Evening Star Newspaper, August 6, 1931, Page 36

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WOMAN’S PAGE. ‘on Fishnet Crochet Work. Again and again children have to be ‘weaned from their childish ways. This ag;agr i i i B i 14 L “ z| | §i§§§ £y i g§§§ i § g ] ; R ‘gfl i % iig gaf 13 Sg & E E s*iii bl i £ & F i EiEx i § ¥ g i il i i t & 8 g 5 BB g i fi?fi;; : i fi§5§ meke th: second cross have made a row of this way turn and Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. the i:t'c the sorts ‘The are always annoyed of visitors in secref rooms and wards va , smokes and goodies. do this are, for the most of ca visitors part, | ceuse the patients ere not getting just what suits their p: most they are being neglected. A isitors’ day in the wards there is always a large “haul” of confiseated daint'es that range all the way from pretzels to chewing to- bacco that have been leff by kindly di visitors with their sick friends. It may be that you ar> one of those persons whose interest and curiosity is greatly aroused by a visit to the hos- m!:!. ‘You may wish to know just why man in the next room or ward bed : 3 i B # au H: 1 8i5 £ & g 1% £ i ks i fi 3 j ? £ 4 EEH] 4] ilf géi'. i uf i sk : 5 ¥ i gf Bg { B i £ i 2 ;éi'g% b %5 il 1 it | ; g L3 it i i £ orant folk, who fancy that be- | companions, he to compensate for this physical lency by boastful talk and by the seizure of opportunities to “show off.” It is true that small boys, if asked fst| to say what they will be when they w up, usually say they will be po- cemen, soldiers, etc. Their da drelpn?m runm_‘g;e’dkmmao{hume s call- s Sl i, iy t; in brief,” the ‘that y would ate for “the help- A n n physical conditions hfldhoodd o the Adlerians add t! ly discounted as “childish.” Par- ticipation in adult activities is often forbidden on the ground that he is “too young” or “too little.” Against his will he is literally forced to accept the | imputation that he is inferior, | ~And o a fictitious life plan is early inaugurated. The child decides to compensate for his inferiority by be- coming big, great, superior, adequate. (Copyright. 1991.) . Breaded Pork Fillets. Cut two pork tenderloin strij wise to make six fillets 11, thick. Pound each fillet down to about half an inch in cross- utes. Brown the fillets lightly in two tablespoonfuls of fat in a heavy skillet, vy pour off excess fat, cover the skillet ntinue to cook SONNYSAYINGS. BY FANNY ¥. CORY. | tE i Many keep i~ from iekE 558 ; £ | ' | § How kin a feller weed his garden if he can't find it? (Copyright, 1931) Pfomises to Children By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON u'lm‘!'.pwfluprkl ‘Today we go to the a8 she half halt $ ¥ gk g i 3 tgg L s | §§ E' E } i i | ] 4 : s § §i°E i ¥ 1 11 !l; L 8 i l g ; M f if : i i siiis g g : # ! ¥ l £ ¥ i " -7 gili fig i i ‘wen! Vine where he usually parked, the car was 3 “‘!{?:levfl!" he cried. “She’s gone and done it now.” At 4 oclock they were in the car. Grandma had given up the bridge party ln;i‘ consented to go, too, party. | night,” thought Spots bitterly. D. C, THURSDAY, —_— OF THE MOMENT BEDTIME STORIES % G Spots Takes to Cover. When truth is known it doth appear E’en independent folk know fear. —Mother West Wind. To Flip and his three friends it seemed as if Spots, the little Spotted Skunk, was the most independent per- son in all the Great World. “I don't suppose there is any one he is afraid of,” one remarked. That was very nesr the truth, but not quite the truth. Armed with that little scent gun of his, Spots went and came about as he |pleased. If he met Speedfoot the Coyote the latter stepped aside politely. If he happened to cross the path of Howler the Wolf, Howler appeared not to see him. If he haj to meet .Dlmr the Badger hun! for a din- & g B i ézi;E B g i He saw ng ; ago was a warning, to be heeded ‘wondered J g R a first Wi i ver. ‘When the Owl left he didn’t know, the big bird left silently. You know, 2!'%.;‘1!“!!0“. The; ive no 5 “That must be the same fellow who gave me a dreadful scare the other. A FEW MINUTES LATER HE HEARD THE OWL ALIGHT ON THAT LOG. must be living around here, or else he has discovered that this is one of my don’t have to scour and scrub to get a wet cloth makes that tub Gold is the qtick, sure way to get rid of dirt. . ‘That’s why we say, use Gold Dust whenever there’s dirty dirt to clean. So get your package today. AUCUST 6, 1931 A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Not to Be Trusted. “He that trudteth his own heart is a | fool.”—Prov., xxv1.26. If Solomon were living today and| some one should ask him for his opinion of the modern doctrine of “self-expres- sion, lmlflm'hh answer would be this 3 55 f Bephaix FEATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK came down to Washington from Sagi~ naw for 11 consecutive terms, then vol- four terms and was,electsd for s fifth at the time of his death, Demo:na - roll up m: ities of three to Reapportionment, question in Michigan, “NO, SIR! You don’t catch me paying fancy prices for insect-killers. Not when I found that Black Flag Liquid costs Jess and ridsmy house of flies, mosquitoes, moths, ants,.bedbugs and roaches—guwicker!” * Get Black Flag. Close the windows. Spray it into the air. Eill the room with its pure, stainless pleasant- smelling mist. And every last fly and mosquito drops for good—dead! Not a single one escapes. Black Flag never fails. It has more powerful killing ingre- dients, yet it’s absolutely harmless to humans and pets. Sold to you on a money-back guarantee. Get Black Flag Liquid to-day. You'll find that it’s the safest, surest, quickest insect-killef on the market. And remember! It saves you money! Black Flag comes in Powder form, too. Black Flag Powder for crawling pests. It stays where you @591, n.7.00.

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