Evening Star Newspaper, December 22, 1930, Page 37

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WOMA N’S PAGE. Two-Piece Desk Blotter Sets BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. (LA S ) ?&hfi TS v T\é\*&%“?&( ‘Q Wi ) ) ‘14'« ) [ HOULY AND MISTLETOE LEAVES IN PATTERN 'SIZE ARE PICTURED, WITH ONE WAY OF USING THEM. A two-piece desk blotter set is a gift that can be made in a jiffy. Use the prickly pointed holly leaves shown in | the iilustration in pattern size for cui- | out leaves, or the smooth edge mistle- | toe leaves, With the former use round | circles cut with a punch from red paper, | for the latter small circles from white paper make correct colored berries. ‘Trace off the designs, and arrange | the leaves to form a spray (see illustra- tion) on the blotting paper, preferab:y | of neutral tone, for the mistletoe de- | sign, and red for the holly motifs. | Place a sheet of carbon paper under the tracing and run a rather blunt-) pointed pencil along all outlines. Re- | move the papers, and with a sharp pen- | knife cut along these outlines, and | take out the leaf portions. Put this | colored blotter over a green one to bring | out the leaf color. Dot the wee circles | with Iibrary paste and stick to the leaves as in the picture. | Blotters come in packages of assort- ed colors and cost but a trifle a pack- | age. The punches can be had from 10 | cents up. With the punch make two | holes through three or four blotters ar- | ranged one above the other, with the two on top that form the cutout deco- | ration just described. Run a ribbon through the holes and tie a smart bow. | A set of these blotters makes a wel- come present. Cut two sheets the size wanted for a | desk and cover one with cotton wad- ding and over it lay a piece of any pre. ferred silk or linen or cretonne cut a trifie larger than the cardboard. Turn the edges over onto the other side of the cardboard and glue down, being| sure that the textile is straight and | smooth on the right side. Take the | second piece of cardboard and across | each corner put a 1!, inch wide strip ‘the textile glued to stiff paper, Turn | the “part “extending id- the . "and glue ‘securely to the | ‘side of it. These strips form | ends under which to s.ip the ers of sheets of blotting paper. Glue | two sheets of cardboard together on the wrong side, and after the sheets of blatting r have been run under the eorner the desk blotter is fin- “make it match the other blotters the same cut-out decoration irf €orner and the same colored blot- ' THE STAR’S “DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Rlecks Vie With Checks. mb;h:h" crepy woorlen frotks fa vored e grown-ups for conservative day wear have now entered the jun\orl bodice with Som neck to hipline is extremely h@fi!‘.i‘-t Gl e 44 3: 4 a2 modish. The boyish collar and cuffs| are of pique. the bow tie, The circular skirt con- m(fl the !rlnllll mct‘\ ulmnmfi;tneu ts gracetully swa mline. 0. 884 is d(dz'nne% for the lit- tle miss of 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. The 8-year size requires two yards of 39- inch material with % yard of 39-inch contrasting. Brown covert cloth with yellow pique eollar and cuffs is smart. Red tweed mixture, bottle green wool Jersey and blue and white wool challis print fashionable combinations. We suggest that when you send for pattern you order a copy of our !?.‘-: Winter ~ Fashion Magazine. It should be in every home for, of course, every woman wants to lnm‘)ku;hfir best. great expense, a book. . It also contains ex- ting paper for the top and under sheets. A desk-blotting set of this kind is new and smart. Guest room match boxes are made by covering each box in a package of safety matches with fancy paper glued down over all parts except that on which the matches are struck. A set of jackets to protect fine book bindings 1s made from strong but not heavy paper with chintz or silk cover- ing one side. Paste textile and paper together close enough to' the edge so that when a narrow ribbon or sil¥ binding is stitched down binding all edges, these basting threads are con- cealed. Use any regulation size book jacket as a pattern. Three such jackets of the same or different textiles ure o unique Christmas gift for the person who has everything. If preferred, very handsome fancy paper, such s has been imported the past year or so, may take the place of the textile, and a pla‘n paper be glued over edges instead of the binding mentioned above. (Copyright. 1930.) Russian Dressing. One-half cupful stiff mayonnaise, two tablespoonfuls chopped ripe olives, two tablespoonfuls chopped dill pickles, two tablespoonfuls chili sauce, two table- spoonfuls catsup, one tablespoonful lemon juice and one-eighth teaspoonful salt. Mix ingredients and beat with a fork two minutes. Chill. Serve on head lettuce or vegetable salads. Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. ‘The best of all cleansers still consists of water and the amateur spot remover is often surprised to discover that noth- ing could be better than this simple liquid. Among spots for which water is the best of all removers are included sirup and sugar mixtures of all sorts, many sorts of ink, iodine, egg, milk, cream, tea, coffee and many sorts of fruit juice. Spots made from bluing may be re- moved simply by very hot water, choco- late and cocoa spots usually disappear if treated with cold water in which borax has been dissolved. Clear coffee or tea usually yields to boiling water. If the beverage contained cream the spots should first be treated with cold water and then with boiling water. Cream and milk should be treated with | cold—not hot—water, using soap with the cold water if necessary. Warm water and soap will remove iodine stains if used promptly. Otherwise am- monia should be used. Most medicines may be removed by means of alcohol, | which is useful for removing candlewax stains that remain after as much of the wax as possible has been scraped from the material. Kerosene is useful in removing vaseline, soot and smoke. Javelle water, which is useful in re- moving mildew, iron, scorch and per- spiration when it occurs on white wash materials may be bought ready pre- pared or may be made as follows: Dis solve one-quarter pound chioride of lime in one quart water and dissolve one-half pound washing soda in one- half quart boiling water. Pour the clear liquid from chloride of lime on the soda solution, let settle, strain and put in bottles, cork and keep until needed in a dark place. Moisten spot | with javelle water, expose to sun and then rinse with ammonia solution and finally clear water. (Copyright, 1930.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Apple Sauce Cereal with Cream Broiled Bacon Nut Muffins Coffee. LUNCHEON. Pish Chowder, Crackers Dill Pickles Preserved Pears Molasses Cookies Tea. DINNER. Tomato Soup Meat Cakes Scalloped Potatoes Green Beans Banana and Nut Salad Lemon Rice Pudding Coffee. APPLE SAUCE. Put one cup of sugar on to cook with one quart of water. Pare, core and cut into eighths or quarters enough apples to make one quart. Drop apples into the sirup, cover and cook rather gently until apples are tender and transparent, but not mushy. FISH CHOWDER. Put 2 slice of salt pork into a kettle and let fry. Put in & layer of potatces, cut into slices one- eighth of an inch thick, then a | layer of any nice white fish cut into small chunks and seasoned with two or three slices of onion, salt and pepper. Then another layer of potato, fish, etc., until pot is full. Fill level with water, and cook until potatoes are done. ave ready one quart of milk in ‘hich are soaked one dozen crackers. Turn this into chowder, | | let boil up and serve at once. LEMON RICE PUDDING. One cup rice, bolled soft. Put into baking dish and add the grated rind of one lemon, six tablespocns sugar, pinch of salt, yolks of two eggs (well beaten), one pint milk and one cup seed- less raisins. Bake until browned. Frost with the beaten whites of two eggs, one cup of confection- | tov cannot_interest a 2 or 3 year-old. THE EVENING STAR, WASHIN BEDTIME STORIES Your Baby and Mine I BY MYRTLE MEYSR ELDRED. Most of the things which mothers are told about colic should be thrown in the ash heap. The fear that acid foods will cause colic and that baby will have to suffer from colic for some set period, | such as six weeks or three months, in- | dicates a misunderstanding about food and about what is really wrong with the baby. One doctor was radical enough to say in_print that there is no such thing as colic; it is always hunger. In the many. many letters I receive asking me about colic a truly amazing proportion of the bables are very obviously underfed. Colic in the nursing baby is practically always hunger unless the mother is vio- lating every rule for nursing babies. Naturally we must make an exception of the mother who nurses every time the baby cries and whose baby is gain- ing enormously and suffering accord- ingly. Such a baby might have colic. Here is a brand-new mother worry- ing about these fusty ideas. “Please solve my problem,” she writes. ‘“Tell me what to eat to produce good milk. Tell me what foods give colic and which ones co not. I give my baby a complementary feeding at 6 o'clock in order to have enough milk for night.” All of these questions reveal errone- ous ideas. There are n> colic-making foods. many cases fruit acids are alkaline after digestion and are help- ful to the well balanced diet. Foods which cause the mother distress should, of course, be eliminated from her diet. The same goes for strong drugs. Other- wise a diet which any one would eat to keep in good health will result in & good milk supply, providing the mother knows some of the rules about the tech- nique of nursing. Our new leaflet on “Improvement of the Breast Supply” is a valuable leaf- let for any nursing mother to possess. A self-addressed. stamped envelope in- | closed with each request and sent to “Your Baby and Mine" department of this newspaper will bring it to any reader. To skip nursings and substitute a ‘bottle does not improve the breast sup- ply. Milk is not “saved” by such tac- ties—in fact, Nature refuses to send in as large a supply when she finds it is| not being used. Mothers may learn this one rule with advantage: “The! greater the demand the greater thei supply.” As baby grows and needs more nourishment the regular demand upon the breast creates a better supply. Substituting a bottle is the first step in :fle;mnx. no matter what the age of the V. When complementary feedings are used, nurse first, then give the bottle to make up any deficit. Our leaflet on complementary feedings may be ob- tained in the manner listed above. Meanwhile, stop thinking about colic. Stop interpreting baby's every cry as a cry of pain. Watch the baby's normal gain in weight and let this tell a more accurate story. NANCY PAGE Keep Toys Simple, Sturdy and Plain. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. “Believe it or not, Peter, but some of the toys which our young son re- | ceived a year ago last Christmas are | still in storage. I have tried to keep him limited to a few playthings at a | time, rather than loading him down | with so many toys that he never played for any length of time with any one of them. The psychologists tell us that concentration is & wonderful asset in child’s character equipment. So I havé tried to teach him to concentrate. “But most of the toys that are put | away are the kind that no 2-year-old | cares for—the mechanical toys that wind up and go for a time or two until the inquisitive fingers have pulled them apart. “There are the metal toys with sharp corners and the ones which are painted or enameled with so thin a coating that a knock takes part of it off. Those are too_dangerous for him, I know.” “Well, I was going to get him an electric train, but I suppose he is a bit young for it. Maybe I had better wait for another year.” Peter was right. A wooden train with little shape, but with sturdy construc- tion that allows it to be pulled and dragged suits a 2-year-old to a “T.” Little children adore Teddy bears— they are soft and cuddly. They like balls and simple building blocks. A 2- year-old will drag his own little chair or table about with him. If he gets blocks or books with pictures they have to be large and simple. Detail is be- yond the small child because he has not vet taught his muscles to concentratd on small things. The mechanics of a | even though a grown-up is fasc by it. Write to Nancy Pace, care of this paper, enclosing _a stamped,’ self-addressed k for her leafiet on Toys for (Copyright, 1930.) JOLLY POLLY ate A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J FRISCH. BEFORE | HAD PERFORMED MY ABLUTIONS, DAD SAID, “SANTA CLAUS OUGHT TO BRING YOU A DAINTY LITTLE BLOW-TORCH , TO BE USED IN REMOVING PAINT FROM YOUR S FACE” | coat, had told him that it was nothing | don’t want any favors. How about it Stumpy Changes Opinion. A sorry world 'twould be and strange Did formed opinions never cha; Old Mother Stumpy, the three-legged young Musk- rat, was just like most other people, | wishing that he had something he| hacn't got but some one else had. What | he wished he had was a white coat. Jumper the Hare, who did have a white but envy and that he was better off | without a white coat. You see Jumper, from the wisdom of experience, knew | that if a white coat was a good thing | for & young Muskrat or any other Musk- | 1at, Old Mother Nature would have | seen to it that it was supplied. But Stumpy couldn't see this and he sat on his favorite tussock by the open water of the Laughing Brook and | thought how fine it would be to be cressed all in white and be able to go | rbout on the snow and practically disap- | pear just by sitting perfectly stiil. | “It' would be fun,” said Stumpy. | “What would be fun?” inquired Jerry | Muskrat, who happened along just In | time to overhear that remark. | “Why it would be fun to have a white coat and just sit still when an enemy came along and thought you were a | lump of snow,” replied Stumpy. “I don't | see why Old Mother Nature rirn't give everybody white coats for Winter. “You'll find as you grow older that| there are many things Old Mother Na- | ture does or does not do the reason for which you cannot understand,” said Jerry. “But,” he added, “you may be sure of one thing. and this that she makes no mistakes. For whatever she does there is a reason.” “Just the same I think we would be tetter off if we had white coats like | Shadow the Weesel and Jumper the Hare,” grumbled Stumpy. “Where do we Muskrats spend most f our time, in the water or on land?" asked Jerry rather sharply. Stumpy hesitated for a minute. wanted to think that over. “Well,” said | he slowly. “I suppose we spend more time in the water than on land except- ing when we are in our houses. This | time of year we spend more time in the | house than anywhere else.” “And this time of year is the only time of year when a white coat would be of the least use to any one,” replied Jerry. “A white coat would be of no use in the house, and I for one don't ant one when I am swimming. When | the Black Shadows have come we can | swim about where they are without much danger of being seen, but how | He | The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD Who storted her career as a frightened typist and who bec highest paid business women in America. . o Begging for a Job. | It’s queer that people looking for jobs are always made to feel like beggars. | Queer that tney should feel ashamed | | when all they want is a chance to work. In my many years of working for a living I remember just one thing with anguished pain. and that is locking for a job. As I walked up to the outer desk B in the reception office I would feel as tall as a worm. And I could see # ! the strain on the LSl " face of every other i | girl looking for af@ 4 | job; the apologetic P4 | air, as though tok: 3 | say. “I have no right to work, and you are a great, kind person even to lock at a creature like me, but please, as | a favor, let me try to work hard for a little while.” Instead it ought to be like this: “Here I am, a good, healthy, competent girl. I'm willing to help you out if you'll give | me decent hours and deeent money. 1! Helen Woodward. That's the way it ought to be. But instead looking for work means going downtown day after day, when lunch is something to be carefully considered, because you cannot really afford it. It means letters sent out into the darkness in reply to want ads and worrying about | the cost of stamps. No wonder people stick to jobs they hate! When you go into an office to look | for a job all the girls look at you queerly, | some "as though to say: “You poor thing. It's too bad. Which dening. as you don’t want pity. some look at you superciliously, as though to say: “Who are you, anyway, | LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking and thinking, and I sed, Hay pop, do you bleeve its a good think to make New Year resolutions? Why yes, it strengthens the will power for a few days at leest, pop sed. Meening that was proberly lPl the longer they would last, and I sed, Well | us fellows made some today. We | made kind of easy ones so they wouldent bex!oo )l;‘lll;ld to keep, I sod. | ve herd of werse ideers, sed, | and I sed, Do you wunt me mP?:" you what some of them was? There are soms other things that I proberly wunt more, but go ahed, pop sed. Well, Reddy Merfy made a resolu-| tion not to sass anybody unless they | :’n d“ leest younger than 60 years old, | sed. Well, that wont keep him quite idle, anyway, pop sed, and I sed, And Sid Hunt made a resolution to stop being late for skool unless its some inavoid- able reason he cant help such as not waking entirely up before he goes back to sleep again, and Pugs Simkins made | one to stop eating between meels unless it happens to be something that wont keep very good such as candy or cake or froot. And do you wunt to hear | mine? I sed Well Ive gone this far, pop sed. | Meening he did, and I sed, I made a resolution that if I dident save at leest half or at least a quarter of my money | in 1931 Id make a resolution in 1932 to_axually do it. Be prepared to make i, P, Wich I am, having a whole prepare in, anyway: sed. year to Grapefruit Is Healthfruit Doctors say that ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT aids digestion and helps eliminate acids from the system Tree-Ripened and Delicious LOOK FOR THE NAME Wholesale Distributor: . Ch: Heitmuller Co. 923 B St. N.W. ‘Washington, D. C. | coat. If Old Mother Nature should come | side of the fence? | chance to apply for a | effort to shorten her wail By Thornton W. Burgess. would it be if we had white coats? Now: when we dive we at once go out of sight, but with white coats we could be seen under water easily. A white coat may he all right for Jumper and for Shldog the Weasel, but I coubt if even witl | them it is wholly a blessing." “What do you mean?” asked Stumpy. “You will find," replied Jerry, “thab there are times even in Winter when the | ground is bare. Sometimes the snow ls| “WHAT DO YOU MEAN?" ASKED STUMPY. long in coming. Jumper and Shadow get their white coats before the snow comes and then they are just as easily seen by their encmies as we are now th our brown coats, I don't want a white _coat. No, sir, I don’t want a white along and offer me one I would thank her and say that I am quite satisfied with what I have.” ! Stumpy thought this over for a while. The more he thought about it the clearer it was to him and that Jerry Muskrat was right. He looked at his own brown coat and the more he lookea at it the better pleased with it he was. He had thought a white coat very lovely, but so was a brown one. So gradually Stumpy changed his mind and the next time he saw Jumper the Hare there was no envy left. In fact, he was thankful he didn’t Lave a white coat. His brown coat seemed just suited to his needs, as in- deed it ‘was. So, without knowing it, Stumpy had gained wisdom, for it is the rt of wisdom to waste no time in wanting those things it was not in- tended you should have. (Copyright, 1930.) going around begging for a job? at me. I've got one. And employment agencies are often | almost unbearable, with cold, insolent ! treatment by hard, unfeeling people and | the dreary, sad atmosphere of long lines | | Look But let's be honest. How do you yourself act when ycu are on the other ‘When you see a girl | sitting outside the railing waiting for a job, are you Do you make an Do you ask her if she'd like a drink, or a mirror to powder her face? No; probably you alk by her, not unkindly, but with an air of conscious superiority just because youre working and she'’s not. You ought to be apologetic to her because | you have a chance and she hasn' If you were to meet a rich idle girl today dressed in a riding habit, with| no way to use up her energy except to | ride a horse, you'd be more polite to her than you would be to the girl look- ing for a job. D 5 to_either one, but you'd be especlally polite to the rich girl who doesn’t want to work and you'd be condescending to the girl who doe: Isn't that true? Girls having problems in connection with their work may write to Miss Wood- ward, in care of this paper, for her personal advice. actively kind to her? | him how ’0ur hero’s home for Christmas and the Imported Ingredients Make It Richer and Better i 4 f IDERS Costs a Trifle More—W orth Lots More TON, D. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1930. SUB ROSA BY VIRGINIA VANE. Dear Miss Vane: I should like to| know what is the correct thing to do| in this case. Some time ago I took a | girl friend of mine, Ethel, to see a cer- tain young lawyer, 'a very special friend | of mine. She wanted legal advice, which he gave her, and he also did a great deal of work for her, which would have cost her a lot of money had she gone to any one else. He was more than kind to her because of me, and in return for his kindness she did noth- ing but ridicule and criticize him. When the work was finished, I sup- posed that she would not go to him again, but I find that she has returned to him and intends to get more of his | services free. No, 1 do not think she wanis to vamp him, but she is cer- tainly treating him badly, and I want | to know whether to go to him and tell mean she is about him, so that he will do nothing more for her. How can I tell him this? READER. You can't. Perhaps this whole af- fair may teach you not to bring friends | together through business channels. It| is always fatal. No good ever comes of | introducing one best friend to another for the purpose of saving money for one of them at the expenss of the other In the end there is bound to be trouble, | because personal feelings are brought | into the business. | There is certainly nothing you can| do now. If you go to your lawyer friend | with tales of Ethel's ingratitude, you| will either hurt his feelings or give | him a violent attack of disgust with the whole feminine sex. He has probably been patient and long-suffering with | both of you. He probably knows per-| fectly well that he has been good-na- tured in the matter. If you now go to| him with this story. which displays the | petty side of woman to the greatest extent, he’ll be good and mad in a nice, honest, masculine fashion. and you'l rue the day you ever brought up the question. | The only thing you can do is to tell him that you refuse to accept any more responsibility for Ethel's actions; that you had understood that she went | to him originally for one plece of work, | and that now you wash your hands of the whole matter. Tell him that it will not hurt you if he refuses to go on being a sort of special free lawyer for | her benefit. But don't, for goodness sake, start to make an issue of the thing. | vealed tn a patch of moonlight. FEATURES Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women Lord Dufferin and the Ugly, Coffin-Carrying Apparition. BY J. P. GLA i AS IT PASSED UNDER LORD DUFFERIN'S WINDOW. THE LATTER SAW THAT THE SLOWLY TRUDGING FIGURE WAS CARRYING A COFFIN! One day when Victorien Sardou, the | Lord Dufferin found out that nothing eminent Prench dramatist, was walking | WAS Known of Lim. He was only ad extra helper, a vagrant who had been along the Rue de la Banque in Paris, a R volce inside him, he sald. cried, “Cross | yhebe ne came. Trmar nobody: could over!” He obeyed, going 1o the other | guess. side of the street. Just than a sione,| Lord Dufferin wondered why he had lcosened from & cornice, fell on the |besn so mysteriously saved from death, sidewalk. | or sericus injuty, in the elevator. ‘There are many accounts of experi- | (Cepyright. 1930.) ences like this. A very interesting one, differing, however, in that the pre- monitory warning came in a dream, " 2 3 and " advance: f tme moment of | | WE ARE TOO LARGE danger, concerned Lord Dufferin, for- | mer British Ambassador to France. | He had been visiting a friend in a | village in Ireland. One night he sud- denly awakened, and being unable to | get to sleep again, got up and went to the window. The moonlight was very | bright, but below him the buildl a heavy shadow. In this shai saw a figure moving. It was that of a man bearing a heavy burden. As the figure passed under Lord Duf- ferin's windcw the latter saw that the | slowly trudging figure was carrying a coffin! Just then the man lifted his head. For a moment his face Was re It was | the most repulsive face 1mlr(im‘lble—“ It's the era of machines. They are canning pork and beans, they are sew- ing gabardines, they are doing all our chores: pulleys turn in countless mills, shaping jcists and beams and sills, making poultices and pills, making handles for our doors. Smooth ma- chines are turning out endless quanti- tiss of kraut, and they will without & doubt multiply in years ahead: they are fashioning our pies, making swat- for the flies and supplanting many guys who would earn their daily bread. Now the happy days are gone when there was demand for brawn, since ma- chines are golling on, making all things we require; making hats and hunting | the face of & disgusting apparation. | horns, meking stoves for Winter morns, | questioned his host, who did not recog- | nize the perscn he had seen from the | | barnyard is agog. It's a most exciting moment in the life of Father Hog. “My boy.” he says, “I'm proud of you; I knew you'd reach the top.” “Oh, yes,” says Puff, “I went there, but I didn't have time to siop.” Prices realized on Swift & Company | o €. 20, sales of carcass beef in Washington. D. for “week ending Saturday. December 1930. on shipments sold out, ranged fr 10.00 cents to 22.00 cents per pound and eraged 16.48 cents per pound.—Advertise: m ou '\” - | was esccrted by his secretary to a large | | elevator, before which several state of- Lord Dufferin, greatly struck. went back to bed, where he again had diffi- culty in sleeping. In the morning he making salves to heal our corns, so they run and never tire. We have long been advertised as a people ample-sized; now the race should be revised with machinery in view, for thereis no longer need of a large and stalwart breed, iittle fellows gone to seed could do all there is to. do. Why should man be 6 feet tall? He would better far be small, 40 inches -over all would be plenty, I insist; in the stirring bygone yeers when we needed pioneers men might well be strong as steers, but that era's gone, I wist. If we were but 2 feet tall we could still accomplish all, our expenses would be small, we could save some money then: we could live on shreds of meat where we now are prone to eat full-grown cattle off their feet, being big and husky men. We could iive in doll house shacks and would pay a trifiing tax, and the rai- ment on our backs would involve & small expense; I can't see a reason why we should so much bulk supply, for in being 6 feet high there is not a lick of sense. WALT MASON. (Copyright. 1930.) window as any one he knew. Inquiries | developed that there was no one in the | village dead or dying. His lordshin con- | cluded he had either bsen dreaming or | had seen an apparition. Years passed. Dufferin was ap- pointed Ambassador to France. In Paris he went one diy to a diplomatic reception held in the Grand Hotel. He ficials stood in line. They bowed re- | spectfully, and Lord Dufferin, passing between them, bowed in return. Lifting his head, he was about to step into the elevator when he stopped, with a start. The operator was the exact reproduc- tion of the coffin-bearing apparition he had seen years before in the Irish vil- lage. The Ambassador stepped back. Mur- muring that he had forgotten some- thing, he requested that trose already in the elevator should be taken upst;‘m - without him. He went to the office, 11 obtained the manager, and started to Cranberry Filling. ask him about the identity of the ele- | Three cupfuls berries, one cupful vator operator. But before he could get | water. ane cupful sugar, two tablespoon- the wcrds from his mouth a terrible | fuls flour and two tablespoonfuls butter. crash was heard, accompanied by cries | Mix the berries and water. Cook five d moans of anguish. After going up | minutes in covered pan. Blend the flour, sugar and butter. Add to berry mixture. Cook 2 minutes. Cool. Pour into unbaked tart shells, cover with criss-cross strips of unbaked pastry and bake 15 minutes in moderate oven. to the bottom of the shaft, crushing or mutilating every onie in it. Among those killed was the operator. b\ X at the flavor of this pineapple meringue Umm...m turn! Yes, indeed, it’s Pineapple that’s used in this marvelous meringue! (Of course, you may want to use those beautifully, evenly cut DOLE 1 Slices— but since the pine- apple is baked anyway, you can see for yourself that DOLE ~—and more economical.) My, it’s a joy to be able to buy just the grade of pineapple you want, these days, whether it’s Sliced, or Crushed, or .m! Hc‘-vcnly flavor of baked pineapple, golden brown to a Tidbits—just the grade best suited to your recipe! My, it’s convenient that James D. Dole grade-marks pineapple by stamping the name DOLE and beneath that name the number 1, or 2, or 3 right in the top of the can! He grades the pineapple as nature gives it and marks those grades for you. It's great help in buying! It’s a real help in preparing menus. HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE COMPANY Sales Office 215 Market St., Sen Franciseo DOLE 2 Sliced 2 is satisfactory Honolulu, BAWAIL COMPLETE GRADE-MARK STORY = and 39 recipes in our booklet *:The Kinge dom That Grew out of @ Little Boy's Gar. den™. For your free copy, mail coupon. HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE COMPANY, Dept. N-19 215 Market Street, San Franeisco, Calif. Name... AQdress...ooesesnasessensssiunsaseraessasusersense

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