Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
v MY HUSBAND'S LOVE REVELATIONS OF A WIFE | LYCEUM i‘d’;so’M‘g;; Directons He hurrjed out, and 1 sank inte & Kitehen chair with & helpless, hope. | ¢ . v ~ "Why doen't you go on dewn, Mar- k at Lillian. | . A . weret? T shall do very nicsly now.'" that gravy,” 1 said despair. | . 5 Harriet Braithwaite's (ones were .;-,. “l‘ e:.‘;l u::;“. --l e RY lll:un MARY ey on e s sleady, her face and eyes seamingly would net soften he 'vordlul and 1 ST ealm, Yet but & few seconds before Is the man of your family a hty . ::: had dromped bor sataly _ mask e arimace he | unter who salles forth with &¥gun L or n an- 1 1 ing," h. d, and tramps through brush and mire Kulshed woul to me. I knew wAll :h,'";.?:‘,‘: .',,"4":,,,,":":,,,.-‘,,\...4 finally brings home game in the though I had bean privileged to re- | \.' o1y ol in tonather, T could | form of & squirrel? And he tells you Assure her, yet she was still shaken, | . "0 oo T ol veur deli- g00d Its going to taste when you 'r:.::“"“‘."“u "‘“""‘ ‘: o return, | €8te ravies! I'wander If he's stuck | have cooked it. And you wonder how fiaces 88 the best aid to her Teturn: | .,y cloves or cinnamon in the chick- | On earth you do ook the things! "..,‘.‘.‘m’;.“ PO PRSI, If she has, she might just as| Perhaps you have recipes handed bith f Tesh towels In ke her will, pronto. Lot's in- down from mother'to daughter, Our room, 1 said casunlly, “and g great-grandfathers relished (he fresh while I am here I may as well show PG QR meat and appreciated it as we don't you what you have in your little in this day :nd ase. Today it means pantry. I brought up small portions | something “different” for our sA- fruit. And there is ice in the refrig- o“'p 3 omer ;::';'"":;:,,. pORNEAL 10 e N erator, But don't you think you'd | # aquirrel provides a rather light | better lot me got your breakfast in meat course let the accompanylng the morning? I'd love to. Embroidered Gloves vegetables be quite substantial, The She was walked with me to the | Neariy avery glove that makes any salad should be a simpie green af- Pantry aa T telked, and with & prac- |pretense (o being up to the minute |fair with a Frerth dressing and the tioed housewifely eye she ran over |has some faney embroldery on the | demsert of fruit in some form, 'hf.v'::'"";.m.&'l'"‘;:l' AN euft or on the back of the hand. Rrunswick stew' {s an old, old dish Y. d » Sy om Virginia. This is a hona fide claimed. “You even have remembered Wide Collars :;r:‘inu r':clpe from a Ilmmu":oulI:- the material for Edwin's favorite | \wide cavaller collars of white satin ern cook: mufting . No, indeed, I'm not goIng to | or batiste trimmed with lace and em. | " Brunswick Stew let you get breakfast for us. Thin|broldery are very effective on black| ryree squirrels, 8 slices fat, salt 'l‘lll':.. great ":h'" L ) );ou-:k" velvet gownp. Inorl‘ H m:dmm sized onions, II large ng this way. ere can 1 get- s . . J “Milk, cream and rolls delivered each Amber Farrings xoln(.oe:, :u :u::m::;:; l~ :':I.D lima morning,” I interrupted. I only| Earrings of amber with long drops| **"™ : u:l b "“"":' have to speak to the men who bring [are naturally popular sinee beads of | ;"'"' upoo‘r;‘ 't b q‘,‘,": mine, so just give me your order be- | these stones have become so amart. \':;:L'::O:::‘;'Iot"u opoons butter, § fore you go.to bed tonight.” | — / “I'll glvasdt. to you n:'. whe sAid | Lattice of Ribhon | The original recipe uses green corn practieally< and she named the A lattice work of two-toned ribhona | CUt from the cob. The amount of amount df the articles she needed, or of faggoted bands is seen on some | Dutter can he decreased to two table. spoons and the stew he quite rich enough, while I mentally jotted them down. of the newest lingerie, Vertical Ruffies | Clean wash and disjoint squirrels, | Then, with the feeling that she need- | ed solitude more than anything eclse, 1 hurried downatairs. Not all the ruffies run around this | et stand in cold salt water to cover In Time to FAelp Lillian | season Some of them follow tha for an hour. Drain. Chop salt pork | Lilllan—flushed and anxious—was opening of the frock from collar to very fine, Put a layer in a broad | in my tiny kitchen bending ever pots | hem, and are finished on the edge!flat iron pot, add minced onions, po- | of steaming vegetables. Cooking ix | with a picot. | tatoes cut in very thin slices. Add| {a layer of corn beans and all the Directed |7y not her especial forte and she turned | T \ a relieved face to mine as I enterd Blue and Gold | squirrels, Cover squirrels with pork, | CHARLES G. NORRIS SIDNEY FRANI IN [l the Kitchen. . | Dull blue velvet s made, into the onions, potatoes corn and beans. “I belleve in fairies,” she announced | most effective frocks this season by | season each layer with black pepper’| Produced by [| dramatically.” “I just wished my |combining it with gold and siiver and just a dash of cayenne,: Pour| f HARRY RAPF Il varticular guardian one would ma- |tissues. over boiling water, cover tightly nnvl! i terfalize you. Look at these dratted P stew gently three hours. Add toma-! things and tell me if they're all Satin Pajamas, toes, salt and sugar and stew an hour | right. T dfd exactly as you told me.”” | Popular pajama outfits have trous- |onger. Work flour and butter to-' She hovered at my side with an |ers of black satin-backed cyepe and | gather and stir into stew. Boil three _ [ OW | over-cating or acute catarrhal cone jackets of colorful satin embroidered | , : )lmd:u; :y: d"::’ wl:h' W p::;"::: in gold. il ,e;\»,' Pie, canned tomatoes, bacon, fat salt and Broiled Squirrecl. il gl e e 1 AR e: pepper, flour. 8Kin, clean and split down the back. | ditions of the mucous membrane of | the intestines, climination from the snap beans, which T had planned to ST Two or three squirrels, 1 large on- I 2 7 ) : ) ¢ cioint squirrels. Let |1t stand half an hour in salt water ; jon {l1efdon, “L:Nl{ces (At Rait ‘ori, 3 Glean ‘and-dinjolnt, squirrels: - Lot T Lt i A e e m body is delayed and the toxic poisons serve creamed, a favorite dish, I re- ’ s membered, of Edwin Braithwaite's. Short fur capes are fashlonable this | y,100500ns flour, 3 cups water, bis. | stand in salt water to cover for half Vet fnioe: - ik it Svars tilh - are rapidly atsorbed from he . ins These toxic poisons find JAeYe DATALY, AlL (HIEHGY oL s e PRk cult dough. an hour. Drain. Season flour with | gice of hacon and broil over or under » y testines, i SQ] I ) | their way first to the liver and then to #aid, and she drew an exaggerated |the short fur iacquette. | Bkin and dress squirrels. Wash and | salt and pepper and roll pieces of | a Lot fire, If broiling over a fire long: breatB, ot reifef, - Colorful Frock disfoint. Put into cold salt water 10| squirrel into it. Melt bacon fat and|(urn frequently when meat begins to | the general circulation. e e e A one | Flamboyant flowers in purple, " red | SOVEr for an hour. Drain. Put into| fry meat to a golden brown. Re-|grip, | There Is headacne, loss .of appetite ¥ as a heavy step sounded in the | yellow are appliqued on a bouf-|* kettle, pour over bolling water to| move from frying pan to kettle. Re-| B s 5 By DR, CLIFFORD . ROBINSON |, ot 8 B o o the ball and the rublound janitor ap-| it gown of black satin with the °OVer, add whole onlon and simmer move seeds and pith from peppers Polishing Cloth ki and nausea. ‘Th ATH.48 Bokber, peared at the door, bearing aloft fashionable drop-shoulder lne’ ‘and ‘ at the boiling point for half an hour.|and cut in sheeds. Peel and slice on- Nothing is better for a polishing | Billous Attacks. breath bad and lh(’r(: is pain in the the roasting. .pan, ;contajning my |, " 0., atting bodice. . Drain. Sprinkle with lemon juice. |jon, Cook peppers and onfon in ba-|cloth than an old piece of velvet or| In some parts of our country the jtomach and back. Vomiting of food chickens. Roll In flour. SKkim out crisp pork and | con fat in which squirrel was cooked | velveteen . China silk from which all | term “billiousness” or “bilious at- |15 followed Dby that ot’biffous sccre- “Mamma, she fired them. all .« nice Prevent Waste fry squirrels to a golden brown in| until onions are a pale straw color. |stiffness has heen washed is also ex-|tack” has rather a broad and indef. tions. there is much weakness and for you, Missis Graham."hesald with| 5, ;.\ Shat you need and what the-fat. Arrange squirrels in a deep|Ada to squirrels. Pour over six cups|cellent for fine wooden surfaces. | inite meaning. More northery parts the skin is sallow. . beaming face. "There was too much |, ‘yyow you can use. Nothing is| baking dish. 8tir flour into fat ©i|of bolling water, cover tightly and! Mo S T Lof our country employ {he term gas-| The atlack usually passes in'a few ‘waler in the pan so she poured it out | spider. Add water slowly, stirring! et s . A3 1o X 4 7 3 N a bargain if it lies on the shelf until | 3P g ater slowly, stirring | simmer two hours. Add carrots, rice, M d P 2 tritus in speaking of this toxic at- days, the source of trouble being re- und she made such & nice gravy. it deteriorates. | constantly. Let boil two minutes and celery and tomatoes and simmer an odern Portia tack in the intestines. Tn certain low= | oo s oo venk alkie My hedrt descended to my boots pour over squirrels. Cover with bis-| hour longer. Add water as necessary i i with starting rapldity. I am fussily Easy foe Rweeping |‘cuft “ough’ andv bake An & hdt ‘oven|’ . Squitres are delicious brofied and | ";‘l.','_'\i‘:::":';‘i T o montuse [ line fluids ‘to soothe the irritated particular about the preparation ©of | 4 |;ig handled dust pan is more for 45 minutes. if you are “out in the open” cooking | : ? : [the two. terms. .Many people still ;I“l”vlr.‘uzf“‘;i“l;‘:“I].i”’t. ’.m. “"}P:"J";:“_'""“' my. gravies, aspecially those of foWl.| oxpensive than the short-handied va- | Squirrel Stew. over a wood fire there is no better| [ i a helleve that It Is brought about by a| pe avoid bilious atiacks. be é“',.,._ T ‘knew Dbefore I tasted it that the| ety hut it is much easter to manip-| =~ Three squirrels, 2 green peppers,| way to cook them. The temon juice : change in the weather, especally | ru; of your food and habite of cati Aravy would have too much fat for | yjate and makes the job of sweeping |1 onion, 2 cups diced carrots, 1-2 cup | may be out of the question for out- | trom-snnimer to autumn Tul. of YOULL00% SRt M SR iig, the water and flour and that it would | mych tes sarduous | 1-2 cup diced celery, 3 cups ! daors cookery 8 At : In otier WOrig Mol tndkealDi G be pregnated so strongly with onfons & Wkl oar SR o, Lt s A Jid 3 In former years, when people were i constipation Which induce these at- and the herbs with which so' many Borax Aid e accustomed to use coarse or plaia ' tacks by knowing your own system, cooks, especially foreign ones, think it | gheer materials’ appear much m""’i 3 § ' § food, troubles from poor digestion | its condition and requirements. ol necessary to' disguise the taste of fish, | jjke new after a trip,to the laundry | : ) . |and constipation were much less com- There is nd one dief that will suit fowl and fiash that no one would be'|jr they are rinsed In borax water in- ! | 3 ¢ { | mon than at present. Indigestion of lall cas A proper proportion of able to distinguish it from a gravy |stead of being sttarched in the regu- | i i some food material, which causes | fine and coarse foods, not - forgetting | stagnation of the intestinal stream, is | the bulky raw vegetables, will usually served around roast pork or beef. 1ar fashion, (B ! ‘ Madge Is In Despair it ' -~ s & i | the forerunner of a bilious attack. prevent the bowels from . becoming | But the mischief was done, and the Hard Flannel | and hls 3 % When digestion goes wrong from | sluggish. Janitor's rosy, beaming face made me Soak flannels that have become : _ o force my lips to a mechanical smile | hard and shrunken in gasoline and -~ By AR"II{UR scorr BA[LB" K 5 R A o LY FASHION SEUVICE = 3 (R S : | ' pnd the words: you can restore them to their former | “How niee of her, Mr. Sch‘w;rlxd! Roftness, | i g ¥ o : ; ' T coms down ant pe ‘tho munh o P T kM r - || Use Hemstitching to Join Yoke to This Dress 'l come down and get thc squash Baked Potato | THE GAY RIDE | think you've mistaken me for right away.” Cut large potatoes in half before| g, etimes Jonnnie Green took.Cuf-| Somebody else,” said the other. “What 140N, no, you not take dot trouble,” | baking them. They will bake much | 'y Bear into the tent from which the| was 1 doing in your ncighborhood— » | —— — | he rejoined. ‘“'Mamma, she fixed dot more quickly and the cut side gets 8| performers made their entrances into if 1 Was there?” k 3 il i 4 3 i g A G for you, too, all nice mit a sauce. 1|delicions crust. the big show. There Cuffy had more . “Well, you werc eating apples, for! : ,_____,,,_______’thAn once seen a troop of chattering one thing. You ate so many they { monkey, all dressed in bright jockey | made you ill.” suits and caps, and each mounted on| “It couldn't have been me,” the !'a Shetland pony. They never atayed | monkey replied. “1 .never had long under the big top. While they|enough apples vet.” | W B Hogan, Jersey City not vet 25 years of age, but already has won many legal victories. She i E itly was engaged to defend a man SIT TS QIR thit one o | Dr % ‘harged in Hackensack, N. J., with Fhmiivon "to Lestlo Erencott, gt MR 0% prafedted R Xt ; first degrec murder. She succecded This i tho first time, my dear| "t nmiand's court. ! A 4 ADAY 1 [in getting a second degree verdict danghter, that 1 have folt T could sit| , YOU father and were taiking about ; REAT AN iy with recommendation of merey d:vn and talk to you in the way I it the other night and we agreed that ' y ? L usnally do in my letters. all this is & part of the heritage of { il Your father has been lying out. | America. Your father said, “That is i 3 PR Y doors in the porch swing all day,|!De reason why I allowed Lesile to | ( A THE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WA' He was able to walk out of the room '"]:";' ;‘:“’:‘V‘L'I'"“'{ :’r‘"’"u‘l'"‘“ ;‘“d ) X A ibeisg why n’t settle a half million dol- | ;h‘:.:l:zm!ng and seemed quite nke’ L‘:I:.“‘ }:;'t"' the time of ln:rnue. 1 . 3 ve that every man and woman urirh:"v::k'. h;:;‘:,ul:o:;g f-““ve:; should strike out for themseives. 1| busy getting ready to be presented at ‘would not for anything in the world court. ukata"uymfr:m hwd‘{“’h Iaem(o, the | " greal oy at you an ad of sav-| 2 Oh, my dear cbild, wher_\ I think of | ing and secrificing.” it all it seems like a fairy tale to| were gone the band played lively mu-| “Your master called you Jocko. He . | sic. And when they came back again came and took you away on a hand- me. You know, my dear, 1 had littla| “TrUlY, it 18 a jov Lestie. You wini| fit SAC " 000 COC (RME TR GRE organ.” education and your father even less| COMe to know that when you have |y .. .ier Rut what they did insido *Not guilly!” cried the monkey than I I don't know that I ever told | lived along far enough to get tha| ..o ot Cuffy couldn't guess. | “My name is Ginger. And 1 never was you but we spent all the evenings| riSht perspective on all the little up-! “upyor. was one monkey that looked | a hand-organ monkey—thank good- of the first two years after we wore‘}“""l‘ of your first years of mar-| ..y ramiliar. He reminded Cuffy of ness! Don't, for pity's sake, suggest married porins over books and !ry-v".'"- Major Monkey, who had once apent! such a thing to any of my cousins. I ing to learn. | From the tone of your letters late-| geveral weeks in Pleasant Valley. 1In' you told them you thought they were Of couyse your father is one of the ly, dear, I have come to the conciu- | fact Cuffy wasn't sure but that this hand-organ monkeys you'd make ‘ greatest steel men in the country sion that you have been having one chap night he the Major himself. 8o vourself unpopular.” today and I believe therc is nothing | of those upheavals now. 1 do not | ane day he spoke ¢ performer, Cuffy Beg promptly about a steel mill or steel machinery | want to pry into your affairs, but’ “Hullo, Major!" he eai pardon that he does not know. He has|please let me tell you that the first| The monkey touched his cap. “That's all right,” said the monkey. learned it all in the hard school f three years of marriage life are the | “Howdy, Cnlanel!” he replied. “I'm a good-natured peirson, as you'll experienceé and what he could get|crucial ones. In them you must really| Now, that answer wasn't at all like| learn when you know me better.” trom books in his evenings. get acquainted with your husband and| the Major Monkey that Cuffy knew,| “So these other monkeys are all 1 was about Alice's age when you| he with you. |.who never wanted anybody to enjoy' cousins of yours?" Cuffy Bear ex- . were born, dear, and we were so, You must adjust yourselves to an|a higher title than his own. claimed. An attractive and simple way to| pattern. Baste the folded edge over very very poor that someone who entirely different environment and “I wonder if 1 know you,” Cuffy “All but one,” said Ginger. “You put this dress together is with ma- the plain or gathered edge, notches knew and liked your father in the|mode of living. Whenever you feel| Bear ventured. “You make me think|see that disagreecable looking fellow r chine hemstitching, matched, and have it hemstitched, al- mills persuaded his wife to send me | that maybe John is not as fine and|of a friend who spent some time ifi over there on the spotted pony 2" Figure 1 shows how to prepare 4| lowing one thread of the hemstitch- vour layette. I had to be up and|spiendid as you first imagined, do Pleasant Valley.” “He's my brother,” the monkey 1 v plain seam (as around the top of the | ing to just cover the edge of the yoke. around my house a little over a week | not forget that he may be having the ' 1 don't know,” replied the named Ginger explained. “He's more sleeve) for hemstitching., and Figure Trim off the raw edge on the wrong after you were born, dear, but thank | same disappointment over you. i “I've been In &0 many places! | peavish than usual just now, because 2 shows how to prepare the gathered |side close to the hem-tsitching. The God we both were always well. ! 1 intended to write you a newsy know the names of half of| he hasn't won a race for a week." part under the yoke. hem line might also be hemstitched. 1 can't pretend to describe to you letter but instead I am preaching them, with the show always on the “Ah!" Cuffy Bear exclaimed. “Now yoke This makes a firm seam and alls all the saerifices and economies that little. I'll close before 1 bacome pro move.” 1 know what you do on thee ponies, |the newspapers are full of mistakes gn the seam allowance and baste the I/practicsd. T never dreamed that T| Lovingly, MOTHER. | “You have a way of seratching your | under the hig top.” and they persist in calling the ZR-1 a |fold. clipping the edge around the| This hemstitohing is best suited to she | curve to make it lie flat Gather be- sheer soft materials as Georgette, would be able lo give you the splen- (Copyright. 1923. by NEA Service,| head that's exactly like the Major'a”| (Copyrights 1023, hy Metropolitan lighter-than-air airship, though 4 cducation that is yours and cer-| Ine.) | Cufty told him. I Newspaper Service,) | weighs nearly 100,000 pounds. |tween notches as indicated on thelchmnn voile and lace. R The young lady across the way says Turn under the edge of the | a pretty trimming line to the dress,