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l storms. E PAGE. BY L¥DIA LE BARON WALKER. N this season of snowy or rainy| weather, rubbers, rubber tips by the person who is ‘equi] for going out It would be impossible even to men- tion the numerous styles of overshoes was ungainly and uninteresting. Today | with their fluctuating shapes to go with there are many models in each type of |varying models of shoes. 3 s . ‘ THE FOOT SHOULD BE WELL SHOD IN STORMY AS WELL AS PLEAS- | ANT WEATHER. | overshoes mentioned, and in a wide va- | tiety of colors. The woman who has an entire rainy-day outfit has the color of her overshoes, whether they are en- | tirely of rubber or are partly of fabric, | métch the rainy-day togs. | The woman who is particular about | her footwear appreciates also that, | apart from such a costume, rubbers should be of the same color as the | thoes over which they are worn. Some- | times the exact shade of the shoes ean bs matched and sometimes merely the eclors are alike—that iz, tan rubbers | and tips are selected to go with tan | shoes and black for black shoes. In | | DAILY DIET RECIPE : CHICKEN BROTH WITH LEMON Chicken broth, six cups. Bay leaf, one. Rice, one tablespoon. Salt, one-half teaspoon. Raw egg, one. Lémon juice, three tablespoons. SERVES SIX PORTIONS. Homemade broth made from giblets, neck, wing, etc., of the chicken may be used or a canned chicken broth containing the rice already cooked can be used. 'The rice should be simmered in the broth until tender, if homemade product is used, and use bay leaf* as seasoning during cooking process. If canned product con- taining rice is used add bay leaf and simmer broth for about 15 minutes. Meanwhile beat the egg, add very little salt and the lémon juice very carefully. Have broth hot, but not boiling, in a double boiler. Stir the soup carefully into the egg and lemon mixture just before the soup is served. Warm up again in the double boiler but not too hot. The soup will be frothy and milky looking, with a pleasant taste. : DIET NOTE. furnishes protein. Lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C pres- ent. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. 'NOW SCIENCE TELLS WHY BRAN IS 50 G0OD FOR HEALTH ALL-BRAN Has and Vitamin B; Healthful Kellogg's “Bulk” Alse Iron. sing Kellogg's All-Bran, mil- o Db ?;“l\'l overcome com- the headaches, energy that so By lions of people mon constipation, and loss of appetite and frequently result. New laboratory tests show All- Bran supplies two things mededu;.o | overcome temporary and recurr h‘ | constipation: “Bulk” to exercise the | intestines. Vitamin B to help tone | the intestinal tract. The “bulk” in All-Bran is much like that of lettuce. Within the body, it forms & soft mass Gently it clears the intestines of wastes. Further experiments prove All- ! Bran provides twice as much blood- building iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. Eat this delicious cereal and avoid | pills and drugs. They cause artifi- | éial action, and often lead to harm- ful habits. | Ty two tablespoonfuls of Kel- | logg's All-Bran daily—sufficient ‘o ‘uv-rwme most types of constipation. |1t your intestinal trouble is not re- | lieved this way, seé your doctor All-Bran has a delicious, nut-sweet flavor. Enjoy as a cereal with milk or eream, or use in making flufly bran muffins, breads, omelets, etc Recipes on the red-and-gréen pack- age. Sold by all grocers. Made by Keliggg in Battle Creek.—Advertise- ‘ment. There is, ap- | parently, an endless assortment. It is the care of the rubbers and other styles of overshoes that is almosit as needful as the choice if good looks and long wear are coupled. The suggestions given | today are practical and are worth fol- lowing. | To prevent heels of rubbers wearing out. especially when the heels of the | shoes worn with them are uneven or do not fit the rubbers as perfectly as they should, put a small piece of sponge into the heel of the rubber. The sponge | will adapt itself to the shape and depth of the heel, improving the fit and the camfort while at the same time pro- tecting the rubber. To insure rubbers bei correct foot, letter R in the right foot and L in the left rubber. Also it is advisable to mark your initials in rub- bers if you would be able to pick them |out quickly from among others, with | the absolute assurance that you have the ones which belong to you. ‘When rubbers have holes in the heels cut the heels out, leaving a strap only put on the |to go over the back of the shoe. This | transforms rubbers into the handy tips S0 many persons prefer to wear. Be sure to keep your rubbers washed and clean. Dirty rubbers are unsightly, 50, at least, start from home with clean anes. It is well to remember that thin and very flexible rubbers which can be tucked into a handbag are now to be found, and when rain is pending it is a wise precaution to carry a pair of these emergency rubbers with you to slip on when needed (Copyright, 1932.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W, SPROWLS. Traveling in a Cirele. If you are lost in the woods, you wander around in a ecircle. If you drive a car blindfolded on a prairie, vou will drive in a cirele. If you skate blindfolded on a large pool, you skate in & circle. Sometimes you circle to the right, sometimes to the left; sometimes vou will change from right te left.| But always in what looks like some sort of eircle. What's true for human beings is true also for all sorts of animals, even | down to the earthwerm. T rather suspect that the mechanism is not so much a physieal as it is a psychologieal propensity. I know of nothing more universal than the ten- deney to think in eircles. And animals of all kinds tend to be guided by what might be ealled the “mind's eye.” After all, the whole thing i¥ not so mysterious. It all amounts to saying that no one knows his directions. There is no pure “sense of direction” perhaps in some species of pigeons. Even a cat does not usually come back. Lose a man in the woods or blind- | fold him, and his eues to direction are removed. He has nothing to guide him but the idea that he is going straight. The idea itself under such conditions is a complex of hunches from rather unusual and unreliable sources. So you “travel in a c‘l:]\:'" That is, you wander aimlessly What Users Say of Plain and Sélf-rising Here’s another letter from a Washington housewife who has found the way to perfect baking results. Mrs, C— Washington —for all purposes—a perfect flour for perfect results. exeept | WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD, Registered U. S. Patent Office. this way sharp color tontrasts are or (avoided. The rubbers are inconspic- | overshoes of some sort are needed |uous and the smartness of the footwear | properly |is accented. in such | was when this footwear WATCH HIM WIGG When the “shadowgraph” was a real home_entertainment and dad was usu- ally the featured performer? LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. | Me and pop was taking a wawk b fore supper, and all of a sudden pop | tripped over a stuck up brick and start |ed to fall down and dident quite, s ting down on somebody’s frunt instead. saying. Yee gods, a littl more and I'd of twisted my ankle off my foot, owtch. You dident brake it or anything, did you, pop? I sald, and he said, No, but I certainly gave it something to remem- ber me by. I'm not going to home on this thing, I better rest it up. | we'll take a trolley. By gollies I left the house with nothing smaller than 8 30 doller bill, I cant offer that to & street car conducter, he said ‘Why, pop, what would he do? and pop said, He'd proberly brak: other ankle. Take this bill and ! Peet sake be careful with it and see |if you eant get change somewhere, he said And he gave me the 20 doller | and T started to go in stores to g changed, going in a cigar store and saying to the man, would you mind changing a 20 doller bill? On the contrary I'd be delighted if | some kind sole would only show me | where to get the cash to change it | with, the man said. Being a little man | with’ glasses and a sad expression, and I went in a hardware store and asked and the man terned around and velled to somebody in the back of the store, Hay Ed, here's a kid wants to know if we can change a 20 doller bill, and the man in the back of the store yelled Kick his pants out of here before brake into tears. Me quick wawking out by my own | free will, and I went in 2 more stores | and one man asked me if I knew there | was a depression going on and the | other one pertended he was going to throw a loaf of bread at me, and I 3 bill 30 doller bill, pop, nobody eant change | 1t and most of them get mad. Lets try wawking, pop said. Wieh we did, and by the time we | proved too much for them,” replied | think they have caught all those Rats!” went back to pop, saying, Here's your | = H——, on Capitol Hill, writess BEDTIME STORIES The Rats Are Missed. olks are missed alas how sad them makes neighbors glad. 25l Mother Nafind: “There is nothing more sad that I can think of than to be so lacking in friends that folks are made glad by one’s absence rather than one’s pres- It is rather dreadful not to be d even as a neighbor. But Robber doesn’t appear to mind this at has no friends and apparently | s no friends. He and his family | e sufficient unto themselves. | ven't seen a Rat about here for an a week. I wonder what has of them.” said Farmer Brown at | w the barn one morning | I haven't seen one either,” replied Farmer Brown's Bcy, “but I think I can guess what has happened.” What?" asked Farmer Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Monkey-face have ence Farmer Brown's Boy. You don’t medn to tell me that you exclaimed Farmer Brown. “Nonsense!” Farmer Brown's Boy grinned. “No,” said he, “I don't think that. They have ught a lot of them but to catch all | ould be toa much to expect of even | 1 good hunters as they are” | Then where are the rest of them?” | demanded Farmer Brown They have moved out have moved out” Brown's Boy. ‘Why do you mer Brown Because I know just how smart Robber the Rat is” replied Farmer | Brown’s Boy. “He is an outcast and | asn't a friend in the world outside his but he is smart. I have no r Robber the Rat but T sometimes ve to admire his smartness. Just think how hard we have tried to get rid of those Rats and all the time they | st kept Increasing in numbers. I suspect that old Robber just laughed us. He was smarter than we were. S Yes, sir, they replied Farmer think that?” asked MR. AND MRS. MONKEY-FACE HAVE PROVED TOO MUCH FOR THEM,” FARMER BROWN'S BOY REPLIED. He and the rest of them did just about s they pleased, and they stole enough grain to have fed a horse. If those Owls hadn't come here to live in the barn they would still be stealing. Now we are rid of them, and I say a good riddance.” Farmer Brown laughed. “No one will disagree with you in that, Son,” said he. “But you haven't told me why you got there pop was wawking as good as new, proving all his ankle needed was exercize. think that they haven't all been caught, but_have moved.” | here,” “Unless I am greatly mistaken, we are | ship. They are smart enough to look | said Parmer Brown. By Thornton W. Burgess. “Because Robber is smart enough to know it was no longer safe to stay replied Farmer Brown's Boy. going to hear from some of our neigh- | bors before long that they are overrun with Rats. And those Rats will be the same Rats that were in this barn | Robber decided that his new neighbors | Winter. were too dangerous and that if they |the beginning of the new year has been were going to stay he and his tribe must | trieq in many places in the calendar, And that is what he did do, he |ang the Jewish and Chinese New Years t | are far from each other and from our I still think that March 1 or thereabout is a good date for New Year, as the Romans arranged it, and I notice that almost all nature lovers | “80 you think we have those OWIs to | unconsciously think of the New Year as that first, balmy day that comes, about this time, when the little song sparrow lifts up | his brave voice and sings. “Then I hope they will stay unless | note, I say again, is no more than a barbaric whoop compared to the bub- move. and all the rest of them. You kno | is said that Rats will leave a sinking | ahead and know that what is bad may be worse. thank for ridding us of those Rats?” “I know it,” replied Farmer Brown's Boy. they develop a liking for young chick- ens,” replied Farmer Brown. “They will stay,” was the prompt re- | sponse. “They have a family of eight | babies up in that box I built for them. | I peeked at them this moarning. As for the chickens, we will see what we will see when the time comes. Mean- while we are rid of the Rats.” (Copyright, 1932 . In a recent month Honduras shipped 1,230,805 bunches of bananas to the | United States. My Neighbor Says: It milk or water is spilled on the dining table cloth, place a piece of white blotting paper over it. This will absorb the moisture almost immediately. The oven temperature must always be uniform when baking cakes. Opening and closing the oven door changes the tempera- ture. Grated lemon and orange peel may be easily removed from a grater if a clean vegetable brush is used. To mark hemlines on dark material, use a thin slice of hard white soap. It will make a neat line, which can be later removed by rubbing between the hands. (Copyright, 1932) Robins’ bingers of Spring. own. SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Truth to tell, uncertain, songs are proverbial For me the music of the song sparrows is the true har- mony with which the new year begins. | One speaks of Spring as the new year, and one wonder why New Year day should come in the early part of the the date for almost too The robin’s har- bling happiness of the song sparrow’s Spring song. You will know him, perhaps, as the bird who says “Maids, maids, maids, | put on your tea kettle-ettle-ettle.” But this is a silly travesty of that sweet strain of melody. I only quote it be- cause, in a rough and cheap way, it does reproduce what the song sparrow sings. song sparrow is so early in the ¢ cert of the year, because he over-Wi ters here in the District. Indeed, as with the meadow larks, one often hears 2 bit of the song on fine January day There is no question that one of m Washington friends and corresponden is right—every individual song spar- row sings a little differently. Thi. might be true if we listened attenti to all birds, but not to the same ext: I'm sure, nor would all singers re so much attention with any individ- ual charms. The song sparrow is primarily meadow bird. He will, likg the ro approach your lawn, seeMng worr and your garden, where he looks | weed seeds and insect larvae. Or if yo go walking down along the creeks in the eountry (“runs.” as they call them | in Virginia), you will hear_hih often {amid the blossoming alder bushes, for they are cleanly birds, forever wash« ing themselves. | . 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Just clip the coupos. sisa. sad mail This Economy Dinner saves time and money! TRY IT TONIGHT GR.‘\;’EH{L’IT’CUP *ON-THE-DOT MEAT PIE GERMAN FRIED POTATOES CREAMED TURNIPS LETTUCE AND BEET SALAD UNEEDA BAKERS BUTTER WAFERS **DON JUAN DELIGHF Ca *On-the-dot MEAT PIE 2 caps chopped left-over meat . : ; 1 cup &ravy . . . | teaspoon minced omion . . i 26 Premium Soda Crackers . . . 1 can tomato soup . . . salt and pepper. ; i 2 tablespoons buster Put meat moistened with gravy in a buttered pie dish. Crumble crackers and mix with onion, seasoning and soup. Spread over top of meat as a crust. Dot with butter and bake in a mod- erate oven (400° F.) until browned lightly. 6 portions. Preparation, 8 minutes. **DON JUAN DELIGHT 12 Uneeda Grabam Crachers. .. % cap butter . . . 1 tablespoon suger. .. | can applesauce . . )y teaspoon cimma: hee 2 egg whites. .. 3 tablespoons sugar. .. 1 teaspoon vanilla Crumble Uneeda Graham Crackers fine and mix with softened butter and sugar. Line buttered pie pan with mixture. Turn applesauce into pie shell and sprinkle with cinnamon. Bake in a hot oven (425° F.) 10 to 15 minutes. Prepare mer- ingue of stiffly beaten egg whites and sugar. Flavor with vanilla. Spread over pie and return to slow oven (325° F.) 10 to 15 minutes to set and brown. 6 por- tions. Preparation, 8 minutes.