Evening Star Newspaper, December 24, 1932, Page 18

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MAGAZINE PAGE, Beauty in Window Decorations BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER, =123 HANDSOME WINDOW DECORATION FOR CHRISTMAS EVE. FOR BAFETY, ELECTRIC CANDLES ARE USED WITH WREATHS. Tomcx—n' ia the eve of lighted)dows displey creeches, representations of candles. The significant and|the Christ child an decorative custom was started in Boston. It has reached to distant sections of the land. It 4s based on the tradition that a candle dburning in the window of & home will light e footsteps of the Christ child 20 the house and he will dwell therein during the coming year. Since an un- bounded love is the great attribute wof the master of Christianity, this ning light typifies & sum- mmons to that beautiful tender spirit of mffection which centers about a home nd radiates to every one who steps vithin the portals or who comes in ';m?é.-ct with & member of the house- old. ‘The custom of putting a single ighted candle in a window is of ancient rigin, as the legend indicates. It is he idea of making the windows of an ntire house glisten and glimmer with radiant candlelight that was originated n Beacon Hill, Boston. 8o beautiful (Jas the illumination, of whole blocks of ouses become that pedestrians flock to it. Companies of carolers assemble groups and here and there on the illside start sf g, which is joined in the slow-m ‘happy throngs. It is the eve of lighted candles, a Em-m.mn eve pageant of illumination | in ‘which every one plays a part. Win- ‘madonnas painted by noted artists or coples of such pic- tures, on which the canglelight is focused. |~ Hospitality is enjoyed by friends and | acquairtances of ihose who reside on | the hill who keep open house. An ever- fluctuating company of callers bring the merry Christmas greetings to the household. Light refreshments are served, and those who leave the homes again 'go out warmed and refreshed, into the brisk air of the streets gay with the decorative glow of illuminated homes. This happy night before Christmas celebration is a joyous precursor of the greatest holiday of the world. The | decoration of homes is shared with passersby. Its beautiful significance should be understood wherever _the practice is chserved and the fashion followed. It is a period decoration which should not pass. Without its meaning being grasped it may wane. It g2ins in point and significance when the illumination is confined to Christ- mas eve. So tonight, above all others, let us put at least one lighted candle, even if it is the electric candle, in the window and join with the families in foreign lands and in our own country who celebrate the eve of lighted candles this decorative way. (Copyright, 1932.) GOOD TASTE TODAY BY EMILY POST. Famous Authority on Etiquette. | Obligations, Peq Y DEAR MRS. POST: The wife of the vice president of the compeny I work for has invited me to her home, over 200 miles away, Jor & week end. My own employer will ive me there. We will probably stop ‘dor two meals during the trip. Should I attempt to pay for my own? Also, “Pleased to meet you,” when introduced. “Dear Mrs, Post: If a young girl is seated in & room when an older person, an old acquaintance she hasn'c seen for several years, enters, is it proper for the girl to rise to shake hands?” Answer.—Most certainly!. (Copyright, 1932.) NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. pa; lovebirds belong to this group. At the crack o' dawn they wake up with the dew heavy upon them and a long c¢ay of pleasure and eating before them. ~Screaming and whistling as they fly about, the whole forest is awakened by these self-appointed alarm clocks. Then they are off to the flelds or the fruit trees. They are only birds that hold their fruit in their feet while eating., and their beaks sre 80 strong they can crack the hardest nut with them. Parrots are clever and sly. Thelr bright eyes are ever on the lookout for something to steal and some one to tease. When the grain is ripe whole familles move to the edge of the field. Here they station seasoned old thieves as sentinels. Upon the first approach of the owner or the caretaker of the fleld a note of warning will be sounded. Attention is given to this bugle call, but they go on eating until the shrill whistle to “beat it” is sounded, and the ‘whole chattering group takes off to the e of the woods. In a short time they are back again, fully aware of the fact that it is merely an interruption to the day's festivities. Berries, grains, nuts and tender plants comprise their diet, unless persistent come their way. As a married couple they are espe- clally devoted to each other and faith- fully discharge their duty toward their offspring. They mate for life, and in the tropical rainy season in the early Spring the great flocks break up, the mates house hunting. They are not particular as to residence, and an old woodpecker hole will suit them: or, lacking this, a crevice in a boulder. There are not many bables, and the | parents devote all their time to feeding | and instructing them. They are early | taught to bathe and that a sand bath is most essential to keep the plumage free from dust and parasites that lodge too close for comfort. Parrots have fleshy tongues, and they do not use them for talking. They speak through the larynx. They learn to reproduce word sounds in their right sequences, but, of course, do not know their meaning. Talking parrot fashion has been practiced by many and is not confined to these birds only. After liv- ing with man, the parrot loses all in- terest in his former feod. He will steal sweets at every opportunity and_de- mands f0od from every passerby. Wi the proper care these birds live to be well over & hundred and it is not an uncommon thing to have the bird men- tioned in a will: and in some instances the parrot has been “handed” down to several generations. To this tribe belong the macaws, co;hm wgggm& d‘md Jovebfrds. All of m ly to captivity, learn to sing, whistle and falk.” They become a part of the family and take great delight in tormenting dogs and cats who are also members of the house- hold. Many amusing stories are told about them, some true, others wicked, all finding a ready, interested audience. (Copyright. 1932.) DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX How Can Children Be Made to Leave the Too-Comfortable Home Nest? tine he pmrlz'lem is the boy. ), ‘Hates the slightest physical or mental exertion. play solitaire and read newspapers and detective smoke. I get him on his way out of the nest in & manner beneficial to him? H. B. NSWER: Get the boy & job and tell him that henceforth he is his own meal ticket, and that if he wants to eat he will have to work. ‘Then go to live for the time being in cne hotel so there will be no place for him. Evidently he is one of the warm home nest of his own accord. pushed out of it, but you will have to destroy the nest so he cannot return toit, “There is no problem that parents have to face that is more difficult than that of what to do with their lazy, purposeless children, who settle down on mother and father to be supported and who refuse to make the slightest, effort to provide for themselves. It is & problem so complicated with a false idea of parental duty and so mixed up with maudlin affection that most fathers and mothers lack the nerve and backbone to solve it in the only rational way, which is by turning the youngsters out on their own and locking the door behind them. EW parents have the hardihood to apply such s drastic remedy, al- though they know it is the only cure. They can’t bear to think that Mamie may be having to cook her a poor meal over & gas jet or Sammie ‘may have no nice comfortable bed to sleep in, so they let Mamie and Sammie sit around idle year after year with nothing to do but to play golf or pool or follow some sort of temperamental occupation which brings in no pay envelope. Al of us know dozens of cases like these. We know plenty of homes in which there are husky young men and women with pknty of intelli- gence and plenty of energy in amusing themselves, who positively refuse to leave the home nest long years after they should have been out of it and about their own business. Sometimes they stay until they are old birds themselves and father and mother have to scratch around and feed them as long as they live and die wondering what will become of poor middle-aged Sally and Jimmy. Tms tenderness on the parents’ part that encourages normally healthy and sensible youngsters in a Jmpeuul babyhood does as much harm in the world. It ruins its thousands of men and ‘women who should be braced up instead of coddled and who only need ‘some compel necessity to make them do their duty in the world. Tling is the knowledge that there is aiways home to stay in and three square meals a day that is responsible for nine-tenths of the no-account loafers that encumber the earth It is the boys and girls who know that they can always go back home and be taken care of who are the quitters and shirkers, who throw up & job the minute it gets to be hard sledding and there are disagree- able bosses to be contended with. The boys and girls who have no one but themselves to depend on, nowhere to go but the room their labor pays for, nothing to eat but What they earn. are the ones who stick to their work and put their hearts and backs in it until they win out to suc- cess. DOROTHY DIX. LI JDEAR MISS DIX—T am very much in love with a fine young fellow. My parents like him, but they do not approve of his family. His parents were divorced when he was 15 and he had to go out then and support himself. Do you really think it is fair to condemn because of his parents? V.T. Answer: Certainly not. You are not going to marry his father and mother. You are going to marry him, so it is his record that counts. not theirs. Possibly your father and mother think that he will not make a good husband because his father may have been a bad husband or his mother a bad wife, but this does not follow. I have known men who were {;:nflell prohibitionists because their fathers were drunkards. Some of t and best housekeepers I have ever seen were women who were disgusted by thelr mothers’ extravagance. DOROTHY DIX. yright, (Cop) MODE OF THE MOMENT : SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I finks I hears him down there, baby! WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. A Centerpiece. WINTER harvest that I have collected, out of botanical inter- est in its component parts, has delighted some of my friends, and as it makes an amusing centerpiece and a good pivot for open- ing conversation among acquaintances and strangers, I keep it in evidence these days, as earlier the goldfish bowl and the family used to be set out on the parlor table. There is nothing rare or difficult to | procure in my heaped-up platter. | Everything there can be coll by an | occasional purc] in the city and fre- quent country rambles. I find that most farmer folk grow a completely different garden flora from that of the suburbanite; more o, in fact, than the salaried suburbanite’s garden differs from that of the landed gentry-man who im- | ':im‘ his seeds from Sutton and Vilmo- | n. | | ‘The Virginia plowman’s wife is de- | voted not only to her pumpkin Taich | and her squash row down by th: old fence and ditch; she often grows other | very interesting members of the fourd | family. A little sympathetic conversa- | tion, an admiration of her Plymouth | Rocks and Wyandottes and her own | toddling progeny, and one can gradu- | ally procure an unusual or interesting | specimen for one’s Winter harvest col- | lection (for the gourds and their like | are seen upon the withering vine long | after frost has rimed the grass and | icket). | The old-fashioned dipper gourd. of course, is the commonest, though it is a bit unwieldy for household decoratior. | The hedgehog gourd, a sort of great, round bur, is rare in this part of the | country, and the snake gourd is a fan- tastic creation that amuses every onc. |OF year!” exclaimed Mrs. Peter. * Two specimens of the Luffa gourd that | yOu did you certainly must be crazy. I often find, are especially beautiful, be- | ing delicately striped with pale yellow ridged) upon a background of cheerful | light green. | The most variable and interesting of | all are the white-flowered or Lagenaria gourds, which may be flat as disks or | nearly ball shaped or bottle shaped or | dumb-bell, club, dipper, sugar-trough or club shaped. They come in many of green, white and buff or yel- | low. Still others look like a rajah’s tur- ban or Hercules' club. Then there are the calabash gourds—but there is no space to tell of them. A collection of gourds will last all Winter. They need only to be dusted daily and turned from ome position to confusedl: Peter, “have been swimming In the Smiling Poo,ll;“l' “But,” she added. “I can guess. were chased into the Smiling Pool had to swim to get away from some | MO R8 ane. That is what of going 'You tell Little Joe Otter to mind the way you do. It is enough to give " you your death of cold. Reddy Fox?" Fox,” replied Peter. Coyote,” declared little Mrs. Peter. you stayed at home in the dear Old Briar-patch you wouldn't have to go swimming for your life.” Pool.” replied Peter rather sullenly. “HAS THERE BEEN A SHOWER went swimming for pleasure this time | mi color-bands (though the surface isn¢ | WAS beginning to lose his temper. happen Mrs. I SHOULD like to make this Christ- | seacon. I know that people are groan- WOILIEN'S FEATURES. Peter Tries to Explain. Re AL e o sake, Peter Rabbit ive you heen?” ex- | J! claimed Mrs. Peter as Peter had led to Little Joe Otter’s sli) sneaked into the Dear Old close to the PPT.!EM Briar-patch, B e A had hoped to get in without being | P/ANCE and tumbled b he had meaked in. | {ust couldn't tell her that. tented himself with Just wlell]l !nli"I ¢| “Well all T can say is, you made & good job of it,” retorted Mrs. Peter, Just ther who should arrive in the dear Old Briar-patch but Sammy Jay. Peter saw him coming and did his best to keep out of sight. Of course, Mrs, Peter thought this was because he didn't want to be seen looking so wet. { | Sammy alighted in the top of a small tree and began to peer all about in the dear Old Briar-patch. Sammy Jay's eyes are sharp and it wasn't but a minute or two before he discovered “S0 there you are!” cried Sammy. “How is the merry slider?” “Slider?” said you mean by slides “Hasn't Peter told you that he s the champion slider of the Smiling ? y. “That is just one of Sammy Jay's foolish jokes,” said Peter hastily. “Little Joe Otter sends you an in- vitation to join his party tomorrow g,” continued Sammy. “Yes,” sald Peter, “I've been swim- “What for?” demanded lttle Mrs. T. “Well, you see—" Peter, and He just couldn’t tell how he tumbled down the slippery slide. 0, I don't see! torted Mrs. Peter. You and Off | His own business and you go on about yours,” snapped Peter, who by this time had quite loet his temper. (Copyright, 1932.) ‘Who was it, “No, my dear. I haven't seen Reddy “Then it must have been Old )llx; oy, Everyday Psychology BY DB JESSE W. SPROWLS. “Nobody chased me into the Smiling Mental Independence. When you hear a person about his mental independence, you may begin to suspect that he is not s0 independent after all. When you find him doing as he pleases, you may suspect that he is mentally ine 1d- ent. ‘Thoughts which finally eak their shackles create motion, activity, results. Talk is very generally a betrayal of wishes. And wishes are often the sym- bols of mental slavery or dependence. At least idle wishes are. When you talk for no other purpose than conver- sation, you wish aloud. These wishes are very often disguised in words that mean nothing to the listener. That's why so much talk is wasted in this world. \\X 7 To be mentally independent is to A % 1 think silently. The moment you begin N e en > | to talk casuaily you are likely to show NNN== 77 | “You don't mean to tell me that you t"/ TR ) 10 Ly a lack of mental independence. You ars not certain of yourself. You are comparing your own slavery with what you assume to be the mental freedom ASKED | of another. And a half sincere ex- change of opinion adds nothing to the | independence you weuld like to possess. ‘The human mind is, or ought to be, the most versatile thing in all the world. It will stand a lot of punishment be- “Im not crazy and I didn’t go swim- | fore it surrenders its freedom. But when ing for pleasure!” snapped Peter, who | it does. personality takes its flight. And i | then 1t is that “conscience doth make cowards of us all,” and enterprises lose the name of action. WHERE YOU WERE?” MRS. PETER. “If “Then what did 2" demanded | Peter. I UNCLE RAY’S CORNER A Little Saturday Talk. | happy. And that is why I camnot be | completely cheerful in this Yuletide mas talk & happy one from start ing under their burdens, and I_know to finish, but to do so would not that many boys and girls are suffering express some of the thoughts because of household worres. & which are in my mind. at is not as it should be. With Th: More than once I have said that We | <oi] which can yield more food than another so that spores of mold do noi live in “a magic werl”,” and it is true. hyman beings need, with great stores wedge in the points of contact and caus» | Inventors and scientists have performed | of coal for warmth, with water power decay. Do not add any fleshy or perish- wonders. The newspaper which you | to give us electricity, with looms which able fruits to the collection, as they aie are reading was printed on a press ' can turn out more clothing than is re- always heavy with water and will con- | which moves with a speed which would | quired—I can see no exeuse for suffer- vey decay to the dry fruits. | amaze any one who lived a century 2go. | ing and want such as we have beem | Forest trees are turned into great rolls | having curing the past three years. |of paper, and with the help of the In one of the old Greek legends about printing press the rolls are transformed | pandora it is said that Pandora per- into thousancs of newspapers in & mitted all things except Hope to escape single hour. from a box, and perhaps with our “Merry Christmas” this year we can | velous things which are being dome. | mix a little of the Hope which has Star | Patterns understand they have a general maid. I do nol ‘believe this serv- knt will have any oceasion to render mme personal serv- ice, so would I be LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Your Baby and Mine BY MYETLE MEYER ELDRED. Adorable Little Frock. The fluttering Gouble cap sleeves add obligated to leave her anything?” Answer. — Since he is taking you in his car he will, of course, provide a piquant touch to the dainty little frock. The contrasting collar is ac- cented by three little buttons. The tricky box pleats are useful as well as decorative, since they smartly conceal the ample fullness 50 necessary for free- I was waiting impatient for pop to cocme home so I could ask him for movie money to go to the special wild ‘west picture at the Little Grand tomor- row, wich I did while he was hanging his "overcoat on the hatrack, and he T | ¥ou could mention @ hundred others if helped men struggle. Diet in Second Year. | year of age, he has made at |y ¢ o fow. least an acquaintance with most ' you took time to think of them—the airplane, the talking moving picture, | members of the great Corner family I That is just one example of the mar- | 1 When I say “Merry Christmas” to | smile, but I mix with it the hope that |in your life you will find some way to BY the time baby has reached 1| the radio and the sutomobile, to name [do so earnestly and With a friendly of the ordinary types of food. | He is drinking one quart of milk daily. He is eating various kinds of vegetables, the variety depending somewhat on the courage of his mother. He may be, having a whole egg or at Yes, it is & magic world. uelm of dom of movement. ¥ science have used their great ‘This little frock makes up cunningly in gay checked ginghams and mothers your meals. Give the maid a tip of at least a dollar when you leave. Re- member that she will have cooked for | will be delighted with the ease and you, set a place at table for you, waited | economy with which it can be made. on you and made up your room for | It is No. 846. { help make things better for the human to learn secrets about the distant stars: ( F3Ce. | Because men and women of past radium has been discovered and used | .o o Tt 0q o build & better to treat dicease; the X-ray gives us | | world, we have many good things, but s & g S W e there is much room for improvement. said, Why dont you ask me before I get my hat and coat hung up? Being just what I was doing and proving he was in a bum humor, and I thawt, Aw heck, why didnt I wait a while? “solid walls.” you—if nothing else. ‘Dear Mrs. Post: I have been invited %0 a bridge luncheon given by five Jadies, of whom I have met but one, ,and was asked cn the invitation to direct my reply to her. Would you lease tell me wheih-r I am indebted all these ladies cr only the one hom I knew before the party?” . Answer.—You are “indebted” to only the one who evidently invited you. But should you be giving a general party, t would naturally be courteous and to invite all who were your “Dear Mrs, Post: When leaving & on (or persons) whom you have Just met that evening, is it necessary to say, ‘T am glad to have met you? Can’t one merely include, as in the instance of persons of cne’'s own age, all in a friendly ‘Good night’ or, ‘T have enjoyed the evening with all of Fou,’ or some similar informal remark?” Answer.—Yes, say whatever comes aturally to mind. ~ The only tebu of etiquette that I can think of s saying, MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Grapefruit. Oatmeal with Cream. Dropped Eges on Toast. Bacon. Toast. Orange Marmalade. Coftee. DINNER. Oyster Cocktail. Stuffed Celery. Cranberry Jelly. Roast_Turkey, Giblet Gravy. hed Potal Baked Squash. Creamed Onions. Alligator Pear Saled. Plum Pudding, Lemon Sauce. Radsins. Nuts. ‘Bonbons. Coffee. Olives. SUPPER. Lobster Newburg. ‘Toasted Crackers. Orange Sherbet. Light Fruit Cake. Tea. ALLIGATOR PEAR SALAD. Cut alligator pears in halves. Remove seeds and arrang> each half on a salad plate on a bed of lettuce garnished with pim- ento, Serve with French dress- ing. LOBSTER NEWBURG. Meat of two medium sized lob- sters, four tablespoonfuls butter, one-half teaspoonful salt, one- quarter teaspoonful pepper, grat- ing of nutmeg, yolks of four eggs, one cupful cream. Remove tke meat from the shells and cut it in delicate slices. Put butter in the blazer and when melted put the lobster into it and cook four or five minutes. Add the salt, per, nutmeg. Stir the cream the beaten yolks and then stir both into the lobster mix- ture. Serve as scon as the eggs thicken the sauce. (Copyright. 1932.) The pattern is designed in sizes 2 to 8. Size 6 requires 28 yards of 36- inch fabric. This includes bloomers. Half yard of 36 or 39 inch fabric for contrast. Simplified illustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dreszes. To get a pattern of this model send 15 cents in coins or stamps. Please writz2 your name and <coddress very plainly; also style number and size of each pattern ordered, and mail to Th> Evening Star Pattern D:partment, Washington, D. C. Several days are required to fill orders, and patterns will | be mailed as quickly as possible. THE EVENING STAR PATTERN DEPARTMENT. Inclosed is 15 cents for Pat- tern No. 946. Sizz.. Name (please print). .. Street and No.....ovevesenans | | Ony he stayed in a bum humor, and |after supper ma said to him, Do you hear that, Willjum? You can hear that bathroom tap dripping all a way from here, if I dont remember to call up the lummer tomorrow I'll go crazy with at sound. Plummer be blowed, I'm not going to pay & plummer a King’s ransom for doing a little thing I can do myself as quick as you can say Enclycopeedia Britannics, pop sald. Where's that monkey rentch, where’s that box of washers? he said, and ma sald, Now Willyum, you know you never fixed a tap in your life, you'll have the whole house a living mass of excaping steam didn’t even have taps. he - he went down the celler and got_ the monkey rentch and things and fixed the leek in about 5 minutes and came JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOS. J. FRISCH. AN IMMINENT EDUCATOR SAYS THAT THAT NEW BABY MAGAZINE | FILLSNA CRYING Y M. A—“An emnent educator.” is the correct form. Imminent and emi- nent are entirely different in meaning. The former means dangerous and close at hand; threatening to ately; menacing; ; perilous; as, “an im- storm.” . Eminent means high in station, merit, or esteem; distin- guished; as, “an eminent scholar.” occur immedi-|’ A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. Tml are anxious days for two men “on the hill” known as “the gen- alee‘::n of ut‘he thprp\%:lsn as cmgres: es the en: question of o whether the is- and quiet Pedro Guevara, senior resident commis- and the agile, voluble, sartorially elegant Camilo Osias, junior - the House of Repre- sentatives, but while the Senate had be- fore it mbmg:- dence bill they moved over e ?le:ht side of the g- itol and took their stand. Nearly any of the day the Senate was in_session Guevara could be spotted in the rear of the chamber listening eagerly. Sitting at the elbow of Senator Hawes, co-author of the bill before the Senate, was Osias taking reams of notes from the speeches being delivered, darting here and there for hasty con- ferences with Snators favoring the debate on the floor and frequently crosses swords with House members. Never does he miss an opportunity to preach that idea of independence for the Philippines, whether it be on Guevara maneuvers skillfully behind scenes. Osias carries his plea to the people out in the open. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. {at 6 pm.? |at 7. He should have his milk least an egg yolk deily. he has long | been accustcmad to cereal or banana. and probably several different kinds of orange or tomato fuice. | The only really momentous change during the second year is the addition of meat, or fish or cheese or chicken | to the noon meal, and an increase in the variety of all the other foods men- tioned. | Mrs. L. B.. whose baby is 16 months old, has a schedule that is still service- | able this second year. Chiefly it needs | variety, and a choice of other protein | foods at noon in addition to the egg. | She is worried for fear this menu| doesn't contain enough *“heavy” foods, | but what I imagine she means is food | that demands more mastication. | Here is Mrs. L. B. letter: “I have been feeding the baby so far on your | diet list called, ‘Fc-ding From 2 to 12 Months,’ and now I feel that my 16- month-old son, weighing 26 pounds, should have heavier foods. I hesitale to make any changes without asking you for fear I may make a mistake. He now has cereal. milk and toast for | breakfast; juice of an orange at 9| o'clock; super D cod liver oil at 11:30; beef broth with vegetables, another vegetable, one egg. cornstarch or rice pudding, ‘and milk for lunch: cookies and milk in the afternoon, and cereal, cooked fruit and milk for supper. He eats at 7 and we eat at 6 and he is often_very mean at this hour unless I feed him; then he is all right. Would | it be all right to give him his supper | He has 12 teeth and is| cutting more. He can feed himseif | quits well if I am there to watch him. He walked at 10 months and seems very | strolng. I shall watch daily for your| reply.” you soup, but do need green vegetables, of | which baby may have a variety to dis- p&‘; the monotony of spinach and car rots. It is all right to feed him at 6 pm. when you eat, and then put hlm.ui = My Neighbor Says: ‘When lates or dishes are ‘burned wfile baking they can be easily cleaned by rubbing them with a cloth dipped in salt. A little ammonis in the bath the skin healthy, firm looking. y be prepared. left-over coffee in & glass jar. It will be useful for coffee jelly, cof- fee or for mocha frosting. (Copyright, 1932.) in sclence and invention but has lagged | fellow.” cooked fruits in addition to his familiar | behind in the art of making people ! s Boys and girls of today can do wonders The world has moved forward sWittly | if tney will always remember “the other UNCLE RAY. (Copyright. 1932.) Use This Coupon te Join Our New 1933 Scrapbook Club! UNCLE RAY, Care of The Evening Star, ‘Washington, D. C. Dear Uncle Ray: I want to join the new 1933 Uncle Ray Scrapbook Club, and I inclose & stamped envelope carefully addressed to myself. Please send me a Membership Certificate, a leaflet telling how to make & Corner scrapbook of my own, and & printed design to paste on the cover of my scrapbook. Street of R. F. Duoovvcnnnenerirnnerniineiniieiissssssssssssssssssssses City. . State or Province.. . SCREEN ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWCETT. CONSYANCE OWNS 75 PAIRS OF DAJAMAS.

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