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Show In the Dos House Joe With whom was your wife quarreling last night? iill Why, sne was scoirnng the e Poor beast. I heard her threaten to take the front door key away from him. Or Both? Daisy Would you be happy with 10,000 a year? Mae Men or dollars? Peace Maker Judgt And you call yoursilf a peace-loving man? Defendant I do, your honor. Judge Even after you slugged Casey on the fawf Defendant Yes, your honor. I neper nep-er saw Casey so peaceful as just after I bit him. Bonehead Al Gee, the elephant must be dumb. Bill What makes you say that? Al His head is so full of ivory that it sticks out. Bargain sale where a woman ruins one dress to buy another. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. BUILDING MATERIALS CONCRETE BLOCK MACHINES 200 to S40 blocks hour, other hand or sower 49 ta 100 hour, brick machines, batch mixers any size, motors and gas engines. MADISON MADI-SON EQUIPMENT CO.. Madlsea. Tun. FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP. WESTERN RED CEDAR FENCE POSTS Sale by Carloads. 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Women la your 0's"l Does thai junctional 'mlddle-ace' period pecul tor to women causa you to suffer hot "". nervous, talgtastrung, weak, tired feelings? Then do try Ijdla K. rinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. It's amtnu for this purpose 1 Taken regularly Plnkharn's Com-Pound Com-Pound helps build up resistance against such distress. Thousands have reported benefit! Also a very effective atomachlo tonic. Worth trying I vuuuuuuo tonic, worth U lYBIU.MmM'S fEsmiu COMPOUNt WNU W 11-47 And Your Strength and "oertT Is Below Par m be eaased by disorder af Vt-If Vt-If mloa that permits poiaaaeos J ? ""nlata. Far truly auay Msopia teal tired, weak and aiiaerable Wbea the kidneys fail to resuve eieeai adds and ether waste Butter treat the wood. Yoa nay suffer Bagging backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, auxinaa. Setting ap pifhta, leg pains, swelling. Bomstimee frequent and seaaty urine-Bon urine-Bon with smarting and buraiag Is en-ether en-ether aign that something is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doabt that prompt treatment Is wiser than neglect. Use Ceoa's POU. It la better ta rely aa a asadleuie that has won countrywide ap-Preval ap-Preval than on something leas favorably aaowa. Can's hare been tried and tees-a tees-a many years. Are at all drag stone. Get Doss's today. f?5 vtV (used GAB MARKETS4 VWESTERM AMERICA? Kathleen Norris Says: Just Like a Husband Bell Syndicate. WNU Features. "Carol squabbled with Monroe over dominoes and crosswords. I was ! delighted at this new friend's congeniality with my husband; it relieved the j strain for me." j By KATHLEEN NORRIS SOMETIMES a husband does something that makes his wife wild, without giving her the satisfaction satis-faction of either ignoring the matter or changing the situation. situa-tion. Such a husband, evidently, evident-ly, is Monroe White, whose wife, Edda, writes me from Buffalo. "Monroe has a dear woman friend, that's the gist of the matter," mat-ter," writes Edda. "That sounds innocent in-nocent enough, doesn't it? Nothing sinister, everything happily open and above board, but there it is. Carol is everything he needs ta gay, sophisticated companionship; he sees her every day. Or if he misses seeing her for a day or two he gets restless; last summer Carol went Into the mountains for a month and three times in that month Monroe went up to see her on one pretext or another. Once he took me, and you may imagine what a lovely time I had. "This Carol Is about 30. I am 38. Monroe is 39, and we have been married 15 years. We have two daughters, Phyllis, 11, and Mary-ann, Mary-ann, 9. Monroe is a cheerful, easily pleased man, not fussy about meals, very popular in business and club circles. He has always been a model husband as far as I know and a conscientious father. When my mother was with us, a long pull with three years of helplessness help-lessness and illness, Monroe was generosity itself. I think it was at that time that I began to hear a good deal of Monroe's dear old friend, Carol, widowed, and back in town. Carol often came to supper In those days, and squabbled with Monroe over dominoes and crosswords. cross-words. Absorbed in my mother's tragedy, I was delighted at this new friend's congeniality with my husband; hus-band; it relieved the strain for me. Unconcealed, Unashamed. "It went on. Nothing to conceal, evidently, nothing of which to be ashamed. Carol telephones me every day or two to say that she saw a hat downtown that would be ideal for me, or that she is sending the girls books. Monroe says quite casually, Til not be home for dinner, din-ner, Carol is crazy to see that show and I'm taking her.' Or he says The Masons have asked Carol and me up for the weekend. I told them we had measles at home and they said it was O.K. for you to beg off.' "Sometimes he says that Carol is the most intellectual woman he ever knew. If I say that she is not particularly pretty or has rather a heavy figure, he says with amused authority that men find her perfectly per-fectly fascinating. Once or twice he has said to his friends that he has a sensible wife; that Edda never makes any fuss about his platonic friendships with other women. He puts it In the plural. I put it in the singular. "I am good-looking, I dress wall, nothing sensational but quite up to the mark. What's the matter with me that my husband is perfectly content to let me cook, finish the Ironing, keep house, entertain his friends, drag him off for an occasional occa-sional dinner but that for companionship compan-ionship and glamor he goes elsewhere." else-where." And the letter finishes desperately: "Can a man and a woman have a platonic friendship, anyway?" She Thinks It's Fair Play. My answer to that, Edda, is "no." Not under these circum- "I am good-looking, dress well.'' NOT SO PLATONIC Platonic friendship rarely exists, declares Miss Norris, in answer to a perplexed wife. Edda White writes that her husband, Monroe, is good and dutiful in every way but one. He likes the company of a widow whom he has known for a long time. Their com panionship isn't the ordinary sort of relationship. Edda be-lieves be-lieves that Monroe is faithful to her. He often says he is glad that she is so sensible that she "understands" his platonic friendship with Carol. He takes Carol to dinners and plays. She often comes to the bouse. Sometimes she goes to a party in company with Monroe and Edda. Two or three times a week she calls up Edda and tells her about some bargain, or some other friendly friend-ly message. She sends presents to the little girls. It is difficult for Edda to repulse these charming attentions. Edda is getting annoyed and worried. This "friendship" between be-tween her husband and Carol is becoming embarrassing. It seems to be growing, instead of diminishing. Edda is asking ask-ing Miss Norris what to do under these peculiarly trying circumstances. stances, no. With Monroe at his age, Carol at hers, and your marriage mar-riage at this point, this friendship is not platonic. This is not to say that matters have proceeded to the point technically tech-nically known as infidelity. More likely Carol is happy to play it along safely, having all the fun of a man's admiration and attention and companionship, but not sacrificing sacri-ficing anything that would make her feel guilty of disloyalty to you. It is a fond illusion, with women of her type, that everything short of actual surrender to a love affair is fair play. She is holding Monroe all the tighter by her refusal to enter into a serious relationship with the husband of her friend. He probably deeply admires her strength of character and purity of motive. But in truth she is as low as any other woman who comes deliberately between be-tween a man and his wife and throws dust in his eyes while doing so. My advice to you Is to wake up and realize that this Is disloyalty, sugared over with the claim of being merely an intellectual and honest friendship. Such a thing rarely exists between a man and a woman, even when both are entirely en-tirely free to marry; It certainly does not exist here. You will win, in the end. If you can rise above all this. Keep busy, have as little to do with these high-minded high-minded friends as you can; don't discuss it with Monroe and don't see Carol at all. Ask her quietly not to telephone, don't argue, don't make scenes, just let them both know that you are perfectly aware of the fun they are having at your expense. The shock to Carol may stop the affair right there; Monroe will be shocked, too. But whether it takes only days or takes months, that's the way to end it, and the only way. Don't forget prayer. SURGERY ENDS WORRY Psychiatrists in Glasgow, Scotland, Scot-land, have made public details of a new brain operation to cure worry, anxiety and fear. Hospitals already have successfully handled hundreds of cases, they say. It consists of cutting the white! matter in the frontal lobes of the brain. Study of war wounds shoved that these lobes are the worry part of the brain and that many people can get along better without them. Anxiety goes at once, but the memory mem-ory and intellect are unimpaired. Released by Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE ROSALIND RUSSELL cer- tainly avoids monotonv! In Columbia's "The Guilt of Janet Ames" she wears one costume consisting of 3 pounds of diamonds and about 2 pounds of tulle, net and sequins. The diamonds are set in a huge necklace, earrings and a se ries of bracelets. Quite a change from her "Sister Kenny" costumes, and from those she'll wear in RKO's ROSALIND RUSSELL version of the O'Neill play, "Mourn- i lng Becomes Electra"; she spent a ; couple of weeks at Palm Springs . .... ....... resting up preparatory to winning i in that one, set to go before the cameras just about now. . . Danny Kaye's 1947 picture is all set; called, at present, "That's Life," it revolves around the central character of a professor of serious music who becomes involved in an academic analysis of Jazz. We hear it'll be Kaye's most elaborate musical musi-cal so far. Pat Buttram, comedian of the Saturday Sat-urday Night Roundupwanted some patchwork quilts for his home, but the prices asked in antique shops appalled ap-palled him. So he wrote to friends in Alabama who used to make quilts by the dozen, found he could buy them for $3.50 and got started or-dering or-dering quilts and couldn't stop. So now the situation's reversed he's looking for customers for patchwork quilts. " Ezlo Pinza, Metropolitan Opera star who has added greatly to his popularity by doing guest shots on the radio, has signed with United Artists for three years. You'll see him In "Carnegie Hall" before long; after that, in "Babes in Toyland." Rise Stevens, star of the Sunday "Family Hour," tells this one on herself. One season when she was leaving Prague for an opera tour of Europe, Walter Surovy, whom she'd met there, said "Write to me when you have a chance. I'm collecting stamps." Not a line did he get from her, not a stamp. But he must have learned a more romantic approach somewhere she finally married him! . Jim Backus, best known for his "Hubert Updike III" role on the Alan Young show, plans a club called "Millionaires Anonymous"; says it'll be made up of busy radio stooges whose names don't mean much to the public, but whose weekly week-ly incomes pass the four-figure mark. Take Jim's case; besides his Friday night stint with Alan, he's frequently heard with Fibber McGee and Molly, Bob Burns, Jack Carson and Jack Benny. Five-year-old Marcla Anne Northrop North-rop appears in Samnel Goldwyn's "The Bishop's Wife." Her mother, a Goldwyn Girl, appeared with Eddie Ed-die Cantor in "Palmy Days" way back in 1931. So Marcia Anne has been enrolled as a Goldwyn Girl, class of 1960. Three years ago Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy broadcast from Mexico City, the first time a major commercial program had originated outside the U. S. Now, on March 16th, they'll do it again. The entire troupe, including Ray Noble's No-ble's band and singer Anita Gordon, will be on hand for the broadcast. . ' ' ' Proiessor Quiz (heard now on Saturday evenings) tells the inside story of how he got his first sponsor. Ten years ago the network was trying try-ing to sell an elaborate, costly program; pro-gram; since it's good policy to offer an alternate program with the one they're trying to sell, it was decided decid-ed to offer Professor Quiz as the sacrificial goat. : So the sponsor heard both programs, chose the Professor. Pro-fessor. ' : . ODDS AND ENDS Harry James appears in one of the top sequences o "A Miracle Can Happen" with Jimmy Stewart and Henry Fonda. ... The "Lower Basin Street" series, which was Dinah Shore's springboard to fame, and which a lot of us miss, may return to the air. . . . Major night-time radio shows are seldom carried by more than 180 stations on a "full net work," but the ABC "turn V Abner series is heard over 26 J outlets. . . Although Bing Crosby and the Andrew An-drew Sisters have been making recordings record-ings together for five years, they will appear together in a motion picture lor the first time in "Road to Rio." ' , f f t f T i ' 4 HOUSEHOLD C1U CI OS Let Children Entertain Their Young Friends At Home Suppers When serving supper to a gang of teen-agers, prepare a casserole as illustrated here, and let the youngsters young-sters serve themselves. Complete the main course with a tossed salad. If you're one of the many mothers worried about where your teen-aged children spend their recreation and leisure time, then start doing a little hinting that it would be nice occasionally to entertain their friends at home. You can enlist the help of other mothers in the neighborhood and plan a series of suppers or evening snacks for the younger crowd, and in this way, have some idea of where the children spend their idle hours. Daughters, and sons, too, will be glad to cooperate with mother in "cooking up" something super special spe-cial In the way of refreshments which should be simple but good to eat. If you want to have a snack party par-ty for the youngsters, here's an easily eas-ily planned and executed snack idea: Salmon Salad Bread Box Pickles and Olives Potato Chips Dutch Apple Cake Ice Cream Milk or Chocolate The salad loaf can be made ahead of time and set in the refrigerator refrigera-tor for chilling, then removed at serving time and sliced. Salmon Salad Bread Box. (Serves 6 to 8) 1 tall can red salmon 1 tablespoon plain gelatin 2 tablespoons lemon juice teaspoon salt Dash of Worcestershire sauce teaspoon grated onion H cup salad dressing 1 loaf (small) onslicetf white bread Drain salmon; remove skin and bones. Flake fish into small pieces. Soften gelatin with lemon juice and dissolve over hot water. Add seasonings sea-sonings and salad dressing; combine with salmon, mixing thoroughly. Trim crusts from bread; cut thick slice off top of loaf. Remove inside of loaf leaving a wall about ',s inch thick. Fill box with salmon mixture; mix-ture; replace top slice of bread, pressing it in gently. Chill thorough, ly. When ready to serve spread top and sides with extra salad dressing dress-ing and garnish with ripe or stuffed green olives. Serve in slices. Another easy type of dinner to serve is an oven stew with a simple tossed salad. Both of these can be prepared ahead of time and finished up by the gang, if necessary. For dessert, serve something frozen because of the convenience of preparation. prep-aration. Supper Idea. Oven Stew Baking Powder Biscuits Tossed Vegetable Salad Relishes Frozen Lemon Cream Milk The stew is rich in vegetables and will be filling enough for hearty, youthful appetites if prepared as follows: fol-lows: Oven Stew. (Serves 6) 1 pound beef or lamb, for stew I tablespoons butter or other fat 'A cup sliced onions 3 cups boiling water cup diced carrots y, cup diced turnips Vt cup diced potatoes Z teaspoons salt i teaspoon pepper cup cooked peas teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Vt cup cold water 3 tablespoons flour Brown beef or lamb in fat. Add onions and saute until golden brown; then add water. Turn into casserole, cas-serole, cover and cook in a moderate LYNN SAYS: Serve Fruits Often For a First Course Give your appetites a new slant on dinner. Try serving fruits and fruit juices in deleetable combinations. combina-tions. Canned raspberries and seedless grape halves, marinated with a bit of orange juice are a grand combination. combi-nation. Equal parts of orange sections and Tokay grapes are guaranteed tc whet the appetite. IP iuJmn LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Poached Eggs on Toast Scalloped Spinach Mashed Potatoes Raw Carrot Strips Beverage Chocolate Pudding with Cream (350-degree) oven for 1V4 hours. Increase In-crease heat to hot (450 degrees). Add carrots, turnips, potatoes, salt and pepper and continue cooking covered for 20 minutes or until vegetables vege-tables art nearly tender. Add peat and Worchestershlre sauce. Add ws. ter gradually to flour, mixing to a smooth paste; pour Into stew, stirring stir-ring vigorously. Place biscuits on top of ttew; turn into oven and bake 12 to 15 minutes longer or until biscuits art browned. Dutch Apple Cake. t caps sifted flour I teaspoons baking powder H teaspoon salt Vt cup butter ' 1 egg cup milk Vt cup sugar 5 apples, cut, pared 1 tablespoon cinnamon Vt cup currants Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. Work butter Into flour mix ture. Beat egg, add milk and stir Into dry Ingredients. In-gredients. Spread the dough in a well buttered biscuit bis-cuit pan. Spread apples on dough, pressing sharp edges of fruit Into In-to mixture. Sprinkle Sprin-kle with currants. susar and cinnamon which havs been mixed together. Bake in a moderate (350-degree) oven for 30 to 40 minutes. Baking Powder Biscuits. (Makes 12) 2 enps sifted cake floor 2 teaspoons doable acting baking powder Vi teaspoon salt 4 to 5 tablespoons shortening H cup milk Sift flour once, measure, add bak ing powder and salt and sift again. Cut in shortening. Add milk and stir until soft dough Is formed. Turn out on lightly floured board and knead 30 seconds. Roll Vt Inch thick and cut with floured, 2-inch biscuit cutter. Use on top of stew. The remainder may be baked on an tin greased baking sheet In a hot (450- degree) oven for 12 to 15 minutes, Frozen lemon cream la the perfect dessert for a hearty main dish. This dessert may be made In the freesing tray or a mold. Frozen Lemon Cream. (Serves 10) cup finely crushed corn flakea 2 egg whites tablespoons sugar 2 egg yolks cup evaporated milk, thoroughly thorough-ly chilled and whipped 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 3 tablespoons lemon Juice Thoroughly butter freezing tray of refrigerator and cover sides and bottom with cornflakes. Reserve some for top. y Beat egg whites stiff but not dry. Add sugar gradually, beating con stantly f until thoroughly blended. Beat egg yolks until thick and lemon-colored; fold into egg white mixture. mix-ture. Then fold In evaporated milk, lemon rind and juice. Turn into freezing tray. Cover top with remaining re-maining corn flakes. Freeze until firm, using coldest freezing temperature. temper-ature. Freezing time: 4 hours. Un-mold Un-mold and cut in slices for serving. Or, pack in large melon mold, using equal parts of ice and salt (without (with-out stirring) ; let stand until firm (about 5 or 6 hours) pouring off salt water as it accumulates, before it reaches top of mold. Released by Western Newspaper Union. Grape juice mixed with gingerale is guaranteed to whet jaded appetites. appe-tites. -. !;; Avocado slices which are combined com-bined with grapefruit or orange sections sec-tions may be served sprinkled with halved, seedless grapes. For a rich new smoothness in ice creams, whip butter-ripe avocado with a rotary beater until fluffy. Then beat into ice cream, frozen to I the mushy stage. Return to refrig- erator and freeze until firm, stirring I occasionally. f f rt n , V v V- SEVING CIRCLE Sliorl'Steevel oCovelu Speciai v a Junior Frock THIS smart, brief-sleeved frock - has young ideas tiny waist, full skirt and the popular surplice closing. Junior sewers can put it together easily and quickly. Use gay solid tones or stripes, going this way and that. Pattern No. SMI cornea In sizes 11, 12. 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size 12, J'4 yards ot 35 or 39-inch; 1ft yards straight grain fabric. Special Occasion Blouses ""TWO lovely, dramatically simple blouses for special dressed-up occasions. Each blouse has few pattern pieces, requires very little fabric. They can be made in a ASK ME O ANOWSH i I A General Quiz 1. The dog watch on a ship is how many hours? 2. Which was the first state to adopt the primary method for all nominations? 3. The priests, prophets and wise men among the ancient Celts in Gaul, Ireland and Britain were called what? 4. Ascorbic acid is better known as what? 5. Which of the apostles is sometimes some-times called Levi? 6. What is the estimated amount of tea consumed annually by China? 7. In a play where does the epilogue epi-logue come? 8. The Arc de'Triomphe in Paris commemorates the victories of what ruler? 9. Cocaine is obtained from what shrub? 10. Why is hydrophobia so called? The Aruwera 1. Two hours. 2. Wisconsin, in 1903. 3. Druids. 4. Vitamin C. 5. Matthew. 6. Eight million pounds. 7. At the end. 8. Napoleon. 9. The coca shrub (the leaves). 10. Hydrophobia means "fear of water," and the disease gets its name from the mistaken idea that a mad dog has a fear of water. SNAP! CRACKLE! 4 2& f898J Pf Be sure you get America's favorite rice cereal, .da the on and only Kellogg"! Bice Krlsplesl Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim J&l Sum! U. S. Savings Bonds! iTiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu PATTERNS outliful jtroch 2)reAd - Up (&fc ou&eS I .18123 variety of fabrics crisp white, soft pastels, novelty prints. Pattern No. 8123 is for sizes 12, 14. 1. IS and 20. Sir. 14, 114 yards of 3S or 30-inch for either blouse. Ssnt an additional twenty-five seats wltk rear pattera erdsr for the Sarins FASH-ON. FASH-ON. It's SUet with Ideas ter smart Bprlnf-thrsvth-summev warerebes. Free ha arietta Inside the seek. Bend your order to: SEWING CIKCLK PATTERN DEPT. 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