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DAY, DECEMBER 26, 1922. EATURES. \VO}\IAN’S PAGE. RACIAL ORIGIN—Anglo-Saxon. SOURCE—Geographical. Two of the family names in this group were originally preceded by !the words “de 1a.” the contraction “del” (both meaning “of the”) or & 3 t i 3 7 S : Bistory of Pour Name. | 'Y I The Diary, of a Professional Movie Fan 1Y PRILF FRANGIS NOWELAN. | 1 BY GLADYS HALL. T H KNOWLES H i | | oy i Back Into Whalig Days. ' spcions shamenof Jow, Rt | B ["aurrr e bt ‘ ' Last week three of my critical con-|land's whaling was ol\fi‘ollt‘hat tfimmorstl freres and myself journeyed to Provi- | Industries of the world. akes you L ot Elmer | nto the quaint Quaker atmosphere of S Shos plentaN 0% - New Bedford. The o'd meeting houses, in or that we might Sce hiS | the old gurdens, velics and helrlcoms, cture, “Down to the Sea and traditions shako off time's guthored on e o con! . dust and live again. The Quaker mar- ne of the aforementioned confreres | ust and Lo sgatl., The, AR e n Ships. “My, but it’s good!”" —that's what you'll hear when a luscious | rvedthat tlie trip was “an act of |town criers busy ersing out the scandals | | “atte” (“at the”), for they are names SOC LTI SR U, BLR L) which originally were descriptive of the 4 kind of places in which their first bear- { _Mr. Clifton worked without a studi‘« ! The scenes in_“Down to the Sea in ers dwelt. be 55 edlioria | Ships™ are reul scenes; of real places. | ; - _— ’ cranberry pie is served for dessert. i The whalemen ure the survivors of their | They are “countryside” names, if we may use such a classification, and, like nearly all such In the English language, they trace back to Anglo- Saxon rather than the Norman-French Epe . The ~Anglo-Saxon ‘“nclle” was the | cquivalent of our modern wo l“knnll." which 1s déscended® from it. Jt meant a gently rising slope of | Cranberries—the fruit for every meal. Serve as a sauce, as jelly, or as butter. Economical—healthful —easy to prepare A recipe folder, containing many ways 1o use and preserve cranberries, will be sent free on request. | ancestry. Most of the Quakers are New Bedford Quakers. The homes and gar- dens wnd the meeting house are ull { | authentic. You are uctually living for some two hours in the early nineteenth | in old New Bedford, or you are mighty mammal through . Man-stuff is in that is mercifully and far re- : i i ) 2} | | &rouna, ber. » E . B i L e R e e M |‘ il : i groud el o Hmber.” Guits st | AMERICAN CRANBERRY EXCHANGE, 30 W. B'way, New York. ichology and the eternal tribulations of iitd i ) {idales et s the triangie. i 3 St SIS hlor e Raymond McKee is convincing £s the itk { Bnowleri o SHodlnow]m {else by such appellations | atte Knolle” or “Glibert dc or “del Knolle,” or “de¢l Cnolle.” In the course of time, during that | lnerlm; of the eleventh,’ twelfth and | thirteenth centurics, particular {when populations were growing ifast that a real necessity for family oung lover and self-made whalemau. Marguerite Courtot is poignantly sweet | !and sincere as the Quaker maid. Da-} |tience. And little Clara Bow, winner of & Brewster beauty contest, IS spirited and significant. ter the showing of the pleture Mr. Clifton_and “us” repaired to an ancient [ : 0 i coffee house In ancient Providence, aud 3 i ” ‘ ‘r‘:]:l“glfiLf:mfl»syé:lr;:fvo‘lerlxs:r;osw lo[-"t“ . there, by candlelight and to the tune of W{”l-fi Cel et ye Bosmeniiont | i some sollege youth's impassioned eukele, il I A e o e we Il c | mere family designations. I“rom then | A on tie tendency was to make them easier of pronunciation, and a natural velopment was the dropping of the rious phrases meaning “of the” and t the” wh originally preceded | them, and giving us a group of names eimilar to such names as Hill, Hedges, | Cliff, Grover and the live, As there were many knolls, it is! j but natural that a great many families | { bear names derived from this word. old Mr. Clifton what we thouvht of 2 =l his picture, and we asked him innumera- | [ oL ble questions and told him -that wei . thought he ought to make another piu--§ t 1re dealing solely with the Quakers, be- : c: use the atmosphere is go charming and Quaker material jhas never before been shown on the scréen. But “Elmer” didn't seem to think so much of that. He d he was thinking, first of all, of | ling this pleture. and after thut was | isfacto done he had in mind some ort of story of high finance, or else ! jcture showing the influence of one | imind on other minds and lives nearby. Qur humorous confrere told Director Clifton that he wou'd be limited in his subjects for the latter picture becau _ i if he selected u girl he'd photegraph blank, as girls don't think; and if selected a mman he wouldn't dare to film what he found. ‘Whatever Mr. | propl ( For Christmas— ; and Other Days Has graced American tables for fifty year Always delicious and wholesonic. Made after a famous recipe from the finest ingredients obtainable. Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. ifton does next, I dare Le he-man stuff ‘at any rate. e that. He has a hearty ringing langh, a warm hand-clasp, a ! impiy stupendous vitallty and, temper- | splendid, espe- |ing it all, his long apprenticeship under | raw stuff of | D. W. Griffith to tinge virlity with) far out, o softer sentiment. among the (Copyrigh! i Undecorating the Tree. There comes a morning, within te 'days after Christmas, when it fal! Laura, back in the old home town for the first time since her marriage four years ago, had hoped to find ! to the housewife to put away again Lew Davis, the boy she jilted, still pining for her, though she knew he had married and firmly believes he did | the ornaments, candles, strands of | it just through pique. Lo, she discovers he had so far forgotten and forgiven that he gets the little wife to |silver “rain” and other baubles I ask her up to dinner, and her host and hostess put in an hour and a half showing off a most ordinary baby. | which have decorated the tres. This | (Copyright) ought to be a careful, well-planned | prooess, looking to the time when : Listen,World! next year's tree will be ready for fts| WRITTEN AN, Christmas garb. riLysTreATED By Elsie Tobinson 1 Just before you begin taking oft! the trimmings study the t thoughtfully, deciding what it lac! Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes wits we pow draw in- % ¢ fuscinating clothes » Bagdad, :Santa C { Folks, { more I i that there's cnly |about one-Lundredil part outside and R de The R perhaps, or brighter colors in the Bee ‘h |m“ 2 "h-. 5 t = i “[ gleaming balls. Make a list of the see and landle are the least part ¢ Eleaming b e S o e, ‘ Il we ow nd must reckon ith, tree iook new and “different” next got touches = ) - ‘a1 o i s don't do th People do: - Christmas. If you wait until next 3 homespun | | i ngsidon: co il Togperoon) IM A REELY-TRULYY ear you will be certain to have for- 11iilons O ers’ an ou = ¢mbroidered in horiz n(:\l‘ \ i do things. Spirits do things. | - &) e e T < hig Sidwe bitriduced 1C i There lsn't an individual Santa | and see if vou have enough candles Every morning millions of minds gain - a ; {Claus man, but there is a universal = on the tree, and put down the number LT hid 2 . - 2. Thi You’ll Like of additional candle holders and their poise and determination and ideals ) % anta Claus a beautiful and ngs You fapers you will ‘waat It may be . ne slippers. Y B {inspiring Santa Claus spirit. And if [REELY=TRUY OR e for the day over their coffee. ly for sport | ou rob your child of a knowledge |A JUST-PREVEND) to Make I e Y e { n{;fflflfr:]if,‘.’%‘i-’gexx}:]lll‘;m St for the stook s entirely depleted at You know how it is—a cug ?f th;lcgl::le = d X > i this time of year, and another gea- i B - (o L B ) SO e 3 e [ If sou wish to make your party ta- | son Wil bring. Boveltits, hew colors you like best and your whole so 5 ne of whits and color a fash- | rangement. You iaseranEerouE I 3 {ble mere attractive and add to the |and ungucssed of tree decoratios, better—you can see things more clearly. importan ¢ rords, ec 1y iv t accu- | g R S . but If you have a list of about wh. % . : L P R e G B E77) | rchidrens or even the grown-uPS:lvou will need, you will have it reads Since 1864 the ideal of Chase & Sanborn < does not Shiritual perception, a spiritual inter- S0 gl s g e s l"‘\ém Soiie it hon! Hop ot ihe ite has been to give this country coffee that a red sash with| pretation, a sp al instruction. ! ¢ o : % : rathosralibox fin hwhich Svonkmuk - iation. £ t And it is best conveved by syr & i e : s e s Thioh oy s would win popular appreclatlond ghe L T i Indeed, e o Z =3 : r i tos: &1)1 lhfi trimm ngs tobether degree to which we have succeeded is sui e 2 C v )! S n el, b oth 3 1to the , but seort them ov i i H : ; ing. when vou * vour | ! - ; 4 ad |caretully. Throw away il _the | shown in the increasing demand for Seal 3 anoe e B 2 ) air. { broken “balls, the ormamente whose Brand. Wherever you go—from coast to rand: 1 B whole 2 j catches are brol n or missin; any 1di 1 i these col- ; \E to which rever refer And ; | e tor Linool starn men sitigs Ko coast, fastidious coffee drinkers delight go around a| 8 the more ve s you simpl g i ! only_the whole, perfect things, and in Seal Brand. It isalways fresh, always That idea | must rely upon symbols and parrbles | H / wrap each of them in a plece of i h d fivi nd st siwinter: A 1 gelivoull ey Byourtimes i i tissue paper. If possible, put dl packed in °§°-ld'b"°° l‘;“bl E 5‘:“ en and stout ones, | . 3 B { A the great teachers i ferent kinds of ornaments in sepa- ins. iable merchants o and florid ones, wearing chemise| 9 iprophets have used such parables |ihere are. Give him this spirit / ate boxes. as they come from the sealed tins, B yireisa - cks cirdled at the hips, covered) P They underlie all our classics—allthe | f50d in fts earofully prepared f i shops. This will faoilitate the uni- everywhere. h embroidered bands going around | or. foundation of intellectual and.reli- |5 you would give him his physical form trimming of the tree next year. di lied by Cha: & Sanborn 1 | glous thought. food in a speclally prepared form. It will pay you to take time to do Trade supplied by se % s| frock of white { " Little children, because they are|ygy gon't expect him to eat pork and this packing work slowly and 68-78 E. Lake St. Chicago large peasant| still clean and normal. vet the truth|peans at six months, do you? Then thoroughl: A more discouraging e of white chiffon embrodered; out of a parable. A child can under- | Why should you expect him to under- eight than a box full of broken 3 red. black and vellow. A panel stand miracles and wonders, not be-!ctang adult conditions ¥nd adult phi- mussed Christmas decorations, mo 8—, ? the embroidery is placed in f-ont 6 cause he is stupid or ignorant. but jooon, SOt POICIORT Y of which have nothing to hang them ase anoorns the blouse. also at hem of skirt.| WHITE 'CREPE FROCK_ _WHICH | because he is wise with the only wis- Let him have his wonders and his up by. I cannot imagine. And Hlack silk cord plays a leading role| "GOES TO FLORIDA. THE_PEAS-:dom that counts. His eyes are Still| ¢airy tales. We have them, too. fnally. (g0 very early’ mext year n this frock. It is run around the| A SLEEVES ARE OF WHITE undimmed. He seces to the heart of &/ though in another form. Will you be befora the ornaments have been kirt and makes a girdle wh'ch ends . EMBROIDERED i thing. lying? In the name of all holiest ploked over, and select the articles D thick black silk tassels. Wherever A Santa ‘Claus is a parable—a folk-|things, you most certainly will not!{ called for by vour list. Make a note can festoon biack silk cord on 2 THE FORM OF A BR. . { lore parable—old as the ages and the Byt you most surely wiil be lving on your 1923 calendar, for early in No- te garment or a hat It is well to| A TUNIC IS EDGED WITH BLACK llove in the hearts of men for one s vou tell him there -is no Sant Sember—+Buy Christmas tree orma- co. It brenks the lack of color| MARABOU. THE BELT IS OF another. He is the spirit of all gTa-| Clays: L ments, 5t pleasantl BLACK SILK CORDS END! IN|cious giving. He is the spirit be- (Coprright, 1922)) S ah e e e ¢Coprright, 1022.) | TASSELS. e parts and bind each section to form tures of the i D e 113 ” ashion [ vemsmace [ iinsdhi o | “Just Hats {These doll ca ; be used a: la.c . CC‘S Aaaeatiog Thitg! caps can be used as place By Vyvyan ol e | T haven't felt so mad for vears {caras as well if the name of the guest 1 did just this very day. I hope when i BEDTIME STORIE = Peter Hears a Familiar Voice ' 57r; e knew that it was & mattor ! ! | i i . |13 written on the basket. — FLORA. (Copsright, 19! The Double Brim. Annabel | this short verse appears she’ll read | | 1o | food. those who { ‘Worthington wl . i 1 hat I have got to say. It happened | 3 Tr loncliness and discoatent " | sleep through the winter and those | I was in a rush. and_yes some “no- SIDE “VIEW - i Teo ives aro sadly epent | who ko away to the Sunny South do| s fions® T must buv. 1 landea cates | | FEED TH¥ BRUTE —e atls ter c oo 80 to keep from starving to death. But Tiny Tots’ Dress. through the crush and sought the! winter had come to stay. The) Peter can always find something to | | buttons with a sigh. One dame be- ng Pool was locked in ice. Snow | eat, and sometimes it is hard for him ifore the counter stood. She wo Favorite Recipes by Famous mapy cedar trees. It was dark and 1y salt and pepper, a little paprika, and gloomy looking in there. It ma Then in the end sho HQUER! @ RIA' - IBil it with sweet corn, then close the to realize that these others cann inot budge to left or right. al ° L { coverea the Green Meadows the Old| gy {18/ i Mo g . . {28 1f carved out of wood. fa! en. un er_Flrst Ald ¢ Orchard and the Oid Pasture. It lay| He tried to find his big cousin, o the buttons from my sight. ! .l through the Green Forest. All| Jumper the Hare. But Jumper was the left and could not reach. = % ‘he trees were bare excepting those not in that part of the Green Forest. the right, but still no luck. I thought JOHN T. McCUTCHEON, Cartoonist. e o erctacks, He looked for his old friend Mre, that stubborn, bulky ‘peach” must - > * which, ltke the pines, the her : Grouse, but he couldn't find her. In buy her buttons by the truck, But, Poulet Archeduc. 2 ¢ the spruces and cedars, ho:y ;halrl{laect;v::t;l:lgo:é%l;k;‘fl?: :‘nfir‘bzdy. and no, mdfi?flfi ahel wnshno!d Auredwgfl(‘:‘l The poulet archeduc was such & 1 year round. Johnny 0 some X mize, which color, she deeme est. { areen leaves the year round. JoRAY | ono™%Sq o' wandered sbout aimies: 5 R et e’ o Caweal boor_to | feature of a dinner at Henry's, in | HAT rare tang Wagner’s § Chuck had been asleep for 1y, growing.more and more lonesome G keep me from my urgent quest? She | Paris. that I asked him for the recipe, i d gi : i discontented. § ¥ | picked up one, she put it down. whilst Which I sive in hie own vhrfiulolosvd: | blen gives to the beans. : a6t he came to a swampy part 3 i1 stood thers and grew quite thin.| “The chicken must be well cleane H o ) H of the Green Forest where grew| . [For one & smile, for one a frown.|[nside. Then put in It some butter, ; How the children love Peter more lonesome than_ ever. Peter moro lon chicken. Next put it In a saucepan v L And, oh, what goodness urned his back on it. and was just with more sweet corn, againet butter, 1 H starting off, ~ lippert . salt and pepper and cook about hait § they derive from it. when he heard a sound that brought | o of one hour. The best corn is the ¢ R e PAM'S PARIS POSTALS | | &6 1555 it veel o : - he had heard it, although he couldn't | K That’s because Wagner ® are steam-oven blended, which really believe he had heard it. He sat =y up and lisiened with all his might, J B ‘ v 5 . & 1 couldn't really have heaed it We called it the Newland-Tarlton means cooked to the utmost . digestibility. Full of nutriment The second recipe is really 2 com- bination of two puddings. ‘I first ex- perienced it in Nairobi, East Africa. said he to himself. “I must have im. s ¥ pudding, because it was the joint agined it. Of course, I must have Im- creation of Mrs. Newland and Mrs. agined it. It certalnly did sound like - 2 Tarlton. One wrote the poetry in 1t| A hat of Guvetyn of medium size the volce of—" 1 and the other set It to music. —makes lete meal— Just then Petor heard that sound ‘ rén3626 ) The - Newland Banana Custard— | With double brim. These two brims, n cory 2gain. It \was a voice. ~Yes, sir, it { Boll three large cupfuls of milk, mix are joined wtefi;" "!l; fl:‘bl; :’ cloth as volce. re was no doul tablespoonful of corn flour with a three 1 es wi tapers :?:\:t"t.h;:,. d|.t |§m!:e:§: om'xég l;ul‘: Little women are very boastful of .?iu‘lie col::l érélll‘{ Just to mak& Lz into ::‘::‘runa :,::rd the b::k toa :am L, Vo! of ai - i B te, a our e v .t old friend. He waited until he heard | their clothes, they love pretty dresses| p & A y Lk together with theeo tabler point. The tiny sketch on top shows it a third time and then he turned |just as much as their mothers and i Spoonfuls of sugar. Put into the|the side view. and scampered straight into that|gger sisters do. And as they need so| [k : fildll | votled milk, and stir until it thickens,| rTne brims can be separated the full S {CHEN HE TURNED AND SCAMPER. | Cedar swamp as fast as his legs| = =" hanges. it s never wise to| (REEOG), Il | vut do not let it boil. ‘When taken off | 0ot 0B T ecting strip, o can and instantly ready to appease the hunger of old and young. At All Stores At All Times would take him, for it was from there !add one_teaspoonful of vanilla es- 9 =~ S\T,‘é’“fs“%’x‘s"%"fé’ '}il;scill’zlgs‘; that that voice had come. spend to much money on their clothes, | I} f | Sence. Cut up ten bananas and put|be crushed together with the strip Martin Wagner Co. * WOULD CARRY HIM. (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burgess.) for they outgrow them. [l | in a dish, then pour custard on when | folded in flat. A véry smart model. EAST BROOKLYN, . sl While baby naps. mother could take ; s s s e e BALTIRIREL Suicntus. SecbAd) Nimyiiiece, S White Soup. this opportunity for quiet and run Jp o one-half pound prunes until quite] - Jellied Asparagus Salad. - jumping Mouse. g e D‘ = Wash and peel and cut into pieces |2 little dress for her, so simple is the soft. Remove stones and cut prunes ; { Zhad long since retired, although he pattern to follow, that little daughter L small. Dissolve one-half ounce gela-| Drain the liquor from one can of | ~ould occasionally pop his head out ;vggndswlpogflggs' one stalk Bt cal would have a new dress to wes look around. Buster Bear, Mra. | BOURS Of DOLIOCH D00 N e and boil r and-the twins. also Bobby Coon. { yntil soft in three pints of water with | nest afternoon. =~ nad sufl:mtnoub;i flf‘;;‘oz‘;‘: e e ot tWO ublméo%ngls of butter and :flz Made of a printed batiste at 35 cents oon as to_taste. ul e mixture rou; a 14 a - ey could. o longer find food. _Most | C12nder, put back. In the pan with | Per yard it would cost about 65 cents frage. How truly wonderful Is mod (Coprright, 1922.) ved “pepper, one teaspoonful of | ¢ the birds were down in the Sunny half a pint of milk, then let boil. Put The pattern No. 1614 cuts In sizes|ern art! I sit and gage at it fflrl 2 N chopped onion, one-half a stalk of outh. in one tablespoonful of flour, mixed 1,2, 3 and 4 years. Size 4 requires 1% hours. PAMELA. | pis Gorimeal Mush and Ham, |Chopped celery’and a sprig of thyme. Peter Rabbit was a wee bit lone- |smoothly with a little cold water or| o ge 36-inch matertal with (Copyright, 1922.) ied Co [ush an . | Allow to simmor for twenty minutes First Aid to Hunger ners - ar the j tin and add to one-quarier pound sugar | ggparagus and add to it enough water | = = runes and_ kernels. Pour into wetted = PARIS, December 12.—Dear Ursula: | hioid to cool, first adding one-half glass | to make two and one-half cupfuls, “Plerrot” wall r 1s all tho|of sherry. Must be served with banana|then add four of the asparagus tips, Do ikieot el oo cream (the Newland). one saltspoonful of salt, & pinch ot! some. He missed these friends and|mlk; let the soup boil for ten min- Stir one-half & cupful of cold water add one and one-half table- who had gone to sleep or then serve. .. 22-inch cor rasting. k. : ered gelatin mixed i aveay. There would, be days at b v O ‘Transfer Pattern No. 626—in blue|— Apples Stuffed With Nuts. | into one cupful of Bornmeal to aveid “onactourth " cupdtl ot " eold sc&w Oven Blended zs time when he coul itor—~What's wrong with our | only—15 cents extra. - Core some apples. Chop very fine | of boiling salted water. Stir Yor five nd stir un 801V en T ulk to. they all go. sway n;‘:r‘t?n‘ 1 m?n Tayeoit and said | Price of pattern, iS cents, in post-| enough wainuts to 811 them. Season | minutes, placing the kettlo directly in. Line a wet mold with the . . yu:lt. g::a;: f’rflnm );old weather,” | that you, being considered fittest | age atamps only. Or:::‘- ‘:‘Ivulln:e with u.l:l;lmon"s:!: r. dBake and ::vv‘«'.r° :hew l:,r:': ll:gm‘;\:’ek. Dfmor o::‘; or‘:;t ;:mumx!e“.lnw"n. se!m‘gln fs t:-h. rn / 3 lected president of | addressed to The W lon r|serve them whipped cream. z s - < grumbled Peter as he bunted for|member, were ¢ '32 Eant 15¢h street, | These aro deliofous and mak. » 500d | Add three-fourths of a cupful of diced | den. then turn out. Serve on & bed \ < Green | your club. D LT v : tnto 1 od |of lettuce fesves with mayonnaise 7 jome ome to talk to in the ‘Ponderous—The paper says|New York .city.. Please write mame luncheon or dinner dish and cre|cooked ham, pour into’s small greas: WITH REAL TOMATO SAUC PSR R whe Gattest member Detroit News. | and address clearls. quickly prepared. tread pan, chill, slice thin, then £ry.|dreasing. . S e — e : = T \ wasn't quite (rue. Peter did