Evening Star Newspaper, March 24, 1930, Page 25

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WOMA Suggest Fashions of Other Days BY MARY ‘This is a season of new old fashions, and almost all the old fashions that have been revived to make the complex that we call the new mode are of com- VEST OF PALE PINK EYELET EM- BROIDERY WORN WITH A NAVY BLUE SUIT. SCALLOPED COL- LAR AND CUFF SET OF WHITE EYELET EMBROIDERY AND VEST AND CUFFS OF THE SAME SORT OF MATERIAL BOUND WITH OLD BLUE LINEN. ratively recent date. The barrel of lashion has not been turned over to reveal fads and fancies of dress from ages past and far remote countries, as is very often the case. The designers have simply delved down a decade or two and have brought up ideas in dress that BEDTIME STORIE Flip Isn't Satisfied. Bome people alwavs want to see Before they'll believe a thing can be. —Bowser the Hound. Flip was upset. Yes, sir, Flip the Ter- | rier was very much upset. I might say | that he was doubly upset. Bowser the Hound had knocked him right over onto his back. He had done it just as Flip ‘was about to show that he wasn't afraid of Prickly Porky the Porcupine. So he ‘was upset bodily, and also he was upset | in his feelings. Probably there was never a more surprised dog than was Flip when Bowser interfered. Bowser had frankly confessed that he himself was afraid of Prickly Porky and had explained why. At first this had been sufficient for Flip, He was satisfied to sit down and watch Prickly Porky climb a tree. When Prickly Porky was safely out of reach, Flip and Bowser trotted on to see what more they could find. All the time, however, Flip kept thinking abeut Prickly Porky. The more he thought about him, and the more he thought about the way Bowser had in- terfered, the less satisfied he became with having left Prickly Porky alone. “Bowser probably meant all right,” thought Flip. “I'll give him that much credit. I guess Bowser isn't much of a fighter. Prickly Porky didn’t look to me THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE. Sports Dress. It's true beige with just a dash of brown in rough surfaced woolen that is extremely light weight. The belt that marks the normal waistline is leather in the brown shade, that matches grosgrain ribbon tie of neck- The brief bodice is decidedly youth- ful fashion and is emphasized by flat hipline of circular flaring skirt. It's unbelievably easy to m for it means you practically have a two- R4S I SR plece skirt to be seamed and stitched to_a two-piece bodice. This sportive model Style No. is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inch bust. It is very striking in wool jersey in dark purple shade with collar and cuffs of beige faille silk crepe piped along edge in red-dahlia shade crepe, and worn with a red-dahlia shade leather belt. Printed silk crepe, plain silk crepe and canton crepe appropriate. Later made of men's silk | broadcloth, printed cotton pique, linen for resort, it can be shirting, shantung, silk pique, or Chinese silk damask. For a pattern of this style, send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star'’s New York Pashion Pifth Avenue and Twenty- - “Bureau, ninth street, New York. ‘We suggest that when you send for pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional for & copy of our new Spring Fashion Magazine, just off the press, 236 N’S PAGE. MARSHALL. [fluumhea within the memory of all but | tl.e younger generation of women. ‘The tuck-in blouse, the shirt waist, the bolero, the ankle-length skirt, the | | peplum _jacket, tailored jacket suits— | all of these and many other new fash- | ions are of comparatively recent date. rlflve’rl\ l%:l;t Il;n’,lcahl‘l,hll one sees in the 2] of fashion are suggestive of | fairly recent fashions. | _Wool crepe, which has come into prominence within the last few weeks and which is used for some of the smartest late Spring suits, has a familiar look to many of us. Irish lace, which is used on many of the new dresses of | | sllk crepe or fine linen or cotton, and { eyelet embroidery have also been re- | vived from a not far distant fashion age. Eyelet-embroidered silk crepe as | well as sheer cotton is used for the neat | lit.le sleeveless blouses that accompany some of the new suits; and to wear with | the one-picce dress of silk or light- { wet~ht wool there are charming collar | and cuff sets of washable eyelet em- | broidery. |, The little girl who wears dresses of | the new thin cottons nceds a number of little washable slips in her Spring | | wardrobe. This week's circular gives a diagram pattern and directions for a very simple slip of this sort that is| very easy to make. If you would like a copy please send your stamped, self. addressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be sent o you. (Copyright. 1930.) Egg Rolls. Grind three-fourths of a pound of fresh pork with a little onlon or garlic, add a tablespoonful of soy sauce and | little salt. Beat five eggs. Place | | half a teaspoonful of lard in a pan. When hot, drop in one tablespoonful of | beaten egg, in the center of this place a teaspoonful of ground meat, fold the | eggs over and cook, then remove from (the pan. When all the mixture is | | cooked in this way, add about three- fourths cupful of water to two table- | | spoonfuls of the soy sauce and a slight ; | amount of sugar. Put half a table- spoonful of lard in the pan, add the egg rolls, cover with the soy sauce | mixture, cover the nap and cook for 15 minutes. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS as if he could do much fighting. He moves too slowly to be a fighter. I should like to ask Bowser why he is afraid of Prickly Porky, but he might | not like it if T did.” At last curiosity got the best of Flip and he ventured to say to Bowser: | “Why are you afraid of Prickly Porky? Does he throw a bad-smelling scent that | smarts when it gets in your eyes and choke you, the way Jimmy Skunk does?” “No,” replied Bowser promptly. hasn't any bad-smelling scent.” “He's very slow moving,” said Plip.| ‘He doesn’t look as if he could fight.” | Bowser grinned. “He is slow moving," he agreed. “He | is slow moving with the exception of | his tail. He can flip that tail nmundi fast enough. It is a good thing that | that tafl isn‘t any longer than it is.| Yes. sir, it is a good thing that Prickly | Porky’s tail isn't long like the tail of | his_cousin who lives way down in a | place called the Tropics. I've heard | Scrapper the Kingbird, who spends his | Winters down there, say that Prickly | Porky has a cousin down there with a very long tail, only his tail is bare. If Prickly Porgy had a longer tail, more people would get hurt than do get hurt now.” “I don't understand” said Flip. “What has his tail got to do with hurt- ing people?” “Everythin, replied Bowser very promptly. “You see, that tail is cov- ered with little spears, and if he should | happen to hit you with that tail he would leave a lot of those little spears sticking in you, and they hurt. I know, for I have felt them. And it hurts still more to have them pulled out. So you keep away from Prickly Porgy. He's covered all over with those little spears, excepting underneath.” “I didn't see any little spears,” re- plied Flip. “I saw a lot of queer-look- Ing stiff hairs.” “No, you didn't” replied Bowser.| “What you call ‘stiff hairs’ are the little spears 1 have been telling you about. | Prickly Porgy is one of the people whom you want to leave absolutely alone.| | Keep away from him. As I told you once before, if you do not keep away | from him, you'll be the sorriest dog| | that ever lived.” Flip said nothing more, but he wasn't satisfled. ~He couldn't imagine how it | was possible for Prickly Porky to really be so dangerous. You see, he knew nothing about those little spears, and he wanted to know more. So the first chance he got he l]|gped away and went back to where he had seen Prickly Porky. (Copyright, 1930.) “He MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananas. Dry Cereal with Cream. Prench Tosst, Bacon Curls. Coffee. . LUNCHEON. Baked Potato. Stuffed Onions. Pried Mushrooms. Baking Powder Biscuits. Caramel Custards, Wafers. Tea. DINNER. Clear Soup. Hamburg Steak. Creamed Turnips. Mashed Potatoes. Lettuce, Waldorf Dressing. Baked Indian Pudding. Coffee. FRENCH TOAST. Two eggs, one-half teaspoonful salt, few grains pepper, a little butter, two cupfuls milk and six slices dry bread. Beat eggs slightly; add salt, pepper and milk. Strain into a shallow dish. Dip bread in mixture and cook on a hot, well buttered pan until the under side is brown. Turn. and brown other side and serve very hot. STUFFED ONIONS. Remove skins from onions and parboil 10 minutes in bolling salted water to cover. ‘Turn up- side down to cool and remove part of centers. Fill cavities with equal parts of finely chop- ped cooked chicken, stale soft breadcrumbs and finely chopped onion which was removed, sea- soned with salt and pepper and moistened with cream or melted butter. Place in buttered shal- low baking pan, sprinkle with buttered crumbs and bake in & mr{w{lernu oven until onions are soft. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. Scald qpe quart milk in double boiler; take three tablespoonfuls Indian meal, one of flour, wet with cold milk and stir into the boiling milk until it thickens. Then take your baking dish and into that put one cupful molasses, two large tablespoonfuls of but- ter, one teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful ginger, one quart cold milk, one beaten egg. Add the hot milk and mix thoroughly. Bake all day in moderate oven, | maintnining in that city a siege of sev- | ren out to Sunday school. THE EVENING Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. ORAIG. March 24, 1801—The first suit grow- ing out of the troublesome affairs of the famous Greenleaf - Morris - Nicholson real estate syndicate in the Federal Metropolis was filed in the new Cir- cuit Court of the District today— the day after the organization of the court. The operations of these gen- tlemen, who speculated in Washington real estate and expected to become enormously rich from the proceeds of lots in the new city, purchased—Ilargely on promises to pay on the instaliment plan—from the District Commissioners, will doubtless result in endless litiga- tion, clouding the titles of District property and destroying the confidence of many persons in the financial pros- pects of the new city. The collapse of the syndicate has been complete. | James Greenleaf of Boston, who came here highly recommended, with letters from President Washington and others, became associated in his real estate ven- tures with Robert Morris, of Philadel- phia, famous financier and friend of President Washington, and with John Nicholson, formerly controller general of Pennsylvania and, like Mr. Morris, one of the wealthy men of the country, about ten years ago. The affairs of the syndicate did not progress satisfactorily. The sale of lots was not as rapid as expected. It was difficult for the syndicate to float loans elsewhere to finance the plan. Soon personal differences arose between the three financiers. Four years ago a large number of city lots was advertised for sale because of default of payment of the third installment of the purchase money. The final crash of the great speculative scheme came in June, 1797, in an assignment by Morris, Green- leaf and Nicholson of their property interests in Washington to trustees. By October of that year, Greenleal was 10 a debtor’s prison in Philadelphia, and soon Morris and Nicholson, after eral months in their houses against & host of constables who were trying to serve processes, joined Greenleaf in prison. Greenleaf about a year later managed, through bankruptcy pro- ceedings, to get a release from the debt- or's prison. Nicholson died in prison last December, Morris is still in prison, but hopes to regain his liberty this Summer. William Kilty, a native of England but long prominent as a lawyer in Maryland, with a good record as a sur- geon in the Revolutionary War, has been appointed chief judge of the new Circuit Court by President Jefferson NANCY PAGE Applands Simple Clothes for Children. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Spring Sundays brought all the child- Like their parents, their sisters, their cousins and their aunts they came adorned in new clothes. Nancy took Joan and stayed in the infant room a short time. As she sat there waiting for the services to com- menced she watched the children and mentally dressed her young son, Peter, in the clothes the other little boys wore. One small brother and sister came in with outer coats of a nubbly tweed in green. The little girl's coat was cut with scalloped cape and cuffs. Her brother’s coat was of the same ma- | terial but cut in severe and manly box style. Both children wore socks of creamy white wool, black oxfords and creamy flannel berets. Two other children wore white linen. The girl's dress was simply made with straight yoke. Smocking gave the full ness to the skirt. A turn-down colla and straight turn-back cuffs had no ‘rimming at all. The yoke used crystal buttons sewed on in pairs as the trim- ming. The thread used to sew them on was the same shade as that used In : mocking. ‘The boy's suit was of white linen. He felt quite manly with his belt and patch pocket like those his father wore. Short sleeves with turn-back cuffs and turn-back collar wore open at the neck gave him the feeling of comfort. Cut into small pleces one pound shoul- der of pork, three medium-sized onions and enough to make one cupful of cel- ery and fry together until brown. Cook for 15 minutes one small box of noo- dles, then put in a colander and pour | cold water over them. Add one can of tomato soup, an equal amount of water and the noodles to the mixture of meat, oni..s and celery, season well, put in a casserole and bake for one hqur. One cupful of cheese may be addeg it liked. WHO REMEMBERS? DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Offce. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MARCH 24, MODEST MAIDENS “H'LO, MURPHY, HOW'S TRICKS?" DorothyDix| Should Teach Children to Stand Alone, Fill Own Life With Interests and Have Some- thing to Fall Back Upon. Talks About Absorption in Children The Too-Loving Mother Deplores WHEN a woman absorbs herself in her children she feels that she is giving a beautiful and inspiring example of motherhood. No other women in the world are so complacent and so self-righteous as those who say: “No. I never go anywhere. I gave up society completely when my first baby was born, and I have lost track of all my old friends. Why, I never leave my children even to go to church, or to the movies, for I believe that a mother's place is at home. , “No. I don't have tfme to read, or to keep up my music, or to belong to clubs, or to run around with my husband, as so many women do. In fact, I have no interests outside of my children. I devote my entire life to them.” It would shock that kind of woman to death to tell her that instead of being & good mother she is the worst possible mother, that there is nothing easier to overdo than mothering, and that a child is better off with no mother at all than it is with too much mother. To begin with, the woman who absorbs herself in her children to the exclusion of every other interest is not fit to rear them, because she becomes narrow. dull and prejudiced and old-fashioned in her point of view, while her children are open-minded, alert, progressive, avid for every new thing. She has lost touch with the world as it is. She has fallen behind the procession and her children mock her advice and deride her opinions. PR THE mother who has influence with her children in these days is not the one who sits at home and prays for their safe return. She is the up-and- coming mother who is in the forefront of everything and who keeps herself young and pretty and bright and attractive, and to whose judgment her chil- dren defer because they recognize that she knows the world better than they do, and because she can play a better game of golf and bridge than her sons. ‘The woman who absorbs herself in her children always boasts of how dependent her children are upon her. She bristles with pride as she tells you that Mary wouldn't know how to buy pocket handkerchief by herself, and that John is as helpless as a baby and can't even find a clean collar for him- self, and that none of her children can do anything without mother. And it never occurs to this poor woman that in fostering this mother complex she has done them a greater wrong than malice itself could invent, for she has utterly unfitted them for life. She has made of them clinging vines instead of sturdy oaks. She has killed their initiative. She has made them afraid to decide anything for themselves. She has turned them into | weaklings who will have to hang on to somebody’s hand and have somebody | guide their footsteps as long as they live. ‘Worst of all, she has soft-padded life so thoroughly for them that wheni they come up against the hard reality they are unable to endure it. Why, half | the disgruntled husbands and wives are the product of devoted mothers, and their real grievance against their mates is that their wives and husbands don't spoil them as mother did. o ARY walls out that her husband is a brute, and that he is selfish and cruel and doesn't understand her, merely because he expects her to do her duty as a wife and because he doesn’t sacrifice himself to her every whim ' and have his shoes patched in order that she may have her forty-seventh pair of fancy slippers. John thinks that his wife is selfish and callous and unreason- | look all of his grouchiness and bad manners and abuse and excuse his philander- ing just because he did it, as mother has always done. Furthermore, the mothers who absorb themselves in their children lay up grief for both parties for the future, for in the end such a woman inevitably becomes the old woman of the sea to the children. All of us know brilliant and talented young people who have had to forggo their ambitions and shut the door of opportunity in their faces and stay on in some dead little village, or on the old farm, use mother couldn't bear to be separated from her darlings. All of us know lonely old maids and bachelors who have had to put love and home and children out of their lives because mother had wrung a promise from them never to leave her as long as she lived. All of us know homes in which the mother-in-law is the constant source of discord. The mother has money enough to live where she pleases, or her children are able to support her in a hotel or her own apartment, but she has absorbed herself so long in her children that she has no interest apart from them, and 80 she must fasten herself like a parasite upon them, no matter if she wrecks their homes and bleeds them white of happiness. So from every point of view the mother who absorbs herself in her children makes a fatal mistake. It is disastrous for all concerned, and the wisest thing that any woman ever does is to teich her children to sta: lone and to fill her own life with interests s0 that she may have something to fall back upon when her boys and girls leave her to go about the business of life for themselves. DOROTHY DIX. -HAIR ANY COLOR No waiting. No disappointments. 6 Just brush or comb in. ROWNATONE (Copyright. 1930 Baked Pork Chops. Place some thickly cut pork chops on the bottom of a well greased Nkmli pan, and on each chop place a table- | spoonful of boiled rice and a piece of | butter. Cover the rice with a piece of tomato seasoned with salt, pepper and | a sprinkling of sugar. Add enough boil- | ing water to the bottom of the pan to keep from burning and bake uncovered in a hot oven for about an hour, The o oW chops should have a crisp, browned ap- GUARANTEED HARMLE! pearance. SRR G T S T A upsets of ildre” ‘All children are subject to little upsets. They come at unexpected times. They seem twice as serious in the dead of night. But there’s one hf(mn of Icom ort on which ; mother can always rely; d ol Castoria, This purey,\iogzflhl! reparation can’t harm the tiniest colic, or diarrhea, yields to the soothing influence of Castoria. Keep Castoria in mind, and keep a bottle in the house—alw-ys. Give a few drops to any child whose tongue is coated, or whose adding a little cold milk as it bakes away. I use about three quarts in all. Do notgstir after it begins to whey. >~ ‘When drop-stitch stockings and French heels were a smart combination for the well dressed girl. breath is bad. Continue with Castoria until the child is grown ! Every drugstore has Castoria; the genuine has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. infant. Yet mild as it is, it soothes a restless, fretful baby like nothing else. Its quick relief soon sees the youngster comfortable once more, to sleep. Even an attack of 1930, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I was keeping Sid Hunts fox terrier Teddy in my back yard till us kidnap- pers found out about the ransom, and last nite pop told me I had to get him out before I went to bed, and after sup- per I went over to Puds Simkinses house and wisseled the secret wissle, being 3 short ones followed by 2 long ones followed by 4 short ones followed by one long one, and Puds stuck his| hed out the 2nd story window, saying, Beware. Being the passwerd, and I sed, Be- | ware, and he sed, I aint aloud out. And he stuck his hed in agen and I| went up to Shorty Judges house and wisseled the secret wissle and Shorty quick came out weather he was aloud | or not, saying, Beware, | Beware, I sed. We got to find out | about that ransom rite away because Im ;lggldfle to get that dog out of our yard, | The ransom being 16 dollers reduced | from a_thousand, ony we dident know | if Sid Hunts father had saw the note | vet, and me and Shorty went to Sids house and wissled the secret wissle and Sid opened the frunt door, saying, Be- ware. me and Shorty sed, and Sid sed, It dont look so good so far. Well_did your father see the ransom note? I sed, and he sed, Yes he found it under the frunt door when he came home. I think maybe he kind of sis- | pected it ‘wasent from reel kidnappers, | but I aint sure, Sid sed. | Well G wizz'what did he say? T sed, and Sid sed, Well what he sed was, he | sed he hoped he never saw the dog agen, and he sed he dident even know if he'd take him back if somebody | Fa,ved him 16 dollers for doing it, much less him paying somebody elts 16 dol- ers ‘The result being that Sid came and | got Teddy, Teddy being much gladder to see him than what he would of been if he had of knew he was one of the kidnappers. Home in Good Taste BY SARA HI After all, when we select the smaller pleces of furniture for our homes we are doing the important part of the work, for if we fail in our choice of these we find that the rooms are not successful. In spite of the fact that sofas, chairs, tables, etc., have been chosen with care as to design, coloring and size = FEATURE Conde, the great French general of the period of Louis XIV, was an en- thusiastic patron of good cooking. He had a maitre d’hotel completely worthy of him. This was the celebrated Vatel, the man who killed himself because he | thought_one of his dinners was faulty. | The King had arrived to be the guest of Prince Corde at Chantilly. That night a marvelous supper was served in a Toom hung with jonquils. The serv- ice was magnificent, for Conde would | not permit his royal master to outdo | him in profusion. But, unfortunately, | several unexpected parties of guests ar- rived and there were no roasts at some of the tables. | Vatel was in despair. He declared, almost in tears, “I am dishonored; this | is a disgrace I cannot endure.” It made no difference that there had been a roast for the King's table and only the minor tables had been de- prived. Nor was his grief assuaged | when Conde came to reassure him. “Vatel,” said he, “all is going well. Nothing could equal the supper of the King."” ‘Monseigneur,” he replied in a broken voice, “your goodness overpowers me. I know ‘that the roast was wanting at two_tables.” “Nothing of the sort,” insisted Conde. “Do Mot distress yourselt—all i going well.” Self-Analysis. Don't be one of the women who kid | themselves into the bellef that they can go on from year to year looking just the same. You can’t go on from month to month, or even week to week, with- out looking different. You must watch | yourself very carefully, analyze your- self frequently and impartially, and do what you can to keep yourself the same or to make all changes for the better. You gain a pound this week; that doesn’t matter. You gain another pound next week. Watch carefully if you al- ready weigh what you should. ~ Begin dieting before you gain more than a few pounds. Slenderness is youth, you know. What about your complexion? If the least blemish ‘shows, begin a diet to | clear it, and if the blemishes are stub- | born, find out the reasons for them and | cure them. If your skin is neglected to |such a point that acne develops, it will take you months, or even years. to get »-29| (with relation to the spaces which they are to occupy), it is really the smaller pleces which complete the rooms. In the illustration is shown a grace ful table to be used at the side of a chair, and it is ideal for this purpose, especially it the chair is of the easy type, for the small lamp which the table supports is just high enough to shed a good reading light. two lights used in the early homes of America. By a feeble glow shed from one candle many an evening was spent sewing tiny patches together to fash- fon beautiful and colorful quilts. (Copyright, 1930.) Mandarin Ducks in London. Following the success of the intro- duction of Mandarin ducks from China into Berlin, Germany, they are being ide at home in London. Two pairs have been given homes at the lake in Buckingham Palace grounds, and others are at other lakes. They came direct ble because she doesn’t wait on him hand and foot as mother did, and over- ! from China and the brilliantly colored | hours out in the fresh air each day, as birds are nesting in holes in trees. rid of it. By the way, have you tried | the Epsom salts face pack I talked of | the other day for clearing the skin? I'll | give it again in a day or so. |~ Then there’s your hair. It should al- | ways be sleek and shining, neatly trim- | med and nicely combed. Either have | it shampooed once a week or save one | night a week for doing it yourself, using an egg and other helps mentioned here | from time to time. | Your nails are enormously important. | There are so many “chats” about mani- | curing given here that no one has any | excuse for not giving herself the weekly uick | the hands and nails looking nice. | should also learn to do exercises to keep ! your figure. You should learn to keep | your toes and feet in good condition. Every woman can be well groomed all times if she gives a quarter hour a day to it and uses her intelligence in the way she works. B. D. R—The loosened appearance of your skin after a day's work merely | shows you are tired, and if you rested | your skin would be refreshed and firm | again. This is proven by the fact that | your skin is not that way earlier in the | day. You may need a tonic or more ‘no one should look fagged out even BEAUTY CHATS S.' FAMOUS KNIGHTS OF COOKERY Vatel Killed Himself Because of Fear Dinner to King Was Imperfect. BY J. P. GLASS. WHEN HE MET A SERVANT WITH TWO PACKAGES OF F1SH, HE ASKED, “IS THAT ALL?" ‘That night the fireworks which the maitre d'hotel had provided, and which had cost 16,000 francs, were a failure. He went to bed but did not sleep. At 4 o'clock he arose, determined to over- see everything himself that day. He had sent to all the seaports for fish. When he met a servant with two packages of fish he asked, “Is that all?” The man, not knowing of the widespread order nor that two packages represents only the return from one port, replied “Yes.” Vatel was in anguish. He thought there would be no more fish. He de- parted from the kitchen like a man pur- sued by malign fate. Shortly fish began to arrive from all directions. Supernumeraries sought Vatel so that he might distribute ft. They wunt to his room, but he did not answer their knocks or their calls. The door was forced.. Vatel lay dead on the floor. He had placed his sword against the door and leaned against it, stabbing himself through the heart. He had required three attempts to succeed. Conde was in despair and yet proud of a servant so jealous of the honor of the house. As for the King, he both praised andl blamed. He said that, as | & matter of fact, he had delayed com- ing to Chantilly for five years because of the fear of the embarrassment he should cause. BY EDNA KENT FORBES after & day of regular employment. If it is possible, take a warm bath when you come home from work and rest 15 minutes before dressing for the evening, and if you want to look particularly refreshed follow the facial J:mnn. by an ice rub over face and throat. F. R. H—The small, raised line on your neck could probably be eradicated by a surgeon, but since it is so small, would it be worth the trouble to do it? Cheese Charlotte. Soak one envelope of gelatin in one cupful of cold water for about 10 min- utes. Heat three-fourths cupful of sweet milk to the scalding point, in which cream one ind of grated cheese. Add three-fourths cupful of mayonnaise, one small can pimentos finely chopped and three cucumber pickles chopped. Melt the gelatin, then cool to lukewarm. Add to the cheese mixture, slowly stirring well and adding salt and cayenne. Put into molds to congeal. When ready to service, turn out onto lettuce. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. -9 “I wouldn't say that Ella Mae tells stories, but the truth just don't seem to suit her until she adds a little garnishin'.” Mardi-gras Salad Arrange on of grapefruit, alternate wit red apple. G. serve with Serve this novel salad tonight Rich contrast in color. Piquant con- trast in taste . . . sweet apple, tart grapefruit, plu s velvet-smooth Gelfand’s Mayonnaise! Order it fresh today. Your grocer has it. GELFAND’S Mayonnaise - Thousand Tsland Dressing - Sandwich Spread _ __Dist A g S crisp lettuce leaves sections ieeled and skinned, and unpeeled sections of arnish with water cress and Gelfand’s Mayonnaise MAvoNNAISE utor: H. L. Cnrnel, 2155 !!uecn’s ChaEl Rd., Wl-hi&!on, DG i ; T 3

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