Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 01, 1920, Postscript, Page 12, Image 12

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"'SAVING EXPENSE ON FOOD WOMAN'S EXCHANGE CYNTHIA STARTING RIGHT IN THE NEW YEAR
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tSflMCA. WlL,nUlX
ri BUSINESS LUNCHES
aiulwiches or Salad With
Sweet Cakes Can Be
Carried to Office to Save
That Daily Expense
&hi Gives More Time for
That Much-Needed Ex
ercise and Breath of Air
Each Day
By JIKS. M. A. WILSON
(Copyright, 1020, ty itrs. it. A. ir(j8n. Alt
rights reserved )
SOME persons feel that If they carry a
lunch from home the walk out of
doors at noon will be lost. This need
not Interfere with your bringing a lunch
from home. Either take a short walk
and then return and eat lunch or eat
the little attractive lunch and then go
for your stroll,
Use the paper cups for jelly, salads
and mayonnaise dressing. Keep at the
office a small shaker of salt, pepper and
paprika, and if you choose you can send
a small pitcher and purchase hot tea,
coffee or cocoa from a nearby soda
fountain.
No. 1
Shrimp and Celery Salad
Rye Bread and Butter
Chocolate Cake Tea
No. 2
Sliced Meat Potato Salad
Graham Bread and Butter
Tarts Tea
, No. 3
Pimento and Celery Sandwiches
Cup Custard
Stuffed Prunes Tea
,' No. -1
Deviled Egg Sandwich
Celery
Bated Apple Cake Tea
No. 5
Salmon Salad
Whole-Wheat Bread and Butter
Apple Pie Tea
f Shrimp and Celery Salad
Line a large paper cup with wax
paper and then dice the celery fine and
add
Seven canned shrimps,
Four tablespoons of mayonnaise,
One-half teaspoon of salt,
Pinch of- pepper.
Toss to mix and then fill in the cups.
Lay three nice crisp lettuce leaves on
top and then wrap the "cup in war
paper.
Potato Salad
Grate
- One small onion.
One and one-half cold Doited potatoes,
diced.
One stalk of celery, diced,
Six tablespoons of mayonnaise,
One teaspoon of sail,
Oni-half teaspoon of mustard.
Mix and then prepare the cup the
sace as tor snrirap nnu ceierj imu.
Pimento and Celery Sandwiches
'our Iraitcftej of celery,
Three pimentos,
One-half onion.
Put through the food chopper and
add
One hard-boiled ega, chopped fine,
One teaspoon of salt,
One-quarter teaspoon of paprika,
Pinch of mustard.
Mix and then use to make two sand
wiches. Deviled Egg Sandwiches
Rub one hard-boiled egg through the
sieve and add
Ttco tablespoons of grated cheese,
L TArea taolejpoona of mayonnaise
' dressing,
PI Three-quarters teaspoon of salt,
ne in.mmrlir ifaxnaon of oaorika.
in Three tablespoons V finely minced
fai parsley.
Wer Mir and use to make two sandwiches.
.. 3pread the bread with butter and then
SJith the filling; now lay two crisp
kfleaves of lettuce on top of the filling.
JCalfpiace the bread to make the sandwiches
'"- and then cut in finger-width strips
Try this fruit mixture for a variety
in sandwiches. Put through the food
chopper
One-half package of seeded raisins,
One-half pound of prunes,
One-half pound of shelled peanuts.
Add the juice of one lemon; tnir well
and then fill in jar and store in a cooi
place. Use for an occasional sweet
sandwich. This mixture will keep for
two or three weeks.
j Luncheon Cake
! Three-quarters cup of sirup,
Yolk of one egg,
Three tablespoons of shortening.
Cream and then add
One cup of flour,
Txeo teaspoons of baking powder,
' Four tablespoons of tcate .
Beat just enough to mix and then
fold In the stiffly beaten white o egg.
.Wke in sauara nan and cool. Divide
In half and then spread one -half with
Jelly. Cover with cocoanut.
Make a custard as follows;
One cup of milk,
Three level tablespoons of cornstarch.
Stir to dissolve the starch and then
The Question- Comer
Today's Inquiries
1. What will keep soft soap from
dissolving into jelly in the bottom
of the soap dish?
2. Describe an attractive new style
of vanity case.
3. What addition to a knitted mitten
for a child will keep it on tighter?
i. In ironing clothes at home, what
will prevent parching of the hands
ft
7nreB from the heat of tho iron?
-CtheAtn What material is very popular
-. now for bracelets?
tS"l). How can a bias crepe de chine
necktio with no lining be pressed
smooth without ironing?
i r
Yesterday's Answers
1. A pretty way of trimming a serge
dress is by cutting round holes,
turning back the edges and lnert
Inc serge of a contrasting color.
Soap jelly for home laundering
can be made by keeping all small
leftovers of soap In a bottle and
adding a little water. Shako well
before using.
An appropriate centerpiece for
the New Year's Eve dinner table
Is a large kewple carrying a ban
ner bearing the numerals 1020.
i. In pressing a seam, pulling it out
ahead pi the iron to straighten it
should be avoided as it causes
Ktreichine.
'? . The cqu&re neckline is the popular
,f ..2tfc p i one for this season.
p, i o. n t-'io gm on a manogany irsy
w luuncu, u uuiu v. unci oio may
tw substituted to protective wood.
T t t - w i - -
MlXiKXin
Ask Mrs. Wilson
If you have any cookery prob
lems, bring them to Mrs. Wilson.
She will be glad 'to answer you
through these columns. No per
tonal replies, however, can be given.
Address questions to Mrs. M. A.
Wilson, Evening Public Ledger,
Philadelphia.
bring to a boil. Cook for five minutes
and then remove from fire and add
Three tablespoons jof sugar,
One teaspoon of vanilla.
Beat to mix and then let cool. Now
split the second half and piace the cus
tard between the slices. This cake will
make five generous portions.
The above luncheons can be varied in
such a way as to relieve the monotony
and will supply more real nutrition
than many so-called lunches eaten in
the hasty lunchroom. Get back to the
good old style and be proud to carry
your lunch basket.
Mrs. Wilson
Answers Queries
No. 2
My dear Mrs. Wilson Would you
kindly tell me if you know of any
thing that will take away from fresh
butter a rancid taste? I shall be
bo much obliged. A. 15.
Place the butter in a saucepan and
cover with boiling water. When melt
ed, bring to the 6calding point, then
set aside and chill. Remove tho but
ter and rework with fresh milk and
then salt. Wash in plenty of cold water
to remove the milk. Place In a cool
place. The dairy has evidently left the
milk m the butter, which caused It to
turn rancid.
Nol
My dear Mrs. Wilson I attended
and enjoyed so many of your lectures
and I wanted to ask two or three
questions, but you were so sur
rounded by questioners and I was
obliged to hurry away so early, that
j. mu io give ic up. i wanted to ast
what to use in cleaning aluminum
ware. Putting them over the fire with
nothing in them and letting tho
status burn off seems to do pretty
well. Is that all right?
I think you said not to put salt
in the vegetables while boiling. How
about potatoes, carrots, onions, etc?
JLncn t. would lite to ask what ar
ticles of food those subject to twings
of rheumatism had best leave out and
what would be good for them to eat.
Will you kindlv answer through
your columns of the paper? Thank
ing you very much, I am H. E. B.
Use steel wool for cleaning aluminum
utensils. Salt all vegetables when they
are finished cooking. A physician must
prescribe a diet for the rheumatic trou
ble.
No. 7
My Dear Mrs. Wilson Will you
kindly publish the recipe for browned
hashed potatoes? My son had them
in the hotel this summer and he had
me ask you how to make them. Your
recipes are grand. I have thpm all in
a blank book. MRS. B.
Hashed Brown Potatoes
Remove the skins from three or four
cold boiled potatoes and chop them very
fice. Now place three tablespoons of
shortening in a frying pan and ddd the
potatoes, stirring frequently. When
ready to serve, gather them in an omelet
shape in the side of the pan and add
one tablespoon of fat to the pan. Tip
it so that it runs underneath the po
tatoes. Let them brown and then
gently loosen with a spatula. Turn in
omelet form on a hot platter.
CINDERELLA'S DAUGHTER
L
By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR
Copyright, MHO. Tv ttus Public Lcdaer Company
The Rebellion of Virginia
SYNOPSIS
At boarding school, where Virginia
West met Kathleen Foster, a friend
ship was formed between the two girls
that persisted after Virginia was re
moved from the srhool because of her
infatuation for .Timrav Anderson, a
young college man. Kathleen's en
gagement to Bill Lyons did not worry
that young lady. She was not seri
ous, but Virginja was. Mrs. West
discovers that her money is running
low and wants Virginia to marry a
man with money, which she refuses
to do. Mrs. West is finally forced
Into accepting Jimmy as a son-iu-law,
and Virginia goes to visit the
Anderson family, expecting to be mar
ried in the fall. In the meantime a
letter arrives from Mrs. West an
nouncing her sudden marriage and her
departure for Japan.
good housewife. Sometimes in his heart
VIRGINIA did not realize how much of hearts he doubted his mother's de
she had been counting on her i eisions, but she was so conviucing nnd
mother's return to New York until s-he ?ee? to '"le so ""ich for granted the
received the letter announcing her mar-
riage. It seemed now as u every unK
that had forced her to the old life was
broken and from now on unless she was
very careful her life would be lived ac
cording to Anderson standards.
She went up to her room and cried
for nearly two hours, and when she
appeared for the evening meal she was
white-cheeked and red-eyed. Of course,
the Andersons wanted to know what was
wrong, and Virginia banded over the
letter at the table.
"Hm," Mrs. Anderson remarked. "I
suppose it was the best thing that could
have happened under the circum
stances." "But if she had come on for the wed
ding," wailed Virginia. "She knew bow
I felt about it."
"But it isn't as though tho wedding
were going to be a big affair," put in
Jimmy. "We can be married quietly
down here, and things can go on as they
are for tho present."
'Tou mean you'll stay in the city
and come down hero week-ends as you
do now?" Virginia asked quickly.
"Why, yes."
"Oh, no," Virginia returned firmly;
"we are not going to do that."
Mrs, Anderson looked up quickly.
"Why not?" she asked. "It would be
splendid just at first and Jimmy would
be able to get ahead."
"Why, yes, Virginia Mother thought
of it, and I agreed with her that it was
a splendid plan."
Virginia felt that they were all try
ing to beat her down, and that if she
gave in this time she would never again
be able to assort her independence with
any of them, to she shook ber head,
"I won't be'married until Jimmy is
able to take an apartment," she an
nounced. "Well, I must cay, Virginia, that
Isn't much of a compliment for us. I'm
sure we've done all we could to make
yau happy with us,"
"Oh. I know ypu have. Please don't
misunderstand me." And Virginia turn-
Please Tell Me
What to Do
By CYNTHIA
Bobbed Hair Is Approved
Dear Cynthia Having read tho let
ter of Miss Bobbed Hair I wish to state
that I approvo of wearing the hair
bobbed. Miss Bobbed Hair, I think,
would h,e doing a good thing if she dis
regarded the friendship of the lad who
resented her bobbed hair. Tho lnd
was very wrong when he said a girl was
a doll because she wore ber hnlr hnWieil.
I know a few girls who wear their hair
cut short in the bobbed fashion and
they are far from being "so-called
dolls."
I wear my hair cut short and also
wear bangs, which style is very be
coming to me, and I can cook and do
housekeeping, etc. So I consider ray
self no doll, and I am in sympathy with
Miss Bobbed Hair.
The reason I wear my hair bobbed
is that it becomes me very much and
also I do a lot of athletic wo'rk, such
as gym and swimming.
MISS BOBBED HAIR WITH BANGS
Agrees With "Bachelor"
Dear Cynthia Please print these few
lines to Bachelor. Thank jou:
Dear Sir I certainly would enjoy
the pleasure of shaking hands with you,
I am about to reveal a little romance
I had with a little girl whom I trusted
nnd honored. I thought there was none
like her. I was born and reared in
New Mexico. About three years ago a
band of Mexican bandits raided tlie
border, committing crimes and lootinir.
A squad of. rangers was formed and I
volunteered. We chased the bandits far
into Mexico. Finally we had to with
draw, as our search was fruitless. We
we were In the ruceed hills of Meiico
four days when we again reached the
border. e were arrested for break
ing the international laws and for cross
ing the border without orders.
I was sent to prison for a short term.
When I was released I went home and
went around to see her. I was barred
from the house and she was through
witn me.
Just because I joined the rangers
wild chase. Since that day to 'this I
haven't any faith in girls. To tell the
truth I wouldn t trust my own sister.
Take a little advice. If you have any
secrets don't tell any females, because
if you do the whole town will know
it in a short while. ST. CLAIRE.
Likes Your Letter
H. J. B. Cynthia has decided it
will be better not to Drint further cor
respondence on the matter you write
about. She will sav the same to the
other contribution. She will answer your
questions ny mail.
Dress Trimming
An attractive and cheap trimming for
a dress or mouse can easily be made as
follows: Baste an embroidery pattern
to the material, which, if inclined to
stretch, should have another naner
basted underneath. Thread the top of
your machine with whatever colored em
broidery silk you wish and the bobbin
with plain sewing cotton as near the
color of the silk as possible. Stitch
through the design on the paper: tear
the paper away carefullv. The effect is
the tame as hand emoromery JlcCaJls
Pretty Clothes
The psychology of feeling w ell dressed
and well groomed is just as important
for school children as business people.
A little well-chosen embroidery, even
on a school ores1-, encourages an appre
nation of individuality and is well
worth while. .lust a row of satin-stiteh
dots makes a dress distinctive, und col
orful embroiderv is delightful for dark
serge or white flannel.
jy
ed to Mrs. Anderson lmpuhnely. "But
I don't approve of living like that, and
I m going to wait till Jimmy is readv
for me."
The color burned in Virginia's face
with the earnestness of her resolution,
and sho did not meet Jimmy's ryes
in fact, she avoided them. Afterward
he sought her out and aked her to go
for a walk. In the duskj twilight in
her straight white gown there was some
thing ethereal about Virginia sonic
thing that she did not have when Mrs.
Anderson overran her personality. She
was mysterious to Jimmy out here in the
twilight, and his feeling for her came up
in his throat as he reached for her hand
and drew it through his nrm. Here alone
with him she was the woman he loied
and wanted. It seemed to count more
with him than tho fact that his mother
naa aeterminea to maKe Virginia info a
i l'l" ouier people couia not do het-
ter tTian to agree with her and to decide
with her that Jimmy had found himself
overpersuaded more than once. Of
course, his mothef was wonderful, but
Virginia was different from his mother,
and it had been that evasive charm
about the girl that had first waked this
feeling in Jimmy's heart.
"Virginia." He spoke her name
sof tlj .
"Yes "
"Dear, I want you to know that
everything shall be as you like. We'll
go to New Yprk and take an apartment
and be alone. Oh, Virginia, don't shut
yourself . up in that shell of jours; it
makes me desperate."
"Well, jou see," she said slowly, "I
never thought that you would wish to do
anything else but be alone."
"I didn't until mother suggested this
plan, and she's so sensible; she has such
a way of pointing out the best thing
to do, that I told, her we would do it
before I thought."'
"Before you had consulted me," Vir
ginia added.
"Yes, but mother thinks you are such
a child."
"I'm going to be married," said Vir
ginia soberly, "and I don't feel like a
child."
Tomorrow Mrs. Anderson expresses
a few Ideas,
Labor Savers
When using soap flakes of any kind,
use a wire egg-beater to beat up tho
suds.
If the kitchen sink is rather low, cut
an eigbteen-incb board just long enough
to reach across the top of the sink, bev
eling the ends slightly to fit the taper of
the walls of tho sink. This brings the
top of the board about five inches above
the bottom of the sink, where the dish
pan would ordinarily be placed. Put the
dlsbpan on the board. Paint the board
(o match the woodwork in the.kltcheju
WOULD
By FANNIE
Mrs. Yanci Itifkin, icife of a strug
gling tailor, consults a doctor about
tier ill health and finds that she has
only a year to live. Uer sister-in-law
finds her in despair and tries to
comfort her.
CHAPTER IV
rH, MY darlin'."
v "I can't leave him In a
Zett. Without me he's too
a schnookle
hole,
good
ever to make
the break
He'll work
but his life
down here,
you and him
together, on
big business
and no profit.
Three years
i t wouldn't
seem so bad,
but one at
tho outside,
Zettic. I
can't leave
h i in in a
hole."
"You're so
young, dr-
FANNIE HURST
Iin , young
as your own daughter."
"And her such a baby, l wanna see
her settled. She's got the gad-around
streak in her like I had, Zett. You
heard the row I had with her about
going to them Brighton dances I That s
all can save her, the way it saved me.
He's a nice kid with brnihs, and they
got a lean to each other. I want to
see 'em settled, them two kids. I can t
leae without, Zett. I can't. leant.
"Oh, whv ain't it me, with, nothing
to live for!"
Suddenly Mrs. Rifkin rose, her face
all washed now of its rouge .and the
elaborate coiffure fallen, showing dark
roots. . . . ,, , ,
"All my years for nothing. All his
years for nothing."
"Yanci! Yanci!"
"I got to get him moved up into the
Wolfeson store while the going s good.
No time to lose, Zett. Not a minute.
Got to raise the money now. while 1 m
on the job to do the engineering. Gotta,
At her feet Miss Rifkin lay col
lapsed into the smartest possib e com
pass, her head buried down between
her knees.
"Don't talk that way, Yanci. Not
now! What's business or anything
else as long as you're sick this way?
Without you, what are we, aujways.'
TJiih( hark where ine aim u.'
started with a shyster business for a
shyster trade. Nothing ain t nothing
without you, Yanci. You bet your life
the kid's got the gadding streak in her.
She needs jou, Yanci, all the time.
Yanci, darlin", jou got to get wel . c
ain't nothing without you. otbing.
Nothing." , . 4 ,.ij
The clayey hue of faintness settled
over Mrs. Rifkin. and she sat down
again on 'the bedside. .... , ....
"Don't Zett," she said; "jou're kill
ing me."
"It's only a nightmare we're having,
Yanci. I'm dreaming bad these night.
"It's bo little we need, Zett, to nnil
the Wolfeson store. Two thousand in
the hand would do it fixtures, new
machines and Till." .
"Lillie Legiuska's sickness!
"If we only had one friend of the
family, Zett; a barouche or any bank
standing!"
"Yanci, Yanci, why don't you tell me
I'm dreamin' bad?" ,.,,,..
"Selig, ho he's such a devil! I just
wouldn't dare go to ask him again.
Assets he wants, till I'm crazy. e
r.t tin. nKsets. I Lent trying to tU
him. only they don't show. Our secur-J
ity is our future. With the right loca-
tion. we got a fortune, we
"Why couldn't it be me?"
"It's Uke with the pieceworkers'
, f-u-n nntin' into us and nil. that pome
! devil was kecpin' us back from makin'
idn mnre. Even my two thousand in
surance has got to be so we can t bor
row on it yet Listen to me, Zettic, I
ain't bragin.' but that two thousand is
worth three times more with me htre
to engineer things than it will be
after "
"Yanci, kill roe and tear mj heart
out while ;tou'rc at it."
"Ssh-h-h. bon, I was kiddin
Thev resumed silence. The loom hud
a gaudy stare, the gaslight singing
into it.
"Zettie."
"Yes, darliu,.'
"Jerrv Jerry Kcsslcr."
"Jerry? Ssh-h-h, dearie, jou're see
ins thing-. Jerry Kessier can't hurt
ou. Whcre'd jou even get him in
your head? He can't lay a finger on
I jou."
"I I could get it out of him lik(,J-
1 like nothing till the year .is up; just
like rolling off a log, Zett. '
, "Get what?"
1 "What's two thousand to him? Any
ways, at the end of the ear, it it's
iut like he had security like the Amer
ican Insurance Co. in back of my word
my insurance money will meet
the"
"Yanci, jou gone crazy!
i "I know where he lives, Zett. You
know that picture in the paper? The
I Apthorp up on Riverside, where he.
owns the whole apartment house.
' "Him that dog! That "
I "I tell jou, Zettie, it's onlj for a
jear !"
I "God, if Henry hears jou! AVomau,
I you gone out of your head ! Henry,
i find forbid he bhould een hear jou
i mention that dog's name ! Remember
the crv nisht of sour wedding, how
he hit Buddie in tho mouth for even
sajing lm name in the house, lanci,
have you gone crazy mad?"
'She was crying now and rubbinc
her hands in a dry wash.
I "No. no. Zett. I didn't mean it. Hon
est. I was just breakin' my head tryin'
I to think "
"I cot my four hundred and twent
' nnllnrs' hiiildlnc association, if it'll ease
I jour mind any: but wha't's money?
What s unj thing.' lou so sick: lou
I down with Lillie Leginska's siqkuess?"
"I'm scared, Zett. Oh, so beared J
I 1 ami readj, , person like me
I tVinf nni.nr II, llfir 11 f l r,Vft IBItpll tlitinirt
lltl.b I.V.. ... m.-. n.f u..L,i .it. L3f,n
a thought. Always in the movie, vcett
how I cover my eyes when when the
sad scenes come"
"I know, durlin' ; 1 know."
"He don't deserve it from me, quit
tin' like this. Took me out of the
workroom, nothing but a fast kid that
would have gone to hell in another
j ear. Helped me them hrst years, and
jou with him, Zett, to settle down to
know what a decent man can make
out of a fly girl. What did I do for
the business compared to all lie done
for ine? AVhy, Barney Bernard, with
that kids brains, a member of this
firm, can do more for it iu one yearJ
uptown tnan i uone in an my nitreu
I'm qulttin' before I'e mado good to
htm, Zett. Wuittln', Zettie; qulttin'
The past seemed to have sucked her
tn. nnd sue was weeping tiacx into it.
"Never a hard word out of him. Al
ways what I wanted was right, cen
when I held out so long against the
machine workers it coat us ten years'
savings. Always ready to give the
shirt oft bis back. Always smi n'.
always such a -good old schnookle."
Yanci. God knows vou ain't ant
ntl,I,, n .renrnnet, vr.nt-.ilf ...iTlT"
vvMMa, , -,my yKwy,b T,,m,
YOU?
HURST
You're worked yourself down to to
what you nrc, dearie, trying to build
up for the move, because you knew he
was eating his heart out to get up to
the Avenue quick, .after Machinsky made
his dirty getaway.-" v
A bell rang, and with every ganglion
of her spinal column answering to itt
Mrs. Rifkin sprang up, gathering back
her loosened hair into bom'c sort of
form.
"That's them, Zett, inck ffom polo.
For God's sake, get up!"
Miss Rifkin shambled to rise, feeling
of the bed end;
"What'll we "
"Swear to me, Zett. you won't tell
Henry. You won't tell a living soul
that breathes." '
"Yanci, my own poor brother, I "
"Swear! Knowing don't help, and I
want you to swear on your knees."
"Ynnci "
"Swear I"
"Darling, I "
"Say it after nic!"
"I can't."
"I swear to God."
"I I swear to to God."
"I should bo struck dead."
"I should be struck dead."
"If r breathe what I know."
"If I breathe- whntT know."
"To-a soul that breathes."
' 'Toa soul that breathes. ' '
"So help me God."
"So help me God. "
Voices in the outer hall.
"Yanci!"
Silence.
"Ynnci!"
Her voice came out to them lifted
a"Jd full of a singing quality.
Yes Heine comin' tra-la 1"
Ithe Apthorp apartments, situated
on Riverside drive, where tho soldiers
and sailors' monument stands so
whitelv out against one of the city's
rare horizons, n twelfth-story occu
pant, gazing out from the brace of bow
windows in the drawing room, can see
the Hudson river bend like n Ktnve nrm
and palisades, ygrira with who knows
wnat paleozoic past, banked up against
a Jersey sky. Of n Sunday evening at
dusk, with tho pink mist of a sun that
had set grandly, dissolving into tdireds.
nd the river suddenly the color of
cold steel. Jerome Kesslcr sat in the
Draec ot uow windows in nis drawing
room, but with his back to the in
coming dusk and bpread out spread -legged
in a cront leather. iinlinlsterrrl
chair, asleep, with his head well back
and his mouth open.
A bell rang and ho rolled over, but
in sleep. Then, at voices, sat nn.
wriggling down his tiirht snan of waist
coat, and tweaked on a kev mi tlinf
a shower of light flowed down upon a
room mat represented some decora
tor's use and abuse of carto blanche;
tin e.nensie red-velvet nnil hlndr.
leather cross between a hotel lobby and
a grill room; hung in red brocade and a
shadow-box painting of still life; a
friar and a mue: a nude: a white mnr.
Me figure of a woman with a windinc
torso and winding a bit of scarf about
her. A suit of mail mounted on a
stand. In the midst of heroic high
ceiliuged proportions he was a low-
paunchy figure, with a roll of flesh
pretty well around toward the front of
his collar, but preened and with a white
boutonniere in his coat lapel, and wet
looking hair brushed diagonally across a
thinning area.
A mold with two yellow MiVar curls
pasted to her cheeks, and every move
a coquetry popped in at the door.
ohe s here again: wanner in?
"Yes, you little underdone broiler,"
he said, making n false swoon at her :
"and keep your little nervy ear away
irom the Keyhole, or 1 11 singe jou.
She side-stepped, flashing her black
skirts in a bwirl ot petticoat.
"Some ba-ba out there!" she said.
breathing in her waistline so that her
back bwelled outward. "Some ba-ba
doll! Uh, uh. jou!" And went out
slamming the door.
Copyright. 1$!0, lu Wheeler Syndicate
CONTINUED TOMOHROW
The Woman's
Exchange
To Soften Back of Fur
To the editor of Woman's Paue:
Dear Madam Please give me in your
column a fccmedy for softening the back
of sealskin fur. I have some that got
wet and it made the back of the fur
stiff and hard. I want something to
soften it up and make it pliable again.
CONSTANT READER.
Rub vaseline into the stiff back of the
fur, being careful that it does not get
into the fur itself. This "lubricates"
the hide and makes it soft. Of course,
it will have (o be lined very thickly and
carefully to keep the grease from com
ing through.
Wants Lovely Complexion
To the Editor ot Woman's Pcoe:
Dear Madam Will jou please tell
me bow to hac a oely complexion?
I have pimples, blackheads, a muddy
complexion and am dark under the eyes.
Do you think any soap or ointment w ill
help it? P. M.
The regular use every night of a good
facial soap, witli occasional steamings
of your face will keep it clean. But
I strongly advise jou to consult a phy
sician. You cannot help n muddy com
plexion or lines under jour. eyes by
external treatment, and it sounds as if
jour digestion is in bad condition, or
your circulation. Be ery careful of
jour food, avoiding rich or sweet
things nnd drink plenty of water. This
may help jou, but a doctor could help
jou more.
When Did Leap Year Skip?
To the Editor o! Woman's Page:
Dear Madam I am a constant
reader of your paper. Kindly inform
me what year it was that the leap
j ear did not occur until eight vears
instead of four? C. P. R., U. 8. N.
According to the World Almanac,
leap year skipped from IJNG to 1S0-1,
instead of to 1800, and also from 1800
to 1004, iusteadjot 11)00.
To Brlflhten Jet
To the Editor ot It'omoit's Page
Dear Madam Will you kindly tell
me how i may restore the brightness
to jet trimming that has become dull
from lying packed away for several
j ears? Any suggestions will be re
ceived with thanks, . E. R.
Remove all dust from the jet with a
very soft brush, then polish gently with
cotton moistened with a little oil. Rub
tindlly with soft chamois skin. This
mnTt i,a rinn mIHi .,.. ,.. .' .
" .l"'..: . '"V" """, ' "" ""
ao iug yuv vtans eo easily
SUIT OF WHITE SILK
TRIMMED WITH BLACK
Dressmakers prophesy that white
will be popular for the new spring
clothes. No doubt it will If all the
frocks made are as attractHo as
this silk suit. Black silk roans tho
embroidery, which stands out so
strikingly on the white ground.
A Daily Fashion Talk By Florence Rose
ALMOST every year at this time there
is the prediction heard among
dressmakers and makers of women's
frocks and suits and hats and cloaks
that "white is going 'to be unusually
fashionable next spring." It is pre
dicted as the leading color or, perhaps
I should say, tone for sticklers say
that white isn't a color at all. And
these predictions are based on what is
seen at the smart resorts where smart
women who can afford to wear white
are foregathered. Or it is based on
what tho exclusive shops or dressmak
ing establishments aro making for these
same women.
Alas that the rest of womankind may
not follow this charming fashion more
often! For there Is never anything so
becoming to every sort of woman as
white. If she is beautiful it makes her
divine: if she is pretty she becomes ir
resistible; if she is simply sweet she
becomes adorable, and if she is actually
plain but there aro no really plain
women in bpotless, well-made white
frocks.
This year the prediction has come
very early that we will have a season
of great popularity for white. And
there is nnother prediction that goes
with it; that this white will often be
trimmed with black this based on
what has already been observed at Palm
Beach and other" southern resorts.
I am showing you one of these frocks
chocu by a well-dressed woman for her
southern wardrobe. It is a so-called
sports dress, but don't be misled. Smart
women do not actually wear this type
of frock when going on the golf links or
tennis court. They Eclect some real
sports toggery of a more mannish sort.
This tvpe of sport frock they wear for
general morning and cany aitcruoon
at the resorts. In many instances they
make no change whatever in the after
noon, but cling to this type of frock
through the afternoon until they change
to evening dress before dinner.
This frock is of heavy white silk em
broidered iu black silk. The skirt i
trimmed with black silk braid, while the
girdle and tie are of white satin. De
spite the milliner's prediction that this
is to be a great season for white hats,
the hat in this case is ot black satin.
Copyright, 1j:o, by Florence Hose
Adventures
With a Purse
HAND in hand, my adventures and I,
we come to wish you a very happy
New Year. We hopp that this will be
quite the happiest and most prosperous
New Year jou have ever known, and
that the Adventures will mean more to
jou than ever before.
It's such fun, jou know, tc go scur
rying through the stores, aud the many
fascinating shops, picking up a rnic
little pin to tell you about, or lingering
a soft little blouse, and wondering
whether jou would like to know about
it. And then one must always be on
the alert for bargaiuH and special sales,
making sure, too, that the thing one
wants to write about will still bo
available when you go to purchase it.
And as may be expected, there is an
occasional disaster. Sometimes an irate
render will tell us that she went to such
and such a shop, aud they didn't have
that powder ut all, at all. Which makes
life very complicated. For Test asured
that never docs an Adventure appear
that is not the result of a personal
investigation.
But sometimes a new bales person has
been placed at a counter, or once in n
while the article described has beeu
moved to some other section of the shop.
So there jou have it!
If such should happen to jou, won't
jou tell us nbout it, so Hint we can sec
just what has caused tho trouble? He
member the Adventures are written for
jou. I like to think of your sitting
quietly in the evening after the dishes
are cleared away, resting, rockiug
peacefully back and forth and chuck
ling with ine when I am frivolous, or
agreeing with me when I write some
illuminating (?) truth.
I should be exceediuclv sorrv if tmi
i were frowning ubout me because you
nan ocen uusucccssim in securing some
thing I had told you about. Let me
know about it, too!
bend a self. addressed, stamped
envelope to the Editor of Woman's
Page, or call Walnut 3000, for names
of shpps whre articles mentioned
in Adventures With a Purse mar be
purchased.
few
DON'T MAKE RESOLUTIONS t
ON THIS NEW YEAR'S DA Yl
i , . ..I-. . . . !
And Don't Turn Over a New Leaf Just Look Over Old Leaves
and Broken Resolutions and Fix Them Up Like Netv f
TniS Is the day to turn over u new
leaf. If tho resolutions made this
morning wcrcstrung out in a row like
tho broken hearts iu the wake of a
story-book belle, they would reach all
the way round the "world and homo
again. Many of them would'bc in the
same condition ns the row of hearts,
too. A resolution has a short nnd
rough life; mode in the morning of
New Year's Day while the bells are
still ringing their welcome, modified tho
next day, broken before a week has
passed and forgotten before the person
who mado it has overcome the habit
of writing 1010 for 1920.
I know several sensible people who
announce frankly that they have given
up making New Year's resolutions.
"What's the use?" they exclaim, "I
either break them right away or for
get whether I made them this year or
simply remember them from last year"'
Sometimes resolutions arc kept off and
ou until snrinc. but when summer
Lcomes with its lazy days, Vacation hopes
anu easy-going times, we torgei. iy
the time the New Year comes around,
we have put all attempts at keeping
resolutions far, far away from us, and
we say, "Oh. well, I won't make any
new resolutions this year. I'll just turn
over a new leaf and start over ogam.
I'll just try to be better about every
thing." IN BUSINESS schools where sten
ography is taught the students are
required to take correctly a long sheet
of legal or technical matter before they
can consider themselves qualified as
Pteuographers. If they make ono little,
tiny mistake way up in the middle of
that page, they must start all over anil
do the whole tedious task again until
it is letter-perfect. We are not to
hard ori ourselves as all that. When we
make a mistake in our lives, wo rub
How to Know Which
Cream Yoti Need for
Your Special Skin
Condition
No matter how many creams
you have tried, there's always
the one best suited to your
individual requirements.
Each skin defect needs a special prep
aration. Does your face feel dry? Or
Is it oily and stippled? Is It marred by
blackheads and pimples, or is it sallow
and lifeless? For each of these condi
tions
offers a preparation scientifically com
pounded to fit the case, proved by
tests in more than 3500 Beauty Shops
before being offered to the Public.
Get a Small Bottle! Freshen Your Scalp! Stop
Falling Hair! Remove Dandruff! Grow Lots
of Wavy, Glossy, Beautiful Hair You Can!
"DANDERINE"
GROWS HAIR
Betide doubling the
beautr of your hair
at once, yon will
bortljr find n n
hair, Una and downy
at drat, bat .-eallj
aew hair crowlac
all over tb etiln.
CosU Uttla.
jfttf'ln If i !mmmmmmmmWmsMMsr frlVf, ft 4 ?!3ammmmmBmmmmmmmmaPIHBammmmBmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmml
it out with explanations, smooth It over
with apologies, nnd leave It. Our con
sclcnco is- tho only taskmaster that
"calls ua down" for this error, and to
our conscience we can always promiss
"Well, next time!" When the next
time comes we forget, and then we get
out of it all by shutting our eves and
saying on New Year's Dnv: "I'm go
ing to turn over n new leaf." We turn
It over quickly because we dou't want
the ugly, smeary sldb of it to bo seen.
But this j ear, Instead of turning over
that torn, soiled leaf with its mistakes
erased and left nil smudgy, its para,
graphs started, left unfinished, and put
aside for something more Interesting
let's turn it back and look it over. Let's
pretend we're studying stenography and
'hat we have to hove a perfect pale
before we can leave it. Instead o
adding new rules to break, let's go back
nnd mend up the old broken ones. And
then next year, when we turn over bur
new leaf on New Year's Day, we won't
have unsightly faulty pages to turn
down quickly because we re so ashamed
of them.
Cleaning Hints
Water in which potatoes have been
boiled" is' the best thing with which to
sponge and revive a silk dress.
Scorchad spots in cloth can be re
moved by wetting the spot with wnf.i.
I und covering with borax.
KeepYourSkm-Pore
Active and Healthy
With Cuhcura boa
P
Mil
aop,oiritnint,riim,z6c.TerTWht Fofitmpi
&Garefl6:uai.curtMDruonoiiJopt.j,uuaui,KiiB.
vimnwfflaiiiiniTO
Study this
Chart
For the guidance of
woman who desire to
use the preparations
thatwill producequick
est and best results, the
following chart has
been compiled.
To be sure you have
the cream you need,
inspect your face crit
ically in the mirror and
then study this chart.
Lettuce Cream
cfcan$M
Tissue Cream
nourif hes
Foundation Cream
prepares
Whitening Cream
bleaches
Motor Cream
protects
Astringent Cream
contracts
Acne Cream
heals
At Drug and Department
Stores
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