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of 1930 has her Jonger skirts and fons ‘generally, the bride own way. a much easier bridal costume more feminine fash-| has things all vells we have seen this season is shown y's sketch. It was made of white extending from the shoulders in a , sweeping train, with a cape shaped drapery of net edged with white | My Neighbor Says: en mak tomato salad bl 0:"(‘0!!“(00‘ with the back “GOOD fo the skins of a silver knife instead of | and for ce so_badl, One of the most attractive bridal| P WALY lace. The head drapery may consist| ; of a cap-like extension of the net trim- , |med with the same s.rt of lace. A cape and cap of this sort would SEddSh ot B ne raped over thl:e not-efre to pay for an entire veil, can very avell follow this plan, using real lace for the covering when the ceremcny takes place in church, and this season small caps of velvet are frequently used instead of hats. These caps have a medieval-as- pect, but are in truth very much like rather full berets made from transpar- ent or chiffon velvet. (Copyright, 1930.) I TOO LAZY TO FIGHT l I never was too proud to fight, but I have hlways been too lazy; to scrap | pou aroundy with main and might, to me seems rather crazy. I know & man who | loves to scrap, no armored knight was ever bolder; a challenge broods upon his map, he has & chip upon his shoulder. He says to me, “Come out of doors, there is a matter we must settle, and I will cover you with sores, and find if you have any mettle.” Per- haps I show a craven heart when I use to seek the alley and have rend my bones apart, while dead game sports are keeping tally. But I refuse t> do hard work unless I'm drawing seemly wages, and I confess I am a shirk at taking up men’s battle gages. Abundant energy’s required to punch the head of some strong neighbor, and when I'm winded, when I'm tired, what is the guerdon for my 1abor? Who pays ms for the honest sweat that I have shed while swatting noses? Will whip- | Fm‘ some one pay a debt, or make my ot &' bed of roses? Professionals.may draw their pay for slugging other moron thinkers; there's nothing for the private jay except loose teeth and blackened blinkers. Men living in my neighborhood will gladly pay me use- ful money to saw their piles of four- foot wood, to herd their bees and gather honey. They'll pay me promptly, pay me well, when I am toil- ing sanely, meekly, and in the local B. & L. 1 can deposit rubles weekly. But who would pay me for the scrap to which I sometimes am invited? ‘Who'd pay me for my dai " map, blighted? MASON. (Copyright, 1930.) o Delicious Orange Cake. Rub thoroughly to a cream two cup- fuls of sugar and two-thirds cupful of butter. Add three mmun sepa- rately. Squeeze the j of two large orang:s into a cup, adding water to fill the cup. Stir this into the mixture to- gether with three and one-half cupfuls of fidur, two even teaspoonfuls of cream of ‘tartar, one teaspoonful of -baking soda and a little grated orange rind. Bake in layer tins. For th: filling, grate a little ounfi. rind into one egg, add the juice of half an orang and sugar enough to thicken. Buckwheat Cakes. Scald half a cupful of cornmeal with two cup’uls of bofling water, add half & teasp” onful of salt, beat well, and when ¢ 4 add half a cupful of flour and or: cupful of buckwheat and half a dissolved From the place of its origin in the Old South it grew and érew in favor until it embraced every neighborhood in the nation. lt_is only natural that such success should attract imitators. All too frequently, however, the chief hope of such imitators is the dubious magic of the outworn claim “just as good.” To achieve a coffee good as Maxwell House would be no simple matter. For despite the modern science that surrounds its production . this coffee fundamentally is still that matchless beversge of him | juice, strain it and add as much water juices are mentioned as the three de- sirable fruit juices for baby’s diet, the mother naturally assumes that Juice is a substitute for % is not true. (omato juice are cause are ri | make up diet, so for the young baby we must put our emphasis upon orange juice or juice. In cooking or canning juice does not appreciably lose its vitamin C content. . M.s letter is along these . “My baby is almost 5 months old and his first tooth has ap- peared,” she writes. “He had no trouble at ul'lu and is a big baby, weighing 20 nds. “I have started him with orange Juice and tomato juice, but he seems to dislike them bol He likes cereal. Can 1 give him anything In place of those two? = How about prune juice?” Perhaps you have le an unwise choice of oranges, or have used them without water dilution and baby hasn't enjoyed the new, sharp taste. Use naturally sweet oranges, squeezs the as there is juice. Start with one tea- spoon of orangs juice and increase up to one ounce, giving an equal amount of water,” Give by spoon and if baby still spits it out, put it right with the bottle formula. Tomato juice may be started “with one tablespoon of the strained juice of canned or ripe to- matoes. Increase to one ounce or more daily. This may also be added to the bottle formula if necessary. To ac- custom baby to various tastes it is b: ter to offer these juices alone. They are too ?Wfl‘nt to be discontinued because ‘of baby's dislike, so if he doesn’t them readily, they should be_included in the formula. ‘Your other requirements right now are cod Jiver ol and the cereal, which you said baby enjoyed. Plain or flavor- ed cod liver oil is started in five-dro) doses and increased up to two spoonfuls & day. This last amount ing too large an amount for one dose, is divided into three doses. The con- centrated ofls must be advise® and 50 PowesTul to be handied by amateurs, AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. Love may be blind the first time, but & widower usually sees well enough to pick one that won't spend half her time in the hospital. HE first coffee to achieve a genuine national popularity WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY OF THE MOMENT dress of starched. Aiffor cut wdh cverlapping godels front and back., Draped bodice and. cafs collar: BEAUTY CHATS ‘There are various forms of hair and scalp tonics—TI'il just mention a few of the simpler ones first. The egg sham- poo, which is & tonic—an e a little, rubbed over scalj 1o dry, and rinsed off before a shampoo. By taking ‘up everything on the scalp that does not belong there, and be- cause of the sulphur in the egg yolk, this is a wonderful tonic. Another tonic shampoo for very bad cases of dandruff is—two large spoon- fuls of olive ofl and one of mange cure— you'll have to heat them gently to make them blend. Rub a little along pa: of the hair, using a rubber finger on your hand to keep your nail clean. Let it stay on & few hours, one hour at least, and then shampoo. You'll need a tincture of green soap shampoo, or some specially prepared liquid shampoo- et it all o!?.rlnd it will need &::e to lpp‘luunm of soap at least, perha) four. This is an excellent, antiseptic, weekly shampoo, and will cure dandruff. Sulphur is also wonderful for dan- druff and bad condit! ly the earlier stages of ness—it will even stop the spreading of baldness once it has begun. Ade enough olive oil to & spoonful of pow- dered sulphur to make a smooth and not too thick paste, and on the scalp, wash it off as eight hours. It is easier to get off if more olive oil rubbed on again, and if an egg is then allowed to dry on the scalp, to take up the sulphur. I have a favorite hair tonic, given in the “Beauty” pamphlet, which lots of my readers send for and keep as s brief reference book for beautifying themselves. There are plenty of tonics in America was Maxwell House. d | Pepper ai BY EDNA KENT FORBES on the market, but these must be good for so many conflicting cont 3 none of them must ever make the hair greasy, so that it is a chance whether they are good for you or net. I know what is in my tonic, herice I know its many virtues. . H. J. C- you can, have a good scalp specialist diagnose the con- dition. Premature grayness may come from any cause that affects the nervous g‘:km. and a diseased sealp will affect coloring. On receipt of ped. self-addressed e , I shall be glad to send you an excellent tonic formula. It is very helpful in many scalp troubles, and it has a v upon the action of the color cells. et PR B Fruit and Cheese Salad. Cut & pineapple into strips and the strips log fashion :’u: I'Almm: raisins in between. Top with cream che':le ;r‘l,d nl;l: balls n;!n:'nwnled wlI:lh nuts. For a dressing, two eggs, adding half & cupful f water, half a teas) ful of galt, a little white one-{o1 cupful of vine- . Stir over the fire in a double boiler until it thickens without curdling. Add enough top milk to make the dress- ing of a creamy consistency. i i S Okra With Cheese. Boil the okra in salted water until tender. Drain, remove the stems, then arrange in a serving dish, season- ing each layer with black pepper, bits of butter and grated cheese. very hot. stimulat effect | now many more fun if they blow out smoke, coulduen ,gryo:u it ""’:.’:';T objecks hfllfl*l. ¢l Ineys woul proberly have the t time, i o PASRRRLED 'S Cranberry Salad. Cook one quart of cranberries with two cupfuls of boiling water for 20 minutes, then run the berries through a sieve, Stir in two cupfuls of, sugar and ook for 5 minutes. Add twd and one- ‘balt tablespoonfuls of gelatin dissolved in a little cold water and then add one cupful of diced celery and one-third cupful of chopped walnuts. Mold in individual salad molds. Serve on crisp lettuce with mayonnaise or boiled dress- ing with small mock crabapples made of pimento cheese, in one end of which :‘x‘:l g‘t‘;: Pu:h: cme for the blossom e other end a of for the stem. . b JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. AFTER | HAD DRANW 1S SELLING BOOKS, BATHING SUITS, AND TIRES. e tain stone, where he to church. Many parishioners this as rather shocking, but no one dared to ramonstrate with so dis- tinguished a man as Linnaeus. The church was some distance from the botanist’s house. On the way he used to stop and rest aw] on a cer- 1d light his pipe and have a quiet- smoke and enjoy the beauties of nature, before going on to divine service. Pompey, in the mean- time, reciined quietly at his feet. Presently Linnaeus would knock the ashes from his pipe and hide it under & bush, to be reclaimed on the way home. Then man and dog would set off again to the church, where they would occupy the same bench until the sermon was over. One thing Linnaeus could not bear— a long sermon. If the pastor talked beyond an hour he got up, and, with Pompey following, departed. It is interesting to know that Pompey recognized the arrival of Sunday. If, for any reason, Linnaeus was detained t home.xha would go to church by rest awhile. Arriving at the church, he would to the usual bench and listen qumgl to the sermon But, like Linnaeus, he could not endure too long a dissertation. After a proper allowance of time, if the benediction was not pronounced, he went home. ‘The pastor could endure his unique ner as long as he accompanied . But it piqued him to have walk out before his sermon was a El §§§ 25 35 i g »3 i L . oo are long when even s dumb animal goes: out be- fore they are finished.” nguding the news about_Plough's Three Face ders! FOR OILY SKIN~—CuHoOS® PLOUGH'S “INCENSE OF FLOWERS™ FACE POWDER, MEAVY TEXTUNE IN THE OVAL BOX—78C. FOR DRY SKIN—CH " ueH's *FAVORITE BOUQUET™ FOR NORMAL SKIN—CHOOSE PLOUGH'S *“EXQUISITE" FACE POW. DER, MEDIUM TEXTURE IN THE ROUND 3FACE POWDERS ~ CREATED BY TASTE DENIE YOUR HEARING mercial destiny. gentleman for his own private use with no thought of com- Into his experiments went the most precious coffee beans ob- tainable and out of them came the most fragrant mellow- smooth quintessence of delight that has ever reposed in a cup. This tiste-quality of Maxwell House is not arguable —it is something which must be experienced. It is at once 4tl'1e denial and the despair of any other coffee claimed to be “just as good.” That is why, year after year, Maxwell Honn has goile steadily forward winning new friends and holding old ones. LAST DROP” * the golden age of American dining. In essence it is the very same coffee created by a Tennessee That is why the friendly blue tin now waiting at your grocer’s is today the best coffee-bargain that money can buy. Maxwell House Coffee has been re- duced 11¢ @ pound to the wholesale trade since July 1, 1929. This re- duction parallels the reduction of green coffee, and you may now enjoy Masxwell House Coffee at the lowest " prices in years