mo... " ' a for aProfession Has¢nol§i$ti.to.-_-A_%;a-;Girl to Wait for Iiimor. ' _Marry= er sndExpectHis »,\I¥mM¢tcSnnnm1lh ":.’% 1 -. .-.a-.-—_-.a takobis sosuccam. i; iii-ii 1 a 5E 3 a ti? i E‘ s; ‘ 53* Egg. in r s5§ is: w, 11.5 i i i ii i’? 555$? i?‘ '3 i: c? i? Egg: 2 1:25 5 5 a 2535.55 5 i ha? d salt. Ibld in fin b- u" 8L7 NTHOLATUM (Jinn. CORIFURI D-nly THE COOK'S CORNER CINNAMDN STICKS sslices bread “all: cup Sweetened Condensed 1-3 cup water 16 Cut ti slices of bread 1 inch thick. Then cut into l-indi strips. Dip in mixture of Sweetened Condensed Milk and wator. I'ry in butter until golden brown. White hot, roll strip in a mixture of granulated alga: and cinnamon. serve with tea. NUT SIB. 1 cup nut meats I 1-8 cups (l can) Sweetened Condensed Milk l cup dry bread crumbs it taableqaoon salt Put nut meats through food chopper. Blend with Sweetened Condensed Milk, bread crumbs, salt and cinnamon. Roll crust out in ob- long sheet as as possible. Spread with Pffiliflred mixture. Roll upas for jelly roll. Cut in mu. inch slices and place on buttered baking sheet. Brush tops with Sweetened Condensed Milk. Bake in hot oven (400 degrees F.) 10 minu- tes or until brown. Makes 1% doeen. PINEAPPLE MUFFINS 14 cup buttor l egg l cup Sweetened Condensed Milk 2% cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup drained, crushed pineapple Cfreani butter and blend with Well beaten cu and Sweetened Condensed Milk. Sift flour, baking Powder and salt together. Blend with first mixture. Add drained, crushed pineapple. Bake 20 to 80 minutes in well-buttered muffin tins in a moderate oven (350 degrees 1",) Makes 2% dozen snail or l6 large muffins. PICAN SQUARE l cw Sweetened Condensed Milk B tablespons flour . 1 tablespoon molasses "4 “Npoon salt $6 cup pecan rfut meats 'I‘horoughly blend Sweetened Con. Milk, flour, chopped nat to as inch thieknau -buttsred pan (about s by E g‘ 5. t.’ 5 5 r 5 5 g. E g 5 5g éltgdiiiéaéiizééo prhient ventive Officer ogblthflixsl‘ Port and waaaoourtoous andoap- abieoffioeinliomthis iotiradon iggigiii:giggzrzgzgggiigéiisgig,,a 1155.5 J5‘ ‘ii 115%? o. .4115; %§1§z5§§1:'§1'§ 11115115. 1,1 §_ r , .1 g iifizsiia: fisziiiiciliiigieiii z ,2; is E vwww B; AAA ‘ a a a I a a h . a I a a h . - a I has w w . vvv Y‘ rsonal i-.- Fashions‘- aa ‘as AAAAAAA “‘ vv v v-wvvvvvvi v I ' :- Literd ta re v Vv vvvv v , . a w v O . m}; BLUE 000.2 by . RACHEL MACK 11.. HOUSEWIFE and HER ACTIVITIES levity on your part. Let's cut out. the entering and concentrate- on the finale." Ruth shook her head and drew away from him. "That's the Little T‘ movement for you! get worn out with rehearsals. ing it rapidly. "I used to pore over it. It's several sizes larger than ours. Wait! What's" wrong?" The two sections of the globe had become loosened at his handling and showed signs of separating at the equator. He lifted oi! the top section and held it up. "Well, I've half the world at least-—" "What's this?" Ruth asked. ‘In the smooth concavity of the lower hemisphere there was a bit of gaudy ribbon, nus cunted by a bronze bar. flhe picked it up and examined it curiously. John carefully put the globe to- gether again. Then he said, "May I see it, Elaine " She gave it to him and he looked at it for a long time. "lt'a my Scout badge," he stated, quite as if he hldbfiflllOOunflfOfitthédflybg- ion. “Imagine finding it in there!" Bhe saw that he was back again in his boyhood and she was very still while he thought about the little incident. She suspected that it had been important to him -- like the time she lost her little gold ring and could-never get another. He said than, “I haven't told you what I came over to ask. Ifother W811i! Wlrto come to supper at 6. Only she ‘calls it tea on Sunday. ffifiufifi ap.‘°‘“‘...i"’.‘ ‘I.’ - c o en r- tain me. mod?" m“! V1111 111111. "I couldn't have stood it if you hadn't asked me. 511111157 1118113 are lonesome." “I hate to think what they'll be n;~".."a.""- ,.... " 1'91? ll . She s e sharply. CHAPTER-XXII when the Postman called at the bfcNeill house Monday morning ha left one utm- ih the box. Susie who W" 111181111: in the hail went out Ind brweht it m. Nothing about 1t The envelope was "I15" 111d sfflvly blue and the let- ters that spelled Mr. John's name and address were upright and _, ‘Prwl a she said aloud Osagt foo! Elaine." P199994 e1 tter rl t the hall table agsiigst 1:111: aglaisfi mahogany leaf and it stood out im- "m at college at Graycsstle now and am planning to run ofl during fall vacation - two weeks distant- never recapture the old childhood spirit, but at least I'm to attempt it. It would help to iind one familiar face there besides Penny's. In short, when I arrive will you come throush the aligns bodes ‘agdfloreot me hi: the 0 garden ore see you lflin and talking over old times. You'll iind ms aged, though not de- “Otherwise teh lime Elaine ow- mers. him sdrinkofwaterand m a.“ Iiil Gusts llseliabamaasat Tbaveialitmubibattliatufi pleade- plaoe. He unfolded his napkin. took began mech- anically to sat. _ Mrs. McNeil! said, “I've asked you- twicascmifyoufeelwell. You don't look qultsrlght. Is anything wrong at the factory?" . He answered quixkly, "Excuse ms, Mother, I didn't hear you. I'm all right. Just thinking, that's all. Ev 3's line the factory. so. Bennett's back and not coughing allfldsgotsnswooldcurefliat he wants everybody to try." “What is it?" inquired Mrs. Mc- Nelll with keen interest. John described the treatment as well as his confused thoughts could recall it. _ He got it wrong, saying that Tom Bennett swallowed the grease and campbor mixture and rubbed his chest with what he should have swallowed. While Mrs. MoNeilLwa-s marveling at this revolutionary step in medi- cine, Jolm'a mind was ticking of! phrases from the letter. "had such funthereasekld. . .wliiyou come through the althea hedge and greet me in the old garden . . . your Eagle Scout badge . . . I hid ltlntheoldglobcinthelibrary . . E. C. Unrepentant—" MrsJscNelll saw presentLv that he was unaware of what he was eating. It was his favorite lunch- celery soup, lamb chop, and fresh peas-but it might as well have been a dish of dry rice for all the notice he took of the food. She accused, teasingly, "You're thinking about Elaine!" When he reddened to the root; o: his hair she was sorry she had spoken. 811s did not want to be a Drying mother. She tried to close the matter gracefully. "she's a very attractive girl, John. But last nhht I couldn't see a trace of Hunter in her. She must be all Chalmers." John made a. mutter of agree- ment. lie excused himself and said he must get back to the factory “to see a man." , . He had a feeling that he must be alone to think. He went beck to the factory, went into his own oflios and shut the door. With his elbows on his desk he looked walls and space and saw Ruth. He told himself, "It‘s lust as 1 suspected it first. Elaine Chalmers hasn't been near here. This other one's been lying straight through. I could have tripped her up a thousand times. but I didn't. I gave her all the brealks. I talked and she listened. I 1st her foolme . . . Maybeldidnw want to trip her up. Why? Because I didn't want to fflfllten her away. I let her fool me. I let her fool the old woman. Hanged if I don't think she's almost fooled herself!" He remembered her ease of manner, her poise. in restaurant and theatre . . . "When she fainted that ‘day ontheporchlknewitwasfrom lack of food. I saw ‘em lke that the winter I worked with .10 Welfare . . . . But I let Bertha Gibbs lead meflaalf. ‘Diet!’ she said. Ioid it on e .. Suddenly he put his hands over his eyes and winced. This girl whom he loved had been hungry enough to faint. Who was she, then? (To Be Continued.) ’I"oday's_Shori Wave Radio Program (Alltimgishsternitandard) MONDAY, MABCH 16 Wellington 11 a. m.—U. s. Navy Band. W83. Pittsburgh, 10.1 m., ism meg. Also wsxAL, New York, 10s m, 1131s 1119B- Tokyo 4 p. nb-"Ihe Jinrkiksha Passes.” JVM, Nanaki, I'M m., 10.74 meg. Home 0 p. run-News bulletin in Ikig‘ lish. The Opera "Arabella", from Genoa. Replies to letters of radio listeners. folk songs. m0, 81.1 in, 0.68 meg. Iondon s p. m.—"caravsnssraf." "A place where caravans meet." An autho- Washington 0.15 p. m.—-U. S. Army Band. i, Pittsbluih. 10.’! m. illl meg. ‘I p. rim-little Compositions by Frans Schubert. NC, (OJ m, 0.08 11108. Caracas, Vnmneb no p. m. - Amateurs YVItO, 51.’! as, 5J0 meg. IMII. 6.11 my the W-Es ~e0ats are in evidence, as illustrated my; only one ehouder $2: giving a sort of lopsided ef- fect, while other evening WW1" havo the other shoulder bare. _ "BUSTLI 0F SPRING” IN TAFFETA-IJNED COATS New York-Inst gentle little rustling sound you will hear from WHITE FUR! White furs will not turn yellow u flay g5 kept in blue tissue paper when not belnk 11ml - TABLE LINEN. when giving the worn tableclot andnapkinstheirflnalflnsmadda little starch. This will make them last much longer. and also improve the appearance. TH! VINIGAR CRUET ' The vinegar cluet can be easily cleaned by filling it with warm water. to which a few drops of household ammonia have been ad- ded. Iot it stand for an hour. then rinse thoroughly with warm water. i; swishing its way baok into favor for unseen things-Uni!!!» 301' 111' stance. The taffeta-lined spring coat is about to make its re- entranoe. You will agree that it is sure of a welcome. 8o it is en- ciliuxred rncstlyuin tscgi-lsctvigisls pg g up separa C0! 5 - ger lines. There will be plenty of taffeta by sprlns. 8-1141 W9 1111" 111' ready approved bengaline. 111111111 is having considerable vogue be-i cause it is so frequently chosen for the dinner suit. the suit of the mo- ment both here and in Paris. Ono authority, Just back from Paris, says there is a diversity of influences advanced in the new Paris hats, but the important point ‘a that "lines have been sifted down to hatswhich are wearable rather than sensational." Among the silhouette types favor, he quotes rolled brims, new‘ downturned brim movements, hats with oblong fronts, and crowns which are either flat and fitted. or show manipulation in broken height- mmminss I" 1111111114111 more important than in many sca- sons, with expert employment 01 flowers and the new veils. which are worked in deflate decorative outlines, so that they "become part of the hat." Detailed manlpulalioa of the kind that characterizes fine mlllinery is every-where in evid- ence. Amoug the media emplfiyed. ha quotes paper belt-ins ribbon and felts. GAUGE AND EFFECT. In an Atlantic school a prize was offered for a story of the fewest words in. rhyme. A colored boy won it. Amuleinthebarnyardlasy and slick, Aboywithaplnontheend ofa stick Blips in behind him as still as a mouse Crepe on the door of the little boy's house a NEEDED rnavoa If you are afraid to put chopped onion in the potato salad on ac- count of an unknown gucst,- rub the bowl with a out onion and eliminate the actual pieces. JUSTICE ALI. AROUND a SCOBCHED COTTON have one shvrio P11“! 519°" ‘m; timetotime oomeB-I-syou may. have gussed, from taffeta which‘ in crepe: with embrolderies. m Stomach Trouble- N without $.12 iliiiiiifi: “Far a 1w: time r mm will . 1.11m, ‘It M "with 1 started Fruit-g. fives. not well and confines: on!“ II Qfi&t|"_w n“ Fruit-a-tives nwltratgd s _wby Frult-a-tivs act naturally m . - h h bflnr- not tempura-y. but Ioitzxgyrélia pain or sf Hymn“ Mr. S. $11-91?“ on Q v ""e'°'".’“°"."l' PI-‘itgél. Mo“ 1r rac a o RA r108. PRUNES w: lianssfqqi-EE; teal! y, n oioif ftlminafion to FRUlT-A-TIVES Hahn's Irnlta and llarba kept under control, and it advantage that it can whim: permanent instead into gm o, spirt lamp. Elaborate hair i; lacquered and made up into some. $111118 ma dladem round the fore- head. is moxo complicated even than flocks of little cum and must be hard to go to bed m Hair may be color from purplg onwards but it must have form, and a high wind is no longer any w for the wrong [twp o; _.._____.___ 80811185 GOWNS For evening there are man) sleeved hostess types in plain c0101 UMBRELLA! INSURANCE Praklle-Jlmbrellaa that "cannot be lost" are being sold in Czechoslo- vakia. Those who buy an umbrella at a good shop are given a free in- surance polioy. The “risks" are loss and damage. apart from normal wear and tear. If a umbzellaisleftinataxiorohmi. bus, all that the owner need do is to present his "insurance policy" at the gbop where be bought the um- bmlla. Inquires will be made at once by agents whose sole duty is to trace stray umbrellas. Should the umbrella not be recovered the ' owner is given a new one free of charge. It is onlyfair to the atorekeeper with whom you deal to return any If you have badly acorcheda cot- oans of vegetables, soups, etc, ton fabric, try this method of get- whoee con‘ ts are spoiled. It ting the mark out. Dip the article not only saves pennies for the in cold water and hang dripping housewife, but shows the store- wet in the sunshine. As soon as it keeper what brands and makes of dries, wet it again and repeat the food upon which to rely. process again and again .It may take a couple of days and a ‘night's MEI-TED CHOCOLATE exposue, but it is a cure that will Gratin: mods» is l lenathy IiOt in any way injure the wearing proceu and somewhat of a nuis- quality o1 the material and only ance. Put the dulled amount of means a little patience. chocolate in a small saucepan and SIDE VIEW 0F COII-‘FURI aetitontopofthstea kettle un- tillmelted. One MUST ALWAYS BE STUDIED unsweetened chocolate is the --—- Hair is too often looked at from‘ the front only, and so the many equivalent of two marked squares AN ATTIBUTVI APPMB-ANCE side views are left to chance and to desolation. Also it is not enough Always remove leftovers from $119 411111" 011 W111i!“ 111°? 8N merely to dye the hair white to served and place them on clean achieve salvation or even to wear halo hats displaying a model of a dishes before putting ‘them away parting. Bide views of hair am im- ih the refrigerator. They will be 11111011 111°" 511885"!!! 01 1791118 portaut Just now..Par'is frankly de- turned into an appetizing dish of spises the “Aryan" shibboieth, and some sort if they are on clean its mannequins have deep black 618118- or dark brown hair as well as the more unnatural shades. Hats with a ourve at the side call for hair weu brushed back from the temples. Even where curls are seen the roots of the hair must show. and the broad, high forehead and the ears no longer have to hide shamefully away. . Some curls are allowed to grow long _‘- to gather into some- thing msembling a bun. There are a few Greek coiffures. Fair girls have an English look-the English of thirty years ago, with a parted. curled fringe. This too must be_ IIANDUOMI COAT The usual handsome eyeoing in s Jacket of mash composed of beaded strings. lwearlng in a multicolor pattern worn over a deep periwlnkle gown. RIP!‘ PIECE 0F CHOCOLATE QUEEN VICTORIA GAVE HIM A piece of chocolato-8ii years old —is owned by l". Marlow, of Mar- BLACK FAVORED Black is returning to favor for evening wear. although bright colors are still shown. AMorAningSmiIe PRIVATE PRIVILEGE The tube train was very crowded. and Jones was pushed minst the end of the carriage by a. burley 111- , dlvidual, who trod on Jones’ favor- ite corn each time the train rocked. Jones suffered in silence for a while, but at last he could bear it no longer. "Excuse me, sir." he 01111111111911- "I know my feet were made to stand on, but that privilege 1161011811 to me." ours Throush a typographical 1119- I certain newspaper called an oldnsol- dier "a bottle-scarred veteran. in ' its subsequent n, . $1111 P1P" described him as "a battle-scared veteran." which is on a p111‘ “W1 the following correction which ap- peared in another M1191‘! "111 M’ last issue we stated that John Smith was a detective on the politfl force. Of course, that was a typo- graphical error, John south 11 really a detective on the b01166 . farce." kiet Overton, near Oakhaln, Eng. African {who served in the Booth ‘P. ICIIIIOBIIDOXIIEGCIIMCMMIII . ,- },',',°“,,°"*,,,,,‘{,',‘f'°"' “m “‘° "M Spring Fashions HNK Is POPULAR. One often hears that this color Home Dress-Making For or that is the color of the mo- ment. Now one can safely say that every color is right, with perhaps an emphasis on yellow and browns and pinks ranging-even for uday a Here's Just a darling little dress. It's so simple to make and so com- fortable and nus-rt to wear. it's one-piece! Such eunnlnl plaits either side of the front, pro- vide ample freedom for pllytimfl- There's brief puffed sleeves to show cfl her chubby arms. m primes or plain cottons, it is as pretty u can be with cont-mt for collar, front band and I100" m“ bl with Plain linen in new 110 white contrast and Irish Moot trim. is a very elective scheme. BNJGVHIGUWUQQQWMQ ajwand doyearasisearedllllflfli oi 30-inch material with a will e narrow is skirts," reminiscent of the good old-fashioned ckys. but worn wide and flaring apron bring up to contrasting. PHN OI FATE“ ll Obfltl in stamps or coin (coin is-Wflflflilu wrap coin carefully Nmfli. , Name Bias oononsouoeoue-unl ghost MdrQ c" 22w . 5?. §i é i . Essie; 2112.155 yardsoflaceandiiylflltuunm; a