Evening Star Newspaper, September 1, 1926, Page 35

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OMA Producing Supple and Pliant Velvet BY MARY MARSHALL. Certain fashions demand certain fabrics. When prim bouffant frocks are in fashion we may expect stiff (taffetas, organdies, tarletons, alpacas. THIS BLACK VELVET ENSEMBLE POSSESSES A COAT _ALMOST AS LONG AS THE SKIRT. IT IS WITH A HIGH-NECKED OF WHITE _SATIN ED WITH SATIN BUT. N D HELD BY A BLACK VELVET BELT. When closely clinging garments are in fashion then come into prominence voiles, mousselines, chiffons, etc. But sometimes a fabric does not wait for the favorable moment. It changes its very substance in order to gain its way back into popularity. An excellent example of this is velvet. The present silhouette de mands fabrics that are supple. Noth ing at all bulky can be tolerated Even furs must be sleek and flat. Old fashioned velvet could hardly have heen used for the present mode. Even the sort of panne velvet and chiffon velvet that we knew 15 or 20 years ago would have been a little too sub. stantial. So it was that the manu facturers contrived to make velvet that possesses all the richness of old velvet but is at the same time al- most as supple and pliant as geor- gette or silk crepe. There is a "brocaded velvet on a The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1926.) | grown weary N’S PAGE. chiffon foundation and this year we' have transparent velvet. The “back’ of this velvet is as light as chiffon. | But it 's firm and substantia} enough to keep it from sagging or stretching. One of the new velvets shows a solid color on the right side with a color- ful printed design on the back, and the lines and colors of this design show on the right side. i Velvet is used for evening wraps and evening frocks. for formal after- noon frocks. for tailored suits and even for sports attire. Velvet hats have come hack into faver with sur- prising rap:dity and there are many fashion observers who feel assured that the comfortable draped velvet | hat is now superceding the soft felt | untrimmed cloche that remained with | us ‘even after the milliners had! of its presence. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. 7 Melons Hominy with Cream. Baked Sausages. Potato Cakes. Hot Corncake. i cake, Whipped Cream. Coffee. DINNER. Jellied Bouillon. Cold Roast Lamb. Candied Sweet Potatoes. Baked Summer Squash. Stuffed Tomato Salad. Squash Merinque Pie. Coffee. POTATO CAKES. Mashed potatoes left over may be used for this purpose. To one and one-half cups potato add an egg and beat the two together until light. Form into cakes, roll in flour and fry in butter. . PEACH SHORTCAKE, Have sponge cake baked in round tin and cut piece from center, leaving walls an inch thick. Pare and slice peaches (or canned peaches may be used) to fill empty space and mix with sugar to taste. Beat one-half pint cream until stiff. add one- half cup powdered sugar and one-half teaspoon vanilla and pile above peaches. STUFFED TOMATO SALAD. Two medium-sized tomatoes, one-half teaspoon salt, one tea- spoon chopz2d parsley, two let- tuce leay four tablespoons cottage cheese, one-half tea- spoon celery salt and two table- spoons salad dressing. Care- fully peel tomatoes and remove stem and portion of inside, using this for other purposes. Mix cheese with seasonings and fill tomatoes. Arrange on let- tuce leaves with one tablespoon salad dressing on top each.. Serve immediately. Both cheese and tomato should be cold. Across. 1. Chops. 8. Hindu ejaculation. 7. Pertaining to an order of Greek architecture. . Slackening of speed gradually (mu- sical) . A fuel An animal 8. Unit of work. Contradicted Latitude (abbr.). Concerning. Note of the scale. Conjunction Rone. . Steamship (abbr.). Roll of thread on the spindle of a spinning machine. Preposition. . Exclamation. God of Babylon. . Mountain (abbr.) . Proposed international language. . Prefix; two. 2. Note of the scale. Head covering. Like. Male child 7. Ourseives Nickname of a governor. The sun god. Printer's measure. ; Engineering degree | i | i i . Egyptian deity. 2. Time gone by . Root ot a shrub found in Florida. . Upright. . Beast of burden. . Severe. Down. . Longed. . Rough steep rock . Set of tools. Street_(abbr) nswer to Yesterday's Puzzle. L UM D.EL Ew | N { ! 5. Gold (Heraldry). . Doctor's degree. . Within. . Peculiar. . Christmas. Vehicles. Reverential fear. Military aviator. Anctent King of Athens. Inhabitants of Eastern States. Prefix; two. . Morning (abbr.). . Toward. River in Siberia. . A diphthong. . Exist. Hang down. Inscribe. . Behold. . Printer's measure. Devoured. Discerning. Hastened. . Paddlelike implement. . Lot. . Membranous pouch. K n utensil. . Preposition. Company (abbr.). Chopping tool. An opening. Lessons in English_J ' BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused: Use “donate’” when a gift is important, otherwise “give." *He donated a large sum to| the cause “He gave $2 to the, church. Often mispronounced: Only. Pro* nounce the o as in “no,” not un-ly. Often misspelled: Chocslate; no k. Svnonyms: Fascinating, charming, winning, bewitching, enchanting, en- trancing. . Word study Use a word three times and it is yours.” ~Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’'s word Subjugate—to conquer 'by force, sub. due completely. “They were subju- gated fear of punishment.” P SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY What you fink of 'iss? I'm drivin’ Jess and Bess! . Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Shoes. This isn't going to be a talk about what kind of shoes a child should wear. It is to be a plea for shoes that fit. One wonders sometimes what makes children so cross and firritable when they are taken away for a picnic, for a walk, or what noc. numerous feet of small boys. especial- 1y, I wonder they don't all become bandits. Such shoes! Great, big, hulking affairs on the feet of hovs 8 and 9 that would be plenty big enough for tHeir fathers. Huge soles, half an inch thick: bulldog toes, and miles too big for them. Half of this is the fault of the salesmen. Some one has filled them with the idea that children's feet must have plenty of room to grow. But how many active children ever wear their shoes longer than six weeks or two months? And just how long can a chiid’s feet grow in that length of time? Surely not the 2or 3 inches that are allowed at the end of the shoe Every time I buy my small son a pair of shoes I fairly have to fight to get a pair that fits his foot. The salesman is always so sure that they are being fitted too short. Having gone through the period of walking about with a small boy whose (eet are carrying pounds of extra weight, I decided long since that 1 would not buy@ shoe that was obviously too large for him. Set your boy's foot down on the soles of the shoes that some clerks bring yvou and you will find his big toe at least 2 inches from the tip. This throws the bhall of the foot in the wrong place In the shoe and offers no support where it is needed, under the arch. His foot slips around in the manner that is the most fertile encouragement for callouses and blisters. Fit the child's foot. He'll wear out his shoes far sooner than he'll outgrow them and while he wears his shoes he will have comfort and support for his active feet, in- stead of a dead weight of useless leather to be laboriously carried about with him. ‘The problem of the girl's shoes is not so acute, nor is that of the baby. Their shoes are lighter and, besides, girls, even at an early age, are too vain to wear shoes that are too large. It is the ¢mall boy who is imposed upon. The baby's shoes must have sufficient room at the end of his toe to allow for it to lie full length and straight. Crowding his feet into short or too narrow shoes will make for mis- shapen feet and a cross baby. But the exaggerated lengths of most chil- dren’s choes are useless. Their shoes should be bought for today and not for a year from today. They should fit when they are new and not six months later, when they are worn out. Picnic Triaggles. Roll some pastry one-eighth of an inch thick, cut in four-inch squares and lay on a tin sheet or large bak- ing pan. Put a tablespoonful of any good preserves on one corner of the pastry. Moisten the edges with cold water half way round, fold over the pastry #o form a triangle, and press the edges together with a fork. Bake for 15 minutes 1n a hot oven. Pack in a tin or pasteboard box lined with waxed paper. Chopped dates or raisins stirred in jelly or marmalade may be used instead of preserves if desired. If you wish something dif ferent, try adding to chopped pre- served ginger twice as many more walnut meats. Moisten with ginger sirup and use as a filler for these triangles. Fish in Potato Cups. To one cupful of left-over mashed potatoegs add one egg yolk. The potatoes must be hot when the egg is added. This amount will make four cups. Invert four custard cups or jelly glasses and cdver the outside bottom and two inches of the sides with the potato mixture. Smooth over and set away to cool. When ready to use, turn right side up onto a well buttered pan and carefully re- move. RBrush the outsidé with milk or beaten egg before adding the fish. Mak€é a white sauce, and add salt pepper and a little nutmeg and any flaked white fish Fill the potato cups with this mixture and brown lightly in the oven. When serving. garnish with parsiey Fried Eggs and 7App1es, Peel and core two large firm apples, then cut them in slices about a quarter of an inch thick, sprinkle over them salt and pepper, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter In a frying pan, add the apples, try them for two minutes. turning on each side. Break six eggs over the apples, sea- son, and frv for a minute. Then set in the oven for five minutes. Re- move and serve on a hot dish EP the cereAL CHILDREN LOVE Watch them - up. They love PEP. Con- tains _bran. For pep PEP. After gazing at | Women Who ‘Have Important Tasks in Government Service BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt. Probably one of the best known women in the Government service, Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, is one whose life story never grows stale. Success storfes that are an uninter- rupted progression of orderly event each foreseen as a logical step follo ing the one before, are common mate- rial; but a story whose mainspring fs to be found in unusual personal cha: acter and’ great ability is never ordi- | i mary i Mrs. Willebrandt was born in Kan- sas, at Woodside, in Stevens Count: Her people were true pioneers, the two generations before her having moved successively from New York to Illi- and fromiliinois to her own State. Willebrandt herself had the ex- perience, as a child of 4, of going with her father and mother in a “‘covered wagon” to Okluhoma in the great run for land when the territory was open- ed. rupted necause of living on a farm, but her parents gave her much per- sonal attention, and when she went into her first year in a regular grade school, at the age of 13, in Kansas City, she was able to graduate in less than a year. Her high school work was done under similar difficult. such was her determination that she not only finished it. but went through the Tempe, Ari Normal School, and the University of Southern California Law School, graduating with the de- grees of LL. B. and LL. M This is the educational background upon which Mrs. Willebrandt has built one of the most remarkable careers of our time. For some years she taught school. but when her bar examinations were passed she opened a law office in Los Angeles, and for ten years fol- lowed private practice in that cit Part of this time she was assistant Police Court defender, organizing the work for women with James H. Pope, and her record shows the defense of over 2,000 women. Then, in August, 1921, the appoint ment of the second woman to serv as an Assistant United States Atto; ney General was made. From among the woman lawyers of the entire country Mrs. Willebrandt was chosen by President Harding as having the most thorough equipment for that re- sponsibility. She received a reces appointment through Attorney eral Daugherty, the Senate confirming the appointment in September of the same year. Her subsequent work has brought her continually before the public, and it is interesting to summarize the wa fn which these five busy years have PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE || BY WILLIAM Where Little Pollen Blows. Hay fever sufferers, to begin with, fix the blame on the wrong pollen, for it is seldom timothy, and even the other grasses are innocent of the au- tumnal attacks. at any rate. The real culprit in_the majority of cases of au- tumnal “hay" fever is ragweed. Sneeze that one off before you con- demn the hayseed. The specific treatment, either for the purpose of immunizing a subject before the opening of his regular sea- son or relieving or shortening his at- tack after the season is on, consists in the administration of a rapidly as- cending series of doses of an abstract of the pollen by hypodermic injection. The specific pollen is determined by skin tests. Aside from specific treatment and escaping to a resort where the pollen isn't, some patients still obtain con- siderable relief by taking internally throughout the season. or for a week or two before the opening of the cele- bration, one or two doses of calcium chloride daily. Ten grdins may be considered a moderate dose, and it is best taken either in a glassful of water or chased down with a large drink of water, within the hour after food. Sometimes this upsets the stomach and must be discontinued. A few sufferers have reported en- thusiastically on boric’ acid solution— as much boric acid as freshly boiled water will dissolve—used freely and several times daily as a mouth wash, throat gargle and nose spray. agree. ably warmed for use in the nose. This they practice throughout the season. Very dilute solutions of adrenalin still hold a high place in the esteem of confirmed sufferers. About a tea- spoonful of the standard 1-to-1,000 so- lution may be mixed with 4 to 8 ounces of normal salt solution (which is about a teaspoonful of table salt dissolved in a pint of boiled water) and used three or four times a day as a nasal spray or as drops for the eves. This affords only symptomatic relief. The game®of fleeing to_resorts dur- ing the season is a bet. You bet your favorite pollen doesn't prevail about the resort you select. Among the places where relief may be sought are Santa_Cruz, Del Monte, Santa Bar- bara, Lake Tahoe, in California: Silver Plume, in Colorado: the southern coast of Florida: Brasstown, Bald Mountain, in Georgia; Rangeley Lakes, Kineo. on Moosehead Lake, orthern Michi- gan. relatively free from hay fever Queenis Saatn’s Famous Dancing Feet “I never have had a corn noranaccident. Butifever either comes—I want pro- tection. That’s why I al- ways carry Blue=jay and an accident policy.” So writes winsome Queenie Smith, the star of the musical comedy, **Tip- Toes.” Good old Bluesjay! For 26 been vanquishing corns . count of conquered toe<alluses runs into the hundreds of millions. A cool'and velvety cushion fits over the corn and ends the pain at once. Usually one. plaster routs the corn. But even an “old offender™ will seldom require more than a second Blue=jay plaster . . . Atall drug stores. Blue-jay THE SAFE AND GENTLE WAY TO END A CORN v years it has The Her education was much inter- | »| tions and for the Federal Reformatory | i been filled. Admitt.d to practice be- fore the Supreme (ourt just after her appointment, she was assigned to charge ¢f a division of the Depart- ment of Justice, including supervision of all litigation arising in the 88 Fed- eral districts of the United States and Mrs. Mabel W. Willebrandt. Copyright by Harris & Ewing the island possessions, and all quee- tions of policy, appeals and direc- tions to the ited States attorneys under all laws pertaining to tax cases (income, estate, admissions, dues, ex- cise), prohibition, Indian liquor law prisons and requests from the Presi dent or the cabinet for opinions on the interpretation of any of these laws. Several times, in the absence of th Attorney General, she has been called | upon to head the department for the period. Her most notable work,, of course, | has been in prohibition, but she has been one of the prime movers also in aging the fight for better jail condi ) SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Misunderstood Mary. Mary says nobody understands her or sympathizes with her unfortunate Iot. “People say I am fickle,”” she com- plains. “They accuse me of being inconstant, unreliable and & whole lot of other dreadful things. I'm not at all. I'm just a mormal girl who fall” in love very easil: Mary has a dangerous way of kid- ding herself—if she goes on with it, she’ll never change her habits—which are sadly in need of a change. She says she's a normal girl who falls in love very easily. She's really a thoroughly maiden who hasn't enough stability to stick to ear she was frantically in love with Alan. And for the space of six months she was loyal and true to him as any one could wish. | In all those six months she never looked at any one else, never thought of loving another—simply lived for the time when they could be mar- ried. She's very proud of that record. She thinks she deserves a lot of credit for it. And when suddenly she met Bob and found him to be her ideal, she was _indignant and annoved that Alan’s friends and her own should condemn her so bitterly for her fick- leness. She explained to every one that she'd been loyal to Alan while she loved him—but that her greater love for Bob made it impossible for her to continue loyalty to the first sweet- heart. She also explained carefully that she had an extraordinary tem- | perament—couldn't _help her stormy likes and dislikes. She proceeded to be just as madly in love with Bob as she had been with A.—and to break his heart just as completely at the end of four morths. Never a doubt or fear crossed her mind during the Bob episode. She promisel him endless devotion, eter- nal love, etc. She was shocked and any one to find herself out &rieved ith Bob and infatuated with of love Leslie. eople simply don't understand she wailed. “I can't help my v for falling in love. I'm not like other girls. A new man seems to take my mind off an old one, no matter how attractive the latter may be. 1 shouldn't be condemned. I didn’t mean to hurt Bob. I thought for Women. It will be remembered | that she gave the opinion that liquor could not be carried on ships flying the American flag on the high seas: and that it was she who personally super- vised the two-vear bootleggers’ ring in Savannah. BRADY, M. D. Duluth, Minn.; western Nebraska; At- lantic City and other coast resorts of New Jersey; Albuquerque, Sulphur Springs and East Las Veges, N. Mex.: Adirondacks, Thousand Islands, Old Forge, N. Y.; Eagles Newt, Glen Ayre, Mount Mitchell, in the Black Moun- : resorts in the Balsam Range and Smoky Mountains in North Caro- lina: Devils Lake, N. Dak.; Pocono Mountains and the hills near Bradford. P esars Head, in Greenville v. S. C.; Hot Springs, S. Dak. the boat voyage over the Great Lake: sea voyages: Roan Mountain, Tenn.; Brighton and Ogden, Utah: Green Mountains, Vt.; western part of Wash- ington State; Terra Alta and Webster Springs, W. Va.: Two Rivers, Wis., situated on a peninsula extending 7 miles into Lake Michigan: Banff, Cana- dian Rockles, and Nova Scotla. Hay fever victims contemplating the placing of a bet on a resort should beware of the roseate blandishments of chambers of commerce, city boost- ers, resort promoters and fellow suffer- ers. They should write rather to the Public Health Bureau of the Treasury Department, Washington, D. C., for a pamphlet about hay fever and resorts. s (Copyright. 1928.) Molasses Corn Meal Pudding. Pour 4 cupfuls of scalded milk over 1-3 cupful of corn meal and cook in a double boiler for 20 minutes, add 14 cupful of molasses, 1 tablespoonful of butter or chopped suet, 1 teaspoon- ful of salt, 1 teaspoonful either of ground ginger or cinnamon, % cup- ful of seeded raisins and 1 pint of cold milk into which has been beaten the yolks of 2 eggs. Pour into a greased dish. Bake slowly for two hours. It should have considerable whey when baked. This whey is used as a sauce when serving the pudding, which may be eaten hot or cold. Eggs in Peppers. Parboil some green peppers for five minutes. Saute 1 chopped onion in 1 cupful of butter, and season with salt and Worcestershire sauce. Put a tablespoonful of this mixture in each pepper and place in a but- tered baking dish. Break an egg in each mold over the mixture, cover with the buttered crumbs and bake for 15 minutes. Serve on toast with Hollandaise sauce. ..how they're kept ree from corns.. work on the alleged | I I loved him. Unless Mary takes a day off and tells herself the cold truth, she will g0 on like this year after vear, with never a chance pf experiencing a real sting love. When a girl realizes that she is fickle she can take steps to curb that fickleness—she can save her men from hurt by not promising them eternal devotion until she’s sure that her changeable heart has settled on them forever. But when a girl like Mary deludes herself into thinking that sh im- ply an extraordinary person with a different temperament from that of any one else in the world she may never get over her flitting from one man to the other—and she may never win true happines: Don't get into the habit of making excuses for yourself—feeling that you're misunderstood and maligned. If every one is uniting against you, there must be some good reason for it. Once you've told yourself the true reason you can go to work to cure it. (Covsright. 1926.) Send for Minn's Fashion Hints, _Inck it addressed. stamped envelope for repiy. HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. “No Man's Land.” During the great war we heard much of “No Man's Land,” and the term being new to many of us, it was popularly regarded as having origi- nated in that emergency. The fact is, however, that the term has long been used to designate land or terri- tory of questionable ownership. The “No Man's Land” of barbed wire and bayonets and shrapnel, on both sides of which opposing armies crouched, i8 no more. But off the coast of Massachusetts is an uninhab- ited island that has for many years been called “No Man's Land.” And in South Australia there is a territory of 80,000 square miles whose indefinite ownership long ago earned for it this appellation. The most interesting “No Man's Land" was a short time ago within our very midst. This was a strip of land on the boundary between Penn- sylvania and Delaware. Officially it was declared to belong to Pennsyl- vania, but some of the inhabitants claimed that it was not part of either State, and they neither voted nor paid taxes. But for the small part taken from known as “No Man's Land.” ceded to the country by Texas. It was W e W W e N N e e SV W Sl e e W Nl Wash With It This W W e W W W § i 5 As Little as i seen a worse case.” Indian Territory, Oklahoma used to be | where the sun will do it most good! day weariness the first time you wash with— in Your Own Home We will make your week’s wash disappear and re- appear as completely cleansed clothes during a de- lightful demonstration. No obligation to you—just a test of the best. Only with your own wash—in your own home—can you really appreciate Sunnysuds, its simple, sure and saving operation! Main Ten Thou- sand is the number that summons Sunnysuds to take the WORK out of wash-day for you. Call It Now! For FREE Trial —Phone Today—Now The Potomac Electric Appliance Company This Company Stands Behind Every Appliance It Sells . 14th and C Street Northwest FEATURES THE MILLION DOLLAR WIFE By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. “He's sleeping,” she sald smilingly, in her, and not wanting to seem too Betty Ames, a nurse, is given & pneumonia case at St. Martin's Hospital. The patient’s name is James Cornell. CHAPTER IIL Crisis. Betty grew to resent the daytime, because it was then that Miss Ander- son, the day nurse, took charge. Miss Anderson was competent and efficient, but Betty wanted no one else to have anything to do with the patient. She would have given up every hour in the 24 if she had been permitted to do s0. But she needed her strength. Night nursing was enervating, and because she wanted to bring her best to James Cornell she forced herself to sleep a certain part of every day. When she appeared at 7 o'clock each evening the two girls would chat professionally. Miss Anderson would present her chart and they would look it over, and each time Betty would shake her head, while a sick de- pression settled down over her. It didn’t seem possible that any one with such a persistently high fever could live. His heart was weaker, too, and Dr. Roberts had brought two little ampules filled with a thick amber-colored liquid. To be used in an emergency, in case the patient had a sinking spell, he had explained. Betty knew what the ampuleg con- tained—camphor in oll, a- powerful heart stimulant. She lived in deadl fear of having to use it. L But although she was afraid, she never let Miss Anderson suspect it. Miss Anderson would say: “He can't pull through. I've never And Betty would grit her teeth and set her firm little chin. “I don't agree with you. ing to get well." Miss Anderson would glance at her curiously. She was a placid blond type, extremely capable where her work was concerned, but’with little emotion in her make-up. Betty was slight and dark and vivid. She had greenish-blue eyes and dark, thick lashes. Her mouth was fulllipped and tender over a softly cloven chin. She despised people of Miss Ander- son’'s temperament. Miss Anderson would open her eyes in amazement if she could know of Betty's attitude to- ward the patient, the feeling she had of a personal bond between them, the determination to pull him through this fllness if it were the last thing she ever did. . There came a night when in bend- ing over the bed Betty felt that some change was imminent. The patient scarcely seemed to breathe, and when she reached for his pulse she found it fluttering weakly. With fingers that were not quite steady, she sterilized her heedle in carbolic. Then she broke one of the ampules and drew the He's go- consclous of the elation surging up personally interested. syringe. A moment later she had given the hypodermic. The fluttering pulse grew stronger instantly, the heartbeats were fuller and more regular. With a sigh of re- lief, she sponged off the man's faee with coo’ water and readjusted the fce-pack. She was almosst certain that the crisis was at hand, and she was afraid. If his heart could- starid the strain when his fever dropped, he would pull through. But couMd {9 That was the question. a All through the long sight she hung over him doing what she could to make things more comfoftable for him, and at 4 o'clock, when she took his temperature, the fever had dropped a degree. At 5 it had gone down still another point, and when she took his pulse it still beat with a fair amount of regularity. . At 7, when Miss Anderson made her appearance, Betty was jubilant. In spite of her long, weary vigil, she was vivid, radiant. “He's sleeping,” she said smilingly. conscious of the elation surging up her and not wanting to seem t00.ps! sonally interested. “His fever hég gone down 102, and his pulse i# fairly steady. 5 Anderson smiled placidiy; You've worked hard over thig case, Miss Ames. It must be a great satisfaction to you.” N Satisfaction! The word was tame, Betty's heart was singing joyfully. He was going to get well! Andt night; when she came on duty, haps he would recognize her speak! (Covyrisht. 1926.) (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) Corn and Rye Gems. 2 Pour one-half a cupful of boiling ‘water over one cupful of corn meal and let stand for 10 minutes. ~Sift one-fourth teaspoonful of baking soda into onefourth cupful of molasses and stir until it foams. Add this te the meal and stir in one cupful each of whole wheat and rye flour, mixed thoroughly with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one teaspoonful of salt, alternating with one cupful of milk. Add onefourth cupful of raisins rolled in a little flour and two tablespoonfuls of shortening melted. Mix well. Bake in muffin pans for half an hour in a moderate oven. This recipe will make 18 gems. AR T Beef Croquettes. Chop some cooked beef fine.. T each cupful add one-half a cupful of cold botled rice, one-fourth cupful of mashed potato and the beaten white of one egg. Season highly. Shape into oblong rolls, dip in the bea‘s: egg yolk, roll in fine cracker crumas thick, amber.colored fluld into the e A AU SNl LA S U Sl S S A Sl A S N S A R 1 N T See the LAST of Wash-Day Work for You! BE the first on your street to have the week’s washingfout on the line You’ll E] LT AT I, 0TS 05 G g v i l Let This September First ‘SunnYsuds Electric Washer and Wringer Week FREE PAYMENT * ! ! & and fry in deep fat to a rich brown. see the last of wash- R RTER RAPFFARR R R R '1“# RAARER ‘K*H?‘&‘M’r?‘ Less than 25c a month is the cost of - current consumed by Sunnysuds.* ; BT, And only $5.00 monthly with your light bills provide the most pleasing terms! el iR Based on figures compiled by a nation-urde survey of wash- ing machines and their electri- . cal_operating ‘cost. ey Main Ten Thousand

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