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wWOoM AN'S PAGE’ THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. Accessory Col BY MARY Beige, cream or ecfu collars and cuffs are usually more becoming than those of pure white, but almost any sort of collar and cuff of lace, lawn, PR G, | yarn AR AND CUFF SET OF CREAM E. WORN WITH BROWN CREPE SATIN FROCK. FASTENED AT THE FRONT WITH RHINESTONE BUCKLE. COLL LA organdy or mull is more becoming than none at all, and 1. for one, am glad that they have come back into favor again. Of course, they are a The Warren Way. | OLKS warned Jennie Maxwell of tae Warren way before she married Joe Warren. But she laughed at them. Joe was big, clean-bodied, clean - hearted good-looking and he loved her. ~She Joved him. ‘The Warren way didn't bother Her one bit. For two or three years Jennle did ! just as Joe's hother had done, and got along with things as they were on the Warren homestead. Housekeeping tools were clumsy and old fashioned Jenny washed by hand, using a pair of Jeaky wooden tubs and a tin wash-| boiler. It was hard work, particular as she used her nice pieces of lin every day. Somehow, she just couldn't et the grime out of the towels. When Joe had the place joined up with the electric light system in the near-by town Jennie saw help ahead. At the same time tie barn was wired | Jights were installed in the house. But! improvements stopped rigat there. Joe felt he had spent enough money, One Saturday afternoon Jennie drove to town to do ome markeling ‘nd happened upon a demonstration of | electric washing-machines. After look- 4ng through the window at the crowd of interested women inside the hard- ware store, she entered. Her father had been a machinist and she had in-| herited a knack for machinery. Thers was a joke in her family to the effect that 1f you gave Jennie a hairpin and a button hook she could mend almost anything. This brisk, capable labor- maver fascinated her. The grimiest towel came out snowy white. Jennie's big dark eyes grew lumi- mous with longing. Two or three women gave orders for the machine. ©One of these women was the wife of a anan. who worked odd times for Joe. 10! course she had a big family. “How about you, Mrs, Warren?” the alesman - asked, smiling at her, pencil | ised above order blank. Jennie flushed anc shook her head. fShe wanted to talk it over with her| usband, she murmured, Behind her Lucy Frost laughed “That's all 1t will amount to—talking over.” Lucy said to the woman be- wide her. v hushand works for Joe Awarren. He's tighter than the bark to ja tree. And set in his way—the War- Fen way.” Jennie could not get away quickly fenough. ‘She raced the car home, Lucy Frost, was a liar. Joe would. he must wfter that, let her have the washing anachink. But Joe wouldn’t. When he learned | §he price he was astounded. But, Joe.” pleaded Jennle, “you {dont ¥now what you're talking about. Just see how the thing works before fou decide against it.” Nothing she said had any effect upon Joe. His lips shut in a straight line, his sandy brows drew down over his gray eyes, With a gesture he dismissed | the washing machine forever. Two days later a truck drove up tol the barn. Two men got out and began 40 unload a huge box. Joe came Tun- ning from the field. Jennie was pu What was it going to be no 1o see. i milking machine of the improved type. Joe hadn't told er he was going 1o get it. They had | only four cows, reistered Holsteins, | nwhich Joe never allowed anybody else o touch. This expensive contraption was for them, lo save Joe that how milking night and morning. ~Jennie turned round and went back in%o the ! Thouse s hands got dreadfully dirty. She scrubbed on the old washboard with all her might Suddenly a cry burst from her lips, She had torn her hand on the zinc. It re-| quired bandaging. She couldn’t finish her washing that day Next morning Joe had something else 10 do, 50 Jennie drew the milk to the condensery. She drove the light truck ac well as Jo¢ could and there was ai- ways somebody there to unload the cans for her. Her hand was still fandaged and very sore. And her dis- psition was sore, 100. She feil she had as much right to a ¢ machine as Woe had to a milking machine. She was delayed at the condensery #nd she went In to watch the ma- chinery. She peeped into the great va where the fresh milk bubbled to the ! proper point of condensation in three | hours. Wonderful! She moved on to take a look at the way the cans were 'peing filled and capped automatically. But, most amazing of all, was ihe ti Jess carrier which hurried along the empty shells which two girls were feeding it with deft, swift motions. She knew the girls weil. They were neigh- bors, young, alert, good-looking ‘Say, Elsie.” she said, “how much do! you get a day for doing that?” “Five dollars “Five? Jennie was she added. iist And I'd like to stay on she blushed. s trying 1o tell you she's going fo be married the first of the month nost startled ! out of the car and went siowly into| lars and Cuffs mefIV1E RyT REG U 8 PAT. OFE. MARSHA nuisance, for they have to be kept in the pink of condition and they! do add to the fussiness of dreszing They cerlainly give a decided advan- | tage to the girl who is willing to take pains with her wardrobe. | I cannot name a single one of the notable French dressmakers who has not made use of ihese accessory col- | lars and cuffs in recent displays of new frocks. Trim linen collars and cuffs are added where a tailored ap-| pearance wants to be maintained:, they are used on many sports frocks afiernoon frocks increase their fem- | inine aspect by the addition of these accessories in fine lacé, and even some of the evening gowns have deep berthas | or panel collars of lace or embroid- ered net. | The sketch shows a collar and cuff | that gives distinction to a new| of brown crepe satin and the, sketch shows, I think, quite] how it is made. Lsce about four or five inches wide was selected | cnough of it to go rather sm.gly around the s with French seams and to_follow the outline of the V| neck with ends. he cuffs consist of straight pieces sibiliti with seams taken so that the cuffs!story. “The peplum is a popular variant taper to the wrists slighily, and they from the straightline mode for both are made just enough 'v ve | daytime and evening, and here are two drawn over the A convenient different but typical ones. arrangement is keep them sepa-| On the left an afternoor rock of rate from the blouse and (o draw | UK twill shows a small circular peplum them over the ends of the slecves With the line repeated in a flared after the blouse is put on. They may | flounce he flat crepe evening gown then be fastened at the top hv litile' on the right has one which grows into ornamental pins. The collar is ot- | @ long panel in the back tached to the nckline and the ends EEIEERG AR ) are mitered. They are drawn tnrough 'Y PAGE The STYLE POST is the marker on the road Lo being smart. clearly Two Peplums. , Far from exhausting the peplum pos- es—two of them only begin the a small ornamental buckle of melal or mother-of-peaxl i This week's home dressmaker's help | shows how to make tufted wool trim- ming—just the thing to use to finish cuffs and collars of a little girl's Winter coat or (o provide interesting trimming for a wool frock for a lit- tle girl or a big one. The sketch that | accompanles the working directions| with the coming of Winier comes shows how attractively it may be used. | yoast pork to a prominen: place in the And all you need is a little Xniting|dinner menu. And pork brings apples and a worsted needle. If VOu| with jt. For years we have served ap- Would like to know all about it. piease | ple sauce. but leave it to Nancy to find send me your stamped. self-addressed some unusual way to combine the apples envelope and I will send the, circular |and the ham, roast pork or pork chiops to you. | She chose apple sauce sifted to a fine- < Apple Rings Ring the Bell BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. (Copyrignt, 1929.) Coleslaw With Nuts. Remove the outer leaves from a small head of white cabbage. Use cabbage that is corapact, not loose-leaved. Cut out the core and shred the rest very fine. Soak in cold water for an hour. Drain by placing in a net or wire salad | bag or piece of cheesecloth and shaking this until the shreds are dry, otherwise | the moisture will dilute the dressing. and her place will be vacant” said Mary Fancher, “They are looking for somebody to take my place,” Elsie said. During this conversation the girls didn’t once pause in handling the empty shells. Jennie turned around and went straight toward the office. As she went she made swift computation—$5 day for 30 days would buy her that wash- ing machine. Meanwhile, she could hire Melissa Sprague to help her with the | housework. i When she wen lissa_with her. | “What's the idea?” Joe demanded.! “Me! is going to do the work here for a few weeks, Joe, replied Jennle. “On acount of your hand?” “No,” Jennie tried to laugh, but she was trembling all over. “On account of my taking Elsie Dumond's place at the condensery. i “What are you talking about?” Joe's face was crimson. | “I mean it Joe. I've hired out for: one month. I begin my work tomor-| row,” Jennie's tone sounded much | steadier than she felt. i Joe jumped up, overturning his | chair, and dashed out of the house. He | was angry clear through, but he knew | —all that Jennie hadn’t told him. Jennie went to her work next morn- | ing. She drove over to the condensery. | She drove home at night. Joe said not one word. Nor did she. They simply dropped the matter. But she knew when she looked at him that he wasn't go. ing to give in about the w¢ ..ng ma- chine. The Warren way b auld of him, It was the first time thai Jennie had even seen the hateful way in ac- | tion, znd she hated . Her mode of pio- @pple rings slowly in & heavy sirup cedure had become now a challenge.| made of equal paris sugar and water, She was striving less for the coveted | To this she added a little stick cinna- labor-saver than for victory over an mon, a few whole cloves, a suspicion inherited trait which threatened to mar | of ginger and a tablespoon or two of their happiness. | vinegar. When the appies were tender, After the first week Jennle’s work | but not broken, she took them out of became monotonous, Just an endless' the sirup and cooked that down uniil handling of shells, Once she awak-i{thick. She spooned this over the rings ened in the night to find herself sit- aiter she had arranged them on the ting up in bed going through the mo- | serving plate. Peter voted them a great tions on the counterpane. Night found | success. her tired, her head aching from the A rieh dish like this calls for reducio pounding of the machinery all about | sfterwars. If you are inercsied. wriie U her. Her washing machine was cost-! horTequeing seafiec, 1° PAPen ing’ much, much more than money. | oo oiibt Could she hold out, could she? | : She held out to the last day and the last hour until her month’s check | was in her hand. Wearily she climbed | mnto the car and started homeward. | She had given up her job. She was glad to be through with that. But a harder | job lay before. If she got that wash- ing machine it would add to the trouble. | And the distance between her and Joe | was wide and getting wider. Perhaps | Joe's mother had done the better thing | she had managed without protest. She | had bowed to the Warren way. Of | course, she hadn't lived long. But what matter? Jennie was worn out. Her thoughts were thoughts of defeat as/ she drove homeward, the big check in | her pocket. | Joe was nowhere in sight. She got ness. into which she folded whipped cream and freshly graded horseradish She chose baked apples, in the center of which she had stuffed squares of crisp bacon and raisins and lemon peel. Sometimes she puts tiny crisp sausages in the hollow of the apple. She often spiced prunes and served them. To do this she soaked large prunes over night. Next day she sim- mered them until tender. As they sim- mered she added brown sugar and vine- l'home she had Me- | gar and 2 inches of stick clunamon. Just before she took them from the fire she added & small amount of corn- starch stirred in cold water and then cooked in the sirup until it became translucent. These spiced prunes made her ex- periment with spiced apples. She chose firm, red-skinned cooking apples. cut them in half-inch-thick slic & o asking for 1920.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAS]. Stewed Pruns, Cooked Cereal with Cream. Bacon and Eggs. Toast. Rice Waffles, Maple Sirup. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Baked Macaroni with Cheese. Graham Gems. Maple Apple Sauce. Brownies, Tea, DINNE] Noodle Soup Casserole of Beef and Macaroni, the house. She heard Melissa slam- | ming pans in the kitchen. There was a | good smell of pot roast. ‘ She went to the door, looked into { the room, at the grinning and excited washing machine of her dreams stand- | Hot Apple Pie, Cheese. Coffee. RICE WAFFLES, MAPLE SIRUP. Mix and sift one and three- fourths cups flour, two table- .SpoONS sugar, 4 tablespoons bak- ing powder, one-fourth teaspoon salt, and then work in with fin- gers two-thirds cup cold cooked rice. Add one and one-half cups milk, well beaten yolk one egg. one tablespoon melted butter and white of egg beaten siff. Cook as for ordinary watfies and serve with maple sirup. Melissa, and at something else-—the ing in the corner that seemed just m‘ have been made for it. elissa!” gasped Jennle, “Where did | that come from? | rom Allen’s hardware. Just got here. Joe told ‘em to be sure and have | it here before you got home.” | “Joe?” Jennie felt tears coming. She could hardly see Joe strolling in cas- | ually | “Hello, Jen!” Joe said. He looked at her an instant, then went up to her, took her in his arms and Kissed her. Melissa slipped from the room. Jennie | put her arms around his neck, her| head on his shoulder. “You're a brick, | T'll say.” whispered Joe. “But, Jen, s if you won't go back to the condensery cver again I'll get you anything you ask for. 11 can't come into the house and find you gone Jennie, Why, it— it just about kills me | THE END. (Copsright. 1929.) MAPLE APPLE SAUCE. Stew two quarts pared and quartered apples in enough water to keep from burning. When partly cooked add one cup maple sirup. As soon as apples become soft sprinkle with granulated sugar and remove from fire, Serve hot or cold. NOODLE SOUP. Boil nice soup bone with an onion, pepper and sall. When meat is done remove meat, strain liquor and put back in kettle Cut meat in small pieces and add. Make noodles while bone is boil- ing. Beat 2 eggs with bit of salt and enough sifted bread flour to make stiff. Cut into halves, flour your board and roll thin as for pie crust and let dry a little, then turn over and dry other side. Cut in strips and put strips on top each other and slice them. Use other half the same, and put them into boiling salted water, Boil five minutes. Drain and add to meat and liquor. Heat up and add little nutmeg and chopped parsley. Whipped Cream Dessert. Cream half & cupful of butter or sub- titute, then add one cupful of sugar and cream that. Add the well beaten yolks of two raw eggs. Sift one and tnree-fourths cupfuls of flour with three teaspoontuls of baking powder, one tablespoonful of cocoa powder and one teaspoonful of cinnamon. Add alier- 'nately with three-fourths cupful of milk. Bake in two greased layer cake ins in a moderate oven for 35 minutes. Put together with cocoa whipped cream | I made as follows: Mix four tablespoonfuls of cocoa powder with one-third cupful of powdered sugar and add a littl: boil- ng waler to blend in a smooth paste. | Add half a teaspoonful of vanilla ex-| Prices realized on S . i tract and a cupful of thick cream and | sales of carcass beef m%:yl::h:"%:‘lm e \whip until stiff enough to spread.!for week ending Saturday. Januars 29. {Cover the top of the cake also with this 25, PiPments sold onut. vanged fro 00 1 cents tn 25,00 certs per pouna nd averaged cream, . 30,53 cents per poUnG. -Advertisement, ort 5 n. MONDAY, JANUARY - ‘. 1929, FEATURES. The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. Probably some of the most ardent ad- | mirers of “Babe” Ruth were not aware that the Sultan of Swai spent New | Year with friends in Washington. The wages of fame are the loss of privacy. | Sycophants _pursue | them and_the ef- forts of the great { and ncar-great to | elude their atten- | tions is sometimes pitiful. When one of them contrives | to escape and is able to be himself | for a few hours he has accomplished an unusual stunt. s THE WAGES OF FAMG: 15 THE tos3 OF There is a bil- liard academy in the city where al- most nightly elderly men gather to discuss the scienece of the game The seriousness with which they regard | it is worth observing | KAk ! Capt. Ira Eaker, chief pilot of the Question Mark and one of America’s most famous aviators, has studied law and perhaps may practice it some day. He also makes excellent egg sand- wiches. | * ok kK Two friends mei in & barber shop. While waiting their turn they engaged in light patter. Another acquaintance was being shaved. When the latter's | work was completed he spoke to his friends. put_on his hat and overcoat and left. Two minutes later he re- | turned, visibly excited and sought: one - {of the men who by this time was oc- ' cupying a chair and whose face was covered with lather. Finally locating his, he exclaimed. “I just ran back Doc. to tell you 1T made a 94 out at the club vesterday.” Golf “nuts” are like that. ok n Having been accusiomed (o making notes Lo support our memory. we envy one who can recall dates and events without. consulting data. “Five years ago today,” said he, “I was at so-and- so. Bill and Joe were there and I re- member Joe had to leave early.” It's | & gift. %k K W | Officers and atiendants who are as- signed to public bufldings come to re- | gard visiors in the same light as the | actor looks upon his audience. The | buildings and their contents and the | players’ lines are familiar to them, but io each sight-seer or box-office patron | there is a first-time ihrill. Hence the admirable patience of the attendenis even when the most absurd questions are asked. - . * “I think I lost a friend the other day.” sald he, regretfully. “Simpiy be- cause I expressed an opinion that dif- | fered from his. He loaned me a book ! and when I finished it he inquired what | 1 thought of it. I said I thought it was | | rubbisi, He hed liked it and expected me to. Unconsciously T had attacked his judgmeni and he resented it. He | asked me why 1 didn't care for the book. | It was well written, but 1 simply didn’t enjoy the volume. “This is unfortunately true of some people with whom we come in contact Their very presence causes us instinc- tivelv to fold up, Why. we do not know In the light of careful analysis they | would probably assay 100 per cent. but | they do not ‘click’ with us. The same is true of pictures, music and plevs. ' One likes golf and ‘another chess. Al of which injects the spice of variety into life and gives every man a different sort of job.” L A letter from a reader says: “I have been following your ‘Sidewalks' column for a long time. In many of the inci- | dents mentioned you do not name the principals. Would it not be well to tell us who they are This is merely & suggestion. Sincerely. H M. Undoubtedly it would. On the other ¢ hand it might prove embarrassing 10 those about whom we write. We hu- mans are constituted so that we do not care to have our weaknesses exposed to our neighbors. For example, Mr. John Smith returns home at midnight to find two husky prowlers ransacking his home. Dashing fearlessly through the door. he e'iacks them and after a scuffle manages to overpower them and call for the police. He has displayed @n unusual brand of heroism, and any publicity he might receive is satisfying to his vanity. ! Let John Smith return howme and find his front door ajar and his family away on a vacation. Using excellent common sense, Mi. Smith decides that discretion s the better part of val- or, s0 he not only remains outside, but summons the police. Several offi- cers respond and enter ihe house with pistols drawn. No one is on the first floor and ap- parently nothing has been touched. They ascend to the | second floor and find no one. On the third floor they discover the maid, who con- fesses that she for- gol to close the front door when she came in. She usually enters at the kitchen door. but the family was away and she used the main entrance. | John Smith is mortified. The cops | chuckle and leave., John Smith might | | tell this incident to a few intimates, but he is not likely to desire publica- tion of the fact that he didn’t crave to enter his home and surprise what he thought might be a burglar. He is| justified in not. wishing the truth known. Thus anonymity is more merciful. | | Gails THE VouicE MILADY BEAUTIFUL ‘[ BY LOK | ! Dear Miss Leeds: (1) T am tired of bobbed hafr. Will you please suggest |another way to dress my hair. 1 am {nearly 13 years old and 5 feet 4 inches [tall. «2) |for my age and height? (3, Is long | hair coming into style? | THANK YOU. Answer—1) If you have a [fairly low forehead and small features, brush | your hair straight back from your face. Have the cnds curled in ringlets and Iasien them back with three long | combs, one on each side and one across {the top at the back of the head just below the crown. Have a small strand of hair curl in front of each ear and in | the center of your forenead. This will | give you a dressy coiffure that is smooth , jover the crown and sides of the head {and is a mass of short curls at the back. Another way to do your hair is to part it down the middle and wear a wide She | Then | she took out the core and cooked the bandeau. Wear bangs that curl upward over the lower edge of the bandeau. Ar- range the side hair over your ears. (2) One hundred and nineteen pounds. (3) | It has been coming back for some time, especially among girls of school age, who, like yourself, are tired of short i hair. LOIS LEEDS. | Dear Miss Leeds: (1) 1 am letting my hair grow. I wear it parted in the | middle, but it is too long to let hang and 100 short to do up. How can I Idress it? (2) Will peroxide make the | hair light? (3) Will it harm any girl ! to smoke and, if so, in what way? (4) | I am 14 years old, 5 feet 1 inch tall and weigh 110 pounds. Am I overweight !nnd how can I reduce? G. M. AND M. L. | Answer——(1) A preity way to dress | hair like yours is {@ part it in the mid- {dle and draw it back. Comb each sec- ition of hair smooth and flat. Secure with a metal clip or narrow barrette, then fold the left-hand section over to the right side of the head, turn the |ends under and pin; fold the right- | hand section of hair over to the left, “I Never Knew Canned ' CornCouldBeSoGood” Such approval is worth the 12 years we took to develop this new breed " She New Sweet Corn Tta fascinating, unique fresh corn flavor appeals at the first taste. Jts big- bodied, tender ker- nels embedded in the rich corn cream are a treat reely ever found in canned corn, And the abe sence of chunks of cob and other tongh particles, due to the specially bred tall DEL MATZ kernel—what a relief, what a pleasure this new corn is. After years of the most advanced experimentation with the finest of the older varieties of corn, we fonnd we could not get all these de- lectable qualities we felt would be so appreciated. It was necessary to call on Nature to help us—by intensive and ex- pert seed breeding, through 12 Fdé' Sale at All Savitary What is the average weight | S LEEDS. { turn under and pin. (figure 3). It your | hair is not long enough to fold over, | just fasten it with two pretty little bar- | rettes at the nape of your neck and curl | the ends. (2) Peroxide bleaches the hair | but should never be used undiluted. It tends to make the hair streaky because | it dries unevenly. 13) Smoking harmful to any growing girl or boy b cause It makes the heart irritable, in- | terferes with digestion, interferes with | normal development of the body and mind,' taints the breath and discolors the teeth. (4) Your weight is good.' You do not need to reduce. | LOIS LEEDS. Brittle Finger Nails. Dear Miss Leeds: My nails don't seem to grow very long and when I do manage to get them to a presentable | length they almost always break off | immediately. Can this be remedled? Answer—The condition you describe is often due to some form of ill heaith | or a diet that is not properly balanced. | Ask your physician about it. For a lo- | cal treatment soak the nails in warm | olive oil for 10 minutes a day to toughen | them. Wear them short. Lettuce With Cheese. Wash a head of lettuce thoroughly. Break into pieces with the fingers and put in a napkin on ice to gel chilled. ! When ready to serve, grate over each fportion some Parmesan cheese and sprinkle with French dressing made of | two tablespoonfuls of salad oil, a dash ' of cayenne, and half a teaspoonful or| more of salt. Beat together, and add | drop by drop one tablespoonful of ‘nne-’ gar, Beat or put info a closely stoppered | jar and shake until creamy. My Neighbor Sa Try cleaning ' spinach or any greens with hot water instead of cold, using & long-handled skim- mer instead of your hands. You will find the grit ail in the bot- tom of the pan and the spinach clean and also shrunken. It may be cleaned this way in less than half the time it ordinarily takes. A bread mixer may be cleaned in & much shorter time if boiling water is poured into it and al- lowed to stand 10 minutes. Keep a pair of cloth gloves in the living room to put on while dusting or when putting wood in the fireplace. Make a short apron, double the lower part and divide it into four pockets. An apron like this is very convenient to hold thread, scissors, etc., when sewing. patient vears, to de- velop an entirely new and distinct va- riety or breed of corn. The result hae more than justified the efiort. The tall tender DEL. MAIZ kernel, not only per- mits a deeper cut without including the usual unpleasant tough cob par- ticles, but contains a delicacy of fla- vor and richness of consistency that delights the palate to the utmost, leading grocers handle DEIL dAIZ. Get vour can today and a FREE booklet of a dozen delicious DEL MAIZ recipes. DEL MAIZ is grown and packed only by the MINNESOTA VALLEY CANNING COMPANY Le Sueur Minnesota and Piggly Wiggly Stores LOIS LEEDS. ' * Wil0 REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rexistered U. S. Patent Office When Jack Heath's houseboab, on the Upper Potomac was popular with Wash- inglonians who thought they could beat the gambling game? Howe in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND, Here is something unusually inter- esting to all members of the family, for it will furnish amusement and educa- | tion to all interested in solving puzzles Looking like nothing more than an ,ordinary globe on an iron standard. this piece has a surprise for you. It section containing loose pieces which when put together correctly, form a country or continent. Of course, each section has a different puzzie, making it more than ordinarily interesting. Could you think of anything which would be more appropriate for a large table in a living room or library? And then every boy's or girl's room at boarding school should have one. A study desk at home should not be without one of these attractive globes: snd 1f there 1s not much room on the desk, & shelf above would accommodate it and several books besides. v ‘The standard is finished in black and the colorings of the globe are the bright shades characteristic of geographical drawings. (Copyright. 1929.) DAILY DIET RECIPE CABBAGE-TOMATOES. Shredded cebbage, two cups; canned tomatoes, two cups; but- ter, one tablespoon. SERVES FO! PORTIONS. In & greased casserole put & layer of shredded cabbage and cover with one cup tomatoes. ‘Then :nother layer of cabbage and the other cup of tomatoes. Dot with cutter. Bake in mod- erate oven about three-quarters of an hour. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes much fiber. lime, iron and vitamins A, B and C. Can be given to children of 8 yeers and over. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. Preity Nancy was ill at home Walter sent her flowers. Being a well- informed young man, he didn’t expect the florist’s blooms to correct her phys- ical distress, much as they might help her mentally. Yet some people tract? which all doctors the first precaution. r things on their handkerchiefs; smell them, and wonder why the cold hangs on. Imagine treating what has been termed “the chief threat to life and business”, with a pretty odor! How can that possibly clean the digestive “If Only.” We are all so wise afterward. When 2 mother finds a child has fsiled in any way she usually blames hersell “If only I had done this, if omly I had seid that, this thing would never nave happened. You don’'t kmow. Mothers say and do what they think is right at the time Perhaps there were things hidden from them which had they known. might bave changed the action or the word at the Ume—but that is only a mavbe W: eiways think backward in terms of what has happened, forgetting that at the time things were far different Regretting what has passed is a waste of time ana energy. The best thing (o do is to sit down in a’quiet corner and think it over. See where you might have done better-—maybe. Draw from the event the drop of wisdom that ex- perience oughi to distil for each of us and then proceed forward, stronger for the experience, ‘There are some people wno do mot profit by experience. “I gave him a good spanking, but it didn’t do a bit of good.” And then she spenked him egain next time. “We sent him to a military school in the hope that the training there would help but it hasn't. Not a particle.” Then he goes back to the same school next term. One ought to take stock of experiences. Put them to work The worst regrets arise after a trou- ! blesome child dies. Al the seold! all the tears of up in memory, proportion, and punishments ving days rise magnified beyond all torment, the grieving p Let the regret go. ' moment it rises and set to w member that memory plays quesr tricks with us. All the good we remember of the bygone days is a resplendent good. far beyond any that we really enced. All the trouble we h was grievous trouble. and th none ike it ever hefore in this It isn't true. Let the past go by Dwell on the joy you have known with the child who has gone on, and let the regrets go by. 1If they rise to trouble you in the stiil hours of the morning light your lamp and read some cheer- ing word and take comfort o your self. Time heals all wounds If now and again you are tempted to sic and brood, to sigh and say “If only,” remember that the time fur- nished its own answer. You did w sou could do. What vou are think 0 i= what you could do today id that is a different om It the £ all. we live day day we have is our own i* none other certain. Let the regres go. Look ahead. Keep busyv. A aro ing child leaves no time for regre you live along with him. And that is the very best w (Cop! izht. 192 MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., January 7.- Hollywood has had a hard time believ- ing Mary Pickford really would change her type. Local newspapers have calamity-howled about iL. Those close to the cinema--and therefore without the perspective of those not so near— have insisted that “America’s Sweet- | may be removed in seven sections, each | heart” must retain her little girl iden- tity to the finish. Some two months ago a dispatch from me told jusi what Mary Pickiord would do. The queen of movies related in a confidential mood her determination to give the -world one serious and dramatic ole and to bury the little girl with the curls once and forever. ‘Today Mary Pickford, with as new 2n identity as an extreme bob can give her—a bob & milllon miles removed irom that first careful, conservative hair trim which went under the new name of | bob—is beginning to shoot the frst sequences of “Coquette.” The story is far different from the | old. sappy. sweet things Mary has done. { But the girl who is doing it is far | different also from that other Mary | Pickford. She has surrounded herself with an able cast. She has turned over a new aramatic leaf. And she is willing to |stand or fall by this new personality. ‘What more can you ask? Few actresses bave the moral courage for such a move. Mary Pickford prob- ably wouldn't have were it not thai she |18 deadly weary of motion pictures in the accepted sense of the word. and equally interested in the new medium. She has smiled down Hollywood's dou | prognostications. ~ Hollywood has suggested that Mary Pickford try the role out on a stage of a local theater and let audience reaction | determine her in movie plans. she has listened politely to it ali and gone right on. ;o She is still the woman of dominant interest in the movie colony. A digni- fied Los Angeles concert course has | Mary Pickford as its stellar attraction. { Her own neighbors want to glimpse this girl who has come up from an un- named player with the old Biograph company to a place of leadership in the eyes of the world. At the same time that Mary Pick- ford’s voice tests prove her to be one of the most fortunate members of the old movie profession, with a wide fleid of activity before her should she choose to continue, Dougles Fairbanks™ closest friends say his present picture will prob- 1 ably be his last. Douglas Fairbanks’ voice doesn't reg- ister as well as Mary Pickfords. The talkie trend eliminates those sheer feats of athletic skill on which Doug built his tremendous popularity. His is a pantomime medium. Action and smiles l;’e1 the two dominant characteristics of it. Fairbanks. say his friends. will be through with movies. so far as he is concerned as an actor. But ne will produce. and in the new medium. It is no easier to to take the tiny with a cold; so But MERRICK. Meanwhile Mary Pickford will enter- tain from all over America-- girls who have not before been to Hollv- wood. They will see the new Pickford personality and the mew haircut. Thes will be allowed on the stages where drama is being made. And 25 citfes of the country teill have a v definite idea of the new Mary by time the picture is launched It Mary Pickford puts over this per- sonality change, she will prove that Hollywood prophets have been foolish enough to let the moss grow about them while they watched Hollywood instead of the world (Copyrignt. 1920. by North American ewspaper Allinance A Sermon for Today RY REV. JONN R. GUNN. Go Forward. “And the Lord said nnto Mos 1, Text speak unto the children of Israel they go forward."—Ex. xiv. 15. On to Canaan! On to the promised land! Never mind the impassable sea Just ahead. Never mind the wilderness that stretches out beyond. Go forward! Such was the divine command to the children of Israel just as they were emerging from Egypt and starting on their long and hazardous journey to the promised land of Canaan. And yet at the moment it seemed impossible to" obey this commrand. Before them were epparently insurmountable obstacles. Nevertheless, they were told to go forward. “Are there obstacles? Then go ahead!"” said one to a friend who was proposing to launch out upon a large enterprise. Mere obstacles! What are they to turn one back? What chal- lenge would there be to undertake a thing if it offered no difficulties and hindrances? To a man of faith and courage the appearance of obstacles becomes an incentive and stimulus to go shead. He is not much of a man who allows himself to. be frightensd back from a venture simplv because {he finds it hard and hazardous. There ‘s no promised land for any man whe is afrald of the hazards of the sea and the wilderness. What if the children of Israel had turned back? Belore them were great perils, but behind them were greater perils—“Pharaoh, his horsemen and ! his army (I is usually so with every one who turns back 1 the call to go forward. Whatever hardships lie o the road ahead. far greater are those von ¢ | counter on the road back. 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