PAGE EIGHT l? ma cuaahowmnwu cusaoum For The Cook l DorothywDix. Letter Box t COFFEE SOUl-‘FLE Iii cups of strong clear coffee. - ‘h. cup of sugar. 1 tablespon gelatine. 8 eggs. 1 teaspoon vanilla. ‘.1. cup cream. Method. Soak the gelatine in ‘A cup of cold water for 10 minutes. Put the coffee, cream, half the sugar and the gelatine in a double boiler. When hot add the yolks of the eggs which have been beaten witnthe balance of the sugar. Stir for a few minutes and remove from the fire. Let cool slightly. Beat the egg whites until very stiff. Add the van- illa and fold into the coffee mixture. Pour into wet mold and place in the icebox to set. Serve with whip- ped cream-and, if liked, lady-fing- G25. Etiquette By Roberta Lee Q. What is the universal rule for the bridegrooms clothes at an even- ing iveddlug? A. Full evening dress. Q. Is a silver tray correct for serving tea? l A. Yes. the tray may be of silver, wood, or gloss. Q. May temporary addresses on a calling card be viritten with a pencil? A. No, they should be written in ink. AMorningSmile l "Ma wee brithers bein’ baptized today said Sandy to his playmate, Wullie. “M”. aboot?" "In the kirk of course," exclaimed Bandy. "Whaur were you baptized?" "Aw wlsna baptized." "Ye're tcllin’ a lee, Wullie Mc- Lean, everybody gets baptized." “I'm no tellin’ a lee, Sandy Mc- Neil, an‘ awll show ye; look there's nae merks on ma airm." replied Wullie. "Vifhaur iih lip,‘ Elli‘ 5W1 JUNIOR BASEBALL The Sock-Foot ‘Nine and the Tig- ers taro junior baseball teams had s. great game of baseball Saturday evening on the Convent square, which resulted in a score of 20- 8 for the Sock-Foot Nine. ‘ Following were the line-ups. SOCK-FOOT NINE Pltcher—Petc'r Doyle. Catcher-loco Redmond. 1st. Base-Basil Dunn. 2nd. Base-Harold Prunty 8rd Base—Earl McLelian. Short Stop-Fred Dunn Left Held-Hubert McCallum Right Field-Jack Neale. TIGERS Pitcher-Gordon Trainer. Catcher-Vernon MacDonald lst. Base-Mlibert Welsh 2nd Base-Winfred Chaddick. 3rd Base-Buss Bell Short Stop-Eddie Burke Left field-Hank 'l‘rainor. Right Field-Ted Wilson. Before and After Childbirth " o... ndfifi; ?".':-.-="i*...l..er two ways egetab 98 nuinf lUUWnmen VII‘ ~£.'I Ill \l ill ll?i'\l lyrila E. Pinkhzmfs Shall the Wife Whose Husband Considers Her Only a Dear Friend Leave Home?-' Should Mother-in-Law Live With Daughter-in-Law Dear Miss Dix-My husband says that he only cares for me ss he would a dear friend and that he has never loved me in any other way since we have been married. He also says that there is no other woman that he cares for any more than he does for me. I asked him if he wanted a. separation and he said “No? We have a 2-year-old baby, to which we are both devoted. Now what shall I do? Would you leave him or stay and tough it out? A. B. Answer: I would stay. You have too good a chance to win out to throw down you: hand and quit at this stage of the game. Especially as you have that baby fighting on your side. suppose your husband does love you only as a dear friend? Why, ‘ that is what marriage settles down to with every couple by the time they have been married a few years. All of the palpitations and thrills pass luvay with courtship. The romance falls under the glare cf everyday, humdrum, domestic life. The husband does not express his love for his wife by bringing he The husband does not express his love for his wife by bringing her orchids. l-le fetches home the bacon. The wife does not seek to make herself alluring to her husband by arts and wiles. She pleases him by getting him a good dinner. Husbands and wives do not spend their time billing and cooing and making love to each other. They show their af- fection by doing their duty and trying to make each other happy. Courtship is one thing. Married lifc is another. No couple could keep up the high-pressure sentimentalism of courtship year sitcr year any more than they could live on an exclusive diet of chocolate eclalrs. It would nauseate them and they would cry out for plain bread and but- ter and roast beef, medium rare. And that is what marriage is, where a man and woman Just settle down to the business oi life and being kind and good. to each other and not talking much about their feelings. Happy, then, the wife whose husband still regards her as a dear friend. Who shows that he finds her companionsble and sympathetic and understanding and. trustworthy-who with whom hs can talk over things, whose advice he respects and of whose loyalty he is assured. I would trust that kind of aflection to endure s lot longer than the one that was made up of hectic thrills and chills and sgus stuff. so, my advice to you, Mrs. A. 3., is to taks the goods the gods pro- vide and thank heaven for what/you have instead of worrying over mar- riage," and when a woman can say Friend Husband she is indeed a. lucky wife. Make your husband a good home. Make him cozrtlortsbls. Drive with a. light hand. Give him plenty of liberty and don't nag. Don't even discuss with him the state of his affections or the possibility of a Style half a dosen fabrics will tell the Thsrefil be an abundance of Lelong do nice things in color while Charlotte Revel is no duvcntlne. i WITHALMAAICIIB It looks as though the little colony of fashion plotters in Paris hsvs boiled down their fsll fabric ideas something dandy. About medians. typo where a single yam can't be traced and the finish is smooth and unbrushcd. Mesh wespes and drop stitch weaves, as used by Brupere and Worth, are great and the new armure treatments wherein the yarns pull together now and then to form a design, as a. lozenge or shell, are pretty hot too. Borlhfl 5nd Chats woolen dress story. crops weaves of the irregular. contrast with chiffon-broadcloth, slouch with chiffon-velour, or bread or wssthsm or bacon the suns wsy and make into sand- wichss‘; sit-her will need s. touch c! mustard. Psplsr mscbs will‘ ml? be thrown any ofinrwordl or bottled drinks may be served- ’ Rudy lolsi Flor the rssdy-to-sst picnic. ws rely chiefly cusmdwichol. with such additions ss dcvilled eggs. salad, cakes and pastries, and if at; all possible, I. hot beverage to lid digestion. , " Waxed paper is a picnic necess- ity, for wrapping most, sandwiches,’ etc. For sandwiches, use white or brown bread, or a slice of each. Petit Picn As a. rest from tbs constant meal getting-as a change from routine meals-pack a picnic! Perhaps your picnic will be merely a. lunch or tea. under a tree in the garden- a pleasant change and s. great reducer of dishwash- lnglPerhaps it will be s. motor party, or maybe you will go by boat.‘ Both of these are very easy, because if there is s conveyance at your door’ into which you may thrust s. gay mass of equipment, you can have any typs of picnic you choose. If, however, you are to travel 1n more public fashion, the picnic must be -a rather circumspect affair. Ons cannot clutch the fry- ing pan in one hand and the coffee pot in the other, in quite the same carefree fashion. But one msy puck a basket neatly. Cook it There It is not always necessary to carry along a. frying pan, to have a campfire meal. Lots of good things may be impaled on sharpen- ed green sticks and toasted_saus- ages, ham or bsmn, steak cut in small pieces. The coffee pot is susually worth carrying, for even in warm weather, a. hot beverage is welcome. If you carry a frying pan, you can have steak. chops, fried him and eggs, scrambled eggs, hamburg steak-and how good they taste out of doors! A couple of small fires, or one‘ ic Parties long low one, are best for cooking purposes. “’I'ho good camper is known by the fire he makes"-twigs first, then short small wood, a few bits of old, soft wood, to make a quick, thick bed of hot embers. Two or three stones or green logs should be placed to make a rest for the pct-s. What will the basket hold? An old table cloth or a paper one; paper table napkins-the cheap by the hundred kind; plates and cups; knives, forks, spoons (the throw-away paper kind i sa boon), a. cooking fork and a sharp knife. And the "eatmenats," as the darkies say? Potatoes to bake in hot ashes around the border of the fire, or cold ones to slice and fry; tomat- oes; pickles; mest or eggs; cookies or losf cake or pie (or handy little turnovers, if one has baked with the picnic in mind), fresh fruit, s. bowl filled with excellent salad- potato or bean or beet salad, for instance. Always there must be bread-the loaf to slice as required; butter, in a Jar; salt; pepper; mustard, if needed; sugar; coffee or tea, cream in a. covered jar or bottle. If you want a nothing-bc-carry- back picnic, you may still have a hot course. Toast sausages on sticks and put them into split rolls or- between ready-cut shoes of separation. If you do this you_will find that the friendship .. you will grow stronger and stronger year by year, for friendship is mods up of common experiences, of joys and sorrows that ws have endured to- gether, of memories that we have in common and of battles that we have fought out shoulder to shoulder. That is why we cling to old friends and why new friends can never take their place. Perhaps your husband will never really fall in love with you in a romantic way. Most likely be is not of a. romantic ism- perament and is as incapable of the grand passion as he is of singing in opera. But so long as he gives you his friendship you can do without the romance. DOROTHY DIX. O I O Desi- Dorothy Dix-Should a. mother-in-law llvs with her daughter- in-law when she has daughters of her own? X. Y. Z. SQUID Answer: ~ A mother-in-law should never live with either a. daughter-inflow or a son-in-law unless it ls an absolute necessity or unless her lll-IIWS are so ' anxious to have her that. they consider her presence under their roofs a benediction instead of a penance and urge he: to make he: homo with them. » Fortunately, there are such ‘instances, and I have known women whose in-laws loved them as if they had been their own mothers and who were welcome guests in their in-laws’ houses. Such instances are, alas, rare. Few old women can avoid making pests of themselves by trying to boss everything about them and tnndsring unsougbt advice and suggestions. Nor are there many old women who srs tactful and dip- lomatic in dealing with their iii-laws. Neither are there many daughters-in-law’ or scns-in-lsw who want any third party in their houses, nor who are pitiful and patient with the whims and vagaries of age. Bo, because the motbcr-in-lsw in tho house is nearly always a cause of disscnsion and strife between husbands and wives, I think it is far, far better for women not to tryyw live with their children after they are married. But in case it has to be done, in case the mother is flnlncillly ds- ~ pendent upon her children and they cannot afford to make hsr an allow- l ancs that will enable her to ‘have her own little homo or to board some- ‘ where, it is certainly Just as much the son's place to take care of her ll - it is the daughter’ s. There is no more reason why daughtcr-in-law shouldn't do her bit than there is why son-in-law shouldn't do his. The fair thing is for each child to do his or her share in taking care of mother and this div- ides it out so that it is hard on none. But when you rebel so bitterly, X. Y. 2., against having your hug. bands mother with you in her old ago, try to put yourself in her place, for it may be your fate when you are old in be dependant upon your children. How will you like it, then, if your dsuglatcr-ln-law makes you feel that you are a burden and an unwelcome guest and that your ssst at your son's ilre and at his table is begrudgsd you? Once I was cunping out in the Sshsrs Desert and one night the story-teller about the ilro told this tale: "Once upon a time there wss an old msn who come to his son and ssid: "When you were a child I carried you in my arms, I wsrmod you at my breast, I fed you and clothed you. Now I sm old sad helpless and I ask you to do for me what I did for you when you wsro young and helpless." Bo the son took his father into his house and comforted him, but the son's wife nagged st her husband to ssnd his fstbor sway until she mid» him turn the Old man out of coon. nut. at the inst moment the son's conscience smote him, and he sold to his little boy: ‘Go got the blsnkst with which we cover the ass so the old-man may luvs something in wrspibout him, for the nights srs cold in tbs dust-t.‘ VBQBlHIJlB Bmnunund The littlebcywssgcns farslong time ssdwhiohi rstumoslubsd out the blanket in two ms brought only half of it. ‘wnysfsm do mm.’ uius u» fstlisr. cunt the other mu: rsplisd tbs ma: m, ‘to s o s"‘s give to you when you are old and I turn you out of my doors.’ " DOROTHY DIX. Desi‘ Miss Dix-I am very much in lcve with s splendid young man apples; veal with s. little chopped ham, hard boiled eggs and ml?- onnsisc; cream cheese, finely chopped beets and French dressing; g chopped nuts, chicken, salt, paprika salad oil and lemon Juice: .G’Glm cheese and peanut butter; cross and finely chopped hard cooked eggs; lettuce, cream cheese and pimento; chicken, cross, pimsnto, green pepper and mayonnaise; bee! with chopped mustard pickle or Wor- cestershire sauce, pork with spiced bacon and mustard. Satisfying, with brown brssd and butter, is a baked bean salad. Mix white beans (cooked) with mayon- naise and a dash of cayenne and sprinkle with chives, parsley and canned pimenio, all finely chopped. A good potato salad consists of potatoes, a little green pepper. mix with mayonnaise: place on lettuce leaves and cover top with sliced cucumber. To make a good combination salad, mix chopped. tomatoes, cucumber, celery, radish-i es, apple, chives, pimento and a little green pepper, mixing all to- gether with msyonnaiss- Pack th" salad into an enameled bowl snd tie waxed paper over the top. or pack individually in ws-x paper cups. l LONG-VIEW, Wash, Juno 28. (UPJ-A homing pidgoon that had , forgotten where it lives has beonl found here. The bird found its way I to the home of chsrlss Risdon, who found a legbsnd hes-ring a. Seattle number, and a note written by s man in Port Angelou, mother place. Womanis Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions ~~¢-.¢- rum; so. 1931 i. :-‘ Literature _-—- ‘Pl/hat the Fashionables are Wearing Illustrated Dressmak l in: Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern \ . By Annubslleworthlngton Consider your comfort, ladies! Cspelets are voguishwand solves tbs slscvs prcbls 1.11m‘ over ths shoulder?“ s”, as: pretty model. n, “m.” o, u“ skirt ilounco con-upon“ with m outline of lower sdge of tbs collar. This charming model 1nd‘ m‘. w“ t° ‘m “m8”!!! Practical m. BXPIIII! w. llmpls to create 4"“ M, general day may, It lends itself perfectly to g1] Make fillings ‘flavorful, and whore F-ho suitable. ‘ ‘ thsm with sauce. ages‘ “m” " “u " ‘mi "b- cream, salad dressing. etc. Hero Pam are a few suggestions; chopped Ndmagfg ummmmmll- White cotton mesh 1; mm“ worn with a vivid red be]; Dusty-pink flat washable on" silk, yellow eyelet bstists and p“ 51W 511ml“!!! srs attractive. Style No. 8128 comes in sites l6, is years, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches buss, I Size 86 requires 3% ysrds of 85- ‘ inch material. - Vocation Days us hem “m” So nearly hero, st least, ti“; w. time for: you to be thinking about your Summer wardmbs. Besurstofillinthssizeofths - 59nd “m?! or coin (coin preferred.) Price of Pattern l5 cents. __-_..__¢—¢@-.___ No. ma. Size ... -".-.~-.---------. ooooonososocQ chives, cross and pimento, all Nu“ I chopped and tossed In mayonnaise. Fbr s. beet salad, chop boots, \ Bfifgqfi My," radishes, cress, olives, celery and ' l ~----.-.-u-...--“.- sooossscl‘ C"? Stsio t §l1wa|~l5 gun »§weeie'n ed Jaffa . Dale!’ for fiéfhhéff’ and he with me, but I have refused to marry him because my father committed suicide, and I feel that that would be areficction on him and s disgrace to my children, if I should have any. But the young man says that nothing matters but our love. What do you think? where UNDECIIDED. Answer: I think that you have got ‘morbid on the subject. There is nothing disgraceful about a suicide. It is only sad and pitiful that your father should have been so unhappy that hs was driven to taking his life in coma moment of madness. 'l.'hlnk no more about it, but go along and marry your sweetheart, 903011-11: 131x, s P0118 Styles i By MARY KNIGHT United Press Stsfl Oorrsspondsul v PARIS, June 29.--(U. PJ-A gown that is embroidered all i ove: in tiny Jewels calls for no further ornamentation and requires 1 only I. trim figure and s. swset face to make it work miracles in i Romsnostcwn. l Such s one comes out of the shop of Premst, that fashionable spot in Paris that fslls under the shadow of Napoleon's column in the Place Vendome. This frock is of palest pink organdie en- tirely embroidered in s fine little flower design of infinitesimal chips of corsl. It has s wide scarf cut like a great nchu and edged _ with the some coral flowers. It may be tied in various ways to fall in graceful folds ove: the arms, back and shoulders. "What have you in bright red for evening?” Msinbocher was . asked. “Uno robs rsvlsssntsl" was the prompt reply. Made of bright red crepe do chino with a. theme song of simplicity, it was devoid of trimming and its youthful cut and graceful lines did everything they were supposed to do. The crepe was gathered into a yoke, much like an Egyptian girdle, and fell to the floor in soft‘ folds, lifted just barely at the instep. A long scarf accompanied it. Shoes fol-this ensemble are made of the some material as the gown, very plain except for s small iswelod bucklsvif desired. Shampoo “Eegularly Cuticura Soap hboolol by Implications of Cuflcuru fllntment This transient will keep tho scalp in s health condition and the hair soft m lustrous. ‘hi; E Wilma" J-T-"sll 039g’, Id-, WI HAVE EVERYTHING YOU f Nlll) A blood stotcmout lo make, but martini’: booksd up by hols. Thss-dsmsishsndyloolorplecsof oqslpmsnilhstyou can thlnkof thsllsmotsnoursbslvsmwbstbsr yolmsksyonrliviagwiihioohsr nsnlyussihomuahobbnwsfl supply you with anything you and. The Rogers Hardware Con l‘ wandering about the Puget Sound country. the bird hsd stopped while “t. chivorf5 b€ YUP? i ' For a limited time you can buy Modess l at a Remarkable Saving ! of twelve l co Modess Comps the same aty ' or fifteen Regular). Oamhlssfln m!‘ comrfiuifhcnnswuh, 11us8podsl uflsftlsplh: Have you tried Models? If not. make the most of this special ofiei‘. Its superior softness, comfort absorbency and protection will delight you. course ' you are young Modcss, you will tabs the fullest advantage of this tunity to obtain a plentiful at a smash-able saving. B!!! IS ‘I'll OIIBR l 1 Standard Package q! l2 Modou towels. worth l0 cents 1 Special Gm Package q! 3 Mada: towels, worth 15 cum This lpsolsl Combine Ccmpsctconpsisss milk the 3 packages q! 15 Medan tonlroh. worth 66 cum for Fifteen Modcss Towels don fifoua ‘ramped Three Modess Towels FREE! This special combination ode; applies ct as well Modess Regular. Fifteen towels, all e (either fifteen Compact asto usltsflfsulsu ~ Y wwnlssllosn» . I. Mlllvflllllllfllrllllltlioydlorlllnlltolprbl. names...