Evening Star Newspaper, June 25, 1930, Page 29

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Womeén Who Sell What They Make BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. - ‘When a woman first contemplates |she :m?s“thlht‘!flnmlmhmlhe by selling she feel al g] 0% the inings she can make, she L0, " he should be able to earn is “at sea” to know just how to.get in | 5" " should, bit thinking she touch with customers. It is then that | is but the first step toward doing it. she must put on her thinking cap and | She has to-think to & find & solution. She cannot expect any.|She Will follo one else to manage her own personal problems, but she can learn the methods ,her( nd\;lnm:te Bullnl:1 ;robl:tm:' ;& . be further discussed and ideas that are followed by others who are to help her recognize ntia] ele- + Successful. This means that she must | orecin her handiwork that must be apply herself to the study of such | present to make them marketable. methods. | It is for !hnfl::p{e:; j;urm o‘t:e?i . ing women et their wares tha A business men does exactly the ot “CRTCTING cerjes of articles. Same thing. He first becomes thoroughly | Therefore ‘all letters asking how to do it will be replied to through this department. When any p.-blems a told me, they will be discu. ed imper- sonally. Tt must be remembered that the actual seling of the things a woman makes can be done only through the | personal efforts of the woman herself. It comes within the province of an ad- viser to suggest avenues through which different kinds of homemade articles, | cookery, etc., can be sold. Those who | have read the previous articles will note | that this has been done already, and it will continue to be done. | It remains for readers who would earn money by selling what they make | to select the avenues best suited to their | purposes and try them. If any woma; | has found an original method of sellin| which hhs solved her own problem, t i shall be gind to hear from her, and to | pass along,her account to help those | who are stfuggling with unsolved prob- lems. 1t hoped that many women will have {lpful suggestions to aid those who are beginning to sell what they make. | (Copyright, 1980.) MOTHERS AND TREIR CHILDREN. For Shut-Ins. One mother says: When our childrén are confined to the house for a few days I always try | to find some little extra thing for them |, | to do to amuse themselves. The every- | day toys lose their charm when the | have to be played with for any l!fl,‘g |of time. One of the most successful | things I ever got for them was & pound | of sea shell noodles. With & box of | water colors they spent hours decorat- | ing the shells, trying to see who could ! | make the prettiest ones. (Copyright, 1930.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Farina with Ralsins Bacon Omelet Graham Toast Coftee LUNCHEON. Baked Beans Pepper Relish Brown Bread Baked Rice Pudding with Cream Ice Box Cookies Tea DINNER. Split Pea Soup, Cold Corned Beef Creamed Potatoes, Carrots and Peas Jellied Tomato Salad Cottage Pudding, Strawberry Sauce, Coffee PTHE E,EO"V‘NAN MUPST gg{gg -A;{DOVAJ BACON OMELET. URPO! HEN PLA! Place bacon in frying pan and TO SELL WHAT SHE MAKES AT| | cover with eges well. Bostent ry HOME. until golden brown and turn and : fry on other side. Season with acquainted with his products, and then | | I3 he studies the problems of getting them | | SAIt &nd pepper. on the market. So great a problem is BAKED RICE PUDDING., business that universities are having special ches known as business One cupful cooked rice, 1 éup- schools for graduates of colleges €0 ful milk, 1 egg beaten light, i ®at they may learn business manage- L s, S U TR mt‘ e‘hon;aml.kher h“n“" uppo;- salt, vanilia, Bake minutes. ty to attend such a College. She must learn at home, make the things COTTAGE PUDDING. at home and sell without going out into One-fourth cupful butter, two- the actual business world. It will be thirds cupful sugar, 1 egg, 1 cup- seen that she should not be discouraged ful milk, 2% cupfuls flour, 4 tea- if she has to study the merchandising spoonfuls baking powder, 34 tea- ©f her products. spoonful salt. eam the butter, It is this that is the business end of | | add sugar ually and egg her work. The other end is generally beaten, Mix and sift flour, bak- part of her household tasks. Because ing powder and salt; add alter- [} nately with milk to first mixture, Turn into buttered cake pan, bake 35 minutes. Serve with vanilla or hard sauce. Strawberry Sauce—Cream % cupful butter with 1 cupful sugar, add stiffiy -beaten white of 1 egg and 1 cupful mashed and strain- ed strawberries, place over boll- ing water, heat until lukewarm and serve immediately. this . cerea TALKS! Ir’s so crisp it pops and crackles when you pour on Some time ago we showed in this| Tilk or cream. And what & column how & trestle table, two| flavor! Crunchy rice grains benches and two chairs, could be used | ,—toasted golden-brown. to seat six people comfortably and in : - the illustration today we give an idea Rice Krispies are fine for ve-them to the of how delightful a long, narrow table | gny meal be when combined with a bench 2 o 4 chairs, children for supper. Ea mnn':fnnflrfi:'d m.n;1 -vmdm are Just | g0 digest. Order a red.and- e ] 80 that a cushion ana seat may be constructed beneatn | Sreen package from your them and placed in front of these a| grocer. Try the recipes for It v'f::x'fl.fib;}n possible to place 8 | & BoAroons, ete. Made by bench in front of this table, but because | Kellogg in Battle Creek. the room was rather large, the four . chairs were found more pleasing ‘The woodwork in this room, includ- ing the wooden cornice board above the | windows, has been finished in silver | green and the walls in parchment color, | the glass curtains are made of ecry | voile, while the over-draperies are of | yellow—ground, flowered chintz, bound | with green to match the woodwork. The cushion in back of the bench has ‘been covered with green rep. If cush- jons were desired for the chairs, these Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. might have been covered with the flow- | ered drapery material and trimmed all around with green pleated chintz. CAN'T BEAT POWDER TO RID A HOME OF ROACHES - ' Tmakz's nothing like powder ta Hid s house of all roaches. For they hide when you'rg around. Only powder can wait for them, Black is deadliest of all! Never evaporates. Kills all foaches, bedbugs, ants, fleas and moths. Also flies, mosqruitoes. Packed in glass to keep its strength. @ s,n.0.00, BLACK FLAG POWDER MADE BY THE MAKERS OF BLACK PLAG LIOUTD THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25 1930. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. BY HERBERT PLUMMER. THERE'S something a bit incongruous in the picture of Wesley Jones as the center of a controversy such as he has had on the question of prohibition— or any controversy, for that matter. For the senior |{Senator from | Washington, who | startled the coun- | try the other day { by announcing that | if ‘his constituency so decreed he would | stand by a referen- |dum on the dry !law, 1s not the type | of man who starts | or figures in sensa- tions. Out of the 96 men who sit in the | Senate it is doubt- | ful if on> could be | found possessed of a more mild disposition, a more serious | mien or a more quiet reserve—a re-| serve which at times seems almost dis-| tant. Senator Jones is as far removed from the familiar back-slapping, hail-fellow- Summertime cert'nly is the best time | well-met politician as one could imagine. there is. | There is only one thing about the man (Copyrieht, 1930.) which is not quiet, and that is the flam- ing red cravats he elects to wear at fre- quent intervals. In the Senate he sits quietly at his desk on the Republican side next to the aisle. Most of the time he is fingering books and papers stacked high on his desk. When he does arlse to make & speech or join in debate it is in a voice that scarcely carries to the galleries. His tone is conversational, and rarely does he depart from it. Gestures are few if any. Prohibition to him is a vital thing, born and nurtured in strong personal conviction. His announcement in re- | gard to a referendum marked no sur- render in his “personal conscientious views.” He always has been & dry. Facetiously dubbed “Five and Ten” | Jones when his bill to tighen enforce- ment of prohibition was passed, such Widespread publicity has come to him that his previous legislative accomplish- ments have been pushed into the back- ground. Few remember that he sponsored the Mississippi flood control act of 1928 and put it through the Senate without a dissenting vote; that he has fathered numerous laws alding soldiers and FEATUR | sailors; ‘that he i for adherence of America in the World Court. | |, Born three days after his father died, | | from the age of 10 Senator Jones has | made his own way. Until he was 16 he | worked on a farm all Summer that he | | might attend school in Winter. ~ He| Tive e Ived on'S/ceniz.» ay ot shepd on e | ety of what your Hvestament read law in Chicago. policy may be, stick to it. If you do | _And at 26, “$11 worse off than nothing | not, you are paving the wi dl | financially,” with a wife, ome child, ,w,:qu Y bk | plenty of ‘pluck and good health, he A | moved to Washington. ~Ten years iater| BY citing examples of how changes in | he came to as & Representa- | policy may create losses, it may be tive at large, served 10 years, then ran clearer just why a purchase once made for the Senate, and has been here ever | should be uninfluenced by a change in since. mind later | i, A woman may buy stock in the X Y 2 | Railroad. Her jnvestment banker has | Ham Pie. | Cut some eured ham into small pieces, | And prospects of the road. Add a lump of butter and a lttle black | “DParent that the road will realize some some boiled eggs in fourths and place | flect its increased earning power. Hence }m,m on top. Gover with a rich pastry | the stock seems to be & good invest- rolled thin, and place in the oven to ment. § |brown. Push the browned crust down| The woman, let's assume, buys the linto the ple, cover with pastry again, |Stock. In three months it is selling at and repeat the process until there is|$10 less a share than she paid for it. enough browned pastry in the pie for | She forgets her original investment pur- the liquid it contains. Lastly, cover Pose. She decides to “switch” to make with pastry, dot with butter and brown. | Up_her 10-point loss Serve hot. ‘Chicken pie ean be made in| The switch costs her $10 a share and the same way, using chicken instead|sShe probably switches to a speculative of ham, issue that increases her loss. Mean- | & while, three years pass. The stock real- izes its earlier promises and has repaid One in every five workers in New | handsomely those who held it over that South Wales now is temporarily unem- | period of time. ployed. The other picture is of the woman explained to her the condition, earnings | | cover with water and cook until tender.| In Jess than three or four years it is| traight Talks to Women Abcut Meney BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLE! | ¥ho buys & stock for speculative pur- poses and who is encouraged by a sub- | sequent rise in price to hold it for “in- | vestment purposes.” | Her stock having had its rise, soon | slips gradually down in price until one | day the woman finds herself without | her profit and with an undesirable stock | on_her hands in the bargain. Whatever your purpose, stick to # | and realize it. Griddle Cakes. With sour milk: Mix and sift two and one-half cupfuls of flour with half pepper. Pour into a deep pie can. Cut| Of its prospects, and its stock should re- a teaspoonful of salt and one and one- fourth teaspoonfuls of baking soda. | Add two cupfuls of sour milk and one egg well beaten. ‘Drop by spoonfuls onto a greased hot griddle, and cook |on one side. When puffed full of bubbles and cooked on the edges, turn | and cook the other side, Serve with | butter and maple_sirup. With sweet Jnilk: Mix and sift to- getheg three cupfuls of flour, one and one-Malf tablespoonfuls of baking pow- der and one teaspoonful of salt. Beat one egg, add two cupfuls of milk, and pour slowly onto the first mixture. Beat thoroughly and add two table- spoonfuls of melted butter. Cook lik: the other griddle cakes. STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS 1 Can Mueller’s Cooked Spaghetti 6 Green Peppers 6 Tablespoons Grated Cheese Cut tops off the peppers, remove seeds and fibre. Stand in boiling water for 10 minutes. Drain. Then fill each pepper with the cooked spaghetti, cover the top with grated cheese. Place the peppers uprightina pan containing & small amount of hot water. Bake in a moder- , ate oven for 20 minutes. Kept Clean and Fresh in Airtight, Triple.Sealed As a Change From Potatoes LARGEST . SELLING I L8B. 102 MUELLER oes Mother S share the fun ? OU NEEDN'T HURRY HOME to cook the family dinner. Spend a few extra hours outdoors where - it’s cool and pleasant. Dinner is no problem. You can prepare a delicious, healthful, balanced meal in just 2 few minutes. Thousands of wise housewives have discovered the secret. Just serve MUELLER'S COOKED SPAGHETTI as the main dish. This delightful food comes to you al- ready cooked and in a sauce made of ripe tomatoes, other fresh vegetables and mellow whole-milk cheese; no “filler,” artificial coloring or preservative has been added. A Complete, “Balanced” Meal MUELLER’S COOKED SPAGHETTI contains an abundance of health-giving, body-building elements — precious vitamins, carbohydrates, protein and mineral salts. Itis a balanced meal in itself —but you can, of course, add variety by using one of the delightful recipes of which an example is shown on the left. Simply Heat the Can And what a convenience MUELLER’S COOKED SPAGHETTI offers you as mother of the houschold. All the work has been done for you—the selecting of ingredients, blending them and cooking—all have been done in sunlit kitchens, under the most modern sani- tary conditions. You need only heat the can, open it and serve. You will have extra hours of freedom so you can share the summer fun with your family. Keep half a dozen cans of this delicious food in your pantry at all times. You will find them most handy whenever you wish to prepare a healthful meal in a hurry. Ask your grocer for MUELLER’S COOKED SPAGHETTIL He has it or can get it for you. MUELLERS "MACARONI SPAGHETTI EGG. NOODLES ELBOW MACARONI - B RRAN D COOKED SPAGHETTI IN AMBRICA,

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