The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, June 01, 1928, Image 2

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    THF HEAVERTON REMI W
FRIDAY, JUNE 1. 1i>2K
FAVOR MILK WITH OUT-OF-DOOR LUNCHES
•e'ETS
S
it
THE •
KITCHEN
CABINET
t i l l K U . \ l w a u i u N«-«kavwitHsr \ t ilo t i »
To b* « « r « n * amid a losing IlgM,
Tu ni»*t with squat e u u rt a * dark
or light.
To b at * all >kam. and with o« r -
alatvnt might
Tu du brave deed* aa In a matter'*
The
lig h t
Truck Driver
Tht*
I believe Cham pion b
the better spark plug
b ecau se o f th e way
Champions stand up in
hard truck service.
Even at Picnic Parti** Milk I* Important
(P re p a re d by the C n lte d Statea P vp a rtm e a t e f A c r lr u lt u r e .I
l e t the children lunch out o f doors frequently In the giHKi weather o f the
next few month*, suggests the United States IVpartm cnt o f Agriculture.
I f you do not have a convenient eating porch, you can set a table for them
right out In the jard. There they can have the regular foods that would be
given fo r a meal at thl* hour Indoors, Including the milk they all need.
Liquid food* like milk and soup are easier for children to manage at a table
than In picnic fashion, although there is much to be said for the simple
picnic lunch o f sandwiches and fruit on summer days. Whatever sort o f
lunch la served, milk should be Included for tbe children. Every growing
child needs at least a pint o f milk a day and may take as much us a quart
POPULAR TYPE OF
ROMPER FOR BABY
SpariCPlugs
Dependable for Every Engine
U»e of Two Materials Gives
Garment Dressy Air.
A Wrong
President Lee of the Brotherhood ot
Railway Trainmen, said in Interview
in New Y ork:
“ The Geneva economic conference
has very rightly protested against
those cartels, or monopolies, which
greedily Increase the cost of living.
“ The men who do the useful work
o f the world— the fanners who feed
us, the sailors who sail out chips, the
teachers who educate our children—
these men are lucky If they succeed
In accumulating a few thousand dot
lars In a lifetime o f to ll; but the car
tela I They, by putting up a price 01
two, make millions overnight,"
Mr. Lee shook his bead.
"It's a wrong gain." be said, "that
has no earning."
( P r i p t r t J by the U n ited States D ep artm e nt
o t A g ric u ltu re )
Here Is a romper liked by many
mothers for little runabouts between
a year and a half and three years
old. Tbe flared cut at the sides and
the nse o f two materials give the
garment a somewhat more "dressy"
air than tbe severely plain play suits
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Any Woman Gin
iookSiyiish
Since people have begun to reallxe
the value o f liver In the diet as a
source of Iron and vltnmlnes, new
ways of serving it are always accept­
able. This recipe from the bureau o f
home economics makes a dish that
can he cooked while the housewife
Is doing something else, and that can
be sent to the table when ready, tints
saving two serving dishes— always a
help when the homemaker must not
only cook but wash the dishes.
A Good Type of Ro«np«r of Two M i.
terial*— Front View.
Most stylish looking 'comen you see
o f dark materials often needed foe
are simply “ good managers." They
mornings spent at the sand pile. A
don't open their pocket-books wide
fo r every change In fashion. They j romper o f this kind Is appropriate at
any time o f day. The one In the 11
know simple ways to make last sea
ton’s things conform to this season's lustration was made by the bureau of
home economics to bring oat certain
styles.
points In tbe construction o f romp
Thousands o f them haTe learned
how easily they can transform n ers o f this general type. Several pat­
dress, or blouse, or coat, by the quick ¡ tern companies show designs similar
to this one, which can be adapted to
magic o f home tinting or dyeing.
With true, fadeless Diamond Dyes, one s needs.
The length from the hip to the leg
anyone can do this successfully. The
“ know-how" is in the dyes. Each pack­ bands should be given attention. I f
age represents the perfection o f 80 the rompers are not short enough at
years o f dye-making.
They don't the sides they will hang down over
streak or spot like Inferior dye*. New | the child's knees and prove a great
annoyance to him. At the same time
fashionable tints appear like magic
right over the out-of-style or faded I sufficient length must be allowed
colors. Tinting with Diamond Dyes through the crotch. In the Ulustrs
Is as easy as bluing, and dyeing takes
Just a little longer.
Only Diamond
Dyes produce perfect results. Insist
on them and save disappointment.
Sty new 64-page book, “ Color Craft."
gives hundreds o f ways you can make
yonr home and clothes stylish and at­
tractive, and do it with little money.
It's FREE.
Send fo r yuur M f f ,
NOW.
W rite Mae Martin, Home
Service Dept., Diamond Dyes, Bur­
lington, Vermont.
Change in Policy
“ Use that guest towel hanging In
the bathroom.” a w ife said to her \
husband.
“ A fter you have repeatedly warnen I
me never to loach It? Well, I guess
not! Not m e” replied her mute.
“ Oh, I know," said the wife, “ bui
It's turning yellow from disuse and I ¡
want to get some good oat of It he
fore It falls a p a rt"— Great Bend
Tribune
I w h it* potatoes,
sliced thin
*4 lb. liver, sliced
t, cup diced salt
pork
H
tsp. salt
J tb*. flour
1 tsp. grated
onion
m
cup* milk
Cook the diced salt pork until crisp.
Place a layer o f thinly sliced row
potatoes In a greased baking dish and
salt and flour lightly. On the potatoes
lay some o f the slices o f liver and
part o f the crisped salt pork. Add more
potatoes and continue until all In­
gredients are used.
The top layer
should be o f potatoes. Put the onion
into
the
milk
and
then
pour
over the contents of the baking dish.
Cover and cook for on* hour, or until
the |M>tatoes are temler. At the last
remove the cover and allow the pota­
toes to brown.
Steamed Dried Apricots
Make Very Good Pudding
Dried apricots have many uses be­
fore the season for fresh fruits re­
turns. A very good steamed pudding
c n be made with them. The bureau
o f bom* economics nits tried the recipe
and found It excellent
H
lb. dried
cota
1 cup water
1 cup flour
14 cup butter
4 cup su ga r
a p r l-
2 eggs
2 tsp. b ak in g p o w ­
der
H tap. aalt
1 or 2 tba. apricot
juice. If needed
Sock the apricots overnight In the
wuter. Drain and eut them into small
pieces with scissors. Cream the but­
ter utid tbe sugar, adU the beaten
eggs, and the dour In which the salt
and baking powder have been alfted.
Stir In the apricots. If the butter la
a little stiff add one or two table-
spoonfuls o f tbe liquid In which the
apricots were souked. Partially dll a
greared mold and ste'iin for two hours.
Serve hot with liquid or hard sauce
Quickly Relieves
Rheumatic Pains
Children Need Cereals
«
12 Days' Free Trial
T o g »t relief when pain torturec
joints and muscles keep you In con
atant misery rob on Jolnt-Ecse.
It Is quickly absorbed and you can
rub It in often and expect results
more speedily. Get It at any drug
gist In America.
L se Joint-Ease for sciatica, lum­
bago, sore, lame muscles, lame back
chest colds, sore nostrils and burn
Ing, aching feet. Only 00 cents. If
penetrate*.
P P I T F O e u d nam* and Add ress for l i
* rv — — d*y tria I tube to Pope l a b o r a -
torte*, D e s k I. Ha llowcll, Main*.
I toward the hip when the child stoops
I or climbs.
Measurements for them
should be taken on the child's thigh
about five Inches above the kneecap.
It is a common mistake to make them
too broad for comfort.
Inch hand*
are satisfactory.
Elastic leg band*
are never advised.
The bloomers and hands o f trim­
ming are made o f fast-colored print
In this rase, and the upper part Is
white. Any firm white cotton mate­
rial such as broadcloth, cotton poplin,
fine cambric, madras or lightweight
sateen, are good fabrics for the pur­
pose. l'laln rhamhray or broadcloth
matching o f the colors In th* print
may he used Instead o f white.
There are four. Instead o f three,
buttons on the belt o f the drop seat.
These are placed near enough to the
underarms for the child to reach
when he learns to dress himself. The
lower part o f t' ts romper may be
made separate from the upper, but­
toned to it both front and back. T w o
pairs o f bloomers to one top would
Insure a maximum o f cleanliness with
very little trouble.
Scalloped Potatoes and
Liver Always Favored
MAE MARTIN
:
R o b b ers’
R oost
la tu learn
lit*'* laaaon
reach the height.
aria* Allen Ouuaaun
J
C llT T t H O m
C h a m p io n
t
of
HOW TO USE RHUBARB
Champion U th* b«tt*T spark plug
b t u u it it k u an exclusive stlli-
n u n itt Insulstor i p e
d a ily treated to with-
«a n d the much higher
tem peratu re* o f the
modern high-compres-
aion engine. Also a new
patented »olid cop p er.
gasket-seal that remain« I
a b solu tely gat-tight
under high com pres­
sion. Special analysis
electrode* w h ic h l u u r e
a fixed spark-gap under
all driving condition*.
i
C The U Jard
Back Vi*w of Child’* Romper, 8how
Ing Placing of Button* at Sid* and
Back.
'
i
tlon the material Is folded between
the legs; while the leg openings are
sloped upward to make the sides o f
the bloomers short. Kullneas I* pro­
vided In the width-.of-the garment In
stead of In Its length. The leg bands
must be loose to that they can slide
Cereals play a very Important part
in tbe f o o d o f children, according to
the Lulled State* Department of Ag
rlculture.
Whether served aa bread,
as breakfast final, with meat, or as
dessert, tliey cun tie depended on for
a large part o f the fuel that every
active child needs. Milk and other
protein finals, vegetables and fruits
and blitter may supply practically all
the building and regnlajlng materials
needed, but unless they are used In
unduly large proportions they do Hot
furnish enough fuel, and cereals are
excellent for supplementing litem and
rounditig out the diet In this respect.
— —
HOUSEHOLD NOTES
Tough p!e crust Is generally the re­
sult o f (.sing too little shortening.
• a •
I f you fasten the Ironing board
cover on wet It will dry tight and
straight.
A mattress wears liest If It It the
exact sise o f the springs. In buying
a new mattress, remember that It will
spread front one to two Indies as II
It used.
Extension window frame* covered
with canvas or unbteaded muslin will
let In air and keep out snow on winter
nights.
When the knob comes off o f a sauce­
pan cover. Insert s screw through the
hole from the bottom and screw a
cork on IL
s e a
When orange* are expensive or dlf
flctilf to obtain, canned tomato Juice
ituiy lie substituted for the baby's
• •range lube.
U A R llO T T
When stewed and properly sweet
C W O (liipmki,
eued. ruhharb make* a uniat delldoua
WNU
sauce, but when
baked It la even
better. Place lu a
covered
baking
dish a pound or
SYNOPSIS
plot •>( rhubarb
**Oo Ahead" Morton, Virginian,
cut Into loch
anti «#cr«t aarvlca man. racatvaa
lengths and utt-
a tat tar from Tom Fair. I*« ml it
l»eeled. Add one
Icadar, urg in g that loma ona ba
cupful ot sugar and one-fourth cupful
aant to rvaoua Si*l>« Morton, foa*
ter «later, from tiia gang.
An
of water. O iver and bake until the
anemy In tha g an g pravanta Fair
rhubarb la tender but unbroken, f o r
front helping tha girl
T h « lattar
variety on* may add a piece o f letuen
WflJ Intend«' i! for “Oo Atu-ari'a"
or ginger. If that flavor la liked. A
father, who la a w g y from homa,
“Oo Ah ra d " droid«*» to go him-
few raisins, flg*. date* or prune* will
aalf.
At “ Bobbers* Rooat" Fall
also add variety and make u pleasing
aapfalna tha attuatlon to Stella
addition.
t
now alghtaan jraara old Sha d o ««
not want
to laava Fair, for
Spiced Rhubarb.— For eacb three
whom *ha hn» tha affection of a
pounds o f rhubarb add one teaspoon-
tiiiughtrr.
Jim Bgrkar, i l i r U f
ful of cinnamon, one-half teas|>oonful
and aspirant for Htalla'a hand.
eacb o f cloves and allspice and one
t t Y W t l Fa l r t>* run a altlp mi I It
of arma Into M«x lco and bring
fourth teaspoonful o f nutmeg. T ie In
back wh'sky. U nk now n to Fair.
a thin muslin bag.
Place one-half
Stella, d r t l l d M a Roy. accom-
cupful each o f vinegar and water *nd
pantaa tha gang.
two pounds o f sugar In a preserving
kettle, add the *><lce bag and simmer
for fifteen minute*. Then add the rltu
CHAPTER IV— Continued
barb cut Into Inch length* and one
package o f seeded rulslna
Simmer
But Stella, suddenly uneasy, refused
until thick. Put Into glasses and seal
to be longer held. Lp she Jumped and
as usuaL
ran out o f the door end away to tbe
Rhubarb and Plnsxppl* Sherbet.— •table«.
Combine one cupful o f crushed pine­
A* (b e ran In. Diego, on hi* knee*
apple with one cupful o f atewed rho
beside her borse, straightened up
barb, adding the juice o f one lemon cuugbt her eye, and flinched. Then,
and one orange. Make a sirup with with quick recovery, he nodded vlo
one cupful o f water and one and one- leully. "Horse heap lame," he gu*|ird
half cupfuls o f augur; when thick
“ Lame I"
Stella * face darkened
cool, stir In the fruit, add one-half "H o wasn't tame last night, (low 'd be
cupful o f pineapple Juice nnd turn In
get lame?"
to a two-quart freexer. When partly
"Qulen *abe. »enorlta?" Diego »tut
froxen add one stiffly beaten egg white
tered and stammered lu Ids confusion.
and continue freexlng. I f wished fine
"But parlenxa. señorita. It I* nothing
grained, add another cupful o f water
Soon will this so wonderful horse bv
or pineapple Juice and water and
well. U cannot he otherwise."
strain the fruits.
Stella had dropped on her knee*
For conserves and preserves one- ; and was examining the horse's foot
third o f berries o f any kind with two- She could And nothing wrong, bul
thirds o f fresh rhubarb, makes a most
when she tried to lead the animal out
delicious combination and makes the be limped badly.
product much less expensive when
Furious, Stella turned on Diego.
berries are high In price.
I “ Go get me another horse. Quick I"
More Ordinary Foods.
she ordered.
On a cool morning this will make
Diego hesitated; and Wade, who
s most acceptable breakfast dish:
had followed Stella, grabbed Idm by
Mock Sous*.— the throat and flung hliu down. "Don't
Roll one pound
you hear what you're told?" he raged
o f l e a n f r e s h “Co get another horse, pronto!"
p o r k I n salted ; But Diego threw up Ids hands In
water uuttl very 1 protest. “ But. «enor," he »aid. “ there
tender.
When
Is no other. My men hnve g-.ne on
cool cut the meat j all the other* to the station nr to the
very fine, strain I corral.
Have patience, »enor, and
«
-----------------------
the broth, cool
and re more the faL
Reheat the
broth—one quart o f It—In a double
b oiler;-w h en bulling stir In three
quarters o f a cupful o f corn meal
cook over the heat for a few mlnules
then over water for an hour, stirring
•at. two
occasionally. Now add the meat,
teaspoonfula o f salt, one-quarter o f a
teaspoonful of pepper, celery salt and
sage. Cool In greased baking powder
cans Silce, dip In seasoned flour nnd
fry brown In a hot frying pan. Nice
with cabbage salud or apple sauce for
luncheon.
Monastery PI*.— T o one cupful of
soft bread crumbs add one pint of milk
and one tabu-spoonful o f butter. I-et
stand In a double boiler one hour over
heat, stirring occasionally; now add
three-fourths of n cupful of finely cut
cheese; beat until melted and smooth,
add one-half teas;>oonful of salt, a
dash o f cayenne, two tableapoonfuls
o f minced aweet pepper, one table­
spoonful* o f grated onion and three
well-beaten eggs. Tarn Into a hut
tered baking dish, set In a pan o f wu
ter and bake until browned and set
Serve hot as a main dish with tomato
sauce.
Raised Doughnuts.— Scald one pint
o f milk, add one cupful o f sugar, one-
half cupful o f butter and when slight
ly cooled, one beaten egg and cinna
mon and nutmeg—one-fourth tea-
spoonful each. When the mixture Is
lukewarm add one-half o f a yensr
cake softened In Itikewnrm water and
bread flour to tnnke a dough stiff
enough to knead—about six rupfuls
Mix this at night. In the morning rut
down, let rise again and roll out aa
much o f the dough as will he needed
for the meal, let rise and cook In deep
fn t; put the rest In the Ice chest and
fry when needed. Thla will keep two
or three dnya.
Country Club Gnocchl.—T o one-hnlf
cupful of yellow corn meal add one
pint o f chicken atock. and one-halt
cupful o f milk, boiling hot Let boll
up, then cook over water for an hour,
atlrrlng occasionally. Season with one
teaspoonful o f salt, a little grated
onion and a dash o f cayenne pepper
When done It ahould he somewhat
thicker than breakfast cereal. Add s
well-beaten egg after taking from the
heat, tie»ting rapidly.
Cool In hut
tered dish, making an Inch layer
When cold rnt Into rounds, place In a
hollered baking dish, cover with one
and one-half cupfula o f rich white
aauce, cover with buttered crumbs ot
grated cheese and tiros n quickly In a
hot oven. Bouillon cube* or any meal
stock may tm used If one lack* the
chicken stock.
, .
A "Yes, Dear," Man
Friend— "1 thought you said you al
ways had tha last word with yonr
wife? I heard her ordering you about
all the time." The Htitihy—"W ell. I
do have the last word.
Didn't yon
hear me say, «All right' each tim e r'—
Montreal flaxen«.
The Pumping Way
A pump doe* md draw water, lift It
or pump It. All II does Is to dleplais
sir, and atmospheric pressure dip
be vacuum with water.
I it slit idly Stellas hand dropped <>•
Iter belt and her ever ready pistol
flashed up, covering bolli Diego and
Wade.
•Tut 'em up," ahe ordered Wade.
Tlieu—“ Dlegol Gel out Wade'a horse
for m e "
Wuil* had pul up Iti» bands ns or
derad; but now be took litem down.
"Atv, « lin fa tba u*« foolin’." ba said
“ W a ve got you: ■ »' It'* about lime
you knew It. You ain’t a» amari a» I
thought you «u s, or you'd 'a' caught
on aoomr.
Sur«, lUrker'a coinin’ ;
un* ha's bringing In tit* padre with
him to milk« you Mr«. Jim Barker. As
for that gun of yinira, lit* cartridge»
In ll alu't loaded. On» of th# hoy« ,
changed 'em while you waa ealln'
hreukfnst. Just hand II over, pronto."
Stella lulled; but she dhl not lower
her pistol. W ad« might be speaking
the truth about II.« cartridges and lie
might not. Most certainly shs did not
Inttfiul to lukw Ids word for IL She
hud plenty of cartridge* In her holt,
hut of eotira« she could not nink* In
slant us# o f them. Nevertheless—
“ I’m going fo And out Aral If you'r*
lying." ah* remarked coolly. “ If you
« r » you'd better apeak up quick ; for
If you don't you're goln* to tile O n*I
lu . ' I'll re.-'" With the "three" sh« '
pressed the trigger.
The lock clicked. No explosion fob
lowed. Wade had told the truth as
to that on« cartridge, at any rat«.
Swiftly the girl snitptH-d the revolver j
»gain and again.
Still no re|Hirt Bounded; and the
grin on Wade’s face told her as c le a r j
ly as the gun Itself that he had spoken
the truth.
Coolly she lowered If. "You did fell
Hie truth once." she admitted. "By
tome mistake, I reckon. Here’s the ;
gttn. Take It." She tossed the weapon
at Wade’s feet.
Then, ns he »looped to pick It up !
she darted pest him and hurried to ;
tbe house.
Wade made no attempt to stop her. j
He guessed that she b.qied to litui an !
other pistol ; but be kurw Hint none
they will return In the hour; but of »
•urety they arc not here now."
Stella listened with frowning hrowa.
Though one of the least suspicious
people In the world, she was not ■
foo l; and she felt sure that there srns
„ „ „ ^ h l n g behind *11 tht*. Bul what?
A f *he hesitated Wade turned to
her with a laugh.
"I guess w ere
stung, all right,” he said. "W e ’ ve lust
got to wait. I f the fools had told me
Li time I'd hove made one of the men
give yon his horse and wait. Aa It la
— well, I guess Fulr will give me the
devil, anyway."
Stella did not rise to the occasion.
She did not assure Wade that she
would back him up when he told her
father that the had taken Charley's
place and Hint he had not known It
until hour* Inter. Instead she looked
him In the eyes
“ Have the rest of our men gone?'
she asked.
Wade shrugged his shoulders. "I
don't know for sure." he answered;
Up Sh* Jumped and Ran Out of tha
Ooor.
"but I guesa they have.
We d-m't
wait for each other goln' home You
k.iow that yourself."
Rtella did know IL Nevertheless—
"W ill Barker he here till* morn
iD g?" she a sk e d , flatly.
In *p lt« of himself Wade flushed
botly. Hut he answered quickly. If
evasively.
"How'n
thunder
do
I
know?" he demanded. "Barker doe*
what he pleases. I ain't his keeper."
Stella could rend the falsehood In
bis eyes. Too isle the realised that
she hod been trnptied.
' “ I ’ll take your horse and go on,”
sha suggested. "Y on can com* Inter
111 aqnnre you with dad before you
get to the R oost”
But Wade shook hi* head. After
all, be decided, why ahould he longer
keep up the deception? The trap had
been sprung and th « victim waa In
the tolls.
“ Nothin' doin'," he replied, rongh
ly. "You come on thl* trip on your
nwti say so. Now you've got to lake
tbe consequence*."
MOST people know ibis »hsol.it«
antidote (or pain, bul »re you rsrrlul
to say Bayer when you buy it f And
do you always give a glane« to see
Bayer on lite bos--and the word
./«tarne printed in red? It isn't the
genuin« Bayer Aipnin without it I A
drugstore always ha« Bayer, with the
proven directions luckcxi in every hog :
A«-lrtn I.
th#
M
mor% o t
i(Me**«tt*s*M*sl.v of S.ttflytlrs.lg
■a a Hark, IW
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
f f T1r*4 F m I II C m I » • > « (
AI nltftit
jr«mr fret
ir »l lr vt l, m r« a m t «tvollm
l r i
f ll
»at nun k VAtfclo« i r
»n< 1 11 *.
» I> rl n k l0
Iw >
Alim i f •#1-1411 t»»w<Wr«
in ii«» tool hail, paH|
rub tlx? m»rv «ml III*
flat nc«l
imrt« «ml
Is till« m«<rt>*
> Mbtfct AIW m sfM4 |gg*
Into yuur «I mmm In
1110 nturnln« «ful
walk «it « 1 «? in Ooni*
tori
it
i«h o «
lit*»
friction from tb*» «b»*r For n i l tem pi«
«• d iM teiy a n i m t u u m
«. ?.
Pike’s Peak Elevation
Pike's peak achieves an altitude o f
M.147 fret
It Is D o t the hlglwst peak
In (ho fn ltr d States (Mount Wbllney,
California. 14,801 feet, enjoya that dis­
tinction) nor even In Colorado, where
Mount Elbert exceeds ll with 14,430
feet.
WILL 00 III IT
CLAIMS TO DO
Mr*. Steele S«y« of Lydia EL Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
"Put
Em Up," the Ordered Wade
waa there to be found. So he followed
her alonly, chuckling to hltneelf. and
giving her ample time to tearch the
bouse. It was very simple and very
simply furnished; and It would not
take long to search.
It did noL Stella soon found this
ouL Then, for ahe was a sensible girl,
she went Into the big living room and
sat down In consider what to do.
( t o
he
c o n t in u e d
.)
Camouflage of High
Order Saved Convict
Extraordinary tales o f adventure,
death nnd escape from Hie French
Islands of exile off tbe Gulttnn coast
are told by Itlulr Niles, the tlrst worn
an to visit Hie prison Islands
"There was. for example," she write*
“ tbe convict stutloncd on one o f the
I»evil's
Island group, who, some
u.onHis ago was missing nt the five
o'clock roll cull. Al that hour thn
keepers are busy rounding up Hie
men and locking the correct number
Into each dormi. >ry fur tbe night.
Number X wan missing; he failed tn
answer to Ills name. Search was load«
o f the three Islands. It revealed noth­
ing. The cun waa sinking; In a few
moments the tropical night would fall.
The ennoemen were commanded to
launch Hie bouts; far, fur nut n speck
was seen on Hie deserted ocean. The
prison authorities focu*e<l their glasses
But they saw only a ilurk mass on Hie
surface und above It Hie great spread
lug borne of one of tbe water buffalo
which Hie administration imports from
French Indo-Chlna. Only a dcud wn
ter buffalo flouting out to sea. They
revoked the order to the ranoenten
Anyway, darkness bud suddenly shut
down.
“ But the prisoners knew Hint the
dead water buffalo was »no o f their
comrades, his body bound to a plunk
and covered with bnnitna leaven, while
with arm* and lega he «want ileaper
ately. Tbe buffalo horn»—didn't a
buffalo ill» on Hie lalnnd* only Inal
week ? The horns were Hie esraplnx
convict's camouflage.''— From the Fo
rum.
Pratt, f f . V *.— “ I was so weak
sad nervous that I was In led most
all thn limn sod
couldn't sit up
and I nm only
90 years old. I
saw yuur adver­
tising In a mag­
asina and after a
bad taken Ihre«
doses of Lydia K.
I'tnkhem's Vege­
table Compound
I could feel that
I was better. A f­
ter taking two
bottles I began doing my work and
I feel lika a new woman I recom­
mend the Vegetable Compound to
my friends and say It will do all Ik
claims to do and mora. I will gladly
answer all lettsrs I rwelva."— V
H. E. Servi r, Pratt, W. Va.
Pasting the Buck
Lee— Will you klsa me?
Dora— Isn't that Just like a man,
al ways frying to shift the rceponsl-
blllty?
It Is what a man beta that prove«
his convictions.
[Cute in a Baby-1
'Awful at Three
-a n d it’s Dangerous*
by Ruth Brittain
Thumb *nrklng doe* lo o k aweet In a
hnby, hut It la disgusting In the three-
yenr-old and sometime* It hangs on
until fifteen or sixteen! Tne habit
may ratt*e an Ill-formed mouth or In­
duce adenoid*-, nnd It always Inter­
fere* with digestion. Pinning the
sleeve over the hand; nttarhlng mit­
ten*, or patting on rnnlhourd cult*,
Enemies of Cockroach
In Enroll« n parasitic four winged which prevent bending the nrm* at the
fly often lays Its eggs In the capaul” * elbows, are mine o f th* ways to stop
o f Hie cockroach. This fly hat be­ the hahlt.
Another bad hahlt— Irregularity In
come widely distributed over tbs
world, following Hie roach. (Jnkirto- bowel artlon— la responsible for weak
nntely, Its usefulness as a mean* of hi."»-:« and constipation In liable*.
keeping the roach In check by destny- Give the tiny bowels an opiMirtunlty to
sltoylng the egg cuptule* Is greatly ■ct i t regular period* each day. I f
they don't act at «r »t . a little Fletch­
Impalmi by the occurrence of anothei
er'* fa c to r l* will soon regulate them.
four winged tly which Is pnraslllc op
Every mother ahould keep * bottle o f
on the first. Among other natural en­
it handy to nse In e «»e o f colic, chol­
emies of the roach are tree froge, and
era, diarrhea, gas on stomach anil
It has been sil ted that If these an
bowels, constipation, loan o f sleep, or
Itnnls are Inclosed In a room overnight
when b*hy Is rro*a and feverish. It*
they will entirely clear ll o f roaches
gentle Influence ever hnhy’s *y*tem
enable* him to get full nourishment
Carver’s Favorite
from hts food, help* him gsln,
Adaptability to th « carver’« art I* ■trengthen* hi* bowels.
one of th « chief attribute* of gum
Cnstorla 1« purely vegetable and
wood, ll* line, closely Interlocked hartnle*«— the recipe In on the wrap
grain permits delicacy and grara In per. Physicians h a v« prescribed It foe
line, as well a* strength and dignity over .10 year*. With each package,
In mas«. The quality, when combined yon get a ralnable hook on Mother­
with It# natural delicate coloration
hood. I-ook for f i t « « . H. Fletcher's
afford* high lighting effect* possible signature on the wrapper oo you'll gel
with few other hardwood*.
the genuine.