Evening Star Newspaper, May 21, 1930, Page 37

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sweater knitted from mauve wool with crocheted border of yellow and pur- BEDTIME STORIES Reddy Finds His Mouse. Fo. 204 e not lete suecess, you may 7ot not pogsesy. P Sown's oy had_one. P-4 Ay wn's Boy gone. Presently Reddy came to the bushes een Meadows. “It %o do that, Where Farmer' Probably it was nothln&'n interest me, but -at least it will satisfy grounc gerly search all around that was puzsied. He didn't get louse smell. He poked his nose the leaves, into every little bunch Home in Good Taste BY SARA WILAND. A very lovely affair is this lantern- lke bracket and container for a trail- N plllnb—-poeillly when it is fille§ vy. ‘There are s0 many. places where such & fixture might be used. Pirst of all we think of it as an exterior decoration; a'h! by ‘the front door it might be most If your house has a tiny porch it might be 5o arranged that the ivy lan- tern could be suspended from the center of the celling of the porch in place of a lantern. In the sun room one or two of these lanterns would be very effective. If archway from the living to the sun room one of these fixtures could be placed on each side f it. One each side of a group of ‘windows would give a ing effect, course, one could be suspended of the sun room if it terfere with any el hnmum«w course, tion whicl appointed . | selves the , | those who you, | some fault in the of the new sleeveless sweate! ‘The diagram gives 18 inches for the lower edge of the front and back— that is & total hip measurement of 36 inches. In making your own pattern, measurement to ings for the arms need not be changed, because they allow plenty of room for almost any figure, ‘When the swea is up sides of back and front with wool, threaded into a large needle and, using a neat crochet stitch, make a o:x‘m-utm‘ border around the x finished sew Tofal lungth.qoom BY THORNTON W. BURGESS £ - i z ; _éagffi EF EQE b gi REzud T Eifgg 3 5 28z ..oodorfll:!l‘ 't want no maid. It makes me the work myself if I pay Ise to do it an’ it makes me madder to see it left undone.” (Copyright. 1930.) ‘The men who fail are all around us, discouraged, broken, weary gents, and sometimes they pursue and hound us with sad requests for 50 cents. They have no savings wisely salted, they lack the shilling and the crown, and, 'f'v' ined, sweenied and string-halted, they drag themselves around the town. ‘There is no sadder thing, I'm weening, than gazing on the men who fail, the broken delegates careening toward the poorhouse or the jall. Once they were young and had ambition, they dreamed their dreams, like other wights, they would attain a fine condition, and they would scale the shining heights. One man, perchance, was fond of roaming, he didn’t like the three wains; he asks their aid when he is goaded by hunger’s well known pangs and pains. One was exceeding gay and frisky, and, since he'd be a time dead, he bought large stoups of gin and whiskey, e | painted all the village red. The rector 'altd him he was head- he actions for busis to tie him up. . | is_the plural of “d THE EVENING Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. In every community, in fact in most every household, there are sel eritics who take upon them: burden of sweeping in front of every do:lr but their own. 'rh‘:z nr: ways manage to point oul ment, -feeding or general care of every child except their own. Many times these critics have no children of their own, but their inter- est in the neighbors’ children is in mo way snuffed out. Indeed, “Now if that were my child!” is the second sentence 4 these articulate gnats even if they do not follow their advice. Life is always simpler for any of us when we know our are applauded. Mrs, F. R. has a neighborhood situation duplicat- ed a thousand times.in every city. She writes: “My husband and I are faithful readers of your column. Will you give us the benefit of your experience in the following case: We live on a main thor- oughfare, and as our home is always used for ness purposes it is im- actical for us to move. of two and girl of six months. :’:I‘m we have cannot be fenced in, in order to let Jim play safely in the air and sunshine it is necessary “I do all my own work and I cannot watch him constantly. I tried caution- ing him about going on the street, but I was aroused one day by grinding of brakes and the tooting of horns to the 2 old cannot be trusted. He has a fasten a rope to this that will allow him to go as far as he could go safely if he were not tied. At first he object- ed strenuously, but I have talked with him and expiained the reason, and he has become reconciled to the idea. “Nevertheless, it seems that we can't consider ourselves. There are some per- sons who think it terrible to tie him up. T have even heard of humane societies ing & hand in such a matter. We don't feel that this is wrong, but we want your opinion. Our babies are very dear to us, and their welfare is our only consideration.” The of tying up to which hu- mane societies object is quite different, Mrs. F. R. There are parents who are cruel enough to tie children all day to bedposts, then go away and leave them 1o scream or starve or exist as bet they may. The two_things are not to be compared, and I thoroughly approve of using this safe and harmless method of keeping & small child in the yard. We have to be res] ible for these tots, and while this should not be over- done so that he never learns caution, it is & method if you can’t watch him. I think it fa rless cruel than making a child of this age ible for his behavior and then beating him if he runs away. thbors Tave, JOLLY POLLY A Lzum!_in_ English. MOTHER BELONGS YO A CLUB, THE DUES OF WHICH 1S FIVE DOLLARS A YEAR. THE CLUB RECENTLY : ANNOUNCED A DISH- WASHING CONTEST —“The dues are five dollars” is the correct form, not “the dues is.” “Dues” Incentive (In-SEN-tlv) means encour- ent; that which incites, or has a to determination or ‘The love of and the desire of promotion are power- ful incentives to action.” Dl Foodstufts exported from the United “l“t.atouz° last year were valued at $754,- Charm Grows 0 Years Fade before this « « luxurious 4 L COMPLEXION POWNDER Light as the heart of a country maid, fair as her face, fragrant as the wild flowers she plucks . .. such is FRANCENE, complexion powder moderne. Years fade, charm grows at its touch, for FRANCENE protects as surely as it adorns. Choose mediumweight FRANCENE for normal com- plexions; lightweight if your pores are enlarged. Good toilet counters have all modern shades . . . $1 i How FRANCENE | : | Guards Beauty Ordinary face powders mey “‘pack’ your pores. FRANCENE does net, For it cantains @ cherished beauty ingredient, incorporated by a process exclusively FRANCENE'S, Note (fig. 1) how ordinary powders clog pores, and (Ag. 2) how FRANCENE guards without clogging. Test FRANCENE . . . See how lovely yeu'll look. « « FRANCENE Beauty Aids » » Lemon Creme Cleansing Creme Begty Creme Tissue Creme Creme Base Creme ABankle Compect e Compact Shampoo. FRANCENE Last Hours of Great Fighters Surgeons Killed Richard ‘the Lion-Hearted When Enemy Failed. BY J. P. GLASS. “DURING THE ASSAULT AN ARCHER PIERCED RICHARD'S SHOULDER 4 ‘WITH AN ARROW." the Brabancons were mercenaries they loved Richard. and stricken, they cat Gourdon and fiayed him alive. The Vicomte de Limoges, from Poitou,| Richard’s favorite sister, Joan, Queen had sent him two mule burdens of sil-|of Sicily, had married Raymond, Count ver, part of a treasure in his hands.| of Toulouse, but her fortunes were im- It was in Poiton, at the siege of the castle of Chaluz, that Richard the Lion. hearted came to the end of his adven- turous career. Richard sent back word he must have | paired. ~ At this juncture she came :n The ch- all the treasure. Richard, asking aid. She was exgee “No,” replied the vicomte. A “Only ing an heir, and when she found gold belongs to the suzerain; silver is]ard dying the shock was too much for halved.” her. Her child was born dead, and she h_)mhlrd . ro;:ptg marshaled "hil died, t00, & few hours after Richard. oops, mostly Brabancon mercenaries,| The; Burie i B miarohed off o seise the Temainder | e, Tat the. vt o Laelr ather, of the booty. He believed it to be con-| Henry II founder of the Plantagenet cealed in the castle of Chaluz. line in Engiand. During the assault an arched named Bertrand de Gourdon, shooti: from the walls, pierced Richard’s shoulder with an arrow. The wound was slight and no fear was felt, but Richards surgeons mangled the wound terribly in trying to extract the arrow head. The wound festered, and soon it was appar- ent that the warrior must die. Richard’s captain, Mercadet, pushed on the attack and captured the castle. He brought Bertrand de Gourdon to the tent of his victim. He expected that Richard would order a punishment for the archer, but acted a nobler role. ! “Villain,” he ssked when Gourdon was brought before him, ‘“‘wherefore hast thou slain me?” “Because,” was the reply, “thou hast with thine own hand killed my father and my two brothers. Torture me as thou wilt, I shall rejoice in having freed the world of a tyrant.” Richard's fevered eyes filled with ad- " be sald, “as & braye “Let this man go free,” he commanded. Mercadet obeyed him. But though My Neighbor Says: Prunes used in p) sal shoula e smakectnwarrs water . for 10 or more minutes so that polish for mahog: is a tablespoonful of olive oll mixed with & teaspoonful of Apply the fluld with a 1 after the wood hes been dusted. Then polish thor- oughly with & soft, clean duster. When making cream sauce or using flour for thickening, if you use pastry fiour it will mix easler, and there will be much less dan- {::'ox its lumping than if you use d flour. After a room has been painted, be entirely gone by ; Today in Washington History May 21, 1885.—Mrs. Lincoln has suf- :’:" prostration FEATURES. UNCLE SAM keeps a wary eye on his pocket change. The other day he tumed down an|g offer to make $3,400 alear profit by turning out a new 50-cent piece. And he would have had to make only 10,000 of them. In all ility a chance to make an mm:g,uo “within _a few months will be spurned as well. But be'd have to make 500,000 new “four- bit” pleces in this instance. ‘The two issues were to have been commemorative coins—the first t| ¢ommemorating n presented a martial appear- it attracted a large crowd on the streets along which they passed. Mr. Davis is reported to have been captured in North Carolina, although there is a later and unconfirmed report that he was taken into fl.hod‘y in Texas. " | have been issued du the seventy - fifth anniversary of the : i SONNYSAYINGS at_Yorktown. b il In the first in- ted. stance a check for " | $5,000 was sent the ‘Treasury to cover the entire amount of the well as the cost of minting. not a chance in the world to But Uncle Sam declined. As a matter of fact, commemorative melting pot. And of those 2,134,000 shiny Stone Mountain coins issued not so long ago, Uncle Sam reports sadly: “It is understood that large num- bers of them are on band, unsold, at the banks.” Experience of the past 10 years has had its effect. Fifteen special that time— an average of & new half dollar every eight months. And they have been boomerangs. While a tee is required that ethad by Which they an be prevented W] can Trom eventually getting back o the . T'd better break ‘Treasury. quick—kill it in'antly so it 't suffer. (Copyright, 1930). for alloy sells poun pois d. Production figures for 200,000 half!ville, Tex., farmer. \ others, it’s for you o « o this new, delicious cereal with a “VEGETABLE EFFECT” + + « to help you regulate your children’s health in 2 manner s attvactive that they give you_oomplete cooperation in HEINZ of “$7" fame now offers oven- toasted, crunchy, crisp, delicious rice flakes with bulk and roughage qualities similar to those of vegetables . . . a food that prac- tically every child is fond of —plus effects that you, perhaps, have had to struggle for till now. Think what this means to you! Now meals can be “happier”; and mothers and children can be better pals. HIDDEN IN ATTRACTION No, this isn’t a bran-food. All the bene- fits are hidden in the daintiest of texture and most delicious flavor you have ever known in flaked foods. By a special process owned and used by HEINZ exclusively, 2 fine food-sub- stance known as vegerable-cellulose—a part of rice itself—is,retained in the flakes. This food-substance increases in bulk, ot volume, four to six times when mois- ture is absorbed after eating. Thus it forms one of the mildest, gentlest, yet most effective types of bulk and roughage that Science knows—the same type, in fact, as that contained in vegetables themselves—not hassh or irritant in any way. In the form used by HEINZ its preparation costs much more than the rice grain itself, yet you pay no more. No other cereal of any kind provides this fea- ture. HEINZ Rice Flakes alone supply it. REAL IMPROVEMENT Let your children try these alluring rice foods. \ a most delightful way. *E. R. HARDING, M. A, in @ recont avticle says: “That cellulose ia/both s netural and valusble food constit- uent is evident. ‘That it is practically essential is not t0o extravagant a claim. It is found widely distributed in nearly all natural vegetable It is particularly high in such vegetables as celery, lettuce, cabbage, spinach and asparagus. - Fruits like oranges, grapefruit and others of this type con- tain considerable amounts of it.” Fellow, Molion Institute of Industrial Ressarch, fiakes. Serve twice daily for ome weck—in the morning or for dessert at lunch of dinner— start the benefits; once daily thereafter to maintain them. Flakes—then how they begin to brighten and improve. If they prefer others, or if you don't notice res/ improvement in bealth-habits in one week, your grocer will gladly refund the pulchue price. Remember that this important *'vege- table effect” comes only in HEINZ Rice Flakes, so when you order be sute to insist on HEINZ. All the usual energizing food value of rice is included, so this new value in HEINZ Rice Flakes is pure gain to you. Just as good for grown-ups as for children, so let your men folks also have HEINZ Rice Flakes. ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN He will tell you of the efficiency of vegetable-cellulose in absorption of mois ture and resulting bulk and roughage. H. J. HEINZ COMPANY Makers of the 57 Varieties” Enjoy these radio talks. .. Tuesday and Friday mornings at 10:45 Eastern Daylight Time, Miss Gibson of the Home Economics Department, H. J. Heinz Company, will broadcast new and delightful recipes over W)Z, KDKA, and 34 other stations associated with the Natiosal . Broadcasting Compaay. H.J.HEINZ COMPANY CHILDREN CAN’T RESIST THIS FLAVOR SO THEY DON'T RESIST THESE BENEFITS HEINZ RicE Flakes

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