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MAGA ZINE PAGE. G 7 THE EVENING STAR. “’ASHINGTO.\'. D. €. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2. 1932, Setting Places for Family BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ASHIONS fluctuate even to the setting of the dinner table. For example, not so very long ago it was correct to have the serv- ice plate flanked on both sides with such an array of flat silverware that it was bewildering, especially since, dor the good appearance of the table, 932 . o = 4 NOTE THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE FLATWARE. the pieces were graduated in size, from largest pieces by the plate and the smallest ones on the outside. Today fewer pieces are in the array, and thev are placed in the order of their use, S0me other problems is sought by Mrs. | the pieces first needed are on the out- MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice Cornmeal Mush with Cream Baked Hlul‘g Corn Cake offee LUNCHEON. Pried Pea Soup _Croutons i Baked Stuffed Peppers Icebox Rolls Pineapple T’;Diocl Pudding ‘ea’ > DINNER. Consomme Roast_Shoulder of Pork Pan-Browned Potatoes Creamed Turnip Lettuce and Beet Salad, French Dressing Hot Mince Pie Cheese Coffee BAKED SAUSAGE. Prick large country sausages well and arrange them in a baking dish. Surround them withs thick slices of pared apple that is cored. Drain off the fat be- fore serving. PUDDING. ‘Wash one-half cup tapioca and put it in double boiler, with scant quart cold water and pinch salt. Cook until as clear as tarch. Stir often to prevent umping. Remove from fire, put in dish in which you intend to serve it, add one-half cup sugar and small can shredded pine- apple. When cold whip cream and spread on top. If you have your own preserved pineapple use a large cupful of it instead of canned pineapp! SHOULDER OF PORK. Use dressed pork. Rub the meat with lard and sprinkle with flour. Roast in hot oven for half an hour, without putting any water in the pan. Lower the fiame to a moderate oven tem- perature and continue Toasting until tender—about 30 minutes to the pound of meat. Turn from side to side frequently and baste every 20 minutes (Copyright, 1932) side, Those required last arc on the inside by the plate. The service plate is rather large and often is very ornamental. It is before each person at the beginning of a meal before any food is served. It moved when the pate having food on it is sot down. It is replaced when the course is being chenged so that. at no time, is the person minus a pate be- fore him. For the family dinner :t which the main cours® begins the meal, a hot dinner plate is generally substituted for th ervice plate. On this the hot soup piate is placed when the dinner starts with the soup. The service plate is omited belween courses also, and t 3 7 | minfshed. For eny meal approximatin formality, the vice plate is indi: ible. the knives ht of the position of spoons is at the plate. Only three pieces are s Two knives, if two cre nceded for the dinner. ere laid with blades turned in. Farthes from tke plale comes the soup spoon. Or one knife, a spoon for dessert and & soup spoon may be the three pieces laid in the order named. with the knife next the plate Forks are laid at the left service plate in the for the sequences of cou e nap- kin comes at the lelt and just beyond t close to the outside foerk. If mono- or fold the napkin : make it narrow bring the letterirg into promi- If the monogrim is centered from the angle of the edg:s of the napkin fold to form triangle and then turn opposite points bact, thus bring- ing the letiefing straight when the corner angle is toward the edge of the table (see illustration) Butter plates are omited from the formal dinner table, as bread and but- ter are not served. For the home table, position these plates ot the left and a trifie above the service pla Glasses are at the right just above the flat- ware. and service (Copyright. 1932.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRYTLE MEYER ELDRED. Orange Juice. The importance of adding orange juice to the diet of the bottle-fed baby is not always understood by mothers They accept it as a routine measure in modern feeding. but because they know many aduits who never received orange juice in infancy, they consider orange juice a fad without firm founda- tion. Perhaps they may their school days the sailing expeditions on which sailcrs were gone for long months, subsisting entirely on canncd foods. ‘The result was that they developea scurv,, which aisappeared when they returncd h and were again g to procure fres foods. Some such thing may befall the baby who is fed entirely on canned foods The nursing baby runs no such risk, for breast milk, popularly known as & | “live” food, is well provided with fresh elements. ' Boiled, pasteurized, evap- orated. dried or condensed milks lack | enough of the .fresh elements to make any of them unsafe without furnishing baby either . fresh orange . juice or | canned tomato juice daily. Both orange | and tomato juices are richly supplied + with vitamin C, the fresh element that prevents scurvy. Information about orange juice and remember from history of early P. She writes: “My baby | 412 pounds at birth and no A | months weighs 16 pounds. She is fed |on evaporated milk, to which water and sugar and one egg yolk are added. | | She is fed four times daily and at 10 | o'clock at night. | “She takes four or five tablespoonfuls of farina daily, two to four table- | spoonfuls of ‘sieved vegetables and| ‘npp]e. prune and banana pulp. I try | to give her orapge or tomato juice, but she spits it out. | have it? 1 “‘Occasionally she breaks out in a fine rash, which Iasts for a few days and| | goes away. What causes this and what | may be wrong with her food? She ap- | pears healthy, active and happy “She refuses to sleep on her side and wiggles over laughing, no matter how | many pillows I stuff behind her. The | back of her head is quite flat and | how can it round out when she refuses to sleep except on her back?’ | Her formula is a good one refuses orange or tumato juice alone. | put it with her formula. ~Start with| | one teaspoonful of orange juice in each | bottle and increase to two or three in | each bottle. 1t does not matter if the | milk curdles slightly. | | T would omit the whole egg yolk | daily, for that is possibly the reason for ‘the rash. Babies are often sensi tive to eges. Instead, boil the egg | hard, pulverize only the yolk and use | one teaspoonful of it mixed with the | vegetables. Cooking any protein makes | | it Tless irritating to children who are | peculiarly sensitive to it. | |~ Overfeeding causes eczema, too. Your baby has made & 12-pound gain in | five months, which is considerable for any baby, even one with no weight | handicap at birth. You may have my | leaflets, “Evaporated Formulas” and “Feeding From to Twelve Months.” I shall be glad to send them | to you or any other reader, if you'll| inclose a self-addresse nped en- velope with your request ite to the “Your Baby and Minc” department in | care of this newspaper. And don't| worry about baby's head. All babie: have preferential positions and emerg with heads shaped by heredity, not temporary sleeping positions weighed Does she have to It she | Te W [ o) | Lyonnaise String Beans. ] Cut four pieces, then slices of bacon into small fry until crisp. Remoye from the fat, add one onion, sliced thin, to the fat, and brown ly. Add four cupfuls of ¢.nu-d string beans, the | bacon, and half a t-aspoonful of sali, and a littl: perper. Heat thoroughly and serve while hot is re- | thus di- re at 51| SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | | i = t thus. | ‘ I | 1eels bad for her, but T cant fig- ger out Miss Wade has had more'n si® birfdays! Fink ob the cakes she's missed! (Copy 1932) LITTLE BENNY | | BY ght, | | | | i | LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking to himself and I| | said, Hay pop, does practice really make perfeck? | 1t does indeed, and if you get that fermly fixed in your head you'll be suc- | cessful in anything you choose to un- | dertake, from running a peenut stand to running & bank, pop said. The werld's leeding men in their particuler line of endeavor, weather 1t's & big line like shooing horses or a small line like shooing fiies, always get to the top of the he:p by constant practice. ‘The erth revolves on its axes once every hours and zrcund the sun once every year, keeping its mind on both jobs so | perfeckly that its never late by even & | half & second. Could you do it, could I do it? No. Why? Simply because we havent had the practice widle the erth has been practicing for millions of bil- ilons of years without a single vacation. 1 should say practice does make perfeck, pop said. That's what I thawt, Tsaid. And that's why I practiced throwing a pillow for & whole hour without siopping today to | see how near I could come to something | without axually touching 1L, I said. ! "Even throwing s pillow a sufficient | number of times will train the eye and | steddy the hand end fix the reflexe: pop soid, and I said, wes, sir, that’s at I thawt, but the trubble was, the | last time I thew it I came so close 1 axually did touch it, &nd it happened | to be ma’s fancy blue empiy flower pot, {but ony a little hunk broke off the | edge when it fell down and I fixed it | with glue so good that you cant see the place unless you look for it, so do you | think I awt to tell ma about it, pop? Ye gods, you win, pop said. No, you | better give your mother the sattisfac- | | tion of finding it for herself, he said. | Wich she proberly wiil sooner or later lon account of being such a good de- | tecktive. | | \) ington Judge Cardozo to the Supreme Court, doubltess will member his experi- ence time hence. | A big shouldered Senator ; | from N the name of Hen: Fountain made sure of that. Anderson, mer superintendent | of League York, charges against Cardozo three Senators— “/ff . Robinson of Indi- F | ana, Minnesota and Says: For Your Own Good Why Pilease Your \DorothyDix| Husband? RE husbands worth holding? A peeved young woman writes me that she considers all of this advice to wives about working themselves to death trying to throw some sort of spell over husband that will keep them perpetually fascinated and nailed to their own firesides is, in the lahguage of the day, simply the bunk. and that for her part when she gets married if her husband wants to roam she will give him the air and welcome. Furthermore, she opines that a man who has to be held isn’t worth holding. : Oh. I don't know; & woman takes care of other valuables, why not of her husnand? She doesn’t. leave her diamond brooch or her string of real pearls lying around loose for any light-fingered lady to appropriate, 80 why not keep a watcliful eye on hubby. whose price is above jewels? JF 2 woman is sitting pretty in a good job, she is mighty careful how she handles her boss, so why shouldn't she make as much effort to placate her husband as shie wouid an employer? Certainly it is lots worse luck to lose out as & wife than it is to lose out as a stenographer or private secre- tary or buyer or what not. Everything that we get in this world has & price tag on it, and the things that are worth having are marked up pretty high. We pay for our luxuries with toil and sacrifice and striving. And the treasures we have won we hold by our intelligence and vigilance. 'l‘ms law of life holds in spiritual things just as much as it does in mate- rial things. And especially does it hold true in marriage. A happy marriage is bought at a great price. It is only the men and women ¥ho are willing to pay over the counter for it with unselfishness, with patience, with self-control, with tenderness and understanding and forbearance who ever gel one, und only those keep married happiness who are willing to give up their ease and comfort to guard it night and day. ‘Wken all is said, marriage is the career for which nature created women. and it is the one in which they find their greatest happiness Husband, child, home—the woman who has these has something that satisfies her. and without these she is never content, no matter what else fate gives her. I\© woman can be happy or make a peaceful home for her children to grow up in unless her husband loves her. If he is indifferent to her, if he neglects her, if she is torn with a thousand jealousies, she is the most miserable of all creatures and her home becomes a place of torment. Hence just for her own wellbeing, to keep a husband in love with her and admiring her is worth any effort it costs her, any struggle and sacrifice it may demand. Husbands are lost through carelessness of their wives, and the moral of this story is that inasmuch as a woman invests her all in the man she marries, it pays her in every way to keep him. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1932.) IINGTON DAYBOOK A WASI BY HERBERT PLUMMER. ILLIAM H. ANDERSON of New York, who came down to Wash- to protest the nomination of lanti the Arizonian has a way all his own in handling a witness, He was in fine form the morning of Anderson’s appearsnce. Te- | Wearing & frock coat, horn-rimmed | pince-nez poised delicately between two fingers, he sat directly across from An- derson. His manner Is such as com- | pletely to disarm a witness. | He listens attentively, apparently completely absorbed in what the witness is saying. He smiles encouragingly from time to time, nods his head in approval | when it appears that the witness has scored a good point It is not very long before the witness | becomes convinced that if he has no | other friend In the room he can cer- | tainly rely on Ashurst | One finds out later, however, as An- | derson did, that behind that sunny Ashurst exterior lies & mailed fist He tore into Anderson several times | during that brief hearing in the Senate | Judiciary Committee room in such fash- for a long | broad- Arizona by Ashur for- the Anti-Suloon in New laid his before Schull of hurst. Bul it was Ashurst whom Anderson | will think of in connection with the event. Ashurst always has & big time when he finds himself in a position such as this, Suave, the acme of politness and gal- SCREEN ODDITIES | lon as to make it long remembered. ‘There was one instance in particular. Anderson in attacking Cardozo referred {to his father, also & judge, as being un- | der the influence of ‘I'ammany while he | was on the bench. Ashurst stopped him | in his tracks. “The gentleman is not trying to make us believe that the sins of the father are to be found in the son?" more, Ashurst struck. “I would remind the gentleman that BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAUCETT. we will hear all the charges he h: make. But.they must be fair ones. ‘ And before Anderson could say any | to We LIONEL BARRYMORE, GOT WIS START AS A SLEIGHT- OF - WAND ARTIST IN A B MEDICINE _SHOW NOW HOLLYWOOD'S MOST SOUGHT-AFTER CHARACTER ACTOR ,RETIRED FROM THE SCREEN TWO YEARS AGO AND VOWED NEVER TO APPEAR IN ANOTHER FILM. MARGARET LIVINGSTON ONCE DOUBLED FOR A PARROT N A TALKING PICTURE. A"GOBO’ 1S A BLACK PANEL USED TO KEEP THE LIGHT RAYS FROM STRIKING THE CAMERA 193247 The Bor Syndhene lac) 109 Off Du Made ring March New don’t hit below the belt in the Senate ever. We hit each other frequently and hard, but never below the belt.” | The manner in which he said that | was the thing. It must have struck Anderson with telling effect. He at- ’l.empled an explanation, but it didn't seem to get across. He finished soon after th: Favorite Salad. Remove the seeds from one large green pepper and stuff the pepper with | a mixture of cream cheese, pimento and cream. Place on ice to harden. Arrange a slice of tomato on & lettuce cup, place on top a slice of the stuffed pepper cut crosswise and in the center of this place a radish which has been peeled down to form a rose. Over all serve French dressing with a dash of garlic. star. WOMEN’S FEATURES. ’ Star Patterns [ Work-a-Day Prettiness. | Simplified illustrated instruetions for | cutting and sewing are included with | each pattetn. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. | "Por the work-a-day lady who vahes | her trimness at the head of an orderly | household. This frock combines pretti- | ness and comfort all in one piece. The | | | crossed collar is smart as can be. The cap sleeves are dainty and allow room for work. For practicality there is a handy pocket and a full skirt for swift movement. We suggest a printed cot- ton with a solid color trim. It is No. 166. Designed in sizes 14, 16, 36, 38, 40, 42. 44 and 46. Size 36 requires 3% yards of 36-inch material or 3'( yards of 39- inch material. To get a pattern of this model send 15 cents in coins. Please write very plainly your name and address, style nun.ber and size of each pattern ordered and mail to The Evening Star Pattern Department, Washington, D. C. ‘The new fashion magazine with color supplement and Paris style news is now available at 10 cents when ordered with 4 pattern and 15 cents when ordered separately. The Evening Star Pattern Dept. ers, and we might call them | Perhaps the art of Story of the Alphabet. PEDDLERS OF LETTERS. At one end of the great sea which cuts off Europe from Africa was the small country known as “Phoenicia.” Men of Phoenicia were great trav peddler as well. In long boats, fitted with oars and sails, they mdde their way across the sea, taking goods from one coun- try to another in order to trade These folk carried ivory, purple cloth and other stuff in their but their chief export was something which took up no room. I am thinking of the alphabet The magic letters invented i were known by men of writing w to them by Hebrews who I it from Egyptians. At a knowledge came to the sa traders cf Phoenicia, and was them to other folk At first Egypt had a picture alchabet, but later scribes made 1 picturss so simple that you could hardly tell what objecis they stood for Hébrews and Phoenicians changes in the letter signs letters looked like modern le The Phocnician letter for something lik> our letter in tion. Their “D ed toward the 1 “O" was very much like th letter, but their “S™ looked like - dye, and was fa enroll as a member of the 1932 club for making a scravbook. ¢ and 1932 membership certifi with stamped, self-addres; UNCLE RAY Care of The Evening Star. Washington, D.C. Street or R. F. D City and State taught the the alphabd Whe F t word| and understood ding more simpl learned the of Among those A-a H el i =mity R0 O in our next story that a few d m 1 tte 1> from Indi t of the credit for the aiphab ould go to Egypt and to those Wh) sychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROW There is no such thing as a defini- tion of thinking. At least, there is none that can be agreed upon. There is, however, such a thing as a descrip- tion of thinking. The way to go about this description is to admit the fact that you live, and then admit the fact that vou do re- member some things, and then admit that you can imagine things ths have ‘happened and probably n: happen. After you have admitted these facts, then picture yourself trying to get along (live) in a world you know all too little about. When you do something about this world in a direct way you are acting or behaving. You may, if you like, call | this acting one form of adjustment to Pattern No. 166. Size . NAME (Please Print) .. Special Stuffed Apples. Cut some apples crosswise and take | out the cores, making a large cavity. | Bake without seasoning until done, | then fill with the following mixture: Mix together two-thirds of a cupful of sugar, two-thirds of a cupful of sweet milk, 'two-thirds of a cupful of flour, two-thirds of a cupful of pecan nut | | meats, the yolks of two eggs and one | | teaspoonful of vanilla. Cook all together | until thick. Make meringue out uf‘ the two egg whites and pile on the filled apples. Brown. — | Cranberry Pie. | Mix one tablespoonful of flour with | one heaping cupful.of sugar. Add one | cupful of boiling .water, one and one- [ half cupfuls of washed and cut eran- | berries, one cupful of seeded raisins and | & pinch of salt. Add one and one-half | ‘lelapoonfuls of vanilla and a lump oli butter last. Cook for 10 minutes, stir- | | ring constantly. 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