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F 3¢ = ™~ FEATURE PAGE. ™ ™ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 192f.° ‘ "~ FEATURE PAGE., 7" - = scout will show you how to maintain i e b HOME_ECONOMICS. Trothod known,-tho. prone bressure method of Schafer. The abllity to el b s / A employ this method of resusoitation may possibly mean the maving of & HOME NURSING AND HEALTH HINT v life that is dearer to you than your SITC) By Luciue Van Slyke ‘Coddle Your Eggs. . 3 & gwn. If you are nntylure ycm can BY M. JESSIE LEITCH. g o it properly, don’t sleep until you Rememberingjithat sthey white ot 3 have tried It on a volunteer subject. Sitting Up in a Chair. jher lkuees flexed. and Mis. Riley slipped one st n, a Lily Jones had been fll for six|giris knecs -the wther avennd her eggs must not be coagulated by a In the c: £ drownl all popu- “Nope, the day before” Merry i | e case of drowning, POP! | inughed back at him. A new schaol {LiED temperature, we cook our exEs 5 i e A e should be dis: SHOI p VAMPS. . [for boys had been recently opened In |for breakfast in & way to save our M;Sr::xn\:&:n‘:b:::u.&‘:r;l::: the next street. Moarry decided at|stomachs a battle royal with tough g "'('-’l“dK:yb"?v::’ffi"i’n"fl«f“{:&fflx& weeks, and she was Solng to sit up ::‘d‘;r dl‘r:lfmmllly Py e i & : e, i say famfly than he realized. ‘r’:fieq‘u’i:: K D“Pyfln: She |whites. We have a saucepan full of tsinges or Tumas will flow out whils|in & chair for’ the first time, Her |jigiir, Uik B 0% ;“fl,.‘,’f,“d.r‘h"e; e 3 ihe prone-pressure is being applied.|mother called the good news &cross|blankets were pinned about her, and x k ran. T s0. 1 n any case, drowning, gassing or Blacky Becomes Very man. T am so. I belleve he put, that | smoio asphyxiation. « so-called pul- lteve he did it out of the kindness of | MOtOr or lungmotor or other appara- SUSDIOIOUS. his heart. . tus 18 of less value than properly & P Yas Farmer Browm's boy 1|Plied prone-pressure manual resu BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. |, 0114 know that all Is well; that he | ¢itation. for this Schafer method is the frost-blackened garden to her|the chair was wheeled over close to oot 4 e window, which was opaned. A t-door meighbor as the two women | goc V90T Which was opened. . shook dusters at the back door. The girl leaned back against the pii- a “She wants to put on all her clothes | lows and sighed. and walk around the room,” said Mrs.. “I don’t think I do feel like wa A droll @airn terrier he, who |& :lllmple b;relcvlo:i mm:_«:‘n hshe nr‘:(: h:fllln: water, really bolling, not just cocked his ear itelligently when his | S0TLIY 58 SRe tried to hide her stock- |steaming, into which we put the eggs, 3 a mistress tatked to him in the lone- | \N%ed feet In the punsy bed. = H1eass lone by one, making sure that there is enough water to cover them well. some hours while his master was|this way- She smiled approvingly as he knelt | Then we cover the pan, set it on the R e ] : to help her don the satin mules. [back of the range, where the water f aila v promise not to tell | ;= fy s f " of v 1 3 i available instantly anywhere that a doubtfull; Y he | ing,” she said. * Yot Rasa” v Svia | Kneeling, he looked sven more boy_|will not boil, and et the eggs cook in 98 things Jou do ot vedersiand, Bemare! | Was thinking of hungry Ducks with | byt pe e e ko and it is in the e e aon think she| ing she sald. I 1e lovely to uit dogginess, as she corralled pastes and | ;) n p d standing. ow co! You'll find the older that you grow first two or three minutes that life I think It's too much to attempt|the street.” polishes for a session of shoe clean- e guess he was the Latin instructor That only ‘hings and foiks you know A Is to be saved, if at all. The most|the first time she is out of bed.” ing on the side verand: Tl let you in the new school. She was blissfully Are fully to bz trusted, so—Bewal disinterested authorities|agreed the neighb t let 1 in on the fact that there aro some [Unconsclous that she looked about —Blacky the Crow. Z have studied this problem of |come over and hein officlite at the lhhln[s about being married to a poor= T;:nn::lelsedxd‘;f‘i!:::‘n?::iu That is one of Blacky's wise say- uscitation exhaustively ure us|ceremony. John has a big Navajo . ¥ take my puise?” ques- ¢ e ; e vivid coloring. Let me | pini hed, turned the matt . R;'.s perked the listening ear at- :g;‘mr-‘:l:v::ed her h.n;:t ‘[»etg.lnntl 3 reason he has become regarded by all A \ 7 — an expert in charge, that may be|lend it to Lily. It will mngkl up for |spread fresh linen on it smnor:rflsy.a"] tentivel 1 n ho -hor'm:a::e -:‘]ul.l ;;er his neighbors as one of the smartest : given with pulmotor or lungmotor, |not putting on her own clothes. The| “It's the thing to do when one get Hagey, dear, my trousseau shoes are| “They always cost scads of money and on the Green Mendows. He sel- ) L Lt o imals manipule: | A e e T | tahes the pulso'arier the nariont s the scuffiest looking: . somehew. Oh hum—a half sole in- dom gets into any real trouble, be- tions used In applying the Schafer So Mrs. Riley got out John's big|been sitting up, too. in order to find She snapped the uhoeau'-:;sm::‘c!u}gfl{ %;emr:(u.n"dca“u:ll‘u"re::mgd t)‘li:'e-—shn cause he first makes sure there is no == grcnemressprn resuscitation which|robe and ran across the back garden. |if the business of sitting up is prov- = covers something he does not under- . <) b7 CEOr 1O isappoint- | I' ples #d ot informadon e IEiabhed fat; the ‘;’;,%g";’";“b:lhf‘":“"g lower step. He e e D s raattul of 1t : 1. Kneel astride or beside the sub- | ment about not being allowed to put| “I Wouldn't attempt o it up more grimy. toes, S tacgled '““rr, !“%; i hved acbrusnian 8! o As he watched & man scattering ; A J(ebcl"n hips, the subject lying prone]on her clothes, held out pleased arms|than au hour e fir: time,” she With ol enthusiasm at all. but lots of | “You sound like Horace. He says Tellow. com in_ the WEter fom (he A e R L e T e T P A e radiator paint. She sighed despond- |* s if they're too shoses ofitheltBIE (RIver he st once e et e araenf niaa™® °° | Mo mother stood oy et S windas, Sata: T dapiulate T ently as she varnished her shabby t they're too Bacame susplaious. ‘He couiint v i Tace your puima o the lower| I dom't know what i PR s TouTly. Thini bed Togks raiher good. 1 g hootn: Narrow they pinch derstand why a man should throw ribs over th " b TR i S oks rathee good. A R ytherthing about matrimony | “He's rather clever, isn't he?” Merry it from six to eight minutes. The re-|good corn among the rushes and Fibs over theiamall ofithie back,,your admitted. “Sitting_up In a chair|Will Sit up longer tomorrow.” And hannother thing about matrimony | e ed. “Doct e Fo to yous |Sult I8 coddled eggs, cooked through |wild rice In the water, and because fingets and thumbs divected gutward [sounds exay, LUL (uers Iv 20 migch Hcked ntoghed o i phale an bad s old ishoseile. oi : out in an even, soft consistency. 1f|he couldn't understand he at once fromethezenine. jand Jean ithe: welght | (o remember [ about fdraughtatieng of Confentmnc A B I e iy : anybody in the family really cannot|began to suspect that it was for no Your body forward on your straight { things' " R e e s D s ot byt . Every day. May I be educated into cating an egg soft,|zood purpbse. When the man left!“I'LL WARN THE QUACKS TO This makes pressure onjthef’ fo/the nelghbor took charee: 1 D e N D o ol P%aux! |bring him around some day? He's a|We cook his in just the same way but {in a boat Blacky slowly flew back over KEEP AWAY FROM THERE." PLs Mower cuest andisinos hibie N oiclose the does for m while even it ahe dassens | Erouch, but he's—well, lots of folk |leave It in the water from forty 1o {the rushes where the man had thrown the effact 15 to drive alr ou T e ot At Y oes for &/ while. ovenitiahe aasssnt| fike:nim: forty-flve minutes. Then It scems 10 | the corn, and presently his sharp eyes | fow places where they can feed in | (RS Sect ls to drive alr out af his|le] eritchairsand 8 CinE b Jone wou tell anybody | MXE Tiliis eyes danced. She thrust [be ‘hard-boiled,” but the temperature | made a dlscovery that caused him to | safety as they make the long journey |inere pe R WL L Dl L o : 15a1d that, Ragsey Lindsey, for its | the wedding ring hand still deeper has still never been high enough to|exclaim right out. from the Far North to the Sunny |3uitf 6 An¥ (0 o ungdion throat § oue I don 'lk‘""‘,"’ ba wrapped. She sighed deepl she thrust her|inte the shoe. coagulate the albumen. What was it Blacky had discov- |South. But it wasn't Farmer Brown's | o posmor":‘;‘mg lbe previous rest- n:‘: t;: wat all lroumi" the room TS SlEhed docplyias she thrupt her! - Il make fudse for-you." she prom- | -Another more convenient,and quicker ored? Only a fow faathers clineing | boY; T dor't Iia: the 1aoks of:it. T(INE Position ithe subjest’s chest z6- 1204 Wes how.stconk L am.: Drotasted walking boot. _The brown paste, pan. 154 in a very matronly manner. but less certain way to coddle eggs|to the rushes where the corn had |don't, indeed. I'll keep watch of this | ep e,"“”?tmef.lgos;lw f"'mt“? ’};-fl Riley:slasl Hai , walking boot. The brown paste: pun- | ““Tomorroy g is to put them on in cold water |been thrown, a few downy feathers. | placs and ses what happens. own elastioltyimithitha; resuits that | (iMrs. (RIY, (placing o coaln Bt Des ol o o oodness, no! T'm going away to- (And bring them quiokly to the boiling | No one with eyes less sharp than| All the way to his favorite nereh|tion.” You n nto isjchent=ingpira | O it il bo vty giad feaii NPNbEAG Me iaieas mate o the row to stay till Tuesday.” Point. Temoving. them then at once.| Blacky's would have moticed thom. |in & certain big hemlock cree in the[ton. You need only repeat this ati, “rol Nr it you feel iik to;slceull s A e e i BT T D iis oy thoy ore suftrhooked. | ana Tow Tolid heve pr s s |Créen Worest Packy kept thinking |08 T8ie vf about fittesn times 3 min- | B & SLUC 8 GO IS8, (N0 ava bion e et £ you run along now.” Her nod| Eggs coddled until they are hard,|thousht If they had noticed them. But |about that corn and the man who had §: 28 may: beinecssnary A T A T ki e T | dismissed him. which are to be used as garnish or |Blacky knew right away that those iseemrd to be so generous with it, and| QUESTIONS AND ANSW. editoz slx weeks: my denr jait 1n ) stocking tect and anbreviated dress- | “Sh*5iciced up the shoes as he de-|in making other dishes. should be |wero feathers from a Duck. Iie know | the more he thought the mors St ERS. |a long time. g sown. ran atter him, " escuer, | PHRCE 3 put into cold water when they are|that a Duck, or perhaps a flock of |piclous he became. He didn't like the Far Off in Bermuda. e Eow e e e ' i o 4 3 ) ag: she chattered, taken from the hot to prevent dis-|Ducks, had been resting or feeding |looks of it. He didn't like the looks| Would you advi: ith L er shoe in hand, lifted his cap de-|grouchy old husband couldn't coloration of the yolk. in there among those rush @ that | of it at all t4 vise a person with|Then a bianket was spread across tho | ety e e oD o Bl ol e iosolboyt | *Coadled eaas ave broperly served|in moving abaut they had lefe thi o the Quacks to eep swiy | o L oWz, O Muend Mhe winter 1b{cukic cormerwise : the hedge toward the row of drying | ‘short vamp' indeed.” she gikgled. |In small egg cups standing on e two o nE about they had lert those | @ there, 111 o It the very st | inancialty abls and "“'o'}fm“;:i“;:ldr"”“';‘;,' Amtockings having besni shoes, nly conscious of her neg- | “Oh, dear, wasn't he the freshest. al . - S 3 3 ¢ awn e big. Tobe WEADDES lige. | The soung man tactfully nicest chila:” And ne'l be B | Paaten ta-cab shch ek i 1th cups b | e G ot ome oF (halr rorstives | a3 ho B eered ra o o Slaepe it o aicky javided the PAtIENt talics (fronnd her/isheisation (the bed with 1d s find to the row. uesda; keep it warm, are to be had, and are | kave been here. It is just the kind |they have any sense at all they willl fro 4 = S uCinderelln the day after” he re- very quaint, pretty, and useful on the |of ‘& place Ducks like. Also some |stay in the pond of Paddy the Eeaver. o Decembscito; May/Be bensfcial? s , y lifting a silver slip- | (Another episode of this story in to- |breakfast table. = Salt. pepper, and|Ducks like corn. If they should come But if they should go over to the ABEW o 5 morrow’s Star.) butter should be at hand and egg|back here and find this corn they |Big River they would be almost sure ns n"' . Only the patient's Shoons shonld, If possible be Just & |would have & feast and they would | to find that corn., and If they should |9Wn Bhysiclan is competent to advise Pifie smaller than the standard tea- | b sure to come again. That man who jonce find It they would keep going [Rim about uny such experiment. spoon. The spoon called “afternoon |scattered the corn here didn’t have a | back for more. It may be all right, A Bit of Salutary Fog. » tea” is an excellent size for this use.|terrible gun, but that doesn't mean |but I don't like the looks of it." 1. Should bedroom windows be kept SHORT SKIRTS FOR CHILDREN (Copyright, 1921 P e e a hunter’ fo may come | And still full of suspicions, Blacky |open In foggy weather, or is it harm- back again and then he may have a | went to sleep. ful to health to breathe the damp air % terrible gun. I'm suspicious of that (Copsright, 1921, by T. W. Burgess.) when sleeping? 2. Should bedroom R NHOUIE Cranberries in Season. - | windows be kept open from the top s Cranberry sauce isn't the only| g e L R worth-while sort .of cranberry, you | § = vile nealth 15 concerned, fog should not The juveniles have fashions of their|line and a wide girdle at the hips.|Know. There are other ways of pre- 3 Persona] Health Serv‘ce cause the closing of bedroom win-{ own, They wear shert skirts because | Children as well as adults adopt the | PAring this really delicious vegeta- dows. The natural and ideal plan is | ke Y h At th ish lengthened waistline, but they do not bla—or_frull—(qr 1!12 table. Here are to admit fll[‘ near the floor, from ey like them and because they wish | fighten it. They merely mark a divi- | M€ worth trying: By w‘ulAM BRADY M. D_ the warm air register or through an 10 flaunt their bare knees in the face|sion of the frock with the belt. Cranberry Pudding. A ? open window on one side of the of a public who talks of pneumonla.| One of the new colors to be used{ Mix one cup of milk, one egg well Noted Physician and Author oo, And-allow. . the wArmers Alx in these chemise frocks is a light 7 1 H which rises, to pass out through They are as proud of their bare legs beaten, half a cup of melted butter.} g window lowered from the t t th raspberry red. It is too heavy inland one cup of cranberries that have | M rod; g e top atitie #3 a sallor is of his bare neck. There- | cloth, but it is admirable in linen |been"split open with a mallet or ; other:side of;thie Toom fore, the problem of short and long jometimes it is embroidered with|potato masher, with one and one- (Signed letters pertaining to persosal health ind hygiene, not to dises Adiagnosi The Nose Shaping Myth. 2 i : stam, -1 velo] K losed. skirts does not come up to them. g’:{";’. "ifif:’,3@,3“‘&“‘“5{'»833 haif cups of flour sifted with & pinch (et W tola e b riten ok e the ks, T Tl ers socerved, | Kindly give me the names of firms Tho rest of the world may worry its wool of salt, one teaspoon of f0da ang twe |selyTlvitus ¥ Safrernd sere, "Yo tnly eag bt made € querin sk contormiog 10 Javras | SPULE COUDST T et (A B < 5 X _ . , 10 care of The Star. 3 s head, individually and collectively, | Black @id not succeed as @ color | or an hour and serve with any pre- el i T i e | 1D about the political problems, the | 07 SUATC, XCORL In oRis Bnd TAGG ) forred sauce. | First Aid for Asphyxiation. | [0, "0 o reca "only 'a few minutes.| Answer.—Surgery alone can ;7;.5(135 stl;xen;:::‘:‘r;ersasma:: Ques- | bl ck taffeta fashionable did not meet | ":"':': "'l'"' o] Asphyxiation means smothering. It | Will vou make the rescue good or will straighten a crooked nos [ 3 e with success. It does not seem to be ne quart cranberries, sugar to you let the victim die by deprivation e oing independene by . oarelosaly | B e e e os® o | taste, one cup of ralsins, one cup of [MaY be caused by ':""f"‘ that shuts| F08, elligent resuscitation? What a Physieal Cultire Flapdoodle, Waving the problems away with one. children. and yet, now that it is done, | Water (bolling), pie crust. Bring the |off or decreases the body's OXYgen sUP- | horrible thing it must be for any one| I read an article by a prominent hand and trotting sturdily along its|it strikes our eye as agreeable. cranberries and water to & boll; cook [ply to & point below the minimum es- | to carry on his consclence the guilty D}hyflh'al‘ culture expert that persons own path. - There are fragile children whose]gently r frequently and mash the| "oy eor 1ife, Water In the lungs| knowledge that a life has been sacri- who have had the appendix removed Its skirts are short this season. So{faces do not carry brilliant colors. |berries. When they are done, which = | ficed because he failed to apply proper |are not likely to live long. (A. E.) much is settled. Of course there is a|Reds, bright pinks and thick blues|will be in about one and a half hours, from drowning will asphyxiate & per- rogtorative measures at the right! Answer.—The “expert” is slightly ew kind of brevity in juvenile clothes | reduce their features and their col-|remove them from the fire, and stir in | son as surely as the inhalation of illu-| time! confused. Persons who refuse to part and France began the fashion because |oring to Insignificance. These are the |raisins and sugar to taste Line a pie | inating gas or the exhaust gas of an | There can be no excuse for that|with a diseased appendix are ex- she delights in creating revolutions|children that wear gray suits. It|dish with pie crust. Pour in the bil i . S e you | kind of lgnorance. Every child, to]tremely short lived, many lasting only T A arm tone and It canmot|cranberries. Put strips of crust in @ |automoblle engine will. Suppon YOU|gay nothing of adults, should Xnow|a few weeks or months. Whereas TSk R t6 'ltselt, but when it has|lattice over the top, arrange the edge |should encounter a case of asphyxia-|how to resuscitate persons asphyxi- | those who, like myself, consent to B e et Then, It has|meatly and bake for about fifteen|tion tonight. What first ald maneuver |ated by water, gas or smoke It isjsacrifico the pesky thing while the ; ey 8 s clnth oy brajd”Ji | minutes. Brush the fop of the crust |would you employ in the effort to save | too simple for, any one to plead in:|sacrifice is stiil possivle, look forward of egg, and brown. 1ife® Assume you have dragged a vic- | competence. Any boy scout or girl!to a long and happy life. instantly becomes a gracious thing|With ¥ for a child. [P S Scrambled Eggs With Ham. Cut one-half pound of cold boiled ham into small pieces and put it in a frying pan with one tablespoonful of butter and an omnion. Cook until Why dairy farmers buy Pet Milk hi begi isp, Kkl - with & pinch of sdr‘;:vumucrst!n‘:-d:al:n:nnl}:" MANY farmers take their milk to the I e 3olis and whites, SUF e Pet plants and carry back a case of ¢l the egen thicken: Pet Milk for their own use. They know that Pet Milk is “milk at its best’’—just pure, rich milk—nothing added, nothing removed but part of the natural water. They like its convenience for it requires no refrigeration and while sealed keeps sweet and i‘elh indefinitely. For cream, use Pet as it is, or add an equal quantity of water and you have pure, natural milk of unusual richness. The art of preserving natural milk by ster~ ilization after removal of of the nat- ural water, was discovered by the Helvetia Company. By this process, they have maintained, for 35 years, the quality and uniformity so noticeable in Pet Milk. Try Pet in your favorite recipe. Youwill be Dordend CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK Made by the Manufacturers of Eagle Brand Condensed Milk For Four O’Clock with Tomato Sauce ‘With three times three hun- taste! Get a at s b 2 B . s Eapacesge = impressed with its quality and convenience. Yivs ad have it handy. Your r can supply you. Two sizes— dred and sixty five meals to Mix it with water or milk, hot or cold. It's CHILD'S FROCK OF DARK BLUE Bo'dmn:m“ly 1 'S ] < 3. OMBINED WITH BLUE AND SILVER STRIPED CLOTH. a new chocolate flavor. SILVE! b HEAD AND A VELVET BAND Ve Bordons UNDER THE CHIN. which involve youngsters. We are apt o say that the French children dress badly and yet we have taken every successive evolution of juvenile fash- ions from this source. &> All white is one of the fashions NI = that we discarded when the French L3erdst! induced us to put color into the nur- \ [ocorn!f sery. We no longer balk at the idea 0. of using dark blue, gray, touches of MNTHED black and deep pink on children. ! Black velvet coats, trimmed with Mir i white fur and black velvet hats = touched with loops of white velvet ribbon are combined to make a smart street costume. By the way, the closely arranged white velvet loops are substituted, sometimes for fur, especially during the mild autumn and spring. The world at large appears to like ° this garniture of ribbon loops. It er was overdone last spring and one immediately knows the date of a frock which is trimmed with side pannels of ribbon loops; but, grant- ing this, the idea Is continued in ye 0 e 11 ages throughout autumn ap- parel. The milliners use it more than the dressmake! Those who design fop children see in it a clever way to add ornament without weight and talland smal rite for a Pet Recipe Book. QR bout evety. year & i no wonder mother’s .ad feels as if it were going round in circles. The Helvetia Company (Originators of the evapovated milk industry) But that can always stop when she thinks of Heinz Baked Beans. They are a common-sense dish with a wonderful flavor. Really oven baked and en- riched by the famous Heinz tomato sauce. —*“Round and ’round the world they go.” bul The sketch shows 11 colors that has all the earmar this year's fashion. It is of dark 7 blue cloth at its knes line and biue| Each package of “Dlamond Dyes” and silver atriped cloth at its top|contalns directions eo simple any line. It is a daring thing to divide | Woman can dye or tint her old, worn, 50 tiny & gown, for a child's frock |faded things new. Iven if she h: ends almost after it begins. But the|never dyed before, she can put a new, irregularity of line which marks the |Fich color into shabby skirts, dressel joining of the two different mate- | Waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, rials saves the result from awkward- | coverings. draperies, hangings, every- 3 thing. Buy Diamond Dyes—no other The neckline of 'this tiny frock is|kind—then perfect home dyeing is oblong and its migeves have wide|gusranteed. Just tell your druggist v, cuffs above the eibow. 'he hat is|Wwhether the matérial you wish to dye \ a mod! Persiug .turban with a|is wool or silk, or ‘whether it is linen, thick roll of the bits and silver cloth | cotton, or -mixed goods. ~Diamond around the headline. A blue velvet | Dyes never streak, spot, fade or run. band goes under the chin ‘The one-piece chemise frocks which . older women wear are still in high 7 fashion for children. They wmake them in France. i0.over here. They have square gleeves cut in With the - S_bedy of th k, an obl - \.dy o n oblong neck. 0 Leading grocers in Washington quote these prices on Heinz Baked Beans Small, 11 ce-11C Medium, 180z-15¢ Large, 30 0z—25¢ —_—