Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1925, Page 24

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FEATURES. Fruit Beverages for Emergencies BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. emergency but on every ho situat had ajand & cake plate holding some fancy of those baffling | crackers and homemade cookies were sewife will appre- | put on a tray with the pitcher of on was this: Un- punch, and she went back with them in for the |into the living room. No one knew young people, | how the drink was made, but all en- I than they | joved it. The housewife was amused phonograph had | wher heard of the women ¢ was one of [telling one another of what they »rds, and every | thought it was made. jolly time, until | “Oranges are In it, and I should to wonder what | think there was somo white ginger for refresh- [ale!” she heard one remark. While group, | another said, here's some lime julce in it, T know. and tea, but what s the other flavor?” The combina- of the pineapple, the maraschino and the pistachio extract was puz- zling to analyze. The homemaker thought it poor policy to interrupt and tell them how she had mixed the delicious and elusively flavored bev- crage arisen—not tha she some urned latest d. s o the time, sourceful a good k Combining Juices, aps none of us would have the t ingredients together just at the when we were in a similar ency. But other drinks equally bus can be made by comblining juices with lime juice or lemons. ined cranberry ju the liquld of pears, the juice from & fruit or a couple of oranges can be compounded with or without cold tea nake refreshing beverage. t julce, lime (or lemon) juice, the liguid strained from apple sauce and just & little of the julee from swe ckled peaches,-to give zest, is another excellent combination. As a matter of fact, any fruit juices can be used in combination, if in the right proportions to produce delicious beverage ere must be something acid, rething sweet and something full flavored. Let the beverage plque the taste well as satisfy thirst, and you will succeed. is morning it was raining easy starting to rain hard, and pop called out from the hall, I say, some- body, ware the dooce my other rubber, wats a me putting them carefllly behind this door in peace time if theyre going to be partly or holey missing wen the country Is in danger? Well, they were both there, ma sed going out to look know darn well use of “10US TO DRINT I they were, pop sed. But you diden sed. The de pop sed, elf and bowl of rv t put them there, ma had a made her ut wanted but not whip, bsti- ing en? Every to drink ur of the T dide ma wy dident 17 Becau: 1 did I found them out in the yard after the last rain ware eny T Dick and Harry could of wawked away with them. O is that so, is, wat good is man that loves pop sed. And ma for it, pop saying, good rubber never strays far from its mate unless theres bin fowl play. *h jest then T Wt of some- thing, ying, G wizz, pop, I bet million dollers its down the celler. O, you don't say so, and wy should you risk al your intire fortune on a wager like that? pop sed Well, I don't know, unless maybe I forgot to bring it back up agen, 1 sed. And wat the mischiff were you do- ing down thero with one of my rub- bers? pop sed, and I sed, There was puddles down there on account of the rain leeking in. And wat good was one rubber? pop sed, and I sed, I played it was a ferry boat. You flatter me, pop sed. Run down and get it before the papers have a chance to print a story about a han- some intellectual man merdering his dumbell of a son, now shake a leg, he sald Wich T did. nd s¢ =4 well e the point a ony one rubber to a both feet equally? yway, him and arted to ju ough n rong te dients for a And then of pineapple Much of the d_for salad, but Now the young Juld serve some- tempting and > to mix fully to d right, no ic in th differe have beve ould do the thir try and wat tap. Bef drew a it back blow the on the the wind would Proportions. she poured the 1 nd part of all of the pine- of large table- went into the sampled. enough lime Whe toa into ano r the lime jui pple juice uls Orange Marmalade. Mix Dbitter, sweet and seedless orange peeling, with the yellow cuticle cut or grated off, and cut into stfips. Boil in clear water unt!l ten- der. Measure pound for pound of was mneeded. | sugar and peeling, boil up, and pour were to the {into a deep bowl and with a Then .*ll.tils.rg" silver spoon. Return to the the back | fire and boil very slowly until the marmalade is a deep, dark yellow and firm enough for the spoon to | stand upright. Bitter orange peeling makes the best marmalade, but a given quantity used with other kinds of peeling gives the tang and flavor that is all its own. Grape- fruit peeling preserves, crystalizes and makes marmalade of the same flaver as orange peeling. couple mash a very little a4 for another it she returned king the two she poured the undi- beverage to the Kitchen, luted mixt right to d & then she added one teaspoo achio and the liquid from of maraschino cherries that cen left. Goblets Production of sugar {s believed to be the oldest industry fn Mexico. rr._flrz:z if you can find your name . Perhaps it is here. I'M GETTIN' UP A RAFFLE ] FOR A POOR OLD MAN 4 —ASK YOUR MOTHER IF SHE WON'T BUY A TICKET. 1 A 7 WHAT wOULD § MOM DO IF SHE § LZF . CopyRient-1923 HORIZONTAL - 1 - A GIRLS NAME 6 - LOUD, CONFUSEP NOISE 7 - OPPOSITE TO FROM & -NOT OuT. 9 - THE WHOLE OF. 10- OLP-FASHIONED FORM *f YOU 1Z- POSTSCRIPT (AB) 13- NEW BRUNSWICK (AB) 15 - A WORD USEZ WITH EITHER. 16 -NICKNAME FOR RICHARD. VERTICAL * | -NICKNAME For ELIZABETHI PUZZLE N° |41 z -ROAD (AB) 3 T NIcKNAME For wiia{EJAIT] 2 - MEANING ONE. A[TIER 5 - YOUR PARENTS SISTERS[T [E|Af 1270, FI??KSCHR OUSLY. 1Z.-TO PE| URI! [Plo]T B 14 -BRITISH INPIA (AB) [SINIEH 1S - CORRECT (AB) af | land awi THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, HIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY— Color Cut-Out RED RIDINGHOOD. A Clever Trick. “Where are you going?’ asked Mr, Wolf, looking at little Red Riding- hooa' hungrily. All hed had for breakfast was an ox and a sheep, and that wasn't any more than a dish of oatmeal for him. “I'm going to vieit my grandmother,” she answered “She lives in a cottage at the end of this path, just beyond the woods. She's been sick, so I'm taking her some cakes I helped my mother to bake." Then a wicked scheme flashed through Mr. Wolf's mind. “Why don’t you pick some flowers for her?” he asked sweetly. “Oh, that's a fine idea,” exclaimed Red Ridinghood, who was tired of walking straight ahead, and she for- got all about her mother's warning not to stop. She began to gather the pretty flower: “Good day. T'm glad 1 met Yo sald Mr. Wolf, tipping his hat again, y he hurrled toward the grandmother's house, planning how le'd get both the old grandmother and little Red Ridinghood. Here's the wolf's fancy dress-up cloak he wears when he goes out at night. It's bright green and his hel- met is gray. (Copyright, 1925.) —_— Prices realized on Swift & Company on shipments s01d Qut, % 17.00 ‘cents per pound and averaged 13.14 cents per pound. - Advertisement. e Tomatoes With Okra. Take one quart of okra well washed and sliced round, one quart of peeled and sliced tomatoes, one tablespoonful of butter, one table- spoonful of salt and pepper to taste. When the okra is tender, have ready one pint of broken crackers In a deep dish, pour the mixture over, and serve. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Cereal with Ralsins. Eggs Vermicelll. Broiled Bacon. Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEO! Corn Chowder. Toasted Crackers. Fig Cake. Tea. DINNER. Hamburger Steak. Boiled Potatoes. Succotash. Banana Fritters. Cracker Plum Pudding. Coftee. OATMEAL WITH RAISINS. Put two cups of oatmeal and a little salt in a double boiler at night, cover with hot water and let cook all night. In the morning add some well-washed raisins (two small handfuls) and more water if needed, then stir up and cook until ready to serve brealk: FI1G CAKE. One cup sugar, one-half cup butter, two eggs, ‘one-half cup milk, one and one-half cups bread flour (measurs before sifting) one and one-half tea- spoons baking powder, one-half teaspoon vanilla. Bake in three layers. Filling: Nine flgs washed and soaked overnight. Chop fine next morning. Add one cup sugar, boil down very thick. Add one-half cup chopped English walnuts. Spread on cake when cold and cover with chocolate frosting. BANANA FRITTERS. Press the pulp of six bananas through a sleve and add the beaten yolks of two eggs, one tablespoon sugar, one table- spoon melted butter and one and one-half cups of flour mixed and sifted with two tea- spoons baking powder and one- fourth teaspoon salt. Beat until very light, fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites, drop from a spoon into deep hot fat and cook until brown. MASSACHUSETTS IN 163/, AFIER Com~- PLETING HIS STUDIRS AT CAMBRISGE . HE WAS 500N CHOSEN MAsToR OF HE CHURCH IN SALEN, AND BEGAN TO HE PREACKED THAT THE LAND ON WHICH THEY LIVED BELONGED T THE INDIANS, WHO HAD NEVER. BEEN PAID FOR IT, AND THAT THE Says Careers and Babies Won't Miz 4 Woman's Interests |DorothyDix When a Man Marries He Simply Adds a Domestic Life to His Business Career, But no Woman Can Have Both. G6QR/HAT sort of interests can the well-to-do man provide for his wife, or she for herself, comparable to the interests the man has in his own & very intelligent young man asked me the other day. n's interests should be entirely another's,” he w while labor and sacrifice and unselfishness all play a very important part in every right-thinking person’s life, they should not be everything. It isn't natural for any one to do everything for love—or love and a square meal. worl ? nt on, “and tive endeavor in business, so real, very tangible in life, rething In’ which she herself 1 excel on her own account, a reward, that doesn’t come “And just as a man finds a kick in competi should @ woman, I think, find something ver entirely apart from her home or her fam is the central figure, something in which she and from which she can derive a satisfaction, by proxy “It see strong, dr they get i t of an anything else the home. How a can women need mo interest outsid s to me that what 1§, personal, selfish They can’t get it, my friend, without wrecking t i misfortune in being born a woman is that one has to choose between domesticity and u career. She can’'t have them both, as a man can When @ man gets marrled he simply adds the comforts of a home and the joy of having & wife and children, to the never-dying intercst he finds in his business or profession. But when & woman gets married she Las to sacrifice elther one or the other, or else she makes a hash of both. a successful business wo time. Cureers und hopes 1e. The greatest e n and a succeasful wife abies no more mix than oil and nbitions and aspirations are to let the home fires go out No woman can and mother at the su water, and the wom centered on some outside 1 for lack of tending. D nobody is to Mother Nature, who made wife- hood I motherhood job that s all that any one individua! hus the intelliger c and the strength to handle. Any woman who does her full duty to her family is ready to call it a day, and knock off when night cc without superimposing any outside labor upon it Of course, T know that this statement will ralse a how! of protest from the advanced thinkers. They will say that a woman can hire housekeeper to look aft and trained baby specialists to rear her children, that it 1s a w to darn soc nyway. aste of tim thetic home v children hat But I have yet to see a sy that mother used to r Tearcd under a patent T that had cither moral or physical stamina No hireling hands can make a home, nor can any woman make one s & side {ssue when she {sn’'t busy with her real interest in life. It has to be her great worlk, her crowning achievement, the thing into which she puts | the very best that is in her. Nor can children be properly reared in the intervals 1s not pursulng some more exciting diversion, at had t d out In an ir e fl of the home ator and | n which a woman Real motherhood is upation so absorbing it leaves no time for anything else, for it is only by never-ceasing watchfulness, by never-ending guldance, by never-failing patience and love and understanding that faults of character are corrected, that weaknesses are strengthened, that principles of right are instilled in the childish minds, and boys and girls are rcared into fine men and women sthers have their strongest interest outs ciety of more vital interest th their ds of youns hoodlums who our And it is because so many m of the home and find careers children that we have t ¢ police courts 1 do not believe that have their interests and home. On the contrary, two, and that they mak masters at the same t it adds to the happin ambitions centered on think that they successes of of married women to something outside of the are torn in twain between the fther because you cannot serve two UT, for all of that, the domestic woman's life is not dull, nor lacking in thrills. To begin with, to run a house economically and efficiently requires just as much executive ability, just as much planning and thought, as it does to run a business, and it is just as interesting a proposition. The housewife must be as good a buyer. know just as well how to assemble the stock she needs, use just as much tact and diplomacy in dealing with those about her, bring all of her ability to bear on the job as she would If she were conducting a shop. Believe me. the woman who gets no kick out of being & good house- keeper would get no kick out of business or a career. Whatever she did would be only the dull grind of monotonous work to her, for she has no fmagination, no pride of craftsmanship, no spirit that sings a pacan over labor well done. We take out of things only what we put into them. Often it is more interesting to be the king-maker than it is to be the king, and the woman who helps her husband and her children on to success gets a happiness out of it that she never would have gotten out of the gratification of her own personal ambitions. Finally, women share the supreme excitement of creation. Every mother who holds her babe in her arms gets a thrill out of it that no man ever gets out of any triumph. She has an interest beside which all other interests fail. She has all the ambitions, all the hopes, all the aspirations of the world bound up in the little bundle on her breast. Oh, women do not find domestic life dull. They get plenty of thrill out of making comfortable homes and keeping husbands pacified and rearing decent children. God help us all when they cease to get a kick out of that and have thelr vital interest outside of the home. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright.) ' of hot water. Pour into a greased mold, cover with buttered paper and steam for three hours. Turn out and serve wtih milk Graham Currant Pudding. Mix_together two cupfuls of gra- ham flour, one-half a teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of butter, one teaspoonful each of powdered cinna- mon, ginger, cloves and nutmeg, one cupful of currants, one cupful of mo- lasses, one egg well beaten, one cup- ful of milk, and two teaspoonfuls of iodz dissolved in one tablespoonful Keep PRETTY HANDS m winter’s cha, MENTHOLATUM is softening, protecti antiseptic - ARMOUR'S Be Your Own Skin Specialist New Treatment Brings Fresh, Youthful Complexion WHOLE FLAKE OATS Coi:)(;é: e You can — wve vour SIMIINULES family a hot breakfast; = nourishing, tasty, deli- cious; and cook it while memke the toast. old-fashioned whole oat flakes now cook in F~]-V~E minutes. Also ARMOUR’S QUICK OATS that coo a3 minutes, the “cut-up” kind. Many prefer Clear away every pimple, every blackhead and every other skin blem.- Ish almost like magic. Exchange muddy or rough skin for a clear, smooth, velvety one. It fully easy to do. Just pleasant tasting tablets of Ve.Lak three times a day, and, in an incred- ibly short time, blemishes will have vanished. Ve-Lak supplies you with certain vital elements—the very el ments needed to keep your skin cledr and your cheeks rosy. Get a box of these remarkable tablets from your druggist today. In a short while your fresh and rosy cheeks will com- Pel the envy and admiration of your friends. Get Ve.Lak today. Recom- MONDAY, JANUARY and | 26, 1925. GANSETT BAY WILLIAMS WAS GIVEN ISHELTER BY THE INDIANS. LATER HE BOUGHT A TRACT OF LAND FROM THEM AT THE HEAD OF THE | | RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, AND BAY AND WITH OTHER EXILES BUIT A WHICH HE CALLED PROVIDENCE | | VOTING BY PAPER BALLOTS- [ love goloshes ana slickers so, Ther mames sort of I ?]\:l\ Qegctln.r. lop and slip thro t"naps‘o — ST —— What Today Means to You | | BY MARY BLAKE Aquarius. Great care should be exercised dur- the early part of the day, as the planetary aspects indicate accident or disappointment. Only routine matters should receive your attention, and no new ventures should be es- ed. Above all, nothing should be said or done on impulse. It is just as necessary to meditaté on your epeech as on your actions. Later on in the day conditions show a certain degfee of im- provement, but they are not so favor- able as to warrant the abandonment of caution and reserve. No letters of an tmportant nature should be written, and no contracts executed. A child born today will not display at birth, any evidence of being robust, | is fact need not cause any wor- v, @& its latent powers of recupera- ovided it be glven proper nu- . will prove of great assistance successfully overcoming the afl ments to which it will be more than ordinarily subject. On reaching the period of childhood ft will be, in a physical sense, quite normal. In character, while an ardent student and & hard worker, it will be rather morose, and scek its chief pleasures not in' the companionship of others but in literary and artistic pursuits. It will be diffident, and alow to make friends. The few, however, that it does make will be quixotically loyal and faithful. This child 11 develop a high form of citizenship, with good ideals and a progressive intellect. If today is your birthday you are very candid and frank, and often shock your friends by your blunt ut- terances, lacking, as they are, in all tact or diplomacy. Truth s an as- set of which the value cannot be de- | nied, but it is not always necessary or cxpedient, to serve it unadorned WOMAN®S PAGE. y J. CARROLL MANSFIELD RHODE ISLAND AN PROVIDENCE SETILEMENTS. AND A FORM OF GOVERNMENT WAS BEGUN THAT PERMITTED ' DEMOCRACY AND ABSOLUTE SETTLE IN HIS COLONY, WHICH LATER BECAME KNOWN AS RHODE 1SLAND. Torwreow — SETTLNG OF CONNECTICUT VALLEY INTRODUCED THE SYSTEM OF It can bo neatly and adroitly draped. | son, botanist: Mabel 0. Wright, au Without any of its inherent beauty | thor: Cleveland Dodge, capitalist being sacrificed e former Go In your affections you ernor of Illino fickic " than constant, and you are (o casily attracted by externals, without | 5topping to think of the fundamen- | tals or consequences. You treat your | own parsing affections and those of others very light-heartedly. time, however, will surely come one can say how soon or how tardy when your feelings will be dee moved, and, at such time, it is likely in the line of retribution attachment will be a f. and your love unrequited. Well known persons born on this d are: Cornelius N. Bliss merchant; Hattie Tyng thor and poet are more right Breaded Veal Cutlets The| Cut into thin slices one and no parsley, grated le of salt lets over coat them crumbs and fr: in smoking tomato sauce. a preparat with bread i - | ands lightly icis Atkin- | with Etkys All you hope to enjoy in tea Orange Pekoe Tea Mehkes good tea o certainty carefull ¢ qu Busy Wife: Ll‘, T us introduce you to a real friend—a de- licious meal that takes but a few minutes to pre- pare. Nothing to do but fry! Made from the fa mous Gorton's Cod Fish —No Bones. The origina ready-to-fry fish cakes. [ Snowdri good to eat ing than alm mended and sold by Peoples Drug | them. Stores and all other good druggi: Ve.Lak Company, Atlanta, Ga. In cooking for children select a fat which is nourishing and most easily digested. ft—not only makes things but is itself more nourish- ost any food you cook with it.

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