Cape May County Times, 1 July 1927 IIIF issue link — Page 17

! SECTION

cm KAY COUNTY TIKES. FWDAY, JUNE 24. 1W7.

FASHION ISUGGESTIONS

Page One

FEATURES FOR WOMEN

ifidentially, Do You Ever Have “Tantrums?”

I Bath. Freah Lingerie and a Dainty Frock I Banish the Wont Caae of Being "Out ot Sorts |M «T J»sr IHOe asuctu^r q 1 V/ t t .

mother >l*aa DITISn I OUT Hair So

As To Give It Life

i tier up

I prettiest drees. i for this mite of InHr whea ahe la e

lersily

i the world. ■rortui for <Us h )rlH work for She arc . too, for the psycho i very aood. It is worth some time i a particularly good plan

lillitcerle 1

uncomfortable and unM

p into a hath perfumed with

e scent in bath sails, r a while in the water,

i will bagin to feel your jumper and grudge against arid beginning to slip away

Then put on fraah. • that feels comfort

0 your akin.

> don't slip Into just any i. but put on something I ordinarily Wouldn't r d She house, soroetlhlng you i of looking well ■ hair becomingly, and ip a bit with a das ^ up and a whiff or two of

perfume.

1 don't hare to go any- * to get the benefit of this : Just alt ting down cm oh. or setting somewhere book, or some sewing. In I frame of mind will put thing loudire on dhe banmi of She worn! case at be-^out-of-doors, li more women try this simple method, h-'d be less family quarreling

m has brought dist to a number of who had nursed the idea their horn bands’ u n reason - raa entirely due to

Many of us think we

llglously brushing our hair when mt * lv ' 11 * regular number of aurfac.- •ewlpea" every night. Ii may be that, if the hair is thick, we never get down to the roots at all. but are merely smoothing

the surface.

Before you start brushing, rumple me hair up oar ej canty with your Bnger. Kumpllng Is good for the hair. Well-tralned hair that is never disarranged from its orderly place In the scheme of things is more likely to become dlscouragad and lifeless nhan hair whlah is allowed at times to lead a towaeled eitatM or Mover, when hair Is i one style sll the time, rwpeelally If the hair is long, certain parts of (he scalp , off almost permanently from light and air. Therefore, when you take down your hair, bend your head forward, letting the hair fall over your face. Shake your head and rumple your hair lightly with your fingers, and them tom your hair bach over, your shoulders, letting the locks

stray as they will.

Now you are ready to use your brush. Always employ both hands when you brush your hair at nlgta. One hand wields the bnsh. while the other divide* hair into tail portiona. ao as to get at

sections of the scalp.

Then finish by putting your fllnger-tips at the hairline. n<*r the center of the forehead, and, with a cireulad movement. Jiff the scalp back, working toward the crown of the head. Do the

time, starting from the

nape of the neck and loosening <he scalp upward at the back. All

really brushing your

hair.

Nias Flo:

tPrioeBeaut^i)

-

To a Groom-to-be Who Wonders

Clothes—Six Ounces

THIS SI MMER *ra Siam. Wall Street stenogragiher. in her ala ounces summer ckHhes—Including frock, shoes, stockings and "undies." "Economical and comfortable,"

Miss Siam.

Try These For Jaded Appetites give a delicious Savor to tbeae poport-rx: Obeewe Pufflt-ls: One-third cup grafted cheese, one lablespoon Sour, one egg. one-fourth teaspoon salt, one fourth teaspoon pepper, three-quarters cup

mUk.

Sour with salt and pepper.. three-quarters cup milk. MU Sour with salt and pepper.

American s Menu Most Diversified In the World Averag American’s d.Hy bill of fare Is the most diversified of any nationality in the world. Bread, considered In Europe as || man’s "staff of life." Is merely |jan Item in the American's dlrftj ary. Both the Belgian and the II French worker eat three much. The Yankee eats pota'oea but leas than any other worker except the South European. We are fond of bucter. but do i not consume a« much Scandinavians or the French. The Dutch and the Scandinavians _ I thirty timw more cheese than ; Americans and we drink I milk than they, but more than ■ other Europeans, except Germans. I Of sugar, we eat loss than the British and Grand tnavlana but more than «h.r Eu—iptams. Americans eat more beef than any other people, but only half as much mutton as the English. More green vegetables are con- - sumed by Europeans but we lead in the consumption of pie and

Ice oreaai.

American housewives, too. have a groater knowledge of food values than other nations. They have better culinary facilities and. as a consequence, more leisure time. Where the French worker’s wife spends hours „ front of the fireplace, the American 'home manager u*m range or gasoline pressure cook stove, thereby cutting the time of mesl preparation in half. The American housewife eatravagent. but she can afford to be because she has more ta to spend than the European

Old Cookie Jar and Family Dressmaker What ha* become of yesterday'a cookie jar? Where has the old family dressmaker gone? They have disappeared with the rubber-tired buggy, bustles, and

brownstone

blend with cheese and an egg. j Umbo of forgotten thlnga. Add milk and mix wall. Bake, White-faced bake shops capable in popover pans la a very hot of turning out 10.000 gingerbread oven—126 degri -a for ten min- men an hour have replaced the old

| brown earthen cookie Jar that used

I ... i .to stand on the lowest shelf in | Vegetable dishes that are suit-1 grandmother's pantry. And fac- ■ able for planking are numerous -1 torlc* making dresses at unpreceI or rather, various forma of at- > dented speed, and Jobbers whose tractlvely prepared vegetable* are chief concern is getting Paris 'readily served In a planked vege- fashions in small towns the same

i very nice fflrl with whom 1 greatly in love. 8h.' has oii *e«ro«d wholesome and fine. I have never known her to or do a coarse thing. How1 n«< her family recently the. firm time, and since then ive been rather doubtful that tan be happy together. 1 e U-mi brought up In a home »hlch modesty and refinement r Instated upon, both in perepecot and action. I have •r -heard anything coarse or lor in our home. However. In ree’s home they seem to know ring or care nothing about w things that are generally ‘idered the decencies of life. 1 was more than shocked at things they said and did. I to be prudish, but 1 wonder will be happy with a girl has lived in such surround- » F. W. In Plant and animal life, there vialonally what is known

j plant—hut closer inspection re1(1 veals many differences—perhaps In the shape of the leaf, the formation of the petals, or In the

coloring of the flower.

And ao It la with human beings sonirthnee. The girl you low may resemble her family every apparent manner, but deep In her soul she may be an t stranger to them. She may have finer thoughts, liner senslbllille*. and a finer sense of character than all the rent ot her family together. And if you love the girl you will remember that you' ore not marrying her family. It she has proved herself over a ported of time to be wholesome and clean-minded and decent I fchlnk it most unfair to Judge her

by her family.

Judge her. rather, by the things she does—«he things she aays—the things she thinks.

day they appear on Fifth Avenue have removed the need for the

family dressmaker.

Flanked Onions: To stuff ,n da J'* P*»t the itinerant aoamonlons for plank serving, peel ,treM was so much an American them and cut out the csnterw i ,n, ' , * ,u,,on a * ,he family doctor, with the aid of a curving grap. -! H,r vU,u w, ' re seasonal. When fruit knife, boil them in tailed * he camt ‘ ahe functioned not only water until tender, and boil the if" tbc, • B, * ord la »‘» a < wear, centers as well, chopping portion i , 1 • ervpd ln ,hc double capacity with a cup Of shopped ■ confid.M.^

little chopped parsley. Beaeo:

When providing for bridge parlias. reception*, tea*, or other social events, the aveisge hostess is puscled oftentim«* to know Just how much to provide, ao (that there will be no lack. the same time no waste, the Information a* to quantities given below is kept in a handy place it will be found uite helpIf rhe quantities gb more than you would have need for. K is an easy niatfter by dtision to arrive at the desired quantity. It will also be found that In e preparation and serving large-quantity menus will facilitated If menus arc planned that can be prepared "on location." consisting of plain foods requiring a minimum technique. hlch can be provided for amply and served easily. One pound of tea will serve 0 Ocups of tea. One pound of coffee will serve 0 cups of coffee One quart of cream will serve l5 to 40 persons » ,'ti cream for

coffee.

One bushel ot well-flll.d green peas win yield S quarts when shelled. 60 generous portion*.

everybody will be-1 get married find.- a man who Just I 50 portions of cream potatoes,

suits hi - ~

the stuffing well, add >two tablespoons of melted butter, fill tin onions and top each with a dab of butler. Thus six onions are quickly made ready for “plank-

ing."

Stuffed tomatoes rfhouk! be scalded, skinned, scooped out ami made ready In almost Ideistiaclly the same way. saving that nuts arc left out of the stuffing, which should be especially well Hea-

rd confidante and costumer, tween stitches—and her nimble fingers manufactured everything that was worn—she competed with the doctor and minister in making all birth, marriage, and death

announcements.

But big scale production and leaping lyiving costs havr crosJcd her into the luxury colum-i. Women can buy their clothes today more cheaply than they can have them made. For huge factories, iquipped with motor-driven machines, are turning out the same kind of garmenu she wan wont to make, in

one-hundredth the time.

An Adept

Housekeeper Says--. A Slight sr,<1*1 ma* freuentlj

be remedied |f moistensd hung in the sun to bleorb. When pancakes stick to

aluminum griddle it may be cause Bu recipe doees not Include enough fa: Add a little more and the trouble may be correctert Cranky prejudices about certain food* increase the burden of

the mother who must ]

Jncai* Train the children to like

nd eat all good wbolesomt Any true mayonnaise, Kb egg. oil, acid and

lags will keep as long aa a week

refrigerator. It'a a good

Idea to make up a sufficient

quantity to last a week.

Learn how many serving* can expected from each kind of food you buy. and you will go a long way toward economical man-agent-nr <,r she food supply. Buy by weight or numbei when you Wh- n steaming a pudding in a coffee can. the lid must be Belly fastened on. but If a small hole i* pierced In the top to let the at earn -scape, there wUl be !<** need of tying the lids on and the pudding will not become

too moist.

A freshly spilled liquid should ncvci he rubbed from a carpet or rug because this only drive* the liquid into rhe fabric Instead. cover the liquid wHh coro meal, talcum powder, blotting paper torn to bits, or any other absorbent material which will take >i up and prevent Ms spread-

ing.

Butterscotch flavor is made by melting tognflher one cup of brown sugar and two tablespoons of butter umll the mixture Is waxy. It can then be used to sweeten and flavor many anrt* sudh as Ice cream. March pudding, custards or gela-

Every Woman May Now Dress Fashionably and in Taste There Should Be Co-ordination in All Part* of the Costume

The Two-Piece Bathing Suit * a

takes on a third part and 1* dig

nlfled Into an ei costume sketched

white ahlrt. red and white plaid flannel ahorts and a looae coat

material. It la quin-

the youthful

It la possible today tor the woman In the most remote dl*trlcta to dress herself faMitona'aly and with taste There must be co-ordination of all the larts

make a costume if <

be well dmwed. There must be a blending of form and color before any cos turning Is effective. Don’t plan costumes until you have a general ides of the type and color of the particular twetume you may neod. With this mind go to your dressmaker. If you find anything approximately the picture you have In mind. weH and good. The type of bat and shoes you choose miM' conforan to the type of frock you eelected. You may find a hst whose color is right hut the i

Then you must!

look further until you get what

Into the general effect,

he woret thing a woman can •to is to wear a drew with the

of wearing It. That kills

the whole costume, and the woman become* merely a clothe*horse. A costume should be perfect of Ms kind—every thought

the adjust-

or it.

But

who jnilU her rl.itbee about, who preens •henerlf In mirrors and retie arse* her dressing in public is IU bred. She is probably of the | some sort as the woman who

! powders in public.

The habit of powdering and doughtag In r.-etaurants and thejatres .or anywhere In public, la ••tie <f tfae woist and moat dlegustlng hsbiu. You wouldn't likeec to see a man talks out a eumb or start shaving In a restaurant. would you? Then don't

powder publicly.

All the mlnen.cn t* of th« outer surfaces spoken of here are , gradually bee-imlng more general in our country. The more you exercise your taste, the more taste you will have—the more you learn to cultivate your physical beauty, the more sonrtUlv* you will become to the beautiaa of the mind and the spirit. Encourage anything that makea for a rich physical beauty—M la the foundation of a *-nse ot beauty in the fact. But always bear In ml ad that It is only an approach to beady that Is real and last-

Quantities Required For Social Functions

“The Lone Flyer” By MOLUE "dEPI’TY BHORT j t great bird jllfted ita wing* 1 In flight. And aped away to meet the night: Po meet the night and bright great fame And honor to its rider's name. The rider thereof was only a boy. Ilia mother's pride, bis nation'-.

Joy;

True of heart and brave wa» he. Aa be sped from New York to gay Pan*

fast

A bout Your Health Thing! You Should Know AM.,/—Af.O.

i mawy Into n family whose o different from your! j^ Vl

That Is there la a °»» K" 0 * fc,r * o^WaNity that ^l*u and apontanrous variation i"‘■om r° a no! be normal type. At first I merely assumed a pose of flne-

perhapa the offspring is

' 1 cry reaped like lh« parent

\tm that ahe really doea not i p«*Mas. for If ahe ha*, sooner or' later, she will revert to type. There in no saying ao true a* the one which l el I* us we cannot make a allk purse out of a sow's ear. and there would be small congeniality between you and the girl if you are always I ,iing to be shocked with her. or if ahe Jar* your ideas of decency. Remember lhai your home must not be merely a place of shelter and rood. It must be a thing of beauty, with no less of the spirit and soul. A woman must put into it the beauty of her heart Just as truly a* a poet muat put it into his song, and if "he has no beau*y in her heart, if she la coarse and vulgar and i common—you cannot hope fori

happiness.

And remember that when the ohina vase and the earthen* pot undertake to Ikmt down rgehber. It la always fine vase that gets smashed.

The Medium Luge Hat

Ten pounds of large po'c I > '" ,d 3 pounds of p.tato e:

I or 60 portions. 1 One quart bo

| will aerv

Baby g Fashionable Vehicle For This Year

But Oh, The Difference e dreasea with a puxsled fro

atalked beneath. But he faltered not. as on he WHh a steady hand a clear. keen eya And a heart that whispered “Do or die." With only g kitten to share hi*

But captain, pilot, oil wa* be. In .this "Cine-Msn" night to gay Parse. A brave little mother, with heart of gold. With prayerful lip* and cour-

age bold.

Bade him go. “You can do It,"

ahe naid.

And watched her boy. as away

he aped.

Many the prayer* that were breathed that night. For the brave "bird-man" on his lonely High:. Through the vaotneaa of ulgtU, with its terror* all. That wrapped him ‘round like n groat black Hhawl.

er filled

White-winged

the i

eoaengem of faith and prayer; Ar.d winged their way to the Throne of Grace. For his safety through the ethereal apace. But. one mood out, emblaxoned. atone. And wended h* way «<• the gr«at White Thrmc: 'Twaa the p.uye.r of the gulshed heart and w

harkened ai made the »t hie "Sprit

Home ii m •« my readers write me .asking about little things not made clear In my letters to ibis paper—1 thank mem for the indirect confidence — some!tone* for criticisms indulged. 1 cannot, of course, undertake the treatment of diaeaseai by mail: have all 1 can do at home; bu aeir-cddresaed. .-damped envelope will bring an immediate roply from me. In the interest of good

newspaper service.

I have been asked recently “hat foods arc moat .ikaly to make a "laxy" liver wane. Sometimes a laxy liver a an c loaded, tired live' not a laxy one. Hence I reply that, an c hod of any kind of food will aggravate an over-loaded Uv. fruits being the least harmful. The specific article at diet that I forbid, when dealing with engorged liver is. surch. In many forms, such aa boiled or mashed potato.«. dry beans, white bread and the like. The liver functions larg.dy aa a starch ‘ transformer. n..d cannot do more

than it i« able to do.

One writer remount rotor—that fats work harm In "Uver trouble*:’’ referring to animal fata. I suppose. 1 have forbidden all meat-fats In gall-bladder condition*, but .these are not “I Ivor -I roubles." Fat meats are not good In gall-bl* dder InfacJlon*; dairy fat*, butter, cream, etc., in small quantity, do much lea*, if any harm. And. the vege•latde oils. oli\.- oil particularly have a reputation for being beneficial. among the older cliniciaaa. Every liver case la a law unto itselt. and should be referred to the family physician, whether acute, rubactue. or chronic Specially after forty-five should all suspicion of liver disease be investigated. A atMoh tn time may save several yard* of cal

lor knows which gown’, right gown; , band, j Because she thinks an ev

gown

■t shnply i

|The glorious Fourth—Hurrah! Hurrah! The kids arc out for fut wn ' What jolly times they’ll have today from rise to vet of sun! ‘fc* But what is this these children have? A giant cracker* My! | If they explode that thing I’m sure 'twill blow them to the sky. log j But don't you worry—daddy saw 'twas but an empty shell; He brought it home packed full of things the kiddies love *o we!

t a variety— Ik to talloivd liner •picting Little Bo oy Blue and other

ram tilted Aplique, ecp. Utile iur»ery flg-

nigbt-j And now thcy'i J And happy as the day

with :

each fur

oving t

y* head and shoulder* are. wed to emerge from the covt?. exhibiting a dainty white t with a deep cape collar.

1 his honor to

t-heart-• and bn

The Judge: "The Jury havl trquiMMl you of the charge bigamy. you an* dtaeharg Than moan* you are quite f to leave the court and go humTh. Prisoner. "Thank you, m lord, but 1 want to be on tt

Lacey Frocks Smart i There la really no more delightful a medium for mi mover dr«ases than lace. When in addition it la tailored, them H reached the height of H* poeslhllltles. Scarcely a smart laoe dr ms is seen of an afternoon or evening that It has not a moire bek with a buckle of brilliant*. The inconsistency of diaphanous lace combi-ved with tailored lines is what actually gives this mode tta piquancy. Some Cooking Hints Cook del ica t e-fla vored vegetable* covered. Cook sttong-flavored vegetables (as onions and cabbage) uncovered. Add salt to Vegetable* after they begin to boll, to retain no tor. Pour vegetable puree into white sauce vwh, cream xmps.

MECRAY’S BEAUTY SHOP

Evel.row Shaptag Huir BsbMnc Klnir r Waving Hot Oil Shampoo Henna Park ^ We MatoOntaMa Kngagamenls ROOM « and « SMCOMD I'l.OOR FOOER-MEOKAY lit’II.KINO Caps May Roll, Phon—

Special attention given t Hair Cutting by Miss Edith D. Buii 3cJ

1M High Street.

Hnye Your Work Done Right in Your Own Home i Marcel Wave Water Wave , Shampoo (Med. Lemon) Facial Moabage | Facial Plastlque and Bleach j. Scalp Massage. Violet Raj I and Vibrator Treatments Mrs. Mattie Berry j .Formerly with Mr*. R. B. 1 Beckett. Millville) PORT NORRIS | Call 128 J-11 for appolnt-

safe

, hum*

GUARANTEED MARCEL PERMANENT WAVE

Mrs. R. H. Beckett