Evening Star Newspaper, May 12, 1922, Page 35

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FEATURES. i ‘The Greatest Shoe Value In Americal Shoesfor Women Ask For No. 4760 < Mghogany Russia Lace Oxford, No retailer single-handed could possibly produce such a value as this for less than $5, when it is all WE can do with an out- put of over FOUR MILLION PAIRS A YEAR and the narrowest possible margin of profit, to sell them for $3.60.. All the luxury of fine leather quality and elegance of style that $5 ever bought is embodied in these perfect creations at $3.60. See them. Newark Shoe Steres Co The Largest Chain of Shoe Stores in the United States. 3 Washington Stores 913 Pa. Ave. N.W. 1112 7th St. N.W. 711 HSt. NE. Open Saturday Nights Open Nights Open Nights All Newark Stores Open Saturday Evenings to Accommodate Customers The Stout Woman’s Problem 'I'HE woman of full figure has a poise all her own which needs only proper cor- - seting to produce an enviable charm. The Rengo Belt Re-, ducing Corset, moulding the lines to beautiful proportions, gives the effect of grace and dignity. You can depend up- on your Rengo Belt Corset. It is strong and well eailored. i Sold at all good stores. Yalla Cotury Bids Vo Seal Brand is a rich, full-flavored coffec— delicious in taste and tempting in its aromatic fragrance. It is the choicest coffee that fifty- seven years of experience in buying and roast- ing coffees can produce. ' Since it was first put on the market, the goodness and high quality of Seal Brand Coffee has not changed- in the slightest.” You can depend upon its uniformity. All the flavor and aroma are stored tight for you in the sealed tins. Seal Brand comes in whole bean—steel cut—or percolator grind. "One, two and three-pound tins at leading grocers. Tea-drinkers will find in Sesl Brand Orenge Pekoe Tea the ausiity es in Seat' BremdCotln . SEAL BRAND When you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over- 22 years and proved safe by millions for - Headache Colds Rheumatism , - Toothache Neuralgia . Neuritis Earache Lumbago Pain,” Pain : ‘Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Hasdy “Bayer” bozss of 13 tablets—Also bottles of 24'snd 100—Druggists. [sgirta 1s the trads mark of Bayer Manafactwre of -8 Salicyliensid “Brains Count the Most.” Two years ago 1 had dinner with Monte Blue. It was his first night fn New York. A week ago or more I had dinner with him again i He'd changed. The first time we dined together he was brand new to the great city. {He was staring at the skyscrapers and experimenting with the subway. He was wearing a sombrero and he had a western swing to his walk. He still has that. He was sort of flap- per-shy then,-and his Indian blood was more I evidence than it is now. He was shy and_didn't talk very much. Of course, I didn't mind that. It was my opportunity! * The other:night he was different. He talked a lot. He wasn't & bit shy. He said: “Doing Danton in_‘Orphans of the Storm' has been a wonderful and a satisfying experience. To work under Mr. Grifith and with Miss Gish is to be akin to art. And what is more, they are real—wonderful and human and sincere.” 4 “What about girls asked I * “I can’t stand Ingenues,” Monte, “the clinging vine type—bah' I like girls with ‘pep’ and ‘punch’ and in general?” spirit. 1 like girls who look alive. [Girls who think. Girls who do things. I particularly like the girls in my own profession, and I don't | even think a girl is beautiful unless she’s got dash and go. “As for the screen—why, it's nar- rowing down. You know what I mean?” .3 didn’t, but I tried to look intelligent). “This is the day of the thinker on the screen. You've got to have something more than youth and & pretty face if you're going to be a screen success from now on. The ITTLE GORIES 56’5551;111&& A Stray Baby. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS, ‘Who nothing knows can. not This truth to me is very clear: - —Jol ¥ Chuck. Johnny Chuck and Polly Chuck were well pleased with their new home on the edge of the dear Old Briar-Patch. Nearby was plenty of sweet clover. Behind them were the brambles of the dear Old Briar-Patch, and this meant that mone of their enemies could get at them from behind. It was a splendid place to bring up a family. Never had they had a safer home. . Johnny Chuck knew that Peter Rabbit and Mrs. Peter had a family of babies in the middle of the dear Old Briar-Patch. He hadn't seen any of them, but he knew they were there. News of that kind travels very fast. But Johnny didn’t give them much thought. You see he had babies of to think about. He did wish that Peter would come over and be neighborly, but so long as Peter chose to keep away he, Johnny, felt that it was not his place to try to regain the lost friendship. ing fear. “One morning Polly Chuck had taken ; the young Chucks out to the patch of sweet clover which had once been Peter Rabbit's favorite patch. Johnny was sitting on his doorstep taking a th. He had had a good break- nd was foeling very comfortable lazy. . The sun was warm and Johnny was enjoying it. He was half dozing\when he heard a little rustle off at Sme side. Johnny turned his head guickly, There. peeking out from the edge of the Old Briar-Patch, was the living image of Peter Rabbit, very, very much smaller. knew at once that Peter's babies. The little Rabbit was looking out across the Green Meadows with big soft eyes filled with wonder. Never nly Johnny it was one of “THAT LITTLE RASCAL MUST :{6\;[71': STRAYED AWAY,” THOUGHT { beforeshad he looked outside the dear 1 Old Briar-Patch. Johnny guessed that iby the look in the baby's eygs. Johnny looked back of the baby { Rabbit for Peter or Mrs. Peter, but he could see no sign of them. “That i “lrle rascal must have strayed away," . tought Johnny. *“I don't believe his i parents know he is over here. I hope the little scamp will know enough to j{stay inside the Old Brlar-Patch. He 'inl too little to be wandering around alone.” For a ldng time the littls Rabbit idldn't move. He sat there perfectly still and simply stared and stared. Johnny Chuck didn't move either. Presently Polly Chuck and the baby Chucks came back from the patch of sweet clover. Having filled their stomachs, the little ucks were The straylittle poked a wabbly little ,nose out and nibbled a blade of grass. Evi- dently it tasted good, for when that blade had disappeared the little Rab- bit reached for another. Then he came quite outside and- sat up just as Peter Rabbit sits up. Johnny Chuck huckled inside to see him. All the time he kept wondering that Peter or Mrs. Peter hadn’'t come to look for their stray baby. But they hadn't come and they didn’'t come, and presently the little Rabbit made & few timid hops away from the dear Old Briar-Patch. All the time he kept his wabbly little n going as if he were trying to find out what each new odor was that the Merry Little Breezes brought to him. Two or three times he became frightened at nothing and scampered ‘.mm Polly Chuck might drive it ] said Big, BY GLADYS HALL, Monte Blue. playboys and the playgirls are golng to be eliminated—and it's a good thing. It may hurt, but it will help. With workers and thinkers,co-oper- | ating, there's nothing the screen can't !do. "it can make history live again, as in ‘Orphans of the Storm.’ It can bring beauty into lives where there | was little or none before. It can preach sermons that touch the heart |and pictures that touch the soul. Worth-while things always win, any- way." Monte Blue is a dear. I hope you |want to know more about him, | ‘cause there's lot to tell—all nice. | (Copy! 1922, HOME ECONOMICS. BY MRS. ELIZABETH KENT. The New Figure. In a book of costumes it is Interesting and amusing to see how the very figure and bearing of a woman seem to ac- commodate themselves to the fashion of her clothing. And this alteration of the figure is by no means imaginary, though it may be caused by life as much as by change of style. You have only to try to put on one of your grandmother's ‘gowns to realize that your snape is actually different from hers though you may be about the same height and weight. ~Probably you are just a little taller and weigh con- ably less. Probably the gown will not meet- around your waist by three inches or more, and is too large in the bust, but too narrow on the shoulders. Bellamy in his. “Looking Backward,” an old book now, many of whose prophecies we have lived to see fulfilled, points out to the child of the future, in a museum of antiquitles, the wax re- production of a nineteenth century woman, and comments on the narrow ghoulders and wide hips. His woman of an ideal future would be ashamed to Dave shoulders over which a garment eould be slipped that would not as easily pass over her hips. In the new figure we have already adopted that change-as desirable if not vet achieved. 4 Tre new figure is not thin. or flat, or ngular, but it is round, slender. sup- :le and muscular, poised’ in its own strength. not in stiff corsets tightly laced. The waist measure has grown from eighteen to twenty-four inches or ore. No corsets, or topless corsets ade chiefly of elastic and with very few bones, and a trim brassiere, leave the body free. Such freedom, however, self-control, as new free- 01 do. It demands stron; godleu, built up by good food, well di- gested ; fresh air, deep bresthed; whole- some exercise and wise habits of living. Strong shoulders and slender,. supple odies with narrow hips can come only m that kind of living and provide a ‘wholesome jdeal of fashion. different habits of box of Nadine Face Powder ets which every m‘mrflfixnn of h‘mmx the day. The secret of skin comfort — with never & hint of barm. To you, &8 'b millions of others, seveal these intimate secrets. At Loading Toilet Counters. At Pre-War Price, 50c. Itberal NATIONAL TOILET CO., Pasis, Taan., U.SA. ‘back to the safety of the dear Old Briar-Patch. But each time he re- mained thére a shorter length of time, and each time he went out a little furthier, He was growing bolder, At last & Merry Little Breese brought in the odor of the sweet clover patoh. The little Rabbit took th: lon, spiffs and then he started straigh for that clover patch. (Copyright, 1823, by T. W. Burgess.) fimwb;m.lold, Whipped Cream. . Take one quart of strawberries, one large cup of sugar,. the juice of one lemon, two-thirds of a package of geiatin;. soaked in one cup of cold wal ; and one pint of boiling water. Mash tife berries and strain “them through a coarse muslin. Mix the sugar and lemon juice with wates stir until clear ' an e n strain. Add the strawberry juice and strain again. Wet a moald, pdur in the jelly ai t on ice to form. When served fill the center with swt whipped cream. —_—— Rov. Prank 8. Holett of Lisbon,” is. the first I.fli‘:d_l!t?:‘ rider, so.far as is known, to tover s his ‘territory by airplan th soaked gelatin, pour over theabomn; t! LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. The reason why people do not have more romances and adventures in thelr lives is that they'd yell their heads off if they did. Romances and adventures are lovely things:to talk about dn moonlit nights in steam- heated apartments, but they're most uncomfortable and Inconvenient when you're living them out with the co- Vvotes. Take that business of the days of '49, f'r instance— i Every one talks about the “good. old, | golden days up on the mother lode"” as if such days were the one experi- ence their hearts pined for. More- over, they believe what they say. | They're convinced that they *‘would { have made Bret Harte's wildest tale sound like a Mother Goose jingle !f they had been argonauts. That's also the reason Bill Hart's sawed-off shot- gun roles take so well with the audi- ence—every man_there thinks he could shoot even better if given the chance. Now I've lived on the mother lode —and assoclated with sawed-off shot- gun society. Not in the days of 49 but in the midst of gold mines, boom: murders, stud poker games, elop ments and all the other appurte- nances of romance. And I'm here to state that it's a hard life. For every elopement, gold strike or interesting murder. there are numerous monot- onous areas of rattlesnakes, bedbugs, iheel blisters tough steaks. hard beds, { buzzards and thermometers at 114 de- grees. These things do not bother those whose hearts really fit. They didn’t bather me. I don't mind rat- tlesnakes and bedbugs, tough steaks land bathing in the creek. But the folks who are looking for thrills and poetry had better stay home. The same applies to these wild love dramas that so many nice women in gingham dresses sccretly pine for. Such games might be all right—pro- ided you're so constituted. The chief drawback to untrammeled love is that you usually have to travel far and fast, without letters of credit, skip- ping all the best hotels. Also people talk about you. The average person would rather take cyanide than be that he was cut out for an Anthony- Cleopartra role! that's why most folks never go on adventures. (Copyright, 1922.) "Carrot and Olive Salad. This recipe serves five to six, and its preparation requires twenty min- utes. Use one-half cup cold cooked carrots, one cup cooked peas, one-half cup diced celery or shredded, cabbage, one-half cup Spanish green olives, sliced; one head lettuce and mayon- naise. Mix vegetables with enough mayonnaise to moisten, Serve on let- tuce and garnish with Spanish olives and sniall pieces of celery. Strawberry Sauce. Take one large tablespoonful of butter beaten to a cream. Add gradually one and one-half cups of powdered sugar and the beaten white of one egg. Beat until very light, and just before serving | add one pint of mashed strawberries. * | monthly i talked about—yet he inwardly feelui Funny, isn't it? Buti Seclre This trial is absolutely free. clean the rugs, the portieres, mattresses and upholstery. Use it everywhere. Only $5 Down Our liberal easy payment plan gives you the privilege of owning one of ‘the superb new Eurekad and paying for it in small payments. But you must act at once, as our supply of new models is limited. . Remember—Next Saturday at 6 P.M. this offer will be withdrawn. - : So you must act without an hour’s delay to keep from being dis- THE . EVENING STAK, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1922 Look at This Floor! Are.you oontent with yoir kitchen floor? Yes? Then you are to be.con- gratulated. .1f you are not. comtent with your kitchen floor,, if every time you, take any one into, your kitchen You feel like saying, “Look at this floos!' I must have somethipg done about it,” then you are to be pitied. However, something can be doné to help solve almost every kitchen floor problem. 4 Take the:kitchen floor in an old house. One woman who owns a house that has not had new floors laid in fifty years is in despair over her kitch- en floor. She feels that to have a new floor put in would be a bad in- she may gell it at any time, and if vestment, as her house is very old and seld the building would qoulitiess be torn down. At any rate she could never get the amount she Invested in 2 new kitchen floor back on the total price of the house. She hoped that it would be pos- sible to have the old floor planed down and so made smooth™and firm, but the boards have been so worn that much planing would do very little good. Besides it would be a dif- ficult job, as the planing would bring the floor below the polnt of juncture with the mop-bo-rds. Inlald linoleum, put down with ce- ment, miakes a very good kitchen floor, but this costs.as much as a new floor. The best solution them in this case is to buy a piece of fairly good — = YACUN CLEANER. This wonderful offer closes sharply at 6 P. M., May 13. Send in the coupon, call or telcphot.le us today or tomor- row at the very latest to get a new improved 1922 model Eureka on a free 10-day cleaning trial. Use the new Eureka to PAY YOUR ELECTRIC LIGHT BILLS HERE FEATURES. = s linoleum almort as large as the room. Have this placed on the floor and al- Jowed to settle before tacking in place. Then get some metal linoleum tape and bind off the tdges of the finoleum at every side with this. ‘When the linoleum is perfectly clean and free from dust paint over with one or two coats of linoleum varnish. tion of the idealin A festive drink—a cheerful drink—a friendly drink—a fam- ily drink—and a healthful drink. Day ! datu E SUPERB _NEW, easy i fintomat Electric Appliance Co. Building, 14th and C Sts. NW. ° : 607 l4th St 2ok Store Waskingten Rallway sd .~ Phone M. 955 For Free Trial TRY IT. MIXED TEA Just enough green tea to make blend delicious. Free Coupon Offer Potomac Electric Appliance Co. 607 14th Street N.W. Send me the details of-your free trial ofter, If this varnish is replenished every six months of every year it will help greatly to preserve the linoleum. The parts of the floor not covered with the ljnoleum should be put into as good condition as possible by put- tying up the cracks and then adding a good flller. After that paint or stain the bare boards around the cdges. "SALADA" TE A H’as been selling on its merit for over 30 years. In yourteapotitis the realiza- ea Satisfaction. H291

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