Evening Star Newspaper, September 6, 1927, Page 38

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WOMAN’S PAGE." . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1927. FEATURES. WEDLOCKED on e —By BRIGGS. | |' SUMMERTIME ‘ ! Yy \ flgnsz | o maKE BY HAZFL DEYO RATCHELOR. e Sianos: [ Jos Sackus \ | Seovamr- BY D. 0. PEATTIE. { 922 uz i SeALETTL AND_BEE m“’\ftcvf:;‘r ’ Pink Root. | Nan Hartley, an artist’s model,| she had said, but he coulin't. Ehe 8222 || ke | ;“frf’_isg\l' | &m? You el It vor have afiy ambition to sehieve | marries “Tom Elliott. @ poor artist.|had merely put into words what he 2.~ i) dne DONF}‘ ¢ At T R ] | Bite yourself an having had a chance to marry Martin [ had been fighting to keep in his sub e U bonir | Lee, a rich lawyer. Tom and Nan are | conscious mind. W I you might go down to Mount Vernon wvery happy, but they haven't Imn[ Once more he turned the car, \ A ( 2 1 nd try to relocate the pink root, as | amarried very long when Tom develops | out in the open road th pnewmonia and dies. He leaves Nan | Martin was facing now what he had i 2 1 about to have a baby. Martin Lee|tried so long not to face. Alicia's few - NS ? 29 A p | the District flora. Years ago it was | comes back into her life, and she mar- | well chosen words had made him final- ; / . - / 4 BTN iai e A h e i e Do vies him without love, but for the sake |1y admit to himself that he could rot Z i v/ e R ] of her child. A tensc situatlon de-|expect to hold Nan. It was hopeless, Y/ no one who has discovered it again. | welops between them. On the one| And Alicia, in the seat beside him, ; T 4 b Z - The pink root, called also Indian | occasion that Martin s his fecling | enuggled down almost contentedly. 5 2 ), A pink and worm grass, is well worth | he senses Nan's utter csponse | Her blue eves were smiling under their y : 2 n ; o and his pride is arms. Nan is. | long gold lashes. She didn’t mind the 7 2 NS I fnding for itself, with its onf;'-f‘l:{"" | of course. afraid of him. She feels | terrific speed at which they wers trav pikes of handsome, tubular red | vedlocked. * Into this situation comes | eling. Once more she had shot an ar. 2 3 o “"("’m_;'“‘:,“'_“""If","h Sl licia Rumsey, a friend ¢ ar S | %o g AR reached 'k, 8 % 5 . 2 are trople class, 3 e % a ey Wit | S Rt AT Gach o merk AR /fi:’:"\m STacnee" Logania family, in which the nw!v\‘sf irts manip- (Convright 19 { Great Lap_|REMENBER & SAID You | \ Low' T T nine, co well beloved in Southern stime Nan | (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) AIN'T ug 7| WM WERE A FINE | 1now Hir i ol and the noble buddlein of oyr | but | | 4 e also found ; . | nesan v /|| oo Bovergusti © ) S : ‘ of Mlarist ® A MENTION MIS | -7 : / | t there is a particular interest i Vegetables With Pork. s v‘j | Namz - ano / b cen his plant that botanists o 2 on- SLP T have titled Spigelia marilandiea. The » | | rare a plant as occurs on the list of | | marflandica part of the name is obvious enough, except that it is not, | i know, found in Maryland | Spigelia_commemorates the fame of Adrian Spigelius, who flourished in the 1600s and was perhaps the first t Chop one pound of lean pork, > brown it in six tablespoontuls of S butter, add four tablespoonfuls of @ the | cho tour tablespoontuls M b sped onion, vinz. of choped green pepper, one cupful w | of choped celer nd two quarts of 7 ») \ 1 i ally; | cabbage cut in strips. Let these vege- g / | bout the shop- |tables brown a little in the hot fat, o write of the making of an Aplished, and once | then add a small quantity of water ~ 5% 45 { | herbarium of pressed flowers. But 1 intersperse her land let the meat and vegetables sim- 4 4 : 7 R vl the real int les in the fact that to the mer for about fifteen minutes. The { = 1 A ) Alexander Garden of Charleston, for vezetables should then be tender but % XN 8 ) | Whom gardenia is named, discovered ttled | still crisp and fresh looking. Season / en 2 that the pink root was an efficacious Wy | with salt and pepper and serve at ¥ 1 . ‘x medy against the hookworm and fell | one : < g, |r>\rn before the Revolution had com- municated this to the Royal So ¥ of London. PRI h Apricot Glaze. Soak one-half a pound of dried ap- | ; ) ~ SRS A | % £ Ao capruis of warer over | | WORD GOLF—Everybody’s Playing 1t THE V A night ove the wkins from - the L) ying I'tll,. WOMAN OF FORTY i turn to the same water in — = e = which they were soaked, and cook BY JOHN KNOX. e s slowly until tender enough to ) 2 BY CLYDE CALLISTE through a sieve. P’ress through s : e | | sieve and add onehalt a cupful of Go from DIRT to SOAP. Here is something we all do every day e elat Becehor Sto L e g e 1 | Sugar, mix thoroughly. stireing until | @t least we can't afford to admit that we don't do It), and yet the word. |, ‘ 1eP Harrlet Beecher Stowe was) portan r heallvas jat gy "{,,,- She flatte rself that her friend- | Qissolved. This ma an excellent | change Is as reluctant as a small boy's struggles with the back of his neck. |30 she wro % Cotitias N ho: Tellelots MGk #hip of the : : s aze to brush ov v or fruit Go from SHE to HIM. Not grammatical, but you get the idea. Shes|a year by writing, but I don't want to | e E | tart. It may be kvmr in &»glfls« |1:\r r;;fn:e::“iv;ilv‘gr:‘n ll.!ll;vlf"_[l‘\[;[fin:r:n‘:‘;r{:;::fi_ time and the hims have been |feel that I must, and when weary » Burke, Frances Starr and ronamons VNS c oy S pe Go from NICE to WILD. will be boys, but the gap between the | With teaching the children and tend-| Alma Gluck fre presentday. colebri: sexes is too wide to be bridged by a shingle bob s ackage of cigarettes, | "5, the baby, and buying provisions, | U8 ¢ 27 de be bridg y a shingle bob and a pa of cigarettes, and mending dresses, and darning ooyright, 1027.) had been sal Creamed Salmon. had 1.“..‘\ ‘.“1 lone th eamed PRINT your ‘steps” here. stockings, 1 sit down and write a 3 _the hounds of fricndship. | Teat the salmon in the can by piece for some paper.” The family in-| Toys made in Germany and shipped She would have giv & eal 10 | placing it in boiling water, Bo!l for | come. she said, was $1,700 a year, but | to other countries last year were ¥now wbat Mart 21 feelings |ahout 30 minutes. Use a medium | she hoped to bring down the expenses | valued at $25.000.000. ve. Did ) 1 narried | white sauce on the fish. The ingredi- of her large family to $1,300. syl pretty litt S . Why [ents for the sauce are: Two table- | While she was still 40 s old she did his face ntly wear that rav- |spoonfuls of fat. (wo tablespoonsfuls R b ol o B - el of flour, one cupful of milk st bt Bl L GO il g M L 4 S ik ; of 1 » write “Uncle Tom's Cabin." The E h S bt : ar- | fourth teaspoontul of salt u serial vights she sold for $300, but her s, renc fivst; and |of pepper. Chopped par: fim Sogliod hesiidhind o5 in the sauce makes It particularly MEIANde A Do0A. DrgiMEo:. SOt e Stuffs Peppers s . - royalty with the publishers for & |of the hook. During the first four Th W To Clean Tan Shocs. | months after publication of “Unele 18 ay ve you, Why| Tan shoes often become almost | Tom's Cabin” Mrs. Stowe's royalti B : | black owing to the wax in the polish | amounted to $10,000—and she w. i i : % Woman-ike, Alicia guickly ed. | caking on the surface of the leather, Solutions on this page in today's Star | still 40 years old. ARDOM, six medium. sioe ) It exactly @ remark, iUs & (The laver of wax absorhs mud and (Covyright, 1 Mohammed's first and best beloved peppers five minutes, Cool n eY re Ot Y dirt, which cannot he entirely hrushed | wife, named Kh A, was 40 when he and remove seeds, taking care not i LSS R, il aneer | : ff and is glossed over by the next martied hee, Jahs Was. a rich widow, | + (9 Becab ks Makel ricrb;rw-n Alicla waited a moment. Now that iapplication of potish. When this has | v v and engaged Mohammed, then 25, to sauce—amitting salt. o a d t v P o out to speak to|occurred give the shoes a good rub BEAU1Y (,HA s BY EDNA KENT FORBES Accompany a caravan to Syia to dis.| ¢an of Gorton's Ready-toFry | W ardaen pl'e zeleers Martin e ized that she must “ung with an old rag moistened with pose of merchandise. Returning from | Cod Fish Cakes, shape int> cakes Y i She was | netrol. paying particular attention to |the undertaking, which had been suc- | and fry in hot fat until golden ’ in s ‘ e ‘ned | the creases. e petrol will dissol = e 3 sessful, the future prophet v his . 2 & . e to hei with a y vere driv- {and remove the dirty coating. Put | Chat for Young Men. |2nd no cakes or puddings. No candy | \Weaithy emplover sitting upon tha | :rfco‘:féng:?;g;e{a:;f:,;cgs:glc: Back in 73 Grandpa was the pretzel biting nz slowly i | the shoes in a current of air for an iy d iy, | Or such rich (hings for a time. | upper story of her house surrounded | . o County, o, 1Hes dUAE g ik gl bise orsgts || 1815 b iRt Rox fman, mpatly, (97 i | pper tory of her houss murrounded| for cachy cake.. Sligke:thoroughly ¢ champion of Kokono County—and he’s still “Well? nal tan color will be restored. | thoush no doubt lots of young women | TAKS ® liwatve dully for a few) B (U7 TN CNC ming of this young| B pan uatil mized, but do not X d. H bi igh Alicia turne him impulsive- | i T - 2un profit by it also. It's about diet, | J4vsi radually leave this off as the | i "Ghom she had never seon hefore, | Mash. Stuff the peppers with thia good. He can bite straight through the ist this, 1.know 3 . s b RVE | foods you eat keep the system “open.” | She ~harme: y sl s mixture and bake in quick oven, il ili i and ahout some simple cosmetic treat |She was charmed by his appearance v , al Lhave mo vight to mention' it, but Eggs in Ramekins. . ”m;ms Honis ‘: l_k" ‘m‘o’sl.m ‘”r e e Loy Bot: Ruspy path: they |and. after he had left, she realized | 10 minutes. By Mrs. Flora M. French Bp;::b" “ldl‘:ut spml;ng a“smgle pretzel. ter 4 > are friends—good friends! | Mix two tablespoonfuls each of 3 sk open the pores a er the body and | that she loved him. t i | i onis ad crumbs and chopped chicken or |sistent hlackheads and pimples. It |drai. them of waste matter—this re he had many suitors, for. though | [ Ry can alvendy ke & 5 I (m sicgle 3 he purned to look at her she n e bread alone, with erent® | .o sariea chiely because o a pa !]\h;:vsylln‘ pores of the face. It you | 40 yenrs old, she was a comely widow | C) | bite, but he’s apt to leave rough edges on C or the -fi time what batter. Season with salt | ity have time rub sulphur ointment on|and had acquired a fortune through | » strange, enizmatic eves he had. They ne a buttered ramekin | thetic letter from A. G., and another |the face, hold u minutc over | iliectiunos arit bouudhtn it lian it his “Q’s.” were of no pa 3 S case with the batter. Break |from Discouraged A. A. | of hot water and let the po and second husbands. Inspired by ;. into the dish. and i desired. |y e "o nd hinckheads have come |PY. the heat. take up the sulphur— |jove for the youns man, she sent 1 Headpto B ; In a statement recently bitten for the r e that in U!p.]) st she hadn't | eover with batter. on a folded | e ¢ dtet and rhaps s is cl ind antiseptic. v servant to him to propose marriage. | A Joticed his eyes, and 'sie had known | paper, in a d il ot Bater. | Lol meplect ot/ fis8on pekhins off with soap and water. Or use un |The mind of the ALl il e ; i press, Grandpa said: “Uneeda Bakers’ pret. m so wel 3 they held her—she | untit the eg: St Serve from the | ¢ % - LS o apt | Ordinary cleans eream, th cents ade up at once. "I am ready,” S Flsh A curious feeling &ticred in her e e e e I et stawey | on—this softens the stuff in the pores. | to Khadiy heart minute ske hadn't | so it is more easily washed off. Don't| Two sons and four daughters SIDES being, as the name implies, Bt H ) [from the dist. Starch ferments in | : e i thought very muchiabout Mariin Solutions of Today’s Word [ | from the Clet. @ iees weids and » | Sduecze blackheads if you can help it. | piessed this union, and so long as | ready to fry, may be combined with 1 other foods in countless delicious wa Ehe_had thought only of the | Golf Problems; ,W of trouble and all this results in | PUt if you do, have vour fingers clean | Khadija lived Mohammed did not tal fact that he had » w it 4 : E before squeezing the spot, and then | ngquaniawe of the nrivilege sranted he| Of which the above recipe is an example. TS BHe" Aol DIRT, DINT, DENT, SENT, [-[SKin cruntions = Now. an enlarged | touch the place with peroxide of hydro |advantage of the priviloge granted by | We are always glad to hear from house: 4 Wwould = be SHAT SLAT STAD SDaD-. pore. full of mueous and the sort of | zon 5 make it antiseptic and to close | \0C3F custom to take other wives. He wives who discover these new recipes. ed to him than 3 SEAT, SLAT, SLAP, SOAP— | |soft, waxy stuff that makes up a pim- | 5520 10 203 ot | e Sortaialy B maupa D I | e Seven'steps. : 1B A bt RaFa R blacic D, DI | ture, but the love he had for his | Gorton-Pew FisheriesCo.,Ltd.,Gloucester,Masts SHE, THE, TIE, HIE, HIM ~—Four step must settie in that soft substanc Jane.—The el¢eiric necdle treatment | 38108 spouse made him one 5o long | "Corton's Desp Sea Recipes'” Free ) | as she live NICE, MICE, MILE, WILE, WILD—Four ste man to be swe Fis e Diet. keep to fresh vegetables cooked | destroys most of the but a few | or in salad form, especially green veg |do sometimes recover and grow weaker | _This_vear . “Pretzelstoday are better than ever. Crispier etables, any sort of fruit, and som® |again and are sure to be ‘'iminated - 0 meat, but no potatoes and little hread | with ano‘her treatment. —— - y than the kind we had when Grant was presi- a little | ———u=i i - thing to Y had pome. | bR o) " $ o S dent. Crunchier and more brittle than even iolus e of . we're e g 3 i 3 b those of the Garfield-Arthur period. /nd know that “’mu ut i - PROTECT : L B 1 - G ; the salty taste is what I call salty.” was from the & e k . The Golden Age of pretzels is here. £ « Pl e YOU[ DOCtOI‘ s AR e People are eating O-So-Gud Pretzels every hed his face for a chaage, ancl Yourself % . % ; R chance they get. Before you go to bed— but she could see none. It was cuite it R L L k - : great. With ginger ale — fine. With soup, P o e s gh. As happy ] : 3 s salad or dessert—nothing smackier. For chil- s bitter, she knew : 4 j L ko dren in between meals. uth, ond it ? o ; 4 5 < A { Easy to digest? Yes. And remember— Martin, but 1 kiiow you're wot §amy: i . - > ’ oo AN AN 52 s ool = ] wind " g .‘ £ o 2 . cause they're made by the Uneeda Bakers. He whir on her th narrowed, and ing along the las “What do you mean?” R 2 5 e : d ¢ “Just what I she returned 2 2 i : 3 2 steadily. “You're not happy, and your % g 3 2 2 3 3 - - poor little w ol riie O ; @ ; 3 o doesn’t belor he atmosphere y o ; ; AtG.u L the same, and ) u Buy them by rtin, only nit it. I the pound. Vit i) Unless you ask for “Phillips” you e ' : Thertsa lr of USR5l may not get the genuine Phillips R ARR) s it were appures s A iy A Eo every one. J H, s st Milk of Magnesia prescribed by 7l SRS “YELLOW MASK”? hands trembled on the steering whe e St e wien | physiclans over fifty years as a harm- less and effective antacid, laxative @& ; Will jou make 1 ol e simple test to discard it? F ke il (i et . - T succeeded in incorporating in 2 , and with prac ands, Ma and corrective. 5 ! Look at your tecth. Have they a tasty, pleasant tooth paste the ed the car intc 2 3 5 cllowish tinge—appear stained? one substance that positively re- as the last th i wa - " hat is **Yellow Mask.™ gxgvcsh(his ma_}ll:« “Tri-Calcium 4 - o . E ; osphate.’”” This magic sub- Millions have found it ideal to relieve s‘;z&’:fif;f&“&oh::;fi;‘rffif delae me e e like others, you have come to to clean tecth. And you know what beauty miracles he works i et B i igesti B believe that yellowish hue is in hat bt e e 0 S o iy Acid Stomach Indigestion e with il racing, He wanted G get awoy from | AL But the truth is you have teeth The name of this new and finer Ul Dup chpupuis Bbove all ady it Heartbum Flatulence white as gusuni’ng ivory. That tooth puste is ORPHOS. It can- 3 ; ugly, yellowish hue hides in 2 not harm the softest enamel. i = | Sour Eructations Bi 1ousness . ios. | glassy mask that envelopes the Dentists everywhere are rec- J I M . L s b e ot tecth. This mask is known as ommending it — especially for Sick Headache Constipation ract 5% Galeami A i teeth difficult to cement'inyoursaliva | yooxkFORTHIs! | whiten. Buy a tube . aq . . b AT 20 1 e forms it. Acts like 2 “brush from your druggist or Straight as & strin, It is pleasant to take, mild in operation, and e glucfcsc 5:;;;{; f‘“‘:";"'l:fh.n von | mail coupon below for bus fi_me;. ':4' . % . . C! ard. 1 i B seresting. Good an never causes nausea, griping, or the slightest in- R deitificos suslly | B ORPHOSES [ & Z07ime Tube FREE. saly. “1e bandy i R | gloss right over it. | 2L el e B backages «s your convenience. Full directiors in every package. e Biibdow dealsciedce. | aeasatin: | it sow. e yoiirs [k o 2 5 y can give you those too. reached the ent RS0 Us. PAT. OFF. Beauty That Auraz;!l 1 | 25c Bottles —s0 enchanting and allur- ing it commands the admir- - i) ation of all. You can i — Z possess this soft, fascinating Also 50c Bottles A"Y DIUgStore = o : ‘\‘. FREE 20-Time Tube appearance instantly thra Ghinsine . - |\ /I)"inl‘rm:y?on fo Oraios o Ine NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Dept West New Refuse Imitations of Genuine “Phillips” @\ D R, “Uneeda Bakers ORIENTAL, CREAM O e n;:",n: i “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark o The Charles e : 2 H. Phillips Chemical Co. and .its predecesser Charles H, Phillips since 1875,

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