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WOMAN'S PAGE. Fe;lfhenfitching Is Attractive BY MARY MARSHALL, our young schoolgirl £yme one of the new it-1 « hallis. suggest It so, then we Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. ‘We often marvel at the feedings some children survive. It would seem that the mother were testing the child's ability by offering almost anything eat- able, however indigestible or unsuited to & baby's diet. A recent letter from a hgrrified neighbor outlined the diet that was being fed & 2-months-old child of her acquaintance. In addition to getting & formula that would be excessive for a 6-months-old child, this helpless infant is being fed lime-flavored candy drops (because the mother had heard that lime was ing most of his daytime hours sucking on a nipple filled with honey and corked, and had already been regaled vfll&h mashed potatoes. Two months o If the child has the constitution ca- pable of living after such mistreatment, the mother will be more than ever con- vinced that bables can digest anything. To prevent mothers from making use of tabooed foods, we usually avold men- tion of them. But we get such constant pleas to tell mothers what foods are unsuitable for children that we are appending a list. We trust that mothers 'fiflert‘ad this carefully and remember that for various reasons these foods put an unnecessary burden on the child’s digestion. They are quite all right for adults. Do not feed young children pork, sausage, goose, duck, brains, kidneys or sweetbreads, salt or canned fish, dried beef, or, in general, any kind of fried meats. Do not give a young child hot rolls, biscuits, hot bread, hot cake or cake with nuts or dried fruits in it. Do not give partially cooked cereals. Do rich preserves or rich rd cheeses, pies, pastry, pt with ofl and lemon the simplest kind), nuts or rich candies. When there are so many vegetables, simple cakes, cookies , the elimination THE EVENING October 10, 1861.—McClellan's “Grand Army” has begun its movement from the vicinity of Washington into Vir- ginia in the direction of the Confed- erate forces. ‘The Union division under command of Gen. Smith at Chain Bridge has ad- vanced within the last 24 hours and sac- rificed in the neigh. fftue Rock turnpike and occupyirg Prospect Hill. ‘The other part of the division took the new Artillery road and occupied Smith’s and Maxwell's Hills, & mile and a half this side of Lewinsville. Batteries have been drawn up by the Union forces in prominent m'i& , and Infantry has been ed to support them. After waiting about three hours for the Confederates to put in an ap- pearance the Union skirmishers ad- vanced still further and occupied Lew- insville, while the Confederate forces withdrew, evidently in accordance with & pre-arran; 3 uarters here today it was stated that Lewinsville will be retained by Union forces, as well as the other positions taken yesterday. As all these places have been taken without a struggle, it appears that the Confederates had no_intention of try- ing to hold them in the face of the ad- vance of a large force, such as that under the command of Gen. Smith, Other Union troops advanced further into Virginia. Minor's Hill, to the right of Falls Church, has been occupied by one “i’et-chmem,t &( the Union Army. This detachment within sight of the Confederate kets. i Gen. McClelland and his staff, ac- eompanled_'by Capt. Bucker’s “McClellan Dragoons,” crossed over Chain Brls{e yesterday and spent the entire day mak- ing reconnoisances of the new positions w.ihu fne:\'rfl-.da’ 'ihx'y fon mcf::m' ents of Un! across the Potomac River were kept secret by the military authorities until today. Lemon Sauce. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1930. MODES T i i OF THE MOMENT N N § E EE%E&%EE?EE 8 it iigfiie J Ex‘ '5§ il vagghetiits ikt 3 3 B Gl E 5 % | fol B of pale blue s&)'a/ba' salin. Short ermure W) fustened ot side andd o nothed so that bows SUB ROSA Is This Vanity? BEDTIME STORIE Discovers the Truth. The It was daybreak of the morning after the start of the great fight in the Green Forest. Sammy Jay hastily got mlblumutmdmmm was_suspended. ‘The first unusual feature and the reason for her suspended sentence was that, while the woman admitted this one theft, she had a record for honesty. Conspicuous honesty in her case. For she had found and returned to a cus- tomer, in the little restaurant where she was a waitress, & package contain- ing $500. The other unusual feature was the nature of her theft. Unusual at least it seemed to the man who judged her— for this hard-working woman, aged and care-worn, had stolen a vanity case. It puzzled the judge and it puszled her accusers to understand why a wom- scrupulous honesty, return such a sum when there was small chance of its being discovered in her and then lose her reputation and face a prison sentence for the theft of a vanity case. ‘The man who judged her kindly and leniently saw the pathos of this case, but he did not see, as a woman might see, how pitifully natural it was. She didn't keep the money that did over to where the night before he had left Lightfoot the Deer and the strange Deer fighting. - He would find Some one who could tell him who had won the battle. You can how surprised he was when he discovered the two fighters apparently fighting B hard as ever. Anyway, they were standing head to head and every now and then one would give the other a push. Could it be that had fought all night? All about the ground as if there were something she did not. understand the two who were figh flnc?y the Crow arrit — utes after Sammy Jay. 3 ), Was surprised. “I never heard of such a thing!” he exclaimed. “It looks as if neither knows when to quit.” Just then both slipped to their knees. Sammy's sharp eyes discovered some- thing. ~Yes, sir, they did so! Those eyes of his are very sharp and they are forever discovering something. “Did you see that, Cousin Blacky?” | §¢¢ he exclaimed. Those two were to pull apart, ; | instead of trying m% each other,” Sammy, growing more exclaimed L ‘atch, and you'll see that I'm right. Blacky leaned forward that he might see better. “It's as true as alivel” he exclaimed in his turn. B8Y THORNTON W. BURGESS it to separate for s moment's rest, had been unable to, each had thought that the other was It was not un ed that he could not ‘Then a dreadful fear had n. , 1t was a dreadful situation. , it meant slow together that way, neither could get food or drink. They could not un- derstand what It all meant. Creamed Salt Pork. Slice the pork about one-fourth inch . Panbroil it ¢ sphien There was fi fighl that night that's talked about from Cuba to Singaporel... «..while the mobblocksthe door «..and there was the gal, the Cuban blonde...white as an angel...with a saintly look that we’d never seen before. He fought for the come-on dame whose lips were any man’s... and she prayed while he fought like afiend in the heat of the tropic dive. Life with a trip-hammer punch in the sin-soaked depths of Havana! HELEN TWELVETREES in the fiery depth and power of her greatest role. JAMES GLEASON in his funniest. MARJORIE RAMBEAU in her debut on the talking scveen, playing a part that will tear your heart out. RICARDO CORTEZ as a sinister dude who’s handy with a knife. PHILLIPS HOLMES as a rugged sailor hero you’ll go mad about. Directed by TAY GARNETT " Produced by E. B. DERR T pecteotes sl psviv o prtivont aPATHE W feature iidAr.8coa 150l