Evening Star Newspaper, September 1, 1921, Page 31

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WASHINGTON, D. 0. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 1921 = = — “but I've got an engagement for this " FEATURE PAGE. *l II bit of paper, he stuffed it under the |ing the overture. From their seaty evening.” bell on the top of the telephone. He !in the third row Dennis craned hii E ACE T % Ml | ““Then break it advised Terhune, |was standing with a smile of infinite | neck around-and surveyed the hous, ‘ o . L . coolly. “This is of the greatest im- | satisfaction, listening to its persistent |taking a professional interest in t portance. I have come to the conclu- |but impotent, whir when Dernis ap- |arrangement of the exits, while M S 5 sion after careful :tudy of the situa- | peared at last. Carty studled the program anl - BY ISABEL OSTRANDER. tion’ that the man who killed—" They dined hurriedly at their fa-|snorted. £ | |, ery sottly and ?ellmnfifly McCarty |vorite ?lmn house and reached the the- ww £t = e 3 | ung up the receiver, and, rolling up | ater just as the orchestra was start- (Continued in Tomorrow’s Star.) ‘Author-ef "The Island of Intrigue,” “Suspense,” “Ashés to Ashes,” etc. z e e 5 Copyright, 1931, by Robert M. McBride & Co. % = (Contintied from Yesterday's 8tar) | out to supper ! 3 A afterward; one of the He made ‘out 'to be hard of hearing | ladies in the show. atifirst and ‘asted ' the acared, be-| “Not if I know it couldn’t be ha ki had & mAGcants tos the Mfe. oo o "pry knowing T had or | knowing nothing about anything &nd was honest. i ::;&nt hi t‘:)“.k'“-. nlllnM :{;d l)’m s Striped Chi nt 3 ay from him be- | around with you all in- It leaves no time for discontent | oy. Pl o Cmipmunic laughed, rIEN! | Cause ‘of soms mistake of the hard- | torrupted MoCarty. r envying your neighbor. “I believe you really mean that. heéarted police, but he sang a differ- | be going on Saturday night, but Ter- —Stripeq Chipmunk. | ' pencve you really mean that’ . |ent tune when'r opensd up on him. |hune's jittle moving picture inter. Phil-oso-phy seems Iike & big|do; sald he I hate wark e iy L ance anditald him that Lt o I b e Pecer! . ad | dress ‘suit to you, bu ust as well Word to be connected with such a lit- | o, b1 Petert Fiet crled Striped|pean run in and were down at head- |to o as we are, for yowll feel mnra\ BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. The secret of true happiness You'll find in useful labor. - She who presides - at the breakfast table t believe in 1714 ‘grab down behind the counte: % de; o £ = You domt el N n counter. | you're taking me along for, but I'll P LR R R U e e e youre wakine me ok o7, ban 'l | serves—for good coffee more than any- B! +'And where - were you while them 11 tH H 1 When he told Peter Rabbit that one | body knows it, Peter. ~Everybody | two lads were making the pinch?" n- | "*ri you think it 1s for conversation thing else proclaims the ideal housewife of the reasons he was so happy that! 5 on't know anybody who|auired Dennt and hostess. tle fellow as Striped Chipmunk, but|piness in all the Great World like |JUarters telling all they knew, and|natural. T've bought the tickets al- if you divide it and say, it slowly it |that of keeplng busy at something :hen 1 sprung it that we were look- [ ready and left a note to be given to , ng for those ral 12 doesn't seem so big. And Stripea |Useful. It is the idle whe are most|iif o [loff, emeraits. He swore | thb girl when she ruaches the the Chipmunk would tell you oy ften Suuappy-| 1 idagieere tine that he mever.saw them nor heard of | “Whats it you've got up your . , . but_when ” its meaning s quite simple. B means | "Huh"" exclaimed Poter. “Hubi|out'the warrant and the bracelois he | "What's the name. of the show’ and y of getting the most joy apd { o' JO0, WOTK YO saw that the game was up and made | who is the girl? 1 know well what and. the best things out of “Self-Adjusting Cap” Nets and “Fringe” Nets Both single and double mesh 15¢ _each—2 for 25c and up Yowll find them at leading shops Whale coffer berry showing chafl. can run away from work fast as I'm inviting you, Denny, I could just b ” who can get in trouble as often or as e’ not go rheumatism n his < ! iy saurted Xehy casily as you can. Old man Trouble g Temarked modently. I|fingers:” McCarty ~replied with Theres 30 P;ruc“hl: art about — | ““On, yes, it I stidamiothersib e A : making good coffee when you use ] ght and he always you've had her on you knee many's Laces and Lace Curtain|Chipmunk.” “It is one of the very | s the most of It." Lhore WA (s biCT ol ia ) commotion {10 4 ime. Boscul Coffee. Anyway you prefer to Z Cl < “Pooh!” said Peter. Kosakoft was willing to talk when| ' Me?" Dennis turned a scandalized 4 eaning ] R oo v And’ people caught by Old Man![GEnCOf Was WHUTE to telK M heh[face on his friend. “Ill have you make your coffee, with Boscul results Strived Chipmunk. . *“The show,” McCarty put in inno. Established - 1855. 727 11th St. N.W. | "g‘i‘l’hl!"lulm Peter n%a‘\ln“ Sl :'r::t b‘(:‘yta "t‘::d n:.-’:l:m' 03:;! l:‘z‘:r:e u?e{ y, “is a fool thing called ‘By-by 5 . ] at is more.” continu tripe ation house to keep the crowd back 2 - Chipmunk. “idle people seldom are|and we got “him into the room at| “I've heard that name somewhere Entirely ab.sent from Bosc“.l % fl"at usual coffee bitterness, to avoid which requires such extreme care. This bitter- ness is unavoidable so long as the woody Trouble. Now dowt you dare say|cofme across. Dennis reflected aloud. pooh’ to that, Peter Rabbit.” ‘He knows who ‘Crawford’ was all eomebody telling me— |, Peter didn’t. Instead he wanted to| right, though he won't admit it, nor ‘Tis the show Terry Burns | know why Striped Chipmunk should|that he had the least suspicion the | daughter Is ih, her that threw over retorted Striped | S¢ldom bothers busy peovle. but ldle- | fjled with cuff-links and such, and|)ithering scorn. “As for the girl, Trouble 'are seldom happy,” added | depidea .t know, Timothy Mc— - - MME. VIBOUD, Inc. e U Aol audgen Bl he are always uniformly satisfactory.. - .. - !h-mm even when free from Old Man | the rear of the shop and made him |lately, besides seeing it on the bill- I \‘ | i il i “YOU OLD LAZYBONES! CRIED start a storehouse for winter in. the middle of summer. You kpow, Striped Chipmunk had said that that was the work he must do that very morning. “Time enough to think of winter when winter is somewhere near. -It' comes soon enough without thinking about it on a beautiful summer. day lik: this. That is what I call foolishness, said Peter. “Did you have hard work getting enough to eat any time Iast win- ter?” asked Striped Chipmunk, as if to change the subject. “I should say 1 did!" exclaimed emeralds were the same the papers wére making such a holler about when the girl was held for trial and jumped her bail. It seems that ell who gave the name of ‘Foster had 80ld him a pearl necklace and some other junk and when ‘Craw- ford’ came he sald ‘Foster' had rec- ommended him there. Creveling had omly mesnt to borrow those emer- alds from his wife, not steal them, for he arranged with Kosakoff to hold them for three months and agree to sell them back to him for | thirty thousan he must have been Eddy Kirby for a stage career, as 1 was after telling you the other day! ‘Tis little Bea herself we'll be taking out for supper!” “It is” McCarty admitted briefly. “But why? Well, I know you'll not be taking an evening off in the mid- dle of a case to go gallivating to the theater nor yet to be seeing the daughter of an old friend. What's she to do with the shooting of that man Creveling?” “wothing, you loon!” McCarty ex- plained disgustedly. “Do You muud chaff—a part of every coffee bean—is ground in with the coffee. With Boscul, by an exclusive special process this chaff is removed before the beans are ground. Boscul therefore is ALL coffes, the best of the bean, with a smoothness, a full rich coffee flavor that Berry cracked open by Boscul procese. <Fne. ‘Worthless chaff. which we reject how we came to be talking of her the other day? 1 was telling yuo that some of the girls from that same show were at the party Waverly at- everybody remarks who tastes Boscul for the first time. HE. “I REALLY BBL!IEVE YOU | Peter. in, a tight squeese, for he only got REALLY MEAN THAT." “I_aldn’t” chuckled Striped Chip-|two-thirds of what they were wWorth, munk, “and T won't have next winter. | and then dug down for ten thousand best reasons, if not the best reason,| That is why I sha\ Degin-that store- | for Iisa’s ball when his wife was de- I ¥ S { I've got for being happy this morn- | house this morning and why I shall r fended on Thusetsy Dlent ap fem Try Boscul next time. You'll see a difference. in handy half ‘. ing. I couldn't be idle all day long|be happy building it. Now, I've “Well, why wouldn't she be?” Den- Shatiit “"faan AN Ie' 21c . amd be truly happy. Now, could 17" |talked long enough. Come see me|nis asked. “Did Hill's wife make | that I¥ LUS Bes, wash b (0e s A A N A and cortonss * Peter scratched a long ear with aoften. Peter.” With a whisk of his|sheep's eyes at you that you can see :I_e de 1‘?1 Nl'lk“"t "Sfl g "": by t:: t grocers ¢n¢ryw’len in ever po! fi“,',gm. long hind foot. Then he scratched (flat little tail. Striped Chipmunk dis-|only her side of it? It was tough|Was. o e to find out ho Balk in 5-pound tins and sealed cartons only WM. S. SCULL CO., Camden, N. For 63 Years Importers, Roasters and Blenders of High Grade Coffees luck, of course, her being innocent | Waverly acted that night: whether the other long ear with the other long|apveared between the stones of the ll::ik o c\‘;ut € T e I awt | he was just having a good time, with- that and you can’'t blame her!out a care in the world or if there RO ahting the thief punished meemed {o be something on his mind. : M Carty shook his heas. ‘Tis 6 now, and vou're off duty. < s “P'm not so sure, Denny, that ‘twas | Hurry up and come on.” a matter of principle with her 50| But Dennis refused to be hurried, hind foot. “Well” said he slowly,|old wall. o “I could. If I were in your place I (Copsright. 1921, by T. -W.- Bargess.) LIEBMAN BROS. at your ¢rocer |l e —— | Pe Signed letters pertaining to personal oIl e muswered by Dr. ‘Brady if rsonal Health Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. i Noted Physician and Author { | health and hygiene. not to disease &iagnoai 2 stamped, self-addressed euvelope-4s inclosed. treatment. 5 Letters should be brief and written in ink. Owing to the iarge number of letters received, onl | & few can be answered here. reply can be made to queries not conforming to fstruction Address Dr. William Brady, i care of The Star.) The Practical Nurse. b A young woman has been engaged more or less of her time as a practical nurse in the homes of her relatives and friends and later in outside work since she was sixteen years of age. At twenty she is kept busy constantly and is paid at the average rate of §22 | weekly. She has the good will of physicians in her community, who summon her or recommend her to their patients. She had but one year of high school work. She now desires to know whéther it would be wise for her to emter upon a three-year hos- bital course in order to become a trained nurse. Good training schools do not, as a rule, admit girls who have not com- pleted four years of high school work ! or equivalent. Certainly it would not be wise for this young woman to seek training in any other than a good training school. But she complains that trained nurses seem bitter toward her. Even advise all young men to marry trained nurses if there are no school teachers available. Aside from the superlative qualities of the trained nurse as sweetheart, pal, friend, wife, mother and general good fellow, ‘we must hand her just one brick: She Is too apt to become uppish about her *pro- fessional” status. 1 don't know what pay or salary a trained nurse receives in the com- munity where the young .practical nurse lives, but every doctor knows that the majority of substantial fam- ilies cannot afford to employ trained nurses in extended Illness or in fre- quent illnesses. Every doctor who has had general experience in private practice knows that there are a 1?1 1 many illnesses in which the right kind of practical nurse fills the bill satisfactorily—and a great many fam- ilies can afford to employ a practical nurse, not merely because her stated salary is lower than the _trained nurse’s but because she is and should be expected to turn her hand to ass in keeping up the house, as well a: care for the invalid. Of cours a an old girl friend who is now a|trained nurse cannot be asked to do trained nurse refuses to speak to her since she has taken up practical nurs- ing on a commercial basis. No one has a higher regard for the trained nurse than I have. I would that. There is a great demand for healthy young women of sound moral caliber and fair intelligence in the fleld of practical nursing. The cue for any such young woman to follow Is this: Let her cuitivate the acquaintance of much as protection. I've got an idea that after she started the rumpus about the robbery: and called in the police she got more-than a suspition of-the truth, but ‘twas' too late to back down from the stand she had taken and Ilsa was the goat. Mrs. Creveling is a_hard woman, with the hardness t| comes only to the proud when something has made them suffer and they don’t take it right. There's some that tribulation makes gentle and forbearing and some that it turns to stone, she's thé last sort. I'm thinking _her husband broke her heart, and if it hadn't been for her’ Pride she'd have kicked him out long . "Tis not love for him now that’ made her so set on finding his mul derer, but other women have been the cause of her suffering and she suspects some woman Is at the bot- tom of his being shot. As long a all this notoriety and scandal have been brought down on her anyway, she's going to find that other wom: and make her suffer, too, or I mi my guéss. “And she had never a word of r gret for all the harm she’d done llsa when you told her the truth?’ “Qh, yes.” McCarty's lip, curled. 's her own. lawyers that’ll help quash the indictment, and her own influence through old Alexander that'll smooth out the little matter of bail jumping, and a handsome set- tlement _she’ll make on both Hill and IHsa. 1 took the s=atisfaction of warning her that the matter of settle- ment might be decided by the courts i Ilsa brought action against her, and I hinted that the both of them more than suspécted the truth. She'll move heaven and earth to keep. it from comjng out, of course, and I shouldn’t Wonder if them two was fixed for life. “'Twas a grand bluff you handed her about finding the man that made the fake emeralds, and that he could and no stage door satellite could have been at more pains with his sartorial appearance. McCarty left him at length to follow at his pleasure and returned to his rooms to add an extra touch or two to his own attire, and he was struggling with a new, tight collar when the telephone rang. “Hello!" he said curtly. “Are you there, McCarty Ter- hune’ voice came to him over the wire. “If you are not busy, 1 wish|, you would drop In at my rooms this| | evening. A new phase of the case has occurred to me wideh I would like to discuss with vou* McCarty gave a8 exasperated wrench at the collar and flung it on the floor. I “T'm sorry. sir,” he replied, firmly, 474 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. NOTE: To every laundress in this city. Ask the woman of the house for a package of the wonderful new product for home washing. Remember the name—Rinso, good doctors in her community and (prove ling brought the real seek their guidance in the matter of |ones to him!" Dennis remarked. - (] a little reading and study along the LISTEN, WORLD?! | |[iines of practical nursing. - Let her learn well the first lesson of nursing, namely, to be honest toward her torted with dignity. “Where do you BY ELSIE ROBINSON. tient, herself and the doctor and|suppose I've been the day, after see- never to assume knowledge of arts|ing® Kosakoff off for the station which no nurse, practical or trained, |, 5e? 1 started to hunt up all the % can hope to understand, such as disg’ | makers of imitation junk in town and and treatment. Let her respect|¢ye fourth one I struck remembered McCarty re- Is Paris really doing this? Mattie Brown is much peeved. It's all because of the way her Fred acts | If you hear a rumor con- 4 What amounts to privileged com- cerning the length of skirts, ||Ther he comes home from work.| o, fona the “secrets or confi- | the fine paste emeralds he mads and confirmm it by the latestissug, || When thes were fist married Fred | donocs which come to hier aa s nurse, uC, In_the original “setiings for o L e latest used to be “the darlingest thing,” ac- | Gossip is fatal to & good nurse. Let |customer named Fdward C. Craw- of Harper’s Bazar. If you hear that our tailleurs are going to do remarkable ings with their hemlines, let Harper’s Bazar tell you about it. e imagi- cording to Mattie. He would help her | her strive to bring comfort info the | ford—he did not show much Sith all the dishes. She'd always have | sickroom and order into the home and | nation in thinking up an allas e 2 rug to be beaten or & window to be | she need have no anxiety about com- | Nimself, did he? I pulled out a pic- washed. and Fred would beam to do|manding the respect of all the world. | ture of Creveling that I'd cut from it. And he'd always cook breakfast in . the newspaper, but with the name the morning. Even after the first Questions and Answers. torn off, and he said it was the same Salt Water. man all right. Kosakoff, under pres- baby came Fred stayed right on the sure, had identified the same pic- (LS yarm. salty water injurious to| (WIS} the fake emeralds? persisted i S This sort of thing Harper's e eyes when used to bathe them? I} . S &ufudoth; but_omem::“ mn: injured my eyes by reading fine print. { Dennik. “You'd think after stealing < 5 Glasses have given only partial relief. [ them away from his wifé he wduld tact with Paris brings the newsto What would you advise? (Mrs. R.|have Hid them good until he was able ;ou as as if you yourself H. R.) s to have them replaced by the real . | -~ had a personal representative in :| Answer.—If the amount of. salt in|O°f < Paris. the water is about that present in the - Keep every small detail of your costumes correct by planning with m: :‘utumn wardrobe the right amount is a heaping teaspoon- ful of common salt to the pint of re- cently boiled water. This is com-|to hide them from Alexanders prying paratively harmless for bathing the |old éyes in ome of the office safes. and eyes, but has no particular medicinal | I didn't size him up‘as the feilow to wvirtue. . Perhaps you are wearing im- | trusit .anybody much, especially in a case like this. He seemed to like the . |name ‘Crawford’ “since -he'd used it ” : 5 twice aiready, 8o I got a list of al Jhat effect has Epsom saltsion the |¢ne 1jtt1é cut-Of-the-way branch banks blood?il (E-B.) and. trust companies, whare - they Answer.—None, exceépt in an occa- | rented safety deposit boxes and start- sional insistence of idiosyncrasy when.|ed out to look for one that had been it causes collapse. — Eplrm salts 18 by Edward C. Crawford a ma z . magnesium sulphate, whih, injected | tér of two months ago. Well I knew into the blood, exerts.a pronounced |he wouldn't dare tackle any of the s 'O longer do you need to spend hours of back-breaking rubbing at the wash=board. . depressing or sedative effect on the|big, riominent places, for Eugene ‘ The largest soap makers in the world, after years of ex- save you hours of properly fitted glasses. Epsom Salts. nervous system, not produced by-the | Creyelirg’s. face must be prasty well salts taken Internally, as & rule. known .in banking circles. I sent Martin to Brooklyn and Yost to.the lt-n-. it will be unirritating. The | Bronx and checked off all the places . ved the washing for nights o c and Fred turned the wringer and Bea“hfy.thmplm hung them out. She showed him how IN TEN DAYS |and Fred put it up. Somehow she 2 never could remember about the shop- | Nadinola CREAM | ping. so0 she'd phone down to the office | just before quitting time, and Fred| Things You'll Like to where Creveling or his father or. Alex- 4 det had ki 1t hich - v 2 2 Fo/ Pt up his Tunch for the next day, Make. Towed | the | search down’ a ot In- perimenting, have perfected a soap product that saves you spector Druet lent me one of the de- the hardest work of washday. ‘This sensational product, Rinso, loosens all the dirt from partment's . cars and ‘twas. .well he did, for where do you think I found - what I was after? Over -n. Staten ::':1: do the shopping on the way L "m s k. 52 even the heaviest pieces of the weekly wash without injury have to do any vul eclared - Denni G T e e R ionhy came, [ ! (Butwho was this guy Foster that / to a single fabric. You don’t have to rub anything but the Eiven here, "After seaking a “brute.” Half the time h 't Bvaling recommendes ' . ’ inte d_'.," ime fuil . p: E':.‘;i"n" .,”".‘;_‘“‘fi:o & em:voll,:‘ t to thla Rosakolf? The one that sold badly soiled spots and thue only lightly. < e ,_::‘.::,' nste refuses to : 5 added emough fresh Rinso But up his Junch and yells like myr- Don't rub your youth away. Get Rinso today at your gro- Ssintien io make & sood r e asks Any erra on his way home, He wontt do the . cer’s or department store. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. Tinse clothes. No : washing and hs won't help with the R : : and -a0ld - some . Stuff.- belongt 2 4 dishes and when she asks him to beat | t v the rug he beats it to the -club in- stead. And no matter how busy she is, he just sits in_the front room and d - ' g 3 s & brute an i i’ 2 - p | o herd et o e, oy, foved | Ribbon-trimmed curtains are easy |- “Wall. 11" ey you ‘worked quiok: . she's & fool and that he givi to make and look 50 charming -on | fuenty fer bere & P a7y 3 -and you' :;:::'fnt :l:.ley to do these things and | badroom windows. Make simple cur- |up what the best ,(gll.:vb-e_' l: e da- right to rest. So there tains of voile oy marquisette. Draw | tective buresu e to you are. ‘Well, how about {t? Ia it up to Fred | suficient threads to have the hem-[3¢ 1 fwo months, but you'rs no neer. to-help with the housework and the| stitching _three-elghths inch wide. | Crevie—r .. 3 : e rhan {I):e‘:;:pl"p':?;’i s it ub| Make double hematitching. Use one-| ‘Déenny, for the love of the salnts, up to Mattle to remember her own | fourth inch ribbon of & color to har- ¥l you put on & mew record!” Mo~ shopping dnd have her own cleaning{ monise with the color scheme of the done, or else ask for more money| room. Run the ribbon through the wherewith to do it? Hasn't Fred a|hemstitching on the side and bottom. | your. regular right to read that paper provideq he| Finish the corger with T made | ghout it, for * has hustled during working hours? | of loops of the ribbon, These ribban- Of course there are times when the ;mmfi,em' are lovely in their (Copyright, 192L.) 53 —_— Gour Oriental Cream ow're going to a party tonight. “A: party, is it?° Dennis: eyed hi: T-'-!‘l:'n:n.--rw-;n‘:,f‘- Ehe-. straight chemise dress will: be | this: omiBroed- i aprl:rl'nrl::%:n WHAL't &‘m i ;- - hoomedy, apd you'll be taking' & ledy . ~ 2

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