OCR Text |
Show Frock Versatile And Charming ft! V'?0 i'i I ' i- l 8007 CCALLOPS down the front dis- tinguish this charming dayume frock. The belt tics softly in front, and there's the popular high slit neckline. Picture it in a striped grey flannel or jewel-tone solid tones. You'll wear it all winter with pride. Pattern No. 8007 l for sizes 12. 14. 18. 18. 20: 4ft and 42. Size 14 requires 3, yards of 35 or 39-inch. "and tndar for tha Fall and Wintar FASHION fW Bare of tmart, caiv Is aaaka alvlaa. specially draisnta' fanhiona. aasa af farm fraeka, fraa crocheting In. atrnotlona, free printed ball pattern In Iba ?aaa. rriea eenta. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 70S Million St., Ran Francisco, Calif. Enclose 23 cents tn coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No. lire Name Address- Gas on Stomach ReMtmd la I wmtM m 4onhl yN mmy hack Wba netw tfteh add mmm painful, nf foist In T fill Mur toaweh and hwtbara, doctor usual I prmertb th faatMt-avctinfr cndlcinM known for vrnuUtBEuiMe ntuf aMKHeinw Itk thotwln tiU'fa Ttbftta. No lamattvo. tUU-vi brtnir tomfort In ft Jiffy or doubt your money back rvtuni of kotti to w. t ftU dniiufitta. This Home-Mixed Cough Relief Is Wonderful No Cooking, bo rOiwy. Saves Dollars, To get the moat surprising relief from coughs due to colds, you can easily prepare a medicine, right in your own kitchen. It'a very easy child could do It needs no cooking, and t antes so good that children take it willingly. But you'll say it s bard to beat for quick results. First, make a eyrup by stirring t cups of granulated sugar and one cup of water a few moments, until dissolved. dis-solved. Or you can use com syrup or liquid honey, Instead of sugar syrup. Get I ft ounces-of Plnex from any drupglst, and pour it Into a pint bottle. Fill up with your syrup. This give you a full pint of really splendid splen-did cough eyrup about four times aa much for your money. It never spoils, and lasts a long time. .And it glvea quick relief. It acta to three way loosens the phlegm, soothes the Irritated membranes, and helps clear the air passages. Plnex la a special compound of proven Ingredients, in concentrated form, well known ,for quick action In coughs and bronchial irritations. Money refunded if it doesn't pleas you in every way. i- Al sV . a-' r .,- J' vi change to CALOX for the touc eect on your smile Efficient Cnlnx trvrlet raw trmnt t Kelps remove film .. . bring out ail the natural lustre of your smile. at A special ingredient la Cslox encourages rgWr massage... which has a tonic effect on gums ...helps make them firm and roty. Tone up you smile. ..with Calozl MmU aa Immm McKmm UAtafHm, III mars e tbmwsemtioU Hie t$ Buy and Hold Your U. S. Savings Bonds due to MONTHLY LOSSES? Tou girls and women who lose so much duHsg monthly periods that you're pale. weak. " dragged out" this may be due to lack of blood-iron. Bo try Lydla K. Plnkham'a TABLETS one of the best home ways to buUd np red blood in such oasea Plnkham'a Tablets are one of the Ims blood-lroa tonics you can buy I -alL.- 12-4? U. N. Converts Modem War Plant Into Peace Factory By BAUKIIAGE Newt Analytt and Commentator. WNU Service. 1816 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D. C LAKE SUCCESS, N. V.-At this writing, committee! of the United Nationa are still meeting In the fTl great modernistic f ' i f a . . iijl-. f iaciury uuiiuiug, t dow converted I Into a plant for ' t of International I good will. A hundred hun-dred committee meetings are be ing held in the rooms where once the delicate machinery turn Swear-i ing out Instru ments of warfare Baukhage oncebummed merrily and efficiently. Here delegates to the assembly of the United Nations, split up into groups, tackle the various subjects allotted to them just as the committees com-mittees of coneress discuss the bills and agree upon their form before they are submitted to the "committee "commit-tee of the whole house" for consideration con-sideration and action. The difference Is that the assembly, assem-bly, unlike congress, cannot pass laws. It can only express the will of the majority. Its value Is to register, before the world, world opinion as expressed by the nationswhich make up the United Nations. This is the first step toward a world govern ment whose chief purpose it to police po-lice the world against war. While the committee meetings were taking place the security council, coun-cil, which compares roughly with the senate, held some of its meetings in the same building, for unlike the as-embly, as-embly, which meets only once a year, the security council Is a continuing con-tinuing body. The Council of Foreign Ministers, which also la meeting in New York, la a body entirely separate from the United Nations. a a SaddU V. S. With V. N. Expense It was characteristic of the desire to maintain a "realistic" attitude (let us hope) which resulted in the mDhasls on fiscal mattera rnnalno newspapers on the flrjit day's com mittee meetings to display a head like this: i V. 8. OPPOSES PAYING HALF OF U. N.'a BILLS At the meeting of the budgetary committee, Senator Vandenberg got In a sly dig when he suggested that If the other nations felt the American Amer-ican economic system was so good that It could put up half the money to run the organization perhaps they might adopt a similar system. Capitalist Capi-talist America would pay 49.89 per cent of U.N.'s bills while Communist Russia, although much greater in size and population, would provide per cent in the plan submitted. Of course, any amount balanced gainst the price of war Is small. a a Powerful Committee Art in the Making The work of the committees of the assembly covers a wide scope, since besides offering the sounding board for world opinion and controlling con-trolling the pursestrings of the whole organization, the committees likewise like-wise supervise the several important impor-tant subsidiary agencies, some of which will become extremely powerful pow-erful when and if they carry out the duties planned for them. For instance, the many plans for Improving Im-proving living standards and social relations throughout the world, which is the purpose of the economic econom-ic and social council, and the projected project-ed trusteeship council which will oversee the relationship between the dependent countries and the nations held responsible for their control and welfare. Another Important function of the assembly Is initiating amendments to the charter, and this session bristled bris-tled with talk among the smaller countries for amending provisions governing the power of the veto in security council. a a Rutsiant Vie to Latt Minute Early in the meetings of the general gen-eral committee (the steering committee) com-mittee) and in the assembly Itself. It became evident that the Russians were following a general plan of procedure pro-cedure which was not unlike that which bad appeared and still is appearing ap-pearing tn all the controversies. The One of the problems of the United Nations is to And out whether the Russians prefer to export caviar or Communism. a a Did you ever think when your mother made you use an atomUer to clear your head of a cold that "atomizers" might lay a million people cold? Is this progress? BARBS . . . by Baukhage I Russian delegates frequently oppose violently a point and then, when they see that they are beaten, yield. Sometimes this looks like pure obstructionism; ob-structionism; sometimes it seems merely an effort to display strength and combativeness, sometimes It Is only a patent move to keep Russia In the forefront of the negotiations as a force with which to be reckoned. There is also the language barrier. Probably there are no more competent com-petent performers among the various vari-ous types of experts than the translators trans-lators at these international gatherings. gather-ings. Much has been written of their remarkable ability to translate, without with-out taking a single note, long paragraphs para-graphs of some speakers who get so deep In their subjects that they forget for-get that the translator Is waiting patiently to translate one segment before the speaker goes on to the next. Prize of them all is Pavlov, the lean and scholarly looking young man who appears to wrap himself about Molotov or Vlshlnsky and with his lips close to the listener's ear pours In the words so rapidly that It would appear they synchronize with the movement of the speaker's lips. But even a perfect translation may produce a different meaning, just as the same word may mean two different things In the same language lan-guage to two different pairs of ears. You may recall the famous Molo tov outburst at the opening of the assembly, the speech in which the Russian delegate demanded disarmament, disarm-ament, objected to the Baruch atom ic energy plan and went right down the line walloping everythlna In sight. As I remarked earlier, there was more smoke than fire in that tirade and American Deleeate Aus tin, suspecting as much, made the terse comment on the sDeech. "smart but tough." When the translations came back from the report in the Russian nresa Austin's words became "smart but sharp." now it may De mat "tough" is a tougher word in Russian than it is in English because the Russians' or dinary conduct In such and some oth. er matters, all the way from danc ing to breakfasting on vodka, mr- be what we would consider toughi than the Anglo-Saiim-approach. a American Consciou Of Foreign Policy Most Americans do not realize how far this nation has gone in the establishment of a foreign policy built on popular desire. In the oast the foreign policy of the United biaies always had been a rather vague thing to people In general, aomethlng evolved behind a screen of formal phrases in the ancient high-ceilinged offices of the old state department building, where thev still have marble fireplaces that really work in some of the rooms. In the early days the subject was kept out of domestic politics simply because the politicians knew that the people knew as little as they did as to what it was all about and didn't care any more. Then came the famous fa-mous Wilson versus Lodge fight over the League of Nations, which was really something far deeper than that, a fight of two powerful personalities person-alities and two different concepts of government not world government but domestic government Lodge and Wilson became so definitely committed to their own respective views that they couldn't afford to compromise. After that, each party considered it fair game to rip the other up the back when it came to a discussion on foreign affairs and the fine old tradition tradi-tion (which was really a negative thing) "foreign affairs ends at the shore line," was split wide open. And then the bloody conflict of World War n made people realize that Democratic and Republican blood when it flowed on the battlefield battle-field was the same color and caused the same gaping wounds at home. The campaign which we have Just witnessed, while it was characterized character-ized with the same old fuss and fury of the past, omitted the question of foreign policy except when It was raised by persons already discredited discredit-ed by both major parties. That Is the hope, as I see it, tor American dominance, for the dominance domi-nance of the American idea of human hu-man freedom. We have learned that when it comes to facing the world, we meet it shoulder to shoulder a Americans and nothing else. The difference between a Communist Com-munist and a fellow-traveler is that one knows where he wants to go and the other is being taken for a ride a a a Paul Scott Mowrer says that Russia Rus-sia has solved the problems of the economic cycles (the booms and busts of capitalism) by achieving a permanent depression. i By EDWARD EMERIXE WNU Faalara "We de not live, but only stay And are toe poor to get away." Life on the frontier is al ways hard. It was doubly hard in Kansas where the nirt. neers had to endure border wars over slavery, bad men, drouths, grasshoppers, blizzards bliz-zards and dust storms, in addition ad-dition to the ordinary hardships hard-ships of a new country. But they stuck it out. They stuck it out and "sticking It out" until the battle is won is still a characteristic of Kansas people. Perhaps it was the crucible of those early years that steeled and tempered tem-pered the Kansas spirit which conquered con-quered the prairies. They stuck It out, rose above the trials of the hour and developed that rare sense of humor which enables Kansas people to laugh at themselves and the foibles foi-bles of mankind. Despite Coronado and other Spanish Span-ish explorers, and French traders, Kansas remained Indian and buffalo buf-falo country for two centuries after English colonists settled In New England and Virginia. Slow in Settlement. ' It was not until the Kansa..N. braska bill was passed in 1854 that the land was opened to settlement. At that time the entire white population popu-lation of Kansas consisted of about 700 soldiers, based at Forts Leavenworth Leaven-worth and Riley and Walnut Creek CHIEF EXECUTIVE . . . Gov. Andrew F. Schoeppel is a native Kansan, born In Claflin in Barton county. A former lawyer and veteran vet-eran of World War I, he was a member of the Kansas Corporation Corpora-tion commission until be was elected governor in 1942. post office on the Sante Fe Trail, and an equal number of civilians at Indian missions, stage stations and trading posts. The qnestion of slavery immediately im-mediately plunged Kansas into bloodshed. Even before the Kansas-Nebraska biU was signed, Mlssonrlana who favored slavery slav-ery slipped across the border and founded Leavenworth and Atchison. But Ell Thayer found 29 men In New England who were willing to emigrate to Kansas, settle on the prairie, be neighbors to Indians and fight slaveholders. Dr. Charles Robinson Rob-inson brought a second party of anti-slavery anti-slavery emigrants, including four musicians, from Boston tn tottio . Lawrence. Congress had decreorf that Kansas would decide the question ques-tion of slavery for itself. And Kan-sans Kan-sans set out to do it in their own way. ! ' ' A :' '' .:f, '. i- Wild Cow Towns Hold Spotlight One of the most romantic mi in Kansas history was played by the lexas-Kansas cattle trails and the wild frontier towns which became shipping points for the herds. It was Joseph G. McCoy who first decided to do something about a market for Texas cattle. There were millions of the cattle, and they were more valuable than the buffalo which roamed the Kansas prairies. At first, Kansas towns weren't mm w OftfftJb BREAD BASKET OF THE WORLD . . . Kansas is the No. 1 wheat producing state of the nation, yielding almost a fourth of the entire U. S. crop. Whether for or asalnst slaverv. Kansas settlers lived in log huts, shake houses, sod shanties, dugouts dug-outs and other humble shelters, using us-ing grass, brush and buffalo chips for fuel. The "sod crop" was corn and corn they ate! Corn bread, parched corn, hominy, corn-meal mush they boiled corn, fried it. baked it, stewed it. Fortunately, they had beef, pork and milk to eo with it, and a coffee substitute. made of dried sweet potatoes, dried green okra and parched wheat ground together and boiled. Would Kansas be slave or free territory? On its first election day in 18S5. hundreds of Missourians "with rifles on their shoulders, six- shooter in their belts and a liberal supply of whiskey In their wagons" wag-ons" crossed the border and voted. All of the Dro-slaverv candidates except one were elected! And when the "bogus legislature" met in July, the Missouri slave code was the law of Kansas. The curtain-raiser to the Civil war was fought in Kansas. Men were murdered in cold blood. Border ruffians ravaged anti-slavery anti-slavery settlements. John Brown and his sons took np the challenge chal-lenge and took after the slaveholders. slave-holders. "Bleeding Kansas" was no misnomer during the next few years. But gradually the anti-slavery forces won and Kansas became a free state. Only two slaves were listed in the census of 1860. Many notables have trod the Kansas Kan-sas stage. Heading the list is Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, great mili tary leader of World War II. Frontier Personages. The history of the Old West Is represented rep-resented by such Kansas personages as "Wild Bill" Hickock. the mar. shal of Abilene, and Buffalo Bill, the scout. Carrie Nation and hr saloon-busting hatchet also brought the state Into the limelight. In Statuary hall In the nation'a capitol is the figure of John J. In-galls, In-galls, senator, orator, essavist. noet Ed Howe, the sage of Potato HilL and his contemporaries, Walt Mason Ma-son and William Allen White of the Emporia Gazette, were Kansas folks. But the unknown soldier, the nnhonored hero, of Kansas is the man who Introduced the plow. He was not a glamorous figure, and his hands Were gnarled and blistered and bent to the shape of a plow handle. interested in Texas cattle, at least most of them weren't But Abilene was, although it was only a "small dead place consisting of about a dozen log huts." " As soon as McCoy started building his depot at Abilene, the village awakened and teemed with activity. By 1870 there were 4 hotels, 10 boarding houses. 9 or 10 saloons and other business places. One of the first buildings, of course, was - 'tM Kansas is ideally situated for agriculture, but it took a plow to break the sod. Where William F. Cody used to hunt buffalo are the greatest wheat lands in the world. Kansas produces more wheat than any other state in the union almost one-fourth of the entire United States crop. It is first In milling and wheat storage. Corn, alfalfa, hay, sorghum, broom corn, sudan grass, potatoes, sugar beets, barley, flax, rye, soybeans, : vegetables fruits, truck crops Kansas produces pro-duces almost everything that ii grown on a farm. Rich in Resources. Kansas finds riches below as well as above the surface of her rolling. fertile acres. Kansas is one of the leaders in oil production, with Its companion, natural gas. Lead and zinc are mined extensively. Coal Is produced in most parts of the state. Under Kansas is enough salt to last 500,000 years! Volcanic ash, gypsum, limestone, clays and other resources are mined in Kan sas. It is an important source of helium gas. As the geological center of the United States, Kansas was and is the land of trails. Those who sought land in Oregon, gold In California or Colorado, trade with the Mexicans in Santa Fe, or cattle from Texas, used Kansas Kan-sas as highway. The Santa Fe Trail the California and Oregon Trails, the Butterfleld Iran, the Smoky Hill Route, Overland Over-land Trails, Pony Express Route, Jim Lane Trail and the cattle trails from Texas, including the Chisholm. Old Shawnee, Ellsworth and Western West-ern Trails, all used Kansas for a right-of-way. Kansas today bears some of the scars of long ago ruts made by thousands of covered wagons and hooves of cattle among them. Lonely Lone-ly graves still may be found, and bridle bits, parts of wagons and other oth-er mute-reminders of the past are picked up occasionally by grandchildren grandchil-dren of the pioneers. Kansas is great, not only as one of the food-producing states of the nation, but as a great family of people who retain much of the pioneer pio-neer spirit. They stuck it out a few generations ago. And Kansans are still "sticking it out" for freedom of thought and of action, and for th right to progress by their own ef forts. o! Frontier the jalL Sidewalks were of wood and soon trembled and clattered as boot heels clomped on them. Kansas cow towns held the spotlight spot-light of the frontier. There were Ellsworth, Newton, Wichita (larger and noisier than most) and finally Dodge City (toughest of them all) For 10 years Dodge City was the wickedest town in the country. But it fought hard to gain that distinction! 4 v , A STRIKING picture came along a few weeks ago. This was a picture of Alonzo Sta?g returning to the Midway and Stagg field at the U. cf Chicago tor a look around, before the Northwestern game. The amazing part oi this snapshot snap-shot of Lonnic with the snow-white hair was the fact that he first came to Chicago Chi-cago as a coach just 56 years ago. back in 1890 At the age of 84, this amazing veteran veter-an is still an alert. Pop Warner hard-working coach with the College of the Pacific, and the 58 intervening interven-ing years had failed to alow him down with the thin material he had at hand. This picture of Stagg back home again reminded us of great coaches of the past, Pop Warner and Hurry-up Hurry-up Yost, long before the days of Knute Rockne and Percy Haughton. In talking over old times with a veteran group of football mandarins, manda-rins, it was generally agreed that Pop Warner, now forgotten, was the master of them all. Pop is now walking with a cane and a crippled knee around his garden gar-den at Palo Alto, Calif. Pop isn't far from 80. But more than 40 years ago, when the game was young and there were no precedents to work with, it was Pop who brought in the single and the doable wing and other innovations that still remain today. It was Pop who discov ered Jim Thorpe at Carlisle, when Jim was a slender young Indian of some 16 years, weighing around 150 pounds, r It was Pop who built the Carlisle Indians Into a drawing card that today would rank above even Army and Notre Dame on a general aver age. Thorpe, Guyon, Calac, Metoxen, Hauser, Bernus Pierce, Little Wolf and Little Bear, Mt Pleasant, Hud sonremember any of these, old- timers? They were among football's greats. Greatest in Football "Pop Warner should be the great est name in football," a veteran coach said. "Yes, Rockne was great Knute had the most amazine Der sonality football has ever known. Knute was the most popular coach of all time. And a great one. But Pop Warner gave the game more than any of the others when he had Carlisle, Pittsburgh and Stanford. Pop wasn't a handshaker. He was direct, abrupt and at times brusaue. He said what he thought He was no diplomat But he was the only man that Jim Thorpe both feared and respected when Jim was kine." There happened to be at least 10 oia-timers in this midnight group. All agreed that Pop was the top the game's greatest genius. I'll vote with Red Blaik of Army along these lines. Another great coach, In some ways the greatest of modern times, is Tom Hamilton of Navy. Tom Hamilton did more for college football foot-ball than all other coaches put togetherand to-getherand I mean all of them in one compact mass. ExceDt for Hamilton's Navy V and Navy pre- mgnt teams, there would have been no college football from 1942 through 1945. College football should erect a statue or a monument to Hamilton, too high for Luckman, Baugh er Dobbs to cover with a pass or a kick. He has been the big man of football foot-ball during the last four years for the job he did of eaving college football, foot-ball, whatever happens to him in this waning season of 1946. I happen hap-pen to know the inside story of the fight made against him to abolish college football in 1942, and the valiant val-iant stand he took against heavy odds, the odds that Hamilton loves. a a a Kickers and Passers I he growth of "air travel" in footballparticularly foot-ballparticularly professional footballis foot-ballis one of the features of this air-minded see. r rof - ea- - ....... .u auiK and kicking. Passers such aa Lurlrman r.,v. Dobbs, Ace Parker, Filchock! Christman, etc., have increased in importance from year to year. And there soon will h now n.i, i a tog in from the colleges Gilmer, Layne, Wedemeyer. etc., who will be in big demand whn thoir pus time is over. A grOUD Of Dro rnanhoa ran1 -vvuva .CkCllUJF was arguing about the fastest backs. "I See." On Kairi S,rK it.!.. 1 xAMiaa names McAfee. I'd a noiio, on his own club was even faster. ne can ny." "What about EVannb .i Giants?" another askm .... . .. vaw also move." Greasy Nenlo .till ,.f.,... l. - " '' w uc- iieve any of the n e. Van Buren with a football under ei- "icr arm. This led to annthor o m . . , . n,(UiJJCUI i uie oest combination kicker and passer - Baugh of the Redskins Red-skins or Dobbs of the Brooklyn Dodgers? Both are great passera and both are among the best kickers. kick-ers. Both can call on a play that so few usethe quick kick. It is the greatest yard gainer of aU. i iisai . . n.im . I Off a small spilling. a fold. Iron first onVJ then on -the hem side. ,,e Tie bark .,.,(..: by pulling down win.be the exact point wherp't, iitv and eliminates a lot of JIUI M measly Clean chromium with . water- followed by tZ' whiting paste. 1 PLshffi.a JVhen baby's quilted pad, fc well worn, cut the best p& them for pot-holder na !rs3 make extra heavy pot-h Sewing machines should ba after everv fivP . -: J use.; Inout How Sluggish Folk oef lieppy Relief WHEN CONSTIPATION nukes yoo be punk as the dickens, brings an ttomck upset, sour taste, gassy distomfat take Dr. Caldwell's famous median to quickly pull the trigger on bur "innards", "in-nards", and help you feel bright tit chipper again. DR. CALDWELL'S is the wonderful suns su-ns laxative contained in good old Sjnf Pepsin to make it so ess; to ttit. MANY DOCTORS use pepsin premis n'ons in prescriptions to make the medicine medi-cine more palatable and agreeable s take. So be sure your laxative is attained at-tained in Syrup Pepsin. INSIST ON DR. CALDWlU.'S-foe favorite fa-vorite of millions for SO yens, sad fed that wholesome relief from cosstip-tion. cosstip-tion. Even finicky children lore it CAUTION: Use only as directed. DR. CAMUS SEUIAXAT1VE CONTAINED IN SYRUP PM WILL NOT HARM ANY METM TT takes so little. Just two spoons of XZIT sprinkled. fire once a week keeps your ctoww stove, and heating unit clte0 " soot Soot can be dangerous, for often causes costly chimney t Don't take chances. Use XZU to larly. XZIT sprinkled freely fireplace or firebox quickly and e tively extinguishes chimney, Keep a supply of XZIT J Ask for XZIT SOO.T.ERADK TOR at your grocery, hard", drug or fuel supply store. J800 So. Hoover St., Los Angela 44, SOOT ERADICATOR XZIT w;uk! of all stores 8 crop KRBSBBBBaalBBaaSATVS?C2l ji nutlets I i A BP RANBOWtULHw BEAUTIFUL. NELENCHWJJ |