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Show Tt ev were gone six d'ivs Tarh day Sylvia ha them up and driving at davBpht aid she kept on toe job, r.ri lilting I tie sights at the next stop, in. til late at night She called tipor t hip to slop often at r ad ode standi e FICTION corner 1 WILL PF THE WIND UII l.l Ilv M ItlC wlite she MM)N n i fits and Me plied di ins and i d ami L n tin it m I r.ir. "W j UU s- - I v i" li 4 w.ulrd "What did Hi i .i! i I ij tin I ir ! n i t ,1 ii,i. .i i i it .1 I i . i j; l d (.or iM s 'I I'll sk 1 v .iS t tit i ills, tdi h.iir w.k k t t H urlmg A i Ifido it t. .t . u it'.wn her nn H - 'I nn A Ji.n l.a li collar tine out nt In r null iti uto itch in i. it. it h ,d fal'i ii d.'.iii t nil hmk'e at i r waist She ,1 'll ik.iy, "lh Hu. Mr Mack'll N It. in;. " Mis Jiiikit drew down the corn's t I. or 1. mi lh "Nothing, my t ,,t Its tiot ause i f Cl.'p wanting to u st.iki s and go to Clinton. i ill it is " .ii t It Of four Si h i.i sl.ipiu d the l n k id h.nr out of her "I Wont he a hnoim r she flared "I won't" wife "Mm." Mrs. Hackett said sourly. " 'A hovs will is the winds will. T ats a (Hiem. It's the truest thing In the world Don't do no good to 1 k I hif I 1 rarved orna d pi. K that 111 call d in his eyes on the tlnr i flay Mrs ll.u ki tt ran e over the day at'r they returned She said, "Will"' and paused expectantly, In ng the cup of Sugar m both I 'Will." f.lrv Hji kt It s.iid, "you (.in IMe it for what it's wnilll, Jt woikid wall Mr ILnkdl, I kr.ow tt .ii " "Bill Ab.it W.ii "Wl. never he walked himself up to a .ihout cutting loose and (I a m g au.iv some place after s mu Hung he thought was better, 1 mm gave lam his way." Svlvia looked disappointed and puzzled, "uh" "Bat," Mrs Hackett Said pro-fml v, "he d.dn t know it. 1 took him on a trip Just a week or so And I kt 1 him on the jump every m.nute if It. 1 always liked little trips around, anyway Well, by the tune that man would get fume again he d be so tmd of jumping mound that he wouldn't have left sl.i.i It" : pnreha-t- bum y J ottery. him with le t d gs. S' fl bad Coltre She was sur-p- : d l.gh'i d at the glazed I h.m Is 'He went baik 1 o work tiday," said There was a listless said Mute in her vmic "He ba'-n'- t any tiling about going to C'atdon f.r day s " "Min' An! what did he ny when i Sylvia ! he got o home" She juir-- i d In r S "That he never thought it would i he k so good to him Svlvia rii i'li d She sat down on a kitihin chair mid swung m r foot 1 and watched It pensively "Just she said "You won t evin be able to him to stir out of the hmise to a t g pic- - ois fight agunst It. Remember that and j oil'll base l easier." "I won't be a boomer' wife! 1 won't drag around to one null after another all my life, and never have anything, no home, and no no nothing! 1 won't! "Well, it's his job. If he wants to throw it away. Company for Dinner "I Just dont feel like I can entertain now that food price are so high," said a friend of mine to me recently Actually you can do so, I explained to her, if you serve less expensive food but dress it up. company style. There's pot roast, for Instance, which, done to succulence and tenderness. and gar- - "It isn't! It's just as much mine it is his! I don't believe in that old idea that a woman's just a a slave, to follow a man around at whatever he hni ens to want to as do'" Mrs. Hackett "Oh. you don't, said. "And just what can you do about it?" bowed her head and Sylvia scrubbed unhappily at her chei ks I dont with her handkerchief. know," she sobbed. "Of course you don't. You're nothMrs. Hackett ing but a child. sniffed. "You'd be twenty years finding out what to do and by that time it's too late to do you any good. Unless theres somebody around to tell you to begin with. Somebody who knows." Sylvia was not Impressed. "Whal could you tell me, Mrs. Hackett? What could anyone do? Ive argued with him until I'm almost crazy but he he doesn't even listen any more. Hes got his mind set on moving on, to something different that wont be any different at all, and then he'll want to go again, and" " A boy's will is the wind's said Mrs. Hackett. "That's will. what the poem says. It's Just as true of a man or an old man, for that matter. The older they get the truer it gets, I reckon. Only they kind of give up trying to do anything about it after so long a time." She pushed up her lower lip and looked down her nose at Sylvia. Like Mr. Hackett." You Sylvia looked up, startled. want mean Mr. Hackett used to to" "He was the hardest man to hold down in this town. He got tired of everything, that was his trouble. It's a sort of laziness, that's all it is But he stuck here. He stuck, all right." nlthed prunes or spiced crab apples. leaves nothing to be desired. Or what about a meat loaf? Now there's a good old - fashioned stuffed m They went up into Michigan, west to Wisconsin, down through Minnesota and low a and St. Louia to Memphis. for a pension. That." Mrs. Hackett ture show for a month. I told you. the poem. that's said, Is something you find out Wind's will, about men. Sylvia They like to start They're all alike. She put the cup can be dressed but they like getting back a whole of sugar on the kitchen cabinet and up beautifully at looked " "But lot more Sylvia and frowned a fluting of mashed potatoes with I wouldn't say you look so happy Sylvia said doubtfully, "It doesnt and served with parsleyed carrot about it. Sylvie. But y ou're tired." sound like Chip would " and glazed onions. foot Sylvia stopped swinging her Short rib of beef? Yes, Indeed, "Maybe he wouldn't. I'm the last and rested her chin on her hands. person in the world to try to give She sighed and said, "Only of this there are few meat dishe that can folks advice, Sylvia. Nobody wants town, I I was just thinking, come up to it in tastiness. it and I guess everyone has to sew when weguess. Desserts can be made that are came back yesterday, and his own seam anyway. But Mr. tt looked so very inexpensive, but, put in a mold, so so old and Hackett says they're shutting down and dull and tiresome . . . shabby have "company manners." they and I for a week for the millwright's Here are menus to fit the smallest our that all we'll lives spend thought of purses, but they all have style gang, and if Chip was to spend that here." week in a car bouncing along from and class. Mrs Hackett drew back and reone place to another, without even Mena I. desaid then her and again Steak a chance to catch his breath . . . garded Yorkshire fensively. "You're just tired, Sylvie. e Well, a boy's will is the wind's will, Cabbage looked and her Sylvia eyes up Glazed Carrots and the wind can change in a min- were she "But not, Im sparkling. French Dressing ute. Tossed Salad said. "I had a wonderful time. to want if wouldn't he what "But Cloverleaf Rolls Cocoa Sponge go?" Youll enjoy this Yorkshire Steak "Mm. You tell him you want a as much as roast of ribs if youll little vacation before you move to it thia way: make in he thinks you've given Canton. If Yorkshire Steak. about that he'll take you. You try it and see. (Serves 6) jfUt i 14 ponnd chuck steak, cut I They went up Into Michigan, west Inch thick to Wisconsin, down through Minne1 Yorkshire Pudding sota and Iowa and St. Louis to Memrecipe WAS THIS THE MOST CHARMING with salt and steak Season phis, east to Knoxville and up WOMAN? in a through Louisville to come home. place per; You can pick up almost any wombaking 1 an's magazine and read an article greased dish or roasting woman most about the charming which in that ever lived. One writer will se- pan meat fits the botlect a movie actress like Ingrid tom. Brown In a Bergman. Another writer will point hot oven for 5 to the fact that the Duchess of WindMake - yrr'&StZii;, minute. sor is the most charming, magnetic the for recipe woman. Imaginative writers go all pour pudding: Solution In Noxt tune. the way back to Cleopatra in makover the crowned steak. Reduce ing their nominations heat and bake until the meat is tenIt seems to me, however, that, der. everything considered, the most Yorkshire Pudding. charming woman who ever lived flour 14 cups was not a movie actress, an Egyp2 teaspoons baking powder tian queen, or the heroine of a popu4 teaspoon salt lar novel. She was instead a mild, 2 eggs middle-agewoman who lived in 1 cup milk Paris around the middle of the 4 enp hot beef dripping Nineteenth century. Sift together the dry ingredients Her name was Madame and and although she left be- Add beaten egg yolks. Add milk in beaten Fold well stiffly egg mix an but hind nothing exquisite legend con"as of a rose that had bloomed for a whites. Pour into a shallow dish in a taining the beef drippings. Bake while in a garden and vanished, fairly hot oven for 30 minutes. Cut still her. women and men praise In squares and serve around the Reca-mierThe secret of Madame charm was that she put her- meat. Cocoa Sponge. self always in the other persons (Serves 6) place "She was an enchanting lis1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin admirers of one said. her tener," 4 cup cold water She was She rarely spoke herself. 4 cup sugar But she did something far more im3 tablespoons cocoa portant she contrived to make you 4 cup milk say bright and witty things. 1 teaspoon vanilla extract She had tremendous tact. When 3 egg whites you called at her home, she smiled No. 2 4 teaspoon salt graciously, made you feel more welSalted almonds come than you'd ever felt anywhere 32 Simper 26 Having lobes before She wasn't flowery or exSoften gelatin in cold water. Com.4 Preserve, 28 B ixei with about it. It was the way bine sugar and cocoa Scald milk; travagant as by saltlids she said what she said rather than gradually add to sugar mixture, 29 Reduce ing. etc. the words she used 35 R.ser to a pulp mixing constantly Add gelatin and One of tier friends, the great stir until dissolved. Add vanilla ex- J1 Upright (Russ , wrote French author 37 Humble SUPP TtS On the day after her death. "She LTVN SAYS: Answer to Pottle Number would have liked to stop everything Wise Planning her heart remained ai Saves Work at Ai ri . 6 Pf - O O EV earlv Sf rirg " Keep a list in an easily accessible T What did she i !Ter these persons preferably where you do your place, that they loved her so Not wealth best thinking, such as over the sink st Not positu n She while Hors was washing dishes, and write on hved in a four room fiat Then it as things occur. wlal The sheer charm and power A wise homemaker is never withof a perfect eisonalitv out staples; she replenishes these Jc.i'.re Francone Recamier wat periodically and never "runs out of or f name She lived in Pans things " 8 ifl To this day when fri ir 1777 1 Plan your menus when you are w'.iis ward to set up a star, dare hungry This adds more zest tc your cf charm and jersnnality, Strlra they meals. choose her as their model. i- ... Seven-Minut- ml JmkXimJR ?$ . Horizontal Shades of a primary color 5 Fish 9 Fgress 1 10 Weaver-bir- d Variety of 11 willow 12 14 Lairs horses Wild (Tex 16 17 18 19 ) Any powerful deity High (mus.l Affirmative reply African antelope s 20 Nev 21 22 23 25 27 -- Testament (abbr ) Observe Fruit of the palm Hampers Natl 30 3! Mandate Centimeter ( abbr.) Leap Caress 32 Shinto 28 33 34 36 temple Jewish month Fancy ball cU thes Ankle bone at - .I 8" Pt 40 Vv.igcn - i 42 i pi ) Antlered animal (pops Vertical 1 Cf 2 Live 4 5 Medlex s 6 Metalhc rocks 8 1 ver 'Fr.) 7 R Rar ge R. 11 S i3 15 t ate nsequence -- ling M-- . , irund g mij lemerits 19 ale si eop Fare Wandered Sr! A' ibia !e of Irelai d 89C,vil wrong 41 3 21 L.l'l Srat'er, us seed 22 Moisture 23 Head 24 covering Framework of crossed sticks 25 Taik with Cream of Mushroom Soup Veal Chops Baked in Sour Cream Two-liece- Baked Potato Salad Rye Bread Toast Beverage Orange Chiflon Pie Buttered Broccoli Date-Appl- CTART each new day u.ih in this crisp house frock for warm weather, too, i. brief sleeves mid low r,r Choose a brightly checks, Adorable solid tone. VOUK young daughter is sure or gay 1 to adore this pretty two pieccr v No. 8145 Is f r s that makes her lok so grown up. 40.Pattern 42. 44 4h and 48. s.zc J6. The pull sleeted top has a cute 85 or 39 inch. Semi vour order flared peplum the little gored skirt flares out so daintily. SFWINO rtlUI F rtTTFKV e r. - tn- tract. Chill until syrupy. Beat with rotary beater until fluffy. Beat egg whites still; add salt. Fold egg whites into cocoa sponge, and beat until mixture holds its shape. Pour into a mold which has been rinsed with cold water. Chill until firm. Unmold and garnish with almonds. Almond Sauce. 1 egg yolks 4 cup sugar 4 teaspoon salt 2 cups scalded milk 4 teaspoon almond extract 4 cap chopped blanched almonds Beat egg yolks, sugar and salt; add milk. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until mixture coats the spoon. Cool. Add almond extract and nuts. Menu II. Pork Roast with Spicy Sauce Sweet Potatoes Cinnamon Apples Cabbage-Pineappl- e Slaw Brussels Sprouts Whole Wheat Biscuits Frozen Orange Cream Pork Roast with Spicy Sauee. (Serves S) Fresk plcnio shoulder Salt and pepper 2 small onions, minced 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce 1 tablespoon sugar 1 teaspoon paprika 4 cup vinegar 4 cup water 2 tablespoons catsup Have picnic shoulder bonod and rolled. Season with salt and pepper. Place fat side up on roaster pan, end bake in a moderate oven allowing 40 to 45 minutes to the pound for baking. Combine other ingredients and cook together for 5 minutes. Serve with roast. Menu III. Tomato Juice Savory Meat Loaf Green Peppers Stuffed with Co: Browned Potatoes Orange Rolls Grapefruit Salad Apple Betty with Hard Sauce or Chocolate Souffle All the items in the above menu are extremely inexpensive, and even if you are busy, they are easy to prepare. Savory Meat Loaf (Serves 8) 2 pounds ground beef 1 egg, slightly beaten 4 cup minced onion 14 teaspoons salt 4 teaspoon pepper 1 teaspoon poultry seasoning 14 cups condensed vegetable soup 2 cups brad crumbs 4 cup fat Mix ingredients thoroughly in the order given, with the exception of the fat. Shape into loaf and place in a pan. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) about 14 hours. Baste meat every 13 minute with a mixture of the fat and 1 cup boiling water. If mashed potato topping for meat loaf if desired, swirl on top of loaf when It has finished baking, then run under broiler flame to brown the potatoes. Released bf WNU Feature. 128 Mission Pattern and inch. 12 It St, San I noons F.nclose 25 i rms in colza L , dr sired pattern . Pattern No No 8255 comes In sizes 8. 8. 10. years. Size tt. 24 yard of 30 Send an additional twenty Bve cents for vmir ropy ol the Spring and Summer S Name- txlIION our complete pattern mid-zinc- . ree pattern printed inside the - Addres- s- 1- book. MUTT Aluminum paint makes That murky appearance that OSH, I N' conics overnight on mirrors dur- celient sealer. It will seal: cl iFTyCEt emica. and of be the stains can wiped ing warm weather off with a cloth dampened with ish later with two coats KMYC ammonia. Then rub dry with a oil paint. 07HE MC clean cloth. fit to f Buy your clothes unbleached muslin of est part of your figure. It a: Use to take in a dress heavy quality for pressing cloth$ easier out the seams. is to let Edges may be left unfinished if desired. To be sure the cloth is luit free, boil the muslin cloth and rinse thoroughly. . c. Mix whiting and a little lemon juice into a clear paste. Use this as a cleaner for ivory or bone cutlery and yogll be amazed with the results. Leave the mixture on a few moments, then rinse, and polish. When wash cloths become old and faded, fold them over and cover with a casing of cretonne. Now you have a serviceable pot-hold- If there's no room in the hem of your skirt for lengthening, try adding a width of ribbon around the waistline. Use a contrasting ribbon. Some of the newer dresses have contrasting waist interest, so youll be right in style. A To sew a smooth bias seam, baste a piece of paper between the two edes. Tasty Kellogg's raisins . . . a All-Br- tiercs r., flavor combination C JP 2 tablespoons Women Squelch Gripers; Put 'Em on Committees 41 1 shortening cup sugar CUP 4 teasr; 24 egg , cup Kellogg S bakw- - ; H cup and sM1 All-Br- Griping doesnt go in Noel, Mo., and its a womens organization of all things thats putting a stop 1 Blend shortening oughly; add egg and beat and In Kelloggs ir soak until most of moisti salt up. Sift flour with powder; stir In raisins. All-Bi- to it. Every time someone growls about a situation, its leader says, "we put them on a committee to straighten it out. Straightening it cut so far has meant turning the city dump into a public park, providing equipment for city tennis courts, instituting a sanitation and clean-uprogram, and installing several public drinking mixture and stir ; only appears. Fill greased muani' thirds full. Bake in to . hot oven HOOT.) 2j Makes 9 marvelous min--i Americas most famous natural cereal laxathro Try a bowlful p tomorrow. CHEST COLD? for Comfyan& Whty' he MENTHOLATUM if Sainte-Beuva- I 'h-i- nr X 1 1 G-- S 11 Season to please your family. It Is not economical to prepare foods which do not go over with the family When you have to make sustitu-tionchoose foods that are the aame kind such as cabbage or spinach in place of lettuce; another fruit for a i, freah fruit. Shop in person and early in the day for best quality. Learn to read labels so that yixi'll know what to expect, how many the product or container serves, characteristics. and its cooking Quick MENTH0LATUM Mother, when coughing spasms wrack your childs body and leave chest muscles so sore it hurta him to breathe quick! call to the "Comfy and Minty rescue. Comforting Camphor and his , minty Menthol, the two Mentholatum ingred1 gentle to a childs delica skin but they work ease loosen congestion, and lessen coughing. ALSO RfLIEVtS HEAD COL, .. |