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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENING STAI WASH > X, Frog Fasteners for Pajamas BY MARY MARSHALL. esting bit of handwork and not at 1 her 8 You n white cord cause she cz affor uy or tape, or you may cut bias strips of tnem the material about an inch wide. Fold them over so that edges meet in ter and then fold again toward 1 whip the edges together that you have a This is then e frog_which de- curve nuous RS. JONES is & ear-old kind she cou good friends they get noon this W to 4 1 to the | the tape design £ hing 1 -leafed clover of the loops are fastened | fiat to one side of the pajama front the other is used in place of a button hole to loop over the button on the other side. LITTLE BENN supper I said, Hay ma I go out for about 20 t my supper before I lessons immeeditly and with, thats what lessons id, and id, 2nd the s been seconded and do your v I couldent and I it find my books any- I started to do, books in the ck, Hay m: you see my sakes dont you know and I in this goodne put I put L so dont And she came g. Look at cant find of 2 distir the same time, them in school, I Havent you s Yes, sir h T did w instead of better. WE ALWAYS STUDY GRAMMAR MONDAYS . PUZZLE NO. 21. is a concealed name puzzle. The inscription on the school-room black- board hides the name of a make of automobile. The name is there, with its letters in their proper order. Give the words your close attention and find the name of the car. ‘Th Name Of CAT s.eeovensesssvsnsoarses Above is the 21st puzzle in the contest now being conducted by the Wash- ington Automotive Trade Association in co-operation with The Star. Solve it and fill in the correct name of the automobile in the line provided under the drawing. Keep them until the other four appear. When you have satisfied your- self that you have the correct answers, mail them in all together with a reason, ot to exceed 25 words, “Why the automobile show should be held annually in Washington,” to the Washington Automotive Trade Association, suite 1002 Chandler Building, 1427 I street. No reply received after 10 a.m. Tuesday, Feb- ruary 2, will be considered Remember, the first prize is $50 and six tickets to the show. Altogether $100 in cash will be awarded and 100 tickets. You may be the lucky one. The judges are Fred L. Haller and Joe B. Trew. president and vice president, re- spectively, of the Washington Al stive Trade Association, and G. Adams Howard, automobile editor of The Star Following is the list of cars to be in the show. One of these is the correct answer to today's puzzle. Ford Franklin Graham Tolet Hudson sler Hupmobile Cord La Salle De Soto Lincoln Docge Marmon Essex It is not necessary to purchase copies of this paper to compete in the eontest. Answers to all solutgns may be written on ordinary writing paper. Files of The Star may be examined at any time during the day and up to 10:30 at night. The last puzzle (No. 25) will appear Saturday, January 30. Nash Oldsmobile Packard Pierce-Arrow Plymouth Pontiac Studebaker Willys. a fizzical impos- | BY FANNY Y. CORY. SONNYSAYINGS i | | | i | I promised my Muvver I would only | frow soft snowballs. I wist her could | get ’ese uvver fellers to promise it, too. (Copyright, 1932.) THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE | | | Jacket dresses approve smart con- trast. And a lovely idea for early, Spring is this soft diagonal tweed- | effect woclen in light navy blue mix-| ture. The light grayish-blue cantor lle crepe silk trim creates rather effect. It is exceedingly easy fashion it Style No. 2666 may be had in sizes 6, 18, 20 36, 38 and 40 For sports it is decidedly ears SN el N youthful with the dress of wool crepe in lovely rose-red shade, with the jacket of navy blue wool crepe. Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39-inch | material, with 1 yard of 39-inch con-| | trasting. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to| The Washington Star's New York Bureau, Fifth avenue and inth street, New York. new Spring Fashion Magazine ! page from cover to o color Beautiful styles covering the com- plete range for the woman, miss, child and the stout; articles showing what ts will be worn, hairdressing hints, afternoon wear, subdeb frocks, etc It points the way to better dress and will help you economize. Price of book, 10 cents. Price of pattern, 15 cents. DAILY DIET RECIPE CARAWAY PINEAPPLE COLE- SLAW. Shredded young cabbage, two cupfuls; sour cream, one-half cupful; drained crushed pineap- ple, one cupful; vinegar, four tablespoonfuls; salt, one tea- spoonful; caraway seed, on-half teaspoonful, and lettuce leaves, six. Serves six portions. Have cabbage crisp and cold. | | combine sour cream, pineapple, \ vinegar and salt. Mix cabbage with this, tossing it all well to- | gether. Add caraway seeds and ‘ serve on a lettuce leaf. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fiber, a little fat and protein. Rich in lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by children 12 years and Can be eaten by normal of average or under over. adults weight. | or criticizing anything he did. ‘ markable man he was. | about | cord in the home and hard feclings be | he has just as much right to expect a ple: | to group III or group IV | of what you c Three Countries Ceylon, India and Java contribute to the twenty selected teas every blend of "SALADA" How to Make a Happy Marriage Lists Five More Rules for Wives (Continued from Monday.) IXTH. She must establish her own home as far removed as possible from the sphere of influence of in-laws. family and don't have yours come ing for trouble, which QEVENTH. did before. breath to his stories, no matter if Your chief come-on was leading him to have an admiring audience in you and JIGHTH. Don't argue < senseless argument over But the husb: law to him, and the 1 e is other neither ever forgives. An argument never does any good The only purpose it serves is to make dis- tween those who really love each other. she s wrong and the other is right INTH. Make a ch part of the busir have a right to expect to be supported business every man and worry. Every wife home a place of Test an hould realize DI from which he will go forth refreshed to 'l‘ENTHv Don't cut out the romance. quit making a fuss over your husband thoughts and attentions to the children baby has put his nose out of joint. If happy though married, remember this (Copyright, The same technique ermined to have the las it hammer and tongs and before they know it they a eerful and a comfortable home. of marriage as making a living is your husband's, and life is a hard one, full of strain and anxiet thi and brightn, Don’t go to live with your husband’s to live with you unless you are out hunt- you are sure to find. that if he married you he would wife who appreciated what a re- that caught a man will hold him. believe get 8 Nine-tenths of the family rows start in a perfectly something that neither party really cares a rap 2d isn't going to let the wife think she can lay down the | t word, and so they go at shouting insults at each Nobody is ever convinced that he or That is just as much your asant and an efficiently run home as you In these days of fierce competition in and nerve-rack d that it is up to her to make her in which her man can relax and > the battle again next day Don't cease to be a lady love. Don't Don't give all of your time and Don't let your husband feel that the you forget all the other rules for being It is the most important. . DOROTHY DIX 1932.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Streptococcus at Play. Tonsillitis, simple sore throat s ght feverishness, and scarl according to the investigations of Grif- fith and Glover, physicians, who reported their Medical Journal re y caused by the same germ—a he streptococcus. lease don’ I am fond of prying these % terms off my teeth. Il explain what hemolytic means and then drop it for the rest of the g It means blood destroying, or the_dis- solving of red blood © germs have the facult notably the notorious While we're explaining, what st ~occus that occurs ir like strings of beads istic readily distinguishes or kind of germ from, say, the staphy- lococcus, which occurs in’ the form of bunches, like bunches of grapes, or the diplococcus, which oceurs in pairs We have long known that some of the very worst acute sore throat of v C] T caused by t molytic that thi with fever, doing t streptococeus. let us explain It means a he form of ¢ That _charact this speci hown and is responsib! many cases of acute tonsi , and the famous Drs. Dick in this country, au- thors of the Dick test for scarlet fever, have shown by actual experiment on volun oculation with the sam produce simple son, scarlet fever second person. scarlet fever with typi cal rash in a third person, and perhaps erysipelas in a fourth person The English investigators believe that any such acute sore throat of the strep- tococcus class may be followed or co plicated by what in quaint Albion they still call “acute rheumatism.” or by acute inflammation in the ear, just as so often happens in cases of scarlet fever. They find that there are at least four groups or classes of hemolytic streptococei which cause scarlet fever group 1 being highly virulent and group st virulent—t is, the forme severe scarlet fever, the latter only mild illness, if any a popular notion that “scar- er illness than sca etina” is the name give to cases of let fever due reptococeus. So it is necessary to recognize that in any epidemic of scarlet fever or of sore throat the virus may be spread by per- sons who purport to have nothing but a slight “cold” or a simple sore throat. This is just one more good scientific reason why people who value their own health and respect the rights of others should accept and practice my teach- ings about “cri” Even if you are not willing to do unto others as you expect them to do unto you, at any rate it can never harm your own health to beware ch in polite conversa- tional sp ther the epidemic is a large one or just a little household, office or shop outbreak Protect daintiness this simple 4-minute way: All day long underthings absorb perspira- tion. To avoid offending, dainty women wash them in Lux after every wearing. Lux is especially made to remove perspi ration acids and odors completely, yet to protect colors and fabrics. And it takes only 4 minutes, or less! Use Your Diaphragm. One of the characteristic symptoms perhaps the most obvious in- ted in the eyes of the casual ob- er, is the shallow breathing of the victim. At first sight it almost seems breathing has ceased until perhaps a feeble sigh gives evidence that there is still life As significant and the sinkir the end of any the depression breathing. It is a well known fact that a form of “pneumonia” is likely to develop and carry the victim off after rescue from submersion, from exposure to cold from prolonged deprivation—all of which ordinarily produce extreme ex- haustion or vital depression. The popu- lar explanation of this, based on an- tiquated medical theories, is that the victim has “taken cold” and developed pneumonia. But such a notion does not suffice for the scientific investigator, for the “pneumonia” in such cases is not an inflammatory condition at all, but ther a mechanical one, practically mere con n or stagnation of blood the lower portions of the lungs. Pre- cisely the same mechanical stagnation of blood in the bases or deepest portiéns of the chest cavity, called by physicians “hypostatic congestion” is the usual terminal condition noted by examina- tion in most prolonged fatal illnesses. Physiologi: ibe this stagnation of blood in the lower chest region to kening of the force which drives the blood from the veins back into the right side of the heart and on through the lungs to left side of the heart. This force is called venous pressure. It seems to be chiefly the effect of the pressure or squeezing of the muscles throughout the body on the veins which convey the blood back toward the heart. Hence the general muscular “tone” or vigor and resiliency determines the state of the circulation. Particularly important is the tone of the muscles of the front ab- dominal wall and the diaphragm. Physicians have always relied on strychnine to serve as a stimulant in these conditions of great vital depr sicn. Strychnine is a powerful stimu- lant to the contraction of muscle throughout the body. But even more e fective i mergencies is the re- cently dev remedy, carboxygel that is, a mixture of 5 to 10 per cent of carbon dioxid with oxygen, administered by inhalation. Carbon dioxid stimulates deep and forceful breathing, even in the unconscious; this deeper and more vigorous action of the muscles and dia- phragm pumps more blood back from the veins into the right side of the heart and the heart itself responds to the increased volume of return flow by pumping the blood more vigorously through the lungs. Thus congestion or stagnation or “hypostatic pneumonia” may be warded off until the patient’s normal strength is in part restored when the danger will be over. Take a hint from the lesson in physi- ology. Give your own circulation a boost by practicing breathing excerc the failing pulse sclousness toward <hausting illness is lowering of the as e or Use as much tact in handling your husband after marriage as you | Before marriage you never dreamed of telling Tom of his faults You laughed at his jokes an you had heard them a dozen times before. | | won't’ add too many d listened with bated | da NANCY PAGE Here’s a Good Luncheon for Bridge Club. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. “What can we have for & brige luncheon, Nancy, that won't cost too much, won't be too much work and calories to the s meals?” “That's a large order. Tell me, are you limited as to the number of courses you may serve?” “No, except by our pocketbooks. I wanted to have a hot dish, a simple salad and a dessert.” “Well, let's scc. We might have a hot meat loaf baked in a crust, mush- room gravy, toasted rolls and stuffed celery, orange gelatin with chocolate ers. How does that sound?” ‘Grand, just grand. But tell me, how do you make all those dishes?” “The orange gelatin may be made with a ready-flavored gelatin or with one flavored to taste with fresh ge and lemon juice. When it has arted to congeal add sections of orange freed from white tissue. I'd buy chocolate wafers, although you could use a homemade brownie cookie you wanted to “The stuffed celery takes the place of a salad. Mix cottage cheese with a little Philadelphia cream cheese and a small amount of mayonnaise. ~Add pepper and cayenne. Wash stalks of y and stuff grooves with mixture. Do not, smooth over top. The meat loaf is mixed in the usual fashion, having it well seasoned and somewhat drier then usual. Have a yeast dcugh which has risen and been ded Rell out about one-quarter inch thick. Wrap around meat loaf bake for an hour. The dough uld be so well joined that little if juice can seep out as the loaf cooks. When baked cut in slices and 3 3 made from canned kened and enriched with a wushrooms sauted in butter before adding to thickened gravy.” 2 The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD Whose uniquely successful career, both in business and private life, enables her to speak with authority on problems of the modern woman. A Hole in Her Shoe. | to go home in the torn s shoes—and with not a Jerrie is an actress and hasn't had | name | much luck for over a year. So now she | “The next morning I had indigestion has no money. One night iast week she | pecause my dinner had been poisoned was going out to a by my bitter thou and 1 had a | pretty fine dinner slightly lame ankle from having walked party. She put on | for hours on the side of m | her ‘old black lace “But Jerrie, you that part I looked at her fragile face, her smiling eves, and the mouth t a little too tightly “Oh yes, I did,” she said actress, and you often get par meeting people socially. I sho ss and worn penny to my said, don‘t show.” The dress wou pass. Bat wher | she looked down st | her shoes and di covered a badly | worn_spof, almost a hole, in the satin she dropped into | give up. “I just can't go through with i can't” she said to herself But Jerrie had been poor so much and had squeezed hersalf through many tight places that she did | know how to surrender. - Lo | fully at the shoes, she |mind that by walking w on one side she could cover up th So she jumped up buoyantly a from her dresser three | orchids. Not one—three. | was taking her to the dinner had them. She pinned them onto her old lace dress. Then she sot out. But | dinner party was no fun for her looked around the table at the be ful gowns. Inwardly she made face the champagne—but outwardly she s smiling and charming ‘The worst of it came a going on somewhere else, across a slot machine ), man who had sent her th to gamble, and he wa; some fun. So he I lars' worth of quarte forced to stand there 2 drop one quarier af machine. Nothing “But I was supposed tc with the rest, and en Jerrie. “Later on Bob I other five do which followed the first ir mouth f that wretched the course of the ever have dropped anoth himself. The machine but not once did it choke on o: quarters. “Imagine how I fel lars would have shoes—and each quarter you my word I'm an hc believe me, if I could out be caught, I v a few of those qua |I wanted them dreadfull ning of misery (Copyri “BONERS” HELEN WOODWARD. a chair ready to Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers. hol ard they when came SECOND REALLY GRAVITY, BE- FELL ON HIM HE TOLD NEWTON, WHO GOT ALL THE CREDIT FOUND OUT E AN The eart and a composed of one quart rts of water e q A street is a It that has a very good class of people on 1t an is largest 1 Observatory. ted a Chr teri onicle The Immortal William is a to the German Emper SCREE Bese DANIELS DROPPED HER MIDDLE NAME OF VIRGINIA BECAUSE SHE DIDN'T LIKE THE INITIALS B8.Vv.D. DANCING CUPS/ MANY OF THEM WITH HIS WIFE, SuE CAROL E:Z:__(t—upyfll—._——'« T3 by The !‘ll'Syv\dHAu ne) N ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAUCETT. s father was became a well- eled all through He used to sit ny poems and Later he mar- - and lived hap- Age was when every- r cows in the same pas- 1932.) Sehve CHOW MEIN Chow Mein always makes an enjoy- able luncheon. Oriental Show-You Chow Mein noodles are made of the finest quality noodles, fried a rich brown, kept crisp and crunchy in You can also buy Oriental Show-You Chop Suey in cans - just heat and serve. No bother, quick and not expensive. You will be delighted with the secrets of Oriental cookery revealed in the Oriental Show-You cook book. Write for copy. 1’ Oriental Show-You Co. DEMOLISHED To COMPLETE ACOLLISION SCENE FOR STAXY 72 e e e e e e e R e ] e iy e el wic wiv oS Wi @i iy e AR ‘ < fi"’\\xh"“s T GRETA GARBO 5 GRETA GUSTAFFSON. RAMON NOVARRO 1S RAMON GIL SAMANIEGOS Columbia City, Indiana e e gt T T —k" PEG: Imagine it! A nice girl like Anne wearing her under- things a second day. FRAN: And she’s so dainty in other ways... PEG: Of course, she’s awfully busy— FRAN: But our, way is so quick and easy! It just floats out the per- spiration acids and odors why doesn’t she Aflsh this 4-minute way: 1. One tablespoon of Lux does all one day’s under- things—stockings, too. 2. Squeeze suds through garment, rinse twice, shake out. Never rub dainty lingerie with cake soap. Rubbing tends to streak colors and weaken fabrics. Lux re- moves perspiration acids and odors complerely—yet leaves colors like new. If it's safe in water alone, it's just as safc in Lux. Don't use too-warm water. Lux gives instant suds in lukewarm water, won't fade colors or shrink fabrics. Wash after each wearing for perspiration acids lefc in silk fade colors and rot the threads. With Lux it takes only 2 few minutes—less time than it takes to wash your face and hands. Have You Tried LUX for dishes? Its wmd:d ful suds work sO fast. .- lucp bands lowly, 106l » + * Ches less than 1¢ 3,447 TEA “Fresh from the Gardens” keeps them like new. . . in spite of frequent washing LUX for underthings