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WOMA N’S PAGE, THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. (. MONDAY. AUGUST 17, FEATURES. Gift§ Made From Pine Needles . BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. A SMART WAY TO TRIM A CASE FOR A PINE NEEDLE PILLOW IS WITH THE WEE PINE TREES IN PANCY POTS IN FILET CROCHET, OR CROSS-STITCH. Pine needles can be put to sevengh uses in the making of giffs fcr Christmas. As these presents are now being pre- pared in advance by the women who delight in being ready for this festive occasion, it is well to let Dame Nature lend her eid. Just what can be done with these needies derends upon their length. In the South the needles grow B0 long that they are used in making fromes fcr trays; to fashion baskets in th: same manner that sweet grass is employed; and in many ways similar to that in which rafia is used. The im- portant thing is to keep adding new needles so that working strands are of the same continuous size. In the North the needles are shorter, but they are reputed to be much more fregrant. Many are the persons Cuba who try to obtain northern pine needles for pillows, that they may get occasional whiffs of pine groves remi- | miscent of their beloved homeland. ‘These pillows are so easy to make and 80 nsive if one lives anywhere wit range cf pinewoods that this is a good clue to follow when considering What to give certain friends. pillows are really for the At night they sre not s> much ! “mot be hsavy or thick, however, for the should nct be inelosed. Down- proof ticking is recommended. It comes in light-weight textile soft and white. For the cuter covering or pillow slip, any boudoir pillow cases cen_be used but if there is a pine tfce m7tif on it in |stitched by counted stitches cn the | or a pine tree design in the lace edging, the appropriateness is charming. Smart casss of this sort can be made from a design which can be had by sending 10 cents with a self-addressed and stamped envelope inclosed with a re- directed to Lydia Le Baron Walker. Full directions come for making the pointed edging in filet crochet, and the inscrticn to mateh. Make the lace in one straight strip and overcast it to the insertion edging the case itself, Or the insertion can be let into the linen case leaving & border of the fabric be- tween it and the edge of the pillows into which the lace is sewed. Such pillow cases ere exquisite. The pine tree design can be cross- cases, by basting fine cross-stitch can- vas over the part to be embroidered, and by taking the cross-stitches through both canvas and case, after which the canvas is cut and pulled away. Corners of single pine trees can be 80 embroid- €red or entire borders cf the wee trees. The filet crochet lace edging can finish the edges. Pine needles are not so fragrant that they can be used for regulation sachets, but they prescrve sweetness in bureau end dresser drawers when sprinkled thickly over sheet cotton wadding which | lines the pads for dresser drawers. Use thin silk for the outer cover cf these pads, and tack them here and there with wee tufts of crochet silk. Put a cross-stitch pine tree in each corner and a little cluster in the c:nter top to sug- | gest a tiny pine grove. | The boudoir pillows made ss de- | seribed and fitted with cases with the pine tree filet crochet cr cross-stitch embroidery trimming them, are sug- gested as novelties to put in gift ps. They are “something different.” So a! are the pine tree bureau pads. They should find ready sales. They are, for these rezsons, excellent to put in fairs and bazars, 2s well as to make for gifts. (Copyright, 1031 OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Fearfilled Guardians. “No, no, Billy. Come away from . I don't care. You can’t get on thing. Come away.” the other children are geing up, “I Gon't care. If they want to be | t is no reason why I should risk your neck. Come away.” then stay away from the play- | grounds that offer the climbing, whirl- | ing, dazzling things taat children love. | That is what attracts the children to |the play place. If vou are filled with | the fear of sudden death, stay away. ‘The children love to go. If ycu d | cide that they can go and you are shud | dering in fear about the whole per- | formance, lst somebody else take the children, wl you go to scme enter- tainment that will take your mind off ‘what the children are doing. But don't take them to the playground and then them they can't play. And don't let play. A fear-filled guardian kil DAILY PATTERN | fun. He does more. The grownup's fear | SERVICE | is likely to reach the children. A child This cute model answers mode’s call | 15 usually safe as long ms he feels safe. ith a capelet collar and brief circular | Let the slightest doubt of his safety :&,M kirt | enter his mind end he is likely to slip It's s0 simple and so smart and so | A0d fall THE STAR’S The first stage in safety is | “ Posy to make. It's adorable in flowered pink dimity With white organdie collar Its small cost will surprise you. For th~ 8-year-old, it takes but 1% yards of 39-inch material with '; yard of 32- inch contrasting. Style No. 3062 is designed for that $mportant age of 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. French blue linen with white hand- | courage. The child who knows he can, | usually can. But fear is infectious. It is | lkely to spread. Keep away if you are | filled with fear. ‘When you go to the beach to see chil- | dren swim don’t begin calling to them to come back, come back. Let them |alone. If they catch your fear there is likely to be trouble. That is why camp directors dread having nervous mothers {on the beach when the children are | swimming. The boys are in no danger | 2s long as their faith in themselves Is | strong. Shake that and they are likely to get into trouble. If you cannct cheer a child on, stay away and let him work out his own salvation | _“I'm down for the hundred yards at the end of the hour. Can you put it on first thing? IT tell you why. My = NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. Illustrations by Mary Foley. LXXXV. COTTON BEES. Hymenoptera. HESE little bees make beautiful | downy beds for their babies. They do not build a home for | them, as many bees do for their | children, but seek an empty | bramble stem or a little hollow place in wood. Scmetimes one has been known to use a home left by another bee. She goes t> a thistle, sags bush, ever- lasting or mullein plant which is dry and dead. It would never do to have green cotton shects and wadding that would mildew. So she is wise and seeks the dead plants and there she scrapes off the soft fuzz of the plent. The down is passed from her mcuth to her hind legs where it is held firmly against her chest. When the bale of cotton is the size of & pea, she sails off toward the apartment she hes selected and en- ters it. There she removes all the lumps from her cotton and lines the | little room. Back sh- gces for more | and keeps this up until she has a lovely | little room all snowy white for her | baby. | It is to the flower she goes now and | takes from it & wee drop of nectar and returning to the nursery she places this in the center of the room. Upon this he lays & tiny egg Once more she goes to the plant and scrapes oii some more d-wn. She is not so careful about this cotton because it is to be the plug | to the door. When she has enough she files home and with her front feet tesrs the bale apart. She presses the cotton into the opening with her head, and, when it is cicsed to suit her, she begins to pick up odd bits of sticks and a pebble. She places this at the en- trance, 5o that no enemy will be able to find the innocent baby behind the cotton door. In a few days the little bsby bee will | | | 1 | hatch from the egg and drink the | honey greedily until every drop is gone and then he spins himself a wrapper | of silk and, facing the door, takes & little nap. When he wakes up, this time | he is a_grown-up cotton bee. He has | strong jaws for cutting, and he tries them at once on the door befcre him, | Pretty soon he is through the wadding, | knocks away the debris and is free. Out | into the sunshine he flies, and for a few | days seeks the nectzr so easy to find in | the flower's cup. Later he weds and his wife goes alne to hunt & plant where the cotton is free for the scraping. These little bees are known as soli- tary bees. (Copyright. 1331.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS, The Balanced Mind. When you speak of a person’s possess- ing a balanced mind or an unbalanced mind, you are not thinking of educa- tion or training in specalized pursuits. | The balanced mind refers to something more fundamental than the accident of artificlal environmental influences, | A balanced mind is one toat is char- acterized by a harmonious setting of the emotions. The possessor of a balanced mind has a fairly good opinion of him- | self. The Arst signal of incipient in- sanity is noticed when the individual begins to feel that he amounts to noth- ing. At least, that situation will answer for a great many cases that eventually find their way to a mental sanitarium. | A wholesome amount of egotism is a sign of mental balance. The cases of | extreme egotism found in asylums, and often out of them, are very generally compensations for unadmitted failures A balanced mind may, on occasion, | become emotionally aroused. But it never goes to extremes. Nor do such states continue long. A balanced mind is, as a rule, free| from haunting fears 4nd morbid reflec- There 2re no well defined com- plexes, inhibitions or repressions. The unbalanced mind is characterized by its lack of cheerfulness. Pessimism leads | to all sorts of maladjustments on the | social level of existence. A disorgan- | ized emotional life is sure to follow. | In order to possess a balanced mind, | vou need to take an interest in a fairly | wide variety of things. The mental diet should be even more varied than | the bodily diet, for its functions are relatively more complex | (Copyright. 1931) tions. the highest I Suppose I Am Like This. | While Helen Woodward was away on {8 vacation, a man who used to work for her sent us a letter about her, We think, perhaps, some of it would make , her blush, but while she is away we are gcing to take a chance and let you read The Woman Who Makes BY HELEN WOODWARD. Who started her career as a frightened typist and wi paid business women in America Vivisecting the in-Law Finds Only Human Frailty | DorothyDix A MODERN college, which offers its students & course in domestic relations, is going to devote study to the mother-in-law. She is to be vivisscted and peychiatrized and put undcr the micrcscope and have all of her com- plexes and inhibitions invertigated snd her actions and reactions analyzed with a view to finding out what makes the wheels go around in her and why she does as she does and whether she is really as dangerous as she is reputed to be. ‘What they will find out when they get through is that the mother-in-law is no abnormal and exotic female with strange, malevolent impulses that cause ber to enjoy breaking up homes, but that she is just one of the common or garden variety of women who are good and kind and devoted wives and mcth €rs snd who belong to the church and run the missionary and sewing soci- eties and are helpful neighbors and who live in sanctity and dle in grace. A S women, no praise is too fulscme a tribute to pay them. It is only when they become mothers-in-law that their virtues suffér a sea change and are transmitted into vices. And this is not their fault. It is only that the role of mother-in-law is so difficult and calls for so meny conflicting talents that it is virtually impossible f-r any human being to fill it satisfactorily. For & mother-in-law, to come up to requirsments, has to be as dumb ss an . as humble as a worm of the dust, os invisible as a She must never give advice, no matter how badly it is needed. She :nugt never Intcrfere in her children's affairs, no matter how vital they are o her. SHE must never appear upon the scene except when there is a new baby or sickness or need for somebody to take care of the children or substi- tute for a servant or when the rent is overdue or the grocer pressing fcr his bill. Then, her misgion performed, she must vanish, without even expecting any thanks or appreciation. And for a woman to be able to do this requires her to be something more than a superwoman. It requires her to be a miracle. Most of the charges that are brought against the mcther-in-law are justi- fled. She is nearly always a menac: to her children's marital happiness snd any bridal couple might just as well put a stick of dynamite under their door- step as to take mother to live with them when they get married, unless mother happens to be one cf those rare women who have the disposition of an angel and the tact and suavity of a diplomat and the sc!f-abnegation of any early Christian martyr. And even then they take & risk. JT I8 easy enough to understand why the mother-in-law heads the home- wrecking crew, as divorce statistics show that she does. To begin with, she is always an enfcrced guest. Her in-laws never really want her, because every young husband end wife who love each other desire to be alone with no third party always listening in to their billing and cooing, taking part in squabbles and disagreements, always having to be dragged mbout to their places of amusement. Then the green-eyed morfster rears its ugly head, and there is no Jjealousy on earth bitterer than that that & mother and wife, who fight over the same man, can feel for each other. None greater than that a mother can feel for tbe man her daughter loves better than she does her, Nor can any man hate &ny other rival with a more deadly hatred than he feels toward the woman who has more authority and influence over his wife than he has. Then there is meddling. It is 21l very well for a mother-in-law to make a cast-iron resolve to keep her fingers out of her children’s pies, but she stmply can’t do it. The one thing that ege develops in us all is egotism and self- complacency. All elderly pcople are perfectly sure that they are fountains of wisdom and oracles. THE'N there is partisanship. The faults that a woman overlooks in her own children loom as big as mountains in her in-laws. In a wcrd, the study of the mother-in-law will only show a natural human women, and it is because she is brought in conflict with the natural human men and women her daughters and sons marry that it is wisest and happicst for them never to try to live under the same roof. DOROTHY DIX. Copyright, 1931 MO(Q:ETI-é MOMENT PARIS™ %m Darayr /Lu.rfl.é«/-cd velvel wrap be worn Wik a charlrewse Fown., A’ni searf & drawn through nerusrtation and cafua[[y thrown over shoulder | with clients generally, she completely | dropped her expensive emotlonalism | that characterized her when she was | working in her office. She became & gentle, easy-mannered little woman, | whose quiet poise suggested leisurely, | untroubled movements.” : (Copyright. 1931.) Good ho became ome of that she found she could do her work | more successfully by building up a pres- | sure and letting her emoticns go into play. It was all on the surface and | 500 B.C. could be dismissed at a moment’s notice if there was a reason to throw it off, or | it could b: deepened into a serious note | of determination if somethin, | [WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. i When Washingtor first foot ball team was organized by the Oricnt Ath- letie Club, near Lincoln Park? LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking and thinking and ma was pushing crooked things strate and stra.e things crooked, saying, I bleeve Iil get one of those bathroom rugs. One of wich bathroom rugs? pop sed, and ma sed, One of those that are avvertized by Hookbinders, one of the thick ones that feel so nice when you step out of the tub. Well, a bathroom rug jzzent so bad, pop sed. It gives a poor man the sen- sation of being a rich man as his drip- ping foot sinks into its soft dry luxuri- makes the rich man feel even richer, thus promoting good feeling between the classes. Stepping from our porcelain our savage ancestors stepped from their rocky river bed onto the gooky mud- bank. If I were a grate poet I bleeve I would write a grate pome on the subjeck of bathroom rugs. pop sed. sidering that each one is hand made on a hand loom by special hand werkers, mad sed. Otherwise I mite consider %2 dollers and 50 cents quite a far fetched price she sed. and pop sed, How much? For how many' For one, of corse, ma sed. In other werds, each, she sed. Meening aplece; and pop sed, Yee gods. Now that I come to think of it, & bathroom rug can be terned over the same as anything elts. In other wer: it has its reverse side. Is it fair to t hones; werkmen who lovingly gevc their best to lay our bathroom tiles, fair to them. I sav. to cover the gleem ing fruit of their efforts with a rug? Ferthermore, why should I bs robbed of the virile feeling wich comes to me when 1 step down, down. from my plunge onto the smooih inviggerating tiles? Why should I make a mollycoddle of my son by robbing him of the same manly privi- lege? he sed | ous thickness, and at the same time it | tub onto our fleecy bath rug, what giant | strides we have taken since the days | Theyre reely quite reasonable con- it |'came a period of great anxiety to Mrs. Pompons Smart ‘What is smarter than a pompon on' the top of your beret? The answer to | that little riddle is quite simple! Two pomp:ns—especislly when one is red and the other is blue or one black and | the other white. So if you have a close- | fitting little beret or knitted cap make the pompons and perch them in the center of the crown. They are on the | top of the cap, but when it is actually worn in the new menner they will be toward the back of your head and per- haps a little to the right side. Be- csuse the proper way to weer a small hat of this sort is far enough back cn your head to show a bit of hair and | drawn a trifie to the right side. | It is & simple matt:r to make a pomron. All you will need is & small ball of yarn and two pasteboard discs. | Choose yarn of medium thickness agd | cut the pastebcard in two discs each | | having a diameter of 3 inches or | a trifie less. Then cut circles in each of the discs so that th:y look like flat crullers. Now put the twc discs together | and wind the yarn round end round | over the circle, bringing it through the | hole each time. Wind the yarn very | closely cnd evenly and do not drzw too | tightly, until you have the entire circle covered thickly with yarn. Next cut a plece cf yarn about 10 inckes long and then, holding the thumb and first fingsr of your left hand over th: center of | the doughnut, slip the scissors through the yarn and cut betw-en the two teboard discs, holding the yarn se- curely with the left hand. Be ready | with the 10-inch length of yarn. Slp ‘fl between the cardbosrds, tie end {draw up tight. Tie egain t> mike a | double knot end remove the cardboard. This done, you have a pompon thet only needs a little trimming to meke | ready for your beret or cap. And re- | ‘ 1 1 Forkhern Twins. He'll longest live whose Instead of Wi B B 4pons makes him A Id Mother Nature. Like Mrs. Lightfood the White-tailed it t. | | Do horns or antlers. Yet, s with the former, the children must be watched over and cared for and protacted, with no help from any one. So, having no | weapons, Mrs. Forkhorn must depend | wholly on her wits. She is constantly |on the alert. She takes no chances. nd from babyhood the babies are | ught to obey, to do just what they | the antelope twins were taught. The Forkhorn twins were born in & thicket in a quiet hollow in the woog a mile or more from the old cabin which Farmer Brown's Boy was now camping with Stumpy, the old pros- | pector. Like Lightfoot's babies, the | twins had pretiily spotted coats. Mrs, | Forkhorn was tremendously proud of them. She was sure that they were the most wonderful babies in all the great world. But with their coming | Porkhorn. There were certain hungry | folk who would like nothing quite so much as & dinner of tender little fawns, and she knew that these hungry folk | BEDTIME STORIES | Deer, Mrs. Fockhorn the Mule Deer had | Willyum Potts youre just tawking | through your emoty hat to fill up vacant | time, and Im going to get that rug, ma | sed. Wich she proberly will. in Use on Beret BY MARY MARSHALY. member t e two of them of con- trasting colors and fasten securely on the cap 5 shown in the skotch. By Thornton W. Burgess. ing that way and Mother Forkhorn led | him away by thrashing about in the | brush some distance off. He at once went that way to investignte. Once he actually brushed past the very edge of thet thicket, but there was no scent to give the secret away and that thicket | was like countless other thickets. Per- | haps you can guess how Mother Fork horn felt until he was safely past and she had led him away. Of course, the first lesson the twing were taught was to lie perfectly sti. “Sharp eyes are always watching, buc if nothing moves they see nothing.” warned mother. “They can look have been told to do, as you remember | Straight at you yet not sée you as long as you do not move. The only safety for little Deer is to bz at all times hidden. Not until you are big enough and strong enough to run and jump will there be any safety for you except in keeping hidden. It is o help you in this that you have spotted coats. When are big enough to trust to you: & you will lose those spots and have a plain coat.” So the Forkhorn twins remained hidden in their thicket and grew and mother kept watch ond thestime came when they could make their first jour- | mey cut in the Great World. Tart Cases. Tart cases made from puff paste may bs made either single cr double, and | may be used for pztiles with fillings of | meats or oysters, with the difference thzt the rhells or c2ses used for sweets may be glezed with sugar or sirup, while those used for meats should not be sweetened. NANCY PAGE Formal Curtains Belong in Gracious Rooms. | | | BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. The gracious dignity cf the Georgian rooms is calling for more formality in | hangings and wall coverings. The simple rusticlty of the provincial furniture and | SO HAVING. NO WEAPONS. MRS. furnishings s not In keeping with state- | FORKHORN ' MUST = DE | Iy Georgian, nor with its compatriot in | Germany—Beidermeler furniture. ThiS, | i that probably somewhere she had | these precious bables hidden and would | as Nzncy lcarned, a few weeks ago is | gaining in popularity. especlally in | constantly be looking for them, She families where the ancestry is German. | The English families veer toward the | e aotmnn wut ner wip, '° derend | Georglan. Directoire furniture and | " mqy begin with she separated them in rooms are toming in also. The Direc- | | tolre rcpresents the French influence, | Lt SScret thicket, It has something of the classicism of the Greeks, at least in so far as the draperies are concerned. Here, fcr in- stance, is a drapery which Nancy clipped for future use. It has the “swag” which interfor decorators are referring to 50 frequently. And the swag hangs in folds down the sides of the curtain. The valance, which used to_be fitted & few years ago, is now less restrained and hangs gracefully with a slight drocp or curve. one should might remain unfound. And then she | kept away from that thicket. It was a | hard thing to do, but it was the only safe thing to do. She wanted to be | with those precious babies, but if she | were seen in the thicket by one of her watchful enemies the secret would be givem away. So-she went there only at break of day, when the hunters of the night were through hunting. and again in the dusk of evening, before these hunters had started the night's “Everything s one and that one is| God,” is the summary of the religious teachings of a Greek philosopher of | In a room which needs space and has | windows too close together, Nancy | found a decorator would increase the apparent size by the use of wcoden scalloped valance and mirror panel. The effect is gained by extending the | curved wooden valance across the two | adjoining windows and the intervening | space as well. In the narrow space be- | posite to that from which the wind tween windows is put up a mirror. A | was blowing, knowing that if there was table set between the windows can have |an enemy lurking upwind her friends, a tole vase with flowers. These are |the Little Night Breezes, would bring reflected in the mirror. The hangings | her the scent. Only when she was sure are long, too long for cleanliness but | it was safe to do so did she enier the not & bit too long for style. They rest | thicket and there nurse the hungry on the ficor itself. And that means |babies. When they had been fed she careful putting up out of the way before | would steal away as cautiously as she | the vacuum cleaner is used. had_come. All day she browsed some distance from that hidden nursery, but always hunt. Even then she didn't go directly there. She would sometimes circle completely around the thicket so as to test the air on all sides. This was when there was little air moving. Au other times when there was some wind she would approach from the side op- Grandee | discusses American ‘Women ““Your American woman, ah, she has the grace of our own Sefioritas . . . the chic of the Frenchwoman. .. the culture of the Italian + . . theallureof the Oriental. But, alas, she has not the wavishing complexion of the Englishwoman."’ It is true that the English complexion is the loveliest in the world, in spite of the inclement weather and yellow fogs. For142yearsthewomenof have used Pears Soap for radiant skin. Get a cake and watch Pears’ generous lather gently bring the natural, delicate color to your face. At all drug and department stores—wherever toilet goods are sold, Péars’ Soap unscented, 15¢. ted, & bit more. wGi sl o Peach Scallop. “ Slice about seven, peeled peaches into | a baking dish and sprinkle them with gradulated sugar. Mix half a cupful of brown sugar with half a cupful of | flour and cut in one-fourth cupful of butter until the mixture is like coarse meal. Sprinkle over the peaches and/| bake in a moderately hot oven until| the peaches are soft and a crisp brown crust has formed on top. It will tal about 25 minutes, with increased heat | the last 10 minutes to brown the top. | Serve with plain or whipped cream, | taking out each serving with some crust. Lovely Women Depend Upon This Safe Preparation ‘Thousands of particular women use Key's Astringent Powder in their daily douche. They know from experience that personal hygiene is essential to health, daintiness and charm. Daily, more and more women are de- pending on this safe, non-irritating preparation, which has proved its ef- ficiency in combating bacteria. You, too, will be delighted with its soothing, comforting and pretective benefits, once you have tried it. Get a 50c box of Key's Astringent wder at your favorite drug store to. . ' Po A New Discovery! |a” Cleans Sheerest Silks and Heaviest Wools Light or Dark As Advertised in and Guaranteed ' by Good At Drug and Dept. ‘tend oe Sor Frial ME FoE S mother is coming and she is always afraid I'm going to be drowned and that | makes me nervous. If we can finish be- | fore she comes I'll be all right” Fear is poor inspiration in any situ: ticn. Those about us who are strug- ing to do and dare have enough fear | of their own to conquer. Nothing was ever done without a struggle agains fear of some sort cr another. Children, | of course, have much more of that than grownups have and they suffer accord- | ingly. Now add to that the fears of the grownups and the plight cf the children is no enviable one. Children need support. They need our | Ta'e 4% Enter faith and our courage to strengthen | Madam.' When she their own. They are entitled to our Shio the & weep of vitality | sturdy encouragement. If we are afraid | ¢ame into t - ‘h‘ P | for them we do them harm. Next time | Seemeg to come with her. S | your heart is filled with fear for your | ‘She was hardly inside the office be- | | child either kill the fear, conquer it, or | fore she began firing orders, and fcr the | keep out of the way so the child will not | Dext hour she worked furiously. Usual- meet your fear. ly a line of magazine representatives (Coprright and others were in the waiting room to | see her end a list of telephone numbers was on her pad. She attended to these | as nearly simultaneously as possible, and cast a rapid eye over the details | which her assistants had ready to show | her. Wren things were wrong she dis- solved into a momentary ses of despair, | but she could brush this aside as quick- ly as it had overwhelmed her, and l'henv scmething pleased her, it was us. “At lcast four days & week she ‘would i pause now end then to murmur how | wretchedly she felt, and then imme- ||| diately plunge into the business af it so that you will know her better. The letter comes from John Willlam Rogers, Who is now a successful pub- licity man in Tex- as. Here it “When 1 worked for her, Helen Woodward rarely arrived at the cf- fice before 11, and {§ her sppearance re- sembled the en- trance of the prima donna in Varesi's needed { to be battled over g = “Actually, I think she got more out | ¢f her assistants, both men and women, | |than any one else in the advertising | |agency. ~She was careful to have |around her personalities which esms into harmonious play with her own and | for whom she had a genuine respect | This respect reacted in their relations with Ler. “Working for her was rather exciting All the emctional fireworks that went into the day’s business we found vastly | entertaining and a srur to our game, | which was stirring people's emotions | sufficiently to make them buy. { ‘One of the striking things about | being in the office with her was the number of people who came to her for | advice and belp personally. Hardly a | day, never a week. but there trooped in | to her a succession of timid women and uncertain men. end always she tried to see them and help them with their ° problems | | “In_the conference rocn;er t&n!*‘ 'This Woman Lost | 64 Pounds of Fat Alec the Great l in sight of it, ready to lead away any | enemy who might chance that way. | Ears, eyes and nose were always on | 4uty. Twice while the twins were very | young Puma the Panther came slink- | Chevy Chase Milk IS FOOD AND DRINK REFRESHING as a trip to the farm, wholesome as the pas- always try to think y t you might call great, | But, gee—today my greatest thought | _Seems strictly second-rate Each day I A though! better appetites ‘THE peppy taste of Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes puts an edge on every appetite. They contain just enough bran to be mildly laxative. They’re filled with whole- ‘wheat goodness. Serve PEP Bran Flakes often — for lunch, for chil- dren’s suppers. At grocers in the red-and- reen package. Made by Battle Creek. ° turelands upon which our herds feed daily, Chevy Chase Milk satisfies your thirst or 1991 MENU FOR A BREAKFAST. Half Melon. Whole Wheat Cooked Cereal. Bacon and Potato Omelet, Hot Corn Cake. Coffee. — hunger. Change to Chevy Chase Milk today, and discover how delicious it is. You’ll like the milk, and the convenience of ourfamous cream-top bottle, with its gill of whipping-cream. Teleplone West 0183 Wise Brothers CHEVY CHASE . DAIRY &8 & I % ¥a : > SPOTS STAINS LUNCHEON. Broth. Presh ‘Vegetzble Salad Crisp Rolls, Banbury Tarts. Tea. DINNER. Tomato Juice Cocktall. Lamb 3 for ‘more tive. W sy TR RO -u—m':-t ‘membranes. 50c and $1.00 boxes at PEOPLES and other good druggists. 'KEY e ol ASTRINGENT POWDER o tor Women e DIVISIO TIONAL D