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Valy.ing Heights of Heels BY MARY ‘The idea still prevails among wme[ women that harm may be done by wearing heels first of one height and FOR SPORTS A FORD IS } SSITY, BUT SPEX TATOR MAY WEAR STRAP PUMF OF WHITE BUCKSKIN AND TAN CALF WITH MEDIUM LEATHER HEEL OR EVEN HIGH-HEELED DRESS OXFORD. GOLD _KID TRIMS THE HIGH-HEELED, LOW- CUT CREPE DE CHINE SLIPPER. then of another. I have heard women e in the fact t they wore high fs in the garden on the ground that WORLD FAMOUS STORIES MARYLAN! ANONYMOUS. NANCY PAGE Stawberries Sliced and Sunshine Make Jam BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. MARSHALL. they were sure they would have fallen arches if they changed to shoes with | lower heels. Fashion pays no heed to such an | objection, mnor is there anything to | prove that it is sound, and surely more can be done to the feet from |had seen. They were large and firm ng ~high heels for occasions to|and ripe. She decided to make some | which they are not suited than to'gnepine’ ¢irawberry jam and some changing into shoes of an obviously | ° e . ool | more appropriate sort sliced berry jam. For the sunshine G son there are spectator sports | herries she hoped for a bright day—and shoes with medium high heels that are | she had it. She used equal weight of in much bett, taste for general wear than the very broadhecled shoes that | |are worn for actual sports—also pref-| -able to the more formal sort of high | hecled shoe that would be chosen for | the more formal sort of daytime wear. | Leather heels are coming into im- | portance and these are now to be had in high Cuban style as well as in the | broader lower sort. | Heels in contrast to the shoe above | the heel are a better choice for the | extremely tall woman or the woman | with too slender ankles than heels that match the shoe, while for the woman | {who wants to make the most of her height matching heels are a better choice, arm s | An_attractive little ‘apron with the| | new flaring skirt silhouette was chosen | for the model of this week’s circular. 1f you would like a copy of the circular ng a sketch of the apron with dia- am_pattern and directions for mak- ing. please send me a stamped, self- berries and sugar. She put the berries in a preserving Kettle, laying them in layers, sprinkling sugar over each layer and stopping when the depth was {wo inches. She heated this mixture care- addressed envelope and 1 will be glad | fully to the boiling point. ~And then | to send it to you. skimmed carefully and boiled rapidly (Copyright, 1020 |for 10 minutes. Then she poured this | 2 = . mixture in large platters having the berries and sirup in & single layer. She | Duchess Potatoes covered the platter with a sheet of pla of cooked potatoes | Window glass and let the covered di S | stand in the direct sunlight for an e Heat in a pan with | tire day. Then she poured the mix- one ounce of butter. Add the yolk of ture into glasses and covered with an egg and salt and pepper, and if | melted paraffin. The exposure to the necessary a little milk, Turn out onto | SR evaporated some of the moisture so a floured board and divide into 12 bleces of equal size. Form into squares fl of oblong shapes and mark with & knife, Place on a greased tin and brush JTRAWPLREY ub one pound ough a sieve. over with milk or a little beaten egg. Bake in a hot oven until brown and | erisp. Dish up and serve very hot. D GHOSTS For 40 years the Rev. Dr. B. has been | the rector of a prominent parish on the | Eastern Shore. He had, when the scenes zecorded below happened 22| years ago, a mission charge 16 miles distant from the town in which he re- | sided, and he was therefore constantly traveling between these two places. , About 6 miles distant was the country | | residence of Judge S., & well known end Venerable . parishioner of the worthy ! doctor. The sod had been turned above | this gentleman’s grave only about six weeks. when Dr. B. chanced to be re- turning from his mission charge in company with a friend. It was broad daylight, just about sunset, and not far from Judge S.'s gate, when a carriage, drawn by a white horse, passed them rapidly from behind and was soon out of sight. “That fellow must be in a hurry to reach the town,” remarked the doctor. “Did_you notice anything pecullar about that vehicle,” inquired his com- panion. “Only that it moves very quietly. I heard no sound as it went by.” “Nor did 1.” said his friend. “Neither ratiling of wheels nor noise of hoofs. It is certainly strange.” | * The matter, however, was soon for- | gotten in other conversation, and they had traveled perhaps a mile when sud- | denly the same horse and carriage passed them as before. Nothing was| discernible of the driver except his feet, the carriage curtains hiding his body. ‘There was no cross-road by | which a vehicle in front could possibly | have got behind without making a cir cuit of many miles and consuming sev- eral hours. Yet there was not the shadow of a doubt as to the identity of the vehicle, and the two gentlemen gazed at each other in blank amaze- ment and with a certain defined sense of awe which precluded any discussion of the matter, particularly as the horse | was to all appearances the well known white habitually driven by the deceased | judge. ! 1A half mile brought them in sight of | Judge S’s gate, when for the third| time the ghostly team dashed by in | | the same dreadful mysterious silence. | | This time it turned in full view inta | i the gate. Without a word of comment | the doctor quickened his horse's speed, | and reached the gate only a few yards | | behind the silent driver. Both gentle- | men peered eagerly up the long, open lane leading to the house; but neither | carriage nor wheel-track was visible, though it was still clear daylight, and | there was no outlet from the lane, or could any vehicle in the time occupied | accomplish half the distance. The peculiar features of this strange incident are that it was equally and | simultaneously evident to two witn both_entirely unprepared for any manifestation, and differing widely temperament. habits of life, mental ca- pacity and educational attainments, and by mere accident making this journey | together, and that to this day both of them—witnesses, be it noted, of un- impeachable credulity—attest i, | fully corroborate each other, but with- | out’ being able to suggest the slightest explanation. Then there was the ghost of Peg Alleys Point. Peg Alleys Point is a long and narrow #trip of wooded land, situated between the main stream of Miles River and one of the navigable creeks that flow into it. ! is about 2 miles long, from 50 to 300 is bounded by deep water and is over-| out alive. Her husband cruelly mur- dered her with a club. The point of | Jand has ever since been known by Peg | Alley’s name, and her perturbed spirit | has been supposed o haunt the scene of her untimely taking off About 12 years ago a gang of rail-| splitters was at work on the point, and one day the foreman flatly refused to go back, declaring that queer things happened down there, and that he had seen a ghost, Mr. Kennedy, his em- the right con- that the jam was of sistency. For the sliced jam she washed and hulled the berries and then cut them in slices. For ds of berries or four and on level cups she added seven cups sugar and mixed well This mixture was cooked over hot fire until brought to full rolling boil. It bofled for three minutes by the clo Nancy had just received eight quarts | of the prettiest strawberries she ever ployer, Jaughed at him and dismissed the matter from his mind. Some time after this Mr. Kennedy had occasion to ride through the woods to look after some sheep, there being but one road Then it was taken from fire and one- half cup liquid pectin was stirred in Then it was stirred for five minutes and then poured into sterilized jars and covered with liquid paraffin while mix- (him. She was very poorly clad in a | his horse to the spot, hoping to find | out who the strange intruder might be, | | community, is not far from the scenes and | rds in width, and | eros and the water on either side. As he approached the point his horse started violently and refused to go on, regard- | less of whip or spur. | Glancing about for the cause of this unnatural fright, he saw a woman rise up from a log, & few yards in advance, and stand by the roadside, looking at ture was still hot. The long stirring, Nancy learned, kept the fruit from floating to the top of the jars or glasses when jam had cooled. Jam like this would be od to give at shower. Write o Nancy Bage. eare of thi paper, Inclosing a stamped self-addresse envelope, asking for her leafflet on Showe (Copyright 9.) faded calico dress, and wore a limp sl e sun-bonnet, from beneath which her i thin, jet-black hair straggled down on Curry With Wheat. her ‘shoulders; her face was thin and | sallow and her eves black and piercing, | Wipe and cut half a pound of mutton , 4 = 18 | or beef in small squares and chop half Knowing that she had no business there, | OF beef In small SaUares A CPop hall i g s se, | and ooclpled i Cor g D o | Thubarb, Fry the meat lightly in half B e e wase e i anireal was | 8D ounce of butter or margarine, lift ot her onto & plate, fry the onion and apple : for a few scconds, add one teaspoonful Slowly she turned and walked into e & 5 the thicket, uttering not a syllable and ;‘;’, o ‘fif,{’:fi"&?fi’,ffi;’;{;g‘;’ n‘é";“'l“(fi‘f} looking reproachfully at him as she | o' - 3 im a pint of water gradually and a pinch went. With much difficulty he forced | o¢ a1t bring to a boil, return the meat to the pan and simmer slowly for about two hours. Serve with plain or boiled rice. but the most careful scarch failed to reveal the trace of any one, although | there was no place of concealment and | no possibility of escape, for which, in- | deed, there was not sufficient time. The old family seat of the one of the most prominent names in the | & of the adventure. In all, a region of lovely situations and charming water views, its site is one of the most beau- tiful. The brick mansion, with all the strangely mixed comforts’ and discom- | forts of ancient architecture, rears its roof up from an elevated lawn, whiie the silvery thread of a land-locked stream winds nearly around the whole. Over the further bank danced the spar- kling waters of a broad estuary, flash- ing in the glance of the sunlight or tossing its white-capped billows in angry mimicry of the sea. The gleam of white salls is never lacking to add variety and picturesqueness to the scene. In the dead, hushed calm of a Sum- mer evening, when the lifted oar rests on the gunwale, unwilling to disturb with its dip the glassy srface, one has a strange, dreamy sense of being sus- pended in space, the sky, in all its| chaging beautics, being accurately re- flected in illimitable depth by the still water, until the charm is broken by the splash dnd ripple of a school of nomadic alewives or the gliding, sinuous fin of a piratical shark. In this lovely home it was wont for the family to assemble on the occasion of certain domestic celebrations, and it was at one of these that the following incident occurred. All were present except one member, who was detained by sickness at her residence, 15 miles away. It was in early afternoon that one of the ladies standing at an open window, suddenly | excalimed: “Why, there’s Aunt Milly ing the flower garden!" The party approached the window, The & G thorities—will indorse the “Pantry Pals” for better baking results. D. C, THURSDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Plan for Board of Marital Advisers in Every Community—Should Women Believe Husband or Gossip About Him? l FAR MISS DIX: Don't you think that it would be a fine thing if there could be established in every community a board of conciliation, made up of a group of men and women of large experience of life and wide sympathies, to which disgruntled husbands and wives could appeal to straighten out their marital tangles when they found themselves in a snarl that they could not unravel themselves? I belicve that such an institution would fill a long-felt want, and that it would save many a divorce and prevent many a home from being broken up and many children from being half-orphaned. ELIZABETH. Answer: about our matrimonial troubles until our thoughts go round and round in a circle and we get so befuddled that we cannot think clearly. Sometimes we magnify little faults until we make mountains out of molehills and then what we need is some kind and wise and dispassionate outsider to turn the searchlight on our problem and show it to us in its true perspective. And sometimes we need a simple home remedy more than we do the surgical operation of divorce. Take the case. for instance, of & young couple who fight and scrap all the time, and where neither one can even make a remark about the weather without starting something. They are miserable. They find marriage a failure. They have decided that they have ceased to love each other and feel that they have come to the parting of the ways and that their only chance of happiness is in separation, but they hate to do that on account of the children that they both love and toward whom they both have a sense of duty. If such a case as that were brought up before your board of conciliation, nine times out of ten the board could seitle it and save the family by recommend- ing that the wife go on a six-month trip. That would give her and her husband time to realize how much like spoiled children they had acted and how foolish were the little things they had quarreled over. It would give them time to realize how empty life would be without each other. It would give them time to realize their own faults and shortcoming: It would give time for their hurt vanity to heal and when the probation was over they would be glad enough to come together again. Believe me, a railroad ticket would save many & divorce. "['HEN there are the cases in which an in-law is the source of discord. Sometimes it is the man's mother who trles to boss the wife and run the house #nd manage the children itated. Sometimes it is the wife's agreeable and who is always saying litt and implanting suspicions of him in his wife's mind. husband and wife Certainly the board of conciliation, if consulted in such a case, would advise the husband and wife to eliminate the cause of trouble and to get as far away from their families as possible. And don’t you think that many an extravagant wife who is living beyond her income and running her husband in debt trying to keep up with the Jones | would begin to budget her income and nurse her dimes if the board of conciliation in her community advised her that it had its eye on her and felt in duty bound to warn her that she would lose a mighty good husband if she didn't watch her step in spending? And might it not make many a grouchy husband cheer up and be more | | Can of PINK Salmon, 3 hard boiled attentive to his wife if the board of conciliation tipped him off that his wife was tired of trying to get along with a sore-headed bear? And couldn’t the board of conciliation save unending domestic friction and keep the first of the month, when the bills come in, from being & day of wrath by being a Court of Appeals, to which a couple could turn to have it definitely | decided how much of an allowance a man should make his wife? a board of conciliation could do a great work in harmonizing Here's hoping some enlightened community will start one. DOROTHY DIX. Certainly al relations, [DEAR MISS DIX: T have been told that my husband is stepping out with a young widow and that he also has a love affair with a him about these reports he just laughs and doesn’t bother about them. To tell the truth, I don't know what to think, because he comes home regularly from work and, while he goes out once or twice a week at night sometimes, he is back at 9:30 and sometimes at 12, and he spends all of his salary on his home and is always cheerful. He is devoted to the kiddies, laughs and plays with them all the time and is teaching them to dance, sing and play the piano. Only when I get suspicious he calls me & crepe-hegger and a joykiller. ‘So will vou kindly tell me if 1 should believe what Mrs. or Miss So-and-So tell me, or just trust him? JEALOUS BERTHA! Answer who try to make you jealous and break up your home. evil of your husband is your friend or mear ‘Trust your husband. Bertha, and refuse to listen to the women No woman who tells you well by you. She is a malicious busybody who is trying to hurt you. She wants to see you suffer. If she were your friend, she would bite her ‘tongue off rather than tell you that your husband was unfaithful to you even if she knew it to be true, because she would know that it would do you no good to have your trust in him | destroyed and that there would b enothing you could do about it to help yourself. | As for your husband, he seems to have all the earmarks of domesticity and you are certainly going out of your way to hunt for trouble when you suspect a man who comes home promptly from his work and spends his evenings playing with his children and spends his money on his home. And, as a clinching proof that he is model husband and no gay Lothario, there is the fact that he spends his money on his family and that even when he goes he gets home at 9:30. Believe me, it takes money to make whoope, and the gay ladies have no_iime to waste on any man whose family has a prior claim on his pocketbook. Nor can you step very far if you get back home by carly bedtime. So the next time Miss So-and-So begins to tell you about what a philanderer | your husband is, laugh it off. There DOROTHY DIX. (Copyrig! nothing in it. best domestic science au- REBEEEE 1 think that is & fine idea, Elizabeth, for sometimes we think | and who keeps her continually upset and | mother who is cantankerous and dis- | . mean, spiteful things to the husband | Sometimes it is other | relatives who are enforced guests who are forever stirring up trouble between | irl, but when I tell | JUNE 6, 1929 SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. All to0 few are the folk, both lay and medical, who recall that now is the merry hay-fever season—for there are two of them, worse luck. The height of the plague. of course, will come in | | September, when ragweed throws lit- { erally tons of its poisonous pollen into the air of almost the entire United States. But there is an earlier hay- fever season, and if you can't account | | for your sneezes, consult a specialist, | | and 'see if you do not give a positive | reaction to plantain pollen, sweet ver- | nal grass, spear grass, timothy. red- | top, bent grass, orchard grass, bluegrass | | or hemp. Indeed, this, the early hay-fever pe- | riod, i chiefly a grass period, and it | will" subside in July.' Through the | Summer there is a rather obscure pig- weed and Summer-grass, hay-fever sea- son, that shoots up into a real plague in Autumn, with the ragweed ses Salmon Salad Croquettes | eggs, 1 cup finely minced celery, large white potato, boiled and | cooled; sprinkle well with paprika | and add a bit of onion juice. Mix | ‘well with just enough French dress- ! ing to form into croquettes. Roll each croquette in finely ground nut meats and serve on lettuce leaves with SALMON dressing made from 1 cup of SALMON rubbed through a colander into a plain mayonnaise dressing. FEATURES. Happy would we be if all flowers were | pollenated by insects, for such have! heavy pollen that seldom rises on the wind; but the golden dust of the wind- pollenated plants is adapted to volplan- ing, and it 1s, of necessity, produced in | immense quantities. Hay fever is a subject for vaudeville Jjokes—laughed at by those who never | | have it. Sufferers from it do not regard | it as so funny. If you have had hay fever, you should | probably not live in_ the sub; A down-town office doesn't give any one hay fever, and neither does a cottage !ina pine’ forest. The suburbs, full of vacant lots where hay-fever weeds stand thick as marshaled ari are the worst of places for hay feverites. At the same time, every one thinks he has hay fever should be certain that it is pollen that is causing it. It is astonishing what susceptibilities (called by the medicos “allergies”) some people | suffer from. Almost every known food, especially fish, may develop the symp- toms in one or another hay feverite, | and equally so, wool, hair,” fur, orris root, face powder, rouge (and presum- ably' lip-stick) An eminent Washington doctor re- cently reported on the case of & man who got hay fever from a pet parrot. tn which he was so devoted that he hac it sleep on his bed. I think he deserved his fate. Fritters. Apple: Core. pare and cut tv edium sized sour apples in one-this inch rounds cr slices, sprinkle th with powdered sugar and a few dro of lemon Juice, cover and let stand f half an hour. Drain, dip the pieces batter, fry in deep fat and drai Sy > with sugar and cinnamon. appl Cover some slices pineapple with & little_sugar and ) stand for one hour. Drain, dip tI slices in batter and fry in deep hot fat Drain on brown paper and sprinkle wit! powdered sugar. To make the batter for these fritters mix and sift together one and one-third cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one-fourth tea- spoonful of salt. Add two-thirds cupful of milk gradually and one egg well beaten. Egyptian Delight Salad Flake 1 can PINK Salmon, and mix with 1 cup diced celery. Mix thor- oughly with boiled salad dressing. Place lettuce leaves on a chop plate so that they reach out to the edge of the plate. In the center heap the salmon mixture, pyramid fashion, press lightly into the sides 1 dozen stuffed olives, having the red on the outside. Arrange around the edge 2 or 3 tomatoes, sliced, with a ball of cottage cheese (moistened with salad dressing) in center of each. Between each slice of tomato place a small radish with its green stem upwards. 1 Try these excellent PINK' Salmon Recipes — selected from $1000 Prize Contest — almon Mousse Mix ¥ tablespoon salt, 1% table- spoons sugar, 1 teaspoon mustard, ground. Pour over this ¥ cup scald- ed milk, cook in double boiler five minutes. Add 1% tablespoons melt- ed butter, 2 egg yolks, beaten, 1 tablespoon cold water, and ¥ cup hot vinegar. Stir and cook. Add 1 package granulated gelatine, soften- ed in and turn into small molds to harden. Serve with cucumber sauce. *PINK Salmon is highly recommended by U. S. & o government officials be- cause of its low cost and high percentage of pro- tein, phosphorous and iodine content — (iodine is recognized as valuable in the prevention and treatment of goitre). g & oo o and yor'll want to get up for breakfast Out goes the light . . . in comes the moon . . . tired . : ; big day to- morrow . . . have to—get up—early s :: ho-hum . . . sleep! Morning! Eyes pop open. Wide- awake to a new day—and to break- Jast! For no longer is breakfast a daily duty. It’s a joyous pleasure. Worth getting up for! And there it is—your beaming bowl of Heinz Rice Flakes. Eagerly Send for the Prize Win- ningSalmon RecipeBook of 150 practical and de- licious ways of serving PINK Salmon. Free copy * sent upon request. ASSOCIATED SALMON PACKERS 2502 Smith Tower grown with pine and thick underbrush. | and beheld, in great surprise, the lady, There is extant a tradition to the effect | in her ordinary costume, slowly strolling that many years ago a party of Balti- | among the flowers. She paused and more oystermen encamped on the point, | looked earnestly at the group, her fea- among whom was a man named Alley, | tures plainly visible; then turned and who had abandoned his wife. The de- | disappeared amidst the shrubbery. No serted woman followed up her husband | trace of her presence being discoverable, | and found him at the camp. After some | it was natural that a gloom fell upon | conversation had passed between them | the company. A few hours later a| the man induced her, upon some un- | messenger arrived with the news of | known pretext, to accompany him into | her death. The time of her apparition a thicket, and the poor wife nevar came | and the time of her death coincided. you crunch their nut-like goodness. Satisfied, at last, when your spoon has sought the last sunny flake. Oh—the “Joy of Living"! Joy indeed. For these gladsome breakfasts bring days full of vigor— free from loginess. And it's all due to a new, patented Heinz process of cereal-making which transforms the natural rough- age element of the rice into a pure cellulose, that provides the healthful effect of a gentle, natural laxative. No other cereal food can offer you this precise quality—for Heinz owns the process. So good to eat. So good for you FLOU Is made for kitchen use—from wheat best adaptable to kitchen formulas and facili- ties. SH...SH! IVE FOUND THE SECRET HouseroLp pests used to annoy me. But no more! Now I use Black Flag Liquid. It kills every fly and mosquito—every ant, roach, bedbug, ete. And it kills them quickly! Surely! For Black Flag Liquid is the deadliest liquid insect-killer made, (Money back if it doesn’t prove so.) PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR for all purposes. SELF-RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR (mixed with the purest leavening phosphates) for biscuits, waffles, etc., made in a “jiffy.” R 3 & For sale by grocers and delicatessens in all sizes from 2-lb. sacks up. .The 12 and 24 Ib. sacks are more economical—because WASHINGTON FLOUR IS GOOD UNTIL USED. & 8 @ ©1929,8.7.Co. BLACK FLAG 35%.. 7. HIQUID— wiypyms Black Flag also cc.:: ot in Powder form. Equally deadly. 15¢, and vp. L3 45 Wilkins-Rogers il WV ng Co., Washington, D. C. ¥ CHE OB OB BB OB B OTHERS OF THE 57 HEINZ OVEN BAKED BEANS, HEINZ VINEGARS, HEINZ PEANUT BUTTER ® %