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Ciiin* rr y- Tk* Barairtll & C, Jfay St 1*84 Tf V IP*P ■ ’IP 1 CUB 9 ’ 09 fey JIMMY OAMTMWAITB ”7^ ’^E PAPER BOAT A PAPER boat set out to sea One terribly windy day And carefree as a boat could be It scudded along its wav. _ But wait! Before the boat.set sail Two passengers came aboard— A Dancing Doll with her bridal veil And a Soldier with his sword.^ The two of them were off upon A honeymoon trip together And so of course they would have gone In any old kind of weather. They didn’t see the sea was rough And the waves were billowing - high They didn’t hear the hurricane huff •' And puff from the hurricane sky. They didn’t know this sort of day This tossing and spray and foam Would even make a skipper stay All snuggled in bed at home/ And so they journeyed on and on And chatted quite cheerfully The while the boat tossed hither and yon And flittered most fearfully. But soon a seeth- , . ing wave rushed by Boiling with angry rage It flipped the boat just like a fly Just flippered it off the page! © Harper A Brother*—WNU Service. Over Boy Prodigy boy prodigy, who has completed Are years of school wort la fire months, la worrying his teachers. Charles rrtts Is brilliant in his school work, bat Principal A. H. Scbowaller, of bewey-Horace Mann school, which Charles attends, be lieves the boy should give more at tention to outside activities. * have had a' conference with his parents, and asked them to en courage the boy to play more.** Sho .waller said. **1 don’t want to see him develop In a one sided way.* \ - The boy could lead newspapeff at the age of three. His parents insist he was entirely self-taught FROCK TOR UTTLB ONE WILL PLEASE HER. AND MOTHER WELSH RAREBIT AS QUICK toEAL There Are Several Ways of Making Every Kind. B, EDITH M. BARBER I N THINKING about uulck mauls. Welsh rarebit Just naturalfj comes to my mind. .During the last fifteen years man) of us have regretted the necessity for eliminating our pet recipe. I,am print Ing my own special recipe for the first time, and. at the same time. I shall give you several others for rarebits which are all delicious and different. No matter what kind of a rarebit you make, you will need the fresh, soft cheese. Tills Is particularly Impor tant for rarebits made with beer. When cheese is old, the fat separates your Ingredients will not blend togeth er and you will have a stringy rarebit I remember one time, sending my brother to the store especially to get soft cheese, and be returned with a pound of “cheese ends,” Informing me .that was all the old cheese they had. Quitk Meal. Welsh rarebit on toast Broiled bacon., Mixed green salad Sliced mixed fruit Coffee Method ot Preparation. Prepare fruit and chill Prepare salad, make salad dressing and chill Flake cheese Cut bread for toast Broil bacon Toast bread Make rarebit <. Make coffee Welab Rarebit With Milk. 2 tablespoons butter 1% tablespoons flour % teaspoon salt H teaspoon mustard Dash cayenne 1 cup milk % poynd American cheese * small pieces Melt the butter, add flour and sea •onlngs and stir In the milk until thick and smooth. Add cheese, cook and •Ur until melted. Serve on crackers or toast Tomato Rarebit pound soft cheese Pepper, psprlka % teaspoon salt W sirYag^^amMAUSSsR. -- -- - -- - - — — t wvwwptwtr mtioinm \ to 1 cup tomato soup Cut the cheese Into small pieces, add mixed seasonings and cook over a low fire until melted. Add enough to- HER GREAT EFFORT rnato soup to thin the mixture so that it may be ponred on pieces of toast Herb Powder. Take fresh marjoram, basil, bay leaf and pf&sley and dry in the sun until crisp. Pick carefully off the stalks and rub Into a fine powder. Add a small quantity of dried and powdered lemon peel and allow to each ounce of herbs In the powder, one-quarter tea spoon salt and cne-elghth teaspoon pepper. Sift through a piece of cheese cloth and store in small bottles for use as needed. Flaked Fish Sandwiches. 1 cup flaked flsh 2 tablespoons chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped pickle ^4 cup thick mayonnaise 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce or catsup, salt and pepper Mix Ingredients and season to taste with salt and pepper. Spread between thin slices of buttered bread. , Vanilla Junket With Bananas. 1 package powder of vanilla Junket 1 pint milk —*4 cup sugar H cup whipping crerfm 2 bananas, sliced Prepare vanilla Juuket according to the directions on package. Cliilj In refrigerator. Whip th cream, adding one-fourth cup sugaV Just before the cream is stiff. When ready to serve cover the Junket with the sliced bananas and garnish with the whipped cream. I Squash Souffle. 2 cups mashed squash ’ 1 cup cream or thin white sauce. Salt r-teaspoon grated ouron *• ~ Dash of nutmeg 3 eggs To the squash add cream or sauce, salt, onion and nutmeg. Add egg yolks, slightly beaten, and fold In stiffly beaten whites. Set In a pan of hot water and bake In a moderate oven (375 degrees F.) forty minutes. Any other mild vegetable may be used In place of squash. Vegetable Timbales. 2 cups grated raw or mashed vege table Vt cup bread crumbs 2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons melted butter % cup milk Mix the grated or mashed' regeta and add to them the salt, butter and milk. Add this mixture to the vege table and crumb mixture. Fill small greased baking molds, set in a pan of hot water and bake In a slow oven (320 degrees F.) until firm. ©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Dr. John Martin Hiss, orthopedic surgeon at Hollywood, Calif., believes the feet of Borneo are Improving In this athletic age. He is here seen measur ing the proportions and bone structure of the feet of a group of lovely girls. A Li* ;hts of Ne^ W York LLSTEVENSON 1 When the new state hospital at Brentwood Is completed, the insane population of Long Island, beyond the limits of Brooklj^i, will exceed the sane population. 'There are already boa- pltals at Kings Park. Central Isllp and Creedmore with thousands of inmates. The Brentwood institution has be»>n completed to a point where It has a population of 10,000 patients. Even *ttaRy-lt will have a total population “And you have had the same serv ant for two years?” “Yes; she says she doesn’t believe in changing after she has gone to the trouble of teaching the family her ways.” The Evil Eye T HEBE are few beliefs which go back further Into antiquity than the notion of the evil eye—the Idea that some people possessed the sinis ter magical power to work harm upon whom They chose, simply by looking upon their victim. Some have asked how It started. Belief In the evil eye was prevalent among the Creeks and the Romans and a reference to It Is found In “The Wisdom of Solomon,” sometimes called “The Book of Wisdom.” which dates from about the middle of the first century B. C. ©. Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. of 100.000. That’s equivalent to a city the size of Gary, Ind., or Lowell. Mass., and only a few thousand short of a city the size of Utica. N. Y. Inclden tally, according to the -hud census, there are only 73 cities In the United States with a population of 100,000 or more. The Brentwood institution has been years In building and will take more years to complete, the state’s Investment running into many millions * • « Nbt/only as to size alone Is the Brentwood hospital unique. For In stance, there ttr a rretv method of han dling patients. The manner of feed ing is an example, Insteiyd of being massed at long tables andjiaving food served to th»*m t all patients who are able, go to a cafeteria, cari^ their trays around and select what they want to eat Just as do many thou sands of normal persons In New York each day. Attendants are qpt uni formed. In the bakery, the attendant in charge is garbed Just as is every other head baker. The laundry at tendant in appearance is merely a fore man. Every attempt is made to make the patients feel that they are not in an institution and under guard but that they are normal people engaged In normal occupations. • • • Brentwood is also a city auffdent unto Itself. It has a central power plant which supplies services of va rious kinds. There is also a complete water works system, the water being pumped four miles away and carried to the institution in great mains. In cidentally, the power plant burns 130 tons of coal a day. • • • Wondered what had become of the rum runners now that prohibition is only a memory. Learned recently that two of them are on Broadway. They are not following any racket, however. The ex-bold bad men of the sea are now a dancing team appearing in one of the tango palaces. Learned ilso (hat another rum dealer, who used to ride around'in a big bullet-proof car, still does. But he has turned it Into a taxicab and does not Inform his passengers that should shooting start they would be safe. • • • Then there Is Albert H. Wlggln, for mer chairman of the board of the Chase National bank whose deals In his bank’s stocks, supposed to have netted him $10,000,000, and his $100, •MO annual pension, loomed large In the public eye only a short time ago Mr. Wlggln’s principal task now Is dodging publicity. He lias a modest office - oh .IMne street* where he looks after the various holdings of his fam ily and himself and a residence down at Charleston. S. C^ where he spends his spare time. He also'collects etch ings. purchasing those that appeal to him whether or n<1T the eFcher Re' known and whether or not he be still . alive • • • No use mentioning the name of this man. Strillclent-rr^t Tn snyttnir * ■ • A small girl will look very sweet In this little dress. The yoke la seal- s. long ago he was a power in Walt Street. But recently, when his pe» dog becairff III. he found it Impossible to pay a small hospital charge. One of his fornfer clerks finally loaned him enough to redeem his net. He carries with him a long string of cliupin,:* pasted neatly together. They tell ot the fall of the financial bouse of which he was Hie head. ©. Bell Syndicate —WNU Service. My Neighbor ^ Says ;= CVCESHNESS of flsh can be deter- w mined by the elasticity and firm ness of the flqsh. The odor, of course. Is a valuable aid. e e e - When making bread never put hot water on yeast cake, as It kills the yeast plant and consequently prevents bread rising. Use lukewarm water. e e A Cream may he imuie amir hy adding loped In front - and plain in back. There are little bows which tie the sleeves very smartly, and a cunning collar. Her mother can make the dress, omitting the lower part of the ateeves and the cottar, as the small sketch shows. Use the pattern to make several different dresses; for example, It’s cute made of a cotton print, and equally dainty In one of the pastel shades in plain silk or linen, or dimity. Pattern 9G95 may be ordered only In sizes 2, 4, 0, 8, and 10. Size 4 re quires 2% yards 36-inch fabric and H yard contrasting. Complete, diagrammed sew chart Included. Send FIFTEEN CENTS In coins o^ stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, the STYLE NUMBER and SIZE. Send your order to Sewing Circle Pattern Department, 232 W. Eight eenth St, New York, N. Y. one-fourth teaspoon of cream of tartar to one and one-half cups of cream. • • • A piece of adhesive tape put on the Inside of a thimble will make it fit if it is too large. O. th* AanorlntM Newspaper* WNU Servlc* SCHEMER Austrian Monarchists Salute the Chancellor Chancailor Engelbtrt Doll^uM, leaving a church In Vienna after a service February riots, reviews the ranks of tfca Iron Ring,’’ an organisation of tba victims ••Jack and 1 have parted forever.” “Good gracious! What does that mean?” “A five-pound box of candy In about an hour.” Rhe in Price of Gold Brings Boom to Alaska Seattle, Wash.—The rise In the price of newly mined gold to. $35 an ounce, opening of canneries and fishing grounds, has started a new rush Alaska. The Alaska Steamship company an nounced it was bringing 13 vessels out of moorings and was overhauling them in expectation of one of the largest passenger and freight cargo yean in history. The steamship Yukon left port re cently with every passenger accommo dation filled, and loaded to capacity with . cargo. Many passengers were women on their way to canneries and many more were men going to fishing grounds. The majority, however, were both young and old mining men who hoped to "strike it rich." Sweden Planning Mas* Flight of Navy Planet Ka/lakrona, Sweden.—Six Swedish navy pianes under the commafd ef Gen. Eric Virgin, head, of the Royal Swedish Air force, will soon make a formation and training flight from the naval base in southern Sweden to Gdynia, lu Poland. En route certain aerial maneuvers will be staged. Al together 18 men will participate eS SMOOTH STRATEGY •*In the course of time you must have made many enemies.” “I have made but few enemies,** answered Senator Sorghum. “Occa sionally, of course, 1 have provoked active expressions of antagonism which I was sure I could argue down. Bnt I never deliberately make an enemy except when I feel that I need him In my business.” Brought a Lot of Griof “What invention do you figure la one we best could do without?’’ “The fountain pen—without It my name never would have gotten on n lot of dotted lines.”—Cincinnati En quirer. — She’d Soil Ice to Byrd Mother—What happened when that high-pressure salesman called today? Daughter—Oh, I sold him father’s old clothes and all the discarded furniture in the attic.—Detroit Free Press. Ohl Ohl Lady—Can Mr. Smith see me? Cheeky Youth—You bet! He’ll al ways see a pretty girl. What name? Lady—Mrs. Smith!—London Hu morist. - — -——