Newspaper Page Text
Kitchen Helper Has
Double Duty Purpose
T'HIS practical kitchen helper is
x really very easy to build from
the full size pattern. Once you’ve
used it chances are that you’ll
make another to go alongside your
stove or sink. It not only provides
many square inches of additional
table top working space, but it
also does double duty as a large
tray holder. Salad bowls and mix¬
ers can also be stored on its wide
shelves.
The materials which the pattern speci¬
fies are obtainable at any lumber yard.
Trace pattern on lumber specified, saw
and assemble. Full size pattern shows
exactly where to nail or screw each
piece You’ll and size of nails and screws to
use. have fun building this piece
and save many steps using it.
Send 50 cents for Step-Saver Kitchen
Unit Pattern No. 3 to Easi-Bild Pattern
Co., Dept. W. Pleasantville, N. Y.
NEW! BRAN MUFFINS
WITH TANGY PINEAPPLE
Grand Idea For Sunday Night Supper
Aahl Crunchy toasted Kellogg’s All
Bran dotted with flavorful pineapple!
Different and dee-iicious!
U cup shortening % teaspoon salt
3 ,i cup sugar 1 cup Kellogg's
1 egg All-Bran
1 cup sifted flour 1 cup undrained
2% teaspoons crushed
baking powder pineapple
1. Blend shortening and sugar; add
egg and beat well.
2. Sift flour with baking powder and
salt; add All-Bran. Stir into first
mixture alternately with pineapple.
Mix only until combined.
3. Fill greased muffin pans % full.
Bake in moderately hot oven
(400°F.) 25 to 30 minutes.
Yield; 10 muffins — 2Vi inches in
diameter.
tomorrow. —try famous laxative America’s a natural bowlful cereal most s
Yodora
checks
perspiration
odor
.«E Swm/w&r WAY
Made with a face cream base, \odora
is actually soothing to normal skin3.
No harsh chemicals or irritating
salts. Won’t harm skin or clothing.
Stays soft and creamy, never gets
grainy.
Try gentle Yodora -Jed the wonderful
difference!
Are you going through the func¬
tional ‘middle age’ period peculiar
to women (38 to 52 yrs.) ? Does this
make you suffer from hot flashes,
feel so nervous, highstrung, tired?
Then do try Lydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound to relieve such
symptoms. Pinkham’s Compound
also has what Doctors call a sto
zflbchic tonic effect! -
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S compound
When Your
Back Hurts
And Your Strength and
Energy Is Below Par
It may be caused by disorder of kid¬
ney function that permits For truly poisonous nan?
waste to accumulate. and miserable
people feel tired, weak
when the kidneys fail to remove excess
acids and other waste matter from the
You may suffer nagging backache,
rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness,
getting up nights, leg pains, swelling.
Sometimes frequent ana scanty urma
tion with smarting and burning is an¬
other sign that something is wrong with
‘^There should fc^eno^doubt neglect. that promp. Uss
treatment is wiser than rely
Doan's Pills. It is better to on •
medicine that has won countrywide ap¬
proval than on something less favorably
known. Doan's have been tried and test¬
ed many years. Are at all drug stores.
Get Doan’s today.
_
DOANS PILLS
U.Phillipr
FHE BABE GOES HOME
Whatever means as much as an
‘all-hot” is getting quite a play
today in that Valhalla to which base
sail folks go. The angels, we like
to think, have set aside their wings
And are in shirt sleeves. The bars
lave been let down somewhat. St.
Peter is not so strict on the gate;
those not quite eligible are permit¬
ted knotholes. Arguments are not
frowned on and a little ribbing goes.
For the first time, perhaps, it is
all right up there to throw a pop
bottle.
_ ♦
_
Diadems are a little tilted.
The sun is shining at its bright¬
est, there is the snap of flags
in the breeze, the grass was
never greener. George Herman
Ruth has come home.
_ * _
It is curious how many potentates
and great ones of the earth are in
die bleachers and how many folks
jvho were not great shakes when on
earth have the box seats. It’s very
special. The scores have been kept
ivith great care. Those who did it
:he hard way, who triumphed over
aandicaps, who came through
against odds are being smiled on.
There is an enormous section for
ost sheep and prodigal sons.
*
_ _
The harps are put aside for
brassier instruments and for
tin horns and super-noise mak¬
ers. Gabriel himself leads a
cheer and the Bambino en¬
ters. He is dazed and needs a
few minutes to get things
straight, to realize that the doc¬
tors are gone, the men with the
stethoscopes and the tubes and
the instruments, the nurses and
the charts, the agonies and the
darkness.
_»_
He rubs his eyes. “It’s all right,’’
i voice of infinite tenderness tells
lim. “What’s all this? Where am
[?” asks the Bambino, young and
zital. “It would take too long to
explain,” says the Voice, “and you
.night not find it easy to under¬
stand. We’re not too sure whether
;his is just the proper thing or not
iut we are scrambling up values,
standards and the rules a little.”
_*_
“But I don’t rate all this,”
stammers the Babe. “I was a
pretty tough one in my time.
The reformatory type, remem¬
ber?
“And a bad actor in plenty
of spots. There was that time
when . . .”
“Shut up and come in,” says
a fellow with a great shock of
hair. “And remember you nev¬
er got anywhere talking back
to me.”
“Judge Landis'.” exclaims
the Babe.
“Get into action,” says the
Judge. “It’s been lovely up
here, but, well, a little too quiet
without you.”
_*_
“Look, is this a dream? Did the
ioc give me too many dope pills
ast night?” pleads the Babe.
“Take it from us. This is all the
real thing,” comes from a trio of
familiar voices.
“Colonel Huston! . . . Jake! . . .
Miller Huggins!” cries the Bam
oino.
_ * _
“Welcome!” says Colonel
Ruppert. “And no salary talks!”
The Babe looks himself ov¬
er. He sees that he is a young¬
ster again. He observes that
he is in the No. 3 uniform. He
feels the old surge of power.
But he still stands a little be¬
fuddled.
“Have a bat, pal!”
“Lou! . . . Lou! . . . Lou Geh¬
rig!”
“Yeah. I’ve been expecting
you, Babe.”
_ * _
Now the Babe hears such cheers
as he never heard before, mighty
rheers from the throats of old tim¬
ers, departed buddies, the greal
dost of kids who were called toe
soon, Brothers Matthias and Gil¬
bert-all the^ great company ol
chose who love a game battler, a
oig hearted guy, a fellow whose
ehief mistakes came from being too
numan.
_ * _
He’s at the plate once more—
and on such a ball field!
The Bambino has come home!
* * *
Chet Bowles, former head of OPA,
nas been named as the Democratic
jandidate for governor of Connec¬
ticut. He is all for the return oi
rationing and it is obvious that if
ae wins over the GOP candidate il
svill be on points.
* * ♦
VANISHING AMERICANISMS
"I’m glad you complained; the waitei
uill bring you a new order at once"
"The boss knows what he is doing.”
_ *
_
"The fellow who was hired as a co
median was funny.”
Fur coat sales are reported off 2f
to 40 per cent. Who wants to buy
one these days when its such fur
sitting by the phone waiting foi
the radio to ring you up and givi
you one free?
CLEVELAND COURIER
m
Here's Why Steak
Costs So Much in
The Butcher Shop
OMAHA, NEB.—A $5 bull calf,
born on the western Nebraska
range and fed grass and corn for
two years as a steer, will bring
36 cents a pound on the Omaha
livestock market. And that’s not
top price.
For a housewife to place on the
broiler—steak from that one-time
wobbly-legged calf, she must pay
her butcher $1 a pound. That’s av¬
erage current price for beef loin,
Here’s the trail a specific Aber¬
deen Angus bull calf travelled be¬
fore he ended up on the dinner
plate:
He weighed about 75 pounds at
birth, and was worth $5. In the
first year of his life he grazed
off seven acres of grassland, ate
about two tons of hay, licked block
salt and underwent a de-sexing op¬
eration.
In the second summer he had
grown into a 711-pound steer and
was ready to be sold to a feeder,
a stockman who specialized in
“finishing” cattle into beef-on-the
hoof. The steer brought 16 cents
a pound, netting his former owner
$114..
Transportation Costs
The feeder paid $1.91 to trans¬
port the steer by train to his home
town, and 21 cents to truck the
animal to his farm. The feeder
kept the glossy black animal II
months.
The feeder followed the Ameri¬
can Meat institute’s formula for
fattening the animal for each 100
pounds of grain:
Seven hundred thirty-two pounds
of grain costing the feeder five
cents a pound; 60 pounds of pro¬
tein at six cents a pound; 245 pounds
of hay at 1% cents a pound; 385
pounds of silage at one-half cent a
pound, and 8% days of outside pas¬
ture running 75 cents a month.
The cost of feeding, insuring, and
caring for the critter was $164,
making a total expenditure of $278
to the feeder.
Steer Gains Weight
The steer gained 609 pounds to a
total weight of 1,320 pounds. At
$36 per hundredweight, he re¬
turned $468, a 68 per cent profit,
or $190, to the feeder.
The carcass of the former 75
pound bull calf yielded 68 pounds
of loin, only 8 per cent of the
dressed weight of 850 pounds.
Prorated, that 8 per cent of loin
cost the packer $37.44. At a whole¬
sale price of 80 cents a pound, the
loin brought the packer $54.50.
That money was for the cut of
meat to produce steaks, not pot
roast or chuck.
The housewife paid the retail
price of $1 a pound for a piece of
meat which, two years ago, repre¬
sented 5.23 per cent of the calf
on-the-hoof, was worth about
three cents.
Lawyer Explains in Legal
Terms How Client Was Bitten
CINCINNATI.—Mrs. Anna Wag
enlander, 79, Newport, Ky., filed
two suits for $12,000 each in com¬
mon pleas court, charging she had
been bitten and mauled in the Cin¬
cinnati club by a chimpanzee be¬
longing to the Zoological Society of
Cincinnati.
Mrs. Wagenlander charged the
animal attacked her when she
stepped from an elevator at the
club, where she was employed.
Jack Glenn Williams, attorney in
the action filed on behalf of Mrs.
Wagenlander, said:
“Plaintiff had no knowledge of
the presence of simians among the
group waiting for said elevator, nor
in the exercise of reasonable care
in departing from said elevator
could plaintiff distinguish said
chimpanzee from its keepers and
the other anthropoids, waiting there.
“Plaintiff was not aware until
thereafter that said elevator, or said
Cincinnati club, catered to or were
used by wild animals other than of
the species homo sapiens, especially
apes, far from their native haunts
in Africa, and even several miles
from the strong cages of the Cin¬
cinnati zoological gardens where
the aforesaid elevator-riding chim¬
panzee usually makes his home, but
without elevator service.”
New Air Power Hoe Replaces
Drudgery of Hand Farming
SAN FRANCISCO.—One answer to
higher agricultural production costs
may be found in the air power hoe
invented by Frank King, sugar beet
grower.
Although the machine is mechani¬
cally practical, actual savings in op¬
erating costs are not known yet,
says J. P. Fairbanks, University of
California agricultural engineer,
who saw it demonstrated.
He added that the savings would
have to be high because the hoes
cost about $165 each to make, plus
the air compressor, cost of tractor
and driver’s wages.
However, it replaces the drudg¬
ery of hand hoeing and workers
won’t have a chance to lean on a
handle and rest, he said.
Up to 20 rows can be weeded at
once. A tractor draws an air com¬
pressor slowly down the field with
air hoses attached on each side.
Each hose is connected to a hoe
with a piston at the top of the
handle. Compressed air jabs the
blade back and forth much like a
jackhammer.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
IJounff CJrocb for Cfeneral lAJec
(Comfortable CJailorecl CCtylc
Choice of Sleeves.
DUTTONS in three on shoulder
and hip make an exciting trim
for this versatile daytime dress.
Nice in a college wardrobe; for
the business girl; for general
wear. A choice of sleeves is pro¬
vided.
Pattern No. 8235 is for sizes 12, 14, 16,
18 and 20. Size 14, 334 yards of 35 or
39-inch.
Extended Shoulders.
"^EATLY can be is tailored this well and mannered slim as
shirtwaist frock. Extended shoul¬
ders are extremely comfortable;
the panelled skirt is a favorite
with women everywhere. Note
the clever button closing.
Pattern No. 8356 comes In sizes 36, 38,
40, 42. 44, 46, 48. 50 and 52. Size 38, 4 y,
yards of 39-inch.
Send 25 cents for your copy of the Fall
and Winter FASHION. It’s smart, color¬
ful—and filled with sewing ideas for
V,’
I 3be£uxe CHAMPION TRANSPORT CHAMPION GROUND GRIP
PASSENGER TRUCK TRACTOR
mm
SAVE 9ATC ^ O WAYS ™AT)
ON THREE GREAT TIRES
Tire$tone TIRES
IOt YOUR TRACTOR. TRUCK & CAR
tyou Save tyo#. Save tyou Save
WHEN YOU BUY Firestone WHEN YOU USE Firestone WHEN YOU RETREAD
Tires because your used Tires because there’s extra Firestone Tires because the
tires worth in miles, extra months of safe, tire bodies are strong
are more dependable service built enough to outlast several
trade at Firestone. into them. new treads.
SEE YOUR FIRESTONE DEALER OR STORE
Listen to the Voice of firestone Monslay evenings, NBC
every home sewer. Free doll pattern
printed inside the book.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
530 South Wells St. Chicago 7, 111.
Enclose 25 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No__Size_
Name.
Address.
MORE MOTHERS buy Kellogg’s Rice Krispiea
for their families than any other brand of rice
cereal. Um! Popular! Delicious!
COPYRIGHT I*4». »Y KEl.1033 CX
Korea’s Isle of Amazons
Lives on Ocean Harvest
As shallow-sea divers for pearls,
shellfish, edible seaweed, and va¬
rious items of commerce, women
of Oriental coasts for centuries
have outdone the men.
Those of Cheju, 50 miles off Ko¬
rea’s southern tip, have been nota¬
bly adept. An estimated 10,000 to¬
day live by harvesting ocean atres,
while their men in som^ cases tend
the children and prepare the meals,
notes the National Geographic so¬
ciety.
From this feminine monopoly has
grown the tradition of Cheju as an.
Amazon isle. It took positive form
in the West about 1900 when a
traveler brought back the tale that
the island until 1850 had been popu¬
lated solely by women and young
children in storied Amazon style.
In the 1946 census, Cheju counted
276,148 inhabitants, virtually all on
the coasts of the 45-by-20-mile oval
of land. There were 113 women to
each 100 men on Cheju in 1946,
whereas on the Korean mainland
men outnumbered women.
Cheju port on the north coast is
the island’s capital and chief cen¬
ter, counting 30,000 inhabitants.
They live largely in crude, thatch
ed-roof huts of mud and stone. An¬
cient walls to defend against pirate
attack still stand along the shore.
Life of Samuel Colt
After being expelled from Am¬
herst, Samuel Colt was sent to sea.
The ship’s paddle wheel gave him
an idea for the revolving pistol
cylinder. At the age of 14 he whit¬
tled out a model and it worked.
Later, he quit his father’s dye
plant to seek his fortune as “Dr.
Coult”. In 1832 he sent his plan of
a gun to the U. S. patent office,
and was awarded a patent In 1836
After the original company failed,
Colt invented the submarine
“mine”, while still in his twenties.
He died wealthy at the age of 48.