Evening Star Newspaper, June 18, 1926, Page 39

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Clocks as Decorative Features BY LYDIA LE BAROM APy o RANDFATHER WITH QUAINT CLOCK SHOWS OLD FURNITURE TO ADVANTAGE WHEN s sho ind in s mposing have a fascination of their own { One’does not have to peer up into the nother « time with no up They are floor clocks in mini ninlatures are allur s have their ow fit into rooms r ugh they ma in the orna it ut can | The an halls, tl P, also Mantel Clocks. clocks o Just now wntel clock fn severe lines is | red. 1t stands rather low and | many of its designs. But old mantel clock, tall t as a sentinel, has been gain rity. There many h clocks with mpre- the A1l one h t clocks they are ) those scope where lation idy of 1d ravely the m, nes o1 i foned garden posies. i/ 2.1l itonms genufe clocks of this | that » should be conceivable Sometinies th had mir intrinsic worth In es king glasses were scarce. These | s of clocks are eminently Suited to colonial houses furnished In period 1 style the roc d not be | stickier: v period detail Clocks with gothic cases rer of church doc AT dec They show to advan! walls, for each little | in relie centing the | | Wall Clocks. | the well The Lanjo into homes I v days when | { 100 ndi them clocks are among amental clc in s and finds its wa | where elocks are appreciated | ornaments. The lyre clock is | this in style and gets its n the shape of the lower pa | includes the pendulum. The shape and the decoration are typical of the Iyre. When choosing_clock: that it i8 a_conspicuou nishing and ord with the room, incre: uty and be accurate in telling the time and in <hioned style. wce in living s and m: » not at a on. Genuine icks are prizes less so are the which are le 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. remember plece of fur. dmdther clocks, s and loss of the Cedars; our credit and reputation lost and great part of the country, and a powerful enemy ad- vancing upon us culties we cannot surmount them. whole thoughts are now bent on ma ing a safe retreat out of this country; however, I hope we shall not be obliged o leave it until we have had one bout more for the honour of America “I think we can make a stand at Isle-aux-Noix and keep the lake this Summer from an inv y. We have little to fear, but I am heartily chagrined to think we have {lost in one month all the immortal | Montgom was a whole camp: |in gaining, together with,our er and many men, and an amazing amount of money." Note—This is the same Benedict Arnold who later in the Revolution wiped out his earlier reputation for brilllant service by attempting the blackest plece of treachery and trea- son ever recorded in American his. tory. When Gen. Arnold Loses Hope NEW YORK, June 1 Renedict Arnold des ation of t Am «anada there is no hope lef! he sentiment of Army office: have he: etter written k Arnold to Gen. Gates from Ch Arnold has always been one of the most dependable rs | n the Conti sovere persc countering great dangers in Americs His expe wilderne has not ceased to of the most thrillin, war thus . the assault upon ¢ was painfully him the greate: He has in This ind the cau through the Maine parly last Winter rded as one episodes of the his bravery in which he s won for ation and* re heen cour- ous and cheerful » face of the reatest discouragement ) that the Canadian situation is recog hopeless when a letter dict Arnold reading itic s 10 Q! (Copyright, 1926.) el The number of women in Boston exceed the number of men by more than 10,000, I am a thousand for your kind . of which 1 nge. 1 shall in your friendship and h you, that our irters will be more 1 I much doult it if with you as here. ress be nehed stressed with gencrals and ich may »ble; our Quebeck - 1 nera e ever happy society, and hope Winter q able, tho fairs go as eglected by Cc ith every wan the smallpox; we discipline in_our yather be called late retr | from At times it's best to sit quite still, Let go my stubborn Little will, And calmly, trustingly awalt With unconcern my certain fate. R1CA i i USED | | happened to Ler. Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND a LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Sattids afternoon ma looked the back window, saying to pop, Will vum, that grass needs cutting agen, I Qeclare I never saw sutch quick g Benny, that g needs cutting agen, did you ever heer of sutch re- markable grass? pop sed Me thinking, Aw G. heck.. And I sed, T dont think it looks so awful bad, pop, Tve saw it looking mutch werse than that. Thats not the point, pop sed. The point should be, how mutch better can you make it look, ever onward, ever upwerd, let the blades fall ware they may. livery grate man in histry tributed his success partly to the ct that wen he was a boy he never |tet the family put enyvthing over {on him. I eut it myself, but alas Im too ol now to ever be i grate man, |but jest because 1 made the mis {of mot beginning to cut grass wen I ['was a child is that eny reason wy 1 {«hould deprive my son of his chance to mount the ferst steps of the ladder | that leeds to grater pop sed. Aw G, pop, holy smokes jimminy crickits 1 sed. You may have a good ideer there |but I dont quite ow you, pop sed |1 dont wunt to be u grate man, 1 teness and teness thrust upon s you Dop sed ening I had to cut it G owillickers pop & some them, and T sed holey cats good 1 acquit ) cut feel t Cherry Tart. Line a deep ple dish with paste, Plck ¢ one and one pounds of cherries. ‘Turn a_cup up » down in the anidale. Fill around L the cherries. Add sugar to Lay a wide strip of plain wound the edze of the dish. g ud press the e ther w pastry a ho minutes ve with powdered” sugar sprinkle Ickly on top. A1l juicy fruits s axcelient cocked fn this way plain halt it taste. pastry Women Who Have Interesting Tasks in Government Service BY ALIC HAGER house, until then associate professor of economics and sociology at Smith College. The preparation Mrs. brings to her work with the burcau is an enviable one. She took her bachelor's degree at McGill Univer sity, in Montreal, and added to it graduate study thero and later at the University of Berlin and at the Uni- | versity of Chicago, specializing in economics. For some years, coinci- | dent with her teaching at Smith. she {has been collecting materials for a | book, which she is writing at present, {on standards of living. Outside of | {elass time e has done mucl | lecturing, and has published va | rious magazine articles on the educa | tion of women for home-making. “We've spent nes 1 our until now learning how to make money,” says Mrs. Woodhouse, “and now we are beginning to realize that it is equ 10 know how 1 be wisely spent. If sound onomic principles were applied to home mneeds and to consumption fewer families would be in financial | straits and we should be & to de rmine more nearly what a real mini mim sta 1 of living really is if i | does exist. p o she | | S problem fc | ! sufticien Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse. The size of the family dollar these days is probably the sorest subject in the land. It is constantly under the spotlight, of discussion, with intricate statistical reports being published, ex- plaining in detail why it doesn't buy Woodhouse time v on her first | dwhen | . mh popula md vious s working ne the Gover ave put b counts | i g \ l hopes N and fentitie b ory about her, however brief, And Mr. fwould be complete witho ition of s time | the fact that she fs pra ng what adequate | she preaches and is another one ¥ expe the modern w who with com- | rtion of | plete serenity are carrying on a | left exposed | cessful home and a successful career \d the weak- [at one and the same time. Sh ened dollar expires under the strain.|two young children. 1 nee 18 trying to come to| And, entirely outside of her ro the res Down in the Buremu of | subject, she vrote a hook on * | Hom: omics more things are [and the Jugoslavs,” which app: {being studied than the always neces- fin 1920 S NEAF B WOODHOUSE. | true } No MRS CHASE GOING Average Man spends most of 1 thying it into a blanket to cover his Tam Usually , son poor th anatomy to the wintry blast on October 1, 1925, three new mem bers of the division of econo o staff Mrs Chase G THE MARRIAGE MEDDLER BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR in love that they ealotay in Conrad s m; Patterson take | i t not at I roadhouse co's maid, Ki tella Richard withoit eaves the without red doors, making them | CHAPTER XLVIL Distraught. aware of what she wi Ing her lked down the & d left the house w vhere she want turned and carry small overr Jean w e ) idea of she came to the old Hami hotel , but into the main she House, and > went up into the ane sed 1 e to had What terrible thing had been in Con’s mind when_he had accused her of with Merton? And to flail her as he had without giv ing her chance to explain, to treat her without respect, even to subject her to physical violence in his fury, it was all like a dreadful nightmare, and vet it was true. he lobby was T and she down in a ch: decide what to do. nind was so re of t n had come downstair pausing a moment by the desk. came on the lobby passing sunk deep tically deserted ir to try to h of ardly man_and and were They Jean, the in big For sixty years Chase & San- born’s Seal Brand Coffee i has held the |} affections of ’)‘ coffee-loving b millions. COFFEE Seal Bramnd Teo is of the same Migh guality T I and were |z wher spoke “Do you 1 | prise e couldn’t til ye «d been a sed uncor - could > said with IFor a_time and when 1 smile s troilab] ] IS the | As things b od thing v ner now a Iucid des | come o £don | out, Jean {to give | what had ) , that i |time of her arrvival in Hamilton that morning. From n was { fairly vague, and at last she burst out | wildly “I don’t know what I'm supposed to have done, and after all, it doesn't matt What v matters is that Con 1 h been foreed sver meant to mention this Con’s mother 1e has been prejudiced inst me from the begi and no | {matter how hard T would never give me a n loves me, I'm sure of it, her in flue him and 't seem to help it. Things get to a point where | he sees things through her eye only we could have been alon, thing would have been all right.” You have always been so evas in yvour letters,” Mrs. Ainsley said, quickly, “we had no idea that you were unhapps “I never thought it would work out anywz put in Jean's father, I have faith in Conrad, and in you, too, Jean. Besides T h little' scheme that may prove interesting. I think it’s about time the other in-laws, were given a chance to show what they can do.” it's a was ahle ption of b to the rea hates me. e (To be continued.) Still use old hygienic methods. Charming freshness, true protec- tion, this new way ... discards like tissue O help women mect every day | Tunhandicapped is the object of | a new hygiene. A way that ends the hazards of the old-time. “sanitary pad,” that ends the embarrassment of disposal. Eight in 10 better-class women today employ “KOTEX.” Wear lightest gowns and frocks without a second thought, any day, anywhere. Five times as absorbent as ordi nary cotton pads! Deodorizes. Ends ALL fear of offending. Discards as easily as a picce of tissue. No laundry. You get it at any drug or depart- | ment store simply by saying, | “COTEX.” No embarrassment. In fairness to yourselt, try this new way. Costs only a few cents. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue [ HOME NOTES BY J) NY WRI Of all the rooms in the ¢ is perhaps the most des ful thought and planning, for ere that first impressions of the house are formed. 7 In planning this it home became stairway at one an arrangement which d o disadvantage wrehitect cleverly ie hall is usnally conside However, the il ontributes the long \pletes well padded s of charm, Railroad and lieved to lold Y womnia ted States. road ove long URSE CRUI LF PO HEALTH PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. [ children from fore they enter schoe this may be done is cl r susceptibility mea £ th : children sho ion” to the 1 ed wheal like a simple hive of inje in from 24 tie reddened week. Th ction shows that the to_diphth It i years of The o ‘there “no Whenever I hear a man s is no insanity” or “no cancer tuberculosis in_our family he is either a fool or a lar, no family escapes these dise: through many generations. But to day i I heard a man say “there is no diphtheria in our family” I should think he were a reasonable man, and it he says “there isn't going to be any diphtheria’ in my family” T should | cusce know he were a man of practical good | less o sense, for it is up to every parent now | it proc | to decide for himself whether his chil- | couscien | dren shall be immune to that menace. | oljecti in ar re not with diphth years of a | susceptibl in to therefore 1t [ posed to diphtheria | only way diph- | | theria is through close pe so- | 1 clation with « person who is il of, | sist jout to come down with or conva- | (hypodermic) fr Jescing from the disease, or a person | toxin at intervals of 1 who has had it some months ago and | munity develops in ¢ still carries diphtheria bacilll which | and lasts for a few e virulent or capable of produci 1 to protect the disease in others. The mode of in- [ the v fection is generally the s all | | the other respirate nan Iy, spray—fine, or Ik - because de point hours, 1t the tic o are: tive re; ch e protectic hing to ki the immuniz s of is most dan doctor can ad nd carry about 4 § rule of hygle vher | fieatth’ « Only Kellogg’s has such flavor NCHY-CRISP flakes of golden corn! How good they taste with rich milk or cream! Served with juicy, ripe fruit! Kellogg’s are the original, genuine corn flakes. No others bring such delightful crisp- toasted goodness! Kellogg’s are corn flakes as they ought to be. Never tough-thick or leathery. More than " 10,000,000 people daily insist on them. Try Kellogg’s for lunch. Order them at the cafeteria. Adelicioustreatanytime of theday. Have them for the kiddies’ evening meal. Light and easy to d . gest. Sold by all grocers. Served at all hotels and restaurants. Imitations cannot bring you such wonder- flavor—such crisp, crunchy flakes. The genuine corn fl. the originator, Oven-fresh ALWAYS Kellogg’s patented inner- sealed waxtite wrapper preserves the Ravor and heeps the flakes toasty- crisp. This is an exclus ive Kellogg feature! lakes bave the signature of BNV E TNNER

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