Evening Star Newspaper, September 22, 1931, Page 27

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WOMAN'’S PAGE. THE EVENING BEDTIME STORIES #s Thornon Mysterious Whistle. When eves 3 R et "0 o mhat to Beeve, —Farmer Brown's Boy. | Farmer Brown's. Boy had climbed high on the mountain side, higher than trees grew, higher than he ever had been before, for back home there were | no such high mountains, On the edge | of a great rock slide he had stopped to | rest'and get his breath and marvel at | the wonderful view spread before him. | Peak on.peak the mountains towered as if seeking to touch the blue, blue sky. some of them with ‘glistening white | eaps of snow. Rocky crags were all | W. Burgess. vain, He began to have a funny feel- ing. He certainly had heard a whistle. He was positive of it. ‘ “It must be that some one is tryin(i to have fun with me hiding agong | the rocks,” thought he. “I'll just mind my own business and pretend I am not | interested.” | So Farmer Brown's Boy sat down on a rock and pretended to, be interested only in the wonderful view, but.all the time he was searching the rocks with his eyes for that unseen whistler. For a long time he did not move and there as no sound. At last he got to his feet undecided whether to climb higher or go down to camp. As he did-s0 he | heard that whistle again, clear, sharp | and piercing, and he was sure that it came from behind a jumble of rocks | some distance away ‘along the very slope he was on. “All right, Mr. Who-ever-you-are, if you ere hiding over there I'll soon find | | you,” said We, and started for the rocks. It was farther to them than he had SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., TUESDAY, The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD, Who started her career as @ frightened typist and who became one of theshighest paid dusiness women in America. Boy Friend. I don’t care if the next day never | Letters keep coming in from the girls cogiu).o" sports, such as tennis, golf, | | who are bored with life and each one | swimming, ete. AR { | of them has a different reason. A few | of them are hard to answer, but here'x‘"mfin”&n;?;: wsg:“yen(l&:.le :;g: |one whose problem will solve itself. |when you're ready for it, youll have| | “Dear Helen Woodward: I am 20, |8 boy friend, and then you on't, e considered good looking, have plenty of | yotivities of your life will become inter- | personality, quite attractive. For the | esting and vivid. | past two years I have been managing | Girls of your age like to thilnk ;‘.ha‘ti | news stand of my own in one of the | T iy miaens st derense. . | prominent town banks. I meet the | If activity, work and sports could fill | loveliest. people, all kinds of types in | life, yours would indeed be full. But | | " or a girl of & sort of du aze | |my work. I like my work immensely. |pongs Guer ‘all her life—all her work, | | T work fromp8 o'clock in the morning |sports, affections and books—unless | {until 8 or 9 a®hnight. | I have a lot of | she is in love. | | young friends as well as older ones. Girl friends are important, but boy | “I am just bored to death with life friends are necessary. SEPTEMBER 29 ey 1931, NANCY PAGE Good Taste Girls Hear About Foods. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. The Good Taste girls were holding few meetings during the Summer. First, because they were scattered at various jon spots. Second, because Nancy was not feeling overly ambitious. Third, because the weather was too hot. But | Nancy had arranged & few meetings for them. One meeting called for a lecturer who spoke on health. He was a young | and enthusiastic doctor and brought h man interest into his talks. He dis- cussed dieting and was really able to get sore of the thin girls to ask for a gaining weight diet. In discussing the whole question he said that insurance companies had | proved it was wisest for a person under 30 to keep a little over weight, and that a woman over 30, who has a nat- ural tendency to gain should try to keep her weight) close to the 30-year-old Wise Eacupay | you have your slen- ! derizing Salad-Meal... fll(vored with BEST FOODS Mayonnaise! You have more time. You look better, you feel better . . . because you are fit.,Once you thoughti for the air was o clear that it was hard to judge distances, and dis- tant things seemed very near, But at last he reached that jumble of rocks | and searched all through it in vain.| There wasn't & rock big enough for a | at the age of 20. ‘When I go out to the (Copyright. movies with my friends, mostly girls, I am just bored to death, I do not have “taste Best Foods only BEST FOODS willdo! 1931.) figure. o = In dieting he '1Mx nudneed for ime. Pi getting protein, vitamins and mineral & ‘ a steady boy friend, and I do not bother Lime-Pineapple Cup. “ salts, * Cpllclum. phosphorus, iron and I don't see the idear ob bein’ 80| myuch with boys, but I have a lot of | Thoroughly dissolve one package of | jodine are necessary in every person's man, or even & boy, to hide behind | ticlar ‘bout the back ob heads an’ glrlelg:‘ndx. . i S i!,‘,',""fl‘.;}?,’,"?,,“'.f.f,‘fi:.“?fi{‘; r:;;ger.;:‘glethxwlne:a m\mf Inmlgodai either \ o o | ! ong to a_ ve ne club. e e 3 | fresh, cann or frozen. 'e0] that'he didn't examine. Such a funny necks-=I dont, expect ‘1o back UP 10 .0 rans Tne AEAIN sush s mrm-li one cupful of cold or ice water, turn | live in the so-called “goiter mn,‘?v'-h':: o e e s Ls o | PP compiny. and informal dances. I attend all these | into a shallow pan to the deptn of half | sources of lodine are almost absent, | sokian 30100 TeAM ¥ L (Copyright, 1931.) | affairs, but I am just bored to death |an inch, and chill until firm. Cut into | should eat plenty of sea foods to get joke ‘and yod've HALYOULET4e etme or and cannot walt until the dances are | half-inch cubes and combine With tWo | the necessary amount of this mineral [out and get. scquainted.” over. and one-half cupfuls of diced fresi| which has such an intimate relation to The only reply was Co'hecho of his| “I am quite a fortunate girl. T have | pineapple which has been sweetened | goiter. [own voice, He began o have & queer |lovely parents, lovely home, stunning| with sugar if necessary. Arrange in| ~ For the thin girl a lunch before going ‘gclmgam 5 :thtf o;v' an-?“g ué‘ | clothes and a business of my own. Can | sherbet glasses, chill thoroughly, and| to sleep is & help. It need be nothing “IHAT 18 QUEER.” HE MUTTERED, ‘u]hav,w i n:uturedg or in. the firs you please tell me why I am bored -to | serve either as a fruit course or Wwith| more than glass of milk and & few| . s TRt el ek SRR death with 1ife? I just feel as though whipped cream as the dessert course. |crackers. ' WHISTLED IN REPLY. ! 1 the echo of his own voice was the only | about him. High above him Talons the | reply. “All right for you. If you don't | Golden Eagle sailed in majestic circles. | want my company I won't force it on He saw no other living creature. A |you,” said he, and began his downward | feeling of awe took possession of him.|climb toward camp. Not until he was | Never had he felt quite so utterly alone. | nearly to the bottom of the rock slide | Presently Talons disappeared in the | did he hear anything more. Then again | distance and the feeling of loneliness | came that clear whistle and this time | was greater than ever. Up on these | it was answered by another farther bare rocks there was no life. He was|away. It was mysterious, very mys- | sure of it. He spoke aloud just to hear | terious indeed. | his own voice, | “I'm coming back here tomorrow “I fegl as if I were on top of the morning early and if that fellow, or world,” ‘said he, “yet this old mountain | those fellows, try any more such tricks | goes on up and up and there are other Il find them,” he promised himself. ‘ peaks higher still, I feel as if I were the only one alive in all the Great ‘World.” | At that very instant there was a sharp, clear piercing whistle. “Hello! ‘There must be some one else up here after all!” exclaimed Farmer Brown's | Boy in surpise, and looked eagerly in the direction from which the sound | had come. But though he looked and Jooked he could see no one. “That is queer,” he muttered, and ‘whistled in reply. There was no re- sponse, 5o he put two fingers in his mouth and whistled. It was the clear, loud whistle with which he often had called Bowser the Hound when the lat- | ter was far away. Again he waited in | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Bananas_with Lemon Juice. Bran with Cream. Corned Beef Hash. Diced Beets. Popovers. Coffee. DINNER. Baked Spaghefti with Cheese. Baking Powder Biscuits. Grape Juice Pudding. Wafers. Tea. SUPPER. Tomato Bisque. Broiled Steak. _ Riced Potatoes. Creamed Caulifiower. Cucumber Salad. French Dressing. Steamed Apple Pudding. Coftee. - Foods MAYONNAISE E " Price cut on “PHILADELPHIA” Cream Cheese is good news for shoppers! (Copyright, 1931.) MODE OF THE MOMENT nter—Kayser's PERIOD FLARE GAUNTLET astrakan are ._fu/awfrfc. e new AT, i Y Now.lo It’s the most famous Cream Cheese in the world — *Philadelphia™ Brand. The largest selling packaged cheese. And yet the price has just been reduced! The new price, ten cents a package, is the lowest in fifteen years! THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE To be just right the clothes of the growing miss must have a bit of dash. The jacket dress, so splendid for | school wear, has a definite smartness and practicality, ‘too, for it is equally attractive when the jacket is discarded. This jaunty model is delightfully car- tied out in yacht blue linen. And ta be ultra-smart it trims its jacket with blue linen overplaided in deeper shade. The epeats the trim in bows at the front, and for the modish cap sleeves. ‘The skirt is so cut in box-plait effect at the front and circular at the back. Numberless fabrics are suitable for this swagger outfit as novelties, jersey | and supple woolens in tweed effect. | Style No. 3145 may be had in sizes | 6, 8..10,.12.and 14 years. 4 Size 8 requires 3¢ yards of 39-inch material with % yard of 35-inch con- trasting. { For a pattern of this style send 15| cents in stamps or coin directly to The | Washington Star's New York. Fashion | Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. | Don't envy the woman who dresses | well and keeps her children well dressed. | Just send for your copy of our Fall and | ‘Winter Fashion Magazine. | It shows the best styles of the coming | season. And you may obtain our pattern | at cost price of any style shown.” The | pattern is most_economical in material | Tequirements. It enables you to wear - o s C a puckcg P Delightfal in flavor, rich in food value, “Philadelphia” is ideal in sandwiches, insalads. And it’s won- derful for children! Your grocer has it fresh in indi- vidual silver foil packages plainly marked *‘Philadelphia’’ Brand. P KRAFT-PHENIX CHEESE CORPORATION General offices, Chicago. . . Division of National Dairy Products Corporation NAN: Heavens, my hands are a mess. That's what dishwashing does. MIL: Mine used to be red and rough, too. bty Y S 5055 — g ¢ \ . Y oy v v oy v Y, et ; > My vt Vi VS NAN: Whatever did you do about it? o IR PRt " AN e S FaANIEET vy MIL: Just changed my soap. Now I use LUX in the dishpan—it’s a regular beauty treatment for your hands. : & ‘ and only *122 For your Empire costumes—the season’s Dashing and Different smartest gloves! Soft, suede-like and alto- gether charming. The cuffs—a wide and the new frocks at little expense—two frocks for the price of one. You will save $10 by sending 10 cents | for this book. So it would pay you to | send for your copy now. Address | Fashion Department. Price of book, 10 | cents, jaunty flare. The hand-stitching —in lovg}y contrasting shades. Washable? Dear me, yes! They’re Leatherettes* and wash beau- tifully! Black and Chocolate Brown with white stitching. Doeskin,” Beige, Gray, Arab, White—stitched in contrasting color. Delicious Fresh Baked And these bland, gentle Lux suds work swice Kayser gloves in other flare styles—$1.00, $1.50 aajn}! Make dishwashing twice as easy. Rinse . 3 off in a jiffy—lcave glassware and dishes spar- kling clean. Try Lux FREE. Try this wonderful care for Yo Eanas, at our cxpense. Just send us your name and address, and by return mail you will receive a full-sized package of Lux free. Write today to Lever Brothers Co., Dept. XM.5 Cambridge, Massachusetts. 305 Famous Beauty Shops AT ALL THE BETTER SHOPS e _ Kavser *TRADE MARK REG. 4y is actun]l}j the case thae dishwashing with Lux gives the hands regular beauty care, 305 famous beauty experts recently agreed. “"With all our experience we can't tell the difference between the hands of a woman who uses Lux in the dishpan and the hands of 2 woman with maids to do all her work."” LUX in the dishpan . costs less than 1¢ a day— lovely bands»and less work i

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