UUFLEN TlZ2. KENANSVILLE. NOBXH CABCUNA C ., ... 7 . Keii.. id by i.:..un ' soldiers "in Eritrea, northeast Africa, a wallow recently flew 2.600 mllea to Tortonla in northern Italy, and la believed to be tiis first of Ita apeclea to carry a iis.sHge, tbe paper being tied to one of Ita legs. . - ',:Ar;j EOYS! GliRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad In another column of this paper and learn how to Join too DIxzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prises. Adv. t. ;;. "'t:: Ad Sounda Bad ..;." ' Profanity Is coarse; of course, It's wicked, too. . ' ' i; L i::::zorLLicc::?;.:.is TOCATiVL ; St ssss of tiow totoot intpootouot tMaav 'i to cfUfaVsii procicna VUaMnbia . . - for having fit. . : v :" Mighty tarn canal kanm U, ' Murr are nervous, poor In appetite, v system our of order, because their daily diets lack enough of the precious Vua- min B for kammo fir. Few thing keep them back Bke a lack , , of this protective food element, . - &s rive avarraom Quaker Oafa w ; morning. Because in addition to its gen erous supply of Vitamin B for keeping '. - fit, it fiinushes food-energy, muscle and , ooay-Duu(ungingremeata.jor aooucc - Scan smio it tomorrow rb?a2weks test. Quaker Oats has a wholesome, nm like, luscious appeal to the appetite. Flavonp. suraaaaino-Iv rwt All wnetia ''" ,- : supply it. '.. v:; IN VITAMIN B M KEEPMQ FIT. . . lc word Cf Quaker Cats Oufcar mt MotWs Oat are the i". - , .. -,: ; , ' ' ' V it Soviet Silk Fanu : ; i Thirty thousand acres. In Russia whl e devoted to allk farms, , .M' ASH YC JH DOCTOR : FIRST, nOTIIEill r Before You Give your ; Child an Unknown Remedy to Take Every day, unthinkingly, mothers take the advice of unqua 1 persona instead of their doctor's on . remedies tor their child. , .. ' ft they knew what the scientists know, they would neper take this , ."- Pocton Say P1T1LLIPS ; . ?; Ir YourCWld. ' When it comes to the frequently-used "milk of magnesia," doctors, for over 50 years, have said "PHILLIPS' Milk of Magnesia r the safe remedy , for your child." ; v!1 ' Remember this And Ahvaui Say -Phillip? " When Yon Buy. Your . child deserves it; for your own peace of mind, see that yod get it Gea- nine Phillip? Milk of Magnesia. : v , Aiso in tablet i'ormi y Phillip.' Milk o Magnesia Tabtets are now on sale at all drua atores everywhere. Each tiny tablet it the equivalent or a iea spoonful of Genuine Phillips Milk of Phillips WNU 4 V 4188 For the Daily Care of Prolong the youthful appearance of , your hands by giving them the same care yon give your face. Use v Catleara Sas every time yetr'. wash your hands it Will do much 1 to prevent redness and roughneae, " cauw d .by daily tasks, and to keep t'-e hands eoft, smooth and lovely, "A Price 23 eenta -i. Cuticura Soap X. a Willie CHAPTER kill Continued ' , .. There was In him no. Immediate Intention to do this, - His first ex perience of Hostile Valley had not been of a sort to attract him to that gloomy . place again ; yet If . Bart, and Zeke and Hutdy wet's gone. . He thought of Jenny and Will and of Alarm Pierce with pleasure; and when, the next day proved fine and Talr,rand the blue hills were beck oning, he yielded to sudden ' Im pulse, climbed Into his old car, and set out along the remembered way. : 6aladlne turned Into tbe farm yard, and stopped the car, and a man at work with an as In the shed ceased his labors and came to the door. But this was not Zeke Dace ! Here was Will, He recognized Sala dlne and dropped the ax and came swiftly out Into the sun. His smile waa broad, and there was welcome In his eye. t Saladlne looked at this ..tall blond giant with' hair like flax. and Steady eyea of a deep blue like the sky at dusk; and he slipped to the ground, and their bands clasped hard.-fpjy':!,:-.';.-' ,' "Come .fishing again, did yooT" Will asked, with a chuckle. "Dont see no rod 1" "v 'r; .AiCT' ' "No, Just come to pass the time of day," 8aladlne told him. "How are you, Willi Yo're looking finer "I am," said Will. "I am full fine !" Then his eyes swung to one side, toward the house, and Sala dlne saw Jenny In the kitchen door. She bad a plate and a dish towel In her hands, and contentment lln her countenance; and as they went toward her she smiled, andput the plate and towel ' down and came swiftly to meet them. 'So these three stayed there to gether on the sunned step of the porch for a while. Saladlne asked after Marm Pierce, and Jenny's eye twinkled, and. Will said: "She's, busy " breaking' Win' to bridle now I" , J : 1 thought she got too much sat isfaction out o'f "her row with him ever to make it up," Saladlne sug gested, amused. ... , ' It was Jenny who explained, her eyea gentle, "She Just did it so's I could marry Will and 'not have to worry about her," shev confessed. I'She wouldn't hear to moving up here; "lowed If she was pulled op by the roots she'd Just wither and die: And she said new married folks had ought to be by thelrselres till they got broke to double har ness, anyway. But I couldn't bear to think of her living there alone; so she. sent for Uncle Win; and talked htm Into coming back there to live, and now she's, haying as much tun out of maklag him do her bidding as she did before out of fighting with him I" ,; "1 hear he's quit drinking Sala dlne suggested. Will guffawed ; and Jenny nodded, laughing softly too. "8be put something into his rum," she said. : "It made him terrible sick, and: he lot on that . she'd killed him, and . she ; sajd . she'd kill or cure !" She added contented ly: "Uncle. Win's .pretty old, but be Robert Ames Ben iAetB new thrill hovel of a plane lost in the un tracked'North. 16 How Alan4 Garth fought to save the lives of three .tenderfeet while they were plotting to kill him and seize his ; platinum strike--is one ; i of the most exciting f istories vet to come from i this favorite author. "V' j O Caught In The Wild ; y begins next week in this fnewspaper. Be sure to ' begin with the : first in ;'8tallment jl'l " Don't miss a slnrth chapter of this czrtel zizTtlr. next rs. ' --r1 I ms can do the. chores,1 and - she can manage tbe housework. (It's better for them .to be together sol" . i. And i she confessed, ' her - cheek bright i "Of course, I'm still down there the most of the time. I Just come up- here to do "Will's dishes, and sweep around,' and cook him op some victuals every day." Saladlne aaked, mlllng: "What 'does Marm Pierce think about you and. Will waiting so long?" . , - Her eyes were quick to cling" to Will's, ' tenderly ; and Will said gravely : : "We didn't want to put no slight on Huldy, by marrying; and Jenny and me, we're young. We don't have to hurry now. -We've good timer' , t ; "But we're . most through wait ing," Jenny added.- - "It's not long now.". , , ' When Saladlne. presently moved to depart, ; Will urged that he stay and try for a trout. In the big pools in the bog. '"A day like this, yo're apt to get hold of an old rouncer, down there," he promised. "Might be. worth yom? while!" ; But Saladlne shook hit head. "I cant,: not today," he said. "But ril stop and see Marm Pierce!" . Jenny shook her head. . "Granny's not to home," she said. "She and Uncle Win went to the village." . "I'll come next spring, then," he' promised.. "I left my rod down here, last time I was here. I'll have to come and get that, and try the brook- again. v- . "She's kept the rod safe for you," Jenny told him ; and Will urged hospitably: "You do I Come and stay with us. Jenny and me, we can put you up right here, long as yo're a mind!" So Saladlne left messages for old Marm Pierce, and at last bade them good-by. When he drove away, they stood together, . shoulders . almost touching, to watch him go. He. turned up the road toward the ridge again, and looked back and saw their hands lift, in a gesture of fare well. Then they swung, side-by-side, toward the house that was to be their home. . The farm was far below him ; and fieyosd it lay the sweep ana love liness of Hostile Valley. It waa not easy, on such a day as this to un derstand' bow the place bad come by Its harsh ancient name. When on that night In June, now months past, Saladlne departed after his first coming here, he had gone at full speed, like one pursued. But today he drove slowly, reluctant to leave the pleasant scene and these friendly folk behind. . , THE! END. Hypnotism Dafiaocl Hypnotism la defined as an arti ficially Induced sleep or a trance resembling sleep. Its duration va ries with the subject as well as the operator, and so also does the In tensity of the sleep. While hypnotic suggestion has been used to some extent medically, It has also been employed by others such as stage exhibitors. '' 1 'FMv ... v. " ' wczh ln thls paper ' -jk i !- , -y : .::." - ; 'A .'. Afc s)f, Mr, W' .tffr 4fe . 4tt tat Our MeWe te ' CCOD HEALTH BY DR. LLOYD ARNOLD PiDtoaor of BactcrioloM and Pre ventive Medicine, Univeriit of voueie ei saeaicina. THE UBIQUITOUS TUBERCLE AND ITS RELATION TO MAN - According to a report Just Issued by the National Tuberculosis asso ciation of New Tork city, the tu berculosis death rate ln the Unit ed States ranks seventh among the 80 countries listed. New Zea land, the Union of South Africa, Australia, Oey lon, Denmark and the Nether- I J lands ' are the , . . wumrwa uai have lower tuberculosis death rates. These figures are for 1928-1932. The listing for 1084 Is not available yet because It takes time to tabulate the enormous amount of data. Tuberculosis is -one of. the- most Jrevalent of all contagious diseases, t is rightly called the white plague. It is spread over much of the known world. ' And It. Is different from most of our other contagious diseases, which are what we call acute. If any one has typhoid fever, diphtheria, measles, scarlet fever, mumps, or whooping cough, be has a period of a few days to three weeks when he Is confined to bed. But recovery takes place promptly after the fe ver stage Is over. Tuberculosis, on the contrary, Ms a chronic disease. It can extend over a period of years.1. In the beginning stages pa tients ' may hardly be aware that they have It . It lent only the human race that has tuberculosis. Animals also can get It Fish, turtles and frogs have tuberculosis. Birds, chickens and turkeys have .tuberculosis. Oows have tuberculosis. The cold-blooded animals are Infected with a tu bercle bacillus that grows only at at a low temperature, and hence cannot grow ln man. Birds have a higher temperature than man, consequently It Is bard to infect us with their tubercle bacillus. Some human cases have been reported, but avian tuberculosis In man Is ex tremely rare; - The tubercle bacilli that cows have, however, can grow In man and cause tuberculosis. But the aisease Is different from the true human type, as the lungs are seldom Involved In bovine or cattle tuberculosis ln man., Tuberculosis of the bones,. Jpjflts and glands ln children, however,' are oftentimes caused by this particular kind of tubercle bacilli. Most of us have breathed ln or swallowed living tubercle bacilli many times before we reach the adolescent stage. When the bacilli enter the body they either are killed off quickly or else they find lodg ment In some organ, usually the lungs, an'd there they grow In a small local spot, of tissue. When the growth Is very slow, as It Is ln healthy persons, then the surround ing tissues can wail off the Infected area. .It Is as If si tew thousand soldiers of an enemy country had succeeAled In entering sthe center of some state, and then the defense sol diers in that state, who could not drive them out, had sealed them up In a tight-walled; enclosure. Now If these Invaders were able to live on the water, air and food that percolate through the walls, then yon would have he same situation as exist In a walled-In tubercle foci. The Invaders are, harmless so long as .the wall holds; them prisoners, but If the wall gives. way, we find an Invading army right In our midst Undernourishment and long fevers, such ss nn'dulant fever and parrot fever, and whooping cough, mumps, diabetes , and anemia, all tend to lower the body .resistance and open up holes in the walls en closing tbe germ prisoners. The ba cilli swarm out of the opening, and spread rapidly through the adjoin ing tissues. i' The best way to prevent tubercu losis Is to prevent the tubercle ba cilli from getting Into our bodies. But - this Is almost , Impossible to do In the present condition of mod ern civilization. We have to mix with many different people. Do you ever, count the number of persona yon talk with dally,, shake hands with,' or tand or sit next to In a movie theater, church, restaurant, store, street car or bust - Some of them are sure to have tuberculosis. Children, too, come in contact with persona Impregnated with this dis ease. ;,. . , ,..:!',, V". .". ! One should almost have to Hve on a desert bland, with absolutely no contact with the outside world, to be safe from infectirn. t . - ' ; Consequently, since we can hard ly prevent tuberculosis germs from coming Into our bodies, , the next best thing to do Is to keep our bod ily health In such daily good condi tion that we can destroy the germs that do get in, or. If the dose la be yond our ability to destroy, that we can Imprlaon them ln the ; capsule form Just . described. . Then our chances are very good 1 for- going through life without being Invaded by the disease. , But medical "science Is : conquer- (ng tbe disease, 'i! V a) Western Newspaper Ualoa. ' Treasury Gets Back $2,400,000; of Chinch Bug Control Money The weather early this summer saved the government about $2,400 000. Heavy ' rainfall at critical pe riods did all that barriers costing $2,000,000 could have done to keep chinch bugs cut of middle westeqi corn fields. . Tbe federal bill for chinch beg control this year will be less than $75,000, according to Lee -LA. (Strong, cniei or ourean oi ,eu (tomology "and plant guarantiee of the United States Department of Agriculture, who directed the government-state campaign against tbe pest Tbe 'rest of the $2,500,000 that con gress appropriated for the campaign reverts to the treasury. Most of the $75,000 used has gone for barrier material, largely creosote. A small amount will be used this fall to determine the probabilities of an outbreak next year. Barriers between small-grain fields where the chinch bug passes the first few wingless weeks of its life and corn fields to which it crswls as soon aa the small grains ma ture were needed in only a com paratively few aoattered localities in six corn, belt states Iowa, Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, and Minne- Are Our Eyes Getting Weaker? Defects of Vision Increase With Years Poor Light a Cause. When born, nearly all babies have normal eyes. With the same kind of care that carries them through In fancy and childhood, happy and healthy their eyes should remain normal. But It has been found that by the time children finish grade school, 20 per cent of them have defective vi sion. When they have finished col lege, 40 per cent have eye difficulties. Forty years of age shows 60 per cent with defective vision, and past sixty, (5 per cent are so affected. Why should the eyes of so many ihow aucb an alarming Increase In visional defects? Because these cbil lren, these growing girls and boys young and older men and women, ised their eyes with too little light I In tbe daytime outdoors there is, of course, plenty of light the nat ural daylight nature developed our eyes to see by. Tbe light from an unclouded sky gives us 10,000 foot candles. In tbe shade of a tree, the light will be upwards of 1,000 foot candles. -Close by a window there may be 200 foot candles of light shining on your book page or needle work. What is a foot candle? It Is the scientist's "yardstick" of light meas urement The amount of light one candle would sbjne on a surface one foot away. But at night that Is another itoryl It Is very common for people to read or sew with only four foot candles of light where they should have an illumination of at least 10 foot candles for the coarsest kind of aye-work; 20 foot candles for read ing! fine print and for sewing; 30 foot candles for continued use of the eyes. Using the eyes with less light than these minimum amounts may result In eye-strain and possible permanent Injury to vision. ' Be sure you have enough light I If you use electricity ask your light company to test your lamps and fix tures to see If they give enough light (or safe seeing. If you do not have electricity, get one of the new 800 candle power pressure lamps that burn kerosene or gasoline. When your work is held three feet awdy from the lamp, the latter should be of at least 275 candle power Intensity to assure the 20 to 30 foot candles of light you need to protect your sight It is Important that you use a high candlepower lamp to be sure you have enough light to protect your sight LJ you there fs Now let's reason sensibly. Don't try to get well in a day . . . this is asking too much of Nature. Remember, she has certain natural processes that just cannot be hurried. But there is a certain scientific way you can assist by starting those digestive juices in the stomach to flowing more freely and at the same time supply a balanced mineral defi ciency the body needs. You art mvitti t Kttn is "tvery Friday night to profrtm of y Music Bon Hoar Mutual Broadcasting Network, sola. Elsewhere excessively heavy rainfall supplied an effective two edged weapon. Tbe rains covered the eggs in tbe cracks of the soil, so the little bugs could not get out Many small bugs that did emerge were beaten again Into the soil. The rains also promoted the spread of a fungous disease deadly ro the peat Many of tho chinch bugs, which overwintered and came through tbe spring In record-breaking numbers, probably. lived their allotted span and laid as . many eggs as usuai. Had It not been for the timely rains, these eggs almost surely would have produced great hordes of hun gry bugs, This reduced migration, Mr. Strong warns, ' does not mean that corn growers have nothing to fear next year. Present conditions are highly favorable to the chinch bug. Since the small-grain harvest the bugs have found abundant food ln the natural grasses gi owing luxuriantly as a re sult of plentiful moisture. Tbe bugs living on these grasses have reached maturity and have flown all over the corn fields where they are now feed ing and laying eggs from which the second generation will hatch. Tbe second-generation chinch bugs may overwinter In numbers large enough to be a aerlous threat in 1036. FORTUNES IN GEMS CHANGE OWNERSHIP OVER CUPS OF TEA When It was stated the other day that a scientist bad discovered a process which enabled him to make synthetic diamonds. Indistinguishable from the real ones, but very much cheaper, a great many people were alarmed. Diamonds are a favorite Invest ment and those who possess them would suffer enormous losses If atones exactly the1 same could be made commercially. It is Impossible to say exactly bow much money would be involved, but the total would probably not be far abort of 1,000,000,000. Fortunately for the owners of jewels, however, tests of the "syn thetic diamonds" by tbe experts "1 the London Chamber of Commerce have revealed Important differences between the manufactured gems and the genuine article. Business ln diamonds Is one of the best barometers of world trade. When diamonds boom It Is a sign that there Is general prosperity. When the demand for them falls off commerce generally is slowing down. But no other form of "big busi ness" Is carried out ln so modest a way. There Is no palatial diamond exchange, housed ln "marble halls." Instead, you have the marble-topped tables of a teasliop, where men sit over twopenny cups of tea or coffee, discussing the prices of the "spars lers" that He spilled among the bread crumbs. That's how they do busi ness In Hatton Garden, the center of the diamond trade. London An swers. Thia Story Has Whiskers Mike Verkal, the unemployed woodsman of Spokane, Wash., got police protection for his beard. Said Mike: "1 got temporary work ln a camp north of town and I'd only been there two-three days when a man grabbed my beard, kicked my shin and said, 'It's fellows like you who keep us barbers out of work. Get shaved or get out of town !' I have this beard ninny years. I like It Maybe you arrest this barber?" The police promised eard protection In stead. New Gasoline Process By a new process used In Great Britain's government laboratories, a gallon of gasoline worth 25 cents Is obtained from a gallon of tar costing 7 cents. Light Up Illumine your mind by the light ot the thoughts of the great feel tired, run-down. nervous anu out ot usually a definite reason for this Therefore, if you are pale, tired and run down ... a frequent sign that your blood-cells are weak then do try in the simple, easy way so many millions ap prove by starting a course of S.S.S, Blood Tonic, Much more could be said a trial will thoroughly convince you that this way, in the absence of any organic trouble, will start you on the road of feeling like your self again. c s.s.s. Co. makes you feel like yourself again Here Is Child's . Tinted Apr: By GRANDMOTHER CLARK ' ' We have here a cute little apron, which any youngster will lore. Bits three to six-year child. It measures 19 by 24 Inches. The bear and ball ' are tinted in yellow. Cross-stttcllJ and outline stamping Is done on on bleached material and can be worked ' In any dark color thread. - ' Package No. 6 contains 'v this stamped and tinted apron ready to be embroidered and sewed up. Bind ing and thread are not Included. Sent to you postpaid for 15 cents. Address Home Craft Co, Dept A, Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave, St Louis. Mo. Inclose stamped, addressed en velope for reply when writing for any Information. Australian Aborigines Are Rapidly Dying Out The aborigines of Australia, prob- ably tbe most primitive of the sur viving races, are rapidly dying out, It Is revealed by the report of the commonwealth statistician, notes a Sydney correspondent In the Los An geles Times. The number fell by 10 per cent last year. The figure of 54300 Is 5,200 below that which waa returned ln 1933 and la tragically lower than the population before the arrival of the first white settler. Though this was little more than a century ago, the blacks then num bered more than 250,000. In their native surroundings the aborigines are self-reliant and quick; under white Influence they lose sta bility. White man's diseases have played their part ln the decimation of the last century. Whole tribes have been extinguished by smallpox and tuberculosis. European vices ap peal readily to them and they fall under the strain more quickly, per haps, than any other native race. As far back as 1840 one Australian newspaper foresaw extinction of the aborigines If nothing was done to check contacts between the two races Inhabiting the southern continent Yet the future of the natives receives little attention. Just So Too often the distinction between true and false Is Identical with mine and thine. For Bad Feeling Due to Constipation Get rid of constipation by taking Black Draught as soon as you notice that bowel activity has slowed up or you begin to feel sluggish. Thousands prefer Black-Draught for the refreshing relief it has brought them. . . Mrs. Ray Mullins, of Lafe, Ark., writes: "My husband and I both take Thed ford's Black-Draught and find it splendid for constipation, biliousness, and the disagreeable, aching, tired feeling that comes from this condition." With refer ence to Syrup of Black -Draught, which this mother gives her children, she says: "They like the taste and it gave auch good results." BLACK -DRAUGHT SINGIE BOOmAnD PRIVATE BATH, A nsw hotal on 4nd Strawl t blocks aaat of Grand Csniral Station. sorts old-fashioned music p:jo f. m., EXT, SlL