Evening Star Newspaper, April 28, 1925, Page 24

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FE Ramble Aflmd South America BY RI Tue TOWN 1S CROWDED WITH MTRATE CARTS Thirty-Eighth Day N 4 < morning from Tquiqui | 1ano birds—the wing- | d Chile. However Ltest e of wealth is n omethin St as unus the v ate beds. ) merce is a white which the | de of gunpowder is made used in chemical works luce nitric and sulphuric acid, but the bulk of it is emploved n nitrates. h speculation to the origin | Although they are an | of plant food, ther and the 'de. vainless, arid 1ccepted ex a book I find Railed early mid « wealth of IFAGASTA tr Chile rch ouds of & Peru a al | 2l element > ship's librar this . peculiar cli { have prevailed. ind powerful caused the nitro- | forming nitric acid. This lium sulphate, which was, still, abundant in this regio ause the greater affinity of | jum than for sulphur, | s freed and liberated in a | gaseous compound, leaving the solid | sodium nitrate Figure it out ¥ The nitrates a flashes of zen and found e found from Arica THE GARDEN WITH BURBANK FElizabeth Urquhart and Fdited by Luther Burbank As Reported bs Shrubs. for the garden, as | to the amateur 1tage, be repeated the shrubbery. If carefully worked out. the effect will be most pleasing. and there is no son why shrubbery masses and skylines and visias and house outlooks should not be considered with larger zrounds. A garden should be like bit of natur a landscape on a small | scale—and nature’s ways should al ways be studied The flowering shrubs ed in front of the trees or shrubs, and when they blo v and out like so man their lea b: + one group will blossom ther, until they all come in me ¢ them will be harm ous, if due e exercised in re; d and blossoming season “Which of these will be suitable for hedges and windbreaks?” asked Hll" amateur, ““Boxwood for swered Mr plan earlier Making a suggested might, with ad here in planning nay be group the taller m they pictures ground nd then and particularly has been to color, height very low hedges.” an Burbank: “mulberry. | privet for tall hedge: ind the spireas are all | for massing against the | s of a house the deutzias. | snowberries, bush honey- | hia and weigela.” to know where to plant shade nswered them rejoice in the shady places you may lea, hydrangea, rhodo berry, privet and vibur shrubs—sun or Mr. Burl Nearly sun, but plant the dendron, snos num T felt that there must be something to ask and felt relieved when Mr. Bur bank added “The gardener must not forget culti vation the first season, which is al most necessa trees and shrubs as for vegetables d flowers. The ground around them must be kept open and loose by hoeing or light spading, and in their earlier yvears the ground just around them should he covered with a mulch of old weeds or leaves “After awhile they will manufacture their own mulch, and the dead leaves. nstead of being raked off, may be furned in or left on the surface, es. with evergreens.” a4 beautiful arrangement of nature for the tree to give back some of the food it has taken from the soil. to be used again!” said the amateur. who was learning ma things. All of mature’s arrangements are heautiful.”” answered the chief, “if only we study them and understand them not only for rden trees and | of | principally | with | ferent temperatures. Chile ATURES PLEY. down to Coquimb proximately 300 » average about tw in width and lie hill feet of bove sea lev 000 acres. The depos face, or more of earth usually carries fre nitrate of sod: separating the nit materials is quite of b and steam Thus has lightning with pre During and since the war the nitrate of Chile prospec orv industry at the any, have m the | uninteresting plac to break the monc Antofagasta obt a point near Boliv the sea and 173 say that chumpagne becau pensive That went li up to the ened to Cape 750 miles away It made me ho Particularly shrubbery is cuitivation of benefit, but re’'s own natur to trees in well; they, cultivation provement and “I once saw an oak tree, 600 vears old, whic down. and section I saw th: showed a much than the inner r into its history I the rings, been cultivated (ju and the tree had been at once affected by the turning of quent cultivation.’ This was a new | who said: “According to th might be Mr. Burbank an ely— restry (Copyriz The prosperous southeastern state: ter tha states of the cour is the only one whose highways ap- proach the status the United States e and the Andes, | from the sea, and from are oftener overlaid with a erystallizing been ains her water from the poor folks here drink was too much for me, the static on examining hat the new growth dated from the time when the land had first stimulated growth by cultivation?" cultivation i THE EVENING Shall Good Women Forever Remain EAR MISS DIX: For 18 vears she has tried to atone reserved, and she leads an extremely lonely life. Now, think that this woman is as good as we Answer: By all means do %o. Christian thing to do. 1 condemn thee. Go, and sin no more.” than follow His example. But certain when a woman'’s neighbors, instead of tearing her to pf over their tea cups and drawing passes It would be a kind, And certainly 0, a distance of ap. miles. The deposits o and a half miles between the coast 10 to 80 miles 000 to 5,000 el, covering an area an honored and a cherished guest metimes on the sur- | ot 1 do not believe in letting down all the moral bars, material only fair and just that those who break the laws of punished vielded to the blandishments of the seducer has k. girl straight. pay its price in contumely and shame. But we should temper our justice with The raw »m 20 to 65 per cent a. The process of rate from the waste simple. It consists biling the material = ot air mercy. suffering. been ofitable struck sults. by SR has been alarmed | of competition in | and elsewhere devised to obtain air. out of the pit into which she has fallen is hopeles: e has neither the strength |all that she touches a fat e, but serving weli | stony of the wooden | But there are other women innocently, because they who are led were too trusting, into who hav | their tea hat of your club in being siste lived the lives of saints thereafter 00 feet above way. They ia, 10 il to them EAR MISS DIX: girl quite soon. se water is too ex so 1 room and J.—some wireles May, of life. N. n which I will have an interest some day. mesick! ny business prospects are? Answer L. €. W. A man who does not give an just how much money he is making, what he h | the future is to a girl before marriage deals very unfairly in the woman's eyes. getting a husband who will be able to give her luxurle: ward that he has decelved her, and that they necessities. _Certainly arden s |g5.000 or a $10.000 espond to care and take him or leave him how immediate im- to marry him will certainly hate him if he has inveigled him under false pretenses. more than h had just been cut the cro: at the outer rings more rapld growth ings. On inquiring found, by counting | what sort of a partnership she is going into when a woman marries she puts all she has in the firm. |able to give your wife a good home and the necessities. fortunc to start on 15t vears before) the soil and subse Christ sald to the repentant Magdalene, their skirts away from are big enough in heart and soul to blot out her past with their sympathy and take her by the hand and welcome her into their sorority. Do you think I should ask the girl to wait for me and tell her just Of course, you should tell her all about your busine: You are quite right in saying that you will never marry until STAR, WASHT DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Aloof From Woman Who Sinned? Shall He Tell Fiancee About Money Matters Before Marriage? T know a woman who, in her very early girlhood, through love and ignorance, stumbled off the straight and narrow path. i for her mistake by living an almost perfect life. but the sense of her wrongdoing has made her ve very shy and ome of my friends and T have talked this matter over and we are, and we want to ask her to join our club, but we have decided to put the question up to you. Shall we? MRS. K. and gracious, and “Nelther do we can do no less it marks a red-letter milestone in woman's advancement es in cruel gossip her when she It has always been a bitter shame upon our sex that we have given tacitly our approval of the double standard of morals; that we have always blamed the woman and let the man go free; that we have shut the door in the face of the woman who sinned, and made of her an outcast, while we invited the man who was her partner in guilt to dinner and received him as 1 belleve that it is soclety should be I am sure that the knowledge that she would be disgraced if she 1 ept many a sorely tempted Virtue must have its reward in honor and respect. Vice must 3 : And a single fault committed in the folly of youth should not be penalized by a lifetime of More than that, each case should be judged by its individual merits. The woman who sins, and who keeps on sinning, and who makes no effort to climb She is inherently immoral. nor the desire to save herself. rothing to help her, and we do right when we let her alone, for she defiles We can do wrongdoing ignorantly, too loving, too soft, 1aving realized the enormity of their offense, turned from it In loathing, and They wash out their sins with s of repentance, and we should follow your example, Mrs. K., and DOROTHY DIX. but who, I am just 20 and am going to be engaged to a very nice But just now I am not capable of supporting a wife, and I positively will not marry until I can give one a good home and the comforts I am working for my father, who is well off and has a good business, vhat L. C:W. s affairs honest and truthful statement of and what his outlook for with her. Some men don't do this becaue they want to seem rich and prosperous And so many a girl marries a man, thinking she s and finds out after- cannot girl has a right to know whether she is marrying a a vear man, for that gives her the opportunity elther to And the girl who doesn't love a poor man well enough afford even the her into marrying Therefore, the man saves himself as well as the woman when he lays |all of his cards on the table in the days of courtship and lets her see just For you must remember that ou are You don’t need a You don’t need a fine house, nor to be able to give your | wife a limousine and pearls, but if there is to be any happiness you must be |able to provide the decent comforts—food, and shelter, and clothes. A There can be no happiness in a home where the wolf is always howling idea to the student, |where the next future. To bg a ndertaking. At 20 vou are still too young to marry an engagement situated and decide on a sort of tentative understanding al uc to is. even forest trees | to improved swered part |the matter up again? (Copyright, 1923.) bt, 1925 i ® | all one-fourth Breast of Lamb. Steam a breast hours, using’ the steamer for broth, of the best roads in | freeing fat . nips boiled, peeled and thickly settled cupful s of Brazil have bet- | an have the other atry, but Sao Paula | liquid under the | half a after cooling and Serve with pars sliced. Over boiling. Add one from Iy before serving two, when you have got on your feet and are ready to marry, DOROTHY DIX. pour some creamed peas half of cooked peas {at the door. where the man is always torn with anxiety about the rent, and -ome from. and the woman lives in dread of the ess marriage has to be financed just like any other You are still too young to go into So why do you not tell your sweetheart about how you are that, in a year or you will take Melt of butter. In it of lamb for three| cook one-fourth cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of salt, then add two cupsful of cold milk. Stir until cupful and one. Heat thorough Place a standing D. C, TUESDAY, APRIL 2 Fish seem so indignant With, rude, unseeing stare — I'm”glad "they hve in water g What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Taurus. Tomorrow’s planetary aspects are adverse during the whole day. They denote a decided di¢content and gen eral feeling of pessimism. Not only wliil it be inexpedient, but it will be practically impossible, to accomplish anything of much value under such conditions, and it will be very hard to realize at all times during the day that “there Is a silver lining to every cloud,” as your outlook will be based on pessimism. No speculation of any character should be Indulged in, and only routine dutles executed. A child born tomorrow wlill be quite normal in health and strength, and will cause little worry or anxlety on physical grounds. Its disposition will be” at once sympathetic and affec tionate. Its character will be well de veloped along right lines, and it will be truthfully inclined and very con- clentious. It will have many friends and be very devoted to all the mem- bers of its family. It will not attain a very large degree of material suc. cess, but will be able, owing to its sterling characteristics, to reap happi- ness wherever it may be found. If tomorrow is your birthday, you, in spite of shrewdness, intelligence, declsiveness and positlveness, are very cautious. Notwithstanding the possession of these valuable assets you have a weakness which enables others very often to take advantage of you, as you are pectliarly sympa- thetic and sensitive. You take offense very easily, and are rather slow to forgive. As a result of this you are ften misunderstood, but those who know you will appreciate vou and will be extremely loyal. In vour home life this causes a wreat deal of unhappi ness, as the freedom Wwhich prevails in the family circle encourages the ex pression of thoughts outspoken in ab solutely unrestrained manner, and you can never accustom yourself to these conditlons. You resent them Well known persons born on this v are Matthew Vassar, philanthro ; Jacob W. Bainey. naturalist; Adolph H. J. Sutro, mining engineer, philanthropist and former Ma San Francisco; Charles R. Otis, ele vator inventor; William L. Elkins, as tronomer, and Lorado Taft, sculptor. WOMAN’S BEDTIME STORIES Head of the Family. When all s dons and all is said, Just who is the family head? S fimmy Skunk. consolately starin, Suddenly Mra. head out. “Aren’t dear?” said she. Jimmy didn’t wa vitation. “Of coul It 1s astonishing how fast children grow. Jimmy Skunk says sc, and he ought to know, for with nine of them he had a ehance to see. Jimmy had taken it into his head to go down on the Green Meadows, and because he was 80 fat he didn’t return to Farmer Brown's barn when he grew sleepy and tired. Instead he used an old house of Johnny Chuck’s, which hap pened to be handy. It was 10 days before Jimmy returned to Farmer Brown'’s barn, and in all that time, of course, he had seen nothing of Mrs. Jimmy and the bables. The night after his return he met Mrs. Jimmy and the whole family just starting for the Old Orchard. “We are golng to look for some grasshoppers. The children are big enough to catch them now, so we are going to see if we can find some. Won't you come along?" sald she. Jimmy was about to refuse when it struck him that this was the first time for many long weeks that Mrs. Jim- my had seemed to want him about, so he told her he would be very happy to g0 “Your father will lead the way, chil dren,” said Mrs. Jimmy, and she herself | brought up in the rear of the proces- slon to make sure that none lagged behind. Looking back at that long line of half-grown children, two dressed in all black, one in almost pure white and the rest in black and white, Jimmy was astonished to see how they had grown. Suddenly he felt very chesty over belng the head of such'a family. And he really was the head for the time being. At least he was the head of that procession. So he led them over to the Old Or chard and there in the grass they found young grasshoppers. Very spry | | were those young Skunks and the ung grasshoppers gave them a| chance to show just how spry they could be. My, such a good time as| they had! It was great fun to catc the grasshoppers and still more fun to eat them. They looked for all the world like a lot of black-and-white kittens playing in the grass After they had spent some time catching grasshoppers Jimmy led them to the old stone wall and they had great fun playing hide-and-seek in be- tween the stones. Jimmy showed them how to pull over small stones to look for crickets and beetles. He showed them the nest of a mouse they were just too late to catch. He showed them how to dig a white grub out of the grass roots, and no one told him that Mother had already taught them | |how to do that. Jimmy enjoved it. He enjoyed it a lot. And all the time | he felt more self-important. Being the | head of a family was a great deal bet- | ter_than living alone. | Finally Mrs. Jimmy announced that it was time for them to return to their home under the henhouse “Just what I was about to say,” said Jimmy, and led the way back toward the henhouse, Mrs. Jimmy at the tafl of the procession as before. When they reached the henhouse Mrs. Jim- my sent the children in to the hom she had made under the henhouse and followed them. Jimmy stood dis. “AREN'T YO DEAF family. You never that this was the (Copyright. 192 from a leg of col put it over the fire until more of chopped Add salt and pepi one-fourth cupful blended, then tomato puree and ful of rich, wells stir until bolling, and turn upon a Surround with bre serve at once actually cleans = BY THORNTON which his family had vanished. BAID SHE. tone quite befitting the head dared venture through that Hashed Lamb. | chop the meat fine. add W. BURGESS g at the hole fn Jimmy poked her you coming in, my aft for a second in rse,” said he in a | COMING IN, MY of the| would have guessed first time he had | doorway. | by T. W. Burgess.) T | d roast lamb, then Chop an onlon, | in two tablespoons: If at| fresh mushrooms. | per to season, and of flour. Stir until | half a cupful of three-fourths cup- | easoned broth and | then add the 3 hot serving ofled tomatoes m\dl surpassing Ma was sewing on her electric sew ing machine and I sed, Hay ma, is & sudden shock bad for peeple? Certeny it is sometimes its the werst thing there is, its bin known to tern peeples hair wite, ma sed. W wat are you tawking about, vou havent eny suddin shock in store for me, have you? she sed. No mam, T sed Well Im' glad to heer it know your roundabout wi of getting at things, ma sed. Enyway, If vo wunt to give me a mild suddin shock that wont do me eny harm, jest get up gome morning wen I call you for the 2nd time insted of waliting for the 11th or 12th, she sed Eippose T got up once wen you called me the ferst time I sed. You better not do that, it mite ef. fect my hart, ma sed And she kepp on sewing to herself and after a wile I sed, Well G wizz ma, T was thinking more about & sud din shock to myself, T was thinki maybe I better stay home from skool tomorrow. all this? ma sed Well, you know vacation aint verv far away now, and I was thinking if T stopped going to skool all at once and dident haft to go agen for 3 munths it mite be sutch a suddin because [ Trim the fat and unedible portions |ghock it mite tern my hair wite like it does some _peeples thinking maybe I better to s I was brake the good news to myself easy by staying ful of melted butter and stir and cook | zway from skool once in & wile befors vellowed and softened hand cook with the onfon a cipful or | for instants, I sed. vacation starts, sutch as tomorrow 1f 1 heer of vou trving eny munkey bizniss like that you wont try it agen in a hurry, thats all, ma sed Wich I dident, not reely ixpecting to eny = Many persons complain about the cost of necessities who insist on going he limit on luxurfe In Delicious Flavor all others "SALADA” TEA. is truly satisfying to the palate. 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