=». ii V‘! v And eating pleasant thing-z; AEIGHT was‘ ~ ti... t 11... HOUSE WIFE and HER Acwvlnss v._ A CHILD ON CHRISTMAS This holiest of all the nights, If wonder what it mums, ‘Tls su.eiy more than candle ‘ights On tlrlselied evergrPens. Itis more than toys that make it " dear, For. if you'll listen right, you'll " llerir A: nlurmuring of wings. ' My Grandma says it's more than ~ fun And hanging up your stocking; It's knowing every needy one, Might be the Savior knocking. l It's helping those who feel the rod 0.‘ grief and heavy labors. Perhaps it's being nice t0 God By loving all your neighbors. - -—(John G. Neiclhardt) THE CHRISTMAS STORY Now Jesus was born in Bethle- hem of Judca, in the days of Herod the King. And Mary, his mother, wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger, because there was no room in the inn. And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flocks by night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them, and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them: Fear not, for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be t0 all people. For unto you is born this day in the city oi‘ David a Saviour, which is Qhrlst the Lord. And this shall be {sign unto you; ye shall flndthe babe wrapped in swaddling clothes. lying in Q. manger. And guddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God. and saying. Glory to God in the highest, and on eds-m, peace, goodwill toward men. And it came to pass, as the an:- eis were gone away from them in- to heaven, the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even un- indietblehem and see this thin! which is come to pass, which the 19rd hath made known unto us. And they came with hast/z. and fqund Mary, and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger. ABOUT SUPEESTYHONB t CHRISTMAS SEASON Do you know that a full moon lit Christmas clay is supposed to be unlucky. the saying going: ."Light Christmas, light wheat- sheaf; dark Christmas, heavy wheat sheaf?’ and that a windy Christ- mas and a calm Candlemas were mid g5 omeng of a, good year. Rain during the i2 days after Christmas was said to foretell a wet Yea} l° follow. When decorating the house with Christmas holly, be careful not to burn any leaves or berries that fall, but put them carefully away untll"*"l‘welfth Night," when they should be burnt with the rest of the decorations. Then luck and happiness ‘will follow; yuuch 5,5 a holly leaf is burned be— forehand, you are courting disaster. my the old-fashioned country folk who set store on Christmas omen!- Ilook to your fire on Christmas day, for l! it burns brightly it is a alzn o! prosperity; if, however, when the fire is first. lighted it smoulders and refuses to “draw? setbacks may ‘b’: looked for during the year to 00ml- wear something new on Christ- mas; day if possible, “for luck." and be‘ very careful to put on no Gil‘- ment with a hole or tear in‘it, otherwise you will lose mnneY- A5‘,- rémember that the first Word! spoken in the day should be cheer- Jul; m speak a word of grumbling is to court bad luck-Morning Herald. .___._._. D00“. IIINGES .Metal door hillkis 531mm! be wnshcd frequently in warm scall- suds and tlIere will be far less nee‘: of drastic poiishluu- ‘Tiler 51w“ m, wgped dry after each wasllirlB dud then rubbed with oil to Pm‘ v:nt rustinE. IN TIIE CUPBOARD g .- Yd Tusd articles on “l9 01mm: fihiteilvcus of the cuPbimTd so you are not constantly movinl fllese unnecessary articles to B“ w me oncs you want. In the lower section of the culllmflld W" 7°“. heaviest pans on the bfli-Wm she“ and your popular suucellflllll Within Iggy reach on the "W" FIRM“ You will use a SOUP I10‘ 01' Tim-m" jhst once every ten times a sauce?“ d; frying slcillet is used. . nousakucvlflfl (‘IMTTER inside of your Kiwi“ and the dishes against tilfi :- Paint the upboard white ill look attractive ckground. Ian; overcome the dumevabls °d°I house caused b7 fiwill"! ‘m’ a gnu or caboose. M l 9"” ‘*1 “n”; gc peel bum slowly on top o vc. tt the 0031 into $110 mtmwapar-wot thorn tiloroulll- d then niece cold wafeamaizlwmn “wan material. i m. square and otrififll N NI“ r dulled with rut lids are mien- d spa/u savers in t refrigeragg: cm. 11mm. tfiii I?“ ‘ .,.__._. ‘ .. a s1. j it“; ifltvfll ll b“ y, ._._ 15 Wfelllled securely and stored in wax paper. SIIINY SILVERWARE Add a little milk to the water in which the silver is wash-ed and it will help keep it bright and shiny. 4 rut: CASSEROLE Stains can be removed from a baking casserole by soaking it in a strong solution of nor-ax and water. POT ROAST OF BEEF Select a 3 to 4 pound piece bee.’ (invxpznsive cut.) Coat all over with flour, and dust generously with salt, pepper. grown the meal richly on all sides, in a very hot oven. or bzown in a frying pan on top of the stove, in a little very hot fat. Transfer to a heavy pot, or cook in the roasting pan in which it was seared. Pour in a littlc hot water. Cover very closely. Simmer gent- ly on top of the stove, or place in a rather slow oven (325 degrees F.) and cook until tender. Replenish water as necessary. but do not have water more than i to l 1-2 indies deep during cocking. One hour before done, lift meat from kettle or pan, and arrange in a layer in the pan diced car-rots, diced turnip, diced celery, finely chopped or sliced onion. Sprinkle vegetables with salt and pepper and place mcat on top 0! vegetables. Be‘ sure there is cnough water in the pan to prevent burn- lrlg. Cover. Simmer gently 0r bake until the meat and vegetables are tender. Lift meat out on to heated platter, arrange vegetables around the roast, and sezvc very llot. SALTING ALMONDS AT IIOME n you want to fix your own sell- ed almonds, buy the nuts in their shells, crack, pour boiling water over for two minutes,» then pour- OVEI’ very cold watcr and drain. slip the brown skins Oil. Dllt lllli-B l" l buttered bowl and coat lightly with salt and butter. Place in a flat pan and roast in a. moderate oven (about 350 degrees) for 15 minutes. SUPERLATIVE WOMAN ' WANTED FOR TELEVISION LONDON-Somewhere in the United Kingdom is a beautiful young woman with personality plus charm, a golden voice and photo- genic features-if she can be found, and the British Broadcastinll 0°!" poration hopes she can. If so. she will be engaged‘ to take a leading part in the forthcomirlz campaign to popularize television. By “photogenic features." 8090m- ing to Gerald Cock, director of tele- vision, is meant good looks Whioil telcvlse well. Besides the superlative woman. B superlative roan is wanted by the B.B.C. for televblon .two really first- class announcers. Th.» idea is i0 begin with about three hours a day of short, snappy programmes trans- mitted at times most suitable for public and private demonstrations. THE PIANO Pieces of gum camphor placed inside the piano will protect from moths. Do not allow the cam- prior m come in contact with the strings or it will dlscoio them, though not injurious. WINTER, COLDS A balanced diet will'do‘ much tc- wards preventing winter colds. Leafy vegetables, wholesale salads. fruits of all kinds, and a "quart 01 milk a day are all E905- WOMAN IIEADS ENGLISH FAMILY OF TRAGIC HISTORY Another strange flllllliel’ i" ‘he tragic history of the DSSllllS-Qne °f the saddest, yet dost romantic, in ihe pages of the British P991130" was begun on the death recently c; the Em Qf Dysart, “the blind Earl" at Buckmirlstcr Park. Leices- tcrrllize. l-lis nicc2. Wlllv-fl/d" Grooves, succeeded to the WET-lib?- She is i6 years of c,'c and as the Count/cs of Dysart is the third wo- man to hold that title in her own right. The death of the eldest soil. often by violence, and the preser- vatiou of the title by a female 8W‘ ccssor, who married Major Owain mdwurd Whitehead Gxeaves in 1913. and lives at Glangwnll. Camflwml‘ shire, has three children-ail daughters. COSMETICS ONLY ACCENT HEALTH No longer do smart women i156 rouge, powder and lipstick to take the place of natural beauty that comes from plenty of exercise. en- ough sleep and other healthy living habits. Modems apply cosmetic aids to enhance their own coloring. of course, but they 110MB“? "9 51°“ concerned with fundamental beauty. Even oixmcticlanl. torched as they. m in selling fir, ioiiflillllll various val‘- at Jmqurgqtirdilsf sto take brick wlllu, do oxerclsu. eat ' sensibly and imp a will mllllv hours every nifillt» - ' Instead of saying that their cream; alone will make the skin glow, eyes sparkle and hair chino. mm of than advise beauty-mind- ~ ed wornenrtd-prescrve and protect thei; health and to use cosmetic 100ml M iupriidmbnt health routine; “Our lldilfi 4501p U AMorningSmile A charitable woman, much inter- ested in a poor neighborhood that whenever she called on a protege of hers she always saw a very down- and-out sort of man standing at the corner of the street. One morning she took compassion on him. press- pered, "Never despair." Next time sllc saw him he stopped her and handed her nine shillings. "It means, m'm," said the man. "that Never Despair won at 8 w 1." NOT THE REASON ‘File-re lives an old lady in the vil- lage who suffered terribly with rheumatism. One day the vicar met her, and she was walking quite doubled up. "My dear Mrs. Brown," he said. “I am sorry _to see your rheumatics so bad today." "Oh. but I am all right myself," replied the old lady, "but 50mg friends persuaded me to wear ankle socks. and I have got my suspenders fastened to them." ALBANY SCHOOL CLOSING A most. enjoyable concert and Christmas tree was held at Albany school Dec. 20 A large number of visitors and ratepayers were prgg. cnt. Much credit is due our teacher Miss Aurdrey Harvey, for the cap.’ ' llble Way in which the children were trained to take their respec- tive parts. The Programme was as follows z‘ Opening Chorus by the school. BExercise-Annie Sherry, Jean Hillier, Dorothy MacDonald, Rflfiitfltion~hila Cameron. slmg-Ellllfl Large. Audrey and M15 MllcKily; Kathleen and Jean- no Boulter Recitation_ Ernest Arsenault. DlRloirue— Marjorie Donnelly Jll-Willl Kelly. Eldred Bculter. ’ Recitation-Bea Gamble ‘ Chonis _Grade 8, 9, 10 Monologue-Lois MacKay. Solo-John MhcKay. Reading 401m Walker. Recitation --Paul Dawsgn, Dmlixzue‘ Mal’? Tierney Mhg. fznret Bculter, Ralph D,,,,;.,,, Solc-Vodla MECKEIV. ' Recitation —-Earl MacKay Recitation Doris Dawson Exercise by 11 pupils Monologue-Jeanne Bonito;- Dur-i: -Eldrcd Boulter John Mc Kay. ’ ' Recitation-Margaret. Kelly Pantomlne- ' Gamble. Ktthigsliy cfcirrrisxe‘ Riff’: Cwkell. Verna MacDonald: filming Chorus Immrdratcly after the pfg. gramme gifts and a candv treat were dktributcd among the child- lfégévAflidress was then mad by was * mnéignfg’ tfienilegchbresentation Croken. er by Ruth Alb D Dear Teacher:- any 9c 20 m” Amid we are gathered boggthgg- "gemie-‘l ‘Hillel's. mothers. nnnualcigstlvglrlgo .rl.§¥.f,'.5',h§'d “u; Cligristmas. 3y o c feel th t th occasion is ngt aithgggthser ltgmq 014% without some ‘indication o: Hill" gratitude for your long sufR-r. ink patience in prQpfly-lng ‘this EITIISIZIC prcgrgmma ‘ for the love protect-ion. and service which you w?“ “WWW. ml the illlpils which 1° ‘llficr Your dictatorship, y... Elllihgond iii-me which we have had m”! you n our midst, as a genial ioG, and Winsome entertainer. 5° We 85K you to accept this small ifilen cg our love and respect, with ~ goo wishes for a very Merry Christmas and HEIYYV New y,“ On behalf of Pu il‘ ‘ ' School. p ‘s o: Albany I Several spec h,- ' of National Arithgnflnbfictrlllzeh singgg enjoyable afternoon to p, c1059, nATlrrNG-srrrr- mann- NEW YORK, Dec. il-AUIIE: )_. Perfection of a "three-dimension. bathing suit that breathes" w“ m. "oumcd Yflieldfli’. The manufac- turer said the illusion of a third cil. menslon was created by "a lace- iiile. latex. overall design." FEATHER! VARY Fillings 1'01‘ pillows in order of merit are down, goose, duck and chicken feathers. Chicken feather-c gqiflgg-llf-ilf and hard to make good Your double chin, but you must do neck exercises at home to streng- then muscles that Buppofl; m; nun under your chin," g, “mo.” oosmetioian recently told a 6m." tamer. ‘Uhe hears advice like this every. where these days. In tome o1 tug largest salons, customers are sent DICK lb their family doctor-g bgfofg they are allowed to take gpequj exercise __routifrca. In others. acne creams an not sold unless he af- Jlcted pouch hll hid l. medial! oxnmirwtion. ' health u skill trouble: that manic ailment! ed a. shilling in his hand and whis- "What does this mean?" she said." . healing for the Dorothy Dix ‘s LetteryBox ’s Realm-v Social and Personal i-:- Has/lions . . . y‘ ‘THE l COOK'S ang if You Plan Revenge Upon a Way- ward Husband - tlrely plain that he does not love me. and we have had terrible scones which leave us both sworn to myself that I will not live him move he makes; that I will not. live him revenge beside my present way? should be hurt some way for hurting ms much, ITtOUBI-ED, Answer: .. Qr as gall, and it destroys all the fllrvor in life thoughts with it. It is a poison that eats into the hBBfi-a case of conscience since you started out to avenge yourself band for the wrong you consider that he has done you. honest with yourself, you will realize that cheerful thought or had a carefree moment since avenged on him. ion with you. misfortune until you have lost in anything. You can't even all will be, if you don't snap with listening to your troubles. would justify him in ceasing to love you, you cannot find any pleasure l making him as miserable as you are. You have he loves eat out and make him and the woman if the knowledge that and longing for each other, but. I doubt hurt them as much as they have hurt you will bring you think it will. We ilave no control over it and we cannot force ourselves to lcvc person because it is our duty to do s). why we cease to love. dealing with those who have somehow, us_ . . ation as it is instead of rebelling against it, rather than seeking revenge upon him. In forgiveness you will wound he has upon him you will prod at poison your whole life. _ O O O i l t who have good husbands and good ironies, estio life and complain about having ever realize how many of us places. I have been working for ing for a change from typillg. four years the happy day mother. apron strings? I have recently met is in love with me and I like him, him as I do for the other. pair‘! AILWIBII away from her and set up a home oi his own. bestows her affections upon some more promising subject, goes to her for advice. On her ire bestows his confldenccs, wife is always sort of an interioper -ln the family. of the business girl. her husband. atlonthtth dthif I l , a ey o or emlrcemp eyes. D1x_ the intended wife or hush nd th t th before the marriage? a a are h ‘nanny lwogrmaorg Answer: . Every law of decency and honor demands that any man or womq "wilds lwledltm Mme but any disuse m. individual my have. lllll l! they do they have no right to have children. DIX. Men A e Weak CHICAGO, Dec. 23.--Ma.le not femah in, the weuhlr sax. .Thicmaynot banowstomoat wives but Dr. Edgar V. Alim of the lhyo clfnc It Rochester, Minn" pndioud today it would to a hard blow to may hucbandn. The female of the macho-dol- piu tradition and bib of quota- dxpectnncy is four yum than a girrz. cancer. hardening of the pneumonia. asthma, landing arteries, discard: ti» and brain. ‘I'm explanation that "man harder, moire men, drink u ngardufnod and Guard Yourself Against la Jealous Boomer- Dear ma» Dix-During the‘ last year my hurbziad bu made it on- This has wou ed my ride deeply wrooga I havc moment's freedom; that 1 will follow every . divorce or any peace, even if it kills me, just so I can make him as unhapily as he has made me. Can you august any manner of I feel he Revenge is a boomerang. It returns to those who hurl it and annihilated them. When you seek to take revenge upon than who have injured you, you hurt yourself far more than you hurt them. It has been said that revenge is sweet. Never hu than been a more false statement. Revenge is an bitter for those who saturate their and brains of people and warps them, and finally clays everthing that is goodin them. on your hus-. If you will be you have not had a 5111819 you set yourself to be You have dwelt on his unfalthfulness until it has become an obsess- Many times your mind has gone over every detail of your the ability to eat or sleep or 11nd pleasure talk of anything else. And the end of it out of it, that you will become a nervous wreck, and a bore whom your friends will avoid because they are worn out So give up your melodramatic plan of revenge yourself on your hus- band for your own sake- Unless you have a fiendish nature yourself that it to be built that way m get a kick out of torturing a person and seeing him writhe, and not. many women are so cruel. You can, of course, refuse your husband a divorce their hearts in loneliness ou have you the so ace that I sympathize with you deeply in the loss of your husband's love. That is a hard thing for any wife to be called upon to endure, but it isnot ai- ways, perhaps not often, the man's Inuit. Love comes and goes as it wills. _.u__..____. We do not know why we love nor And so we should temper justice with mercy in some way, inst their affection for I think you will find far more happiness in just accepting the situ- and in forgiving your husband find dealt you, but in trying to avenge yourself the cld sore and keep it festering until it will . DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dim-When I read the letters in your column from woman but who are bored with dom- to do housework, I wonder if they businms women would like to be in their nineteen years and fending for myself, and I would like to have some strong shoulder to lean on, and to do cook- I am in love with a. man of 40, and for has failed to come because he can't. leave his What can you do with bachelors who are tied to their mothers’ a man who is lust the opposite. He but I don't have the same feeling for Do all old maids live in hope and die in dos- BPINEPER. They needn't die in despair if they. have enough good, hard horse sense to cease living in the hope that, mamrnirs pet is ever going to break Watchful waiting is a. losing game for a woman to play, because wait- ing and watching for a drlamry man to set the wedding day ages ha; and robs her of her good looks quicker than anything else. Generally by the time the man has made up his mind to marry he has lost hi5 tang for he! and nicks out some pretty young flapper for a wife. It is all right for a girl to wait a reasonable length of time on a man, but if be keeps putting off marriage she is well advised if she breaks oil with him and Anyway, there is no more undesirable husband than the m“ who has the mother complex. He never grows up_ He 15 glwgyg Mammals “we baby boy and urldcr her dominion. She always comes first with hing m, And his Lots of business wolnen like you would like to exchange placeg with the domestic woman, just as lots of domestic women are green with envy I often think it is a pity that they can't really tradg places for a while. If they could, each would g0 back better satisfied wtléh her job. The domestic woman would find that it is Just as mon- 0 nous to operate a typewriter all day as it is to perform on a gas range; that customers can be just as aggravating as children and that the busr. ness girl has to take as much back talk from her boss as the wife from The blleillwl air-l would learn that the wife and mother has no alnecure of lying abed in the morning until she feels like getting up, and g g aroun moat of the day reading a novel, the wife and moths;- hns to put in about eighteen hours of steady labor. Bha would 11nd it is often harder to get money out of a husband than it is to earn it herself, and that fcw husbands treat their wivcs with the politeness and consider-- ' DOROTHY Dear Dorothy Dix~8nould a person contemplating matrlmon inform family who is marrying should tell til . that could afloat the success o? °'riig'i.‘§da°'lf.§imfiz do not. think that people who have hereditary disease; mould mm n m . mortu- Meh are more afflicted than m women with mom or the stomach, liver, of lDiflll cord . , mm alcohol and llvu ma" irregularly not" l: not tho CORNER MINOEMEAT PUDDING T9 2 cups of rich, but not too moist, mincerneau add alternately 1% cups flour and the beaten yolks of 0 eggs: mix thoroughly, then fold in the whites of the eggs, beaten light. Steam in a covered buttered mould for 0 hours. Serve with hard sauce. ‘ ‘ Hard Sauce: Cream ti cup butter, gradually beat in 1%. cups of con- foctioncrs sugar, moisten with a few drops of vanilla extract and add a grating of nutmeg. MASHED PAR SNIP BALLS Trim and scrape two or three large parsnlps. cut in elghths, lengthwise, and let cook in boiling, salted water until tender. Drain. mash smooth with 2 tablespoons whipping cream or milk, 2 table- spoons butter, l teaspoon salt and V; teaspoon pepper, mashing in the saucepan in which the parsnip! were cooked, and stirring the lnix- turo over the fire until hot through. Remove from heat, stir ‘in very , _ qludkly one beaten egg and set How true this is you can sec from your own experience. You must away go gwy 51mm mm 1,9115 om know that you have not had a minute's happinéao or peace of mind or ma, m dmmeger; dip in beaten egg, then in fine-sifted crumbs, place in a fryin basket and let cook ill hot fat untl brown on the outside. Pile in pyramid form a on a dish. with fine-chopped parsley sprinkled over ' them. BEEFSTEAK AND PUDDING KIDNEY Cut one pound of steak or stew- ing beef, and kidney into small pieces, or put through the mincer. Grease and line a basin with slot pastry. Put in the meat in layers with choped onions between. season with pepper and salt, sprinkle a dash of flour ovcr, and pour in a little water. Put a cover of suct pastry on top. Tie over this a pud- ding cloth with n strong string. (Bring the corners of ihe cloth on top and tic) and boll or steam for three or four hours. PLUM PUDDING Four good-sized slices of bread soaked in 11/.- cups sweet milk. 2 pounds seeded raisins, 2 pounds cur- rants, it pound mixed peel, 1% cups molasses, 1% pounds of suet (melt. strain, use as lard). u cup butter, 8 cups yellow sugar, 0 eggs, 2 teaspoons each of soda, cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg. Flour to make real stiff batter. Steam or boil for 8 hours. I} l. PLEASANT CIRCLE INSTITUTE The December meeting of “Pleas- ant Circle Instituie,“ was held at the home of the President Mrs. Earle H Bouiter. with ten memb- ers and four visitors present. The newly elected President occupied the chair, and the meeting was opened by repeating the "Club Women's Creed" in unison, Roll Call was answered with a Christmas verse then minutes of last meeting were read, approved and signed. some discussion took place on fancy work and a number ' of articles were sold. It was moved and seconded that the usual Christmas treat be bought for the school children. It was moved and seconded, that two Sunshine boxes who is visiting in U. S. A. Some Christmas seals were sold. New Committees were appointed. Sick-Mrs. Jack Walker. Miss Faith Boulber. Program- Mrs. Arthur McKay Mrs. Eunmet Crokcn, a demonstration to be put on by Mrs. A. McKay. on “Bath- ing and dressing a baby." Next meeting at Mrs. Urville Large. roll call to be answered by a remedy for a cold. burn. 0r poison; or Donts on child- training. The pro- gram for the evening consisted of “making housekeeping easy, "taken from Institute News. reading by Mrs. Basil Sherry. “Tho will and the way" written by Mr and I‘ J. Inca. Hampton. These read!‘ were much enjoyed by ent. It was decided to meet at the home of the Besetary on Dec. 16th, to mw, and make special articles. for Christmas. A dainty lunch was then served by the hostess social hour spent. EUROPEAN POTATO CROP WILL BE LESS IDNDON, Dec. 23 — Europe's 1930 potato crop wllisbe 15,000.000 tons smaller than last year's it was estimated yesterday by the Im- perial Economic Committee. Although tberc is little danger m‘ a potato famine, prices probably will rise. II be sent to two sick people in the district, also that a Christmas booklet be sent to‘ Mrs. P. 'I‘ierey . a reading by Mrs George MlcKcy. ' all prur ' anda, It is estimated that Britain's Don't trust TDECR ‘r935 Lite iat'are> Send it to ‘the Folks Away from“ Home‘ ‘ . . Wht more acceptable Christ- lllll gilt could you sand to the ' friends in dhfnnt parts than, a few cnnllten of i110 1-98 that loaves noihin to be desired —- MOBBEJS SELECTED onANGE PEKOE rm. The problem‘: solved. Ask your “M” u; ggqyply it in Christ- ro Cents mum-well " ~ per Pound ..t-——-;tr_._ ‘I F "“"'"'4 ‘f’ '- or 1935 IVE OLD “manner BOGEY MERRY "rm us" AND STAY THIN fitii-Iféyeri I Corltract ‘Influence’ Disputed PORTLAND, Dec. 2mm. P.) — Services for which Arthur P Home, Washington consulting en- gineer, claimed 370.000 were not worth more than “ a few thousand dollars." William s. Nowell. pmid- ent of the Bath Iron Works, Inc., testified yesterday C curt. Nowell was testifying in the trial of Homer's suit to collect $100,000 from the Maine Shipbuilding Com- pany for his "profeuonal services" in connection with destroyer awards NEW YORK. Dev- "it-mm" an unusual thing about this sea- son's crop of Mlanhattan debutantes. They're hull y. and they “l! They eat ce cream with 630001- ate sauce attack their soup eagerly and do right by sweetbreads One of their favorite breaflast dished is good old substantial corned beef h for this is Charles. ash -. Authority debutante ren- maitre d'hoi'.el at a dezvolu (The Ritz Carlton). H0 was asked "How about it?" after some of the season's buds were seen consuming food at a mat 1n 1933, rate. He pressed belief that Homer's Debs, he explained. no 1on8" claim that his "personal friend- nibble lettuce leaves. They gulp" with high officials led to the awards was without foundation. The contracts ulere let. he said. by regular and legal channels with- out Homer's help. ___.___-_._ ALBANY SCHOOL School ham and eggs and even eat he candle: that were Juli "l ""5" ment on the table a. few years a c. 8H0 also said, while on the sub- ject of debs and dining. That the average woman would gain l0 pounds in one winter if she at: debutant/c party food with out dancing until dawn. That debs always lose weight during the party season. M01105! they're always or. the go. That filet mignon is the "end all Report of Albany for November: Grade X-l. Jeanne Boultcr; 2. Audney MacKay; 3. Mary Tierney. Grade IX-l. Joseph Kelly; 2. Elma. Large; S. Kathleen Keough. Grade VIII-l. Mildred Walker; and be all" of young men who 80 2. Kathleen Boulter; 3. Eileen to deb dinners. Walker. . Food appears on the debutante Grad», Vii-l John W glker; 2 scene five times daily —at lunch- Blanche MacDonald; 3. Verna eon, afternoon reception, dinner! MacDonald. l dance, supper party, and finally Gradev -1 Ruth Croken; 2. breakfast at dawn. Ben Gamble; S. Mary Gamble. Waiters would rather serve debs Grade III (Sr) —-l. William than diplomats. They know, the Aroenault; 2. Allre Bernard. stars of each crop by name, and Grade 8 (Jr) -1. lvfargaret Kelly; 2. Gerald Kelly. Grade II l.- Jennie MacDonald; 2. lit-nest Arsenault. ' Grade l (Sr)_ i Paul Dawson! 2. Doris Dawson. 3 fills Cameron. can reel off the_frames_ycars_l_af2r_. crop will be 050,000 tons less than last year's Germany, which always has been the biggest potato pro- ducer.) reduced its potato acreage Grade I (Jr) —-1. Vodia Mae- this year by 800,000 acres and her Kay; 2. Annie Sherry; 3 Jean yield is expeteed to show a mduc- Boulter. tion of 7.000.000 tons. Poland's pro- Perfect Attendance:- Elma duction is expected to drop 4.000.- Largc, Bea Gamble, Lila Cameron. 000 tons. . Teacher, Audrey Harvey. SMART CLOTHES FOR THE HOME DRESSMAKER l 4L‘ l‘)! EOE All patter-ha 10c (coin is pdurrod.) Wrap can carefully. No. til-slum ma linden-fling. m. ltyip l. “m... p, .1... m. tics-in stronger than t male. he xenon for fcmolu “lilpo‘lority" 1g l . m M m“ h. n n, H l - rem. so. 86,400.44. 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