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WOMAN'S PAGE. ern resort have m about the chs hats and accessories epression 1 are at lea ‘ming new wisel ever eve the resor ing Spring will b terest MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Orange Juice Whole Wheat Cereal With Cream Scrambled Eggs Raisin Bran Muffins LUNCHEON Tomato Bouillon With Barley Crab Meat Salad Toasted Muffins Coconut Cream Banana Pie Tea DIN R Cream _of Corn Soup Baked Pork Chops Apple C ed Sweet Potat ns i O RAISIN BRAN Two cups br: , add raisir beaten egg and sour milk in greased muffin tins moderate ov , corn sirup, Bake in a One ba sliced coconut juice, four frequently extract. Pour bananas, * coconu juice and add Beat spread 12 Beal egg W minutes Cool_and serve. Enc rosix people. SWEET POTATOES Two cups sliced raw sweet potatoes, one teaspc teaspoon dark ] Bright Colored Scarfs Popular BY MARY MARSHALL. RIENDS who are, fortunate | newest scarfs enough to be spending these dull weeks at some intere South- | yard long and is finished with to say | composition ring in a way that the If the shadows ger in the cities WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY EVENING THE STAR, It is made from a strip of bright colored silk crepe about a metal | sketch explains. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. _TROWLS. ‘What's Going On. surprise you to t always know what may be described as ng more than half of psychologists recognise the 1 live and have your psy- in various degrees of consciousness. You are v you are “sound and just Psychologis! clated but fa W ire moving abou cknowledge tc of your everyvda you car m from & ci nt of view degree of awareness is ngs that arc heard a tune that your attent! f gree of awareness is th is g DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX D!AR MISS DIX—Do you think business should alwi come befors “BONERS” Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers. pleasure? I am engaged to & young man who is going into a new business, and he 15 working so hard at it he doesn’t have much leisure to give to me. It is generally late even on Bundays when he gets to come to see me, and I get tired of waiting for him, He tells me that as soon as he gets his new business straightened out he will have more time to spend with me, and, of couxse, it is for the good of our future that he is working. But some of my friends tell me that he is neglecting me and that he will neglect me worse after we are married What is Your opinion on the matter? BADIN Answer—Well, Sadie, if I were you, T would a lot rather trust my future to a man who said it with hustling instead of handing me soft talk for a couple of hours every evening. The real proof of & man's love for & woman ts vhether he fs willing to work for her, not how much time he | apenda holaing her hand l;\nwm'\ Y the young chap you are engaged to is a go-getler who s “ golng to make good, and 1f you marry him you can look forward to | having a hisband of whom you are proud and who will be & good provider, and th arder to secure this comfortable future it will pay you to make & fow aacrifiees of your sweetheart’s time and attentions now. For success doesy't come oaxdly. It has to be paid for, and it is the young men who work while their companions are dancing and philandering and having a good time who get there Kun over the iiat of prominent men in your community and you will | find that every one of them spent more time holding down his job when he wan just getting a start than he did in dangling around a girl, and this was no algn that he didn’t love some girl either. Probably the reason he sick to Lis work so closely was because he loved some girl so well that he was trylng to get ahead so he could marry her and because he wanted to make lifo soft and easy for her. beth ddle on cloak she had got sa which \ said, 1 x p! am solled your coat.” Ralsigh | Mon Dieu et Mon ow ) ot ly, 3 yome My God, yours| ()M T know tha there are a lot of silly, morbid, neurotic women who of thelr husbands’ business and who talk about their hus- old offices” as if they were keeping rendezvous with and we ¥ a lot of twaddle talked about men neglecting for their business. 1 have never heard of any of these jealous ladies who wanted to give up their beautiful homes and their fine cars and good clothes and expensive ways of living that their husbands’ work brought in in order that they might have more of t husbands' time Jon to thelr leg of & grasshopper is | ecanter Boxer Indemnity is & sum of | set aside for the maiptenance or disabled prisefighters SEEMS to me that the thiag for women to do is to quit whining about helr husbands neglecting them for {heir business and to make more effort to enter into their husbands' interests and thus make them their own. If they did, the wife would not be left out of her husband's life. She would become part of it and she would not be lonely because they would be traveling the same road together hand in hand, climbing up to the gonl of his ambitions So, Sadie, my advice to you is to quit listening to the people who tell you that your sweetheart is neglecting you. Instead of reproaching him’ when hs is Jate in keeping a date, show him that you understand s life was full of blank I’ ip the blank with grief. ding from a wound in his be stood on his head in the cts are things what you think | 1% to happen : e wick was & clergyman Dickens and appreciate how hard and brave a fight he is making for you. Get as E rarely | | o n America interested in the success of the new business as he is and you will have A Less a tie that will bind you together with hoops of steel, for there is no bond ve proc- He b a cranjum for his gold of unifon stronger than a mutual interest DOROTHY DIX Still less often do heart is beatirg work t your BY HERBERT ght, 1932.) ASHINGTON DAYBOOK CREEN ODDITIES PLUMMER. | S Tisa -a New Yorker—who has e the titular head of the_“pro cause in the House of_Representatives | In the mi most e epend s associated arian disaffec~ Oue would with a % | ne Hundr { Twentieth treet, in New to be in sym- with such a 1 But Fio- rello La Guardia is. | He has stepped orward and as- | sumed the role of chieftain. And he | has brought to the job a militancy that promises much | La Guardia has been a lone battler | for the cause in the past. Ever since | “Old Bobh” La Follette's ill-fated presi- | dential crusade in 1924 the progressive | group iIn the House has amounted to | little as a They kept the name, | that was @ com- one ress and its close political division came a re- | | birth of progressive hopes. La Guardia stepped forward as the | leader of some“six or eight in the group. It is not a definite bloc. There K:s no visible organization. They refer Jimmy Durante CARRIES $100,000 INSURANCE ON WIS FAMOUS ®SCHNOZZLE". to themselves as “legislative individual- | ists But t e active. It is no un- common sight to see them grouped on the floor of the House when important legiclation is being considered. La Guardia is in the center. Around him are Kvale of Minnesota, Amlie and au of Wisconsin and the others. suardia is attracted to the inde- because he says he always in accord with their legisla- ls. His humanitarianism has him at times far from the in- terests of his city district. o is, for example, his excursion | mine section of Pennsylvania vears ago during labor disturb- severa ances. Quictly and unannounced, he spent a week in the coal mine region investi- gating conditions. Then he came back to the floor of the House and described | things as he saw them. | Short, fiery and irrepressible, he has the reputation of being one of the hardest workers in Congress. He tackles | everything. Few bills come to the floor of the House that he doesn’t know some- thing about. The range of his interest in legislation is remarkable. An_ expert parliamentarian, La Guardia relies on this knowledge of the | rules of the House to gain advantage. FIQST STUDIO WORK WAS AS A OLASTERER IN THE UNWERSAL PROPERTY DEPARTMENT. ALICE WHITE PREFERS TO DRIVE HER OWN CAR == WITH HER CHAUFFEUR N THE RUMBLE SEAT ! Liver Cake. | e Put one pound of liver and four small chopped onions through a food chopper, DID YOU KNOW THAT add two eggs and one tablespoonfull of | | WALLACE BEERY ONCE WAS ACIRCUS ROUSTAROUT AND ELEPHANT TRAINER ? flour, and salt to taste. Shape into little cakes and fry. | ndicate, Inc.) EVELYN BRENT WAS FORMERLY,A SCHOOLTEACHER ? JANUARY 26, 1932. FEATURES. B—11 ! e can sing. They answer the loud, |ing obnoxious grubs, beetles and catere N A T U R E b s ardent wooing with shy little notes | Pillars. The millions of weed seeds cannot be estimated. With his “Cheer, which are very different from those of | cheer, good cheer!” he is a_welcoms | resident and his domestic affairs are so well conducted as to compel our ad- miration and respect CHILDREN The father is & devoted parent and willingly sits on the e ¢hile his |spouse takes her daily dosen. ~While | she is absorbed with the second group | | of eggs the father takes entire charge | | of the first children. He proudy leads | them forth and gives them wise in- Slice & pork steak rather thin and s, the Talr of the gt and the jn. | Place in & baking dish. Season wel NTUCKY CARDINAL, tricacles of the toilet. Being well| With salt and pepper and cover with R gioomed s very important to this| cracker crumbs. Add enough thin Cardinalls cardinalis. aristocratic bir | cream to cover. Bake in a hot oven for |, ,As bullders they do not rank high. | about half an hour, of wntl well | ITH polse and dignity the|They build a loose nest of grass and | browned | Kentucky Cardinal bears | twigs in brambles and low saplings. 3 himself as a true F. F. V.| There BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. rations by Mary Foley. Xi are from two to four white, | in the feathered world. It bluish or greenish eggs, marked with | station in | chestnut and purple. The family mem- | i palatial cars and taking them home life to walk about over the ground | bers are very able assistants in remov- | after the performances. like his friend the robin. For Him | oo the level of the laurel bushes far as he will descend. It is cholce to remain aloft and make happy all those who see him ‘There 18 nothing more beautiful than | a group of cardinals in a dark green cedar tree with a background of snow- flelds. Their beautiful bright plumage makes them an easy target and many a lovely cardinal has lost his life by making himself too conspicuous He is & singer of note and, with his | brilliant dress adding to popularity and adaptability, he is shipped in cages | London shows are fetching patrons i8 beneath his Wilkins has a rich, del- icious flavor that only a | blend of the world’s finest Coffees can make. You know Wilkins is FRESH—because it's blend- ed and roasted fresh daily, right here in Washington. Then that flavor of flavors is triple-sealed in Wilkins modern, economical carton with the moisture-proof Cellophane wrapper,_and rushed to your grocer. Try Wilkins Coffee . . . the Quality Coffee! WILKINS | to Europe as the Virginia Nightingale. The cardinals begin their song with a strong, high whistle, very much like the high notes of a fife. “Cheo-cheo- | cheo-00—"and_you walt for the| | prelude to end. Over and over he be- | | gins and finally you are convinced | this is the best he ‘can do. Mr. Allen | | calls 1t “the most melodious ~sigh.” | The song, if you call it singing, is the joyful conversation which goes on be- | tween the males and females from | March until September. | . The cardinals roam the Eastern United States and are resident rather | than & migrating bird, and in many| localities are to be seen the year round. | They travel about in flocks.” They live | | upon the seeds of weeds and the buds | of trees and bushes in the Winter and | seek the grain flelds or the woods in| | the Summer. | The gentlemen cardinals are bril- | liantly dressed. The forehead, front| part of the cheek, chin and throat | have a black band and this band com- | | pletely surrounds the bill. The head | is a vermilion red, the crest is a duller | red. The underparts are pure ver- immon red, becoming paler toward the| |'outer edges. The flanks arc grayish, | the hindneck, shoulders and rump are |® dull red. The wings and tail are | less vermilion red, the bill is red| | orange. The eyes are deep brown. 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