Evening Star Newspaper, November 12, 1930, Page 33

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Value in Personal Inventories BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER, | other times is nursed. { what she would like to have to her wardrobe suit her desires should funds permit. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. with her baby constantly is Even if to one person. ‘The mother who is nursing her baby must have some means of nourishing him for the hours in which she is absent; relief bottles fill that niche graciously. A relief bottle is an occa- sional bottle offered to a baby who at Because it is used only in an emergency, its actual contents need not be as care- fully as if baby were getting his; whole sustenance. from bottles. It should good, however, and be of exactly th, or baby will disdain take | three cupfuls of flour, 1t of baking powder, one level giiifi Eétg’ il d Egg £k i E‘ g2 2 ] 2% ;.E LT i 23et :igé i half a ful of butter, gradu- one cupful of sugar, stirring untndvcry smooth. Add two one teaspoonful of and beat well. Mix and sift CCHERILS wil L protect YOU undoubtedly know how successfully CHARis controls and lot, he sed. ‘Thats what I thawt, I sed. But of corse I could have a manager, I sed, and pop sed, You cant always trust a manager. But then on the other hand a million dollers is a grate temptation for berglers if you keep it in the house, and if you keeprit in a bank the bank mite fail and you mite ony get about 33 cents on the doller, or in other werds a paltry 330 thousand dollers, he sed. Besides, you'd be almost sure to be swam] by begging letters, and then the intrist on a million dollers mounts up faster than you \can spend It the ferst thing you know you'd haff to be paying more taxes to the govern- ment. I declare I hardly know what to advize you, but whatever. you do dont do anything rash, he sed. If I gave you & dime would it tide you over temporarily and keep you from brood- ing? he sed. G, yes sir, I sed. And he gave m Soft Molasses Gmkiu. ‘Work one cupful of shortening until very soft and creamy. Add one cupful of sugar gradually, and when well blended beat in one egg, Then add one cupful of molasses, one tablespoonful of vinegar and five tablespoonfuls of cold coffee or water. Mix and sift together one téaspoonful of baking, soda, half a level teaspoonful teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful each of cinna- me and it did. mon and ginger and half a teaspoonful |an of cloves or all-spice. ~Add to the lquid, using more flour if necessary to make a very soft.dough. Drop from a onto a greased pan and bake in a moderate oven for about 15 minutes. Royal Murders N and Murderers Tiberius Liked to See His Victims Die. BY J. P. ‘The Emperor Tiberius was at first mild and lenient. But he became de- bauched and his innate cruelty, which he had concealed, came to the surface. He condemned untold numbers of persons to death for offenses that were not offenses. It was not justice, it was murder. At Capri still is shown the place of execution, where prisoners were con- demned to die after the most studied tortures. Tiberius watched as they were GLASS. manicus, his nephew, Emperor of the East, a great and good man. Jealousy led Tiberius to have him poisoned. The wife of Germanicus came to Rome and accused the poisoner, Piso, who, under public odium, killed himself. Every one knew that Piso had been only the tool of Tiberius. The latter, thinking the presence of Agrippina in Rome a con- stant_reproach to him, banished her to thrown over a great precipice into the the Island of Pandataria, where she sea. At the bottom, soldlers waited with | would starve to death. poles to break their bones and see that they drowned. On the occasion of the death of his dissipated son, Drusus, who had been d | poisoned by his wife, Livilla, a man who once had played the host to Tiberius at Rhodes came up to Rome. He went to see Tiberius, because, on the occasion Germanicus had three children, Nero, Drusus and Caius. Tiberius imprisoned and starved Nero and Drusus, but al- lowed Caius to live. Calus, like him- self, was vicious. Tiberius wishud him, to be his successor on his death, so that Rome might have an emperor more cruel and tyrannical fhan he and thus of the latter's visit, he had left a cordial remember him more favorably. invitation. Punishing all those connected with the death of Drusus, Tiberius forgot the identity of his friend from Rhodes, and had him put to che torture as orle con- cerned in the inquiry. When he found out his mistake, he did not apologize. He ordered the man killed so he could not reveal the injustice done him. His trials of accused persons were S0 unjust that people stabbed themselves to death rather than be humiliated by & public condemnation. ‘Those he found guilty were thrown down the Demonian steps into the Tiber. ‘Twenty, including women and boys, were killed in this manner in a single day. He joked mbout death as something trivial. Upon hearing that Carnulius, accused man, had committed suicide, he exclaimed, “Carnulius has escaped me” . To a prisoner who requested a spee.y death he replied, “Ah, my friend, you are not yet restored to favor.” One of Tiberius’ first victims was Ger- A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. HAT with a short session of Con- gress and an early Lent, resulting in the White House having perhaps its most crowded social calendar in years, the appearance of rdinan ter | men _ in here and abroad, he has had oppor- tunity to learn what to do, how to do it and at just what time. He served first as private secretary to the American minister at Peking, then as diplomatic secretary at. Constanti- nople, Paris and until recently at Lon- don, to say nothing of service at the State Department in Washington. This side of 50 years of age, one of the best and most correctly groomed the diplomatic corps from princnez to pear] stickpin in his cravat, he is sartorially perfect. with all these qualifications it is by no means an easy task which he ial | finds confronting him. shoulders responsibility of steering the wcm gfll‘m of hite House quickly yet fault- lessly along its brief way, and from all indica- tions he is well equipped for the 80" those observers of the Capital's ‘haute monde seem to think at any rate. Lavish praise of his ability was seen in the papers whznhplwolnmnt Was announced. It was pointed out that Belin is cor- d the “correct” was capital- No siranger to etiquette is the new social arbiter. For years, various diplomatic posts ‘The White House social program éan- not be inaugurated until after Congress convenes on December 1. And ‘it must be concluded before Lent starts Feb- the ruary 18. ‘There are 14 official functions It's up to Belin and hip asso- clates to these in during last 31 days of 1930 and the first 48 days of 1931. - tom - inet, Included in this list are the ary five state din: {o the cal to the Vice President, to the Chief Jus- tice and the Supreme Court, to the Speaker of the House and to the diplo- mats. _Receptions, including the famous New Year reception to the general pub- lic, complete the list, All eyes will turn to the White House this year. ¢ What a Lovely Skin! OVEMBER 12, 1930, “Do not walk beneath a ladder,” says the superstitious jay, “or you will be feeling sadder ere the closing of the day. People, joking and odsfishing, sometimes laugh my rede to corn, but ere long I find them wishing that they never had been born.” We'll be punished in due Season If we do not heed his word, and he gives no lucid reason for the thing that seems absurd. “There are 13 at the table,” cries the hostess, in affright; scared by some ancestral fable that she heard one Winter night. And the star- tled guests won't swallow further por- tions of the soup, for they know that doom will follow all the members of that group. Some, before the year is ended, will be lying dead and pale; others doubtless will have wended to the poor house or the jail. Better feed in some | This iy old stable with the horses and the kine, than against a princely table in a group of 13 dine. “Now we can't avoid dis- aster,” I have heard a parent yell, when & little plece of plaster from a sagging ceiling fell. “Portents sometimes die { a-borning, but this omen never fails; lit's & grim and grastly warning which much misery entalls. So the parent, solely stricken, lost the pep that once was his, knowing troubles soon would thicken, woes around his patch would whiz. “I have seen a black cat streak- ing down the path I have to tread,” cries a grown man, nearly shrieking, “and I know I'llisoon be dead.” 'So the people shudder under superstitions of all kinds; are we civilized, I wonder— have the years improved our minds? ‘WALT MASON. (Copyright, 1930.) BY ROBERT QUILLEN. me owners. The| incentive for building homes, and so relieve periodic slumps in the building| lnd\ll‘lz; It's the effect rather than the cause, howeyer, that will interest thousands of housewives. It will be comforting to think one can actually build & home to suit one’s tastes and fulfill one’s hopes without rdizing the family for- tunes entirely. ‘Women who have temporized until now might do well to investigate costs, both bullding and credit, at this time. In many communities it will Ve par- ticularly advantageous to build. A com- “It didn't su'prise me n Emily was engaged. I heard her Iast month she was tired o' workin'." (Copyright. 1930.) NE TWO-TO-ONE TWO-TO-ONE TWO-TO-ONE TWO-TO-ONE 0 you need an excuse to eat hot biscuits! R are you one of the many who find it hard to stop eating hot biscuits? Well, here’s good news. Rumford biscuits are not ordinary biscuits. Rumford biscuits have earned their right to & place on your family board because they pro- vide in substantial quantity healthful mineral food elements which modern science says are most likely to be missing from our diet. The most important of these particular minerals are Calcium and Phosphate, recognized as vital to sound teeth, strong bones and steady nerves, Milk and fresh vegetables are rich in Calcium and Phosphates. But remember that in even an average Rumford biscuit there is four times the Phosphate and half the Calcium contsined in a large glass of milk. So— Have another Rumford biscuit! You'llywant to have them often. THE RUMPORD COMPANY, Eweutive Ofiss, RUMFORD, R\~ RD m‘ifi'fi’:’”fi&"m two-to-on¢ leabener No Trouble Here « moderatesthe contoursof the mature figure, gracefully distributing excess flesh s0 as to produce the foundation of firm, natural curves démanded by the present form-fitting gowns. But, perhaps you are not aware that youthful CHARIS models have been created especially for the younger woman —for your daughter. .. gar- ments that protect her lovely, youth- ful lines and preserve hiér precious, youthful vitality. These models have smart low backs and the brassiere sections are . to create a natunally outlined contour. Like all CHARS garments, the patented adjustable features per- mit ing ‘'wherever and [ mux as desired. You can arrange for private showing of this superior foundation garment 2t home, whenever convenient. write or phone the address below. Engoy Dorothy Chase and T:’CHAIH’ Players, WMAL, Thursday, 11:00 AM. CHANRLS OF WASHINGTON 1319 F Street NW. 502 International Bldg. - Phone National 7931-32 4 ‘THE REAL BEGINNING of & beautiful complexion s perfect health. Withous that, color soon fades. ; FRESH YEAST, added to your diet (3 cakes daily, B befm; or betwe«:mull) helps lay the foundation ; ; for real health, renewed appetite, restored energy, greater reserve ; ; ; and the result is better skins ALL BECAUSE yeast cleans and tones up the ine testinal tract, where poison-forming wastes collects Complexion Color that Doesnit Come in JARS ! Here’s the way to radiant bealth that puts the rouge-pot to shame for color! Just a corrective treatment UT away that lipstick! Go easy on the powder and rouge! Here's the way to lay the loundation for healthy color that no amount of cosmetics can match! A good skin begins with a healthy body: Unfortunately, our bodies were not built for our present-day modes of living. And most of wus, as a result, suffer from an age-old ailment s .. Intestinal Fatigue . . . that shows its marks first of all in bad skin. Not only th;bc lack vitality. Energy is mklnpmmo:o::updhkwcoflgn for that age-old evil . Now most of us are too impatient really to correct this trouble. We turn to cathartics, to laxatives, to measures that are often violent and always only temporary. Doctors, including European specialists, are emphatic in warning against this method. They recommend, instead, a simple food rou- tine that acts naturally and easily, restoring bodily function to pormal once again. , . . Intestinal Fatigue! This food is fresh yeast...ordinary Fleisch- mann’s Yeast. Eaten regularly, it serves the highly useful purpose of regulating the intes- tines, of cleaning and toning up the very region where intestinal fatigue gets in its bad work. And once yeast has been ‘given a chance to clear away poison-breeding accumulations, and boils disappear. We feel better in ma: ways... because we again enjoy the true without which a good natural complexion color is impossible. If you really want a good complexion, make the right sort of beginning with Fleischmana’s Yeast. Eat it regularly . . . three cakes a day, in water, milk, fruit juices, milk drinks or plain; Remember, you can buy Fleischmann’s Yeast anywhere . . . at grocers’, restaurants, sods fountains, Buy a supply today . . . and be- gin eating it regularly. Each cake is rich in three vitamins to health — vita. indispensable color returns, the skin clears, pimples =2\ mins B and G and the "sunshine” vitamin Dy < yee Limes a day

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