OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO Mexican Tea TowA ForColorfulKitche,, I I 'LAXCALA, Hidalgo v Sonora all the romancT Mexico comes to mind as broider .these" new Palm trees, cacti, and the foJS costumed Pablo and ConciS ford opportunity to use , SlkE3SCREi!ill VALE By VIRGINIA Union.) Newepeper Western (Released by eveJ is paying out money be cause itsnotsafe to take a Paramount dteburf by Western THE Newspaper Union.) chance on an elephant or rather, on a herd of elephants. You see, though Hollywood evhas plenty of practically short on erything else, its a elephants; rounding up thousand unusually 100th anniversary of' the State Medical soIs being held in which ciety, 21 Peoria May to 23, has more than a local significance. Not only does it pay tribute to the founders of one of the first istate medical associations in this country but it also serves to recall the heroic services of the pioneer physicians and surgeons during the frontier era of American history. o For whether that frontier .was along the Atlantic sea-- board, in the Ohio and Missis- : sippi valleys, on the Great Plains of the West or in Rocky mountains, one of the most important figures in the pioneer commuThe doctor's horse waits patiently in the storm while nity was the man with the his masterpioneer Is busy on his errand of mercy.-- ' little black bag." It was he, American vessel nearing the ften traveled 100 miles in 24 who, undaunted by the perils shore, he secreted himself among hours over a territory which now of attack by savage Indians some barrels, reached the sWp Includes seven counties in Illinois. or wild animals, heedless of safely and returned to America. He was also active in many other arrived in Sangamon' county ways. He erected atores and the danger from floods and He 1836 in the small shops so that farmers in and was Whatever i ha it when the it old end to her it old the knowt prairie or forest fires, and little village of practicing near obtain Rochester, U. their So hell about hate it supmight f t why necessary worry ' indifferent to the discomforts plies without traveling to distant Springfield, when the organizaof blazing summer, heat or tion meeting was held. Beardstown over the worst kind By KATHLEEN NORRlf Your Cotnpanion be one of those adventurous a career of roads. With his brother he raging blizzards in winter, Maybe yon never flopped to think that of established a general store, to whom only cheerfully climbed into his DONT bout it, marfor and tayt Kathleen Norrit, but slaughtered packed there it only one companion and a saddle, or into a really money his ket as many as 3,000 hogs in a have throughout your lift that you alleviset to and forth He acted as postmaster in good digestion are important shay, YOU. and that it brother, he took passage at Pitts- year. 1849 and donated sites for parks in life. ate human suffering. on a out fust what that com. flatboat bound St. for Finding burgh and cemeteries. it like, what the wantt and And this heroic preservercf Louis, At that time a grotto, be one of the millions panion Dont doetnl Nor want, what the needs and was called Chandler, the only one situated on BIC is t T VJ girl would be childs play compared to putting your hand on a dzent the animals just when you wanted them. . Thats why O. C. Stratton, mount property department head, baa arranged to feed 12 of them when from now until next summer,, Burma Over Moon of the filming is scheduled to begin. deThe elephants belong to the CirWallace and funct Hagenbeck cus, whose receivers agreed to keep the stock on the West coast if the studio would foot their board bifi. So the pachyderms are quartered at Camarillo. Calif., devouring dollar worth of hay daily and it ia hay while preparations for Moon Over Burma goes on. The story opens in Mandalay and ahifta to the teak plantations of Rangoon, where the elephants will be shown hauling the forheavy wood, while Paramount and just pays gets about buying bay rental fees. ! color in your sewing basket rJ hot iron transfer, 2317? I 15 cents, there are three mot each of Pablo of them together at the fiesta, m the sombrero. design for holder. Add color to your own kitdsJ or that of a friend with set g these gay Mexican motifs, tv, NUMO hot iron transfer mu NUMO nd-Conchitva? -- trans-Missou- ri J stamp several times. Send Kansas city, Ms. Enclose IS cents (or each patten desired. Pattern No. ing to the radio there ere eight n radio names in the cast Bob Bums, of course; Pst Barrett Cheapest Light well-know- The most efficient source d light in the .world is the glow worm. Chemical changes on the sugar absorbed by the insect pro-duce the light from which it gets . health and life had precioufew aids in his work. Mostlyfhe depended upon his unidSd senses to diagnose the cage and decide upon the treatment He was without the help rfe-- thermometer, which did no come into general use until about 1870 and then was ten inch long and required five minutofi to register temperature! IleyCad no stethoscope, no instru-.enetor measuring blood sure, no blood count or blood chemistry determinations, no y no way, in fact, of examthe Interior of any organ. ining In the light of modern medical practice, the miracle is that he saved as many lives as he did. It was such men as these who mounted their horses one morning in the early part of June and rode over the uncharted prairie and forest trails toward Spring-fielthe struggling little village on the banks o.the Sangamon river. Histotychas preserved the names of a few of them Easterners who had "come West to grow up with the country," such men as M. Helm, a graduate of the Baltimore Medical college; William S. Wallace of the Jefferson Medical college; and John Todd, who had been graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in nt X-ra- ..i :i I ! d, 1810. Associated With Lincoln. The latter had another distinction, for he was the uncle of Mary Todd who had recently become engaged to a rising young lawyer in Springfield named Abraham Lincoln. Evidently Todd was a leader among the for when, on June 8, 1840, these doctors launched the Illinois State Medical society, they chose him as their first president. The name of William S. Wafellow-physicia- ns llace, previously mentioned, is also associated with the name of Abraham Lincoln. He had come to Springfield in 1838 and three Cave-in-Roc- k, who consider eating?and drinking, amusements and parties, flirtations and gay companies, smooth hair and smooth skin the real objects education; churches; provide print newspapers; serve in public and aims of existence. offices and, when need be, they All these things are fun, in Captured by Outlaws. went to war and fought shoulder mild doses. But there is only When the flatboat . on which to shoulder with their fellow pioone Doctor Webb was a passenger neers. companion who goes with doctors who engaged in activities outside of their profession. They helped lay out townsites; start .Industries and businesses; install systems of reached the captain and three of the passengers, one of whom was the doctors brother, were decoyed into landing at that place. When they failed to return. Doctor Webb went ashore to find them. He was promptly seized by three of the you to the end. and thats yourself. Typical of these public-spirite- d Find that cultivate her, physicians was Dr. Benjamin give her acompanion, taste for the things that Klrtland Hart of Alton, one of the la too late. before it last, Medfounderi of the Illinois State Women dont think enough about ical society, who had served as thla. When they are young they president of his town board and feel that age never wifi come, and who, three years later, fathered a movement which resulted in when it does come It finds them utthe purchase of a site, later the terly unprepared. These ripe years, erection of a building, for Altons which ought to be the very best of first schoolhouse. At the rear of all, strike them like a thunderbolt. the Peoria home of Dr. Rudolphus They've never considered the finanRouse was a fine opera hall which cial side of them. They'Ve never Rouse had caused to be built. The considered the social or domestic result was that pioneer Peoria side of them. Theyve never conwitnessed some of the finest sidered the moral tide of them. Twenty-Fiv- e Tears Ags. drama of the day, since Peoria became a stopping point for road To be sure, 25 years ago Peggy companies traveling from one married gaily enough, leaving her own father and mother alone. And large city to another. Like many of the pioneer physi- when that mother was widowed, cians, Dr. Edward Reynolds Roe Peggy shed dutiful tears for her lost turned from medicine to devote father and felt quite aorry for mothhis natural talents to the less er, who waa immediately plunged strenuous pursuits of writing and into money difficulties. But all this doesnt affect Peggy became so much in demand as a at all. SHE never thinks personally writer while practicing medicine in Shawneetown in 1850 that the of herself as fifty, and alone. SHE Illinois Journal at Springfield em- never will be widowed, her one child ployed him as a regular corre- married, her entire provision for old spondent. Then he turned his hand age a small life insurance policy. to fiction and produced Virginia When these inevitable condition Rose; a Tale of Illinois in Early arise in her own case Peggy is Days" (which had for its back- shocked and despairing. All her ground the lawlessness centering plane have included herself as imaround ; which ran portant. attractive, and protected by at a prize serial in the Alton John. But now her daughter la marCourier in 1852; The Gray and ried and gone, her husband dead, the Blue"; Brought to Bay; she must give up her home, and in From the Beaten Path"; G. A. her bitterness and loss she feels R.; or. She Married His Double"; that there ia nothing left She very Dr. Caldwell; or. The Trail of probably sinks Into the limbo of the Serpent"; and Prairie Land those unhappy lonely little women and Other Poems." Later he be- who live only in their child's Cave-in-Roc- k, outlaws, blindfolded, his hands tied behind him and placed in a skiff which was rowed out into the river end then set adrift. In the middle of the night Webb succeeded in freeing his hands and with hit shoes began bailing out the water that was threatening to swamp the frail craft. At daybreak he managed to reach a small inhabited island where he was provided with a paddle and advised x- - to proceed to Dr. John Todd Smithland, Ky. Anxious to learn the fate of his brother, Doctor Webb set out afoot but sprained his ankle and was barely able to hobble along. He was discovered by a girl mounted on a horse. She told him that her name was Cassandra Ford and persuaded him to mount her horse and accompany her to her home. When he arrived there he found that the girls father, James Ford, had the flute with which the doctor had entertained the other passengers on the flatboat years later married Mary Todds and which had been taken from came editor of the Jacksonville sister, Frances. So in the course him when he was overpowered by oun&L-jtbenu- r the - Constitution, J of - time he bccamoLincolna the alist. brother-in-laand in 1861 when Despite this evidence that Ford Lincoln spoke his famous words At the outbreak of the Civil war one of the outlaw gang. Docwas of farewell to his fellow citizens tor Webb who was then the first Roe, proceeded to fall in love fessor of natural science at proof Springfield from the Tear of a IlliEventually he nois State Normal railroad train, Doctor- Wallace with Cassandra. near university to mar that returned vicinity, stood beside him. More than that riedher andwUhhiabridt-set--j- Jia. accomp&niedthe-Presidentia- l composed mainly of his tied in county to practor service in the Union party to Washington to accept an tice his Livingston students, meanIn the was captain, major, He appointment as paymaster in the time hisprofession. army. brother had been re- and then lieutenant-colonUnion army. Exposure in milof the leased by the outlaws and made Thirty-thir- d Illinois regiment and itary service caused his death in his to Louis. St. way safely 1867. was dangerously wounded- at Still another pioneer doctor who Vicksburg in 1863. Later he beDr. Charles F. Hughes, who was came editor of the Bloomington acted as secretary of the organi- -. had an adventurous career Dr. Charles Chandler- ,- whose Pantagraph, was' appointed marration meeting of the Illinois had a prior history as stir- name is perpetuated in the town shal of the Southern district of Chandlerville, 111. . A native Illinois, and served in the state ring as the times in which he of ' Rhode Island,- he was prac- legislature. His varied career lived. Bora in Maryland in 1807, of in state when the spirit ended in 1893 when he died in Chthat be was graduated from St. Marys ticing of w. adventure ,i&fluweijced11.hinx Jo T eighty. college in.Emmettsbfurg-Md.icago atlha-aga-and later from the Maryland migrate to the western country. Another literary doctor was Medical college in Baltimore. Chandlef arrived in Illinois at Franklin Behjamin Allen, a naof Hawk Black the the time war Because his health was impaired of tive N. Watertown, Y., who be- he took a sea voyage to Latin and started up the Illinois river with intention the of at settling America. when county, IU., in 1844. In 1850 he CFtdfJk Forrci&rr When the ship on which he was the of the boat on which settled in Joliet, 111., and began captain a passenger arrived in Guate- he was traveling declined to go to devote his time to writing. mala,' the negro natives, who had farther because of fear of the Inhis writings were The started an insurrection, captured dians, Chandler disembarked at Among the ship and killed all of the off- Beardstown. He was so impressed Uncles Legacy, which ran as a icers, crew and passengers except with the beauty of the country serial in the Will County Courier Doctor Hughes and another physi- around what is now Chandlerville for six months'; Irene; or, The cian. These two were spared by that he entered 160 acres at the Life and Fortunes of a Yankee the superstitious natives because land office and built a cabin on his Girl; and a series of humorous sketches under the title of Exthey were medicine men." tract. Hughes practiced his profession periences, Advice, Comment t and A Versatile Doctor. among them for seven years beSuggestions of Barney OTc'ole," Chandler soon built up a big who- - seems to have beer an fore he had an opportunity to One day, seeing an practice in the new country and earlier Mr. Dooley." , escape. el ociety, - r o. tiU of ww.usmn WAN mar -- remembering, grievBarden on Other. Instead of having that child depend upon her, and half envy m others independence. freedom., high spirits, Peggy becomes n burden upon th youfifr family.-Her-c- oo- Bor la Anwzlng Relief af CdBtlsaa One to Slngttsh Mr? fiSs- - d, Bill Phillips, of the Warner Brothers studio, reduced 2? young girls to tears the ether day, and get paid for It Teave guessed why, of ooarse he's the makenp man on All This-- , and Beavea Too," and they were shooting the soene fas which Bette Dsvis teOs her pupils the sad story of her life and makes them cry. So Phillips stood off at me side and blew menthol fumes at the girls, and they wept buckets-fa- ll of tears, right oa schedule. cofinnf U? , to-da- y dracsiat. Mafca tha not delighted, retan tha bos refaad tha parchaaa rrlco- - TtoaVa fair. Oat NR Tahteta todtr. trat- - toast Old In Hours man that is young in yean may he old in hours, if be hart lost no time. Bacon. A of Harmful Body Waste kidneys are eonatmntly waste ssattar from tbs Wood atreass. wertow kidneys aomatimaa laf fat their fall te w toot set as Nature Intended ora lm parities that. U vase potsoa tha systaa ss4 apsat tha body machinery. cta7 Symptoms may he persistent has dacha, attacks ol diana P awellint, up toifhta, tatting nader the ayaa a tealing at and loss ol pap and sore anxiety Othar signa ol kidney ee bladdw order are sometime burning, srea9 . 0oe frequent urination. There should be so doubt that pfWF tMittoni la wiser them asglart. bw wtoW Dna'i JHU. D l new tries da for snore than forty y They hara a aatiowwuie repstat m Are recommended by grstefol oonstry orer. Ask gear safUQi rtlnd. surtf form books, for language study, for gardening, for any one of a hundred Del Sharbutt, announcer for Lan-n- y interest and avocations, when Ross, is being ribbed by his there are movie and beauty friends because of a mishap while and flirtation parlora and night aoftbafi.playing He was playing clubs to fill her time? first base with a team dead, and goodness knows she often What is the answer? composed of members of the staff of Columbia wishes she were dead. Ask yourself why. Broadcasting System. A ball was Now, since you know, you women Answer Is Apparent hit slowly to him. and Del of 25, 50, 40, that this time must The answer Is that if you knew to throw to third base for whirled come, why not prepare for a double why not defeat it of its horrors? It can that In 25 or 30 years you had to play. The throw was wild; it hit move to a atrange country, a coun-trbe the most serene, the most bounded, kv which 'theeyes fife." ybu Use "now" backhand struck on the head. It can be a time of harvest rather could see nothing, in which your Wonder why aoftbafi seems to have uch a fatal bva for radio present ears could hear nothing, of than of famine. announcwhose language and customs you ers. Older Women Different know nothing, you would certainly r arm .W For ln.thc.icra..after 45 a. woman at "teMftgw 'You' can be herself, express berself, live would study the conditions, the limODDSASDESDS her own life ha she never can in itations and opportunities of the C. Truman Bradley , announcer on the peoBunt and Allen program, wot younger years. No girl is so use- ple of that country; master its lansigned kU mOU less, so defeated and unhappy, as guage; cultivate a few friends who screes the girl who tries to be independmust make that journey with you. on millionFZ?7 ent In rushing off to Paris, or into Middle age, old age, can be a wret m Rk(Tt 'Millionairet is Pri. some unknown field of endeavor, sht long peaceful holiday. A useful holonly proves to herself that she has iday not by any means an idle hoi- . c A. thrown away the honest beginnings Iday. But a happy time m Dorothy Lamour which a r the role created of life, refused to play the game by woman who has done her c Cray honest l rule, and beside making hersek riof living in diculous, has made it practically im- can find endless interest, a thousand C Uscar Levant of m Information possible to get back to a real start absorbing occupation, completa Please, hat fature d With the older woman it is differ peace of spirit part is Chosi p Crmby' mrxL ent She has served her apprentice- - That aomething worth achieving! versation becomes a long dreary re- cital of what glories and possessions she once had. She cannot sufficient- )y reiterate the trials, the dismalness of age; when you get to her age, she says, you might as well be a biliore cmaUpMha Tear - v,V D bmsoretia 2 h velop its miraculous resources? Why deny herself and the children superfluous - luxuries and extrava- - km mmm WNU 21--tf W What Yon Can The manly part is to do va ao. might and main what you can Salt Lakes NEWEST HOTtt - it y t momma W s prepare-tomxfceth- -- 'Tt - -- r1 tt, ! I t tkto hasten Help Them Cleanse the Blood If youre going to New York for the Worlds fair this summer, remember Metros Information Centre, located in the city on the little island at Forty-sixtstreet between Broadway and Seventh avenue. The attendant will supply you with information about the city and the fair, (last year they helped more than a million persons.) give you guide book and guide para- phlets, and speak to you la any one-c- f ll dlff erent languages if need be. Also, there is a visitors registry at the booth you can put your New York address on file so that your friends will know where to find you. Metro deserves a lot of thank.from'0VCrihe C0UntrT for de- kno ace alike. )oat toy rctfccst Esk whom radio fans know as Uncle Ezra; William Thompson, the Old and Harold Peary, the Timer, Gildersleeve of Fibber McGee and Molly; Don Wilson of Jack Bennys program; and Jerry Colon-n- a of Bob Hope's; Marjorie Bauera-fielthe air waves' Mirandy; and Cliff Arquette, who's likely to bob up on almost any broadcast crib-bag- f an retetaMe refreshing, UmtousS, But they have vanished now. And now comes HER time; the time when she can be most truly and wholly herself. Her small bouse is a veritable kingdom with its garden, its dog or its cats, its visits from adored grandchildren, its quieter visits from old friends. In planning trips, in club work and charities, in easy hours and easy dresse ing and games of dominoes or or backgammon with a few tried and true neighbors and friends, are real pleasure. If the companion of her youth Is still beside her, all thii felicity is doubled. . But even if he is not, rich and ripe and useful living is still hers. Tame and Uninteresting. Now, unfortunately, this paradise of the middle years sounds extremely dull, to youth. It sounds tame and uninteresting to the last degree. Youth never wifi change ideals with age; It hates the thought. Age is no more convinced that it never will be youth than ia youth sure it never can grow old. And so many a woman who could be planning now for her later years draw away In repugnance from the thought of them. Whatever the it when shea old and to her 45 ia old she knows shell hate it. So why think about it? Why train her character to de sira. whalixtrue and lasting into her own soul and 'rma pfl,b relM Ins sick h dectne. tired tHns wbsa areodated with PAT BARRETT B swell If VOS tbhkd -- f . I 10STY0URPEP? ship. She has been daughter, wife, mother, housekeeper for a long quarter of a century. And these have been happy years, proud years, years full of the joys of trips and frocks, parties and flattery and life-compl- aining. ing its name. In this process only 3 per cent of the potential energy is lost, the remaining 97 per cent being givta out as light. Compare this to tbs 12 per cent given by electric bulls. didnt Cave-in-Roc- k) w iPOtl doesnt need it the fob every worn n thould lake upon herself. Age creept up on a perton end all the thingi that teem important la young women arent really that important Find out what you need to prepare for old ege. Prepare Yourself for it and it will be the h period of your life. Dont prepare end yeull live to regret that you of these pioneer the banks of the Ohio river near Shawneetown was a rendezvous for a band of river pirates who enticed river boats to stop and passengers to disembark with an attractive sign, Liquor Vault and House for Entertainment." 1SS-- Name Address When you see Cornin Round tha Mountain you can close your eyes and pretend youre at home listen- ss - AUNT MARTHA Bos forty-fiv- e one-ho- order to- Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Opparfiq pm.v a aid cf Cstfccfk at thi bqautifrt 1 h7 KRNEST C. ROSSITE. ' |