Evening Star Newspaper, May 29, 1930, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

w OMAN 5 racve. Immaculate White Kid Gloves BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. renewing the chalk it -n:"it brushes off while it on it when- cleanses the and gives it that fine finish gloves when they come from an expert glo fave 1] cleanser. ASSEMBLE THE FEW NEEDED AR-| ‘TICLES AND THEN CLEANING PROCESS. in an expert way. Both time and money are saved by home cleaning and quick methods. The one I am giving today s “tried and true.” START THE he g ‘with perspiraf a vu? little liquid ‘white shoe cleansing fluid may be used. Put the gloves on. ohe at a time, so that one hand is free to work over the loved hand. Pour a little of the cleans- fluid onto the large lamb's wool puff. Rub the gloves with the dampened puff until the dirt DAILY DIET RECIPE LAYER CAKE. Butter, % Buger, 1 cu Eggs, 2. T gw.;.‘swcufi" 2 teaspoonfuls. MAKES THREE 8-INCH LAYERS. ter, add sugar a time beating until light. and flavor- flour, powder. Add this to the mixture alternately with the Fold in stiffiy beaten egg whites. Bake in 3 greased 8-inch layer cake tins in moderate oven at 400 degrees F. about 20 min- utes. Put together with any de- sired icing. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes starch, fat, sugar, protein. Lime and iron present, but vitamins have been damaged by powder. Can be eaten occasion- ally and in moderation by normal adults of average or under weight. If there are perspiration marks, touch them lightly with a cloth moistened with the white shoe cleansing fluld. Be sure to shake the bottle well before moistening the cloth with the shoe pol- ish, and do not put the fluid on any but the actual perspiration marks. The polish coats the marks, leaving them white. It does not do anything but whiten them, however. ‘The perspiration has already ruined the gloss of the gloves wherever it has left its marks, so no harm is done there. But this shows why the shoe polish should not be applied to places other than the perspiration marks. The rest of th: gloves themselves will be restored to their accustomed whiteness and re- | tain the desirable gloss. (Copyright. 1930.) | GOOD OR BAD | Bad habits, once they are acquired, stick closer to you, year by year; and when at last it is desired to shake them [off, they still adhere. A man is careless of his debts, he doesn’t pay his bills on time, although he knows the merchant frets, and sorely needs the plunk and dime. Perhaps he has the coin on hand to pay all bills when they are due, to pay for hat and tie and shoe. But he's acquired the habit every merchant wa creditors a pain, and they denounce him as & skate. So he builds up a punk re- nown, he's lost his grip, he cuts no ice; there is no merchant in the town who wants his trade, at any price. The stand-off habit grows apace, like an other sort of guile, until & fellow has no place among the delegates worth while. Another man i8 prompt to pay his monthly bills when they appear; he settles for the bales of hay, and for the case of Volstead beer. He sends the useful picayunes to Baker Jinks and Clothier Jones; he pays the grocer for his prunes, he pays the butcher for his bones. He could not soundly sleep at night if he owed money here and there; he takes a keen and sane delight in paying bills, in being square. So he builds up & splendid fame, unmarred by stand-off type of sins; and merchant princes bless his name, and only wish that he were twins. Perhaps there comes a fateful day when he is broke, and needs some coal; and he hears smil- ing dealers say, “Buy what you want, you neéed no roll.” This sort of habit closer grows, it rides the owner till he’s ol«}‘: and he“ wh% has l‘zd always knows it is an asset, good as gold. ‘WALT MASBON. (Copyright, 1030.) Home in Good Taste “Oh, dear!” one often hears the home furnisher remark as she looks over the window situation in a new . “I don't know just what I am going to do in the way of over- draperies in this room.” ‘Trué enough—Iit does make one won- der. There will have to be a separate pair of glass curtains for each win- dow, of course, but it is not possi- | ble 'to use one pair of overdraperies between | 8WAY because there is & wall space the window casings. Just two windows in separate casings i JRALL TN ‘ will cause & lot more trouble than three or four in one casing, for in the latter case one pair of draperies would be sufficient, whereas in the former a pair should be provided for each. However, the windows may be tied together by the use of one valance run- ning across the tops of both windows, thus making them seem more like a unit than when divided. ‘The woodwork and walls in this room are a parchment color, the floor cover- lime-green Wilton, tains of EDld gsuze and peries of black ground chints. (Copyright, 1980.) 'Y | want to keep the glass cur- overdra- = Naats AUy a.viinG - DUAR, ‘Well, there's Mis' Truman out wavin' her rugs again. (Copyright. 1030.) SUB ROSA BY MIML Forget It. It sounds sllly when a person tells you to forget something which pains you, doesn't 1t? Yet we have a certaln amount of control in our hands when it comes to memory, We do a lot of forgetting when we don't want to; why shouldn’t we make a business of forget- and discouraging things? Memories are like birds. When we them, we can cage them like canaries and have them sing sweet songs to us. If they are as ugly as crows and keep caw-cawing at us, we can give them the air Where they belong. Perhaps you've been out of some little joy which looks big when close to the eye. Naturally, you tend to brood over this like a hen over a set of eggs. Like the hen, you hatch out a lot of ugly ducklings in the shape of ever 80 many more sad feel 3 Maybe you've been cut out of the attentions of some boy friend who now seems as much out of your life and as desirable as the Prince of Wales. If he were the only man in the whole U.8.A., you'd have a right to be grumpy, but you know there are others. A JiIt of this sort is some jolt. After the crash, all of our machinery rattles as though we were coming apart. We've been hit in our pride, which 18 more sensitive than the solar plexus that the doctors talk about. It was worse than the removal of a pair of eranky tohsils. Just here is where the forgetter comes in, You can put out of your mind the faet that were dished out of so much happiness, and start with a clean slate. You can put the forgetter on the map the you pour a bucket of water on a camp fire. You can use that part of your b\‘&.\.nu :’C“k" “oblivion.” 5 en & seems can't bounce the blue e omebody else. Let one nail drive out :noc.her in the board and fill the hole which the first one leaves. A clever cat in the house can drive all these little gnawing memories. A mental mouser is probably the thing you need to make you happy. (Copyright. 1930). Browned Kidney, Pour some salt and boiling water the kidney until all the red col gone. Chop it up raw and remove the ‘white s Diece of butter, onion, and when it is the kidney. Cover Risotto, iblespoonfuls of olive fry it in one tablespoonful chopped onion. Add a cupful of rice and allow to color pale yellow. Pouf on three cupfuls of cold water and leave at the back of the stove until fully cooked. Make a tomato sauce with ba leaf, thyme, and garlic seasoning, an stir into the rice, adding half a cupful or more of grated creese, ferred. ‘This is plain risotto. thing more elaborate of mushrooms, ham Heat two tal and | Do you know mOthS won¥ eat your clothes - if you treat the wool itself to be wool so that the mothworms ca; safe from moth damage. Yes, treat the cloth itself. That's the only sure way Mothproof the n’t eat it. No use trying to find every hungry little moth- worm. Insecticides don’t reach them. They are buried away in the wool. And the smell of moth- balls, from eating, tar-bags, and the like doesn your own experience. Larvex kee, 't keep them as you have probably learned from ps them from eating. It mothproofs. Mothworms will starfe to death on cloth treated with Larvex. This remarkable moth- proofing agent is odorless, non-inflammable and flllmnteed as advertised in agazine. Good Housekeeping SPRAYING LARVEX, for upholstered furniture, coats, suits, etc. One s year. $1 for a pint, or wit! for years, $1.50. RINSING LARVEX, for such washable woolensasblan- kets, is in powder form (50¢c a package) and you just dissolve it in water, soak sweaters, etc. This and dry—that’s all! Both kinds sold by drug and department stores everywhere. The Larvex Corporation,Chrys- ler Building, New York, N. Y. ¢ gmylng lasts a whole atomizer which lasts SPRAYING LARVEX RINSING LARVEX VW adiivuavay, D U, Luciwbal DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why.It Is a Dangerous Practice for Parents to Refuse to Let Their Daughters Have Dates. MISS DIX—I am & young girl and, of course, I want to have dates and go all the ts absolutely refuse to let me go bo; . They tell me that I must wait until of boys and I won't be through college until o Answer.—This letter I8 typical of hun gitls all over the country who are being parents who shut their eyes and up and are women. m{‘m;r u‘“ %md"wlm tf e . who 15 satisfie elr company an for them to take her by the hand.for a nice walk or perhaps a ride in the family car with little brother and sister. Of course, after a while, they suppose she will grow up and want to step out & bit and have beaux and ptrhlgn get married, but that will be a long, long time. Some 30 or 40 or 50 years hence. ‘These benighted parents do not mean to be unkind or tgunnlul. They simply won't allow themselves to see that the miracle has happened. That Betty has turned from a child into & woman and that, like every other girl in the world, she craves the pleasure that bel to her time of life. She wants to have dates. She wants to have boy frien She wants to dance and have all the innocent, silly good times that the other youngsters are having. And what's more, she is going to have them. Honestly and above board if she can. Secretly if she is forced to it. Bhe will meet boys decently and properly if her parents permit. She will pick them up on the street if they don't. ‘The parents who think that they can keep their Betties from knowing boys by refusing to let any boy come to the house or by issuing orders against Betty's having anything to do with boys, simply befool themselves if they think they are obeyed. There never was a girl yet who couldn't outwit father and mother and there are mighty few girls who won't climb out of & window to meet a boy if mother the door on them. . So the matter becomes one of expediency. The girl is going to have dates. 8he 18 going to know boys. And the most elementary, common sense suggests that the wisest thing for the parents to do 8 to accept the situation and make the best of it. Also to realize that the girl is within her rights. Certainly there is every argument in favor of parents permitting their daughters to receive their men callers at home, It gives the girl a background that is of inestimable value as a protection to her. No boy treats the girl whom he visits in her own home and whose father and mother he knows, as he does the girl who sneaks out %o keep dates with him and whom he plcks up at the corner drug store. 80 wake |‘|,p parents, and realize before it is too Iate that your rxht to their dates and their good times and that it is up to you whethet they these innocently and harmlessly or in devibus ways that are full of danger. ROTHY DIX. (Copytight, 1930 L §§§ have a Fluffy Dumplings. Sift two c'urluh of flour with four teaspoonfuls of baking powder and half & teaspoonful of salt. Work in two ta- blespoonfuls of butter with the tips of the nn{;r-, #dding one cupful of milk gradually. ‘Take up heaping tablespoon- fuls. Place on a floured bogrd. Dip the hands in flour and roll little heaps of dough between the hands into little round balls. Have some stock boiling, drop the dumplings in, put on a tight- fitting cover and cook for 12 minutes. Banana Pie. Mesh two bananas through a sieve, add one cupful of sugar, a pinch of salt, and the unbeaten whites of two eggs. Beat all together to a fluffy froth, then add an eighth of a teaspoon- ful of almond extract. Put into a baked pie crust and bake for 20 minutes in a siow oven. Chill and cover with whipped cream. strmm with nuts and cherries. This makes one ple. Tou Will Want to Place 1z Right onYour Table % Now—you can get this flavory Best Foods Mayonnaise—made from the favorite recipe of millions of American home-makers—in this beautiful crystal jar—as different from the old straight, round mayonnaise jars of the past as its delicious contents are different from ordinary mayonnaise. X Smooth, creamy, flavory mayonnaise that makes every salad a better salad —in this lovely, modern jar that you’ll want to place right on your table. est ‘oods ‘““““/ Ma.yo:tFmaise OVER SO M/LLION JARS $SOLD LAST YEARN X IN ITS NEW CRYSTAL JAR NOW~ aoognmg'i’fl'l‘é‘x‘)’x‘ons, INC. A 8.W. ‘Washiagton, &' e District d008 ™ 2 WHEN INSPECTOR SHELBY, CHIEF OF DETECTIVES, TIONIST OF NO MEAN AROUND WASHINGTON. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking and thinking in his private chair and ma sed, Willyum, do you realize that that grandchild of ours has & 6th sense? Meening my sister Gladdises baby, and pop sed, Il consider it a bit of luck if he's in full possession of the usual 5 senses. Now Willyum you just lissen to what happened last nite and youll change ur attitude like a camelion, ma sed. laddis and - Harvey were suddenly awakened from a sound sleep to find the baby crying at the top of his lungs at 3 o'clock in the morning, she sed. Do you mean he wunted to let them know ‘they only had 5 more hours to sleep? pop sed. Certenv not, if vou payed more at- tention to lissening you wouldent have 80 much time for interruptions, ma sed. Well, they noticed immeeditly that it wasent the usual ordnerry cry of normal pane or hunger, but what was 1t, that was the question, ma sed. Heers where the 6th sense comes in, pop sed, and ma sed, Absilutely. This morning they found the frunt door oOpen, and a lot of coats and things scattered pell mell over the foor, but nuthing was axually stolen, ptoving the theef was alarmed in the mist of his low endeavors, 8o the child must of resence of danger away his Iittle subconsclous- ness, and he pfomply warned his par- ents in the only language he is aware of, wich is the language of erying. Nuthing but & 6th sense can account for 8, and Im sure the child will grow up to have marvelliss powers, she sed. ‘Theres ony one thing that worries me, pop sed. I see where the 6th sense comes in all rite, but &erh-p- the little scoundrel was trying to cover the ber- glers tracks h{l making a few sounds of his own. I thihk we'll be lucky if he duzzent grow up to be a 2nd story man’s ferst assistant, he sed. Making ma £0 mad she made him take her to the movies to relieve her feelings. MATTRESSES RENOVATED i Best Servies and Prices COLUMBIA BEDDING CO., Ine. °19 G N.W. National 83 A e TR TR ) AR Ty & Try this recie for Muffins —using FLEATURES. BEDTIME STORIE Finds & Neighbor. & one is aiways o heatt .. As you know, Danny and Nanny | Meadow Mouse had their home on one | side of the Green Meadows. They were living in an old tn can in the bushes. Being fond of the open meadows, as you know, Danny spent a great deal of time cutting private lttle paths in the ,rms of the Green Meadows. These | little paths led from the edge of the bushes out to certain places on the Green Meadows, where the grass was L e ow, as Danny worked cutting private little Daths he ke of Carol thé Meadow Lark and the other was the song of Bubbling Bob the Bobolink. Danny knows the songs of mahy of the feathered folk, but he knows of none in which there is more Jjoyousness than in the songs of these two lovers of the Green Meadows. For Carol the Meadow Lark and Bubbling Bob_the Bobolink are meadowfolk. Although Danny had often stopped to listen, he had not given the subject much thought untll one morning when he had carried a new path quite a dis- tance out on the Gréen Meadows. Then it occurred to him that Carol the Meadow Lark seemed to be singing al- most, over his head. He looked up. There, just as he expected, was Carol. What & joyous song it was! Carol came down at the end of the song and it just happened that he alighted in the grass near Danny. "“That was fine!” squeaked Danny. “What was fine?” asked Carol, pre- tending not to understand. “That song,” said Danny. Then he sighed and added: “I wish I could sing like that. Do you sing just for the pleas- ure of singing?” “Sometimes,” replied Carol. “Just then I was singing to Mrs. Meadow Lark. In fact, I do most of sing- ing to her. When she hears me singing to her, she knows that I am not far away. here is she?” asked Danny quite | bluntly. | " “Just where she should be” replied | . “She Is sitting on her eggs.” | Danny was interested right away. {“Do you mean that you and Mrs. Meadow Lark have & nest somewhere around here?” asked Danny. “We have a nest,” replied Carol, “and there are five eggs in it. I don't say that it 18 around here.” | “You don't say it,” sald Danny, “but | just the same I know it is. If you and I have a home not & very good home, your home is?” spreading his singing ‘The Carol.” Sliced cucumbers, chopped chopped lespoonfuls .chopped green peppers, one-half tea spoonful p-arllm, one-half cufiul StfT mayon- B8Y THORNTON W. BURGESS ‘were singing to ok a long way. hear me % Green Mead e Danny grinned, Carol see him do it that that nest was very ., wasn't fooling him & bit. "I am wondering,” sald Dafny, “if we are “"g‘ob""‘" & = you mean that ving over here, Danny Hm‘“flm“ ™ fne quired Oarol suspiciously. “Of course, I'm living over heve,” ye- Carol “THAT WAS FINE!" SQUEAKED DANNY, led Danny. “You wouldn% find me re if I were not llvln‘( here. Nanny far from here— Where did you say “I didn’t eay,” replied Ouarol; and, wings, he mounted wup, as he went. (Copyright, 1980.) next story—“Danny Watches Tomato Salad. Eight slices tomatoes, one eupful one-fourth euptul two tablespoontuls two tab) celery, onions, salt, one-fourth and three tablespoonfuls chili Arrange to- sauce, Chill ingredients. matoes on lettuce, add cucumbers, cel- salt and chili sauce. onions and green peppers. rinkle and paprika. Top with mly?nnlh PERFUMED - MANICURE POLISH CO | EXQUISITE PERFUME COMPLETELY REPLACES CHEMICAL ODORS IN THIS FINER GENTLER LOVELIER NEW POLISH PERFUMED POLISH=-THREE SHADES $1. POLISH AND SOLVENT COMBINATION $1.80 PERFUMED MANICURE SETS WITH REMOVABLE FITTED COTY BAKELITE TRAYS $3, $4, 8 P !2.!! pugar b.‘fifll o add the lour, el itustes porvens n:' Sel I-Ralu Washington R S L ieh "‘g‘:‘,w;:“: - ::fk:";fi' %'“" s TR ) "iBout 18 ‘mifates """ Self-Rising They’ll be light and fluffy, with that inimitable natural nutty flavor that is characteristic of this pecial growth of June sun-ripened wheat of which WASHINGTON FLOUR is mede. SELF-RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR makes delicious biscuits, waffles, shortcakes, muffins, dou, without the expense for baking powder—and ready The Pantry Pals SELF-RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR and PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR (for fll&m’m) —the autocrats of the pantry. Both are for sale by grocers and delica- tessens in all sizes from 2-lb. sacks up. You can safely and economically bui the i2 and 24 pound sizes, because Y SACK OF WASHINGTON FLOUR 18 GUARANTEED GOOD UNTIL USED. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. ©. ghnuts,

Other pages from this issue: