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FEATURES .THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan The great American demand is for the best of Everything Nucoa supplies the demand for the Best of Spreads for the best of Bread. | BY GLADYS HALL, skin she wore a frock of black satin combined with black velvet. It fitted her closely and had a very long there’s always clothes. |Skiit, very long sleeves and a very b g high’ collar. She wore. &’ string of WWhat did she have on?” is & leading | j, 8¢ with 1 and a huge black. N otvat feminine question. and although, hat rolled up in the front. The ef- when you put that question to a man, !fect was sort of a high-society shep- he will invariably answer, “Heavens,|herdness, = = - s g v. idn" . » C/ ¥ kes conservi ve 1 don’t know, I didn’t notice!” § things, and when I saw her in the if you are very Intuitive, you can|studio early this week she also wore a wrap of moleskin, a small black satin turban _embroidered in odd colors, and a tailored gown of dark blue twill, cape effect, medium length | skirt, embroidered in odd colors like {the hat. = ! T had a letter from the coast the ‘nlher day and among other items it contained one to the effect that at {& recent dinner dance Katherine | MacDonald looked even more than | usually beautiful in a gown of forest- &reen silk crepe with silver | 1 flat flowe; satin. One N was qui the other | [w S partiall. by the | {drapery. On her hair was a flat fillet of silver leaves. i The same letier told me that at the | same dinner Midge Bellamy looked iadorable in a girlish frock of mauye | taffeta, with a decp bertha of the sanie | | fabric. The skirt was made. I be- ‘lie\'e. of three deep flounces, and the waist line was quite long and was emphasized by a flower-girdle of ~violets. 1 can see Madge in that:| can’t you? Claire Windsor has been wearing and Silk-and-lisle for | Poiret twill to the studio this menth> Ngaes {lt fll(? nter- | they tell She has one tailored ef- esting price of i 'l ltect she is especially fond of. It ha ling from the left shoulde i nehes below the hem, and | The Hosiery Shop {conventional motifs in braid ar used as a balance trimming from the Arthur Burt Co. 1343 F “What Did She Have Ont” Whenever there’'s nothing else to’ talk about g”t” i il | The Hosiery Shop —invites you to sece the beautiful colors, designs and fabric now ready in Silk, Silk-and-wool, Wool it iright shoulder to the hem. The neck boatline and the sleeves are lonis. | Colleen Moore likes sports costumes ; {and_particularly one of Erench blucy woolen embroidered in white yarn. | VIRGINIA BROWN FAIRE HAS THE ||t is a one-piece dress and cape, with MOST _ORIGINAL COSTUME OF |a hat of the same color embroidered EM ALL. aear | " Virginia Brown Faire, who has just | finished playing the leading feminine role with Guy Bates Post in “Omar the Tentmaker.” sent me a photo- graph of herself from Honolulu w Anyway, I know what some of ‘em |ing a modish thing composed Cem Stars) are wearing, and in stra Braided straw adorned he case’ you should care to imitate, I'll |black hair, and anktets of the same pass a few frock-facts on to | finished off the most original costume | T lunched with Betty Blythe the of ‘em all. other day, and under a wrap of mole- | generally tell by the glint in his ey whether what she had on was charm- ing or the reverse. of ~TMOURNING BLACK ~ sae e Dyed Within 24 Hours TARMACK DRY CLEANING CO. 2469 1ISth St, Col. 638 _Dupont_Circle, _Fr. 5232 i i PBistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. PORTER. , | VARIATIONS—Durward, Dorman, Do- man, Doorman. RACIAL ORIGIN—Norman-French and | Anglo-Saxon. SOURCE—An occupation. As might be suspected, the family name of Porter had its origin in the occupation of porter. Title, jowever, would really be a better term than occupation, for in the middle ages, under the Norman-French feudal sys- tem of milltary-soclal organization, the porter was a person of military importance. In those days the word had nonc of its modern meaning. The porter was | not a bearer of burdens. He was the I military officer in charge of the guard at the gate, or “port” of the castle. The Anglo-Saxom equivalents of this title were “dore-ward” and ‘“dore- man” (door-ward and doorman), and family names developed from them tea gown, and is planning to coax Joe to take her to t that he can’t get home to dinner and may be kept g (Copsri 19 \abel { ATaiREton ! Pretty House Dress. By Thornton W. Burgess. BEDTIME STORIES | ites, hout it 1o les 1 don't know what the wo But w Peter T it Peter Rabbit was excited. Ine was excited. Tt was a long {ir i since he had been quite =0 ex | He was in the cedar swamp, whic la part of the Green Forest. It { dark and gloomy in there because t | trees grew close together and, evergreen, which means 1h; keep their leaves all winter, the {out the sunlight ! | w Nomatter wha are frequently met with. peter didn’t mind this. You But the name of Porter is far more B ol e I hare widespread today than the others, and e o Saouniled axactly Hke thie voice there is & reason. There was a period | e old friend, a voice which he of two centuries or more in England | Lo O s ot to, 8aE, nmain until c in which the Norman conquerors' Bt Now ho was lookinss for the spoke only French, the language {owner of that voic which they brought across the chan- | ! onelinja cedar nel with them, an nglo-Saxon was | wam eve if “I'M_SILLY TO STE MY TIM spoken by the conauered populatio [one You are hunting for is bis. * AND) RUN MY 10T The nobility, of course, was almost 1 e acatse it is impossible to see D PETE 5 without exception of the former race. L e et o y 2 R Hence in the castles, where the po: | it G {ters duties lay, onmly French was| i e R spoken, and naturally the French title (e Al g prevailed. Later, of course, owing to | weuld hop only 2 ed that some one was i the political severance of Normandy o e on e olmoranc.p s from England. the two tongues com- | bined into a mixture that was basi ally Anglo-Saxon and from which modern English has developed. But by that time the word “porter” had was tempted to give leave the cedar swamp. ity wouldn't let him. Bach time he pted he would hear t and excitedly start off in he would hurr Now. if the owner of th remained in one place have found him e pain in one at voic Veter But he didn't | re become thoroughly fixed. | ; nat voic i would come fr L poi hort 1 3 o2 r n g im this time. Poter would say | my leg S 1o omz reconasn el ion® B to himself. away he would sat walting and listeninm. “Some o ERRGEE Ask the efficient homemaker about |lipperty-lipp -lip. is playing a joke on me. Yes, s some one is — | the advantages of attractive ana]Eonc whatihe thousht Was 0 mying = serviceable house . garments. She [rhen he would | that voic voice | . i | PAM'S PARIS POSTALS | | xnows S T - A pretty model dis shown in this|to do the same thing over again, ‘Thut a3 24 X . ; vice didu’t put. It was con- a sEetch et oun o leliniaiday and : "lH v IIH(I\IX\,. bhout \ O he starte he wonld tind the this time. F | reached the seemed there. certainly was provoking. (Copyright, 19 by T. W. Burgess.) Love Letters That Made History ow Now, that voice was a chirp. er mournful chirp. Never in his | had Peter heard that voice in wint It was the voice of one of his fea ered friends who should b J down In the Sunny South. Knowing this, Peter couldn’t even vet really { that would cost but 65c, figuring ging- | ham at 15 cents per vard, with cham- bray at 20 cents per yard. The pattern No. 1603 cuts in sizes 134, 38, 38, 40, 42 and 44 Inches bust measure, Bize 36 requires 3% vards 36-inch material with 3 yard 32-inch contrasting. Price of stamps onl | dressed to The W gton Star Pat- tern Burean, 22 East 18th New York eity. Please write name dress clearly. “Just Hats” By Vyvyan er of that + 1t n't. voice wis sir, 1t BY JOSEPH KAYE. the first time at Meylan. You could not ve known then how you overwhelmed At childish heart that was ready : the disproportionate bur- I believe that you ardonably cruel as some- to laugh at me. Seventeen yea Berlioz and Estelle. Hector Berlioz was one of the great- {est musicians and writers that the century produced. The | nineteentn = corld has never quite decided whether PARIS, December 13.~Dear Ursula ]‘“’“ % 4 simply love these darling envelope lin- | Vieriior was a great composer o e it ot o e R | { onl, minor creative talent, ch by which she was traveling. 1 ings, only it. does make life more com- | plicated. Whether to send the ‘“pas- sionate purple” to John or the *‘for- get-me-not- blue” is driving me dis- tracted. PAMELA. Another Fur Cloth Model. {he was the father of modern orches- ylrnllun is fact that is gratefully | {admitted by all Berlivz was an extremely Imental and isitive m. beset by troubles all his the ori 1 of his w { musical he and poverty all faithful compan Berlioz had t in hi Henrietta t in thson he | was a stage idol 5 a miserable, struggling mu; made ends meet by singing chorus of a burlesque. hope of win- hing her was more of a visionary dream. Yet the fates ordained that the beautiful and resplendent ci cure, Miss Smithsen, should break her leg and suffer acute financial reverse: }and that in this condition Hector Ber- lioz, enriched by 300 francs which he borrowed, should marry her. A man like Berlioz could present a beautiful passion., but as a husband he was a failure. His married life was a most unhappy one and the| couple eventually separated. { i i with a letter. A violent art made my hand trem- it approached hers. 1 recognized e obji my first admiration, the del’ Monte, whose radiant beauty wted the morning of my life. vYesterday, Mme, 1 under- took 2 long contemplated _pilgrimage. » more [ de verythin done so. . . . Nothing Time has respected the tem emol But strangers in Your flowers are cult ands and no one in en yourself—could hay j guessed why a gloomy looking man, wi ° | features furrowed by labor and sorro | should vesterday have penetrated to its 1 most secret recesses: O quante lagrime! a temperi- He w fe, due rk and t introdu times illumi (Copyright, 1922.) 1o | o his was m. o predomina clish actre: i changed. ple of my habit it now. FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. : JEFFERSON DE ANGELIS. Spaghettl. Having traveled and eaten all over the world, it is rather difficult to state what my favorite dish is. Kor the moment, as I seem to have a longing for spaghetti, I will sug- gest my preference for preparation. The ingredients are as follows: Olive one-third cupful; garlic; cloves. five; onions, six (small); chopped beef, one-third pound; tomatoes, one! small can: mushrooms, ono small can; Worcestershire sauce, two table-| — — in the Cut_iclu'a il;l; Severe Eczema Over Face and Body ‘1 had a severe case of eczema. > It broke out in pimples all over my face and body and itched 80 badly that I could not rest at night. My clothing rewell, madame, T must return to } my whirlwind. You will probably never { see me, never know who I am, and 1 ope you will pardon the strange liberty [ am now taking in writing to you. I forgive you beforehand if you smile at. the recollections of the man as you laughed at the admiration of the child. *‘DESPISED LOVE.’ enoble. December 6, 1848.” Forty-mine years after he first met telle, he actually saw her again. This s at her home. She was sixty-seven old and Berlioz was Xty-one. But in the eyes of the impetuous artist i i i i But for Lstelle his love bloomed un- faded for fifty years. doubtless for son that du A small hat sans trimming. is made i & ot this half century | the vears and gray hair and wrinkled I il fi= " WEDNESDAY, | DECEMBER 27, 1922.° ’11! | | il i L WRITTEN I'm not runnimg a competition stand gerday It’s Bound to fippen Sooner or Later, But the First Time Is the Worst. L] Birdie, bride of three months, has the loveliest dinner all ready, and has donned her prettiest batik he movies, when the unfeeling brute calmly telephones e late at the office, so don’t wait up for him. isten,World! AND 1LLUSTRATED By Clsse Jobinson jwith Westminister Abbey, but every {time T meet up with a fine, upstand- ing human act I like to do it honor. | Therefore, I nominate for this humble niche in fame Mrs. Everett Brown lof San Francisco. Calif. The follow- ing newspaper <lipping will intro- duce vou to our heroine “Woman asks divorce. but spurns alimony. “It was in the fall of 191§ that | | ! to; ) t SHE ACCEPT ! erett Brown, New Orle; Brown, 6 California. promisc. 8 liere and j WOULPN T ALIMONY, importer of irs. Lverett wealthy d hold- the la e of dispost u ther n You c of time and trouble by using less d 1f you rinse tow deal h our djshes with | boiling water after washing them. and | aggravated the breaking | | spoonuls: and Parmesan cheese, one_|Of fur cloths. It has a becoming [ ISCNer oy Uirice Do iEn(ihe fardentiyiies" G sl caneed: W fobuen. | | TTE0R ORI Eeate) . L o | comonet I Sroms, OF halfi oyt ety (pesiiors 000 fove begdney hen he telie was Iuckily a I tried several different and o QLD rlic (cut!ryng down at the sides abruptly into!was twelve. The —impressionistic sensible woman and created a neutral ; in small pleces). Cook in frying pan o s & lovely voung woman | bond of affectionate sympathy bef remedies but did not get ¢ g pan |, ee brim at the back. This sort|yeungster saw a lovely young woman | bond of afiectionsis, SFRRLLY boihesh until_brown, then remove pieces of garlic frcm oil. « Add sliced onions and, when almost done, add chopped meat. When meat is cooked through, add tomatoes mixed with one pint of boiling water, half a teaspoonful of salt and two tablespoonfuls of Wor- cestershire sauce. Then add mush- rooms and half of the grated cheese. Let it simmer for ten minutes. If sauce is too thick, add a little more boiling water. Place spaghetti, which has been cooked (steaméd, prefer- ably), on a_large platter and pour sauce over it. Sprinkle the balance of your grated cheese over the Iot. Add paprika to give it a little cclor. Vlace dish in oven to heat throug brilliant j them. 1 i frame of mind as his tumultuous char- | acter could muster. eighteen, with large of shape is comfortable as well as|.yes, a splendid mass of hair and en chic with the large-collared fur coat. | chanting, graceful figure, and lost his I Teart completely. His passion became : A 2 standing joke at Meylan, where this According to Her Principles. Flora—It's rumored that you're en- | episode took place, and suffering Hec- itor was reduced to despair. Seven- gaged to Mr. Allfront. Are you mar rying him for his mone: teen years later he saw h Estelle Fauna—There's nothing in the for a moment as she, passed in a stagecoach. Sixteen vears after this! rumor. 1 shall never marry—espe- | cially a man I don’t love—unless he | he visited Meylan again and became | so distracted by memories of his first has a lot more money than Mr. All- front. | jof relief. I read an advertise- ment for Cuticura Soap and Oint- ‘ment and sent for a free sample. The first night I used them I got relief 80 purchased more, and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Thomas L. White, Rt. 1, Hartwell, Ga., Feb. 4, 1922. Cuticura Soap to cleanse and pu- rify, Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal and Cuticura Talcum to and perfume are ideal for daily toilet purposes. "Caticura Soap shaves without mug. Chicken or Veal Broth. Prepare_a_ white sauce with four unces of butter and the same weight of flour. Moisten with three quarts of chicken or edl broth ard let-it simmer on the side of the stove for twenty minutes, removing from time to time the scum which may ise to the surface. In the meantime parboil thrce ounces of rice for ten nutes, drain and add it to the soup lo love that he decided to see Estelle. She nad married, lost her husband. and Was living in peace with her chi idren, a devoted mother. In that quict < i At the Council Meeti: s d the wi e re- i1 t the cil ng. I?&‘i{fi}"{}'s p‘:fss‘i‘nrx:?e"e;!u"&f rom Ber-}and let simmer for twenty \minutes Then eat. B Chairman—Well, what had we bet- { lioz: longer. Just before serving, add one i do not know how it sounds to the|ter do with that garbage on e | "“adame: There are certain faithful | pint of cream beaten with four egg cader, but it makes my mouth water!south side? and persistent admirations that only die | Yolks, Season to taste with salt, pep- o write it down. Member—T move that we put it.all | with us. . . . I was twelve years old | per and grated nutmeg and add some (Coy tn the hands of a special committee. | when 1 beheld Mademoiselle Estelle for ' chopped parsiey. ight, 1922.) ! 1 | 1 stand will then they not means that but few towels week. and that the dishts needed ever them in a wire drainer. ing. This will_be require d will be just as clean and perhaps even than to You.can make muffs, bed with velvet with fur. Mak the material of and drapes well. or fur. Scarf Muft Is Paris ry easily. when dried with THE HOUSEWIFE. a "Things - You’ll Like Make. Novelty. one of these Parislan Cover a muff feather or other material or a scarf of silk or of ‘our coat, if it is soft Zdge it with fringe Pass the scarf around the middle of your muff, tie it into a knot as shown. The scarf can be tacked to the muff or if daround your mneck at times. leave it unattached. you wish to wear it FLORA. " Feature Suggests Women are grateful for the fashion which permits them to wear separate skirts with overblouses. It permits them more variety than a one-piece frock. It gives them a chance to ap- pear gay and colorful above table at lunch and dinner, snug and sensible as to the lower garment. It allows| them, also, the satisfaction of chang- ing the upper garment every da which, for variety and cleanliness. a good thing to do. None of these things are possible with one-plece; frocks. Counting on this accepted fasHion. the shops are fllled with entrancing tunics, short and long. Som huvu‘ hipbands, some have not. There are the Venetian tunics in black crepe de chine embroidered in narrow bands of bright color and tinsel which carry a metal ribbon that wraps twice about | the body to finish with short tassels | at one hip. There are Chinese tunics | of water green, of dead-leaf brown, which is a smart color of the se: especially when embroidered faded gold, pink and yellow. There | are water green blouses of crepe de | { chine partly covered with wheels of ribbon in the same color, and there are rosewood blouses of satin gir- dled with cord and edged with a o"-.] inch band of yellow and black Chi- nese flowers. Against these colors! white crepe de chine holds a snug | blace. Women like it for its clca ness and its neutrality. A colorc blousc does not go with any suit or topcoat in the closet. A while blous doc:s. The sketch shows one model that women like. It has a high collar, lowered armholes and full peasant} sleeves held tightly to the wrist by | narrow beaded bands. The odd fea- ) ture is the Chinaman's queue made of | beads. It begins between the shoul- !dur blades and drops to the knees. ending in a thick tassel. It may not | have been suggested by a Chinaman; it_is really like a Victorian bell-pull | Thé interior decorators, you know. | arc insisting that we put these beil- | pulls in_our rooms for pure decora- | tion. They come from old Russ: palaces as well as from Georg houses on leaf-strewn London square There is no bell at the end of the { bell-pull in theze days of electricity but such bits of splendid old embroid- | ery are decorative, So we put them at the eide of the fireplace, and if have money ugh for burning log and have the taste to read Thackeray e can ensconce ourselves in early Victorian atmosphere in one corner of a modern room on a winter's night. But if you have not a Georgian bel pull, if vou do not possess an ope fireplace, if you sniff at the fads of interior decorators, why mnot put bell-pull on vour blouse? I assu you the cffect is not curious or fan- tastic. If you do not like it swinging down the middle of back, wrap it ound the hips and let one end fall knees Mr own told Superior Judge E. P. Morgan that her husband had_ not arrived and she felt that | his failure constituted a desertion en- | ng her to a divo | ‘Are iou asking | Judge Morgan asked i 0, your honor. is not good enough for me to with. I don't want his money,’ Brown said firm! 5 And that in, was quite as eworthy s that little stunt of Horatio's at the bridge. | Take it as you will. divorce is a tragic expedient. Only the direct ne- | cessity should prompt it. and the bargain once made, it should be a| clean-cut proposition. A marriage for money is bad enough, but a; divorce which exacts still more mon is the abomination of abominations. And the law which permits women batten on the corpse of a dead love ix neither beautiful nor merciful. Tt should indced be regarded us u sult_to all that is highest in woin: hood. With what contempt would nien look upon a man who demanded | support from a partner he no longe ‘loved or lived with. Yet we regard such acts on a woman's part with complacen: We expert nothing bet- ter from women—no finer pride, no higher honor! Call it by as chivalrous a name as vou will, is there not the implication of a cial sneer at women in the term imony”? Many of the most sensitive and intelligent women are coming to think So. They belfeve t children should be wholly or partially supported by the father through im- maturity, and that the aged and sick partners who no longer “fit” should bhe loyally red for. believ and purity herself. though it were the W Copsrigh h alimony” a: of shame. ~ Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Sliced Pineapple. Rice with Milk h Cornmeal Mush and {b Minced Ham Fried. i Buttered Toast. Coftee. | |m LUNCHEON. : Baked Oysters and Mushrooms. | |o Popovers. Boiled Potatoes. | | Stewed Tomatoes. 2 Tea. DINNER. Oyster Cocktail Roast Turkey with Bread Stuffing. Giblet Gray. Cranberry Marmalade Riced Potatoes. Browned Parsnips Tomato Relish. Fruit Salad Mince Pie Coffee. e la je 1 Bedspreads. Don't be discouraged if vour bed- | spreads need replenishing. No. indeed. | 1Just go to it and make some new ones. One of the best kind to make 1t is expensive to begi very, but it wears almost forever ivou get a good quality heavy linen literally weavs for years, and goi through hard usage besides. You can cdge the spread with a little fringe, if you wish to have it hang over the side of the bed. or you can embroider a monogram on it, or you can hem- stitch it a foot from each edge, if the edges are tucked in. Or vou can buy & coarse ecru linen and work a border in fast colors in cross-stitch—faded green and blue. with a little rose and orange. for i stance, for a room where there is no very bright color. You can, of coarse, maie these bedspreads to match the cpvers on bureau, dressing table and qther furnitur Another way to go about it is to make a colored sateen siip cover for the bed, and over this hang a dimi or swiss or other thin muslin colos edged with a little strong coarse lace or else simply with a neatly stitched hem. This, t0o, makes a durable co ering, and does not cost so much the linen—nor, of course, is it quite | s0 durable. : Or_ you ‘can malke cretonne bed- SpTY These are charming in a room with cretonne window hang- ings. They should, of course. match the hanginge, and be finished at the edges in the same way—with a stitched hem, with fringe, or with raid. w i il of jc with. | T irph n m W fr m Peanut Loaf, Tomato Sauce. Mix together one cupful of cooked salted rice, one cupful of crushed pea- nuts. one egg. one cupful of cottage cheese, two tablespoonfuls of chopped onion cooked until soft in one-half a cupful of water, one tablespoonful of fat, one-fourth teaspoonful of pepper and one teaspoonful of salt. Make into a loaf and bake. - Serve hot with to- mato sauce. —_——— In China the art of healing is still based ou {aith and superstition. [eo 0! , WOMAN’S PAGE. "’ BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, WHITE CREP! 1f my husband | the ing cumulative ri et meals, plan to atiend few functions and take this ¢ person again (who's {understand?)? cooks you up the suppers and score! best of pancakes c: I'm old and tired with 23 Chinese Queue WERBLOUSE WITH I BAND DOWXN BACK. NARROW MIDDLE BL A WITH ITS THICK TA. B O L AT ONE END. THE FULL SLEEVES ARK GATH INTO LOW ARM- HOLES AND FINISHED WITH A IGHT W BAND, Your Home and You KENDALL. BY HI Holiday Week for the Mother. The Ch excitement and rush ad died o the ure of th nany home and chu preparation « s over. aid WA the sigh of relief s be m ed to as | owish, 1 hours T put in ow this week.” < going 1 announ ing o and el ay unds ve nake up fon, My ret ressing dolls before Christm; igh schoal daughter here will reakfast while I rest up from pre- aring the Christn turkey, b: nince pies and making Christmas candies. “As my holiday, after three weeks f trotting through the shop ing up packages and on. 1 ing to settle down w some new Christmas bool day and relax z Then by New 1o cel a until having to hoid th up jing without velids up. So. with the nce of lLer family, she v very morn after v E £ in bed, took a bris tle walk the fresh air and then retired to big divan in the living roon. ith a £ Christmas it side her. and =pent most uriously catching up after the fi- guing work of pulling off the fam ¥ Christmas fete By late afternoon she w ong, quict breaths ag N and take the enthusiastic taki ud reins of it thie ousehold 1 gement for the din er hour and the evening. leaving the horning work for the children. The average day’s domestic work intermittent rest but during the days prece few moth, nd the arincss need a per e this week of Have simpic s its per of it Christmas e moment own for recuperatio : to become a normal VERSIFLAGE. When Mother Visits. When your mother comes to visit lain't it fun? How you chat and luugh and gossip, talk used to know, of the things vou d in childhood, ‘one by say middle of December, and we-went to hear the great Caruso bought us acid drop: sapphire-diamond ring? THow folks done the never of long axo. you of yo How Tw o you he “Do_you remember ingz: and you 1ollipops, jelly heans and and you let me wear your When your other comes to visit ain't it grand experienced that event will ¥or when mother omes to stay you just feast yourself “h day on the dishes that were our greatest treat. For she s of yore— making appetizers she can She can bake delicious ca n she make and special little entree from calves But_the best of all. whe - visits me, is to hear her sing old-fashioned airs that 1 child—ah, th d—then 1 qui AT WILHELMINA STITCR at gs and m