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“You don’t catch me MAGAZINE PAGE ] A Fast Trip Across Asia. ‘WE ENTER INDIA. OME Afghans say they are de- scended from the lost tribes of Israel. This may or may not be UNCLE RAY’S CORNER istan, we fiy above the Kabul River. We know that it flows toward the east and will join the Indus River. We come over the great valley of the Indus River. The Afghan Moun- tains are behind us and we have entered | NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. HMustrations by Mary Foley. NGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1932, JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English, BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. TOM WAS AGREEABLY DISAPPOINTED WHEN HIS FATHER, UNABLE TO SEND HIM TO COLLEGE, BOUGHT L ” true, but it is certain that Af- |India. (%7 sla'vln'g ghans look a great deal like| India, mother of men! You have e ——— HIM A RACCOON COAT INSTEAD. ee people of Jewish stock and must be |fallen on days of hardship and trouble, ! g related in one way or another to the |but you have written much into the Dionaea muscipula. theres ? ~, folk of olden Palestine | Listory of the human race. ilie. bogé. of Mésth and. Sevih = S < v I soak my clothes clean in Chipso LIFE'S too short Like the Turks and Persians, most INSIDE OF A DELHI TEMPLE. | | We look at the natives and we notice that their skins are brown—some of deep brown, others of very light brown. Should we say that they are members of a brown race? Not without words to explain. India’s people number nearly 325.- 000,000 and make up about one-sixth of all those who live on earth. Study of their history shows that they are in large part of white stock; but they have mixed freely with brown folk and to & lesser degree with yellow folk. Banty says that he is willing to pilot us anywhere in India, but I remind him that we are on a fast trip through Asia and can afford time for only one stop—at Delhi—before we enter Burma. Delhi is in the north-central part of India. It has taken the place of Calcutta as capital of the country. Around the city, on three sides, are walls which were set up in olden times. One side of Delhi is bordered by a river, and beside that river are the remains of fine buil s which date tack hundreds of Perhaps I should not say “ruins because the | buildings are still in fairly good condi- tion despite the passing of years. In the hallway of one of them is an in- | N | Carolina grows a most unusual plant. and, in fact, must have it in order to live. The flowers are dainty and grow on & slender stalk, but it is the leaf that holds your attention. When the plant wishes to dine the | leaves are wide open. They are two- lobed, extremely sensitive, and stand more or less at Tight angles to each other. The edges have spiked processes and the upper surface of each lobe is covered with tiny, circular, sessile glands. It also has three five-pointed sensitive bristles. When the insect is | trapped these hairs prevent him from getting out, even if he could break the viselike grip of the trap. It thrives on a meat diet | M. P—"“Tom was agreeably sur- prised” is the required form. It is not possible to be agreeably disappointed, since to be disappointed means to have last one’s hopes bl the secret” seription which means “if there is a | Heaven on earth it is in this building.” ‘The Great Mogul, ruler of Hindustan, | Afghans are Mohammedans. They be- lieve that Mohammed was a true | prophet and that his teachings in the Rains and winds, and even another | plant brushing the lobes, do not cause | it to close, but let an insect touch the | to wear n:yself OUT on WASHDAY! I There's NOTHING like CHIPS80 SPEED FLAKES. Those BIG BUBBLY SUDS SOAK clothes CLEAN. I don’t break my BACK RUBBING out DIRT! * * CHIPSO’S so HIGH GRADE T use it for daughter's PINK SILK TEDDIES. And it's GRAND to wash DISHES— leaves my HANDS so SOFT! * Yes, Chipso’s BIG SUDS certainly can make WASHING EASY! Ask your GROCER for CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES. * * * * DO YOU HAVE COMPLEXION DEFECTS? Pimples, clogged pores, redness, roughness,dryness. Then try the Resinol treatment—Resinol Soap to cleanse and reduce the pores— Resinol Ointment to clear away the pimples, roughness, and dry- ness. The treatment that has changed many an ugly skin to one that is clear and velvety. Don's ‘wait until you have eczema, ring- worm, or any other di r. FOR FREE TRIAL size package of Resinol Ointment together with your copy of new booklet on Skin Treatment, write Resinol, Dept. 20, Baltimore, Md. Subscribe Today It costs only about 1l> cents r.r day and 5 cents Sundays to 's best newspa- per delivered to you regularly every evening and Sunday morn- ‘elephone National 5000 and the delivery will start immediate- ly. The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month. So many blouses— but Chipso soaks them clean! It keeps me HUMMING to keep BUD in CLEAN BLOUSES now that he's DATING up GIRLS! * * It was a CHORE until I tried CHIPSO FLAKES. Those SPEEDY SUDS are 80 BIG and RICH they SOAK out DIRT with no HARD RUBBING. * - I noticed my HANDS kept SMOOTH in those VELVETY SUDS. So now I CHIPSO EVERYTHING, from PINK SILK BLOOMERS to FINE table LINENS. * * * I know you'll like those RICH LASTING SUDS. Try CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES. * Koran should be followed After leaving the capital of Afghan- Care of The Evening Star, | | | | UNCLE RAY. i ‘Washington, D. C. [ self-addressed, stamped envelope. Street or R. F. D...covvvvenen e City and State. ... I wish to join the Uncle Ray Scrapbook Club. printed directions for making a scrapbook, design for scrapbook cover, tules of the club and the 1932 membership certificate. lived in Delhi two centuries ago. UNCLE RAY. COUPON Please send me the I am inclosing a | | l Chatterer Forgets. | | HATTERER the Red Squirrel poked his head out of his door- way to leok and listen before venturing out. Long ago he learned never to expose himself | until he had first made sure that no | watchful, hungry enemy was lurking near. It was a beautiful morning, clear, | still, cold, for jolly, bright Mr. Sun had only just begun his daily climb up in the blue, blue sky. Suddenly Chatterer | pricked up his ears and listened intent- | ly. Faintly but clearly he heard certain distant sounds that brought him wholly | out of his house in a hurry that he might listen better. And they brought a grin to his sharp little face. | There was the sound of distant merry whistle, He knew that whistle. | He had heard it often enough. It was | the whistle of Farmer Brown's Boy. He | knew, too, what that pounding and chattering meant, for he knew just| where those sounds were coming from. “I'LL JUST HELP MYSELF TO ALL 1 WANT WHENEVER I WANT IT,” THOUGHT CHATTERER. They were coming from Farmer Brown's sugar camp in among the sugar maples and they meant just one thing —that Farmer Brown and Farmer Browns Boy were preparing to make sugar and sirup from the running sap of the maple trees. They did it every year when the sap was running. Chatterer listened for only a minute or two. Then with a hasty look around to make sure that the way was clear, he whisked up that tree, out along a | branch to the tip, leaped, caught the tip of a branch of a neighboring tree, | ran along that branch and out on an- other to leap to a third tree. He wae off on a familiar little highway of hi own through the tree tops and he was heading straight for those sugar maples and the place whence those sounds were coming. He hadn't stopped for even a mouth- ful of breakfast. He passed right through the top of the tree where he had the day before stolen sap from Tap- per the Sapsucker. He didn't give Tapper 80 much as one single little thought. He had forgotten all about Tapper. It was just as well, for Tapper was even then drinking sap from the little holes he had tapped in that tree and was prepared to make it most un- | comfortable for Chatterer should he again try ‘to steal any of that sap. Chatterer was excited. He was very | | much excited. He always is excited | when humans come into the Green Forest. Now he was even more excited than usual. for he knew (hat there would be much to watch and very like- ly cpportunities to steal many a tidbit from the little sugar house among the big maples. Anyway, he would be able to get all the sap he wanted without | SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Signs of Spring is all right, but what (Copyright pounding, a_fainter clattering and a | 1Ors Y} 1 want to see is more warm weavver. (Copyright, 1932.) 932.) BEDTIME STORIES % %o danger from the stout, sharp bill of Tapper the Sapsucker, He was soon in sight of the litt'e house and hid where he could see all| that went on without himself being seen. Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's Boy were going from tree to tree, bor- ing little holes in each, driving into these little spouts and hanging pails to catch the sap that would run from those little spouts. Chatterer's eyes shone with greed. There would be no trouble now in getting all the sap he wanted without the trouble of working for it, and without the danger of hav- ing his coat torn by & sharp bill, to say nothing of the pain that would follow. “I'll just help myself to all I want whenever I want it,” thought Chatterer. ‘What a feast I will have, for am sure that there will be plenty of good things in that house, and while Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's Boy are away from it I can enter when I please. Sap to drink and good things to eat and the fun of getting both!” So Chatterer watched and bided his time and thought greedily of the good things he would have, and it didn't once occur to him that in taking them he would be doing anything wrong— that he would be stealing. You see, in the Green Forest each one has a right to take what he can get. It is his only when he has possession of it. At all other times it is for whoever is smart enough to get it (Copyright, 1932.) bristles and in less than a second, under suitable conditions, the hinged lobes close over their prey. The leaf then turns itself into a tem- porary stomach and pours over its meat an acid secretion containing an enzyme which digests the juices of the insect. The soft parts are tumed into liquid and only the hard parts and wings re- main. | to grow upon and later you will see the | 1obes open agiin. Wind blows away the remains of the feast, and agmdn the | trap is dry and ready for another maeal. 1t has been observed that the plan$ be- comes more sluggish after each meal. | At last it ceases to open its jaws and | its mission of gathering food for the roots to store is over. This plant may be successfully grown in small bowls, the bog or moss kept wet, with not too much sunshine. There is 1o trouble in securing the meat diet for it. The question involved is whether you can live in the same room with it. The odor from the decaying flies is too offensive for one to take more than an | interest in this trap as a strange, in- | sectivorous plant, and thereafter give it | wide berth. ‘The most frequent victims are the carrion flies. These are no doubt at- | tracted by the odor, as their name well indicates the type of food they seek. There is another plant called the sun- dew, which has even more sensitive lobes than the venus fly trap. These two plants show the most striking ex- | amples of movement in the plant king- dom. The pitcher plant, while subsist- ing on the juices of insects, catches them in a deep pitcher. The hairs pre- vent the victim from getting out, and it | drowns. (Copyrignt, 1932)) My Neighbor Says: Never salt meat that is to be grilled as it hardens the fibers and tends to extract the juices. Salt it on the platter just before | | sending it to the table. No meat should be salted uncooked, but after the surface has been seared | | and the meat partly cooked. | Seeds of castor oil beans if started in the house in March will make good sized plants by the last of May or figst of June, when it will be time to put them in_the ground. Bath towels that are worn may be cut into squares and made | | into wash cloths by crocheting shell stitches around the edges with pink or blue silk finished cotton. (Copyright, 1932.) After the feast the plant uses its food |- | because Chipso keeps my hands so fine! COARSE-looking HANDS certainly DON'T help out in SOCIETY— * x % So I do my DISHES withthenew CHIPSO FLAKES. S Those WONDERFUL SUDS keep my CUTICLE s0 SMOOTH and SOFT. * x x You OUGHT to SEE how BEAUTIFULLY CHIPSO washes SILKS, too. It's just as GOOD as COSTLIER SOAPS to keep COLORS BRIGHT. * ok % If YOU'RE FUSSY about YOUR HANDS why don't you TRY the new CHIPSO FLAKES? They're INSTANT SUDSING in LUKEWARM WATER! “T have been surprised, since I have talked baking with my friends, how many are users of Self - Rising Washington Flour. Seems that is the secret of so many successful cooks. But they all give [ Self-Rising Washington Flour the credit for the delicious biscuits, waffles, shortcakes, muffins, s doughnuts, pastries, etc., that they have been serving at the bridge parties and luncheons. “Made in a jiffy—you know, just as the Washington Flour Cook Book says— and without bothering with baking powders. “Mrs. Johnson, one of the older set, frankly said she had no idea | she could make biscuits without baking powder. And now she says ‘she never made any half so good as those she makes with Self-Ris- ing Washington Flour.” This “accepted” seal denotes that Self-Risine Washington Flour (and advertisements for it) are acceptable to the Com- mittee on Foods of the American Medical Association. T2, 3 MEDICAL “We had an interesting experi- ence at the club meeting the other afternoon. When, it came time to serve the refreshmerits, Mrs, John- son, who was entertaintng, said, ‘Get ready, I'm going to have waf- fles.” “Oh, doesn’t that take a lot of time and fuss?’ asked Mrs. Davis. ‘Never mind,” was Mrs. Johnson’s rejoinder, as she winked at me. “She wasn't gone any time, it seemed, when the maid bzgan set- ting up the tables—and in came Mrs. J. with the walfle dough— all ready, Mors, Davis said, ‘How do you do it, and such delicious walffles with that inimitable flavor!” “Then Mrs, Johnson brought in the sack of Self-Rising Wash- ingten Flour, and said, ‘See, there’s the secret.”” Seli-Rising Washington Flour is for sale by grocers and dclicatessens in all sizes from sacks up—with EVERY SACK GUARAN- Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. Washington, D. C. Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star He need never have SU”QI’fid For a|| those years His headaches, poor appetite, low vitality could have been corrected by eating a delicious cereal containing “bulk” and Vitamin B HIS poor health resulted from constipation. It brought dull headaches to cloud his days, sleeplessness to break his nights. Office hours were handicapped. Ambition blunted. He tried to correct his condition — with pills and drugs. He found he had to keep in- creasing dosage to get results. Then, one lucky day, he heard about Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. He put this tempting cereal on his daily menu. In a month, it seemed hard to believe he was the same man. A new !;pring to his step. A new light in his eyes. The gentle, natural way to relieve common A new outlook on life. What makes Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN so good? It fur- nishes two things to over- come common constipation: “Bulk” to exercise the intestines; Vitamin B to help tone the intestinal tract. It also sup- plies twice as much blood-building iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN of lettuce. Inside the body it absorbs mois- ture, and forms a soft mass, which gently clears the intestines of wastes. spoonfuls daily are usually sufficient. If your intestinal trouble is not relieved this way, see your doctor. Special cooking processes make ALL. BRAN finer, softer, more palatable. It is not habit-forming. Enjoy as a cereal with milk or cream, or use in cooking. green package. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. is similar to that Two table- In the red-and- I CONSTIPATIO FOR THE CHILDREN: Tune in Kellogg's SINGING LADY every afternoon except Saturdays and Sundays at 5.30 Eastern Time, over Wiz, WLW, WBAL, KDKA®, WB2*, wazA* WGAR, WIR. At 5,15 Central Time,XOIL, WREN, KWK} at 6.00, wcN. Songs and stories children love. *When available