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Show TRANSFORMING POWER OF DRESS; COLOR CONTRAST IN LACE GOWNS gSrCHEN DavjEyeniiw CABINET NwpPr 3ar iweeter mnle than .ik E VERY rOt a- Unions for daily 3 ... lt counUr-C,- ,i '"P e d'cr melU tow,kf 'Lvr. THE MIGHTY ONE Prank Cran.. SARDINE LITTLE TASTY herrinz- which we --" - comes uu Maine. We da -- rdjne not serve this delightful little flsh often enough to learn of the number of dishes which It may add to onr list How of good things. a rarebit? about body Ukes Every- rarebit uu of meitea Duwer wuo LjfjH Ir . rioh rhma prated or I?1 into bits. Stir constantly n. i. melts, then add one egz s of and diluted with uum our of cream, U pinch U with eWpaprika, 01a small laDasco two-third- of auc-L- "rop8 I kind u broil them on C of toast and pour over the hot Btdt Serve at once. bnv the sardines put up in Ijrin tomato sauce, or "done" In u nerveu yard, 80 all tastes may Ljiren a variety. fwii Sardines Mix one tea- Ffal each of sugar and curry Put a pinch of salt L Into a saucepan with one cupful or lemon (ream and a teaspoonrui Stir until hot, then drop In a In another pan heat mrdlnes. L butter, and In It saute slices of fad large enough to hold a sardine I slice of apple. Four some or hot apple sauce over each and . ht of sardines, 'A E'v Sardine are probably the this little as they from the tin, with a bit of lemon How would bread and butter. sandwiches popular way of serving next to serving them Is like to try: Toast This Is a most Mtful dish for Sunday night sup- js or In fact for any day In the Ml Put two tablespoonfuls of but-kin i saucepan, add two tablespoon- on itrdlne Ki of flour, stir until smooth and turned sllehtlv. then add a half cup- of good soup stock; stir until thick, cupful of sardines from which ntln and bones have been removed M serve over rounds of hot buttered t & GOOD THINGS SEASONABLE The season Is here when porch and bilea parties call for all the Ingenu ity and originality each which hos- tess possesses, to make the occasion a pleasant one. A teaspoonful fresh of or- grated ange or lemon rind added to the pot ff tea will add a flavor which reminds as of the rare and expensive blends. war sugar rubbed over the rind i lemon or orange will absorb much t tbe essential oil and thus when popped Into the hot tea adds a pleas- ut flavor. Rub the surface of the or orange with a coarse grater t Urst to break the oil cells, then use mgar quickly. Icebox are always In sea- so during the warm making them and keep-- cookies but especially 'tather. Try i 4 Bonner gnd Kb ami- ... ymphony of the Icebox for a week or , baking a baking sheet of them tonally, then they will always be bd and fresh to the taste. Lemon Icebox Cookies. Cream one fPfnI of butter or a mixture of but- -' nd other sweet add one and fat nalf cupfuls of sugar, when well "aided add three beaten ezirs. two lespoonfuls of lemon juice, one tea of the grated rind, five cup- rful of flour, one-hateasnoonful of iat four teaspoonfuls of baking pow-- . all well blended in the flour. Add died orange peel, chopped nuts; is may be added to taste. Shape rolls nnrt nlnno In tha Inn hnr. Into thin slices and bake In a tbem io lf k oven. Graham Fruit Bars. Mix one-haspoonful of suit, one cupful each white and graham flour, two of baking powder, three-'wh-a cupful of cold water, one-hal- f Pfrl of shortening, one teaspoonful lemon Juice; more water may be 'Ned to make a stiff dough. Add lf It pleased Harry to think that such mighty constellations and stars were loosing forward .o a vjsit from him. Harry never liked to go any place where he was not wanted. "Orion Is about the best known of all the noble constellations," Cosmo said. "Tbe Giant Orion, the Great Orion! He Is the head of a fine family of stars. In fact there are more bright stars In his family than In any other group and they are so Fine Family all friendly with each other of Start, that thpv hnvekont . near together (starrlly speaking) In a beautiful fashion In the sky. "There he Is 1" "Where?" "Don't you see right across the sky marching along with all his family. He's looking forward to the frosty weather that your Earth soon will have. That's when be likes to be seen and admired." "Oh, I see him." And there he was, so mighty, so great, so bright, so enormous. The plane stopped upon one of Orion's stars, and then Orion came forward, greeted Cosmo and bowed low when he was introduced to Harry. "I'm wearing," Orion told Harry, "my costume that used to be so much admired by the wise men of old. They always called me the Giant and they loved it because 1 stood facing Taurus, the Bull." "Didn't I pass by Taurus when I took that quick trip along the Zodiac?" "To be sure you did. Now you see that star? That fiery looking one? That's Aldebaran and the Earth people say he is the fire that comes from the eye of the bull as he plans to get at me with his horns. But you see I have my right arm up and my mighty club all ready so that I can protect myself and my family. "Please draw an outline of me when you get back to the Earth." Harry said that he would. "You notice, too, how I have the lion's skin over my left shoulder? I use that as a shield. To be sure it's not a real lion's skin. It's made out of stars to look like one. "Then there is Scorpius, you know I hate Scorpius. He was supposed to have stung me and a very famous poet once said that I was always hurrying awav from the snake. He didn t sup pose I would be friendly with It, did he. and take it into my family eroun?" "I shouldn't think so," Harry an swered. "As a matter or fact I am not crazy about snakes myself. I'm not afraid of them, but I don't like thpm much." "That's the way It Is with me. I in depart just as Scorpius comesoac--op uu-t- il the heavens and I don t come he has left. We simply don't assoall.' nlnto that's Orion stood un while he talked and rttd Harrv. He had been sitting so much he was glad to stretch himself t this. a I'vp told vou." Orion went on, In the old"they used to speak of me en days as a great and mighty hunter and fighter, and some people thought thnt I helDed blow up storms. Yon never can tell how It Is with if vou will forgive my saying so." Harry enjoyed these apologies so mucnl "iney get up stories and such gossip! Then gossip sticks. It's so untrue most of the time." Harry heartily nirrppd with Orion. I "For example, there's Sirius; the gossip about him, f0llnw!n!' " Minfnl oooh nno-Jinl- f . Pl0i v.ub, lib aim flt We, . bU hntAm uw.vua i Br BISHOP call to action I Away with homeliness let chic, charm and attractiveness reign In Its stead. Lace Becomes a Hobby. Lace has become a hobby with Paris couturiers, likewise the theme of black and white. Work the two together as the creator of the frock In the lower picture has so admirably succeeded in doing, and the result U chic and charm supreme. Frocks developed of lace In two-ton- e are not only very effective but they have tbe advantage of being no- 1 j I c concepts. Nationalism also is opposed to religion. If it is to benefit the world, be sublimated by the love of God who knows no boundary lines must it and no distinctions. A historian has said that there are three ways of solving world problems by force, by reason and by love. Force has been tried in vain. Reason also has failed because masses of people are ruled too strongly by primitive instincts. Love, he added, probably would work if it were ever tried. CHANGE IN FEMININE MANNERS By LADY ARMSTRONG, lllj AFTER THE METAMORPHOSIS IJ usjal. The fact that the party dress Illustrated departs from the soft draped silhouette associated with lace manipulation, achieves for It outstand ing distinction. Its charming full skirt suggests Spanish Influence and Its tight fitting bodice Is typical of lat est trend. Not only are designers interworklng black lace with white, but lace In any pastel shade, especially pale pink combined with black. Is highlighted in the summer mode. Sometimes It Is merely a yoke of delicately tinted lace, the remainder of the gown be lng composed of exquisite black lace. In other Instances such color sym phonies are Interpreted with lace, as brown with beige, or perhaps two shades of green are Interrelated, or of blue, or possibly Insets of colored lace are worked Into the black. Everywhere in the mode one encounters lace this season. It even having dared to enter the domain of stylish footwear. Lace slippers are quite the envy of the most fashionable this season the lace being stretched to make a long story short, she violates all the rules of careful groomingsidesteps every "first aid" to beauty, sinking Into apparent hopeless homeliness. But hear ont Comes a change in her attitude toward life. In order to win back her husband's love she decides to blossom out from a "mud ben" to a creature of radiant loveliness. Where there's a will there's a way to be beautiful and It Is the lesson which Minna Gombell, tbe talented star In "Nancy's Private Affair," Impresses upoD her audience In her role of the charmer who rewtns her husbund's adoration. See Miss Gombell ere her charms begin to charm. Ere she discovers herself straight uncoiffed hair, glasses with owl-lik- e rims, sparkle-lackineyes, woebegone expression with muscles of face drawn taut Behold Then the metamorphosis! the glorious being who wears "clothes" to perfection a stunning pajama ensemble In the morning as Illustrated above a love of a flowery printed frock g Americas Bora Witt o( Britiih Peer Women are softer and more feminine right now than they have been for more than ten years. During and after the war girls put on mannish clothes and did men's work. They accomplished something in business and art and it was all very well. But the reversion has come. They're back in frills and glad to be there, in spite of the little fuss they seemed to make about it. Are the present popular beach and lounging pajamas the forerunner of feminine trousers for street and evening wear? I hope I never live to see the day ! And 1 cannot believe it will come in the near future. I don't believe the women themselves would permit it. They're happier wearing skirts. They fit their figures better. To be sure, women will keep on doing things they always have, for that matter but they're really happiest as the complement of man. They've learned the value of frills and they'll cling to them. And with the change they've made back to ruffles and trailing skirts there has come a definite change in their manners. The smartest, prettiest debutantes aren't smoking these days. They aren't drinking, either. By the scores I see them refusing cigarettes and cocktails. OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM FAULTY By DR. WALLACE M'CLURE, Federal State Department. and unemployment form a vicious circle in economic affairs. Each is a result of the other, and efforts to correct either, as long as the other persists, are likely to be unavailing. civilization more It is difficult to imagine a stain upon present-da- y d than this. The entire human race, save for the little handful of persons who comprise the wealthy classes, is crying out for more and more goods. The full time of every worker every day is needed to produce the goods desired. Yet untold millions of human lives are being deprived of all approach to happiness today because we have been unable so to our organize our industrial system as to conserve and make fruitful Over-producti- deeD-dve- human resources. If in even the greatest of national markets, our own, unemployment seems to be chronic; if the same thing i3 apparently true in Australia, a new country of vast resources and only 6,000,000 people; the conclusion can hardly be avoided that only the widest attainable international markets are sufficient in order that existing difficulties of demand and supply canceled. may be set over against each other and FAULT IN MEDICAL EDUCATION By DR. W. W. BLACKMAN, New York (Homeopathic). The modern tendency of medical education toward the emphasizing of training of specialists rather than general practitioners is to be will always be the deplored. The general practitioner is and probably most important single factor in the practice of medicine. The most is to train men to be competent important function of the medical college be held subordinate to this. must practitioners and every other function the foundation laid Specialization is the superstructure built upon in the allied sciences, and the more widely and deeply the foundations be built upon them. are laid, the higher and better the superstructure can is toward education of medical Unfortunately, the modern tendency Medicine the training of specialists rather than general practitioners. cannot be subdivided into specialties. It is not limited to the eye, the in health and disease. heart, or the stomach, but covers the entire body Unless specialists have broad There are great dangers in specialization. are not safe training and experience in general medicine, they 0 ,H I'll let that old dog tell his own story." "Dog?" "You'll hear It when you meet him. Tell him I suggested that you ask him about it "But they have fcnnw told Sirius? !'ir i. so many like and some I NEED FULL TIME PARENTHOOD Came Forward. Orion stories and legends about I 'I don't. me. Some You know 1 By REV. E. R. DAKIN, Milwaukee (Baptiit). l-tfi- T nuts, one-ar- ft .IJL (MttWi.t). OMMUNISM and nationalism, the two aggreesive forces which are continuing to inflame the imaginations of peoples in many nations of Europe and Asia, will aeriouslj aggravate world problems unless they are purified and uplifted by the spirit of Christian lore. As long as Communism was only an economic theory, it was harm less enough. But now that it has become an active force, seething in many nations and rampant in Russia, from which it extends an alien hand into China, it is a world menace. Communism is opposed to all religions, would destroy Buddhist and Confucian temples as well as Christian churches, prohibits religious instruction in schools and ia training whole nations in materialistic one person deraisins and fruit Juice now you like to have know It will because you scribe you gar; mix well and spread others you and of an Inch thick over the sheet be a nice description describe you at to have want wouldn't h; cover w,th anther layer. L e 20 nilnntoa In tint oven. Cat all." BEAUTIFUL llACE PARTY DRESS t0 bars and cool. "I'd hate to have my French teachFru't Nectar over a foundation of satin crepe de what she thought of me," feminiznna 1UUt ...rt. lnf er describe in.A VUG it wispy. Buttery chiffon (how ball on the "but w and two the chine or. heavy lace. boys cupfuls of sugar, boll Harry said, be all ing these dainty, sheer chiffons are) Now that lace Is going places and would "7 minutes. right" in team picture). Cool, add two cupfuls f for afternoon (to right most unusual, milady or fruit cut Into bits, the Juice of When evening comes a formal gown doing things r 'emons her ders prettiest chapeao made very the to shown as to Time ExplocU and four oranges. Freeze of white georgette t which she wears lace with Ince, of I mush, add the stiffly beaten white "What are you children doing? left, its hemline reachlns to below the In evolving tbe If mitts. please. you conformnormal were together." waistline or una one cSS playing cnerry thought you ankles, tbe cuprui . are . milliners making nse of new hnts and rriritl.,... . silhouette. "We are playing at fathers iiuu ireezing, uieu bcit ing to the latest approved stiffened lace, especially when the lac . v.. uyj y i ui- urn duciucu mothers." Oh I It's a lesson well worth taking is to be combined with straw. all make to when need "But you don't to heart. Why be homely JULIA BOTTOMLEY. these noise." attainable days. so Is that me asked Just has do she ((Ei 130, Western Nwppt Union.) "Yes, we Beauty doctors and dress psychology for money for a new hat." ' NUELSEN. Zurich, Switzerland HL-t- tea-nfu- chopped pitted dates, figs, raisins, wins, and one-fourt- h of a cupful 'ugar, the grated rind and Juice of llrge oranee : thpre should be one- - woman a pretty woman I adrmim Knt ui. . ucmuusiniuie meory nut Into nniH i i. ew psychology based on the efficacy of art la dress and meticulous grooming. So Important this message of the transforming power of dress, the Idea la at this very moment being made a subject for stage dramatisation. As the plaj goes, the wife has grown Indifferent and careless about her dress. comDS ner hair unbecomingly, wears clothes uhlcb are fatal to good took COMMUNISM MENACE TO WORLD 1 D. - pret-tine- ss r.A Full danirers of modem trior wuv la nnft " - of the oerave if we are to needed is time functioning parenthood civilization. civilization. of have a generation that will be an asset in the progress from increased Within the last seven years apartment house dwellers have cent. Apartment house dwelling means a cent to 48.8 24.4 t).j. rail a: LIIUC J01CUl.uwu per per church relanomadic population. There is no stability of residence or , tionship. The problem is complicated by 3,000,000 married women m industry. because they can have Not all are mothers; many do not want children who have children have to more luxuries on two pay envelopes. Many while they work. farm them out to nurseries for care is preferred to a Homes are not what they should be unless a baby world a new opportunity for car With each child there is born into the the betterment of civilization. r |