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WOMAN’S PAGE. Successful Home Life as Goal BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. No good thing is accomplished with- out constructive thinking. To swell on the “off side” of things is destructive. In other words, if a person wishes to Succeed, he or she must think of ways A DICTATORIAL MANNER RESULT OF TOO MUC! VIDUALISM, AND I8 NOT CON- DUCIVE TO SUCCESSFUL HOME IS THE 'H INDI- and means of accomplishing the desired end. To muse over the difficulties and look at all the obstacles will never get one anywhere. It is not wise always to banish the Today in Washington History, BY DONALD A. CRAIG. April 25, 1865.—President Johnson to- day issued a proclamation appointing Thursday, May 25, “to be observed, wherever in the United States the flag of the country may be respected, as a day of humiliation and mourning” for the late President Lincoln. The President, in his proclamation, recommends that his “fellow citizens then assemble in their respective places of worship, there to unite in solemn service to Almighty God in memory of the good man who has been removed, so that all shall be occupled at the same time in contemplation of his virtues and lndsarrow for his sudden and violent oar Mrs. Lincoln is still greatly depressed in spirits, but is recovering somewhat from the prostration occasioned by President coln's tragic death. She is unable to leave her room in the ‘White House, however, and is constant- Iy attended by the wife of Secretary Welles. Mrs. Lincoln will Dmb‘bl{]lk“' ‘Washington for her home in Illinois about the latter part of May. Meantime, so long as she remains here, she will occupy her quarters in the White House. President Johnson will continue to live elsewhere and to use the offices provided for him in the ‘Treasury Department. He will not move into the White House until Mrs. Lincoln has recovered sufficiently to enable her to make the journey to her home with- out danger. All sorts of rumors and alleged infor- mation regarding the conspiracy to as- sassinate President Lincoln and other high Government officials are reaching the War Department. Secretary of War Stanton today issued a statement, desig- nated an “official war bulletin,” in the form of a telegram sent under yester- day's date to Maj. Gen. Dix in New York, as follows: & department has information that the President’s murder was organ- ized in and approved in Rich- mond. “One of the assassins, now in prison, who attempted to kill Mr. Seward (the Becretary of State) is believed to be one of the St. Albans raiders.” In obedience tc orders from the pro- vost marshal general, all the men drafted for the Union Army of this dis- trict, who were in the barracks at Eighteenth and I streets, have been re- leased. The men were so happy over their release that they refused to accept the pay that was due them for the time they had been held. All drafted men who report hereafter to the provost marshal’s office will receive a certificate of release.” HEALTH PROBLEM IS SOLVED FOR MANY They Eat Kellogg’s ALL-| BRAN Daily Constipation is the most common | menace to health today. It is ex- tremely dangerous in itself and is the source of many other complicat- ing ailments. There is no permanent relief in pills and drugs. Many of them are dangerous. K Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is posi- tively guaranteed to relieve and to prevent both temporary and recur- ring constipation. If it does not, money will be refunded. Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is rough- age. And roughage in food helps eliminate the possibility of consti- pation. Most modern foods do not contain roughnge. Two tablespoon- fuls of Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN daily is the proper amount. In recurring cases, ALL-BRAN should be eaten with each meal. It is an essential in any reducing diet. In addition, KelloFflALb RAN contains iron, the blood builder. It is the originnf ALL-BRAN, proved effective by millions and recommended by phy- sicians. Kelloj ALL-BRAN | ap- petizing flavor. Eat it with milk or cream, in cereals and fruit juices, in soups and in cooked foods.” Your Focgreenpaciage. Made by Kellogg and-green package, e in Battle Creek. i 7 9, . ALL-BRAN . Improved in Texture and Taste | Imagine one saying to the other: thought of obstacles, but they must be faced with the determination to find a method of eliminating them. Never consider them insurmountable, but as hindrances to be put out of the way, or to be turned to advantage. Viewed in these constructive lights, they become merely part of the work necessary to be accomplished on the way to success. It is the thought of how to eliminate, con- trol or use them that marks the start and many attendant steps toward ful- fillment. If a man and worhan determine to make & success of their married life, they will let no obstacles prevent. They will constantly seek to find their points of congeniality. This is constructive. They will refuse to allow their minds to | dwell on disagreements, These are the disintegrating elements. They will start on a mutual understanding and con- tinue to think well of each other and not stress the points on which they vary. One of the disturbing trends of mar- ried life is the accenting of individual- ism. The man and the woman decide to let the other live his or her own life. Immediately they avoid that construc- tive thinking which elevates the home above petty personalities. They begin to see the “off side” of each other, that is the side of disagreement. It requires team work to firmly establish a home. It is no child’s play, but a serious busi- ness, in which constructive thinking | and " concerted action accomplish suc- cess Let us liken the home to a business which there are two y:rtm;-\":. “Tet us each be perfectly free. You do what seems right to you and I will do the same. We both want to make a suc- cess of the business, but neither of us should be biased by the ideas and opin- jons of the other.” There could be no concerted action. Nothing but failure could result, for it takes the united con- in | sentration and the profound constructive thought and energy to launch a part- nership business and make a success of it. The accomplishment of their efforts is something worthy of pride. It is no more difficult to make a success of home life than to make a success of & business. Each enterprise has its points in common with the other. It is only when partners stand together, in fair and honest dealings and in that constructive thinking tbat means good judgment and wise actions that ultimate success is attained. (Copyright, 1930.) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY ¥. CORY. They is one dandy fing 'bout goln’ to school an’ 'at is the gettin’ out! (Copyright. 1930.) LITTLE SISTER BY RUBY HOLLAND. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY Shall the i e Debates Wealthy Girl D th D Effect W HJOTOLRY X g, Yesterday no girl went into the world to earn her own living unless she was driven to it by dire necessity. Today so many girls, who do not need work, go into business that it has become a fine ethical question as to the right of the girl who has cake to eat to take the bread and butter of the poor girl out of her mouth. For there are not enough jobs to go around, and when Gwendolyn Million- bucks goes into the front door of an office or a shop she automatically pushes little Mamie Nocent out of the back door, and that this is hard on Mamie no one can deny. Why do these girls, who have fathers able and willing to support them and give them every luxury, come down and steal our places from us? Why aren't they satisfied with their parties and their bridge and their golf and their pretty clothes and their fine cars?” cry the poor girls. 'hat they earn doesn’t mean a thing to them. They blow a week's wages in on a bunch of orchids, or a pair of slippers, but our pay envelopes mean food and shelter and warmth and the decencies of life to us and our families, maybe medicine for a sick little brother or sister, or some comfort for an old mother. “At Christmas the store I work in took on a lot of additional saleswomen, many rich girls among the number, and when the rush was over and the extra help was let go, it was nearly always the rich girls who were kept and the poor ones who were discharged. “Why I saw girls in shabby coats and with broken shoes, poor little thin, half-starved girls who had been hoping and praying that they had landed a Job at last, go off crying when they got their di: and I saw rich girls, who had not only kept their places, but had been advanced to better ones, ride off in limousines driven by liveried chauffeurs who had been waiting for them around the corner, and I wondered how they could be cruel and selfish enough tdo take the work that they didn't need, and that the poor girl needed so lesperately.” “Of course, I don’t need the money,” says the rich girl, “but money isn't everything, nor do the things that money buys supply your every need and want. You can be just as hungry for some real purpose in life as you can be for food. *| You can die of boredom just as surely as you can of starvation. “Tount ob bein’ the only one, Jimmie is the littlest an’ the biggest bof in his family, an’ I dess that's one thing Wil- le tan’t brag about.” “NO, BUT VIT'LL GIVE YOU AN IDEA OF WHAT YOU DON'T WANT.” “THAT DOESN'T APPEAL TO M Cocoanut Cake. One-third cup fat, one cup sugar, two eggs, two-thirds cup milk, one teaspoon | vanilla, one-half teaspcon lemon ex- tract,, one-quarter teaspoon salt, two cups flour, two teaspoons baking pow- der and two-thirds cup cocoanut. Cream fat and add sugar. Add eggs and milk and beat two minutes. Add vanilla, lemon extract, salt, flour and baking powder. Beat two minutes. Pour into loaf pan fitted with waxed paper. Sprinkle cocoanut over top; bake 35 minutes in slow oven. i T An Inspiration— Waffles and Golden Crown I'A N INSPIRATION to wives b cause so easy to prepare, an inspiration to husbands because #0 nourishing and so good to eat. Watch the day brighten under the influence of Golden Crown’s rue Southern Flavor. Watch them pass their plate for more. Watch them go forth to the day’s tasks full of good-humored en- . . . _inspired by waffles ergy and Golden Crown. STEUART, SON & CO., INC. Baltimore, Maryland FREE BOOK of Bouthern Recipes Sent on Request it TABLE SYRUP ety Southeenlavor], | CHANGE DARK DRESSES INTO LIGHT DRESSES WithTintexColorRemover* Marvelous? Yes, but so simple! First remove the old dark color with Tintex Color Remover and then you can dye it any one of the lighter Tintex shades—in a minute’s time. 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On Sale Wherever Tintex is Sold “I think no other life on earth is so deadly dull and monotonous as that of the girl who has to drag around to endless parties and lunches and dinners, gorging herself on food she doesn’t want to eat, meeting the same group of peo- ple whom she knows by heart, listening to the same storles, hearing over the same jokes she has heard a thousand times before. Of course, there are girls who adore that sort of life and who get a kick out of it. Good. Let them go to it. But it is not for me. I got to the place where I felt I would scream if I heard another jazz band, and throw things at my next dinner party. 1 was fed up on the cinders, ashes and dust of so-called amusements. What 1 wanted was work. Hard work. Something constructive to do. Something that you had to use (v:ur brains about. Something in which you had to match your wits against other people’s wits. “You see I am my father’s daughter, and he is one of the self-made men who started out with a collar button and has rum it up into a chain of depart- ment stores, 80 I have his trading blood in my veins and maybe & little of his talent. Biologists tell us, you know, that daughters inherit more directly from their fathers than sons do, so why shouldn't a girl get a love of business from & business father? “And if a rich girl wants to work why hasn't she a right to do so? Nobody thinks a rich man’s son should sit down in idleness and live on his father just because he doesn’t need to support himself. On the contrary, we have a con- tempt for the waster and spender. We think they should have manhood enough to follow some useful occupation, yet every one who does displaces a poor boy just as much as a rich girl displaces a poor girl when she goes to work.” DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. FEATURES. “They needn't blame Ella's nerves on glands. It's lack of early spankin’ that causes the kind o' gland trouble she's ot.” by (Copyright, 1830.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Pride. No one knows what pride is. It be- lorks with intelligence in the stock room of psychological riddles. " In spite of our ignorance of the sub- ject, we do have words we use in de- scribing pride. We estimate intelligence in terms of performance. We estimate pride in terms of how the individual ap- pears to feel while he is performing. Naturally in every case we must rely to a great extent upon our own sense or feeling of pride, just as we are able to estimate the intelligence of those and only those who possess substantially our own sort and amount of intelligence. But instead of saying “plus” or telligence, we say “big, “below,” far away,” or “nea six expressions, if properly put together, come pretty close to being a usable measuring device for pride. ‘When a person acts as if he feels “big” we say he is “conceited.” When he acts as if he feels “little,” we say he has had the “conceit knocked out of him. When he acts as if he feels “above” us, we saw he is “haughty.” The ogwnlce is called “suppressed.” ‘When he is too close to u say he is “vain.” When he takes a “far-away” attitude, we use the terms “aloofness” or_“superciliousness.” Everywhere and at all times pride and intelligence have some connection. In- telligent peopl e usually humble. The BEDTIME STORIE Baby Disappears. Whers careless joyousness you find, 1s sorrow mever far behind. —Old Mother Nature. Mrs. Qu a family of 10 of the, prettiest little bables that ever lived. Anyway, that is what Mrs. Mallard thought. And they were as lively as they were pretty. It Was (}ulw a task for a lone mother to find food enough for so many babies. You see, Mr. Quack was still down at the Big River. He was not at all con- cerned about this big family. He left the care entirely to Mrs. Quack. Now, Mrs. Quack aiways keeps a watchful eye out for enemies, but now she was more watchful than ever. You see, there were enemies to watch out for those precious babies that she didn't have to watch out for for her- self. There were certain ones who could not possibly kill a full-grown duck and wouldn't think of trying it, but who could kill a baby duckling and would be only too glad for such a dinner. Of course, Mrs. Quack taught the ducklings to watch out for the mem- bers of the Hawk family and always to be ready to dive into hiding at the ap- pearance of a moving shadow. She taught them that Reddy Fox and Old Man Coyote and Billy Mink and Shadow the Weasel and Bobby Coon and Unc' Billy Possum would be only too glad for a nice little duck whenever they could get it. Some of these she could only tell the babies about, because they didn’t come around where she could point them out. One day, however, they saw Reddy Fox and another day they saw Billy Mink. So they knew that while they were little the wise thing for them to do was to be afraid of any bigger people whom they saw, whether they wore feathers or fur. Then one day as they were following their mother across the Smiling Pool she stopped very suddenly and looked very hard over toward the shore. The babies all stopped and looked very hard over toward the shore. But, look as they would, all they could see was what looked like the end of a black stick in the water. “Do you see that over there?” Mrs. Quack asked. The bables acknowledged that they did. “It's just a stick, isn’'t 1t?” asked ony “No,” replied Mrs. Quack, “it isn't just & stick. It is the head of a dread- ful fellow. His name is Snapper the and there is nothing he would ‘Turtle, like better for dinner than a duckling wise are usually able to “swallow” their pride, especially when it is wounded. The stupid flout their pride in the face of the whole world. Pride is the uni- | cl versal sense of self, real or pretended. (Copyright, 1930.) ack, the Mallard Duck, had | SPe: BY THORNTON W. BURGESS just about your size. He is one of the enemies you will have to keep a sharp watch out for. Your other enemies are mostly on the land or in the air. Snap- is in the water. o TN great deal of his time in the mud at the bottom. When a careless young duckling comes swimming along above him he swims up from the bot- tom and drags that little duckling ‘Watch out for Snapper the . Never be so busy eating or playing that you forget to be watch for danger.” Mrs. 'k led her little flock to the other side of the Smiling Pool. She wanted to be as far away as possible from Snapper the Turtle. Presently he disappeared and they saw him no more that day. It was the next day that one of the most venturesome of the ducklings ventured out from among the SNAPPER THE TURTLE IS IN THE WATER. rushes onto the Smiling Pool alone. At the time the others were all very busy feeding. This little duckling felt very important out there by himself. Near at hand was what looked like the end of a black stick. The little duckling hardly noticed it. Presently it disap- P!lnd. A moment later the little duck- ling disappeared. d to this day Mrs. ack doesn’t know what became of it little duckling. If you should ask Snapper the Turtle he might tell you. (Copyright, 1930.) Strawberry Pie. Bake your ple crust first. Wash the strawberries before capping them, and let dry. Pack the crust with the berries by one so that they will fit in ach layer . Then pile plenty of whipped cream on top. READY TO USE « every bit of it sweet, tender, firm ¥ ¥ a deep-sea delicacy that is also a most important food ¥¢ ¥ No end to the ways to serve it — salads, sandwiches, cocktails, a la King, baked, and many others. ¥¢ ¥¢ ¥¢ Rich in vitamins and iodine, that effective preventive of goiter ¥¢ ¥¢ Packed in spotless - kitchens by the largest canner of tuna in the world ¢ ¥¢ For 17 years the preferred brand UNA COSMOPOLITANSALAD 1 can White Star T Atk celery 4preenand 4rive olves o cup French dressing cen 3 16 stalks green asparagus cup mayonnaise 7 cup cooked green peas 2hard cooked egas 2sliced tomatoes 1 sliced cucumber Break up Tuna with a fork, marinate with two table- spoons of French dressing. Add chopped celery to this mixture. Place this on lettuce leaves In the center of & platter. Cover with mayonnaise. Garnish with olives a slices of hard cooked eggs. Arrange nests of lettuce around this mold of Tuna and A1l the nests with the various green vesetables. Add the remalning French dressing to the vegetabless