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w OMAN’S PAGE. Cool and Smart in Warm Weather BY MARY A dgess of navy blue or black georg- ette, made with skirt flounce, peph and sleeve ruffies of pleated georgette— nothing could be better choice for warm weather days in town when you want MARSHALL. of this sort without the slightest dif- ficulty. You may make it in two pleces or one, using a simple pattern with V- neck closing and tucks on the shoulder. For the skirt you will want a flounce about 18 inches deep after a NarTow hem has been taken. Mark the skirt 18 inches up from the hem and measure the distance around. Three times this measurement will give you the right size for your flounce, because the box ples ing “calls for three times the finished amount. The ruffie for the peplum should be eight or nine inches after a hem is made. Take a generous waist for_the amount needed. The sleeve ruffies should be about seven inches finished. 1f the edge of the flared sleeve measures about 12 inches, you will need two pieces 24 inches’ long for the box-pleated sleeve frills, The peplum is made with an opening at the center front, while the skirt flounce and sleeve frills are seamed u measurement and multiply this by three | ~ STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY. JULY, 1, DorothyDizx| SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. pH you have on hand a last season’s silk crepe dress of navy blue or black, you may use the old material to make the skirt and bodice, using matching georgette for the pleated frills and sleeves, as well as the bows down the front. FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. Glass Tempts Appetites. ‘There was the little X—— by who wouldn’t drink his milk. His mother served it in a pretty, thin green glass. She discovered one day that the ap- pearance of the milk in the green glass was most repulsive. It looked weak and watery. So she poured the milk after that in an amber glass and the boy’s milk appetite returned. Cold drinks are much colder if they are served in green glasses. And ice creams gain in chilliness if they are served on green glass plates. Attractive glass nowadays can be bought at such low prices that every one can own some of it. It should be used carefully to emphasize, with its color, the dominant attraction of the food ‘served on it. Strawberry Shake. Put into a shaker two tablespoonfuls to have something that will be cool and smart and will not readily show the grime of the city. With the aid of the professional pleater, you can make a georgette dress BEDTIME STORIES 7 Dreadful Discovery. Events may sometimes bring s _shock That seems all_confidence to mock. —Old Mother West Wind. “Now, who was that?” sald Peekaboo to Popup as they saw a black-footed stranger disappear edge of Prairie-dog Town. Popup shook his head. the least idea,” said he. didn't lke his looks. “Nor 1,” replied his sister. “I haven't “Somehow, I “I—I don't = Hiany o ! THE STRANGER HAD BY THIS TIME COME OUT OF ANOTHER HOUSE AND GONE AWAY. think I would like to meet him. And if we had reached that house before that Hawk appeared wé would have met him. I wonder where he came from and what he has gone down in there for. “We'll wait and see if he comes out,” said Popup. “Did you ever seen any one with such a long, slender body?"” never did,” replied Peekaboo, “and T never have seen anybody that moved =0 quickly. Do you suppose it is safe to stay here?” A guess it is the safest place there is,” replied her brother. “If we keep watch, we can see where he goes, and then we will not be likely to meet him unexpectedly. He may not be an en- emy, but if he is we want to know which way he goes.” So the two young Prairie-dogs waited right where they were. They didn't have to wait long. The stranger came out, sat up on the doorstep for a look around and then glided away toward another house. Instantly there was a general alarm and they knew by this that the stranger was an enemy beyond a doubt. “I wish T was back home,” whim- pered Peekaboo. “Well, wishing don’t do you any good,” replied her brother rather shortly, for truth to tell, he was wish- inz the very same thing. “When the owner of that house comes out, we will go over and ask him about that stranger.” So they waited and waited, but no one came out of that house. Then they began to grow curious. The stranger had by this -time come out of another house and gone away. Little by little they ventured to approach that house. They were afraid, yet why they were afraid they didn't know. But curiosity was greater than fear, and so they at last reached the house, Popup put his head inside and barked. There was no answer. He tried it again, with the same result. Apparently there was 20 cne at_home. at is queer,” said he. “I didn't see that fellow who lives here come out, but he must have done so when we were not looking.” Just then there was an alarm, for alarms are frequent in Prairie-dog Town, because the Prairie-dogs are such little people. Popup instantly dived into that house, and his sister fol- lowed. They did it without stopping to venture outside. Had it not been for that alarm, they might not have gone in at all. Once inside, they decided to go 'way down to the bed room. If there was Alec the Great T never mind how long it takes To bury bones, but then * T never seem to have the time To dig them up again, a house on the | of strawberry or raspberry sirup. Add |a little shaved ice and one cupful of ' milk. Shake well, pour into a glass, and fill up with soda water. Two tablespoonfuls of cream may be used | instead of the milk, and a sweetened | puree of fresh or canned fruit instead of the fruit sirup. Thornton . Burgess. any one there, he could do no more than drive them out. It was down there that they made a dreadful dis- covery. The owner was there, but he was no longer alive. He had been killed right there in his bed room, and as no one but that black-footed stranger had been in there, there was no longer a show of doubt that he was | the worst of enemies, for he could, and did, enter houses. It is a question which gave the young Prairie-dogs the greatest shock, the finding of the victim of the black- footed stranger or the discovery that the one place they always had felt to be absolutely safe, an underground house, was not safe after all. A great fear took possession of them. What a dreadful place the Great World was, after all. They left that house just as soon as they dared. When they learned that & whole family had been killed in the second house’they had seen Black- foot enter, they were filled with - may. They were afrald to stay out in the open, and they were afraid to stay in the house. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE The spirit of Summer. the sun-tan vogue! And here’s an idea, and you'll |Tove it. It's the new cotton pique tennis or sports dress. _ Of course, you'll want to make it with a pattern so smart and the material 5o inexpensive. Its small cost is almost unbelievable. And it's simplicity itself to_make it. Look at the low-waisted back and the clever way the dress closes with three huge buttons, so decorative. And aren't the wide suspender straps the cutest idea ever, crossed and brought around at the front in partial belt effect. The skirt is pressed into an inverted center back, which lends its wearer a slim line. And, think of it! you can run it up on the sewing machine before breakfast and never notice it. Style No. 3193 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Then, again, you can make darling schemes in pastel washable crepe silk, Chinese silk damask, linen, shantung crepe silk, cotton meshes and silk pique. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star’s New York Fashion Bureay, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street,"New York. Our large Summer fashion book offers a wide choice for your Summer ward- robe in darling styles for the children as v{:ll as the adults. Price of book, 10 cents. plait at the center front and at the| firecrackers!” NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN If George Washington was here now | he'd say “What? No 3 COX ATHEY. Tllustrations by Mary Foley. XLV. GRASSHOPPERS. (Acridiae and Tettigoniidae.) HEN you read that a plague of locusts has been visiting some particular locality, the chances are it is a horde of hungry grasshoppers. A swarm of “17-year locusts” is quite an- other insect; in fact, these are the cicadas. Baby grasshoppers look very much like their parents, with the exception that they have no wings. As they grow older and have shed their coats a few times, you will notice wing-buds held close to the sides and back. With the last molt the grasshopper is full grown and blessed with a healthy ap- petite. His jaws are strong and fitted for cutting and chewing. He has three simple eyes (ocelli) and two compound cnes. The long, waving antennae in the short-horned gresshopper have many joints. When he is courting his lady-love, the antennae are used for long, solemn conversations. Strangest of all is the place where his ears are situated. On the short- horns (acridae) they are on the sides at the base of the hind body; on the long horns (teeigoniidae) they are on the shank of the front pair of legs, just below the knee. This enables them not only tohear their own joyful song, but the compositions of their rivals as well. The two hind legs are very strong and long, with broad thighs near the body, supplied with a supple joint which enables them to make a high jump. Grasshoppers seem to lack the ability to sense direction, except when migrat- ing. Their jumps often land them in queer places and usually in trouble. The mother Jong-horned grasshop- per has a sword-shaped egg-placer. The short-horned mother’s egg-placer is much shorter and differently shaped. During the Spring or Fall, the mother places the egg-pods in the ground. Each pod will contain from two to three dczen eggs. Six months later - the grasshoppers hatch and in about a month are full grown. The egg has two coats of skin, the outer one tough and a pale brown. There are some species whose eggs must be subjected to freezing temperature or | they will not hatch. You can see the tiny hopper inside the egg just before it hatches, if the outer coat of the egg is removed. It is all doubled up and packed tight in its house. Then the egg splits one-half its length and the baby pushes out of its sleeping bag, which scon shrinks to nothing. The first thing the youngster does is to try its legs and jump 20 times its body length. If it is so fortunate as to land in a field of tender grass it gets mighty busy. The blister beetle has a decided weakness for grasshopper eggs as food for her own babies. She lays her eggs carefully on the tiny grasshopper eggs and goes away, well knowing that her babies will hatch first and dine and grow fat on the grasshopper eggs. Many sirds desire the “hopper” eggs for break- fast and s0 help the farmer. = (Copyright, 1931.) Cucumber Sandwich. Combine two chopped cucumbers with some onion juice, red pepper, and enough mayonnaise to make it spread well. Spread on slices of buttered brown bread. Cover each with a nas- turtium leaf, then with another slice of bread. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKAFAST. Sliced Bananas. Molded Cereal, with Cream. Bacon and Eggs. ‘Oatmeal Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON. ‘Ham-Stuffed Eggs. Bread and Butter Sandwiches. Iced Melon. Fruit Cookies. Iced Tea. DINNER. Cream of Corn Soup. Roast Veal, Bread Stuffing. Boiled Potatoes with Parsley. Sliced Potatoss. Frozen Vegetable Salad. Cornstarch Fudding, Fruit Sauce. Coflee. OATMEAL MUFFINS. One cupful cooked oatmeal, one ;m hfi‘ cupfuls rflour'te::;oo ta- nfuls sugar, four n- fuls baking powder, half tea- spoonful salt, l‘ml( cupful milk, one egg, two tablespoonfuls melted butter. Mix and sift flour, sugar, salt and baking powder, add one- half milk, egg_(well beaten), the remainder of the milk mixed with oatmeal, and beat thoroughly. ‘Then add butter. Bake in but- tered muffin rings or gem pan. HAM-STUFFED EGGS. Seven hard-cooked eggs, two- thirds cupful choppedn'oooked ham, half cupful finely diced cel- ery, one-quarter teaspoonful salt, g:e teaagoontrul chopped onion, e-quarter - teaspoonful T, half cupful salad dreulnl;e.pg;e tablespoonful chopped parsley. Cut eggs in halves lengthwise. Remove and mash yolks with fork. Add two tablespoonfuls of salad dressing, the ham, celery, salt, onion and pepper to the egg yolks. Mix well and refill egg white cases. Chill. on lettuce on servifig platter. Top with = remaining dressing and sprinkle with parsley. (Copyright, 1931). 1“! told you s0,” it is grandmother. Should Husband or Wife Love More? Finds Men Need More Love Capital CORRESPONDENT asks: “When people marry which should be the be with but & single %’ you know, but, unfortunately, exists. , Near]y always in marriage orhemlll’w be gued. as the ually in gflll‘ht. old French proverb puts “Two souls this happy state of affairs seldom two hearts that beat:as one.” one kisses and the other permits himself it, and when this is the case it is far better for the man to start out, as least, as the kisser than the kissee. S @ matter of fact, speaking broadly, if Cupid held the scales at most weddings it would be found out that the man put the greatest amount of sentiment into it. Nor is this surprisi has no reason whatsoever for marrying except for love. ‘The average man ing. Few brides in this country bring their husbands any dowry, except their own selves. On the other hand, while few women marry men who do not appeal to them and for whom they have not a genuine liking, still love is not the only force that drives them into marriage as it is with men. They offen marry men for whom they have only a very lukewarm affection because they want a home. PERHAPS it is a wise provision of nature that men should usually be more in love when they marry than their wives are, for, generally aking, they invest their all of romance and affection in courts] ess on a constantly diminishing capital, while the small amount of love the woman puts into marriage expands daily. ‘There are many reasons why this should be so. The very conditions timent in him and to wean him away from a man's '.housihdu are centered not on being provider. reafter do busin ofa his wife. After marriage perfect lover, but on being a man’s life tend to kill sen hip and the He says it with motor cars and Paris frocks and bread and meat, instead of poetry and violets. ALMOST any wife will fall in love with her husband if he is good and kind and generous to-her and if he will take the trouble to woo her and treat her as a ladylove instead of a household convenience. But, not many husbands ever fall in love with their wives, no matter how good and kind they are, nor how much they break their necks to try to keep them vamped. ‘Why this should be thus. nobody knows. It just merely is. Certain- 1y to the dispassionate observer (he middle-aged woman is just as attractive as the middle-aged man. A love more than men do. They men are. Their happiness lies in their husbands’ hands. man he has his consolations—his business, his ambitions, his the home is disagreeable he can flee she has nothing. have lost their husbands’ love, No women are so desolate and forlorn as MAN should be more in love than his wife because women need are more dependent upon love than . If love fails & career, from it. But if love fails & woman those who But in love, as in e ing else in life, it is more bl than to receive, and those are happlest who love most. DO] essed to give ROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1931.) MODE < OF THE MOMENT green’wool \She. Shirt seams sbype olmlé( irom. ‘ZZ Zo /ro:,.: '7:.'1./- eaver collar and. B MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Egg Shampoo. If there is any one person in the world who would be quite justified in occasionally indulging in the remark, For, years after her old-fashioned beauty remedies may have been discarded for something more modern, the best of | them have a way of returning to popu- larity because their real worth cannot be ignored. The egg shampoo is one of grandmother’s favorites, and time has proved that it is just as good today as it was in times of yore when the mar- ket did not afford so many attractively bottled brands of shampoos. The white-of-egg shampoo is espe- clally recommended for light shades of hair. It is also a very good shampoo for those whose scalps may be in a sensitive condition and for older people with snow-white. hair who wish to_keep it from turning & dingy yellow. Yolks of eggs make an effective shampoo for dark fw. as they contain sulphur and iron, both of which tend to darken blonde or white hair. In using the white-of-egg shampoo take the whites of two eggs and add a tablespoonful of rosewater for each white. Beat fi:; Whinas "r:d the ros:; water up together an len mMAassaf this mixture well through the hair and over the entire scalp. If desired, a little castile soap liquid may also be added to the white-of-egg mixture, Continue massaging the white-of-egg mixture over the scalp and hair until all of it has been used, and then rinse it off in several tepid waters until the hair is perfectly clean. If desired, a special blonde rinse or bluing for white hair may be used as the final rinsing. A mild blonde rinse is made as follows: Two tablespoonfuls of peroxide, one tablespoonful of ammonia and one quart of water. Brunettes may employ the egg sham- poo by beating up the yolks of two €ggs Tlassage the_egg into the hair —n with two. table fuls of water or rosewater and u‘s‘m this in the manner ibed—) the mix! T teaspoonful of tian henna powder may be added to final rinsing wlu'l; Mix the powder to a smooth Pas LEEDS. first by blending it thoroughly with a few drops of hot water and then add this to the rinsing water. The amount of water used will determine the amount of henna color imparted to the hair, for naturally the more water used, the | lighter will be the shade. The juice of one lemon added to a quart of water makes a good rinse for light brown or chestnut shades of hair, and for jet black hair a few drops of 1:;1::: may be added to one quart of A '"WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. (®] Xlumc wszm of Towa, b Tecogn! expert parliamen- tarian of the House, has come forward with a proposal which doubtless will pro- voke discussion. The Iowan sug- gests that for the handled by Con- gress be settled through a Govern- ment agency. To the average member of Con- gress such a pro- posal is rank her~ esy. This shep- herding through of private claims bills is, of course, lbfuc cial duties of Sen- ators and Repre- sentatives. But at the same time it is of vital importance. Political careers depend on these pri- vate measures. Most of them are of no interest whatever to anybody else in Congress, but to the member who intro- duces one it means much. Let him fail to get action on a legitimate claim of this kind and there will be created an eddying circle of unfavorable comment blwl:‘k home on his congressional effi- clency. Newcomers quickly learn the ropes. Soon they discover that a belligerent attitude avails them nothing; that what is needed is a_combination of tact, pa- tience and a keen eye to detect the right parliamentary and psychological moment. All must learn this lesson sooner or later. ‘There comes to mind a situation ob- served on the floor of the Senate re- cently when a new Senator first was impressed that geltunce and a growing knowledge of the ways of the Senate had ready had passed both House and Sen- ate, but had been lost en route to the White House. It was all to do over . He tried to bring it up at one of those hurly-burly moments in the su?nlle, but was blocked by an objec- He looked : but one of his vet- him a bit aside, 1931. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. :\v 3 o ‘When all the fixtures of the old Columbia Athletic Club were spld at auction, April 3, 19032 LITTLE BENNY BY LE% PAPE. We was eating brekfist this morning and ma sed to pop, Its very funny I havent had an anser from my sister Fanny yet, I asked her very particu- lilly to let me know what size gloves little Herbit wears s0 I could send him a nice pair for his berthday, and I havent receeved the faintest indication of & response. Maybe Herbit never wears gloves, so naturelly there wouldent be any gloves of that particular size, and perhaps your sister Fanny is in a quandary and a dilemma, not to say. at a loss for an anser, pop sed. My private opinion is that you never mailed my letter to Fanny, and a per- son cant enser a letter they never re- ceeved, because the days of fizzical im- possibilities are over, ma sed. Willyum Potts are you sure you mailed that let- | ter? she sed. . My dear, I can show you the mail | Box I dropped it into, pop sed. Id rec- konize that mailbox in the dark because the little iron flap over the letter slot opens outwerds, he sed. Well my goodness how do all the others open, pray? ma sed, and pop sed, Im not intristed in the others, but if you want ferther proof, this particular flap also squeeks a little when you raise it. It gives a little rusty squeek in the key of A flat, its rather fassinating, and in fact Ive herd that musiclans come from miles around to drop their letters in that particuler box. Id imitate it for you, but my throat is a little horse and I wouldent care to get it wrong, he sed. The main point is, I mailed your letter, he sed. Well G, ma, whats that letter in the | red book up in your room, with a stamp on it and everything? I sed, and ma sed, My lands thats it, I used it for a bookmark and then I started to reed | ancther book. My goodness I never | even gave it to you to mail, 50 how could you of mailed it in a music box or any other kind of a box, Willyum I think youre perfeckly awful, she sed. If I had to depend on you to get all my letters mailed my correspondents would never have any beginning or end, I think youre terrible, she sed. Its a womans world, pop sed. And he folded up his paper and went down to the office. ~ Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Fears. A fear is really an anxiety about what | | may happen. When one is afraid, one | is in doubt about the outcome of some | | immediate or impending real or imagi- nary situation. The following anxieties | help to describe fear, which in itself | | cannot be accurately defined: | 1. Fear of being hurt in a crowd. | 2. Pear of blushing. . Fear of failing in every attempt to | accomplish something. . Fear of going to new places. . Fear of responsibilities. Fear of contradicting the opinions of others. . Fear of underhanded designs on the part of others. . Fear of one’s own opinion. . Fear of remembering painful experi- ences. . Fear of fault-finders. . Fear that some one “reads your thoughts.” . Pear of feelings of inferiority. . Fear of getting tired easily. Fear of self-consciousness. 15. Fear of lack or loss of will power, . Fear of competition. . Fear of feeling of shame‘ . . Fear of fimidity. - 19. Fear of being laughed at. 20. Fear of fear. (Copyright, 1931). Bidi his time, he again got the ficor only to be faced with a warning from a Democrat that he would object to passage at that time of any such bill. It looked hopeless, but he continued to hold the floor, yielding gracefully to every Senator who asked. This went on for almost half an hour. Finally a Democrat popped up with a similar bill. The new Senator yielded to him with the remark, “I am patient- 1y waiting.” The Democrat who had objected earlier did not want to block his col- league and could not consistently oppose the new Senator’s bill. A moment later his bill went through without debate. el Pastry Wheels. Roll some pie paste into a rectangu- lar sheet about one-fourth an inch thick. Spread well with creamed but- | ter and dredge with cinnamon and ' sugar, using one-third cupful of sugar mixed with one teaspoonful of cinna- mon. Roll the paste like a jelly roll and cut off rounds three-fourths of an | inch thick. Bake the rounds in a hot | oven to a golden brown, My Neighbor Says: In selecting fruits for making jellies always procure which are somewhat underripe. Fruits in order to make good jelly must contain pectin, and if fruit ‘I:: overripe pectin is not found it. If a thick cloth is placed at the bottom of the pan or bowl in which delicate china or glass is being washed, the danger of FEATURES. Celebration for the Children BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ‘The celebration of the Fourth of July in a safe and sane way is continually galning ground. The number of acci- dents has decreased because of it, and the atmosphere of anxiety in familles also. In order for the day to continue to have galety and glamor for the young folk, hovvever, parents should cc-operate with program committees, not neces- sarily in any official way, but in the same spirit, to provide entertainment that will be engrossing as well as full of fun. One of the outstanding features that has proven successful is the community parade for youngsters. Again let me remind you of this. It can occupy the better part of the entire morning. It | is an active diversion, and one in which | the children themselves can choose their own leaders and form their own | companies under the head adult di- rector. Different clubs or children fram cer- tain streets can vie with one another to win & banner for the year's supremacy in some special thing. 1f there are sev- eral competitions, and no one group be allowed to win but one prize, honors can be distributed and the good spirits kept high. For example, one can win for the best marching, one for the best music, one for the best appearance, in which costuming can enter, or regalia; one for the best banners of its own make, etc. ‘There can be a community luncheon, in which parents of children in specific groups provide the food, or parents can bring lunch baskets for their own fami- lies. The ice cream, without which no | child’s feast is complete, should be pro- vided from a community purse, thereby insuring every individual getting a share and minimizing the cost to a wholesale price. Peanuts or popcorn provided in | the same way are suggested. Another event should be planned for the afternoon, followed by an evening celebration. The latter is generally a display managed entirely by the mu- nicipality. Sports in the afternoon, especially competitive ones, will create widespread interest. In all of these events fireworks, ex- cept in the hands of the municipality, are eliminated. Danger lurks in these, whatever their kind. Whoever handles them is literally playing with fire, ONE PRIZE CAN BE FOR e YOUNGSTERS PARADING IN THE MOST APPROPRIATE CUSTUMES. When experts play with it they have learned control, and it is to them that the arrangement and the setting off of.. the fireworks should be intrusted. The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. Who started her career as a frightened typist and who became one of the highest-paid business women in of America’s famous authors. Off Goes Your Head. ey iy i atatd ot Iostnd his Job; try everybody is afraid of e or, since we're writing especially about ‘women, her job. ‘To be sure, every girl who works for a living anywhere is worried more or less about her job. But in the picture in- dustry that worry becomes an acute and constant fear. ‘There's the actress whose public may grow tired of her. There's the dialogue writer whose stuff may go out of fash- ion. There's the rector whose last picture cial faflure. There's the executive whol inside politics ma: drive out. the steaographer whom a relative of reception clerk There b 15 hecdeq Melen Woodward. for some one's cousin. All that's bad enough, but there's worse. Never in all my 20-odd years of working for a living have I heard of a business so full of backbiting, of plotting, of schemes to get the other girl out of her job. A brilliant writer who is such a suc- cess that she can afford to be honest explained to me why. “You see,” she said, “most of us were | having a hard time getting along before we came out here. Perhaps we'd writ- | ten a book or a play which had gond reviews, but it probably didn't make money. Then out we came here with huge contracts. We're making a lot of us five times as much money as we have T made before in our live “Naturally.” she went on, “most of us have an uneasy feeling that we aren't earning what we get. A lot of us are, all right. But it's hard for us to be- lieve. So we're always afraid the powers will find us out. We expect each day they’ll say, ‘This woman is overpaid. Let’s not renew her contract.’ ” | “But,” I asked her, “why do the pic- JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in Etiquette. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. DAD WONDERS WHAT THE COUNTRY 1S COMING TO. RECENT CENSUS FIGURES INDICATE TH, | the milk, and the convenience ~ America. She'is now married to cne ture people pay 50 much to writers and directors? ‘They don't overpay stenog- raphers and clerks.” “Partly it's because they don’t know " what authors usually make,” she ex- plained. “But, more than that, writers wouldn't come out to Hollywood if it were not for the big money. The pic-- ture people have built up such a reputa- - tion for acting on whim, for unreason- able changes of mind, for lack of under- standing of the creative mind, that no one wants to come out here o write unless bribed by big money.” b “Then you ought to be contented with your money. You ought to realize that it's coming to vou and take it with a - clear conscience.” “We ought to, but we don't.” she" smiled. “Which shows you how silly writing people are. Instead of feeling happy, we immediately start out knock-"" ing the other fellow to save our own contracts.” (Copyright, 1931). ‘The belief in reincarnation has ex- isted in the Orient for centuries. Chevy Chase Milk IS FOOD AND DRINK REFRESHING as a trip to the farm, wholesome as the pas- ; turelands upon which our herds feed daily, Chevy Chase Milk satisfies your thirst or hunger. Change to Chevy | Chase Milk today, and discover how delicious it is. You’ll like of ourfamous cream-top bottle, | with its gill of whipping-cream. Telephone West 0183 Wise Brothers |CHEVY CHASE W. C—When friends meet on the sidewalk and stop to chat, courtesy de- mands that they step aside, out of the way of traffic. Few things are more annoying to the busy person than to have to walk around a group of thought- less persons gathered in the middle of the sidewalk. Sacrifice the certain purity of Kotex AVE you ever considered the wonderful protection offered by the name, “Kotex™? chipping will be lessened. This will also prevent silver from be- ing scratched. ‘Woodwork which has to be painted should be well smeared with lime water, which can be Sed v e 2 dry and then 3 will dry in h‘.rl’.lhe time. ~ Put. the brush in water when you It will be quite pair of scissors. Trim off all edges that project beyond edge of sandwich. {(Copyright, 1931.) This name is your protection against carelessly manufactured sanitary pads. It is your protection against doubtful cleanliness . . . against actual health risks! Remember the name, Kotex, when tempted to try a substitute of whose makers you know nothing. Many pads are cleverly made to Jook' like Kotex. But the name Kotex is your guarantee of hospital 3 i care in making. Indeed, hospitals buy millions of Kotex pads each year. Kotex is treated to deodorize. It is adjustable. Stays soft for hours. Disposable — wear it on cither side with equal protection. KOTEX Ssnitary Nepkine