, i: : u a ' ). I:e- 7 ..." :!. lH0 : i a 1 :n that j H t y diti'i'ible i la ffi . -2 of Uizzl i vmild allow , time for : tt doors and the gain i air, but carbon monox ! ;v!ulble and odorless gas. H "Vinegar" Bibty ' . - munlon service given to - , .rh church In Boston by - of England bearing;' the s Is still In the possession i "lurch. It also has one of a ted "Vinegar" Bibles, o 1 from - the beading of the ;h chapter iof Luke, which : "The Parable Of the Vine " lastead of 'vineyard,'? 1T17. Ancient Houaa of WoraMp : 8 oldest. - house r of worship n In the southern part of the l states, a temnle that mar ; been, constructed by the an t Mound Builders, was vn led b the Tennessee Valley mrlty archeological survey In i ountaln valley 80 miles Irom ' l : orris Dam. Literary Digest , ii i i i i "ij . ii i i . ' Lisbon's Oldest Cathedral -. -' fa Patrlarchlal. Lisbon's 1 oldest ,. uedral, ' wai founded' In . 1150, wrecked by an, earthquake In 1344, i :.ulit in 1880, wrecked by another earthquake In 1759, and has man v d to lead a reasonably quiet existence ever since. .The choir , loft Is now the only remaining feature of the' origtaal blinding, fm Up to 101T, the ' world's most active Icon was the holy picture of the Iberian Virgin ; In Moscow. I rom morning to .midnight each day In a coach drawn by six horses and attended by priests, it made a round of visits to homes of the sick. - y - 'jTii r . ie,r 1 HAI!t BALSAM Mm Dndroff-Ktoo. Mlr raUfari imill to Lrmy and Faded Hair ec ana yi.uu et ummttwrn. "'--n c:;iai. Wit... Pu.,..a.lf.T. iAitinjOw Ideal for naa in h UrtyiHilrBUnm nfakeatha . aiiaii.itr.(OeantabymaUoTatdra ..AuacwUiaiDiealWorlratehosiiatN.X. 1 YCJ PSERAELET v tin. J. &. WalbnTcf S Plum 6U, Danville, Va aaidjl V'On account of weaknea. 1 I went to piecal before the birth , of mr little Ctrl. I mi tired I and weary all the time, baa terrible dizzy apeUi and to ana jr" all alttlit I oould not aleen, S X :, I . took only two bottle, of Dr. . Fierce' Favorita Preacrlptioa ' ' whenlwufeeliiicatnmfxrand I ' -Mer and offered no more." i " in ue, tablet. JO eta, liquid $1.00. laid ' e, tuba, or liquid, $1 .35. AUdruggiita, Wute Dr. Piereeli Clinic, Buffalo. N. V. :.:tcd your Surtj They Prowrly ( s , Cleanse the Blood, ; t yOTTR kidneys are constantly fuV JL terlng Impurities from the blood f Iream. But kidneys get function Vfflly disturbed-flag In their work. tui'l to remove ,the poisonous bodj; Then ' you may Buffer nagging S ackache, attacks of ; oltxinesa, turning, scanty or - too frequent urination, getting np -at night, ewoilen feet and ankles, rheumatlo Kont delayl Tot the quicker yon ; t rid of these poisons, the better or chanoes of good health, - : hm Doan's Pitt. Doan't are for t!ie kidneys only. They tend to' pro tote normal functioning of the . 1 :.'ts; ' should help them pass off t,.a Irritating poisons. Doan't are r otnmended by users the country t r. Get them from any druggist. PILLC rjour!dn If so. Use --' : i - a . ; . .. .. J : tru.L- -1 -t , C pi lnatai aa aiM soa, j "J 4 1288 - - "ff t ' - k. wa - 1 D CX)RN SEED OATS illy Selected for Germination, itfarSampUtmndPticn -", ha, r fa . .,..,...9 htnU lfl. Ol Am"""" .... W . i . " 1 r l- a -r a , Ey V,'iL.UA..J C.OTLEY DCN'T be alarmea. t "whoosh I" you Jmt 1 . - I and felt was not the 1" in ning of a whirlwind. It was Just the collective sigh of re lief of about 100,000,000 people. For the nation's most appalling unem ployment problem has been solved; Babe Euth. has found a job, What was to become of Babe has caused as much consternation as what will happen to the NBA. A&!& .J The mighty Sultan of Swat, who left his native land to become Uncle Sam's - unofficial ; ambassador : to Japan and created more good will In a few , weeks , than statesmen have In years, returned home to find himself on the outside look lng In. He had declared he wonld not become again an Active player for the New York Tankees, who bought bini when he , was a young pitcher with the Boston Bed Sox and then had to build the world's largest baseball stadium to hold the enormous numbers of those most fanatic . of Idol worshipers, the baseball' fans,, who. wanted to see Bambino,- who answered to the name of George-Herman, when they called the roll for soup In St Mary's orphanage three decades ago,: want ed a. manager's Job. i When he left on .. the barnstorming :: tour' which found him still able to paste the old pellet higher than: M& Fujiyama and farther than Japan's imperial lrto ambitions, he little doubted that there would be a sufficiency of ouch posts awaiting his f) return. Baseball owed It to bf V, Bnt there were ponejr . Baseball, which the Babe's wagon-tongue bat had lifted from Just a swell game to giant Industry, bad no place for him. , i. Even bis own" Yankees didn't want him.;:- They wonld have hired him, yes,- because there would have been bloody revolution In Man saltan If they neglected him entire ly. But they didn't want him. That .was ; apparent.' f$ ,; ,':'Ti-i,--'4- i-:' ' It hurt the Bambino, of course. But It was bis own fault. The Babe Is like a big, shaggy, 'play ful dog that Is always doing some thing cute. He senses that he has done something that pleased you very mud ' gets pretty cocky, about it, proceeds to Jump up on yon, gets his dirty paws on your nice, clean ahlrt and has to be spanked. In abort he lacks diplomacy. , At the close of the 1934 playing season, with his : batting average having shrunk to 288, his : borne ran total to 82. and his salary to a mere 935,000 per annum, and , his forty-one-year-old legs about as steady as those of the card table yon borrowed next door- for Tues day's bridge game, the Babe an nounced to all and - sundry that be was through as an active player. . -. His Dlplomatle Way. ; : ' h With all the diplomatic aplomb of the puppy dog we have mentioned, he went straightway- to OoL Jake Buppert, who manages to find time between his beer foundry and bis yacht to ran the affairs of the New York American league ball club. The ' colonel's eyebrows , lifted In mute surprise . no doubt, because the time was hardly ripe for the n The Babe Created by: His New ; Braves, At Right, the Babe curtain to rise on the annual melo drama that - these two seasoned Thespians . are wont to enact for the benefit of the press 'each' year, before signing to give our hero more money-for circling the bases than the President gets fpr run ning . around the Democratic plat- 'Are you satisfied with your man ager f asked the -Babe, making no effort, whatever: to keep the que tlon secret from the press and the public. Colonel Buppert - replied that he was. Edward Q. Barrow, general manager of the club, fur ther evidenced . complete satlafao tlon with Manager Joe McCarthy. It was not the first; experience of its kind for the Babe. When Miller Hugglns died a few years ago, Babe asked for the Job. . The Yanks have never considered .Buth of . man agerial timber and didn't then. They made Bob Shawkey manager t when be failed in a year's trial they im ported Joe McCarthy from the. Na tional league. Babe has always been petulant about this "Injustice" i- - '-)- ' r ( i : 1 in consequence there has al- vtuys been a , coldness between hlm-j and McCarthy. ' With Buth publicly i declared to be after McCarthy's Job, the Yanks and Colonel .Buppert , were on the pot-VThey felt obliged to retain the Babe should he resign as a player, but eould they countenance n open hostility between 'their manager and one of bis men T Babe was getting old ; could he still draw at the gate? To draw the fans, New York has to have a winner; could the Babe stand the gaff? Mc Carthy was almost sure to keep the Babe on the bench ; would the fans put up with ttl r " , ' ' -, Now to change the scene for a mo ment, things were happening in the town where the Bambino began his big t league . career, The Boston Braves, struggling along as a second-rate club for years, were losing money.' Something had to be done. - Sitting in a bos at a Braves' game one afternoon were "Judge Bmll Fnchs, president of the club, and the then Mayor James A. Curley, now aovernor of Massachnsetts. Business was bad. Curley convinced Fuchs that the Braves must secure some great star to offset the gate attraction of the Bed Sox, -whom Tom Yawkey'a dough had built Into a winner.' He went himself to talk to Buth on- the night of Birth's de parture for the Orient, Babe was willing enough to go to Beantown, bat there were too many obstacles In the way and the thing was pre sumably dropped right there, , :: Boston Goes Wild. ; -, "' 1 When Bnth returned, it was gen erally accepted that he wonld sign again with the Yanks as a player. Colonel Buppert refused to be left on the spot. He telephoned Fnchs in Boston and asked him if he want ed the Babe. Fnchs. responded by catching the Tory next rattler for Manhattan. '. . ' v. " . On February 27, Brfth was made assistant manager of the Braves, signing a three-year players' con tract at a figure variously reported at 120,000 to $25,000 a year. He was also made vice president and grant ed a snare In the receipts which should make his earnings from $4q, 000 to 150,000 a year. , - (Boston; where the fans' like their BUI MeKechnle. Manager of the a Player at 8t Mary's 8chool.? , k;'-" ; ' '. ' 'i-.iyi-baseball even better thfin their na tive beans, went wild. Babe was toasted at dinners. , Bosy' predic tions were made for a revival of winning baseball In the Hub." Nu merous Inspired citizens even offered to buy stock in 'the club, which was badly In need of fresh capital. And right In the midst of all the cheer ing the playful puppy again forgot his diplomacy and got muddy feet on the master slit''--'.i.1sV ' '1 will take over the complete ac tive management Of the Braves, In 1836, said the Babe. . There had been an undercurrent ever since the news of his signing that the capa ble Bill MeKechnle, wily Scot who managed the Braves, wonld get raw deal. Predictions were that Ruth would take over the reins from the popular MeKechnle before July 4 of the present year, or even be fore the first of May.:::'--.L';''V.'' ; Already in a ticklish position, de spite the fact that Buth bad been In the fold only a coople of days, the Boston management announced magnanimously . that when Buth was made playing manager, Me jo, Kechnle would be i.' - i to the executive post of general" manager, with more dignity and more salary. Babe Ruth is popular for the same reason that Jack . Dempsey was. ' Science and skill are great stuff for the coacbts'and the train ers, but what the fan who waits In line hours for a bleacher seat prac tically In the next county wants Is the knockout punch. Nevertheless It Is this real, natural, boyishness of Buth's that make him the Idol he Is. : Babe likes the kids and Joshes with them continually at the ball park, consequently he is regarded almost In the light of a' deity. Lads who couldn't tell you the name of the governor of their state can recite Ruth's lifetime records In their sleep. -ft'if ,)' ':',. -'SS, ' - An orphan himself, Buth Is never so much at home as when he is en tertaining the children at an or phanage or other Instigation. Once when the Yanks werefn Minneapolis for an exhibition game, Queen Marie also happened to be In town. News paper men saw the story possibil ities - of a meeting between the Sultan' of 'Swat and; the' Queen of Rumania, and a time for the queen to receive Ruth was arranged. Ear- Babe Talking to a Patient In a Chll. X j;y dren'a Hospital. Her In the evening the Babe visit ed an orphanage. The youngsters fell immediately In love with the genial behemoth and begged him to linger. Meanwhile frantic calls were coming from the hotel ; he was already late for the. reception. For a moment he listened, to the pleas of the tiny fans, then he returned to the telephone. ?Tell the queen I'm sorry," he Bald. $ got a date." Fame hasn't really spoiled him. He still gets a great kick out of the attention paid him. The writer ac companied Babe and his wife on a tour of the Chicago World's fair in 1933. : There were a quarter of a million people on the grounds that scorching-hot afternoon and walking over the three and one-half miles of grounds was anything bnt pleasant The exposition had furnished a lux urious car. and a chauffeur for the Babe's party and Babe chortled. We were rolling along with the great est of ease when Babe yelled for the driver to stop. "Back up to that woman, will yon 7" said the Babe, pointing out a woman trudging wearily along, hat ing the walk and the heat It was the wife of Lefty O'Ddul, then ah outfielder with the New York Giants and now manager of the San Fran cisco -club of the Pacific Coast league.1 Every one thought Babe was going to offer ber a ride. 'Too hool" he tailed. Imagine the shock when Bhe turned, around and he made a frightful face, emitted a long, rasping noise known In ball parka as "the bird," settled back In his Beat and said, "O. K drive on!" . ; Will Help Bravea, . What a personality like this will do for the Bravea and the National league Is a foregone conclusion. He will still bang a few over the fence, especially with the short barriers In the senior circuit Nine of the Braves' exhibition games In the South are with the Yankees, and they are drawing record crowds. Babe leaves the American league without his career having slumped to an antl-cllmax, Joining the Na tional league, he will stimulate tick et sales all over the loop, especially In Boston, where no less than 48,000 fans turned out to fete him In his last American league game last year and In the Polo grounds, where the Giants hold forth and, where he gained his greatest fame. He Is ex pected to pack the parka In Cincin nati and Pittsburgh, which have never had a glimpse of him. ; , Chicago, too, will be Interested when he steps to the plate against the Cubs. For the Windy City fans will never forget that world's series of 1932 when he created, what was probably the' most dramatic scene ever enacted In baseball. All through the series he had ragged the-Cub players unmercifully. -Already con sldered almost a doddering old man, he. strode up to bat at a crucial mo ment. , Deliberately, he took two strikes. Joshing the Cub bench an the time, then pointed to the farth est distant point of the bleachers In center.' Came the pitch, and whack I went the ball right, to the spot one of the longest drives ever seen at Wrlgley field. The Cubs were licked from that moment ' ; . .i, ( . A Waatera Newanasar TJnlaa. xiACTICAL Br CRANDMOTHER CLARK ii A star rag with points on the out er edge Is not practical, because the points, are .easily turned up when the rug Is In use. This has been overcome In the braided rug shown here, and round rug can be used In many places. , This model Is made In six shades of blue but many other color schemes can be used to set off the pattern. Size Is 33 Inches and re quires about three pounds of mate rial. Three strips are used in braid ing.' The six diamonds to form star are 4 Inches wide, 7 Inches long. Fill In space between points of star to make round. Sew about 20 rows around In colors desired. ' This is one of the 26 braided and crocheted rugs shown In rug book No. 25. Directions are given with each rug; also, how to braid and prepare the material for working. If yon want to make a good-look ing rug, send 15c to the Home Craft Co Dept C 1900 St Louis avenue St Louis, Mo., and receive this rug book by mall postpaid. Enclose a stamped addressed en velope when writing for any Infor mation. Ua Sufficient Paint It is considered false economy to attempt .to save on the number of coats of paint applied for surface protection. It has been conclusive ly demonstrated in tests by paint experts that two coats of paint ap plied every four years will give bet ter service than one coat applied every two years. , ' c ' """" ' , I m'efd ONE STRIKE ! fcfl I I CEE, DJZ2Y, THAT feV l AND that MEaNS g-s PITCHING ARM OF JSi i1 l?S8 OUT IN THIS , VOURS SURE BROUGHT tnn v&43r"N LEAGUE I BACK THE GROCER- fti -mS&s7mL;' "BtfcL ies. I hope I can GR0W Ul T0 BE TO BE GOQD AT ANYTHING. SON; YOU'VE GOT TO HAVE TWO -THINd? - SOME ABILITY AND JUST LOADS OF ENERGY BOJS! Girk! . . . Join the Dizzy Just send the top from one yeHow-and-: Mae Grape-Nut package, with your lawbarifilp n(a for ban sal girls, ' Solid bronxa with wed anaroalai laaaciaa. A Via roo'll be proud to waar. . 4 TUffirtfHniMt,m L-lLerry Weed Cllaa la Accustomed Haunts Along the shady path beside Sprain ' Me, In. Youkers, close by the site of ' ancient Indian village, grows the bu&eweed, pigeon berry,' garget or Inkberry, Phytolacca decandra, a coarse smooth weed with add poison one root and stem, branching some times six feet or more tall. With racemes of flowers, white with green centers on angular peduncles, two to four . Inches long, they become clusters , of scarlet-Juice berries In the autumn. The Indians used the red Juice to stain their deerskin and paint their faces In wartime. White people settling on farms among the Westchester bills and writing borne to relatives In . England about the hardness of their lives and the sav ageness of the country, wrote with qulU pens dipped In Inkberry Juice. The Indians are gone from the hill, but the weed the sqnaws used to dye feathers with , still grows lovingly above the arrowheads And stone bandchoppers sleeping In the black loam of Rocky Lonesome. "Once the lovely color of the berries decorated the blankets of hundreds of warriors about campflres, where now Boy Scouts sleep out "overnight" and Im agine they are Injuns. Old-fashioned herb doctors thought -the toot an emetic, and a tincture of the ripe berries was once used as a popular remedy for chronic rheumatism. Wild birds use, the fruit for food, and robins with their bills stained scarlet In August or October are no: uncommon sights. Its chief benefit to humanity is Its beauty In fruit J. Otis Swift, In the New York World- Telegram. Dr. Plerce'a Pelleta are beat for liver, bowels and atomaeh. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic Adv. Victory The victory of success Is half won when one gains the habit of work. S. A. Bolton. How Calotabs Help Nature To Throw Off a Bad Cold Minions have found In Calotabs a most valuable aid In the treatment of colds. They take one or two tab lets the first night end repeat the third or fifth night if needed. How do Calotabs beln Nature throw off a cold? First, Calotabs are one of the most thorough and de pendable of all intestinal ellminants, thus cleansing the Intestinal tract of the germ-laden mucus and tozlnes. E)g&M flows one over STUFF WAHOO name and addreaa, to Grape-Nuta, Battle Creek, Mich.; for your membership insignia and free copy of the club manual "Win with Dissy Dean" end list of other . valuable free prises. And start building up your energy by eating Orape-Nuts. It has e winning flavor all its own - crisp, nuthke, delicious. It's economical, too. Two table apoonfuls, with whole milk or cream, provide more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. A ' froducttf General Food. . , . 4 T- inherited QUALITY Just as fine dairy herd are bred for Uue-iibbon i quality,so Ferry Pure bred Vegetable JSeedsi are bred to produce vegetables of superior i size, color flavor and abundance. Plant, these purebred - seed and be sure of big, fresh, fine, tasty, lus- cioua vegetables. Bit- Demand. Protlta Great. Manufactories ubetltut. flexible alas.. We atart yo Stamp bring, particular. National Eater. orUe Serriee, Man Yard. Charleston. S. O, RARK UNITED STATES COINS TOM SALE. Catalogue 10c. U. N. Lawnaea, Seminole Are Dnmont. N. J. DCWUU, VWi' Mir..-. www kidneys, promoting the elimination of cold poisons from the blood. Thus Calotabs serve tne aoume purpose ox a purgative end diuretic, both of wnicn are neeaeu, ui un wcnuuou, of colds. Calotabs are quite economical only twenty-five cents for the family package, ten cents for the trial package. (Adv.) n AND I'LL TELL YOU ONE. SLICK WAY TO BUILD UP YOUR ENERGY. EAT GRAPE-NUTS j IT'S PLUMB" FULLOFtE 1 B THAT PUTS THE OLD IN YOU Dean Winners sCsslV I m i i ;