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WOMAN'’S PAGE. Spreading your bread with is like broadcasting a McCormack phono- graph record-the best is spread in the best homes in each instance. SOLD EVERY WHERE RYZON BAKING POWDER When the small hat started out on a wild career last August women ig- nored the changed signals and bought hats with sweeping brims. They did not believe thut the Galnsborough and {the Merry Widows were to be shelved. | Yet that is just what happened. The reason can be found in the preva- lenco of the moyen age and early orlental periods that have been swal- lowed bait, hook and sinker by the designers. _ Picturesquo hats are not finished. Far from it. But they have gone from . BLACK AND_ REIGE HAT IS NEW COMBINA: E_OF THE R. T BLACK HEIG " BEIGE AT ONE SIDE. biz to little. Tho prevailing high and Fruit Pudding|... ; turban that wa tarted in a dance 3 eupluls Comet-Boiled Rice cabaret last =pring in Paris by Mrs. 35 cuptul raisins « le was the extreme e of Per. $ cupfuisapple saucs or any swwed fruit 5 teaspoonful grated rutmez 2 tablespoonfuls butter = tablespoonfuls sugar HOP the raisins coarsely and add ! them to the Comet-Boiled Rice with | the apple sauce and half the nutmeg. ‘Turn into an oiled baking dish, sprinkle | with the sugar and remaining nutmeg, | mixed together, dot with the butter and bake twenty minutes in a moderate | oven. Serve hot with Hard Sauce or| cold with cream or custard. I 1 1 | BY HELEN 1SS MILDRED KING of the H business girls’ department Packed in Sealed Packages of the Y. W. (. A, states that — mever sold loose i the girls of the entire de- SIS, | Partment, including all the clubs and e young girls in business who are the girl reserves division, will ineet for a big Christmas party at !the association headquarters Thurs- evening, December 21, i The girls will all bring their gifts for the welfare work which they do {every Christmas to this meeting and {arrange for thelr distribution. These s provide clothinz. toys and books, funds. for different char- in the city and or families under their supervision. The short Christmas service that is feature of this annual meeting will held. and following it and the ar- < for distributing the gift, entertainment will be given. The brozram for this entertainmert will ibe announced at a later date. OTHER PARTIES. " DURUM WHEAT SEMOLINA and 9‘cquine egq Richest in gluten and they have that homemade taste 10¢ hish school friendship clubs, which arc affilisted with the Y. W. C. A. {will enjoy their annual Christmas party next Friday evening at the as- sociation headquarters, on F street. The party wiil be.in the form of a ! banquet. followed by a program of | entertainment. Mus {ture of the evening's program. The girls of these club: planning a party. to be given before Christmas, for the children of the different orphanges. Oid Man Coyote Is Unpleas: antly Surprised. s ever dream or rcally seem dds the Beaver. Just after jolly. round, red Mr. Su i went to bed behind the Purple Hills land left the sky to sweet Mistress Moon a certain sly fellow came out lot nhis house in the Old Pasture, !szmched. yawned, stretched again, {and then sat down to decide where ‘he would go to hunt for a dinner. | !1t was Old Man Coyote. i At last he made up his mind and i started off at a trot straight for the full cream milk minus only the water. Pound for pound itis the most wholesome food you can buy. Pimcasey S seld b7 the slice, pound or loaf. i 8 VARIETIES IN TINS “MAN COYOTE SPRANG STRAIGHT AND TRUE. Green Forest. “It is some time,” thought he, “since I have had a look at those Beavers. I don't suppose there is much chance that I will be |able to catch one, but one never can joLp ~ |Washing Won’t Rid " Smaller Hats Provide Comfort BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. g T T e NV THE EVENING STAR, Just Hats By Vyvyan Metal Cloth and Chenille. WASHINGTON sian headgear. It had a sort of suc- cess for three weeks. Then it Wi withdrawn. However, it was a shadow of a coming event in millinery. Nearly all fashions are introduced in n explosive manner by some celeb- rity. Later they appear in a simpler guise. Thus it was with the orl- ental turban. | The fundamental part of a turban iis {ts height, and when the milliners were sure that this type of head cov- ering was to be worn they put high crowns on wide-brimmed hats to keep -them in the movement Such shapes were unattractive on the ma- Jority of women, so they were aban- doned as the winter deepened. The remnants of them are in the so-called witch hat, which has a high conical crown and a wide, sloping brim. !difficult hat to wear! It needs an immeonse panache of feathers or rib- | bon at one side of the crown to pre- ! serve the charm of the face beneath !and the balance of line. The Indian and Persian turbans actually belong to the entire Slavic and oriental races, and are not un- known in Austria. ‘By traditional rights, they should be ornamental, and they are really decorative when the American woman feels that the occa- sion demands colored stones, ropes of pearls, silver tissue. ‘The simple modification of all this glory is col- A hat with an elaborate effect that is achleved in & very simple manner. A shape with a short brim is covered ored embroidery done in small figura- tions with faded tones of strong colors. The everyday version of the heimet is of felt or velvet. Sports costum- ery absorbs such turbans, and well it may, for they resist wind and weather. For the same reason they are useful in_the street. The sketch shows one of black and | belge, a combination of importance | for midseason. The material of the hat is black silk beaver. The broad, | outstanding feather i3 yellow beige. The use of beige furs, such as Chi- ' | nese lion, natural caracul and othor in silver cloth, and its soft, puflodl crown is worked all over in chenille of some color, prefcrably a garnet or deep blue. If bronze cloth is used to cover the hat, chenille in golden yel- low or brown gives a rich result. It will be noted that the triangular buttons are used on the coat collar (something new and fashionable in the button world), and the same motif i8 carried out in the long triangular hatpin that is thrust in at an engag- ing angle. Girls and Their Interests IE girls who are members of the ! will be a fea- | Bistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN FLETCHER. VARIATIONS—Arsmith, Sstter, Tippler, Flower. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCES—Trades. Who savs there is no romance ml |namas? How many business men, pelts that have not gone to the bap- tismal font, gives women a chance to continue the black and belge combina- tion throughout the costume. Immense collars of beige fur are worn with black fur or cloth top coats, and jumper jackets of black embroidered crape have collar and cuffs of beige. opyright, 1922. manufacturers, merchants, mnflunll workers and professional men of this modern age go busily about their daily occupations without a thought, without even the knowledge that their family names are the last relics of what was once one of the mightiest industries of medieval England, and which today is obsolete? : The ancestors of the Fletchers, Ar- smiths, Setters, Tippers and Flowers were the backbone of the English nation in the middle ages, for they furnished her fighting forces with munitions, that deadliest weapon with !whlch the English maintained their | H. FETTER. [;his entertainment will be announced e | SCHOOL PROGRAMS. E girls of the Misses Lastman's i school are planning to give a con- cert at the school nest Friday night. Miss Annie Eastman has announced that only the pupils themselves will give the numbers, which will include i both vocal and instrumental music. later in the week. | independenco upon many a battlefield { before the final development of the ! musket and the riflo. Musical entertainments are being | living by fashioning arrow | given at many of the local public and private schools at this time. {heads upon the arrow shafts. | " The annual “Hop Along” vaudeville! Tippers were craftsmen who sharp | entertainment at Western 1igh { ened the points after the, { School will be presented in the school | set. auditorfum next Friday and Satur-: The Fletchers (it was day evenings. One of tiic chief musi- { “Fleecher” in those days) wcre tho: 1 features of the program will be a |who affixed the feathers or scene from the popular Gilbert and ; (from the same word rout which gives \livan comic opera. “The Mikado.” | “feather” and “fledgeling’) hich will be presented by the two/to the shafts. This was probably the glee clubs of the school. An addi-|process which required the greatest | . tional girls’ chorus will supplement | finasse, for the true flight of the ar- i the two clubs’ usual choruses. The ] row in'those long shots for which th i girls in this so-called “semi-choru | are Miss Margaret Watts, Miss Mar- ! gery Smith, Miss Frances Dangler, i Miss Virginia Cooper. Miss Frances Gore, Miss Mary Griffith, Miss Grace Newton, Miss Helen Latterner, Miss | Margaret Wilson and Miss Miriam | Latterner. These girls will give spe- clal numbers to this act. Those having the principal char- acters from the opera in this act are s Dorothy Tschiffely, Miss Helen ark, Miss Betty Morris, Herbert Clark, Alfred May and David Whel- | chel. 'The setting wiil be a charming | pound. depended as much on the feather a3 | anything. The term “fletcher” also was used In the more weneral sense as embracing the entire craft of arrow makers. “Flo” was a famliliar namo for tho arrow in those days, whence. comes the name “Flower.” H Prices realised on Swift & Company sales of s beef in Washington. D. C., for week ending Saturday, December 9, on ments sold out, ranged from 8.00 cents to und and averaged 11.95 cents per -Adrertisement. The details of | little Japanese garden. Your Home and flcdges” ! archers of old England werc famous | BEDTIME STORIES By Thornton 'W. Burgess. _ You AELEN KENDALL. BY H Special Pot Roast. | out of cold water and cut into pieces | dish one peeled and sliced onion, eight i sliced carrots, two or three sprigs of stick enapped. There was a sound as of a heavy body scrambling up the other side of the dam. A fierce joy | filled Old Man Coyote. One of those | Beavers was climbing up_ on the! dam: He hadn't a doubt of it. Swiftly but silently, all the time hugging the ground. he sneaked along until he was opposite the place on the other side of the dam where some one was climbing out. Then he gathered his feet under him for a sudden spring, and fixed his eyes on the top of that dam. He held his breath and waited. Against the sky he saw a dark head come slowly up over the top of the dam. It was followed by a big body. Just at that point there was a shadow across the dam, and he could see only the outline of the one on top of the dam. So sure was he that it was one of the Beavers that he failed to look at it closely. Old Man Coyote sprang straight and true. At that distance he couldn’t miss. He landed gquarely on the one he believed to be either Paddy or Mrs. Paddy. It was right then that Old Man Coyote was most unpleas- antly surprised. (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burges.) Draped Dressing Table. It was getting toward the middle of the holiday month. and tho sound of tacking was heard in the land. It proceeded from a sunny room on the second floor, and when the man o’ the house followed it, coming home a bit early to dinner, he found his wife kneeling on the floor beside & dainty plece of frilly furniture hung with flowered curtains in rose and gray. “What on earth are you doing? he inquired of the flushed and weary ‘workwoman. She sat back on her heels and proudly surveyed her handiwork. “I've been doing over Nancy's bed: room.” she announced. “She is com- ing home early next week for the Christmar holidays, and I want her room to be ready for her as a Christ- mas gift. Boarding school rooms aren’'t as dainty as they might be always, and this is just as different from her room at school as I could make it. N “You know her old bedroom set of furnityre was simply outgrown. When we got her that bird’s-eye maple set years ago it was just right for a lit- tle girl, but it has been absurdly childish for her of late, and it is badly battered, too. So I got this pretty single four-poster and made a chintz_cover for it, with a valance around the bottom, and hung little curtains of the same material at the Take one and a half pounds of lean beef. Wipe with a clean cloth wrung one inch square. Put into an earthen parsley and one and a half teaspoon- fuls of salt. Now add the meat and two cupfuls each of hot water and canned tomatoes. Cover and bake in a slow oven for three and a half hours. About half an hour before serving time thicken with three level tablespoonfuls of butter creamed with three tablespoonfuls of flour. Ra- move the onions and carrots and add one cupful of canned peas which have been rinsed in cold water. Head of Dandruff | The only sure way to get rid of tell. It is pretty frosty tonight, and it won't be long now before those dandruff is-to dissolve it, then you IDDI;‘I‘]: are {rozen ol\l"e.{. Th(en !hfi{e : - i 2 'be o chanco whatever for me to destroy Ilvtnlll’l‘l)A To do thjs, | get a Beaver dinner. Nothing | get about four ounces of ord&u‘;y I can liquid arvon; apply it-at night | So Old -\Llll Coyote ;!lenuy gofl:“i when tiring; use enough to through the Green ‘orest Wal B s 5 Athe ponds of Paddy the Beaver. e e e g dipe® It 10 || knew all about that new pond and Fwith the finger tDs o tomizat g 5y mern- || 253 ‘aam, and he knew all about how | ~ o i " l}| Paddy and Mrs. Paddy had to get dratt tl”h:néo:g me"’.‘»‘.’nfl'fir their food logs over the new dam appiications. will com- |||at a certain point. That would be solve and entirely de- in':e best place to try to catch one of i rgle sign and trace |} them. lof i S » ‘When Old Man Coyote came & tter Dow much dandruff i %% the new pond he stood still for some time, looking, listening and using that wonderful nose of his. Then silently and carefully he stole down to the dam and began to creep along on the lower side of it. He had crept about half way .to the point where he knew Paddy end Mrs. Paddy were in the habit of dragging their: food logs across when he heard a faint splash .on the other side. Instantly he stopped &nd pricked up his ears. “Some one is swimming close to this dam on the other side,” thought he. “Of course it is one of those Beaver: His vellow eyes glowed with hungry cagerness. His mouth watered. He crouched flat and kept perfectly still. Again he heard a splash, and then he heard clawp scratching on sticks a few feet bevond where he lay. A in ! you may have. You will find, too, that all itch- ing and digging of the.scalp awill | |stop_at once, and your hair will| be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soff, and look and feel a hun- dred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any | drug store, and it never falls to ldo the work.—Advertisement. 4 . “ windows. “I didn’t know what to do about a dressing table, though. I didn’t want to buy a new one—they are so sort of—well, hard-looking. So I bought a round, drop-leaf plain pine table in the housekeeping department of one of the big shops, dropped the back leaf down nst the wall and raised the front leaf. As you see, I've tacked plain gray chambray to the top of it and made full curtains of the gray and rose chints, with a little pleated ruffle at the top. I found a plain wooden stool, and I've handled that in the same way. Isn't it all pretty and girlish? \ “You see, she has plenty of drawer space in her closet, with its cup- ‘boards and shelves, so she didn’t need & regul large dressing table. I've shaded the electric lights with rose, too, and put a black and rose rug on the floor. She will be ecstatic, I am sure—bless her!” PAM'S PARIS POSTALS Turnip and Sausage Pi Boil and mash one yellow turnip, add a little-pepper, half a teaspoon of salt, a gill of melted butter, a ta- blespoonful of sugar and a cupful of apple sauce. Line a deep ple plate with crust, then spread a thick layer of the turnip in, and over the top spread a thick layer of well-seasoned sausage meat, spread thinly with ap- ple sause, and ?ut. on the top crust. Bake in a medium hour and serve hot. PARIS, November 2 One’ ouseliold gods” just now are rather alarming. The newest craze is a soft, silk snake to twist around a :uco of furniture, with a Cleopatra ead and jeweled headdress and ear- rings. A LA, «Copyright, 1922.) oven for half anj . ¢, Revolt of the Flappers. ) Madge Bellamy, to be ssen in “The Hottentot,” was in a serious mood the other day. I helped it along by observing, in a casual tone. “The; younger generation doesn't seem to | have much respect for its elders, do you think? Charming, old-time cour- tosles are fast fading awa: . “Well,” said Madge, with vim, “why | should the flappers of today respect | and bow the knee to the mothers of today? If you ask me, I think it's up to the mothers quite as much, it not more, than it is up to the flap- pers. When I consider the mothers of some of my girl friends I often wonder why in the world they should | show them any respect. They copy our dresses, borrow our lipsticks —and forget to return them—bob their hair and smoke cigarettes. Aren’t they just girls like ourselve: Don’t they stress that point? You can’t tell a mother from a daughter these days! And then they demand to be treated like philosophical seers or like nice, silvery-haired old grand- mothers, and feel offended if they're not. Mothers must learn that they can’t have their cake and eat it, too. They have had their youth. Why can’t they step aside for their daugh- ters? But If they don’t want to step aside, if they want to go out with us and have a good time. dance and play about and be ‘one of us,’ then they cannot expect to be treated with ven- eration, respact and the bended knee. It just doesn’t go! It is our elders themselves and not the younger gen- cration who have battered down the old walls of rescrve and respect. “I'm tired of having the poor little old flupper blamed for cverything! “Why, I know a great many digni- | fled girls, their long hair colled about their heads, thelr long skirts coiled about their ankles, whose mothers go about all painted and frizzed and joshing the boys and jazzing in general! 'We aro a reasoning tribe, we flap- pers. We have been taught by ex- perts to look for cause and effect and to figure things out without sen- timentality and slush. So, before we Smart Dress for Smart Miss. Feminine youth generally demands modish and up-to-the-moment clothes, while the mother of that young per- son demands practical ones that do not necessitate too much expense of time or money. In this attractive style shown, which exploits the drop shoulder and flare sleeve, both may be arrowsmith was he who made his! heads. | ‘The Setters were those who set lhe§ had been | aleo spelled | | { Add two slices of stale bread broken up in small pieces, but not crumbed; ! tablespoonful level tablespoonful of lard or butter half cup of sugar and a little pepper. | pleased, for if made of serge at 80 cents per vard it would cost_oaly about $1.50, thus saving about $5. The rattern, No. 1571, cuts in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 requires two and one: of thirty-six-inch material. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in post- age stamps only. Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bu::-. 22 East 18th street, Please write mame Apple Pie. This is the time for apple pie. Andj as we did a few years ago. Well made pie is quite digestible for the person in good health. Fruit pie, though some critics object to it be- cause of the mixture of fruit and sugar, is decidedly toothsome, and if it is not tco sweet cannot be con- sidered injurious. And, indeed, good apple ple, made with plenty of apple filling and witlt a light crust, is a pretty well balanced dish dietetically. You can do most interesting things to the flavor of apple ple simply by varying the condiments and season- ings you use. Of course, there are those who prefer a definite flavor every time—perhaps a little cinna- mon, perhaps nutmeg and butter, per- haps just sugar. If your family likes variety try using~ different “seasonings. Butter and lemon juice, with sugar, of course, give good results. Especially if tho apples are flat—which most apples aren’t at this season—lemon juioce is a good thing to add to them. If the apples are very juicy you can add a little cornstarch mixed with a little water to them to thicken them. You can make a one-crust apple Dple that is delicious. Bake the crust first. Then fill it with good apple sauce well seasoned, and cover it with a meringue. Brown in the oven. If you wish to you may use etewed apples thickened sufficlently with cornstarch for the filling. Another apple pie is made by mak- ing a lower crust, illing it witit part- 1y cooked apples, covering it with criss-cross strips of pastry, and bak- ing until the pastry is done. Always bake apple pies slowly, so that the apples will be thoroughly cooked and the under crust brown and well done. No doubt you have a number otl friends whom you will ‘want to- re-| member at Christmas time. Here is a little gift that will be appreciated. Decorate a tin can by enameling it a ] pretty color and then painting a sim- | ple design on it. Fill the can with homemado cookles. In order to make the cookies fit the can cut them with the can lid. They will shrink slightly while baking and just it the conm- tainer. A, (Cepyright, 1022.) "r MONDAY, DECEMBER. 11, 192 The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL, FEATURES. WRITTEN AND 1LLUSTRATED By Clsie Tobinson This is 2 prayer. : But it is not a prayer to some far power whose face I cannot see. Rather, it 18 a cry to those reserves within myself whose presence 1, well know,.but which T all too sel- dom summon to my aid. | So to myself I cry, that I come to my own aid. i For once help me be wholly true to that which T do know i3 brave and right and fine. | Arise from out the laziness and fear, the foolishness, stupidity and greed | which batten on my soul and al- | ways make mo something lower | than I might have been. . H Arise, and help me in mv need! ¥or 1 am troubled by the work and pain which hem me in, and.can no | longer see the path ahead. i Guard me and spur me on, myself, and | help me be a sport! | Sull all self-pity which would waste | my strength. i Cleanse me of envy and resentment at | i | | ' nyself may | my lot. Fire me with something greater than | _still and strong. a weakling’s peevishness. ! Set great rebellions flaming in my | soul, flerce like tall altar fires which will burn away the dross of | my own weakness and consecrate | pose, but with a shining ‘l"allln‘l and bitter pain. TO MY OWN SEU-‘".'D‘.‘!a Give me great falth, so that I may be And If 1 cannot quite achieve t faith, give me at least a fightin courage to endure and tendernes enough to spare all those I mee: the burden of my own black doubt MADGE BELLAMY HAS A MESSAGE FOR MOTHERS. can respect, we must have something to respect, mustn't we? 1. for one, find _little in these emancipated, painted mothers who spend their time chasing round to teas and to dance “The sacred circle of flanperhom s 80 useless and £o mean. than the things that harass me. Help me to smile, not as a surface pose, but ith a shining gailantry that’ zhall be as a shield against dospalr. | Steel me to bear the infinite =mall |And frets which constantly snap at my ' 10 be has but olle anawer to those wa heels and tempt a snar: 3 about girls not respecting their moth ers. When the mothers decide to stay at home and sew and cook and teach us something to respect, we shall bow the knee as our sisters did before us. But if our worthy elders insist upon being ‘pals,’ then they must swallow the freemasonry and the clap on the Help me to prove that I am greater Such is my prayer. i1 have not offered power whose face I cannot see. | For I well know that powers lie wit! in myself which, if T summon then will rally to my aid. beset, I ¢ sport PERSONAL HEALTH SER to some far —hclp me, self (Copyright, 1922.) ICE Mad that prevails in the younger " 1 groaned. e “Them's harsh w BY ADMIRAL W. S. BENSO) Baked Tomatoes. Most of the recipes put in books | are for people who have mea all the while tomatoes are very largely used | place fewer obstacle: i by people without means, jare rarely prepared in such a way as to make them the deliclous dish they Hero is my recipe for baking can be. , “but I car’t help it—I mean (Coprright. 1922.) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST LUNCHEON Creamed Chicken on Toast Vienna Pineapple and Lettuce Salad Ginger Tea or Chocolate DINNER Broiled Hamburg Steak Rice and Apple Pudding Cofl FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. many nece: tomatoes: baking one leve Mix all time. cooked. used. Scalloped Cheese and Rice. Peel and cut in pleces an ordinary | dish full el together is not Canned (Copyrigh It BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D.. rds,” said dainty Noted Physician and Author. Better Late Than Lonely. A Kentucky correspondent sends mie | a rnewspaper clipping of an item, dated London, October 27: *“The first child has the worst rec- very man should be fore the age of thir he has enough sens. woman should marry such man before fori at twenty-three, coe, Casper unanimously late than lonel; result of an exhaustive inquiry made (iatowed Wah by Dr. R. H. Vercoe among the school children of Essex. ‘Eighth children,’ he says, ‘are inferior to none and su- perior to the eldest children in small families. “Intelligence rises slightly the first child to the third, then drops Rolls Drops N. B. from so long that it causes {are the latest born. while the short- est and lightest are the second and th. e 'lhal illu expressions “going on o ‘The eldest child, as a rule. has the | GriTSIEEE, EY L8 wdown | tightest colored eves, while the e18htl | mon, but th has the darkest. In defects of vision, | Tp, the first and second children are the fang worst, while the third child comes out | be taken literally, I best." ™ Tomely to say th remarks. | £nd out what ails you. ‘The clipping was sent to me by and it just occurred | Boracic Eve tallest of mine. Curious, i And yet not so extraordin: ou come to think of i ought to improve athter, human o bu: seary ingredlents. experfence. i« good teacher. Tho parcnt firt-born have not had the edu tional advantage of years of cxpe ence which the parents of the e born and upward have obtained. jdea is mot mine, but one strikingly clucidated by Casper L. Redfield. S Redficld makes out a strong case for larger families. By sound scten- tific reasoning and the citation of ir ‘one | numerable emincnt examples &b {shows that the late-born child ore likely to be of a hizh order ¢ ntelligence. if not a geniux forceful sclentific arguments field's make the degenerate and crimi- nal propaganda of so-called “birth { control” " advocates stand out hid- { cously, a cancer eating into the soctal | ; [} and I think | With of ripe tomatoes. of plain boiled water. drops or warmth I 4pplied from once u day inour. Tt is harmless for use. but shculd not ba periods or indefinitely, of =alt, and bake a long nice unless well | tomatoes may be Red- t, 1922.) | fabric. The mental and physical superiorfty of the last or later over the first-born Answer—I advise you not on_longer. Of c v do not mean e terms are like “broken heart” “taking one’s head off”—not t know it seems : but the wise thin Anent the item the correspondent|to do is consult 2 doctor and let I | ably surpass the eighth, and even the nth might have a show married be . but Lot betor. 10 vote. Ever: least onc but not be- CaPned Sherples Corn Flaken | |ord for disease and the eighth child Eors i noys enough 1o vore 3 y d Marry carly, if you are Bt to marry Wheat Cakes Coffeo | {and upward the best. This is thely 5™ gy ©oliised the train at Ver- L Redficld and 1 agree that it is better to be QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. When one has gone on one’s nerve a nervous Olive fgmmed Swectbreads | 110 the sixth, and rises again to the [breakdown to such an extent that Sweet Potatoes elghth. L one can’t stand the cry of one’s own “*The tallest and heavicst dren | ba what is your advice . E. N 10 hurboy urse. anythine mixed with about an equal when applied, and tempor: ed for 1 1 think. Babies Are Flat-Footed. Priend husband thinks T am worrs - & needlessly, but baby's footprints look like flat feet to me.—Mrs. L. B. M. Answer—Young babies are naturall: Melt two level tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, add two table- spoonfuls of flour, blend, then add one cupful of milk and stir over the fir until the whole is smooth and cream. Add half a level teaspoon of salt, z child of a family is an evervda servation. This is less noticeable in little two to five child famllies than} it iy in eight to twelve child fam:-| lies, for even in these days of highe education a family does occasionally ! fiat-footed. Fish Patties. littlo pepper and a cupful of grated Continue stirring cheese. sauce. over this, add butter. and dbake in a moderate oven until the top is brown. Write a Limerick! Win a Prize! Enter the ycu know we don't malign pie now |cheese is meited. In a baking d | bolled rice and the above sauce layers, having the top laver of the sih arrange Sprinkle a strike twelve before quitting. The English doctor's observation will proYe someiwhat disappointin astrologists and other purveyor: e the superstitious. Too bad ke dulnt|ley. salt. pep; | select the scventh child. 1t Just lap-f lemon Juice. pened to be the eighth in the grounl\'u\(r with crumbs, the doctor tabulated: in another com- | of water and bake unity the tenth child would prob- for twenty minut unul the allow earthen | two_cupfuls of cold in few bread crumbs ~ Sitroux Limerick Contest We are holding a prize contest to get clever verses for usc in our advertising. If you can write, try your hand. Send in as many lim- ericks as you wish. The prize winners will sec their limericks in print. 1. 2, 3. -~ 5. 6. ® A There was & young girl from Peru ‘Whose hair like a porcupine grew. The answer: A box of Sitrous! Sitroux Importing Co. LIST OF PRIZES First Prize, if written on the back of Sit- roux envelope .$100 in Gold First prize, if written otherwise. . $50in Gold Second Prize . Fourth Prize . Twelve Prizes, each. esseces Fifteen Prizes, each: Handsome Boudoir Box contain- ing one dozen Sitroux special Gold Label Quality Hair Nete. Twenty Prizes. each: Boudoir Box containing one-half t{ozcn Sitroux Gold Label Hair Nets. RULES OF THE CONTEST Every limerick must describe the Sitroux Hair Net and refer to its well- fitting qualities. . Every limerick must, of course, consist of one verse only. g Bach limerick must be written on & separate sheet of paper in typewriting ‘or clear long hand. The name and full address of the writer must appear on the bottom of the sheet. : The name and address of your dealer must also bo given on each sheet, as the prizes will be awarded through these dealers. : Contestants may submit as many limericks as desired. A1 entries are to be addressed plainly to Contest Dept., Sitroux Importing Co., 1123 Broadway, New York City. Contest closes December 15, 1922, at 12 midnight. No entries bearing a later postmark will be accepted. 5 ~No limerick will be returned unless accompanied by a stamped self-addressed return envelope. The first prize of $100 will be awarded only if the winning limerick is written on the back of a Sitroux Hair Net envelope. Otherwise the $50 prize will be given. Here’s An Example Limericks Coming in Fast Join_the crowd now. There is Toom for @ lot more. Put on your thinking cap and see what you can do. Send in as many as you want to write. Re- member. December 15, the closing date, will scon be here’ No suitor would tarry— Now how could she marry? 1wo eggEs o chopped pars 4 a few drops o —— e 10 e L 1 8 00 1 108 B A 0 5 8 < S O S @00~