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WOoM AN’S PAGE. T ixuries Which May Not Be Costly BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Women who wish they could afford imore luxuries may have many of them ‘without extra cost. It must be remem- bered that those who are rich and in- dulge themselves in luxuries have to spend some time to ge them, plus the money. Women who acquire luxuries | | ARRANGEMENT OF MATCHES WAS DAINTY AND SUGGES' LUX- URY IN ONE OF ITS DEFINITIONS. without spending money have to spend | time, and in many instances more time, but they save money. ‘Webster gives “dainty” as one syno- nym of luxury, while another is extrava- still another is free indulgence in sen- one can have dainty thlnfl ‘without greater cost than as if they lacked this element. Also it is possible to enjoy pleasures through the five senses with- out necessarily spending any money. Often there is & whimsy that tickles one’s senses and causes merriment. ‘There is nothing practical or essential about it. Therefore it becomes a luxury, a dainty thing. One woman of my acquaintance made patterns from different-colored match tips when arranging matches in boxes. It was a form of luxury. Every one was amused who saw the gay star of red surrounded by white in a round match box which she rimmed with blue matches. It was & source of endless comments. It made conversation at times when the humor of an occasion needed brightening up. The arrange- | ment was dainty. It took time to d but the time was not wasted for the a: rangement was made when she was resting. Since she found pleasure in making the design, the work did not interfere with her relaxation. When she found that others enjoyed her han- diwork as well as herself she made an- other design. It was fun—a luxury. | One woman, who had lived a great | deal abroad, enjoyed the custom of | having breakfast in bed. When she |lived in her apartment at home she | continued to indulge. in the luxury. She would prepare her own tray the night before, and such food as she wished, such as sliced orange or some fruit, and set the marmalade jar beside her plate on the tray. She put the cream in the pitcher on the ice, and measured out the coffee and put it in the percolator, carefully covering the open spout to prevent the favor evaporating. In the morning she would set the coffee on thé range to percolate, and put the edibles on the tray with the toaster on a table by the bed. When the coffee was ready she would have her breakfast in bed comfortably, getting practically the same luxury by so doing THE EVENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Aren't it great to see Drandpa an’ Baby pardners again? Nuffin’ makes a feller like me feel lal bad as when his own folks is quar- re (Copyright, 1930.) BRIDGE TALKS BY MRS. JORN MUNCE, JR. ‘The hand of dealer, which we will discuss today, is one that presents the problem of a choice in bidding either | of two saits. In other words, a hand containing two sults, both strong enough to bid one on initially. These hands are known as two-suiters, and as when she was served abroad. There was no expense. No extra time nor money was required, yet she luxuriated. Each person has a pet luxury. It is well to see if it cannot be enjoyed with- out extra cost—if one has to be thrifty. By management, and perhaps a little extra time which will prove well spent, many & busy homemaker can in- dulge herself in such a luxury. It should be remembered that luxury and the spending of money are not neces- sarily bound together. Luxury really has nothing to do with price. It is a sensltlo‘r‘lngalned which may or may not ve. Do EXpenA copyright, 1930) Curry of Macaroni. One and one-half cupfuls quick- cooking macaroni, 1%, cupfuls sliced cold meat, any kind; 2 tablespoonfuls meat drippings, butter or oil; 2 table- spoonfuls flour, to 2 teaspoonfuls curry powder, 1 tablespoonful minced onion, 13, cupfuls meat gravy or stock, 1 teaspoonful vinegar and 1 apple, cut or chopped very fine. k the macaroni in pieces and cook 5 to 8 minutes in boiling salted water. In the meantime, melt the fat and add the onion and apple. Cook slowly until the onion begins to brown. Add the flour and the curry powder and stir over a slow fire for 2 or 3 minutes. The amount of curry powder used depends on the taste. Stir in the stock or gravy, vinegar and enough salt and pepper to season. Put in the meat, cover closely and simmer for 15 min- utes. Drain the macaroni and pile in a hot dish. Pour the curry over and nce and still another is free indulgence g sensual pleasures. Itis easy tosee that OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATEL The Playground. If we wanted to raise a crop of pota- Roes, we would first look to the field in which they were to grow. We would question the exposure, the moisture, the quality of the soil. We would not for- get to visit them daily and cultivate them with care. We would gravely consider the welfare of that crop. Children have their habits of growth, their needs for growth, just as potatoes have. They need open air, sunshine, good food, pleasant people about them, good examples and a place to play. This place of play is of the first im- rtance. It is their fleld of growth. child will not grow without play, and he cannot play without the place to play in and the things with which he pllys.l We take heed when the potatoes are under consideration, but children must | take what they can get. Our children play in streets that are worse in relation to human life than battlefields. Thousands of our children are killed at their play. A few people Eun, there is perhaps a word or two the newspaper, and the world goes on as before. Will nothing move us to save the children? Houses are built and rented to people with children. The landlord is delighted with the modern accommodations he offers- his tenants, and the tenants are delighted to enjoy them. No one ever asks, “Where do the children play?” Nobody thinks of that. In the begin- ming of this lountry there were open flelds that offered free play and safety to all the children. Now an open field s at a premium, and the children wan- der from street to street, hunted by the Eolwe, run down by the motorists, cursed )y the traffic whose way they impede. Cleanliness is a real need. Children do not make a healthy growth in a dirty environment. Foul air, littered streets and filthy gutters are poison to children. Who cares? Only the mothers really care, and many of them, the great mass of them whose children live in danger of their lives day to day, are unconscious of the situation. They like to have the little children play where a glance from the window assures the mother they are still alive and whole, To go any dis- | ice means danger. The little ones | must stay on the dirty, crowded street. In the suburbs things are no better. | The fine playground attached to the school 1s closed when school is closed. As if children ever used a playground | in school hours, Saturdays and Sun- PRECIOUS BOON uflem is found prevailing, all disperse, there is no sound of walling, and no one stops to curse. A little fuss has started full oft, a bitter fight, and voters, heavy-hearted, would wrangle day and night. A fuss between two neighbors begins, some trifiing way; and people quit their labors to view the futle fray. At first they are impartial, amused, serene they stand, and watch the doings martial, but do not take a hand. Then some one throws a bowlder that lands on Jasper Jones; he strikes out from the shoulder, intent on breaking bones. The man he hits gets rattled, and strikes out left and right, and soon the town's embat- tled, all take part in the fight. I've seen a town divided for years by war- ring lads, until it was decided by self- respecting grads. Oh, there was always ection on pugilistic lines, and faction swatted faction, and preachers biffed divines. And men in all their journeys expected wrath and strife, and lawyers punched attorneys, the baker beat his wife. In Winter and in Summer men played the same old tricks; the tailor chased the plumber and pelted him with bricks. The hatred was contagious, it would not fade away, and doings most outrageous were chronicled each day. And when the feud had lasted for ears without a pause, men said they'd L dodgasted if they could name the cause. You start a little wrangle with one you don't admire; perhaps you try to mangle his whiskers in your ire; and maybe you are staging a feud that will | accompanying illustration. The top lifts | It ‘would be interesting if placed be- around it and serve very hot. days and holidays the gates are shut. Children endanger their lives or their limbs by climbing 10-foot fences, set with spikes, in order to have a ball ame. And we are a child-loving, an ntelligent, child-loving people. Wouldn't it be a fine thing for every woman’s club in the land to set about making this people sensitive about the play places for children? About the environment for children? As a child plays he behaves in adult years. Does that say nothing to us. Mothers, wake up and insist upon decent play spaces for the children. (Copyright, 1930.) Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. A shoe chest which is also an orna- ment to the bedroom is shown in the up, the front has two doors which swing out and an inner box with two shelves tilts up so as to make the placing and selecting of shoes an easy matter. Usuaily we put our shoe chests in the clothes closet because they are more or (v g Vfl AL W less ugly in appearance, but this one is very different from the ordinary kind. neath a window, and might even be used for a window seat; for, with the doors swinging out, it would not al- ways be necessary to lift the top in order to get at the shoes and the cush- ion or pillows would not need to be dis- turbed. ‘With a tall, narrow chest of drawers on each side of this chest and a mirror over it, it would make a very practical dressing table, for on it could be placed, | brush, comb, mirror, powder, etc. ‘The finish may match the rest of the | furniture in the room so that it will appear to belong with it. (Copyright, 1930.) Veal Goulash. Cut into inch-size dice from one to two pounds of lean veal from the upper part of the leg. Melt four tablespoon- fuls of fat from breakfast bacon in & skillet. Cook in this one smail onion | finely minced, and when the onion is & golden brown add the veal and kee | tossing the cubes over a hot fire unf browned on all sides. Stir into the pan | four tablespoonfuls of flour mixed with | one teaspoonful of salt, half a teaspoon- | ful of paprika, and add by degrees one | pint of good stock and a tablespoonful of tomato catsup. When the source boils, turn all into a casserole and add a pint of sliced cooked carrots and a pint of potatoes cooked not too soft and cut in cubes to match the veal, then cook covered in a hot oven for 20 minutes. Have ready a cupful of sifted apple sauce and stir this into the mixture before serving. Skin some bananas and scrape off the white part. Brown the bananas in a pan with a little butter and sugar. | have to bid two diamonds, as he had a usually contain two suits of five or more cards . each. It is not unusual for dealer or sec- ond hand to have two suits of the same length and approximately the same strength, but it would be very unusual if his partner should have the same number of cards in each suit, therefore it 'is desirable to know which he prefers. It is customary to bid the higher-valued suit first, and, if there is an intervening bid, then bid the lower-valued suit, thereby saying to_your partner: “I have two five- card suits, please raise the suit you can best help me in.” Of course when there are three passes after dealer's bid, he loses his opportunity of bid- ding the second suit. ‘The reason for bidding the higher- valued suit first is that there may be three passes, which happens about once in twenty times, and had you mentioned the lower-valued sult first it would have to stand and your chance of mg game would not be as great as you bid the higher- valued suit first. The proper bidding of two-suiter hands generally produces game for the bidders, and this type hand is considered to be a very strong hand among expert players. With a two-suiter hand never bid more than one initially in auction, consider your partner and give him a chance to choose between the two suits, selecting the one he can best help you in. “l‘l-ée following hands illustrate this point: South, or dealer, holds— ades—Ace, king. fack, 3 4. arts—Ace. king, 9, 7. 3. g West, or second hln'd‘. holds— | STAR, WASHINGTON, T 16 DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX IDEAR MISS DIX: I have one of the best husbands in the world. We are happy, but there is one thing that we cannot agree on and that is that we should save a little money as we go along. salaries, but he spends it all and we haven't & penny in the bank. We both work and make good I am willing to do without some things I want in order to save a little for the days we may be out of work or sick, but he says that with as many friends as we have there is no use worrying about the future, I quit work and keep house for him. ‘What can I do? He often says that he will be gl ‘when 1, too, long for that time, but there isn't any hope of its ever coming as long as it takes all that we both make to live on. Answer: Perhaps if you stopped work and threw the whole burden of the support of the family on your husband it would wake him up and make him realize the value of money. A lot of men need responsibility to steady them and the necessity of providing for some one besides themselves to make them put forth their best efforts. As long as you are working and able to support yourself your husband feels that he doesn’t have to save because you are able to look out for yourself. The one argument against the wage-earning wife is that often she slows her husband down. Perhaps that is the case with yours. At any rate you might give him a jolt by giving up your job and turning the bread winning over to him and see what he makes of it. One of the hardest things in the world for a woman to do is to sew up the pockets of a spendthrift husband. He is always so sure that it is unnecessary to save and that he will always be well and healthy and able to make money and that there will never be any rainy day in his life. He always thinks his wife is such & spoil sport and such a tightwad when she wants to lay up something for the future, and when she points out that they | are just as likely to have bad luck as the balance of the human race and that if they live nothing can save them from growing old, and no other fate on earth is so terrible as that of old and dependent people. I cannot hold out much hope to you that you will ever be able to reform a waster and a spender. ‘They are hope- less because they are weak and self-indulgent and lack the backbone to say “no” to deadbeat borrowers or to deny themselves any pleasure that they crave. All that you can do is to keep preaching to him the gospel of thrift, to which he will probably not listen, and point out to him that if he doesn't save and get a start now when he is young he is doomed to be one of those men who live from hand to mouth as long as they live and who have nothing to show but a few receipts for bills as a fesult of their years of labor. Sometimes a man of this type, whose money burns in his hand until he spends it, can be interested in buying a house or paying for a bond on the installment plan. And ance they do this they are pleased as Punch with themselves and sometimes become actually penurious. As for your husband’s saying that he doesn’t need to save his money because his friends would help him out if he lost his job or got sick, that is the talk of a fool. The spender is popular only as long as he spends, and when his money is gone so are his friends. Nor need one blame them, for what right has the borrower to the money that other people have saved by denying themselves? Nothing is more dishonest than for a man to spend everything that he makes as he goes along on his own pleasure and then expect people who have gone without the things they wanted to support him. Impy Learns From Timmy. Always be prepared to learn: The wise will never knowledge spurn. —-Old Mother Nature. ‘Two odd little cousins sat on the old stone wall in the midst of the Black Shadows. They were Impy the Black Chipmunk and Timmy the Flying Squirrel. Impy should have been at home in bed. Yes, sir, that is where he should have been. But he liked to be out in the early evening, and it was all on account of that black coat of his. It gave him a feeling of safety which he would not have had in the usual striped coat of the Chipmunk family. Until Timmy had suddenly landed beside him Impy hadn’t known that he had such a cousin. “I've seen my cousin Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel and my other cousin, Chatterer the Red Squirrel. I have seen them many times. Why have I never seen you before?” said Impy. ‘Timmy chuckled. He seemed to be full of chuckles. “I've seen you be- 2. Z a . 8. 2. ismonds—Jack, 4 3. ubs—Ace. 10, '9. North, dealer’s partner, holds— ades—8. 5. learts—Jack. 10, 6. Diamonds—Kins. atieen, 9. 7. 5. ack, iast, of fourth hand, holds— ‘We will first take up the auction bid- ding. .South, with a major two-suiter, naturally opens the bidding with one spade, bidding the higher valued suit first. You can see that the hearts as well as the spades are strong enough for an initial bid of one. ‘While West has the spades safely stopped and the ace of clubs, the rest of his hand is too weak for him to bid & no-trump, so he passes. North, lacking normal support in trumps, naturally has to deny this bid| of his partner’s, and to do this he will five-card suit, headed by the king and queen, and his bid of two diamonds tells his partner that the strength of his hand lies in the diamond suit. Nothing is more important than picturing your hand to a partner who has bid a major suit by denying that major when you lack normal support in trumps and showing him where your strength lies. East , as the long club suit was too weak to bid, especially when West had passed. ‘The bidding is now back to dealer again, and he is glad of the opportunity to show his partner his second major suit and bids two hearts. He would not have been able to do this if his partner had not denied his spade bid. West is not pleased with the heart bid, but can do nothing to improve the situation, so he passes. North is pleased and passes, knowing that dealer holds a two-suiter and that his hand holds real assistance for the second bid shown. East, displaying very good judgment, does not bid three clubs, but_passes. ‘The contract bidding would be a lit- tle different. Dealer with this holding would be justified in bidding two spades originally, West would pass and North would have to deny normal support in trumps for the spade bid by bidding two diamonds or two no-trumps. It is well to remember that there is often a choice of bids, and the person playing the hand has to make the decision as to which is the best bid. However, with either a two-diamonds bid or a two no-trump, when the bid comes back to dealer he should bid three hearts, and West would pass. Now North, or deal- er's partner, realizing that dealer has a two-suited hand, also that he has real help for the heart bid, raises the three- heart bid to four, or a game-going bid. A motion picture theater in London, which cares for gold fish in the lobby pool while owners are out of the city, reports that so far no owner has ever returned to claim his fish. The modern creed of supreme individuality is intensified with Coty FacePowders,andcom- pleted with Perfumes. FACE POWDER Twelve individual shades $r.00 *"EMERAUDE,, — the Jews! Fragranes $r.00t0 $10.00 Put them back in their skins and put | them in a baking dish with some sugar rot die, & fight l:llll! will be raging 10 next July. o i WALT MASON. Sopyright. 1930.) and a little butter. Let them bake moderately for three-fourths of en zoun ‘The first browning can be done “I'VE SEEN YOU BEFORE,” SAID HE. fore,” said he. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1930.) BEDTIME STORIES By Thornton W. Burgess. don’t know but that he can see a little better. I have to watch out for Hooty the Horned Owl and Spooky the Screech Owl every night, just as you have to watch out for members of the Hawk family during the day. If you'll take my advice, cousin, you won't venture {1‘::1 from your doorstep after shadow o Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. For those early Autumn days when the young miss and master embark on their school career, their wardrobes of- fer few problems. The washable clothes which have carried them through the Summer will suffice for the first month jor so. The usual costume consists of | washable suits for Johnny in quantities to keep him clean, and washable dresses for Sally with washable bloomers to match. A heavy sweater for cooler days, the raincoat, hat, rubbers and umbrella for those inevitable rainy mornings will be all that is necessary up to November. From then on throughout the Winter the young misses’ clothes go amusingly adult. Even if she is only 5 there are washable jersey outfits that in proper sizes would be appropriate for her ‘They consist of plaited jersey skirts, and matching cardigan jacket, buttoning right down the front. For wear with these are washable blouses, as simple or as elaborate as one desires, or, for colder days, a white jersey slip- over sweater of diminutive size. These dresses are the nicest of choices for those cold mornings when it seems nothing short of cruel to send & child out in a cotton dress. ‘The small boy for the colder days wears flannel shorts of dark colors and washable blouses or shirts. On cold days he too wears a sweater over his shirt, and both boys and girls wear socks, or long-ribbed lisle thread hose of dark colors and low shoes. On in- clement Fall days they don rubbers and “I'd like to know when,” cried Impy. | On cold days, galoshes are still in high “Several times,” replied Timmy. “I've | fVOr. watched you when you didn’t have the least idea I was anywhere near. That's what comes from having the right kind of eyes for seeing at night.” Impy leaned forward and looked closely at Timmy's eyes. “They are large,” said he. “Do you really think you can see better than I can?” “I don't think anything about it; I know,” replied Timmy. “Do you see that beetle over there crossing that stone?” Impy looked where Timmy pointed, but he saw no beetle. In fact, he could do little more than make out the out- line of the stone. “I don't see any beetle,” said he, “and I don't believe you do either.” Instead of replying, Timmy suddenly darted forward and in a moment he was back. He had a large beetle. “Here it is” sald he, and proceeded to pound it one the stone on which they were sitting. Then he ate it and smacked his lips. Meanwhile Impy was feeling very foolish. He realized that Timmy really had seen that beetle and that, therefore, Timmy's eyes must be better than his own. “Why have T never seen you in the daytime?” Impy asked. “For the same reason that I never see any of your family at night” re- plied Timmy. “Chipmunks are folk: Flying Squirrels are night folk see in the daytime? asked Impy. “Yes,” replied Timmy. “But the light hurts my eyes. I don’t like it. So I sleep through the day and come: out when the Black Shadows arrive. When it is time for jolly, round, bright Mr. Sun to climb up in the blue, blue sky in the early morning, and the Black Shadows are hurrying back to the Purple Hills, I go home to bed. But aren’t you taking a chance? One who can see no better than you ean should not be out at this hour. Supposing Hooty the Owl should come this way.” “I've heard of him,” sald Impy. “Can he see as well as you can?" “Just as well” replied Timmy. “I Underwear shows decided, modern | changes. I couldn't find a suit of long- | sleeved, long-legged union suits of the type with which most mothers are familiar. Instead the new type union suits, for both boys and girls, are of four weights—lightweight, knitted cot- ton, heavier weight cotton, light silk and wool, or cotton and wool. They | have buttons down the front of suf- ficlent size for each child to dress and button himself up. There are no sleeves and the knees are of two types, the “French” knee, which is very, very short, and the cuffed knee, which is suitable with long hr}: for the boy or girl who is always cold. Sister wears washable knitted silk or | rayon bloomers in shades to match her dresses and they are exactly like her mothers with rubber at the waist and knee and nary a buttonhole anywhere. Clothes for the modern child are made with the knowledge that our modern houses are much hotter than those of previous generations. Children should learn to dress them- selves; therefore clothes should have the fewest of buttons, which should be large and easlly reached, and as many of the garments as possible should be of the slip-on variety. We offer a brand-new leaflet suggest- ing the full list of garments which will suffice to carry the child through the Fall and Winter school season. It will suggest to mothers some of the neces- sitles which may not occur to her until the morning they are to be used. Self- addressed and stamped envelope is all that is necessary to get “Boys and Girls’ School Outfits” BETTER EXPECT a treat when you try these Better Bran Flakes made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. No other bran flakes are like them. So crisp. So rich in the famous flavor of PEP. And you get the nourishment of the wheat, plus enough bran to be mildly laxative. Ready to serve with milk or cream., Sold in the red-and.green package. THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1930. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD, Registered U. 8. Patent Office. When Thatcher, Primrose and West Minstrels was the b t show of its kind on tour? i Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Experiments With Language. 1t is really very hard for us to under- stand how important language is in every-day life; how we have grown up in it and with it so completely that we rarely stop to think of its place in the reception and expression of ideas. Try the following - experiments: 1. Undertake an ordinary conversa- tion with some one. But stop to think of every word before you use it. This experiment. ought to teach you what it means to be a child, just learning to talk, 2. Attempt to carry on a conversation with a friend using nothing but gestures. Try the same experiment with a com- parative stranger. Then try it with a total stranger. This experiment will help you realize how a foreigner feels as he tries to get along in a country where no one speaks his language. You may also go back in your imagination to prehistoric man. Perhaps you will appreciate the service that was done you by those who lived at least a million years ago. 3. Place & piece of carbon paper, face up, under a sheet of paper and write & few sentences. You have then on the underside of the paper what is called “mirror-script.” Now hand the two scripts to two different persons to read. Keep exact time on them. The difference in time between their readings will tell you semething of the difficulties a child has in learning to read. (Copyright, 1930.) Cucumber Jelly. Grate enough cucumbers to make two cupfuls of pulp, grating the skin also, but large seeds should be sifted out. Season with two tablespoonfuls of white vinegar or lemon juice, half a teaspoonful of salt and a sprinkle of white pepper. Hydrate two tablespoon- fuls of gelatin in a little of the liquid from the grated cucumbers, dissolve by standing in hot water and add to the pulp. If the green color is not bright, it may be deepened by the addition of spinach green or a little green vegetable coloring. “This jelly may be molded in small cones or timbale shapes, or in tiny molds to represent four-leaf clo- vers, or it may be poured tw the depth of half an inch or more into a shallow pan and then cut in cubes for a salad, to be served on lettuce leaves of deli- cate green with a pale green mayon- That'll be with Biscuits made with Self-Rising | FEATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. NEXI March the House of Repre- sentatives will lose and the Sen- ate gain & man who is regarded gen- erally around Washington as one of the soundest econom- ists in the United States. He is Cordell Hull—that tall, genial gentleman who has represent- ed the fourth dis- trict of Tennessee in the House for more than 20 years. Repre sentative Hull was victorious in the recent pri- mary for the long term in the Sen- ate. Senator Brock, whom he”, will succeed, will fill out the remain- ing months of the late Senator Lawrence D. Tyson's term, and then Hull will move across the | Hill, ‘The new Senator from Tennessee has long been a familiar figure on Capitol Hill. Tall, almost gaunt, Cordell Hull is known as a serious-minded, schol- arly, modest and tolerant fellow who is almost unbelievably industrious. When the House is in session, most of the time he is to be found standing in the doorway of the Democratic cloakroom. He holds & cigar—gener- ally unlighted—in his hand. From there he listens casually to the oratory of his colleagues on various subjects, appearing at times a trifie bored. But let the discussion on the floor turn to his pet subject of tariff and taxation and Hull is out of his seeming state of lethargy in a moment. He strides down the aisle to the front row, and until the House moves to another subject he is the most inter- ested and eager man on the floor. To his colleagues Hull and statis- tics are synonymous. Anything per- taining to economics challenges his at- tention immediately, and he 1is, more than anything eise, a profound student in this field. He is constantly brushing up on the subject and never tires talk- ing of it. DAILY DIET RECIPE ANGEL FLUFF: Gelatin, % teaspoonful; gar, 15 cupful; egg whites, salt, i-16 teaspoonful; cold w ter, % cupful; hot water, Y ; chopped walnuts, 1 cup- ful; chopped cherries, 1 cupfu almond flavoring, ¥, teaspoonful’ green vegetable coloring; red vegetable coloring. SERVES 4 OR 5 PORTIONS. Soak gelatin in cold_ water about five minutes, then &dissolve in the boiling hot water. Beat "gl whites with the salt until light and dry. Then add grad- ually, a tablespoonful at a time, the dissolved filltm to the beaten whites, ating all the time. Add sugar slowly and the almond extract. Turn one-third of this into a dish and tint green with few drops of color, then pour this delicate green mixture into a long narrow mold into which has been put a first layer of chopped walnuts and cherries cut in small pieces. Scatter some of the walnuts and cherries on top of green layer and pour on next a white, or untinted, layer. Add more cherries and walnuts and last a layer of egg whites tinted a delicate pink with the red coloring. Chill in ice box. When ready to serve, turn out of mold on flat dish and slice. May be served plain or, better, with whipped cream. Be sure the mold is very narrow, so the layers will be thicker. DIET NOTE. Protein, sugar, lime, iron, vita- mins A and B present. Can be eaten by asults of average or un- der weight and those overweight if amount of sugar were lessened. su- It is the only hobby he has. He doesn’t golf. He doesn't fish. - He doesn't hunt. He engages in none of the more common forms of recreation. His closest friend in Congress—Joe Byrns of Tennessee—says that Hull gets his recreation in thinking—deep think- ing. Another of his friends told me that he does his best thinking while. he shaves. Hull had a hard fight in his first race for Congress back in 1907. He came to Washington as a Representa- tive from the fourth district of Ten- nessee with only a 15-vote majority. But he has been there ever since, ex- cept in 1920, when the Harding land- slide swept him out. He was returned at_the following election, however. His economic mind has gained him much_in Congress. He had not been here long before he had won a place on the powerful Ways and Means Com- mittee. Scme of the more important legisla- | tion he initiated included the Federal income tax law, the inheritance tax |law and laws stabilizing the value of the Liberty bond. JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in Englich. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. | f V' BELIEVE MR. NIBLICK | 1S A BUTCHER BECAUSE HE CONTINUOUSLY SLICES HIS T. K-—“He continually slices his shots,” is the required form. Contine uous signifies that which is absolutely without break or pause; continual, that which temporarily ceases but begins again; as, “It may rain continuously for several days (that fis, ithoud pause), or it may rain conunuany fof a rlno?‘:h lt}mt 1s, hi‘t ceases occasionally, X | T*fresh roaste Peanut Butte; : “Light as a feather” and ready your Experience It saves time spent in mixing with and cost of baking powder—for this natural nutty-flavored, June-ripened wheat flour comes to you alread. y mixed with the exactly correct proportions of the purest leavening phosphates—the kind that “builds bone and sinew.” 3 o Adopt the ‘“Pantry Pals” Both SELF-RISING WASH- INGTON FLOUR and PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR all purposes) are milled under wer—and the wheat carefully washed in the city’s drinking water-—that it shall water be absol hygienic. lutely clean and (for 2-1b. sacks up. and 24 EVERY TON FLOUR und For sale by grocers and delicatessens in all sizes from You can safely and economically buy the 12 sizes, because ACK OF WASHING- IS GUARAN- TEED GOOD UNTIL USED. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co., Washington, D. C. W«&yfiu i i ettt i e