Evening Star Newspaper, March 30, 1925, Page 24

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WOMAN'S PAGE THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGT( FEATURES | Doroth y Dix] o WHEN WE GO SHOPPING MOTHERS a Husband's AND THEIR CHILDREN. Mother-in- ol other Law BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. A Memory Game. 7. 7 ’ - "0 e latter qu ty yo Best Way to Kill a Man’s Love Is to Be Hateful Sponges. thie Gisncdior (Ho fatler auality 3ou = S < ¢ To most folks a sponge is “just a|piece. There should not be too m to the Mother Who Has Given So Much - spongp. but there 1s & very ETeat dif- | Tarwe pores. A enonge (1 y x % 5 ‘ . ference between aifferent grades of | hylky,” that is, one t of Her Life to Him. aponges, and they arc more exactly |about the same both vertical ¥ graded today than ever before. Perhaps |y orizoo oy ettor bir you didn’t know that sponges come in | iy E S 8 O EY grades the same as other goods? The | o ™0 B “0T TIAL Y YOUNG woman married to a fine young man, who is a model husband, ordinary kinds are sold by the pound. told me the other day that the fly in her ointment was her husband's p The fine bathing and toilet sponges are e bthor: sold by the piece. “What is the matter with her?” T asked. “Does she live with you? Does 4 It is hard to believe that the sponge, she nag you? Does she pry into the garbage can and tell you that you are = N €o light, 80 soft, so crushable, is merely peeling your potatoes too thick? Does she criticize you to your husband, and : the skeleton of animal, ismt it? Yet advise him not to let you gad so much?" e e tana T e e ) . . that is just what it is, the shell of a TRy “Oh, heavens, no,” replied the young wife, “I wouldn't stand fo ¥ ) creature that lives on the bottom of 2 like that! There is nothing the matter with my mother-in-law, except that ; " the sea along the warm coast of Cuba, Baked Kippered Herring. she Is my mother-in-law. She never interferes with me in any way, but g the West Indies, Florida and in th Wipe two kippered herring, lay every now and then she comes to see us, and I resent her visits because my | [§ Mediterranean. Fishing for sponges is them on a board and rub them well husband is always so glad to see her and enjoys being with her so much.| H ; a well developed industry. < with one teaspoonful of salt, the - . that even the ancients were quite fami- Same of pepper, a twelve pounded “When we are by ourselves Jack is awfully sweet and affectionate to . liar with the use of sponges for toilet [cloves. Put them in a buttered bak me, but when b mother » around he is not n ly so demonstrative. 5 purpos ing dish, cover them with vinegar, He' is almost cold, and I just feel that she comes between us, though she A Tk ponges are siow growe add two bay leaves and cover with doesn’t do or say a single thing that I can put my finger on ta about 4 years to grow a buttered paper. ke in a moderate “It isn’t your mother-in-law that comes between you and your husband. “Jack says there are two income taxes | dium sized toilet goods sponge, |oven for 20 minutes I replied. “It s your own mean and unworthy jealousy When you a (“‘hm 8| he can't get off his mind. One's Uncle | the larger bath sponges take § to 10 2 o i rude and unkind to his mother, and showing her that she is unwelcomwe in her | g, id the other's a brunette.” vears son’s house, you are showing yourself to your husband in such a contemptible i The Best kind of cleaning: sponges is Frozen Cocoanut Ice. guise that he turns from you in repulsion. He forgets for the minute how - the “sheep wool.” The *velvet” ranks | Bring two pints of milk to the bo voung and pretty and attractive you are, and he sees only your hideous little, next. The “vellow” ranks next to vel- | point. Beats the yolks of five i Bl narrow, selfish soul. vet, and the “wire grass’ holds fourth |one cupful of powdered sugar until light | of which & — place. |and s slowly n he 1 nilk. | are ake “If a woman wants to disillusion & man and kill his love for her, she . Whie wicas wook 14 mus it thisbeng | oo el T e = Poling U [ are taken can take no quicker or surer method of doing it than by being hateful to \ est and most durable sponges on the | one-half a teaspoonful of pistachio ex- | tive of the his mother. And the finer and nobler a man is, the more loyal and true Oy cof market. It will hold two or three|tract and one-half a teaspoonfal of ros S he is. the more he resents his wife’s mistreating his mother. 1 4 times its weight of water, and the|extract. Let o “Did you ever think,” I went on, “that no man has two sets of 3 }fiber is tough, coarse-grained, but y characteristics? He cannot be both ‘loval and disloyal, grateful and very pliable. They ' ungrateful, tender and considerate, and cold and selfish. Nor can he b 4 Slkptod for hemvviclen Tt such b caote or Cibe Tiin chtoance b mean son and a €ood husband. The man who can forget the mother Who | my. hovect and smartest way to fur- | mopping ny the ,.ocu.f‘",r";u;‘n;mn.\".,a\ =i e bore him, who spent 25 years of her life tending and cherishing him..and | nii's Hedroom is to choose MAividual | and washing sutamanilon, oyl ipe sacrificing for him, will forget his wife and the duty he owes hel when some | pioceg of varying styles and periods. For | increase in the number of automobliles younger and prettier and more as nating woman crosses his path instance, this dressing table made up of | the use of the large sponges for it riean empire sofa table and a B ar s s o GJT is the men who are faithful to their mothers, who remember all that | gapneiiice iror is used in the same & purposes has shown a big their mothers have done for them and try to repay it, who are faithful | room with a Sheraton four-post bed, a to their wives, and when you try to destroy vour husband’'s loyalty to hiS| Queen Anne chest of draw mother u are laying the ax to your own safety and happines Louis XVI ar — and dignified in desig When I see a young woman deliberately trying to alienate her husband | ¢y es and entirely ghtful in the from his mother—and I know many men who have been so cowed by their | engemble. wives that they are afraid to go to see their mothers, or invite them within The color scheme oo, is distinctive | their doors, or even to give their poor mothers a few dollars to help them | I wonder' that she is not afraid to do it o, Wonder sne is not afraid of piisnodes: 110 oxpfezaxeioninbog e B 1 killing her husband’s love for her, afraid of the man she has made & or | sed by je purnist B e aitor o her, and, most of all, afraid of some day being treated by ] h [ waten cases and tor polishing marble e Orange Pekoe Tea Jehter-in-law as she is treating her mother-in-law | little hard. round sponge used than one at. It will ar 50 easily. In| the same way a whol, is much better than a cutting of the same size shape and texture from a larger sponge. It wears longer and does better work other says had lot ool addiione: Guatol ot cocoanut and mix well. Turn into a are especially | freezer and freeze. & n paper e grass and yellow sponges are close-grained and rather brittle. They are bleached, often by steeping in water impregnated with sulphurous acid, or by exposure in their moist state to the action of chlorine, and then are used for bath and toilet purposes. Cheap grass sponges are 5 Bt ichimén cawe o roost, and £ by tailors for sponging clothes is S “For there is nothing truer than that curses come home to r t, and | | L 8 3 that the measure we mete out to others is meted out to us again ‘ 2 | known the the “hardnead.” and, as its A THE next time you need tea, ] | L | namo indicates, is v hard, and X A few months ago I was camping out in the Desert of Sahara. At night | [more round’in form than any ‘other | e ask for Tetley’s in the rich the Arabs in our caravan would build a bonfire, and, sitting about it in their | - = sponge that grows is taken from = 3 2 2 | white bournouses, they would entertain themselves Ly singing and playing around the Turks Islands. Another oriental C:ldd). No extra cost. | upon reed flutes and listening to a story teller. fine quality that comes mostly in| “One night the story telier told this atory, which our courier translated small sizes is the “reel” growing Makes good tea a certainty e < e Sl el i e to us as he spoke / / n the s es, and w THE CHILD WILL LEARN TO T BLIC IT IN DOING THOUGHTFUL A¢ - _':”’N ul‘m“ 4 time. he said, ‘an old man went to his son’s house and is very close-textured sponge, re- DEEIBRINC e S aid: “The years are heavy upon me. My arms are feeble and my strength placing in a large measure the firm 1t is not on he o who aulshita) attitnos. SE. besiis Mor oy Slightly | Zone from me, and I am no longer able to work. When you were voung I| silk sponge from Turkey b noTan v - Ndults and | 200t helavior one hoald s to | toiled for you and warmed you In my breast and gave you to eat. Now take : | You judge a sponge according to its | ev hild v b et disorimitfing ©. Should start tol he in and care for me as I did for you when you were young and helpless M | lightness of weight, softness through | il s = ek o = . roms Stho e - £ ey | { the body., and by the toughness of| ngs in order to attract attentic »d deeds and thereby lead Ao A R e e themseives. Often the idea of the re child’s mind into still higher channels. | ¢¢ ‘Sn the man welcomed his father and gave him a seat his fire and i plac Caiise 650t S poneay Latent goodness will become at his table, but the man's wife was very angry at having to iy this room who is trying to gain the coveted|parent and a happy issue out of all | care for th ¢ center. S al troubles is 1hely to be the final| finally he bade the old man begone, and turned him out of his door. As he | an_interestir t of work did so, however, his conscience smote him for the evil deed he was doing, and QR IATaRs te their atten- ommended for children who are | Run to the stable and bring the blanket with which we cover the ampe are silver candle- hi e imhe \Meilrales belob Epuiedivaanat Bansichn < been | ass, and give it to the old man to keep him warm sticks with apricot silk old father, and she quarreled and nagged at her husband until | grapnes of sage d by a matter of equ ment | forced upon them by adoring parents{ was bidden, but he was gone a long time, and when he returned he had cut | gijver. s created. It m deve to a|a par These children | the blanket in two and broughi only one piece of it. “Why did you do that?"| 1ConsiEht butte r‘ are Ou ex ert enou h most peculiar bizarre and as- kindly but firmly, but | asked the man R e At . Y X ks i e child, “I am saving the other tounding. She has set people talking ' not the withholding of praise for Oh," replied th d i e other half of the blanke . about her, however, and this she mis- , §60d behavior. It is not of their own | to 8ive to you when you are an old man and I turn you out of my hou To Brighten Brass. takes for popularity ad of a very | volition that they occupy the center 3 & . e £ mm g it rtuna There is all|of attention, thoug s > “I commend this story to the consideration of every dau r-in-law i i T e e s e e l“;',,"!m-_ world, for as we sow, we reap. It does not take lo Eitor 16-15-20 years [being used will keep bright for weeks = ¥ . The little son that lies on your breast will be a man and = 5 How will you like it then if his t after 3 Steel on Stoves may 3 reated in this the difference in the world betwee to expect and even to de nd it i ming notorious and becoming |&uidance through praise of good acts | t0 &0 & x vou w a mother-in-law center is occupied n the first | at the start has been found su \“' tries to separa y 1 place, undesirably; the second | ful in developing good traits and in | duty to you, makes you unwelcome 1n his home POROBEE T 6 steal and il not place. in a way ~mulate. Adults|building up the characte in chil- | Praprn should be qui. P the differ-|dren who find themselves likely to | an to spot from |h‘.Eh« ignored, or. at least, to be over- | : - ive their own aims close | looked and who crave the attention | E IME STO S BY THORNTON voiding sta center unless | accorde o those occupy stage " BU T e R T lB DT RIES " sircess auce forthe Goose or the gander or ‘his he never touches the eggs of birds. | cousin the duck or Curiosity in 0ld Pasture. He is too good a friend of the birds the blump fowl of com Suspicion s & hatefol thing t0 do anything like that. It must be merce i quite the 111 feeling it is sure to bring = gt e AUSLO ; 5 Itis sure (o bEOR cure. | SOmething else. If it were anybody | ‘most important part lightly smeared over with vase er is spilled light possible Mothers should study their chil-| . i dren and see whether they ar My Neighbor Says: | naught caus ck of under- When wall paper becomes | | tion, because of a| | soiled-looking, dip a clean | | m because they want stage cen- nd rub it over the soiled y What was Easmer Browis BoyHos | orre that it T cooting Eoed for avior. To loosen a glass stopper in a | | wanted to know. Old Jed Thumper. (Copsright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) . B | ftself. Tt has been proved that if g0od deeds bring recognition the Stk in o wanted to know. Bob White wanted per pound.—Advertisement enuine pleasure in wrong doing, or duster in dry powdered bora geuulne nples bt SaStey I (XS MY red borax but Farmer Brown's Boy I would be of the ceremony When otaly e This me i the i | i an s hian rubbing with bread | wanted to know. Old Man Coyote|] don't know what to think." ‘We mean- of course The psycholog the child who | | pottle put o St haro : pesebeloRy jpt boi put one or two drops of the gray, old Rabbit who was the = demands stage center is a study in | | sweet oil around the stopper | | Hon A AY | iorte Mes. beter Rabbit and s | | | and place it a little aistance had lived in the Old Pasture all his in Wi on is the caus: for surprising ] ad lived ir pany sales of carcass beef in W actio a ng the good is quite warm, strike the stop- Sl S oa’ shipments sold out. ranged from 12 ; fon the| | \rapped around it, first on one on for bad or is removed side and then on the other. This 1 S P Therefore, parents must praise, not Wil Topsan sven ths mort ohoie 1 B scold. They must pick out good acts ,m‘"‘_jl”h;j”‘ n the most obsti } 2 Jellied Meat Pie. n though they ma be s n } parison with the annovin and comment favorably on them and utterly ignore the wrongdoings. It Cut up one and one-half pounds of nice lean stewing steak, one small onion, two cloves and half a teaspoon ful of mixed herbs tied in muslin ill Le a tax on a parent’s patience | and one and one-half pints of water. at first to do this, but the zood of | 2 : ; b Put into a stewpan with cold water | the child is il seenr | Varnish vour dinner candles - and add the hert Simmer very cdd and go = e to let with plain shellac or paint them gently, not boiling, for two and one- positive d naughtiness [ | With delicate water colors. Be- half hours. When quite tender place 20 unpunished, an worse | sides making them very pretty % the meat on a hot dish and ¥et, apparently ¢ s it you| | it prevents the wax {rom drip- & > | slices of exs on top. Skim the grav never knew of it, but thiz is a pre-| | ping down the sides of the can- i and remove the herbss Add one ta- cribed treatme i cer- | dle and staining the cloth. blespooful of powdered gelatin to tain types of children, v r every | Try using a paint brush in- one pint of stock. Season well and child | | stead of the ordinary duster pour onto the dish. When a child who = on stage| | when dusting carved furniture. ¢ center finds that deeds lone | You will find that the brush / 2 B i o icox psition, will | | can get into all the crevices and YA = / cease trying to get it in unsuccessful | | you will get along much quicker . ways. A= =oon as the mother begins than if you used a duster. to get the right reaction from her OLD JED THUMPER SAW FARMER I‘enten . ) BROW BOY PEEPING INTO HIS BRAMBLE CASTLE. to know. And there were other little fast becomes Reaay,m? akes When making a plum the cook should a hours for boiling it, and take great care that the water in the Dot never once ceases to boil. Or will you trust the worlds biggest butter maker to assure you of the very best? around, visiting every part. You may 5 r . . ‘ it ety e vy Nauchta e OUL %N the“wholesale markets experts divide butter into six people who wanted to know. crmmEnni ot feast with Cod Fis Pasture. Day after day he tramped bright eyes. He was watched very closcly. ~There wasn't an instant while he was in the Old Pasture that bright eyes were not watching every- thing he did. ORTON’S famous “No “He seems to be looking for some- Bones” Cod Fish mi: hing,” said Reddy Fox to Mrs. Reddy. . \ : od Fish mixed ? s prhel o thing sud Reddy Fox to Mes Beday, 4 ith Boiled potato; allzeady Between the very best and the next! by human hands, in the patented home? 1 guess it Is & good thing we z to fry and serve. Delicious! grade there is a difference of only a' Meadow Gold package which seals not living over here in the Old = e 5 e : Pasturs just now. He certainly is ST o i few cents a pound. in its delicious flavor and protects T e M Lthe butter from contamination. . grades and each quality commands a different price. Between the highest and lowest grades there is often a difference of as much as ten cents a pound. MARY LOUISE z looking for some one.” z A 8 WILL yo% CSO,\;.E / “Old M yote thought the same GostoaBemEARacas Cors It Closemsies: Masn: The difference in taste and flavor % AN HERE AND cous. “He probably is looking for my | and wholesomeness is marked; the Even the salt which seasons the ’/I?OCK THE BABY ?‘ lemaloIsan G0ty Sl | difference in price is so small that no’ Meadow Gold Butter is tested for dian't know that Farmer Brown's Boy family need deny itself the pleasure purity by our chemists. already knew where he lived. But x When Old Man Covote saw Farmer and healthfulness of eating butter of 's Boy i ; : Since you cannot jud butter Brown’s Boy pass right close to his g S y ] c home and pay mo attention to it, he the highest quality. 8 grinned. He was sure then that * ; quality by price and as lower grade LIKE TO MOM, BUT Farmer Brown's boy wasn't interested Mecadow Gold Butter is churned butter often is sold in stores at the v in him. But his curicsity was just f d ‘l ‘Od P AVEN'T A& ROCK YA |as great as ever. He followed Farmer rom double pasteurized pure crecam same price as Meadow Gold, your 's Boy. lowed vith- : ° : : B Rnattoy. SEGEOIoyedm ity 7 especially selected for its flavor and assurance that you arc getting butter Boy know. But he didn’t learn any- richness. After churning, the butter of the highest quality is in asking b el ;—-— . is washed in filtered water; then it for, and insisting upon having, Brown's Boy peeping into his bramble belcAon - is four times wrapped, untouched Mecadow Gold. castle. Old Jed Thumper sat very still. He wondered if Farmer Brown's Boy was looking for him. He Watch the papers for FREE TRIAL offer hoped that if he sat perfectly still Farmer Brown's Boy wouldn't see 5 him. But he saw by the look in of MEADOW GOLD BUTTER Farmer Brown's Boy's eyes thaf he s was seen. Then Farmer Brown's Boy 2 3 BeatricE CREAMERY CoMPANY, World's Largest Churners and Distributors of left and Old Jed Thumpedr sat and ) wabbled his nose and tried to guess = 5 i WhHEESmEs e Nl By AR SE MOTHER:— Fletcher’s Quality Butter. Washington Branch, 308 Tenth Street, N. W. Tel. Main 2336 Ya¥ll pis o A Grymanrias "%He wasn't looking for me saia| Castoria is especially pre- Old Jed Thumper to himself, and . i L VERTICAL Sbbied his wabbly nese faster than| Pared to relieve Infants in | -GLASS CONTAINERS. SOLUTION TO rer. “He wasn't looking for me, for ; i & - SPANISH WORP | -AN INFANT. PULILE NT e arms and' C}.uldren all ages = — FOR RIVER Z-TRIBULATIONS. - Blacky and Crow watched from the of Constipation, Flatulency, § {) “; - 7- i -VER {ALL. f a tres and he, too, was puzzled. 3 E 7 7 S s i o > bl b-!—f\o;?‘\//i:E':N E'IYONEVSS/A\QEFL 1P plinked his brignt eves. ye! Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there- } = 5 - : hed his head. He was that i it ids 9-GRANV LOPGE (AB) |5 -SHORT STOCKING. oAt B e ey ot somat| from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the DOUBLE :g:z?kug_gs?;gmsss sic flf;f;,\fi%%?zu?o,‘ OIAIR] thing. : AT assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. A % e 12 ELes] geTReds S|l UEIIURE, e 2] |oif 1 o oo, P oz | _PasTeuRizen (DULL 15-STREET (AB) 12-STEAMSHIP (AB) S| 1 would say that he was looking for [ To ayoid imitations, always look for the signature of M 'e-To Accomeuisn. |4 necamive arvswee iSiol Il | o e B k| Aty Mammits N Opivs, Pyt evryvhs rconmend .

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