OCR Text |
Show LEADER BEAK RIVER VALLEY CHALET SUZANNE MIRROR Everyone Wants Admiration Of Your Mr. : and fa Sunday Mrs. L callers Mr. a Dewey Bill W Mrs. her he stay a Tremo The organi have games, they n and w MIND w4 M W"- I t fill B LlfSV P jy jinn nnuKi i - - 1 7IV, i.,WJ?K - By Lawrence Gould I xgSw . j rnnioruiiinn fit? vir4 rM'-- W B a conflict between what we to say and what we think expected to say, so that the afraid a child is to express self spontaneously, the more he wilt be to stutter. r-- r " ' slowly toward deep water. But its strategy had been in vain. Suddenly the surface of the lake exploded and a big bass took the minnow under. There has been verification, Pogue says, of a "tall tale" printed in several Missouri newspapers about a wounded goose which was rescued by one of his fellow-geesWinston E. Locker, of Iantha, Mo., says that James Wadlow claims to have shot the goose. Wadlow's story was that while he and two friends were duck hunting near Sumner, a flight of geese came over and Wadlow fired twice at one of the birds, wounding it. He avers another goose dived about 10 feet to get under the injured comrade, which alighted on the second goose's back, and carried it for about 150 feet until the wounded bird was able to wing away on its own power. EV Be Do pampered children tend to stammer? Answer: Yes, says Dr. Philip J. Glasner of John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. From the study of a group of seventy stammering children under five years of age, he concluded that their typical background was a home in which they had been sheltered and in Is no secret that many expert good rec- ords seldom get Bonasa umbellus the ruffed grouse on the fly. Any reasonably good shot can hit a clay pigeon, but It is a much different story when a rocketing grouse is the target The gunner must have his mind completely on his work when he is trying to bag this king cf all game birds. Grouse very seldom fly In a straight line and, as every grouse hunter knows, they have the infuriating faculty of managing to get tree or shrub between them and the gun in practically nine out of every ten cases. Their curving flight Is very rapid and their amazing speed almost makes the hunter dizzy as he watches the bird dodge around hemlocks and pines so fast that there Is very little chance to get a bead on it at all. him- likely -- AAA FIRST-BOR- i GOD, HE SITS ON THE THRONE OF THE UNIVERSE AND WILL JUDSE EVERY MAN. KEEPING HEALTHY Cancer of Lip, Diagnosis and Care "T IKE MALIGNANT cancer grave disease. It lymph nodes near eventually it is Dr. James W. Barton growth else-wher- e, of the lip is a is carried to by and will kill the patient unless treated adequately and at an early stage. Fortunately an ulcer or growth on the lip continually reminds the patient of its presence. It can usual- ly be easily recognized by the physician. Because it can be easily reached It can be treated in a number of ways." I am quoting freely Dr. C C Burkell, Saskatoon cancer clinic, In "Canadian Saskatoon, Sask., Medical Association Journal." Dr Burkell presents a review of some 534 cases of cancer of the lip treated in Saskatoon cancer clinics at Regina and Saskatoon, 97 per cent of which were on the lower lip. In one group of 131 cases the cancers had been present from nine months to as long as 20 years, the average being about four years. While soma cases of cancer of the lip, particularly where the lymph nodes are involved, require surgical operation, where-eve- r radium can be administered in any of Its various forms the results are much to be preferred to surgical operation which in so many cases leaves disfiguring scars. The result of treating 534 consecutive cases of cancer of the Up by radium showed that the overall survival of life was 89.5 per cent (about nine in every, 10 cases) for five years after treatment. Dr. Burkell from his review of these cases states: 1. Cancer of the lip can be cured by radium treatment in a very high percentage of cases provided treatment Is given early. 2. The choice of method In use of radium is not Important provided careful care and planning are used. 3. Radium Is not the treatment of choice where neighboring glands are Involved. Predator Data The fish and wildlife service Is recommending that farmers avoid indiscriminate shooting and trapping of small predators, and rely instead on selective trapping to take the occasional poultry-killinskunk or weasel. It atso urges that nesting boxes be placed for use of small species of owls. The service points out that certain perdatory animals which keep mice under control are among .he farmer's best friends. g or an obscure second-han- Persia or antique shop. Guests eat food of unusual prep Answer: Not if he adheres to aration and unsurpassed quality techwith silver and from china and potthe strict psychoanalytic nique. For the object of this tech- tery dishes from almost every nique is not to remodel you ac- country you can name, and drink goblets which cording to somebody else's pattern from but to help you find out what you hold from a few ounces to some- are and make up 'your own mind thins iust short of a quart. what you want to do about it. A You bathe in tubs of tile, some of person who told you that you which Mrs. Hinshaw herself has should or should not get a di- set and which resemble mosaic in vorce, for example, would be un- their intricacy and color. She has true to the psychoanalytic meth- a few conventional porcelain tubs, od. By the time that you have rec- too. ognized the unconscious reasons Hot coffee and cold orange juice why you've been unhappy in your is brought to your door each mornmarriage you'll know what you ing. want and ask advice from no one. There are 30 rooms at the Chalet, Including efficiency cottages and apartments; and you may take your meals In the dining rooms which jut out over bass-fille- d (you can see them) Lake Suzanne, or in your private patio, or where you please. The remarkable thing about this place Is that there is no breakage. Guests hold the unusual glass and dishes in too high regard to be careless. And there is no thievery, probably due to the charm of Mrs. Hinshaw. Lesson to Others People who boast of turning a stable or barn Into a country home can take a lesson from this native Df Lafayette, Ind., whose banker-husban- d retired in the prime of life, only to have the stock market ruin him and leave him so utterly that pneumonia killed dejected him In four days. Hinshaw bought the estate where Chalet Suzanne now Is. When he found himself without money he spent his last few thousand dollars :o see if rabbit-raisincould be a IS AM ASTONISHING NUMBER OF WAYS IN WHICH CHRIST IS HE IS TEACHER AND HEALER; SPOKEN OP IN THE HEW TESTAMENT: HE IS THE OP MANY BROTHERS; HE IS PRIEST AND SACRIFICE; HE IS PROPITIATION, THE RECONCILER OF MEM TO GOO. HE IS MASTER AND LORD, HE IS THE WORD. HE IS THE SON OP By k Quarters Delightful Your auarters at first puzzle. then delight you. Doors sometimes are so low that anyone nearing six feet must stoop. Almost no two rooms are on the same level. One apartment has a bedroom size 13x 13. a sitting room eround a corner size 8x8, a bathroom with standing space only of 30 inches and 20 give THERE Stunted Fish The problem of stunted fish Is not new. As early as 1875, Frank Buckland had published in his of a Fisherman book, "Log-booand Zoologist," comments on the kinds of fish seined from a small pond in England. He wrote: "It was a very extraordinary thing to remark that, as a rule, the fish we caught, were either very little or very big; there seemed to be no intermediate size. I cannot quite account for this, but it is worthy of remark that there were no prcdaceous fish among these herbivorous fish. It Is generally the case where you have too many roach or crap, and no Jack or perch. I.e., all sheep and no wolves, the fish are exceedingly abundant, but are all very small. It is necessary In stocking ponds always to consider the balance of life, and put Into them such as will keep down super abundant and population, therefore prevent degeneration of the stock of vegetable feeders." low-rollin- windows. The furniture and rugs may have come from Victorian England or AAA AAA ff d g Thieves stealing public property or reported to tbi authorities. Cam is public property, gam violators or truly thieves and reporting such violators is a moral law. and a background of world to be travel may often turn out sizeable advantages for a person unon a few rabbit hutches and an enormous capacity thintr. in the task of makand raising two small a living Ing children. Chalet Suzanne was the answer, but friends of Mrs. Bertha Hinshaw tM dor cVia was a little daft when she started the venture 18 years sue ago. But during tnose yean k,. Tnaiin her a ouiet but reputation for good food and lodghotel ing and prompted reputable book. her from a to take men page Chalet Suzanne is a vernaDie AnW' villa p near here, looking land like something out of a far-otucked strangely behind a fold of g hills of the lush the Florida citrus ridge section. EiOOEimG AT HELIGIOrJ Elusive Bird It -tion world-gathere- AAA trap shooters with very wish we're more iwiii" - Does a psychoanalyst advice? started swimming FLA.-Imagina- far-flun- g Is wanting to show off neurotic? Answer: No more so than any dulged but also had been expected other natural instinct but your to be models of behavior. Stamthe result of way of trying to gratify it may be. mering is basically Everyone instinctively wants admiration and approval, and accordingly the desire to show off is universal even though in many people it has been so sternly repressed that they are not conscious of it. But to give way to the desire is neurotic when you don't consider whether what you have whether it is beauty, to display wit, or talent will be pleasing to Mature people your audience. show off only when they have something to show. WALES. LAKE Instinct or Reason? Ralph Pofiue. of the Missouri commission relates these stories which stir speculation as to whether creatures of the wild are able to reason, or depend entirely upon instinct: While fishing on Lake Norfolk last summer. Frank Watts and Summerfield Jones, of West Plains, Mo., claim to have witnessed minnow play dead in order to evade a pursuing bass. The fishermen first noticed the minnow skipping wildly through the water, but when it reached the shallow edge of the bank. It turned upon its side, evidently playing dead. After a few minutes, apparently assuming danger was past, it turned upright and 'DafFScheme Proves Worth HEALTH NOTES If your youngster Is not progressing at school, remember that 80 per cent of his school work depends on his vision. One treatment for epilepsy Is a of more fat and less starch foods. diet Alcoholism Is now being fought If It were a disease Lke polio, tuberculosis and cancer. Generally speaking we make as much money with our feet as with our heads. lust as Tuberculosis Is spread almost tirely by adults. not en- Livelihood. It wasn't and suddenly his widow had to make her own way. The two had traveled the globe. They had collected many things, including the choicest recipes and a love of good living. Bertha Hinshaw thought it was a background which she could make serve her. Fire has forced her to rebuild part of the Chalet, since she turned their home, their playrooms, the rabbit hutches, the stables, a huge chicken house and servants' quar-tr- s Into the quiet spot at the end of a quarter-mil- e old brick road lead ing from the highway. Possibilities In Four States Reported Oil, Gas LEXINGTON, KY. Dr. Willard Rouse Jillson, head of the depart ment of geology cf Transylvania college here, sees varying possibil ities of large-scal- e production of oil and gas from deep-we-ll operations throughout four states in which he conducted a geologic reconnaissance. In a recent pamphlet, "Geologic Reconnaissance Through Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York," Dr. Jillson summarized his findings and opinions on the production potential of the areas visited. Dr. Jillson covered some 2,200 miles and engaged in field work during the summer of last year. In his survey he studied only deep wells, those being drilled and those and examined and completed, sampled many types of oil sands at their formatlonal outcrops. The entire areas between Lexington, Ky., and Alexandria Bay, N. Y., was covered by the geologist. Dr. Jillson also visited a number of outstanding geologists In the area and obtained their views in relation to localized deep drilling embraced by the reconnaissance. Of the production potential from deep well operations In Kentucky, Dr. Jillfon noted but one field In which there Is any extensive deep and successful drilling. This, he wrete, Is In central-easter- n Kentucky on tha Powell-Esti- ll county Home care for some patients is only as good as hospital care- -it la Infinitely betUr. Una. Dial 31U Record Throngs t ASK ME Eager to Hear ? ? ? ? 'Noisiest' Band A General Quiz 1. YVho j The Questions first made trousers ular for women? p0n. meaning of sedi- The tioDWhat CALIF. 3. When and why was the cash register's steady jingle is Mpt drowning out the cowbells, door- ican War fought? 4. On what parts of his bells, trolley gongs, ringing bodv anvils, bicycle pumps and tuned does a dog perspire? 5. What is the principal flitguns of the world's noisiest job of a on a bomber? orchestra. 6. Who was the first United Spike Jones, the comic band- States President to be born a leader with the concave face, has citizen of the United States' made music depreciation an art. 7. Which is higher the Empire And how this clanging, banging State Building or the Great Pvra and squealing pays off is a wonder mid of EevDt? to behold: 8. Which weighs heavier, gold On tour last year, Jones outfit commanded $120,000 for 16 days The Answers at the Texas state fair. They got 1. Marlene Las in hotels at Dietrich. big $12,500 a week 2. Language or conduct directed Vegas, Nev., and St. Louis, Mo. The smallest stops among a hun- against public order, also tho Bi. dred cities guaranteed $3,500 a ring up of such disorder, tending night, or 60 of the gross. The 3. 1846 and 1848, to determine average, except in the largest spots, was $5,000 a night. College the boundary line between Mextowns got off with a flat $3,500. In ico and Texas. 4. On the pads of his paws and Milwaukee Spike drew 5,000 to the Coliseum at the state fair on his nose and toneue. 5. He watches the instruments park. io see mat tne plane is performSpike's recording of a single ing properly, retracts anri number, "Two Front Teeth," sold down the wheels, works the wing 1,100,000 copies in six weeks. aim waicnes me propeller RCA Victor sent him a golden imps pitcn. 6. Martin Van Buren. record, framed, and an extra frame for the second golden rec 7. The Empire State Building ord RCA expects him to win with 1248 feet the Great Pryamid sales of the reissue of the same 485 feet. number. 8. Platinum. HOLLYWOOD, co-pil- ot i 1 Jones has just signed with producer Harry Sherman to make a comedy western, Spike's seventh film but his first as the star. The 1948 125 tour, one night stands, grossed over $1,000,000, Spike's junket in 1949 nearly matched that figure although the band "took it easy" by staying longer in some cities. This is big business for a guy who started with a washboard and a $10 set of cowbells. The revenue isn't all gravy, however. Spike takes about 40 people on tour, augmenting the band with singers, acrobats and comedy acts. They travel in a chartered train of two pullmans and a baggage car bpike estimates traveling ex penses at $700 a day. Salaries come out of the gross, too, and Spike's side men are expensive. They have to be good musicians to kick a piece around the way they do. Jones' travesties may sound like uproar to the ira initiated, but they are very care fully arranged. His style is corn, but it's sharp. His most steadfast admirers are not hillbillies. sophisticates Among Spike's fans are conductors Arthur Fiedler and Leopold btokowski. In Bostdn the entire memberof that city's symphony orchestra attended Spike's concert. Fiedler has a copy of every record Spike has made. In Austin. Tex., Spike's concert was a bene fit for the local symphony orchesship tra. Spike likes to take a classic, play it straight for a few measures, then scramble the whole thing with blasts from the automobile horns, pistol shots, burps, hiccups and sirens. For some reason, "Dance of the Hours" made him think of an automobile race. So he incorporated one, with a narrator. Tchaikovsky's "Nutcracker Suite" became the "Safecracker Suite"; "Morpheus," not yet released, is based on "Or- pheus." - Toasted fresh and sweet for folks eat Kellogg's Corn tf lakes last as we make em! Thev re VOUT harpnin in goodness. Get Kellogg's lOrn r lakes. r A, MOTHER KNOWS BEST I Reading the Ads r Make Them Today With m A QEtS S?i DRY YEAST Crisp, delicious yeast raised rolls are quick and easy to prepare with this special Red Star recipe. You mix all ingredients in one bowl. No kneading or shaping is necessary, and full rising time takes only 30 minutes. Try 30 minute rolls today with Red Star Active Dry Yeast. You love them. And, remember, use this wonderful yeast in all your recipes. to 1 f if lit - In ESS Keep Posted on Values By wm you m 'em so yv mJ. Rabbit Fever Nation of Fox Hunters is in the Briton's blood. Phrases like "gone to earth." "full cry" and 'losing the scent" have jumped right out of :th hunting field into ordinary, everyday language. When tha RJI.F. swooped to conquer in the Battle of Britain the squadron-leadwould cry 'Tally-ho- ! ". And all over the country you find inns Wee the "Fox." the "Horse and Hound" and the "Boots and Sad-die- ." er If rabbits become scarce area where they always The rumor-monsc- r himself an evil, but only a monkey seal hit lips against reality. And cancer is a grim reality. We must discuss the facts of can- - ,J st willk-- fK pontrysMI-r"- 1' "sim in were watch out for tularemia, a veterinary medical bulletin warns. Hunters are told that tukiD laremia, or rabbit fever, may in rabbits of numbers large short time. Because the disease also Infects human beings, handlers are urged to protect themselves by wearing rubber gloves while skinning and cleaning tn animals. plentiful, in i Ml dayi r a handfm been & the irus the SIPIEAM NdD IE VEIL is m KAYROGBSSA-Yea- i Fox-hunti- t hv cef in order to help and protect our neighbors. " For humanity's sak- e-- we must own preservation support the crusade Hn this mortal enemr of AMERICAN CANCER yreBl0Otfl ft-- - " |