Evening Star Newspaper, January 4, 1933, Page 25

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AN . 1935 THE INSISTENT CARESSES OF THE CHILD MADE IT DIFFICULT FOR THE MOTHER TO TALK TO THE CALLER. 1t is With difficulty that the mother get the guidance control, It is well to remember this when childten are present with adults wherever they are. A child may seem tihruly enough to make a mother wonder and say, never knew Jane to act like this befote.” e It indeed be of it maj MnZe silly uuomma the chill erence. and can be o never been apparent to the mother be- fore. There's a decided diff , bo'l'hzre are few children who want to po ; will be distracting in order to a‘n’t’ it. lsu:‘h :hllflrtn wlll%o the mmu ‘flnxd- lotis _things, rising _paren guests alike, ln’o‘:?er ":{m themselves GOOD TASTE TODAY BY EMILY POST. Famous Authority on Etiquette. Tea and Veil. Y first letter is from four young s, “Please tell us” they ‘write, “how to go #bout hav- ing a téa, especlally when there ate four nostrs = 1.2 of us has ever had a tea before.” The answer: In the first place, it is mever very easy to put four names on ene invitation. It B you you collec- tively, and many feel that it exacts & quadruple return for a single invita- tion. Why not give teas separate- —small, informal ones? Or at most, two of you might ve & tes together. Eamily Post, lowever, if four of you set your hearts on giving a tea to- gether, then write the four names si- phabetically on a correspondence card or a sheet of note paper and the time 1 \ /RARE] ‘REARRANGE THE 3 WORDS TO' NAME- A CAR. The pussle illustrated above involves the name of one make of automobile { $hat will be exhibited at the annual show, to be held January 28 to February 6, | this takes the form of in mother's bp o et ety on's, cometiaton. lor conversation. ‘There h‘u: note ox?ulouni in such exhibitions of affection. It is hard to thus loving, but & mother can help & to under- | stand that demohstrations are in poor when there are 'gulu much as are welcomed en the family | is present. is not matters of discipline, how- , that are under discussion but how | an adult can minimize the peculiar; | difficulties and make life easier for a | mother during a call. A child, when present, does not deserve to be ignored. After the greeting, the child. should have an occasionai remark addressed to it between lapses of adult conver- | tion. A smile directed toward the | | little one can make her feel she is one | of the group. To direct much attention | to the ¢hild brings her too much to the | | fore. An adult* caller often gets a | | child overexhilarated, and without her | intending to be forward she talks a bit | too much, and too loud. She hops and | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. A starling is partial to the city in the Winter, The family has increased mightily since that day. America has found that the starling has many faults and few virtues. The bird is famous for adapting himself to almost any condition and food. This, of course, cosures the starling that his family will not die out, at least a nat- ural death. Research shows that the amount of food consumed by the pirds is more than 57 per cent animal mat- . This would indicate thai spiders, worms, insects and grubs were the sta- ple foods. But the starling lovés ber- ries, fruits and some vegetables. It is the countless hordes of them that are objected to. Efforts made to get rid of them have met with determined re- sistance on the part of mahy citizens who did not really know the true situa- tion. STARLING. Sturnus vulgaris. RRIVING in America in 1890 and being given the freedom dances excitedly, and is a hindrance to | conversation. It is not always the| Starlings have two distinct suitseach child’s fault. The caller does well to | year, and unless you know this you are realize this before mentally censuring | likely to confuse this bird with others. either the mother of the child. | The young starlings do not resemble (Oouitints. 135> their parents at all. They are & dark | olive-brown on the back and have white WINTER , o 4) or buffy throats. They molt &t the BY D. C. PEATTIE. | same time their parents do and after | HIS happens to be one of the| | few times when thete 1§ much | | the molt is completed the parents and | children cannot be told apart. In the hope for the naked-eye astron- | omer and the star-gazing man- | | Spting they are the only blackbirds on-hls-mcl-g%rch to see the Planet Mercury. ere are several reasons why we never get a good lool | at Mercury. Even the astronomers can | tell you a lot more about what they | know must be true about Mercury than | they can about what they have actu- ally seen. In the first place, Mercury is the nearest of the planets to the sun, so near that when we look at Mercury we look info the sun's glare and see nothing, extept at suhrise or sunset |for a few months in each year. At/ |such times it becomes the morning or | evening star, as the case may be. No- | vember, 1932, is scheduled for Mer- cury as the evening star, while in De- | cember of this year it will be the morn- ing star. 1In either case it is visible |only for a few moments. It sets soon | | after the sun does, below the Western | horizon, of, when it is the“morning | star, the tising chariot of Apollo soon | blinds us to sight of the winged mes- | senger. | Again Mercury is too much in line ! with our Equator to be easily visible | |in the latitude of Washington, and is | {best seen in tropical regiofis, Where it | rides near the zenith. With us. it is always close to the horizon, and so is usually shrouded in our earthly dust- | cloud or in the mists of the customary | h rising from our surface at psunset and sunrise. However, in Winter it is just possible that the atmesphere will prove clear enough at sunset and sunrise to per- of our brother er like Venus in he color effect on the naked eye, but less emethystine, I always think, and | not so bright. is in reality only about the moon. That is to say, its| diameter is sbout four-tenths the di-| ameter of the earth, and it s about | four-tenths the distdnce of the earth | from the sun, Being # close to the | sun as it s, the powerful gravitational our $un has deprived it of any moons if it ever had any, nor has Mer- eur,an strong enough gtip to of atmosphere, it ever Astronomers aré convinced color of the light reflected from it that the naked surface of Mercury (and | there is no chanse that any vegetation | could eclothe it) 8 that of lava ash. Perhaps it has a geography of extinct| craters like the moon. and place (and if you want an answer) this way: Miss Mary Adams, Miss Grace Henry. Miss Martha Madder. Miss Selma Steel. | | Thurs, Jan. 12, Please reply to | Tea at 5 o'clock Miss Henry, ' at 2 Lake Road. 2 Lake Road. | Set your tea table in the dining room or in the living reom. Then we come w0 | your receiving problem. A receiving line of four le turns your tea into a reception ti formal but almost L ay to avoid this would be to have ohe girl receive and one pouf, and the two others make useful. . Post: The smartest shop | in our city are full of little with fla; forehead ncnlnl‘ Answer: They are sultable with semi- evening dress in a restaurant or at the theater or ih a cabaret. No hat should be worn with real evening clothes ever; that is, not not according | to American taste, which proves that | we do not take all of our fashions from { Paris, where hats and evening dresses have always been worn together in | publie. | (Copyright, 1933.) LETTEAS IN THE k | iridescent reflections of purple, green D¢ | nest is made of dry grasses, corn husks, , Snclusive, at the Washington Auditottum, under the suspices of the Washington ration of utomotive Trade Associati, h the ation. This association, throug! ermswfl'md Star, 1s conducting a contest, for which the winners will lO:me uc!nu":: Prizes. d 0 enter the contest simp); uzzle that appears, dpily and Sun- iply solve each S mpnl ‘thenf to the Wash- day, keep them until the Jast ep mtdl the lasi m::‘:;n pvublu.h 1002, 1427 1 street northwest, with & glogan—not to exceed 20 words—on “Why the automobile show should be held with yellow bills. They have a habit of sitting so the short tail droops, giv- ing the bird a round-shouldered ap- pearance. After the molt in September, the bird is a handsome creature with head, breast and flank feathers tipped with white. Prom a distance the bird looks gray, but at close range the true beauty of the suit is seen. There aré and blue on the throat, breast and flanks. The back has green and bronze | reflections and each feather is tipped | with brown. At this time he is mis-| taken for the purple grackle. | In flight the starlings ate often mis- taken for the purple martins because of their habit of sailing on fixed wings. These birds, though flying in great flocks, co-ordinate among themselves so | perfectly that, though they are speed- ing through the air on rapid wing beats, thiey can alter their fiight in an | instant. | In hunting food, the bird i a busi- nesslike seeker, going about in a zigzag manner, probing and hunting for every- thing that creeps. All city dwellers know that the starl- ing is no singer. He is a good mimic, and imitates the little wood pewee with its plaintive “pee-a-wee” 80 perfectly that the little lady is astonished at the deception. The sweet call of the blue- bird, the notes of the fleld sparrow, grackle and red-winged blackbird, as well as the whistle of the bobwhite, are (L2 added to his growing repertoire. His| own love song is & clear whistle, and | Iater the only note is one of alarm. | In April the starlings find their mates and go house hunting. They like to be near human habitation and | build behind shutters in woodpecker homes, downspouts and deep cornices. If forced to, they build in a tree. The clothing and green follage. Chicken feathers are added to the matttess Three families of from three to six children each are raised. The young starling, when three weeks old, joins the younger generation, and in the Fall young and old meet for roosting and reunion. (Copyright, 1933.) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. MODES== OF THE MOMENT T rr— Jtm— How Women Have Changed! DorothyDix Twenty-Five Years Ago Women Wanted Husbands Who Never Smoked or Played Cards—Today They Have Different Demands. E are always talking about the ideal husband or wife. Of course, there isn't avy such animal, and no man or woman could possibly endure having one around the house if there Were, buf it is curious to note how otir theory of what would be perfection in a mate changes. An interesting illustration oI this is afforded by contrasting the replies to a questionnaire that was sent out 25 years ago by a clergyman to & hundred young women with the answers to the same queries that have recently been submitted to & similar group of modern girls, ACOQEDING to this authority, & quarier of a century ago the model husband that a young woman hoped to draw in the matrimonial lottery was a youth who never drank—lips that touch wine shall never touch mine. He did not play cards. He never touched tobacco in any form. He was an ardent churchgoer and preferably he was a preacher. Otherwise he followed some profession and was a college graduate. The 1933 maiden’s prayer, as pictured by the answers to the queries, is = man who is & good sport and who will go 50-50 with his wife. He must be a good bridge player and smoke—"it certainly would be a pain in the neck to have to carry your own cigarcttes and have your husband wortying about ashes on the floor.” He must be able t6 mix a good cocktail, but not too fond of drinking them. He must have attended college enough to have gone collegiate, but not necessarily leted the course Most of the girls didn’t care what occupation he followed, but all wanted him to be a go-getter LOOKED at from the standpoint of an outsider, it would seem that the modern girl is much more likely to her heart’s desire in husband than her mother was, for she has lowetéd her demands to standard that chtlwly any poot etring man can reach if he so desires And it certainly does put marri on a more humane basis for a wife to be satisfied with a husband who is a meré mortal, ‘The really interesting thing about this questionnaitre is the light it sheds on our changing ideals about what constitutes a desirable mate. For nothing is more certain than that both men's and women'’s tastes have changed in wives and husbands as much as they have in clothes and cars, and that the very qualities that were so appealing to our parents would bore us to death or send us to the divorce eourts. SSUREDLY, if the modern girl were to sit down and make out a list of the T:nm.iu that she wotld most desire in a husband, she wouAl cast into the discard a lot of the standardized virtues that formerly ‘were considered necessary to mode]l husband an substitute for them & lot of graces an am t no one ever dreamed of his requiring. For she would know that while a drunkard can often be reformed and a philanderer domesticated. no wife can teach her husband under- standing of a woman's heart. He has to be born with that faculty if he ever | has1 ’n. And, unless he has it, marriage is cinders, ashes and dust to the wife. . ities SO Miss 1933 would demand of her ideal husband a lot of things her mother never thought of. Fair play. Broadmindedness. especially toward women. The ability to see the wife's point of view. Companion- ship. Sociability. Being willing to step out and go.places and do things. ‘The ability to keep her entertained and amused and feeling that life was Please, Miss Nade, kin I go home right away? I is a sick man. You ast me so terrible sudden to spell “gentle- man” I swallowed my gum— (Copyright, 1933.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Oatmeal with Rajsins Corned Beef Hagh Popovers Coffee LUNCHEON Tripe Fried in Batter Clover Rolls Apple and Celery Salad French Dretfim{‘e Nut Cookies a DINNER Boulllon Casserole of Pork Baked Btuffed Potatoes Cauliflower Cheese BSauce Lettuce Russian Dressing Baked Indian Pudding Custard Sause Coffee TRIPE IN BATTER. Cut tripe in pieces for serving and boil 20 minutes, which makes it nice and tender. Beat one egg, add one-fourth cupful cold water, one teaspoonful salt and flour to make a batter, not too thin. Dip the tripe in the batter and fry until a nice color on both sides. If there is any batter left pour it into the spide: and cook with the rest. Be cure to have plenty of rease in the spider. If you use ripe, add one tablespoon vinegar to batter. CASSEROLE OF PORK. Two cupfuls roast pork, one large carrot. one teaspoonful salt, one green pepper, sprigs of sweet herbs, one api)le, salt, one slice onion, one-half ‘cupful fat, five tablespoonfuls flour, six small onions, 2 cupfuls water, one and one-half cupfuls cooked maca- Toni, pepper, one teaspoonful mustard. Brown ch:r in fat, | | place in casserole, add onions, | | macaroni, carrot, pepper and ap- | | ples cut in pleces.” To fat in pan add sliced onions and Cook u:tfi | | brown. Add floyr, brown, stock of water, salt, pepper, mus- tard. Stir sauce until it bolls, pour over meat and vegetables here every year.” Remember, do have + do not send the answers in until sl . It s not mecessary fo send in the themselves. mmmeum.,,w_mmmumm and bake; cover for 13 hours. (Copyright, 1933.) .| when we shall have pretty exact per- worth while. And perhaps she would get them just as seldom as her mother did. Men’s ideal of the petfect wife has changed just as much as women's ideal of the perfect husband, though they don't know it. They are still strong in theory for all of the feminihe qualities that were fashionable in grandmother’s time. Domesticity. Helplessness. Meekness. Patient Griselda stufl. OMETIMES one finds the ideal and marries her. The woman who never has any interest outside of the four walls of her home. Or the moron who rolls her eyes at & man and asks him what he thinks she thinks. Or the woman without any dignity or self-respect who is always ready to forgive a man and take him back, no matter how he treats her. Then the man discovers that these traditional virtues of the model wife pall on him and bore him to tears. He doesn't want & wife who is nothing but a combination ‘gas range and vAcuum cleaner, nor one who is a dummy nor one who is a door mat he ¢an kigk about, He wants a wife who can keep house with one hand and play golf h the other, and who can dance as well as walk the colic. He wants'a wife who 1s as well educated as he is and with whom he can carry on intelligent con- versations. So the modern man, in making his list of the qualifications of the ideal wife, would be more likely to put Gown good health than beauty. Business ability instead of domesticity. Brains inste~d of softnéss. Sportsmanship instead of feminlne wiles DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1933.) 2 iths, and he's | tcu lonedm he‘lmc\ue ;at‘ hnot paying it back, darn , Ay ere was at least a duzzen thi: wanted | to get with that 2 cents at it & duz- zen times, but just when I need it that darn ga always claims, he hasn’t got it. I awt to sue his father, that's wiat | I awt to do, I said. Your lawyers fees would proberly | moré than eat up the amount of the | dammages, I'm afraid, pop said. It's| cases of that sort that make it advis- | ble, when in doubt, to be the lawyer rather than the client, he said. | Well anyways I wish I knew some | way to get those 2 cents back from | that darn _guy, I said, ahd pop said. Cheer up, I'm in a werse situation than | you. A darn guy owes me 600 dollers, | 600 dollers, G' wiszickers, I said. and pop said, G wimickers is correct, in fact it's a lot of money in sny lan- guage. This darn guy I'm speaking of has given me a werthless promisSory note and 3 rubber checks and now he claims he's bankrupt, although .he smokes better cigars than I do and eats in more expensive restaurants. 8o smile happily, what does your 2 cents amount to compared to my 600 dol- lers, he said. Well holey smokes, pop, ngbody would ever expect to get back a fearse amount like 600 dollets, but jimminy | Chrissmas 2 cents, that's diffrent, I said, and pop said, Yee gods. The filos- ophers tell us that the ony cure for trouble and worry is werk, so step on | the gas and get to your lessons, he sald. Wich I did. | + Star Patterns Little Boy's Suit. Here Is an appealing suit for “little brother.” He will be delighted with the | double breasted effect which helps/him | achieve the mannish air. Without doubt, he will be able to find ahy num- ber of uses for the cleverly concealed inside pocket. The little trousers are made very full to allow him freedom of movement. This cunning suit will stand ah amaz- ing amount of wear and tear if made up in any of the durable materials. It is No. 950. The pattern is designed in sizes 2 to 8. Size 6 requires 2 yards of 36 by 39 inch fabric. Simplified illustrated instructions for cutting and sewing are included with each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making thése dresses. To get a pattern of this model send | fifteen cents In toins of stamps. Please write your nameé znd address very plainly; also style number and size of each pattern ordered, and miil to The Evening Star Pattern Department, Washington, D., C. Several days are required to fill orders and pat! will beé mailed as quickly as possible. THE EVENING STAR, PATTERN DEPARTMENT. Inclosed is 15 cents for Pattern No. 950. Size.. Name (Please Print)............ Btreet and Number ............ Everyday Psychology SCREEI; BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Criminal Types. I am often asked to describe the | criminal personality. My correspondents | are interested in physical traits. Hence | the question: What are the physical | signs of a criminal character? | My answer in brief is: Nome. I mean that there are no physicel traits that {uu can rely on. I mfnke this -n; swer from the standpoint of our presen! = wecepted . soientinc knowledge. Tnis| || AARIE DRESSLER | knowledge is all too meager. However, MAS HAD THE SAME MAID FOR {7 ; | there are many among the men of sei- YEARS. |ence who believe that certain correla- | tions between crime and physical traits will one day be established. _Regardless of the status of this ques- tion from a scientific point of view, we | all have our hunches about the appear- ance of criminals, There is one item worthy of mention. | Criminals are fairly generally physical | | weaklings. I believe the day will come | | centag=s on this point. If the police would take strength measurements in addition t5 fingerprints, we might in time know what sort of persons to look for as the possible perpetrator of typi- eal erimes. (Copyright, 1933.) — it i My Neighbor Says: Melted fat should not be hot when added to cake mixture, as :xwot glt is likely to m:emc:v!yl igh, coarse grained BN A Old nail holes may be filled with a mixture made of fine saw- dust and glue. Fill the hole with it and leave until dry. Damp towels shouid never be put into a clothes basket or and left there for days before being sent to the wash. Mildew is almost sure to result. occasionally Sy 0 o e een BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWCETT. Jewel Carmen is retired and matried to Producer-Director Barriscale appéars on the stage and in occasicnally 1n independent pietures. ODDITIES 15 A CWINESE EXTRA WHO THE COWBOY STAR'S NAME. o 2 et 1) he said. I | | ing | aTound the ponds. They swam through MAGAZINE BEDTIME STORIES Mrs. Paddy's Mistake. Ip passing judsment pray be many thines 94 do mot o Mother ‘Rature. | HE two young Otters, the chil- dren of Little Joe Otter, were having great fun e: lomg. the upper and lower ponds of Paddy | the Beaver. It was their first visit there and they meant to see all | it. there was to see. Some of the time| time their mother was with them; some of the time they were alone, It was a sort of game with them. At the be- | ginning Little Joe had warned them of one thing. “You may go where you please éx- cept one place,” said he.” “You are not under any circumstances to enter the | house of Paddy and Mrs. Beaver. Don't forget it. The only excuse for ever en- | tering that house would be starvation, | and then you would go in to kill or be | killed. I have known Paddy ever since | Wwas your age, but never have I been inside his house. I think Paddy is & | little afraid of me, but to be frank with | you I have a great deal of respect for | him and those greai cutting teeth of his. There may come a time when you face starvation aiid then you may be | Justified in trying for a Beaver dinner. | but until such a time treat Paddy and | his family with respect. Never try to enter thelr house.” | The young Otters promised that they | would follow this sound advice, and,! although when swimming under water past Paddy's house they sometimes looked curiously at the entrance, they remembered their father's warning and they remembered, too, those great or- ange-color®d cutting teeth of Paddy’s, | and passed on. | But they went everywhere else about those two ponds and the Laughing Brook between them. They explored | | the two dams from end to end above | | and below, ‘The; ined every one of found and exam-| Paddy’s little land- | places, his little mud wharves, all hisscanals, both those cut for haul- Ing logs and those along the bottom of | the ponds. They visited the places where trees had been cut. And all the time they were doing it they ap- | peared to be merely playing, having a good time and satisfying their curfi);-‘ &y‘:‘ Mrs. Paddy evidently thought just | hu;mm:;e-xgu:“txers think of nothing | aving & good time,” said she disgustedly to Paddy as they sat | on their big dam. “They do nothing but chase each other about =2ll day long. They are old enough and big enough to be learning something in stead of wasting their time in play. should think ~Little Joe or mother would take them in hand teach them that there are more I their | and im- | agic of Sound Waves. HEN we speak of “marvels,” | we are likely to think of the airplane or the radio, or of the telescopes which bring | us facts about distant stars, | but how about the marvels which are ' $o close to us that people never have been without them? - Such a marvel 18 the human voice. We have a thought, and we speak it. Out come sounds which travel through the alr. They may reach the ear of | another person, and he will know what we are talking about—at least, he should. The volce travels by means of sound waves, We speak, &nd sound waves . Unless they are| 'y go in all directions. | a pebble into & smooth l, | and watch the flm:w which goes out in all . Drop a sound into the air, and it will make waves which we cannot see. | Different sounds make different kinds | of waves. Years ago, an inventor made | a device which would photograph sound | waves. The photographs showed differ- | {ences in the sound waves produced by | | such ;mm as Caruso, Tetrazzini and Amato. How fast do sound waves travel? On a day when the air is still a sound will travel 1 mile in five seconds, If there Against the wind, it will go more slowly. If sound travels through watef, it will go much faster thah through air —almost a mile in one sécond. | It souhd through iron, it will | travel 15,700 feet in one second—about | three times as fast as through water, and 15 times as fast as through air, It you and a friend can find & long | iron pipe, you may make an interesting | test. Golhg to opposite ends of the | plpe, let one of you put his ear close to | the pipe while the other strikes the | | other end with a hammer. If the pipe | is long enough, you should hear two | sounds fsom one blow of the hammer, onhe, sound coming quickly through the | plpe and thé othsr more :lawly&grough ! the air. The longer the pipe, the greater will be the difference between e sounds. When lightn! too clese to you flashes (mnless it is be eomf‘fnlble) you Grand Prize have been Winner Consennial B Philadel, Formerly sold at Roland West. vaudevilly with | mistake. PAGE By Thornton W. Burgess. portant in 1'fe than having & 1good time. gutlnn-lh'ylnm‘ much better themselves. Théy are just happy-go-lucky.” But Mrs. Paddy was making a great ‘True, those young Otters were having & time. They were having & good minute they were awake. But all timeé they were learning and having fun doing ““We found some big found footprints | Little Joe was with them: some of the in the mud near the end of the dam and they were made last reported one young Otter to Little Joe. “1 guess we will keep away from there after dark” “A wise idea, my son,” replied Little THEY VISITED THE PLACES WHERE TREES HAD BEEN CUT. Joe Otter. “Those were the prints of Yowler the Bobcat, ahd he is & fellow to_keep clear of.” “And down alohg the shore we found the Dbig Lt footprints you ever saw, some old ones and some fresh ones, so I guess whoever made them comes here to this pond often. Just the size of them scared me,” sald the other young Otter. Little Joe Otter grinned. “Those were made by Buster Bear,” said he, “You've never seen him. When you do you will not wonder at the size of those prints. Take care you never give him a chance to get one of those big feet of his on ohe of you" “Heé's got the biggest claws!” con- tinued the young Otber. “It makes me shiver just to think of those prints in the mud. I hope he can't swim.” “He can, but not as you can, so needn’t fear him in the water,” re] uu!{nue Joe. “’l;n !h’?ld you have_ g your eyes while You have beef playing. That is the way to learn. Never forget to use your eyes, no mat- ter what you are doing.” (Copyright. 1032.) UNCLE RAY’S.CORNER will see ths flash & second or more be- fore you hear the thunder which it makes. If the noise of the thunder comes five seconds after the flash, you will kniow that the lightning flash took place 1 mile away. The greatest noises ever heard by meh afe those which have followed éx« plosions of volcanoes. years a volcano on an isiand near Java loose and blew away triore half t}'le lsllmt.h. Ptoplsle ‘l'l‘uvln. at & distanch of more n 0 jes reported that they had heard the explosion. — Thousands of readers have wril for the free leaflet,, “Marvels of [CARUS DRAWING FROM TFHOTOS OF SOUND WAVES MADE BY THE VOICES OF SINGERS, Sky.” If you have not sent for yout copy, Write to me in care of this newse paper and inclose & stamped return ene velope. Write your full name and ad- dress, taking care that thete shall be no mistake in the malls UNCLE RAY. (Copyright. 1933.) g Air Travel Grows Four Times. Alr travel in Brasil has increased more than 400 per cent in the last four years. 30 LERF P N P ONLY 198 WITH FREE ATTACHMENTS SAVE $9% ON A MODEL 9 VACUUM CLEANER THIS WEEK ONLY NLY a lirnited number allot- ted us by the manufacturer for this special bargain sale. These fine, flowerful cleaners t oroughly rebuilt by the Eureka Vacuum Cleaner pany. All worn parts have en replaced with new parts. They look like new * and are fully guaranteed the same as new cleaners. $290 DELIVERS EASY PAYMENTS Phone for

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