Weather Station for Airliners to Antipodes IN THIS photograph the United States coast guard cutter Utasca, sta tioned at Honolulu, Is shown off Jarvis Island, where the Aviation Bu reau of the United States Department of Commerce Is erecting a mete orological research station for the purpose of making weather records for future airlines to the Antipodes. This Is the first time the United States flag has flown on Jarvis Island since 1880. ;bedtime storj, JByT HORN TON W. BURGESS4 LIGHTFOOT BECOMES UNCERTAIN LIGHTFOOT the Deer traveled on through the Green Forest straight ahead In the direction from vhlch the Merry Little Breezes were blowing. Every few steps he would raise his delicate nose and test all the scents thnt the Merry Little Breezes were bringing. As long as he kept the Merrj Little Breezes blowing In his face he could be sure whether or not there was danger ahead of him. You see, the Merry Little Breezes delight In carrying all sorts of scents, and Llghtfoot's nose Is so wonderful Diet even though those scents be Every Once In a While He Would Stop In a Thicket of Young Treee. very, very faint lie can catch them and tell Just whnt they are. Llghtfoot uses his nose very much as you and I use our eyes. It tells hlin the things he wnnts to know. He knew that lleddy Fox had been along ahead of him although he didn’t get so much as a glimpse of Reddy’s red coat. Once he caught just the faintest of scents which caused him to stop abruptly und test the air more carefully tlinn ever. It was the scent of Buster Bear. It was so very faint that Llghtfoot knew Buster was not near, ao he went ahead again, but even more carefully than before. After a little he couldn't smell Buster at all so he knew then that Buster bad simply passed that way going to some other part of the Green Forest So Llghtfoot knew that he had nothing to fear In that direction so long as the Merry Little Breezes brought him none of the dreaded man-scent, und he knew that he could trust the Merry Little Breezes to bring him that scent If there should be a man anywhere In that direction. The Merry Little Breezes are Ligbtfoot's best friends. But Llghtfoot didn't want to keep going In that direction all day. It would take him far away from that part of the Green Forest with which he was familiar anu which he called home. It might In time take him out of the Green Forest, and that wouldn't do at all. So after a while Llghtfoot became uncertain. He didn't know just what to do. You see, he conldn't tell whether or not ttat hunter with the terrible gun was still following him. Kvery once In a while he would stop In a thicket of young trees or behind a tangle of fallen trees up rooted by the wind. There he would stand facing the direction from which he had come and watch and listen for Borne sign that the hunt er was still following. Hut after a few minutes of this he would grow uneasy and then bound away In the direction from which the Merry Little Breezes were blowing so as to be sure of Dot running Into danger. ‘‘If only I could know If that hunt er Is still following I would know better what to do," thought Light foot. 'Tvs got to find out." e T. W Burses*.—WNU Servlet. ———————— Cut-Throat Finches Cut-throat finches ure so called because of the red streak across their throats. Spots on their shells account for the popular name of the leopard tArtolse. Champion Corn Eater Here is Merge Simonson of Orton vllle, Minn., a farmer, who became the world's champion corn eater when he defeated “King Korn’’ Kd. Kottwltz of Hig Stone City, S. I)., at the fifth sweet corn festival at Ortonville by munching the corn from 53 ears. The contest lasted 7 hours and 13 minutes. Question box b, ED WYNN, The Perfect Fool Donr Mr. Wynn: I am a woman forty-three years of age anti the only offer of mar riage I have ever hail was last night. 1 met a fellow at a party and he was drunk. He proposed marriage to me. He seems all right but I told him to sober up and then ask me to murry him. Did 1 do right? Sincerely, I. M. HOMELY. Answer: Yes and no. lie may not want you when lie’s sober. Dear Mr. Wynn: Some time ago I wrote you for an answer for the following cxnmple: ”If coal Is $10 a ton how many tons would I get for $50? Your answer said I would get four tons. Why did you say that, when It isn’t right? Yours truly, CON SUE MER. Answer: You asked me If coal was $10 a ton and you gave the coal man $50 how many tons would you get? I said you'd get four tons. I know It Isn’t right, BUT that’s what you’d get. « mu Denr Mr. Wynn: My wife tights with me all the time because I won’t get my hair cut. I claim It looks good, hut she says It Is too long. Do you think 1 should have It cut short? Yours truly, BOB BURR. Answer: The only trouble with a man having his hair cut short Is that he Is often mistaken for his wife. Dear Mr, Wynn: I am a cook In a private home. There are no marks on the faucets in the kitchen to show the hot wa ter and cold water. I have scalded my fingers nearly every day. What can 1 do to prevent this from hap pening? Yours truly. I. M. DUMB. Answer: Just feel the water first. t> A*»ocl*ted Newspaper*.—WNU Service. I IP A, IP A KI\OWS-| at_ _ "Pop, what Is a gesture?" ••Political feeler." , © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Minute make-ups :-i. By V. V. In the Hands of a Beauty Expert \\* WtiSHtP 0UNTINO Ih'FUKPRIHS vow vou i _ POT THE 6X02 OH 6000 AMO thick. PCOFEssoc, last year ir WASHEPOEF WITH THE RCVT AUTUMN RAIN AhP I (.OOKCO SORTOF TAVKPRy THE RESTOF THE #AX>H The heauty of your face and the smart appearance of your clothes depend this season on your car rlage. To obtain a regal bearing, practice walking with a book t#al anced on your bend, shoulders thrown back so far thut you may hook your elbows through a broom handle. A stately stature will have much to do with smartness of any costume and the effectiveness of coiffure and make-up. © Public l.edKer. Inc.—WNU Service. Some People Believed Thin If you sleep with a piece of wed ding cake under your pillow, the one of whom you dream will be your mate. ♦ MOTHER’S * COOK BOOK UNUSUAL DISHES WE ALL like to serve occa sionally something a bit differ ent and out of the ordinary, but for the dally diet the common foods simply served we enjoy the best. Golden Coconut Shortcake. Allow two slices of sponge cake for each serving. Prepare orange .sauce by using one cup of orange Juice thickened with corn starch, adding a bit of sugar and butter. Cover each slice of the cake with the sauce In sandwich fashion, cover with sliced oranges and top with freshly grated coconut. Stuffed Tomato Salad. Scoop out the centers of six ripe even sized tomatoes. Chop the centers and add one cup of cooked rice, four tablespoons of cheese grated, one hard cooked egg, two tablespoons of pimlento and one small onion, all minced; season with salt, a little lemon Juice and any other desired seasoning. Fill the tomato cups and chill. Serve on lettuce with your favorite salad dressing. Pot of Gold Dessert. Mix one-half cup of sugar with one-fourth cup of cornstarch, add a bit of salt and a cupful of rich milk, one cup of orange Juice and when cooked until smooth and thick in a double boiler add two table spoons of butter and the well beat en yolks of two eggs. Let cook un til smooth. Serve molded In indi vidual molds with whipped cream. ft Western Newspaper Union. THROUGH A Womans Eyes By JEAN NEWTON ON THE MAN WHO IS TO LEARN TO KNOW HIS FAMILY -- - I 'M SOllKY, I don't remember * you." A shell shocked war vet eran, after an absence of 11 years, said that to his family who were gathered together to welcome him home. Mother, father, brothers, sisters* wife and a son of eleven—he knew not one of them, ills mind a com plete blank regarding everything that happened before the war, even his right name is something that he bas to take on trust For dur ing the Interval of more than ten years that he was wondering about not knowing who he was, he ac quired another name. Out of the tragedy that struck GICJ-IGAG^ “A beggar with two automobiles wae discovered In New York city," says flivverlng Flo. “Well, that's nothing to brag about because It has only taken one car to send most of us to the poor house.” © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service Hat ^nd Halter Hat and halter to match Is a new fashion whim. This hat Is made of suede cloth In sherwood green with a rust colored bandeau and sash. The long tassels are dark green. this wounded soldier and his fam ily one thought keeps forcing Itself upon me. And that is the unique ex perience of becoming acquainted with one's own family. This man will know his family really as peo ple—he will have a chance to find out whether he really likes them. The bond of the family tie that comes of the warp and the woof of dally living and a lifetime of close association, he does not know. On the other hand, he will not know the faults and acquired stigmas, the family judgments and prejudices which persist sometimes from child hood weaknesses to brand a person ality within the family circle. The man who does not remember or rec ognize his family will start with a clean slate. It will be up to the family to “sell themselves’’ to him. Naturally they will try to be at their best with him—as they would with any stran ger with whom they were to become acquainted. And in so being treated like a stranger, this man who comes back has something to be thank ful for—and a head start to really liking his family! © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. BURNING LEAVES By ANNE CAMPBELL IT SEEMS as if the whole lost summer grieves When we are burning leaves, So melancholy is the smoky scent Of this fall sacrament. It was a few sho-t weeks ago they hung In lively green, and flung Their shade upon the heedless passersby, And challenged the blue sky. Now In a wooden basket, drab and brown, They are pulled down; They who In such high place were shimmering Since early spring. There Is In burning leaves a sense of loss, As In we toss The match, and watch them perish In a breath. . . . This, then, Is Death! Copyright.—WNU 8erv!c®. o You Know— That brunette babies are the bravest when being baptized? According to Rev. Dr. Short, for 35 years a Methodist minister, blond babies howl, brunettes smile, baldheaded ones look blank while it is usually the fat ones who cry the most. C McClure Newspaper Syndicate, WNU Service. First Copper House Is Completed ..—-s f THIS copper house has Just been erected at Bethesda, Md., by a sub sidiary of one of the big copper corporations and is oj>en to the pub lic lor inspection. The new dwelling is the first of its kiud in this coun try. Hardwood doors are built over u tire-proof sub-floor, and- inside walls are plastered on metal laths. The house is completely air conditioned. The cost of these houses depends on size and design, with present designs ranging upwards from $4,5UU. Little Lights on LIVING ae By MARIA LEONARD Dean of Women. University of Illinois @ Westers Newspaper Union. THE MASTER TOUCH THE chemist estimates the ma terial worth of man about 98 cents—possibly as low as 68 cents since the depression. Some one has said man has enough iron in him to make a few nails, lead enough for a few pencil points1 and cal cium perhaps to whitewash a fence. Mai\ who has flown higher than the clouds, sailed under the sea and called light from Arcturus to light the Century of Progress is worth in material Inventory but 98 cents! It Is said the English artist Tur ner when escorting a lady visitor through his studio, paused before one of his inimitable seascapes, ’which he had recently finished, to catch her first words of praise. He was surprised to have her ask in differently: "How much Is that worth?” “A thousand dollars," he said. “What, a thousand dollars for just paint and canvas?” she ex claimed. "If you wish Just paint and canvas, madame," Turner re sponded, "I can sell them to you much cheaper than that by the tube and foot from my supply room.” What made the difference in price between paint and picture? Just one thing; the artist had put his soul into the sunset reflection on the sea! The supply room paint had not as yet received the master touch. When a man grows to hts full stature In culture and character he reflects God, his maker, and when this happens, he, too, becomes, as did the artist’s picture reflecting Its creator—a matchless creation, be yond price. Man has received the master touch in all creation, but ofttimes he falls to measure up to It. Instead of being worth even 98 cents he becomes a heavy liability to society, for it costs the govern ment somewhere near $300 to keep a criminal In jail one year, and only $150, half the sum, to keep a boy In school one year. Not long ago I read of a Judge who was asked to dedicate a new Y. M. C. A. building. While speak ing he said: “If this building is in strumental in saving the character of one boy it will justify the ex pense." Like the artist’s canvas, the un developed years of childhood need the Master Touch In training for culture . and character, as each young life Is worth not 98 cents but a million to the individual, the home and the country. This should be given by parents before the age of six If fairness be done to r child. • • • IF IF, IF, If, one of the smallest words In the English language, Is the greatest stumbling block known to man. Some people have built their lives around this prin ciple of “If" and as a consequence they have been uncertain, full of doubt and wavering perplexity, through the years. Doubt Is lack of faith. It Is a form of worry. Worry Is the arch-enemy of man kind. Usually following an “If” comes Its close sequel—regrets. For as the poet has expressed It—“Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, It might have been." All these “lfs” piled high are not as effective as one definite ly planned course of action, taken with a courageous step, a brave risk as to the outcome and a spirit of a good loser, come what may. If one has done his best, angels can do no more. This is where faith begins, for If our faith is worth anything at all, It should strength en our belief In the promise that “all things work together for good to thqse who trust In God." The “If” philosophy has unfitted potential leaders for public service, lives that were meant to be strong builders of the nation, all because they could not hurdle some insig nificant “If” In their lives. During the depression, In many homes, some of these “If” night mares have really come to pass. But, strange to say, we find we are all living, loving and laughing in the same old way in spite of the fact that the bank went under car rying one's life savings and per haps our next winter’s coat. Some thing has come to us in return, perhaps it is more gratitude in onr hearts for what Is really left us than we felt before our loss. When we live on a material plane these “lfs” bother us more like mosquitoes. If we step to a higher Intellectual plane they come less often into our minds—when we even touch the spiritual side of life, they come not at all Into our lives, the “lfs” are gone, for we attain a tranquillity that pnsseth human understanding. It Is akin to God. Eradicate the ‘‘IF’ philosophy from your life today, whether you are fifteen years old or fifty years young, and substitute In Its place the peace giving assurance of: “I trust in God and all is well." SEND FOR THIS GIFT! DION QUINTS’ BIRTHDAY BOWL Sent to anyone for 2 Quaker or Mother’s Oats trademarks and 10c to help cover special postage and handling charges. (ISc in Canada.) Send to The Quaker Oats Co., Box L, Chicago, 111, • This offer is made to cele brate the selection of Quaker Oats as the cereal for the Dionne Quintuplets, even be fore their first birthday. You will love this souvenir. A beautiful design in lifetime chromium, 6" in diameter, use ful for serving many things. Send now to address above. IN VITAMIN B FOR KEEPING FIT . .. 1c WORTH OF QIAKER OATS 3 CAKES OF FRESH YEAST Qwlwr and IWotW» Q»t» arm tfc* —> A Bit ii> All Selfpity Is always ostentatiously Jenounced. but everybody has a lit tle. ( PIE ? "1 [YOU, 61? ( sure-iuse) LTUMS NOW!) SIMPLE SIMON 1 MET A PIEMAN AND ORDERED THREE OK FOUR| HE NOW EATS TUMS WHEN HEARTBURN COMES . . . DON’T SUFFER ANY MORE I Stop SAYING "NO" TO FAVORITE FOODS r[* isn’t only pie that disagrees with some people. Many say that even milk gives them a gassy stomach. The very best foods may bring on add indigestion, sour stomach, gas, heartburn. Millions have found that Turns quickly relieve add indigestion. Munch 3 or 4 after meals or whenever smoking, hasty eating, last night's party, or some other cause brings on add indigestion. Turns contain no harsh alkalies, which physidans have said may in crease the tendency toward acid indigestion. Instead an antadd which neutralizes stomach add. but never over-alkalizes the stomach or blood. You’ll like their minty taste. Only 10c. TUMS ARE ANTACID .... NOT A LAXA1 CDtra This week—at your druggist’s—Bean-’ “ RKEa tlfulfi Color 1935-1936 Calendar Ther mometer with the purchase of a 10c roll of Tana or a 2oc box of NS (The All Vegetable lazatlvc.) Kepther SMOTHERED J Now free from attacks 'Tor 23 years I suffered with asthma. Since tak ing Nacor I haven t been bothered. Mrs. Fred Chamberlain, R. R. 8, Bir mingham, Ala. Why endure the misery and torture of asthma or bronchial cough? Ask your druggist for bottle of safe, easy-to-take, Nacor KAPS—(Nacor in capsule form). Breathe easier. Sleep sounder. Feel better. NACOR MEDICINE CO, INDIANAPOLIS, MB. _I Responsibility More “rights” you have, the more responsibilities. MOSQUITOES FUES'SPIDERS anJ OTHER INSECTS it*