The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 10, 1919, Page 8

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) Last evening Miss Marion Lilly, Lo Non and Miss Ruth Dally. 3 M By BETTY BRAINERD or and Mrs. Give aborate Dance Miss Hazel sts at Maj. and Mrs. n at the home of Mrs. Castlen’s Ybraith. and hostess eAdam, Mrs, Walter Galbraith Miss Mildred Hughes, all rela affgir was a formal party and ‘was beautifully decorated, Japanese parasols shaded | Nights in the pink and white bal! Om, and gayly colored Japanese hung from the ceilings by of asparagus ferns. Pink and! Toses and large palms were) @ in decoration. Just outside the | | room Was a veritable Oriental | as a cozy corner, incense and, Tending their Far Eastern at- e balcony porch was screened | the street with palms and this . into a tropical gar-| most inviting resting place. ue idea was carried out in| mouncement of supper. A two-step was announced and ‘Man presented his partner with ital fan as a favor and she his dinner partner. The din. oom was a bower of pink roses | @ delightful buffet supper was there. The dance was one most elaborate and handsome given for the younger set in + - eee ¢ Supper | spacious grounds of the C. D. home were the scene of an informal evening on Tues- About fifty dwellers of the/ met there for a picnic sup- Later tennis games were en- rag al Luncheon ‘Thomas Green was hostess | a tful luncheon today at the Tennis club. Covers were ged for fourteen. rs ee 7 for Guests Ahtoinette Black and her) , Mr. Lyman Black, enter- at dinner Wednesday evening | ent to Miss Arline Bucher | Haven and Miss Dorothy of Pittsburg. Ten guests en- their hospitality. see for Visitor | or ting Miss Lois Reynolds | yn, Miss., who is the guest | L, B. Stedman, Mrs. J. F. Miss Doris and Miss Alice give a tea Friday at the! Pesala club. " er Born Mrs. Nicholas Furth Jahn “congratulated upon the daughter. eee } we +t al Calloway will act s next Saturday afternoon g the Alumni Chapter of the | will meet at the chapter | fit Seattle awn of Mrs. Frederick Baus- again be the scene of the den party for the benefit | e tle Day Nursery. A de- is being gotten up ‘will be served. The affair place on August 7. eee t Shop ies Anabel Trent has arranged ec surprise for those who the White Elephant Shop noon. Mr. English Cody, of the Chin Chin , appearing at the tan, will give a group of accompanied by Mrs. Thomas fr Ferguson. Mr. Cody Is a pupil famous teacher, Sergeri Kil- Donald les Clise have charge of the ‘White House for the next two Yesterday Mrs. A. A. Suth- and Mrs. W. T. Patten were assisted by Mrs. J. A. $r., Miss Agnes Vail of Los Miss Lenore Blackwell, Miss z h Greene, Miss Virginia Dut- Thursday Mrs, J. A. Hyde will , On Friday Mrs. Bain and Saturday Mrs. Homer Dudley. eee m of Arc Club ‘The Joan of Arc club will give a Champatre on the pretty lawn | St. Theresa's home at 1216 Uni ity st. on July 16 at § o'clock. ee stern Star Dance the fourteenth of July there be a dance at the Leschi pavilion | Taise funds for the new club of the Order of the Eastern As that day is the French th of July,” all French people | invited and also all Masons and) Star: ‘patrons and patronesses will) Mayor and Mrs. Ole Hanson, | ludge and Mrs. Stephen Chadwick, ir. and Mrs. L. K. Tappin, Mr. and George James, Mr, and Mrs. Gattis, (Mrs, Gattis is gen- chairman of the Grand Chapter | OW ANY GIRL CAN _ HAVE PRETTY EYES No girl or woman: is pretty if her| are red, strained or have dark| Simple witchhazel, camphor, | tis, etc, as mixed in Lav-| eye wash, will brighten the and a week's use will surprise u with its QUICK results, Regu- use of Lavoptik keeps the eyes lthy, sparkling and vivacious. quick change will please you aluminum eye cup FREE ‘8 Drug Co. and leading drug- | | Arthur Bekart, | sister. of the World of the Eastern Stqr), Mr, and Mrs, J. N, Hamill, Mr. and Mrs. 8 BE, Cox, Mr, and Mrs. J Jeffry, Mr. and Mrs. J, Kent, Mr. a Mrs. Mr. and Mrs James Men¢ . Mr, and Mrs, Jo seph Mayer and Mrs. Roy J Rossman, Mr, and Mrs, M. Mayberg, Mr, and Mrs, George Bennett, Mr and Mrs. J, W. Crawford, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Averill, Mr. and Mrs. J, C. Baker, Mr, and Mrs, A, S$, Hamill, Mr. and Mrs. J. Horner, Mr. and Mrs, Croe! ett, Mr. and Mrs. J, N, Shafer, Mrs. Florence Hyatt, Mrs, Pearl Faurote, Miss Olive McMace and Miss Jes sie Macclatn. oe Ballard W. C. The Ballard W. C Friday at 2 o'clock at the home of | Mra, W. H. Lewis, 824 W. Fifty-| ninth st. | Miss Gertrude Elser of Milwaukee, ; . T. 0; ‘| T. U. will meet} | Dd. | who was a roommate of Miss Olive Leonard at the Emma Willard school, arrived in town Monday to! spend several weeks with Miss Leon ard. | Mr, and Mrs, Frank Cullen Bro-| phy (Sally Blake), left Banff Thurs day for Washington, D. C., Chicago! and New England. Miss Carrie Hyde of Terre Haute, Ind., and Mrs. Daniel David of Mun cie, Ind,, arrived Saturday to spend the summer with their sister, Mrs. J. R. Hager. . Mrs. Bert Farrar arrived home Friday from a trip to California. ar ae Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Gates have} bought the summer home of Dr.| Eagleson at Yarrow and will move| there shértly. | eee | Dr. Portius of Melbourne; Aus-| tralia, now director of research at the Vineland Training School for| Feeble Minded, has been visiting in Seattle for several da: | . . | “3 Miss Marie Neunch of Pittsburgh is spending a week with Miss Eliza. beth Chadwick. Mr. Fred Zwickey of San Francis-| co is the guest of his mother and| hs } Frank B and Mr. Leo} Black will rettirn Friday from the| East. Mr. Black has just graduated from Yale and his mother went East to attend the commencement exer. cises. Mrs. Mrs. A. Rocke Robertson is spend. ing several weeks in Vancouver, Mrs. Samuel Sizer and son, Rob- ‘ert, of Raymond arrived Tuesday and will spend a week at the Washing ton hotel. . . | Mr. Cecil Willis has recently been} released from active duty in the United States navy as radio operator in the transport service, and is with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Park Weed Willis, Mrs. R. M. Holland (Florence Moore), formerly of Seattle, but now of Tacoma, arrived Wednesday to visit Mts. A. H. Harrison for ten days. see Judge and Mrs. Frederick Baus- man have returned from a motor trip of several days to Olympia. * eee John T. Heffernan, tute of Technology, in Boston, and will spend the summer visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hef- fernan, at their home, 408 Blaine bivd., returning in the fall to go on with his studies in naval architec- ture and marine engineering. ' eo Mrs. C. K. Sturtevant and daugh- ter, Miss Emfly Sturtevant, returned last Saturday from California, where they had spent two months visiting with relatives in Lake county and San Francisco. . . Mrs, Katherine Lancer and daugh- ters, Margaret, Marie and Helen, are sailing Tuesday from Vancouver on the steamship Niagara for Honolulu, to spend the winter. soe Mrs. Mary A. Luby and daughter, Miss Florence Luby, left this morn- ing for California, where they will visit for several weeks. ee Mrs. Alexander M. Wetherill will arrive in Seattle on Monday from Los Angeles, on a short visit to her mother, Mrs, Jacob Furth. vee Miss Adelaide Pollock will return on Saturday from more than a year's service in France with the Red Cross. Miss Pollock, who was prin- cipal of the Queen Anne school, will be the guest of Mrs, R. S, Fringer for a few days following her arrival. ee Mrs, John T, Heffernan left Mon- day afternoon for Long Beach, Cal., where she will join her husband, who is stopping in California on his way home from an Eastern trip. Mr. and Mrs. Heffernan will remain at Long Beach for two weeks. BRITISH-LANDLORDS SPLIT BIG ESTATES N. E. A. Specini to The Star July 10.—They continue to cut up those big estates over here. Lord Rendlesham has just put 10,800 cres on the market at Kast Suffolk. Lord Lovatt i disposing of more than 60,000 acres and the Countess of Portsmouth has put 22,000 acres on the market. HATS ON AT FUNERAL LONDON, July 10.—All mourners were requested by his will to keep their hats on at the churchyard while Charles Milnes-Gaskell was be- ing buried, That the order might be | public is inv Daughter Is Born Mr. and Mrs. M, M. Godman are| recetving congratulations on the| birth of a daughter.on July 1. Mrs. | Godman and the baby the Swedish hospital | are at . eeting | | Postpone Mi The meeting of Beta Sigma of Delta Gamma, announced for Satur | day at the home of Mrs. Fred Pow ell, has been indefinitely postponed. | v. Lecture on Poetry The Maurice Browne lecture “Poets of Today and Tomorrow | which is thé first of the next series, | will be given tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs.) Thomas Ruhm, 702 Minor ave. Any-| one interested is Invi tation . Go on Fishi Mr. extended an ng Trip Frederic Mr. c Stimson, Dr W. Sharples and Mr. W. E. Best are members of a party who left this morning in two motors for a fishing trip to Wenat chee, thru. the thru British ‘olumbia George and Ashcroft They turn in about two weeks s les Okanogan country to ‘Port will re CLUBS FOR FRIDAY Kansas Women's Club Pienic ‘The regular meeting of the Kansas | | { | Women's club will be held at Wood: | ¢ Pink Organdie land park at 2 o'clock. A plente sup wer will be served at 6 o'clock. eee Chief Seattle Clob Chief Seattle Home Club No. 586] | of the Homesteaders’ soctety will} meet at the Swedish club hall, Eighth | and Olive. | Washington Synodical Society Mrs. Charles R. Crooks, of Siam, will speak before the Washington Synodical society, at the First Pres byterian church tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. It is hoped that Dr. cliza E. Leonard, of Douw hospital, in Peking, also will be present and speak, Both women are under the foreign board of Presbyterian church, and are on their way back to their fields. ‘The meeting will be held in the men’s parlors, and the Fruit and Flower Mission ‘The trustees of the Seattle Fruit and Flower mission will hold their monthly meeting at Hunt's pint Friday The boat leaves Madison park at 10:30 o'clock, and members are asked to bring their lunch. Those able to go are asked to notéely Mrs. Cc. W. Curtis, at the Seattle Hard- ware Co., or call Lakeside 42-J, ore Social Score The Social Score will Yneet Friday at the home of Mrs. Hattie Friend, 402 234 ave, Dinner will be served at 1 o'clock. Suffrage Clab The Seattle Suffrage chub will meet tomorrow at 1 o'clock, at Mount Baker park, for a picnic luncheon and election of officer: DID MORE: 6000 THAN ALL OF THE ‘REST, HE STATES Farmer Gains Fifteen Pounds Taking Tanlac—Had Suf- fered Twenty-five Years that Tanlac is of good or I wouldn't have come nearly twenty miles to get these three bottles I am buying now,” said Samuel Ba- con, a weil known and prosperous farmer who lives at Boring, Ore- gon, while in the Owl Drug store in Portland the other day. “I have been trying for twenty- five long years to find a medicine or treatment that would overcome my troubles,” he continued, “and Tanlac is the only thing that has ever done me any good at all. Dur- ing all these years I suffered terri- bly from rheumatism In my back, and there were times when I was in such bag condition that I couldn't turn over in bed, and after sitting down for a Uttle while I could hardly get up again. My kidneys bothered me a great deal, too, and I would often have to get up four or five times during the night, and the pains in my back were so severe that I rarely ever got any sleep. My appetite was very poor, and what little I did force myself to eat would give me indigestion in the worst way. I lost a lot in weight and finally got so weak and run-down that I could hardly walk or stand on my feet. “Then heard about Tanlac through my daughter who had been greatly benefited by taking it. In fact, she was so/ pleased with Tanlac that she bought me a bottle of it and told me that she thought it was the very thing I needed. Well, sir, I began to feel stronger and better in every way before I had finished that first bottle. 1 have taken three bottles so far, and I eat so much, that T actually get ashamed of myself sometimes, What I eat agrees with me, too, and 1 never have a sign of indigestion now. I have gained fifteen pounds in weight, and feel like a different man altogether. The pains have left my back, and my kidneys seem to be in first class condition, and I never have to get up during the night any more. I am also free from rheumatism and in fact, I feel better “in every way than I have for many years, I tell you, this Tanlac is a good medicin “You may know doing me a lot I carried out, he directed that the re- quest be read at the services, LONDON, July Cornwall laid an egg which con- tained three yolks, It was six and a half inches long and weighed five and a half ouncea, 10.—A at and has done me more good than all the rést of the medicine put to- gether I have taken during the last twenty-five years, and I think that is saying a good deal.” Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores wnder the personal di- rection of a special Tanlac represen- tative.—Advertisemant. j ning, | heels, THE SEATTLE STAR--THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1919. [Many Varieties of Shoes and Stockings for Summer Girls; Some Are Real Cute BY BETTY NEV YORK, July that we shall wear wherewith BROWN 10.— nd@ the hostery ther extremi re to be is the of the sea for number and variety For dress effects th are lace Inserted hose and soft, sheenles satin slippers, high-arched, heeled and pointed there are oxfords that are ly designed for afternoon that have modified satin backs and patent or, &@ there are the clarendo have great cover as sands French as as skis, expect French kid ev vamps fetching for instance that buckles and come in soft kid in a tion of in, the last being considered par ste satin eombin or und Is Just Swe et | ® BY BETTY BROWN Any woman in the world—or any man—would promptly fall in love with this little frock of pink and white organdie. It is highly recbm- mended” to seekers after romance! The gown itself ts created from plain organdie, and set off by bias ruffle: of white in the same material, each upheld by bowknots of black silk. ‘HOT WEATHER AND |COOL, CLEAN MILK b] caer gem Sometimes safeguards seem so or- dinary and so unstartling that one thinks everyone must surely know them, without further mention, And they probably are KNOWN, The only question is: Are they OB- SERVED? So, perhaps, these few homely reminders of what to do with milk during these summer days will not be entirely lost in the shuffle, A health commissioner in one of America’s largest cities thought well enough of them to write them in the first place, and have them put on| placards for display places in the city First, he reminded everyone that the department of health protects the milk until it reaches you. Then it followed that you should do your part by keeping the milk cool and clean after it reaches you To do the first of these things, keep the milk on ice, Keep dirt out of the milk. - Wipe the top of the bottle before using; keep the cap on the bottle while not using. Keep files away from the milk. Keep the milk bottle clean, : Reserve a cool, clean place to re- celve the milk, where tt may stand safely until placed on the ice. Keep the refrigerator co clean Keep old and new milk separate. ‘Then he closed his suggestions with the reminder that the difference be- tween dirty, spoiled milk and clean, sweet milk spells exactly the differ- ence between sick bates and healthy babies. STEAL JEWELRY AND in all public and BONDS; LEAVE KODAK} While the occupants were away thieves broke into a house at 1618 Ninth ave., Wednesday afternoon between 2 p,m. and 5 p.m. About $250 in’ bonds and jewelry was stolen. A kodak, obtained at an- other house in a previous robbery, was left behind by the thieves, It was turned over to the police, ‘The shoes | | tleularly smart | ‘There is considerable | paid to comfort have low, does not with t pointed deference | Some formal mod flat heels, but this seem te have inter vely long and els fact fered very extre toes | Sport shoes have a greater im . “ HOW RESCUE CAME TO TINY AT THE HANDS| OF LUCK A “You can't trust threw this platitude | and me as if it were news to us picked up the rope ladder and the| telephone wire and they broke. They were cut!” he said with a Hun!” Tiny] toward Mar: ‘an emphasis which sounded like pro-| 1 was saved, and it was time. My air fanity. “And 1 said to myself that I ought to have known better than to let a Hun trap me. There I was go-| ing to suffocate in a diving suit just for Ustening to one of ‘em. 1 shook | ‘my fist at a spot overhead where the varmint was safe ina oat IT wasn't) ready to quit living, tho T was rained | to face death kmiling. Why, the first thing I remember was seeing a man shot dead, and my dad wouldn't let) lme ery. That was in Montana, 1 wan about four years old, I guess.” Mary and I exchanged meaning | glances. We seemed to agree that | was a pitiful memory for a child to | grow up with, and that we women | ought to atone for it, somehow. | “And I guess I couldn't count the} chances I've taken with death,” Tiny went on. “Mostly they were even/ lchances, but down there the dice} | were Idaded, And I wasn’t ready. .‘Piny was holding Mary's hand and looking into Mary's eyes. He had forgotten me altogether. “{ hadn't been fair to a lttle gtrl, who was every bit as good as I, and I wanted to tell her so—before I quit.” At this Mary's tears took the place of her smiles, and I would have slipped away, but Tiny heard me moving, and waved me back to a seat on the steps of the shack before he went on: “So I thought of a mad way to get up the air of heaven and the good old light of the sun. I imagined I might walk to the shore, it wasn't many miles off. But I didn’t know which way’ it my and I was minus a compass, Then I thought IT might in- flate my lungs with the last atoms of oxygen in the tank, and throw off my toes, and rise to the top of the water and swim for it. Only, you see, being brought up on the Mon-| tana ranges, I ain't much of a swim- | mer.” ‘Tiny laughed, and, from sheer hys- teria, Mary and I joined in. Stripping myself and swimming vas like suicide for me, but T kept he notion in mind as a last chance, jand just stuck around the U-boat— he U-boat! exclaimed I in vast} | amazament. | “Sure! Didnt you expect it was | there after all the fuss we've made to locate it?” “Oh, la! laf! was my only com-| | ment. | “But I didn't investigate it,” said) |riny. “I had lost all my interests in | them pearls, somehow, I was just | set on having my breath, you might | |say. After about 50 years of my life | [had passed by, measured by my| | thoughts and my feelings, T saw a |light spreading thru the water, and | lincreasing. I knew it was the gates} | of heaven, or of hell, opening for me, and I couldn't tell which, and I didn’t | | \| Be Careful What You Wash Your Hair With Most soaps and prepared sham- poos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle, Tho best thing to use is Mulsi- fied cocoanut oil shampoo, for this is pure and entirely greaseless, It’s very cheap and beats anything else all to pleces. You can get this at jany drug store, and q few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply molsten the hair with water and rub it in, about a tea- spoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle Besides, it loosens and takes out every par- ticle of dust, dirt and dandruft, UNBURN Apply VapoRub lightly—it soothes the tortured skin, VICKS V. NYOUR. BODYGUARD’ = S08, 6 portance, than ever thie season, Buckskin and kid in combination ts preferred to the all-buckskin shoe as it is lighter, and there a very lightweight soft and pliable kids that are sure to find favor. For sports hpslery the silk and wool combinations undoubtedly hold first place—plaidy and checks and stripes—it's a matter of choice. These stockings are worn, too, with | walking pumps, tho in quieter pat terns, Dress hosiery, again in atrip or with embr clocks. k and white, plain fects “clocked.” After that, there very fine stripes, black and ¢r and white and black or gray is mi Bi are ar 2 LOVE! re vo long as I left the place where I wae Finally I made an effort to “| help things along, and I came to and| saw it was an are light being low. weren't| ered, same as the one I had trained | after I was 14 years old. Now, Miss | under. Divers was coming. I knew all gone And instead I nearly of saving on killed you,” Mary. “Well, of course. pecting to girl Was you, except for that dance, That got thrufmy nut some way, and I got my breath on deck Just naturally un- surprised to see you there.” “Jane Lorimer,” I admonished my- self, “Lohengrin himself sailing in behind his swans, couldn't make love better than that! And I felt awfully desolate, won- dering when my Bob would come to make love to me. (To be continued.) sobbed we wasn't ex. One of the most remarkable type writers was the machine especially built for Li Hung Chang, the Chi- nese statesman: It had ‘© some you at meet down there, little And I'd never have guessed it By CYNTHIA GREY Dear Miss Grey: You will probably think I am crazy, but really T am not. If you can advise me, I shall call you wonderful. To begin with, I am 28 years old, good looking and neat, a good housekeeper and love my home. I am married the second time. Tho first time I was very unhappy and, as far as love is concerned, I did not know what It meant, until I met my present husband. We have been very together; never hag he given me a cross word, and is just as considerate and kind today as when we were keeping company, and I am just as proud of him as I ean be. , He is older than I, and, therefore, I feel he knows more, so I always listen to his advice. We have never had gven one quarrel. This may sound untrue, but lly it is a fact. He also gives me everything. We both like to read and stay at home. We neither one care for company, and I have no people and do not know his. From their standpoint 1 am not as good they are, so I do not intrude, and I know he does not care for anyone but me. Still, I am not satisfied. I have a longing for something, I don’t know what. I am not very strong, and I do my work and sew for pastime, and I know from a logical stand- | point T should be just as happy as can be, But I am not. I have a constant feeling that something un- 7) ant is about to happen, and, if} the phong rings, I get so trembly I can hardly talk and the door bell has the same effect on me. I have done no wrong. I have nothing to| I am fast becoming a| k, and don’t know why. My life sedms not worth living. I get |so tired of it sometimes, I wish I/ | could die, Other times I want to run | |away. I do not go any place, be | cause T meet people who smile and | talk and do not mean a word of it. | | 1 can't ‘bear anything, and people | will say, “Oh, I am so glad to see | you,” and all the time they are} | thinking—"She has that old last} year's hat, and I wonder why she came to see me,” and other similar things. Every one has a right to do ag they please, so I just stay at! home and have no friends, If I go out on business, I feel that every- | one is looking at me and criticizing me. My husbind makes me go sometimes, but I do not enjoy it, be | cause I feel I am being stared at, | and the Lora knows I never encour- age any ome to look at me. I do not read cheap books, so why should | I feel so downhearted? I want to ery all the time, and — am so rest- less I can't sit still or be quiet. I have thought if I could go to work, maybe it would ‘help, as I have al- | ways worked and made by own way, te ‘Woman, that terrible sensation syou feel is your innermost soul crying out for the companion- ship of other souls. You have this old world all wrong, you misjudge your fel- low men. They are not better or worse than you. You have not tried to know them, you do not want to understand people, from your own admission. They do not criticize you silently or openly when you go out among them. It is your critical attitude toward all mankind that makes you feel that they are condemn- ing you, when, in reality, you are condemning them. Why, do you know, that I would part with anything sooner than the acquaintanceship of all the loads and loads of people I know, and this includes my enemies, too, You are not living unless you mingle and mix with those about , you, and I figure the more peo- ple one can meet, the more of. life that person is in a positnon to live and know. And there is nothing in this broad world that will enlarge a person's vision and mind like meeting new per- sonalities and traveling, Now, this is what I would do if l were you. Have a talk with your husband. Tell him you have just now realized that 4 are in a rut, a dreadful, deep rut, and that you want to climb ~ out, and you want and need his help. You and he go away to gether, if possible, on a trip. It matters not how far, or near, just so you get away from your ever-narrow monotonous sur- roundings, Spruce up a bit. Get some new clothes. Go to a beauty parlor and indulge in an honest-to-goodness dolling up. Then, when you return home, change your entire house, the arrangement, the furniture, the pictures, etc. Begin by attend- ing the theatres, operas, and outdoor amusements, Yes, get out doors a whole lot, the more the better. Gradually you will meet people, interesting people, and they won't prove the sort you think they are at all. Will you write and tell me how you get along? POLICE OFFER REWARD FOR IRISH WEAPONS DUBLIN, July 10.—-Rewards o! $250 each are being offered by th local police for information whic! will lead to the recovery of stole! weapons OL | for Cooking and Sa | Grey, you have some idea of how T| feel, and I can't go on much longer | | this way. Something must snap. If it wasn't for the love I have for my | husband, I would take my life just | as quick as I could, but I can’t hurt him, and it seems I will go mad when I think. Now, please, tell me what to do, because I can't decide any more. I don’t want to lose my | | husband, and I feel I shall if this) keeps on. I am powerless to turn ene way or the other. I have no | one to talk to. Please tell me what you would do? A SINCERE READER. ‘You remind me of a proud caged tigress I once saw at a large circus, pacing ever to and fro behind the iron bars with that hopeless look of longed-for freedom ever gleaming in her eyes, until it seemed she would go mad and die, But, unlike the tigress, you may, free your hide-bound_soul_if you choose. AZOLA means a smokeless kitchen. It will not smoke unless heated far above the food properly. temperature required to cook % ’ Test this out yourself by making: These Delicious Crullers 3 cups Flour, 1 cup Sugar, % cup A ¥% teaspoor Soda, 14 teaapoons Sal, 2 tablespoons Karo, 3 Milk. Sift dry ingredients. Beat eggs light: milk. Stir liquids into dry ingredients and add flour quarter inch thick, cut rgo Cornstarch, 4 teaspoons Baking Powder, 3 Eggs, 34 teaspoon Nutmeg or Cinnamon, tablespoons Mazola, 2 teaspoons Vanilla, 1 cup Thick Sour Add Karo, Mazola, vanilla and sour to make a soft dough. Roll one- and fry in hot Mazola. If desired substitute 1 cup tye flour and add one-half square melted chocolate for chocolate doughnuts.

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