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G^BI OP INTEREST TO I
Shining Saucepans—Aluminum
saucepans that have become dis¬
colored inside can be made to look
like new by boiling in them water
to which a tablespoonful of vine¬
gar and some apple parings or
lemon rinds have been added.
* * *
Useful Velvet—If you are mak¬
ing anything., of velvet do not
throw away the pieces of material
left over. Save them for using as
polishers for your black-leaded
stoves and for your shoes. You’ll
get a real mirror-like shine on
both if you rub them with velvet
after the usual polish has been
applied.
* * »
Removing Tea Stains—Tea and
coffee stains can sometimes be
removed from china cups by rub¬
bing them with a damp cloth
dipped in baking soda.
* * *
To Remove a Tight Lid—Tie a
piece of string round the tin two
or three times, just below the lid;
then push a pencil between the
string and the tin, twist the pen¬
cil over, and the resulting pres¬
sure will release the lid.
* * *
Use Baking Sheets — Baking
powder biscuits and cookies rise
better and brown more evenly on
baking sheets than they do in
pans.
WNU Service.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are an
effective laxative. Sugar coated.
Children like them. Buy now!—Adv.
Talent and Genius
Talent is that which is in a
man’s power. Genius is that in
whose power a man is.—Lowell.
REMEMBER THIS
CROSS
IT MEANS FAST RELIEF
f 15c for u
P" 2 FULL dozen
DEMAND A - 1 FOR He
AND GET
GENUINE
BAYER ASPIRIN
Essential Victories -
Be ashamed to die until you
have won some victory for hu¬
manity.—Horace Mann.
KILLS INSECTS
ON FLOWERS • FRUITS
VEGETABLES & SHRUBS
Demand original sealed
bottles, from your dealer
A Base Possession
The wavering mind is but a
base possession.—Euripides.
Remember This When
You Need a Laxative
It is better for you if your body
keeps working as Nature intended.
Food wastes after digestion should
be eliminated every day. When you
get constipated, take a dose or two
of purely vegetable Black-Draught
for prompt, refreshing relief.
Thousands and thousands of men and
women like Black-Draught and keep it
always on hand, for use at the first sign
of constipation. Have you tried.it?
BLACK-DRAUGHT
A GOOD LAXATIVE
In the Strength of Youth
It is good for a man that he bear
the yoke in his youth.
CfceitG&&
Tonight rub your child's
chest and throat with
Penetro Helps loosen
tightness and congestion I .
THE SALVE WITH A BASE OF
OLD FASHIONED MUTTON SUgT
•rarffl;
Don’t Neglect Them I
Nature designed job. Their the task kidneys to do a
tnarvelous is to keep the
flowing blood stream free of an excess of
toxic —is impurities. constantly The act producing of living —life
ilsel f waste
matter the kidneys must remove from
the blood if good health is to endure.
When the kidneys fail to function a9
Nature intended, there body-wide is retention dis¬ of
waste that may cause
tress. One may suffer nagging backache,
persistent headache, attacks of dizziness,
getting up eyes—feel nights, swelling, tired, puffiness all
under the nervous,
worn out.
Frequent, be further scanty evidence or burning of kidney passages
tnay or
bladder disturbance.
mi________:___i__J
get rid of excess poisonous body w
Use Doan’a Pills. They have had more
than forty years of public approval. Are
endorsed the country over. Insist on
Doan's. Sold at all drug stores.
DOANS PILLS
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
| STAR | j
* DUST
★ Of jMLovie • Radio *
ifc
★★★By VIRGINIA VALE★★★
ATTHILE the director, George
N * Cukor, was in. New York
making film tests of Southern’
debutantes and several young
actresses from the New York
stage, the news inadvertently
leaked out in Hollywood that
David Selznick, the producer,
had already made up his mind
about who should play the leads
in “Gone With the Wind.”
Miriam Hopkins is to play Scar¬
lett, Clark Gable will be Rhett, Janet
Gaynor draws the appealing role of
Melanie, and Leslie Howard will be
Ashley, whom Scarlett loves but
loses. Undoubtedly if the tgsts made
in New York show real talent, the
girls will be put under contract to
play supporting roles in “Gone With
the Wind” or for future pictures.
—•*—
That cast that Hal Roach has
lined up to support Constance Ben¬
Cary Grant
quisite clothes, are next in impor¬
tance, and Roland Young and Alan
Mowbray join the cast to add to
the hilarity. Even if Greta Garbo
were playing the lead, a more im¬
posing cast could not have been
commandeered.
A current picture that everyone
likes, and that men are particularly
enthusiastic over is “Sea Devils,” an
R K O picture with Victor McLaglen.
There is a storm at^sea in this one
that will make you grip the arms of
your theater seat or your companion
and if you don’t let out a few loud
gasps, you won’t be like the majority
in *he preview audience. Ida Lupino
plays the lead skillfully, bqt the
girl, you will remember, is Helen
Flint who gives a brilliant perform¬
ance as a tough character.
A few years ago it was considered
the lowest form of insult if a screen
actress was called a “Clothes
horse.” In fact, Gloria Swanson
used to threaten to play nothing
but waifs in rags if reviewers didn’t
stop praising her ability ‘to wear
clothes. Now, all the girls in Holly¬
wood want to be considered good
dress models, partly because the
top dramatic stars, Greta Garbo
and Luise Rainer, want dress-up
roles, but largely because so many
fashion-show pictures are £oing into
production.
Fruits and vegetables are the he¬
roes and heroines of a movie being
shown extensively in the producing
regions of the South and Far West.
The picture, designed to bring the
big city auction markets to grow¬
ers, dramatizes the selling process
on a typical auction market where
thousands of cars of fruits and veg¬
etables are translated into millions
of dollars in revenue to the growers
every year.
List among your future film
favorites Ella Logan whom you will
soon see in Universal’s “Top of the
Town.” She is the enchanting sing¬
er with a thick Scottish burr to her
voice who, accent or no, used to
shout swing music over the radio
with Abe Lyman’s band. I like her
best when she rings simple songs,
but swing addicts rave about her
ability to improvise new hi-de-hos.
“Seventh Heaven” was previewed
in
one agrees that it
brings more glory to
Jimmy Stewart than
to Simone Simon,
though • she is pert
and appealing in the
role that brought
Janet Gaynor fame.
Simone arrived at
the preview wearing
a hair ribbon tied in
a demure bow just
over her forehead,
and was so notice¬
ably nervous that
she with her
coat, her dress, and her hair ribbon
all evening. She was accompanied
by Anton Litvak, who usually lpcks
at no one but Miriam Hopkins.
—/
ODDS AND ENDS—A make-up girl
at the Paramount studio has twelve wrist
watches given to her by grateful stars.
Just to be different Frances Dee gave her
an alarm clock at the finish of “Souls at
Sea’’ . . . Ann Sothern will probably win
the airlines award for the most persistent
air-commuter of the year. Whenever she
has two or three days to spare, she dashes
off to Chicago to see her husband, Roger
Pryor, who is leading a band there . . .
Everyone at Paramount is glad to have
Marlene Dietrich back, particularly the
electricians and carpenters on her set. She
brings such luscious Viennese cakes and
cookies to them.
® Western Newspaper Union.
nett in “Topper”—
Connie’s entry in the
high comedy race—
has everyone gasp¬
ing. Cary Grant, so
overwhelmingly pop¬
ular since he dom¬
inated Grace Moore
in “When You’re in
Love,” draws the
lead. Hedda Hopper
and Billie Burke, who
are just as slick at
comedy lines as they
are at ex¬
Simone
-Simon
CLEVELAND COURIER
Uncle Pful ^
Jf
Haste Versus Hurry
There is a distinction
haste and hurry—hurry adding
rapidity the element of confusion.
Good deeds are scarcer
bad ones, but one evil act
keep people talking longer than
hundred good ones.
A trained mind deserves
companionship of a
heart.
Peace, to any of the great
ers, seems to involve : ts own dom¬
ination over the others.
Unsatisfying Retribution
Observant men have made
their minds to this: Retribution
is seldom adequate.
A man of culture js respected
for it. Don’t be afraid of acquir¬
ing it, only be sure of getting
enough.
You can’t make dreams come
true by remaining asleep.
The eager expectancy of youth
is the source of so much enthusi¬
asm for a better world.
Take a Hand in the Doings
To enjoy a celebration, be one
of the performers in it instead of
a looker-on.
Self-denial is good for everyone
notwithstanding each enforcement
of it nearly ruins one’s temper.
Time cures grief and fortunate¬
ly, anger, too.
Mothers used to tell their chil¬
dren that the bears would get
them. Now they say automobiles.
biliousness, bilious sour stomach,
lence and indigestion, headache, flatu¬
due
to constipation.
10c and 25c at dealers
A Great Gift
The first great gift we can be¬
stow on others is a good example.
—Morell.
Make the Name
St.Josepli’
Yaur Buy-word"When You Want
GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN
World's Largest Seller at 104
Division
Spilt water cannot be gathered
up.—Chinese Proverb.
Do something about
Periodic Pains
Take Cardui for functional pains
of menstruation. Thousands of wom¬
en testify it has helped them. If
Cardui doesn’t relieve your monthly
discomfort, consult a physician.
Don’t just go on suffering and put
off treatment to prevent the trouble.
Besides easing certain pains, Car¬
dui aids in building up the whole
system by helping women to get
more strength from their food.
Cardui Is a purely vegetable medicine
which you can buy at the drug store and
take at home. Pronounced “Card-u-i."
LARGE $1.20 SIZE
recognized mss*; Remedy for Rheumatic 1
and Neuritis sufferers. A perfect Blood
Purifier, Makes thin Blood Rich and
Healthy. Builds Strength and Vigor.
Always Effective . . . Why suffer?
AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES
SORES, BOILS
ATHLETE’S FOOT, BURNS,
“ CUTS
, .PITCHING SKIN
,0 i i AT YOUR LOCAL DRUG STORE
| at POSTPAID on receipt of p*KO
\w/ Bowson Chemical Produi ICTS C
JACKSONVILLE ORIO
:T-1 Ml 7 .1
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
HOME WORK
WANTED—Women do simple hand-work
at home. Send 25c for our plans and in¬
structions. No investment. Phillips Serv¬
ice, 1016 Pleasant St., Des Moines, Iowa.
PHOTOGRAPHY
PHOTO FINISHING
Any fade size roll film developed and 16 never
prints, 25c coin.
TROUP’S PHOTO SERVICE, Toccoa, Ga.
ART
ARTISTS, ART LOVERS—Free Catalogue,
1,000 items—Best Reference Books, Anat¬
omy, Fine Photography, Art. Technique, Commercial, Architecture. Costume,
MARMOR, 12S0A fith Are., New fork.
UNCOMMON
AMERICANS
•-•-•
By hi mo © western
Scott Watson "TnZ"
Father of the Cattle Trails
TF IT had not been for Joseph G.
1 McCoy, there might never have
occurred that epic migration over
the cattle trails from Texas to the
north during the seventies and
eighties. In that case the history
of the Lone Star’ state—and the
whole West, toy that matter—might
have been very different. McCoy,
a native of Springfield, 111., was a
stockman and cattle buyer who
went to the raw little frontier town
of Abilene, Kan., soon after the
Civil war was over.
That conflict had ruined the cat¬
tlemen in Texas. Shut off from
the Northern markets by the Union
control of the Mississippi river,
their herds had increased enor¬
mously, but without a place to sell
the animals, they were compar¬
atively worthless. Then the Kan¬
sas Pacific railroad, which was
building west, reached Abilene and
McCoy was inspired with a wonder¬
ful idea.
If he could get the Texas drovers
to drive their herds north across
Indian territory to Abilene, grazing
them on the rich prairie grass as
they came, Abilene would be the
market place and shipping center
where Texas sellers and Chicago
and Kansas City buyers could
meet. Despite many obstacles, in¬
cluding the prevalent belief that
Texas beef was not as good as
that grown in the Middle West, Mc¬
Coy went about the job of making
his dream come true.
In July, 1867, he began raising
money to build a “shipping yard,”
a barn and office and to begin the
construction of a large, three-story
frame ihotel for the accommodation
of Texas drovers and eastern buy¬
ers. His next task was to get
word to the cattlemen more than
400 miles away to the south. Al¬
though the time was short he man¬
aged to persuade enopgh of them
to make the experiment so that
they marketed 35,000 head of cattle
in Abilene that fall and received
approximately $15 a head for their
steers. Previous to that time steers
were selling for $5 a head in Texas.
The next year more than 75,000
cattle were marketed there. By
1871 that number had jumped to
120,000 and by the next year to
236,000. From that time on Texas
cattle poured north by the hundreds
of thousands over the original cattle
trail from the Red river to Abi¬
lene and other trails which were
laid out. Other Kansas “cow towns”
began to boom with activity as the
railroad was pushed farther west
and southwest and there was added
to our history that thrilling chap¬
ter when the cattleman was king.
And all of this was due to the vision
of one man—Joseph G. McCoy, the
“Father of the Cattle Trails.”
Mr. Currier and Mr. Ives
'T'HEY gave Americans of their
day the equivalent of the news
reels of today. They were the pic¬
torial historians of contemporary
American life a century ago when
newspapers contained little or no
picture material except an oc¬
casional fashion print.
When a steamboat blew up, a
great fire swept a city or some
other disaster occurred, Mr. Cur¬
rier and Mr. Ives immediately put
out a colored picture of the event
with plenty of action in it. When
the United States was at war, they
issued splendid battle pictures with
plumed generals on prancing horses
(and plenty of gory detail as to dead
and wounded soldiers). There were
pictures of horse races and other
sporting events, there were pictures
of swift clipper ships and pictures
of the first transcontinental trains
running amidst Indians and buffalo.
There were highly moral pictures
there were even “comic strips”
—caricatures of life among the ne¬
groes, called “Darktown Comics.”
It all started back in 1830 when
young Nathaniel Currier, working
as an apprentice to John Pendle¬
ton, who had returned from Europe
with the new art of lithography, be¬
gan thinking of setting up his own
business. So he went to New York
and started as a lithographer in
partnership with a young man
named Stoddard. This partnership
lasted only a year but in 1835 Cur¬
rier began again. He soon built up
a profitable business but it wasn’t
until 1850 when James A. Ives be¬
came his partner that fame and
fortune came to them.
For 30 years Mr. Currier and Mr.
Ives were “printmakers to the
American people” and Currier and
Ives prints of one sort or another
were to be found on the walls of
virtually every American home. In
1880 Currier retired with a foitune
but the firm continued with a son
of the fotlnder in his place. In
1888 machine color printing was ap¬
plied to their product and even
greater numbers of their pictures
flooded the country.
In recent years Currier and Ives
prints have become “Americana.”
Where once these prints sold from
six cents to $3, they are now sell¬
ing for anywhere from $20 to $500.
And cne of them recently brought
$3,0001
Smart, Flattering Dresses
V/IRS. DICK EVANS has come
to town and brought Ann and
Eddie LeRoy with her. She lives
in Palm Beach in the wintertime
and, of course, knows all about
style. That’s why she wears this
directoire type frock that is both
new and figure flattering. In the
floral print she has chosen she
is perfectly gowned for the parties
that will be given for her in the
home town. The kiddies are wear¬
ing the simple styles appropriate
to childhood and therein their
smartness lies.
Auntie Rose Sews, Too.
Little Ann is asking Auntie Rose
if she makes her clothes too.
“Sure enough, dear,” comes the
reply. “I made this percale for
mornings and have a beauty in
yellow crepe cut from the same
pattern to wear to the Bid-or-Bi
meetings.”
“I’ll bet you can sew fast, too,
the way Mother does. It only took
her two mornings to make Ed¬
die’s suit and my dress. Won’t
you help me with my doll clothes
now?”
“Indeed I will, Ann, and then
we will have some of those oat¬
meal cookies you like for lunch.”
Pattern 1272 is available in sizes
"Quotations"
-V
An adequate revival of interna¬
tional trade will be the most pow¬
erful single force for easing politi¬
cal tensions and averting the danger
of war. —Cordell Hull.
I cannot stand a sad expression
on someone’s face. I wish to see ev¬
eryone himself. happy, smiling and enjoying
—Ignace Jan Paderewski.
The great scholars of the world
are the captains of the modern
world’s, army of progress. —Nicholas
Murray Butler.
J
"I was a sucker to
bet I wouldn’t shave
buy again until you had to
another Quart
of Quaker.' State!”
BEFORE YOU NEED A QUART
Try the “First Quart” test. Drain
and refill with Quaker State. See QUAKER
how far you go before you have to
add the first quart. That’s because STATE
there’s an "extra quart of lubrication
in every gallon. ” And remember... MOTOR OIL
the oil that stands up longest is CERTIFIE
giving UARANTEED
your motor the safest lubri¬
cation. The retail price is 35^ per
quart. Quaker State Oil Refin¬
ing Corporation, Oil City, Pa.
14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 re¬
quires 4% yards of 39 inch ma¬
terial and 2 1 /? yards of ribbon for
tie belt.
Pattern 1275 is for sizes 6 months
to 4 years. Size 1 requires 1%
yards of 32 inch material.
Pattern 1403 comes in sizes 2,
4, and 6 years. Size 4 requires lVz
yards of 36 inch material.
Pattern 1212 is designed in sizes
34 to 48. Size 36 requires 5 yards
of 35 inch material plus Va yard
contrasting for the collar.
Send for the Barbara Beli Spring
and Summer Pattern Book con¬
taining designs of attractive, prac¬
tical and becoming clothes. Ex¬
clusive fashions for children,
young women and matrons. Price,
15 cents per copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept. Room 1020,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each.
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Coleman
Use your Coleman
in hundreds of places
where an ordinary lan¬
tern is useless. Use it for
after-dark chores, hunt¬
ing, night fishing, or on any
night job ... it turns
into day. Wind,
rain or snow can’t put
it out. High candle-power
air-pressure light.
Kerosene and gasoline
models. The finest made.
Prices as low as $4.45.
Your local dealer can
supply you. FREE Send post¬
card for Folders.
THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO.
Depu Philadelphia, WU172, Wichita, Kans.; Chicago, lli.t
Pa.; Loa Calif.