Evening Star Newspaper, January 18, 1926, Page 26

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WOMAN’S PAGE Kitchen Coat and Design to Work BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THE POCKETS WILL BE FOUND VERY USEFUL IN MANY WAYS The latest idea in kitchen aprons 1s given a new name—that of kitchen coat. It is made like a long coat and is a sort of compromise between an artist's smock and a man’s long iinen duster coat. The name given it is de. ecriptive and the coat is practical. It can be as plain as the proverbial pipe stem or as ornamental as dainty touches of embrotdery or smart bits of applique can make it. The coat is fitted with pocket: and it may have more as the woman wishes. long sleeves which are most able when they are gathered snug wristband. These long Are necessary, since the fashions call for¥ons sleeves in frocks. These must be protected two ample as _many It has service into a sleeves Pattern for Coat. It is possible to buy patterns for kitchen coats, whether they are sold under that precise name or not. How- ever, any clever woman can contrive a pattern for her own from a dress pattern. It should have sleeves, course, and be made with seams under the arms, where the pattern can be enlarged. piece, but two, allowing enough goods down each side of the front to lap over well, even when a wide hem is turned from collar to hem around the bottom Some women prefer double-breasted i prevailing | Do not cut the front in one | kitchen coats. so that there will be no nger of the fronts separating and | uncovering part of the dress beneath ! Directions for Making. Make the coat ample, so that it will | &0 over u frock and fit loosely. Sleeves hould be full and gathered into cuffs | There should be a mannish style to a | kitchen coat. Make large patch pock- ets, one for each side of the front por- tion. A small breast pocket for a handkerchief may be liked. The coat may have a loose belt, giving a long | waisted effect, the belt may omitted. There buttonholes down the front as well as on the snug cuff bands | Trimming. Feminine touches of embroidery to give chic to these practical coats are put on pockets and on collars. The | work may be combined with applique |or patchwork motifs. The design ‘\‘hfr\\n today has been made expressly for readers of this paper and used to of | embroider or work in the combination | | way Sust described. Pluce | Paper beneath the design, centered on the material and transfer from the | tracing to the pockets and collar be. | fore adding these portions of the coat |to the rest. By lining collar and pockets the under side of the work |will be concealed. carbon Y THORNTON BEDTIME STORIES 7} omo The Smallest Hunter. This much to me ia very clear: The world is chiefly rulad by fear. —O0id Mother Nature. Old Mother Nature is largely right. Fear rules the actions of most of the | little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, the Smiling Pool, the Laughing Brook, the Old Orchard and the Old Pasture. And fear is not confined to the little people who wear feathers and fur. The big people often are quite as timid as the little people, and human folk also are large- Iy ruled by fear. But some there are who have less fear than others. Some there are even HCavy THE SMALLEST OF THE ERS IS TEENY WEENY, COMMON SHREW HUNT- THE among the little people who have so much confidence in themselves that they waste no time worrying through fear. Now the reason for all this fear is that so many of the bigger people are always hunting for the little peo- ple. You see. most of the people who wear fur, and many of those who wear feathers, are hunters. There are a few who are not—Prickly Porky Paddy the licaver. Johnny Chuck these are among those who do not hunt others. Of course, Lightfoot the Deer is another. The bizgest of the hunters is Buster Iear. Liuster doesn’t waste much tinic Lunting others, but he has a foud fresh meat when he can get The smallest of the hunt Weeny the Com- Shre 3 eny Weeny for the first n sure vou would never think of “im as a hunter. Such R tiny felloy ile weighs only mbout 45 gr ch is only a lit- tle more thun a tenth of an ounce. But for his size he is one of the firece- est of all the hunters. If he were Looking back 1 dimly See A younger salf who lonely stands. His face is turned away from me. He reaches out his empty = o 3 as big as Buster Bear and as fierce in proportion, he would be a very terrible fellow. But, being the tinfest of all the little people who wear fur, you would think that no one would be afraid of him _ But, as I sald before, Teeny Weeny |is a fierce hunter, and being a fierce | hunter, he is very bold and does not | hesitate to fight with those much big- | ger than himself. When he s reall hungry, and this is most of the time, he would not hesitate to attack Danny | Meadow Mouse himself, and Danny is {many times the weight of Teeny | Weeny 1 Now Teeny Weeny is not one of those who sleep through the Winter. He is very much awake through the Winter and very. very active, for it is harder for him to find enough to eat then and he might starve to death in half a day. So when there is no snow Teeny Weeny makes little runways under the leaves, under old logs, in the moss, and along these runways he is forever running, hunting for insects hidden away for the Winter, or for any bit of meat which some of his larger neighbors may have left. And he doesn't at all mind if he happens to meet a Mouse, for that means a fight and a feast. Teeny Weeny's eyes are very tiny. 0o tiny for him to see much, for he is a lover of the dark, but his ears and | his nose make up for the smallness of | his eves, and he Is so wonderfully | quick " in his movements that he can disappear in a flash. So it is that he manages to escape those enemies who happen along his way. When there is snow on the ground he tunnels about |beneath the snow. Sometimes he mes to the surface and runs about on top, and always he is hunting, hunting, hunting, for it seems as if that tiny stomach of his is no sooner full than it is empty “I am not afraid,” says the smallest hugter, and, indeed, he isn't afraid. (Copsright. 1926.) Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. “Good Samaritan” Eye. Eyes that are very large and ex i tremely blue, almost _transparent | when “observed in profile, indicate ! ready and great capacity. They also {are “generally eyes of sensibilit easily excited and difficult to manage. | There are asking eyes, aggressive | eves, dull eyes, flashing eyes and ces that can threaten, or, when altered, can make the heart dance with joy. There is power in_the eye to charm the wild beast. You can tell by the look in a man's eye whether he is going to say something kind or something harsh. You can read happiness or you may read despair in the eyes of your com- panions. While there are many varieties of gray eyes., we will pass over the shrewd, the spiteful, the cold and the wild gray ey Every one has seen them—too often perhaps. Then there is the dark, almond-shaped |gray eve, with long black lashes— the Creole type. The one we wi tion to is the c | that looks you sh to call your atten- Im, clear, gray ey kindly in the face, I views you quietly, but dispassionately. Passion rarely lights them, but love | takes the steady blaze of friendship. The calm, gray eye indicates t its owner is upright, conscientious, God-fearing and always pitying his fellow-men. It the eye of the “Good Samaritan. (Copyright. 1026.) kate-like shoes with soles of thin corrugated metal have been invented for traveling on ice or snow at will. $ | | bel hould be buttons and | LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Us fellows was having fun this afternoon and 1 axsidently upset Leroy Shooster by trying to see how | hard I could bump into him, and he sed, Hay cut that out you dumbell. Being an insult, and 1 sed, Whose a dumbell, you must be thinking of your self, ain’t you? No Im thinking of you, your sodum if you was eny dummer you'd be lucky, because vou could get a job in a side show, Leroy sed. O is that o, well your so dum its a wonder you havent got a whole crowd of peeple following you to see if you could posserbly be eny dummer, | sed. Making the other fellows vell, Her- ray, thats a good one, you cant beet that one, Leroy, and Leroy sed, Well if you wunt to' know how dum you are, your so dum yu'd get along bet ter if you didn't have eny branes be- cause the ones you have ony make you dummer. Making the fellows yvell even louder to incourage me, and I sed, Well Lleeve me if you axually wunt to know how dum’ you are, your so dum that if you ever axsidently sed emy thing with eny sents to it you'd be <o ixhausted you'd haff to stay in bed | 3 weeks with ‘a_hot water bottle. Making the fellows make the most noise yet, and Leroy sed, Well now jest for that Im reealy going to tell You how dum vou reely are, your so dum you'll never have a hed ake as long as you live hecause you hevent ot enything to have one with, and if you ever haff to have your brane operated on they’ll find out it looks so mutch like a splinter they'll haff to |operate with a pair of tweezers. And { now I haff to go home or Id tell you | | how dum you reely are, he sed. | And he quickly wawked away like a | coward before I had time to think up | | enything werse. HOME NOTES RY APNNY WREN | | | There is a distinct advantage in having a father who is also an artist, the children who occupy this de. htful nursery would tell you, for was their father who planned | | From the standpoint of comfort, con- | venience, interest and cheerfulness it is quite perfect The walls are pale turquoise blue |and the enchanting toy landscape was { painted by the artist father in mat- uralistic colors. The builtin cup boards for toys extend all around the {room. They are painted buttercup vellow and are very ornamental with thelr quaint black iron hinges, repre- senting squirrels, clowns and wooden | soldiers. The curtains show pale pink roses, with green leaves on an orchid ground They are caught back to allow plenty of vellow sunlizht to come in and| complete the Springlike color plot. What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAI 7 | Capricorn. | Tomorrow’s planetary aspects .are | just the reverse of those that prevail today. They are distinctly adverse and counsel inaction and absence of effort. Only routine wcrk, or yvour customary dutles, should claim your attention. Toward evening there is |a slight change for the better, espe- jcially in relation to the emotions that will be felt. The troubles that have assailed you during the day will sink into comparative insignificance, and vou will then realize how foolish it is to allow trifies to worry or upset you. Children born tomorrow are, ap- parently, destined to be subjected to many vicissitudes of a_physical char- acter during infancy. Much care will be needed, much patience will be re- quired, but If the former be taken and the later exercised, there is no reason why they should not attain a healthy majority. Their disposition will be peevish and complaining. This attitude of theirs must be checked if in later life they are to become !amenable and companionable members fof the community. They will possess high ambitions, and as they will be | naturally perservering and persistent the signs indicate success, provided they are allowed to pursue that career for which they express a preference. Those who celebrate tomorrow the Is Marriage Without Love Ever Happy? Says Nothing But Love Makes It Endurable DorothyDix Those Who Love Persons They Cannot Marry Are| Foolish to Think They Can Find Happiness by Marrying Without Love. CORRESPONDENT asks: “If a man, loving one woman, marries another, will he find such a marriage—such a companionship—satisfying? What are the chances that he will learn to love his wife? If the situation were reversed—if a woman who loves one man marries another—would your answer be the same in her case . I should say that the man who marries one woman, loving another, would be just about as likely to be satistied with his wife as he would be with a flivver when his heart was set on a high-priced car. It may be an awfully good, useful, reliuble little tin Lizzle; it may get the biggest possible mileage out of every gallon of gasoline, and negotiate the roughest roads without a balk; it may be much more suited to his needs and his purse than the de luxe car wax, and, anyway, he could get the one and he couldn't get the other. But, all the same, he never cares a rap for it. It never raises a thrill in his breast. ile never appreciates its many virtues because it lacks the stream-line effects and gorgeous upholstery that ravished his fancy in the other, and that his soul craves. with wives You can’t substitute one woman for another with a guarantee that she will be just as zood and fill the place of a wife just as well 8 the man’s first choice, because noboldy knows just what quality it is in a woman that makes her the perfect mate for some particular man. Because Susan is amiable and healthy and a good cook and thrifty, it is no sign avhatever that she would exactly suit John, and that they would get along in peace and harmony together. On the contrary, her very virtues may bore him to extinction and send him philandering as a lifesaver, whereas Maud's very frivolity would hold him hound to her to the end of the chapter. It {s what a man sees in a woman And if she does not look good and de: come to seem unendurable to him afte dispeller of illusions not what is really there, that matters. | \ble to him before marriage, she will marriage. For marrlage is the great It is no fosterer of dreams. It is the terrible awakener. T is frequently said, with grim humor, that marriage is the only cure for love, but this is sardonically true only when men and women marry those for whom they have a temporary passion. Matrimony is death to romance and not a great deal of affection survives the wear and t of everyday living; of the clash of different t>mperaments: of fights over bills and personal habits; of the disenchantment of kimonos and curl papers, and cold cream and soiled collars and three days’ stubble of beard But while marriage may kill our love for the one we do marry, it does not slay our passion for the one we do not marry. Instead, it breathes into it fresh life and strength, for it puts the beloved one among the unattainable essings on which we waste our lives in vain longings and repinings. If John had married Amaryilis, he would have found in her faults and weaknesses. She would have gotten on his nerves many a time and oft. They would have had the usual number of family spats, and she would have told him what she thought of his conduct when he came home late of nlghts, and he would have expressed himself freely about her extravagance. He would have seen her stripped of the chiffons in which his imagination had draped her, just an ordinary woman, with all of the short. 5s of her sex heavy upon her head thousand But just because he did not marry her, she will be his ideal woman as long as he lives, and he will be perfectly certain that if they had married they would have lived in an earthly Paradise without a flaw in thelr bliss And, worse still, it is inevitable that in his thoughts he should continually compare the woman he marry with this paragon of perfection, and contrast his scrappy home with the blissful abode he might have had if he had only gotten the woman he wanted, instead of having taken the woman he could get. Therefore the foolish to think that have no real love man and woman they can cure it The remedy only . not even the most senti ous billing and « who by agg cherish a hopeless passion are marrying some one for whom they wvates the malady. ental can spend 30 or.40 vears in oing, and there comes a time when even the most_romantic love settles down into @ Darby and Joan friendship. But, curiously enough, this compunionship, to be perfect and complete must have underne: t the smoldering fires of a love that was so strong in | ,\';:Jluh that it will keep the hearthstone warm through all the long years of old age. oty i Enforced companionship does not those to whom we are drawn by the mysterious attraction of whom we open the secret doors of our souls. I do not believe once in a thousand times that a man or . s tha man or wom: 3 lls in love with his or her wife or husband If he or she entered marriage withaut love. Resy ratitude, friendliness he or she may come to feel possibly, but oftener it is hatred for a aller, for marriage without love fs notmng but a = whose bars one’beats oneself continually. make for comradeship. Tt s only the heart to against When one sces how easily men fall out of love after they are married and how domesticity irks them, ft is obvious that they need to start into| matrimony geared up to the highest pitch of affection. With a woman the se is not quite so bad, because she has more compensations in a materfal ay to gain from matrimony than a man has. and, like the canary, having | been bred in a cage, she is better contented to have her wings clipped. Moreover, all the circumstances her interest on her husband, and so makes better shift to be content with wife. But marriage without experiment. of a woman's life tend to concentrate if a man is good and kind to her she him than a man does with a makeshift love is always and under all conditions a risky It takes love and a lot of it to make matrimony endurable. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) 1926.) aniversary of their birthday will be sifted with imagination, possess poetic temperament and love all that is artistic. They will not be very prac- tical, but will belong, in a large meas- ure, to the visionary and dreamer class. They will be diplomatic, tac ful, kind and affectionate. They will not care much for the rough and tumble of life, but in the event of a dispute will always be seeking the {soft word that turneth away wrath. They will, of course, attain more than those who fight aggressively for their | ends. They will always be considerate of | others and always ready to lend a helping hand to those who fall by the side. Well known persons born on that date are: Robert €. Lee, Confederate general; Nathaniel Hayward, inventor; Thomas R. Pinchon, educator; Samuel V. Essick, mventor; Rev. Josiah Strong, author; David Starr Jordan, ex-president Stanford University. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused—Don't say s 4 new beginner in the work.” is superfiuous. Often mispronounced—Pro Pronounce the first a as in * a as in “arm,” accent on fi Often misspelled—Occurred. ¢'s, two r's. Synonyms—Attack, assault, combat, encounter. Word study—"“Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Impertinent; impudent; irrelevant. ““What's the matter?’ inquired the loafer, impertinently.” . Prices realized on Swift & Company rata. " last Two assail, | Southern constellation. Sea animals. Wrath. Point of a pen. Let fall. Fondles. . Inclosure. Porker. Mongrel. Bridge term. Town in Holland where cheese is made. Footlike organ. Southern cuckoo. Measuring device. . Frozen water. Indefinite article. More uncouth. . Ancient. Point of the compass. Reaches a destination. The sun god. Rest. One maintaining a particular doc- trine. Down. Border. - River in Europe. . Town in Canal Zone. Toward the top. Portuguese monetary unit. Southern State (abbr.). Collection of facts Preacher. Members of an ancient Ayran race. Criticizes severely. Prefix; again. 27, 29, 31. 33. |so proud and 34. 36. 38, 39, 41. 4. 45. 48, Sphere. Poisonous snake. Point of the compass. Interwoven. ‘Within. River in England. Eats dinner. Himself. High priest of Israel. Rodent. Five hundred and six (Roman). Back. An S-shapdd object. Limb. Places under restraint. Wicked. Increase. Languished. Beverage. Approaches. Stylish. Exists. Narrow opening. Period of time. Three-toed sloths. Secret observer. Comparative suffix. Exist. Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. o Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” ‘There was a young girl of Navarre Who was deeply in love with a tar. ‘When she swam with him over From Calais to Dover, sales of carcass beef in Washington, for week ending Saturday, January 18, 19: on shipments told out, ranged Irom’ 11 Cents 10 18.50 cents per pound and av 16.44 cents per pound.—Adverfisement, Her friends said, “That's going too far.” (Copyright, 1924 v Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN “The reason my hair is clipped is I wanted to see how I'd look with a bald spot an' then papa made me have it all cut off.” (Copyright. 1926.) COLOR CUT-OUT BEAUTY AND THE BEAST. “Little Beauty.” There was once a great merchant who had six children—three sons and three daughters. The daughters were all very beautiful, but the youngest was the loveliest of all, and had been | so_ever since her childhood When she was a little girl people had called her “Little Beauty,” and as she grew up the name stayed, but was shortened to “Beauty,” so that no one knew her by any other name. Besides being pretty, Beauty was so sweet tempered and good that she was loved by every one who knew her. IHer sis FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: The little woman must avold fancl- ness in her clothes, for fanciness is fatal to height. Simple straight lines are her stanch friends, for they will always make her seem taller than she really is. Yours for plain facts, LETITIA. (Copyright, 1926.) BY YALE S. Department of Peyshology. A Mile a Minute Via Nerves. A little more than a mile a minute the speed of an express t abol fast a message is carried alc ves in the human body ters were resentful, of course, hearing | sed constantly and called by | such a name, and, besides, they sus- | pected that she was their father's fa- | vorite. Perhaps if they had not been ill-natured, he might have liked them better. | Beauty is wearing a pink underslip, tan stockings and black shoes. Her hair is blac (Copyright. 1926.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. Fairs. County fairs are still an important feature of the soclal and commercial intercourse of many rural communi- ties where the facilities for reaching | large centers are not very greatly de- | veloped. And so they would seem to be just an adaptation to natural needs | which they were from the very begin- ning, ages and ages ago. But then they | were natural needs of a very different among the ancient Egyptians | started. At the periodic | overflow of the Nile, which laid waste | almost the entire Nile Valley, the people in the affected areas would | flock with their produce in barges to the festivals of various kinds which were always being held in the large citles or in the vicinity of the great temples. Here they found a ready market for whatever they had brought | with them and many diversions to| while away the time until they could | go back to their homes. It is interest- | ing to note that it is still the custom ! among the Hindus and other Aslatic | races to flock periodically to the great markets during festival times. Touch a hot stove. Before vou have time to make an outcry you have drawn away your hand; a ba hurled at pu, you dodge; a paper blows in your direction, you blink your eyes; you step on a tack, and with- vour foot instantly let us see just how long it takes for all this to happen. In case of your hand touching ti ove, the message that vou b touched something hot is carried from the fingers to the spinal cord and ba ain, the distance of abc two and alf yards, or 90 inches. Nerve me: ges travel at the speed 1,200 inches per second. Thus, from 1e time your hand touched the stove | until it is safely withdra s | 3-40th of a second. ball being thrown at vou, when the qve winks or the head dodges, the distance traveled is less than a foot, with the result that the entire act is almost instantaneous This is the reflex system of the | body. It is not only a great safeguard to health and life, but it is the most economical system, because it permits us to occupy our minds with other things, or even be asleep, yet protects | us from serious injury. If the mes. | sage carriers—the nerves—are not functioning, we would not feel pain, | the danger signal of trouble. Thus, in the mountains an old hunter whose | ODD FACTS ABOUT YOURSELF ATHANSON, B. Sc,, M. A. University of Pennsylvar sht leg was par while watchinz a erves slow jump! you ju your leg ables him & their kneceap and watc This knee jerk e n, the “nerves stop means that her ner when wo and fall asleep vidual whose ke arve what & we the than can e x s shot do know is if we apply current to t end of a nerve attached to the musc of an animal which has just been kill ed we can cause the musc about, contracti nd expz as {t does in the living body. While these of hunge: thirst, pain, sight, g and all o feelings sometimes cause much pair and annovance, they are worth all t} trouble they bring us. (Coorright per w 1926.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Why Arteries Harden. In discussing the causes of arteri- osclerosis shall try to take them in the order of their importance, and accordingly 1 mention first what I | consider the most important factor of | arteriosclerosis, namely, suboxidation. Suboxidation means insufficient oxi- dation. Oxidation must be clearly distinguished from oxygenation: oXYy- | genation means merely the supply of | oxygen; oxidation means the chemical | process by which oxygen combines 1 with any substance, and other terms for the same process are oxidizing | nd combustion. All life is an oxida- | process, a slow combustion. In man this process is technically called { metabolism. Human life consists in the constant burning of fuel (food) | and tissue substances, that is, combin- | ing oxygen with them, to produce the | energy necessary for the beating of the heart, the action of the voluntar muscles and the functioning of the involuntary organs. The free air contains ample oxygen for all our needs, about one-fifth of the volume of the air being pure oxy- gen. Queer how =0 many of us suffer from an oxygen shortage, in fact in- sidiously sicken and perhaps die many | years before our time, because we fail | to get enough oxygen, although we | swim in a sea of oxygen all the time. In the early days of the church such celebrations were assigned to the fes tival day of the patron saint of the town in which they were held. Southern Sally Lunn. Add two tablespoonfuls of sugar to two eggs and beat the mixture until it is very light. Dissolve one-half : veast cake in a cupful of lukewarm water and add that to the sugar and the eggs. Then add one tablespoon- ful of 1t, two heaping tablespoon- fuls of lard, one quart of sifted flour, and last of all, a sufficient quantity of tepid milk or water to make a stiff batter. Set the mixture in a_warm place for about 10 hours. When it has risen well, beat it thoroughly, pour it into a greased cake mold, and let it rise for another hour. Then cook it in a slow oven. { Sweet Pi_ckled P;;u;es‘ Pick’ over, wash and soak four pounds of large prunes for 24 hours, then steam them for 15 minutes. Boil together for 10 minutes two pounds of sugar, one pint of vinegar, one ounce each of whole cloves and stick cinna- mon and one-fourth ounce of ginger. Add the prunes and simmer gently until they are tender, then bottle. 16! -’Ou-l INAL fi.l-: the first fresh-from-the-sea Go: put in your fryingpen. Gorton Pew Fisheries Co., Ltd., v Right here one must advert to the silly, though popular, advice common- miven by short cut healers ar health specialists who have little use | in their business for physiology. They advise the sucker to “practice deep breathing” or they prescribe for him, among other things plausible to his | half knowledge, deep breathing exer- cises, and the poor goof religiously | carries out the instructions, oh, far | more faithfully than he would obey instructions by an honest physician, kidding himself along the while with the fancy that by such monkeyshines he is deriving the advantage of more oxygen for his system. No matter whether one's breathing be deep or shallow, for two minutes or all day and night, the amount of oxygen one absorbs is just so much, and no little pastimes like deep breath- ing will alter the amount absorbed or utilized in a day. As an exerclse deep breathing is just as good in a way and not so good in another way as pulling one's “stomach” or more correctly one's belly up and down or in and out for the same length of time, and not nearly so good as doing the Charleston or just walking about for the same length of time. To be sure, one can by an effort of attention breathe more deeply and either more | slowly or more rapidly than norn for a few moments; but never fear, ever ociginal in its delicious . Famous rton’s Codfish—No Bones. Ppotatoes, ready to Gloucester, Mass. | BRADY, M. D. as soon as the attention flags or re- laxes, breathing excur: be- come correspondingly shallow slower to compensate for th tary spurt, and the sum tota gen gained the stu nothing. However, he ns as Mr. rule f The sound, physiological folk is simply tt 3 breathing matic function (Copsright, 10 Colorful Salad. Divide one pound or more of cc cheese into separtely some red pepper pimentos, some nut me: cress or parsle; boiled eg one porti meats wit ley with the th 8 he volks of eggs with the fourth. Mold every pertion into small balls and place the balls from each portion on crisp lettuce leaves arranged on separate plates Then add a little sing to each plateful. Ch wate Iks of har ppers with the nut ress or pi s, some Mix the the cheese dr . Delicious Cookies. When making a batch of plain cookies, for a change add a quarter of a pound of melted chocolate to the batter after u: z half of it for plain cookies, and in this way make two kinds of cookies. Sometimes you can cut both kinds out with a heart cutte or any other shape. and after they are baked join them with a thin sugs Women’s Peace-of-Mind under trying hygienic conds- tions is assured this new way. Gives absolute protection— discards like tissue DANCE, a sheer gown to be worn; a difficult hygienic situ- ation. You need no longer give this complication a second thought. The hazards of the old-time sani- tary pad have been supplanted with a protection both absolute and ex- quisite. It is called “KOTEX" . . . five times as absorbent as ordinary cot- ton pads Absorbs and deodorizes at the same time. Thus ending ALL fear of offending. VYuu discard it as easily as 2 piece of tissue. No laundry. No'em- barrassment. You get it for a few cents at any drug or department store simply by saying “KOTEX.” Women ask for it without hesitancy. Try Kotex. Comes 12 in a package. Proves old ways an unnecessary risk. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue

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