Evening Star Newspaper, March 14, 1932, Page 30

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MAGAZINE PAGE. b/ VICKS L] Y HERS . IS THE LURS many American wor SHE has learned the secret of the glamorous English complexion—the one irvesistible charm many American women lack. Regularly, now, she cares for her skin with Pears’ Soap . . . the trans- lucent soap which has guarded the world-famed English complexions for over fourteen decades. Get a cake. Watch Pears’ generous lather bring the rose-petal color to your skin! At all drug and depart- ment stores—wherever toilet goods are sold, unscented, 15¢. Scented, a trifie more, Pears’ lasts and lasts! - SOUTHERN DAIRIES A “fussy” dessert] “Banana Alexandria” Slice & mellow—ripe banana over a serving of SOUTHERN DAIRIES 'VANILLA Iee Cream L] Then cover with chocolate sauce. ° Sally Sothern and Southern Dairies Orchestra = Tuesdsy and Friday Eveniags Expensive Dyeing For a Few Pennies! Millions Now Use ® Quick, Easy Tintex! Are draperies faded and dull? Are underthings washed-out from many trips to the tub? Is fabric in your home or ward- in need of new color? Don't send them out to be dyed! Trust them to Tintex! In just a few moments Timtex will restore all their original \color-brightness or give them new and different colors, if you wish! Tt’s s0 easy! So quick! So professionally perfect in results! See the Tintex Color Card at the nearest drug store or notion \counter...choose from the 35 fas- cinating colors it offers you. Then try Tintex on any ifabric in home or wardrobe. .. to jyour astonished delight! o—THE TINTEX GROUP—, |Tintex Gray Box—Tints and dyes all materials. | Tingex Blue Box—For lace - trimmed silks—tints the silk, lace remains original color. Tintex Color Remover — Removes old dark color from any material so it can be dyed a new light color. Whitex—A bluing for restoring white- mnfl“‘fiowedwhiu materials. At all drug and notion counters 15¢ Tintex TINTS Anp DYES rol to look smartly dressed, you wil ook with a critical eye to the de- sign and cut of your sleeves, with espe- cial emphasis on the shoulder lne. Much has been said about the new wide shoulder effect, which is indirectly due, of course, to the fashion for slen- BEDTIME STORIES Too Much. ‘Too much of good things may be had, And then you'll find that they are bad. —Chatterer the Red Squirrel. HATTERER THE RED SQUIR- REL, cmun(lng‘by his ll;‘llild feet to the of & sa) on & big maple tree, gung head down greedily lapping up sap. That pail was more than a third filled with that delicious sap. ~Chatterer thought himself very smart to get it in this way. In his greed he quite forgot but this treat. It was won- defl\llwbetblewllpit;lg He hardly paused to get ith. This was 50 much better than getting it @ drop or two at & time as he usually had to. No thought of danger entered his funny little head. Before letting himself down in that pail he had taken care to look carefully for a possible enemy and had seen none. “Mmmmm, but this is good!” he mumbled as he lifted his nose long enough to get his breath. At that very instant from just above him there rang out a loud whistling scream that almost made his heart stop beating. He knew that scream, or thought he did. It was the scream of one of the enemies he most feared— Redshoulder the Hawk. It was so un- expected that it startled him so that one of those clinging hind feet lost its hold on the edge of the pail. In a panic of fright Chatterer twisted around and frantically tried to reach up and get hold of the edge of the pail with his hands. But that pail was very, very smooth and he couldn't dig his claws into it at all. He pawed and led and then—what do you think happened? He lost his m‘r with that other hind foot and landed with a Star Patterns Tailored Grace. Simplified {llustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. Detall plays an important role in the fashionable wardrobe of today. Simple lines must be offset by fanciful and often colorful detail. In the illustrated model, you see a frock embodying all of the new fea of the latest style by t. It is No. 184¢. A diagonal line overl: at the neckline and ex- tends well below the hips. Kick-pleats and deep cuffs give a tailored effect. bow and belted waist makes it feminine. No. 184 is indeed, and wearable for practically every occasion. Designed in sizes 14, 16, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 36 requires 4%, yards of 36-inch fabric, 3% yards of 39-inch fabric, or 27 yards of 54- inch fabric. To get a pattern of this model send |15 cents in coins. Please ®rite very | plainly your name and address, style| | number and size of each pattern or: | dered and mail to The Evening Sta | Pattern Department, Washington, D. ‘The new fashion magazine with color | supplement and Paris style news is now | available at 10 cents when ordered with a pattern and 15 cents when ordered | separately. } The Evening Star Pattern Dept. | Pattern No. 184. || NAME Please Print) mm‘:’tmummdfl that they have come back into Nov,uyw;:m ve Al E EVENING STAR, WASHINGT der waistlines, since even a very slight | exaggeration of the width at the shoulders gives an effect of slender- ness through waist and hips. some of the newer evening dresses frills or ruffs of net or other rather crisp material are used to ex- tend straps. There are various sorts of epaulettes on coats and suits, carry- ing with them an acceptable military suggestion, Evening and afternoon dresses have short puffed sleeeves or flaring cap sleeves and short capelets ! appear on many of the new street cos- tumes. The sketch shows a new belted one- plece dress made of navy blue wool crepe with shoulder capelets which may be left off when desired. They serve the purpose not only of giving the ef- fect of increased width above the elbows but of adding slight additional warmth to the dress. These capelets appear to be attached by buttons, but in reality the buttons are attached only to the capelets, while a few secure stitches taken through the shoulders of the dress hold them securely. During the first cooler weeks of Spring the capelets may be worn— | then with warmer weather they may be removed. Sometimes capelets are lined with silk of contrasting color or sometimes, as in this case, they are left unlined. (Copyright, 1932.) Mint Mousse. Cut 25 marshmallows into quarters and dissolve them in one cupful of hot milk which has been brought to the scalding point. Then cool and fold in one pint of cream whipped. Flavor with five drops of ofl of peppermint and color a pale green with vegetable coloring. Put into the freezing trays of & mechanical refrigerator. This amount will fill one deep or two shal- low ones, and will serve eight persons. It may frozen just like any other mousse in a salt and ice mixture. Serve with chocolate sauce. By Thornton - W. Burgess. splash in that sapl Yes, sir, that is what happened. If he had been frightened before he was in terror now. Was ever a squirrel in a worse fix? There he was in that pail of sap and overhead was Red- shoulder the Hawk, or so he thought. Fortunately he could swim. He is a very good swimmer. And he had to swim now or drown. He didn't know which would be worse, to be caught by that hawk or to drown in that pail of band craze? D. cfl NANCY PAGE Nancy's Gingerbread Is Really Ginger Cake. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. made gingerbread she mYlgmmangmgnm clkgm That is, her mixture was richer and lighter than the usual product sold as gingerbread. She liked to serve hot gingerbread with hot apple sauce for dessert. Some- times she frosted the gingerbread and then she added nothing else. The sugar one. i‘;ot gingerbread with smooth cream was another favorite dish in the Page household. Occasionally she split the gingerbread while it was still hot and put halves of marshmallows between the two layers. The heat of the cake melted the marshmallows partially so that she had a filling made to order. For festive occasions she added some raisigs and coarsely chopped nuts to the batter. One day she Was in a hurry and knew she could not stop to make apple sauce, but she did want to use some apples she had on hand. That day she had an inspiration. She took muffin pans, greased them in usual fashion. Then she put a few slices of peeled and cored apples in the bottom of each pan and poured the batter over and baked the gingerbread in the usual fashion. At serving time when she inverted the muffins she had apple sauce on top and gingerbread below. Her recipe for gingerbread varied with the ingredients she had on hand. Her pet recipe called for sour cream but when she did not have that she used this recipe: One-half cup sugar creamed with two-thirds cup shortening. To this she added onme cup light molasses into ‘When we suffered from the cigar- DAILY DIET RECIPE Eggs Omer Pasha, Sliced onions, 2 cups. Butter, 1 tablespoon. Raw eggs, 6. Grated American cheese, 115 cups. Tomato sauce, 8 tablespoons. Serves Six Portions. Melt butter in frying pan. Add thinly sliced onions and simmer them only tender—about 15 min- utes. In individual glass or pot- tery baking dishes make a layer of the cooked onions; over this put the tomato sauce (or substi- tute rich catsup). Carefully break an egg on this and over all sprinkle the grated cheese. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenheit) about 8 to 10 minutes, until eggs are set. Diet Note. Recipe furnishes protein, a lit- tle fat and fiber. Very rich in lime, iron, sulphur, vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by nor- mal adults of average, over or underweight. Can be given oc- casionally to normal children 10 years and over. which had been put one beaten egg. Two and one-half cups pastry flour, measured before sifting, one teaspoon cinnamon, one teaspoon ginger, one- half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon baking powder and two-thirds teaspoon soda went in next. lLast one cup of hot water was stirred in. sap. Round and round he paddled, vairly pawing at the inside of that pail and using up his strength all too fast. That sap which had seemed to him so good was hateful now. It was a clear case of too much of & good thing. There was no doubt about that. It got up his It went down the wrong way #se, and choked him. He couldn't stop HE LOST_ HIS GRIP WITH THAT OTHER HIND FOOT AND LANDED WITH A SPLASH IN THAT SAP. swimming, for if he did he would sink and drown. The very thought of that made him struggle harder. And, of course, the harder he struggled the more tired he became. If only there were something on which he could rest for just a minute. But there was noth- ing in that pail but sap, and he must keep swimming or go under. He forgot Redshoulder the Hawk. He 1 everything but the need of get- ting out of that dreadful sap and get- ting out soon. Looking up he could see the bare branches of the tree against the sky. How far away they looked. And only that morning he had been racing along them and jumping from one to another. Even the edge of the pail looked far away. That was be- cause it was as hopelessly beyond his reach as were those distant branches. He didn't even hear the very chic | the Chatterer was in any real danger. Poor Chatterer. He was growing more and more tired. It seemed to him that he just couldn't keep his little legs moving. He was no longer pawing at the inside of that pail; it was all he could do to keep his head above that dreadful sap. What is the PRICE OF BEAUTY? ‘Without health there can be little natural beau The wise woman knows that the condition of her body shows itself on her face, her complexion, and in her eyes. She takes care to avoid constipa- tion. This treacherous ailment fre- quently causes headaches, sallow skin, pimples, premature aging. Try the pleasant “cereal way” to grotoct yourself from constipation. cience has proved that Kellogg's ALL-BRAN provides “bulk” to exer- cise the intestines, and Vitamin B to tone the intestinal tract. ALL- BrAN also furnishes iron, which helps build up the blood. The “bulk” in this delicious ce- real is much like that of lettuce. How much safer than abusing your system with pills and drugs—so often habit-forming! Two tablespoonfuls daily will correct most types of constipation. ALL-BRAN is not habit-forming. I ul ’s. Made fioggin Batte your intestinal r Kel reek. lieved this way, see your doctor. Get the red-and- green package at trouble is not re- A HELPS REEP YQU FIT OF THE MOMENT — i e = [ —-—— s D D Rt aatasS S S NN NN NMINNaN NN D = . NN NN NN 2 NN e N ORANGE PEKOR AND PEKOR Now remove stain, yellow WHITEN TEETH 3 shades in 3 days If you think yellow, stained, unsight- ly-looking teeth are natural, start using Kolynos—a half-inch on a dry brush twice daily. In 3 days you'll see your mistake. Your teeth will look 3 shades whiter! Kolynos—unlike any preparation you've ever used—contains two im- portant ingredients that clean and whiten teeth remarkably. One—the finest cleansing agent known—erases stain_and tartar, foams into every tiny fissure and washes away decay- causing debris. While the other ingre- dient kills the millions of germs that cause most tooth and gum troublesand he'lfi to make teeth absolutely clean. . Thus Kolynos gently cleans teeth rightdown to the natural white enamel and soon makes them more attractive than ever. Itrefreshesthe mouth and stimulates the gums. Buy a tube of KOLYNOS DENTAL CREAM MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1932. frosting might be chocolate or & brown | WOMEN’S FEATURES Handwriting What It May Reveal. BY MILDRED MOCKABEE. Fast Trip Across Asia. CROSSING THE HIMALAYAS, FTER two pleasant days at Ran- goon we make part. We have found that Rangoon contains close to 400,000 peo- ple. It has a fine water supply and many modern houses. It was built alongside the Rangoon River, about 40 miles from the Bay of Bengal. in Rangoon is the great pagoda, which HE “’s” of this handwriting sug- | gest a determined and dominat- ing type of personality. The writer, a man, is apparently the | type Who would brook but little interference with his plans. He prob- ably feels an extreme confidence in his | tgins, own abilities, and may only give wlnti In Turkey we found mountains two consideration to the opinions of others. | miles high. In Persia we saw a peak Knowing his own mind and having | three miles high. In Afghanistan we likely planned his aims in life it is con- | saw the Hindu Kush Mountains, which (t:telie\;:ble he will go far toward realizing | rise to a height of n‘lofll’el than 10\1; % miles. Now we are flying towar He seemingly has the emotional ca- pacity for deep affection. As a father | or husband he would probably show # | side that is entirely different from the harder nature he displays to the world at large, There is but little doubt about his feeling toward his family. Despite a severe exterior, there is apparently ‘within & romantic strain which g;rmlu him to visualize himself as a ight going forth dally to do battle !ulrn dmi: lo‘ved ones. Such a frame of mi , of course, helpful and insp! tional. fabel 5 a i He perhaps has a more than ordina: interest in politics and guvemmen? ‘The strife and conflict of political bat- tles are perhaps not unknown to him. In his writing there is much to sug- gest that he would make an excellent gub]lc office administrator, Perhaps he as already held some such 3 He is apparently an excellent public ’s!penker, possessing the power to in- uence people. However, he may at times alienate his listeners by volcing somewhat radical opinions. Seemingly possessing a naturally l'uxied physique, he might tend to over- work and overtax his strength. How- ever, a definite plan of systematic hyglenic living could do much to in- sure him against the exhaustion which may result from his high-pressure mode of living. cream cone upside down. The tip of visit this sacred a. mountains more than five miles above sea level! Banty is a fine pilot. When we ask him to take us over Mount Everest he agrees to do so and turns the plane northwestward. Three cheers! We are right over Note—Analysis of handwri an ezact icience, Gecording fo world e vestigators, but all Ta’flrutig 13 interesting above.eature 1n that spirie, > o h 1 wish to ve vour writing . It is higher than any other peak in the Himalayas—in fact, is the hlg:eet in the world. e air is intensely cold up here, but are warmly dressed and have a closed-in_cabin. We might have trou- ble breathing if we had not brought along oxygen tanks, because the air is thin as well as cold above Mount Everest. —— Now we are north of the Himalaya Range, but we find other mountains beyond. We are above the great region known as Tibet. The first English raflroads built primarily to haul coal and not passenger: You are Tired of —CALL National 6800, and we will b the General Electric Model JF FLATPLATE Ironer. Here is an Ironer that saves you time, labor and money. so easy to use—just sit down . place your garments to be ironed on the flat board, have . . . roll ] Come in and see it—NOW pull a cool little lever—and that’s all. ready to de-| Perhaps the most interesting th!ng' might be compared, roughly, to an ice| the cone is 321 feet above the ground. |be Burmese come from far and wide to| pagod: | Bidding good-by to Rangoon, we fly S northward toward the Himalaya Moun- | rolling carriage toward you . UNCLE RAY’S CORNER Tibet makes up a large part of Western China. It is filled with moun- tains and high plateaus. Amid the wilds of Tibet live wolv bears, otters, leopards, foxes, deer u:? yaks. The land is also thé homs of wild sheep, wild goats and wild dogs. ‘The people of Tibet are yellow folk, | related to the Chinese. |, (This story may be used as & schoal | topic in geography.) UNCLE RAY. Hot Oider Beverage. Cider may be served hot For this kind of service it should treated by heating it with & of spices and sugar. Combine cider with four pieces of amon cut into 2-inch lengths, one tablespoontul of whole cloves and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Sweeten to taste. Simmer for 15 minutes. Strain. Reheat to boiling before serv- ing, as the spiced cider should be served | very hot For the good health of the kiddies... tree-rspenea Sune SWEETS for breakfast. Full of sunshine vitaming and the valuable mineral salts. Gently laxative, too. Sealedin clean handy carcons. Tree-ripened fruit - |ron|'ng e glad to demonstrate. And it’s just as you always the iron on its easy- NATIONAL ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO. “A Washington-Owned Firm Working for the Best Interests of Washington” 1328-1330 New York Ave. N.W. | S 000 tunity for you. "I could stand Spring until AMOX said: 2 { - admitted Mys. "IN fact, we used to enjoy it. It was fun popping out from behind a base- board or sleigh-riding down the bath- tub. We always knew we could go back when things settled down.” “But what happens today when they clean house? They spray every- thing. Amoxit’s called. And when that spray hits you, it’s ‘Bend down, sister.” Amox is a standing order for ‘Prayers for the Dead” Amox kills!” * * * Not a penngas paid Mrs. Roach Product of The American Oil Company AMO NEW LOW PRICE thing different death dealing. let them keep Women: Would you like to sell these splendid ironers? If you drive a car, here is a real oppor- See Mrs. Topham, First Floor. Phone NAtional 6800 ! llIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIHllllllllllflflflmflflfllfllfllfllflll‘!fllfl% cleaning et %, Us spray, for this testimonial - - only the publicity. When bugs can see some- in Amox, you ought to be able to see it. For Amox is dif- ferent - - it’s unlike anything you've ever known. Its pleasant odor, its free- dom from stain, its split-second effect- iveness are new sensations in bug Your druggist - - your grocer - - your hardware dealer have Amox. But don’t it. Order your Spring cleaning supply today! e EXTRA STRENGTH! HIIHIMIIHIIIHHIIIINIWIIIWIWIM@WMIMIlfllllllflllfllfllllflllm

Other pages from this issue: