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Filet Crochet Set for the Forgotten' Chair X. / Pattern 1224 Filet crochet in a fresh, new design, is an easy way to bring new life and loveliness to the "for gotten" chair. Scarf ends can also be made this easy way. Use . string. Pattern 1224 contains directions and charts for making the set shown; illustrations of stitches ; materials needed. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Department, 82 Eighth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Week's Supply of Postum Free Read the offer made by the Postum Company in another part of this pa per. They will send a full week's sup ply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for it.—Adv. Wet Spot Mount Waialeale on the Island of Kauai, most northerly of the main Hawaiian group and one of the wettest spots on earth, lived up to its reputation during the ;t past year with 499.36 inches of recorded rainfall in 363 day's. Gas, Gas All iheTime,Can*t Eat or Sleep p "The gas on my stomach was so bad I could not eat or sleep. Even my heart seemed to hurt. A friend sug N ested Adlerika. The first dose I took rouflht me relief. Now I eat as I wish, sleep fine and never felt better." —Mrs, Jas. Filler. Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowels while ordinary laxatives act on the lower bowel only. Adlerika gives your system a thorough cleans ing, bringing out old, poisonous matter that you would not believe was in your system and that has been causing gas R ains, sour stomach, nervousness and eadaches for months. Or. H. £. Shoub, New York, reportât "In addition to inteilinal clcanting, Adlerika greatly reducer bacteria and colon bacitll." Give your bowels a REAL cleansing 'with Adlerika and see how good you .feel. Just one spoonful relieves GAS and constipation. Leading Druggists, ■ Greatest Pleasure No pleasure is comparable to standing upon the vantage-ground of truth.—Lord Francis Bacon. iTP GS ' "BLACK LEAF 40| Keeps Dogs Away from ■ Evergreens, Shrubs etc. a£ 1986 Use VA Teaspoonful B Ka per Gallon of Spray. te Get your I Dealer J ,Mr. He Won't Be BALD! He uses Glover's Mange M edicin e followed by Glover's Medicated Soap for the âSSmÊM shampoo. If YOU arc afflict ed with Baldness, Dandruff i cr Excessive Falling Hair, Æ& stop worrying about it. Statt r, usingGlover'stodayandkeep at it. Sold at all Druggists. Or have your Barber give you Glover's treatmentregularly. GLOVERS MANGE MEDICINE Classified Department , 'îS POULTRY SHIP ÏOÜR POULTRY AND EGGS to NYSTRAND POULTRY CO., Butte, Mont., for top prices and prompt returns. TRADE SCHOOL BE YOUR OWN BOSS. Employment the year round. Earn part of living while learning to barber cor rectly at low Special rates. Free Catalog. HOLERS, 405 W. Trent, Spokane, Wash FARM LANDS Beal productive farms, growing wheat, com, grass, vegetables. Corn and Tomato Canner ies. Milk plant. Write quickly, money mak J. Brumfield, Realtor, Rising Sun, Hd. ers. WNU— X 40—36 M EATING HEAVY FOODS brings on highly —"morning alter" distress. Milnesia, original milk of magnesia in wafer form, quickly relieves distress. Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls milk of magnesia. Crunchy, delicious flavor. 20c, 35c & 60c at druggists. 3 acid stomach condition - mmimr • by Thornton W Burgess do's & TJ JERRY'S SUSPICION DIES HARD O NCE faith and trust ha$e been driven out by suspicion it is twice as hard to restore them as it was to establish them in the first place. That is why any one who plants in the mind of another suspicion of some one else does the very worst kind of an injury if it happens that there are no grounds for a suspicion. Just take the case of Jerry Musk rat and Farmer Brown's Boy. Through kind and thoughtful deeds for a long time Farmer Brown's J.V. F ♦ / / l fy 'i ' > t f lb ' * K Jpf'j vm, He No Longer Swam About Freely When Farmer Brown's Bay Was There as He Used To. Boy had established faith and trust in the minds of Jerry Muskrat and all the other little people of the Green Forest, the Green Meadows, and all the Smiling Pool. They had learned to regard him as a true friend. Then along had come a stranger who also pretended to be a friend. Day after day he brought dainties for Jerry Muskrat until Jerry regarded him just as he did Farmer Brown's Boy and wasn't the least bit suspicious. Then the stranger had set traps HoiÜ Book I UNUSUAL DISHES T HE following dishes are quite unusual and will be found both good to eat and nourishing: Bran Ginger Cake. Cream one-fourth of a cupful of Shortening with one-half cupful of sugar,. ad4- one bgaten egg: beat well, then add one cupful of bran. Mix and sift together one and one half cupfuls bf flour, one-half tea spoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of ginger, two teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, and add alternately to the first mixture with one cupful each of sour milk and molasses. Pour into a well-greased pan and bake in a moderate oven 40 minutes. Fish Souffle. To two cupfuls of flaked salmon or tuna fish add one-fourth tea spoonful of salt and the same of paprika, one-fourth cupfu' of lemon juice and mix well. Pour one cup ful of scalded milk over one cup ful of fresh bread crumbs, add the well-beaten yolks of six eggs and the fish. Fold in the stiffly-beaten egg whites and pour into a well buttered baking dish, set in a pan Of water and baké until well set. Serves eight. Chicken and Rice Souffle. Take one and one-half cupfuls of diced chicken, one cupful of cooked rice, season well with salt and moisten with chicken gravy, add ing two well-beaten egg yolks and carefully fold in the stiffly-beaten whites. Bake in a well-buttered pan until a golden brown. Rice and Cheese Roll. Mix two cupfuls of cooked rice, one cupful of grated cheese, one beaten egg, one teaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne, one tablespoon ful of milk, one-fourth of a cupful each of bread crumbs and chopped nuts. Add more milk if needed and Roll in shape into croquettes, crumbs and bake in the oven until brown. Serve with tomato sauce. Griddle cakes will be much more wholesome if a handful of bran is added to the batter, giving the roughage needed in the food. © Western Newspaper Union. o Eve's EplGi-Ans Hoblry knoeûô Bb LoïIG 05 the. little Oocpoh ^ still tfilkinG- K — she doesn't Y coeBn V». ony ihincx, bot > he doesn't know whet she means when she's still. r I o Don't Always Stick "June was lucky in catching such rich husband." "Yes, but her luck has deserted her."—Pearson's Weekly. and Jerry had been caught by the tail in one of them. It was just good fortune that he had been able to get away, but all Jerry's faith and trust in two-legged creatures called men had been destroyed. He was suspicious of every one of them, including Farmer Brown's Boy. To be sure the latter had taken away the stranger's traps and had left a notice warning the strang er to stop trapping along the Laugh ing Brook and around the Smiling Pool. But Jerry couldn't read that notice. All he knew was that the stranger had been good to him just as Farmer Brown's Boy had and then had set a trap for him. How could he be sure that Farmer Brown's Boy wouldn't do the same thing? So, though Farmer Brown's Boy came to the Smiling Pool every day and did everything he could think of to show Jerry that he was a true friend, Jerry continued to be suspicious. He no longer swam about freely when Farmer Brown's Boy was there, as he used to do. Instead, he remained hidden until Farmer Brown's Boy went away. Always the latter left good things for Jerry to eat, things Jerry was fond of—pieces of sweet apple, car rot, parsnip, and pumpkin. But for a long time Jerry would not touch them. When at last he did venture to eat them it was only after a very careful search for hidden traps. The queer thing is that all the time Jerry wanted to trust Farmer Brown's Boy just as he had in the past. But the memory of his sore tail and his dreadful fright kept suspicion alive. It simply wouldn't die. Farmer Brown's Boy knew it was so and understood why. It made him sad, and also it filled him with anger towards the trap per who had destroyed the old faith and trust. © T. W. Burgess.—WNU Service. "H ROUGH WOMAN'S a By JEAN NEWTON DOES A WIFE'S ADMIRATION HURT HER HUSBAND? EAR JEAN NEWTON: "A well-known psychologist, in a book on women and their part in marriage, makes the statement that 'admiring wives drive their husbands to the madhouse.' "We are told that a wife who shows admiration for everything her husband does, who evidences unshakable belief in his superiority, is one of the most harmful types any poor man can fall victim to. For such a woman 'burdens him with over-expectations of success. Admired in fiction, such a wife in real life has driven thousands of men to insane asylums and wrecked whatever of usefulness was latent in them.' D a "Now with all due respect for the psychologist, I suspect that she is talking from theory rather than from observation of real husbands and wives. For to one who does ob serve them it seems obvious that those wives who have cultivated the faculty of admiring their hus bands have done this to fill a very definite need. The men want it. I personally could never rise to such a duty, as anything like that goes against me. But it has seemed to me that the couples who get along with the least friction are those where the wife, sincerely or not, is able to supply the admiration so necessary to the masculine ego. I have never seen any man regard this so seriously as to go crazy from the responsibility. What do you think about it, Jean Newton?" I am inclined to agree with our reader. Men do want their wives to admire them, and unless this is accompanied by nagging, I should doubt that the. fears of the psychol ogist our reader has quoted are justified. ,My own instincts, too, are against anything synthetic between hus bands and wives or in any human relationship. However, it seems to me the decisive factor in these things is the motive. There is noth ing deceitful in making happy those we love. Many a man to whose ef forts the world has remained cold has been sustained by the faith and confidence of his family. To such a man his home was indeed his cas tle, a place of peace and refuge from the struggle and storm with out. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. O Fowl Ride Car Truck When a mixed passenger and freight train stopped at Wolmarans stad, South Africa, a rooster and hen hopped off the truck of a freight car and "stretched their legs" in the true tramp style. They had fidden many miles from Maquassi, where the train stays Over night. The pair had climbed on the truck to sleep and did not wake in time to get off when the train started next morning. They are owned by a railway lamp lighter and enjoyed a return trip with the brakemari. THIS WEEK Airplanes at $750 Each Perils of Pacifism The "Man of Calcium" Improving Human Breed? Fourteen concerns have offered to build small airplanes to cost as little __ as $750. That is important avia tion news; the bureau of air commerce is to be congratulated on its effort to ■ encourage indi vidual flying. The day is com ing when there will be more ma chines in the air than there are automobiles o n the ground now. More than 25, 000,000 airplanes Arthur Brisbane may sound like exaggeration. But it sounded like exaggeration some years ago when this writer published editorials urging citizens not to spread tacks and cut glass on roads, to puncture automobile tires, because, before long, auto mobiles would be used by workers going to and from work. That pre diction came true. Some one preparing a list of ten things that Christians would and would not do says: "There would be no private wealth; Jesus denounced great pos sessions as alien to His gospel, and fatal to His kingdom. "There would be no poverty and no war, because real Christians would refuse to fight." In this civilization, if Christians refused to fight, they would rapidly diminish in numbers and the Pacific coast would be settled by Asiatics. The founder of Christianity taught that what was due to Caesar should be rendered unto him. If He were on earth now He might say the same of organized capital, knowing that it supplies, in our complicated system, the possi bility of steady) work. Nobody, not even a clergyman, can be positive as to what Christ's commands would be if he returned in this age of flying machines, auto mobiles, public schools and the strange problem of too much of al most everything, combined with want among many thousands of families lacking food and the gov ernment wondering occasionally what to, do with millions of bushels of wheat. Before long you may have foot ball coaches feeding calcium to their players. You know what we Call "a man of iron" is really the "man of calcium." The metal calcium in the blood, in quantities that do not change, or that change little, produces a steadi ness of nerve lacking in men with a fluctuating calcium supply. It is said that experiments made on four young men at an eastern uni versity showed that a drop in cal cium brought on "moodiness, de pression and pessimism." If there is high calcium content in the blood serum they are in a "hap py, cheerful, optimistic, emotional state." But ask your doctor about it. Don't swallow calcium recklessly. London thinks something should be done about "more than 250,000 mental defectives," and steriliza tion, on the German plan, is sug gested, on condition that the indi vidual consents. With such a law, government sterilization agents would have few customers. Under one law suggested, the health minister would order the sterilization of "physically ailing persons shown to be carriers of transmissible disabilities." The world is preparing to regu late and improve the human breed, as it has long regulated and im proved breeds of cattle, swine and other creatures; a step in the di rection of uniformity that may not be desirable. One of the most enlightened edu cators in America tells teachers and undergraduates that the important thing is the general welfare* not the individual welfare. An excellent idea to put into the minds of young people. They should also be told that in dividual welfare and striving, with selfishness back of it, is the founda tion of general welfare. The baby wiggling its arms and kicking its legs in the cradle is build ing up one more strong baby, for its own sake, not for the general welfare, to which it, nevertheless, contributes. The man, concentrat ing on his career, and on the care and education of his Children, has chiefly in mind his career, children and family. But he also is building up the general welfare. Each tiny coral builder worked only for its own speck of coral, but beautiful islands are the result. After four years of study, wise men discover that ideas are im pressed on the minds o. children ntore deeply by moving pictures than by reading books. Less than four minutes is required to estab lish that fact. © King Features Syndicate. Inc, WNU Service. Black Satin Frock for Autumn Wear * ■C .V \ ■ mi m l \ 4 i \ •0 «V Tj. iYtl r  \ W i Introducing Autumn's smartest frock. Snug at the waistline and flared below, a youthful interpre tation with snap and dash. The blouse has a clever femi nine touch in its soft gathers that peep cunningly from beneath the yoke, which is topped by a nar row standing collar that ties in a dainty knot. To please your whim, omit the necktie and substitute a neckerchief, or ascot Je; then again forget about the buttons, open the yoke, press down the sides forming a V and trim it with a bright bouttonaire. You may have your way about the sleeves, too, foi the pattern offers both, long and short. A graduated gore reduces the sweep at the hipline and gives the much desired flare to the hem. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1949-B . E>1 All ;*a ill ; ' ; r »I ..i n Ä i as 7 . T -WONDER YOU COULDN'T MAKE ,UP V OUR mind! JUST LIKE fit j WO MAN ! rzzsd -TELL YOU WHAT I'LL DO, TONY..e I'LL GOTO THE THANKSGIVING DANCE WITH IRE ONE WHO SCORES THE MOST , TOUCHDOWNS U CAN I BE EXCUSED FROM PRACTICE TODAY, COACH Ï I COULDN'T SLEEP LAST NIGHT-AND MV HEAD ACHES! À r NOW, LISTEN. J DEXTER-THIS CAN'T GO ON i HAVE YOU BEEN BREAKING MV _ *NO COFFEE n RULEÏ êr say-who , Does she think SHE IS ? TELL HER SHE'S LUCKY IF SHE GOES TO THE DANCE t WITH THE WATER wf-L, boy i AW-WHAT ^ IP You haue f % TELL HIM COFFEE t NEUER HURT YOU ç any-You're W pL-NO SISSY ! J V, Si V] « r % h A 7 Uj 0 H rt g! ) v ' % ~ A C 6 , w .; 2*» X A IF YOU F EEL THAT ÜBi WAY..X SUPPOSE m? I MIGHT AS WELL TRY IT ! jf WELL-WE AW - BECAUSE I ^ LOST THE FIRST \ / BROKE ONE MEASLY GAME i IN SPITE TRAINING RULEI HE OF TONY'S . WANTED ME TO QUIT TOUCHDOWN ! . COFFEE AND SWITCH / -AND YOU WEREN'T U To PoSTUM { ^ ' EUEN ON THE . SEt FIELD i WHY P DIPT HE COACH Y BENCH YOU I J'-. / WEIL ... IF YOU WANT To SEE ME ANY MORE, YOU BETTER DO AS THE COACH SAID l X PONT LIKE A , S QUITTER ! J JTCU&ES!' r I'M LICKED ! POSTUM ALWAYS RUNS ME OUT of Bounds 1 fjrrELL HER L PTO KEEP OUT OF ■ THIS! WHEN DID SHE START C0ACHIM6 FOOTBALL, ANUm* II V ] i ; ' mm : ■ »1 ; ■ 'J.' i : mz } m /, i m > , ! » [I ME. \ü°TFEE .3' ff % Of COURSE, children should never drink coffee. And many grown-ups, too, find that the caffein in coffee disagrees with them. If you have headaches or indigestion or can't sleep soundly...try Postum. It contains no caffein. It is simply whole wheat and bran, roasted and slightly sweetened. You may miss coffee at first, but after 30 days you'll love Postum for its own rich, satisfying flavor. Postum comes in two forms— Postum Cereal, the kind you boil, and Instant Postum, made instantly in the cup. Either way it is easy to make, delicious, SORAMgtAliRl mm m FINE! BUT 1 THEN, VUE FELT , LIKE A MILLION 1 DOLLARS EVER SINCE 7 SWITCHED _ to Postum / m il WELL-HOW ... DOES IT FEEL 1*1 Ö BE HIGH-SCORING I CHAMPION CF THE . L. STATE'! V: j m llPlI ■ General Foods. F REE-Let m of us sei Postum free! Simply-i ■ a. r. General Foods, Battle Creek, Send me, without obligation, a Postum □ Postum Cereal (check 1 Name Street iHSSg ■ ■ ■ fr Ägi - _ . ■. „turn City. H m is available in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponding bust mea surements 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38. Size 14 (32) requires four and three-eighths yards of 39-inch ma terial, four and one-fourth yards with short sleeves. Price of Pat tern, 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 367 W, Adams St., Chicago, Ill. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. « WALLOOWALLOOP4LLOO 3 DAYS A 'tu 1 A T * g 9 .. :% GO FARTHER* BEFORE YOU NEED A QUART Make the "First Quart" testl Drain and refill with Quaker State. Note the mileage. Prove for your self that you do go farther before you have to add the first quart. The retail price is 35^ per quart. Quaker State Oil Refining Com pany, Oil City, Pennsylvania. « t A L*U*JrK* WHEN EYES BURN Get Quick, Safe Relief with < ; ..P mum