UNCOMMON AMERICANS •--•-• By Elmo 0 Western Scott Watson N*uS’oT*r Father of the Cattle Trails IF IT had not been for Joseph O. McCoy, there might never have occurred that epic migration over the cattle trails from Texas to the north during the seventies and eighties. In that case the history of the Lone Star state—and the whole West, for that matter—might have been very different. McCoy, native of Springfield, 111., was a stockman and cattle buyer who went to the raw little frontier town of Abilene, Kan., soon after the Civil war was over. , That conflict had ruined the cat tlemen in Texas. Shut off from the Northern markets by the Union control of the Mississippi river, their herds had increased enor mously, but without a place to sell the animals, they were compar atively worthless. Then the Kan sas Pacific railroad, which was building west, reached Abilene and McCoy was inspired with a wonder ful idea. If he could get the Texas drovers to drive their herds north across Indian territory to Abilene, grazing them on the rich prairie grass as they came, Abilene would be the market place and shipping center where Texas sellers and Chicago and Kansas City buyers could fleet. Despite many obstacles, in luding the prevalent belief that Texas beef was not as good as that grown in the Middle West, Mc Coy went about the job of making his dream come true. In July, 1867, he began raising money to build a “shipping yard,” a barn and office and to begin the construction of a large, three-story frame hotel for the accommodation of Texas drovers and eastern buy ers. His next task was to get word to the cattlemen more than 400 miles away to the south. Al though the time was short he man aged to persuade enough of them to make the experiment so that they marketed 35,000 head of cattle in Abilene that fall and received approximately $15 a head for their steers. Previous to that time steers were selling for $5 a head in Texas. The next year more than 75,000 cattle were marketed there. By J1871 that number had jumped to 120,000 and by the next year to 236,000. F-om that time on Texas cattle poured north by the hundreds of thousands over the original cattle trail from the Red river to Abi ,lene and other trails which were laid out. Other Kansas "cow towns” began to boom with activity as the railroad was pushed farther west and southwest and there was added to our history that thrilling chap ter when the cattleman was king. And all of this was due to the vision of one man—Joseph G. McCoy, the “Father of the Cattle Trails.” *;■ Mr. Currier and Mr. Ives THEY gave Americans of their day the equivalent of the news reels of today. They were the pic torial historians of contemporary American life a century a'go when 'newspapers contained little or no picture materiu. except an oc casional fashion print. . When a steamboat blew up, a great fire swept a city or some other disaster occurred, Mr. Cur rier and Mr. Ives immediately put out a colored picture of the event with plenty of action in it. When the United States was at war, they issued splendid battle pictures with plumed generals on prancing horses (and plenty of gory detail as to dead and wounded soldiers). There were pictures oi norse races ana ouier sporting events, there were pictures .of swift clipper ships and pictures 4of the first transcontinental trains running amidst Indians and buffalo. There were highly moral pictures there were even “comic strips” _caricatures of life among the ne (groes, called “Darktown Comics.” It all started back in 1830 when young Nathaniel Currier, working as an apprentice to John Pendle ton, who had returned from Europe with the' new art of lithography, be gan thinking of setting up his own business. So he went to New York and started as a lithographer in partnership with a young man named Stoddard. This partnership lasted only a year but in 1835 Cur rier began again. He soon built up a profitable business but it wasn’t .until 1850 when James A. Ives be came his partner that fame and fortune came to them. For 30 years Mr. Currier and Mr. Ives were “printmakers to the ^American people” and Currier and Iv’ts prints of one sort or another were to be found on the walls of .virtually every American home. In 1880 Currier retired with a fortune but the firm continued with a son ct the founder in his place. In 1888 machine color printing was ap plied to their product and even JCreater numbers of their pictures flooded.the country. 1 In recent years Currier and Ives prints have become “Americana." 'Where once these prints sold from gix cents to $3, they are now sell for anywhere from $20 to 8500. And one of them recently brought *8.0001 Treatment of Rheumatism By DR. JAMES W. BARTON © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. SO WIDESPREAD is the interest in rheumatism that there are medical spe cialists who treat nothing else. It is known that there are one hundred of these rheumatism specialists in the United States aside from phy sicians at spas or “watering places” where rheumatic pa tients make up the majority of cases being treated. The idea is now general that rheumatism is not a local disease of a certain joint, but that something somewhere in the body tissues is caus ing the trouble and the organisms or substances responsi ble for rheumatism simply go to the joint or joints and develop the inflam mation (arthritis) in the joint. Dr. Barton Just wnat are me causes is not known but it is almost generally ac cepted that infections, deficiencies and dampness, injuries, may all have a part. Something renders the tissues sensitive to, or unable to resist, the attack of certain or ganisms. Infected Tonsils. It is almost generally agreed that Infected tonsils stand at the top of the list as a cause of rheumatism in children. It is therefore advised that the tonsils be removed in every child attacked by rheumatism. Sta tistics show that the child who has had his tonsils out is less likely to have rheumatism and therefore se rious heart complications are less likely to develop. Although diet and the use of the salicylates enter into the treatment, physical therapy—heat of various kinds, and massage—offers the most relief. It is because rheumatism cripples the patient and becomes “chronic” that so many patients try various forms of treatment often given un der unskilled supervision. As the exercise and the amount of time spent in going to institutions to get the joints “bakes,” massaged, or exercised prevents many from re ceiving this form of treatment, it has been suggested that teams ol rheumatism experts — physicians, nurses, and those qualified to give physical therapy—go among local physicians and teach this type ol treatment. » * • Types of Overweight. No one has been able to get out a height, weight and age table that will apply to every single individ ual. Insurance organizations come close to a good table that will ap ply in a general way to the “aver age” individual but there really isn’t any average individual. In trying to arrive at the proper weight for one of a certain height and age there are so many points to consider. Thus in children it is their nearness to, or farness from, the age of puberty when they at tain manhood and womanhood. In young men and women it is the age at which they seem to “fill out,” when they get an extra padding of muscle and fat. After thirty, for some reason, it has been believed that it is quite the proper thing for them to fill out even more and attain "the mid dle-age spread.” There is no "real” reason for putting on this extra weight at this time. Then there are the three types of build: (a) long legs, short body; (b) short legs, long body; (c) me dium length of legs and medium length of body. In addition to this there is the difference in bony struc ture; short and tall individuals with thin bones; short and tall individ uals with heavy bones; and short and tall individuals with bones of medium weight. Now there are the few individ uals who have a thyroid gland in the neck or the pituitary gland ly ing on the floor of the skull, which are not manufacturing enough juice for the needs of the body. In the case of the thyroid gland it means that there is a little less of the burning up or the use of all kinds of foods and in the case of the pi tuitary gland the starch foods are not completely used, thus allowing storage of fat. However, the num ber of these individuals would be less than 5 per cent of the total number of overweights. There is also a number of indi viduals who are said to come from a “fat family”; they consider it on ly natural to be fat because their parents, uncles and aunts, or even their grandparents were quite fat. Most physicians are of the opinion that their parents, grandparents or other relatives were fat because they had the same diet habits—ate too much of the starch and fat foods for the amount of work that they did. However, the great majority of overweights are overweight because despite the fact that some may not be big eaters, every one of them is eating more than he or she needs to supply heat and energy to the body. k ‘ WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Parton EW YORK.—Two men in IN the news this week at test the fact that floods sub side and wars end. It was only a few weeks ago that Churchill Downs was a dis mal swamp. And now the Kentucky derby fanfare is on again, with the purse upped $50,000 and the durable Colo nel Matt Winn taking bows for having lined up again all the truly illustrious three year-olds in the country, flood or no flood. or Man River backs away, and there is assured a braver flare of silks and trumpets than ever before, as the pastures grow green again in Wall street and Kentucky. This will be Colonel Winn’s sixty third Kentucky derby. He saw his first one in 1875, won by a little red horse called Aristides. He was a grocer’s boy, watching the race from the tailboard of his employer’s cart Being a romantic Irish lad, the excitement never stopped boiling. After that, he never conld keep his mind on his groceries. He has had many a run-around in the racing business, but, at seventy-five, he isn’t the least bit track-sore. As pres ident of the Kentucky Jockey club and executive director of Churchill Downs, he rides recurrent floods like Noah and always finds dry land. When Floods Subside. In 1907, the late James turner opened the Empire City track, but the nabobs of racing hereabouts refused to recognize it. Mr. Butler signed up Colonel Winn to run it. In eight months it was given full recog nition. When Charles Evans Hughes squelched racing in New York state. Colonel Winn tried his fortune in racing and management at Juarez, Mexico, with unhappy results. He returned to Kentucky, where he just naturally belongs, and now he just about runs racing in Kentucky and Illinois. He is president of the Amer ican Turf association, which con trols not only Churchill Downs, but also the tracks of Chicago and Laur el, Md. The years paw at the Colonel’s robust person the way the river paws at the track. So far, neither has won a decision. The Godolphin Arab, ancestor of all the Bangtails, was never more alive than the white haired Colonel Winn, with his genial, round face, up-tilted Irish nose and bright, twinkling eyes. • • • Proof the War is Over. IT IS Dr. William R. Valentiner, curator of the Detroit Insti tute of Art, who provides this week’s reminder that the war’s over. As one of the most authoritative and highly respected qrt critics of the country, he passes as authentic the lost Rembrandt “Juno” portrait, which arrived in New York recently. Seventeen years ago, there was considerable public concern as to whether Dr. Valentiner should be allowed to return to this country. This writer dredged up a most in temperate editorial on that subject —yellow with age and strangely un real in the world of today. Dr. Valentiner, frock-coated and dignified curator of decorative arts at the Metropolitan museum, had been in Germany when the war started. He remained to fight for Germany. He wrote happily to his confreres at the museum that his elevation to the rank of vice-sergeant major relieved him from currying his own horse. He resigned from the museum when we entered the war. Before coming to America, he had attained distinction as a curator at The Hague and at the Royal mu seums of Berlin. He became one of the world authorities on Rembrandt He contends that, of the 175 sup posed Rembrandts in the United States and Canada, only forty-eight are genuine — incidentally, worth $50,000,000, as "time and the river” roll on for 350 years. Campos the Conqueror. ANOTHER Harvard man in the news—also in jail. The incar cerated Pedro Albizu Campos has been the spark plug, or main irri tant, of the incipient revolution in Puerto Rico, flaring up again at San Juan with seven killed and fifty injured. A wavy-haired mulatto with Valen tino sideburns, pearl-button shoes and a Harvard degree, he has as pired to become the Henri Chris tophe of Latin America, spilling sesquipedalian words over eleven countries. His father was a Basque and his mother Spanish, Negroid and Indian. He is frail in physique, of cafe con leche coloring, passionately intense and racked with patriotic fervor. Last month, the nationalist party, leading the present agitation for in dependence, again elected him pres ident. Several years ago, he started his movement with a black shirt army with wooden guns. His arrest and trial for sedition, with seven others [last July, has kept Puerto Rico bailing ever since. • Consolidated News Features. T WNU Service. \ Roads By GRACE D. GOODRIDGE © McClure Newspaper Syndicate. WNU Service. THE only reason Little Jim was glad when it came time for the beds to be made up in the car was because Dad had more time to say “pieces” for him then. He liked the one best about the roads and homes, especially the lines: “I never have seen a vagabond who really liked to roam “All up and down the streets of the world and not to have a home”: and he would lie quietly in his cot and think how like that vagabond be was. He could dimly remember that once he had lived in a real house; it was before mother died and there had been chickens and a little brown dog, but that had been only for a very little while. Since then there had been just roads, al ways the roads that never led to a home for Dad and him. Sometimes when Dad stopped to trade with the farmers’ wives, some woman would look kindly at little Jim and say to Dad: “Is that your little boy?” and Dad would reply with such pride, “Yes, Ma’am; I don’t believe I could get on at all without him,” and perhaps the woman would say, “Well, it’s pret ty nice to have him with you, of course, but he should be in school,” and then Dad would laugh his jolly laugh and tell her that traveling gave one a good education. Often he saw children scampering home from school at night and his throat had a queer ache. Of course tit was fine being with Dad all the time, and there were days when the car rolled along so steadily, and the country shone and the wind was soft and warm; when people were kind and business was good and Dad sang in his rollicking voice. But the nights were always waiting, and then the longing for a place where they could just stay for a time be came more acute. Then came a wet, cold spring, when for days they drove through a chilling rain. Business was bad and Dad forgot to sing, and even the verses he said at night didn’t sound the same, and Little Jim tried in vain to make himself warm in the damp bedding. It was tlje third week of such weather, and one morning Little Jim tried to get out of bed as usual, but his body ached so badly he fell back with a groan. His head ached, too, and when he shut his eyes they burned so he was glad to open them again. Then, all at once, the inside of the car seemed to turn into a little house with a warm, white bed just inside the door. He tried hard to reach it, but Dad’s arms caught him instead, and Dad’s voice, with a queer sound in it, was saying over and over again, “Little Jim! Little Jim! Speak to me.” He tried to answer, but his throat felt too thick and sore. Then he felt himself being wrapped up in many blankets and fastened secure ly in the seat beside Dad and they were moving faster than he ever remembered moving before. An hour later, Big Jim rushed in to a hospital with his little son in his arms. Little Jim found himself in a clean, white room, where his aching little body was put into a soft bed. He heard a dim sound of voices, then drifted into a land where suf fering and home were strangely mixed. There were times after that when he came back to the white room and found Dad beside him, and he tried to tell him of the little house and the dog and chickens; but, somehow, it only seemed to make him feel bad, so at last he just lay there and looked at Dad as though he could never look enough. Then came a day when he was back in the white room to stay and the pain and the homes both were gone. Dad couldn’t stay with him so much now, for he told Little Jim that the farmers’ wives would want new dishes to use and that he and Little Jim needed their money. Al though he missed Dad terribly he thought of the time when he would have only the car for a home again, and often the tears slid softly down on the pillow. At last they said he could go away from the hospital. Dad came for him early and the doctors and nurses patted him and kissed him good-by and Dad carried him to the car. Somehow the car looked dif ferent, but he didn’t have much time to look at it, for Dad lifted him to the seat and made so many jokes he laughed until his sides ached. They drove quite a distance out of the town and up a long hill, and right on the top of the hill was a little white house and Dad drove in the yard and lifted him down. Then Dad unlocked the door and led him in and asked him how he liked it because that was where they were going to live. There was even a brown dog who leaped about him and licked his hands. For a long moment Little Jim looked at Dad and Dad looked back, so pleased andn happy, though tears were thick in his eyes; then Little Jim said very softly, in an awe struck voice, “Why, Dad, it’s a home!” Mirth That Glitters Mirth is like a flash of lightning, that breaks through a gloom of clouds, and glitters for a moment; cheerfulness keeps up a kind of day light in the mind, and fills it with a steady and-perpetual serenity. Just LETTING WELL ENOUGH ALONE “There Is a man outside," said the secretary, “who acts as if he really has something important on his mind." “I don’t believe we’d better en courage him," said Mr. Dustin Stax. “He probably wants to finance something." “What he has might make a lot of money.” “It might. But supposing we were to take a chance on him, I already have abundant wealth and nothing much to think about. He has a lot to think about and maybe he'll be happier if we leave him that way.” Modern Methods Bobby (short of money) — Say, Dad, have you any work you’d like me to do? Father (taken by surprise) — Why —no—but—er— Bobby—Then how about putting me on relief? Mixed Grandmother gave little Marylin a peach to eat. The child ate it, and then bring ing the seed, said: “That was a nice apple you gave me, grandma, but I couldn’t eat the walnut inside.”—Indianapolis News. WHO ASKED? Mary—Paul has spoken at last. Sue—And was his answer “yes”? This Is Leap Year Gertrude (doubtfully)—Is this the office of J. Horace Billips, the archi tect? Clerk:—Yes, ma’am. Gertrude—Well, I understand he is opening sealed proposals today and I want to get one of them. In Doubt “Mrs. Bliggins says her youngest is the image of his father,” re marked Miss Cayenne. “What did you say?” “Nothing. I didn’t know whether to congratulate Mr. Bliggins or sym pathize with the baby.” Cold Criticism “Do you consider him a great orator?” “No," answered Senator Sorghum “he is one of those men who get reputations as orators simply be cause they happen to have a few easy audiences.” Borrowing on Capital Junior—Say, mother, how much am I worth? Mother—Why, you’re worth a mil lion dollars to me, dear. Junior—Well, then, could you ad vance me a quarter?—Boston Tran script. Didn’t Miss Much “Mr. Chairman,” complained the speaker, “there are so many ribald interruptions I can scarcely hear myself speaking.” “Cheer up, Senator,” said a voice from the rear. “You ain’t missin’ much.” DIFFICULT JOB Mrs. B.—I simply cannot balance my checkbook. Mr. B.—No; you'd need a juggler tor that. Prescription “What do you take tor your in somnia?” “A glass ol wine at regular inter vals.” “Does that make you sleep?” “No, but it makes me satisfied tc stay awake.”—Telephone Topics. Fortunate Senior—My brother fell against che piano and hit his head. Junior—Hurt him much? Senior—No, he hit the soft pedaL Telling His Teacher Teacher—Now Robert, what arc you doing—learning something? Robert—No, sir; I’m listening tc you.—The Rail. Smart, Flattering Dresses |k/IRS. DICK EVANS has come to town and brought Ann and Eddie LeRoy with her. She lives n Palm Beach in the wintertime and, of course, knows all about style. That’s why she wears this lirectoire type frock that is both lew anc. figure flattering. In the loral print she has chosen she is perfectly gowned for the parties that will be given for her in the lome town. The kiddies are wear ing the simple styles appropriate to childhood and therein their smartness lies. Auntie Rose Sews, Too. Little Ann is asking Auntie Rose if she makes her clothes too. “Sure enough, dear,” comes the reply. “I made this percale for mornings and have a beauty in yellow crepe cut from the same pattern to wear to the Bid-or-Bi meetings.” “I’ll bet you can sew fast, too, the way Mother does. It only took her two mornings to make Ed die’s suit and my dress. Won’t you help me with my doll clothes now?” “Indeed I will, Ann, and then we will have some of those oat meal cookies yoi like for lunch.” The Patterns. Pattern 1272 is available in sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 re quires 4% yards of 39 inch ma terial and yards of ribbon for tie belt. .raltera iz/d is ior sizes o munuis to 4 years. Size 1 requires 1% yards of 32 inch material. Pattern 1403 comes in sizes 2, 1, and 6 years. Size 4 requires 1% yards of 36 inch material. Pattern 1212 is designed ir sizes 34 to 48. Size 36 requires 5 yards of 35 inch material plus % yard contrasting for the collar. New Pattern Book Send for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book. Make yourself attractive, practical and becoming clothes, selecting de signs from the Barbara Bell well planned, easy-to-make patterns. Interesting and exclusive fashions for little children and the difficult Value of Time Know the true value of time, snatch, seize, and enjoy every moment of it. No idleness, no laziness, no procrastination; nev er put off till tomorrow what you can do today.—Earl of Chester field. junior age; slenderizing, well-cut patterns for the mature figure; afternoon dresses for the modi particular young women and ma trons and other patterns for spe cial occasions are all to be found in the Barbara Beli Pattern Book. Send 15 cents today for your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 247 W. Forty-third street, New York, N. Y. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. REMEMBER THIS CROSS IT MEANS FAST RELIEF 15C FORU DEMAND AND GET GENUINE 2 FULL DOZEN EON 2k BAYER ASPIRIN Duty and Contentment; Be sure no man was ever dis contented VvitlpL dW his duty in it.-^-Southey» ■ ; ' —:— -:a"' ■ ' * Remember This When . . You Need a Laxative It is better for you if yourbody keeps working as Nature Intended. Food wastes after digestion should be eliminated every day. When you get constipated, take a dose or two of purely vegetable Black-Draught for prompt, refreshing relief. Thousands and thousands of men and women Black-Draught and keep, it always on hand, for use at the first alga of constipation. Have you tried it? BLACK-DRAUGHT A GOOD LAXATIVE If you really want to stop falling hair, end dan druff and stimulate new hair growth, mail os your name and address. We will send prepaid, without one cent of cost to you, our remarkable device derm o - ray for a 30-day free trial. If at the end of 30 days dermo-ray hasn’t proved an your satisfaction that it will stimulate NEW hair growth/cry**, send it back collect. ..and the trial costs you nothing! We make this sensational offer because we know the amazing resul tsDERMO* ray has brought to thousands of others and we _ _. _ dlides are alive dermo-ray gets astounding results. Send for your freb trial today ! Address: dermo-RAT i laboratories, P.O. Box 187 Hollywood, Calif. PLEASE ACCEPT GAME CARVING SET for only 25c with your purchase ■ of one can of B. T. Babbitt’s Nationally Known Brands of Lye TfftHXr&ptttttH This is the Carving Set you need for steaks and game. Deerhom de sign handle fits the hand perfectly. Knife blade and fork tines made of fine stainless steel. Now offered for only 25c to induce you to try the brands of lye shown at right. Use them for sterilizing milking machines and dairy equipment. Contents of one can dissolved in 17 gallons of water makes an effective, inexpensive sterilizing solution. Buy today a can of any of the lye brands shown at right. Then send the can band, with your name and address and 25c to B. T. Babbitt, Inc., Dept W.K., 336 4th Ave., New York City. Your Carving Set will reach you promptly, postage paid. Send today while the supply lasts. OFFER ROOD WITH ANY BRANS SHOWN BELOW TEAR OUT THIS ADVERTISEMENT AS A REMIND — I