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MAGAZINE PAGE. DRI-BRITE Liquid WAX Needs No Rubbing or Polishing! This is the new kind of liquid wax advertised in and guaran- teed by GOOD HOUSEKEEPING. Simply apply Dri-Brite—wait 19 minutes—and your floor has a lustrous wax finish, Escape the drudgery of old-fashioned waxing methods. Be modern! Beautify { your linoleum, hardwood and painted floors with Dri.Brite. HE barbers' scissors are still at work and, according to all indi- cations, they are likely to go on working with increased regu- larity in women's hair-dressing shops as Spring and Summer advance. There is always the obvious advantage of having one's hair cut in warmer weather. It's cooler and much more Hair Styles for Warm Weather BY MARY MARSHALL. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. At the sides and front it is thinned out | unevenly to give the youthful, irregular line that inspires the name wind blown. Curls are still in order, but instead | of being arranged at the nape of the | neck the very newest thing is to have them arranged fairly high at the back or top of the head. | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes. Hominy with Cream. Fish Omelet. Corn Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Macaroni au Gratin. Grilled Tomatoes. | Toasted Muffins. Lemon Turnover. Tea | DINNER. | Tomato Soup. | Boiled Mackerel. Mashed Potatoes. Green Peas. | Whoo-hoo! Tommy! You | Lettuce, Thousand Island ought to come ober; my Aunt Lena Dressing. sent & big bundle ob clothes an’ fings | Strawberry Shortcake. to us to wear, an’' my Muvver say her | Coffee. bets some ob ‘em come ober in the ark! A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK ‘What you know about 'at? MAY 5. 1932. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. In school today Miss Kitty was tell- ing us all about unselfishness and how it's one of the greatest things there is and the best way to be, saying, You must strive all your mite against self- ishness and I'm sure you all do when you think of it. I'm sure you can all| | remember some act of unselfishness | | that you have accomplished during the | passed week, and I want you to write | it down and discribe it in a few well | chosen werds in the form of a compo- sition, she said. And she gave out paper and some | wrote and some couldent remember | anything, Miss Kitty saying, ‘Well now | sippose I ask a few boys to read us their acts of unselfishness, I will begin with Benny Potts. Meening for me to read mine. Wich 1 did, being, One day this week me and a frend of mine put together all the old newspapers we could find in our cellars and took them around to the junkman in my frend’s express Waggon and the junkman gave us 5 cents apiece, and we was sitting on my front steps talking about what we would do with the money and we decided to each put it in our banks and save it, and we | was talking about what a grate thing | it is to save your money instead of | spending it as fast as you get it and | then not having any left to either save | or spend, and just then the waffle man drove passed ringing the bell, and my frend quick jumped up and bawt 5 cents werth with his § cents and I un- One-Egg Cake. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8 Patent Office. When we played the newest tunes on & | comb covered with tissue paper? Cream half a cupful of sugar with|In other words it is determined by WOMEN’S FEATURES. Free Will. Most of us have been told that our minds are free. We have all been more | or less indoctrinated with the philos- ophy of free will. This doctrine has made neurotics out of many persons. Portified with what | they take to be a fact concerning their | freedom, they do battle with everything that interposes a veto. A struggle be- tween their own ideal world and the |living world of reality is on. Then | comes worry. Next comes repression Then comes evasion. Finally a break- | down, variously called nervousness, neurasthenia, psychosis. | The doctrine of free will needs to be in many respects. In the first place you must recognize that some of | your promptings (acts of will) originate | in your unconscious mind. You must have done a lot of things for which you | can assign no logical reason. In other words, there are times when you do not hold control over your ideas. To that extent your mind is not free. So free will is not a fact before the act. | Another thing. We should modify our notion about the cause of things. In all the physical sclences, cause and effect are taken for granted. No physi- cist would say that .things happen “ac- cidentally.” | ‘The same attitude should be assumed for the world of mind. Every mental | act has its reason for being what it is. some pre-exacting circumstance. mind is no more falling body free to EVERYDAY PSYCHOLOGY BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. fiight to the ground. Jack said ““Clothes cost money!” selfishly did the same with my 5 cents | MIRACUL WAX CO., St. Louls, Mo. to save him from the imbarrassment of one-fourth cupful of shortening. Add | one egg, half a cupful of milk, and BY HERBERT PLUMMER. Pt 75¢ Quant *1.25 | convenient for bathing and other warm-weather sports. Much more im- portant than all that is the fact that Fashion is now throwing weight in the The tremendous success of DRI-BRITE | balance on the side of shorter hair, and Flauid WAX has encouraged imitatient: | much of the ground won by the advo- cates of long hair within the past year seems to have been lost. The cause of this reaction in favor of | short hair rests with the milliners. | ®_| And, aside from the motive of comfort | | and coolness, you will find that most women who ‘are going back to shorter increasingly difficult to arrange long hair to advantage with the new hats | that tilt off one side of the head. Don't imagine that women are con- | tent to go back to precisely the same | sort of short hair to which they were | accustomed. Variety they must have | and the hair dressers have devised a number of most interesting cuts. There is the new wind-blown effect which leaves the hair in a so-called natural line at the nape of the neck. soaps were rotting Sue’s clothes been very kind to me. | to my mother and try to find work. “ band and have the responsibilities of Answer—I think you are a sorry band who has always been kind to yo of a true woman or & true wife. The she should stand by. Why, right now hair are doing so because they find it | EAR DOROTHY DIX—My husband and I have been married about 12 years and have always got along quite well. He was mnjured in an automobile accident not long ago and will never be able to support me again, although he can live on the small income which he has and I can go home | automobile accident and can no longer support you. That is not the part | THE new chairman o the Executive Committee of the Navy's General Board—that _group which shapes the policies of Uncle Sam's sea forces—is among the last of the old sea dogs. Rear Admiral Jehu V. Chase, who has a record of some 45 years in| the Navy to his| credit, will spend his last year in the | service in a post of | the highest com- He next must | year when he reaches | the statutory re-| tirement age of 64. | Broad-shouldered, | and hearty, | Admiral Chase has | had a notable ca- | Teer. He has been mand. retire through two wars He was still in his twenties when the | He has 1 feel that I cannot be tied to a hus- a home if I work. BETTY. quitter, Betty, if you abandon a hus- u because he has been crippled in an more he needs her the more stanchly I know dozens of women whose hus- | stantly and prefers to talk about guns. bands have been invalided who have never once thought of turning their Spanish-American War broke. He was | aboard the old U. S. 8. Newport, which | carried the original Cenal Commission | and a large party of surveyors to Nica- ragua, when his ship was ordered to do blockade duty on the northern coast of | Cuba and off Havana. Years later, when the World War came and he had risen to the rank of captain, he was given command of the battleship Minnesota. One night in January of 1817 as his ship was proceeding calmly off the coast of Delaware to Philadelphia it struck a German mine. A hole 30 feet long was torn in the Minnesota's underwater body extending athwartship from port- side of the keel to the starboard armor shelf and protective deck. He brought the ship into port with- out loss of life. For this he was award- ed the Distinguished Service Medal with the citation “for exceptionally meritorious service in a duty of great responsibility.” But youwll have to go to the Navy records to find an account of this in- | . The admiral dismisses it in- cident. | For ordnance is his pet subject. He is always figuring out some problem in this field. The magazines, papers and books that he reads are spotted with pencil drawings of guns and the like. He admits that members of his family are careful of what they leave around, because they know that if there is any white space on it he'll use it to sketch | drawing lesson. having to offer me some when I dident have any to offer him some. My goodness, 1 think one example of unselfishness will be quite enough, Miss | Kitty said. | Proberly meening too much, and she collected the papers and started the | one and one-half of baking powder. of vanilla_or lemon extract layers. may shortcake. Cookies. Plain cookies are nice and satisfying, but if one can manage to serve some | fancy little cakes, how much more| attractive the refreshments will be. There are cutters that you can buy inék- pensively which will make this entirely possible, and the cookies cut with them | are delicious, whether they are orna- mented with nuts or cherries, made with a sugared top, or simply left plain | and delicately browned. Individual strawberry shortcakes, cut into heart shapes and filled, when baked, with crushed berries, topped with a rosette | of whipped cream, which is easily pro- duced with a pastry bag and tube, are| delicious. Sandwiches may also be shaped with these cutters. TEA? COFFEE? AND WHAT a gun. I‘iul.s knowledge of ordnance has been | recognized by the Navy. After the| World War he was assigned to the Bu- | reau of Ordnance as a member of the special board. He later served as president of this board. He was commander in chief of the United States fleet with the rank of | cupfuls of flour | sifted with one-foury teaspoonful of salt and two and one-half teaspoonfuls Add one teaspoonful Bake in Chocolate or caramel filling be used. This is excellent for Buy the convenient carton of 12 FULL PINTS. Clicquot Clul 1 GINGER ALE KURLA SH CURL YOUR LASHES TODAY NJ© HEAT, no pain, no cosmetics —just simple pressure of a soft rubber KURLASH pad and lashes are curled gloriously. Even short lashes look long. Eyes look larger, more sparkle and charm. KURLASH at toilet counters, $1. GROW LONG LASHES Amazing discovery delights thou- sands of users. “Grew twice as meny lashes as before,” says one. “Lashes much longer now,” says another. You can have long, silky brilliant lashes too. Just apply fragrant KURLENE ot bed-time. KURLENE tubes, 50c; economy jars, $1. Sold everywhere. Eastern Distributor CHRISTY COSMETICS, Inc —his pajamas wore out fast until | changedto Chipso No FOOLING! My husband was MAD! His CLOTHES wore out FAST when I WASHED them with STRONG GRANULATED soap. . . Then my NEIGHBOR told me, “Change to CHIPSO— 0 FREE LYE AKEN clothes.” CHIPSO has to ROT and * - . Believe ME! CHIPSO makes suds FAST— it SOAKS clothes clean in a JIFFY. No HARD RUBBING and our CLOTHES LAST LONGER. FIRST time you try CHIPSO you'll KNOW it is SAFE for clothes because it makes your HANDS so SMOOTH and NICE! 67 West 44th Strect, New York backs upon them and r\mnin%blck to mother. Instead, they have gone admiral until a few months ago. bravely out to work, to earn the support of the poor sick man and some- times a houseful of children besides. OP COURSE, it is no easy thing for & woman to make a home and care for an invalid and be a bread-winner, too, but many women are doing it, thankful that they have the ability to do it for the men they love. I think a woman is & rotten sport if she will desert the man who has divided what he had with her when he was able to work, just because he is down and out. Think it over. But don't do it unless you have a brave enough heart to do it cheerfully. Any man is better off with no wife at all than with one who considers herself a martyr because she stays with him in his misfortune. DOROTHY DIX. So I told her, | *Use Chipso—and clothes’ll wear like iron!” * ok x DEAR MISS DIX—I am a young man of 27. I have had many affairs with women and thought I would never want to marry because I soon got tired of every one of them. Now I have met a wonderful young woman who means everyt in the world to me. I want to marry her, but I am afraid that if I do after the first few weeks I will be weary of her and start looking for green pastures again. I am saying this from my past experiences. What am I to do? WORRIED YOUNG MAN. It CERTAINLY was a CRIME—the way STRONG GRANULATED SOAP RUINED Sue’s CLOTHES! . * . ‘Well, I told her to CHALK it UP to SAD EXPERIENCE, and Laboratory discoveries " Answer—1f you know yourself to be 5o fickle, you will be wise to give your love & long-time test to see if it is the genuine thing or another false alarm. There are men who are born philanderers, incapable of any last- ing affection, and whom no woman on earth could hold, no matter if she Were a concentration of every feminine charm and grace. GUCH a man must know his own nature and I have often wondered that h he did not have enough humanity about him to refrain from marrying SWITCH to CHIPSO! and breaking & woman's heart and messing up her life. These men would ale | Save themselves from much trouble and alimony by keeping themselves free Those RICH CHIPSO SUDS } %o follow every passing skirt, and what a blessing their keeping out of SOAK out dirt FAST—- matrimony would be to women! yet leave COLORS in! CLOTHES get SNOWY WITHOUT RUBBING. ‘ . . . You are evidently a man of wisdom and humanity, and I congratulate you upon your forbearance. Wait at least a year, and if at that time you are still in love with the same girl, you may be very sure she is it. —DOROTHY DIX. prove value of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN Here's why ALL-BRAN belongs on your table CHIPSO is GUARANTEED! | It has NO free LYE to ROT your CLOTHES and HURT your HANDS. - * - Substantial Omelets. For a substantial breakfast or luncheon dish, omelets may be filled | | with fruit, vegetables, meat, fish, or cheese. The fruit or vegetables, either “I’ve no money Try CHIPSO for DISHES. Bt of tha omeict. Just. hefoxe folding to waste Yorg'&tog%{cg[gg?{i\ns "u. l:g; flhchoppod meat, flak;g fish, or SH N NDS. d, ld be = | Bisiha i he" mustie | | OP strong before turning the omelet into the pan. | '| granulated \ All fresh and tender....'| soaps” Which do you choose today? Which vegetables, whigh soups does your family prefer? . okl - £ Thios vou whal'ta reimbuabes.tho ikxie 11 Here are some of the results of recent the body, it forms a soft mass, which laboratory Investigations on bran gently clears the intestines of wastes. Moreover, ALL-BRAN furnishes iron for the blood. Tests prove that this famous health-cereal provides twice as much assimilable iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. Isn’t it much pleasanter to enjoy this appetizing cereal than to risk taking pills and drugs—so often harmful and habit-forming? Try two tablespoonfuls daily— usually sufficient to overcome most types of constipation. If you suffer from a severe intestinal trouble, we suggest you consult your physician. —e IN THE past few months, many new scientific findings indicate that ALL- BRAN is a valuable addition to the daily diet. These laboratory investigations show that ALL-BRAN is an important source of two things needed to over- come constipation. “Bulk” to exercise the intestines. Vitamin B to tone the intestinal tract. (You will be interested in reading some of the results of these tests in the panel on the right.) “Bulk” and vitamin B will help protect you from constipation and its effects—the headaches, the loss of energy, the poor appetite, the sleep- lessness, the backaches, the wrinkles that so frequently result. . . A variety, of hillips Delicious. Pea soup, vegetable soup, tomato soup, beans, spaghetti, red kidney beans and many other Phillips Delicious vegetables are grown slong the famous Eastern Shore of Maryland and freshly packed for your use. All Phillips Delicious vegetables are gathered at first ripencss when the flavor is full. They are instantly cooked and sealed 10 prescrve this flavor for you. The Bulk in Bran Laboratory tests show the “bulk” in bran is much like that in lettuce, spinach, and other leafy vegetables. It may be eaten by most per- sons who can eat these vegetables. Cf = Vitamin B in Bran One ounce of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN containe 45 vitamin B units, as much as that in one very large spple, or five ounces of orange juice. Rich in mineral salts, quickly ripened in hot, bright suns, Phillips Delicious wegetables have extra wholesomeness and extra savor. At no extra cost. DELICIOUS CAMBRIDGE, MD. My grocer told me Chipso is safe even for silks! This chart® shows the effects of daily additions to the vitamin B-free ba- sal diet of labora- tory rats: (a) none, (b) 0.6 gm. pre- pared bran, (f) 16 gm. prepared bran. I was awfully FOOLISH—I used a GRANULATED SOAP —not realizing how STRONG it was UNTIL CLOTHES FADED and TORE— . * . Then my GROCER said, “Mrs. Roe, did you KNOW that CHIPSO is SAFE, even for COLORED SILKS?” Special cooking and flavoring proc- esses make ALL-BRAN particularly healthful. Tempting recipes on the red- and-green package. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Now,inKellogg’s ALL-BRAN, youhave both “bulk” and vitamin B in one deli- cious cereal. The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN is much like that in lettuce. Within iron in Bran Tests show bran provides twice as much blood- building iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. In addition: Bran furnishes valuable proteins and other mineral salts, which promots health. "l‘l:-.alo-nd'll-h“,l“ Rose, by ‘Vahiteich, Funnell and MacLeod, pages 74, 1. Am. Dietetio Alu-.“.l!u", 1932, So now before I give the wash a CHIPSO SOAK, 1 first run my SILK THINGS through those RICHER and SAFER CHIPSO SUDS! . . * Don’t let STRONG SOAP ROT your CLOTHES— and HURT your HANDS. CHIPSO has NO free LYE— keeps CLOTHES like NEW! The gentle, natural way to overcome common CONSTIPATION