Evening Star Newspaper, June 13, 1935, Page 44

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TANANNYNA LYY ) PIANNY SRR B AR AN Y WOMEN'S FEATURES. Sonnysayings THE EVENING ‘STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1935. Who Are You? WOMEN’S FEATURES, Little Benny morning, wich it proberly no doubt will, she said, and pep said, I'll fix it, yee gods, I'll fix it. Wich he did. Bedtime Stories - Uncle Ray’s Corner An Unwelcome Visitor. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. By observstion much is learned Bt I knowledge sarned. And Bit by bl LR P other Sature. ETER RABBIT was alone unde: the back porch of Farme Brovn's house. vet he wasn't alone. there. ground. Who had buried him? he had buried himself. does it. Peter had seen him do it. exactly where Old Mr. Toad was. “I guess,” said Peter to himself, “that it is & good thing we are not all I guess Old Mother Nature knew what she was about when she alike. %W 2 MR. BLACKSNAKE. “WHAT ARE YOU DOING OVER HERE?” made us all different, with different habits. Yes, sir, I guess she knew | what she was about. How Old Mr. | Toad can live buried the way he is He was alone, Cruld | you have pecped under there | you would have seen no one but Peter.| mqa4 ‘ynder here. I couldn’t seem to | Yet all the time Old Mr. Toad was | | He was there buried in the|10d him in the garden, and I know Why That seems a | queer thing to do, but Old Mr. Toad He actually buries himself. He knew hissed Mr. Blacksnaké. “I rather hoped to find some one else here.” “Who?” Peter ventured to inquire. | “Who would I be likely to be look- |ing for under here?” retorted Mr. T | Blacksnake. T | " Of course, Peter could guess, but he didn’t say so. He just shook his head. “I thought,” cont‘nued Mr. Black- snake, “that I might find Old Mr. that he likes places like this. Have | you seen Old Mr. Toad lately?” This was an embarrassing question. | Peter had been afraid that he might | be asked this question. He didn’t an- swer it directly. “You can see for yourself that he isn't here,” said Peter. “Yes, I've already discovered that,” replied Mr. Blacksnake, who had been exploring all about underneath the porch. “But that isn't answering my question. I asked you if you had seen Old Mr. Toad lately.” “What business of yours is it whether I have or haven't?” demanded Peter. “I am just looking for information, | that's all,” replied Mr. Blacksnake. | “I have an idea that Old Mr. Toad may come here, so I think I'll wait a while. There is no one of my ac- | quaintance that I would rather see | just now than Old Mr. Toad.” | snake proceeded to coil up and make Then. to Peter's dismay, Mr. Black- | We put up & box fer the wrens, an’ he works all the time tryin’ t' please her, but her ain’t satisfy with nuffiy’— (Copyright, 1935.) Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Quotation Marks. OME one has wisely said that every- himself comfortable on the very spot | thing is & quotation of something | where Old Mr. Toad had dug in.|that has previously existed. | There he was, looking and waiting for | Every house is a quotation. Every | Old Mr. Toad, and down in the poem is a quotation. Every human | ground right under him was Old Mr. | being is a quotation. Toad himself. | Every human being a quotation? “It was a good thing that Old Mr. | This is really worth thinking about. Toad dug In when he did,” thought just how far back along the ancestral Eeser Youte are you able to detect the quo- tation marks that enter into your make-up? How many persons are able to say something definite about their great-grandparents? Yet all your great-great-grandparents have contributed something. Perhaps a (Copyright, 1935.) —— Jolly Polly A Little Chat on English right now is something I can’t under- stand. If I were buried like that I would smother to death. It doesn't seem possible that the old fellow can | come out again when he wants to, but of course I know he can. Hello! I wonder what that noise is! It sounds as if some one is just outside. My stars. it's Mr. Blacksnake himself!” It was Mr. Blacksnake. He put his head in through the hole under the porch. He saw Peter at once, even though it was dark under there. He darted his tongue out and kept doing it. Then he slid in through that hole. Anyway, that is the way he seemed to enter. “Hello, Peter Rabbit.” hissed Mr. Blacksnake. “What are you doing over here. Why aren't you over in the dear Old Briar Patch?” Peter had retreated to the farthest corner. He knew that Mr. Blacksnake would not attack him, for he was too big. At the same time Peter had never got over the feeling of fear which had been his when he was a very tiny fellow and he had been taught that big snakes dearly love to swallow little Rabbits. Peter made no reply to Mr. Blacksnake's question. “I didn't expect to find you here.” How ABOUT DINNER TOGETHER TONIEHT ? great deal. There is a law calied the law of mutation. This law means that na- | ture seems to store up traits and then turn them loose several generations after the storing took place. In this way an individual might turn out to be a genius. In this way you are | likely to possess a single trait that accounts for a big difference between | you and your immediate blood rela- tives. In other words, you may be possessed of quotation marks which no one can possibly trace to their origin. That’s why you are different. (Copyright, 1935.) BY JOS. J. FRISCH. — | | = s | | . | Jewish Stewed Tongue. | Boil a calf's tongue in salted water | until tender. Skin, and cut into thin T. T. E—"There is a tendency to slices. Heat two tablespoons butter use rung. shrunk, sung, sunk, sprung, | with one chopped onion, stir in two drunk and swum in place of rang, | tablespoons of four, and brown. Add shrank, sang, sank, sprang, drank and | two cups of the liquor in which the swam, but this is not in accord with | tongue was cooked, % cup seeded the best usage. Those who take their | raisins, a few cloves, one bayleaf, 12 grammar seriously say, “My roast|cup vinegar and a dash of paprika. shrank,” instead of “My roast shrunk.” | Lat all boil well together: add the “I swam across,” instead of “I swum | sliced tongue, and allow all to sim- across,” ete. | mer for 10 minutes. Serve hot or cold. HAVING | WAS ....8UT 1 CHANGED MY GOING TO MARGE'S &A SO, NO,BUT... WELL , LAST TIME DISHES WERENT MATTER .+ ¢ HAVE A FIGHT OH, JACK, I'M SO GLAD YOU CAME FOR OiNnER. ! HER QUITE CLEAN FORGET THAT, JACK. MY SISTER TIPPED HER OFF TO USE SILVER DUST.HER DISHES SURE AND HERE'S A SPARKLER TO REWARD YOU FOR THOSE .SPARKLING DISHES Dust, 88 Lexington Ave, New York City. Feathers and Bonnets. NE of the joys of my boyhood was an “Indian bonnet” which my grandmother made 8 years old. It was made of & band of red flannel set with feathers which stood high in the air and s trail or “tail” which hung down be- hind the back. It was fun to dress like an Indian (I had arrows and a bow made by real Indians, with whom I had be- come friends), but I was more of a “heap big chief” than I knew. Com- mon warriors did not have great war bonnets. Only leaders of the tribes, as a rule, were allowed to wear so many feathers. Among Indians of the plains, who are most noted for the wearing of bonnets, the feathers were awarded as an honor. Acting as s messenger, Old-Time Indians. l’ormevhmx-ntbom" The Romance of Your Name. BY RUBY HASKINS ELLIS, ever, came from the wings of hens. If they had been offered to an In- dian of the plains I think he would pleased. dians in many other parts of continent. When eagle feathers could not be obtained, turkey or gouse feathers were used very often. Some warriors of the plains did not have the right to wear a single eagle feather, and others could wear only one or two. There were other uses of feathers among olden Indians. Feathers of he coat of arms here dis- th to H on tree, being & departure rue meaning of the name. coat of arms with crest, however, assigned in Gore's Roll of Arms to nent. There was hardly a tribe| which did not have at least one “eagle clan.” | 24 " EHREE § | Lemon was & member. The Lemons, Le Mons and Lemmons of Counties Herts and Norfolk, England, bore the same arms. If you would like the new leafiet, “Fifty-five Riddles and Answers,” send a 3-cent stamped return er velope to me in care of this newspaper. ! a different crest. It | note that this crest | | the Lemon family, of which Joseph | BY LEE PAPE. POP was lighting his cigar with a sattisfied expression, and ma sald, New, Willyum, histery is not going to repeet itself as far as I am con- serned. I meen I stayed awake last nite half the nite practically the whole nite long scarcely closing 2 consecutive eyes listening to the water dripping from the faucet in the bath room. So you'd better get up rite now before you're too unbearabiy comfortable and go and tighten it or loosen it or whatever it needs to stop leeking, she said. It seems to me there's something homelike and comforting about the sound of a faucet cheerfully drip drip dripping, pop said. Why dont you give it one more trial? It will be an excellent chance to practice that Hin- doo fillosophy you were telling me about. For instants you mite imagine that the dripping is the gentle patter of rain on the window pane. What could be more soothing, and you know what the poet says: Pitter patter gen- tle rain, en each and every window pane, you make my cares and trub- bles fly, you are my favorite lullaby, pop said. You could of had it done by this time, and the paneful future would now be the happy passed, ma said, and pop said, Or you mite imagine that each separate drip is a sheep following another sheep over a stile, everybody knows that's an infallible way of going to sleep. | __All rite, I will, I'll try it, ma said. T'll know very well what's making the gassly sound without going to the trouble of imagining anything elts, but I'll try to imagine it's rain and I'll try to imagine it's sheep, and I'll keep you informed to repay you for your intrist. I'll wake you up regu- | larly every half hour to tell you I'm | still’ trying, if it takes till 5 in the (Copyright. 1935.) - A SIOUX INDIAN CHIEF. boiler, | slaying a buffalo, or some other deed | 5Poon gelatin dissolved | might bring the right to wear feath ers, one or two, or perhaps five, at & time. In at least one tribe it was the custom to give five feathers to | enemy. ‘The feathers in my bonnet, how-| whipped cream. UNCLE RAY. IYflliln Coffee Cream . Mix two cups strong coffee with % cup rich milk or cream in a double Add Y2 cup Bugar, 1 table- in & little | water, and a pinch of sait. 8tir in| the yolks of three eggs beaten with |cover the peaches with it. Set in the | % cup sugar until thickened. Re- move from fire, add the stiffty beaten any warrior who captured a wounded | whites and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Pack | with powdered sugar and a |in a mold, freeze and serve with |lemon juice. Run back into the oven | | to brown slightly. Serve very coid. | There are living in the United | States today a gerat number of | Lemons who trace their lineage to one or another of these ancestral ‘ a//”y air _.ad sure warni may be checked thz n{ulu use %yf uticura SOAP*OINTMENT Peach Custard Suisse. Line s buttered dish with slices of | | sponge cake and cover with peach compote. Make an egg custard and | oven to bake. When done top with the whites of two eggs beaten stiff little | Battle Creek. Nt A ‘ Y ,\._.}r\;) }rench.m Line & glass pudding dish with stale sponge cake or lady-fingers. Sprinkle with sherry wine. Make a regular boiled custard, using the yolks of four eggs flavored with rose water. Beat the egg whites with pow- | dered sugar and flavor to taste. Pour the custard over the cake and place the stiffly beaten whites on top. Put on the ice and serve very cold. ‘SHE FELT MARVEL- OUS WHEN HABITS BECAME REGULAR | Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Relieved Her Constipation® Read this splendid letter: *“I tried everything, with little or no results, I felt miserable, was 20 but looked much older, and my !kltn was continually breaking out. “I decided to try ALL-BRAN, | three meals a day for about a | week. Elimination became regu- \lar; I felt marvelous and looked better. Even my outlook on life was changed.”—Mrs. Armand Hamel, Pawling, N. Y. *Constipation due to insuffi- cient “bulk” in meals. Kellogg's ALL-BRAN provides “bulk” to aid elimination. It also furnishes vitamin B and iron. The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN is gentle. More effective than | “bulk” in leafy vegetables, as it | does not break down within the body. ‘ Isn't this natural food pleas- |anter than patent medicines? | Just eat two tablespoontfuls daily. | Chronic cases, with each meal. iI( not relieved, see your doctor. | Get the red-and-green package |at your grocer’s. | Made by Kellogg in Keep on the Sunny Side of Life Grocers swamped as mothers demand NEW, NONDER BREAD iEar botter," about new loaf for children ous “double yous U:fi::;“: a sensation in :\’u:, thousan %, and proved 10 thov! : ‘Vl?::;:r Bread is best for ch\ld;len “These mothefs knew that © Zh pest—would dare make su ;:gna— that the pew children, meets every Pro Onelookat the creamy, of the delicate Wonder flavo tender t new hi r—was enough that we were 1 = gh standards, €x* say mothers baked money back” dreds of stores mothers that one bread—the an offer. They Wonder Bread, ise we make e exture—one taste for it. to win ight in . H t. Wonder ingredien ers know, because and minerals. ¢ oday of its body-building Proteias 8% 5y 0 the new of mothers have brings their Ui s ne flour perfine & d best for dnld;en. 4 kinds av hosen from 2 :"EZ':’::; :nn of the wheat-berrys i d energy- “h;?:;:c:nogm Laboratory slo-baked Wonder Brea fast-baked bread. Moth: v chat their children get 8 d is far easie ers are glad A ildren this essentl £ O an ordinsry bread: extra benefits that we select to make This flour is the ailable. It's from richest in nour- tests prove that ¢ to digest than of this. It means from Wonder . % i easier. 2 Bread—get it quicker and ea: Give your children ese mothersare doing. dn?:x‘t::‘senefits of Wonder how good itis for them. its mew airtight wupp: yellow and blue balloon THIS NEW WRAPPER BRINGS YOU THE NFW WONDER BREAD BAKED FOR.CHILDREN r with OF WONDER TOAST, SERVED WITH POACHED EGGS. WHAT A BREAKFAST/ Bread for 30 Look for Wonder days. See Bread in the familiar ©

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