Evening Star Newspaper, November 11, 1930, Page 30

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WOM AN'S PAGE. _ Ways to Prepare Baked Apples BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. firm, be cooked , and not have the shriveled appearance they sometimes have. There ‘TASTES ARE DESCRIBED. are ways of avolding the “cooked” look, mhl:&hrmhenmmed.mcu A are perhaps next best. Each kind has qurlme-mdnu'ouw&rydu- ferent ones and discover which your family likes best and which you find suits your cookery to your own satis- that are steam-baked will have skins more tender than those baked uncovered. The fruit will not be shriveled and the pulp will be firm, un- less the apples are in the oven too long. The length of time needed to bake the fruit perfectly depends entirely upon the size of the -'Rx:las. the temperature of the oven and e fruit. Small Baldwins, if cored and baked in a hot oven, may take but 20 minutes, while extra large Tolman Sweets, or greenings, in a slow oven, may. require 50 or 60 minutes. By pricking the ap- ples with a two-tined fork or a sharp metal skewer it is easy to know when they are tender and should be taken out. The simplest recipe for baked apples is as follows: Select ripe apples of ap- proximately the same size,” wash, and core’ them with an apple corer. Place in a shallow baking dish (a pie plate is excellent) and fill centers with \n- ulated sugar. Two tablespoonful each is enough for greenings or Bald- wins, No sugar is used with Tolman Sweets or other really sweet apples. To each six apples allow one-third cupful water., Put in a moderate oven and bake until tender. Serve hot or cold. Apples may be basted with sugar and water sirup made of one tablespoonful sugar to three-quarters cupful water. Basting keeps the skins tender. To steam-bake apples prepare as above, put in a pudding dish with a cover. Allow one-quarter cupful water to each six apples. Cover and bake in a_hot oven until tender. Richer baked apples are made by putting a dot of butter on top of the sugar in the core cavity. By sprinkling cinnamon over the apples spiced bak apples result. If clove fiavor is pre- ferred stick one clove on opposite sides of an svgla before baking. These are | clove apples. | It readers would like apple recipes | that are somewhat different and un- | usual, please write me (do not send | stamped envelope). Also, I will put | others in this department. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Insight. What a word! immediate abiiit; get on the inside and outside of im- lowly earthworm to exalted Go to the ape and be wise! German ptychol‘:‘_'ht experiments with apes in order insight. The ape is in a cage. Outside the is & banana, also two sticks— The Woman Who Makes Good Who storted her career as tened typist Stenography Helps You. The best way, it seems to me, for & girl to begin in the business world s through stenography. A stenographer can learn all about a business and work her way into it gradually until g has an important executive posi- n. ‘When a young man starts to work, it is assumed that he may be trained for an executive or sales position. But no such chance is given to women. -A girl 1s expected to stay in her original job until she gets married, and afterward. But she can get a job as stenographer where otherwise there would be opening for her. And then, because she is at she has a splendid chance to learn all about it—a :‘m :lg-i:u tmanwn: man brough es) m‘fin business. ' ¢ There are women in every field who, beginning as stenographers, are interior decorators, advertising women, editors ©f magazines, bond saleswomen. A 1 I know asked an ad ter. she she wrote a little ad. It ‘The following week she wrote another It was used. Finally one day she wrote an ad on a book of etiquette that brought big returns. To- day she is one of the highest-paid people in the company. Another girl wanted to be a land- scape gardener, No one would give her a . She learned shorthand and got in on that. She is now an independent landscape architect. What, then, is a good stenographer? She is one who has sense of words, & knowledge of English—and good nature. She has to be patient with the boss’ un~ reasonableness. If, in addition to these 1\)!11'.19& she can look about and do little jobs that are not exactly her Job. One day wasn't good. DONTLET WEATHER FADE THE BEAUTY OF YOUR SKIN Weather dries out the natural oils of the skin. Passing years bring drooping chin and lines around the eyes and mouth. Whether you are teen or forty-six you can keep or restore the facial contour of Youth, if you will follow this sim= le method: Daily patting with lough'’s Cold Cream. This unique and scientific cream strengthens sagging muscles; nourishes thin, weathered skin; changes sallow- mess into youthful color; erases tired lines and crows feet, and core - rects drooping 1 chin line. } many, many cases, Plough’s 3 ColdCream has kept and re- stored the pre- cious beauty of the heart of the organization, | of and who became one of the women in America. business, she is apt to find herself in & very position. . In Mg::‘ words, the good stenographer who gets ahead does not mind her own business. She minds every one else's. Not in an obstreperous way—but in good-natured and helpful manner, to be sure. ‘There are some employers who don't want a secretary to be of real help. If you are in that kind of a position and wish to make ess, F@ another job. (Copyright, 1930.) Prepared Mustard, Pour boiling water over one table- ?oon!ul of flour, three tables) d? mustard, one small tablespoon- ful of and one teaspoonful of salt. Stir perfectly smooth, and when cold add enough vinegar to thin. If kept in a covered jar, this will keep a long time. * “There are that make 7 'us happy..." SUB ROSA BY MIML Prelude to Peace. ‘There is no more convincing evidence of the impotence of man’s mind than the fact that war has existed since history began and has come down the ages to plague every generation some- where, some time or other, always. This weary old world, as a matter of fact, has never known absolute peace; and yet, in our optimism, we hope for the day when man’'s mind will find the way to a lasting and untroubled uni- versal amity. ‘The instinct to war is rooted deep in both man and animal, but man, pre- sumably, is civilized only to the degree that he subordinates his instincts to the control of his intelligence. The question, then, may be asked: Is man intelligent? History's answer is an emphatic “No.” # There will, therefore, be wars in the future—unless we deliberately blind ourselves to the significance of the past. To denounce war and hate it— and who does not?—is not enough. We can contend with it, and succeeding generations, perhaps, dispose of it, only by_recognizing it as a reality of life. If man, at this stage in history, is still unable to get along in the mass, one group or nation with another or others, there is evidence that he can sometimes get along as an individual. And again it is a question of subordi- nating the instincts to the control of the intelligence. ‘We harbor too many fllusions about war, It exists in our daily lives. If the butcher overcharges us or gives us short weight, we declare war uj him, in a certain sense. But it is not war if we exercise our intelligence and control our instincts. We then deal effectively— or as effectively as possible—with a ed r-g:eu-ble fragment of reality. I is thus and so, too, in marriage. Thers is nothing man desires more than the perfectly happy marriage. But does man's mind always prevail over his instincts, even in marriage, his greatest concern? Look to the records of the divorce courts. Listen to the talk in your neighborhood. Examine your own life. Do you not declare war, at times, upon the person you most love? Unless you both interpose an armistice, there would be destruction, misery, un- hngplneu. It would be war without end. Peace must be earned. It is not a 't or an accident any more than piness is. It is the direct result of the control of our instincts by our intelligence. And the history of man, as an individual, proves that this is ble, As for war, in its broader sense, it is my conviction that it will be abolished from the face of the earth only when every individual has proved that he can get along in peace with every other individual. (Copyright, JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. 1930.) THE LATEST CASUALTY IS THE HITCH-HIKER WHO SPRAINED N‘S)“rfl'\B/ | HAVE BEEN ADVISED 'rmy . P.—“I have been informed (or is the > form. ]gflu means to give ice or counsel to; as “The doctor has advised me to eat more 3 D. C—A casualty (cazh-u-al-te) is a fatal or a serious accident. In war, cas- ualties are losses arising from any cause. ‘Write to Jolly Polly for details on “J. P." book. 2l A Sardine and Egg. Soak two tablespoonfuls of d[eh(.ln in one cupful of cold water and dissolve in two cupfuls boiling water. Add half a cupful of Sugar, one teaspoonful of salt and half a cupful of vinegar. Cool Put a thin layer of the gelatin mixture in the bottom of a ring mold. When this thickens place a row of sardines entirely around the mold and press down into the gelatin. Add carefully a little gelatin and allow it to harden. Slice !:ur hard-cooked eggs and place a layer of them around the mold. Con- tinue with alternate rows of sardines and until the mold is filled. Chill until . Unmold onto a .wrv!.nr plat- ter and garnish with crisp small lettuce leaves. Do YOU remember the song? True words. For when a smile is lovely there's nothing more attractive. And how mach it depends upon healthy teeth and gums! But don’t you sometimes won- der if you really are taking the best care of your teeth? You notice so many theories — so many dentifrices. What is right? E. R. Squibb & Sons asked a leading research insti- tution to get 50,000 practicing dentists to answer the ques- tion. Read the summary of the . replies received: Squibb Dental Cream is made with more than 50% Squibb Milk of Magnesia. WASHINGTON, MODE D. G TUESDAY, OF THE MOMENT BEAUTY CHATS Reducing Business. Lots of people reduce because they think some part of their bodies should be thinner, whereas they need nothing but certain simple old-fashioned re- medies. I know & thin woman who carries around in front of her a very large stomach—and there are thousands of men like this everywhere. And people reduce for many other reasons than to get thin, or to have the very slim waistline fashionable at the mo- ment. Diets are for high blood-pres- sure, for skin troubles, scalp troubles, nerves, and goodness knows how many other ailments that seem to have little to do with food. And lots of people reduce who do not have to. Does this cheer you up? For instance, that woman with the enormous stomach, who tips the scales to just about what she should weigh. Do you know whai she did finally? Began a course of simple, old-fashion- ed, uncomplicated bicarbonate of soda, to stop some of the fermentation in the stomach. n also, & series of enemas, with bicarbonate in the water. Occasionally had one of these high colonic irrigations that only a profes- sional can give. And her stomach shrank to proper proportions. In othes words, she was partly blown up by gas, cauged by fermentation in the stomach and in the intestinal tract. This was a special case, though by no means an unusual one. But every one whose figure seems too stout, es- pecially around the waist and stomach, can benefit by—first, taking enough bicarbonate of soda (15 minutes after meals) to reduce fermentation, and occasionally milk of magnesia for the same purpose. Second, by occasional enemas (always with boiled water) with some bicarbonate added. Third, by oc- casional firrigations, if these can be Fourth, which is most important, by drinking large amounts of water. Two glasses . hot before breakfast, and six other glasses during the day, hot or cool. And by cutting down on starch and using protein to make up the food amount. N. P—Try massaging your legs and also take exercises that require stren- PARIS - SPONSORED "Now Offered by Tintex* New color for faded frocks and dull home-furnishings means new | beauty and usefulness for them. | Tintex, always in the lead with new smart colors sponsored by Paris, now offers six of the most ar Paris shades. Wine— ust— Beige — Seal Brown— Turquoise—and Royal Blue. 6 new ones—27 regular Tintex col- ors—a rainbow color-range from which to select your favorites. All quick and easy to use, all brightly perfect in result. Have tried Tin for i 'n‘y‘:u‘ruiu?TTI:;n{h- ionable Tintex curtain green, gold, rose, orchid, «—THE TINTEX GROUP—, Y Tintex Gray Box—Tints and dyes all materials. Tintex Blue Box — For lace -trimmed silks — tints the silk, lace remains original color. Tintex Color Remover—Removes old color from any material 8o it can be dyed a new color. Whitex — A bluing for restoring white. NO* LoiBER 11, 1930. Yestiday before supper ma took me and pop out in the new car for a drive to prove how good she can drive, and after & while she sed, Willyum, I dis- tinckly heer a kind of nocking. What do you suppose it is? she sed. Its proberly something wrong with the car, pop sed. Of corse, naturelly, I woulden't need a lawyer to tell me that, but what do | you sippose it is? ma sed. | 1 havent the faintest ideer, pop sed.| And pritty soon ma sed, Something | is certeny nocking. What do you think | it is, Willyum? she sed. Its proberly a loose majigger making & falts contack, sed. Thats very indefinite, I must say, ma sed, and sed, Its-the best I can do on such short notice. An after a while ma sed, Dont you hele{ that, wll,lelyum. what could it be? how could it? By missing a connection, sed, and ma sed, Willyum P. Potts !ou know what your hwkm& about? and pop sed, No, I told you I dident have the faint- est ideer. Well why dident you say so in the ferst place, ma sed, and pop sed, I did. ‘Wich he did, and ma kepp on driving and pritty soon the nocking stopped by e Royal Murders ATURES. and Murderers Emperor Augustus Killed Folks for Most Trivial Reasons. BY J. P. GLASS, WHEN THEY BEGGED FOR MERCY HE HAD A PLEASANT THOUGHT. Caius Octavius Caesar Augustus, first of the Roman Emperors, was ac- tuated to many murders by suspicion. For in his youth, being the nephew of Julius Caesar, he was the object of more than one plot of assassination. Later, in his days of power, he sus- pected every one, A great soldier and a great admin- istrator, he was possessed by many fears. He disregarded no omen. Thun- der and lightning he dreaded so much ged outside. The centurions and sol- diers tortured the poor man to make him confess and the Emperor himself dug out his eyes, but Quintus Gallius admitted nothing. Still he was exe- cuted. Augustus avenged Julius Caesar by defeating Brutus and Cassius. Brutus, in despair, retired to a hill and killed himself. His body being found, Au- ,unus sent his head to be cast at the foot. of Caesar's statue. He treated even the most fllustrious of the prisoners he took, cruelly. itself, making ma feel werst insted of better on account of the sispenst of lissening for it to come back again. Luncheon Eggs. Boll six eggs for about 15 minutes, | then shell them and cut in halves. Make a cream sauce with half a pint of milk and two tablespoonfuls of flour of butter. Put into a double boiler and ocook until quite thick. Add a little pepper and salt and chopped parsley. Add just enough vinegar to give a tart taste. Add the eggs and serve hot. Banana Turnovers, Peel some very small bananas. Make a rich ple crust, roll it out into the shape of the bananas and leave enough | to lap over. Sprinkle sugar on the bananas, then wet the edges of the crust and adjust tight so as not to let the juice escape. Lay in a pan, not letting them touch each other. Bake until a light brown. Serve hot with sauce flavored with vanilia. BY EDNA KENT FORBES uous movements of the legs, and you will_get rid of a certain amount of fleshiness. | saw Pinarius, a Roman knight, taking rubbed smooth with one tablespoonful | hody. He ordered a certain father and his son to be killed. When they ed for mercy he had a pleasant ti ) ordered them to cast lots to see which one should die, or, if they did not like this, to settle the question between themselves by the sword. ‘The_ father now offered his life to save his son. He was quickly exe- cultted. whereupon the son killed him- self. Augustus’ victory at Perugia came on the anniversary ! Caesar's death. He an action of Augustus. The latter made | celebrated by sentencing a great num- threats in return. Tedius, knowing |ber of prisoners to death. He made they would be carried out, threw him- |only one reply to those who begged for self from a great height and killed | mercy, or sought to excuse themselves: himself. “You must die.” Quintus Gallius, the praetor, came (Copyright. to compliment the Emperor on his vie- b v s torles. Under his cloak he carried & Egg Cutlet. tablet which he intended to present at the proper moment. ¥ Boil and thicken two cupfuls of milk Augustus saw he had something un-| with flour quite thick. Boil six eggs der his cloak. He imagined it was a|hard, chop fine, then add to the thick- sword; but pride kept him from mak- | ened milk. Season with salt, mpflr ing a search lest he should find some- | and a little onion chopped very . A thing else. Instead, in the midst of | few parsley leaves broken fine add to the flavor. Fry in a hot pan, using & the praetor’'s laudations, he was, on the order of Augustus, seized and drag-'large tablespoonful to each cutlet. i that, immediately a storm aj red to be coming on, he retired pre:helur, underground if possible, sealskin with him to be put on for preservation from lightning. Here are some of the things he did in the way of murdering: One day, while making a speech, he notes. He at once ordered him to be sh:’hbed to death as a spy and busy- Tedius Afrer, consul-elect, criticized 1930.) Be guided in your choice of sanitary protection Leading Hospitals throughout America make it a point to specify ‘GC]'HY do you suppose our outstanding hospitals, staffed by world-famous sur- geons, makeit a point to specify Kotex? There’s more than one reason! In the first place, it is hy- gienically safe. In the second place, it is amazingly absorbent ~and that is vital for all surgical purposes. Actually~think of this — Kotex is five times as absorbent as the finest surgical cotton! The material of which it is made (Cellu- cotton—not cotton—absorbent wadding) is laid layer upon air-cooled layer. And each one of these delicate layers is a quick, com- plete absorbent in itself. Because it is so absorbent and because it absorbs scientifically (not just in one con- centrated area, but all over) Kotex nat- urally stays soft. It is guaranteed to stay soft longer than any other sanitary pad. 13,000,000 pads to hospitals alone To give you an idea of the great weight of hospital approval in back of this first of all sanitary pads, the hospitals of America bought 13,000,000 Kotex pads during the first nine months of this year. Then, add- ed to this num- 2,500,000 pound$ of Kotex absorbent—which is enough to make 80,000,000 more pads. Hospitals need the best. So do you. Safety, security, good health demand it. Why should you be content with anything * else when you can buy Kotex everywhere?—at all drug, dry goods and department stores. You ask for it by name. Simply specify: Kotex. KOTEX IS SOFT ... 1 Not a deceptive softness, that soop packs into chafing hardness. But a delicate, fleecy softness that lasts for hours. The Kotex filler is far lighter and cooler than cotton, yet absorbs 5 times as much. In hospitals—Kotex is the identical mate- rial used by surgeons in 85% of the coun. try’s leading hospitals. Deodorizes . .. safely, thotoughly, by a special process. 5 .Disposable, completely, instantly. Regular Kotex — 43¢ for 12 Kotex Super-Size=65¢ for 12 4 to ;{’ v:fl:n enti w m“”m“w”)flfl% Firm yet light; will mot curl; perfect- fisting. KOTE X The New Sanitary Pad which deodorizes . Youth. Results Could there be better assurance that Squibb’s will safeguard your teeth and gums . . . and protect the beauty of your smile? Copyright 1930 by E. R. Squibb & Sons | QUI B B DENTAL CRFAM GUARDS THE DANGER LINE ness to all yellowed white materials. PARK & TILFORD, ESTABLISHED 1840, GUARANTEES TINTEX ber, they bought Atalldrug, dept. mmsl 5¢ counters . .. n TINTS AND DYES KOTEX COMPANY, Chicago, Illinois

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