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Show Page Seven The Cache American. Ix)sran. Cache Countv. Ctnh 0USEH01D hits: Corn flake or rolled outs HOMER. 6CROY are ex cellent substitute for breadcrumbs. ( silk thread. of the bast-- mark This leaves no JnCS. h" MHtrt. toby this rax: Amo coy firm ia mi.- Sr Hstnrr bora, Sunday mraal (barrb, company lor diBarr, aad ",,,d,4 Ul add For a pleasant flavor In tea. bit of dry orange peel to the can- - a,., hub mater, and keep tightly closed. . I If a newspaper becomes stuck to a varnished table top, apply oil. Let soak thoroughly, then paper can be removed. c To make screws penetrate hard wood more easily place a little ordinary household soap on the Vork nl,0) u.t. school and colic,, tBtf w fliy. Ha wm rejected by avary hlr'4 Sf. la klm ,r f1" I , ua uy. ihaodora oraitar ea a woman' t-u nb mac-oliv- e ' oeasaal pats. Tha Judtn sirred oa lha r Mi others aera draaa by districts, iia eontioard u iraa Uora iib success. The pay wit aaly eaouch to him to coaunue. thread. CIIiPTER Tie a button on the end of the string attached to the toddler'a toy wagon or truck so the string doesn't slip through his fingers. h XIX f,(le,r ,onc,; comings T" T would go out on and sit in for rocker, neigh- waiting To freshen a felt bat that be-Y comes soiled, rub lighUy with fine Some!!!!.'.. ehlt P Co over the entire sur- - STt IT. .7 P ,Y'a7 sandpaper. face in order to avoid a spotted He would go back to the kitchen with the newt. Earl Trullingcr passed dnvin' their new sorrel I think they paid too much for him Lem Gault and Mrs. Gault went by. I waved but he didn't see me. I expect his eyes are failing. They had a farmers' telephone put in and when it would ring. Thebe would dry her hands and softly take off the receiver. Pa could never effect SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT RUBBER ' Rubber deas not oatar Into tha snaking of toots, ytt tha demand for military tents has reduced the manufacture of passenger car tiros. Tiro cord and yarn for tont duck aro mad with tha same machln-er- y. that lha treat ore In reasonably good condition when the Far Cost rubber plantations aro Assuming e i perti anticipate that within two years soma 1,600,000 tons of natural rubber will be made available, enough to fill on year's astimatsd needs. That b why B. F. Goodrich officials believe civilians will still have to depend upon synthetic rubber tonnage in addition to that required for naturol security. B.EGoodrich quite bring himself to eavesdrop. But it was all right for Phebe to do that. Womenfolks were different Shed tell him the news: Jim Vert's broken the trip on his wheat drill and is cornin to town to see if he can get another. He may have to telegraph to Kansas City." He never keeps his machinery under cover! Pa waa dead against anybody who neglected their machinery. Mattie Knabb'a folks are cornin In from Nebraska. Did you learn when theyd get here? "She dont know. She Just got the card yesterday." "Theyll probably have trouble crossing the Platte. I see Its on a DOR O T JLJ 0 i . Para of "W'nl 'U of the mount L AM 81U1 maQT weU- - P'oomed, Hollywood star iofor?i se lcKes50 BridgePort Toot Robbins ,no. CALOX jOOTH pOVDER o "When do you calclate to turn 'em? The market Is so tricky I think I'll feed em a while yet. "Hog Baker brought in a load of shoats this morning. They would nod respectfully, for Hog Baker was the best hog farmer in the country. People paid attention to him. Sometimes other farmers would ship Just because he did. Nobody could ask for a finer compliment than that. Hog Baker knew he was the best hog farmer, and Saturdays would swagger down the street in his old slouch hat. When he stepped over to the edge of the sidewalk to talk for a moment, he'd soon have a crowd around him. Maybe hed drop something. Pa would go to Tom Wadleys; lots of farm news there. Maybe somebody he knew would be in. Well (hed say to Tom) times are chang- in. a What do you think of this havin county agent to tell people how to Ive always been wantin' to an easy way, find Pa would say and theyd laugh. "Youve made quite a success farmin, Amos. Pa would straighten of up a little. of the poorhouse. "Youve been more liberal in your giving than most men. A person ought to do what he can, Pa would say, pleased in spite of himself. of the retired farmers Many loafed in the courthouse yard, lounging on the benches, using the court- Oa your favorito mvery 9:00 JV. B. C. station Saturday morning A. M., M. W. T. KIDO KGIR KSEI KDYL. KTH KOB KOA A. M., P. W. T. KFI KPO KHQ 8:00 SAVE YOUR SCRAP TO HELP GAIN ICTORY Old METAL, RAGS, RUGGER and PAPER tooth-cleanin- "'S'' ' house toilet facilities, watching what teams came in. But Pa wasnt one of them. Even now he couldnt loaf. Must keep busy. Want to run out to the farm? Pa would ask Phebe. They would have an early dinner (eleven-thirty- ) then Pa would hitch up and they would start. Phebe would stay at the house, talking to he tenants wife, while Pa walked s cross the pasture scooping up and kicking out Russian this-leHe saw every detail in the vast and complicated process of farming. He would head toward the tenant. Did he have warbles? Pa would ask. How about rock salt? Pa and Phebe would get in the buggy and start slowly back to town. milk-.veed- I became engaged . . . did I dare 'undertake marriage when I never knew from one month to another how much I would make? As a boy I had listened to an train whistle at night, coming in over the sloughs, and wished with all my heart I could get on a train and go somewhere And now an exceedingly bold idea laid hold "Thats a fine idea. pany as being susceptible, and tripped gaily in. Here again my tremendous confidence must have been on my side, for I was passed along until I came before Carl Laemmle himself. He was a short man, a German Jew, with a wide space between two upper middle teeth which seemed to make his accent more pronounced. He had a kindly, almost fatherly, attitude; in fact his office name was Uncle Carl. He hesitated when I told him How you goin to my fine idea. make pichers when you dont take photographs?" he asked. Youll have to send a cameraman with me," I announced. "Im going to direct the pictures. He studied me, and I knew my How fate was being weighed. many pictures have you direct? I havent directed any yet, I said, sensing that victory was comBut I can do it all ing my way. right. He looked at me, meditating. . . . It was finally agreed that I was to see him in Hollywood, but when I arrived there I found ten thousand others were also trying to see him, e for these were the wild, of I motion shadowed days pictures. him, not only at his office but also on the lot, every time the poor man left his door. But all the other pursuers were after him, too, some of them far more bloodthirsty than I was. One day in his office, I happened to overhear in a conversation that he was going to the bank. I waited to pounce on him, for I had by this time grown desperate, but he used an unexpected side door. I started across the lot feeling everything was lost, then spied him getd car. ting into his big, I dashed for him, leaped on the running board of the moving car and plopped down beside the astonished man. For a moment he did not know me and seemed to think he was the victim of some wild plot. I talked as I had never before talked in my life. By the time we reached the bank he had said Yes. His publicity department had widely publicized something it termed Laemmle Luck, and Im sure the old gentleman believed he had it. I hoped to God he was right A cameraman was assigned and I started out with my smoking tobacco. chewing gum and toothpaste to go around the world. I found a Universal film company working in Honolulu. making what they called authe-ti- c nd South Spas pictures gold-strik- open-toppe- - 1 rtvea actual iira Patter this rut with color guide and direction for prepartnf male rial! and hooking. Ask for pattern by number and enclose 13 cent tetlh nama and addrex direct to: NOTE Hljf, V" J - H AND TVItN Kkt learned a little about handling film and chemicals and drying racks In the subtropics. The first place I photographed, after Honolulu, was Japan; and the first "shot" (I was learning fast) was a silkworm factory. The Japanese Government sent three men and they never got farther away from me. Im lure, than ten feet. And demanded to see every inch of 8EW id n fr complete SuftlAP 69UARIS HOOK , T -i RITII WYETH SPEARS MRS. Bedford IllUi Enrtoia 13 Nc Draotr York IS cent fur Pattern Nu. 301 Nama Addffil taoaoooaosoaoaaa film. I wont atop to set down all my adventures, except this one point I was on the Chins Sea, on a North German-Lloyship named the Francis Ferdinand, sitting at the captain's table, one noon, when a man from the wireless office came, aaid something In German, and handed the captain a message. The captain read it then reread it and, to my astonishment, arose slowly and. without a word to anyone, faced the end of the dining room where there was a painting on the wall of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand. He saluted the picture gravely, and sat down. Then he said. He has Just been assassinated at Serajevo." But it did affect me. as I soon found. Singapore England's stronghold in the Orient was filled with German spies. And soon, at my Dutch hotel, I heard nothing but war. But it would be over soon. On the way to Rangoon, later, four or five English "clarks," who had been assigned to duty at home, stalked up and down the deck giving an imitation of the goose step and roaring with laughter. I laughed, too. It all seemed vastly amusing. One of the clerks said. It'll all be over before we get home and Ill have to turn around and come back, whichll be Just my luck." At Rangoon a shadow fell across us. We were transferred to another ship, one much smaller. Gradually matters grew worse and I felt myself struggling against something does powerful and relentless, as in a troubled dream. I had no passport of any kind, for at that time passports were not required. But I did have a personal letter from William J. Bryan. Secretary of State, which the publisher of Leslie's Weekly had got for me. I got on the train one night in Calcutta with a Pennsylvania Dutch young man of my age. We were in the compartment alone together; the engine was smoking and breathing heavily, and people wee going up and down the platform in a excitement of departure when suddenly the door was opened by two British officers. One said, Are there any Germans in here? The young man with me answered, "Nein. He was hauled out and was, I learned later, kept in Ceylon as a prisoner for three months. I made newsreels and travel pictures across India, but even here, miles from any British stronghold, I felt the war roaring toward me like some gigantic but invisible force. In Bombay my camera was taken from me and I had to see half a dozen officials to get it back. I ran out of money, and the Majestic Hotel ejected us, but kept our cameras, chemicals and equipment. I moved into the YMCA, where, for three weeks, I was without a shilling to my name. All I could do was to smoke and scour my teeth and chew gum. At last money came through. I claimed my cameras and equipment, and got on to Egypt. The shadow had grown darker. I could fill pages with details of what happened, but I must forego that, for I dont want to make my book too long. Only just one point: I was questioned at the Second Cataract as a spy. William J. Bryan saved me. At last I got to London and cut the film. It wa3 released as halfreel subjects under my name. I thought it was, for the most part, pretty poor. But when the Universal house organ came out, it had this UNIVERSAL as a banner line: SCORES AGAIN. LAEMMLE LUCK I felt better. STILL HOLDS. I went to the advertising companies with my pictures and the pieces I'd written. The chewing gum company said No; and wanted none of what I had to offer. The others bought some of my still pictures and some of the material I wrote, at a price which I thought was pretty good, but which I now realize was ridiculously cheap. And now I had enough money to get married. Oh boy! When we were married, the Universal Newsreel made motion pictures of us coming out of the church and getting into a cab; the pictures were shown on the screen in and around New York. Thus we became the first couple in the world to be put into a newsreel. The church was the Swedenborgian, near Madison Avenue, New York, and the time was February 7, 1915. Until then the newsreels had dealt with burning buildings, street acciThen dents and other calamities. they discovered love. It just shows how they were progressing. Later, in the British Museum, London, I of the was pleased to find a write-uwedding and the statement (very British) that an American couple had chosen to throw modesty to the winds and be photographed for the cinema actualities. The write-udidnt think much of the brash American couple. Well, theyre still married. (And they still have the negative of the film.) d V p Stomach Upset I hutdwMiw OOLEN strips from worn out coats, suits and dresses are used for the background of this rug, and the turquoise flowers and red cherries in alternate squares are from dyed pieces of an old cream colored blanket. The burlap or canvas foundation is cut in twelve-incsquares. Each square is hooked separately and, when sewn together, they form this fascinating design. No large frame is needed and your hooking is easy to carry with you or to work. use for pick-u- mttmrn Vh BBMMlMMi trtii OMM Md iMWllMini, daftOFt WHUlf fM, IMF WlMMRf faiiaiB-artHBwairtiwB M PltrtiMR tiks UnwiR ItaiMA llktf ywrtiai lit raitaf mptgBU 1 abtats ha Uttaur Mmb kniFfMn Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On relieves p CreomulMon promptly be cause it goes right to the seat of tha loosen trouble to help and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. In flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulaion with the un dcrstandtng you must like the way II quickly allays the cough or you ars to have your money back. Heat Iickup In the split second that is required to light a safety match on the surface of the container, the heat of the friction increases the temperature of the head to its ignition point of between 333 and 3(18 degrees Fahrenheit. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds. Bronchitis 7JS(S tmrpmMEPiBom,'Q Bkli Gosh, Mom, hot rolls! Now I know I'm really home! And they're even better than I remembered! MOM: Help yourself, son. I made em specially, right after I got your call with a grand, quick recipe using Uclschmann's yellow label Yeast, the kind with extra vitamins I ti Iv'd A- V) si Vf SURfi THEYM GOOD FLEISCHMANN GOOD-A- FOR YOU I S IS THE ONLY I'M FREE JSEN3 FORMEL YEAST FOR BAKING THAT HAS ADDED , AMOUNTS OF VITAMIN B COMP BIG NEIN REVISED FAMOUS lX I . . EDITION OF FLEISCHMANNS VITAMINS A AND D, AS WUl AS THE BOTH h ti E THE BREAD BASKET' XiS1 DOZENS OF GRAND RECIPES FOR BREADS, ROUS, SWEET BREADS. SEND FOR YOURS TODAY And all those vitamins go right into your rolls with no great loss In the oven. So be sure to get Fleischmanns Yeast with the yellow label. A week's supply keeps In the For your free copy, write Standard Brands Incorporated, Grand Central Annex, Box 477, New York 17, N. Y. ice-bo- x. Preserve the American Way of Life By Buying United States War Bonds SORETONE Naturally a man looks old beyond o his years when hes sore from or other mnscle pains. The famous McKesson Laboratories developed Soretone Liniment for those cruel pains due to exposure, Get strain, fatigue or the blessed relief of Soretones cold heat action lnm-bag- Quickly Soretone act to enhance local circulation, 2, Check muscular cramps, 3, Help reduce local swelling, 4, Dilate surface capillary blood lm vessels. Soretone contain methyl salicylate, a most effective agent There's only one Soretone insist on it for Soretone results. 504. A big bottle, only $1. pain-re.ievi- soothes fast with COLD HEAT ACTION In cases of MUSCULAR LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE do t lit gut sr upotun MUSCULAR PAINS I gu It Mid SORE MUSCLES du to mrvark MINOR SPRAINS p ITO BE CONTINUED) f MU Iff f M AwbU pouf iwstaf fcacfc h last-minu- te now. Ive managed to keep out I really done the hardest pari I made start by soliciting several magazines to send me around the world writing for them. One editor looked at ma sternly. "That' a fine Idea. It must be a fine one, or o many people wouldn't present It." I kept on until I got Leslie's Weekly to agree to send me. When the letter of agreement was drawn up. I found that It bound Leslies Weekly as loosely as a twine string around a shorthorn. I was put down by this, not yet having fathomed the way of magazines, but I was so eager to go that I entered only a mild protest Then I did something I'm still astonished at I went to a number of advertising companies and announced that I wai going on a trip around the world and that I would be pleased to represent their clients My youth, or enthusiasm, or eagerness. or something Im not sure what it was made them sign up. was to smoke a certain kind of pipe tobacco, use a certain kind of toothpaste. and chew Just one kind of gum. I still blink as I remember all the things I was to do. When I gut back I was to write of my experiences going around the world smoking, chewing, and Encouraged by my success (so far), I hit upon another bold idea I would take motion pictures! singled out the Universal Film Com He would go down to the bank to see what stock reports had been chalked up on the blackboard. This was a meeting place for the other retired farmers; they would stand there studying the board and discussing the perplexing ups and downs of the market Heavy hogs were off; light ones up. That was Just like the commission houses. Want one thing one week, next week you couldnt give it to em. "How many steers you feedin, Amos?" farm?" IoC of me. I would try to go around the world! It is truly amazing what a person can do when he has a goaL It seems to work out this way; If you establish a goal and make a start, you'va rampage." "Eighty-tw- ) By Ruth Wyeth Speart WN.U.SCRVICC a Bate velvets with You Can Add Square a Time to Thi3 Rug, in Flower and Cherry Desi 3n and McKesson makes it Though applied eoM, rub faMrnt Ingredient in Hor9 ton ftet like heat to lncru th iupertlrlaJ tupply at blood to th are and induce 8 glowing ab o i wirmtlk I |