Evening Star Newspaper, December 7, 1922, Page 42

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"WOMA | OnYour Toes! —5c Everywhere Luscious little raisins in little red boxes—when you feel a little hungry, lazy, tired or faint. 75% pure fruit sugar. Full of quick-acting ener- gizing nutriment—also food- iron, fine food -for the blood. Put you on your toes, and keep you there if you eat a little box or two per day. Just try Little Sun-Maids “Between-Meal” Raisins Had Your Tron Today? Billbéard e WQekl THEATRICAL PLAY SAFE ORDER NOW THROUGH YOUR NEWSDEALER o copy et The Gllrisotrmas lssue The Billboard OUT NEXT WEEK A Besutiful cover in colors late ©o'the season: Many Intaresuing e tratiens. Many highly informative spee. elalarticles. Allthe regulardepartments @overing every branch of the show Qusie wes. At all news stands. 15¢c | Christmas lfichl;flfi? Colgr - Durum \Vheat Semolina from which Foulds’Macaroni and lue :;de. vrr_»gl:ces{h rich, color not possi 3 Sinary flour. e Itis firm, get i Iways distinguishes products. Your dealer difference. Ask him knows th filekles'. R i e s oty tmars the perfect appea Complexion. Permanent and tempreacy skin troubles are effectively conceaied, skins. tiseptic. Send 15¢. for Trial Stze FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New York Gouraud’s Oriental Cream WONEN! DIE ANYTHING NEW * FOR FEWGEATS | Dresses Kimonas Draperies Skirts Curtains Ginghams Coats 8weaters Stockings | Walsts Coverings Everything l ' Buy “Diamond Dyes’—no other kind—and follow the simple directions in every package. Don't wonder whether you can dye or tint suc- cemstully, because perfect home dyeing is guar- anteed with Diamond Dyes even if you have aever dyed befors. Just tell your drugglst| ‘whether the materlal you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it s linen, cotton or mized goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, | henzifie. or something of the o N'S PAGE. Bebe Daniels Sees New York. The -other mgrning, quite early, 1 went to call upon Bebe Daniel 1 was almost the first day of her very first trip to the city of New York. Of course T knew that she would be full of thoughts anent the subway and and other points of interest to young visitors. But 1 found her bemoaning the fact that she had never been so grimy in her lifd—that she had to wash her hair in oline and her hands in ind, and that she simply couldn’t scem to lgok human since she had left the western She said that she had had Detwoe: four-month vaca- | | tion without a_lick of work, and malking | {her next pictu Mrs. Wharton's | ilimpses of the Moon,” in w York, | ho had cho: Tatter—and | at should speak for her regarding | ¢ feeling for New York: Apart from th her ha 5 Th avenue .a sk, the men, the women, the studia nd city, which was like Thw Grant’ d ‘Barthelme nd_first hadn’t felt so in the N 1o look out fo slimpses of the | mansion . She will the sior: train comin been or . on the know. < s, 'm su worse matrimony or the Pve waite all my life and worked all my to get to the point which I now am. would take a combination of b . Paris of Troy inever of the movie PTm not s j wither on ul, {me give it up. LT bel < all Tight for pro i fessional men to marry. lare married, vou ME Central Bulletin has an in i teresting ite cding new regulations at the swimming meets for the girls of the school. As swimming is be 0 girls of the city for a winter sport girls' swimming clubs will be interes! item in Their re aration for th B w regulation, ful including the n lTows: i At the last meeting some discussion was held mainly for the new leader: he main points * means and what a The girls were ments governing their entran letter meet and the rules of the & letic association concerning the award of A new year: a gra; preccdent will be set this tank suit will be given to each g nstead of the usual gift of a cap. As there are sixty 1 this vear. this will be quite an under- taking, but it is believed that team has enough money to d A record number are ¢ this year. and there sh. tionally gnod work. 3 from the first to the eighth is represented among the leaders. It is unusual for first or second semester girls to try for the team. as only girls from the three upper c re al- lowed to compete for their letter. The ! four first-vear girls who have their leadership are: Molly ander. R1, and Marina RI1. The last named is the sister of Dana Yung Kwai, who made a name for himself on the boys' team. Be- er of the captain of ¥ s also a leader. ection C7 holds the record for the number of leaders in one section, hav ing seven girls on the team. This is about twide as many as its nearest rival. The new leaders are: Elizabeth Barr. Marian Bates. Catherine Beaver: Dorothy Boyls, Sleanor Cool. Frances Coughlin, Virginia Cullen, The Beavers Have Many Visitors. 1¢ vou would have vour neighbors cail ‘Fry starting something new: that's atl. dy the Beaver. Yowler the Bob Cat v to waste time hanging around the new pond of Paddy the Beaver and Mrs. Paddy after he knew that the knew he had been trying to catch them. He went hunting elsewhere, hoping that after a time they would forget. But there were other visitors to that new .pond. Indeed, as soon as it wa known that there was new s too wis spot. fade or run. MOST OF ONE NIGHT THERE. pond everybody in the pond just out of curiosity. young Deer were the new pond and carefully over the new The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. Grant’s tomb and the Statue of Liberty for life and Nero to make coming increasingly popular among the well as for outdoor Indulgence in the balmy days of the summer vacatlon. it is quite possible that some of the other d in the new suggestions given in this The girls’ swimming team of Cen- prep- ere about what a aders the BEDTIME STORIES MOTHER BEAR AND THE TWINS, BOXER AND WOOF, SPENT THE MOONLIGHT Green Forest who could travel visited that; Lightfoot | the Deer, Mrs. Lightfoot and the two mong_ the early vistors. Buster Bear walked all around looked dam. He was wise THE EVENING STAR,. WASHINGTON Barthelmess, Tommie Meighan and others—but T don’t know that I think professional women should marry. It doesn’t seem to work out o well for them. Its probably because the men re jealous, ['ve never seen a man who didn’t expect a girl to give up her career when she married him— unless he was, perhaps, professional himsclf. Women never expect a man 7 DANIE N NEW YORK FOR THE FIRST TIME. That's one dif- ixn give up a career. ferono “Men ara more seltish, too. They want <o first and foremost. They don’t 1 [ want to cope with a career in their { home life. But | don’t know why I'm {holdingz fourth on matrimony. = T've [ pever been <o much as engaged, and propose to me I ver met the man man starts to mile! Uve n 1ld be sure enough of yet!™ which Juncture Bebe's' mamma . the felephone began to get in ting work. Bebe t below ken sandwiches and tea—heaven why, it being 11 a.m.—and we procecded to Ta into frequent si- | lences, punctuated by sandwiches and young gentlemen asking Bebe to vari- theaters, dances, house par- . ete. (Copyright, 1922.) i a run S8 B .| A [ ent L ] i allon. an, Elinor Helen Johnse sther Monahan, Ruth Garrison, Dor- Hopkins, 'Adah rtherine Ma- Thlic Raine, Smead, Irma Elsie Talbert, rine Worrall, CHRI HE Alumnae Chapter of the Mer- rill Girls' Club of Eastern High School . held short meeting Tues- day night and discussed particularly what the chapter would do fn the way of welfare work for Christmas. It was decided that it would provide food, clothing and gifts for two poor families this vear. The subject ment for the ¢l of a social entertain- apter was also discussed, nd a dance planned to be given hout the middle of January. The de- ailed arrangements and the exact date for the dance will he determined upon at a later date. 1t is hoped by the members of the club that they may be able 1o s the tearoom of the Grace Dodge Hotel for the dance, which will be of 4 semi-closed nature. Miss Alumnae Chapter, presided at the meet- ing and chairman of the com- mittee of arrangements for the dance. TECH STUDENTS PLAY. \ ISS MARGARET B; NIT is the i student in charge of directing the 1lay 10 be given at Technical High School early in January, under the auspices of the Dramatic Club of the There are about fifty girls and in the club, of which Mrs. Eda adviser, and it is s 1 to keep up a good stic standard, and especially ¥ in English. in order to be ible for membership. he play to be given is Booth Tark- ington’s delightful comedy, “Clar- ence.” dred Volandt will have the leading feminine role of Miss Pinney, and Merrill Burnside will be Clarence. Other girls and boys in the cast have been announced fol- iow beth Gladman, -Marian Brown, 1 Barbee, Ruth Russell, Merrill Burnside, John Daly. John chellhaus. uart Ball and rl Bas- sett. ry for By Thornton 'W. Burgess. without making a call on Paddy and Padd; idy and Mrs. Paddy paid no at- on to any of these visitors. That ¥, théy didn’t stop to gossip. They were too busy. They simply kept right on with their work. When any ! visitors of whom they had the least * were about they always man- I' ed to find work to do in the water. When there were visitors of whom they were not afraid they worked on {land, cutting and trimming trees. In | fact. they were rather glad to have | Blacky the Crow, Sammy Jay and | Chatterer about, for. though their | tongues were noisy, their eves were | sharp_and they really were watch- men for Paddy and Mrs. Paddy, al- though they did not know it. You see, | the instant one of them discovered 1 Old Man Coyote or one of the Bear amily or Reddy Fox he instantly | made a great racket, as is the way of i all three of them. Probably the last of all the people living In the Green Forest to visit that ‘new pond was Prickly Potky the | Porcupine. One moonlit night he came i shuffling_out of the Black shadows i to the shore of the new pond. Paddy ] saw him at once. It didn’t trouble him | he was left alone. In fact. it rather ! Dlcased Paddy to see Prickly Puricy | there. They were the best of friends. ' (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burgess.) at all, for he knew that Prickly Torky was quite harmless so long as The Decorators. Often the “best decoration” for the top of a mantel is no decoration at all. If the mantel ftself shows inter- esting workmanship, If it is sur- mounted by a painting or tapestry or ornate mirror you may find your best plan to leave it undecked by the usual collection of vases, clocks, candle- sticks. ete. 1t vou have attractive flooring there is no reason why you,should cover it with rugs. Many of the best of the new interior decorators delight in the effect of wide oak flooring, left exposed for large spaces. A single rug at one side of the room or pos- sibly a runner where the floor is most traversed with a small hearth rug is president of the Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. BSlced Bananss Hominy with Cream ‘Tasty Codfish Balls Orange Marmalad Bran Fig Muffini . Cofteo LUNCHEON. Potato Salad Cheese Sandwiches Orange Jelly BSponge Cake Hot Chocolate DINNER. Barley Soup Rabbit a la Creole Indian Rice Stewed Tomatoes Cranberry Sauce Dinner Rolls Delicious Raisin Ple Coffes Wistory of Pour Name, BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN LUTZ VARIATIONS—Lutzen, Lutzow, Lutzel- burg, Luxemburg, Lutes. RACIAL ORIGIN—German. SOURCE—Geographical. The family names in this group are not, in all instances, really the same. That is to say, they are not derived from the same source, though they are derived in most cases from the same type of source, the name of a town, city or locality. But the simi- larity of the names is so great, and there have been so many changes in spelling, from one to the other, that barring definite geneaological tracing of ancestry, the individual family has no method save that of guesswork in determining the specific source of its name. There is a town in Prussian Saxony named Lutzen, famous in history as the scene of a great battle between the forces of Gustavus Adolphus. King {_Sweden. and Gen. Wallenstein, in . Many families named Lutz and Lutzen derive their names from that place, but Lutzelburgs and Luxem- burgs could hardly do so. The latter two names comes inevitably from the duchy or town of Luxemburg, which was ~ originally “Lutzelburg,” the softening of the name occuring un- der the influence of the neighboring French tongue. But the names Lutzen and Luts may also have come from this source through a process of shortening. Incidentally “Lutzel” is an old Ger- man form which is the counterpart of the modern English “little,” and the name Luxemburg means “little town.” The “ow” in Lutzow shows Slavonic influence, and tho name “Lutes” is sometimes, though not in all cases. :‘imply an’ Americanized spelling of utz. Your Home and You BY HELEN KEN Electricity’s Artful Aid. Grandmother. who had been brought up on a farm and had undergone all the hardships of housework without running water, furance heat or even gas for cooking and lighting, sat at the breakfast table in her daughter's city apartment and marveled. Opposite her sat her voung-looking daughter, who had the figure and fresh clear skin of a girl, Serving an appetizing dish of bacon and eggs from an electric grill on the table. Her bob-haired granddaughter wi making golden brown toast on a small “silver contraption.” with red hot wires inside. Both these appli. ances were connected by unobtrusive cords with a little mahogany stand which rolled easily up to and awa trom_ the table—*“an electric Susan, her_daughter called it. | Grandmother silently compared these comforts with the old kitchen stove, raging hot and always needing polishing, over which she had hung many days in the long ago, thence carrving her smoking dishes clear across the big kitchen into the dining room. back and forth, back and forth —a weary journey. She thought of the old heavy flat irons she had used, and compared them with the cool handled, ever-hot electric iron in use | in this modern apartment. Grandmother looked on wide-eved | at the electric range in her daugh- ter's wee kitchenette, at the electric dishwasher that had replaced her old dishpan, for which the water had to he heated on the wood stove. She thought back to the fatiguing hours she had spent over the washtub, the wringer, the frozen clothes line—and then she looked again at the electric washing machine, the motor-run wringer, the compact clothes dryer— and grandmother sighed. She sightd that she had not waited a generation or two and lived in a day when the silent force of electricity could have lifted the heavy burden from her shoulders. She looked down at her knotted hands, and then at her daughter's and her grand-daughter's white, smooth ones. "Oh, children,” said grandmother, with_a little quaver in her voice. *“I wonder if you know how to be thank- ful enough for all these new inven- tions. I wish I could begin house- keeping all over again. I would have every electrical contrivance that is made, and it would be play instead of work, Be grateful, children, be grateful!” Rabbit a la Creole. ! does not invariably Dress, clean and disjoint two rabbits. Cover with salted water and let stand for three hours. Drain. wipe. sprinkle with salt and pepper and roll in flour. Put one-third cunful of fat in a frying pan and when hot add the rabbit, cover, and cook slowly one and one-half hours, turning frequently. Pour one cupful of milk over the rabbit and cook for 30 minutes. Remove to a serving dish and garnish with parsiey. —_— ‘bowl, gradually add two cupfuls of sour cream or milk in which one_ teaspoon- ful of soda has been dissolved, add two eggs and one cupful of cleaned cur- rants. Beat, then bake in small cakes. PAM'S PARIS POSTALS Carrant Griddle Cakes. i Sift two cupfuls of flour and onek scant teaspoonful of galt in a mixing | D.- U, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1922 Certainly we are going back to the costumery of the anclents and of the primitive peoples. We use bird animais, houses and human figur i red, blue, black and yellow pin feath- | into. but there are other partnerships ers, FANS THAT RES COLORFUL PLUMAC THEIR_APPEARANCE. THIS ONE, CARRIED AT THE OPERA, IS A BIRD OF PARADISE. WITH A COST- LY HANDLE OF TORTOISE SHELL. MBLE BIRDS OF HAVE MADE as the patterns for our embroidery and other decorations. It would have scemed fantastic a year ago for a woman to wear two porcelain fig- Conjugal Complaints. : Perhaps the most common of all| jugal obesity is the difficulty Friend |and quick wit at repartee made him | Husband has in persuading Friend |Very popular even hefore he was six- conjugal complaints is that after sev- eral vears of morc or less connubial! happiness the wife begins to resem ble her husband, or in sad cases, the! husband begins to resemble his wife| not only in interests and tastes, but/ in ‘manner of behavior and even in Bird Fans as Fantasy of Fashion BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Author. jahoof with ures dangling from the front of her blouse. Today one. glances at them amusedly and says: “They're doing that in Paris” We have put birds, real or com- posite, on our hats for decades. There’s nothing new in that fashion, but we have not put the heads of birds on our fans. More than that, we have been rather selective in the aviary. Owls were not considered an attractive decoration for a lady. Now she takes this bird of old standing for wisdom and sleepiness, and puts its head on her buttons, her sport cuff links, the side of her suede helmet, and as a last thought on the large fan she takes to a dinner party or the opera. These owl fans are two-headed. The wise old face looks out at the world from each side of the immense spread of feathers that makes up the fan. owls’ feathers, of course. Side by side with this fan is one of para- dise. The head is at the side and the handle is of tortoise shell. Women also put the heads of birds on their handbags, and small cockades of birds’ feathers, instead of buckles, are on their high-tongue satin slippers. Last August the French dressmak- ers started to use immense cockades of colored pin feathers as a hip or- nament to hold the drapery of the frock, and now arrive bandeaux of these same bird feathers as rivals to the plaited silver bands which domi- nated the audience at the opening night of the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. There are small evening turbans of with a Persian roll of brown tulie at the edge. and there are bags embroidered in birds’ feathers which swing from fabric belts on velvet and black brocade gown: It is a curious fashion to spring up in an era of trolley cars, labor strikes, votes for women and an eight-hour day for every one, but its advent at this particular moment is not as curious as the observer may think, because it is significant of a remarkable new trend in costumery, which is the first violent movement of the pendulum away from the econ- omy and sobriety of war costumery. It is hard to be demure these days in manners and in clothes. (Oopyright, 1922.) | flivvers do make sluggards of us all. A bad symptom of inciplent con- Wife to take six miles of oxygen him of an afterroon or evening. She finds various handicaps and excuses. And in a little while the man can’t persuade any woman to go out with him, probably couldn’t g0 out if any woman would. Seriously, you see. the notion of Present age is the fact that the young people are no longer regarding each other’s most trivial acts as signs of there are many who deplore this fact, but why should they? There is really 2 great deal of work for men and women to do together outside the business of matrimony. Marriage is undoubtedly the most beautiful part- FEATURES. isten,World! WRITTEN AND 1nLUSTRATED By Clsre Toobinson — One of tie healthiest signs of the |prosperity and happiness of the worid And 5o I think it's a very good thing e e e longer re; mat- ters of awful omen. net The more young people can learn to play and “work together without Tomantic intention, the better world we'll have and the maner homes when the youngsters get around to the business of making homes. It isn't pure or idealistic to insist that young people shonld be guarded from each other unti: the love-making time ar- rives. It Isn't intellige or clean to suspect sex motives in every en- counter. It's ignorant and quite a bit nasty. It shoves humanity down to the level of the gophers and hop toads whose only association comes throught mating. Humans have in- finitely more complex duties and need a wider, more impersonal training than that of even the most select gophers from the best families. The world has suffered greatly from the savage sexpal fears which hav. cooped its young women away fro: its voung ‘men. Women need 1t} tolerance, sportmanship and poi ‘which association with men can giv. them. Men need the refinement. ten- derness and idealism which assor tion with women can give. And thes. things can best be learned in an at- mosphere of happy play, healthy com petition, and good. natural criticisn:. uncomplicated by the embarrassments of love. Will we make mistakes in dealing with this new freedom? Of cours:. we will. Mix-ups always occur wher an old orger changes. But no mis takes can possibly be worse than the deep-rooted injustice and ignorance which underlay the old regime. A in the end we are going to cmerge upon a cleaner, stronger plane of life ‘serious intentions.” I realize that WHY SHOULD THEY HAVE 'SERIOUS INTENTIONS 2 ® nership a man and woman can enter and contracts quite outside the busi- ness of sex which contribute to the Love Letters That Made History BY JOSEPH KAYE. became the acknowledged arbiter men’s farhion. In addition, his =i and charming personality gave hin access to every door. But Brumme lived too well. His arrogant clever ness alienated his roval patron; i gradually squandered his fortune, anc the man who was the favorite of England went through the humill tion of a debtor's prison, ending his days in a charitable institution, ne longer a dandy, but a miscrable disreputable pauper. In the heyday of his vogue P Brummel was a fashionable lover and the letter below is one remaining 1o attest to the existence of an unusus personality “Yesterday morning 1 was reducerd almost to insanity, but your note ir the evening restored me to peace and equanimity and, as if T had been re- deemed from earthly pursuits, would have placed me in heaven. +“Thank you. dearest of beings: how can I retribute all this benevolen' | open-heartedness, the delicious pro- Beau Brummel and One of His Conquests. Who has not heard of Beau Brum- mel? Beau Brummel, the fop, the dandy, the ladies’ man. Most of us have heard of him o often and have heard his name applied to so many purposes that we have come to accept him as a lcgend. Beau Brummel is no legend, however, but one of the most Inte: ting characters in his- tory. His real name was George Bryan Brummel, and he was really ail the rage in the Londen of his time. He was born in Englands capital, the son of the Secretary to a lord. He was sent to Eton and Oxford. where his instinctive taste for good dressing teen. At that age he left Oxford, and when he was presented to the Prince of Wales (later George IV) the lat- ter was attracted by his vivacity and gave him a commiesion in his own | and avowal of my not being indiffer- regiment. |ent to you? I cannot by inanimate Brummel paid so little attention to | words represent the excess of ms his military duties that, it is said, his | feclings toward you; take them witl men didn't know him. He soon in- | undue admission. and forbearance, the appearance. ‘Whether this tendencey of mates to acquire common likes and looks has any tangible bearing on the guestion of disease is debatable. There are plenty of instances of conjugal dis- ease, that is, the simultaneous de- velopment or occurrence of a certain disease, say cancer or tuberculosis or diabetes or apoplexy, in man and wife, but as far as I can learn, the evidence of conjugality is less con- vincing in these instances than in the instance of obesity. There is an exiraordinary number of cases of conjugal obe: to_be found. very sad cases, indeed. True, the disease begin at precisely | the same instant in man and wife in these deplorable cases of conjugal ; probably the husband makes a gesture toward incorporation first, as a rule, but the wife soon over- takes him and maintains a safe lead over him for the rest of the race. Conjugal obesity is too familiar an actuality for anybody to doubt or question such a happening. If the influence of man over wife or of wife over husband has no causative rela- tion here. then we must dismiss the whole question of conjugal disease as_wholly fanciful. For every instance of conjugal pneumonia, cholelithiasis, cataract or epilepsy you can report, I venture to say 1 can cite ten instances of con- jugal obesity. So if there is any- thing in the idea of conjugal com- plaints at all it is surely manifest in this most frequent of all such com- plaints. My researches have convinced me that while some husbands go wrong all alone, still if the wife starts culti- vating slacker flesh the husband will shortly begin emulating her example for if there is anything most men dis like more than outright obesity it being mistaken for their wives' little boys. This may not be good Leary psychology, yet 1 think there is a grain of truth in it. Of course, the main reason for conjugal obesity is that the good cooks are 5o eagerly snapped up by the good providers and Doubtless you have takem your young hopeful visiting some time, only to wonder when it was time to return; how you were going to board a trolley car with such a “messed-up” child and not be disgraced. Disheart- ened mothers heed. In this cunning garment, which combines a slip-on jumper dress with a pair of rompers, you have the very thing you have conjugal affections, of course, you know what I mean, is & conjecture pure and simple. Aside from the communicable diseases which husband or wife may give a mate, and that doesn't include cancer, the only ac- ceptable explanation for these occur- rences is that some diseases, like cancer, are so common that they are bound "to strike twlice in the same family here and there. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Wool for Kiddies. Should a child two and one-half ars of age wear part-wool under- Vests or cotton flecce?—Mrs. Q. J. J. Answer.—Cotton fleece is one of the | most unhyglenic materials for under- { Wear, macerating and smothering the <kin, retaining perspiration and, being an excellent conductor of heat, it offers little protection against sudden plunges into overheated rooms and out Into the cold air. The more wool, or silk and wool, in the child’s unders Clothing, and the less cotton, the bette! Fine for Figure. I have been faithfully doing all of the new Brady symphony exercises: night and morning for the past six| months, and the improvement in my figure is remarkable. Besides that, the exercises are a positive joy. Very many thanks for all your helps. —Mrs. L. A. G. Answer.—This lady is probably trying _to express how fine it feels to get rid of that fat feeling. Sweet Stuff. { Kindly fnform me if too much sweet | stuff will cause pimples and a good | medicine or physic to cure them. —G. M. Answer.—No. Nor do I know a| physic that will cure them. But send me another billet-doux, this time not forgetting & stamped self-directed envelope, and I'll mall you instruc- tions for clearing up blackheads and | pimples. (Copyright, 1922.) Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. BY ABRAM I. ELKUS. Old-Fashioned Bread Pudding. Put bread in a bowl, stale or fresh. break it in pleces with crust, boll some milk in doubie bofler, pour {t | over the bread in the bowl, put a cover over to keep in the steam. Then | when it is soft mash It up with a | wooden spoon, add sugar and take small piece of hutter, size of a wal- nut, three eggs, seedless raisins, cit- ron, one-fourth teaspoonful baking powder. Bake in a slow oven about one hour and & half. If it gets too brown on the top put & piece of paper over it. Take it out of the oven when you are ready to serve it. Hard Sauce for Pudding. Put a spoonful of butter in a bowl with some powdered sugar, cream it and little by little add some milk, stirring all the time until the sugar is all dissolved. Then, when you are going to serve it, put the bowl in some hot water, stirring it all the time. It gives it a soft, glossy look. Flavor with vanilla or any kind of flavoring. ; e ) Fig Pudding. Soak four ounces of figs in a quart of lukewarm water for one hour. remove and drain well. Cut the figs into quarter-inch pleces, place them in a bowl, add two ounces of bread crumbs, two ounces of powdered sugar, one ounce of flour and three egg yolk Mix all well together with a wooden spoon for flve minutes. Then beat up the white of the three eggs to a stiff froth and add to the other bowl. Lightly mix Wlt‘h the spoon for a minute.. herited Some money and set up a simple boon and sacred pledges of fashionable bacheior apartment. He|my heart's deepest affection for you was constantly in the prince's com-|they are rooted in my very soul anu pany, and their adventures were |exist; they will never deviate; th many and gay. will never die away. Brummel's exquisite taste in dress| *“Ever most affectionately vours. spread his fame in society and he' 'GEORGE BRUMMEL." “The kind of fish cakes make yourself when you have time. Gorton's od = ions with fine mealy pota- famous Codfish (No Bones) in generous toes—all ready for you to shape and fry. Tile most celebrated gardens of India and Ceylon give their best teas to Tetley’s Orange Pekoe. It is _ the perfect blend. TETLEY'S Makes good TEA a certainty No more expensive than ordinary brands HILE your grocer asks you to pay no more for Ev Milk than for other standard Wfludgnl :vaporated . actually cost more to produce it. In Borden's E Milk, country with thcaumhhmmdd nutritive value. Ask your grocer for 's. THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building New York Makers alse of Bordem’s Eagle Brand Milk, Borden's Melted Milk end Borden’s Confectionery milk high Lightly butter and flour & quart pudding mold, then pour in the preparation. Place the mold in & pastry tin, and pour in boiling water up to half the height of the mold. Remove, unmold on & hot dish, and enough not to try to walk across on it, for he knew that it was not yet strong enough. Mother Bear and the twins, Boxer and Woof Woof, spent the most of one moonlight night there. Of course, been looking for. The dress may be slipped off while playlng and put on again when “homeward-bound” time comes. often chosen for the only floor cover- ing for reasons that have nothing to do_with economy. The old-fashioned roller shade is looked upon with suspicion and aver- Reddy Fox, Mrs, Jumper the Hare couldn’t keep awa but he was one of those who was sel dom seen. He usually kept safely hid- Blacky the Crow man- Sometimes he Reddy and old Granny Fox were among the early visitors. In fact, they came quite fre- quently. Old May Coyote took great interest in what was going on there. n by many decorators. Often these roller shades are dispensed with e: tirely, provision for necessary shad- ing of the windows being made by other drapery; at other times they are tolerated but are left entirely rolled up during the day time, so as to leave the entire window unob- structed. : There seems to be no reason for the convention for floors eternally finish- ed in tones of brown. And the pre: was content to fiy over the pond. butjent day decorator makes use occa- often he stopped to watch Paddy and|sionally of floors painted bive or re.tl, Mrs. Paddy work and seo what his|or green or gray. Usually such floors sharp eves could discover. Of course,|are given a high wax finish and where Sammy Jay was 2 dally visitor. Chat- | the color is high the rugs used ther terer the Red Squirrel was nother!on are appropriately subdued in de- who rarely sllowpd & 4AY fa Pass slgn or colon T ‘This ulsi:nlll handle is of real skin, and looks just like & dog under your arm. A nearsighted elderly lady wanted to stroke it, and asked. “Will he bite?” PAMELA. e+ RCopyrisht, 19224 And best of ell, it would cost but 45 cents if gingham at 15 cents per yard were used with chambray at the same price per yard. The busy mother could make this little outfit in about two afternoons. The_pattern No. 1580 cuts in sizes two, four and six years. Size four re- quires one and three-fourths yards thirty-six-inch materlal for rompers and one and one-eighth yards thirty- six-inch materfal for dress. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in postage stamps onmly. Orders should be ad- dressed to The Washington Star Pat- tern Bureau, 22 Enst 15tk street, New York eity. Please write mame smd address clearlyy serve with the following sauce over the puddinj = The sauce: Place in a bowl two egg volks and one ounce of granulat- ed sugar. Mix well with a wooden spoon for two minutes. Boll in a saucepan one gill of milk and one gill of cream, adding' seven drops of vanilla essence. As soon as it comes to a boil, pour it very gradually over the eggs and sugar, continually stir- ring. Transfer into a saucepan, set the pan on the fire, heat for three minutes, without ceasing mixing, but do not allow to boil. Remove the pan from the fire. Strain through a cheesecloth into 2 bowl and serve on the pudding.

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