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WOMEN 'S FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1935. WOMEN'’S FEATURES, cC-Ss’ —_——— . Hot, Substantial Main Course Necessary on These Frosty Evenings ° < Proper Diet The First Essential More Important Than Stylish Clothes and Trivial Pleasures. BY ANGELO PATRL "MRS. GRAY, do you know that Billy has lost weight this term?” “No, 1 hadn't noticed. I don't weigh Billy. After all, he is 11, and ought to be pretty well able to care for himself. I weighed him when he was & baby, of course. I weigh the younger ones. You think he is sick? He doesn't show it.” “No, he isn't sick, but instead of | gaining, as he ought, he is losing That is serious. We have to check the loss of weight and see if we can't | get a gain instead. Is he eating all | right?” | “He mever was much of an eater, but he does as well as usual. He eats his cereal and prunes, has a good lunch, for him. He eats fairly well.” “Does he get a quart of milk a ddy?" “Oh, my no He doesn't care for milk. The younger children get milk, but not Billy.” “Billy ought to have a quart of milk every day. He needs it. It is plain that he is not getting enough nourish- ment and milk is the best food we can give him to supply what he needs.” Charming Housedress Comfortable and W Smartness of “Well, I don't know. He eats. Hi doesn’t care for milk. And you know milk costs a lot if you begin buying a quart a day for each child. I have four children.” IL'; ut their milk comes first, doesn't “How can we manage when children ‘want so much nowadays? Billy and Sam have to have money for the movies, for clubs, for candy, for church, for school supplies, for this and for that. We can't do eve thing.” “Then cut down on everything else | and buy that milk. Movies and the | rest can wait, but the children's growth | can't wait. Billy has to have that| milk. His teeth, his bones—every inch of him is crying out for milk. If he doesn’t get it he is going to be worse off for it.” “Poor people can't do everything.” Now how poor is poor? If a family ean pay for the list of things this mother said she had to pay for, is| that family too poor to buy milk for its children? What kind of thinking makes | milk a luxury and movies and clubs and whatnot essential? Milk is a necessary food for growing children. It must be supplied them—if not n| the home, then in the schools. But milk they must have. It is wrong, a Wrong committed against childhood, to scrimp and save to buy pleasures, smart clothes and the things the neighbors see. To those who have eyes the child whose skin glows with health is more beautiful than any stylish garment. The child who feels its power within him goes clothed in radiance that in time to come means power. Never mind about the latest style. Forget the show. Get the essentials first, the pleasures will come after- ward. Milk is essential to the growth, BY BARBARA BELL. HERE are several important items to be considered when choosing a new housedress. It must be comfortable, well fitted, else, when you are wielding the vacuum or the dust mop dreadful thingz will happen, seams will pull apart, waistlines become entirely dis- located, the whole garment contriving to work you into a frenzy, and ftself into anything but a self-respecting work dress. Then it must be smart, neat, individual. The color should be becoming, the lines flattering, the whole effect simple, but in no way suggesting the utilitarian purpose for which it was designed. At least that is the way most women feel about housedresses! Today’s design looks like one of those nice little frocks women wear | all day during the Summer time. Just simple, and casual, and not too closely fitted. There is & round collar that | ties at the low V neckline. The skirt has a yoke and panels in front and back. | Easy to make, nice to look at, |and to wear in the busy round of household duties. As for color, wear something gay and bright. Do you remember the awful drab wrapper-like garments some women thought it necessary to | wear for housework way back at the ‘loz of unnecessary trouble, Fesiriine Yol Ssn by ST e The man who is domiciled in a vil- | 8s dead as dust caps, thank goodness. lage boarding house has no use for Now the busy housewife wears pretty @ local newspaper. | things, soft colors that are exactly e 3 | what she wears on the street, and ‘Tramps have one redeeming quality; ' dresses that are quite as good looking you never hear of their getting miXed ' g5 her best go-to-meeting dress. up in labor Tiots. | Sometimes she selects a color that she A man sometimes feels the loss of KNOws is quite impractical for street first wif t afte uis g | Or day dresses, just because she wants :‘:ona.s oDt aees SN something that color. Perhaps she has a secret passion for purple, but Some people are away, up in the wouldn’t risk it in a more important Bocial scale because they are too light | frock. So she has this dress in purple to bring it down. Houseuouw Aars the efficiency, the behavior of chil-| dren. (Copyright, 1935.) o Pointed Paragraphs The courting of an heiress is a| business suit, but the courting of a flirt is a masquerade suit. It is said that seasickness is a sure temedy for pomposity. An expert penman sometimes forges ahead until he gets caught. 1t is impossible to convince a spider that there is honey im a rose. Don't try to climb the ladder of | fame on roller skates. Other people’s mistakes cause us & ‘We all have our eye out this season for “small gifts” with which to re- . Member our friends. This one pattern contains lots of ideas for quickly-made and inexpensive presents, sure to delight their recipients. Buffet sets, scarf #nds, doilies, handkerchief cases, chair sets, neckwear—all may be made from the Irish crochet medallion or the cobwebby crochet pattern. Easy make the knitting bag, trimmed with puff stitch and gay bands of contrasting golor. In pattern 5486 you will find complete instructions for making the lrtlur shown; {llustrations of all stitches needed; suggestions for a variety of To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in stamps or coin to the Woman's [Editor of The Evening Star, Please print name and address. , y ell Fitting—Retains Cut and Line. | BARBARA BELL, | WASHINGTON STAR. Inclose 25 cents in coins for Pattern No. 1689-B. Size_. Name Address ... (Wrap coins securely in paper.) Maybe she thinks coral too gay for a lady of her mature years! But she | can wear it in the house, and does. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1689-B is | designed in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, | 46, 48, 50, 52 and 54. Size 36 requires | 37 yards of 36-inch material. Every Barbara Bell Pattern includes {an illustrated instruction guide which | is easy to understand. | The Barbara Bell pattern book, fea- turing Fall designs, is ready. Send 15 cents today for your copy. (Copyright. - Informal At Home Permissible BY EMILY POST. JDEAR MRS POST: My husband and I seem to be growing away from many of our friends because we have so little time to give to them. Is there some way in which we could be at home regularly, let's say on a| certain Sunday each month, and send one invitation to cover the whole season? Could you approve of such irregularity? Answer—Wholeheartedly. I think it a perfect idea. Write on your visit- ing cards something like this: “We will be at home on the first Sunday in every month between 4 and 6 o'clock, and hope you will come in often.” It would be simpler, of course, to write “first Sunday every month, 4 to 6 o'clock,” but this wording is less personal and friendly. * x K % Dear Mrs. Post: I'd lke to give a large but informal tea at our club for my daughter-in-law-to-be, who is practically a stranger here. My one drawback to giving this party is the scarcity of money. With this in mind, will you suggest the invitations and tell me whether I should ask friends to pour or use the club service? Answer—The best invitation, with or without consideration of money, is the one written on your visiting cards, this way: To Meet Miss Anne Kent (Your Engraved Name) Saturday, November 4, 4 to 6 o'clock Evergreen Club ‘Whether you ask friends to sit at the tea table and pour, or whether you use the club service, is a question of your own preference. The former is friendly and homelike, and the lat- ter is impersonal, as one naturally expects hotel service to be. * ¥ * x Dear Mrs. Post: My wife will shortly give a dinner in honor of her parents’ sixtieth wedding anniversary, and there comes the question of s guests. There will be many relatives and some half-grown children. Con- sidering these factors, will you tell us whether we must follow conven- tional exactions of seating the table, or what would you suggest? Answer—On such an occasion as this, the bridal pair should be seated side by side, and you next to the bride, and your wife next to her father. And then other people on around the table in whatever order Luscio us Sandwiches And Casserole Dishes Highly Recommended Maximum Satisfaction and Minimum Time Goal of Business Girl Housekeeper. BY BETSY CASWELL. ERE are some nice, quick, nourishing dinner dishes for these snappy evenings, when I I we come home pink of cheek and bright of eye from the cold winds, to the*warm haven of the little apart- ment. Good hot food, carefully bal- anced, is essential to counteract the effects of thes frosty outdoors, and we do not want to have to ner store, on the way home, from| box and the ice Dete7 Cswell box come the ingredients for delicious main courses that may be concocted with little loss of time. For example, try this one: HOT MEAT SANDWICH, MUSHROOM GRAVY, 2 tablespoons butter. 3 tablespoons flour. 1 ean cream of mushroom soup. ‘Thin slices of chicken or ham. 1 hard-boiled egg. Melt the butter and add the flour Cook until mixture bubbles, blending | carefully. Add the soup, and cook until mixture thickens. Toast slices of bread on one side and place heated meat between untoasted sides. Place | sandwich on plate and cover with the mushroom gravy. Sprinkle with riced hard-boiled egg and minced parsley. * %k * % ANOTHER good Kkitchenette dish, which we frequently have at home for Sunday night supper in the kitchen, is scrambled eggs with chili sauce. For two persons the fol- lowing recipe will prove sufficient’ SCRAMBLED EGGS, CHILL 4 eggs. 13 cup milk. 1 tablespoon chili sauce. Salt, pepper and onion juice to| milk, chill and seasonings, and beat for some minutes longer, until all is frothing. Place one-eighth of a pound of butter in top of a double boiler, which has had the water boil- ing under it for some time, so that it is good and hot. Turn in the beaten egg mixture as soon as the butter begins to melt,sand let cook undisturbed until it begins to thick- en slightly. Then keep “combing” it with a fork until it is done, and the entire mass light, dry and fluffy. Have ready pieces of buttered toast, turn the eggs onto these, top with a dash of paprika and serve. Eggs done in this manner are absolutely greaseless, and perfectly delicious. With a mixed green salad, cheese, French bread, and a fresh fruit com- pote, they make a light and satisfy- ing evening meal. HAM AND MACARONI CASSEROLE. 1 can cooked macaroni in cream sauce with cheese. 1 cup ground cooked ham. 1; cup cereal flakes, 1 tablespoon butter, melted. In a buttered casserole place a layer of the macaroni. Top with a layer of ham, and repeat, alternating until all ham and macarcoi are vsed. Mix the cereal flakes with the melted butter, and sprinkle over the top. Bake for 20 minutes in a moderate oven, and serve hot, with grilled tomatoes, Mg e WONDERFUL cold weather sand- wich hails right from Boston, and is guaranteed to win approval from masculne guests particularly. Here is the recipe: BAKED BEAN SANDWICHES. 1 can baked beans. 1 onion, scraped. 1 green pepper, chopped. 3 tablespoons tomato ketchup. Lettuce. ‘Whole wheat bread. Mash the beans well, add the onion, the green pepper, and the ketchup. Place a layer of this fllling, and a leaf of lettuce between buttered slices of whole wheat bread. - If you wish advice on your individ- ual household problems, write to Betsy Shopping in Washington I Bright Metal Blouses Radiate Glitter ana Gavety. Modulated Voice Worth Cultivating ‘Beautiful Speech Is Potent Factor of Charm. BY ELSIE PIERCE. Y often, in stressing the care of the skin, hands, hair and figure, we are apt to overlook other qualities of charm not quite so tangi- ble, perhaps, but extremely important. : Y Upper left: Steel metallic with pointed high collar and slashed back. Right: White and silver matelasse with graceful lines of drapery. Lower left: Gold metal jacket blouse in tailored style. BY MARGARET WARNER. BRIGHT metal blouse above I —=8ketched in Washington Shops. EQUALLY interesting to the college girl are the tables of cozy, warm | sweaters in bright colors and the fas- | One's voice and speech, for instance. | Men and women in business know | how often they are won over by tln unseen person. The charm of the | voice at the other end of a tele- | phone wire makes one feel “there’s | & personality, some one I should like to meet soon.” | Remember that there are occasions | when others get a first impression of you even before they meet you. | Remember, too, that, even when you are meeting people for the first time, though your appearance be beyond criticism (that's where the perfect pic- ture does register, we admit) never- theless a beautiful vorce will give even more fullness and beauty to the | picture. At some time or other you have doubtless met a woman whom you considered truly lovely at first glance. But just as soon as she started to speak your impression became an une | favorable one. That is unfortunate, | particularly so because a beautiful | speaking voice is something we can all acquire. Friends and family won't tell you. You have to be your own critic. Listen to your own voice. Read eloud | (when you are alone). That is on of the finest vocal exercis P nounce the vowels slowly—a, u, y. Listen to your inflection at end of a question. Is your voice gute teral, nasal, flat, hoarse, high, whining, thin, hollow, strident, monotonous of | unmodulated. Occasionally your fam« ;uy may offer to help you. Take advantage of every such opportunity. A sing-songy voice may be becoming to an infant, but it is far from charm- ing in a grown-up. A loud, bellowy, harsh, shrill or scratchy voice is no pleasure to the ear. Have you ever tried to control and pitch your voice? It is as unpleasant to listen to some one who mumbles to himself or herself as it 1s to listen to the too loud voice. ! The happy, modulated medium is | worth working for. Apart ‘from the voice itself, speech taste. | Caswell, in care of The Star, inclosing Break the eggs into a bowl, and|stamped, self-addressed envelope for beat until light and foamy. Add | reply. Dorothy Dix Says (We Need a Character Inspection Just as Often as We Need a Physical One. HOSE of us who take intelligent care of our health go to our physicians at least once a year are a worse handicap than any physi- cal defect, = ting | again, Note whether your favorite you think will be most agreeable to |them, A wedding anniversary dinner is the only occasion when seating husband next to wife and host at the same end of the table as the hostess 1 proper, 4 and have them thump and prod us, and take our blood pressures, and listen to our hearts and lungs and see if our various and sundry organs are behaving themselves. If any of these are cutting up, we are dosed, or dieted, or rested until the trouble is corrected, if it is possible to do so. ‘When I return from one of these physical inspection tours, I always think of what a pity it is that we don't.; | every now and then, give our char- acters and our habits as well as our bodies a thorough going over to see| if we are up to par, or whether we have acquired high-pressured tempers | and chronic {irritability and grouchy | manners that creep upon us just as| insidiously as any disease and are far more deadly. So often we could cure ourselves of what ails us and makes us disagreeable to live with if we only diagnosed our symptoms and took the proper treat- ment. But we don't even know we have the faults we have, hence we never try to correct them. We just let them run on and the first thing we know we are socially dead. Nobody wants us around any more than they do a corpse. e orw SPECIALLY is it important that all middle-aged and elderly people should watch their step because we slump morally and méntally just as we do physically as we grow older, and our prejudices and our opinions harden even as do our arteries. So, if you are past 50, one of the chief things to check up on is your point of view on life. X See if you are beginning to look at everything through dark glasses and to believe that the world is going to the dogs. Get a line on your opinion of the youth of today. Are you down on everything that is modern and, worst symptom of all, do you dwell re- gretfully on the good old times? If you do, snap out of it. Quick. It is a sure sign you are getting to be a back number. Your ideas have be- gun to stiffen and you will be tiresome and senile in a few years if you don't limber them up and keep your mind supple. Check up on your personal appear- once. Spend an hour studying your- self in the mirror and see whether you have begun to get a hump on your back and a bay-window on your front and your hair grows straggly and you favor your feet by wearing sloppy shoes. We can’'t all be the Clark Gables and Jean Harlows, but we can make ourselves easy on the eyes of our fellow creatures. And most of us would do something about it if we only got a line on our looks. * % % % CBIOK up on your conversation. Keep tab on yourself to see if you are getting to be a repeater who tells the same stories over and over topic is yourself, your business, your children, your car, and whether you ever give the other fellow a chance to talk about himself and his family. Note whether you talk too much and whether people welcome you with & glad smile or a hunted look comes into their eyes as you approach. Check up on your manners. Are you courteous and considerate to all you meet or gruff and surly? Do you eat like & pig or a gentleman or lady? Do grab the best of everything for yuoiself? Do you trample down those who stand in your way? . If you have bad manners, perform some sort of & surgioal opersiion on them. TheY ' Check up on the way you treat your husbands and wives. Take the tem- perature of your affections for your mates and see if it hasn't got so low that you can scarcely detect that it is still alive. See if fault-finding and | picking on each other hasn't become such a chronic habit that you don't even know when you do it. Have you degenerated into becoming a perpetual | the table will radiate gayety | all around and make the wearer feel at ease in the thought that she is smartly dressed | for the occasion. It is such an easy | | quick way to have a new outfib—thls} | adding another blouse or even a| | blouse and skirt if you do not have & \ | black cloth or velvet skirt. And it is quite advisable to have such a skirt, | for with a couple of dressy blouses| you will appear to have two frocks at | a very reasonable price. ‘The demand for metal overblouses, shirts and tunics continues at a lively rate in all the shops. The metal shirt dresses up the formal Winter suit for important afternoon events in town. ‘The cocktail blotise may be an over- blouse of hip length or a long tunmic. For afternoon it will have sleeves and a whole back. For evening the sleeve- less surplice-back blouse that is worn with either a velvet skirt or a sheath evening dress is a leading type. There is nothing arbitrary about when each nagger? Are you a little ray of sun- shine in your home or a wet blanket? * % % x JF YOU are a woman, have you slumped in your housekeeping? Have you lost all pride in making a home and let things go just any way? Do you set your family down to any kind of a sloppy meal, served on an | untidy table, and think anything is good enough for a mere husband and children? Are you too busy with your bridge or reforming the heathens to do your own job? Believe me, our mental health needs looking after as well as our physical, and we could save ourselves from worse tragedies than death if we only checked up on our manners and our morals and took some reliable remedy for our faults, DOROTHY DIX, Cook’s Corner BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE. MEALS FOR SUNDAY. BREAKFAST. Chilled Fruit Juices. Egg Omelet. Wafles. Coffee. DINNER. Roast Beef. Yorkshire Pudding. Brown Gravy. Baked Sweet Potatoes and Apples. Btttered Green Beans. Bread. Currant Jelly, Celery. Pineapple Pie. SUPPER. Beef Sandwiches. Dill Pickles. Sugar Cookies. Grapes, ROAST BEEF. 5-pound sirloin tip roast. 1 teaspoon salt. Ya teaspoon paprika. 3% cup boiling water, Fit roast into roaster and bake 20 minutes in hot oven, uncovered. Add salt and paprika, add % water and cover. Lower fire and bake 2 hours, adding remainder of water every 20 minutes during baking. YORKSHIRE PUDDING. 1 cup flour. Vs teaspoon salt, 2 eges. 1 cup milk. Pour some drippings from roasting meat into shallow pan. Mix all in- gredients and beat one minute. Pour. into pan in which drippings have been placed. Bake 20 minutes in moderate oven, Coffee. BAKED SWEET POTATOES AND APPLES. 2 cups sliced sweet potatoes. 1 teaspoon Y4 teaspoon cloves. 2 tablespoons butter. 1 tflabm lemon metal blouse can properly be worn, but a few suggestions may be of some help. The two-way blouse, a model | that can be surplice-back or surplice- front, according to whether it is worn frontward or backward, is a very clever invention. It is nicely exem-| plified in one shop by-a blouse of black and silver sheer striped material with little black stars on the silver stripes. One side has a small cowl neck and the other side crosses over midway down. It is an attractive little thing at $10.95 and very dressy with its abbreviated sleeves. At the top of the sketch is one of‘ the most popular blouses, called | “The Crusader” on account of its| collar with three points. The shir- ring at the front of the neckline and just below the belt are good details | and its slashed back is most interest- | ing. It is particularly pleasing in steel metallic and also comes in gold | at $8.95. i The blouse at the right is full of grace and charm in silver and white lame. It is a new arrival among the dressy blouses and is notable for its draped shoulder yoke and shirred fullness under the arm. The price of this blouse also makes it attractive, for it is only $5.95. * kK % THE lower blouse in the sketch is a tailored jacket model, which may be used over & low-cut formal dress, or with @& separate skirt as part of a dinner outfit. It has s slot seam down the center back and is cut to mold the figure when buttoned. This model is $8.95. For an in-between blouse for after- noon wear a sheer white lame is ex- cellent. It has long sleeves, a shirt- band neck and little bow, shoulder yoke and a-long row of little antique gold-colored filagree buttons march- ing down the front. White crepe threaded in silver is good in & tailored, cinating knitted dresses in one and is a potent factor of charm. Don't two pieces. Among the latter we found | slur over words. Don't say “gimme"” a very beautiful one in blue violet, | for give me; don't chop the “g's” oft with a lacey, vertically striped over- Words ending in Don't use blouse with ruffle neck and a dash- ' slang unnecessarily; 1"t becoming ing bow of fuchsia velvet. Another of to a lovely lady. Learn to express the better knit frocks with a velvety Yyourself forcefully without “guy. gink, texture is in & warm, glowing cop- 80sh, golly.” Proper pronunciation is pery color with two square wooden Very important. Words mispronounced buttons at the neck and a wooden are very disillusioning to knowing belt fastening both covered with brass ' €ars. hobnails. Just as we consider the eyes, nose A casual sport sweater of golden-col- and mouth as features of beauty, so ored wool has a new deep, square yoke, | 16t us consider the many, many fea which is so manipulated at the neck | tures of charm. And remember that that it forms the center of a flat bow. | Charm 1s a much more potent quality This sounds a bit confusing and is | in achleving a favorable response from lond-sleeved model with crystal but- tons. Tree-bark satin is fine for a dressy suit blouse, and it comes in a gorgeous flame color, creamy beige, gold and two greens. This heavy, crepy satin is exceptionally designed with bands of stitched shirring set in diagonally from shoulder to under-arm with gathered fullness on the sides nearest the front of the blouse, A boat neck, long sleeves and a fitted section through the waist that eliminates the need of a belt are the other features. Any of these blouses would be suit- able for the college girl to take back with her after the holidays to fill in a scanty place in her wardrobe. NASAL CATARRH Just a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol clears clogging mu- cus, reduces swollen membranes, brings comforting relief. 30¢ and 50¢ VIcKS VATRO-NOL A really quite tricky, bat simple enough when you see it. This comes in & number of colors at $5.95. | There are endless variations of the | twin sweater, which will be in great demand during the cold months ahead of us. In finest cashmere, they are very warm and are shown in the love- liest shades of French blue, beige, coral and green, so that you can make up your own set if you wish. | For information concerning items mentioned in this column, call Na- tional 5000, extension 342, between 10 and 12 am. e Source of Quakes. The sudden displacement of the | earth’s crust, resulting in an earth- | quake, usually occurs at some depth | below, perhaps one or more miles., This displacement generates a series of waves which spread outward with | great velocity in all directions. As the | waves pass any particle of rock, they cause that particle to move rapidly to and fro, and it is mainly this vibratory movement which produces the sensa- | tion of an earthquake. others than mere facial beauty. “She speaks beautifully” is a compliment worth striving for. Every woman can “speak beautifully” if she tries & bite (Copyright 1935.) My Neighbor Says: Blue lace flowers and pink roses combined with maiden-hair ferns make a very lovely floral combi- nation. A teaspoonful of vanilla and a teaspoonful of almond added to cake mixture will give cake a pis- tachio flavor. Never put silver-backed hair brushes into water._ Rub bristles well in flour until they are clean, then remove flour with clean, soft paper. No warm air, heat or warm water should be permitted near frostbites until natural tempera- ture is restored. Rub affected parts gently with snow in a cold room or apply ice water to bites. Copyright, 1935. I have made many different tests of rouge, but I have never seen a test so simple and reveal- ing as the ‘‘cheek bloom test.” I urge you to make it with Princess Pat fouge. PATRICIA GORDON (Princess Pat) WHAT DO MEN SAY ABOUT YOUR COMPLEXION? Amazing rouge test reveals secret of admiring praise Men just don’t tell you when you look “over-painted”’— it's a subject as taboo as halitosis. But they see. . . and think! It’s so foolish to risk the harsh,- painty effect of old-fashioned one-tone rouges . . . when the modern duo-tone rouge — Princess Pat — gives you the captivating allure of trua natural beauty! Would you know the secret of com- plexion-sureness? . . . of loveliness that commands admiring eyes and wins you thrilling compliments? Then try this simple “cheek bloom test.” With make-up removed; apply Princess Pat rouge to one cheek . . . then gently pinch the other cheek to bring out the natural bl . See be- fore your own mirror that thisamazing PRINCESS PAT ™ ROUGE rouge is indeed like a caress-inspired blush from within! Princess Pat rouge, made on the secret duo-tone principle, is really two tones in one—an exclusive Princess Pat discovery . . . a subtle undertone that changes color on your face to match your individual com- plexion type . . . and a glowing over- tone that gives radiance and freshness to your skin. Get your Princess Pat rouge today at leading drug and department stores, and aceept no substitute. FREE PRINCESS PAT LIPSTICK * Bend the printed paper circle from & standard size box of Princess Pat rouge and you will receive absolutely free a Princess Pat inner-tint lipstick (not a sample) to harmonize with your Princess Pat rouge. Act quickly before offer is withdrawn. Mail to Princess Pat, Chicago. Tune in Princess Pat Play of the Week Mondays — WMAL — 9:30 P. M. ]