Evening Star Newspaper, February 19, 1928, Page 53

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Wholesome, Delicious Desserts for Dinner BY BETSY CALLISTER. HILE for those whn are try- ing reduce or those who €njoy better health if they do not eat sweets, dessertless dinner may be all_very well, gor most paople 1 have found the mere nticipation of a toothsome and satis- ¢ dessert at th: end of dinner < the meal more enjoyable. Then. . the dessert may include valuable food inaredienis, eges and butter, flour, uit. ctc. and so increase the nutri- ve value of the meal The desserts chosen for this week’s dinners consist of apple dumplings. Losting s. chncolate bread pude . orange charlotte, i e tapioca and pru desseris as far ne of them A? np dumplins— 8 or i0—vou will need poonfuls of s of butter, i of baking powder, a ~it. & quarter cupful of nd cinnamon and nutmeg. ~ apples and peel and core 1 together the flour. baking d salt. lerd and butter add the water. into § or 10 portion: portion and st one Fill the core h of ve. To make it rer two level teaspeonful a cupful of su { boiling water f a doudle boiler Surring to keep smooiil a table- 1 of buiter and the grated rind t should be m ints th: , stirring smooth. =n thick and thoroughly ove frem the fire and le a half teaspoonful of vanilla 0 a larg> dish or pour some n or eigat individual des: let WORLD FAMOUS STORIES Mr. Pickwick’s Invitation By CHAZX Pickwick's faithful valet, Sam s hand a card on safd Sam epi- want me, Sam? a0t repli , “and he's " in the drawing room—said wait all day, than not to sce wick. on hear: ~ended to i extended ve heard of your fame, sir. 8m Quite certain that on behalf of Mrs, | e about your famous address cached the ears of Mrs. Leo dr. Leo | eups. pile on the custard. An inexpensive chocolate bread pud- ding of this sort may be made without You will need a cupful of stale y—a, cupful of milk, a half cupful of sugar and a quarter cupful of grated choco- Mix together, put into a buttered baking dish, set in & pan of water and | Serve with | eggs. bread crumbs—not completely dry- late. bake for about 20 minutes. Just befors serving beat the two | egg whites stiff, add two level teaspoon- fuls of sifted powdered sugar, mix and THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., a, | a cupful and a half of sugar, & table- !need prunes cocked very tender and ALE S DICKENS top milk or thin cream. For orange charlotte soak two table- | spoonfuls of granulated gelatin in cold | water for 2 minutes. Beat the yolks | of two eggs until light and add a cup- ful of granulated sugar. Add a cupful of orange juice and cook with the sugar and eges in the top of a double botler, stirring all the time. Add the soaked gelatin and stir until dissolved and let cool. Now beat the egg whites stiff and add to the mixture and put in a mold | to set. A little whipped cream may | be added with the whipped cgg whi | but this is not necessary. This may | bs served with sections of oranges or | with a foew clices of orange on each | dish. Here is a geod raisin pie. have made cnough pie crust for lavers look over one cupful of | and put them in & double boiler with a cup of water. Mix a tablespoonful of flour with a half cupful of brown ! pful of granulated | are and let cook s are quite tender. Line | 2 pie tin wilh crust and sprinkle with | a tablespoonful of fine dry bread- crumbs. Pour in the raisin misture. | some lemon rind and sprink! raisin mixture a quarter tea- | Spoor of it end a teaspoonful of lemon juice. Put the top crust on the pic and bake in the usual manner. pineapple tapioca pudding the first thing in the morning is to put a cuprul of pearl tapioca to soak in cold | water and 2 or 3 hours before dinner | drain and put in the top of a double | boiler with a half cupful of cold water | and the juice from one can of chipped | and the juice of one lemon. | til quite clear—about an hour. ful and a quarter of ar and the pineapple set aside to cool. Serve wit ittle whipped cream if desired. To make enough prune whip for | seven or eight persons you will need | three egg whites. The egg yolks may be used to make salad dressing or to add with whole eges in making scram- bled ecgs or cmclet for breakfast the next day. For three eggs you wil a cupful and a half of prune pul After you two until the ra spocnful and a half of lemon juice and | just a small pinch of salt. To make the prune whip you will presced through a wire sieve. Beat the egg whi 5 n beat in the sugar | and salt and finally the prune pulp.| Pile in individual glass dish>s. | - DEVICES FOR YOUR SHOES The sketch shows some of the keeping shoes. There's the shoe trunk. still very serviceable cretonne shoe bag to Hang on the inside of the closet door. And a very attractive cretonne-covered shoe box, by the trunk. Then there is a rack to stand which the shoes hang by their heels. The figure is sitting on an old s padded cover for several pairs of sortment of brushes and sho= trees slipper hox-—with room under shoes. A slipper mirror and an are shown on the floor. FEBRUARY 19, 1928—PART 3. | There was a time when the size of one's family was representative of one’s | various convenient places for There's the old-fashioned but B | store of knowledge about children. - in | came through expcrience gained | with the experience of neighbors and |relatives. To have but one child sig- ! nified that, having bu$ one experience |in the game of rearing children, one i merely sat in the corner and listened. Not so today. The mother of one child may b> far better equipped with | the knowledge cf how to taze care of | that child than the woman who has had 10, because the mother of 10 may make the same misiakes with each in the closet, with bars from |one’s own family and by comparison ' N AN L (2 4V W\ {Macaroon Named | 5 = | For First Maker . | _ Mile. Macaroon. who lived \nhN:\]nr}'. S . n. | France, was the inventor of the little T e 5 ot} more (ouch- cake stil] known as the macaroon. It is %1t Vou pleacsc: said Mr. Pickwick, |S8d that she and her sisters became “It tuns thus~ said the grave man, | jamous for their macaroons and after Pl My it | their death her relatives and heirs con- e hoe e e of boys, | Linued the business and kept the recipe With wild halloo. and braial note’ |28 a family secret. There is a vast dif- FTitited thet Tior arils 0S¢, | ference, I have been told, between mac- el e e aroons made according to this old recipe Eiiios Tt and the sort you buy elsewhere. PR el S It is an easy enough thing to make aur T e them at ‘home and they ore certainly o z clicious. Here is a recipe: S id Mr. Leo Hunter. | por a half pound of aimonds you will osesl hear Mrs. Leo HUnter | peed one cup of fine granulated sugar ! i a ,e;;;'l 1? 'E”Sfu';“n and two egg whites with a pinch of tomorroy: morning.” said Mr. Pick-| Shy salt. Shell and blanch the almonds and then chop fine, or put through the meat chopper with a fine adjustment. Beat up the egg whites very stiff and add the sugar a little at a time and then add Eut I forgot—'tis a | reakfast.” | from enl'm'n, how-| a m said Mr. Pickwick at his own figure, “I can't can’'t!” exclaimed Mr. “Solomon Lucas, the Jew street, has thousands of fancy Consider, sir, how many ap- propriate characters are open for your czlection. Plato, Zeno, Epicurus, Pytha- goras—al! founders of clubs.” “I know that” said Mr. Pickwick, “but as. I cannot put myself in com- to wear thelr dresses.” man considered deeply for w s2conds and then said: “On reflection, sir, 1 don't know whether it would not afford Mrs. Leo Hunter greater pleasure if her guests saw a gentleman of your celebrity in his own costume. rather than in an asrumed one. I may venture to promise an exception in your casé, sir—yes, I Leo Hunter I may venture to do s0. “In that case.” said Mr. Pickwick, thall have great pleasure in coming” “But 1 waste your time. sir,” said the grave man. as if suddenly recollecting nims=?. I Rnow its value, sir. I will not detain you Mrs. Leo Hu nfidently nguished am proud personege—not a step. sir, And without g time to offer remon- THE DAILY HOROSCOPE the nuts and work well together. Roll this out on a board—covered lightly with powdered sugar—a scant half inch thick and then cut into | rounds about two inches in diamcter, or simply form with the fingers into little cakes about a half inch thick and | two_inches in diameter. On a wooden ' board fasten with thumb tacks a sheet |of whit>~ waxed paper and place the | little cakes on 1t And put them in a ! very siow oven to cook for about ten | Colors and Styles S . Gay for Spring ! Tiers of pleating appear as skirt orna- mentation on many of the new frocks. and to get the right flare the pleats are often pressed out at the lower edge of the tier. To get this effect the material 15 finished in a narrow hem, then pleated, and after that pressed out for about 2 inches. Sometimes when ex- | tremsly fine pleating is used on chiffon | for trimming the edge is pressed out in the same way. | “Black lace appears in combination | with ecru and othier light shades of net jer lace cn a number of interesting new | evening frocks 3111 een that looks really green- top of any billiard table o saw g its appearance iere and there. Bright reds and blues of the sort seen on fresh new flags s | appearing either alone or in_combina- { tion on many of the new sports things. Red 1s blooming all around us and © world of fashion 15 full of inhumer- able sorts of yellow 8o that one must bezin to question the statement made | #0 often several wel ago to the effect | | that only subdued colors would be worn | this Spring ! WHY WE DO WH Fire breaks out in a motion picture ' theater that is jammed to the doors. Panic seizes the mob and they stam- pede. Women and children are tramp- led under foot. In the crowd is a col- | lege student, who picks up helpless vic- tims and carries them out one by one. He returns to the building again and again until he falls exhausted and dies This is an actual case. ‘There zre hundreds of sumilar cases on record. Acts of rescue, such es ing a child from the hoofs of a runaway horse, risking one’s life to save a Grow! ing person, etc., are well known to all The sacrifices that any mother wiil make for her child are tco ccmmon o | mention What makes people unselffish? We are accustomed to_thinking of human boings as essentially sclfish and sclf- seeking. It is true that we are all self- centered and hence selfish to o degre But that is only half the story also unselfish, for along with the in- stinct of self-asscrtion and the fight- ing impulse goes the parental instinct and soctal impulses which generate sac- rifice end unsolfishness. If left to himself a human bci wouid be far difcrent from savage Lors who lived by the law of the jungle. which is decidedly self- ish. In the » of nature the selfish impulses would g°t the better of the un- selfish impulses for the most part But civilization has strengthened the social Impulses through the discipiine of pressure of soclal rewards and punisl ments. The child is quite sclfish at first but he soons learns to respect the rights | of others. in & measure at least. For a time he wants to cat cvery bit of his candy; later he learns to get pleasure out of haring it with his brother or playmate. . As he grows older he be: comes more and more socially-minded He develops sympathy and a spirit of | co-operation Imagina/ help in mal ourselves | n and emotion are a great ng us unselfish. We place other fellos position and feel sorry for him. We want to do all we can to help a sufferer because we can imagine how we would feel un der the same conditions. vivisection, the scientific surgieal e periments on animals, s doubtles prompted by this type of sympathy. Bince a man would suffer if subjected to the rame experiment, he assumes that the animal also suffers in like measure. We arc unselfish partly by inherftance | and partly by training. The right sor! Tapioca and Chicken Soup. Take one-fourth cupful of tapioca. one cupful of cold water, one pint of | boiling water, one quart of chicken or veal stock. one cupful of hot milk, e Bk the yolks of two eggs and salt and of training is mecessary to tip the bal- pepner Soak the tapioca in the cold ance in favor of the social and unselfish | b . impulses which are not ordinarily ac WALer for two hours. drain it. add the strong as the instincts of sclf-preserva- bofling water and cock the whole in a tion and the will to live. | double boiler until transparent. Grad- “ha ually add the hot stock and cook both for 10 minutes, then add the season- ing and the hot milk. Beat the yolks of the eggs and add th°m after dilut- ing them with a little ¢f the hot mix- {ture. = Stir the soup for & few seconds. pour into a tureen and serve. THOMSON. dreseed rieht. 1028.) Desks Convenient And Decorative It is safc to say that the first quarrel between bride and bridegroom is when, child and so her experience is of little should be | value. ‘There little guesswork | about children’s problems today, for Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. know, and they do not agree. What am I to believe then?” This need not upset the mother. There is no on= set of rules which ap- plies to all children. She cam follow one author or amother and perhaps achieve the same result. In the es- sentials there are few disagreements. On= cannot tak> a stock garment and make it fit each child One has °° make a tuck, or shorten a hom. but it bhecomes a d wearable garment just the sam> and botter than a cut by a conscientious but untaught home dressmaker. The maim thing is to have come rulks. zome ideals. some authority for ons's be tive of old age if one mew viewpoints, and try nsw things. Sticzing to old ways meorely because ! one has the benefit of expert knowl- | edge. It is necessary only for the parents to fit this knowledge. bought in the piece, to the framework of their own brood. How can a parent know if his child is acting in a perfectly normal and natural way unless he knows what is the normal and natural way for chil- dren to act at various ages? Onme is saved & lot of worry if one knows that Jack will from 3 to 6 years of | age be likely to varnish every statement | tell the truth, if the truth is told to! with fancy, because Jack is quite in- capable of making statements of fact. fact and fancy being inextricably mixed up in his mind. It is useless to rave at Jack and call him a “liar” stories he tells. They are not lies to hin and he is not in any danger of being | cne when grown. providing his parents are aware of what is to be expected at this stage of his development and merely assure Jack that they under- stand his stories are embroidered by fancy. Jack wiul in due time learn to i him, and he will not have his valuable | creative fancy damaged by parental ;lgnora.ncm It is an eye-opener for most parents o go to school and watch the children for an hour or two. Don't just look at your own child; watch the other chil- dren and find out what children of this age are interested in and how they | act. Know vour own child by knowing others.. You'll always find one or two children in any group who do not fit. They cry when others laugh. they serap when others are amiable. Perhaps this may be your child and you will know then that he is different and needs some different treatment at home so that he will learn to adjust himseif to group activities. If you find your child fitting himself neatly and happily into the group plans, about hum: he is the average child azd without doubt his home environment is suited to Ar unobtrusive adult can learn a lot ts this by reading. One mother i 1 feel so upset when I read baoks, both supposedly by persons who for the W2 are Opposition to | in a burst of mispiaced cnergy to be thoughtful. the bride s her husband's desk at home. e mastiff he scents intrusion into his lair. Perhaps, man-like, he would not be orderly. But why is it that the bride never finds time to answer her letters? Because the desk is so tiny she can't find room to write comfortably. Papers fall to the floor. Altogether it is an {rritating process and so she neglects to write. One wants room and still more room | —ecnough for elbows and papers with no fear of tipping the ink while agoniz- | ing over writing. A jiggling, unstable | desk adds no incentive i For the wife the spinet desks, an some Italian ones; and for the hus-| band the table desks of Chippendale | and Willlam and Mary, and, in larger quarters, the Elizabethan refectory tables, make broad and sturdy desks. | Aside from the fact that one must | have some place to write, the use of a | desk in a living room will give not only varlety of furnishing but a livable look | and will go further than any other plece, excepting a davenport, to make | it look “furnished.” If of the table| variety, the desk may serve double duty as dining table. In these days when so many men— and thelr wives, toa--are “in business, desks are of unusual importance in th home. They can still be ples 3 decorative and have all the chum | that desks had in the days when they | were supposed to be used principally for the writing of social respond- | ence; they need never look “officey” or out of place. A FEW DAYS LATER JIMMY WAS ON THE SICK LIST E)r safetys sake they are oid and famikar is to refusing to ride in an auto because ome has always ridde H n a » you will know a blnd eye on and when it is ure to correct givable thing in indifferent to the weait on child-rearing and to ki clamped v —— Mint Cherry Jelly. Soak two of granu- lated gelatin for five minutes tn coid water. dissolve in bo! water, strain, hen add to ome of sugar and one-half a cupful of lemon juice. Add three or four drops of essence of pep- permint and color with green vegetable coloring until a clear green. then turn into a mold, and when gealed add enough either whole or cut I l;vl-. . Let Monday, February 20. should be a fairly favor- | ig o astroligy, for get germs off hands . ... with this puvifying toilet soap VEN when a fellow's big enough to look after mother and pay her crolley fare .. . he's got to watch out for germs! But Jimmy wasn't always careful. Some- times he'd sic down to” supper without washing his hands. One morning Jimmy woke up. .. sick Couldn’t go to school ... couldn’t go out to play. Yet he didn't know what had made him ill. It never occurred 1o hum that money, or any one of a hundred ditterent things he had handled, nighe be to blame. Why risk family health? Children's hands, as well as grown-ups, may pick up germs from many things we must touch daily-—money, carseraps, books, toys, Iele{honu And germs on hands very quickly pass into the mouth, say health” authorities. See above, the list compiled by the Life Exteasion Institute morni all things id be a time in domestic are under- for the stars KISSPROOF LIPSTICK stays on no matter WHAT one does! /E‘ \ 5 nur has m resumed 1k asts of reas % b’ most ausnic mment of ¢ a duy propitious ar slgns 1v DEAR, you simply can't im AGINE what a FIND this new K¢ proof LIPstick is! 1t's WATER proof doesn't come OFF no S one does! | wan just the hit of the PARty last night, no LESS! 1 didn't have to STOP every few minutes and put more ON! Old fashioned PEOple that use ORdinary LiPstick that comes OFF all the ume how can they BEAR it, my dear?” Kisspraof tells no tales — never embarrasses by coming off when one doesn’t WAN it 0! Easily removed | with cold cream, however, when *s good and ready! s % ; bart Rouge Muakes lips natural, kissable Kisaproof an in of 27 germ diseases that hands may carry. That's why — for health's sake—the Lifebuoy habit has been taught in ovee 63,000 schools and millioas’ of homes. That's why ereryene should use this puntye ing toilet soup fraquently—ecwrally e eaiing. It removes gorms as well as due, A hygienic scent millions love Children, grown-ups too, quickiy iearn love Litebuoy's Elu.\.\m alean scent— which tells you that Litebuoy punfies— yet which quickly evaporates attee riasing. Aad the same geatle, antsepeic Lifebuoy lather that guards health by removing germs — keeps skins fresh and clear by purifying pores. Prevenrs embarmssing ody odor, o _ Use Lifebuoy & week and you'll use it for lite. Gee same today LiVER BROK QO Camdraipe Mast LIFEBUOY FOR - PACE * on he ob- | BOG the appesr o forecast s manners Lhat v, women Leaves Hair Twie as Beautiful In a few minutes’ tims your haty 18 soft, silky and radiant with lite, gloss and lustre. To have beautiful, \-looking hair 15 simply & matter of proper shampooing While your hair must have fre- quent and regular washing to keep it beautiful, it cannot and the | harsh effect of ordinary soaps. ‘The free alkall in ordinary soaps soon a the scalp, makes the hair brittle and ruins it That 18 why discriminating wom- everywhere, now use Mulsified | Coconnut Qil Shampoo. This clear, Tpure and entirely grenseless produ ONI ' 18y ilet goods counters ||| brings out all the real beauty of the Lo i) onisaleByall igliauy | halr and cannot posaibly injure. | they are ton: heysire & | ™ Fwo or three teaspoonfuls of Mul- sified s all that 15 vequired. It makes an abundance of vich, ereamy ather, which cleanses thoroughly ide the seers pre- whio read th cressed interest i every sur The ever rected and foretell in- manual work of Hunter ¥ of this d Joula ulating o y There d be un- allon for di | serest an sthletics will be | L e carly Bprisg, when coun- | Tuy clule may lulrodice o attime Again the prognosticate s | can of Vurists from Europe snd new | erest A providing American resort | compare with forelgn watering | well di- ctory Offer we will Kissproot Lipstick in Vanity proof Face sinplete with miror and puft, ke of Kissproof Faste Rouge fim Gf Delica - Brow with camel's i 1ot applying: ail for coupon below and only et '\nl stingy ples but & whole inonti's supply of each the full size pack aiges would cout oy er 83,001 Ideal for week enas or your hand bag. Viease act prompily ~send coupon NOW! Find out for yourseil whit gennine K issproof Beauty Aids willdo, wiat ordin 1 | cosmetica will NEVER do! Kiwpi i made jen o y. And how they who has produ porems, 1 this y o Lt defies defection! Kissproot suthfuilly NATURAL irresi pulsating wiili Ui very sp) th issproof today — all modern toilet Toon' delay - the yrice 1o nell Tt 5 e wire e cave 1y o enune, You 4 ter you man more tHendly | ot pone other is her try be United Stats Cismpront Is what it | e Fomeproof Treasure Cliest a mem novel greal laste o) Plkwice seers thiat piliaces My tim 8 Bome canuse wibicated Persons whime birth have u year in which | eeried with numberless smell thinge | will le profitehle | oo 1% W0 become wltitude o the own beaut for cluw RAL youthful beaut Froy Co-operation W you would o 11 Pick It crentes an dmmer | wis signed with w10 end ren b on thut day probably | G epprared originally ! will 8 scientific trend of talent For e ssed (stamps or colns) send me and rinses oyt easi maving ever s U cominenoed ! cnglnecis are born under 4 ) , B Kissproof I rew _hést 1;:‘: lined above. particle of dust, dirt :m\ \ln‘:\flm e pant ¢ g1 Tuclude 16-page Neauly let. "1 use~ | "3t loaves the hair soft, silky and | FUNEEE J CiFlesh — (1White (1 Brunette ‘ La Ben easy to manage and makes it fairly 9 Elvary aseRowger. (Chsck wiiich. sparkle with new life, gloss and Nistre con . hia | You oan get Mulsified Oocoanut Ol Bhampoo at any drug store, i | A four-ounce bottle lasts for | | montha. Advertisement * HANDS ‘BATH « Canadian wheat pools, which Ul Ui membere’ giain, sy tiousande of micnhers, 8nd wl the present Ume they handle, rough- wiout hslf of e entire wheat ciop Wl U Domisbou, win M1 Piciwick i Hunwer STOPS BODY ODOR Las PROTECTS HEALTH | Lol M1 Pickwik .

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