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WOMAN'S PAGE, THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4 1929 TFEATURES. 27 MY BEAUTIFUL LITTLE BENNY The Sidiwalku of Washington 5 BY LEE PAPE. BY THORNTON FISHER. Today in Variety in Blanket Stitchery - Washington History BY LOIS LEEDS. BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. BY DONALD A. CRAIG. people pass through | demonstratesd by the ex of an- o *"“‘“‘m'.“ o hern are pup. | other fellow who clam over_tHo ial barrier after he had once been licly known. Most of them are ordinary | reject gy mis THose ‘Who obey s ‘mandates. A jong’ er have & ion to per- | those who ol ma; e i e form. or who are | time ago I became associated with sev- lured to the city | eral men whom I regarded as honest by its charm and | fellows. I think they were when wao Some of | met. Our organization promised much, and as a matter of fact we did begin to prosper. The greed for more dough and faster started the mess. One of the men decided to play as near the dan- ger line as he could, and he induced the rest of us to join him. “Before long we were indicted and convieted. Boy, I hope you will never know the humiliation of being shackled to a bank burglar and removed to a penal institution. Fortunately, my term was a short one—shorter than those served by the rest. However, as far as the public was concerned, I might as well have served 20 years as two, The was on me. Pop was smokiig and thinking and ma was looking at the avvertizements in the Sunday paper, saying, Pox neck- peeees 60 dollers formerly 90, just { imagine. ‘Why should I imagine apything like that? pop sed. And anyway, yee gogds, dident I just get a furriers bfil for hands over the front of the scalp. Now by rotating the parts of the ynder the fingers with an up- ward, backward, upward movement. not merely rub the surface of the sealp, but move the skin itself. Massage the crown and back of the head with the same movement for several minutes. the scalp which will greatly benefit or- | Next place the fingers of the right hand In the first place, any ore troubled 3}‘ :fig 3{,,‘,",‘;‘:;;’ ,."n.dg:;eh:m, fl.n%:rf ith abnormal falling ™ of the hair |y, . i f ‘;‘ Pl r h lth | Ward. backward movemeni from the Thows wioare-In s weak or rundows | harine up, Lo the crown all around physlcal_condition are neariy alWavs | position of the hands S e e right side of the scalp in the same way. Now massage with a rotary movement l\('Ith both hands at once . The mas- ‘s:ge should be given for 10 or 15 min- | utes. - It shoyld be remembered that the scalp and hair are just as much in need of airing as any other part of | the body and quite cften falling Falling Hair. Bcarcely a day goes by witheut its uota of letters asking what te do about falling hair. As there are so many dif- ferent causes of this eommon ailment it is rather a difficult question to - hough there are treatments for November 4, 1863.—J. Wilkes Booth, the distinguished American actor, ap- peared tonight in the role of Charles de Moor in “The Robbers,” Schiller's fa- mous tragedy, at Ford's Theater. He was supported by Harry Pearson, C. G. dollers for having your fur neckpeeee De Vere, Sidney Wilkins, Annie Waite, manicured and shampooed? he sed. Mrs. Chapman and others. Why yes, my goodness Im not even The two rs who escaped day dreeming of getting another one, at before yesterday from the Old Capitol leest this year, ma sed, and pop sed, Prison " have been recaptured and Thats fine, then you can cut that av- brought back. They are dJohn . vertisement out and reed it to me next Hudgins, a Confederate deserter, and year. i 5 Frank Walton, a Union substitute de- And he kepp on smoking to himself serter. They made their escape be- and ma kepp on reeding the ads, say- tween 7 and 8 o'clock in the evening | ing, Imported Frentch evening slippers by cutting the bars of their window on 14 dollers werth 22, my lands but thats the second floor and letting themselves reasonable. down by means of a rope made from Theres nuthing reasonable about get- their blankets. Tt is supposed that they ting more evening slippers when youve bribed the sentry on duty at the time. ographies. Here is one from the lips cf & man who is riding the crest of prosperity. He sald: “Twenty years ago I was ‘stone busfed’ The ‘worst_of part of it was I 'll:“ :n k;;le with & . o two more calami- tous eircumstances —e2) troubled with falling hair, for it is quite true that poor soil will not grow 8 juxuriant crop. So before trying to impreve the condition by external treatments alone, take steps to improve the general health. In many cases it is wise to have a thorough physical ex-~ amination. But quite often’ faulty methods of earing for the hair, harsh shampoos, too much curling with hot irons, neglect of scalp massage and brushing of the hair may be the reasons for scanty heads of hair, and these can be reme- died ‘The most important factor in hair health is good eirculation. Massage and brushing stimulates this and strengthens the muscles around the hair roots. Hair tonics are used for the purpose of stimulating the circula- tion of bload through the scalp, though | & large part of the benefit from hair tonics is due to the massage with which they must be arplmL A good scalp tonic to use for falling hair is made as follows: One dram tincture of cin- chona, one dram tincture of rosemary, one dram Peru balsam, six drams eastor oil, six ounces bay rum. Apply two or three times a weck. Massage the scalp thoroughly with |® very good tonic for oily hair: One- | the fingertips for several minutes. Ap- ply the tonle with medicine dropper, £mall toothbrush or & small piece of absorbent cotton wrapped sure to moisten the entire scalp. To massage the sealp, place the in gauze. Be |One ounce alcohol or cologne water. too tight. If possible, comb the halr and allow it to have an air bath for half an hour or more each day. When the sun is not too strong, as it is on | the hottest days, the hair should be ex- | posed to jts rays for a sun bath. | Hair which is lacking in natural oil should not be shampooed oftener than is necessary for cleanliness. Once every two or three weeks is usually '\slrllfflclel_w when the hair is brushed thoroughly and the scalp massaged faithfully every day. A monthly glm oil treatment is also desirable for this type of hair and a semi-weekly mas- sage with an oily salve or scalp food. Use equal parts of white mineral oil and olive oil, plus a few drops of oil of tar or pine oil, Warm the oil and apply it as fol- lows: First part the hair in the cen- ter, then again in one-inch parts on each side. Apply the ol evenly all over of absorbent cotton wrapped in gauze. Massage the oil thoroughly into the scalp with the fingertips. Wring out a small Turkish towel in very hot water. Wrap it around the head and repeat the hot applications several times, Al- low the oil to remain on the hair for one to three hours, or overnight if the hair is exceptionally dry and brittle. Now shampoo the hair in the usual way, using a good licuid tar soap, olive oil shampoo or pure castile soap shaved and melted into a liquid. Oily hair may be shampooed as often s once a week. After the shampoo ap~ ply a little astringent tonic and massage the scalp. The following mixture makes half dram salicylic acid, two drams tincture of cantharides, ten drops tinc- ture of capsicum. ten ounces bay rum, Shake well together. Be sure to shake and fan the hair every day and give thumbs at the sides of the head over the ears. Elbow Care. It's really only the careless woman ‘Who lets her elbows become dark and ugly. It is easier to beautify the elbows than any other part of the body, and Spread the fingers of both 'vals. BEAUTY CHATS | your elbows will look as smooth and im“heu you could wish. You will have the scalp a sun bath at regular inter- BY EDN4 KENT FORBES reful that you do not leap on r |is caused by wearing hats which are | the scalp, using a small brush or a pad | alreddy got a whole closit paved with them, pop sed. | just remarking on how cheep, they were, ma sed, and pop sad, O well, in that case their proberly quite reason: ble. I should say, just fancy, ma sed. And she kepp on looking. saying, Imported hats designed by Coshay, original mod: els 28 dollers each. Well now thats al most unherd of, the last Coshay mod- els I saw were 48 dollers, she sed. I think I saw seme In the 5 and 10 cent store, but of corse they mite of been designed by Woolworth, pop sed. ‘The point is. I thawt you got 2 new hats last week, he said, and ma sed, So 1 did, mersey, nuthing is ferther from my mind than buying a new hat. ‘Well then for Peet sake why frighten me like that? pop sed, and ma sed. Well for goodness sakes cant I have | my usual Sunday plezzure of reeding the ads? Cant I have the remnants of my reason meanwhile by taking a wawk? pop sed. Wich he did, me going with him. SUB ROSA BY MIMI Feminine Intuition. ‘There’s a lot of hokum about this matter of feminine intuition. but that isn't saying that such a thing doesn’t exist. I don't think it's mind reading, clairvoyance or anything like that. But, still, these fortune tellers and mediums nearly all are women, aren't they? A man may be able to predict the weather, tell which horse will win and which stocks go up, but women aren’t interested in such trifles. They have their inside information, but it's of s different sort. If I break right into the subject, I'll | say that woman's intuition has to do with human moods and motives, espe- clally those of men. A woman can dis- guise her mood and conceal her motive; that is, from a man, and she is foxy when it comes to reading the weather indications of the masculine heart. She has to be. to dirty surfaces. If you do your elbows :llll kmke up more than their share of ack. ‘With vanishing cream as a temporary Take the simple but important mat- ter of love. A man can't conceal his fondness from the object of it, for the girl's face reflects it like a mirror. Of | I have no ideer of getting any, T was Blanket stitch is one constantly used for utility and decorative purposes. It is buttonhole stitch taken wide apart, used in groups or fancy arrangement. It is not made in solid lincs as buttonhole stitch must be in order {5 supply suffi- cient resistance to constant friction of wear. It will be seen that the name in each instance is descriptive. When the stitch is used for buttonholes it acquires this terminology and, while identical | in formation with blanket stitch, it is | beautiful only when made in straight, ciose rows, Blanket stitch acquired its name from its use for finishing raw edges of blan- kets. As the textjle does not fray readily. there was no oceasion to make the stitches close, and they were more | decorative when set apart. After plain blanket stitch was well established its adaptability to “fancy work"” became ap- arent, and ety was given the itherto plain, practical stitch. until now it 15 one of the most widely used embroidery stitches. Some of the various ways in which the stitch is given diversity are pic- tured. The needleworker n‘l"lol&d decldg | upon one for her embroidery and | u:: it mx‘:’u’i:fenfly throughout. This | does not mean that but one style can be | PSYCHIC ADVEN NOTE THE SIX VARIATIONS OF BLANKET STITCH PICTURED. used on one article, but that changes | must be introduced artistically. For | example, no change should be made in the stitch while working it as a fin- | ishing for edges, unless the changes are at stated intervals or in repeated | sequences. When used to bind edges of textiles, | the stitch must be suited to the weave. | For ‘example, a textile that frays easily requires a short, rather close blanket- | stitched edge to prevent the raveling| of strands. Occasional longer stitches | may be introduced for variety, and grouping can also be used provided the | distance between groups is slight. A non-fraying textile, such as blanket- ing, felt, broadcloth, etc., requires no use a wide stitch. 1In the stitchery use a wide stitch. In the stitching much diversity can be utilized. When the stitch is used in the body | of a textile, it can be made without regard to its weave. If the parts out- lined by the stitches are to be cut out, as in several kinds of fancy work, clese buttonhole stitches must be employed. If the textile remains intact, the stitches may be as far apart and as high as looks well in the embroidery medium employed. (Copyright, TURES OF 1920 ‘They succeeded in getting out of the city, but when they reached Bladens- burg they were ordered to halt by the guard. Hudgins refused to stop and was fired at. The ball struck him in the right kneecap. The leg was so bad- ly injured that amputation became nec- essary, Dr, C. M. Ford took off his leg above the knee after he had been brought back to the prison. It is thought he will recover. One of the sentries at the prison has been pilaced under arrest, and the whole affair is being investigated. . The strike of mechanics and laborers young fellow without a job. I had sold utensils—I mean I tried to sell them but I was & ‘wash-out.’ tough proposition for any man today, and was then, not to have a trade or profession. An all-around man seldom | gets anywhere. “At any rate, the gir] really cared for me, but fo course she had sense enough to know that one cam live more cheaply and happily than two and that to marry a man without a job would be silly. I employed on the Treasury Building ex- tension was resumed at noon today. The men struck two days 8go in con- sequence of the issuance of an order which, 1t is alleged, will cut down their wages. They returned to work in con- siderable numbers yesterday afternoon on the understanding that Secretary of the Treasury Chase would give an an- swer at once to the committee which had presented their grievances to him. It appears, however, that the commit- tee misunderstood Secretary Chase in regard to the time of giving his reply. After waiting for it in vain yesterday | the committee sent a communication to|me but I didn’t see them. mentally doped. “Suddenly. as T crossed a street, I felt a terrific impact which sent me A 30 feet. reyog‘l'nmd a crowd of persons huddled about me. the street and soon I was between white sheets in the city hospital. and an arm were broken, according to the doctors. “While I lay in bed wondering what | it was all about, the girl called. Her first words when she saw me were, ‘Wasn't it just too bad? | my wife, and to this day she doesn’t know that a large packing truck saved me from ending the whole thing. “How foolish it all was, when I look Mr. Chase and was informed that he did not expect to reply for several days. ‘The men went to work as usual this morning. At noon they were informed that they would be expected to take only half an hour for their midday meal instead of one hour, the usual time. The men objected to this and at once formed a line and marched to ‘Temperance Hall. where they held an impromptu meeting, with John A. Ross as chairman and John J. Gray as sec- retary. It was announced that Mr. Pray, one of the men who figured in their meet- ing yesterday, had been discharged. Resolutions were at once adopted, de- claring that they would not return to | work until Pray is reinstated. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN, Decision and Action. “Then I consulted with myself, and 1 rebuked the nobles and the ruiers."— Neh. v.7. Here was a difficult situation with which Nehemiah had to deal. Before knew that, too. “After seeking in vain for the most menial of jobs and being econstantly refused, I went to & park and sat on a beneh. man willing to work should be unable to find it. template self-destruetion, but somehow the thought persisted that it was the only way to settle my troubles. “1 decided "“{m’é‘.““’u’:‘ D ma sf toward the water, about 8 blocks away. 1 was in a daze. Happy people passed from the hos?itll I landed a job with the concern nected with, but a part of which I own. You may print this story if you will not mention my That a man can come back is amply could present themselves to & kitchen articles and cleaning It's a pretty It didn't seem fair that a Perhaps it is cowardly to con- g0 to a river nearby Mustering all my re- I rose and walked 1 seemed I was conscious and An ambulance clanged down Several ribs Che is now A few days after my dismissal am now not only con- name.” i JOLLY POLLY : I A Lesson in Eng! h. engaged to also told the truth. “That was many years ago. my deepest night came a marvelous happiness. I am still with the firm and have two wonderful kids. Look at these pictures.” > He drew a small leather container from his pocket and pointed proudly {o the wife and youngsters. Somehow, the day was better-for having met him. Willie Willis “I don't lie to the teacher. asked me if I was chewin’ an’ swallowed it before I said I wasn't.” ' stigm; “The warden was an excellent type of man, and upon my release talked en- couragingly to me. ‘you are going back into the world from Whieh you came. You are going to find it eruel for awhile. Many of your so- ealled friends will no longer recognize or aceept you. Don't let this faet excite bitterness or a desire for revenge. There are many men bacl they sought to get ety that put them here Face the world. Give it the best you've got, and here’s luck to you. “With that he shool placed a small bill in it. “It is & question whether entering or leaving prison is more distressing. Some- ‘My hoy,’ said he, prison because 'k in even with the soci- in the first place. my hand and times I think that the man who stands on thes threshold of the drab structure where he has been imprisoned and Jooks before him is more to be pitied than the one being received. “Luckily enough, I had money , to take me to a cer- tain city a thou- sand mll: h!ram my original home, 1 decldlg:l to lp&\?’ for a job and tell the truth to my prospective em- | ployer. It was the best thing I ever did. I did not change my name. I fine woman, to whom>% Out of e NOTED MEN AND WOMEN Stanley's Spirit Grossed Atlantic to Ease he acted he consulted with himself, | thought the matter through. Then he | proceeded with promptness and vigor, | not the Jeast deterred by these nobles |and rulers against whom he had to | take action. He was not given to hasty | decision, but when once his mind was BY JOS. J. FRISCH. it can be done in less time. The treat- aid, and a daily serubbing and mas- course, the man may try to be indiffer- | ment in practically every ease is as fol- | sage with ‘& really flesh-bullding cream oot Gt ey that gag will give him| lows: your elbows are bound to look nice. I away. To begin with, scrub the elbows. Give | find it a time-saving habit to cover the Mean wear their hearts upon their A them a th.-ough going over with hot | elbows with massage cream when I do sleeves. Hence a girl can see that Regrets of Dying Aunt. water, soap and & small hand brush.|my face at night. The cream stays on heart before the sleeve with the arm in | s Keep on scrubbing tll you feel you |for several minutes and the skin takes it is passed around her waist. The man BY J. P. GLASS. | made up nothing could move him. His have scrubbed practically all the dirt|it up. If you make this a habit I do.doesn't need to confess his love in | action on lhts ogcnnan was only one of out of them. Then while the skin is not think you'll ever have trouble with | words, for the circumstantial evidence | many which reveal him &s a man of still hot, rub it with almond oil or a | ugly elbaws. is against him. A decision and determination. very thick massage cream. You must % DiTry duh—ln? PR PR t’s the masculine mood and motive It was a gigantic enterprise in which be sure, however, that the cream is which the clever woman can spot just v made from vegetable oil, as either | your chest and bust each mOrning, If | s easily us she can 1ol Whether e fHoy R e o e and cleansing cream or ordinary inexpensive | you can, get a quick reaction to such a | will look well on her or not. She may i \ v face cream is 1o good. bath, and it will help make the muscles | not be able to cope with man when it ( i | » Ad e b Do As you have dried the skin a bit by | firm. | comes to science, but she can beet him ! ’ fans nilghitsnioeksand ooy, WHGE ‘o the sc you will find that-it takes{ C. M. O.—The weight of & gisl at 14 "]l o pleces when it's a matter of mind | these fesble Jews? Will they revive the up quite a lot of the.cream. The more | years of age can hardly be considered reading. stones out of the heaps of rubbish vou rub, of course, the more cream it | normal, as children of that age, and for Perhaps it was the Cave Woman who S Hiohaee Hareds” e i the Ranls will absorb. After five minutes wipe | some years to come, vary 50 In their 'began this business of intuition. She e SR 8 NEDSD the Dt off what remains on the surface of the | tendencles in growth. To be 5 feet 5 | practiced it on her mate, and ever since g b ghogunin. oo gy skin and repeat this treatment every |inches in height at that early age might ' then, even now when women live in - e 6 e NoTem N Y tvav night until your elbows are in good |mean she had grown tall and slender | apartments, they have made use of the : ) SN\ fate Dowan the passds to Wias condition again. and not weigh much, or if she was of | ideas of the cave. The woman can look g 2 y % . P YESTERDAY, WHILE WE WERE TO = CAMP, DAD TOLD SOME IMPROMPTU STORIES AND JOKES. OUR ENGLISH GUEST MISSED THE OPPORTUNITY “Invaluable” Says Lovely Baroness Otherwise there is no treatment nec- they set their hands. They eannot bear essary. If you are dressing for the eve- ning and have no time for a lengthy | massage, scrub the elbows as before with zoap and water, then rub in the same foundation vanishing eream that you | pot ‘fatten is made from mineral oll in- Powder thickly and 'stead of the usual recipe with olive oil. use on your face. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Up on Your Toes. Flatfoot comes in three sizes like anybody's salve. First there is the trial size, potential flatfoot, known to phy- sicians as pronated feet and to the laity | as weak ankles. We ean't go into ail the faults of fashionable footwear here, but if you want to know the right and | tual deformity. wrong of it, send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for ad- vice about footwear and the care of the feet. ‘The regular or Main street flatfoot is the familiar trade package. You may study it on all sides and on all the quieter streets. You can spot a person MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes with Lemon. | Dry Cereal with Cream. Soft Boiled Eggs. Bran Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON. French Fried Potatoes. Salmon Omelet. Baking Powder Biscuits. Caramel Custard. Sugar Cookies, Tea. DINNER. Lamb_Stew with Dumplings. String Beans. Baked Potatoes | care were given and the props omitted. |a large frame, she would weigh a great | deal, and whichever way it would be | natural no matter what the weight for | that particular time. to B. . C.—A mayonnaise that does | carrying a trade package rather by his | or her everted feet and inelastic step than by a downright deformity or a| elumsy hobble. Not until the victim | falls under the influence of some per- suasive “foot specialist” and gets shuck with a pair of props does: the char- | acteristic flatfoot hobble betray the ac- The third or hospital stage is per- manent, fixed flatfoot and once the in- dividual with the Main street kind starts fooling with arch supporting de- viees it won't be long before he will have a hospital size case to attend to. Of course, too many readers know from rather lucky experience that the adoption and wearing of arch props need not necessarily ruin the feet for me to attempt to promulgate such a warning. But just the same I know that any foot trouble which seems to get better while arch props of any kind are being worn would get better as quickly or more quickly if the same The surgical treatment of permanent, fixed, absolutely flat feet usuall‘ calls for a series of individual molded braces, but this is strictly a surgical problem and no sensible person would attempt to carry out surgieal treatment on him- self or permit any other than a compe- tent surgeon to do it. How can one tell whether the feet | stage) or rigidly flat (hospital stage)? That is quite simple. Stand barefoot Cabbage Salad. Hot Apple Pie. Cheese. Coffee. BRAN MUFFINS. One-quarter cup sugar, short- ening size of egg. 1 egg, 1 cup sour milk (or sweet milk), 1 cup bran, 114 cups flour, 1 level tea- spoon soda (or 2 teaspoons bak- ing powder if sweet milk is used), pinch salt. Cream shortening and sugar together. Mix and sift dry ingredients. This will make 12 large muffins. CARAMEL CUSTARD. Melt 1, cup sugar, add 2 table- spoons water and 1 quart hot milk and beat 6 eggs, add % teaspoon salt and 1 teaspoon vanilla; pour on hot milk. Strain into buttered mold and bake 13 hour, Cook carefully in slow oven and serve with caramel sauce. It is a deliolous dish. Caramel sauce: Meit 1 cup sugar and add 1 cup hot water. Sim- mer 10 minut LAMB STEW. One and one-half pounds lamb (from the shoulder), 3 table- spoons lard, 3 cups boiling water, 1 small onion, 2 tablespoons salt, 14 teaspoon cloves, 1 cup tomato, 2 potatoes, 12 cup diced carrots. Cut meat into two-inch pieces. Place the lard in a frying van and when hot adé .he onion cut fine. Allow to brown. Add the meat and brown. Add the poiling ter and cook one minute, Pour into a saucepan and let cook slowly for one hour. Add the potatoes eut in cubes and the carrots. Cook fos 20 minu‘es, add the tomato and the salt and cloves. Allow to boil 20 minutes. It stew is not thick enough mix 2 tablespoons of flour with 2 little water and pour into the stew. on the floor. Raise yourself on your | toes. If you can do this, the normal | arch of the foot is restored by the ef- are only functionally flat (Main-street | at a man with X-ray eyes and get some inside information every time. ‘The gift of intuition has come down us naturally. Women ean't tell why, kut just the same they know a man's moods just as well as they know his favorite dishes. The ability to get a new hat out of friend husband may de- a:nd upon this. And what wife wants miss that trick? ‘Women are so wonderfully educated in these days that they may be letting their intuitions get a little rusty. But the wise habit is still there and needs only a little practice to make it work all right. We hear a lot about this television, which is the science of sceing as well as hearing things irom a distance. You are supposed both to hear and see your party. Well, that's an old one. Woman was on to that invention long ago. Her In- tuition is her long-distance sight. (Copyrisht, 1929.) My Neighbor Says: Instead of beating the egg yolks and whites together when making .uyumpkln 1ie, beat the whites stiff and fold them into the mixture just before baking It ene-haif a teaspoon of bak- ing powder is added to tomatos just before adding milk when making bisque, it will not curdle. To prevent milk set in an out- side ice box from freeing, tie an old magazine around the bottle, This will prevent its ireezing in the eoldest weather. . Long cooking in a double boiler to prevent scorching, ecare in measuring & seemingly small amount of grain to & pint of water, and the addition of a pinch of salt to take away the sickening flat taste are points to be remembered in making cereal gruels, Food Garnishes. ‘To cut gherkins for a garnish, select small cucumber pickles of uniform size. | fort—your flatfoot is flexible, fune- | tional, and still amenable to proper e | ercise, proper footwear and general a | tention_to hygiene. If you can't raise | yourself up on your toes, you're a hos- pital case of rigid flatfoot. and props or similar monkeyshines, without prelimi- | nary surgical correction, cannot help you, SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Now let me see—two xIl'ee?lll right, but two an’ what makes our! With a sharp knife cut them length- wise into slices thin as paper without | detaching the slices at the stem end, [ then ‘spread out the siices into fan shape, To fringe celery for garnishing, cut fcces of celery into two-inch lengths. iror this purpose the stalks should be fairly thick, but tender. Fringe each end to within a quarter of an inch of the center. Drop into ice water con- taining a slice or two of lemon and let stand until they are curled. If desired, fringe one end only. DAILY DIET RECIPE CALIFORNIA DRESSING. Olives, 4; salad oil, ene-fourth cup: lemon juice, one tablespoon ; orange juice, one and one-half tablespoons; onion juice, one tea- spoon. DRESSINGS AND SAUCES. Chopped parsley, one-half tea- spoon; salt, one-third teaspoon mustard, one-eighth teas) paprika, one-eighth teaspoon; chili sauce, one-half teaspoon. SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. Cut olives in thin slices, put in small glass jar. Add remaining ingredients, “cover tightly and shake very thoroughly. Chill un- '.fl‘;‘meded and shake again before using. DIET NOTE, Recipe furnishes some fat, much lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by aduits of normal digestions whe are of average or under weight, and by these wishing to "?1““ if men- fattening mineral oil were sub- stituted for the salad eil. “I believe.” wrote Henry M. Stanley | in his autobiography, “that the soul of | every human being has its attendant | spirit—a nimble, delicate essence, whose method of action is by a subtle sugges- | tion which it contrives to insinuate into | the mind, whether aslecp or awake. We | are too gross te be capable of under- standing the signification of the dream, the vision, or the sudden presage, or of divining the source of the premoni- tiop, or its import.” Stanley was a practical man, a man accustomed to face difficult facts hard- headedly. The man who had the cour- age and the wisdom to find the lost Livingstone in ‘“darkest Africa,” and whos2 explorations resulted in the dis- covery of the source of the Congo and the founding of the Congo Free State, | Was not eastly impressed. To throw a fuller light on an epi- sode in which Stanley figured and which will here be described. it must be ex- | plained that though his career began to attain remarkable phases in the United | States he was born in Wales and he might not have erossed the seas had his childhood not been pecullarly tragic. He was born out of wedlock, was never acknowledged by his mother, and spent a considerable portion of his boy- hood in an orphan school. These cir- cumstances contributed to his seeking his fortunes in this country when he was but 16. It was due to his adoption by a New Orleans merchant that he ac- quired the pame Stanley. With the advent of the Civil War, Stanley became a soldier in the Con- “Stanley felt a light stroke upon the back of his neck.” that you had to be what you were. | “I also dearly wished 0 love you, but | I was afraid to speak of it, lest you | would check me, or say something that would offend me. I feel that our part- | ing was in this spirit. There is no need of regrets. You have done your duty to me, and you had children of your own who required all your care. What has haj d to me since was decreed should happen. Farewell.” . ‘The boy's hand clasped the wasted hands of the sick woman. He heard her murmur a farewell. The next moment Henry M. Stanley awoke on his cot in | Camp Douglas. All about him everything was as it | had been before an invisible hand had | dealt him that light blow on the back of | his neck. He looked at Wilkes and | asked, “What has happened?” Wilkes was surprised at the question. | “What could happen?” he said. “Why | do you ? You only ceased speaking | to me & moment ago.” | Stanley explained that he thought he | had been asleep—for quite a while. | He could not shake off the strange feeling that his vision had given him. Later he learned that on that day, April 16, 1862, his Aunt Mary had been sink- | ing toward death. She died the next day, April 17. federate army. He was captured by Northern troops at the Battle of Shi- | loh and was interned at Camp Doug- | las, Chicago. | One morMing in April, 1862, after the | usual work of the camp had been fin- ished, he lay talking to a fellow pris- | oner, named Wilkes, while gazing over the great room, which provided their | quarters. Nearby were several groups | of card players, Stanley had just made | some comment, upon these r fellows | end their attempts to beguile the tedium of imprisonment, when he felt a light stroke uoen the back of his | neck, He became unconscious. | The next moment he felt that he was back in Wales, 4,500 miles distant. A vivid vision to him in which he saw his old village of Tremeirchion. In a trice he was in the bedchamber of his Aunt Mary, whem he had not seen for five year: | This good woman seems to have been the only ane who had been sufciently kind to him in his unfortunate, or- Pphaned childhoad to have held his warm affection. Perhaps it was this bond that now brought his spirit back to Tremeirchion. His aunt was in bed and, he thought. desperately sick. 8he was wan '-nd wasted and sorrowing. Stanley perceived himself—but he was the boy of other days, not the young man who was now a prisoner at Camp Douglas—bowing his head to listen to the woman's dying words. She WAS regretting that she had not been tenderer with him in his childhood un- happiness. She had wished to be, but | she had not been able. boy-that-he-had-been spoke. He | T believe you, aunt. It was not your | fault, nor mine. You were good ‘and | kind to me, and I knew you wished to be kinder; but things were so ordered LA to sit stil) among unexecuted decisions. We wait to hear of their achievements, confident we shall not wait long. Caesar may spend anxious hours in deliberation before he decides to cross the Rubicon, but we know that he will not suffer many hours to elapse between the de- cision and the execution. The possibil- ity or the means may not be obvious to us, but we expect such men to execute their decisions promptly and success- fully. whatever rivers or obstacles may lie in their way. JABBY “They say those fellas are puttin’ new electric switches in every room. In the schoolhouse I guess that'll stop the | paper-wad shootin’.” Blended, roasted and packed en- tirely by machin- ery to chaff r by fans ensure The emoved "1 would not be without new won- derful “While we were at camp” is the cor- rect form, not “while we were to cam, To implies motio) as, We went to ent to church. At im- as, they were at school; t church, Impromptu ||| (im-PROMP-tew) means without prep- aration; made, done or uttered on the spur of the moment; as, We held impromptu party; Harry made an im- promptu speech. | Lexington LO-GLO Pace Powdet | || because it prevents large pores siays on longer . | smoothly and is | says Manon Maria, Baroness | Grazia, concert and radio singer, 108 Ave, New York City.| LO Face Powder is made LT the valuable mineral salts (calcium and sodium phosphates) so neces- sary to the healthy growth of nerve tissue and bones, especially in children. ‘When you bake with Rumford you get not only the advantage of pernfect leavening action, but the addition of real food value as well. Give your family the benefit of this added food value and give your bak- ing the advantage of Rumford leavening. Get Rumford Baking Powder from your grocer today. THE RUMFORD COMPANY [FErecutive Offices: RUMFORD, R. 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