dbRAMBUNG i fli 'RPUND HI 11 NEW YORK J|j|ji^:[^4jUgtngWWY The sweepstake prizes are all decided. The usual stories—"I don’t know what I’ll do with the money”—have come and gone. There are thousands of disappoint ed ticket holders. A few lucky ones. __ They turned a big go'den drum in Dublin one day, picked , out the lucky numbers. And that was that unt'l the race was run .... 3f- >}• Jj Erwin F.dman, philosophy -in structor at Columbia University, says he finds young people ready to admit that they are not nearly so sophisticated as they have pre tended to be. He says that young mddertisi learibd backwarjd from the Victorian attitude toward love and sex because they were deter minded to be candid and truthful, but that the days are now gone when the young generation would talk about "anything” but refused to talk about anything else. He wouldn’t be surprised, he sard, ro see a new kind of puritanism de velop out cf it all. SJ. Jb Jf Sea serpents! Still, we might say, sea serpents . . . .For it seems that when First Officer Moughtin of the Mauretania reported s-ght ing one off Naussau in February, Captain Peel had sighted on; too. "I didn’t pay much attention to it,” says Moughtin, "as that was the skipper’s find.” ... .It seems strange no one mentioned it at that time. Very strange. Jb Jb * It’s Spring again, after one of New York’s coldest winters in years. . . . And the bus tops are full or ardent youngsters riding up Fif thy Avenue and Riverside Drive ... Ed Kressy says he has a repressed desire to stand up when the bus reaches the busiest corner in the world at 42nd and Fifth Avenue, and for., no other reason than, "just Spring,” yell at the top of his lungs. Jb Jb Jb Tipping is an old custom. And. we might add, an annoying one ...... One hotel here advertises that patrons are requested to refrain from tipping, since their employ ees are paid more than a living wage . ... The head waiter ac tually runs after people who have left tips—to refund them . . . And there’s a chain of hotels that ad vertises that you don’t have to buy your hat and coat out of hock when you check them . . . The check girls cannot accept tips! * * Helen E. Hughes, svelte bru nette looks as lovely as many of Hollywood’s stars. But, although Miss Hughes is secretary and mem ber of the board of directors of one of the large motion picture companies, the closest to Holly wood she has been was on six sep arate occasions that she packed ready to go. And every time some one of importance breezec into New York and she had tc cancel the trip. Damage by wind reported, bui when your back yard fence blow: over, the wind may be mostly ir the insides of the kid element. The lady who said she had the Lord in her heart but the devil ir her stomach, might be reminded that if so she put the devil in there through her mouth. Why some of us Cannot Gel Thin and Others Cannot Get Fat An interesting article in which science explains that obesity oj leanness often cannot be controll ed. Read this story April 15 ir the American Weekly, the maga zine which comes with the BAL TIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN Get your copy from your favoriti newsdealer or newsboy. ■ Bad Taste in Mouth, Sour Stomach For quick relief from constipation troubles, such as are mentioned below, get a 25-cent package of Thedford’s BLACK-DRAUGHT and begin taking it today. “I have suffered a great deal from biliousness and constipa tion,” writes Mrs. D. C. Jones, of Waterloo, Ala. “When I get bili ous I have a bad taste in my mouth, have sour stomach, my color is bad, and I get dizzy and feel awfully bad. I have head ache constantly. When I take Black-Draught it relieves me and I feel like a new person. I don’t think there is a better medicine than Black-Draught.” Now you can get Black-Draught it the form of a SYRUP, for Childeen On Top of Crime LOS ANGELES ... A miniature radio set, weighing less than two pounds and worn on Sam Browne belts by policemen on duty, is the newest development in the crime eliase by John Law. The set was invented bv R. O. Gordon. ° Bu Patricia Dow « -»»> >» «««« PaCCevtv ' 8163 Designed in 5 sisee: 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 38 re quires 3% yards of 85 inch material to gether with y. yard of contrasting. Without contrast ty yards. , A \ PoOm/to N* 8152 Designed in | s<^ sizes: 2,4,6 and j 8 jeers. Size 6 requires 2% I yards of 35 inch material, with 2 yards of ribbon ! for the tie belt. , __i FOR BUSY MORNINGS PATTERN 8163—Every wom an knows how to look neat, attrac tive-and ready for work in thi morning by wearing a dress liki the one sketched above. She makes it in printed percale with a blue ground and white fig ure and has the waist par: it white, repeating the color con trast. Or she chooses a checke gingham in green, blue or pin and white and makes it all of on color, with collar and sleeve rut fles in white. A LOVELY FROCK PATTERN 815 2—When we g< to parties we feel very party-ish dressed in this pretty dress of dot ted swiss, with a sash of turquoisi blue. But we have a variety cJ materials we could use, muslin batiste and it would be sweet n pale blue organdy. For PATTERN, send 15 cents in coin (for each pattern desir ed), your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE to Patricia Dow, The Carolina Watchman Pattern Dep’t., 115 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. ifoircta ayJOHN JOSEPH GAINES, M-D-ff PAIN IN ARTHRITIS "Doctor, I could get along—if it wern’t for this terrible PAIN.” So often we hear that—we doctors. If we could only alleviate the pain! Nowj let?s talk sense. First, be sure that it is arthritis in your W W X\ \\ « n h « t I I • • • H m case. Your doctor can tell you. Second, you can never relieve pain in a joint by walking on it! Don’t forget that, please—never! The fat patient with arthritis suf fers more; let’s talk to the fat one. If you want to relieve the pain, you will use REST and DIET k •« • M HOmmmmrnf m m m mm jmrm / UTTUEAMfRICA ANTARCTICA /l4/c/A3^ul\edt/t£\Srm 13 Frozen Boots! | I ITTLE AMERICA, ANTARC TICA, (via Mackay Radio)—Believe n or not, we are still hauling supplies from the scat tered caches on the Ice into Little America and, according to my boss, Commander Noville, we shall be at it for a total of three weeks or more. 1 am actually living In a lit tle tent out by Pressure Camp and I'm looking forward to getting Into one of those warm snow-burled wooden huts In Little America that Isn’t In danger of being blown away by the wind. Speaking of wind, we’ve got plen ty of It and they tell me this Is only a beginner. We are reaching the end of our sum mer season down here and the boys tell me It Is nice and balmy. I wouldn't know that. The ther mometer says fif teen degrees be , low zero and a W. S. McCormack biting wind sends our autogyro the cold rtght i Pilot through our veins. There are 51 of us working on the 'ice and already we are watching each other's faces for signs of frost bite. If we see a small white dot appear on another fellow’s nose we run up to him and help him to rub it with snow to restore the circula tion. Frostbite R no fun under our circumstances and Dr. Shirey has been busy fighting It with us, but [now he is gone. Illness forced him . to quit the Expedition and he Is on his way back to New Zealand on jthe Jacob Ruppert. We’ll miss him. We understand the research ship, Discovery II, Is bringing us another ! doctor who will "be transferred to Rhe Bear at Oakland and brought here to spend the next year or so with us on the ice. Then the Bear will have to run out of here to New Zealand before the Ross Sea freezes i again, so we'll be left all alone for .! twelve months. 1 wonder—about a , lot of things! In addition to my Job of segre [gating the many types of fuel and 1 oil for the various airplanes, trac itors and snowmobiles, as they re i [quire it, I am now helping In the | distribution of parts for all these [ [machines. Gosh, I didn’t know there (was so much work In the world! | The only water we have is heated ’ jsnow, so even the sketchy washing i of hands and face and shaving are priceless luxuries. Bathing 13 out of the question. Later, when we get Indoors we'll clean ourselves with cold cream. I never realized what a wonderful song that was, “Gee. How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning.” It Is a miserable feeling crawling out of a warm sleeping bag into a temperature of ten be low zero and finding your boots frozen solid so you have to beat them against the tent pole to soften them up before you can put them on and thus get your feet In out of the weather. No yawning or stretch lng. Once awake and out of your nest and you have to move fast. Al Carbouue, the cook, Is hav lng a picnic trying to feed us properly. Working under tremen dous difficulties, with ouly a single three-burner gasoline 6tove to pre pare five meals every 24 hours for 51 men, he la performing miracles But we must eat fast. The food turns stone cold In two or three minutes and freezes solid in ten Out on the trail we have thermos bottles of hot cocoa. You can bet 1 am very careful, to keep that stove supplied with the propet gasoline. We are working day and night at top speed to get our supplies to Little America before the baj ice and barrier ice feet break off There is a considerable crisis ot this kind now at Pressure Rldgf but, with luck, we’ll beat it. I’m delighted at the radio new? that these disconnected, hurrler little yarns of mine are proving in terestlng and are running in hun dreds of newspapers and that rnj club Is growing so fast. They tell me that high school teachers in his tory, science and geography are en rolling their entire classes and studying the stories with the work lng maps every week. That's swell! The more the merrier. We welcome as members, without any cost what ever, all people Interested In avia tlon, adventure and exploration who send in a seir-addressed stamped envelope to C. A. Abele, Jr., presi dent. Little America Aviation and Exploration Club, Hotel Lexington 48th Street and Lexington Avenue New York, N. Y. and the club staff will send them all a membershii card and a big map of the Soutl Polar region. (Next Week: "A New Exploration") first. Drugs cotne last. Ah, you had been trying every drug from aspirin to Sloans; and you kept right on walking—and eat ing everything you can get hold of! If you have arthritis, you are SICK, I tell you. Then be your self. I’m talking for relief of pain, mind you—and I mean every word I say. Go to bed and stay there; keep off those sore joints, you fat woman with a case of early arthritis. Don’t even go to the bath-room. Take your food lying down. That’s REST. Then, "starvation diet.” You want to relieve pain, don’t you? Here is your diet: Broth, whole wheat muffins, tea or coffee with out cream or sugar—for three days. Fourth day .you may add lettuce—and "greens;” yes—spin ach. Nothing more. You will be astonished at the result—free dom from pain. Remember, it is the recent case of arthritis that I am talking to. Remember—rest and diet first—drugs last. R^st in bed three weeks if necessary. When pain is gone, gradually— very gradually get back to your tjsual diet. And, remember— you can never get rid of pain in a joint by walking on it—especially in the knees, feet and ankles. Now I’ve said much here—but it means a lot as well. There is said to be a great un satisfied demand for automobiles, also there is a great unsatisfied demand for money to buy one with. , "Use a word three times, and it is yours,” says the linguists, in urg ing us to learn the meaning of words. However, some of the men have used the .word "tenspot” several times to thier friends, without having secured the loan of *fhe same. , The Rabbit Comes Up Smiling ■ - . I ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. . . . “Rabbit” Maranville, 43-year old baseball infield spark plug of the Boston N. L. Braves, whose suffered mutiple break of the left leg shoeked and grieved the entire baseball world, comes up smiling and declares that he “will come back again as he has before.” Photo shows Maranville with nurses Edith Green, left, and Myrtle Bloomquist at the hospUal here where he is progressing nicely toward recovery. UNUSUAL FACTS REVEALED by “Movie Sf>otiight”j MARION NIKON fS WE SMALLEST TULL GROWN leaping LADY IN pictures. SUE N JUST FIVE TEFT TALL AND WEIGHS NINETY-EIGHT POUNDS. -x. t ONE IMPORTANT ACTRESS WHO INEVER APPEARS /N A PICTURE !/S THE *STAND-IN SHE STANDS IN THE STARS PLACE WHILE THE CAMERA MAN FOCUSES AND THE D/RECTOR PLANS THE LIGHTING. (T IS FATIGUING WORK: K \ fc. NOEL FRANCIS 1 HA DESCENDANT | OFXSHN QUINCY I ADAMS' AND A 1 D.A.R. —QUTSHE I _ ATTRIBUTES HER £/ START AS AN ACTRESS i HER shaped/ 'M i COLUMBIA STUDIOS HAD 70 CONSTRUCT | MOTH PROOF REFRIGERATOR CABINETS 70 KEEP *00,000 WORTH OF. COSTLY \ FURS USED IN "THE LJNE-UP! I MUTT AND JEFF—ONE GOOD RUB DESERVES ANOTHER BY BUD FISHER JEFF,THE ESKIMOS ARE STRANGE PEOPLE! \ -THEY KISS BV RUBBING NOSES - NOW WATCH ME SAIN THE FRIENDSHIP OF THAT ESKIMO J BV RUBBING -;-"S NOSES WITH ^T^/mDTT.VoU SOT HIS Lrm-E (a nose TO do it.1 r-m ( I66Y W16GY, ylGGY W\6GY! E S' ~ AW, HE WAS JUST |§g = / OH'. that GlVIHG VOU ARlSSl t : ^UST BG HE RUBBED YOU M 1 Jic.iicci VvaMTH HIS _ ;_JHIS WIF (Ooj>rr%ta. uss, br a 0 iW> OtmI Britain Mffeta Brarrril Tndn Bek Be* 0. 8. Pat. Ofr«o» THE FACT FINDERS—AND THEIR DISCOVERIES BY ED KRESSY [ 1 /were we go FOLKS,ON AH' ^ OTHER FACT-FINDING ADVEN TURE -HOP ABOARD &TRAVEE vumt US TO PAY iw< // iudia^a,ILLINOIS,OHIO,MISSOURI 8. KANSAS HAVE A The hirst thing we stumble across Today is growing seasou oterom iso to 180 days.Iu the TlllS-APPROX-iMATELY 2,000 CAR LOADS of POTATOES NEW ENGLAND STATES THE SEASON ISFR0MT2O ARE USEP-EACH DAY im the UNITED STATES.. To ifaODAYS LONG.... TUE££ A2E ABOUT 7,000,000 D005 we UNITED STATED r . a r MOW L£TS MO? OVER ' TO SOME ofOliR WESTE2N STATED ANDPtCKUPA EACToP-TWO^ j WILD WORSES ARE STILL To BE FO(JMD,IJOTAB>_Y !W COLORADO, MEVADA.OBMOM, I DA HO, W. MEXICO &ARJ2QMA

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