Newspaper Page Text
-Pigeon Brings in an SOS;
17 Men Are Rescued at Sea
Officials of the Freeport (N. Y.)
Boatmen's association have disclosed
that 17 men were rescued from a
stranded craft off Squaw island re¬
cently 6 after n carrier pigeon brought
an S S message to shore. The res¬
cue was the first of its kind, as far
as is known.
Off West island the Dawn, a 40
foot filling boat, broke her exhaust
pipe. A pigeon bearing word of the
vessel's plight was released and flew
15 miles to the association club¬
house at Freeport, ltfscue craft
then were dispatched.
&
KILLS INSECTS
ON FLOWERS • FRUITS
VEGETABLES & SHRUBS
Demand original sealed
bottles, from your dealer
3iyy
Have you chosen your Profession?
• BE AN EXTERMINATING ENGINEER.
In one of these towns. Stndy at home. U en
tific course of instruction leading to dir 160.
On easy terms. A graduate should earn 160 weekly
in any good locality. Write for free literature.
EXTERMINATING ENGINEERS OF AMERICA
1809 Radford Avenue - • El Paso, Texas
Real Perspective
You may laugh at trouble, but not
until some time afterward.
WOMEN OF ALL AGES
.. '9‘ .
~r'.‘-:'{: , ,‘(i'
,, -:
"X, ;:;:::-:-~,- -< 3
'
losing weight steadily, weighed but 95
pounds. helped Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
to give me an appetite and I felt
just fine and was able to enjoy life once
more. I gained In weight too.” Buy .now!
Wintersmith’s Tonic
'
'
- " — ■ FOR ■- i ■ ■■ ' - -
MALARIA
; ..V- ■
• AND A ' “y
Good General Tonic
USED FOR 65 YEARS
Monotony Only Boresopie
Monotony is better than the vio¬
lence that breaks it.
To instantly relieve pain, stop nag¬
ging shoe pressure and quickly,
safely loosen and remove corns or
callouses — use New De Luxe Dr.
Scholl’s Zino-pads. These soothing,
healing, and cushioning Flesh pads prevent Bore toes
At blisters. color; waterproof.
all drug, shoe and department stores.
D? Scholls
WNU—7 21—30
No Need to Suffer
“MorningSickness”
“Morning sickness” To — is caused by an
acid condition. avoid it, acid must be
offset by alkalis — such as magnesia.
Why Physicians Recommend
Milnesia Wafers
These mint-flavored, candv-like wafers are
pure milk of magnesia in solid form—
the most pleasant way to take it. Each
wafer is approximately equal to a full adult
dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed
thoroughly, then swallowed, and they correct
acidity in tiie mouth throughout the
digestive system of and insure Quick , com¬
plete elimination the waste matters that
cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and
a dozen other discomforts.
' Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of20 and
48, at 35c and for 60c respectively, handbag and in
convenient tins your contain
ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately
one adult dose of milk of magnesia. All
good d*ug stores sell and recommend them.
Start using these delicious, effective
anti-acid, gently laxative wafers today
Professional samples sent free to registered
physicians or dentists if request is made
cm professional letterhead Select Products,
Inc.. 4402 23rd St., Long Island City, N. Y.
35c & 60c
bottles
20c tins
The Original Milk of Magnesia Wafers
Mrs. J. H. Faisen of
713 Eva St., Durham,
N. C., said: “It was
impossible for me to
sleep well and I was so
weak most of the time
that 1 wasn't able to do
a thing. I would be
troubled too with split¬
ting headaches. I was
HOjvXRE " ■ .T©DAY
W. BARTON
How “Extras” Add Weight
tiPOME people dislike to be
O fat because they regard the
extra weight as a physical handi¬
cap, others consider a slender fig¬
ure more graceful, and still oth¬
ers realize that excessive body
weight is a menace to health. But
whatever the objections to being fat,
correct body weight Is now widely rec¬
ognized as an essential to enduring,
health and a long life.”
I am quoting from “Diet and Like It”
by Mabel E. Baldwin, Ph. D.
Doctor Baldwin states further, “If one
Is and decides to reduce,
Dr. Barton
weight must necessarily be reduced,
but if the food Is reduced too rapidly,
or If certain vital foodstuffs are re¬
duced ill health or worse may follow.
The body needs only simple foods
but yet there must be a great variety
of these foods—vitamins; minerals—
lime, iron, phosphorus, magnesium,
iodine; animal proteids—eggs, fish,
meat; vegetable proteins—beans, peas;
carbohydrates or starch foods—suifar,
bread; and fats—butter, cream. And
each of these foods must be. present In
suitable amounts.
Size of Meal No Guide
“Nor does the size of a uieal give the
correct idea of how much actual fuel
or food value there is being eaten, for a
pound of shelled almonds is equivalent
to nearly thirty pounds of tomatoes
and so neither the weight nor the bulk
of the meal gives any idea of how
much fat it will produce.”
“Food values are measured In cal¬
ories. High calorie foods are those of
which only a small amount is needed
to supply a large, number of calories
sucli as olive oil and other fats, sugar
and confectionery.”
Lettuce is a low calorie food as
three medium-sized heads of lettuce
equal in value only one tablespoon of
olive oil. High calorie foods such as
fats, flour, and sugar, contain little or
no water whereas most fruits and veg¬
etables, low calorie foods, are three-
fourths or more water. “A lunch of a
cup of soup, lettuce, a tomato, a small
slice of whole-wheat bread, and a tan¬
gerine—a small orange, will weigh
about a pound and a quarter. Another
lunch consisting of a pork chop,'two
fried sweet potatoes, a slice of white
bread, and a piece of chocolate cake
of ordinary size will also weigh a
pound and a quarter but will furnish
more than three times as many cal¬
ories."
Desserts Add Pounds
High calorie foods are less bulky
than low. calorie foods, which is the
reason that many people have a great¬
er tendency to eat too much of the
high-calorie foods than of the low-cal¬
orie foods. Also most of the foods
that are eaten between meals or after,
the food eaten at meal-times is already
sufficient, are high-calorie foods. “A
man eats a sufficient amount of food
for his energy requirements for the
day by the time he reaches the dessert
course at dinner, and ttien eats a piece
of cake. This 'surplus’ or unneeded
amount of food will yield 200 to 300
calories and will increase the hod>
weight by one ounce. Or. a woman
obtains from her usual three meals a
day a sufficient amount, of energy to
meet her needs and eats during the
afternoon a dish of ice cream, several
nuts, or a few pieces of candy. She
will obtain from them 200 to 300 cal¬
ories, and site will, likewise, increase
her weight by one ounce.
“Suppose either of these people in
dulges to this extent only once every
four days; by the end of a year the
Increase in weight will still have
reached live or six pounds."
With the above simple statements of
fact by Doctor Baldwin it can readily
be seen how easy it is to acquire many
pounds of fat. without being what is
considered a “big” eater.
It is the little "extras” of the high
calorie foods that put on the excess
fat, very gradually it is true, hut nev¬
ertheless they put it on
Indigestion in Children
Mothers are often at a loss to un¬
derstand why their youngster some¬
times loses his appetite, may have a
headache, and may have vomiting
snells.
This condition is sometimes called
acidosis. As these attacks occur from
time to time they are sometimes c-a^ed
“cyclical” vomiting attacks, as they
appear to come In cycles.
It has been suspected that it may be
one. or more than one, article of food
that cause.; these attacks, but making
skin tests and actually testing out cer
tain foods has proved of no assistance
in finding the cause of these attacks
Dr. K.'Talieriimn in the British Sled '
ical Journal thinks that these attack
arc much like or related tn some way
to migraine—one-sided headache—ami
he therefore recommends that 'the fa
foods be cut down in the diet
Ot —WXi: Service.
the most obvious need
is for a diet that will
cause loss in weight.
But for the welfare
of the individual it is
also necessary that
the diet be one that
will maintain the body
in a state of excellent
health and vigor while
the loss in weight
takes place.” Of course
the thought In the
above statement is
that if food is reduced
CLEVELAND COURIER
Monument to Be Unveiled
At Irwinville, Ga., June 3
• • > —Photo Courtesy Atlanta Journal
Confederate President Is Honored
By 5 United Daughters of Confederacy
MEMBERS OF BEN HIL’L CHAPTER, U. D. C., at the mono
ment to Jefferson Davis at the. Davis Park, near Irwinville, where
©avis was captured, May 10, 1865. The monument will be un¬
veiled June 3. Governors of the" southern states have been in¬
cited' to the exercises, along wkth. national and state officers of
-- ...the United- Daughters of the Confederacy. Elaborate plans are
being made for a. redepfion to the' visitors at Fitzgerald on the :
■ evening of June 2. Left to'right, Mrsb Humbert Watson, Mrp. W. ^
E- Halev’Mrs.-F. E.'Johnson, president of Ben Hill Chapter, V. p."
C., and Mrs,, SJi.G, Pryfy, jr. . f
Lookout Mountain s ii
k * 2,800-Acre Park Is
.• Opened Public
to
. i
Chattanooga, Tenn. — To the un¬
counted Americans .who know Look¬
out Mountain and to the myriads
who long to-see it, a great work has
been done, during. 1935. The great
mountain, rising fifteen hundred
feet Vb'oVe the Tennessee River at
Chattanooga, is headed to the north
in the shape of a huge Indian arrow-,
head. Its point rests upon whpt.
Jhight be the toe of a stupendous
Indian moccasin created by a-ten
mile majestic curve of the vast Ten
nessde’Rfver, with fife city iri which,
and around which and about which
soldiers in 1S63 hungered during a
siege, - fought in several decisive bat¬
tles, 3.ncJ died in appalling numbers.
Few places in all the world afford
■scenery that is more satisfactory to
the sepse of sight. Nature in her
grander moods nearly always calls
lor special clothes, long hikes, and
various handicaps. Not so on Look¬
out Mountain. There is a combina¬
tion of accessibility, grandeur, mild¬
ness and visibility that when her In¬
dian and battleground background is
added makes 1 -the mountain without
parallel.
. One can with little effort stand on
Point Rock, overlooking the sweep
of the fn'fghty river—second to none
iii America; in projected water power,
development—and gaze upon- a city
of one hundred and twenty thousand
people via remarkable variety- of
industry. At night the lights of the
city are like stars in a gigantic
pool. Sightseers may aspend on the
famous funicular railway, a cable
incline about five thousand feet long,
which rises a height equal'to one
thiid of its length, as it carries its
passengers safely but thrillingly to
the top. This .railway is unique and
not to be soon forgotten. Within
sight are two removed battlefields,
Chickamauga and Missionary Ridge.
Furthermore, tablets erected by the
United States tell of other conflicts
on the field in immediate view. The
names of many valleys, creeks, and
rivers, are i» the Indian tongue, and
monuments to indomitably soldierly
courage raise their heads in silent
testimony on every hand. A thou¬
sand feet below Point Rock, a grey
stone tower will be seen. To com¬
plete the unusual character of na¬
ture here one may there be conveyed
four .hundred- feet down an elevator
shaft into the. secret places of the
earth. A waterfall one hundred an4
twenty-five feet in height is but one
of the marvels to be seen under Cav¬
erns Castle.
During 1935, however, the last
step was taken toward an ageless
accomplishment.- ' -Adolph S: Ochs,
owner of the New York “Times,”
dreamer of dreams and generous’-of
the generous, acquired during five
years over four square miles of the
cliffs and slopes of-this most unus
,ual mountain. July 1, 1935, -it was
deeded to the United States and today
a park of two thousand eight hun,
dTed acres is open to' the public. De¬
velopment is to carry out Ochs’ con¬
ception of a “hanging gardens" made
real by the great terraced bluffs and
by sixty-five miles of riding trails
the Government is today construct¬
ing. Over twenty-five mile? qf these
have been finished. One meanders
from the base of Point Rock for a
mile and a half to the base of Sunset
Park. The cathedral-like rocks, the
moss, the lichen, the laurel, the ar¬
butus, the pines, are nature’s resto¬
ratives. From unforgettable Sunset
Rock one goes southwardly along a
path that in many places literally
leads through literal hanging gar¬
dens, biiffs rise a hundred feet above
us or fall below. Babylon’s great
“hanging gardens” .were not so ma¬
jestic. Railings aye provided.- Views
are unsurpassed. This trail - leads
for three and a half miles to the
bluffs adjacent • to': the gorgeous
Lookout Mountain Hotel, Often 1 dur-
,
ing the summer season, where one
can look down on a mountain top
eighteen-hole golf course and in a
few minutes pass into the remarka¬
ble and unmatched Robk City Gar¬
dens. This Lookout Mountain, Hotel
seems to be the "top of the world”
and is the cynosure of all eyes from
Southern- approaches to Chatta¬
nooga.
First was the grim battle of Chick
amauga. Here over one hundred
and twenty thousand troops bat¬
tled for two days, and the percent¬
age of losses was heavier than in
any other battle of the Civil War,
according to your encyclopedia. This
was followed by the seige of Chatta¬
nooga, the battle of Wauhatchie,
Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga and
Missionary Ridge. The United States
made the environs of Lookout
Mountain a great government park,
marked with tablets so that the bat¬
tles can be followed in detail. The
great Ochs "hanging gardens” are
and will be a never-ending source
of restoration and delight. On the
western slopes of the mountain no
fewer than three trails are beneath
the Hotel, one on the top cliffs, one
half-way down the slope and one
near the base, and more are yet
building. The variety of the wild
flower and natural shrubbery growth
is a subject for a horticulturist.
Gay, Colorful Applique for Tea Towels;
You’ll Find It Easy and Amusing to Do
PATTERN SK22
■ -■
.
You'll find it the grandest sort of
May—this embroidering of. tea towels
with gay applique, “ whether they’re
for your owriv spotless 1 kitchen, or an¬
other's. Comb tfie scrap-hag for your
choicest cotton scraps, as this poke
hotinet miss demands 'a bright dress
find, bonnet-every day in- the week.
•If you. prefejc, dp her .entirely in out
Brothers Take Brides;
Become ‘Father and Son’
John Lightejv Jr., thirty-four, re
cently married Mrs. Paul Shields,
thirty-nine, arid Ws brother. Andrew,
twenty-live, took-.Mrs. Shield’s daugh¬
ter, Laverpa, twenty, as his bride.
The double wedding took place in
Kenton; Ohio. The'brothers are now
father and son..
In Los Angeles-Mrs£-Ruby Peeler-’ 1
son, thirty-seven, recepjly applied for
a license to wed Harvey V. Bladen,
twenty-five. Her daughter, (hive,
eighteen,: at.. the .same- time applied'
for a license Orville, to marry Harye.v's
brother, twenty-three.
This story will interest
many Men and Women
TVTOT long ago I was like some friends I
ll have...low in spirits.. .run-down.. .out of
sorts.. .tired easily and looked terrible. I knew
I had no serious organic trouble so I reasoned
sensibly... that as my experience has since proven...
work, worry, colds and whatnot had just
worn me down.
The confidence mother has always had in
S.S.S. Tonic.. .which is still her stand-by when
she feels run-down..: convinced me I ought to
try this Treatment... I started a course... the
color began to come back to my skin... I felt
better.... felt that those I no longer tired easily and soon I
red-blood-cells were back to so
balled fighting strength... it is great to feel
and- like old self.
• d P ^ TO N 1C Makes you fee! like yourself again
mm
SAYS.
"hou need
(jjUatit!'
/ J
MOTORISTS INVENTED THIS
FIRST QUART" TEST
Thousands of motorists made this discov¬
ery for themselves: When they refilled the
crankcase of their cars with Quaker State
oil, they went farther before they had to
add a quart. This simple test proves that
Quaker State stands up longer. But it
proves even more... because the oil that
stands up is giving your motor the best
lubrication. Try the Quaker State “First
Quart” Test yourself. See if you, too, don’t
go farther than '-jotr ever did before under
similar driving conditions. Quaker State
Oil Refining Companyj*6il City, Pa.
Retail Price '...354 per Quart
* c pit 4 t'cJZ&ice of Sxp&u&Mca’
RELIEVE ,ywLue PIMPLES • BLACKHEADS*
SKIN eczema* r ashes* itches • burking
FAULTS P-T? g0 another day without trying the Cuticura
FAST T“, t0 “w , beauty. In
t he a week you’ll see a change.
Thvmlf treatments continue, you’ll be amazed.
medicaid qualities of Cuticura Soap, plus the
^ the e^rer ^ ° J Cuticur * Ointment
w Buy "OW! Soap 25c. Ointment J
, 25c. Sample each FREE. Address' .5
Cuticura, Dept. 6, Malden, Mass 1
CUT! CUM A
line stitch. It’s an easy and effective
way of doing these amusing motifs.
In pattern 5522 you will find a
transfer pattern of seven motifs (one
for each day of tire week) averaging
5% by 7 inches and applique pattern
pieces; material requirements; illus¬
trations of all stitches needed; color
suggestions.
Send 15 cents in coins or stamps
(coins preferred) to The Sewing Cir¬
cle, Household Arts Department, 25!)
West Fourteenth Street, New York,
N. Y.
To keep clean and healthv take Dr.
Fierce’* Pleasant Pellets. They rezulafn
liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. °
Purpose of Freckles
Freckles keep a boy from getting
foolish about his beauty.
BILIOUS SPELLS
' In bilious spells, one of the first
things to do is to take a dose of
Black-Draught to relieve the attend¬
ing constipation.
Mr. T. L. Austin, of McAdenville,
N. C., tells of having used Black
Draught for a long time. “There is
a box full on my mantel, now,” he
writes. “I take it for biliousness. If
I did not take it, the dullness and
headache would put me out of busi¬
ness. It is the quickest medicine to
relieve me.”
Black-Draught is purely vegetable. It is
one of the most economical laxatives. Sold
in 25-cent packages containing 25 doses.
BLACK-DRAUGHT
5$ ASP10 i JARS
THE 10V SIZE CONTAINS 3'/ 2 KJoffsf
TIMES AS-MUCH AS THE 5< SIZE
MOROUNE V Y'i;SNQW
WHITE PETROLEUM JELLY
"Yes, I have come
hack to where I feel