TUB r.KK: OMAHA. FRIDAY. MARCH' 10. 1P2 Society t Chnnunmn-Ncloon. i Announcement it nue ef the n;rntif r( Mi KUie Harriet Nrl. on, d4glurr(( Mr. and JUri, Funk Nrl.oii vt Colon, Nfb., to Aug u I hristtanson, lo of Colon. Jhe trmnnny look puce in Omaha Wr.lncxlav aftcrndoti it the twine of the hn.lr'a couinn, Mr. nl Mrs. JniM TriiiiM. The briJ wore dark serge tiit and rose -colored list j rnd carried a torus of f e tr. f Mr. and Mr. Clinttunton will live I in felon. Mr t. Kill a Popular Viaitor. , Minv affair are bring given (or ; Mr. V. II. 11 .til of Kansas l ily who , arrived Wnlne id.iv inorninir lo lie ; the surt of Mr. L A. Kerr lor 10 ,! day. Mr. and Mr. Hall formerly f Ut4 in Osiulu. IVi'Iav Mr. Kerr will enterum at a bridge luncheon for lirr (;uet when coveri will be laid for tht Mrdme F.. A. lar;holomew. James fione. O. A. Kunyon. C. H. l.owry. C. R. Hamil ton, I R. Knti'1-.cn, George F. Ah tin, John II. Thompson, jr., Franklin htr.irn and Daniel drown, Monday Mrs. Hall will he the gue-t of Mr. J. H. ration, jr., at a luncheon and bridge partv at the Athletic clu!, Tiictrlay Mrj. Kerr will Rive a dinner for I J at her home lor Mr. Hall. Wednesday he will he honor pnet at a luncheon bridge given by Mr.li. A. Bartholomew, and Thursday Mrs. James Done will entertain in Iter honor. Bridge Luncheon Club. Mr. Clinton K. Hamilton enter tained the Vedneday bridgr luuch eon club at the Athletic club 'cdne lay afternoon. Member of the r'ub .include Mcdamc J. F. Gable, Ben jamin F. Koth, Fi. V. Miller. J. H. , I'urptin. R. L. Owen, Howard Hawk and C. K. I.owrv. Mrs. W. H. Hall of Kansas City,) formerly of Op. alia, and Mm, L. A. Kerr were guests of the club. Mr. Hawk will be hostess for the j thib at !ie Prettiest Mile club on I March 22. Home and a Career Possible Says Great Artist JLEEPY-TIMC. TAUU ' J n i ft ; I- Li arvlTI THE TALE OF M-ASTER MEADOW THim 5C0TT BAILtT I Tea for Eastern Visitor. About 60 guests were present Thursday afternoon at a pretty tea given by Mrs. V. P. Haney for her house KU"t. Miss Helen Hagcdoru. The house was decorated with daffo dils and yellow candles. Assisting the hotesj were the Mesdames Vilf Guild, Ralph Hitchcoclf, Edward Armstrong, William Wherry, Lynn Campbell and Jack Algaier. Drama League. Children are especially invited to attend with their mothers the Drama league performance at the Fontenelle hotel at 4 p. m., according to Mrs. Samuel Burns, publicity chairman. The program will be given by Miss .Marguerite crewman s Children s School of The Theater." and will in clude scenes from "The Tempest" and "The Three Wishes." Job's Daughters. Job'i Daughters will hold a busi ness meeting Saturday at 2 p. m. at the Masonic temple. The organiza tion is working up an amateur play : for presentation after Lent, coached by Mrs. Irving Bcnolkcn. Programs I are being presented at the business , meetings, including songs, dancing and readings. Margaret Matzcnatier, j sing at the Auditorium March 24, , believes it is possible to combine motherhood and a career. She is the mother of an 8-year-old daughter, Adricnne. She accomplishes this by never doing things by halves. "When I am on the opera stage," she said, "I am not half a singer, but I en deavor with all my heart and all my soul and all my mind to be a singer, and when I am at home I am not half a mother, but, similarly, I en- Margaret Matzenauer. who willldeavor with all my heart and all my soul and all my mind to be a mother." Adricnne lives most of the year at the country home of the family in Westchester county, New York, with her pets and flowers. She does not go to the theater, to concfrts, and especially not to the "movies." In fact, she is kept away from crowds in accordance with her mother's ideas. The Tuesday Musical club present this great artist. CIIAPTERTVJn. Under tht Snow, Winter had come, lhe snow lav deep over Pleasant Valley. Hut Matrr Meadow Mouse didn't object to that. On the contrary, he bad welcomed the now. t'.ven Johnnie lire en. peeping out of hi chamber window at the first snowfall of the eaon, hadn't been any happier over it than Master Meadow Mouie wa. To Johnnie Green the mow meant fun. To Master Meadow Moue it meant fun and something more. At lat lie could scamper about the meadow without being feen by everybody. For he set to work at once to make tunnels beneath the snow. They ran in every direction from hi house. And he was for ever pushing them farther and farther. Through thoe tunnel, Master Meadow Moue could took for seeds and grain in the stubble. And, while he was rambling along his network of halls, he didn't have to worry about anybody's making trouble for him. unless it was Peter Mink, per haps, or Grumpy Weasel. Of course Master Meadow Mouse didn't stay under the snow all the time. Now and then he liked to climb up into the open air. And he made many shaft that led to the world above. Although most of the birds had gone south to spend the winter, there were still some that Master Meadow Mouse had to shun. Old Mr.jCrow wa spending the winter on the farm. And there were Solomon Owl and his cousin Simon Scrcechcr, who hunted over the meadow nightly. And at dusk, sometimes, a fierce hawk known as "Rough-leg," would SEW My Marriage Problems Ad! Garrifon'a New Phase of "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE' 1 H,t 4 t!. I, t;j.ij k.,nt, wli...e I ,jd turn unable l strep n1 iut to K-ttie . great Hut he nii j' t to ak lmi for a sedative l nude me hnmrik (r v tile irnable ne , forget in slumber in ltud tUti!e arLling U.e. I liWuiiii.iit. Itnl wlmi bad (Inn patted a niil iuirr4ld riming, and ,iuy bailiiuiie at mind iue ii4 dimmed j Ha glad tthrii braid, a I t'H" uiy.rli to tli dor, my a.ionithrd Ipo.rd, he fdij nci-in" knol upon flu rye brtuM Uuky sunding imp Personals Problems That Perplex Antncred bj BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Charles Mead left Thursday after ' noon for a trip to Denver. Mrs. G. G. Gideon of Omaha is at Excelsior Springs this week. i Miss Zerlina Brisbin returned Tuesday morning from a several '.weeks' stay in Denver and Kansas J City. 3 Mrs. L. II. Hall and small son ar ; rived this morning from Eugene, ; Ore., to visit Mrs. Hall's parents, ; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Carter. 5 Miss Henrietta Rees writes from ; Karnak, Egypt, of a beautiful trip up the -Nile. She has also visited the i famous temples of Karnak. ; Mrs. Henry M. Simpson leaves I Friday for Los Angeles, Cal., where ' she will visit her son, Harold Simp- son. She will be gone six weeks. Mrs. Bertha Clark Hughes, su preme president of the P. E. O., is , leaving early in April for California, , where she will visit local chapters I antf Sttend the state chapter meeting in Tasadcna. s A cable has been received from Mrs. Joseph Latenser and her daugh- : ,i ... t . , t ier, miss joscpnine Latenser, an fnouncintr thev have landed in Na- pies. They left Omaha February 18. John F. Stout and his daughter. ' Miss Gertrude Stout, returned Wed j nesday evening from California. They . spent a month in Los Angeles and C motoring about in southern Cali i fornia. j Miss Elizabeth McDonald will v spend her spring vacation on a cruise to Bermuda. She will sail from New York March 24, with a party of , school friends from Bradford acad- l emy, where Miss McDonald is a stu- dent. They will be gone about two t weeks. I Mrs. Harry Hunsaker arrived Wed j nesday morning from Denver to ? spend a few davs. She is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Brandt. Miss . Winifred Brandt and Mrs. -Huiit sakcr's son, James Hunsaker, of Omaha, are to be roarried next month. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Gamble of Omaha arrived in New York Mon ; day on the "Arabic" from Naples, I Italy, and Mr. Gamble reached Omaha this morning. Mrs. Gamble ; went to Boston for a visit, and will also stop in Buffalo before her re i turn to Omaha early in April. Mr. . nd Mrs. Gamble spent two months abroad. I Birth Announcements. ; Mr. and Mrs. Martin Harris an nounce the birth of a daughter, Jane Allcne. March 9. Mr. and Mrs. Lorenza Curionean nounce the birth of a son March 7 at St. Joseph hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Harman announce the birth of a son, Charles W. jr., March 7, at St. Joseph hos P'tai. , Mr. and Mrs. George R. Vine an nounce the birth of a daughter, Mary . Lou. at the Nicholas-Senn hospital, March 7 t . Shower for Bride. Mrs. Edwin Davis will be hostess next Monday at a bridge partv and shower, honoring Mrs. Jesse Thur mond, a recent bride. Common Sense . ct and businesslike even when he cares for a girl, or should he be romantic and full of sentiment? My chum thinks a man who is worth the name should always be stern and strong, and that ven if a girl' misses something in his lovemaking shell know there s nothing weak and silly in his character. v "I, on the other hand, feci that unless a man can give ate tenderness and thrills there's nothing like real love between us. If a man wouldn't give up any engagement, business or otherwise, to come at my call, I'd say he didn't love me. I've broken my engagement because the man to whom I was ready to give everything, would neglect me any time for work I didn't see much happiness in such a marriage as ours would have been. I've an idea you'll say I'm right." . - You're wrong, my dear Elsie, both' in imagining I'll say you're right I and in the theories you defend. Life is something besides love makiiig. It is something besides illusion and sen timent. Our whole existence is based on certain economic conditions which we cannot escabe or evade. The butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker must all be met and reckoned with. Any practical and sane man realizes that neither he nor his love are much good to a woman unless he fortifies the gift of himself and his feelings with a background of suc cess. A worth-while man wants to save his wife from poverty and even from the minor worries of life. lie wants his wife to have as much as the rest of the women she knows. He longs to have his children well educated well dressed, well fed and well placed in the world's scheme of things. Men are used to having "depend ents." They are brave and cheerful about it. But it takes a lot ot cour age to assume the responsibility of taking care of a wife in sickness and health and of bringing children into a world which will give them noth ing for nothing. When a girl is in love she likes to dream through the day. She likes to spend the evening in her lover's arms. And when he cannot be with her all the time, she may be so senti mental, impractical and selfishly ab sorbed in her feelings that she doesn't stop to think of all the other things besides love that go to make up the world. But the wise woman recognizes all the elements that go to make up life, and so she doesn't want her man to be a mere lover. She wants him to be a fighter in the fray of life, a citizen of the world and a conqueror of the temptations that come to him from the dreams he too might like to make all of existence though life is an affair for the wide awake and ener getic. A man's love is the bigger and stronger for recognizing that it can never be all- of life. ' -v Hi- a. Do You Expect Perfection, in Your Partner? When a husband or a wS'te expects a flawless partner, someone is due to get a shock none is perfect. Every person has one or mc peculiarities. Few persons but have several traits disagreeable to others. When a woman gets dissatisfied with her husband because of some faults which she thinks he posses ses, she may feel that she knows of some other man who would not do or be like her erring husband, But she may not know that her own husband has many admirable qualities which the man she thinks so perfect in comparison does not possess. A man in comparing his wife with ouier women many tunes may see ways wherein she does not measure up to someone he has in mind, but the chances are that if he is fair, he will find that she is far superior to the one with whom he compares her. Husbands and wives should real ize that no matter how perfect im agination miy picture, reality does not discover one who perfects in all things. There would be fewer divorces if persons made greater ettort to he pleasing to the husband or the wife, and that ought to be rather easy since the only one whose opinion really matters is the husband or the wife, as the case may be. (Copyright, 1922.) Train School Mothers. Mrs. Fred Kcutcher and Mrs. Tosepli Jindra will entertain the Train School Mothers club Friday afternoon at the home of " Mrs. Keutcher, 130 Lincoln boulevard. ADVERTISEMENT. I A Silly Song ' ' rw a rurvrr htph Oh listen, dear reader, a song I will sihg, of the teas and the tonics I take in the spring. They are al most too countless to mention. Full of all sorts of slop I am fiilled by my wife; for she thinks sassafras is the essence of life and believes in an ounce of prevention. She gets out her kettle each April or March and throws in some quinine and moth balls ' and starch, and starts the concoction to boiling. She opens the window to let oot the smell and the folks who go by on the highway all yell and ask what the dickens is spoiling. But she goes on brewing and heaves in the pot some garlic and stuff she had almost for got, then she pours the result down my throttle. And if in the spring I should happen to croak, a little round hole in my hide they can poke, and pour me back into trie bottle. Speaks Highly of This Home Made Cough Remedy Says It Acts With Unusual Speed Loosens the Mucus Relieves the Irritation and Stops the Cough When he hcAri it he turned quidtlg and hunied back whei-4 .be came from. beat his way back and forth across the snow-covcred stretches in the hope of catching one of the Meadow Mouse family unawares. In spite of such unpleasant neigh bors, the big Meadow Mouse family managed to have many a gay frolic under the stars on crisp winter nights. Sometimes Johnnie Green, wandering over the fields on snow- shoes by day noticed a lacy tracery on the snow. It was the tracks of the tiny , toes of Master Meadow Mouse and his dozens- of cousins. At first Johnnie almost thought that he had stumbled upon the scene ot a revel of fairy mice. He did not know then that the Meadow Mouse family had a village of their own right un der his feet. But Solomon Owl and Simon Screecher and old Rough-leg, the hawk, knew all about the habits of the villagers. In fact they some times complained about the way the Meadow Mouse family had built their tunnels. They agreed that there were too many holes leading down to the village streets. It gave the Meadow Mouse people too many openings into which to dive in case of a sudden surprise when they were having a moonlight party. "If they ever invited me to one of their affairs I wouldn't care what they did," Solomon Owl remarked one evening to his whistling cousin, Simon Screecher. "If they'd' wel come me just once to one of their dances I'd be satisfied." "It's plain that they don't like i you, his cousin remarked. Nor you, either," .Solomon Uwl boomed. And then all at once he burst forth with a peal of ghostly laughter ,"Wha, wha. whoo-ah!" Now. Master Meadow Mouse had just crept out of one of his door ways and was looking up at the stars when that shivery sound came roll ing out of the woods. When he heard it, he turned quickly and hur ried back where he came from. There won't be any fun to night,", he grumbled. lijopyngnt, 192;.) The Question tht Doctor Atktd Madge, The rotund luite liotue ph,vitian of the htiul littfitrd with an admir able air uj priirsional pluitude to my tory tl the incident wImcIi had rc-uhed in to bizarre a Iicoloration of my lorrhcad ud eye, but a Hid den upward glance at hint revealed to me ihat he wa eyeing mc keenly a I talked. I gitotcd that he i weighing me and my Mory, ami ( felt a fierce" luile ihruli of uuju-t re sentment at the ilikfotrry. That he accepted the tale a truth ful, however, I .oou realized al though I wa hardly prepared for hi comment. "It mu-t have bent a terrifying rs perience I understand you were traveling' alone," he aid casually. Naturally I had made no alluxion to the mysterious foreigner who had forced hi companion.hip upon me with the plea of being my father' iriend, Dut the dapper little doctor ' question brought the dinuguilH'd personality of the man whom I had eluded io forcibly to my mind, that I had hard work to make my reply as casual a his comment. . "You could hardly call it traveling. Dr. McDermott," I said, n I at tempted a smile, then, remembering how ghastly the rlTort must appear. I hurried on with my chatter. I simjy ran in from the cast end of the iland for a dav or two, and was i caught in that cru-h in the station. And it was a terrifying experience, j but people were mot kind. I wa , carried by some one into the waiting room and the matron took care of me until I was able to take a taxi over , here." The physician shook his head dis- j approvingly. "You should not have made the i journey here alone after being I stunned by that blow, ' be said. "ou might have swooned again. But now you are here." he went on more briskly, "you must not think of going out again today, or, indeed, tomor row." 1 "Is the injury then so serious?" I asked in alarm. 'T thought the in convenience of a black eye was the worst I had to expect. "So it is, so it is!" He rubbed his ptiimp, well-kept bands together. "But the shock could not help but be severe from a blow hard enough to knock you unconscious even if it were for only a few seconds, and you must have rest and quiet. He put an exploring delicate fore finger on the discolored surface again. This is going to be quite painful, he said, stepping to the adjoining bathroom and turning on the hot water faucet. "And I am afraid that you will have neither strength nor inclination for the work of attending to it. Have you no woman friend in the city who could come to you for 48 hours? It would be absurd to have a trained nurse, and yet, you really should not be alone." Dr. McDermott's Advice. I shook my head decidedly. There were only three women in the world beside Katie and my mother-in-law of whom I would ask such a favor Lillian, Katherine and little Mrs. Durkee. The first two, of course, were out of the question, and while I knew well that it only required a word of my need over the telephone to bring "Her Fluffiness" flying in from her Marvin home, yet I could not would not speak that word. Not that I minded the friendly eyes of my little neighbor, even with the touch of amused malice -with which I knew she would view my accident. But her knowledge would inevitably mean that of Edith Fairfax also. In all probability, Edith herself would come in to see me if for no other reason than to appear properly solic itous for Dicky's wife. And I knew of no other eve from ho critical and amurd trrutmy I houh phrink more Kiumvrly than from tho o( the woman whote unrequited afTec lion for my luuband I had known from her own bp long ago, "All my frjendi are iay from the city." I .aid. Ir. McDermoit brought oft gauze and a basin of hot water and laid a framing cloth upon the bruised f!rli. "Then we niut ubid' one ol the maid," I e aik "I think I can arrange with the housekeeper to have one of thrm come in here at the neceary internal to do thi lor OII." He finished hi tniuitratiMi and then wrote a preicriptiun whivh he retained in In hand. Dicky Arrive. ' will have thi sent up." he said, "and you will plrae take it according to direction. And I will look in upon you for a minute before you go to bed, or, rather, to sleep for the night. I or I Mi you to go to bed at once. I will tend the main in to help you undrcn. Rest is what you principally require." He Lowed himself out. and a few minute later the maid appeared. She ADVERTISEMENT. WISE WOMEN A famous medical man of ancient times states regarding his writings that thev were but a collection of knowledge obtained from the "Wise Women. Do you realize that in those times the women, and not the men, knew about the healing properties of medicinal plants, roots and herbs? From the earliest times, women had a knowledge of the treatment of dis ease and of the healing merit of roots and herbs. - Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was originated by a woman, Lydia E. Pinkham, and is now known and praised by women of all ages. It is prepared from roots and herbs having medicinal ac tion of great value in the treatment of troubles women so often have. Costs Next to Nothing for a Big Supply. Whenever anyone in my family catches cold and begins to cough and sneeze. and hawk and breathe heavy, it doesn't take me many minutes to fix up a remedy that will drive away all such troubles in double quick time. It's no secret anyone can make a half pint of the finest cough medicine in the world for a trifling sum. Get from any druggist one ounc at Parmint (double strength) 1 this add a little granulated suirar and enough water to make one-half pint that's all there ia to it. . But now you've got a real medicine mind you the first spoonful you take acts directly on the membrane of the throat and nose, the tickling ceases almost in stantly the inflammation begins to dissp- pear up comes the stubborn mucus and often in 24 hours every trace of the cough that frightened you is gone. It's really remarkable how this home made remedy acts on the mucus mem- brmne and that is one reason it is so help- I ful to thousands of Catarrh sufferers, i PLAYER PIANOS No Money Down A beautifully finish ed $450 sweet toned Schmoller & Mueller Player Piano will be sent to your home, when you select and pay for a liberal se lection of Player Rolls. Ea$y and Pleasfof Terms for the Completion of Payment Wa absolutely guarantee Schmoller & Mueller Player Pianos for 25 years. They come in mahogany, oak and walnut finish and are the very best Player Pianos ve know. yrayy sr Stop in at Our Recital Rooms and See and Hear Them. COUPON Gentlemen: Please send me frae catalog and price list. Name Address Sckiolkr&jlluelJcr Piano Co lTi4 r6-t3-Dode Si. - Omaha CHIROPRACTIC The natural ay to health. By nrup. erly adjusting your spine the fhi.o. prartnr corrertt the cause of all diseases Chiropractic is very successful in eliminating tht rau of all acute and chronic riisea.es, such as stomach and bowel trouble, rheumetlum, sciatica, neuralgia or any febril ditrase, which will yield resdily to adjustments. Spinal analysis and censullatloa (re, s Drs. Curren and Curren , CHIROPRACTORS Rmt. S- Weed Bldg. ISlh and Faraant Phone AT 7 (MS Hrs. 10-12, 2-5 and by appslntmsnt. It'll Make a Big Boy Out of Him CREAM OF RYE, served with milk or cream and sugar, is delicious! Chock full of bone-and-muscle building nourishment. You'll like its different flavor. Buy it at your neighborhood grocer's in clean, "air-tight" fibre cans. It is never sold in bulk. Get a package and read the many fine recipes for serving it. Treat your family to a new taste. tMore than a rJ3rcacfast TqogL f TP I jMAOt IN THE CUPVwJ I , jArrM jjj Dl-,,u"nmifl (COFFEE OHCWJATED BY MR WASHINGTON IN 1909 Make Coffee the Improved Way In the Cup at the Table GL Washington 'i Coffee dissolves instantly when water Is added Put it in the cup just as you do sugar. The bulky, woody fibre which make the coffee grounds and the digestron-disrurbing acids have been refined away by Mr Wash. Ington'i special process which makes G. Washington's Coffee lOCr pure. No coffee pot or percolator needed. No waste. It Is estimated that more than 259fc of all bean coffee made is wasted. Measure the cost by the cup , Not by the size of the can One can of G. Washington's Coffee Is equivalent to ten times in weight in roasted bean coffee , For greatest economy buy the larger si:e can. No trouble no waiting no grounds. Always delicious. Every can guaranteed to give satisfaction. Booklet free. Send 10c or special trial use. C. WASHINGTON COTTTE RErTNTVO COMTHNT 522 Fifth Annut, New York ""I""""..,,, H,...H"l,lil .ml r ,ll..ip ill a t ii 1 1 1 IIHIILM X af Svniwut Purnt C am Fin nic ; Drain cocked Sunawect Prunes, remove the stones and m eanire 1 cupful. Chop fine,' iii lJcuponaijrt marmalade, M cup finely chopped walnuts, 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Mix well and spread between layers. Swiwsit Peune Brno Pud omc; One cup Suntweet Prunes, washed, soaked, pitted and put through food grinder, 2 eggs, beaten j add cup sugar, 2 cups scalded millcj K teaspoon each orange and lemon extract, prunes and 1 thick slice of bread cut in small cubes. Pour in buttered bak ingdith,rt in pan boilingwatrr. Bke in moderate oven until cus tard is firm in center and bread ii browned. Serve hot or cold. StwrwEtT Pawr Coffee Cake: .Two W "H beatenj 1 cup sugar; cup milk j 2 cups sifted flour; 2 teaspoons baking pow der; Vi cup melted shortening; 1 teaspoon vanilla extract. Beat eggs, add sugar, sift flour and baking powder; add to mixture gradually with milk, beat Until smooth, then add melted shorten ing and extract. Pour into two greased layer cake pans, cover entire top with uncooked pitted Sunsweet Prunes. Bake in mod erate oven. SunswcetPhune Salad Pine ArrlE DaissiNC: Cooked Sun sweet Prunes, pittedand drained; allow 4 prunes and 1 slice of pine apple for each service. Place the pineapple on a crisp lettuce leaf. Fill prunes with a small por tion of salad dressing and arrange around the Sirtuwi if PiivKC SourriEr Take 1 cap cooked Sunsweet Prunes that have keen pressed through a colander. Beat whites of 4 eggs until stiff, add 4 table spoons sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla and carefully fold in the pruDe jnilpandjicupehopped walnuts.' Pour in an ungreaied pudding; dish, set in pan of hot water, bake, in a moderate oven until firm.! Serve with custard tauee made, of yolks of 2 eggs and 1 cup mil k. or with whipped cream. Swiswtrr Pawr akd Cottage f Cheese Salad: Remove stones from cooked, cold Suntweet Prunes. Fill with cottage cheese; place on lettuce leaves; serve with thick mayonnaise dressing. 1 StutWEETpavNEPATTlEJ: One half cup Sunsweet Prune pulp; 1 tablespoon sugar; I teaspoon flour; Vt teaspoon salt; tea spoon nutmeg) 1 yolk egg; ' cup scalded milk. Beat yolk of egg; add sugar, and remaining dry ingredients,line 6 pattie pant with flaky pastry, fill with the mixture. Bake in a medium hot oven until firm. Cool slightly,! cover with meringue made of stiffly beaten egg white and 2 tablespoons sugar. Bake in slow oven eight minutes. Sunsweet Pit uke StiamCd Pi b- PlNCt 1 cup soft bread crumbs; 1 cup chopped suet; . pme- apple. Place a spoonful of dress ing on pineapple and iprinklewith chopped walnuts. For dressing melt 2 tablespoons butter, add 2 tablespoons flour; i teaspoon sah; teaspoon dry mustard; mix well; cook until frothy ; add 1 cup pineapple juice, t teaspoon lemon Juice. Cook until thick. Pour over 1 well beaten egg .Cool. Fold in cup f whipped cream. also 1 cup chopped apples; cup brown tuear; 1 cup chopped, un-: cooked Sunsweet Prunes; i cup shredded citron; t cup flour sifted with yi teaspoon each of salt, soda, nutmeg, cinnamon,' cloves and allspice; cup moIas es; J ggs, beaten separately. Mix in the order given, folding in the beaten white of egg at the last Grease spudding moid, pour in the mixture, having mold onljr, two-thirds fiUe Adjust cover and place on a rack in a kettle of boiling water and steam about1 three hours, having water boil ing constantly. Thewater should be about two-thirds of the depth of the mold. SnJfirnmfiUte ktnpt Patiel Uiitd mnJ tfitei by mrrwn Dtmtitie Snrntf DirtBtr tt's fret! Califtrnt Prune ani J finest Grrvctri Inc., ICO Market Street, San Jue, Cal.