Evening Star Newspaper, December 27, 1923, Page 29

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Stepmother Who Cannot children—Is There a Husband Tem ])"AR DOROTHY DIX: I wonder it #often the hearts of two girls o w rificed for them in every way tha artly raised by an overindulgent gra with suspicion, and encourages them children, and 1 could win inst me have not been with their their hearts by their relatives, for they seem to' be quite fond of me when grandmothe Win Hearts of Her Step- Any Way to Make Control His per? : you could write something that would f fourteen and seventeen toward the Wan who married their father four years ago, and who has worked and t a mother could? These girls were ndmother, who views everything I do n to dislike me. They are not bad if they were not continually set for several months. AN OKLAHOMA STEPMOTHER. f we Lave t epmother, we m the helpl than sicrifices 1 One may well wonder that an lertak : hazardous expe Is a job for a saint and & martyr, Ta expect girls of fourteen and determination of the young, to submit no matter bow gentle, and kindly, possible. The modern girl does not much less that of a stranger. qually well ctim of pitiless sk so than le ba consider To expect young girls to to be reasonable, dnd e If there e pung girl of today authority. ~ She recogniz asure. All that she th es s the other r own mother own mothe ampled under fo is bent s no one of is b an would love the . Whereas the There is no deunying, however, ¥ harder by the relatives of the appreciation as the one: just as quickly epmother resents i that the stepmother's task s to shed over the poor little child with the | sorrows of the woman | ¥ weep over the stepchildren. kless as the one she performs. she makes. lot in the world is woman on earth is foolhardy enough to ment of marrying a widower with children. not a mere human being. seventeen, in these days of the self gracefully to the rule of a stepmother, and wise it is, is to look for the recognize her own mother's authority, . te of another's feelings, to be to get along with, is to indulge in a were any such girls, the species is extinct. 1 going her own w: She’ brooks rights. that conflict’ with her own having a d to do this she would ride.rough s she does over her stepmother. &irl well enough to be willing to be . and is hurt by it is made first wife. Their foolish and criminal them teach the children to look upon their stepmother as an ad of a friend, and to reg: | teach them good manmers, as tyr: Many a stepmother is better fitt, er ever was, and she would gladl; the love and ‘tenderness of he erally the child L lot of meddling p them inflamed against their vicar! stirrers-up of strife commit. would accept )3AR DOROTHY DIX temper? 1 try very hard to please - disagree with him, alt in it. and quar devil withip him. My husband thinks he is a mode ney, and gives me what 1 swances for his other bad habits, as imation it is kindness and gentien ey, t of it is that d I shudder when I think m only twenty-five years old. ! n Answer 2 brutal temper being reformed by hi two gentle, swee fined women_b: third wife who i ild, and talk so much more rapidly busive thin than he could ever thi terrorized that he became as meek as mwouth in her presence. People who give w ly is a coward who the only way vou can deal with an hyu to it, and mak But, ar lady, eries of band or since none of ough married, ¥ be setting this good quality sirike a good aver: v to their te your husband is s are Undoubtedl better than a stingy one, The wife who has all the comfort that ear to many irritable speeches, and sl from the man she et and a man to stand between you even if they heart, if they would only let her. f the long e continually against that bad quality, and in that way you ard her every effort to control them, nny. ed to raise children than their own y bestow upon her husband’s children And their stepmother as a real mother grandmothers and aunts did not prejudice them, and fous mother. It is a great crime that DOROTHY DIX. Is there any way to make a husband control his my husband. I never contradict him, but 1 cannot do or say anything without his finding ing with me over it, and I4ive in terror of rousing 1 husband because he is liberal with need, and he tells me that I should make fie has that good feature. But In my that make domestic happiness, not sband’s temper Is killing my love for vears of misery ahead of me, MARY BROWN. In all of my life I have only known of one case of a man with s wife. This man had literally killed his cruelty. Finally, he married a could get so much madder than he and say so many more insulting and nk of, that she got him so cowed and Moses, and scarcely dared to open his mpers are nothing but bullies, and a bluff you can call if you have the nerve to do it. ybody who goes into rages is to beat him afraid of you. right in one respect. Matrimony is No man or woman is ever a perfectly satisfactory c perfect, and if you would be happy balancing “your accounts, and high-tempered husband is hard to endure, but he is far or a mo-account one, or a sullen and grouchy one, money buys can afford to turn a deaf he may still further comfort herself th this thought, that she doesn't have to stand for any more back talk married to, than she would from the man who was her if she had to*earn her own living. A good home and a good meal and the world are not to be despised, do not come tied up in a blue-ribbonedspackage, As for your thinking that you have ceased to love your bushand, do t let your mind dwell on that. ot of jove with a man. snerosity, and minimize his rages. § Py SAR MISS DIX wife, more for a companion than 1% Answer: iatrimonial bureau. circumstances whatever. And that's that, flat. . (Copyright BEDTIME STORIES Danny’s Astonishing Sur- prise. —0ld Mother Nature. Danny Meadow House never had card of a snake with a bill. But if is wasn't just what he was look- = at, then Danny could no longer rust his eyes. To Danny, any snake bad enough, but somehow omne a bill seemed wors This Fuiny South certainly was a land of trange people. ‘ nny wished the leaves of that r were not =0 thick. He wanted o see the whole of this snake with L bill. He wanted to see if it was as hix as Mr. Gopher Snake, who had o badly frightened him a few days efore. But the leaves were in the vy, and all Danny could see were ho head, neck and what he thought W part of the bod. waited and waited and ited ~right where he was. He he wanted to iidn’t wait becau: . Oh, my, no! No, indeed! He [ 4ited because he didn’t dare to do x¥thing else. He didn't dare move. +t last his long walt was brought to an end very suddenly. There was a novement behind the leaves which Danny NEVER EXC] (MED DANNY. E “I NEVER DID!™ the body of the snake with a Tho head and neck disappeared. ro was a splash in the water. ‘He must be a water snake, i oaght Danny, and peeped out over 1ie water. Nothing was to be sgen. The snake with a bill had disap- ured. He must be under water. Now was Danny’s chance to g'. y from there. He knew it. He w that the thing for him to_do to take to his short legs. But i'iosity was too much for him. un as curlous ay ever was Peter tubbit. So, inetead of running away, T cpept a little nearer to the edge ' the bank that he might see better. For a few minutes he saw nothing iut the smooth water of the river and Grandpa Pelican sitting on his favorite stump. Then, some distance out from the shore, suddenly ap- yeared that same head and neck which had so frightened é;lm at first. “He js a snake! And he has a g ed Danny _to himself. “Ank; ofi: qear: he Ia coming straight over hera!” - Danny turned around. He took one more look behind - him. nd'you can regain many of your lgst illusions. a twinkle in his eye and a :gnmn«l every instant to turn Any woman can think herself in love, or Fix your_thoughts firmly on his kindness and For, after all, hard words break no DOROTHY DIX. I am a widower with a good farm and house and need a a help. Will you please send me the dress of some nice girl or widow who would correspond with me? B. G. S. No. T have stated over and over again that this column is not | I will not forward letters, nor give addresses under DOROTHY DIX. t, 1828, By Thornton W. Burgess. and looked again. He He blinked several times. “No, sir, I never did!” he exclaimed again. There was no snake out there in the water, but there was a_ bird—g big black ‘bird with silvery spots on his back, and a long, slim neck and snake-like head, with a long, slim, very sharp bill.' Even while Danny was looking this® curious stranger sank until his body was below the water, leaving only his head and neck above. Danny knew then that this was the same fellow who had been up in the tree, and whom he had mistaken for a snake with a bill, because all he had been able to see’ had been that long, slim neck and head. “I never! I never did!" repeated Darny, and waited to see what would happen .next. (Copyright, 1928, by T. W. Burgess.) blinked. “If I Had To.” 4 brisk-looking young business man came into the office and sald, “Good morning. Remember me?" I looked at him, trying to tie the right name to the dark blue eyes and roguish smile that stirred vague memories of difficult days. I shook my head and sald, "Somewhere, some- time, T knew you.” He sat down at my desk and eet a little ‘example on a scrap of paper. Seven, seven, seven multiplied b; twenty-two. & “Patsy,” I shouted. “Right,” . said he, laughed. “Remember the pipe?” said he. “And the hut?” said I. “And the janitor coming in with the keys?” “And me saying we probably wouldn't need them, for we were there for the night,” sald I. How we laughed. Once when I was {onnx at teaching there was a boy in my class who came in any time at all or no time at all, and did nothing at all unless he felt like it and then did it wrong. He should have been at long divi- sion and he was only at two times. One afternoon I'kept him in. ‘“Look here, Patsy” saild 1. “You came in at nearly 11 smelling like a sack of old pipes, and you haven't done a thin, this day. -What are you going to be What good will you be? You'll know nothing, and be able to d6 nothing.” “1 don't need to know much,” said Patsy calmly. * “My father's co tractor, and I'm going in with him when I'm ready and feeling good.” “You a contractor and you couldn't multiply seven times two. “I could if I had to,” sald Patsy blithely. Wrath filled my soul The long hours I had toiled over this Imnl!dnt( young rascal who faced me now 21‘3 it P and how we through his freck! No 0od time, having as many | | | {the.2nd thing I knew I was dreeming ! sourball | dreemed jwhich to make the dra: Last nite I went to bed after pop sed If he had to tell me to go to one| more time he would ch the way up with his slipper, and the ferst thing 1 knew I was asleep and TREES OF WASHINGTON BY R. A. a_ grate dreem about me wawking along a ctreet all made out of rub- | ber to make you bounce wen you| wawked and espeshilly wen you ran, | and 1 thawt 1 was suckin that got bigger i littler the morc 1 sucked i Puds Shokins cams bouncing. sayin wunt to see one of the grea ou ever saw, do you? Sure, wat? I sed, and Puds sed, Our skool is going to ber at ixactly 9 o clock, hurry up or we'll be too late it. 3 And we started to run and bounc: the rubber, golng about 2 blocks ery jump, me saying, How do you know it Is, Puds, how do you know? A little berd told me, Puds sed, and 1 sed, Wat kind of a berd? and he sed. A parrit » Which, jest then about 50 cannons went ol % times each, meening !" o'clock, and we came our_skool and some big giant standing outside holding a mat ' ig as al telegrafl pole and sa: Wen T say & Im going » strik and you'll never see th old kool eny mor Il they bild another cne. —One he_sed. Wich jest then I woke up on ount of ma shaking me and ving, Are ou deff, Im positively horse from calling you. And she went out of the room agen, me thinking, Aw G, thats heck of a time for eny- body to wake you up, Im going back to sleep jest for about a minnit till the skool gets bernt down. And 1 went back to sleep, ony /in- sted of dreeming about the skool I dreemed [ had to take my choice of elther drinking 4 glasses of caster ol or having my ears washed 2 hours without stopping and wen ma woke me up agen it was so late I had to run to skool without eating hardly eny brekfist. Proving if we ony knew be satisfied we'd he all rite. o wen to Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDA Acknowledgments. “Deer Auntie Nell,” once wrote a small boy just after Christmas, “Tme much obilged for the coam and brush you cent me for Chrismus. 1 hate to rite letters but Mother made me write this on Because Aunt Nell was her sister, Mother sent this epistle on, with an amused comment. But her eyes wero opened to the fact that letter writing is @ source of torment and boredom to the very voung, and the following year she sat herself to make Christ- mas acknowledgments a pleasure in- stead. She proposed decorated, il- lustrated “Thank you" cards instead of written letters, and the suggestion was hailed with relfef and delight by the youngsters. Each had received on Christmas morning, as children generally do re- celve, some form of colored drawing materials. Boxes of paints, tubes of crayons, cases containing colored pencils, and in some collections a | supply 'of variously coiored papers on ings, were all gotten together on a morning dur- ing Christmas week when the stormy weather forbade staying out long, and the novelty of toys and gifts had begun to wane. The childrem were assembled in the sunny nursery window, and set to work. Small tongues curled around the corners of childish mouths as the trio embellished squares of paper or correspondence cards with their pet designs. Flowers, houses, ships, dogs “funny mans,” and other devices were painted or penciled around a large, unsteadily printed “Thank you" in the center. That was all they were to say—just “Thank you,” with their own names. printed below. The new paints were freely daubed on, the new colored crayons wagged Joyously. Here was a definite pur- Pose to Which these possessions might be_put. ‘When the thank yous were finished each was inclosed in an envelope ad- dressed to the donor of the Christmas present. The children themselves printed the addresses and licked the envelopes with the proud gratifica- tion of having produced works of art instead of having performed a hated duty. Needless to say, the cards made._just as much of a hit with their relatives as with themsel 3 | down the example: seven, seven, seven, multiplied by two, two. Do that correctly before you leave this place. tonight, be it tonight or to- morrow night when you finish. Her: we stay till it's done. You have to. The time ticked by and Patsy sat writing and writing and counting. ‘The janitor came in- with the keys. ¥Lock up when you go out,” sai@ he with a wink. “Right,” sald .I, “but I expect to ?e sitting right here until the morn- ng.” At 6:15 Patsy got it right and we went out into the twilight. “Good-night, Patsy,” said L “To- morrow's another day. Day after day Patsy had to—until it happened that he wanted: to. He told me one day that-he stopped smoking the old pipe and that the hut he used as his headquarters wasn't what it used to be. Patsy had come over the hard place. “But imagine, I could if I had te,’” laughed the ynunf business man. “I dropped in to see if you had any more ke me.” B “Yes, Patsy,” sald I, “but I know they have to before they tell me. They and I owe you & lot—two, twe times seven, seven ,seven (Mr. Patri will answer all letters dealing with problems of child edu- cation if the twritér will inclose a stamped, addressed envelope.) (Copyright, 1923.) —— Aprioot Bomb. Apricots are ‘not eaten as much as some other fruits, but they are ‘wholesome and good. Freeze into a sherbet one can of apricots mixed with one cupful of cold water and one cuptul of sugar. Then add two table- spoonfuls of sugar to one-half a pint of cream. Line a mold with the sherbet, pour the mixture of cream and sugar in the center, pack the mold in ice and salt, and let stand for two ~hours. 3 Rl ‘Duchess De Lanti, celebrated Italian ‘bea who lost her roruu‘;: follow- OSMANTHUS—OSMANTHUS In the northeast corner of Garfield Park there is a row of three small trees that will b of special interest during Christmas weck, for two of them are hollies and the third so closely resembles the American and English hollics as to be confused with them and is in fact, sometiimes sold by the English osmanthus (osmanthus and; is the firet one at the north end of the r rom there down the row the re the English holly and the holl The leaf of the o only almost an exact replica of the typical holly le but its general habit is also quite stmilar, a shrub or small tree to twenty feet. Th best point for distinguishing them is in the fact that the leaves of osman thus placed opposite along the branches while those of the holly are alternate. The . quently planted in the District. holly, This is the anthus is.not her: Annabel Worthngton 5 <Play Frock. The attractive appliqued pockets are going to appeal to the little wear- er of this easily made play frock. A linen-finished cotton or gingham would be nice to make it of, in a blue for & blue-eyed, fair-haired child, and in tan or rose for a chubby, little, brown-eyed person. The pattern’ comes in sizes 2, 4, 6 and § year, and requires .for the four-year size, 2% yards 40-inch material to make the dress and bloomers. stamps are included in embroidery pattern No. 671, which costs 15 cents extra. Orders should be nddressed to The Wanshington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 1Sth street, New York eity. Please write name and address eclenrly. The Guide Post— By Henry Van Dyke The Little Present. Silver and gold have I none; bu I Mave, that give I thee—Acts The little present, or the rare and long-wished-for gift (it matters not whether the vessel be of gold, or silver, or iron, or wood, or clay, or just & small bit of birch bark folded into & cup), may carry a message something like this: “I am thinking of you today, be- cause it is Christmas, and I wish you happines: “And tomorrow, because it will be the day after Christmas, I shall still wish you happiness; and so on, clear through the year. “I may not be able to tell you about it every day, because I may be far away; or because both of us may be very busy; or perhaps because I can- not even afford to pay the postage on so many letters, or find the time to, write them. “But that makes no difference. “The thought and the wish will be here just the same. . “In my work and in the business of life, I mean to try not to be unfair to_you or injure you in any way. “In my pleasure, if we can be to- ther, T wbuld ilke to share the n_with you. “Whatever joy or success comes to you will make me glad. TWithout pretense, and in plain words, good will to you is what I mean, in the spirit of Christmas. (Copyright, 1933.) Coffee Bread. Mix together two cupfuls of Graham flour, one and one-half cupfuls of white flour, on molasses water, one cupful milk and two-thirds cupful of strong coffee. Heat a little water, dissolve one teaspoonful: of -soda in 1t, and add it to the other ingredfents. Then flour one cupful of broken K‘nndnt :‘u‘uuua lm them. Pour e dough into a long, narrow pan bake in a ‘lulcr:& oven for one ut what nurserymen as a variery of | aquifolium) | smanthus has been fairly fre- | EMMONS. AQUIFOLIUM. |are some in the rear of | modore Barry statue in FKranklin |park. The so-called holly hedge |along lower 17th street opposite the Lincoln Memorial is of this plant, The specimen illustrated is the one spoken of in Garfield Park. | "It i8 a handsome little evergreen | with fragrant small white flowers in the axils of the leaves, appearing in June and July. Owing to our ex- ceptionally moderate winter many of | these flowers are open at presant. reader should see these extraordi- | winter flowers and taste their delicate fragrance. It is @ native of Asin and_in country is hardy | north to New York, the hardiest of its | genus. Ther several varieties: | one with smallex leaves without! | thorne, another with white variega- tions 'on the leaves, and others. | | Thero are ten known species of | | osmanthus in the world, nine native | to Asia_and Polynesia and one in | North Americ: he devil wood {the southeastern United Stat Osmanthus fragrans is a species th is frequently grown in greenhouses | for its fragrant flowers A SERMONETTE. ATTENTION TO DETAILS. BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS, Food Specialist the Com- Have you not at one time or an- other come to the table only to push aside the wholesome food, simply be- cause you were too tired to eat? Of course, you have! And what is the answer? Rest, certainly, but before ' happy period of complete ri has ar- } rived there are mealh to be eaten and | digested. How about those? { If you are the housewife you have | matters largely in your own hands, and if you are one of the other mem- | bers of the family you can easily get | into conference with the mistress of | Ithe house, so this sermonette is for | {you, in any case! { |” When one can spend but a limited | jamount of money it may not seem i worth while to attempt the graceful i touches that add so much to the | pleasure and actual digestibility of the meal, but it is just such circum- stances that make the graceful | touches supremely important. So trifling a matter as a sloppy i soup plate may send a delicate appe- tite to the right about. The waitress who brings the soup to the table in a cup, pouring the individual portion after she has set down the plate, is a | real force for good digestion, and this applies equally well to the child or other member of the family who acts as waitress in a simple home. | " "Wtih scrupulous cleanHness as a i foundation then, the next step is to | provide charm! { Dash agpoonful of minced parsley on top of ‘the plain cream woup; dress the cheap shoulder chops so daintily that they will meet with as enthusi- astic welcome as the most expensive cuts from the loin; “compose™ attrac- tive borders of rice and vegetables for prosaic stews; these are but a few thoughts on a large subject. The returns will more than repay the ef- fort expended. i b © Vogue | A Ménuifor a Day. BREAKFAST. > Oranges Dry Céreal with Cregm Rice Waffles, Maple Situp “% Coftee LUNCHEON. Cream of Tomato Soup Corn Fritters with Bacon Rolls Apple Bauce, Spice Cake Teax . DINNER. Potato Soup Filet of Sole Delmonico Potatoes Boiled Squash Celery Salad + Cheese ~ Crackers Coffee RICE WAFFLES. Ono cup of botled rice, one pint of sweet milk, two eggs, two teaspoons of baking pow- der, one tablespoon salt, but- tor 'size of a walnut and flour to make a thin batter. SPICE CAKE. One-half cup of butter, one cup of brown sugar, onc egg, one cup of sweet milk, two cupe of flour, one cup of seed- ed rafsine, ‘one teaspoon of baking powder. one tablespoon of cinnamon, little cloves and nutmeg. Frost with white frosting. CELERY SALAD. Seclect large, red apples, ent in halves and scoop out’ the centers, Jeaving sufficient pulp next to fkin <o that the apple cups thus made will stand up, Cut_the pleces of apples in small pleces and combine with an equal amount of chopped celery, one-fourth as many white grapes, cut in halves and soeded, and a few chopped nut meats. Mix with salad dres ing and pile in the apple cups, COLOR CUT-OUT After Christmas. “Whoopee! Hooray!” yelled Fatty Barnes, after Christmas. “This new suit I got fits like a million dollars! I tell you a fellow feels like some- body when he gets dressed up in regular clothes!” Fatty sat down i i i at the desk and filled his new fountain pen. ‘“Now I'll write the imvitations to my New Year dinner party,” he said. “First will be Betty and Billy Cut-out, and their cousins. the Cut-ups, and David, the crippled boy at the hospital that I met, and Peggy With the broken arm, and—oh, help!” he ended. Down the desk, straight onto Fat- ty's brand-new suit, ran a black river | of ink. Dript Drip! Drip! Down | the coat front to the floor! 1 forgot to put the stopper in the ink bottle” groaned Fatty, “and my beautiful Christmas suit is ruined Fatty's suit was such a nice brown, just 'ate woaring this. season. ~ May if Jis ‘mother sands it to the Cleaners' the ink will come out. (Coptight, 1923.) Fruit Salad Dressing. Pour into ‘a- double boiler on fourth cupful of pineapple juice, one. fourth cupful of orange Jjuice and one-fourth cupful of lemon juice. s It cooks gradually add one-half | a' cupful of sugar. Beat two eggs| stiff, add them to the fruit juice and | the sugar, and cook the mixture until | it will coat a &poon. Then remove | it from the fire, place it in a bowl of cold water and beat it until it is cold. Whip half a cupful of heavy cream and add it to the dressing just before you serve the dish. This is an excellent dressing for any kind of fruit salad. number of Vogue Areyougoing North? South? East? West? Do . you want to be sure to stay at the best hotels, do the correct sights, wear the appropriate clothes? « « « » Get Vogue, full of talking maps and trunks that fairly pack themselves. Florida. California. The Southwest. Bermuda. The West Indies. Hawaii. The Orient. Canada. All you wantt to know about every glu_ce where the smart world goes. And clothes—clothes—clothes! Bat if you aren’t going anywhere, you'll need Vogue even more. Because reading such a gay and travelled issue gives you quite the feeling of. having travelled too. For thirty-five cents! - Travel to the NewsyStand. DATED Vogue's on sale there today. JAN. 1 OUT TODAY -third cupful of | | ish, ingenuous manner, still a little | FEATURES.” The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan Boys and Books. Recently, before leaving New York | for these great open spuces, I met | Douglas Fairbanks, jr. He looks even younger than I had thought he would | look, and that was very young, in- deed. Also, he has still a nice, boy- good ike Indi; 1 think | s ‘Leather all about storie would ¢ Stociing d Ho, e best Although I which |« boys' booi am playins to do lote cvery boy shoul s possible, evey thougi : o work d a% sohos ible is €0 many boys think ot s s0 much additional worl when It is call all. It's a venture!” Why and difident, and yet withal a nice dignity and a small” but growing self-assurance. He told me that it has been a part of his picture education to read as many boys' books as possible in orider to it him for his career as a Para- “mount star. It is one way of finding b out the kind of stories he likes best i"_‘”“"* and perhaps alighting upon one that | naw' oy, may seem to him above all others the | dio. story he should do: he “Books," he said, fare friends I have next to my “Every boy likes to have but that's not always practica anyway, vou can't find adventures | really every day. So the next best thing to really doing things like rid- ing bronchos and salling boats and geing to the north pole or the seas 18 reading about them. vise every boy to read just as mu as he possibly tan. KFor my part, get all kinds of inspiration for act- ing from the books I read. They were | lots of help to me in my fifst picture, ‘Stephen Steps Out.” “I had lots of adventures in this pleture. I went to Turkey and got imprisoned, but broke out and res- | cued the sultan’'s son from the l'(]]x: next to mine. It almost as good fun as really doing those things. But most boys dow't have these | tunities at having adventures. | can read the stories, though, and get almost as much of a thrill “I liked ‘Treasure Island.’ It's just the kind of thing every boy would | like to have happen to him—adven- tures in the South seas and all kinds | of gold and treasure at the end of the voyage. 1 think every boy should read “Tom | Sawyer' and ‘Huckleberry Finn.' Dhon there is ‘Swiss Family Robinson,’ | which is bully. It's all about ship- wreck on adesert island. Desert is- | lands are the goods! The Ballantyne storfes, such as “Martin Ratler” and Roberta membe -Rod L of the next saue is o be : € William a. L production upon which he i West Coast stu once told me tha to spend his ol it the oque spes. ent 6, the best tivbte ors turned Sills once taught Wee ware English ot . Edmung® was for a short time pre fee2gs of English Santa Clara I'l‘ versgT in California.” Louis Wolheim wa also a professor in his earlier d of both matiematics and English, I have it rigit (All rights reserved.) ma by A it clear water a hrown down a sink will j it. clothesline 1 it will not always does. Old nail holes may With a mixture made sawdust and g when it twist, filled till dry. ning embroide fold the hlanket several times, lay the embroidery face down rds and iron on the back, the surface evenly. making mustard, in- stead of using water, mix with a little milk and a pinch of salt. It keeps the mustard soft and makes it go farther. . Washington hostesses welcome Sar-a-Jee JST the delicious newness of Sar-a-Lee Sandwich Spred—so piquant, so different'—is delight- ing Washington hostesses. They let its sweet, tangy creaminess en- rich cubes of toast, or tempt from hollow egg-whites, or make de- licious canapés. “Appetizing in all its goodness, Sar-a-Lee with the first course carries the dinner! Sar-a-Lee is irresistible, too, for tea and dance sandwiches. Snowy bread-stars prove most tempting filled with this lascious spread. Sometimes thin bread is folded around it and daintily tied for the bridge chocolate or reception tea: and often Sar-a-Lee furnishes all the rich flavors needed for salads, tartare sauce, and Thousand Island dressing. Sar-a-Lee gives you velvety mayonnaise, spices and peppers, olives, pickles and shredded ham— all blended for you in most delicious proportions. For formal and home occasions you will find Sar-a-Lee Sandwich Spred an economical treat. You can obtain it in groceries and delica- tessens anywhere in Washington. THE SAR-A-LEE CO. Cleveland, Ohio -

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