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WOMAN'S PAGE. " 5 d ' ged Dressing the Girl of 14 or 15 BY MARY MARSHALL. Flapper styles may have become a thing of the past, but the flapper re- mains and the problem of choosing clothes for her or. of helping her to choose clothes for herself is still none too easy. The girl or 14 or 15—the sub-deb or junior miss as she is some- times called—usually has ambitions to wear clothes that her mother thinks too old for her. On the other hand, there are mothers who keep their daughters in clothes that are entirely too childish to be appropriate. We take it for granted that the girl between 12 and 17 should be awkward. \J ¢ DI - 'ARTER COAT WITH LAPIN [Otten it is only her clothes that make {her so. It is difficult for her to rise (m%eln]:r '?mbadly proportioned “t;ln'.hu. { rls - of may usually wear {rather brighter than their moth- lers and the girl of 15 who is uncom- § ly aware of her own drabness be greatly color. chosen ha iund ihel, IRL OF 15 WEARS A GREEN | visaging ~'rwm RESS ~AND THREE- %S5 “OO recently made for late Winter and early Spring for a girl of 15. It is of tweed in one of the new soft, interest- ing shades of green and the hat is of felt of a slightly darker shade of the same color. The skirt, which extends three inches below the knees, is set in wide box pleats at the front, which are stitched down to a low hipline. This week's circular gives a diagram ttern for a short cape which may made of lace or chiffon for evening wear or of silk or cloth for wear with a separate skirt and blouse. If you would like a copy please send your stamped, self-addressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be forwarded to you. (Copyright, 1930.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. ‘What Is the Will? ‘The average human being knows, or thinks he knows, that he has a will—a will all his own. He takes a pride in it: it’s his most treasured possession. Like Henley in “Invictus,” he imagines that his will makes him the “captain” of his soul. ‘This notion of the nature of the will, while undoubtedly satisfying, is in all psychological essentials a fundamental mistake. One may even go so far as to say that there is no will. At all events, the human mind cannot in any sense be regarded as a system of parts, | working more or less independentl: ~( | one another. I mean by this statem :t that the will is not a specific thing, capacity or ability. Lots of people are stubborn in the face of the veriest of verities, just to make themselves believe that they have a will. The will has been defined as “a wish plus a sense of attainment.” It's a good definition. It means that we are able to ill to do” only those things that ence has taught it is possi- ble to do—things possible for us to ac- complish. Experience, then, is the es- sential thing about any given individ- ual's will. One's wishes are merely the motive forces that set the imagination on the highway to new and different ac ments. In other words, the will is one’s mental mechanism for en- . future events. ‘The central thing about any human being is his own sense of self. Around that sense of self he weaves a picture of every other person, every other thing, every situation that involves persons and things. These other persons, things lnd'lllbulflnm may be real or imaginary, mostly 3 Upon this prineiple, your will is noth- ing other than your picture of ym'xg:ll about to take a place among the t- ing - interplay of other persons and things. More briefly, your will is your comparison of your reai world with your imaginary world. Jif colors are 3 | The sketch shows a suit that was MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Superfluous Hair. il please for me: (1) Is there any way to remove hair from the face permanently? (2) If not, what would you recommend? Do commercial de- pilators” increase the growth? Miss Leeds, I have a growth of hair i above my upper lip, and it is terribly einbarrassing. Every time any one looks me in the face I imagine they are Jook- ing at it. Please help me if you can, as I think it is terrible for a girl to be this ‘way. A READER. | Answer—You are quite right, is barrassing there than d I am glad to inform you in regard NANCY PAGE Joan Gets Duck Mirror That Is “Ducky” BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. h | Nancy found a new mirror for Joan's foom. was of heavy mirror glass in of a duck. The feet and head wood painted realistically. But | the body of the animal was of mirror | #lass cut with beveled edge and no other ming. The glass was fastened to the ooden framework of the animal with | ple rosette screws. | ‘There was another one of a boat. The | 0 sails were of glass and the keel and h;td points and flag were of painted Uncle Peter decided that he would | W & pattern for the glass and have glazier cut it. Then the wooden part ld be made by a woodworker, - the painting and Jorn and Aunt ancy the admiring. ~ While they were working with mir- rors Aunt Nancy asked the glazier to do a number of other things. There was a small table in the living room tinually being marred. want to cut o At the ::elmt The other I.a"!mw: lw;g glass mwmth felt. Small this same glazier from (Copyright, 1930.) LEEDS. to question (1), This hair can be re- moved permanently. There is only one way in which this can be accomplished, however, and that is with the electric needle. Be sure that you chocse a com- petent operator and he will be e remove the permanently. (2). They do not-encourage growth of the only remove it grows in again. LOIS . LEEDS. My Dear Miss Leeds—I am a young girl 17 years old and h but 103 pounds, though I am 5 feet's ine tall, How can I put on more weigl dance a little and walk about two mfles every day. I also eat and sleep teguhrlg. LOU. Answer—A girl of your age is quite often not fully developsd and you have likely been. growing upward instead of outward. If you are healthy the extra 20 pounds you ought to have will be added gradually. Try to get more than the average amount of sleep. and if at all possible a nap of 20 or 30 minutes after your lunch. In your diet make sure that you include pienty of milk, vegetables. with cream sauces, salads with mayonnaise, pfle ity of butter, etc. (Copyrizht, 1930.) THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. January 25, 1861.—Preparations are progressing for a grand Union inaugural ball to be held in this city on the night of Mr. Lincoln's inauguration as Presi- dent, March 4. It is designed to be in 1 DO sense a partisan affair, but one in which friends of the Union of all sec- tions and parties may join. Lieut. Gen. Winfield Scott will head the list of managers for the ball and will be assisted by the veteran Commo- dore Stewart. Among the others who are expected to participate in the man- agement are Gen. Wool and other p ent officers of the Army and Navy, Senators Crittenden, Seward, Douglas and other members of the Sen- ate dnd distinguished citizens of each of the 34 States. A spacious building will be ‘!‘!Pech"l‘llyd’!?r thseq purpoeemoil ‘;ha g;u clary Square, adjoin! y m' It is expected that Mr. L'lmln and Mrs. Lincoln will attend the ball. Ex-President Tyler continued his conferences with President Buchanan at the White House today with reference to the plan initiated by Virginia, his home State, in the hope of preserving the Union without hostilities between the States. It is understood that Presi- dent Buchanan agrees with him that the general Government should refrain from doing anything at this time that would preciptate a conflict. The cabinet has Mr. Tyler's sugges- tions under consideration and President Buchanan will probably deal with the subject in a special message to Con- gress in a few days. Virginia has pro- posed that no acts of coercion be at- tempted by the Federal Government ?endlh‘ the meeting of commissioners rom Northern and Southern States in Washington February 4, at Virginia's suggestion. Virginia is also asking South Carolina and Florida to give these commissioners a chance to seek a ;olutlnn 1ém' the preslenL difficulties be- ore seizing Feedral property within their borders. o President Buchanan, after a long and friendly talk with Ex-President Tyler, expressed the belief that there will be no open conflict between the States during the remainder of his adminis- tration and said he would do all in his power to prevent a collision. Mr. Tyler will remain in Washington until the other States’ commissioners arrive, The Hon. Cassius Clay of Kentucky, who has been here for some days, 18 doing his best to bring about a com- promise between the Northern States and the border slaveholding States, in- cluding his own State and Virginia. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN, “Billy might support a wife o' some kind on.$20 a week, but nntx‘rr tha thinks a square o' lace the of a postage stamp is.a work apron.” (Copyright, 1930.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKPAST, Grapefruit Oatmeal with Cream Creamed Dried Beef ‘Toast Coffee. DINNER. Cream of Mushroom Soup Roast Lamb,. Mint Jelly Rolled Potatoes Buttered Brussels Sprouts ‘Tomato Salad, French Dressing OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Looking On. ‘The lot of the one who must stand aside and look on while others do things is always a hard one. Nobody is happy doing nothing, taking no share in life about him. In order to feel at all con- tent one must be in the center of things helping, directing, creating. E So much do we like the feeling of mastery that comes of doing and think- ing and doing again that we try to keep as much of the activity in our own hands as possible. We are jealous of any attempt to deprive us of the least share in what goes on in the familiar circle. We refuse to let the children have their rightful share. f course, we cover this selfish grab- bing by saying that we know best; that the children are not ready for responsi- bility; that they camnot work so hard; that they have no power; that they waste time and material; that in short, we can do better than the children can. But there comes a day when we expect, the children to stand out among the group as being skilled, efficient, success- ful. We are bewildered to see that they cannot. We complain and we reproach them. “Why didn’t you think? Why didn’t you do this and that. It is all s0 simple, yet you stand there helpless.” How are children to become efficient and self-helpful if they are never al- lowed to try things out for themselves? How are they to carry responsibility if they have been deprived of any since birth? The only way for a child to grow up is for to grow up, but we stand in the way. We want to do the growing for him. We want to save him any | trouble. And we like the fun of it We cheat. Some of our cheating is due to fear. We are afraid of what might happen 1f the child made a serious mistake. It is true that there are certain fields of en- deavor in which the child must be guarded and his steps carefully guided, but it is also true that from birth to old age there are many fields in which they can -experiment safely and with profit if we will but allow it. A little girld stands beside her mother wistfully watching the deft hands turn out magical cookies. Can't the child try? y not? A little boy wants to g0 _to town to have lunch with his father, but there is nobody to escort him. Can't he be put in charge of the conductor and met by the office boy? How old must hs be before he can take a train ride by himself? Clothes must be bought, but mother alone may buy them while the children look on from the background. How old must chil- dren be before they can be permitted to select their own things? When do they begin? I believe that a child ought to be al- lowed to help himself just as soon as he shows an inclination ‘and some degree of power to do so. Life is an adventure. N ly ever guaranteed it to be safe, but many brave and wise among us have found it to be beautiful in its freedom. Instead of making the children look on them to sel 0. lemselves and you but life the richer for that. (Copyright, 1930.) glass. were unAeduu ut':h inds under water rge star E;lde a plateau Xa‘hth?'eenm of the e Cl.rrytn’l(ullludol)n-e rs, mail and freight,"an air liner fle'“f‘r;n to Brussals, Bel H l&n' i lgium, in lonmln- utes, breaking commercial records. Peapple Shortcake, Whipped Cream Silver Cake CREAMED DRIED BEEF. Pick one-fourth pound of dried beef into small pleces, put in ket- tle and just cover with cold water. ‘When bolling add from one to two pints of milk, depending on quantity desired. Allow to come to a boil, then thicken with flour made into a paste with cold milk or water. Add salt to taste, as the beef salts it some. Then add a good plece of butter. Break one or two eggs in dish and then ut in gravy, stirring rather riskly to break up the egg. Cook only a few minutes after eggs are added. They may be omitted if wished, though they add a great deal to the gravy. PINEAPPLE SHORTCAKE. Place in mixing bowl one egg, two-thirds cup sugar, six table- spoonfuls -homn!na: cream well, then add two cups flour, one-half teasponful salt, one cup water, one-half _teaspoonful baking powder. Beat thoroughly and then turn into well greased and floured deep layer-cake pan and bake in moderate oven 35 min- utes. Cool and split, fill with grated pineapple and cover with Caledonian creal SILVER CAKE. One cup sugar, one-half cup of butter creamed together with the hand, whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff fronth, one-half cup of milk with one tablespoonful corn- starch stirred into it, well round- ed cup of flour. Flavor with just a drop of almond, frost with the yolks of two eggs thickened with pt;filflered sugar. Flavor with va- nilla. “Fluft her ter youngs b dllpedm:"m her, lnd.g ying ' musta took it all.” (Comyright, 1930.) i be told from the natural, and, an; +| the it 1s shape 2. PARIS.—There's a most aristorcatic its elegant mauve orchid at the shoulder. Model by Irene Dana. DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX How to Overcome an Inherited Tendency Toward a Bad Disposition; False Teeth vs. Marriage. DEAR MISS DIX—Do children inherit their parents’ dispositions? One of my parents has a very bad disposition and is very high-tempered. The fear i8 always hanging we have very many or their grandparents’, or or your great-grandfather was a rogue, grandmother was & slovenly housekeeper, or your great-g nagger, are no reason on earth for you to be guilty of any of these high crimes and misdemeanors. On the contrary, just because you notice these tendencies in yourself you should be particularly on your guard against those especial faults. So, snll{. if you see that you have inherited yoyr father's surly and grouchy and morbid disposition, make a determined effort mistic outlook on life, and to make yourself Of if you realize that you are temperamental and highstrung, like your mother. grip on your temper and your tongue. get a death Dont be a victim to heredity. DIAR MISS DIX—De you think a woman of 35, with false teeth, stands any OLD MAI chance of getting married? Answe:: Why not? A out because you have the toe acl people have store teeth that they have & matrimonial handicap. Nor do we judge age any longer by teeth. It may have been pyorrhea or rheumatism, and anyway whether a woman has false teeth or not is her own and no man from falling in love with her, Too many men have Pplates and bridges of their own to look a gift sweetheart in D.t!u mouth, business Copyright, 1930. Styles in Flat Silverware BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ‘THE SHAPE OF THE BOWLS OF SPOONS HAS BECOME MORE OVAL. It has been but a comparatively few years since period styles in flatware prevailed. The ornamentation of the silver knives, forks and spoons, as well as their shapes, followed styles prevail- ing at the time these articles were fash- loned. This, fortunately, now plays into the hands of those who would find out the age of their silverware. No such tabulation of present day flatware could prevail for styles are so varied. Not only are old patterns re- produced, but each silversmith periodi- cally brings out patterns patented by his rticular firm, and such patterns may ollow any d , old or new, that suit the artistic fancy of the makers and the practical' requirements of the articles vy To_those who flatware either from sheer interest in the evolution of silverware, or to trace kcinating o note the changes 1 asc n and ut;;lz gradual introduction of Ferd the medallion pattern. In this ex- a!;‘llne ‘work, bas rellefs were wrought. ese are not made now except on spe- cial order. The medallions, thou decoration was vogue, so many readers will have pieces over me that I may develop that parent’s disposition as the same characteristics. Answer: Undoubtedly children do often inherit their parent’s dispositions, their great-grandparents’ for that matter, but that doesn’t foredoom them to go through life nc!rl: Heredity is about the most overworked excuse on earth, and it is time that we quit using it as an alibi and began consldefl:g‘ facts that your father was a drunkard, or your grandfa dentist can make false teeth that can scarcely y, in these days when e, or falling hair, or what “are studying styles tn.| D0, N alr about this white morocain dress with A cape swings from the n’l:ggetue. SALLY. g as their ancestors did. it as a warning. The er was a ne'er-do-weli, , Or your mother was a shrew, or your randmother was a to cultivate cheerfulness and an opti- leasant and agreeable to live with. DOROTHY DIX. Ty snatch your teeth ave you, so many ceased to be & matter of opprobrium, or DIX. |ornamented with medallions. Already they are of historic value. Shortly after this period beading 8gain became a vogue. In fact, beading 115 occasionally used with the medallion pattern, but more frequently engraving is combined with the bas reliefs. As indicated, the ornate style was fol- lowed by a period of more simple deco- ration. “The pendulum swung far in the other direction and the bizarre was left | SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1930. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and Puds Simkins was taking & wawk just taking a wawk, and Puds tred on a stuck up brick and muddy ‘water squerted up without hitting either of us, me saying, O boy lets wait and see the next guy tred on it. Wich we started to, Puds standing about «. yard on one side of it and me standing about & yard on the other side so nobody couldent axsidently wawk around it, ony nobody dident come along for about 10 minnits and then some lady started to come up, Puds saying, G, we dont wunt to make a lady tred on it, do we? Gosh, I gess we awtent to do that to s lady, I sed. Ony we dident haff to worry, on ac- count of the lady crossing the street just before she came to us. Me and Puds not knowing weather we was glad or sorry on account of her being a exter wide lady looking as if she would of made a good splash, and we kepp on waiting, me saying, nite where is everybody, are we the ony peeple left in the werld. Im getting stiff from standing, I sed. Wich just then a man started to come up. Being a little narro man, Puds saying, Heck, he dont look as if he would splash much. ‘Well he’s better than nuthing, I sed. And the man stopped rite in frunt of the brick saying, Do you know where Mr. Jarvises house is around here? You havent came to it vet, I sed. Meening the stuck up brick and not Jarvises house, and he stepped rite on it and it squerted out on both sides. one side squerting on me and the other side on Puds, and the man kepp rite on going without even having the sat- isfaction of knowing he hadent been squerted on. Proving when you try too hard to l'dnv'e 2 good time its just when you lont, Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND, If you are building a new house or remodeling an old one and have a very large wall space which you feel may turn out to be rather awkward when the room is furnished, here is an idea which may help you to break up the monotony. These three recessed spaces, the cen- ter one sufficiently large to hold a mir- ror approximately 36 inches wide and 40 inches high, with bookshelves of the same height on each side, combine to make a delightful background for a liv- ing room. The bookshelves are about 20 inches wide. Inasmuch as these recesses are about 8 inches deep, the center one may hold a candelabra or jar of flowers, which will be reflected in the mirror and ap- pear very decorative. In fre of .these recesses may be “® flat-topped desk, a table or w-backed sofa or daybed. If a contrast is desired in the wall treatment, the interiors of the recesses may be finished in a different color f;ol'l that used on the flat surfaces of the 3 (Copyright, 1930.) Pepper Salads. 1. Mix half a cupful of minced nuts with a small package of cream cheese and a tablespoonful of butter. Fill a pepper shell. Cut thin slices with a sharp knife. You will then have a green clover-shaped rim with a cheese center. Place on lettuce leaves and dress with mayonnaise. p nge a bed of lettuce leaves. Make small cheese balls and heap them in the center. Surround this with shredded green peppers, rurmh;’ a ring. Around arrange & row cheese balls, and on the outside another ring of %ylg!fl. Use a thick French dressing t] is salad. Stuffed Flank. In a thick flank steak make & pocket to hold dressing. Moisten two cupfuls of bread crumbs and season with pep- per, salt, onion salt, celery salt, a little poultry and two tablespoonfuls of drippings. 'k the dressing in the meat. Place over the meat two strips of bacon. for one hour in a covered DAILY DIET RECIPE PECAN WAFFLES, ‘White flour, two cups. Baking powder, four teaspoons. Salt, one-half teaspoon. Melted butter, one-half cup. Sugar, two teaspoons. Eges, two. Milk, two cups. Chopped pecans, one cup. Makes six or seven waffles. Mix and sift dry ingredients together. Add milk, which has been mixed with beaten egg . _Add melted butter. Beat until all lumps have disappeared and mixture is smooth and creamy. Fold in beaten egg whites. Fold in pecans. in greased waffle iron. (If elec- tric iron is used greasing is not necessary.) TE. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes starch, pro- tein, a little fat. Lime and iron present. The vitamins have been damaged by action of the baking powder. Recipe can be eaten by adults of normal digestion who are of average or under weight. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. behind. It returned in a modified form in the last quarter of the nineteenth | century when repousse were the | fashion. Edges of flatware were given | t attention, being in foliage and | lower patterns, narrow but pronounced. | Today there is a renaissance of old- ! time styles, severely plain, but none the less beautiful. These styles are adapted E and modified and made in classic re- | mk,n. This description would appear | give a period classification to present- day styles, but, as exquisite artistry in severely crude peasant styles, and as all sorts of re- plicas are favored, eras are so inter-! mingled that a maze of variety results | instead of any special period style pre- vailing. (Copyrisht, 1930.) There are four Bhas in the world amed from colors—Red, Yellow, Black ni iand White. FEATURES. dewalks The Si One night recently we attended a fight. It was a public contest in which two well groomed young men took divers and sundry punthes at each other for a purse of gold. We have better fights. fond of pulling his chair before the that night was a lad ‘who witnessed for the first time & professional boxing match. Quite nat- urally, he was ex- cited and, sitting on the edge of his ringside seat, he shouted words of encouragement to his favorite. Whether the reader is interested in fights ot not, it must be admitted that the average man is intrigued by the sight of two well trained youths pum- meling each other. About 40 years ago Jack McAuliffe and Jem Carney of Birmingham, England, fought 74 sav- age rounds in a small stable at Wes- terly, R. I. Like many other American champions, McAuliffe hailed from for- eign parts, his native heath being Cork, Ireland, where “The Wearin’ of the Green” was the national anthem. In these days of portly purses a champion who requires more than a dozen rounds in which to dispose of & pretender is said to be “an awful bum,"” or words to that effect. The customers prefer their ring action in concentrated doses and—but to return to the story. How the oldtimer must read ’em and weep as he considers the purse for which Carney and McAuliffe battled, and the stipulations would provoke noisy laughter from the modern gladi- ator. The articles called for a fight to a finish for side stakes of $4,500, which were posted at the time of signing. Neither man was to be permitted to bring more than 10 men each to the ringside, and this was to include news- paper men as well. Violation of this stipulation would mean the forfeiture of the erring one’s purse. The fighters were to weigh 133 pounds eight hours before the bout. Secretly and silently on the day ap- pointed both boxers, with their retinues and friends, stole into Westerly in order to evade the police. Through an un- suspected source the news had leaked out, however, and the' stable was jammed to the rafters. At a given sig- nal, the men tore into each other for what was to be a finish struggle. It was a question which suffered the most, the hands as they struck or the faces of the fight-frenzied fl!hun as they swirled about beneath dim lights over the ring. For thirty rounds the battle was waged evenly and then the marvelous iron fists of Carney began to strike with tremendous effect. McAuliffe’s digits were badly swollen and so painful that Special Dispatch to The Star. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., January 25 | (N.ANN.A.).—A loud wail of protest will probably go up at my prophecy that Corinne Griffith will be the first of the great cinema beauties to abandon the screen for the surer delights of a' life of ease abroad and at home. While no definite statement of the sort has been made, indications point that the still lovely Corinne is becoming weary of studlo routine and the restric- tions it imposes upon her. Some of the symptoms of restlessness she is showing include her plan to sell the Beverly Hills mansion where she has dispensed an almost regal hospitality. The oval bath room, with its yellow satin hang- ings and gold faucets; the boudoirs tapestried in antique silks—all the glor- fous settings of a great queen of beauty —will be abandoned. Corinne is planning nl: its h.:;e;d a somewhat simple -and-a-| ouse at Malibu Bgehm miles from the heart of Hollywood, as her only Cali- fornia home. 1t is not the type of home which calls for the great staff of ser- vants which manned the formal estate at Beverly Hills. It will be like playing house in its simplicity, and from every window the blue stretches of the Pacific may be seen, for the house stands not 500 yards from the water's edge. The actress explains her love for this lonely spot in terms of beauty and quiet “blue water and escape from telephone conversations and occasional lers.” To artists the cagual visitor is a curse. He arrives when ‘they are in the mldl.t of studying lines for the next day's work, and \mlen:. hell.s a perwnh né’ rare perception he stays long enougl en- tall telling him the painful news that he is de trop. Corinne Griffith still holds her place in the local world of chic. In a recent trip to the snowflelds of Yosemite she wore one of the smartest skiing cos- tumes of the season—navy blue woolen trousers, with box jacket of the same; her woolly sweater and scarf were gray with vermillion stripes; a small-visored cap of blue, gray and vermillion, and smart, heavy ankle boots. At a recent dinner appearance her nun-like gown of platinum-gray trans- parent vyelvet, sweeping the all about her, attracted much notice. A simple crystal band at the conservative neck line and at the long, tight sleeve ends, and crystal bu on gray satin umps. D'X'hp.fifl!lrmmlnmmodeofm than Hollywood. But so is the actress' entire line of thought. She is studying French assiduously, with an eye to spending half the year in that country. Chateau life calls to her more allur- lnfly than regal splendor in the Beverly Hills. Meanwhile there is a voice insured for $1,000,000 among her Hollywood as- sets. But the betting is strong that she will be the first to follow in Constance Talmadge Metcher's steps and enjoy the calms of civilian life with her hus- band, Walter Morosco. Ann Harding, one of the unbelievably beautiful newcomers to_the screen, is to star in Charlotte Bronte's “Jane " The galaxy of talkle beauties has no more brilliant member than Ann Harding. Her perfection of feature en- titles her to a dominant place in Holly- wood's beauty ranks. But so far her performances, adroitly acted as they have been and with all the dignity of fine diction and excellent stage tradi- 1s | time the of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. each blow he landed caused him to " ihe " boul continned : tirotish th e con e fortieth, fiftieth and sixtieth rounds. The lust of battle began to penetrate the hides of the onlookers. Some one made a crack to another ‘and two spectators m{tml:m a elhwh‘ . By hm: Rro lonal performers ha reached e seventy-first round the small stable was in an uproar. ‘The battering knuckles of the Eng- lishman had already floored McAuliffe for several short counts. So bitter had the struggle become that both men dis- regarded the rules and fought like savages. Once more McAuliffe went to the floor and, as he fell, his sympa- thizers cut the ropes and surged into the ring, hurling fists right and left. McAuliffe once more picked himself up and sailed into his antagonist, in- furiated with pain and lost dignity. It was impossible to continue, however, as the angry mob was holding a battle royal of its own, causing the referee to close hostilities and call the bout a draw at seventy-four rounds. Present-day boxing matches are pink teas compared with the so-called “good old days.” Jack McAuliffe still lives to remember that November day 40 years 4g0 when primitive instinct resorted to primitive weapons. * o ok X Showmanship! ~ What significance that has in the world of sports. How few have the faculty of putting them- selves over. There have many in the history of sports who have for a brief space of time occupled the seats of the mighty through sheer personality and skill. There have been others who have been colorful, dynamic and spec- tacular, but the art of showmanship belongs to few, We have always believed that Georges Carpentier was the greatest showman of them all. Mos: of us - remember HE WS | N TRAN-| ING (N SECRET. delegation of sportsmen, who es- corted him to his hotel. The columns . #pace » royal visitor might have been proud of. Georges Carpentler was a hero, fiyer of France, a soldier. debonair and heroic, he immediatei captivated the :uhlle. Following his regal welcome he was taken to his training quarters to prepare for & con- test he had no chance to win. Oar- pentier was training' in secret, it was said. No one should know what it was all about. Sho 1 manship could have caused the between Dempsey and Carpentier called “the battle of the century.” ht e MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. But what an eas 1 she is in sil- houette as well nmau“etuul Says Mme. Praya (g:whuldnx for (1930): “Women will loved in the coming year as they have never been loved before, and they will be deceived #s they have never been deceived be- fore. H'm! ‘The rest of the world ably going into competition with Holly- wood! P { (Copyright, 1930, by North paper Alliance.’ THE STAR'S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE, - erican ‘Newh- Smart Soallops. A black Canton crepe that an pline w u-uor- appearing fil“lm in jabot frill of collarless neck- . 2 ‘The long-waisted bodice that s s princess lines is beautifully molded and caught in at the left side with huge bow, creating smart puff effect. The shoulders have inverted front. Sleeves are slender darts below the elbows. 4 The circular skirt has deep scallops at lower edge. Style No. 118, that is obtainable in tion, have not been sufficiently m P nant to rouse my wildest enthi My Neighbor Says: Most_electric waffle irons re- quire 10 minutes of heating be- fore batter is added and from one fo two minutes of heating be- tween the baking of every waffle. It takes about two minutes to bake a waffle. Use pipe cleaners to remove little particles that may accum- late in gas-stove burners. Be sure to leave sufficient between the walls of the ator and the dishes near 'm and between the dishes on the shelves to allow a free circulation of air. It is the continual cir- Tommy’s been takin' music_lessons fer a long time, but eben now he can't make near as much noise as I kin. (Copyright, 1930.) that preserves your food. To leftover pickles or Ellmmgufl? them in s “'lul imbler and cover with salad ofl. sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, is a perfectly charming dress for general daytime