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d not much more than and rather beating her s large 8 will you 24 OOTTON PRINTED WITH GREEN DOTS IS COMBINED WITH APPLIED HEM AND BINDING OF sugar. Pour custard in cups SOLID COLORED GREEN COTTON. S nail Fun’ i st ool fengths of material 24 inches wide and mixture made of W] A sbout 23 inches long. e back and chill. When ready to serve pour front of the dress are cut exactly alike. over juice left from prunes. The distance from edge to under arm is 16 inches. “:1': armhole l’:l 7 PLANKED SHAD. Tetee Swp. Whes e pcs tev Place a shad which has been been cut out, lay them together and| | cleaned, split and thoroughly My Neighbor Says: keep celery crisp, thor- wash ‘x‘c and cut for serv- To. oughly ing. be- #h g L DATED FINER “BOUQUET,” a fuller flavor, ; and adeeper zest certify the freshness of Chase & Sanborn’s dated Coffee. ‘This deliciously pungent coffee comes to you in a plainly dated can. It gives you direct proof of its freshness. Just a few cans are delivered at a time. ‘These come straight from the roasting oven to your grocer’s shelf. FOR 65 YEARS Chase & Sanborn have roasted ind packed the finest blend of coffee in the country. Now you can enjoy this coffee at its superb best, for it is being handled like a Eresh perishable food. grocer receives it by the marvelous deliv- ery “net work” of Standard Brands Inc. Every can is plainly marked with the date on which he receives it. Notice the date on your can of Chase & Sanborn’s Coffee. You will never find one more than ten days old. No other coffee givesyouthis promiseoffull-flavoredfresh- ness. Get 2 can from your grocer today. and Sanborns Cofie - DATED Chrase (Puyristt 1930, Standard Brands lac, WOMAN'’S PAGE.’ than a yard and a half of half of time you can make daughter a practical dress for warm afternoons. It is the sort of that makes a little girl look unexpectedly de- has spent the morning in a sturdy play suit brother at their enough for a | need two Little Daughter’s Summer Dress BY MARY MARSHALL. two 16-inch sides meet, and two more French seams where the 5!2-inch edges Join over the shoulders. Slip the dress thus put together over the little girl's head and arrange in- verted box pleats to dispose of the ex- tension of the material under each arm, and arrange surplus width over the shoulder*in three narrow tucks extend- front. If you like, make an applied hem of contrasting material cut into V’s at one side and use the same material to off neck line and armholes. Several readers have asked for a sketch and diagram for a separate skirt. So for tomorrow we have chosen one of the new sports skirts with pleats at the front. You will find a skirt of this sort made from wool voile, thin flannel or Shantung silk a useful addition to | your Summer wardrobe. (Copy Stuffed Eggplant. Wash and boil one whole eggplant until tender, or for about 30 minutes, then cut off a little from the top, re- move the inside with a spoon, taking care not to break the outside skin, mix with a little minced onion, cracker or bread crumbs, a little cream, a lump of butter, some salt and pepper, place all back into the outside skin and bake for about 15 minutes, or you can cut the eggplant in halves and stuff each half, bake for 20 minutes and serve on & hot platter as a vegetable. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananas. . ‘Wheat Cereal with Cream. Orange Pancakes. Coffee. LUNCHEON, Fresh Vegetable Salad. Pickles, Olives. Crisp Rolls. Prune Float. Tea. DINNER. Clear Soup. Planked Shad. Mashed Potatoes. Green Peas. Fruit Salad. Crackers, Cheese. Coffee. ORANGE PANCAKE. Mix six small tablespoonfuls butter, one cup powdered sugar and juice of orange; put a little in the grill and heat a pancake in it on both sides, sprinkle with sugar, roll up and serve. PRUNE FLOAT. chopped prunes and one-half cup skin down upon the plank; dot over with small pieces of butter, dust with salt and gen- erous supply if paprika and place in brofling oven. It will require about 20 minutes if the fish is an inch thick in its largest of each a dot with paprika and bit of salt; place in brofling oven for about five minutes; remove from oven Twice a week your ing 4 or 5 inches down at back and| Al bind LOOK FOR THE DATE ON THE CAN Washington History BY DONALD A. CEAIG. May 15, 1865—Strong military guards were placed today on the streets leading to the old Penitentiary Build- ing near the Arsenal, where the trial of the conspirators charged with aid- ing in the assassination of President Lincoln and attempting to murder oth- er prominent officials is now being held daily before the military commission or court. ‘The prisoners were first ar- raigned Saturday and the real trial began today—Monday. Four-and-a-half street, leading to the place of the trial, is strongly guard- ed by soldiers from Pennsylvania ave- nue to the Penitentiary Building. At the upper gate there is another strong military guard. A line of sentinels ex- tends from the gate to the building, where is posted a guard of the Vet- eran Reserve Corps. All sorts of precautions are being taken to keep out of the court room and the building persons who have no business there. On entering the build- ing, those privileged to have Dasses from the president of the commission, Gen. Hunter, arc directed to & wide stairway that leads to the hall on the second floor. A new stairway has been thrown up at the northeast corner of the building to the court room, the door being & small one at the northeast, set in an tongue-and-grooved casing. ‘There are sentries at the foot of all stairs, at every door and at every turn. In a second-story room, from which en- trance is gained to the court room, military officers this morning were gathered around a table in the center awaiting orders. Around the room were orderlies ready to gallop off with & summons or message from the court at_a moment’s notice. ‘The interior of the court room has been partially described heretofore in THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, MAY 15 1930. Everyday Psychology BY DE. JESSE W. SPROWLS. - Milk Qualities of Character. We all think of the quality of the character of others (and sometimes of ourselves) in terms of so much of this, that, or something else. In other words, quality is res quantity. In the first column you 1 find a list of traits of average amounts. In the second and third columns are the same traits expressed in terms of shortage and excess.® Average. cre lies not so esy Soieananenes seauiousness Frankness Hypocrisy Bluntnes Determination Vaciliation Wilfulnes Tovaity Independence bartnership Honesty Venality Scrupuiousness Diligence Dilatoriness Haste Accliracy Buperficiality Tneenuousness Children Pedantry f Inquisitiveness | Often like Servility thusism amiliarity i Bollcitude Barsimony Lavishness Timidity Reckleseness Faint: Daring e (Copyri osity Combativen'ss Courage detioreren is enough. Movie fans are trowding the few theaters in France where talkies are exhibited, while silent fllms have few spectators. . It might be added that it has heavily grated windows. The prisoners’ stand or dock is at the west end, raised about a foot from the rest of the floor and surrounded by & plain railing about 4 feet high, extending the whole width of the room. At this end there is just enough space for a heavy wooden door, studded with iron bolts, set in the wall, through which the prisoners enter the court room. The officers of the court are seated at a long green baize-covered table at the north side of the room. The of- ficial reporters and newspaper corre- spondents are seated at another table nearby. Theywtmell stand is in the center of the room, about & foot high, and sur- rounded by a railing. Counsel for the accused use separate tables nearby, while the judge advocate his as- sistant sit at one end of the long table with the court. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Miss Bay read “Goldenlocks an’ the Free nunytn us today, an’ her ast had us heard it before. ~“Well, I should say!” I telled her. “I know 'at one by hand.” . Stuffed Cucumbers. Mix well half a cupful of minced , two tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs and tomato catsup and one tablespoonful of finely chopped onion. Season with salt and pepper and add & lttle milk. Cut lengthwise, peel, and cut out the centers of three cucumbers. .MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Why So Mad? “Doest thou well to be angry?"— Jonah {v. 4. How easily some of us become angry and over what trivial things! Getting angry has become a habit with some. Upon the slightest provo- cation they fly off the handle and give vent to & most unreasonable T, 1 recently came upon a man in a heat of temper. “Why so mad?” I asked. He tried to tell me, but after I had talked with him a few minutes he had to con- fess that he really had nothing to be mad about. “The discretion of a man deferreth his angler,” says Solomon. If one will hold himself in check and defer his anger, nine times out of ten he will find that he has no occasion for anger. “Doest thou well to be angry?” Con- sider how small the matter is over which you have become angered. Is it well for one to allow such a little thing to upset and unnerve him? Consider the effects of anger. To say nothing of the effects upon one's nervous system, it always leaves one in a mean spirit and with & mean feeling. After a spell of anger, you go about feeling like a ci t. We suffer more from our anger than those with whom we_become angered. Besides this, in the heat of anger we say and do the most ridiculous d absurd things. In fact, there is scarcely anything that makes us act more fool- ishly, Solomon didn't miss it when he said, “Anger resteth in the bosom of fools.” 1t we would learn to control our tem- per and hold back our anger, we would save ourselves & lot of misery and spare others a Jot of unhappiness. White Cake. Separate the yolks of sit from the whites. Beat the egg yolks well, adding one cupful of sugar. Then beat again for five minutes. Add a tea- spoonful of boiling water, then add one cupful of flour sifted six times. Beat the whites of the eggs until they are very stiff, then fold into the mixture, ad f vanilla. Bake One mother says: Jane has a game which she likes to play when we go to the country in the car. She keeps track of all the filling stations along the way by putting a mark down in a little red notebook every time we pass one. Then when we a cemetery she buries them all and over, sometimes substituting horses, farmhouses, autos passing, or, best of all, windmills. When she tires of this she often jots down the license numbers of the cars we pass, and she s making a_regular collection of States to see if she can see more out of State licenses than her little chum who keeps track of licenses. Kleinert's Mirelle Powder— the delightful deodorant. Fill with the mixture and sprinkle over the top finely diced bacon. Bake in & Coffee NEW...this method of handling coffee like a perishable fresh food ding one of in & moderate oven for about 20 minutes. and now, more than ever, you'll need these fluffy petals of » pure soap. .. Summer's just around the corner . . . with cottons at their height. Sheer, wispy voiles and crisp organdies, sassy ginghams and French piqués. Easy to tub . . . but be careful to keep their delicate tints, their snowy and off- shade whites, unstreaked or grayed by re-deposited dirt! Trust them to the suds of these downy-white petals of soap. Kirkman’s suds, you see, do more than gently wash the dirt from the fabrics. As each particle of dirt enters the suds, Soft, white petals of purest soap It is the rag-tag end of the year when children’s appetites frequently lag and the usual meals that ought to tempt them seem uninteresting. Yet children need good, nourishing food at this time of the year as much as at any other time, and the trouble usually are not hungry as that they don’t like the things offered. One mother finds that by way of varlety she gets very good lunches consisting of sandwiches and milk shakes. with eagerness at this time of the year milk shakes, and all you need is a metal shaker and some chocolate malted milk to add to the milk. Chocolate milk shakes that some chil- sweet chocolate sirup made from cocoa or chocolate. chocolate sirup in the shaker of milk shake increases its nourishment, and is liked by some children, though not by others. Other flavors that may be used in- FEATURES, stead of the chocolate in making the milk shakes are caramel and maple sirup. Now for the sandwiches. There is almost always nmet.mn‘ in the larder or refrigerator from which to make tempting sandwich fillings. The fillings may be made shortly after breakfast if you like, and then when lunch time comes the task is simple. If baker’s bread is used, I suggest oft the crusts for the sand- wiches. These crusts may #&M crisp in the oven and eaten but- ter or instead of ers. Leftover meat, if freed from skin and little gravy, make who will not drink milk| ¢net aimost all children like. butter is liked by many childceg, Y ure of cream cheese and gfoun dates or cream cheese and chopped figs. Shakes for Children. much in the fact that they results with it if made into chocolate o Indian Fritters. ' Put into a pan three tablespoonfuls of sifted flour and pour over it carefully, stirring all the time, enough water to make a stiff paste. cool, then break in separately the yolks of Xom'B e:tn lulm! ‘{,he wh‘l,vfl of two eggs. Beat well and drop by spoonfuls into bolling fat. Fry quickl: ‘may be made from a not too A tablespoonful of this milk A raw egg added to the just twice as smart LOOKS THE WOMAN WHO FEELS SMART—BECAUSE SHE KNOWS EVERY LITTLE ACCESSORY, SEEN AND UNSEEN, IS EXACTLY RIGHT! o ew Kleinert's Party Back Brassierette. Pretty evening gowns must have their dress shields—the Party Back Brassierette is a favorite be- cause of its low cut back... Skirts have no chance to wrinkle when they’re protected by well-cut aprons or skirts with a panel of pure Kleinert's rubber... For the absolute minimum in a sanitary belt, choose Kleinert's Phantom made of NUVO, the wonderful newelastic material that mevercuts in and cannot slip down... And for a delightful deodorant pow- der to keep you fresh for hours, 4sk for Kleinert’s Mirelle—bland, soft,and effectiveto thelast shake. Kleinert; it Sanitary Apron. «“PERFECT AS ELEINERT’S DRESS SHIELDS” 2 tiny globule of sosp surrounds it and holds it . . . holds it and holds it dll the washing is finished. No ¥t can o deposit . . . the last speck goes out in the rinse water! Give your summer things and delicate underthings this infinitely finer care. Your grocer has Kirkman’s Soap Chips, packaged in three convenient sizes. Kirkman & Son, Brooklyn, New York. » Hear Mary Olds and Calliope in *Woman to Woman” every Tuesday and Thursday at 11:15 A. M. Eastern Standard Time over sta- tion wTAM, and 12:15 P. M. Eastern Daylight Saving Time over stations WEAF,WEEI, and WGR. 1. dislodge the dirt 2. keep the dirt from re-deppsiting Because there is no substitute for purity there can-be no substitute for Kirkman Produets et [ %]