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WOMA Sun Suits Have Gained Popularity BY MARY A child basking in the sunshine wear- ing nothing but an abbreviated little sun suit is no longer cause of comment. In fact, when warm days come in the country or suburbs or at the seashore GREEN AND WHITE COTTON PRINT USED FOR SUN SUIT WORN BY OLDER GIRL WHILE SMALLER SUN SUIT WAS MADE OF GREEN AND WHITE CHECKED GING- HAM. the children who are not wearing sun suits are mor> conspicuous than those who are. That is, during play hours. The well bred little boy or girl usually knows that the morning hours are the sun-suit hours. After the afternoon nap usually comes dressing up in & more civilized sort of dress or suit. | The sun suit shown on the older child | 2 in the picture is of green and white | cotion print, tled at the shoulders, on | the sides of the legs and at the belt. The toddler in the foreground wears a sun suit that is very easy to make at home, and the diagram shows how it is | cut trom the material. In all medium sizes you will need a | yard and an eighth of yard-wide ma- | terial. The garment is in two pieces, one for the back and one for the front, | and is jointed with French seams at the side. To make the pattern for the front | cut a paper 17 inches wide by 22 inches | Jong. A to B is 17 inches and A to D 22. Measure off 3 inches from D and mark F and 11 inches from F and mark G. Measure off 12 inches from B and mark E. Then connect E and G with a curved line, and trim off along this line. All other edges are perfectly straight. The back is the same only that the pattern should be 18 inches wide instead | of 17, and from f to g 8 12 inches. | N'S PAGE. THE EVENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. MARSHALL. Mdke the curve from g to e identical to | that from G to E and mark f 3 inches | | from d. | These patterns are for half the front | and half the back. Fold your material | on a lengthwise fold and place A-D and a-d on the fold so that you will have a | front 34 inches wide and a back 36 | inches wide. Now seam the back and | front_together at both sides marked B-E-G and b-e-g and make a French seam. Make a seam 6 inches long, join- ing F-D-F and f-d-f and make & French seam. This will give you two ovenings on either side along F-G—1-g. These are the leg_openings. The top of the garment is B-A-B—b-a-b. Face the top and the two leg openings with an inch-wide strip of material and through this Tun elastic, adjusting to suit the waist and leg size of the child. | Arrange strips of material in suspender | fashion as indicated in the skefch. You can get enough for these strips along the edge of the front section or you may make them of other material of of ribbon if you like (Copyright. Automatic Transportation. The lastest idea in industrial rail- ways is the plant which has been de- signed for the Trinity Portland Cement Co. Railway cars without passengers| and apparently running without human energy will transfer cement rock from the excavating pit to the crusher on a | raflway haulage system. Two operators, located where they can view the load- ing and unloading of the cars and their movements, govern practically all the operations of the cars. The track on which the cars will run will be divided into a number of sections. Four motor- driven cars will ride over the track, US IS PITTY NEAR TO THEM NICE COOL WOODS, AN' IT'S A GOO[;NTHING. US IS DEST ABOUT | ALL IN. FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. | 1930.) | Good for Luncheon. | Cheese is an excellent food to add to the luncheon dietary. It is, of course, not to be used for luncheon when meat is used—that is to say, it | ought not to be, according to what we think now-a-days of the value of not eating too heavily of foods high in protein. But for a substantial | luncheon dish when no, meat is served, | each propelled by two 50-horsepower | it is very good. | mo'orsl.) gx‘wrzv for driving the motors | For instance, a vegetable salad with will be supplied from the track n‘nd lv:;:;:: “;rtrfi‘\:‘schemo:kes a good main - s s by energizing | cours : e e T s W oars | _ Cheese souffle, bread and' butter ana will run from one end to the other. Iaw fruit make a satisfying and sensi- The cars will be stopped by interrupt- | ble luncheon, ing the electric current to the’section _ Cheese sandwiches and hot chocolate, on which the cars are traveling. Elec- | followed by baked apples or sliced | tric brakes, operating automatically | Oranges or some seasonable fruit, make will stop the car when the energy sup- | another good combination ply is interrupted. An interesting char- Macaroni au gratin, followed by & acteristic of the motors operating the | fruit salad, is good. cars is' that they will tend to main- | b tain constant speed under all circum- 01d Battle Flags Mended, stances. On down grades the motors | will act as generator and the electricity | Restoring old battle flags to a sem- thus generated will be fed back into the | blance of their former beauty is & new vocation recently taken up by Mrs. M. power system, helping to operate other | | Antrobus of London. Eight tattered cars on other sections of the track. flags which had been through many en- gagements, some being a mass of frag- ments with none of the original colors, were put in such condition that they looked like new from a short distance. The flags were encased in hand-woven Orange Juice. nets and the original design repainted Rolled Oats with Cream. in the net. Fish Cakes, Chili Sauce. = . Wake up and K pep up with MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. LUNCHEON. Egg and Tomato Salad, Mayonnaise Dressing. Crisp Rolls. Strawberry Bavarian Cream. Sponge Cakes. Iced Coffee. DINNER. Cream of Spinach Soup. Brolled Salmon, Egg Sauce. Delmonico Potatoes. Green Peas. Asparagus Salad, Mayonnaise Dressi) ng. Blueberry Ple. Cheese. Coffee. CORN MUFFINS. Pour one cup boiling water over one cup cornmeal, spread with butter and let stand over- night. Add two beaten eggs, one tablespoonful sugar, three-fourths cup buttermilk and one cup flour mixed and sifted with one-half teaspoonful salt and three-fourths teaspoonful soda. Bake in but- tered muffin pans. STRAWBERRY CREAM. Soak one-half package clear gelatin in one-fourth cup cold water, then dissolve over hot water. To gelatin add one cup strawberry juice and strawberries mashed, one tablespoonful lemon Jjuice, one-half cup sugar. Stir until sugar is dissolved, then set in bowl. Put bowl into pan of ice water, stir until it begins to thicken. Then fold in one and one-half cups whipped cream. ‘Then wet individual molds in iced water. Cut strawberries in halves and line molds. Then turn mix- ture in and serve with sweetened mashed berries. THE finest way to start the day. A heaping bowl of Kellogg's Pep Bran Flakes. There’s sparkle in the flavor — health in the whole wheat —and the extra bran helps keep you fit and regular. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Llo99° PEP BRAN FLAKES BROILED SALMON. Rub slices of salmon all over with lemon juice, cayenne pepper, salt and salad oll. Let stand for half an hour. Rub gridiron well with beef or pork suet and broil over clear fire. | are to be happy or miserable, a success of a falure. D: C., THURSDAY, STAR, WASI i DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX JDEAR DOROTHY DIX—I am a boy 19 years old, the youngest son in a family of six children, all of them married and living in homes of their own. I live with my parents on a small farm. They are too old to work and I manage the farm. But I don’t want to be a farmer. I want to go to college, but my parents demand that I stay with them. They will not consent to my leaving the farm and my mother tells me that I can never marry because two families shall never live together under her roof. I hate the farm and know that I will never make a success of it. What shall T do? Must I stay at home with my parents, or would you advise me to go to college? swer—T urge you by all means not to sacrifice your life to your parents’ whlmérl\flul to s!rik!:CN}lL (n!‘yynurs?". Ii they want to live on the farm, let them stay there. OId peovle are not haif so helpless as young ones think they are, and nearly always they are far happler if they are left to themselves than they are if their children upset their plan of living by taking them into their own homes. But if either your parents or you have to sacrifice the thing that is desired, it is they who should make the sacrifice instead of you. They have had their lives. Their race is nearly run, but you are just starting on yours and you have a long career before you. And what you decide now will determine whether you If you go away to college, or if you get into some occupation you like, the chances are that you will be successful, but if you stick to a little farm, disliking farming and having no talent for it, you are a predestined failure, grubbing to your dying day for a mere pittance. Among my friends was a young boy who was confronted with exactly the same problem that you have. Only he had gone out into the world and had a fine start with a big firm for which he worked. He was a born mechanic with genius in his fingertips, and his employer had just given him a big promotion and sent him to be in charge of the machinery in a huge plant he was installing. |on laying there a while to e { feel more honest, and the doorbell rang But on the way to his new place of business this young chap stopped to visit his parents on the little farm on which they lived. The father told a pitiful tale of how he had got behind and had mortgaged the place, and they begged the boy | to stay and take charge of it and told him it was his duty to cherish them and | look after them In their qld age, and so on. Finally the mother wept the boy | into submission and he gave up his good job and stayed with them. ‘ He knew nothing about farming. He loathed it, and, although he worked | like a slave, he never made expenses and they got deeper and deeper into debt until finally the sheriff sold them out. But by that time the boy was a middle- | aged man, broken in spirit. disgruntled, his opportunity gone, his life ruined by | his foolish sacrifice of himself to his seifish parents. And all the sacrifice was to no avall, for if he had kept on with the work for which he was destined, he would be able now to buy his parents half a dozen | farms and keep them in luxury, instead of their all being forced to live on the | mere pittance that he is able to earn. Nearly all sacrifices are futile. Don't give up your life for your parents. You wiil best help them by fitting yourself to make more money. DOROT! 4 (Copyright, 1930.) e Theater Coat Rooms Hit. Scots Want Freedom. Protest against alleged profiteering in| The Nationalist movement is advanc- | fashionable West End theaters of Lon-|ing in Scotland. The Scottish National | don in the prices charged for coat-room | party recently held at Glasgow its sec- tickets, programs, “mostly composed of | ond annual conference, which was fol- advertisements,” and drinks were re- | lowed by a demonstration at Stirling. cently made to the London cmmt_v‘ At the conference C. M. Grieve pleaded council. Capt. G. E. Pierrepont asked | for a covenant which would pledge those that other playhouses follow the ex-| who signed it to establish an independ- ample of one which had abolished coat | ent government in Scotland. A mani- room and program charges, but the|festo to be issued states that the party council explained it had not jurisdiction | stands for a complete measure of Scot- in the matter tish self-government. INSIST CN THE ORIGINAL First in sales Because it is good to drink and good for every- body, more Horlick’s malted milk has been sold than all other brands combined. Its richness and quality have made it the world’s standard—and the safest milk for you. Send us ten cents today for a sample and mixer. HORLICK’S RACINE, WISCONSIN JULY I was up in my room other without falling, and I herd ma downstairs saying to Nora, All rite, I'll send Benny rite around to get some. Me thinking, Aw heck, a errand. And I quick layed on my bed and ma called me about 4 times and I sed, Are you calling me, ma? No, Im just practicing in case T mite wunt to call you some time, the ideer, | ma sed | Meening of corse she was, and T sed, | Well T must of been party half ways | alseep. Im laying down, Im tired. Well no wonder, I sippose you been | racing around like’a wooden Indian all| afternoon with no regard to rime or | Teason, ma sed. rest, Im lie down, Well stay there and 101 call up the store and have them send around what I wunt, she sed. | Me thinking, G, herray. And I kepp make mq and I learned over the bannisters and it was Puds Simkins, me heering him say to ma. Can Benny' come out, Mrs. Potts, | us fellows are getting up 8 relay race and Benny is one of and we need him, O my goodness, a race, absilutely not, e's exhawsted now from racing, he's lying down, me sed. Me thinking Aw heck, gosh hang the luck. A relay race being one of my favorite things, and pritty soon 1 wen downstairs easy, being just the wrong time on accout of ma being in the front hall, me saying, I feel better now, ma. Well you dont look better, I axually bleeve there are rings under your eyes, the best runners ma sed. | Proving how one person’s fmagination can start another one’s werking, and she made me go up and lay down again, me thinking, Aw heck, I wish I had went the errand in the ferst place. Proving a lot of our trubble comes from trying to save ourselfs trubble. Cherry Sauce. Four cups seeded cherries, one and | one-half cups water, one cup sugar. | Boil cherries and water eight minutes. Add sugar. Mix well and cook slowly eight minutes. Serve hot or cold. to put| 13 empty match boxes ontra,p of each| glad you have sents enough to| FEATURES. Famous Strong Men of History | Presumably we never would have heard of Goliath if David had not killed | him with his little stone and sling. David won immortality in more ways | than one, but Goliath had to attain it | by having his skull bashed in with a | hard pebble | Our private opinion always has been that David got too much credit for his victory over the big fellow. He was a veritable crack with a slingshot, and, consequently, he had practically the | same advantage over his opponent that a man with a rifle would have had. Of course, he took the chance of missing—a big chance, too, for if he {had missed things would have gone badly with him. Goliath, apparently, could have destroyed him with one hand. Samuel's account of the giant is that he measured 6 cubits and a span in height. If he intended by this the cubit |of a man—from the fingertips to the elbow—this would make Goliath 9 feet {9 inches high, but lccordlng‘ to the | cubit measure of 21 inches he would have been 11 feet 5 inches high. Perhaps Samuel’s figures were a little optimistic. Josephus did not agree with him, and, on the whole, his conserva- tism is the more acceptable. He places Goliath’s height at 4 cubits and a span. | In other words, he would have him 6 |feet 9 inches tall by arm measure, ! which sounds reasonable. Goliath's Coat of Mail Weighed a Mere 208 Pounds. BY J. P. GLASS. | | | | PP PP PP P - ) HE HAD PRACTICALLY THE SAME ADVANTAGE OVER HIS OPPONENT THAT A MAN WITH A RIFLE WOULD HAVE HAD. Both Samuel and Josephus agree that he was not only tall, but enormous in all his proportions and possessed of ters - rific strength. The armor and weapons he carried about prove this to be the truth. His coat of mail weighed 5,000 = shekels of brass, the equivalent of 20 pounds. The staff of his spear “was like & weaver's beam.” The head of his spear weight 600 shekels of iron—that is to say, about 25 pounds. - David is not to be blamed for adopte -+ ing a method of combat which enabled ‘* him to keep far from Goliath's eager ™ reach. - Perhaps, in whatever state he now is, Goliath mourns that he had to become - & small man’s victim to achieve im- mortal fame. But he can reflect that he « was the butt of a stratagem; and in gloomy moments he can read over Han- + nah More's description of him in her sacred drama of “David and Goliath,” . :{fltkn 20 centuries after his dissolu- ~ lon. ’ Miss More pays great tribute to Go- ~ liath’s “fearful stature,” his “towering : head” and his great trunk, “compared with which the amplest oak that spreads his rugged arms in Bashan's , groves were small. Granted that his spirit has any pride of person at all, * he must glow with pleasure at this poetic tribute to his manly qualifica- tions. (Copyright, 1930.) QUALITY MEAT PRODUCTS The Picnic Basket is the most important part of your July Fourth outing. AUTH’S SMOKED HAM Sweet, juicy, spicy, tender—it makes wonderful sandwiches— Insist on Auth’s Be sure and include an abun- dance of Auth’s Ham Sandwiches, Auth’s Frankfurters and Potato Salad — Sandwiches made of Auth’s Delicious Meat Loaf and Auth’s Cold Cuts. My—doesn't the very thought of them put a keen edge on your appetite. OU must say “International” to your grocer if you want a larger quantity of the world ) ..from our ovens to your home ! And when you buy—don't take any one's word for it—look for the name Auth’s on each and every Auth Meat Product. If the Au!ll.mme is missing—depend upon it you're not getting genuine Auth Quality. FRANKFURTER SAUSAGE Unequaled for spicy hunger—satis- fying deliclousness. Because you love Quality— Insist on Auth’s best free-runningsalt for only S¢. Housewives everywhere have found it well worth while to in- Sunshine Bakers skilfully defend the delicious taste and oven-crisp- ness of Krispy Crackers by putting a sturdy wax-wrapper all around Here, madam, are just the right crackers to serve with soups, salads and cheese. And here are just the right words to say to your grocer, sist on getting the big package of International Salt. Your gro- cer has For Highest Quality Insist on this big, blue package. Sunshine Krispy Crackers, PLAIN or IODIZED INTERNATIONAL SALT CO., Ine SCRANTON, PA. AUTH'S MEAT LOAF Makes frresistible sandwiches. So does AUTH'S spicy Pimento Loal. Insist on Auth’s THIS NEW AND GREATER SALT VALUE IS PRESENTED TO YOU BY THE WORLDS LARGEST SALT PRODUCER. INTERNATIONALS PLANTS, REFINERIES AND LABORATORIES ARE UNRIVALLED N.AUTH PROVISION €° WASHINGTON D(. A FROM THE THOUSAND WINDOW BAKERIES of Loose Wiles Biscuit Ca,