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Protective Footwear for Winter BY MARY The won Winter with cause ghe re goes about cold ankles does so be. wants to, and not be. cause she 'ving fashion thereby Grunwaldt, one of the most conser; tive of French fur s beer showing fur paten fasteners to 1 ats intended fo motor w T also fur b, For cold, ra new rubber glovitied the n who o to m are Iike hizh overshoes that oshes. They above ankles, leaving s SHAPELY ENT STAN PLEAT: KID BOOT WITH PAT- FASTENERS, THE NEW RUS. ROOT WITH PERMANENT AROUND THE ANKLI AND THE PULL-OVER GAI- TE MADE OF STOCKINETTE W TURNOVER TOPS OF DIF- FERENT COLORS, inches of stocki skirt is worn, wise fasten as closely onion skin material who rainy days follows last about in showing if a short They button or other- from top to toe ard fit to the shapely shoe They are of rubberiz in colorful design. The girl wears these foot overshoes on will make the girl who son’s fashion of going cumbersome goloshes look very awkward indeed Pull over gaiters of fine wool are already to he scen, and these will un- doubtedly hecome reasingly popular as the \ ter vane They are knit o closely that the process of pulling them over the foot does not tend to make them baggy. There is strap that holds them snug under he instep. They have a turn-down Aff usually showing a design in con color, and these, too, end below the knee, so that Rlimps of stocking below There also are some over- the-knee knitted gaiters that provide even better protection in cold weather. The Russian boot never gained so t there is the skirt, this ny days there look come me MARSHALI much favor here as in Fngland. We seemed to share the French prejudice. But the new Russian or boots are shapely. Sometimes are made of soft kid, with shapely toes and 1y high heels and fit fairly close over the ankles. A patent fastening down the front keeps them closed. There are still some of the hoots made without opening. But these are somewhat neater than they used to be around the ankles because there are permanent wrinkles there that give the necessary fullness in drawing the hoot on without -permit- ting the former sagging. These pleat ed boots, T belleve, are called Lithua nian. Some of the new boots have a rubher: inset at the side, after manner of the cld-fashioned congress gaiter. All these devices have been worked out to make these serviceable boots more shapely. « n t MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAS Sliced ¢ Diry Cereal with Cr Baked Sausage. Potato Cakes, Hot Muffins. Coffee, LUNCHEON. Spinach with Poached Eggs. French Fried Potatoes. Raisin Bread. Stewed Prunes. Ginger Snaps. Tea. DINNER. Cream of Tomato Bisque. Cold Roast Pork. Plckled Watermeloa Rind. Lyonnalse Potatoes. String Beans. Lettuce, French Dressing. Baked Indian Pudding. Coffee. POTATO CAKES. Peel about two quarts pota- toes and cook fn salted water until tender. Drain and mash. Add more salt, caraway seeds _and flour enough to make stiff. Flatten out into round cake about one inch thick, cut as you would ple and bake on frying pan on top stove. Have plenty salt pork fat to cook them in. Turn every few minutes so they will not burn. They should be eaten while hot with plenty of butter. SPINACH WITH EGGS. Put one-half cup milk, one- half teaspoon salt, dash pepper, scant one-half tablespoon table sauce in chafing dish, cover and when boiling drop in three eggs, sprinkle with three-quarter ta- blespoon butter in small bits, dash salt and pepper. When poached, serve on bofled spin- ach. INDIAN PUDDING. Scald three pints milk with thin vellow rind one lemo skim out rind, stir in ten tabl spoons Indian meal and, when thickened and free from lumps, add one-half teaspoon salt and one cup molasses. Turn into buttered dish, pour one and one- half cups cold milk over top and bake two hours in mod- erate oven. 150 YEARS AGO TODAY BY JONATHAN / Rhode Island Invaded. PROVIDENCE, R. I, December 7, 776.—A British fleet of 78 ships in- cluding transports and Sir Peter men-ot-war arrived this near Newport and later came to whor at Weavers RBay on the west shore of Rhode Island, the island which gives its me to this State, The transports hrought two British and two Hessian brigades, @ total of 4,000 men, under Gen. Henry Clinton This sudden move of the enemy, at a time when the war center is in the Jersevs a hig surprise to thode Island and will spread alarm ghout the neighboring States of 1 Massachusetts. Not has trod New Eng- since Gen. lHowe's army Boston in March, except- ¢ those of war prisoners and fes who are confined in the Con- feut prison camps. Meanwhile, New England has been giving of its best in men and war supplies for the support of Washington's Continental Army. Neither Rhode Island, Con- necti Massachusetts is in con- dition to nd off a hostile invasion. Tt hardly seems probable that the enemy would undertake a serious in- va Army Parker’s afternoon hoot questions regaraing 0 Stuart Gibb turer_on nutri ompanied by as only those of awered this nswered through Wil be made to bt we hespeak wlers for_any. un. mber of letters re 1 take its_turn bs. 468 Fourth fond of mo- | -lis me ot Will you tell me Mrs. L. P. I should find out why sses for the uple, a tem- he may against food that 1s too 1 the time being. If there is no trouble, t the litt r! have molasses in re m able Molasses is a good re although it must not, of d 10 excess, or in estion Brown sugar, some of v delicious auce to give it what vou stmply wi original form and oth Do stbly trouble that tine e worse b hold has gred who advise e very your « My o} effect that tronble, Wh need roughage of bulk of the op! done. PBran tain forms of constipa also an excellent food it does, valuable elements of the wheat. On the other hand, it will not Always adapt itself to certan condl- tions. If the stomach lining is ir Htabie, or If there is sluggishness in vertaln parts of the Intestines, bran tometimes increases the irritation in the stomach As for the sluggish in Lentines, there have heen cases where ran has filled in its mechanical fune- tion of stimulating the weak muscles vou think that bran may pos X trouble? My sister is constipation and has a4 cure. Sinee has seemed o is not ready she with brun ouglt she o1 vesponsib fidence in the person to take it. 1 shall vou wiil give me hiect.—K. & or v is very d bran may easily cause I agree that we do or a_certain amount fon that this may be over on, but it is ntaining, as n I should let | the | jedly to the | r our food, T also am firmly | < not only a help in cer- Story of the U. S. A. A. RAW men, nor is it easy to see what they would accomplish by stationing this force on this island. Gen. Howe has set before us another of the puzzles in which he delights, and we sha not have the answer until his Gen. Clinton makes his next move. They have already accomplished one thing, however, and that i= to bottle up Commodore Esek Hopkins' Conti- nental Navy 5 miles below Providence. The commodore’s fleet consists of only five ships, but these have important work to do. Now their approach to the sea is blocked by Sir Peter's frig- ates unless Commodore Hopkins can manage an escape through the many islands in Narragansett Bay. The commodore will prepare his ships for a vigorous defense of Providence in case Sir Peter decides to continue his journey in this direction, The 600 American soldiers who have been on garrison duty on the island of Rhode Tsland fled northward upon the approach of the British, leaving 15 or 20 heavy cannon behind, but getting away with most of _their stores. Gov. Nicholas Cooke of Rhode Island has sent appeals to Massachu- setts and Connecticut for levies of militia, and has reported the invasion to Congress, but has little hope that aid will come from the Continental forces. (Covpyright, 1826.) of the Intestines simply because it | has formed a mass which in itself | becomes an obstruction. My own ex- perience with feeding a good many | hundreds of both children and adults has led me to this conclusion. it possible to have ptomaine | poisoning from vegetables? 1 was made ill from eating vegetables that | Were not fresh and that were pre- | pared with stale materfals. My mother thought the trouble was ptomaine poisoning, but I have heen told that this is not the case—I. O. Y. Considered from the standpoint of | chemistry, ptomaine polsoning is a | complicated conditjon. It is not nec- | essary, however, «w go into this for practical? purpose of keeping well. While one dislikes to make generali- zutions, it i8 a fairly safe assertion to say that real ptomaine poison | comesgauly from spoiled animal food | Tam an engineer and am just get- ting ready to go out on a long tri T shall be busy at construction wor and should like to ask how much { more food I need than for an ordi- narv working life at home.—L. P. his is a very good question, as not many fully understand the im- portance of adjusting carefully any additions that need to be made in dfet. nt studies indicate that for a on engaged in such work #s yours © should be an increase of ubout 36 per cent over the diet used in mod {erute work. This will give you ough figure by which to estimate | how much more food vou need. It ! You eat a little more than one-quarter Ws much again, you are likely t tulfill your needs (Copright Is 1926.) Lemon Cheesecake. Line little patty pans or a square | baking tin with puff paste, then fill { with the following mixture: One pint of well drained cottage cheese mashed very fine, three eggs well beaten, one tablespoonful of flour dusted into the cheese, one tablespoonful of buttel the grated rind of a lemon and ene and one-half cupfuls of very rich sweet milk. Sweeten the whole very sweet with fine white sugar and after filling dust over the top a little nut- Muscovite they a the | /) 14 17 WA AN Dr. Daisy M. Orleman Robinson. One of the most important parts of the work being done by the United States Public Health Service is the study, cure and prevention of con- 1aglous direases. This work has heen continually extended since the organi zation of the service in 1798, and in July, 1918, the Division of Social Dis- eases was added by the Chamberlin- Kahn bill. The question of soclal pathology has at last, therefore, been brought to the status of a Government problem, and definite measures taken to organize a nation-wide fight against one of the deadliest enemies of the race. In co- operation with State and privately endowed organizations, the Federal service has enlisted its corps of ex- perts to bring this enemy into the open. One of the experts in the division is Dr. Daisy M. Orleman Robinson, M. S., dermatologist, acting assistant surgeon. Dr. Robinson has a remark- able record, with thorough medical training in this country first, and ex- tensive post-graduate study in the universitier of Zurich and Bern, in Switzerland, and at the University of Paris. Prior to the war, she practiced medicine as a specialist in New York City, lecturing as well at the New York Polyclinic Medical School and Hospital. With the war came her great op- HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. | meg and fine sugar. Bake In a quick oven. . The gift that flatters most is the gift that shows the most thoughtful choosing. Any one can give cigars and candy and handkerchiefs, but it takes genuine interest to select the right book, the right record, or the right piece of furniture. For instance, any home woman who does needlework would be flat- tered by the gift of this cozy little easy chair and stately sewing table. These two pieces could stand efther in her own room or in the living room and would not be out of harmony with either roonf. The chair is a French peasant type and is upholstered in a quilted ma- terial known as Touy The sewing stand is an early Amer- jean type. Its outward spread legs Jead one to suppose it was inspired by a Duncan Phyfe design. (Copyright . Women Who Have Interesting Tasks in the Government Service RY ALICE l{OfiERS HAGER portunity for service, and she was not slow in taking it. The fact that she already widely acquainted abroad ght her immediate calls, and the first year, 1914-15, she spent in Eng land.” In 1916, she was appointed by the ministe rance as a surgeon in the Service de Sante, to help in such special position as chief assistant to Prof. Letulle, noted French Pothol- ogist and surgeon, who was in charge of the French military hospitals, and later as assistant to Dr. Vernes, di- rector of the famqus Institute Phophy- lactique in Probably the finest single thing she had done in this latter | connection, medically speaking, had been in introducing the Noguchi test of serum diagnosis in France in 1909, |and that had led to her election as the | only woman member of the nch Society of Dermatology and Syphi- R brou ) bardments and other of the more %0 lent aspects of the w and that she was awarded for her bravery avd her devoted service the gold meds Of epi- demics and contagious di=ses and the medaille de reconnajgnce by the minister of war, fade Into insignifi- cance in her opiniop.Jeside her other achievement of pave SC tence. | French Academy 0f Science awarded ber its gold pemo as its visible sign of recognitics of her work and her publications She gomed the rank of tn tr¢ United States Medical Corms (R) in December, 1920, but she me to her present office until 19 Since that time, she e of the Public Pathology. and gives lectures on public health in various parts of the country upon re quest, acting as a consultant at the request of the State boards of health. WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. surgeon Wind. There have been winds of fatal intensity these last week read of a cruel blast to the south of u Then a destructive tornado weeps Texas, Oklahoma and M ouri. Some of the things a can do are funny; some are the most sudden and awful calamities that can 1 upon humanity. But the wind, whether a zephyr or a hurricane, never blows without hav- blological significance. The st of breezes causes evaporation from the leaves of plants,’ uses up thereby the soil water, keeps the pre- cious film of the earth’s water supply going round and round in i%: cycle. But what impresses any one who ha ever studied bacteriology or the fungi is the fact that every breath of wind distributes the spores of these organ- isms, giving them perhaps fresh ace to some stratum an which they may grow. Wonderful things are spores. are the equivalent of seeds They in the attained to anything so complex and modern as a seed. There were minute spores drifting around the world in the jolly old days when dinosaurs lked abroad; probably the ed spores about nearly barren when life first appeared on the . Some even think that spores have drifted to us from other planets, blown upon that mysterious thing all scientists argue about now. the ether drift, that wind between the sphetes. Don’t wrestle with your breakfast CATCH-as-catch-can is no way to attack your breakfast. Even the Marquis of Queensbury’s rules are too rough. Be friendly with your breakfast. Don’t rush in, get a head-hold on it and try to drag it to the office with you. Be leisurely about it. Sit down and appreciate your fruit, cereal, eggs, toast, and your Chase & Sanborn Seal coffee. Brand. Smile at your Treat your breakfast as a friend and you'll find it is a friend. A real friend too. (Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Tea Is of the Sa . High Quality hospital bomw | The | First we | wind world of lowly plants that has never | wind | | Chicago is MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Saturdays That Count. 1e mother says: Following the ides that -are natlonally observed sometimes observe different days. The children do their own su gesting, and it pleases me to note for ideas above mere play r kept “Clean-up Sat- “Mending of various weeks day New-Eriends (Copsright. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. 1998.) My cuzzin Artle came around after suppir and me and him was tawking wats e eny. spilled ickers 1 agen for nd 1 sed, G winnickers, ent aloud to h r jest because a old gl er, G wi got a good mind not to eat a munth to show them. The way I feel, my father gave me a fearse rap on. the nuckles with his spoon jest because I had my hand on the table insted of Artie sed. Iloley smokes it would serve: them -all rite if we both never ate agen, he sed. G, lets do that, lets keep on starv- ing and starving and getting thinner and thinner rite in frunt of their eyes, 1 sed Sure, after we havent ate for about la ‘week we proberly wont even fecl hungry eny more and it will be a sintch, Artfe sed. Gosh; theyll be serpri floor behind a door or somwares, nuth- ing but skin and bones starved from starvation, 1 sed, and Artie sed, G. think how theyll feel. Wich jes then our cook Nora came in with something on a plate, saying. Heers the remains of some bannanna | shortcake my ter brawt me, it would only be spoilt by tomorro so 1d jest soon glve it to you Kids as throw it _out. ach- other, me saying, Well, long as she brawt it up speshil to offer it to us, and Artie aving, ure it wouldent be polite to axually say no. Well glory he, dont do me no favors at and throw it to the s if thats ay of it, Nora sed, and me and A sed, We'll take it, hay, G, we'll take it Wich we did. y One of the interesting entries at the Internatio Livestock Ixhibition at a litter of_hogs, 17 in num ber, which weighed 5 pounds at 6 months of and argewing and playing lotto on the | underneeth, | ed some day | all rite wen they find us ded on the | Me and Artie jest looking ‘doubtfill | as | by excepting it, 11l take it rite down | f | their | tew | comes | and | fed move # | the rice. What Do You Know About It? Daily Seience Six. 1. Whatlis the glottis? 2. What is the diaphragm? 3. Why is it better to breathe through the nose than through the mouth? 4. What aré hiccoughs, and what causes thém? What should be done for a choking baby? 6. What is the average num- Dber of breaths for man, womar, child? Answers to these questions in tomorrow’s Our Traction System. The part of the human hody where there is the most extensive and in- tricate arterial and vein traction sys- tem compacted in a small space is the lungs. If the lungs were merely hol- low places, there would of course be only a couple of cubic feet of space. Owil to the ramitfi fons of the sys tem, however, there are 2,000 square feet of surface in the lungs, where the blood is exposed to the alr for purifi [ tion, \When bubies are first born th [ lungs are pearly white, with veins of | pink. The average city man has al | most sooty black lun; but the | Kimo, " 1i in an almost dustless climate, lungs rly as clean, a baby No, what do you know about trt? Answers to Yesterday's Questvns. A guillemot is a bird of -n€ auk 1 nez gulllik, bird, but A tern is a ) Uener bill, weak ler, with. mor a marine, fish- sack under the o Which th, Prey is held, A" b Wt is @ mythologlcal it ferocius habits: the word has extersed to mesn a scolding “carmigan s an Arctic-Alpine sout 4= Erouse. ¢ Old squaw is a common name a sea duck. (Consright. 1926.) bird heen womn fe Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLFE MEYER ELDRED. Every mother understands now that bables and children must have vege- tables vi in their lives. Breast- fed babies need their juices because store of ron is used up the fivst months and a mother's milk be- limited in its supply of iron other essential minerals during the later months of lactation. Bottle: bies need them because at best they are being fed artificially and it is necessary that they receive supplies of minerals in which their formulas may be deficient. The prevalence of among the babies of today be fur. amount of the ables are rich. recipe for vegetaBle soup which may be used for the infant. At first he needs be given'only the soup itself, later he may have some of the sieved vegetables included in it. The soup may be kept for two days on the ice. One-fourth pound of meat chicken or lamb) One medium rot and two (beef, zed potato, one car- alks celery, or potato, handful of inach and carrot. One tablespoonful of some cereal (farina, barley or rice). Cut meat and peeled vegetables into small pieces and wash rice or barley. Add to two quarts of water with a pinch of salt. Cook three hours, after which it will have hofled down one- half. , Strain _(rubbing vegetables through fine wire sieve), cool and re- Start with one ounce of this @t the 2 o'clock feeding. may begin to give one teaspoonful of the vegetable itself, run through fine wire sieve served with but- ter and a bit of salt. Very often when a child refuse eat vegetables it is because they erved so unattractively and cooked 0 badly that he turns up his nose in disgust. Vegetables should be steam- ed, or boiled in a covered kettle over a slow fire, so that only a little water is needed and the water they are cooked in can be incorporated in the ! auce that is served over them. If| fresh vegetables are impossible to pbtain a good grade of canned ones an be used. . Rice and Sausage. Boil two cupfuls of rice in salted vater, make a tomato sauce of one t of canned tomatoes, one bay | three aste. one medium-sized onion, cloves and salt and papper to When well cooked, strain. Fry one pound of little pig sausages. Into a baking dish put one-half of the hofled next the cooked uges, then f of the tomato sauce. Use the balance of the rice and cover with tomato sance. Dipefour tablespoon- | usage fat over all and. lastly, pour one-half a cupful of boiling water into the frying pam. Let it simmer a few minutes and pour over Bake for about one hour, uncovered, in a moderately hot oven. Portugal, has introduced s having one end higher ther when on level ground, on mountain routes. Lisbon, trolley than the u Discovery Ends Burn Pains OR quick, sure relief from burns, nothing so effective as OIL-of-SALT has ever been discovered before! The action of this new antiseptic and heal- ant is little short of marvelous. Itisso potent that it kills burn pains in three minutes! Cool and soothing—never smarts in the slightest degree. OIL-of-SALT gently penet; flamedtissueand insulatesthes ends. Atthe ed ingredients stimulate growth of the new tissue atonce. Healingactually commences a few moments after burn is recelved! No nder Fire Departments in over 250 citles y they “can't do business without it "and | 1 i in Three Minutes use it as a part ofstandard equipment! In response to many requests, this am: ing burn aid s now offered to the general public. No home should ever be without it —for you never can tell when treacherous flame and scalding steam will get in their deadiy work. A hot stove, steaming kettle, cracklingrubbish fire—andin the twinkling of an eye the unexpected happens. Right then a 65-cent bottle of OIL-of-SALT in the medicine chest is worth its weight in gold. Don't wait until emergéncy arises. Be prepared with OIL-ofSALT today. It's marvelous for sunburn, too. Your druggist ‘will supply you. Money cheerfully refunded if you are not entirely satisfied. Just ask for OILo-SALT ! Mads in C. A. MOSSO LABORATORIES, 215 South Leavitt Street, Chicago, Il At nine months one | al FEATURES Inherited Large Ankles. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) Is there any remedy large angles -that are hereditary? Do you think that rub- ber ankie reducers would do any good? (2) T am 21 years old, 5 feet 13 inches tall and weigh pounds LE Answer: ankle bones, there is no way to make them slender, but if the thickness is due to layers of superfluous fat it ma be exercised and massaged off, T rubber reducers would be helpf:: in| the latter case. My leaflet or CAare exercises for reducing large ankles and T shall be giad to mall it to you on receipt of a stamped, self-addressed envelope. (2) Your weight is correct. LOIS LI Non-Fattening Foods. Dear Lofs Leeds: (1) T am a little overweight and wish to reduce. Wil you please tell me what foods are not fattening? Is pineapple fattening? (2) I am very dark. Please tell me what colors to wear. BIRDIE Answer—(1) I would advise you to cut down on certain small items that are fattening, instead of putting your- self on a strict reducing diet. ~For axample, do not use cream in bever- ages or on cereal. Omit mayonnaise FOIBLES OF Francis Bacon. Whether his resources were small or great, his expenditure was alw in excess of them. lle was, through- | out life, in bondage to money-lenders, vet he never hesitated to increase his | tlay and indebtedness. He saw his S ants robbing him, but never sald a word in protest. By a will which he drew up a year before he died, he was munificent in ts, not merely to friends, retainers and the poor. but the public institu- tions, which he hoped to render more officient in public service. Yet when all his sets were realized, the amount was sufficlent to defray two-thil s debts, and none of his magnanimous bequests took effect. In the Spring he would regularly go out for a ride in an open coach while it rained, to receive, as he put it, “the benefit of irrigation,” which he was wont to say w very whole- som nse of the niter in the universal spirit of the He had extraordinary notions re- specting the virtues of niter, and con- ceived it to be of inestimable value in the preservation of health. So great was his faith that he swallowed three grains of that drug, elther alone ot with saffron, in warm broth, every morning for 30 years. iie was very fond of quacking him- self, and when he heard that two ins of so and so or a pint of so and so was healthful, he promptly ted taking i Once a_week he took a dose of ‘Water of Mithridate,” diluted with strawberry water. Once 2 month he made a point of swallowing a grain and a half of stor” in his broth and breakfast two successive da sixth or seventh day for he THE ELITE OF BOUT a g ago the “White House Spokes- man” granted the first interview. to a news- paper reporter. At dawn he goes for his ac- customed dip in the Potomac . with a willow limb his only bathhouse. En- grossed in the aquatic sport, the “Spokesman” looks up to find, seated on his clothes, Anne Royal, editor of the “Paul Pry” and scandal: monger . extraordinary. “When you answer my questions I'll give you your clothes,” she century 2117-2119 Fourte MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LE ® i (1) If you have large, heavy | | dark gives special | + Elite Laundry cenea Eravies, eream e candy. Strige’ for diet, being suwre to a well spinack- eal- include enoug? bage and -th sh vegetahles | Pineapple -8 not fattening. 1t *takes | two siics ene Inch thick to vigld as | many #lories as are in one stiee of e-quarters of aff inch sparingly and aveld F foods. (2) If vén are young woman you may apricot, flesh, red bronze green. bright orange-yellow, olde ark brown, deep crearn and LOIS LEEDS Bleaching Facial Hair. | iss Leeds: How can T hleach - dark hairs on my upper lip? use equal parts of peroxide or peroxide and lemon juice is Inclined to be tender. bleach muke the hs row | How long will it take to bi AL RE Answer—Peroxide ha to dry the skin, so th used with caution tender skir It is better to be ent with slisw progress in bleaching than to frritas the skin. Try using two s of phr oxide to one t of water on e hairs every night. If you natice that the skin' is becoming sensitive, usa the bleach every other night and Bpply | cold cream “on alternate dave.? |the bleach will not encourage t growth of the hairs. T judge (£ wi take about two weeks to bleach the hairs, but it may take long 1f vou are unable to use the lotion every day. LOIS LE Hair on the Arm 1. Givup—Tlair on the ar bleached with peroxide, but if: vou want to remove it vou uld vse # deptlatory. Of course, hairs will grow in again thicker. There 38 no practical way to remove superfiuous hair from large areas permanently except the new ray method, which is not yet avallable in all localities, LOIS LEEDS. (Copsright. 1926.) THE FAMOUS drank an. infusion of rhubarb in white wine and beer immediately’ he- fore his dinner. Te made it a point to take afr in some high and open place every morning, the third hour after sun rise, and, if possible, he selected’some spot where he could enjoy the per- fume of musk, violet and rosesy Re- sides thus breathing the pure mr of Nature, he was fumigated with the smoke of lign-aloes with dried ebays and rosemary, adding once a wgfk a little tobacco s On leaving his bed he had to be anointed all over each day with oll of almonds, mingled with salt #nd saffron, and this was followed by gentle friction. He loved music and meditation; and bestowed much flattery upon women. Queen Elizabeth, when on a vigit to him, happened to make an ohserva- ion as to the size of his hg Madame,” he replied, “my house is mall, but it 1s you who have made me too great for it.” (Copyright . Excellent Veal Soup. Put a knuckle of veal into - three quarts of cold water, adding a small tablespoonful of uncooked rice. . Roil slowly, scarcely ahove simmering, for four hours, when the liquor shoiild be reduced onehalf. Into a warm dish put one cupful of cream into which has been stirred the yolk of an.egg. Add a plece of butter the size of a walnut; on this strain the soup, hfling hot, stirring all the time. Beat; well for a_minute. Whipped cream -or spoonful of cooked egg white &nd 1 quantity of parsley may he put n top of e: s | th blues, hrown, black Dear lotiger” ich them ADER tendeno t <hould T on t 1926.) WASHINGTON Emnarrassed” . « . helpless, the “Spokesman” complies Instead of going to the Potomac today, we have- the Potomac piped into- our homes. And nothing is more invigor— ating than that daily plunge and a change- into sweet, freshly laun-; dered linen. Ag pleasure that attains thes ultimate when vourt clothes are reconditioned«- at Elite. Phone to-; day and interview Elite | to learn the most eco-; nomical and suitable? service for your cleasing requirements. enth Street NNW. Potomac 40—41—42—43