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'WOMA Distinction in Being BY MARY When Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt sat through the opera the other evening wearing just one long white glove she was perhaps not aware of the fact that she had started something. Ot course, there was no reason why ¢ | not forget to speak of the.little home | Lla GOLD SEQUINS. BELOW CUFF OUTLINED WITH GOLD RBEADS. AND TO RIGHT. EIGH RUTTO. GLOVE. she should not have worn one glove— or two gloves or no gloves at all if she had chosen. Gloves are optional for evening wear even at so formal #n occasion as the opera. Some women have apparently for- gotten the importance of gloves. Tl considering their stockings have forgoiten to think of their gloves. Nowadays the matter of keeping the seam of one’s stockings in the mathematical center of one’s leg BEAUTY CHATS A Pretty Nose. Have you a pretty nose” Your first attempt in improving it should be to make the skin as clear and fine possible and after that to see w can be done to improve its shape, or 10 overcome the defect of it shape, by ihe styie of hats chosen and the way the hair is worn. However. 1 do not think any results will be encouraging until the nose Is made attractive by a clean. fine comiplexion. We shall treat the skin first. I the nose i greasy and the pores large. a little borax in the water used for washing will Porax makes the water slightly anti- septic and will“soothe any irritation of the skin. extract of oramge or-gose or lavender in it is astringent, and perhaps betier 2nd easier than any of these is starch ~-paste spread thickly on the noxe after ‘4 2 AT | LEFT, BLONDE SUEDE GLOVE, | _this condition, | Boiled water ith a little | N'S PAGE. | Creator of “The Cheerful Cherub” Dies in New Mexico Well Gloved MARSHALL. is—a matter of vital importance. But the set or fit of one’s gloves doesn’t seem to matter at all, Carelessness with regard to gloves has become so widespread—especially | {in this country—that the woman who is obviously well gloved gains thereby real distinction. Gloves are an a cessory of dress concerning which | French women have never permitted | themselves the laxity that has heen | | s0 widespread in this country within recent years. Rubies, sapphires and emeralds are | more often seen in engagement rings {than formerly, though, of course,; most girls prefer the diamond. With | | American girls the diamond is chosen, | !one assumes, because it is precious. If another stone is used instead it must be one of the very precious sort. | But in France the diamond is chosen because it is white and colorless—the emblem of maidenly purity 1t an- | other stone is chosen it st be as white and colorless—hence the white 1sapphire or less expensive white stones are sometimes selected. It is only for the second marriage that a ecolored stone would be considered appropriate in France. Speaking of rings, let me quote from that amazing new book cealing with it manners of millionaire society Move Over,” by E. Petit. Mario! | i& showing Sheila a gift from Don. “And she exhibited seven tiny gold bhands on her finger. Each set with (tiny stones, the firat with diamonds, the second with enieralds, the third with amethysts, the fourth with | rubies, the fifth again with emeralds |and then sapphires and topa ‘Dear- est’ they spell. Neat, & | Marion’s comment. Very neat, indeed. I think—and now | that finger rings are back in fashion {perhaps vou would like to have a set | of rings like it. 1t is a wide jump from diamonds {and rings to work aprons—but I must | BECKY McCANN. years “The Cheer! been a feature of The Evening ar, and Becky Me(: who drew the little pictures and wrote the bits of clever verse to accom! them, hecame well known to thou nds of Washingtonians through her ork. She was once connected witl Haskin Service, in is | Aluquerque, N. cember 22. Mis paper work when she w: age, ard she was 32 ye; sh: died. NANCY PAGE Hot Mince Pie Profoundly Pleases Peter Page ars old when | | | dressmaker’s help that we have ready {for you this week. The diagram pat-| tern is for a clever little apron, as| easy 10 make as it is to wear. If you| re interested I will send it to vou | ith a2 sketch of the finished apron nd directions for putting it together. (Coprricht. 192 Turkey Cakes. Mix one cupful of chopped roast [turkey with one egg slightly heaten. {one-half a teaspoonful of salt, a little > | pepper and one tablespoonful of cream Mince-meat turnovers and ot vidual or enough to molsten. Shape in smali | De%; For these 1At ones Sy | fat cakes. Coat with one egg beaten ! Jiumeter and about 1 inch dec | with two tablespoonfuls of cold water ! {and cover with sifted crumbs. in butter until well browned on both | ides. TNemove to a hot platter and | {surround with one cupful of white| |sauce to which has heen added o ‘(hlrd cupful of celery cut in small pieces. These meat cakes may be | | | I served on toast. ! Really’ the biackheads can bhe ! squeezed out. Metal “extractors” can be had anvwhere. These should be ,clean, and when the blackheads have been pressed out (best done after . | washing with very hot water) the skin should be made antiseptically clean. | Cold water, followed by an ice rub. is { the easiest way ®f closing these pores %0 no infection can get into them. | Remember, a large pore sfier the | blackheall has been extracted is like !an open wound and a germ can cause all sorts of trouble. Use no cold cream immediately | after blackheads have been taken out. BY FLOKENCE LA GANKRE. Could one have an English husband d not have mince pies? “No™ most_emphatically to work. Instead of makin ditional large pie she decided to try | BY EDNA KENT FORBES lined the bottom with erust, put in a small amount of mince meat and then but on a top marked with the initials T. M.. standing for ‘Tix Minc The turnovers were made by rolling out the pie crust into 4-inch squar On the Jower half she placed a spoon ful of mince meat. Then the top wax folded over diagonal fashion. The edge of the lower triangle was brushed with water and the top half pinched | LAP.P\-Al”yflrlofnge.htl‘ht“ ‘ND‘V]DUAL MINCE |5 feet. you are only a few pounds over- | weight at pounds. | A. B. C.—The exercizes given for PlEe {the eves will strengthen them and { cannot be any detriment 10 you if you | use them. More strength meanx bet- | washing. rubbed in and allowed to|ter heaith, and that is much toward @ry. then rinsed off. | relieving any condition even if it does | Camphor in the water is fine for the | not cure vou. | # skin when the skin i red and the | Margaret W. Y.—The only advan. makes the water astringent, ton, and helps overcome redness. But with all these a mild, pure smoap should he used and lathered freely over the nose and rinsed off well. BEDTIME STORIE Whitefoot Has a Neighbor. G P DL o antie aor” ~Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. Whitefoot isn’t one who cares much ahout his neighbors. 1 mean by that he isn't one who has much to do with his meighbors. He would do very nicely it he had ne neighbors at ull He wouldn't be lonesome. It wouldn't . have troubled him at all 1o find that in this mew home over there : Jittle house In the appie t edge of the OM Orchard he “po YOU LIVE NEAR HERE?" IN- QUIRED WHITEFOOT near neighbors. No have troubled him st yather nice when he e had & nelghbor apd neighbor wes. Whitefoot prefers 1o be out 51 night. e i8 #lways more Himid in the Auy tine. Perhaps there are no mure # Jooking for him in the dny time than st night. but he feels that it i8 easier Lo hide when there are Bhrdows around everywhere. 8o, though he Aoes come out in the deytime occasionsly, espectslly on utl, dsrk ey he is much more often out 4t pight. You will remem. ber that when Black Pussy caught pim It Wk in the daytime pky the Bereech Ow) spent much :l‘fi;)l"unfi in that part of the Ol Ovenard, even sometimen wiiting vight wouldn't Bl 4w vered th ew who thet blood vessels are prominent. Vinegar | tage in using a curling fluid is in | having the hair stay in curl for a very | {little longer time than if you used | | water. Be sure to brush all the dried | particies of the gum out of your hair | afterward. | i on. A spray of flowers ornamented the top triangle. This allowed the juice and steam to ooze out. baking, the turnovers were dusted | with powdered sugar and served hot who's here! 1 suppose you are one of | With & generous wedge of cheese. | lh;f::llr of Danny ){s;do:: Mn'-:s‘o HOROSCOPE speaking rather timidly, “I am his | | cousin, Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. | | Thursday, December 29. wod and evil influences contend tomorrow, xuppose you are a cousin of Chatterer which should he falrly not | the Rted Squirrel. You must be Striped Chipmunk. proud of the relationshiy puttered | Tavorable for many human activities, “I don't like Chat. | Early in the morning che hearts of | terer and 1 don't ‘eare who knows it. | men and women who occupy pl | What are you doing here" {the sun should he touched “I am living in that little house up | yiivit of generosity in the tree. 1 hope you don't mind ™ | “-The forenoon is 4 time to ank favol | replied Whitefoot. [and 1o seek positions for the ne | ot at all, not at all” replied | year, | striped Chipmunk. “1 don't Ui well not to trust one’s Judg about trees myself. No, sir, 1 don't|ment tomorrow, for it may he oo | eare about climbing up in treex.” | much affected by the emotions, ! “Do you lve near here? inquired| Warning ix given that Whitefoot politely 2 uratlon encourages acceptance of d “Right down helow.” replied Striped pressing rumors of every sort Chipmunk “Bo you wee we are clully those that concern natle ! nelghbors.” | fairs “HBut why haven't 1 seen you be | Warlike preparations prob fore” exclaimed Whitefoot he wdvocated by certain sta | “Fve been asleep,” replied Etriped foresve perils that may not exist, | Chipmunk, yawning. “I haven't poked Mrologers announes. my nead outside for a month, While the aspects for the coming LI you'lt excuse 1 think I'll ga | yenr appear to presige many inter |10 bed. 1 hope 1'll wee you aguin national mixunderstandings, it is proh. L B0t won't 1 see you every day?" able they will not be serious, the seers | quired Whitefoot, dectare, CNot if 1 know 11 replied Rtriped Under Chipmunk. “It msy he two or three | sense of th Aays, it may be a week or §t sy be a o deps month before you see me aguin.” . “But where are you going?" eried | Whitefon lare “To Chip L aun » | munk, AN According 1o t lore, 1t should | of venr w particularly locky day for en is to ket momething 1o eat. Goud-by.” & men an employes | Btriped Chipmunk dissppesred ersons whowe biethduy 11 | sCowyriaht 1927 ) {have u year that in eventful BY THORNTON W. BURGESS “f am hoth.” ing a little “Striped in muy he u 1, nnd con whould he Ihis sway, the futiiy of effs smalon which replied ®tripsd | In mny WOW WOULDJA LIKE TO WAVE A WHOLE BANKFUL OF DOLLAR 6OLD PIECES? | | | on Whitefoot's own house. he changed l his babite somewhat, Yes sir, he 0id e came ot morve often in the ) night aytime #nd less often in the $1e felt 1t quite mafe in the daytime be- | coune of that old sone will -n,.'. yfectly Jovely place for aiuch A oo ax Whitefoot the Wornd Mouss. Why, there were ever and evag 0 many places down underneath (a8t old wall where no one could yus L] yeach Mm. unless )t were Shadow The Weases, Fo when he vias on the old sone wall felt quite safe He was oul there early une morning SInE WP 0B top of one of the sones the 0ld wall eating bis bieskfosl hem suddenly, Without any warning ot all. 8 hesd popped up from hetv e 1w slones o) u whot fromm b “well, well, sald & shaip voice, “see ” W hitefont | 1937 1/ Y0 s After | the confiz | . Billty and nervous fmpatience | REG'LAR FELLERS—Jimmie Lacks Good Cents. ... THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1927 Discussea Pros| and Cona of the Great Adventure Marriage and Character DorothyDix} Greatest Developer, Making Women Broad- Minded and Enabling Men to Achieve Fame and Fortune. CORRESPONDENT asks: “Is marriage worth while?” To which T would reply that it depends altogether upon how much sporting blood you have. Marriage is the greatest gamble on earth, with the highesat stakes and the heaviest ndds against the player. Compared with it, poker and roulette are sure things. But if you are lucky and: win, you get the wreatest happiness that ever comes to mortal man or woman, and even when you lose you often get the consolation prize of children. The timid souls who are afraid to take risks and the selfish who are intent upon sccuring their own well being at any cost do well never to take a flyer in matrimony. The chances are too slim that they will get just the Kind of life partners they desire and that their investment in domesticity will vy a hundred per cent profit. Single blessedness may offer ita few thrills, but it fs a safe bet, and the man and weman who choose it are reasonably sure of a degree of happiness They can be certain of peaceful homes. They can have thelr own money to spend upon themselves. They can have personal liherty and he free to indulge themselves in their little ways. Above all, they eacape the respon- sibility, the cares and hurdens of a family. The bachelor and tha spinster may he compared to the conservatives who put all of their money in Government bonds. They never get rich, but they never starve. Rut those who marry are like the plungers who invest their all in Iy speculative stocks. They either go hroke or make a killing. But, any- way, whatever the outcome may be, they have had their great hour when they believed themselves millionaires and that they were sitting on top of the world. R NDOURTEDLY life holds no other happiness equal to that experienced hy a man and woman who are really mated, whose love never wavers, who find a never-ending delight in each other's companionship and who give | o each other a complete understanding and sympathy Unfortunately such marriages are almost as rare as hen's teeth, and Jjudging from divorce statistics and the disgruntled husbands and wives we see all about g, we can but recognize that the holy estate is far more often a place of torment than it 18 an ahode of bliss, and that its risks are so great that they ate not worth taking it one is seeking only one's individual happines.. There are, however, a lot of hy-products of matrimony that .make it worth while, and chief among these jx the fact that marriage jis the great developer of character. Six months of marriage will age a girl and hoy more | than six years of single life. ~Marriage sets its ineffaceable seal upon people. It brands them It alters the expression of their faces, the way they walk and di R Not 40 divorces can ever make over a man or a woman and take away that married look from them. | | | Sometimes marriage brings out all the good that is in 2 man and woman Sometimes 1t deveiops all that is worsat in them. Sometimes it turns them into saints. Sometimes into devils. Sometirhes it will turn a silly, frivolous flapper into a wige, self-sacrificing wife and mother. Sometimes marriage will convert a wild, reckiess boy into a steady-going, ambitious man. The man and woman who have been married know things abaut their | own souls and the souls of men and women that no old maid or old bachelor ever knows. . They know to what depths human nature ean descend and to what | heights it can :ixe. They know the inside of life. They are Eves and Adams who have eaten the apple to the core, whereas the unmarried only nibble at o the outside of it. And that knowledge alone makes marriage worth while. D ARRIAGE is worth while because it makes men and women more fol- erant and more hroad-minded. Esepclally women. The very conditions of domestic life force a wife to get a man's point of view on things, and the child’s point of view, and to adapt herself to them. Not without reason are most of the fanatical reformers who want to make the worid over according to their pattern, and force rybody else to | eat and drink and think ax they do, old maids and old bachelors. | Marriage is worth while to a man because it gives him the incenti | that he often needs to force him to make good. Few men ever save any money or make any real progress in their work until after they get married It im after they have the nccessitv of providing for a family that they really g0 to work in earnest, and give the best that is in them to their jobs. Many a man a: hieves fame and fortune bhecause he adores his wife and wants to make he. proud of him and give her case and luxury. And many a man becomes a millionaire hecause he is so miserable #t home that he is bound to abkorh himself in his business and give his every thought to that, or else go crazy. . Marringe ik worth while hecause it is the Great Adventure. Tt lures us into the unknown. It offers us the thrill of danger; the fascination of exploring the personality of the partners of our bosoms: the thrill of fights with our husbands and wives that are far more perlious than any scraps with big game; the daily and hourly necessity of heing a pathfinder and walk. ing warily among the prejudices and habits and sensibilities of the one to whom we are united in the holy honds of wedlock, | Oh, yes, marriage is worth while. Else we would not all be 8. anxious to try it Ay DOROTHY DIX (Copyright PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D, Does the Mind Work ¢ The popular conception of “nervous exbaustion” implies that one has a fund or store of “nervous energy” and if this is squandered or capended too fast. “exhuustion” evitably follows—-the _victim - having | covery is_concerned “nervous breukdown.” | To be sure, the mind w TV kdown | A earies of un- Now T know how deleterious anxi- | congenial study or drab poring over !m'w worry and fear can be. I Kknow | ondless figures wnd the like. This is | that e lnl(f.tn‘{:! l'w:::m- -lmvv-n'.mv‘ilr.puurly c.!ka “brain fa Diver. ] 3 vlon of “interest or attention is the ind surgical shoc NOW. remedy, not rest. Varfety is the spice t in ull modern surgical tech- of life ' Change of task, change of #kill the most careful consider- | xubject, change of paths of |Atlov of the patient's mental state s | quction, change of occupation. Voca- |ensentini for success. 1 recognize the |tion and mvocation: oceupation and | important place thut imagination hus | hobby: 1n any normul lite these things in the life of the individual. And in nust he »o arr; d 0 Insure { the Mrn'n! these facts I would Tone will not h:-'-‘n.n.lo -u. r'vm::-‘w‘u:r.‘h" out physiologlesl truth that ‘The function of your hrain uses no ph knockn the bottom out of al | more enerxy than the funetion of vour nervous exhau parotid gland. The parotid gland Is " £E " The' UhyAOORIoAl | et i ano i (e e U | truth is that the working of the mind ety ;r::"'::olll?“:':;“fl" . 1 withdraw that | tabollsm—combustion of fu tion of heat or work, and product. Byt In the case of the men tal function thia conversion of energy (which constitutes what doctors call | metavolism) is at & minimum. and is virtumily negligible so far as our In- | knowledze af work, fatigue and re. certain | reauires virtually no energy at wil, at moxt the mental function expends no re energy than the liver function | or the kidney function does, xo tri- | {fling an amount of energy that it is {difficult o impossit reasure it anything from raw or huxie materials: IC just serves as a e transformer and central station. I n the calorimetry ¢ 4 !the brain or mind were so Inxulated | do not mean to Imply that the | \0 . | working of the brain or the activity of | i, ™, '";,"“'";' .fi".“'emu':m:"}l. \nm mind uses absolutely no ftuel or [ (U ocenrs with abwolutely no wear nnd N [tear or produces absolutely no waste 4 e v matter. ” The hrain tlave is com. |, 0% YOU 568, 68 Chr as we know, b osed of cells, and no microscopic cel) | LT 11 produces energy. It ¢ {7un function without its minute me- | it B0F PEOGACER FRarEN: Vgl | messages. Aside from the minute metahollsm of the living hrain cells, the mind does s in common concep- ength, vigor [ve found a way to ' meanage bores 8 (Without much puin or shrinking — [ let them telk wbout themselves While T just ,( . v Atr Copyrizht 19271 skl Fruit Squares. Beat three egg yolks untll light and stie in one cupful of sugar, Add two tablespoonfuls of orange fulce and one (and one halt cupfuly of dutes, Ags or ‘\..P on [valalng eut in niocen and then one cup lhink;ng» L tenapoonful of xalt. the three egk whiten heaten stiff. Npread very thin on a well greased Inverted pan. unge | noodlen in squar lzed sugar. aprinkle with puly 1D RATHER WAVE A BANKFUL OF WUNRED DOLLAR GOLD PIECES! I'D RATHER HAVE [ A BANKFLY “ 3 MILLION - @GOLD PIECES H — e S - FEATURES.” SONNYSAYING MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LO0IS LEEDS. Whi ds. soap and water at bedtime. Remove Blackheads and Whitehea | maka-up first with cold cr Rinse A group of Canadian beauty fans|in® o in o or U ions out the ige hax asked me to outline a simpie daiiy | blackheads, bathe the area with borie program for young girls wio are anx- acid solution, dry and apply an acn [salve, Here is a good recipe: One fous to clear thelr comglexions of | Bl tm e Ot onehalt drim blackheads and whiteheads. zine_oxide, one dram starch, nna and From the outset it is necessary 10! one-half drams petrelatum. Leave thin realize that hlemishes of this sort can- on overnight and wash off next not he cured by purely local treat-|morning. ments, When a young girl's com-| The whiteheads are dus to a siuz- plexion is rough instead of elvaty,|gish circulation. RBrisk daily sxercise tae cause may usually be found in her out of doors and stimulating morning digestive tract. Of course, if ahe is |baths will help correct o i not careful to cleanse her skin thor-| Do not miss taking a h oughly every day, her neglect in an' with a cnarse, dry tows: every morn- invitation to Wackheads io establish ing. Open the larger whit>hesds with themselves on her face, 1 I wonder whetiier my younz 1eaders will be dizappoin‘ed when I put first in their daily neauiy program not a special skin lotion but an avoldance of constipation. The right chol ond point in the gi of food is the sec- '« beauty [rogram. When the diet is properly pianned every meal is a re heauty treatment. Young girls require threa meais a day. | The no-breakfast fad is an unhealth: | ful one for them. Fresh fruit, cereal, | poached egg on toast and seme health. ful beverage other than tea or coffes | make a suitable breakfast. A ,ight| midday lunch may consist of a glass | of milk, whole wheat sandwich filled | with peanut hutter (or chicken, pimen- | to cheese, date and cheesa or deviled | | egie, preferably with le:tuce and siiced | | tomatoes), hot vegetable soup and an |apple or other fruit. The principal | meal of the day should include some | meat, a starchy vegetahle, a salad, two | jeculent vegetables, stewed fruit or pudding dessert and = glass of milk. ishes gémetimes corur in No eating between meals shou! he ‘0 e = in i , allowed. Candy may be eaten after | ot ol careful Lleangicy of the siin | insults from strange men. Any other| iy dessert or in place of it at meal| Lill be nutgrown in a faw years. Sa. times, vera cases of acne should be treared | girl might be embittered by the awful | experiences she's forced to go through.| The local treatment for blackheads by a physician. Copsrizht iva is almost good-natured in her | consista of a thorough cleansing with T a sweet little martyr, that's all, | | And How to Keep It Fit | She's had to leave two or three jobs | BY PROF. JOSEPH JASTROW. 1 looked berry careful free times | 'mong my toys an’ I can't ses what e afte L (Covvright. 1927.) SUB ROSA DY MIMI. a sterilized needls and press aut the white matter inside, :an bathe the place in baric acid or otaer antisepti~ wash. During the adalescent period com- i the most persecuted little person in the world, and it seems to me she's wonderfully brave about it/ all. Her life is just a succession of | 1927 | because of the cruelty of her em- | ployers. They were all nice men in their way, but as soon as Eva hove in slight their true natures asserted themselves. | One boss after the other insulted Fva deliberately—asked her to go to dinner, offered to buy her a diamond (ELECS Rendru iy EN o like perfect| .. ;) depends upon what one counts Poor little girl; she wandered for asa “thing.” how the “things” are re- days getting new jobs, and having 10 jated and how strictly you mean “at | give them up within a few’ weeks once” It's a good question to start a | after taking them. Her courage was discussion. As L -write these words | almost gone when she finally landed | with a pen in my right hand, 1 am | that the two hands travel in opposite a position with an aged gentleman holding a cigar in my left hand. and ' directions. She can write either or whose p ‘ial blindness perhaps ac- ' now and then puff at it; and just now | both words upside down. for her mind- counted for his chivalry. I answered a question put to me by my , images of what she wants to draw are Even so, Eva's troubles didn’t stop. | stenographer ~without stopping my |0 clear that she copies what she Day after day she was forced to leave | work: and I could go on working with , imagines. She can divide the writing a comfortable seat on one subway car | a phonograph playing in the room, and | between the two hands. so that these and go to stand in another because listen to that, too. Though writing, I ! nine words would be written with the | some outrageous fellow was flirting am doing several “things” at once not | right and the others at the same time with her across the aisle. related to the writing. but not needing | With the left hand. . Tt tired her all out. avoiding the enough attention to interfere with it.| Remarkable as this is, it is only a advances of these subway sheiks. She | But there is some swinging from one more skillful traininz of what we ail used to wail to her friends that if ' to another ofthese occupations, When | do. and could learn to do better if it only there weren't any men in the | get absorbed in my work 1 let the Were worth whi'e. The inventor of a | world she'd he xo much happier. cigar go out or drop the ashes: and. if | typewriter on which you could strike | "It she went into a corner drug store | there were constant interruptions, my (tWo letters at a time. and. ag he to telephone she’ was subjected to ' work would suffer. Writing isn't one | thought. double the speed. found that humiliation from every side. | “thing™; it is “at once” thiking what | he could learn to do it pretty well. but Men spoke to her: men asked her if to xay and putting it in words, and |he couldn't sell the invention. Most she'd go to the movies: men offered to | moving the pen. and reading what 11persons prefer to get more speed in a buy her ice cream sodas. It was write. Thesa are ail bita of one per-|Simple performance than to learn a awful. formance. and my attention must be | more difficult one that is differently er- | Eva finally decided that she had properly divided among them. ganized. No one proposes that we been horn with a curse, and after that | The main point is how the eccupa- | $Bould all cultivate the ability which she was quite resigned ‘to her fate.| tion ig organized and what mechanism this young waman found she could ge- although every one who knew her was | (na performance demands. The | YSIOD: it's interesting to find that some still regaled with accounts of the daily | ianist looks mainly at t people can use the mind in wavs that notes, a! r ", 7 4 = require ynusual orzanization. But it's | insuits she recelved from every man iittls at the keyboard. plays one part ‘Toiir® ! S - who met her. I with his right nand. a very different SR T S e Eva was horn with & curse. as it 80 part with his left hand. and uses the Mind that L= '"'““‘"; Coprris thands at once. and complete it in 20 seconds. She could even hold one piece of chalk in her mouth and one in each hand, and write three different words the same time. even words in different languages. In writing her left hand starts with the last letter. so Two Things at Once. happens. But it is not the curse of | pedals with his feet: but all in the in-| fatal beauty. as she secretly believes. (orest of one result. He might sing ' —_— i) Her curse is the kind of mentality and accompany himself, and still be: Mushrooms With Bacon. that discerns in every action, every doing one “thing.” But if he could | speech. a black insult. | play one tune with the right hand and | b the myshrooms, remove the {""She really loves ft—this feeling that | anather with the left. it would be quite | Sleme, and piace the caps in 3 but- ! wherever she goes men will insist on'a stunt. A person who is knitting and tered brotier and broil for five min- | flirting with her, and deliberately talk- | talking at the same time, is attending | UteS, having the cap side down first to her when they've never been to two things quite differently organ.: Malf of the broiling. Serve on circular ¢ introduced. It gives her a wense of import#nce. ized. vet hoth so practical and inde. pendent that they don't interfere. She feels rather like a tragedy queen. And we can all walk and talk at once. Half the poor. innoceni men whom | though some persons when they get <he accuses of impropriely are not excited stop walking. So we make even looking at her when she’'s busy ' one performance out of what goes to-! Dieces of buttered dry toast. Put a small piece of butter in each eap. sprinkle with salt and pepper. and | serve as soon as the butter has mekt- ed. Care must be taken in removing from broiler ta keep the mushrooms cap side un» to prevent the loss ®f of nerve con- | A single Ihuu[hl.l th | DALE Ww much HQuiA in (he cooKINg | e peglected. These | gather boLLAR resisting their unwelcome advances. r. such as the many things to he She imagines insult in every speech, ough not quite at ance, in driv- every lock. The employers whom she | ing an auto. as we organize it, and call {1eft in high indignation had probably | it driving: and n do easily two never spoken a word to her in their | things at once that are practiced and {lives that wasn't connected with busi- ¢ ey, ness. Now and then somebody appears | But Eva, being an incompetent little | with a rare shill for managing two | person, they very probably did fire| tasks that are differentiy and highly her, and with her usual powers of organized and involve related parts | imagination she made a sob &tory out | af the body to perform them: and that ot it for the benefit of friends and is a real trick. There is an account tamily. | of a young woman who was so remark- The only reason Fiva s aver.nsulted | able at it that she went on the stage is because she's looking for insuits. Wit her: “ack® . Wihes cualil ple with Almost eve pretty girl in the ane hand while drawing with the! {world has had a few experiences'other. She could work at different wherein fresh voung men have tried | parts of a portrait with right and left | to scrape acquaintance in an informal | MOTHERS fashion AND THEIR CHILDREN. juices. Serve surounded by broiled bacan. You mizht be surpei Kknow that the best thing yea |\ can use for coughs. is"a remedy which 1= easily prepared at home | in just @ few moments. It's cheap but for resulis 1t beats aartding else you ied. Usually st ordy hours. Tastes pleasant—ehil- dren like it. R Pour 2'5 ounces of Piaex im a pint buttle: thea 6Nl it up with Wain zranulated sugar syrip. Or use clarified honey justead of sugar srrup. if d Thus you make & full pint—a family supply— costing ue wore than & smail dottle of reaty-made cough avr A s a cough is really nothing hetter to at amy price. It goes rvigh Rut most girls pass these impudent Kids hy without a thought or a worry. Eva's trouble is that she can't help Kiving publicity to the most harmless firtation ever attempted by a sireet { lounger. Until she geta over this feel Affairs, s dexper 3 idiculous Agure pmong he | - {to cut a1 | triends. i (Covvright. 19271 i = — Chili Con Carne. Koak bvernight one half 1 pound of | Kidney beans, then boil until almost | tender. Brown in suet or other fat| h ne pound of round sqares hel. promptly bhedls branes that line the threat passages, stops the annoving tickle, loosens the your cough stops eatirely. did for bronchitis, hearseness bronchial asthma. o Moex s & highly coacentrated compound of Norway pine egtraet aud palatable guaiacel, famous tor Dealing the membranes. 3 To averd disappointwent ask, your druggist for “2ly eunces of Pinex” with Guarantesd to giv satisfaction ar meney funded. The Pinex £ t. Whei the liq iid (rom the meat and onions has bolled down add [the bollsd heans and th: lquor in| | Which they were cooked and one pint of water.” \When this has begun to wil one clove of garlie chopped this flaver (s liked, and one ing teaspoonful of Mexican chill | po “der, Stmmer alowly for one hour | The amount of chill powder may be | increaned 1€ lked by adding xome | more fust hefore the chill con carne One Mather Savs | in taken from the atave. it the taste | Afer the children have plaved with | lis not strong enough. Atter cookiuk ! (heir Christmas toys for several davs | for ane hour the - shoull be AbOUL | (ilera wee alwavs some which seem €| Mer | and put away in hiding eval | . months later, when the Spring rains " I Reep the chitdren inside, 1 Wil Bring | e Thin s just as delie ey | OUE these forgotten foyx, and thev Ave | left.over 16 ther i sure to < N oh ent Dol “tibe. or' e | 218 10 be received WIh much enthu | aary favor By GENE BYR i Thicken very slight [y with four and merve with hot hollad rice. macaroni, spaghetts [ utensit as solids de fron D RTAVY ve th (Convright 1997 ) NES D RATMER HAVE A BANKFUL OF IMES .07 THEYRE BASIER ¢ TO SHAKE ,(‘ N Pimples all gone Skin clear again No wonder she smiles! Woulda's von 1vou had been suennag the embacan ment of & rough, ted, pmply akin and Bad tried one treatment alter anather without succesr—then vou wied Rew ol Ohntment and it cleared awar the trouble quickly, eauly. and at saalt cout? IF your shin in red and “heokoa out” give thia heabiag aatment a tewal Sample free=Write Rov: il Dept, T, Balnmers, M 4. AL daggets o Resino