Fun for the Whole Family THE FEATHERHEADS By 0*on? The Lid's Off WAVE' VoU ANV TiSHT- FlTTlWG" CAPS? I -CiS Aisl | ILL WlfJD -THAT poesnT Swe HAT-reRS SOME BUSlMgSS rr -3fk\ -op" S'M ATTER POP ? Look! Keep Y our Wishes Down By C M. PAYNE rf MESCAL IKE Br S. L. HUNTLEY Local S&uiety a OATCturrvi WER. VJMATCVCR |5TPuCXMiM* opusxxxyi?} r bo MI55U5 T 1 O OST TV4JNJK BRATTLE CVC* 3MCU0kS.8MC*S ,PO??N>e"Tv?r *(T*??cce* Aa rw ry*v ??v ?a*j j*tim TW a ?v?cO ( AMJTTM MeR VOAUGMTOITJ r uuocasmMO U3MC9 "?M p*t] >WMCKi vou ' CA.KJ >OU lMAfi?klG >"r TMCV-VC OCCNi MARRIED TIM VEAR3 AMD MCS wcvee oeEKjAvu&v ? WHASTMC f vmuv i *jA*sm toss TcatEsI HCR A 3|N&?jvuW,-lVeV^^S_'WO' rhvruonui Vot f?AJJIE' h-KAJE* bm? YigiACJOUS'.P"^ aur rru.-M-n~e ^A^loFLOSoJHiatJrr VMlXEVj MB y,WM> tVS AfMWsJ * SAiLNtmnooLE y JU^PUWCM , .ecwvu SMCf apA, '>,1 I ' V FINNEY OF THE FORCE -'/I-*0-1? Write Is Right CATCMIM ' AUTOI STS VioiaTin' tH' LAW Be Farife BiJ SINKS rr" BRONC PEELER ? Pete's Puzzled By FRED HARMAN IN-rtLUfcE-rtCe | lOo?rf BSUEvJE ?4irA? WHAR WAS HE, i'o ukt 0 < "To KfJovJ . Bronc Piute's WM4N CUTTING CATttLt (.St-P owf. Oft rtoftE A atao ? A VJCU. TftAlNEO cow 40ftSST NEEDS hk> 6010IH6 Oft rWvCngNT Of Trtt QfirtS *?>fl -far Qtoft. k ?<*>?** ^nrr vM?r fb 00 a*o ooCs rf QutCKlV?? rtEEPl** AFTER. -rt? ANlf^A*. AHO tbQrt** ft ?N VMAf- rwcft OKltirfiOfJ MECESSAfty f*> SEPA^rTE % The Curse of Progress Unusual Guest (about to spend Uie night in a haunted chamber) ? Has any thing ? er ? unusual ever happened in connection with this room? Sinister Retainer? Not for over 50 years, sir. Guest (relieved)? And what hap pened then? Sinister Retainer? A gentleman who spent the night here, sir, ap peared at breakfast the next morn ing.? Stray Stories Magazine. Tommy Preferred the Dog Tommy? Mummy, has Aunt Betty got a little baby? Mother ? Yes, dear. Tommy ? Has Aunt May? Mother? No, aha has a little dog instead. " Tommy ? O, I suppose she had first pick !-f Portland Express. No Worry About Gas Herman ? Jasper used to have a car that con $3,000. Jerry? What kind of ? car doas be uae now? Herman? A street car. the REBEL ?r GLUYAS Williams oscMf nwi-M-M *?OUPffWtt ANT VMM msHMM 3W4 MKU ft SW ?v nmos ?tns -w* ?oom ? urns oh-m MUMVMC.KOOKf wauKHtiwytM/ ? u MC>M5?T51tPS MM4 UPSltoM I / \ ?W IIPMX.lt UNMt or Dm w><> Mptvny A6MN ^ewwut foctta*. tOWtfl HA6tlV R* MP*M BOW. UPSfAM*. W0W**?i6 HOW KNEW STAR DUST Aiovie ? Radio r* By VIRGINIA VALE** SO PHENOMENAL is the suc cess of National Broadcast ing company's Spelling Bee program that soon it will be transferred from its Saturday afternoon spot to an evening hour on the blue network. Apparently the whole country feels the urge to compete, for mail pours in from colleges, from old people's homes, from women's clubs and orphans' asylums, from volun teer firemen and swanky country clubs asking for a chance to join the fun. Paul Wing, who conducts the pro gram, travels around the country at top speed, broadcasting from here and there, drawing such crowds of fans you would think it was Robert Taylor making a personal appear ance. If Carole Lombard is not already one of your favorite stars, she will be as soon as you see "Swing High, Swing Low." She is so beautiful, so in gratiating, such a good sport that you just want to climb up to the screen and shake Fred McMur ray for nearly breaking her heart. This picture may do iiu ena 01 aamage and cause innumer- Carole able family rows, Lombard for Carole never nags, never whimpers, never rages. The character she plays is going to be held up as a model for behavior in private life by all the young fiances and husbands. ? * ? Frances Farmer, who plays the feminine lead in "Toast of New York," has skyrocketed to fame in record time, bat nevertheless, she has not buried her stage ambitions. This summer she will go to New Hampshire to work with the Peter boro Players. ? * ? The rest of Hollywood may be lieve that Glenn Morris, Olympic decathlon winner, will make an ideal Tarzan, but Lupe Velez holds firmly to the belief that only Johnny Weismuller can effectively play the part. Even Lupe had to admit in the midst of argument that Glenn Morris had the looks and physique for the part, but she still held out that he would never be able to give the Tarzan yell. Whereupon some old meanie said that in that case the producers would hire the same yeller who howled for Johnny. Marion Claire, who for the past two years has been trouping around the country with "The Great Waltz," has been signed to play Bobby Breen's mother in "Make a Wish." Schulberg has signed Lenore Ulric, who was so good as the vi cious grafting friend of "Camilie," to play in "The Great Gambini." A girl in her 'teens named Wyn Cahoon who has had considerable success on the New York stage has been signed by Columbia, who have also nailed the veteran Dick Arlen down to a contract to keep him from gallivanting off to England again. _* ? For those audiences that like chills and fever, horror and sus pense, blood and thunder, there are two new pictures just made to or der. "The Soldier and the Lady," an RKO picture which is really that old classic of spine chillers, "Mich ael Strogoff," is the more spectacu lar since it introduces army scenes made in Europe. More intimate, but less blood-curdling, is "Love From a Stranger," which stars Ann Hard ing and Basil Rathbone. It is a story of a mild young woman who wins a sweepstake prize and mar ries a fiend who has dispatched sev eral wives via morbidly-contrived murder. ODDS AND ENDS ? Bing Crosby has been kidded so much about his balloon ing figure that he has taken up tennis in an effort to reduce. Incidentally , did you hear hti old friend Harry Barris on his program? And wouldn't you love to see him in a picture with Bing? . . . Basil Rathbone , as I kept reminding myself all through his horrifying antics in "Love \ From a Stranger," keeps 86 kinds of tea on hand at his house so as to have just the flavor he wants of an afternoon . . . I AU Hollywood swooped down on the Selznick-l fiternational studios to witch < the Coronation scenes in m The Prisoner of Zenda .** And then Mudrline Carroll broke up the scene by whispering to Ronald Colman just as the hundreds of extras in the procession got under way, m Don't look now, but I think we are being followed" ? Western Newspaper Union. Clayfield Baffles Experts There is a clayfield at the village of Ewenny, near Bridgend, from which clay has been taken for near ly a century, yet there are no signs of excavations, rotes a writer in London Answers Magazine. Experts I are baffled, for there should be a hole at least fifty feet dep. It is known as the "Potter's Field," and adjoins a world ? famous pottery. Thousands of tons of clay have been t?ken from it, but the supply seems inexhaustible Sunbonnet Girls to Applique on a Quilt ? ? ? So quaint, so colorful ? ihese adorable "Sunbonnet" maidens with their bobbing balloons ? you won't be able to wait to applique them on a quilt I The block meas ures 9 inches. Here's a long-locked for opportunity to utilize those gay scraps you've been saving. You Pattern 5734 can use the same design on scarfs and pillows and so complete a bedroom ensemble. The patches are simple in form? you'll find the work goes quickly. In pattern 5724 you will find the Block Chart, an illustration for cutting, sewing and finishing, together with yardage chart, diagram of quilt to help arrange the blocks for single and double bed size, and a diagram of block which serves as a guide for placing the patches and sug gests contrasting materials. To obtain this pattern send IS cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th Street, New York, N. Y. Write plainly your name, address and pattern number. Mail Service in Alaska Alaska is the show place of mail service, the last frontier, the re gion of the greatest variety of mail transportation in the world. There one may see the mail car ried by railroad, wheeled horse vehicles, horse sleds, dog sleds, reindeer sleds, by men on foot and on snowshoes, by steamboat, gas oline boat, the white man's row boat, the Eskimo kayak and the airplane. ? Washington Post. Why Laxatives Fail In Stubborn Constipation Twelve to 24 hours is too long to wait when relief from clogged bowele and conetipation Is needed, for then enor moua quantitiee of bacteria accumu* late, causing QAS, indigestion and many restless, sleepless nights. If you want REAL, QUICK RELIEF, take a liquid compound such as Ad lerika. Adlerlka contalne SEVEN ca thartic and carminative ingredients that act on the stomach and BOTH bowele. Moet "overnight" laxatives contain one ingredient that acts on the lower bowel only. Adlerika'e DOUBLE ACTION gives your eystem a thorough cleansing, bringing out old poisonous waste mat ter that may have caused QAS pains, sour stomach, headachee and sleepless nights for months. Adlerika relieves stomach QAS at once and ueuatty removes bowel con gestlon In lees than two hours. No waiting for overnight results. This famous treatment nas been recom mended by many doctors and drug gists for 35 yeare. Take Adlerika one half hour before breakfast or one hour before bedtime and in a short while you will feel marvelously refreshed. At all Leading Drugglete. Books Are Company If you can entertain yourself, you are fortified against many a long evening without company. Try the companionship of books. To Women: If you suffer every month you owe It to yourself to take note of Cardui and find out whether It will benefit you. Functional pains of menstruation have, In many, many cases, been eased by Cardui. And where mal nutrition (poor nourishment) had taken away women's strength, Car dui has been found to Increase the appetite, improve digestion and in that way help to build up a natural resistance to certain useless suffering. (Where Car dui falls to benef% consult a physician.) Ask your druggist for Cardui ? (pro nounced "Card-u-i.") Show Intelligence You don't hear babies using the baby talk that grown people utter to them. beat Uvf INSECTS IIS ? FIUITS :S t SHIUBS dM WNU ? ? 19 37