Evening Star Newspaper, May 19, 1921, Page 32

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

+ The Buzz in the Rocks. BY THORNTON W. BUR the Green Mcadows to obey. and fo some of the older folks. too. for t matter. This is because of curio: Anything new. anything seen for th first time. awakens curiosity, and cu wants to know all about it. 1urm\|h leads many little some great trouble o strange thing Mother Bear had done her best t M T SUF KE: S WOOK- WOOF “WHAT DO IT™ A make the twins understand this. J«io go near a thing until (h had found out all about it. twins forgot. as children will sometimes they thought they knew al about a thing when they ! is a mistake often made enough to know better. One d a little while to play the very ledge in Buster Bear. had by se old on a s g | rocks, r | did the same thing. ju: e | -ltwo i ihow i So people and play hide and seek. ! Reware. beware low near you go |, They had been plaving for some H ‘To things of which know. time when they happened to approach . Dxlother Tear. a spot on round. bright This is one of the first laws of life Saov broadest. As s s drew spot Boxer's all thtough the Green Forest and all ARG uehal o e over the Green Meadows. And it is ¥ he stopped, with his head one of the hardest of all the rules for to one side. that he might the children of the (ireen Forest and |listen better. Woof-Woof stopped and ler wa i that P whirr i minut L ol | | 1 | i le i Ner o Anyw Pnoug on, let" Parky enc | know Over | and over she had charged them never | 1 1} Mother Bear left them for | rocks ledge of hich their rm- h. maker of the queer sound. pent the | tious. be Bo: But often the 3 or: as gre: yx., know w Toxer “l haven't id Woof-Woof. And I do w makes it with . FEATURE PAGE." They liked to play there. It reat fun to climb about over the to hunt for little caves and to THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. What Every Husband Knows. OH, TIMSY BoY! T WANT You To SEE MY NEW HRTS AND GINE ME YOUR CANDID OPINION — — use Box- T s doing it. Then sh quecr sound It ing sound. and some ttle Bears didn’t lik t seemed a warning. For a e or two they stood perfectly Fhe queer sound stop- one of them the least ide rflnll!‘l ‘It sounds to me sort of ug! n’t_tell anything by sound. u yes, you can!” retorted Buster. n tell a great deal by sound well cnough by the sound | Bear's voice when she is| v you o said sound very ugziy fo nt to find out what won't do harm it anything | bi ound here thing that makes this doesn’t That %t h to hurt us < hunt for t Xh(- l'urumn Jimmy Skunk. all about. Boxer had grown cau- To be cautious. you know, is careful to make sure of things. Xer was not so cager to hunt of that queer sound. enedl to it the less he taunted Woof- id. Boser Bear. atler with you- like Besides, that. i Toxer didn’t Jear would. be told, at as and what Wooef-Woof in hunting o pyright. Lby T. W, Rurges<t HOME NURSING AND HEALTH HINTS I- BY M. JESSIE LEITCH. Concerning “Spread Lint.” country. he might not have been so interested in 2t the end of the elect grandmother attached it to the cord getting that the iron was hot. it. His arm was badly seared. and ask Aunt Ada t Little Bennie burned his arm when he ' was staying with his grandmother in the If he had not been a normal smail boy the blue sparks that sputtered sometimes - iron when his But one day he puiled the cord. for- and pressed his soft little bare arm against the iron fell on the floor and burned a hole in the linoleum. and his grandmother came spose makes it | | PER-FECT-LEE MAcnmczNT‘ STuNNING!! 2 i i i H i Just Bet“ een Oursel\ es VERY BECOMING ! IT’S A PEACH, EmE NICE HAT! WELL= ER- 1$N'T THAT ONE A LEETLE TJoo FLOPPY — OR SOMETHING 7 THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1921, . FEATURE PAGE. r The Old Gardener Says: 1 3 8 | While some flowers will grow i BY DELLA E. STEWART. (L me somepowsns Wil oW I i B Pt cer< conditions, there sratitude is one of the gre are ‘which insist upon jCratifudcn Gt havinz good rich ground and life’s lubric It brings ty of suniight. In the over past efforts, it g | two of the l for mew. To do one’s very best has| | “:‘!Aln"y‘.,f(u;u {inward reward always. but thel |GG ol 0le plenty of fertilizer knowledge that fellow humans 2p-( | where these planis.are 10 grow, gite you a clean white towel. Bennic|preciate helps even the strongest of | | and if you can mix wome ashes {defir. and the spatula that is in the | @r soot’into the soil it will help medicine cupboard, and the zinc oint-|YS: to protect the asters from the ment and the box of surgical lint.” But lubricants, though they helpl | insect pests which work at the | Bennie Interested Onlooker. 80 much to smooth running, don't fur-| | reols. nmofothen pobulirian., And Bennie was an interested on-|nish motive power for the machine. i | (piat*3 JWRCE BOCE, CUN and the looker while his grandmother, referring | It won't do to settle dowa to requir-; | baisams. to the article for directions. cut the lint |} ey i ; g fonidin ae ingz praise for every little action. for = into strips of varving lengths and widths | we'i| never zet far if we do. Wed| PR P and spread it with the oiniment, as onelqoon be worthless workers. And we'lil u-l'rva:,\ read w h”:) ner-d'l_'"e‘fipam‘“ oon find. when we start out to do 5 SDECAC S O EmOcH and it was ap-|gome special work, that more people i i picd to the smooth side of the lint. Then | havd hammers thdn helping. spades. Things You'll Like to the pieces were neatiy foided, With theiMore stand ready to criticise than to |} Make. ointment surfaces fogether and thel il woolly surface of the lint outside. It we have no reason to resent |- - was a f; ating process. “Like mak- They often have a better per-| Stunning sport blouse trimming is covered with gauze LISTEN WORLD‘ SLSEE ROBINSOY Tt takes extra in ¢ of la something t throwing into a ladies’ committee meeting. the other day I was drug. It very important meeting. They £oing to reform a certain voung person who haven't the sii est desire to be reformed. They all showed they the gravity of the situation by w ing white gloves. terribly expensi 1ittle “trotting frocks” and nent waves. It was most impressive Some on tions exist” tions were offered those nermanent waves. Indeed. no! [What would our country c me ot Bandar-1oz folks (monkey merely wi Now we're zoinz to Rrother. thy Thix is the W 1 longed to dn't For. after all. I'm not so riasting| sure that I'm not one o he Bander-log myself! The Old Gardener Says immed Im- e hlcoming because dur- they form new be removed it x ia done in the fall winter. It Is a foolish tiee anip off the he proper mcdintely afte meason, if at all, class of appreciated ar- Then every one talked at once <omething must be done® At once! K A swarm of the love- | or of them involved giving ! nees or mussing | had Jost an arm in | cepsrigne. 1021 H ting juvenile delinquents on probation {is gaining ground. !to send wayward boys and “reformatories,” and that their m(-res(s and society's will be served i theory underlying this belief. | penalize L uphein, ibr ‘you i keep 1 his home surroundings, best portunit His Best Chance. I | BY H. Author of “'Ths Ridd'e of Personal'ty,” *‘Hand- hood, ™ More ki [3 Inst I the wa, the to drag me but As a general doctrine. that. mind that it is not universally sound| of o —that, was a were unde| pernici by act Take. icase o perma- g0t up and told terrible truths. Some one else read a tabl of scathing statistics. It was certain- iv appalling! How can such condi- bou tore down all the refining insti- tutions at once. But with so much love yearning for expression, surely, uch good must result! the time | sat and longed ed to do something. I longed and read the following ve from Kipling's ad-gon the L i I hr 1o times bLrought into court because of | the sheet. | various kw. mi with his court record. Bu wishing to give the boy a chance. {he would not send him to any inst ! tution then set time things Nine cident to it | Without friends brought ag his_wife For the first time. un in the day. th d mistake he that he had ac 3 fortunate of his one real chance when he jthe me 3 cetive. There his limitations and his pos- ibilites _alike could have been | {studied. T t could have been de- term a so would suited Like “m from provation few J in B | hoped that th influences % and happiness in life. {doer is to be had only by giving him examination and acting in a with t A% is day. a court, Prices ng is improved ing good drd not 1 it w ventually ADDI 'ON BRUCE. icups of Child! Ete. i and more the practice of put- | by the Assoeis hesitate zirls to school believing | Judges “training institutions. ndered by giving them op-| to develop free from penal the on rsponsib the parent ity where it runs the “Don’t immature for a faulty See to it that the up- the ing. cad of completeiy utting the | 1 contacts, | him end on | too. That isi to give him his best chance.” thing this is wound can be no doubt of | must ever be kept ini o watchful eye on There Only indeed, which ous. there are circumstances it becomes positively uai life experienc for a typical f a little lad of example. the | thirteen, three | misdemeanors. in his school Notoriously work nd of a mere child of nine. judge knew this, and was fa Instead he talked with him. him at liberty. And for a -emed to go well enough. vears later the same boy, a man of twenty-twi he same court. in the meanwhiie drifted cupation to another. “mak- in none. Incidentally he H was without a job and| And the charge now | inst him was of deserting and two-week-old child. i end him to a schoo! for; whether he would e ally safe and useful man. er be And} deemed wise to release him | trom custodial ea he been sent back to society | have to his mental capacit the feeble-minded, the so-call- oral imbecile” can’ profit little And there are not a delinquents who neced I care before it can will prove respons| helping them to find ! uvenil 1 med: f which implies that the re for the youthful wron, ough med and psy chological cordance he findings of this exmination. ing done in many courts ty- nd as should be done in every — realized on Swift & Co. xales o 0 for week ending on shipments sold out. ente-th 17,30 cents per pound aked 163 cents per. pound.—Adver: 1 Zwithout us. ! strong light should As is too frequently demonstrated | iahle about fifteen feet behind {taches and_additio 1 Leauipped 1o support himself by work | 28, omelel pan, beat up aix czgs. sea { pour them into the hot pan. Draw the work: Nothing noticeable, Rever the spectacular. only_steady, monotonous grinding away. Yet we feel we have our own little use and responsibility | come part of ‘the fam- | machinery would give way. Let's be a little more thodghtful of | ily jthe toilers, the ones who in heme or society or government do ch of the work d _receive little of the honor. Gratitude is an efficient Jubri- cant for everday life. g at The Impromptu Show. the country suburban | who displays the greatest amount of ingenuity and resource- fulness when it comes to getting up impromptu performances—play charades and oth= amateur pel formanc The city dweller finds in diversion at the| -ssional players or en- he geldem thinks of ing himself and his guest when summer calls us away from the city we find that the city dweller is sometimes at a disadvan- uze. 1t i S0 many vears since he has plaved make-believe that he doesn’t know just how to go about eat amuiement can he gained | and anv possible talent in acting displaved with shadow pantomimes. To produce these you need to stretch a large sheet at the opening wide door. Your spectators | siould be seated on one side in an unlighted room and a single but be placed on a our | sheet on the other side. If possible use a shaded desk light that may be made to cast a strong lizht toward or It s dweller or You may select mercly a_ Mother se rhyme for depiction. And yvou | have no extraordinary elocu- | ionist for the reader. Jt is nec-! ssary only that she or he should{ read distinctly and slowly. Mean- time the actors go through the story read in pantomime. The tale of the old woman who went to market her for to se'l was given recently good result. Longer, humorous will oceur to you. he beauty of it is that only the shadows show, %0 you may make crooked or long noses of pasteboard, and beards, mus- al evebrows may be made of cotton batting A little | chewing gum is the best adhesive | for these impromptu features, savs| an_exverienced pantomime producer. Shadows of very convincing tears may be produced if the actor has a small wet spongze held in his hand- kerchief to be squeezed when he wipes his weeping cyes. The shadows of these tears drop to the floor most pathetically. A rising sun or flvi birds, roaring lions or other acc « may be made of cardhoard. which can be operated by means of strings or broom handles behind tac | sheet. ! —_—— Clem Omelet. Heat two tablespoonfuls of butter in vers, son them with salt and pepper and eggs from the edge to the center as fast as they are cooked. Cook very slowly until all is thickened, place one-half unon a hot platter. pour over one cup of hot chopped seasoned clams and cover with the remaining half of the omelet. Serve at once. —_— Tapioca Soup. Boi! three iarge potatoes. of tomatoes and a small sliced onion in three pints of water until soft. Rub through a sieve and add one cup | of soaked pioca Let boil for twenty minutes longer. add a table- spoonful of butter and salt and pepper one cup to Heat a pint of milk and thicken with a teaspoonful of flour rubbed smooth with one of butter, pour into tk:e boiling 8pup, mix tho: oughly and serve over'small squares of tousted bread. i Applique them d | band as shown. | the blouse, make the | the orange). ing sandwiches,” gurgled Bennie. spective than do we. %0 near the|guchione o Soanire kiakr;miu:w"eflflg(..‘r{f: wet "\When the prepared lint was all folded { work. Often: too, their motives are| o hioned)toty biack e o away in a tin box. because the ointment | helpful. Queer. isn't it. how very | SQUir hero of the hour. | would have penetrated a cardboard box, | hara it is for some of us to feel that | braid. Zinc Olntment “Meany.™ | grandmother labeled i. “For Bennie's: criticism of ourselves is ever de-| While the burn was healing some one. Arm,” which mad~ him feel very im-|served?> We rush to resentment and | sent Bennic's grandmother a box of zinc | portant. She used a strin of adhesive excuses. We must be right—they ! ointment, which w i plaster for the label, because paper labeis | must be wrong. FPut be it's us a dressing for the refuse to stay pasted upon tin. Why not 20 a bit slowly and meditate “run” and drip on things as his grand-| And the dressings after that were|on the matter? Energy is not synony- mother applied it to his arm. It was simple processes of applying the pre-|mous with wisdom. : Very “messy pared surface of the lint to the child's A more discouraging thing is to be | mummy Reading the paper one evening. Ben- arm and = ban v over theitaken for granted. like an_ insigni nie's granamother discovered ‘pread comfortable app! which was|cant cog in a great machine. > lint.” which is an approved method of not a b't “drippy , more, ne.er,v'rns" no blame. no notice whatever applying any ointment to skin surfaces. | slipped. like the gauze had done. whenijust on and on. all days alike. Some, the ointment had been applied direct to]0f us have just that part. in life's edge of the band. picoted into « of one of Carry ou cire blouse of white Canton two rows of silk braid silk tSpert B[ouse'rv'imm\ng crepe. along W of white satin and soutache Stitch a broad band of black cire silk about six and one-half inches| wide around the bottom of your sport | €a Have some whi four-inch %onully to the black f gray new squares. is used for had “quares of gray les of t this same sport €0 - ALWAYS CRITICISING S ‘lar —By Herbert Johnson| peAuTIFULL! SWELLEST LiD 1 EVER SAW! FLOPPY ] THERE You You NEVER L\KL ANYTHIHG 1 WEAR' \ blouse trimming on the cuff: Cops right, 1 than flavor. It lie fhes}l ])]ile:: percentaé'e of protein foun mma Bring out the “ngh Lights” in your hair! There is an elusive blue light hiding amidst your dark tresses, Rich Brunette, or pershance an alluring. tint of bronze. And, Dainty Blonde, there are golden glints unawakened that will make yours a true crowning glory, once they are aroused. And, why don’t you, Stately Titian Gitl, emphasue the dancing lights that make your hair so fascinating? All of you should let ED.PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC bring out the “High Lights” in your hair. Ask your dealer today -for an 8 OZ. bottle \ D PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD American Import Offices ED. PINAUD Bldg. ) New York PIGGL IGG Saves Housekeepers Many Dollars PIGGLY WIGGLY is an idea transformed into action, which is daily putting money into the pockets of the Grocery Buying Public. PIGGLY WIGGLY is the most economical and efficient method of distributing food products ever devised. PIGGLY WIGGLY brings the producer direct to the consumer, thus sav- ing all intermediate prof- its, thereby putting actual dollars and cents into the Housekeepers’ pockets. Eliminating clerks, de- livery and charge ac- counts, and by putting into practice other econo- mies, it kceps down the overhead expenses, and saves the buyer money, and permits the shopper to get whatever he or she wants in the shortest time possible. PIGCLY WIGGLY is a system whereby everything in the grocery line may be purchased at consistently low prices—NOT FOR ONE DAY BUT FOR EVERY DAY. “ When you enter a PIGGLY WIGGLY Store, you see on the shelves natianally advertised goods, whose reputation is unquestioned. Nationally advertised goods are not used simply because they are nationally advertised, but because they have.stood the acid test. They have been approved by the public as to quality and price. PIGGLY WIGGLY Does Not Sell Of Brands or Junk. Granulated Sugar, bulk, 1b. Granulated Sugar, carton, Ib. Gilt Edge Butter, per Ib. . ; Borden’s and Carnation Mllk tall can . 12lec Campbell’s Pork and Beans, per can . . 10c Standard Tomatoes, No.3, percan . . . . 10c Fancy Cream Cheese, per b. . . 23c Strictly Fresh Eggs (cartens), perdozen . 3lc New Potatoes No. Lper ib. . . . . 6¢c Welch’s Apple Butter, 14 oz.jar . . . 25¢ Underwood Deviled Ham, %5 Ib. can . 3lc Rumford Baking Powder, 1lb.can . . 29c Libby Corned Beef, 11b. car . . 20c Pride of Illinois Corn, Fancy Country Gentleman, 10c Premigy Sajad Dressing, Jarge bottle . Alc R. & R-Boned Chicken; 8 oz.can . . 58¢ Purity Cross Jellied Chlcken, Goz.glass . 65¢ Marshall Herring in Temate Sauce, 1 Ib. can . 3lc Red Jacket Lobster, ¥ Ib. can . M | Premier Strawberry Jam, 15 0z. jar . . 35¢ Beechnut Grape Jelly, large glass . . 42 Cruishanks Sweet Pickles, 5% oz. bottle . 20c Beechnut Peanut Butter, large jar . . 28¢c Franco-American Spaghetti, per can . . 15¢ Deep Sea Shrimp, drypack . . . . 2Ic Saw Log Salmon, med. red, 1lb.can . . 22 Brookdale Chum Salmen,1lb.can . . . 10c White Star Tuna Fish, 15 b. can . 32¢ Alexandria Tuna Fish, 14lh. can . . 21c Gold Medal Fleur, 2415 th. sack. . . $l 35 Gold Medal Fleur, 12 Ib. sack 69c¢ Clicquot Ginger Ale, per bottle . el | Silverdale Y. C. Peaches, 21ocan . . . 20c Del Mente Peaches, 2lpcan . . . 30c Tle 8c 40c Kellogg’s Cern Flakes, package . . . 10c Post Toasties, package . . 10c Quaker Yellow Meal, 11 Ib. package . . 10c Palmolive Soap, per cake . . . . . 8¢ Grandma’s Soap, percake . . . . . 5S¢ Export Borax Soap, percake . . . . 3¢ Fresh Milk, ice cold, pint bottle . . . 6¢ Fresh Milk, ice cold, quart bottle . . .

Other pages from this issue: