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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1925)
nturdny Evening, April 4, 1925 THEEUGENE QUAED Page is mo (Continued from pg lht) . j. Ml. LtVU xvvcu who "S?,3inid, and Nelson Perkins was " , man Mr. and Mr.. Durbin wiU .hir home in Gardner, where ' former u a forester in the Siub- Lduate of the University of Ore- wilb the class or Wis, ana huh ,ril collctfc, and a member of Gam- a Xu iraierunj. .... , :r families of Oreton, Mr. Lbin's 'amily beine early reaidents f .Marion county, and Mm. Durbin's ', Douglaa county, Ahout fifty memberiof the Ma- A. . . . i ....M.w of h ('JMMI run s """" ""' TMbjterian church gathered st the :,rch Wednesday for the annual u.Ium dav luncueuu. me uuiur wus ,vrn by the social committee of the ..riliarv. The main feature of the Latins wos the address given by Rlisn Uertrude Shult of New York, ud a member 01 me ioreigu mission ,.nrtl of the '1 resDyieriuii caurcur ...iinwini the luncheon a program Kvm given. Mrs. Sherman W. Moody .e;ng in cnargc. Kef. and Mrs. Bruce J. Giffen en tertained a number 01 fm uamma iplts nembers lor uniuur m iucir Biouie Thursday evening. . Th American Association of Uni- nilr Women held their monthly luncheon at tho Anchorage today. Mrs. Harry B. Torrey addressed the group on "American Drama." One of the interesting socfel club gatherings of the week was that of Lhe L. U. neju xuuisuuy aiieriiouu in the Elks temple. Mrs. G. W. Mel lon was hostess in the card rooms insisted by Mrs. Mary Tirronl. Mrs. K. H. Peterson and Mrs. O. E. Lee presided in the dining rooms. Hon ors at bridge were received by Mrs. Hiley Stewart, Mrs. Charles Taylor, Mrs. 0. Wilson. .The new officers recently elected were installed, and are Mrs. Hugh Earle, president; Mrs. 0. E. Lee, vice-president; Mrs. Itob ert Biddle, secretary; Mrs. .l'.x-J. lianas, treasurer. In two weeks the club will meet again, with Mrs. Kilcy, Snodgrnss hostess in the card room, and Mrs. Frttl Chess in charge of llie refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Rapp were hosts Tuesday evening to members of N. U. A. club at their home' for dinner and cards. Mr. and Mrs. Loy Howling were bidden as additionul guests for the evening. Mrs. Ella Steams returned Mon day eveniog from Portland after a visit there. ... Coining as a bit of interesting news this week was thnt nnuouncing the marriage of Miss Evaugoliuo Foster and Stuart W.. Ilurd. The wedding was a large event of last Monday at the home of the bride's father, A. J. KoBter, in Portland, Rev. . AV. E. Kloster officiating. The ceremony was performed be fore a huge bank of roses, daffodils and fern iplacedfsin.'tlle .living room with tall candclabras on either side. Itaskets of roses and spring flowers were placed about the rooms. Greet ing the guests at the door was little Miss Dorothy Hindmnrsh and assist ing about were three tiny girls wenr ing dainty frocks of nnstel shades. I'nti'icia Hindmarsli, Joanne llind- marsh and Eleanor Alny Collier. Pre ceding the ceremony Miss Ethclva I.ikins of Euccne nlnved' Men uelssohn's "March of the Priests," nnd during (he ceremony Miss El- Kins softly played the "Song of l.ove. The bride wore a luvely own of green crepe and carried a Slower Douauet of Onhelin rnpR nnrt "lies qt the valley. Her only attend ant, Miss Jcnn Steel of Eugene, wore an attractive Invender frock and car rion a bouquet of sweet pens. Mor- reie Unlpole of Eugene was best man. An informal reception followed the ceremony. A group of Pi lleta i sorority sisters of the bride as- "istcd about the rooms, including Miss 'ursaret carter. Miss Priscilla Eak m and Miss Dnrnthv V.nUir, M '"rcq iollior and Miss Edith Foster. "'"" or the bride, cut ices. Mrs. enaaii and Mrs. M. llimlmnr.i. poured. Among the out-of-town miests were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred CI h'T of Klamath Foils, Mr. and Mrs. Uinton Hurd and Miss lieruice llurd "t tugene, Mrs. Hnttio Kurzee of orth Dakota, and Charles Mullen of '.'iKene. Mrs. Hurd is a crnrlnnti. nf thB T"i v,-j,y ?f Orcon with the clnss of " ,?llc is " member of Pi I!eta .'ir. nurd was with the mar ines durinv !,- xr 'I'ird plan to make theii; home near r.ugene. Mrs. -w. T. Shoull. was hostess delightfully informal party at home Wednesday evenin?, invit ' a number of old friends in for a urprise party for Mr. Shoults. lhe ,8'" be'ng his birthday anniver ,Z, ' evening was spent with , "Dj Kmc' ollowini v-hich a "iK-lieon was served. Those in lhe 'ty were Mr. and Mrs. J. IV. War Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Mitclioll. " nd Mrs. Harry Shoults and .-hd-''0 . Mr. ,Bd Mrs. E. I. Korn, Mr. " "i : w- "loomfield. Mr. and '- Albert Warner and daughtor, . ,"r?trd Shou". Charles C. Warner, Mr- and Mrs. W. T. Shoults .'bout two hunHred persons attend. U.e benefit dlLntr of the Conerc- 1 chorrh K:ven Tuevlav eve 1 "cat the church. l,.'.' H,u ws hostess -o roea r of Sins Souci club this ofter "u. ' Iw! r',.A ' nnf" enterlnin M..J "mm alumnae at her home ""diy evenine. 5r. and Mrs. Frsok Jenkiui went rl,,"' w"k- -Mr- Jenkins 2 this .week, but Mrs. Jenkins 1 30 t stay f,,r another week or so. lXli:i"'lrl l)"u'" entertained V. TtZ. i . nral's at her home i , '""day for luncheon, bidding as d-: "l."'"1 "' M. Robert 1're.cott ! ' Mrs. R0f.r WiHi.m.. Mor'?' f'n M- Wilkn 'n'ert.ined i e.k w ol"b ""nibers this 'th a one o'cl.jek luncheon at STYLE DICTATOR URGES WOMEN TO BE INDEPENDENT 'Don't be Slave to Fashion," Advises Henri Bendel, "But Buy and Wear Clothes of Kind' That You Like Best" Mm Itski ISp wiini ! mfri Camilla Ponsetle of the Metropolitan Opera company refuses to be a slave of fashion. She shune flapper styles because she does not believe she looks attractive In them. In that way she achieves distinction and style In dress She is shown above in gown and two coats which accentuate her type of beauty. . . , By IIORTENSE SAUNDEUS (NEA Service Writer) JEW YORK, April 4. Women need an emancipator to arise ami free them from the tyranny of Dame Fashion. This Is not the opinion of a re former, but of our lending styje ar biter, Henri Bendel, who believes that individuality and personal attractive ness' must come first, then fashion. , "If a woman likes frills, embroid ery, and the decorative touches thnt the flapper scorns, she should have the courage of her convictions and wear them," Bendel said. "She should not adopt short skirts if they lire not becoming. Site should uot skin her hair back tight from her brow if she is essentially a woman .who needs fluffiness about her fare. She should not -wear straight line frocks if her figure suggests too many curves beneath. "My advice to every woman buy ing her spring wardrobe is this: DON'T BE A SLAV. 3. Study out your own needs and buy what you really like and what suits you, in stead of what all your friends are buying or what the sutofuvonuin wants you to have. If you bring out your own personality and accentuate it, you are well dressed no'matter what you wear, if you don't, you are a ! au impossible Ideal. Tho delicate sartorial failure, no matter what you j woman needst light colors and some have spent. ' I fluffiness to bring out her type. The "Naturally there mur.t be trends I .!uiioestie type of woman needs soft and harmonies to bo observed in f upks nnd feminizing. The exotic dress so thnt wqmen as a 'whole fit. woman needs color and splendor, into the current picture, but origin- Women aren't all toppers, but it's aiity and individuality is as much to , hr.nl to make them realize it. That's be desired in clothes ns it is in char' acter. "There must be fashions, if only for the assistance of those whose time is limited, and these fashions must express the feelings of the ma jority of women, but within certain limits, encli woman must express her self, not her neighbor." As he was speaking, we were I watching the manikins parading about in tne new spring mievy mat was just being taken out of its Paris wrappings. There were lovely printed silks, hnd kashas with- their smart slim coats to match, on Rlim, boyish fig ures skirts were short and essen tially sleeves were long, why they need on emancipator. "Some, women have nothing of the slave about them. Take Hose and Camilla Ponselle. stars of the Met ropolian opera. Thef are both exotic in type and they dress in rich and colorful materials that bring out their brunet loveliness. He showed mo two new coats Ca milia had just ordered one was of gold and orange tissue cloth lined with orange chiffon, with fur at Ope neck nnd sleeves, the other was -in sheer gold, and blm-k brocade with a capo of black chiffon banded in the brocade. It was very Unlit in weight, but very rich in effect. She had also selected a gown of black satin, very long, with a regular court train, nnd a tie of a wide band of diamond and pearls coming from But all women areu't flappers." I nrotested. 1 "hx nelly, Bendel replied. "But each shoulder. a thev would all like to be, as far as! Both the I'onselles absolutely their oppearanee is concerned. Tlyit's the reason you see so' many badly dressed women. They're following re fuse to wear short skirts or flapper styles. Both achieve a real distiiur tion in dross, her home. Favors of Eaatur were attractively used as the table decora-' tions. During the afteriMim's study i Mrs. Edwin L. Knapp led in tho dis- i eussion of Oregon poet and their work., The works of (Iimo! llal't, j Kiecces Gill, were taken up Vot the next meet ins I e works o? Hnzd! Hall will bo stuaicJ. Meat Substitutes Eugene society is interested. in the announcement that Mrs. Buth Bal- derree Wheeler, who has been travel- building. ing and living in the orient for sev eral years is to hold a sale and give a lecture on oriental art and gift ar ticles which she has collected, this Hill, Mrs. George Bogue. Mrs. Cas sie tlyde, Mrs. J. F. Finch, Mrs. C. T. Barnard. j TEUY often vegetables can be corn- Scores of Eugeneans attended the. T bined in made dishes to form; a benefit musicale and dance given last most acceptable "piece de resistance" evening by members of the Eugene , for luncheon or dinner, branch of the American Federation!, Whenever a vegetable dish is pre of Art, for the purpose of securing pared the seasoning should be of great funds for the university museum consideration. A suspicion of onion The musicale was given at eight o'clock In Alumni hall and was participated in Dy a number of the cam mi a music students and faculty 'I members. Several articles from the Luiiiiub i : Murray Warner art museum were on in the campaign for the new museum ( (J. )(iy in AlmmiJ hUL rolowing the budding Mrs. heeler has announced ; Jm,sicflle i!)e (nnce wa8 Riven in tho that she will give all returns from the , pvmimHiuin of ,he Woman's building, sale to that fund. Mrs. Wheeler is an Thp bpnpfit ,ms hppn aQ cvpnt of Oregon graduate. The sale is to be , intprnst for Rcverft! weck as several held Thursday, Friday and Saturday j )romillf,nt porson9 of the city have During the tea hour a nunibcr f hoen activelv working for its success, prominent Eugene women, will pre- Vnirom fnr (he PVening were Mr. and Mrs. Curl (1. Washburne, Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Chambers, Mr. and Mrp. W. K. Newell. Mr. and Mrs. H. r.. Buth, Mr. and Mrs. Eflie F. Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Snhroff. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Zane, Miss Maud Kerns, Miss Victoria Avnklan, Miss Camilla Leach, Miss Kate Srhaefcr. side, and will be Mrs. George H. Mc Morran, Mrs. Nelson F. Macduff, Mrs. W. W. Calkins, Mrs. Uruce Mogurt. Mrs. W. II. Jewett, Mrs. David Auld, Mrs. Lettie Mowrey, Mrs. Frank L. Chambers, Mrs. KHa Stearns. The sale will be herd from nine o'clock un til six o'clock each day. The auxiliary of the chamber of commerce is planning for one of their social meetings this coining Wednes day evening nt seven-thirty o'clock. Mrs. AV. W. Branstetter is chairman of the committee of hostesses for the evening, and is to be assisted by Mrs. George Blair, Mrs. S. B. Burton. Mrs. L. C. Barger, Mrs. John Buird, Mrs. W. H. Brooke, Mrs. F. L. Beard. Dr. Sweetser of the university boiany de partment is to give a talk on preserv ing Oregon wild flowers, as a part of the evening's program. Cards will be played. LONE FINE. April 4. (Special) The Lone Fine Sewing circle met with Mrs. Albert Dale March 12, members answering to roll call with j a household hint, which furnished ( much entertainment, the afternoon j was spent in telling of future planB j for the betterment of the club. The j next meeting will be with Mrs. Kin met t Uoward April i) nnd each lady is asked to bring a thimble and scis sors. Itollcall will be answered this time with an Toaster verse. The host ess assisted by Mrs. Beisbsne and Mrs. Lindley served a very dainty j lunch. Visitor present were Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Chambers, Miss Coral Lindley. Members were Mn. J. W. Brown. Mrs. H. Shrenk, Mrs. E. How ard. Mrs. N. Ijissin. Mrs. Blank, Mrs. Bice, Mrs. I'ackard, Mrs. Lindley, Mrs. Bupbane, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. Smith. The Birthday club was delightfully entertained yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. I. Barnard, the occasion being the hostess birthday anniversary. The afternoon was spent in visiting and with needlework, fol lowing which a luncheon was served. The rooms were caily decorated with spring flowers. Thoie In the party were Mrs. Jesse G. tfell, Mrs. J. M. Williams. Mrs. G. F. Conway. Mrs W. T. Shermnn, Mrs. Peter Nelson, Mrs. .1. W. 1'ixley, Mrs. Sallie Dan ner, Mrs. J. II. Daniels, Mrs. Andrew Dust With Damp Cloth Occasioally after sweeping it Is well to dust a carpet with a cloth wrung very dry out of clear water or water to which a little ammonia has been added. often lifts an uninteresting and "flat" dish into tho "savory" or "tasty" class. These recipes may be new to you and help solve the daily problem of "what shall wo have to eat." Casserole of Vegetables Two cups peas, 1 cup string beans, 1 cup diced carrots, j cup diced cel ery. 1 tablespoon minced onion, 1 head cauliflower, 4 tablespoons butter, S tablespoons flour, salt and pepper, 4 tablespoons grated cheese. Cut beans in small pieces. Re move outer stalks from cauliflower but do not separate Into flowerettes. Let stand in cold salted water for one hour, drain and rinse well in clear cold water. Melt butter, add peas, beans, carrots, celery and onion and cook five minutes. Shake the pan to prevent sticking. Sift flour over vegetables and stir lightly with a fork. Be sure flour is well blended with butter. Put cauliflower in the center of a buttered casserole and ar range prepared vegetables around it. Season with salt and pepper and add boiling water to barely cover mixture. Cover casserole and cook 40 minutes in a hot oven. Remove cover and sprinkle with cheese. Cook uncov ered utitil cheese is melted ami slightly colored. Your menu might be as follows: . Cream of potato soup, croutons, casserole cf vegetables, candied Bweet potatoes, molded spinach salad, whole wheat rolls, steamed orangjo pudding, coffee. Vegetable Loaf Five good -si ted carrots, 2 medium slxcd onions, 2 tablespoons minced parsley, 1 cup chopped celery, 1 cup dried bread crumbs, 2 eggs, 3 table spoons butter, salt and pepper. Scrape carrots and peel onions. Tut through the coarse knife of the food chopper. The parsley and celery can be chopped in the food chopper, too. Fut V egetables into sauce pan and stew in as little water as possible until tender. The water should cook away so there isn't more than one or two tablespoons over the vegetables when done. Add bread crumbs, but ter and eggs, unbeaten. Mix well and i season with salt and pepper. Form 1 into a loaf, roll in crumbs and dot with bits of butter. Bake on a well buttered baking sheet for 20 minute Ui a hot oven. Serve with a rich cream sauce. A nut loaf Is always good and makes an excellent meat substitute. It should be served with vegetables not too highly flavored, a salad and a fruit dessert. Nut Loaf One and one-half cups nuts, 2 cupe stalo bread crumbs and soft part of loaf, 1 cup milk, H teaspoon salt, I -8 teaspoon pepper, 1 tablespoon minced parsley, 1 teaspoon minced onion, 1 eggs. Puck crumbs into cup when meas uring. The nuts should be chopped rather coarsely. Combine nuts, crumbs, salt and pepper, parsley and onion with milk. Mix well and' add eggs well beaten. Shape into a loaf, roll in dried crumbs nnd bake 110 minutes in a moderate oven. Servo with celery sauce, tomato sauce or brown sauce. Rice and Nut Roll One-half cup rice, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon salt, -i teaspoon pepper, 1 cup chopped nut meats, bread crumbs, '2 tablespoons melted butter. Cook rice uutil tender nnd as dry as possible. Steaming is the pre ferred method. Let cool and add nuts, milk,' salt and popper. Shape m a roll, roll in bread crumbs and place on a well-buttered baking pan. Pour aver melted butter and bake 'JO minutes in a moderate oven. Serve with a well-seasoned tomato sauce. Savory Vonotaulos One cup dried beans, 1 cup diced carrot, 2 green peppers, 1 Spanish onion, 1 cup broken maeronni, cups canned tomatoes, 2 tablespoons but ter, 1 cup sliced mushrooms, salt and pepper. Soak beans in cold water to cover over night. In the morning drain ami pnrboil for five minutes in soda water. Drain and cook in boiling water mil tl tender, about three hours. Add carrots, peppers cut in shreds and union thinly sliced. Simmer until vegetables are tender and water is re duced to one or two tablespoonfnis Cool; maeronni in boiling salted water until tender, about 20 minutes. Drain and add to vegetable mixture with to matoes. Melt butter and saute mush rooms for five minutes. Add to vege table mixture, season with salt nnd pepper and serve. Stuffed Peppers Six green peppers, . 1 cup broken mocrnnni. 2 tablespoons butter, 1 V tablespoons grated cheese. V cup thinly sliced mushrooms, milk to mnk nioist -alf and pepper, buttered crumbs. lieniove slice from stein end. of pepperH and take out seeds and fiber. Boil in slishtly salted water for 10 minutes. Drain and plunge into cob! Witter. Cook mncronni in boiling salted, wut PC for 20 minutes. . Drain and blanch. Add butter nnd cheese and stir with a fork over the fire until well mixed. Saute mushroom in 2 tablespoons butter for three min utes and add to maeronni. Add just enough milk to ninko moist, season with salt and pepper and fill peppers with mixture. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake 20 minutes in a hot oven. Serve with tomato sauce. Cynthia Grey Says: I TEN GREAT MOMENTS OF WOMAN'S LIFE No. 7 The Baby niEN a men wanted to flatter a woumn, he used to tell her that she didn't lookher age. Now he tell? her she doesn't look her weight! After a love affair a woman always has a good cry. A man usually laughs! No man ever really knows woman until he has had a love letter from her. The life of a woman with her hus band is a series of experiments. An 1 the wise wife Is the one whcTcslizes thnt neither beauty nor wit csn hold her mate as a working knowledge of -i good cook book cant ' Questions Answers. Dear Miss Grey I am In love with two girls. I have been engaged to one of tbem for more than a year. She r very wealthy. I met the other one HOW BOBS ARE BEING CAMOUFLAGED HERE ARE SOME OF THE NEW METHODS PARIS EMPLOYS IN CAMOUFLAGING THE BOBBED HEAD. THESE ARE THE LAT EST STYLES OF COIFFURES. IN MOST OF THEM" A CHIGNON, FRENCH FOR SWITCH. IS USED. 4 v it tSMI r By tlYNTHIA GUEY , T LAST the white-capped nurse j has gone. And Sylvia and Sylvia the Second are all alone? The small Sylvia is only a month old, but she is monarch of all she surveys, nevertheless! For she Is a very strong-minded young woman, who shrieks for the things she wants . . . and gets them. "Dear me, it's two hours before her next feeding time," Sylvia the Mother thinks to herself. "I hope she won't sturt to cry beforo then. Because I won't know what to do with her if she does!" Thou she begins to look through all tho neat white clotlufs that the hos- .ibout six months ago. She has no money but to me "she seems the most wonderful thing in the world. Now what shall 1 do marry tho girl with muney or the poor one whom 1 love? - Lewis. The sole purpose of marriage is to permit two people who love each other' (o live together and rear a family. Money ought not to bo considered at all. The decent thing for you to do is to tell the girl with money that you find you do not care for her. It may hurt her for the time, but in tho long run she will be happier for know ing it now instead of later, Dear Miss Grey For Home time I have been going with o man several years older than myself. I call him my "sleiidy." Ho Is very jealous and so I have had to give up oil my school friends. Lnst week I went to a glee club concert with a boy my own age. My "sternly" Is terribly angry about this. T!e won't speak to me. Shall I drop him, or shrill I apologize? And do you think I would be htippy with a man si unreasonably jealous? Dubuque Rose. Yes, I think you would be hap py with n man whom you loved, no matlc how unreasonably jeo lotm he happened to be. But do you think you love this mnn? I don't. If you did, you would ho ; iil ud thnt be wits iealous of vou. ond you would have no desire to go to parties with the boy who Is your own age, or any other mnn, r for thnt matter. Don't apologize. There's no need for it, so long as you nre not engnged to the man you en II your "steaily." I Home Hints pitul nurse has folded away so care fully in the little chest of drawers that matches the blue bassinet. .... Powder, brushes, safety pins, cotton wooll Sylvia wonders wildly what all those simple, everyday things are for when it comes to using them in a baby's toilet. The brush, for Instance . . . there certninly is not enough hair on Sylvia the Second's head for an honets-to-gooduess' brush 1 . . , , . And how In the world will she over lift that little cuddly bundle of a duughter without breaking her, Sylvia wonders. With joy and terror in her heart she bends over the tiny atom In thb bassinet. Sylvia the Second teeter like a little bird. "Are you talking to your mother 1 . . . Of course, yon, are, yon baby thing, yon I" cries Sylvia the Mother. And forgetting all the things the white-capped nurse had told her about not spoiling the baby, Sylvia picks her up and holds her close to her heart, as mothers have done for hundreds and thousands of years be fore . . . long before books on the scientific care of infanta were ever dreamed of. Humming a little tuneless lullaby, Sylvia rocks Sylvia the Second a very bad thing to do from the view point of the doctors and nurses, but a very nice thing, according to the ftaby. Fur Trimmings Are "All The Better" Perhaps yon, too, are hesi tating to have your last season's coat, snit or dress cleansed because of its fur trimmings. Hesitate no longer. It isn't necessary to remove for trimmings when oleansing a garment. Fur is so stylish this year and looks beauti ful when properly oleansed. Send us your soiled, fur- trimmed garments to be cleansed, tnev will ba won derfully refreshed. If we clean it, it's CLEAN Qity gleaners E. NAYLOR, Prop. Phone 220 1 IJKFOKK doing rough work such as scrubbing, polishing or anything1 that Is apt to moke the hands very I dirty, greaso your hands well with cold cream or vaseline, and they will bo uninjured during the process and the dirt will not be ground into the crevices. j Doughnut Hint A fourth of n teaspoon of ground ginger added to the grease In which doughnuts nre fried keeps them from , absorbing too much fat. j Use Lest Heat If you are baking a layer cake you will require less heat than if you are baking it in a solid loaf. Fuller Yet Slimmer j The sprittg dn'sses are fuller than i we have been accustomed to, but j hey giro a slimmer silhouette, be-1 cause it In achieved without severity! or apparent effort. ! The Rprlnfl Coat The cost of this season may hi belted or unbHted, and may be seven eighths or three-(iinrters in length. Virginia Carvel Solid Silver WOMEX are so quick to rocognizo more - thnn-tlie-surfacc value. They appreciate nt once tho truo worth and meaning of Solid Silver, genuine aJl the way through. For Solid Silver, Precious Through tho Ages, can only be imitated, never equalled. Yet Virginia Carvel Solid Silver (Sterling) is not ex pensive. A sot for six may bo had for as little as $75.00. Singlo gift pieces from $2.50 upward. LUCKEY'S JEWELRY STORE W. W. BRISTOW I I a wtv.x V" $ jl