IRON DOG GROWLS The use to which the phototube, popularly known as the electric eye, i8 put are literally numberless. One of the most peculiar {8 used by a approaches he is startled by growls, for on his approach he interrupts a eye and that sets off the vocal mech- anism-—a big, raucous buzzer.—Oil Power. IT WORKED MPCRE people could feel fine, be fit and regular, if they would only follow the rule of doctors and hospitals in Jelieving constipation. ever take any laxative that is harsh in action. Or one, the dose of which can’t exactly measured, Doctors know the danger if this rule is violated. They use liguid laxatives, and keep reducing the dose until the bowels need no help at all. Reduced dosage is the secret of aiding Nature in restoring regularity. You must use a little less laxative each time, and that's why it should be a liquid like Syrup Pepsin. Ask Your druggist for a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and if it doesn’t give you absolute relief, if it isn’t a joy and comfort in the way it overcomes biliousness due to con- stipation, your money back. Gloom Is Seasoning Gloom is the seasoning which gives joy its savor, just as failure is the salt which provokes the appetite for SUCCess. * Quick, Safe Relief For Eyes Irritated By Exposure RUT T| and Dust — 3 FOR YOUR Hl Hollgwood Stars Do So Can Youn Wear a Hollywood Beauty Helmet 2» while dressing and save hair-dress- | ing and cleaning bills, Send P.O.) money order $1.98 to POROTHY YOUNG P. 0. Box 1684, Hollywood, Calil. Ne Bat the Man Didn't Indians were once found of scalp ing a man, but they had to get over it. Laxative combination folks know is trustworthy The confidence thousands of parents have in good, old reliable, powde Thedford's Black-Draught has prompted them to get the new Syrup of Black Draught for their children. grown folks stick to the powdered Black Draught; the youngsters probably will prefer it when they outgrow their childish love of sweets. . . Mrs. C. W, Adams, of Murray, Ky., writes: “1 have used Thedford’s Black-Draught (powder) about thirteen years, taking i¢ for bilious. ess, Black-Dranght acts well and [ am slways pleased with the results, [| wanted a , reliable laxative for my children. I have found Syrup of Black Draught to be just that™ BLACK-DRAUGHT nerense Wearing Quality of Hose, Treat right pair 25¢ delivered In U. 8 Money ack guarantee, Agents wanted, Specialty Co, Box 289, . Omlif, we BUTLD YOUR OWN BUSINESS We train you to establish your own organ. ization, Write to SUPERIOR MFG, CO. 779-372 ELM ST. PERTH AMBOY, N, J. Win $150 Working Send 3¢ for our illustrated crossword fold. wr. PUZZLE CO. Box 81, Midland, Mich. Aeantife! Silk Hosiery, 5 Pin41 Sample 28e. Directeo, BW-221 W. Broad, Savansab, Ga, Rid Yourself of SCL IET L “OH WAD THE POWERS" An elegant young woman strolled down the main street of Skople. Yugoslavia, attracting admiring ly a man dashed out of a shop, lifted ker off her feet, took off her shoes and set her down again to walk home The assailant, a shoemaker, explained that the world bit | Do- | all the a little SEX, SEX, SEX—I'M SICK . all In same way-— OF IT body would know it By STEPHEN LEACOCK 1 think that now, All the MAGINE that if went crazy—Jjust are golng-—no, crazy.” crazy, «In the old Victorian days, now pass- ing out of memory women bad quite a different place from what they have | pow. The men did everything and ran | everything, and women represented | the is happening of today | gone—""sex is what geneatlons they ve the household side. The only sericus job given over to | women was that of the care of sick. | They didn't really know anything | about it—had never seen a clinical thermometer; but they filled the sick- room with flowers (carbonic acid gas) and sat snd did needle work beside the bed. It wasn't bad. People often got | well, Then things began to change. Wome en began to get educated, to break | into the colleges, to volte, to carry on professions Everybody knows all that. It wouldn't have mattered so much If the ornamental stuff dropped off with it: like ash barrels would have sat committees with men in overalls, jut instead of that there arose all the new “sex-stuff” that has trans | formed the world since the days of the | had | on | early nineties that some of us still re | member as the days of our youth. i From the magazines the girl's face, | as the emblem of the present sex en slavement, spread everywhere. A gro- cery firm wants to order a Christmas calendar for their customers:—What design do they put on it?—a ham? a cheese? a Bologna sausage? That's what they used to do, in the early nineties, and a skilled artist of those days could combine those three things with a charm that made your mouth water, jut now, oh no!-just a great, girl's face—or at most a girl's face eating a | Jologna sausage and saying, “How do | you like my Bologna?” They put girls’ faces now on eal endars, on book jackets, on posters and placards; next year they are going on billls, invoices and government blue books. The worst of it is that presently people began inventing a new set of words to go along with the new sex- stuff, The biggest and most successful was “sex-appeal” No one heard of any thing of that sort in the early nine- ties. But all the Miss Americas are supposed to have it: and the men and This “sex-appeal "whatever the In my time back ia the early Now it Is quite different. 1 Imagine a Job for want of it I think that one thing that helped along all this “sex-appeal” stuff was the fact of women getting into games. lawn tennis came first, They were In that from the start. Back in the nine. ties we didn't look on lawn tennis as a game in the real sense, It was just a sissy business on a lawn-~played with girls as part of an aflernoon party. We could all play it of course but the real games were football and baseball and ericket. Nobody played tennis well, or wanted to, Those of us who were six and a half feet high could beat the rest of usby hitting the ball down at us: little short fellers the height of the net got no show. Then came golf. In the early nine ties nobody played golf but a few fluffy old Bcotchmen in plalds and tar. tans, pink-faced and wholesome like an advertisement whisky. We used a little ball with a flask in used to play in parks and on sheep We didn't un- derstand that It was a game. We thought it was just their way of drink. whisky. We them for it. At their age, we couldn't expect them to stand up at the bar and drink as we did. They needed air with it They could hold more. Then the women butted In and the of golf began. It | moved out of the parks and the pas- tures: lald ont vast links and built | palaces and let in women, Now It is all women. for to notice round the thelr pock them knocking landscape, They 1s, respect ed Look at any landscape and the pleasant greens all spoiled by a bunch of tubby-looking Can they play? Of course not. They Just clutter up the course and spoil the whole thing: a few of them seem able to hit the ball, but not really. Any of game could have gone out and all over the lot. But they pieces and began to deck themselves in silk golf shirts and Imported and silly “plus-fours” Look at a couple of these men walk- and their soft new clothes, and their beads prematurely bald as | All men are bald now. It's the price they pay for being so | much with women. Back in the early | nineties we considered that a bald | man was either a professor or that | he hadn't lived right. We expected a | bald man to be a little silly over wom- en. Now they are all bald and all silly. ¢ So out they go to the links at them! What the hi do they ! think they are? Play? Oh, yes, of course the poor nuts can play. That's | Just the trouble. Now-a-days they go Look | golf so desperately that they play too well. There is no fun left In It: only effort and “sex-appeal” Back in the nineties we looked on | women as a dangerous drug. You had | to be mighty careful: keep away from | them all you could Of course there were odd times of | exception—evening parties and dances, once in each blue moon-—but to go round with them every night! Good Lord! The kind of feller who did that was the kind who got bald. Naturally, back in the early nine ties every young man presently “got crazy” over a girl (we called it that— we knew the right name for it), and then he got engaged to her and he went out with her all the time—float- ing round in a canoe under a shadowed river bank, and picking flowers, and crooning--in short quite crazy. But we understood it: the man was Just knocked out for the time being. Presently he'd either marry the girl or else she'd throw him over. Anyway he'd be all right later on—back in the bar again practically the same as ever, but anyway quite cured, The bar, of course, we had to our selves, There were no women there, We could stand at the rall and talk for three hours on three beers and a ham sandwich (fifteen cents the lot) and | never have to think of our “sex-ap- bar again, the women will be right in it: they rename everything: they'll eall it a solarium, or a herbarium or a piscatorian, or something of that sort, And the men will have to wear litle barroom shorts and drinking jumpers, But still what's the good of talk. ing: you can't alter things: 1 may as woll stop writing: and anyway 1 have to go out with some women. © Stephen Lesoock.~WNU Serviea about in comfort while he was on the verge of bankruptcy. third or fifth night if needed, How do Calotabs help Nature throw off a cold? First, Calotabs is one of the most thorough and de- sndable of all intestinal eliminants us cleansing the intestinal tract of the germ-laden mucus and toxines | purpose. of a purgative and diurefic, both of which are needed in the treatment of colds. Calotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the family package. ten cents for the trial package. (Adv) § “CAKES AND COOKIES just disappear in my big fam- ily,” laughs Mrs. Hickey. “Soit'sabig help when Ican get a full-pound can of my reliable, standby baking powder, Calumet, for only 25¢! As long as I bake, Calu- met will be in my pantry!” Grandfather Rommel, who was a baker for 40 years, says, “Calumet takes the guesswork out of the job nowadays.” P I OSE 105 THERE ! Name. Street HY was coffee bad for you, Dad? we iI thought it was bad just for us kids!” “Oh, no! Many grown-ups, too, find that the caffein in cof. Fee upsets their prove a real help.