Evening Star Newspaper, January 9, 1929, Page 26

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26 Ice as an agent of household impor- tance is distinctly an American luxury also considered a necessity. Travelers appreciate this and seldom can recon- cile the idea of food conservation and preservation as found in foreign lands with that so easily accomplished by refrigeration in this country. Here also we put ice to all sorts of odd uses, WHEN THE CANDLES ARE KEPT | ON ICE, THEY BURN MUCH/ MORE_SLOWLY, BUT WITH AS BRIGHT RAYS. 2s well as the essential one of keeping perishable food products in good con- | dition. One use that the housewife finds ex- cellent is to make candies last their very longest after being lighted. Can- dles kept in a refrigerator have the | wax so chilled that they burn much | longer than otherwise. The thrifiy ‘woman, therefore, keeps candles on ice. | Cut flowers will keep their beauty and freshness an amazingly long time if WOMA THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, rooms would be too great at first, wrap the flowers lightly in paper, so that they gradually become accustomed to the change, Also before taking them [to the warm rooms again let them re- | main long enough. in a8 moderate tem- | perature for them again to be adjusted. g:wlll be remembered that florists al- | ways keep fresh-cut flowers in ice- | cooled inclosures, where they are seen through panes of glass. | Ice is also used as an aid to beauty. It closes the pores. Women frequently give their faces ice baths if they are very tired and wish to appear refreshed. It tones the skin. The ice is rubbed over the face previously steamed by ap- plication of cloths wrung from very hot water. Douching the face with handfuls of very cold water is one of the finest beauty treatments for a com- | plexion. This has to be done regu- | farly twice a dav to keep the complex- jon fresh and fair. So stimulating are ice-cold douches {to nerves as well as circulation that | physicians advise cold douches for the spine in many nerve ailments. This should be done only on the advice of a physician, however. It is mentioncd merely as showing its recognized bene- ficial effect But this is by no means the only remedial purpose to which ice is put in treatment of illnesses. In the hands of skilled doctors ice be- | comes an agent of great curative value. (Copyrizht, 1920.) MENU FOR A DAY. Bran With Cream Creamed Liver on Toast. Popovers, Coffee. LUNCHEON. Baked Macaroni and Cheese. Baking Powcer Biscuit. Gingerbread, Whipped Cream. ‘Tea. DINNER. Bouillon. Broiled Hamburg Steak. Brown Gravy. French Fried Potatoes. Brussels Sprouts. ‘Waldor{ Salad. Cocoanut Custard Ple. Coffee. CREAMED LIVER. Cut in small pieces one calf or beef liver, sprinkle with salt and pepper and arrange in baking dish which has been well greased with bacon drippings. Cover with one pint scalded milk. Bake in moderate oven about 40 minutes, or until liver is tender. Serve with toast. WALDORF SALAD. Two cups chopped apples, one cup broken nut meats, one cup diced celery. Mix with any pre- ferred dressing. Serve on crisp lettuce leaves. GINGERBREAD. Mix. together one cup molasses, one cup sour milk, one-fourth cup melted drippings. Add two cups flour sifted with one tea- spoon soda, one teaspoon ginger and one-half teaspoon salt. Beat well. Pour in greased medium sized dripping pan. Bake in mod- they are night. ut in the refrigerator every the contrast from heated erate oven till done. This is & tale of early American history, when the country was in the making and brave hearts were at work founding the great Nation that stands pre-eminent in the world today. It was the 7th of October, "777. Horatio Gates stood before his tent, gazing steadfastly upon the two armies now arrayed in order of battle. It was | & clear, bracing day, mellow with the | richness of Autumn. The sky was | cloudless, the foliage of the wood scarce tinged with purple and gold, the buck- wheat in yonder fields frozen into snowy ripeness. But the tread of legions shook the ground. From every bush shot the glimmer of the rifle barrel, on every hillside blazed the sharpened bay- | WORLD FAMOUS STORIES THE BLACK HORSE BY CHARLES SHEPPARD. that steep cliff. Is it not a magnificent sight to see that strange soldier and that noble black horse dashing like a meteor down the long columns of battle? Let us look for a moment into these dense war clouds. Over this thick hedge burst a band of American militia- men, their rude farmer coats stained with blood, while, scattering their arms by the way, they flee before that com- pany of redcoat hirelings who came rushing forward, their solid front of bayonets gleaming in the battle light. In this moment of their flight a horse came crashing over the plains. The unknown rider reins his steed back on | his haunches right in the path of a| broad-shouldered militiaman. | “Now, cowards! Advance another | |~ The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. i Novel Cuffs. | A cuff means much more than a mere wristband these days. Long and | short haired fur and fabric make inter- esting detadls. No. 1 is a swirl reaching the elbow, No. 2 a bracelet just below the albow and No. 3 a double pompon (all of long-haired fur). No. 4 is a slightly flared sleeve with flat fur extending above the elbow and No. 5 a fabric sleeve whose cuff consists of three bell- | shaped tiers. (Copyright, 1929.) on a Stick Are an Easy Trick BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Apples Lois spent two evenings a month with her group of campfire girls. They fol- lowed the regular outline of work as laid down by the national committee. In| addition, Lois taught them little cour- tesies and amenities. One evening she took them over to Nancy's home. Lois said it was not necessary to serve any- thing to eat, but Nancy said she would feel better if she did. That night she passed rosy apples, which were pleas- antly cool and juicy. The red cheeks had been polished until they shone. Then she got out her popper and the girls made fresh popcorn into big round balls. She learned they never had made apples on a stick, so she gave the recipe to Lois and the next meeting the girls made them. Here is the recipe: Two cups Sugar, one-half cup light corn sirup, three- fourths cup water, few drops red color= | ing and few drops flavoring oil. Lois | told the girls that flavoring essence | would not do, the oil was the only T says: see. if she wanted to keep her man. A suffer themselves to be placed in this humiliating position. demanded a certain freedom. That will take away man's security. be faithful in order to hold his wife.” i | left their husbands they wor | accordingly. Within another making a living, n She will be just dependent one, and when the time keep a good wife is to treat her ri are sprouting wings on their shouls Husbands Will Be Wife Job D. €, WEDNESDAY, TANUARY 94 1929 FEATURES.? - When Women Achieve Economic Independence Forced to Make the Attractive. HE biggest problem that women have to solve is how to keep the middle-aged husband nailed to his own fireside. “Heretofore, in matrimony, it has always burden of making the marriage a success has rested. {do the adjusting of one personality to another. most sacrifices, She who had to rub the fur the right way. shut her eyes to keep from sceing the thing that it would break hor heart to to bear with all sorts of idiosyncrasies in her husband The younger generation of women will not She who was forced A man writing to me on this subject been the wife on whom the It was she who had to She who had to make the She who had to They have already He will Perhaps my correspondent is right. a chology better than I do, but I cannot see how a husband’s suspicion of his wife's fidelity is going to promote domestic peace and harmony. cannot visualize a happy home in which there is no faith or trus but in which a green-eyed man and woman stand perpetually upon the watch- tower, with their eyes continually on the lookout for rivals, He should understand the male psy- Somehow I or confidence, Possibly while woman is young and beautiful it may stimulate her husband's interest in her to feel that he has a very precarious hold upon her and that she is likely to go with some other man who strikes her fickle fancy if he does not show her enough attention. A woman's youth and beauty soon go, however. Other sheiks fade into the background and become a negligible danger, and what is to hold a husband then when the danger is past? Besides, few men enjoy being kept at a boiling point of jealousy. The average husband doesn't want to have to watch his wife. in her goodness as absolutely as he believes in the goodness of God. He wants to have a faith in her loyalty and honor that no doubt ever dims. RO He wants to belleve BREAKFAST. SO. I cannot believe that it will promote fidelity in husbands for their wives Stewed Figs to take to philandering. It is bad enough now, heaven knows, when | . suspicions of their husbands gnaw at the souls of so many women. It would NANCY PAGE be worse if every husband was torn with doubts of his wife. For both husbands and wives to distrust each other would not usher in the domestic millennium | we all long to see. It would bring about a worse pandemonium than now exists. ' I agree with my correspondent, however, that Patient Griselda has few lineal descendants among the younger generation of women and that the women of today, and especially the women of tomorrow, are not going to stand the sort of treatment from their husbands that their mothers and grandmothers stood. Th:;ly kl‘rebnotk going to suffer and be strong as grandmother did. to fight back. ey are going ‘ ‘They are not going to be so meek and humble that they are ready to over- look-every time husband stumbles off the straight and narrow path. The young man who marries one of them is going to find out that he is tied up with a regu- lar human being with whom he has to go 50-50 instead of having espoused a | doormat that he can trample over and kick around. All of this is going to raise a great rumpus. Men aren’t going to like it. The divorce statistics are going to increase for a while, but in the end it is going to mean the reformation of matrimony, better husbands, fewer broken-up homes and orphaned children, and marriage placed upon a fair, equitable basis. As I see it, the thing that will bring about this desirable result is not for .. miliation from their husbands; the wives to become rakes and keep their husbands guessing, but the economic in- dependence of women and the certainty a husband will does't make the wife-job attractive and give his wife a square deal, she will give notice and quit. T and niggardliness, and unfaithfulness, and drunkenness, was not becau: ware such angels that they forgave ev se they have have that, if he 'HE reason that wives in the past have stood for all sorts of injustice and hu- reason that they have endured tyranny, 'y offense against them, or because they were so much in love with their husbands that they were like dogs that lf the hand that smote them, but because their husb-!x;d.u were theu'gmul ticgersd. They had no trade or profession by which they could earn a dollar. If they uld starve, and husbands knew this and treated them generation every girl will be taught some way of just as much a matter of course as she is taught how to read. as capable of supporting herself as a man is, married her husband will have to mind his p's and q's if he wants to keep her. and when she gets No one treats an economically independent person in the same way as a comes when men realize that the only way to ight, why, you are going to h der blades, o o eTIT ran” DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1929.) Instincts or Habits. KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. drug store. r) CANDIED ADPDLE.,. thing to use. She added that it could be purchased in small amounts at a ‘The girls polished 12 red ap-. ‘We begin life as a bunch of instincts; | we continue it as a bundle of habits. The useful way to regard human in- stincts is by considering the instinctive factor in acquired behavior. Part of such behavior is instinctive, or due to the way we are built to begin with, and part of it is the result of habit, how we have trained ourselves to behave. In the long run, and after infancy, most of our behavior is learned, and so is in | the nature of habit; but it is learned |on the basis of a drive in that direction, which is instinctive in type. How we speak and what language we use, our accent and the rest of it, is all learned, and is learned by imitation of those around us; but the tendency to make sounds and attach meaning to them is there by nature. Fairly early and for life we are a bundle but the bundle ples and in each apple at blossom end stuck a wooden skewer which Lois had of habits, onet. step and I'll strike you to the heart! shouts the unknown, extending a pistol in either hand. “What! Are procured at the butcher’s. changes as we acquire new habits and shed old ones. It isn't wholly a matter be written in terms of this instinct group, especially if we add to it the care of young or mothering instinct and the homing instinet of local at- ug‘}‘:nent. i ere is also an instinctive urge in the opposite direction. There is :‘nein- stinct to make a home, strike roots and become attached; and there is an in- stinct to wander and migrate and seek new contacts and enlarge experience, to explore and go afleld. There is much nomadic life in human history. Tramps and vagrants and gypsies show this in- stinctive tendency strongly and without ]lb travel would not exert its strong ure. An urge leads you to leave the safe she’ier of home and embark upon ad- venture, The search and lure of adven- ture are equally instinctive; the novel attracts. Without that experimental instinct the human race would never have progressed: the role of the ploneer, is bound up with it. The child begin: its exploring tendencies early; running away becomes in some children the v— AUNT HET “That child’s so spolied now they might as well knock him in the head— unless he's goin' to be a famous preach- er or poet or fiddler so folks will keep on pettin’ him.” (Copyright, 1029 sierprll For the third time inn as many years, John D. Rockefeller, jr., has given $50,000 to the New York City Federa- tion for the support of Jewish Philan- thropie societies. holiday feasting and festivities, and many find the planning and the a- ration of the “in-between meals” rather a_problem. Leftovers are often a com- plication if you are attempting to follow any previously planned set of menus, and in many houses the changing num- bers of family and guests that appear for meals upset any regular routine. ‘The Sunday before New Year we are using a boiled tongue with raisin sauce as the main course for dinner. This is a plain dish, in contract with many of the meals served during Christmas week, and is quite an inexpensive one, wkich is an jmportant factor. A medium-sized boiled tongue will serve four people for two meals and probably leave a small amount over that can be minced and used as a stuffing for baked peppers, for sandwiches to serve during the bridge game, or to use with spaghetti, noodles or rice for lunch-~on. | Raisin sauce suggested for hot tongue | 1s good because it combines a sweet and | acid flavor that offers the necessary contrast to the somewhat bland flavor | of the_tongue. | For New Year day we have a roast of beef with Yorkshire pudding. As turkey or goose is usually served for Christmas, a juicy roast will have more of an appetite appeal than a repetition of fowl. Ice Use Apart From Refrigeration 1“5[]"_[ RU,T g D t h _D . dai Planning a Week’s Meals BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. S RIG.U.S. PAT.OFP. a ;fi'}fma Oro y lx ol :gll!v%r‘l; bcssbroprmreemim s We are still partly in the midst of| One may perhaps prefer su:lnwlt fresh ham, stuffed, and basted cook- ing with sweet cider, instead of the roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. The other parts of the meal could very easily be served with this kind of meat, sub- stituting, however, cranberry sauce or spliced apple sauce for the horseradish. And menldn,‘ol spiced apple sauce, try flavoring with a tablespoon of the little hard red cinnamon candies. They will color the sauce a beautiful red and at the same time add a spicy flavor. If you have one of the modern elee- tric or other iceless refrigerators, you will find it an easy matter to freeze the fruit salad served for supper on New Year day. A very simple one is made by using two tablespoons of mayonnaise with one cup of whipped cream and one table- spoon of gelatin that has been soaked in cold water for 10 minutes and then dissolved over hot water. This is folded into a large can of fruit salad mixture, the solid part of which has been cut in small pleces. Freeze for two hours in the refrigera- tor, or pour into a mold that can be tightly covered and bury in equal parts of crushed ice and ice cream salt for three hours. Chicago Parent-Teachers Association has 37,000 members. The Eurniture of EARLY AMERICA 15 Reproduced in these Cherry and Maple Pieces T—IE lovely wood of this furniture has been care- Jully chosen; the design of each piece preserves the quaintness of the early models themselves; built in our Oneidacraft factory, every detail of Gates was sad and thoughtful as he | watched the evolutions of the two| armies. But all at once a smoke arose, a thunder shook the ground and a chorus of shouts and groans yelled you| " The first three ingredients are cooked until temperature of 300 degrees F., or hard crack stage, is reached. The fire is turned down during latter part of cooking, as'sirup darkens and burns of circumstances that determines what goes into our bundle of habits; we have more or less of a tendency which is in- :::&clt‘ive to form certain kinds of most powerful drive of their natures. By the similar route we come to the sporting instinct, a complex set of trends. That pattern of behavior has a: construction Is sound. Here is beautiful fur- niture~not expensively priced'~ that Americans, men, and fly before British soldiers? Back again ‘and face them once more, or I myself will ride you down!” . along the darkened air. The play of death had begun. The two flags, this of the stars, that of the red cross, tossed amid the smoke of battle, while the sky was clouded with leaden folds | and the earth throbbed with the pulsa- | tions of a mighty heart. | Suddenly Gates and his officers were startled. Along the height on which they stood came a rider upon a black horse, rushing toward the distant bat- tle. There was something in the ap- pearance of this horse and his rider that struck them with surprise. Look! He draws his sword, the sharp blade quivers in the air; he points to the distant battle, and lo! he is gone— gone through those clouds while his shout echoes .over the plains. Wher- ®ever the fight is thickest, there, through intervals of cannon smoke, you may see, riding madly forward, that strange soldier, mounted on his steed, black as death. Look at him, as, with face red with British blood, he waves his sword and ‘This appeal is not without its effect. ‘The militiaman turns. His comrades, as if by one impulse, follow his example. In one line, but 30 men in all, they confront 30 sharp bayonets. The Brit- ish advance. “Now upon the rebels—charge!” shouts the redcoat officer. They spring forward at the same bound. Look! Their bayonets almost touch the muzzles of their rifles. At this moment the voice of the unknown rider is heard: “Now let them have it! Fire!” A sound is heard, a smoke is seen. Twenty Britons are down, some writh- ing in death, some crawling along the soll and some speechless as stone. The remaining 10 start back. “Club your rifles and charge them home!” shouts the unknown. That black horse springs forward, followed by the militlamen. Then a confused conflict, a cry for quarter, and a vision of 20 farmers grouped easily. mended. Pour sirup into top of double boiler and set over hot but not boiling watzr. Add coloring and flavoring. Ofl of pep- permint, clove or cinnamon is recom- Hold apple by skewer and The sheltering instinct will serve as an example. There is a strong instinc- tive drive for shelter and security. The infant in its mother's arms, snuggling for warmth, sets a pattern of the drive for hearth and home that accompanies plunge it in sirup. Draw it out, twirl it until sirup runs down over apple. Set skewer in rack or vase so that sirup hardens without apple touching any- thing. Eat apples day they are dipped. (Copyright, 1929.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Two Mental Dictionaries. You carry two mental dictionaries with you all the time. One is on the meaning of words you know how to use sentences; the other it us throughout life. We want to be safe and protected. In a street car with long benches, first. It is almost as though we feared our fellow-beings; would be protected on one side. don’t place a bed in the middle of the room; you usually shove it into a cor- ner, Young children take a lot of pillows and blankets and build a “house,” where they can struggle and hide and satisfy their sheltering instincts. The cave- man sought a nature-made shelter. This instinct is also typical in that the corner seats are taken in the corner we You where you feel more protected. combined combines with others; with the constructive instinct, it builds elaborate houses. instinet of possession, something pe- Combined with the around the rider of the black horse, when you comj culiarly yours, it leads boys to build strong appeal to human nature. Its center may be the lure of taking chances—gambling, the excitement of losing and winning. Getting the best of the game or of the other fellow is also strongly anchored in human na- ture: that's what wits are for, and liv- ing by your wits is a useful or a dan- gerous game, according to how you play it. Yet fisherman's luck is taking chances, always combined with a bit of skill. Put together the total ranga of human behavior in which the sport- ing element enters, from the stock exchange to politics, or bridge to polar exploration, and you have a picture of the vast part that this tendency plays, converting simple bunches of instincts into complicated bundles of habits. Throughout life we carry on and carry through original tendencies which are instinctive, building them up into elaborate behavior patterns which we have acquired in satisfaction of the vital original needs. But the original will last through the years. A BUTTERFLY TABLE, i/lustrated above, of Chetry and Maple, is made in three sizes. With a 42" x 54" top it is $59;°30" x 45" it is $48: (both of these sizes are suitable for the breakfast room). With a 25" x 36" top The CONCORD [EASY CHAIR, illustre.... it is $39. or a covering of your own is $62. , uphols:ered in Denim HIGHBOY, illustrated above, in Chen‘y and Maple; has plenty of drawer space and is a charming living room or bed room piece. $208. The Concord Love Seat, companion piece to the easy chair, is, in & cov- ering of denim, $118 shouts to his legions! Now you may |greeting him with cheers. see him fighting in that cannon’s giare, | * Thus it was ail the day long. Wher- and the next moment he is away off | ever that black horse and his rider went yonder, leading the forlorn hope up, there followed victory. At last, toward the sctting of the sun, the erisis of the conflict came. That fortress yonder on ‘Benniss Heights must be won or the | American cause is lost! ! ‘That cliff is too steep—that death is too certain. The officers cannot per- suade the men to advance. The Ameri- cans have lost the field. Even Morgan, jthat iron man among iron men, leans on his rifie and despairs of the fleld. But look yonder! JIn this moment, when all is dismay and horror, here, | crashing on, come the black horse and contains implied meanings of words— the ones you infer from the context of something someone else has written. To put it another way, you have a writing vocabulary and a reading vo- patterns show through, (Copyright. 1929.) BRAIN TESTS The names of the six continents are given at the head of this test. Each continent is designated by a number. Below you will see a list of names— cities, countries, rivers, etc, all well known. Mark each one with the proper number according to the continent in shacks, which they find so much more attractive than the comforts of home; it gives them an all-their-own feeling. Under increasingly complicated de- mands, huts and tents become man- sions and palaces; a man’s house and home remains his castle. One instinct merges with another and our housing habits and ways of living incorporate the satisfactions of what we are by nature. The story of man could almost WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. MOTHERS In the general run of the population the difference in the sizes of these two dictionaries is astonishingly great. The business of education, so far as it ap-| plies to the use of the mother tongue, is to make these two mental diction- aries approximately equal. I say ap- proximately for the simple reason that a perfect equality can never exist. Educators talk a lot about the “psy- chology of reading” these days. If there A WINDSOR ARM CHAIR, in Cherry and Maple, to be used either with 2 butterfly table in a breakfast group, ot as an occasional chair is $24; side Chairs to match are $10.50 AND THEIR CHILDREN. Boys Will Be Boys. Hundreds of Hooked Rugs, genuine examples carefully col- lected by our experts, are one of the most tasteful floor cove erings with Cherry and Maple furniture—scatter sizes start at $10 {his rider. That rider bends upon his|is such a thing, the dual dictionary which it is found. ) el Z‘é’.’fine.""“,‘; el T TR . Iéggg::“(“‘“ () LaFa'c )) and -tglln .r:rya of V. & Slwnqt’)n | St mioey G URat S e, e T T WG WS, Sl fil""::"{"‘,( ) 2 e saraide b‘]', | otters. e tallsl Now ol SHI“on | ‘At churety’ with meek and unafected N i il'fi'o‘v:i:f! The rider lurr.m his face and HL; kfl;m “vfigg-«::gfi'bfilfl‘;"'" &;mg:‘cs h ; ':epocl.x;:e J () : D a5 requi wn“_(_:nme on, men of Quebec! Come :,m ;:;,m.; "not——today will be less ;}gflfifii (d’) : g;’;n‘w s “O yet we trust that somehow good Will be the final——of all.” 4. Quality, attribute, property. “His scepter shows the force of tempor- | al power The——to awe and majesty.” 5. Awful, terrible, alarming. “Then must it be an——thing to die.” | British cannon pour your fires and lay iyour dead in tens and twenties on the Irock! Now, redcoat hirelings, shout vour battle ery if you can! For lock! There in the gate of the fortress as the smoke clears away stands the black horse and its rider. That answers, First column: 55131533586. Second column: 4 452263554 Macaroni With Cheese One mother says: t T have come to the proven conclusion | that it is far better not to watch my | boys in their active pursuits. Their father says we must let them climb W. & J. SLOANE | ) 709-711-713 TWELFTH STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C. and wrestle, and go through the various other phases of normally growing youth. 1 used to stand at the door or window, trembling and chilling with fear at the might-happens, When one of them would receive any minor injury and come running in to me for first aid, I would tearfully ceclare that there had steed falls dead, pierced by a hundred balls, but his rider, as the British cry for quarter, lifts up his voice and shouts afar to Horatio Gates, waiting- yonder in his tent: “Saratoga is won!" As that ery goes up to Heaven he |falls with his leg shattered by a can- Apple Amber. Cover the bottom of a baking dish with one-fourth inch of water. Pare, | core, and slice thin some tart apples. Lay the slices in a baking dish with Break one package of macaroni into small pleces and cook in three quarts of bolling salted water for 15 minutes. Drain, return to the saucepan, add two cups of milk, two tablespoons of butter, salt and pepper to season, and one cup of soft cheese cut into pleces, or a half cup of grated hard cheese. A few drops of table sauce is a good addition if “The House with the Green Shutters” STORE OPEN FROM 9 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. DAILY INCLUDING SATURDAY Charge Accounts Conveniently Arvanged to be a stop put to such rough-and- x\:;mkbflr‘xL !&'hoD:ax the rider of the sugaaxs};:r{noklegkgetween n:: I;yers. Fill L s v v o viser 1 Dlac jorse? you not guess his| the 5] Wi In an inch of the top the cheese is not very Arp. H 5 s : e ey e T e | riminee ; and finish with a thick sprinkle of Sprinkle in two tablespoons of flour Slaane Endorsed Merchandise Carries An Assurance of Satisfaction usual pursuits of youngsters of their age, without keeping them continvaliy in sight and agonized thought. ‘Ih Then bend down and gaze on that »tiered limb and you shall see that t bears the mark of a formor wound. | sugar and dots of butter. A little cin- jnamon or nutm-g may be sprinkied | over. and stir over a slow fire until the mix- ‘When a little negro boy followed the | ture is thickened and the cheese melted Bake uniil the apples can b> Washington hand-organ men over the [Turn into a buttered baking dish, spread haven't been nearly as many falls Al"&hm wound was recelv>d in the sotrm- | easily pierced wiih a toothpick. Leave ciiy and gathored in the small change [ with a layer of grated cheese, bake brutses since, T am tbankful to add. |ing of Quebec. That rider of the black in the dish and serve with plain or by whistiing the popular airs of the|from 15 0 25 minutes In & I0derate | S R RS T (Ceprright, 1029.) ~hogse was Renediet Arnold! ‘whipped creany «ay? wven. This serves six. ” 2 . 4

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