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Show PACE SIX TIIE PARK RECORD Thursday, August 4, 1938 PHOTOGRAPHY ROLLS DEVELOPED 8prinlluble wnitrht enlnreeiuenn, or your choice of lti nrinut without ulargaments o coin, heorlnu iicea. NORTHWEST PHOTO SERV1CC Fargo Bspt. K North Dakota PHOTO-KRAFT ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Developed with 8 Quality Prints - - - - 25e Extra Prints - - - - - . 3e Wrap coin and film carefully PHOTO-KRAFT Box 749 Salt Lake City. Utah SCHRAMM-JOHNSON DRUGS Simple Embroidery ' For Luncheon Mats By RUTH WYETII SPEARS f E SAY luncheon mats yet, more and more, mats are being be-ing used three times a day. This change from the traditional table cloth saves time and laundry; the color and variety of mats add interest in-terest to table settings. A set of sheerest organdie is used with dainty china. The mat shown here is the other extreme. Vc- ...'Jr((Wit.4l-(la(l(l(l.(l. 4 .fJA-J H - ji--ArV-. It is made of soft blue denim and is embroidered in heavy white cotton. cot-ton. Napkins may be made to match, or plain white napkins may be used. Here are all the directions you will need for the embroidery. Cut the mats the desired size, i pulling a thread of the fabric to guide you in cutting the edge straight. Hem the edges by hand with -inch hems, using matching cotton sewing thread or raveled threads of the fabric if they are strong enough. Now, blanket stitch over the hems with the embroidery embroid-ery thread as shown here at A. Next, make tiny chain stitches between be-tween the blanket stitches as at B. This completes the embroidery for the long sides of the mats. The short ends are embroidered more elaborately. Make a V stitch at the top of every other blanket stitch as shown at C. Chain stitches are then made as at D. NOTE: Mrs. Spears latest book gives complete directions for many novelties, gifts and things for yourself and the children. It also fully illustrates 90 embroidery embroid-ery stitches with interesting variations. vari-ations. You will use these again and again for reference. Ask for Book 2, enclosing 25 cents. Address Ad-dress Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Des-plaines Des-plaines St., Chicago. NERVOUS? Do you feel so nervous you want to scream? Are you cross and irritable? Do you scold those dearest to you? If your nerves are on edge and you feel you need a good general system tonic, try Lydm K. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound, made especially for teamen. For over 60 years one woman has told another an-other how to go "smiling thru" wilh reliable Pinkham's Compound. It helps nature build up more physical resistance and thus helps calm quivering nerves and lessen discomforts from annoying symptoms which often accompany ac-company female functional disorders. Y hy not give it a chance to help YOU? Over one million women have written in reporting wonderful benefits from Pinkham's Compound. As Becomes a Man I dare do all that may become a man; who dares do more is none. Shakespeare. PV KILL ALL FLIES Pliwea1 anywhere. Patsy Fry Killer attracts antj kola flies. il'?-rrC'f j W Ulnot soil or Injure anything. '.0,VL'Im ail eeason. 2.o at all ".JiiiS"- dealers. Harold Somers, Inc., liOJJeKtilOAve.4l'iLliiii'.Y. . ..1 Ti vonveuieui lunno5 nm II 23 WNU W 3238 Caution and Chance Some get ahead through caution, and some do it by the opposite. . Jmmmt Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Your kidneys are constantly filterinf waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometime lag in their work do not act as Nature intended fail to remove re-move impurities that, if retained, may poison the system and upset the whole body machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, puffinesa under the eyes a feeling of nervous anxiety and loss cf pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder dis-order may be burning, scanty or too treouent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than Beglect. I'm Voan't Pilt$. Doan't have been winning rew friends for more than forty years. They have a ration-wide reputation. Are recommended by grateful peopie the country over. Ask your uaghborl : mmmi Field of frW.; -.'""J " ' & ' V? " .''"ipirW'Wy V '"' J ' If I J uj ,,,..J..... I J ' "'', , , If : i ' " " i If -'.rw.?: 4 ty'rr' t-:,: V Attics s v...'..- k Three Chicago youngsters with a taste for truck gardening "plowed" and cultivated a tiny patch of ground near the curbstone of their residential street and soon had a thriving field of corn. Photograph shows the three city "farmers" tending their crop in the extr emely foreign city atmosphere. Left to right, Joe Dam-ble, Dam-ble, Rose Iluntsman and Neal Damble. Lemonade Stand Up to Date r'l I r iT"l :J', LNwSiiv - "x- 1 lniSu Complete with cash register is the lemonade stand opened on a St. Louis street corner by Dickie Bradley, left, twelve years old. Constantine Dem-mas, Dem-mas, six years old, hands over a penny for a glass, after a sample sip. Dickie says business is booming. Czechoslovakia Aids Political AX" 1 H . 9. $ i Poverty-stricken political refugees from Germany and Austria are finding a haven in Czechoslovakia Thi. government has established a camp for these unfortunate people at Bruenn where they S ShM a various chores. This group is peeling potatoes. "gemer at SWAM 50 MILES J 'A . v A . Paul Chotteau, sensational forty-year-old distance swimmer shown taking a bit of light nourishment in Santa Monica hospital, following his spectacular 50-mile swim. Holder Hold-er of two world's records, Chotteau Chot-teau demanded a steak, but physicians physi-cians said he was still too exhausted to take anything but light nourishment. Corn Waves in 1 ,4 v: - -7" y r 4s 4 . ha - Flood of Pennies for China V . I'Gh 1 CHJ '-4 - j Putins her heart and soul into a miniature relief campaign all her own, Carolyn Hong, six years old, collected 4.000 pennies from fellow : Chinese school children with which she surprised officials of the United Council for Civihan Relief in China. The money will be added to fundi 1 for relief of sufferers of the Japanese invasion. City Street CLARA BOW'S SON Clara Bow, former screen glamour glam-our girl and wife of Rex Bell, film cowboy actor, shown with her baby son, photographed for the first time in her home in Hollywood, Calif. The son has not yet been named. Miss Bow has a three-and-one-half-year-old boy named Toni. Refugees 54f r J - '; 3 1 4. C A V j' MED' I-A I I CHI , r" 1 -vi j ? , i 7 ; A Play Outfit; r0 YOU need something new to dawdle in or to dress up in? Here are two new designs, one for play and one for afternoon, that are so smart you really should have both. It costs so little, in time and trouble, to make them for yourself, with these simple designs de-signs that even beginners can follow fol-low with no difficulty. And of course you can splurge on some really luxury fabrics, when you sew your own. Play Suit and Sports Frock. This new design gives you both! The play suit has beautifully cut shorts and a nice bodice top with the sunniest kind of sunback. The frock is created merely by fastening fasten-ing that straight skirt around you, and the bolero goes with both! Notice how cleverly the ricrac braid is used to simulate a square yoke in the front. The smartest thing for this design is linen in a UncUPkih We Don't Wish to Be Judaed No man's life is an' open book, and it shouldn't be. We have all made wretched mistakes. Never judge a man's action, until un-til you know his motive. Aladdin may have had a hunch of what the push-button would do some day, when he was rubbing his lamp. Does a robin enjoy his chirrups as much as you do? Hope is an obliging grace. She always comes when invited. They Want It Protected Conservatism generally wins in America because more people have a stake in its wealth. We like some hateful people. They say the things we don't dare to. There is a feeling of affluence in contemplating a drawer plumb full of shirts that are all yours. We never realized how little the wretched Europeans are masters of their fate until we see them drifting into another war. 0 r 31 i ; r j y I fi A IV Vour automobile requires pure oil . . . oil that will not break down into sludge, carbon or corrosion-forming corrosion-forming elements. Acid-Tree Quaker State is a scientific scien-tific achievement in motor oil purity. In four, great modern refineries, operating oper-ating under the most exacting control . . . selected Pennsylvania crude oil is freed of all impurities. Every drop of Quaker State is rich, pure lubricant. Retail price, 35 a quart. Quaker State Oil Refining Corp., Oil City, Penn. IT MAKES CARS RUN BETTER LAST LONGER a Basic Dress dusty pastel shade; calico, percale per-cale and pique are good, too. Be sure to trim it with ricrac. Dress With Bodice Detailing. Here's a design that brings a breath of fall smartness in the bosom detailing that you'll see in expensive models this coming season. sea-son. Also in the Victorian sleeves, high at the shoulders and fitted to the arm below. The straight panel pan-el in the back, the gathers at the waistline in front, give you a lovely love-ly figure-line. Make in silk crepe, linen or georgette. Later in sheer wool, satin or velvet. The Patterns. 1557 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 5-!s yards of 35-inch material. 10 yards of ricrac braid to trim. 1482 is designed for sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 34 requires re-quires 4 yards of 39-inch material ma-terial with long sleeves; 4!4 yards of 39-inch material for short sleeves. Success in Sewing. Success in sewing, like in any other field, depends upon how you approach the task in hand. To help you turn out clothes professional profes-sional looking in every detail, we have a book which plainly sets forth the simple rules of home dressmaking. The beginner will find every step in making a dress clearly outlined and illustrated within its covers. For the experienced ex-perienced sewer there are many helpful hints and suggestions for sewing short cuts. Send 15 cents (in coins) today for your copy of SUCCESS IN SEWING, a book every home dressmaker will find of value. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept, 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. Bell Syndicate . WNU Service. SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio tor Every Room 200 Rooms 200 Baths Ih HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 The Hotel Temple Square hai highly desirahle, friendly atmosphere. atmos-phere. You will always find it immaculate, immac-ulate, supremely comfortable, and thoroughly agreeable. You can therefore there-fore understand why this hotel 1st HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You can also appreciate why t It's a mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. r t at 4 s & 4j w v. r- 1-1- -y -;s--.-:AK. - ate lIl y L"""r " L"rr""iir ,j f j, " l'MUMliefBUCIl LEAF 401 DASH IN rTAER7X60MUCHFA,THW i |