Evening Star Newspaper, January 19, 1925, Page 21

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WITH FEATURES. —\ll -active Ways of Baking Apples BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. baked plerced with a broom corn the apples cook long cnough r them to lo their shape If the ven is hot, the pulp will first L until there is danger of the Kin bursting. After this the will shrink as the moisture ites and the apples will not k attractive, though the be hurt Baked Stuffed. stuffed apples are delicious left_when the core is re- filled with a mixture of oth minced fruits and some- nuts, and then the apples are cither with the skins on or bove A delicious fill- » by combining seeded and raisins with stoned and cut up Mix with nd sea namon anad a dash of m S Eeterred s. Bind to with a very small amount of Chopped ery, nuts 1gar and splees (o them) offer another fine »d stuffed apples serv h easil pating th sand of pulp aked cavit bak 1 bread cru ce and raisins w hout ing desse supplement ly light As they a meal that Omit the ¢ dessert appl Other fruit hredded pineappla may be the stuffing and shredded mbincs well also. Steam Baked. baked rved are oanut apples e than ous are Jess fre they should be Peel and core carefully § A sift su nnamon if you wish 1gh bofling water to apples from sti arter eup, and in a very siow oven ten This will ta ars probably. and ording to the kir used. The in tone sauee of the will not if they ) i pot ) Four in just e a king. cover and 1 A of fruit a the ¥ until of apples that should be | Nquer that | apples are ch br taker fu out they eepectally Tallman 1 Pt v 1 lose | their shapes sweot apples especially good for steam baking. | cause they remain whole. Sour ples will collapse quickly. i Choose Large Fine Ones. | When selecting apples to bake, tion. Such apples will be satisfying, while small | turn out well. Both sweet and sour apples bake well, but the latter re | quire close watching or they will fall | apart. Sweet apples require practi- | cally ‘no sugar: sour omes a great deal. The sugar forms a up which WITH | will burn if the apples are not taken S DE | out of the oven as soon as they done. There should be sufficlent | water in the pan to prevent the juices actually burning, though | they may brown lightls Each varlety of apple tinct flavor when baked pi change these tastes, and the pulp of rbs the essence of the it the pan which the of a filling, so that the ged and bake in & |whole apple becomes somewhat per- 1 the pulp can be [meated with the pleasant savor. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. UFFED A D APE LICIO avity sugar Pples with with sugar. Put a very wher sprink the the mon and 11 that of ¢ very short ouly half So she called it “pulka,” for is the word in her Bohemian that meant half. The craze s dance swept the civillzed much as jazz has taken posses- sion of the cotemporary mind. At the height of jts fashion the name was given a new dress goods patter Of course. the word has been Angl fied to "“polka,” a&nd from that date to this a s dotted design has bLeen )wn as the po t st to the polka-dot are the pin dot and the -spot, the former ing smaller and the latter larger. Spotted effects are produced loths in different ways—by employ- ads in which spots intervals, most »dueing extra warp or weft to man, It|threads which are brought into the sur- designers to |face where the spots are formed. The and this lllex|~ mplest way is by floating the ordi them into|nary weft or warp thread on the suw variety of | face of I in an order that surpass contrast with the Interlacing ny things usuall spots - it is m the cloth ge was 5o sm | steps w steps pul tongue t 4 mecessity her Romance of the Polka-Dot. “spots” before your r mind; it is no occasion or even for rushing off to for an examination, for that dots and spots are | s th season like an April ange In size from pin- harlequins, and of| long range in fabrics led erad ops, 1t ex- | in | o appear | and they ! s as well the lossoms. oping 0 on th e ve irl living near ':~r.Al\." originated weft r h : prominently BEDTIME STORIE Absent-Minded. trous and also because BY THORNTON ¥. BURGESS do that and I I one to as then 't make up my mind t Pet ded er Rabbit be- He was €0 bus, up his mind that he | i else. There he was the open, easy for sharp, quite a dt k coat showed up agai plainly. Yet, instcad of hurrying his fastest to reach shelter, Peter actual- stopped once or twice as he tried to up his mind where to go. He .11-4\1 completgly forgotten everything clse. It was a ad time to be absent- minded. Yes, siree, it was a bad time to be absent-minded. There were too many hungry people out looking for a dinner. Hooty the Owl was sitting qon the top of a tall. dead tree just within the edge of th He could look out over the Green Meadows, which, of course, were not grcen now, but all white. His keen eyes discovered a little brown spot bobbing alonggover the snow. His { Breat vellow eves grew flercer look- ing. hat looks to me like Peter Rabbit.,” muttered Hooty. “He's com- ing this way, and he doesn’t seem to be in any hurry. If he keeps on the way he's a dinner. Hello! thief, R&ddy Fo: Jtoo. If I don’t watch out he'll get , that Rabbit dinner instead | What's the matter with Peter Rabbit He acts as if he didn't k there was an enemy in the rid. Well, I can't let Reddy Fox ch him.” With this Hooty spread his great, broad, silent wings and flew straight toward Peter. (Copyright. 1923 There's that He sees Peter, aBy GREAT. BROAD, AND FLEW STI1 PREAD LENT WI \IGHT TOWARD HIS GS { thi a T. W/ Burgess.) cter Rabbit While the had not dared ar Patch. He 1 most of the Now this fine the Old Pasture led Making sure, t s he started ippert As he drew . of Green Forest he | Beat d where he toset cre were several | and ad to visit. First he [and place. then he .t than he thir « o sw which plac Peter to himself 1l three first, but br soft he old B Prices realized on Swift & Company xales of carcass beef in’ W. | for week ent aturday, on shipmen; ut, ranged fro fo 1%.00 cents cents’ per . pou 1 been Advertisement, o th. Peter dec to o over tc 5 cooking a even rou ree large with sugar neh of salt, a little flour ter to bring the mix- of : lip ar sorty near | and cggs d and ' A it a in they bolling fat , Puffy and brown, then paper und roll thew ugar. Serve the dough- For small family thr nd the whites of two cgg: ake a sufficlent quantity. until draiu them rowdcred nuts lot apples will me to to “i want T can't taste will | included | inferior apples will not | are | being | the white snow so | Green Forest. | headed now he'll furnish me | sly of me. | es of apples into| x THE EVENIN( People s2d or med or gl'r.d. Peopla wild or tame, Loonc'i at From = mountain top & Seem about the, same.. staged at | the day oft wrong, hideous : through the next six or eight hours, and that will be ctched into their minds 1 man W ook ~ zrouchy man M* herves happiness and ler home. side with bright Zood humored, and wh STAR, | time in whieh to indulge in this favorite is at breakfast time hurrying to cateh the | cheek, and wife r “ivil W has heen done and wife that doe they Says Never Quarrel Over the Breakfast Table WASHINGTON, DorothyDix Breakfast Quarrels Rankle All Day in the D. MONDAY, JANUARY Last Impres$ions of the Wife and Send the Husband Away to Make Dangerous Contrasts. there is any psvehologi spat, 1 do not know when Nevertheless, this ap ¢ glve and ask no quarter. with eruel truths and jealous accusations, loaded with criminatic ithereens. skir gives Tittle R:15, Of course, the is over, and tie entel In this they are mistaker The bitter o not forget for which ther domestic bre. quarrel is particul but because and disillusioning i Every ast 1y reconciliation much of him ail d for hi joyous v deep for a It does not take who has with oman berating him forward with a either will the woman ng at the jovous thrill RRIAGE every scrapping is always v wife with Fo alert women jobs allze 5 by gloves. untidy on her feet good to him not strange that he | who looks up to him and tells Lt pick those that are large and in fine condi- | | b | his fatal contra; Nothing is commoner than mployes, and when it to blame, and it she herself Tf his last zlimpse of 1 and unkempt womar nnot wonder ears still you ea It h -, a woman's vanity warn her of th st between women wi 1 should of the n And a woman' st work when he is giving tho other half is subconsclo Of course you've heard of little Red Ridinghood, but maybe you've never {met her. Well, here she She's wearing a little apron dress she’s helping her mother do the bak- ing, but tomorrow she’ll put on her very best dress, all trimmed with Tos Be sure to cut her out and save her, because there will be more Red Ridinghood cut-outs. C®lor Red Ridinghood's dress light blue, with stockings and the tops of her shoes tp match. Her hair is & golden yellow. Now mount her on light-weight cardboard, the back of an old magazine will do. (Copyright, 1625.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDRE 1s. because m | w w w i is A\' because she is not quarrel. M\d to bim. and th to her t is both a me ade a wrong decis ould have made his quarrel with his wife. More than that, t n w ith his wlife feels that he ha ho has been sped on his way woman. It is for the woman he loves that a And the wife has just as bitter taste in her wh to bla asmu he turns over and over dust and ashes in hersteeth Sometimes she c s he ponds with not leave wounds that never heal is lomded her husband happ: danger of having her - lack of charm and common mense | with her husband at breakfast, and he his busines in her m | band said at breakfaSt—his unjust | necessary money upon which to run the house, his bru earnest efforts to please him. with the Prince Charming she thought s now that t sport o t is, but T do kn inc It is then that men and yns and recriminations th; mish. generally ends in s wi ham-and-cggs-i vitriol-flavored kiss nte aordiale has been rest fight 1 The mind There is never a word rankles in the amite, b because husban with dy arly full of peril, it leaves both the wessdon of each other e it mes to dedt ' totally to eff Sherlock Ho! mental pi v ure a fau'ts and quarreling over the returning sticipation to las® close-up of her husba judggment and knocking he of his returning that for women t when es h P s hetr husband g who are neatly diepend upon th she . wh for a ma e it make has not virtually all handed h i#h cold eream that his spic the admiration and flatt 1 how wise, and great A her desire to hold lier ow hushand amiability is associated should teach her that goes forth angry e she has materlally diminished his efficiency ¥ half of his b meaner ones he ha wext tiove s 1 cloud. ended an ¢ had ha hio has come s no such incentive by a cheerful, amiabl n does impe to labo mouth a ind all day reproa the har 2es when she ta And she « sts him e was marrying rself by going out Sometimeés she revenges hersell by wild extravag: The Home Business. | | We have turned our home business| affairs Into a family corporation, al- | lowing each child to take a turn at| bookkeeping and making our budget a family responsibility, now that our children are old enough to handle ac- counts. It is surprising how much easler is now to keep down ex- penses (Copyright, 1925.) The fashionable ladies of the court of Louis XVI preferred the poudreuse |at which to perform the intricate and exquisite rites of the tollette. Now, with other eighteenth century French furniture, the powdering table returns to favor to remind us with its delicate | grace of the charming and vivacious ladies it first served. dressing table, with space within for toilet articles and a top which closes to hide all feminine fripperies from | view and to make of it a small writ- ing table. Because it is so demurely deceitful and will on occasion accommodate | itself to living room use. the powder- | ing table is often used in the living room of the smartly furnished small apartment, as well as in the boudoir. (Copyright.) Japanese Dish, Beat one egg and stir tablespoonful of chicken soup or weak consomme. Place in & small bowl & few pieces of canned fish, one emall bunch of spinach leaves, a few button mushrooms and a few bolled shrimps and pour the prepared soup Cover the bowl tight, in a pan of boiling water and steam the contents to the con- sistency of boiled custard. Serve at onec. i it into one person. gives up trying to plea who says, the very worst It makes a very pleasant mue';’" This recipe is for & serving for |32, her } “Oh, what's the use,” moral of all of wh Tk n time of all Is at breakrast. (Copyright, lusband and becomes a y d tha ym har r handling h d-span secr inge with querulous whine and d a br ess fron cal moment in which it is safe to have a family dangerous households, he most £ many pears to be the zero hour.in which most husbands and wives go over tho top and do bloody battle with each other, in which women stab each nd hurl across the b at blow love truce. TTu sth think that ored, and no ha hetweer ¥ may like a forgive ut the one it not only nd and wife at they will uce the slouchy bills, will to her at ni nd waws of r weakn en, and this st er temper and he jeopardizes to work side 10 are 2 Avith how much the im over plaints of the wor 1d suceessul he n with ather v continually id the at etary ud e erie when she quarrels | d disgruntled to | do MEW ain and thought to nis job an - mean’ thing No man car and the th Dt a1 as does the Heart into band udas peck on the | the hushand but a hurt in the that starts with a rry fact that a shrewish arly, | feel her cheerful and velvet love with one of | happiness in wife | m to another Slippe draw ractive- | 19, 1925. What Today Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Capricorn. Until noon the planetary aspects conrtibute to make this period unfavor- able for matters of {mportance. Much, however, can bo successfully achleved along l!ines relating to research and {all classes of preparatory work. | While it is not a propitious occasion for the execution of deeds, contracts or agreements, the jvibrations indi- cate concentration that will enable vou carefully to scan them and dis- cover any errors or loopholes, if any there should be. After noon the in- Sun has opportunity for expression and means the rest of the day and rening s good for both business and pleasure, { A child born today will be fairly | robust, -although it will not entirel. escape the ailments to which infants are subject. More than ordi- nary care must be exercised in the period of childhood, as indications point to a serious illness or accident. Once this danger, however is over- come, it promises to develop physi- cally along normal lines. In dispo- sition it will possess great nervous energy, . like changes, and will not persevere as it should. As undertak- m to lose fnterest in them. considerable pride and always be anxious to make as good an appear- ance as possible. 1t will have a keen sense of hymor, be a and read a great deal. It today {in vour make-up very diplomatic and | possibly addicted to~ writing, teach- ing the fine arts | tion is kindly, coneiderate of others, and vou are always ready to lend a nt a4 wayside jand po affectionate, You are mnot worried over lack of material success—that degree of success which is measured by dol- lars and cents—as you find unalloyed the moral encourage You are both tic, as well as kind and by nt you rid o not practical despalr vour ex ana among ssive optimism an very are, ure is | always ready {and confden It vou could culti- vate a little more of the atmosphere of Missouri vour troubles would be fewer and your kindness less indis- ! criminate Well known persons born on date are: Robert E. Lee, Confederate gene Nathaniel Hayward, or; Bdgar Allan Poe, poet, Thom Pinchon, educator; Rev. Josiah author: David Starr Jorda often imposed upon by to exploit a akfast-table 1 sweet-tempered ossible things sh words her asked hi 1 criticisms she saw and he metimes and lets everything go at that. is that there is no good 1925.) me to quarrel DOROTHY The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrignt.) ACROSS. Sets of two. Human fish Firmly set Distant. Devoured, Arm of the sea Proclamations. Conjunction. Angled edges. Move “swiftly. Stringed Instrument Raise the spirits of Stain. Twilled woolen Breathe out. Royal seal. Before. Small metric unit (abbr.) Measure of liquids (abbr.) Fuss. Lubricant. Military obstruction Imbibed. Be in debt. Supernatural Adjacent. Lofty. One of the Philippines Calclum (chem. symbol) Slanting. Drag. Formal affirmative. Be mistaken. Interval of measurement Took booty. ignificance. DOWN. Metric unit of area. Daughter of Inalch Loose garment. Strip of wood from Physiclan (abbr.). Country mail service (abbr.) irl. Arched gallery. Prisone. Hole for a cord High regard. Most authentic. Book of the Old Testament Attempt Mendicant. Not _strict Prefix meaning Having ears. Bestow income upon. Finds out. v period. a cask three. Earljest Tertia: Threaten. Allotments. Throat-wash. Prosecute. Narrator. Hasten. African village TUsed to be. Learning. Use a lever on. Prefix meaning X] DA B 1] gode Medicinal ingredients Man-eating monster. Affirmative answer. Ministerial degree abl on. Answers to Yesterday's Puzzles. | [ TRK pumm S| and last just | vish, dull creatu but DIX. noticed dig a husband ificd when he's It started to rain like cats and dogs and 1 wunted to go cuzzin Arties to puntching bag. and {nuntca e wares for my umberella | without finding it, wich I genrelly cant, so 1 took pops insted, and the | wind was blowing like everything and 1 hadent hardly got to the corner | wen pops umberella blew inside out, me being the ony one erround that dident seem to think it was funny. Proving nobody takes your trubbles as serlous as wat you do yoursef, and I quick ran home agen and tried to push the umberella back the way it use to be, and I stuck it back In the umberella thing agen, it looking pritty naturel there but not quite, and after suppir pop started to smoke to himself in his morriss chair and I sed, It certeny did blow today, dident it,_pop Yes indeed, I dont think it would be eny ixaggeration to say that it blew grate guns, pop sed. It certeny blew eround heer all rite, a umberella blew inside out rite down at our corner, you awt to of saw it, pop, 1 sed, and pop sed, I wish I had, an umberella blowing inside {out is one of the grate comedies of nature. Some boy was holding it wen It dld it, I sed. You awt to of saw every- {body laff, 1 sed, and pop sed, 1d ot |laffed at the poor kid too I sippose, an inverted umberella is one of the few sites of which I never tire. Even if its your own, pop? I sed. Wats that, is that a purely hypo- thetical question? pop sed. Sir? 1 sed, and pop sed, Did you {have my new umberella out without | ny permission, anser me yes or no? | Sir? Yes, [ sed. | The rest being too sad to repeet. 1 3B 5tnty of 9nur fiamt. th | erround punteh s afternoo: to his I | BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. 1 i 1 VIVIANI VARIATIONS—Viviano, Vivien. RACIAL ORIGIN—French and italian. SOURCE—A given name. Ithlian and French family names, like the words in the Italian and French languages, are sometimes Teutonic and sometimes Latin, though both languages in their construction are lineal descendants of the Latin |rather than of Teutonic tongues. It is to be noted, however, that the proportien of the nomenclature which | traces back to Teutonic sources is greater than that of words. The an- gwer lies in this fact. Though the Germanie nations cuickly adopted the Latin tongues of the seetions in which they settled, after they had swept throngh Burope and laid low the poiitical power of Rome, they naturally did not change their names as readi us their vocabularies. This family name, however, is one whieh traces back to a given name of },,,m»l,\ Latin origin. “Vivianus” was ithe Roman form of the given name {which was derived from a word i meaning “lively Family names of | this sovt denoted in both France and Italy, as dn England, the parentage of the person to whom they were ap- plied in thelr first use as descriptive surnames. fluence of Moon in good aspect with | | most ings near completion it will be prone | It will have vleasing talker is your birthday you are| Your disposi- \ helping hand to those who fall by the imaginative | veur | are able to give others, and | contemplation of the beauties| as a result of your trusting those benevolence | this inven- | | 1 WOMAN’S PAGE. Tuck-in Blouse and Shoulder Straps BY MARY MARSHALL. The wonder is that the suspender skirt was not revised sooner. It go sat- isfactorily solves the problem of eecur- ing the position of & skirt that is just as 100se at the waist as it is at the hip a skirt that has no belt and no waist- band. Morecver, the separate skirt and blouse was never originated to be worn by a race of corsetless women, and ay louse can be combined with arate skirt over an uncorseted without uity whe mounted on a slip top shoulder strape presente one rece skirt, which, of noveity at all. B | wore this sort of skirt th rere there for purely ornamen sons. The skirt hung from waistline. Tt didn't need the | penders. Now it does, and them, the skirt can bo cut on straight as we choose | The suspender especially well with | peasant type, since i costumes include | der straps of | auently, too, it is | ble costume, with a wrap | | the skirt. "The sketch | | suspender skirt of gray £ ! “v«u:\ a peasant | straightline topeo: | skirt, but 1t is | sketch. In some qua | pender skirts go by | Jumper skirts—though | why s not very clear. You may have heard of « guimpe tope, which are ity in the way of skirts, Here ti more substantial—but the tect and the advantage : w for a new Spring advantages guimpe-top ski to matet figur ekirt ided wit Blan pros probler until iy v suepende Contee. imatt the last time w nder skirt 50 often peasa of Kine this part of nnel wor Thire atet shown ers these the nar suspender 1 My Neighbor Says: jccessful cakes the middle of the o being placed abe from the botto It you want lamps to Zive wicks should t three month wicks, if cut lengtiis and stored make excellent fir If the roof =i r ceiling Lo r the stain o nesia. R spot until then smooth fingers. It works 1i Photographs come sofled may t like new by wash a plece of white dipped in cold use colored c never use soap over w adeto 1c ng them w ater ammon!a JUMPER SKIRT OF FLANNE WORN WITH PEASANT BLOUSE. A TOP COAT MATCHES TH SKIRT, | ing pear! not break cad If potat are held under ing or scrapi be left upon | what you will, we are traveling farther | and further away from the old-time | corset | Of course, the tunic and jumper | Qur Children—By Angelo Patri | you had | Did vou haps wit r watch next tim card, a wrong & mean thought kind action ends doctor. You see the volce of 3 Conscience. R My dren: Conscience is a ter- rible thing. No sword cuts deeper, no drug is as drastic, no force ts so powertul, for it is, you must know, the voice of God. I have no doubt that many, many times you have been told about God and the words have {bounded off your eardrums like hail off the roof. But we will kecp on | telling you and telling you until one | day your real ears open the inside | ones and vou hear.® | "So ‘again today I ten { dwells within you no matter Who|jends a spr | you are or what you are. You may|j1augh to his be the worst behaved child in the| o' % [town, but the goodness of Gog,| Just forset | breathed into you on the morning of | DeS2 18 easy | vour 1ife, will stay within you until | WIghty hard and a : | You carry it back to Him who gave it, | 9T &irl who can ‘When you do what is not right, the | 300't ask you to take m; voice speaks to you. You smother it [ I Just offer this thought down and go on while it speaks on | Intelligence: If you |and on. Sometimes you feel that you | 8004, be good. have had quite the best of it. You| Tell things just as had your good time, and the voice|requires a leen intelligence { had to keep still. But did it strong will. | stitre Take your Your step was mot so light about it quickl was Dbefore: the words did not B e WY | so gracetully to your tongu: 3 dinner did not taste very good e Tast o head and your heart were very heavy. | qne,'%. 90, Ut Every once fn a while your heart| - “m‘ Hda rose into your mouth and you thought _fl; S reroman 0“,‘ e | surely the thing you had dono had “7g & WoHMaT out of 4 ‘would your precious life flame, the x‘om trouble. man sleep well ot Jights, bealthy app: gives hir you God and work fu. and is the make zood. word for to vou found you out. But nothing hap- pened and you got by for that time: until you had a bad headache or & mean boil, or a sore throat or your eyes were tired. Something went | wrong and your anxious mother called the doctor and he gave you some medicine and wondered what Patri will give personal from parents or school the care and_development of child him care of The 8tar, inclosing envelope for reply IZ]his is a cinch, Kids not one word over |three letters v B YES, WILLIE, YOUR HMOTHER USED TO SING AND PLAY A Y GREAT PEAL — SINCE WEVE HAD 1 CHILPREN SHE 4 HASN'T HAD MUCH ] TIME. e L/t IR 15 THAT WH'V YOou /"' ALWAYS SAY US : CHILPREN ARE SUCH STA BLESSING 7 coPvEIGHT 1924 VERTICAL {-MALE PARENT 2-A HOSTELRY A GIRLS NAME S3-NEGATIVE 1i- ACCOMPLISHER 13- COM: £ 15 MEGATY 16-PREPOSTION HORIZONTAL 1-AN_ EXCAVATION 5 A HARSH NOhE PROMOUN -TO ACCOMPLISH - NMEGATIVE. EEMALE ParenT SOLUTION To PUZZLE e 7 11-TO PEPART 1 CONJUNCTION. [

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