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MAGAZINE PAGE. about our easy Chipso washdays At our BRIDGE CLUB a bunch of us GIRLS got to TALKING about CHIPSO FLA XES! * * * We said no SOAP could beat CHIPSO for QUICK-RISING SUDS! It’s the TICKET for QUICK EASY WASHINGS! Those RICH CHIPSO SUDS SOAK DIRT out FAST with NO hard RUBBING. * * * We all AGREED that CHIPSO’S GRAND for DISHWASHING, too. It leaves your HANDS 80 SMOOTH and SOFT. And THAT means a LOT! * * * Yes, we're ALL FOR CHIPSO FLAKES. Why don’t YOU try them? HOW MILLIONS STOP PAIN One drop gives instant relief lifts off An amazing liquid has been discovered that actually ends all Worry over corns. One tiny drop stops pain instantly. and a few more drops make the corn so0 loose you can lift it off with your fingers. It's FREEZONE—the safe, quick way to get rid of hard and soft corns and callouses. Get a bottle from your druggist and try it FREEZONE Telephone National 5000 For immediate delivery of The Star to_your home every evening and Sunday morning. The Route Agent will collect at the end of each month, at the rate of 11, cents per day and 5 cents Sunday. “I'm young enough to learn—" that Chipso washes are easier! When I came to VISIT DAUGHTER I wanted to HELP with the WASH! * She began to LAUGH— * * THE NEW CHIPSO SUDS! * * * I'd HEARD how GOOD CHIPSO was—but I didn’t EXPECT to see SUCH BIG SUDS! They sure BUBBLE out DIRTY DIRT— and I was PROUD of those WHITE CLOTHES! * * * Now I'm using NEW CHIPSO FLAKES— and I can’t WAIT for YOU to TRY those FAST WORKING SUDS, too! Life in the Middle Ages. PILGRIMS. URING the Middle Ages stories spread far and wide about holy places where saints were buried or where a saint MRd tasted the water of a spring. Many persons believed that they could cure their sickness by going to such a place and drinking the watér or by touching one of the bones of a saint. PILGRIM OF THE MIDDLE AGES. women to travel long distances, and | these folk came to be known as “pil- grims.” Families which lived along the road- I side were kind to the pilgrims, giving them food and shelter without charge. | Poor persons sometimes spent most of their lives tramping about from one covu UNCLE RAY, Care of The Evening Star, Washington, D.C. 1 wish to join the Uncle Ray Scrapbook Club. Please send me the inted directions for making a scrapbook, design for scrapbook cover, ¢ the club and the 1932 membership certificate. pr rules of a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Age...... eessseses eessnserane PR Street or R. F. D City and State (Copyrig PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Explaining the Germs. Some one sends in a cult healer's pamphlet, in_which there appears an essay on “Colds,” and in this essay a definition is offered. I've been bawling for years at the physicians who issue public bulletins about “Colds” or “The Common Cold,” in the vain effort to persuade one of these authorities to define “the common cold” if he really | believes there is such an ailment or disease. No use. The wise ones refuse to commit themselves. Their position is satisfactory as it the general pub- lic knows what a “cold” is, of course. ‘Well, this cult healer’s definition is wordy enough, but pretty vague, after all. As a matter of fact, the essayist says, a cold is an inflammation. There you are. What more could anybody ask? Appendicitis is an in- flammation. but we must not be too critical. The main thing here is to explain the germs, for, according to this cult healer, there are a lot of germs mixed up with a cold. Oh, yes, indeed. vast quantities of germs, but the germs are svavengers, that’s all. Why, the cult healer.goes on, it is a well known scientific fact that such germs are al- ways present in the body . . . ‘Which is all hooey. No scientific au- thority has shown that disease germs can be present in the tissues of the body without producing the specific di ease of which they are the cause. Here Star Patterns Smart Afternoon Frock. Simplified illustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. The effective use of two sides of black satin crepe renders this frock creation unusually attractive, the satin side being used for the peplum and the smart sleeve styling and the crepe side for the frock proper. So the result y of light and smart V-neck- e treatment. 0. 182 frock that can worn for mart afternoon oc- casion and also well into the evening. Designed in sizes 14, 16, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 3% yards of 36-inch mate rds of 39-inch waterial, with 1%, of asting To get o pattern of this model send cents in coins Please write Ty | plainly your name and acdress and size of each pattern ordered, and mail to The Evening Star Pattern Department, Washington, D. C. The new lashion magazine, with color supplement and Paris style news, is now available at 10 cents when ordered with |a pattern and 15 cents when ordered eparately. THE EVENING STAR TAT- TERN DEPARTMENT. No. 182 Name Beliefs of that kind caused men and | - THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1932 UNCLE RAY’S CORNER BEDTIME STORIES ?.Tx"u"r',’if,i" sacred place or “shrine” to another. In a sense they paid for what was given them, for they told news of the places they visited. In those days there were no printed newspapers or printed bocks in Europe. Some persons rode horseback and others jogged along in carts during the Middl s, but the pilgrims almost always walked. Many pilgrims made long journeys to Palestine. Because Jesus had lived | there, Palestine came to be known as, the Holy Land. Pilgrims who went to the Holy Land believed that they were doing pennace for their sins For many years the Holy Land was kept open to the visits of Christian pil- grum. even though Arabs of the Mo- ammedan faith had power over the country. The time came, however, | whren bands of Turks came from the | East and won control of Palestine. Pilgrims who went to the Holy Land after the Turks had come, found that the old policy had changed. They were | in danger of being robbed or killed. 1 Partly to take away the Holy Land, and partly to save Constantinople from | capture by the Turks, the wars known as the Crusaders were started. Thou- sands of German, French and English nobles, knights, men-at-arms and pil- grims traveled to Palestine |~ The Crusaders were successful in isome of their battles, but they were ,defeated in others. The warfare dragged on for two centurles. At one | time thousands of boys and girls took | part in what was known as the chil- | dren’s crusade. A large numver of these children died from starvation along the way, and the crusade came to an end. At last the Christians gave up their efforts to win the Holy Land. | UNCLE RAY. PON I sm inclosing . Grade.. ht. 1932.) BRADY, M. D. the writer has merely repeated in par- | rot fashion an old dodge which might serve very well in a debate, but can scarcely entertain anybody who knows | pathology or bacteriology. The theory | that all kinds or any kind of disease | germs may e present in the body in some circumstances yet not set up the spec'fic discase has no foundation in fact. Another cult propagandist, deliver- | ing a lecture under the auspices of the local organization of his employers, made a similar crack about disease | germs being merely scavengers which | follow the disease, not the cause of the | disease. This draw a laugh from his | listeners. But if any of them had been | bright enough to think for himself he might have asked how about cooties— | does & man itch because cooties have | come to him or do the cooties come be- | cause the man itches? Likewise, does a child develop diphtheria or scarlet fever because the germs of the specific dis- ease have entered his body or do the | germs of the proper kind hurry in be- | cause the child has developed symp- toms of the disease? How painstaking | and considerate of our peculiar medical whims these disease germs must be— they never make mistakes, but always get in the right place at the right time, | 50 to speak. | This cult healer made an attempt at | definition of a “cold,” at any rate. The | oldtimers who still prate about “colds” | and “the common cold” will never dare | to define the condition they have in mind. for, of course, they have nothing | in mind. | Copyright. - — Fish Scallop. Flake any kind of leftover fish, care- fully removing skin and bones, mix lightly with highly seasoned cream or cheese, but do not use enough to make soft and liquid, and place in buttered scallop shells. Pipe some highly sea- soned mashed potato, to which a beaten egg has been added, all over the top in | whirls and quirls. Leave in a hot oven until the tips of the potato are browned. 1932. He’s heard me say a hundred “Nothing like Chipso in a washer for snowy-clean clothes” ” Jim’s so GOOD-HEARTED he gave me a WASHER toSAVE mefrom SCRUBBING his GREASY work CLOTHES! i L I sure am GETTING a lovely WHITE LINE now that I'm USING CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES. * * * NOTHING like CHIPSO for RICH THICK SUDS— they’re HARD on DIRT but they're so MILD I use them for SILKS! * * * CHIPSO for QUICK DISHES —that's the WAY I keep HUBBY proud of my HANDS! * * * You're DOING yourself a MIGHTY GOOD TURN when you CHANGE to CHIPSO SPEED FLAKES! A |Tarly favorable to beauty. WOMEN’S FE ATURES. Foods Favorable to Beauty BY KATHLEEN MARY QUINLAN. A Slap in Time. self alone none may depend: it quch attend, ster would on suel & Nature. | on B ERHAPS the desire for food is the strongest inherent urge as well as | the most necessary instinct of the hu- | man being. Every active, healthy per- | son should possess 1 normal sense of others. We may not think we are, but we are. Even the most independent are far less indepen- e | dent than they think they are. Sometimes enor- | It always has been so and it always mous lp’?e‘nten are | will be s develo] or quan- | Jerry Mus! tities r:)er lood? be- | just two vagabonds. Yes. sir, that is cause one has not |8ll they were—two vagabonds. They adhered to a|had Bohome. They had no food sup- % diet con- the ele- krat and Mrs. Jerry were the body require- ments. Judicious selec- tion may supply those very neces- ry elements in moderate amounts of wholesome foods. Lack of appetite, on the other hand, is wholly abnormal and is usually the symptom of some physical disturbance Temporary loss of appetite is common at this period of the y ir, when colds and minor digestive disorders are so prevalent, Sometimes, however, appet'tes need only a change of food—the n onotony of unvaried menus is occasionally quite sufficient to destroy a healthy appetite With the delightful additions that | Spring brings to our markets one should hot find it difficult to vary the menu | “NEVER IN MY LIFE HAVE I SEEN with delicious and unusual dishes SUCH A HOUSE!” Orange juice, grapefruit and Casaba melons may be varied and improved in | ply. They had just then no special pur- flavor by the addition of a bit of fresh | pose in life beyond living from day to lime juice. | ay. You see, they had been driven Cucumbers, endive and lettuce are'from two homes by the flood, and now delightfully delicate and _pleasing | they were just wandering in that part creamed on toast after & quick steam- of the Gugen Forest through which the ing Laughing Brook was roaring angrily. New turnips and greens and broccoli, | Never had either of them been so far mustard greens and beet tops make al- | into the Green Forest, and they were Liost a meal if steamed in water in |enjoying the adventure. which a plece of salt pork has been |get very far from the water, for it is cooked, and then served with real only when they are in or near water Southern hot cornbread :hat they feel really safe. Watercress, radishes, raw carrots, green peppers and tiny onions add in mineral and vitamin |times formed big pools. It was in the value to almost any salad and lend |latter that Jerry and Mrs. Jerry could themselves also to most attractive color | swin, for elsewhere the current was too combinations (a factor also in appe- |swift and would have swept them away tite). and perhaps even have drowned them. The resourceful house: Mrs. Jerry was beginning to think that vary her menus frequently they had gone far enough. There are a few simple ones which| “What is the use of going farther?” are attractive and tempting. and include | she asked. “It only means that we will a number of foods which are particu- have to return all this distance by and by, and the farther we go the farther | we wiil have to travel back. We have | seen what it is like in the Green Forest and if you ask me I don't think much of it. There are too many trees. And the Laughing Brook runs too fast.” “But that is because of the flood,” replied Jerry. f c.w\ = ~ young | wife will also Grilled Calf's Liver and Bacon Creamed Stuffed Potatoes. | Asparagus. | Tomato Jelly and Lettuce. | Apple Turnover, Hard Sauce L VERY day we are dependent on | |not obstinate. He said nothi; | thought he. Never did they | The Laughing Brook tumbled and | before had he heard it so loud new | roared and leaped over rocks, and at | the sound made by a tail slapping the | too wet. | JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. - BY JOS. J. FRISCH. | H. H. G—"Dad took me aside” is the preferred form. Sometimes a wrong choice of words will give an entirely different meaning from what is in- tended, Although “apart,” in one of its definitions, means “aside,” it also means “in pieces or to pieces.” When a word has two or more meanings, care should | be exercised in its use, BY BETSY CALLISTER. It's time to start the window boxes First thing, get the boxes. Perhaps you have them. If you have, get them cleaned out. If the outsides need painting see that it is done. Then refill the boxes with good earth. It's “Perhaps,” sniffed Mrs. Jerry. I've noticed that we haven't come to a single pool that isn't a new one made — by the w-urr;?‘s‘lnfi Qver the banks, and | [AT THE BRIDGE PARTY LAST NIGHT DAD you know very we v e water | | ¢ goes down these pools will disappess | |-100K ME APART TO TELLME THAT I 'm going back. That is what T ag | LHE OLD_DAYS RUBBERS WERE S going to do. I am not going another | | 4 \ =1y step farther this wa; | (-2 37 N THE MORNING, BUT NO Now, when Mrs. Jerry spoke in that o ‘f THEY ARE SOMETHING TO tone Jerry knew that it was useless to > ¢ § SIT THROUGH IN THE J 7| argue. He knew that she had made up L) CEVENING - her mind, and trying to change it was a waste of time. But Jerry is noi e ; ., but kept right on following the course of the Laughing Brook deeper into the | Green Forest. It was as if something | beyond was calling him. He knew that Mrs. Jerry probably was right. It did seem foolish to g0 on_when later h would have to return. But the sp the explorer was in Jerry and he j had to go on. So he pared company with Mrs Jerry, who headed back down stream and kept on. So it was late in the afternoon of the next day he came to the first dam of Paddy the Beaver. The water was pouring over it, making a e in sight was, an Cidn't suspect that there was a pon (};’Me sof “i’hendhe had climbed up on the end of that da d saw that pond Fi T e e aam and saw that pond | | Your Home and You was a p! 1ea Here | ey he could swim all he pleased, and here | the water was deep enough to dive, Right away he thought of Mrs. Jerry. “I guess If she could see this she would think it was worth having kept on for,” | “And up there is another | pond. I wonder how it happens that | there are two ponds 'way 1p here in the | Green Forest. > 15 a house over | there in the water. My goodness, what | often worth while getting this earth a house! It is big e h for two or | from the florist, for everything depends three familles of Muskrats. Never in |on having the earth rich and the boxes my life have I seen such a house, I | properly filled. If you fill them your- thought I could build a good house, but | self. put a layer of broken china or 1 couldn't build one like that. I won- |clinkers and coal ashes and stones in der if any one is living there now. I |the bottom of the boxes to provide good wonder—" drainage. Then fill the box with good, Just then there was a sharp sound | rich earth. = | that Jerry recognized, although never | When watering the boxes be sure It was | that the water doesn’t keep the roots Plants, many of them. don't | water. Jerry didn't hesitate a second. | like to have their roots perpetually | He didn't even stop to look around. He | Wet. Like wet feet, wet roots don't| plunged into the water and swam under | mean heaith. Let the boxes dry out| water as far as he could. When he put | Dow and again., And don’t ever water | his head out for breath and looked back. | them in bright sunshine. | Old Man Coyote was sitting right where | If the flowers are much exposed to | he had been sitting at the end of the | very hot sun, devise some way of dam a couple of minutes before. That |shading them in the hottest hours slap on the water had been just in time, | Make a tent of heavy paper for each (Copyright, 1932.) box, well weighted down at the four s . corners with four big stones and put Our foreign-born population has in- | these tents in position when the sun creased but little in recent years,|iS too hot. amounting in the past decade to 288 | 'Pansles are the first things to put 547 persons. The total foreign-born|into t.e window boxes, with English population aggregated 14.204,149 on | daisies, too, if you like. The pink and April 1. 1930, compared with 14 white of the daisies with the regular in 1920. pansy colors are most attractive. Later ———] on, geraniums may be used, and for boxes much exposed to the sun these are perhaps the best choice. For ex- r\xr!s getting both sun and shade vely effects may be gained by min- gling blue and white ageratum and petunias of various shades. And there are beautiful ornamental plants show- ing green and white leaves that are also a good choice. The florist will be glad to recommend other combinations that are specially suited to your particular exposure. But petunias are much used now, for they are hardy and beautiful (Copyright. 1932.) Maracaibo. Venezuela, recently opened its first radio advertising station. FRIEND TOLD HIM ABOUT ALL-BRAN And It Brought Relief From Constipation Those who are bothered with con- stipation should read Mr. Gelpke's unsolicited letter: “I have suffered with constipation for years. A friend of mine told me to try ALL-BraN. I have taken ALL- BrAN for the past six weeks as & breakfast food. It has regulated my bowels as clockwork. Now I would not be without a package at all times"—Mr. Leslie Gelpke, 273 Ridgewood Ave., Newark, N. J. Common constipation — with its headaches, loss of appetite, sleepless- ness—is due to lack of “bulk” to exercise the intestines, Vitamin B to help tone the intestinal tract. Both are present in Kellogg's ALL-BRAN, as well as Lon for the blood. The “bulk” in Arr-BraN is much like that in lettuce. Within the body it forms a soft mass, which gently clears the Intestines of wastes. Being a natural corrective, ALL-BRAN is not habit-forming. Try ArL-Bra in place of pills and drugs—so often harmful. Just eat two tablespoonfuls daily—serious cases with every meal. If your in- testinal trouble is not relieved this way, see your doctor. In the red-and-green package. At all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek —Advertisement. Don't Serve Bread that’ “JUST BREAD” Serve Wonder-Cut Bread. It Doubles the Joy of Eating Men hurty And me - always delicious. It alwey> OR years women have wanted a bread like this! It’s delicious! Better still, it makes everything else taste better, too. Just as mint goes with lamb—so Wonder-Cut Bread goes with all good foods. It doubles the joy of eating. No accident-created this marvelous flavor. Years of experimenting were needed. Blending and reblending of spe- cially selected ingredients. Then a new baking method—Slo-Baking! Result: Wonder-Cut Bread, favorite of thou- sands—the bread that’s on more tables than any other bread baked. Treat your family to a Wonder meal tonight! Serve their favorite dish with Wonder-Cut Bread. Watch the smiles! The family will like the whole meal better. »~ joy of eating! ~The Heppy BOB, STAY IN TOWN TONIGHT, AND I'LL BUY YOU A MEAL! home when meal —ved with Wonder- Is served W : ; doubles the i© They’ll vote it the best they ever ate! Don’t serve “pretty good” meals, when you can serve perfect meals so easily. Just ask your grocer for Wonder- Cut Bread—oven-fresh. It doubles the S M % Wondr® FEEL IT. CONTINENTAL BAKING CO. s are delicious! Cut Bread are y of eating- . IT'S FRESH! oNDER-( 71/ BREAD IT’S SLO-BAKED AND SLICED