Evening Star Newspaper, January 12, 1922, Page 28

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WOMAN’S PAGE. A Real Delicatessen Store Eme-Cooked ig Feet, Potato Salad, 20c Ib 12Y5¢ Each Made ‘é: m.y;;..a;b ~ Smoked Baked Ham,, | Celery Chow; 20c . Home-Made Cooked Smithfield style, Just the thing for oysters. __23c%Ib.; 90c bb. | Combination Salad, 30c Ib. Boiled Small Shoulder, Made of all kinds of cooked 20c Y4 Ib.; 75¢ Ib. vegetables and mayonnaise. Baked Beans, 15¢ Ib. Roasted Chickens, 75¢ Ib. With S'\,lfll":. 1% to 2 pounds. 2 Pounds, 25¢ Whipped Cream, 25¢ 2 pt. EGGS, Dozen, 43¢ Home-Made Scrapple, 12%c Ib. Guarantced April Storage. = Large Stuffed Olives Sweet Milk, pint, 5¢ —Small Pet Milk or a Free pint of sweet milk with one Jar Homemade 15¢ 1 Ib.s a : 15¢ V5 Ib.; 28c Ib. Mayonnalse E SRl ce in olive or " Sweet Mixed Pickles, Pimento Mayns Saturday nly. 15¢ % Ib.; 25¢ Ib. 20c Jar - Apple Ple;:e45c Orange Pies, 40c We Have Small Cans of Corn, Peas—Just Enough for 2—and Tomatoes Hot Mashed Potatoes, 15¢ Ib.; 2 Ibs., 25¢ " Roasted Rib of Reef, 20c Va Ib.; 75¢ Ib. Broadway Home-Made Mayonnaise, 20c Jar Campbell’s Soup, can, 6¢ (4 cans to the ord ) Friday and Saturday only. Delicatessen Store Opposite - 714 K St.-N.W. Public Open 7 AM. to 7 P.M. Library Closed Sunday Malwgahy or Walnut Another big shipment of these Console Model Phonographs enables us to offer this wonderful instrument A Console Phonograph 5 $12500 o This is a real phonograph with the motor built in—not a cheap machine “set in.” Come in and hear its wonderful tone. To se¢ and hear does not obligate you in the least. Harry C. Grove (Incorporated) 1210 G Street Ludlow Crochet Twine — the newest vogue in needlecraft 'OU can now make useful, hand- some articles at small expense and quickly with' Ludlow Crochet Twine —a decided novelty in needlecraft. ‘This new way to crochet is quite the vogue and is becoming daily more popular. Some of the attractive things you can make quickly and at small cost are sport hats, shopping bags, mats, ornaments or the slippers pictured above. Ludlow Crochet Twine may be had in a wide variety of distinctive colors at department, notion and art stores of the better class. 50c for a e Ludlow Crochet Twine In 30 Beautiful and Artistic Colors MADE BY LUDLOW MFG. ASSOCIATES, BOSTON, MASS. 'Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star ‘Ser\'e in frappe glas: I grapefruit, add a few chopped mara- A Suggestion. Girls who work in offices almost al- ways become round-shouldered and hollow - chested unless they take enough exercise out of office hours to overcome the effects of sitting at & desk or unless they sit better than most of the office workers I see. My suggestion to is that the girl who sits all da long at an office desk should try to work with her chair pulled closer to the desk, so as to keep her back a little straighter. | LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. [ SHE vu_'aus TO "ExPRESS AERSELF" BUT WAHAT HAS SHE TO EXPRESS P Listen to the y- way with stand- \ardized living! To the ash can with {law and order, discipline, system, convention and conformity! Be | vidual! Be different! Be free! i press yourself!” Which warbles we self by all means. r the love o' ve something to expres: They begin it in the third grade. | d, s far as I know, t keep it {right up until they pass t s and yell for an ¥ in haloes. tvke who evolves the newes rolling her socks to the reddiest red | | who doesn't wear any at all, they are | | all bristling with the one desire | be different 1oy What are they putting over? A piguant face, a unique quirk in sing, a daring departure in per- a ical 3 anda 2 ding babi is this t “express But are not unique. | | steallngs and_apings of o | What 3 which the w Las not seen v What personal impression they may be cre- tating. We've turned from the sane, hum- s and jobs which must of all healthy growt running around makin es and calling ourselv But most of us couldn’t Celery Stuffing for Veal. Cook two cups of celery cut fine {until tender-u-boiling. water ta.cover; {drain, reserving the water; mix three ! cups ‘of crumbs from a loaf of stale bread with the celery, one egg well {beaten, one-half teaspoon of salt, ai little pepper, one small onion chopped {fine, one teaspoon of poultry season- ing and one-third cup of melted sau- sage or bacon fat. Add one-half to one cup of celery stock. Macaroon Whip. Whip one-half pint of heavy cream until it will stand alone, flavor with vanilla and stir in_one-half pound of macaroons which_have been broken in small pieces. No sugar is needed, as the macaroons sweeten sufficiently. Fruit Ambrosia. Cut up in their own juice the pulpj of two or three oranges und one schino cherries and a little of the juice, a small quantity of chopped pineapple, figs or nearly any other fruit, and mix with it the contents of a small package of shredded cocoa- nut._Serve in sherbet glasses. WHEN THE KIDDIES SUFFER FROMCOLDS HILDREN'S colds should not be C neglected one instant. Have Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey an hand, and give them some as directed. It helps in relieving jrritation and loosens that hard packedphlegm. Clears the air passages. Take Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey yourself for that heavy cald. Get a bottle from your druggist today, 30c. Dr.Bell’s. & PineJarH for Coughs and Co ACHES AND PAINS- SLOAN'S GETS ’EM! a‘ VOID the misery of racking pain. Sloan’s gets right down to the ashinz -fit d:rnd 'rluhevu ur and you wonder why you gd n‘(’r‘tmma Sl{:n'l first. Hxve a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment kandy and apply when you first feel pain. Use nl::Mlyd and m’thmb. as & an m how qu{:‘l’d‘ly it eases the pain ::;llenqla feeling of warmth through aching part. Fine, too, for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains, aches, pains, over- worked muscles, lame back. For forty years Sloan’s has been the stand-by as a liniment in thousands of families. Ask your neighbor. At all druggists—35c, 70c, $1.40. beon’s Family Remedies. DrHobson's EczempOintment BY EDNA KENT FORBES. other suggestion is that she torm the other gi a gymnastum cl breathing and she exercises for ten minutes during the lunch ~ hour. realizing the value of this, are doing it for their employes, but my sug- gestion is for the girl who works in a small office with two or three others and hasn't the benefit of the classes and gymnasiums the big con- cerns go in for. exercises taken outdoors or on a roof, but if this is impossible, a room with the windows open will do. Five minutes should be glven to deep breathing while the girls stand erect with hands resting on’ the hips, and five minutes should be devoted to exercises that A make the arms swing and that bring [maize, though in B the shoulders back, the head up and|grain in general and w he chest out. Any book on gym- will give you plenty of sug- somcthing in this space about just|or oats. If the bran and germ are |such exercises as these. If you can interest your fellow- workers and keep them at | appearance .will improve an work will benefit and you w have that cramped and achy feeling |after a few hours at an office desk. reduction method, but to exer- nd diet until you are the proper: gluten which give the bindi quali li Betsy—Cocoa bu sed in ically u tly warmed it massages casily. | {If you are underweight. 5. It is arms, legs and chest m | easily by taking a little extra nour- in many southern state | ishment every day. Make way, foiks, for the new slogan, | oo oo ‘oul the THURSDAY, JANUARY HOME _ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. be cornstarch 12, 1922. to the dlet. In a well-mixed ration corn is one of the best and cheapest cereals that can be used. On every pantry shelf there should to_be used in milk puddings and to dilute heavy wheat WOMAN’S PAGE. flours in sponge cakes. Thero & be either white or yellow cor: pudding in her office into fast po to practice deep der straightening Big business firms, really should be Corn to us means Indian corn, or rope it means| E | ticular. Our corn has more fat | Every week or mo there is|#tarch but less *protein than wh "l'n wian removed, as in fine corn flour, the fat' || o= content is reduced. One reason for removing the germ is that the flour keeps longer in good condition when this Is done. (¢ 5 s coarse hom not pous BIrl 17, 6 feet 4% inches|tain forms of constipation, but pounds. You are|good for de - ; pounds overwelght. I!corn meals a advise you to take any|the wheat flou Corn flour la gliadin in it to wheat f That is why you of corn flour t the staple food of the deal of protein food should be Harry Dennis, Jr., has just won a prize of $1,000 because he is the most perfect baby in five states— Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin. a3 3% He is the three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dennis, of 7 South Michigan Avenue, Battle Creek, Michigan. ARRY DENNIS has made an enviable record for per- fect health and physique. Not only was he Michigan’s prize baby—for which he won $500 —but also he has been adjudged the best baby in five states, win- ning $1,000 more. “He has been raised on Eagle Brand,” Mrs. Dennis writes us, though, of course, her own care and his fine constitution have been partly responsible for his splendid development. Harry, Jr.,was put through the most rigid and careful tests, and then retested. He competed against many thousands of fine, healthy children, so that his achievement is most exceptional. Countless other mothers besides Mrs. Dennis have found that Eagle Brand makesstrong, robust, sturdy children—perfect physicallyand of keen and active mentality. Thou- ~ sands of them have testified to its benefits. Physicians recommend it for babies who are undernour- ished, weak and underweight. For ould know m: 14 keep a Dottle of Juir D wonderfuil, 1u: GLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK they are of the same value—to be used in johnny cakes, Indlan meal nd as a varlant for break- Corn breakfast foods in packages are relatively expensive, y convenient and much hildren. xclusively, but are very sionally. (Copyright, 1922.) —_— A gown of gold lace over gold tissue is embroidered in tiny coral beads. They should not -v dofiltheirown \' sore throats 1ed throat every winter, can't seem to get rid of them. you w uld take a look at mine and tell me what to do. Formamint pleasant and convenicnt enough to use frequently. especially children. bound to come 1p, und wores of the nd In five : blets T d and less completely dirr n 3 ir | ing off a lot of tonsillitis for me, but I am even more interested in the finer meals or fl sealp will look and feel 100 per their prophylactic power, and so I am advising my patients to use therefore, good bulk food > caue it is such ormamin GERM-FIGHTING THROAT TABLETS Formamint is our trade mark. Itidestifies our product. Baver Chem. Co., Inc., N.Y. Eagle Brand is very easily digested and has proved itself invaluable in stubborn feeding cases. Would YOU experiment with your baby’s food? What mother who has her baby’s welfare at heart would experiment on him with foods whose purity is doubtful? Mother’s milk is best for baby, of course. But if for any reason you cannot nurse your baby, don’t take risks with him. Eagle Brand has been the standard baby food for sixty-four years. For three generations it has reared splendid, healthy little boys and girls— givle‘: them the fair start that every child ought to have. Eagle Brand is not really a special or prepared food at all. It is milk—country milk and pure sugar. It is the natural food for children when mother’s milk fails. Ask your grocer Eagle Brand is available every- where. Any grocer has it. It is always sure, safe, dependable— uniform wherever and whenever you get it. THE BORDEN COMPANY Borden Building New York Mabers also of Borden’s Evaporated Milk, Borden" Chocolate Malsed Milk and Borden’s Confoctioners. “I want to congratulate you, Doctor, on the great success I | i hear you are having with your throat cases. I myself have attacks | Parisian Sage Rids the Scalp |; of in | of Dandruff and Itching— Makes It Healthy. Almost everybody nowaduys kuows that | f gusranteed to remove | f dandruff, stop falling Lair “I guess, Doctor, T will have tointroduce you to Formamint—— a real good throat antiseptic with which you will keep the soft tis- sues in an almost constant antiseptic bath, because you will find find that the average patient will readily dissolve Formamint in his mouth every hour or so, and you know hoy hard it is to get them o use gargles or sprays consistently, even two or three times a day, “Formamint tablets certainly relieve sore throats and are head- them freely during the throat and influenza season to prevent infec- tion.” Recommended by threat specialists, physicians, deatists and druggists,

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