The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1924, Page 12

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RR THE ROSE JAR Leaves for Memories Spices for Excitement Salt for Preserving Summer Sunday Fa THREE Marriage Aid to Ca reer LITTLE Breakfast MOTHER F INDS. ( HIL DREN AND HUSBAND NO HANDICAP Luncheon or Supper fs * . 5 e | os he e . Dre Gra Bread | di * esi awvekee se aL ee i" FRUIT SOUP a 4 w ~ 4 ear © : oan salt 3 continue Adela was makin, . $15 k A week and my sa! done than to im at home. And then I left th rem wspaper, Worthless Hubby said Mrs Johns. began to a short time an we “fs ea f i keep t We then not only made SCARLET TOUCH y husband often tells me of E ; both ends mee but sav money on the girls he used to ake 4 ; the single A touch of scariet dances and plays. And it seems to Fe “But she wasn't satisfied as a pick ney s aang 4 jme the girls are very angry w housekeeper—altho she was a good vhad ma 00% |they meet me with He treats one,” said the husband. ‘‘She wanted - x nahin y and takes me out wher. @ career, and began to write her way baacracuad jever he goes, Should what they j out of the drudgery of keeping Pies |think worry me now? 7 his } house.” TO PROTECT RAISINS WORRIED WIFE. | ] “Then we struc arrange Before adding raisins to cake A—What more unnecessary worry - ment.”* said Mrs “Ivan atter spre layer of | could you hit upon? You have won, would pay for of the on bottom hand & | they have lost, the game is ended. 4 j home, just as he had been doing. tle to cover the top. This | Heviewing a parade of his early “If I was going to earn money es the cake smooth and prevents dx loves is not the most tactful way a ae weerens 7 Cane, sway from * top and bottom from| a man can select to amuse his wife. ; meme it was » ony to pay for th }burning. ty. | Better discourage your husband by % —_———————_- | we changing the subject every time it | recurs. “pe The Modern Woman erg “ : men r em |ie2 : gr? Si-ergoedens ite ts wis ose Jar | | Fancy Costumes the justice and the logic of thelr new Satine nies Oh Fienee “v5 | Rebuke g Rachel position 4 American man is AKE clean rot 719g ai pe q a aster scane ff haa ghey wert peepee | A—Miss U. 8. A. Cotton. Girt, . i unconscious of himself to be deeply nalt cinna | > Gir ; concerne f the erie: n in botte her id rose e | Queen of Hearts, Up-to-Date, Knit oho a Rca reael pa yathesr ; smiigernt baer pepe lting Girl, White Cloud (Indian girl) 2 Py Lagoa ee aa sen oper ” or any flower such as white rose or certain defects, and if he has not © 4 spray or leat fetes Ald H yet cut his wisdom teeth in matters m or Martha W ; om } oe ain =| hs of business—particularly on the ire 4 3 BY humanistic side, in which women Cleaning Plumes paige 4 genius more skilled— Dear Miss Grey: How can I clean epee i & generous share of the blame must | white plumes at home? t remark is: Women wear hi be placed on the American wife. I ful A—Sift one part of borax with please themselves—ng frankly consider it more logical that 1 top and close 1 | three parts of flour and work into (it should read: Why sd i leaders of women should ta'k about When ready to use simy | the feather, wrap in a clean towel n?) : and plan for responsibilities as wiv dott toc ’&: tow me over night, then brush out the pow- ble men aft { rather than excite themselves over ibe Dactuena sai € | der. © feminine { meticulous qualities of rights, sc You helped fina j poeg as for the jong as it remains ct that niz cat and this is | Question of Etiquette they cer tenths of women wish wifehood tain to ba bls | [Diese Mins Grays: “Wives “eating | ta { they want their sole profess The benefits ' ° meat, after cutting the same with |to get ahead of t e female of the : of sheer wifehood under modern co: i i yee he knife, shoukd the fork be changed |SPecies. Then goes on with: Women a W ditions of semi-luxury, Seattle may perspire and fan itself these warm days—but the climbing MEFCUTY | to the osbnyginah * pede tne roi wear clothes to please themseivl 2 ig American male attitude are pro makes no matter to these three little maids who are not afraid to go near the water.|+5 the mouth? H. G 2 was te i ouneed and obvious: they so weigh isi ; chubby littl : in Lake Washingto tand: (Left to right) Peggy| A—Not if the change can be i ani Pac aite’s olde iat the achle) ta Here is the Parisian idea So, cooling their chubby little toes in La ke Washington, star Ly i] gov; A— } i fact, that it is sm of what the well-dressed Fr Moriarity, 156 25th ave.; Gertrude Martin, First S. and West Brandon, and Margery ere ait eee eee j men are waking o woman should wear on) pnimel pan. Hea | McMicken, 531 17th N jas possible. It is the English cus- : } ag Iesuityloncund > Dee hot day—white organdie moe Pat mt has sai ake Bae ie = setae }tom to use the fork entirely with | his c - they should marry th aeer: pe : files | the. left hand. Americans who are | sane 4 ged epped up with black em-| sprinkle with allspice, turn dai | A RIG A OMRON 7 ’ = : wah st menace magatine for July. 4 HOME FURNISHINGS t | very careful often imitate the Eng-| DIFFERENT. fet Sa a ck Bi lor seven day Add cloves and | a : i" | ang: | 3 broidery and a black sash. for seven Gay . Aad eves and (lee valine a eres a arize 7] 0 Me hiaaty tare snacdrmatinsiate stp fang eines GOOD MA The spiderweb motifs in the| cinnamon ss Keep in cleced || tween two » P jcism which can be applied to those A sympathizer 0 — rge siz f ¢ rib- pels 4 “ar e3. above the fireplace who use the fork in the right hand. THIRTY Pe Pee ce Cre bom," fesvstad wih blocs| Pa =P Pee || Sere, e Geter men Be Cool Summer Drinks. Ae, tilious as to pay their dinner cails|| bon, faggoted with black| im SSADER: gare. beaneinl ¢ Tadite | s within 24 hours, but it is the|/and the smaller ones are Thank you, Indies, for answer cluttered with antiques and other Tea Punch Jwhile tea is hot. Add sirup and height of correctness and go0d|/ circles of black silk em-| ‘98 my request for Jar d tronke ocsathent Oné cup strong fresh tea, 2 lem.|POUF mixture over cracked ice. Add THIS SMILE IS GONE manners. r 4 c.G ™| orange slices and serve. j broidered in white. The a a oranges, «1 fresh straw Cherry Ade < 1S aR RST RSE CRETE ES | 3 is wo ver a berry or raspbe ¢, 2 cups su- et tabi : dress is worn oor S plain PANELS CHANGE SHAPE k and felt hats are mor ar. 5 bups. wat ucked ice | rwe cups cherry juice, 2 cups! Ruthie and her lost pal Nude hosiery has become over- pop-| slip of white organdie and remarkable to see the si T\than straws for sportwear | Squeeze juice from lemons andjSusar sirup, 1 cup orange juice, “Spot.” This little young- ular in America and the better) with a large white sun hat! tines that may be achieved for stout joa! sports dress is the straight-lined |strain, Cut oranges in alices. Boil | cracked ice, 1 cup tea. ee tbrok Pee dressed women are wearing them| with a black border. Very|ftisures by the ingenious use of| fi I one’ which ig bound about | mankr and water le-tinutes Mix » make the sirup, boil one and} ster is heartbroken and noth- only for evening occasions, prefer: h blatk dad ribb drapes and panels heck, armholes and border in white, |lemon, strawberry juice and tea|one-half cups sugar with one-halt|ing will bring back the sun- ring light gray, beige and gunmetal| heavy black corded ribbon is — — - } cap water till sirup threads. Stone| shiny smile she is wearing ii for street wear. used for the sash. cherries and just heat to start the} ASPARAGUS FOR SALAD < Asparagus for salad should be : plunged into ice water as soon as it BY JANE BELLOWS Books and e House w e ls taken from the fire and then|| ‘acntetie Director. Natleeat Beard Y. W A., and Author of “Individual “ served with French dressing to Kaxeretee which a Ittle mustard has been Standing with feet parallel and apart, raise arms sideways to shoulder CONTRIBUTED 10 THE ROSE JAR BY AMANDA F. MORFORD, | *<ed ee level, bend and ty unk forward, downward, left until right hand 2 3100 E. JEFFERSON " || touches left foot, or the floor beyond it, keeping left arm at shoulder * | Necklaces of huge coral colored|| level. Bring right arm up, making a large circle above head. Drop head ‘ORE ‘and more is home reading entirety, tho any book may be read |beads are worn for summer with the|| back, reaching up with chest as arm returns to position. Continue being emphasized as of great] in same way, pter each | lingerie frock. Crystals continue to| | aitern: . 6 to 20 times. importance in the bettering of the| morning. However it is hard to lay|be popular for evening wear and This exercise gives flexibility to the muscles of the trunk, stretches home itself, yet there are many|down a book at the end of an in-|large pearls combined with an oc-|| the calf muscles, massages the abdomen and tends to give a graceful ‘ women who think, mistakenly, | teresting chapter with the story still |casional colored bead are popular as|| posture, thru the flattening of the shoulder blades. enough, that house work and books | incomplete cannot he reconeiled. Too many| ‘Too many people are gourmanda women allow their minds to become stagnant pools reflecting only the drudgery of their lives, giving as an excuse that “they reading.”’ | in their reading. Cramming one story after another into the mind, giving |no chance for any; one of them to have no time for | become a part of ourselves before an other is crowded after it, can be of | Most of us who are busy house-| «mall benefit. Little of what is read wives, put aside our reading until wel iy retained. De a ae, OTE” One article 0 Gay toad and retained, after a more or less busy day, only to discover that we get less of either Pleasure or profit from it than we might expect. A tired body makes & weary brain, without question. My own experience has bet chat from 15 to 30 minutes of reading in the morning before beginning any of the day's work, is of more real bene- fit to me than four times the amount of reading done afterward. Fifteen minutes a day, six days a week, furnishes one and one-half heurs—30 minutes a day, three hours of constructive reading each week. | And by constructive reading I mean | reading followed by thinking about, | digesting and assimilating what has | been read. | will and do more to broaden, educate strengthen the mind than dozen carelessly read. That is where| the great educational value of the! morning comes in—it gives time and opportunity for thought afferward. Once begun it becomes such pleasure, is so profitable, that 1 am| sure no housewife who, like myself, has once established the habit of a| few minutes’ reading at tho begin ning of each day, will ever willingly | relinquish it Gain Weight | ' reading, since cach may be read im its] (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star.) The name of the headdress does not limit | front and back, GIR LS AIRPLANE STUNT recently show CLT SD and even school girls y-wid- | Housework ix always more or less| Four tablespoons shredded pine | mechanical and requires a minimum snple seen’ fried eral a] amount of thought. Making beds,| Creamed potatoen ad” brag ons | washing dishes, sweeping, ,dusting,|pan cakes, 3 tablespoons maple | ironing, even cooking, become to a| sirup, Kraham-nut and = raisin certain extent so much a matter of | tear anparanie You t Fouche | habit that these duties can be done|egg on toast with % cup tomato | and done well, while our thoughts |freene pete sone jngh Cres enrar| are otherwise occupied. chowder, 2 slices cold roust. beet | Why not give to our minds, then, | cup shredded cabbage with 2} first thing in the morning while they | t@blespoons cream dressing, 2 ch | cups, 1 cup compote of Trult| are fresh, plastic and unwearied, | sprinkled with 2 tablespoons shred oi some new thoughts to occupy them | deg coe ad ‘ toasted crac kere | } while our hands perforce must be| With soup, 2 slices’ whole wheat| i busy with necessary but monotonous |PSOMd: pint whole milk, 1 table: | Ae) duties. Total calories, 3942. Protein, 542; | if ? An interesting. short. story, Snape fat, 1642: carbohydrate, 1448. ‘Iron, ait 4 ing poem or instructive article rend |" 1¢ you like you ean add two or La the first thing in the morning, will! three tablespoons of whipped cream ‘ , i “ brighten all the hours of the day. |to your fruit compote, Be mure a| Bobbed hair styles are changing again. | it to the husbandless 1 Meise aesios, stablag nia ey) banana is included in your mixture,| Madame Louise, Chicago hair dresser of | have their locks shorn to the new lines, PEATE the ina gasind” oftar the yi Hing ov ithh hs Shay Dee Ie authority, presents to the world her new| Miss Agnes Verne, Mont satisfactory material for this|geanon should he used freely, "|“Merry Widow” bob. | owed” by the hairdresser, § how it looks | Protein. 613 Juice. Press thru a cheesecloth. | sirup, let Mix the orange and cherry juices and stand on ice till thoroly chilled. Add cracked ice and pour over hot tea. Serve with large perfect cher- | Tes in glasses. | Fruit Punch | One pineapple, 1 quart water, 1 quart raspberries or strawberries, 6 oranges, 3 cups lemon sirup, cracked ioe | Grate pineapple. Put water and pineapple in a smooth sauce pan and | boil three minutes. Strain. Add | Juice pressed from quart of fruit, orange juice and lemon sirup, Pour over cracked ice and serve, Cherry Punch A delicious drink for a hot day is | cherry punch. | Three lemons, 2 oranges, | shredded pineapple, 2 cups stoned | cherries, 1 cup sugar, 1 quart gingor | ale, 2 cups iced tea, 1 banana, % cup | chotee cherries (stoned). In a large bow! put juice of lem. ons, the oranges sliced, the pine- |apple, the cherries and the aurar, | Press with a wooden potaty masher and let stand for an hour or icuger | | to extract the juice, Press the fruit toa pulp and strain. Add the strained | Juice to the ginger ale and tea. Add |the banana, sliced, and the cherries Jout in quarters. Put a tablespoon. | ful of crushed ice in each glass to serve. | Four tablespoons shredded _pine- | SPple, 1 poached egg on toast with 4 tablespoons tomato sauce, 1 ott clam chowder, oup cabbage salad, |Ticup compote ot fruits aliten eriep |wluten toast, 1 gluten roll, 1 pint skimmed milk Total calorios, 11 Proteing 223; | fat, 388: carbohydrate, 576; ‘Iron, |.0211 gram Poached Egg on Toast | (Individual) | One slice whole wheat toast, jorlsp pleces brofled bacon, Jegs, 5 button mushrooms, pimento, Place 2 thin 1 poached 2 strips | the hot bacon on hot toast, jcover with a hot poached egg and add the mushrooms broiled over a ar bed of coals or in a hot pan. rnish with strips of pimento |crossed over the top of the egg and {Serve with tomato Uce, Total calories (without sauce, 8 fat, 159; carbohydrate, Iron, .0! gram. es (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star.) | % cup { Lose Weight | Reader Flays Old Fashioned M other May Be Honest in He Si Puts a C ung G I Ar a ar f ” It is all right to obe ¢ up to the times These are excer t “ answers the little a” gir d tot t her heartach “Disillusioned Gir to herself, she said She complained that mother and the Cor ent any sort of a good other 04 CAN'T GO ON WEEK-END TRIP = One reade ert Min Dear awa n es ma are pla CANT STAY ovr APTER 1930 Bh et her go « 9 they nowadays has to stay out f. the crowd An old-fashioned mother may be hone her convie tions, but she sure does put a crimp in a girl's fun, E rperience, Unnecessary Worry Dear Mins Grey: I ! o- How She'd Har this picture. “Spot” is lost. Read the letter from Ruthie's mother to Cynthia Grey, and if you have seen a dog ans- swering “Spot's” description, won't you let us know? SAR MISS GREY; I wonder if, was served also. Her dad took it ase be th you would please kind enough | With him Monday evening » ot | truck and unknown to them to help us find our pup.» We lost him } jumped on the running to fo | stonday evening, June in the | iow them. neighborhood of 71st and 34th ave.} I am sure if whoever has DE Si W. in Ballard. We had him on the | knows how we miss him they r running board of the car and he|gladly return him as he is one either fell or jumped off. |tho family and our home does! He is a long-haired white pup with|seem the same since he !s black and brown spots and answers | Ruthie is heartbroken, she cries z jto the name of Spot. He has a very | cries until she is almost sick. | peculiar walk and is very easily reo-| I will certainly appreciate anythit jognized. You can't imagine how we/you can do to help us get Spot DOM yy mourn his loss, especially my 4-year- again. I called the Humane soelel ’ old girl, who was his pal and play: | but they haven't found him, be mate. From morning until night she} Our addre 55 Market ' would never eat or drink until Spot | Phone SU nset Mi = = - ’ | Her Ideal of Gentleman Miss Grey: May I give you my opinion about gentlemen? I thi By the only gentlemen are the men who make a living with manual Jab \eg and use their noodles at the samo time. Will tell you what makes Itt ¥ think so, At 17 I married a preacher who was weak, both in his mt ex and in his back. He suffered from lumbago whenever there Was al r wood to chop or water to be carried. We lived in the country: x only time he felt spry was when playing tennis with high school gitls® : T left him. At 24 1 married a floor-walker who was stuck on hi and thought every girl was stuck on him; he used perfumes and OF metics and had no more brains than a grasshopper. At 30 1 married MY Dui prekent husband, a hod cartier, who gives me all his money except Y dollar or two which he uses to get lit up a little on Saturdays, He very loving. He has some queer ideas, He says r and ¢ pets att not healthy to have in the house. Lace curtains to him are punky Bl every other way he is “Jake” with me. I call him a gentleman hever kicks about my failings, We go to a show twice a week. Kav’

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