Sudden out. veranda. He let the low gear motivate The car stayed and he came going to be any joy-riding,"” he an- nounced to one and all. “I just been reading here in the paper that au- tomobile accidents is still climbing to beat the band. What with all the reckless drivers there is on the road a body is taking an awful risk on the highway these days. Thirty- eight thousand, five hundred people killed in auto crashes during the last year, it says here. That's 1,500 more than last year. “This is one smart cookie who is going to stay right here at home, off the streets, where he's sure to be safe.” And that was that, Uncle Henry isn't any different from millions of the rest of us who are getting more than a little You'd think by this time folks would know better. But they still start fires—sometimes costly ones— with kerosene. alarmed at the increasing motor death toll. Like Uncle Henry, many of us feel at one time or another that we would be better off if we would stay at home where we are safe. Like Uncle Henry again, most of us are entirely ignorant of the facts. Home Accidents on Increase. You have a better chance of be- ing accidentally killed in ‘your own home than on the highway! You have more than twice as many chances of being accidentally killed at home than at work at the factory, in the office or on the farm. For the first time in eight years home accident fatalities were more numerous than motor vehicle fatalities in 1936. The increase in home accident deaths over the 1935 total was five times that of motor vehicle deaths! The rising accident toll has been especially notable in rural homes over the past few years. The busi- ness of farming is one of the worst offenders in the accident death col- umn. More agricultural workers meet accidental death in a year than workers in steel, public utili- ty, trade and service, transporta- tion or any other industry. In Kan- sas, one of the principal farming states, a farmer is killed every third day in a work accident. Special attention to the preven- tion of accidents in the home and on the farm will be directed as the na- tion celebrates the sixteenth annual National First Aid week from May 16 until iday 22. This week, started by industrial and manufacturing or- ganizations interested, both selfishly and altruistically in cutting down the number of accidental deaths, serves each year as an excuse for the car- rying on of educational programs in accident prevention and in the care of the injured after an accident. In many respects the home prob- lem is more serious than the traffic accident problem. Traffic accidents usually occur after a violation of some standard rule of the road. To prevent these violations we can place signs of warning to remind the driver of his danger; also he is more conscious of the chance of accident, for he is at the wheel of a vehicle which he must control if he is to protect his person. Kitchen Deadliest Room. But in the home sudden death lurks inconspicuously in the thou- sand-and-one little things that we do as a matter of course or habit. Our homes would look silly, indeed, were we to paint a sign in the seat of every chair, reading, “Don’t use me for a stepladder!” But our ac- cident lists would be much shorter. Broken arms, legs and backs too often follow such misuse of furni- ture. Just as there are more fatal ac- cidents in the home than anywhere else, there are more accidents result only though many of these end in total or partial disability. The kitchen is by far the most dangerous room in the house. We might well take a lesson from the highway and hang a little sign on every frying pan, to read, ‘‘Lift the lid away, not toward, the face.” Fifty-six per cent of all the burns suffered around the home are re- ceived in the kitchen, and burns ac- count for 35 per cent of all home accidents. Many women have been disfigured for life because they for- got to remember that fat frying is a hazardous occupation. Serious burns often follow the improper re- moval of a lid from a steamer or roaster, too. There are almost numberless ‘““‘don’ts’’ which, if observed, would prevent painful burns. A few are: Don't remove a grate top to a stove and put on a solid lid unless the manufacturer says it's all right. Don’t—for the humpeen millionth time—start a fire in a stove, fire- place or furnace with kerosene. And don’t keep gasoline and kerosene in the same kind of cans. Don't place an oil lamp on a table near a window, where the wind can blow the curtain against the lamp. It might be upset, ignit- ing the curtain. Don't permit a long, shaky, crooked stovepipe, wired across the room. Too easy for it to bulge open, causing a fire, or bruising someone's head. Falls Cause Many Deaths. Don’t leave oily mops, cleaning rags, etc., on basement or attic stairways. Remember there's a thing called spontaneous combus- tion. Don’t forget to disconnect elec- trical devices when you are through using them, Don’t bend or tie knots in electric connection cords, and don't hang them over nails. Falls are another important clas- sification of home accidents. Oddly enough, more falls occur in the bed- room than anywhere else in the house. Which only goes to show that if you're in the habit of falling out of bed, you'd better sleep next to the wall. More frequently we fall or stumble over a chair in the bedroom at night; some unfortu- LE A —— THE CENTRE More people are killed at home than in traffic accidents. Here is one of the reasons. chairs. in electric A person who is standing in a few inches of water is not in as secure a position as one who lights a match to see if the gas- oline tank is empty. In the age group over 65 more than twice as many persons are killed in home accidents as in mo- tor vehcle accidents. But here is the real pity: Five times as many children under the age of five years are killed in home accidents as in automobile accidents. The National Safety council's rec- ords show that in 1934 35 per cent of all accidental home deaths of children under five resulted from burns, and another 17 per cent from asphyxiation and suffocation. Chances of death from falls increase with an individual's age. Among children under five only 7 per cent of the fatalities were caused by falls. Yet in the age group from twenty-four to sixty-five, falls pro- duce 35 per cent of the fatalities. Children should be kept away from pots and pans in which foods are cooking on the better keep the youngsters out of the kitch- en when you're cooking Danger- ous chemicals such as lye, which children often mistake for sugar, should be kept out of their reach, and clearly labeled. All poisons kept about the house should be clearly identified, all kept in one place and either locked ug or placed high away from the reach of tiny arms. stove; Farm Accidents Varied. There are so many ways in which accidents can mar the peace and quiet of life on the farm that there is no room to go into them in de- tail here. The recent survey con- ducted in Kansas by the state board of health recently that farming is the most hazardous oc- cupation in the state, accounting for more than 50 per cent of all occu- pational fatalities. This is despite showed re ~ nate people have broken their backs doing this. There should be a light near the bed to be turned on, or lighted, immediately someone gets out of bed. The old saw about getting a black eye from bumping into a door in the dark is no joke at all. Many eyes have been put out by a bed- room door being left jar. Such ac- cidents wouldn't have happened if there had been a light. Second only to the bedroom as a place for dangerous falls is the kitchen. Stepping on a piece of fruit or a spot of grease too often ends up in a sprained ankle or a broken back. Climbing on things that were not meant to climb on when reaching for an article on a high shelf frequently brings disas- ter. Bath Tub Electrocutions. Falls in other rooms are not un- common. Once the bathroom was regarded as particularly dangerous. There should be a firm rail on the wall to grasp when you are climb- ing out of the tub. Such a rail may take only a few minutes to rig up; it may save a life or prevent years of suffering from the results of a severe fall, Probably more electrocutions all considered hazardous occupa- tions, are carried on in Kansas. Accidents to farming Kansans were varied. Some were killed pouring gasoline into a running mo- tor; some were cutting the winter wood supply with a buzz-saw, when the saw broke loose from the frame, some were riding loads of hay when the load toppled over, catapulting them to the earth, where they were pierced through by the tines of a pitchfork. A survey of accident causes on Ohio farms disclosed that falls ac- counted for the largest percentage; hand tools were next; stepping upon or striking objects next; handling machinery improperly next; then operating industrial motor vehicles injudiciously. A letter to the state board of health asking for information on ac- cident prevention in and around your home will bring plenty of help- ful suggestions. The state will be glad to offer instructions in the prin- ciples of first aid to care for those who have been accidentally hurt. If followed, these suggestions may save lives and limbs in days to ont Western Nesoaper Union, “Late for Work” By FLOYD GIBBONS girls to tell me about the biggest thrills of their lives, and follows: I read an article in a newspaper.” Well, sir, when I got that far in Frank's letter I began thinking to my- | self, ‘Hold on, there! Reading a newspaper might give you a thrill now {| and then, but it just ain't adventure.” | after all. You see, that newspaper article was about Frank's dad— | Frank J. Starr, Senior. And it was all about how he almost got fired for being late for work. That doesn’t sound like an adventure either, does it? Plenty of people not only “almost get fired,” but DO get fired every doggone day, and nobody thinks it's exciting. But this is a special case. You'll begin to realize that when I tell you that, after Frank Starr's bosses thought it over, and investigated the situation, they changed their minds about firing him for being late for work and decided, instead TO GIVE HIM A MEDAL FOR BEING LATE FOR WORK! Frank Heard a Scream for Help. Boy, that is news, isn't it 7 All my life I've wanted to work for a boss like that, But being late for work still doesn't come under the head of adventuring, so I guess I'd better get down to brass tacks and tell you WHY Frank Starr was late for work. The story that Frank Starr, Jr., got such a kick out of when he read it in the newspaper. Frank Starr—young Frank's dad-—worked for the dock department in New York City. He lived in West One Hundred Fifty-first street, not far from where he worked, and he was in the habit of going home at noontime to get a hot, home-cooked meal. On September 14, 1918, he had been home for lunch and was on the way back to work again, and as he was walking along the waterfront at One Hundred Fifty-fifth street and the Hudson river he heard a loud scream. “HELP!” “= Frank looked in the direction from which the scream had come. Out there on the water he saw a head bobbing up and down and a little arm raised up in the air. A kid out there in trouble! Frank didn't hesi- tate a second. The tide was running strong out in the river, but he didn’t even stop to take off his shoes or throw off his coat. He leaped into the water clothes and all and began swimming toward the drown- ing youngster. It was hard going with his clothes on, but he swam on toward the spot where he had seen that little head go down. Ashe reached the place, the boy came up again and Frank grabbed him. He took him under one arm and had started to swim back to shore again when he heard an agonized voice on the shore cry: “Save Jimmy-—save Jimmy, too!" Jimmy Also Had to Be Saved. Who was Jimmy? Frank had seen but one head bobbing around in that water, Was there another kid out there? He looked around. About thirty feet away he saw some bubbles coming to the surface. With one drowning boy already under his arm he turned again swam toward those bubbles. He had a tough job reaching the His clothes—the current— the boy under his arm-—all of those things hampered him in his battle. At last he reached the place where the sinister stream of bubbles rose to the surface. Down under the water he could see where those bubbles came from-—a still form floating down there. He reached down and pulled up a second youngster. Frank tucked the secoid youngster under his other arm. Both his arms were full now. Two KIDS, as well as a lot of heavy clothing, were dragging him down. But he started for shore again, fighting with his feet alone to keep afloat, He didn't have to swim far. A boat was putting coming to the rescue. Frank swam toward that boat when he was half-way in, and he put the two kids i in himself. and eryrt spot out from shore and It rea hed him Too Modest to Tell of His Feat. Both kids were unconscious when they reached After a long treatment they were both brought around again and taken to their homes. The doctors wanted to do something for Frank too, but he refused their offer of medical aid. He-—well--he said he was all right, «nd he guessed he'd better run along and change his clothes. He was late for work then, and he'd be a whole lot later by the time he got into some dry duds. Frank stowed up for work just half an hour late. The boss wanted to know what was the trouble, and Frank—well—he just sort of shrugged his shoulders and said he'd got wet pulling a couple kids out of some water and had to go home and change his clothes. That report went down on the record, and pretty soon it came to the attention of Murray Hurlburt, who was then commissioner of docks. Commissioner Hurlburt took a look at that report but he wasn't sat- isfled. Maybe it just looked like a new version of the sick grand- | mother alibi. Anyway, he decided to investigate. He found out about | pulling those kids out of the water all right—found out that there was | a lot more to it than Frank Starr's own modest statement indicated. So instead of firing Frank for being late he made a couple of telephone calls and told a couple of people what a brave fellow he had working in his department. And the result of those phone calls was that Frank was awarded | the Congressional Medal of Honor and the Medal of the Life Saving | Benevolent association of New York-—-for being late for work and, to use the words engraved on the back of one of those medals, “For sav- the shore Spiked Boots Ban Saved Traverse City Sidewalks His boots were as sacred to a lum- berjack in Michigan's boom timber Traverse City, reveals a Traverse City correspondent in the Detroit Free Press. The city passed an ordinance pro- viding a maximum fine of $10 or 10 days in jail for the lumberman who was found wearing spiked boots in the city limits. In the "80s and the '80s, there was a good reason for the rule. Traverse City sidewalks then were constructed of wood. After a couple of instances when the city had laid a sidewalk of new white pine and three or four hundred rivermen had come off a drive and riddled it with their spiked boots the city decided to call a hait. The boots, made of the finest kan- garoo skin and costing as much as $45 a pair, were purchased in the fall. Through the winter the loggers treated them carefully with mutton tallow, but they never wore them until spring when the drive started. Then the boots went on and stayed months. Marks of Past Iliness Shown by Hair and Nails Signs of past illness often re main long after the illness has end- ed. These are to be found where the circulation is poorest, viz., in the hair and the nails, says a writer in Pearson's London Weekly. After a severe illness, you will often find that a ridge appears run- ning across the nail and growing with it, advancing towards the free end as the nail gets longer. This is due to the fact that the illness has absorbed a good deal of the patient's strength and the circulation, in con- sequence, has not been sufficient to nourish the nails properly. When anyone gets run down in general health, the nails frequently suffer in other ways, especially if the condition is a chronic one. They may become brittle and crack eas- ily, while sometimes they are pit. ted with small holes as though they had been worm-eaten. To restore the appearance of the nails you must, of course, first re- store the general health. The prin- cipal cause of the debility must be treated, and when this has been done improvement in the circulation follows. As soon as the nails be- gin again to get proper nourish ment they quickly regain their There is a meanness that profits man who possesses it, stubbornly withholding One understand withholding When in doubt, etiquetie is an Don't ask your friend to do something for you he doesn’t want Your friendship will cool If you know intimately a suc- will not tell you everything. There will yet be a Society for Among Automobilists. Sometimes a pessimist is a man The discipline of children is now day. Today the greatest severity may consist in insisting that they eat spinach. We're satisfied with any bathtub Man hasn't done much with fish, for all his inventiveness. He has the seeds out of oranges. My Favorite y Gloria Swanson Film Star Recipe Caviar Canape 1 can of caviar 1 egg 1 tablespoonful of lemon 1 tablespoonful of onion juice juice Bread for toast according to the number to be served. Spread the caviar on round piece of toast. Then spread on this the yolk of the egg which has been hard-boiled and run through a sieve. Season with the lemon juice, although the lat- ter is a matter of personal taste and should be used at the discre- tion of the individual. Trim the edges with the grated white of the egg and garnish with small piece of tomato. Coprright —WNU Bervice. Lazy, bored, grouchy You may feel this way as a result of constipation Constipation is an enemy of pleas- ure. It dulls your enjoyment of the best entertainment and the best friends. To neglect constipation is to In- vite serious trouble. For your health's sake, take Black-Draug? the first sign of constipation. You'll soon feel better. Heres a laxative that is purely vegetable, prompt, reliable. BLACK-DRAUGHT A GOOD LAXATIVE Different Viewpoints Looking from a mountain of vi- sion or from a valley of self-seek- ing makes a difference in the out- look. KILLS INSECTS ON FLOWERS » FRUITS VEGETABLES & SHRUBS Demand original sealed bottles, from pour dealer eye EE——————————— WNU—4 17-37 The Extremes There is no worse evil than a WOMEN 27: WEAK , Pierce's Favorite Pre tonic certainly made a