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Onion is a vegetéble of man ties and ca Somet! best wa more o the same use. right to use in pickles when whole in. ‘edients are called for in the mair ey are so small that the savory vine use. ESCALLOPED CELERY AND ONION! IS A DISH THAT IS DIFFERENT. gar preparation penetrates readily, and being white thi mixture. wanted in certain pickles such as chow chow and other mustard pickles in which tumeric is an ingredient. Italian onjons are mild and sweet and are preferred by others table. leaves is considered a A dish of well Italian onfons with their rich color is| one to tempt an epicure. | tic. &) lished by those who enjoy this o relisl who / dmm 4 WOMAN’S PAGE. in Many Ways l Common red onions are prnfmunmr‘ n fla{r. and for this very thing the; Onions Are Serve BY LYDIA LE BARON varie ble of many varieties ¢ s the kind indicates t! to prepare and serve it, b n each kind can be put t ‘Tiny button onions ar re Klesivable to use in coolcry o t §0 .t. The cheap price of this is anofher high recommendation povula‘ity. Ped onions, however rot the nicest kind to serve as a by ttsd, Such as botled or & cames mons. 72y lack the peculiay swee favor thatsshould be pgrent, ardl they are too strohg for acy. Onions seved by tMemselves should bb mild and swee| ive ar! ‘or and Bermuda onions, y pr white tones are among fehoicesteind to serve boiled with butier, cregm or sauce. They can be | Shote” or ced. It quick cooking 5 anted, the onions, and it will re- Jiuire a moments only for them to e boiled lefore they are reaay t #draim and have a hot sauce pourdd over them. Trey should stand in it 4 little while for -the best flavor, whi®h, of course, isgnot impaired in the least by the onlor¥ being in pieces , % delicl a-onion preparation is made of alternatiayers of sliced onions and Loelery withfieasoned and butter-dctied bread crum s between layers, Or the celery can ‘e omitted, and just the ! onlons can,be used. Blice onigns across so that curls result] Fry lightly in boil Thes.' are, atiractive looking, and it Spanish gr Bormuda onlons are used. | the flavor is delicate. Serve with liver stéak or bcfled mutten rings or The Adrenzlin Personality. | Over cach dney sits a little saddle | of yellbwish fa¥For centurieb physiolo | giats too k no particular notice of these ‘anes. \supposing that they were just | plat ordinary bunches of fat. But about | 60 ,yesrs ago the erratic Dr. Brown- beégan to gay there was some- ‘al connegted with this “kid- Death dne quickly and sure- as removed. OO e .o'NN,mw- BOVODORXXE BRI Rt 09" i 1y it 1t | whom these -flrer’l gla | dles of fat) exercis® a marked influence | Adrenalin sufficieng personalities energetic people. They have pugnacious | propensities., You find them taking a hand in the sterner activities of life. | They enjoy apscrap. One needs a good | ) set of adrejal glands to be a good | dier, a suctessf#l politician, a ca | of industry, a “he-man'in the mc Such things require @ibe ‘sticking q | ties which none but We adrenalin n: sonalities possess in $ifficient quantity {to wear down compefition and opposi- ! tion. ) From the physical point of yiew the adrenalin_type is known best by, the | color of the skin. It is usually dark or | swarthy. Those who have an abun®ance | of freckles are pretty likely to be.ad- | renalin deficients. In the opse of bAgh | marks, warts and freckles dome tempo- | do not discolor the | rafy adrenalin insufficiency\s supposed they take on the.tone to be the eause. | Next in importance is théjhair. Ar drenalin personality has lots™of it, and it 18 generally of the stiff and wiry sor The hair line on the brow is erally | above all | low. es the color of hair is unususl for the rase to which, the in- dividual belongs. A Norwegian With jet black hair is a good, but rare, filustra-: tion of this freak of nature. As a rule, | ztd hair, wherever found, indicales tho adrenalin type. (Copyright, Instea far that dish. The deep red hue characteris- ced and seasoned 1031.) LITTLE BENNY THE STAR'S with | g deep | are § A [ THE EVENING STAR, ¢ . WASHINGTON, . n C. iUST 18, 1931, SUMMERTIME BY p. C. PEATTIE. X v .. o Abundant Flawers. It would be Worth while to name some of the hardy and-fbundant wild flowers | that can stand moderate picking. For- | tunately the number of plants that are | duty-free, in the eyes of out consclence officers, 18 large—quite the opposite of | the conditions that prevail in Spring when we are a1l flower-hungry and al- s on the “verbcten | First of all, we may freely pick asters nrod and vervain generaily. Per- haps an ekception should be made of the New England aster. Then co ironweeds, boneskts, black coreopsis. Least forbidden of I suppose, is Queen Anne's lace, a harmful weed to the farmer, a joy in | A bouquet. 17 the same cese exactly | is the damisy. arrow, too, may be picked ad infinfoum, I should say. and —don't laugh—the thistles, many of which' are really very beautiful I presume, too, that nobody would tkrowy the cloak of protection over any |of tfle Eurcpean or other weeds that hayk established themsclves here ac welfs. But some of them are very hand-y some. Viper's bugless, for one, is a thoroughly harmiul weed with mag- nificent flowers, which I have actually seen in florists’ windows in New York It is abundant around Fort Myer That quaint old garden plant, tansy (now exiled from gardens and run wild). is in the same class. Mullein is another waif without protection which, in Europe (whence originally it came), is | grown in’ gardens most respectfully, and called “American volvet plant”! Butter- |and-eggs is harciy enough to stand abuse, and yet so lovely is it I have | often ‘moved it into the garéens; it iy | almost as beautiful as snaparagons ther harmful weed, with beautiful flowers, is the hounds tongye, and oc- casionelly around Washing®n 1 have come on a Western wild flower that has | spread here *~om the prairie States that 1 have often put in vases jugt for the cake of its crimson blossoms, so dark they are like old Burgundy. This is {the wild four o'clock, that®has estab- | lished itself hlong the railway lines near Chevy Chase Lake. Adrenhiin personalities are those over | (the sad- | DOROTHY PIX’S LETTER BOX e i — e DES OF THE MOMENT =) V'!Ju ninpale tones cf ered cfiffon with a sniral dUAf"L of tudk. ing ucufi the skirt 4 TS [DEAR Miss DIX—Lasdlords are the,nost unpatriotic America. Why? “Bacause they do mt want to f children.” Who will be $he ones to fight the next war? The bo Who will be the nurses and fill the men's ylaces while the: girls of today. When ’iho crabbed old by s of today fight? courtry? The \gifls and ‘bays of today.. our banks and stores arfl sail our ships,ahd-fly our planes in t The laughing, romping and girls ¢f todey, and yet nobo rent us a house in whi rear these youl ters. 1 tell you certainly have the hea he for our \‘Mfll’xu c C., if you motMers had less hea Tight arm in dealg with them/ ed to renting h Answer—Well, Mrs. chiliren and more good find that landlords ob. r:)mpln] boys and girl T is all very well to ddplorel the lack off patriotism of thé "‘n wha' to our future citizéns, but ho is bringing up a) set of any house they live in if it happens: provide eithr, even for at brand of patriofism hhs the m 1ifle vandals who literally Sepr dow to be a rented house? For it is observable thot even a smail moye respect for property if it belongs ‘to bis parents, and cf les through papa'{ windows, nor E h the same plvous abandon with other people’s windowf} and stair rail®’ y hi " Landlords are in the Plisiness of -renting house: depends upon their geiting enants for to rent to people with children that § house is never the same after a ly of children have lived in it, and that the damage they commit is” ite thin the rent comed to. Ard that should give parergs a jolt that should make the pluse} think, and consider what thgy are doing in Pearing a fam who have been taught no no ethies of civilized society. pitizens got o people with 3 The le die off, who will run our Bo will run our factories and . future? jants to we mbthers RS. C. tache for yoir ses to people with laughing, not rve his initials on mother’s sun he displays in dealiny eir prosperity thelr property, and if they refuse is beca experience has shown them nd of children gard for the rights or property of others, A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J FRISCAL |IT WAS ALONG OF AN EXCRUCIATING HIS NECK THAT DAD COULD | GOLF, ME YEARNS FOR THE | DAVS WHEN A BOIL COULD BE | “Ghaar, LANCED WITHOUT | HAVING T0 6O | TO THE ROSPITAL| FOR A WEEK . o ] ‘r ! in the ses of on aecount of.” “be- ‘cause of,” is®ot standard English. We say “It was,on account of a boil.” not #“along of @ boil.” It was because of m that that happened,” not “Along | of Tom.” v § Excruejating eks-kru-she-ate-ing) means extremely painful | - . Py reason NATURE’S CHILDREN HAT slim, blue-eyed Y: : BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. slim, blue-eyed Yankee of six feet one—Senator “Hiram Bingham of Connecticut—apparently has ideas of his own as to the best methods of keeping in the public's eye. While his more { orthodox colleagu |issue Jong and | oristling statements | through the pub- | licity ~ departments of their party or- g8 gapizations, express | their views on this - and that issue on | the stump, in their local newspapers {and the like, Bing- ham follows a dif- ferent course He takes to the jair to attract at- tention to the | Bingham caus=. Thus, if you have been to & movie | recently, vou probably noticed in the |news rcels how the Senator climbed into an autogiro at the steps of the Capitol and flew to his country club for a round of golf. Illustrations by Mary Foley. THE SPIDER AND HER TELEPHONE. ITTING out of sight, with her legs holding the telephone wires of | or hides from view and is wide awake, watching clasely the great green fly that s buzzing near touches the guy-lines. When an insect is caught she can tell at once the loca- tion of the trapped one. If the lines are | at once. Each little vibration te) her just what is happening up there her caretully spun web. LXXXVL her web, Mrs. Spider takes a nap | Her feet are spread so that each one stretched slightly, this is known to her Sometimes there is a terrific com- Also, you have probably seen pictures | of him as best man at the wedding of A prominent air official in Washington with Amelia Earhart as matron of A dog or cat has run into her trap. Of course, the spoke lines are sticky and the animal is obliged to brush and brush the cobweb from its | face. Then Mrs.-Spider knows by all | thé jerks and pulls that her telephone | says all wires are down. | It the one trapped is a xrmnnpgen | and 1s making a great to do, she rushes | to him and begins throwing ropes of | silk about him. When he is secured | she begins to dine on him. There are | many times her telephone wires an- | nounee that a very medium sized insect | has fallen into her snare. The wires | just jingle & little. She takes her time | to answer this call. | It is wonderful to wateh her. She will hold these wires and tighten them |up or let them out. Along each line leading to her foot goes a message, just as _clear to heér as a voice is to us. | "When the hunting is over for the | day she lets go her wires and goes away. As much mending has to be done, often the repair work is accom- plished at night. It is surprising how much these webs will hold. Often leaves or sticks will fall in them and hang to them. This, of course, makes a bad connection, and Mrs. Spider does all in her power to remove the obstruction. If it 18 too much for her, the careful | operator eats the silk thread and drops the stick. She rebuilds and mends, as | the wires must be intact for clear mes- sages to get across. 't is interestin, | motion DAILY DIET RECIPE AVOCADO OR ALLIGATOR PEAR. Alligator pears, three, medum size. Olive oil, twelve tablespoons. Vinegar, four tablespoons. Salt, one teaspoon. P«‘gper one-half {easpoon ‘Table sauce, two tabléspoons. Lemon juice, one tablespoon. Lettuce leaves, twelve. SERVES SIX PEOPLE. Thoroughly chill the alligator pears. Cut each in half length- wise. Remove seed. With a sharp knife cut pear from the They can then be cut in thin strips crosswise (or in cubes) and laid very close together on the young lettucs leaves on individual salad plates. Dress with a Prench dressing made of the ingredients given and serve cold. DIET NOTE. . Recipe coniains in the pear a most digestible fat and vitamin B. Valuable in a diet to increase weight. Can also be eaten by normal adults of average weight. to watch her when the message surely says a fine, juicy locust is on the line. Well, he was, but he got away in time. She rushes after him and tries her best to throw a lasso or tangle him so he trips up and falls into the lower wires. No use—he is too | | quick sven for her to give him one stab | with her stiletto, and he gets away. Sadly she mends her wires once more and goes back into her dark corner. All eight 1sgs holding to wires, the operator hopes a promising nsect will drop down | .nto the telephone booth. There have been times when a whole | swarm of insects was caught in‘ the | sticky lines. Manna, indeed! |spider rushes back and forth. ‘Too| many to handle, she works on those | near her. Some are roiled nto a sheet | of silk, others are paralyzed by her lance and have fallen tc the ground. The | ‘web is a wreck, but she has enough food | to last for several days. (Copyright, 1031) Baked Pears. FEATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. honor, You heard him over the radio | while Post and Gatty were here, skill- | fully inducing the quiet Post to describe his epoch-making flight. And so on— The Senator gets & big kick out of his activity in aviation, as well as this extremely valuable personal publicity. He is a genuine aviation enthusiast. He was 42 years of age when he learned |to pilot a plane, and he has been hop- ping from place to place in one ever since. In the days of the World War hs | was a leutznant-colonel and assigned to act as chief of the air personnel in Washington, but at his o#n request he was sent to Prance and eventually made commander of this country's largest aviation instruction center at Issoudun. Bingham comes of a line of aneestry which down through the years dared | the unkmowr. Deacon Thomas Bingham came to Connecticut from England in 1650. The Senator himself is third of that name in line. His father and grandfather attained considerable note as Congre- |gational missionaries to South Sea | Islands He has traveled odd places of the globe and is known as an authority on | some g{hnsos of South American civiliza- | tion. His parents were missionaries who |jeft New England for the Hawalian | Islands and he was born in Honolulu. | " He is one of the most striking .!'\fum | in the 8°nate. His thick hair is siivery. | The light gray sack suits which he | wears at all times are entirely in accord | with his appearance, | James Fenimore Cooper, the earliest | American novelist, made good his boast that he could write a better novel than sny in his day. DAILY PATTERN \ SERVICE Here's a_darling style in silk broad cloth in white ground printed in yacht blue. It tubs so splendidly gnd wears | forever and a day. And it's €0 fresh ‘and chic and so entirely youthful and sportive. { “Neath the wee bolero jacket the dress is held by simple shoulder straps. And Apple Pie. | an apple pie is baked, place ces of cleese ov grated cheese top, and leave in a very mod- Wash the pears, eut them in halves, core them, and place in a baking dish Sprinkle with sugar and a little salt, | dot with :uttekr. add ver}gdhme water, | 1 cover, and bake in a moderate oven. n until ghe cheese is melted. | ) "oion "ag the pears are soft, remove nce while the cheese is warm. | the cover so that the sirup will cook | eshly baked or a cold pie may | down. Serve hot or cold and with or ed in this way. without cream. easier to let chlldren grow up iMto h m to be ladies and gentlemen ihat mothets Perhaps it §s because many ;mothegs self-wiliedj youngsters, and they arc ¥ d matinees to keep up ¥ith what becausel so many mothers are so that fhey think to be sacrificed ERHAPS it 5 beceuse ite Tums than ¥ is 10 teach ¢ take the line of least resista are too lazy and inert to figh{ wit} to0) busy going 1o bridge gamps a their* children are doing. Perblps it is soft, ad obsessed by their adomtion o their yoy eveybegly else in the world thogld rt‘i.‘ld‘?r it ‘a toris tq the £y Vite A lion tmg children. Wi Mdst of us would sooner expense 8f having the house dond over when sheyles Afl thin over | erate | sServe @ Me and pop was eating brekfist this morning and the letter carrier rang the bell with a letter and who was it for but me, being fn tipewriting and say- ing Deer Sir, This is the senson of the year when wise hardware merchants re- | plenish their stocks and lay in novel- | ties to catch the eye of the Autumn | customer. We have been in this biss- { ness for 20 years and can therefore | | qualify as specialists, our guiding prin- | e i ' i | | i | { { | | 1 her cubs to visit ! us than W would a mother witl can't afford the JOW everybody adores a goodYchild and "\ri\)ndv hates a| bad one and pareénts should care too mych for their ok children to be willing th establish A feeling of ili-will ainst them injAhe minds of| all who know them. this prejudice agafst & pad childffarries over into after- it and the Jeagon that many of ds dorft have K. A. 4 a phikician is use he was'a pestiferous littR boy| who was always doing somp- to annoy ug, or we refuse Tpmmy B. & job because he tut our and strewed tacks in our drivel and we cun't, believe that boy who iilty of malicious mischief can up into wn honest man cipal being the ultimate in service at the most conservative price. We en- close our latest catalog, fully illustrated and with complete lists, Hoping | to hear from you, are Wt yours, Herman Judge and 3 Wholesale Hardware, | Ony there wasent any eatalog or any- thing enclosed, and pop sed, It reems to be what is known in bissness circles as a form letter, and I sed, I bet I know who sent it to me all rite, I bet Shorty Judge did, I bet he got it down at bis Tather’s office. I bet youre rite, pop sed, and I sed Do you think I awt to anser it, pop. Youre under no moral obligation to ‘but if you like Ill dictate an anser with some good bizzness terms in it, and you can take it down and send it to Shorty Judge. pop sed. G, all rite, I sed. And I got a pencil and some paper and pop dictated the letter, being, Mr. Shorty Judge, eskwire, Deer sir, My attention bas been called N to yours of the present instant, and 4 B would say that in due order in the last < analysiss my overhead sales chnrt shows & maximum minimum of supply and demand wich my contact men will en- deavor to undersell in our forthcoming sales campaign, to wit as of recent date and I take pleasure in enclosing 2 rolls of autographed barbed wire, respec- tively yours, B. Potts limited incorpo- rated, and beg to remain the same Well, G, pop, 1 havent got a 2 cent stamp, 1 sed, and pop sed, Youve got nuting on me. & n anothe Meening he dident either, and neither " did ma, so I decided not to send the letter on account of it proberly not be- ¢ H ¥ ing werth 2 axual cents to buy a stamp. i f | For your buttons it is a good plan to oot o > | have a little bag to put inside y Rice Snowballs i | |large bag. Select the buttons for this bag with reference (o the clothes you Mix one cupful of boiled rice with {are wearing, remembering to add a few three teaspoonfuls of suger and on | snappers and hooks and eves in black tablespooniui of melted butter thor- | and white. oughl: Form into balls and place in I It is always a good p a flat baking dish Beke without | | browning for 10 minutes. Pour ovi *his the whites of three eggs beaten dr to whish three teaspoonfuls of pulver- | ized suga half a teaspoonful of lem:n have been added Set | in a co oven to just dry but not| - with whipped cream. | qont you love the arr grouped plaits at the front slimming? | A cotton would also be lovely model | Then, again, shantung, crepe tiste and chiffon tive | style No. 3106 14, 16, 18, 2 bust. Size 1 inch material contrasting For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. Our large Summer fashion book offers | a wide choice for your Summer Warc robe in darling styles for the children, | as well as the adults. Price of book, 10 cents. ro‘] nidking it suppresses the nitural T4 is all arfant nonsense abou n!mm:r children keep_their| play gayety: and joyousness of childhood within bounds and respect the rights ) (Copyrignt thers DOROTHY DIX. @1 { for a hot day BUTTERMILK is & delicious summer beserage . . . wonder- fully healthful . . refreshing in flaver . . . and popular with young and old. n white cotton material to use in bg or making reinforcement for your mending bag you mber to put your tape | of lingerie Tibbon or There should be white hirt strings, and_the good place to keep t laces and shoestrings. articles that so easily aid or lost that it is a good “h some sort of ident A thin piece of wood or iboard, bearing the name may be attdched to one by means of a stout cord Fatch their names on one the scissors with a pin NE of the afticles most often forgot- ten when people pack' trunks or bags to go awaf for a Summer outing | is the mending bag. It seems usually | that if you do all your mending and before you start away you will mended least while you But rents will come, stitches e unsewed. and, most often of all. | buttons will loosen or come off For your traveling mending bag select g quite substential ahd durable bag, made with = pockets on the In one of the the half dozen ill need put your needle braid and tape; in ming equipment, and | sewing stay | gone | Chestnut Farms Buttermilk is a splendid body-builder. Tt helps keep vou well in hot weather. It's cooling. tasty, wholesome. This summer, drink more buttermilk. And order it from the World's Model Dairy. rated 100% by the District of Columbia Health Department! Telephone Potomae 4000. Scissor: become m plan to at tion to youl a piece of cf of the owne of the handle Other people of the blades for_identificatid SUFFERED FOR 50 YEARS you 8pool r might Chestnut Farms Dairy USE KLEENEX DISPOSABLE TISSUES in place of irritating handkerchiefs handkerchief laundry. If handker- chiefs are washed at home, the use of Kleenex eliminates this most unpleasant of all washing tasks. Other important uses Kleenex comes in Cellophane- wrapped packages . .. conveniently arranged to permit removal of { tissues with one hand. Use Kleenex for re- moving face creams, as famous movie stars ad- vise; for dusting and pol- ishing. Motorists find many uses for Kleenex. It pays to keep a package ! always in the car. At all drug, dry goods and de« partment stores. “ take o risks in removing cold creom! Kleenex is always on my dressing table. JEANETTE LOFF “Early in our careers, we movie actresses learn to use Kleenex when A DIVISION OF NATIONAL DAIRY RED-HEADED WOMAN by KATHERINE BRUSH Author of YOUNG MAN OF MANHATTAN They called her “Red” when | she was young Bill Legendre’s' secretary. She usually got what she wanted. She wanted Bill. Red’s ruses and strategems to become Mrs. Lillian Andrews Legendre make a story as vivid and as penetrating as ‘“‘Young n to have a bit AT a wonderful relief is Kleenex during hay fever! Don’t endure another season with old-time handkerchiefs. You know how quickly they become damp, disgusting . . . how they inflame and irritate your skin each time you touch them to your face. Hay fever season is at hand. Don't delay. Buya package of soft, dry Kleenex disposable tissues. They will provide grateful relief from harsh, irritating cloth, Doctors recom- mend Kleenex Many already know Kleenex from its wide- spread use during colds. Doctors are recommend- ing disposable tissu Schools are teaching their use. Kleenex is a soft tissue . . . utterly unlike any tissue sub- stance you have ever seen. It's. so exquisitely soft! So marvel- ously, instantly absorbent. It costs le and destrg ' 4 ement of the s0 neat and for this Ir You suffer from constipstion, read this enthusiastic letter from Mr. R. Foster, 108 Broadway, West Plains, Mo. “I have been constipated for the last 50 years—taken all kinds of drugs with only mo- mentary relief. I have been using your ALL-BRAN six weeks. It has given me permanent relief. I can heartily recom- mend it to be a certain remedy for constipation.” Eat this pleasant cereal and overcome cons\‘.ng.a:ion in a nat- ural, safe way. 0 tablespoon- fuls of Kellogg’s ALL-BRaN ily. In stubborn cases, serve banish pills and drugs from your life. Kell needed for the red-and-green fi!“ your grocer's. Mlse ogg in Battle Creek. L) tub silk eyelet ba- very effec- pastel crepe ner nts are be had in sizes THERE'S NOTHING LIKE SUGAR TO SWEETEN DRINKS How could we go through summer | without home-made drinks sweet. | ened to taste with sugar and chilled with ice! Nothing can take the place of sugar in sweetening drinks. And housewives all over the country look upon refined cane sugar as the standard. Use it for iced tea, coff and chocolate, milk shakes, lemonas Man of Manhattan.” and fruit punches. Refresh your- with & sweetened drink.” The R THE SATURDAY -"Flavfr and na:o-‘l R EV?NING ROS T Now on Sale C | ot . | Grape Juice Sherbet. | Dissolve one packige of lemon-flav- | ored gelatin in one cupful cf bolling {nm. Add one cupful of sugar and ’s ALL-BRAN also adds ‘ ron to the diet, Lotlv(k ck- by stir it until dissolved. Add half & eup- ful cold water, half a cupful of juice and two and one-half cup~ fuls of grape juice, and ccol. Pour into & three-quart freezer and fre:se, using exght. parts of ice to one part of salt Let stend for several hours before serv- al} powder and dirt, leav~ res really clean. And Kleenex is absolutely sanitary in itself, unlike :‘h:'uiled towels and cloths that s people still use.