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Show rrrrn r nnt of TXT T ,EIII. UTAH Uniaue Setting for Your Bric-a-Erecj! i ! SCREW SHELVESANffl '"vkintn w TU METAL ANGLES ill 8T0R Rica ' i 1 1 r, irjiif nuiii Mini"' f WMuPhilipr W SPARKY WATTS !tt x won W '1 Kub 111111 SSSSactXf tSm V pitches V M SSft f otewmi Wl "Jgggf W Tri'BALLTAM if HB TAKfi V.. I'M UNK-lYE PITCH AJ ? STRONG MY UW J ) . JJ5TJ JF$m i tWfflfrM Tffgfflffl li By RUBE GOLDBERG LALA PALOOZA-Nolmpre...on y-Fwad louCH' )1 THAT VkSN'T EH -AM I TO ' OUT OF MY WW, YOU LOW f L , SIS OUCH. J WAST NICE OF YOlW SaLLiScE iJT EG TAO&HT BORN LOUT BEFORE I'M FORCEOj l V ' rf TO PtNCH MISTER ) . SvOUTO WNNERSBV I r TO SOILMY HANDS ONYOUrl .gf L VINCENT'S JXHZ Jm -;, , r., f .; - , GENENES REG'LAR FELLERS A Matter of Dress . (pE)$) yV CjjflP 2br 1 r .sj t . w ... ii i i i " " ... n a in t in lirt "I"!' POP It's a Chilly Spot for Anyone . j. ITTINGi Ol TOP ' lC.,iT cnru a J Jffi$ ' OF THE VVORLD - ,5NTh! - ASK THE ESKIMO fcM . i u- fcwtx!r-i J fr- h . By FRANK WEBB it f , PORT 6ENNINC, 6A. u t,l Al ' 1 ' ' M PRIVATE ((f - W -tJ- ,L5J lfaflK ( J PKj'i I "Z3 I "When we jump tt night. Sir, I like to see If my k.ik . f 1 1 'chute opens!" tLi Ii LJ GASOLINE FROM THE FARM The American Chemists society J talks and other lam toeS corn states ana products. Fine! Now b will proauce e" a head of cabbage and show us bo to make an a U-hoi ouv - we will feel all set ior ends in the postwar world. It will be mc driving over hil and dale In a vegetable dinner. But it is going to seem funny t CORN BORER." And we don't think we will feel quite right when we take the car i to be gone over and hear ttw .- a h examines UH carburetor, "It's a sugar j sm. TWt car has got to go easy on sweets. i The convention of chemists heari that farmers will find a new and perhaps better living m i . "gasoline." Exit the man with the hoe; entei the man with the hose. . onnflorful farm" yoo will hear somebody say. "He raised over ten thousand barrels of fuel last season, despite the bad weather." t Won rpach a stage where, looking at a load of hay, you wiT naturally wonder whether it's higb test or regular. And how, we wonder, will we feel about corn and sweet potatoes when we know that they are full of gaso-something gaso-something about IU1V. "l -" " , sweet corn that always appealed M us, but we thought of it only as a vegetable, particularly tiice al clambakes and Elks' picnics. Now we shall always feel after eating a few ears that we should go in to have our carbon removed and valves reseated. - . The same way with sweet potatoes. pota-toes. Who can ever feel the same about a sweet potato in the era when even as you take a second helping ' you feel that you are keeping some poor fellow from get ting his share of gasoline.' What burns us up is that there Is no way to get gasoline from a tomato. That's the only vegetable we have ever been able to raise. . IF SHE CAN COOK, OKAT! II, : m tz. : MARK J;... SCALLOPEBl-i FRONT ON f 8 PLVwoon witu r-PATTFRN.TUcu uui mm n jit, say OR A COMPASS SftW .jel ..t: Bleh i:o NO MATTER how often you have to move or whether yot change from a spacious house to 3 single room there are certain treasures that will mean home tc you. v A iew ouoks, a piece oi china and some perfectly useless but cheering bits of bric-a-brac. By all means take them with you and make an attractive setting fw a shadow-box cupooara wi 1 rfr the trick. No special skill and al- most no tools are neeaeaiomafceit, If you do not nave a saw to cut Vio snaUorea irame. marK it m plywood and take it to the nearest woodworKing snup 10 nave h cut, You may have the straight boards cut where you buy them. Then all you will have to do is to screu them together: tack on the front frame and paint or stain to suit your room color scneme. NOTE An actual size pattern for this lhadow-box cupboard; list and sizes of al! materials; and illustrated directions lot making and Bnishing will be sent tot U eents. Ask for Pattern 264 and write direct to; lilentlt Lpjcttd nut L U4 fcr. Taussig 1 MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEAR8 Bedford Hills New York Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents for Pattern No, 264. Name Address Pete Wih ,'tbe Grar f he. as He clerl "She's 01 "Thanks. Pete lit x jeep breai Is 1 noii" M hon Lss aboi tolonel F fciew eno lardboiiea I He wen Kline w She ireadi toere swi L ihreds, tu Migu them was It seen Icould wre ;tiled flow jered 1 ;to lee w Cabbage Seed Cabbage seed has a peculiar tra; known as alternating dormanc; which makes germination rather un certain. Because of this, sow ion or five seeds to the inch, even under glass. Then thin the seedlings tt stand an inch apart as soon as can be handled. If there is room, transplant to stand four inches apart or thin to that spacing when second leaves form. Be sure to keep the seedlings cool; they do better at Si than at 70 degrees. Tire Life The national average tire life to passenger car tires in 1940 was about 22,000 miles. In the test on concrete roads in Iowa, a tire life of 40,000 miles was obtained to speeds ranging from 25 to 65 mile: an hour. The tire mileage obtainec by various drivers of Iowa highwaj commission cars ranged from 20,i to 70,000 miles. The girl who is a good cook is coming into her own again after years of deflation. Her glorification is at hand.. The high cost of eating out, coupled with what you get for your money, is making dinner at home seem a major treat. . For years the gal who could cook was denied just acclaim, due to the 'mushroom growth of restaurants, luncheonettes, taverns, etc., where a dinner saved expense and bother, without destroying the digestive tract. This was the era when restaurants put out a fairly good meal at a reasonable price. Not only that, but iney inrew in a little air of solicitude solici-tude and courtesy. . Dinner far two in the medium. class place would cost $2.50 at the outside, with cocktails at twenty-five cents. Today if you get away with a check for less than $5 you're getting get-ting sandwiches. The run-of-the-mill lunchrooms are charging twice what they did before Pearl Harbor. Even the dogwagons require a bankroll for successful attack. ' And it's nnt tho rial-lino l and quantity that hurts as much as the absence of anything like attentive atten-tive service. The best waiters have gone into the war effort And the re placements have come from the Deaneries. The old-time smile. ' o wuu iuir ner and custnmnr.io.oin.. -""-"wajB-rigiu mood has enno , tm mc poor pro-pneter pro-pneter isn't wholly to blame. Help is so hard to get that he has to Stand trxv at.U: I The customer had objected to , yinaxoes and the failure of the waiter to bring him a lork. I - ree C!,ee" for the little gal who is handv in thA ntw, 6 ul One of the bissest t,... i mi- " "us "i me .'" "ua J ear comes in a shrrt episode in which the culmet-S made to apologize to a waiter for hurting his feelings. if 1 BJ. . but . nsea W be a aart star. "un Ba,m and Water Rules Weather Water rules the weather in Ireland. Ire-land. Warm winds scoop moisture from the Atlantic, blow mistilj against the western hills, wet to coastal strip with heavy rains, keep the island's temrjerature 20 degree; to 30 degrees higher than America: or European areas in the same iau tude, assure a mild, damp climate, The Timid Guanaco Guanaco fur comes from the am mal of the same name. The guana co is the larger of .two wild representatives repre-sentatives of the wool-bearing animals ani-mals of the camel family found it South America. The other is the vipnna Tho Inner soft fur of the animal is fawn colored on top an- white underneath. nnurr I IT CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP A 1171 1 M all w w lien uuwcia mo o'bt. - -WneA feel irritable, headachy, do as imlBO" do - chew FEEN-A-MINT, the mode chewing-gum laxative, bimp'y ", FEEN-A-MINT before you go to w taking oaly in accordance with paews directions sleep without being turbed. Next morning gentle, tww relief, helping you feel swell again- i'l FEEN-A-MINT. Tastes good, j J and economical. A generous family WPF FEEN-A-MINT lo I Anne c ind itooc 'leaning 1 frame, 1 happier ever to went alo herroon waste b; ter reac Not tha' was the It was J She st hall was coming on the the per were i stant tl Porter again. 'Ann She eyes di "Anr Her vi "Oh, 1 Ann you w are yi "Eu cation She '1. Ee si half a tell vt have. said, thoug 'II said 'Bi I ke get 1 over, of hi frigh done Whe: ask W00( 1 hate Ai heai &ro on was aga T It ( yet it -the a: S the sta purrCD CRflMt iuu umtN nnu aurruni"-- a HOT Mt weak, nervous, cranky feeling. a mt blue at tunes uuo -, fiiTH-ttnnal "mirtrfle-ase peculiar to women try "" d to reUeve such symptoms. , regularly Pinkham's Compou helps buUd up resistance ag" such distress. It helps nam Also a fine stomachic tonic low label directions. urrrrsBlf LYDIAE. PINKHAM'S SU . ; I 'our son fcas an excellerit touch whe a he's angry. Unfortunately, Unfortu-nately, he's usually TOO angry to do anything v bang: . Home COot in a ... wonderful o. " ."r seeme(i ore budfiet unportant to the 7 KILLS r Levels O Shn I an ti oy CO ia h Si fu 1 n P 1 a t t |