SUCH IS LIFE? Good Ole Bed JuniO^ I WAKTT ^ TO HAVE A TALK WITH you ABOUT SOMETHING "THAT IS easy -to GET IKttO AMD HARD TO GET ^jOUT OF ' ;// wish vou'd- I jf &VE JUNIOR A I ff,. LECTURE OH / J,{{ BAD HABITS* ( J/ HE'S late S V 7D SCHOOL- ES/ERY s MOM/H(r THAT IS A 8AP . vWAS/r J WD YOU KWOYV WHAT I By CHARLES SUGHROE Trace Life of Man Back Over 70,000,000 Years Earliest Known Link Found in Dead Montana Fore?t Washington. ? Scattered remains of the earliest known members of the order of life to which modem man belongs have been discovered Id central Montana by three scien tists who in succession spent nearly thirty years exploring a wooded par adise of 70,000.000 years ago. ac cording to a report issued by the Smithsonian institution. Only teeth and jaws of these crea tures have been found and only a paleontologist, ? the report says, could recognize their relationship to the monkeys, apes and humans of today. Tiny creatures, hardly larger than mice, they lived in trees of the ancient forest region just east of the Crazy mountains, according to Dr. George Gaylord Simpson of the American Museum of Natural History, author of the report. No claim is made that the little animals were in the direct ancestral line of present-day primates. It is believed that they were off-shoots of an earlier general and still unknown stock from which man also derived. Reptiles Eat Animals. The branch of life in question ap parently became extinct after the Pal eocene age, and signs indicate many of the animals were devoured by large crocodile-like reptiles which were the dominant creatures of their period. The explorations were begun in AND THE PINS FALL Mrs. Annie B. Desel, ieventy-flve years old, who has been secretary and treasurer of the Central Ladies Bowling club of New York since 1901. Mrs. Desel is an ardent bowl er and appears each week at the club to participate in the game. She bowls an average score of 155. 1908 by Albert C. Silberling of the United States geological survey, and a large collection of all sorts of specimens was made' Investigation was continued by the late James W. Gidley of the National museum staff and continued after his death in 1931 by Dr Simpson. Dr Simpson's re port is based largely on the exten sive Smithsonian collection of the fossils from the Crazy mountain area. Although only four or five semi complete skulls and no complete skeleton exists in the collection. Dr. Simpson states that one of the types discovered seems to combine vari ous fundamental features of the pseudo-monkeys, the lemurs and tarisoids, the latter now represented only in the East Indian tarsius. Early Animal Life. Some scientists hold the view that the primate branch which eventual ly produced man budded off from the main primate stock in the tar sioid stage. The report discloses the discovery also of remains of animals related to bears and to such insectivores of today as shrews and moles, as well as discovery of probably the earliest beginnings of the family now repre sented by horses, cattle, deer and bison. In the earliest strata of the Crazy mountain formation, according to the report, are found fragments of animals at least 50.000.000 years old and entirely different from any known today These are the multi tuberculates. which at one time con stituted the most abundant form of mammal life. The collection from this area in cludes the finest single multi tuberculate specimen yet discov ered, the report states, skull, jaws and partial skeleton of one of the small rodent-like animals. My Neighbor Says := Egg whites, to be used (or meringue, will beat stiller if a pinch of salt is added to them. ? ? ? The next time you make a pump kin pie, when pie is nearly done, cover top with marshmallows and return to the oven for 10 minutes. It gives a different flavor to the pie. ? ? ? Most flowering plants and those that grow rapidly in the house should be watered daily. Give less water on days when the sun does not shine or when plants are in the shade. ? ? ? Great care must be taken in har vesting all kinds of vegetables. Even a small bruise will make a squash rot, and if the tops of the beets are cut off closer than an inch from the beet itself, bleeding will re sult. C Associated Newspapers.? WNU Service. a^eamy,nute Caution and Not Confusion By LEONARD A. BARRETT It is better to be cautious than mentally confused. There is an im portant distinc tion between cau tion and worry. The former is an attitude of mind devoutly to be wished. Caution is prudence, foresight, wari ness, but worry is fretting, har assing one's self, being over-anx ious about things, many of which never happen. Caution is con structive; worry is destructive. It is worry and not caution that ultimately kills; for it is like sand in delicate cog wheels. It finally blocks the machinery of the nervous system. There is noth ing to be gained in closing the door alter the horse has escaped. Cau SAVE SOME FOR ME! Such is the appealing attitude of this bear club at the London zoo, that words aren't necessary to describe the picture. tion would close the door before the horse escapes. Worry cannot rem edy a matter. The distinction be tween worry and caution is of fun damental importance in keeping mental poise and balance. What are the things people worry about? For the most part they are the things that never happen; the circumstances which could arise; the uncertain elements which make up routine living; the things which have happened to some one else. It would be an illuminating experience if all the readers of this article would make a list Of the things they have worried about during the last five years, then check the events which have really happened. We venture the guess that nine out of ten items would remain un checked. Fear causes worry. It poisons the psychic centers. It makes oar hori ions c load 7 and haiy. Fear dims onr mental vision and anesthetizes oar nervous energy. Many children are afraid of the dark. Childish and silly, we say. Yet, aren't we all? The darkness of the future which has not yet ar rived overwhelms us. Analyze fear when it first makes its attack. Stop manufacturing imaginary trouble. Fear is not intelligent. Cease being influenced by ghost stories. Be cau tious. but shun worry. Crises come into every life. Im portant situations demand definite decisions. Defeat and victory both depend upon our reserve re sources of mental and nervous stamina. Our decisions must be concerned with life purposes and less centered upon life's per plexities. If we heed courageously each day, the future will not mat ter. If we are more concerned with what we can give to the future than what we can get out of the present, we shall avoid many pitfalls of wor ry. If we keep our mental balance, we aha 11 be able to meet issues clearly and properly evaluate future events If we keep faith with our selves by living courageously as we think of courage, we shall be using knowledge and not dissipating it. Don't make worry aa "escape for reality;" make caution an effectual element In each day's work. ? wm?l Uato*. ALL her life Anna Lee has wanted a pretty bedroom. And never got it. In the old days at home there was no money to spare, what with the three younger children (till in school and the house needing this for the roof and that for the porch. Then when Anna Lee married, the babies came thick and fast for the first few years, and Anna Lee's room was usually a cross between a baby ward and first aid station. But eventually her littlest one trotted oil to school one golden au tumn morning. And Robert came The Babies Came Thick and Fast. home that same night with a raise in his pocket. So Anna Lee breathed a big sigh, cried a tear or two for the babies who were trying their wings, and began to think about that dream room. Of course, through the years she'd changed her mind a dozen times as to just what she did want But always it was going to be a misty tranquil room that would be balm to a lady harassed with the thousand and one details of making a pleasant home. Now that the room is actually coming to life, it is just as serene and lovely as she'd always dreamed, even though it is very modem in colorings. The new fur niture they bought is bleached ma hogany in Adam design and Anna Lee has the walls painted deep old delft blue with a pale ofT-pink ceil ing. A light beige self-patterned rug was her choice for the floor while she used a pale off-pink ninon at the windows. A monk's cloth in the same blue as that used for the walls makes for a bedspread and the dressing table bench has a top of the same fabric. Beige frames and mats for the pictures and some extra beige cushions add their ac cent, while lamps and small ac cessories ore in pale pink porce lain. ? ? ? youthful Carefree Charm. They were a gay pair who didn't know the difference when they fur nished their first little place. So it turned out to be something of a hodge-podge even if it did have a youthful, carefree charm. But not at all what they wanted by the time they were thirtyish and on the so phisticated side. So now they're weeding out. "We are refurnishing gradually with Federal American reproduc tions," wrote Ellen B., "but we can't do it all at once. And we need ideas on how to proceed. So far we are concentrating on the liv ing room where we have a dull gray-gre^n broadloom rug, a Vir ginia sofa in brown colonial tapes try with small flowers, a mulberry wing chair, a brown chair, a green club chair, a pull-up chair with a black horse hair seat. The woods are dark mahogany and the lamps are white? walls will be reflmshed in white or cream? which would be best? Would you please make sug gestions (or draperies and curtains, a new cover for the brown chair, a new slip cover (or the green club chair? What type of pictures would you suggest?" Let's see? you'll be retaining the dull green rug, the brown sofa, the mulberry wing chair, the black horsehair and white lamps. We'd pre(er off-white walls with the soft est of gray green raw silk for draperies over off-white glass cur tains. Then for the two chairs to be recovered, select a Williamsburg type of chintz with a sprawling pat tern in parchment colorings, and have drab green welting and for each chair a little round cushion in the same gray green. As for pic tures, nothing would be more suit able than reproductions of old por traits, Gilbert Stuarts for instance, in heavy gold frames. And you'll probably want a convex mirror with an eagle presiding over the oval gilt frame. This type of room has a certain formality, so that accessories should have some dignity and poise. That's why silver in the Sheffield type of designs would be so graciously appropriate, e By Bettv WcUs ? WNU Scrvlca. OUTFIT FOR FALL Jane Wyman, of the Alms, wean this smart daytime dress designed for her by Milo Anderson, promi nent Coast designer. Of navy blue bengaline, the dress shows a squared yoke with high fitted col lar finished with a tailored bow at the front, of powder blue crepe, a fitted peplum and gored skirt. Her loose crushed gauntlet gloves are of powder blue crepe matching the yoke, and her visored beret shows touches of the same fabric. "Make Their Manners" "Make their manners" was the expression Ohio forefathers used for the training given children in cour tesy and behavior. Hawaii Wages War on Wild Sheep I Part of ? herd of 3,000 wild sbeep and goats recently slaughtered oo the island of Hawaii by federal and territorial officials in an effort to conserve the Island's watershed. It is estimated that 40,000 animals arc ranging the upper areas at the island. ? Pan Pacific Press Bureau photo. IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By REV. HAROLD L LUNDQU1ST. Dean of the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. ? Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for October 24 CHRISTIAN RENEWAL LESSON TEXT? Titus 3:1-11. GOLDEN TEXT? ror the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men.? Titus 2:11. PRIMARY TOPIC? The Good Shepherd. JUNIOR TOPIC? In His Likeness. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC? A New Life In Christ YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC? Renewed Life Through Christ The pastoral epistles, of which Titus is one, were written by Paul to his young brethren in the faith who had been called to the ministry of the gospel to instruct them concern ing three important matters ? (1) Church order and organization, (2) sound doctrine and (3) holy living. The third chapter of Titus, our lesson for today, deals with the life of believers in Christ in their rela tion to unbelievers. The great un derlying reason why Christians should conduct themselves in meek ness and humility toward others is that except for God's grace we who bear the name of Christ would be, and indeed were before our regen eration, just like the unbeliever. We shall best study our lesson, therefore, by considering first of all v. 3 which indicates the lost condi tion of man by nature, then follow him through the miracle of redeem ing grace, w. 4 to 7, and finally see him as a living testimony in w. 1, 2. and 8 to 11. I. Lost ? by Nature (v. 3). It is not a pleasant picture that is painted in the graphic words of this verse, but, remember, it is God's picture of the unbeliever. He is said to be "foolish" ? that is, irrational and senseless in his course of liv ing. He is "disobedient" to the 16w of God. He is "deceived," lit erally "out of the way," misled by Satan. He thinks his pleasures and lusts are serving him, but alas, he is only a slave in bondage to and serving them. Such a life can only result in a man's becoming hateful to his fellowmen. They in turn are hateful to him, and so he hates them. Thus the whole world be comes a hateful place where men are "living in malice and envy." How we thank God that we need not stop at this point. Man is by nature lost in sin ? but he may be n. Saved ? by Grace (w. 4-7). How sweet are these three words in the sinner's ears! Saved by grace, not works, and made heirs of eternal life. 1. "Not by works" (v. 5). Some one has said that man is determined by one means or another to claim salvation by his good works. To do so may flatter the flesh, but it surely finds no support whatever in Scripture. We are to work for Christ because we are saved, and after we are saved, but no man can be saved by works. 2. "By his grace" (v. 7). God shows his unspeakable kindness and love toward man ? saving him by grace, through Jesus Christ. Grace has well been defined as "unmerit ed favor." We deserve but the just condemnation of our sin, and God in his mercy saves us, through faith in his Son. 3. "Made heirs" (v. 7). Saved now? Yes, thank God! Satisfied? Yes, praise his name! But there is more yet to come. We who de served only God's judgment are now made heirs of an eternal hope. Tis indeed no small thing to be a child of God. Now ? we are ready to approach in the right spirit the admonition to live out our salvation as a daily testimony to others. III. Witnessing, by Holy Living (w. 1, 2, 8-11). The young preacher Titus is told to "put them in mind" to be 1. Subject to rulers (v. 1). True patriotism (and we did not spell it "pay-triotism"') stands very close to godly living. National leaders would do well to recognize that the decay of our national life will follow the decadence of spiritual life. A man who is right with God will be right with his fellowmen, and a no ble and useful citizen. 2. Meek and kind to all men (v. 2). Meekness is not weakness. Gentle-* ness is the attribute of strong men and women. 3. Maintaining good, avoiding evil (w. 8-11). It is the tendency of man to divorce morals from reli gion, to profess a faith which does not touch his daily life. Let us af firm "constantly" and "confident ly" (as the R. V. has it) that those who believe in God should "be care ful to maintain good works" ? yes, and at the same time to "avoid" that which is "foolish," contentious, "unprofitable and vain." Knowledge and Ignorance The best part of our knowledge Is that which teaches us where knowl edge leaves off and ignorance be gins. ? O. W. Holmes. Justice Justice is the idea of God, the ideal of man, the rule of conduct writ in the nature of mankind. ? Theodore Parker. The Test cf Truth The truth makes free, brings joy, hope, encouragement. Gay Hostess Apron With Poppy Motif Flit from pantry to parlor in this "hostess" apron, so gayly ap pliqued with poppies, and guests are sure to ask how it's mads I Choose bright contrast (or yoke, border, poppies. One poppy forms Pattern 1495. the pocket. Pattern 1495 contains a transfer pattern of the apron and a motif 6V* by 10% inches; a motif 6V4 by 9Vi inches and the applique patches; illustrations of all stitches used; material re quirements. Send 15 cents, in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Department, 82 Eighth Avenue, New York City. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Ho matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold, or bronchial irritation, you caa get relief now with Creomulslon. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulslon, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids na ture to soothe and heal the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel the germ-laden phlegm. Even If other remedies have failed, dont be discouraged, try Creomul slon. Tour druggist Is authorised to refund your money If you are not thoroughly satisfied with the bene fits obtained from the very first bottle. Creomulslon is one word ? not two, and It has no hyphen In it. Ask for It plainly, see that the name on the bottle Is Creomulslon, and youll get the genuine produce and the relief you want. CAdvJ Let It Be Pleasing Of all the things you wear, your expression is the most important. CONSTIPATED? To keep food mute toft and moring, many doctor* recom mend Nujol ? because of ita tfeotle. luhrlmHnd INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL GET RID OF PIMPLES far Roaedy Uses Mapesia to Char Skin. Firms and Smooths Complexion ? Makes Skin Look Years Yoanger. Gel rid oi ugly, pimply skin with this extraordinary new remedy. Denton's Facial Magnesia works miracles la up * spotty, roughened com plexion. Even the first lew treatments make a noticeable difference. The ugly ?Pots gradually wipe away, big pores grow smaller, the texture oi the ?H** becomes firmer. Before you know it mends are iwwptim**i^ig you os your complexion. SPECIAL OFFER ? form fnr neks only OUo in cash or stamp* today. DENTON'S Faaial Magnesia Str?t AMnm