Evening Star Newspaper, June 24, 1925, Page 26

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FEATURES. BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Meats with jelly are distinctive. A cold meat can be be warmed over and served with one of these delectable sauces and appear to be a novelty rather than a left-over preparation Freshly cooked meats an have sauce of this kind and be made mo! delicious. Ready-cooked meals given an entirely new guise when dished up with a jelly sauce. Dinners an_be made more tempting and luncheons and suppers take on a_more | | | an be | The idea is not to have jellied meats, such as are made with aspic or with elatine, but meats with actual jelly sauces. Jellies for Meats Some tempting combinations of these meats with jelly sauces are as follows: Lamb with mint jelly sauce. Ham with grape jelly sauce. Pork with apple jelly sauce. Beef with spiced crabapple Jelly sauce Chicken with cranberry sauce jelly. Veal with cherry and currant jelly sauc sorted cuts with mint jelly sauce apple jelly. Making the Jelly Sauce. The meat should be previous ed and cut in rather thin slice: jelly should be melted until it sirup and the lean meat put in for a moment, just long enough to heat and coat the pieces without cooking them in it. Or, if you prefer, the meat may be put in a casserole, on a glass plat ter or some plate on which the meat an be rved and which will not be harmed by the heat, and then the jelly be lightly spread over the top. Let the dish so prep: remain_in the oven until the Jjelly is liquified, zarnish the meat with sprigs of pars ley and serve at once. he jelly should not remain in the heat long enough to get sugary or stalize, but merely long enough to| becon rich, heavy sirup Many of the jellies mentioned are THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1925. ] l_ COLOR CUT-OUT LITTLE BO-PEEP. | Discusses Pecularities of Mother Eve’s Daughters HOME By JE NOTES NY WREN Aren’t Women Funny? IDorothyDix “Queer Creatures! No Wonder Men Don’t Under- stand Them!” Exclaims Dorothy Dix as She “Sets Down Some Feminine Oddities With Her Tongue in Her Cheek. Trellls making is both an interest- ing and money-saving job for the handy man or the handy boy, which- ever you happen to have around the house. The fan-sha instance, is ea d trellis shown, for to make and will AR N'T women the funny things? Consider some of their humorous peculiarities. - A woman who would go to the stake and be burned rather than tell an untruth about any other subject will lie like Sapphira about her age. There are practically no women between the ages of 30 and 70. No woman admits to being middle-aged. They are all mere girls, or old. A woman who weighs 190 pounds speaks of herself as having a plump figure, but she calls a 160-pound woman “fat.”” A woman who can tell that another woman across the street has her hair dyed Delieves implicity that she fools all other women about her straw- berry jam-olored loc| A woman will refuse to follow a diet when her physician tells her that her life depends on her doing so, but she will heroically starve herself to ac- quire a girlish figure. A woman will have 40 mirrors in her house and spend hours a day look- ing into them, vet never sec herself as she is, or perceive that she is too old and fat, or too old and bony to wear flapper clothes. A woman will hire another woman to do her housework and then pay out good money to take a course of exercises that involve exactly the same motions that are made in sweeping floors and making beds and scrubbing A woman who is too frail to keep house or to be bothered with servants, :an walk 10 miles in a bargain store, play golf all afternoon and dance until »'clock at night add very materially to the good ap pearance of your home, while cost- ing little. Eight strips of pliable lumber 1 inch wide, 3% inch thick and 6 feet long are used for the ribs. They are nailed together for 18 inches of th A woman who has been an invalid can arise from her bed and go to WOMAN’S PAGE. IN THE GARDEN WITH BURBANK As Reported by Elizabeth Urquhart and kdited by Luther Burbank. Planning the Iris Beds. that the iris are finishin their season of bloom,” said Mr. bank, “it is a suitable time selections, to set out new pl to transplant those that. are rowded." “I have been studing the ir dens as you advised and have been makin; varieties,” T replied i aid Mr. Burbank, ‘“should be transplanted just after blooming as they begin then to make new ro to have them well ar “Now a list of chored b “The spent stems must be remove: the foliage cut back, the old dead roots trimmed off and the rhizome planted near the surface of the ground, that they may the full benefit of the sun. The soil must be good, fertilized with old manure, but none must come in c 't with the rhizomes. Bone meal is always safc if not used too lavishly.” “We are talking now, are we of the ¥ n iris and not of Spanish ese?” I aske Yes clude the germanica and Spanish iris, with its Dutch cousins, although they germanicas and have bulbs rhizomes not the Iso the ish are n instead re they connected?” English and 1 supposed to have been orig ish iris t ed to H to England s produc tions. They ha an iris might in- | ng varia- | bloom cool, | reads beauti those that every housewife includes in her preserve closet supplies, but some, such as the cherry and cur rant, and the spiced crabapple, are not so well known, so I am giving these two recipes. Whep crabapples are not available, use any tart apple or the cores and skins of apples sim- mered until tender and then strained Apple Jelly. s of apple with equal parts of vinegar and water. To two quarts ofapples add four sticks of cin namon, one teaspoon whole cloves a small piece of ginger root (the I ter may be omitted). Simmer until tender, strain and reheat. To each pint of juice add 13, cups sugar, heated. Boil for 15 minutes, or until the liquid jells. Put in tumblers and seal. length to form the base. The crc 2 feet long and the ribs part slightly as thay are onl The top strip is 4 feet lon the ribs are bent still farther as they are nailed to it damp locations, is true to it the nd thrive ing, and for to give thes themsel 4T of thes first and are the English for a success varieties | smaller than the ger: | very dain nd deli beautiful . Imost every country seems browne siven its name to the iris fam. | flame ily.” T commented work and support the family A girl who has been idle, extravagant and self-indulgent can marry a poor man and immediately turn into an industrious, thrifty, economical wife. A girl who has been raised poor and to w 1 pinch the pennies can become after marriage the laziest and most ex zant of wives. if the occasion arises. Potato Omelet. this re ve v a well of moun in the desir Bo-Peep Asleep. This is the third day's chapter of the story of “Little Bo-Peep.” Chil dren who save the cut-outs every day will have a pretty wardrobe for Bo Peep by che end of the week All day long Bo-Peep tramped over the hills searching for her precious sheep, but never once did she cat = . so much as the tinkle of The Majo The woman who has hysterics at the sight of a mouse will face a raging bell or Eva's dear, familiar “B-a-a-a.” { lion without the bat of an eye. What could have happened to her = pets? They had never run away like The woman who faints at the sight of a drop of blood this before. She thought of all the |operation without a qualm of fear terrible things that she had heard —_— sometimes happened to sheep and at The homelier a woma st so tired and worried that she | believes herself a living picture. ould go no farther, she sank down |about her “lines. on the soft moss at the foot of the — hill and, pulling out her handkerchief, Half of the women in the world believe they would have made greater prepared to have a good cry. But be-| ,.resses than Julia Marlowe, or have been greater movie queens than Mary fore she could squeeze out one little | pickrord if they had only gone in for the stage or films, instead of getting tear her eyes shut tight and she was | 'S0 “The other half are perfectly certain they could write if they had fast asleep. y ever tolea (This is Bo-Peep’s best dress. Color ST it a pretty shade of pink with hat and Women have ta fan to match.) are those with a se apart No woman ever admits that she is high-tempered. MODE MINIATURES She is temperamental nkerous and hard tand her She has a highly- Spiced followed by oming last n of bloom No woman is ever unreasonable. No wife will cgnfess that she is canta She says her husband does not under Cover cut pi to get along with. 1te. will face a major on the is the more vanity The worse fig A JELLY SA ! Cherry and Currant Jelly. THE ACCOMPANIE ries add one cup washed currants and pleasing character by the mere use|just enough water to nearly cover. of tart jellies in sauce form | Simmer until tender and put in jelly uces made from juices and | bag to drip over night. In the morn- the kind to be used, and not | ing put the juice in a kettle and jellies made with gelatine. The sauces | bring to a boil, add equal part of Should be siru i too thin | heated sugar, let boil 15 minutes and when hot nor je ¢ cool.| put in glasses to harden. BEDTIME STORIES | When he found To each two cups of washed cher- Some of the happiest women in the world one they meet ent for misery et sorrow that they tell to eve Very well liked is the vogue for knotting a man size silk handkerchief about the neck as illustrated. It lends | sh to a costume otherwise plain or tone. On the golf urse some men find it serves practical duty by being an aid to coolness—based upon ame principle that a man ties a chief around his throat during sports. looking kerchiefs hail from s as you might quickly surmise their daring design and clever color combine. And if you do not find a satisfactorily smart one in the wom en’s neckwear shops a Visit to an ex ive men's haberdashery will re ward your search. NARGETTE, In love, women put more stress on words than on deeds. A woman will doubt the affection of her husband, who is kind and considerate to her, and works himself to death to make her comfortable, if he never pays her any compliments, but she will believe implicity in the devotion of the man who tells her how beautiful and wonderful she is, even if he beats and starves her. MENU FOR A DAY. BY THORNTON - : s an ecstasy 1n W. BURGESS There’s a 4 Tetley’s iced that glows through all your being! Orange Pekoe Tea Makes good tea a certainty BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes. Bran with Cream. Scrambled Eggs with Tomato Bacon Curls. Toast. Coffee something to eat he | would take a bite and then look up. | | The first time his mother signaled | danger he led all the others in scam- [ pering for home. Striped Chipmunk said that to little | | His brothers and siste : id that to little | pape fun of him, to call him a {‘«Hfiil(::"':"".:"kihJhk"qh\“fi?.(;“l{:\fi?fl raidy.” He didn’t mind. He didn’t | et i taken | once get cross. He was too humble Dplace withiSm Chinmunk since h® | He had learned his lesson. He had ailr i ned one of the greatest truths that et Browi o Boy mall person in feathers or fu Smarty Chipmunk was a very differ- pilimers e < vas & very dllel;|can learn. It was that it is the fearful | smart. Smarty no lon, r suited hir - s scombgeirerigiee all. He hadn't been a smarty once | «yt is better. nothing many A woman thinks that it is only her intentions toward her family that count, and that if she loves her husband and children well enough to die for them if the need arose that it gives her liberty to poison them with bad cooking and nag and fret at them Smarty Chipmunk Is Very Humble. You will often my That humblene ear. LUNCHEON. Asparagus Omelet Brown Bread Chocolate F i Most women are happier married even to brutes than they would be single. A woman never outlives romance. to 80, and when she is 90 still kid he fatal attraction for men DI 3 =it Cream of Spinach Soup. When the average woman becomes a reason Broiled Beefsteak. common sense. She never sees her children as they really are. She visions New Potatoes. String B them as she wants them to be. She forgets that the world has eves, and she Tomato and Cucumber tells you how beautiful her homely ¢ ht is and how brilliant her dull Baked Indian Pudding. son is, and how much they are admired, when she must know that you know g that every one avoids them. mother she loses all reason and said he, “to run from times than to fail to run once when danger is near.” It wasn't long before Smarty Chip munk was the best watchman in the whole famil his bright e were the fi > an enemy. Al WAV little ears were the first to hear a_suspicious sound. His broth- ers and sisters began to depend on | him to give them warning. Even his | mother depended on him somewhat. And Smarty wasn't at all proud. He didn’t consider himself smart. He was still humbl lach day Mrs. Chipmunk led the little Chipmunks a bit farther from home. It was very exciting. They felt that they were getting on in the Great World. They were even begin. | | the stifiy-beaten whites; melt ning to dream of going out in the| | & little butter in the omelet Great World by selves. But if pan, and l\vnen it iy}[\nung hot o v turn in the eggzs; brown well : lace theheast | nearest his mother. the one [ | minute. Have asparagus tips | |9f ‘he VPEEADET, S0/ b o er who always did just as she did. He| | cooked and seasoned, spread on | |pr SWect Aorie e FURE TERDIG (10| Interest in mouth-organ and accor- meant to learn ail that she knéw bé the omelet; then fold the latter | [te2SDOORTUL oF S O O ot With a | dion playing is declining and German fore the time should come for him to| | and turn onto a hot platter and Adresn | manufacturers of instruments are i g sliced vegetables like the one | leave home and go out into the Great | | garnish with parsley. B e o | e World by himself. : on top and add enough boiling water (e 2 or stock to cover the contents of the | saucepan. Cover and bring to the boil ing point. then set on the stove where | it will cook gently for three hours. | Serve the heart garnished with the' vegetables and the pieces of bacon. SCRAMBLED WITH TOMATOE: The volks of six eg: whites of three, one tablespoon of butter, one cup of cream and one-half teaspoon of salt; put the mixture into a buttered pan and stir quickly until it is a soft, creamy m: Serve with strips of dry toast and slices of raw tomatoes. ing that her chil of the things that ¢ befools herself into belie and that th 0 not do an go with do. Women who spend their time and eners their own children run wild on the streets. The average mother r dren are models of propriet the other young people the es in uplift movements let as water, and strong as tient and 1 suffering one and the same time, weak wise as Solomon, and fools: | nd loving and heartless. re, at nd cats: faithful Women steel; angels and quitters s ueer creatures. No wonder men don't undesstand them 2 DOROTHY (Copyr A S e 5 | individu: Braised Beef Heart. B ot fully in the g dd a | paper over layer of cases to form consisting | 4 foundation for the next. Cover, pack one turnip, one onion | jn i 1t and allow to remain for | ASPARAGUS OME; Break the yolks of fo dishes: beat ) add four tablespoons of milk, salt and pepper, then fold in ET, nd whites separate till thick, DIX. rinkle over "k care- roons. can, placing stiff Cover the bottom of a large sauce- pan with s layer of s of one carrot, H.Cany BUT HIS MOTHER CAME TO HIM ND LED HIM HOME. since his dreadful adventure. a changed Chipmunk When Farmer Browr turned to look for & arty Chipmunk | after driving Mr. Blac Snake away he had expected to find just a dead baby Chipmunk. So he was both sur- prised and delighted to find that rty Chipmunk was more fright- ened than hurt. In fact, he had had ne difficulty in catching Smarty ipmunk. Of course, being caught by Farmer Brown's Boy gave Smarty as much of a fright as being caught by Mr. Black But ‘armer Brown's Boy hs v carried him back near where Chipmunk and Striped Chipmunk were still calling sorrowfully, and there had let Smarty ¥o. Just He was He was so. Boy had re. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. Mix three-tablespoons of In- dian meal with one-half cup of molasses and pour slowly into three cups of scalded milk, stirring continually until thick- ened. Remove from the fire and add one-half cup of sugar, one beaten egg, one tablespoon of butter (melted) and one-half teaspoon each of ginger and cinnamon. Turn into a but- tered baking dish, bake in a slow oven for half an hour, then pour one cup of milk over the top, cover and bake 2% hours longer. Serve with hard sauce. by T. W. Burgess.) which escape now will breed millions before September. Don’t let one live. Get every fly in your home with this surest of insect-killers . . . BLACK FLAG It Stops Chafing! “Exercise always chafed my skin painfully vatil I begantouseKoraKonia.”” Mr. M....S. Biscuit Glace. Boil half a cup of water and two- thirds cup of sugar in a saucepan for | half an hour. Remove from the m-o‘ il i} raKonia Jor Sore Skin and stir in three well beaten eggs. Place the saucepan in another pan of | boiling water and beat the mixture for | eight minutes. Transfer the saucepan | to one of cold water and beat until | the contents are cold. Add a teaspoon ful of vanilla extract and two cupfuls an humble Bmarty Chipmunk little fellow as was. He wa to his mother, to him and led ashamed to fac . but, of course, ashamed to go home but his mother came him home. He w: his brothers and he had to. Nobody said anything to him about how silly and foolish he had been, but nobody needed to. Nothing that they could ] id could have made him feel any worse than he did fee How good it was to get in that safe home underground! It seemed t~ him that he would never want to put his head outside again. But an empty stomach after a while caused a chan of mind. The rest of the family was outside, and finally Smadtly poked his head out, and, a look around, joined his brother sisters. But such a different Smarf He was ready to run at the lez gestion of danger. He w looking about in ev stel she doesn’t think mod- ern ure is so questionable. Most of it is perfectly clear.” You'll love it—that The annual consumption of electric lampbulbs in the United States is at the rate of 235 lamp bulbs per in- habitant. This is not only the high- est ratc in the world, but also is nearly half again as large as that of the next largest lamp-consuming coun- try—Switzerland. Here the per cap- ita consumption is 1.62, while in Ger- many it is .88, in France .72 and in tain Toss your silk stockings into Lux suds—after every wear- ing/ Gently Lux cleanses them of perspiration which if allowed to stay would soon rot the fibres and ruin your stockings. Washed in Lux they wear longer—and your hands stay soft, white. Directions on package. whipped cream. Mi 4 Blue=jay istheefficient ‘way to rout a corn. It leaves nothing to your guess-work. You do not have todecide how much or how little to put on. Each plaster isa complete standard- ized treatment, with just the right amount of the magic medicar tion to end the corn. Simply put on the plas- ter—it does the rest. Could you confess a Corn —without embarrassment? to neglect those parts of her body which are usually un- seen. . . . Anyone may ac- uire a corn. . . . But it is bad form to keep one. Especially when Science has provided the way to get rid of it so swiftly, surely and pleas- antly. 45,000 ists have Blue-jay. Blue-jay There 1sn't anything unnat- ural in one’s desire to hide a corn. A corn is undainty. One feels instinctively that it is not a possession a well- bred woman should have. A dainty woman will not tol- erate a corn. She is as careful of her feet as of her face. She feels that it is unpardonable THE QUICK AND GENTLE WAY TO END A CORN ] e Brack Frac is one insect- killer that does a 100 per cent job of killing. It gets every fly in your home. Not one escapes. For Brack FLAG contains a se- cret, vegetable ingredient that flies breathe and die. . MOSQUITOES and : ROACHES, TOO, are killed instantly by Brack FLaG — every one. They can not survive a single breath of this master in- sect-killer. But Brack Frag is The menacing 4 in 10 Ordinary insecticides kill, at best, only’ 6 out of every 10 bugs. The four which get away breed the hundreds that return. Don't absolutely harmless to humans and animals. Use it in either form—powder or liquid. Both are sure death to all insect pests. At drug, grocery, hard- ware and department stores. BLACK FLAG COSTS LESS BLACK FLAG Powder BLACK FLAG Powder Gun BLACK FLAG Liquid.. BLACK FLAG Spraver.. 15¢ up 10¢ 25cup ..45¢ Special introductory package contain- ing can of liquid BLack Frac and sprayer for only.. 6 5 C B lct them escape. Brack Frac kills 10 out of every 10 pests. It will rid a home of insects when all else fails. BLACK FLAG kills and rids the home of & @ 1928,G. L. Co. Ina. < ey (mmey o 'éw‘yg s%(%., -

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