6 TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND, JANUARY 14, 1912. of the faults. At ons and the same time train body, soul and heart to the beauties you desire. Lastly, look ont for the bsd Influ ences of precocious playmates. The knowledge so gained Is withering to future peace, destructive to present and future health and beauty. Look out for bad moral example In the home the furious family row for In stance. Remember that the little body Is a most delicate bud. and that Its unfold ing Is in your hands. Treat the aoul reverently. KATHERINE MORTON. WHITE FOX IS FAVORITE EVENING FUR SOMETIMES WORN AT RECEPTIONS Snowy Pelte, Because of Scarcity, Axe Almost as Costly as Ermine, and Present Beautiful Appearance at Opera or in Drawing-room. CHARMING DANCING FROCKS DESIGNED FOR DEBUTANTES PROVE POPULAR Chic Dancing Boots With High French Heels Worn at Coming-Ont Parties In Gotham Selection of Ornaments Is -. . Important to EffectiTeness of Costume. Blondes Are Disappearing I - :v'H -If l j V 1 - ' ' "I? ' I j f 1 c . . - . X 1 C ' ' ; 1 lX ; ' v!k- ; MNx:.X;. r T - V-'-x: ; .. - l ' X . ifyV x :- vr' - xs, . xx m ; I .-fa r c 'X Vm x i x; pi ' -M M-i I - - : THOl'OH trains are worn on many evening (owns Intended for danc Inr. In debutante or girl In hr irconj Htwn wears a tralnless frock ignd specially for dancing; use. rtils dainty frock, morn at one or the Junior Cotillions at Sherry's tbla Win ter. Is of very light blue velvet, made In the quaint "lambrequin" style over petticoat of lace flounces. The bod Ice Is a draped fichu of lace and the slue velvet girdle has a flat bow at one Me of the hack. The flower festoons on the tunic are In shades of pink and lu and the fringe is silver. With this frock were worn dancing boots of blue pearl buttons and high satin with Krench heels. All dinner gowns have trains and the home dressmaker will be Interested in the way this drugging, three-cornered train Is attached to the foot of the skirt. The gown Is by Lanvln and Is of mauve blue charmeuse with an under-bodlce of diamante white net. The bodice Is draped over this diamante net. Its edges being finished with dia mante banding. Ornaments of rhine stones are set at back and front of the waistline. The coiffure ornament la of dull silver and blue sequins, with a white aigrette; the slippers are strap affairs of white satin, buttoning across silk hose matching the blue gown, each strap of the slipper being- beaded with rhlnestones. FUNDAMENTAL NEEDS OF CHILD BEAUTY ! i K you want your child to be consid ered good looking, attend first to Its physical health. If you want It to feel good looking, that Is. to have a erholesome unconsciousness of Its de-fet-ts. see that your precious lad or las lie Is happy. Health and happiness! In two brief words are contained the needs ? all children, all mortal needs. With the first tne soul Itself Is crippled; without some taste of Joy. Indeed as much of It as tan he had. the child beart becomes morose, suspicious, em bittered. Mere happiness Itself, that lightness sf the heart whUh declares that the thing, whatever it is. Is good. Is the best cosmetic for the skin the world holds. The youngster constitutionally Joyous, and whose swret ehullltlons are not nipped with cold sarcasms or cruel punishment. Is rarely pimpled, sallow or constipated. There are no Interior dreads to hamper the (unctions of the body. The blood flows freely, for the heart Is fearless. That some govern ment ts needed, goes without saying, bttt It begins with proper food and reg. ulsr hoiira for eating. o the mother who serves her chtld s meals at "any old time" or who thinks thst this or that cold scrap Is good enough for the midday meal, in doing br progeny great hurt. Regularity in eating la absolutely required for heaiw and as childhood is the formative period for the body as well as mind. It stands to reason that food must be good enough to make healthy bones and muscles. The coarser breads are needed to solid ify the tooth structure graham, gluten and rye there must be warm appetis ing broths tor toning up the stomach, dainty, easily digested sweets, fresh vreen vegetables, fruits In abundance, an occasional crisp salad and meats cooked In such a way as to provide all the nutriment they can provide. Under 7 years of age children require little meat. Good sweet milk, fresh eggs and fish and fowl should take Its place, cream cheese served with a bit of Jam or Jelly Is a splendid substitute for me it. and if the child la trained at an eatlr age to eat the wholesome thing, whatever It Is, whicb Is set on the table, there will be no unreasonable exactions with mature age. Hunger Is the best of atl sauces for food, and the hungrier a child gets tier lis meals the more evidence there la of normal health. So forbid many be-tween-meal bites for the youngsters who no longer need them those who bava passed the weakness of babyhood, wbea eating must be often to sustain strength. Supply sponge cakes more often than pound or fruit or spice cakes for the nursery table, and a. low candy, and that of a very simple sort, only after meals. The dally eating of fresh fruit will do much toward keeping the child's bowels in good order, and orances are espe cially beautifying to the skin. Pine apple Jtii.e. which Is most refreshing to the paiate and atomach. tones up the blood, and it Is much liked by chil dren, especially when strained and chilled on the Ice. A tea of sassafras root, made sweet and chilled. Is like wise useful for the blood and bowels, blia a nibble of the gummy licorice so D-any children like Is the cheapest and most gsntie medicament for tight bow els that can be had. When the youngster comes down with an attack of Indigestion, the first move toward a cure Is to give the bow els a complete clearing out with castor oil. The druggists have a way of pre paring this with orange Juice to make It more palatable, or else they put the oil In capsules, when it is not tasted at alL Three drops of brandy put In the, oil Itself will prevent this energetic purge from griping. The hours for a child's sleep should he as regular as those for meals, and the little bedroom needs to be venti lated ail night and kept clear of use les dust-harboring truck for health and good looks. Yet the little bedroom should be a gay and sweet place, too. for the children are highly susceptible to beauty, and neat and gracious sur roundings belp to make them mora fas tidious about their persons and cloth ing. Insist upon a complete morning or night bath warm water and a good soap for the bath Is required for both moral and physical health. Many a high-strung, nervous child, given to ungovernable fits of temper, would be amenable to the sweeter moods of childhood If It were bathed oftener. Tha warm bath, soothing as it does the nerves, relaxing tenae muscles and comforting the bowels, undoubtedly helps to make life more endurable. It Is one of our cheapest blessings, al though If a child Is In very delicate health a warm sponge is far better than the all-over bath. But where the lad and lassie are In strapping trim, the dally tub la as good for them as breakfast or dinner, and it Is certainly a royal factor for present good looks. These things constitute hygienic living regularity, proper food, quiet sleep, rleanllnens Inside and outside the body. But there remains the health of the heart, which is so Important to child life, and without which small fry In the most luxurious circumstances are but beggars. Where do children find this spiritual health, this marvelous uplift of the spirits needed for tha healthy growth of their little bodies and souls; In play yes, in the rery stupid Jumping op snd down which seems so intolerable In the house; In the skates on which they skint around the block; In the noisy game of hide and seek. Thy find It in all their lit tle Indoor Jollying, and find more of It In the outdoor games. There, while soft bones are stretching with the ex ercise, muscles growing harder and blood pumping more freshly, there un der blue skies, with Summer sephyrs or Winter winds, m-lth the noise and dust of towns, or with the quiet and vague mystery of country life, the child la coming Into Its own. I'nder the wing of Mother Nature It Is devel. oping with every breath of air. every wiggle and Jump, learning unconscious ly the true tbtngs of Its own little life. With play so desperately Important, then, to child happiness and health It can easily be seen how long Indoors tasks are crippling to the little mind and body. it was not meant that young minds should be clouded with the thought of burdens, young hearts bowed down with the weight of grim and svstematlc dlsplaasure. A light spanking, quickly given, quickly over with, will seem far more reasonable, snd nine times out of ten be far mors efficacious in the way of a moral les son. But the tenth child can have no whippings. This small soul must be governed with quiet talk, example, un failing tenderness. Why one child should be so different from another no body can tell. The mother must Judge Its needs and act. accordingly. But considering the spanking in Itself, in my opinion It Is not necessary after the child can understand words. If you will only notice, the children who are punished much In this way take on a hardened look. In other words the child is to a certain extent brutalized with whipping, and. so merely from the point of beauty, the spanking habit is Injurious. The well child Is commonly happy, the happy child commonly well. But foolish Indulgence of every whim of the youngster is not needed for health of either body or mind. There must be certain definite rules laid down for dally living and conduct and these must be adhered to. The thing which brings ruin in Its train is Injustice. Young fry have their rights, and the understanding of them Is Inherent. So If you want your lad or lassie to have the sweet, fearless, trusting look which Is more delightful than any physical charms, treat it like a reasonable hu man being. Explain the, need of tha small duties, explain the consequences Archbishop Gleasos- Gives R ease as for the Prevalence ef Brsmettea. That blondes will grow fewer in the United States In the next 100 years, and that they will continue to exist longer In the smoky cities than any where else. Is a theory of whose cor rectness Archbishop Olennon has be come convinced. He discussed it In elaborating on his smoke talk of a few days ago before the City Club, of Mil waukee. "The theory isn't mine." he hastened to explain. "An Eastern scientist haa worked It out In much detail, but I have studied It carefully, and it seems very plausible." It might seem that smoke would make dark complexions, rather than light ones, but the archbishop's theory shows clearly that hydrogen peroxide and pink complexion powder will have to make their last stand as commercial ataplea In cities where the smoke In spector has accomplished the least. "It Is this way." said Archbishop Olennon. "The white rays of sunlight re much harder on light persons than on dark ones. In the case of light per sons, the rays affect the nerve cen ters. Persons of dark complexion have pigment under their skin which gives protection from these rays, and there fore they are better qualified to live in a sunlight country, such as this Is. "The most favorable countries for blondes, and the countries where they are moat found, are the British Isles, Germany. Scandinavia and Russia. These countries have a softer sunlight. In Southern Europe the people are bru nettes, and are used to living In the sun. The sun rays hit these countries more directly and not at such an acute angle. "In other words, the sun tends to destroy the blond type, and thus .to make brunette predominant, wherever the sun shines much of the time. But city people are protected from it by their Indoor life, and in some cities also by the smoke cloud. This tends to develop an anemic race." Woman's National Weekly. Hygienic Value of Saladx. Henry T. Flnck'a "Multiplying the Pleasures' of the Table." in Century. Probably no detail of the French menu is so important to us as the sal ad. Very few American families know what an invaluablo delicacy a genuine French salad, with a dressing of good olive oil and 'pure, fragrant vinegar, la Invaluable, because of Its effect on the digestion and health. There Is very little nourishment In salad leaves until the oil haa been added, and the oil Is what many of us need, according to the doctors, who deplore the Insuffi ciency of fat in the average Ameri can's diet. It Is excluded therefrom for the very good reason, that the average American finds it difficult to digest It. But it Is right there that the salad comes to the rescue. The vinegar in it. if genuine, excites by its fragrance and acidity the digestive glands not only In the mouth and stomach, but In the pancreas, which acts on all the constituents of food, particularly the fats. There would be vastly less Intestinal Indigestion In this country If every family followed the French custom of eating salad at least once a day. Keal Dogs of War. London Chronicle. The dogs which are helping the Brit ish forces against the Abors by per forming sentry duty are by no means the first to figure in the British army. When the Earl of Essex went to Ire land to suppress the rebellion In the reign of Elizabeth his forces Included 800 bloodhounds with which to track down fugitives after the battles; and In all the English wars with Scotland the bloodhound was largely used for the same purpose. A Masculine Surmise. Harper's Bazar. Husband How would you explain the Inscrutable Mona Lisa smile? Judson Some one has told a funny story and the poor woman Is smiling in the wrong place. 1 ; . IV , " l XX-tjV i A - x X- . 1 - j 1 X V K ' .. .. - ::M X- 1 "LUiS. r L , x- .' I - r X xr 1 x . l. i x- j tx' lei" ' f - i ; . . f " ? X ' - - i - ? . I. 1 v Y 1 - ' " ' X . - :.: , r X. -Xo;- di$V:&- l"V'!f 7 J :; w k . -k . ? x : J' : . J Xt -f ik-M i- i - t U ' 1 x -';-'!p III 'i . I n " I - -it- i 1 -1 K .: i I ' f) r : I '. hhU ! X - M -X . rx Fxxx Jit vh&irr- Y- ' vBPrry f-'L.'- 23 tWf 1 r r-w ;'temvMti& L..im m, mm ft. a n rwm nnm Jmmmmmmnmmm W "S N O FUR Is more beautiful with the light fabrics used for evening wear than the fluffy, snowy fox; and this fur Is now almost as costly as ermine because of Its rarity. The coat is for opera use and Is made of clel blue mirror velvet with a lining of white satin and trimmings of beautiful snowy fox fur. On the white satin lin ing are trimming details made of small ribbon flower festoons in shades of light blue and pink. These tiny flow erets decorate the shirred pockets which are placed in the lining for the accommodation of my lady's belong ings. The woman who has handsome furs. snd wishes to make them do their part In enhancing her costume, may retain them when she leaves her outer wrap in the dressing-room, at restaurant or private reception. Furs are never, how ever, retained w..- a bridge or lunch eon costume. The fur toque has a white feather and the lace yoke of the frock is white and not cream. NEW AMUSEMENTS FOR THE CHILDREN DID you notice the enormous number of playhouses offered for children In the shops at Christmas time doll houses, country cottages big enough for four children to enter, gro cery Btores, express offices and so on? They are all connected with the present system of education, which is to make . the child think for Itself. They are, besides, the most delightful playthings that can be had, and if the toy shop buildings are dear, very good imitations of them can be made at home at small cost from thin new boards" or old packing cases. The Dig toys are inspiring to Juvenile resources and In the games connected with them the children acquire much knowledge of real life. The little grocer or ex pressman learns to count real money DRESSY FUR HATS AND MUFFS ARE WORN OVER HANDSOME GOWNS NOW These Requisites for Fashionably Attired Woman Are Suitable When She Intends to Sit in Restaurant, Theater, or Some Similar Place Where They Can Be Retained. XX XX - : yjf : ' V k X' XX X 'V'-v rx . r A A ' XXX:?." X;Xc----v'- - J I r " " . . x fX - . XX' UR hats, neckpieces and muffs of so that It drapes gracefully over the type are worn shoulders. Tne ermine ni n - crown of black velvet, ana at uie awe Is a- paradise plume In shades of yel low, the theater frock being of permo fabric and Venlse lace In shades of golden brown and cream. A score of small French plumes In the loveliest shade of shell pink are heaped on this picture bat of black vel- ( especlaly dressy m over handsome frocks when the wearer uses a limousine or carriage and when she Intends to sit In a rest aurant, theater or box or some simi lar place where hat and furs may be retained. This beautiful set Is of soft, spotless ermine, the oarf-wrap being as supple and light aa so much satin. vet, and though tha little feathers seem to be massed on the hat In hit-or-mfss fashion, they are really arranged with infinite skill. Beneath the droop ing brim is a frill of gold lace and the brim Is slashed and overlapped at one side of the front, making the brim droop more definitely at the sides. To match this beautiful hat. for restaurant wear, there were long pink silk gloves with dainty embfoidery on the wrists. while the small mistress of the big cot tage or doll house becomes an admira ble housewife, in a tiny way, through the dainty care of her toy menage. With one of these novel toys in the house a child can give a very success ful party with the character of ihe building as a motive for the species of play, and such amusements are becom ing very popular for Juveniles. An Invitation to a party of this sort, recently given, read as follows: "Jimmy Wilson, grocer, begs to call your attention to a sale of fine can dies. Ice cream and cakes of all sorts which will be held at his store on Thursday afternoon, February the tenth. Please bring five pennies along and wear your dancing clothes. "One hundred and two Plum street." When the eager little guests who, of course, knew all about Jimmy's grand Christmas toy arrived on the important day. there was a corner in his mother's flat fixed for all the world like a village street. The store was only front and side boards, of course, but it stood so snugly against the wall nobody could notice that. It was of imitation red brick, with a grand sign J. Wilson. Groceries and a pleasant wide window with real glass and a shelf outside on which stood a num ber of the grocer's nicest samples. On the shelf inside there were canned to matoes, condensed milk, a few potatoes and onions and so on, all of these arti cles being borrowed from the pantry, and to be used, of course, later on for the family table. The real sale things were in a new ice cream freezer on the counter, two candy jars and a big cake plate. About the store stood some rub ber plants to imitate trees, and Jimmy, a sunny, towheaded little man of about six years, wore a grocer's coat of white drill and stood behind his counter say Iny, "What can I do for you. please V In the most attentive manner. The fun consisted in selling the goodies, which had been provided for the party, and as the small guests re ceived the little plate of Ice cream or the nice vanilla cakes or the little bun dles of candles, nobody seemed to think they were dear at a penny or two. The boys and girls had all come in their party clothes, and -When the sale was over a young lady who was helping the fun along sat down at the piano and played for the dancing. A small boy's birthday party could be delightfully accomplished through the help of an express office. The toy, big enough for the child to stand in, could be had ready-made for eight dol lars, although the office could be stim ulated, too, in some amusing manner. For Instance, two curtains could be hung in one corner of the room, with a pasteboard printed sign Express Office placed "across the top of "the opening.- In here, with some sort of a device for a counter, the boy would stand receiv ing nicely done up express packages from the guests, each of whom would be Instructed as to the proceedings In another room and present the birth day gift in this manner. After this part of the playing is over, another boy could enter dragging a little wagon, himself dressed up In an expressman s cap. with a load. of souvenirs for the guests. These would be delivered at the office where a grown person would now stand to decipher-the names on the various little parcels as they were . n . . t Ha Sma run. and given ouu am w.- . i I.- nnirf he varied in all sorts of"T wavs with the children's own notions. For the girl, a paper doll party, or one with the usual graven images, would be very attractive, and although a doll house would be a moat effective detail with this it is not absolutely required for the fun. Here is an Invite used for a paper doll party given not long since: "To Mildred Lee's Paper Doll: "You are cordially invited to brlns your mother to a party I am giving on Wednesday, the seventeenth, at my home. Rose Lodge. "Kitty Baxter's Paper DolL" When Mildred Lee went with her pa per doll to this- fine function her eyes nearly popped out of her head, for there was a doll house entirely of brown packing paper except for a light pine frame and among Kitty Baxter's own paper children there was a complete family her grandmother had made of old fashion plates from the magazines of the 'sixties. How cur ious they were, those sweet ladies with tiny waists and wide hoops, the funny little girls with gunboat hats and long pantalets and the gentlemen who were all such elegant dandies. But the story of them was sweeter than all else. 1 Mildred's grandmother had been a Confederate child, a little Southern girl whose family's fortunes all went with the Civil War. So as there was no money to get real paper dolls she had cut out the fashion plates with her own hands and glued them to card board and put the little rests behind for them to stand up. and so on. And here they were still In the world, the paper dolls made nearly 60 years ago. This party ended with the wholesale making of paper dolls from present day fashion plates, and if by any good luck these live, too. for fifty years they will seem quite as remarkable as these old dolls of the 'sixties. With a paper-doll party the children simply played -vith dolls in their own manner, dressing and undressing them to show off their various costumes, etc The little hostess also shows oft the house with its minute cardboard fur nitureevery stick of which can be had at the ten-cent store and when the hour comes for eating there Is al ways Bome nice little bite or other suited to small stomachs. In actual fact none of these amuse ments is new they are, indeed, as old as the hills. But they have been re vived with new interest because they help in child development through the simple human Joy they hold. Children are imitative, primitive, in a way dead ly serious, with their games; these lit tle mummeries give them the taste of life they vearn for. With the clothes and imaginary sicknesses of paper dolls, the house with its tiny furnish ings, the make-believe store or express office their small hearts take on their rightful importance. They are playing true things, things that make them think. The larger of the portable play houses seen in the toy departments those big enough to hold half a doz en children are meant for the lawns of country homes. The ravishing play things are weather tight, with real windows, a porch and sometimes two nr more rooms. The furniture is made Just to fit and when the birthday comes In Summer mere is a b' especially for the showing off of the darling little house. Its little master or mistress Is a householder, a land holder, and the lesson teaches the good care of property. Good manners are Incidental, yet Inevitable. PRUDENCE STANDISH. Scaling the Peak Harper's Bazar. Knicker Is that Boston girl frigid? Bocker I should say so. When fel lows call on her they tie themselves to. gether with ropes