* > —— CC 2 ALONG LIFE’S TRAIL MALARIA AAA CAAA RRA RRR RRR RNS By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. oe, (@. 1928, Western Newspaper Unidn.) TELLING THE WIFE HOMPSON was about to get mar ried to a pretty young girl to whom he had been engaged for some time, and not being able alone to solve all of the marital problems which presented themselves to him before the cere mony, he had come to me for advice. He had had an opportunity to watch the workings of the domestic ma- chinery which Nancy and I were keep- ing in operation, and he had confidence that I would guide him discreetly. Should he tell her everything. he asked with some concern—about his financial affairs, his weaknesses, his past life, the mistakes he had made and was making. “Well, that depends,” I answered. the only way to get on. As to your past life, she'll learn all about that anyway, whether you tell her or not, #8 soon as she gets acquainted with your old friends, so the best policy is to beat them to it, If you think there is anything she'd be interested in knowing. As to your weaknesses, she'll have them all catadbgued before you've been married a week, so it Isn't worth while giving them mich concern. It's alto gether likely that before the end of six tnonths she'll be able to tell you more about your personal weaknesses than you drehmed of, though if she's wise, she'll keep a lot of this to herself. When it comes to your finances. you ought to Iny the cards down on the table. Women are usually shrewder than men give them credit for being. They are more economical; they spend seldom get him into a hole. is a partnership, and If the wife is to an intelligent one of the two of you seems to have the best business head. There are a lot of things it is just as well not to tell, Some burdens a man ought to carcy alone. To tell of them would only worry his wife and In no way help the situation. Simpson, as soon as he was married told his wife what a good cook he was, und he's been slopping about in the kitchen ever since. If telling will help the situation. or make her happler, or give you satis- faction, It's a good thing to tell, It's a matter of judgment. HAVE often remarked upon the ef. ficacy of work and the fact that nothing which Providence has decreed with regard to man has contributed more to his happiness, his progress in the world, and his contentment. than the necessity that he work. “In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat Separate Coat in New Winter Modes Garment Should Be Chosen With Future Costumes in Mind. Always excepting the new hat, or the new little frippery that is needed to add a piquant alr to the plainness of the costume that Is a legacy from the season past, the separate coat Is far and away the most {mportant ac- quisition of the new mode. Against its background-—of fabric, color and line—will be bullt the costumes that the season to come will demand. And these separate coats differ very little, If at all, from the ensemble coats bought as a part of a costume sult, They fall, naturally, into the same di- visions of the sult, some model of which Is possible for every occasion of the day from early morning until late evening—or early morning agaln! For they are militarian, sports, seml- formal and formal, with a generous representation of tallored types. It will be readily seen that the sep- arate coat Is an economy, since it may be chosen with future costumes in mind, and [ts color may be, In a way. a dependable one, against which gay ety and brightness and unusual shades may be silhouetted. If it is to be real ly serviceable, It must not be chosen In one of the "off" shades—let the frock Charming Coat of Cloth Is Trimmed With Mink. be chosen thus—but in a tone that will harmonize with many other tones Since one's first Impression of the costume ensemble is the outer wrap, it may truly be said that the outfit will stand or fall by the coat of it! And the very fact that more of these costumes are made up of contrastin Hints on How to Make Footwear Comfortable Bugkled shoes are sometimes loose round the instep. If the portion of leather to which the buckle is sewn is unsewn and firmly stitched a little blessing, of kept what he got. The contrary often seems true, hut only we have not looked Into the details, I always thought that Mr. Cham- bers, the banker, had never worked. tighten It, and give greater comfort to the wearer. Shoes a little too big and which rub small length of narrow ribbon velvet or a pair of little fixtures sold st most such Irregular hours. always have sat in the lap of ease and luxury. In his youth. He had tolled early and late with his hands and had suffered It rich.” He had been through enough If a patent shoe pinches any part of the foot a rag soaked in bolling water should be placed over the part while the foot is In the shoe, and the leather will soften to the shape of the foot. Smart Cossack Costume Is of Black Broadcloth Of Russian inspiration broadcioth, with and border. Completing the outfit is a leopard skin purse. se ——————————— A fabrics than all of one appreciably to the value of the arate the cloth coat have a dress of any fabrie, and velvet combines with cloth, crepe or silk. And poptlarity of the ensemble or ¢f harmonizing colors, is another fae tor In the success of the coat de signed for general wear with a va riety of dresses, resulting In a variety of costumes. And designers of eonts— playing up to the ensemble [dea—have individual selection entlcingls coal, For may made ensy The warning—New materials with a soft feature And conte rich pile indication alike to manip fon displays have been any and supple and ihe w $ velvets are re markubly easy Combinations Attractive In spite of the fact that the pam summer witnessed a vogue of purple almost unprecedented In the history of that particular color from a fashion of considerable in the modes. Paris, It importance Is said, regards with the color which was so popular In rather than a reddish east has Black Prince, so dark that at a dis tance it appears to be black, For afternoon costumes and for eve ning frocks the lighter shades are chosen and shades of the same color are combined in the most subtle fashion, are interspersed. frequently are seen, add to the individuality. transparent materials which such success during the summer ap. pears in several new Interpretations of particular interest, Too Heavy Clothing Is Not Good for Health It seems that people have sald enough about the undress of women. and that now the pendulum bids fair when he got ohl Bennett did not work for his money, It came to him from a hard-working uncle, who had suffered many priva- tions to amass the fortune. slipped through his fingers. one contentad, Benjamin Frenklin was a wise man in his day, and human nature was not materially different when he was mak ing Its acquaintance than It now Is He was constantly drawing conclu sions from his observations, and of one of these studies, In his autobl ography, he says: “This gnve me occasion to observe that, when men are employed, they are best contented; for on the days they worked they were good-natured and cheerful and, with the consclous ness of having done a good day's work, they spent the evening jolllly; but oy our idle days they were miutinous and quarreisome, finding fault with the pork, the bread, ete, and In continua; fil-humor, which put me In the mind of an sen captain, whose rule It was to k his wen constantly at work: and, his mate once told him that they done everything, and thers was ing further to employ them about, ‘Oh,’ says he, ‘make then: scomr the anchor’ Along comes an eminent British physiologist who approves of women's clothes—and says that the modern garments are beneficial hecause they rays of the sunlight to reach the body. The present-day fashions for women alm to expose the neck and arms: short "skirts and sheer stockings are desirable from the hygienist's point Add to this the well-estab- lished custom of wearing low shoes, even in winter, which permits of free unhampered move ments for the muscles of the feet, and you, have to admit that women have taken a long stride toward that un- conscious abandon and healthful free- dom of men. Ample ventilation Is necessary In order to carry away the body heat and moisture and to prevent setting up a "torrid zone” of Impure, stag- nant alr between the clothing and the skin, In winter the people who live In houses with closed windows—glass eliminates the ultra-violet rays—and who cover up their heads and feet and hands when they go out get al most no ultra-violet radiation. As a result they are “run down” and re. quire a “spring tomle,” but recover during the summer, The children de velop rickets, A safe rule Is that the clothing should be wu. light as ean be worn and keep the body comfortably warmed. If the chest and stomach are well cov- ered the lower parts of the Iimbs and the face and neck are better left ex- posed. Only in this way ~an they he adequately stimulated by these myriad rays, which penetrate to the cells just necessary to health. Plisse Effects Seen in American Fashions Where. the straight silhouette ap penrs in this season's fashions it dou not have the uncompromisingly severe lines of last year, but is given a cer tain fluid grace by cleverly coucealed godets and plaitings. Plisse effects which always have been featured In French frocks but which recently only have been made an Integral part of American fashions, frequently are seen, One reason for this is that since the plisses are usually put in by hand it is a long and tedious process. But designers have found that the results more than justify the time taken in making them, Many are extremely Intricate and suggest honeycomb effects or smock racter are not fas. They consist of long precious or memiprecious nished at either end with a tassle and simply wound around throat lke a scarf. * RNAPII NDAD DDD POINTS ON KEEPING WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of "HEALTH" OSE AD AAPOR PODOPOIG (@, 1935, Western Newspaper Union.) LIGHT TREATMENT OF ASTHMA is a common and mos, distressing affliction, To see the unfortunte vietim struggling and gasping for breath is almost as try- ing on the friends and relatives as it is on the sufferer. Asthma Is a spasm of the bronchial tubes, during which these fine air passages in the lungs close up, pre- venting alr from entering. So the desperate effort which the asthmatie makes during an attack {sg literally a fight for alr, every available muscle being used to force alr through the constricted tubes Into the lungs, Asthmatic attacks naturally do not last long. If they did and If they involved any large part of the lungs, the patient would die from lack of oxygen But In real asthma, from | cause, Just as the attack its height and It seems as! the sufferer could not live | minute, the spasm relaxes | and the patient, exhausted and stream. with perspiration, sinks back re alr again fills the lungs. Asthma is not a disease. It is rather which may appear Id different conditions. Its close to and connection with would indicate that it may by abnormal conditions In the nose, such as bony spurs and ob- | structions it tion with A STHMA whatever reaches though ing 5 . 3 Heved as fever be caused occurs in connec- | of the kid n, certain odors may also have some bringing on an at. years, Walker usthmatics are certain sub. of the also some diseases neys. Climate, inds of food or } thing k. In shown to do with the ia that ily sensitive st ten Some to Cause spasm where | the rea) ssl cause the most Im the asthmatic is itment by which be can avold So a recent article by Gerber of Providence, R. 1, of the American Medi. be of Interest asthma, is ERS, the Journal y Assoclatic $ hand ' n shouig = sufferer from to evers Light kind for the treatment of many conditions, It is not strange that the X-ray should be tried In asthma. Doctor Gerber is being widely used for that Germany. In examining the chest of an asthmatic by X-ray, It | that after the examina. tion, the asthma was greatly relieved. experience bas shown that, | in many cases of asthma, treatment with the X-ray will greatly reduce! the frequency and severity of the at- | tacks and may entirely relieve the | patient, of some being used gays it was noticed —— DODGING SMALLPOX United States may own and hold over one-half of all the gold | the world today. But it also had year one-fifth of all the small- | in the world. That Isn't quite so pleasant or desirable, neither Is it anything to be prond of. In the hundred and twenty-five years | since Jenner's discovery of vaccina- tion, this hideous disease; once the terror of the civilized world, has been | #0 well controlled that most of us to- | think of It as an Insignificant | danger. Yet the United States Public | Heulth service, In its 1924 report, | shows that smallpox has been steadily i increasing. In 1920, there was nearly | in than In 1921 and much more In 1024 | than In 1923. This Increase occurs | always In states or citles in which vaccination is neglected. In 1024, the United States had 40. LRT cases of smallpox with 871 deaths, while Canada had only 2808 cases with 60 deaths Government and military authori ties have learned by bitter expert ence the dangers of smallpox and the value of vaccination In preventing It. kor hundreds of years smallpox was | one of the added horrors of every war, Whenever any large number of men were brought together In military camps, smallpox promptly appeared and often killed more men in camp than died on the battiefleld. Even In the Civil war, smallpox was practical ly always present in both armies. But in the World war, with nearly four mi- lion men In the service, only 20 men died of this disease. Ex-service men know why. Ask any man who was In the army In 1917. 18, either in this country or overseas, what was the first thing that happened to him after he reported for duty, He'll tell you, “They vaccinated me.” « But the war closed seven years ago. In this country and In Eng land, smalipox has been steadily In. creasing both In amount and In vie ulence. It will continue to Increase Just ns long as vaccination is neg lected, it cannot be prevented as can typhoid. But it ean be prevented by vacelna- tion, If you want to be safe from smalipox, there's Just one way. Get vaccinated a I sh 1 CABINE 72g (@E. 1920, Weslern Newspaper Union, ) 80 many gods, so many creeds, Bo many ways that wind and wind While just the art of being kind Is all this sad world needs. Wilcox. FOR EVENING PARTIES Now that the long evenings are upon 18, we will like getting together in imall groups for the pleasure which the lovely out of doors has kept us from enjoying. If it Is a dane ing party, and sweet apple cider is to be procured, there is no re- freshment equal + a chilled glass of the good drink tnd a doughnut. Very simple to get ‘endy, easy to serve and most enjoy- thie. To make the doughnuts use the 'ollowing old recipe which is one hard 0 equal: Doughnuts.—Take one and one ‘ourth cuptuls of sour milk, one-fourth ‘upiul «of cream, two eggs, me and two-thirds cupfuls of sugar, teaspoonful rich sour if grated nutmeg, one-half teaspoonful of salt, and as little flour as is pos- to roll. Beat ther the and salt and nutmeg, stir in as flour as will nicely ugar, he milk soda, go In y % thoroughly chill When out aging as ttle flour before handle as possible Joughnnts when fried in well, are rich when cooking. Peanut Candy—Shell one and "Arse crumbs rolling bot fat will ec roasted peanuts roll with a ng pin until like ¢ for eight minutes from drst bubble irown the appears, two pounds of sugar and twelve level spoonfuls of butter Stir in the ind pour at once Into pan. Mark off is 100 hard ping fore it ind cook, two pounds of spinach In la 1 *upfal iy Peal sPoanius or tender Add uni of flour white » ag White epper, stir into cooked rub 8 ’ } When a colander, add Stir unt un sping through hicken broth : in bouillon cups; shipped cream Emergency Soup. ierve garnish teaspoonfuls. of n three cupfuls of bolling water. Add liree milk tablespoonfuls of to ‘he first mixture, stirring constantly antil the bolling point is reached. then Household Mints, “Bats in one’s belfry” is no joke If ‘hey have ever taken possession of the upper regions of a house, Fill all openings where it is possible for them to get in and burn sulphur, a lot of It, in the attic until they are smoked out, For the bedridden who get so tired lying ia one position and can help themselves: Tie stout new cotton Moth cut into wide strips to the head holding to these supports ome may raise or change position easily. The knots may be slipped under the pillow when not in use. A bed light fastened to the head- board of the bed is a great comfort for a poor sleeper. With a slight or off and one may read in bed with- For tired feet, a mixture of baking soda and talcum sprinkled into the shoes will give great relief. Change the feet and a bath of salt water is very refreshing. Feet need care as much or more than other parts of the body, yet they are greatly neglected. Corns and calluses may be re lieved by keeping them covered with a piece of surgeon's tape; renew a9 often as the bathing removes them. If they cling to the hose, cover with a small bit of absorbent cotton. When. applying adhesive plaster to a wound which has to be dressed often, use short strips with tapes fastened to the strips; these can be untied, the dressing changed and re turned without disturbing the adhe give at all. It Is not only painful, but dangerous to remove adhesive on a tender skin, The use of paper napkins together with the dinner napkin is a great econ omy. Fruit stains and much soiling will be saved by the use of a napkin of paper. If cracked ice is to be used in a sick room it will keep much long: er If a flannel cloth is tied over » bowl and the lce kept in it. Cover the bowl witlf another and place a paper bag over both. When the ice chest Is at some distance this is » wonderful step-saver, When a good tablecloth has been stained and is otherwise In good con. dition, stretch the cloth with the spot over a pair of embroidery hoops and remove the stain, then press, and the cloth is fresh again. Orange cut into bits and left where a fever patient may help himself, is » ach, Bowels orother In- ternal Organs. Backed by more than half a century of successful ser- vice in the American home. Your Nearest Dealer Car- ries Pe-ru-na Tablets or Liquid . — J Spent It All (ou were out with Miss Kalson Iaxd night. It must pretty es pensive?” ‘Two and a half dollars! “Is that “Yes—that's have been all? with ber. fill she had Backache Wearing You Out? Every day find you miserable with backache? Suffer sharp, stabbing pains? cel 1e and stiff —always tired, ner. 4 dispirited? Then Jook to eve! Your kidneys are the Perhaps they have failed we! roperly rid the blood of body poi ns. Naturally, then, you suffer the injurious effects of this slow poisoning Don’t risk neglect! If your kidwer need help, use Doan's Pills. No otheg kidney diuretic is so well recommends A nor so successful. Ask your neighbor! A Virginia Case Mrs. W. T. Vest, Chestnut Ave, Buena V Vv ached and lers, 111% ills boxes of Doan's cured me ver had any trouble sinc DOAN’S "&® STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Fostes Milburn Co., Mig. Chem, Bufislo, N.Y. , eT Lhrift spends when it Is spend Uo inoney oniy Recessary inginess wont even when A torpid similation tone up surely. liver prevents proper food as Wrigckyvs Indian Vegetable Pills the liver They act gently but 372 Pearl Bt, New York Adv. Men take opposite sides on the soney question, but the majority are on the outside "REPAID THIS MAN A DOZEN TIMES “1 have been repaid a dozen times over in improved health for every dollar I spent for Tanlac, and the medicine is still build. ing me up every day.” is the striking state. ment of Joseph DeSarne. * Tanlac has driven pains from my body that had troubled me for ten years. Be sides backache, which almost killed me at times, I had rheumatic pain and swelling in my hands and logs, my circulation was poor, feet always cold, nerves undone, my stomach didn't feel right, I bad regular boeadaches and 1 was a discouraged man. “1 have never seen the equal of Tanlac in my life. It has mote than doubled my appetite, my stomach feels great and my general health is so improved that 1 can nod praise Tanlac enough for what it has done and is still doing for me.” What Tanlac has done for others, it can do for you. Tanlac is for male by all good druggists Accept no substitute. Over 40 millions of botties sold. Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills for consti. pation: made and recommendad by the manufacturers of Tanlac. TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH your blemishes, your skin leas, *oft, smoath end white, your tote bt ve ng —Glenn’s Sulphur Soap Comtaine R339; Pare Sulphur, Ar droggiem. TOILET Relieves that of having eaten unwisely. 30¢ 90¢ bottles. AT ALL DRUGGISTS. AVE You SIE Bui Ow Sun REA a Dea R TB. J. RB. EVANS, SHEFFIELD, RIT tor in agricultural, alfalfa hq ar Write tor priess, ~ ; | W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 47.1928