TEE DUPLIN TIMES,- KENANSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA 1 - L.: .'IwC. LCTC.l i "'!) e'jii!.' flashed' by a i on Via tidi'phone-Iess Papa ! 1 of the Shetland group 1 a doctor and a nurse from d the other night The i explained an Inhabitant i l en ill and needed an lm deration. -The doctor, and .ued to the patient in a life- : A". Law Every -j;-ricttter iSliould i 1 Ii:ownd Observe Never Give Your Child An Unknown Remedy without Asking Your Doctor First According to any doctor you ask, the only eafe way is never to give vour child ' a remedy you, don't know alt about, without asking him first. When it conies to "milk of magnesia," that you know every where, for over 60 years, doctors have said ''PHILLIPS' Milk of Magnesia for your child." ; ' ' So-"fay 'say Phillips' when you buy. And, for your, own peace of mind, see "that your child gets this; the finest men, know. . Sty fit fym mU tym L" You can assist others by refusing 1 to accept a substitute for the f.-.:::- I enutoePhillips' Milk of Mag nesia, ud uiis in in . Interact VMirvlf 1 J arid your children ,-..rVx and in the in terest of tha public In general. - Phillips, AfHA, cfAaqHeHeL Cuticura Cares The medicinal and soothing properties of the Sap not only thoroughly cleanse the : skin, but are most beneficial and helpful to.iL If you are, troubled with itching of pim ples or other skin eruption the CtateentwiUqwcUyrelieve. Soap 15c Ointment 25c and 50c. , " DefecrJro Hearing - Authorities estimate 17,000,000 per sons In the United States are "hard of hearing In some degree and that about 45,000 art) classed as deaf. LW SUE TOLD V.C?.NOUTIIUSDAND SMCouianare reproached him W his fits of temper bis "all in" com- plaints. But wisely aha aaw fat ha I trouble she neneu I tJaasdpstmn! The -very morning after , taking NK (Na turae mnaw, as aha advised, he felt like himself Brain aeenlv , cneerim. am toe Lable, all-veitetabto laxative and corrective spork(rrntlT.thorooihly,nat tillv.ItBtittnilatethec!ira inative iMuiar trace to uumjxeie. runcuon- inn. Non-habit- V, ioUrrt.25c 1 TiisBwet tyourdiu.. i-jfs BeauT wltb the purcbaM of a 25o box MSgra, For Acta nwigotlon.) ...whii Mn ii ii VY,!.! Iln H S-ll.. i ill, 'mm - a unrr.iiki tetssUll r.our A fin new hotel ia o historic set- - ting overlook-, ing Hampton Roads. Sean oi Monitor . Merrimao battle. 300 large, outside rooms, each with private tiled bath Private. ; sandy beach, large swim ming pool tennis, golf, deep . a fishing, dancing nightly and afternoons Bar. cocktail lounge Health Department , Property adjoins historic Fortress Monroe. Open the ytar round. Near Williams-';; burg. Jamestown and York- BATES f3 .$eMr-;.;i. jfmo ot na siujtmko loontt -nt oi r. A c"n. , f I 1 oi 1$ t a. oceoa. l ! 4 ( 1 I.V II tad whipped. V LJ: I" afe.deoend f 1 a J ' " - - T ERST, select s plump, well-fat-H tened turkey. EUher a young JL", ,or an old turkey can be made excellent eating, but you must know which you havsv for ..It makes a difference in the way you cookjt Allow from one-half to three-quar ters of a bound In the' weight of the turkey- as yod buy It for each person' to be served remembering that In the larger kinds yon will get mors meat' in that proportion to bone.' With a 15-pound turkey, for instance, yon can get 20 very generous servings. The dealer will usually draw the turkey for you, -but certain .things have to be looked out for at home. Out off the oil sac, take out the windpipe and lungs, pull out sny pin feathers and singe off hairs. Do this quickly so as not to darken or scorch the skin. Wipe the body cavity with a soft cloth wrung out of cold water. Scrub the outside with a wet cloth and soda or corn meal : Hlnse off quickly and wipe the bird dry inside and outside. Nevert let a turkey or any 6ther poultry soak in water.. - Ion lose flavor and food value. Bub the inside with salt before putting In the stuffing. Slip a crusty end slice, ot a loaf of bread into the opening ; near : the tali to hold In .;the - stuffing, tuck the ; legs under the band of skin left for that purpose, and sew, up the slit with soft -whits twine. After stuffing and trussing the turkey, rub the outside all over 'With butter, 'salt and pepper and pat on flour. Lay a Tasting the Doheness of the Bird t ' for the Great Feast piece of turkey fat over the breast Place on a reck in an open roast ing pan. 'Do not pot any water Into the pan. Water In a roasting pan makes steam, and steam around a roasting turkey or sny tender meat draws put the Juices.; . , Have the ' oven- hot (about 450 F.) when you put .the turkey in. Brown It lightly for half an hour in this hot oven and after the first IS minutes turn the bird with the breast down so It will brown all over. Then reduce the oven heat to very moderate (325 V.y. ; ; - If the turkey Is young, continue the roasting at this moderate tem perature with no lid on the pan un til the bird Is done.. Baste with pan drippings every half hour.' - ., v For a turkey a year or more old, after browning In the hot oven; put the cover on the roaster, and con tinue the cooking In the -moderate even (about 825 F.). Ton wlU probably need to allow 4M hours, for a 13-pound bird a year or more old. y - ' To ' test the "doneness run a steel skewer or a cooking fork Into the thigh' next' to the ' breast ' If the juice does not show a red tinge, the turkey Is done. , Make gravy with the giblets and drippings, - .The bureau of home economics, United States Department of Agri culture, which gives' the foregoing suggestions, also supplies this rec ipe for s savory stuffing, and one for glbletgravy. For stuffing: 9 oaarta dry kresid I pint efeoypaa , : emsbs - -- . clrr fat. kaiHrr 1 B tap. salt .and torkcv fat 1 to 8 tea. aavarj 1 assail ion, aeala : . ekopaed ' - ; Peppar ia taate . . H np chopped 'y '?;.(;:. . S v parslejj:?..-;'-:;.-1".; i'v'i'S-i,,' i. In the melted fat cook 'the onion, parsley and celery for a few min utes. Add the bread crumbs and seasonings and. stir all together until the nurture ' Is thoroughly heated. Pile the hot stuffing light ly into the turkey, bat do not pack. ,-Glblet gravy: Simmer the giblets (liver, gizzard and heart) and the neck ln one quart of water for about an hour. Drain the giblets and chop them ' fine, ; saving; the broth. If there Is too much fat. on the drippings in the roaster, skim eft some of the excess fat and leave about one-half cup. Into these pan drippings stir six level tablespoons of flour.' .Then gradually add the cool broth from the giblets and enough more cold water to nke a thin smooth gravy. Cook . for S minutes, add the chopped giblets ana season to t i!e with salt and 'V1 v. Moroccan ChltfUIn Prepared by National aeoaraphte Society, ,v .Washington, D. ft WNU service. MOROCCO, long an empire guarded from the coveting eyes of Europe by the will of a proud and exclusive people, remains in her subjection a land tempting to the traveler In search of new and even rude experiences. She Is a country up-to-date, ac- cesslble, civilized : yet barbarous, antique, and forbidden. , She Is 1 French, Spanish, Berber, Arab, and Jew. She has been nursed. far a thousand years on the subtle poll Ides of the Orient though farther west thap the greater part of Eu ( rope. , . . , Her emperors, some of whom were lords and masters of Spain, built great cities and castles and palaces and fortresses, before America bad come out. of the Land of Dreams They endowed univer sities and colleges for the cultiva tion of learning, the terms of whose foundations resemble those at Ox ford and Cambridge; with some of which they were contemporary. The same cloistered beauty Is to be found In both: the same lofty Ideals of faith and devotion. They assembled In their prime, great armies for the conquest of the world, and fleets that swept the Christian seas. Though children born of the desert they srrogated to ' themselves great pretensions ; claiming the Divine Right not mere ly as kings but as saints by lineage. Their tombs, where ruin has spared them, remain as lovely as any In the world ; their gardens of running waters are still a delight to those permitted to enter them. And yet half the population of this country lives on In the ways of Abraham, Isaac, and Jaoob. Orient and Occident Mingle. She Is an eastern land In the marrow of her bones, though placed In Africa; and she has been pene trated throueh centuries bv Enrn- (pean Influences, which lie deep un der the surface of her oriental life. Her camel caravans remain coeval with the airplane; and a tribesman Of the desert wounded In battle, can And himself carried through the air to a French hospital across. tno -wtioie -Tfldtn or impenetrable Atlas. Twenty centuries have here been compressed Into as many years. . - -. Sbe Includes within her borders .mountains almost as stately as the Rockies or the Alps; valleys pro found and lovely; cedars as noble as those of Lebanon ; olive groves like ' those of Delphi; vines that grow wild., or. are as cultivated now as those of Provence; cities like Fes which belong to the Arabian Nights, and. Marrakech the Grana da of Morocco, which glows In her fierce sunlight girdled by palm oases, within a day's ' march of snow-covered . summits, "white as salmon" as . Drake observed them , tn the course of his circumnaviga tion of ' the world ; cities snd peo ples passionate with the fury and excess of AfrlcS, yet profoundly In spired by the worship' of the One God,, their compassionate and mer ciful; Allah I ' . ..,V",: ' . For these and other reasons this country grips one, thougii the world be at one's disposal. Each year the pacified frontier of this violent and poetic land marches on Into re gions unknown. Each year one finds some new. tract becomes accessible; old castles, unsuspected, and , chief tains ' living in them In medieval state; clans and tribesmen at war, now gathered into the fold; maps that record a twelve-months' prog ress,1; with all . sorts of lines and spots and frontiers marked on them, each with Its fascinating tale of valor or Industry to tell.1 ; The history of Morocco Is one of violent unrest and order In contin ual balance, ' ; i-,; Rebels Still Eklst -- Since the magnificent failure Of Abdel-Krlm, who all but broke the. power of Spain In Africa and went near to reconquerjag Moroeco from the. French, the tricolor now blows beside the flag of the sultan over nearly all of French Morocco; but not quite. .'.There are regions In Great Atlas' where die-hards ; still maintain their freedom, delivering shrewd blows at Jhelr- conqueror from time to time; and, in, the des ert spaces of Sarahs, horsemen and cameleers who ride acknowledging no lord. . It Is these gentlemen ' who keen i France busy, and offer her young I c 4 W 7 it I iw AiiinHifWi m wnnKaHirrnf. mUtm isK.AAs1i at Hla "Front Door." men opportunities of advancement and adventure, beyond that, border land known as the Zone of Securi ty. One can - Imagine the attrac tion of snch ' a life for a man grown tired of his boulevards and the charms of an overripe elvlllza tlon: but It is closely sealed. It Is not very difficult to have your throat cut If you cross thai line. The rekkas, ' or secret mes sengers of France, faithful to their salt frequentlyJuendure that fate. Nameless, unknown, tbey perish, leaving no ripple behind them. But the sands of this colored and attractive life are running out and short of another European war or some violent uprising In Asia, the triumph of France seems assured. None the less,, these last pages of her story remain romantic enough; telling a tale of policy and arms, fanaticism and pride; of resistance, surrender, and swift revolt that await a scribe. But France in Morocco has not produced her Kipling. One doubts If she ever will. One great traveler she has produced, the Vlcomte de Foucauld; and . one administrator of genlns, the Marechal I.yautey, grown white-haired and old In the service of France. Those Who Serve France. All kinds of people have taken a band in this adventure; crafty and ambitious chieftains and fighting prophets; smooth diplomatists and hard-hitting commanders of the For elgn Legion; Christians, Infidels and Jews; generals as lean as their Swords trempes, as they say tern pered, by a life in the Sahara. friends In their youth of De Fou cauld and Laperrine; realists yet mystics like the people of the desert themselves, and quite the best kind of man you can hope to meet In northern Africa ; meharlsts of the camel corps who swagger about In their vast white pantaloons; flight commanders who cross the Atlas, dropping bombs upon the gathering tribes, snd making new maps from the air; royal princes with an urge for adventure; drummers and armv contractors out for pelf; ladles of high rank and great virtue, and 'a .dies of many, charms who- possess neither; Innkeepers and cantlnlers; French children who become the at tached companions of retired die- hards; drivers of armored cars and lorries sprung from half the na tions of Europe, with weird person al histories, and a knack of extri cating themselves from every ad venture, or dying game; literary gentlemen whose home Is In Paris snd whose public resides In France misslons-scientlflques ; hydrbloglsts ; deputies of the French , Republic. shepherded In flights;- newspaper men, unweicomes; marshals of France, . with famous names ; the resident general of Morocco him self, carefully guarded and sur rounded with pomp and ceremonial observance;: and something like 30, 000 legionnaires (mostly Germans) who, having no country of their own, fight for that strange thing- the Honor of the Legion end do the work of France for a few cents a day; Ishmaelltea all. , ; Berbers -In Opposition. Upon the other side, and almost as quixotic Is their friend , the Dls sident, who provides the occasion and the battle ground for all" this adventure; a queer chap, with an odd love of freedom and of his na tive hlUs,a bit of a troubadour; somewhat of a patriot and tighter for the Faith ; gallant truculent, treacherous, and cruel ; . but always very much of a man, with a keen sense of humor allied with a strict attention to business. - Awhile ago he raised f laugh .throughout1 Mo rocco by stealing two carefree gen tlemen of ; the resident f general's household with their respective la dies; snd returning them, a little damaged, in exchange for Ave mil lion francs "and a gramophone of the very latest design, with all re cent .Improvements, duly specified. The -Berbers, to rhose category be belongs, have always been "agin" whatever, government there, has been In the land ; willing, as gentle men, to follow any great leader to blunder and war; unwilling to follow -anyone .for long;, the real nucleus of the Moslem armies who conquered Spain, and near of kin to those who. marched across th Alps with nannlbal to the walls of Rome. The name of Hannibal Is still, oue Is told, to be found amonr them. , . x i I "OH WAD THE POWERS "J An elegant young woman strolled down . the main street of Skopje. Jugoslavia, attracting admiring glances from all she passed. Sudden ly a man dashed out of a shop, lifted her-off ber feet took off her Shoes and set ber down again to walk home In her. stocking feet The assailant a -shoemaker, explained: that the shoes had not been paid for, and he was tired of seeing his clients going bout in comfort While be was on the verge of bankruptcy. : ; "Better baking ":' SAYS MRS. W, W. HICK BY, OF CHICAGO. ILL. "I'm paying the lowest prices ever for Calumet "CAKES AND COOKIES just disappear inmy big fam ily," laughs Mrs. Hickey. it's abig help when I can - get a full-pound can of my : reliable, standby baking powder. Calumet, for only aScI As long as I bake, Calu met will be in my pantry 1" ; Grandfather Rommel,' ' who wasabaker for 40 years, says, "Calumet takes the guesswork out of the job nowadays." LOOK AT TMI NEW CALUMETCAM A timpU Ma ...mi A Easy-Ofininl To lift . No dtlay, ipillint, t araira fingtrnaiht n w'i'mam i m immimmm a m9 m m$ m G6,oao...comeon he ib ewjov LIFE J 1 00T AND SHOOT.' WWHEW V0U FEEL SCJ JIM.WRE MAKING UF MISERABLE FOR ALL OF US Wltrt VOUR CROSS, IRRITABLE WAV5! I JUST WISH ITELL HER XJ Sa 11 i rr t urn. iiaii - f I fmu liywiocJiiwiwii Jirisi r.iirui i VOIl'D RC A CA tACAM AC, I " faataTWWBMa CTWTJ'jyMBrFvA, E'lk - . f G, 0A0-.ITM 1 VOUR OLD DAD HAS E j I SWELL ID 60 Lri I BtEf n NEV MAN It) IWIMO WfTHJmJ SIMCE HE CHfWeOfj OSp7' -Lip flp How Calotabs Help Nature ' To Throw Off a Bad Cold Millions have found in Calotabs a most valuable aid in the treatment of colds. They take one or two tab lets the first night and repeat the third or fifth night if needed. ' How . do t Calotabs help Nature throw off a cold? First, Calotabs Is one of the most thorough and de pendable of all intestinal ellminants, thus cleansing the intestinal tract of the genn-laden mucus and toxlnes. at a saving that counts Baking Powder! 'l WHAT makes Calumet so dependable? Why is It different from other baking powders? Calumet combines two distinct leavening actions. A quick action for the mixing bowl set free bV liquid. A slower action for the oven set free by beat. This Double-Action produces perfect lea renins. New! Big 10 Can! Calumet is now selling at the lowest prices in its history... The regular price of the Full-Pound Can is now only 25c 1 And ask to see the new 10c can a lot of good baking for a dime with Calumet, the Double-Acting Baking Powder. A product of General Foods. LISTEKV0U.' VOUR COAT.' Hour, shoes j Trie H00SE...AN0 STAV TrlEREJ lUBCTAlWrlMiWVe GOTCOFFEE-NEWESf -perhaps Voue one OF TrioSEWrtoSHOULpiJT DRINK COFFEE! WHS OON'tSDJ CHAM6E TO P0STUM? 'Brreea In 1 CfJr Second, Calotabs are diuretic to the kidneys, promoting the elimination ' of cold poisons from the system. Thus Calotabs serve the double purpose of a purgative and diuretic, both of which are needed in the treatment of colds. ' ' Calotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the family package, ten cents for the trial package. 'Adv.) , in this family!' LOOK AT LOOK AT get tttfo HY was coffee bad f oryou, Dad? . . I thought it was bad just for us kids!" "Oh, no! Many grown-ups, too, Mod that the caff ain in cof -f aa upsets their nerves. n Wf r- AAli .xf ri Ii I J WW N0TGW HIM M (A6O00 LACIMG1 E V ' ' -tTI OA - ' - - its m.jusTtNOTwR0N6;J -TO SHOW Ialwavs II r vou how loaves me causes indigestion or keeps them awake nights 1" ... If you are bothered by headaches, of indigestion, or can't sleep soundly ... try Postum for 30 days. , It contains no caffein. It is simply whole wheat and bran, roasted and slightly sweetened. It's easy to make ... costs less than half a cent a cup. . It's delicious, too . . . and may prove a real help. A product of General Foods. FREE I Let us send you your first week's supply of Postum rant Sunply mail coupon. Okhsiial Foooe, Battle Creek, Mich. w m. u 11 -s. Please senrl ma, without coat or obugauon, a week's supply of Poetuas. . ." ' ' , , -Srare- Till ia completely -print name and address. . . - (This OSTk expires Jul 1, 1U6 , TIT7T, I II 1 f I I r