Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1926, Page 21

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BY LYDIA NE BARON wm:. M feoel the. ‘When newlywed: btqn the m‘lt ideals in the nterprise of homi'in.kn‘ thelr: 1) d!m of’ Int m‘l’l llRy. !mfi, terest in each other {s so absorbi X @enough. hat they would flout the idea that m\ut bo-daod e rare nhluty w)ull Would ‘ever slacken./ If they know interest. . ‘:'uok o hie ':u'e' » g > newspaper or a o l 7s; if he doks mibt concern himseif ith what attracts her; if he never uoq‘ any pleasant: thing to surprise her, though he may not be heglect: ful, yexactly, he beomes just one of the persons, to consider in the home affalrs. oneyto wor! | us assume,.but ln‘hn apathetic way. h" ;xh’id 'd‘lrtlfi bl WI 1 thfl ouseho! n sewing, in minor detaild or ewen the major af- fairs of the 'home, ‘that she has no time or’ especial u:rllt"l‘: :h:lhnlnflx nt lurprhu or usband, becomes . humd: . Soon each of eomunlnmmp and light each others’ whimsical. or fasci character- istics has waniished, comes ‘an envel Is it not worth giving thought to one another’st lives to .hold fast to that elusi d subtle “something i | that we call mutual interest? - |\ The wife who cam hold her hus- band's Interest is sure of MNis con: ‘tinued attentiens. The hu-hunl ‘who "helds his wite’s erest n oses the loverlike quality that 'Il at firat so engrossing and which never fails to charm a woman. As long as a ‘| husband and l wife unfl;fl. genuy- inely to hold, each .ather's atten they will look forward ‘with. Blanc Mange. 3 ms ON ROAST. Butter slices of \bread, cover breadl with beaten white of one egg, make little hollow in cen- ;:Irku! whlutto put’ the 'holo m‘:‘:'.:f.. ua'“" hake u-'g: oven for few mini mmmnx CAKE. Two cups red raspberries, one cup fiour, one .teaspoon baking' powder, one-half teaspoon salt, one-half cup milk, ‘one egg: m tablespoon melted butter, ‘one- third cup sugar. Mix flour, salt, half, the ‘sugar, milk, egg and butter which has been melted. | Beat until_smooth, add hu.l::: | powder, mix well and the; 3 ragpberries. Pour_into um. pan, sprinkle nder of sugar top, put in modesate oven jand: bake 40 Y 45 mlmnu Sarve warm with milk, cream orisweetened ruvhwry Juice.. THE SAME A’ 'Tlm WHICH T WON PHE! IGAGED GIRL‘S HEART . TQUCH. THE WIIEN $HB I8 .M. D. - S the secret 6f how to keep each other’s Interest afd act on it life will always retain’ a glamour. The roseate hue will unlll 1f_the secret does not find expression, ‘It takes thought and a eonstant studs of situations to hold interest, . The couple lpdure marriage is con- n.the qui vive 1o be interest- If a il (llll to hold the interest jce, or iy he fxils to hold hers they soon bore sone anotheh: Nothing 1§ so disastrous to the con- summation of an engagemen; as to have eithér: person lse in st in the other. And if'§t is of such mo- thu ifpportance: before marriage, is of even greater significance lher“rd‘ A man may be.s he may Iet the wife chopped. ing, pace on lettuce leave: ;00d wage-earner; serve. carry out her Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. vist crowd made its way Broadway to the ;orzmtfll.ml‘l th. N. Y. Makes Its Unanimous. WHI' PLAINS, N. July 9, 1796 q—;r:‘t York at last stands solidly for 'willingly, ‘let [ with her 13 sister States for inde- pendence. | 2 “hen' the Declaration of lndswndeuce was adopted on July 4, New York alone withheld her. ap- proval bedause her delegates had no instructions to assent to a separation from Great Britain. But all is now well, and independence is in strict fact the unanimous choice of the conti- nent, for New York's convention has men wul never be able to raise again. | Our patriot leaders lmend to keep the statue. return ,it as speedily as the' ministerial nuhrl on' our shores, but they vfll on the instalment:plan in the of musket shol Princeton Celebrates. approved the Declaration with- dissenting Vote, ‘and pledged the ves and fortunes-of her patriots in supporting it. Army Hears Declaration. NEW YORK, July 9, 1776.— The Declaration of Independence was read before the: Army of ‘the United States of Americk at 8 o'clock this evening ‘on the common. = The: troops formed & hollow square. Gen. Wi ington, nn hor!emk. took his station within IQMN The Declaration was then gl troops being placed in this nnnsr. th ; the soldiers standing rigidly at Bttention; no demon- stration celebration was possible, | and. the ony was thus a sonie: ‘what solémn ngnu. w8 'the xem doubtiess But ths celebration eame .lates, d New York|: | tonight and inde un;ier & triple v of nuuhm perity’ the United sm-. m ceremony . was o with: greatest decorum. ncy procl Those who have visl will remember the little park between the fort and the city proper, encircled by an irop rail fence and known &s |, the Bowling Green. "It-was here that ped 'his uu of lead with a oom»lulon IF 1d is no m In the evening, the Com my son.” A the hiisband or “\ wi the hen that rules roost.. CORRESP! anmwwvhu T 1N riore {nfluense in: family, a ife?" 'The wite, | In u-u country it fu° ::u tably m.mu.u?'"""'“ it is differemtly o mlh IMII II.MM ve and w] ‘n h-u-.m of the soclal h!howuthbuu—.mmumflntm ullldmrmlnpdbytutothmh\uuu If a duke| | l.hnm thereby a. ley. In the family are Richard Kings- * |ley, and nury tM son, On the first morning: Leila {s summoned to Mona's room. She ma Richard theve and -\ Mona Mmmdu Leila before him, duchess and entitled to walk| ' nuulnmmhtmwmwhombommmhdnl.bunnmhhmontu ;: free rdl!n.d. hlr o memb-r > us, in every community we have families that are content to be rich :“Early to bed and early "'; makes a man heal'y,” weal ’ wise.” But'I notice it's just the K:flll at has to fl: all the ‘nln‘ early. What TomorrowMeans toYou -] in them, and T have o seen women actually push Imn“ nt | sisdom You have not as much <con. as others hsvo in}' Il 'ouuuonnllu ition than the one you now eceupy. self- and deprecate are convinced that work:and merit wiil event , - though unh sécure ad recognition. : “This holds true in some but no harm it and comefol and remain in the station in life to-which it pleased fate to call them before papa made his money. And we have other familles who, with every turn.of the wheel of fartune, have mo: anot Tise | the social Iadder until by the time papa gets his million they are perched upon the very roof of the country club, so to mk. and are elimbers. And it1s Alw-y- mamma who turn the trick. P-ps couldn't. do 1t to) A socially ambitious woman, with plenty of money to spend, as her limit and can fly as h there is absolutely nothi: save hig life has 'qh' e sky family wlth her. But her rung of pmmdu the as she pleases and take her that a socially ambitious man can do to elevate the family if he is married to a woman who has no social gifts whatever, Pml.nn are more adaptable than women are. udly influenced than women are. Perhaps they only follow the m it easier to’'give in to s amazingly true that in m .. Perhaps men are ir wlm than to -great’ majority of Wthohm‘ndmhumermnuhhwmnlwd If the wife is better bred, better thuv.hohlub‘nahum the man marries beneath wife except in the rarest instances. educated and has had more advan she refines and educates asd N.ml.l!. as mo anu tages polishes him, but if goes, he doesn’t raise his ost invarisbly pulls ‘him down:. I have seen—and so have nn—brlllhnt. intellectual men who heardly b Doras who themsel read another book after they married d lves never looked at anything except the birth and nhath notices and the soclety coluthn in the dally "have ssen wives to whom the ley werg married. mu:-"lnhhnulmrry & dull, commonplace hmnndmkchhnunnmdmalnfldn- papers and who wanted to put in every evening at the movies or become narrow and broad-mi generous and eolc and l‘lln as the hard, hiehl nursing, mny-unchmc I have seen a man ‘with the flame of ‘woman and let her put out was. { And I have seen women take a rnulh diamond and wum it until it icintillated. 1 have seen women turn boors into gentlemen.” I have seen women who broadened and humanized men and hrought out all that was good mediocre men into success ‘upon men who could not have achieved it for themselves. But T Ve never séen a man altdr a woma: & hair's breadth, exoe] in the miatter of making a clothes horse of :o:” - Z. Paris finery. and dressing her up 1 have never seen a husband m influence over his wife was sr-x tellectual enough to make her read if she had no inf wmdmrnuilmm;thntum orc mtotnrnhnrlntonm ! r if she was lazy and it in hrlolmfillh uma rarely changes. What she wishes u,uhcm-wm.ndotflu t 1s also far more 1t tha llnp’:v'-.n- zmwnnnmmm i Childten m‘:usmmwhl tather, indeed. They dishonest ) & nken » an immoral father, and 1f ! wmhwmumuhtom’n’t‘rmwu“ uanuuum other h good mother her :nnph their father sets eralded, | . cases, s ever done by judicious hdivlmr ¥ ip, You are faithful and ‘trustworthy in the performance of any duties indicated by others, but fe 1 and M-lu.nt lp your own uuun You have s kind dllmlldon zo ¥ down the Bowllns Green, | tion “Pa, what o bers'?” "A-wlmmc mortality aquns o ‘lhtlndd(ble-lmg fllmlflm Quick Hash. Mum.wmwmmln' 'mnnwovulmlu Chop In one onlon, brown, then stir in a tablespoonful of flour and add gradually & pint of boiling water or milk, - Lastly, stir in your chopped cold meat or chicken and“cold chop- Season. to , allow :‘mm minutes lmrv.:' at 1t is the mother who tetehu her Mndl. mvorlonhwmuu the mother who makes yearning, or to make her that a man should use outa.wu-mn it is. that I-cunxhnhmnd o wite ca For the him to be, but the woman pter. may have a loase iving etk good and noble & CHAPTER XL Ordeal. Directly after luncheon on that first - day, Mona went out. Lella helped her to dress, and succeeded in pleasing her. with the adept manner in which she had arranged her hair, 1 s0_that ‘Mona was in a good humor. + One mother says: “Hot-weather play i m‘m water containing” the in- collection ‘of celluloid animals which children haye under a tree in the yard and they will amuse thém- selves for a'long time, Soap bubblers and bowls of warm’ soapsuds or tubs of water for laundering the dolls’ clothing prom refreshing nmu for the hot weat! bcelm allow my ehfldn hese ‘mn in the back yud ln thelr bathing suits and just before they come in I turn go fine spray of the garden hose on Sam short was so tona of —1— That his taste led him into the —2— Of spending his —38— Near the doors of —4— m when he saw one he would —6-— . Dish made of cheese. 3 Custom. 3. There are uvon of them 'in"a ‘week. 4. Restaurants. 5. Seize; neuter pronoun (NOTE—1t's fortunate that ! habit was an unusual one, as agree when you have placed the fl.‘ht vmu. indicated by the.numbers, in corresponding spaces—otherwise tnnc might be a bit more congested than it is. The answer and another “Puszlick” will be here tomorrow. Yo 's “Puzzlick” An amusing young person from Butte ‘Who mfl"" couldn’t, be mute, Persistent spluttered And stuttered and muttered, (two .| “Tilevery one. else ‘follawed suit. - as the wif -hnnmmnuhmhummhmonpawm the man’s it is far more importan Cleax Soup—Egg Balls. should wite can, t0 a | i ng all en the meat is in balls, add 3 pints of cold water. Cook very slowly for a day. - Strain and scrve in cups badlwith a thin slice of leniop. Balls.- ‘When she was ready for:the strest in a dark blue suit and a small biue hat crushed down over her golden | hair, her beauty was startl the expression in Leila’s eyes need you untll dinner she-said sweetly, “so spend the afternoon as you wish,” lia was in her room about 4 o’clock that afternoon, when Kuwa knocked at her-door and told her that.Mfs. Kingsley wished her to serve tea in the lving room. The news filled her with eonsternation, for she knew that the serving of tea was Kuwa's' job ahd not hers. Besides, Mrs. Kingsley had generously offered her the after- noon off and was now withdrawing her offer, which certainly. was not v, For a mément she hesitated and then she sald to Kuwa: % “Don’t you usually serve tea" The Oriental nodded, and with an inimitable gesture shrugged his shoul- -ders. Tn that moment Leila realized’ that Mona had some reason for mak- ing her do this; some' whim had persuaded ‘her to change the regular |' order of things, and Lelia was afraid. It was one_thing to attend to Mona’s personal wants, but quite an- other to gerve tea when other people ‘were present. Suppose somé one sh knew were present; it was not im- vroblble 1f only she dared refusse to do. it, if only she had the courage to | plead iliness, anything to escape. But she, did not dare refuse; she couidn't risk the chance of losing her position, and it was with a fast beat- ing heart that she changed her-apron and cap for a fresh set and. went downstairs. In the pantry Kuwa was arranging things on an elahorate tea cart. There were plates of wafer-thin sand- i not hel; ‘whi s such a tea cart with just such de. ° liclous things upon it. Looking back, sha eouldn’t help remember noticing what the maid locked like; she was_ just so much backgroind, that was' ’ all. But for some reason she could feeling that today thingw different. It wasn’t that conceited about her looks t she would draw un- necessary attention, but she could not help knowing that for one in her po- sition she was unusual. Then, too, it amused Mona to embarrass hef. she had been deliber- Suppose something . of ‘the same kind ‘happened this after- noon, - Lefla felt. that she would sink through the floor. At last Kuwa was satisfied with the appearance of the cart, and with a little nod stepped back. This was Leila’s signal to wheel the thing into the drawing room, over the miles of polished floor and ' heavy Oriental rugs. She could have walked into that room with perfect poise and en- would she was that . she tire self-possession just a short time ago, but now. she was in ‘a perfect agony of embarrassment and terror because of the strangeness of her po- sition and the fact that she was to enter a drawing room as a servant . for ‘the first time in her life. She started across the hall wheel- ing the cart carefully before her. From the room beyond she could hear the murmur 6f subdued voices, broke: occaslonally by the sound of Mona’ high, sweet laugh. And then at last she had reached the doorway, she was in the room, thé terrible mo- ment had arrived. (Copyright. 1928. (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) Stewed Duck. Cut the duck in pieces the size de- sired. Fry a finely chopped onlon in a tablespoonful of butter gnd add a few sprigs.of parsiey. Put the pleces of duck with this gravy, add water to cover, two cloves and salt and pepper to taste. . Cover closely and simmer until tender. Keep the same amount of water all the time by adding cup- fuls of hot water slightly peppered .’ and salted as the water bolls away. Thicken the gravy with browned flour. A squeeze of lemon juice in the gravy is liked sby many people. Serve garnished with croutons. ICED ~Boil . four’ eggs for 20 minutes, put in_cold_wate, cool put the yolks in a 1 and rub them to.a paste. with one spitspoonful ‘of salt, a pinch of pep- per, one teaspoonful of melted butter, And when ¢ | @ Téw cracker crumbs and moisten ughters purity ‘and her. sons un can get oln of life the easlest ny. of clean or flithy, and on those who go out ffvm(k ility. lntuluunkdodthulorunv'mn {Copyrighi. 1926. DOR( DIX. tapleca in one pint of water over night. Next morning steme enough cherries to ‘make one pint of ‘fruit. Add to -the tapioca the juice of cherries mixed with ont pint of" Let, simmer for about 30 minutes, sugar to make sweet, add the ch ries, and cook 4 minutes longer. on ice'and serve with whipped cream. ‘THE ELITE OF WASHINGTON NE HUNDRED< ... 1 . elaborat The qumt eleg:nc! o _early home furnishing! The snowy whiteness of with the white of one egg, using enough to shape into balls about tha size of a marble. Roll in fiour’ and frylnluu. Roll on cloth to absorb ’thu-myh-mfl;“ln P Scak four tablespoonfuls qf pear|. . Sl Rakook SANE 79l hthme g’uflnmmdm

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