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WOMAN'S PAGE. Driven Away. situation that s tense often sa L AFTER HIM FLEW THE WHOLE . CROWD. have to look for a new home else-| N nid Ni ‘that “I guesa” s anny, “ you are ¥ight. And that was such a beautiful home! Never have I felt more safe $han I felt there.” _ “You wouldn't feel safe there any fonger,” sald Danny. . *“No, I don't suppose I would,” Nanny geplied. - “Still” sald Danny, “if Mr. Black- mnake should be driven away he might mever again return. Somehow I have & feeling that he is just traveling. I don’t believe he lives around here. Oh, dear, T wish I were big enough to do something.” - Just then Ssmmy Jay alighted in the tree. He didn't see Danny and Nanny, but he did see Mr. Blacksnake. “Thief! Thiefl Thief!” he began #creaming at the top of his lungs. Now, when Sammy screams “Thief!” like that, every one knows that he has discovered an enemy, and most of the feathered folks within he: flock to see what the trouble is. wasn't long before the hegan coming from all directions. Mr. Blacksnake withdrew his head from in- NANCY PAGE Beautiful Bride Is Wflcd Felicity, BY THORNTON W. BURGESS § 4 5 . 'He had lougd him in there. Now his forked tongue out as he glared at my other feathered folk around. He didn’t like so ntion. No, sir, he didn't like attention. He never does like . _He held hitm f in readi- strike at any of t come within striking dis- §§§ Egg i g ] i gl Mr. Blacksnake be- for a way out. He 3 P £ ng be- fore they were so far away that the lm:’ndNol ‘he(r‘;l va:clts“reu:hzd Danny and Nanny only faintly. snake hlflnL'ndel 3 “He won't come back,” said Danny confidently. “How do _you know?” replied Nanny. “I just feel it.” said . "We may as well keep If we were living somewhere on the ground, a visit from Mr. Blacksnake.” “Perhaps you are right, Danny,” said Nanny. “On the und we would be in danger from others as well as Mr. Blacksnake. Come on; let's go back home.” - So Danny and Nanny climbed up to the old tin hich was now their think that that fel- el Just hons that ped. We'll jus ht'lll{never_teomeu in.” o “He won't,” replied Danny confidently. And Danny was right. Mr. Black- suake never did return. ; (Copyright, 1930.) Apricot Snow. Boften two tablespoonfuls of gelatin in one-fourth cupful of cold water. Heat one cupful of apricot strup with one-fourth cupful of sugar, add the Juice of an orange and the juice of half & lemon and the gelatin. Stir until dis- solved, then cool. Cut out some rounds of sponge cake, place on each one-half Mr. Black- required form, way, | houss,” because time is thought of as a | unit. ' Similarly we say “less than five minutes ago,” “less than three days ago, to number, as “fewer sive or that which cannot be counted, he: id always be the chance of | as “less sugar,” “less gravel,” ete. box with the dent in the top, and the coffee Is in that round tin that held the fruit cake. fruit’ jars and so is the farina. can tell the difference, because a string is tied around the rice.” some such directions as these When it came to giving instructions as to where ?’le ;‘n.rioufl articles of diet were to be ound. our foads put away in such a way that they can be some few JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JO8. 3. FRISCH, COLLEGIATE CLEO HAS ASKED FOR SIX CLASSES BECAUSE SHE CAN'T GET ALONG ON FEWER @il{({ HOURS' SLEEP. ® J. J. V.—“Less than six hours” is the not “fewer than six eto. Ordinarily “fewer” applies “Less” applies to Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. “You will find the tes in that cracker The rice is in one of the You Daubtless you have sometimes heard Very few of us housewives have all found without_opening boxes and cans. You may think you have, but the chances are that here and there in pantry or larder there is a container not properly la- beled. You know its contents, so there seems little object in labeling it. Still, for the sake of convenience and system, 4, apricot, then pour over the fop a4y Juch containers should be labeled little of the apricot sirup. When the rest of the sirup begins to thicken fold in two stiffiy ten egg Whites, pile labels at a very small cost. lightly around the apricot on the cake, gummed labels are arran; alphabetically, and contal of every sort of food that any housewife could want to list. There are also labels for articles and place on ice to stiffen. Serve ve: cold, 4 Xggs in' Peppers. Cut_five hard-boiled eggs into amall bits, then fold into one cupful of thick white sauce. Cut six 'Etnmm it speinkle ‘with shells: in halves the mixture, mmpnuolmt:dem. Brown in| there oven, adding two plainly. It is possible to buy small med t %NWMMnmmwvmnumm d in sheets, the names f im) At the m’&h’fi'm" are some blank I on which the ‘tablespoontuls of S Butter, garnish with paraley, and serve | futed. > " o0 SUCh ATHcles as are got The sleeves were long. The train was of lace. With all the richness in the §own, it seemed wise to use a aimple ulle veil. A lace one would have de- tracted from the lace in the dress itself, The bride’s gloves were quite long, of tvory shade. The bouquet was beautiful with its @ependent ribbons caught with orange blossoms. Orange blossoms held the fitted vell coronet in place also. Write to Nancy ‘Page, care of this paper, 1081y i L, - er LA Rles (Copyright, 1930.) craekling - CRISP Rice Krispies snap and pop in milk or cream. There never was a crisper cereal, Delicious rice toasted into nourishing bubbles. Great for children. Serve for breakfast, lunch or dinner. With fruits or berries, sweetened with honey. Use in macaroons, candies. Order a red-and- green package from your grocer. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Helloggs “QICE KRISPIES (Oopyright. 1939). Occasionally a Man and Woman Are Great Lovers, s To Whom Poverty and Struggles Are Merely Adventure. | wnAT price romance? What price wifehood and motherhood? A woman writes me: “I belong to & small circle of young women. All of us were in | business and earned good salaries. Some of us married. Some of us didn't. W}ll‘wn I married I pitied the girls who were staying single. I thought of them as poor old maids, without romance, without love, without children, without any strong, manly arm to lean upon. So I joyously rushed to the altar with & man ‘whose pay envelope had very little more in it than mine had had. ““That was five years ago. Now it is the turn of the unmarried girls, who kept on with their jobs, to pity those of us who married, They are young and fresh looking, well dressed. They have time to ga_about to places and see things, time-to read and keep themselves mentally alert and interesting, while we who married on shoestring incomes are tired and worn cut with drudgery and shabby and dull and peevish. “Believe me, it hurts when a girl who is accustomed to ‘permanents’ and ‘facials’ and good clothes musi. do without them and see her good looks vanish for lack of proper care and adornment. Too much heavy housework and not enough amusement have crushed my spirit. “My husband says, ‘Why, I turn in my pay envelope.” Yes, but after paying the rent and insurance and for the food and the doctor's bills—and there are many where there are children—and after the husband takes money for himself and for his clothes, what has the poor mother left for herself? Not much. Often ngthing at all.” My correspondent draws & vivid and s tragic plcture of what marriage means to those upon whom it forces a lower scale of living tham that to which they are accustomed. She does not vision her husband’s side of it, but it is scarcely less herd upon him than it is upon her. Both of them are used to the luxuries of life. They have taken pretty surroundings, , good food. smart clothes, amusements and leisure as mere necessi- ties of existence, and when they find that they must live in a ch'n‘? cottage or s dingy flat; that they must eat cheap cuts of meat and will vegetables; that they must go shabby and that they cannot afford even the price of a ticket to the movies, they have not erough philosophy to meet the situation. ‘The onlything that can make marriage a success when it entails hardships is a great love, a love great enough to lighten labor with its magic, a love great enough to make ice & joy instead of a hardship, a love great enough to Just being with the beloved one a joy that irradiates life and compensates for everything one mije-s, Not many of us are capable of a love like that, but occasionally we find a man and woman who are great lovers and who are willing to pay the price of love., To them poverty an str\afl. and anxieties are merel; &e great adven. ture. Work is & sacred offering that they ll{ ach other's fest, Their shabby clothes are royal mt because worn for love’s sake. Their bread and cheese become nectar., DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1930.) Nut Cakes. Put one apple, three-fourths cupful of walnuts and third cupful of raisins through a grinder and mix with a heap- ful of butter, three-fourths cupful of sugar and one-fourth teaspoonful of vanilla. Add to this the floured fruit, with three-fourths cupful of milk, or less if the apple is very juicy. The dough should drop quite stily from a [y ing teaspoonful of baking pow- n. dv:“‘u! one p.:: with one-third pe?np- “od FEATURES. Foreign Exchange. ested in the way in which our currency It & & sim- some things should know. The rate at our money is changed into forelgn is fixed by the of the money market. This rate is usually quoted according to the the pound, franc, lira, mark, shilling or krone in dollars. For le, if the ‘franc s quoted franc in Uni rg approximately 25 francs for each lollar. Unless one vxch.ng- an appreciable amount of United States money, how- ever, one is not likely to get the ad- val of this quoted rate. 1f you ex- & traveler are those encountered on shipboard, “Oh, ther might be some triflin’ dif- | where the purser has the market cor. | ference in regard to the pearl button | nered. fariff, but aside from that the two ole |exchange quarter is the small money parties are go identical that it's hardly office on the other side. worth while to vote,” declared Hon. Ex- | If you have & considerable amount of Editur Cale Pluhart today. money to change, shop around for the Selam Bentley wuz discharged at the | best rate. , If you only wish to change Emporium today fer gittin' prematurely & small cl , §0 to one of the larger | BTay. banks, or, If there is one, go to a for- (Copyright, 1930.) eign branch of an American bank. It Cheese Ramekins, Put three tablespoonfuls of butter and three tablespoonfuls of flour together in a saucepan, and stir until blended without browning. Add one cupful of milk, a little at a time, and stir until the mixture boils, then add one cupful of greated cheese, salt and pepper, and set aside to cool. Beat three eggs, yolks and whites separately, then add the yolks to the mixture in the saucepan |Ous. My husband almost left me. Now, and blend thoroughly. Lastly, fold in| thanks to Vinol, I am well and h-ngy the whites, beaten to a stiff froth. 8nd he loves me aga Mrs. R. D, Then turn into well ol Doctors have I known the value bake in a moderate oven long minutes, and serve quickly. of mineral elements, iron, calelum with —_— %o‘d lnm peptone, inol. N Nervous, eas! surprised how Vinol ramekins, or about 20 Banana Cream. Dissolve half a package of prepared lemon gelatin in three-fourths cupful of boiling water, then let cool. )Inh two llr|: ripe bananas and mix with three tal umnm.l of sugar, then beat tos vulr ip half a eupful of cream and it to the fruit, whl{plnc all with & wire whisk into the thickened latin, Pour into an iced wet mold. to set. Serve with whipped tired ves nemenlth, n e atter Bor e e 0 N Those going abroad this Summer or mp-mmwmmmuv':m having relatives abroad.will be inter- | rates. ol FOR STRENGTH, APPETITE, SLEEP traight Talks to Women About Mone t et reduces dollar. If possible have your local tain ‘enough of the f 70 wil need on the other dids o quite mv‘:fil- in dollars, so tau’t all ited Btates currency, o that ono | or plane ‘fea s e Ush for train eal train and porter tips. s g Bubble and Squeak. Serving six.—One pound round steak 's check for $10, & rate | cut in 1 inch pieces, two oupfuls diced of .045 may b quoted as the best. potatoes (uncooked), Possibly the least advantageous rates | sliced onions, one-quarter cupful chep- ped green peppers, one cupful diced ear- Tots, a8poon: The next least advantageous tsuno‘::\'tu'l‘ 5 Depper, tfour tablespoonfula 1at and two cupfuls meat stock or watar, Place fat tn fryin, n, add cook until mnzflp‘ lm‘l:":t-.“ one-half oupful 1 salt, one-quarter SHE TELLS HOW TO WIN BACK HUSBAND’S LOVE “For 9 years I was tired and nerv- | sound sleep and a BIG you more PEP tastes dellcl_g\u. tite, Gt oy Tlite!” Viner to sles Drus A ‘e give you ‘n.l..“rmum & 1 o Just order a KINGAN'S CHICKEN - IN - GLASS from your food dealer. It comes to you in the glistening glass container in which it was vacuum-cooked—a fancy, milk-fed chicken, stuffed with spicy dressing. You SEE exactly what you buy—you KNOW that it is exactly what you want! The next time you purchase bacon, ask for KINGAN'S CREST BRAND Sliced Bacon —sliced fresh daily; sold in sealed cartons and in cellos Phane. Mildly cured. Hickory smoked. The sweetest, tenderest bacon you ever tasted, Bake in well ord ns in & moderate oven for hl’; ho?x.r. enjo CHICKEN 2 o Twenty minutes before dinner time, remove the chicken from its glass con- tainer. (The aluminum lid comes off with just a light twist.) Put chicken in a pan and warm in hot oven, Heat the rich, flavory juices for gravy—or mourishing con- somme...That's all there is to do! Three hours time saved! U.S. INSPECTED “ AND CERTIFIED * =a protection not offered in the old-fashioned meth- od of selling chickens. dinners 3 o, Ah-h-h—a steaming-hot baked chicken, stuffed with spicy “Southern Style” dressing. How the family will enjoy its delicious flavor—and its excep- tional tenderness! . Prepared in only twenty minutes—less time than or- dinary dinners. Mother is glad to serve chicken dinners often, now that she knows this quick, easy, modern way! For cold lunches or suppers, KINGAN'S CHICKEN-IN- GLASS is READY TO SERVE just as it comes from the glass container. Ideal for sandwiches and salads, too... You'll need this popular new food convenience often! KINGAN & CO., &stablished 1843, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Washington Branch 630 Pennsylvania Avenue N.W. INGAN' Whole, Vacuwum-Cooked CHIKCKEN-IN-GLASS