THE OREG ON ! SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 5,. 1920. Home-MacU Drinks ' By Mrs. Christine Frederick; - The Distinguished Authority on Houaibold EB Idiocy. M pAMA, buy me a soda," the frequent plea of the small child during the warm weather. . .Now, while our laws enforcing the inspection of beverage and other foods have greatly improved In the pest few years, it Is never theless true that as a cites "toft drinks" are most likely to be adul terated and artificially colored of flavored with chemically com pounded tastes and odors. : " And so it seems an unwise thing to permit young children to drink these things. Children teas for bought "pink lemonade only be cause a satisfactory equivalent U not provided at home. This year soft drinks are in greater demand than ever before. Why does the housekeeper not see her opportunity o save money and to better serve her family's health by making soft drinks at hornet There are on the market sufficient kinds of bottled fruit Jukes of the highest grade to form a basis tdf euch home beverages. 8he can also use the syrups from canned fruits. No artificial flavors can possibly compete with natural fruit Juices as a means of refreshment and cool ing tonic. Grape Juice contains (potash salts, tartaric acid, iron and is particularly high in ability to cleanse and keep the body tempera ture low. Lemons and lhnee are natural tonics. W should culti vate a wider fast for the bottled lime juice. A few drops 'Of it poured into Iced water will aave its the musslnees and delay of a lemonade. The loganberry' Jules is another refreshing flavor, with wide possibilities, as punch, shrub, etc. Pineapple and apple juice nay be bought bottled. The Juice of any berry (not forgetting the elderberry, free for the taking on the Summer road) has a sub-acid piquancy which delights and cools. $ven peaches, pears, watermelon, etc., contain salts and acids which are especially needful in Summer. These fruit Juleee inaf be used plain or partially dilated with shaved ice or eool water as substi tutes for tea and coffee at meals. A glass of grape Juice taken -with meals by an aenemic child or adult will aid digestion and in crease the blood supply". Similarly, apple Juice, loganberry Juice, ete will be found a healthful meal beverage for Anybody since they refresh without the harmful Stimu lation of tea and coffee. The Reason a LMOST every Confirmed bach J elor believes that ke might have married A treat many women. In his heart Of hearts he has an idea that almost every wom an who ever smiled upon him or blinked an Interested eyelash at him would only too gladly have become his wife. But, after all, siace be really never "popped" the vital question, what right has he to be so sure? I wonder how many hearts the boastful bachelor thmks he has thrown aside which he never reaDy had at all! Many a bachelor se! his friend walk off with one of his Old girls and secretly laughs, saying to him self that he might have had her. But could he have wen her? Tea. she bestowed coufitless dimpled smiles upon him. she sang her best for him, she tolerated him but that is the woman of it. That la the side of a woman the bachelor does not understand. Later,' perhaps, this same heart breaker of a bachelor sees his di vorced friend carry away another girl of his. But he alaps himself upon the back and goes forth to play the game of love again la catch a girl for another chum and add another to his list of reveries. Perhaps in old age the bachelor receives a revelation of the truth that never In his lite has he made, an actual "conquest"; that if-he had ever submitted hit neck to the matrimonial yoke It would then have been the (woman, not himself, who "withdrew gracefully." The divorced man and the wld- Appetizing-Menus for the Week MONDAY TUESDAY Breakfast Sliced Peaches, Cereal. Cora OysteN, Muffins. Coffee. Lunoheon Fried Smelts, Potato Salad, Whole Wheel Bread. Sliced Pteeappl. Dinner BaW Veietable Leaf. Savory Sauce, Creamed Salsify, Current Jelly, Caramel AJiAowi Ice Creasa,'"' WEDKXSDAY Breakfast Baled Apple. Grilled Bacon, Breakfast Put. Coffee. Luncheon En Plant " Stuffed with Calf LWer, Sponge Cake, fcedTsa. Dinner Roast Duck. Potatoes, Green Peppers Stuffed with ; Tomatoes and ; Cera. Grape Sherbet. Break fa$t Pear. Graham Muh " with Maple Syrup, Toatt. Coffee. Luncheon Rice and Cheete Croquettes, Tomato Sauce, Apple Float. Dinner BaVed Veal Culleti, Mathed Potatoes, Stewed Corn, Lemon Cornstarch Pudding. Thai Cream. Nowh It only a step to convert . any fruit bevetage.lnto a.soda by meant of carbonated water. Not all housekeeper know' that any drag store or grocery will supply their borne with, a case or less bf bottles - of carbonated water or "Ticby." This la what gives the "fizz" so dear to childish hearts, who delight ia a "soda not o t, much because of its sweetness or its flavor, but for that wonderful cascade of bubbles in the glass. By pressing the syphon lever, as much "fizz" as desired may be In jected into any beverage, making : it the exact counterpart of the "soda" one gets at the store. In addition to fruit drinks la the large class having milk aa an In gredient milk shakes, -eggnogs, snd particularly malted milks. Any drink with either milk, egg or chocolate added la most nourish ing. An egg-malted milk, for to ; ' stance, eaten with a few crackers, 1 is a "complete" meal for Summer. No more refreshing and less tax ' .tflg meal could be taken than such 1 a large glass of malted milk, with ! egg and chocolate flavor, and it Is ! especially suitable to. the needs of the harried housewife or children. One anemia child of six, who never could be induced to- take egg in any form, greedily drank such 'sodas" for its lunch, withmost happy results. Beaten eggs may also be added to the fruit flavors, chDled, and called by any fancy name desired. A basic syrup for all fruit mix tares Is made as follows: Add one quart of water to one pound of sugar and boil five minutes. Cool and add strained fruit juice in de ' sirable proportion. Juices may be bdttled at the time of canning or putting up any fruit, and this Sum mer it would be well for the house keeper to remember this when doing this work. Squeeze or mash the fruit into Juice, and strain through a coarse sieve. Measure the Juice and add half the amount of Sugar. Bring to the boiling point, stran through flannel or fine sieve; reheat, boil five minutes and, bottle at once. Peach, pear, pineapple and any berry juice can be bottled In this way and kept for beverage use. There are many syrups which ' may be made once a week and kept the rest of the time la the refrigera tor or other very cool place. Such syrups aave mach time and mussl ness in making drinks for unex pected guests, and are frequently more economical. Wky TkeyVe Bachelors ti r r 3 By Jane Baird. ower have the bachelor beaten ten to one. They really have made a "conduest," and they really under stand women. And the worst of it is that the bachelor doesn't know he is beaten! He struts about bragging about what he might have done and prides himself that he has always thrown his hearts to the four wlnds.s The truth is that, although he may chuckle up his sleeve and think he knows the ladles, he doesn't know as much about them aa a new-born babe. All the bach eloT'l reveries torn fnte pipe dreamt, and ever will.. It he wants to really find out what he can do instead of what he night have done he will hate to hunt up his chums who married! and get a few hints on the subject Woman is sd complex that it takea more than two or three hours of pleasant companionship to under stand her. The bachelor must have a great conception of the feminine natural And yet to hear him talk one might 'suppose the poor mar ried man a mere greenhorn. But if the bachelor wrre to start out with a widower orA divorced man to' win a wife th bachelor would probably have the hardest run. The man who has been over the matrimonial road once ts like a bby from college compared with a wild young stag from the back woods. Not that a woman has such a refining influence that she pro duces this great change, but that a woman ia a woman, and really to know her and her fads and fancies a man must have been married to her. THURSDAY Breakfast Berries. ' Steamed Rice, Scrambled Eggs, PopoTCrs. Coffee. Luncheon Duck and Orange Salad, Mayonnaise . Dressing, Tea. Dinner Beef Toegue, Spinach, Potato Croquettes, Banana Sponge with Rhubarb Sauce. FRIDAY Breakfast Canned Fruit, Broiled Fish, Sally Lunn, Coffee. Luncheon Egg and Romaine Salad, Whole Wheat Bread. Chocolate Frappe Dinner Veal Loaf, Tomato Sauce, Mashed Potatoes String Beans, Peach and . Almond Satad. Saltmes. ' .......... . . : ' J ' I :?VQJ : ' : -- -k; ;-:,' !.LJ m '. W " -' ? ft g-:;D ,:--: -S' Lf - t J r i - v J . i . , , ; . i mini fmmmn, mhm r-i. . , " A V I ?.U"i' ..wmiii-.w.it,i.i,im, inni.imwuiiwiH.il i , mm a l'l3"' "'"M.I'"IJ""1""""'' 'uniii uiiimwi i Slllitl I Ml I m I MaitHIHl I1V1 11I K I III liMWWtlBWUI lVimillHm iS bMS&WMUMMMMMaUMBmBNIMMMMUHMUMMMMMaM Famous Beauties of Stage and Screen, Nov 9 THEDA BARA. Photograph by CAMPBELL STUDIOS. An eggbeater, a drink mixer, a good squeezer and a wooden spoon are important aids in preparing Summer beverages. Never prepare fruit juices in tin or metal ware or use any but a long wooden spoon. The mere drawing-room woman is not the creature men encounter in their married life. No matter how many sisters a bachelor has, no matter how well he knows his mother, he can never understand them as he can a wife. The widower has a slight advan tage 'even over the divorced man in winning another wife, because he creates sympathy. A woman's heart is filled with the desire to 'comfort Even the hardest woman wants to comfort a child on the street when she sees it in tears. And so when gentle woman sees the lonely, sorrowful widower, ap proaching her path and asking for her lore, her heart opens and Alls with pity for him. The divorced man can, of course, concoel a tale of misery and abuse, and he usually does, ills little ex perience has quite fitted htn to know the feminine nature. Bat the bachelor is at the tail end of the race. Oh. yes. he THINKS he is the winner, butjftkt Is because he is merely tolerated.' Women will tolerate a great deal. That is one of their best charac teristics. If. however, the average bach elor should decide .to-stop bragging what he might have done and actu ally propose, he might have to get upon hia knees several times before he succeeded In getting a wife! All this goes to show that the bachelor's accounts of bis love af fairs 'must be taken with a large Krain of salt. They are Interesting, but only as fiction. If we want the teal truth about them we must look to some other person than the bachelor who figured in them. SATURDAY ; Breakfast Apple Sauce, Creamed Miacea Ham on Toast, Coffee. Luncheon Tuna Fish Croquettes. Tomato Sauce, Baking Powder Biscuit, Pineapple Salad, Cream Cheese Dressing. Dinner Roast Beef. Mashed Potatoes, ; Asparagus, Fruit Cup. SUNDAY Breakfast ' Sliced Peaches. Cereal. Savory Omelet. Toast, Coffee. ' Dinner (Cold) Cold Roast Beef. Bean. Asparagus and Carrot .Salad, Sweet Pickles, Pistadiio Ice Cream, . Sponge Drop. Supper Emergency Sandwiches, JeHy Roll. Iced Cocoa. C) 1C0. International This year, when canning, why not follow the plan of one clever woman who packs what she calls "Beverage Fruits" in pint cans? She cuts pineapple and large fruits into neat cubes and mixes several sorts to Bqauty Hints T-iNDLY advise me how to Xa- whiten a very much tanned neck and arms. MISS R. A. V. Lemon Juice is an old stand-by that never falls to remove tan, if faithfuljy used. It is too strong, of course, to use undiluted on the face. Use an equal quantity of water or of rLSjwater with it Her is a "honey paste" whlich many have used with marked success Ut whiten the skin. Wear a simple cloth faee-mask and coat the under side thickly with this paste; Ground barley t ounces Honey ,...1 ounce WhHe el one egfl. Wash off la the morning wrth tepid rosewater. CAN yon tell me If purely local applications of anything win reduce a double chin? ANX IOUS. v You can quickly reduce thpse unsightly rolls of flash beneath the chin by "ironing"' the muscles inta hardness with cold water com presses and applications of ' lee. Also, here ia a reducing formula that is safe and if persistently ap plied every day should ie effective as an absorbent remedy: Tincture of Iodine.... 30 minima Iodide of potassium... 60 grains ' Hyposulphite of soda. 2C gralfta. 1 Distilled water 7 ounces Aniseed water ..... .170 mlnina H OW should my face be mas agt4ng ' cheeks? B. Give your iace a cleansing rub with a little cold cream and btgin by massaging the muscles of the cheeks In front of the upper half of the ear. TJse the three fingers ' . of each hand, rubbing outward and upward with a firm but gentle touch, with a rotary motion whose circles would be about as large aa a silver dollar. After a while you ca feel the muscles pull taut about the corners of .the mouth, : thuff effacing the drooping lines from nose. If faithfully -done thie mas sage will, in time, strengthen the muscles so that the cheeks will ns longer sag and all the telWale Unas will be effaced. Teat art BerrSce. Ina gether In one jar to be used as garnishes, etc. Whole Cherries, whole red raspberries and currant juice make another excellent ."drink" ..mixture, which may be canned and used as needed. Tested Jam and Preserve Recioes - tr By Mary Peach Jam. , WASH and peel peaches. Press through a potato ricer. Measure, and for each pint of peach pulp add 1 pound of togar, 3 table spoons lemon Juice 'and a handful of shredded blanched almonds. Cook slowly until thick, stirring often. Grape, Orange and Nut Jam. PICK over and wash t pounds of grapes. Separate pupt and skin. Cook pulp until soft, attain, add skint and cook about IS min-' utes. Add 4 pounds sugar, 2 thin ly sliced oranges and IH pound raisins and cook until thick, stir ring frequently. Add a cup or more of chopped pecan nuts a short time before the Jam Is dona. Apricot Paste, , PRESS apricot pulp through po . tato ricer or coarse sieve and weigh It Add 1 pound powdered sugar and cook very slowly until it is so thick that it will pot run to-' gether. Pour out on large flat piatters which have bea rubbed with oil. Place fn a draft Car uays iq Become tnoroughiy dry. Cut into desired shapes, sprinkle with granulated eugar and again expose to draft: fcprmkle with granulatedS eugar and pack In air tight box, with parchment paper between layers. For apple paste use about pound powdered sugar to I pound fruit pulf. Helpiiil Hinto for Busy Housewives NutcrwkcTt for Stoppers. AGLAS3 stopper that refuses to come out easily may be read ily removed with the aid of the useful little nutcracge- . TAghling , Matches,' WHEN thereover of the safety match box is lost strike the matches on jhe windbw pane or any piece of glass. When Making Jam. A PAPER soaked in - vinegar', placed over newly made; Jam before putting on the cover wiil prevent its fermenting. Crest nrttaJm KinU BeserreO. Beautys By Lina Cavalieri, Tb Most Famous Living Beauty. I AM going to give you a few general rules that may be fol lowed in .choosing the coiffure that shall be moat becoming to you. first, you must be particularly care ful not to accentuate that which Nature haa already accented too much. If it happens that you have a round, chubby face, counteract this too decided tendency by building the hair high.- As nearly as possi ble give the coiffure the effect .of a pyramid. The one high point at the top of the head- will materially lengthen the face ;aad lessen that roundness which (tight tend to in sipidity. The high built coiffure will thus give special distinction to a face that had lacked it . Should the forehead be too low, comb the hair loosely back from it This will add to its apparent height .as well as emphasize, the, alertness and intelligence bfthe expression. If, on the other .band. Nature has given you the knobby by whicb I mean the intellectual forehead, the brow which ie full and high and broad, with projecting bumps, you most modify Nature's extreme by training the hair to fall in loose ten drils upon it Also comb the re mainder of the hair loosely from about it Never tightly, for that will only Increase the drawn, fright ened look which Nature haa al ready carelessly bestowed. To express this more succinctly, remember that If your face be broad, a high arrangement of the hair trill increase Its apparent length. 'If yours be a lender counten ance, then affect the low coiffure, for its tendency is toward breadth If the face be broad, do not build the hair out loosely about the ears. Instead, comb Jt upward above the ears.' But if the face be slender. Its ap- parent breadth is added to by the "" w" y u wui m ' L ' . I' m In any case If the face la bard or angular, its hardness la reduced " BVii wj j juftMuu i me barf. In selecting the style of wearing your hair do not forget that balance Is the law of beauty at it ii of wis-1 4pm. For instance, balance the heavy jaw by drawing the hair in r a loose mass well forward above 1 the brow. Balance the anub nose Lee Sunn, Pear Ginger. SELECT slightly underripe pears. Peel, core and cut into thin slices'. To pound pf pears allow t pounds sugar, 1 cup water and Juice of 4 lemons. Cut 2 lemon rtnds into shreds and add them. Add H pound naely chopped ginger root Cook gently, until very thick. Spiced Peach Jam. CVT 2,i pounds peaches In email pieces. Add I pound eugtr aad a spice bag containing i all .spice berries, a small piece -of gin ger root, tt teaspoon whole cloves, l Inch atlck of cinnamon, V4 tea spoon mace and 1 crushed peach kernel. Cook until thick, ttlrring freqeently, Seal la sterlllxed Jars. Pineapple, Peach aad Ahnesd a Sweetmeat. SCALD peaches quickly and re move salna. Out in small piecea. Chop pineapple and weigh fruit. . Alkrw equal weights of paaehes and pineapple. Arrange la alternate larra la & e1ao nrArv ing kettle, sprinkle each layer with sugar and lemon Juice. Allow pound sugar aad S tablespoons lemon Juice for each pound of fruit Bring gently te boiling point and simmer until as thick as apple sauce. A few shredded blanched almonds may he added to each layer If desired. raster zor attending. - ADHESIVE plaster is Just the thing tor mending ' hot-water hags, raincoats, gloves and rubber ' goods of all kinds.. ..... t - f'-' CsleaiiinnESeL--S--- TO make whlta enamel look like new rub thoroughly with bak ing soda, then wash, with hot soap euda. ' . - . t White Window Boxes, WHITEWASH , the . inside - of ; your window- boxes before filling with earth in order to keep out insects and prevent the boxes from rotting. - Coiffu by a loose coiffure, with no Juttlnf protuberance at the back to suggest that It is tbe corresponding pole of the nose. . As to the color of the hair, it I my Judgment we women would be far better off If we would leave it as it is. Nature Is the greatest and most accurate colorlst In the world. With very few -exceptions she matches complexion, eyes and eye brows perfectly with the hair. Transform your hair and you will be at the trouble to transform your entire person. For myself, I seldom change! the . atyle of wearing my hair Long ago I found that flat waves drawn low upon my brow and cheeks were peculiarly becoming to me. In it self the style happens to be a try ing one, but it suite me most re markably. The Italian women are almost .the only nation that can wear It to advantage. It somehow seems to belong to the large, soft eyes, straight-nose and delicate chin of the race. r Naturally, then, through all the) succeeding years, whether off the stage or on, I have worn my nalr in this fashion, because it look best that way. in fact I never Tary the style save when the times or character I am playing demand a change. r. It la my firm opinion that the woman who discovers the style of bairdressing that is adapted to her . individual atyle, and with some pos sible slight modifications, which are conceealon to the mode, preserves that general style until the chisel ing of the years has so changed her face that she requires a different cOiffure, la the clever woman. I knew a ytry lovely woman who dressed her hair in the same style for thirty years. It is admirable for her long, patrician features, set ting off their toingled delicacy and strength .and her rare, fine coloring. In time she will doubtless chance i aiiv hj one so iter ana looser, i llated to lessen the effect of I ageing features. But that time, f happily, is still far off for this truly - wonueruu woman. r S6 i I4ell you that in general, it II abaolntely true that preserving approximately the same outlinea of v a coiffure for most of a lifetime makel a woman, seem much young- Sthan does a constant changing out from one style of bairdress ing to another. . 1 R J if Jam. dry 2 pounds of figs. Skins may be removed or not Cut in Pieces. Add V pounds of sugar aad cup irater and cooDc slowly until thick. Seal In sterU Uer Jar. :--.;:. .5. Tomato Butter. CCALD $ pounde of ripe tomctoef O quickly, io that the skins may be easily removed. Place the tc matoea in a large kettle, add 4 cups sugar, 1 pounda tart apples, X cup mild vinegar and a spice bag containing 1 tablespoon cinnamon. H tablespoon ginger, tablespoon mncg.nd tablespoon, cloves. Bring te boiling point and boa until at thick at thick apple sauce. Stir frequently. Grape, Peach, Apple and Quince1 WA?? thoroughly, cut i Jfy the hard fmita in without peeling or removing cores. If trapes are used, crush them. Coves fruit with cold water and bring to boiling point. If apples are used, sweet cider is often used instead f Water. Cook until soft. Press through coarse sieve to re move teedt. Measure fruit pulp, and for each quart of pulp add av pint of sugar. tablespoon clove end 1 scant tablespoon cinnamon, -Spicet may be omitted. Then cook gently until as thick as thick apple sauce. Watch very carefully, as It burns easily. .... store ia sterilized Jar, k wmtening; Clothes. ANB teaspoonful of turpentine tst the washing water will help considerably in whitening whlta clothes. ' y Saving; the Cheese. :' X "RATE all the leftover scraps of J stale cheese 'with a' jrotmeg grater, store In a glass bottle and use for flavoring soups and sauces. C : Scorchless Muffins. FILL all. but one of the places in the -fern pan with batter and fill that one with water before put . ting into the oven. This Is a sura way - of preventing the - muff inn acorching. , - i ...