Atwater
with the Golden Voice
Here’s the radio that makes
your money count most
P ERFORMANCE—long life—freedom from
service expense—satisfaction—real value
for your money. That’s what counts!
Atwater Kent is the preferred radio today,
and has been for years, because quality is put be
fore everything else. Yet the price is moderate.
As an investment, the new Atwater Kent is as
sound as a bond.
Whether your home has electricity or not,
the nearest dealer has the new Atwater Kent
for you—witli its Golden Voice, Quick-Vision
Dial, Tone Control, Screen-Grid power, and
honic-like beauty. The battery set is just as up-
to-date as the A. C. set.
No matter how far you live from the big cities,
no-one enjoys better reception than you when
your radio is the new Atwater Kent.
ATWATER KENT MANUFACTURING COMPANY
4700 Wluabickoa An. A. Alwaur Ktnl, Prtt. Ehiladelpbi*. i’a.
mm
EAGT.E. BURNSVIIJ.E N. C.
THE
CLOVEN
HOOF
®.
Syr.(]lellte.t
HOPKINS KCJIJIPMKNT COMPANY
Georgia nitolraalv MHutributom
AlWATIEIR, KENT RADIOS
ATLANTA, liEOUGIA
“Careers” Found May Be
Both Short and Ugly
Armo Miirnnii. of one of
Anicrii'ii’.s urciilcst fliiaiiclors, was
iliscuHsinK tlie aiiiliitioiia .Atiierionii
girl.
"Ambition is a fine (bini:," slic 'lo-
rlai-cd, “hilt I am liic-ltiicd to favor
(he Idea of wlnnlnj; one’s way In
one’s own eiivlronnicnl, Tlio conn-
ipy Rirl, for instance, liii:
rliaiice of niiddiiR her way in tlie
world liy slayini: at home tlinn iiy
coinliiR to the ell*.’." And tlu-n slie
lidded, with a Minlle:
“Most, of tjie smnIMown girls who
go to the rliy
,-Ally, (Inii !i"Llli‘y nre not nl-
AS PURE AS
MONEY CAN BUY
THE LARGEST
SELLING
ASPIRIN IN THE
WORLD FOR
Little Mary Discovers
Shortcomings of Daddy
Little Mary a.«Us him if he knows
how to cast out nine.s. lie says no,
he never heard of casting out nines,
and wliiil Is It? Slie says !f’a an
easy way to eheck long division and
she has learned it at school and It
is very simple, and slie will show
1dm how it is done.
So she does an exaniplo In long
dlviston and tlien begins to east out
nines. He says yes, that Is all very
well, hut wliy do you do It? Slie siiys
she does not know why you do it,
hill that is what you do, He says,
well, tiiere must he some reason and
he woiiW like to know It.
■■ Slie sFA Hiere Is ifo use bothering
iihoiit the reason, hut just try It and
see If he can do it. So he tries, hut
fails, and she tells him tlnit he
could not have been piiylng atten-
li.ui, iind lo lisleu very carefully this
lime. Put he finds It ratlier dilllciilt
i lo concentrate, as he keeps on sny-
to himself that there ought to be
■ason for if and he would like to
original colors, were put in such con
dition that tliey looked like new from
a short distance. The flags were en
cased in hand-woven nets and the
original design repainted In tlie net.
Cheap Enough
Lady Gamper- - This economical
lamp I bought from you diesii't burn.
Village Shopkeeper—Well, could
iiiiything he more economical?
If you lay out and tend a hand
some flower garden you "huild up Hie
A perfect story teller shouldn’t
Hive to work. His functio^ is to
ertalll. - i •' - r
S OMBTIMES neither the manage
ment nor a large part of the
audiences whicli crowded the
kind of variety theaters where
tills attraction appeared, knew what
Cloven Hoof meant.
Hut seldom did they miss its con
notation. Even to the ignorant and
tlie unenlightened, the term “cloven
hooT’ suggested the pagan, the fan
tastic. the unrestrained, the naughty
and forbidden.
The Cloven Hoof act did not dis
appoint.
ft consisted of a series of “Solo
Baiiets” as the programs put It, per
formed by none other than the Faun
himself, a role that had for years been
successfully Impersonated on vaude
ville circuits by Henotd Itcnolds.
There was.^a stage name for you.
Henold Uenolds. It Intrigued the
fancy, ft inajde girls who had stood
on their feet illl day ln«liops and fac
tories tlirili wltli surmise.
It wa.« said that Ids performance
had once ineluded a stirring trapeze
act that hadl'.vlelded him over twice
the salary h.- now enjoyed, hut fh;:
his bride of two weeks imd fallen oft
the bar and liiroken lier back and tlint,
since then, the Cloven Hoof act had
consisted iiieijtly of the Solo RiiHet.
He that as lit may. the performance
still retained feulTlclent vigor and nov
elty to insure Ilenolds steady and
long-term hookings.
His scene consisted of a grotto, moss
grown, lichen grown, woody, tropical
and full of strange under-and-over-
growths of fern, mosses, orchids and
clinihlng planiB. Tlie effect of a wa
terfall was achieved by lighting. Birds
of strafige plumages sat in the trees,
a red moon rose slowly out of a clump
of jungle. Owls hooted. A nightin
gale tinted Its half-finished notes. The
beholder was transported from his
consciousness of city streets, banging
ears and day of moll-and-toil. Into the
curious, half-rank, half-fragrant mys
teries of the jungle.
It was said that Henolds’ “fan let
ters’’ amounted to hundreds a week.
At any rate, every inontli he sent a
packet of them to tlie headquarters of
his mamigement in New York ns evi
dence of the continuing and hardy suc
cess of his act.
There were tho.se who said the suc
cess of that act was not Uenolds him
self. but his animals. During all three
of his Soio Haiiots there appeared
ui>on the stage, birds, dogs, cats, a
small trained leopard, a pair of mar
mosets.
fau|^
Thoiildcrs aP^Kidn^TWcrrles fr,T5
Upset Not Serious if
Bowels Get This Help
' if ^
do It. and lie tries once more and
makes several mi.stalies. and slie says
you eould not Imve been imying nt-
ii-iuioii again or yo.ii would imder-
siaiid, it is so easy.
So slie gives up Iryliig (» teach
liim to cast out nines. Hut slie ean-
not help wondering how a person
wlio Is so slow to ciiteli oil eould
have gone tliroiigli school and cd-
tego ami even got a degree,—Balti
more ?'Un.
Refuted to “Mother” Chichi
l-T'iiiiklin lliekling, twelve year;
old, dl.scovered a crow’s nest will
live eggs in it at Ludlow. IMullie. Ih
toidc out three of the eggs and re
placed ttiem witli hen eggs. Whei
ihe crow rcliiriied, she tli:
1‘ggS
and sat ■
1 the
and after they were
ilieil Mrs, f'row sat on a limb
refused lo acknowledge the par
entage of the chh’ks. The lad took
e eliieks out and phiceil Ihmii >
other moilier, \ilio accepted the
spoiislhillty.
When you’re out-of-sorts, head
achy, dizzy, hilloua, with coated
tongue, bad breath, no appetite or
energy—don’t worry. It’s probably
constipation.
Take a candy Cnscnret tonight
and see how quickly your trouble
clears up. N’o more lieadache; no
giis on stomiu h or bowels. Appetite
improves; digestion is enroiiraged.
Take another tomorrow nlglit and
the next niglit. Get every hit of the
souring waste out of your system.
Tlien see liow bowel action is regu*
lar and complete.
Cascarets are made from ens-
cara, which doctors agree actuallv
strcTtglhena bowel muscles. Ten
cents nt all drug stores.
ALES
ONEY
OF
OREHOUND
ANDTAR
inded
Old Battle FUg» Me
Kcslorlng ohi haute dags to o
scmhlnnce of their former beauty i.*
a new vocation recently taken up h,\
Mrs. M. Anlrobus of I.nmion. Eight
tattofod flags wldcti liml been tliroiigh
of fra:
For
TEETHING
troubles
Fussy, fretful .... of courae
lialiics arc uncomfortable at teeth
ing time! And mothers arc worried
b^usc of the little ui'scts which
a>me so smldcnly then. But there's
one sure w.»y to comfort a restless,
teething child. Castoria — made
especially for babies and childrenl
Its pcrfivtly harmless, as the
formula on the wrapper tells you.
It’s mild in taste and acuon. Yet
it rights little upsets with a never-
filing cfTcctiv-encss,
Thai’s the beauty of this special
children's remedy! it may be given
to tiny infants—as often as there
is nc^. In cases of colic and similar
disturbances, It is invaluable. But
it has ewry-day uses all mothers
should understand. A coated tongue
For over 50
years it has been
the household
remedy for all
forms of W'
Malaria
Chills
and
Fever
Dengue
Sunshine
It is a Reliable,
General Invig
orating Tonic.
A tiny poodle dog run Into
till* scene on rear Icg.s. carrji.cg a cloll-
haby in Ids fragile paws. The tame
leojiard walked out of n moonlit
clump of trees .and permitted Uenolds
to turn donlile somersaults across his
beautiful hack. The mnrmnsets staged
a elinse up and down the long, slim
flanks of the solo dancer. Three pale
gold angora cats [dayed ring-nround-a-
rosy. A flaming macaw flew across the
scene and alighted on the branch of
a tree.
It was quite an net. ending with
Uenolds surrounded by Ids menagerie,
birds on Ids arms, leopard nt Ids side,
the dog standing on (lie back of one
of the angoras, the marmosets clut
tering. the ninenw waving its tri-col
ored, widespread wing.s and the lights
causing tlie waterfall to leap in glory.
Tills final tableau was po.sted In
lithographs all over the lotihy and
along the hlitbonrds of the town.
It gave people pause. Especially the
young girls whose feet could ache so
at night liked to gather before the
faunal figure in its jungle setting.
Simill wonder that the letters con
tinued to stock up on the table In
Uenolds’ dressing room. Girls flocked
to his net. Women, especially the
tired, earth-hound ones who stood on
their feet behind counters ail day,
wondered about him.
There was an ecstatic sort of mys
tery about the ninn who can he won
dered about. WImt was Uenolds’ life?
Fantasy, indulged in by the meager
girls in therr meager rooms, ran wild.
Actually Ills everyday real life was this:
There was trntli in the rumor tliat
the two-week-old bride of Uenolds
hud fallen from a flying trapeze. The
sliort, blunt facts were tivat she had
broken her hack, cracked her skull
and met with tortuous Internal inju
ries. She was a frail beauty of a
girl who had danced before a row of
footlights most of her life, and, with
the sometimes astonishing eiiduriiiice
and vitality of the frail, had weath
ered the l.orrlbleness of the accident
and had nt least won her life, Precious
/ / / /
—All Winler Long
At lh« Foramosi D*>arl Retort
of IhoWett—marvelout elimote —worm tunny
doyt—eUor itorlit nights —dry invigorating
air—iplondid roodt — gorgeout mountoin
tconot—flnett hotolt—Iho id*ol winter home.
Write cree * Chtnmy
PALM SPRINGS
Ufornia
I, inMNK>s .vM> rno-
llttle more than that. The back healed,
hut kept her flat on it. The skull
healed, hut the mind could bend and
flicker like a lamp in a gale. Internal
ulsplaeenienis sometimes tore at Ema-
die and made her frantic with pain.
And yet the mystery of It! The
eternal mystery of the will to live!
Both Uenolds and Emadie fought for
that life, dung to It. struggled to keep
it going.
There is an old Hindoo saying that,
“No one but God and 1 knows what
is Id my heart.” Weil, no one but
God and Uenolds could quite have
known the quality of love, endurance
and forbearance that Uenolds poured
into those long years that were after
math to the night his crushed and
broken bride had lain writhing at his
feet after the hurl from the trapeze.
Uenolds gave himself to the rem
nant of this life that had been left
to him with a zeal, with an intensity
that were nothing short of fanatical,
and with the sometime tendency of a
mind that is tortured, to vent Itself
against the one most loved, Emadie
literally pirated off the qiiality-of-mer-
cy that was Uenolds’. She was exact
ing, slie was jealous, she was dicta
torial and was often abusive.
Even her doctors sometimes forgot
forbearance, reminding her that there
are limits even to the tyrannies of the
afflicted. Hut no so Uenolds. It was
as if he bared his neck, bowed his
head and said: “Strike, strike, strike.”
And strike Emadie did. For fifteen
years Uenolds had carted the poor
little ruin that was his wife from
town to town with him. He had In
vented beds, carrying chairs, spine-
rest devices, mattresses, especially
designed for berths, cold-water bottles,
hot-water bottles, traveling medicine
kits, tiiiit might, it patented, have
made him a rioli man. Not a step had
Uenolds taken In all those years witli-
iiut the litter tliat bore his wife, nt
his heels.
It was a matter of transporting the
frail body, estahli.shing it in hotel
quarters, assembling his menagerie,
rusliing off to the theater and liome
again without removing his make-up.
The leisure of Uenolds. If it might
so be called, and about which the hun
dreds of wistful-eyed girls wondered,
was spent ministering to the broken
doll tie called wife, and attending the
needs of a menagerie that was rapidly
growing old. For nine years tliere had
not been a break In those animal
ranks. Tlie liirds. marmosets, dogs,
cats, had iiinnaged to survive Intact.
Some said it was tlie marvelous care
that Uenolds lavislied on them. Some,
the few who knew, said it was that
same Incredihle quality of devotion
that he lavished on Kmadie, which
had kept her alive.
Be tliat as it may. when the faun
uiitlioDged his sandals tiiat were soft
ns panther skin, unglrded his loins of
the skin of a leopard, and hastened
into civilian clothes, no matter what
the town or what the season, his des
tination was the same.
Bad; to the hotel, into the room
whore lay the querulous invalid, sus
picions of Ills slightest delay. Never
a meal would Emadie eat without him
tfure to feed her spoon by spoon. No
ortfc could touch^ior -dllow, ease "Tier
imsitiun, massage her aching head,
rend her the daily newspapers, or min
ister to her capricious moods, Imt
Henolds.
Her demands, her commands, were
without limit. She loved lilm with a
frenzy that miide her Insane where
lie was'concerned. She tortured the
thing slio loved to limits that were
iiicredihlo.
Between tlie demands of his menag
erie and the demands of Emadie. Ueii-
olds' time was crammed to its limit.
In a way his animals had come to
dei'end upon him just ns surely and
just as exaclingly as Emadie. The
french poodle would only eat from
Uenolds’ hand, The macaw would let
no hand hut ids place him on ids
perch at night. The marmosets pined
and would not eat until Uenolds per-
soiinlly administered to them. Gounf.
less times he had sat up the night
tlirougl) with one of tlie orange an
gora cats who was subject to astli-
iimtlc smothering spells.
If ever a man had two worlds en
tirely dependent upon Idin. that man
was Uenolds. Tlie world of his wife,
the world of Ids animals. He was their
sustenance, ttielr all. Ills time was
theirs, his life devoted to their crea
ture comforts, and to the exacting
task of keeiiing tlie rough places of
life out of their sight.
His niglits and his (lays were full
of them. Eau de cologne for Kmadie.
.\ toy to amuse her on the days when
her hne^ was particularly had. Sugar
for the poodle. -A new astlima medi
cine for the cat. A hit of a sweet
for the leopanl. A liny oil liurtier for
the cage of the marmosets. A new
device of an air-pillow for Emadie,
Sweets, Sedatives. Service.
And every night, ns he hounded on
stage into his jungle and the water
fall began to flow silver, and the shy,
sweet sounds of the forest began to
emerge, tlie rows of girls with the
tired feet sat feasting their eyes and
he.aris on the beautiful pagan mys
teries of the young god with the cloven
hoof.
World Ever on Lookout !
for Ideas Worth While
Cason J. Calloway of La Orange.
Ga., "took an idea to market” and
found It [irofitahle.
He has kept up a constant search
for new Ideas to use in his business
ever since. And the practice still
continues a successful one.
The idea was to buy short staple
cotton left after the manufacture of
tire fabrics and other cotton goods.
It had been selling as waste. Cason
Calloway planned to grade it. com
mand higher prices than a waste
product would bring and eventually
manufacture from it cotton products
not requiring a long fiber. In three
years his valley waste mill was
worth S500.000 and doing nicely.
Since the- World war the Callo
way group of mills has expanded
from nine to fourteen units. Tlielr
products are diversified—and that
diversification is the result of using
new ideas. Often a new idea is the
result of an accident. ;
One day a foreman took to the
plant hospital a worker whose little
finger had been badly torn. On the
way hack to the mill he began to
remember a number of such accidents.
Ilf aiioii revealed they all traced
to the same cause, the use of cotton
waste for cleaning moving machin
ery. A worker got his fingers tan
gled In the fibers and before he could
free himself had lost or badly in
jured a digit.
The experimental laboratory was
put fo work on this prohl4m. It pro
duced a wiping cloth made of the
very s.ame waste, that did the work
better and eliminated the danger.
Mr. Calloway sent out a surveying
group to determine If a market for
siK'li clotlis existed. And the sale of
such cloths lust year totaled 5U,000,-
000 units.
WOMEN SHOULD
LEARN USES
OF MAGNESIA
Lucky Day
Three candles! And each one rep
resents a year of joyous living.
This is Carolyn Babush, of 800
Downer Ave., Milwaukee, Wiscon
sin. Her mother says:
“My mother used California Fig
Syrup, and when Carolyn became
constipated we got some. It re
lieved her constipation, sweetened
her breath, made her well and
happy. I have since used it for all
her upsets and colds. It has kept
her strong and energetic.”
For fifty years, mothers have used
California Fig Syrup to overcome a
child’.s bilious, headachy, feverish or
fretful siiells. Doctors recommend
Its soothing aid to keep bowels clear
in colds or children’s ailments; or
whenever bad breath, coated tongue
or listlessness warn of constipa
tion. It assists in building up weak
children.
The genuine always bears the
name Oalifornia. All drugstores.
To women wlio suffer from nausea,
or so-called ’•‘morning sickness,” this
is a blessing. Most nurses know It.
It is advised by leading specialists:
Over a small quantity of finely
cracked Ice pour a teaspoonful of
I’hillips’ Milk of Magnesia. Sip slow
ly until you are relieved. It ends
sick stomach or inclination to vomit.
Its anti-acid properties make Phil
lips’ Milk of Magnesia quick reliet
In heartburn, sour stomach, gas. Its
mild laxative action assures regular
bowel movement. Used as a mouth
wash It helps prevent tooth decay
during expectancy.
Too True
She—If only men behaved after
nrrlage as they do during their en
gagement there wouldn’t be lialf the
dtv(
Tlie Brute—No. imt there’d he
twice the biiiikniptcles!—London
Humorist.
Feel Always
Stiff
It May Wiam of Disordered
Kidnetp-
Are you troubled with back
ache, bladder irritations and
getting up at night? Then don’t
take chances! Help your kid
neys at the first sign of disorder.
Use Doan’s Pills. Successful for
more than 50 years. Endorsed
by hundreds of thousands of
grateful users. Get Doan’s “
Sold everywhere.
Diatracting
He was playing on a golf course
near tlie sea coast. On green after
green lie took four or more putts,
and blamed everybody for moving
ns he .plnyed. Ifls sliqt. Finally, on
the eigtiteonth green he was left
will) a nine-inch putt to save tlie
match. Kver.vhmly in the vicinity of
tlio green .stood like statues as lie
made his putt—and mis-sed! "Hung
It I" he stormed: “liow tlie deuce can
anyone putt with all these confound
ed ships moving up and down?”—
Weekly Scolsiiian.
Bobby gazed intently at a picture
of several angels surrounded by a
bank of clouds in the family Bllile.
“No wonder we never see any an
gels down liere,” he said. “Tliey're
snowed In!”—Chicago
Trlhiino.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prepcriplion makes
weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold
by druBgi*-!^ in tablets or liquid. Adv.
Doaiis
►ills
iV.
Hortet' Feet “Muted”
Uuhber slioes to lit over hoofs of
funeral horses to prevent clatter on
pavements have been liivcnied by an
uinlertaking firm nt Newcastle, Eng
land.
Colds Go Quickly
Double strength Lax-ana needd
Only one night to open up clogged
bowels, break a cold and expell
congestion. Safe, sure and quick.
Sold on a money-back guarantee.
1
Vice of overeating is one that it is
Impossible to conceal from others.
IM
'ANA
“If
Fear is a lack of vltalit
Hobton'e Choice
eat no meat you i
'getarlan.”
'm not, but my v
wife is.’’
Six Simple Principles for the Argumentative
The six principles of effective argu
ment might he worded In many wn.vs,
hut stated in very simple terms they
l.'M(» VI. '
MANAUKK,
calls for a few drops to ward off
constifiarion: sodocs any suggestion
of lad breath. Whenever older
children don’t cat well, don't rest
well, or have any little upset, a
more liberal dose of this pure
vTgctable prciviration is usually all
that's ne^ed. Genuine Castoriabaa
Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the
wrapper. Doctors prescribe iu
melon. Ouirport.
w. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 3.1931.
1. Don't try to do all the talking.
Uemenihcr your opponent wants to
talk Just as badly as you do. Give the
other fellow a clinnee.
2. Don’t Interrupt your opponent's
talk with a couiiter-nrgiimeiit.
:t. Do not assume an argumentative,
dogmatic attitude. Don't wear boxing
gloves.
4. Ask questions in a pleasant. In
quiring tone of voice during the first
half of the argument.
f). Ucstate cloarl; and fairly In a
very few words of your own the gist
of eacli argument your opponent ad-
vance.s as soon as he advances It.
d. Wlieii you reply, stick hard to the
siihjci. Bring out Ihe key Issue and
stick to It. Don't tllgresa and don’t
let your opponcni digress.
Ill explaining the iip|dication of
•hese priticii'li-s 1 \rtsh to emphasize
Irsl i>f all llml Hie only way you can
get their full benefit Is to paste them
your mental Imthand and use them
consciously, deliberately. Most per
sons who use them at all apidy them
>’2consclously. And most persons who
violate them are unaware that they
nre doing so. If you do not practice
them until they become a habit, 5'ou
will forget and" will not use them at
all.—Albert E, Wigg'-m in Ihe Amer
ican JIagazine.
BAYER
ASPIRIN
is always
SAFE
BEWARE OF
IMITATIONS
Explaining Wave Motion
Wave motion In a liquid represents
a continuous handing on from particle
to panicle of a disturbance In the
medium without actual transfer of
the medium Itself. This may be dem
onstrated by throwing a stone Into
water. It will be seen that waves run
nut in circles fron tlie point at wliich
the stone submerged. These waves
s(H'm to he actually moving, but if a
chip he thrown on the surface of the
water it will he found that Its motion
is up and down and not in an outward
direction.
Unless you see the name
Bayer and the word genuine
on the package as pictured
here you can never be sure
that you are taking genuine
Bayer Aspirin tablets which
thousands of physicians have
always prescribed.
The name Bayer means
genuine Aspirin. It is your
guarantee of purity — your
protection against imitations.
Millions of users have proved
that it is safe.
Qerxuine Bayer Aspirin
promptly relieves:
BAYER ASPIRIN DOES NOT
DEPRESS THE HEART
HEADACHES, SORE
THROAT, LUMBAGO,
RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS,
NEURALGIA, COLDS,
ACHES and PAINS
Acplriii If U>« tfnU-iMjk of m.iiaI»rtoii of mooo«»ti«cUi«t*r of liUcTUaeld