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FRP " WOMAN’S PAGE" Intelligent Contacts Are Needed BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Many a homemaker who would not eonsider giving herself inadequate food will expect her mind to keep alive and alert on a starvation diet. She de- plores the fact that she is no longer AS THE ATR IN A TOOM NEEDS RENEWING BY OFENING WIN- DOWS. SO DOES THE MIND NEED RErRESHING WITH NEW IDEAS. up on interesting subiects, that she has become a dull conversationalst, that she is sure that her presence at any party is not much addition, but her thought about it ends there and nothing is done Her concern about it should start Just as soon as she feels a slackening The Sidewalks of interest within herself, It is not the avenues of contact which are limited, as much as her own capacity for interest. ‘Unless some one else def- | initcly goes about it to interest her in something she seeks nothing out for herself which offers to her mind the stimulation which it craves, and with- out which her whole life is sure to be tempered with dullness, Avenues of contact with the latest | trend of thought of Mterature, of fash | ion, of drama are to be found in near! l'every community, and where there is | not ‘even a community they still con- | tinue to exist in_bocks. periodicals and through the radio. The value of such | contact is tremendous, in fact, im- ’measurnbll‘. ‘Think how small an area | is required’ for two points of wires to | touch in order to have an electric | current of great voltage conducted | through its entire length, provided one | is_charged, The homemaker who thinks herself shut off from the great currents of | interest should remember that not very far away is some highly charged wire | of interest which need only be con- | tacted in ortler to send a tremendous | impulse of invigorating thought suffi- | eient to permeate her whole life if she will permit it to do so. The big dynamic forces of creative thought of world affairs, effort, of sportsmanship, of enterprise in business, of art, and of new and | interesting hobbies to ride are not less | beeause the individual steps out of the way of them.. They are merely waiting | to be touched in order that | vitality be felt. | _ There 15 something exceedingly ben; ficial in keeping the mind as well con- ditioned as the body. route for the housewife to follow if she wishes to become increasingly duil is mever let her mind swerve from the routine, never to look up frém the pans | to be scrubbed to see what stars are in the ascendency, never to vary tn miss something of broadening in- terest that would delay it. a woman consider herself a good heusckeeper, but not a good homemaker. The making of a home requires that the faculties of mind as well as body be well nourished (Coprright. 1920.) My Neighbor Says: To sterilize jars for preserving first w them thoroughly. theh put them into‘a ketle or boiler of cold water, bring {0 the boiling point and boil for 15 minutes Ripe fomatoes will remove ink and other stains from white cloth, also from the hands. Those who make fagoting trim- ming will find it much easer to do the work on buckram than on paper. When strinzing beads or pearls of various sizes place them in or- der in one of the erooves of a piece of corrugated paper. Tt will then be much easier to slip them onto the needle of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. There are motorists in the city who pay for their gasoline by taking friends and acquaintances to business in the morning. In most cases they charge a trifle more per week than street car fare. Usually the “fares” are neigh- bors. By carrying three or four pas- ngers, they reduce the cost of motor- ing % ¥ A loud-voiced citizen was haranguing a group in 2 downtown hotel lobby, Apparently the discussion had become heated. Lissen! the loud one, this matter.” rean.” Teplied one of the group. “Your side and wrong side.” * % % Lissen to me!" exclaimed “There are two sides to A stage director, ‘Washington play-goers, "'The trouble today is knows too much about th of actors and actresses. There is no longer any mystery about the stage and its people. and this has been an unforiunate thing for the profession. ‘We have gone so far as to reveal the mechanics of the theater. Wer have observed_this tendency in motion pic- tures. This would have been unheard of a few years ago. Naturally, the mystery no longer intrigues the play- 5 “I have been very careful, in direct- ing plays, about letting outsiders in on some of our secrets, For example, during the run of a mystery show. we were compelled to use numerous me- chanical contriv- ances to obtain tie proper cfects Three or four men, en, ¢f cour: the audience, back stage ng _like Tro- Each his duty to form which timed to the spli second, so0 to speak The failure of any one of them would have embarrassed the actors and de- stroved the illu- sion’ we fought “Had we permitted any one back stage who had no business there, our tricks would have been exposed and the public enjoyment impaired. It is as much for the benefit of the spectator actor that mystery remains. vind machine is operated. A shutter bangs. Thi are caused by men stationed at certain points. What a shock it would have heen had every one been informed of the trick, Of course, the people know that me- chanical methods are used, but to ;hrnw the brutal truth at them is not air. “We had a coffin on the stage in one, act, A body was placed within. Later, when the casket was opened. found to be empty. This was mystify. ing. Naturally the ‘dead’ actor had to get out. - But how? Also, he had to get in again. The public suspected there was an opening in the box, which was true. To have made this obvious would have hurt the per- formance. “You may print what T am saying, because I think it may help the stage. There are ctill some stars who hide be- AUNT HET BY RORERT QCT well known to said_ recently: at the public private lives “Amy pretends she’s my friend, but she served that sticky stuff at the Ald Soclety meetin’ knowin’ d o' well my upper plate would stick am’ pull loose when I bit it.” - “capyright, 1920. had | hind the veil of obscurity, This is not temperament, but good business. One of our finest character actors is seldom scen on the street or at social functions. His characterizations are 0 unusual that he prefers to be known their | The obvious | the | hour of preparing a meal in order not | Let such | | by the parts he plays rather than by | the intimate details of his home life. famous Hollywood actress has followed his example in this respect. She is one of the most popular women on the nothing about her private life. “No one, so far saw Richard Mansfield make up. had a portable dressing room, which | was pushed behind a set. When a | change of costume was necessary, he entered the tiny booth. He had a repu- tation for being temperamental and even ugly at times. Nobody penetrated his privacy. He lived and died one of the most popular men on the stage. “I do not advocate the actor lea a hermit’s existence. He must have I diversions and recreations the same others, but going about in public plac too frequently and being seen destro that most essential qualit The stage is ‘make believe.' spoil the picture?” * % x ‘The foregoing reminds of a very tem- peramental actress who was engaged tc make a movie. She has spent a dis- tinguished career on the speaking stage for many vears. When nounced that she would star in a ce tain picture. the studio was besieged by people anxious_to see her work befos the camera. The few invited guests, among_whom was the writer, noticed that the set was hidden by a hign cloth barrier. Seats _were ‘thin the and the en- trance of the star awaited camera and direc- tor were read The star came on. Startled, she look- ed at her small audience. Calling the director, she protested that she wouldn't speak or make a - gesture until the specta- tors left. The em- barrassed _director | was comoelled to ! Zmm| ask the visitors to | Z leave. This was i not a matter of | fear on the part of the star. She had been used {0 playing to crowded houses { She was no longer a young woman and | resented the presence of spectators who |sat within a few feet of the movie | stage. The Kieig lights were brutally | truthful and this may have inspired | her_resentment. | The director said later that he never had such an experience before as that | of directing the lady in question. | l BRAIN TESTS I | In the following statements several | possible reasons are given for the truth | of each statement. The object is to | pick out the most logical or the most probable reasan. Check the best reason in each case and allow three minutes for the test. (1) A man jumped from the edge of a bridge that was 20 feet high, yet he wag net injured because: (a) He was lucky. - (b) There was deep water under the bridge. (c) He landed on his feet. (d) He was a trained acrobat. (e) He had a parachute. (2) A man objected to paying 50 cents for having his shoes shined be- caus SHE REFUSED TU money with him. (b) One shoe was not shined as well as the other. (c) He considered the charge exorbi- tant. (d) The shoes were not new ones, (e) He was in a hurry and did notl want to wait for change. (3) A doctor received a phone call | at midnight and left his house im-| mediately because: (a) He wanted to study the stars. (by A friend wanted him'to play olf. # (¢) fThe call was from a patient. (d) His office hours were from 1 a.m. to 5 am. (e) He was afraid to stay in the | house. o Answers. - The most logical reasons are: (1) », @) .6 @) (a) He did not have that much| A | screen, but the public knows little or | as is known, ever it was an-| i I | on SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. This is goin' ter be pitty hard on my folks, even Drandpa may feel bad. Muvver an’' Daddy will ery to see o eous | me dead and cold—Baby won't hardly be able to stand it. I dest swallered a big chunk ob ice. (Copsright, 1029.) NANCY PAGE Yes. She Can Bake Cherry Pie. Billy Boy. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Every June bride becomes accustomed to hearing her husband sing in loud and meaningful tones, “Can she bake a cherry pie, Billy Boy, Billy Boy." And woe be unto the bride who can't make that pie which is golden brown top with a few dark red stains which show the red juice of the cher- ries which are underneath that erust in all their rich fruitness. Carol and Nancy are having a session devoted to Cherry Pie. Carol spells it with capital letters because it seems so important to her that she make a pie to suit her newly acquired lord and master, Her Get are Nancy's directions: some sour pie cherries. ‘They will be juicy and a rather brick red in color. Buy a quart. Wash them, stem them and pit them. Sour cherries are seldom wormy so you need not bother to look at each onme. It is sel- dom vou find & worm. Put the pitted cherries in a bowl while you make the crust Use one and one-half cupfuls pas- try flour, one-half teaspoonful salt. six tablespoonfuls shortening. Use half butter and half lard or vegetable shortening. Cut the shortening into flour until it resembles course sand. Add six tablespoonfuls ice water. The ture should be enough to hold together when worked into a ball. Put half of it on a lightly floured board and roll with floured rol ing pin until one-quarter inch thick. Line pie tin. Mix one cup sugar with two tablespoons full flour. Put half of this in bottom of pie erust. Put in cherries, there should be two cups full. Put rest of sugar and flour on top. Moisten rim of paste; 1ing paste 1o 'y inch thickness. a Gpenii i center (0o and tojer pie dges cut Hmp bake in hot oven for 20 min e ase heat and bake for 30 minutes more. (Copyright, 1929.) Fruit Ices. Raspberry Tce: Make a sirup with four cupfuis of water and ene cupful of sugar. Add two cupfuls of raspberry juice and two tablespoonfuls of lemon jujee and freeze. : Wash half a pound of dried apricots, cover with four cup- fuls of water and soak for several hours. _Cook in the same water until soft. Put through a sieve to get the juice and pulp. Add the juice from two oranges and two. lemon Make a sirup by boiling two cupfuls sugar in the water. mixture and freeze. ¥ Cherry Pie. Line vour ple tin with good crust, fill half full with ripe, stoned cherries, sprinkle over them one cupful of sugar, add one tablespoonful of sifted flour and dots of butter here and there, -Now fill the crust with more cherries, cover with an upper crust with fancy gashe se lay on pastry strips like Be sure to have the parts d down around the rim. just moist ! Add to the firsbl Urges Need for Financial Independence To the Girl Just Leaving School | DorothiyDix| “Your Education Not Completed Until You Have Mastered Some Gainful Occupation by Which You Can Support Yourselves.” Wmm do you go from here, girks? You have just graduated in all the ologies and isms and a peachy white frock, and now you are standing rather be- wildered and dazed, not knowing what to do next. If you were boys you would be thinking seriously about your careers, and your parents would be trying to help you get into the trade or profession you meant to follow as a life work, but fathers and mothers don't bother much about shaping a girl's future course. They trust that to luck. Everybody takes it for granted that a nice. rich, kind young man will marry the girl and that she will live happily ever afterward. 8o what's the use of her bothering her pretty little bobbed head about anything except dates and clothes and the newest makes of sports car and the shortest length in skiris? Of course, if money is scarce in the family, she may have to work mn a store or office while she is waiting for the Fairy Prince to come along and rescue her from drudgery. but both she and her parents are looking for him to arrive at any minute, so it doesn't seem worth while for her to prepare herself seriously for a job that is purely temporary and that she is likely to throw up any day. Unfortunately, this optimistic forecast of a girl's life is not always justified by the subsequent events. Sometimes the girl marries and lives happily ever afterward. Sometimes she docsn’t marry at all,cor if she does marry she gets a divorce. Sometimes marriage solves all of her material difficulties. Very often it is just the beginning of them. Sometimes the Fairy Prince scorches by in his car and bears her off to a palace. Frequently she mistakes a rotter for him and he drags her down to the gutter, and she has to go to work and support him and half a dozen children. I she was safe from the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune JEAVEN alone knows how the deluded notion ever obtained that marriage Nothing could it I not necessary to fit giris for life as it is boys, because girls will marry. Yet the most casual observation gives the lie 1o this theory and shows thr | eruel wrong it works. For not only do many women hever marry at all. but many of those that do marry come to grief. Husbands sicken and die. Husbands are unfaithful. Husbands desert their wives and children. Husbands lose their , money. Husbands sometimes have no moneymaking ability whatever. Every day we see the tragic spectacle of women who have been trained to no trade or pro- fession struggling desperately to support themselves and perhaps an invalid husband and little children. Every day we see women enduring the insuits and abuse of brutal husbands because they have not. been taught any way to maxe a dollar and they must stick to their meal ticket or starve. | So T implore yvou girls who have just finished school not to consider that your education is completed until you have mastered some gainful occupation by which you can support yourselves. Don’t think that because your father is rich | it is not necessary for you to have a profession. | millionaire leaves his children paupers, but if you have the kind of skill of hand and brains for which the world is willing to pay, you have something that cannot be taken away from you. Don't think that because you are pretty and a riot with the hgys, you can marry vour living instead of earning it. Perhaps Mr. Midas will pop the ques- tion to vou. Jurt as likely Mr. Poor Man will. Besides, face the fact that you are living in & new era in which economic conditions often prevent a'voung couple from getting married unless the wife is also a wage-earner. The parasitic wife, who 15 nothing but a parlor ornament, s a luxury that few men can afford in on h:l\'éng not only to bake the bread, but make the dough as well when she gets married. T < romance but an aid to it. For it will enable vou to marry your man, should you fall in Jove With a poor one. while you are stiil young and your heart thrills with passion, instead of dragging out the weary vears of a iong engagement, waiting for him to make enough to support two, while the glamour and illusion of love's young dream pale and your romance of love burns down to ashes in your hearts. { Nor is this all. ‘The woman who is self-supporting is always a free woman | She can never be made into the slave wife if she happens to marrv a tyrant | s the dependent woman is, because if her husband does not treat her properly | she can always give notice and quit. Nor is there any other such gdod prepara- !'tion for marriage as for a woman to have earned her own living. | JT bas taught her efficiency and promptness and self-control. It has taught her the value of money and through what agony it is earned. It has taught | her sympathy with men and an understanding of the trials and anxieties that they undergo and makes her a more companionate and thriftv wife. For the | qualities in a woman that enable her to hold down a good job will enable her to keep her husband ‘The curse of women is that, as a sex, th no settled purpose. As the old song puts it, “they are on their way, but they don't know where they are going.” They expect to ma but they don't prepare | themselves to be wives and mothers. They think vaguely that they would like to follow careers, but they don't settle down to any one. | earn good salaries, but thev won't take the trouble to learn how to do anything | well enough to become cxperts. i E not one of these foolish virgins, Decide on some definite thing that you want to do in life and fit yourself to do that well. Learn some way of up- porting yourself. Learn how to do the kind of work that has a market value. Learn to be independent and stand on your own feet, It is the best insurance that you can take out against the accidents of life, DOROTHY DIX. : have no plan of life. They have MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. *;ll?l l]-"‘:O([)D. ‘ialg’,“fluly 12—This| Clara Bow, village “It" girl, has is the land of make-believe | 2 You make believe you're & producer, | PrOVed her right to the title by an- or an actor, or an a.thor, or a dramat- houncing her engagement to Harry ist, or even a columnist. You live in a Richman, entertainer and night club make-believe Spanish haclenda. The ouner, make-believe adobe walls are Monterey - in front and Hip-hip-hooray in back. Clara’s name has been coupled with | You make believe it's a luxurious life. | 19n€ list of Romeos, including Gilbert { You rise at 7 in the momning to eat a|Roland. who. Clara says, broke her | make-believe breakfast of Melba toast "";_fip’“r:gehl;‘*trvnl:;fl’;mmm - end a grapefruit, for fear your make-| .. cjarg g fat salary check, which she | believe silnouette will get thicker. ‘ < 2 has invested carefully. So her bank- t believe 3 You attend a makesbelieve picture “53 O e conference and are asked your opinions. 0 hz 0 ety It's make-believe because if you really | Harry Richman'is part of New York's gave them you'd be out in the street Eift to Hollywood. Clara stole a march 3 on a good many beauties in a village minus a contract the next minute. You | o8 D d { produce a Iot of make-believe enthusi- | Where swains are scarce and belles as common as dandelion: {asm over everything. You fake make- believe laughter at your superior’s jokes. In the evening you see make-believe art in a preview: try some make-be- eve wit--read going home from the studio - on the dinner guests: turn into | your expensive boudoir at 10.30 or 11 {for you have a big income, and you {must apprectate the luxury of - your make-believe frecdom earncd by suc- cess, i When Florenz Ziegfeld comes to Hal- Iywood to make a picture the village le up an oid financial score s glorified the American girl oniy by putting some hundreds of thou- shekels i the Zi eld pockets. this pi re is one of the riceless tales of Hollywood finance The title was bought from Ziegteld. It has been more or less of a tag through |the years Then the studio set absut writing a story to fill the title. The story some- how fafled to click th the produe I mean. The manuseript passed from one hand to another and suffered the handling. One by one the famous and the unknowns received the studio hoodoo to handle. It got them all. | Thyra Samter Winslow came to the village with a six weeks' contract. She was put to work glorifying the American girl. Only a score of writers had pre- ceded her. When she discovered that mlm authors of the glorifying seript w almost as nu 5 as ' In my day you were lucky if you got | B0, 29 DUMErols as Bolomons i your white buckskin shoes regularly | writere of magnificently destructive fie- and they were kept clean. Th; Square- | tion went back to her really splendid toed patent leathers we wore for eVery|ecraft ‘leaving some more ambitious and day were carefully rubbed with cream | jecy ‘capable person fo Write the il when taken off at night. | fated story. But the ipfantas didn't have wee 4 st ermine coats then. A white corded| The moral—A gentie named Ziegfeld silk muff with a couple of beaver bands | was collecting a_ thousand dollars a was just about the most devilish thing | week during all the years this rigama- role was going on. And that, my chil- that “could happen. And every chic child put on its Peter Thompson coat | dren, i¢ business as done in this village and sallor cap and ealled it & day. No| of Hollywood, year of our Lotd nineten Ishenanigans on merry-go-rounds in my | hundred and twenty-nine. day! What a price we pay Who Were| copyright, 1929. by North American News- born too soon! paper Alliance.} With such atmosphere on every side quite natural that one should find 00d a make-believe it lon the Boul Holly shop for “tiny tots. Tt's really a shoe store, but it makes believe to be a fairy-tale place. Great, fat, wooden bunnies, creamily enam- eled, hold out the glass cases in which tiny footwear is displayed. For fittings proper there is a merry-go-round with gorgeous bears, and camels, and deer, and bunnies. You ride the merry-g round while the salesman is selling | you the latest in infant footwear. patronage to the dealer who deserves it. The Grocer who recom- mends Puritan Malit is featuring unu- sual quality. ended all of a woman's troubles and that once she was in the holy estate | be farther from the truth, yet in spite of its fallacy the idea still prevails that | Money has wings, and many a | these days of the high cost of living, and so the modern girl can fairly well count | YURIOUSLY enough, being able to make your own living is not a bar to | cars to tatters and the very fire | They would like to | FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Foot Troubles. l Now that tight corsets have heen thrown into the discard their is nnly1 one other item in milady’s costume that may cause real pain and injury to her | health; that is her footwear. Fashion | has reduced underthings to a minimum | and has decreed comfortable, light- weight frocks to cover them, but the | | style dictators still seem to look upon | shoes as a purely decorative touch in the ensemble. | As a result there are very few women | who do not suffer from an of foot. trouble, including corr callouses, bunions and weakn arches. 'Excessive sweating ing of the feet become more hot_weather. The first step in curing a | foot troubles is. of course selection | of correct shoes that really fit the feet without pre g the toes out cf po: or being so loose as to rub anywhere I'll admit that it is not al find shoes that fit properly and at | fame time come up to our ideal beauty and fashion, but such shoes are available, and when found one shouid be_very slow to change to another last Buying a lot of cheap s extravagance. but it is ecor buy several pairs of really ny of these 3 swab with indine from dirt with cl “When T asked Hector what caused the two hens next door to quit laying, he said an auto.” (Copyright. 192 OUR CHILDREN || BY ANGRLO PATRL Everyday Law Cases May Parents, N Do BY THE COUNSELLOR. Showing Off. “You got a funny dress on.” “Bettern’ yours. I gotta new bath- tng suit.” “I got {wo. And T got “I got a new,robe. It's all— “Do you go to dancing school? mother got me a beautiful new Beautiful " I got a diamond change, makes the shoes last lo speak cf economy in b should not. however, think enti terms of dollars and cex bu of beauty and heaith. Foot irex the feel and causes blemishes o1 them is also an indirect cause of fa wrinkle. We cannot enjoy exercise the sctive outdoor sport ssary to health if ou: Here are a few sugy And_ I got new slippers | ing dress. all spangles. | “That's nothing. ing and a—-" | “Ah you have not. But I have a necklace all set with pearls and dia- monds and rubles and colored glass and everyth For_blisters s0ap and water, also, Now sterilize ing.” it prick the edge o mother has a better one than Gnm(l;pm»:”v \.»l;':wnf My father—-" e = n b “Pooh. Your father can't do_ what | Surrounding skin with a 2 my father can do. He's rich. he solution of iod C | He can buy the whole world if he Al and st O Bathe feet father's factory.” | “He don't want that old dump.” | The contestants flew at each other ; and had to be torn apart |~ “Dreadful child,” said cne mother to | the other. | | Not so dreadful. Brought up in the| atmosphere of competition. whai else | conld they be? Each was showing ber | | best side, as she thought, to her neigh- | | bor, just'as the family had been doing | before the neighbors.” “I got” was the | standard each had seen in act | were they so dreadful? | When a family invests money ildren they must expect to do withs the things it buys in other directi If you want a healthy, happy child you | have to be the kind of parent who be- { lieves the child worth the price of the | new car or the new rug or whatever is {offered. Children ccst money. Ti turn they offer is not a material one. Most parents are no longer interested in gathering wealth after their children { have grown to maturity. The return | that children bring s in terms of love | Love cannot be measured in terms of | money nor can it be cultivated in t | atmosphere that puts money and t | things it buys first. | T am not crying down money. T can- not see how a family can be? rearcd | without it. but I am decrying the spirit | “I got.” The spirit that makes folk | unhappy because they haven't got what some one else has. A Lizzie is a very | good family car but the family wt / owns a high-priced limousine is politely funny at the expense of the smalicr one. And why? I was pleased at the retort of a boy | who was' driving his Lizzie when | neighbor boy passed him in a big car | shouting, “T smell sardines!” | “We 'pay cash” he called trundled on. A pride in ene's poscessions, a sturds | honestyof living, an_acceptance things as they are when it comes daily expenses. are what makes character in children. Never mind w cou “got.” Wa a need! { ou_got. ing i | or He can't buy my 1 ¢ and appl solution ef formalin Good Health So Cheap And So Pleasant To Take DDE HEAT With all the bran of the whole wheat “H 3 £ Two biscuits with whole milk and some fruit, give energy for the hot days and are so easily digested and so full of real nutriment—for breakfast or lunch. (Copy | i New TypE ! DESSERT . REecipes with this cake at your grocer’s [0l | i Ll in| I’ 'Make Your Dessert Tonight ays Alice Adams Proctor Serve this delicious Hostess Lemon Loaf OUR COSTLY INGREDIENTS FLOUR. Soft cake flour milled especially for us. MILK. Every drop pasteurized twice. BUTTER. A fine grade of fresh creamery butter that tests “go score” by Uited States Govern- ment standards. FLAVORINGS. We make our own. No others measure up to standard. PROMISE you an unusual dessert for supper tonight. It will be delicious. Yet inex- pensive. Itis this Hostess Lemon Loaf that I recommend to you. Made with fresh crushed lemons. It offers one of the most cooling desserts you could have on your summer menu. i We Bake It For You Matchless chefs bake this Host- ess Lemon Loaf. They work in a model cake kitchen near your home. They use the best ingredients. Unlike so many so-called “lemon cakes,” this cake is not syrupy ;:eet The natural egg sponge flavor is topped off with luscious butter frosting. Then © 1029, Continental Bakiag Gou and a half at least. It would cost youtwice thepricewe charge. Taking advantage of its re- freshing flavor, I have planned seven new and unusual dessert recipes based on this cake. You get them free. Thus, with Hostess Lemon Loaf, you get not only a deli- cious quick dessert, but recipes for every day of the week. Geta genuine Hostess Lemon Loaf today. Only with the gen. uine do you get my new recipes. self would take you one hour . acq_n.nw ; bee‘: THostessoCake BAKERS ALSO OF WONDER BREAD AND WONDER PAN ROLLS just enough fresh, crushed lemon added to balance the sweetness. To bake such a cake your-