THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7. 1933,

OUR BRITISH CROSSWORDS

AVOID

MAKE P

Off-Color

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FRY'S

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Women of Imagination Score in

MIXING CLOTHES.

Parin.

There is A good deal more liberty About ensembles than formerly. When the rule WAS

no getting away from the rule.

THE WORLD OF WOMEN

Union Between Hair and Hats

[Hy Joan Savoy.]

your

hots

Your colffure and must form a companionate union or all chic is lost.

Since the new hats expose com- pletely the left alde of the head, hairdressers are making up for this lack of hat by emphasizing the coiffures on that side.

Three new coiffures for dif- ferent types of women and hats that are perfect with them just- rate the point.

1. For the blonde of 20, the hair is parted on the left side and set in innumerable sculptured curls which slant down toward the back. The right side of the with head is smoothly. waved fan-shaped bangs on the forehead and the ends of the hair are drawn down to continue the roll of curls at the back.

The hat la a beret of olive green felt, with a bow of valvet ribbon in a slightly darker green. 2. The sophisticated brunette of 36 wears her hair parted in the middle and brushed Bleckly

WHAT CHILDREN READ.

A Mother's Difficult Task.

TO-DAY'S RECIPES.

Cheese Potatoes.

Some sliced cold potatoes, some grated cheese, some grated crust of bread, 2 tablespoonfuls of milk, 2 small egge, the usual salt and pepper seasoning.

Put a layer of the potatoes in

rigid that dress and coat must be Many modern parents do not pay alike women were tied to separate enough attention to the home read- ensembles of dress and coat, coating of their children. Nowadaye, a deep, buttered baking dish; add and skirt and blouse. There was when books, good, bad, and indif some grated cheese, pour over ferent cost so little or can be a little milk, which has been add- borrowed from a library, and every ed to the beaten eggs; now add bookstall is loaded with all kinds seasoning, and then more potato, of papers, It is not wise to allow and cheese, &c., till the dish is children to read what they choose.full.

Now there are all sorts of ways of mixing, and it is by learning to choose good mixers that women show ingenuity and taste.

A dark skirt may be worn

Every child loves stories. And, Let the top layer be of cheese! with

bread EE light

grated blouse-waistcoat as a rule, poetry delights them. mixed with the top-such as Bruyere does in Even though they don't understand crust. Bake in a moderate oven pleasingly soft, crinkled, and all the words, the rhyme and till brown, and serve in the same stamped materials--and a short rhythm pleases them. So it would dish. coat to match the skirt.

appear that a child's taste in literature should be moulded in the nursery.

Half

Peppermint Creams.

& pound of icing sugar, 1⁄2 teaspoonful ok. essence of peppermint, white of 1 egg.

Discrimination Required. With that same skirt you can

Many nursery rhymes aro put a different blouse and a

Roll the icing sugar until free figured short coat; or, again, you charming, and there are appro- can have a long, or threcquarter, priate poems by R. L. Stevenson. from lumps, whip the egg, and twood swagger coat and under it Sir Walter Scott, Browning, and add it to the sugar with the othora. Even some of peppermint essence, and mix to a put a knitted sweater and jumper. many

If too dry, add a little With those same coata you can Shakespeare's are suitable, such as paste. have gured skirts, or little"Ye Spotted Snakes" and "Under water- tesspoonful.

Roll out, on a board sprinkled dresses.

the Greenwood Tree." The child

to inch Briefly, your coats and skirts whose parents can recite or read with icing sugar, should all be of the same family Poetry really well is, indeed, thick, and cut into rounds with with different characteristics. Of fortunate, And many stories hold an egg-cup. Leave on a sugared course, much discrimination and the child's attention better when dish for about 6 hours. Knowledge of how to mix is need- told instead of read. ed, but that is fun for the girl with imagination.

Much Real Literature to be Had. There is so much real literature for children that it would not be possible to get through it all days. For in- tance, there are the "Alice" books, "The Water Babies," "Peter Pan." "Jungle Tales," "Just So Stories," and a wealth of old ballade and

When a woman dresaca only in CHOCOLATES red, or unimaginative, or per-during nursery

black you may be sure she is JOHN D. HUTCHISON aps, and this happens to many,

CANTON AGENTS

for

The

Hongkong Telegraph.

THE SHAMEEN PRINTING

PRESS. LTD.

83, B.C. Shameen. (Nr. British Bridge),

Tel. 12037.

very poor.

Batter for Fritters. Four ounces flour; a little salt; a dash of grated nutmeg; 2 eggs, 1 tablespoonful of olive oil; a cup of cold water.

Beat the yolks, and mix them with the flour and oil; then add enough water to make a batter as thick as double cream, then fold in the whipped whites of the CKRA. This is excellent for coat

Neckline Adventures. The neckline ia a field for many fairy tales. adventurca *in trimming. and But it is no good soaking ing meat fritters. many collars, scarves, draperies, children in good literature during and buttonings make it important. nursery days and then letting them Jean Patou has promoted the read all kinds of rubbish after-

FASHION NOTES.

Fashion Calls for Smart Coiffure

and severely of the forehead Directly over the temples and over each ear the hair is drawn back with a wave from templo to crown. The centre part continues all the way to the nape of the nock, the anda curling away from the part towards the face at either side.

The hat la a tricorn of saffron yellow felt with др unvaunt new note in the crown which is Also blocked in a tricorn. The bow-knot is high on the left side. mado of brilliante.

3. The silver-haired matron's hair is parted In the middle, and all of it, except for the thick strands at either sido, is brushed head straight and close to the

Bet in The sides. however, two alde waves. The onda of the hair form a flat, double roll in the back.

are

The black hat Is of felt and in worn low over the right eye and vary high at the left and the back. It is encircled by a band of shiny silver mesh. The hat is topped by a fell bow.

Other houses are advocating one dreas, with different changes of trimming. Thus, you may wear severely-cut collar and cuffs on Almaily-draped scarf or a frilly your dress in the morning with a net trimming for afternoon,

Fashion has recognised that wo men are spending less money on dress. At once she has come to their aid with suggestions for mak- ing one garment serve two or three purposes. For instance, oven'ng contees need not match the dress with which they are worn, either in colour or material. So, with idea of trimming cont collars with wards. The mother has a difficult The New "Three Piece." the help of a coated or two, a wo- a silk over collar which ties into a task in front of her when her boy

There is every indication that man can keep on ringing the bow with onds. This trimming le

or girl goes to school, for they buttoned on to the collar and is will come into contact with many Dame Fashion intends women to changes on her appearance, even easy to take off for cleaning or children who have little or no make the most of their clothes by if her supply of frocks is limited. There is very little change in the changing.

literary taste. And as children all, wearing the same garments on The fashionable neckline is

scen in the city, Many have full high. Nothing stiff is worn about imitate each other, unless great almost all occasions. The old-time cut of any of the new coats as it, and usually it can be thrown care and tact is exercised, the boy necessity for a distinct change for open or carried close to the thront.ar girl will read what the others every hour of the day is passed. sleeves about the elbow, not exag- The belt at the waist is descend-rend and gradually develop a lower was shown recently several start-gerated, but enough to be in keep- ng models by a well-known Parising with the lines of fashion laid taste in literature. ing to the top of the hip bone. If children's minds are attened dress-making boure, which were down by "La Haute Couture." You can still have a high line 1

the waist-from the it suits you, but if not, then you to good literature they should find composed of three pleces, a drea. Almost all the coats are close-

ercat delight in reading Scott, a short Jacket, and a removable fitting at are just as fashionable with your Dickens. Thackeray, Jane Austen, skirt, which, folding round the evening wrap, to the Jaunty sports walatline set at the natural curve.

The new belts are trim and give. L. Stevenson, and many good, walat, transformed the jacket into jacket, all must mould the line to

a long coat for more formal wear. the figure.

a slender line.

Nervous debility

frequently is caused by faulty nakitan

and can be corrected

by a regular course

of this long-bamlingt

and body-building

food. Ask for

SCOTT'S

Emulsion

"The protector of life

modern writers.

SALESMAN SAM

ARE YOU GONNA LET HOWIE GET AWAY WITH THAT, SAM? HE'S DOWN ON "TH' CORNER TELLIN' EV'RYBODY YER A COWARD AN SCARED TA FIGHT HIM A GUN. DUEL!

Sam Plays Safe!

YEAH? WELL, (SO I'M AFRAID OF YA,

WE'LL SEE

HUH? LISSEN, HOUNE SÉLZ ABOUT THAT. HAVE YA GOT VER GUN C'MON, STUFFY!! WITH YA RIGHT NOW?

THOID STREET

GYM

WHY, NO!

I LEFT IT

HOME-

ARE YA POSITIVE

LOOK FER.

YERSELF!

Across,

3 Worn out and confined at last. 8 This remains uninjured and in

nice discernment.

9 One is known by the interior of

this purely surface Anish. 10 Storm enclosure.

11 Putting up with things as the

ond's in sight: 12 There's a ready sale on every hand you'll allow, now that the venture has been undertaken (hidden).

13 Mada to take at least second

place.

14 Theodora (anag.).

17 This is achieved by those who

are not thirteen.

19 Not a und score for "wrong'uns"

to hold.-

23 Come to the point-do.

27 A measure of correctness.

29 Hidden In Clue 12

30 It may be divine, but it's very uninteresting as placed before.

Us.

for

31 Should apply the cause

every act in one way it does. 32 Where one can see a wake but

cannot hear the keening, 33 Mystical...

34 Duck downA

AT Down

1 Sternutatory convulsion.

2 A great composer.

3 Sends round a hint for incomes.

4 Offers made with an object in

view.

6 Another offer,

8 What it says may sound sense, but It's sure to be half rubbish. The remainder is on an equal

footing,

7 The spirit of the meeting is not.

always good.

18 Fundamental

15 Hidden in Clue 12.

18 Change seats to be on the right

mida.

18 hidden in Clue 12,

20 Make the third letter the sixth to make the inside Icas suitable. 21 Anything vexations.

22 Groan vegetables with flah provide a seed vessol for the vegetable..

24 Dèscribes the action of a lout, but I'm nothing to A bork ́swimmer.

25 It's nice to be on.

26 Lot the tugar strike E and

function again.

28 Regarded as a star by Parisiana

Yesterday's Bolation.

10 OLERIDGE MOPE) AMODAL LAẠI SHTNINEBR BOOUT

DISTEEN ENAMOUR

CANUTEN RENNET ÓNATVAGÚFICE) MENA GET PREEN.B BETSAFE PRINNAR AQUARIA ESCAPED RULE A ANKLE CUBEURANT NE

T

T

LEASEHOLD

Stop that t

COLD

before

it settles on your

CHEST

A NEGLECTED cough or cold does serious mischief

to the delicate bronchial tubes and lungs. It-often ends up in an attack of bronchitis, asthma, or other stubborn chest complaint. Don't run needless risks! Take Peps breatheable tablets at the first eign of a cold or chill and ward off worse dangers.

When dissolved in the mouth Peps give off powerful healing and germicidal fumes which are breathed direct into the lungs. Peps soothe the throat and heal the in- flamed linings of the air-passages. They destroy' 'flu germs, loosen phlegm, and banish coughs and colds.

PEPS as a handy potvrdive and trendy f

sarly-mwning cough, night chille, ne. Of wil met sore throat, laryngolia, eman,"

PEPS

HANDY SILVER-WRAPPED TABLETS ↳

Agents:-Mesars. Gilman & Co., Ltd., Des Voeux Road, Hongkong.

By Small

WELL, THEN - THIS OUGHTA PROVE

T'AIN'T AFRAID OF YA!

HA

HA HA

HERE

FAT, OFT,

Sorell

137 BY MEA SERVICE,

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