Evening Star Newspaper, June 7, 1922, Page 26

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'OU can make halt profit on each sale selling your friends Guaranteed latest model VACUUM CLEANERS No Contract Necessary Try one if you wish This 1s the best Electric Cleaneron ¢ wiven when we write). We e sell twenty different kinds the market (na know because and this is the best scller. Its a wonderful proposition even if you only buy a cleaner for your own use at wholesale. A $56.1° outfit costs you only $28.38 Easy payments if desired. Tear this out NOW lest you forget. Send Coupon To-Day Wholesale Dept.YACUUM CLEANER SPECIALTY CO. 111 West 42nd St. New York, N.Y. Kindly send further particulacs of your liberal offering of Vacuum Cleaners. NO COOKNG ™he “Food - Drink” for Au Ages Quick Lunch at Home. Office, ens Fountsms. &sk for HORIICK'S. rehveid Imirations & Substivay Soothing and Healing Atraveling requisite For all the ills that the skin is heir to; chafing rash.insect stings. cold sores. scraiches, etc. Apply lightly and the pain is instantly rclieved. “Be sure goeswith Always Refreshing Tastes Right—Is Right Enjoy Its ‘Wonderful McCORMICK @& CO. RINGWORM OVER FACE AND"HANDS ~ Also Feet. Bumed and Htched. Caticura Heas. “I had been bothered with ring- worm for more than two years. broke out underneath my chin and soon spread all over my face, hands and feet. The affected par badly inflamed, and my clothing sggravated the breaking out. I éo my usual work. 'lost my rest because of the s n, burning c-nd itching. I began uwsing Cuticura Soap and Qintment and was hesled, after wusing foupcakes of Scap and three Tomes of Otntment.™ ( Atherial Jobnson, on-Cuticura Sosp, Ointment and Tekcem to care for your skin. Sumpla Buch Frooby Mail. Adéress: “Cuticura Lad- g e Olatiment 5 and s, Talcom B2, Soap shaves without mug. Whence sprang the organdie ro- sette? No one knows. No one cares. Lanvin has the credit of starting it. It is a royal emblem used in a demo- cratic world under a republican form of government. However, clothes of today have no caste. They did when Elizabeth was Queen of England and “atherine de Medici Queen of France. Those stalwart rulers did not permit the middle classes to dress as they did. There was an edict in England against finery on men, so that they would not be confused with courtiers. Today it is often the case that the royalty left in the world dresses simply in order not to be confused with the small-salaried worker who wears the fine plumage and the glit- tering beads The rosette held its own, despite the change of governments, throughout the ages, and it is now merely a m- bol of fashion, not one of position. it is shown on this hat of black red organdie. This is the material of which the rosette Is made, its center a black straw button. Such rosettes are placed at the hips of oon frocks. They are made of d ribbon to ornament cloth frocks after ribi and e Th en the edges of onen jackets. are especially designed for vouth- ful frocks, the kind that can be made of organdie and figured challie. It is in the millinery field, how- ever, that organdie reaches i st popularity. It is used as ming more than for a whole hat. traight, plain linings on la are not as fashionable as rufl and it stands to reason that must have a youthful of such frivolit It is dificult for any woman beyond the imess of {the early twenties to ¢ a hat Lew Cody's Views. 1 went to meet Lew Cody with something of a thrill. T had read of him as “the male vampire” T hoped he might respect my years, but couldn’t be sure. Who could tell but 1 might be led from the corridors of the Hotel Biltmore shrieking, “A fool there wa But, as you see, I was not placed in a cell. I am at large. My first glimpse of Lew was some- how re uring. He was sturdy and bronzed and fit. He looked as if he might play tennis or golf. [ can't quite see a vamp, male or otherwise, making a brassy shot. “Hulloa!" he sald, real breezily. 1 caught no insinuation in his voice. “Hulloa!” 1 replied. “Have some tea—chicken—some- thing like that?” “Oh, yes.” I began to be at my ease. After all he might have sug- sted sinister lemonade or root beer, and then where would I have been? But he Is gallant. Very. I asked him if he had any preference in lead- ing ladies. “If 1 have charming women about me.” said Mr. Cody, “that s more than sufficient. “It must be hard,” I said, “for you to live up to your loverish reputa- tion."” It is.” said Mr. Cody, “especially as I am really the most bashful of men. Of course, 1 don’t expect any one to believe that, once having seen my pictures.” re you a cynic?” like the way it's spelled,” fenced Lew. “Romance?’ I said, “What of that?" Under the influence of the innocuous orange pekoe and homely sandwiches 1 was waxing bolder. ~Lew hadn't so much as flung a wicked eye! “Romance, he said, “is the one Rosette of Organdie Is Useful BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. HAT _OF LINED WITH RED OR- THE CROW AFTERNOON GANDIE RUFFLES. IS ORNAMED MENSE ROYAL ROSETTE. w, which is lined with ruffles of The milliners are rioting have no hesitancy this season. in color, and the: offering red gardless of her coloring. thing about the fashions is the prevalence of the wide-brimmed sunshade hat, presents less danger than the Slavic maintained It needs a small ide drapery of the beneath it. assists every age American width above e o permit at This is the making son (Copyright, 19 Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALI The most baxhful of men—by ad- mission—is Ll ave enough | takes time— I am still waiting that 1 may find it any day—just around some sud- den corner—the great romance—the high roman “Are women managed to get in. “Women are far to be problems York city one does not time for it. takes dPeaming. for it—and problems to you?" I happens to me! BY EDNA KENT FORBES. l BEAUTY CHATS | Imagining Yourself Well. We have had several chats together so far on the power of auto-sugges- tion, particularly on the methods of Coue, who has made such a sensa- tion in Europe. I told you of Coue last week simply because there has been so much talk of him recently and because he has been so extraor- dinarily successful in curing people who were hopeless invalids or hope- less cripples, or sadly afflicted in yme other fashion. Many of our own doctors have been doing for vears what Emile Coue advocates, and I believe that every man or woman can follow this method suc- cessfully without the aid of a doctor. The thing to know first is that the imagination is stronger than the will. You can belfeve this readily enough when you think of the number of people you yourself know who im- agine themselves afflicted with va- rious aflments, and who have those ailments eyen though we all know they do not wish to be sick. It is a case of imagination being stronger than will. Why not imagine yourself to be well? Coue s: you can do it, and proves it by the marvellous cures he makes every day. You must not will yourself to be you cannot imagine yourself to be well you must do is to let the thought sink deeper and deeper you are gradually better and not particularly matter whether you believe it or not. ing yourself a sufficient number of times every day that you are getting and better. thought will reach your subconscious mind and when that happens the cure immediately If vou keep tell- L. W. E—Bleach the fine hair with peroxide and extract the coarse ones with blunt-end they show above the skin. Hopeful.—The blackhead powder is made by mixing two ounces of corn starch, one ounce of powdered borax and one ounce of almond meal. Anxiety.—At sixteenteen years, five feet five inches, you should weigh 120 As your blonde hair is get- ting darker over the top of the head it shows that it is making a perma- nent change to usually happens with light hair at tweezers every that shade, PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. *Noted Physicien and Author. ‘When Castor 0il Kills. If my untrustworthy memory is to be relied upon momentarily it was Dr. Isaac A. Abt who first brought forcefully to our attention in this country the fact that castor oil when fed to a helpless infant as a laxative or physic causes at least miscroscopic bleeding into the intestine, for the un- warranted assault on the child is generally followed by the appearance of red blood corpuscles in the dejecta. And Dr. Abt is a baby specialist duly and regularly qualified, since he has issued a book for nurses and parants, with the title of “The Baby's Fool" (W. B. Saunders Company, Philadel- phia) giving detailed directions for preparing food for infants up to fif- teen months of age. No baby specialist cuts any figure nowadays until he has published a book for mothers on “How to Keep the Baby. I mention this matter not to preju- dice grandma against castor oiling the baby, but 'just to add another worry to the load mother already carries. My craven purpose Is to im- plant in the mind of the mother the disturbing suspicion that castor oil may not be the harmless thing it is popularly supposed to be. Indeed the grannies who so eagerly ply the puling infant with this venerable panacea know not what they do. Far from being the perfectly harmless remedy they confidently assume it to be, castor ofl must be credited with its own mortality rate. It kills some youngsters, beyond peradventure of doubt. Not because it causes microsco- pic hemmorrhage into the bowel, but for the reason I shall attempt to ex- plain. Now and then a “stoppage of the bowels” or an obstinate state of cos- tiveness in an infant happens to be due to some actual obstruction, let us say intussusception (slipping of one portion of Intestine into the portion next below), and in such circum- stances any physic can only aggra- trouble and In older children a costive state with some slight fever- ishness and upset the irrepressible granny promptl cribes to worms—may possibly indi- cate a serlous lesion such as appen- and to administer castor oil at such a time is indeed a risky busi- ness since the purgative is likely to cause the inflamation to spread and thus place the precious life in jeo- pardy. There castor ofl into a sick or ailing child, very real danger. 3 danger in waiting forty-eight hours for natural bowel action, or at least until medical advice can be hud. 1 hope readers credit me with a modi- cum of common sense about dnctoss specialists, remedies and treatmeuts. I appeal to the sanity of the intelli- gent parent who reads this column. judgment no child should ev. én a dose of castor oil cxcep! by direction of the physidian. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Sweating Feet. My grandson, aged ten, has develop- ed perspiring feet, with a disagree- able odor. What to do? (H. D. C.) Answer.—Wring the feet of all his stockings out of a solution of as much boric acid as a quart of water will dissolve when hot, and let them Powder the insides of his shoes each day with boric acid pow- Aveid hot bathing of the feet; tepid or cold water only, and the less of that the better. PR Baked Scalloped Tomatoes. Place one tables| raw onfon in a ba tablespoonful of butter, one teaspoon- ful of salt and a little cayenne pep- per; pour over one quart of tomatoes cutting into guar- ters: cover with a layer of course buttered bread crumbs and bake. danger to life. stamach—which in pouring joonful of chopped ing dish with one after peeling and ) Siaess EVENING -STAR, WASHINGTON,- ITTLE STORIES lfiBfl%fl&B, > Whitefoot the Wood Mouse Is Unhappy. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. l'nhlps::r_ln without a cause you never, never I m-;;“:;;"nn the stomach or it may be In the " —Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. Whitefoot the Wood Mouse should have been happy, but he wasn't. It seemed as if there was everything to make him happy. When he had been driven out of his old home by fear of Shadow the Weasel he had had a dreadful journey, but at the end of that journey he had found a new home even better than thls.ld home. It was high up in a tall hollow stump and had once been the home of Timmy the Flying Squirrel. Before that it had been the home of Drum- mer the Woodpecker. Whitefoot had been delijghted with that new home z(l:d for a while had been very happy Winter had gone and sweet Mis- tress Spring had brought joy to all the Green Forest. Every one was R RABBIT HAPPENED ALONG WHITEFOOT TRIE ¥ TELL HIM Tiean et Whitefoot no less so than his ors. Up from the Sunny South came th sathered fricnds and at once Dbegan plgnning new homes. Twitterings Joy w 3 plentitul, and W ind fat. That nd filled ghe air. Food became me sleek came as fat s a lively Wood ver does become. None of his enemies had dis- covered his new home and he had little to w ry about. _But by and by Whitefoot began to yous by day he grew more unbappy. He no longer took pleasure in his fine home. He began to wander about for, no particular on He wandered” much farther from home than he had ever been in hit of doing. At times he would nd listen, but what he was lis- ng for he didn't know. here is something the matte th me and 1 don't know what it i said Whitefoot to him forlorniy. It can’t be anything 1 have eaten. 1 have nothing to worry about. Yet there is something wrong with me. I losing my appetite. Nothing tastes good any more. I w but 1 d want He tried to tell his troubles to his neighbor, Timmy the Flying but Timmy was too busy to i . W Peter Rabbit happened along Whitefoot tried to tell him. But Peter himself was too happy and too « to le Green Fores rn all the new t to_listen. No the had any interest in Whitefoot's troubles. Every one was ott busy with his own affy So day by day Whitefoot the Wood Mouse grew more and more unhappy, and when the dusk of early evening came creeping through the Green Forest he sat about and moped in- stead of running about and playing. as he had been in the habit of doing. The beautiful song of Meclody the Wood Thrush somehow filled him with sadness instead of with the joy he had alw felt before. The very ihappiness of those about him seemed to make him more unhappy. Once he almost decided to go hunt for another home, but somehow he couldn't get interested even in this. He did start out, but he had not gone far befors he had forgotten all about what he had arted for. Always he had loved to run about and climb and jump for the pure pleasure of it, but now he no longer did these things. He wos unhappy. was Whitefoot, Yes, sir. he was unhappy. And for no cause at all so far as he could see. (Copyright, 1 by T. W. Burgess.) BHistory of Pour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWL, JONES. VARIATIONS—Johns, Johnson, John. ston, Joynes. RACIAL ORIGIN—British. SOURCE—A given name. Some wag has given Jonah, of bibical whale fame, credit for be- ing the first Jones. Such, however, ! is not the case. It is derived from John, which originally was a Hebrew namé. Jehohs of God." Jo tirely different name and is Hebrew word for “dove.’ It was natural, perhaps, that In the period when family names were be- ing formed so many persons should have adopted a given name that was S0 popular. Since there were more Johns in the world than Peters and Williams it was natural that there were more “John's sons.” So when come one called “Peter, John's son" had a son of his own, and the latter grew up and decided he would take his grandfather's distinctive name rather than his father's, he uncon- sciously started a new custom and became a Johnson. or a Jonson, or a Joneson (for they were not so par- ticular about spelling in medieval England). And in the course of time may of these “John" families short- ened their names by dropping off the final “on.” Others didn’t. The spelling Johnston, of course, is simply @ misspelling which, _perpetuated through several hundred years, has become legitimate. Indeed, such changes in the spell- ing of the “John" names are much to be desired if family names are to perform the real function for which they became and continue necessary that of differentiating_one indi- vidual from another. With more “John" names in the world than any other, there is really no way in which a man can better lose his identity than by calling himself John Jones, unless, of course, he is able to advertise it in some connection, making a virtue of necessity. ———— Fresh Peach Pudding. Fill a buttered baking dish full of peaches and pour over the top a bat- ter made of one tablespoonful of but- ter, one-half a cup of sugar, one cup h, or Jonas, is an en- the old of flour, one teaspoonful of baking powder, one well beaten egg, one- half a teaspoonful of salt and one cup of milk. Bake in a moderate oven for thirty minutes. Serve with cream. Rhubarb and Fig Preserve. Take three pounds of rhubarb, two and one-half pounds of sugar, one- half a pound of figs and two ounces of candied peel. Wipe the rhubarb, cut it into Inch lengths and place it on a larg dish. Chop fine the figs and candied peel and scatter them over the rhubarb. Lay on this the su- gar and let stand until the next day. Boil the preserve slowly for an hour, or longer if necessary, adding a small plece of ginger root for half an hour. Pour into jars and seal until wanted. ‘D:--C;; "WEDNESDAY, -JUNE -7, 1922. " The Wife Who. Wouldn't Settle Down! A Sequel to “Brides Will Be Brides” By Lucille Van Slyke. - Police to the Rescue. SPORTY-LOOKING roadster sped along the Jericho turn- pike with three apprehensive persons wedged into the seat, bending nervously forward. The spring night was heavy with threat- ened rain, but these silent persons paid no heed. John Lindsay's wife and their two small children had been missing for several hours, how long nobody could guess. The last person he had been able to get in touch with who had seen them re- ported that at 10 that porning she had warned Merriam away from a camp about a mile from the Lindsay's wee house, The disreputable gyps: Pumpkin Shell. Though the obliging Davises had been motoring John up and down the road for more than half an hour they could find nothing more than disturb- ing evidence that the wandering band had_hastily broken camp and moved on for parts unknown. Lindsay had rather lost his wits under the strain of the frantic hours he had already put in, but Davis, apprehensive as the situation made him, kept his head. {Mrs. Davis was nervously trying to {stifle her sobs. “Come now monished her sharply, “we don't ac tually know that Mrs. Lindsay has been anywhere near that camp. 1L think we'd best point for the nearest telephone. We'll try iindsay's house aguin—perhups she s already there. 1f she isn’t, 1 think it wouldn't do an, harm to communicate with the near- est police station, without mention- ing Mrs. Lindsay's name, to see if they know where these gyps have landed for the night.” But it was quite natural for Mrs. Davis to continue her weeping, while the two men left her in the car out- side the house, in which they pro- ceeded to act upon her husband's wise her tears away before they came ack, but her heart sank us they approached the car, for it was all to evident from their despondent at- titudes that their efforts had been search party brusquely they climbed on. “The captain thinks he ought to have some information for us within fifteen or | twenty minutes. He was ordered to mo: o'clock this afternoon ¥s the gang on about 2 We under- stand it took them about an hour to| get on their way. Lindsay hasn't had dinner,” he added bluntly. I telephoned 'the Warlands why we ably. “Didn’t stop to think that you Were on your way to a dinner party.” “Seems a million years ago and awfully unimportanf, “Mrs. sniffed. “Anyway, 1 couldn’t eat u morsel.” “1 could”” Her grim chuckle. “I'm hungry a deuce. So's Lindsay, I'll bet. W time to dash back to our house and dig out a bite, while we're waiting for the captain to round those beg- gars up. No use dashing about aim- | ! lessly.” 1t ‘was nearly 9 o'clock when they turned back toward the Davis home, stopping on the way to turn on the lights in the Pumpkin Shell, pwith | vague hopes that Merriam might | return. ing he will stop that awful pantin She moved toward the icebox. “Let’ not leave here,” she appealed to the !men. “I'll see if I can’t find some- thing in here for you two and that poor dog to eat.” She moved briskly j at her husband ad-| His ruddy old face was genuinely d tressed as he thrust his white head through the doorway. not wait for an answer when he spie the exhausted dog. “Hello, old to) he bent over the beastie, with the first_intelligent phrase the poor dog had kad flung at him. “Good doggie.” hack to organize a| Davis informed her | B hu staccato barking that signaled the approach of the motor police. stammered John miser- | re Davis | sband managed a ! he | As they turned into the drive a frantic dog sprang from the back steps. Ragsy, Merriam's Cairn ter- rier, flung himself tempestuously upon John. He was muddy and be- draggled, covered with burrs and a dirt-streaked yellow bow of ribbon straggled from his collar. He crouched and whined when John tried to order him to find the babies {and their mother. There was literally no word in the list that the dog un- Id-rulnlld that could fit so extraordi- nary trying his doggy bes| barks and aimless wrigglings, to tell them something. But he would not stir cutside tne gate. He merely dropped and cowered when they dragged him to the roadway. His | tongue drooped, dripping saliva. an occasion. Manifestly, he was with his hoarse Mrs. Davis thoughtfully brought a ?asln of water, into which he almost el Poor doggle,” she murmured. avbe when he gets through drink ut the kitchen, preparing sand- viches, while John sent one message after another over the phone wires. They had scarcely begun on their improvised meal before the driveway was fllled with motor cars. The | widely scattered neighborhood was ! responding promptly to the appeal for help. Thorne Blaisdell’s horn honked first “Any luck?’ he cried. But he did Ragdy thumped his bit of tail and suggestion. She managed to wipe; Whimpered “No use bothering with him,” John uttered to his friend and employer. We've tried evel we could to start him off. We don't even know which way he came. He’'s done up cared to death. No use at all.” More cars were arriving, but above of their engines sounded the Nan Blaisdell, listening to Mrs. Davis' almost hysterical recital of the few clues upon which they were working., put out a restraining hand to quiet John. “Just you remember this, Johns: she cautioned the overwrought young | man. “Merry is a flighty. harum- scarum child about diving into trou- ble. But she keeps her wits about her when she's hit by it!” The officer in the doorway called pectfull er of you Is Mr. Lindsay, the captain says to tell you that I we've located those tramps on a side road between Freeport and Hemp- stead, and that we've two men on the way there no Half a dozen neighbors leaped for- ward to offer John seats in their cars. “If you were to get into the &ide- car on my machine” the officer's ves twinkled a bit. “I think I can promise to get you there quicker than the law will et ypur friends fetch | you.” (Coprright, 1922.) (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) —_ EFFICIENT HOUSEKEEPING BY LAURA KIRKMAN. Bran and Oatmeal. A reader friend has written, to ask me to publish a list of laxative foods. Laxative foods include most truits and vegetables, and cereal foods and breads containing the whole of the cereal grain. Bran and oatmeal are especially good. Here are two laxative menus—the first one for dinner and the second for supper or lunch: Lamb Chops Mashed Potatoes Either bolled onlons or cabbage Bran Bread Fruit Dessert Coftee Bran bread: (Kindly contributed by {“H. L. C): “One cup of white flour; two cups of corn meal or of whole- wheat flour—or these two together, half in half, three cups of bran, two level teaspoons of shortening: two tea- spoons each of soda and baking powder if sour milk {s used; or, if sweet milk s used, add six tea- spoons of baking powder; also add lone tablespoon sugar and two tea- spoons of salt. Sift dry ingredients except the bran, then mix in the bran and add enough sweet or squr milk ito make a stiff dough (after the melted shortening is added). The dough should be stiff enough to clean the bowl. Pour it into a well greased baking pan 12 by 16 inches—if vou have one this size. If, howeter. you have only the ordinary loaf pan, di- an” meaning “grace | vide the dough into two of these. rat down the top of the dough so that It is smooth and pushed. well laway from the sides of the pan (do spoon of salt shortening. pan a few minutes, then turn it out and brush the underside with the same salted shortening. ground nuts are splendid in this bread. It is better made with sour milk than with sweet.” with six cups water to cover mixture is thic this with a cake-turner dipped In milk) and bake for one hour in a moderate oven. On removing from oven, brush the top with the follow- ing mixture: Rub one-fourth tea- into one tablespoon of Let the loaf stand in the Fruit Salad 5 Carrot Marmalade on Any Coarse Bread Tea Oatmeal Cookies Prune Whip Carrot Marmalade: Peel and grind enough carrots to make two quarts. Put this in an enamelware saucepan f sugar and enough ! let simmer till the . then add the juice and rind of three lemons. Let con- tinue to cook till the carrots are tender and the marmalade Jjuicy. Store in jelly glasses covered with paraffin. Oatmeal Cookies: Rub one cup of gusar into three-fourths of a cup of tte bgmen, five tablespoons of sweet milk, two cups of flour sifted with two teaspoons of baking powder, one teaspoon of ground cinnamon, and a pinch of salt. Stir in three cups of rolled oats (uncooked) and one egg- white sti be very a rounding teaspoonful of it and roll this into a ball. Then flatten out. Bake these cookies on a greased pan, in a qui Add the volk of one egg well v_beaten. The dough will stiff. Take up in the hands k oven, for about 15 minutes. Things You’ll Like to Make. 1 Here is a smart-looking burlap and yarn cushion that you will want to make for your porch Bammock. It wil look ‘equally handlome in your living room. Make a burlap cover for a round cushion. This is made by cutting two circles, each a Httle smal- ler than the top of the cushion. Then cut a three-inch band_that will go around the cushion. Join the band to the circles. Before joining the top circle decorat® it in " the following way: Cut a circle of dark_linen, of any color that will fit into"the color scheme of your room. . This circle should be fivé inches smaller in di- ameter than the burlap one. Cut the outer edge of “the lirien circle to the form leaves as shown. Cut out of the center the flower forms like the one shown at the left. Applique the lin- en to the burlap with wool in_some contrasting shade. Make French knots in the center of each flower. The burlap shows through the linen, giving a unique effect to this burlap and yarn cushion. FLORA. (Copyright, 1922.) Cheese Balls. Rub one teaspoonful of butter into one-half & cup of breadcrumbs and one cup of grated cheese, and add one-fourth teaspoonful of mustard, one-half a teaspoonful of salt, a few grains of red pepper and one egg well beaten. Shape in small balls and fry in hot fat. Drain and serve hot. . Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. i Cornflakes with Cream. Broiled Lamb Chops. Creamed Potatoes. Popovers. Coffee. DINNER. Cream of Pea Soup. Boiled Chicken with Rice. Mashed Potatoes. Stewed Mushrooms. Olive and Pimento Salad. Cheese Sticks. Ginger Pudding. Coftee. SUPPER. s Creamed Chicken. Crisp Rolls. Olives. Salted Nuts. Pineapple Omelet. Tea. ductions of the Chinese are a dic- tionary of 5020 volumes and an en- eyclopedia of 22,937 volumes. Two of the greatest literary pro- WOMAN’S PAGE. LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. I wrote an article about the futured® home and the part whichk community cooking might play in it. I'm hearing trom that article yet. Yesterday I pointed out the inconsistency of peo- ple who condemn community cook- ing, yet eat canned peas. Today I'm going to answer that loud protest against the idea of centralized fam- ily eating places. Community eating does not neces- sarily follow community cooking. However, I haven't the slightest doubt we would have more pleasant, progressive and contented famiiies : iz if we did more of our eating in pub- A wide range of sizes and lic. There is a beautiful tradition patterns in three distinct that the family dining table is a styles of weaves: DeLuxe, Herringbone and Imperial. Crex rugs in the living room wear longest because only tough wire grass i< used, and the strands are twisted and woven to withstand con- stant usage. ° Crex rugs combine good taste, ecconomy and service. GRASS RUGS_ '® HOME, HOME__o—- == - SWEET, SWEEIAOMES combination spiritual shrine and men- tal symposium—but the reality docsn't always tally. As a mecca, the home table is all 0o often a Gettysburg. Our manners are much prettier and our consideration for the feelings cf others more elastic when dining out, because they have to be. Public dining doubtless eliminat.s oppor- tunities for nagging, intcrfering and tattling—and varfous other sacred family * prerogatives—but who can honestly say we wouldn’'t be finer for their elimination? This applies not only to our men- tal condition, but to our phvsical functioning. = We digest our food better in the pleasing atmosphere supplied by the restaurant, an at- mosphere which it is often impossi- ble for the busy wife to produce 'n | Remove Freckles e eme | Becatiorinh enian and Pimples (healthy” cooking than tne kome riety. 5 _The chief objection to public eat- Women who have long wished for ing ‘3 naultl a n;nral. but a tinancial | asafe, easy way to remove unsightly consider: 5 ch. Ye - H e . if "one’ considers. the coer ni famly | Skin blemishes, will find in Beauty cooking, in spiritual dollars and| Bleach just what they need. cents, perhaps the restaurant is the . 2 chu‘r:;rldu;nnx place. Not that 1 Black and White Beauty Bleach is would eliminate the home tabl> or trel cold creamed i the beautiful intimacy which it can ado‘g’l;: gty freckles ta e and so often does supply. Hut levs | Ppound thatremoves freckles, tan, sun- ‘burn, pimples, spots—makes the skin Eet over this idea that the “far consists of yown men Johnny--and i put ourselves in touch witn the big, | clear, soft and youthful. It is harm- ger home, and the wider cude of | less—will not grow hal All toilet mafiners. Goprent Torey counters can supply Black and White N sl Beauty Bleach 50c the jar; Black and | | White Soap 25c the cake. HOME ECONOMICS. | Clip and mail this to Plough, Memphis, | — | { Tenn.. for free copy of Black and White BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT, | | Birthday and Dream Book. Raisins or | should be fried. The rule is forty Everybody likes fried foods, but they have a bad name, and nearly all diet lists exclude them pretty com- pletely. It is true that the combina- tion of fat with starch or protein | actually retards digestion, and is| therefore not suitable for young| children nor delicate people. But for normal healthy people who lead active out-of-doors lives. properly- | fried foods need not be forbidden. A | 0od cook would always rather fry | 00d in deep fat than saute it in a shallow pan. She knows that it is! better tasted and more casily Ai- gested, and that it is better econom as it takes less fat. Deep fat means a sufficient quantity | of clarified fat to flll a vessel six | inches deep. It should be raised to! a temperature of 330 to 400 degrees fahrenheit, and the food to be fried ! lowered into it in an open wire con- | tainer. It the fat Is at the right temperature, the food is immediately | 5% the reward of - , - : the girl who uses covered with a thin, protecting layer | of fat, and takes up no more fat than this | layer. If the fat is not hot h, i N‘ Y J‘l‘ St et o Newbros Herpicide y It In unwholesome quantity. 1% 18 "tos 1oL, the shaped feod Simpls | W By All Drug & Dept Stores falls to pleces in the fat. | MEN-APPLICATIONS AT BARBER SHOPS Obviously, since the Yood —_ fried should remain in the fat t:bo?x:l EECHAM'S a minute at most, only foods already or Sick Headaches cooked, or such small amounts and kinds of raw food as can be cooked throughout in that time, Strawberry Tartlets. | Line some tartlettius with puff paste, | fill them with raw rice to preserve their shape, then bake them in a hot oven. Turn out the rice and return | F=——— the crusts to the oven to harden the | [ I bottoms, then set them in a cold | place. Fill the orusts with nice. | “THE arge, ripe strawberries that have ! . e’ » been cut in quarters. Heap a tablg-lfl'fx; ll. Now, :;“51":":“»." e spoonful of whipped cream in. the | blaod Ix out of order. Dot walt o center of each. : St ) you have to CURE dixease: it -n‘:|h.ell:r to PREV NT it -, th the first blotches or eruptio Savory Steak With Gravy. |or the dullneas, weariness snd. de- Have a one-pound steak cut two | Pression that are some of the symp- inches thick, then pound into it one |toms, You need thix tomfc. It will cupful of flour. Put the steak into a | rouse organs into healthy action, pan with three tablespoonfuls of but- | thoroughly cleanse and repair ~our Do And. brown 1t on 'both sies.|=¥atem, and build up needed fiexh, bright,snappy, " luxuriant hair is seconds for cooked foods, sixty s onds for uncooked. Some foods, such as small new potatoes, should be parboiled. The cooking can then be completed in the deep fat. The Delicious Flavor "SALADA" T XA has made it the largest selling Tea in America. s Sold Everywhere—Try it Today. Cover it with water, adding one,h--hl. and strength. Druggists sell sliced onion, four skinned tomatoes | “Dixcovery™ im tabletx or tliquid. sliced and cover closely and let sim- — mer for three hours. Just before the steak is done add salt and pepper to taste. When done the gravy is al- ready made and is delicious. KILL FLI MSCORMICK & €O 2 ALTIMORE

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