Evening Star Newspaper, October 5, 1925, Page 28

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WOMAN’S PAGE." THE EVENING S’I‘AR WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1925. FEATURES. More ESS,enlials BY LYDIA LE B! In cakes powder, cussed discusstons of making good King We have dis and that two cupful of liquid w one-exg cake. Where one ¢ is used a little | we have s and flour butter cake” cupfuls Gt flour to on was correct in more than considered 1 ] tavor. | cake VIGOROUSLY than the prescr added. and v, without dange tking when baked ether well, as much su ther the subject we shall ing when done chine or cake 1so or | the i is used he details of the mix Two thin e a third ways read butter or su ould be is added “Cren Recipes ether the i in well, then ind the liqy It is easy to se these th in alternately 1 mix better than when the 1!!\\|\<| put in all at once, for the tlour has tendency to form wee balls or lnmps and the liquid dispels them. | Beating. | beaten vigorously | m feels equal to| yut into the pans. Cake should be and as long as the a the task before it is After beaten whit 1re added no fu beating is needed. The hites | should be blended by folding in. not by | ‘beaten in,” which breaks the | ells you have worked to get ! The essential matter, if a cake mixer BEDTIME STORIES Sad, Glad Time. —Old Mother The leaves on the maple tr 1d and red. The leaves on the beach and the birch trees were yellow. The leaves on the sumacs were bril- liant red. Brown leaves there were | 1 the—ground, and each day and all| iay and all night there was the gen- | whisper of deaves falling every- | here. ‘The ni were cold. but davs were beautiful. Summer over, and now had come the heautiful Fall season to prepare the | ittle people of rest, the | '3 fore | economically. of Cake Making ARON WALKER. is used, is to see that the liquids are put in first, and that the butter is not just off the ice and so ve', hard that it does not heat or creani well. The dry ingredients go in last and the liquid absorbs them, and turning the crank mixes all together thoroughly and satisfactorily. Plain Cakes "he best of into a rich, plain cake—that is, one that does not include extras such as raisins. coconnut, spices, nuts, ete, for Ca in them may h used with perfect satitsf may not require the fin of ingredients. The S tastiness of the filling provides the desired flavor. Chocolate cake can be made with sour milk just as well with sweet, and the shortening n e almost any that is not salty. Th a chocolate cake, while a favor: is also that can be made very ext time we shall cakes and how to st grades or the consider sponge make them. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Preserved I'e Oatmeal with « Spanish Omelet Spoon Corn Bread Coffee. LUNCHEO! Cream of Pea Soup. 1ded Veal Choy rowned Potatoe; tewed Tomatoes. Lettuce with French Dre Orange B; Coffe SPOON COR One cup cold sweet milk. 1 cup cup vellow corn me: baking powder, bakir i, white beaten s of salt. Melt a slice o in pan in which corn br to be baked and pour into bat- ter last. Then pour this batter into same buttered pan and bhake in moderate oven about 40 minutes. Serve with spoon while hot sing. a pinch butter APPLE TART »are, quarter and core 6 ap- 1id put them in a buttered Add 4 tablespoons ablespoons brown spoon lemon juice, paspoon cinnamon, 'y te: nutmeg, 1 tablespoc cut into bits, and 4 < water. Cover with rich pie crust with slits for the steam to escape, and bake in moderately hot oven. Pl baking dish. cup boiling water Iieat the yolks cup sugar, 14 tea 1 cup hot milk and cook in dou- ble boiler untii* the custard coats the spoon. Remove from fire, add the dissolved gelatin and the grated rind of 2 oranges, let stand 5 minutes and strain. Chill, add the juice of 4 oranges and 1 cup heavy cream beaten until Stiff, turn into a wet mold and place on ice until firm. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS had enlarged their house. Now they were looking forward to the time when they would have nothing to do but eat and rest, and because that time was drawing near they were appy and made happy little sounds s they worked lnln\n\ Chuck w deed, Johnny was Polly Chue through the v Fall there had been plenty of sweet clover and & Now they were so fat that it w | they could do to waddle a short di tance from their doorstep. It didn't seem as if any more fat could be | tucked away under their skins. Peter couldn’t them quite so fat. But it seemed that the fatter they were the happier they were. . So, seeing so many of his friends { happy. Peter was happy. He would ! kick up his long heels and jump about in was happy. Ye: appy and so Summer |in the funniest way from sheer hap- ) SO MANY OF HIs/| FRIENDS HAPPY. PETER WAS| HAPPY. o ' 1 the Laughing Brook Pool for the coming | North Wind nl\lil the long Winter Green Meadows, and the Smiling Brother rost for months. Peter Rabbit loved this season the first place the clear, sharp made him feel good all over. In the second place it was such a lovely s son. In the third place there w much to see. At the same time eve where he%vent Peter had a feeling of sadness. There wasn't a day that he in't say good-bye to some one. for cvery day feathered friends were were leaving for the Sunny South. Other feathered friends were arriving from the North, but B, would say zood-bye after a b But it was great fun to hurry about watching other folks preparing for; Winter. Some of them were so ver) h r. There were the Squirrels ousins, for instance. This year there were splendid crops of hickory nuts and acorns and heechnuts. Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel, Rusty the| Fox Squirrel, Chatterer the Red Squirrel and Striped Chipmunk were busy from dawn to dark. And be- never so happy as 3 were happy all day long. actually got along without quarreling, for, you see, there was plenty . for all. Every once in a while they would h: to stop and ghout their happiness aloud. Where the beech trees grew thick- est there was a feast every day. Bus- ter Bear was there. So was Lightfoot the Deer. Thunderer the Grouse and Mrs. Grouse were stuffing themselves. They. too, were happy. Over in the Green Forest Paddy the Beaver and Mr 1dy had begun early to cut and pile in their pond a upply of p r logs. Already the, had a great pile there; and with every loz they had so much less cause for worry over their Winter food. They had been working long and hard, for they had added to their dam and they In air | . too, ief stay. v | But, piness and joy in being alive. And| then, perhaps, along would come one of his feathered friends and er wod-bye, Peter! T hope I'll see vou in next Summer.” Then Peter iness would be touched with a dness. So altogether It was a glad time and Peter loved it. Hul irom it he drew no lessons wha He saw some of his friend ving for the Sunny South so that | they might be sure of having plenty of food. He saw others of his friends | making the most of good times and storing up food sure to come. for the hard- times But Peter didn't store up anything. No, sir, not so much a mouthful. He was too busy watch- ing others work or hurrying ahout to 1y good-bve to those who were leav- ing, to think anything about Winter and the hard times it was sure to bring. Bistorp of Pour Dame)| BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. AYER ARTATIONS—Sayers gar, Saers. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A given name. Here again is a family name which looks as though it might have heen derived from some sort of occupation. like that of Seward, however, it comes from a given name; in fact, from a glven name with almost the ime meaning as that from which the family name of Seward " and her” were quite usual spellings of this given name in the Middle Ages. The use of the “h” instead of the “g” was a normal philological development, and you must remember that in the Middle Ages, when the Teutonic languages were all of them nearer their primi- tive forms, the “h” was often more than a mere aspirate breathing. It was something of a gutteral as well. The form “Saher,” from which the family names in this group without the “g” have developed, shows signs of the French influence in the speech of the Teutonic Normans. The other two were given names made popular in the days prior to the Norman conquest of England, and which persisted for some time after- ward alongside the form “Saher.” As a given name it meant simply “the victorious one,” and in its earli- est use as a surname it indicated that a man's father bore it. Seger, Segar, hing must be put | have these things | and all | remember ever having seen| SUB ROSA BT MIML Does' Every One Like Her? Stella was introduced to me some months ago by an old friend, who alleged that S. was the sweetest, most enchanting person in the world. “Every one likes her,” my friend told me enthusiastically. “She hasn't an enemy In the world—and she's too charming for words. So I took Marjorie, the child beauty and wit, along with me when we went to meet the famous Stella, just to Marj how delightful ‘an older an Le. And the woman liked certainly was afternoon. “You dear child” she cooed Marj, “you're exactly the sort of p on 1 like to know. I do hope we're going to be friends. None of my friends, though, are half as pretty You, £0 I'm afraid some of them will rather: jealous.” j decided then and there that was the world most intelli- most delightful woman. hostess went out of her way ¢ pretty things to all the other en present, and they beamed and preened their f. hers and glowingly gushed back at her. As we were leaving, S. jorie and me aside and wh my voung friend: “I don’t want you to think that I' a silly. gushing | woman, but truly one of the | H attractive, most smartly dre: ‘(F\l girls who have ever been to my b And I do want you to come again. Marj assured her with fervor that | wild hor would not keep her from | so charming a hostess, und we left | in great good humor. Well, that was that thrilled because an older woman h taken such favorable notice of her, and nobody could blame the child. However, a few days later, at matinee met Vera, o . who| told us that she'd just| nd that the older woman | en more than kind to her know,” Vera fairly sim- pered, * d the nicest things to me. I was so pretty that she | was afraid most of her friends would | be jealous of me, but she wanted to be my friend awfully.” (Vera is no shy, retiring violet.) At this Marj stiffened and began to compare notes very exactly with the complacent Vera. Yes, Stella had made practically the same charming speech to Vera upon her leaving as had attended Marj's farewell. | And as the week ed by and the | woman whom every one liked met move and more girls of the same| crowd, there grew to be a perfect club of sweet youn: recite Stella’s speech St | that in time the feeling that this charming flatterer was the most de: lightful woman in the world changed | to one of extreme distrust. For none of us feel we can trust the person who used a stereotyped speech for all of us—not matter how Dleas- ant it may be. You will find if friends by excessive flattery that { ¥ou'll end by creating more suspicion land distrust than anything else. man one | that whom every delightful at Stell gent, Qur took Mar- pered to w Marj was a P vou try to win What about Stel Jike her. do you thinl 10 answer your love qn stamped addressed envelo Teply | 19: be Just_in a pers (Copyright. What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. aspects are Tomorrow's planetary they be- | quiescent until nocn, when { come overcast, indicating erse conditions. 1f you should feel any urge to do anything of a constructive character that is out of the ordinary routine of your life, the only time to do it is in the morning. If. choosing { this time, you. go at it with vim and earnestness, the prospects are that vour plans, if not either speculative or hazardous, will be successful. In the afterncon the signs denote that you will feel irritated and distraught, which will be reflected in your actions, | unless vou courageously resolve mot | to be influenced by such conditions. Children born tomorrow are de- stined, according to the signs, to suf- fer from many ailments in their early vears. None of them. however, will prove to be serious in their conse- quences, if proper nutrition be given and a healthy environment provided. | Once the infantile period is passed | successfully. they will attain a normal majority. Temperamentally. a boy will be hoisterous, while a girl will be bashful and reticent. They will both be endowed with good spirits and clean minds. The boy will he none too studious, and more devoted to i sports than fo learning. The girl will | possess an ambition to acquire knowl- | edge and will be willing to sacrifice many pleasures, usnally so dear to a girl, to realize her desires. If tomorrow is your birthday, your energy is unbounded, your compe- tence is unquestionied, and you pos- sess great mechanical, as well as ex. ecutive ability. You, on starting any Inv\\ enterprise, or undertaking any work of an important character, be- | come very enthusiastic and have the happy gift of being able to communi- {cate vour enthusiasm to all others { i that may be associated with you. You | never attempt anything in a half- | hearted wav. and. whether the task be light or heavy, vou always give it | the hest that is in ~om Some of vour efforts have, unfor- | tunately, been valueless, and this has | j often been caused by-the fact that vou |allow your enthusiasm to dominate | your judgment. Even when every one eise can tell that a project is doomed to failure, you stick at it | owing to vour tenacity of purpose. | Your home life, especially if you _married young, should be full of hap- {'piness and contentment. Well known persons born on this : A. J. Beveridge, Senator; v Lind, opera singer: George “‘psllnkhouw manufacturer; Nathan Appleton, merchant; William N. Jef- fers, naval officer. (Copyrisht. 1025.) Meat or Fuh Omelet Take cold meat, fish, game or poul- try of any kind. Remove all the skin and sinew, and either cut it small or pound it to a paste in a chopper, to- gether with the right proportion of spices d salt. Then either toss it in a buttered frying pan over a clear { fire until it begins to brown and pour beaten eggs upon It, or beat it up with the eggs, or spread it upon them after they have begun to set in the pan. In any case, serve hot, with or with- out sauce, but garnish with crisp herbs in_branches, pickles or sliced lemon. The right proportion is one tablespoonful of meat to four eggs. | A little milk, gravy or water may be added to the eggs while they are be- ing beaten. Baked Spareribs. Wipe tresh spareribs carefully with a cloth which has been wrung out of hot water. Arrange the meat in a dripping pan and place it in a hot oven, which should have the temperature lowered gradually. Baste with drip- pings occasionally. When the meat is well bfowned place some apples, which have been cored, in the pan with the meat. Fill the cavity of each apple with brown sugar and let bake until soft. When serving, arrange the ap- ples as a border aro\md the spareribs. Prices realized on Swift & Cflmnlny sales of carcasd beef in Washington. D. C. for week ending Saturday, October 3. ofi -m;;mum sold out. rang ed from 12.0f egno‘t BI80 cents. ner pound and avers Coats Der Dound—Advertisemeat. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrignt, . Afternoon meul. t present. gment. Cross-bar supporting . Roman date. . Unit of weight (abbr.). Auditory organ . Freed from That man. Obtain. Carried. Torn p Location. a vehicle Nocturn: © Requests Equalif . Lubri Part. Unit of energy . Perfods of time. Olden times. To pack awas at in a chu A set of bells . Marry. Land of Job. Though. . Small de To act 57. Impoverished . To cultivate land 2 1\|m!r ant. bk cocate i o Yonder. Down. Babylonian deity . Hewing implement A middle ¥ COLOR CUT-OUT S she took whoes THE GOLDEN FLEECE. |« A . A col . A Roman tyrant. . Conductor of electricity. Sleeping place. Ixists. et_and spongy ground rdy. \ginian queen upplicate. . Ardor . To Vhite metallic ele To pull. Particular thing. . A small candle. Man servant . To make a mistake . Native metal Fallen tree. signal he bellow of cattie King (French). Quarrel . Filled with wonder Reverberation. refix meaning haif. o place . Musical instrument. . Catcher's glove. mall mark Highest part To work at steadily . River of Italy Behold! “PUZZLICKS Puzzle-Limericks mmm—T\ aged dame of ell in love and elope Her But you see r would 1S of which Lince apita st Tndian native e serving & which a woman i Feminine pronoun. third person singulk » { the spitce e N luct of the mi ed lady from the Middle West if not entirely reprehens i what it was f ste | lacing th num| he right word in th he answer k' will appes Saturday’s 21 - LomorToy uzzlick | An old fellow who had a toothache | When the Sacrifice to Neptune. “Do not take it so to heart." said the old woman. “You never met with better fortune than in losing that | sandal. It satisfies me that you are the very person of whom the Spea tng Oak has been talking.” There was no time to inquire what the Speaking Oak had said. for they | had reached the other side, and, after thanking . the old woman hob- | bled 3 on had not gone far before he came to a great crowd at the edge of a town. To his quest one of the multitude answered, “Th is the kingdom of olchos and we are subjects of King Pelius. He has sum- ) the d But His ¢ did betake. ge ntist’s his ght could ief and his rage mistake. et KCOpFTIERARAISI. = white and flalgf Omsance When skin hurts— No matter what causes your skin to hart or itch, it can be quickly relieved by R ora kil moned us to watch him sacrifice black bull to Neptune, his father.” Here is King Pelius. Make his robe royal purplegand his scepter gold. His hair and'beard should be brown. (Conyright, 1025 A THREE DAYS COUGH IS YOUR DANGER SIGNAL | Persistent coughs and colds lead |to serious trouble. You can top | them now with Creomulsion, an {emulsified creosote that is pleasant {to take. Creomulsion is a new | medical discovery with two-fold | action; it soothes and heals the | inflamed membranes and inhibits | germ growth. | Of all known drugs. creosote is | | recognized by high medical au- | thorities as one of the greatest | healing agencles for persistent | coughs and colds and other forms |of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements _which soothe and heal the infected mem- branes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed | into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs. I Creomulsion is guaranteed satis- factory in the treatment of per- sistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and other forms of respiratory diseases, and X cellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded it any cough or cold is not relieved after taking according to direc- tions. Ask your druggist. Creo-| mulsion Company, Atlanta, Ga. —Advertisement. Handicap is greatly curbed this new way of solving this oldest hygienic problem HERE is a new way in woman’s hygiene that ends the insecurity of old-time “sanitary pads” and their unhappy days. 8 in 10 better class women now use “KOTEX.” 5 times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL dan- ger of offending. Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No embarrass- ment. Obtainable at all drug and fle- partment stores simply by saying “KOTEX.” You ask for it without hesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Proves old ways a folly. Twelve in a pack- age. In fairness to yourself, try it. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue | stone, do you think t wrong tooth was pulled by | By Lee Pape. Pop was smoking and thinking and I was wawking erround the floor on the seet of my pants jest for the ex cise, and I sed, G, pop, heers a ded fly. I don't care fo sed, and I séd, think I'll rite a pome g s a good id pop? If it will keep you bi L lovely ideer, If hour T for a wile 1, and in about I've wrote e this one, ck, It wan cl upon its 1 dered on the raleroad tr Well, it calls up rath violent pikture, and besides the raleroads have bin subjected to enuff eriticism lately without you piling on more, pop sed. Well then how 1 fly with reddish hair, n he's proberly the: sest it show poet and I sed, Well heers - lies a fly > rist, By some perfeck nery fis Its hewtiful but it brings tears to my eves, pop sed, and [ sed, Heers one Heer lies a iy amed Ger- ce to her es as well fly 1t tlies go I sed. : feeling, nother By s her bones. A fly has no hone knew a very nice litt ertrude Jones timent of the Wich and besides, 1 irl once numed v T object to the serr- hole thing, pop sed en I noticed the fly s eny more and T sed . pop, he must of flew wasent ded after all. t Bues to prove you can't You reed in cemeterries, pop se \ h maybe you can't. forget that has kindled on Don't polic n more than one urday’s Pu | | Yet it is ahout this one, Heer | who was | insurance | BY WILLIAM The Normal Mind. A human being's existence begins | as a microscopically infinitesimal cell, | though this original cell, the ovum, i perhaps the largest cell in the parent" body. The original cell multiplies sev eral millionfold and the aggregate of cells which constitute the body will weigh, by the time of birth, six to elght pounds. The specialized cells which form the brain make up nearly one-eighth of the weight of the infant | at birth, and the brain is one-third as large as it will ultimately grow; where- as the Infant's body is only one-twen- tieth as large as it will ultimately be- | come. The brain, in the first year of the infant's life, will double or treble in size, while the body ‘as a whole will grow 150 per cent, the average weight of infants one year old being 20 pounds. In other words, the normal kid 1 brainy cuss, with no particular refer | ence to his dad. Of course, we assume that the brain really has little to do with mental ca- pacity. Lots of half-wits have liter- lly more brains than you or I have, re than you have, and not o few persons with extraordinarily fine mental endowment take a 6% hat. So we can’t gauge a man's intellect | the tonnage or displacement of his | | head. The 10 ounces of brains de-| livered with every baby are of I tically no use at all to him when he | first arrives, but nature is forehanded, and if the bimbo gets a fair show he'll begin to find use for ‘em presently. Low under the left temple (no mat- | ter if the baby is right-handed) there {is a motor center for the control of movements of the right arm, and this s the first part of the brain the in- | fant use for purposive movements of the arm about the head and the | mouth, for man is a carnivorous ani | ma) until most of the milk teeth have | been cut, and an arm or two helps the bambino to get en rapport with his_prey. Of course. all this time the b iter in the right side of the brain - the control of the left a been developing, too, whether the b is left-handed or not. Soon afte the nearby center the control of the eyes and tu the head, then the ubility to with the hands, and this g |one of the first tests of mental development. | “The normal infant will begin to at tempt to grasp objects placed befc | him in the fourth month of age, anc {it is not until this age that the bab. {can hold his head erect when | trunk is carefuliy supported for 1 too common it people dandling infants on th Kkr Rrasp sping is an infant's see izne | vounger Made from the finest Fish Caught ORTON'S famous “No Bones” Codfish mixed with boiled potato, de and serve. A wonderfully deli- ciousfamily meal in every can. The original Ready-to-fry, in the blue-and-yellow label. Gorton Pew Fisheries Co., Ltd., Gloucester, Mass. “GORTON’S DEEP SEA RECIPES™ New ideas for your table. Write for iz | a_te: BRADY, M. D. cruelly trying to make the poor little tikes sit erect without even support- ing the trunk. In trying to teach a dog or a cat something I always have a sneaking suspicion that maybe the animal knows more than I do about it. Any- how, I am sure a good many bables could tell their incompetent caretakers a good deal about the way to handle a babby, if the caretakers had brains enough to understand. Occasfomally an infant can hold its head erect before the end of the third month, and will grasp upon a finger s early as the second month. If this should happen in your family, better nothing about it, for you can’t be ure yet that you e not dealing with a precocious abnormality. Corn Brea’d.’ When making corn bread with milk and eggs, If you have cold cream of wheat, mush or rice to use in it the bread will be softer and much more delicate. Use half a pint of cereal to quart of sour milk, two eggs, a pint and a half of sifted cornmeal and spoonful of PEP mn ur breakfast Wonderful flavor. Contains bran—mild- ly laxative. Keeps you peppy all day. THE PEPPY BRAN FOOD INEW COLOR GIVES STYLEQ to wearing apparel—drapenes | —everything | Use Pumum Fadeless Dyn to change the color of last year's fabrics to this year's most fashionable shades. Bring | your wardrobe up to date. Redecorate your house. Curtains, furniture covers, | pillows, etc., can all be easily and suc- Eesstully transformed with Putnam Dyes. The same 15-cent package colors all fabrica—silk, cotton and wool—in one operation. See color chart at your druggist’s. Directionson every package. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES The original one-package dye Jor all materials and purposes ) e =] =] [l Il e t— == Il J You Can’t Be Too Sure EVERY small camera is not a Kodak, nor every vacuum bottle a Thermos. Neither is all tin- foil wrapped cheese Kraft Cheese, even though it is of the same size and style of package. This is often confusing—even to dealers—and un- less you make sure that the Kraft name is on it, you may be disappointed in what you supposed ‘was Kraft quality. Discriminating buyers have learned to look for the Kraft label, it is put there for your protection. Varieties: Swiss, Brick, Pimento, American, Old English (Sharp American) 1 1b. and 5 1b. Loaves. Also 5 Varieties in Tins DECIDEDLY BETTER

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