Evening Star Newspaper, May 19, 1922, Page 38

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

|Has Your To Health and Vigor | life in_ food. | sour chiidren. vigor a | your Tushaud the | Vitamin R, | glands. i | used np iy of v ving ordinary foo And listiegs ¢ richest It in n el e from ounces « et gxint for a Hlc Vosex <t sou do mt < within one | ORANGE PEKOE Others Like It So Will You— A ‘Wonderful Flavor! Lightens the housewife’s task and saves her purse. Meat of chicken, tasty and tender, packed in sanitary tins. A standard product for over half a century. For campers and hikers. For home use. PAINT YOUR HOME Make It Look New Let Us Do It Right 4t MAT] FREE = Ferguson, » . ? c 1114 9th St. N.W, Phene N. 231-233. g find revealed in the green box of Nadine Face Powder They are secrets which every ‘woman would solve—secrets of personal charm. The secret of a rose-petal com- plexion — Nadine’s own gift to womanhood. The secret of last- ing charm—charm which endures throughout the day. The secret of skin comfort — with never a millions of others, Nadine will reveal these intimate secrets. At Leading Toilet Counteru, At Pre-War Price, 50c. Well of || ' Energy Run Dry?| i Delicious Vegex Wil Help You' Tt you want full growth for a clenr hrain for | v of Lealth for | st have vitamins in abun- | Seience has proved that vitamios are u..L | BANGUET hint of barm. To you, as 10’ | | | {ing with ! We make so many that we have no The “Watch Your Step!” TIRED and bored young man slumped despondently into the wide leather sofa, lighted his thirty-ninth cigarette for the evening. and stared moodily across the Allertons’ billiard room. As he was rfot dancing. he was supposed:to be phonograph tending. but he was not; he was watching his wife, whose gavety was irresistible and infectious. © looked rather quaint in“the bor- rowed green frock, her eyes were shin- fun, her bronze curls much tumbled, and her soft laughter had bubbled the long evening thfough. She who was teaching her a new step. She had been learning steps all the evening! Jerry and Hal Blaisdell had taught her new steps, buliying her with the blunt honesty of youths who he grabbed his victim in a bearlike clutch and yanked her breathlessly the length of the room. only occa-! sionally” letting her feet touch the floor. Trixie Allerton’s father, elderly id gallant, had rescued her from Cump. Mr. step: erton had taught her hopping her about in a wheel- d-fashioned waltz that she pro- ed to adore, even while she wink- ed daintily from behind his discreet- Iy encircling arm at his daughter. t laughter. even by John. But it had been hours since the elder manently crippled. So now Merry was dancing almost continuously with voung Gresham. who was the eldesl! of the lads from Yale, and who had announced loudly that he was alto- gether smitten With her charms. “You're a darling. intervals. “Oh, lady, lady! If you weren't married, what a rush I'd give |, yeu'" . ‘But T am!" Merriam laughed at nim, blowing a kiss to John. “I'm marreid to the sait of the earth, who Wife Who Wouldn’t Settle Down! A Sequel to “Brides. Will Be Brides” By Lucille Van Slyke. dancing.” he'd said the wittiest thing ever un her quick retort came: “Not rock salt the Smiling Pool. Peter dldn't mind that. i resham. \ Mer- 3 Slocum cooly cut in on G eral days since Peter had been over riam found herself just a bit flustered, h for it was the first time that evening |} that Richard had danced with her. deed, it was the first time in year: She had decided that he was afraid of offending John. for her, frock. ways liked dancing with Richard. they had circled the room twice. T'm not a bit tired. Seems as though I could dance all night. thought he’d been dancing too long with you, and because I don't like the way he dances.” old | ¥ chap like Gresham won't do for a pla. when you were pursued by an old bach- elor favorite on that horrible phonograph,” he said. most imperfect evening right now. 1f way bard, ‘Watch that step’, his lesson “by one o ladies.’ disdain of the were shouting: P aed TeT &t body please start that musi ing to act like such a moral censor! a darling, too, even if he does hate 1ot “Don’t you have to shake salt to keep it from getting lumpy?” ask- ed her partner, a trifle impudently Her droll giggle made him think A hand caught at her arm. Richard In- He had a new name | { coined from Mrs. Allerton’s “Well, Greeni he asked, “don't vou know that you're the officlal chap- ron of the evening, and that the party was dancing with young Gresham,,can't stop till you do?” tainly in i rarely encounter it in their work. g y the dusk it looked very Jdt in their work. {Who was teachng hera She didn't answer him for & moment, | much’ like him. But Peter had left | [deed, T am not indulging In rhe: Just danced dreamily on. She Old Mr. Toad in the Smiling Pool ) forical liberty when I assert that “'Right-0," she agreed, quietly, after Isn't that funny, had known her always and who knew 2 § g 4 | n h K When it's the first time I've really | But this was a Toad. There couldn't | Schools. That which. the ordinary gy Thantree & hall-dozen vears|janced in just ages and ages. OR lbe any doubt about it -1t must be | {ndividual tmagines s health is e e e Y Tonneon: IRich’, 1 do’love dancing, but T don't!one of OId Mr. Toad's children grown |mere state of temporary abeyance of enthusiast, had also taught her |like being called ‘Greeni she added, | up and coming back to his birth- | his #ymptoms or a brief spurt with- ings he called steps that had kept |APruptly. & place.” thought Peter. out any treatment. It is not a posi- the Whole party showting His tactos | . “Rather fits vour behavior, he| Just then the stranger started to|tive condition at all, but just a lull were decidedly of the foot ball field: |drawled. “Right here is where I Tegis-{pass him. He paid no attention to|between a quixotic ‘tilt with auto- |ter a fatherly scolding I cit in on| Pe but hopped along in *funuy | intoxication and a strenuous race to that Gresham lad just now because I Her brown eyes flashed. “Rich’, you've no right to talk that to—-to an old married lady!"” “But You were a lot safer, “back in the dark ages fellow, Merry. he added drily like me, who in his craziest mo- -“..Ll:u(‘ w ""hl‘?*,';’r’,.,f'{o“?,.’h“".f’i?r ments would never have thought of |thing =~ more work, less food, as an antidote CE1% aDEC gnihon ththors et treating you as disrespectfully as that | Why! Whyee™ exclaimed Peter.|to what ails 50 many health-ignorant g liked it dad. Trisie had |fresh young imp does. [ou aren't Old Mr. Toad at all! #folks, namely, too much food and too agreed’ with him, “but she’s got a| sne laughed lightly, L e anger . stopped. iabruptly, to burn it up. But jealous husband, who might not un- “You old fogey! That boy was only | “Vho I“ s I'm not a Toad " he de-[grasp the idea that Inspires Mrs. M. derstand that you were dancing be- |€8Ching me new steps.” i ruy. ) She has made a valuable discovery, ause you were hipped on that dress | He stopped dancing rather abruptly. | Sl mean ' explained Deter, “vou are|to wit, that the more one eats one i ther hramie ot fot, dress | e walked he the rest of the way (o | Nt my ‘eld friend Old Mr. ‘Toad.|doesn't feel the hetler. OF expressed not because you madly love the |John's sofa. ol tave Known for so long. |in another way, she has found out 4 Y i “I'm going to put Mrs. Harding's | P, people call him just common ) that a reasonable amount of self-dis- “We'll have the end of a | I were you I'd dance this last one with Allertons had -retired, and Merriam X o ger did hop. There was no doub p ’ Was s6ill dancing as indefatigably a8 #lnnshxqsufig’ of with this Gresham | F00, ho e Txr;};‘ulr'hu“(“fx ngd Lflm; slacker flesh accumulates health de- the youngst She dragged John |[¥'C !'sosms 1d lllg t}i‘cross to nal hynu, | clear to Peter that he wep an. un.|clines—and by taking zm;;gm“or;o; out on the floon everal times untii | TI%'8 EOWE (o show me another new ly;swniimo firiasihe, Potor was|cons | Che. reverse the process Mra. M. 1 he protested that his feet were per- |Step.” Mertlam was defiant. cermed: 0. f4r as he, Peter, was con- | coming back, with smiles. She is In the immortal words of the sub- anyway?" | feeling fine. he ended letting him dance it with these—er—more sophisticated He shrugged his shoulders in | y modern girls, who fusic, music! Some- | “Rich’.” she answered impatlent] ‘I'm sorry you came home if you're g (Copsright, 1922.) (Continued in Tomorrow Star.) LISTEN WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON, I've been thinking long and hard on the preblem of capital and labor and I've come to the conclusion that the trouble with, capital and labor ig that there's too much of both and neither of ‘em gets you anywhere. 1 don’t think we're going to settle the problem by socialism or paternalism, by cutting down the capitalist's prof- it or adding to the laborer's wage. The trouble lies not in our system of regulating work or paying for work. It lies in ' work itself. We work too much. 1 c're mistaken in thinking that a life filled withj profitable work is a blessing. Life was meant for.nobler aims. We've made a god of work. W worship the idea not only of money but of industry. If you can’t be rich, you ,must at least be busy Otherwise you're a drug on the ma ket. 1 used to beimeve that, too. My deas were all bee ideals-and I buzzed | about 'em But [ have come to think we're on the wron, trail. We make too many things. i time to en of them. We make them bec we ourselves and very one else want those things, and We believe that the possession of things will make us happy. It won't.| James Harvey Robinson in h book. “The Mind in the Making." speaks of the “sickness of an acqu sitive_socie He says, “There is something humiliating about this sit- uation,” which subordinates all the varied possibilities of life to its ma- terial prerequisites, much as if we were again back in a- stage of impo- tent savagery, scratching for roots and looking for berries and dead animals. \ There were many before the war, not themselves suffering conapicuou: liy from the system, who challenged | its beneficence and pérmanence, in the-name of justice, economy, and the hest and Mighest interests of man- kind 8s a wholé. Since the war many more have come to.the conclu- | sion that business as now conducted is_not merely unfair, exceedingly wasteful and often highly inexpedi- ent from a social standpoint, but| that from a historical standpoint it is ‘intensely unusual, unstable, compli cated. unrellable and temporar: (Keynes). ; Will “business” pass? I hope so. T hope the time will come when we will work just enough to buy ourselves: the essentials and spend the rest of[ our time in the sort of meditation, recreation and creation that befits a human. We'll still make a number of things, from automobiles to art, for each man creates differently. But we'll do it with individual eagerness and in joyful partnership. And we'll plgy as we go along. (Copyright, 1922.) . ——— Savory Chicken With Vegetables. Singe and draw one good-sized chicken, then truss it as for boiling and have ready a casserole large enough to hold the chicken whole. Ling the casserole with one pound of sliced bacon, put in the chicken and sprinkle in some salt, pepper and one onion chopped fine. Arrange round the chicken three tomatoes, skinned, three celery stalks. five mushrooms, two pickled wainuts chopped and one bay, Jeaf. Add two cups of stock, place the casserole in the oven and let it cook gently for one and one- half hours, basting the chicken fre- quently.' When ready, remove the bay leaf, brown and thicken the gravy with one tablespoonful of ar- rowroot, leave all the vegetables in the gravy with the chicken and serve hot in the casserole. among the annuals. duce plants, as it | Menu for a Day. | BREAKFAST. | eSliced Bananas. Cereal. | Broiled Bacon | Rolls. Coftee. | DINNER, i Potato Soi Potato Balls. Stewed Corn Caulifiower Salad. Cheese Rolls. | | D | Stewed Chicken. rape Jelly. | i SRS e oLl ctodyagbust Order o, ‘ n"vm:.:‘r(‘ chuckled. “They don't teach | EGG S | E&B Sandwiches, Sponge Cake. | [y me53 Vire You came from, do | Hot Tea. | Neit do they teach meddling with other With this exclusive table | BORDER FLOWER FOR GARDENS. fairs, 1 am su T just wanted to | tandard of Quality ! Bet acquainted. ' Of ‘coursc, it vou ! Home Garden Advice. éel this way about it I will o right ; o al about my own business Merely Phone West 183 hat will be a very good thing to Service Starts at Once For bordering large beds or for use | do in producing masses of blue. the dwarf lobelias cannot be surpassed | They often prove failures because not emough care is| used in planting the seed, which is vers fine and powdery. Planted the open ground, only a smail per centage of the seed is likely to pro- is easily out by the rains, and the tiny plants are uprooted and destroyed just when germinating. It should be sown in boxes where it can be éared for and watered gently. There is no diffi- culty in raising a fine supply of plants with this precaution. Set six inches apart, these little plants speedily make compact bushes covered with their small blossom: anging from the deepest and r blues to pure white. It is a popular flower for carpet bedding and is used each year by the thousands in park plantings. However, its finest cffect is as a narrow edgmg or in patches at the front of an annual or perennial border. where it will bloom continu- ously till cut down by killing frosts The more robust lobelias or trail- Ing forms are fine plants for window boxes or hanging baskets. They have the same rich blue flowers as the dwarf bedding varieties and produce in great profusion on graceful sprays which will_droop over the edges-of the box or basket. They respond to rich soil and plenty of water. Beefsteak Pudding. | Cut two pounds of beefsteak into | thin _slices about three inches in length and width, but not necessarily | [ uniform in shape; mix one table- spoon of flour, one teaspoon of salt and one-half a teaspoon together on a plate, and dip exch slice | of meat in the mixture. Make one pound of suet paste, cut off about ! one-fourth of It. put it aside for the cover and roll out the remainder to thé size of the dish, which must be previously greased. Line the dish with the paste, put in the meat, sprinkle the rest of the seasoning mixture between the layers and leave spaces to admit water, thus prevent- ing the pudding’s becoming too dr. Fill the dish three-fourths full of bolling water, which extracts less of the juices of the meat than cold water; put on the cover and moisten and seal the edges. If the pudding is to be bolled, tie over it a scalded and floured pudding cloth. If it is to be steamed. cover it with a greased paper. Let the water be boiling, put in the pudding and boil for three and one-half hours, or steam for four hours. Molded Cream. Dissolve half a box of gelatin in.a little cold water, add one and a half pints of milk, half a cup of sugar, one teaspoon of vanilla and the yolks of three eggs which have been well beaten. Put on the stove and cook two minutes. then add the ‘well-beaten ¢ whites of the eggs. Stir well and take from the stove.- Pour into a wet mold and set away to cool. When cold, serve with whipped cream. COCKROACHES WATERBUGS ANT had crept out from the Purple Hills itl | 3cross the Green Meadows that Peter Rabbit took it into his head to visit of a hurry, and the result was that as he ran. almost bumped into some one. of him and jumped over his head. As soon as he turned, his old friend and he knew “But | time. Toad's voice see Peter at al first Peter couldn’t think what it was, I have to a little greenie. A | de: | [ ness of vours who T an don't want to | but to known had no desire to be friendly. | Tooked hopping along slowly, but in a very determined way thought Peter. washed | me who this queer fellow be one of his refattv doesn’t look like a Frog. so he must be a Toad InUse For Over 30 Years Always bears the of pepper | [ By William Brady, M. D. Noted Physician end Author. Peter Meets an 'Unknown. R BY THORNTON W.. BURGESS. Are You Going or Coming?' When vou meet strangers by the way. Public health, if we can believe olite, o . »o t do ne j“_:gé( Rabbit. | What is told us, is purchasable. Be that as it may, personal health can't be bought, Whoever would en- Joy personal health must go after it and devote some little thought and effort to the game of getting It. There is just'as much sport in the health game as there is in base ball, racing or boxing, although we haven't 80 many sport specialists fea- turing the health game. Very few people have even a theo- retical knowledge of the meaning of health, Not one person in ten cgn off-hand give a definition of the term health. Most good physicians, even, know but little of health, they 8o It was just after the Black Shadows It was raining, but It was sev- here uni atest he wanted to get all the news. He was in something has t? lip, he Just n time, he saw some one just ahead lipperty-lipperty L. D) could he stopped and His first thought was that this was Old Mr. Toad. Cer- personal health isnt taught in our in the habit of staying there a long | DSt medical colleges, isn’t recog- Besides, he could hear Old Mr, | Nized in our best social circles, isn't Tver in the Smiling Pool | Prized by our best families and isn't encouraged enough in our common that Old Mr. Toad was that very minute. little get a package of the latest red blood builder. short hops, quite as if he didn‘t He passed so close that Peter had a good look at him.| Mrs. F. F. M. has been going for Peter blinked. There was something | Some time, but now she is coming very odd about the stranger. At |back. She writes: “Please send me your symphony exercises and please | * but after a_second good look he un- tood. The stranger was not so overed with warts as is old Mr. find inclosed a stamped addressed en- elope. 1 have reduced from 168 to pounds by following your method Answer—No through the breath. for the pus-producing bacteria pres- ent in pyorrhea to be passed in the to determine whether they are com- ing or going. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Dangerous Tonsils. Would an operation for adenolds and tonsils prove dangerous to a man twenty-five years of age?—(B. L. J.) Answer—The operation Is far less. B dangerous than the diseased tonsils [ or, adenold body left in the throat. Pyorrhea. Is pyorrhea ever contracted by in- haling the breath of a person who 1 work in an office next to a person who has pyorrhea, and 1 often get his breath, since I am obliged to talk with him at close quarters.—(E. infection Made by SHARPLESS, Phila. passed But it is possible !inyisibly fine droplets of saliva given off as a spray by the individual when talking. This spray does not carry over five feet from the mouth. Keep outside the five-foot barrage and you are safe from all infections, uniess the ememy raises the barrage to ten feet or more by open-face coughing or unmuzzied sneezing in your direc- tion. LLLEL (i S\ \ Toad. In fact, he was comparatively smooth. His head was even wider than Old Mr. Toad's and his eyes popped out a little further, if any- and T am feeling fine.” Never mind about the symphony or my method of reduction—they are just what I have always preached, “_I;-lau. {ecipline in the matter of stufing the ! stranger. Peter had to admit that the stran- 1 hop, don't I " said the|hreadbasket gives one a more cheer- ful outlook. Or put in still another way, Mrs. M. has learned that as the Peter askad, rather -impolitely "I don’t Know that it is any | Health plus. T call the glerious feel- busl- ) ing that the beloved Theodore Roose- veit so aj characterized as “feel- ing bully.” Not just momentary free- dom from pain or misery, but a kind of intoxocation that our modern poi- soned civilization threatens to pro- | hibit. Make vour own amendment. In health game you've got to be wary or somebody will hand you a lot of hokum and get you going before you rdalize that you have lost vour way. It is too bad that un adulterated health s not taught along with the three R's. It isn't right to graduate b and girls and turn them out into life with only chance LI A LI LI At “ e! ~dc Drin ‘Wise Brothers Chevy Chase Dairy Ot | * replied the the unknowr people’s affairs” replied | “Oh, { excu m, said eddle with your af-| Peter. I protection—the Wise ! replied the stranger ungraciously. There was-nothing for Peter to do keep on toward the Smiling Pool. It was quite clear that the un- S0 Peter kept on. back and Once or twice h | saw the stranger CUEVY CLASE RAIRY N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N \ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N I R R e “I hope T can find Old Mr. Toad. Probgbly he can tell s It must He eertainly But he certainly is a queer fellow.” Then Peter hurried faster ever, lipperty-lippertydip, lipperty-lipa (Coprright. 19: than lipperty- For Infants and Children SRR ‘When You T hink —of Painting, Paperhang- ing and Decorating think of Taylor.' LA Estimates made on request. HARRY W. TAYLOR CO. Shave With Cuticura Soap ‘The healthy up-to-date Cuticura way. Dip brush in hot water and rub on Cuticura Soap. Then make lather on face and rub in for a mo- ment with fingers. Make a stcond lathering and shave. Anoint any ir- sitation with Cuticura Ointment, then wash all off with Cuticura Soap. Nothing better for sensitive skin: PAPERHANGING AND PAINTWNG & Sample Rack Froo® Matl, ‘Outioura Lad- W. Tel. Col. 1077 e et Ot knd s Talcomie. P Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. [ TRADE MARK REG. The Stout Woman’s Problem woman of full figure has a poise all her own wbichneedn‘onlymper_wr- 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 tailored. Fif i save you much. best work assured. CORNELL WALL PAPER CO. 714 13th N.W, &= MUDDIMAN'S HOT WATER TIME FOR SLIP COVERS Don't put off until the last minute in having Slip Covers made—they’ll Reasonable prices, ON TAP Got our estimates on Auto- matic Heaters and repairs. ~ MUDDIMAN 616 12th St.—1204 G St. MAYONNAISE T is possible to pay more, but it is im- possible to get a better Mayonnaise than Easton’s. _M. S373-0376 from the creamery to ‘Wholesale FEATURES to be vaccinated against smallpox?— (Mrs. 8. H. C.) Answer—Y: ——— Cocoanut Parfait. Mix one cup of vanilla ice cream with one cup of whipped cream and four tahlespoonfuls of cocoanut. Di- vide into chilled parfait glasses and top with whipped cream and chopped Is it safe for an expectant mother preserved cherries. E housewife who knows the importance of butter on her table, knows also, that she should buy that butter by name. This confidence in a par- ticular brand explains the general preference for Meadow Gold Butter This name for twenty-three years has stood for uni- formly high quality for the year ‘round. . Meadow Gold was the first butter ever sold in a sealed sanitary package. Its goodness and flavor are protected the consumer. Use Meadow Gold butte and youl buy it regularly. Sold ONLY inithe original yellow caston st all deatrs, BEATRICE CREAMERY CO. 308-10th St., N.W. Washington, D. C. Telephone * She could eat anything— tress was most painful fond. 9 a little cold water and drank. without indigestion or sleeplessness FOR a long time she had been troubled with gas after her evening meal. The dis- after eating potatoes or other starchy foods, of which she was very ‘Then she started taking two cakes of Fleischmann's Yeast every night between her evening meal and bed- time. She poured about a half cup of boiling hot water over the yeast cakes, stirred them thoroughly, added She found she could eat anything and sleep splens didly afterward. {rom indigestion. liver it regularly. ‘Thousands of men and women are finding that Fleischmann’s Yeast corrects stomach and intestinal troubles. It promotes the flow of bile and pancreatic juice. It is rich in the ap- petite-stimulating vitamin, so that appetite is always kept normal and you are protected Add 210 3 cakes of Fleishmann's Yeast to your daily diet. You will find that your whole digestive system is greatly benefited. Place a standing order with your grocer. He will de-

Other pages from this issue: