Evening Star Newspaper, September 23, 1924, Page 21

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WOMAN’S PAGE Complete Wardrobe for Mourning BY MARY Golng into mourning as a means of rhowing your berecavement is getting 1o be something of a luxury. The question is not so much whether you pprove of mourning as whether you can afford it. To tho well-bred American woman there is something preposterous about putting on black at all if it is not done consistently and complete- 1. If you have ever lived in France ¥ou_ probably recall the slap-dash method with twhich mourning is sometimes donned by middle-class women there. One observer recently | remarked that quite the most charm- ng widow’s bonnet and veil she had scen lately in Paris was worn with a brown sweater! It is mo uncommon sight to see widows in deep and crepe w ring light stockings. Simply, these women cannot afford to get everything new, but that does not prevent them from following the i into mourning. This sort o thing 1s offensive to erican taste. 1t n't done. Go- nto mourning here usually means new, from shoes and hair ornaments and ear- Tings Dull black kid slippers or pumps the best sclection, and with them ng lighter than thin transparent ack silk stockings. Any of the dull- ribbed fabrics of the present season are appropriate for frocks, with the Qull crepes leading The sk ch shows a frock of black georgetia pleated down each side and ot perfectly flat and straight at ack and front, The hat is of black 1t with a binding around the edge nd i folded band of crepe around own The handbag is of black with rapes and leaf for ing, and the choker collar is of k fur with ends of crepe crossed | drawn through a crepe ring. There is a ruching of crepe around the top of the ollar. Black suede gloves of elbow length would be chosen. PERSONAL HE BY WILLIAM bla Low Blood Pressure. high blood pres- mon ne the modern drawing s neurast Fivpertension, or sure, is as ¢ neaw (which is room), nia or liver com- fool knows ted. Hypoten- ure, is not so wspaper doc- hand to it Mlaint and nearly eve it should be tre n. or low blood pr pular yet but we n haven't turned our Give us time. €1f that readers with the high blood pressure obsession have 4 little comfort in this column theme of most of my learned dis- wions on that subject has been there such disease as hyper- or hizh blood pressure. Sure That would be my position, naturally Almost always n by asserting atly that there is no such d us idea is to sharpen and catch bis calls for much study and ays of crime and y. there is no blood pressure or When the blood is too high or too low it is ymptom or one feature of some disea Probably low blood pressure is found in more diseas conditions than high blood pressure is. Still it must be clearly under- stood that neither high nor low blood pressure is an entity in itself that be intelligently or effectively reated without a diagnosis of the nt's discase. e have blood quacks a-plenty, both jow blood pressure ressure merely BEAUTY CHATS Tired Eyes. So many serious eye troubles result ch preventable small troubles t every one should know a little, least, about the care of the eyes. cialist said recently that a bad light, or a wrongly or reading in a jolting nee, caused the sale of three of every four pairs of glasses. And T shouldn’t think he exaggerated. Yet, in these “nervous days,” it Is possible to expect any one hour in troliey or sub- nothing but sit in silent it is the only for reading. d reading ] and the 3 t's possible, even when newspapers can be read only then. The reasonably large type of a well printed book will not hurt the sight. Jt is always possible to close one’s book or magazine when the light is o or to shift mne’s posit so0 the light comes properl shoulder, full on the p: face. If you ‘retion around the eyelid it opthalmia may develop, and you uld ask your doctor for a pres Tic'll probably prescribe mercury oinment. If this ne, and editatic BEDTIME STORIE Reddy Fox Interested. Your misfortune, it is plain. Happily may prove my gain. ~Redds Fox.. Tt just happened that Reddy Fox was over near tha end of the Long ine when Farmer Brown's boy and »wser the Hound entered it from the cornficid on their way home. It was bright moonlight, and Reddy could sce them almost as clearly as if it had been daylight. But th iant sce Reddy. You see, Reddy was standing in the black shadows. Farmer Brown's boy was carrying DDY FOX TROTTED ALONG SOPTLY IN THE BLACK SHAD- OWS AT ONE SIDE. nmething in one hand. Now and hon he held it up to look at it. Reddy had heard Bowser chasing obby Coon in the Green Forest fhen” ho had heard him over in the yrnfield. So Reddy guessed right way that Bowser had caught some and that the thing Farmer rown's boy was carrying was that ome. n'l"i: isn’'t Bobby Coon,” said Reddy o himself. “It isn't big enough for Robby Coon. I would like to know 7 am surprised that - | limits formerly S | rath MARSHALL. BLACK FELT HAT BOUND WITH CREPE, HANDBAG OF CREPE WITH TRIMMING OF GRAPES, ANT COLLAR OF BLACK FUR WITH CREPE ENDS GIVE SMART FINISH TO SIMPLE BLACK SILK CREP FROCK WORN FOR MOURNING. ALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D. within and without the ranks of the medical profession But all 1 ask you to remember | after the quack has finished with you is that if yvou must be parfed from | Your money there are regular doctors | everywhere who can do the opera- | tion " almost painlessiy. By regular | doctors I mean those who honestly | endeavor to find out what ails you ind not merely what you have got— in your pocket. A rather lower blood pressure than has been generally deemed normal is now believed to be consistent with good health and longevity. from life insurance experience. Just how low | the blood pressure may be without becoming pathologic is a question which will_require more experience | to settle. But measurements of the blood pressure in large groups of {healthy voung adults prove that the set as “normal” were 1 mention no specific that is not a health too high, | figures because | auestion. Some of the diseases in which low ood pressure is found are tuberculo- svphilis, diphtheria, typhoid fever, shock, hidden focal infections, Addison’s disease, hypothyrodism and many cases of goiter and myasthenia vulgaris, if I may give such an im- pressive name to the flabbiness which comes from neglect of daily exercise. This is enough to show that when vou find out you've got low blood pressure, just as in cdse of high blood pressure, you have only taken a step toward finding out what is the matter and what you ought to do about it (Copyright.) | bl BY EDNA KENT FORBES | trouble is neglected, it will cause the | rrelashes to fall, so vanity, it noth- |ing else, should send you to your | physician. Merely tired eyes need bathing, either with weak salt water or weak boracic solution, or even plain, pure water. Alternating hot and cold com- es will relieve temporary tired- . and hot and cold compresses of weak tea are even more effective. A temporary swelling will respond to this treatment. Many eye troubles are caused by an upset liver. Leonie: slump in the general health, especially that affecting the nervous system, will always react on the hair and cause it to lose its vi- tality. There are people whose hair will appear to be lifeless and lie fat to the scalp on days when they are not feeling well; and then on a fol- lowing day, when they have recovered, the hair hair will show instant re- sponse to the improvement. If the hair continues to be lifeless it shows that the nervous system needs to be built up. You can help somewhat with a good tonic and a daily massage of scalp, but the gen- eral health will have to be improved before the hair will be fully bene- fited. 7 BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ‘lockl Dleased over it. Yes, sir, he actually looks pleased. I must find out more about th So when Farmer Brown's boy and Bowser the Hound and Unc' Billy Possum went up the Long Lane some one else also went up the Long Lane. 1t was Reddy ¥ox. While Farmer Brown's boy and Bowser kept in the moonlight in the middle of the lane, Reddy Fox trotted along softly in the black shadows at one side. Just before they reached the barnyard | Reddy had stolen near enough to see clearly who it was Farmer Brown's boy was carrying. Unc’ Billy Possum!™ ex Reddy Fox under his hm:h_d""‘fi'n:g Billy Possum! They must have caught him down in the cornfield. Bowser must have caught him and shaken him to death. I wonder what Farmer Brown's boy will do with him. I wouldn't mind having him myself. No, sir, I would mind hav- Ing him myself. I think T'll bang around awhile, and see what Farmer Brown’s boy does with him. My, how fat Unc’ Billy looks! Just looking at him makes me hung: So Reddy hid whers he could watch. That wasn't very difficuit. Parboil a young chicken cut into keep in the black shadows, and there were plenty of black shadows. He saw Farmer Brown's boy stretch Unc’ Billy on the ground and heard him tell Bowser the Hound to watch him. He saw Bowser sit down be- side Unc’ Billy and Farmer Brown's boy go into the barn. The instant Farmer Brown's boy disappeared Reddy moved over a little nearer to Bowser and Unc' Billy Possum. He still kept in the black shadows. Reddy was thinking hard and fast. “If 1 can get Bowser away from Unc' Billy Possum_ perhaps Il have a chance to get Unc’ Billy myself, thought he. “It is worth trying, any- A (Copyright, 1924, by T. W. Burgess.) Earliest known English public swimming pool wes advertised in London, May 28, 1742, to be open and that “waiters attend daily to teach or assist gentlemen in the said Swim- Dag, bath. A - My ventrilloquizm book came Satti- day on account of me having ansered a “avvertiszment in the Boys All Erround Magazino and sent 10 cents for it, and I stayed up in my room all morning studying it and practicing how it sed to do, the name of it being Ventrilloquizm in One Lessin by Prof. Presto 10 Cents. And I went down.to try it on ma, and she was in her room taking things out of one draw and putting them in another, saying. Well, Benny, youre a stranger, ware have you bin all morning? O, up in my room getting reddy for luntch, I sed. And I started to per- tend to be looking out the window and made my voice sound like a ladys voice coming from out in the hall saving, Hello, hello, is Mrs. Potts in there? Sounding jest like it, and ma start- €d to reed a letter saying, This is the most peculiar letter from your Ant Fanny, I cant seem to make out weather she wunts me to go and visit her or- weather she ixpects to come and visit me. Me making the ladys voice come from out in the hall agen saying, I wunt to see Mrs. Potts rite away im- meeditly, its very important, ware is she? . I cant make hed or tail of this let- ter, Fanny never did know wat she wanted to say and even wen she did know nobody elts ever did, ma sed. Me tawking like a ventrilloquist agen ying, I cant wait all day, my time s valuble, wares Mrs. Pot! Mrs. Potts? O Benny for goodniss sakes how can I concentrate on this silly letter with that squeeking going on? ma sed, and I sed, Well G wizz, ma, who do_you think it is? Who do I think wat is? ma sed. Izzent this letter aggervating enuff without you trying to drive me com- pleetly out of my mind? she sed, and i sed, Well gosh, ma, holey smokes, do you meen to say you knew it was me all the time? O, leeve the room wile I have a fragment of sents left, ma sed. Wich I did, wondering if I could get eny of the fellows to buy the ventrilliquizm book for 5 cents. “JUST HATS” BY VYVYAN. i -3 4 = N Z -z This is a hat of plain color that sounds the new fashionable note in its shaded trimming. There is a shaded ribbon that is put about the crown in pleats, with a peak in the front. An ornament of the same deep tone as the deepest coloring of the ribbon appears in front. The color- ing of the hat is in the wood shades, with the ribbon touching deep orange rather than the sepia tones. What TodayMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Libra. Today’'s planetary aspects are very beneficial and stimulating, and. while they encourage a certain degres of conservative aggressiveness in both business and commercial efforts, they are more conducive to success in do- mestic and personal affairs. Those who marry today are almost sure to secure that happiness they both seek. Those who are in love, but have not vet formally given expression to these thoughts, can put the matter to a final test without fear or trembling. Thoss to whom a child is born will find comfort and solace. A child born today will have a nor- mal babyhood and childhood and will £row up to be a healthy, normal man or woman. Its character will be founded on principle; its disposition sunny and self-sacrificing; its men- tality quite up to the average. This child will be one of those who give cheer and comfort to parents and pleasant association and companion- ship to those brought into contact with it. While always keen to re- sent a wrong—and it will possess a highly developed sense of justice—it will always be amenable to love and affection and will forgive readily, Its success along material lines may not be exceptional, but it will shed sun rays wherever it is and the world will be the better for its sturdy ex- ample of simple faith and duty. If today is your birthday, you very often grumble and complain of the meager success that, so far, has at- tended all your efforts. If you anal- vze yourself, will you not find that your condition is largely attributable to your unwillingness to serve, where- as you expect others, as well as cir- cumstances, to serve you. In the old days kings ceased to make service their first consideration. Instead, they demanded the service of others. Thus they wrote their own doom. Neither human being nor animal which ceases to serve lasts, Great service, generally speaking, brings great reward. He or she who is ambitious to succeed must learn how best to serve, how best to be fitted to earn high rewards, how, in short, to be useful beyond the ordi- nary. There is scarcely a single door leading to success which cannot be opened by the key of service. A too urrent business phrase used to be Soak ‘em.” The modern version, and a much - more workable and worth-while one is “Serve ‘em.” Well known persons born on this date are: James F. Dana, scientist; Elihu B. Washburne, statesman; Sara Jane (Clarke) Lippincott, author; Al- exander Davidson, inventor; James Carroll Beckwith, artist; William De ‘Witt Hyde, educator. (Copyright, 1924.) Southern Chicken Pie. Parboil a young chicken cut into small pieces, some of the thicker pieces being cut in halves, and add eight small white potatoes.. Stir into half a cupful of sweet milk one heap- ing tablespoonful of flour and one tablespoonful of butter. Make a rich crust of biscuit dough, grease a deep pan and line the pan with crust Season the chicken with salt and pepper, add the thickened milk, put into the crust and add an upper crust. Add_dots of butter and bake in UK pEen, Heart-to-Heart Talk to Husbands and Wives About Opening Each Other’s Mail—Shall She Marry Her Tightwad Sweetheart? EAR MISS DIX: read them. Has a wife a right to open her husband’s letters and MRS. R. W. A Answer: Certainly not. Neither has a husband a right to open and read his wife's letters without her express permission. For either husband or wife to open the other's letters is a violation of the ethics of good taste and an exhibition of prying curiosity and suspicion that is an insult to the one whose mail has been tampered with. A letter is an intensely personal thing, intended just for the one to whom it is written, and neither a husband nor wife should feel that he or she has a right to supervise the other's correspondence. \ A man’s wife has no right to know many of the private affairs of his sisters and brothers that they might like to consult him about, nor has a husband any right to hear every detail of the troubles of his wife's family that they tell her in their letters. Both men and women e old friends who write them things that are intended for the friend's eyes alone, not for the callous and critical reading of stranger: So real delicacy of feeling would prompt husbands and wives not to ask to see the letters that are written to their mates. Certainly, a man or woman who can’'t be trusted to get a letter is so poor and miserable a creature that he or she is not worth watching, nor is any system of espionage successful. If a husband or a wife desires to carry on a com- promising correspondence with any one there are plenty of ways to do it. Married people often think that they are under no obligation to observe the decencles of life with each other, or to respect each other's privacy and individuality. Never was there a greater mistake. Just becaus husbands and wives are thrown Into the intimate contact of daily life; just because they are S0 much in each other’s power, it is the more necessary for them to use every courtesy and nice observance toward each other, if they are to keep any il- lusions whatever regerding each other. Married couples soon get on each other’s nerves if they never grant each other any liberty, and If each has to render an account to the other for every thought and word and furnish an alibi for every hour of the day and night. You cannot make a prisonhouse of matrimony and expect either a man or woman to love it. The things that count in marriage are the little things. the appreciation, the word of thanks, the free granting of each to the other of some personal life of his or her own on which the other does not intrude— the right to gratify a fad, to go Into a room and shut the door and be alone, to bave one's own individual clothes and toilet articles that no one else uses, to get one's letters unopened. Belleve me, many a marriage that goes on the rocks could have been saved by a husband or a wife respecting the privacy of the other. For famil- iarity not only breeds distrust, it is the mother of hatred. . DOROTHY DIX. e e DEA.R MISS DIX: I am a young girl 20 years of age, and for two years I have been going with a young man. He is a very nice chap, well edu- cated and has a good position. He comes to my house every week, but he has never taken me to any place of amusement or spent any money on me. He even goes to the theater and movies by himself all the time. This man wants to marry me. Do you think I would be happy with him? ANXIOUS. Answer: T certainly do not. Of all the husbands in the category of men whom it is dangerous to marry, the very worst is the tightwad. An open- handed rounder, or even a drunkard, is a less aggravating life partner than one who doles out the pennies and who always asks his wife what she did with the quarter he gave here week before last. This man has given you a taste of his quality. He has shown you that he bas no care for your happiness or pleasure, and that he is utterly selfish. If a man treats his sweetheart that way when he is courting her, he will display those qualities intensified a thousand times when he is married. If he never takes you anywhere now nor gives you a good time, be sure that he will think that cooking and washing are amusement enough for you after marriage, and you will never again see another picture or a show unless somebody else takes you. It he is selfish enough to go to the theater alone now, he will have all the good clothes and step out alone after marriage and leave you alone with the babies. ~And your miser husband will make your life a burden to you becaase he will always be snooping around the icechest and the garbage can, demand- ing to know why vou didn’t peel the potatoes a little thinner and why you threw away a bread crust. And on the days when the bills come in you will be terrified of your life, he will raise such ructions over them. Don’t marry a stingy man, for the man who has a padlock on his pocket before marriage will keep his purse in a steel safe after marriage, and you will never be able to jimmy into it. DOROTHY DIX. . - EAR MISS DIX: T have just broken my engagement on account of the fol- lowing situation: Jack’s mother is extremely devoted to her son. Also, she is fanatically religious, and she has always been upset over our engage ment merely because I am not affiliated with any church. For two years the obsessions has been gathering momentum, and she has finally become a nerv- ous wreck over worrying about the matter, until lately the doctors have de- cided that for us to marry would either mean death or mental derangement for the old lady. When this was put before me by my embarrased sweet- heart I saw no alternative but to free him and put an end to the misery 1 ‘was causing. ‘We still l1ove each other—perhaps more than ever—and can only trust in God to work a change of some sort in the situation, so that some day we may find ourselves free to marry. I feel sure of Jack’s love—he was terribly cut up over the realization that therc was no other way out than to call it off, yet I don’t want to be fatuously creduious. What do you think? M. P. C. Answer: 1 think you did the fine and altruistic thing. You could not have taken your happiness at the price of a half- demented old woman's life. Alsgo I think that if you had married her son she would have nagged you to destruction. Perhaps the woman who thinks herself so good will some day become a Christian herself and see what a wicked thing she is doing In destroying the happiness of two young people in order to try to force her own ideas upon them, and how un-Christ-like is her attitude how unlike Him who said even to the Magdalene, either do I condemn thee.” DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1924.) Menu for & Day. HOW IT STARTED BREAKFAST. BY JEAN NEWTON. Sliced Pineapple. ‘Dried Cereal with Cream. Vegetable Hash. Rolls. Coffee. The Proofreader. Today every editorial room and every printing office of significance has its proofreader. who is employed to do nothing else but read the proofs of the material which, goes through the office, line for line and word for word; to correct mistakes in typog- raphy, matter or punctuation But there was a time in the his- tory of printing when the proof- reader’s office did not exist and his work was supposed to be done some- how as the proofs went through the hands of the various other workers. Then came the man, the first record- ed proofreader, Giovanni Andrea, Wwho created the job for himself. In the year 1450 the large printing firm in Rome by which Giovanni was employed published what up to that time was their most pretentious volume. Andrea. an emplove in the pressrooms, handling the proofs as they were about to £0 to press, called attention to the fact that they were still full of errors. A score of work- ers had passed on the sheets and had not detected them. So Gfovanni Andrea was commended for his sharpness and made officlal proof- reader—and the first of his arafty (Copyright, 1924.) THE GUIDE POST By Henry and Tertius Van Dyke, LUNCHEON. Omelet with Parsley. Nut Bread. Hot Gingerbread, Whipped Cream. Tea. DINNER. Seotch Eroth. Baked Stuffed Pork Chops. Mashed Potatoes. Stewed Tomatoes. Bolled Rice, Fruit Sauce. Coffee. VEGETABLE HASH. One-half cup chopped cooked carrots, 1 cup chopped cooked potatoes, % cup chopped cooked turnips, 2 cups chopped cooked cabbage, 1 cup chopped cooked beets, 2 tablespoonfuls beef fat, 3 cup milk, salt and pepper. Melt the fat in a frying pan. When sizzling hot pour in the above ingredients, spead evenly, cover and cook slowly % hour. Fold, turn and serve. GINGERBREAD. One cup of molasses, 3% cup of ng-.r,‘,% cep of butter, % cup of milk, 2 eggs, 1 table- spoonful of ginger, 1 teaspoon- ful of allspice, 2 cups of flour, 1 teaspoonful of soda. Serve ‘with whipped cream. Penalty for Dismay. Be mot dismayed ot them lest I dis- may thee before them—Jer. 1:17. One aspect of the great cholce which every one is called on to mako is contained in this word to the young prophet Jeremiah. And so also is the inevitable outcome of the wrong cholce: To be afraid of man rather than to fear God is ultimately to be mado ridiculous before the world. [on IN&ss are contin intimidating the fndividual with o cial conventions and mob fudgments: but in the end they despise the 2 less acceptance of their dictums The one man who is universally respected is the man who, withont fear or favor, carries in his conduct and thinking the marks of tho clean SCOTCH BROTH. Soak 4 ounces barley m 1 quart cold water overnight; pext morning drain, put into soup kettle with 1 onlon, 1 tar- nip, and 1 carrot, cat into slices; add a few green tops of celery if obtainable and 4 table- spoonfuls of oatmeal; cover with 2 quarts of boiling water and stmmer gently halt an hour, then 2dd salt and pepper; strain and serve. Baked Lentil Cakes. Wash one cupful of lentils in sev- eral waters and soak them in water for 12 hours. Boil them until soft but not pulped. Drain, then add two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one tablespoonful of sugar, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, the yolks of two eggs beaten, and half a cupful of chopped nut meats. Make into neat ible peace. The trouble with most of us is that we lack the patience and foresight to realize this truth. ‘We would rather be popular and let tomorrow take care of llnl:l'f than be unpopular today and wait to COLOR CUT-OUT Betty Is a Nurse. ~ “Please let me hold my little cousin, Aunt Kitty,” begged Betty. “T'll hold her so very carefully.’ “She's pretty big,” sald Aunt Kitty. “She's getting almost too heavy for me, but if you're very careful you can carry her in and put her in her little chair.” Betty carried the little visitor to her cunning chair and then ran to find a rattle for her to play with. Color the baby’s dress pale pink and make the little bonnet to match. The chair should be colored a pale blue and the dress underneath the tray is white. The socks are pink. Now cut a slit in the chair along the dotted line and you can put the baby in its chair. (Copyright, 1924.) AUNT HET nice on account o' me makin’ ‘em stoop over to be spanked.” Hodge-Podge. Cut into small pieces one pound of lean stewing beef and place in a large pan with one quart of water. Bring to the boil and simmer slowlx for one hour. Cut two onions, one carrot, one small turnip, and three pounds of po- tatoes and one stalk of celery in small pleces. Add them all to the meat, ex- | cept the potatoes. Season with pep- per and one teaspoon of gravy, a lit- tle salt, and simmer for another half hour. Lastly stir in the potatoes and again simmer for half an hour. FEATURES Bistory of Pour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. TYNDALE V:.l':ATIONS—Tinle, Tyndall, Tin- RACIAL ORIGIN—Dutch. SOURCE—A local name. A good place to 100k for the mean- ing of your name, if it is not an obvious one, and you have no his- torical recerds on the subject at hand, is in a gazetter. You are not certain to find it there, of course. But such a large propor- tion of our family names have been developed from the names of places that the chance is a very good one, provided you have some clus in the nationality of your ancestors. If your name happens to be any The Superfine one of the foregoing, for instance, you would have a Jong search before you found anything on the map of England or France that looks like it. But in Holland thers was a little village bearing this name, and per- sons who emigrated from this place to England, perhaps in some in- stances direct to America, quite nat- urally adopted its name as their fam- ily name after the change. Dutch family names on the whole are of much later origin that Eng- lish. Many of the first Dutch set- tlers in America, for instance, bore no real family names, but still used sur- names deseriptiva of their occupa- tions or peculiarities, and these de- veloped into true family names in the new country. (Copyright, 1924) —_— The truly strong and sound mind is the mind that can embrace equally great things and small things. ities "SALADA" ‘T EH.A. are revealed in every steaming cup. JUST TRY IT. BLEND of INDIA, CEYLON and JAVA TEAS COLGATE'S FAB FAB box fronts have coupon value. Com- bine them with coupons cut from Octa- gon Soap Products for useful and beau- tiful premiums, at 514 “G” St. N.W. 7y mine foday 1 bake many different kinds of pies. There’s none T’d rather stake my reputation on than m¥ raisin pies. ‘Try one today—and you’ll see why! At the res- taurant, if you lunch away from home. Or for supper at home tonight. My raisin pies are home-made pies, with nothing left out—except the bother. I use only Sun-Maid Raisins—big, plump, juicy raisins, made from the cak: lay them on buttered ?hl:dnd Bake in @ hot oven for & quarter of an hour. Sprinkle a few chopped nut meats on top and serve hot. Scotch Breakfast Rolls. Rub together four cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar, one teaspoonful of baking soda, one teaspoonful of sugar, and a little salt. Moisten with sweet milk and mix into & very light dough. Roll out lightly to the thickness of an inch and cut into three-cornered shapes. Bake in a fajrly quick oven. If for tes cakes, use the same mixture with a little ‘butter rubbed through and __ - pemspA (ProREh.A A Slevee Japeral be respected. The young man hesitates to under- take God’s call to difficult service be- cause he trembles at what then will say. Like - Jeremiah, he may be shy, looking for a lodging place in some vast wilderness. But let him beware lest his dismay (of whatsoever sort it be) make him disobedient to God, So that he ends up as a coward, a knave, or a fool before the very men of whom he is afraid. (Copyright, 1924.) —_— Milk contains, in round figures, 3?7 per cent of water, 4 of protein, 4 of| fats, 43 of sugar and a fractiem of ‘matter, fear of God. And he is the one man who finds in himself an nie:mc’ tenderest and sweetest of grapes. Crust—golden, tender, flaky. Filling—juicy, racy, fruity. Goodness that satisfies! Have one tonight, At your baker’s or grocer’s

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