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' + good article by P. Willis Hinkle just WOMAN'’S PAGE, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, 9 D. C., FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1930. FEATURES, BY MARY Colored handkerchief linen is used for many of the smartest of the new | handkerchiefs. For sports wear you may like the larger sort, while to go With your street suits and dresses, for FOLLOWING NEW FASHION, SHE WEARS A PINK HANDKERCHIEF WITH DRAWNWORK BORDER PULL- ED THROUGH NARROW BELT OF I?!{EKSSAND WHITE STRIPED SILK office or general everyday wear you will find the smaller sort more appropriate. Such handkerchiefs may be made at home, and they are convenient pick-up work for idle moments during vacation days. You may buy an asdsortment of colored linens to match your various dresses, or you may chooe all white, JAsing & border thread to match the dresses. For the larger handkerchiefs you will need & half yard of the linen, which will give two handkerchiefs, and for the smaller sort a third of a yard, which will give three handkerchiefs. The easiest and most effective way to LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I went in ma’s room and she was sewing somethin’ on her sewing ma- chine, and I stood there watching her a while and then I sed, What's it going to be when its finished, ma? What do you wunt, you dident come in here to ask me that, ma sed. Wich I dident, and I sed, Can I have mofley to go to the movies, ma Movies movies movies, is that all children think about nowadays? ma No mam, I sed, and she sed, Well its pritty neer all, I was reeding a very| in last nites paper. He sed that theres| just so much room in a childs mind | for constructive thawt, and if he spends all his time at the movies, whats the result? The result is that all this lim-| ited brain space is intirely taken up| with brawling fites and shooting and wild western horses kicking up their heels, and cowboys and silly peeple fall ing down stairs by the duzzens and herling ples at each other, she sed. Well G wizz, ma thats just exactly what the picture around at the Little Grand is about, I sed. Can I go? I sed. O, whats the use of my pointin things out to you in a sensible manner when I mite as well say No in the ferst place and save my breth, ma sed. Well can I, ma? T sed. No, ma sed. Proving she was righ e GRIME . .. DEADLY FOE OF FAIR SKIN! Grime 1s a deadly foe of beautiful skin—it consists of an oily, sticky substance that gets deep into your pores and which most creams cannot reach. »Marinello Lettuce Brand Cleansing Cream melts in- stantly into the pores, cleans- ing the face of injurious sweaty grime, leaving the skin soft and clear as a rose petal. It does not enlarge the pores, does not grow hair on your face, overcomes dryness, re- moves and prevents wrinkles and blackheads, and wipes away beautifully. Get a jar of Marinello Let- tuce Brand Cleansing Cream— if you are not amazed at the new softness and beauty of your skin after using it twice a day for ten days, return the 1id of your jar and we will re- fund your money. The Mari- nello Company, 72 Fifth Ave. New York. Sold at these Beauty Shops: Cathedral Mansions Beauty Shop Bast lfs/!;flc Connecticut Avenue ‘.kfln - ys.‘ll.vv 18th Street, N. W. ea o) i 1;&::5%1?122!:«!5:1-”!!. N.oW. ea . e A‘n!:‘oy{al: Frese Building o len Powers Ecauty Shop - 725 19th Street, N. W. Florastelle Besuty Mrs. Malone's Ames Beauty Shop 2208 ith Street, N. E. Marinelio Daylight Beauty Shop 705 18th Street, N. W. Anne Campbell Beauty Shop 787 gif] 1%tk Strest, N. . Colony Beauty P Y Benot1 Georgia Avenue, N. W. Marinello Approved Shop 1903 F Street, N. W. The Cosmetique Beauty Shco 35151 Mount Pleasant Street Sax See Beauty Shoppe 3 Homer Building Marguerite Beauty Shop No. 1 N B l!lg!"’"m Avenue, S, E. N i-Nita Beauty Shop s 35 York Road, Baltimore Dorothes Mae Beauty Shoppe 8646 - 3ith St.. Mount Rainier Marinello S 1832 Columbia Road Colored ‘Handkerchief Linen Today in Washington History MARSHALL. BY DONALD A. CRAIG. | finish the edges is by means of pulled threads. This may consist of one, two,| June 27, 1864.—-Officers and the crew three or more threads of contrasting |of the P'}?wd SIEMS:\MI m;u(r:'ner H‘lsig- | land Light, in the charge of Capt. Wil- color, forming a border. Use mercerized | |20d Light, In the sharge of Capt. Wilo colored cotton that comes in sketns.|)7:39 o'clock this morning from City Measure in about three-quarters of an | Point, Va. say that skirmishing has | inch from the edge. This will allow | been kept up all along the line between for a quarter-inch hem, with the first | Cen. Lee's and Gen. Grant's armies, in pulled thread a quarter inch from the | the vicinity of Richmond and Peters- hem. | burg, during the last few da cca- Pull a thread of the linen out about | sionally there has been heavy can- a quarter of an inch from one end, With- | nonading. p | out breaking. carry with the eye care-| The Highland Light brought up to mll.\; mhmfi other :‘_r;‘d and pull (;;Il[flb:’;‘l‘t | Washington from the lm»m the 8th an inc here. is means tha ® | Regiment of Ohio Volunteers, com- | linen is gathered sliightly by the pulled | manded by Maj. Winslow. The time of thread. ‘To the inch-long end tie &|sorvice of the men has rxpired. The | strand of sewing silk, a little longer | regiment numbers about 151 officers and | than the width of the handkerchief. (& Loop the end of the sewing silk around This regiment was on the center of a strand of the colored | Gray cotten, twice as long as the handker- | chief, and tie it with a loose knot. Now at the other end of the hand- the left of i s army, five miles to the left of Petersburg. The men say that ther | been no change in_the ition for several days before t yesterday. thread carefully, thus pulling in the silk. And with the silk pull the double strand of colored cotton. If you at- | tach the colored cotton to the hand- | kerchief thread itself, you will probably break it when it is halfway through. | Continue in this way with the border, drawing in as many threads as you like, and when this is done on the four | sides, turn a hem and hem down with fine cotton. 1930.) (Copyright, My Neighbor Says: When cooking cabbage, place & small pan with vinegar and pep- per on the stove where it will simmer while the cabbage is cooking. In this way you will hardly detect any cabbage odor. | Very thin slices of oranges are | | nice in lemonade or ginger ale | | punch Do _you ever have a soggy ple crust? Try this: After the pan is lined with pastry melt a gen- | | erous tablespoonful of butter and pour over the pastry. Then fill and cover. The bottom crust will stay crisp for several days. To prevent the lower crust of fruit ples becoming soggy, brush it over with the white of an egg before putting in the fruit filling. Jerry Isn't Proud. Sometimes 'tis hard to cling to pride, E'en though you want to and have tried. Jerry Muskrat didn't know just when his new family arrived in the snug home in the bank of the Smiling Pool. You see, Mrs. Muskrat had not allowed Jerry to come into the house for sev- eral days. At first Jerry had thought this was due to crossness on her part. Being rather good-natured himself, he hadn’t minded and had Kl’ompfly left every time Mrs. Muskrat had sent him away. Then one day as he crept up the long hall to see if Mrs. Muskrat was .at home he heard certain sounds that caused him to stop and hold his breath and listen. Then very, very softly he left by the way he had come. He had a queer feeling, did Jerry. When at {last he reached the Big Rock at the | Smiling Pool and climbed out of water, |he looked back toward the entrance to his home with such a funny look on his face. do believe,” said he, “that there are babies in there. I do believe I have a family.” After that Jerry hung around his home more than usual. He was wait- ing for Mrs. Muskrat to come out. At last she did. Of course, she had to come out to eat. “My dear,” said Jerry, “why didn't you tell me? How many are there?” Mrs. Muskrat paid on attention to the first question. To the second she merely answered “Plenty.” So Jerry was no wiser than before. Mrs. Musk- rat did not stay out long, and while she was out she appeared to have some- thing on her mind. Jerry hung around until she had once more gone into the house, “She might have told me how many | there are,” said he in a grieved tone Laughing Brook. 'm their father and kerchief begin drawing the pulled linen | BEDTIME STORIES |of voice, as he swam over toward the| Gen. Sheridan, 0 reports brought by this steamer, has succeeded in getting all his wagon trains across | the James River, with his troops. When | the Highland Light left City Point, it | was expected that Sheridan would join | Grant's main army last night. The railroad has been advanced five | miles from City Point nearer to Peters- burg by the Union Railroad builders. | Yesterday, as the Highland Light was leaving City Point, heavy firing was heard in the direction of Petersburg. By direction of Presid=nt Lincoln, ac- cording to an official announcement to- day, First Lieut. John 1. Salter, Com- | pany K of the 8th Regiment of Minne- | sota Volunteers, has been dishonorably dismissed from the service of the United States. He was found guilty of “gross and unpardonable neglect of duty” in | not properly preparing and signing the | muster ‘and pay rolls of his company, | thereby working great hardship to the men of his command by preventing | them from receiving their Army pay | prior to their start upon a distant ex- | pedition This is an example of the care ex- ercised by President Lincoln in looking after the welfare of the enlisted men, as well as the officers of the Army. He issued the order in Lieut. Salter'’s case only after the most careful and pains- taking investigation of all the facts had been made by the military authori- es. By Th;»mron W. Burgess. expected to find. No, sir; I don't know | just what he expected to find, but I am quite certain he didn’'t find what he expected to. Perhaps he expected to find some cute little babies in fur coats. It he did, he was badly dis- appointed. Of course, it was dark in there and he couldn’t see, but he could feel, and what he felt was a squirming mass of tiny creatures without any fur coats at ail. They were just naked and helpless and squirming. How many there were Jerry couldn't tell, but there “MY DEAR,” SAID JERRY, “WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL ME?" were more than he had any idea there would be. Jerry only remained a minute. There was only one way out of there and he didn’t want to be caught in there by| Mrs. Muskrat. So he got out of there |in a hurry. He went over to his favor- I guess I've a right to know. She said|ite place on the Big Rock to *think that there are plenty, but that doesn't|things over. Somehow, Jerry didn’t mean anything. That might mean | feel at all proud. That mass of squirm- three, or it might mean four or five. ing, helpless, coatless little babies The more Jerry thought it over the|didn’t seem like anything to be proud more he wanted to know how many [of. It didn’t seem as if they could ever children he had. He began watching |be worth looking at. his house, or the entrance to it, for a (Copyright, chance to slip in while Mrs. Muskrat 5 was out. At last he got the chance. Mrs. Muskrat swam over and disap- Pickled Beets. | peared among _the bulrushes around | the Laughing Brook where it enters| COok some small beets until they are the Smiling Pool. Jerry, who had been | tender, then plunge them into cold hiding n;arb: took his chance. The|water and slip off the skins. Cover e s Out of Mgt D6 SWAM| g\, with piced vineger and simmer for 15 minutes. Seal in clean, hot jars. Golden wax beans, the stems of Swiss |to the’ entrance to his home and a| second later he was scrambling up the chard,“or very small carrots, may be pickled in the same way. iong hall to the snug bed room at the wmmer. C;;M end | "Now, I don't know just what Jerry MAYONNAISE ® Summer evening dinner. .. the | dark, cool room . . . the table bare and cool, without its cloth . . . tall candles, cool as snow, the only light -« . and their soft radiance resting on cooling salads and sparkling on the Crystal Jar. . . 1930 ue ® Best Foods Mayonnaise . . . so smooth, so creamy, so flavory! « . . straight from its Crystal Jar, whose cool beauty adds to the | beauty of the table service . . . ® Theseare yours, forso verylittle ! Best Foods ayonnaise Ny & S e S ( it e // the i seew’ crystal Juar now’ packd n A Seomirdent sezes OVER 50 #rieron Jars @uepe de chinee )M'd qo a© et eoffan’ 057, A Sermon for Today BEAUTY CHATS and rub in well. Part again, an inclf away, and repeat, until you have cov< | ered the head. This is to go on the scalp, and not the hair, you knowi And rub it In well afterward; giv the scalp a stimulating massage, Or, apply this with a small, stiff tooth< brush; the brush gives the scalp am excellent friction while it also works the tonic into it. A weekly egg shampoo is excellent with this tonic. Mrs. K. L.'J—When using almond oil to clense skin, pour a small amount of it into your palm and rub it intd the pores all over the face and throat. After the skin takes up as much as it will, wipe off the surface cream, as the ' sofl in the pores will come away with the excess oil. An advantage in using this method is the nourishing treatment you have given the akin while you have been cleansed it. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. BY REV. JORN R. GUNN, Hair Tonics. Have you an effective hair tonie? 1 + + named Rhoda."— |sometimes think everybody needs one Rose in a Lowly Place. “A damsel Acts, xil.13, " | these days; even' quite young women. “Rhoda” means “rose,” and this rose | After so many years of the healthy has kept its bloom for more than 1900 | fashion of .wearing the hair short, it years, and is still sweet and fragrant! |'shouldnt be so. But more and more Rhoda was a slave. The word ren- | women are having their hair perma- dered in our version, “damsel,” means | nently waved—which after a time must a female slave. She served as a maid | be hard on the hair, and which is often in the home of Mary, the mother of |bad for the hair in the beginning. And John Mark and sister of Barnabas. | of late years we"ve been wearing snug- Who would have thought that the | fitting felt hats: these are hot and un- name of this simple maid would survive | healthy. Besides, many of even the through all these centuries? | smartest barber shops and hair dressers Men will give their lives to win fame: | do infinite harm by using carelessly and this servant won it by one little act, | cleaned combs and brushes on their and never knew she had won it. Little | client did she dream that “this that she had | ~Here's my pet tonic—which you can done would be spoken of as & memorial | have made up and can use every day to her” throughout the whole world |or every other day, according to your wherever the Gospel was preached. needs. If it makes your hair oily or Space forbids detailing the incident in | sticky within a week of a shampoo, connection with which her name is|don't mind. It is stimulating, and this mentioned. A servant in Mary’s house, | stimulation makes the scalp oilier, Jellied Veal Loaf. Soften two tablespoonfuls of granu- lated gelatin in half a cupful of cold water for five minutes. Bofl two cup- fuls of soup stock or canned bouillon and add to the gelatin. solved, then chill. veal, one teaspoonful of chopped onion, half a cupful of chopped celery and two teaspoonfuls of chopped green pepper. Put the mixture into loaf pans and let become perfectly set by chilling. Re- move from the mold, slice and serv Thin gravy may be used in place of the soup stock. Eggplant Farci. Prick six small eggplants with a fork and drop them into bo'ling water Cook for 10 minutes, drain, cool and cut open lengthwise. Remove the puip spoon. being careful not » Rid Your Home OF Flies » » Spray Dethol—flies won't bother you any more. They breathe the Dethel mist—and die. Try it on a roomful of them. Then sweep them out—dead, every one. Dethel also wipes out mos- quitoes, roaches, ants, moths, bedbugs and fleas quicker than anything you ever used before. Nothing else like it. Nothing so sure. Try it. Like it—or your money refunded. Dethol Mfg. Co., Inc., Baltimore, Md. SOLD. LAST YEAR Distributed by GOOD DISTRIBUTORS, Inc. 1100 Maryland Avenue S.W., Washington, D. G Tel. District 4608 to | chop fine. Stir until dis- | and cover with s When it begins to | strips of bacon across the top of the stiffen add three cupfuls of chopped | tomatoes and bake in a hot oven for = As A SURPRISE... for “that man” tickle his palate with White Star Tuna Sandwiches on Toast, with crisp lettuce mayonnaise. if he likes it ¢ ¥ Then hear his WY e The preferred brand for more than 17 years. “Great! Let's have these often.” break the skin. Scald two large sweet red peppers, skin them, then put into a bowl with the e'::plam pulp, one tablespoonful of gra lemon rind, two minced shallots, salt and pepper and Reflll the eggplant shells, put into a bnkini dish, packed close, sliced tomatoes. Lay about 25 minutes. Put undér the broiler to brown for a minute before serving. Garnish with parsl for quality ‘and economy “Sweeten it with Domino” Granulated, Tablet, | Superfine, Confecti;nen.' Dainty Lumps, Powdered, Old Fashioned Brown; Yellow: Domino Syrup. Always full wngh( : she had accepted Mary's Saviour as her | Have a weekly shampoo and go on Saviour. On this occasion, as perhaps | with the tonic. It is—Precipitated sul- on many other occasions, she proved | phur, 30 grains; Carbon detergent (or herself loyal and true by a very simple | any antiseptic, at your druggist’s discre. act. | tion), 30 drops; castor ofl, 10 drops. Why has the name of this poor slave | gleohol (95 per cent), four ounces; Tr. girl been preserved and this act eter- | ly call small, are regarded by God, not | according to their apparent magnituds but according to their motive and refe: ence to Him. A rose does not need to be planted in a golden jar in order to diffuse its fra- grance. And here God has given us this rose planted in & lowly place, in order to teach us the sanctity and glory of | the humblest life when devoted to Him. SRS il shaker top bottle if possible. Part your | hair, drop a little along the parting pure, delicious juice of S luscious Concords Contains more non -fattening nourishment than any other fruit. Gives you the natural“sweet”you crave,with the minerals yourbody must have to keep up health and good looks—without adding one ounce to y(l):: weight! ist elch’s— 15: it mt:’V pure, un- it .. onl. Write free booklet wolaht -control. At Welch's, Dept. O Westhield, N.Y. As A Cuance Faom Povarors GRAPE JUICE Free Parking Space SALE $3595 Cash Bladensburg Road at 15th and H Sts. N.E. Margery F.—It is the starch in any flour that fattens, and whole wheat bread would have some starch, rye bread would also have some starch, but white bread 15 almost all starch. (Covyright. 1930.) e Eeervedas Y, Shis act efet- | cathiarides, four drams; cologne, fn}:rl DS TRy nally col ated? 5 3 drams; rose water, to make elght| American exports of industrial ma- teach us that things which we vulgarly | gunce. |chinery in the first four months of call great, and those which we insolent- | ““{jse very little of this. Get it in & |this year totaled $87,533,000, a gain ;);233‘!22‘000 over the same period of H No Finer Food Can Be Had Here is a health food that appeals to every appetite. Maueller’s Spaghetti zastes good and i good—for everybody. Made from farina—the heart | of the wheat—it contains essential health elements. Cooks up light and fluffy in nine minutes’ boiling. Avoidovercooking, though 1 or 2 minutes more may be allowed for extrs tenderness: Your grocer has Moueller’s or can get it foryou PLAIN SPAGHETTI For 1 package of Mueller’s Spaghetti, use 4 qts. rapidly boil- ing water with 1 thsp. salt. Boil 9 minufes. Drain. 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