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PAGE EIGHT THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 11, 1920 n 3 HougeholdSBy Children CootCitifi . n-m - -t rkmmK -.....m rj. - am taffigw-tajj i i! r-""a i SZ i ADV Efcrrtmr.s: Pi ?TM& TWINS 31 THE LAST OF THE RENTS T1ofli",STfnd v-hS twlna were erlng the end of their adventures in i' iVf!'Where' for that 8a80n at least. Most of the rents Yr LIU ? Docke'-book was bulsing with money for the Fairy Queen, thir. wonder why she needed money, but she had to do bo many tilings for her people in her Xlno Hundred and .Ninety-Nine Kingdoms that It was necessary for her to have quite a lot. There were blankets for the cmmals to wear during the winter .months in Dreamland, tind all sorts of kt. t COmfort ot the fairies, besides dye for the flowers and birds in fc-erub-Fp Land, and oceans of things for Topsy-Turvy Land, where the uiirnals took such oueer nations 'n everything 'n had to be cured. , x" was Wlth a Proud feeling, indeed, that the fat little fairy landlord tarted back to the Fairy Queen's Palace, with Nancy and Nick in their jreen Shoes, and the Magical Mushroom, too. - I if 80 with a proud feeling the fairy landlord started back to the Fairy Queen's Palace. They had forgotten all their troubles, the last one being a joke Mr. Potato-bug. had played on them, inviting them to taste some beautiful bright green stuff which Mr. Man had sprmkled on his vine, and which doubled them all up with a pain in their tummies. Mr. Tingaling had the biggest pain because he had the biggest tummy. Then there was Mr. Grasshopper, who was so hard to catch because he had a pair of seven-league boots, and who absolutely refused to pay rent for his house on the sweet-tates Vine. Said he neither lived on a sweet-tater Vine, nor a railroad track, lilp the sons raid, and also that he'd be dumswtggled if he ever picked his teeth ' with, a carpet tack, either, one good reason being that he hadn't a carpet tack, and the second, that he" hadn't any teeth. NOW CELLULOID DISKS AND FLUTED RIBBON ADORN AUTUMN FROCKS iiesMQiisoiaiiricie (Ccpyriqht X9ZCX TIieluiiperEiTjpnjAscndion) The Do THE BOOK OF DEBORAH Quarrels I Have "With Bob Not Make Me Unhappy "But how would Deborah save the naan'ehe loved from the complexities, irritations, jealousies, disappointment and " disHiusionir.ents of a love-triangle?" I asked myself as I waitea in the dusk for lia'u to some home to a late dinner. My domestic adviser and household assistant, a dignified grad uate f a state university, who comes f by the hour ix days a week, ana is 1 paid more than the average teacner k this accomplished ' young woman pre pares our evening meal, and I serve it. My husband was very late. He had not phoned me. Luckily, we had a chilled meal for Uie end of a hot day, and it was safely reposing and improv ing on the ice. So I sat in my swing under mpine trees and wondered al ternately about. Deborah and Bob. I eouMn't answer the involved prob lem I had put to myself about Ie!, and it occurred to me that I might much better endeavor to solve my un matrimonial difficulties. Things were going pretty badly for Bob and me. We had reached a period in bur married life when we should be settling Cown to a quiet anchorage on unruffled waters; find we were stiil navigating between typhoons of temper and rocks of regret. ! 1 know several war brides, like my self, -who are having- stormy voyages on the seven seas of matrimony. Per sonally. I am rather shocked when 1 count the derelict divorcees in our eo ciety shallow r. And I expect Bob to steer our" little craft into some near port of happiness. . But at the time Deb and I became such close friends, my husband didn't seem to be givins all of his attention to our ship. I couldn't guess whether ho had lost patience with me as his first mate, or whefcer ho was losing interest in our enterprise. And why was he ra lute to dinner? I miss Boh awfully when wr art quarreling. Ho is rny familiar spirit, the one human belns? with whom I em most a home, liven when we discuss our differences, I am not unhappy, be cause he ia my other self, and one can not quarrel with oneself. It's hard to put the feeling into words, it is really the most ancient bond between true lovers, and Bob and I have often talked about it. Considered in the lisht of love eter nal, we were at odds over a trivial -even a ludicrous happening: Bob had let me have my hair cropped, then he hadn't seemed to miss the loss of it a bit; and then I had by accident discovered him at the garden rally with a button of his sleeve caught in Katherine Miller's blowing tresses and I had heard him refuse to break a strand of what he called "threads of living gold ." Deb happened along with mo and she had no such compunction the dear girl. As I waited for Bob to come home to dinner, the picture I had seen in the box alley harassed me. But instead of making me weep, as once it would have done, it left me cold and sane. (To be continued) o HCW IT GRO.WS A potato grower writes: ' "Last summer I got 1 a bushel for potatoes I sold through a growers' as sociation. The transportation cost from the local freight tation to the retailer s store in a large cny aiiionnn-a to a bushel, or twice as much as 1 got for cost of production and profit. The City consumer paid $6 a bushel. The marketing system rost $3 a bushel, or thrfe times my price.- In ail the city consumer paid six times the orig inal cost of those potatoes." A grower of grapefruit writes: ."I got half a cent per fruit for grow ing tV.em. which included my profit. The transportation system got two and a half cents, and the marketing system got nine cents per fruit, mak ing the total coat to consumer 12 cer.ts." Before you nihsfribp to the doctrine that the farmer is gouging his city cousin. gct oi more familiar terms with vonr nearer relatives, thof-e in- f In tha kitchen of her own home Slater Mary cook daily for a family of four adults. She brought to her kitchen an undertanding of the chemistry of cooking, gained from study of domestio science in a state univer sity. Consequently the advice she offers is a happy com t bination cf theory and pract!cei Every recipe she flives is he own. first triad out and served at her family table ' If a glass fruit can cracks when filling it with boiling fruit don't throw it away. . A common ordinary crack does not destroy the use fulness of the jar. Staple groceries are kept free from dust if stored in these cans. A quart can will hold two pounds of brown sugar, beans, corn-meal, or any of the things a housekeeper buys by bulk in small quantities. The pint jars will take care of a pound. ' The glass jars surely look neater in a cupboard than manv paper bags. And a paper bag has to be opened or felt of, to know what is in it, while a glance will suffice when the supplies are.put in glass. (ft- it JJ-'t - lit1.- Flyted or quilled ribben designs, startling floral patterns in chain stitching, and embroidery made of eelialoid disks instead cf beads, distinguish) newest gowns. . BY CORA MOORE New York's Fashion Authority NEW YORK The new fall frocks are very new. Almost every one in volves some feature that we've never h-eard cf beforet especially in the way of trimming. Take these three costumes, for ex ample. Who before ever thought of embroidering a simply c it black satin with quilled green ribbon in all over effect, as the one at the left in which a pretty "Clarence" glrl is posed'.' Or who ever heard of embroidering with little di?ks of celluloid? A "Honey Girl" niiiiu.m posed in the gown of ruvetyn thus embellished, ot the right, us you may see, a,:ul isn't it effective? Then there H tHe sown in - which Jane Elvidge poses. The gown itself is of one of the new crepe-like satins and the great splashy figures yon set, and perhaps thought were printed on. uere embroidered in white chain stitching. Each of the modi's shows the same straight lines of summer frocks which will continue in vogue, though not exclusively. efficient, hence expensive, twi'ns, Transportation and Marketing Sys tems. How much are they costing you? FUR, NOT GLASS "And, on the top step," sh? told the little boy. and girl, "the prince found the daintient glas slipper imaginable; it lay where Cinderella had dropped it in her fltfght." . That's all wrong; the little boy and girl are being sadly deceived. Cinder ella's siipper wasn't of glass, but of furl The authority is John Fhin and he tells the world in a little volume: "Seven Follies of Science." The public is set rijrht on no end of things Vn that beck, but the solar plex us blow landed on the glass slipper version o Cinderella is tlie inc&i im portant. According to Thin tho translator is for verre. for "fur" was mistaken said to mean "glssx." "And on the top step the prince found the daintiest fur slipper imagin able; it lay where Cinderella had dropped it in her flight." Get that right, children. Fur, not glas-s. Now the world may ko ahend agrain. , o WETTEST TOWN IS ALICE, TEXAS N. E. A. tff Special ALICE, Tex. Here's the wettest town of its i-'-e in the V. S. A. "There's enough liqcr comes into this town every nierht to supply a political con vention'." That's Custom Officer E. Coiulla's report cn this town of Alice. He admits he can't check booze run ning and boo'e seliinsr. Every irsrht f-om to CO armed Mexicans ford the H;r (J rand? hearing into Texas jr.i lions of hard liquor which is distributed to American boot lejruers. "I want a whole army with machine suns and tanks." says Cotulla, "They're too many for me." Fry bacon after cnttinp in inch piccei. Ue 1 tc-aspocn of bacon f:it and 1 teasnoonfrJ of butter and make a cream sjtuce of the melted fut, flour and mk. Season with paprika. Add bacon and serve' at once. Thick slices of ripe tomatoes may be broiled, put on a piece cf hot toa.it and thebacon in cream r.uuoe poured over. Mrshna!'ow Sa!ad 12 marsbmullows. ,' Call diced celery, .: run while grape. I cup chopped English walnuts. '4 oi. u diced pineapples. Cut marshr.iyllov.-s i.i quarters. Re move setds ft'um grapes. Mix all In jire!nts with sweet boiled dressing. Arrange on hearts of lettuce, Vut a jipoonf'Jl of unsweetened whipped cream on top of each service. 'Add a sprig of fresh mint a;-d serve. Men-j'for Tcmorrow . Tlreakfast Crrc-ul with bananas, toast, rr.arr.'.alpde. cofi'e. Euncheo:-. Baton in cream gravy, baked potatoes, lettuce ealad, buckle berry padding, tea. Dinner-EroUed r.amburs stean, baked summer squash, string-legs bears, inatshmaiiow saiad, toasted cruikers, ccf'ee. My Own Recipes Thf luncheon cf a salad, bread and butt'-r and tea that is so ritisfyins to most women in rnuer a happy choice when men are to bo rrrved. With tho excej-tion of the pv:ddinj; the menu is very hwnple and means no "fussing'. Qacon in Cream Gravy 4 eiices bacon. I't cupa m ik. 1 teaspoon butter. 1 tablespoon flour. I'aprlka. If your skin itches andburnsiusttise H you are suffering from eciema, r!n jworm Of similar itching, burn i:'?, unsightly skin affection, hatha t!i sore places with Resinol Soap and hot water, then gently apu! a little Resinol Ointment. You will probably be astonished how in rtan.!y the itching stori and lies! begins. In most cases the sick tUIn quickly becomes clear and hcaif-y ajain, at very little cost.' Ruinol Ointment aod Reslnal Soap a'o cieir iay pin;i!ei, rti'nts, roogbuesi nai daatkvti. Sold 1 U dUSBM M-rlS-1 i-lE it 'lis IT i Instant. 0 1 fostum A BEVERAGE fosturn Cral Company. Your Physical Condition is reflected in your face. Ruddy cheeks and a clear eye are generally indica tive of healtn. On the other hand, a sallow complexion may indicate that coffee is causing the indigestion, sleeplessness ana upset nerves which are responsible for your condition. 13 Instant PosTOM instead of-coffee will prove "There's a Reason" rlad by Fostum Cereal Co,IncBattle Creek.Mich. to blame. "Vair. ' r.id to be French I "PILGRIM MAID OF 1920" Vtetffc v,, , . J . 'V'Xr' SWEET . sX'ft'll''! :-- . V?n COCOA ff$;F mmmm S ufficient unto itself is this food-beverage with its own chocoate-sweetness. A happy blend of pure sugar and finest cocoa (in the right proportions for taste and health) Ghirardelirs Ground Chocolate does not require the addition of sugar-surely a saving worth while these days. GkirardeHi's Ground Chocolate is never sold in bulk but in cans only. In this way Ghirarde'li' s retains its flavor and strctgththe two mast important elements of good chocolate. Say (G ear- ar-delly ' ' D. GH1RARDELLI CO. Since 1852 San Francisco PnoYiNCriTOWX, Mass. "Beauty knows no agre," 'tis ' said, and the I'ilprrim :n.i:d of is just as dainty ami pretty 03 the Pilgrim maid of 1020. .Miss Jc:-rp!.ine VounR, d.tr.rhter of I'resii.-lcnf William H. Youns. Pil- prrim Tercentenary Coinfiittec. hero, proves- it. Site appeared in the garb of the 1'ilerin.s at the telcjbration jjiere, commemorating the arrival of the I Mayflower. 9 1 c I C w i t: r T U It U t it ' i I "I j I ' 1 n 6' lei -I 'ti r. on i 1 1 r ' c th al. t f do waj 1 an "sp d ; i J Y 'ret .(1 Ca I' mi it. or C .. ...