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WOMAN’S PAGE.” Contrasts With BY MARY Of course, you will want to buy one or two of the new printed dresses—a stripe, a plaid or a paisley—but you must include in your wardrobe one or two plain-colored simple dresses that Yyou can use as a foil to the colorful new accessories. Possibly you may decide to work out your entire Spring ward- ¥obe this way, getting a number of sim- ple plain-colored dresses size collection of colo and a good . ary variety. If your own dresses you will doubtless find this an excellent plan to adopt because by saving on the price of s ave quite a little the accessories. R’¢ DAILY PATTERN SERVICE At last! Here is a snappy day dress of plain-colored flat crepe silk in fash- fonable light navy blue. The white crepe neckline band that slips through a tab buttoned closing at end of the V. faliing in scarf effect be. the waistline, youthful It's & simple, wearable t 80 admirably into the sm ‘wardrobe for conservative d: ‘The skirt cut slightly circula verted plaits at each side of the front :&uch adds width and a smart tailored is a darling and pe that fits woman's wear. in- Style No. 2051 is designed for sizes 16 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Printed flat crepe with plain contrast, crepy plain and patterned woolens and wool {emy make up attractively in this 0del. - style after another pages of our new Styles matron, dressmakin; will save v For a pattern cents in stamps or coin di Washington Star’s N B / HE FRESH RIVER RRING ROE New Accessories -y MARSHALL. For immediate wear you may choose to have a black or navy blue dress of wool crepe or silk crepe de chine as a foundation for the scarfs and accessory collar and cuff sets, and later on when the weather is warmer you may add a number of soft, light pastel-toned dresses to your collection which may be dressed up in the same way. Among your new accessories you will surely want one of the new scarf and sash sets, which consist of oblong pieces of colorful silk, one of which is used at the neck and the other of which is tied easily about the waistline Some of the most attractive of these sets are made in paisley designs. Your paisley may show the true paisley col- oring, brick reds, warm browns, reds and yellows, or you may choose one of the modified paisleys which make use of the paisley design in colorings not usually associated with the paisley idea. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. | Some mothers have resented, some have admired, the schedule printed in s column & few weeks ago. While it | is admirable to live up to a schedule, v the mother of one child has a better opportunity to follow a routine than the mother of three or more. cannot always be charted n. One can always try, yough, and most households do fall into an almost automatic sequence of events, with each task done at a cer- tain hour and with definite hours left | E. is one of the admiring mothers. “I have finished reading Mrs. M. O. M.'s schedule and I really envy her her well trained baby” she writes. “My son is 2': years old and my nerves are to pleces with him. It | is now 5 time for me to start getting our dinner, and he is sitting in {his high chair rubbing his eyes and crying and cross. Since 12 oclock I have been trying to get him to take a | nap. ut him in his bed he Finally I took him v bed and told him | drowsy stories and then gave it up. He won't take a nap and won't go to bedl until 9:30. He gets up at 7:30. His | | diet is perfect—if he would eat every- | thing. His father gets home at 8 and at the dinner table the boy is so cross. His father always says, ‘That child is sleepy.’ 1 haven't a minute all day I can call my own. He talks all day and insists on being answered. What do you think? 1 think it is a pretty sad state of af- fairs when a mother 'who knows what is best for her child, and can carry | that best out, allows a child of 2, years to stay up until 9:30. That is entirely unnecessary. NG LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was starting to smoke with his feet up, and ma sed, Dont make your- self too comfortable, Willyum, Maud and Eustace Hews are coming to play bridge tonite. O ye gods, pop sed, and ma sed Now Willyum'I wunt you to be agree- able. Whats a matter with the Hes she sed. They never know when to go pop sed. They act more like players than bridge players, he sed And pritty soon Mr. and Mrs. Hews came and they all started to play bridge and T went to bed on account of having to, and after a while T woke up and I could still heer them tawking. and I got out of bed and went and looked over the bannisters in my pidjammers, and I could see them still playing bridge, and pop was just putting one hand over his mouth so he could yawn polite, me thinking, G. maybe if T ask what time it is, maybe 1t will give them a hint to go home And I called over the bannisters, Hay pop. And ma sed, What in the werld is he doing out of bed; and I| sed. Will you please tell me the time, home, poker STAR. D Well of all things, ma, sed, and pop sed, Why yes, certeny. | Sounding glad of the chance. And | he took out his watch. saying, Its fust | 25_minnits past midnite. | Benny, go rite back to your bed, the | ideer, ma sed. What do you meen:by such a thing. what do you care what time it 1s? she sed, and I sed, I was | Jjust wondering if it was time to get up et | My grayclous we must reely be go- ing, I had no ideer it was so late, Mrs WASHINGTON, MODE OF THE MOMENT D. C., TUESDAY, FEBR " JARY 24, 1931. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. The Sense Combiner. The human being, like all other liv- | ing things, is equipped with sense or- | gans. The ones we know most about are the organs of sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch, temperature, pain, pres- | sure, etc. ‘There must be many sense organs that have not yet been fully identified. It's through the sense or- gans that we get our information about | the world in which we live, as well as our sense of being in this world. | By far the most important organ of | information is the brain, which always | has been and probably always will be something of a mystery. The brain is the sense combiner. By means of this sense combiner we are able to work our information over | Into new experiences, At least they | seem new. So marvelous is the work- ing of the sense combiner that we are driven to the conclusion that we possess something different and distinct from our bodily parts. That something 1 | popularly called a mind. Whatever the sense combiner may be or do, one thing is certain. It makes | it possible for us to distinguish between | a world of outside things and a pri- vate inside world. In other words, it helps us to know that we are all some- | thing different from every other some- | thing on the face of the earth | In brief, it puts our world in order |for us.’ It is the organ of knowing. It Is the intellect at work | (Copyright, 1931.) Panis Q simple white salin evening gowns from Molyreux. & symmetrical c}myn. of small tucks ands cartridge pleats bebow the hips Ny b FEATUR Peter Makes Good Guess. Sometimes we're safest when we're near The very one we ought to fear * T Cpeter mavbit. What Peter means by that is that it is sometimes safest to be where those who are trying to get him are afraid to follow him. So now as he sat be- side the great big Buster Bear, deep in his long Winter sleep under the big brush pile, he knew that it was not likely that even Yowler the Bobcat would dare come in there, “It is queer,” thought Peter, “that both Buster Bear and Yowler should be spending the Winter under this pile of brush. To be sure, Yowler was at the other side. Still, he is such a cow- ard that I shouldn't think he would be Lemon Milk Cheese. BEDTIME STORIES Hews sed. Come on, Eustace, get your things, she sed. And they went home and I herd ma and pop coming up to my room, ma saying, Ive got a good mind to give him a good spanking, the ideer of such & thing He dident meen proberly just sort sleep, pop sed r my lite and I 1 there witk eves closed like somebody that vy was asleep, ma saying, He s seem to be asleep, that went out again, sa out_the lite, Willyum Wich pop did. giving me a wink § before he terned it out on account of noticing one of my eyes part ways open, and 1 went back to sleep again feeling like somebody that had did a good action. was his on my hawt reely BY HELEN WOODWARD Who started her career as a_frightened typist and who became one of the highest paid business women in America Tea Room Business. I have often wondered why so many women would like to own a tea room. Probably it is because they don’t know dificult that business is. They think that running No child is that powerful. While it is true that children of this age may not be able to nap in the | | afternoon and may do better with an hour's rest period, they should be in bed by 7 at the latest in order to get from | 12_to 13 hours of sleep Your husband’s late dinner hour makes it undesirable to keep the child up that long. Try this better achedule | | for a week and note the improvement: | Feed the boy at 8. Give warm bath at | 11:30 and put him into his night clothes, bathrobe and slippers. Lunch from 13 | to 12:30. Then do not talk about sleep- } ing, but wrap him like a little papoose and put him into his bed. Sit beside | him and hu y or tell him stories | until he has Then leave |n n him he does not have to sleep. but just to play quietly in his bed. The object of the wrapping is that it Keeps the | child from getting up and a few mo- ments cf perfect relaxation may result in his dropping off. Have him up not later than 3; 2:30 is even better. Then give him a’ mid-meal lunch at 3:30 and his dinner at 7. Put him to bed and leave him there. He'll know you | mean business. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Money a Defense. “Moncy is a defense."—Ecc. vii.12, Solomon urges the importance of | thrift, economy and laylng by some- thing in store. In one of his proverbs | | he says. “There is treasure to be de-| red and oil in the dwelling of the wise, but a foolish man spendeth it | By “oil in the dwelling of the ! e” he means a surplus of oll, a sup- | beyond our immediate needs stored for future use. If we are wise | we will save something in the years of | plenty for the years famine, as | Joseph did in Eg There are better things than money, but money is a good thing. It is the | love of money that is the root of all| Kinds of evil, not money. As some one has said: “Money is the root of every: thing that is good. It is underneath every home, school house, church and ution of benevolence.” It was this | that Solomon had in mind when he said, “Money is a defense.” It is a de- fense needed by every home and insti- | tution, and by every individual as well. | I am thinking particularly of the | | young man starting out in life. While | there are more important things than | | making money, vet one of the first things every young man should strive to do is to get himself established on a | colid financial basis. Financial inde- pendence is a defense against being a | slave to the opinions and demands of a defense against the ess and unexpected cir- of every kind. Besides, in and saving of money, when done, there {5 a de- v and character es all the more onc’s de- | | w of hits ook well to | and save | now and | 3 elf estab- | station in life. | | IDEAL FOR LENT SO INEXPENSIVE HERE'S a pleasant way to solve Lenten meal prob- lems. Ask your grocer for Tide- water Herring Roe---those tiny eggs of Chesapeake Bay herring. Delicious at breakfast, lunch or dinner. Tidewater Herring Roe is the best that money can buy---yet it is so inexpensive---and so easy to prepare in a wide vari- ety of delightful dishes. CALL FOR IT BY NAM ving pretty d ~ furniture nging nice ywers, setting a charming table and serving delicate food. Perhaps, too, they fancy them- Bl selves as hostesses in a gracious sort of way. Being hos- pitable and loving company in their own homes, they like to think of themselves doing the ame sort of thing on a larger scale. But it's very different when you are a hostess in a commercial sense. Your customers are not as polite to_you as your guests. And the smile that you wear to greet them is likely to grow so fixed that your face will hurt at the end of the da And that’s merely the outside ap- pea Underneath that is the hard eting and planning meals e will be a profit. You to know a great deal about food bout planning menus so that you <, ot Within the blimp the Bunny piles the baggage on i floor A crunch, a wheere, a clatter—and ,n4’y b e S i won't come out at the wrong end in Though this s not a time for pull- | pofi L ome PRL B0 Ve TS ave to s enough where to buy food wholesale thrown out est prices, and when certain giggles PUl. | yying are cheaper than others. You e have to know ow to plan s meal Ts. t looks elaborate but won't cost To ,Cl"" Shp!w too much. In your own house, when To clean black satin slippers, take a | yoy figure the cost of & meal, you stiff bristie brush. such as is used {or | add up what you spent at the butcher's shoes, and pour a little non-inflammable | and grocer’s and if you are very me- cleaning fluid on one end of the brush. | ihodical you will figure in the gas. Well, Rub the shoes thoroughly with the|;n.¢ cort of thing won't get you any- molstened br first with a circular where in running a tea room. motion to remove the dust, then with For instance, in figuring out what long stroke to smooth down the Nap. | yo, ought to charge for a plate of ice The slippers will then look bright and | cream, you not only must know what new and all spots will disappear. ice cream itself costs you, but also such items as the breakage of the dishes in which you serve it, the cost of the waitress' time, the amount of ice am you throw away each night be- A JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in Englich. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH [THE STUDENTS AND THE TRUNKS ) | WHOM WE EXPECTED ARRIED THIS MORNING. DAD SAID A COLLEGE BOY SMOKES ANY GIVEN BRAND OF L 7 RVE this delec- and nourishing delphia” Cream . ‘e Cheese with crisp vege- k " om” or ich.” table salads . . or your say, “Th 1S ar , at| party salads of fresh t ever sold in bulk. A trunk: form HEeADACHES, dizziness, coated tongue, loss of appetite, lack of energy, a general feeling of “blues”—these are the most frequent danger signals of con- stipation. Look out for them. Don’t let them make your life miserable. Start tomorrow eating Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN—a de- licious ready-to-eat cereal. As pleasant as it is healthful. ‘What a relief it will be after taking unnatural, habit-form- ing pills and drugs. Two tablespoonfuls of ALL- BRAN daily are guaranteed to prevent and relieve both tem- {mnry and recurring constipa- ion. In severe cases, eat it three times daily. Milk or cream brings out the delightful nut.like taste of Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. And with milk or cream, important vita- mins are furnished. ALL-BRAN is equally tempting with fruits or honey. Sprinkle it over other cereals, Use it in cooking—for mak- ing delicious bran muffins, breads, in omelets, etc. ALLe BRAN also has iron, the builder of good, rich, red blood. At all grocers in the famous red- and-green package. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. The original All-Bran. Holloy9® ALL-BRAN cause no one has ordered it, the wear and tear of vour table linens. the cost of washing the dishes in which the ice cream is served, the cleaning and sweep- ing of your room, and the cost of your own time s thought will show you that it is necessary to add all these if you are going to make a profit In planning menus you must know not so much what your friends like to eat, but what the general public wants. The tastes of the public often seem most peculiar. Being a good cook is a help in the beginning. because you can perhaps have distinctive dishes that cost little but that people like better than more expensive ones. ing problems in connection with y write to Miss Woodward. in Der, for her personal advice. (Copyright, 1931.) DAILY DIET RECIPE CHILALY. Green pepper, two tablespoon- fuls; finely minced onion, one and one-half "tablespoonfuls: butter, one tablespoonful; canned toma- toes, drained, one-half cupful; American cheese, one and one- half cupfuls; salt, three-quarters teaspoonful; cayenne, one-twen- ty-fourth teaspoonful: milk, two tablespoonfuls; egg, one. SERVES 4 PORTIONS. Cook green pepper and onion in butter three minutes, over a very moderate fire. Add tomatoea and cook five minutes. Add thinly sliced cheese, salt and cayenne. Cook over hot water until cheese is melted, then add milk and egg slightly beaten. Serve hot on crackers or toast. Also good cold as a sandwich spread. Girls havi their work care of this DIET NOTE. Recipe as given furnishes pro- tein. Much lime, iron, vitamins A. B and C.present. Can be eaten by adults of normal diges- tion who are of average, over or under weight. “No ures The caress of dollar- a-cake French soap A delicious and wholesome milk cheese may be made with lemon juice and | Use a quart of milk and the| strained juice of three lemons. Boil| the milk and pour the juice into it. | When quite cold, strain through wet, clean muslin and then let the cheese | | drain. This is very appetizing served on watercress or sliced tomatoes. Hlasy “THERE IS ONE THING SURE, AND KNOWS HOW_ TO MAKE HIM- SELF COMFORTABLE," THOUGHT THAT 1S THAT BUSTER BEAR | ES, By Thornton W. Burgess. Buster Bear knows how to make Hirgh .. self comfortable,” thought. Peter. 3 ‘This was true. ‘To begin with, he had™s & good bed. and he had prepared.that.} bed himself. He had remained awaka., roaming through the Green Forest jush. as long as there was a chance 1o geb - something to eat. But when Jack Prost.. had made it clear that he had come to stay and intended to freeze up every- thing, Buster had prepared for longe sleep. He had had an eye on that big 3 brush pile for some time. With his big * claws he had torn out branches until 3 he had made a passage to the upturned 3 roots of the fallen tree, around and 3 over which the brush had been thrown. There was fust enough room for him to % turn around. Just the kind of bedroom he wanted. The next thing was to make a bed. He had gone out and raked in & lot of dry leaves, pine needles and small sticks until he had enough to suit him. Then he had gone to sleep to await the return of warm weather. His roof wad = of the criss-crossed branches of the brush. It wasn't the best of roofs, not at ail waterproof, but it was good enough, and he knew that with the coming of snow it would be still better. So it was. He soon had as snug and comfortable a home as a Bear could ask for, and there he had remained from the time he went in until Peter | Rabbit had found him. No one had dis- | turbed him. None of the people living i |in the Green Forest would have dared | do such a thing. Those who had found , | out that he was there had kept away * | from that brush pile. Such is the ef- . fect of fear and respect : (Copyright, 1931) sl Lemo N & H n Cheese Cake. : | Combine two cupfuls of sugar with} half & cupful of butter, three-fourths ; cupful of sweet milk, the whites of six | | eggs. three cuptuls of flour and three : | teaspoontuls of baking powder. Servel | ‘i PETER. | comfortable, knowing that Buster Bear birthdays any more!”’ says William_ Powell, Paramount star of ‘For the Defense?’ “Women know so marvelously how to KEEP their fresh, young charm that is so irresistible. “Feminine stars’of the screen is so near, even if he is asleep. 1 won- ‘der if Yowler is living here or if he | just dodged in_here because he hoped o catch me. He must know that Buster is here, for | there isn't much going on that Yowier | doesn’t know. I don't believe he lives | here and T don't believe he'll come back here again even to try to catch me. I guess 1 am safer right here than I would be even at home in the dear Old Briar Patch.” Peter had made a good guess. Yes, sir, he had so. He was safer right there | than he would have been anywhere else. Yowler did know that Buster Bear was | asleep there. He knew just how deep was that sleep, but so great was his re- spect for the big claws strength of Buster that nothing but the fact that he was very hungry and the thcught of a Rabbit dinner so near was so tantalizing would have induced him to go under that pile of brush, even at the point farthest away from where Bus- | ter “wes sleeping. He really hadn't stopped to think when he had gone in there. Then Blacky the Crow and his friends had made such a noise that Yowler had gone back there and laid down to wait for them to get away, but | all the time he had been most uneasy and uncomfortable. He had slipped out and away at the first chance. He had no intention of going back there. You see, his home really was in a cave in some ledges in another part of the Green Forest “There is one thing sure, and that is T'se still workin' on 'at riddle. Let's see, now. seben wives, an’ they each had | seben sacks—if I dest knowed what scbe en times seben was, I'd hab it. (Copyright, 1931.) For a modest price SUNSHINE . . . the sea . . . a diversity of amusements . . . the comfort and convenience of Chalfonte-Haddon Hall . . . for an amazingly reasonable price. Take those few days of relax: tion that you need so much and run down 1o Chalfonte-Haddon Hall. Write for information. American and European Plans CHALFONTE- HADDON HALL ATLANTIC CITY LEEDS AND LIPPINCOTT COMPANY “The years can make any gi more alluring ffée keeps says WILLIAM POWELL Learn the Complexion Secret bove all 9 out of 10 lovely screen stars know el the lovely one meas- Youth by and stage, especially, seem to know the secret.” Indeed they do! For they seem always young, and charming, and magnetic—you jus¢ can’t believe that they ever have birthdays. - L Lux Toilet § 8y I believe that is just it. | &nd great | Important actresses in Holly- wood, on Broadway, in Europe, use Lux Toilet Soap, regularly! That is why it is found in theatre dressing rooms everywhere—is the official soap in all the great film studios. Start using this lovely white, fra- “We guard complexion beauty grgnt soap today! Buy some now! with the following sauce: Mix her | the grated rind and juice of two lemons, | the yolks of three eggs, hal fa cupful of » | butter and one cupful of sugar. Cook until thick Hke sponge, stirring all the \ Use like jelly between the cakes. | time. | Cheese and Nut Salad, N | Work a little cream and butter, salt. and white pepper into a cream cheese. | Make it into balls. Press into their sides | halved English walnut kernels in the | same way that you would place on each’ | aide of a creamed walnut. Serve with: | French dressing on lettuce leaves or you | may chop the nut kernels fine and mix them with the cream cheese, maki | them into balls after this is done an serving them in the same way. H 1 Clean that dirty white woodwork™ LittLe fingers will leave smudgys: ey g el = sticky spots on chairs . . smears on piano keys. Remove these 5z smudges. Make piano keys sparkle, . woodwork glisten. Wash ‘them with water softened with Melo. It cleans= away all stains. - Melo cuts grease. It makes dirt ""nli:h It hil a wonf}erful cleaner, with qr without soap. It is very easy to use. Melo prevents rough Ln Saves soap, from }§ to 34 the amount- * ordinarily used. Your grocer has it. Beg. T. 6. Pat. OF. WELO WATER SOFTENED WITH MELO CLEANER 10 cents THEHYGIENIC PRODUCTS CO. Canton, Ohio Hanfacturers of Seni-Fiush rl Youth!” else—it’s so important,” actresses will tell you. Crvrrarnem g A ARG ar i oap..1I0¥