Show THE OGDEN STAN D AltD-E- - By Sophie IS STARTLED WIGGLENOSE thejy majay young people go on the rocks nowadays (By Thwuton W Burgess) Ttnt wHniner tn Km In their married lives as their Barents did This is true but it is also tirue that never know what moment we there is no turninsr back when once the We itself will have to flee the shuti i upon past (JAnd! that Tor'life gates have — WlgglenoseTV -i i i me modern oncuu cuuyie wouitj tijuu u almost as difficult to start outltha way This is true It often happens their Daren ts did as they woulc tq hire all seems well and danan ox cart in which to take their wedding thatIs when it from our farthest cirger journey All of the conditions andIsince appears without warningthoughts is That cumstances of life have changed Is safe to be unpremother and father eot married Things why it never never is safe to be careIt pared are necessities that were luxuries then now The era of plain living and high less Mrs Peter Rabbit had done her loving has become as mythical as the age of chivalry Children are brought lip on best to teach her children this be- -f Persian 'carpets instead of rugs so to or they started out'in the Great ereak and accustomed to mauiEences oi World but most of them had been which their parents never dreamed in such a hurry that they had left - - t4- - knowing the dear Old Briar-patc- h very little but quite sure that they knew it all Wigglenose was the one exception and so when he decided to "stay in the Old Pasture he was better prepared than his brothers and sisters had been That very first night in the Old Pasture A he and his mother had been chased by Bowser the Hound and he had learned a lot about what to do to escape from a Dog : ' Since that night no' Dog had vises ited the Old Pasture and Wiggle-nos- e almost had forgotten that there was such an enemy The only enemy who had worried him was Old Jed Thumper a gray old Rabbit who had been trying to drive him out of the Old Pasture Old Jed was his grandfather but neither of them knew it nor would it have made any difference if they had But - Wigglenose had refused to be driven out Of late he had been spying on Old Jed and learning his habits' and he had learned a lot And Old Jed didn't know it He didnt even suspect it He thought that all the time Wigglenose was back in that part of the Old Pastoure- - which he had taken for his home 7ror several days Old Jed had notf been over there He wanted' Wigglenose to think that he had been forgotten and so grow careless and fail to keep so sharp a watch ss "Then I'll get him Yes sir I'll get him" Old Jed Thumper would mutter to himself "And when I do it will be Just too bad for him Hell wish he never had seen the Old Pasture That's what hell wish" Then Old Jed would angrily chew on nothing a way he has of doing Late one afternoon just before time for jolly round bright Mr Sun to go to bed behind the Purple Hills and the Black Shadows to come creeping out Wigglenose started to go over to spy on Old Jed Thumper He had left his own bramble-tang- le and was hopping along a bit carelessly I fear when he was startled by the voice of Bowser the Hound There is a dignity about a great tragedy that gives us he He was startled because the sound courage to stand it but we lack this when the tragedy is one of that voice came from behind him mean of desires baffled sordid little of unratified longings of a point between himandvhis from little daily sacrifices A young couple having to drop oui of bramble-tangl- e home and this could set cannot to a Jh because they live their go the pace Having one thing— that Bowser mean but crave house when to souls their beauty Hating cheap ugly had found his trail He sat up to eat poor food Having to wear shabby clothes when the shpps listen tq make sure that Bowser1 are full of the kind of hats and frocks and suits they hive really was following him been used to having Not having the price of a' wave or k hiir- -' cut Having to watch every penny and haggle over nickels "He isi" thought Wigglenose There is no doubt about it He is Having to listerr to the baby's wails and the squabbljs of the after me" For a minute he had children all day and every day Being overworked and overtired a panic and away he went lipperty I t iS motHer was a rirl who beaonred to m family Jn moderate circumstances who could give terr dowry she was used to having a very milted daughter no wardrobe with frocks bought with due regard for how they would wear She made most of her dresses and all pi per undies She had been taught to cook and expected as a matter of course to go into the kitchen when she married She was accustomed to few and simple and inexpensive amusements If her father was able to keep a carriage it was a family afand she no more aspired to having her own horse and buggy fair ClUDS ASA tn a riiamnnrf cVo wv Vioii waav There were no niKht — -— stnrnnchpr ' vw m bliAli a Inn TTf a ArtAnfnnl nHJ n mu a no ainner-aancwgu wuauuajH and then com church sociable a picnic and a sleighing party now ner rouu me vi gayencs pnsea And when mother married she withdrew from ever those modest festivities because that was the custom Theresas no "young married set" who set the high mark for wild parties and who outdressed outdrank and outt'lirted the girls and bys When people got married "they settled down and gave up runwith their husning around The women busied themselves bands and their babies and their homes and the men spent their eveninzs nutterine around the house and their days oft watering the lawn and trimming the hedge instead of playinggolf And men were satistied to be -domestic because everybody did it But mother's daushter has been reared far difTerentllyt Even if her family has always been just one jump ahead of the sheriff she frocks her cobwebby Stockings has had her silk or her near-sil- k and her pink crepe de chine lingerie She has thought herself a -She has gone from the martyr if she didn't have her own car schoolroom to an office and knows no more of domestic affairs than she dpes of Greek She and the boy friend have stepped out to some place of amusement every evening Their whole conception of fhappi-neis noise and jazz and tumult and going places and dofng to go back and live as their parents things and to expect them lived and be content is as absurd as expecting mem to rev ert to the caveman days They simply cannot do it This would not be so bad if they recognized the fact arid waited until they had the money to pay the piper for the matrimonial dance But they don't They deceive themselves into (thinking that love Is enough and that tney can De nappy doing wi hout everything to which they are accustomed If only they can have each other and while they are under this illusion they niarry and wreck their own and each other's lives For soon enough thejj find that-daily diet of bread and cheese and kisses palls tipoh the mighonj and appetites of thosea who have always fed uponto filet tatters when one that romance is party garment that goes tries to scrub floors and shovel ashes in it Tf - — — — no-movi- es " " a wlth no vacation no change no amusement Nerves fretted to Is it any wonder that young people accustomed to such a different life find that they cannot endure the hardships) of marriage without money and that they quarrel and part so often? Is it any wonder that love dies when it is no longer! flour-- 5 ished on illusions and when a man sees in the peevish hold drudge none of the charms that she bad when she was the soft and perfumed silken beauty whom he married? And when the woman can find in her discouraged anx- husband nothing of the gay handsome wclll dressed sheik who captured her maiden fancy? fid-dlestri- ngs I toil-wo- iety-ridd- K Ul kt - rn en is it rUCh sad thing that love's young dreatoi has to be financed fHari Oth Prurfsf it Anns Seems to bff thff rasp w— w ' vw f 4a a f f nnH wiio are reaiiy iiuui it( caccpl iu lxu£c jieruic solus u vi iciiiu yixzziuii rum uiese aie icw ana iar Deiween r 111 j — j t a i — —— ft — — — — — — — — —— — w w 2 loopyngnt oy fuonc meager unc H E ALT TALKS ' By DR MORKIS FISHBEIN HEART DISEASE DEATHS RISE WITH LIFE SPAN Bat Increase Results From Better JUfnos4s Childhood Infections and Reaction to Modern Civiliza- tion The death rate from heart disease In the United States in 1900 was 132 for each 100000 of the population In 1932 it was 224 per 100-0an increase of approximately 70 per cent Some of this increase is due to tht fact that more people are hying longer and that they must die of some disease or at least from a breaking down of the body generally Since ths failure 'of the heart Is associated with death it is reson-abl- e to believe that as more people Eve longer more and more will die of heart disease However other factors are in this increase One is the improvement in the ability of doctors to diagnose certain types of heart disease such as those affecting the coronary arteries or the small blood vessels which supply the heart itself with blood Anoother import an factor is the increase of heart disease la people past 30 years of age 00 in-voiy- In previous generations nianv people died of infectious d4eftes of childhood Now they tend! tol avoid these diseases or to recover! from them but sometimes theref is suffi cient damage to the hearti tq show itself in the increased number of deaths after 30 years of age The various types of mart disease vary in different parts pf the country Rheumatic fever jpredomi nates as a cause of heart disease in the north and east portions of the United States but is muih less in the southern portions j ' Inthe western and southern por tions pf the country high blood pressirr& and hardening J of the arteriesVare associated with the increase in heart disease j (She figures sow that heart dUea"? K twice as frequent in the noit?st portions of th4 United while States as in the far souph the middle west and centi-a- l states are just between the two High blood pressure therefore is to a large extent a total personality reaction to modern civilization - 5-- ?ruurt ose estate office ' Jane is clever and soon Is ma-a- n affair with ROGER THORPE n affair with ROjGER THORPE who is married Later she Urea of him and when he offers to bear the expense of their child she dis" misses him contemptuously In her desperate plight Jane he was on the right track Wiggleturns to Amy for help Howard nose was rather proud of himself is and Amy touring He was rather enjoying this hunt ' comes to NewGermany Yor She stays unbeen had he was time the first It til the baby is born and then4 hunted alone and he was having a horrified because Jane insists on was chance to prove bow smart he her giving daughter away agrees He was proud of the way in which to take it with the nnderstanding he had mixed that trail V never shall reclaim the Jane that 1934 W Burgess) by T (Copyright : child NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY The next story:' "Tired and CHAPTER XVHI doubtful" Now that she had taken the child for her own Amy was in a turmoil of doubt What would Howard say when he came back and found that she had done this without consulting him! What would her father and mother think I And wha$ an exacting overwhelming responsibility she had assumed I Taking proper care of an infant is not she disat once a mere matter of Olive Roberts Barton covered feminine instinct but an expert C 1933 UEA SESV1CE1NC and complicated craft with a considerable dash of science Miss McNeal instructed disapTIPS FOR DADS TAKING CARE provingly on bathing clothing rouOF BABY tine' Doctor Lacey also instructed without enthusiasm on formulas of feeding mixtures and temperatures (By Olive Roberts Barton) at tried to learn Amy Daddy doesnt need to read this once for she wanted everything to get away unless he Is playing nurse while to go home to be outiof sight and mother is out revulof because sound Jane the It concerns the new baby More- sion that had come to her at Jane's So light-heartis diapers over the subject herself of the hunt up the baseball score gentle- child persisted ridding increased hid it men while' the rest of us have our Is far as she could but it She was there chat and affected their relation They The new way of' folding the" dia- were drawing away from each other per resembles a city lot long nar- Jane was stronger each day and row and rectangular Now fold over her only concern was to put this the top third place the baby in it whole sorry business behind her and draw up the other end between get back to work Her satisfaction the legs and pin at each side over was almost flippant She couldn't the hips she said very often have had a This is the general custom today better break But if you are a very busy person But she knew how Amy felt She and ginning in two places every knew that Amy could not gloss over twenty minutes is too much of a or condone what she had done It chore there is no code that says amused Jane a little that Amy you can't use the'good shouldn't be shocked at her having triangle if you like At three the child only at her giving it months of age when the baby needs away It annoyed her too She more kicking room I suppose you'd did not fancy Amy's sitting in better take time out for folding' judgment on her and there were It gives more freedom Besides moments when she considered takwhen the baby pegins to roll over ing the child away from Amy and on his tummy there won't be an sending' it to be adopted as she uncomfortable bump to prod him had planned in the first place In summer he will chafe easily-SThis Bhe did not quite dare to change' him quickly when he's do She was though she would not damp And although his panties have owned it even to herself should be for air and afraid of Amy's anger and con comfort they should be firm enough not to permit rubbing on his legs Some babies kick a lot from the first months on I've seen little tender skin rubbed a smarting red by diapers put on so loosely they rubbed at every move If a baby has this tendency to rub perhaps you'd better draw together the s open spaces of the diaper and pin This lessens tendency to friction No diaper should ever be dried and used again This is particularly true In summer And soiled ones to get the stain should be boiled ' Your Children ed old-fashion- loose-enoug- ed h : rinse several time to get out all the suds Any soap left to dry in Is irritating You wont be able to see it perhaps even in the second rinse water But it takes a lot of clear water to get out every bit of soap This is accented because many a mother is puzzled by the sore condiSo he speeded up a little so as to tion of her baby's little seat and legs Give it a thought get well ahead Keep clean cheesecloth on hand lipperty lip running blindly That And a handy little' basin Wash meant he was taking no heed as to him off each time you change him where he was going He was run- Yes a little talcum i all right ning without a plan It was because but if he has a tendency to be sore of the suddenness and unexpectedvarnish him (or her) thinly with ness of this coming of Bowser Then lanoline or whatever soothing lotion he got over his fright and began your doctor suggests If he gets to use his head He remembered very sore do nothing mora until the former Chase when his mother you see the doctor Be sure to see had been with him and had shown him him the tricks to fool and get rid Birdseye is best for diapers It of a Dog and how at no time had is soft absorbent and pliable Iron she really seemed worried or it If the baby is tender Otherwise frightened it may be smoothed out with V'lt isn't asK this is the first time the hand See that thenicely is diaper I nave been chased by that Dog" smooth under the baby's back Dont thought he "All I have to do Is to use crooked safety pins or weak keep my head and fool him We opes fooled him before and I guess I You won't get any sleep and can do the same thing again f neither will he if he is suffering So he speeded up a little so as to from rubbed smarting skin If there get well ahead and then' began mix- is anything worse than prickly heat ing his trail by running in circles it is this crossing and recrossing it running (Copyright 1934 NEA Service Inc) i left tn either ladies' or Sasa's sao department j USE yOUB CI1ASCE ACCOUNT I A refill n - - ee o HELPS REPAIRS EUREKA Calif Mrs Franklin D Aug 1 — (UP)— Roosevelt drove northward Tuesday over the Red wood highway visiting the famous1 redwood groves of northern California sne is en route to Portland Ore where she will meet her husband who arrives Friday from his Hawal- - t ian cruise ttcv Mrs Roosevelt spent the night amd ) mues soutn or Eureka " tne resumed her travels at nine a m today Last night the lights oh Mrs Roosevelt's coupe failed and sha stopped at Eel River lodge for reNeither Kenneth Kilburn pairs lormer tureta newspaper man and now proprietor or the ' lddge nor Harris Holmboe University of California student who was on duty at the garage recognized th n ro ' Jdent's wife-'Holmboe Inspected the lights and-- v be ) finally made the needed with a piece of tinfoil which repair he re-- " moved from a package of chewing gum ?How much Is the charge?" Mrs Roosevelt asked him "Oh Just give me a nickel for tha ' gum' and you keep the gum! Holm- " boe replied Mrs Roosevelt laughed declined ' the gum gave Holmboe 50 cents and ' ' drove away ' r )' i'-- t I I f -- :' '''-"-'--:'-- a- l 1 ' - : — : MANCHESTER 1 O— j i 1 K - A ote incongruous outside Its west ern plains habitat was killed at wamsleyvilie near here by O H Covert when he saw the animal chasing his cattle: at ike Pfelit 3 1 1 IB I i FEATURES! - — - r- - " O BILTMORE DOWL Tho Night Spot Suprotvio Tuno fci KFI Los Angotos 10:30 -- n n!ghtly txcept Sunday ' O The RENDEZVOUS Tho Now Daylight Donclna Room Dancing Noon?' to Six n 'like a knife thrust' tliis innocent'-question- ' ' -- n SoTICTS WW TOSM AM WTlL rVC VMMTED TO HELTELL ' P- THAT Y AD I unhappy 7 jr f?' ' L PvfrKlM£5MIY s : ! And then fturr s c WjMJ 'ffv5s- j5fy i J ( P£RSPtRATKl OPOR I A tJEVER REA1I2CP JWSiWUJg - r ci I °rFEM0 as- - y TT U Jri?l ' : ': V 4 4? t' ' ' y4T3 v) vt fa ' ' I '"' 1 N" j what Iced — —— — a- -' r m m m m w e i m Now Happiness Reigns ' - -- Jj- L WE VW rjr COmS)- MDDY TOWS Arrra o ckilling CM MUMMY P-- US JX3WI OAUPX HOME fARLY NEARLY err - L 1 PA' tXTr W EVSkY pat s 1' Ml - 1 ! t ! ''':' - —a rich flavor that the melting jce can't drown 1£BV9 your cia shoes fcere- we'll repair them liks new! at a ricmlnal cost Quic&j effi cient service Shoes msy be ' CIIElllGGE USE PURE SOAP Use pure soap for all diapers and toasted That gives it more flavor WW tempt and so long as they were her walking quickly along the plathidden she could pretend they did form head up slight and young not exist and that everything was and buoyant "I hope I never see her again" right between them thought Amy "I wouldn't have beThe honesty that she had used to lieved—no I wouldn't have beAmy before the child was born dis- lieved—she didn't even look at the appeared 'Neither could Amy be1 baby or say a word about her or honest Bo they talked together as to her" She was trembling shaken little as possible Amy concerned by her rare passionate anger She herself with the child and tried to could not remember when she had still her great anxiety lor Howard's ever been so angry before The had come from porter came and one part of her safety for no word J him 'T'"' c: mind busied Itself with practical The reports of Americans ma- matters fresh ice to pack the suprooned in Europe and their trials ply of prepared food for the child and tribulations were now coming and then the necessary warming of through and added to her fears it at the right intervals she sent She planned to go back to Marburg for something to eat for herself she at the first moment Doctor Lacey arranged her baggage and wraps for said a child so very young might the most space But all the time safely travel The apartment was another part of her was back with crowded and uncomfortable and Jane repeating the warning never the peace and Emma sulked about the extra work to intrude again Into lifeto relief a her be of would It everyone truth when Amy could go In the moming Amy's father and When that day finally did arrive mother were both at the train and there was so much to do to get when they say her they ran toward ready everything was confused and her exclaiming together "Word's hurried that there was no chance come through from Howard— he's In for any private- conversation be- Norway and he s all right" Her tween the two friends Jane and father caught her "Look out dear Miss McNeal both went with Amy to dbnt faint!" for she had K turned the train established her and the weak and dizzy with the joy of the and then good news Then they all talked at child in a drawing-roo- m the nurse said gpodby and hurried the same time and Amy looked off Amy and Jane were left in from one to the other- resting in the tight stuffy little place their sure and stableaf fections re"I suppose I ought to be very turning it feeling herself bound dim round once more in its dear fagrateful" Jane beganIn the cafe-frmiliar security Ai they got into light she looked blcwming and Her color had come back a cab Mrs Lowe took the baby She had gone out to the hairdresser "How tinyishe said "Neither of while Amy was packing She had us quite believed it when you wrote on a smart frock and hat put you'd adopted a baby What's her : Amy glanced up from arranging name" pillows carefully about the child "Mother she hasn't You and seeing Jane's smile her con- might choose one I'm tooany worn out straint dropped and her despising Do you think it was a crazy thing is to do? Do you father?"! leaped out All you need to-dto remember that the child is mine "Oh rather but niceShe And if you ever try to claim her looks a healthy trary one" answeryoung 111 tell the whole story" ed her father Jane struck back subtly sweetly "She's a darling very good Only but with the sharpest blow she there's a lot more to taking care could deal "I'm glad to give the of babies than I imagined Well child to you Amy since you have talk about her after awhile Tell none of your own — if you hadn't me about Howard every single thing taken Howard Jackson away from you know" me this would have been his child They didnt it now seemed know remember I shan't claim her'' much beyond the fact that he very "Howard didn't want you" said and Professor Ellert had managed I dont to get to Norway but how Amy "and you know it and when suppose hell want this child of yours they would be able to leave there either— that s one reason why you no one could tell The state departmust never claim her—" ment was trying to arrange passage "I knew this war was coming" said "Jane was pale now but she re- Professor Lowe "but I didn't expect covered her sense Don't let's quar- it quite so soon It should have rel again It's so foolish to quar- been twa or three years later" rel—" "They didn't consult you 1" mock' "I'm not quareling with you but ed his wife gently I won't stand your lies You want The cab turned off toward the always to twist things so you're not Crescent "Oh Mother" said Amy to blame Well this can't be twist- "I won't go home with you I think ed I've always loved you Jane - no I ought to get back into my own matter what you did but this— I house and establish the baby there don't know— it's as if you—you had sne nas so mucn paraphernalia it no— no integrity in your soulT will muss up your kitchen and both"Integrity in my soul ! v That's er Lillian" "But darling you're more than only a fancy phrase! It doesn't mean anything Why don't you look welcome to muss up the kitchen and at the whole thing sensibly as I've I dont believe Lilian will mind very asked you to before What on earth much" would 'you do with a baby?" "Mother you know shell rave" "This isnt a baby it's your baby In the end it was arranged that or it was—now it's mine If we Amy should go to her own house talked for a thousand years we'd and that her mother would stay never agree Stay out of my life with her for the first few days JaneV-- I don't want you ' there any "But III go on heme now" said more Goodby" She did not offer Mrs Lowe "and bring back things to shake hands she did not want to for lunch and your old cradle" "And any of my old baby clothes touch or come near Jane Jane waited a second "Goodby" you've got tucked away- - She has she said at last and went out hardly anything to wear" (To be Continued) Through the window Amy could see 1934 1 OUt Tea has to have That's what Schilling Iced Tea docs hare— lots "of flavor— because itV iTcnsna TomunE Slopped Instantly Relief D D D Prescription Speeds Eves the not stubborn ltchlrg of czrra pirn pies mosquito car ©tiier Inskin sect bites rushes and many other Den-El' mictions quickly yields to Dr D pure cooling liquid ntuepttc world-wid- e D D Prescription lorxj years' success Penetrates skin th healing tht Inflamed tis a ooLhJng and — no muss Clear grease-lessues Ko fus and stainless It dries up almost Immediately Try D D D Prescription caw Stop the most intense itching at any i'ln&nt'jr A U 3 trial bottle to im prove It guaranteed D D —or money back I made ly t owrrrj ol Italian Eaim MM to New comes York determined to show her home town and especially AMY JACKSON that she can make success of bar life Amy had been her best friend en til HOWARD JACKS'JN Broke the engagement Jane forced on hint and married Amy Unable to bear the ' sight of imy' happiness Jane obtains a job In a New York real back on it for short distances and then making long jumps off to one side It was the old game of which he had been Sattaught in the Old Briar-patc- h isfied at last that he had his trail sufficiently mixed he ran with as long jumps as he could make up a little hill and there sat down to rest while he listened Bowser bayed steadily until he reached the place where that trail was so mixed that he could no longer f ollow it on the run Wigglenose could hear him sniffing Impatiently now and then yelping when he caught the scent and knew that tOTS of Flavor -t- hat's ed Kerr— BEGIN HERE TODAY JANE TERRY marriages' of so it said that the reason that isthebecause are - TTFFf" WTV SIMPLY AS YOUR PARENTS DID' MAY ADVISE TO NBWLYWEDS BUTT NT GOOD LIKE SOUNDS REALITY IT WOULD BE AS HARD TO UU tSAUIv SIMPLE LIFE AS TO TAKE WEDDLNU TRIP IN OX CART START LIFE AS You often hear WEDNESDAY EVENING AUGUST "STAY OUT - OF '! Dorothy T)ix 0IJes -- AMINER X y ratrWiueiuiiiii 2s rcmorcs perspiration odor— saves colors J |