Ask Me Another ® A General Quiz The Questions 1. What people are considered the most law-abiding? 2. What is the highest state in the Union, in average altitude? 3. How high above sea level is its principal city? 4. What do the letters I. H. S. stand for? 5. A township is composed of how many square miles? 6. What is St. EImo’s fire? 7. What sports event attracts the largest crowd? The Answers 1. Generally speaking, the Fin- landers are the most law-abiding. A police system is not necessary. 2. Colorado. 3. Denver is one mile above sea level. 4. Jesus Hominum Salvator (Jesus the Savior of Men), more correctly IHS, the first three let- ters in the name Jesus in Greek. 5. A township is composed of 36 square miles. 6. A flame-like appearance oc- casionally seen during storms and other atmospheric disturbances is- suing from pointed and elevated objects. 7. The world’s largest sports gallery is that watching the an- nual Tour de France, a 2,755-mile race in which the field consists of around 100 professional cyclists. More than one million spectators line the route of the race. NO ONE IS IMMUNE TO ACID INDIGESTION — i a But Why Suffer? Here's how you can “Alkalize”’ anytime—anywhere~the easy “Phillips’”’ way! WHY SUFFER from headaches, “gas,” “upsets” and “biliousness” due to Acid Indigestion—when now there is a way that relieves excess stomach acid with incredible speed. Simply take two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets at first sign of distress. Carry them with you — take them unnoticed by others. Results are amazing. There's ns nausea or “bloated” feeling. It produces no “gas” to embarrass you and offend others. “Acid indiges- tion” disappears. You feel great, Get a bottle of liguid “Phillips’” for home use. And a box of Philips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets to carry with you. But — be sure any bottle or box you accept is clearly marked “Phillips’™ Milk of Magnesia. PHILLIPS’ MILK OF MAGNESIA % IN LIQUID OR TABLET FORM What We Share Not what we give, but what we giver is bare.—Lowell. NERVOUS? Do you feel 30 nervous you want to weream? Are you cross and irritable? Do you scold those dearest to you? If your nerves are on edge and you feel oe need & good general system tonie, dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com 3 made especially for women. For over 60 years one woman has told an- other how to go “smiling thru” with reliable Pinkham's Compound. Te helps nature build up more physical resistance and thus helpa calm quivering nerves and lessen discomforts from Annoying BY mites which often se company fem: unctional disorders, hy not give it a chance to help YOU? Over one million women have written in teporting wonderful benefits from Pinkham’s Compound. EE, WNU—4 42-38 Homage of Vice Hyprocisy is the homage which vice renders to virtue.—La Roche- foucauld. HELP KIDNEYS To Get Rid of Acid and P Waste Grovide scanty or too frequent url. or Diadgay be 8 warning of some kidney You may By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK.—As America looks i to its air defenses, it finds, as acting chief of the army air corps, a pioneer technician in the adapta- tion of the air- Arnold Seems plane to war uses, Well Qualified He is Brig. Gen. For Air Chief H. H. Arnold, as- suming command of the corps after the death of Maj. Gen. Oscar Westover, in a plane wreck. Soon after the Wright brothers air jumps, young Lieutenant Arnold was sent to Dayton, Ohio, not only to learn to fly, but to make tech- nical studies of the possibilities of aircraft for observation and fight- ing. He was among the earliest of the army's trained fliers, and, in 1912, won the Mackay medal for a triangular flight, 30 miles to the leg, from College Point, Md., over Wash- ington and Fort Meyer. In 1935, he again won this trophy for his explait of the previous year in leading a flight of 10 bombing planes from Washington to Fairbanks, Alaska. He has been an aggressive cham- | ! in 1926 for what was considered an and was with the A. E. F. in France, in the closing months of the World war, on inspection duty. came assistant chief of the air corps in January, 1936. special means for topographical ob- flying. Point in 1907. touched them. has had his back Clouds Have to turn as his world out- side of it became mostly chaos. As for the Red Cross, he's been doing God, but his business He was a letter-man on the Uni- On the latter job, he had a ringside seat at man-made For 19 years, he has organized and efficient battlers He is a native of Minnesota, N WASHINGTON, Congressman Lucius N. Littauer of New York in the house poker games. And just a little thi Solons’ Losses hile something out of the kitty is Help Finance the $2,250,000 grad- Harvard Gift uate school of pub- lic administration, which he handed Harvard and which recently opened. Mr. Lit- tauer is the widely known glove po- tentate of Gloversville. He is 79 years old, graduated from Harvard 59 years ago. His father, a German immigrant, founded the family glove factory. He has established many benefactions for useful public purposes, among them a gift of $1,000,000 in 1929, to “bring about a better understanding among all mankind.” He provided $100,000 to recondition his old boyhood swim- ming hole, «va THE subject of totalitarian humor is brought up by President James L. McConaughy, of Wesleyan college. He says that's what's the - matter with the Finds What iron men—no hu- The Dictators mor. He finds hu- Lack--Humor! mor the salt and leaven which will save democracy, it short-circuits egoism and pulls down the stuffed shirts, and is kin to humility, Doctor McConaughy, New York- born, Yale '09, has been president of Wesleyan since 1025, He is a modern, alert pedagogue, with a broad social point of view and an awareness of timely Problems. % Consolidated N ews ’ eatures, Why They Were Roundheads In the reign of Charles I a Puri- tan, or member of the Parliamen- tary party who wore his hair cut short was called a Roundhead in de- rision by the Cavaliers, who usually wore ringlets, Look Young By Striving For Posture By PATRICIA LINDSAY © Beil Syndicate. ~WNU Service, HE way you carry yourself is not only indicative of what sort of person you are, but it either adds years to you or makes you look younger, When wealthy ladies pay high prices for courses in self-improve- ment in the leading salons, the first son, (# Wrong posture, right posture. how to walk correctly and to sit correctly, the midriff!” and buttocks’ as if “tuck in your you had been rules to remember as you walk. and ‘don’t cross your knees,” will take you far in sitting posture if you will but remember them. From one of the leading salons, these two corrective exercises, muscles and give Both are necessary to acquire an erect EXERCISE 1 1. On back with right knee pulled to chest and both hands 2. Swing left leg back over head Repeat with right three times. EXERCISE 2 1. On knees, head back, hands downward. 2. Bend slowly forward, keeping on heels. Drop head to floor and relax. 3. Keeping head down, round the and slowly raise the body. ment begins at lowest vertebrae and slowly lifts thighs away from heels at same time. Head and shoulders rise last to original position. Repeat five times, working up to fifteen times altogeth- er in a few days. Not difficult are they? Try going through them every day for a month, HINT-OF-THE-DAY If a child possesses his own aids to body health and cleanliness he is more likely to use them. “My very own hair brush” —“My very own tooth paste” — makes him proud. If he is taught how to use them and why he must use them, a mother will have little difficulty in getting him to do so. Of course all children go through that obstinate age when any sug- gestion is vetoed, when every re quest calls forth a lengthy argu ment. But even during this stage of growing pains the child is quite likely to slip off and do what he has been told to do after he has satis fied his ego by displaying his obsti- nance, that is, Zioviding his earlier years have a daily groom. ing routine. ing health, promoting growth and preventing disease. Re- Your Food and Your Eyes Many people regard their eye- of the five senses which operate in some mysterious manner of their | own! If they suffer from indigestion, they recognize that it 18 quite apt to be due to something they ate. If they are troubled with stomach, liver or | kidney complaints, they quickly ap- preciate that pro longed dietary indiscretions may But it never occurs to them that what | they eat may affect the eyes just | ternal organs. It is not uncommon, during an attack of biliousness, to suffer a! disturbance of the vision. But that | usually disappears with the disorder that caused it. | may produce eye troubles that | health, efficiency, and even per- sonal safety, Night Blindness Explained For example, it has been estab- lished that there is a definite re. lation between your vision and the in your diet; between | nt at night, and the amount of vita. min A-containing foods that youl To understand this astonishing fact, it is necessary to know that accomplished by means of chemi- cal changes in the pigment at the back of the eye. This is known as the “visual purple” of the retina and ome of its important compo- nents is carotene, which is the ac- tive form of vitamin A. The visual purple might be com- in a camera. | the eyes are suddenly exposed to bright light, the visual purple is | greatly reduced or bleached. This | change results in a stimulation of | the optic nerve and enables you to see clearly. When an adequate supply of vi- tamin A is present in the body, | But when the supply is inadequate, a much longer pe- many | That is the condition known as | Victims of this de- readjust them- ] i | | other vehicles. A Common Complaint Unfortunately, the prevalence of of it than these living in the rural areas. This is borne out by the fact that ocular disorders from vi- | tamin deficiency are less common in urban than in rural areas. Children Often Victims Since the discovery of the close connection between vitamin A and the ability to see in dim light, sci- entists have tested large numbers of school children to determine whether vitamin A was present in their diet in adequate amounts. It was revealed that from 26 to 79 per cent of the children examined had incipient night blindness. The same deplorable conditions were found among adults. Mild | to moderate degrees of vitamin A | deficiency were present in from 10 to over 50 per of each group tested, Yet here is the remarkable thing —in nearly every case, a diet rich in vitarnin A for a few weeks re- stored the vision to normal. | cent A Significant Experiment An even more striking example of the power of food to affect the eyesight is to be found in the re. | port of an experiment in breeding scws were given food in abundance but lacking vitamin A | for 160 before and for days after breeding. ters of 35 pigs, all were blind. In another litter of 14 pigs, all were sightless. But under normal feed. days 30 litters of pigs with normal eyes and vision. This experiment Justi. scientists, that ments may so alter vital processes occur, Cause of Other Eye Disorders Night blindness is not the only eye disease caused by an improp- er diet. Xerophthalmia or con characterized by cessive dryness of the eyeball, has long been known to be caused by a vitamin A deficiency. It 1s also well known that a liberal amount of this vitamin will pre. vent that serious disease and will even effect a cure where destruc. tion of the cornea not pro- gressed too far. This importance of foods rich in has suggests the tremendous including in the diet vitamin A-—cod- and other fish-liver oils: milk and oth- er dairy pro is; green leafy and yellow vegetables: and egg yolk. whose similar ciose i and a another vitamin—vi- 1 abun- GUC Experiments dietary requirem to those of ing mos Were she concerned about pro- tecting the blessing of good eye- alone, that be suffi. cient reas every homemak- work x 13] SIgN would on wny vitamins vilglnins not only 2 ire dependent 3 mins, ior they have ons to perform. diet may cause automobiles blind- ght so that they are dan- not only to themselves and gers, but to evervone roads. A de- send them through life with half-efficient bod. ies, half-efficient brains, half-effi- cient senses That is why I urge you to learn everything vou can about food, so that in planning meals you will not only feed your eyes, your husband's eyes and your chil- dren's eves, but will take advan- tage of the wonderful discoveries of nutritional science to make ev- ery member of the family so effi- cient that they will enjoy the best of health each day of their lives, © WNU —C. Houston Goudiss— 1638-33 in i r up people to drive TOUs their passer on the ficient $ fa . i streets and diet will also Flow You Can Look Slimmer F I you'll certainly enjoy hax both of these smart, new, slen izing styles. They're extremely becoming, and made up in mate- rials and colors of your own choos- ing, they will be the joy of your life, one for house work, and the other for afternoon and dinner en- gagements. Both of these dresses are so very simple to make that you'll thoroughly enjoy doing it. 1559 ginners. The House Dress. Notice how very practical and comfortable this dress is, with ev- ery detail you want for working freedom and slim lines. Darts make the waistline slim and neat, but not tight. The armholes are ample, the sleeves very short, and slashed for greater freedom. The skirt has sufficient, unhampering fullness at the hem. It's a dia- gram design, that you can finish in a few hours. For this, choose percale, calico, or gingham. The Afternoon Dress. Just wait to see how nice ‘and slim your hips look, in this clev- erly designed dress, with just a little fullness above the waist to emphasize the slick, smooth cut below. This design gives you the fashiohable bodice detailing, in soft, lengtheniing jabot drapes that Jishop sleeves are another and very becoming style, i to women. ss will be lovely in velvet, thin wool or silk Toad y 1s galiering iarge The Patterns. lesigned for sizes 34, 36, , 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 38 equires 4%; yards of 35 i8 des 9 inch ma- ial. 2% yards of ricrac braid. 613 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 48, 48, 50 and 52. With long sleeves, size 38 requires 5 yards of 39 inch material: with short sleeves, 4% wards. Collar and jabot in contrast would take 3% yard. Fall and Winter Fashion Book. The new 32-page Fall and Win ter Pattern Book which shows photographs of the dresses being worn is now out. (One pattern and the Fall and Winter Pattern Book —25 cents.) You can order the book separately for 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept, 247 W. Forty-third street, New York, N. Y. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate. —WNU Service. Co ———————— a TUNE IN! every Men. through Pri. at "75": ™ Greater Modesty Modesty forbids what the does not.—Seneca. Lniog BEAUTE ATES 2 Natural -Looking FALSE TEETH have a dressy, but not a fussy, manity ?-—Byron. 7 Siifica ales eave that Depeodent storm! ASE TT Iriam! * ns Soh ee 0%