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. Card catalogue vour household be- longings and be sure of knowing where evervthing is. It is not neces- #ary to make a great job of this by THE CARDS USED IN CATALOGU- GG MAY BE FILED IN ANY ARDBOARD BOX IN WHICH THEY FIT. trying to do it all at once. This makes the labor-saving, device more hother than it is worth. The way to get the best results is had by cata- loguing ‘things as they are being put r. This can be done in two ways. the closets and drawers can First, have cards assigned to themselves in the file or, in the second place, the be catalogued under their names. The first is the easier catalogue to use, the latter is the easier to make. It is essentlal to have the file to start with. It can be a fine one, or merely a box the right size for al- phabetical catalogue cards to fit into. When you are cleaning closets or bureau drawers or linen chests, make a note of the number of sheets and pillowcases, towels, etc., the table- cloths, napkins, centerpieces, etc., and jot down the data on the right card. When you put away garments jot down where they are, either in the closet, the bureau drawer, the chest or other container. The amount of hunting that this system saves and articles can BEDTIME STORIE BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. {know each day. the number of minutes it saves also is amazing. What to Catalogue. Of course, it would be foolish to write down where all the things that are in constant use are kept. You You miss them if they are not in their accustomed places. It is the things that are used in seasons, the pleces that match clothing, the thousand and one little odd things that are are so elusive that need this care. I have found, for instance, that keeping such a cat- alogue of articles in chests is invalu- able. You can tell at a glance over the catalogued contents of each, just exactly what it holds. and can get any article laid in any one of them in the quickest time possible. Busy folk need such catalogues of possessions. Partial Cataloguing. Even the partial catalogue is of great help. It f& practically impos sib’e to recall where each thing is immediately it is wanted. (“Yes, I think T put that old shawl in' the box on the top shelf of the upper hall closet” or “it seems to me that that linen traveling case is in with the trunks or in one of the suit cases. 1 know I have it somewhere.” Such remarks are often heard. We all make them, or ones nearly like them, at times—that is, if we do not have a card catalogue. Start the catalogue habit now and notice how much bother, time and energy it will suve you. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice Cereal with Cream Broiled Bacon Graham Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON. Cheese Souffle Lettuce Sandwiches Dutch Apple Cake Tea DINNER. Clear Soup Croutons Fried Ham Baked Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Pear and Pimento Salad Chocolate Bread Pudding, Custard Sauce Black Coffee GRAHAM MUFFINS. One cup graham flour, one- half cup wheat flour, one ta- blespoonful lard, one teaspoon- ful sugar, two teaspoonfuls- baking powder, salt, one egg and about two-thirds cup milk. Bake in muffin tins. DUTCH APPLE CAK Two cups flour, one teaspoon- ful salt, three teaspoonfuls bak- ing powder, one cup milk, two eggs and three tablespoonfuls melted butter or substitute. Mix and sift dry ingredients, Add beaten yolks, butter and milk. Beat well, cut and fold in stifly beaten whites. Spread mixture one-half inch thick on buttered pans. Lay apples, cut into eights, in two rows on top of dough. Sprinkle with sugar, bake in hot oven 30 minutes. Serve with lemon sauce. CREAMED CAULIFLOWER. Soak small head caulifiower in salted water one hour, then place in boiling salted water and cook until tender. Drain and press through sieve. Scald one quart milk with half an onion and a chili pepper and strain. Cook one-third cup flour in onethird cup butter, add flavored milk gradually, stir and cook until thick, season with pepper and salt. add two cups prepared caulifower and one-half a cup of cream and serve at once. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Mr. and Mrs. Stickleback. You who sing a_mother’s praise Consider now a fish's ways. aywing the Gul | Graywing the Gull and Reddy Fox | were sitting, or rather standing, at the edge of a pool on a marsh just lhack of the sand dunes of the s shore. Graywing had just shown | Reddy a little globe-shaped nest at- tached to some grass stems in the water. At least wing sald it was a nest, and Reddy was willing to admit that it looked as if it might be a nest. Rpddy wasn't yet quite o < =] | 1 = | peared through the little round door- way into the nest. The other one seemed to be keeping guard outside. “Why,” demanded Reddy, “dld vou say that Mr. Stickleback is the own- er of the ne: Isn’t it just as much Mrs. Stickleback’s as his?” “No,” declared Graywing, his. It is all his. He bullt it, every bit of it. Mrs. Stickleback didn’t have anything to do about it, and what is more, she won't have any- thing to do about it after she has lald her eggs there. That is Mr. Stickleback’s nest, and he is mighty proud of it. When you hear anybody giving all the credit for bringing up a family to the mother of the family. just vou tell them about Pa Stickleback.’ “What is “it is he called Stickleback }ultimate success for - THE EVENIN SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY Oh! Ain't drandmas nice though? This "'un showed me where the cooky jar was kep’. and the doughnuts, and just said, ‘Hep yerself.’ What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE Tomorrow's planetary aspects are variable, although clear and definite. In the morning they are adverse. In the afternoon they are activelf fav- orable. In the evening they again revert to the adverse stage, but not in so decided a degree as during the early part of the day. The afternoon —from midday until sunset—can be well consecrated to serous effort and work, and the indications point to anything, es- pecially of a constructive nature. that is initiated under such Influences. The balance of the day should be spent in customary work or pastimes, and it will be essential, in order to obtain the greatest measure,of good, to establish poise and maintain equilibrium. Children born tomorrow will, dur- ing infancy, enjoy robust health, and will give evidences of great vigor and strength. They must be taught to regulate their “energies, as there is an indication of possible accident during the ‘teens. This can, pos- sibly, be avoided if they learn to avoid taking chances and not to overtax their physical forces. They will have winsome and attractive dis- .positions and their characters will be easy to mold in the way that may be desired. They will be imitative, rather than original, and will be quick to learn. Their natural in- clinations {ill be for all that pertains to_“‘out-of-door: It tomorrow are not a very are more disposed to theorize than to execute. It is quite difficult for you to make up your mind, and, when any vour birthday you decision is required, it is customary for you to consult others rather than to trust to your own judgment. Your tastes are along literary and artistic | man for whom she has no real affection, to whom she is not enga; lines, and, although versatile, you are whimsical and very much a slave of your moods. You are entertaining and congenial, which is evidenced by the regard in which you are held by your friends. They, however, gen- erally seek you in their lighter mo- mepts and do not often come to you in their troubles or with their dif- ficulties. You are very sincere in your affections, and, unfortunately for your own peace of mind, super- sensitive. Your home is probably at- tractive and happy, as your well srounded affection, and your guileless nature will undoubtedly contribute to such a result. Well known persons born on that date are: Joshua C. Stoddard, in- ventor; James Harlan, lawyer and senator; Stephen P. Nash, lawyer; Charles J. Paine, soldier and yachts. man; John W. Philip, naval August Hecksher, capitalist. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Questions Answered. Here is a list of leaflets which cover most of the problems mothers have to contend with. No doubt the an- swer to yvour own gquestion is here. Pick out the leaflet which covers the subject in which you are interested and send for it, inclosing always a stamped envelope, on which is your name and full address (city and State). You may have: “Pre-Natal Care and Diet of the Nursing Mother," “Constipation,” *‘Feeding and Wean- ing,” “Eczema,” “Layets,” Forcible I"eeding, Infants and Older Children" practical person, but | officer; | 1 i { STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY The Letter- g ngo::;rzm{i%r wo-Cen i = Stamp Most of Us Will Do Anything for Our Families and Friends Except Write—Yet All of Us Delight to Receive Letters. NCERNING letter-writing, our sins are those both of omission and com- mission. Perhaps the greater of these is the sin of omission. At any rate it is the more frequent. It is strange how most of us hate to put pen to paper and what an ordeal we consider writing a letter to be. Rather than do it we will be guilty of the grossest rudeness and unkindness. We will risk losing friends and alienating the affections of those who love us. As long as our friends are within speaking distance of us we'are quick to express our sympathy with their tmisfortunes and our happiness in their good luck. But if we have to wri® a letter of condolence it is another pair of sleeve: We are as silent as the grave, and they might have as many troubles as Job or break the bank at Monte Carlo without getting a line out of us. Indeed, it may be said of most of us that we will do anything for our friends and families except write to them. We will help nurse them when they are sick. We will take care of their children when they go on a trip. We will go miss out our way to haul them around in our cars. We will put ourselves to no end of trouble to help make any of their undertakings a success. We will show our interest and love for them in any manner except by corresponding with them. If they move away where we have to communicate with them by mail that ends it all. In the first spasm of being parted we may nerve ourselves up to the heroic effort of writing a letter or two, but our morale soon breaks down, and we cravenly succumb to our old dread of the ink pot, in which is drowned so many a friendsbip. We salve our conscience hy thinking that we will writg to Mary or John or the Smiths or the Browns tomorrow, but we never do. Not because we are not just as fond of Mary and John and the Smiths and the Browns as ever, and as eager for news of them. hut because we can't get our courage up to writing to them. . If, as the proverb says, “Hell is paved with good intentions,” then the 1and of lost friendships 1s covered with the letters that were never written. It is pitiful to think how much love is lost for the sake of a two-cent postage stamp. It is humorous to think that we will gladly spend hours in serving our friends when they are present, but we will not devote 10 minutes to writing to them when they are absent. And it is strange to think that we so hate to write letters and are so dilatory about writing them when we adore getting letters ourselves and are so appreciative of even a Mne that is sent us on some anniversary or a note of condolence or congratulation, while a long newsy letter when we are away from home makes us feel as if we had been presented with a diamond tiara and fills us with commensurate gratitude. e e . ’I‘Ill; real criminal sinners among thé non-letter writers, however, zre the men who never write to their mothers. There are men not otherwise cruel or hard or callous who do not write to their mothers once a year. never write, Some they are. And strangely enough they do not seem to realize how heartless They are busy, absorbed in their own affairs, and somehow they do not remember that there are lonely old women in dull little villages or on isolated farms, whose chief interest in life is the boys they have sent out into the great world, and that these gray-haired old mothers watch day by day, week by week, with a hopefulness that never dies, for the letters that never come. They would be satisfied with just a line to say that their Tom or Bob was well. They would cherish even a brief dictated note that showed that Tom or Bob still remembered them. But a real letter written by their Tom or Bob telling what he was doing, full of love, warm with memories of his hoyhood, would make them feel like queens. They would read such a letter over and over again. They would brag of it to their, neighbors and they would keep it between the pages of their worn old Bibles until the next one came. Chief among the unforgivable sins that many a man will have to answer for at the judgment bar is the fact that he made his wife write all of h letters to his mother. Somehow, letter-writing seems to be one of the things in which it is difli cult to strike a happy medium. You seem apt to take it too much or leave it entirely alone, and you are either afflicted with pen paralysis or else you are cursed with a flowing fountain pen that never knows when to stop. The sin of commission in handwriting is perpetrated far oftener by women than by men, and especially are women prone to the vice of writing love letters, than which there s no greater folly on earth. D T ET a woman sit down with a fair sheet of paper under her hand. a good pen and unlimited quantities of ink, and the things she will write to a o ged and of whom she knows virtually nothing, makes her guardian angel turn away its face and throw up its job. & The hankering for highfaluting writing, the desire to be sentimental and romantic, is too much for her, and so she pens burning billet-doux which a man shows to his fellows to prove what a sheik he is, which chambermaids read with scoffings and whfch often the girl's father buys back at a high price. There are two letters which should be kept on_ice for 24 hours after they are written. One is the love letter and the other the letter that you write in wrath. Then neither would be mailed and much repentance saved. Another sin of comm| ite doleful letters, letters telling your troubler. They are killjoys that bring unnecessary gloom to those who re. ceive them. Yet [hpre are those whose idea of an interesting letter is to re- count every death, sickness, failure and scandal in the community. Don’t write while you are in a black mood, for your correspondent can- not possibly know that by the time your letter has reached its destination you have cleared up and are as jolly as a sand boy. They say that the art of letter-writing is becoming a lost art. It is a pity, for next to the voice of those we love is the letter that comes straight from the heart. DOROTHY DIX. (Copsright. 1926.) EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is the Best Medicine sradually going back to normal diet should help. Thereafter abstain from | foods which you know disagree. Also bathing with baking soda in the water and no soap should relieve the itching. Use tepid water and about one table- spoonful of soda to a quart. During the day if the rash is bothersome pat- ting the spots with a piece of absorb- ent cotton wet with water and soda is helpful. The bumps will disappear Hives. Indigestion causes much bodi comfort. Tndigestion, like charity, cov- ers a multitude of sins. “And one of the sins which can cover the poor human body Is hives. Hives are an outward sign of inward trouble. They are a symptom of indigestion. Hives are an eruption of the skin consisting of firm round bumps (ke Phelps is in the mood to write, %o vour hours won't he regular “It sounds terribly Interestin { Leiln _said, eagerl “I've always longed , to know what a writer was lige. T wonder If you realize what i vou've done for me and how mammoth mosquito bites) at first pink and then getting white in the center. They itch fearfully. In an acete at- tack of hives the lumpy spots appear as soon as the system is cleared and the attack of indigestion is over. If the attack of hives is accompanied by diarrhoea or vomiting it is best to cail 1928. AUGUST 25, who has abrays heen is fett twithout inexperienced. take a position as i aeith o rich ‘nd beatisu! Leila_Marsh. accustomed to ' idleness money. Because she she is_forced 1o lady's » woman. Mona Kingslen are Riehard, Mona's mushand, and Borry. The ‘son. Rarry persecuies Leiio with his artention and Mona amuses hersell by humitiating the girl. * Richard. who %ias learned long ago'that Mona does not Jove him. begins by pitying ILeila and Ihen ‘discovers that lle cares for her. Rarry finally " comes e conelusion 1hat he must have T his mind to marry her. Dient. she' vefuses Nin scormfully. an later Mona discharges her. During all ihis tine Mona has heen’ Airting with @ woung bachelor. Ronaid Cameron. who i« “infatuated witn her. She has been lgading Kim on because of her avidness for admiration. but at '« Long Isiand house party he fnally persuades her (o Fun away with hini. ' Among the guests i '@ young girl. Fritzie Lung. who. when she discorers Ronny's infdrugtion for Srona. shows her scorn openty. " This hothers Ronny. and on the day " set for the ‘elopement he realizes that he is is in the family o making a ‘mistake. On the way (o the ity there 'is an arcident and Mona is Killed. In the meantime a change has come over Rarry and lie gets a job sell- ing bonds. " Ile and Richard go 1o the country to play qoll ihe same week end Mona goes to Long Isiand. They reach home Sunday might o receive the news of her death. "Atter Ler discharge. Leila Takes a poxition as assistant (o the head of an employment agency. Mary Brandr. ko manages the place. is the one 1who Dlaced Leita wwith ‘the Kingsieys and_is Very much interested in' the girl. She discovers that Leila Toves Richard iing e CHAPTER LI A New Job. One morning shortly after their talk about the Kingsleys, Mary sent for Leila to come to her private office. When Leila appearcd, trim and_effi- clent, in & dark blue dress with Irish lace collar and cuffs, Mary looked her up and down for a long moment. Then she sald abruptly: “Are you ready for another flight?" Lefla -looked puzzled. “Another flight?" “Yes. You want to try your wings, don't you?" “You're going to send me awa: “If it's for your own good, ves. I had a telephone call yesterday from Emerson Phelps. He wants a private retary with unusual alities. ty dollars a week for the right per son and you would live at his home. No menial position this time. You would be treated like one of the fam ily. Do you want the job?" Leila smiled. “You seem to have settled the matter without any advice from me. But do you really think I am good enough?" Mary snorted in a funny little way that she had “You haven't had a chance to ac- quire speed, but You won't need speed in a position of this kind. You'll need tact, patience and intelligence, and you have those three qualities. You know what a writer is, and you'll have to be ready to take dictation whenever much 1 appreciate it all. 1 feel as if T could never thank you enough.” For a moment Mary keen g eves were soft as they rested on Leila's face. Nhe had srown very fond of the girl—so fond that she would miss her.when she was gone. But Leila was making good; she de- served to be pushed ahead, and this Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. PALE HANDS BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. position would be splendid experience for her. | | Dear Ann: Here is a good illustration of the right and wrong collar for too broad shoulders. With only a plain band, the V-shaped neck makes shoulders seem broader. But if a collar is used, one about half as wide as the dis- tance between the neck and shoulders, it.forms a good, narrowing line. Yours for perfect lines, LETITIA. 1926.) (Copsright. “You needn't thank me.” Mary said, abruptly. “As it happens, vou have more than your looks to recommend vou. When you first came to me I couldn’t tell whether you would make good or not. Evervthing was against vou. But you have made good. I'm proud of you, Leila.” The two women looked deep into each other's eves, and then Leila sald, softly, “I'm glad.” There was a silence, and then Mary said, with an abrupt return to her usual brisk efficiency: You'd better go and see Mr. Phelps this morning. T said T thought T had some one who would do. He's ex- pecting vou." Tt was with a very different Yeeling in her heart from the one she had ex perienced when she had first been i terviewed that Lefla boarded a bus for that region of New York known as “Greenwich Village.” Then she had heen frightened and humiliated. <he had a certain feeling of el Mary Brandt's faith in her meant a great deal. Mary never gave praise where pralse was not due, and the few words she had said had filled Leila, with confidence. If Mary believed she could make good as private secvetary for a well known author, then she could. It remained only for Mr. Phelps to enzage her. he found the house she wanted on Fast Tenth street. It was wedged in between two large hrownstone houses and was painted bright red. The door was white and had a shining bLrass knocker. There were window hoxes, and the windows themselves had lead- ed panes. As Leila stood still a mo- ment, looking up at the place, it came to ker suddenly that this was the kind of a house she would love to live in. It looked like a house where peoplo wore happy. There was nothing fash- ionable about it, but it had that rare thing—simple charm. It made her feel, even before she met him, that she would be sure to like Emerron Pheips. | he ran up the steps lehtly and | rang the bell. The door was opened | almost immediately by a smiling-faced colored maid, who ushered her into a sun-filled reception rcom and askmli her to wait. & (Copy 2ht. 1 (Continued in tomorrow’ BMER’S 3128 1ith 1408 N. Y. NQUET oRANGETEA PEKOE. Containing ExtraFancy ORANGE PEKOE TEA from the Finest,Gardens gf INDIA ,nJs CEYLON H<CORMICK & CO, BALTIMORE , MD Salt-Rising BREAD Gluten ‘Whole Wheat FEATURES, REFRESHING TEA There is no drink in the world so cooling and refreshing as iced INDIA TEA » F made correctly, as given below, it thoroughly tones the system and aids diges- tion.” It stimulates and cheers. You can get India Tea nearly eve where. Your Soda Fountain attendant will gladly make it for you ; or you can get India Tea from your dealer and prepare it yourself as follows :— Use an earthenware teapot. Put in one teaspoonful | of tea for each glass of tea. Be sure the water is poured into the teapot the mo- ment it boi Allow to stand for 4 or $ min- utes to infuse. Serve this new relish’ that “Some Puzzling Problems” (hiccoughs, | yrickly heat, dirt eating, cradle-cap, the doctor. A person who eats proper food and Parking With Peggy vapidly and disappear in a day or so. When a person i3 subject to hives the | for inquired Reddy. “Look at him torted Graywing. Fill the glass R hives,” the baby who vomits, lime roper | : Look at his back! How would vou | water, cod liver € | attacks are apt to be frequent and |therefore has a good digestion seldom . | Wil » | 1Ko to bite down right on that back | wee'Sod ver ey S s | Jast longer. But a person should ndt | pays the penalty of a case of hives. | i makes the whole iccl adfir:c:li:‘ 1 of his?” Questions™ (tecthing, thumb sucking, | P¢ Subject to hives. It Is a sure sizn : meal taste i d Reddy looked more closely than he {aniioniiea urine, bed wetting, sit. | that the digestive system fs not func:| R. N. G.-Does cooking spinach 7 of lemon, an had looked before. Right in the mid- | {ing and walking, training in cleanly | LOnINE properly. \cause it to Jose any of its vitamins' bei ter/ pour in the dle of his back two spines that 100k- | habiee perfod of nursing) Y1 Sometimes geiting stung by a nettle| Ans.—Yes. Raw spinach contains = |ed sharp-pointed and as if the & D el or a jelly fish will cause these same |the three vitamins A B C in great | e might hurt stood upright. Just i ental Work. kind of eruptions 1 have described. |degree. Cooking spinach contains A | IN oNEY | front of the back fin was a third, | Mrs. M. B. R. wrtes: “I will be|But wrong eating is generally at the fand B, while canned spinach contains {shorter and smaller. “Oh!" sald |grateful if vou will answer this ques- [bottom of an attack of hives. Some-|only A in slightly less degree. pchI_llll + Add sugar to taste. | Reddy when he saw these. “I guess ition {n Your interesting column. times besides the eruption there is | | T know now why he is called Stickle- | Would it hurt in-any way for a pro- | present diarrhoea or vomiting. Then| M. S. B.—Is cheese digestible? Is it back. 1 guess that any bigger fis): |spective mother to have dental work |the victim knows it's “indigestion.” | good for children? > | that tried to gwallow him would find | done”” | Maybe the attack is severe enough to| Ans—Cheese is a valuable food. be ~. |him rather uncomfortable. Do vou! Answer—Ii is very wise to have |warrant sending for the doctor. ing rich in protein and fat and in the Hlaoy mean to tell me that he really built | dental work done in the first months, | Often the only symptom of indiges- | mineral salts calcium and phospho- - 3 that nest all himself” What makes |us it suves the mother the suffering | tion is the presence of the terribly rous. It is a concentrated food and Try India Tea, either > - 2s RTICK LE) e |1t stick together?” which might be caused by toothache | itchy spots. It sometimes hard to|sometimes discomfort follows the eat 3 MR. AND MRS. STICKLEBACK. | rtainly, he huilt it all himself.” |later on. The dentist should consult | convines people that hives are caused |ing of cheese because too much was h°t_ or cold, for a little ready to believe that it wax the nes; | replied Graywing. “Do you think ‘I | the mother’s own doctor about the ad.| Ly indigestion. “Why I ate just what | taken. It was not well chewed or it while, and you will of a fish, however, for no fish were | Would have told vou so if it wasn't|visability of doing any work which || always eat—it couldn't be indiges-| was eaten at the end of a meal al- diki Ll N o he seen mear i Just as he said (=0? He has some kind of sticky | might demand the taking of gas or |tion Iy Smith, suffering with |ready sufficient. A normal _adult nnk it regularly. o B e G ing 4. “Here | stiff which he uses to hind those |the use of drugs. Long hours in the | hives. It might be that she's suffer-|should find cheese a valuable addition | other drink possesses comes the owner of that nest now. Dits of grass weed and other green !dentist chair ure to be avolded, and |ing from nervous irritability and her|to the diet if used with intelligence. R It is Mr. Stickleback. st “ogecher. Tve | seen o |1 the gentist Is aware of your' con- ' general health must be built A| But it i not good food for young the same delicious fra- ‘ teddy looked down in the water Nany rests of Stickleback's. Some- | ftion he won't insist on long ses. | healthy normal person can negotiate | children. : . ,.,v'.g,‘l.i.:e‘pn.i.:,‘!h_dm Saw o fish com- | times they have one doorway, and |sions. {ordinary food. \When one ge i E el grance and stimulating ing . straight toward that nest. It sometimes they have two. T think| If the mother will see that her |down” sometimes wholesome food w AN, bW uses flushes in | — though harmless — was a very small fish, hardly three- | this one has two diet contains plenty of milk, fresh |disagree. And then the general sys.the face? _ B [ inches long. Reddy would have said Frayw walked around where |fruite. vegetables and whole-grafn | tem must be coaxed back to health. | Ans-—This condition may be due to} [ S =T BNt 1t was a minnow. It lovked to him | he could look across to the buck.|cereals and bread, she will find that , Should hives suddenly appear, the boor clrculation or high blood pres| o 00 808 Cotl i€l OO like a minnow. Then he saw that| Then he returned t where Reddy | her teeth will not be robbed of their | victim by a little act of memory can |Sure. An examination by a competent | Z07058 & 01 0556 DU 3 there was second fish “1 su| was standing Yes.” said he. “this | supply of lime. to furnish the needs | often determine the cause of the |doctor would be necessary to deter- 0 &i pose,” said he. “that one of those Olie hiy iwe door I eyou wantfof the growing babe, and thus her |trouble in the food eaten. The eating | mine the cause. g Wi Ko [ to see # goud father ham] earn some- | teeth won't suffer. of shellfish. pork. sausages. SOMEUMES | Readors desiring prraowal answers to theis hobbed his head. ~Of | thing about futherind. you come over | Long Cooking for Cereals trawberries, sometimes too rich or | avestions should send scii-addressed. stampe: id he. ce are Mr. angd | here eve day for a few davs and | ». too much food may be the cause. | envelope to Dinah Day. care of The Star. ! 3 watch Pa Stickleback. | Mrs. S. E. B—All aluminum cook- | ' %p attack of Tt | fem = — Stickleback. That one goir e el L | Should an attack of hives appear a | ) ) the nest now Mrs ckle - sed to have the | purgative like citrate of magnesia, to; Most men who go to church like properties you mention. If foods are | “ T R cooked over a very low fire, in no mat. | Puzzlicks ter what kind of a kettle, it is un. | | iy likely that they will burn. When they | uzsle-Limerick do it is the fault of the fire and not T of the quality of the cooking utensil. | Who counted his children by —2 thoroughly clear the system, and then | a finished discourse. g But e sure Nasty pests —don’t let one fly, mosquito or roach live in your home 5 minutes. BLACK FLAG kills them. ALL! b Small grained, fine cereals be can s P > x E When the brood —3 cooked on top of the stove satisfac- o i ind of b the home. It’s Funny how little S S {tofily in a shorter time than thes | %‘c{ Fucllglll§;verg s do A'E‘%m Bt ou use I know. He herded the surplus in —5 {can he cooked in a double boiler. In 0 forms—liquid and powder. rug, grocery, hardware and department stores. Powder, 15¢ up. Powder gun, 10c! And the lowest liquid prices the case of vatmeal and whole wheat | and barley. the double holler had het- ter be used. 1. City in Indiana. Halves of scores My mind 15 quite Children INDIA empty of facts. 3 o cdeditnsiaipacicy Drithefeon o you ever saw! . 3 tai Ry, & | ' { r:’nlly dont think Amelence. | Quick Icing. | LOOK ] Rude inclosures, ! When the water is boiling rapidly in the lower part of a double boiler, | place two egg whites, one and one. | half cupfuls of sugar and six table. | mueh at ‘Ln—;‘ I live more esterda Puzzlick” was s0, 1o Keep the average s is easy. When vou've (NOTE— a hard one, normal. today Black Flag LIQUID love 1 ) compl it rou will see why the - Feellngs D o I«MT \as hot on the trail of the | spoonfuls of cold water in the upper P P ora M and acts. {ancient Indianian. Therell be an.|part. Beat with a rofary esg beater ’ b e . - “Puzzlick row, as well as | for abor s, | . i [ bolling all the time. Remove the . | Yesterday's “Puzzlick. | mixture from above the boiling wa- & IA m 8 ter and beat until thick. Add one- ) d | In exerus af Summer dA® ot ways;.. |Balt a toaspoontul of vanilla. This | | recipe makes enough for use as both icing and filling. Sprinkle the top of the cake with chopped nuts afier it has been iced. | #ut does forget | To_our regret The X owed us he never pays, > (Copyright. 1826.) |