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Show 7 i i" ". . A. l M Xwfnva MMnfflMtJ mL tint Seott'f Emuliion- beet be-et it's rich ja enteral A4D Vi Jninf and energr-bulldinsr til ihildrea need for proper n eth, Straus bone, found la h sturdy bodies. flefps emld u mufarne to eoWJ to if diet U AD deficient. Buy Scott' toduy All druggists. J How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulslon relieves promptly be nuse it goes right to the seat of tha trouble to help loosen and expel Jam laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe end heal raw, tender, interned in-terned bronchial raucous membranes. mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell you wmndine vou must like the way it Quietly allays the cough .or you axe to nave your money back. CREOMULSION forCoudis.ChestCoIds, Bronchitis SNAPPY FACTS RUBBER 1 Owr 300 patents dealing with nib-btr nib-btr chem'uriy or among the 45.000 United Statu patents seized from alitns end .national of occupied cseirtries which aro now available (or licensing to Amoricon citizvn. Ivm t peak production ratal, it may take eight year tor manufacturers to Meet the demand de-mand for aw automobiles. h (he rwitlh number of synthetic rubber pauengerer tires in this country has risen from to few thaw land tires to about 33,000,000. To, combat the shock from contact with Icy water, B. f. Goodrich has produced aew synthetic rubber anti-eicpos- USE 666 COLD PREPARATIONS UUUID, TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DROPS fKCNUfA0lHlCUtt M SEADEB'g DIGEST OFFERS as op-Wtumty op-Wtumty to add materially to your wmt , bjr 'accepting subscriptions from IW friends and noishbor during your ! time. Become our CommunHy Wpresentativ. Enjoy liberal profits, jwmoney for Christina, this pleasant. J1 REDUCED HOLIDAY frill? ,peCal Hf-PBICB offer 2? and ix-tenics men-immediate men-immediate orders. No experience LTri? !aak many welcome dollars towffSima?r W postcard SLr -J8 detaas and free Package of wiTi0 SCOTT. DePt NT1 Reader'. Digest, Pleasant- snYoiTlnncrds" ere Crying the Elues &ct25?irATioJ,.,Miw hSV'S.?'. Sy discomfort, Moi 2f. nf 11 Umau icUcina tejOWEU'S U tie wonderful 1 f,"ned in good old Syrup tii!?0?Pti' to mike the medi- fcki wa aao agreeable to Saed k?ll "S mr Mi is con. tftf'1teIit' nm const! finicky (biMxea lore it. aiMIAXATIYE f ; i COniainum mm is -l . BIGcoilrieli I sro SYRUP PEPSH I tf?nRI A r4 a mr I I 1 . "-., ,,.. ,mZZ STitSECRElfSiSo "j Y1KU1.MA VALE Released by Western Newspaper Union. lIGHT cows who appear in -'Samuel Goldwyn's "The Kid From Brooklyn," which stars Danny Kaye, have inherited in-herited a beard that once belonged to Douglas Fairbanks. Fair-banks. But not as a beard. They're all dolled Up for the dairy maid number, in which they are assisted by the 1946 class of Goldwyn girls. The cows make their debut wearing peajl earrings, fancy hats, and artt uciai eyeiasnes. That's where the neara comes in. The property man tried stiff black paper, then pipe cleaners, with no luck. But the oeara was perfect One appearance on the Edgar Ber gen racuo program was all that Anita Gordon needed to launch her on a career. Bergen signed the 15- ANITA GORDON year-old singer to a contract after her first program, and two days later 20th Century-Fox gave her a film contract. e Helmut Dantine's going to know picture-making from A to Z or know why. He's secured permission from Warner Bros, to sit in on all phases of the process in "The Man Who Died Twice," while awaiting his next acting assignment. Betty Button got a pleasant surprise sur-prise when she opened the door of her new and fancy portable dressing dress-ing room on the set of "The Stork Club." In the corner stood a new bleached walnut piano, replacing the old upright that had been in stalled temporarily when the dressing dress-ing room was unveiled. Paramount gave it to Betty so that she could rehearse ber song numbers on the set during filming. Lulu McConnell was a star of the theater in the days of Anna Held and Lillian Russell; now, on "It Pays to Be Ignorant," she's the most insulted woman in America and loves it! She thought she was dope when bronchitis ruined a good singing voice, but that croaky voice became one of her biggest assets. She'd retired when Tom Howard enlisted en-listed her for "Ignorant" Phillip Terry headed for New York after finishing his role in "George White's Scandals," his third RKO role. He's one of the few Hollywood players who got his theatrical school ing abroad in London, and touring the British provinces in stock. He's done all right in Hollywood-played romantic leads in "Music in Ameri-a" Ameri-a" and "Pan-Americana" at RKO, and did 'The Lost Week End" and "To Each His Own" at his home lot, Paramount. But an awful lot of movie-goers will just identify him as he's Joan Crawford's husband. hus-band. Producer Leo McCarey did s nice thing picked 10 girls from the extra ranks in "The Bells of St. Mary's," to play the nuns in a parochial paro-chial school, hoping that their scenes with Bing Crosby and Ingrid Bergman would start them on real screen careers. Joan Crawford's new picture. "Mildred Pierce," is the kind that a lot of women are going to love. And it's a swell come-back for the val iant Miss Crawford; in her lexicon there's certainly no such word as "fail." no matter how bad the. breaks. We hear that Paramount ha sworn amaaviis io prove mai unvoice un-voice you'll hear as Dorothy La- j mour's in SiMasquerade in Mexico" 1 really hers. Seems that, instead w Bf its being a contralto, as it s been for the last eight years, it's suddenly sudden-ly become an operatic high soprano, discovered by Director Mitchell Leisen. B flat used to be her limit: now. they say, she hits a D 10 notes higher. - nnns AND ENDSHanfoy Staffora. 'Daddy Higgtns" ol the "Baby Snnok$ Show" seas originally usked by tunny Brice to do guest iput n the pri gram the "guest spot" will toon br rounding out it eighth vir. . IMck PoweWt happy about hi new mdto teriei. "Rogue's Gallery," except for one thing; he won't be able to vacation in SokiA America with the new Mrs. Powell as he'd plannnd ftnth Bren . atanoA hv ReOtlMlC. . . . After being slapped by Teresa ITri, hi and Rose Hobart and belabored tvith powder puffs by. a bevy ol "'''" Te Trouble With Women," Ray ad-land ad-land thinks he can sand 'anything. " r Don't Rob Calves of Essential Food First Milk Necessary For Proper Development "Nature intended that the calves should get all the colostrum (first milk) because this colostrum is 10 times as rich in protective substances sub-stances as normal milk," the dairy cattle committee of the American Don't rob the calf of all the colos trum. veterinary Medical association re cently reported. Unfortunately, the dairyman hat interfered with nature to such an extent that few calves get enough colostrum to meet this need. It be comes necessary to feed vitamins in concentrated, or even in pure form. Vitamin A deficiency in a calf causes watery eyes, a cough, pneumonia and scours. Vitamin B deficiency leads to flabby muscles and digestive stagnation Vitamin C is needed for the proper function of the guard cells in the Intestine. While some dairymen have tried methods of raising a calf without allowing al-lowing it enough colostrum, they have produced weaker calves at a greater cost by substituting certain "patent" panaceas. Instead of following this practice every effort should be made to encourage en-courage the calf to secure all of the "first milk" possible. Twine Ball Holder Ball of Twine -Twirve f Board Hole Sickle SecTloi Staple Studding Cage for the Twine Ball and Cutter By use of one-inch boards as shewn in illustration and a sharpened sharp-ened sickle section, a time saver for twine ball and cutter can be erected erect-ed quickly at little cost More Weed Chemicals Success of chemical killing of weeds gives promise that this method meth-od will continue to grow in popularity. popular-ity. Michigan State college has found that dilute sulfuric acid may be used in onion to eliminate 75 per cent of the hand labor ordinarily used. Use of oils and other materials in carrots car-rots has met with considerable success. suc-cess. Hogs' Health Can Be Aided by Use of DDT The pigpens as well as the pigs themselves get DDT application to stop (he fly nuisance. The outstanding advantages of DDT would appear to be (1) its convenience con-venience of application and (2) its lethal action on bloodsucking species, spe-cies, such as the stablefly and horn-fly horn-fly which will not normally enter a fly trap. Tests have proven that when sprayed on hogs the raw patches caused by stablefly will disappear within a week and no further Injury of this nature was noticed throughout through-out the balance of the season. 00 VOU MEAN TO TELL ME1 WE'RE HAVINS PHASlANlOAt 6AU.US AGAIN i Don't Rob Calves of sfev fi&ft?-: $arm fill II wrm- I I 4i 1 1 ?, is- i r Kathleen Norris Says: The Business of Being an American Bell Syndicate. ft irtesrit saying to the embUlo'tu BMcfeal Kaeol, anyway." By KATHLEEIi NORRIS Tj VERY woman who man- r ages a house and a fam- J fly knows the value of a plan. No matter how tangled the problem is, if she can sit down with a pencil and pa-per pa-per and plan it all out she feels a great relief in her troubled soul, and she knows all will go well. , , Perhaps her' plan runs something like this. "Dave and Mary come down with Joe in his car. Susan is coming com-ing with Aunt Alice. The Fosters Fos-ters will have the guest room. Alice comes in with me, the two children on cots in the old playroom" and so on. Or perhaps, it is this sort of planning; plan-ning; "I'll combine celery and have a good soup that's Saturday night, and with the corned beef hash and cabbage and biscuits that'll do for supper. That leaves all Jhose sausages for Sunday morning and a picnio lunch. Well, now I have only to make a dessert or two and I'm all fixed." And so with the children's school outfits. And so with the proposed visit to the mountains or the seaside. Think it all out, settle the details, tell everyone Just what he or she has to do and all anxiety and uncertainty are gone. , World Problems to Solve. Now we have a bigger job than week-end meals or picnie and house-party house-party plans , to work on. Now we have world problems of feeding and housing to settle. "World problems!" We are accustomed accus-tomed to this phrase now. and we dismiss ft as too big to handle. It dimly means straitened markets at home, great ships loaded with medicine and food moving to for eign ports, hordes of hungry, fright- tened, homeless folk waiting for that food. We have nervous sense that this winter will he hard on us all, but that we'll weather it And then afterward The "then afterward" is what ought to concern us now. we a get through this winter on limited meat and fuel; we'll get through the next and the next, and we'll slowly work our way out to that prosperity and plenty that nothing can keep away from us. But then? Then comes the time when everyone will want a little money. Ten thousand, 12 thousand, 20 thousand dollars in 1950 are going to-spell the Simple word "fortune. ' Opportunities will be everywhere; you may have what you want in 1950, if you plan for it today. To buy things now homes, furni ture, rugs, cars, is not thrifty, because be-cause of high prices and scarcities. Also, qualities are not what they were, and what they will be again. But to get through these next few years quietly, thriftily, means that you can buy that hillside farm, with the oaks and the creek, some day. It means saying to the ambitious boy, "we can give you your first year or two of medical school, anyway." It means an investment in some growing industry that win bring you and your husband a comfortable and secure old age. It may mean Save or a brighter tomorrow. i anw afq aei ) f . WNU reatures. hoy, "ids eon give yew year year or ism FOR A HAPPY FUTURE Although tht) tear is over, many grave problemt remain (vith us. We can't do much about the hardships of Europe or Asia, excepting to contribute contrib-ute what toe can to relief agencies. But in our own sphere, we can do m tot. Shortages will be with us for some time. Fuel and clothing cloth-ing will not be plentiful this winter. Some foods will still be hard to get. Nevertheless, there should be no real suffering suf-fering in this country, and we can took forward to a better irear than we have had in a ong time. This is a time to think of the future. Right now most people have considerable money saved up and they have good jobs. There is a gneat temptation, now that the restrictions re-strictions of war are being removed, re-moved, to go out and buy all those things you have had to do without for so long, even though prices are high and quality poor. The time for sacrifice and doing without is not yet over, Miss Norris warns. This is the great opportunity op-portunity to put away a tidy sum for the next few years. The best investment, aside from any patriotic motives, is in government bonds. Miss Norris says. For safety and high yield these victory issues cannot he rivaled. Every one should buy all he can to as- sure a happy future. travel It may mean helping a be loved daughter through the hard years when her nursery is small Money is going to be just ss important im-portant to you in 1950 as It is today, to-day, and worth twice as much. Invest In Government Bonds. My answer to this problem is to invest in the last government bonds; the bonds that mean victory, re habilitation, the beginning of a new world. This is not government propaganda; I have not been asked to do it. I am saying it because I consider It an extraordinary opportunity. oppor-tunity. If In the dark war years there was ever a question as to how America was going to come out of this world agony, there is no question now. She has emerged gloriously, convincingly, unequivo-callv unequivo-callv on ton. We who boueht bonds nrkon rAtM n tuiv Knm Ka latas Ham. I v uci iiiou is u fee wviiiub ww. a- sieging London, when Japanese sui- ptace w, wanted Conn in the navy, cide planes were sinking our ships, 5,, Qorm reported at a navy re-may re-may have shown some little faith crulting itatlon .But Instead of wait-and wait-and patriotism in the act. !mg to Birly wandered around But not now. Now there is no the place. FinaUy a navy petty of-doubt of-doubt that an investment in Ameri- fleer, not knowing who Conn was, ca, as she makes her last great ef-: ordered him to get in line. The or-fort or-fort to clean up the remains of the der was given somewhat brusquely, war ruins everywhere, and get her t made no hit with Conn. In place own wheels started again, is the gf obeying the command, Conn told safest investment in the world ie petty officer what be thought of When I say save, and scrimp if tdm and just where he could go. you must, and cut down, and sacri- And after this Conn left the navy flee but lay away victory bonds. and bonds, and bonds," I am talking talk-ing not for America, not even for the soldiers and sailors and airmen for whose benefit this great drive is opened, but for you yourself-1 and those you love, and your bright er tomorrow. TASTIER SCHOOL LUNCHES School days mean lunch-box days. Here are some suggestions to make lunches "go over in a big way." Use enough waxed paper tc cover sandwiches, fruit and cake com pletely so that the food does not dry JEELuZ Hn to,ketP T , L Z , kJ kT fromw"t,nlg ,ong before lunchtlme, wash the leaves. dry them well, and wrap them sepa rately in waxed paper. Then the leaves can be added to the sandwlcl Just before eating. i ' WE WEST ieeeeaMiseeej-n--MieHMMa T, NOVEMBER 15, 1945 in a puncL. - better peoediington, first president roundes, gave the first official mr3 dfty of Thanksgivtog. gofsday, November 26 for " ave our present celebrate celebra-te my the e j0dinning of recorded his-natiedserved his-natiedserved some form of a .giving holiday. In the ag. inscribes a harvest fes I had to do in' the next three rounds was to box and keep away. I know I could have done that, (or at . the time Louis was a tired man. But this la where I got dumb In place of being smart I decided I could knock Too out I honestly thought he was an through. So Instead of keeping away I sailed la end started slugging with him, toe to tee. The pictures shewed that. I made no effort to keep away from a fellow who could eut-hlt me with either hand. The great Cona wasn't wining to win a world's championship ea points. Be also had to be Killer Conn. "Wen, I got what I deserved. I got knocked Out But I still figure a better boxer can handle a harder puncher, even When he Is badly outweighed. out-weighed. These hard punchers don't like shifting, moving targets that are hard to tag." Boxer vs. Slugger Past records of the ring have usually shown the boxer can hold his own against the slugger. Jim Corbett proved It Against John L. Sullivan, looking back soma 03 years. Sullivan at the moment, bow- ever had been aU through tor soma time, after 10 years of strong alco holic indulgence. What about Corbett and Fits at Carson Cityf Well, don't forget that Ruby Robert could box as well as punch. Fits in fact was a great box er. Jack 'Johnson was another able boxer, one of the best s What about Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney, ased as the leading example of boxer vs. puncher? They fought to rounds of which Tunney won at least 16 -possibly more. Bnt don't forget that the Dempsey of Philadelphia and Chicago was far from being the Dempsey of Toledo. Seven years en top take their ton. Sam Langford was a great fight er and a great puncher. But check Old Sam's record against 139-pound Jack Blackburn, who trained Joe Louis. Blackburn told me once that in seven fights Langford had never knocked him down. I hurt Langford Lang-ford as much as Sam hurt me." Blackburn said. Blackburn was a master boxer, one of the greatest Sam Langford will tell you that Langford looked better against Jack Johnson and Harry Wills than he looked against Blackburn as Blackburn explained the case some years ago. e Why Conn Wasn't in Navy With Joe Louis in the army, why wasn't Billy Conn picked for the navy? This question has been asked more than once. This is the story we get from a high navy official. We had Conn all set to go into the navy. This was also O. K. with Conn. At the thpe we figured an army- navy ring match might help out a lot in some financial war cam- naim. Even if this never took recruiting place and went nut to en list in the army." This is 100 per cent Conn. Just sow Billy ever got by in taking army orders is another mystery, phere is nothing the Pittsburgh fight, er bates worse than taking orders, sr even suggestions. He wants his own wsy. e e $80,000 a Year Men Ruth drew an 80,000 salary one year In basebaO and that figure still remains tops in the diamond game. ttl D00 around that time, but no golfer to those days ever drew Important money from tournament play, .... different new. Nelson to already around the $60,000 mark this year with several big money tournaments left la the South, all In the f 10,000 class. 3 - ' either 5 II I. I felt UiJ Juill lead a Best Sods TSo4n!Liui too much soap. A suds o ucnei wick oas. proven washing clothes clean. Bi HMk' theki TIRED, ACHY MUSCLES sprains strains own the ..WW 5 reced Advertisements Mean a Saving to You chaii , 1 theRiWhen raw winds Kerf Ifoahufe... HAPPED LIPS SOOTHED QUICKLY! e"S kt,,l tf M..t .-J e wTauw wut pauuiui averted When taw, bitter weather a tOtskincliaIeavesthenMthirsty.',, j.1 sti tSVftmsst sinrsi ninir awt-aLr anI wj. toothing eMenthoIatum acta 111 Ulna Hue sf1 flanrltj afiMittau Tooes; w).. f0n The Baking Powder with the BALANCED Double Action rtikk nAu tjK L-tL- per e e tha natural hoIc for tha , modern 'recipe. Its Mancec? double) action oudrdnteei !u$f the rlahf ecKoit In the mtxlnfj bowt plus IrTdt final rise to light OncJ fluffy flavor In the bveh. mm. LJ St Heats All Day and Night Without Refueling Exclusive. Patented, -Interior Construction g tntle,. Nearly a If VOU need a new to see your dealer MORNINfl 0fll the coal heater with amazing, patented, interior construe ' tioa principles. Heats all day and aU eight without refueling. 1 Holds fire several days on' closed draft. Yoorhomeis Warm aaaw Miabm Maawitt aaaaaJf am AfA. . HOLDS 100 LDS- OF COAL Requires 00 special diet Burns any kind of coal, coke or briquets. Semi-automatic, magazine feed. Start a fire but once a year. f EJ?0,i? ?EAfII5n'! hv k.lm how Tou the remarkable features of this distinctly different coal heater , . . that outsells all others. LOCKE STOVE CO, 114 West 11th St, KANSAS CfTV 6, WO. W4t r 1 Mil Si ..mm &QWwM mac Here's why gently waxmih&'sdothing Ben-Cay nets fast to relieve museularaoreness and pain .Ben-Gay actually ac-tually conteins up to 2 times more methyl salicylate and . menthol those famous paih-relievingagents known'to) very doctor than five other widely offered rub-ins. So insist on genuine Ben-Cay for soothing quick relief I BUY VICTORY; BONDS! DON'T SUFFER with eoldV muscle achne and sore hroat, V enjoyquiokrelief. GetStJoeeplrABpu-in, world's Urgent eelier at 10o. Big 100 tab- . , , let sise only 35c Get St Joseph Aspirin. II I . J Bruises Stiff Joints i aiTTT- ..... .' ... .. . .. w in wcai Diooa supply TO we sore area. (2) Help, revive "thirsty" cell", so they can retain needed moisture. Vnwt itkaniuil ..A4.U ... Mentholatum, tht comfoHinir medi ..(.J k-l IT I.. I - nrti BETTER OAKiriG MILLION In Uso ! tefltintr ntetvt maw U oLa and inspect the famous WARM " Koaeop. TVAPM HfroMTiVTi- " ,r?.,'..,: :.r. . XT"- ' i IP: W V ! 1 n ( xr,z r r. h n i III i i Of!5CiXfe j. 'A.'s .-''or" 'a,rt ."O.. ...e.W'X' mmWm ml.... L V I' Li I m HUM I, tf :s.r I '. 1 , i "''it 1 ' 1 fmw Vs |