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F Spring Slip-Ons and Coat Sweaters BY MARY MARSHALL. All sweaters nowadays seem to be i w «wo classes—the coat va- riety and slip-ons. It may be that hefore many years have passed the latter variety of garment will be known simply as slip-ons, there will be numerous sorts of sport coats, and that the word sweater will seem as out of date and quaint as are, from the present point of view, such words %8 spencer or pelisse. At any rate, the word slip-on is BE KNITTED PURLED ROLL COLLAR CUFFS. 1T IS WORN PLAID WOOL SKI SWEAT AND WITH A used of the 1 without nd th sport dealers old word sweater. This s mediun just below the hips and with aight, collarless op They are tastened with six or so small buttons down the nt sports woman wears such weater with separate sport skirt and a , with turn- down collar of the high or Buster Brown variety. With this collar she usually wea neat four-in-hand Quite frequently she leav upper three butt unfastened, per- nitting ¥ necktie to show. The woman with Instinetive good taste in dress does not f a sweater lace-trimmed blouse nowaday el of the wimple mannixh jabot blouses, cdged with lace, are with cloth with the sweater gth, coming ng-sleeved ing Th blouse more of her and a but ses one "The h not sort o worn suits port The slip-on is of Sometimes V neck the sorts miple everal with a this Spring are part way and button- made with collars, notched coat collars, save no notehes. Well liked lip-ons that Ing away with holes These a like men’s that th tons have the | | EATURES. Another important species of the slip-on is the so-called turtle neck, made In {imitation of the garment worn by masculine athletes. This, by the way, Is the model of the old type &arment that first bore the name of sweater. That was when sweaters really were sweaters—very heavy woolen garments that athletes don- ned when they had relaxed from their activities, A new and really very smart va- riety of the turtle-neck sweater has quite a low collar. Smart undoubt- edly, but not to be thought of for a minute by any woman over 22. The sketch shows this sweater in beige. The cuffs show the same type of purling that forms the low turtle collar. (Copyright, 1025.) What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aries. The planetary aspects tomorrow are not so definite as those of today, but they are benign and favorable. It may not be an ideal opportunity for the launching of any new enter- prise or undertaking, but the condi- tions will help to materialize efforts made by you to develop any plan on which you have already embarked. They will serve to encourage 3 course of continuity, and will create an at- mosphers free from doubt and un- certainty. The effect upon the nat- ura emotionsl will be clearly shown, and a feeling of responsiveness will be engendered that augurs well for both engagements and marriages. A child born tomorrow will be sub- ject to the ordinary vicissitudes of infancy, but these ailments need cause no alarm, provided the child be properly nurtured and watched. Its disposition will not be very attrac- tive, as it will be rather callous and inconsiderate of others. Its charac- ter, while not repellant, will be more selfish than generous, and it will| never lose sight of or be prepared to sacrifice its own individual interests It will, in all probability, enjoy a large measure of material succes: as, once it starts out to accomplish anything, nothing will stop it until the goal is attained. 1 tomorrow is your birthday, motives are altruistic, although actions do not often deserve this classification. The impulses that ani- mate you are very good, but they are rarely expressed in action, as you apparently lack the courage or con- viction to do what your better nature teaches you. You are impatient and argumentative. You are never satis- fied unless vou have the last word, and will often take up the cudgels for something or some cause with which you do not agree, in order to start a discussion, You have many friends, and could have many more but for this obvious failing. You are full of energy and sure of vourself, and are always con- vinced your way is not ealy the right but the only, way. In your love af- fairs you are impetuous and ha and have more than once had cause | to regret your lack of deliberation. | Well known persons born on this date are: Mary Pickford, movie star; David Rittenhouse, astronomer; | George W. Greene, author; Walter | Harriman, ~soldier and governor; | Howell E. Jackson, jurist; Irving R. | Wiles, artist. (Copyright, 1925.) very Chicken With Vegetables. Clean one chicken and wash it thoroughly. Rub it inside and out with flour then with cinnamon. Boll one kettleful of water, place the chicken in it and cook the chicken until it is half done. Boil and pare three pounds | of potatoes and place them in a fry- ing pan with one-half a pound of butter and some cinnamon, salt and pepper. Then remove the chicken | from the kettle and add it to the | sntents of the pan. Extract the | juice from two pounds of tomatoes, Strain it. and_add it to the other ingredients. Cook the dish in the oven until d. BY D. C. PEATTIE. Redbud. Japan has her cherry blossoms, but America boasts its redbud trees, and for sheer jovous color and the very spirit of Springtime rapture, they need admit no equal among the Spring flowers of any land. Up hill, down dale, they are trumpeting their beauty all over Virginla and Mary- land. The lowliest cabin in this month is suddenly glorified by the redbud at its door. The leafless woods are vivid with it. Not even the peach- blow, which comes to compete in the same weeks, {8 so exultantly beau- titul. Even the city districts have thelr share. The White House grounds and Jackson Park boast their redbuds, too. Sometimes they oall it “Judas tree.” This is an Old World name, applied to a related species of the Mediter- ranean world, especlally the Holy Land. Early Christlans believed that ond® tho redbud's flowers were white. Then, after Judas had betrayed the Lord and went to hang himself on the boughs of one of these trees, the flowers suddenly turned the color of the traitor's blood. But redbud Is not blood, it is a dainty purple-red. And the ussociation with Judas is too gloomy to be fitting for 50 innocent and graceful a little treo as is the redbud when it spreads abroad the joy of its blossoms in this lovely month. the color of Exy Are we going to abandon the din- ing room entirely? It almost looks as though we were, for so many small houses today dispense with it in favor of breakfast room or nook, or simply combine living room and dining room. The new furniture designs help to make this possible. This maple draw- leaf table, for instance, in one end of the living room or in the dining al- cove, can be used as a library table Rr— on occaslon, and it can be very quick- ly converted into a full-size dining table at mealtime. Closed it measures 53 by 24 inches, but when the leaves which are con- cealed under the top are pulled out| it measures 54 by 40 inches. % (Copyright, 1925.) Strawberry Fritters. Select large, finely flavored berries. Make a batter of three well beaten eggs, four tablespoonfuls of milk, a piece of butter the size of a walnut, a teaspoonful of baking powder and a little salt mixed in a small cupful of flour. Drop the berries in the batter, one or two at a time, taking out at once and frying in very hot lard. When browned on both sides, dust with powdered sugar and serve at once. Twentieth Day. AREQUIPA, Peru, February 14 Around and around, in and out, but always upward, goes the ferrocarril. Soon the river in the Tambo Valley comes into view —a strip of Eden amidst Sahara—a long brush-stroke of green on a barren canvas—vivid testimony to the fatal fact that all Peru needs Is a drink of water to make her domain a paradise. Upward and onward we g0 among the burning mountains, which have not tasted a drop of rain in a thou- &and years, until the highland desert of La Joya comes into view. Looking backward we can sometimes see the silvery sheen of the Pacific glistening in the descending sun some 60 miles away. Spread befors us are the famous walking half-moons of La Joya. They are crescent-shaped sand dunes about 100 feet in width and fect in height, and of such exact shape that no human agency could mathemati- cally make them more perfect than the constant winds of this plateau. This unfailing vind is the true ex- planation of - th dunes across the dese.. in a true northerly course at an even rate of 50 to 690 feet a year. The wind, always from one direc- tion, blows the ashen-colored sand up the convex side of the crescent, whence it drifts down into the hol- low side in such perfect and regular fashion that the entire dune seenis to creep across the plateau without a single variation in size or shape, and with a movement that marks the years with the same accuracy that an_hour-glass marks the hours. One has to look back but half a mile to see where a dune was 50 vears ago, when this rallroad was being built; and it you will look back five miles you can see where it was when the Inca sent messages to his people that strange white men with hair on their faces were coming up from the sea. I am traveling the same road that Pizarro trod when these very dunes were some miles back. How I ad- mire that villainous old fellow. What a man he must have been! Imagine the audacious courage of him! The Spanish government had dis- patched two vessels to the little is- creep | land of Gallo, off the coast of Ecua- dor, where Pizarro and his expedition had stranded, with implicit instruc tions to bring back every Spani: they should find still living in that dreary abode. However, Pizarro v not looking for succor—but success Drawing his sword, he traced a line with it on the sand from east to west. Then, turning to the south, “Friends and comrades,” he said, that side are toil, hunger, nakedness, storm, desertion and death; on this | side, ease and pleasure. There lies Peru with its riches; here, home and povert Choose, each man, what best becomes a brave Castilian. For |my part, I go to the south!” | . So saying, he stepped across the | 1ine. Thirteen followed him. And the boat salled away, leaving | this handful of men, without food, | without clothing, almost without | arms, without knc {to. which they were bound, without |a vessel to transport them to the mainiand. Here, on a lonely rock in the ocean, they remained with noth- ing but their avowed purpose of car rying on a crusade against the great | empire of the Incas! | The glistening crescents have traveled many miles days of Pizarro and his v —and they will travel many before we see their like again. of sand since the liant crew miles Peanut Cakes. Remove the shells and skins from some roasted peanuts and if conven- ience in eating is especially desirable, divide each nut in half, but the brittle cake that shows the whole nut is better. Then put two heaping table- spoonfuls of butter and the juice of one lemon in one quart of New Or- leans mdlasses and boil it with care- ful stirring until it threads. Take the pan from the fire and add the nuts, mixing them well with the molasses ‘When the mixture is chilled enough to permit its lying fairly well where it is put, drop it by light tablespoon- fuls in sections along a flat buttered tin. The time for eating the cakes is when they have become as brittle as glass. In the South they use a slab of old white marble for the chilling purpose. This is a great Southern sweet. “on | wledge of the land | Mr. Parkins {ook my sister Gladdis to the movies last nite, and he came erly and etayed for suppir, being liver under onions and mash potatoes, and they was tawking about spring being the best time of the yeer, and Mr Parkins sed, Speeking of moving picktures, I saw Lovey Darling down town toda: Wat, in persin? Gladdis sed. Certeny, I was as close to her as I am to you at this minnit, she has freckels, Mr. Parkins sed Can you imagine that, wat did sho look like? Gladdis sed, and Mr. Parkins sed, Well, as I say, cho has freckols. I meen how was she dressed, wat did &he have on? Gladdis sed O, that way, Mr. Parkins sed. Well, she looked very nice, a little unusual perhaps, but very nice, he sed Yes, but how, wat was sho wearing for goodness sakes? Gladdis sed. Well, in the ferst place the general effect was a genercl effect of, well 1 dont know ixactly how to ixplain it, but envway, her hat was unusual, Mr. Par- kins sed. How do you meen, In wat way? Glad dis sed, and he sed, Well, it was a hat that attracted attention, that was the | main feeture of it, T should say. O, your perfeckly ixasperating, mito as well of not seen her at all for | all practical perpa addis sed, and pop sed, Come come, Gladdis, dont be hard on him, he's ony a young fello, and by the way, mother, wile we are on the subjeck of seeing peepls, I eaw Mrs Blakely downtown today and she sent you her love, or her best regards, or her | bleseing or something. | | 0, is that so, wat did | ma sed, and pop sed, O, a bunteh of clothes, she looked very nice, and ma sed, Now Willsum Potts arent you ag- gervating, sutch a discription Well Parkins old fellow, us men dont | scem to be mutch use in this werld, lets | §0 crround to the bowling alley after | suppir and roll away ocur sorrows, pop | sed, and Gladdis sed, Well T should | you wont take him away eny sutch of a she have on? | to the movies tonite, and ma sed, And even if he dident your father and I are going to ride out to the park to liesen | to the musie. | Wich they did | = Ginger Punch. Chop one-half pound of crystallized ginger very fine. Add two quarts of water and one and one-half cupfuls of sugar. Boil the ginger, the water, and the sugar together for 15 min- utes. Let the mixture cool, then add the Juice of six oranges and six lem- ons. Strain the sirup through a jelly bag. It may be used full strength or diluted with plain or with carbonated water. A sprig of mint makes pleasant addition Baked Carp. Clean and bone the carp. Place it in an oiled baking pan, salt and pepper the surface, add two bay leaves, the juice of one lemon, and cover with sour cream. Bake until the fish and eream are a golden brown. Serve the fish on the platter and strain the cream sauce over it. a oW thousands of pairs of L sou Foy thing, he has an ingagement to take me | WOMAN’S PAGE. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. other distress or difficulty which see to involve any of the-digestive organ or functions “acute indigestion” is ‘a poor alibi. Your digestion iz not to Dlame. Be honest and call it “acuts indiscretion.” You youreelf are entire 1y to blame. Unless you are serious! ill to begin with your digestion wil never fail to take care of any prope food you may eat. There is ot thing as “indigestion.” Now I am not going to enumerafe all the diseases which ars concealed misinterpreted, wrongly diagnosed “dndigestion.” 1 shall say only that the list 1s almost endless, for it em braces not only lesions of the digestve organs, but lesions of tha nervous ey: tem, the respiratory organs, tho culatory eystem and the urinary orgap Acute Indiscretion. of folks who rem when I proposed the term place of the misleading “cold” are now puzzled to understand why I would dub it the ery. The main | objectton they had to the term coryza was that it was cumbersome as com- pared with the simple, ea cold And now they register alarm when I give them slmpler and eas term for it which conveys no false impres- slon Of course, © A lot with me coryza in trated yza is as common as it ever was, at least among people who are watching the weather the thermometer when somebody handing ‘em the makings, but, after all, coryza is only one of the numer- ous respiratory infections which pe ple like to cover and disgulse for a time with a blanket title. Crl is an honest blanket for that purpose When you have the cri you simply acknowledge that you have caught | one of the “common respiratory in- | fections” (the initial letters make the word), and are not trving to ai sur friends or associates by pretending that it-is not nuni cable. The title of this refers another ailment, condition or disea which simply does not Peo ple with powerful this apocryphal st tion.” Newspaper rcporter acute indigestion almost oy but the health autho become downright susp any such diagnosis appear certificato, for experience them that is it not so. There 15 no denying the one feels when h gulped down poorly 1 unmasticated foo something which has partly or crammed in an overload of food indulged in overseasoned superflu or an of condiments or s such diet. But this kills anybody, nor is it ever a scriou condition In itself. An emetlc thartic, will give immediate the discomfort, though, of nothing can wipe out the dam such an insult. To call this In the Tea Cup the full charm of "SALADA" 5 TE A 838 is revealed. The flavor is pure, fresh and fragrant. Try it. Black, Mixed or Green Blend is or (Copyright, 1925.) Endives Like Asparagus. Chooss somes that are free from hard out and which have whole head them as vou would wash lettyes 4 boil them for half 4 to which a. littlo sait Drain them, then cover them Boil soung, tender Wat vou head n has be them and ke ntl tH Allow half g8 to en llow one tablespoonful of but and one scant ealtspoonful of potat 10 each person to b mooth cach portion of potato flour © teaspoonful of cold water. | butter and add it to the flour and wate | Stir the mixture and heat. it | the cggs and cut them in halve | wise. Serve tho endives on a hot piat | | hieit somn gy article 3 somn eg 4 are hard. person te lc cail indig diagnose das omehow rations iou her in ha taught eath engt ter garnished with the eggs and wit the butter sauce. Allow two heads of endive to each person. The ezz choul be mashed in the bufter sayce endive dipped in the mixture befors it aten. Do not waste the water h vou have boiled the endives. will make delicious soup. Thicken with mashed potatoes or with slighti browned flour and a few slices of onfo browned in butter. Just befor serve the soup add a little cream add milk thickened with potato flour discomfort one Hehl feated and e or taken =poiled is i or | Wi 1t error of a ca relief to | conrse, | | gedone | Great Britain i using or any | radio Full Fashioned Thread Silk HOSIERY *Marvel-Stripe It prevents “‘runs!” An exclusive featurc. A patented circlet at the kace protects the sheerest hosicry from costly ‘‘runs.’ Kayser Colors With colorings so important, and many tints so common—{‘ou will ions de- find Kayser color original h'ghtfu.fl;c;uinble. € A slenderizing note in knit- ting that adds grace and beauty to ankle line. Itis to be found in many Kayser modcls from $1.50 up. ! Hot Cross Buns Special this week. A famous Lenten treat — made extra good with Sun-Maid Raisin: ( I bake them eve: fruity, Hot Cross goodness. You can get them fresh from my ovens atanybakery, grocery store or delicatessen in the city. Don’t miss their special goodness. Make sure of getting yours today. Phone your order now. day this week —rich, uns, full of old-time More and more women are saying: “'I want Kayser hos- iery.”” Supeérior quality is the chicf reason for this pref- They wear and wear and wear! Only pure kil silk and pure dyes arc used. No weighting to give a falsc impression. Each pair 1s knitted to exact size. CHIFFON WEIGHTS - LIGHT WEIGHTS - MEDIUM WEIGHTS - HEAVY WEIGHTS Az all Leading Stores Eadorsed by bakers everywhere, including the American Bakers’ Associstion and the Retail Bakers’ Associstion of America — ding Wednesday order with your Beker or Grocer for Reisin Bread on Wednesdays