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'ACKJZVBB'ERS, MADE AS DESCRIEED, CAN MATCH THE BATH-TOWEL SET. A simple contrivance for rubbing one’s back dry after a bath can be made from & small sized Turkish towel, some mer- cerized crochet cotton and two bone or white rubber rings, slip easily over the thumb. The entire device can be white, or any preferred color scheme can be carried out by us- dng a towel with & colored border and grochet cotton to match. ‘Those who have mnever seen these ‘Back-rubbers will find that the idea of & doll's hammock immediately comes to mind. The shape is the same. The small towel is folded through the length- wise center and seamed where the sides meet. The ends are basted together. Each end is then finished with gradu- | ated rows of filet crochet, until but eight spaces remain. From these extend Jengths of chain stitches each 213 tnches long. ‘When each strand reaches the desig- Jated length it is caught in a stitch of crochet covering the ring or is held to the uncovered ring by looping one crochet stitch over the ring. In either instance after the chain is attached to the ring the chain stitchery continues until another 21, inches Is completed and fastened in the same place in the filet crochet in which it began. Another way to make this chain is o start with a loop of stitchery about the ring, crochet the 2!2-inch length The Daily |it. large enough to | and then catch it in the final loop at one end of the filet stitchery. another 234 inches and again attach to the ring with a loop of stitchery about It requires eight of se double chains to complete the joining of the “hammock” portion to the ring, After this the ring can be covered with loops of crochet-like buttonhole stitches or it can be left uncovered. An attractive ornament for these back- rubbers is a monogram or initial, em- | broidered in the center of one side of | the towel. This should be worked before the towel is doubled. The under side of the embroidery will be concealed when the towel is folded. Use the same crochet cotton for the individual in- itial or monogram as is used for the crochet stitchery. ‘These accessories for the bath make attractive gifts for travelers, especially those going to the seashore. They are just the things to be made for bazaars and fairs at beaches, or any Summer resorts, and they are welcome gifts for Christmas. A set, one for each member of a family, with colors differing and each having the initial of a member of a family is a unique Christmas present. The sizes should vary, small ones for children, somewhat larger for the mother and extra large one for “daddy.” ;rhg gift should be neatly boxed and ied. (Copyright, 1929.) Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1929.) 1. At no time. Bo: 6. Box. 10. Large island. 14. Old-womanish. 5. Released. 7. Large edible fish. 18. Spiritless. 19. Out of order. 21. Allots. . Owns, . Soak. . Reverence. . Jug. | Fit 1of tillage. Famous mountain. Pale tan. . Giant armadillo. Germplasm. Adult females. . A faint color. Pear-shaped fruit, . Dispatched. . Cucullate. . Hawailan bird. . A tree. . Golden eagle. . Frequently. . A daughter of Cadmus. Native of northern Europe. Measure of weight. Suffix signifying dominion. Bend. Empty show, Handle. . Homage. Counter-tenor clef, Religious regard. A coguette, . Trained. . Chair. Prepal . Pale red. . One who counts, . Affliction. . Large deer. . Note of the scale. . Oozy mud. . Evergreen tree. Lessened. . Act of repeating. Sliding Down. . Be progr 0. Gestur: 27. Rescue, 29, Mortgaged. 30. Imbecile, 32. Fairy tale maiden. 33. Repaid in kind. 34. You and me. 36. Introducing condition. 38. Upward path. . Proceed. 43. Pronoun. 44. Contributes. 47. Parish house. 50. wWild. 51. To such an extent, 53. At a distance, . Doctrine, . Thorn. . River in Germany. . Fabricated. . Bolivian shrub, . Violent anger. . Radical. . A conjunction, MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Preserved Raspberries Dry Cereal With Cream Creamed Eggs on Toast Coflee LUNCHEON Creamed Shrimps With Green Peppers Buttered Toast Prune Gelatin Ginger-snaps, Tea DINNER Cream of Corn Soup Hamburg Steak, Brown Gravy Baked Stuffed Potatoes Mashed Turnip Grapefruit Salad Crackers, Cheese, Coffee CREAMED EGGS ON TOAST. Two hard-boiled eggs, chopped medium fine. Over {his pour butter melted in pan, 1 tablespoon butter melted in B flour slightly browned in the but- ter milk to t con- to taste, t over freshly buttered toast., Two eges will serve five or si¥ slices of toast. GP.APEFP.Y?TT;ND APPLE SALAD. Cut grapefruit into halves, re- move seeds and scoop out pulp. Add 3 tart_apples cut into dice, dress with French dressing, place on heart leaves of lettuce and sprinkle with chopped almonds. PRUNE GELATIN. One package orange gelatin, 1 cup boiling water, 3 tablesp: sugar, 1 cup strained prune pulp, 1 cup prune juice, Mix gran- ulated orange gelatin with sugar, dissolve with hot water, stirring well; then add prune juice. When cool. whip to consistency of whipped cream -and add prune pulp. Pour into wet jelly glasses and chill. Makes 6 servings. Crochet | THE EVENING SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Eating Our Cake. Our mothers used to bake cakes, but we have no greater ambition than to seat what the baker makes for us. We're too busy with the job, date and make-up to spend our time hovering around the oven. But this is not a question in domes- tic science. It is only another way of stating that the modern girl is having a problem with her very modern life. She is trying to eat her cake and still have it. In the matter of life itsclf, the mod- ern girl who is on the job is taking her place in the world and making her little presence felt. But with all her activity, it is a question whether she is getting life; that is, life as woman understands and appreciates it. I'm afraid I don't really know what life means, but for a girl it is sun- shine, repose and love. These things are elements in the life of maid or flower. ‘When a girl becomes a worker in the world, she tends to gyp herself out of these things. She's caught in the grand whirl and Jost in the great crowd. She’s like that woman who once went over Niagara Falls in a barrel. She's eating her cake of life, and she thinks she still has it. ‘The same may be said of the girl's life as s0 much love. A girl may reason that when she makes herself useful and wage earning she makes herself eligi- ble. A man, she thinks, will be at- tracted toward the girl who won’t be a drag on him, but who wiil show her ability in dollars and cents. It will be the girl with the job who will get the man. But love doesn't perch on a type- vriter the way it hovers over a ham- mock. And when a girl pins her pay {envelope in her dress, it will be hard for Cupid to send a dart through her heart, Then, too, all this interesting busi- ness, as we feel it when we are not chewing gun, is likely to take our minds away from Tomance. You can’t be working the telephone _directory and reading a love story at the same time. We're eating our cake, all right. We have enough cash for fine duds, but when we get them on we don’t make much of a hit with them. We want to have our cake, which is life and love. But they are the very things we are eating up in our work. A man may not want a baby doll, but he'd rather have that than a girl who is a bear for work. I suppose that we'll have to stick 1o the job now that we have it, but we mustn’t let life and love pass by with- out our sceing them. BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES, Certain colors make you look slim. Others make you seem stout, at least stouter than you are. Black will always thin you down, even if the black dress happens to be cut up with a lot of ruffies. Red will seem to add weight and white is fatal to a fat figure. On the whole, the dark colors make you thin, the light ones fatter. If you happen to be too stout, wear dark shades as much as possible; if they dis- agree with your complexion, wear light collars and cuffs with them. And wear shiny materials. For instance, black satin with a high gloss will make you seem as slim as black, dull crepe, vet the one will be full of life and the other dull and dead. I know nothing more becoming to a full figure than a simnle dress of glossy black satin, cut with a V o @ deep U neck, preferably with a col®- in the back, since this gives heig to the costume, with or without eP.s, with a little flare to the skirt and without a belt or with one of the dress material. Light shades are becoming to slender, even too-thin figures. Jade and lettuce green, French and flesh pinks, all the light blues, honey and flesh, pink, beige (—and dozens of others, either accentu- ate the figure's slimness in a charming way or give it an effect of pretty pe- titeness. ‘The very thin girl can always wear flaring skirts and wide belts to make the hips look larger and in other ways break up the too great length of her figure, ‘There is a lot of talk that straight up-and-down lines add height, but it is not always so; not if a belt cuts the lines. Dixie—You are probably 20 pounds underweight with a height of 5 feet 3 inches and weight of 103 pounds. Per- haps you do not get as much fresh air or have lessened your activities since you have married, consequently there would be less desire for food. As you are healthy, you can easily make up this needed weight, but do not aim for | the weight of five years ago, as you were overweight then. If you take cod-liver oil over the cold months, it will give you a start; after that give preference to the fattening foo uch as cream, milk. butter, olive oil ng to salads; in fact, any fat- tening foods that do not overtax the digestion, Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Inaugural Crowd. ago today Herbert Hoover was ident at Washington. What of the psychology of the crowd that saw him inducted into office? It seems to me that peolple are eye- minded. They are interested chiefly in what there is to be seen. At any rate, vhen the new President began to de- liver his inaugural address the crowd began to leave for what was still to be seen—the parade, Seeing came first. What was to be heard might be read at leisure. To those of you who only heard the i r the radio I put this u not continually try- your auditory experi- ence into 1 experience as the in- imitable McNamee and his associates tried to tell you what was going on? Why did McNamee, in telling about the Senate proceedings, describe the occa- slonal smile on the as yet President- cleet, Hoover's fac ‘Why did he de- scribe the granite ge of President Coolidge? Why did he go into details of the appearance of uniforms, dress, personalities? He knows from long ex- perience what the people want to know. People are, above all else, sightseers. ‘There is another thing of importance connected with the inauguration. At noon March 4 all minds were turned to Washington as the seat of govern- ment. Despite the fact that the aver- age en now and then breaks a law, he still believes in self-government. This consciousness of government of, by and for the people seems to be on the inerease in this country. The out- look from the standpoint of national welfare f5 i question: ing to trai 11 perspective—a mental democratic past. The sense of national consciousness 18 the stouiest bulwark of the Nation. And this consciousness is something that embraces the past as a part of the pres- ent and a forecast of the future. Special Salmon Salad. Remove the bones and skin from one can of salmon. Chop five or six smull les and six hard-cooked eggs, up enough crackers to make one and one-half cupiuls. Don't roll ohtly, then fdd the STAR, WASHINGTON, D. DorothyDix Is Youth ‘the Time of Happiness? Glorification of, Youth Believing Life Ends ., MONDAY, Deplores False Standard of Life, Deceives Young Into at 30 and Prevents Laying Foundation for Happiness. THE cult of youth that causes elderly women to dye their hair and have their faces lifted and starve themselves into pernicious anemia in an attempt to attain a girlish figure and that makes senile old grandpapas hop around on their rheumatic bones and chase flappers is bad enough, heaven knows. Yet the most disastrous effect of this undue glorifying of youth is upon youth itself, for it gives the young-a false standard of values by which to judge life.. They are told continuously that youth is the joytime of life. It is incessantly dinned into their ears that we are young but once. They see older people striving with such might and main to hang on to the last shreds of their youth and to substitute a synthetic youth for the real youth that they ha naturally makes them believe that youth is the only period of ex worth having or in which one can find of which one can get a kick and thrill, It is this false bellef that youth lost that it stence that is any real pleasure and happiness or out has a monopoly on everything that is interesting and pleasurable in life and that after it is past all the balance is cinders, ashes and dust that is responsible for most of the follies of the young. It is what makes thousands upon thousands of girls go wrong. e owow T is the same way with boys. The real reason why so many young men are thriftless and ambitionless and purposeless is because they also believe that youth is the only time of enjoyment in life. around, instead of settling down and going to work® 1t is_what keeps a boy playing at a career. It is what makes a boy put his money into a flivver, instead of saving it and making it the nucleus of a fortune. For youth is so completely sold on the proposition that it must make the most of its brief hour of sunshine that it feels that when that is over it is the end of everything and that there is nothing left worth having or striving for. The glrl of 18 cannot even imagine why her mother should be interested in pretty clothes or going to places or traveling or doing anything except sitting in the chimney corner with folded hands, waiting for death. ‘The boy of 20 Jooks with pity upon his old father of 45 or 50 and wonders why he wants to continue living when he has nothing but business or politics or his profession to interest him. It is, of course, idle to tell these youngsters that youth isn’t the happiest time of life. but once, those of us who are older thank God for it. through the measles or the whooping It is the most miserable, and while it is true that we arg young 1t s like having passed cough or any other juvenile affliction. For youth is not & season of perpetual Summer skies and smooth sailing. It is a time of storm and stress, of fears and tremors, when every passing cloud seems to blot out every ray of light and every wind is a hurricane. To the voung every disappointment is final, every deferred pleasure a blight, every desire that fails a world-wrecking catastrophe, It is only when we are older that every cloud has its silver lining and the sun rises after the darkest night. It takes experience to teach us the philosophy of living that enables us to get the most out of every situation and to look forward with keen anticipation T to what the future has in store for us. ra ’[‘HE young feel that they must gobble down the whole of life in one gulp because they are confident that they will have no appetite for what will be spread before them later on. ‘What the menu that the 30s and 40s, to say nothing of the 50s and 60s, will offer them will be flat and savorless with no sauce piquant to give it flavor. But the 40s and the 50s and the 60s could tell youth that the years have educated their palates and that they are getting more real enjoyment out of the banquet of life than their sons and daughters are because they are savoring it with a discriminating regard for the sauce of every dish, the vintage of every wine, y s so perceptive of beauty as an older one. e 2 music or travel what an older person does. background, standards of comparison, memories, a person can get out of a book, a play, The young lack knowledge, No young thousand subtle sources of enjoyment that oniy living can bring. hters wonders what pep mother can find in living when she leads a humflD\'\‘;umg life with father, with no beaux, no exciting romances, no jazzing, nothing but a dull round of household duties and social contacts with people of her own age. But mother could tell her that no woman ever really knows real happiness until she has settled down with her own man in her own home with her own comfortable place in the sun. Son marvels that father can endure the treadmill of business with no relaxation but a little golf and an occasional fishing trip. But father could tell son that he is sitting in on the most exciting game in the world and that ev Ty f his life is a hair-raising adventure in which he matches his wits against g?fi’e\? men and that when he triumphs he is thrilled from head to foot with his victory. 1t is a pity that we teach the young that youth is the only time of enjoy- ment. That is why we have the flaming youth that feels that it must have its fling at any cost. chngngc and that it is only that we get If they knew that as we grow older our interests merely our kicks out of different things at 40 from those we did at 20, perhaps our boys and girls would be more wiliing to take their pleasures moderately and to lay the foundations for the happiness they should enjoy when they are middle-aged. DOROTHY DIX, (Copyricht, 1929.) VIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif, March 11— You can be @ great actor or actress to the rest of the world—you can be a shining star in the movie firmament so far as the public is concerned; but to the familly you are just mama or or whatever it may be. pu";l‘xe best story of the week goes to Pat O'Malley, who sent his family to see him in the premiere of a movie in which he had an excellent part. The children were restless, Mrs. O'Malley had all she could do to keep them quiet. Finally she asked: i y - he matter Wi you? Are‘:\v‘{m;ou‘sefn;;o,y_lnz the movie? Isn't D b all right, T guess,” sald a small, red-headed O'Malley in a very bored tone. “But when are they going to take him off and let krazy-kat come on? That's what I want to know.” Arthur Caesar has received his final salute from the studio which has been hanging on his every word these weeks past. g Nobody can discover the feet of clay in an author-god quicker than a Holly- wood supervisor. Caesar says the dis- covery is often traced back to wrong ovement. he‘l‘;;lsglook mine laterally when I should have r‘\‘odded it up and down,” he re- marked. Caesar will. probably be nodding or negating in another cannery shortly. He has the reputation of springing more original lines than any man who has come colonyward these many months. Now hash has entered the social scheme of movieland, and is causing no end of a furore. And not only with the digestive apparatus. The girl who did it all is Lucile Webster. She started the do-as-you-please party. She gave a luncheon, and directly afterward the ladies present found they could either play bridge, have their hair shampooed and dry it in the sun- shine of the patio, sit and chat or go on to another engagement. Lucile Webster is like that. Holly- wood thinks it is, but it takes a girl with the courage of her convictions to live up to it. One big producer who has cherished a secret yen for hash had three plates. His wife considered it bourgeois, and it was banned from the daily menu after they made their first million, On_the Harold Lloyd lot, watching the chap who has made clean comedy ay! by I}t 's perpetual old-home week at Hal's studio. The men who are making the present picture were shooting morvies with Lloyd a dozen years ago. They'll be carrying on for a score more if they do what's right, and live to see that many years, Harry Brooks, little comedian who contributed laughs to some of the old short comedies Lloyd made, is at work today. He is almost blind, despite the efforts of some of the finest eyemen ‘n this country. Brooks was injured in a fall some years ago, and since then the light has been growing dimmer and dimmer, Not that he feels it that way. The sympathy he receives is the rough, gruff, magnificent camaraderie which men give to men, Brooks knows every one, on the set by the way they kick him. It wrings their hearts to see him passing through the doors of darkness, but they say no word. He carries on as though nothing had happened. Is cast in every picture. And the gang l\gix one egg well beaten with a scant half cuplful of sugar, one teaspoonful of dry mmstard, one tablespoonful of butter, one. eupful of vinegar and one teas) of celery seed. Cook and when 05t cold mix with the first pixi and .serve, A i go on kicking him as they did in the old days. He never misses in guessing who it is. In a village where tales are turned out in celluloid as evenly ground as the output of a spaghetti factory, where _profit .often displacep pity, and lust for power puts loyalty into the back row, here is something to watch and to admire. (Copyright, 1929, by North American News- Paper Alliance.) Glazed Ham. Soak & ham in cold water overnight. Bojl an 8-pound ham for two hours. Put into a roasting pan and bake for an hour and a half in a hot oven, using one cupful of maple syrup and one quart of ‘water for the liquid. Baste several times with the liquid from the pan, and if the sauce mixture begins to thicken add anotker cupful of water. Remove from the oven, spread with a thin layer of peanut bufter and dot with whole cloves, Brown in the oven at a good heat. Serve the liquid separately as sauce. Candicd sweet potatoes, b apples, baked bananas, corn friiters o stuffed peppers are excellent side dishes to serve with glazed ham. Keep your head clear with VAPEX ' Varex for eolds deserves its popu- + There is no bother, no dos- ing to it. The odor is pleasant. It can be used frequently, anywhere, at any time. A drep on your hand- kerchief — breathe the healing vapor—immediate relief. Conges- tion breaks up. A drop on either end of your pillow will keep your head clear and let you sleep. Vapex was discovered in England during the war. Workers in a fa- mous laboratory were mysteriously immune to the devastating in- fluenza epidemic raging at that time, It seemed certain that their A drop on your handkerchief 'VAPEX Breathe your cold away *Reg. U. 8, Pat, 08, MARCH 11, 1929.° WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. S. Patent Office. NEVER GET. SOUR FATHERS x ‘When we didn’t have any gas or elec- tric ranges and you'd have to hustle to the store in the mornings to get those handy bundles of wood to start the fire, Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. March 11, 1858.—Senator A. G. Brown of Mississippl, from the com- mittee on the District of Columbia, has submitted a report on the school system of Washington, which was made public today. It includes a bill designed to remedy the present unfortunate situ- ation due to lack of a proper number of buildings. The bill proposes to surrender to the school fund of Washington City, for the purpese of erecting permanent school | houses, the fines and forfeitures which may be collected in the District of Co- lumbia and which at the present time accrue to the United States Govern- ment, until the amount reaches $50,000. The bill also contains an appropriation by Congress of $20,000 from the Na- tional ‘I'reasury, to continue for five years and no longer, on condition, how- ever, that the property holders of the city submit to a tax of 10 cents on each $100 worth of taxable property in the corporation, which they may not be willing to do. The committee on the District of Co- lumbia reports that it has found that there are remaining unsold no valuable public lots in the city, and it has, there- fore, ceded some of these for the erec- tion of school buildings. The committee refused to recommend that of the money, up to the necessary amount, or any of it, received from the sale of Government lands in the States and Territories of the United States, shall be used for the support of the Washington schools. This project is called unconstitutional and numerous other objections, more or less technical, are raised up in order to defeat it. It is for all these reasons, gathered together and enumerated in the com- mittee’s report, that the committee sug- gests the doubtful expedient of turning over to the Washington schogl fund, for the purpose of erecting much need- ed new buildings, $50,000, or so much thereof as it may be possible to col- fect from the fines and forfeitures in the courts of the District of Columbia. In 1856 and in 1857 the total forfeitures amounted to $9,565 and the fines to $1,481, but even these were only on paper, for the total amount collected seems to have been $1,481. The amounts from this source have varied greatly from year to year, and it is never pos- sible to count any specific or approxi- mate amount. The prospect for new school buildings, therefore, is not bright. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. My sunny ‘school teacher bringed home my ‘ittle wooden snake, an' she's tellin® how it berry near give her nerbous perspiration when her finded him in her coat pocket. (Copyright Stuffed Sweet Potatoes. Wash six medium-sized sweet pota- toes and bake. When soft, cut in halves, take out the potato, mix with one cupful of cooked sausage meat, all fat extracted during the cooking, and one well beaten egg. Refill the potato shells, sprinkle with bread crumbs, put {,n a moderate oven to reheat and rown. immunity must, in some way, be dde 1o the materials with which they worked. Tests were instituted at once, supervised by physicians and government officials. ical analyses proved con- clusively that a vapor given off by these materials killed the germs of common colds. The discovery was widely acclaimed and Vapex came into immediate use. Leading druggists have Vapex— fifty treatments in every dollar bot- tle. It is distributed in the United States by E. Fougera & Co., Inc., New York Citys FEATURES.” The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. Here is the latest one we've heard. What is the difference between New York and Chicago? Answer. In New York “they faw down and go boom.” In Chicago “they go boom and faw down.” * ok ok ok There is still a host of timid persons who are reluctant to ride in an air- plane. According to statistics, 27.000 people were killed last year in automo- bile accidents, compared with whi airplane catastrophes were infinitesi- mal. It is true that air accidents are more sensational, but there. is always time to get out. On the other hand, when two autos crash on the ground or one goes nto a ditch, there is little or no time | in which to prepare for it. Actually there is less of a thrill flying to New York and back than one might expect. Mr. Jones, let us say, decides rather hesitatingly to {'risl an air journey to Gotham. The morning he is to take off he awakens early. As a matter of fact he has scarcely slept | during the night. Mrs. Smith and the children plead with him to change his | mind, cancel his booking and take the train. Mr. Smith is heroically adamant and insists that he will fly. Secretly he wishies he had not arranged to go by air, and hopes that the flying company will call him up and say that the ship has carbon trouble. Mrs. Smith sneaks upstairs and su: reptitiously reads father’'s insurance policy, noting especially the clause per- taining to accidents. Leaving a half cup of coffee, Mr. Smith looks at his watch and picks up his traveling bag. His eyes search the familiar objects he ms never see again. Myrtle bas been a good wife. and the children are sude denly transformed into little anse! ‘There are long lingering kisses ali way around, ith a final suppressed sigh, Mr, Smith departs on_his adventure. The Treasury Building and ‘White House never seemed so beautiful before. On his way down town he calls up the office hoping that he will be detained for a few days on unexpected business. He does so and fails to get “a break.” He won- ders if the folks have a good photo- graph of him in the event—well, if anything should happen and the papers want to print his picture, In due time he reaches the flying field, but there does not appear to be any excitement. He rather expected a MRS, SMITH READS HIS) INSURANCE FOLICY. crowd to gather around him at this| epochal moment in his life. He had been boasting to his friends for a week past that he was going to “hop up to New York.” The “hop” has become a ghastly reality, but it is too late to Tenege. Suddenly he sees an office friend, who has come to the field to see him off. Sald friend grasps him by the DAILY DIET RECIPE BROWN BETTY. Sliced apples, three cups; grated bread crumbs, one cup: grated American cheese, one-haif s Insist on the genuine Vapex in the little sguatebotilé and the packagewith ! llumlriuub.];.. It may be expensive 10 experiment with an imitation! cup; brown sugar, one-half cup; * cinnamon, one tablespoonful; but- ter, one tablespoonful. SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. Butter a -baking dish and ar- range a layer of apples, then one of bread crumbs and grated cheese sprinkled with cinnamon, then another layer of apples, bread crumbs, cheese, cinnamon, and dot with butter. If apples areinot very, very juicy, add about one- quarter cup of water. Bake in moderate oven until apples are tender and brown crust covers top. Can be served plain or with cream. DIET NOTES. Recipe furnishes fuel value in the sugar, bread crumbs, butter, protein in the cheese. Some lime, iron and vitamins A and B pres- ent. Could be eaten in modera- tion by adults of normal or, under weight and by children over 8. ADVERTISEM] Y T. | | ~ PRAISE NEW HERB the | hand and asks where Mr. Smith “wants the flowers sent.” Mr. Smith never thought of flowers, but he manages to force a chuckle and murmur something unintelligible. In the meantime an attendant takes is bag. Just as he is about to light & cigarette Mr. Smith is frightened out of his wits as a deafening roar is heard. It is the plane motor. All set. O. K. Mr. Smith once again shakes hands and finds that his own are a bit moist. i]l(t is assisted into the cabin, the door is closed and he has the sensation of rolling along the ground. ter and faster the plane speeds. ‘There is an almost imperceptible bounce as the wheels are urged to leave and then they rise. Mr. Smith again wishes he had taken a train. Up and up he goes and the ground recedes. Looking below him he sees the Washington Monument and the White House. ‘They are tiny objects by the time he is passing over the diminutive Capitol. Washington, below him, is a map of squares and circles. Funny he never thought the town looked like that. Wonder what Myrtle is thinking. The ship now is running as though it were in a groove. Mr. Smith of Wash- ington is feeling much easier. In fact, he rather en- joys the sensation. ‘The trembling has left him and he peers below at Bal- timore. One mile high. That's a long way up, thinks Mr Smith. Funny hc could never look out of his fourth- | floor office window without shivering. But this is different. The drone of the motor in front soothes him into a feel- ing of security. The ease with which | the pllot controls the big ship is assur- ing. They pass over Philadelphia and the Camden Bridge. How ridiculously | small they are. Mr. Smith feels like a veteran. He gazes below and sees Staten Island and beyond the Statue of Liberty. Boats resembling water bugs move on the surface of the water. Everything is “jake.” A few minutes later they land on Long Island. Mr. Smith emerges from the cabin door and hastens to phone his wife that the trip was a perfect one. ‘Two days later he returns by the same plane. Landing in Washington | he calls up the office and his wife. His fellow workers evince no surprise at his sefe return. “But,” he says to himself, “they wouldn‘t have done it.” The suffering comes later when, for the following six months, the boys in the office have to listen to his talk about the time when “I flew to New York and back.” THE. MONUMENT AND [WHITE HOUSE ARE TINY| OBJECTS . Tasty Spinach. Curl a slice of bacon inside each of six ramekins. Chop enough spinach to make three-fourths cupful and mix with half a teaspoonful of salt, & little pepper and three-fourths cupful of milk. Beat two eggs with half a cupful of fine bread crumbs. Combine the mix- tures, fill each ramekin and bake unti! firm in a_moderate oven. Serve turned out on a hot platter. If the bacon does not brown quickly enough, turn the molds out on a baking tin upside down for the last 5 or 10 minutes. _ Pineapple Candy. Cook like fudge three cupfuls of white sugar, one cupful of evaporated milk and one cupful of crushed pineapple drained from the juice. Let it cara- melize slightly at the last, but be care- ful that it does not burn. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter, cool, beat, pour thinly upon a platter and mark at once as it becomes hard. Cook to 236 de- grees Fahrenheit for a creamy candy. A NEW, AMAZING ROUGE BE FIRST to discover Zansibar, the wonder rouge. It will blend into more exquisite shades any other rouge you know . . . from dahlia pink to dahlia red. Tt can be used for daylight ot artificial light. Natural and perma- nent. Also Zanzibar indelible, water. proof, permanent lipstick. ADVERTISEMENT. PEOPLE EXTRACT | Those Who Have Used It for Years Say It Is | Without a Dcubt the Greatest Medicine | | in the For years people all over the country have been using this famous herbal remedy (formerly called Herb Juice) and well known people in the city of | Some time ago, when the papers 'announced that a special represent- ative for this medicine would be in that city, Mrs. Mary Hann, 833 Har- rison St., Gary Ind., was one of the first to call. She said she first used /it when it was introduced in Detroit several years ago. “Yes" sald Mrs. Hann, “I think Miller's Herb Extract is the greatest medicine on earth, an I will tell you why I think so. Som! | years ago I be%an to have a great des | | of trouble with my stomach and be | fore I hardly knew it I was in a ter~ | rible condition. Everything I ate caused me pain, food simply would not digest, | but instead lay in the stomach to sour and ferment, gas formed, |up around the heart and I wa ‘nlmost constant pain day and night. | When I laid down I would have smothering spells and was so restless | and nervous I could not sleep at night, | even though T was worn out. I could | name a number of different medicines 1 I used for this trouble, also took spe- | cial treatments, but nothing helped me at all until I began using Miller’ Herb Extract. It was simply wonder- ful, the way this medicine went to the very bottom of my trouble, and a few World. } Gary will tell you that this medicine | has given them relief from ailments of |long standing, after other so-called remedies had failed to have any effect. | bottles put me back in perfect health. | Things I ate no longer caused me any trouble. - Every bit of the pain left| me and I felt like a new person. Nerves were quieted, slept sound all | night and felt refreshed when morn- | ing came. My husband was also in | poor health. He, too, used this rem- | edy and in ort time he looked and said he felt like a new man. There, 'Was so many things I _could say in favor of Miller's Herb Extract that I | cannot find words to express them, | but I want to say to all my friends in | Gary that here is one medicine they | can take with confidence and I feel | sure the results will be more than satisfactory.” You don't need any pills with this medicine; it's a real medicine within itself--guaranteed ta give results. A medicine you can take three or four bottles without seeing any re- sults is not much medicine. See the special representative direct from the laboratories at his headquarters at the Peoples Drug Store, 505 7th 8t. N.W., where he is now introducing | and explaining the merits of this medicine. 4