WOMEN’S DEPARTMENTAL Page.V FASHIONS By Julia Sanford A New Year, new clothes and a grand feeling that you’re dressed just right. No doubt f'ou'll be work ing hard for the next five or six months and you’ll need the easiest possible to keep smart. Skirts *nd blouses hit the easiest way that I know of for keeping that wit!) dre^soi look Get a plain skirt that tain b: worn with any color or combination and your worries w® be over. Also a black or navy blue woolen, or rough silk crepe dress (a very plain one) will be aw asset to anyone’s wardrobe. There are so many dainty collars »nd cuffs, flowers and ornamental jewelry one may add to a dress of th'is type. Just change the collar and cuffs, ect., and you have an « merely new dress for any wecasion. These things are easily eared for and for the busy woman •be dark dress or skirt will really wear like anything, and the acces sories aro easily laundered. ---o.Oo FASHIONETTE Hazel L. Griggs for AN I* SMART CLOTHES IN SMART PLACES Hello Headers: Your fashion scribe is writing, thi week, from Detroit, Miclvgan whero the inertings of the Kappa Alpha Psi Conclave nan the Al pha Kappa Alpha Boule a*e being held. Needless to say, it’s always; fi*ir weather when those fraters' mi*' eorors get together, and al though the temperature is hover . iiig around the zero mark, the at- j *n« phero is warm with friendliness and hospitality. With this fine spirit and a carnival air of gaiety mid- merriment which could hardly fee surpassed, Detroit is showing her visitors what a grand loan she <*ar> be, i / , I‘ve digressed a hit from fash ions but, of course, the cocktail parties, dances and other affair.' have brought out some of the smartest dresses of the season. STOVE FURNACE .* BOILER REPAIRS Omaha Stove Repair Works f?m Douglas St. Phone AT.2524 - A: --• Loans WE BUY OLD GOLD WATCH A JEWELRY REPAIK • ING WE LOAN MONEY ON : EVERYTHING '*-rrr GROSS JEWELRY & LOAN GO. -CLOTHING Comer 24th & KKSKINE -2414 NORTH 24th ST. OMAHA, NEBR. IT rv ■ i y•». Herman's Marke First KERMAN FRIEDLANDER PROPRIETOR 24th Lake St. WE.5444 Having just returned from a join party given lor the two organic ‘ions, the gay and colorful frock' «ra still fresh in their mind. T'l beautiful Arcadia ballroom server as a background for these drear.'3 and lovely laeY.s swaying in the nrms of those handsome Kappa to the strains of Prater Flostei Currant’s orchestra until the wee ; hours. t Now for what they w'ore—Soici Beulah Whitby, chairman of the Boule, was beautiful in royal blue net topneel by a brill ant s’quin jacket. Pretty Suror Evelyn Sop nmn, chairman of viie escort com mittee and v-»v it.-y lady th". dnys, wore black chiffon, glittering with brilliants and .scarf-like head dress. Black seems to be a favorite among the; girls while white p running n close second and coir s are also popular. Soior Alice Lew, basileus of Beta chapter, Chicag wore black a moire taffeta, strap less gown, adorned by a single -e i rose at the wasp-like bodice with another in her hair. Girls are here fro a all point* of the compass, and at are beauti ful representative* from their res pective sections. So* or Bobbie Scott of Washington, 1*. fwore a shaded pink net. dress, shades rang ing from pale pink to a blush lose, Soror Ursula Adams of Los Ange les, was lovely in fuel’s a chiffon over metal cloth and t>«»r*r Mattve Bedford of Houston, I rxas look 'd very charming in .1 chartreuse end pansy purple net creation. At the ‘ Hostesses'’ cocktail party which preceded the dance, I saw Mrs. Robert Miller, wife of Chicago’s Mayor Bronzeville, look ing very lovely in a black and sil ver lanie cocktail dress with t:p tilted hat to match. Vivacious Wil helmina Alexander of the same city war. extremely attractive in a 'bir red rose crepe model. The Marian Anderson concert brought out the best of everythirg; hoop-skirts, net creatiosn, taffe tas, sequ'n packets, tiny evening hats and gorgeous fur wraps were everywhere in evidence. Soror An derson, in her usual beautiful and charming manner, thrilled a brilli ant audience with her magnificent voice. She, herself, was stately and boautiful in a black slipper satin dress with leg^o-mutton sleeves and a short train. A lei of pink camelias adorned the neckline. -0O0-— BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF HARRY L. HOPKINS Harry L. Hopkins was born in Siouv City, Iowa, August 17, 1890. Ho was the fourth of a family of five children. His father David A. Hopkins, had come West as a young man from Maine, his native State. In South Dakota, David Hop kins married Ann Pickett, daugh ter of a homesteading Methodist family and a school teacher in Vermillion. They moved to Nebras ka in 1892, where the father op erated several small ’ a mess fac tories; moving subsequently to Chicago, III., and then, in 1900, to Grinnell, Iowa, where Harry Hop kins attended the public schools, and Grinnell College Upon graduating from Grinnel in 1912, he found his first job as counselor at a New Jersey summer camp for poor children, operated by the Christadora House social settlement of New York. Next he went to tho Association for Im proving the Condition of the Poor, the largest of non-sectarian pri vate charity organization, whero hi', studies of housing and living eruditions in New York slums at tracted wide attention. In 1915 his experience in admin istering large scale rcLief opera tions beg.an when, at the age of 25, he was named executive sec retary of New York City’s new (Board of Social Welfare under Mayor John Parroy Mitch el. His duties included administration of the board’s annual budget of $10, 000,000. There were 19,500 families on its rolls. W’hen the United States entered the World War he was rejected for army service because of defective eyesight, but was made head of the Gulf Division of the American Rest Cross, with headquarters in New Orleans. His efficiency won him promotion to head of the entire Southern Division. In 1922 he returned to-New York City to become assistant director for the Association for Improving tho Conditions of the Poor. In 1924 he became Director of the New York Tuberculosis Association, la THE BEAUTY BOX I By VEITS IE WINSTON of Northside Beauty Box Kg “POWDER” Natural looking make-up of i course, is the ideal make-up, so in determining the shade of jwwder, let the tone of your skin be your guide. Do not choose a powder that does not harmonize with your own coloring, one that is either too dark or too light, the effect will bo dco'dely splotchy. When in doubt as to which shade of powder to use, make several tests upon your skin. I be right method of face pow der application is important if the I effect is to be found flattering. As a rule, in daylight the darker shades will be found more effective while lighter tints are more lum inous and are flattering under the glow of electric lights which always gives color a different tone. Guard against the common bad practice of placing a great daub of powder upon th> end of the nose and t en blending the surplus pow der over the rest of the face. This method invariable leaves much powder on tho nose, emphasizing and making it appear larger than it actually is. The application of powder should begin at the base of the neck. Work upward in the di rection of the forehead. The pow der should be patted on lightly and allowed to settle for a moment or so, rather than rubbed into th" skin with the puff as is so often done by women and girls, who do not know how to apply make-up properly. This ‘scrubbing’ method only results in a caked, streaky ap pearance and is very likely to cause enlarged pore.s After tho powder has been thor oughly distributed remove the sur plus powder flakes from the skins surface. Use a downward stroke to finish the powder application be-, cause the soft down which is found an everyone’s face grows in that direction. To brush against the growth, espeaally when the face I is powdered, only makes this down moro noticeable. Remove the excess flakes of pow der which have a tendency to cling to eyebrows, lashes and lids. This is easily done with a bit of eye cream or cold cream or vaseline placed upon one finger. The cream , imports glossiness to the brows and lashes and gives the eyeldds a moist youthful appearance. Every woman should exercise this ‘trick”' every tim eshe powders her face, to gain greater beauty of the eyes. (Read next week, APPLICATION .OP ROUGE). ter the New York Tubeirulosis and Health Association, and built it in- [ to what has been called “one of the most potent forces in the coun try for research in preventive me dicine and the encouragement of local action” (Fortune Magazine). It was at this time Hopkin’s work first attracted the atten tion of Franklin D. Roosevelt, then Governor of New York. When the panic of 1929 started a spiral of depression, new state efforts to provide relief became necessary and in 1931 Hopkins became the working director of New York State’s Temporary Emergency Re lief Administration, under fomer Ambassador Jesse Isidor Straus. Governor Roosevelt appointed Hop kins to .succeed chairman Starus in 1932. Through the TERA in New York, Hopkins administered a $140,#00, 000 program over a period of two years. The methods then worked out; for both direct relief and work relief became the model for the national relife administration set up by the Roosevelt Administra tion In 1933 President Roosevelt ap pointed Hopkins Administrator of the Federal Emergency Relief Ad ministration. Unemployment had then reached a height estimated at j from 13 to 18 million people. Hop kins built up the FFHA organiza tion with great rapidity providing relief in cooperation with the states to more than four million families. In the fall of 1933, Hopkins ad ministered the Civil Works Pro purahasing power. Rapidity of em ! ployment was desired, and a mil* 1 gram, which was set up te increase F _ _' __ Builds Her Houses With Crocheting Needles Mrs. Beasley and Dave Elman MRS. ALICE BEASLEY of Brook lyn might well be known as the world's most unusual architect ac cording to Dave Elman, dean of America’s hobbyists. For Mrs. Beasley, who is assis tant forelady at a metal specialty manufacturing company inNewYork City, doesn’t build her houses of steel or brick or wood. She cro chets them. Explaining tho rearon back of her unusual craft on a recent "Hobby Lobby” Wednesday night, NBC broadcast, she spoke of her dream of owning her own home. She was always interested in magazine pic tuies of homes and ( dates One v, as especially appealing — Mrs. Beasley called It her dream house. She knew that she couldn’t afford to actually build It, so she did the next best thing—got out her cro cheting needle and started work. Mrs. Beasley's miniature dream houses—she’s now at work on her sixth—have two stories. They are lighted with tiny electric lights, but, outside of these, everything is cro cheted. even down to the water in the tiny tub in {he bathroom The lawns around them are made of green wool. It is the ‘architect’s” fondest hope that she can save enough money from the sale of her cro cheted houses to build an actual dream home of her own. Hen and a half, people were set to work on public projects within three weeks, the goal of four mil lion being reached early in Janu ary. In all States, 180,000 projects were operated. T.’ie creation of so vast a structure in so short a timo was unprecendented. Tho PWA program was complete in the spring of 1934, and the FEA work divis'on took over work relief on public projects, providing ft maximum employment of over 2,500,000 people who were taken almost entirely from the relief rolls and were paid a security wage. Tho great drought of 1934, creat ing a desperate emergency throughout a large part of tho Mfd ulo West, was met by a farm re habilitation program administered 'by Hopkins. Several hundred thou sand farm families were furnished loan8 for subsistence and rehabili tation. This farm program was transferred to the Resettlement Administration and is now carried on by the Department of Agri culture. Again, in the 1936 drought Hopkins established temporary work projects for a quarter of a million distressed farmers. When direct relief was returned to »the States in 1935, the Works Progress Administration was set up to carry on work relief pro jects, under the administration of Hopkins. WPA employment has been given to a maximum of over three and a quarter million peo ple. This employment is greater than that in the coal, steel and textile industries combined. Hopkins has been called the larg est single “employer” in the his tory of the world Under his ad ministration the WPA has built schools, hospitals, and public build ings of all kinds, constructel roads bridges, and airports, laid sewers, and water mains, constructed parks playgrounds, stadiums and tennis courts, built dams and carried on conservation work of all kinds in cooperation with State, local and Federal agencies. It has also car ried on work in public health, edu cation, i-e«reation. In the field of the four arts it has conducted or chestras, written guide books, pro duced plays and decorated public buildings with art works. Women in sewing rooms have made gar ments for the needy in public in stitutions and for sufferers from floods and others emergencies. -0O0 -• 3 NEW BOOKS OUT ONNEC.RO children New York, Dec. 2.'1 (C)—Three new books have been released oy leading publishers and are widely advertised for young people. The first is “Shuttered Windows," by Florence Crannel Means a 206 page story of a 16 year old colored girl who was bom in the North bul Calvin’s Newspaper Service TESTED RECIPE —By Francet Lee Barton —— THE next time you are baking pies, remember what a treat It La to find a surprise dessert of ytvHii y iuwivdu Into the school lunch box — or how nice it Is for the family to find soma 1, thing unusual In the cake box when they raid - the pantry In 1 uie evening. >1 uni remember to make double the quan tity of pie crust — and you are all ready to go ahead and make — Apricot Strips ' 1 recipe pie cruet; 1 pound dried apricots, stewed and cooled; M cup sugar; 2 tablespoons hotter; 2 cups shredded coconut; % cup sugar; dash of salt; 1 egg, beaten thoroughly; *4 cup milk. Line a large sballow pan or bak ing sheet, 13 x 9 inches, with pastry rolled % Inch thick. Arrange apricots In rows on dough, sprinkle with % cup sugar, and dot with butter. Bake In hot oven (425* F.) 20 minutes. Cover with cocanut topping made by combining coco nut, % cup sugar, salt, egg. and milk. Reduce heat to moderate (375* F.) and bake 15 minutes longer, or until delicately browned. Cool and cut into 2 x 4 V4 inch strips, {lakes 1 dozen strips. went South to live, published by Houghton Mifflin company of Bos ton. The heroine, Harriet Freeman, whose life in Minneapolis had spar ed her many prejudices a»ul dis criminations, undergoes a series of painful shocks and disillusionments when she begins life anew with her grandmother on a sea island oft' the coast of South Carolina. The book is designed to bring a sympathetic view to white girls of an educated colored girl’s pro blem of racial adjustment. Life at Mt. Vernon in the days of George Washington is vividly portrayed in “A Shipment for Su sannah,” who was Nellie Custic’s maid. Susannah was present when General Lafayette visited General Washington, and saw the great Frenchman help plaster the man son ballroom walls. The book, by Eleanor Weakley Noeln, is publish ed by Lothrop, Lee & Sheppard company of Boston. “Junior, a Colored Boy of Char leston,” by Eleanor Frances I.atti I more, published by Harcourt, Brace and company of New York, is the story of a lad that is “simple, appealing, and full of the atmos phere and charm of old Charles ton.” ——-—0O0 NEBRASKA PRODUCE 1202—4—6 North 24th St. Phone WE 4137 i i Poultry and Egg Dealers Out prices are reasonable, see us first. Free Trading Stamps with each Purchase. NOTE:—Your question will be analyzed free jn this column omfy when you include a clippingjpf this column and sign your full name. birth date and correct address to your letter. For a "Private Reply"?.. send only 25c and a stamped envelope for my latest ASTROLOGY READING covering your birthdate; also a free letter vf advice analyzing three Questions Explain your problems clearly and con fine your questions to those within the scope of logical reasoning. — Send Youh Letts* To — ABBE’ WALLACE, P/O. BOX 11, ATLANTA, QJL MY NEW 1939 ASTROLOGY READINGS ARE READY A. J. D—I am taking up the study of aviation, and have asked some very important people for ! aid. Will they help me? Ans: I think that your choice of professions was a good one, although not the most practi cal. However, you are a bit j too optomistk when you think someone else will finance your venture. Get yourself a job, in order to earn a living. Study your chosen work in your spare time. C B. S.—Will I be able to find work sometime before the fifteenth of January as I have in mind? I am about the most anxious per son in this world to go to work. Ans: You bet your boots that you will find work Write a per sonal letter to each Beauty Parlor in your city and state your qualifications and let it be known that you are anxious for a start. I assure you that you will get a call to work from one place if not more than one. j M. F. B.—Will I succeed in gett i ing my home soen and will I ever , bo happy with my husband? * Ans: You will get your homo before the Summer months. Yes, when you are situated in same, you and your husband aro going to find life together more pleasaRt. Try to be as patient as possible with him for he is a nervous type and doesn’t realize he makes you unhappy. C. P.—I am planning on going into the Pie Business the first of tho year, and I would like to know if I can make a success of a busi ness of this kind? Ans: Yes, I feel that you could. You aren’t going to make a fortnne overnight, but if you economise and make your pies outstanding and tempting to one's appetite it seems to me that you should build a business of this kind up so that It would net you a living. It will take hard work j the first few months to build j up a trade . . ■ - R. c. P.—Tell me truthfully, Mr.) Abbe’ iif you think that college is the place for me? Ans: Absolutely it is, but you aren’t even being fair to yourself to take the matter so carelessly. Turn over a new ■ I CALVIN DISTRIBUTES 3,200 PICTURES IN 1939 New York, Dec 29 (C)—Calvin’s ! Newspaper Seiwice, 143 West 125th 1 St., distributed 5,200 pictures (mats) to the Nagro press in 1938. An average of 100 pictures a week. -oOo Patronize Our Advertisers leaf after the Holidays and j finish your course, it can be dono by June if you will try. * | M. C. C—Tell me why, my | daughter lives with this man and ho is not good to her and is terri bly cruel to her two boys? I just can t hardly stand to see her child ren treated like dogs and I have tried every way in the world tp make her see her mistake. Will things change ? Ans: Your daughter is so wrapped up in the man she is with and being of a rather self ish nature herself, just does not care anything about anyone but herself and her friend. If possible, take these boys to live with yeu. for they would be better off not to be in sur roundings such as they are forced to live in at this time. Your daughter will not change. & T.—Are the people my hus band has been working for so long planning to get rid of him? Ans: No, I don’t believe they are. He ns going to continue to work, although it is quite likely that a few changes will go into effect o nthis job. Try to keep him from worrying a bout this job. 1939 Astrology Readings NOW READY! w > T ASMS' WALLACE lull of! th* pros* .. my IMI Aotrol M Balding* covering yon* own birth - lUn. Mm lie. Frrt lotto* ol adrim laotadod with ooch ordo*. ^Scratching //RELIEVE ITCHING SKIN QukkJy Even the most stubborn itching of eczema, blotches, pimples, athlete’s foot, rashes amt other externally caused skin eruptions, quickly yields to pure, cooling, antiseptic, liquid D.D.D. PRESCRIPTION. Clear, grease less and stainless—dries fast. Its gentle oils soothe the Irritation. Stops the most intense itching In a hurry. A 3.r>e trial bot tle. at all drug stores, proves it—or your money bask. Ask for D.D.D. Prescription. A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or bronchial Irri tation, you may get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel germ laden phlegm. Even If other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, try Creomul sion. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene fits obtained. Creomulsion is one word, ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion. and you'll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.) PRIVATE READINGS DAILY -BY REV. ALFRED J. THOMAS SPIRITUAL ADVISOR & DIVINE HEALER I I and Pastor of 1st Church of Deliverance 2426 I.ake St. I __. For Appointment— cAL AT-Q628