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FEATURE PAGE, 19 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1922. Red Squirrel and Happy Jack the . wow, yelped Bowser | ] wo Gray Squirrel and Sammy Jay and|the Hound and bounded forward also. Tommy Tit the Chickadee and Drum- | But they were too late. Ey the tim2 : mer the Woodpecker watched. Pres-|they reached that little house Prickly | Have some raw fresh fruit at least night, and ently Prickly Porky came to the little | Porky was inside. It suited him. once a day. When oranges and grape- | o house of "Bowser' the Hound. Te | Nothing could have suited him bet:| It s a good rule to make, in planning | fruit are pientiful you should have one | Hiner » focs . e doorway. It was dark|ter. He examined every inch of it|your o Jettuce | of these citrus fruits at least once a day. | i 2 < zood prec r EDI IME foside. 1t looked 1iks a very com. |and then caimly lay down to take a|Soun eale to By eltae Tn some|They adapt themsclves to every meul | dent for cutting out bread at dinne fortable place for a sleepy Porcupine |nap. It was dark and warm and|gormitories and large boarding houses |and to many different courscs. Ior in- | Some persons. however. find it ca | form once a day. 3t you have them for | inclined, it is a good plan to elimina | luncheon, then plan” to have rice or|bread at onec of the three me macaroni in sume form for dinner. | is usuaily an Once a Day Be Brides By Lucille Van Slyke. who wanted to get out of sight. He|very comfortable in there. and he|the pi A o e e | Stance. you inay have grapefruit or | 10 cut out bread at breakfast, and 1 Y 4 y let his thousand little spears drop|made up his mind at once that there H,;“';,:’;{'?“M‘;I‘:,U,,. st pesanetad | grapofruit and orange pulp Sbper | may easily be done when you have i B the Hound Is U set. back until they were almost hidden | he would stay. b and dessert always at might, | lizer or first course at luncheon or din- | Cereal of some sort to supply the starch owser the PSEL. |in his coat. Then he started to enter| Poor Bowser! He was completely : y Liner. They may be used in salads or | Of the meal. THE PAINLESS METHOD. Sadie v = Bg =Ly Bowser's little house. upset when he saw Prickly Porky p can| ert, and of i S S Sadie bring socks down here to BY THOMAS W. BURGESS, _Once _more Farmer Brown's Boy |disappear in that little house. He|if you like, by eliminating either soup or | course :hey are always appropriate for | Eig sq “oth tablecloths. ERRIAM LINDSAY was pour- | "o John cried. “A corking| With opportunity at hand yelled “Hi there!” and with his stout | sat down in front of it and howled. | dexsert when you have a salad for din- | the first course of breakfast. i e (v hee e it > ing out her troubles on her idea! I will get a smallpox sign| Year not of it to take command. st‘:fill:y!mrted to run toward Prickly | Yes, sir; that is just what he did. ner. = 1f you are inclined to overweight, or | the doylies of oilcloth, for they cover defenseless John. Perched |from the board of health! Behind —Prickly Porky. k (Copyright, 1922, by T. W. Burgess.) It is enough to have potators in some ' if other members of the family are thus | a larger surf. on his knee sho recounted at | gt barage you can live in peace armer Brown's Boy saw where — length and with many details the tre-| “Do you know, that's the most mad- | Prickly Porky was heading for; it R mendous annoyance she found her denl{n(s thing about Sadie?” she re- | was for a hole under the barn. 7th &D Sts. N.W. =" Open Every Day i Upstaics neighbor, one Sadie Parrell, | I MCOTSUCNIY. 1\ .y | Parmer Brown siw st == From 8 AM. to 6 PM. | who simply did not know the meaning | you go—off on a complete tangent— Son,” said he, “if you don't turn 2 him aside, the rascal will get under the barn. Then what can you do? vou cover up that hole of the word “No.” Sadie was a lady | Just like a woman. with much leisure on her hands. She|SUGE to the poin S gt to it Merriam de- | 1y : Kept house in ome room for herself |clared indignantly, ' “You said wei| WhY dom't ond her husband. Which took a & Smallpox sign to keep her out; and |and then we'll see what he'll do. Per- [ J ® Sman Traction ot her day. The rest|1 said. with perfect logic. that that|haps then he will have sense enough of the time she seemed to prefer to| Was the most maddening thing about | o go back to the Green Forest, where | [lfi ; spend w. erriam. And, while Mer € D e ha Mo aid not feel ex- | “What was?" John groaned he belongs. oty Torong of “her “serubby-looking | “Trying to keep her out! A thing| So Farmer Brown's Boy hurried to acquaintance when they strolled forth S'k" a smallpox _ sign wouldn't. | gat some boards and nalls, and by adie’'s awfully noble. She's the . : -!g‘htseseala\is; t:g:sth::éwm s TRRAReE: m,.d that would come in to save your |the time Prickly Porky reached the o “How could she save vour life?" ; “ , after a Four. g 8 d | the egin with— :;xr:e?_e'r and 1 simply can’t get Tl kf}leee:!flmd tlungl hazrseltr bagkkonhhfi R - g o and pretended to chol im. N Ny b “Cheer up,” soothed John. ‘“"We|p, presently, snuggled in hlsearrr.l:. N\ = : . You never can . aren't going to live here Tong. When | it FEEIRUN Shoe e move bick to Hosedale weil forget [ 516 hefan once more on the puzzling to give her our address.” “The only way out I can see,” she “But that's three long months yet|gecided firmly, “is for me to be so i [ 1 . . P A e P - | olRs are buyiny--business is Gooa--Values are Great o Tenub her: ‘she's 8o riendly herself, [ SHe BEls anery and stops coming at E _ Honesty. Johnsy, I have to run for |3tk For Tl have to be some day. 5 the bedfoom and pretend to be asleep | JHSE DAL & Bt e o AT 's Susan Sue can tell her I am. And |{ der on Tuesday and be. o aa just says. -Well, she'll wake | IN€ 50.80Tty Wednesday that I was so T Boon Tl sit down and read these | Tude f&”‘i’s‘r‘éfi..‘é’,.%fi&fl‘{“”" decent to = . s in 't You j ncourages . her < > 5 Tagasines until she does’ You just|neh, of , Wetnesday—encaurages. he y can’t snub her: nobody can” 1 Sust have to have it all over with in| | e n p T t- - BB Sl e omes PSS 2 ST = mportant Sale of Beautifu redit---As Usua n: g A her at the time, but it's a painless “What a stupid suggestion!” Merryly,oi0q compared to doing little snubs e O e v'ail the whije.: | o1 at @ time for threc months—unt a e e Furthermore, a very You could sneak back after she went ‘,“mma‘!‘k}l’, g‘l‘ fh:{‘lgsr‘-‘;n“gi"‘ the ac - ; 0 a . Is ght in to- | PRESENTLY PRICKLY CAME TO important item is the cut. § ; morrow morning. I shall tell Susan| THE I - PO ‘Johnny, please be serious. it's just to tell her I'm not to be disturbed. ’;EE lf}(’l;':l:gED-HOUSb OF BOWSER Open Charge Account, awful! I'simply don't know What 0 Anq then when she comes down at 11 do_about it. e - lo'clock with the soup—" » . John puffed at his pipe solemnly. e o Merriam. “Are|PArn there was no opening through But Merriam might have known from | SOUDT John shook Mer e | which to get under it. He didn't un- o 2 'Has thi g unbalanced e wiked ;‘fig‘t‘e‘:ti‘gn";';‘bi';:{g’ £388 | you mentaily? e derstand it at all. There had been that bonvhy. of course it hasn't Merry |an opening there, for he had used Couldnt you commit justifiable | Dobbed her red curls in denial “Cant};; c.veral times. He had come out of Tomicide? Chloroform her or sand- 3¢ T Aredit ‘men.ithal stupldsl, - o oz homicide? Chloroform her or sand v usan says I'm not to be|it only the night before. It was very bag her or shoot her or somcIhnE?|disturbed Sadie thinks that means |strange He ‘grunted’ and whined :Iuit‘ fil’l?d ury<:~eot andqin‘ured as I'm sick, because she's so dense that | W hile Farmer Brown and his boy ou looked' as swee! J she thinks nobody wants to be alone | stood back looking on and wondering 3oy 4o this minute " @ over.” he con- | Unless one is sick. and that nobody at he would do next. He didn't & d" ""m‘:mau“‘ ceeming quita ought to be alone if one is sick. and | leave them long in doubt. No, sir, tinued, ruminatively, seeming Ault:|gown she comes with a big bowl of |l didn't leave them long in doubt; v, as whe baced up and down | $0up—and you know, yourself, Johnsy, 1 He sniffed along the upper edge of - e i 1 ‘(;proba,bly any hy ‘:ol\lz?)“;(;'es?z‘:)'i‘fig P — ](linl top h|o:tlrx(l i'arll'lt'r llgrozn'x Boy re 3 sly, v 3 'So ¥ e soup | had nailed ere, then he began to zeally clever lamyer cofild ger 3 U Off | in her face and say. “This IS a hint|gnaw with tHose great teeth of his, T tead of howling insanity or dig- |that T don't want you to play in my fpulling off great splinters. Intea o s for & mug. | YArd—is that your idea of a patniess| “Hit here! Stop that, ¥ a"' if_he put it up squarely to the m'i';lheo outer door banged suddenly. shones tomer Doans jury, ‘Your homor, my lovely client|peering over John's shoulder through il Htont. Bt in self-defense. Eroyer g 5 en The Constitution savs that every man, | the window, Merriam gave a tiny v and grunted which you may use with us any time and make your payments at your convenience, weekly or At An Astonishingly Low Price = m fretfull nd Kkept trying to get back woman and child is_entitled to the | SUGEMy 0 oo he exclaimed in a el pursuit of life, liberty and happiness. |y O JEUTRE, Noice, “Were we | ho i be Forme Beowns Boy pokag T'Can plainly’ show by indisputable : welhe di evidence that this defenseless darling Iy dop 1T Becanneithat Was|him aw r . was prevented by the deceased bore )" wuif " she eavesdropped.,” John e e t e a"’e oll a lle from pursuing any of the three. chuckled, “why, maybe you won't!is to be gained x isti § ls s Oonmev.” Merriam Interrupted scath- | fhuckled, fwhy. maybe vou, womtiis to + oyt M Interunt th | have ¢ vour " | obstinate, and while Prickly ingly, " “if sou ‘think = vou're being ijsn't’ it maddening?’ wailed Mer-|Porky réalized. that it was uselets + Cou' . . . funny, you might as well stop. You're “I won't know until tomorrow! : ! Large and " 2 ite end "jto keep on trying to gnaw his way t ok Tt Sy R R our Pieces, Including ;752 Vanity Dresser with Sadie, or bus riding with Sadie. | Another episode of this story in to- uffle along. looking for some other morrow's § place in which to hide. He had no or to museums with Sadie, or letting I i % intention of going back to the Green « wonder where he will go,” said Farmer Brown's I and stopped trying to make him go the way he We are featuring this excellent suite tomorrow because is a most exceptional value. It combines beauty with com- ing to mak fort and utility. Mahogany finish, guaranteed construction. o / LISTEN, WORLD!| | | HOME ECONOMICS. BY ELSIE ROBINSON. { | | Iy Poriy shufad aions stowiv: Consisting of full size Vanity, Chiffonier, full size Bed and BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. I yhining and complaining, and sto large Dresser with plate mirror. Use your credit and have er b gk Me cameito this fine suite sent to your home at the February Sale price of Bowser the Hound and Chatterer the Poets have no imagination. Ever since I first scanned Mother Goose I've been reading lyrics about some maiden’s fan or senorita’s lace hand- kerghief or a dancer's silver slipper or other romantic bits of feminine c AéTo R lA Tbe Famous Sellers haberdashery. But there the romance For Infants and Children has stopped. Why? Have handker- - 'n u“ F°r overaov..n I - = P | Kl.tchen Cabinet chiefs, fans and slippers, faded roses Gruel. and locks of hair the monopoly on Always bears heart throbs? Why doesn’t some one the REDUCED write a lyric about a boy’s first razor? Synatmre of In the February Sale housewives will find a splendid line of these famous Kitchen Cabinets at greatly reduced prices. Let us show them to you to- morrow. All styles and sizes are here $ .75 to meet every re- quirement. Prices There's a real soul shrine for you! Any one can have a handkerchief or a slipper, dozens of 'em. But a boy can have only one first razor—and t's certainly some hard- ‘Away with vour maidens’ dreams! For genuine, eight-cylinder palpita- * * tion give me a sixteen-year-old boy - as he watches the coy emergence of lges on his first whiskers. And what lnciellll Gruel is porridge strained through battle hymn ever evoked more re- i D e pined than the|a very fine strainer, or, better, —and o InE hib Arat safety’? squeezed through a cloth. Oatmeal and cleans a B S 2 i t lit- i They’re doing them up in neat lit- | porridge is most used for gruel and caated tangue Liberal Credit, Too! All Steel Toaster At one time one may make four pieces of delicious toast easily and quickly on this toaster. should be cooked for the purpose forty-five minutes and made in the proportion of two and a half cupfuls of boiling water to a cupful of rolled oats. Gruel is given to little children and to invalids. Its purpose is to ob- It is human nature to want to tain the nutriment of the cereal as find out "'h’." So far as sclence completely as possible, while remov- can tell us this is the reason: ing the rough particles of grain; the : % : straining is therefore the important Fleischmann’s Yeast is a food part of the preparation of gruel. In abundant in certain elements cases of intestinal weakness, particu- which are necessary to health and larly where any rough bit of matter o may tear open the tiny ulcers which | | life itself. It promotes the flow of ! ¢haracterize the diseases of typhoid bile and of pancreatic juice. It has {and dysentery and so start hemor- a remarkably beneficial effect on | rhage, great care should be given to the whole digestive process. It this detail. Children who have sum- cleans a coated tongue, mer complaint, or cholera infantum, o as it is sometimes cailed, or. indeed, Try Fleischmann’s fresh yeast diarrhoea of any sort, are often given f i BTuel, and the straining is for them | | in orange juice of in olkehien al important. It is a nuisance to like it in milk shakes and malted squeeze .oatmeal through cloth—a milks. Women like it spread on sticky, tedious process—but if gruel bread or crackers. = |is made at all it should be thorough- B i tlo khaki cases this year. There's|ly strained. Where the need of nutri- Keep your digestion in the pink art for you! There are epics and ad- | ment is great, or where water gruel of condition and yourtongue clean Ventures, crusades and accolades all|is distasteful. the porridge may be| | and healthy by eating 2 or 3 cakes done up in vest-pocket packets!|cooked either with milk or half Ly ting What rosebud, halr pin, silken garter | milk and halt water. This makes|| ©f Fleischmann's Yeast fresh o Bisted shoe lace cased in sachet|a very delicate and delicious gruel || everydaybefore orbetween meals. | An inexpensive suité, consisting of ever ‘enent;d such world-conquering | Salt should be cooked in the por- Besureit's Fleischmann’s Yeast— Ad Thousands of men and women have found relief from varions digestive disturbances by eating Fleischmann’s Yeast. Nine-Piece American Walnut or Mahogany Dining Room Suite—On Credit This splendidly designed suite will add immeasurably to the beauty and comfort of your dining room. Period 75 design—generous size pieces, all substantially built. China Cabinet, Extension Table, Buffet with mirror and six gen- |hrld,|h uas i v‘éh.t - her?i‘: o!“::.e‘gg ;;\zlge‘i :ttseasxlz:opn}l to Sih;:uplful gs the familiar tin-foil package with Drener, Chiffonier and a Continuous- and cotton? 2 es I ed oats. is impossible to a o AT O re Dromising angles of his it satisfactorily after the porridge is|| theyellow label Placeastanding post White Enamel Bed. All for the low contours while first wielding it? What | cooked. order with your grocer today. . if he does wipe off the gore on his! Gruel may be made thin enough to - mother's best guestroom towel and|be drunk, but does not in that case leave the bathroom looking like a|yleld much nourishment. It is bet- war relic of Hun frightfulness? He | ter to make it thick, strain, and re- has scaled Olympus and the rest of | heat it and serve it hot with cream and the hero gang have nothing on him.|a littl. sugar, or mold it and serve Lives there & man with soul so dead|it cold, like a Jelly. This latter is Who never to himself hath sald: often a welcome change to an in- “Gee whiz! I needa shave! valid. It can be served with a fruit I counted sixteen hairs last night, |Jelly or an ice. S 5 My map is sure an awful sight, (Copyright, 1922 ey (RSN N But this old boy will fix "em right P. D S M And teach ’em to behave! < ians . I . t t My dad_has nothing now on me! fThere's & skin beautifier—a de~ I Ry 4- 1ece avenpor uite From all that baby stuff I'm free. lightfully fragrant cream known 2 ———— | Just wait until my chin they see— s Black and Gosh. how the gang will rave!” : i d in connection . = : The ideal combination living room suite e e — 3 WELSH :]i'{fihnm‘a:r ‘White Soap_and M - v i providing sleeping accommodations for two 9. ore s ore 1 Cleansing Cream gives surprising p —=3 ! | | in the comfortable and sanitary Davenport- RAREB, Fesulta, : i 3 ¥ | Bed. The suite is of golden oak, with black IT The “‘{,‘};‘m’,‘, cmuot.fi | i ) z imitation leather covering. Dal;enport-Bed, Rarcbit or Rabbit ‘xfi:&m ‘a0l 1s mado soft and | | Armchair, Rocker und Side Chair.. ..« .. .- | ever you spell it, S — == . | e — S = ” is never complete without Lea & Per- § cake, . — 0c packa, 2 Two words worth hing d'l‘s:dv:l:ec:nf Bls 7 n‘é’:t;::r{u dea 2 . 2 while l.°°k“'g up nol:fie right without ¥ wfiee, Dept. D, Plough, Meme : —not in the dic- . the enap and aroma d'gml‘BBo fkfi'a 1:1 e ‘:{ tionary, but on ofitheigenuine e’ s about Black and . Whits toilet preparations. page 17 of today’s ; Star. Our store Aluminum hand corner. i e SAUCE '1 sgmmm}’?bs‘ ‘l THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE Y% P BERIIRRAY| 89 4 : Fme QOak Telephone Stand and Stool