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£ Cardui Helped Three Times ®/' “I used Cardui, when a girl, for enunps, and it helped then, writes Mrs, Ike Wright, of Sealy, Texas. Next, after marriage, she reports having taken Cardui when she felt weak, nervous and restless before her children were born. And during middle life, it helped her again. ."I wet miserable, the explains. “I did not have an appetite. I was very blue and * upset. I remembered Cardui had helped m&tao took it again and soon began to pick' up- I ate and had more strength. I. akept up the Cardui end did not have any •Tutor* trouble. Ie it any wonder that 1 recommend Cardtfa to all my friends? "Thousands of women testify Csrdui bene fited them. If it does not benefit YOU, -eonafilt a physician. f’ 1 Blind to the Present ■! Why do most people-speak of hap piness In retrospect? --.- . Myldeal Remedy for HEADACHE "Though I have tried all good remedies Capudiuo salts me best. It is quick and gentle." Quickest because it is liquid— Its ingredients are already dis solved. For headache, neuralgia aches—periodic pains. S'. •Mo Need to Suffer “MoiningSickness” “Morning sickness”—is caused by an acid condition. To avoid it, add must be offset by alkaiit—such as .magnesia. 'Why Physicians Recommend Milnesia Wafers . These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are pore milk of magnesia in solid form— *<-‘the most pleasant way to take it. Each wafer is approximately equal to a full adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct acidity in the mouth and throughout the j&estive system and insure Quick, com '\tete elimination of the waste matters that cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a doses other discomforts. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and (8, tit 35c and 60c respectively, and in convenient tins for your handbag contain Jm 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately oik adult dose, of milk of magnesia. AD good dirug stores sell andrecommend them. Start using thesa delicious, effective aati-a cld, gently laxative wafer*today Professional samples sent free to registered physicians or dentists if request is made on professional letterhead. Select Products, N.Y. _ i WNU—4 * 0—« Dandruff Formed in Big Flakes ~ Scalp Itched Badly-Qulck Relief with Cuticura the Family 5SBBS8SSSSSBS=sss5S=BaBBBSBSSBBBSasa8BaBSSSSSB=SBSSB==BS= Magazine Section of Special Interest .to Women and Children Readers ll BEDTIME STORY |i J By TBORMTOR W. BURGESS | LIGHTFOOT DOES THE WISE THING ALL the rest of thnt day the hunter with the terrible gun lay hidden In the bushes of the pas ture where he could watch for Lightfoot the Deer to leave the place of safety he had found when he swam across the Big River. It required a lot of patience on the part of the hunter, but the hunter had plenty of patience. It sometimes ' Lightfoot Got Up and Stepped Out Under the Stars. seems as if hunters have more pa tience than any other people. But this hunter waited in vain. Jolly, round, red Mr. Sun sank down in the west to his bed behind the Purple Hills. The Black Shadows crept out and grew blacker. One by one the stars began to twinkle. Still the hunter waited, and still there was no sign of IJghtfoot. At last it become so dark that it was useless fdr the hunter to , remain longer. Disappointed and once more be coming angry, he tramped back to the Big Biver, got Into his boat, and rowed across to the other side. Then he tramped home and bis thoughts were very bitter. He ‘knew that he would have shot Lightfoot had it not been for the man who had protected Lightfoot He even began to suspect that this man had himself killed Lightfoot, for he had been sure that as soon as he had become rested Lightfoot would start for the woods and Lightfoot had done nothing of the kind. In fact the hunter had not had so much as another glimpse of Lightfoot The reason the hunter had been so disappointed was that Lightfoot was smart He was smart enough to understand that the man who was saving him from the hunter had done it because he was a true friend. All afternoon Lightfoot had rested on a bed of soft hay in an open shed and had watched this I PAPA KNOWS—1 I ’■ mi “Pop, what it a locomotive?” “Steam puff.” ' e Ball Syndicate.—WNU Service. man going about his work and tak ing the utmost care to do nothing to frighten him. "He not only will let no one else harm me, but he himself will not harm me,” thought Llghtfoot. "As' long as he Is near I am safe. I’ll stay right around here until the bunting season Is over, then I’ll swim back across the Big Blver to my home In the dear Green Forest” So all afternoon Llghtfoot rested and did not so much as put his nose outside that open shed. That is why the hunter got no glimpse of him. When It became dark, so dark that he knew there was no longer dan ger, Llghtfoot got up and stepped out undejr the stars. He was feel ing quite himself again. His splen did strength had returned. He bonnded lightly across the meadow and up Into the brushy pasture where the hunter had been hidden. There and In the woods back of the pasture he browsed, filling his stomach. But at the first hint of the coming of another day Llghtfoot turned back, and when his friend the farmer came out early In the morning to milk the cows there was Llghtfoot back in the open shed. The farmer smiled. "You are as wise as you are handsome, old fel low,” said he. © T. W. Burgess.—WNU Service. Protecting Florida Coast Fish |WW.,VW"V ^ .• * VA^-^W -V^V *AA^ -vA> • **A* '*-5f THE Miami Chamber of Commerce evidently does not want any tricks played on the fish in Florida waters, Inasmuch as It has provided a checking service for the false teeth of fishermen. It all started when a fisherman found a set of teeth in a red snapper he caught, and received claims from a score of alleged owners. ♦ MOTHER’S ♦ COOK BOOK SOME GOOD RECIPE^ IF TOU like the Chinese dishes this will be one to prepare for the guests who also enjoy them: Crab and Egg Omelet. If the fresh ^hrimps or crab Is usQd, cook and cool. Shred one cup ful of crab or shrimp. Cut one cup ful of lean pork into Inch long nar row strips. Use scissors for the cutting. Soak one-fourth of a cup ful of dried mushrooms, then cut Into strips. Slice one large mild onion and cut fine Into strips. Fry the pork In two tablespoonfuls of peanut oil until tender and brown. Add onion, one cupful of bamboo " * ■"■■Mi ANNABELLE’S ANSWERS Bj RAY THOMPSON DEAR ANNABELLE: ■„ WHO IN VENTED THE WORLD'S FIRST CURB FOR BALDNESS? SH1NYPATK. Dear Shinypate: A FRENCH MAN—HE CALLED IT THE GUILLOTINE! Annaballa. "Sanctions” Applied at Home you MUST EAT roue spinach before *x> get Awy desert , I I PONT IfAVB I This HOltt£ Cf iMTHOyr sOOR V.-5 W&fiVB&tKS ^ EKTRV 0ARP&P you ueam III VOUR SHOEi> fl thokoooh uy I th7 I PRACTICE f BRST AMP MAT 60 OUT — shoots and mushrooms, a table spoonful of soy sauce. Just before dinner beat six eggs, add the finely cut crab or shrimp and the vege table mixture. Fry In a small amount of peanut oil, in small bits like a pancake. ' \ ~ ~ - Lobster Club Sandwich. Toast bread cut one-third of an inch thick, butter and keep hot. Allow two slices for each person to be served. Saute the lobster in a little butter, use either fresh or, canned. Season well with salt, pep per and a teaspoonful of currant jelly. Fry bacon until crisp. Place slices of bacon on toast and over this a layer of. pieces of lobster; cover with mayonnaise, then top with a piece of crisp lettuce or chilled watercress; make another layer of bacon and lobster and on top place a slice of toast. Garnish the sand wiches- with sliced tomato, may onnaise and lemon. Cut into tri angles and serve. Piiplento Cup With Egg and Celery. Drain the small red peppers from their liquor, place in gem pans to •fill. Fill with the following salad: Chop one cupful of celery very fine and mix with two hard cooked eggs chopped. Into this stir one-half cupful of mayonnaise and fill the cups. Decorate with mayonnaise and small shapes cut of green pep per. Serve very cold on crisp let tuce with toasted biscuit and cheese. 6 Western Newspaper Union. THE THINGS YOU THINK By DOUGLA8 MALLOCH THE! things you think men care about When you stay home, when you step out, Are not the things, It may befall, That people care about at all. Some are so ' careful of their dress, Yet guilty of the carelessness, Some merry night, some busy day, Of whfti they do and what they say. ,, » The things you think that callers note, And long remember when remote, Are not the things remembered then By other women, other men. Some are so careful that the drapes Are certain colors, certain shapes, And yet their house may be a place Without a single Christian grace. The things you think that men dis cuss When tlnqp has bad its time with us Are not the things that men relate, Our worth, or wealth, to estimate. Some are so careful that they leave ▲ great estate to those who grieve, And yet their monument shall be Not money, but a memory. • DoiurlM Matlock.—WNU Sorvlco. GIPUGAGP “I pity the midget,” says fisher woman Fannie, ‘‘because he can’t show you how big the one that got away was.” ® Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Dinner Ensemble Mme. Suzy poses a black jet bird on the tiny pillbox hat of black an telope that is worn with Marcella ' Dormoy’s new black broadcloth din ner ensemble. The dress is floor length and is slit from nape to waist In the back. The hip-length jacket is slightly flared. » Eve's EpiGrAros 1 no CJOCOAtl sees herself AS others see r her; cohen she looks in her coir ror she closes her cooyth. 16,000 Worm*' Sixteen ioousuuU specie* of worms exist. "QUOTES" COMMENTS ON CURRENT TOPICS BY NATIONAL CHARACTERS Opinions expressed in the paragraphs below are not necessarily concurred in by the editor of this newspaper. AAA BENEFITS By EDWARD A. O’NEAL Head of the American Farm Bureau Federation. THE program launched by organ ized agriculture must go forward. The American farmer will continue to fight for economic parity. Under the operations of the Agricultural Adjustment act the agricultural march toward parity, by giving farmers a purchasing power, has stimulated business revival through out the country. We are going to look to congress to take specific steps which will pro vide by legislation the mechanism by which agricultural parity is to be continued. It is up to congress to provide that legislation within the provisions of the Constitution. THE PARALLEL By PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT SOMETIMES at the close of a day I say to myself that the last na tional election must have been held a dozen years ago—so much water has run under the bridge, so many great events in our history have oc curred since then. And yet 31 months—less than three years—have gone by since March, 1033. History repeats in these crowded months, as in the days of Jackson— two great achievements stand forth —the rebirth of the interest and un derstanding of a great citizenry In the problems of the nation and an established government which by positive action has proved its de votion to the recovery and well-be ing of that citizenry. A DEFENSE OF CAPITALISM By JOHN S. THOMAS President of Clarkson College. WE LISTEN with rapt attention while onr intelligentsia tell us that the chief interest pf business men is to bring on periodic collapse: that our farmers are failures; that we who work are oppressed; that we who do not are pauperized; that our statesmen are stupid, renal and hired; that criminals rule our cities: that we owe ourselves so much man WOMEN ARE NOT SO “EASY” AS MEN IN FLATTERY GAME ‘ What do you think of the claim that women like admiration and flat tery as much as men and are no less fools than men In the bands of one of the other sex who uses that meth od of getting into their good graces? “Don’t you think that’s ridiculous? I’ve never yet met a man who wouldn’t believe anything charming and delightful about himself that any woman might tell him. But I’ve seen many a man try to bamboozle a worn an and fail because he laid it on too thick.” This was asked of a woman writer of note, who replied as fol lows : I think our reader has hit upon an important truth in the relationship of the sexes. I do not doubt for one moment that women like admiration as much as men—that is admiration from the other sex. Indeed I believe this Is in a way a more important factor with women than with men. By that I mean that while men may “eat up’’ admiration from the other sex. that is not the motivating factor of their Interest in them; while with some women delight in masculine admira tion Is largely the root of their enjoy ment of the society of the other sex. But—women are not so “easy” as men. A homely woman does not easily accept a man’s insistence that she is beautiful, but many a bald, fat man has been convinced he is an Adonis. Women can be flattered, but it has to be done more subtly. Therefore the man who is wise will discriminate in his flattery. He will look for the “good points” which in some form or other are possessed by every woman, - and concentrate on them, rather than attempt to endow her with charms which she realizes are not hers. It is not that women like flattery less, but they have more difficulty than men in putting entirely to sleep their intelligence and common sense! © Bell Syndicate.—WXU Service. ey we are bankrupt, and that we do not owe ourselves, we lent to Europe. And poor old capitalism I Ism has not a leg to stand on. ing tried for life, she seems not have a friend left in court | And all of this, mind yon, in spite of the fact that capitalism and the principle of competition in business working together In this country since lT'JO have given us the most marvelous 140 years ever enjoyed by any people, anywhere, at any time. THE PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE By MR. BOOVrat THE most ominous note of all was the President’s warning that the power he has assumed would be dan* gerous in other hands. “In thirty four months.” he says, “we have built up new Instruments of public power. In the hands of the peo ple’s government, this . power le wholesome and proper.” It just happens that the Ideal up on which our government was founts ed and hitherto conducted is that It Is dangerous to the people to have any man possess such powers, or to allow any man to thus aspire to per sonal government Instead of a gov ernment of laws. The question Is, not that these powers, having been created and now In the hands of the good, might be transferred to the hands of the wicked, if the New Deal Is not con tinued. It is that they never should be possessed by anybody In these United States. We’ll No Gie Ower Just Yet a Bittie, Is Spirit of Scot I am about knocked out of time now; a miserable, snuffling, shiver ing, fever-stricken, night-mnre-rldden. knee jottering, hoast-hoast-hoastlng shadow and remains of man. But we’ll no gie ower just yet a bittie. We’ve seen waur; and dod, men, It’S my belief that we’ll see better. OLD KING COLE IS A MERRY OLD SOUL NOW THAT HE EATS ROAST BEEF , . . HE HAS HIS TUMS IF HEARTBURN COMES . . . THEY GIVE HIM OUCR REUEFf LEARN HOWTO EAT FAVORITE FOODS . Without Heartburn For Coughs due to Colds, Minor Bronchial and Throat Irritations JAB. BA1LT St BON, Baltimore, SSd. Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood v WOUR kidneys are constantly filter* '« ing waste matter fronr the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work—do not act as nature in tended—fail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging bade* ache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, puffiness under the eyes; feel nervous, misera ble—all upset Don't delay? Use Doan's Pills, Doan's are especially for poorly func tioning kidneys. They are recom mended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist _ 'How do I feel — Rotten! why do you ask ? “Because, tS you are not yourtelf P* rr is all so simple, too 1 Thei tired, run-down, exhausted feeling quite often is due to lack of a sufficiency of those precious red-blood-cells. Just build up these oxygen-carrying cells and the whole body takes oo Hew life... food is really turned into energy and strength.. .you cant 1 help but feel and look better. S.S.S. Tonic restores deficient red-blood- ;, cells...it also improves the appetite and digestion. It Las been the , nation’s standby for over 100 years... and unless your case is excep. > tional it should heln vou. too. Insist on S&S. Ton it; in the blood-red
The Wallace Enterprise (Wallace, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 6, 1936, edition 1
7
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