Evening Star Newspaper, November 24, 1927, Page 33

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‘WOMA Ideal Hair Cut BY MARY If a census were taken of women and girls bearing on the lensth of their hair here and in Franco I feel sure that more short hair would be found on this side of tae Atlantic This despite fact that there is a much stronger tendency among smart FOR THE LI STRAIGH BLOW SAID IN ITS I GIRL WITH THE “WIND. MUCH TO BE VOR. women here and amung the vounger | voung women generally to let their once bobbed hair grow in Perhaps you would find a larger number of short-haired women at #ny really smart gathering in Paris than at any equally smart gathering in New York or Chicago or San Fran- cisco, let us say. But there are so many more long-haired little girls in BEDTIME STORIES Cubby’s Thanksgiving. Who cause for thanks doth fai! to find To favors proves that he is biinl, —O0ld Mother Nature, Cubby, the little bear, spent the nignt verre Thanksgiving curied up in a hollow in the base of a big tree. He ‘was lonely and somewhat upset, but he wasn't particularly frightene You see, by this time he felt quite equal to looking after himself. The chief thing that bothered him was his appetite. He went to bed hungry and he awoke still more hungry. To make matters worse, he couldn't find much to eat. In fact, he found almost nothing at all. And this on Thanks- giving day! Probably Cubby would N‘S PAGE for Little Girl MARSHALL. France than in this country, That, T think, is the impression of every re cent traveler. The long-haired little girl is rather | unusual in this country. The li'l!v girl at school here with uncut hair is| | usnally easily distinguished simply as All the rest cut in one way or another. | almost infinite variety to the appearance of all thesa little hobbed | head So much depends on the tex- ture of the hair and the shape of the head. Tha ideal halr cut for the little girl {is one that is short enough to keep | her hair out of her eyes without the | assistance of hair ribbons, anlass she | happens to be a very precise lttle rl who likes to wear hair ribbons At the same time the hair should not | be so short as to leave the ears, brows |and nape of the neck too much ex- | posed. With the curly-halred little girl this sort of hair cut is not difficult. But the straight-haired darling presents | sreater difficulties. For ner the irrcg- ular hair cut known in rber chops as the “wind-blown cut” has decided advantages The irregular effect across brow and ears gives a_softer line than would be possible with a straight cut, and is therefore much more becoming. A simple forward | brushing is all that is needed to keep | it in neat condition—and yet the hair | is short enough to prevenc its falling across the eyes, Here is an ideal neglige for travel- | ing or going away on a visit, becaase it can be folded perfectly flat and takes up little room in trunk or suit case, yet n be made as warm and s substantial as you like by choosing warm and substantial material. It is very casy to make, as you will see if you send a stamped, self-addressed envelope for the sketch, diagram-pat- tern and working directions. | “the girl with long hai have it "I'I\(‘rr\ i BY THORNTON W. BURGESS perfectly still, holding his breath., In 2 moment a small bear came trotting into view. It was Cubby. There was no doubt in the mind of Farmer Brown's His good-natured freck- led face broke 0 2 broad grin. At that very instant Cubby sniffed a merry little breeze that had blown straight from Farmer Brown's Boy to him. He stopped abruptly and stared very hard. Farmer Brown's Boy spoke to him. At the sound of that voice Cubby looked as friendly as he knew how. Hesitating just a_bit, he came toward Farmer Brown's Boy. Then his inquisitive little nose discov- ered the buckwheat that Farmer Brown' Boy had scattered about. Cubby was hungry. He wasn't above eating buckwheat. A sudden fear came to Farmer Brown's Boy that Cubby might follow him home and then would begin over again all those troubles about which I have told you. Watching his chance, he slipped away while Cubby was en- gaged in looking for buckwheat. Then 'Cubby is hungry . ® never would have gobbled up that “Hiasy, HE STOPPED ABRUPTLY AND STARED VERY HARD. have felt a whole lot worse if he had known that it was Thanksgiving day. Now, the way in which Farmer Brown's Boy always celebrates Thanksgiving day is to make sure that all his little furred and feathered neighbors have reason to give thanks because he is their friend. He does his best to make sure that each one ‘has all he can possibly eat on Thanks- giving day. So early in the morning on this particular Thanksgiving Farm- er Brown’s Boy had gone over to the Green Forest to take some buckwheat to Thunderer the Grouse and Mrs. Grouse. ‘He had spread the buckwheat at one of their favorite feeding grounds and was just turning away when a rust- ling of leaves caught his nlten‘l,ion. He stopped instantly and “froze,” as the saying is. That is, he stood BEAUTY * CHATS Astringents. The heat of Summer days, like the heat of very hot water, relaxes the skin so that the pores are apt to be too large and prominent. There are very few complexions which do not need an astringent at certain times. You can buy all sorts of fancy as- tringents in bottles, but I earnestly advise you to save your money and make what you need yourself. One of the best astringents in the world runs out of your bathroom pipes— cold water. Wash your face and neck first with warm water and a mild fatty soap, using a little borax or bicar- bonite of soda in the water to make it soft. Hard water contains calcium or magnesium carbonate, and though too much soda or borax In the water is bad for the skin, the hard water is even worse. Use the littlest bit— better still, use oatmeal powder or oatmeal bags. or a hard water Soap, which contains things to make the water nice. If possible, boll your water, and if you are building a house in a hard- water district, put in the not very ex- pensive machine that softens all water as it enters from the main. Cold water is one of the best as- SOMEBODY IS ALWAYS TAKING THE JOY OUT OF LIFE.—By BRIGGS. MR. Jowes You' L FinD THAT PoLICY You HAvE Tavan 1S THe FeEST IWESTMENT IV THE WORLD~ You SMows A HEEN SENSE oF SounD BUSINESS JUDGMENT A-HAHA HA- DID You -r,.nl mvs’ofi THosk POLICIES 2 WY You Poor NUT- LISTEN WEve GoT A Pouicy ONE-HALF THE PRICE T TWICE THe buckwheat at that rate if he hadn't been very, very hungry. He is going to have a Thanksgiving dinner. That is what he shall have—a Thanksgiving dinner.” So Farmer Brown's Boy went straight to Mother Brown and told her about Cubby. You will remember that Mother Brown was very fond of Cubby. Half an hour later Farmer Brown’s Boy was headed back toward the Green Forest. On his arm was a basket. In that basket was such a dinner as Cubby had never dreamed of eating. It was his Thanksgiving din- ner. He smelled it even before Farmer Brown's Boy was in sight and he ran to meet him. He was so_ eager for that dinner that he pulled that basket right out of Farmer Brown's Boy's hands and upset it. Then how he did eat! He just gobbled that dinner u And when the last scrap had disap- peared his round little stomach couldn’t have held another crumb. Cubby’s eyes twinkled as he licked his lips. p“[! I could have a dinner like this every day I soon would be fat enough to sleep all Winter,” said he. But, of course, Farmer Brown'’s Boy didn’t understand a word of this. Then he scattered more buckwheat for Thunderer the Grouse and Mrs. Grouse and started for home and his own Thanksgiving dinner, whistling 11 the way. = (Copyright. 1927.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES tringents, if it isn’t hard water. Next comgn vinegar diluted half with water and then flavored with anything you want. Cologne water will do. Use it on the skin. Ice is marvelous. Anything with alcohol is astringent, so colognes, toi- let waters, etc., are good for the skin, used after cold cream, whenm the skin oily. And another good astringent is to put lumps of starch in the cool rinse water, rinse the face with this and let the starch dry on if you like. It helps the powder, it bleaches the skin, it makes the complextion milky, it closes the pores and is excellent as a skin tonie. Alice F.—T do not think that a ta- spoonful of peroxide in the last of the shampoo will hurt your hair, unless it is inclined to be brittle already, and as soon as the hair shows this tendency you should stop using it. Olive oil is nourishing as a massage, and the only reason for heating it is to have it absorbed a bit faster than if it were used cold. Sdna F.—At 25 years of age, height 5 feet 4 inches, your weight from 114 to 118 pounds is correct, and the meas- urements you gave of your figure show that your proportions could not bi 1'HE KVENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | soul! AR, WASHINGTON DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX How One Deserted Wif Husband—Is a Wom Take a Busit EAR DOROTHY DIX: At the ag who was a wonderful wife a 4 pated and my wife suffer ing by my side, helped me became a leader in my church, but aft young woman whom I thought my sou fashioned and forced her to divorce me s creature with only a_pretty connection along with my wife. I thou | broken-hearted, but lately T met her ag: s plannin, rhank you to m at me. appiness and to he smiling * [ wa | to atone to her for my neglect and sir this marriage? “Look quick, Baby, an’ tell me if Uncle Bill is helpin’ hisself to a bum- stick. I can’t bear to look. (On account of unexpected com pany Sonny and Baby have to wait | for the second table.) (Copyright. 1927.) Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. ovember 24, 1809.—Robert Brent, | mayor of the city, has made a report, which was published today, of the progress thus far of the Columbia Manufacturing Co., of which he is president. It discloses that only 400 of the 2,000 shares, par value $25, have been subscribed. The formati of this company was the outgrowth of the public revolt against the oppres- sive trade regulations growing out of the Napoleonic wars in Europe. American commerce having virtually come to a standstill, people through the country hecame aroused to the im portance of developing home manufa tures. One of the chambers of the City Counctl of Washington recom- mended that the members appear iy homespun when they went in a body, on July 4, to pay their respects to the President. Under these conditions the Columbia Manufacturing Co. was or- ganized “for making cotton, wool, hemp and flax and the promotion of such other domestic manufactures as may be thought advisable.” At first a building was rented on Pennsylvania avenue between Fourteenth and Fif- teenth streets, where machinery brought from Philadelphia, was se up. The plant was moved last Au- tumn_to E street between Seventh and Eighth streets northwest, and thence to Greenleaf Point. November 21, 1812.—The first car- load of flour ever brought to Alexan- dria by rail arrived this month from Prince Willlam County over the Or- ange & Alexandria Railroad. This railroad is largely an Alexandria en- terprise. It is not yet completed, but its formal opening is expected to take place by next year. No provision has been made to extend the railroad to Washingten. The purpose is to sup- ply & market for southern and western Virginia at the port of Alexandria. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Baked Apples. Bran with Cream. Buckwheat Cakes. Maple Sirup. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Salmon Croquettes. Pea Sauce. Rolls. Hearts of Lettuce, Russian Dressing. Cream Pie with Macaroon Cream Filling. Coffee. DINNER. Clam Broth. Creamed Finnan Haddle. Boiled Potatoes. Carrots and Peas. Fruit Salad. Crackers. Cheese. Coffee. BUCKWHEAT CAKES, MAPLE SIRUP. Mix three-quarter cupfuls buckwheat with one-quarter cup- ful flour and one-half teaspoon- ful salt; add three-quarter cup- ful warm water, one-third cup- ful milk and one tablespoonful dark molasses, and let stand over night. In morning add one-half teaspoonful soda dis- solved in little hot water, heat thoroughly and bake on soap- stone griddle. Serve with maple sirup. SALMON CROQUETTES. Cut up fine one-half cupful salmon with little salt and white pepper. Boil and mash three or four potatoes and mix with salmon. Form in egs- shaped croquettes, dip them in egg, then in cracker crumbs. Fry in very hot fat. Drain on brown paper, put on hot plat- ter. Garnish with parsley. FRUIT SALAD. Peel and cut two large or- anges into pieces, add one cupful shredded pineapple, one-half pound malaga grapes from which skins and sceds have been removed, and one-half pound marshmallows cut into quarters. Sweeten to taste, place in nests of lettuce leaves and crown with boiled dressing mixed with equal quantity whipped cream, be improved upon, Bdsiwass Jungmewt! weee - GUESS | AM PRETTY FOXY AT ThAT~ on THa SQUARE HARRY You nEED A GUARDIANS | DION'T_ THINK You WERE BHAT BAD A BUSINESS MAN- OH'H __THATS awruL ——— SN I've_JusT Tawew OUT A PoLiCY IN THE H.A.P INSURANCE Co, ‘=M THERE WNTh Tum BUSINESS HEAD wey ? (’/ Every man has a right d so it is Answer: the best he can for himself, back if you can. But if she has the intelligence and to have, you will have a very poor rival for you. She will argue that if take a chance on the unknown than on one who has proved himself a | total los: You see, the trouble with you is { you out and found how weak and disl | stood by you in the d: s when you w you reap the bitter harvest. She wor vou get a start, and when vou succ forsaking her for another woman. Why would any woman who was to a man like that? You say that treated her and t you have repented, you want to mak: but oceans of tears of repentan ke thing they were. For I humiliation of having put another woi her through the s face. an old sweethen ;0w of inducing her to throw over your h rdidness of the divorce court, for having her home broken up and her faith in love and men shattered? D. C., THURSDAY NOVEMBER 24, 1927. FEATUR e Treated Her Disloyai] an of 40 Too Old to ness Course? e of 21 T married a sweet, heautiful nd housckeeper. In my ¢ days T ed for this. I was a brute. Later my establish a_successful business, and T er a while T became infatuated with a simate. 1 considered my wife too old e, but the girl proved to he a shallow, T lost my business, frien hurch ight my wife would pine away and die in and she is beautiful, brimming with rt soon. Her eyes scem ant my wife back. 1 need her. I want n. Shall I appeal to her to break off SORRY. to fight for his own happiness and do our privilege to try to win your wife strength of character that she appears marriage is a lottery, it is better to She has tried | re. She | that she knows you. oyal and untrustworthy you ere sowing your wild nd helped | vked and saved and ificed to help | ceded you rewarded her devotion by | m't an utter imbecile want to go back | that vou are sorry for the e up to her for it. Of course e cannot wipe out what has ha how can you atone to a wife man in her place, for ha you are poened | for the ving dragged We say we forgive those who have wronged us, but it is an idle gesture A wound may blot out the black memories of the thi heal, but it leaves its ineffaceable sc r, and no will of ours ngs we have been made to suffer. Many men think that they can abuse and neglect their wiv unfaithful to them and that all that they when they get tired of their philander and forgotten, but this is not true. Th ave to do is to say they are sorry | 13 and that everything will be forgiven e wife may take her husband back for the sake of her children, for the sake of her pride, for the sake of being supported, but there is always betwee: has done her, her knowledge that he is in her heart in which is buried her you n them her memory of the wrong he not to be trusted, and there is a grave ng love. | Tt is good news to hear that you your desertion of her, for it shows that women are cor and more reasonable view of thi always been a profound m over losing one. She should have ci rubbish, D JAR MISS DIX: a small salary that barely gives u prospects of makidg more. We have n but T have passed my thirty-ninth birt to take a business course? mat Answer: Certainly not. A woma learn anything she wants to learn. C young girl, because she has the subject o settle down to her life work and m: ‘There are many men who are e lovable, who are the best of husbands, b: ble, a hes s , but who lack the talent for money- | making, and when a woman is married to one of these she is very wise to | take up some gainful occupation her: finances and to save up something so old age. In the old da if he was not a go-getter she had to luxuries that a woman craves, But fortunately all that is changed, and in these progressive times no ! intelligent, able-bodied, industriouus wi wishing for the good things of life. for herself. The main thing for you to decide upon is In just what your talents | consist and what you are best fitted to do. carefully, then cash in on your strongest attribute. Make yourself an expert in whatever you decide to do, so that you will be able to command a good salary, It class pay. get employment as a young girl would qualified for the job. (Copyrigh WHY WE DO BY MEHR/ K. The world has always admired suc- cess. What constitutes success it is ditficult to say. The aims and stan- dards differ from age to age and from country to country. But success it- self, no matter how defined, is a tre- mendous drive in human affairs. The causes and methods of success are not always taken into account. We soon forgive and forget shady or unwise methods if the enterprise is successful. ‘The man who fails is a fool. The man who succeeds is wise. The man who loses his life in attempting to fly across the Atlantic is foolhardy. The man who succeeds is a hero. A revolution which fails is an insur- rection. The leaders are shot. A rev- olution which succeeds is most honor- able. The leaders are patriots and heroes. They are immortalized. Success is the modern god to whom we offer human sacrifice. In these days of cut-throat competition the weak are pushed aside to make room for the strong. We idealize the suc- cessful men. We hold them up before the youth of the land as shining ex- amples. Our children are impressed with the idea of success from their cradle. 'Why do we admire success sc passionately? We admire success because it gives power and prestige. It means victory in the game of life, whetner a world series, a business venture or a social triumph. To be successful means that you are master of the situation AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Pa has been clearin’ his throat in that grand way, like an orator, ever since he attended that banquet at the county seat, and he won't feel prop- erly humble again until his rheuma- tism has another spell.” (Covyright. 19! The Seductive Touch of the Orient —this alluring, fascinat- ing attractive beauty with it subtile, mystic appeal can be yours. Possess this bewitching appearance thru. Made in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10c. for Trial Size stery why 4 I have been married 12 years a woman was bound by her hushand Remember that a woman of 40 wi r wife has not broken her heart over ng to take a saner tar of the unfaith<n! hueband. It has | v woman wasted a tear of regret | onsidered it a good riddance of bad DOROTHY DIX. .. My husband makes only s the necessities of life, and he has no | 0 children. Office work appeals to me, hday. Do you think that I am too old | ANXIOUS. n of 40 is just in her prime and can ienerally she is more eflicient than a of marrying off her chest and is ready ake good at it. verything that is good and kind and | self in order to help out the f: amily | that ) she will not be dependent in her | limitation, and do without all the little comforts and oman need sit with idle hands vainly | She can hustle out and get them | Take stock of your abilities very is only first-class work that gets first- 1 not have the same chance to unless she can show that she is highly DOROTHY DIX. t, 1027.) WHAT WE DO THOMSON, Ph.D. You are a conqueror, a hero. There is no greater satisfaction. in life than the feeling of elation that comes to a man who conquers something; a na- | tion, an unexplored region, a bad | habit, a musical instrument, a wild | colt, an enemy or rival, a discase germ —anything. Body and mind are made | for action, for conquest, for self ex- | pression, for self glorification. Failure is so common, So ever pres- | ent. Success is so rare, so hard to achieve. Out of & hundred competitors only one may win the prize. The very uncertainty of success lures us on and makes us appreciate it all the more. We admire success in another be- cause he has arrived where we arc eager to be. He represents our own longings and aspirations. We admire success because it is the highest form of self expression. It heightens self esteem and self respect and the approval of our fellows. Suc- cess gets us where we live. It is lifc at its highest and best. (Copyright. 1027.) DAILY DIET RECIPE I Oysters en Brochette. Oysters, two dozen; bacon, one-quar- ter pound; lemon, one; parsiey. SERVES FOUR PORTIONS Drain oysters. Cut bacon in 2-inch pleces. Skewer oysters and bacon al- ternately on four skewers and broil under a hot flame. Serve on the skewers garnished with lemon quar- | ters and parslep. Strips of toast could | accompany the dish. DIET NOTE. Recipe contains protein, fat, min- erals, iodine, phosphorus, lime and some iron. Could be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight. The oysters should of course be free from contamination. Shaped in the Kn keep ankles lessly with select ‘Burson Fashioned Styles for Every Hour of the Day. Ford. T. Hopkins & Son. New York Dept. M.75 BURSON /zs#izoned HOSIERY | Really Fits Because trouble and expense. Offers sug- will help you BURSON KNITTING COMPANY /& Rockford, Illinois My Neighbor Says: Before using new flower pots you should always soak them, otherwise the moisture neces- | | sary to fill the pores of the flower pot will be taken from 1 the soil, thus impoverishing the plants. Do not put flo into the pot for a few hours after it has been sonked. Brooms will last longer and not wear the nap off the carpet it they are occasionally dipped into boiling water and allowed to stand in it until the water cools. Then put them out in the open air until they become dry. When the brooms are not in use they should be inverted and placed in a_ cupboard to keep them out of the way, or hung up. When b 1 alws Army blanke iceable for boys’ beds. all-wool tan blankets are better than the lighter shades for young girls' beds. When you are basting ro: heef, a tablespoonful of brown or white sugar added to the improves the flavor and S houd never be wdded to stews, soups and boiled meats until after they are cooked. If put in at first it touchens the fiber of the meat and takes out the juices. The Sidewalks | memories. So, too, do all feast days. | | Incidents of little significance ordi-| narily assume vast proportions when | assoclated with those days of ur A TOOTHACHE ON THANKSGWING | 1 1rth of remembere - cause little Wiliie nearly lost a fin- ger; Memorial day because that was the day we ha< «| srace of P (ures and no cx- trv_ tubes. We all never fors this day, 12 or 13 vears ago, when, with 17 guests *n | prospect, we were attacked by a mer- ciless toothach which despite the application of ever known remedy persisted in admini tering its painful punishment. An actor recalls New Year day be- cause that was the occasion when the manager of the show eluded the troupe_and left the players stranded in an Towa tank town Every holiday has a meaning all i own for somebody. In a 24-hour, per- | sonally conducted expedition about | town the writer discovered some in- teresting sidelights on Thankegivin PR { blankets one ler service. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. “It's just one of the breaks you oc- casionally get,” said a traveling sitting in a hotel lobby is the second Thanksgiving day I've been | away from home. I couldn’t cancel | an important engagement for Friday morning here, so I have to stay over. | But the wife and kids—say, look at | these pictures” (extracting a leather | case). “The big kid is 16 vears old looks like his old man, huh? S hoy, too. Had diphtheria when he was 9 vears old, but you couldn’t te Plavs halfback on the scl and edits the school paper. be a great writer some day A : s tle fellow looks like his mother. Wich he did up in_the living room | °rozular little son-of-1-gun. after suppir, saying, Yee gods is this a | though, and wants to be a ball player | rora gas pipe, if there's envthing | Whar bo' prows up, that hasent gone rong today it dident | g hare happen to me. a r ymnan. Me thinking, O well, if T wait eny | p 000 10T longer something elts will probably [ vert €oe Fr: happen. And pop blew out some more | 3013 O FIRER NG puffs with a unsattisfied ixpression | gleap late, read the papers, eat in the | ind 1 sed, Hay pop, do you know | potel urant, maybe go to the| something movies at night. Well, T gueas I'll | T know that door fs open agen and | ard s nicnt message now to the it letting in a confounded draft, pop sed. | tia hunch. eut in St. Touis. Glad to | Meening for me to shut it. Wich I |2 SEHICA AT T St did, saying, Do you know wat 1 feel i il like doing, pep? * x Do you feel like tying vour shoe, or | “Thanksglving! Why are you fermly resolved to trip OVer | one mpankeiving on T more than ten yea that flapping rug and spoil my eve- | ning intively by breaking your neck before my very e nop sed. actor speaking. “I don't care, though, | Mé thinking, Aw G, heck. And' I |.5 jone as I'm working. regulasly. tied my shoe, saying, Wat do you |, i e i R e e think is around at tho Little Grand, | There are a lot of birds who will eat | Dop? on Broadway Thursday who are still -, doing the agencies. 1 mind the last Thanksgiving day I was in the ‘big | | town.” Tt was before we got into the | war. T was doing the Western circuit | when an offer came to do a specialty | act in a new Broadway show. I tossed | up everything and beat it back the day before Thanksgiving. Thankssiv ing and a part in a Broadway wow Can you imagine? “T ‘hired a private dining room and invited 20 jobless actors to have din-| ner on me. I remember there were two of the smartest hoofers in the business there. Another guest had a | dog act, but his engagements were so few and far between that the animals were dying one by one from old age. | A female jazz singer, imitator. a | trick pianist and a mus aw artist were among those who assembled that | an Theres a new Kut Up Komedy at the Little Grand this w today. and I was wondering if pop would take me around rite after suppir to see the ferst show before it was time for me to go to bed, ony he dident < exter cheerfill wen he came home eating. sing stake under onions for sup- pir, ony the stake was half bernt and the other half was tuff. making pop feel worse insted of better, me think- ing, T gess I better wait till he lites his cigar and starts to blow smoke out. that's | t do vou think is around your a ring of dert, thats wat, go and ash them and wash them rite, pop Proving if a thing ter to pospone it than MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. The party set me back a week's pay, but what of it? I was giving thanks the best way I knew for my luck. The next week our show opened at Stamford, Conn. It also closed at the same place. I don't care where 1 {am on Thanksgiving now, just so long | las I'm working. By the way. won't {you drop up and see me Thursd BT a3 When children are irritable and troublesome the cause does not al- ways lie in some digestive disturb-| ance, although sometimes it does. Very often it comes from overfatigue. I have a little boy who works or plays 50 hard that at times he “goes all to pieces,” as his grandmother puts it. 1 do ot let on that I see this. I quietly warm a glass of milk and put it near him. Perhaps I drink a glass myself or in some way make the attention incidental. After he has had the milk he quiets down at once and I read him a story or have him rest in some other Jopvright, 1027.) Yorkshire Pudding With Beef. | The beef should be roasted as usual | and the pudding made as follows: Beat the yolks of three eggs until very light, then add one pint of milk. Pour the mixture over one cupful ofl flour, add one teaspoonful of salt and beat well. Bake in hissing hot gem pans or in an ordinary baking pan for 45 minutes and baste with drippings from the beef. If gem pans are used, they should be placed on a dripping pan to protect the floor of the oven from the fat. Many cooks prefer to bake Yorkshire pudding in the pan with the meat. In this case the roast should be placed on a rack and the pudding batter poured on the pan under it. Your Fall itting proof against rust and hold the weight of the a special rod for window themselves to any angle, so easily as a str: just been arranged for your your fault- clad less Adjustable A FREE at Your Store tha Davis Seal wrote ipes. Y Hores: isted” beiow, | Or ‘sent by e el s enne; . .. Ve ton Ave. Alh‘m .l. L . and THE HECHT CO. Thanksgiving day resurrects tender morning? | friend on Thank west line. nearest relative don’t ma our roof. t o worse,"” spirit. Iy hot weatl season w | teel that el (how day { has | w | doctor | garments. |if he ht row of w other Keneco Rods in the special displays that have CURTAIN Get This Valuable Draping Help ES. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. 1t's good to see an old ing.” *x k ¥ car conductor on a North- Yo, I ain't married. My an old woman liv- wvhere in Wisconsin, I'm on Thanksgiving, but that no diference to me, Some- ody’s got to do it. 1 don’t read none ind T don't care for the movies, so I it as well keep buss A streot working giving dinner will be eat right out of the old 1 hox. R neh Yeh, this is Good luck i verheard in a local bus. ng Catholic University on Evidently the other s are taking the holiday off. * K ok * We were talking to a vietim of the 1o in the Southeast the other lay. “Yes, we were fairly fortunate,” 1id he. “We lost only abeut half of A friend of vurs jr.st around actically everything, it _wasn't any Thanksgivi “H-—— he corner lost p we're _thankful That's the Your Baby and Mine i R ELORED. it —————— Mothers who have become thorough- familiar with sun bathing in the r now approach the Winter h fear and trembling. They iliren must have sun baths quickly we do become accus tomed to new methods of baby care), ind they do not know what to do about them. It is casy to understand that a mother cannot be persuaded to put a delicate baby outdeors on a cold, raw however bright the sun, if she to him without clothes. . I don’t think it a practical If the child has tubercu- ; rickety, two conditions vhich demand sunlight, she should put her bah in the care of a good and follow his directions. It he thinks sun baths essential he will di- rect her how to give them. I can't feol it a safe thing generally to advise rothers to put babies out in the sun n the temperature is dropping. As for putting him in the house and letting the sun pour on him through , that does not furnish him the vital violet rays which provide the curative qualities in sunlight. If shia takes him outdoors clothed in any- thing more than a piece of vegetable silk fartificial silk) she can't expect the vital violet rays to go through the Her one hope, then, Is cod liver oil. For cod liver oil does for the child in Winter what the sun's rays do for him in Summer, making it possible for him to make the best use of the clements of the foods he is eat- inz, through its vitamin D property, which property acts on the body like i t to de or is ake your baby out of doors and | ziven him the benefit of at least two | or thr e hours in the open every day Give him the proper foods and keep a window open in his bedr.om so that the sun will have a chance to pour in. You know how weak and pale a plant can get when kept in a cellar? You want your little human plant to have unlizht in its room every day, and ng the window open and the room , warm will prevent the baby catching cold, as he very well might were exposed without rlothes out of doors or in front of the open window. el an The pearl fish is so called because sometimes takes the shell of an er for its home. it oy Personal Stationery FOR CHRISTMAS 200 Note Size Sheets sl oo 100 Envelopes to match Hammermi’l Bond U'sed Exclusively Printed With Your Name and Address 1Sy org ar STATION emit CONGRE / hi rshail Place, Phone Franklin B ey SRTE: B PO - 2evs Bl redraping becomes a joyful venture —With these better curtain rods to help you OU’LL enjoy putting up your new drapes almost as much as the charm of the finished effect, if work easier with Keneco Curtain Rods. The ‘simple but sturdy brackets are easy to in- stall and the rods go on in a twinkling. They are made of heavy gauge steel, permanently you make the stains and rugged to heaviest drapes. Two or three windows in a row —easier to drape now Troublesome problems of the twin or triple win- dows have been settled by the newest Keneco Rod— series. Brackets adjust that you drape a bay as indows. See this and the inspection. KENECO Flat Robs ““Wind Magie,” & helpful book whout windaw Or sent by mail ‘elling- KENECO RODS FOR EVERY WINDOW IN WASHINGTON AT S. KANN SONS CO. LANSBURGH & BRO.

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