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WOMAN'S PAGE. GREAT TRIUMPHS OF CHILDREN Patti, at Six, Astounded From “La Norma, BY J. P. HE STOOD HER ON A TABLE. “YES, “NOW, WHAT WILL YOU SING?” SAID. When Salvatore and Caterina Patt! went to the old Astor Place Opera House to sing they used to take their youngest | child, Adelina, with them. Four years old, with raven-black hair and eyes, she wandered around back- stage, absorbing all the atmosphere of the theater. Later, at home, she re- enacted the things she had seen and heard. She lived in a world of charm- ing illusion. Her home was a veritable temple of music. Salvatore and Caterina Patti had been well known opera singers in Maly. Caterina’s four children a former marriage were all vocalists. Two daughters she had had by Patti were studying for concert careers. All day the house was filled with the conflict of ing voices. Through this unending rivalry Adelina wandered unconcern- edly. Her sister Amalia_had trouble doing the shake properly. It annoyed Adelina, now at the mature age of 6, “Why do you do it like that?” she demanded scornfully. “Do it like this.” And forthwith she amazed Amalia by delivering a faultless, natural shake. The Pattis had come to New York to find prosperity. But America was scarcely ready for opera. In truth, too, Salvatore and his wife no longer were in their prime. What impresarios need- ed was a brilliant star. Salvatore could not see that any of his children prom- d to become that star. One night there was company in the PSYCHIC ADVENTURES OF NOTED MEN AND WOMEN Rubinstein Revealed Dying Xgony to Former Pupil. BY J. “Even in death Rubinstein had kept =as he always did—his word.” This declaration comes from’ Lillian Nichia, a well known pupil of the great Anton Rubinstein, planist and com- poser, wha:formerly in St. Petersburg was as much of a czar in mhmn musical as was the Emperor of all the Russias in aflairs of state. Rubinstein was the first man to pass judicially upon the ability of Ossip Gabrilowitsch, present conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, who has charmed untold numbers of Americans by his piano-playing. When Gabril- owitsch, at 9 years of age, seemed show unusual promise, his parents suc- ceeded in getting Rubinstein to give hum 2 hearing. “He has a real gift,” said the great man It was a dictum which deter- mined the boy's future, for the com- oser, as the statement of Mme. Nichia dicates, possessed a stern estimate of the value of truth. It was a startling event that elicited Lillian Nichia's declaration. On a stormy night this lady had dinner with Rubinstein. Years after- ward she could recall the terrific gale that/howled around the house, causing the timbers to creak, and setting loose weird moans beneath the eaves. The wind was exceptional, even in Bt. Petersburg. Rubinstein listened to an exception- | life ally loud blast speculatively. “What,” he asked his pupii—“what do these winds represent to your mind?” Nichia shrugged “hef shoulders, shiveringly. 2 “They are like the moaning of lost souls,” she replied. This observation had the effect of starting a discussion upon a matter of u;l':ndinz interest—death and the life after. “There may be a future,” Rubin- stein admitted. To which his pupil re- plied with conviction, “There is &/ future—a great and beautiful future.” | She paused and then added dramat- OUR CHILDREN s, Angelo pase He Didn't Mean It. ‘There is a kind of child, boys and girls are alike efflicted, who would have us believe that he is always heading ;Ighb while his results turn out wrong. e child is usually very frank about his meaning well.. Tells you about it MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange juice, dry cereal with cream, scrambled - eggs, hash brown potatoes, toasted brown bread, coffee. LUNCHEON. Cream of corn soup, vegetable plate, rye bread, caramel custard, macaroons, tea. DINNER. ‘Tomato bouillon, breaded veal chops, lyonnaise potatoes, string beans, coleslaw, French dressing, baked Indian pudding, whipped cream, coffee. POTATOES. Peel and ‘wash some raw white potatoes, cut them into inch- square dice, boil them -in salted water until they are tender, then drain off the water. Pour into a buttered pudding dish and pour over them a rich, well seasoned sauce. Cover and bake in a good oven for 20 minyges, then un- cover and brown richly and serve. CORN SOUP. Chop finely one can of corn, add an onion, sliced, the size of an egg, large sprig of parsley and one pint of water. Let cook 20 minutes, taking care it does not scorch. Then press through a sieve, extracting all the pulp - sible. Melt two rounding table- spoons of butter, add an equal amount of sifted flour, one-half teaspoon salt and a good dash of {)epper. Cook to a smooth paste. hen add dually a rt of hot milk, mwnm’ mfl. and serve, add a cup of cream or rich milk and salt to taste. BREADED VEAL. » Take as many veal chops as wish, wash well, pepper and . Let stand for 15 minutes, then take two eggs, beat well in bowl and dip each chop in eggs on both sides, then flour .or cracker flour on both sides and then fry them brown on both sides in pan of hot fat. a plate near fire or heat. take one-half can of tomatoes and two s, boil till onions are well done; take all, put in strainer lnm in a e:u;l‘ season .qver : Serve with green peas hot.. 2 to | Startled, filled with fright, she sprang | thoughts and deeds. By Singing Difficult Aria GLASS. HERE I8 A STAGE FOR YOU,” HE | house. Naturally there was singing. | Adelina was like every one. She wished | to sing, too. “Of course,” sald hc‘.fm:s'l“m”' Jo- vially, “you shall go ugh a whole plece, pretty one.” He stood her on a table. “Yes, here is a stage for you,” he went on. “Now, what will you sing?” They had expected a simple melody. But the self-contained infant had no idea of playing with small game. She started the ‘long, sustained note and urn” that form the initial phrase of asta diva,” the noblest of Bellini's arias, the sublime prayer from his “La Norma.” And wholly by ear, with un- canny ease and precision, she went through the thing without mistake. Even her brothers and sisters were held spellbound by this performance. As for the parents, they wept tears of | ioy, embracing first each other and then the child. “This is no ordinary child,” said Sal- vatore. “Yes,” agreed Caterina, “she is a born singer.” Adelina made her first public appear- ance at 7. From that time on the Patti fortunes mended. At 16, in New York, her first appearance in opera created # furore. She was hailed as the sen- sation which managers had desired. She sang uninterruptedly for 56 years, attaining an undisputed world-wide supremacy. But she did not call her- self American, except in the early years. Afterward she was always Italian. (Copyright, 1929.) LASS. feally, “If I die first I shall come to you and prove this.” Rubinstein seemed impressed. He | looked at her gravely. | “Good, Liloscha,” he said with the | utmost serfousness, “that is a bargain. | And if I die first I will come to you.” | It was six. years later, in Parls, that | Nichia awoke from a sound sleep one | night, with a cry of agony and despair | ringing in her ears, such, she said | later, “as I hope may never be dupli- | cated in my lifetime.” | _ Rubinstein's face was close to hers. | It was the face of a man caught in a | maelstrom of most terrible emo- | tions—hopeless fear, remorse, anger. |out of bed and turned on the lights. Everything was as it should be. Her room was in perfect order and quiet. “It was only a dream,” she told her- self. She had forgotten her conversa- | tion with Rubinstein years before on | that stormy night in St. Petersburg. | | She returned to her bed to sleep. | | _ The next day while reading Le Petit | | Journal she suffered a_terrific shock. | Rubinstein had died stiddenly the night | |'before, a -dispatch said. It was four years later that she met ‘Teresa Carreno, who been a pupil of Rubipstein—~she ‘and Lililan Nichia often‘met at their teacher's dinner table.”. Carfeno was well ac- quainted with the circumstances at- fending Rubinstein's departure from e. “He died with & cry of which lti irs‘hlmm!bl! to descflb.ef'?n.!’hg told Nic! What had bmuaht this terrible ejac- ulation from the dying composer? %lu it caused by a physical agony? Or were his eyes confronted by some horrar which death disclosed to them? Seemingly he made an effort to ap- prise his old pupil of his distress—or at least some sympathetic chord in her picked it up. We can. scarcely wonder that she said afterward, “I knew then that, even in death, Rubinstein had kept, as he always did, his word.”" (Copyright. 1929.) with many words and ample illustra- tions, but you always have an uneasy feeling about him. You're never quite | certain about what he meant to do. And you are very sure that what he did do was far from right. | Now I do not believe that it is pos- | | sible for a child to forever mean right | {and do wrong. I know that none of | us is a pure idea. We are a complex | of ideas. Nothing we do is isolated. | but is an item in a long series of But I believe this | to be true: The proportion of well mean- | ing Is in direct relation to good resuits. A child cannot mean right and do| wrong save in proportion of right and wrong in his “meaning.” Clark always meant well, but he was @ general nuisance.. One day he stayed after school annd cleaned up the teach- er's desk as a surprise for her. The teacher was very much surprised when she found that all her monthly records had gone the way of the incinerator. Clark meant well, he sald. But in that mass of records was one card belong- ing to him, and what was written upon lt] did 1‘}&! ‘;‘!]dl;lgd to his honor and glory. lela) appearance it- ¢ ted him a trip to. town. P He was very late coming home ‘from school one day.. His mother was ex- pecting him to do an errand for her. By and by, when it was too late to send a messenger by foot and the car had to be pressed into service, he saun- tered in. “The streets were all dirty| and there was a big_puddle right in| front of Manly’s. I had on good shoes, and I didn't want to .p:‘xly them, %o I went round by Hanson’s Brook.” Henrietta was a little girl that meant well, too. She was stuch an impulsive, generous child, always giving things away, always helping le out, and yet the results of her deeds were ulu;fl{ not so good. ° I on your little brown coa - rietta. It's a little cool this mnthIHx:" “O Mother, dear, I !orwc to tell you. il "cold one. morning. * ¥ forast "o | morn] for [or| avout " 8. got _all Leaving out the fact that she had’ g;:‘v‘x r".hyml l‘ ei?t without her er al . _one becomes ested in the other (Copyright, 1920.) Cut some white bread in slices one- fourth inch thick. Spread lightly wit) creamed butter. Place a slice of baked ham between two slices of the buttered bread. Holding the sandwich between single So when annoyances, big and little, Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. Ir.ll)'l.l. “When It Rains It Pom:”.. “When sorrows come, they come not spies, but in bhattalions. wrote Shakespeare, when he por trayed the mind of the trouble-haunted King of Denmark. “So we all think e “everything go wrong.” At such times we are pretty likely to feel that,. no matter what we do, things are bound to go wrong. We take a fatalistic at- titude, and feel like just sitting back and letting the powers of evil have their moments. Then it is that the book of Job makes congenial reading. There is, I surmise, a perfectly logical expianation for troubles seeming to come in bunches. In the first place, they do not so come. We merely, im- agine for the time being nothing but trouble. We see trouble where none ex- ists. It's our own mental attitude. Have you never observed that some- thing line nine-tenths of all the things you worry about really .never happen? As Abraham Lincoln's philosophy went, “This also shall pass.” What are the elementary psychologli- cal facts about our troubles, real and imaginary? Some real trouble, of course, starts things going.. We try to get it out of the way. More often than we suppose, we succeed. If we fail, then the imaginary trou- bles begin. We have for the time be- ing lost our grip on our surroundings. We have lost our morale. The door Is opened a little wider and in pops an- other annoyance which ordinarily we would not have noticed. Being annoyed by the second invader, we begin to look around and see all sorts of dire things that might happen. As we enlarge upon the unwelcome images, they loom large, they begin to come in battalions. h'me psychological formula is simply this: 1. Some real trouble or annoyance and fallure to effect a tolerable ad- justment to it. 2. The lowering of the morale. 3. The expectation of some other trouble. Ks“ An exlmnytlun of the expecta- n. 5. A further retreat in consequence of lowering morale, 6. The conclusion that ours is & world of trouble. (Copvright, 1929.) “There's times when a fella can go around a lot without seein’ very much.” (Copyright, 1929.) My Neighbor Says: If a teaspoonful of cold water and a pinch of salt are added to the whites of eggs when mnlns meringue, it will be light an flufly. A “sliced banana, added to the white of an egg and beaten until stiff, makes a delicious filling. Black specks, which frequently appear on silver, may be re- moved if covered with a paste made of whiting and olive oil. Let it stand until dry, then polish the silver with a chamois cloth. Before applying linseed oil to the outside of a soapstone sink or tubs, first go over them with sandpaper to make them smooth. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. A Sewing Help. One Mother says: I used to have such a hard time keeping- the different pieces of my sewing_ together and within easy reach when I was making Marion's dresses. One day I put on my thinki cap snd devised an easy way of making order out of chaos. I bought an inexpensive towel rack and screwed it to the right- hand side of my sewing machine. When I am sewing I hang the different g:m of the garment on it as I finish them. Now pieces are not lost and the gar- ment may be quickly assembled, saving both time and patience. (Copyright, 1929.) WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. PARIS.—Not for everybody, but ‘interesting just the same, are the fan- trained evening dresses all the big houses show for Winter. Mirande has one of ruby red velvet, part of a dramatic ensemble. RITA. fDorothyDix‘ i Does Bachelor Who Is Proud of Maintaining! Single Blessedness Realize Wife Would Assure Long Life and Prosperity? To the Self- Satisfled Bachelor YouNG MAN, do you know that the best insurance you can take out against death and poverty is to get married? You don't belleve it? Then listen to the recent report of the American Statistical Soclety. It says ‘The death rate for single and widowed men is twice that for married men. ‘That rather ureh your theories concerning the benefits and perquisites a to and concerning single biessédness, doesn't it? Of course, you have always realized that life must seem longer to a married man than it does to & bachelor, but it is a little startling to find out that it actually is longer. - However, there is no reason for our surprise in the matter. It is ly logical. The ‘very monotony and lack of excitement of the domestic life are its | chief assets from a hygienic point of view, and if it draws out a man's days and evenings and makes them seem interminably tedious, it also multiplies them Ohbvio;;.!lg, !hed candle that is snuffed eut at 10 p.m. lasts longer than the one that urned. 8o, while punching the home time-clock may have fewer thrills in it than sitting up all night 1n a poker game or going on wild parties, it does more to put & man in the Methuselah class. You may have. no particular relish for roast beef and spinach, but it is a more :lho.lmme diet than caviar and hooch. FURTH’!ENORE. 80 adroitly are our blessings often camoufiaged, the one thing that men most object to in their wives is in reality their first aid to longevity. That is nagging. Probably the time when the average husban oftenest asks himself, “Why was I ever fool enough to marry?” is when his wife badgers him about taking care of himself. It is when his Maria follows him to the door with her incessant adjuration repeated for the millionth time, not to get his feet wet, not to sit In a draught, not to eat fried oysters and ple a la mode for lunch, not to fe to go to see the doctor about his cough of the dentist about his teeth that r."h’nl:mnd husband regrets most bitterly the bachelor liberties thst he orfeited. But, little as he realizes it as he gulps down the food his Maria considers good for his digestion, instead of dining cn the dishes he likes and lets her drive }jgm into a doctor’s office, she is a guardian angel who is saving him from the ve. For among the by-produtts of the liberty of the man is the liberty of dying early, because there was no loving feminine eye to watch every shade of pallor and weariness on his face, to note the fi: -appetite and dragging step and to take alarm at every pain and symptom of ess and to see that some was done about it. Nor is it strange to learn that married men are more prosperous than bachelors. The thing that keeps more men from marrying than else is fear of the Ynee. They figure up’ the eost of a wife and children—food bilis and clothes bills and rent bills and school bills—and it seems to them that if | they will cut out all those bankrupting expenses and spend no money except upon themselves, they are bound to be millionaires in a few years. | But something seems to go awry with their calculations, for in évery com- | munity you will ind a hundred rich married men to one rich bachelor. Indeed, | most men who have made fortunes will tell you that they never saved anything until after they got married or really got down to the business' of money- making. It was only after they were married that they put their hearts and | their backs into their jobs and that is why most employers prefer married mien | to single ones. 1 As long a5 a man has no one but himsell to think of he feels free to throw his money about as he pleases and to loaf and invite his soul whenever he is 8o inclined. He can always make what he needs snd he see no necessity of sticking to a hard job or doing uncongenial work, and so he often becomes 2 wanderer and lefs youth and even middle age pass by without settling down to any definite ‘occupation, But with the married man it.is a different story.. He has given hostages | to fortune. A wife and children look to him for support and he is driven | forward by the most relentiess force in the world—the need of those who love him and whom he loves better than emse or rest. It is the thought of l'w children crying for bread, of their little bare feet on the pavement, eir | ha no roof to shelter them that gives many a man the strength and energy | to fight his way -through incredible difficulties to success. ! It is the fact that married man has to make money that turns many of them into go-getters, who would be ne'er-do-wells if bachelors. meet the demands of his family, to give wife the pearls she craves and to give the children the sport cars they can't live without, the man has to hustle around so much that it incidentally lands him on easy street, and this incentive to make the most of his ablility the bachelor lacks. DOROTHY' DIX, (Codyrignt, 1920.) BEAUTY CHATS My Daily Treatment. Lots of my readers write in and ask me what I personally use as a dally beautifying treatment. Any one who ‘writes on beauty, they say, should be up in the very last tricks of improving her npvnnct ell, here's my routine, a simple one, as I am very busy slways and must go my beautifying routine as quickly as’ possile each dn{, But I must add that I never miss it. Morning, cold water all over face, neck and shoulders following bath. If I'm in town and to business, I use a very llmn“b:: of uundltln:“c'remw | wder, rou 'S necessary, | o ad ?}uen, and 7 BY EDNA KENT FORBES little golden brown powder over the eyelids™ (instead ‘of ordinary ' powder) and the hlukeoldcrnmenmlfi l-she;, the formula for which I of ive here. s At night, a most thorough cleansing with warm water and s lather of"castile soap. In the Winter, cleansing cream first, then the lather of soap and a hot and cold rinse to follow:’ This leaves the :skin fresh for the night. R nbwn.lu’e:ufl Switt & Com, " ek ending Baturdar. 'm"'m"‘m' . on shipment sold out, ran: 00 o cents.per pound "MELLO-GLO race Powder is won- derful because it does not enlarge the d stays on without d | teas) T fi-s%& 't your by watching me eat one, ma?® I and she sed,'No thank you, my will Sonver does. tueh better 1t 1 test on going and pritty ady, saying, well of AL QE. £ be’ either perfectl, or compleetly devoid of ‘memary, ma sad. Ive just gone through the Span- ish inquisition to'lose 18 pounds in 18 wl. and here I meet you and hear , the ideer. And we kepp ‘on going. ma keeping on saying, The ideer, sucn brazen stupidity, and pritty soon we met Senator Tibbitts, ma saying Well this' is a serprise, Senator, is Mrs. T? o Well and kicking, haw haw, Senator ‘Tibbitts sed. Putting on = little Weight, though: like yourself, haw haw, he said, and ma sed, If thats si be a Joke its & mizzerble failure. Is that so, haw haw, Senator’ Tibbitts sed. Proving it still seemed funny to him, and ‘me and ma kepp on going agen, ma saying, O whats a use, ite better to eat a jce creem soda and en- joy it than not to eat it ‘and have everybody tell me I look ‘as if I had, And we went in the ferst place and each ate one, SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | i | | | t T wish I hadn't found such a .com- fortle place as 'iss, when I is on a rush | hurry-up errand to get the meat fn‘ Camp Biscuits. Mix two cupfuls of flour with four poonfuls of baking powder, four tablespoonfuls of dried milk and one teaspoonful of sal in five table- spoonfuls of shortening with a fork or with two knives, add one cupful of water slowly, stirring with a fork until ;ell mlxedfl.gcnmp {rom a spvo'r;éznt‘o a reflecior pan or a gre ry- Wn and’ bake slowly. If Jn,r, frying pan, bake until half done, then”turn and finish baking..” To mak- a sweet, biscuit add two nfuis | of sugar and sprinkle a mixture of but- ter, cinnamon and sugar on top of the biscuits. Pis above biscuit dough can be made ihd s leasposniils of Raking potaer | of pofgder. Pat these biscuits out on a card or pan | to ess of inch and with a cutter or a baking To make cinnamon rolls pat outi some of the dough to a thickness of one-half inch. Spread with butter and | sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar, rol! up and cut off pleces one inch thick and bake like the bjscuits. For coffee cake spread. some of the dough in & pan, spread with butter and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar | flRalans may be added. Bake in a re- ector. | Panoakes Delicious. Bift three cupfuls of flour, then sift | jain with five teaspoonfuls of baking | z::a: and one mnml of salt. | wo ong -xumh'?uuglln of n?flk, then mfl, this mixture into the- flour mixture | two tablespoon! ening, then fold in the two egg whites beaten stiff. Bake on a hot griddle. 1 was to divorce Pa, T'd be teo to take alimony if it wasn't for - spendin’ it on some DISCOVERY . -FATAL TO-BED BUGS : Let Peterman’s -Dis: covery_ Liquid trickle: down ‘behind ‘bas +boards,cracks inwalls - in 48 hours. Standard for50 years;sure,safe, - | stainless, econorical. = A All Draggists smuller siges) mwcgr can. |’ FEATUR " The Sidewalks’ ES of Washington = ' BY THORNTON FISHER. . Thie, ofher night we had dinner with one of ,almflu"l le-dl:. rs and the versatile %lml lrlex;‘d ‘was presen T “party” she said: It was strange that during the entire evening Billy didn't say. one| smart or clever th ‘There was no attempt to be witty. ‘This ‘was an. unconsclous compli- ment, Like the prosaic business man, this comedian locks his office, or what- ever comediens lock -after work : hour: and- thinks of other things. - His smart | remarks and wise-cracks are ¢he tools of his trade. Even the plumber tries | to forget his blow torch and wrench | when he nnuhea‘m: Job. * * “Wonder ‘what a midget thinks about?” said an acquaintance, looking down upon ‘a di- minutive lady in a 4 hotel elevator. The tiny human crea- ture was perfectly formed. Her fing- ers were adorned with ajamonds. She was 4 trifle [] higher = than an average man's knee. Mature, H which may have been cruel to her, according to a common _ opinion, provided her with means to earn an excellent 1iving. The curious pub- lic is anxious to pay for an exhibition of !strange-look- ing folks, -or ‘what is more vulgarly known as "“freaks.” * K % % One ‘has but to drive an automobile in New York city to give three hilarious cheers that he motors in Washington. | tesf Recently wg were stopped in New York by a red light. A dozen other autos were halted. Suddenly there was a | - DIET AND BY LULU HUNT Answers to Mothers. “Dear Doctor: Ever since birth, five weeks ago, my baby has been crying, | sometifes for an hour straight. T don't| wake her up for feeding, but nurse her | when she awakens. Shall I awake her or nurse her longer when she wakes up? I thought if I would wake her up wotild be too-sleepy to take encugh. nurse her every four hours. She seems | to be starved at times and she sucks at | her fist or anything else within reach. She cries from one feeding to the other and I try everything to keep her quiet. I take her up when she cries, but some- times I can't quiet her by holding or walking around with her. She is nor- | mal weight. “At times she looks cross-eyed. Could "this be from being awake S0 much? -1Is it anything un\(}ufis; ) . M. Jiidging from’ your letter, Mrs. M. your baby is hungry. While she may | be the average weight, this average not be normal for her. The fact that| taking her up doesn't stop her crying | shows there is another factor besides spoilage to be considered. | The four-hour schedule is very suc- cessful with most babies, but there are a few with whom it is not. When I was practicing I found so many of my | babies did get hungry on a four-hour schedule and they spent so much energy | in erying that they didn't gain rapidly enough, so I went back to the three- hour schedule. Now, of course, you! have been feeding your baby irregularly. (It is best to awaken babies for their feeding. Thev'll go to sleep again if| 1 || master crash. and the .impact drove” cupants of our car car with an absent. at the controls had .struck ma- chine. Immediately a crowd ered, Th'ph ar{m‘l::rmm bl:l:lemoww o, fault — . we ve ,” for English was difficult h(:: K é‘ Luckily, the car suffe than a badly damaged lenderys” * * kx k l;\ : n:uu town, 10. ¥ modest and even bashful [ellow rented a frame shacky’ His ' : and equipment were crudé, His ge of mecnmu' llent, . ‘the amount th he ted 40 - ing an occasional. bile he ed little. In fact; he,must money. When the car was i to the owner. however, it.was in as mear perfect condition as & used - mschine could be. ol Pt * x b 3 A few days-#go we-drove up to the e site of the frame shagk. (the. shack, we: mean). 5 T 5 880, a and equipmen Many ' cars were waiting attention, while busy employes rushed about. Over the entrance in gold letters was the Tiame. The reason for this little human docunient {5 simply to prove that an honest young fellow, efficient at his business, can make the grade. * ¥ Our host had provided an ‘excellent dinner for his guests. " B ‘consomme to herring ‘was petizing = fashion = before (h‘t‘ % friends. _After the finger bowl cot garcon brought the “bad news.”. totaled $24.60. The host scruf the bill. Then he called the tfi this bill correct?” be y. t A “Yes, sir.” replied the mafiay “Well, what is the 60 cents_ for manded the host. « HEALTH: - PETERS, M. D. they need it) So you . haven't tmyd out the (our-honrnm ‘:}_— rectly. You might do this: before you & noiher point, to be thought of s other _pol your diet Are you mm&fll - the elements you need and o amounts? If you are ‘nét, it s ) able that your milk is not rich eno We have an article on the diét g:exm‘:acy‘:und a'l; which you ma; ve by following col 4 will hel if this 1 have a list care and. f g About the crgss-eyes. ‘There #n’t“a normal control”ef the eye young babies and-they not inis look cross-eyed ‘at an.. as soon as they become & If it doesn't, of course, you specialist, either in a clinie or Babies should have mont! anyway. Few Things Are More Tm:] || Portant Than Balanced Diet in Promoting Health | recipe for gfii‘m Beets: Peel 12 small ed of vinegar, 1 tablespoon pepper and heat. Melt 2 tablespoons ||/of butter and biend with it 1 table 3 the Whatever recipe you arg “ust and whatever vegetiible ynm cooking, try adding a dash of for a new, enjoyable flavor, It not the purpose of the FUERY make the vegetables taste™ Sugar brings out the delicate fi of the foods and blends these. the seasonings used. Sugar is iHe blender and the supferhi condiment. It 1s_the right Han successful cookery. Serve a _varied, balanced Serve at least two cooked ve Serve at least two | pl O.e“ The etsunrm“;n plete. The | tisement. gravy, :@ ps. Learn the art of ytx:{e(uww. stifte ~Adger No fieed to worry sbout mi- - -nor stoppages—too small fora plumber, too big to be neglect- ed. ForClorox downyourslug- gish drainpipes makes them clear; sanitary, and odorless.It will free your kitchen, lauadry and bathroom drainpipes from food particles, grime, bits of hairand odors. And theregular use ot Clorox will keep drain- pipes fresh and clean. Just fol- low directions on bottle, - At A Grogers: