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& A % vod BE-BY-BF-BF-BF -BF-BF-BF |; The Marry Month of May Vanderlip Is Training Children to Unc THE EAT Fighting Handicap of Wealth lerstand Value of s what O. Henry Money; Workshop Erected for Boys cal it. So if you're ae entertaining for the bride at lunche tea Lom AE SS DS or shower, you'll need a Gold Medal i” ’ Its teasy, tangy taste alin, en makes fes the simplest salads and sandwiches. Write for frozen salad Recipe for the merry, Marry month of May. Best Foods GOLD MEDAL Mayonnaise More than a dressing —it’s a Food 9 THE BEST FOODS, Inc, 1964 Bryant Street, San Francisco BF-BY-BF-BF-BF-BF-BF-EF ~~ IMPROVISED BROILER y have a b with om VARNISH ture has boen war t paint or enamel REMOVE Rished, you car | Kelvin, at work in his machine shop. © first removed the’ Charlotte, John, Frank, Jr., BY ALEXANDER HERMAN | N. E. A. Service Staff Writer SCARBOROUGH, May 9. Frank A. Vande {ilionaire, is training his 11-year-old son Kelvin be a machinist method of coun 1 disadvantages » being a rich man's W hite Footwear a. thru. my ¢ at ths a day put me sity of Iilinols, says Van And now my older children hay Ahead oe ‘AIRMEN TO HUNT. FOR MARTIN Two Aviators Going North} From Seattle on Cutter Bear FRANCISCO, of Lieut May %—De Earl H. Tonkin, the Sist diviision, and} | by airplane Chignik, Alaska, to nearch for the Major Frederick Mar- | tin, missing world flyer, delayed until Seattle, Better prepare for it by selecting your en route to white shoes. this week, while the un- broken lines are all out on display. The np eraser few showers we are having now are car-, 0. Cooper wil | . * * . . m, tomorrow peting the hills with a more lasting green load one “JN ete motor, spare and minimizing the menace of forest Rcastity eee fires. The outing season will be longer reventze ‘cutier and more enticing than usual. You'll “Mage want the white shoes—and you can get : stay there unti we search every! them at place where he could possibly be.” Aer Lieut. Earle alr officer at Crissy $4.75 to $8.75 }ing nine days. At Seattle the two Criasy field 1326 Second Avenue ar men will leave thelr piine and continue thelr journey aboard the} onst guard cutter Bear which will | ail the first of next week. Friday morntog , Lieut. T. Bs Koenig, commandant at Sand Point, | was finishing knocking down and erating a Curtis JN-9 plane which | will be shipped north on the Bear, together’ with 1,200 gallons of gaso- ine, for Lieut. Tonkin to use in the | search, | Ifeut. Clayton Binsel!, advance | Jngent of the world filght,, who ts | |now in Alaska, is the instigator of jing eir men. Patrick immediately over any and all of the wy rogions Blue, gray and brown |strued here to mean that he {s sat serge. Y | tied the major and his mechanic $5 Hat FREE 'U. S. Planes Plan With Any Suit plane, an parte and a . assistant and Sergt Ivan ©. Cooper, were preparing, Friday, to hop off trom: the Callfor- jnia field for Seattle, en route north, to add to an intensive Maj. Frederick L. Ma comm: ler of the ro quadron, and his mechanic, Sergt are adding daily to their list of satisfied custom- ers. the renewed search for Martin. He |wired Maj. M. M. Patrick, chief of the army air force, at Washington, —AT— |D. C., for help in locating tie miss. jprovided for the shipment of two 1 men and a plane for that work. 29 50 | Headquarters for the searchers . jwill be maintained at Chignik, the| last point where Martin and Harvey | |were seen, Lieut. Tonkin will be jalded by a fleet of fishing boats. | ‘The leutenant has orders to search in which the major mif¥ht have been forced to land. |} TAeut. Bisnell's request that the jsearch for Martin continue, is con Chicagoff Jump CORDOVA, Alaska, May 9. — Lieuts. Lowell Smith, Leigh Wade and Erik Nelson, flying around the world, who were unable to get away | van, island of Atka, for jeagoff, island of Attu, yesterday, |were hoping for favorable weather conditions for the flight today. The search for Maj, Frederick 1. |Martin, commander of the flight, | missing now for nine days, is con- \tinuing in the Bering sea and on the | Alaskan peninsula, but no word of |him or his mechaniclon, Sergt. Alva | Harvey, has been recotved, In Business on First Avenue for 25 Years CARL SCHERMER 103-105 First Avenue South “WE CATER TO THE MAN WHO WORK f q u Around him, beginning upper left: | felt that a man who bullds something to has been |! | Citizens’ up the Virginia, Narcissa and his mother. “They mins the early training of sacrifice which I had. sibly give it to th “They are handicapped to degree, for they don’t have to the fire of that developing # gic. But I can keep ations wh I can't pe come with com from being misdirected." BOY LEARNS TO USE HANDS So he ts er for his be equipped with lathes. saws and tools for tron, wood an: ther handy w M in, aya hh father proud! has tHe knack of doing things. And I want him to n to use his hands, “I'm sorry that my work~ tn Washington rectly to supervise tion of the bi to build houses. joeen't allow me 4 the const ding myself. For 1 ha —a good the wor Besides the six children tn own family, Vanderlip has some 2 others b ested. . BSearborough ect tains so that s you shoulders with parents. o—has let four “For I believe,” a knowledge tial to good ct But h PUBLIC SERVICE | THEIR AIM It Is the note of this sounds thruout the service the National City York, nearly 60, the normal ch comforts of in our government. | Mrs, Vandertip, too, has been de. | voting her time to public service in| hope woman's affairs, ‘hey both that their children will carry on. Frank, Jr., 18, ts preparing to en- | Narcissa, the oldesy| ter Harvard, girl, {s @ junior at Vassar, lotte 4 Virginia, 15, hockey team at Scarborough. of the family, school. also go to NEW KIND OF SHOE ENDS LABOR TROUBLE ae A shoe that Is designed to ft more snugly to the lines of the foot, par tcularly to the sole of the foot, in proving @ tremendous success, It ta the Invention of Dr. George R. Davis, & foot and shoo specialist of Beattin, and {s manufactured on ae large acale by one of the leading union Iabel shoe manufacturers of the country. By holding the foot snugly in place and supporting It evenly over the entire bottom, this shoe, known a the Dr. Geo, R. Davia Anti-Friction hoe, ‘provents the usual foot-labor troubles do to wrong fitting and the improper support that results from it. All over the country chtropodiate are adopting this type of shoo as « troubles due to wrong fitting and the shoes to thelr patients personally. Many foot ailments are caused by improper support of the foot. Oth or Mila, including what is sometimes thought to be rheumatiam, are fre- quently the result of the strain on unsupported arches, ‘Tho pre the bones upon the ner & wenno of which may be car- ried to other parts of the body. The Dr. Geo. R Davis Antl-Frio- tion Shoe relieves that strain by gly- ing even support to the whole foot and carrying the body in absolute comfort, is with foot troubles, , buntor such wonk and con- wultation room at 1407 Fifth Ave. No obligation to huy.—-Advertisement. His father, the comper machine shor whom he ie vitally tnter They are the pupils at the main can rub thone of less wealthy hiléren have well as the en of the Vanderlip butler and rborough | to render that Vanderlip fam: ily. For the former president. of bank of New) has reached the age when leisure and ease would be | Yet he has given is beautiful Beechwood surroundings to live in| Washington and undertake an ex pose of corruption and ineffictency | Char. | & freshman at Bryn Mawr ‘s captain of the| John | and Kelvin, the youngest members | that | Compicte Set Consists of Phot 14 “Tiles” Showin {00 Counters 4 Metal Ma Jon Racks Game in 2 Iwory Dice Progres 1 Book Directi: The Great Chinese Mystery Game The photograph above shows a critical moment in a game of Ma Jong. Three persons are playing here, but the game may be played by two, three or four. The player on the right is shown just as he is completing his turn by discarding a tile. The next player is eagerly waiting bis turn, so that he can “pung” or “chow” the tile that has just been laid down. The ancient Chinese game is nearly ten thousand years old in China, but has just recently been introduced into this country. Here It Is — Actual Photo of Box Containing Ma Jong Game (One-half Size.) It’s All the Rage—Easy to Learn Everybody is talking about.Ma Jong these days. Everybody is playing the game. { _ Jor No game in years has attained such popularity in so short a time. You will be fascinated with it right from the start. Everywhere you go, you hear people talking about “loose tiles,” “red dragons,” “opening the wall,” “punging,” “chowing” and a great many other terms of Ma Jong. Unless’ you are familiar with the game, all this talk is “Greek” to you. “And it is so easy to learn. By reading the book of directions that comes with the Ma Jong game we are offering to you, you will be able to master it in no time at all. You'll have just as much fun with this set, and become just as ex- pert as if you had paid $50 or $100 for one. It includes all the pieces shown above, packed in a handsome black, imitation leather box, imprinted in gold. Yours Now Get They’re Going Fast NOT | at $5, $15, $25 or $100 BUT AT 60c Each (MAIL ORDERS 10c EXTRA) Accompanied by two consecutively numbered Ma Jong Coupons which appear elsewhere in The Star from day to day. If you are unable to get down to The Star office during the daytime, you will be able to procure your set until 8:30 o’clock each evening. The Star office remains open until that time. The Seattle Star Star Building Seventh Ave. Between Union and University Sts.