WORLD’S BEST COMICS \ Lighter Side of Life as Depicted by Famous Cartoonists and Humorists THE FEATHERHEADS Second Guessing flet's Go.^L * uiiicdC'o • LETS where’s -THE CbFFEE? WMIZZZxi \l SORRV( PEAR \ HERE'S SOME y buttered [ TOAST FOR. v^l-, You •/ I -0-IH4K I'lL MAs/e ANOTHER cup OF CoFF*=E AMD IS THEBE' ANY OP THAT -STRAWBERRY Ssb-S!!"^ ■K or s A.W ) u(r not woW— i Just -rue’ bus turn The* corUet?— So NOW i HAMS' LOTS' OF T(MB— BFTeew MIN UTSS - TLL —.'Till -we mb** ) S’MATTER POP-— Sorry, Sorrier, Sorriest By C M. PAYNE frtAT'3 MV 9.a I’m SorhV v g(Q Th» B«I1 grndiou. Ino.l 1 MESCAL IKE %7 s. l. huntley He Doesn’t Scare Easy urrs some MlDES UUMAT A-SWIODIM' MARKET Tm\de! rmvw DO vuu i SOfV? COW WIDE HIDE1 rWIDE. A cows] \lA r'-^OUTS1DE. 1 A.IKTT ©OJWaT^ IfBf OO U»T / -L AIM'T / p\ AFRAID OF KIO / pN^JQMOpuJUX^ LolNg Gag s i 3WC SACVS HER PACK •a SOW I SWT TWAT r UK* W*« »JMS CODING IOOKJQ WJlTM A. PJ*0 LOCK STOft^ I . HfcM. Oitt> J FINNEY OF THE FORCE ByTWO’LMgUfc. Crashing Into the Dough _CLEANED - O UT, TOO/ ■ny EOMY 'WORR/-1 Bee.n1 PA Vim e IMSURAMCB- OM THAT- PHOMEy WWDOW DISPLAY FOR -TfeEE VEARS AND I ^TWOU «MT » NEVER VJOULD / collect/r ADAMSON'S ADVENTURES The Getaway By O. JACOBSSON (t lltf bf Co—ottdifd Nwr» Feature) | Our Pet Peere By M.G.KBTTNBR Thu Generation Little Girl—Mother, yon know that old ftiaae you said had been handed down from generation to generation? ' Mother—Tea, dear. Little Girl—Well, thla generation haa dropped It.—Honaton Rotary Bulletin. He Understood Smith—Awfully sorry I couldn't come to lunch with you aa I prom ised. Circumstances over which I hare no control kept me away. . Brown—That’s quite all right, old chap. By the way, how is your wife?—Argentine Magazine, "Don’t you think the world owes you a living r* "Tea,” replied Plodding Pete. "But the world la a tough old creditor. I find I have to hand it a few wallops with a pick and shov el to convince it" SNAPSHOTS OF A BOT ASKING FOR A COOKIE Bi GLUYAS WILLIAMS VWCHH WOW* CUM u> Unworn OF TO mu. mu onm mum#* aour niUMHBMf* NtCHW M*aK6£MUin HI EKW MM JUST «M NOM 9 -rvV amrnms axwe on «*nw shop, n hwwm wvmuv Wv'ux# rimvmt MUM HER BACK M* Tfc LMlM ROOM, Huff* utt oof Wat me owe/ HTW WHTSSlWJWf MMMCMM9NX HmrHM.tKWSC WV WEREN'T MM KAtWNMNN.W m«NM _ MMurtrsim. MIS SlUW SMM www.tftWk um mow iMiwwW. «* WtPWfc UP II |fCW MOOOliWS MI'S tpttf, IWSftV *D SOM Uttf SI MMS MAPPILV WITH COOKIE Tall Tales a As Told to: * FRANK E. HAGAN and ELMO SCOTT WATSON Sagacious Serpent MvrBS," said Madame Zulawa, a tbe snake-charmer with the old Boblnson circus, “Elmer was by far tbe most Intelligent and most versatile serpent I ever had. He was a blacksnake—six feet of pa tience, pliability and perspicacity. I could call out any number and In stantly he'd arrange himself In the form of that figure. His figure eights were a model of rounded symmetry. But all of this was be fore one horrible night . . .” Madame Zulawa covered her eyes as though to shut out some terrible sight. There was a tremor In her voice . . . then she went bravely on. “Our circus train was crossing the high Sierras. Just as It was approaching the summit, Elmer slid out of his cage and started back over the tops of the cars. He was coming back to my car for his cup Of warm coconut milk to help him get to sleep. "Just as he stretched oyer the gap between two cars, there was the sound of Iron snapping. The coupling between the two cars had broken under the strain of pulling the heavy cars up that steep grade. In another moment the rear half of the train would be speeding down the Incline, gathering momentum until it jumped the rails at the first curve. '* “Elmer knew that everything de pended upon him. Quick as a flash he sank his teeth In the wooden top of the car ahead. At the same mo ment he wrapped his tall around an Iron rod on the car behind. The strain on him was fearful, but he hung on grimly . . . “Well . . . there Isn't much more to tell. The whole train passed safely over the summit But El mer's days as a performing black snake were over. Go to the Cin cinnati too today and you'll find him there In a cage labeled The Only Black Python In Captivity ... 42 feet 6% Inches long." Tenderfoot, Beware! WHEN a tenderfoot disappears out West some old-timer Is certain to shake his head sadly and say: *T reckon a roperlte or a tri podero must of got him.’’ Chances are, he's right The trlpodero has only two legs, arranged like a telescope, so that It can raise or lower Itself at will. Its head has a long muszle with a mouth like a gun barret As it lurks among the brush, it raises and lowers Itself on its telescopic legs to watch for approaching game. When the trlpodero sees a ten derfoot come jouncing along the trail on horseback, it gets behind a boulder, tilts Itself at just the right angle and points Its muzzle at the unsuspecting tenderfoot. At the right moment It blows from Its mouth a pellet of clay (it always keeps a supply of these quids In Its left cheek) which shoots the taste right out of the tenderfoot’s mouth. One week and three hours later he dies of starvation because he can’t taste anything after he has been shot by the trlpodero. If the tenderfoot Is lucky enough to get past the trlpodero, the rop erlte may get him. It is a curious animal with a long rope-Uke beak which ends in a slip-noose. As the tenderfoot rides singing along the trail past the place where the rop erlte Is lurking, It shoots out this natural lariat, the noose tightens around the luckless Easterner's throat and be chokes to death'on the bars of music that stick cross wise In it It Is estimated that a total of 4,168 tenderfeet have fallen victims to either the tripodero or the roper Ite in the West since the spring of 1887. Land of the Sky Blue Water BABB was Paul Banyan's big bine ox. He was quite a sizable an imal although not all lumberjacks agree as to just how trig he was. Some say be was seven axe-handles between the eyes but others de clare,the figures should be 42 axe handles and a plug of tobacco. However, all agree that Babe could pull anything that bad two ends to It Paul often used him to pull the kinks out of crooked logging roads. Occasionally Babe would run away and be gone all day. Paul was the only one who opuld track him because his footprints were so far apart that an ordinary man couldn’t see from one of them to the next one. They were pretty deep, too. Once a settler and his wife and baby fell Into one of these footprints and the baby was fifty seven years old before he finally climbed out and reported the acci dent. The winter of the bine snow Babe went on one of these rambles and wandered all over the present state of Minnesota. When the snow melted the next spring the water filled his footprints and that’s why Minnesota Is now known as the tend of Ten Thousand Lakes—the “Land of the Sky Blue water." Oddities Fact* A recent survey of some 8,000 dahlia names indicates that a man’s chance of having a new flower named after him Is about half as good as a woman’s. And a woman is about six times more likely to'be so honored if she is married. If a meager dozen of plants ceased to grow in America, our commercial beekeepers would have to go out of business. Most flowers yield little or no nectar, from which bees make honey. About three fourths of the supply is furnished by the clovers. There are 1,200 natural lakes in the state of Nebraska. Pood as well as drink for crops now flows in some irrigation ditches in southern California. A little am monia gas Is mixed with the water, and extensive tests have shown that I plants thrive better on this liquid diet than on solid fertilizer. Recent tests have shown that flies are attracted by light colors, espe cially white and cream. They have no real color sense, but a luminous surface suggests the brightness and warmth which they seek. More than 30,000,000 tin cans are used in the United States each year. Farm crops in every can. There is no truth in the old belief that cucumbers contain a poisonous juice which can be counteracted by soaking them in salt water. The soaking merely wilts and toughens them. Soviet Russia is reported to have more than 1,000 scientists working on problems of plant improvement. “Some like it hot, some like it cold,” the old nursery rhyme, seems to hold for plants as well as for hu mans. In Yellowstone park plants have been found growing in the wa ter of hot springs just 27 degrees be low the boiling point; and In the polar regions other plants grow In water at freezing temperatures. There is no foundation for the no tion that sour cream contains more •jutterfat than sweet cream. The fact is that only butter of inferior quality can be made from it—Coun try Home Magazine. Roman* Knew Near Mikulov, in Czechoslovakia, a two-thousand-year-old Roman camp has been found, with evidence that the Romans had a system of central heating. The finds reveal that heat was circulated through hollow spaces in the walls. Black-Draught's Reputation The confidence people have in Black-Draught, built up from satis factory use so many years, is shown in its being handed on from one gen eration to another. It must be good to have such a strong following. “We have used Black-Draught tor twen ty years,” write* Mr. Bred Richardson, of Hartshorn., Ok la. “My mother has used it for fifty years. It is the best medicine I know anything about. I take it for sour stomach and constipation, or when I feel sluggish and bad. Black-Draught ia splen did to regulate the bowels, cleansing them of waste matter, ridding them of constipa tion. I expect to use it twenty*fire years more if I live and it gives satisfaction as it has always given.” FRUITS-VEGETABLES WANTED! SCHLEY BROTHERS •'JBrtablMymn^tmdU^onhf WMmaU UcSSms'mmd mim'jbiHm*****BaUnun! BALTIMORE. BCD. i |ttmn amd ths only WktlmmIs Drofsiata, Jewelers. Mualo dealer*: Bar stringed instruments and supplies from right source. Wholesale catalog “A.” St. Loots Music Supply Co.. St. Louis, Mo. PW KILL ALL FUES^l DAISY FLY KILLER No Need to Suffer “MomingSickness” “M sickness"—is caused by an ion. To avoid it, add must be aHalit—such a Why Physicians Recommsnd Milnesia Wafers These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are pure milk of magnesia in solid form— the moat pleasant way to take it. Each wafer is approximately equal to a fall adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct addity in the mouth and throughout the digestive system and insure quick, com plete elimination of the waste matters that cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a doscn other discomforts. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48, at 35c and 60c respectively, and in convenient tins for your handbag contain ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately one adult dose of milk of magnesia. All good drug stores sell and recommend them. Professional samples sent free to remstoed physicians or dentists if request is made on professional letterhead. Meet PreOerW, lac, 44021M St., long Istaad city, N. T. 35< A 60c • • • w aocttiu fcv"T CT-,:a^.r.arr TM Origkml mm •* Magmadm Wt/mrm