Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1926, Page 24

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WOMA Mannish Decoration for Boy’s Room - The ship with its shimmering shadow & above the sky line, ca The Lovs of deserve have their rooms yrated as e the family One gre not more universi to find sufficiently thousand w makin rooms dainty to one wiy o them mannish and attrac the help of such mothers as are puz- #ling how to accomplish the result T am giving some hints today. For instance, few lads are not fond of the water. Almost all of them delight in hoat » these crafts nstitute motitg for one scheme. They are sailing boats, little ship so small that ther michi he giv masts by the And f vising to on’ the now tha is not roush, b the lines . shadows sugse U hizh to e of the girls of the n why it is bed- kin For ¥s of w shimm the wate cause of which waves applion for I the moon: worked <hould also mast and sail a good size annisi honts cin which hoat, the motit outline The a0 for Cushio This same idew can b varfous needlewori fors with the same strons T'he color schen can b any preferred tones peacock biue. whict green-blue shade « rried ou bt alwa wrneteristics varied to suit A sota pillow of unlike The Duii;‘ Cross-Word Puzzle Cony BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. 1 be developed in s wtively dec- | N’S PAGE. " THE EVENING SUB ROSA BY MIMI | Getting Ahead. | It's a subject that has to be dealt with at I t once every two months, because every day the mail brings more news from the determined | maidens who are bent on getting ahead. And all those letters reveal{ |such a pitiable lack of happiness— |such grim effort with so very little | reward for it. When a girl writes, telling me she's going to get some- | not going to marry the | n boy whom she falls in e going to stop at where—sh, | first hometow | love with—nor is | silly good times like picnics and the ay night movies—then 1 know in for a lot of disappointments, a great deal of work and very little to | show for it at the end of the long | grind. The get-ahead girl hasn't a bit of | time to enjoy herself—she doesn't | relax and enjoy just a simple evening | with a crowd of young people. | | got her eyes fixed on the stars, and | she knows it would ruin her chances | if she once got in the habit of a cepting the simple pleasures of life. | Maybe a nice brown-eyed boy comes | along who wants to see her occasion- {ally, has plans for the ntovies and one | or two quiet evenings a week. Well, she might have a darn good time with | {him. She knows that, but she feels she can’t afford the time It would take to see him. | It's far more important to her great | career that she be seen out in the low- r of the town’s big bad man, Just back from college and She doesn't like Joe aw- see her with him will know she's a_su { wealthier men may take her ventually she will land where right in the upper circle. he passes up the nice brown- { boy and determinedly goes about | Joe, who annoys her in I | but'who is quite valuable as an adver- | tisement. | | At a dance she and_al) | she wer ,umpkin- | ing little shadow | full at Rut she fc slung r: Joe Da | very up, and he be- h silhouetted against the moon, ral forms of needlework. fairly popular. 4 normal pleasure - X sorself to the | dance. ¥ too wor big-timers ntion. The 1t ve a black 2 linst a deep orange colored moon of appliquy | should also be black. e can't, you see. . fear the really ds. her enough a 1 ship mo u or a table i | ign done | Over her shoulder she watches anx- | {in flat colors would be decorative, The | iously for some signs of approval from ends could be of plain wood such as | the upper ten. With this ohsession can be bought for 10 cents sometime, | of getting ahead, she hasn't & chance | with the ships done in flat tones of of enjoying hersell as a girl should. | paint. Or the ends can be of painted | She deliberately cuts herself off fmm; [ tin. “Metal ends, covered with cloth, | which are the portion | | have the design appliqued or em- by allowing her ambition | broidered on the fabric in outline [to ruin her happiness. | stitch. | Concentration on a great alm may | pine it {help vou attain your object some day Pine Tree Motifs. | ZDULIf it's foo severe & concentration A pine tree motif can be wiade easily | it will let you out of all the fun. 1 several sizes to use in the room of | 1f the get-uhead girl at 25 finds her- 1 oy who cares more for the country | self married to an eligible bachelor in [ than the water. Cut o folded piece of | the proper circles, she has still missed paper from biase o tip of one corner, [all the fun that should have been hers <0 that when unfolde iangle | in the precious early twenties. not equitatera t le. |t And if--as more often happens—she | Cut 2 strip of page h | fails in ler game of landing where she | to form the trunk wants will have sacrificed | tree you : I ciior veutkul e Wt of the b Tiie - short Witi een cloti carfs and Book A row of the fs could edge n rf. Book ends with the d | i Vi never ¥ lad to alized. nlts many <hip. Be diffeyve it i sure when tree for ha ders of the d fo make trees ship upright. Ship Design Free Those who wish the ship de have it free by sending Aressed and stamped envelop the request. Direct care o ising. eithe What Tomorrow Means to You ings that the im0 the M BY MARY BLAKE. row upward aspects ave | Toward the emotions | cellent | for n Tomorrow’s planetary exceedingly favorable. they encou more than effo It is an e and a very oceasion launching any the details of wh fully planned beforel be e determi resourcefu propiti ution seli-ad b5 to me 07 2 auspicious new undertakin h huve been nd. There v e and It will also prove to for the putting into: drastic changes or he Across. Annoy Type of defense at luw Adieu Revolving part reelk istter. Go to the bottom. Satistac F'amous Act. Yondles. Stberfan River 1= Capital of Azores. 1 ~ompanted Regions Horse. efilx meaning again. rhat man Numerous. State on the Mississipp! (abbdr) Active agency. Man's nickname Wanton revelry. Comparative suffix Was enamoured of Obliterate Dally occurrences. To form words nElsh <cho Down. ip of we or puhlication. o tocgl sloth Narrow wven fabric Prepa The t ning is peculi and | to lovers. Those who fuiled to declare the wuld take advantage of the responsive utmosphere that will sur-| round them. ° 5 Children born tomorrow will duri infancy display great amount of physi siliency, and although they may suffer from variety of allments | and they probably will—they \\'ill: always come “smilin’ through.” The signs indicate that they will attain vigorous and robust maturity. In d position they will In their early years be winsome and attractive, and as the vears roll by these fundamental char- acteristics will develop into an attrac tive and a magnetic personality. They will be amenable and not difficult to manage. Studios and always anx- foux to excel in everything that they undertake. More than average suc- | cess is in store for them. It tomorrow is your birthday anni- versary, you love deeply, work ener- getlcally and play enthusiastically. | Everything that comes your way is | tackied with a spirit of zealousness | that bespeaks successful accomplish- ment. You are intense and put your whole energy into whatever occuples | your mind. Rather as a result of this | you are a poor loser, as you always feel that you have done your utmost, and that this in itself should assure | victory. You are disposed to be proud, somewhat reserved and not a | “good mixer,” as you are ultra-careful about your friends and those with whom you assoclate. Your ideals, not always practical, are very high, and | you never weary of trying to attain them. It your mate s born under Feminine suffix. | your own sign, between September 24 Noah's boat. | and October 23, your home life prom- Behold. | 1ses to be very happy. Pronoun. Well known persons born on that Worn on the foot. | date are Alexander T. Stewart, mer- Annoys. | chant; Lyman Trumbull, Senator; Unit of germ plasm. | George W. Cable, author; Helene Mod- Negative. | jeska, actress; Alvina Valleria, singer, One empowered to and William “Luther Sivert, general, oath. . Struck with missiles. (Covyright. 1826.) Center of operations | Exciamatio MOTHERS ' Exclamation AND THEIR CHILDREN. administer Conjunction Preflx meaning again. Old English (abbr.). Point of the compass. Man's nickname. A whitish limestons. Genus of plants. Title of address (abbr.). King of Bashan. | Bird's home. | Woody plant. : | No Lost Buttons. Minced form of “God’s.’ Tree. A State (abbr.). Spanish definite article. Means of transportation (abbr.). The three-toed sloth. Lessons in English | BY W. L. GORDON. | i | Words often misusedi—Don't con {fuse “prophesy” and ‘“prophecy.’ ! “Prophesy “prophecy” is | the noun. - Often mispronounced—aAbstemious. the “e” as in “me,"” not as Often misspelled—Bluing. 2 No “¢’ after “u.” T have a little bright colored paste- | Synonyms — Abbreviate, shorten, | board box with a slot in it which I abridge, limit, reduce, curtall, con-|keep in the lowest sewing machine | drawer. We call this the ‘“button —“Use & word three |bank” and whenever a button comes times and it 18 yours.” Let us increase |loose on a garment the children are| our vocabulary by mastering one word | taught to put it in this racepuble‘ each day. Today's word, “Impera-|instead of laying it down just any- tively"”: peremptorily. decisively. “He | where. ke to her imperatively | unique, individual, interesting, a dis | and emphasize that. STAR, WASHINGTON. Strut Your Own Stufy ! DorothyDix “Don’t Ape the Others, Girls; You'll Lose Out If D. C.. MONDAY, ocC Advises Against Imitations You Do—Stress Your Own Type of Charms And Learn to Be Yourself.” THE newspapers are telling the sad, It appears that the lady in question had picture actress who “reduced.”. sad story of the tragedy of a motion a feather-bed figure and a jolly round face like a full moon and whichever way you looked at her she was billows and billows of fat. Came a day, as they say on the screen, when she cast a dispraising eye on her own curves, and determined to be no longer a stylish stout but a lean | So she starved, and ran, and walked, and rolled, and | and_slithy vamp. tumbled, and was massaged and steamed and beat to a pulp until through much suffering she became a mere living skeleton. Proudly she presented herself to her director, feeling that she could | but, to her surprise and consternation, ! demand 2 million a week as a salary she found that nobody wanted her at filled a big place, literally and figurati with lines lesson in this story for all women, and Strut your own stuff! Don't be copy-cats. Don't wear Jjust because it happens to be fa little airs and graces and mannerism best in and,wear it. Study your: In a word, strut Very few women have intelligenc to standardize themselves and to be a pod, with the result that they throw away the most alluring charm that any , and that is what we call “personalit | human being can possibly ha inct her face she was merely hionable. As a fat woman she had little world. She had been But just as a lanky woman ny price. vely, in he ype. T one in the crowd, with nothing about | She's | her to distinguish her from the femininity that comes by the bolt. There is it is this: omething that doesn’t suit your style Don't imitate some other woman's Be yourself. Find out what you look 1f and ascertain what your strong point is your own stuff. enough to do this. Most of them try much like other women as peas in a . 'AKE as a flagrant example of this the mania that women of every age have for appearing as flappe: and class, Now, the flapper is all right in her own age Nobody will deny the charm of the little, thin, bobbed-haired, addle- pated girl of 18 who jumps around from one thing to another and is always on the go, who babbles of her crushes and her dates, and who hasn’t two rea thoughts to rub together in her head. She is amusing and entertaining, just as a playful kitten crabs the flapper’; - | Wants a girl of that age to be settled or wise. But the woma act, as vaudevillians s .. | She doesn’t make herself look younger. | wears clothes that belong to her daughter or her granddaughter. . merely makes herself ridiculo She exaggerates her e when she | TOBER 11, 1926, NO ThanwS BiLi: (LU JUST WAL AROUND Tug COUR' AND WATCH You FecLows PLAY- BerT FEATUR “Is Murder, at Times, Really Justifiable?” ) A-HA-4AnA You CERTAWLY | ToPPED THAT \_owe BiLt ¢ S HANALA ) ES —By BRIGG A (.'H HA HAHA HA Yeu'tL wEvER GET N ThAT Bact ouT | L oF Tuere omie Bit ma " Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. The fool questions that 18 asks are deliciously naive, but they are ignorant stupidity on the lips of 48. simpers and talks about what her be: _ Yet 50 is not a more unattractiv middle age is better looking and more fa Many a woman who was into a gorgeous rose. a hard, tight, insignificant little bud bloss 0 ‘We smile when the schoolgirl chatters to us about her sweeties, but we turn away in disgust when the elderly woman bridles and young man said about her eyes. e age than 20, and many a woman at inating than she ever was before Sometimes a m crown. Re ng, tri her interesting. Rubbing against the her tact and understanding and sym million times more charming than throws all of this into discard when er hody fills out; nondeseript hai veling, experience cultivate a woman’ mind and make world wears off her shyness and gives athy, so that in her maturity she is he was in her callow girlhood, but she he tries to understudy the flapper. Her cue is to strut her own stuff, to be the beautiful, graceful. poised, middle-nged woman - the woman who woman who knows the hur with a thousand strings. After all, not many people res 1y them ripe and mellow. MANY glrls fail to get married hecause they have not thelr stuff. There is the domest the men pass her over for the The poor little domestic girl limps g an heart and who can play upon i along a bad tenth, ele has lived and thought and learned: the as upon a harp like green peaches. Most of us prefer ic girl who wa rls who go on wild parties with them. enth or twelfth in this mad race and wails that she cannot keep up with her sisters of the flying feet. Of course, she can’t, and she is Her play silk stockings when she has company. ®ets a_chance, r no matter what kind of gir home-niaker for his wife, and any girl idewa that she is domesti Poor girls who ing that they better off than th admires a frock that it is French dealer they know their own clever ting cheap litt What they should do is to strut their things cost and how skillful they they are at finding har, ns like to marry but who feminine finery in dey I pass this fdea on to you, girls, Amplify it of yourself. Secut your own stuff. o e ashamed of their poverty make the mi: are. when in reality they have made thei and they cost almost nothing. silly to try | s to slug the first eligible man that comes her way with one of | - an empty am- | her own inimitable cakes or ples that is far better than mother ever made | Let her put the loud pedal on what a home body she is. Let her darn I Let her feed every man at whom she and it won’t be long until she will be ringing her wedding bell 1 man play around with he wants i capture him who can sell him the ke of pretend They remark casually when a man le import obtained for $50 from a little things with their stuff and hoast ahout how little are with their needles and what sleuths for the world is full of young men who would re kept from doing it by the prices they see marked on ment store wi indows. Apply it. Make the most DOROTHY DIX. ¥right, 1926.) EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day's Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food Is the Best Medicine The Pellet Age. We have had the Victorian age, the Paleozoic age, besides lots of other ages or eras. There has heen founded in France the Marcelin Berthelot Institute and the object of this nstitute is to create synthetic food condensed into pills or pellets. Three times a day we can take a pellet. Result: Time consumed 30 seconds, complete bodily nourish- ment, no indigestion, no gluttony. It ever these sclentists should get this theory of food dining reduced to three delly pills what in the world would the chambers of commerce do? How could the uplift work go forward without a luncheon or a dinner as a gathering place for the discussion of weighty problems? Synthetic silk and synthetic fubber are all very well. But synthetic food would not be 8o good. The sight and odor of appetizing 004 causes “appe- tite julce” to flow. This appetite juice helps digestion. It is a fact that unappetizing food can be ultimately digested and furnish nourishment. But the sight of appetizing food and pleasant environment {ncreases the flow of gastric juice and aids diges- tion. The learned savants engaged in the work of experimenting with synthetic food hope to reduce the food to prac- tically no bulk, with no odor, little taste and to have it prepared exclu- sively in factories. And besides all of this, food i8 to be chemically made —that is, they intend to create fats, sugars, starches, albumen. Prof. Berthelot is now dead. He ‘worked on this idea for 50 years and the institute is now founded in his honor. French chemists recently visited America to invite them to join in these experiments. When Prof. Berthelot was living in 1902 an ex- eriment was. secretly carried on in s laboratory. Four men and two women took part. They lived on the food pellets for three weeks. At the end of that time, three had lost con- siderable weight, two had remained stationary and one had gained. It is, of course, possible to sustain lite, and even health, with small amounts of food. Overeating is a very prevalent dietetic sin. There are times when every busy mother wishes she could take a small box of pellets off the pantry shelf and distribute them | to her hungry family. “Wouldn't that ibe a glorfous feeling? she thinks. “No vegetables to peel. no dinner to cook, no dishes to wash.” But with the present type human with normal stomach, teeth, gums and intentines, food with hulk, taste and smell seems to he needed. Of course, the time saved by eating the factory prepared pellet would he enor- mous.” Efficiency experts could figur up milllons of hours per day human- ity would gain. If everybody had all the time saved from the three square meals per day, would the intellectual | lite of the community be more notice- lo” S. E. R.—Is saccharin used in mak- ing pickles harmful? Answer—Saccharin {s a sweetening agent made from coal tar. the food and drug act articles of food which contain saccharin are consid- ered adulterated, because a coal tar product lowers the quality of the food and may render it injurious to health. It Would be better to use sugar in your plckles. 7 Readers desiring personal N auestions whould seric self- Addresmed: o1Amnan envelope to Dinah Day. care of The Star. “Puzzlicks” zle-Limericks ——1 A naughty young maid of On a trapeze in mid air dld—2—; Till one night off she —3— _And went straightway to —4—, No matter 'bout others —5—. 1. City in Iowa. 2. Revolutions (colloquial). 3. Descended rapldly. 4. In a good manner, 8. Affairs (colloquial). (NOTE: No, this “Puzzlick” not come from the Bowery, New York, though the rhymes in the second and ’fltfld):dlh\es would seem to indicate that ek tomorrow.) Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” ‘Was seized by a horrible tremor; She’'d swallowed a spider ‘Which stung her inside her— Oh, my, what an awful dilemma! (Copyright. 1926.) Made from the finest Fish Caught ORTON'S famous “No Bones” Codfish mixed cious family meal in every can. The ori, in the nal Ready-to-fry, -and-yellow label. Gorton Pew Flsheries h—-lfi-.c."m ense enough to strut | complaining that | Under | did 1t you can't figure it out, look | for the answer and another ‘“Puzz- | A certain young maiden named Emma | ms out | | turns to a silver | “I didn’t mean to be sassy. |tola Mrs. Brown she better not rake her heels on our rug when she rocked, because it ain't paid for yet.” (Copyright. 19 ] LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. 1 was reeding a lyberry book called | Over the Top and Other Stories, and ma started to call me from her room, ng, Berny, come heer and sce if you can hook this dress for me. I dont think I can, ma, its too hard to see ware the diffrent ones go, I sed. Now dont start eny debating sis- slety, Im waliting, ma sed, and I sed, Aw (1, me Im Jest in the middle of a story. Well stay there and come heer fm- meeditly Being a joke withput her meening one, and I went in her room and started to hook up her dress in the back, saying, Im starting at the bot- tom, ‘ma, is that all rite? Yes, yes, now hurry, Im late now, ma_se Well wouldent the result he the same if I started at the top, ma? 1 sed, and she sed, O, I sippose so, how meny have you got hooked One, T sed, My ‘goodniss, one, kepp on hooking, smokes, ma, sip 4 wrecked on a desert island with this dress and nobody wasent there but vou and some cannibills, and you couldn't tawk cannibill to ask eny of them, how would you get it hooked” Land sakes, sutch a riggermaroll and 1 Holey ma_sed how meny have vou got done? ma ! sedd. 2, T sed, and she sed, O wat a child. Meening me, and she terned around backwerds and looked at her back in the mirrer, saying, Well if you dident put the bottom hook in the rong eve to start with. G, its a lucky thing 1 dident have it all hooked pefore yvou found that out, aint it, tha? 1 sed, and she sed, Its a lucky thing Im in too rutch of a hurry to give you a slap. And she went down in the kitchin and left our cook Nora hook her, and I went back to Over the Top and Other Stories. Scalloped Emlfit. Cut one eggplant in slices and soak in slightly salted water for an hour, then drain and cook in salted water slightly acidulated with lemon juice. Drain when tender but not soft, dry lightly in a napkin, and place in lay- ers, sprinkling each layer with salt, paprika, grated cheese, and cover | with a few buttered crumbs. Chop fine a medium sized onfon and fry it in a tablespoonful of butter or bacon fat, place this over the last layer of eggplant, and cover with buttered crumbs, and bake in the oven for 20 minutes; Women’s Handicap is curbed this new way of i ol bglerie prol discards like tissue is a pew way in women’s that ends the of old-time “sanitary pads” and their | wnbappy days. Eight in 10 betterclass women now use “KOTEX.” ‘I/wa‘s easily of tissae. N::hnndty.u;lorbu. “KOTEX.” Yo'l*fiubfi’vihm besitancy. Costs coly s few cents. Proves needless risk. 12 in a pack- Efi'_bmwh WAWARA HAT You \ WMSSeD aw EASY I just | You RAT! You counT o v Fum ouT RAPPY £ e 1 couen omy) K\M m FoR e HAVING Too muCi ouR Game! 1F 1 GET You vouwe J A DEAD MAn s THE MILLION DOLLAR WIFE By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. CHAPTER XXXVIL June Approaches. After the New Year eve party, the days went by as usual. Living as she did, at a fast and furious pace. | going out somewhere {night, to Betty the time seemed veri- | tably to fly. February came, bringing {in its wake the anniversary of their engagement. Jim gave her a silver tollet set marked with her monogram, and they ! went to dinner and the theater, but as the days lengthened into weeks and | Spring came stealthily into the city, he made no reference to the fact that he had mentloned June as the time for their marriage. Naturally Betty could not help won- | dering about it, but because she trust- | {ed him so implicitly she began to col- | | lect things for her trousseau. As she lcould afford to do so, she bought | fragile pleces of lingeric, cobwebby | silk stockings, inexpensive litile Sum- | mer dresses for use if they went on a trip. Of cow she said nothing about these purchases to Jimmy. She cnnll]; not find it in her heart to remind him | of what he had said. But she was| | sure that he would speak to her ahout it some time out of a clear sky. That | | was his way. And then, too, it wasn't | s 1t they were gofng to elaborate wedding: there [to be planned for or a i In May the w ther turned uncon fortably warm. Betty w: taking | every case that was offered to her {largely because she needed the money. {and for the first time in her life she | knew what it was to feel tived a great “\urt of the time. | I 1t was fatiguing business to ort | {for duty at 7 in the morning, stand | fon her feet most of the day, and then after 7 at night to rush home, | {take a bath and dr anew for| |Jimmy. He would e shortly | lafter ~half-p 7. amazingly fresh | and active A usually full of plans| for the evening. There were times! when it was on the tip of Betty | tongue to suggest that they stay at| .humv or at least do something that | would enable them to get home early. But she never made these suggestions, and Jimmy always had his way, “That | meant getting home any time between | midnight and 3 in thé morning, and | |at 6 o'clock Betty had to get up and | | get ready for work. | She was growing distressingly thin and there were times when her nerves | got the better of her so that she lost | her temper easl; Toward the end of lay she was called on a case at Flower Hospital. The patient was a child who was very Il with malarial | | fever. His temperature was very high, so that most of the time he lay in a stupor, but any unusual noise worried | him and he would pluck nervously at the coverlet. On the second afternoon it was un- usualy warm outside. Betty was watching the child uneasily when from across the corridor there came the sound of wailing. It was not like |the ory of some one in pain, it had | more the sound of a parson beset by tear, and after it had éontinued for some time it seemed to Betty that her nerves were stretched so taut she | tht, 1926, v Beanty Foatures has, the“middle- | aged womean” a tragedy of | the past—tryit, for one week KEEPING youth is something } more than merely the fervent ! wish of every woman. It is a duty that she owes herself and others. Look everywhere today. Note how women are retaining youthful charm through the thirties, into and well beyond the forties. Don't believe it is doe to costly “youth” methods in skin care. Most ‘of the time you'll find it the simple result of natural, common-sense | - ways in preserving youthful skin i |texture and suppleness. | The following rule, carefully fol- i lowed, will do much toward women keeping their priceless youth. It| has probably done so far more than any other method known . .. just| the softening olive and palm lather | of Palmolive, used this way: THE RULE IN SKIN CARE URGED BY EXPERTS ‘Wash your face gently with sooth- sng Patmal . Soap, massaging it soft!: the skin. Rinse thoroughly, fin’; nd disfigurements often fol- hey must be washed away. would screarn aloud if the noise wen' on much longer. She went to the door and, it, looked up and down the the floor nurse. No one w at that moment and with her mouth drawn into a raizht line <he went across the corrido opened the door of the room opposite, On the narrow hed sat a woman with her drawn up in front of her. The marks of tears were on her face and as she met the cold fury of Betty's eyes she stopped ng to stare, What's the matter with ripped out Betty, “are you in The woman shook her head “What is ft then?" “I have to have s I'm afrafd. [ don't w was beginning to weep Betty Spoke to her severely “There's a little child hall who may die at any vou keep up this noise. | to stop it immediately. Do s Conscious of the fact t shaking all over, she turned the room. But it was hall before she stopped tre though there was no \cross the hall, the ke her nerves were in such : fied her. opentn hall fe in sight you, 1 operation nt to die win, but s the inute if vou i was ind left wn hon nd a 1 he (Copvright. (Continued in Tomorrow's Star Sour Milk Cornbread. “There are two ways of mixing this bread. The ingredients are two cup fuls of corn meal, two cupfuls of sou: milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter two tablesponfuls of sirup, three fourths teaspoonful of salt, two eggs. one teasponful of baking soda, and one tablespoonful of cold water. By the first method, the meal, milk, salt butter and su oked “in double boiler for 10 minutes When the mixture is cool the egg- ded well beaten and the soda i- dissolved in the wa By the sec ond method all the dry ingredients including the soda, are mixed together and then the sour milk and eggs wel beaten and the butter are added. I° the second method is followed, the cold water {s not needed. The brea:i should be baked fn a shallow fron o: granite pan for about 30 minutes. BARKER’S 616 9th N.W 1108 Salt-Rising BREAD Gluten Whole Wheat Guaranteed pure imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL old Everywhere' Follow these rules day in, day out Do not use ordinary soaps in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as of palm and olive oils, is the same. Remember that before Palmolive came, women were told, “use no soap on your faces.” Soaps then were judged too harsh. Palmolive is a beauty soap made for one pur pose only: to safeguard your com plexion. 60 years of soap study stand behind it. Millions of pretty skinc prove its effectiveness beyond doubt BE SURE YOU GET THE REAL PALMOLIVE It costs but 10c the cakel —so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Note what o--ukditsmbrirzg- ou. The Palmolive Company Cery.).

Other pages from this issue: