Evening Star Newspaper, January 21, 1928, Page 21

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WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENING' STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (. SATURDAY. JANUARY 21, 1998 FEATURES.™ o1 e ||| Fes Folk | Sunday, January 22. e u Shoulder Flowers Have Grown LITTLE BENNY - The Sidewalks of Washington BY LEE PAPE. BY THORNTON FISHER. hionable by dulia Boy. BY MARY MARSHALL. ‘wreck A recent fashion obscrvation reecived |and for theater or restaurant wear are | I stopped in at Sam Crosses house | o those to whom tradition and past Sometimes, perhaps, 1t 1s well to spection. Growth of great congregations in many cities is forecast, for there will be a new interest in religious matters |a ways dark and Sam was called for a | suppir, being a bad fine for me on ac- | count, of the Crosses always eating later te 1 row the stars are| on my way home from skool this aft- - | landmarks. tion—is that shoulder flowers are no of fashion, however, the shoulder flower | 8Strology. N ‘r\'us starting to get dark and I hm{ 4 edifices In like the extingulshing Of | 1t might be mentioned that the former longer being worn. The fact is that has grown until it is no longer a mere |, Preachers today should command) (\/ pimhle Jrock deer I betier be starting home f T|great personalities. Each blow of the |1t might be mentioned that the foret - 4 blosom but a veritable vine, hanging | {houghtful atiention, for the minds of & 3 : dident wunt o be late for suppir agen. | Forciless wrecker falls with Unerring | homiet stoms: e ok Gl 18 soom down from the shoulder to the waist | hearers should bs attuned to intro- Wack velvet 4s Aflw.'tfl;tr {and the next thing 1 knew it was all | procision upon an era of rich associa- | to e demotiahed to make room for an |tions, tinctured with romance and | apartment building. It was in this blended with an age of childhood lore. | house that the retired ex-President used Each gaping, jagged hole, each falling | to sit and acknowledge the salutes of and sometimes down the back as well | An interesting shoulder ornament re- { cently worn by a French actress of note { than we do, me thinking, Heck, darn | . e G . B os e aaeumon eaiadhd bow. | “hisiis alBenefictaspect forteduca- | | it 11t be late agen. e S R e S T Ot . whare knot. perhaps 3 inches across, placed | yon “and the seers declare. that this| | Wich I was, heering the sounds of | rt!tel JestES o Prpral ity A b on the left shoulder. with an identical| year will reveal more than one pre- | everybody eating as soon as I opened | ' YOUth- g ¥. . 4| "Washington 1s expericncing a meta-| of the enward press. of progress, and h'fu'“’,‘:"l‘ ,‘,'3.","..".’.;.‘1, :“h::l ‘V;“:f::"u{fi': morphosis. One needs but to leave the | yet what a ity | attention off of me being mate. and I|CItY for a year, or two, or five, and S S ! return to observe the truth of the | ran_in the dining room saying G, ma, s o . & G, pop, Sam Crosses baby sister Udeen | foregoing. A longer absence will startle| A Washington resident sends the fol | O Dol S the visitor who returns, { lowing brief incident to us. While in |~ Wat. wat from? pop sed, and ma sed, | , This was illustrated lately when a | England, the writer sald, he happened 0. issent that terrible: but I jest saw | [OTMer resident came back to show his | to attend a session of court. A cock- the child out with its nerse this morn- | 50N the sights, among them being the | ney person was calied as a witness and e atei ol sbe Benne? ouse in which the family once resided. entered the box. One of the lawyers Yes, mam. she’s bin unconshiss about | "I had been boasting for years,” sald | took him in hand and inquired, “What 3 Houpsi T sed e | the ("rmv;rdrr;m»m, ;ab;‘ml l‘hp hnmhp is )8'}‘{ rg;cuppfl".ln‘nr:’ i 7 s : | we occupied here and how from the| “Oh. uts the crosses e ot Cown modest, In my PIAce | second-story window we could see the | cross buns.” | ornament placed at the left hip. | viously unrecognized gentus. | These jeweled pins in pairs are very | o F RGN O Pood uek for | much admired at the pressnt time. ONe | oatings between men. and women. | clever jewelry set T saw the other day | conferences, as well as social consisted of a pair of twin bracelets. a should be fortunate pair of earrings. and two ddentical | "yt s a favorable day for aviation. brooches. ~ You may wear both brace- | and seems to presage a governmept lets en one arm or one on either arm. poliey that is most successful. -/and the brooches you may wear one on | Congress and all legislative organiza- | eithor shoulder. one on the shoulder | tions continue under a rule of the stars | and the other 4 or 5 inches below it that foreshadows continued bitterness | For an aftarnoon frock the matehing | of discussion. brooches may be worn one on the | warning s given that floods will be shou'der and the other as a hat orna- | even more disastrous than formerly in | without enybody mentioning enything o | ‘ment | the spring of 1998 about being late, and ma sed. She must | e gomsioningicepts] OB '»,V_"‘“m“.”;o:’:-r“?flwm{, Fr':;‘:}; Joweled or cnameled buttons ate| Thi s & month when pectl of of had's suddin fever, children of that || (rwaswie | 7 |l My boy, 18| Soues on the ‘o eroas buns’” repeatad the new accessories and collec- | dis~ase is increas>d and an epicmic 18 Som ‘mzr! finally » vyer, sneeringly, mu | age are so perishible, they seem to be | (_HousE | well one minnit and sick the next. well, | = I sippose theres nuthing I can do, T sip pose the only thing I can do is call up | the house and see if theres enything I | can do. | Wich she quick got up to do. me saying. G. you better not, ma, it wont be eny use. wat, wat do you mean, you dont s of antique jewelry in Paris have | foretold recantly had a brisk demand for all| Persons whose birth date it is have sorts of fine ald jewcled or metal but- | the augury of a year in which many tons On some of the new frocks all | pleasant new experiences are met the buttons in a row do not match | Children born on that day may have One jeweled button may head the line | a_strongly scientific trend of thonght of plain gold ones or a single enamel The subjects of this sign are often frail bufton may appear in a row of plain | in body and should be carefully reared (Copyrizht, 1o ~—— lindueed me to amusementof the spectators, Z{bring him to| * %% % 74 Washin, to see | JEET%] the ot miace. 5| Last Wednesday s hatless and coat- - 93 Z1had seen pictures | 1ess man of 67 (according to his own H 5f the new Union WOrds) stood on a packing box in E ” %] Station. but buried | Sireet and gathered about him pe-Zeps 77 - m{oack in my head 2 hundred persons, curious folk. 71 1] was the vision ef | ¥hom time was something to be f THE SGOULDER FLOWER HAS GROWN TO A LONG TRAILING VINE. THIS CONSISTS OF A i on a clock. The elderly gentieman %as o v mean to say the poor child is ded. ma a4 24 | he tinv, miserable RED TALLIC ROSE WITH i s°d all ixcited. and I sed. No mam. G \fflr/&"d {B. & O Depot. T G el A e TRATING DO o ey oo o or 'y e wn | DAILY DIET RECIPE ik toa 1 meantaliss slwnyy ncons et e aite fpred ! g “~pared when "we | OF $1, of both, one could find the road <hiss wen she’s asleep, and that's il she Patdy Blien We | 1o heallh 1T rontiones whERM ot THE BODICE seeing any number of the g s for little girls prepared for r son challenged any one of his audience o . e : ; 5 The result being T got 3 good slaps | majestic terminal, o ¥ len Jeweled sh r have come late Winter and Spring. we have Asparagus Salad. from ma and pop sent me up to wash the site of 2 A% him any ‘question. He would into prom some gath- sketched one for you this week. Send A 5 I e Shich answer it pronto. ’ thew ave me a self-addressed. stamped envelope sparagus, 1 can Y ; . = L s . s any one of worn almost to the exclusion of the and I will send you the sketch with ani Oil. 6 tablespoonfuls. envthing about me being late. proving jeer wi yways, dilapidated dwellings. greeting t artificial shoulder fiwer. These jew- table diagram-pattern and direc- | Salt. 1 teaspoonful » the idsenswas pRstiyigpodien n-rm as he rmirnd 'm:"w:mnr:x T tal or o dis- for X apri '4 teaspoonful i g i TR eled and metal orna have the dis. s for making [ . ¥ Capital tinct advantage of not being mussed— (Convrizht ) Vinegar, 2 tablespoonfuls - Chopped picklcs, 1 tablespoonfuls 4 “The house in which we lived here ———————— R — WINTER | |.Fome o it v ooy 1 spoonful folks. and wherever fortune took my »;-:r;;:gu:““- BEDVI‘I‘IE q]‘ORIES‘ BY THORNTON Chopped parsley. 1 teaspoonful. | B A ,“n‘;,"":,",g"':',‘:;““.‘-‘""*y:" tender || . i\ M S W. BURGESS Ghopped chives. 1 teaspoonul | IRl 3 SUSHL AL e et e ] lo colishten hi Sy voun! r e I e | au nee. RS L SERVES SIX PORTIONS. It never fails to make people smile },?:’}',’Jg”{’,’; l‘f\!mngn"‘;lrg:;: ‘Q‘:[S{;f; | In the mean- Billy Mink Gives Up. At last Billy Mink came to a path | , Drain asparagus and chill. Mak~ a when T say that T hold the dandelion | or cqirce ‘such a pretentious piace wos o ik e - ¥ feep in the = ~ dressing of the remaining ingredients to be the most wonderful plant in the worth it 2 o il Sy ot g deep in the snow. He paused on th: Mix wel! o n irb. One lady bice = 2 e edge of it and looked down. He knew |MIX well and pour over the asparagu- world. Even when I wisely modify this | “I was more excited than the kid p . a sedan nearly fe! out of the window « Mk whose path that was. He knew that it | Which can be served on individual salari when we took a car out to the addres had been made by Lightfoot the Deer | P'3tes on lettuce. ‘Garnish with p = i The number was as vivid in my mind to include only the temperate wi Shadow the W ®as far too wise and his family | The featnrte oj | MCNto strips binding the stalks. nobody believes me. So I have t0 €0 a5 the day we moved in. Arriving m E ’,flz,h'{u'z;",k., do more t el with his Jumper the Hare ended right on the | DIET NOTE. and explain that by wonderful 1 do the street. the kid and I jumped off. He was an exam 1. Billy Mink. He was far too edge of it. Billy looked over on the! If mineral oil were used in dressing not mean big (the redwoods for that), but somehow it didn't seem right. We ple of what th isc to get into a fight with Billy. S0 | other side. to see if there were any salad could be eaten by one wishing ling Billy what he thought of footprints there. There were none. |to reduce. Olive ofl is hizh in far calling him a lot of bad Billy jumped down into the path. His, content ecipe contains lime. iron Shadow turned and bounded nose foid him at once that Jumper had | vitanin B. Can be eaten by adults of awav through the Green Fi Billy | gone along that path Billy hurried a | Average or under weight and by those Mink at once resumed the foliowing of | little faster. He came to a cross-path. | wishing to reduce if mineral oil were the trail of Jumper the Hare. Almost) His nose told him that Jumper had | used. 8t once his nose tald him that Jumper | kept straight on. . He came o whor must have been close by when he and the path forked. Once more that| Shadow the Weasel bagan to quarrel. trusty little nose of his guided him “He heard us ond took to those long aright. And then. quite abruptly, he iant SUCly had made a mistake. E ! nor beautiful (the world is full of pIant 2 “rou”of humble rl‘x‘t:l?‘;musfscmx:"; beauty, from the tiny ebony ferns to the row we had lived in. flame azalea). nor yet useful to man (a “Yet there were some familiar char- claim that the coconut. the wheat plant | acteristics. The old grocery store. on LHWN G and the pine dispute). The wonderful th» corner and the house next doar Ipart of the dandelion consists in its ' were unmistakable, There could be mg (abtlity o live anywhere. stand any question about 1t | abuse, elude every enemy and reprocuce This was the street and t i |its kind with a prolific surety that is across the strest, was um' ens DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX | |saseine “Are sou sure this s the steeet. ope book taugh NANCY PAGE S ar i e Bl At wng | auEt. nd. 4 i final proof of the dandelion's asked the kid. Wel. b . s of his, red Billy Mink. “If 'n‘}ix?v!' s.;hx;rkn.‘g::rr:l;:rflx:a ’;;;r:m this complete, undefeatable sturdiness came ' courage to tall xh.'vau’nzs'ffl'rfi.?:fl% way and that. His nose was filled with | | Cold Goes With Corn and {$he other-day when my small daughter | house over thiere was the object of my | suffertng. (OF mon eaforter oS the scent of deer and deer scent was so strong that Billy could find no trace of Jumper the Hare. It was plain that | Lightfoot the Deer and his family had come along after Jumper the Hare had | Chilly With BY FLOREN Swibr It had falles By 3” nol'hml Usually a smal} boy wa« 0 0 a len fro s high state into | inveigled into ascending the wagon i 2 i & & g o i the hl"lrun.fi of a record No flover disrepair. The original buff bricks had Whers. und‘:.-nl dim nmnemmme, h Necessary in Life of a Man?—Helping Pretty fhat 1 know of hlooms naturally in the | been painted. s rust red and this was|wes Getcued o s Homne fame. he District in the deep of mid-Winter ex- | rapj peeling from the surface. Non-, less useful proportions. Pollowmg the With Exception of His Mother, Fs Any \Woman jiusht in trom her walk a dandelion | brasting for years. but T had to do i 1A GANKE - | @ = 2 . | cept the dandelion. The plant that will | deserf, b J been then fo - | #On a bitter cold evening there is 3 00S: A T : ARt 1| des !’?Y-kamz child; romped about “performance.” the dental gentlema very r'?sveumfi“rinw'-“dHh-c«t?m;:‘l:m:ur’f | nothing like a great bz bowl of steam- ( 1 1 of 16 Choose Career. live on garden loam or foot-worn clay |the place, and the small grass plot was | would sell toth remedies. of in som ried. But now he hurried. There were | iNg chowder.” Nancy remembers hear- 9 i e YR, Inewed ton e RO Up b L {cases pass out cards inviting those several little paths going in several di- | INg Peter sav that months before she G s overy | r:“i,‘.nx c:at J:m Talk about vour shattered illusions. ' present to visit his office. rections. Billy ran a little way down | KNeWw that she was goinz to be Mrs l EAR MISS DIX: Recently I read an article written by a bachelor in which e n'l“m.;! 3" 'mr'n‘hn' :-“1: Som® day. I suppose. a new home will eling showmen are beco: each in turn. Nowhere could he finq Pecter Page. But here was the bitterly he told of the jovs of unmarried life for A man and how much better his | & plant that will ‘be erected on the spot. However. I ing more scarce each year. Pew a house was managed than the aversge home run by @ woman. He made the mf,fil “'1"’:! ;‘{";;“o }:’.?: Ater the un- | have been busy lis article so convincing that I am inclined to believe he is right. Will you please zone. answer the following question: With the exception of his mother, is anv woman | necessary in the life of a man? JAMES D. | \l*NT HET | Answer: Probably not. Neither is pic necessary as food. but most of us | would feel that we had had a pretty skimpy dinner if we didn't have some sort of dessert RY RORERT Ot And that is what sweethearts and wives are on the menu of life. You can | get along all right without having any woman to love or to love you: without having any woman to turn to for tenderness, for understanding. for sympathy in whatever befalls you of good or ill. without having any woman to whom vou could boast of your triumphs and lament vour defeats as you could not to a man: without having any woman to whom you could turn, sure that if all the world was against you she would be with you. But don't you think that if there | were no woman in’your life it would be a pretty poor, empty sort of a life? the scent of Jumper the Hare. But| in two or three of the paths the deer scont was very strong. Billy returned to the place where he had lost the scent of Jumper. There | he sat up for a moment and snarled Then he ran back along the path down which he had come. leaped out of it | and disappeared in the Green Forest “I know when to quit.” muttered | : ¥ = Billv. “T guess I don't want any hare “HE_MEARD US AND TOOK TO znyway Tl go hunt for something THOSE TONG HEELS OF HIS." easter to get. I dont see why those MUTTERED BILLY MINK. doer had to come along just when they did. Jumper is lucky, that is all 1 ean say for him. Well. if T don't have nim now 1 can have him some other had Jumper by this time. e clion ‘did travel out of UMC. S0'that’s tha - Just Jook at the length of those (Covvricht. 1924.) Jumps! Well. if he's as silly as most 0 tening to the kid ask- | be found outside their natural hab! ing me. “Where did you get that stuff?’ | namely, the circus. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. l Dear Miss Leeds: Every one else ciation from a teacher who is trained in seems to write to you for advice, so!this work. There are several ot I'm going to. al%o, and goodness knows 1 nead it! I am 16': vears old. 5 feet 5'; inches tall and wet gnod-for-no! g litle white in of mine hadn't got in the way I would h M I have A few pimples. Some davs I do not by spel them. then pronouncinz put on any make-up, but when I do them siowly and then singing them. The I clean my face at night with cold average person does not realize what an eream The next morning 1 wash my elaborate co-ordination of nerves For 1 am assuming. of course. that you are plaving fair and that, if you do | not intend to marry, you will not expect any woman to lavish upen you the | affection and the companionship and the interest that only a husband has a right 1o possess. There is no meaner or cheaper graiter than the man whose = 4 5 e ! face with soap and water. massaging muscles is required in speaking. In the hares are hell soon be running in a Frie mmea sh. cold evening. here was the tired Peter attentions are without intentions and who takes his fill of feminine society and . 2 circle, and then hell be my dinner. = i I coming home and -here were the big | entertainment, but never assumes a feminine beard bill and shopping ticket, e lather using & wash case of the person who is afflicted with water {5 boiling, salt it an wls. m chowder it shoul 4 v ul r ‘ng there is some- Rl Bty s that Jumper When the water is boili It it and bowls. Corn chowder it should be After en rib in & sammering or stuttering there is some wasn't running in Scatter the commeal in by the handful, | For dessert she chote apple pan A wife Is a necessity only in primitive communities where the husband's | all quantity 1 and leave it thing that interferes with this delicate «.7.°s He was going straight away. ing constantly. Cook until it is a | 9°%dY. She had fresh bread, butter physical comfort depends upon her on for about five munutes. I try to co-ord n and it takes a great dea end he was going fast. Sull Billy kept ik smooth batter, and at the last |20 PPACh Jam as well Celery gave In sophisticated communities a man can have his buttons sewed on and his eat what I should, such as vegetables of patience and practice to overcome and fruits and no candy or fat meats | T have consulted four different doctors about my complexion and they all say { the blemishes are due to my age and | outgrow them in time, but Money will give the bachelor every physical comfort, but man does not live | “It ain't hard to win they do not recommend any local by bread alone and without some woman by his side who loves him there comes & your husband after y arn to sigh ' Ireatments Please tell me what to do time when everything goes stale and flat. ‘What good is his money if there is no an’ answer him in & patient mother [0F a double chin. Sometimes I get a woman to buy pretty things for, no woman to deck out in jewels and gimeracks? ' tone o' voice ™ little too slender. and when I What good is his success if there is no woman to gloat with him over {t? What WConvrieht 1828 put_on sht 1 get a doul flavor has the dinner that is eaten alone? How dreary the sick bed if no anxious | Hore I'm both: eyes bend above it; if no one agonizes over his suffering or really cares whether he lives or dies? . o pUaTpe K e ULIeose f0 U0 | iz iin i ocd ihanafulioti flows whian'| footprints of Jumper his nose Wwas binds it and makes it better for frying tickied with the scent of Jumper and Serve hot with milk or cream and he became more determined than ever sugar. or fry it. If you are going to | that he would catch him. He ran fry it first pour it into a greased bread | easily, 50 &3 not o tire himself. He pan and bake it for a while. Cut it in | knew that if he kept on sooner or later | slices when cold and fry in hot lard or he would be likely to catch up with butter to a nice brown, Berve with Jumper. syrup, socks darned by a company that does professional valeting. He can hire a trained nurse to tend him when he is sick, a decorating firm will put tidies on | his chalrs and quilted pillows on his couch, a chef will cook him perfect dinners There are hostesses who shower invitations on unattached men ! chin t BILL. wer—1 am glad to help you with problems. my dear, and 1 feel The Daily Cross-Word Puzzl o ~ 4 P n Of course. wives are expensiv They are troubles The - r solution escapes a lot of nagging and worry and anxiety, but he also misses having some | es W one to whom he is the center of the universe and who thinks he is the greatest | the physical changes characteristic to the adolescent pertod It is not necessary to have blackheads. BY DONALD AL CRAIG, { and wisest and smartest man in the world, and that the only reason why he | 1sn't President of the United States is because politicians haven't enough sense " tective food, The \© KMOW 8 §00d thing when they see it | January 21, 1801 -In response to a however. and the other blemishes may he necessary protective he SE / I ommissioners of the b® reduced by the proper care. You | meal was pronounced perfeet | And another thing he misses. James. Children. They are the consolation | < oUst from the Commissioners of the | [ TAHIC B0 T0€, BIODer oA | _ Bhe used one can corn, four cups 1AW ' prize in even an unhappy marriage. Federal City, the Senate today oon- |y frct washing your face. The potatoes cut in cubes, one sliced onlon, Along about the time when you are 50 or thereabouts you'll find out that Sented to the assignment of a room in cleansing cream removes only the pov one and one-half-inch cube salt pork | you have sort of lost Interest in yourself. You have done about all you are going the Capitol, adjoining the Senate cham- | gt 8 € TR cut into bits. one quart milk, eight s0da | 1o do and you have Your own number and know that you are never going to |9€F On the south, “for temporary ac- | crackers, four tablespoonfuls butter, salt | achieve the great things you dreamed of when you were young Also vou will | COmmodation” of the Supreme Court and pepper. The pork bits were cooked find out that there are not many things you want, and that you don‘t get a great O the United States The next term of ce dust Yoy follow the cleansing with o washing the skin. Rinse off 0 ] t thorughly in clean, warm wa {4n a frying pan until crisp. ‘The onlon kick out of what you do think you want the court will begin February 2 bathe your face for several | was added and cooked until golden - Son the newiolEk of \he ooy cold water Your second mista brown. The fat was strained into a ‘Then life begins to get pretty drab and dull unless you have children. But B Caldwell will formally assume b cold cream into your skin after saucepan. To this were added potato and two cupfuls boliing water. Wher if you have they put the punch back into everything. You rencw vour youth in | dtles. in place of their youth. You revive your hopes and ambitions in their hopes and ambitions. | WO has been t Kk heretofore washing it without patting on an as- % Y R Dol et it ard to close the pores | Botatoes wero soft, corn and butier were | You live your life over again in them, and You have a lot more fun in buying | The term. ‘whioh begina next g these two error {added. The crac Vere soaked in | pretty dreases for your glris and cars ‘for your boys than any old bachelor has | ¥1Il be the firat held in this clty. When | 8 Vnat"Yonr complesion o | cold milk, then put in. The mixture | in spending his money on himself o s adiumnad e Fabtuses omd ) d lke 1o have & copy | wah seasoncd and served steaming hot AL, et yaar 1 onilhasiohia no date N | e e e 1 large bowls 1t you wan. to sise up what e gives to the ald bachelor and the man who | %eh fixed for the removal of the Fed- | 17 [T6¢, afel ARt gives P Later in the evening the Page family bal | marties, Just watch the face of a father telling about the record that kid of his A fn;;‘:“"‘l":"'l‘“"““;{ el s o . K s making at school q ¢ the ol achelor's as he relates s oS k- S » . ., s making W00l or In business, and Id bachelor's as he r Blg}| SINC Wit Th oomvenied Yo Auguas It ok No. James, a woman 1sn't & necessity in & man’s life. She i a lusury, but | e new clerk, arrived last Autumn and | 17 O | she 1s worth whatever she costs you DOROTHY DIX | has taken up his residence i George. S\mple mat ee) | 5 Ve . " | town. chin if vou practice . | i ) 20, 1808~ To it list of siand- 800 do the neck-hen EAR DOROTHY DIX: 1 am a pretty orphan girl of 16 My uncles and il ‘e hosasios - ! g co o TUTNING exercises des | Ox-Tail Soup. o o i ent e o thcn o e i eperen | N fommees the Mouse today wdded | furning exerciies de . ; One uncle wishes me 1o be a singer. another wants me to be a planist. while my T Thab S Throat ™ e & Cut one ox tall into pleces and fry | O YREle Wit e il el A PPy | bla. The chairman is Philip Barton At Ak for ywn 1 butter Slice three onlons and 1 should be an antist. Which carecr should T choose HA Kev, who represents the congressional 85ain LOIS LEEDS s, and when you remove the 5 o p TR i Answer: You must, indeed, be happy o be possessed of 5o many talents, but my advice 1o you Is to take a good course in stenography or domestic s ; ' . WO egis e brown them also When done tie them A » ; | " the only member of either branch of | Dear\Miss Leeds (1 1 sturer very ® W & heg rih & henck o Thume | %0 that you can support yourself while you are walling for g(-.‘n:,. h».hl{.\\\l.;l‘n‘ Congress who owna the house he occu. | badly and at times can hardly make | teaspoonfuls of Cdrop into the soup pot. Lay the rli 5 | . DOROTH 3 ples in this eity. Tt is believed that the mvself can | 0 car | district comprisong Montgomery and Frederick counties In Maryland. He is The Stuttering Habit. nelted dutter a1 Food. THis Je YRy ien | epone a dasn o ox tail in, then u’ur pounds ol new committee will rapidly become one barrassing How " v pepher beef cut in sn sices, Grate over Peby ioos. 5 | | of the buslest of either branch of Con- 14 years o * neh them two carrots Add four quarts of anana Sponge. the sealding point, let cool a ttle, add | gress t s my cold water with »alt and pepper. Boil | Ponp [ the tutce of one lemon and beat until | January M. I881-Tt was announced correct ave A dars for mbout six hours according to the | Boiten ane-third box of gelatin i [1ight and cold Then beat in three egg | today that the company operating the n o and brown eves size of the ox tall Blrain the soup for fone-third cupful of cold water, add | whites gradually, which have first baen | urnpike between Georgstown and fRock. t colors are becoming to me? = & v SRS 15 minutes betore serving, thicken with fone-third cupful of botlling water and | beaten until dry. ‘Purn the mixture into | ville is able to begin the payment of a BROWN EYES Acra ¥ nd . (abh e 2 S TISANC R SA0DE.) two tablespoonifuls of browned four, [ one-bulf a cupful of sugar. Strain over |8 mold lined with slices of banana. | 8 per cent dividend on its stock. The | Answer— 1 You shoud e 1 A ¢ Wicoandne 0 then boll for 10 minutes longer. i cupful of banana pulp, Heat to Serve with oream [ rond has been i use three years CIAl tnstruetion . correet, clear A= should b e b “haldean e I IN RZBBITBORO—AL the S . "V ALRERFINE RANDALL H 4 il i 3 finite mrticle - ——— —— , DSBS e D e B T ——— T —— ; ) e =) \ £ b, Hewaed - N g o & > | 3 Py S : i | BEFORE MISS FLOPPY GE VS MERE || OB SAID HEARD MY MOTHER[| AN DICK SAID " WELL \F SHE D11 QW MISS FLOPPY 1 WAS JUST \ 1 f_,’,‘,",‘, LabbE} MUST TELL YOU WHAT | HE ARD ! l‘,'\ 'fi ‘1\{\/\] [RIE nu)\‘}-v WA S N EVENR SEEN MIDN FLOPEY TRYINT | SAVIN' HOW MUCH DICX =1 16 Bune . Hawaitan bird BOBBY FUN AN DICK SAYIN " ¢ JUST THROWIN' HEROELF AT | L0 FLAY BALL ANITH US 1N THE NaRD, || ENJOYS HIS WORK WITH You 4 | e 31 Bend forth ABOUT HER HE OTHLIL DAY DOC WHITEY 'S HEAD, - WHATLVER | SHE'D KNOW THAT DOC WAS SAFE ! ey e £ 4 Berts o . - 4 ey THAT MEANS V% b < s | Avsver to Yesterday's Pusge, 36 Bmall v ~ I e~ Vi 1 R R | ©The cream T 1L S \J 14 2\ \ | = e 8 Knglish coin | 4 N VIf / ; & 8 |71 Imic sholalm]s Dawn, | Y % ‘ [ I Homed animal - | { ] aisturied | 4 Period | ' | H Bnake 6 Rulea e T Mode of setion ‘ { B A calise i 20, Pring | 1 i Wrath | Fo one vide B Onergrown with & delicate plant A Overgrown with u delicate plan - L35 Vaey, P .\d\n.\d“. 185, Possest, -

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