Evening Star Newspaper, February 19, 1930, Page 26

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Meeting Test of Hard Treatment BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ‘Warding off the ill effects of hurd treatment of furniture and other parts of the household equipment is a thing ‘which has had to become an art in many homes. The well cared for look @ear to the home-maker who takes pride | |almost indefinitely. One woman em- ployed this method of preserving a lino- leum so that at the end of 20 years the pattern showed no wear and the floor covering looked like new. Either varnish or a little butcher's wax shculd be resorted to in the case of hardwood floors that look shabby at the threshold or where the lines of house- hold travel lead. If window shades have started to tear narrow width will help to prevent fur- | ther damage. Window hangings which have become | badly faded can be immersed in a home | soluticn of dye, if they are of cotton or | linen variety whose lightness of weight | does not preclude their being handled. | A housewife whose home is done in the Italian manner dips her curtains every year. They are of a dark-brown shade and ‘take the color evenly. A dye that s slightly uneven will hardly be de- | tected in a hanging of this nature. The | folds conceal the defielencies. | Discrepancies that would be obvious on a bedspread are unnoticeable there. Unless one has had some experience| | with the dye pot, the advice of an ex- | pert should be sought before trying any | valuable pieces. | Electric light cords shculd be watched for worn places, as there is genuine dan- ger if the casing becomes badly broken. | The insurance companies can attest to| many instances where such carelessness resulted in conflagration. There, again, |a small plece of adhesive tape is useful | It can be touched with crayon colors to make it the right shade. | (Copyright, 1930.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Mental Unemployment: Unemployment always has been and always will be a problem. This is be- cause industry has its ups and downs. They are to be expected. If a person can economize here and there, he can usuaily tide over the lean periods. A great deal depends on one's attitude, one’s psychological make-up. | | | | | | | VARNISH 1S ONE OF THE WAYS TO GIVE A BEAUTY TREATMENT TO does not continue of it- by any number of ex- its. A few of them are suggested today. An oilcloth or linoleum betrays its age in the places where most wear comes. If an ition of varnish is put on before pattern becomes worn, it will keep it in its fresh-looking condition Of all the f¢ of unemployment, mental unemployment is by far the most devastating. There should be some way ': tflml woxtkh for unemployed minds. ut, again, the problem is squarely uj to the individual. . » It has been estimated that very few people use more than one-fifth of their potential mental energy. I can easily | accept the estimate. Spend one hour each evening with the proper sort of books for six months and you will acquire the equivalent of & grammar school education. Work at it for two years and you will have the equivalent of a high school education. Keep it up four years and you can take your place beside almost any bach- elor of arts. so far as usable information is concerned. ‘There's a lot of wealth lying idle in the public libraries. Salvage that and you salvage yourself. Another thing—the human brain is strikingly similar to the muscles of your | arms, modern educational theories to| | the contrary. )bn.uu the more powerful they become. more you use your There are those who have become alarmed about the future of the human race. Their tmm'.emiim;n is that we are, as a race, actually losing ground men- tally; that we have exchanged the aristocracy of mensal aggressiveness for the democracy of mental acquiescence. (Copyright, 130. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif, February 19 (N.ANA)—Edward Marshall, operatic baritone, will probably be Bebe Daniels’ leading man for her forthcoming pic-| ture. ‘When you stop to think of the type of thing Bebe Daniels was dding a few years ago and the type of leading ter Wolfe, originally chosen | - ':mf’ Wolfe is lulrflmoreumn- ic-lool than rshall, although Hofly'buc make-up men can put any type face they wish on an actor, and if the job is Pplastic surgeons are called in, the actor | ®iven another nose, or another pair of ears, or a tuck taken in his chin, or his eyebrows lifted—and away they go! ‘Walter Wolfe came to dollywood fresh from musical successes on the Eastern Coast. He is under contract to the Shuberts, it seems. And they sud- denly boosted his salary to $6,000 per week, the rumor goes, when the first ap- es were made for the “Dixiana” . At any rate, whether it happened precisely this way or not, the $6,000 per ‘week was a bit thick for even a good baritone. Grand ofera stars have been accus- tomed, in the main, to glory but very lég-lc spare cash. The )‘euopa:!un u}:l icago opera companies count penn with any one who is not a box-office eadliner. And these children of fame | MERRICK. dances the drum-beat in a weird cere- monial. photographed in color and with the lfihoue::: :{ dthemd:nur mlkin{h a grotesque giant double image on the background. In a day of revues such material is out of the ordinary—and the Paul Whiteman music is good for a bit of savagery also. i Plastic Surgeon (indicating a sta who has just entered the room)—That's one of my chins. Obese Lady (with a sigh)—I wish she had one of mine. Lon chaney was once a song-and- dance man on the legitimate. He also spent some time with a circus troupe. He found in silent pictures the ideal medium. He has abgndoned it only after a bitter Struggl studio won a final victory, due to the fact that producers are “all for one and one for all” in this talkie matter. There are no silents being made in Hollywood. If there were, it is safe to bet that Lon Chaney would be on that lot making pictures in the medium that is most natural to him. ‘When Lawrence Tibbett refused to do a stunt in Metro's big revue he estab. lished screen precedent. So thorough Hollywoodized had the Barrymores be- come that John Barrymore did a scene from “Richard III” in the Warner slaughter which featured 70 famous stars. The village is a bit bewildered in the return of its big lion, for Tibbett now enjoys that position in cinemaland. ml rzb(::um their star det luxe very {m;:“i lea; new programs for some o concerts, and beyond their reach socially by reason of eight concerts to give in fortnight’s time. ‘You would have to live in Hollywood to appreciate the naive wonder of this procedure to children of gelatin dynas- ties. To them the world beyond the studio lights is a sad place. where un- fortunate people are forced to exist be- casks | cause they have not beauty and fame. claim they deserve an . When you sit and quaff the sort of suds served out these days as stage beer you're earning your money. John Murray Anderson, brought out | of New York for the sole purpose of giving the Paul Whiteman revue some- thing different, seems to have been ‘worth the rather fat salary it required to get him here. | We have had at various times jungle touches in our celluloid. The most DAILY DIET RECIPE THE NEW YORKER. Roquefort cheese, four ounces. cheese, four oun ‘The most amusing actor in the busi- ness is the red-headed Charles Bick- ford, who did such a perfect bit of work as Matt in Greta Garbo's first talking Ppicture. begin with, he is never satisfied with himself or with any work he dBes. He grouses continually either at the part or over his rendering of it. He is engaged in more weird enterprises than any colony member. They include half ownership in a shark-hunting business. ‘The shark hide is in great demand for leather at the present time. The fins are a rare delicacy in China, and are shipped there to grace the tables of Oriental gourmets, bringing $2 the n, pound. He has rolled up a fat bank account by buying abandoned gasoline service stations and running them indepen- dently. A recent purc) was a garage and restaurant in Culver City. He also owns several whalin, which operate off the Mexican coast. He is about 6 feet 1—a mighty he-man, with fiery-red hair. gift of fate or of the beauty have not been able to asces . the picture of the red-blooded, hard- living, two-fisted son of the great open spaces. the gay nineties included “Go back and sit down,” “Skidoo, your mother know you're out?” dfather used to say “Sock- at the edge, a little adhesive tape in a in which the| Whether this is lor I But it's dramatic, at any rate, and fits into | According to Gene Markey, slang of Way | “Does FEATURES. Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. February 19, 1861.—While the peace convention, in session here, continued |its efforts today to find a solution for the troubles that are disrupting the| Unlon, word was received of the in-: { auguration of Jefferson Davis as Pres- lident of the Confederate States of | America, and of the progress of Abra- ham Lincoln in his journey toward Washington for his inauguration as! President of the United States March 4. | The peace convention again failed to | reach a vote today on any of the plans | suggested as a means of preventing, at least, the secession of more States, in- cluding Virginia, from the Union. The delay seemed to be due to the activities | {of certain State delegations that are | evidently determined to prevent any | plan being adopted that may satisfy | Virginia and the other border slave | states. | With much interest and deep con- cern, news was recelved over the elec- tric telegraph wires of the inauguration | | of President Davis at Montgomery, Ala | yesterday. The* ceremonies were de. scribed as the “grandest pageant ever | witnessed in the South.” “I enter upon the duties of the of- fice to which I have been chosen,” | said President Davis in his inaugural | address, “with the hope that the be- ginning of our career as a Confederacy may not be obstructed by hostile op | position to our enjoyment of a sepa- rate existence and independence, which we have asserted and with the blessing | of Providence intend to maintain.” | | Mr. Lincoln, President-elect, con-| | tinuing his progress toward this city, { was met with enthusiastic demonstra- | tions everywhere his train stopped be- | tween Albany and New York City. Speaking to an immense throng at Poughkeepsie, Mr. Lincoln said: “I don’t say that in the recent elec- | tion the people did the wisest thing they could. Indeed, I don't think they did, but I do say that, in accepting | the great trust committed to me, which I do with a determination to endeavor to prove worthy of it, I must rely on the people of the whole country for ! support, and with their sustaining aid | even I, humble as I am, cannot fail to carry the Ship of State safely through the storm. “I trust that, in the course I shall pursue, I shall be sustained not only by the party that elected me, but by the patriotic people of the whole coun- i | | OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI Children’s Pattern. | The teacher becomes the pattern for all the pupils in the class. Nobody else has such influence over children be- | tween 6 and 10 years of age as the teacher. “My techer says—" is the thunder from Sinai. How careful the teacher must be to merit that trust, to carry that responsibility truly and bravely! How.conscious she must be of it, lest,” unaware, she furnish the wrong pattern! A little girl had very sore hands. They were chafed and raw from ex- posure to water and frost. Her mother |could not imagine the reason, because {the child had warm gloves, her hands | were carefully washed, dried and pow- dered. As they became tender, then sore, the care and attention were doubled. Still the unhappy hands. Al- ways the child had a very happy atti- tude toward it all. She seemed to enjoy the condition. One day her mother cried as she bathed and tended the frosted hands. “Don't cry about it, mother. I like| them that way. My teacher has redder | knuckles than mine—oh, much redder. I like my hands to be like hers.” ‘The secret was out! This teacher had a difficulty with her hands. The chalk dust cracked the skin, and in spite of all her care the knuckles were often red 1and angry, with little cracks showing through. "The child discovered that by wetting her hands and exposing them to the frosty winds she fould have red knuckles, too. Usually the children copy the right | things, but don’t overlook the fact that {anything the teacher is, does, lives, is copied by her admiring group. Any little mannerism, any trick of speech, |of gesture, of temper, is noted and copied by one or more of the watchful H!g: o}nl. vely hands make their impression. i Little girls—and little boys, too—long- | ingly admire the well kept hands of | their teachers. And if the dear teacher |lays her hand in benadiction upon some towseled head the joy is unbounded. The teacher’s voice is the standard | for the children. If it is pleasant and | firm and clear, they will copy it. If it| % is loud and harsh and unpleasant, they wfll1 Copiult to an n;n‘nectlon. It is nlle:i easier copy the untrained persor th’.l'll: th"ee cui:(ured one. S \ e teacher's speech is the standard of the class. If the teacher speaks well, |if her words are chosen with care, if )l::tr m:lx:‘ner tl})\x upemh direct and eresting, the cj will uire : Iu!Al Lh('l-let qualities. s sweet-temperad teacher is a host In herself.” The children are never un- | certain, never moody. They will take on the serenity of the teacher’s mood the moment they enter the class room. They will be patient with each other and courteous in their attitudes. But let the teacher be of uncertain temper and the whole atmosphere takes on chnrled' tension and trouble is immi: nent. . The teacher is the children’s pattern. She is their leader, guide and lllpl-hol’fly. How careful, watchful, reverently re- sponsible she must be! Savory Baked Ham. Soak a ham overnight in cold water to cover. Wash thoroughly and place in a kettle and let cook for about five hours slowly, or cook in a Kuluu cooker for about one hour. t the ham cool in the water in which it was cooked. When cool remove the outside skin and rub brown si over the sur- face of the ham. Stick with cloves, place in a baking pan, cover, and cook + slowly for an hour. i MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. 1 Baby’s Clothes Rack. Famous Cinderellas—Good and Bad Queen Christina of Spain Married Tobacconist's Son and Made Him a Duke. BY J. P. GLASS. ‘This is the story of a male Cinderella. ‘The first time Queen Christina of Spain saw Frederick Munoz he was trudging along a high road leading into Madrid. Her majesty’s carriage passed him. Her handkerchief mped out, and Munoz, picking it up running after her, restored it. He was 22, tall and handsome, in the uniform of a private soldier. Christina regarded him approvingly in the mo- ment before her coachman started his horses again. As for Frederick, he thought nothing of tiis incident. He could not guess what a romance it had opened for him. Christina’s husband, King FPrederic! VII, died shortly after. His widow, having never loved him, did not mour him. For the time being she was the “AS THEY PREPARED TO PART SHE ruler of Spain, for she had contrived to get herself appointed regent during the minority of her daughter, Isabella II. Still young, still beautiful, she had fallen in love with Frederick Munoz in one brief encounter. Of course, the outh would never dare to make love to er. She decided to wco him. This bizarre romance proceeded in a little tobacconist’s shop kept by Fred- | erick’s father in an obscure street of Madrid. Heavily veiled, Christina went to the shop at hours when young Munoz would be there. On the fourth night she asked him to 'ompany her to the end of the street. As they prepared to part she suddenly uncovered her face. ‘The audacity of the steps by which Christina made the poor private soldier her husband aroused admiration. First she had him discharged from the army. Next she commissioned him an officer | BEAUTY CHATS Facial Massage. ‘There are all sorts of things to use when massaging the face. You can use plain almond pil, provided you get the very best quality. This is very cleans- ing, and so light that I prefer it to anything else. It cannot clog the pores, and the little that remains in the skin after being wiped off is readily absorbed and gives the skin the nourishment and lubrication it needs. Or, if the skin is oily, the ofl can be washed off easily with a cloth wrung from soapy hot water, rinsed with hot water and then cold, and then the usual astringents can be applied. There is olive oil, too, but this is thicker than almond oil, though it is very cleansing and very effective. Al- mond oll does not smell like almonds, incidentally. And there is the cleansing cream, the formula of which is often given here. It is good, though I am more and more advising against a cream, when an oil will do better. S This is all for young women. Oldéer ‘women need a heavier cream with body. especially for around the eyes and mouth and down the sides of the nose. Oddly enough, wrinkles form from the | inner part of the eyes and radiate down the nose, as early as 35 years with some women. They should not, but a good way to stop them is to keep the skin as moist with cream as is possible. Be sure that the flesh-building or wrinkle A Favorite . for Over 40 Years | in her bodyguard, where she could have | him always near her. | Her infatuation soon wes noticed. Some of her ministers were for inter- | ferring, but others were not. Spain was, in fact, rent by political factions, and there were many ambitious persons |who wished Christina deposed. These felt that her intrigue with a common | soldier would ruin her. < Those who favored interference set afoot a conspiracy against Munoz. The queen heard of it. A few hours later |in the presence of a few trusted inti- | mates she married him. That he might | be of a rank approaching her own, she | created him Duke of Rienzares. Munoz, happily, was a really fine character. From the start his sole con- cern had been loyally to serve his {queen. Christina so loved him she SUDDENLY UNCOVERED HER FACE.” started machinations to make him king. | But he refused to let her go on. | _“I have no concern with courts and thrones,” he said. “I am no politician. We'll both be unhappy if you carry things too far.” Civil wars in Spain brought Christina much unhappiness. She had to flee to France. Through all her troubles, how- ever, she was certain of domestic hap- piness. The duke, despite .his humble | birth, had ‘all the attributes of a gen- | tleman. | “She ‘gave him several children, to | whom he was a fine parent. When he | died, not long after the close of the Franco-Prussian War, he was sincerely | mourned by every one. Christina died in 1878. just a few years before the birth of her great- grandson, Alfonso XIII. Peace had been | restored and she had returned to Spain. (Copyright, 1930 BY ERNA KENT FORBES massage cream you buy for this is god, for just ordinary cold cream is uscless. It s almost impossible to massage we come to almond oil—merely because massage motions are more effective if massage by slapping the face with a patter. Blue Eyes.—Continue to massage with the cocoa butter, and do not heat the oil, as you have been doing; the oniy when passed over it will take up a littlc of the oil. I should think you were a bit underweight for your arms to need filling out, and it would then be an ef- fective and quicker method if you built u}) your general weight. Drink a quart of milk every day or take a tablespoon- ful of olive oil in an equal amount of fruit juice three times a day to put on weight. Brown Eyes.—I do not think there is anything to be done about your eyes. Apparently what you are bothered about is merely a natural characteristic. = St e An ordinary plece of iron is itself nothing more or less than millions of tiny magnets. Every atom of iron is a tiny magnet with its own north and south pole. But we don't notice it because all these tiny magnets are higgledy-piggledy, as it were, and neutralize each other's magnetism. without using something oily, so again | the skin is well lubricated. Otherwise, | heating needed is enough so the paln | LITTLE BENNY LEE PAPE. I was sitting on Puds Simkinses steps tawking to him about diffrent subjecks, and I sed, I met the gerl in the corner house, her name is Emmly Star. Tell me something I dont know, Puds sed, and I sed, Why, G, do you know her? and he sed, Sure I do, she came around twice to borrow the lend of some onions and things. . G, thats just how I met her, ong it was eggs and things, I sed. G, she's | certeny pritty all rite, aint she? I sed. | How about all those long black cerls? 15w about all_those short white | teeth? Puds sed. She certeny can bor- row, though, cant she? he sed, and I. sed, O well, I gess if her mother sends | her I gess shie has to go. Wich just then who started to come | up but Emmly Star with her little bas- kit, me saying, G, heer she comes, and Puds sed, Good nite and she’s going to | borrow some more, she’s got that little baskit. G wizz my mother told me to tell her no in case she tried to borrow agen ,and good nite I dont wunt to tell her no, Im going in the house and | if she rings the bell somebody elts can | tell her no, he sed. | Wich he started to, and I sed, Well ! hay, wait, she’s libel to ask me to get | it from my house if she cant get it from yours, and Im sippose to tell her no too. Im going in with you, I sed. ‘Wich I quick did, and we hid behind the door in the frunt room and waited a long while and then the doorbel! | rang and the Simkinses cook went and | opened the door and wawked back agen ‘ saying to herself, I never seen the beet of that mailman, he could ring the bell 10 times a day and he wouldent bring me a single blessed letter. Proving it was ony the letter carrier, and me and Puds went out agen and Emmly Star wasent anywhere in site, Puds saying, Aw heck I bet she was ony going to the store. G wizz she mite of stopped and tawked to us, he sed, and I sed, Aw heck. And we kepp on sitting there feeling | werse insted of better. Proving its not good to get too sis picious, especially at the wrong time 1 My Neighbor Says: Slices of fish should be turned often while being broiled. Broil a whole fish first on the flesh side until done, then broil on the skin side until crisp and brown. Those who do much sweeping will find that a piece of velvet glued to the part of the broom handle on which the hands rest will prevent blistering of the hands. To remove stain left by choco- late ice cream, sprinkle the spot with borax and soak the cloth in ! | cold water, then in boiling water. Small rugs may be made to look | | ke new if washed with “dry" | | suds applied with a scrubbing brush. Shake out excess water from the brush before starting. v;'lm the rugs dry with clean clof 3 Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. | { Make-up Box. ! There is a good deal of talk and scheming nowadays to make one room | do the duty of two. In many small houses and apartments it is a necessity | —or at least a great convenience—to turn the daytime living room into an | occasional sleeping room and of course ; | & great many women who work, live in | | hotel or | The powder table and powder box, | | although they were developed at a time { when the ladies who used them had | | plenty of room—for they are distinctly | associated, in origin, with some of the great court beauties of France—are the aids of the girl who would make her bed room an attractive living room and a convenient dressing room. For these powder tables and powder boxes are large enough to contain all the paraphernalia of makeup needed by any woman. The boxes are just as convenient. They lack only the stand- ard or base of the powder tables. Their capacity for holding creams and lotions, powder and rouge, is just as great. And powder boxes are more convenient than the tables because they can be Ell.‘ed on any table when you use em. “Ain't it funny how the bizness other ! folks keep buttin’ into is always some- ‘?‘:’e you partic’larly wanted to handle alone.” (Copyright, 1930.) cerackling CRISP Rice KRrispres snap and pop in milk or cream. There never was a crisper cereal, Delicious rice toasted into nourishing bubbles. Grea for children. ; Serve for breakfast, lunch or dinner. With fruits or berries, sweetened with honey. Use in macaroons, candies. Order a red-and- green package from your | about one month. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. JN Edgarde Simone’s studio on the third floor of an apartment house on I street there are five marble busts ¢+ Which few people would have any dif- ficulty in identify- ing. First in order is that grand old gl:n ‘ol the United ates Supreme Court, Oliver Wen- dell Holmes. The next is Sir Esme Howard, Am- bassador of Great | Britain, who leaves the United States the latter part of February. The third is Gen. John J. Pershing. The fourth is George W. Wicker- sham, chairman of President Hoover's Law Enforcement Commission. And the last is Patrick J. Hurley, Secretary of War. These flve marble portraits were made by Simone within the space of Soon these five, along with 49 other works of the sculp- tor, are to be exhibited at the National Gallery of Art in the United States National Museum. Simone, who has been decorated three times by the King of Italy, has been in Washington only since the first of January of this year. He came here for the express gur- pose of making busts of those high in the official life of this country. Each of the five national figures whose busts he has completed sat for him. Justce Holmes posed three hours at different times while Simone fashioned his likeness in clay. Gen. Pershing sat JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. DAD AND UNCLE JOHN SEE ONE ANOTHER NEARLY EVERY DAY, UNCLE JOHN, WHO HAS A PROPENSITY FOR TELLING SCOTCH JOKES, TOLD ME THE J. M. Q—Each other is used in refer- ring to two; one another is used in referring to more than two. “Dad anc¢ Uncle John see each other” is the cor- rect form. Propensity (pro - PEN - se-te) means disposition or inclination to some ac- tion, course of action, habit, etc.; as, to do evil is a natural propensity; with all his lordly propensit'es, he was unabl: to attract the princess. 57 for two hours. The others gave him a like amount of time. Of the five busts completed, the sculp- tor is loudest in his praise of the one of Wickersham. Next to the last of the series to be completed, Simone regards it as probably the best of all. Of the five who sat for him, probably the one who aroused in him the great- est enthusiasm was the venerable Holmes. When I asked for his impres- slons of the famous jurist, Simone could only stretch out both hands in an em- phatic gesture and say: “Marvelous! Simply marvelous!” Included in his exhibit at the Na- tional Gallery of Art, in addition to these five prominent Americans, will be a bust of Mussolini, Edward Spafford, one-time national commander of the American Legion; Howard Chandler Christy and others. All but four of the 54 pleces to be exhibited were made by Simone since he first came to Amer- ica two years ago. ‘The Italian sculptor, who served dur- ing the entire war as a volunteer pri- vale and wears the Croix de Guerre has 26 of his monuments erected in 26 different cities throughout the world. One of his most famous is the war memorial monument to the Alpines in Ttaly, unveiled by the King of Italy. WINTERTIME . BY D. C. PEATTI It is the contention of some thaf every place has its genius loci, its pars ticular spirit, a something that hums, unheard, even in Summer air at noon- time; that oozes out from the walls of many houses; that rises up from the ground like mist on an Autumn evening. Thus it is obvious what is the genius loci of the spot in Rouen where Joan of Arc was burned; to this day we hear the wailing of the crowd, the shouting of the English captains, the tolling of the cathedral bells, the cracking of the faggots about the slim girl at the stake. It is a spot with a genius loci. Europe, in almost every square inch, is deep as velvet in this sort of quality. In America it is rarer, if you mean only the more sort of “feel.” the rich historical association. But there is a subtler sort of genius rcl in the Virginia woods, in Winter, or instance. It does not reside in historical associations alone, though one can easily catch a ghostly gll.ul?‘rse of a scarlet Colonial coach vanishing down an old wood-road, or fancy the phantom guns of the Civil War. If you want to see finer trees, you |can go to California; the rivers are grander in the Middle West; farms are more cozy and landscapes more land- scapish in New England. To me the something that is silvery and sadly beautiful breathes out from the Vir- ginia woods, down the Potomac, toward Predericksburg and never more so than in the very season when nobody pic- nics and scatters tin cans. ‘The cry of the signal crow, the creak- lng of two old trees that, rubbing to- gether, have worn each other raw, the Tunning of a little brook underneath its coating of ice, the rattling of the yam-pods, hanging silvery and empty on their vines, the melancholy form | of Virginia cedars, the russet of beard- grass in ed meadows, half | blanketed in ligering snows, the twirl of quiet smoke from a countryman's chlmney—the!y are all but part of the genjus loci of Virginia. intothekenle When Heinz tomatoes are fully ripe, off the vines they go—into the ketchup kettles. Kitchens right on the spot capture that fresh taste of sunny gardens— there’s no chance for a bit of that precious flavor to escape. That's why the flavor of Heinz Temato Ketchup is nnmistakable. You recognize it whenever and wherever you taste it. grocer. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. \ ‘;:‘c'fl:,\,! m&er" quite feelingly. and a “running | ee] A a “running | kick” seemed to be his favorite means | of administering punishment. Arnold Korff, famous European direc- tor, has been lured to Hollywood, which shows you the way the wind is blowing | One Mother Says: 5 regarding foreign releases. The Ger-| To make a clothes rack for baby's man, French and Russian directors of | clothes, I procured a thin bosrd about the past will be stealing back again. | 6 by 22 inches, such as they use in dry Korft is also an actor ‘of note in|goods Europe. I am told he has been deco-| on. rated with the Prussian order of the|in Eagle, the Spanish order of Isa- | at the back by glue! bella, the Belgian order of Leopold. | heavy paper over the 1f he remains in Hollywood, he'll' it to dry. Then I learn to take more orders, and to give small brass hooks at orders when hunger seizes and attached a cord at midday. X (Copy#ight, 1930.) WUP Y. copsrisnt, 19%0) Bacon, four or six slices. Paprika, one and one-half tea- HEINZ Tomato Ketchup SERVES 4 OR 6§ PORTIONS. Mix together cream and Roque- 8) d this on the WhiteHouse Coffee ol Finer Flavor for over 40 years! Rt DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein, starch, fat. Should only be eaten in mod- eration and occasionally by adults normal who are of average or under weight. intervals top to hang |

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