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RIY l") For the Dining room 1Favorite Recipes Use by Women You Kno No. 2— BY MRS. CALVIN COOLIDGE Pineapple Sal Place on a lettuce leaf a slice of Hawallan pineapple and cover with salad dressing. Over this press through a potato ricer cream cheese and lay a preserved cherry on top. To make dressing for -this salad use six tablespoonfuls of pineapple juice, two level tablespoonfuls of sugar and butter size of a_walnut. Heat In a double boiler, add two beaten eggs Restless Is as Restless Does. ITH her broken ankle The Wife Who Wouldn’t~ Settle Down! 7 A Sequel to “Brides Will Be.Brides” By Lucille Van Slyke. arm was held to his breast With a black satin sling. “Rich," she cried remorsetufly, “no- —where the family meets and cook until it coats the spoon. < oftenest, a Crex rug gives, When cold add whipped cream. propped ‘on chintz-covered | hogy told me you were hurt that a tone of hospitality and cor- . (Copyright, 1822.) pillows, Merriam Lindsay | mych!” rectness. Designs match any sat in her screened porch [ His ever-courteous self, he put her decorative scheme you choose making a strenuous effort to get the |at case. Nobody told me you were hurt and by insisting on the gen- { uine Crex, made by firmly twisting and weaving the in from the sandpile because she felt “As one cripple to another,” she strands of wire grass you get D | smiled up at him, “isn't it just hades a guaranteed product, the r great need of their moral support | 10" ha' e hand And foot:” longest wearing inexpensive They were in a deliciously naughty She eyed the s appreclatively. e Pl a0kl Ly | * , {humor. Even wee Dicky, who usually | $he had swift recollections of how g y y. i (118 behaved like the angel his mothes ad. | MaNY: many afternoons in the days i == et o i : i lil'_ r ;wrn‘re he had been marfed lnlJohn . s m to be, had mischief | Lindsay, this same Richard Slocum Making Over an Old HOUSE. |dancing in his eyes. He was dashing | had appearcd “with Just such sized or e JIlome - 9 4 2 ¥ | boxes, to call out, “When in doubt GRASS RUGS I BUIM He found Mr excited he was delighted with that old nest and she showed it. For his hitefoot couldn’t see anything BRAND Condensed Milk [ITTLE CTORIES BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. A home is always what you make it With love there yon will ne'er forsake it. —Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. Whitefoot the Wood Mouse climbed up to the old nest of Melody the Wood Thrush, over the edge of which littie Mrs. Whitefoot was looking down at him. It took Whitefoot hardly a mo- ment to get up there, for the old nest was only a few feet above the ground, in a young tree, and you know White- foot is a very good climber. Whitefoot very much at_old home of Melody's but a rted old house, of no use to any- . it had been a very . It had been _twigs, statks of old s. fine roots and mud. It ite solid and was firmly roteh of the young tree. twins Into clean rompers. In a panic- stricken moment she had called them about trying to dodge the comb with which Ricky, the girl twin, was pursu- ing his glorious mop of red curls. Being a girl person, Ricky had been a trifle more amenable to reason when orange-checked gingham was ordained, but Dicky, still breathless from a pitched battle anent llonnlngi clean undles, was valiantly resisting any other garments. “You're the wrigglingest, wiggling- est pair!” Merry cried as she tri adjust an orange bow atop Rick straight, bobbed hair. “I wants a .bow Dicky _sidled close to his mother, lured by the ribbon. He looked so irresistil lovely with his pleading eves li that Merry ruined all chi - by stooping to kiss him. “You precious little gander!" she te: “You've curls instead of bow! Boys don't wear bows.” “I will wear a bow!" He was a trifle edgy from too much play. “And Mr. Slocum will think a girl" To small Dicky this idea was ex- 4 ce at dig- that much!”-he gestured toward her splintered foot. as to whether she wants violets or marrons, take both!” How could she have beer so base as to want to wound so generous and forglving a soul! She untied the strings to the boxes with a pretty speech about how he made her feel like sweet sixteen. Dut the next moment, crimson with chagrin, knowing that Richard was smiling at her confusion, she pushed the boxes toward the twins. For they held no bonbons or flowers, but twin toy monkeys upon which the half- dr babies fell with jovous whoops! usan Sue bridged the awkward mo- ment by dragging them off to thelr supper. am found herself wishing that Susan would take her, too. She onned her thimble hurriedly and at- acked a sock, but Richard took the ending away and they both looked at the hand. sn't @ big hand. It was trim n as to nails, but it was rom housework and gar- red from amateur Strug- h can openers—manifestly - nand of John Lindsay's wife, and not at all the kind of hand it would Mothers find that normally | quisitely funny.” He shouted S RntE . =8| laughter. cky” houted With|pive been if she had been Richard heflldt_lhb lé-’bles dewlelop Dt sl Duihe "““l um's wife. He said the oddest steadily and consistently on “YouTe the gigglingest pair!” | thing 3 5 Merry found herselt 1;':5;hlxng":xl~7ih “I do believe that hand s the only Eagle Brand. Doctors recom- mend it for babies who are | puny or losing weight—be- gingham dress. Spring freckles were £ ixhie begn a causeit is easily digested. It faintly shadowed on her retrous olding he spoke gently. N . - d unif - hone; and how ateiEeie. with. © ¥, Merry, 1 just wanted to say ow 1n cartons 18 pure and uniform al“ays. white I thought it of you to One Dozen Bottles Unbelievable Youcan hardly re the wonderful im- provement to yourskin and complexion your mirror will reveal to you | | ACK AND FORTH FROM THI TO THE OLD NEST IN E WHITEFOOT HER- SO F GROUND THE TR RIED. couldn’t see how 1t a4 into a home for a d as much. Whitefoot_became more excited than e You dear old tupid.” she sai is the matter with you? Don't you see all we need to do is to put & roof on. make an‘entrance on the under side nd make »t, comfortable bed in- ke it a delightful home?" sce why we don't make a e altogether,” protested But Whitefoot could be tur le them. She was very much little girl her- self just that moment in her simple youngsters made her b moistly a hair_curi ead. With the easy youth 3 had quite forgotten her sophisticat mood of two hours ago. “I ask you., Susan Suc.” She looked old dear in grandstand young {mps so restl even get their clothes on [ Well, restle: age Susan Sue X leave them quiet them down and give them their was to me, % senten- ou I suppers. If ever You was to tr ting them see caliers now, they’l up something awful. Restless folks, young or old, hain't safe company, they hain" B e_‘rrlnm gave a guilty start. No, no,” she answered hurriedly.| ou ‘go get their supper ready, I'll dress them—I—Iwant them her. She was sincerely regretting that in a lonely, angry moment she had telephoned Richard Slocum. A sort of stage fright at seeing him had superseded her desire to punish him for the well deserved lecture he had thundered at her the week previous when he was in an entirely jutifiable thing about you that's motherly!” he drew it angrily away. ¢ vowre going to start scolding an petulantly. is chance to say ‘I'm sorry. brute the other night.” she spoke in a very small “You were right.” (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) (Copyright, 1922.) Bistory of Dour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. DANIELS VARIATIONS—Danlel, Dann, Tancock. RACIAL ORIGIN—Anglo-Saxon. SOURCE—A biblical glven name. Danlels is another of those family names which comes down to us ¢rom the days of the old Anglo-Saxons, shough, like other family names, it aid not become such until a period after the Anglo-Saxons and the Nor- s after =singGouraud'sOriental aitefoot. “It seems to me that|angry humor with her. She wanteq | maneFrench had become fused into Cream for the first tme. w stub of mine is ever so much |—oh. she hardly knew what she|the English race of medieval and oy than thit. That has good, |wanted! When she was telephoning, | modern times. Send I5c. for Trial Size FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON New York ; _:Gou:r',aud‘é A Oriental Cream \ de your hair the life, luster and luxuriance nature infended. } Newbro's Herpicide Is Sold Gy All Drug & Dept Stores MEN-APPLICATIONS AT BARBER SHOPS For All Skin will keep your | ..i: healthy and give s i [ solia walls and we won't have to do = to it old you once before that it t <uit me for summer,"” replied Mrs. Whitefoot, rather sharply, she was beginning to lose will be all right for patience. wint It may suit you for summer, doesn’t suit me, and this place does. his ,is where we are going to v. my dear, certainly,” re- Whitefoot very meekly. me yet how we are going to make & decent home out of this old nest.”” “Don’t you worry about that,” re- plied Mrs. Whitefoot. “You can get the material and T'll attend to the rest. Let us waste no time about it. I am anxious to get our home finished nd to feel a little bit settled. I have already planned just what has got to be done and how we will do it. Now, {you go and look for some nice, soft, i 1k and strips of soft bark_and m d any other soft, tough material that you can find, Just get busy and don't stop to talk.” Of course, Whitefoot did as he was He ran down to the ground dry weed s and began to hunt for the things Mrs. scalp clean and | ¥iceite: wopied e s very par ’Ucul:lr about it much of her idea of making over that home of Melody's, but if she would do it he meant that she should have the very best of materials to do it with. So back and forth from the ground to the old nest in the tree.Whitefoot hurried and presently <there was quite a pile of weed stalks and Soft grass and strips of bark in the old nest. Mrs. WHitefoot joined White- foot in hunting for just the right things, but she spent more time In arranging the material. Over that Down through the lower side she cut a little round doorway just big enough for them to pass through. Unless vou happened to be under- neath looking up you never would have guessed there was an entrance at all. Inside was a snug, round 0ld nest she made a fine, high roofy she had been actuated by a _desire 1to make him fall in love with her again, but now she was so ashamed |of her mean motive that in contri- | tion she decided to appear in a strict- Iy maternal role. Perhaps that would blot out from his mind the idea that she was a flirtatious young. thing whose only aim in life was to dance and “play around.” The truth that she wopldn't ac- knowledge to herself, even, was that nothing had ever hurt her pride more than Richard's making her feel that to quell her mischievous youngsters. Dicky, still sans rompers, Wwas snatching the bow from Ricky's hair and Ricky was waliling out wild pro- tests. “You little old imps!” Merry shout- ed above their clamor, as Richard tapped at the screened door. Very correctly groomed, rather grave as to manner, he greeted her. Merriam had a sudden mental picture of how higgeldy, piggeldy her man- ner of life must seem to the critical bachelor. Behind him his uniform- ed chauffeur stood with the crutches for which she had telephoned. Rich- lard himself had two small packages under his left arm and his right The final “s” on Daniels indicates that it has been shortened from Dan- ielson. The variation Tancock is the result ot a misspelling that crept into the name at some perlod, either before or after it became a family name, and the habit of the Anglo-Saxons of shortening names to one syllable and then adding a diminutive ending. One “If you : : ce Wil 1 had lost his respect for her. f these endings was “cock” or {Want to live here, here we will live. |Be, Sl g [t 1o 1% comtean Tt 19wt clear to | PINK with exasperation, she strove | ucoch,” meaning “little” Tancock, then, translated literally into modern speech, means “little Dan,” or, If we should use the modern diminutive, “Danny.” G It is impossible to state at just what period “Daniel's son” ceased to be merely descriptive of an indlvidual and was adopted through several generations, thus becoming a family name. A general development of custom took place along this line throughout northern Europe from the twelfth to the fourteenth centurles. The frequency with which Danlel ap- pears as a given name in the old days indicates many unrelated families adopted it simultaneously. BUD 4 WEISER Anheuser-Busch, St. Louis nheuser-Busch Branch Wholesale Distributors “FEATURE PAGE.” Washington, D. C. Food Fun— “We're hefg and we're glad!” the kiddies say—it's appetite’s answer to a helping of Post Let this joyous, healthful food bring inspiration to your break- fast tomorrow. Try itfor a quick " Picnicand Onfing room, and in this she made the sofest\| }and most comfortable of nests. As it began to look morezand more like a home ‘Whitefoot himself became as excited and eager as Mrs. Whitefoot had been from the beginning. “It certainly is going to be a fine home,” said Whitefoot. 0 “Didn’t I tell you it would be?" re- torted Mrs. Whitefoot. (Copyright, 1822, by T. W. Burgess.) - l - L Wherever goodness and purity in foods are appreciated you will find Meadow Gold butter. For discriminatin, lunch. A Post Toasties supper for the children will prepare the way for sweet dreams. Toasties. No coaxing necessary; i it's fun to eat. 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