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B—6 Conquering Contract By P. HAL SIM! P. Hal Sims. Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auction plager. He was captain of the renowned | “Four Horsemen” team of four, and has won 24 national championships since Four-Card Suit Responses to One No Trump. F the bidding goes one no trump, two spades (or two hearts), three no trumps, you must read the ently according to your position. If You Had Already Passed. If you had passsd you can have no | reason to put in another bid over the | three no trumps. The opener is merely | is safe in view of your first response, and that he requires further infor- n abggt your wish the opponents acquire any fur- er knowledge of 1t, as they might if you were given an- rtunity to bid. he aspires to slam after you have passed and wishes tg ascertain cantains ‘around two and a half to three tricks, or rénges between one and a half and two and a half, he can bid four no trumps | as & mild slam try. This you would n the bidding originally. If you have mugh to accept the slam try, bid five no trumps, not five in your second suit. Do not give him the impression that you | have a real 5-5 two sulter. To bid <ix most with which you would pass a de- fensive hand—ace-king and ace, plus a jack, or ace-king and ace-10-9. If the No-Trumper Was Bid by Dealer or Second Hand. goes one no trump, two spades or two | hearts by you, three no trumps, you | may read this as a mild slam try, since the opening bidder does not know howl strong your hand may be (short of an 1924. meaning of this jump rebid differ- hine 15 0o trumps , and aoes not other intermediate whether your hand pass unless you had almost enough to over four you would have to hold the In this situation, when the bidding YOUR BABY BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Enjoyable Rainy Days. HE rainy days of April! Do the| childreni grumble and moan when they awaken to the rain streaming down the panes, or do they leap from bed. their minds seething with the projects which have been awaiting just such a day for fulfillment? The manner in which the children greet nature’s watery outburst depends pretty much on the mother's attitude. The mother has inspired that spint of anticipation by her cheery, “Now Jjust wait until some rainy day and we'll do that.” What the children do may be some painting, sewing, carpen- tering or the reading of a new book. Or it may be one of those “inside jobs,” the cleaning of pantry shelves or book- cases, or bringing a new orderliness to | dresser drawers or clothes closets, which can be such fascinating occupations when no more active amusements are beckoning one outdoors. Rainy days are ideal to browse in the attic among old trunks or discarded chests and dressers, whose contents lend themselves readily to unexpected journeys to far laads on a boat made | of two chairs and inclosed for privacy by an all-encompassing blanket. ‘There should be special toys for rainy BEDTIME STORIE Johnny Is Resentful. Rp v joner et goudnd g —Johnny Chuck. | OHNNY CHUCK left the black Chuck in the stone wall that was | the boundary of Farmer Brown's farm. He didn’t know that that was the boundary, but he did know that on one side of that wall he | felt safe and on the other side he didn’t feel safe at all. You see Farmer Brown does not allow any shooting or trapping on his land. “Phew!” exclaimed Johnny as he left the stone wall. “I certainly did have & 80 HE HEADED FOR THE OLD HOUSE HE HAD BUILT SO LONG BEFORE. narrow escape over there. That Chuck back there under the stone wall is wel- come to live there if he wants to; I cer- tainly don’t. I never would feel safe there. Well, I guess I have wandered about enough. I'll go back and see if Polly Chuck has changed her mind | about letting me live with her there. If | she hasn't I'll have to get busy and fix up one of my old houses or dig a new one.” On his way he started to cross a far | eorner of the Green Meadows where a | long time before he had once lsved.i “T'll have to look at that old house of | mine,” thought he. “Perhaps I'll use it | for a few days and stay around here. I always did like it over here.” So-he| headed for the old house he had dug | and used so long before. It was close | to the fence. Bushes had grown around it. The mound that used to be the doorstep had long since disappeared. In fact, Johnny had some difficulty in finding it bec2use surroundings had changed sv. de fairly stumbled over it at last. Even then he had hard work to realize that this was in truth the doorway through which he had gone in and out so many times. He was just about to go in when he noticed signs that some one had been using that house iatcl”. Who could it be? # another Chuck? His nose soon settled that question. It was another Chuck. Yes, sir, an-| other Chuck had been using that house, and very recently, too. In fact, Johuny wasn't at all cure that this other fellow was not down inside at this very mo- ment. He resented this. Right away he was angry. He shouldn't have been. “This {5 my house” he muttered. *This is my house, and I won't have any one else using it.” He started to go in. Then backed cut 5 he heard some one coming up the hall. He backed outside and a few away and waited. In a moment a Bead was thrust out of the doorway. It was the head of a grizzled old Chuck. He glared at Johnny angrily. “Well, what do you want?” °| days, some things that appear momen- | he de- | MAGAZINE PAGE. immediate suit force) because you have not had the opportunity to bid or pass. Lacking a five-card suit, you must re- spond in terms of your high cards, not your suits; generaily your alternatives are to pass or to raise in no trumps. The exception would be if your second suit was headed by A Q or K Q, and your | first sult also was headed by some better combination than K J. Accepting » Slam Try. You now have the virtual assurance that no trick will be lost in either of your four-card suits, as your partner’s jump bid proclaims one at least of the top three honors in the suit you have bid, and presumably three aces with strong supporting honors. ‘Thus it seems certain that eight tricks will be taken in your two suits; consequently if you have about a trick in seconderv form in the other two suits together— say king-10 and queen or king and queen-jack—accept the slam try by bid- ding four no trumps. With a worthless doubleton in the | hand, the total strength being adequate, | accept preferably by bidding four in | your second suit provided it is suitably headed. With so powerful a responding hand it is desirable to play for a slam in whichever suit the opener can raise or, failing this, in no trumps. When to Make a Slam Try Yourself. ‘With 4-4-3-2 distribution, the re- sponding hand should only make a slam try if able to do so in terms of no trumps, on the lines already laid down for hands which contain no biddable suit. For the responding hand to initi- | ate slam tries by means of four-card suits is absolutely unsound because it is | almost sure to deceive the dominant opening hand, the assumption always being that slam tries in terms of suits on the part of the responding hand in- dicate suit length and distribution. The case is quite different when the opening hand makes the slam try, and the responding player thereupon men- tions a second good four-card suit be- cause this information appears wmore informative than a raise in no trumps A short-suited responder must always play a subsidiary role unless his high- card strength is so impressive that he can take command of the bidding in terms of no trumps. | (Copyright, 1933.) Mr. Sims will answer all inquiries o tract that are addressed to this new with self-addressed stamped envelope. AND MINE tarily when the rain is present and disappear anly to renew their delights on the next rainy day. The special box may contain old and discarded favorite dolls or toys which have been replaced by newer ones. It may con- tain some especially exciting game cr | puzzle which mother has picked up and | put away for just such moments of | ennui. Placed on a high shelf and marked “Rainy Day Amusements.” the box offers an immeasurable allure, if presented on a day when ordinary toys have taken on the gloomy aspect cf | the day itself. Rain might be unbearable were it a| constant phenomenon, but its infre- | quency should make it the signal for | new games, new amusements, new proj- ects which can be enjoyed only on thos2 | days when it is impossible to do any- thing but stay under shelter. SRR Strawberry-Pineapple Jam. | Run pared and cored pineapple through a food chopper and add equal amounts of strawberries. To every five cupfuls of fruit add four cupfuls of | sugar. Let stand several hours. Put in| preserving kettle, let cook gently until clear and thick. Put into jelly glasses.| Cover and set in a cool, dry place. By Thornton W. Burgess. voice that sounded very much like a| growl. “Your house!” exclaimed the grizzled old Chuck. *‘Your house! How do you get that way?” | “Yes, my house!” retorted Johnny. “I dug it and if that doesn’t make it mine I don’t know what does.” . “It may have once, but it doesn’t now,” was the prompt reply. ‘“When you left it you gave it up. You know the law of the Green Meadows and ‘“'i Green Forest just as well as I do. Any- | thing left by any one can be taken by any one else who may want it. You may have owned this house once, but it is mine now. So what are you going | | to do about it?” Johnny had all the time been grow. ing more and more resentful. He didn’t really want the old house, but he re-| sented being told that he couldn’t have it. A lot of people are like that. “I'll show you what I am going to do about it. I'll show you whose house it is,” he growled, and at the same time showed all his teeth. ‘The grizzled old Chuck showed his teeth in return. He didn’t come wholly out of that doorway. In fact, only his head was out. Johnny was too old a hand at this sort of thing not to under- stand how almost hopeless it would be to try to get that old Chuck out into & real fight as long as he kept his posi- tion there, and this made Johnny all the angrier. “Come out and fight,” he growled. | “You're afraid to fight.” | The grizzled old Chuck said nothing, but kept his position. (Copyright, 1933.) | AMAZE A MINUTE SCIENTIFACTS—BY ARNOLD. A 100-FOOT HI ICEBERG HAS BEE| AS THE LATITUD oF SPAIN. —_— ANTS 5 AND SNAKES - “BuLLDOG" ANTS ARE CONSIDERED THE ONLY DANGEROUS WiLD A ANIMAL IN o AUSTRALIA ;Q ; OTHER THAN A POISONOUS SNAKES. manded. ‘I want to know what you mean by house,” replied Johnny in & \ CEBERGS AS FAR SOUTH AS SPAIN- MET AS FAR SOUTH THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, APRIL 24, 1933 _B—6 MAGAZINE PAGE. ____THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAV, APRIL 24 1933 WOMEN'S FEATURES. NANCY PAGE ||| o, ! Doroth y Di xi v A || SONNYsavINGs Peter’s Afternoon Nap Lasted Too Long BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Peter Page Junior was having a dread- ful time. When his mother told him it was bed time he set up objections ga- lore. He had to finish making his pus- zle, he needed to see what his cousin Joan was sewing, he wanted to hear one more story, he was thirsty and must have a drink of water. At first, when these objections were raised Nancy tried to be patient and reason with him. But that did not get her very far. Then she tried being firm and using | the tone of voice which he knew never admitted any argument. Of course, he went up to bed. But once up there he could not sleep. He kept calling down- stairs for this or that. . He called across the hall to Joan. He found it necessary to go to the bath room and to have a drink. Finally it dawned on Nancy just where the difficulty lay. He was still taking afternoon paps. She put him to bed at 1:30. FreBuently he slept until 5 or 5:30. Nancy did not waken him, because as she said, he must be tired out or he would not sleep so long and soundly. But she realized that long naps made early bedtime hours such sieges. No wonder Peter did not want to go to bed. He was not tired or sleepy. She knew that he was still too young to omit naps and she was sure she wanted him to keep to a 7 o'clock bedtime hour. She decided the sensible thing to do was awaken him at 4 or a little earlier. ‘When she did that he was sleepy and tired enough to go willingiy to bed at 7. So there was another problem solved. Pointed Paragraphs Bonds of friendship are often formed on flimsy thread. Always provide for the worst—the best can provide for itself. We may see all things come to some- body else, if we only wait long enough. Girls should never throw kisses un- less they really wish to miss the mark. Help a man out of trouble and he'll not forget you when he gets inwo trouble again. A bachelor says that marriage may be a cure for lovesickness, but that remedy is worse than the disease. Epi are people who dislike to waste good hunger on poor victuals. Athmu:rii always ln::o\u to heip another e sees a chance to hel himself. 2 Time is money; probably that’s why the man who owes you a little bill promises to pay it in time. Half the people in the world are unhappy because they can't afford the things that make the other half mis- erable. Self-made men are scarce, but self- made fools are plentiful. Luckily, though the cat may have nine lives, it has no biographers. A man loses his appetite for a lot of things while waiting for them. A man who looks only at one side or a thing imagines that every other man does the same thing. How It Started BY JEAN NEWTON. “Through Thick and Thin.” We have an inquiry as to the orij of the popular modern phrase "thrm;‘zul; thick and thin,” meaning under any circumstances, despite all obstacles. ‘The expression is an old one, not only in point of its first usage, but also its popularity in speech and writing. Its first recorded use is in Chaucer’s “Kyng and Hermpyt,” which dates 1380. It is familiar in the better known six- teenth cent: verse of Spencer’s “Faerie Queene,” which is as follows: “Through thick and thin, both over bank and bush, | In hope her to attain by hook or crook.” The examples of its employment in English literature from that time down to the present day would be too numer- ous to mention. (Copyright. 1933.) GH N \/"\/‘\ P.E NG UNBARKING A TREE/ A wiLow oAk N WASHINGTON HAD ITS BARK COMPLETELY STRIPPED OFF BY A STROKE OF LIGHT- NING. & Py ey, Apnly for Divorce? HERE is never a day in which I do not get a score or more of letters from heartbroken wives whose of happiness have suddenly crashed about them, wrecked by the discovery that their husbands have been unfaithful to them. ‘The disaster has come to these women with the suddenness of s cyclone bursting across a clear day, for the men to whom they are married are not the ordinary philanderers or Don Juans. On the contrary, they are men who have been kind, indulgent husbands and fathers. For 10 years—20—often for 30 years they have lived in apparent contentment and harmony with their wives. A HUSBAND in whom a wite trusted, a safe comfortable home, the children gro up about them, or marrying and starting out for themselves—it was t of all possible good worlds. Then without warning comes this rending, shattering blow that annihilates her uni- verse and turns everything into cinders, ashes and dust. Her husband has betrayed her. Her idol has toppled off the altar and she can never believe in him I?lnl. In her derment and despair she does not know what to which way to turn. There are the children to consider. There is her own age, her lack of training in any trade or profession by which she could support herself. Be! a good wife and mother is no recommenda- tion when applying for & job in an office or shop. OF course, the woman's first thought her soul outraged with injustice, is of divorce. This would be the obvious course for her to take if her husband were in love with the other woman and wanted to marry her. For no woman with a shred of self-respect could endure to keep & man bound to her if he were tired of her and anxious to get rid of her. As s general thing, the husband does not wish his wife to divorce him. He doesn't wish his home broken up. He does not want to be separated from his children and to forfelt their love and respect. He knows that it doesn't help any man’s business or professional career to have his wife leave him because of his affairs with other women. 'VERY often he is still fond of his wife and admires her above other women. In her rectitude and dignity he considers her far superior to the poor, weak creature he is playing about with. So, when his wife finds out, he makes a full confession, begs her not to divorce him and cerned. All wife has to do is to forgive and forget and everything will be happy and serene as it was while she still lived in her fool's paradise, believing him as true to her as she was to him. But the poor wife knows that nothing can ever -fdn be the same. She knows she has been dealt a mortal wound that will never heal. but bleed as long as she lives. Bhe knows that he has killed her faith in him. She knows that his prom- ises of being faithful are generally lies. SO what should the woman do when she is married to a man who is technically a good husband, who is kind and pleasant to live with and a good provider, yet who does philandering? There are several things, I think, that should influence her decision in the matter. The first is, of course, the children. There is no argument as to the disastrous effect that divorce has upon children. It deprives them of the sense of security that all helpless young thi need in which to grow up. It breaks up their home and disjoints their lives. It orphans them of either a father or a mother and every child is deprived of its birthright who lacks a father's strength and a mother’s tenderness to mold its character. Besides the spiritual wrong that children suffer from the divorce of their parents, they often suffer severe material losses. The woman who leaves her husband, even if the court makes him pay her alimony, is seldom able to maintain them in the same state of lflebor give them the social and educational advantages, or the start in th world they would have enjoyed if they had been brought up in an unbroken household. TH!N the woman should consider her own financial status. And, finally, the real determining factor should be the woman's own feelings toward her husband. Sometimes these wandering husbgnds never make but one excursion off the narrow path, and in the end they all come back home after they have grown tired of chasing wild women. Often the reward of the patient wife is many years of domestic peace and happiness. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1933.) MODES OF THE MOMENT UNCLE RAY’S CORNER Exploring Australia. Across the Pacific. ATHER suddenly I have asked you to join me in a trip to far Australia; and, loving adventure | pire. as you do, you have accepted with a cheer. Instead of risking an airplane journey across 6,000 miles of ocean, we go to a Pacific port and embark on a steam- Our ocean voyage lasts three weeks, but we have pleasant little visits along the way. Our ship makes port in Hawali, and also pauses at some of the tiny islands which dot the South Seas. Before we complete the journey you ask me questions about Australia. “Is Australia an island or a conti- nent? Where did the name come from? ‘What are the people like?, How long ago was Australia discovered “As to the people,” I reply, “we had best wait until we meet them; but I may remark right now that most of them are members of the white race and most are of English descent. “I can see no good reason why Aus- tralia should not be ranked as a con nent. It has an area of amlost 3,000,000 square miles, which means that it is close to the size of the United States. “At an early date (1605) Dutch sail- |a ors reached the shores of Australia, and called it ‘New Holland’; but they were not the first white visitors. Men from Portugal had been there before them. Little effort was made to turn Australia into a colony until the English came. They made it part of the British Em- “The name ‘Australia’ means ‘Land of the South.’ This is the only continent which is entirely south of the equator.” ‘When our ship comes to port, we en- ter Sydney—a great city with a popu- lation of more than 1,100,000, accord- ing to the latest figures. (For “Travel” section of your scrap- book.) . veral thousand more copies of the “Surprise Leaflet” will be mailed with- out charge to readers who send me a stamped, return envelope. This leaflet is one of the most popular I have of- fered. It contains riddles, and tells how to perform magic tricks. UNCLE RAY. (Copyright, 1933.) eI e Salade Veronica. Arrange escarole on a salad plate and place on this one sliced cooked knvp celery and one sliced cooked beet in a crown-shaped mound. Over this sprin- kle one-fourth of a cupful of driea beef frizzled in butter. Pour over this French dressing seasoned with chop- chives and garnish with choppea, Y FANNY Y. CORY. Springtime an’ school is two things that don’t mix good. (Copyright, 1933.) Uncommon Sense Laziness BY JOHN BLAKE. 1 OMPARATIVELY few people are lazy physically. The village | Joafer will run half a mile to see a dog fight and pitch horse- shoes all day rather than hunt around for a regular job. | There is never any lack of volunteers | for a base ball or foot ball game, and ! the boys who are fond of sitting around and watching other people work will | cheerfully spend a whole day tracking, i some pitiful little rabbit, because they regard that kind of work as “sport.” * x % % Mental laziness is more common. Most of us inherit it from our ancestors. Beginning as school children, we seek every possible means to escape study. . As we grow up and are confronted with the necessity of using our minds we discover that the mind would much prefer some useless activity to one which requires effort and consternation. Many men I have interviewed in con- nection with the job of reporter have cheerfully admitted that they hated work, until they had done enough of it | to become interested. Then they worked right along until their energy was ex- hausted. I 2m convinced that almost every one who is not a moron is capab.e of doing more and better work than the average person does today. But before this can | be acomplished he must learn to make | his mind behave. He must stop “looking out of the win- dow,” by which I mean not only the actual window beside which he sits, but day dreaming about things which have no relation whatever to the job he has in hand. At the beginning the brain will “play | hookey” whenever it gets the oppor- tunity. Every distraction will turn it aside. It will welcome every excuse to slack and take a little holiday. But if its owner can keep it operating a little longer and a little more intensively every day if become resigned stick to the task. After that it has great and growing capabilities, and the re- sults of its labor may astonish even its owner. A time will come when this newly trained mind will get the work habit so firmly fixed that it functions without any prod whatever, because of the in- terest it takes in its new-found powers.| Keep your body in health, of course, for if you fall 11l your brain will be non- productive. | Be stern and unrelenting with your mind. Keep it on the job, make it do a little more and a little better work every day, and by and by you will be ! astonished at its output. | Don'’t worry about overstraining it. It is capable of doing far more than you ! are likely to force it to do, and the dan- ger of a breakdown is so remote as not 1o be worth considering. (Copyright, 1933.) Shrimp Canape. Mix chopped parsley with creamed butter, and spread on small squares o: bread. Top with a shrimp, and fill cen- ter with seasoned minced egg yolk aua pimento. The Old Gardener Says: Garden makers who rent their homes and therefore do not feel like investing in shrubs or peren- nials will find the spider plant, | | or Cleome pungens, useful, because | | it _grows tall enough to act as | | substitute for shrubbery. The growth is rapid, too, and the flowers persist until the coming of Fall. Then they are likely to self-sow and come up freely the next year. The plants grow best in rather rich sofl, and should stand one foot apart. | ‘The common name of spider plant was given because the long stamens and the curious seed pods suggest a long-legged spider. The blossoms are curfously sticky when touched. They are not very attractive in the middle of the day, as they partially close then, but when evening comes they open to their fullest extent and make a very pretty appear- ance, being deep rose in color. (Copyright, 1933.) CARRIES ALL-BRAN ON EVERY VOYAGE| Seaman Finds This Delicious' Cereal Relieves Constipation * = I Here is_an unsolicited letter | from Mr. Darragh: | “I have been going to sea for the past fourteen years. Every trip 1 underwent severe head-| aches, nervousness, and sleepless- |f| Iness. Tried all sorts of remedies | |and received only temporary re- lief., | “So_ hearing about Kellogg's | ALL-BRAN, thought I would get | a box, which I did. That was six ||} months ago, haven’t been without || ' |it at home, and when I go to sea | a box of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN is always with me."—George D. Darragh, 1914 32nd Avenue, Oak- land, California. Tests show ALL-BRAN con- tains two things for common con- stipation: “Bulk” to exercise the intestines; vitamin B to help tone the intestinal tract. ALL-BRAN also supplies iron for_the blood. |t The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN is| much like that of lettuce. Inside | the body it forms a soft mass | which gently clears the intestines of_wastes, e How much pleasanter this is| than ukm'i pills and drugs—so | often harmful. Two tables; on-l fuls of ALL-BRAN daily will cor- rect most types of constipation. If not relieved this way, see your doctor. Serve as a cereal or use in cook- ing. Get the red-and-green pack- age at your grocer’s. Made by |, ellogg in Battle Creek.—Adver- ||’ tisement, WOMEN'’S FE ATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. BAOK in the days when the Repub-| licans were in control of the| House, the favorite target of the Demo- | “Longworth, Tilsonand Snell.” w er e variously dubbed “The Three Horsemen,” “The keteers” sometimes were accused by their opponents of rid- * over the will of the majority of the House. The cry of “gag rule” was raised | frequently then. Demands for liber- alization were heard on all sides by the Democrats. And they promised them- selves if they ever were returned to MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice. Rolled Oats with Cream. Baked Sausage. Griddle Cakes, Maple Sirup. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Spanish Omelet. Stuffed Celery. ‘Twisted Rolls. Wuhl%flon Ple. ea. DINNER. Boiled Corned Shoulder. Bolled Spinach and Potatoes. Parsnips and Carrots. Beet Salad, French Dressing. Cottage Pudding, Lemon Sauce. Cottee. GRIDDLE CAKES, Beat 1 egg light, then add 1! cups sweet milk, 2 cups flour, with 3 teaspoons baking pow- der, sifted with flour and a little salt. If batter is too thick add a little more milk; fry on a hot griddle and sprinkle on a little sugar or serve with sirup. WASHINGTON PIE. Cake—2 cups flour after sifted, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon soda, 2 teaspcons cream tartar, little salt. Sift all together. Break 1 egz in measuring cup, fill with milk, stir well into your mixture. Now add 3 tablespoons melted butter. Bake about 20 minutes. Filling—2 cyj cold coffee, heat and add 23 cup sugar, 2 teaspoons cornstarch, 2 teaspoons cccoa, 2 ns butter, all well blended with a little cold coffee. Cook in hot coffee until it thickens. This makes just enough for a good filling and just thick enough so it will not run off when turned over the top of the cake. COTTAGE PUDDING. One egg, ' cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup milk, 2%, cups flour, 1, teaspoon salt, 8 rounding teaspoons baking powder. Mix and bake like a cake and serve with lemon sauce. Lemon sauce—Beat together until foamy 1 egg and 1 cup sugar mixed with a scant tea- spoon flour. Add nearly a pint of boiling water and butter the size of a walnut. Let it come to a boil. . Flavor with lemon. (Copyright, 1933.) Five Cups Fine Tea for One Cent SALADA BROWN LABEL --the lowest priced FINE tea you can buy--will give you five cups of delicious | the broader his grin grows. power in the House things would be different. Longworth is dead. Tilson no longer !crats was the famed triumvirate of (s @ member of Congress. The third of the trio, Bert Snell, is now the Re- publican floor leader. And how he is enjoying himself these days reminding his Democratic friends of the times they denounced him! For the Democratic leaders in the Hcuse, in their zeal and eagerness to rush through President Roosevelt's emergency legislative program, have been pushing the members along at top speed. They have brooked little delay. Once a proposal of the President is sent to “the Hill” it has been quickly dis- patchéd through the committee, a spe- cial rule for the legislation paufiy being framed in the rules committee, and it is brought out on the floor. A special rule for a piece of legis- lation is a powerful weapon. Usually it curtails debate to the minimum, often precludes the right of members to offer amendments in which they are interested, and shuts down gencrally on the proposition. That's why the House has been able to move so quickly in the disposition of the President’s program so far. Such a thing is impcssible in the Senate. Snell can't resist the temptation to | jibe the Democratic leaders whenever they bring in these special rules. He still remembers Low they used to raw- hide him for the same tactics. He sits at the Republican leader’s | big red table, his face wreathed in ] ",',"'fi grins, and his tongue in his | cheek. He sends in his best sharp- shooters to razz the Democratic | leaders for ‘“gagging” the House, while e sits back dis- comfiture. The more the Democratic leaders squirm and try to defend their stand, Some- times he’ll take a shot at them him- self, but he prefers to let his trained enjoying their i hecklers do the job. He has waited a long time to enjoy such mcments. He doesn't want to miss a_second of the show. DIGESTIBLE AS MILK ITSELF! A splendid cheese food for children o It spreads of tea for just one cent . . . And your grocer also carries Salada Red Label, America’s finest tea. SALADA’ TEA NOW CLEAN TEETH WHITER THIS FASTER WAY USE TOOTHPASTE THAT ACTUALLY REMOVES DINGY FILM AND TARNISH...RESULTS WILL AMAZE YOU CHEER UPI I'LL TELL YOU HOW TO CLEAN YOUR TEETH...MAKE THEM SPARKLE. QUICKEST WAY KNOWN TART brushing your teeth with Kolynos. In just a few days they’ll look whiter—shades whiter. They’ll feel much cleaner. Here's the reason: Kolynos does what ordinary tooth- paste can’t do. As it cleans up ugly stain and tarnish—it foams into every tiny crevice and kills millions of germs t.h:’t are t.h:o krtx:;wn ?husefild ‘most tooth and gum troubles. Thus Kolynos gives RESULTS YOU CAN SEE. Cleaner, whiter teeth. Healthier looking gums. flfiex}: using the % ) d&clm}il e e lynos ique ~—a haif-inch of this: ble dental cream on a dry brush twice a day. It’s the better, quicker way to cleaner, whiter teeth. Try it. DEAR! MY TEETH LOOK WHITER AL- READY. KOLYNOS SURELY WORKS WONDERS. A FLASHING SMILE 1 oF vyours. DENTAL CREAM