Evening Star Newspaper, December 5, 1921, Page 26

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THE EVENING FEATURE PAGE. Suf'passing all others in Delicacy and Fragrance. "SALADA" TEA o BY DOROTHY ETHEL WALSH. Holders. more Christmas presents. them from being effective. peries held back with what at glance might be SEALED PACKETS ONLY EVERY LEAF PURE " Philadelphia CO The Girt Book-1922 “ as issued by this Establishment will prove of grec’ value and assistance to those who wisk 1o secure Distinctive Articles of Merit JEWELS-WATCHES - CLOCKS - SILVERWARE { CHINA- CLASS = NOVELTIES from which may be selected madem{efrica . appropriate Wedding and Personal Gift Ma.iled?i’pon request WEDDING INVITATIONS *2¢ ANNOUNCEMENTS Samples of Correct Social Stationery as approved by Society - Mailed upon request. in our grandmothers’ day. bright colored yarn. of several a new design. inook. Lovely worked out helping hands. instance, orange flowers most effective. On green linen, and white flowers, etc. color combinations can with these Wide-Awake Exercise. Do you wake up i feeling as though the only comfort- are lying in and that the effort to get up is almost too great even to at- tempt? 1f you do—and then you are only like most of us—I have an ex- cellent suggestion to offer. It's an exercise to be taken in bed. It's very good for you and it will reconcile you to the dreadful task of rising. In fact, it may even make yqu glad to get up. It's as follows: - Lie on vour back, the pillow, so you on the mattress. the chest the hands just above the elbow. Now while you hold tightly to your Do yoow what Nucoa is? Jus-r rich coconut and peanut “Letter? Letter? Who's Got the Ol & ils, churned with pure pasteur- Letter? ; ized milk—that is what Nucoa is. ERRIAM Ln;xds;(’x‘y wasn't a i sed read- - very tall-looking person Nuwa ik as)m oD d fol’ ever, not even when she bread, and for all table purposes, just as creamery butter is used. We wish every American house- wife could visit one of our spa- cious, sunlit plants and see Nucoa churned—in sterilized glass-lined churns—and then worked, salted and packed in prints. Such an in- spection would show—better than wecantellit—why Nucoaischosen for the family table on its merits wore Ther stiltiest French heels and tucked a high-backed Spanish comb in her reddish curls. So that Merriam, lying in a motion- less heap on the dusty tennis court. with low-heeled sport shoes peeping from beneath her pinafore-like frock, looking more like a child t:n the dignified matron she fou..y imagined herself to be. She had ligterally collapsed the instant that tne swiitly flying tennis ball s.ruck her lcit temple. Alreaay the dull red of the bruise showed with swariing clearness against her fair sKin. Her partner, eighteen-year-old Hal If your family has not tried Nucoa, order Biaisdell, bewlldercd boy that he wus, X e was trying to iift her limp body as a pound today. If her husband and Richard picoum sXz—=\ your dealer cannot fill your order, write or phone us. dropped their rackets to race to- wara the spot where she had fallen. From the terrace above came the excitable shricks of the briuge play- ers. Her husband took her from Hal's farms, but it was Slocum who had {the presence of mind to issue sharp | orders tor restoratives. | Quick-witted person that she was, i she did not open her eyes when she I first feit herseif regaining conscious- iness. Just to “lie sciil and hurt” emed ail she could manage. ‘Smelling salts—ice—a pillow. she heara Ricnard’s decisive { saying. x ! " She gave John's hand a reassuring lif somewhat feeble squeeze. {7 “Merry! Merry!” he was whisper- ling. “have I killed you 5 i 'She opened her eyes compassion- j atel No such luck, old dear!” The pain ! was so intense that her voice sounded {very far away from her own ears. “You—ycu do send awfly wicked | balls- BUTTERS BREAD Joseph Phillips Company 10 Wholesale Row, Washington, D. C. Representative of THE NUCOA BUTTER CO. voice | P%Good little sport that she was, she | | was trying in every way she could |to make light of the accident. Long | before Hal had come flying back i with his resourceful mother the i plucky_bride had struggled to her | feet. ~ But she sat down quickly as Soon as she had wriggled herself | about enough to assure her excited | audience that no bones had been | broken. Bruised and battered, she |lcaned against a tree while the vonien sopped and salved and ban- ! daged her. Her head swathed in a | bocoming “strip of surgeon's cloth, he grinned piuckily. % [ e how you .all look,” she iasked saucily. “Yowve enough: bot: i tlcs to be a class in home brewing. But her head ached horribly. Grit | her tecth as she might, she could Inot conceal that the throbbing pain as & severe tax on, her shaken | onergy. Yet physically upset as she | Was, she found herself thinking whim | gically that her nerves and muscles i weren't half so tingling as her feel- H S, {InE S hours and houre she and John | had been hurting each other senti- Bentally; a dozen unsettled, mis- understood episodes nagged and ir- |Fitatea them. Merriam was | Etatece John made no real effort to lenter into the gayety of the house- hold: John was suiky because he | thought Merriam was playing coquette ithoall the men of the party. His Nttitude seemed absurd to Merry, &ho had known her host and his | guests all her life He had disap- | proved of every word or deed. She had a rather unfair advantage at this moment, for shé knew Bitterly John was blaming himself because his pent-up emotions had Jet ‘8o much force speed the unlucky ball. But she was afraid if they were lete alone together he would try to ake her explain her behavior of i the evening_before. 1 "'Sne closed_her eyes wearily. Sh | was ironically aware that everybody I the solicitous group hovering about Fer was eager to help her except the one person from whom she wanted Telp. That person was her own cousin, Cecily Leland. t Cecily was seemingly busy in Mer- ry's behalf. In a most business-like Way she was putting stoppe bottles. A “More_com! ? : bent over her injured guest. “Ready for those brutes to carry you up- e sense, T can walk——" Merriam Vogue shows the wo- man of taste how to buy, when to buy, what to buy, where to buy. A Voguotrained dol- lar goes twice as far, because it never brings home a mistake. B Vogue Holiday Number dated December 15th VOGUE :On Sale Now! At All News Stands! you $3.85. Yo-un'fllfiue Their hostess, trying to make the jssues for $2.00—if you will Nume ...... best ot an él}vkrrvlrddl%&;fl%k tast H " hust! n an away. sign and mail the coupon today. st o ething always happens if the home morn 1k hang aroun men fol g Rich ings. Clear out. both of you. you take Mr: Lindsay over to the ' Ind. in the morning ‘Worsted Flowers Serve as Curtain 1t is not too late to make a few The fact that our time for planning is draw- ing to a close will necessitate their being simple, but that need not bar ¥ In today's sketch you will see dra- st taken for the old faashioned glass curtain knobs used But, bless your heart, they aren’t at all! No, in- deed. just simple crochet flowers of I have shown you bevore in these columns a group small flowers used for a like purpose, but the one flat flower is A pair of these, mount- ed on a narrow band which fastens arbund the curtain and having rings on either end that will fit over a hook used for such purposes, will make an attractive present, and they are cer- tainly easy to make for the woman who knows how to wield her crochet be holders as On blue curtains, for would be rose able place in the world is the bed you | first disposing of | been stretched half a dozen times. e with your head | Then try to stretch the head up from Fold the arms over | the neck, making your body as long grapsing the arms with | as possibl Brides Will Be Brides By Lucille Van Slyke. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. YC.'. | i WITH CURRY. [ Curried Mautto One pint of finely chopped cold mut- ton, - one tablespoon of butter, one tabiespoon of flour, one tablespoon of curry-powder, one' gill of rice. one egg. two quarts of boiling water, salt to taste. Wash the rice. Put it into the boiling water and boil for twenty-five minutes. Drain in a col- ander. Put the butter into a frying- pan with the flour; stir smooth, then add by degrees two gills of boilin water; stir sméoth again. When boil- ing, add the meat, curry and salt. Stir for ten minutes. Heap the mix- | ture in the center of a fireproof flat dish; make a border of the rice around | the meat, brush all over with beaten \ egg, and place in the oven until 1 browned, from five to ten minutes. 2 Carried Eggn. Eight hard-boiled eggs, one pint of cream sauce, one teaspoon of chopped parsley, salt and pepper, one teaspoon of curry powder, one teaspoon chopped chives. ~When the cream sauce is prepared, blend an stir into it the curry powder; then add pars- ley, chives, salt and pepper. it hot over boiling water ahile you prepure the eggs. Having already boiled the eggs, cut them in halves: lay them in a deep dish; pour over them the sauce. Cover. Set the dish | tover boiling water for ten minutes, | p until the eggs are thoroughly heated, and serve. Curried Tomatoes. An_exceptionally apetizing sup- per dish is tomatoes seasoned with curry powder. and this should be served with baked bananas. Plunge four tomatoes into hot water, remove the skins, cut into halves and press lightly to take out the seeds. Cook two onlons chopped fine, until tender, with two tablespoons of butter. Add a teaspoon of curry powder, a ba: leaf, a teaspoon of turmeric (this can be bought at any drug store), and a half pint of wafer or cocoanut milk. When this mixture reaches the boiling point add the tomatoes, cover the saucepan and cook slowly for twenty minutes. Boil a cup of rice, drain and_heap in the center of a platter. Place the wnbroken to- matoes around this, strain over the Ijuice and serve at once. Things You'll Like | to Make ! arms. try to pull them apart. As you are holding tightly you can't do it. But what you do is to exercise any number of muscles in the arms, chest and shoulders. Probably a lot of them you never suspected existed. { Repeat this stretching exercise about a ddzen times. You will already feel a little more wide awaki Now while you lie in the same posi- | tion, stretch out your right foot and y to touch some imaginary object. six inches or 8o below you—the foot- board. for instance. Relax and stretch out the left foot, and then the right foot again and so on until each have overed Case (s c ared yeglass Fose 5 = n | ta You will feel beautifully wide awake by the time you are fin- ished. Z for shabby, present him or her with | a covered eyeglass case for Christmas. Cut a piece of brocaded silk. leather- you men are all lunching there any- | ette or cretonné the shape of the case how. Merry needs a nap, that's]when it is opened up wide; allow for sure.” the front piece if it is th Merry nmanaged to wave a EAay|case. Scrape off any rem: g DATLS . f farewell. But the moment that sheiof the old cover. Cover the e was in her room she faced Cecily{outside of the case with glue. Lay calml. , __{the cover material over th and ec’” she began, “I've been Sev-lryp smooth. Trim the edges. If you a; eral kinds of a goose, Rich' and Ilgo not care for such a fancy covering had rather a joke about—about ajyoy can scratch off the old paint,! Bvim et e o Al " %eas |enamel or whatever covering was on Eoing moonlight swimming and—and | the case. Then enamel it theNcolonja Rich” had sent me a note asking me |3 g A o Tutier to go, but I didn’t get it till after I'din contrasting color. This gone. And that paper that you had | L I—I lost and—and—oh, please, Cec'jand useful gift. dear. give it to me. for I don’t want Johnsy to think I'd be such a duncpi as to take Rich's teasing seriously.” |t ¥ Cecily's voice was cooing sweet, : but her eyes were tricky-mean “Why, 1 can’t.” she answered H so sorry—I saw right away some sort | § e of joke was on and I-thought it might make it all the funnier if I— Td ! e Just tucked that note in John's coat when the ball hit you Country Club, Thorne's foursome will be in by the time vou get there, and b ! el ito some FLORA. a LIMITED This offer good from Dec. 1st to Dec. 10th Another epinode of this story in to- morrow’s Sta DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out; Thickens, Beautifies. 35 cents buys a bottle of #Dande- rine” at any drug store. After one application you cannot find a particle of dandruff or a falling hair. Besides, every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and abundance. cross | syrup at home. But have you ever rs into | air passage, lifts the phie; i Nan Blalsdell!uz.“ cough, c phlegm, heals how | of Pinex then add plain granulated | The Best Cough Syrup Is Home-made Here's an easy way to save §3 yet have the best cough remedy you ever tried. nd You've probably heard of this well-known plan _of making cough! used it? Thousands of families, the: world over, feel that they could hardly keep house without it. It’s simple and cheap, but the way it} takes hold of a cough will soon earn it a permanent place in your home. Into a pint bottle pour 213 ounces The Pudding Pan’s Diary sugar syrup to fill up the pint. Or,} Saturday if desired, use clarified molasses,| WOKE and found that the prunes I honey, or corn syrup, instead of! stewed last night had been served. At sugar syrup. Either way, it tastes| ihomven with comebeesnfact 6ol torminy. good, never spoils, and gives you a Then I was given six_egds which, after full pint of better cough remedy; d with the than you could, buy ready-made for; three times: its cost. { | You see, I heat up evenly all over. used. hold the heat a long time and, therefore, “MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, A Sudden Interest in Paddy’s carries far, and there is no voic of [ it. | had been taking « nap on like a statue listening and watching. As the sound louder and cl into his eyes. larger and toward the stretched, at down. of ! 1f one of your dear ones has an eye-! Old Man Coy | Blass case that has become worn off | thi { those of Old Man Coyote h j that voice were black eagerly and two sharp faces had turn- kind of a! s<pecks the Green ireplied Mrs. Reddy. Then they looke | covered eyeglass case makes a pretty i old ears, but the: 1921 | Grann; {of, and it is a Pond. By THORNTON W. BURGEsS. | 1l&ht to | the Beaver. To quicken wits there's nothing quite| In the Green The equal of an appetite. ‘fflr from —Old Mother Nature. |0f ears had 1 |as they listened. The voice of Honker the Goose!tail had twitci like | ook had crept One who has once heard it will €Ye only h “Those Geese of Paddy the aky. | & little time ove 5 | Then and tiny specks against the been heard and | his fierce Pasture a pair of sharp ears pricked, And so it (Copyright, 1 Saturday. 1 old out rang Advertisement. or supper d _THE {ED AT LACH R AND LICKED THEIR LIPS up at the sound of that voice. and Boil two pou Old Man Coyote lifted his head to|two hours until listen. Then got to his feet, for he [them carefull door- through a sieve. stood tep, tiblespoonfuls nd, facinz the north, he of that voice grew rer a look of eager- ng and craftiness crept fresh eggs, and a taste of e nilla_extract put in a we bake for for erate oven, the three eges to a ta little sugar. s9 and longi He saw those tiny specks grow larger. He saw Honker turn_and slant_down e Green Forest and finall appear in the trees. Then O1d Man ote licked his lips, yawned, licked his lips again and nd his floc sure as I am Prune an 0ing to spend the n Paddy the Beaver." alive they are ht in the pond he muttered. my, my. how good a Goose would 1 'haven't been over to call on the Beaver for a long time. It ill be moonlight tonight. so I thin will run over just to be neighborly te grinned when he said and licked his lips again. Other and quite as sharp as ard as soon as he had. They ears and there were tw. them. They had_listened both hot and them from the through a food cup of prunes orange. Add th {half of the oranges crange and to add one-half cu together, stand the jam s glasses. ears airs of north and watched those grow larger and larger and | d’'sappear behind the trees of Forest “1 think, my dear, we eglected Paddy the B nd that tonight will be <aid Reddy Fo agree with you, d 1o the To six | smooth stir unt one-quart nal ve rather ver of. late good. time let cook over bo; minut. add dates, o make him a call “For once 1 quit t each &the; Not far away s had been 1 lemon extract, longer, another pai tening. They were quite a were the ea s ever. They two-quart XL C e e A B S EHeET | Granny ¥ox. “A Goose.” murmured s the finest eating I know |1 have tasted one. 11 on my old friend, I‘udd)‘l Paddy's pond another pa in a round face. never mistake any other voice for it. | Bob Cat, walked over to a tree and When so far away that keenest eyes among the people of the | Keep | Green Forest and the Green Meadows | of could ma¥e out Honker and his floek | think it will be worth while to spend as Honker's voice had recognized. fandg Over in the loneliest part of the Ola ' 100king than before. was sudden and great interest in the pond of Paddy the Beaver. the | sharpened his claws. he sharpened his %5 beef in Washington, D. per pound and averaged 11.35 cents per pound. T PO Creamed Tripe. Clean and scald one-half a pound | of honeycomb tripe. Cut it into dice, | melt two tablespoons of butter in a dish, add one teaspoon of chopped | onion and the tripe. Cook until slight- 1y brown, which will be in about ten | | minutes.© Add two tablespoons of | | lour, mix. add one cup of milk and | stir ‘until’ the whole is smooth and | creamy. Served with a creamed salad. toast and a little chee: this makes a delicious and economical luncheon Chestnut Pudding. weight of sugar, one Mix well together and | greased pudding pudding and put into the oven to get crisp and firm. Wash some prunes tablespoon of sugar to each mmer until thick. an be used in a few days. Date Sponge. tablespoons of cornstarc] ith one cup of cold milk and =mooth, of butter, one-fourth teaspoon of and one-half cup of sugar, cover and stoned and chopped. teaspoon each of va stirring all into a glass dish, and when cool deco- | rate with whole stoned dates. ! PUDD long, long time since It will be a fine Forest and not very r istened and twitched A short stub of a hed, to A hungry into a pair of savage | Yowler the will =leep in the pond Beaver tonight. I er there,” he growled. ! claws again eyes grew hungrier that there was a by T. W. Burgess.) , for week | cember ed from nds of chestnuts for| [ quite soft. then skin | and_ pass them them with four butter. the same the yolks of three tumblerful of milk ther n or va M of FEATURE PAGE. RESINOL ASK THE WAITER n_: u,rsv: Lea & Per- rins’ Sauce. i wonderful forw ter,Clam and Crab Meat cocktails. Fine for fried oys- ters, fried clams or clam chowder. But be sure you get Why you need Soothing and Healing Because ifs Invaluable for Burns Chafing Scalds Rashes Cuts Cold Sores dish utes in a mod- n beat the whites of very stiff froth with Put this on top of the the pudding back d Orange Jam. thoroughly cold water. then cut pits. P'ut the meat chopper.and to each take oné cup of cut e grated rinds of one- used, add one cup of two cups of prunes ¢ P of water. Str well any wo in a saucepan and let | chabby Seal in qyeater: peries, “Diamo in ses0000000e Each of scalded milk add mix anteed, before. the mat 1t | or silk, dd one tablespoon iling water for twenty one-fourth pound of |never s and one | illa extract and cook for ten minutes the time, pour| i Dyed Her Tan Skirt to Make ton or mixed goods. ss0s0sssee Child a Dress "sesss00000000000000000 0 package of “Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple that man can dye or tint faded. skirts, dresses, waists, coats. <. stockings, hangings, dra- evervthing like new. Buy nd Dyes"—no other kind then perfect home dyeing is guar- even if you have never dyed Tell your druggist whether erial you wish to dve is wool or whether it is linen, cot- Diamond Dye= treak, spot, fade or run. Diamond-Dyes 99 for alimited time ONLY: 1 / Fine for Christmas baking RY t2is fullsize, two-quart “Wear-Ever” Aluminum Pudding Panin lyourlntchen. See how it meets all cooking require- ments. Note that it is made of thicker, harder aluminum than limited time only.) More than two million Get this handy pan TODAY quart Pudding Pan at 49c (for a house- wives know what the “Wear- Ever” trade-mark on the bottom of a kitchen utensil stands for. his ‘:J..‘:.".i.‘i:“r":.n“e‘fy"l’.‘.::.‘.'ifil"i, Tamre 2ot ot foel, e o dcticioms sice OTAINATY cOOKING utensils. We want YOU to know so that cough—usually in 24 hours or less.| Puagicdfpr luchess, Bhe children Jone It is for the purpose of showing YO too, ‘will replace utensils It seems to penctrate through every, question of whether Imould makesoup.or you the significance of the fact that wear out with utensils that heat up a can of beans. The so . loosanis 8 diy:loarse/or | Tater i the afternoon I was given the gellghttal job of molding fruic gelatine; the, membranes, and gives almost| out onto a dish and immediate relief. Splendid I‘or’ P“"‘w‘:_k;;"?m""ck& I was sent to the oven ie. throat tickle, hoarseness, croup, Tonight I'm in the refrigerator keeping bronchitis and bronchial asthma. somse 1904 cold. Becanse of the thickases of the aluminum from which I am made, I struggied to her feet. -1 just want Vpbl T T hly concentrated! the slupainuin from which | aea wad St my smudgy clothes oft— - ly a as well as I ab *Andy 'a diplomatic gleam in her | compound of genuine Norway pine being made of hard, cold-rolled 5. !, : \’r:- 19 ;a..‘::- sm-.m New .l-:h :‘.Wm brown eves, na, PETRADR Ceclly will | extract, and has been used for gen- resiat the sction of strong food acid do e iased k Joe whids elp me. — % 2 beocb odors or flavors, Bought singly at 35 cents a copy, lsmues of Vogue, becioning with th Lingwle S Cecily could not refuse. Nor could "I"&nl for throat and. chest ail- ol S e 11 issues of Vogue would cost resches you in time vou wil send me & of J:vh'n Ur:?;.l{hzx:;\l: sapon: [502\5:2; ment ometrow b 8 _m’.:yu. are He jssus without extrs charge. ! “u'h-' ~ng ERVEN 1 it S biutely denied wanting him. To avoid disappointment ask your :.l. tridgle cakes to keep them hot. I love druggist for “2); ounces of Rinex” with directions, and "don’t accept anything - else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money re- funded. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, that “Wear-Ever” utensils ARE made of HARD, THICK, SHEET aluminum that we are offering you this $1.10 “Wear-Ever” two- This “Wear- r-hca-&,,tw: -Ever THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL COMPANY, “Wear-Ever”. Go to the nearest ‘“‘Wear-Ever” dealer and get this $1.10 pan for 49c TODAY. *'—not a “Wear-Ever'" seconds llth—mm-o;mumwu-flwc ‘The Aluminum U Ne Cooking Utensil Co., New Kensing h"c:‘zuc’n be seat to you Look for the store with the “Wear-Ever” window display New Kensington, Pa.

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