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Show THE MURRAY EAGT.fi Kansas Weather A Gibraltar Gibraltar, the rock at the discloses that Kansas is Just about the most healthful state In the Union. It is one of the first three in the longevity of women and among the first six in longevity of men. The survey discloses that Kansas has fewer communicable diseases, such as tuberculosis, than most any other state. And the reason ascribed, according to experts, Midsumis the Kansas weather. mer sun provides health-givinultra-violrays, say the experts, and there is midsummer sun in Kansas as in few places elsewhere. j A little gem entitled RIGHT With AMERICA" ernmost point of the Iberian peninsula, guards the entrance to Uie Mediterranean sea. The rock has been in British possession since 1713. It has been elaborated, tunneled and armed until it is considered impregnable. A large and harbor has been constructed at its foot and as a naval base it is of the greatest strategic importance. The rock is 24 miles long, of a mile wide and 1.396 feet in height The area is nearly two square miles. three-quarte- rs Location Decides Color The location of a room has much to do with the color wallpaper that looks best on its walls. Almost al-- i "Whafa reveals an It shows interesting comparison. that the American worker still has the best opportunities of a high standard of living. "Today, the average American workman works 853 hours to pay for an automobile. The English workman has to work 3,522 hours. The German workman, 5,054 hours. The French workman, A Chinese workman 7,295 hours. would have to work all of his life and still he couldn't finish his installment payments." Flagellation According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the Penitentes Los (the Penitent Brothers) is a society of flagellants which exists among the Spanish Catholics of New Mexico and Colorado, and also Inamong the natives and dians. The discipline consists of flagellation, carrying heavy crosses, binding individuals to a cross for hours, tying the limbs to prevent the circulation of blood and other acts of bodily torture as a means of expiation of sin. Her-man- ways, north and east rooms get less sunshine than do south and west nrci Sn in malra nn fnr thia rtnfiripn- cy, pick wallpapers in warm tones with red or yellow tints for north and east rooms, and reserve the cooler shades of green, gray, blue or violet for the brighter rooms. You can use richer shades and more pronounced patterns in these lighter rooms, as welL Doll Hobby Four hundred dolls, gathered from all parts of the world over a period at a cost of from $5 to $150, are only the start of ber collection, according to Mrs. Franklin Schneider of Cleveland. She became interested in dolls from buying Christmas presents for children of friends. Alimony Covers Hardin Balthrope, south- - se-cu-ro g U. S, A. Way Negligence, not Accident Most accidents are not accidents, but are the results of carelessness, negligence or just plain bullheadness and cussedness. It is not an accident if a driver passes on a curve or on a hill at 75 miles and either goes over the bank or hits another car or pedestrian. It is not an accident when a person crosses against the lights and gets hurt or killed. It is not an accident that 76 per cent of all cars on the highways have defective brakes, as determined by the University of Iowa. Rock of recent national health aurvey half-bree- d el NATIONAL AFFAIRS FOR WINDSOR, TOO! separate maintenance arrearage to his wife, imposed upon him by a Chicago judge, recently. Citizens Win Strike After staging a voluntary blackout lasting a month in protest against high electric light rates, citizens of Baracoa won their battle President Bru of Cuba ordered the power company to reduce its Hi YOU'LL FIND WINDSOR AMONG charges. "FINEST"! THE TOWN'S aid-to-BritQ- (BeU Syndicate in Windsor deserves to be decorated for smoothness, for delicious flavor, and for every other quality you look Tobacro Warehouse One of the largest warehouses of its kind in the world is a tobacco warehouse In Lexington, Ky. It haa 210,000 square feet of floor space and has held as much as 1,916,000 pounds of tobacco at one time. tylNDSO So many of the WASHINGTON. political phases of the present help to Britain situation remind observers of the days just before American participation in the first World war that the actual relationships of some of the men involved are of interest. For instance, there is Sen. Bennett Champ Clark of Missouri, one of the leading opponents of President Roosevelt's foreign policy. The senator is the son of SpeakI er Champ Clark, who in 1915 and 1916 ua nno nt thp nut. K f I standing opponents I S, of President Wilson. insisting, as his son does now, that "the L President is leading .t Senator CUrk u, into war. Of course the Clark case was embittered by the personal rivalry of the two men. Champ Clark had been a candidate for the Democratic nomination in 1912 and, according to majority rule, was in a way entitled to it, for he won all the primaries In which he entered, including some against Woodrow Wilson. Senator Clark was his father's parliamentary clerk at the time, and no son was ever more devotedly loyal and partisan. LA FOLLETTE ISOLATIONIST Another son who is carrying on the same fight his father made against the White House on the isolationist Issue is Robert M. La Perhaps no figure in our political history was ever treated more e drastically than the elder La for what was regarded as his unpatriotic course. Charles A. Lindbergh, consciously or not, is affected by the same sort of thing. His father, a member of the house in those days, was an isolationist, and voted against the declaration of war. He was persecuted, at time when the Atlantic flier was at probably the most impressionable age. Sen. Burton K. Wheeler is another of this group, though in Wheeler's case he underwent persecution himself. In the war days he was a district attorney in Montana, and if there was anything short of traitor which was not said about him, it could not be printed anyway. He had plenty of enemies, both in Montana and Washington, who virtually left nothing unsaid about him, so naturally he bear a few scars. Add to this the fact that he became closely associated later with the elder La Follette, being his running mate on the Progressive ticket for President in 1924, and you have a background which will explain everything. A study of the list of those oppose bill to aid Britain ing the will reveal that while the illustrations given are the most spectacular, there are plenty of others. MIWD $100,000 BUI STIAIOHT A NATIONAL 10UR10N WHISKEY FAVORITE FOR THE 6 PAST YEARS National DittilW Product Corporation, Nw eral Reserve banks. York City 85 PROOF Through special arrangements with the magazine publuherj we offer Ameriea'i finest farm and fiction magazines in combination with our newspaper at prices that simply cannot be duplicated elsewherel Look over this long list of favorites and make YOUR election today! This Newspaper Year, and Q Five Magazines ALL TOW PR ICC CROUP A MtCall's Mainline True Komaiur fact DigrU ScrrrnUnd American IUt Amcrtoui Ciil V 1 yf. 1 r. f yr. 1 Yr. Rr.7Nf"n1Tr- - HuminK and rUhingt Yr. 1 Yr. Farming SikttuI OROUP C DorT O AND (hKL This Newspaper,SHOWN RnY Yr. yr. Anuria- - Fruit Crowe, 1 1 Producer. Q N.tiotul Struma. Lrsh.ro Kld Anerina P,T- - 1 yr. Mother's Home Ule 1 Yr! Plymouth Rat MthlT- -l Yr. - 1 fanner OCpprrt g N,Uul LlretUxA ,v Fn joHnl Farmer's Wife i. Vonr' nnd U Moarm Konumu O Silw Srrrrn yr. Yr. Yr. lYr. 1 yr. 1 Yr. Vr. SELECT 1 MAQAZJNE . MAGAZINES 1 t Houh.ld Marine .1 Yr. BO Pathfinder (Weekly) Sports Afield i yr. Ones Road (Boyi) 1 yr. Stimce and Duroverr-l6 Yr. Mo. ChriMiaa Herald Mo. SELECT 1 MAO ATI Mr ALL SIX ONLY FOR BOTH NEWSPAPER IRC JL- - E Breeder's Cairtte Kbk Uad Red JrnL fj Poultry Tribune 1 Yr. 1 Yr. Yr. 1 Ustcd Magazine nwt Fim " YEAR , nriowrt C.rof --- 0AmM5ne r.K Q,.Ws 1 Ttox .. 1 SHOWN $15 Grower SELECT 2 MAGAZINES Parents' Magaiiie CROUP '.mii Hot Send mil M II; ft Hunting n MaK"n 'XT" I30 ,,,K I SO ... . H Sports Cftffll AR'W Troe . .n rr ij in True S'oft YM a Q 1 0" Her liBrt FILL OUT COUPON PLEASE ALLOW (Cl't I ml 4 lo mtt Centlrmrnl I rtHltxe with I yrat's lulwtiptUm to your NAME rosTomcjL. Policy Unsound CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. Montgomery Ave. San Francisco Calil. Enclose 15 cents for each pattern. 149 New Pattern MAIL TODAY I im etKloMng lb rpet. ir. or .rjj oiler drtlred No Size Name Address Bile Sixty-Poun- d Every time your teeth bite through a juicy steak you exercise a jaw pressure of 60 pounds. Fortunately, the human jaw is endowed with sufficient strength to take this strain, as was demonstrated by Dr. Ralph Boos of Minneapolis, at a recent dental convention. Dr. Boos used a machine known as a gnathodynamometer to demonstrate the biting power of a man's jaw, and he also showed that the average woman has a bite only of 0 pounds. The jaw structure of a woman is more delioate than that of a man, and usually her teeth are easier to extract. 25-3- Vf AXE up this smart tailored dress in a refreshing Spring wool, or print, or dark flat crepe with bright buttons. It will give a real lift to your spirits and look gay as a holly berry under your winter coat. There's no better way to start the year right than with a really smart new everyday dress, and a crisp shirtwaister is smartest of all! This design (No. 8853) is exceptionally becoming to bright-colore- d Enormous ' VKMtTil VOLUME AO HARD KERNELS I easy-to-ma- AROUND c Full What has this ours left untried, has it shunned? Age unfeeling age of what wickedness Horace. THE HOUSE Keep cheese in a dish or it will become dry and tasteless. well-covere- d Delights cookng healthful Parsley washed with hot water keeps its flavor better and is easier to chop. the rover innerfoi man... ond froub... ... economical . . . order, focfay, from your grocer. o If milk boils over on the stove, sprinkle the spot with salt. This will at once remove the disagreeable odor. Steamed leftover fruit cake served with a lemon sauce makes a delicious dessert. An old piece of velvet makes an ideal polishing cloth for silver or furniture. Baking powder biscuits and cookies rise better and brown more evenly on baking sheets than they do in pans. f 1 -i m w m. m If you wish to boil a cracked It it very obvious now that the British made mistake in their egg, place a little vinegar in the Through Trials Together whole agricultural policy, from the water in which it is boiled. This Trust no one unless you have national defense standpoint a mis will keep the egg from seeping eaten much salt with him. take almost as grave at their lack through the crack in the shell. Cicero. of preparedness. Sir Charles Ross, inventor and manufacturer of the famous Ross rifle in the days preceding and during the last World war, has been OF THE IL pounding away at the British government from his home in Wash ington since 1939 to do something drastic about the food situation. "The oftenpr vnn Mr. ir tho vnti Sir Charles has been deeply in " .(' j j will like it" has terested in agricultural problems for been heard countless many years. As the largest remainand it contains the vital elements times, ing landowner in Scotland, he pried to a balanced diet. every bit of Information possible out Vitamin A, Vitamin B, Thosphorus, of the U. S. department of agricul ture with a view to making those and Calcium remain in "Cream of the lands more productive. West" in their natural state. As a result, ht came early to Buy a package from your grocer and pronounced conviction that tractors were absolutely necessary. treat Early your family to a delicious cooked in the war he urged that it was vital cereal. It has a flavor all its own. to Britain's safety to have every possible acre producing food. He MONTANA CEREAL CO. Billings, Montana seized on calculation printed in the London Times which showed that some 3.000,000 odd acres, which had been under cultivation at the close of the last war, in 1918, were not being used fnr the reduction of food a year oeo. vJZraAVa U J LhtJ httir" -- 'Tropt-- r WEEKS FOR FIRST MACAZ1NM TO ARRIVE 4ttk4 m4 f. Imrm viiA 0k f n.) ktM( I. Britain's Agricultural order to: SEWING J 'A lend-leas- o tHHCl Pattern No. 8853 Is designed for sIzh 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. 44, 46 and 43. Size 36 requires 4 yards of material without nap. Detailed sew chart included. n Fol-Iett- for in fine bourbon! Woodrow Wilson's portrait appears on $100,000 denomination bills. These bills are not in circulation, but are printed only for transaction between the treasury and the Fed- 3 ! WNU Service.l Fol-lett- 1 those who take woman's sizes, and useful, exceptionally whether you're a suburban wife or a city business woman It will be pretty for home wear, too, made up ij tubfast cottons, and the trio of pockets may be omitted if you prefer. A very easy style to make. Fight on President's program links personal element to Wilson's opposition . . . British make grave mistake in agricultural policy. V 2,000 Weeks 35, of Chicago, yo ReviewtJ by CARTER FIELD m will breathe a sigh of relief when he reaches the age of 74. At that time he will have finished his weekly payments of $1 a week on a $2,000 when 0jt use of thoje 3.000.000 acres, lays Sir Charles, "would have made Britain almost on foodstufls. But this was rmt dune, "But tor years prior to the out break of this war the British gov ernment had deliberately discouraged domestic agriculture, allowing the rr'm to sag below the cost of production. The purpose of this w as to give a trade advantage to our Industries. We wanted to sell our manufactured products in Argentina for example, so we wanted to be able to buy in return the beef and grain of that country," he explained to- - fTp! IG rUBLIC nature of advertising bene- JL hu everyone it touches. It benefits the pubfic by describing exactly the products that are offered. It bencfiu employees, because the advertiser must be more fair and just than the employer who has no obligation to the public. These bencfiu of advertising sire quite apart from the obvious benefits hich advertising confers the lower prices, the higher cjuality,th better sen ice that go with advertised goods and firm. i |