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CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
INVEST. OPPOR.
Dixie Bftse Celt ate*, Dalton,
POCKET *1.25 on each sale.
8x10 enlargement in gorgeous new
photo frame—sells on sight for $2.93.
for sales olan. MONOGRAM STUDIOS,
Bex 233, Department A, Fore** Hills,
HELP WANTED—MEN,
AGENTS WANTED
To sell new product pro of nationally known
manufacturer manufacturer needed needed by by every every housewife. housewife.
Sells for $1.00, your profit 50c on every
sale. Special uivuc; money raising r a a ising Dept. plan pts for
churches, lodges, etc. Write A: of
«»* Box 1433, i/es Des Moines, • uic», Iowa *^¥S for iui details
this real money making plan.
WHITE TEACHERS WANTED:
Commercial. English. Math, and social
studies in high school and elementary.
S2.3CC plus $25 per year yes tip to 25 years
experience for teachers with degrees.
J. D. BURNSED. C -onty Superintendent
Micdenuy, Florida Phone 59
HOME FURNISHINGS & APPLI.
Beaatifal Fluorescent Table Lamp. Mail
card for descriptive literature. Harold
Amspacker, Dept. A-3. Lewistown, Peana.
MISCELLANEOUS
nisi
prof. lead sheet copies of your song. SI5.
Evans Mnsic ‘ * “ Serv; rice, Hofm mans Bldg.,
Detro roit, Mieb.
TRAVEL
FOR A VACATION in the mountains or a
night’s rest on your ur trip, trio, stop stop at at YOUNG’S YOU!
TOURIST COURT N AN T AH ALA, N. C.
All modem cor nvesiences. Kitchenettes. In
spectacular K ant itahsla gorge, on superb
new Highway W for Reservations.
rite
A. Safe, Sound Investment—
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!
ACHES ro EASE DATf Yosefs G
or
Quickly GRAY’S apply soothing OINTMENT and com¬ with
forting antiseptics and
its wholesome na¬
ture aiding medication. Nothing else
like it—nothing so comforting—or
pleasant for externally caused skin
troubles. S5c. Get a package today.
rQ
;ti Mini lead in mn if
RHEUMATISM
NEURITIS-LUMBAGO
P§pVi P L
Large Bottle : —c Torn*. *l 2 °- Small Size 60c
» CIITIH: HE HIT IS IIIECTEI «
IT III SSI! 313; SUMS u IT Ulil »r«ei|t «l »ri:«
mini mt ti tic. jicismuiE «, mint
JUST A
DASH IN FEATHERS
OR SPREAD ON ROOSTS
GIRLS! WOMIN!
try this if you’re
NERVOUS
On ‘CERTAIN DAYS’ Of Month
Do female functional monthly disturb¬
ances make you feel nervous, Irritable,
so weak and tired out—at such times?
Then do try Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vege¬
table Compound to relieve such symp¬
toms. It’s famous for this! Taken regu¬
larly — Pinkham’s Compound helps
build up resistance against such dis¬
tress. Also a great stomachic tonic 1
LYDIA £. PMHAM'S l SSSSU
Kidneys Work Well- Must
For You To Feel Well
24 hours ever cry da 7 , 7 days every
week, never stoppir from ipping, the the blood. kidneys filter
waste matter om t
kidneys If more people constantly were aware of how the
must remove sur¬
plus fluid, excess acids and other waste
matter that cannot stay in the blood
without injury to health, there would
be better understanding of xchy the
whole system is upset when kidneys fail
to Burning, function properly. frequent
scanty or too urina¬
tion sometimes warns that something
is wrong. You may suffer nagging back¬
ache, headaches, dizziness, rheumatic
pains, getting up Doan'* at nights, Pills'! swelling.
Why not try You will
be using a medicine recommended the
country over. Doan* stimulate the func¬
tion of the kidneys and help them to
flush out poisonous waste from the
blood. They contain nothing harmful.
Get Doan’* today. Use with confidence.
At all drug stores.
DOANS PILLS
WNU—7
IF YOU WERE A WAVE,
WAC, MARINE or SPAR
Find out what
Nursing .
offers you! V
-an education leading to R. N.
-more opportunities every year in
hospitals, public health, etc.
-your allowance under the G. I. Bill
of Rights often covers your entire
nursing course.
-ask for more information
at would the like hospital where nursing.' you |
to enter
i
BOON TO BABIES—AND PARENTS, TOO . . . Experiments con¬
ducted by University of Nebraska food and nutrition laboratory have
shown the valne of feeding meat to babies. Mothers are interested
from a nutrition standpoint; fathers are impressed by the fact that
babies are less fnssy and sleep better. Patsy is shown here receiving
a blood count at the hands of Dr. A. K. Myrabo, pathologist of Uni¬
versity hospital, with Dr. Ruth Leverton, university nutritionist, stand¬
ing by to help.
FOR THE BETTER, TOO
Even Babies Are Affected
By Revised Eatins Habits
WSU Features.
LINCOLN, NEBR. — Chances are “love your great-grandmother
would have no more thought of eating a apple” than of hying
to China. But now we call love apples by the more prosaic name
of tomatoes—and not only eat them but drink ’em, too.
that people s eating habits change,
The University of Nebraska's food
and nutrition laboratory is trying to
see to it that they change for the
better.
Take babies—six weeks old—for
instance. A lot of mothers would
gape in astonishment if you said,
“Why don’t we give the baby a nice
i helping of meat today?” They might
even tell you scornfully that babies
don't get meat until they’re at least
nine months old.
Babies Like It.
| Yet, Dr. Ruth M. Leverton, uni
| versity nutritionist, and two pedia
triciar.s have been feeding meat to
tiny babies for some time now 7 . The
babies like it, and the results have
interested even the American Med¬
ical Association Journal, which
doesn’t get interested very easily.
The big thing that Dr. Lever¬
ton and her associates found is
that meat added for eight weeks
to the diets of babies as young
as six weeks can knock out nu¬
tritional anemia. This, they
say, is important because that
type of anemia is common to
most infants.
The researchers don’t pretend that
j blocking anemia from babyhood is
i going to produce a race of super
! men and women. But they do say
I that anemia keeps the human body
j i —little performance. or big—from 100 per cent
| from It may be that freeing infants
j anemia will let them grow
j strong enough to toss off some of
i the usual childhood diseases. Any
I way, that’s what Dr. Leverton hopes
1 and the laboratory is assisting with
! further study along that line.
Launch Experiments.
The university’s food and nutri¬
tion laboratory launched its attack
on anemia seven years ago. It found
that meat added to the diets of a
group of co-eds reduced simple
anemia.
During the war, a second
study revealed that meat was
of benefit to blood bank donors.
Next came a study of expectant
mothers. A meat supplement to
their diets boosted their hemo¬
globin values—which is a fancy
way of saying they did not be¬
come anemic.
Encouraged by these results, the
researchers turned to babies. When
the study started, strained meat for
babies was not yet on the market
but meat processors cooperated and
produced strained meat of custard
consistency which could be added to
baby formulas. Since then a meat
product has come on the market
commercially.
In cooperation with doctors at
Child Saving institute in Omaha, at
St. Thomas orphanage in Lincoln
and with a small group of parents,
the battle of babies versus anemia
was begun. At the outset, a third of
an ounce of strained meat was add
ed daily to the formulas for babies
six weeks old. This amount was in¬
creased until at the end of a week
an average of a full ounce of meat
a day was being added.
Show Marked Gain.
Records of Child Saving institute
disclose that the 18 “meat babies”
showed an average gain of 13.3 per
cent in hemoglobin content of the
blood at the end of eight weeks.
Their competitors—15 babies of the
same age group and same general
Novel Clock Performs Many Tasks
SPARTANBURG, S. C. - Made
about 1380, a here—keeping four-faced clock still
ticks away time,
charting movements of the moon
and sun, and incidentally telling
time — keeping track of days and
months—all on a master wheel ro¬
tating once every 13 years.
The clock was the creation of Dan¬
iel Davis, who used crude tools to
cut its wheels, gears and cabinet in
his small cabin in the Carolina
CLEVELAND COURIER
condition who did not get meat—
lost 10.3 per cent during the same
period. The red cell values of the
meat eaters jumped an average of
22.2 per cent while their competi¬
tors chalked up a gain of only 6.2
per cent.
Nurses at the institute report¬
ed the babies who got meat
seemed less fussy and slept bet¬
ter than their competitors. The
institution’s pediatrician said the
general physical condition of the
meat-eaters was better, too.
Results comparable to those at
Child Saving institute were obtained
at St. Thomas orphanage. Among
the babies in private homes, the rec
ords were not as spectacular—prob¬
ably because the routine of care was
not as exacting—but even in the
homes the meat eating babies
showed no loss in hemoglobin con¬
tent of the bjood while their com¬
petitors who did not get meat lost
8 per cent.
It was this ability of the meat
eaters to avoid hemoglobin loss that
the researchers consider important.
According to Dr. Leverton it means
that the protein in the meat diet
kept the babies from taking the
downward road to nutritional
anemia.
-
Worth 50 Scents,
Old Trapper Opines
At Big Skunk Hunt
RANGELEY LAKE, ME.—Ain’t
been so much fun down Maine way
since the lassie moose mistook an
air raid siren for her lover’s call to
arms.
The first skunk hunt in the Pine
Tree state was such a sockeroo that
they say it’s going to be an annual
affair from here on in, with brass
bands and all that.
“I wouldn’t have missed it for
50 scents,” giggled one grizzled
old trapper.
Skunks are a bit of a problem ii
the resort area of inland Maine. So
this year, in an effort to speed mass
migration of the “burrowing carni¬
vora” in the Rangeley Lake region,
W. Scott Peirsol, general manager
of the Rangeley Sheraton hotel, so¬
licited the services of Boston’s fan¬
ciest debutantes and their escorts
for the first mass skunk hunt.
Their weapons for the fray includ¬
ed wicker baskets (you throw the
basket over the skunk’s head or, if
you prefer, over your own); flash¬
lights (not too far front, please), and
pitchforks (by process of elimina¬
tion, since nothing in Emily ~ Post
recommends the use of any other
j f° r k as de rigeur).
: To climax three days of unrivaled,
: unfettered frolic, a Skunk Hunters’
ball was held for all participants.
Three “C’s” Now
NORMAN, OKLA.—It’s the three
“C’s” instead of the three “R’s”
for wives of war veteran students
at University of Oklahoma. Instead
of readin’, writin’ and ’rithmetic,
they are learning about cannin’,
crochetin’ and clothin’ in classes
sponsored by the school of home
economics.
mountains.
One face records the 24 hour
progress of the sun. Another charts
the course and phases of the moon.
A third tells the day and month,
even allowing for the extra leap year
day. The fourth face performs a
clock’s ordinary timekeeping duty.
R. O. Davis, grandson of the
skilled maker, now owns the novel
gadget, which holds a place of honor
in his home.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
f-^rettij idroch j^or IgJouncj Cjirfs
favorite in Cavern very WJardrobt
Party or School Dress
\\T ’ ’ HAT could young resist this miss dainty of 4 school to 12
or party frock? Tiny ruffling
forms the yoke edging accented
with a saucy bow, a narrow belt
ties pertly in back.
Pattern No. 8122 comes in sizes 4. 6, 8
10 and 12 years. Size 6. 2 1 a yards of
35 or 39-mch; 1 yard purchased raising.
Don’t miss the new Fall and Winter
Issue cf FASHION. It’s brimful of smart,
easy-to-sew styles; fashion news: special
features. Free pattern printed inside the
book. 25 cents.
__
A quiz with answers offering ?
information on various subjects \
The Questions
1. Which of the umpires is su¬
preme in major league baseball?
2. The community chest origi¬
nated in Denver in what year?
3. What ended the War of
Roses?
4. How many moons does Jupi¬
ter have?
5. What state has the most fish¬
ermen?
6. How big are the Statue of
Liberty’s eyes?
7. How did Pitcairn island get
its name?
8. Is Spanish moss a parasite?
9. What is the world’s largest
crop?
10. What was the largest purse
ever offered in a horse race and
what horse won it?
The Answers
1. The plate umpire.
2. The year 1888.
3. A wedding. Henry the VII
married Elizabeth, daughter of
Most Versatile Robot Could
Walk, Smoke. Count, Talk
The most versatile mechanical
man ever constructed was made
by an American and exhibited in
New York City in 1939-1940. Upon
a spoken command, this
foot 260-pound robot would
form any one of 26 actions
as walk, smoke, count on his
gers and speak, using a vocabu¬
lary of 77 words. Most incredible
of all, his intricate electrical
mechanism — tubes, motors, re¬
lays, coils—contained no less than
24,900 miles of wire.
MORE HOHE/ffiE SWOONS
“than CAMELS, ever before!
Mrs. June Slocomb, Housewife, says:
"EXPERIENCE IS THE
BEST TEACHER! I TRIED*
MANY BRANDS DURING THE cau®
WARTIME CIGARETTE SHORTAGE
— I LEARNED THERE'S NO
OTHER CIGARETTE LIKE
a camel!",
Cik/it io Opp&thwihf,
Texans are famous for their loy¬
alty to their native state, and are
always ready with a good word for
it no matter where they are, to
wit:
One of its sons was visiting the
East where he had occasion to at¬
tend the funeral of a man who
was thoroughly disliked in the
community.
At the services the minister,
who was new in the parish, called
upon someone to say a few words
about the deceased. A long and
significant silence ensued.
Finally, the true son of Texas
arose and said, “Well, since there
is no one present who has any¬
thing to say about our departed
brother, I’d like a few minutes to
tell you folks about Texas.”
Gramma
SPEARIN'.
:
.
rrs TOO LATE to worry about
yesterday, about and too soon to worry
tomorrow.*
COUSIN ERMA sez what you use
for seasonin' vegetables should be
real tasty by itself. That’s why
she uses Nu-Maid.
Jf'
FORGIVEN’ IS something you do
with your lips. Forgettin’ is some¬
thing you have to put your heart
into.*
SAKES ALIVE, when you see the
words “Table-Grade” bn a pack¬
age of Margarine, ve’re sure it's
top quality. Nu-Maid Margarine’s
Table-Grade, -Grade, made ’specially fer
use on i 1 the table.
*$c
will be paid upon publica¬
tion to the first contributor of
each accepted saying or idea for
“Grandma Speakin - .” Address Nu
Maid Margarine, Cincinnati 2, O.
■VNOTHING tops the smart shirt
* ’ waister for season after sea¬
son w r earabiiity. This practical
frock flatters every figure, takes
j handsomely to almost any fabric.
* * *
•' Pattern No. 1600 is for sizes 14. 15, 13.
’ 20; 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 16, 3- 2 yards
of 39-inch.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
530 South Wells St- Chicago 7, HI.
Enclose 25 cents m coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No___Size_
Name
Address
! Edward the IV, and thereby unit¬
ed the House of York, the “White
Rose” of the war, with the House
of Lancaster, the “Red Rose.”
4. Eleven.
5. Michigan, which issued 904,-
557 licenses last year.
6. Each eye is 2L feet wide.
7. From Pitcairn, a midshipman
I aboard Carteret's ship, who first
! saw the island in 1767.
8. No, while it grows only on
j trees, it is an air plant.
9. Rice. It is eaten every day
by nearly half the people of the
I world.
| 10. The §103,400 Santa Anita Han
i dicap of 1935. Azucar won it.
BUBBLE
* \\ _an d parents
| * .. 1 foil -
\ JaDe Norris,
fays: "I get
father, Mr.
to blow bubbles.
up! I also
Champions like
Jane Norris say:
Look for the Yellow
Package trith the Big
Red Letter*/
SUose
ASPIRlii
CHEW BUB
this laboratory -pure,
quality bubble gumi
QUEEN BUB in recent contest
all the time with BUB.” And her
Norris, says: “Jane has taught me
recommend the sport to every grown¬
BUB for quality and purity P"
meets all Pure Food require¬
It's made entirely in the U.S.A.
the most sanitary conditionsl
your dealer does not have BUB Bub¬
Gum, send us his name and address
with your name and address and
and we will mail you 5 packages of
BUB Bubble Gum. This offer
until Aug. 31, 1947 only.