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Show NEEDLECRAFT PATTERNS Practical Potholders in Jiffy Crochet Our Improved pattern visual wltli easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete com-plete directions makes needlework easy. Price 20 cents. Due to an unusually large demand and current conditions, slightly more Ume is required in Ailing orders for a few of the most popular patterns. Send your order to: Sewlnn Circle Needlecraft Dfpt. S6t W. Randolph St. Chicago 80, I1L Enclose SO cents for pattern. No Kmmm 1 , , j ' "Mom said I should tell you about the trouble I tot Into z' Z . (T today but you know how I exaggerate evervthimr Keiuy and Br were going to match to see which ' vryming. i . 1 one leaves-but neither of 'em have a coin!" " ' I IANCY tujijuij . , Bv Ernie Bushmiller A inT FRfTZI'S W m.- AUNT FRITZI 1 V NO t-m Wm X" Wl r ?, BEEN MAD AT 1 & WILL YOU COME I f still ' i 'ITTTF. REGGIE . By Margarita WrS1" 2 0HIW0NT...l) SAVED THEM ? J 11 THEY KEPT SWELL...) 11- I &G(s DIGGING F0R V SAVED SOME WHAT DO YOU fjA fT IN YOUR v .S' wL IUTT AND JEFF By Bud Fisher i lv ma t ArJ( m(SJ's Trti 1 S0ME 3uY's VEL-wrtV don't VrTTiN ( wait? what)! r Tll , . -.,-,7) ; g I (IUTT HOLD ME MY GIRL IN THE hrf ftBM WAJT.THM) I J." j wk or i might , garden' i-i- VaJjI wkat i'll V smaller (CfV ' $ ? ' 1 ij JTTER ; ByArtWPomter !(3SBSSH5SH L IISrEfX . SHOP AND BRING BACK WHAT J Tc lgfkg I mfNT K ' T' AJ ?-v IL he gives eu r- S vTHtttsStSS -Jmh cm 7j . Lin jyy j J 5 1 jet 3LAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes . , rj ; . " 1 N ,AASfiiE- VU'O " , WHAT I'M V" UTE TO RENEGE y READ N 1 C-A5S LIBRARIAN $ Hi Y HEIBOOltSi I WAlTIN'TO V . ( NOW, BUTCHA GOT A.JIMMI&-VE " felSS THOUGHT I'D TM& ) r. UV115 AFTENOON? . DO BUTCH.' SYMPATHY' ---Sl f fcgpga, THOSE BOOKS 1 rGIL By Len Kleis !L i?vdu com i ein m-n i ' 1 n Z Z ITI Canvthin6 else V llferpKH 1 S-- l By Jeff Hayes Distiller's Processed Grain Has Feed Value By-Product Speeds Up Growth of Livestock By W. J. DRTDEN Leading agricultural colleges have conducted experiments with distiller's distil-ler's dried grains and have found that for every bushel of grain milled In a distillery the high protein and vitamin by-products recovered are equal to one and one-seventh bushels bush-els of grain in feed value when fed with farm-raised grains. From every bushel of grain processed proc-essed for alcohol in the distillery, 17 to 18 pounds of highly nutritious animal and poultry feeds are re- ""'""""n-f fc 'i i-iii'nXma limit 7466 Neglected Cut Brings On Murder Conviction A short time ago, a victim of a holdup found that, in the scuffle, he had received a cut on his thumb says Collier's. The next day, the thumb was so sore that the man consulted his physician who told him it was badly infected and should be amputated at once. But he ignored the doctors's advice and ' warning and died two weeks later of blood poisoning. ' Although the physician testified at the trial of the robber that the death of the victim was due to neglect neg-lect of his conditki, the defendant was found guilty of murder because be-cause the wound had resulted from the holdup. Weighing and checking periodically periodi-cally turkeys fed on stlmuflav at Walker poultry farm, Peoria, 111. covered. The present demand for grain makes it advisable for farmers farm-ers to substitute distiller's grain or similar product for part of the ration ra-tion for their turkeys, chickens or livestock. The economy of such a method has resulted in increased growth and production at a low cost. Poultry Poul-try fed this by-product has shown a gain of one pound over chickens raised on a standard farm ration. Reinforcements Needed To Maintain the Soil Manure is important in furnishing plant food to the soil, adding organic or-ganic matter and rebuilding soil structure. But you cannot maintain your soil simply by feeding crops to livestock and returning the manure to the land. The above chart shows the losses that occur when 1,000 bushels of corn are fed to livestock. In making the feed into milk or WHAT HAPPENS TO FEBTILITV ' : WHEN FED ? -f - " " 1 ii-i-rffiirn iiI-iiii I if Tl IOOO BU. ANIMALS RETURNED CONTAIN: USE! IN MANURE: 2tSNS QM. 17 T0N5 II T0N5 1000 LB Si N. 250 LB& N. 750 L54 N. I70LB&P. 34 LBS R. 136 IMP. 190 LBS. K. 19 LBS K. 171 LBS. K. rTn vnn pvpr bop Riirh mv not. - I I hrtlrlarc? Thpu'pfl rtrortiVal I too. Good and thick, and sturdy, Made of rug cotton or candlewick. Make these pretty flower potholders. Protective as well as gay I Pattern 14Wi bas directions for both. WmM s First".;;' Hi? Mail 'Pilots Pigeons carried messages in an cient times, beginning in the days of Cyrus, the Persian king (about 550 B. C). But it is not generally known that they pioneered the world's first regular air mail services, serv-ices, i It began in November, 1897, when the Great Barrier Pigeongram Pigeon-gram Service established a regular regu-lar air mail route between Auckland, Auck-land, New Zealand, and Great Barrier Island, 65 miles to the north-west across a tempestuous strait. A year later the New Zea land Government authorized the issue of special postage stamps for use on this pigeon mail. In September, 1899, the service was extended to Marotirl and Hen and Chicken Islands. A rival service, serv-ice, known as the Great Barrier Pigeongram Agency, began operations opera-tions in the latter year, Both companies com-panies continued to carry mail by pigeon post over these routes until the opening of the New Zealand cable in 1908. Letters flown on this pioneer air service were written on sheets of tissue-thin paper, folded in such a manner that they could be sealed with the postage stamp itself. Schoolboy Howlers Tbest little gems of information . were taken from examination papers: Prevailing winds are winds that always blow when other winds stop blowing. In some rocks we find the footprints foot-prints of fishes, False doctrine means giving people the wrong medicine. A cipher is a bottle that squirts. Antidote is a funny story that you have heard before. A refugee is a man who blows the whistle at a football' game. Asked to paraphrase the sentence, sen-tence, "The epistle was written in jocular vein," one boy wrote: "The letter was written in blood." Bridal Wreaths beef, the animals use up 60 per cent of the original organic matter, 25 per cent of the nitrogen, 20 per cent of the phosphorus and 10 per cent of the potash. With careful handling the manure (liquid and solid) will return to the soil a high percentage of the fertility originally contained in the feed. But under ordinary methods of handling, manure may lose as much as half its fertility and organic matter. In order to maintain main-tain and improve the soil, manure should be reinforced by other good management practices. These 'should Include liming, the growing of deep-rooted legumes in the rotation rota-tion to open and ventilate the soil, and the application of commercial fertilizer as needed. trials Show Efficient Feeding of Molasses Three series of trials using a total of 122 pigs were conducted to determine deter-mine the maximum amount of cam molasses that can be utilized efficiently effi-ciently by pigs from weaning to a weight of 70 pounds. Rations containing contain-ing levels of 10, 20, 30 and 40 'pel cent molasses were compared witt check rations containing no molasses molas-ses in these experiments at University Univer-sity of'HawaiL The results indicate that, with th rations fed, 20 per cent is the maximum maxi-mum amount that will allow satis factory gains and efficient feed util ization. Above this level of molassei both the rate of gain and efficiency of feed utilization decreases mark edly. Cost of Keeping Rats Runs High on Farms Eats and mice, mankind's great est animal enemies, cause enormoui losses to agricultural crops, roc crops, tubers, bulbs, cereals ami trees. Rats also transmit such diseases dis-eases as typhus and bubonic plague It costs about two cents a day oi $7.30 a year to keep a rat One ra will eat and destroy from 85 to 101 pounds of feed a year, or as mud as la consumed by a laying hen. 4 cow produce oa food of 225 rats. Illiterate Financial'Wiz' Set Out to Corner Gold Wall Street's most spectacular character in the 19th century, was James Fisk who got his start selling sell-ing blankets to the Army during the Civil War. By 1869, he had become be-come so wealthy and bold that, with several associates, he tried to corner the nation's gold, an unsuccessful un-successful move that swept hundreds hun-dreds of firms and individuals into bankruptcy. Fisk, one of the greatest great-est financial wizards of his time, was uneducated and virtually illiterate. The wreath of flowers worn in the bride's hair is a relic of the "corona nuptualis" used by the Greeks and Romans to indicate triumph. In other words, the bride who wears a wreath on her head i3 telling the world she "got her man." Beware Coughs from ccmn.cn csiis That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly because be-cause it goes right to the scat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, Inflamed In-flamed bronchial mucous membranes. mem-branes. Tell your druptjist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding: un-derstanding: you must like the way it quickly allays the couprh or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis P!r FASTER SMOOTNtRt 5 ' . Vi ft J .T,.f.i MOIli i 'l I Dl-Maa B - i 0; 1iuUVi r&&'J on!. SINGH OH POUBtf fDGf j y . r I I Ft m-Y A A ir V l mv ' ' 1., U. .. ...... .Z in. ' ! if :3 I Rub in Ben-Gay, quick! Gently warming Ben-Gay brings speedy, welcome relief from chest-cold discomfort. discom-fort. You see, Ben-Gay contains up to 2Vx times more methyl salicylate and menthol two pain-relieving agents known to all doctors than five other widely offered rub-ins. Insist on genuine Ben-Gay, the original orig-inal Baume Analgesique. Also for Paia due to RHEUMATISM, MUSCLE ACHE, and STRAINS. Ask for Mild Ben-Cay for Childrea. 'if mm |