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Show ..kA,t, Marth 12. 1936 THE WEEKLY KEFLEX PAGE THREE 19: :erli EBEDDiniKnE STTdDI&Y iiiu n t py. THORNTON W. BURGESS I UCHTFOOT CATCHES (! yipSE-OfTH- A STRANGER E g.ij ty f, gin e til GI!TF06t the Deer wag un was a strange un Mppy. It as unhappiness such iploesa ' You before. known never wj r be had dlscovered'tbat there stranger In the Green For stranger of bis own kind, an n deer. He knew It by dainty prints In the mud along th" Mrfng Brook and on the edge ijj pond of Paddy the Beaver. ttnew It by other signs which he across every now and then. But (rcb as he would, he was unable t Sod the newcomer. lie bad Wbed everywhere, but always he Q just too late. The stranger - o gc n t!i, ter; 1 a, e di -- Iei Q IO Vice President Has His Own Vlui Keeping Up 'JRrvc i, cience Sorest. The beautiful stranger nad slipped away as silently as a shadow. All he rest of that night Light foot searched through the Green Forest, but his search was In vain. The longing to find that beautiful stranger had become so great that he fairly ached with It t it seemed to him that until he found her he could know no happiness. T W. I Bury. WNU iin tor, kt s Llghtfoot lifted his beau slight movement eyes and drew a thicket cot far away, silvery light of gentle Mistress fell full on that thicket and ont from It was the most utlful head In all the Green firld. At least that ts the way It ed to Llghtfoot, though the :th Is, It was not as beautiful as own, for It was uncrowned by lers. For a long minute. Light led. head and a ht his Quick r3 OWT ara-ut- ir the is oi iat he mson Prejldent, American Society of Ag rlcultura! Engineers, In an Addres. idea of the industrial tfi farm eiops as raw materials is not new. Years of scientific research are behind it, but the depression, from which we now seem to he emerging;, has given it a prominence that pains person Minute Llghtfoot Stood Gazing. t stood , gazing. A pair of back great, soft eyes gazed him. Then that beautiful bead a Long won-ful- :in appeared. i mighty bound Llghtfoot A'ltb the Laughing ired over to bed se all) k? F rout be Dally tb Brook and the thicket In which it beautiful head bad dlsap yred. He plunged In, but there I no one there. Frantically he ifehed. But that thicket was Then he stood still and listed. Not a sound reached him was as still as If there were no her living things in all the Green pty. PRESIDENT GARNER Is here seen with his own apeuul Mag, the ever made for a Vice President of the United States,. In design It ts Identical with the President's flag, the only difference behu that the Presidents seal Is on a blue field and that of the Vice Pres. dent on a white field; and the Presidents stars are white while those of the Vice President are blue. VICE Pop, what is a narcotic? Snow bird." O Bell Syndicate. WNU Berrtee. MOTHERS . 1 are as many forms of night lunches as there are families. Some like one thing and. aomq another. For a winter night there are many who enjoy a bowl of mush and milk. Those who do not like that may like bread and milk or popcorn and milk. Whatever ts served for this meal, after the usual Sunday dinner. It must be rather light In many homes simple dlsb of popcorn and an apple or two will satisfy the appetite. For those who have a few friends to serve, a simple salad of stewed prunes, stuffed with cream or cottage cheese, or simply plain with a tablespoon or two of french dressing. A sprinkling of nuts may be added. If one needs more nourish ment Cottage cheese with dates Is another good, tidbit On a cold night a bowl of hot Hot cosoup is always eajoyed. coa, tea or milk, malted milk or cof well-like- d T THIS TRICK PONJAY HARRAH By Copy-Tigh- t y nogbi fee If one cares for It, are all warming and stimulating. nice salad which Is always appetizing Is head lettuce, sprinkled with onion; add a handful of fresh roasted peanuts, rolled Into coarse crumbs; serve with french dress Ing. Any lettuce salad Is much more appetizing and crisp If prepared Just before serving. Sandwiches of various kinds are This Is a good always enjoyed. night, provided you are not to ap pear at church, to eut onion sandwiches. If a bit hungry, fry an onion Id butter, after chopping fine, add an egg or as many as will he needed, place on buttered bread and serve very hot They are most appetizing. On special occasions, by previous arrangement, cup cakes may be prepared and filled at the last moment with whipped cream sweetened and flavored, or a bit of preserved fruit with the whipped cream. They make a nice variation. Cut the t p from the cake, scoop out enough to leave a thick wall to hold the filling, put back the top and serve on dainty plates. C Wntern Nwppr Union, A dolly-covere- by Public Lodger, Inc. The - strong but not for long, strength may conquer for a time. Ighf i! yet ' The victors I have met d heads as well as hands to And - climb. vdut 2; lorer lonilh- VIW Oia'fc p Watch both the trail and skies JSere the sun, select a star Yes, they Who wisely choose the way final victors always are. Hake sure The truth that will endure four equipment on The trail the quest; Too short may often fall, f longer road may be the best Here strength Will lose the lead at length, :ad baffled by some sudden brink. Wlilie on And up some 39 man has gone, the time to man who took think. Doudu Malloch. WNU Barrie. Training for TllOMIM development. Soy beans furnish the almost Introduced In perfect ezample. this country over a century ago from Chinn, they were first grown In the South. Acreage was limited however, and the beans were fed mainly to hogs. Practically none of the American production went Into Industrial use, regardless of (the fact that soy bean oil was be lng Imported from China for use In the paint Industry. Then re search tackled the soy bean and a wholly different story may be told today. Soy Bean Acreage tnersasedo. In 19.Tr, almost 5.500,000 acres In DEAR ANNABELLEi IS TIIKRt 27 states were planted to soy beans ANYTHING TO THg RUMOR THAT alone, and an additional acreage VING BAILEY THE CROONER. was planted with corn and other LOST HIS VOICE CAUSE HE WAS STRUCK ON THE HEAD' DIALER crops for forage. This was an In Al over crease of Dear Dialer: NO IT WAS most 21,000,000 pounds ofl!).il.Amerl PROBABLY STARTED BY soy bean oil was used SOME BIG HAMMER MANUAbout half of this by Industry. FACTURERS! went Into the making of paint and Ann bell. The balance went Into vnrnlsh. soaps, linoleum and oilcloth, print lng Inks, edible compounds, and THROUGH various other Industrial products Including automobiles. Gear shift knobs, engine distributor covers ornamental door handles nnd other parts of automobiles are now being made out of soy benn meal. By JEAN NEWTON used Casein, a dairy In and widely Industry particularly SOMETHING ON GRATITUDE In the manufacture of certain Is exam another of paper. grades I think Jean Newton: tipkEAR one of the lowest qualities pie of what mny be done with many of which the human race Is capable farm produced materials now lm According to the United Is Ingratitude. And yet the people ported. who In other ways are not low are States bureau of dairy Industry, of the casein required guilty of 1L I see so much around American factories In 1920 wss by me, people falling to appreciate As late as 1929, abroad. obtained favors and efforts on the part of was Imported. How others which they themselves would about one-habe none too ready to render some- ever. In 1934, all but 4 per cent of one else. It seems there are a good our Industrial needs were supplied many people with two codes, two by home producers, who, with rules of measurement One Is for chemical and engineering aid, found that what could be accomplished what they should do for others the dairymen of the Argentine by and frequently It Is a very small rule of measurement. The other ls,?n pIwhere was not beyond the for what they may expect from Ingenuity of Americans. The Farm Chemnrglc counctl es others. And there they take a good tlmates that 60,000,000 acres may deal for granted, frequently acbe omt crops planted to Industrial-uscepting everything casually without gratitude. I think the sub- within the next ten years If man The ject ts worth a few words from sets himself to the task. council estimates 8,000.000 new you. acres to provide wood pulp for pa Gratitude It Is an old subject, and paper stock, a forecast and wiser minds than mine have per Is based on the success of the that spoken on It. When writing the experiments by Dr. Charles II. ner above our reader friend must have southern pines, with been laboring under the reaction ty Fosslbllltlvs from a - bitter experience. For If The South abounds In unexplored would be a sad world If Ingratitude common were Indeed so s; quality. possibilities for new crops. In For my part. I have not found It southern Florida they have found so; my small efforts for others that coffee and cacao may be grown have always been appreciated be--1 If sheltered by larger trees. plants Is their deserts. Yet we know her from American-growthat here and there In this large Mill a possibility. Artificial tem community that we call the world perature, control, to protect plants there is the type bf person who Is like tbs tung tree from winter casual in what he accepts from oth- frosts, is gradually being developed ers and thoughtless when tt comes to s practical stage, and what vis tas that will open to southern grow to appreciation. era only the future esn tell I have come across a recent utNo on a discussion of Indnstrlsl terance use the subject by said who from tire minister, crops esn be complete without men pulpit that the emotion of grati-tu- tlonlng cotton. Through chemical ft eonvers!o&"Thto' cellulose Ii tho 'tenderesr-YrhUffl1tnjes feelings; It msy be ranked with hav become literally hundreds. love, sympathy, benevolence." To Cotton seeds, once a waste, now me that Is sentimentalizing the mat- - have a value of graITTu(Te aif original In a cotton crop of 11,300,000.000 quality, reflecting credit on the one Cotton seed oil, the hulls, the who feels It I feel rather with our the meal and cake, all have reader that In all decency gratl become valnable materials. Coattnde should be Involuntarily, a nat ed fabrics such as "Fabrlkold" conoral reaction to kindness on the sume cotton by the millions of part of others and that not to feel pounds. Cotton enters Into the manIt In such rases Is Indeed base. ufacture of cements for leather, However, our reader should re- textiles and paper; Into watermember and It may help to avoid proofing compositions, smokeless the canker of bitterness that peu powder, gun cotton, blasting gelapie are not all alike In manifest tin, coal mine explosives. Into toiIng their emotions, that the lack of let articles, electric Insulators, Immediate expression does not nee -picture film, golf balls and essarlly denote a lack of apprecla women's fingernail polish. The list i tlon. ts almost endless. ' C Bil yndlot WNU arvW. & J T THE RING FROM THE STRING ... I ' ; J c -- V of place the the loop over a spectator's foretin ger. The trick ts to remove the ring without taking the loop from the fingers. To accomplish this, take hold of the string at the left of the ring and place It over the forefinger on the right This forms a new loop, which you thrust below the one al j A Wsmans Eyes s e there. Then slide the original loop off the persons finger. The ring will drop from the string. Yet at no time has the string actually left the person's fingers, Perform this trick rapidly; after s little practice the moves will blend. The ling will seem to drop off In most nncanny fashion. WNU Barrie. d lf ring on a double loop THREAD aand ends ready one-thir- two-third- ovwz. Hay lead, "tough d Toque for Spring Won 8 By KAT X? Ir DOUGLAS MALLOCH fast-growin- g The high pointed crown of this weave straw Is emphasized by a spray of flowers tacked Into the front The bow Is of cornflower blue silk taffeta matching the cornflowers that are combined with pink and yellow bachelor buttons. the Big Battle Next Fall lp-6tr- thr . Rub-yon- d n well-know- n d a S3 OTet-CMaooa- ttWQPiM ter.-TtTf- T oaL iaker lln-ter- s, i SLNQMG ANP POP6M6 ( "We read that the average woman uses three time her weight in coemetice during her lifetime, eaye rougematlzed Rosie, bo now we not only know what haa kept the woman In the red for life but the husband too." 6 Bail arsdlcst. WNU Srle. motion- . Stales I I.i patent granted s If j J. j to ll.mmutiid. Jr noted g4'r Ids Inventions or niivlautlon.il Kulde erslenis, and son of the famous milling engineer I Idling the f,i filled gup tie ween plane and airport, radio waves traveling with the speed of llht carry u picture of thy land Ing field to the pilot, simultaneous-with data of the exact position f Ills plane over It, the direction of Ids Might, Ills altitude, wind ve oeltv and wind direct Ion -- all the lata he needs for a safe lauding How It Works. The sending of the picture Is ae ompllslie.1 with the aid of television which Home experts say will he here on an every day basis with In two to five ycArs Here briefly Is how the Inventors patented system does. It r ' SUNDAY NIGHT MEAL THINK baur ANSWERS COOK BOOK j. CAK unit makes It one of the major hopes of agriculture today. World changes In agriculture are tending to make nations more and more self sustaining, which means that somehow we must broaden our markets at home One way to do this Is by cultivating ob American soil (hone ngrl cultural raw materials we now lm-- i port. The other wuy Is by finding new uses for our crops In our man ufaeturlng Industries. We are fol lowing both of these methods of ANNABELI.KS Resist the Magnet Dont listen to two others argua you can't keep out of IL I TIIE THERE Bayer fastest relief 'nlnM By L. F. LIVINGSTON 'iten. iew of Airport tele-Eio- lolm liver smi bowels. Adv. They regulate ASH I Nt i l't. )N I low n nuv eliminate many of tlic liajiils of Muni landings in ccn tlic densest fog and black'd night by figuratively provuVng the pilot with log and night- rc.ing "eyes," is revealed in a to Products Is Groat Hope f 'I gone. there was nd anger In Llght-desir- e to find the stranger one as he drank at the Laughing a strange feeling swept over It was the feeling of being lash Industrial Usnif Fat in C gi Iatont Claims to New of the Future j there was a great longing the first time In his life Ught-felt lonely. So he hunted and C:ed and was unhappy. He lost fertile. He slept little. He 'asti about uneasily, looking, lls iig. testing every Merry Little lie, bnt all In vain. riewant Pellets tre the orlr liltls liver lulls put up 60 years sao. - Sti-vl-c Vnd, ed WNF Pert ns. hap- Dr. Tierce Farms to Feed Our Factories KNOW- S- IP A, IP A 8rvt Civilizations perish because tions lose heart. Such things pen." With Television nra eocmjce O WHEN NATIONS LOSE HEART Minding Planes n Blinding Fog Slang's Use Slang peps up the conversation If. It Isn't the loo cheap sort. y the airplane approaches the It sends out radio signals. These, or the roar of the piano's propellers, are picked up on the landing field by delicate direction finders, like those used, by armies to detect and tiaee the position and direction of flight of enemy plant's The direction finders, operating complicated mechanism, trace this nformatlon by means of n liny light hulli, which moves over o photograph or facsimile of the airport nnd the surrounding landscape with lls hills, river, forest, high chimAt nny neys nnd church steeples Instant the position of the light bull) on the facsimile Indicates the exact position of a plane over the field while an arrow hooked up with the Imlh points In the direction of flight. Picture Appeara on Panel. A television transmitter now televises the whole picture from the Hlrport via radio waves to the pilot, together wltti the other data mentioned. This picture appears before Idm on the television receiver attached to the Instrument panel of the plane. The aviator, therefore, will always have In front of him a view of the landing field and the surrounding country with a bright spot of light Indicating the position of Ills plane over the As field. j plr wrlcome IheaKlot this rrlutile corrective Nature's Krnwxly strengthens and regulates the tnitrt eliminative tract salcly carries away tbs that poisons hruig on headaches, . hiliousrvcss.fi g I. ct a 2Sc bo. All druggists. ml-U- j field. 'JiLLiiULLiJj" ' Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood kidneys are constantly flit ing waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work do not set ss nature intended-fail to remove Impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging back ache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at flight, puffiness under the eyes feel nervous, misers ble sll upset I Don't delay? Use Doan's Pills. Doan's are especially for poorly func tioning kidneys. They art recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist BABY COMES BEFORE Elimination of Body Waste Is Doubly Important Soviet Scientists Transfuse Animal Blood Into Human Patients . In the crucial months before babv arrives it is vitally important that the body be rid of waste maltcr.Your intestines must fun completely without griping. tion-regul- MOSCOW, U. S. S. in transfusion of blood from goats, bulls and hens into human patients are being carried on by a number of Soviet scientists. The object of these transfusions is not to replace blood lost In accident or disease, as In the case of transfusion of human blood, but to atlmulate the body to greater activity In fighting off disease. Stomach ulcer, certain forms of rheumatism, various forms of blood poisoning and chronic anemia are among the conditions which, it la claimed, may be helped by animal blood transfusion by the method of these Soviet scientists. The blood from the anlmnls Is specially treated In order to make It safe for Injection Into the human patient's vein. In the ense of the bull's blood, only the red cells are used, on the theory that the albumen of the blood plasma, rather than the red cells, Is the part of the animal blood that - would prove with Tirosr incompatibleblood and therefore most injurious. This Is the explanation given by Professor Galpern of the Dnepropetrovsk Medical institute, who Is said to have been the first to make experimental transfusions of large doses of animal blood to men. Further Detail Follow. Doctor Aogdassarov explained the terms as method In follows : ' "The Idea of transfusion of animal blood to men In order to raise the activity of the organism In Its struggle against the disease and to stimulate the Increase of production of' blood" longs to the French scientists Crochet, Casslmon and Ragot, who adIloweY'- vanced of found treatment method er, this no la the development practically medical practice of Europe, while extensive research .and practical work has been conducted In ,thla field during recent years In the USSR. "A year and a half ago, the Central Institute of Ilaemathology and Blood Transfusion In Moscow used for the first time goata blood for transfusion In cases of ulcer of the stomach, chronic and forms of rheumatism of the Joints, vsriooa forms of sepsis, chronic anaemia, etc." non-technlc- by'the-organtsrarb- e-' semi-acut- e Why Physicians Rtcommtnd Milntsia Wafers wafers are candy-lik- e These pure milk of magnesia in solid form-m- uch pleasanter to take than liquid. Each wafer is approximately equal to a ful adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly, then swallowed, thev correct acidity in the mouth and throughout the digestive system, and insure regular, complete tlimlnation without pain or effort Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48, at 35c and 60o respectively, and la convenient tins for your handbag contain ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately one adult dose of milk of magnesia. AD good drug stores sell and recommend them. mint-flavore- 1 Start using the so delicious, effective anti-aci- gently laxathre wafers today d, Professional samples sent free to registered physicians or dentists if request is made on professional letterhead. Select PreducH, Inc., 4402 23rd St., Long Islond City, N. Y. 35c & 60c bottles 20c tins The Ortglmal Milk SALT LAKE'S at Magnla Watan HOSTELRY NEWEST Oar lobby la delightfully sir ceoltd daring the szzmmer asonths Ermrr Rodim tme Rmmm 200 Rmm--9 00 Ball M SS5fi I f! If & HOTEL Temple Square Raimg $tJSO to $3.00 n.fl BTr TiylfrtMtdlv kiUr UlrbZ. wUI always flw it TV yrily IkwMlhiy Sm t W tbw11 kt,l why Ub HIGHLY EICO MM ENDED Ya MM Im yprelat wbyi ml dMImeUmm So If m murk komut itml kmsMnr at this far aanlud 1 mmfortafc, M v ERNEST G ROSSITER. l!rr. |