Evening Star Newspaper, April 1, 1926, Page 47

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WOMAN'S PAGE. implify thc Edster Entertamnw BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. nter enje they Even aster vacation means ter the family folk when ief period. | to | places | the room after | been brought | has N ATMOS MALITY DI 1ERE OF TO GUEST INFOR AND | gained. friends the and | enter | suppers that dishes are ar which { with ¢ many the | occasion and the sort of meal provided. { [Putona | together { as buttered | salted nuts, etc., {in on serv according | the serving of the tood. BEDTIME STORIE t April First Joke. r coning MOTHER NATUR |1 t | t | whistling But it April NCLAIMED ¥ THINK OF *HUMPH . was surely said Peter, “how Hyl: hen nes Nature tells must wake mud at the Pool. My, but | his voica! Now, if | Bluebird and know that | here. I| Mother “She > in the tom of the ood to he Win we shall - soon will be for it myseif exclaimed Pete of me? If you are long 1 weath: ust imagine the rest of us feel who nice Wi “What had & 15 you have comfortable 1wh e it happened that as Jerry and | ther bank of the | ol friends of theirs L know it. They who had ) they wer old h. that Tvia i 1 for other sound v did_not | - the faint whistle of wings high | ihove them Mr. and Mrs. Quack | {tew high above the Smiling Pool. Mr. and Mrs. Quack noticed that neither | Peter nor Jerry looked up. “We'll give them a little surprise rty,” said Mrs. Quack to Mr. Quack, < they circled far out over the Green | Meadows, “We'll fly low from be-| ind them and make our wings whis- | that they think one of | enemies of the air is after them. | will be s surprised that they | stop to think t there zrve flying at night. We'll just joke on them Mrs. Quack turnes eper 1ne and 3t Give %0 -your complexion a charming, soft, youthful freshness. This delicate, re- fined touch of adorable beauty is yours to command thru Gourauo's ORIENTAL CREAM Made in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Bize erd. T. Hookins & Son, New York Clty eve- |t soumd, B Paol than to show their of their homes re glad to put energy into inment which will not be overtaxing. The suggestions offered today will prove helpful when serving are evening meals and not mere refreshments. Novelty and Ease. An element of novelity enters into the supper when it rved in the living room. Practically all service unnecessary. There has to be no laying of a dining table, 1o ingement of nterpiece, over o puzzle one's brain or an which to expend money. Thke napery needed is comparatively small, thus iininishing the customary laundry work that entertaining at a meal otherwise involv The bother of ating guests in correct order and eliminated. in long hospitality They a ¢ ngenial partners is the work is lessened ways implifying Service. nd serve the supper in the all describe, adapting it to requirements of the Plan way I s special ¥ napkin and silver, es and such food bread, olives and t be taken wther put arge tr with glas lis or which m o dishes. On chocolate or things, | to which is to be served. | 1l other food helped out \n plates ready to be handed around. cally all of these preparations made in the afternoon, except tea coffee And have rac i be Hearty Menu menu to serve is cold M baked potatoes, canned cans and celery. Follow this Y dessert that y in the day. variun cream with whipped cream cake in delicious. If the ad or the other des: the living room a inconspicuously, the e served without the hoste: the things in. it the housemaker feow trays, after the fir emptied it can be taken out and crt put on it and brought upler menu is a substantfal salad h olives and the hot rolls, and then satisfying dessert, followed by bon- sons. 1 For Sake of Convenience. The hostess should have any small ables she can use placed conveniently bout the room. She should preside sver the things and see that guests ve their needs satistied from the of food not helped out. As many < eight persons can make up a tea this sort, thot six s nage. s better to have easily managed suppers large one that entails o method of serving most succes: - be made on Nt e ork BY THORNTON the Smiling they were two little tting ot were towards wo tust 11d see the Peter and Jerry he bunk. How their wing through th linost over Peter he lafter noti ling What's that?” cried Jer dign't wait for an answer -d headlong into the Smiling | And _as be plunged, he more | half expécted to feel the great | one of the Hawk family. | Peter Rabbit. he made a | ip to one side and then he | the alders at the heagl Vool as fast as those long | d tuke him. e, too. expected to feel rreat didn't. Ie plunged the alders wnc dowr nd_ my, b They o caded Poc orms of before He lung As ing his_cor an hal ut he in wmor THE EVENING STAR, 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY “Muvver, I wouldn't be ’sprised if ‘at old tat had stealed a doughnut!” (Copyright. 1926.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Sundey afternoon pop was smok- ing and thinking and I was setting there wondering wat to do next, and pop sed. Well Benny, are you glad you have a little brother Meening the new baby, Well, T aint sorry. Thats a beginning, at leest, pop sed. 1 expect your little brother to be a grate help in forming your caracter making you a better . he how 1 sed. Thats ixactly wat Im I meen thinking of. pop sed. He' smaller than vou and he'll continue to be smaller than you, so you'll haff to take care e¢f him and protect him and see that no harm happens tto him, you'll haff to think of him insted of ony of yourself, in other werds you'll haff” to be unselfish and unselfishniss is the greatest v. tue a human bean can have. Well Il take care of him, hope he appriciates it, T sed Weather he does or not you'll have don vour duty and your conscients will be cleer, pop sed. Wich jest then ma called from her room, Willyum, if your not doing enything 1 wish vou'd come and wk this baby, he won keep quiet nie. and 1 sed, Look at the size of him, looking but T for & sometl it leest t about to take Beunyv for u nd I dont wunt to disuppoint 3 n d And aw me pop quick went being a_exter intr account of stopping ice creem soda on Jlaces for French Mustard Dressing. Stir & _teaspoonful of flc teaspoonful of melted butte boiling water to make as thick as white sauce. Cook for a minute or two, then add a teaspoonful of sugar half a_teaspoonful of salt and two tea spoonfuls of dry mustard. Stir until freo from lur nd add vinegar to make as thick alad_dressing. ur in and add once safely there he sat up to listen He heard twe the Smilin; low “Quack Peter jumped i and kicked his long Mr. and Mrs. Quac he cried happil must have scared Jerry and me just for a jok Which is e ¢ what had happened the air heels together. have arrived!” in la fine edge and wondered Arnold’'s Army in Distress. AMERICAN CAMP BEFORE QU! BECK, CANADA, Apr. 1, 1776.—. graphic description of the difficult cir- cumstances of the American Camp is given in a letter despatched by Gen- eral Benedict Arnold on Saturday to Silas Deane. General Arnold makes no attempt to conceal his distressed situation, yet writes cheerfully. From January 1 to March 1, not more than 700 effective men were on duty-—sometimes as few as 500. The enemy force within the citadel is per- haps four times this number. The new New England troops will be of little service for some time, as the greatest part have the small-pox. That fatal disorder has got into camp, though every method that prudence could hugzest has been attempted to prevent it. In Colonel Warner's com- pany, 271 of the 373 men are now sick with ~mnn -pox inoculation. The surgeons are without medicine, and hospitals crowded and in want of al- most every necessary. A few small cannon cannot be ex- pected to effect the reduction of a place so strongly fortified as Quebeck. Three mortars, a few shells, and those too small, will cut a desp at a bomb-battery. “Only one Artillery General Arnold, “and office; 20 matrosses lOlll‘ Children— By Angelo Patri Teach in Faith. i in faith. The old truth still your bread upon the and it will return after many The teaching you do today seems to roll off like the proverbial water from the duck’'s back pme of it sinks in. Gradually it colors the thinking of the child and hecomes part of him, lends quality to him It does not s X you were making much headway when the child does the same thing e did last weck after all your ut hold on in faith. Think bac! vear and see if you cannot find the differe for the better. It often happens that all you can succeed in doing in the first 10 years is to register a s of rightness and wait until it bears fruit in the years of adolescence und after. Bertie was the sort of boy who left nothing out. He cut the fringe off the table cloth the first time he got hold of the scissors. He poked holes in the fcing of the party cake. He raided the ice box and ate himself sick. e stole a dog. He fell off the w building and broke a collar bone. He fought in- the schoolyard. Tle kept change and spent it. e went es without permission. e de on a freight and had to home. Ile went to the neighbor’s house and caught scarlet ough he was warned to His mother was worn to how long him out ole a be escorted would be jail. In the meantime, a little brother was growing up. Bertie seemed to take & great interest in him and grad ually mother discovered that all the teaching she put on Bertie. he returning sevenfold to Ben. It was Bertie who found a way to teach Ben how to use his pusher instead of his hande. It was Bertie who taught him to say “thank you and please.” So earnest was he in establishing righ eousness in his younger brother that the unoffending child had to be res | cued from his z Much of our tending of plant she of able to keep teaching is like the You set out a seed- | ling that has four good leaves. You | glve it every care, food and water and S ter and sun are bent to its serv. ice. And the stodgy thing sits there with its four leaves. To be sure, they , have a healthy look. but a most voking appeara of permanenc Everyone longed for it « . ... this difference in flavor that has won America *“Good to the last drop” It hasnever happened before! For the first time, real nation-wide fame has come to a coffee. Among a few dis- criminating families and in famous hotels, its special flavor made it the first choice longago. Today through- outthe entire country, this blend has pleased by far more people than any other coffee ever offe for sale. It brings you that difference in mellow flavor—that same rich smoothness that delighted connoisseurs of good living years ago. Just the touch of extra goodness that you long for. It bas pleased more people than any other coffee ever offered for sale WASHINGTON, D. (artillerymen), very few of whem know thefr duty; not one artificer for making carcasses (incendiary projec tiles), or any kind of fire-works. An able engineer wanting, and no pros- pect of one, a well-furnished military chest (treasury) entirely wanting without which we cannot make one movement in this country. For, to tell you the truth, our credit extends no ‘farther than our arms. Add to this catalogue, want of provisions and our resources uncertain, and most of the New England, and all the New York troops engaged no longer than April 15—these are some of the diffi- culties we encounter. General Arnold says that notwith- standing this long catalogue of wants, his men are determined to exert them- selves, but are too few in number to attempt an escalade. They are there- fore raising batteries on Point Levi and the Heights of Abraham, the lat ter within 500 yards of the wall. They of Bright-colored fers are now corate shades, decorative noveltie: have one gondola and boats, and are preparing a fire £hip. few days ago 60 British and vance guard, two, took standard, without any comes discover that the sturd ve a root growth t for a support for the top growth and the blooms. Children give us ma move toward ma ¥ eager cern little growth lis to | teaching and hoy them e Vritehim, « I's awful bout bustin’ look lke several armed 0 ided a convo; ovistons at Point La Caile. A ment of 80 men which was sent suit of them surprised their ad- killed seven, wounded 38 prisoners, with the King's oss on our side. 1926.) sketeh fer is s white tern. (Copyright. hour cle the the cloth pat ov move a The time ain and vou wee things at would suf the v best ved = them a; four-le to move young tr a trying nother” they We who are them arrive can dis- nd much of what thin to do up the light picking them up and cheering H( one difliculty to to see e is wrong keep on holdir ing, time they fall h step forward. in faith that the One ¢ that wo work grave, and dev s0 de of ‘this paper, i " stamped envelope Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN care or osing reply v mode wrote ago it was of Child ~0; The method of glue onto the pex ransfer 10 “One Foot in Grave.” modern expression modern pertness, than to describe one C, THURSDAY, APRIL T, 1926. HOME NOTES | BY JENNY W decalcomania much in demand to de- | furniture, woodwork, lamp glass dresser sets and other These trans designs trans fact that children, ch four typical meets an in love ried_man. in Natalie with icily. - B Ve such an him when How be purchased in most few cents each. wplying the trans Brush a thin coat of face of the ib the pattern down ha > to be decorated, working . 50 as to foree out . Let it dry for a half \ saturate it well with en it is sufficiently wet will slip off easily, leaving film. Then u: wet with clear w the design gently excess gl (Copyri )W IT STARTED “I am g lett, and out 2 W Wi can stores o imple. pat- beurd, rid with 2 just reali inkling of him_for Martha. <he h. and at the t er to allo in { had known what N NEWTON that? BY JEA’ hardly K me wit an ald s | he would 1 He loved N re foot in A voy hJds so commonly used who is so ill or so old that he has not much Yet the story of its eveals that the phrase is as Plutarch—who lived and nineteen hundred years protect her. Natalie, it. [Ylo0d “was her veins. i ‘On the Training re of ‘tie discour find his reference to f ith one foot we < were er d¥ it Is used Bean | gether ent source in Plutarch |um expression r { everyday. | suffice i | popular rel hard to tell the truth | Milun window if papa’s eves | lieu he didn’t I i of 54 1 ars hef aumont’s death in | of 30. Whether it | v or direct from its | work t! ived its impetus language we do not know. the the! Dl t to say that it has survived o use in modern speech (Copyright. 1926.) o Rt atti, widow one of the AMinister chief Musso- harita Sar ttorney. i its of Prime Ttaly. away from Arthur the meantime. who is deceiving him and accept the attentions of another man meets Perry at a tea what at was he t could he do? Of course, th atalie b it. could ghty ch Her Martha Dennison husband her her, as attractive Macdonald, and ac: { without realizing th Lan attachment. with Mimi, @ dancer, with Lucien Perry becomes intere through is FEATURES. at and epts his attentions | Arthur is CHAPTER A Hopeless Situation. had never k emotion he reali: her challenge in his as if she had ing are iculou: She such a t aving di 1 shown him only 1 how much she d! and yet he was too much in | w her tc t the fa s to meet cided to fol by and ¢ he In't ag Nat ild. Anc ke 1o dc thought was precious in its rushi and her BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR faces the | ous tense has drifted [ what had vell as her two | toward Perry 1 Natalic. She | tivel i bachelor. Perry |y ai i sened tenderness show the w She we hem vould cause thought | herenl = danger in such nfatuated | and Natalie half Bartlett, a mar sted | a desire a to pro her pow tect her, and ends by falling in love | o0 PO 0EE with her, which ma. Martha embarrassing. 5 his friendshin Arthur, picious of Mimi she instar bsurd, of v do such a th 1 o distrac t all suse (i hough she Natalie | 2% | ne d treats him an loved X1\ fore experienced wle her t aroused i hole that DAUGHTERS OF TODAY tlated 1 Her rn_ins - she had had remem %3 that. did 1 t de if with th s sur meet Dennison accomplish make a lov zed that ace. It Lueie vou g o natur hin: s ussed ) g0 on dangerous game she was play But what could he do? intest Lucien, alie home i vet » that ed he would 1 ver ere so quickly mood w ind hi 00 P! slik idea felt d through he was helpless to do anything about Nat delighted she had been to fli n had no Lamed | with | & inly ed hini this whe | | ad only | doing ke thro; eloped stun th futher a wife idea hay about. life to think at minutes 100! few and the n thr nd put You can't 7ub clothes as white as this soap soaks them WAY with washboard and bar soap!- Away with the red- dened hands and aching backs of old-fashioned washdays! * This new way is easy. No weary toil over the washboard. You just oak—rinse—and your week’s wash is whiter than you’ve ever seen it! And out on the line hours earlier! Millions of women now let Rinso do the hard work of washing for them. Saves clothes —easy on hands Rinso is rich, gentle soap—gran- ulated. 1t s allyou need on washd No bar soaps, chips or powders. No laundry soap is easier on hands or safer for clothes. Contains no acids, harsh chemicals or bleaches Guaranteed by the makers to injure white clothes or fast colors. No matter how hard the water, Rinso gives thick, lasting suds. Soak the wash in these creamy suds— and the dirt and stains just loosen and float off. Even the most soiled parts need only a gentle rub between the fingers. Thus, clotheslastlonger for they aren’t rubbed threadbare against a washboard. Try Rinso this week, and know the joy of a whiter, sweeter wash ithout hard rubbing! Your grocer will supply you. Just follow casy directions on package. Best for washing machines Rinso is endorsed by 23 leading washing machine makers for its safety and forawhiter, cleanerwash. of Lux . ~Lever Bros. Co. my been @ Rinso has “Since using laundry problem simplified and my work made much lighter. The clothes come out white and clean with less labor. They also wear longer because they are not worn out on a washboard. 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