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| Fun for the Whole Family
BIG TOP ByEDWHEELAN
CAPT. OLSEM'3 TRAINED SEALS. THE CLOWNS POT ON A * WALK AROUND' MEANWHILE ■AT BACK POOR ■
/fOME ON, BOyS, LET'S LIVEN)
( THINfiS UP - IWOSE SEALS / N / Jt I |SUCH A TERRIE>LTs ( PARUNGr,
. I 11 ■ ammamrntmm nil
LALA PALOOZA —Too Late to Send Her an
SCATTER POP— Fixing for Night Work By C. M. PAYNE
/Air^' : J farr. ff-ff' ) > {j|W V™f tAy
- ■ - .lU « ■ ■■ ■ I
MESCAL IKE b x s. l. huntley ° n H ?. USe> We Suppose
/ALL TU'rOCKUS STITTERS.ME'S PIT ) uVhST^Orvf I TUFT? I U’U AISTAKEL AW
VOVERTOTU' OewTISTS TO BE TIED. TO DO W |M TOO MUCW GASV - Lblsa^
DO° PULLEO x N r ~T AM 1 ME KIM DA - SS^^V
'" i | 2 s made
POP— Flunked! —r-r— —— By J. MILLAR WATT
I DON'T BELIEVE you're- „ Mr nM I
AN ENGLISHMAN ! * YE T PAINT" CO t O .
- vvmat does _ i rv^A
I ! Tli' am ISviili'M'! r.< "M ~ i . " ... ' ''> . ■
[ THE THIN Armstrong |
“I think George must have hit the pin setter.”
HOUSTON HOME JOURNAL. PERRY, GEORGIA
■ l_
□THOUGHTFUL
The man in the dock as looking
__ particularly doleful.
“Please be lenient with me, your j
worship,” he said, addressing the i
magistrate. “I have a good many j
dependent on me for their support.
It would be only fair to consider
them.”
A soft light came into the magis
trate’s eyes as he listened to this
plea.
“Children?” he inquired, a touch
of kindness in his voice.
The prisoner shook his head.
“No, your worship. Detectives.”
Penalty of Being Adored
First Guy—She treats her husband
like a Grecian god.
Second Guy—How’s that?
First Guy—She places a burnt of
fering before him at every meal.
Proof
“Anyone would think I was noth
ing but a cook in this house.”
“Not after a couple of meals, they
J wouldn’t!”
I *- 1— ‘ ■
| THE WORLD AT TTS WORST By GI.UYAS WILLIAMS | !
5 j
HAN/IMG BROKEN PATE WITH SOME NEI6HOORS BECAUSE
VOJ WANTED To SEE A CERTAIN MOVIE, VoU DISCOVER THAT THE
B'LL HAS) CHANGED, THAT WILD HORSES COULDN'T PRAS VOU iH
To see the current picture, and Thai vou've 6oTTo so in anYw/aV,
TO AVOID SAID NEIGHBORS WHO HAVE JUST TURNED THE CORNER
Belt Svnrtif..ir Inf —VVNU Service
T Trick of Reclaiming
The Discarded Chair
By RUTH WYETH SPEARS
/ T'IIERE were two of these old
bent-wood chairs—both with
cane seats gone and a badly
scarred varnish finish. “Get them
out of my sight!’’ their owner
said, “I can’t stand the thought of
wood bent and forced into unnat-
J ural curves.’’ In the end she did
get them out of sight and used
SEAT
TppAND
r
WORnI) / SEAM OUTSIDE -H
CANE / WITH BINDING
SEAT
c them too. The trick was done
with slip covers made, as shown
here.
The one you see in the sketch
became a side chair for the living
room dressed in richly colored
-J cretonne in soft red and blue
“*l green tones with deep wine bind
ings. The legs of the chair were
sandpapered and stained mahoga
ny to tone in with the cover. The
cane seat was inexpensively re
paired with a ready made seat of
plywood reshaped to fit by first
cutting a paper pattern to fit fhe
ill scat of the chair and then using
|lj the pattern as a guide as indi
y catcd here. Next week I will show
S you how the other one of these
Bf old chairs was used.
j* * *
NOTE: As n service to our readers, 160,
of these articles have been printed in five
U separate booklets. No. 5 contains :i() ilius-
V trations with directions; also a description'
of the other booklets. To get your copy
of Book 5, send order to:
?
MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS
Drawer 10
Bedford Hills New York
Enclose 10 cents for Book 5.
Name
Address
Mom! Keep
O-Cedar Polish handy . . . for
dusting, cleaning, polishing
Keep genuine O-Cedar Polish handy . ..
then when sudden guests come, when the
club meets, or when it’s the usual time to
clean and polish, you can do both easily,
speedily (with O-Cedar Polish and the
■r mop) and you leave behind a soft, silken
O-Cedar lustre that’s lovelier. Ask always
for O-Cedar Polish (AND the O-Cedar
MOP... it is big and thick and fluffy^
Qfedap
POLISH
MOPS, WAX, DUSTERS, CLEANERS AND
FLY AND MOTH SPRAY
Real Spirit
Spirit is now a very fashionable
. word; to act with spirit, to speak
1 with spirit means only to act rash-
S ly, and to talk indiscreetly. An
} able man shows his spirit by gen
* tie words and resolute actions; he
is neither hot nor timid.—Chester
field.
- OUTSTANDING BLADE VALUE
- SSrmS 10 for 10 Cents
cupples co., sr. louis, mo.
»
Self Advantage
No man can live happily who
_J regards himself alone, who turns
- everything to his own advantage.
□ Thou must live for another, if
thou wishest to live for thyself.—
~Seneca.
V^S\UI///^ F|HST CHOICE of millions.
■ct THEIR FIRST THOUGHT
■*!> FOR SIMPLE HEADACHE.
JOSEPH ASPIBIKj
I BEACONS of
—SAFETY—
• Like a beacon light on
the height the advertise
ments in newspapers direct
you to newer, better and
easier ways of providing
the things needed or
desired. It shines, this
beacon of newspaper
advertising—and it will be
to your advantage to fol
low it whenever you
make a purchase.