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Show , 1 , , . The Deseret News, Salt' Lake City, Utah ,.- - - rr , , , - - , Diabetes . Disease Most Severe In Patients Under Forty Years , ' , By CARRY CLEVELAND ' . MYERS, Ph.D. she gets depressed Just of emotions.' a mixture Frequently have often mother may An expectant these long months when she ought to have Most di. because of her physical discomfort. During have the least. Barbaric customs among people she and may recreation, contacts social versions, by commanding her to stay at home and avoid the who presume to be intelligent, add to her burdens most. activities which for her health and the health of her child she needs a thinks she No wonder. then, and en great deal about herself tertains anxieties. She is more than ordinarily open to suggesmost tion, and older women, who often visit with her. may be pretfull of superstitions. The - , . . , ty curious, brutal thing about superstitions is that nearly all of themare morbid; most carry penalties and not rewards. The expectant mother is told about those women who have had miscarriages and is given a long string of frightfultowarnings. the storShe must listen also les about mothers who have lost their lives during or soon after .the confinement, - When these brainless busybodies , savage, have no more twaddle, they will chatter about baby markings. I wish there were some way to put all such women In Jail for their sins against expectant mothers. . It may be presumptuous for me, a mere father, to offer advice on such matters. No man atnows Very much about the state of mind and emotions of an expectant mother. Nevertheless, there have been scientific researches for careful -evidences of such prenatal influ,Not one of them has ences. a grain of truth that any'sees thing the expectant motherwhathears, has any influence soever on the physical features or later:- - mental traits of the , in, people over t ' ' ! , , , : - : t day and evening wedding hours always leave confused about their guests clothes. A woman, by the simple expedient at adding a Jacket, ,can, of course make any not too elaborate evening dress appropriate for - , , - , -- - : 0' - al Wins Relaxation ' -- Inviting Dish - with-whate- ver Sleep immemorial, man has been WOO" sheep, ing sleep by counting and most of us at some time or other have had a series of lamb dinners every night. A lamb dinner in this case being that succession of woolly sheep jumping over the stile, a ', sight said to cause sleep by making the counter tired of looking and counting. Everyone has a pet rtmedy for inducing sleep, Just as everyone has a method of curing a cold. Yet sleeplessness and colds go on and on. But something has happened at last. In a store devoted to the household is a shrine It houses the worlds sleepless. only Sleep Shop. Norman Dine, cone- of the store executives, thought it up, perhaps while he was lying awake at nights, trying to do right by his own insomnia. At any rate, there it is,. .tt little world dedicated to Morpheus, a' world where the right con.-tinu- t 4- ' - . d - : , ' opened, - A recent study shows that per. sons On farms are more likely to have good diets than persons in cities or villages. mattress,- - the'proper - comfortable couch. - -- . , . by 4,tintet, .. ,,.. , , ... . - 1.4,... A;a41 (k4 . The sweet, fresh charm tha; is all wrap; veils 110 (.I:, ped up in this Anne Adams style! Jk -,--Make Pattern 4472 in botn its 0 useful versionsthose - simple ., panelled lines will be quick to stitch. The prettily shaped yoke , A - - - and the sleeve-tab- s ofthe fr ' '' look adorable in dainty contrast, Is, s The lace. edged with Is made by omitting the sides of . r 17 . the bodice, the sleeves and the back sand the into cutting yoke -a low square. Crisp self or con. trasting ruffling and a sash will The gives it a pinafore-effec- t. may be worn as a jumper over blouses. too. Or- I der this pattern today! N''-- , Pattern, 4472 is available in - children's sizes 2. 4, 6, 8 and 1 t $.141 .. s ;4.10; Size tb3, kk'''' , -, inch fabric and 14 yard eon- - .4,1 V.,mil I 35 yards i ' I t''' : st . inch fabric andWyard-contrsif.' V ,, --, ."...- - - .., N CENTS (150 ,' 1-t ,4 lj - - - ir7 ' A sun-dres- ------ , sun-dres- o- , h , , ,, l ! ''' -- mrpattern. 1 '-- NUMBER. ' , - '.1., ,,I I 1 .,t, .,, , 4 . - , -- - - ' ' t, ... 0 N.,. ; Order the new ANNE, ADAMS - PATTERN BOOK by thecnext ..,,mail . be clothes-read, and oummerl Within its pages .,you will find a complete ward- .0 robe for either a traveling or an 1"1"'",..... at home" summer. There are ,..town and country tailored& the ' - 91 -- 'TEEN CENTS. BOOK AND TOGETHER,' TWENTY.. FIVE CENTS. Send your order ToTbe----Des--eret News Pattern Department. - . 4 , ty. "That will come," Rosalind assured her one evening when ambition drove her to speak. "You have got to learn to creep before you can walk. Do each little task well, and some day you'll have -- your chance." That chance did come. sooner even than Rosalind herself ex . . si . LUNCH , One egg and 1 egg white; 3 tablespoons 5 per cent vegetable; 3 tablespoons 10 per cent vegetable; lh head lettuce; 2 level teaspoons mayonnaise; 2 slices bread; 11,4 squares of butter. SUPPER One bowl clear meat broth; 3 tablespoons 5 per cent vegetable; 3 tablespoons 10 per cent vegetable: 14 pound- lean meat, fish or chicken: 1 medium potato; 2 slices bread; 114 squares butter; 1 medium sized oranke. se N. ' ',te .- eo op ' ,,aa ' -., Sqllt!, -' ; - ,4472 . 11 , , - 4:- ..,, - ,,,, " - V f '. - - maid-of-hon- 'How-doyou-d- o' d - - - io ', I I everything in the world but the wedding dreis of Iris Van Borne. Miss Van Borne was the first bride-to-b- e who had been indueed to order her trousseau from Rosalind. The order was tremendously important, not because of Miss Van Dome, who was pale and shy and uncertain- about this wedding to Professor Harper which the papers made so much fuss over, but because her mother, Mrs. Reginald Schuyler Van Dome, was about the most substantial patron any shop could desire. Her approval amounted to the same thing, in a democratic way, as an appointment to Her Royal Highness, the Queen. Thus, if Iris Van Dome's bridal finery was satisfactory, the mothers of another hundred brides would seek the skill of Rosalind, Limited. The entire shop was in a nervous frenzy, from Rosalind right Madown to fourteen-year-olntle Doyle, who ran errands. The wedding was to take place on Thursday, at high noon. On Wednesday morning, Rosalind herself went to the Van Borne mansion for a final fitting of the ivory velvet gown. Every last frock-- had been completed and deliveredthe bridesmaid's dresses, the gray velvet for the mother of the bride, the brown traveling suit the with its sable trimming, crimson hostess gown, the tweed ensemble for the country. All had been closely examined and scrutinized by the exacting Mrs. Van Borne: all had been approved. There remained only this final fitting. It was two o'clock on Wednesday afternoon when Rosalind returned to the shop. Robert came in behind her, holding aloft the square white box which contained the wedding dress as ly as if it held the bride herself. "The buttons have to be moved once more," sinking into the first comfortable chair. dress!" waved hair was a little tousled, n raised hO'rrifie'd her nose was red and obviously "You don't understand, Mr. eyes. Mail. shining. lard. It's Iris Van Dome's wedShe kicked off her black suede thusiasm.dress. For tomorrow." - Robert ' looked- - perplexed. ding slippers and wriggled her feet Still he smiled. "Iris Van comfortably. "This will be the "Shall I tell him you've gone?" Dome's. eh? Well, what of it? third time we've moved those She frowned. "Yes, Robert Will Let her wear somethingelse. buttons. I swear that girl's so' The professor'll never know the you" upset over her own wedding She did not finish. There was difference." that she loses 10 pounds bea sudden shrill scream back in (To Be Continued) tween each fitgng." the workroom, the. sound of a The Register and Tribune Mrs. Bray, the head seamstress, fall. crashing Syndicate , nodded sympathetically. "Let's be Ellen caught her breath in thankful that she ordered only alarm; she turned instantly and one In making slip covers, rememmodel." She was ran down the corridoTI, with Robber that patterned materials soil ert close at her heels. unwrapping the box, lifting out fold after fold of protective tissue and show wrinkles less quickly At the doorway she stopped, than do plain ones; but they may terrified at the sight which met paper. She held up the dress add to the cost, because more her eyes. The dressmaker's carefully, noting the readjustments. "It won't take me an hour bedecked in material is sometimes needed for dummy gloriously to finish this," she the wedding gown of Iris Van the cover. promised calmly. "Be careful of the pins," Rosalind cautioned. "And when you're finished, run along home, Mrs. Bray. Send all the girls home early. They need a rest after these past few weeks." At the last button was.-iplace. The dress - was the bride completed- ,- ready-fo- r to be poured into it. Rosalind inspected it, satisfied herself -that each exacting detail had been attended to. --- ----"N ,,, I'm going tifi a ,.... . ..ci .0 form," Mrs. Bray suggested.' "If , Xi). 111B I put it back into the box, it will .:;011 omassioamor :ci.. only crease." . ...., . Rosalind .nodded ..in.agreemen ,. :a, d five-thirt- t Rosalind---anflounce- close-fittin- 4 -- - - - -- - - -- b 1, I x t .16 k , good-nature- d , 40 ,1 ,,, a-- . -- 1 t. g - four-thirt- , '-' has been applied too late, after the plant has already developed its tall growth and then flop. is frequentlyThecessary for the ped. itishard lei tie up such -correct growth of plants. Many , an unsteady and tottery speciplantsire unable o men.. ,D9, ,not bunch the branch. kee'p themselves erect wItitput es togetrier; this gives the poor artificial aid, and one sprawlibg, Plant a look of being rudely leaning delphinium can often strangled. Three thin bamboo spoil a whole planting. stakes, should be usedone at Correct. posture is as impor. either side and one at the rea- rtant in plant life as iit is in the and the twine brought around human family. No matter.how and loosely tied to each stake. blue the delphinium, or how Lower growing plants also are it - ofterr- geittly benefited- by hew glowingthe scarlet-poppy, untidily, half the -charm ing a shorl twigthrust imarnemg drooreauty is gone. , . the growth to hold it upright. In the perennial garden. stak-: When pruning shrubs and trees, we always save. some 'of the ing must be practiced regularly In order to Insure a goodrffect. branches to use 'later for this and the manner in which , the purpose of bolstering up such stakesarei applied is an art in plants as coreopsis,- pinks and ' itself. ' other low growers. damaging winds accidents, but it also 1 -- , ,. through the center of any plant a trocedutre is sure .1tes ,dSuch ,Place around the outer edge; a wooden mallet is the ideal tool to use Vv.- forcing them into the ground. tio)ose' a tithe' Just after the ground has been well watered; then the stake can be driven down far enough to make- - a sturdy support for strong grow. . ing plants. Good usable stakes can be collected from straight branches of treesor t'eeesi--from-a- -- , ,I Personal To Fat - - Girls - -- , - .) --- - - , i - ' - ' ',;,.." slim 'down Igo and face may you your figgre without isesstarvation dieting or backeat sensibly and breaking take Marmola under the conditions and acdirections to the op cording package. Marmola Tablets have been sold to the Public for more than thirty years. More than twenty million boxes have been distributed during that period. Marmola ,is not A . curs-al- l, yorroolo .le adult fat oestty tor lathypottnesa.11 by a thyroid drson ism) but who are otherwise normal and healthy. We do not make any diagnosis es that lit.the function of your phymemn who must PurtrP:arttahlonottar 141, trritedufirr, motat.box Marmola way? Get of Istarmois tada; trout your dnuoust.,.. , -- - , . . . . , 411.1Bf. i.4-- 15. 1.4',.! -- 4t e,.,1',R COP. DICK? BIRD , ,. , ,, ,, ' to4o, " ',i.ertg!,,.- Thiswarblingbird ..,, -- srh;,et, - meameasaisamuaams ,- .L. - --change - -1.- . . .. -- every- ' - 1 . i t ' ' 2560j - --- block, entirely as your fancy dictates and your scrap bag permits.' 'So make the quilt colorful. Pattern 2560 contains a ,diagram of block; accurate pattern pieces; directions for making quilt; otip gram of quilt; yardages; color schemes.- Send ten cents in coin for this pattern' to The Deseret News Needlecraft Dept., Address. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, ' , ady.) ),our NAME' and ADDRESS. , - , I PATTERN ..,- . - -- llb4C- -i , inapplique-can ei nsill,"24.;,si- -- NEEDUCMET SCRYKrb ..,,, -- - , '.. vie!. i i ,. f44 ,11411,:?1 (4)' uegrastillim"N '4,.- - , , 4 it a , Ne.7 15 . . - - Adf, :It . - . - , -- - f - thatareeutdown,--and- -from 'lumber yards or nursery houses.. - The alert and: thrifty gardener- will keep an eye out for any material that Will make usable stakes, and will assemble, 'a .collection for use in keep.' ing the garden in good order. , , " hgtFthi t I - d Fret-carefu- lly U 11 - , -- , .. , '', - '. . .. -- t.' 't :, 444 -S12 ',.. ;, V. . pected. But it came accidentally. Meanwhile. Ellen worked and watched. She learned a great many things she had fieVer been taught beforehow to press a velvet dress without leaving a mark, how- - to work with fur and beads and braids, how to build up a size 40 from an original 14 to flatter the wearer. And she was happy because she had no time for unhappiness. -Roger Maillard had phoned her every day for a Week after the show. He invited her to dinner. to lunch, to the theater; finally ha pleaded, at least, for the pleasure of driving her home some evening. But she was always busy. She explained the fact kindly and sincerely. She liked him. She had only seen him for those few brief moments, and at the time she was herso excited and self that she had noticed him with a very carelits interest. She had a rather vague recollection of a tall, blonde young !Ilan, with a smile that was genuinely wholesome and friendly, and a most engaging manner. It was a surprise to her, later on ' when Mae Brooks, who had modeled the outfit, emphasized his social significance. "What a sap you are, Ellen!" she said in bitter chastisement. "You meet a man like Roger Maillarcl,with a town house and a country house and a castle in Europe, and you say and turn your back. Haven't you any sense at all? Don't you recognize an opportunity when it almost knocks you down?" and that was a She didn't, fact. She never read the society pages nor noticed the names in the rotogravure sheet, and so an Introduction to Mr. Maillatil had meant nothing. When he phoned, she was more embarrased than pleased, and she took eagerrefuge in the excuse that she must work every night. The girls stormed and argued and scolded. but she didn't care. She wasn't interested in crashing society. One bitter evening had made her feel unequal to it. After a week the phone calls stopped, but two days later there was a huge box of white roses, with his card enclosed. -"Roses f o r remembrance," It- said, "while I spend this long and lonely week in Canada." That same day there. was a brief note from Peter, on the of Abbott imprenive letter-heaand Carlton, explaining that he had tried all day Tuesday which was election day and herefore a holidayto reach her by phone and what was she do- ing, trying to rtm out onhim all these years? after -It was a silly, casual note, but she gathered to her heart what little warmth it offered, and promptly forgot Roger Maillard and his white roses. On the very next day the aecident occured which opened the door of, opportunity to her, and hours she forgot for forty-eight a PdotlardIr . good off any dust. job, Mrs. Bray." She went home Immediately. There was a tired droop to her shoulders as she walked through the salon. She wished that she away to some quiet might runnever see another dress. farm and The bridal sho whad been a success, a greater success than she had dreamed in her highest hopes. but before the last trousseau was completed, she would be a nervous wreck-.-Ellen and Mae Brooks were in the salon as she passed through. "Poor thing," Mae remarked One kindly. "She's worn out. Rosato say for thing you've got lind. When we're busy she doesn't just sit around and give orders. She pitches in and works, harder than anyone else." At five o'clock the shop was closed. The girls in the workshop were all gone, all except to tidy up after the others left. The models and saleswomen lost no time in getting away. Only Ellen lingered. This was her first free evening in weeks: she had hours and hours before her, with nothing at all to do. The thought did not disturb her. It would be pleasant to do nothing, after so many nights of work. She could have a good dinner over at Schrafft's; she would dawdle over each course and take half an hour to finish. There was luxury in such leisure. Rosalind, LimitBy ed, was practically deserted. Robdoor-man, was making ert, the his last rounds, locking windows and turning off lights. Mamie, singing dolefully off key, was the last pins and putting away buttons.---Roberneedles and peeked into the sewing room, saw the girl all alone "Has Miss Carlan gone yet?" he asked. "No. She's still here." "Out here. in the first dressing room," Ellen called out. "Do you want me, Robert?" He walked down the hallway, following her voice. He found her putting on her hat and coat. "There's a young man waiting for you,' he announced quietly. "He's been waiting an hour or more.' "Waiting for me?" Her face hbpefully. Perhaps brightened. Peter--J'Dihe say who it was?" she asked eagerly. "No. But you know him. The one who was at the wedding show with Miss Maillard." "Oh," Her voice lost its en- 0 IP Dome, lay on its side on the. floor. Some dark stain was slowly but certainly seeping through its gleaming velvet folds, spreading in wavering black fingers of destruction. The wedding dress, which must be worn tomorrow morning for the most important nuptial of the season! Ellen stared, stupefied. Behind her Robert shook his head forlornly. Only Mamie was alive, alive ..with a dreadful hysteria. , "I couldn't help it!" she shrieked. it! Hones' I "I couldn't help couldn't." She stood there. wringing her hands and trembling from head to foot. Not for one instant did she underestimate the havoc she had wrought. Ellen was at her side, trying to lend a comfort she could not feel herself. "Of course you couldn't help it, Mamie. It was an accident. Don't cry so, dear. We'll fix it sornehow.' "You can't fix it. You cin't fix It now. It's ink, don't you see I was all ready to go home, and then I saw the ink on the side table, and it belongs in the ofI musts tripped I don't fice. know. It was dark. But you can't fix it. You can't take ink " out of white velvet "We'll do something, Mam:.Ik We'll have to!" Ellen's thougl whirled in a confusion of futill y and uncertainty. What could she do? What could she do? -Then someone else was there. She 'caught sight of the tall, blonde figure peering over Robert's shoulder. She heard him asking "What's all the trouble in here?" And then he was in the workshop with them, looking down at the bedraggled bridal dummy, and not understanding at all. '"What's the trouble?" he asked again, disturbed by the terrified expression in their faces. Mamie told him, incoherently, hysterically. Ellen held her tight., trying to hush her screams, but Mamie went on. "I musts tripped. But you can't- do anything. You can't take ink out of white velvet." Roger Mallard laughed. Not unkindly, nor disparingly, but rather In a sort of as one Might condescension, laugh at some childish folly. "But it's only : dress, young lady. thought someone was ' murdered good L6rd. you mustn't take tim so over a "Just throw some of that flimsy over it, to keep lining materialYou've done a MARION WHITE BY ay, . - 92 so - 7.r Po-slot-- the garden not only is a safe. . De ,. s, patty Thui-a- .0. , PAT-'TER- - , se.'. , - earfto-UPP'-patter- . Plant 9,1 '.. 44:P....I.:- . Vred.c.a. V. qe ,, 'latest sportswear, airy sheers ' ,oand cottohs, enchanting evening . rroW-gownFashions for every age are shown, from magically sli- - m0,, ming-matrtyorits to spirited-;dothes for totsand each -in an BOOK- Fl 4 TEEN CENTS. PAfTERN Fir- ,- 1, - - with fresh asparagus - and glazed eln f -- ,., - ..t,; 1 C so ; ' -- 4 -- , ' SIZE, STYLE plainly :- . ,. Write- - - FIFTEEN Rosalind's autumnal wedding was a. triumphant success. No less than six orders for trousthe seaux had resulted from showing, more than a dozen ivory velvet wedding dresses howwere ordered, each one ever, to be dramatically distinctive in style. The shop was working day and night, and Ellen was at last given the opportunity for which she had longed. "If you must sew," Rosalind agreed briskly, "here's your day: you're my best model now. But if you want to stay on evenings and help with. the actuak laborwell. it's up to you." So she was working five nights a week, bending over one of the long sewing tables and filling in the odd jobs which - more important workers had no time for. There was, as yet, no fascination in the work. She was servin her apprenticeship ing drudgery, She basted endless scams of velvet to prevent "riding" of the fabric. She handed the seams over to the more experieried dresmakers for finishing; after that she was ,entsusted with pulling out the bastings. She sewed on hooks and eyes and buttons.- she turned up hems. It was not at all what she had - dreamed of doing. She wanted "to take the soft material into her on hands, cut it out herself and fashion it after her own ideas. She wanted accomplish ment, the gratification that comes with the creation of beau- CHAPTER -- h- , :NAME,,ADDRESSNand ,,i; -- - 4z- ...incoins- He Fresh cut flowers need cooling treatments both in summer and winter. As soon as you take them out of box or basket,, put them for an hour in a deep receptacle filled with water-whictakes in all their stems. Never keen them near a sunny window. If you receive them in kwilting condition put a few drops of ammonia in the water. Always change water once a day, clip their stems a little each morning, and if they are not flowers with very flimsy -petals, it lengthens their life to submerge them ."to their chins" In cool water overnfght. - -- -- E.0" , s. ter, ever seen. Mother Rosa at the orphanage bears Ellen's plight and sends her to Rosalind. a .famous fashion designa er. Ellen asks for a position, an seamstress, but Rosalind hires her as a model. Peter- calls for Ellen to celebrate their new positions and is as. bonded by her new glamour. They go dinner-dancin- g but Ellen's happiness is ended when Millicent Abbott and her party of friends join them. Idillicent monopolizes Peter's. attention. On the way home Peter assures Ellen nothing will ever come between them and they will be as close as any brother and sister ' ever were. The Abbotts seeing Peter call on Millicent. decide it would be a good match if Millicent married Peter.- Ellen models a. bridal gown at Rosalind's fall fashion show, and Roger Maillard, handsome millionaire sportsman who accompanied his sister to the showing, falls in love with Ellen. t takes-1-yar- 35 , double-beddite- twists and turns, and she can't sleep, or vice versa. And two more sheep counters are in business! The modern version of the bundling bed is a marvelous mattress without any partition or center-- - ridge whatsoever, yet both sleepers slumber away In their respective places, secure and undisturbed. But that's not all! Mr. Dine features a mattress that is really composed of two sleeping units. One side is firm, the other soft, an ideal arrangement for two sleepers with weight disparity. - crisp Dress for Sunny Days to boon and-tende- , , tosser-and-turne- form a -downy 7throne.In It is every known inducement to bring rest, ful slumber, and Mr. Dine to tell the why and the wherefore, to Scrambled eggs are easier to advise the :visitor. . cook if r beep moist The essence of sound sleep is ad in the top part of a double inboiler than if cooked in a pan relaxation, a natural function herent in all of us but someover direct heat. - ' ' ' It can be learned and relearned like a sport, with daily practice But most of us won't take the trouble, we seek short cuts, and often these short cuts prove more harmful than beneficient. The Sleep Shop decrees that a restful bed is one with a mattress that Is fully eight inches longer than the height of the sleeper, and fully eight inches wider in girth. So it features a mattress clinic where shoppers can try out every type and Make of mattress until they find the right one. Experts explain all about resiliency, about the right mattress for the the sybarite, the spartan, the delicate. the frail, the fussy, the high motility sleeperotherwise the aforementioned a that there is mattress just for them. Once the right mattress is discovered, the cause for insomnia is often found. and the rest Is sleepa good night's sleep. Star of the Sleep Shop Is the modern Bundling Mattress, a -- , Ovens on some of the newer electric ranges have ,small lights is which turn on when the door . : how lost In the shuffle of eomplex living. The techniques of relaxation is a physical process, explains the director of the ,sleep shop, and be believes that for-.th- his",exacVage. Tuna fish a la king Damon apples. offers-Peter- It may be Sleep, sheep. more timn a coincidence that the two words rhyme. Since time -- Warm Day-Forl is served in shells, Public-Mer- - ' cup grapefruit; 1 medium sized orange; 5 tablespoons oatmeal (cooked); 2 eggs; 4 taablespoons cream; 2 slices bread; 1 square butter, One-hal- one-hal- might like to retire.-- ' Butwhat comes next, if after-sh- e suggests thisthey say, ""Oh, no, we're not tired; this is the mere shank of the evening for us." The poor hostess in this case was dead for sleep, having got up several hours that day before snyono else and. , having spent the entire day tryEllen CarIan, a stenotraphing to show them a gocd time. er. has loved Peter- Storm, 25, since Answer: According to lute, the both of them- were children living in hostess asks, "Wouldn't you like &aorphanage.- - While... picnicking near the orphanage, they take refugee from a to go to bed?"--- (The word rrestorm in the old Tucker Rouse. an tire" is one the of the tabus of rain the unoccupied mansion, and notice to resemblance of Jonathan Tucker good taste.) Then if they answer tenement a fire, of As result the Peter. as you suggest, it may be that Mo. 1 and the becomes Veler many guests would expect her to papers connect him with the Tucker lsit up all night with them,-B- ut house when he- tells- a- reporter Jonathan-Tucker his wall the inspiration of ean at least name one hostess heroic ',act.' Attorney John Abbott and who would tell them to stay up his wife. Cora. who manage the Tucker just as long as they like, have a estate, fear their deception many years earlier, when they abandoned the only tray brought in be discovat the orphanage, , refreshments the ice box affords heir who is a law tree!. Abbott and then bid them "Goodnight!" student.. a position in his law firm. ElPeter tells her that hostess is writing len is wounded when Abbot's daughMillicent Abbott, the these words! is the most beautiful girl be has follow. CLOTHES FOR WAITRESS Dear Mrs.' Post: Please tell Me what kind of stockings and shoes my waitress should wear. She wears black dresses with fine embroidered white cuffs and collars and snatching aprons. I thought the mother during pregnancy. If you are an expectant mothr, you may ask, .Can I make a lochild become a musician by lie; "tening VI fine music during- its ;Inv-natlife? Can I. by looking ,iong and often at great works art, make it become an artist? ;Can I. by being very intellectual religious now, endow my child intellectual or religious with is the answer to all of No, 1,," these. You can, of course, by such procedure, increase your :own Interest in art, music, IntelIectual matters or religion. Then after your child will have been ,,born, you will be Inclined to e with these interests which your youngster,. loving , you, might imitate. Now is a good time to prepare yourself to be a mother for your child, once Ale has been born'. "The Expectant Mother" is a :pamphiet to be had free by writing to the Children's Bureau. : Washington; D. C. If you want a list of names for boys and girls, with their meanings, write me ' at 235 East 45th Street, New ; York City, enclosing a self-adressed envelope with a three-i- t cent stamp on it. In like man; ner, you may receive a simple ; chart to aid you in finding out how smart your baby- is. Give mot ; meals for one day: BREAKFAST three-quarte- NOT be open. WHEN HOSTESS IS TIRED Dear Mrs. Post: I believs It is supposed to be proper for a hostess to suggest that her guests well-dresse- d Of course, some chilrdren have marks,- - and occasionally one is born with some physical Mrregularities. Arare few, in. .deed, are born with defective 03rai1s. But the cause of such ..things is unknown, although it ertainly is not traceable to Znental or emotional experiences : ' wear, clothes earlier-than-evenin- g But the for a roan are .still perplexing him, as the following (very typi- cal letter illustrates; "What'does the manwear, to a half past five o'clock wedding at church, which Is to be followed by a big reception at the Country Club? Does he wear evening dress to church he at the wrong hour, or does rewear day dress at the evening is expectception? This wedding ed to be the social highlight of season." the The answer to this is of course made fairly easy by the fact that the season is summer and that a white dinner coat is worn every evening in brdad daylight. This fact will help to keep - a tuxedo (even with black evening trousers) from looking out of place at the ceremony. especially since every one knows that evening dress will be,essential at the reception which is to -- , black stockings, but she seems to think. these too dark. Answer. A medium gray looks best since they give the effectof thinnest black. But a quite light gray would be very pretty if she I s young or if she has slim ankles. Black patent leather pumps are smartest but black Xid much more comfortable,spd equally suitable. In either case, the heel of course should Jae no more than mmedium height, and toes - may' BY EMILY POST ' -- b absorb. and-tho- ost-Nreliable -- : - 40, and in fact,' most occur in people over 50. We said yesterday in discussing diabetes - in children, that the younger the person, the more severe the diabetes in all likelihood. People over 40 are- - inclined to have a mild form of over 50 an se diabetes even milder form, and those over 60 still milder form. Diabetes is simply an inability on the part of the body to utilize sugars -and starches. The excess sugar runs off in the urine-an- d sugar in the urine is -the sign of diabetes. Middle-age- d people with diabetes, as we say. having a mild f form, can utilize about as much sugar or and starch as they coula in health. Therefore they need, in most instances, only to cut down on sugar in their coffee, desserts, bread, starchy vegetables, such as potatoes and sweet fruits, and get along all they will usually right. Only a small proportion of them need insulin. , ' The'tendency now is to give as Much carbohydrate (sugar and starch food) as possible, even though occasionally some sugar. appears in the urine. The pa tients are 'tore comfortable that way and do not complain of bun- ger. They must, however, stay within the limit of their glucose tolerance and not try - to eat more starch than the body can diatetes occur Most cases of -- ' M.D. BY LOGAN CLENDENING, . , ' , . .. . Wiitnen Should Have Diversions Before Child Is Born; Marking Is Scoffed . . Thursday, June 13, 1940 , , -- . ' |