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THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 24, 1921 PAGE SEVEN otnari 9 Household.- Children W Cook-inK Fashion 1L - Little Stories For Bedtime BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Right and Wrong in Dress JERRY MUSKRAT HAS A DAY BUSY There van the strange pond in (T'h Own Forest, and there was the 2na of ugs and sticks and mud which had made the stranse pond, but look as they would, Billy Mink anil little Joe Oner and Jerry Musk rat and Orandtather Krog and Spot ty the Turtle could see nothing of the one -who had built the dam. Jt was very queer. The more they thought about it the queerer it swtr.ed. They looked this way and they looked that way. There is one thing very sure, and that is that whoever built this dam had no thought for those who ilve in the Laughing Brook and the Smil Iwg Fool." said Grandfather Frog. "They are selfish, just plain every day selfish, that's what they are! Now the Laughing Brook cannot lauch and the Smiling Pool cannot mile while this dam stops the wa ter from runing and so " Grand father Frog stopped and looked around at his four friends. "And so what?" cried Billy Mink Impatiently. "And so we must spoil this dam. W murt make a pla-e for the wa ter to run through," sand Grandfa ther Frog gravely. -Of course. That's the very thing!" fried Little Joe Otter and Billy Mink and Jerry Muskrat and Spotty the -Turtle. Then . Little Joe Otter looked at Billy Mink, and Billy Mink looked at Jerry Muskrat. and Jerry Muskrat .looked at Spotty the Turtle, and after that they all looked very hard at Grandfather Frog, and al together they asked: "How are we coinK to do it?" Grandfather Frog scratched his " head thoughtfully and looked a long time at the dam of logs and sticks and mud.. Then his big mouth widen ed in a big smile. "TV"hy. that is very simple." said he. "Jerry Muskxmt will make a big hole through the dam near the bottom because he knows how. and the rest us will keep watch to see that no harm comes near." -The very thing!" cried Little Joe Otter, and Billy Mink and Spotty ttie Turtle, but Jerry Muskrat thought it wasn't fair. You see. it gave him all of the real work to do. However. Jerry thought of his dear Smiling -" i ooi ana now lerrmie n wuu m ue if it should smile no more, and so ! he set j to wdrk without another word. Now, Jerry' Muskrat is a great worker and he had made many- long tunnels -into the bank around the Smiling Pool, so he had no doubt that he -ould soon make a hole through this dam. But almost right away he found trouble. Yes, sir, Jerrv had hardly began before he found real trouble. Tou see, that dam was made mostly of sticks in stead of mud. and so instead of diccmi his war ill as Tie would have rtone into the bank of the Smiling 4 Pwol. he Aad to stop every few min- tea to gnaw off sticks that were in V the way. It w as bard work, the hardest kind of work. But Jerry Muskrat is the kind that the harder the work to be done the more determined he ' is to do it. And so while Grandfather Frog sat on one end of the dam and protended to keep watch, but really took a nap in the warm sunshine, and while Spottv the Turtle sat on -v s t 1 It Was the Hardest Kind of Work the other end of the dam doing the same thing, and while Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter swam around in the strange pool and - enjoyed them selves, Jerry Muskrat worked and worked and worked. And just as' jolly, round, red Mr. Sun started down behind the Purple Hills, Jerry- broke through into the strange pond and the water began to run in the Laughing Brook once more. Next story Jerry Muskrat Has a Disappointment. (i w 's-r 4 rtsv- -- Sis,'?., v M v..Ai4'.. . V 1 . TL I ( CIV' H c CONFESSIONS OF A HUSBAND. Tke Man's Side o Married Lale EYELET EMBROIDERY EFFECTIVE Post Tdasties are"WhatsWhaf intheWhosWho" of Breakfast Foods says OF ICE BOX The ice chamber of your ice box was not meant for foods. Vegetables put right on the ice prevent free cir culation of cold air and rob the other parts of the refrigerator of adequate refrigeration. The section directly under the ice chamber is the coldest part of the ice box. Cold air "settles," forcing warm air up. Milk and butter and any foods that need to be kept specially cool should be stored in this art of the refrigerator. Menu for Tomorrow BREAKFAST Grapefruit, but tered egg on toast, coffee. LUNCHEON" Potato soup, toasted crackers, butter scotch pie, tea. DINNER Mutton broth, fish cro quettes, radishes, hot rolls, aspara-J gus souffle, strawberries, sponge cake, coffee. . My Own Recipes " After boiling the mutton until the meat drops from the bones strain broth. Then add barley to broth and boil for an hour. The barley should be blanched and parboiled before adding to the broth. Buttered Eggs on Toast Four eggs, 4 tablespoons butter, Vz teaspoon salt, teaspoon pepper, buttered toast. Melt butter, but do not let bubble. Beat eggs slightly with salt and pep per. Pour into stewpan containing melted butter and stir briskly until thick. Pour over toast and serve. . Butter Scotch Pie One 'cup brown sugar, cup boil ing water, 1 tablespoon butter. 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup milk,' 1 egg, baked pie shell. Mix sugar, boiling water and but ter. When boiling add the flour mixed with the yolk of egg and milk. Stir until thick. Pour into shell and cover with white of egg beaten until stiff and dry with 2 tablespoons of sugar. o CHILDISH EFFECT The straight bodice, with very lit tle decoration and attached to a full s fiincv of the. moment for 'rocks of dark silk. These are par ticularly youthful. o EVENING GOWNS The dyed lace evening gown is often accompanied by a square cape of the same lace lined with taffeta. This shows the proper (left) and the improper (right) way to dress. On the right the gray hat (1) and the gray dress (4) only accentuates the sallowness of face, and the light hair 2). The V-neck (.3.) and the narrow belt (5). with the vertical lines of the fringe trimming (6) emphasize the thinnessof the body. The figure on the left uses a rounded collar (l)ota dark material setting off the light complexion. The- broad belt (2) gives the appearance of added weight to the figure while the dress has the correct balance (3) that all dresses should have. 13. I Meet Edith's Father ' I had expected that Edith's father would be something like her. In manner he was exactly opposite. Edith was a mile-a-minute talker; old Mr. Jenkins was as careful o! his words as though they .vere HO gold pieces. He never used a sen tence where a phrase would d'j and never a phrase where he could Kpt by with a word. He made me do most of the talk ing. I felt, as 1 had felt the first evening with Edith, that I was on exhibition. But Edith found out about you by shooting questions at you from every conceivable angle; her father merely kept still and made you ' reveal yourself. When he evidently felt that I had told him all he wanted to know, he sketched very briefly the problem I with whih he was confronted in his new company. As he did so he watched my face intently. That was all. When he had finished he rose, shook hands with me and said I might hear from him. Not a word was said about salary, and that was the subject that interested me most. Dot had made me promise to call hsr up when I left Mr. Jenkins' of- Mce. but there was little that I could tell her. When I got home that night he was ready with fresh questions about what he had said and what I had said, but I could not tell her what she wanted to hear, and that was that I had been promised a good po sition with the new company. "I'm mighty sorry your parents are coming to visit us at this par- THROUGH A WOMAN'S EYES BY JEAN NEWTON 4 IGNORANCE IS NO EXCUSE Two persons in Vermont were mar- j ried at an evening party because a justice offered to marry any couple without pay who would ."stand up." These two fools "stood up" up and were married. We predict that every year that goes by will see their dis gust for their foolishness and for each other grow greater and greater. And the number of such persons who marry in haste to repent at leisure seems to be increasing every day. We have it from such a high authority as Judge Tobias, of the New York Court of Domestic Rela tions, that the startling number of people getting into matrimonial dif ficulties is due to hasty marriages, which he says came into vogue dur ing the war. "Some young people." he says "were hardly acquainted when they went to the altar, and a great many failed to look before they leaped. The point is that few complain of infidelity. They simply cannot agree." It is passing strange that a jnan or woman who would not take a business partner where the stakes are just a sum of money without ex ercising the 'utmost care and judg ment, will give not as much thought to the selection of a life partner where the stakes are one's body and ticular time." I began when it seemed that the subject of old Mr. Jenkins had been exhaused. But it was an unfortunate begin ning. Dot flared up immediately. "1 don't see why my parents can't visit me when they please." "Of course they can. and I'd be glad if they would come at any oili er time. (I had to say that). But right now we have to economize " "I'd like to knbw if you call it economizing to fuss with George about a restaurant check." "But dear, that was different. We don't want to be under obligations " "Yop're silly on the subject of ob ligations. If it comes to that, aren't we under obligations to my parents? Didn't Bobbie and I spend all last summer with them? And isn't it natural for them to want to see their only grandchild?" I said I supposed it was, but I am afraid I did not do so with a very pleasant face. The truth of the mat ter was 1 felt as friendly toward Dot's parents as I did to a couple of inquisitive porcupines. They were firmly convinced that Dot had thrown away her chance by marrying me, and they showed it in every look. I had never forgotten how they had opposed our marriage, and I suppose that for my part I showed, that. Mentally I made a note to be very busy during the week they would be in the city. H there were only some place in the neighborhood where I might drop in when I got tired of looking at my mother-in-.aw's face! There was Edith am George. . . . (To Be Continued) THE YOONG LADY ACROSS THE WAY and ideals, everything that counts. The increasing number of divorces, now one out of every ten marriages is an indication of what is happening because so many people of varying tastes, temperament and outlook are forming life partnerships. The mis marriage mill grinas on and in its vitals are crushed the hopes, pray ers and ambitions of two souls. Ignorance of the statutes excuses nobody and ignorance or defiance of the greatest laws in the world the laws of conjugal felicity exacts its relentless toll. The man who mar ries for money the woman who sac rifices her birthright of happiness for a title, the man who marries a voice, a piano solo or a pout the woman who falls for a divine fox-trotter. Apollo manners and a foreign accent all these embrace the- shadow and miss the substance. If there is one department of Jife where men and women should "go slow" and consider well what they are doing, it is this making of a un ion for life. "You can alwaiys get married" is no meaningless jest. There would be far less domestic misery and catastrophe if men and women chose their future life part ners as ' Goldsmith's wife chose her wedding gown, for colors that would not run and for qualities that would wear which last is saying a great deal more than a double column of soul, friendships, habits, family, ideas l "horrible examples." Ladies Let Cuticura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Young 3a.OfaaMnt,Ti0com.7c.errwhr. 'rfwnP IX., T-tsfe- 5 ffeutr Contented1 "toTS -t Too re lwy confident C- f , I j I f- JlSsSSL &i tht your beautir has been W J 'V Tuii developed to th highest l, Aiy 1 SWS 11 of its possibilities after - using Couraud's Oriental "V." J7 X -$ . Send 15c for Trial Sua 11 Af "A i JSyFerAT. H.koSe A Jfft I H i f-dar vffi JL ) VST" H m 4h r M : fe'' ""- &-CS THE "DIZZY" ENTERS! Enter, the "dizzy!" It is a new name for a girl in the flappe stage and refers to one who is just a little more so in every way than the flapper. That is, her skirts are a little1 shorter, her cheeks a lit- le more colorful, her eyebrows a lit tle thinner and her air a little snap pier than that of any one else. The "dizzy was coined in New York by a girls' service club which makes steadying them its mission. AN ORDINARY MAN "There was a strange man here to see you toaay, papa, saia uiue Ethel, who met him in the hall as e came home on Wednesday night. 'Did he have a bill?" "No, papa, he had just a, plain nose.' Edinburgh Scotsman. Tke rwx W th way the principle of U. m J",-" tb people l buy thlnejs ooht t pay a little aomethin alao. EXPERIENCED A Japanese "boy" came to the home of a minister in Los Angeles recently and applied for a, position. Now l happened that the household was al ready well supplied with servants, so the minister s wife said, I am sorry but we really haven't enough work to keep another boy busy. 1 "Madame." said the Oriental polite lv. "I am sure that vou must have You may not know what a little bit or work it takes to keep me em ployed." Christian Register. o LEARNING Senator Hall was talking about i fake oil company which had defraud ed its dupes to the tune of several millions. "We learn to do," he said, "by do ing." Then he added, with a smile: "But Derhaps we learn more by be ing done." St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. A SECRET. CAN SHE- BEAT MOLLA? England's woman tennis champion. Miss E. L. Collyer. Molla Bjurstedt. I. S. woman champion, is on her way to i meet Miss Collyer for the international title. ; ONE LITTLIDLEMISH Will Mar Your Beauty To matter how perfect the features or how preuily gi-wr.ej. if your com plexion is marred by a pit iple it only b'!eni"-"h, you cannot possess complete beauty, Litil facial blemishes can he eas f" removed by the use of Black and White Beauty Bleach. This delightful flesh-tinted cream "forms an invisible coaling which will clear the skin of tnn. fre'-kles, pim ples, unsightly blotches, liver spots au-.d similar blemishes. Black and White Soap should b used in connection with Beauty Bleach. It is a pure soap and a de lightful a.id in keeping the skin clear, soft and yo.uhfui. . TClarJC sum ' J - -n be found at your drug or depart ment store: Bleach 60o the package. i rc the cake. Free literature .nd samples of Hack and h. Powder and Talcum sent u I uest to F.ita Muray. 1'lough "deans as it Polishes" NEED PRINTED LIGHT A movement to suply Russian sev- SEMI-DRESS A t'nncv of llic somi-riecolletaffe is ants with the latest foreign scientific) tulle dIaping. on some of the smart pamplcts and bulletins is under way j PT ROWrls jt js drnwn around the in England. Hundreds ot learned bodice in .a siraisht line and allowed Russians -under the bolshevik regime have for years been cut off from lite rature dealing with recent advances in their particular fields. o Policewomen are becoming popular in Japan. Sa Co, Memphis. Tenn. White Face pon re- cuemii MITEWjI fr EUAGH ,)Pg mm I to stand quiie upright, veiling even the upper neck and chin. Surh an effect adjjs the softness of youth. Great Britain has 3i labor unions with an exclusive female membership. 4mm for the dress which has forsworn superfluous trimming, nothing is more effective than eyelet embroidering, cut to reveal a contrasting petti coat. The sketch at the right is from a dress worn by Dorothy Daiion. . Paramount star, and is of lemon-colored organdie sashed with Jade green. The dress at the right goes as far as any day-time summer frock dare in the way of elaboration. It is of blue and white dotted voile over a blu( siik foundation. DROWN IT IN FIZZ Germany is trying to drown in champagne its sorrow over defeat and its worry over indemnity pay ment. While Germans consumed only $.000,000 bottles of the bubbling French wine in 114. figures for 11 show that they drank 10.0ti0.000 bot tlesan increase of 4,00,t0. The official seal of the Confederate states has never been found, since MATERIALS Crepe moroccan is the exceedingly costly material in which smart Pari sians are ordering tjjeir outer wcap. Coats of it are quite unornamented. Though it is never made ready to sell loo costly, madame! TO REMOVE GREASE Remove grease spots from your itcben floor bv sDrinklins the snot with soap and then pouring bolting I It was hidden from federal authori- J Is better 1 water on it. ties. 'it awaken - Sleep is most important to your baby and be sure that, if you murt awaken him. you do it in such a way that it will not startle him. It - 1 Is better to let the rhild sleep until naturah. T" ' Harry Wteat do you mean by lett ing Mabla ta&t Vm a fool? La,rt WU. Tsa Mrrjr-vu U a secrat 7 For Your Furniture gives a high, dry brilliant lustre without hard rubbing 30c ro VOO ih - AD Dtalm How quickly it heals! Yes, that's the point. Al most the moment this geti tlo ointment touches the siclc akin, itching stops and healing begins. Does not burn or sting; eren when applied to th not irritated aarfare. Yoa can K-t it from yoor orucist. Resinol SPECIAL MOTHER'S AND CHILDREN'S MATINEE . SATURDAY AT 2:30 P. M. "THE MAGIC FOUNTAIN" BY Pupils of Yua Sonstegard King AND 'SPOCKS", a special children's comedy full of innocent fun laughter. ites 01 . white beaches a glorious, curving sweep of rippling waves and white foam at your feet that's the spacious summer playground at San Diego, Cfornia, for thousands already happily away from heat and dust, and for other thousands now coming. You will find nothing like it elsewhere. Swimming, surf bathing, dancing, motoring, fishing, golf -your pet recreations all are waiting for you here by the sea, with cool nights and days, and the salt'freshness of the ocean breesc to whet your enjoyment. Aquaplaning, that fascinating water sport which hereto fore has coaxed the wealthy to the far South Seas, and now finds itself at home in the blue waters of San Diego bay. Deep-sea tuna, a score of other varieties of ocean fish, and the bass and trout of mountain lakes, furnish abundant sport. Every attraction and accommodation of a thriving city is added to an exceptional list of sports and diversions, and living expenses are less than elsewhere. Whether you live in hotel, apartment, cottage or tent, you will find accommodations of unusual merit. The city's many modern hotels close to the bay, with their spacious lobbies and roof gardens, are especially equipped for the entertainment of seasonal guests, at reasonable rates. Make this your summer of real delight Eighty-five thou sand permanent residents and thousands of seasonal guests, are waiting for you to join them at Lalirornifit Sa DllCO-CALlFOmSIA Clcb, 51 Spreckels I-tui'.riing, San Diso. California. Grrnnrmrn: 1 should like to know more about San Iie(s California. Pleaae tend mr yout free booitict. ' LOW SUMMER EXCURSION FARES Come direct to San Diego over the New San Diego and Arizo na Railway, operated in connection with the Southern Pacific, and enjoy a daylight ride through magnificent Carriso. Gorge and old Mexico. Kami Cm. St. I v i ft tella osorc "Ha f California. Il Sian thia L tl coupoa nd