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ctt.GE SEVLiN MM n. THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 12, 1921 i H pj m PiWf llPfP mm Mill A faw momenta thowff'ii upended in calculation baaed on the knowledge of the appttites and tastes of those to be served makes it possible to provide just enough. In a family where left-over are not tolerated this accurate provision of food should be worked out most ju diciously, otherwise there is danger ef tee greet frugality, causing under nourishment. Menu for Tomorrow BREAKFAST StwM prunes, rooked cfreal, hot buttered toast, cof fee. LUNCHEON Spanish rice, brown bread and butter, Rlace apples, tea, DINNER rot roast of veal, mashed Potatoes, buttered carrots, head let tuce salad, lemon roll, coffee. My Own Recipes There in no cereal that In not Im proved by Ion cooking, no matter what the- directions on the packnre lead one to believe. If a cooked cereal 1 nerved for breakfast it should be Marted the night before and partially looked while the dinner dishes are l eing done. It will finish cookinff while I he coffee is boiling in the morninK. Adventures OF Tfcilr TWINS y Olive KoLefrir Bgrtarv aatl SPANISH RICE I cup rice 1 fpiart canned tomatoes " medium-sized onions i' green peppers 'a cup diced celery -i teaspoon salt U teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons bacon fat Melt bacon fat in a frying Pan and add sliced onions. Cook until 'onions are jl pale straw color. Add tomatoes. Add rice carefully washed and drained. Add celery and shredded peppers. Season with salt and pepper and cook slowly for an hour. Stir frequently to prevent burning;. GLACE APPLES 3 apples 1 cup sugar Pare and core apples. Cut in slices about half an inch thick. Put in a stew pan with the susar and cook very slowly for forty-five minutes. Apples that are rather coarse-grained and don't cook to pieces are the nicest to use. The .syrup should be a very pnlo straw color when removed from the fire. Do not try to cook more "ISHTU'S HUT" Nick looked at the map he had been given to guide him and Nancy on their trip to the South Pole. "There should be a hut here," he said. "It's marked 'The House of Ishtu the Eskimo.' ' "Why, there it is!' cried Nancy, pointing to where a low mound of ice and snow pushed up from the flat ground like the head of a large mushroom. "That's queer." said Nick. "It wasn't there a minute ago, because after we had come through the golden door in the ice wall I looked as hard as I could in every direction, and there wasn't a thing." THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES BY JEAN NEWTON "A Nice Quiet Girl" The craze for a while among men hns heen the brilliant girl. A ... j ' 'VVV W " A Master piece It would be easy to paint many glowing pic tures about Ben-Hur Coffee, but the master piece is the coffee itself. No words, or pictures, could ever do justice to the delightful, rich, mellow flavor of Ben Hur Coffee, our masterpiece. But just one taste, one cup, and you will say, for you henceforth cuum Pa.cM.ccf: Such coffee as Ben-Hur is not a mere chance. The wonderful taste that you can't forget, is the result of knowing, after many years' experience, how to select, blend and pack. BEN-IICR QUALITY PRODUCTS CofU Tea) Extract Spices) Chili Powder Prepared M tard JOANNES BROS. OF LOS ANGELES '- uv $r "-rs changed the whole look of the man. Over his smiling anU indifferent fea tures spread a deep red blur of color. It passed, leaving the lines of his face strained and hard. "Wrong number!" he said sharply and he hung up the receiver with a snap. "Wronr number!" he announced unnecessarily as he rejoined our cir cle. "Come. Marte, we must hurry." But Lorrie. had to be well wrapped up, for a hiiazard was racrinrr. Ami so A low mound of ice and snow like th Head of a large mushroom "You must have been dazzled by the ice." remAked Nancy, "for thera it Is. And Im hungry, and a liUle cold, and I ttiink we'd betir find the door and ask if we may get warm." Thrv" Green Shoes piloifd them paftlv over the ice to the "igloo," as Eski mos call their houses, and they soon four J the little low l.xrv. that looked almost like the opening to a beehi.e. Dropping on their l.arias ai.T knees the twins crawled inside, finding themsel.s in a sort, of hallway cut oiu of solid ice, at the far end of which was a thick tx ;;:. . f walrus skins. "Please may we come in" called Nick, as r.e decided that as there was leal' no door it was useless to knock. "Sure, come in," called a cheery voice in Eskin", iui, of course, c:.r little friends understood as easily as if it had been American, because Nancy u'l carried the charm-that the Magical Mushroom had given them rvhen they left the Fairy Queen's Palace, the charm that helped them to understand alllan guages. They lifted aside the heavy, stiff curtain and entered. At first they could scarcely see at all for the smoke, and the only light was coming from a vessel of burning grease. Then they made out the figuc of a man. "Brains." they demanded. "Looks, if possible, but brains, brains, brains!" From the very first they "took" to the new woman the girl who had nc "place," who assumed an intellectual basis with them and was able to give and take- cn the rostrum as in the home. And with this new fetish of thinking, wideawake women became the vogue of the brilliant girl. Koon the fellow who used to brag about takins out the prettiest girl in town changed his tune to the quantity and quality of the gray matter he had escorted to the Satur day night ball. But the brilliant girl made one mis take she overreached herself. She for got, it seems, that man's ruling passion is vanity and that no matter how badly smitten he may otherwise be. any ap peal that will not sustain his vanity is likely to be no more than a temporary aberration! To her, too, the situation was novel and she exulted In it. More valiant than discreet, she outscintillated. ob scured her satellites with men the un pardonable sin. So they are running: away from the brilliat girl. They flee at the mention of "brainy" or "superior," and it looks as if a "a nice, Quiet girl" is going to be the drawing card again for a while. While the "nice, quiet girl" may be in for an inning, her brighter sister J may still take heart. She need not really retire altop-'tlcr. Not if she is brainy enough to be ' rice antl quiet,' clever enough to be unobtrusive, if she will f how her powers of conversation by leUing "him" talk, her (ki n insight -by being interested, her logic by being Impressed. Then her letterbox will continue 10 be filled and her wire always "busy!" "Evan took up the receiver nonchal antly." the ring of the phone caught them once more. "Don't bother to answer," Evan ex claimed. "Operators make such care less mistakes in the holidays " He was talking too much about rcthing, I could see, and so could Martha, She threw her husband a suf-ri"oj? glance and took down the rtc;vf r , My .' 1 r : s";r.k with a horrid fore bodms as i':? 8.wered the call: "Yes, Mr. Fmac.-se! What is the matter?" fTo be cf i -tinu-l.) ' oshiosiette Invisible HAIR NETS At department stores, specialty snops ana gooa arug stores Colonial f Qmlity L (Copyright lSBQt by 'EEie.IuypApeT rrtapnod,1ion) Ann whirled and stamped and leaped in a very smart imitation of a folk-dance and all except Martha Palmer' watched' her with pleasure. I said to myself that Ann was showing off to Van again, and I wanted to shake her. because she looked to him for applause more often than to her husband. She was flirting with Van, as usual, and I could see if the others couldn't. I was sorry that Martha was pre occupied. She was debating the wis dom of adopting Marion Sprague's un welcome child. Martha tardily noticed little Lorrie when he touched the but ton that switched off the lights and set the great tree to revolving so that the children could pick its choice fruits. In one way I was glad that Martha had a chance to sit quietly, for she made a most exquisite picture and one which Evan was appreciating. Van wasn't losing a nuance of her beauty, either. But he had his man ners with him; or perhaps he, too, ob served Evan's devotion to his wife. Evan hovered around Martha much as he did in days of yore before the war. It was like old times. I eould than this quantity at one tice. MARY SAYS: "Thanksgiving! Christmas! New Year!" quoth the turkey. "Nevermore." hardly realize that they who had been such devoted lovers so short a time ago were as far apart in spirit as the universe permits two souls to sepa rate. The party broke up at an, early hour, for well-brought-up children must go to bed by the clock even in the Christ mas season. Evan and Martha were saying goodby to me when the phone rang. "A call for Mr. Palmer," said the maid . Evan took up the receiver non chalantly. In spite of his careless way, for no reason whatever, a silence j feil upon our little group. - -wnat's that Yes! Yes!" Then Evan paused and a curious expression 1000 Eggs In Every Hen New System Of Poultry Keeping Get Dollar A Dozen Egga Famoua Poultryman TELLS HOW R EDUCTIONS THAT WILL ' SURPRISE YOU A Real Sa!e Where You Purchase At Less than Cost of Materials You Cannot Afford to Miss This WE WILL SELL AT A LOSS .Dresses? Coats We Need the Space for Our Spring Arrivals The Profits Go To the Pubiic "The great trouble with the poultry business has always been that the lay ing life of a hen was too short." says Henry Tafford, International Poultry Expert and Breeder, for nearly eigh teen years Editor of Poultry Success. The average pullet lavs 150 eegs. If 1 kept the second year, she may lay 100 more. Then she goes to market. Yet, is has been scientifically established that every pullet is born or hatched with over one thousand minute egg germs in her system and will lay them on a highly profitable basis over a period of four to six years' time if given proper care. How to work to get 1,000 eggs from every hen: how to get pullets laying early; how to make the old hens lay like pullets; how to keep up heavy egg prodjetion all through cold winter months when eggs are highest; triple egg production; make slacker hens hustle; $5.00 profit from every hen in six winter months. These and many other money making poultry secrets are contained In Mr. Trafford's "1,000 EGG HEN" system of poultry raising, one copy of which will be sent abso lutely free to any reader of this paper who keeps six nens or more. Eggs should go to a dollar or more a dozen this winter. This means big profit to the poultry keeper who gets the eggs. Mr. Trafford tells how. If you keep chickens and want them to make money for you, cut out this ad and end it with your name and address to Henry Trafford, Suite 10143 Tyne Bldg., Binghamton. N. Y., and a free copy of "THE 1,000 EGG HEN" will be sent by return mail. r .--- pi l - ' sW'.. .', , 7 .1.1 t:l Drawing Made from a Modd Booster Zitchei Suits PHOENIX SHOP 210 West Washington Tvo Doors Above Redewill Music Company "Where Quality, Style and Economy Meet" Cuticura Beautifies Your Complexion The daily us of the Soap cleanses and purines the pores of the skin, thus prevent ing blackheads and pimples. Th Oint ment usrd occasionally, as needed, soothes and heais any irritation or roughness. They are ideal for the toilet as is also Cuticura Talcum lor perfuming. DuBtlt T WU 4Mrr-i' "Cltlemr Lb- BUY I U$JFk I Take a Year to Pay WHEN we place in your home A HOOSIER KITCHEN CABINET A HOOVER ELECTRIC CLEANER AN APEX ELECTRIC WASHER A BUCK'S COAL, WOOD, GAS OR COMBINATION RANGE AN ACORN GAS RANGE We feel that we have established friendly relations be tween your house and ours. We Have Mutual Friend s That's why we say for a small payment down we will deliver any of these and you may take a year to com plete the paying. Established 1885 MCCuticm Sop t have without mvt. Bawu-yaiBK ar . Z3jm3Barmwi. mmn .uw.1 warn a