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Patterns for Hope Chest Gifts BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. - )W) “)gm\w" THE LITTLE HOUSE AND FIREPLACE GIFTS ARE DELIGHTFULLY PRIATE FOR THE GIRL WHO IS MAKING PREPARATIONS FOR APPRO) A HOME OF HER OWN. fashion of presenting an en- gaged girl with gifts for the hope chest is a happy one, whether the articles are given collectively at a shower or Whether they are given separately. The things may be trifles, but they should be for the new home just as definitely as are wedding presents. As June, the month of weddings, is almost here, some suggestions for the hope chest gifts may prove helpful. Showers for en- girls are apt to be given shortly fore the time of the wedding, al- though any time after an engagement s announced would be correct. Since hope chest gifts should be for the home, articles made from the lit- tle house and fireplace patterns are sdmirably suited to the purpose. Kitchen cushions are among kitchen necessities. Directions for unique cushions of this sort indicate that a spool of thread makes the chimney, and er the door, while the roof forms top of a needlebook, and the edge BEDTIME STORIE Arrives & Bit Early. Re early rather than too late, ‘When you agres to keep a date. —Winsome Bluebird. OTHING s lost by being early. Sometimes much is gained. ‘Winsome Bluebird arrived early in the Old Orchard this year. He knew he was early. You #ee, he was inpatient. He just couldn't wait for sweet Mistress Spring. He knew she was on her way, and so he came s bit ahead of her. When he and Mrs. Winsome had left in the Fall in ‘tompany with other Bluebirds, he had not gone far south as the others had. Belng in good company, Mrs. Winsome had kept on, but Win- some had dropped out at a place which promised food enough without the danger of too great cold, and there he | affords just the right space for pins to be put. The little house may be stand- | ing on a textile grass plot and stepping | stones from a path to the house. | " Another style of picturesque dwelling ‘15 for a holder. The fireplace, as a | cushion, has the word “Kitchen” let- | tered in pins over the mantelpiece. | _ Ensemble sets of cushion and three | holders are attractive gifts, whether | the pattern chosen is of the little house or the fireplace. All the articles can |be made of one design or both pat- terns can be used in combination for | an ensemble set. pattern sheet is of double value, at the single price of 10 cents. | Please do mnot omit a self-addressed | and stamped nevelope should you wish the pattern. Direct requests to Lydia Le Baron Walker, care this paper. On the pattern sheet are full-size diagrams of pattern portions and every minute detail of cutting and putting” together these pieces. (Copyright, 1933.) A | but By Thornton W. Burgess. in a hollow in a tree on the edge of the Green Forest and almost wished he hadn’t been in such a hurry. But Jolly, round, bright Mr. Sun shone the next day, and Winsome found enough cedar berries and sumac seeds for food. All day he bravely whistled, partly, I suspect, to keep up his own spirits. And if that whistle was a little more Plaintive than usual, it was not to be wondered at. Whether or not he suc- ceeded in raising his own spirits, he wonderfully raised those of others who heard him, for everywhere he is re- garded as the herald of Mistress Spring. Peter Rabbit did a funny little dance when he heard that soft whistle, and Happy Jack Squirrel whisked up a tree and barked a greeting. Farmer Brown'’s Boy went out and whistled a reply that for a moment almost fooled Winsome Bluebird into thinking that there was another of his own kind as early as he. Bully the English Sparrow heard that S.filh whistle, but it brought no joy to ully. “He's back!" he snapped to Mrs. Bully. “Who is back?” she asked, for she was fussing about among the hens try- ing to steal some grain from them. “Winsome Bluebird,” replied Bully. “Well, what if he is?” asked Mrs. Bully. “You ought to know,” retorted Bully. “If Mrs. Winsome isn’t with him she soon will be, and that means that if we want that house we have been look- ing at over in the Old Orchard we will have to fight for it.” “What of it?” demanded Mrs. Bully. “Since when have you been unwilling |to fight? You must have changed. It |ever I have seen any one who loves | to quarrel and fight. you are that one, Are you afraid of Winsome Bluebird?” “I should say mnot!” retorted Bully boastfully. “But you know what a fight over that house will mean. All the rest of the birds will join to help drive us out, and in the ‘end it wil bring Parmer Brown's Boy, and he will put us out. There is Winsome Blue- bird over in the top of that le tree this very minutes showing off his fine feathers. I don't like that fellow, and I don't care who knows it.” like “HE'S BACK!” HE SI'APPED TO MRS. BULL’ b ¢ had t the Winter. Before parting he Mrs. Winsome had agreed to meet in the Old Orchard early the next 80, partly_becsuse b tmpatient e was impatien to get back home, for the Old Orchard 15 home to Winsome, and partly to be sure to be there when Mrs. Winsome | “He has got a lovely coat, just arrived, he had come early. All the|a bit of the sky,” sald Mrs. Bully ad- landscape was bleak and cold when |miringly. “I wish you had a lovely ho arrived. There was still snow in the blue coat like his. And I don't think Green Forest, and there were lingering | he is trying to show it off.” patches on the Green Meadows and in| “Then what is he sitting in the top the Old Orchard. It was cheerless | of that tree for?” demanded Bully. “You enough, and, to make matters worse, | better come along with me over to that there was another snowstorm the day | house before he gets in it.” after he arrived. Winsome huddled | (OoporiciE 3930 A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. BY HERBERT PLUMMER. #THOSE who registered surprise when |2 ‘President Roosevelt chose a college resident to direct the vast Tennessee alley conservation program and iffed that the " gets | charge of designing reclamation works in the Southern States. Besides serving as chief engineer of the Miami, Ohio. conservation district | for flood control, he later served in the | same position in the Pueblo, Colo., con- servancy district. He drafted the codes for Minnesota, Arkansas, Ohio, | Mississippi, Colorado 'and New Mexico, | and has been consulting engineer on Bprings, Ohto, can | drainage and flood control projects all Quslity for mem: W | over the Nation. in the | That he is regarded as a practical Drofes: : | engineer and not a theorist is evi- slonal group, But | denced by the enthusiastic reception e had other qual- | of his appointment to the post by the ifications that the Ohio Senators. Senator Bulkley of v e i1k vt s Ohio, long before his appointment was have considered in announced, declared that Morgan was choosing him for | fit in every respect to take over the the task of admin- job X i istering his pet | " Incidentally, in taking this Govern- project. | ment position’ Morgan leaves the same The scholarly more than six-footer | college that Senator Fess of Ohio left from Ohio is rated high as a civil en- | to enter the Senate. Fess was presi- ineer. The President for weeks back | dent of Antioch College for 10 years. as been turning to him for advice in determining suitable men to aid ful- fillment of the Tennessee Valley pro- gram. other guess com- Arthur E. Mor- gan of Yellow My Neighbor Says: To keep yolk of egg fresh, if only the white is needed, cover the yolk gently with a little cold water so as not to break it, and it will keep fresh for several days. To clean wall paper, first brush the walls thoroughly with a duster tied over a long-handled broom, and wipe with clean cloths until all the dust is re- moved. Then cut a stale loaf of bread in quarters and with the pleces lightly wipe the paper, holding the bread by the crust. Begin at the top and rub down- ward, never up Or ACTOSS. (Copyrisht, 1033.) The Tennessee Valley project is in the field about which Morgan knows most. Bince he started his engineering work, back in 1902, with only a high school | education, he has planned and super- | vised construction of some 75 water | gontrol projects. | ‘The ambitious St. PFrancis Valley reclamation work in Arkansas and the Miami conservation project at Dayton, ©Ohlo, are pointed to as evidence of his | handiwork. | In taking over the Tennessee pro- gram, he is returning to familiar ter- yitory. He was the supervising engineer in 1607-09 for Pederal Guvrmmenl] <rainage investigations and was in revised drainage ! Conquering Contract BY P. HAL SIMS Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auc- tion player. He was captain of the renowned “Four Horsemen” team, and hds won 24 national champion- ships since 1924. These articles are based on the Sims system, which in- cludes the one-over-one principle which the Sims group of players was the first to employ and develop. Slam Tries When Partner Has Opened With One No Trump. Yesterday I discussed the/bidding of this hand: Sp. DL AXXxX Hts. KXQxxx CL K QxxXx when partner has opened with one no trump. I explained why I would make the jump takeout of three hearts with the hand as given here, but if the club holding were changed to K J x x I would advise a first takeout of only two hearts, with the intention of initiating a slam try at a later stage of the bid- ding. ‘With the three positive primary tricks in the hand here shown, the slam should be reached. It must be & bet- ter than even chance even if the ’opener‘s hand lacks reserve values. Give him as little as Sp. K Qx Di. Q 10 x x Hts. A x x CL Axx and I would gladly take my chance of losing only one trick in the diamond suit. Opponents have to lead, do they not? And after I have played out my clubs and hearts, will their discarding have been so perfect that they will avoid a squeeze or an end play? Why should I not deduce or even guess the location of the king and jack of dia- monds? Partner May Not Sign Off. T have assumed in the last few articles that the opening bidder denies posses- sion of three aces, responding to the takeout with three no trumps. If he should hold three aces, his response will be four no trumps—but the round of bidding thus lost will not be needed, as factor is under complete control, and the slam must be virtually certain. Risk of duplication vanishes when you hold a vold, as the two losers in your K Q x x suit will go on the ace of that sult and the ace of the void suit. Again, when the responding hand holds two aces and can also make a jump suit takeout, the round of bidding lost by the second jump bid can well be spared, as the opening bidder now knows he has no reason to sign off un- less he himself holds only one ace and his hand is such a minimum that he fears a second trick may be lost in ad- dition to the missing ace, although his partner has the requisites for a jump suit takeout. For Tournament Play. I have described what I find the safest and most precise manner for bidding big hands of the types dis- cussed, from the point of view of reach- ing reasonable slams, stopping short of doubtful ones, and selecting the safer declaration when there is a choice. Of these three objectives the last one ap- plies somewhat differently in tourna- ment play. For that reason you may observe tournament players handling the bidding slightly differently and sacrificing soundness and safety for a higher trick score. We try to play as many hands as we can in no trumps if we deduce from the bidding that the same number of tricks will be lost in both no trumps and the best suit bid. Frequently in a tournament we will sign off at four no trumps where in a rubber game such a course would be unpardonable, and the sign-off at game in a suit would be obligatory. This is & matter of match-play technique, which sometimes compels one to be unsound if one would reach out for a brilliant result. You are not then sacrificing a sure game for a doubtful slam or, greater crime, for an attempt to grab 5 or 15 points more per trick; you are abandoning acceptance of a tied score with, say, two-thirds of the field for the hope of picking off a top which only one or two other pairs are likely to_share with you. If you fail your resulting low score will be in good company, but the more cautions pairs will not beat you by the measure between top and bottom. They will be dividing nearly all the match points available among themselves, so that each of them will gain only a little on you. The only time when you will suffer the difference between top and bottom will be when another player ventures the same bold bid that you did, but fulfills the contract whereas you fail. If his success is due to better play on his part he deserves the advantage iobtained. If it resulted from less skill- ful defense by his opponents, accept the result gracefully and without indigna- tion. Your turn will come on another hand when the breaks will be against him and in your favor. That is where the luck of tournament play comes in. (Copyright. 1933.) . Sims will answer all inquiries on con- tract that sre addressed to this newspaper with self-addressed stamped envelope. NANCY PAGE Who Would Ever Suspect the Apricot Glaze? | BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. French pastry always has an appeal to the woman who is lunching down- town or in the smart teashop in the suburbs. Many a woman has tried to equal the gay little tarts in her own kitchen. And many a woman has failed. The shining smartness of the tarts is due, in part at least, to the glaze which is put over the fruit after it is in the tart. The procedure is like this. | " Pirst the tart shells are baked. They may be fluted by baking them in the | fluted little tart tins. Or they may be ! made straight-sided by fitting the pas- | try into the inside of muffin tins. It is a little more difficult to get Ian attractive edge when this is done, for the pastry will persist in slipping down the sides. There is no edge of tin to fold them over. After the tart shells are baked they may have & spoonful of thick, rich custard topped with uncooked, sweet- ened fresh fruit. Or the fruit, such as plums or pears, may have been poached in boiling water for a moment or two. The glaz~ does the trick. That is made of a mixture of apricot puree cooked with once and a half again as much sugar to a rich sirup. Or it may be a sirup slightly colored and thick- ened with cornstarch. This is brushed on. There is no cooking after it is put onto the fruit. (Copyright, 1933.) pNancy bas u leaflet on “Pastry which . n i E’nvrg'ped Sehvelope. Write Hef care of “thi apess with four aces between you the time{ idistance and size of stars. G'TON, |DorothyDix| Some Have Demonstrated They Are Pinch- Beck Gold, But Many More Have Proved Strong and Courageous. I into becoming hoarders who are afraid to make any investment whatever, and still others it has driven into reckless wild-cat speculations. AR D. IONDAY Finds Letters Show Character of People How Have You Stood Depression? HE depression has hit the matrimonial market about as hard as it has hit the stock market and with virtually the same results. A few it has enriched. Many it has bankrupted. Others it has scared I get hundreds of letters every day, written by people who live in different parts of the country and who belong to every grade of soclety, and these reflect the tempo of the times as nothing else could do, and show how men and women are bearing themselves in this crisis through which we are passing. I have tried to analyze these. IT has slowed down both marriage and divorce because it has put them in the luxury class. It has revealed husbands and wives to each other and enabled them to see just how fine and strong, or how yellow are their life partners. It has turned many a painted doll into a real woman, and cured many a philanderer of his wanderings. It has turned myriads of people away from night clubs and hard drinking and whoopee making back home, and they are glad of it and intend to stay there a spell, even after prosperity sets in again. Out of these letters I could tell you a thousand stories, funny, sordid, tragic, heroic. Things to bring a lump in your throat or a sneer to your lips or lift your head with pride in humanity. For depression has brought out the real mettle in us as fire tries out gold. ONE man wrote me that after years and years of struggle and striving and hard work he had risen to a place of power and accumulated a fortune. Almost in a night his investments became worthless. He had taken cut after cut in his salary until he was earning a mere pittance. In théir prosperity he and his wife had drifted far apart, as rich husbands and wives are apt to do, he absorbed in business, she in society. Even their old love seemed dead. Then came the crash. Standing amidst the ruins he was despondent. His courage and hope were gone and he was lonely and desolate. Then came his wife to him, bracing up his fainting spirit with her own intrepid one. “What does all this matter?” she said. “We have still got all that counts. We have got each other. We started out with nothing and we had the time of our lives building up together, and we will do it again and like it.” He added: “And getting my wife back, and finding out that she admired me as much as she ever did was worth all it cost me.” OT all wives are pure gold. Some are pinchbeck. And I have had many and many a heart-breaking letter from a husband who had slaved for years to give every luxury to a wife who turned upon him with bitter reproaches and nagging that took the last ounce of courage out of him when he could no longer give her the money she craved. Sometimes in the queer upheaval of things that the financial earthquake has brought about, the man in a family has been unable to find employment, while the woman has & job, and in many such cases the wife who has accepted her husband’s support for years has grudged him the very bread he ate when she became the family provider. Many parents have written me that they considered the depression had been a blessing in disguise, for it was the salvation of the younger generation who were hell-bent on having a good time and nothing else. Lacking the price, they have been forced to slow down and turn their energles into something more profitable than making whoopee. THAT there should be fewer marriages in hard times is, of course, natural. Prudence warns that even brides have to eat and men are afraid to undertake another mouth to feed when they don't khow where they are going to get enough for their own. It is also understandable that there should be fewer divorces because, for one thing, divorces cost money, and for another, the depression has drawn many husbands and wives together and made them realize how dependent they were on each other. Many women who had nothing to think about but their own emotions and whether their husbands were their real affinities or not, have had to g0 to work for the first time in years and been too busy cooking and washing and ironing to think about the state of their hearts. And so our black cloud has had its silver lining, domestically speaking. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1933.) MODES OF THE MOMENT UNCLE RAY’S CORNER The Star Arcturus. | tween 1893 and 1933, the dates of two | Chicago world's fairs. ONG before the opening of| “The distance from Arcturus to the Chicago’s Century of Progress earth is about 246,000,000,000,000,000 it was announced that the lights | mjjes. on the grounds would be turned | " (For “Science” section of your scrap- on by beams from the bright | pook.) star called Arcturus. | Several thousand more copies of It is possible for starlight to be| the “Surprise Leaflet” will be mailed caught by & photo-electric cell and 10| without charge to readers who send set up an electric impulse which will| me a stamped, return envelope. This perform further wonders on our little | leaflet is one of the most popular I earth. | have offered. It contains riddles, and 1 speak of our “little earth,” but that | tells how to perform magic tricks. is only a point of view. All things may (e, e be taken by comparison. pyright, 1033.) Compared with a mayfly, a human being is of mighty size. Compared with the earth, & man is tiny. The earth is large compared with any object close to us, and there was a | Pleces, heat thoroughly in milk in a time when people supposed it to be the [double boiler and strain. Spread some largest thing In the universc, That was| of the beef between the folds of an ore astronomers lcarned the size Of | omelet and dot the beef generously the sun and the stars. with thin slices of stuffed olives or with ‘Telescopes and the science of geome- chopped black olives. This is good for try have made it possible to learn the We know that Arcturus is so large that, com- pared with it, the earth is “little.” i The diameter of the earth is not quite 8,000 miles. The diameter of Arcturus is close of 20,000.000 miles! Arcturus is far larger than the sun, and deserves to rank among the glants of the universe. It shines brightly; but even so, it looks small because of its great distance. An airplane two or three miles away seems hardly as large as an eagle. What could we expect of an object millions of billions of miles from us Light travels so swiftly that it might go around the earth seven times in one second. Arcturus is so far away that light from it takes about 41 years to reach us. ‘When officials were looking for a star whose light could be used to open the Chicago fair, they chose Arcturus be- cause its light has been “on the way” for almost the same period as that be- Chipped Beef Omelet. Tear some chipped beef into small for the price of 1 in 1920 | MAY 29 NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. | Wild Ginger. | Asarum canadense. | N the Bible there is a story about the servant who buried his only | I talent in the ground and was re- buked for his act. The wild ginger does practically the same thing and as & result has only one| solitary flower. If not entirely hidden | under the leaves, it is not exposed to view. Of course, we do know that flowers have a very good reason for doing | some unusual things. This flower does | not have to flaunt gay colors to coax | guests to come her way. Her nectar | and pollen are offered to those who are acquainted with her modest ways. ‘The flower is a dull-looking child sitting close to the ground and upheld by a firm cup. She has an abundance of nectar and her petals are so deep that her guests are protected from the WILD GINGER: cold Spring breeze that is about in late March. Within the cozy ginger blossom the early Spring fly, most likely her first trip out, is glad enough to accept the proffered cup. The stigmas of the blossom are sticky and hold the grains of pollen brought from other wild ginger flowers. After the stigmas wither there will arise the 12 stamens beside them and this pollen is dusted over the body of the insect that she may carry the precious gold to a waiting ginger blos- som nearby. To the lover of flowers this little scheme of the wild ginger plant ap- pears to be a striving to perfect a plan much like that of her cousin, the Dutchman’s pipe. After fertilization the ginger cup nods its inverted head and inside the leathery capsule the many seeds are developed. When the seeds are matured the capsule bursts and sends the seed children in every direction. From March until May the rich hillsides, moist woods and damp, rich swamps are sure to have many pairs of dark green, broad leaves on fuzzy stems. They creep along the ground, supported by a thick aromatic root stock. The solitary flower, which is a dull, purplish brown on the outside, has a creamy white interior. It is only found by those who are aware of the ginger's little secret. Many are aware | of the lovely leaves that often form & carpet in open places. ‘The wild ginger is known from North Carolina to Missouri, Kansas north- ward to New Brunswick and Manitoba. You cannot get cattle to touch the leaves, because they are so bitter. A grub will not even rest on one and a mouse passes it by. Long ago man thought it must have medical value, | because it bit so. (Copyright, 1933.) Your Baby and Mine Mealtime. BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. UNISHMENTS eating, forcing food, or dis- agreeable scenes at meal times inevitably encourage a feeling | of distaste for eating that we | should be loath to bulld up. Mrs. D.| says her 18-month-old daughter has a | sudden dislike to certain vegetables— | asparagus, peas, green beans and cauli- flower. She eats spinach and vegetable connected with | WOME S FEATURES BY JAMES J. Here Is Preparedness. ‘When Bolivia and Paraguay declared | war, both sides had been fighting in| the field for months. When other nations of the earth Have, in the days of yore, Believed that some dispute was worth ‘The waging of a war, Defiances they forth have hurled And with a grim delight Have notified a listening world Of their intent to fight. ‘Whereon, their soldiers, ill-prepared, Unready and untaught, To distant battle fields have fared And fought. Bolivia and Paraguay A wiser plan have found; They did not wait until the day That battle cries should sound; MILADY B BY LOIS BECO! G hat is just as much | Rerh be- | coming coiffure. Yet there are | many women who insist upon | wearing the latest and most| freakish millinery, without considering | whether or not it is really flattering to | their respective types | I am not suggesting that we shouldn't try to be in style, but every beauty seeker ought to realize that when a given fashion in hats or clothes doesn’t | suit her type, she should not hesitate to discard it or adapt it to herself. This caution is particularly timely when | small, oddly-shaped hats are in vogue, | as at present. ! In choosing a hat, a full-length mir- ror is as important as a hand glass. | ‘The lines of the hat should be studied | in connection with the lines of the | figure. The tall, slender woman may | choose & wide hat to make her look | shorter, but if her face is slender the | wide brim will make it appear small | and thin. A Jarge brim makes a | large, full face seem smaller but it also makes a sturdy figure look shorter and broader. Ideally, therefore, the wide hat is most becoming to the woman with a full face and tall, slender figure. But this combination is not often found except among girls in their late teens or twenties. For the average woman a because it does not flatter her face at the expense of her figure. ‘The skullcap and beret of hat makes one's features look larger and coarser. Imperfections of complexion and facial contour are emphasized by it. Small, close-fitting, brimless hats are really becoming only to women and girls with small, regular features, fine skins and slim figures. Another drawback of the tiny hat is | that it fails to protect the face from sun | wrinkles. These lines form about the eyes when one is facing the sun. If SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. medium-sized brim is most becoming, | MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY MONTAGUE. Both armies to the colors flew And their machetes bared, Although full well the people knew ‘War hadn’t been declared. They fought their foes on bog and brake And all around the map, So later they'd know how to make A scrap. And when the declarations came One torrid tropic dawn, They need not wait to learn the game; They fought serenely on. And so, with saber and with gun And bold and valiant hearts, The war will probably be won Before it even starts. This looks like war by hook or crook And blast the rules—but then, ‘The warriors must be foreward looke ing men. (Copyright, 1033.) EAUTIFUL LEEDS. you walk along a sunny street with your shadow in front of you, all the women you meet who have not wide-brimmed hats will be squinting involuntarily to keep the strong light out of their eyes. In general, a soft hat with irregular- shaped brim is flattering to most women. The crown that is rounded to follow the natural lines of the head is more becoming than the flat-topped |or conical crown. The drooping brim |and trimming make the face and figure | seem shorter and wider, while upward | lines in the hat have an opposite effect. | Brims need not extend all around the |hat. Many of the new models shade | the eyes while leaving the back and one |side of the coiffure exposed. This is & smart and practical style. How it Started BY JEAN NEWTON. | To Be “Green.” One of the most popular metaphors in common speech is the expression “green” to express lack of knowledge or experience in any field of endeavor. The term been attributed to Shakespeare, and it is doubtless his use of it in “Hamlet” that is responsible for its popularity in modern speech. How- | ever there is a previous use of “green” |in this sense in the Earl of Surrey's | “Restlesse State of a Louer,” which | dates 1557, while “Hamlet” appeared |in 1602. The use of the metaphor in “Hamlet” | is by Polonious, talking to his daugh- | ter Ophelia about the prince. Ophelia | says: soup nicely. “Should I let her go hungry or offer | the rest of the meal?” asks this mother. | “If I omit the remainder of the meal, | shall I offer the vegetables again at | night and give her nothing until she| eats them? Would teething have any- | thing to do with this? She has been | cutting teeth the past month. “Her toes turn in slightly. She has| always worn good shoes. Shall I do anything about this? How many words does the average child of this age have | in the vocabulary? She has about 12 words, and I have been told she is slow | in talking. | “I still boll her milk and add two | tablespoonsful of corn sirup to a quart | of milk. Can she have sugar in her| food?” By no means make the eating of | vegetables & punishment to her. Offer those she likes. When you serve others | which she does not eat make no com- ment. Children will learn to like vari- ous foods if the mother shows no emo- tion about the rejection of offered dishes. The teething might affect her whole appetite; so avold scenes by offering foods that she does like and will eat with relish. The important thing is that she eat each meal with pleasure. She can't do this if you ele- vate vegetables to such an exaited po- sition and punish her for not eating them. Slight toeing in is rather common- place among children. Do nothing at all about it now. Gesell, in “Growth of the Pre-school Child,” gives 93 words | and 38 phrases as an average of the | | language ability of 50 18-month-old | children. | _Continue to boil the milk, but you need add no sirup. If you give some sugar or cereal, some in puddings and fruit sauce, as would be a natural man- “He hath, my lord, of late made many tenders of his affection to me.” Her father answers: “Affection! Pooh! | green girl, “Unsifted in such perilous circum- | stance.” If the metaphor required interpreta- tion, it would be explained in Shake- speare’s lines in “Antony and Cleo- patra”: “My salad days, when I was green in judgment.” You speak like & Fruit Omelet. Before folding a cooked omelet, spread its surface with either jam, pre- | serves, cooked figs or peach, pear or plum jelly, or fresh fruit, well sugared, may be used. Also remove enough of the fruit for garnishing the . A plain omelet surrounded with fruit or preserves makes an attractive serving. I bet ya don’t know what?—School is pretty near ober! Me an’ Tommy is learning a piece to say the last day— (Copyright, ) NOW GET RESULTS —WHITER TEETH from the toothpaste you use ner of preparation, the child ought to| get enough of this nutritious and laxa- | m{fk element without adding it to the | mi Ham-Chicken Pie. | | Make a rich crust and line a deep | dish with it. Boil a rather young hen | until very tender. Cut off the meat, re- | moving al! bones. Thicken the gravy left from boiling, as for a fricassee. Be sure that there are no lumps. Slice some cold bolled ham quite thin and place it in layers in the pastry-lined dish, alternating with chicken. Fill with gravy, then cover with crust and bake in & hot oven untll the crust s one. 4 YOU WERE RIGHT, DEAR. KOLYNOS IS MARVELOUSI MY TEETH LOOK WHITER ALREADY. SO UGLY AND OFF-COLOR YES, QUICK RESULTS START brushing your teeth with Kolynos. In just a few days they’ll look whiter—shades whiter. They’ll feelmuchcleaner. Here’s the reason: Kolynos does what ordinary tooth- Ppastes can’t do. As it removes ugly stain and tarnish— it foams into every tiny crevice and kills millions of germs that are the known cause of most tooth and gum troubles. Thus Kolynos gives RESULTS YOU CAN SEE. Cleaner, whiter teeth. Healthier looking gums. Give up incompetent ways of brushing and start using the Kolynos technique —a half-inch of this remarkable dental cream on a dry brush twice aday. It's the better, quicker way to cleaner, whiter teeth—try it. KOLYNO 3 DAYS AGO YOU WouLD NOT HAVE SAID THATI DENTAL CREAM, ; 4 P