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Show Duck Design Makes a Jolly Toy, Ornament for Lawn or Applique By Ruth Wyeth Spear eut an1 aanmitli! ! wharbarrftvv and a rorririlrta J)t of matrJala rwjalfM r Included. Aik lor patttrrn lA and ert lb ernta with Barn and addraaa. di-ct to: Mil".. Rr)Tlf WTETn KI'KAItf Ilr.dlord Ifllli New York Mrawer ) F-ncke 13 caitl for Pattern No. 2i. Mama ............. ... Addrc-iil.. tuf 6utJ "fori W(1.1V6R LAWN VcSlLHJ QUILT lfJ'ncTO SI0F4 flPPUQULS OF WHEELBftBHOW TpIIIS wheelbarrow is eauy to make from scraps of lumber. The wheel is cut out of wood and held in place with a bolt. You may be able to salvage a metal wheel from some discarded toy. The duck3 are cut out of plywood with a jig saw or by hand with a coping saw. They are then nailed to the sides of the wheelbarrow and the fun of painting and stenciling aegins. You just trace the pattern an the wood and follow the color chart. NOTE Pattern 258 gives an actual-ilze tutting and painting pattern tor the large wheelbarrow ducks and for smaller ducks to be used for lawn ornaments or applique designs. Large diagrams showing how to yjM VWV VVr Oa your favoritm N. B, C. miation mvry Saturday morning 9:00 A. M., M. W. T. KIDO KGIR KSEI KDYL K1H KGB KOA 8:00 A. M., P. W. T. KFI KPO KHQ Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly because be-cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. Inflamed In-flamed bronchial mucous membranes. mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding un-derstanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, B ronchirij "I'd Have Been a Goner . ; ." Lg jr",-, ..ij i ii u rw tww-w . ... ,.,.- 1 5 V . . - 4 . 4 ' "I , '. " r r- "f , ' f If " ' - " ' , v. 1 - , " - i !-v " - - . r- 41 ; VN ; i 7 V y - . y :siix y. STAFF SERGEANT JOHN SCHUSTER, Infantryman from Stelton, New Jersey " 'Hit the ditch, boys; here come the Jerries' Like the rest of the men I dove for the nearest hedgeroiv in a Normandy field on the road to St. Lo. The low-flying planes dumped their bombs along the road. Only one missed, and that one hit near me. I was badly wounded bythe shell fragments and the next thing I knew I was in. an evacuation hospital and an Army nurse was giving me blood plasma. If it hadn't been for that Td have been a goner. I'm an old hand at plasma for I've had it twenty times. Now they're giving me whole-blood transfusions. There were Army nurses with me all the time and, tired as many of them were, they'd spend their off-duty time with us wounded men, helping to bring us back to where we thought things were really worth fighting for. We need all the nurses we can get. If you can, join the Army Nurse Corps." ALL Women Can Help! If you are untrained take a home nursing or nurse's aide course. If you are a senior cadet nurse serve your final six months in an Army hospital. If you are a registered nurse join the Army Nurse Corps. You may mean the difference between life and death to our wounded men. Visit or write your local Red Cross chapter for full information informa-tion and application blank. Or communicate with the Surgeon General, U. S. Army, Washington 25, D. C. NURSES ARE NEEDED NOW! Pleaso send m Information on how I am a registered nun Q to help the U. S. Army Nurse Corp I am a senior eadct nurt , Q to care for our wounded soldi era. I am untrained but want to team J Mamm r.'.hff State , m Fill out this coupon and send It to the Surgeon General, U. S. Army, Washington 25 crrw D. C or to your local Red Cross Recruitment Committee SN EPB-SA-N-13 U. S. ARMYslURSE CORPS |