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Even for the very little girl two- &ie:e dresses are now the fashion and re is a practical advantage as well as a fashion advantage in this arrange- ment. A simple little skirt of colored linen or navy blue serge may be worn with sleeveless blouses made from an amazingly small amount of material | cessively high. 3 DJ—5 and %. KD—2. ab and cd—8 and ac and bd—11 and ag—4 and 5. ae—2 and 12, fo—35. bi—1 and 2. dj—6 and 2. km—34. mi and kd—2. The pattern marked with capital let- ters is the back and the one with small letters is the front. Cut two fronts and cut the back with AC on a length- wise fold. Join back with fronts with a French seam at eh and EH and also at KJ and kj. Bind off armholes, neck and fronts and finish with buttor buttonholes as shown in the (Covyright, 1930.) FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. 1 4 | The Italian restaurant in this country |still serves macaroni—miles and miles {of it. But macaroni really isn’t Italian |any more. It has taken its place beside Paris fashions on the list of things upon which Mussolini has set the seal of his disapproval. The reason, I suppose, is simple enough—the price of white flour out of which macaroni is made is ex- It is something of an act of patriotism to give up macaroni in_order to reduce this high price. So when you see in the recipe book or on a menu a dish marked “Macaroni a Italienne” you will know that this menu or book isn't quite up to date. Here is the sort of dish that we con- sider typically Italian. It can be made THE SLEEVELESS SPORTS SHIRT | OF COTTON MESH MAKES A SMART PLAY DRESS WE | COMBINED WITH A PLEATED | SKIRT OF STRIPED MATERIAL. | K and one skirt with three or four blouses will give as much service as three or four one-piece dresses. The skirt or blouse shown today is patterned after sports shirts worn by | young girls this Summer and may be made of lisle mesh or any sort of cot- ton material you like. These dimen- sions are right for the child of 3 or 4, but may be increased for the older of either spaghetti or macaroni. The only real difference between these two products seems to be that macaroni is somewhat larger than spaghetti and is tubular. Have ready a kettle of rapldly boiling water. You should have two quarts for a half pound of macaroni, which may be broken into short lengths to suit Americans. The water should be slight- ly salted. Cook until tender. Now grate a half pound of American cheese. Wash and cut up fine a sweet green pepper and two cloves of garlic. A little onion may be used instead. Drain the macaroni and add the cheese and garlic and green pepper. Also add four or five tablespoonfuls of canned tomato, four or five tablespoonfuls of olive ofl, several tablespoonfuls of catsup, with salt and pepper to taste. Butter a baking dish and pour this into it. Sprinkle over with some buttered crumbs, and sprinkle a little of the cheese on top. Bake about a half hour—it should be a golden brown on top. 4RO R, Tasty Stringbeans. String and break into 2-inch lengths one quart of beans, wash in hot water, add two slices of bacon, one medium sliced onion, two cupfuls of tomatoes, salt and pepper to taste, and enough child. AB and CD—7 and 4 inches. AC and BD—11 and 12, BEDTIME STORIES Thimble Is Found. Who from his treasure cannot stay 1s bound to_give the thing away. —FARMER BROWN'S BOY. Farmer Brown's Boy was thoughtful. Mother Brown was telling how she had Jost her thimble. “I thought I put it on the windowsill,” said she, “and I wasn't out of the room over two minutes. If that Crow had been around here, 1 would suspect him; but he was down in the cornfield with you. So that let's him out. It must be that I didn't put the thimble there as I though I did, but dropped it and it rolled out of sight. Farmer Brown's Boy said nothing, but he looked over at Jim Crow a bit suspi- ciously. It was true that Jim Crow had been with him most of the morning. He had ridden down to the cornfield on his shoulder and had ridden back on his shoulder. But now that he thought it over he recalled that there had been a A iz ¥ 4 = e e % HE FLEW OVER TO THE TREE | WITH THE KNOTHOLE. | brief time when Jim Crow bad disap- { peared. His master thought nothing of | it at the time. In fact, he hadn't been | quite sure that Jim Crow had really left | the cornfield. Now, however, he sus- | pected that the black scamp might have | been back up to the house, and then re- | turned to the cornfield almost at once. After dinner Farmer Brown’s Boy went out with Jim Crow riding on his shoulder. _“Jim Crow,” said Farmer | Brown's Boy, “did you steal that| thimble?” | “Caw!” replied Jim Crow. This might boiling water to cover the beans well. Cook for about three hours, adding boiling water as it is needed. Serve hot. BY THORNTON THE EVENING BY LEE PAPE, My sister Gladdis and Harvey came for supper today, and they all started to tawk about Gladdises baby, being my Dpeflew. Reminding me of some- thing, and I sed, G, that reminds me, 1 had a sed dreem last nite about Willy, O my goodness, I nope there wasent anything significant in it, ma sed. Her bleeving in dreams, and I sed, Well it wasent so sad for the baby especially, it was more sad for me. I dreamed T wes playing with the fel- lows and a messenger boy went pass with a telegram, and the fellows all started to wonder if it was for any of them, and we all started to follow him to see whose front afegfl he went up, and ferst he went up Puds Simkinses steps and Puds got all excited, and then the messenger boy looked at the number of the house and found out he had made a mistake and kepp on going, and he went up Sid Hunts steps and up Skinny Martin’s steps and it was a mis- take each time, and then he went up Iy steps and axually rang the bell, and the fellows all yelled, G, its for Benny, Benny's getting a telegram, and I ran up the steps and I sed, Whose it for, is it for me? and he sed, Its for Benny Potts, thats all T know, and I sed, Well Im Benny Pofts, I know that much, and he made me sine my name and give me the telegram, and I quick opened it and it sed, A mistake has been made, insted lu( you having & cw its a bysickel. ne}?&y goodness such 8 ideer, ma sed, and Gladdis sed, Well Tm very glad to heer that he considers it & sad dreem and that he'd rather have his neflew, and pop sed, Yes, it shows a certain pride of family wich I consider a very good thing in a young savage, and Frarvey sed, Maybe he's human after Bllell G wizzickers, that's not what T ment was the sad part of it, I sed. Well then my stars what was the sad part? Gladdis sed, and I sed, Waking up. pMaklng them all mad, and ma sed, O, eat your supper. ‘Witch I did. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Line and Becoming Color. Here is a charming siruple frock. It has all the new style features to be certain. ‘What really makes it smart is its sim- plicity, that always expresses good taste. Next in importance is & becoming color. The fabric adds much to its exclusive- ness, . It's easy to have all three by making “It's an opportunity to add just one more interesting sports frock to your Summer wardrobe. W. BURGESS have been yes and might have been no. “I do believe you did,” continued his master, “and I'm going to search your treasure houst “Caw. Caw!” said Jim Crow again. Now, Farmer Brown's Boy knew where Jim Crow’s favorite treasure house was. and he went straight to it. He hunted all through it. There were many things in that storehouse and most of the things were shiny, There was the han- dle of a broken cup; there were two or three white pebbl there was a 10- cent piece. Farmer Brown's Boy pock- eted that with a chuckle. There were many other things, but there wasn't & thimble. Farmer Brown's Boy hunted thoroughly, but there was no thimble. “Jim Crow,” sald he, “I misjudged you. Yes, sir; I misjudged you.” “Caw!” sald Jim Crow. “Cawl!” “It must be that Mother really did drop that thimble,” sald Farmer Brown's Boy. “We will go in and have another look for it in the house.” He started for the door, but Jim Crow didn't follow. Jim Crow flew over to an apple tree in the orchard. Farmer Brown's Boy went inside the house. Then & sudden thought led him to go peck out at Jim Crow. Jim Crow was watching the house. Farmer Brown's Boy took care that Jim Crow shouldn't see him. Apparently satisfied that he wasn't being watched, Jim Crow flew to a certain knothole and peered into it. Then he thrust his bill in and took something out, with which he appeared to play for a few minutes. He then dropped it back in the knothole and flew over toward the house. Farmer Browr's Boy let him into the shed and then shut him in there, Then he went straight over to that knothole where Jim Crow had been so busy. He peeked in. Something bright was in there. He put his finger in a&nd he could feel something. The hole was not big enough for him to put his hand in. Finally with a little stick he managed to.get out the thing he had felt. It was the missing thimble! Yes, sir; it was the missing thimble! Farmer Brown's Boy went back to the house and let Jim Crow out. At firs Jim Crow just hung around. Finally, when he thought no one was watching him, he flew over to the tree with the knothole. A moment later Farmer | Brown’s Boy chuckled as he heard t| | voice of Jim Crow. “Caw, Caw, Caw shrieked Jim Crow. And one did not need to understand what he was saying to know that he was both disappointed and angry. (Copyright, 1930.) Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELL Expensive Clothes. “Clothes are such an expense!” Jaments & woman, “and I don't know how other women manage. I alw need something or something is alway wearing out. There seems to be no end to it. What is the answer?” The answer is sometimes to be seen on the woman who murmurs the Yament. One cannot wear sheer hosiery pvery day without amassing & heavy osiery bill, Because of the chemistry »f their sk e Women cannot wear sheer hose y at all. The business girl who chooses & soft blue unfinished worsted for her business suit and finds it wearing shiny and matted in & month has her poor judg- ment to blame, not the “high price of clothes.” The woman who buys a& coat for everyday wear, and learns after the first rainstorm that it spots from rain, need not look far for the cause of her waste of money. The same may be said of the woman who buys a sewn instead of cemented raincoat. It is not so much what one buys at timos as one’s purpose in buying it. One must not only know her needs, but also how to satisfy them, satisfactorily and economically. The woman who buys overseam in- stead of prix seam gioves for every- day wear will soon find the former “pulling out.” It is not the fault of the glove that she chose a dress glove for everyday wear. Another reason why the clothing budget is stretched at times to dis- tortion s the fact that we spend more on occasional clothing ‘than ‘we can efford, or than the occasion demands. & woman who pays $12 for a pair of ZABETH ALLEN white shoes to wear with her garden party dress will probably find about the time Fall rolls along that she could use that $12 to buy two pair of much-needed shoes, We usually lack clothes-money because we have spent it unwisely, and we lack clothing be- cause we have shopped improvidently. :‘flk, that i cool and thoroughly prec- ical. Blas binding of plain silk accents scallop-trim. Style No. 746 comes in sizes 16, 18, 20 years; 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. 1t is straight and slender with length- ened silhouette achieved through verti- cal line of center-closing bodice and stitched skirt plaits. Sheer pastel linen, pique prints, striped cotton or silk shirting and pastel washable flat crepe silk smartly ap- propriate. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. ‘We suggest that when you send for this pattern you inclose 10 cents ad- ditional for a copy of our large Fashion Magazine, Cheese Relish Sandwich Filling. For 12 sandwiches—One-half cupful yellow cream cheese, one tablespoonful chopped onfon, two tablespoonfuls chopped celery, two tablespoonfuls chopped sweet pickles, one-eighth tea- spoonful salt and five tablespoonfuls salad dressing. Mix ingredients with fork. Spread on buttered slices of thinly cut white bread. Arrange sand wich fashion and pack in picpic basket. Graham, white of Boston brown bread used for making these sand. Flies — Mosquitoes Roaches—Bedbugs Ants, Moths, Fleas. ° KILLS QUICKER ALWAYS COSTS LESS LITTLE BENNY l It is watery-green polka-dotted tub | STAR, WASHINGTON, MODEST “MAY I CUT IN?” OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI. Rights of a Child. It is true the first thing to do with children is to give them the best pos- sible physical care. They must be kept clean, They have to be well fed and clothed. Their beds must be comfort- able and their homes safe and warm. Their little ills must be attended to; their greater ones given grave care. Their first requirement is & healthy animal life. All that is_true. But it is not all of the truth. Not nearly all No child can thrive as a mere animal, however healthy it may be. The mission of humanity is the culti- vation of a spiritual self. Unless the children have the opporlunlt{ for spiritual growth, for emotional de- velopment, they are stunted personali- ties and never find happiness on this earth, As in every branch of child training this idea works first from outside, in. We have to wrap the children in an| environment that breathes spiritual | qualities. First of all, the child in the | household must be loved. When you'| feed & child you should dress the dish with affection or its soul nourishment is nothing at all. A smile and an affectionate touch should accompany your ministrations or, clean and comfortable as the little body may be, the budding spirit may be blighted. Service given in bitterness poisons the spirit of the recipent. It is dangerous to child growth. For this reason we try to keep chil- dren in homes rather than institutions. BEAUTY CHATS Varying Your Diet. The woman on a strict diet has one legitimate grievance—that a reduction dlet is terribly monotonous, Of course, she should consider her meals as medi- cine rather than food; then she'd be grateful for any part of them that was tasty, and for any amount she ate, whether it satisfied her or not. There is a lot in the mental attitude with which you approach any subject. But let us see what can be done to vary a quite strict diet. You can have clear soup—that means clear beef broth, chicken broth, clam broth, further varled by flavoring with onion or with tomato. You can have eggs—boiled, poached or hard boiled and sliced cold. Or deviled—only don’t make the stuffing rich. You can have chicken any way but fried, lean beef, lJamb or mutton chops—not the fat bits—liver, and you can have the meat baked, broiled, roasted, stewed, minced, in endless variations. You can have almost all vegetables. Here is where the fat woman and I part company sympathetically. I know of no more delicious meals than those made up with fresh vegetables, cooked hot, cold or made into salads. I can think of 30 different sorts of lunches, com- bining an egg, spinach, beets, earrots, turnips, oyster plant, tomatoes, peas and beans and corn, and 8o can L As for salads, using up all the left- overs in the ice box, with a dressing mostly vinegar and almost no oil—or if that ofl is tasteless mineral ofl and not olive —why, the variety is endless, Desserts give you less chance for - BEAUTY CREAM | ' REMOVES WRINKLES An amazing new cleansing cream has been discovered called Marinello | “Pissue Cream. It is already the fa-| vorite among leading beauties of the stage and soclety, as well as cos-| meticians everywhere. | Doesn’t look nor work like any, cream you ever used. Melts the pores, lightens the skin slightly, cannot enlarge the pores, cannot grow hair on your face, overcomes dryness, removes and prevents lines, | flaking and _wrinkles and wipes | away beautifully, leaving the skin as | soft and clear in color as a rose petal. | Get & jar of Marinello Tissue| Cream from the stores named be- | low. Cleanse your face with it twice a day for 10 days using no soap or Fater. It you are not overjoyed at| the way it removes wrinkles and gives nmew softness and beauty to| | your skin, send us the lid of your | Marinello” jar and we will refund your money. The Marinello Com- | | pany, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York City,” Sold at these beauty shops: | | thedral Mansions Beauty [onatn 3000 C Shoo = onnecticut Avenue Beauty Bliop 10"‘"" ano 19 18t street N,W.l ity Beauty 8hop | Vanity Beply Connecticut Avenue N.W. | Eleanor Suyder Beauty Shop » HHOB hnlufilfll:l Press Building len Powers Beauly hop e . ls;;.i 19th Street N.W. PFlorastelle Beauty Shop | 8§08 H Street N.E. | Mirs. Malone's Marinello' Bho i 2 Columbia Road Ames Besuty 8hop | 202 4th_Street N.E. | Marinello Daylignt Bewuty ‘Shon | 705 13tn Street N.W. | Anne Campbell Beauty Siiop | 727 T2th Street N.W. | Colony Beauty Shop 1 Georota Avenue N.W. | Marinello Approved ‘Shop 1205 F Street N.W. The Cosmetigue Beaity Shop 51 Mount Pleasant Street | 8ax See Beauty Shoppe Homer Building Marguerite Beauty Shop No. 1 623 Penna. Avenue S.K. Lady Jane Beauty Shop 1304 F St. N.W. Marti-Nita Beauty Shop 35 York Road. Baltimore | Dorothes Mae Besuty Shoppe 3646 34th St., Mount Rainfer | i | personal tint that sets the youngsters'| D. C., WEDNESDAY, MAIDENS The close, affectionate, spiritual touch so essential to healthy child growth cannot well be given when children are massed in and attended by strangers for pay. Kindly and well meaning, even loving, they may be, but that “little bit more” that means the very essence of life to children is not there. And for that reason we beg that all teachers who have no real affection for children, who cannot love the trouble- some child while correcting it, who cannot yearn over the growth of a stumbling pupll, find some more cod~ genial occupation. Children must be loved if they are to succeed. That is only another way of saying they must be happy. Put a line and color into their cloth- ing so they feel your understanding care. Put in that “little bit more” into the dressing of the children so that your care takes on the emotional and hearts beating in higher rhythm. Put! a touch of beauty in the table service, | it 1s so inexpensive and easy these days of the five-and-ten, so that each meal becomes a feast of love, although it be only bread and jam. Bread and jam served on a dainty green plate, milk in a tumbler that glows with the light of Spring grass and greenery, is & party. A lesson sccompanied by a new and shiny pencil and immaculate paper becomes a privilege and a joy. Just & “little bit more"—and earth becomes heaven for childhood. Isn't that worth a little thought? (Copyright, 1930.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES varlety, since you are held to melons and frults. But ready-cooked breakfast cereals With fruit come in here as a ?ren help in making up tasty, non- attening dishes. J. L. S—Bleaching to eliminate freckles may go on constantly, for if freckles are natural to your type they will be forming all the time. Some skins tan and others freckle—really the same thing, as nature is throwing this coloring upon the skin to protect the health of the person from the ‘direct rays of the sun. If you bleach con- ;tnntly your skin will be injured there- J. F—D. B. M.—Girls of 14 and 15 years of age should not try to reduce their weight through a rigid means of dieting. If you are stouter than the average girl it is not serious, for a few more years of growth may completely change this. Shipping lists show that the number of transatlantic passengers sailing since the beginning of the official Summer AUGUST 6, 1930. SUMMERTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. ‘There are so many families of flowers in which the technical specialists de- light to amaze the amateurs, families where all is difficult and full of pitfalls for the beginner, that it is & relief to meet & family like the mallows, that anybody can recognize on sight and understand. If you know what a hollyhock looks like, then you have the gist of the mal- low family, and though it is not very brilliantly represented in the wild flow- ers of the District of Columbia, there are two species of hibiscus “‘down- river,” along the tidal marshes of the Potomac, that are in bloom just now and are so lovely that it is worthy a pil- grimage (best attempted by boat) to see them. They look for all the world like extra big hollyhocks growing in water, and one species is pink with green leaves, the other white with the leaves silvery-white beneath. Perhaps the commonest Summer flowering shrub of the suburbanite is the Rose of Sharon, which is another species of hibiscus, but it comes from the Old World, as indeed do all the mallow family hereabouts except the two handsome marsh mallows (ori- gin of the confection of that name). For instance, the handsome velvet leaf that runs wild in vacant lots around Washington comes from India. The high mallow, with purple flowers, and the little bardyard mallow, with edible fruits that look and taste like cheese, are European waifs, NANCY PAGE Blue Plate Luncheon May Be Served at Home BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. ‘The Nancy Page Club was meeting at Dorothy’s home. She had a shaded patio which was just the place for the luncheon on this hot day. Fortunately Dorothy knew that even on the hottest days there should be some warm food served. A meal of salads, frozen dishes and iced beverages may taste delielous as it goes down, but it leads to digestive upsets. Accordingly there were a number of hot foods on the blue luncheon plate. But she had iced coffee made amber with rich cream and she served chilled melon for dessert. On the blue plate she had this com- bination—veal bird with' brown gravy, flaky bolled rice, fresh green beans but- tered and crisp cucumber salad. She had tiny, rolled sandwiches of white brle‘nd with cress stuck in the end of the roll. Her cucumber salad was made by using small cucumbers of fairly uni- form size. She cut each one into halves lengthwise. Then she pared the halves and hollowed each half. With a sharp knife she slashed cross- wise of the cucumber boats, not cutting through but making it easier to get small sized portions when eating. ‘The cucumber pulp was chopped fine, Qe P CUCUMPLR combined with thin slices of radish and ripe olives. ‘The radishes were not pared, so that the effect was one of pale green, scarlet and black. The mix- ture was marinated in French dressing made spicy with garlic. Then the pulp was drained, heaped into shells and served with a mixture of thick sour season has been greater than the 1929 figure, but the proportion of de luxe cabin bookings has decreased. cream, diluted with a little vinegar. “The combination is delicious,” said all the club members. Don’t Starve The Teeth Teeth have to be built out of foods that are rich in phosphorus and calcium. Many children take into adult life teeth that are defective, unfit for the job that nature intended. Shredded Wheat with milk h elps develop sound teeth, good muscles and good bones. It is rich in the bone-making salts. The erisp, crunchy shr eds make chewing necessary and that develops healthy gums and good digestion. SHREDDED HEAT WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT ¥FEATU RES, A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. Il' you are old enough to vote, more than likely there’ll be a letter for you within a few weeks from the man who represents you in Congress. He will be wanting to know what reading matter he can send you from ‘Washington. There will be a list from which you can choose—some 650 = different publica- of “Food 1 Children” = of gamut from ‘Young to “Diseases Sheep.” 3 Check the _ones (§ you want, mail the list back to him, and within a few days the postman wiil deliver them to you. On July 1, this year, each Senator and Representative Was ‘allotted his quota of Farmer Bulle- tins—the “best sellers” of all Govern- ment_publications. 1t costs Uncle Sam $250,000 to pub- lish this series of bulletins which are given away free. Four-fifths of the total number published are turned over to Senators and Representatives for | distribution as they see fit, The Department of Agriculture re- tains the remaining one-fifth for gen- eral distribution. These 20,000 coples which each mem- ber of Congress gets are not foisted in- discriminately upon his constituents. | Care is exerchedtw make sure \Iutf: | person _does not get something fol }which he did not ask or in which he is not interested. | _ Before actual distribution & list of publications is sent the constituent. He is asked to read this list over, select those in which he is interested, and mail it back. Lest year, as a result of circulating some 6,000,000 copies of these lists, more than 7,000,000 Parmers' Bulle- tins were distributed by members of Congress. This brihgs the total number of pub- lications distributed by these officials last year to more than 13,000,000. ‘There are heavy runs on such issues as “Lamb as You Like It,” '% at Cream Prosen ongressional are compelled to do some shrewd bartering to secure cient of ar issues to meet demands of their con- stituents. It is not uncommon for & secretary of one Representative to endeavor to trade the secretary of another 25 coples | of “School Lunches” for a like number | of “Suits for the Small Boy.” This congressional _distribution _of farm bulletins is in the charge of a clerk at the Department of Agriculture named Prancis Cleary. Cleary has grown up with the de- partment and members of Congress and their secretaries regard him as vir. tually a walking encyclopedia on mat- ters pertaining to agriculture. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Prevention of Wrinkles. Not so long ago & woman in her late 30s went to her physician to .see if he could tell her why, though apparently in good health, she felt so tired all of the time. After an examination which proved that there was nothing organi- cally wrong, he informed her that the reason for her lethargy was the fact that she was about 60 pounds over- Ve unds of excess bag- ::;{h:}e ?zgefl;x?:xfeo to make the bearer unusually weary. And then he outlined for her a sensible reducing diet with a list of exercises to be used in connection with it. But the patient found the exercises rather tedious and decided for herself that she would depend upon diet alone, and she also made the diet considerably more rigid than the doctor had ordered. Result—the first week she lost eight pounds and was delighted. The next Week she lost five pounds and so she went on, week after week, until, 4s she put it herself, she “felt and looked like | an_old woman.” Getting down to normal weight is fine both as a health and beauty measure, but it should be done gradually. These extra pounds usually creep on slowly and if they are sloughed off too fast milady is sure to pay the price in a wrinkled and baggy skin. It is only natural that when excess fat melts away the skin should hang in loose folds. That is one of the reasons for exercise along with a reduction diet. The exercise itself doesn't always help one to reduce a great deal, but it does keep muscles firm and the skin in bet- ter condition than when one -depends on_diet_alone. By all means, do not try to reduce too fast. While the diet may be low My Neighbor Say: A paste made of bicarhonate of soda and water applied to sun- burn gives a cooling_sensation almost immediately. When the moisture has been absorbed from the paste the fire of the burn will have disappeared and the danger of blistering is lessened. Do not cut the grass on your lawn teo close during dry periods and do not water your lawn too often. When you do water it saturate the soil. Much damage is lt]i\)ne by sprinkling the surface sofl. Ice boxes need sunning and airing. A clean ice box saves ice. Loaves of yeast bread and bis- cuits may be quickly dipped in and out of cold water and fresh- ened in a moderate oven (375 de- grees F.) for 5 to 20 minutes, depending on the size. Such a rebaked loaf may be sliced while warm and will appear to be freshly baked. in fuels, it must contain sufficlent build- ing materials and regulators. During the reduction process do everything possible to nourish and lubricate the skin so that it will not wrinkle when the subcutaneous fat has melted a After the face has been cleansed at bedtime a food cream should be applied and then a massage given. As there is great danger of stretching the skin when massaging, use & patting rather than a rubbing move- ment. Take about a teaspoonful of tis- sue cream or muscle oil in your right hand and rub it in the palm of the left hand to make sure that it is per- fectly smooth. Pat it on the skin with the two fingers of the right hand. When facial muscles seem to sag downward, use the following movements for lifting them: Bend elbows, fingers meeting beneath the chin, palms for- ward. Stroke up firmly to the ears. Now place the fingers of your left hand on your left cheek bone. Stretch the thumb down and with it pick up the loose skin under the jaw. Proceed backward toward the ear, picking up the skin with the thumb and keeping the fingers on the cheek bone. Repeat on the right side. Now execute a pat- tering massage on your cheeks and throat, using all the fingers. After the massage, wipe off all excess cream and pat on an astringent, as this will not only close the pores and im- prove the texture of the skin, but will 1so help greatly in keeping muscles al firm, (Copyright, 1930.) Lemon Cake. One-half cupful butter, one and one- half cupfuls sugar, three egg yolks, one cupful cold water, one teaspoonful va- |nilla, one teaspoonful lemon extract, one-fourth teaspoonful salt, three cup- fuls pastry flour, three teaspoonfuls bal three egg Whites soft. Add egg yolks, water, extracts, salt, flour and_baking powder. Beat three minutes. Fold in egg Whites, pour into two layer cake lined with waxed papers. Bake 30 minutes in moderately slow oven. «Cranss . Th garment illustrated ot ... $1295 CHAws js the foundation garment fo o - of the mot 1) from bust to thigh. It tured ular radio programs Spring. Su/mxmm, g 61}011, MNeed CHARILS More So much depends on your foundation garment this summer. It must control and mould your figure, must give you a noticeable waist line. It must do these things and still be so comfort- able that you can wear it on the hottest days. So you need a ChaR 1s.. . the lightweight, patented, foundation garment that you adjust according to your individual needs. No give you the firm su perfect physical comfort of CHARIS— garment can be so | ightl, & s o boning and: st and control. You can have & private, at home. other foundation garment can port, correct figure control and ause no other constructed, with & mini. furnish adequate support reliminary showing of CHARus, in ter your ually fitted in our beautiful lors. Just write or "phone the & Flfmtnt will be indi y -&pxoimzd ficting par- ess below and ask for & CHARIS representative. CHA\RLS OF WASHINGTON 1319 F Street N.W. Phone: National 7931-32