Evening Star Newspaper, March 19, 1926, Page 48

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Decorative Belts Faney belts are so popular in Paris that sometimes the sole trimming for :ol wn will be an elaborate belt. This ows the trend for trimmings about THE BELT HAS AN ORN: TRAL MOTIF. | the walst line of dresses. You will no- | tice that very many frocks have em-| broideries in color or trimming in | applique about the bottom «f blouses | that exactly match the skirts of| metimes the hlouse is mere- by the garniture and | one-plece gown. But whether the frock is in one or two pieces the style is| pronounced concerning the correct po- | sitlon of the trimming WOMA BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. as Sole Trimming generally black—that is, unless the belt matches some special colored frock. Then it is apt to bhe of satin, just the same, only the color is not black. Tt is the black satin belt that 18 the most adaptable of all for it can apparently be made to match a black satin gown, while in reality it was de- signed to go with that merely as one of sgveral. Forms of Decoration. There ia a central motif embroidered finely in artistic colors or dope in leather applique work. Or the work may be crystal painting, which is the mort that seems to have tiny crystals in colors applied over the paint. Or again the method of decoration may be the usual painting. The colors that predominate may be chosen to accord with the different frocks with which the belt is designed to go. In which case it would seem to be developed especially for whichever dress it was worn with as a decorative accessory. Floral motifs are the most popular. These belts are the sort that the home needle woman can easily make. The one thing that is essential is neat- ness in working and in the actual making of the belts themselves. Offer of Design. Those who would like a design to use in any of the methods of work men- tioned will find the one offered for the Spanish shawl can he used admi- rably by omitting the portion which extends in a point and using the rest. To get the design, send a salf-address- ed and stamped envelope with a re- quest, and it will be sent free of charge. Direct letters to Lydia Le Baron Walker, care of this paper. MENU FOR A DAY. BREARFAST. Raked Bananas Hominy with Cream Soft Cooked Eggs Oatmeal Muffins Coffes Cake Willie Willis | BY ROBERT QUILLEN “I wouldn't of had a cold, but 1 showed Pug I wasn't scared to go barefoot in the snow.” (Coyriht. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Pisces. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are distinctly adverse, and although they reveal some good conditions in the eve. ning, these Are not of long enough du- ration or of sufficiently stable ure to.warrant the attempting of anything out of the ordinary routine. The signs denote that it is a particularly inaus- piclous occasion for travel or for initi- ating any changes of an important character. 'Twere better to_leave well enough alone, and to content one's self with the discharge of customary du- ties and the enjoyment of recognized recreations and pastimes. In the eve- ning there is no doubt about the exist- ence of a better atmosphere, and thix Coffee 1 CHEON. Meat Balls and Onions French Fried Potatoes Crisp Rolls Dutch Apple Cake Tea DINNER. Split Pea Soup Beefsteak Pie Baked Stuffed Potatoes Creamed Caulifiower Tomato Salad Céftee Bavarian Cream Coffee BAKED BANANAS. Six bananas, two tablespoons butter, melted: juice one lemon, one-quarter cup sugar. Use firm bananas. Remove skins, cut in halves lengthwise. Place in shallow dish Mix butter, sugar and lémon juice and spread half of mixture over ba. | nanas. Use remainder for bast ing the fruit while it is baking. Bake 20 minutes in slow oven. MEAT CAKES. Use half lamb and half pota- toes. Put through a grinder aith an onion, season with salt and pepper, add one egg and one tablespoon flour. Make into H cakes and fry. One reason why the decorative belt should appeal 1o women of America ix | its thriftiness. One helt may he ased | to give chic to two or even more| dresses. To he sure. the Parisian belte | referred 1o are extremely handsome, They are called beits, though some- | times they may he in reality narrow { tie_girdle sashes. the length heing sufficient for the ends to he locped to- gether. The loops may come at the | back or on one side. according to the preference of the wearer. | The material made into the helts is| (Copsrighf Across, 1. An inlet from a bay. 6. Asiatic country. 9. Falsehood. . Speck. . High priest of Isracl. . Sea eagle. Forehead. . South American city. Shaded walks. Alluvial deposit at river. mouth of a American general. Heroine of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin."” . A unit. . Beauty. Small hallway. . Annoy. . Every bit. . Poles. . Form of address. . Nodule of earth. . Mother of Castor and Pollux. . Girl's name. . Remains. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle COFFEE BAVARIAN CREAM. Soak one-quarter box gelatin in cold water till soft. Chill and whip one pint cream. Boll one cup milk with one-third cup sugar. and when hoiling add { | soaked gelatin. Strain into | | granite pan, add vanilla and one- half cup strong coffee. Place mixture in pan ice water and when it begins to thicken add whipped cream. Pour into) molds. t. 1926.) is bound to favor all family gatherings or social reuniona. kg Children born tomorrow will pass through the period of Infancy unevent- fully, but thereafter are destined to suffer from ailments, which, although serious, need not necessarily cause alarm or anxiety. In disposition the boy will be querulous and quarrelsome, and, unless curbed, this will develop into -a. chronic chip on the shoulder. He will, however, be industrious, am- bitious and painstaking. A girl, on the other hand, will possess a very charming personality. She will not be overintelligent, but what she lacks in learning will be compensated for by her general attractivenesh. Both boy and girl will be loyal in their affections and sincere in their friendships. - * If tomorrow is your birthday, you have no deminating personality, lack | otiginality and are a slave to conven- tion. You are incapable of giving ut- terance to your inmost thoughts, leat it might offend and give rise to criti- cism. You never stop to think wheth- er custom or conventionality is jus fled by conditions, but blindly follow in_the rut. You are honeat and intelligen: are a great reader: all your abilities, however, are overshadowed by the con- stant thought of what so-and-so will say. This excessive consideration for the opinions of others mars your suc- cess and belittles yvour efforts. In vour home life you naturally ex- ercise greater liberty of thought and action and do things more on your own natural impulses. As a result you Are very companionable, and your freedom of thought and action makes for happiness and contentment. Well known persons born on that date are: Edmund P. Gaines, soldier; John' MeCloskey, cardinal; Everett P, Wheeler, lawyer: Lucy M. W. Mitchell, archaeologist: \Mrs. Bellam: Storer, | originator of Rookwood pottery; Ber- nard H. Ridder, publisher. (Copyright. 1926.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Rickets in Families. | Down. . Lose blood. Some families never have a knowl- edge of rickets because they do not seem rredlnpoud to them, while all the children of another family mgy be afflicted. Rickets, a nutritional dis- ease, characterized by bones so soft that they inevitably lead to physical formalities, {s caused by a 'k of nlight and of certain essential food elements. Nursing bables may develop it it they are being nursed by mothers who fail to give themselves the proper nutrition during the prenatal or lacta- tion period. or when the child is nursed longer than the ninth month. The prevention of rickets lies in seeing that the child is given plenty of fresh air and direct sunlight (daily airings have more than one reason for being) and breast milk from a mother who is feeding herself cor- rectly; cod liver ofl and orange juice from the early months on both for the breast-feeding and hottle-fed in- fant. Since rickets is an insidious dis- ease and attacks the fat as well as the thin child, this giving of cod liver oll, which is rich in minerals and fats, has hecome a routine measure with pedia- triclans. The dose is five drops a day to begin with and increased by one drop daily until the child is getting two teaspoonfuls, divided into three doses daily. If the child has an active case of rickets, this maximum dose may be increased. As a preventive, two teaspoonfuls, or even one tea- spoonful, daily is enough. Naturally, even cod liver oil cannot make up for a deficlent diet. The child should have breast or cow’s milk, orange juice after the third month, and vegetables and cereals beginning the sixth or seventh month. These 1 2. Atmosphere. | 3. Japanese coin. 4. Part of the moon’s shadow during i an eclipse. 5. Judea. 6. Through. 7. Arabian name. 8. A mother of Greek mythology. 1. Sphere. 2. Also. 7. Fasten. . . Lawmakers. . Alwaye. . Voleanic rock. . Depression. . Glance maliciously. . Certain animals. Nobles. . Short literary composition. Long stories. European deer. . Increase. . Permit. . Meadow. . Observed. . Hotel. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused: Don't say “However could you say such | things?” Say “How could you ever | say such things?” # | Often mispronounced: Industry. Ac- cent the n, not the s. foods offer the child the mineral and vitamin elements which are essential to his perfect development. Rickets is easily cured, and no de- formities will result, such as bow legs, pigeon breast, enlarged ankle and wrist joints, protruding stomach, ete,, if the disease is recognized and treated. If it is left until the bones do harden in their deformed state, little can be done to help it. Some mothers become unduly alarmed when their young babi seem to look bow-legged during their early months. The legs of the voung baby quite natutally curve, due to its Shows tmportance of| the Evening Greeting How Do You Meet Your Husband or Wifte? DorothyDix Your Entire Success or Failure in Life May Be Seen in Your Nightly Meeting—Do You Re- flect the Beauty of a Peaceful Home? DID you ever consider how you meet your wife or your hushand of an evening? Never struck you as a matter of the slightest importance, did it? Yet the whole success or faflure of your life may depend upon it. So important is the etiquette of home-coming that at a “Better Home Week'' in the West they are going to stage an exhibition in which demonstra- tions will be given, showing the proper way to do it. There will be’a model room in which there will be a wife awaiting her husband's return, and a man will show how other men should act as, they return to their own firesides, while a woman will give an exhibition of the manner in which a wife should receive her husband when he comes home of an evening. This exhibition of home manners should do good, even if it doesn't. It is & pity that a lot of husbands and wives can't get a living picture of the sort of welcome that they hand out to their unfortunate spouses. If they did, they wouldn't wonder that divorce is so common. They would be amazed that another husband or wife wasn't on the way to Reno. Perhaps not one woman in a million ever really takes any thought about how she shall meet her husband, vet upon this apparently trivial matter hangs the queation of whether marriage is a success or a fallure to him. Picture it to yourself. Think of a man coming home, tired and worn with the day's work. Suppose he comes home to a houme that is dark, There i8 no one to welcome him because his wife is away gadding the atreets, or she hasn't gotten back from her bridge game. Perhaps the house is untidy, and there {8 no prospect of dinner save some messy stuff from the delicatessen store that Friend Wife will bring in when she comes home. Suppose, on the other hand, when a man comes home there are little faces against the window pane watching for him, and as he puts his kéy into the door there is the scurry of little feet to meet him, and smothering arms about his neck. Suppose his first glance at home is of a cheery, bright, orderly room, and of & woman with eves glorified by love welcoming him. Suppose the savory odors of a good dinner stream from the kitchen, and are a sweet odor in his nostrils. DRI JON'T you think it makes a difference which way a man is mét when he comes home of an evening? Don't you think that one man feels that no matter how hard he works for his family, nor how much he sacrifices for them, it {s worth while, and that he géta value returned for his service, while ::P nth“or man asks himself—and nobody can blame him—"Oh, what's o use?” Suppose a man comes home nerve-worn of an evening. All day long be has been on the rack of terrible anxiety. All day he has had te fight for his very existence, and all day he har had to hold himself with an iron hand to keep from offending those whom it would he suicide in his business or profession to offend. He is at the place where he feels that the weight of another feather would break his back Yet the minute he opens the door of his home his wife deluges him with every petty vexation that has happened to her during the day. Before he can catch his breath she has begun on how bad the children have been: how the maid broke his pet pipe; how the cook is going to leave: how big the butcher bill is: "how strange it is that he can't make money to buy an automebile, as Tom Jones has done. j 7 Suppose an exhausted man comes home of an evening to a wife whose wise eyes take in just how weary he is, and who drags him across the threshold into an atmosphere of perfect peace and calm, of soothing love and flattery, and who tells him only bright and joyous things that will divert his weary mind and make him forget the carés of the da. It doesn’t take any Shériock Holmes to tell which one of these men i going over the precipice of nervous prostration, doas it? The way his wife | meete him settlen the question of many a man's abflity to Aght “the battle | of life. s e . 1 ANB suppose a woman has worked and toiled all day in the home. Suppose she has wrestled with teething babies and refractory sewing machines and has burned herself to a cinder cooking some favorite dfsh for her husband. Suppose when he comen in he bangs the door and Kicks the cat and slaps the baby and sits down and gobbles his dinner, and merely grunts when she asks him a question. Suppose he never notices anything that she has done except to knock it. i | Suppose & woman has spent her day in a dull round of domestic-duties. doing them as earnestly and consclentiously as she can, and when night comes she is worn in body and soul. Suppose when her hushand comes he meets her with a glad, sweet smile, and a kiss, and tells her how she grows more beautiful every day, and that she is the most wonderful housekeeper in | the world, and that he thinks his guardian angel must have heen working ! overtime when he got her. Suppose the husband brings with him light and | cheer and brightness, all the little gossip of the outer world that he hasi picked up, with which to amuse her. Any Aifference in lite for those two women? Any likelihood of one of | those two women finding an affinity, and the other one not? One may he the wife of a millionairé and the other the wife of a poor clerk, but one is| miserable and the other happy, for the way her husband meets her when he | comes homa of an evéning makes a woman envied or envious. H Believe me, the art of meeting vour husband or yvour wifé is worth| studying. DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright, 1926.) " PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. ney and continue for the first two or three days of the voyage, taking each morning on rising half a bottle of | says Dr. P. H. Desnoes, port medical | solution of citrate of magnesia. officer for a large shipping company.| 2. Morning, noon and night, at is the oscillation of the ship about it8 | jeast an hour from mealtime, take in- various axes due to the action of the | ternally from two to four drops of waves apd the ground swell. To this | tincture of belladonna (assuming you constant rise and fall. pitch and roll [ weigh from 90 to 180 pounds) in a (enough, it sounds, to bring on an at- | jjttlé water, or a modergte does of the tack, just thinking abou* it), is added | active principle of belladonna atropin, a minor factor, the fine unremitting |in tablet form. A moderate dose of remor or vibration transmitted from | atropin ia from one four-hundreths to the engines through the framework | one two-hundreths of a grain. of the ship. In large motor ships this | 3. Immediately upon boarding ship tactor is reduced. lightly pack in each ear canal a cone Deat mutes, young infants and per- | of gauze or some lamh's wool, to dull sons who have had destructive dis-|ail sounds, and wear t the first ease of both internal ear structures | two or three davs of the vovage. never become seasick. The belladonna. atropin (or scopo- One theory of the nature of seasick- | lamin), has the effect of setting the ness is that the vomiting, frregular | peristalsis right. breathing. pallor, sweating and dizzl-| The Barany chair, in which the sub. ness are produced by overflow of | ject is revolved through various stimulating impressions from the | planes to test the integrity of his Jabyrinth in the internal ear struc-(labvrinthine gyroscope function, came ture to nearby nerve centers in the |into prominence one of the tests brain. The labyrinth is a delicate | for prospective airplane pilots in the mechanism of lvmph canals serving | World War. Dr. Louis Fisher finds as a gyroscope, and enabling us to | that many subjects become immune keap our balance. to seasickness after several whirlings. The hird who suffers mal de mer on (If none of yvour parlor chairs is a slight provocation may take comfort | Barany, you might cultivate the in the knowledge that albatroas, par- | somersault habit as a means of train- rots and macaws also appear ‘to be | ing against seasickness. subject. Likewise monkeys. £ 485 pii & Mold the Jelly. Seasickness. The immediate cause of seasickness. Eyestrain. improperly fitted glasses, and prolonged gazing at the twhite water rushing by or the sun glare on the distant water does the trick for some people. Blind persons may get | seasick. : Perhaps the most satisfactory ex- planation of the phenomenon is re- If there are children in vour family that like gelatin desserts—and most children do—then buy some of the {nteresting little jelly molds that come tor a very reasonable price and add 0 much to the attractive appearance What Do You Know About It? Dally Science Six. 1. How old is the oldest living person in America? 2. How old are the redwood trees of California. 3. How old are the pyramids of Egypt? .~ 4. How long ago the Great Glacler? 5. How long floes an elephant live? 6. How old is the earth? (Answers to these questions in tomorrow's Star.) was 0ld Age of the World. Just as fire burns brightly at first and fades to ashes, o, many astron- omers believe, the stars, or, as they really are, suns, have youth, middle life and old age. Stars appearing bluish are thought to be new and vigorous, burning with an incan- descent heat; yellowish suns are in their middle life, like ours; reddish suns are but the embers of once- bright stars. The presence of col- pletely dark and dead suns has sev- eral jimes been suspected. It stands to réason that no form of energy Iike heat can last forever, and in that | cage the time will come when oar sun will burn itself out. Perhaps then the motion of the earth wiil slow down till it stops, and the sun. a dull red ball, will always stay fixed | in the sky, and half of the world will be in constant darkness and the other | half in twilight. It will slowly grow | colder and colder; snow will not melt | except in the tropics, and the winds will die down. Even now our sun. in its onward rush, might at any| time encounter one of those dead | suns, invisible now for | lack of in-| ternal fllumination, and collide with |’y it. The flames caused by such an explosion would reach the earth in| eight minutes and burn it up. { Now what do vou know ahout that? Answers to Yesterday's Questions. 1. The largest island in the world, | excluding the continents of Green- land and Australia, is_Borneo. 2. The Island of South Georgia. near the Antarctic Continent, has men, hut no women, on it. | 3. Maine has m islands on its | const than any other American State. | 4. The Dry Tortugas, off the "mi" i of Florida, are devoid of water: pi-| rates sometimes marooned people | here. | 5. Helgoland, off the coast of Ger- v, and Sable Island, off the coast v heing washed t A §. The “sea island” cottén came from the low islands off the coast of Georgia and South Carolina. | (Copsright. 1826.) "HOME NOTES | | BY JENNY WREN. sald: The author of Ping hua pu “Prize the porcelain and disdain gold | and silver.” His admonition has heen | followed bv lovers of the beautiful | for many centuries. As long ago as| | the seventeenth century, blanc de chine, a white variety of fine Chi- nese porcelain. was enthusiastically collected by French and Spanish con- noisseurs. They found irresistible its elegance, perfect composition and ex- quisite feeling. They were enchanted by the statuettes, the vases and the libation cups and proceeded to fill their cabinets with the white Oriental divinities. Today collectors of Oriental art are just as avid for blanc de chine as ever. Judiclously used as a decora- tive accent in a beautiful gives a piquant and lovely touch that is entirely delightful. The hest monthly total of sunshine on record stands to the credit of July, which in 1911 gave Londoners 820 sunny hours. The normal total of sunshine for the month 201 hours. T T | “The next room, it | FEATURES. Dear Ann: The fingers that have wide spaces hetween the jointe require square or oval settings, for a narrow, oblong ring would lose all character on such a hand, Yours for the right thing, LETITIA. KEEP YOUR A Bit From an Everyday e s Making the Most of Your Looks - BY DOROTHY STOTE. \ CHILD WELL Drama in Washington, Monologue of a Nurse of the Child Welfare Centers. “Y 38, it is the most satisfactory | work 1 have ever done. It's| such a joy to see the babies grow | and improve. Rut the toddlers from to 8 or i—those are. the ones 1| love hest. They are old enough to| appreciate your interest in them. There it something very sweet in the confiding smile they give me | when they come back to the con- ferences week after week. And when I call at their homes they come | and lean against my knee and gaze | into my face and listen 8o hard to all the advice 1 give their mothers, and | watch me while I show how their| food should be prepared. | “One little 8-vear-old named Liz-| zie is so appealing that vou simply | n't bear it when things go wrong with e Her mother has had a hard time making ends meet. I have helped her plan the food for the family so that the children may be well nourished at least expense. and | little Lizzie i8 my pride because she has picked up so since I tonk the, family in hand. You ought to see thosa little| children in the weighing contests— | we call them malnutrition classes— | we conduct from time to time. Each one has a card with a record of| his weight and héalth habite writ- | ten in tabular form. The first step _Lis a careful examination by the doc- tor and the dentist, who are so gen- their time to o said the child in an ed tone. ‘Yes, only ur duty is to tive and be a strong; healthy, useful American citizen for your country.' “You have no idea how the little things take hold of the idea, how they will work for the honer of being call- ed up before the class to have the stars put on their cards. And w a child earns the long-coveied gold star, his glee is immense. “Lizzie was %0 happy when she got her gold star! It was fun to see the quiet thing. e jumped up and down with joy, and then suddenly began to Charleston before all the class like a grotesque little monkey Note—This is one of & series of sketches showing the benefits whith can he abtamed or * your by vimtng Ehiia eltars and Child H{:wn- centers of the city No_mother need awake nights worry ing about what to do with an alling hild. Any mother who cannot afford to call in a regular physician can take her child to the rearest Child Hygiene or Child Welfare centar. 10k in the telsphone hook. call up the nearest center and find out the hours of the conferences. Cod's Roe Fritters. Wash the roe in cold water and te it in a piece of muslin. Put it into pan of boiling salted water, to which a few drops of vinegar have been added. Place the rée on a strainer or plate in the pan and let the water barely cover it. Simmer very gently for half 10 three-quarters of an. hour, according to the thickness and size of the roe. When cooked lift it out, drain and cool. then remo the roe in slices our ecountry?” aw erous in giving the skin and cut work. If dental work is necessary.|ahout one-half an inch thick with a the dentist does it, and if tonsils or|sharp knife. Mix a spoonful of flour. udenolds are the difficulty, the child| salt and pepper on a plate, dip the is sent to the Children's Hospital| pieces of roe in this, brush over with to _have that attended to. | beaten egg, coat with hread crumbs “Then the nurse—we call her ajand fry in hot fat. Draln on soft dieticlan because she hax made a'paper and serve piled on each other special study of food for children|on a hot dish. Gaenish with fried who ha not developed as they ! parsiey and cut lemon. and pass to should—makes a searching inquiry|mate sauce and brown bread and into the child's history—what dis- | butter. epses he has had. what food he eats. what are his habits ax to sleeping . and exercise in the open air, ete. You would be surprised to see how often the dietician—because she | knows what is hest for children of different ageés—is abhle to put her| finger at once on the weak spot in a| child’s habite of living. That is the| point from which she starts in each | case. H and most important | thing i to interest both the mother | {and the child in the effort to_ im- | prove the child's condition. ~Since the mother brought the child to the center she is presumably interested. | but the child i= probably hored to | death with it an. | “‘Here comes in the element of com-| | petition. She calls the child's attention | { to his own disabilities and puts in him the desire to he as strong and able *o | do. as other children of his age. She |has to be a little sharp and -eritical } | here, because a touch of self-scorn is a | great incentive to improvement. Then | she tells the child and his mother. what changes must be made in his | way of living to bring him up to par. and suggests that the mother give {him a reward every day that he foi- | | tows the new rule: | | “Now Johnny.” she says. or Tommy, or whatever his name do_you see | { these spaces on this card? These are for stars. You are to come back each | | Wweek and if you have gained. I will FINGERS seem put a little star in one of the spaces to taper more | and vou must try to gain very time | . | and get a solid row of stars.’ ‘Like the delicately | American flag.’ said one child. ‘Yes. i just tike our flag and when you get in those up to the weight vou ought to be I 3 [aM ‘going tn put a gold star on your fashionable | card to show vou have gone over t | top." ‘Like the soldiers who died for VAN RAALTE SILK GLOVES —"*becanse you love nice things "’ MADE BY THE MAKRERS OF VAN RAALTE S1LK STOCKINGS AND Snx UntEwaaz versed peristalsis; that is, the waves of motion in the alimentary tube go > the jelly. You can buy them for as little as 5 cents each. The more in- tn The wrong direction, the vagus |tricate designs—flowers and fishes (sympathetic, autonomic) mnerve con-|end birds—cost more. trol of peristalsis being upset by the | — excitement of the voyage. On this conception the most successful pre- vention and treatment is based. Dr. Desnoes prefers scopolamin, a close relative of atropin, to the atro- pin itself in the treatment of sea- sickness. Scopolamin will be not un- familiar to readers who may recall that it was used along with mor- phine in hypodermic injections for the production of surgical amnesia. particularly so called “twilight sleep. But this routine has proved fairl effective - for preventing aseasickness in case an individual is subject to it long months in that position, but the real how-legged baby is one whose legs bend and curve when he begins to stand and walk on them. This baby should be prevented from walking, his diet improved and cod liver ofl added to it, until his bones have grown strong enough to bear his weight. Poverty; with its attendant lack of sunehine and knowledge of proper feeding, is a contributing cause of rickets, but a failure to cure it comes from ignorance alone. English Muffins. Bring one pint of milk to ing point and stir into- it the boil- one te: spoonful of fat. Set aside until t mixture is lykewarm, then add two cupfuls of flour into which a tea- spoonful of salt has been sifted. Now beat in half a yeast cake dissolved in one-fourth cupful of warm water Often misspelled: Derisive; s, not z. Synonyms: Gift, present, donation, pequest, contribution. Word study: times and it is yéurs.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Tenet; an opinion, doctrine, dogma or belief maintained as true. “Free speech in one of the essentia] tenets of Americanism.” and set the batter aside to rise all night. In the morning add one cup- “Use a word three | ful of sifted flour. and with floured |+ hande make slightly into round muffins and set to rise in greased muffin tins for half an bour. Slip the rings and thejr contents onto a greased griddle and bake, first on one side, then on the other, until ! done. - yet must go on the vo; yage Begin two days before the jour. the Spots! * Solarine banishes ala orn ike magic. It shines wher everything else has failed. Used on the metal and 21e glass of all cars from Fords to Rolls Royce. Buy a can today from your grocer, hardware, druggist or aute * VMOEQT O=-UMN==Z> or Boisonous REE WASEINGTON, D € Qfi[k(fiaeh’gjs For Women Who Demand Loveliness BLUE Moon Silk Stockings are so fine, 80 beauti- ful, that they instantly appeal to women who in- sist on the best. Blue Moon S wear longer Inu\us'they are full fashioned, made of pure silk and have patented garter strips to take up the strain. In colors new, subtle, exquisite. Next time you go shopping, ask to see Blue Moon Silk Stockings. 2 : No. lm:wmn, itk full ;‘llhl tops: soles. $1.65. 0. 200—Medium weight, pure silk, e Hea , T No. 508—Chiffon weight, fine . puresilk, full tashiched. SHL Hrom top to toe. §2.15. No. 608—Medium weight, loned service stockings. Silk fro: top to toe. $2.15. White, Sking French Nuds. Grawel. Atmosphere. 3 Cinder, Gun Metal. 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