Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\ MO Se $$ ____—____—_,, j For when the heart goes before | S 4 like a lamp and illumines the path- '@) cl y, many things de clear else lie hidd rkness.— low. Club - Enterprising Women Rapidly Prove Their Value in Field of Banking and Finance War Work Opened Up Opportunities Thereto- fore Closed to Women—New York Bank Pro- vides Quarters for Meeting of Women’s Clu Banking is comparativel. women are concerned, but a few unusual] successes have a‘ tracted nation-wide attention in the financial world, thus g ing promise of future accomplishment in the realm of bank- ing efficienc During the world war, women came to the front in the zy and Immediately Aids Its Volume of Business} an unplumbed depth so far as t- Ten Inches From Floor Is Proper Length — of Skirt Dinner Gowns Lower, but Concession Made to Danc- ing Frocks b ‘There are skirts and skirts and each skirt has its own length, now so con- clude the designers. Although it has been the desire of the Parisian mo- dists to muke the néwest skirts lang noes | ‘ 3 many think to prove if possible Shoe Styles Change heir leadership in the world of fast:- In China, Women Are the Americen buyers and pur- , asers as a rule have refused to Now Fleet of Foot cw the lea ae tut even thovgh the discussio: of Feet fit fur fonts, both as to I}etcrt length threatens to be a never shape and shoes, are no longer con- [| cr one, there are a number of fined to men, nor > the women || ruice which have been Jaid down by of the western world, says a bulle || rcpular designers and which the home placed i r C from the National board of the ressmaker and the shopper miy fol- party of the 1 2 ‘ ang Women’s Istian assoc v without question. wage and ust ¢ an T i] ation. in the recent Olympl The .skirt of the really smart suit sponsibility was negative: for the wom- || or the far east, held in Shanghai, |{skirt measures 10 inches from the en's department up to this time had/! 1 299 giris and young women took || ground, despite the fact that most been merely fi r her part, 106) theses 908 shure! frend women have agreed that the shorter stallation, Mrs. L: eer spent nearly |) nan and the Philip: ds and |] skirt is prettier, more convenient, and six months in acquainting herself with |! The ‘rest. from. Chi 00 being ||snappier than the long length on a routine and tec alities. Becoming |] shanghai girls. The Shanghai dele sult, the approximate length has been thoroughly grounded she was ready | noire eblectedl acid Srnlics +] cet from nine fo eleyen inches, to introduce seve ue feat e events by the ¥. W. C a filmy dinner gown six inches which ‘have. proved eae Shanghai is considered “the thing” and six mable value to the cation 1G Se “It is within the last six years || nches to the ankle, even when department will com: workable |! that this activity in the land of lit: |] meh French heels are’ worn, even household budgets to f e individual | botnd, tases haat? Bavaseres ight inobes below the ahoe top. need; balance check or account book || ‘* Miss Florehee Brown, Ro- || _Asvm.congession, hawsver. ehesbkiet mon or your bonds and clip]| 7 EYe GB tarat pcaaen the dancing. frock. is-put at?43 beng for sual Da if ai for the Y. W.C. A. “In || inches One may think that that is as business senso has won for her the|| Were held, the only girls who took ||*hose in charge of alterations say they recognition prominent bankers || Dert-were a few Filipino giris, who |{ Were tmuch’ more” familiar with» the throughout the country and has done || formed 4 ball. team.” oni cage ear tt he tap hones tara dr much to biast the theory that a wom an cannot handle her own pocketbook. Mrs. Key Cammack obtained her po- sition under much the same circum- atances as Mrs. Laimbeer, but her me- thod of handling her department dif. fers essentially. It was her good {or- writes: “We town were just driving Into tl Hrubieszow in Friends relief mission in Poland who the war-ray rather deceiving thing.» But the skirts were coaxed down to their present length, which is quite significant when one thinks that de- signers can ‘no longer decree a style nejand have it accepted at once. The panel was dropped below the hem-line - = "; | aged district of Poland when a peas- thert skirt had a filmy overs fesidence; and taking advantage of|@ came up to the wagon and pre-| points end trains, uneven hem-lines that fact sho suggested the batiroom |Sented a letter which she could not}and long sashes accustome’ the cye be fitted up for a committee room for|Fead. It proved to be from the war|to the longer skirt length a good rea- the accommodation of the women's |Fisk bureau at Washington stating son ahead of the cautious chanie made clubs throughout the city which had|tbat her son bad died in the American] by the designers. Whetho: tho long ff 0 proper fac s of their own, The|®t™my and that his insurance would] skirt is destined to a lom< iifo effect was immediately noticed in the |COme to her for 20 years, at the rate]merry one is still a mooted question “ sncreased volume of business in the|0f $25 a month. Already there was] «mong the best nformed n tite realni ‘ bnkers and when it became necessary women's departme ther equally feminine suggestion which were acted upon have built up the business to an amazing extent and have proved that the wholly human element should be as much considera as prompt pay- ment of interest. Another interesting financial career is that of Mrs. Jacob Riis, wife of the late Jacob Riis. Left with some money but not enough to meet ail her needs, she decided to enter the world of fi- nance. Some years before she had or- ganized a co-operative society of farm- ers in her neighborhood in order to deal with the banks collectively and thus receive better terms on loans. The move attracted the attention of sent shortly by check. sho heard of the money. The son and granted. his. death had with no wood for building a house ani a diet of rye and potatoes. “The $900 in American over 1,500,000 Polish marks and woul: make her the richest woman in th village and probably in the country. to earn her living she was given the position of Investment Officer with the Benbright Brothers, brokers. She is the confidante of hundreds of shrewd business men and women, who seek her advice on matters of invest- ment. Mrs. Riis’ favorite pastime is farm loans and credits, the idea with which she started so lang ago and as a mat- ter of fact she is one of the best in- course, gettingsthe money from Warsaw. and Poland.” formed individuals in the country on that particular question. “ More and more banks are coming|} Here’s a Restaurant to accept we nas part o fthe’equip. ment necessary for efficient service|{ Where You Pay When to their patrons; and an intelligent woman with a work: one or two fore ally n ble knowledge of nguages has her ade the You Have the Price begin-]| NEW YORK nking career. habitues, of New rk benches ive banks in Wyoming |are gurgling the praises of their new- zed the value of women in|est and most beloved benefactor, d have on their $900 waiting for her, which would be money makes, at the present rate of exchange “I consulted the postmaster for her and he said that when she made her mark upon the check the local bank would pay her the money. Only, for no local bank would be able to cash so large a check without first Chronic | 47, of dress. Those who predicted the common sense Short skirt woyld stay “The woman's face was shadowed as | have lost. heard of her son's death but it brightened with amazement when she had not been heard from for three years been taken for She had other children and they had all been living in a Suaeds His Monopoly no implements to farm wiih and only Man Has Lost | On Preaching “|President of the International Association of Women Preach- ers Declares That Male Auto- cracy Making Last Stand CHICAGO, Sept. 23.-— Male auto- cracy that once ruled in every part of “This is a fair example of the differ-|Ife is Taking its last stand in the ence In exchange between American|ministry, Miss M. Madeline Southard president of the International Asso- ciation of Preachers, told the members of the association in their recent con- vention here. Miss Southard led the struggle in the Methodist Episcopal general con- ference last year that obtained license for women to preach. Her home is in Winfield, Kan. Women preachers of a number of churches, for the associa- tion is non-dominational heard her ad- “Our good friends in this land who oppose woman's admission to the min- *listry seem to be serenely unconscious rinse wt West Thirty-Fourth street restaura-lthat they yare the spiritual descend. teub ancientare amar’ k ants of those who once held women as Coincident with the recent opening | chattels, who later shut the schools Ba of the doors of the new bean empor-lin their faces, denied them the ballot, {um there was an elahbors Peasant Woman Is Made Rich Through Our War Insurance} teen cents.” | l the coffee you can drink for >, anther Rueaie od j nickle.” Polish Mother Receives $900| "41%. nen to be broke in American Money, Huge | ry, come on in anywa: Sum Due Exchange Rate | “People ask how we do it. |swer is: We ao. folling, magnetic phrases: teen cents.” “all the spaghetti you want for fif- The proprietor declares the restaur- PHILADELPHIA Sept. 23.—An old} ant a great success. pecsant woman was 1 the rich- There are few, said he, “who est women © by a letter! cents.. Those from the wa ance bureau| havent are such good waiking adve ef the American ¢ cident is told ernment. aber The | havent fifteen t t the | ¢ a me FRENCH PLAN WOULD FURNISH HOME FREE TO BIG FAMILTES H } edying both depopulation anad the hous: reported in the London Sunday Times. The story houses in the outer suburbs of Paris, where land and to them for nine years to young ma ried couples classes, under certain stipulations. At birth of the fi will be reduced by a quarter. i h of a second rd by three-quarte al of a fourth w and its accompan: 1 bring all payment of rent, ing garden becoming the property of the paren A that the cost of such a house, which -vould be con- e, containing a diningroom, two bedrooms and the French kitchen, would be only "6,000 francs (nominally baby would, therefore represent, taken proportionately, 1,500 trancs, or onomists have already calculated that the lea valuable French citizen represents a value to the state of $5,000. “business of the scheme is, therefore, obvious. It is. f announced the promoters of the plan that there are many phi thropists who are perfectly rendy to fur! financial support it # can be put into operation. On the other hand, it is not expected there wil in the lack of candidates for houses. As is cachman is to have le cot scheme gives oneymoon instead of at h Ee Lous E opportuni den wedd e display of the sign painter's art, bearing the “All the beans you can eat for fif- f you're hun- The an. who ements that it is a oy to see jem and refused them equal wages for equal work despite the fact that thou- sands of them were the family bread winners,” Miss Southard said. Men Did the Interpreting. “The time was when an appeal to scripture settled the whole thing, men of course doing the intdrpreting,” she id. “We have gone far from that now, for every woman's voice heard in Christian Endeavor, Epworth League or Sunday school is a direct violation of the ‘keeping silence in the church,’ while if women did no teaching both public schools and Sunday schools would suffer considerable loss. “Another once overwhelming argu- ment was that woman was not men- tally capable of presenting the weigh- ty themes that must be dealt with in the pulpit. But since we have had a single generation of educated women we hear little more of that. t has not been proved that preach- ing is in any way inimical to mother- hood. I know a number of preaching mothers and I will put their children up against any. of the same number that any group of families desire to bring forward. Femine Though Needed. “Woman will bring no new Gospel, just the woman's vision of the old yet ever new gospel. And there will be no rivalry between her and her brother, E as in other fields so in this, cach ‘ . Tr. will reinforce and strengthen the oth. er. For the men’s mind and the wom. an’s mind are ever complementary and only the blended -idom of the two can give whei-aess and sympathy whether in home or state or church,” poe name all bohcaaaa “Judgment,” “recommend” and “al. are the most difficult words in @ for the average persen to ‘ording to educators at the ty of Pennsylvania. — hav been determine? by of 1,400,000 spellings 2 jlese’ ‘womens Activi Where do you think they are wearing Spanish combs this season? tn their hair? Yes, but not only there. In their hats, too! Paris has sent over a purple velvet toque which has a big tortoise shell 3panish comb thrust in it at just the same angle Signorita Sevilla wears Another has a big Spantch cafib made of velvet at the back from which falls a veil like a mantilla. Surely, it is to «tare! COWBOY’S SPECTACULAR GARB RESULT OF PRACTICAL NEEDS in her hair. There are v: who is the most numero thanks to the movie—th interest. nose and mouth thus forming a s! ‘ous brands of cowboys and a lesser variety of cowgirls. There are, among others, the puncher or real cowboy; the wild west show cowboy, who hasn't much]|a very reasonable price compared to time to shepherd the cows anymore, and the mail order cowboy, boldly forth, in his -_, habiliments when he isn't waiting store. The cowboy having became one of our best known American types— wherefor and why of his costume is a matter of |W than it has been for 10 yoars. It he red bandanna worn by most cowboys and cowgirls was first adopted] for the consumers to buy thelr fur as a protection against the clouds of dust which rose from the trafls over | garments. which the cattle wero driven on the plains in the early roundup, ‘This dust had a large percentage of alkali which parched the cowboy and caused his tongue to swell. paintully. loosely around the neck in order that ft might be e sly drawn up over the ” ve through which the dust could not pass. |SU™mer and early fall. Woman in Harvard Pulpit for First Time in 300 Years CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 23.— Dr. Rowena Morse Mann, minis- ter of the Third Unitarian church in Chicago, the first woman to re- ceive a degree from the University of Jena in Germany, has attained a new distinction. ‘When she appeared recently in the pulpit of Appleton chapel at Harvard university to preach to the students of the summer school she broke Harvard tradition. Never before in the nearly 300 years of the institutton’s history has a wom. an conducted chapel services. Lower Prices On Furs Than In War Times Some Garments Cheaper Than in Last 10 Years—Styles This Season Offer Attractive Coats and Large Capes Suzanne of As practically everyone knows, the price of raw furs was exteremely low last year. This js reflected in the price of the finished fur garment ané the lady who wants a fur coat, capé the movie cowboy.4°Fr scarf is now able to procure it at who rides] war prices. In fact, ri . on trade at the Boe are otis Mh great many‘fur garments is lower looks Iike an exceedingly good time A great many of the fur manufac rers are dffering special reducer rices for orders received duing the This is an Ups and throat of the | tu: The bandanna was worn |ip; The custom of wearing a bright new bandanna on fete or celebration days | Vantage to both the consumer an¢ compares with wearing a brightly-colored tie in modern dress. the manufacturer as the manufac The “chaps” worn by all cowboys are another evoution dating back to|turer an afford to make lower Prices the cattle days of the Texas plains when the prairies mesquite brush which has long sharp spines or thorn: were pusued, they would dodge in and out among the rider had his legs painfully scratched in rounding them up. the cattle country moved farther north into Kansas, Nebraska and the Da. kotas, the cowboys adopted the warm fur chaps as a protection against the |!" the season. cold. It does not follow that a cowboy to follow his trade must of necessity ar- ray himself as if he were en route to a fancy dress ball. cient members of the clan affect nothing more spectacul and the hickory shirts worn by Civil-war generals and Bill Hart. Pity Poor Woman of the Westem World; She Has too Much Liberty, - Declares Lady of Turkish Harem ANGORA, Sept. 23.—"The seclusion of the harem is best adapted to wom- an’s nature and it is best for the social order that she should be-there” declared Mufide -Ferid ~Hanem, the nationalist novelist and beautiful wife of Ahmed Ferid Bey, ex-minister of fi- nances, to a correspondent in an in- terview. “The harem grew out of the intelligent understanding of the mar- riage relation. It represents thé wis- dom of the east. “IT am a reformed woman's rights advocate,” she continued, “I used to yearn for the independence of the American and European woman, but now I believe that mistress of the harem is a superior product to the spendthrift Russian woman, the sen- timental Austrian, the nagging Eng- lish woman and the calculating, self- centered American woman. “To these women woman's rights means the right to spend money on foolish finery, to marry late, and be childless. They live for the store and the theater, They are responsible for ~ the sta’ Esie Hill e¢ which is in & good deal of factory in useless directions. work with their hands to moke their fashion, novels and candies. “Men have become their slaves, you call this western civiligation. Turkish women have had our heads turned by the offort to become like | , these civilized women and in doing so some of us have lost our sterling old- fashioned qualities and become a cost- ly vain, destructive creature like our sisters of the west. “We Nationalists are in favor of abolishing the theory of though in fact it has long since ceas-|©O" and Jap mink, squire}, ed as an institution. But we are sure | ™USKrat. fitch and man: woman's place is the home, and the|*Fe used to ndvantage in capes. best way to keep her there is the har- ~ em, which gives her much liberty but|Afetic seat mink beaver, muskrat,, not license We are good housewives, we wear more or less a uniform gown, i and veil, in the streets which pre.|'? 25 years. Such furs are really not vents us being victims and at home, if we do not wish to see| the finest that can be procured the our husbands we are not obliged to do} Owner sets real service for the cost Surely that is liberty enough.” Members of the National Woman's Party are indignant over the nesicct of the statue of suffrage pioneers presented to the nation last ter, Here is Mrs. C. L. Robey leading a scrubbing expedition to clean e basement of the capitol. were dotted with a]}to get the orders early and keep hit When the cattle| shop going full time and the consum: rush and many 2/ergets the advantage of these special Later, when | iow prices by placing his orders: carly Another thing, the consumer gets a better selection of skins and more careful workmanship than can be given rush orders the Jeans} heavy part of the season. Styles Especially Attractive. The styles for furs this season are especially attractive and varieties of furs shown are numerous. Coats and large capes are going to be worn extensively. The most’ popular fure shown in coats will be Hudson seal. muskat, Jap mink, and squirrel, with the cheaper coats made from Mar- labor expended mot. French or near seal and sea- They won't] lion. Most of the fur coats are be- ing mad m 36 ches in their minds are filled with pepirg wisi aketabes % Dolman type coats made of mole and} squirrel or Kolinsky are going to be Wel worn extensively. The capes made up in vatiour hapes and styles. Some of the de signes are very beautiful. Capes give A lot of protection and are preferre by a great many instead of a coat as they can be worn more months of the year than coats, Beaver, Hud- son. seal. marten, Kolinsky, Amerl- mole other furs Some very effi- lar than blue Polygamy, The most durable furs are made of marten and Hudson seal. Mink Are tic soal or beaver will often we 20 to fashion | considered a luxury. While they are considering the length of time they will Wear. Mary consummers_ are Yearning to buy the better grade of fur as they cost little more than the low grades and imitations. Near seal, Coney and sealion are among the very cheapest furs and will often hot give the wearer more than one season's service. . Misrepresentation Hurts. The fur trade has suffered by some unscrupulous merchant an sales people who misrepresent, and as most of the buying public are un- familiar with qualities they must de pend upon the dealer from whom they make their purchases. The only safe way to buy furs is direct from the manufacturer, who through long years of service has proven his reliability. He knows the differnt varieties of furs, the res pective wearing qualities of came and can intelligently’ recommend to the * Jcustomer the right kind of fur to buy. Furthermore, if he is a reliable ufacturer he will sell to the cus- tomer the real article and not the imitation. j \A great many merchénts who are not fur manufacturers but who hand- Je furs are not familiar with and do not specialize in furs. may he de and while they might sincerely ~ bolieve ther were recommending—a food gar ment, the fur might fe a rank tmita- tion and the mercHant not know It. SBS Ss ER Harmonizing Protest cieved in their own purchase: Mistress—Maggte, I think I'll take one .of the children to church this morning. Macgie—Yes, ma'am. Mistress—Which one do would do best with tis dr (Australia) Bulletin. fa Pe Bee The police of El Paso, Texas, have been in@tructed to shake hands with all idlers. Men with soft hands but no work are taken into custody and then compelied to leave town, ou think —Sidney With her is Miss Declares America ies Lowest Rung of Musical tae in Wa Zt Pop- Songs — Places the ‘Blame for Condition on Mothers of Country ~ HIS generation is being brought up on trashy music and degrad- ing words, according to Mrs. Har- riet A. Seymour, of New York, who says America is on the lowest rung of the ladder in popular songs. Mrs. Seymour lays the blame for this con- dition at the door of American moth- ers, who, she asserts, are not equip: ped to supply wholesome music in the home and thus prevent their children from picking up the un- wholesome in the streets, The originator of the “Seymour system" by which music is taught from the inside out, instead of from the outside in, is launching a move- ment to make American wives and mothers realize that music is as much @ part of their home-making equipment as cooking and sewing, working upon the principle First, listening, then thinking and then acting. “Look over the titles of the popu- lar music on any counter and com- pare them with folk music, which ‘a always about the simple joys of home and human relationships,” said Mrs. Seymour. “Because we always set a wrong thing where no right thing fs, every mother should be able to play simple songs for her children. “If a mether understands the value of music and has the right equipment she can be a tremendous factor for simple happiness and unity in the home. And she doesn’t have to be musically talented to do this. Any tirl, by learning music from the in- ride out, could read simple songs, folk music and ballads in a year or two. She could pick out a tune given by the children ano harmonize it and put any song line tuto another key. “Why do people desert the home always looking for some place to go. Because there ¢s nothing to keep them there. A tired husband comes home from business, having made up his mind to go to his club that night. He stretches out upon the couch to rest a few moments. Now, if his wife, instead of beating out a rhap- sody would begin to play a soft and soothing ballad or some gay folk dances, the chances are that he would, without rexfizing it, become interested, his nerves would become quieted and he would most likely de vide tovspend a restful evening at home, A mother who is equipped can meet ‘every inharmony with music. “ther by playing herself, or by mak- ing singing one of the natural activi- tes of the way not only add to her own chi dren's health and happiness, but will draw in the neighbors’ children and " state of harmony will be establish- od without effort. .In -what better way can we all brmg harmony into our lives than through music, the language that everyone loves? Mrs. Seymour was asked how those who have learned music in the old way may conform to her system. “They must go back and change their process by starting with listen: ing rather than playin; swered, ‘‘ although they do not lose a thing they have gained in the old way. Of course, when my term ‘re edycation’ is applied to those who save™had no causical education at all, it. simply means a higher approach to life and a different attitude about music, using music for developmnt instead of purely for performance. “As soon as music from within be- comes an established fact fn America we will have a better output of popu- lar songs, because the public will de- mand it.” —— FOR SALE: -Forty tons best alfalfa hay with pasture on Horse Shoe Creek, Glendo, Wyo. The pasture is in one body. under good fence and contains 3,200 acres; feed and shelter are the best; plenty of water jrice io suit you. Write R. Woody, Manville, Wyo. 9-24-4t Music As Much a Hone-Maker As Cooking — Teacher Starts Movement to Prove Point Ordinary Cat Has $750,000 Yard As Place. to Play In That's Why Owner Refuses to Sell Plot of Ground on Fifth Avenue NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—A woman who owns a yard facing 50 feet on Fifth avenue at 39th street, in the center of the city’s: most fashionable shopping district, refuses to sell it be- cause her cat “has to have a place to play in.” The property is worth about $750,000 according to real estate men. ‘The dollars paid on it each year in taxes would, if stacked dollar on dollar make a hurdle not to be sneered at by anything short of the cow who jumped over the moon. The cat is of these yere everyday walkin’ roun cats” It was never known to take a prize at cat show. Other wealthy people have given strange reasons for refusing to scl! business district property which was eagerly sought by many buyers. Some time ago a man who owned a building in Broadway just below Times Square wanted contract stipulations that none of the prospective buyers would lease it to certain businesses. His list began with aviary and went right on down the alphabet to zylophone deal- ers, skipping so few lines of business that none would take the place. Teach Facts Of Government Through Mail New York Women's League Con- ‘ducting Course Designed to derstanding of Citi i Privileges and Duties - ‘When is a woman an American cit- lzen, when not, and how can she be- come one? lzenship mean? What is the responsi- bility of the native-born woman to her foreign-born neighbors? ‘These are some of the questions that, will be answered for women voters who want to make the best of their new privi- lege of citizenship by the New York League of Women voiers ‘through a correspondence course in education for citizenship which is now being put out by that organization, Other important subjects to be tak- en up in the’ course of study are: The structure of town, incorporated village, city, county, state and nation- al government. The real meaning and function of political parties; how can- Aidates are nominated; elections; how to judge matters of taxation, public highways, school systems, public char- other similar subjects. The courso also deals with legisla- tion pertaining to the enforcement of the prohibition act in the state of New York. The course will also en- lighten women in industry on such subjects as the eighthour day and the minimum wage. White Teeth Attract Diningroom Patrons SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 23—White teeth of smiling waitresses add to the attractiveness of the service, cheer the diners and assure them that tho servers of food are cleanly and whole- some, in the view of a San Francisco hotel manager who recently advertised for diningroom girls with fine teeth. “We serve our steaks beneath sil- ver covers when porcelain would do as well,” he said. We do it to make our food attractive. We can't always get beautiful waitresses but we ty to start the day right for our patrons by having healthy young women with cheery smiles that display flashing white teeth wait upon them at break- fast time.” ECIPES for odd salad dressinge R are always sought after by salau ‘overs, and they are not always easy to find. If salad mater‘als are scarce, maybe confined to one or more varieties of lettuce, it is the dressing which must be depended upon to make the welcome changes. The excellence of even the simplest dressing depends upon the care taken in it? preparation, and there is no other single item which adds to a din- ner so subtle a touch as a perfectly made salad. « Cucumber Dressing. Pec! and quarter three medium- sized cucumbers remove the seeds und slice them. Cover with boiling water and Jet stand for five minutes, then drain and press the water out of them. Put two ounces of butter into a fry- ing pan. When melted, put in the cu- cumbers, and shake gently over the tire until they are a delicate brown. Add three-quarters of a cupful of rich stock, and thicken slightly by dredg- ing in a Uttle flour. stirring constant- | ly, Season with salt. pepper, a little sugar and celery salt. ‘This is ex- cellent with a potato or a cabbage salad. Bacon Dressing. Dice and fry a quarter of a pound of good bacon until it is a delicate brown. Add an onion chopped fine and a tablespoonful of flour Blend in | carefully with the back of the spoon. | Add two tablespoonfuls of vinegar. | salt, pepper and a cupful of water. | PERFECTLY MADE SALAD ADDS SUBTLE TOUCH T0 G00D DINNER Stir until the sauce boils gently and thickens, then set aside to cool slight ly, Used on a potato or a meat sals it is delicious. Pilgrim Dressing. To one teaspoonsuf of heavy crea add the juice of an onion, pepper, salt, a tablespoonful of sugar ani tablespoonful of tarragon vine: Mix well, and use over hearts of tuce, cucumber end onion, or « mizcd salad. California Dressing. Squeeze the juice of one larse orange and strain it. Put a teaspoon- ful of paprika and a saltspoontul of salt into a bowl, and add two ta spoonfuls of olive oil. Stir well, then add the orange juice little by i stirring contsantly. Chill and se: over a fruit salad. Peanut Butter Sauce. Add two tablespoonfuls each of wa ter and vinegar to a quarter of 2 pound of peanut butter. Stir until blended. Add pepper, salt and a tea- spoonful of English mustard. Beat well until creamy like mayonnaise. and it 1s then ready for use. TI dressing is excellent with any of the green salads. * Cheese Dressing. Mash two tablespoonfuls of Ro fort cheese with a fork. Then add ! tle by little a quarter of a cupful of Olive oll, tablespoonful of tarra: vinegar, salt and paprika to tast- Blend perfectly then pour over ic tuce hearts. “Just ony ities, child wage earners ard many Give Members Intelligent Un-,/ What does American cit- *