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WOMAN’S PAGE.” THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D.” ©. WEDNEQ‘D'AY. NOVEMBER 29. 1922, FEATURES. ~ 15 — For a golden brown roast to set before the host— and real turkey flavor— Spread the Thanks- giving Bird with wcoa 1 A safe painting outfit for the children ER “painting”* outfit that H e paiats 1o m called ARTCRAFT. Aund Arteralt doesn’t use crayons, powders, brushes, or water, either! There is no muss, no mess, no fus when a_ child owns an Artcraft Picture Makiog Outhit, in Colors. No_ spilled pant. No sepoiled clothen. No dicty Gugers. And yel, ‘the cbild makes ‘ihclun'l with four beautiful colors. Woodland Green, Royal Purple, Sunset Red and Deep Blae-black, in actual aun- dreds of tints and tones. Makes i birds and flowers, mountaips and luke boats_and bunnies, holly and Santa Claus, ides many otber things. Pretty Artcraft pictures grow under the _ child’s interested eyes! The brilliant colors are COATED on patented Artcraft stencils. Water won't dissolve them. The child can lick the stencil with the aue and the color won't come offt Safe. Mere is the method: JUST RUB, and beautiful colored pictures appear. Alinost magic. roed in a few minutes. Simple. Easy. Interesting. Instructive. New—pate ented late this summer. Costs S0c, $1or §2. Ereeexplanatory circular, Come to the toy connter of your favorite sicre and Arteraft Picture Making Outfits, in Colors. A thoughtful gift. Picture Mahing Outfits inColcrs Wdaby C.J. VasHouten & Zoon, New York, . See Demonstrations Priscioal Departmest asd Tey Storas don't compare flours compareresults { TO PUT ON needed flesh take Doctor 1 eree’s Golden Medi- Discovery. By re- ring aciom of the ranged organs, de- it e cmaciated, th slexhmaker. In every(hi that's claimed for the “Dincovery —in purifying and building up the flesh a it is Felinble. LUDEN'S GIVE QUICK RELIEF 180 cents per yard for the dress and the normal{ maks. ¢a|Picoted or buttonhole them yourself. Long Coats for There was a curious revolution from capes to coats this year. Something of the political conditions in the world must have entered into the spirit of these garments; no one knows today who or what will be in power tomor- row. If the moon is governing all this backing and filling and reversing, it much to answer for. The followers of Hermione put all such business down to the planets, but as many thousands of years have been spent by the superstitious in crediting everything to the moon, it is not early ;lorldlhu planet idea to get a good strong o0ld. _~ There were few revolutiens in clothes this year, however, and the swift turn from cape to coat caused more atten- tion than as if all fashion had been in ux. This revolution came unheralded. Last winter there were capes; _the whole world of women wore them. Sud- denly there were coats; the whole world of women bought them. They are warm and protective, these new coats; there is no deceit about them. A ‘cape looked warm, but it wasn't. One's hands were snug enough in its folds, but it wasn't possible to keep them there when the wind blew and the cape blew with it. If it was heavy enough to be warm enough. it tugged at the throat and shoulders until one felt half strangled. Women did not protest against these conditions. They never protest against a new fash- ion.” They simply adjust themselves to it, and suffer, more or less. The coat of the hour needs no pro- test. It serves one's needs and it is good to look upon, although it has not the swagger, the rakishness, the air of style that a cape possesses. All the peoples of adventure and mystery, of crime and romance, have worn capes. The coat deadens adventure. It stands s0_securely for health and safety first. This season, to inveigle women, the ners have put as much glory into it as their imagination suggests. They build it of demufe and glowing fabrics. They lavish upon it all the curious tricks of decoration that this fruitful season has brought forth. Costly and colorful, it serves for evening and when one wants to be sedately covered there is the coat that gives one the worth of its price by adapting itself to business and festivity. Such a coat is the cne shown in the sketch. It is of warm beige ve- lours de laine trimmed in three places with seal. The usual coat is draped at the hip line according to the model which was standardized last summer in Paris. This one is not draped, how- ever, but Is cut in two pleces which are joined with a thick cord. There are squares of embroidery for decora- tion. The trick about many of these new coats s one every woman should know: they have a lining which per- mits them to be turned inside out. This 1s not possible when there is fur. Otherwise, yes. Then, indeed, does the coat do its work. (Copyright, 1922.) Jashon?) - ABgREon The Ever-Popular Jumper. For school wear, especially during the cold weather, it is hard to find a style that renders greater service and that always looks fresh and clean with a change of washable guimpes than the smart little jumper frock. The jumper shown exploits the new oval-shaped neckline and large arm- holes. The jumper may be made of serge, homespun, tweed or flannel, with guimpe of a wash fabric like lawn or batiste. Figuring serge at batiste at 35 cents per yard for the guimpe, the complets frock would cost about $ and with what you save In making the dress you could make another frock of a different style to give your girl a more ex- tended school wardrobe. The pattern, No. 1577, cuts in sizes 6, 8 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 re- quires 1% yards of 32 or 36 inch material for dress and 1 yard 36-inch material for. guimpe. Price of pattern, 15 cents, In post- age stamps only. Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, New York city. Please write name and address clearly. Things You’ll Like to Make. Something New in Nightgowns Here is s charming new nightgown which you will find very easy to Cut a plece of silk the shape of pattern “A." Have the edges If you wish to make it a bit dain- tier, roll the edges and then Jjoin narrow filet or val lace to it. The rest of the gown is a straight plece joined to the j/oke to give the peg- top effect. You can join the two parts with hemstitching or with an insertion of lace. Finish the edges of the lower part in the sa®~ way as the top. A dear friend would appre- ciate a gift of this sort for Chsft- ' mas. FLORA. (Copyright, 1922.) —_— Prize Chocolate Frosting. Coffee is usually on hand and three tablespoonfuls can be saved from the meal preceding for -flavoring this frosting, which is dark, smooth and rich, Heat the coffee boiling hot. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in three tablespoonfuls of coffee, and turn while boiling hot upon one cupful of powdered sugar and th tablespoonfuls of cocoa. It is venient when eggs are high priced and the vanflla bottle is empty. BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, | | Winter Weather STREET COAT OF BEIGE VELOURS DE LAINE TRIMMED WITH AMERICAN SEAL. IT IS NOT DRAPED AT THE HIPS IN THE USUAL MANNER, BUT THE TWO PARTS ARE JOINED WITH A HEAVY CORD AT THE HIPS. Meni for a Day. BREAKFAST Stewed Figs Oatmeal with Cream Steamed Corn Brea Chopped Meat with Eggs Coffee LUNCHEON Scalloped Brains and Sweetbreads Biscuits Sweet Green Pepper Salad Soft Gingerbread Cocoa DINNER. Potato Soup English Dish of Beef Boiled Oniong in White Sauce Mixed Pickles Orange and Walnut Salad Cheese Chocolate Layver Cake Coffee Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. Cutting the Door in Two. In very small apartments in the city, where every inch of’room is at a premium, the sweep of space re- quired by the opening swing of a door will often seem to fill all the available standing room. As one humorous young woman put it, have to move @ chair to get into my room, and move my bed to get out.” Even when there is enough floor space to walk into while the door s open, very often the door bumps into or entirely conceals an important piece of furniture, and sometimes seems to be the largest thing in the room. An_ingenious young matron who found that her whole home Interior was clogged up with large doors, so that no vista was possible, and the furniture was always being moved back and forth, got permission of her landlord to store all the doors in the basement of the apartment house, and replaced them with narrow double doors, each panel being half the width of the ordinary doors. These narrow doors, when swung open, took up only a small space against the wall and made only a small swing into the room. They could stand half open without jutting too far into the floor space, and then one had a pleasant view of the room beyond. Each door was a single panel, and the home-maker painted them a rich, dark blue, with tiny lines of gold outlining each panel. The hardware was of brass, gquaintly shaped, and the doors made a delight- ful spot of color against the white woodwork. The hangings throughout the apartment were colonial blue and the narrow doors had the value and effect of dark blue hangings, with the practical convenience of closing tightly when it was desirable. In houses where one may do as one pleases, being the owner, it is quite possible to saw doors in half, and fyr- nish each panel with additional hinges or latches, as the case might be. e effect of narrow French doors is an extremely attractive one and they are certainly much Jess :Wk'a.rd than the usual wide single oor. PAM'S PARIS PQSTALS PARIS, November 15.—Dear Ursuls: Choosing Christmas presents too exhausting for words. But Paris has such lovely things. The jet and dia- mond hat pin in the center I have bought for Cousin Hilda. (Copyright, 1922.) , BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. onnaise made without musta: Bistory of Pour Name] BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN MARSHALL VARIATIONS—Ferrer, Fervier. RACIAL ORIGIN—ANglo-Saxon. SOURCE—AnN occupation., The word “marshall” is one that has run the full course from the most humble to the most dignified of meanings. It is an Anglo-Saxon word, the original form of which was, under Norman-French influence, “marescal” or “mareshal”” It was & compound word, made up of “mare’” 1k,” the latter meaning “marescal” was originally, then, a “servant of the horse,”.that is to say, he was a horse-groom or & blacksmith. But as the Norman-French over- lords’ households were of military organization, the title came gradually to denote the more important mean- Ing of “master of thp horse,” and to be assoclated with more dignified du- ties of a military nature. In the course of time the “m: 8’ ties became those of the guests at banquets and important functions. How important this was can be seen only in the realization that in the Norman soclal organiza- tion this was a most punctilious mat- ter and from the fact that the title has developed into the highest mil- itary honor that the French govern- ment, and that of Great Britain also, can confer upon its generals. The family name of Marshall is an outgrowth of the title in many in- stances, but it cannot be doubted that in many others it was merely the outgrowth of the original occupation of horse-shoeing, which meaning still attached to the word after it had become important as a title. Ferrer and Ferrier are names which developed old word for horse-shoer, that of “ferrur” or “ferrour. ITTLE STORIES .[}G'Br:gm??e . have from anoher Yowler the Bob Cat Plans for a Beaver Dinner. Suspiclousfolks I've alwaye found Are very fond of suooping ‘round. —Paddy the Beaver. Peter Rabbit's interest in the new pond of Paddy the Beaver deep in the Green Forest was wholly a friendly in- terest, the interest of curiosity. But there were others who took an even greater Interest in the building of the new dam and the making of the new pond. One of these was Yowler the Bob Cat. It was: Yowler took. Oh, m: thing but a friendly intere It was a wholly selfish interest. Y r was all the time thinking of his stomach. Yowler had not happened to be about when Paddy and Mrs. Paddy began 't a friendly interest that . no! It was any- new dam. In fact, the new dam was s < MOST OF THAT NIGHT YOWLER SPENT WATCHING PADDY AND MRS. PADDY AT WORK. already of considerable size, and a small pond had already been formed before Yowler happened along that wa: haps you can imagine how surprised he was when one night he came stealthily prowling along and discovered a pond where there was no pond the last time he had come that way. ow Yowler is one of those people the Green Forest who always are ‘Whenever he sees, Per- | v 2> 14 of suspiciou: at once sets out to find out all about it, or at least to try to. At the sight of that new pond he stopped short, and for a long time stared at it without moving. After a while he noticed that the pond was little by little growing larger. Then in the shadows on the far side he saw a silvery line moving, and he knew at once that some one was swimming there. Without making a sound he stole around that side of the pond. When he got there no one was to be seen in the water. Yowler crouched down and waited. Yowler is nothing if not patient. By and by he heard a little splash, and then he saw Paddy the Beaver swim- ming with a long stick. Softly, as sil- ently as a shadow, Yowler followed along the shore. At iast he came to the new dam and saw Paddy place that stick in it. Of course, he understood everything then. He understood that that new dam was making the new pond, and that it was all the work of Paddy the Beaver. At least, that is what he thought at first. But presently he saw Mrs. Paddy at work on the dam too. A flerce joy filled the heart of Yowler the Box Cat. He had never been able to catch Paddy, but here was a newcomer who might not _be smart as Paddy. Besides, with two Beavers about he ought to have twice as many chances as he had had before. Most of that night Yowler spent in watching Paddy and Mrs. Paddy work, but he took the greatest care not to let them know it. Not once did he show himself. Not once did he snap a twig or rustle a leaf. 4 He was back there the mext night and the next and the one after that. He was studying the ways of Paddy and Mrs. Paddy. When they went off down to their old pond to rest in their house there, Yowler went all over their new dam from end to end. He studied the ground and the surroundings at both ends of jt to see if there might not be a chance o catch one of those Beav- ers when they were at work on one of the ends. But he couldn't find a hiding place near enough, and so he wisely declded to walt. ‘Wneh the dam was finished and Pad- dy and Mrs. Paddy began to cut their food supply and float the logs and branches down to the new dam and then drag them across Yowler saw at once that this point on the dam was, the one place where he might have a chance to catch a Beaver dinnmer, and he at once began to plan it. (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burgess.) Fig and Date Cookies. Cream one-third of & cupful of but- ter. Add gradually one cupful of sugar, then one egg, beaten light, one-third of a cupful of sweetf milk and two cupfuls of flour sifted with two_teaspoonfuls of pastry flour. Mix lightly and roll in a thin sheet. Cut any desired shape and put one- half the shapes into buttered tins. Spread with a fruit mixture made of one pound of figs or stoned dates, cooked until Soft emough to mash | amooth, then cooled. not let the fruit come quite to the edge of mnl dough. Put a second shaped bit of dough above the fruited one. Brush, over with white of egg, sprinkle with sugar and bake in-a quick oven. —_— Cranberry Salad. Stew one pint of large cranberries in as little water as possible, and: when done sweeten with a cupful of sugar and let them get cold. .Add to them one cupful of chopped nnt) meats and one cupful each of chop- ped celery and apple. Add the juice | of half an orange and half & lemon and fold in a small quantity rcd»f may- o; b i 3/ slept 1n, over in the is, knitted stuff, an flannel or ficece lined stuff) woolen: constitutes unfon suit, with socks of about the|valyular disease. offered the greatest:self a cause of death. idea uppermost fancled the cold might ering weather. ward_valetudinarian. he said to himself, “it looks as though we were getting Grampy's goat. He is sleeping nights with two bedroom ! windows wide open, and taking his He's pretty well broken of the coddling habit and real or imagimary drafts no longer send him scurrying for cover. must try now what a little sensible| dieting will do for that boy and may- live comfortably. tantly. it nowi mor?— (B. P.] Sarah Bernhardt’s Godson. To be a godson of Sarah Bernhardt 1s rather like being the bed Napoleon [ ally evinces for all of the truly great or the well Washington drank from, or an ancestor that came | gaid, “as tremendous as & women as or some|she is an artist. other well-known, overworked object, training, and what I am, of a like nature. - “Mayflower,” But, i apart, I actually take Gaston Glass's word for it when he tells me that he is a godson of Sarah Bernhardt's.|the first time, the early years, wherein After all, he ought to know. told me such an honest and amusing story In connection with the honor- ary relationship that all doubt fled. 1 was having tea with him at hi The First Three Years. Grampy, with his chronic winters, logic, not to say nagging, ame material, omfort indoors and out. The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. skepticism | limtiess’ patience with me, as she has He | she was most right.’ apartment—it was when Gaston was in New York, and the apartment was the one he and Dick Barthelmess had shared together before Dick took up the abode of matrimony. that Gaston Is French, and having heard of the Bernhardt PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE AR BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.. Noted Piysician and Author. Knowing “influence,” bron- chitis or winter cough, was as regu- lar as taxes and as wrong in his con- ventional notions of the cause of the | other ty trouble and the ways of health as a testimonial writer. years, mostly and the doctor to impart the first rudi- ments of a common sense hygiene. Grampy finally came to believe that|ie clothing is something to be worn for| comfort, winter or summer, and not for armor against “taking cold,” and he had to admit, after an exhaustive|and prevent any blood from leaking scientific consideration of all the tex- tile materials used for underwear, that for a man of sedentary indoor life a fairly light weight, porous( that|eard sort of a stockinette machine ! thick not tightly woven |yajve will not close perfectly. It took three' of eloquence by | heart let us call it, T asked him about her. At once his face lighted up with the fervor a responsive person just natur- things in litc and art. ‘She 1s a tremendous person,” he She gave me all my whatever I 1 be, I owe to her. She had a with all persons and all_thing: “Oh, has she a temper?” “Oh, has she a temper “Oof!" he threw up his gesticulat- ing hands (all Frenchmen gesticu ate). And then he ‘told me the tale. An incident that occurred when they were on tour, I think in Havana He had been told, he said, that the tour was to end rather abruptly. Thinking the information authentic, he passed it on to some one else. Mme. Bernhardt sent for him and accused him of misinformation. Gas- ton sent for her secretary to con- firm the tale he had heard, and the secretary denied the truth. Gaston told the secretary what he thought of him, and madame lost her temper to the extent of hurling some ‘silver- ware about the limited space of the dressing _room and informing Mr. Gaston that he was a fool, would never be.an actor while there wasea world, and, in brief, to be gone from her sight and from her company. “She told me,” sald Gastor. rue- fully, “that I would never be an actor. And I told her, ‘But, madame, you, you yourself are the one who told me that I should be an actor, nothing but an actor, all the time an actor—but her temper would permit of no compromise then. I left the company, and now I have a consuming ambition—when Mme. sav- GASTON GLASS COMPLAINS THAT— | Bernhardt returns to this country I want to be playing on Broadway. I want to make her see. I want her to know that once she was right and once she was wrong. but that it was 1 asked him how he liked us American._girls, and he said, plaintively, “I adore you all—of course. But you all say the one thing to me. Even Norma Talmadge has said it. You say: ‘Don’t lose your accent or vou will lose your per- sonality.’ " . “We all mean it in a complimen- tary fense,” I said. soothingly—"but don't lose it!” (Copyright. 1922.) Of cours |as seen under the microscope. The | cause of cancer is unknown. Sar- coma often developes in the site of some previous injury ray and ra- | dium treatment seem to have less in- fluence upon sarcoma than upon the pes of cancer (carcinoma and epi thelioma especially). Leakage of the Heart. What is meant by leakage of the Is it a cause of death?— M. R. H) swer—There are membranous between the two right cavi- d others between the two left cavities of the heart; and similar valves between the heart and the great arteries. These valves close | after the contraction of the heart, | Mr A valv back into the heart. As a result of infection (germs lodging on and en- tering the membrane) of the valve | ana_inflammation thus caused (endo- is) the membrane may become ed or distorted and then the hat eakage of the heart,” or It is never in it- Indeed, most ersons with leakage of the heart die Being regular, the patient had been | gnall) of other causes independent of raption was a “chest protector. thing than b: ection. hin. in mind it | trange that an invalid with t rather than from Wi he imagines was caused by “cold” i the first place should be inclined to| wear more clothing than comfort | really called for, especially upon the throat and chest where he childishly | “penetrate. in the habit of wearing a curious contrivance of red flannel—why red, it would be a puzzle to determine,| but perhaps because red is the danger | signal—cut in the outline of a shield, | and Grampy rather shamefacedly con- fessed to tho doctor that-this con- o was influenced to discard the ‘chest protector” more by the argument that | it_was an uncleanly any belief that it actually tended to impair his natural resistance to in-| Being regular, again, he was | one of those individuals who imagine | ‘(he heart defect. (Copyright, 1922.) | | The Housewife’s Idea Box Clean White Furs With Cornmeal. With _this | It was a great day for the doctor, | ‘Well, xygen ahoof daytimes. 3 smells { that body warmth and comfort come or hears anything new and strange he|from external heat, artificial warmth We e broach the subject of autogenous accines. They give the itch seven ears in Indian 1 wonder if bron- chitis really must run on forever. well.” If there is anything In this idea of “live and learn” a man at seventy- four ought to begin to have glimmer- ings of intelligence, and yet so few of us live to learn that few of us learn to Grampy did, reluc- And to hear him telling about adays—as he usually is—one would imagine Grampy chose the way and led the doctor on after him. That's another peculiarity of psychology of the older boys. do succeed in hammering a new idea|two, within earshot, 1 confess. into their heads they invariably im-!will look so well in blue, agine they have conceived it them-|heard the salesgi selves. the If you QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Fibro-Sarcoma. Is fibro-sarcoma a cancer or tu- Answer—Sarcoma is one of the more malignant types of cancer, oc- curring in persons of any age and rapidly fatal in its course unless rad- ically removed by operation. term fibro-sarcoma means that the structure is that of a mass of fibers, The when Grampy first ventured out for| his constitutional sensibly, even light- | ly attired, notwithstanding the blust-; The doctor espied his difficult patient beating it up the ave-| nue at a fine galt, swinging his stick | as blithely as any young buck, with-| out a sign of a muffler about his throat or overshoes or any of those timorous appurtenances of the way. | To clean white furs, rub well into the fur some cornmeal which has been warmed In the oven. As the meal becomes soiled use fresh cornmeal. After the meal remains clean, leave it in_the fur over night. In the morniing brush well, so that none is left in the fur. THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copsright, 1922.) VERSIFLAGE. A Gracious Act. 1 was standing in a store where the blouses are displayed, gazing idly through the door, feeling lazy, I'm afraid, when all suddenly my eves were attracted to a pair; to a sales- girl looking wise, and a lady with white hair. So 1 walked a pace or ou I then 1 stress. And the lady smiled reply, “Very well, I'll take this one.” With slim fingers deft and spry, soon the parcel quick was done. And’ I witnessed then a deed that forget I never can. With an eager- ness and speed she sought out the head blouse man. And she told him with great zest, “Your young salesgirl has good taste, and her manners are the best, I was glad to buy this wals! ‘Then I thought, Oh, courteous i dame, it's no wonder in your face there’s a sweetness one can’'t name— it reflects your spirit's grace. WILHELMINA STITCH. Eliminate constipation from your system through the use of nature's wonderful food—BRAN—Kellogg's Bran, cooked and krumbled, and you not only get every organ in your body working normally, but you have side-tracked disease! Eat Bran regularly, at lesst two tablespoon- fuls dail in chronic cases, with every meal! Bran, through its mineral salts and ability to absorb water, giving bulk and moisture, is nature'’s way to assist in perfect elimination. Bran’s work for health {s wonderful; it sweeps the bowe] tract, cleansing and purifying. Yet, Bran is not a “remedy.” It forms no habit! Your physician will indorse Kellogg's Bran. 1t is predicted that the consistent use of Kellogg’s Bran will increase ife from ten to fifteen Bran will make children Human Jife could be lengthened if people ate Kellogg’s Bran regularly! grow bigger and more robust be- cause it keeps the organs active and allows normal growth. Bran elim- inates sluggishness from men and women and keeps the brain active. Bran is-the most beneficial agent for constipation that can be given the aged! Kellogg's Bran will permanently zlear up & muddy or pimply complex- ion; it will relieve an obaoxious breath! Consider Kellogg's Bran as a de- licious_cereal—as well as a regula. tor! Kellogg’s Bran is delightful eaten as a cereal or sprinkled over your favorite cereal, its nut-like flavor adding greatly to the good- ness of all foods. Or, use Bran in raisin bread, gems, pancakes, etc. Recipes on each package! Go to your cery today and get a package of Kéllogg's Bran, cooked and krumbled! AL LS o P A A ey 1LLUSTRATED By Elsre Tobinson Look with horror at the people w! do good deeds. I don't. Or, at least. when I do I try not to think of them as good deeds or expect any reward for doing them. Goodness ought to be as spontaneous as sneezing and as soon forgotten. The reward for being kind lies in being kind. If Something tells me that some day I'm going “to do a murder. I don't want to do it. I shall struggle against it, but if temptation jostles me too close there’ll be something for the ambulance to take away, and it won't be me. The name of my mangled victim will be One-Who- Did-a-Good-Deed-Daily. Ot all forms of manhandling, the worst i{s doing a good deed dally to some one. History records no hor- rider sight than that of a pure soul pollyannying around like a blood- hound on the. trail waiting to do a £0od deed to the passer-by Then, having done it, hanging the good deed up in heaven to dry, as if it were Scalp No. 74,289. No to being Scalp No. 74,239. No one i £oing to graft their way into para- dise by doing a good den1 to me--not 1({ know it! Not that I mind people doing good deeds or Indulging fn any other sort of indoor sports that appeals to them. Nor do I mind their being kind to me. In fact, the kinder they are the more they love, admire, respect, honor and allow me to bors them, the more I admire their good taste. - But 1 do object to being used as grist for any spiritual hopper. They can't shove & Bood deed to me in at one end of the machine and take out a pair of wings | for themselves from the other end,| without a scrap. Moreover, I consider this whole business of profitable morality in. vestments to be perfectly disgusting. 1t's as if you prepared for heaven by | a sort of building and loan proposi- | tion—Do one good deed daily and in time you'll get a pearly mansion with all modern improvements. No, don’t look with horror at me. you don't get any joy out of your goodness, there's something wrong. either with the goodness or with you And as for this keeping toll on your spiritual investments—why should you call th ‘good deeds” if you expect to realize 8 per cent on them with a gilt halo thrown in as & bonus” I've served warning. Don't do your sainting here. Cultivate your =oul at the expense of some one else. but when you're with me, please be natural. (Copyright. 1822.) Girls and Their Interests BY HELEN HE charm of the rifle for sport | at 4 o'clock, under the supervision of seems to have gripped . the i Mrs. Catherine Swanson, director of the fancy of all the local! high A feature of :;fl{xraund. and Miss Ruby Neal, her school girls. and rifle teams | b:&':";hsence on_the x:::nd of -o‘:'n].! a1 < flourishing in all the high schools. | real live turkeys. The children will en- The team at Eastern is among m‘f;;)' some march formations and folk most active in this Amazonian sport, | sance®, before the regular program of songs and recitations. and the girls’ rifie club of that school | Among those who will give recita- is launched upon what promises to be fig_’,?:nir Vl';larybr’aryx. v;]hn mE r!t;fl« the most successful vear it has|puie" whpunisgioing. e sty known. At the first meeting of the e Lo Ry Cs ) AT year, Miss Florence Jarvis was Dorman. “Over the River and Through the Woods,” and Jennis Har- chosen to fill the vacancy left by the captain-elect, Miss Edna Mazzullo. ‘Grandma on Thanksgiving Others who are to sing or re- Miss Mary Tesh was elected secre- tary-treasurer in place of Miss Louise cite, but whose selections have mot been given to Mrs. Swanson as yet Smith, and Miss Marguerite Lingrell was appointed assistant captain. are Patricia Diamond, Frances Broce. Already the club membership num- Virginia Moore and Irving Schneide. 1SS ELL TH 5 bers more than fifty girls, but, to the 1\ EABETH, FISHER Ja D e i e e rector of girls' activities on the > ive | Plavgrounds, has just announced ti number of enthusiastic prospective | P . - e members has come from the freshman | two final winners in the various class of the school. From the point school division girls' basket ball of view of the freshman class this|icame Ars. Caroline Alexander, di- is_excellent, a8 the early practice at this sport will give them a most im- [ fector of the Rosedale playground portant advantage when theirs is the | division, states that the Webb School senior team. There's nothing in the | Was the girls’ team winning In that world like practice. All of these new [division. The personnel of the team girls are” shooting remarkably well [included the following girls. Ella for beginners, while the girls who | Fitzgerald. right forward: Dora Bell were members of the club last vear |Gray, left forward; Ida Harding, cen- are holding their own with their |ter: Catherine Hannahan, side center: records. Liliian Fisher, right guard, and Zam- Miss Shelp and Mr. Schwartz of |ma Hawkin:, left guard. the faculty the supervisors of | Miss Ethel McAllister. director of the club's activities, and Edward An- | the basket bail teams of the George drus and Sanford Leach are instruc- |town division. has informed tors, training the girls in the proper | Fisher that the team from the Jack S son School won that division's cham- pionship. The girls on the team. which won with a score of 17 to 14. : Virginia Morton, right guard: Elizabeth Barr, left guard; Olive Copperthite, center; Marie Jeffries. side center: Beatrice Wisotzky, Tight guard, and Ida Berman, left guard. Miss Fisher states that these games tbeing the final ones of the season there will be no girls’ sport on the playgrounds until .after the Christ- mas holidays, as the girls will now concentrate their attention upon the since the club was organized. making: ol _toys and ‘ether: things founded originally on the idea sug-|¥hich can be used as Christmas gifts gested by Miss Arline Gilbert, generally | for poor children. acknowledged as one of the best ¥ g Meat in Tomato Sauce. un pianists in the city. Miss Gilbert | graduated with the class of June, 1922, | from Western. She attended this last Heat half a pint of stock in a dish with two tablespoonfuls of good to- mato catsup. a tablespoonful of but- meeting, and at the end of the usual program plaved Chopin’s “Nocturne in D Minor. ter and a dozen drops of onion Juice. If you prefer. you can fry a sliced onion in the butter first and to_ this Other numbers on the program we: Haydn's “Gypsy Rondo,” played by Miss add the stock and the catsup. When the mixtuse is hot. lay in some slices Barbara Saunders; Schubert’'s “Four of cold mgat, add salt pper Impromptus.” played by Miss Anita nd pe) and cook un{il the meat is thoroughly Mueller; Nollet’s ““Tarentiella,” as played by Miss Ann Keliher, and “A heated. Either veal or beef is good warmed over in this way, and so i= la Bien Aimee.” by Miss Mabel Yassell. 075, TS, members were “welcomed into the club at this meeting. They are Miriam Latterner and Miss Marian |2/8° 1amb or mutton. —_— Pear Cream. Peel and core some ripe pears aud Lockhart. mash them fine. To one pint of the lpuln add one-half a_cupful of sugar. Winning Teams. PIANISTS' CLUB. HE Pianists' Club is one of the most interesting girls' organiza- tions at Western High School, which is the only local school to have a club of this particular variety. The fourth meeting of the year of | this group of girls, which was held re- | cently, was one of the most Interesting in the numbers given on the p It was THANKSGIVING PARTY HE little girls on the plaza pi ground are planking an especially i ; " |a little vanilla and one cupful of u_-;gne“pm,\’rh\o celehmwm'l",hlnku e el o noo ot BV nE e e program will be pre-|gether and set in a very cold place. sented on the playground this afternoon Serve in sherbet glasses. Good Luck is thought to go a long way, but Good Judgment goes farther. TO USE "SALADA’ IS GOOD JUDGMENT. . “The Tea that is always Reliable.” Something To Eat In A Hurry? Listen World! £