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-Saee7 %, Biter in your pa We J Canned Corn aD, Sin! Tes sa Keal W inbee T reid — CYNTHIA GREY — Flirting H One Curtain Lecture Brings on An- other, and the Batt BY CYNTHIA GREY One woman writes me No amount of reasoviing, him, she continues. Otherwise, that The more he is a Another woman defending a man. is & man,” all alike—all brutes! can't please everyone humans. writes Secretly s else “s All of I hold no briefs for husbands, their faults, just as wives do. But business, and she ought to make Besides that, the infidelity, titi feurable kind for e sis likely t Sthe vines, Take nagging. to have as the Scriptures It’s a little Mrs. Pepys was a born na Once she caught Sam kissir cusing him of making love to model hus the trivial sort, good wine of many a marriage into a bitter brew. There was the case of Samuel Pepys and his wife. that she nagged him about every pretty woman he met, ac- = BY SISTER MARY | One dozen ears of « mak penance When corn is well in the “mil about tw ints of / tage it ia best for canning To a courne t una if ut | termine this preas a kernel with| entirely on the size of t || If f So, Y ou Ca an Hav ea a Hat Like This the hull, Hf the Juice fon owt with | Unless canning t \ quick aquirt the corn i» not old |, family | ee | nou, but if the milk rune slowly | paring ; at ier tke cream the corr juat. right | gy aaa < ee and should be used at or se rag ul canning of corn If you want to can “corn-on-the peapies 99 her Ausband ts a born flirt oot you caviet use large cans and) 00 nue ” + | then perhaps the ears must be cut arguing, pleading seems to feaze tone nH event ana aa fr gathered and in the she raves, the more he flirts can on the cob or cut the corn the | #8e for canning ther t band. What shall she d blanching and processing he | Mott to be gu . t ame eae de t t to pan me generously for ever sataclot’ 1 ‘ 4 cheesectoth and plunge a lea aie he “just knows that Cynthia boiling water, Boll for Bake d Spinach and * would never take one’s part, They're | utes, Dip quickly into ee pa lomatoes which goes to prove that you ord My idl i water, as cold bad oe Two poun i tom sible, Remove at once and untie.|% 0 (minced), 1 teaspoon’ sugar there are no parallels in the lives of | Cut neat the eon! eax [otis hag. teaspdoet “jad ae a thin alice from the top of the! % 1 bread mb ° | kernels, Scrape out the milk and | tat t 4 tab let it be understood. They have the heart with the dull ¢ f the |b aft tables, niece is primarily the woman's | knife. Put into jars which have!ed cheese a * if possible. con sterilized in boiling water for| wan : , faults of a husband are usually the in- five minutes, Do not “pack Chop ¥ f Peel “ton xample. Whereas, a woman plage et: Psacie “6s 1 cut i Put a laye the “little foxes that spoil 4 teaspoon salt and % tea cog 4 say. n sugar to Pour in| tomatoe » vice, but it has turned the | bolting rn and fill) pepper ugar |Jar, Adjust and half seal.jier Add a layer of # Beats Put Into bath and pro | with Arie Grteand vat ce for t « f layer t s gger. tie ft th i va ng the housemaid. And after} 0 Ken ere ‘ rumt Me m ' nd turn upside | pry bi ; : ‘ ol, as ae ; all of them. sibié and w rot, | sani e cure Pepys of his flirting? tore in @ dark . y ae With what result? Did sh Not at all. fairs, beginning with a certai SHOUT ECROS TT Teesbeste ending with Deb Willetts, the scullery maid. a about them in his famous the afternoon,” writes Pepys and trotted out to meet Deb! So much for nagging, and POREP CSC eP OROTEENE can only spoil things. at About Married Women | ~Who Work | Dear Miss G | Apropos a a few days ago let She drove him to more “I listened to my wife’s threats and vows and curses a Nagging never gave any woman any of the things she gs wants from her husband—neither love and wider love af- Sagwell and Pepys tells 300 years n beautiful Mrs. | “Diary,” written : And then he put on his if YOU HAVE ANY STANDING as an amateur knitter or if you can crochet in an elementary fashion there is nothing? ‘to keep you from having one of these smart sport hats. The} e rib stitch is all you need for the hat part, and for the It} pompom you simply wind mu h wool over cardboard, then tie and cut it. This one, crocheted by Kathlyn Martin, actress, is of sand-colored wool with two fluffy pompoms of red, blue ; |and green yarns. i|- BA corr age Pie ee eee us ok \ 2 hat } the good it does! > nor happiness. | ont. * Cynthia Grey will receive callers at her office in The Star building, 1309 Seventh ave., from 1 to 3 p. m. every day except Saturday and holi | —s~} Gregarding married women m_ the ‘ Pteaching profession, I think a n = ome 1 Ing otation hundreds of women will agree v nship 7 rm re . me in thinking that the teaching| Query tor I hese Kiddies @Profession is not only the exclusive| “4, Miss Grey: 1 was born jn ag of workers who suffe> there-) Canada and married an —/ eo fome 14 years ago. I BY BARBARA BROOKS | We went home feeling that here @ 1 havo just returned from visit-| @ing a friend, who was left a widow jewith two children to raise. She has a small home, but in order to pay assessments, taxes, she had to} wo it two years ago and take a} Eposition as housekeeper on @For the first six months her ten Gants paid her no rent ar she Gcould not put them out without mtually employing an attorney and owing to receiving no money from them she could not leave the Psituation she filled when after two MGmonths they were unable to pay Wher wages, so that her last state Twas worse than the first. I was able to relieve her by look- ting after her work while she spent Aa week in Seattle c to Eobtam work. She scoured the from end to end without avail and Geverywhere she was confronted with © marric-1 women © Is it any wonder that much Sbitterness is prevalent when one| Sconsiders such circumstances? Mar-| ried women have a perfect right to Giwork, but is it fair to employ wo- Gmen who have husbands to provide *for them and who should have Ghome duties to perform while there “are so many women absolutely de- Spendant upon earning not only thelr Sewn bread and butter, but com- Spelled to fill the mouths of others Glependent upon them for sustain- ranch. | ‘1 Sence? | = AN INTERESTED READER. = | Mary’s Calf ) BY HEDDA HOYT | S—Mary had a little calf, | It never did develop: And everywhere that M: The people all cried “Hel-up!" y went What limb atrocities we see these .. of short skirts! It is time that some of us woke up to Bthe fact that a 48 bust does not go Swith a 10-inch calf. Others might | Sheed the fact that a 32 bust is out} ot connection with a 20-inch calf. “That women are bipeds is no longer 4 question of any interest Short skirts are certainly prefer mable to long ones, since they are @easier to walk in and easier to keep | Selean about the hem. Let us hope Tthat we shall never go back to! “ground draggers” of other days, mBut, any skirt that js 12 inches) Grom the ground ts sufficiently high “for freedom of motion, and it stands Slo reason that the woman who Tivears a knee hemline ix not striv Qng for lez motion, Usually her| Sekirt is cut sa long that her step ia impeded. 1 She is merely striving attract attention to her shapli 8. If such # person has just gulaim upon shapliness, “them high. cplayers one sees, tfrom shapely. let her wear New Yorkers are generally knock kneed, Still they wear circular gkirts which dip at the sides and yoar upwards in front and back, Wisplaying huge, ungainly knees, “here are stout women with hips of “barrel width and legs like pipestemn. | hey, too, are vain in displaying | Poulcs i* made of plain black velvat | what seems to others a deformity, , “4 the printed border forma a etr JN WA At Deauville, rance, a gentleman | py ye Which beging at the WHY PAY R. PRICES ? Shatioe Bist Beek. ballads Several afternoon and evening “Millions (4) 0, ds tdaahe 0 a ed for en pP iy f ver ‘his bathing mult. Perhaps Bl eee glade With. chp Yenee on yk) 7 sealized his defictencies, Women |" Marea ie Tae Us d b hh gmight take a lesson from him fee tan RC RE I EL eA '0 ne e yy the one's limbs aren't worth showing, sete . wily" show ‘om? No-one. will be| | Sovernment awed by the first 12 inches of al A FRENCH ECONOMY slog. It's the next 12 that knock Bacon fat ma be used in sa gam dead, dressing for lettuce and vegeta t a here since. I se ia ™ CHILDRE come into} ¥&* # wise mother with a happy year and then married a Bol | RGN meale—they | “mil Lor of sleep, out- who already had his first r i bor play an filling station’ |In September he secured his seem to consider home primarily a provided nolenome — fe the up the corners, which, in growing WHEN BAKING CAKE i Barada |UD c § ich, gro" Ay NG CAKE |the skirts or the al shea Bodices) children, are often left empty in| Collect all the materials you need are left extremely plain spite of a large meal Simple | before you start to make a cake. It There are, for instance, velvet ily worked in ombre beadwork or |embroidery. Where the skirta car- |rles out the trimming {dea to an high } Most of the kneo dis-| however, are far| papers. Am I still a citizen? | filling station.’ This was tho state- | all working together for fam J. J... | ment. wa, heard a mother laughingly | ‘ly hea The United States Naturaliza- make k spe — tion Service advises me that | cia} not as the you are still a citizen since you | came thal. wa have remained in this country. | to. 1 eCHIUs | since your first marriage. ) Yor the Jen ie fat ct ; famil _Y | Legality fet ga Aelia ee Breakfast Berrills, cereal, thin} of Will : : ; ¢ream, soft-cooked ‘exes, ryo. toast,| Dear Miss Grey: My husband) A generous yard back sotiin! atti HY has made a will leaving his prop-| provided an ample Luncheon—Cream of spinach sour erty to me. There are no wit-|'The thingy that children be] ee een Oe et Oey | nesses, but he says it is valid just| Joy were the a ‘ t , : death, | t id ta Goat ; apple sauce, ginger drop cookies thea same. In case of his death ‘ sa dy aor SAP | will this will hold good? We have| the childrer ! rs an mm " Dinner—Roust le. of lamb, r t He named m two minor child executor MRS. J. J. W i y. browned potat creamed ca Your husband should have that et » rots, jellied fruit salad, cheese, crack the will signed by a notary pub be filled 1 right kind of /ers, coffee, milk, graham bre | lic in the presence of witnesses 1 be tie Those members of the family who in order to make it valid. This | iubae tide! ioe’ waailaw abut tprade® kal unsookied oereat-tie Breac may be done at « small cost, } dren, Firat of all, |fast will like thelr berries served with phe dadl | thet’ ta are not pampered—the |the cereal. This means a saving of — ttl in_served—they eat what tp dishes for the dishwasher, and Is} | F 5 given. The parents do lkewise and | Worth encouraging | Trimmings do not express aloud dislike of an | food which {# sent to the table HELPS CONSIDERABLY | | The day s plan for these ch je butter Jincludes a quart of milk apiece. | About a pint of this is taken as a beverage and the rest Is used with | cereal, in soups and desserts. Three | vegetables are served daily, at Jeast one of them uncooked. Cereals are Rub your fingers | the knife before you seod ra nd you will not be annoyed by stickiness. ren on BY HEDDA HOYT Women, Women, lovely Women! Your chic this year depends on trimmin’. the | -- | | IRONING TIP j an | If you are going to tron clothes Trimmings are going to play important part with the well dressed Fall, Almont |2eved for breakfast and ready-to- | {mmediately after sprinkling them | woman this coming tae 7‘ a + eat cereals are always on the sup-| use hot water. It will make them every garment for dress wear I8) 10. tanie. ‘Thero ts nothing equal| much easler to handle trimmed in some manner. Usually trimming is concentrated upon to a bowl of corn flakes for filling cookies and frult form the evening | will take leas time and you will be} desi _leas apt t 25 OUNCES afternoon frocks with plain bodices and with wide circular skirts heay- extreme degree, the sleeve and re mainder of the frock is generally! left plain and unadorned. One of | the most frequent sleeve trimmings | found this season is where the full | | gathered sleeve begins at a low| shoulder seam and is embroidered in colors terminating in a narrow wristband. Repetitions of the sleeve embroldery may be found on the bodice at the point where the flared | | skirt begins. | Among thé prominent embroider: | fes are those done tn allk, metallic | threadwork or wool. Petit point| embroidery js also included this sea Chinese embroidery gold and blue in background noon models | Aside from embroidery there ¢ trimmings of ribbon, | jand velvet appliques which are usu- | ally combined with chiffon or geork Jette. Just at present the call for| black material embroldered in colot | is very strong. Women aro buying | black yard material such as velvet jor silk crepe printed in horder de- | sign in vivid floral designs for Fall | in green, worked on black sat: | form many after trims lace Price Jor over 35 years | One of the loveliest evening | gowns is made of black velvet | printed with huge rose design in coral, red and green colorings. The | odie FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER. 18, 192 —_ > Home Handiwork ae: : | , 7 GAY COLOR MOTIFS \ By Ruby Short McKim é Orende Lt, Green 0) i WD Dark Green Liga Green Stems Blue Lavendar Blue Orange Torple Orange O Rutvy Short Miki o> BY RUBY SHORT MchIM , nbroid i uch ¢ i > garments rect and embroid ool or } » make enough band attern, t ue pape thru ating the pa t given 1 length. Then t { n paper to The 1aro t r i sral linen or some neutral ackyr not ont on clothes There’s heart-deep western welcome in every savory Sip WHOLE-SOULED hospitality and “a cup of wonderful cof- fee” —these are twin traditions of our great western empire. You get the connection the moment you moisten your lips with a warming sip of Hills Bros. Coffee, that fra- grant seal-brown brew the West claims as its own. Break the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros. Coffee. Inhale that rich, rare aroma! Brew a cup and taste that marvelous flavor! Comb the continent and you will find.no flavor to compare with this. That’s why they call it The Recognized Standard. Reg. U.S, Pat, Off, Aroma, flavor, strength, freshness—the Quality Quar- tet that has won so many friends for this unusual coffee, from the Pacific to the Missis- sippi. Ask for Hills Bros. by name and look for the Arab onthe can. Hills Bros. Coffee is economical to use. “es ~ p= ie