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PAGE 8 Co. Phen ress Be: year oe aT ‘ ' epreseatatives, Ban Franclece of ne didg.; New York office, ot bide. i ed, am convinced that istaken, minority who ever be repealed,” basic provic they are believe the | Thus did lican party een pai great! n nt will nt, as the spokesman for the repub- lid down a little tighter on John A year ago James M, Cox, speaker ty aid su tially the same pres il the fin, cratic par thing. Last month Governor for old John in New Al Smith attempted a resurrection te. Then Al went up to meet with the de ty bosses at French Lick, Indiana, where Tor rt and the rest of the demo cratic old-timers told Al to go back home and keep his mouth shut—or words to that effect It look tho, now that the presi:nt has had his say, there is nobody left to revive the liquor question as a Political issue because everybody is on the same side. Whatever Uncle Sam may be personally, politically he is dry. The only drawback to living at home is if you don’t eat it op you have it for the next meal. We are eating more soft bolled eggs than ever before, according to a dry cleaner's figures. Attorney general says the sugar situation ts very satisfactory, but doesn't say for whom? Glacier advances indicate the ice age ts returning, so our kee man is Worried a little. Your Vacation Take a vacation, no matter how hard it may be to find time for one, this summer. Change is absolutely nece: sary to rest the nerve centers. And the city person should make it a point to take his vacation in the country, while the farmer and those who spend their lives on farms or in Small towns should come to the city and enjoy city life for a short time. © This excellent advice comes from Health Commissioner Mahoney of Boston. are suffering, in varying degrees, from “nerves,” a malady created by the hustle and rush of civ- /ilization—and it is increasing in frequency and intensity as We become more “civilized,” whatever that means. We of the citie re keyed up highly. We work under » great nervous pressure, speeded up to the last ounce of en- ergy. And we get the clock wound so tightly that we re- main keyed up when away from work. We rush about the streets as if going to a fire. + Wegulp our meals. We sit down at home after dinner and immediately be- come restless—begin drumming our fingers, wanting to “start something.” Maybe we go to a theater or movie. Impatient to get past the people in line ahead of us. So restless that-we can’t keep our seats until the final curtain drops or the pic- ture ends. That's why musical shows come to an abrupt ending. They have to. No one would be left in the house if the show ended peacefully and artistically. All this is “nerves.” Its imprint is on our strained faces, in our keyed-up walking or auto driving, in our general im- patience. ne Wikis When a person has a nervous brea 1, the first thing the physician recommends is “a chan The best kind of achange is a complete one. So Mahoney is right. The city man should vacation in the country. The farmer and small- town resident should vacation in the city. Contrast is a nerve restorative. It is informative, broad- ens our vision, restores our balance, gives us the proper Perspective. What does you most good on a vacation is the “change,” rather than the air or rest or rec tion. And, the more e the change, the more recuperative. i for the s reason, will do best by spending his holidays where he'll have physical labor to do — preferably camping chores. And the man who works with his muscles can get the greatest vacational benefits by giving his muscles a rest and exercising his brain, reading, thinking. A good rule, and it can be applied in ever: day life as well a ions. By complete “change —doing the opposite to your routin you can get at least an hour’s vacation every day. Love's a gamble. Texas sheik who played with hearts and diamonds Was dealt with by clubs and patted in the face with a spade, Some men are cautious; they want two guesses at the wianer of the Dempsey-Gibbons fight. Only nice thing about most troubles is you soon have some new ones to take their place. In Des Moines, Iowa, only one high school girl in 309 says she wants to marry, but just wait. About 75 were poisoned at a New York wedding party, even tho the bride didn't do the cooking. Why They Live on Mt. Etna “Why do those foolis voleano like Mt. Etna else?” ‘This query from a valued subscriber has doubtless been echoed by others many times during the past few days when the news columns have been filled with the story of the awful destruction wrought by the “Scourge of Sicily.” The answer is twofold, but very simple: First, Italy is an over-populated land. In the second place, Mt. Etna is by NO Means an unmixed 1, Within a few days from the time of eruption, the surface of the lava streams begins to cool, then under the influence of the torrential rains of that Yegion, it starts to crumble, and in an in dibly short time green shoots appear in the ere of what was but a short time before melted stone and iron! The facts are that the very lava which carries death and destruction in its path contai n superlative degree the best elements of plant food particularly adapted to the cul- ture of the lemon for which Sicily is world-famous, and this fact explains, first, why the slopes of Mt. Etna are cov- ered with vineyards and orchards condly, why the population is actually increasing year by year, Finally, the region about Etna uperlatively beautiful, and all Italians love beauty. Prob: y if it were not for the fierce economic urge they wouldn’t think of leaving their lovely volcanic slopes, even for “that dear America.” There are lots worse things than yoleanoes—homesick- ness, for ¢xample, h Italians live under-the terror of a why don’t they go somewhere Bad news from Madrid. Spain fighting Moors. Just like them, we don't know what it is about. Over in London, a woman mill worker won $160,000, no doubt making all the neighbors mad, Baltimore's new council is asking for heer, The weather must hoe get ting hot in Baltimore, Women's working hours may be reduced in Mlinols, but this doesn't include married women. German people are gambling in marks, but many people here match pennies, which is worse, | THE } ; J NOW 1 VWUNDER WHERE AT! CouLo 4 SEATTLE 81 FRITZ OUGHT TO REDUCE A LITTLE TAR BY W. TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1928. H. PORTERFIELD | Ta part, If to the streams and the many | be k office nor last | the have | strate has given out on merit. Not | origin Ne political debt paid in the | wi wholq lot—at lenst, that's what | but p they say Pinchot got the kt fa dry LETER FROM VRIDGE MANN Ivan eas ou never wa tarry there, the the alr, and thus rec el around you walk the beach and breathe you hear the hour chime; and the b time, Y and beat ft on the run; you ¢ n the trip's begun hen at 6 o ore ¥ reach summer shack ‘ou neem to be a grocery store, with a pack, You buck them down, remove your hat; the wife « the lot; she asks you where is thie or that; you murmur, “I f 1” | You eat your dinner, chop the wo by 10 oc « you're dead | and the life must do you good, you've got tc hit the hay a little while, wake up and hustle down eat and run a mile to catch the boat to town! Ko to bed. You and Gress and LETTERS EDITOR ution t coples n the Posting the Constit controversy about | off why |t OUR ANIMAL ||!" tear, mt, penta EDITOR: SAYS ||tm ci eect ton, truly. ARMAND J, DUPT PICTURE HATS Large hats horsehatr tha. n neatly assassinated by 4 shrew, Curfous of us in America oa m Ho's chief noticeah diffe his longer and sharper nose. > Areti¢ mice kicking out All had bee mer, but ow? persona quick-fire digestion and an empty stomach. He ia | of flesh and bo two shrews in a cage| Il fight {t out till one or stuffed bird jand {t's r except the neck. | wringing | all o Statement by Mra. 8. A Oklahoma cou Johnson dead, Shrews eat great |iaia the wit jes of bugs, but love mouse |tawn to al steak best |hole in the m vd |when it was brought tn later, I Altho Yellowstone Park ‘s full of | patched Wh wild animals, Including grizzlies, | car park attendants say the o dangerous the buffalo When Brer Grizzly gets fresh, he be made to se reason, but the all and his charge when has insulted bh fixin’ to insult him warning. If ng his tail | rmer weathor thought nder us onco but passed it up as until one morning while I was y really critter is | tivice, ing the bed a distinct wiggle I opened up the old hole Jumped a snake and Blue Jay's an egg thief and a| of baby birds all right ut he's also the Paul Revere who w x folk of ap-| f Yah! ing stirs without murderer time to make of 20 to 40-pound| | n4, enroute this spring |his notice. Also America’s |from Gulf of Mexico to Hu¢ greatest tree planter. He carefully | bi ed for rest on ara |buries bushels of nuts, one at |river and went to sleep, Were torn|time, for future personal nourish going over the falls ment, congratulates himself fluent. | |ly on his foresight at each hole, and Dr, Robert T, Morris, New York |then forgets all about ‘om. | a 4 ldenlwe Hige by eoliduassen? | POSSESSION Yel say we must not walk again The ways we used to go; I shall not question what you ask Recause I love you so. But you shall not take my thought of A lilac dusk in spring— And you will be all gentleness In sweet remembering. you— Firat Tries Failed. honofilm” Latest. ule by De Forest. r s the screen, en working tr hem wit ke] 4g Per var At He was glad hemor ession wha over ar : ' ' “ ia rdw , ng sf ’ t w lking Movies. RIEDA’S OLLIES 8 busybodies, that we It was mostly @ at squeak, which n the herd n for pus when th nded “Hands | 48 disease, esstul talking movie has « not safe ented by Dr. Leé De Forest, Pegs He calls his machine : phonofilm,” and he has denon < 1 it ina way to prove that ft is different from the| So what could I s of talk replace the 6 , bably will be used f y 1 effects in speaking and ~the Indian mothers... . marveled at such a baby as mine UT in the middle of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota lives a little white boy. He is.called Bunns by his friends. He is a husky littie chap, sturdy and full of life. His fine health is in notable contrast to the little Indian. babies around him. For Bunns’ sole playmates are the grandchil- dren and great-grandchildren of old Sitting Bull —the last of the famous Indian warriors—and his followers. And Indian babies are not healthy because they are usually not properly fed—the infant mortality among the Indians is appalling. Bunns’ chance of life was slim enough at birth because he was born through a Caesarian oper- ation. But he was fed on Eagle Brand, the famous baby food, from the first, and “has never been ailing a day since his stormy and dangerous arrival.” “When I brought Bunns home from the hospital,” says his mother, “the Indian \\f mothers were daily visitors. They mar- veled at such a baby as mine. They had heard thestory. After this they frequently came to me for advice, and I always recom- mended Eagle Brand and pointed to my own baby as proof of its nourishing and hygienic merits.” Bunns’ father, L. A. Lincoln, of Oglala, South Dakota, suggested the publication of this tale. “What mother would not be anxious to read a story like that?” he asks. Mr. Lincoln is a sort of public missionary and teacher among the Sioux Indians. it is his duty to instruct them in various things pertaining to civilized welfare from hygiene and sanitation to books and agriculture. “T live here in the midst of an Indian at- mosphere,” he writes. “There are days and days when I see nothing else but Indians.” “‘I got into my flivver and started to Hot Springs one day, and when I got on the way some twelve miles I came upon an Indian chief. I asked him his name, and he told me it was Henry Kills War- rior. Henry could say his name in English, but that was about all the English he knew.” , Sac ule oa PAl DEN COMM” “Ttseemed thatHenry’s wife had just presented him with a new baby boy, and it was necessary to feed the little one by artificial means. You can imagine my surprise to see that mother opening a can of Eagle Brand Milk, and prepar- ing the baby’s bottle in the most sanitary fash- ion.” Then he adds, “If that wasn’t a husky, fat papoose I never saw one!” HE mother who has used Eagle Brand Condensed Milk for feeding her baby knows its value. Just as Mrs. Lincoln, having raised her own baby on it successfully, is teaching the Indian mothers to give their babies milk, so thousands of grate- ful mothers recommend Eagle Brand to their friends and write enthusiastic letters to the Borden Company. Eagle Brand has a national reputation as ya baby food. In fact it is more used than all other infant foods together. Many doctors sug- gest it to their patients. For Eagle Brand is not only exceedingly diges- tible, but it is also absolutely pure and uniform. You can keep a supply in the house because it won't sour in the unopened cans. You can carry it with you if you travel, and thus avoid the risk of changing the baby’s milk. You can buy it anywhere—whether you live on an Indian Res- ervation or in the heart of the metropolis. Eagle Brand makes a splendid beverage for the young child, too. Justas it has brought vigorous health te a million babies, so it helps to build bone and muscle for growing children. If you cannot nurse your baby, start him on Eagle Brand and keep him on Eagle Brand even when he is through with his bottle, Eagle Brand is just pure milk and pure sugar, the natural food for baby when mother’s milk fails. If you wish for an authoritative guide in caring for your baby, send for the new booklet, “Baby’s Welfare.” It was written for the young mother by a physician, and tells you exactly what to do. It is free. The Borden Company, 84 Borden Building, New York. Borden} EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK : An Interview With Pinchot 5 . nt onennciailitindre ata i