A OO O0000000000000O0OO0O0O0V000 How It Started By JEAN NEWTON oC “A FLY ON THE WHEEL” WW J i; the the wheel” lessness with fo all familiar with the use expression fly on to denote help one powerful destructive h be exposed, erence to treachery in absolutely helpless, signifies tion where f# Chance, where one the start, A the market, referred ARE “like a the utter of some as whic with ref. the viet short, or where In ore bh im it a situa is man for "a at on often very lating nance, specu toed nat Sl0Un inst is to as the wns reference is wheel which I or religious offe torture politica confessions or The service of the *“ Inquisition has ters of blood over the pa it was a revolving contrapt dimensions on which the prisoner tied and rolled until every bone in hi was broken and crushed. to defend himse he might indeed have on the wheel” . 1 tend merely as punisl ring been written in let. ges of hi story ion of great body alt his escape, fly chances Jif or been The figurative pression to a situation that preposterous in its unfairness, comprehensible, (Copyright) pl Jian FOR THE GOOSE— is equal is easily AWS By Viola Brothers Shore 1 OBODY'S woman that's got nothin’ got az little time as the to do. Dancin’ nobody does ain't dancin’ is one of them things that bad. Because if you good, you ain't dancin’. “When you get married yon know i's the mother-in-laws that's the hard to get along with. When your son gets married, you know it's the daughter-in-laws. Ones FOR THE GANDER An easy stunt that you don't know how to do, Is hard. A hard one that you mastered, is easy. A man don’t acquire a strong per sonality from gettin’ honors—but from deservin' "em. It takes a lot of hammerin’ to make work of art out of a hunk of marble. (Copyright; ) {)- - pn GIRLIGAGV? (Conprign ) “Knocking the girls’ bare knees wecns to be entirely unnecessary” ways Frivolous Flo, “since a great wiany of them do their own knocking.” SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT By F. A. WALKER AROUND THE CORNER uf his NE of the greai gold ml Alas has an inter A diy ol believed be found in t all CleRy © nes esting tory. could began ue digging, up rock hoping turned soll and Wis us For several that he strike At last discouraged » threw down his pack and quit A few days luter an » i 1 ¥ months he kept on, wold ore Her prospector existing 0 il Tong predecessor thrown hey bis ft oy FEEL O60 5 HgEing 1 wl © gd uncove the Oe YEIDs ID ferritor) That frst from corner from Just be just six inches wus Just arout it. He won man was success, He the complishm 1 fore he id have . a We are not gre prospeciors. for a us verith, all miners, but the most 1 f We start oul vein of some kind that fore, If we and shovel ts in other kin tools com happi do not carry rey thelr hiysical 4 pick we Of fen ds of p When prom we come to what looks like a ising opportunity we start dig of us get to of Some tired very quit move on hunt dig again. Some us for tw } we do not aor d¢ h in one place, Do you know that it Gray thirteen years to write in a Country Churchyard? but out good places to dig » not dig took Th his Elegy That is a of it t poems in the omnas came English language. One of the world's great musicians of music that you can the plano in five minutes. Chemists have made as many as twenty thousand experiments and worked a dozen years in the effort to galn one result. . 0 piay on Discouragement Is the greatest en emy of maskind and the most pro digious obstacle to success. If the devil were asked to give up all his weapons but one he would keep Discourggement because he can get quicker and more effective results with that than with any other imple. ment he has, Whatever other life moitoes a man may have be should always make one slogan an everyday battle ery. “Don't quit.” Let that be the first self-coun- sel of the morning and the burden of the last prayer at night. Don't quit, Keep going. Success may be just beyond where you are now, Fortune may be waiting the next turn of the wheel, A woman, who had as much reason for discouragement as any person | ever knew came to my desk one day and laid down a slip upon which she had typewritten what she had told me was her creed and the secret of her successful battle against the odds that had faced her. The sentence read: “There Is only one real fallure in life, and that is not to be true to the best one knows" There never was a better battle ery vor a more secure fortification against seeming fallure, Somewhere, sometime, a poet or maybe only a rhymsier wrote the fol lowing. It Is pasted in my scrap bock of inspiration : Not by appointment do we meet de. Hight and joy But ‘round some corner In the streets of life They, on, a sudden, greet us with a mile. Paste it in YOUR serap book. Read it frequently. Let It Influence your dally toll and efforts and watch the Corners, | vin we Moines Newspaper Sysdioats.) Se As A EAA LINSEY-WOGLSEY | AND SATIN HOSE By DOUGLAS MALLOCH oy — 3 | ACE and satin and powdered halr, - But under the silken where : common touch lace and much, folk or dressed, Put any The heart and Why, satin don't mean Yes, gentry, howe'er man to a manly test Whatever the rank or what the kind. Linsey-woolsey No luce nor jut under made The brotherhood of Yes, folk or creed, the country need, many a and feet left bare, satin nor powdered halr, the homespun roughly the unafraid. gentry, what craft call, let the find, or what the kind Lincoln you will satin and quite what hose, never are men sup pose rich things, are rich in the common wings kith and has an eagle's gentry, we're soul Yes, folk or Kin, we're dressed, we're within, a danger dark the skies, Washington our Lin coins rise, t by McClure same but aur And and Nowspapuy Byndicate.) told me that if one star: beyond, one not Way >a a man hit » he sot aimed? Sherwood SIMPLE DESSERTS will Margaret CURING richer foods wenther n, keep winter be the eold toay ente as uj more energy is heat, are needed body Fruits 1 such ng: these stimulating, milk, egps cembinutions are nourish simple foods, when served wil never become me wd for chil moto us, and are especially dren Mock Sherbet. one-half cupful of minute tapi teaspoonful of and two cuptfuls {a Cook ocn, fourth ful eof sugar, water the tapioca hoiler. Add the t $1 xine ao double Using a Gouin of the lemons and yellow of or ive minutes be fi Pour the has been two the yp from wh As qed mixture on & platter, ich as the stifMy Right sheer ped in cold w wor if} HOON two until fn olty tent cold ipped cream, and > VOrY wh Sherbet. of thin Fruit To two aus r cupfuls cream add one can of ue of thre on and ths three eges beaten. Freeze, iris of sugar. ple, the » oranges at twe len whites of { Apricot Charlotte, Wash one-fourth pound of dried apricots, cover with colt] water and sonk over night. Cook In the same wa ter until soft. then rub through glove, Add one tablespoonful of gela. tin to one-third of a cupful of water; when softened add one-third of a cup ful of boiling water, the juice of a lemon, one cupful of sugar and the strained apricot. Cool: when the mix of three eggs, whipped cream. Nerle Mogwat £5. 1937, Western n Newspaper U nion. i HE YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE WAY £ NE The young lady across the way says seven to nothing is regarded as 8 pretty small score for a football game but for her part she thinks a tear does pretty well to tear (ts way neross the opponents’ goal line seven times (@® by MaClure Mewspaper Syndloate) i dass apt St Transportation of heavy supplies up mountain tralls formerly by burros and llamas, Bolivian mines Bleep ersed only to level been by automobile trucks. Developed by Incas. Centuries ugo the Incas first devel oped these mines located in the n Innccessible Inland ranges. The Span ish envious Indi s0et above sea in has solved the use of light 10%! conguistadores, wealth, made short the native population condition of slavery and supervising the production of gold. In later years and tin have been the inetals produced In with operations seriously handic by inaccessibility of the giles, Unti) a year ago burros and llamas, carrying maximum load Of nns’ work io a most solivin, silver minin the “u ALCOHOL IS BEST ANTI-FREEZE DOPE Great Drawhacl Is That It Readily Evaporates and Must Be Replaced. No DO, Feunedd of rietaal nace revised by the standards Letter etrendar form fiom frist Furor United States burean It etnbodies thie tests on a num ber of anti-freezing mixtores and gives “ui na & table showing the percentages of of Are DECOSKary a given cohol, of glycerin and combi tions of the twee "hat produce a solutien baviag freezing Ale rigs | il regarded as the best keep anion if wood std 8 K1 obile radistors from freezing alcohol is used rare should be taken to see that free from achd, otherw the radiator and circulatory may The great drawback the ase of alecobol is the fact that and res Rysiem {0 it resiig. readily has to be re placed. Glycerin not drawback, but it is more exg Anti.Freere Solutions, Among other anti-freeze discussed are esichum chloride, glucose and Kerosewme, Calcium chloride is frequently used and found to be very effective, but it has a decided corrosive par ticularly on solder and slominum. This salt forms the basis of many of evaporales have ensive, solutions honey, action, market. To some of these a soluble chromate is added to prevent corro- slon. The bureau finds that little cor rosion results when this Is added ex- cept to the aluminum parts, An- chloride is its tendency to cause short circuits when it gets on the spark plugs or ignition wires. When cold it takes up moisture and Jorms a good conducting layer where such is not desired. It is hard to remove and the short circuits formed by It hard to find because they disappear when the engine gets hot. Unsatisfactory Mixtures. Honey and glucose were found un- satisfactory because a high concentra- this results in a thick solution so danger, of depositing sugar in the circulatory system. Low percentage solutions do not lower the freezing but they do When a solution does freeze It first turns to a slush which must first be eooled to a considerably greater ex- tent before It turns solid, * Carburetor Wisdom In making carburetor adjustments, an operation the owner usually per lorms when the engine is cold, the new adjustment should be given a chance to prove itself before another change is made. That is, after mak: ing a change the engine should be run for a couple of miles, even If it mis. fires at the beginning while It Is still cold. It may be that after it has warmed up to normal running tem- perature, the new adjustment will prove satisfactory. Arrest Noise Makers Under an ordinance forbidding un. pecessary nolses In St. Louls, Mo, drivers of trucks, taxis and automo blles who allow thelr vehicles to back: fire and who use sirens will be ar rested. . | | | each were port supplies to the {ie oper to wii and raliroads the refined met enormously hea ssl] quan ping pra better dis ithe pounds miles daily and travelfog only 20 upen: to trams ating relied sly centers and lo sew board als y even iu titles, Improvements tice were Impossible g methods were aval Charges Reduced. Notwith roads which were standing rough and the fact that bh rocks sil motor tralls covered wit utomol #Ul an i to centiof ite the rarefied jokes 3 an [er when in operating atl here of racks the pack CRITEILE 120 miles OSD fudes, animals One light truck O00 coveri ng of 120 burrox or transportation charges Signs Suggested for Railroad Crossings Winter + ¥ I Washington Police Get “Safety First Pagodas” Washington traffic police are to be provided with these litile pagodas, the intest thing in safety, comfort and visibility. Traffic Officer R: M. Frye is shown overlooking the hurrying throng In front of the United States treasury. Deceleration Is Quite Important to. Motorist “Accelerates from five to an auto advertisement. Very good | but what about deceleration? Hew | many seconds are required to bring the car from thirty miles an hour down to five? in terms of distances, wheveas it may be more to the peint to. consider it in seconds. The time interval has much to do with the distances fer even if a car has peer brakes and does not Huntington, W. V&~'"For about two { years | was in miserable health. | tries { several different medicines but did not get help, Finally I saw Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription advertised as being good for nervousness, so] began to take it. I am now on my i 4 third bottle, 5 nerves h quieted WV down, 1 can sleep, Nags my appetite has re- turned, I have gained seven pot nds in am feeling better and stror ' have for over two years. ‘Favori scription’ is the best medicine | hay taken ard it has dome more toward storing me to than anyt} ever took.” Ceorgia 4206 18th St All dealers. AVE . ie eats nr. ft NTE, Fiamias, Tab Bud. Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother's Remedy “tomech intestinal {ll 8 good oldfash- loned herb howe remedy for cousti- pation, stomach {lis and other derange- lets or lic For every ments of tem so prevalent these days greater favor as a than In yor the syn iz in even medicine aay. family ur grandmother's mow, some do mot know that quickly checking colds, re- lieving aches end pains, healing cutsand barns, are but - few of ils. many uses. — EE — wath every Berrie. USE i L onsY FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem: oil hus Been a worid- wide remedy for #idney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, toniiagomndi uricacid conditions. GOLD Mi EDgqy EET s correctinternal trouliles; stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Goin Mepar. Sad ¥ +t “Wimt bheeame ery maxis ag felled” you wy yy in Trim! Good Elimination lr Essential to Good Health. E kidheys are the blood filters. IF they fail to func. tion prapeiip there is apt to be a retention of tomic poisons in the bioad. A dull, languid feel. ing and, sometimes, toxic back aches, headaches, and dizziness are symptoms of this condition Purther evidences of improper kidney function fs often found in busning or scanty passage of secretions. Each year more snd move people are learning the waive of Doan’s Pills, & stimulant diuretic, in this con. dition, & nook or ham. let anywhere but has many enthusiastic Uters. Ask your neighbor, DOAN'S "2 f Stimulant Diuretic to the og | Poster Milburn Co. Mig. Chemists, Buffalo N ¥ Ten “miles an hour was about the hest sustained speed that could be made in the first automobile race In the United States, of distance saved as well four-wheel-brake results with two wheel brakes. Drivers who have used hand brakes in the past well remem: ber the gain in deceleration distance ping process. Stopping Is coming to be a matter of seconds more than of distance. Stop watches on the braking technique of need for such a change. Cause of Some Leaks Many cars have wires or rods lead: ing from the front of the radiator to the priming device on the carburetor. These rods pass through one of the air passages of the radiator. The tubes of radiators are made of very thin material, and In the course of n season's use the primer rod, In rat. tling around, through vibration of the car, may cause a leak that wil bw troublesome. The remedy Is to In sort a stiff plece of tubing in the alr passage that holds the rod. DO YOU WANT OIL FARM?! Farms worth the price for farmi in line Tor ¢ pol i" i —_ Sn yeu Ba oan Write het TLLe hy BRISTOW, ORLA D,ROUGH SKIN is ugly and sanoying—~make yoitr skin soft, whits, lowly, by Resin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers