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WOMA N’'S PAGE 1 “Atta girl” | says my husband i [ | | He’s glad I've found an easy washday Yes, a HUSBAND hates to come HOME to a FRAZZLED WIFE. s ok ok 1 EASY WASHDAY NEW CHIPSO FLAKES. * ok I let those BIGGER BETTER and SOAPIER SUDS BUBBLE the dirt OUT. * * CHIPSO is HIGH CLASS Why, I wash MY SILK UNDIES in CHIPSO and COLORS keep BRIGHT. * * * You take to CHIPSO f you WANT to KEEP SMOOTH, NICE HANDS. N Don't MISS t These NEW CHIPSO Flakes— They're so SPEEDY! THE EVENING Being at Home in This Universe BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ECENTLY I came across this sentence in a magazine article quoting from Lloyd Johnson, which said, “Make yourself IL‘ home in this universe” It set | me thinking. The world is an im-| mense dwelling in which every one should feel at home. It is the place in | which we all must live during our en-| 132 Pineoleum is the modern oil treat- ment that soothes colds away! It ‘ routs the germs and clears your head. Spray or dropper. At all druggists. | |a Pineoleum, with nebulizer spray $1.00 | 1.00 | M Pineoleum, large, for refill Pineoleu: Just Think de .50 with medicine dropper REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. of It— l ered to your | vice at this cost? nal 5000 and de- at once. “Everything’s fine e ” i when you wash wool in Chipso! It doesn't TAKE TWO YOUNGSTERS long to FILL a WASHTUB full! * PLENTY of DIRTY WORK in our HOUSE for CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES! * * * * * CHIPSO piles up the BEST SUDS EVER. It SOAKS out DIRT, yet it's MILD as MILK keeps WOOL so FLUFFY! * * * T'll bet I've put the KIDS’ SWEATERS through CHIPSO SUDS about FIFTEEN TIMES. AND they’re SOFT and BRIGHT as NEW! * * Do ask your GROCER for CHIPSO FLAKES— for SPEED SUDS! * e NOT LIVE WITHOUT OF THE OUTSIDE NATURE. YOU COULD THE ENVIR WORLD OF tire earthly lifetime. Unless we make ourselves at home in it we are like strange guests in a foreign land. This existence. We would s to such condi- tions or lead a miserable life, not un- rstanding the language or the ways living the persons at home in own land. It is a point of view interest all and especially to women who are homemakers. a physician, the head n sanatorium for per: 1g from mental disorde t in almost every case the trou- with the patient's inability to djust his or her life to existing social ns: that is, to family and com- In other words. the failure to make one's seif.at- home n this verse was the cause of terrible depres- is a lonesome sion, mental tions. ‘This is the price one has to pay when one refuses to accept and make the best of life, insists on estranging one’s self from the great home circle of the inhabitants of the world with whom life is cast. It is one to give pause for thought. How can one learn to make one's self at home in this uni- verse? There are certain rules and regula- tions in every household which are carefully considered by the homemaker in order to foster the well being and happiness of the members of the fam- ily. So also there are great laws gov- erning the universe which cannot be disregarded by those who would be at home in it. These pertain to physical, mental and spiritual life. If one is in- clined to discredit the life of the spirit let him call it by any preferred name that signifies the psychological life of thought-world, that life which every one realizes, although it is in- tangible in itself. Learn to see the good in others and to recognize it in yourself. Think kindly of those about you regard the physical well being of your- anguish and hallucina- | self or those of the family Handwriting What It May Reve: BY MII,DR}‘;—MOCKAHEL Mapay Towdled 7 e o Q s e HIS writer has perhaps sudden changes of disposition. One day she may be happy-go- lucky and care-free, the next she may be worried and de- spondent over really trivial matters. This tendency i indicated by the ir- regularity of size of her letters. Some are very small. while in other instances lower-case letters may be larger than capitals She probably tensely, Teacting and sorrow sic in_part b a deep effect on her, it her moods. Because of this trait would seem to be the type to become a ccessful musician or dancer ing the effect of intensely herself, it her to display this emo! It would be foolish, howev to believe that success in could come without real study plication The necessary preparation would but pave t for an opportunity to become & artiste The marked size of the cap apparently indicates that she think of herself first. This selfishness should be easy for overcome if she will exert conscious t. It may be thoughtlessness that her to disregard the needs and of others at times when she help them She probably enjoys the cos ship of both men and women formal parties and d where spirit of jolly merrymaking would possibly appeal to her most. The more formal teas and receptions would perhaps bore her, making her distant and reserved with other guests. In her as in all things, she should feels things keenly to very both in- npanion- Ir INEOLEUM | BEDTIME STORIES By Thornton . Burgess. Danny Rubs His Eyes. Most_people And doubt th can deceive Meadoa Mouse 2 thes v ever HIS is simply Danny's way of say- that most people have per- fect faith in their eyes and be- e that they see what they think they see. Usually this is Were it not true, eyes would be use. Yel eyes sometimes are deceived. Again, just the opposite is true; eves see correctly, but the things they see are so strange that their posses- refuses to believe them In short doubts his own eyes. Just this thing happened to Danny Meadow Mouse Danny had climbed up a tall mullein stalk to reach the surface of the snow that covered the Green Meadows He had it in mind to run about a bit in the moonlight and perhaps gather a few seeds from the top of weeds that stood above the snow. He often did this, for in this way it was easy to get plenty to eat. It was much easier than climbing those tall weeds when there was no snow. But it was riskv. Yes sir, i was risky. No one knew this better than did Danny. Under the snow, especially when it was crusted true. of little AS DANNY SAW THOSE BROAD WINGS HE HADN'T A DOUBT THAT THEY BELONGED TO HOOTY. over, he was quite safe. He could go and come almost as he pleased, in the little tunnels he had made along the surface of the ground. There his ‘harpest-eved enemies could not see him. while on the surface of the white snow he could easily be seen from quite a distance So now Danny was very, very careful. He had made a little round hole close to 1at tall stalk, and when he reached ais he stopped. Very slowly and auticusly he poked just enough of his head out to allow his bright little eves to look all around in every direc- jon. There he remained, looking and looking. Reddy Fox might be some- where about. Hooty the Great Horned Owl or little Sooky the Screech Owl might be silently flying overhead, ready to drop on a careless Mouse. He saw nothing to cause him alarm. and had just about made up his mind to climb out when a shadow drifted across the white snow just a little way off. Danny didn't need to look up to find out who made that shadow. It was the shadow of a bird with broad wings. Danny held his breath and didn’t move so much as a whisker Hooty the Owl!” he exclaimed under is breath. “It is lucky for me that I aw that shadow when I did. Just a wee minute more and I would have been out there. Well, he won't sta: long: he likes the Green Forest best Danny remained just where he was, not moving o much as a whisker. In ® few minutes that shadow returned and the maker of it alighted on a fence! post just a little way from Da back of him. As Danny saw tho wings he hadn't a doubt tha longed to Hooty. But whe wings were folded and stood on the top of the pc just simply ducked down his eyes. There must be sor matter with them. More once he had seen Hooty on that very post. He was big and so straight that he looked to be a part of the post itself. His legs were hidden by featheis. feet only the great cruel claws er the top of the post could be seen opposite sides of the top of round head two little tufts of feat stood up like two e horns Danny knew Hooty when he saw him At least he thought he dd But if this were Hooty on the post now something was wrong stand straight like a par the post but more as Blacky the Crow migh stand if leani tly forward. [ was hump-shou were tufts of feathe His feet were armed with great aws, but they were not hidden by feathers. no were his lees. And such legs! Da hadn't supposed that anv member of the Owl famiiy could boast such long legs. It was no wonde: ) his eyes. He was sure > the matter with tf very cautiously he again. The stranger had t such a face as Danny saw! Never had he dreamed of such a face! It was of two great feathered disks from glared a pair of ferce eves just above a hooked bill That face seemed to Danny like a bad dream. and once more he ducked down to rub his eyes. (Copyrisht. 1932 their e Danny rubbe; hing Do not dis- | WASHINGTON, D. (., FRIDAY DorothyDix| EXT to a bad reputation there is nothing that is such a handicap to one’s pleasure and happiness as a good one. If you desire to live in peace and comfort and avoid wrinkles and nerves, never establish a reputation for excellence in any particular line. If you do, you are its bond slave for life. You cannot run away from it or leave it behind. STAR, Depicts Evils of Bewg Good at Something Sad Effects of a Good Reputation The beauty must take much more care of her appearance than the homely woman. She must dress with more lavishness and taste than the woman who has no reputation for good looks to maintain. People expect it of her and they are quick to notice the least falling off in looks and the first sign of approaching age, whereas the plain woman can go through all the gradations from youth to middle life without any one being the wiser. IF you acquire s reputation for conspicuous excellence in any line, i establishes a precedent that you have to live up to, and in consequence you become a shining mark for criticism. Take the lady, for instance, who is a notable housekeeper. Hasn't she let herself in for & life sentence of hard labor? Other women may have a picked-up dinner; other house- keepers may draw a blind down hastily to hide where the maid neglected to sweep in the corner; other cooks’ cakes may be sad now and then and their bread heavy and we think nothing of it. We don't expect perfection of them. But no such blessed privilege is hers with a reputation. 1t is sad to think that we have to guard against our most amiable impulses, but it is & fact nevertheless. A familiar example of this is afforded by the attitude we are forced to take toward children for the sake of our self-preservation. There isn't any one with a heart as big as & nickel who doesn't love little children, but if you are rash enough to let this become known your life will be made & torment to you. JSVERY time your neighbor gets busy with a new dress or wants o g0 “ somewhere and spend the atternoon playing bridge, she bundles her nursery in on you. “Of course I wouldn't do this with anybody else,” she says, “but 1 know how fond you are of children.” Fond, bah! When you had planned a nice restful afternoon with a new novel. You feel like a female Herod. But it is your fatal reputation coming home to roost. Then there is the terrible thing of getting the reputation of being a philanthropist. Once give to & cause and you are on the sucker list for the balance of your life and are importuned daily to contribute to everything The moral is that we have to live up to our blue china, and if we once get a good reputation we have to break our necks keeping up to the stand- ard we have sel. Hence the only safe plan is not to establish a precedent. DOROTHY DIX. 1932) (Copyright 'MODES F=——=0F THE MOMENT necked sureatin wo thie tuwo-plrer Fnithed cootume v{, wool amd. rayen. He 2k fand. comes ak the watunal waistline Ha Princr of Wales o Hhe name appliad <o the braum. ealf fif«d, felowr 34 oo 1%«%’74, tibihing ... dSiana Warun » prevails, | Water Pipes. To prevent water pipes from freez- ing and bursting, take an equal amount of vaseline (petroleum jelly) and paraffin and let them melt together over & hot Then rub the pipes with an old woolen cloth until they are perfectly dry While the mixture is still hot and liquid form, apply it to the pipes wil an old paint brush. This method has been known to keep the w from Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers. freezing even when the pipes were al-| most_exposed to the weather “You only live once—" THE SOIL OF PRUS: POOR THAT THE PEOPLE HAD TO WORK HARD TO STAY ON TOP. Uncle Tom's cabin was & station on the under-ground railway Three metals have just been studied Arsenic, Antimony and Bismarck. Shelley unfortunately died drowning in the Gulf of Leghorn. while There are people who see red at the thought of cruelty to animate life, vet do not feel the slightest twinge in view- ing a wholesale slaughter of inanimate life. (Copyright. 1932.) SCREEN ODDITIES so try an easy R4 \& \y GAry Coopenr ONCE DROVE ‘RUBBERNECK” WAGONS N VELLOWSTONE PARK ® Chipso wash I'm not lazy, but I TAKE LIFE EASY as I can. * * * 1 sure like CHIPSO FLAKES. NO more RUBBING to get my CLOTHES real WHITE! Those BIG CHIPSO SUDS SOAK out the dirt. And they WORK like greased LIGHTNING. Such lovely RICH SUDS! * JoAn Bronorir, BORN OF GLOBE-TROTTING THEATRICAL PARENTS, NEVER CELEBRATED TWO SUCCESS~ -IVE BIRTHDAYS IN THE SAME COUNTRY UNTIL SHE WAS 12 YEARS OLD. * 1 do my DISHES in a JIFFY with CHIPSO, and my HANDS keep SOFT and SMOOTH. Chipso’s WONDERFUL for SILK UNDIES, too! * Why don’t you TRY CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES for QUICK WASHINGS and WHITER CLOTHES? * «— MOUSE RECEIVED MORE THAN 30,000 FAN LETTERS IN TWO WEEKS. * * FEBRUARY fire. | 9, 1932. NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. Illustrations by Mary Foley. E are not the only ones eager for the Spring to come. The lictle hepatica even keeps her furs on, while she pushes her way up out of the snow to reach the sunshine! After making her debut, she turns her back on the snow and faces the sun. The flowers are pink, white and lav- | ender, & few of them fragrant. The stems and bracts are very fuzzy, as if | they still had on their fur coats and| indeed they have. There seem to be 12 petals on some of them, but as & rule there are 6 and only 3 of them are truly petals as the 3 outer ones are sepals. It is the position which dis- tinguishes them. There are three green bracts which are below the flower and these remain with the seed. mens have greenish-white anthers and pollen, and they stand around the pis- tils at the center. There are often 24 of them. The pistils hold on high the wee horseshoe-shaped cream-colored stigmas and, when pollenated, develop seeds. When the flower is young she closes up tight at night as if she must protect her precious pollen. After a Visit from the bees she stays awake all night and fades to white. If & belated storm comes along the litte flowers bow their heads and close up tight The leaves which stay all Winter are a ruddy red. Those that come in the Spring are a very lovely, soft, mottled purple and green on the top and a deep purple underneath. They are smooth- edged and have three lobes. Artists frequently use them as modeis in con- ventional designs. The hepatica looks wisely ahead for her food supply. Late in the Autumn after the leaves have fallen from the trees and the sunshine again reaches the plant, food is stored in the crown bud. The little buds then snuggle down in their fuzzy blankets and await the call of Spring. From Nova S it southward you find this flower in rich. moist. open woods. where she will be provided with ample shade in the Summer. If transplanted into a v garden she will die. It our first Spring flower h cabbage does bloom first, but one never thinks of taking her home. From March until May, the hepatica blooms, the time of the year depending upon the location. Copvright skunk 1932 The sta- | powder. FEATUR ILADY B BY LOIS O ONE likes to have hands and feet that are ugly and swollen with cnilblains. These are caused by a faulty circulation, undue exposure to cold and application of strong heat after chilling As might be expected, anemic persons | are more likely to develop chilblains | than are robust people with good cir- culations when exposed to the same conditions. Building up vigorous health | by exercise and right diet will help | in such cases. Of course, hands and | feet must be given extra protection in cold weather to prevent she re- currence of chilblains. As soon as ygu feel your skin ir-| ritated and suspect the ocoming of a | chilblain, massage the place with warm | oil or melted vaseline, which will prevent the skin from becoming sore and cracked. If the skin should break wring out a plece of boric acid lint in boiling water and completely cover the place. Then cover with a pie of olled silk and secure with a small bandage. If the feet are especlally hot and swollen, bathing them in warm water in which a few grains of perms ganate of potash (just enough to mak the water a bright pink) has be discolved, will give great relief. Mas- sage with rubbing alcohol or methy- lated spirit and dust with boric acld SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Nippy feller that's a means i we got to cut It's ob fun out chasin’ cats fings by no just like most t it are | lathered with EAUTIFUL LEEDS. Cold, damp feet may be massaged every night with rubbing alcohol. chloroform liniment, camphor cream or mentholated cream. Exercise the feet and legs and massage them thoroughly to promote circulation. Although 1t may take you a little extra time each day to care for your feet, properly, you will feel more than repaid by the added comfort gained. A good time to give them the atten- tion they need is while you are in the bathtub before retiring. Scrub them thoroughly with s04p reach the skin between t them by vigorous rubbing Turkish towel Much insomnia and restlessness during sleep arises from uncomfort- feet. Rub them bris brush well to taki; necessary to day's not idy for the mple precau At least id be GTAINLESS Same formula . . same price. In original form, too, if you prefer 2/ 50 \JICKS % CcoLDs VaroRus OVER \#/ MILLION JARS USED YEARLY We like it better than ever, SLICED-~ Junior Pullman enables you to buy and serve “later bakings” more frequently. Junior Pullman (sliced) favorite offered in a new ec Junior Pullman is baked by Dee Bakers of the finest money can buy. Junior Pullman makes won is a time-tested onomical size. the famous Dan ingredients that derful toast and sandwiches for school, business and enter- taining. Junior Pullman is sold by al I quality grocers, delicatessens and other dealers everywhere. 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