Evening Star Newspaper, May 5, 1932, Page 38

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (., THURSDAY, MAY WOMEN'’S FE \ATI'R'F.S. MAGAZINE PAGE. T —, Bolero Coats. OTS of the new figured print dresses NANCY PAGE | |lkcrsm water with pienty of mds | she made a soap jelly from white soap | | SCREEN ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWCETT. L &3 e and put some of that in the lukewarm - are made with little bolero coats Nancy Knows How to Keep | | water, mixing it well to dissolve the or jackets, They are becoming. these Clothes Fresh Jelly and make a suds. jackets, with the built-up waistline of oF S Fcan. | “'The :oiled garment went into the | the moment. The slender waist out- BY FLORENCE LA GANKE., ! ‘ of salts, vinegar or chemicals. She used ‘ H BY EMILY POST. EDDY FOX couldn’t keep away |hidden where he could watch those| | Famous Authority on Etiquette from the pond of Paddy the (Geese., All that night he remained Beaver. He had seen Honker | there without once having a shadow of n. <\ the Goose and his flock pass|a chence of catching one of those big Letters From Wome - high over the Old Pasture, | birds. E HE first letter is one of heart- ng as they flew, and had watched | “I suppose that they will leave as breaking sadnes: 3 em slant down and down until they | usual at dayligh hought he disconso- ‘ “Dear Mrs. Post: Should disappeared among the trees of the lately. So you can guess how de- ‘shower gifts which have been | Green Forest. | lighted he was when, after much gab-| given to my baby, who died at | . “They have gone down to the pond | bling, the flock settled down to stay for birth, be returned? It is very unlikely | of Paddy the Beaver,” said he to Mrs. |that day and another night. Every that I will have any more children.’ Reddy. “Hurry, my dear. We must get | time he looked at one of those great Answer—I would send each gift back over there as soon as possible. They |birds Reddy's mouth watered, Which |with a note saying that you are send- Ilukewarm -water and was washed by | linod by the frock is in attractive con= | means of a cupping motion. -That is, | trast to the Iines of the coat. she ¢id not scrub nor rub the mate Sometimes a cape and jacket effect J “ I V Any family that has small children gorously. An especially dirt is combined in a bolero. The bolero, 0 N HALL M geuli a ll:und{y problepla.x Il_r,\kr’m don't | washrubbed against T(; 1flflz of her at the back, turns out to be a jacket eve it, ask Nancy Page. There were | with finger tips dij nto soap f that ties at the front. Plain an MINED A FORTUNE IN NEVADA her clothes, Joan's, young Peter's and e T Wi, il MEcnarh | fpmed’ Siwtes ‘are psn. *nd m‘i ---- AND LOST IT BEFORE Susan's. It is true that the 6-month- | were used in rapid successicn. Then identical shade of the same color in BECOMING AN ACTOR / old daughter wore but little and that | the garment was squeezed somewhat | two fabrics is sometimes used—satin . little was not fussy, but even so—the | free from water and a dry, clcan bath jacket, thin wool crepe dress. € l:u&dn‘ basket was always full of lg\\ul inserted in the gnrnvlm Then And sometimes, of course, the whole clothes. the garment was wrapped thing is of print, the fi which Will spend the night there, and while I meant that it was watering most of the ing it back be- Many of the little dresses and suits | fashion, in another bath tow poren o e e S;“o:“m‘ of do-not expect we will have a chance to | time, for theré were few moments that cause you want ) were of colored prints trimmed with | long roil was squeczed for a few r o B 4 | fome other baby 1A white. To keep that trimming free |utes. Then it was unrolled. The plzn gelor. | THe bak. petam, ot eatch one of them, there is always a | he didn't have his eyes on one or more | of those Geese. The more his mouth to use it. Do not from the color in the prints was quite | ment was almost drv e n . 2 watered the greater became his appe- attempt to write | | a trick. Nancy had mastered it. Want So dry that there W tite. He was ready to take almost any these notes your- it > to hear how she took care of the laun- | color running. N chance to try to catch one. But he self. It would be : ¢ P dering? ing while too camp W didn't have much hope that a chance too sad to bear. y % She did not try to set color by use | which would tend to would come. In the first place there And equally sad was wise old Honker at the head of the 1 for your husband flock and on guard most of the time. or the grandpar- Then, too, most of the flock were old, ents. Any friend with the wisdom of long experience. | ' —or your trained However, there was the young Gan- nurse —can Wwrite der whom Jerry Muskrat had warned the messages and just in time the night before, and two /4@l return the pack- | or three others of about his age. One ages for_you of them might, just might, happen to ‘My Dear Mrs. ) THE AGE OF 13 MONTHS make & mistake or be a bit careless. So Post: How can I —JSITTING IN A HIGH Reddy waited and watched and watched Emily Post, keep my children and waited and his mouth watered and from imitating | his appetite grew. And at last the very | relatives who have bad manners?” thing happened that he had hoped for swer—No situation is mcre diffi- | but not expected: a young Goose came | culf than this one, because you may BEDTINIE STORIES BlyV .1;;:;.3? Good Taste Today J | London police have a problem in han= dling the Increasing number of stowa= ways arriving on British ships. “Iadorethisblouse but it costs me . a fortune in “Gracious, why don’t you save the money with Lux . .. here’s ibility that one may be careless. y, my, what wouldn't I give for a din- ner of Goose!” 8o Reddy and Mrs. Reddy had hur- ried over to the Green Forest and trotted through it to the pond of Paddy the Beaver, just as they had done every Spring and Fall for several years when the Geese rested there on their long journey either way. They simply couldn't stay away. As usual, they found that there were others on hand, others who, like themselves, hatl an appetite for goose. And as usual they found that wise old Honker was it charge of the flock and quite aware of the hungry folk prowling or hiding around the edge of the pond. Mrs. Reddy didn't remain long. “What is the use!” she demanded. "It will only be wasting time. I am going hunting where there are not so many hunters. A couple of fat Mice in my stomach will be far more satisfying than an eyeful of Geese that I cannot catch.” But Reddy would not give up so easily and Mrs. Reddy finally left him lying Reddy was hiding and squatted down, | with her back to him. | Reddy quivered all over. He quivered | 50 with eagerness that it was a wonder |he did not make some of the leaves | rustle. He waited untfl he was sure that she Intended to remain there. | Then he began to creep slowly, care- | fully, an inch at a time, pausing and holding his breath every time that | Goose moved the least bit. Now his | mouth watered more than ever. It was too good to be true. Yes, sir, it was too | good to be true. That dinner of Goose | was already as good as his. Anyway “ that is the way he felt about it. | | that Goose got to her feet, turned and | looked straight at him. It was now or | never. Reddy leaped for that long | neck and—was knocked sprawling by & blow from a great wing! Instantly he was on his feet, leaping for that long, snaky neck and getting only a mouth- ful of stiff wing feathers. By this time old Honker was coming. half running. half flying, his long neck outstretched ‘nnd hissing angrily. It was right then that Reddy lost his appetite. UNCLE RAY’S CORNER Speeding Around Africa. UR lodging in the Angola vil- lage was not much to boast about. Instead of sleeping on beds, we slept on mats—but what better could we expect “in the heart of Africa? The natives charged us nothing, but they accepted the mirrors and beads which we gave them as presents. With broad smiles they watched us board our airpiane and | take off. Now we are zooming straight west- ward. Below us are hills, mountains apd valleys. Much of the ground is covered with trees and thorn scrub. There are rubber trees in the forests, and they yield enough rubber for ex- T Moving about the land of Angola are liens and leopards, along with giraffes, | . elephants and rhinos. In that river down there we see a crowd of hippos, swimming along peacefully. If we were in a boat, they might upset us, but we are riding high above, out of reach of any harm from them. There are a few thousand Dutch and Portuguese settlers in Angola, but most of the people are black and brown folk —Bushmen “and _members of the Ba- Kongo, Abunda, Bangala and Ba-Lunda Star Patterns “High Lights.” Pashion is on the up and up! Waist- lines going up to that new high-under- the-bust line . . . necklines high enough 1§ hug the throat . . . and sleeves so high that they scarcely cover the shoul- ders! Other “high-lights” of this frock are the curved yokes that follow the upward trend of fashion. Notice that trim, slim look around the waist and the softness above that's so new. Now, about other things. Puiting a PpEint near the face is always effective. Particularly if it's light and bright. Red and blue printed crepe for the yoke would look well with an all-blue crepe dress. Orange and brown fersey would go.with a brown wool frock Designed in sizes 14, 16, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 36 requires 3%, yards of 36-inch fabric or 3% yards of 39-inch material. and 7 yard for contrasting 10r upper blouse Simplified illustrated instructions for cftting and sewing are incluced with each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. To get & pattern of this mocel send 15 cents in coins. Please write very Mainly your name and address, style niimber and size of each pattern or- dered, and mail to The Evening Star Pattern Department, Washington, D. C. The new tashion magazine with' color supplement and Paris style news is now available at 10 cents when ordered with ; and 15 cents when ordered The Evening Star Pattern Dept. Inclosed is 15 cents for No. 715. Sl NAME (Please Print) | tribes. Their one-story huts commonly have mud walls and thatched roofs— with open doorways but no windows. What a wonder it is to glide over Africa in this manner! If we were on foot, it would take us weeks to make the distance we cover in a single day. | ing ahead! are crossing the border of Zululand. ashore right in front of the place where | never criticize an older member of And then for no apparent reason | | Thirty years ago, this air trip could not | | have been made. Yes, our world is go- | | We have left Angola far behind, and | the family. The only thing you can do is to say. “I want you to do thus or so, because daddy and I like it done that way.” Then if the child says, | “Uncle Zink chews with his mouth | open,” you can only say, “Well his mother and father didn't bother about elling him whel he was a little boy.” don’t know that this solves the prob- lem, because, in its last analysis, it is | criticiz’ng grandparents as well as un- - - ——— DOLORES DEL Ri : SKED DAILY UNDER A VIOLET RAY MACHINE TO ACQUIRE RIGHT SHADE OF TAN FOR HER ROLE IN"THE BIRD OF PARADIS by Coorright. 193, by The Bel Syadhcate. lcle. So egain it must be shifted, | > s shculd the child question further, to ays long ago.” Let us hope that elderly relatives will not put young parents in this predicament! | “Dear Mrs, Post: 1 had an invita- tion by telephone to luncheon. On the day of the lunch the hostess’ hus- band called me and told me his wife was sick in bed and could not have | the luncheon. After two weeks, I called her to inquire about her health and she has not called me since then. What is my next move' | Answer —In courtesy, you should have called her the day after her hus- band canceled the lunch, or at least within a day or two, to inquire about her. But in any event, it is the duty of the hostess to call you to explain | and again invite you to her house (Copyright, 1932.) Bl ok it | Quick Dinner. | Stem and chop one green bell pepper. | Peel and slice one large white onion ‘'ut two slices of breakfast bacon into a small pieces. Mix with one can of Guaranteed by this pork and beans, four tablespoonfuls of . Sugar. alf a téaspoonful of salt, one-| famous signature fourth teaspoonful of black pepper, half a cupful of tomato soup, and one tablespoonful of table sauce. Add two tablespoonfuls of water and bake in a| moderate oven for about an hour. Stir occasionally. | “I test a corner of the sash or hem in water...if it’s safe in water I know it’s safe in Lux. Then I just squeeze the lukewarm suds through—never rub, of course. Three rinses, and the dress is clean and bright as new! keeps colors and fabrics like new “Lux floats out all the perspira- tion acids and odors, too. A dress is so much fresher after a Lux bath. And think what you save! A cent’s worth or so of Lux does a dress, while it would cost at least $1.00 to have it cleaned.” We have heard that the Zulu folk are | flerce savages; but when we land near | one of their villages, when we speak | with them and eat with them, they seem peaceful enough. Their name for being fierce came from the warfare they waged against white men who came to | conguer their homeland. | We gaze at a Zulu woman who is holding a large clay jar on her head. | The jar is filled with water which she has brought from a spring, without | spilling & drop. The Zulu men are tall, strong fel- lows. _Thelr skins are dark brown. | Most Zulus make their living by keep- | ing herds of cattle and other livestock. The village is made up of huts of bee- hive shape, arranged in a circle. 1t is getting toward evening, and men are driving a herd of cattle into the circle —so0 that the cattle way be safe at night from the prowling beasts of the jungle. The chief of the village invites us to stay in his home overnight. UNCLE RAY. Cateh up with yourself TAKE next week-end off and run down to Chalfonte- Haddon Hall. Lie in the sun. Walk the Boards. Play golf in the tonic ocean air. Play. squash. With Chalfonte-Haddon Hall as background you can relax completely and enjoy life. Here you will find an ex- cellent cuisine, thoughtful comfort, and a cordial hos- pitality. Our rates are 1932. Write or phone 4-0141. Special week-end railroad tickets available. American and European Plans CHALFONTE- HADDON HALL ATLANTIC CITY Leeds and Lippincott Company NOW STOP PAIN| QUICKEST WAY Just one drop does it—then corn lifts off Just one little drop of FREEZONE on that aching corn will stop all pain instantly and for good. Then a few more drops of this safe liquid and corn gets so loose vou can lift | it right off with your fingers, core and all. It's the quickest way known to get rid of hard and soft corns and calluses. Get a bottle from your druggist and try it is a worthy heir to the distinction accorded the flour produced by the “Father of Our Country”’—accepted everywhere as the Flour best adapted to kitchen facilities—and baking with results not obtainable with any other flour. PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR for all purposes. SELF-RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR for biscuits, waffles, short- cpag\evlbg;ughnuh, muffins, pastries, etc., made WITHOUT BAKING Both Plain Washington Flour and Self-Rising Washington Flour for sale by grocers and delicatessens in all sizes from 2-1b. sacks up. EVERY SACK GUARANTEED. Write an Essay on “George Washington, the Miller” and win one of the $150 in Gold Prizes Contest open to all pupils in Public, Private and Parochial Schools in and around Washington. High School 1st Prize 2nd Prize . .. 3rd Prize Junior High 1st Prize 2nd Prize 3rd Prize Are the Simple Rules The essay must not be Write vour name, home When received your longer than 500 words. address, school and grade envelope containing Write only on one side which vou attend plainly insignia, your name, etc. of the paper. on a slip of paper, a will be given a companion Every essay must be ac- ing it to the insigr number to that placed on companied by the insignia from the bag. Inclosing the essay, the purpose be- printed on a sack of either them in a separate sealed ing that the identity of the PLAIN OR SELF-RISING cnvelope in another with writer will not be known WASHINGTON FLOUR the essay, mailing them to to the judges prior to the of any size, 2-Ib, 5-lb, 12- the Wilkins-Rogers Mill- selection of the prize-win- Ib. or 24-Ib. ing Co., Washington, D. C. ning essay. Graded Schools 1st Prize 2nd Prize . . 3rd Prize Children of employes of the Wilkihs- Rogers Milling Co. are not eligible. Wilkins-Rogers Milling Co. Washington, D. enough for 20 servings or 20 muffins Big news for bran users —a new big-value handy package for only five cents! Women with smaller families wanted it — it’s just right for any family where only two or three need full strength bran’s benefits. Big enough to last three people a week — enough for 20 crisp tasty servings or 20 delicious muffins—then you get a fresh sup- ply for another nickel. Two table- spoons are an average serving and if eaten daily, is all most people need to relieve constipation* due to lack of bulk in the diet because Post’s Whole Bran is full strength bran, You'll like it sprinkled over fruits or other cereals — or you’ll get the same good from a muffin a day, made from the easy package recipe. Ask for this new 5¢ handy package —AT YOUR GROCER’S. 3 Cases of recurrent constipation, due to tod little bulk in the diet, should yield to Post’s Whole Bran. If your case is abnormal, consult a competent physician at once and follow his advice ACTUAL —————————————————————————————— FREEZONE .

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