Evening Star Newspaper, December 22, 1921, Page 36

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A TUANS FEATURE PAGE. FEATURE PAGE. — Cold Veal Made Tasty. o ;lleu one larble!l)oun of butter, two 2blespoons of catsup or chili and one-half pint of veal stock or 1.::358 \,m\:.. uuux.ng l'i“” ::d some slices of cold veal cut rather thin. Sa po-_bofore serving, T ey 6% Inch long. Put paste on one end of the strip. Join the ends to make a ring with the colored side out. Slip another strip through the ring and paste the ends together. This gives your two connected rings. Con- Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST Grapefruit Cereal With Cream Fried Mush With Syrup Coffee Brides Will Be Brides By Lucille an Slyke. IMPORTED AND LUNCHEON tinue till you have long chal These % -, String Bean Salad add color and daintiness to your THE PRODIGAL WIFE GOES OUT “Jinks, but your hair gets grander all Baking Powder Biscuits Christmas tree. R. L. RIBLER, Y HERSELF. LUGUBRIOUS scrubwoman was sloshing a brush about the Lindsay's small kitchen , the time,” she remarked, enviously, as jMerriam’s hat came off. “I reckoned out the other day, and found that any wom in who has naturally curly hair saves $10,847.16 during a period of Stewed Apples Gingerbread Cocoa DINNER (Oopyright, 1921.) —————— Mixed Vegetable Dish. RARE FRUITS CORNWELL imported fruite are ) LR DELE LR DRES QUYL genuinely flawless, and comprise the finest obtainable! Hamburg Hot House Grapes, $1.25 Ib. (extra large—packed in cotton) Tmported Malaga Grapes, 50c 1b. (large clusters) Alligator Pears, 75c each Casaba Melons, $1 each Kumgquats, 35c¢ basket Fancy Pears of all kinds $1 to $1.50 dozen rhone (CORNWELL:S Msin Us 1415 H Sireet 87. Rogemary Rosemary Baskets—Beautiful for Christmas and with a delightful touch of individuality, filled with Choicest Confections, Jam and Jellies. Price, $3.50, $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00. Rosemary Dolls—Attractive Christmas Novel- ties, filled with high-grade candy, to delight the hearts of children. Rosemary Gift Boxes—Lovely Boxes for Christmas, filled with Fine Candies. Rosemary Candy—Of highest grade. Glace ruits, Chocolates, with tasty centers of nuts, fruits and fondants, covered with rich and deli- ciously smooth chocolate. Price, $1.00 per pound. Log Cabin Roll, Piganolia, Pecan Candy. Price, 60c per pound. Fudges, 50c per pound. 7] Ask to see the Blackistone Remembrance Box —Flowers and Candy, a novel and charming Christmas Gift. Blackistone, 1401 H St. 'CREAM| —For the piping hot cup of coffee or cocoa. —Your favorite tea. —Home cooking and baking. | Wherever and however it is used, you have . the concentrated essence of nature's most per- Simply Phone ‘ranklin i hisself- Phone Main 3707 ;§ in Rosedale. | ful contralto, hdr voice rising in a wail a third higher and sinking to a minor sixth as she repeated her re- frain. on household bills that had accumu- lated during a month's absence, shrugged her shoulders. b “He'd never have come home if he'd had tax bills and water bills and in- | {arest lue and no coal in the cel- ar- the high back of her great-grand- |, daddy's chair. Her bronze lashes trailed against pale cheeks. She feit tired and listless. Utterly discour- aged with 1'fe. A hidden drawer in the desk held her jewelry; she pulled it open, took out a bracelet, a wrist watch and some ring: She put them in a vel- vet case, wrapped it in tissue and snapped a business-like rubber band around the whole. Presently her own voice was added to the wail of the scrubwoman. Mer- riam always sang when,she dressed to go out. { “Oh, de prodigal wife went out by herself—" she parod'ed to cheer “‘Oh, de stravagant wife went v hersel ““Clatinda Jane,” she admonished the scrubber, “I shan’t get back till after lunch. You cook yourself two pork chops and eat the rest of the apple ple. But when I get back 1 expect to find this house just poison neat, do you hear?” she ended sternly. “Don't you sit down one minute reading the 1 you have ~very last urban train. All the way to town she consulted smudgy small ads on | the back page of the morning paper. She surveyed her shabby shoes and much pressed blue serge com- placently. Nothing like being nppropriately | dressed,” she thought whimsically {look exactly like a woman on her way to_the pawnshop.” She was rather excited. She felt eminently noble. But when she came out of the pawnshop, which happened to be next to a hairdressers, she blushed crimson. For_stepping out of her limousine was Leila Graham. 2 “You're the very person I want to see!” cried that ornamental young person. Leila was the very person Merriam didn’t want to see. But a sort of haughtiness at the thought that she Dossessed interest money, tax money and coal money in her purse, made Merriam feel entirely_equal to consort- ing with the wealthy Leils. “Let's get shampoos together and e a million things Leila rattled on. ' lunch together—I to say to vyou, twent: L, on “Oh, de prodigal son came home by | Mepriam » she moaned in a mourn- ;r.u:‘z the way Put talks,” Leila ex- pl ined. noon and night—-"" booths uniil the shampoos were over. | They walked out with the deliciously Merriam Lindsay, figuring nervously | pious air that all women walk at such times, Yvonne's She leaned her curly head against !, FRPPSf POLC ShE Arasied, SOl Foy da; together last night. pre Merry scolded ¢ ! right aw vears which is the interest Lella's ironical tone made look - at her In _wonder. “I hear that sort of thing morning, They visited amicably from adjoining | ‘There’'s a_ripping new place called . Leila said; “let's lunch | here——"" Chops and mushrooms ordered, she eaned back, lighted a cigarette and losed her eyes. “Pepper po she drawled, “will you alk a little sense—-"" Merriam laughed. ou are perfectly safe, my temper ys are over—I'm tame “Well, Rich 8Slocum and I had dinner Poor old dear looks y seedy.” “He ought to start south right away,’ “Dr. Gordon told him ‘m, I know. But he won’ y. Merry—this is a prodigious but I'm going west next week. To dear old Reno to buy myself a nice, viish divorce. “Leil’”" Merriam was genuinely hocked. “You've only been marrie to Putnam a vear! And he—he di- vorced Ellen to marry you!" “Ancient history—old beast!” she showed her pretty teeth. “I've had enough. I'm through. He's impos- sib’ What 1 thought was that— it would be a rather good thing if you went along with me.” “Leil’, are you crazy? Merry, you've been but_ you'll have and the quicker “Perfectly sane. a good little sport, to give up some time, you do the better. You're getting to be pepless, haggard, frumpy little thing—you guessed wrong about this John person, just as I did about Put- nam. Of course, you's is good-look- ing and young, but that's all. Rich says he's done his best by him, that he's a sulky, ungrateful—' - y. ‘ait till I'm done. Here's old Rich just loving the ground you walk o, literally dying for love of i you, with everything in the world to give you. He wouldn't let you lift your little finger. But this handsome hero, this noble John, lets you grub like a charwoman. Love's a grand thing, but it's The waiter service plate before Merriam. stared at him. “Check, please!” she said firmly. “But, madam “Check, please: she reiterated With trembling fingers she pulled a bill from the money she had gotten at the pawnshop. She flung the bil! at the waiter. Without one word to Leila, Merriam walked out of the res taurant. Another episode of this story in to- morrow’s Star. as putting down a She BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES. A Pretty Neck. A few days ago we were talking about massaging the neck with cocoa butter to overcome the series of wrinkles so apt to appear on even a youthful throat. The cocoa butter is valuable not only for filling out these wrinkles, but also for fattening a thin neck. It can even be used to fill out hollows in the shoulders, but this 1s a tedious process and had much bet- ter be done.by exercise. No neck is pretty if the skin is not in color, if the neck is not hetd fizl‘lror if it is either too fat or too {hin. You can use the daily cocoa but- ter massage to fill in wrinkles and {0 help make the neck plump. You can make a fat neck slender by reducing {your body until you weigh only as much as you should for your height and your age. You can make the skin fresh and clear by using a cleansing cream and by wearing only washable white material around the throat. If there are brown lines around the {neck or if the skin is a bad color it s probable that tight collars have been rubbing or irritating you, or that the dye from your dresses has been rubbéll off into the pores of the skin. If the head is not held properly the neck is apt to develop a little curve in front which it anything but at- tractive. There is a little bone at the back of the neck above the shoulder blades which is very sensitive and very eas| displaced. This _often stands out like a little lump and quite ruins the neck line. You can get this back into position by pressing it with your hands and by holding the head high. If it seems particularly obstinate an osteopath "ould put it into place in a very few ‘eatments, Louise—Blond hair that is slightly 1y always has this tendency to get lark near the roots. Shampoo the hair vith castile soap every three weeks, nd put a little lemon juice in the se Aliee—You can take yeast cake in candy form if it is easier and pleas- «nter that way. Personally I don't hink it makes any difference. Most veople benefit if they take three cakes of yeast every day, because they puri. fy the blood and act as a laxativ By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Noted Physician and Author. i The Attack of Infantile Paralysis. No harm is done, though I am not tsure any good can be done, by the| frequent rinsing of the mouth and ithal (gargling) with a solution of |as much boric acid as bolled water | will dissolve, several times a day, | when infantile paralysis Is epdemic {in the community, especially persons :caring for, or who may have come |into contact with one ill of the dis- {ease. No other known antiseptic is !better than boric acid for the pur- 'D()Se. 1T have told how easily the feverish {stage of Infantile paralysis may be imisiaken for ‘:onsiiltis” or “‘griupe. for “just a cold.” In any event, the {child is well treated with prolonged warm packs, if the mother knows ihow to give a “hot pack,” or a pro- {longed warm bath or baths. This is |good for the feverishness, good for jine restlessness and- tenderness, if any, and good for the intlammation in the spinal cord if the iliness nap- ens to be poliomyelitis. A great many parents, saddened by 4 “visitation of this cruel disease to anxious to procure the best atment, have asked me Lcther piasier casts should be ap- fect rest to the muscles and nerves, and that is by all means the best thing that can be done at this stage of the diseas: The _general treatment of the erish stage of infantile paralysis cunnot be set down arbiirarily. It specific against any known disease or fault. Nature, spelled with a cap- ital N, is In this war again&t disease all right, but though 1 recognize na- ture as a blind, treacherous, cruel, yet powerful healer, I feel sure the es killings, ally, nature, needs constant watching by an intel lizent physician. Cures croup in: 100 per cent of cases, but how! roughly! Nearly chokes the ‘breathl out of the child effecting the curel Coctor gives a little medicine and re- lieves the attack without the rough work. Give nature a chance, always l——but don’t trust the old murderer too ar. If some day we are visited with a strange disease which the medical scientists find involving the heel and toe, though the virus enters through the eye and lodges in the fingers, the lver and the semicolon, why, I 'sup- pose a lot of le people will call u @& shoe-store " to treat the disease with a patent leather arch support, say. That would be as logical as some of the mal- stricken with infantile paralysis. The patient should be kept in bed at least ten days after the fever has gone in infantile paralysis, though a child seems to improve with surpris. ing rapidity and begs to get up and piay. | treatment that is inflicted on chlldrenl Each of us at some time or an- other finds himself worn out phys- ically from unusual effort or con- tinued nerve strain— when sleep seems almost impossible. TINGLE'S LAXO ASPIRIN is not & narcotlc drug, but the salicylic acid it contains holds great sooth- ng and quieting powers. Twenty minutes before retirin take two tablets accompanied by : ;"h“ of warm milk or warm water. == 30 Years Cleanliness l: one of done without foe Suction Teeth Will Net Slip or Drep, $5.00 Other Sets of Testh, §5.00 Up BRING SLEEP AND REST TO TIRED, TAUT NERVES— TINGLE’S LAXO ASPIRIN Our Long Life Plates and Everlasting Bridge & very appropriate gift. Free. of Good Honest Dentistry Our Record. r many striking features. . s'izhtest semblance of Cream of Pea Soup Hot Boiled Corned Beef s Swiss Chard Mashed Potatoes Turnips Baked Apples Stuffed With Ralsins Coftee. [ITTLE STORIES /S BEDTIME: Peter Rabbit Is Trapped. BY THORTON W. BURGESS Could we into the future look As backward we can see, How oft we otherwise would act, And different things would —Peter Rabbit. Back of Buster Bear’s bed in Bus- ter Bear's cave sat Peter Rabbit with eyes which seemed to be popping out .of his head, his heart seeming as if it were right up his mouth and every hair on his back standing on end With fright Peter had heard a noise Just outside the entrance to that cave and, of course, his first thought was that Buster Bear might be re- turning. He thought of Buster first, because he was in Buster Bear's bed- room, where, of course, he had no right to be, and he had that most un- comfortable of all feelings—a gullty feeling. Outside the cave it was light, for Mistress Moon was shining her brightest and Peter could see the en- trance clearly. You see, he was look- ing toward the light. His first thought was to take to his heels and scamper out of that cave as fast as his legs could take him. That is what he wanted to do. My, how he wanted to do it! But he didn't dare to. No, sir; he didn't dare to! To do it might be to run straight into the claws of Buster Bear, for that noise he had heard was just outside the entrance to that Was ever a Rabbit in a worse fix. He didn‘t dare run and he didn’t dare stay. Again he heard that nolse, and this tme there was no doubt as to what it was. No, sir; there wasn't a doubt in the world! it was the noise made 0y some one sniffling at something and Peter didn‘t need to be told what wvas being sniffed at. He knew. He knew only too well. Some one was :niffling at his trail. Some one had found the scent left by his feet. Buster Bear!” thought Peter. “Oh, dear! Oh, dear! He has come home and I am in a trap! Why. oh, why. did L ever come in here? If I try to run sut he'll just reach out a big paw and hat will be the end of Peter Rabbit. ( wish I hadn't come over here. I wish I hadn’t thought of Buster Bear. sh 1 had heeded Mrs. Peter and ayed in the dear Old Briar-patch. Ha! It isn’t Buster Bear at al You see, all those thoughts went hrough Peter's funny head all in a minute, a way thoughts have of loing in moments of fright, and all he time he had been staring at the :ntrance to that cave. Now against he moonlight beyond appeared a 1ead and it wasn't at all the head ‘eter had expected. It was a round- r head than Buster Bear’s, not so vig and with a pair of the fircest, nungriest eyes that glared inside that ave, and seemed to Peter to see him it once. No, it wasn't Buster_ Bear; it was Yowler the Bob Cat! Buster 3ear_would have been bad enough, ut Yo ler was worse. Too frightened to do anything ‘éter did nothing. This was the wis- t thing he could do. He sat there 1s still as if frozen stiff. Yowler peered In that cave with those fierce :yes that are made for seeing in the lark, and though it seemed to Peter that they saw him at once, they didn’t. You see, Peter was so_much the color of the leaves of Buster Bear's bed, behind which he was crouching, that Yowler didn’t recog- nize him. s But Yowler's nose told him that Peter was somewhere in there and his stump of a tail twitched with agerness. But he hesitated to go in hat cave. That was Buster Bear's home and Yowler knew it. Yowler is a coward, and though he knew ! Buster Bear was not at hcme, he hes- itated to enter that cave Poor | eter! How he did hope that Yowler would prove too cowardly to enter. He was trapped. There was no mis. take about that. (Copyright, 1921, by T. W. Burgess.) Egg and Tomato Salad. Cook one pint can of tomato soup, a slice of onion and a stalk of celery for fifteen minutes, season with sait and pepper and add one-fourth pack- | age of soaked gelatine, strain and add two - hard-boiled eggs which e been sliced, mold in cups and serve on lettuce with boiled or mayonnaise dressing. time be in vour system, clearing up the congestion and producing a healthful perspiration. It h the sleep-inducing powers of an ordinary hot bath, plus medicinal qu#lltl?u exlzrzo;dlm.ry. e laxative found in TINGLE" LAXO ASPIRIN makes ml%l’ ll? your relief by ridding 'gl syste: of the waste poisons which often br{;lg pain :.nd rekl! e ;snesa. e _sure to ask for TINGLE'S LAXO "ASPIRIN, the lr::prond a —It's a gentle laxative TINGLE'S LAXO ASPIRIN Ask Your Druggist for the “Three Point Box” Therapeutic Research Laboratories, ‘Washington, D. C. Work will features. m pain. rowns Bridge Work, $3.00 — $4.00 $5. B Wyelh Jc, 43728 th 5. K. W. Eiareimd s s Mabel's thoughts are all of Christ- mas now, charming use for our old magazines. Tear out all the colored pictures. | height of the beans. Cover and cook i Cut them in strips one inch wide and |a slow oven until the beans are soft. Boak two cups of dried lima beans over night in co'd water to cover. Drain, put in a casserole dish and sprinkle with one-half teaspoon of salt and a little pepper. Cut a two-inch cube of fat sa.t pork in small pleces, try out in a frying pan and strain. To the fat obtained add one small onion, peeled and .ninly sliceu, and one-half cup of one-third-inch car- Tot cubes and stir constantly until the vegetables are browned. Add to tie beans, dot over with two tab.espoons of butter and add hot water to one-half the which suggests another Gouraud's Oriental Cream LORD CALVERT CLEAN Iy STABIISIED (820 3 7 GALTINORENE ROASTER CARTON | DOES NOT TOUCH HUMAN HANDS “AFTER LEAVING THE UNTIL THE OPENED IN THE KITCHEN Buy From Your Gro " FLYOSAN kills Fleas CER . without harming the dog \VID HARUM says, “A rea- will also be glad on bein’ a dog.”—But remember— David Harum never was a dog. Make a test. Stand Rover on a newspaper or sheet. Then spray moths, dies and { . - st be dete ined by the circum- e o fect food—something better with than without | | “-icir, 1o phen mis Sy T him with Flyown agaiost the way 1t clean to us, it —something for which there is no adequate P tupais ot orcarivataet SithobgR GIF I’ OF GIFTS%* his hair grows. He may object € easy to use, it's pleas- substitute. Enjoy the luxury of ample | 20 particular drug can be considered The Most Useful Xmas Gift That Can the noise of the sprayer but Flyosan gnt to use, and best of CREAM. T R e R Given, Made by Dr. Wyeth and Staff of Ex- can not hurt him. Neither will it gy, it’s absolutely * ter, is any known human agency; pert, Careful Skilled Dentists. stain or gum his hair. * harmless to everything In a few minutes, you'll see the dead fieas drop to the floor. A few sprayings, several days apart, will essans oid charlatan fs ‘mot tled to any ensble Rover to enjoy his naps, ware stores. Get our “school,” “system,” or scheme o h:il?{nc. Nature effects the cure, wo flea-free. : complete $1 introduc- say, in a kind of bombastically mod- Sure she does, And she Dad,ashercadshiseveningpaper, tory package today. COLONIAL CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Reading, Pa. ) New Orleass, Lo to miss the thump- 2 5 g salleylic acld will in short|pirin with the thi 3 — ed limbs. As cn- e three points: - The morning cereal. g ;P““I"n‘.‘l’effig‘;:;‘,}fi,‘,; \'\‘,‘:“:.. l.,,‘: '3(,*%(3, It's absorbed sonable amount of fleasisgood ing obligato with which Rover used & such a . ¢.dl, —Your cream and fruit. L i most pois It relieves pain quickly foradog—theykeephim 'mbroodin’ to jer the house. Flycsan kills all sorts of bugs.— Cockroaches, bedbugs, ants, lice, mosquitoes all are Flyosan. Cadyrieht 19%7 Cotomin? Ch-wicnl Corpormtion

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