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In spite of weather that seems mor Summer glishwoman blithe- like Winter Americans, th: the E BY MARY MARSHALL. LONDON. to mo @ but admire the Englishwoman who, climate, wears frocks that seem more fitting to the tropic: On really cold evenings the girls go out for tennis, apparently quite comfortable in sleeve- less frocks that come barely to the knees. 4 Then the American reflects that all Winter long the Englishwoman been fitting herself to this sort of ex- posure. he has worn thin, low-cut evening (rocks every evening in houses where the thermometer seldem Roe above 6 It may be, as some one sugges that the English diet, — MENU FOR A DAY. BR AKFAST Melons Iavina with Cream Minced lamb on Toast Blueberry Griddle Cakes Coffee LUNCHEON Cream of Pea Soup Vegetable Salad Date Bread Raspherries Peanut Cookies Iced Tea DINNER Cream of Vegetable Soup Broiled Round Steak French Fried Green Peas « Strawberry Blanen Coffee nge GRIDDLE CAKES Reat one egg with quarter tea spoonful salt, add one pint milk ard enough sifted flour to make a batter, then add two rounded teaspoonfuls baking powder, and, finally, stir in one cup blue. berries. Bake on hot soapstone griddle and place on hot but- tered dish with grated maple sugar between them. CREAM OF PEA SOUT. Fresh green peas are best, hut canned ones may be used. One pint peas.iafter shelling), put on stove in cold water and cook until tender. Then take out half of them and pass remaining half i | through sieve, also water they FLOWERLIKE DINNER FROCK | | were cooked in. Rub three ta GREEN CHIFFON. THERE | | Wlespoonfuls flour into a crehm ) BODICE WITH A | | with one tablespoonful butter AND A BELT OF | | and blend with three cupfuls || scaldea mitk. Now add this to 1 strained peas. Season well, and ; e 1| just before serving add remain- B Sihine & Meabroniyiingo ing peas and one cupful cream. in or piercing wind. A charming frock of this sort re. | BLANC-MANG cently worn by a well dressed Eng- | One quart strawberries, one lish woman was of white chiffon ir cupful sugar, one cupful water, regularly spotted in black. The low-| | two rounded tablespoonfuls placed belt was of red, the skirt flar cornstarch, pinch of salt, two ing and the pure white wide jabot was | | rounded tablespoonfuls marsh- edged with the spotted chiffon. Tiny | | mallow whip or one cupful red buttons adorned a narrow hox whipped cream. Mash straw pleat of white that runs from the | Lerrie: dd sugar and water fairly low neckline to the hem Put into saucepan, bring to boil In spite of a cooler e, the slowly ‘and boll five minutes, lishwoman is prene to wear more| | then mash through very fine summery frocks to the races than | | strainer. Return to fire and add does the Parisian when she attends cornstarch, which has been the races about Paris. In fact, no- mixed with little cold water, and vhere in the world is the garden boil three minutes. Pour into party type of frocks and hats so sure jce cream glasses or glass bow to meet with ap The wide-brin erable reserve oval 1s in England. s that these are trimmed with flowers, Paris lliners have been offering with con. have met with great cess here in London, and many of EVERYDAY QUESTIONS Set in cold place several hou When ready to serve put a tea- spoonful marshmallow whip on top or a tablespoonful whipped cream. Answered by DR. S. PARKES CADMAN Casimia Dr ihat appear o b representative of | he receives Chure Cadman seeks to ends_of thought in the 1s the United ference? CALGARY tates vitally affected by the forthcoming disarmament con- | And is not clerical prometion largely | readers are answered d; president o cs of Chr many Cana Is nf 1St in er letters da. Answer—There can be no disarms ment without the Uni we are the potential er tries agree to limit their ed Sta r-making PoW- | young, who are as disenchanted with Even though all forelgn coun-|the tgwn as you are with the coun- own arma ot t since ments, they would still have recourse to our gre: ternational cf « would be well witl in selli munitions to them. It is essential, therefore, that the Tnited Sta soperate with other | nations in ng world security through m djustment of the prot m of munition works in and n its neutral righ this cou ment in. ity NEW YORK CITY. big center. T feel conscious of gifts | for a larger ministry than I can ever exercise in this place. I chafe over its remoteness. So | do many of the voung peopla of my | church.” What have you to say about those who, like me, are buried alive in an age of stir and movement? {a matter of chance? | Answer—I meet scores of ministers {and hundreds of people, old and try. They are divided about 50-50 on_thelr merits and demerits. They would tell you and those who feel as you do that not in the clamor of the crowded street nor in the plaudits of the throng. but in your- self. is the satisfaction you seck. Bishops, secretarfes, ~editors, chants and business men wh the tremendous pressure of modern ity and business life, have scarcely A chance to open a book or to nod as mer. T am considering marrying a man | they pass by envy vour leisure and who ‘%anie 10 venrs ago niarried and | 1 opportunities for quiet reading and S s later was divorced, mot | ction. it were otherwise, how hecause of any ol B DNEas 2 e e 1:.:1”‘”;1’:51\':35"'.‘,\( | to Just such parishes as yours, many y e his wife as luxariously as | 0f Which double their population she } istomed to in her | from May to October? S ¥ | As transit facilities improve this he has married twice | €Xodus will grow. And it ought to n 1 He has not re.| BroW. for church and state are.in e . \eording to the Bible, | danger of being jettisoned for want e ke, for divorce. | of the pregnant thinking which in erdid Christian, as | Sures right action. ¢ friendship existing for | . What wealth of mind and guidance | ne W time he has| Anglicanism got from John Keble, | Charles Kingsley and Richard Wil he in God's sight | liam Church, all of whom were coun . Kindly reply | t'Y clergymen in small parishes for ¢ daily column, for |the larger part of their clerical ca 1 o1t iy sincere thanks in | reers! Lincoln. as you recall. spent " 150 vears in comparative retirement \nswer Although 1 disclaim au.|for less than five vears in the pre to speak on this pro nary knowledge. from my ction of the divorced vlem with |do you explain the annual exodus deney Today we await the man who can mold the minds of his fellow men be- cause he’has seized the heart of living 2 arcying again largely olves issues and made it plain te others. One can hardly imagine more ;| Those who shine in the cities in any e . eparation from her former | Capacity have more often than not 1 than that which she now |kindled thelr flame in the country. 1 sea mo apparent reason, | Dr. Johnson’s assertion that London why the inquirer should |Never grew a man was too sweeping. ¢ the man of her choice. | But it had truth enough to give o OHI0. I am o country clergyman living tn a httle parvish far away from any nr more to be an “ouch’ systemy’* expert at the pause fo aspirants for city life. Spurgeon had a fairly wide experi- ence in this matter, and he declared that it takes more brains to minister to a rural church than to a fashion- able one in the city. You are not so buried alive that you cannot make yourrelf felt as a vital force for good in your hamlet and country. Use every opening you see or can secure and you will find men at vour door asking for your service. relieve Chance will- not your situ- ation. It may send the favoring breeze. But If the pilot Is asleep at the wheel when the breeze comes it may drive him toward the rocks in- stead of the harbor. Steamed Pudding, Beat together one cupful of cake or cooky crumbs, one cupful of apple sauce, one cupful of seeded raisins, one and one-half cupfuls of flour, one- half a cupful of sugar, one-half a cupful of molasses, one-half a cupful of butter, one egg, one and one-half. teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, one-half a teaspoonful of cloves, one-fourth tea- spoonful of salt, and level teaspoon- ful of soda. Add one-half a cupful of flour and one full teaspoonful of bak- ing powder, stirring lightly Pour into a greased pan with a cover and steam for two hours.. The pudding {will be improved if set in moderate men for fifteen minutes to brown Serve with whipped cream slightly. Lw. any, pudding sauce.prefesred, . + The shivering American cannot help in spite of dull skies and a northern has puddings with its innumerable suet and endless rashers of bacon, renders them le: sitive to the cold. Or it may be. as our grandmothers used to say, that pride can keep any woman warm. . under | Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. H, T.: Your condition is one .| which should be brought to the atten- tion of a physician. It is entirely out of my line. I do not give advice on any aillments of' adults. Please send for the leaflets Nos. 8 and 9. You will find in them the answers to your other questions. Send a self-addressed and stamped envelope with your request. Happy Young Mother writes: “I take much interest in your column, and it has helped me out of many deep ruts. These questions puzzle me row: at birth, now at 2 months welghs 1 pounds. He is a good and healthy child, and sleeps 18 hours out of the 24. He is fed every three hours. But two hours after eating he (it awake) is irritable and acts hungry.. A drink of water from the bottle will satisfy him for a while, but not for long. He is Yond of water, and would take half a bottle at a time if I would let him. Can he take too much water? On very warm days my neighbor suggests that 1 take off his stockings. which are one-fourth wool. 1 am afraid, as he is too young. 1 dress him in a shirt that is one-fourth wool. diaper, hose i thin petticoat. He is slightly broken out with the heat. He also seems very constipated on hot days. Can this be remedied Answer—First of all, won't you send a self-addressed and stamped en- velope for Nos. 2, 8 and 9 leaflets? If the weather is hot, make the baby comfortable. He is evidently —too warmly dressed or he wouldn't have prickly heat. You might find that the baby would be much better contented My baby, welghing 7'3 pounds it he were fed hut once in four hours instead of opre in three. Try this for | a while as least. He has made a really marvelous galn, so that lack of | food is not the cause of his irritabil. itv. A baby can take too much water, but the amount he gets mid- day between feedings would not harm him so much as giving him water just hefoce his feeding, as vou are doing. so that when it comes time for him to be nursed it mav be that he does not | take enough milk to satisfy him until | the next feeding period. Try keeping | him amused in some way. and with { only a little water for a few daye un [ til he is going good on the four-hour schedule. The leaflet on constipation | will help you with that problem. What Tomorrow Means to You Cancer. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are | qistinctly unfavorable, and at no time | do they give any evidence of encour | agement. It is a day when more than |ordinary” circumspection will e | needed it mistakes are to be avoided It is also an occasion when travel, it | possible, should be avoided and atten- | tion given only to those duties that {are of a routine nature. Poise must | of necessity be established, as there will be sensed a strong and almost | uncontrollable urge to speak critically and to act in a manner that would | later on cause regret. It would be | very unwise under such conditions to | embark in any new enterprise or |initiate any changes of importance. Children born tomorrow will during infancy be ver tic in a physical sense.. They will become desperately i with surprising suddenness. They | will also recover from such attacks | t fis much celerity. As they erow up and with a wholesome en { vironment they will assume & normal | condition und attain without further | difficulty a vigorous adulthood. They | will be rather reserved in disposition | and although their characters will be steadfast and loyal they will not pos- sess an-engaging personality. They | will ghine more in a subordinate ca city than where brilllancy and lead ship are needed. 1f tomorrow is vour birthday anni sreary. vou ave & student, a_great | reader profound thinker. You | howeve e vather slow in action You are disposed to theorize, and owing to this failing often allow op. portunities to slip which, taken ad- vantage of hy others, lead to success. It takes you too long to make up yvour mind. When, too, your decision is made vou reject all half-way meas- ures and are never satisfled with any- thing but the “whole loaf.”" This i& not. of course, the road to material good fortune, as most of us in order to attain any reasonable degree of reward for our efforts have “to give and take.” and can never win the whole prize that we imagined could be attained. Culture and refinement mean much to you. Your love is of calm and serious nature, and does not afford vou the same thrills that are vouch- safted to others of a more ardent | nature. Iell known persons horn on that date are John Paul Jones, naval offi- cer; Ashbel Green, clergyman and edu- cator; Ellis 8. Chesbrough, civil engi- neer; John L. Beveridge, United States Senator: Randolph Rogers, sculptor, and Daniel Coit Gilman, educator, (Copyright, 1926.) Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. The Bluffer. When a person who threatens you shakes his head violently, and bolds it partly backward and to one side, vou need not fear him in the least, | because he is only bluffing. | Each and every posture assumed by individuals expresses the reactive activity, present or permanent, of theil respective faculties. Every primal element in man, of which each faculty is a representative, ex- presses itself in everything one says and does in proportion as it is de- veloped. Each facuity declares itself and its relative force in everything. The natural language of force is a shake of the head, and means, “I re- sist you.” Those who combat earnestly shake the head more or less violently, according to the power of the fighting feeling, but always shake it slightly inclining forward. Beware of him who inclines his head slightly forward and to one side while shaking it violently, for he will bite, whether he be a two-legged or a four-legged animal or human. This brings us to the conclusion that every faculty appertains to everything in nature, to every individual, and whatever he says and does, even the tone of the voice, the jook of the eye, every motion of the body and mental and physical action whatsoever, all bespeak the character of the individual. In=or harm anything excopt insects, Housshold sizes, 10c and 25c—other sizes, S0c and $1.00, r druggist or grocer. Free Booklet. B McCORMICK & CO., Baltimere, Md. Across. To vociferate. Melodi Note of diatonic scale. Poplar. Horsepower (abbr.). Boy's name. Capital of a Southern State Either. Helps. Suitable Passfonate affection. Petition Small artificial elevation Rinds. To get sight of. To make a mistake. Troubles. Disagreeable sensation. To cut down. The two-toed sloth. Spanish Duke who ravaged etherlands. |38 Southern constellation 39, ‘o repalr with thread { 40. Mythical river of the under- | worla | 41. Regular abbr.) ‘l! Wife of Geraint | 43. Preposition { | 44. Musical instrument. | 16. Accordingly. 47. Preposition. 48. Beneath 49. Prefix meaning in 0. Deep gorge. 51. City in Wisconsin Down. 1. Line from center to circum ference of a cir 2 todent. 3. Insect. % Flatted scoop with a handle. |EAT : The Right Food Is ! Slow Eating. i | Now that the Summer meridian has | been duly passed, we can at least hope fully 1ook forward to Summer weather. So far the weather man has not been a very good friend to the Summer bathers. The stores are ailuringly filled with bathing suits. But when all the week enders stact the bathing beach parade, how many Venuses and Adonises will there he? Fven if the hone structure of every man is not the foundation structure of a Greek god. strength, grace and vitality are within every, bod. reach. Food will supply strength and vitality. And it will also make fat it the man inclined to over- weight is not careful. 1f the lumberjacks were loud, the bizarre display of bathing suits for men are louder. Can you Imagine anything niftier than the plaid pants and vivid-hued shirts in predominating color that accompanies said pants? | Can it be that some bold. fat designer got the idea that these resplendent colors would o dazzle the eve of all beholders that a bay window sup- ported by knobbly, scrawny legs would not be noticed? Or, on the other hand, it may be that with one of these suits a fat man will feel the call of youth and decide he'd better regain his lost youthful figure. Whether it's a bathing suit or a penny scale that brings home the fact that flesh is creeping on, the man who wishes to live & long life had better watch his diet. The chief reason for a trim figure 1s not that a man may be chosen for a clothes advertisement, but that he may keep his health. Too much food of the fat-forming kind brings on overweight. Proper eating will give nourishment with no attendant fatty tissue piled on in layers. Heavy jowls and a paunch are a visible sign that food supply and body needs do not coincide. Proper food, eaten in moderation, will reduce overweight. A very good means of reducing the amount of food eaten is to chew the food thoroughly. A great majority of the stout are fast eaters. Gulping quantities of food leads a person to The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1926.) E HE take more than he needs. He is very likely to eat much more tifyi cooler and rore sanitary VARNISHES and WA pense. S = 1334 N. Y. Ave. P Navy Deck Paint & Copper Bottom Paint —etc., for protecting and beau- ng all kinds of water craft It Saves Housework @To have floor coverings up and the floors fin- ished and waxed, not only makes Summer homes , but effects a big saving in housecleaning. Compare the ease with which you can ‘“‘do” waxed floors to the trouble of sweep- ing carpets, shaking out rugs, etc.- Waxed floors collect little dust and can be gone over in a jiffy. Reilly Floor Stains, best made, and will enable you to have sightly, sanitary floors with minimum trouble and ex- PRICES SPECIALLY LOW. » HUGH REILLY CO. PAINTS AND GLASS To let. Material for roofing. Used to write on. go in. Newspapers collectively. Son of Hector. Height To immerse and withdraw, Lubricant Minister. City of Holstein, Prussia. imbing plant. oldler on a war Mountain nymph Famous musician. 3irl's nickname. Ascended. Ruined Play upon words. Plural of os vessel. Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet the Best Medi satisfy his appetite unless he takes time to chew his food enough to get the taste and not swallow it whole like an ostrich eats an orange. This habit of swallowing the food in great mouthfuls causes an ov loading of the stomach and a loggy feeling. Those who are inclined to overweight just by nature do not use up much ‘nourishment. Weighted down by a quantity of food tempts the fat man to take his ease. He rests himself. The unused energy supplied by his food turns into fat. His de. fense is to eat in moderation the right kind of food and to chew that food thoroughly. K. B.—Is there food value in olive oi Answer-—Yes, 8. P.—Are fried foods harmful? Answer—Foods which are so fried that the grease has heen absorhed are more than likely to cause digestive disturbance, Readers desiring personal answers to their 0uld send self-addressed stamped Dinah Day. care of The Star. Potato Apples. Mix two cupfuls of hot mashed po- tatoes, two tablespoonfuls of butter, one-third cupful of grated cheese, one- half a teaspoonful of salt, a few grains of cayenne, a dash of grated nutmeg, two tablespoonfuls of thick cream, and the yolks of two eggs. Beat thoroughly. hape like apples, roll in flour, eggs and crumbs. Fry and drain on brown paper. Insert a clove in the stem and blossom end of the apple. — . e Mint Sherbet. Strip from the stems enough leaves of spearmint to make one cup- ful. Pound until thoroughly bruised, add the juice of two lemons, cover, and let stand for half an hour. In the meantime dissolve one pint of sugar in one pint of water and boll for & minutes. Take from the fire and add the strained juice from one orange and the mint mixture. When cold, strain, add one tablespoonful than willof creme de menthe. and freeze. LaH X are chosen from the Phone Main 1703 ‘What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six 1. What are carbohydrates? 2. What kind of food, bulk for bulk, contains the most po- tential energy? 3. Name some foods of which protein is the chief con- stituent. 4. What are the chlef two organs of digestion? 6. What do the enzymes in the stomach do? 6. What is an anti-scorbutic? Those Vital Vitamin During the building of a railrcad in the Amazon jungie, where a camp of American engineers was at work, complaints against the food were con- tinual. o the company in New York that employed them sent the best American canned food and made ar- rangements for the shipment of meat. In the middle of the tropics the men continued to live on meat and pota- toes and white bread, as they did at home, and the more they ate the more often deaths occurred of a mysterious disease. At last some one suggested that they needed more vitamins, and told them to eat wild fruits growing in the jungles. But as these were eaten by monkeys, t00. the men re fused to eat “monkey food.” and con tinued to live on canned or frozen or starchy foods. Finally the graves be came more numerous than the tents, and the project was abandoned, ali hecause intelligent men preferred to die rather than to eat any food to which they weren't accustomed. Now, what do you know about that? Answers to Saturday's Questions. 1. Marl is a limy the bottomis of many ponds, deposited chiefly by the de certain primi tive water plants which contain much lime. incrustation on The green scum on ponds is gen eraily algae, lowly forms of plants. 3. Marsh gas, or methane, is a had smelling inflammable gas given off by decaying plants in bogs and swamps 4." Mosquitoes can be driven from ponds by stocking the ponds with fish pouring oil on the surface. Some marsh nesting birds are bitterns, marsh wrens and red-winged FEATURES., 7T Women Who Have Important Tasks in the Government Service RY ALICE ROGERS HA( Miss J. Beatrice Bowman. One of the finest groups of women in the Government service is to be found in the Navy Nurse Corps. ‘Their normal strength is , but it tradition had heen largely seafaring and her father had been a soldier—a colonel in the Civil War. She was trained at the Medico- Chirurgical Hospital in_Philadelphia. the hospital which is today the schooi of nursing of the granduatae school of medicine of the University of Penn sylvania. Her entrance into public nursing was at the time of the dic Aster in Mississippl in the Spring of 1998, when she worked there with the Red Cross. In 1914 she was temporarily released from the corps to he supervisor of one of the “nurse unit which were sent to Kny nd on the Ned Cross ship in Septembe: When this duty was com pleted she came back to her position of chief nurse, going out 10 head the hospital at Canacao, in the Philippines In 1918 she was assigned to head the naval hospital at Great Lakes. en larged for the war period to 1 400 beds, and here she stayed until 1920. On December 1. 1922 she became super intendent of the corps, the third to hold that position It is no small responsibility. Suh. tion of the Surgeon vy. she is completels activities in the where the Navy These include mot United States tlons in our ject to the dir General of the in charge of all « 44 far flune station nurses ure sent only the hospitals in the but also all the foreign possessions. such as Guam. Honolulu, the Philippines, Samoa. Haiti. Guan- tanamo Bay and the Virgin Islands. It covers a wide range of occupation - seagoing nursing on the two great MISS J. BEATRICE BOWMAN. hospital ships, Relief and Mercy: the Instruction of the 3.500 male hospital seems to he almost impossible to|corpsmen who are used as nurses on keep them up to that because they !the fighting ships, the teaching of na get married too rapidly. Probably.|tive women in the possessions to act however, the real cause hehind this | as nurses among thelr own peopies, heavy casualty list is the requirement |and the special services in laboratory made for entrance into the corps, of |diet kitchen-and tubercular wards. tact, dignity and executive ability Mise Howman has heen responsible At the head of the corps is Miss |for much development of post grad Josephine Reatrice Bowman. whose ate courses for her nurses and for the pervisors whe sgether tional com institution of regional s s divisions of the 1 official titie is superintendent of Na nurses. And if the corps itself is : matter of pride to the Navy the va She isa men hiackbirds. Miss Bowman is the pride of the corps. | mittee on American Red Cross Nure b e. of the advisory committes 6. Some mammals that frequent | Her pervice record is as long as that fing Service, of the afvishes, commliies marshes are beavers and muskrats, |Of the organization itself. as she was | of nurses A (Copyright. 1926.) Out of Kitchen BY FLORENCE DAVIES, For more than a generation very name of Sherry has been syn onymous with delicious food. The will of Louis Sherry. who died the mous restaurateur was worth more recently f: than a million dec ax a kitchen lx revealed the fact that Yet he started ars. the | nefl of the United one of the first 20 appointed in the of tha Amer wake of the rigid examination given | States Veterans' Bureau - the earliest applicants its hegin- | fran Public Health Association. and « ning, in 1905. She came naturaily |the American Assoctation for the Ad Intg the service, hecause her vancement of Seience, TODAY AL AGO S 150 YEAR Story of the U. | BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. America Greets the World. | complete Declaration of Independence was adopted and officially signed It 1 (8L dlilel Giuee ghat Cheibojiaion B ¥ IEAREEE REAA Sy o | A ] President John Hancock and Secreta: this great fortune was not made by | N€w Nation greets the world today.|Thomson. : 5 | No plin has thus far been made the selling of expensive food. It was | The news of its birth is already speed. | N¢ Pl has thus, far Ceen - probably due_to certain 1eal estate |ing throughou States in the hi e B oF ook 5 holdings in New York City, which|of trusted. speedy express riders (Copsright. 1926, greatly increased in value. United States of America,” to use the | o But t A ains at o read dopted by the Conti ut the fact remains that Louis|name already adoy Pianut Battes Mafis: Sherry, who mastered the art of serv nental Congress, bhegins busine thi: | the King of | ing food fit for kings, did once work [ morning. His majesty Cream one-half a cupful of lard A% u humble helper in # kitchen, and | Great Britain, has lost 13 colonies. | with one tablespaonful of p ! that he died a millionaire, and that| Yesterday's session of Congress. as|ior, add one cupful of sugar, and one he began by taking the job of serving | we are today pérmitted to Know. Was | egg heaten. Add ane teaspoonful of food seriously. very much like every other session.|Sanilla and a cupful of water. then Now, while the road from your|®XCePt that the seriousness of thejudd two cupfuis of flour and tw: kitchen and mine does not lead to the | Kréat business in hand was impres flevel teaspoonfuls of baking powder millionaire’s camp, still it is impos. | SIelY veflected in_the countenances| pake in grease! muffin pans. sible to review, thai life of @ man' who | Of the members. Iirst. thers was tre| = T Started as & humble helper and died/| UBual routine business —an_applica: | a millionaire without realizing that "{:;““““”]“fiz“jd“‘:f“_"“l‘“\_‘l‘l’:pl’\" e Tongue Salad. he would never have graduated from Roil a fresh heef tongue for 3 hours. request to Maryvland and Delaware to | his lowly post us & cook’s help } iitpiond 3 IS ot (o ,,,',nf‘m”"“';': Il embody their militia_for the fiving | Skin and let cool in water in which than dogged drudgery to the day's|CeMP and to march them without de-d it was cooked. When cold, slice and e EET) lay to Philadelph Then, as report. | roll. pinning each rall with a tooth e offic al. “Agreeable | pick. Grate some fresh horseradish Bt aikes B i s ed in the official journal. “Agreeable | pick. Gra 2 e i T O e men | to the order of the day. the Congress “ and mix with whipped cream ViR o W 5 iha PiC | rasolved itself into a committee of the [ one spoonful with each roll. Se e v writing poetry than hending | o 10”1, take into futher considera- | on lettuce leaves with potate sal over steaming kettles in our kitchens. hate the drudgery so thoroughly that we would never become 1 seconds for Louis Sherry Sherry doubtless conceived the idea of serving food as well as it could be prepared. He made an art of the busines: * There's something about this pic ture of a kitchen-boy who becomes a millionaire which ought to make the job of running a home kitchen a little less monotonous. “All right,”” we say. as we put the kettle on to boil. “there are peaple in the world who do this job so well that their fame spreads far and wide. It must have some sort of possibilities.” The minute you put any job on that plane. it ceases to be sheer drudgery and becomes a kind of fascinating game. We promise no millions as a reward for this attitude of mind. But there would be greater satisfaction in any work done in that spirit than in the jog-trot gait of dreary necessity. Tn one part of British Africa the first principle of the native dance is that the lady must stand on the gentleman’s feet throughout the dance. The pair sway slowly to and fro to the beats of the music, never, how- ever, moving on the floo | tion the Declaration: the President re- | | sumed the chair. Mr. Harrison report | ed that the commitiee of the wnole | | Congress have agreed to a Declaration | which he delivered. The Declara- tion. being again read, was agreed to | | as follows.” Then it was ordered that the Declara . Egg and Potato Pie. Shell five hard.cooked eggs and cut them in slices, not too thin. Mash a pound of cooked potatoes and mix with a heaping tablespoonful of but tion” be autenticated and printed |ter and two tablespoonfuls of hot and that coples be sent to the g P A semblies. conventions, committees or | CFéAM. Season with salt. pepper And councils of safety, to the commanding {2 Very little nutmeg. With this line f‘{]‘"‘e of the 'I'“mi";‘mal Evore R'}:“‘lhe bottom of a buttered earthenware that it be proclaimed in each of the | gicn ang 7 S i 5 | ats! d place in it a layer of the United States and at the head of the | (liooq eggs. Scatter over some chopped Army | parsl nd cover with a little white Then 12 items of routine, the | last o icl order 1¢ D last OF ovhich was an order to the|suce. Continue aiternate lavers of powder to l;vhn G n—v-m:ll) of North FOt(D, sauices AL A e el o ed! JwTth | titles are used. Let the last layer be a L = | conting of sauce and cover the top b of s . ’ | with mashed potatoes. Smooth this e 0 celetratlon. o e [ over carefully ‘with a wet ko and until this morning was the news il Heat) piteas o iton f N the point of a knife. Brush over with I heaten egg and hake in a_moderatel {heated oven for half an hour. Dec: | rate with parsley spread generally through the city. Dur ing the night the Declaration was | printed for distribution to the select {list_named by Congre: Thus freedom for America come a fact, and although the fact | was actually established on July 2 by | the adoption of the Lee resolution, July | has be- |=——= o Salt-Rising BREAD BARKER'S 4 is the rigntful birthday of Amer | _ Gluten 128 T4 Sy ica, since it was on July 4 that the Whole Wheat 108 The fly makes 1000 stops per day BUT Flit will stop to the fly’s travels. Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of disease-bearin, mosquitoes. 1t is clean, safe and easy to use. Kills All Household Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bu roaches and ants. It searches out the cracks and crevices and breed, and destroys insects and their eggs. Spray Hit’on your gar- STANDARD OIL CO. Flies Mosquitoes Moths : Ants Bed Bugs Roaches uickly put ) Y RSt & enich eatholes. 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