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MAGAZINE PAGE. “You’ll havea breakdown,” doctor said before I changed to Chipso DOCTOR said I'd haw= to QUIT doing the WASH. RUBBING hurt my BACK so! * * * But now I've CHANGED to CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES no more RUBBING out DIRT! Those BIG CHIPSO SUDS sure do SOAK CLOTHES CLEAN and WHITE. * * * Now I CHIPSO daughter’s BEST SATIN UNDIES— the COLORS stay LOVELY. And CHIPSO is GREAT for GREASY DISHES, too! * CHIPSO gives you such WONDERFUL RICH SUDk. They LAST and LAST! For an EASY WASHDAY ask your GROCER for CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES. * * Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to your home every eve- ning and Sunday morning. Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, st the rate of 11 cents per day and 5 cents Sunday. i are you Hand-Shy? Let your hands dare the light! Give them youth and besuty with Pacquin’s Hand Cream. Pacquin’s banishes redness, roughness and the signs of age and makes the hands youth- fully white, soft and smooth. Also refines the skin of arms, shoulders, neck and elbows. Readily absorbed by the skin —does not leave it sticky or greasy. $1.00 & jar or S0c & tbe at all lead- The dirt he picks up needs Doctor Chipso Jimmy’'s SHIRTS would make me CROSS it I didn't USE the NEW CHIPSO FLAKES. * k¥ Talk about SUDS! The biggest SOAPIEST suds! They TAKE the DIRT and LEAVE the COLORS be! * * % No BUCKLING down to a WASHBOARD now. CHIPSO suds BUBBLE out the DIRT. * % CHIPSO must be mighty HIGH GRADE soap because it KEEPS my HANDS so NICE. * k ® I hope you'll TRY NEW CHIPSO FLAKES— for QUICKER, RICHER suds! E sewing at home, THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, F& CBRUARY 23, 1932. Bow-Trimmed Evening Dresses BY MARX MARSHALL. | best to take in the side seams of the | dress you bought six months or a year | ago. Often the lines of the dress are | quite satisfactory and all you need to | do is to make the dress look different. | Then a new girdle or some new Sort of shoulder straps will turn the trick. Recently we have seen a number of new evening dresses trimmed with bows. Sometimes a very large butter- fly bow is placed at the back of the walstline, and sometimes it is placed somewhat higher at the line of the low-cut decolletage. One of the most attractive of these bow-trimmed eve- ning dresses is shown in today’s sketch. The original was made of pale yellow satin with bows and shoulder straps | of plum-colored velvet ribbon. On a pale pink dress you might use cherry- colored ribbon, or on blue a darker shade of the same color. Egg Rolls. Sift two cupfuls of flour with four teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one tea- spoonful of salt, one tablespoonful of sugar, cut in three tablespoonfuls of | VERY evening dress has two terms of usefulness — maybe more—that is, it has such pos- sibilities for the woman who knows how to do a little clever To be sure, if you cupful of milk, add the flour mixture, and work lightly. Roll out, brush over with melted butter, cut, fold, and bake LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. In school today Miss Kitty was tell- ing us about fables, saying, The value of a fable depends on its instructive teeches us, and in order to help us lern the lesson the fable may end with explination of its meening, but in & good fable we should be able to gess the moral for ourselves Now I wiil read one or 2 fables and we Wwill se if we can guess the miorals, she said. And she red one about a fox getting its tale partly cut off in a trap and then trying to get all the other foxes to get theirs cut off too, Miss Kitt | saying, Now who knows the moral of that? Sam Cross raising hig hand and say- !ngl.] The moral is, All's well that ends well. And why is it, pray? Miss Kitty said, and Sam Cross said, Because a foxes tale is its end, and if the other foxes dont have the end of theirs cut off, that means theyll keep on ending &s well as they're sippose to. lard, mix together one egg and half a| out there an' face the big bully, an’| tell him I aren't afraid! Not at all, the moral is, never trust the advice of a person who has an ax | to grind, or in other werds, a selfish motive, such aa tha selfish motive of the mutilated fox who wished to see all his friends in the same predicka- ment, Miss Kitty said. Miss Truman say to dest go right (Copyright, 1932.) powers, in other werds on how much it | what is known as a moral or a brief| MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice. Hominy With Cream. Poached Eggs. Hashed Brown Potatoes. | Graham Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON. | Tomato Soup. Spanish Rice. Toasted Crackers. Lemon Tarts. DINNER. Cream of Spinach Soup. Cheese Souffle. Green Beans. French Fried Potatoes. Stuffed Pear Salad. Mayonnajse Dressing Tea. | | Jam Fritters. These will utilize leftover bread, or they may be made from fresh bread if liked. Cut 12 slices of bread about one-fourth of an inch thick and then cut into rounds, using a cooky or bis- cuit cutter., Spread the rounds of bread with any kind of flavored jam or jelly and place two together as when | making sandwiches. Beat one egg light. | Add one tablespoonful of lemon juice | and one-fourth cupful of cold water, continuing the beating until well mixed. | Quickly dip each sandwich in the egg | mixture and brown in a frying pan, in‘ which three tablespoonfuls of butter have been melted. And she red another one about a | crow up a tree with a hunk of cheese in his mouth, and a fox asked him to sing and show off his bewtiful voice. and the crow opened his mouth to sing and the cheese dropped down and the fox quick grabbed it. Shorty Judge raising his hand, say- ing, The moral is, A stitch in time saves 9, because the fox proberly got a stitch in his side running away witk the cheese. Cant anybody do better than that? Miss Kitty sald, and Charley Chizzam raised Lis hand. saying. The moral is, Here today and gone tomorrow, because the crow proberly dident see the fox again till the next day, Wich just then Miss Kitty started the histery lesson. i | NANCY PAGE Two- Year-Old Children Have Plain Food. | BY FLORENCE LA GANKE, Lois and Nancy were comparing notes on the feeding of Susan and Ann. Susan was almost 4 months old. Ann would be 2 years old early in May. Nancy was still nursing Susan, although she was finding it necessary to supple- ment the breast milk somewhat. had put Ann on bottle feedings t as soon as she was born, , under doctor’s orders, gave Ann oonful orange juice (dilutass when she was 2 months old. %his amount was slightly warmed and given ne hour before the midmorning feed- ing. Susan started her orange juice when she was 3 months old. Ann had cold liver oil the second month, one teaspoonful daily. Susan started the third month with a few drops. Ann was still getting a teaspoonful of cod liver oil daily Lois had resisted all the family's de- sires to try strange foods on her young daughter. She kne¥ it was fun to watch the “funny face” the baby made when & strange food was put into her mouth. But she realized that the fun- ny face amused the grown-ups while the was quite apt to upset Ann. The face was not worth the upset. Accordingly Ann was still getting well cooked cereal. Lois no longer strained it. She had vegetable juices and purees, egg yolk soft cooked or WOMEN'’S FEATURES. Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Neglect Is Costly. Women who think of neglecting in- surence premiums and installment pay- | | ments as being an excusable womanly | trait will be interested in this story. Here in this very town in which we live is a young girl whose only pos- | session in the world is a rather nice frame house which she has leased to a couple. It is insured for $20,000. The girl is independent in her ways, and her brother could never counsel with her. He suspected that her insurance had not been paid for some time, but he knew that she would resent any in- quiry on his part. He contrived a plan to teach her a lesson for life. The girl was working in a distant city. Her brother wrote her a rather realistic letter informing her that her house had burned to the ground. It was unfortunate, but of course she would collect_enough insurance to replace it. papers for her policy and being unable to find it, assumed that she had it with her. Would she send it to him, s0 that he could make a claim for her? Of course, the girl was stricken with remorse. Through her stubborn neg- lect, all of her earthly store had gone up in smoke. Sadly she wrote to her | brother, and admitted that she hadn't paid an insurance premium in a year and a half. herself for being so utterly neglectful The brother learned at once, of course, what he had suspected. He paid her insurance up to date, and then told her the truth. For an instant she was furious and then she was grateful and appreciative. Furthermore, she had learned an unforgettable lesson. It is fair to assume that her house. at least, will always be covered by insur- ance in the future It is easy, almost human, to neglect things as this girl did. Yet if we think | for a moment of the dreadful cost neg- | — | He said that he had looked among her | She would never forgive | |lect exacts, we would never endanger our store in life. It doesn't matter what risk one falls to provide for, neg- lect makes us pay dearly for our over- | sights. The woman with the car who has ne liability insurance; the woman whe fails to pay her instaliments and lose what she has paid vn, and the wom- |an who doesn’t give her investments the care that they require, as well as others, are all reaping future losses. They may not have brothers or hus- bands to check up on their oversights, and they will have their bad news to Temember as er than as jolt- ing shocks with endings. | | ee ||“She’s always getting | dated up” Apricot Pudding. Coffee. are just rolling in wealth you don't| have to worry about the dress after its first term of usefulness is over, or if you are one of those very, very busy business girls you may not have time to do the necessary remodeling. Usually the simplest way of giving the old evening dress a new lease of life is the best way. It isn’t necessary | to rip the material apart and cut it all over. A little adjustment here and there will often give the needed change in silhouette. Now that waistlines are snug and rather high you may find it HASHED BROWN. Peel and wash some raw white potatoes, cut them into inch- square dice, boil them in salted water until they are tender, then drain off the water. Pour into a buttered pudding dish and pour over them a rich, well seasoned sauce. Cover and bake in a good oven for 20 minutes, then un- cover and brown richly and serve. SPANISH RICE. Melt two tablespoonfuls butter in a saucepan, add one tesagoon- ful finely chopped onion and one teaspoonful curry powder and let cook carefully until the onion yel- Jows. Add one cupful boiled rice, one-half cupful tomato puree, four tablespoonfuls grated cheese, one scant teaspoonful of made mustard, one teaspoonful of chut- ney and pepper and salt to taste. Stir and cook until well blended, turn into a buttered baking dish, sprinkle with buttered crumbs and brown in a hot oven Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Discovery of the Mind. ‘The mind has to have a body. This is & stubborn fact. So long as psychol- ogists were content to sit around and introspect in the old-fashioned sense of the term, phychology was a compar- atively simple science. Pick up any book on “Mental Philos- ophy” published before 1850 and about all you find outside of philosophy is an enlargement upon the so-called “laws of association” laid down by Aristotle. | I am not finding fault with these laws. In fact, they are appropriately incor- porated in any modern text on psychol- ogy. I am only saying that “armchair” psychology dominated the psychological world for something like 23 centuries. Modern psychology began when men found out that mind is a function of matter. So long as mind was associ- ated with soul, psychology was a mere adjunct to the philosophy of dualism which means, or rather meant, that the mind and body were two different things. It is not hard to understand how the dusalistic philosophy came into | existence. Human beings have always been jealous of two worlds instead of one. The only interesting thing about the psychology of the first 1,800 years of our Lord was the enormous amount of dogma spilled arotnd in the ever- lasting search for an everlasting soul. (Copyright, 1932.) APRICOT PUDDING. One package orange-flavored gelatin mixture, one and one-half cupfuls boiling water, two table- spoonful lemon juice, one-half cupful canned apricot juice, one cupful canned apricots, one-half cupful blanched almonds. Pour water over gelatin mixture and stir until dissolved. Add water and lemon juice. Coll. Add rest of iningredients and pour into mold rinsed out of cold water. (Copyright, 1932.) SCREEN Ann Haroing WOULD BE COMPELLED TO WEAR AWIG IF SHE COMPLIED WITH ALL THE REQUESTS FOR A LOCK Star Patterns Bertha Effect. Stmplified illustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with | each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. ‘The_little girl is dressed up in No: 157. ‘The preity lines of this frock do not interfere with the play every child enjoys. The belted effect at the walst is smooth, but not snug. And the in- sets that charmingly suggest the molded hip-line of her mother’s frocks, muinm a flare that ends just above the knees. Long sleeves are made to appear fitted, but are in reality roomy. Dainty effects are achieved through the use of a pleated capelet inserted just & few inches below the natural neck-line, and tiny cuffs of the same design. An elongated tab points to the | waist-line. Designed in sizes 8, 10, 12, | 14 and 16. Size 12 requires 235 yards | of 36-inch material, 2!, yards of 39- inch material, and % yard for contrast. To get a pattern of this model send | 15 cents in coins. Please write very plainly your name and address, style| number and size of each pattern| ordered and mail to The Evening Star | Pattern Department, Washington, D. C. B BUDDY ROGERS CHARLES CHAPLIN AND DUMB LANGUAGE. Banana Fritters. Sift together one and one-half cup- fuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of bak- ing powder and one-fourth teaspoon- ful of salt. Beat one engg, add two- thirds cupful of milk and stir into the dry ingredients. Remove the skin from two large bananas, cut the fruit into small bits and stir it into the batter. Drop by tablespoonfuls, using a tea- spoon to push the batter, into medium hot fat and fry to a delicate brown. Serve with orange sauce made as fol- lows: Remove the skin from two oranges, slice, add the juice of half a lemon, half a cupful of sugar and half a cupful of boiling water. Let boil for two minutes and serve while hot. | The new fashion magazine with color supplement and Paris style news | {1s now avallable at 10 cents when | | ordered with a pattern and 15 cents when ordered separately. qux grocer u: i and The Evening Star Pattern Dept. PATTERN No. 157 Size.... NAME (Please Print)........... 20 YEARS OF | | 9 DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX EAR MISS DIX—You say that for a man and wife to have the same tastes, habits, etc,, is the best guarantee against their going on the rocks in matrimony. But haven't you noticed couples who are so much alike they can't get along together? I know a couple, for instance, who both resent criticism, but both like to criticize and they are in a perpetual row. How about it? CURIOUS. Answer: Congeniality implies people being interested in and liking the same things, not having the same temperament. People who have the same temperatment can rarely get along together. That is why families fly apart as soon as they can and why the Browns go to the ends of the earth to keep from being Browned to death by their sisters and brothers and 'why the Joneses seek somebody as different as possible from the Joneses 0 marry. IF Jones, who is irritable and high-tempered, marries a red-headed, ner- vous woman, they are as good for a stormy life as a nickel is for a ginger cake. But if Jones marries a placid, amiable, good-natured wife, he will be as happy as the day is long, and his counterpart will also get along beautifully if she gets a jolly, amiable husband. For years I have known a couple of fine people who have been very unhappy together simply because they are both shy and reserved and do not know how to shew their feelings, yet both are pining for love and petting and to be made a fuss over. If this man had @ wife who was his exact opposite, one who would have caressed him a made much of him and jollied him along, he would have been perfectly blissful, and the ‘woman would have been equally happy if she had married a man who would have made love to her and told her that she got more beautiful every day. ' DOROTHY DIX. DEAR DOROTHY DIX—I am a lonely all grown up and married. I have an offer of marriage from a man of another nationality. Would you advi v with one of my children? ¥ e oA ylnauor gvallal;g‘fll’“c widow, 55 vears old, my children O ere the ways, d husbands with wives, are different from ours. But it the Jer i St ligible y v hine You will be happler with him than you will b;x%mg yith your (Copyright, 1832.) ) ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAUCETT. ILL HEALTH Then Mrs. Duke Discovered | | i % 1 Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. | Of her own accord. Mrs. Duke| sat down and wrote us a glowing | tribute to Kellogg's ALL-BRAN: i “I have been constipated all my life, which has been about 20 years, up until last year when I started eating your ALL-BRAN. Since 1| have been eating it, people tell me | I am looking better, and I am lure‘ that T fell a great deal better.” Mrs. L. W. Duke, 210 Hardin Ave., | College Park, Ga. Constipation is usually caused by lack of two things in the diet: “Bulk” to exercise the intestines; | Vitamin B to help give them tone. | Kellogg's ALL-BRAN provides both of these dietary necessities, as well as iron for the blood. [ Within the body, the “bulk” in ALL-BRAN forms & soft mass, which | gently clears the intestines of | wastes. | How much more natural it is to enjoy this delicious cereal than to| risk taking pills and drugs — so often harmful. | Just eat two tablespoonfuls dnuy‘ —serious cases with every meal—| for most types of constipation. ALL- BRAN is not habit-forming. If your intestinal trouble is not relieved this way, see your doctor. Sold !éndlheby red-and-green 5 age. ade Kell in ittle cree.k.-Adveruummt?" hard cooked and mashed and spread on bread. Crusty bread, fruit puip and puree, butter in small amounts and | milk, a quart a day, made up her daily menu. Foods rich in calcium, vitamins and tissue-building materials were the foods | | which Ann, like any growing child, needed most. Her mother saw to it that | she had them daily. ‘ Plain Pie Crust. | Sift one cupful of flour and one- fourth teaspoonful of salt and cut two ‘tahlespflunfu]s of lard into it, then add |two tablespoonfuls of water. Use ice | water if possible. ACID SKIN*...ENEMY OF GOOD COMPLE Skin acids—the same acids that ruin your stockings and undergarments—age your face long before your time. Do not neglect them. Keep your skin youthful, radiant and alive with Denton’s Facial Magnesia. It penetrates deep into the pores and neutralizes skin acids just as Milk of Magnesia corrects stomach Tsy a boc or $1 bottle. Money back if your skin does not regain its silken texture acids. T after a few weeks. *Nature daily eliminates about 24 sagging t DENTON'S FACIAL the best lea . of acid impur- ities through the pores of the skin. Enlarged pores, wes, rough texture, sallow complexion are a few of the harmful effects of skin acids. but she still does the dinner dishes I'm GLAD my Peg’s 80 POPULAR—but I'm NOT spoiling her! She has to do DISHES and WASH out her SILK UNDIES. * * % No GRUMBLING from her since I CHANGED to CHIPSO FLAKES. She says they GIVE such GRAND SUDS yet they’re so MILD on HER HANDS! * * * And RIGHT she is— my hands LOOK lots SMOOTHER now, too! * g L. I'm using CHIPSO for all my nice THINGS— as well as the FAMILY WASH, Try CHIPSO FLAKES— you never saw SUDS come so FAST! ATWOOD TREE-RIPENED WHOLESOME DELICIOUS Distribut Heitmulle: 1310 5th St. N, Union Market Terminal. XIONS ° s.D.P. 1902 MAGNESIA Lipton's is 99 So say professional tea tasters. So say First Prize and Gold - Medal Awards of Ceylon and India. No wonder! Lipton's Tea is the choice of the Orient's finest gardens. Delivered in a triple sealed package, it comes to you garden-fresh with all its original delicious flavor and fragrance. See for yourself. For 10 cents you may discover what 1931 Talloc tea experts recognize... what lovers of good tea know.Today,fo:10cents, getanintroductory pack- age of Lipton's Orange Pekoe and Pekoe Tea... also in tea bags.