| evitable set-to began and other girls what you will, you can't save them. . | were demonstra charm in every Now, is that little pink doodad | possible key for his benefit. Mrs. yours?” ke Mansfield faced every day with a “My daughter's.” Mrs. Mansfield ee | gick dread that Lutie would spoil it, was thinking over what she had Bellefonte, Pa., August 14, 1981. and went to bed every night with a said. “How do you mean—save ————— welling relief that Lutie hadn't. them?” Mrs. Macalarney straightened a tired back. “Well, Ey Mary got herself engaged to as nice a young feller as ever stepped; hard- ‘and earning good money and kind to his folks and liking a joke—my, he was a lovely feller. And he come to ask if he could have her. And I told him the truth.” with Was she at last really in love and MY STAR. had it made a woman of her? Or was I have a star |she only supremely clever? All of my own, Her mother did not press the ques- Hung in the night ition. As much as she could, she So all alone, | avoided it. | But Lutie was no different when God put it there. |they were alone. She never talked He gave it Light with her mother, and Mrs. Mans- Ever to shine | field's attempts at conversation were Mrs. Mansfield was listening From Heaven's height. yawned at or snubbed. Lutie con- troubled eyes. “The truth?” | sidered her “small town,” and per- “I says to him, ‘Bob, she's got a ‘haps she was, for her civic interests handsome face, and that's all she's | —creches and hospital and communi- got. She's not been any comfort |ty chest—made the world at large in her home. She's never done a One little star— I tell it all. It understands, It will not fall! ‘seem very dull beside home. day's honest work or lifted her hand When-1 am tired | “But I am a real person,” shear- to help. She's vain and wasteful, Of Falsity, gued, alone in the dark. “My hus- and that lazy she'd fall apart if it band found me worth talking with, Lutie. How have I so failed with wasn't for me. She's got an ele- There is My Star gant silk crepe dress rolled up un- Winking at me. Mary Philips. You?” That was the question that der the bed this minute for want of she could never get answered. Lutie, a bit of mending. Now, you're a —————————— a nice-erough young girl, rather fine boy and I'd like nothing better YIMMY YOHNSON lumpy and clumsy and silent, had than to have you for my son-in-law. been sent away to boarding school to save her from the sad years of her father's slow dying; she had come back suddenly and overwhelm- ingly a beauty, with a scornful refusal of all the home had to offer. “I can't be bored with that,” was her answer to every human obliga- tion. Her Aunt Martha, who lived with them, put it with a terrible bluntness: “Lou, I can't see a re- deem trait in that girl.” Mrs. eld had resented it hot- ly, but in silence. An obscure sense of being to blame had taken all the fight out of her. Binks scratched at her door and whimpered. He wanted her to go down and tell Lutie that it was time she came up to bed. His paw was well again, but he had squirrel in- validish habits. She escorted him to his bed in Lutie's room, tucked him in and made his restlessness an excuse for staying there until Lutie finally came up. She was so happy she had to talk a little. “Binks has been weeping for you,” she explained her presence. Lutie looked at her unseeingly from a long way off. “He'll be all right now,” she said. It was dismissal, but because she had felt so warm and open, Mrs. Mansfield tried not to see that. Take her if you must, but don't you never say I deceived you.” Mrs. Mansfield's hand was shield- ing her face. “What happened?” she murmured. Mrs Macalarney stooped for the sheets. “Just what you'd expect. He says I'm hard on her and he mar- ries her. I couldn't save him.” “But girls often improve,” Mrs. Mansfield urged. “They grow up. Love and children can work won- Didn't you have to give her her chance?” “Well, her three kids didn't work no wonders. Bob and his mother are bringing them up, and Mary's home with me—There's a tear in that pillowcase, ma'am; it ought to be attended to.” afer the laundress had gone, Mrs. Mansfield sat ponderi behind her hand. The i nag moved her unbearably. Something small town and conscientious in her was awed by its impersonal vision and Brutus justice. To be bigger than the family circle! What Nor. man would do for Lutie had so fill- ed her sight that she had not even considered what Lutie might do to Norman. A lovely fellow—kind to his folks and liking a joke—that was Norman too. And Lutie? “Lou, I can't see a redeeming trait in that Mrs. Mansfield paused at the foot of the steps to look back through the open front door. Strong mid- summer moonlight turned the beach to gold and the cedars to ebony, and laid a dancing track of diamonds across the ocean, but that was noth- ing to what it did to Lutie Mans- field, who was sitting on the top step with her fair head tipped back against a pillar and a mist of white chiffon overlaying her young limbs. James Norman Johns sat on the bottom step, his back to all the other loveliness, his face a dark disk lifted wholly to Lutie. How right Lutie had been! Mrs. Mansfield, closing her door, felt an ache of apology for how she had op- pose taking the cottage, talking about what they could afford and trying to buy Lutie off with a trip. Lutie had got her own way by the simple process of her- self impossible to live with on any terms. And now—Her heart sang deep hymns of ving Norman was of a different breed from the young men who were al- wa, taking impudent stock of Lutie’s beauty. He was a person, a power. He took his wealth ser- iously, making a career of it; he was decent; he was sweet with children “Have you had a nice time?” she girl.” What would Lutie make of and dogs; he read books; he had a ggyed. y big power, when she had been so fine body and a lean, New England «yery" Lutie disappeared into spoiled by the little power of her sort of face that inspired trust. He had usually taken his holidays ex- ploring wild corners of the earth, and he had never seen very much of girls—perhaps intentionally. He must early have found them more than ready to him. Neither Mrs. Mansfield nor Lutie had dreamed who he was when he rescued a runaway parasol on the beach, and so fell into talk with them. They had understood his name was Johnson, He had come home with them and tinkered with the family car, getting himself very hot and dirty, while Lutie sat by and cheered him on. He was re- warded with a casual lunch, and Mrs. Mansfield worried because he had got a smear of black on his white-flannel trousers. She insisted that he take cleaning fluid to it while it was fresh, so he did, look- ing amused, and contributing a pun. gent odor to the dining room for some time afterward. And Lutie had been so nice with him, so hu- man someway. Mrs. Mansfield had not once wished that she wouldn't. The next morning he was there again, and Mrs. Mansfield had seen with relief that he owned a second pair of white-flannel trousers. Binks, the Scottie, had cut his paw, and Johnson bathed and bound it, show- ing Lutie how. Lutie really want- ed to know. In moments of bitter- ness Mrs. Mansfield had told herself that Binks was the only living crea- ture for whom Lutie felt a spark of affection. Johnson had b t his bathing suit, and he actually got Lutie into the water. Lutie’'s bath- ing suit always made Mrs. Mans. field wince. e had heard a yo fellow urge Lutie to go in. want to see what will be left if it shrinks,” he had said. But young Johnson had simply looked at her as though this were the loveliest picture he had seen yet, and made her swim boldly out to sea. “I will see that you get back,” he promised. She swam in with a hand on his shoulder. “I like you, Mr. Johnson,” she observed as they dripped into the house. “And it's funny, for you are not at all my kind.” “Tell me what your kind is and I'll try to be it,” he proposed. “But perhaps I shall like your kind best,” she said, going off to her bathroom. “If I knew what your first name was, I would consider u it. “Jim,” he called after her. And so she had called him Yimmy Yohnson at lunch, and sent him off because she was going to have her wave set. By that afternoon everyone knew that the Johns yacht was in the harbor, but many lesser craft were there, and even when Yimmy Yohn- son invited them to lunch on his boat, Mrs. Mansfield did not sus- pect. She thought that he meant sandwiches and ginger ale on some litle catboat, and was surprised to see that Lutie had put on her fresh- est, most dis sport clothes. “Wouldn't some old skirt be saf- er?” Mrs. Mansfield ventured, braced for having her head taken off. Lutie only smiled There was a new color the dress she was pulling off. When she emerged she seemed surprised at finding her mother still there. “It's late,” she said. “I am dead myself.” She looked very far from dead. Life shone out of her, her body moved with a suppressed exultation. “I have been alone all day,” Mrs. Mansfield said impulsively. She never said things like that, and she tried to sound humorous about it. “The only human speech I have had was with Mrs. Macalarney, when she came for the laundry. Couldn't you sit down and visit with me for beauty? Norman was simply good and generous and solid—in a way, he was small town too. Wouldn't Lutie despise and snub him for it when the glamour was off ? “Don't you never say I deceived you.” Oh, the robust honesty that | 80 Smply ignored gain or loss. One could not do it oneself, but one could reverence ft. All day Mrs. Mansfield carried an in her breast for that clear sight of what Lutie might do to Norman's life. As they went silent- ly to dinner, Lutie had not spoken a few minutes?” to her since morning, she found her- , “If you would go to the beach and self hoping that Mrs. Johns t ‘the casino, you would have plenty of be a very woman, so th conversation,” Lutie said impatient- Norman would not go into it wholly ly. “You have met loads of nice unwarned. She would have found people. Sticking here in the cot- the meeting formidable but for this tage, of course you are going to be intense preoccupation. bored.” She went into her bath- Norman was waiting at the rail. room, turning on a flood of water The open happiness in his face made that drowned out speech. Bet, smile at Lutie, a beseeching Mrs. Mansfield was shocked at her SMIe¢ that said, “Oh, my dear, be own anger. She did not feel pa- 5°0d—be good, and save us all from tient, or to blame, or any of her paint Le ow only the other usual excusing moods; she was so "hother, w by the lo sharply angry that if it had not Shisira and deck tables to receive been for the rushing water she “om- would have quarreled loudly with her daughter, called her names. Something was breaking in her long restraint. She shut her door with emphasis, and for several days made not one of her usual fri y over- tures. Lutie was too absorbed to notice. It was Lutie who started things. She came into her mother's room one morning, early for her, quite unconscious of the fact that she ‘was not greeted. Mrs. Mansfield had barely glanced up from the let- ter she was writing. “Yimmy's mother is coming here,” pected a big, powerful woman to accord with so big a fortune, Mrs. Johns was small and frail, with smiling, dark eyes and a sensitive | mouth, and she walked with a cane. 'Lutie, at the introduction, was sud- denly shy, helpless; it was her moth- er who gave the moment ease. Two | older women talked together while Lutie bit her lips and stared at ‘the sky, and Norman looked on in "happy confidence. Lutie recovered somewhat during dinner, but she was not quite her- self —not the nice, human self that Lutie announced, and stood frown- She had been Norman. Her ing out of the window. Not even OWE lack of ease infuriated her and little combs across her hair could Sweet, smiling, listening, that gave mar the grace of Lutie's body or her every chance, made that a fail. the beauty of her face. jure too. A look at her mother said “She is!" Mrs. Mansfield felt a Secretly, bitterly, “If you hadn't in- clutch of fright. sisted on ocming—" but Mrs. Mans- “I suppose that Yimmy has men. field's heart was too heavy with big- tioned me alarmingly often in his ger trouble to mind reproaches. She | letters, and she wants to look me found it fortunate that she was over,” Lutie went on. “Anyway, he there to carry the talk. Mrs. Johns has asked us both to dine with her might have been small town, too; tonight on the boat. Would you she was so informed about creches mind being taken ill at the last mo- and small hospitals and all Mrs. ment and staying home?” | Mansfield's home interests. She Mrs. Mansfield carefully wiped her really cared about each other under pen and laid it down. She needed happier circumstances. a moment to get her shock master- After coffee, Lutie saw to it that ‘ed. “Why, Lutie?” | Norman took her out on deck. Two | “I think I can pull off a better mothers stayed in the salon and a impression alone.” | silence fell like an 2ntr’ acte. Then Mrs. Mansfield managed a faint Mrs. Johns talked of Norman—of smile. “Don't I do you credit?” | his devotion and sweetness with her “You're all right,” was the short invalidism, of his manfulness under answer, “I feel freer by my- the heavy load of his father's for- | self, thats all” | tune, his humorous avoidance of its Something broke. Mrs. Mansfield pitfalls. ‘was suddenly speaking as she felt: ‘Mothers always talk like this,” | “Then you will have to feel a little she interrupted herself. “Only with ‘less free. I shall certainly go. The Norman it is true.” impression you are going to make “Yes, I have felt it,” Mrs. Mans- | |depends on what you are, not on field said, and heard again “a love- whether I stay home. The worst ly feller” echoing in her heavy heart. of you isn't your mother.” | “Yes, he is lovely.” Lutie stared astonishment. “Oh, the open door they heard | if you are Joing to talk like Aunt Norman's laugh. Evidently Lutie Martha—" said, and stalked out was in form again. in her face that had nothing to do of the room. “Now tell me about your girl,” with rouge. The smartly manned, Mrs. Macalarney was just coming Mrs. Johns said. “All I know yet boat that came for them took them in with the clean clothes. She is that she is a beauty.” past all the smaller craft, out tothe looked after Lutie, a shrewd smile Mrs. Mansfield's pulses were beat. | stately Kasidah before Mrs. Mans- on her battered face, then set down ing so thickly that words would not field had fully caught her breath. the basket and began lifting out come. : The owner-on board flag was flying, layers of slik and linen. | _ “Has it spoiled her a little?” Mrs. | and Norman Johns stood waitingto “I can tell when got beaus; Johns asked, tempering the question receive them in still another pair of they have so much wash,” she ob- with her deep smile. white trousers. | served. | Some outside power took over “Well, Yimmy, nice little boat you Mrs. Mansfield was used to ignor- Mrs. Mansfield’s “Yes, it have,” Lutie sald casually. “My ing her own hurts, putting them by has spoiled her ,” she heard it mother wanted me to wear an old to be dealt wtih later. | sa ’ skirt, but I don't believe I shall dam- “Yes, they want to be very fine,” | Mrs Johns kindled, warmed to her. " “Do you want to tell me how?” age this | pave tlie Shaw Ju | The voice went on: “She is im- | she sald. And that was the way she had | “And the continued to treat him, even the in- Mrs. Macalarney on. “Say patient and selfish and lo Mrs. Mansfield had vaguely ex. 4 ' stand.” home. She can't be nothing for human never helps. The mine, yet I have tri has brains and force, good for the voice faltered, was gone. She was nized mother who had betra child. “Oh, how could I?” breathed. She felt her hand taken in a del- jcate clasp. “You had to,” Mrs. Johns told her. “Oh, I like you— You can meet a big in a big way.” She talked on with a gentle intimacy, drawing away from their two children, but Mrs. Mansfield could not listen, could not see any- thing but what she had done and and the battle ahead. Presently Lutie was told that her mother had a headache and they went home. Once in their house Lutie's angry silence broke. “I hope you are sat. isfied,” she said, stalking ahead up the stairs “I couldn't do a thing. Mrs. Johns must think me an idiot. If I had been alone I could have worked out of it, but you would go—" The attack was just what Mrs. Mansfield needed. It gave her back the courage of what she had done. “Yes, I would,” she said strongly. Lutie stopped in the upper hall. looked an amazed question. This was something new. “What's the idea?” she demand- ed. “You will have plenty of chances later.” Mrs. Mansfield passed on into her own room. “I am not so sure” she said, sinking into a chair. Only her knees were weak; spirit was mighty. Lutie followed her. “What do you her mean? What did she say about me?” “She said that you had beauty and asked me if it had spoiled you.” “What did you say?” “That it had, badly.” Lutie stared, too astonished yet for anger. “What possessed you?" “The truth possessed me.” That was the very word for it; she had been possessed. “Lutie, Norman is too good to have his life marred by Your selfishness and scorn and bore- om." Now there was a flash of anger: “But Norman doesn't bore me!” “Naturally, now!” Mrs. Mansfield could raise her voice too. “But he is a faithful man rather than a clever one; he has all the small- town virtues that you so scorn. He can be prosy-—I have seen it. When the glamour is off, if you snub and yawn at him, you will break his heart.” Lutie leaned against the wall, her chest ricing and falling stormily. “And you told his mother all this?” “All this and more. I told her all there is to tell: and you are no fool, Lutie; you know what there is to tell about you at home.” Lutie could not believe her ears. “You ran me down-—to Norman's mother! Why-—why?"” “Because I am honest! And be- cause Norman is worth saving! Don’t you suppose I have wanted this mar as much as you have? More, for I thought you might love him and it might yet make a geal woman of you.” Lutie was crying, “I do love him!" “Yes, but it hasn't changed you; it hasn't made you a shade kinder or less selfish. That kind of love doesn't work wonders. If this goes on, at least they can't say that I have deceived them.” Lutie turned to the door, looking young and bewildered and beaten. “I thought your mother was on your side, no matter what,” she mutter- “Yes, so did I", Mrs. Mansfield's voice sagged into desolation, “And I thought that daughters loved their mothers, We have believed a lot of things that weren't true.” Lutie went, | her door. Through the thin wall her. mother while she lay very still, not wanting to be heard. When morning came she still stayed in bed, too sick at heart to face the day. She did not wish that she had acted differently, but she did wish poignantly that she had died when her husband went. Suddenly Lutie came in, an open note in her hand. “The Kasidah has gone,” she said, going to the east windows. “There was a note under the front door; he says he is running his mother home and will come back later.” She looked ravaged, but she was curious- ly free of hostility. Mrs. Mansfield, expecting hate and scorn, found this temperate, matter-of-fact tone so merciful that her eyes filled. a is coming back,” she repeat- “He might come back,” Lutie ad- mitted, her on the sunny space where the had been. “But I don’t believe it. Well, there is one I want you to under- he sat in a deep chair, her pajamaed leg swung over its arm. “I've only just really understood it myself It has taken me all night. you see, I was such an ugly duck- ling; IT hated myself so. And I! thought that everyone would hate the way I looked, always. And then, suddenly, I couldn't believe it. It was too marvelous to be true. But the girls saw it, and any boys I met, and people on the street— oh, it was like crowned queen of the world! And I went home with it, but you-—oh, of course, it couldn't have mattered to you, with father. I know that. But didn’t notice it, didn't care that I had turned out a swan. And Aunt Martha was only snubby. So I was and started in to show you. I've been angry and showing you all these years. It is a description of me, no doubt. But you do see, don't you aw Mrs. Mansfield's wrist was across her wet eyes. “Yes, I see, Lutie. It was hard on you.” “Well, that’s all.” And Lutie Lutie went away. A long week dragged by. was going from morning till night and stirring, sighing, from night till | | nome, bu. the old hostility was gone. | Her mother even felt that she gave comfort just by being there and un- derstanding and saying nothing. That Lutie was not angry at her, now that she had every reason to be, was perhaps one of those wonders that love works. She grew almost as thin as Luti» did, brooding over what she had said to Norman's mother. She tried to ease her pain by talking with Mrs. Macalarney. She needed to hear the tale again, to stiffen her own crumbling sense ot having done right. Mrs. Macalar- ney was rather dry about it. “Oh, yes, I give Bob fair warn. ing,” she admitted, her fist in the hinge of her back as she straighten- ed up from the basket. “And when he brought Mary back to me, Bob says, ‘Mother Macalarney, you said it!’ And now here last Sunday didn't he turn up, sick with worry and all, and Mary, she's gone back with him.” Mrs. Mansfield was all at sea. “Perhaps she has learned,” she ven- tured. “They ain't neither of them learn- ed one thing,” was the emphatic answer. “Talk won't save a man and talk don't change a girl. We're as God made us. Me too, For all she was no help to me, I kind of miss her.” And she went heavily away. There was’ a shred of comfort: “Talk won't save a man.” Looking at the deepening hollows in Lutie's face, the droop of pain about her mouth, Mrs. Mansfield sent up a wild prayer that talk should not save Norman Johns. What she had done vas right, but she was dying of it. The week's’ end did not bring Nor- man, and hope very faint as the second week began its laborious course. By the tenth day she had almost ceased to watch the sea from her east windows. She stood there for the full moon, looking sadly at the ebonied cedars and the gilded beach, when a call and 4 fly- ing step set her heart to drum- beating. “Mother! The Kasidah!” There she was, the proud beauty, towering over the lesser craft, glid- ing to her place. They heard Lhe anchor chains, they saw a boar s'ip over her white side and take to the water. “Hard to believe, isn't it?" said in a choked voice. “My darling!” Her mother had not used that tone for years, but it seemed right and natural now. They stood pressed together, watching, waiting. At last there was a figure on the beach, and Lutie ran down. Half the night passed before she came back. rs. Mansfield still sat by the window, dark t the moonlight. The very hands on her knee expressed peace and thankful- ness. Lutie dropped to the floor beside her, arms on the window sill. They could see the light of the yacht's boat slipping between the other boats “Well, Yimmy Yohnson had a bad! time too,” she said, her voice held down to bald narrative. “Very bad. Then he told his mother he had to come back, and she said all right, I was your daughter, and that gave her faith. 80 he came. And I told him that everything you had said was true, and then some, but that if ever I began acting like that with him, he had only to give me a swift clout on the side of the head, for that was evidently the way to treat me. And he promised he would.” The boat had reached the yacht; | her eyes followed a moving shadow up its white side. Then her voice broke loose: ‘Mother, I loved him from the first minute. You remem- ber the second day, when I went to get my hair done? I had to go; I loved 80 that I couldn't hide it. And then I heard who he was—But he didn't have to have a bean. He was my Yimmy. Oh, don't you think, loving him like this, that I'll turn out a decent sort?” Kissing her wet cheek, her moth- er silently answered Mrs. Macalar- ney: “Talk does change a girl; love can work wonders.” By Juliet Wilbur Tompkins in the Saturday Evening Post. A ——————— OLD HOTEL SITE Lutie i MAY BE CAMP SITE What was at one time the site of of | the Old Foust hotel on the top the Seven Mountains, the midway stopping point for stage coaches be- tween Lewistown and Bellefonte, will in all probability become the site of a religious summer training camp for the young people of the | Pennsylvania Conference of the Con: | gregational church. Leo. F. Treaster, of Milroy, pre-| sented 316 acres of the land sur- rounding the site of the Foust hotel | i i i to the conference. Officials of the TF3&: Congregational Young People's Fed- eration of Pennsylvania together | with other church leaders recently visited this site and were enthusi- astic about its possibilities and im- | mediate development. Among the prominent laymen and youth leaders in the State giving the project their whole-hearted sup- port and who attended the confer- ence were: Mrs. A. D. Upton, Scran- to; Mrs. James R. Clinton, Philadel- hia; William Pierce, Plains, presi. dent of the Wyoming Valley Young People’s Federation; Joseph H Dav- ies. Mahanoy City, president of the Central Pennsylvania Federation; Mrs. H. L. Deiss, of Milroy, and the officers of many individual church societies. . The officers of the Pennsylvania i Congregational Church Young Peo- | ple’s Federation, which is prominent- | ly taking a part in the inter-church movement to establish the religious center for young people's work, are as follows: President, Joseph H. Davies; re- cording secretary, Miss Ed- wards; vice president, Harold O'Don- | nell; treasurer, Miss Ruth Eagan. | { —Watchman advertisers always | unkind at morning. She was very silent at|get good results. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT Have you noticed the old, gnarled tree that lost half of its limbs in a storm? It is trying to live on the rest. —Atlantic City: Along the ver anda's edge and beside the garder wall, everywhere at this season of the year hydrangeas are blooming ir brilliant luxuriance. Thriving or the damp salt air and sandy soi these hardy flowers are well adaptec to the climate of Atlantic City Until a few years ago they wert not used extensively in resort gar dens, but after it was found tha they grew so well here resident: hastened to cultivate them. Visitors from inland cities marve at the size and colors of the hy drangeas for in other places the do not grow so large and thei colors are not always solovely. Ii some gardens the plants are fron six to eight feet high and are cov ered with blossoms. New color have been discovered in recent year and there are delicate pinks, laven ders and blues ranging from a pal shade to an unusual deep colo Gardeners produce these blues b using alum in the soil at the root of the plants. The pinks are prc duced by the use of oyster shells o steel shavings. —Barbers and beauty specialist are largely responsible for the im proved health of American wome: according to Frederick L. Collins i Harper's Bazar. The barber lifted a wad of 350 tons of hair from 14,000,000 women heads. That made them feel s much younger they wanted to loo the part in other respects and prc ceeded to patronize about 30,00 beauty shops. As a result of the: bobbed hair and bottled complexio women began to look so health and youthful from the neck up the just naturally set to work on tt Just of their anatomy. Says Co ns: “Grand dames who had never li tened tothe family doctor were qui willing to listen to the beauty docto They realized that there was no us sticking young heads on old bodie and that is where the health mov. ment began.” That American women have mac marked gains in health during ti past ten years is not a matter fi argument. The proof is to be four in the cold figures of insurance con panies. —Too late to buy a sports jacket Don't you believe it! You can cow on jackets being worn right throug fall--and not only for sports, eithe but for regular, everyday wear. A flannel or lightweight cre) wool jacket would be the best choi if you want to wear it in the a tumn. You can even get a ne flannel or crepy wool skirt to mat it when cooler weather comes, you like. Though these smart se arate jackets can be worn wi dresses or with skirts that dor match, too. In fact, one of the smartest wa to wear them this summer is wi skirts or dresses that don't matc A blue or brown jacket with a whi skirt or dress. A white one witt dark costume, as well as with whi ones. And in the fall this same bl {acket could be combined with ue tweed or flannel skirt andt brown with a beige or brown fla nel, or a lovely soft brown twe mixture to make a smart suit. Flannel and light wools are Jt as good for now, too. Unlin they're not too warm. But course, silk or cotton would be ev cooler and just as fashionable { seicHy Sumner use. t double-breasted, slightly 1 ted kind of jacket is one ig fashionable this summer. And st will be in the fall. With brass buttons it has a ne tical look—somet Hke a Ibe officer's jacket—and looks well at the seashore or on be trips. With ordinary buttons it's suita to wear anywhere. And it's one the most generally becoming of the smart sports jackets. 1 done in flannel, angora or slik cre Another jacket—equally fashic |able and equally sporting looking is the one that fastens straight the front with buttons or the metal clips that Schiaparelli int duced. It has a loose, careless, comfo able look-—makes a fine golfing hiking jacket—and goes particul ly well with tweedy thingsor th smart knitted dresses you're seei This jacket is sometimes made washable chamois or suede. Sor times of suede cloth or flannel. If you want a dressier look jacket, one good one is the type w wide, loose, uarter len; lan or kimono sleeves. It fast either diagonally at the left or do the center and is belted. But sor times it fastens just at the ne line, hanging open below the sin button. These jackets you'll find in lin flannel, silk crepe, pique. The) quite youthful and jaunty look and are particularly smart in d: or bright colors worn with wl dresses. ~—Uncooked Sour Cream Dressi Press 2 hard cooked eggs throu fruit press or potato ricer. Bea cup sour cream until stiff. To eggs add 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tal spoons lemon juice, 4 teaspoon basco sauce, 1 teaspoon sugar, tablespoons chili sauce and 1 tal spoon finely chopped green pep) Combine with beaten cream. Se with chilled green salads. Bakeries now make colo bread for fancy canapes or sa wiches. Thin slices of yellow, gr and white make attractive and o looking ribbon sandwiches. —Creamed dishes in summer t should use vegetables instead toast as a base. par-boil spinach and using it under crear fish.