Evening Star Newspaper, May 31, 1922, Page 37

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‘Character must be built into a baby carriage from 4ta very beginning, by the flawless weaving of end- ‘less wickers into a graceful, sweeping, perfect whole. Lioyd Loom Woven Baby Carriages have this <character, easily ished in the exclusive “shell”design of the bodies—a graceful bowl shape, sweeping unbroken curves from side to front. . Lloyd who invented the ‘method and loom which, weaving thirty times faster and finer than the old hand weaving, have #0 cut labor costs that we can weave the finest wickers, add the latest refinements and still sell our wicker products at very moderate prices. Pn.Proeeon LOOM Products Wn':e for booklet show- {aghlons and Loom Woven ture, for eale by lndnl furnitureanddepartment stores. | Baby C'amages & Furniture The Lloyd Manufacturing Co. (Heywood-Wakefield Co.) - - P - =< ‘Pleass send me 7 bookiet, *‘Mothers of the Worige ™ vl Lhoat the remerkabie s s passibiy. the wonderfally o over Baby Ca 53 Farnitare, Complete Lines of Popular Priced Lloyd Baby Carriages and Strollers Liberal Credit Terms Peter Grogan: & “Sons3Co. GROGAN 817-8231Seventh;St..N.W.’ Earned $150 !/ Not an impossible feat—it's been done already! There was a little old Ford coupe, rather dingy for the -vlue it had given, about to be traded in for a new car. the automobile firm, and the Ford owner Muud it. UT—that same Ford owner invested in a 90c CAN OF MO’I‘OR CAR FINISH AND ASKED US HOW HE COULD PAIN"I' THAT LITTLE FORD COUPE. an instructions and doing the job, back he wut to tlu automobile firm, the little Ford cor glossy t. This time the manager offered $350. %m-. a lt’l-r m:‘h or fi-s lme'tel.l"ld e i a ory and we t to n order that you take the “lead” and follow suit. Seey:'todl We can supply you with the com- | Wholesale plete line of the famous PRATT & LAMBERT and ACME QUALITY Am Vlmidiu and Enamel Top LORD CALVERT COFFEE WE MAKE IT- YOU DRINK IT- YOU ARE THE ONE TO PLEASE YOUR GROCER WILL REFUND YOU EY !F YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED The Wife Who Wouldn’t Settle Down! A Sequel to “Brides Will Be Brides” By Lucille Van Slyke. WHAT HE THINKS OF HER. HE road through the woods was narrow and unfrequented. Hal Blaisdell had taken it thinking that it would be a short cut that Jerry would not risk for the larger car. A rueful youn ster, he paused, his foot on the s of the little car after helping Rich- ard Slocum into it, to-give another call for the missing Gresham. But there was no answer. “Think I'd better get you and the girls home and then come back for him?* he asked dubiously. “Of course not,” Merriam decided. all right. It's only about s aren’t ex- cial time. So 0 badly, I think It seems pecting Poppy any unless Richard feels wo'd better wait longer. hardly decent to go off leaving Mr. Gresham wandering around feeling so—so—" “Drunk,” Hal truth, he grumbled, up queer pals. like this Gresham at all. like a tough ame out bluntly ‘Great day In the “but Jerry 1 didn't He looked omer to me. 1 said so. But old Jerry comes back at me with a lot of guff about how patriotic Gresham was to go to war in the first place and how noble he. to come back to college after- d what a nice mother he had “Never mind the history of the case,” Richard interupted gruffly. “It Merry thinks we ought not to leave him, let's give a yell all together. Probably he's stumbled over some log and gone to sieep.” “I've an idea.” Merriam suggested. “I'll drive slowly up the rnud, throw- ing the lights as far as I can to the sides of the road. hunklnfi the nd Hal can walk along look- She clambered out to get to the wheel 1l T _ walk along with Mr. 117" Poppy’s voice was tremul- “That s, unl!ll you want me to with M um. m all rl.m Rlchlrd sald. “Run alon He leaned forward to speak to Merriam as the younger couple ed up the road. ‘That poor child commented. Merriam did not answer him. She was having rather a struggle with the car for she did not often drive. She was still unnerved from Rich- ard's narrow escape and really deeply concerned about young Gresham. When she spoke it was to say just is scared,” he oor silly Mr. Gresham. What- ever could have happened to him “That seems to me relatively unim- portant.” Richard was more badly shaken up than he was willing to ad- mit. He had taken a violent dislike to Gresham the evening previous. He had been thoroughly disgust: with the chap's behavior all it had been his earnest desire to pro. tect Merriam from the fellow that nad precipitated the accident. For a moment Merriam had to give hes undivided attention to the clutch. She was running very slowly, speak- ing occasionally to the pair walki: Three Opinions. The other day three girls and one other were having tea together and talking, as girls and others will, of men and mice and money. The girls were Claire Windsor, recently seen in “Fools Firs Marcia Manon, also 1 cently seen in “The Masquerader, and Natalle Talmadge of the Tal- madge three. Besides being sister to Norma and Constance, she 1s, L the world kens, Mrs. Buster Keaton. I was the other. ‘We were speculating 8 to Just what a girl marries for; what she wants in the man she marries—that nou of I put some questions. d, 1 mlrl‘lel for 's afrald of thing. “Do you think mol ay. or beca sh 1 aced in th- discard, or beca: sh wmu a handsome husband- what?" “Well,” said Claire Windsor, “s mai ohief attraction for me lies in his Intellect. I simply =uuld 't en- dure a stupld man, or an who knows less than I do. 1'd da e him in no time at all And ther that. It & man e will almost aiways have strength of character, too, and if he has strength of character he won't be egotistical or domineering. 1 no reason why & man shouldn’t nd brains at one and the same time. In fact. I knox great many men who have both. But it 1 had to take my choice between manly beauty 4 manly brains I'd uk. the brains ‘What do “Morely physical besuty.” said Mar- uh.l y i ‘count in the matrimonial Sl T married my husband, use a “because I Wanted to have {hu taot that he was not tl somest 2.1: in the world didn't worry me for flennn He waa & wond ful lover and he has lived np to t! rolo l.l l i Good looks mmu 'runm- Keaton with her asisters-in-screen. *“ ery time. Plnuuu Invalide’ Meals. Beveral of my column readers have written to ask me to publish an oc- casional article on invalid cookery. “There are so many sick peopls around, that I am sure your other readers ‘would appreciate such a series of ar- ticles,” says one of thess letters. I m only too glad to comply with these requests, For naturally I want to" Pubtish what my readets reail ‘W:n! to rud. !&fl :oin: Lo begin to! ily, she must follow_one of titese xmfr tnn of dfet. Her doctor decides whieh one is Ml:fl suited .to t| il. clear goups, beef % Julee, Jfi‘- n P’ she says. along the road. But the bend in the road, when she had accidentally stalled the engine, she called softly: “Oh, Hal, when I get back on cen- ter I think l'd be: turn the other way and wal “Good s me Hal answered her. "Po py thinks perhaps he went back e place where she got the water lnd slipped some way. It was muddy, Stop sbout & hundred yards beyond where we made the first halt. We'll prowl there a bit.” Richard was nursing a bruised and aching brow when Merriam obeyed instructions and leaned back wearily to_wait. “Think I'll give a call or two,” she Mr. Gresham! sald. ~“‘Oh, you-hoo! “Paul'” snapped Richard petu- a lantly. “Rich'”” Merry's temper flared. *“I don’t like your tone! I know you've a right to be angry. You and I can scrap this out some other time if you want to, but right now we've got to find this chap. It's not decent not to. I'll take mhy share of the blame. I suppose 1 ought not to have danced so much with him last night, but I hadn’t danced for ages. t seemed sunch fun. And today I tried to get rid of him and couldn’t. And I hadn't the remotest idea he was bringing drinks to the party. Truly 1 hadn’t, Richard. I suppose you think: , I've done a gr! thinking, first and last, a some years back,” Richard Inlerrnm- ed her. “But right now I'm realiz- ing something that never quite hit me before—and that is_that, though you look like a sweet, helpless littie lady, you are really a wicked, reck- less womay His volce was paasion- ately ang “Aren’t you happy un- less you're keeping some chap or other all stirred up emotionally? You had the excuse of youth and in- oxperience in my case. You broke my heart and ruined my life gegeral- 1y, and I forgave you. But here you are—you've been married nearly five years and you're still making John miserable because you keep right on flirting around with any Tom, Dick Ty that comes along, young or l ‘deal of for tones were even angrier than his. “You hush! It's no time for & lot of sentimental rub- bish when that poor befuddled lad is wandering along a dark road on the edge of a ravine. You haven't any right to say such things! I'm not a flirt and I don't make my John un- happy, and—and—I shan't stay here to listen to any such idiotic talk!" “Sit down!" he ordered. “1 won't!” she defied him when he tried to stop her. He was fifteen years older !hln she. She had known him almost all her life. She realized that, in spite of his words, he still thought of her as & girl and still cared about her. What she did not understand was that the temper she had roused in him was making him feel slorlouay d | éxnilaratingly young agal hand was on her shoulder, he Taally shaking her as the headlight o Sorry Blaisdell's car flashed in' the road ahead of them. (Copyright, 1922.) looks don’t count at all” she main- tained. “Why, a man may look one way to all the world and quite an- other way to his wife. For instanc Buster has never been known to smile on the screen, most wondertul smi 1 think she marr! him for his per. sonality, for an indescribable some: 1l ‘which attracts her, and prom- i er all the things she wanti wnll, thoro you are! How many of §° with Marols, Claire lnl l.tAHOY more than one servin ed chicken, chop or & EENOE! implé dessert. ue ice cream, junket or cooked cereal day of broil- milk either e ind! tion, !or Inlunn !h l\l".llll °l:‘l for this diet a ) . strained D u ach, bllafl potatoe All l)mltl diets, as dlabetic dist and imonia, must be dlaund by the ynhyllolnn !or each individual cass. that I have outlined the three of dfet nrdlnlray used k’h i1~ to, ahal M acipes for the varl contained in these three diets, 'L\»ny I h only space to give two such t inte ked white of one egg: until the contents are about three n nutes) grains of and Jul added I'h.'( vars “ 1 u o. are r fever patients. Albm}n is made lhlk.h!hu‘r *BEDTIME Reddy Fox Works for Nothing, ; BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. T S —Reddy Fox. Of course, Reddy Fox and Mrs. Reddy were greatly disappointed by the failure of their clever plan to catch some of Johnny Chuck’s babbies or Peter Rabbit's bables. But Reddy and Mrs. Reddy are used to disap- IT WASN'T HARD DIGGING THERE AND REDDY WASB BOON WAY OUT OF SIGHT IN JOHNNY CHUCK'S HOME. pointments. They have ever so many of them every day. This is quite true of most of the little people who live in the Green Forest and on the Greon Meadow: So Reddy wasted no time lhlnkln‘ about that disappointment. began to plan some othe: 'ly g some of those tender ies. He had already care- ined Johnny Chuck’s house. that Johnny had lived in the year before had had its doorway between two great stones 8o that there was no way of digging it larger. The year before that Johnny and Polly had lived in the far corner of tween two big roots of an old tree. But this home on the edge of the dear old Briar-patch had a doorway with neither stones nor roots in the way. “If thers I8 no other way of K ting them 1 can dig those v Chucks out,” said Reddy to him: “It will be a lot of work, but I can do it. Thers are no stones and no roots in the way. Of oourse, Johnny will fight, and T would a whole lot rather catch those young Chucks without having to do such hard work cr to fight for thi T'll wait & day or two and perhaps Mrs. Reddy or L will ‘have a chance to surprise those | little rascals away from their hom: So Reddy watohed, but he waited in vain. Finally he made up his mind that there was nothing for it but to dig those Chucks out. He chased the whole family into their home and then started In to dig. Now, Reddy is a good digger when he sets out to be. My, how his black paws dia fiy! Tt wasn't hard digging there and Reddy was soon half way out of sight in Johnny Chuck’s home. Of course, tne scent of those Chucks wi trong, and this kept Reddy excited and made it easier to work. Now and then he would back out to get his breath. Then he would go back and work again and the sand fairly fly. Presently he had wholly disappeared. Now, it was a long way down to the bedroom of Johnny Chuck and his family and it took Reddy some tffn to get there. By the time he did get there he w: th‘ld His legs lull for he had ry £ His was filled 'Ith und He did hone What Johnny Chuck wouldn't show ») lu-l'! :I‘D" hlllltll bsoause down fa thers Jehnny 11 the best of it."¥You Soot hare wasn't room tor Reddy to move very ersily. At Jast he resched th the Chucks. Johnny Een Bpane fact, Johnny Chuck 1l Neither was Polly Chuck. dy almost crasy catch them. But the scent was all FEATURES there was there. Tt didn’t tuke Reddy a minute to discover that leading from that bedroom was another hall-] way. It was a back hall. Johnny and Poily and the babies had simply gone out the back way while Reddy had been digging in the front way. If ever there was a disappointed Fox that one was Reddy. He hbd worked hard for nothing. ‘Should he Keep on? That would mean more_hard work. for he knaw that back hall probably was as 1o} as the front ome. He decided to 8¢ outside and have - josk first. S Reddy backed ow the san« Trom hia tace wad’ then Jooked. ot conldn't see that buck @oor, but W knew where #t must be. It must right in the middle of the dear Wi Briar-patch where the brambles wer/ thickest. Reddy shook himself am started straight for home. TW. Lifebuoy babies They have beautiful, healthy skins. They arefree from chafing,roughness, chapping, annoying eruptions. . Uncomfortable skins make many babies fret- g‘l’: especially in hot weather—but not Lifebuoy ies. Lifebuoy is the essence of purity and mild- ness. It may be safely used on the tenderest skin. Itis wonderfully cleansing for little hands, faces and bodies. It leaves a delightful softness and freshness. But it does more than this—it lays the founda- tion of lifelong skin beauty and health. ‘Thousands of mothers are proud and that they started their children as Lifebuoy babies. You cannot start them too young. IFEBUO HEALTH SOAP Lifebuoy’s big soothing, bubbly lather delights Little users The “Queen Anne” Design 1992—in Twin Pair IFyonknewhnwunuaythe merchantoftenis when asked the facts about mattresses—you would un- derstand how the Simmons program of responsibility has taken a load off his mind. ‘The Simmons Label Mattresses built for sleep. Mattresses built wholly of pure, clean, new kapok materials. or cotton. No “renovated” Mattresses sealed in cartom rolls. Delivered sealed to the home. Your choice of five styles—distinguished by Labels a popular range of prices— of different color—at Blue Label Green Label Red Label White Label SIMMONS COMPANY ! ATLANTA MONTREAL (Esocutivs Officss, Keneshs, Wis.) le Label ,/3uzlt for Sleep plete slecping umit. Beds, Springs and to fit the other—all built for slesp. In this ‘way, you secure a rosl guarantee of sleep sat- fl' BOOKLET ON SLEEP: Q*-fi'.‘dfiu—"

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