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"WOMAN’S PAGE.” THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON TEATURES. Thanksgiving Day in the morning— Hot Cakes—Pure Rich Yvonne Davidson, the wifs of Jo Davidson, the sculvtor, who is to do a has shown the courage to open No other American woman has at- tempted this feat. melting in Good— Better—Best! to recelved the guests in & gown of gray which she suddenly slipped off to show a gown of green. Before the | exhibition was over she put one gown {over the other and was admirably { frocked fn gray and groen. Naturally, a stunt like this caught the curlous attention of every one in jthe room. " She explained it by tn- | sisting_that women are weary of a . wardrobe full of clothes and prefer curfous combinations that save time and money. If, for instance, & woman chooses gray and green for her ward- !robe during the season she matches {the accessories to it and does not | waste hours in changing shoes, stock- {ings, hats and frocks. Mre. Davidson does not stand alone lin this propaganda for a new form { of dressing. Jean Patou sponsors it; |80 does Afolyneux; so does Worth. It has sfgnificance, this movement, for it is an attempt to please the masses of women who insist that their new kind of life does not give them time to choose and assemble a mass of separate costumes for each season. Nor do they want to bother with a large assortment of accessorles that must be constantly changed. Many women 4n Paris sponsor the plan of having a plain skirt that fastens down the side, an ornamental omet c Rice ala Creole 2 bodice above it. a coat over the s tutte bodice. Each of these garments may 2 green peppers, chopped be removed or overturned, except the 2 Fuptulastock or water (3if frsttoma= | bodice, which matches the underskirt. toes are used) and the latter is revealed only w 'l"h‘ 1 cupful Comet Rice the top skirt is droppeu. By thes changes a woman fs suitably frocked for the different occasions occurring in one day. If the movement gains power she will be able to start out at 9 o'clock in onc costume, which she can manipulate so as to serve differ ent engagements up until 12 o clock at night. Possibly she may have to carry a valise with her. Those dif- ferent garments must go somewhere. She can't carry them over her arm. ‘The sketch shows the charming gown which Yvonne Davidson ware and which Americans have taken up as a delightful thing. It has no hooks or eyes, buttons or buttonholes. It 43 cupful tomatoes or 3 fresh tomatoes 1 teaspoonful aait '{ teaspoonful pepper I0OK the onion and the pers C from which the seeds ha\?:pb«n removed in the butter for five minutes. Add the rice and stir until it begins to turn color, then add the tomatoes, sea- sonings and stock and eimmer without stirring for one hour. Packed in Sealed Packages —never sold loose BY HELEN 1SS BLIZABETIL dircetor irls® H the mun ! grounds. was hostes members of the Capitol Athlet o girls in the studio of Mr iLocher. in the absence of Mrs. Locher, | } Friday atternoon There were sixteen girls present at tBo meeting | and the club’s constitution was for- mally adopted. Miss Catherine Pfeiffer, head of the | committee on ket ball, tendered her resignation, as she felt her sc iwork reauired all of her t she could not do her work e as well. Her FISHE intere: on Kraft Cheese is the most economical “meat food” you can buy. One pound of Kraft Cheese is equal in nutriment to twenty- five eggs. Kraft Cheese contains the two impor- tant vitamines. ‘ 3 varieties: American the president of Thelma Castle, are sames participated club member: tive elub, rrange to in by the Pimento, Swis, :old by the .lice,pound or loaf. 8 Varieties in Tins ia meeting of neighborhood club. — PARIS, November 12.—Dear Ursula: Swee nut-like flavor The delicious flavor of Foulds’ Macarori and Spa- ghetti comes from the Durum Wheat Semolina used ex- clusively. “This wonderful flour worked by our special machinery re- sultsinfirmnesswithout tough- ness and arich golden color. Itisrichest ia gluten. ipathetic appeal in his eves that I simply had to buy him. He s white china with a yellow beak and feet.| PAMELA. (Copyright, 1922.) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Canned Plums. Cream of Wheat. Meat Croquettes With Tomato Sauce. stnuts With Apples. Tea. DINNER. Pe; up. Veal and Ham Fie. Lettuce With Pimento Dres Rolls. Raisin Ro ing. Baked Potatoes. Nuts. Coftee. Ple. Things You’ll Like to Make. I [ Hat Pin Ornament. Nadinola CREAM | The Usequaled Beautifier Used and Endorsed By Thousande Guaranteed to remove | tan, freckles, pimples, | sallowness, etc. H treme cases. Rids pores and tissues of impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, bealthy. At leading toilet counters. -| At Pre-War Prices, Twe Sides, 80c. end §1 00 NATIONAL TOILET CO.. Paris, Tanw N Hat pin ornaments are very easy to T LOOKS DARK fo any weak | make and look attractive on any or ailing woman, ' gmall hat. Cover a large headed e Ea | hat pin with silk. Use platn silk and tion comes te | embroider it with ailver, or use one of her help. For|the new metal stitched silks. Make a 1% " ilong tassel of sllk or wool. Attach ak.| it to the center of the head of the de- | covered pin. One of these ornaments {stuck Into each side of a turban | makes a very chic little hat. FLORA. is the proven remedy. This Prescription of Dr. Plerce’s is » woman’s tem- | perance tonic for the frail, the delicate and those who are mervous, dizsy, and whe have hackache and dragging feelings. Try it NOW-—tablets or liguid. Send 10 cents for. trial package to Dr. Plerce, uufale, N. (Copyright, 1922.) : o weniin D sales of carcass beef ‘ashington, D. C., for ool Ba November 25, on shi Sk Sadhey Harnay Rovembor 3o Wip ‘cents per gound and averaged I: cents per pound.—-Advertiscment. L] BY ANNE RITT the heroic figure of the American ma- ; rine to be placed at Hampton roads, | dressmaking establishment in Parls. | At'a recent exhibition of her clothes | the smart world in France she| ' ent pa This paperweight duck had such g/ b Two Gowns Are Worn at Once HOU | i | | 1 i i ! 1 ?S'l‘r'lll.l‘ K SE_CR PIRE GRE BY YVONNE DAVIDSON, THE AMERICAN SCULP HAS OPENED A DRES! HOUSE IN JARIS. i< )CK OF GRAY JAPA | avoids that troublesome thing—going over the head—by Iapping around the figure. It fastens with a tie on one hip. (Copyright, 1922.) Girls and Their Interests H. FETTER. Furthe ming exh elub’ at [ bition to be the Y. W, dle of nex and an inv Kent to th en LT month were di s ion w 1o b Colle hem in to take part s Fisher, who 1 an ex- me herself, offered to coach them in this sport. will play on It was an emblem, nz of Miss Thelma Castle, Miss Altje ¥ and Miss < appointed t > voted upun at the h wiil be held December 22 on to the busi- the municipal grounds. ness me : Pathe recls of ‘athletic movements zed. which demonstrated espe- the co postures and meth- ods to be followed In the £ports of diving. hurdling ard playing differ- itions in base ball. Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Steps That Save Steps. “We women do not alway take pains to equip our homes, and par- ticularly out kitchens, with all the heips and convenicnces that tend to make housekeeping a pleasure in- <tead of i wearying burden,” remark- ed a modern homemaker one dav, at n my case, I have had to make a real etudy of comfort, because I am stout and short, and find that both bending and reaching are difficult for me and tire me out. “I think that reaching is especially bad for women. muscles and brings on fatigue and even sorenmess. Yet all of us have cuphoards and -pantries and closets | with high shelves that are out of our reach. I used to drag a kitchen chair across the floor to climb to my top shelves, but even this is a high step and is not easy and comfort- able. ‘One day, in the bagement of a de- partment store, I saw the little handy sets of steps, some with two steps and some wih three, which solve the trouble. I can step up easily and reach every shelf in the house. I purchased ‘a very strong set and avoided the folding type, which I dld not want to trust my unwieldly per- son on. “Now, I have a set of steps in my store closet upstairs, where there are ! bandboxes and valizes on the topmost shelves. and another et in the cel- {lar, so that I can get down my can- ning jars comfortably. : “Ot course I know you have all seen these little sets of steps and know about them, but how many of you have them? My point is that ‘we ought all to provide ourselves with cvery possible effort-conserving de- vice we can. to make our housekeep+ ing more efficient. Orange and Walnut'Salad. Peel some juicy oranges and break them into sections, removing every particle of the white skin. Arrange a bed of crisp lettuce leaves on a dish and place the orange pulp on them. Chop some walnut meats, not tao fine, and sprinkle over the whole. Serve with French dressing. for the swim- by the Pool_ahout It is a strain on the | 5 s worded | George Washington £irls interested in swimming | the ; The girls ! voted that the club adopt| nd a committee consist- | therine Pfeiffer | secure some designs next meet- | d viewing some|£athered to wristbands lend 2 unique |of sun, they came—the brawny j Fireworks—oh, me; oh, my i i FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. BY WILL DEMING. Eaditor. Lemon Pie. :mlx thoroughly a heaping table s spoonful and one-half of flour. Grate {the skin of one lemon and add the {Julce. Then add the yolks of two | eg&s and a cup of water, also a pinch {of salt. Stir this thoroughly, all to- gether. Put into a double boiler and let it cook until it is thick and smooth. Then pour it into the cooked ple crust. Add a teaspoonful of Water to the whites of the egga and a pinch of salt. Then beat until stift. Cover your ple with this mixture and then sprinkle granulated sugar on top of the meringue. Don't mix the sugar and the meringue. Put under the broiler to brown. The crust: Mix two good sized tablespoontuls of lard with one and a half cups of flour. Mix this with your fingers thoroughly, until it feels like corn meal, although much larger. Add ice water until the mixture holds | together: then roll on a floured board. In baking the crust for & lomon' ple, either puncture the crust all over with a fork or bake in on the outside of your ple tin. This will keep it from creeping. A Dressing. (For stuffed tomatoes, cold meat or potato salad). Melt a large tablespoonful of but- ter. Add a saucer of vinegar to the yolks of two eggs. Then add a tea- Apoonful of dry mustard and a tea- spoonful of sugar. Stir the mixture— sugar and eggs—into the vinegar, ilhen add it to the butter, which you have on the stove. melting, Keep stirring this until it gets thiok, and remember that it will be much ithicker when it is cold. In case you {wish to usc this for potato salad, jdon’t make it very thick. OVER | 5T, MADE | WIFE OF | 'OR, WHO MAKING | | i i | i i 1 =1 A semi-fitted basque of the popular grown-up type and long sleeves distinction to this frock for the young miss. Sash ends that are tacked at the underarm seams tie ina bow at the back. Flannel, wool Jersey. serge, crepe de chine or a wdsh fabric would be excellent material for this style. Serge at 80 cents per yard would make the completed dress cost about $1.80. Any mother who sews at all could finish a frock like this in about two afternoons, and would save about $5 in making it: #0 for the cost of one dress the girl could have a school and a party dress if both are made at home, The pattern No. 1575 cuts in sizes 6, 8 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires 23§ rds 38-inch material. Transfer Pattern No. 602—in blue oniy 15 cents extra. ce of pattern, 15 aents, In post- age stamps only. Orders £hould be addressed to The Warhington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, New York city. Please write name and address clearly. VERSIFLAGE. A Heated Problem. She said to me today: “Life's filled ‘with problems steep. A new one came my way, which kept me from my sleep. ‘Wanted, a furnace man,’ thus 1 did advertise. They leaped, they jumped, they ran—strong men of every size. Each one I much admired, none could I turn away, and so by night I'd hired a_ wonderful array. First, Donald broad and tall, efficient engineer, I liked his overall, the stripe 8o blue and clear: then Harry with a grin, I felt he’d never mind toting ashes from tha bin, he looked s0 mild and kind; there were John and Jack and Bert, each begged me to choose him; T did not like to hurt by admitting 1I'd hired Jim. So I thanked each stalwart one and J hired him on the spot. That night, by se lot. And lan- Zuage all ablaze. Alas, why didn’t I give them alternate dayi WILHELMINA STITCH. PO el b Cabbage Cooked With Pork. For a small head of cabbage use , about half a pound of mixed lean and {fat salt pork. Boil the pork gently for about four hours. Prepare the cabbage the same as for plain boiled cabbage. Drain well and put on to boil with the pork. Boil rapidly for about forty-five minutes. Serve the pork with the cabbage. If needed, add more salt. Smoked bacon or ham may be used instead of the pork. The cabbage may be cooked in water in which corned beef was boiled. 'The Housewife’s Idea The fliling: In & cup tull of sugar, How Paddy’s New Pond Was Used. The wisest does his work tods. That in the future he may play. —Paddy the Beaver. Peter Rabbit was so interested in hé new pond Paddy the Beaver and {Mrs. Paddy were making by build- ing a new dam. that he spent most |of his time where he could watch. {Every day the dam was a little {longer, and the pond above it was a jlttle bigger. Peter could see that i pond grow. He would sit down at the jedge of it to watch Paddy and Mrs. i Paddy work, and then the first thing ! he knew he would have wet feet. Ile would move back a step or so, and atter & while the same thing would happen over again. 8o the water crept out in all ai- N would stop. At last there came an afternoon when as Peter grew near the pond he heard the crash of a falling tree. “It must be that Paddy and Mrs. Paddy have begun to cut theilr food supply,” exclaimed Peter and hurried faster. When he reached the new dam his two brown-coated friends were no- where to be ceen. They were not working on the dam. Peter looked across to the upper end of the new pond. It looked to him as if a trec had fallen over there since his last visit. He suspected that {t was the tree he hud heard crash. Of course he hurried_around as fast as he could g0. When he got there he found Paddy and Mrs. Paddy cutting off limbs. The smaller ones they would take oft at a single bite. The bigger iones they would cut in the same way i that they had cut down the tree—that i 4s, by biting out big chips. | TPeter noticed now that that pond iscemed no bigger than when he last saw {t. He sat down close to the {cdge of it. and though he sat there jfor a long time his feet remained tdry. “Is your pond big cnough now?" !he ventured to ask Paddy. Paddy stopped long enough to nod, and replied, it is big enough for the present. You see. we will cut these poplar and birch trees nearest the water first. It may be that by and by we will have to make a pond The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL, i An Introduction of Joseph Francis Keaton, Jr. .. Well, day beforo yesterday I was “properly and conventionally intro- duced to Joeseph Francis Keaton, Jjr. .1 was formally and yet informaliy jintroduced to the young gentleman. i His mother made us known, the one jto the other, but as he was In bed ;wl(h one finger in his mouth, and as 1he was much more interested in his {afternoon nap than in me or in any- thing that I might put in my diary about him, we didn't get very far conversationally. I was, by the way, agaln introduced to Keaton, sr., but as he was much more interested, solemnly interested, of course, fn a game of solitaire which he was ab- sorbedly playing. perched upon a twi bed, I didn't get very far with him either, speaking When' he had finished the fiftieth round of “idiot’s delight,” he did arise, and still solemnly, but with great thoroughness, turn @ double somer- sault upon eaid- bed. 1 was edified, but hardly knew what to say. Meet- ing the smileless comedian soclally 1s something of & strain upon one’s social etiquette. To laugh or not to laugh—that is the question. And one seems quite as much out of placc as the other. However, after a long and admir- ing survey of the small Buster, who has, .his proud mamma informed me. doubled his weight in less than half the time taken in like manner by the jordinary infant and after telling her that he should not suck his finger or he would develop adenolds, and after being told by her in turn that Con- stance always luckfil her finger and did not develop enoide—after, I say. such-llke womanly exchanges of advice, we repaired to the other room of the hotel suite and sent below for a large and substantial consignment of French pastries and Oolong tea and cream and lemon, etc. One al- ways eats when one Is with 2 member of the Talmadge clan. There were evidences of the small Buster (not to mention the large one) all about the suite. A grey peram- bulator, small French frocks. but very simple ‘and “manly.” Pads and rat- tles and comfys and other infant in- signia. Natalle, who has bobbed her l BY WILLIAM Be Prepared for Worst. Three doctors, all of us more or less eminent men 40 our special flelds, happened to be among the guests at an inn in the mountains one fin autumn night. Near the inn was a sharp turn of the road at the fot of a hill and a narrow bridge over a deep chasm. Soon after dark a car came {to grief at this bridge and a passenger was carried into the inn unconscious and bleeding from wounds about the face and head. The three of us did all we could for the victim, but so far as first ald or medical or surgical smervice was concerned we might as well have been three cawing crows, for not one of us had so much as a hypodermic syringe or a plece of ad- hesive plaster at hand to work with. After some excursions and alarums three real doctors from country places round about arrived and did some- thing for the injured man. Every person who 1s responsible for an automobile ought to see to it that the car 18 equipped with a small emer- gency outfit in case of accodent. T have often before been caught well prepared to succor the injured along the road. The ocgasion described was my first disgracéful failure and was due to a change of cars and inex- cusable procrastination about chang- ing the first-aid outfit. Here is a list of articles which 1 think sufficient to carry in an emer- gency or first-aid kit: 1. A strong vial of tincture of iodine. 2. One ounce of aromatic spirits of ammonia. 3. One ounce of flexible collodion. 4. One or two tubes of sterile petro- latum (vaseline). 5. Two-ounce or four-ounce carton | o absorbent cotton. It is not easy to take doughnuts out of the fat unless you have a con- venient utensil with which to do it. tA 1m;l.ll :fi? pick will prove very u Ul lor s purpose. 2 THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copyright, 1823.) | e Among the first women to enter the fleld of motion picture directors is Miss Dorothy Farley, who has directed some » sterile gause in envelopes. 7. Half dozen two-inch gause band- ages. 8. Five-yar oxide adhesive plaste! Thesc eight items are about all one 1s likely to have any occasion to use in an emergency, and when compactly wrapped up they will go in an over- coat pocket or & pocket of the car. Let me suggest briefly what the items are for. Swab every fresh wound once with tincture of jodine by using. a_wisp of ocotton wrapped on & tooth pick or stick. From half to one tea- spoonful of aromatic spirits of am- manis in a little cold water may be siven as & quick stimulant in mw or shook, if the individual can low: this may be repeated every five cr ten minutes. The collodion makes BEDTIME STORIES rections, and Peter wondered when it conversationally. | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Noted Physician and Author. o |and is pr Half dozen one-yard folds of, | 1nave been d one-inch spool zino! H By Thornton 'W. Burgess. bigger so as to reach some of those trees which are now t0o far awa from the wa'er. I Lope you'll excuse us, Peter, if we don’t stop to talk now. We have too much to do tol spend time gossiping.” excuse them, and that he didn’t want | to be & bother. All he wanted was to | watch., Bo Paddy and Mrs. Paddy went on With their work, while Peter | found a comfortable place from which | to watch, Paddy would pull a limh out into the water, and then would i i | tilaor urse he would THAT THAT EEMED NO BIGGER THAN HE LAST SAW IT. Feter said that of ¢ swim down toward the dan.. towing the lmb with him. Mrs. Paddy would ! do the same thing. When they, reached the dam they would climb out and drag the limbs over it intoy the Laughing Brook below, and swim { down this to the old pond. There they would tow the limbs out to the place where they had started their food | pile, and sink them in the water. 1 Peter couldn’t help but see how | much easler it.was to get those limbs and logs down to the old pond by towing them through the new pond than it would have been to have dragged them duwn the Laughing Brook. He began to understand mo fully why Paddy & only was the work casl ut it was | ever so much safer. No enemy could reach Paddy or Mrs. Paddy while they were swimming in the ponds. (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burgess.) fof vanity. i i i | <hould it ever be vain In a woman to i that it will keep the wrinkles from gathering thickl come. the same. {therefore all ELLOW FANS; PERMIT ME TO INTRODUCE BUSTER KEATON, JR. I hair, and looks very chic and vounger than she did before the small arrival. said that she and Buster had wanted to go abroad with “Peg and the £Irl8,” but of course they couldn't and wouldn't on account of baby. sald the young mother. “comes first.” 1 did, too, but Buster. sr. didn't He savs I look like a member of | the Follies.” she laughed. ‘A man always says something like that,” T consoled. Buster, sr.. plaving his solitaire was aloof and impervious. “Peg,” Natalie told me, “writes me yards and yards of letters. <tarting out to be about the things they are doing in Europe, but alwavs cnding up by belng more about the baby than anything e She is simply dying to be with him. She took of the care of him in Californ nd 1 take most of the care of him her 1 have a nurse, but 1 bathe him and feed him and ‘dress him myself. don't like anyone else to do these things for him. I guess I must be old-fashjoned.” H She asied me anxiously if I thought ' he should wear a cap over his ears at night and I told her that T though! it percautionary, but probably un necessary, and then I caught Buster. sr., looking at her—and smiling. And | ngularly sweet smile it is. too. | (Copyright, 192 i . | i { { BRADY, M. D.. 1an impervious protective dressing for any small cut or wound if the su is perfect! puinted on. The petro | Bauze from sticking tv & ble to salve on T | never be applied nest |as a protective padding or covering over gauze. A fold of sterile gauze may be slipped from an envelope di rectly on a wound without touching cither gauze or wound with finges or other unsterilized object. Adhesite plaster strips applied to clean. dry ! skin will Serve to draw together oen wounds and also to hold a dressing ! on a wound when banduging is difli- ! cult. tum keeps aw wound 1y ointment o -otton should e wound, hut QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. ? Iron Rations. Kindly give me the names of foodls containing fron, also mineral water fcontaining iron. My children seem to be without tone, apathetio and tired. !nnd they feel the cold so much. 1 !think they lack iron. Their ages ar eighteen, twenty-one and twent. three—R. J. T. Answer. These foods contain iron: i Egg yolk, bone marrow, lettuce, on- ions, asparagus. tomatoes. celery 1 tatoes, spinach, pea ifresh lima beans, cabbage, rhubarb, ! ! peanuts, almonds, cocoanuts, walnu i | pecans, hickory nuts, oatmeal. ent’ { wheat, wheat bran, brown bread, gra- jham bread, rve bread, pearled barley whole rice, prunes, dates, currants. apples, figs, pineapples, strawberries. huckleberries. gooseberries, raisins. crude black or dark brown molasses, the crudest grade of brown sugar, maple sirup. If any two or more of ithese items are included in the daily |ration in the usual quantities served 1 to one person rest assured the system will receive all the iron it has any ‘need of. Damp Feet. troubled for several win- | ters from damp feet. What can you | suggest to relfeve this™—S. M. A.~ | Answer, Sponge the soles and the ! spaces between the toes with the! strongest formalin solution the skin will stand, each alternate day for three or four times, allowing this to | dry before putting on stockings A solution of one ounce of formalin in half pint of water IS moderately strong. (Copyright, 1922.) ? ‘The first woman of modern times to recelve an honorary college de; Caroline reformer and philanthrop- pist, upon whom “Alfred University be- stowed an hororary LL. D\ in 18 1t isnt {and willing to mix and learn. |that T want to tell briefly what she j<ald o me. She has few wrinkles and cream than for pevple cannot exerci apt Listen,World! WRITTEN AND 3 ILLUSTRATED By Cisre Tiohinson There's one thing that I'm more world afraid of than anything else on earth. [ Y0u ¢ 3 « digease or disaster or even | U0 S death. 1ts concelt. Now it's part of my life to know | O x‘r" n.‘.\ Jour o many clever and quite a few famous UWNE Wiiliam Sha people. I'm neither particulariy clever | —— nor famous myself, but 1 circula D0 wouU with that sort of x gang. And take o T T it from me, folks, we humble on- =2 BE(‘OE\]G L9 lookers are about the only ones who THE SELT do circulate. The mighty on are | <IN all standing stockettll thumplnc their RAISING vn chests and telling the world how 2 wonderful they are. | CLun z IU's a funny thing, but it seems get nearly all of them sooner or late While they're grubbing along thirty a week they're just itke the rest of the staff—simple and friendly once let fame place u laurel upon their bandoline and wll bets are off. Forthwith their shapes begin to bnige with accumulations of com- plimentary clippings (they never fave any of the other kind), which same they read 1o you at the glightest provocation. 50" they develop tem- peraments. Last w their heurts would warm to you over a glass near heer and x hot dog. But todas they dine alone on caviure. Vacum wns between them and the. com- - mon herd. " And forthwith all that | hanoe. 38 Vinel Alexandor the G living contact which fed their genfus S ceases. They may not realize 1t and |5t pale then take the world gome Lme to o T LA ments look ik | And may Aliah ticmber all the: it S realize i1, but they are through. No, I'm not joking. There’s no sight more depressing to the audi- ence, nor more devastating to the vie- i, than conceit. And why in the Cop; —_— Y Cwsmrewny ' EDNA KENT FORBL>. BEAUTY CHATS An 0ld Lady’'s Letter. Tl other day I had ruch a charm- ing letter from an old lad; 10 be recommended inussage for this is &1 A o ndid i crean David Damipeniug day would not cause it You must Laving with your scalp or a tem 1o cause the condition tion. T will be glad to ser formula for an «xce | ¥ou wish it every duy until it giows fr creased circulation will prove help nd if a zood te led to t atm; often that is noed ed to restore the 10 its forme: health of seventy ow gray halrs and easlly passes for fifty. She confesses that the has & great desire to grow old gracefully. I think from her letter that the has succeeded. To look fifty at the age of seventy is an even greater achleve- ment than to look thirty at the age of fifty, for after the half century most people break physically and losc Constant R Zirl or seves ket teen. height inrhes b % normal weight at 128 pounds. It happened that this correspon wanted a nourishing face cream keep away the wrinkles, but what interested me most was her fear that 1 would think her foolish for this bit. We do not think it vain that @ young girl should try to pre- serve her heauty. Why should we think it vain when an old Jady fries to keep herself attractive? WU Polly—TFhe trouble wit] plexion comes cormetie health rour con ma in a uge all th and cons Steamed Corn Bread. increase the beauty of the world by < Mix two cupfuls of corn sneal making herself prettier? phtent s old friend the cupful of white floar. one-fourth of « ormula for nourishin, #kin fot uga n R ove P I hope sho is using 1t fajthfully and 4 CUPIUl of sugar and two level tea {spoonfuls of salt. thoroughth for a long time 1o iuto three cupfuls of sour milk. the T wish all cld ladies would d0 ' mix in one-fourth of a cupful of melted butter. Ada one and ne. half level teaspronfuls of soda, stir red into one heaping tablespoonful o flour, and into the batter thoroughly. greased ding o If swee three level teaspronfuls powder for tha sod "SALADA" .6 i Pure - Fragrant - Economical *“A Delicious Tea, Scientifically Preserved” BLACK (Orange Pekoe Biend) MIXED or GREEN — JUST TRY IT. — one @ Stir young one; for old e ®wo much, and the bodily slow up and a zallow skin is ¢ to follow. Therefore an: which helps to stimulate the skin, to cleanse it and to make the pores zct mix Put Try This Prize Chocolate Cake Recipe W. H. BAKER'S CHOCOLATE DELIGHT Cream { cup of butter, add Jually, beating constan s of 2 eggs until thick, and add 34 cup sugar gradually whi .15 cup sugar. Deating con- cups flovr 2 egps, beaten untit stant jv. Combine mixtures and add 35 cup milk alternately with 1% mixed and sifted with 2! t. baki vder: then add whiteso ted and 15&. vauilla. Turn into a buttered and foured ake pan and bake in 3 moderate oven about 30 minutes. When cold cover with frosting. When froating is set pour over a litti» ata tie, 113 2t of Telted chorolate. pread with back of spoon N ;. Tut 2 cupssugar and 15 eup boiling water in pun. St uotl sugar is dissolved, Tet boil without atirring until mixture will spin & thread when dropped from tip of Pour syrup gradually over the whitrs of 2 stiffly beaten eggs, beat Return to sauce- n until 1t becomes Tlavor with ing constantly until mixture is nearly stiff enough to hold its sha pan and cook over water stitring icing from bottom and sides of granular around sides. Removeand beat until mixtuse holds its slaj. 15 t. vanilla. This delicious cake won First cake prize in the Apri! Awards of our “$1,000 Prize Recipe Contest. « & The largest prizes will be awarded on Dec. ist. You have plenty of time. Submit your unusual recipes for entry. W. H. BAKER, INC. PROMOTION DEPT. Box 844. Penn. Ave. Sta., Washington, D.C.