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WOMAN'’S PAGE, Cards, Gifts and Letters BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. It is during the Christmas holidays the threads of friendship are ithered together through the inter- change of cards, rg;fla and mis- - sives written on cards accompanying u.mvnlul one holds fltnh'fi mltmh ey ually grow wi time until 'y become wlsrs too slender in coming years to cling to- gether. They have to be reinforced e 1~Z23~3L WRITE A LETTER TO TEE DISTANT FRIEND OCCASIONALLY. with occasional letters, calls, or invi- tations to tea or some not too formal Testivity. The time is ripe now to ltrengthelx;; such ties as one wishes to keep. it is through contacts that friendships are to ripen, now is a favorable time as it is midst of the soclal season. No extravagance need be incurred if the purse is slack. It is over the teacups that hearts PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Remedies for Cold Feet. December a New Jersey this timely and home- while I haven't tried , I mean to when I get enough, and meanwhile I heartily it to all our readers who to make any commotion at than he makes accidentally to bed in the dark, y |nights should make it an invariable ug lnhy;here 1@ hole sn too, for stiff !ouglx. climb inty ice-cold feel like an icicle and and shiver and stay to straighten out with my old is the warmest spot I to-me is that Simple Embroidery Stitch BY MARY One of the simplest of all embroidery stitches consists of the so-called blanket stitech which is nothing more nor less than a deep buttonhole stitch done warms to hearts, and tea is a simple dish to serve. No is nicer to serve with it than hot buttered toast with a few small homemade cakes or rich cookies. Or if one has cinnamort toast it is enough in itself with the tea. Such simple refreshments are easy to prepare also. So cost and trouble need not hinder any one from the £leuures of entertaining one’s friends. It is more often, however, that the distant threads of friendship are lost {rather than those close at hand. It | takes an interchange of letters between | Christmas seasons to make the strands |of affection bind closer. A 2-cent | stamp, a sheet of letter paper and an | envelope, plus a few moments to pen a | little note are all that is required to | strengthen these friendships. See that your desk is supplied with stationery in note and letter size and that there are correspondence cards. Have a bottle of ink and pens handy and a penholder that suits your hand, that balances the way you like it to do. Or, better still, have your own fountain pen, but do not forget the ink bottle. The pen needs refilling often when y: are a good correspondent. And don't forget the stamp box and its ready sup- ply of 2-cent stamps. When you are tired from being on your feet, rest them, if bug for 5 or 10 minutes, while you pen the missive which will bind friendship closer. Then don't forget to mail it. Send it off just | as quickly as you have the opportunity. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Post-War Revivals. History teaches that every war of any | importance is followed by some sort of revival. We are just now in the throes of a post-war revival. We have gone through a war that left tremendous im- pressions on the minds of the American people. One phase of the present post-war revival may be studied psychologically. | We are going through a revival of learn- ing. It seems that everywhere pecple |are clemoring for knowledge. They | want to know more about the world in which they find themselves. They even go in with enthusiasm for the abstrac- tions of Einstein's theory of relativity. That's one thing that puzzles even Einstein. The late war succeeded in upsetting about every settled conviction we had about humanity in general and its place in the scheme of things generally. And we are doing what pussied men have always done. We are turning to the stars to find out what they can tell us sbout this cld world. Astromomy is to- day a popular science. Another popular interest has to do | with what-might be called the material of life. Men want to know what they |{are made of.. Hence a new interest in | the life solences, such as biology, chem- istry, psychology. All in all, the present revival is a Trenaissance in. popular information as z(})flthe where, what and how of living Ings. BRADY, M. D. the gallon jug at one's feet would solve that other grave problem, how to keep the weight of the clothes off your toes. Even when you can man- age to get your feet warm by other expedients—which we will elucidate presently—there is always the baffling problem of keeping the blankets tight- ly tucked in around your neck or. ears without pulling them up from their anchorage at the foot of the bed or dragging down tautly upon your toes. Youngish and middle-aged le who suffer with cold feet oflenpe;%d an jodin ration brings about great im- provement—not quite so promptly as the gallon glass water bottle, perhaps, but, say, after the first month'’s ratio ‘Write in, everybody who fits the sym toms, and we'll send you the particu- lars and directions for tal your lodin ration—if you spare us clippings, ask for what you want and inclose a finmped envelope bearing your ad- ess. Mature persons who enumerate cold feet among the divers little factors that prevent them from getting asleep rule never, never to go -to bed nights without inflating their bellows. Six, 8 or 10 slow, even diaphragmuls of air, when you first ease yourself under the cov- | ers, all done as though you had no, chest at all, will reduce the high blood pressure, equalize the circulation and warm the feet and distinctly favor re- laxation and sleep. When doing this lie on your back with knees flexed and one or both palms rTesting on your stomach; pretend your upper chest is pm&zed; all breathing through open mouth; strive for slow, even rise and fall of body, without L or too much effort. The only effort is in the inflation of the bellows; deflation oc- curs purely from elasticity and calls for no muscular effort at all. (Copyright, 1931.) MARSHALL. |a finish for the hem on fine linen or | silk lingerie or blouses, It is easier for the beginner than a rolled hem and just as effective. Merely fold the edge of the material in & very narrow hem and baste. Then fill the needle with fine embroidery thriad and take your blanket stitches so that each one lfm over the entire hem, giving a neat little row of stitches running across the na: row hem. One-two-three stitch is merely a vari- ation of blanket stitch and we est. using it to give an easy, effective finish for a dress of jersey or fine wool, Us: & fine quality of worsted threaded in a coarse darning needle. There are sev- eral variations on the usual one-two- three stitch. The first one shown here consists of three fairly long stitches of even length, followed by three shorter stitches, three longer stitches and 80 on to the end. The second variation consists of a short stitch, a medium- sized stitch, one a little longer and one quite long, followed by a descending arrangement of the stitch ‘The third variation consists of four stitches of graded lengths done so that you with the longm. and end ‘with the shortest and then begin again with the longest. A fourth possible arrangement consists of a long stitch followed by two shorts, then a long, followed by two shorts and so on to the end. (Copyright. 1931.) My Neighbor Says: ‘When cooking as) do not. cover the utensil in which it is cooked. Cooked in this way the natural color of the asparagus is preserved. ¢ mirrors in & mflm where the sun will not s on . Heat causes the quicksilver mmmkoum‘n«mcm- ‘When grease spilled w matung cover the spot ‘:1% few drops of ben: mmg s tew o - zine. When this has evaporated brush off the chalk and spot, have disappeared. Do not a light into the room until has thoroughly evapo- the rated. When your shredded coconut dry and hard, put it in & small ve and steam for a while, then (Copyright, 1931.) THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, |DorothyDix| SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY ¥, CORY. I got some sympkins ob sore throat, but Muvver didn’t fink it was bad enough to stay out ob school about. (Copyright, 1831.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Ma Fas been looking for her diamond ring again for ab-ut 4 days, not wunt- ing pop to find it out on account of him always teezing her about not knowing where she puts it, and when she came home this afternoon I sed, (iood news, ma, I found your diamond ring. O thank gocdness, I thawt it was reely gone this time and Im sure your father has just been on the brink of noticing its absents, ma sed. Where on erth was it? she sed. Ive looked myself deff dum and speetchless and I couldent find it, she sed. It was in that kind of high pink looking thing on the dining room mantel peece, I sed. Of corse, the flower vase, ma sed. I put it in there so carefully that Im sure I mever would of remembered it again, she sed. Where is it? she sed. Heer it is, I sed taking it out of my pants pockit, and ma put it on her finger quick, saying, What a relief, Ill haff to give you a nice little reward. I dont want any reward, I sed, and ma sed, Can I bleeve my ears? You must be changing your intire caracter, she sed, and I sed, I was just thinking it was darn lucky that pink thing got broke. Got what? ma sed, and I sed, It was reely Nora's fault. I got mad at her and threw a folded up napkin at her and she dodged like a cowerd and it hit the pink thing, and even then it mite not of brcke if it hadent of rolled and fell off, and it mite not of broke even then if it hadent of hit the back of a chair on the way down, and if I hadent of picked the peeces up so careful I mite never of saw your diamond ring and it mite of got swept up and thrown cut forever, I sed. My good flower vase that everybody admired so much, I dont know what I awt to do to you for that, ma sed. ‘Why don't you tell pop? I sed. Being a good anser under the eir- cumstances, and I herd the fellows yelling and argewing outside and I went out feeling lucky. Baked Fudge. Place two squares of bitter baking chocolate and 1f a cupful of butter in an aluminum bowl, place the bowl in hot water and when melted add one cnl:fm“ of sugar, one-fourth teaspoon- of salt, one teaspoonful of vanilla and two beaten eggs. Beat well, then add one cupful of nut meats cut rather fine and mixed with half a cupful of pastry flour and half a teaspoonful of baking powder. Spread one-fourth inch thick or less on a well greased paper lining or a baking sheet. Bake in & moderate oven until a toothpick comes clean from it, or for about 15 minutes. This should be very rich and tender, with no crust at all. Before removl':s from the oven sprinkle with gral sweet chocolate, and just as soon as melted take out, let cool long enough to set the chocolate, then turn out onto @ wire cooler. Cut with a sharp knife into inch squares. Raisin-Prune Conserve. Soak one pound of prunes overnight in enough water to cover. Add one cupful of sugar in the morning, also one package of seeded, not seedless raisins, and several slices of lemon. Simmer until the mixture is of the consisten of marmalade. Stir fre- quently. move from the fire, mash out the prune seeds and pour the eon- serve in jars. This keeps well in the refrigerator and is a good homemade jam for those who do mot have much fruit for erving. If mixed with peanut butter and thinned with a little cream, it makes a very tasty and nour- ishing sandwich for the school lunch box. JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. THE BOOTBLACK THAT SHINED MY SHOES SAID MANY A PERSON WILL BE GLAD TO BE ABLE TO PAY M. D. T—Some authorities do not recognize “shine” in such constructions as “He shined my shoes,” “Shine the silverware,” etc. Others sanction its use. Purists prefer “polish” in such constructions as “He polished my shoes,” “Polish the silverware,” etc. The term 'shoeshine” is in almost universal use. A FAVORITE EVERYWHERE Plough’s “Favorite Bouguet” Face Powd«;; :1 50 ?}ft :sd lmofithan appealingly umed, so clinging and bnutifgil:g and so economically priced that it has become a favorite th smart women everywhere, Try it today! Five tints: White, flesh, pink, brunette, sun-tan. Be sure to ask for Plough’s “Favorite Bouquet” in the square shape red box, the j? selling face powder in the world for » 2 “FAVORITE BOUQUET” FACE POWDER 292 a_hea e e L-" e ao.m‘m 02 rea vl o Thln ™" Does Charity Mean Giving Money? Urges Sharing of Spirit ‘WOMAN whose very presence is & benediction in itself said to me the other day tha presents this year. t it had grieved her so much not to be able to give any Christmas “Why,” I exclaimed, “every day is Christmas day with you and wherever you g0 you bestow presents that are far more ‘g:-dnux can buy. You give yourself to people, and 9" your love to them and that warms them more than lve your breast for those in trouble to weep on and better than giving them a dozen hand-embroidered handkerchiefs.” tiara would be. You of coal would. » ton ‘ou that is thing that money t is a greater gift than a diamond And then I thought how strange it is that we think of giving only in terms of money and mat eeds of those in need of food and warmth and shelter, generous we refer merely to one who has an open pocketbook and nd individual as not an open terial things, just as we think of charity only as supplying the hen we speak of an One of the greatest philanthropists I have ever known Was & woman so poor that onllvmby the most rigid economy was she able to eke out an existence on her infinites! ness and cheer to every one with whom she came in contact. go from her without carrying nmh!‘ u: merry thought or something ti one brightened and lightened his or hei al income. She had never a cent to give any one, but she gave happi- 8he never let any Sometimes it was a funny little story she told to a grouch. Sometimes a compliment she to a discou man or woman. mother or a new baby or about how some on at school. ssed on. Sometimes & word of Sometimes jusf talen reciation for work well done an inquiry about a sick old ted son or daughter was getting Just a little gift of kindliness, of friendliness, of human kinship, but it brightened a day just as much as a little ray of sunshine and was just as much charity as dropping a dime in a beggar's cup. All about us there are ple starving for companionship, but we don’ think of trying to relieve l.lumml’y by going to see them. Yet if we heard that they were starving for food we couldn’t get to them quickly enough with our basket of provisions. old people who have grown a ‘There are invalids shut in the four walls of their rooms with nothing but their own dull and demn!mt.hw little senile and tiresome whom nobody goes to visit ts for company: there are any more; there are young brides who have been suddenly transplanted from a home circle and a place in which they knew every one to & strange city in which they know no one and who have no one even to speak to but the clerk in the cor- ner grocery. ‘These people are hungering and thirsting for talk just as much as they would be for bread and water in a desert, and it is just as much charity to give them a lttle neighborliness as it would be to suecor them if they were in phys- DOROTHY DIX. ical instead of social distress. (Copyright. 1031 MODES OF THE MOMENT A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. ’I’HIRI are ways and ways of get- ting & political start, it seems. In the cloak room of the House of Representatives the other day a group of Representatives was discussing this subject. Talk shifted to thelr first campaigns for Col ss and the methods they em- ployed. One of the most amusing stories was by & member from the - was & bat- tered car. nl‘ynxpé“duthlt old bus up so that whenever I desired I could make it wheeze and stop completely dead. “There was never anything seriously wrong with the car. A child could have nxedl "in My %ry was that meoti ple_know 'a little something abou! 2;0 automobile; that most of those I would run into would know enough to fix mine. “80, in running sround over the dis- trict to get votes, I made it a practice to put on my automobile gasping act at the most strategic points. Then I would appeal for aid and always got it. The voters were eager to display their knowl- edge of mechanics. “After the car was fixed I would congratulate the voter or voters on & knowledge of mechanics, casually men- tion that I was running for Congress, and pass on. 5 - - “Of course, I may be wrong in saying that this was one of my effective campaign tricks. But I can’t quite ATWOOD GRAPEFRUII explain the fact that I rode into Con- gress in a battered car, while my oppo- nent, who drove a_high-powered auto- mobile which never had a blemish on :t. ‘;u left far behind—unless it was my rick.” One of the favorite stories of Everett f Sanders, former secretary to President Coolidge, concerns the time he visited Hait! while he was a Representative from Indiana. In & remote village of Haiti he met a coal-black woman with whom he tried to converse in sign language. After he throug had gon th various contortions and was about 'g give ll:l.: sald: up, mister?’ ‘For heaven sakes,” Sanders shouted, w do you come “‘Mister, I'm from speak English?” Philadelphia,” she replied to Senders. “I drifted down here and havz never been able to raise enough money to get back home. “You're a Coi an. Please, sir, can't you lroad and boat fares lowered a little? “’'Cause I am sure anxious to get back on Broad street again.” need to drug your- self with laxatives when consti- pation can be overcome by eating a delicious . Mr. F. E’Amlnun, Kennyhole, ‘Washington, writes: ‘.'1 suffered with dl:-k nda': use ek, but, since 1 got v uflh-omn. 1 was so (N by e Bas works, o satarally asd e Just eat two tablespoonfuls of ogg’s ALL-BRAN daily. is guaranteed. It is the natural, safe way. Delicious with milk or cream, fruits or added. s for the furnishes .ltn the nd-lmt ‘o Badls Creck: 9 ALL-BRAN FRIDAY. JANUARY 23, 1931. WHO REMEMBERS ? BY DICK MANSFIELD, Rexistered U. 8. Patent Office. o HEoWark 8K Yo \RELAND 1%/ 2E Was When Dan O'Leary, long-distance walker, strutted his stuff at Kenilworth Summer Garden? Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Despite page-long rehearsals of her baby’s various ailments, a mother’s un- varying comment at the end of her letter is. fellow.” One wonders what health means to most moth Does it mean just plumpness? Health is first of all an absence of disease, but it is more than that. A healthyy baby is one who is making con- stant weekly or monthly gains in weight, increases in height, and appre- ciable changes in development. There is no standing still for the healthy child, there is a noticeable forward movement. ‘The healthy baby shows his appre- ciation for living in a hundred ways. His legs and arms go like windmills, his eyes are everywhere, Joyous wrig: glings and cooings, his instant response to whatever comes within his line of vision indicate that he is alert to every kind of bodily sensation. He has bright ey:s that sparkle and shi He has an unblemished skin, with or without color in the cheeks, but the satin, smooth skin that adver- tises babyhood and abounding health His hair will be lustrous and strong, whatever its coloring. Lifelss, strawy hair goes hand in hand with a lifeless, muddy skin and lackluster eyes. The healthy baby will have strong muscles that help him to hold up his head at an early age and in du: time sit with his back like a little ramrod, disdainful of artificial supports. ‘Teeth will appear at the proper time and afterward at regular intervals. The baby will struggle to sit up, work valiantly to pull himself to his feet well within the limits set for such activities. ‘The healthy baby will have a ippetite (unless persistently overfed) and will find food interesting, even ex- citing. There will be a desire to sleep and, after the sixth month the healthy baby will probably sleep from 6 to 6 without waking, or at least frém 10 to 6. He will do this only if he has been let alone at night and his good sleeping habits encouraged. Health, one can see, is far mor= than just fat. Health is a constant change and an uninterrupted joy in living and all the activities which constitute it. ‘The blessing of good health can only be confsrred by two healthy parents. With such a heritage it remains only for the parents to take their job of rearing a healthy baby as seriously as such a precious responsibility demands. Health isn’t to be had for the asking, or the wishing. It means attention the thousand and one details of proper feeding, regular hours, consistent air- 1 ,‘?lllly ba:.hlfl(. d.nd {.hen, h:ld together and make baby’s day something besides just a machinelike routine, lots of love and patience and understanding to bind baby’s physical and mental health into the perfect whole of real happiness in being alive, Comae Oyster Loaf. From a square loaf of baker’s bread cut off the top crust carefully in one ]rloce and take out all the inside of the oaf close to the crust. Have ready a quart of oysters, scalded sufficiently to lump them, and put them in the loaf just as you would prepare scalloped oysters, using cracker erumbs and oysters alternately together, with but- ter, pepper, salt and hot milk mixed with the liquor drained from the oysters before scalding. Bake for half an hour in & medium oven. Leave off the top crust until the last 10 minutes. Serve very hot. Veal Pork Rolls. Chop about one pound of cooked veal and half a pound of cooked fresh pork. Mix well together, adding half a cupful of cracker crumbs, and salt, pepper and sage to taste. Add two_tablespoonfuls of milk in which two tablespoonfuls of butter have been melted, and moisten the whole with one weil beaten egg. Form into rolls, dip them in beaten egg and roll in cracker crumbs and fry & delicate brown. Soap Purity and Lather—an aid to BEAUTY A smooth, satiny skin is a skin that is CLEANSED regularly. Soap should first of all be PURE, but to really count for cleansing, it must make a thick, generous, pore- searching LATHER. ‘That's the kind of lather that Sweetheart makes in hot or cold ‘water, hard or soft—a lather that dissolves, loosens up and clears away the grime and pore-debris im- bedded in the fine grain of the skin. Sweetheart isnothing but PURE soap, made to rigid standards from fine materials—no coloring matter, ‘That's why you get high quality at so low a price. A pleasing, hand-fitting oval cake. Delicately scented. Does float because it is a lot of soap Just try Sweetheart! At your grocer or the better druggists. “But he is a healthy little | FEATURES. The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD Who storted her career as a frightened typist and who became one of the highest paid business ‘What Do You Do Best? Most girls think that if they had a chance they could do better at some other job. And most girls are right. | 1f a girl is doing the work she is fitted | for she will do it well and she will like it. | It's a false notion that most people are so lasy that if 'y had a chance § they would never do any work at all. |§ If that were true no one would do that hard work of playing tennis. And no one would drive a car eight hours a day on what is & called a pleasure tour. Helen Woodward The average girl has a lot of energy and wants to do something with i The reason she scems o reluctant at| her desk or counter !s that she's being forced to pour that energy into work | that bores her. There's some kind of work every girl would enjoy doing. If she could find that work she'd be happler. If she could find that work she'd do_it well. If she could find that work she'd make more money. But there are two hitches on this idea. One is that most girls don't know how to find out what they are | really fitted to do. The second is that BEDTIME STORIES Billy Mink Decides to Travel. If_you find life becomes a bore, You need & change and nothing more. —Billy Mink! Life sometimes does become a bore | t> even such active little folk as Billy Mink. Doing the same things over and over becomes tiresome. Nothing seems really worth doing. Things that were | fun are fun no longer. What is needed | then is a change of scene. Perhaps it | is because most of them have a change twice a year that the feathered folk are usually so happy. They do not stay long_enough in one place to become bored. Billy Mink had been feeling out ol; sorts for several days. Hunting over the | same old hunting ground day after day had ceased to b> intcresting. He was | tired of familiar scenes. Each day was too much like every other day. ere was nothing new, nothng exciting. “I need a change,” said Billy, talking to himself. “Yes, sir, I nced a change. It is a long time since I have bezn away from the Green Forest, the Laughing Brook and the Green Meadows. I want to see something new. I want some excitement. There is no sense in stay- He started right then and there. That was all there was to it, He had made up his mind to go, 50 off he started. He didn't even go back home to tell Mrs. Billy that he was going. You see, he didn’t have to pack up or take any- thing with him. He didn't have to wait {or a train or a boat or an automchile, as you and I would have had to do. No, sir, all he had to do was to decide in which directi-n to go and star He was running aleng the Laughing Brook at the time. He aimply kept on running. He followed the Laughing Brook deeper and deeper into the Green Forest until he came to the pond of Paddy the Beaver. He climl up cn the roof of Paddy's house to rest and look around. The scent of Beaver came hrough little air holes in the room. He thought of Paddy and his family held prisoners there by the ice, and pitied them. Thz* didn’t ask his gl:yv ‘Goodness, no! were quite ppy and con d and, l'ke Jerry Muskrat and his family, considcred the ice a blessing. But Billy Mink turned up his nose at the thought cf such a quiet life. o7 st be dull, terribly dull down there,” thought he. “I don't see how they stand it. I couldn't. Let me see, ‘where shall I go from here? I believe I'll go up along the edge of the Great Mountain. It is & very long time since | I have been that way. There ought to | be good hunting. Anyway, I never have gngrud yet and I don't believe I wlu‘ e After a bit Billy started on, follow- | ing the Laughing Brook above Paddy's pond, for he knew that the Laughing Brook came down from the Great Mountain. ‘“Caw, Caw! What are you doing up here and where are you bound? Look out or you will be lost,” cried Blacky the Crow. Billy looked up and grinned. He knew that that was a little joke on the part of Blacky. He couldn't amagine himself getting lost. “I'm going travel- " said he. “I've got the wander- women in America. even if you did know you have a hard time getting & chance to do it. I know a dozen teachers who would rather be stenographers because that work would bring them into more ac- tive contact with people. But they don't do it because teaching is more certain and they like the long Summer vacations. I think they make a mistake. The long Summer vacation does not repay them for the boredom of nine m‘l;‘bhl‘ work they hate. (I won’t say anything of the poor children under them be- cause that's a large subject that doesn't belong here.) As for the certainty of their jobs, the girl who prefers safety above everything else has to pay for it by a lot of dreary work. The real question is how you are to find out what you would like best to do? Well, think it over some Sunday morning when you are just waked up from a good sleep. What would you do if you got no pay but if you did get a lot of honor for your work? What would you do if all kinds of work were equally honorable? For instance, if cooking a dinner were considered as fine as being tennis champlon—if sweeping a floor were done in as pleas- ant_company as golf—if keeping a set of books was as highly honored az writing a book. If all those ifs were true, what would you love to do with your time? The answer to that may lead you to a business success. Girls having problems in connection with work may Write to Miss Woodward, in care of this paper, for her personal advi (Copyright, 1931.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS “What_kind of a foot is-that?” de- manded Blacky, looking puzsled. Billy grinned again. “Well,” sald he, “if T had wings like you I suppose 1 would say that 1 have the wanderwing.” Black chuckled. “I get you,” said he. ou mean that you feel that you just must g> somewhere. ‘That’ replied Billy. “I just s i “When will you return?” inquired Blacky. “When I get tired of traveling,” re- “I'M GOING TRAVELING,” SAID HE. “I'VE GOT THE WANDERFOOT.” plied Billy. ‘Now I must be moving along.” ‘atech your step. There's always trouble in the unknown,” warned Blacky. Billy merely grinned and bounded on his way./ He hoped there would be trouble. He wanted excitement. (Copyright, 1931.) Cottage Cheese Loaf. Mix one cupful of cooked kidney beans with one cupful of cottage cheese, half a cupful of ground peanuts, one cupful of bread crumbs, one cupfui of rice, one tablespoonful of ‘chopped onion, one tablespoonful of savory fat or drippings, one cupful of tomato juice, and salt and pepper to taste. Form the mlxturemgl roll Brush it over with melted fat and bake it in a slow oven for 35 minutes. Serve the loaf with a medium thick white sauce, to which may be added two tablespoonfuls of oed sweet red Ppepper. AN NP Spanish Rice. Slice three medium-sized onions and cook them until tender and slightly brown in half a cupful of melted drip- pings.* Remove them from the fat, add half a cupful of uncooked rice which has been carefully washed and dried, and brown it. en add the cooked onions, three cupfuls of canned to- matoes, three green peppers cut into strips, two teaspoonfuls of salt, turn the mixture into a baking dish and bake a:tatl“ the rice and the peppers are For a Pleasing Change in Menu—Serv e |t Often