Ttoyd ADVENTURERS’ CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI _ “Monster From the Swamps'’ By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter H“ ELLO EVERYBODY: Well, sir, if I seem to be continually harping on the fact that adventures are things you meet up with most fre quently at home, you can put it down to the fact that I am continually being reminded of it. Just the other day, while looking through a sheaf of letters I came to a story by a woman who had an adventure on a farm. Well—of course, there’s nothing unusual in that. The funny part of it was that the farm was in this country, and the adventure was of a sort you’d only expect to run into in the jungles of Africa or South America, or to read about in some account of the grim battles between men and animals that the an cient Romans used to stage in their gladiatorial arenas. The woman is Lottie Hawco—Mrs. John Hawco, of New York city. And the animal she fought with was a wild boar. I'll bet a lot of people— including me—didn’t know there were wild boars in this country. But there are, as any South Carolina farmer can tell you. How they got here is an interesting story. , You see, the ordinary barnyard breed of pig is nothing in the world but a descendant of the wild boars you read about in tales of old-time Merrie England. Those boars were tamed and fat tened and domesticated until, over the space of six or eight hun dred years they became the fat, lazy, gluttonous animals you see In hog pens the country over. How Pigs Get Wild and Dangerous. But a pig will stay fat, and tame, and lazy only so long as he’s kept in captivity and stuffed with chop suey from that well known galva nized iron can out on the back porch. Once he gets loose and goes back to the woods again and has to rustle for his own food—well—then he gets thin and tough and rangy. His tusks grow out, and in a generation or twm he becomes a boariagain—Just as wild and as dangerous an ani mal as ever he was when he roamed the marshes and forests of old England in the days of Robin Hood.v There are plenty of those backsliding wild hogs in the back country of South Carolina, and the farmers hunt them down and round them up because they destroy the nests of the wild turkeys in the neighborhood. The Roar Viciously Attacked Lottie’s Mother. And that brings us to Lottie Howco who. on February 16, 1931, was visiting with her mother and her sister, Inez, on a farm near Osborn, S. C., where a wild boar hunt was in progress. A bunch of men from the neighborhood had been out all day, comb ing the marshes with packs of dogs, roping boars and herding them— alive—into a big high-sided farm wagon. They had just returned home with six or seven boars—big, vicious fellows, waisthigh to a man and weighing three or four hundred pounds—animals that could break a man's leg with their huge, crunching jaws and which frequently did dis embowel the fierce dogs that hunted them with one sweeping blow of their long, protruding tusks. The men backed the wagon up to a strong enclosure and were untying the boars one by one and cautiously prodding them into the pen. Lottie, her mother and sister were standing nejr by, watching the proceedings—and then—suddenly—a terrible thing happened. Attack by a Savage Hoar. The men had unloosed the largest boar and were prodding it toward the pen when it turned, squeezed between the wagon and the enclosure, and rushed out into the open, gnashing its great teeth and foaming at the mouth. It headed straight for Lottie’s mother, who was standing near est the pen, and before she could turn to run, it was on her, throwing her in a heap to the ground, biting at her savagely. It was the most terrible sight Lottie ever beheld in her life. Charlie, the foreman, stood with his mouth agape, too surprised for a moment to even move. Sister Inez, paralysed with fright, clapped her hands over her ears and began to scream. Lottie herself was numb with terror, and for precious seconds—seconds that seemed like a lifetime—she stood rooted to the spot. All.the rest of the men were on the other side of the pen, or on the wagon, too far away to reach the spot in time to do any good. Then, all of a sudden, Lottie came to life. She can’t explain what happened, but it seemed as if a spring inside her had sud denly been released. She sprang forward, threw herself on *!.e snarling, screaming, rolling jumble of woman and beast, singled out the boar and began beating and mauling and scratching it with insane freniy. Surprised Him, So He Fled. The boar could have killed Lottie with one thrust of its sharp, pointed tusk. Lottie’s mother had been saved from death thus far only by her long skirts and thick clothing. But taken by surprise, the boar couldn’t quite figure out this wild new menace that came beating and kicking at his flanks—tearing and scratching at his eyes. It was a thing of fury. It didn't seem one whit afraid of the boar. And an animal will often reason that if you are not afraid of him. then he must have good cause to be afraid of you. This one did just that Snarling and grunting, he turned to flee from this inexplicable new attack. He got about three steps, and then he found himself tangled up in the ropes of the men who, by this time, had Come around from the other side of the pen to deal with him. The next thing Lottie knew, she was back on the porch of the farm house with her mother, looking over herself for injuries. She doesn't even remember helping her mother to the porch, and to this day she can’t figure out how she came out of that fight without a scratch on her body. Copyright.—WNU Service. Barratry in Shipping Barratry in shipping and naviga tion includes every wrongful act committed by the master or crew to the prejudice of the shipowner. The master must have deliberate ly violated his duty to his employer and acted against his better judg ment. says Tit-Bits Magazine. Dev iating from the ship's course to engage in smuggling is barratry. No act of negligence, inadvertence, or mistake amounts to barratry. Name Percival Is Greek The name Percival is of Greek origin and means "courteous.” Sir Perceval was a knight of King Ar thur’s found table. Percival Lowell (1855-1916) Boston astronomer, wrote books and made important discoveries in astronomy, also es tablished the Lowell observatory. Cheerfulness Has Huai Value Cheerfulness has a dual value In life. First, it helps you—then it helps you to help others—and it keeps on spreading out Into the great throng of humanity, stirring the hearts of men as the gentle breeze stirs the leaves of the for est-returning to you in its endless course and all the while making the heavy load lighter and the dark road brighter for all. * Oldest Lighthouse in America The oldest lighthouse in America is Boston light station. Built in 1716, it was knocked down during the Revolution, rebuilt in 1783. It was then 69 feet high, lit by four whale oil lamps. The tower, 90 feet high, contains the original stones, in use more than 222 years, plus addi tions. WHO’S NEWS THIS WEEK I I By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK.—Mrs. Joseph P. | Kennedy has been an effective social and political ally of both her father, former mayor of Boston, and her husband, am- | Mrs. Kennedy bassador to the Aida Father Court of St. and Husband James ®ut news that, in ac cordance with her husband’s deci sion, she presented only seven American women at court is one of her rare appearances in the head lines. The 11 engaging Kennedys have been viewed more or less en bloc in the news and Mrs. Kennedy has never been in a very sharp lens focus. She was one of the prettiest of Boston debutantes, 30 years ago, a rollicking girl with black hair and eyes of Irish blue. Back home from her convent training, she taught her father "Sweet Adeline.” He was John F. (Honey Fitz) Fitz gerald, and in his campaigns he sang his way to memorable political fame—riding like a surfboard the long, lingering "swipes” of the song taught him by his daughter—"the flower of his heart.” Joseph P. Kennedy, her childhood playmate, was twenty-five years old when they were Fortune and married in 1914. Family Grew We borrowed $2, Up Together 000 fort a dot7 ^ ° payment on a $6, 500 house. Their fortunes grew as their family, with Mr. Kennedy president of a bank, in a year or two after their marriage. Mrs. Kennedy once told a Boston drygoods clerk that she bought 200 suits and dresses a year. It takes a heap of shopping to make a home, like the Kennedys’, and she became known among her friends as a para gon of household efficiency com parable to the one in Solomon’s off hand apostrophe to such skills and virtues. Now she Is mistress of the "castle” which was once J. Pier punt Morgan’s home; also of a beautiful mansion In Bronx vllle, N. Y., a huge summer es tate at Hyannisport, Cape Cod, and a villa at Palm Beach, built by one of the Wanamakers. She Is slender and girlish, comely and vivacious, weighs 115 pounds and takes size 14 Has Diamond in dresses. Vion a Potentate net makes her Might Envy gownsA a"d shfu is envied by other women for her magnificent jewels— notable among them being a ruby and diamond bracelet which, it is said, is matched only by the one the Aga Khan gave his princess. But she never lets the children run to unseemly display, hold ing them to restraint in regime and dre.ss. Even without all these adventitious fixings, say her friends, she would be an ad mirable ambassador’s wife, with her own quite adequate equip ment of tact, charm and intelli gence. • • • \/f AN and boy, this Journeyman •l’-* has helped process a lot of explorers’ and adventurers’ copy through the news mill. If it was ghost-written, it had only slick and synthetic excitement, like Ersatz pastry, and if it wasn’t it was usu ally dull. Happily in contrast are the doubtlessly authentic and per sonally written yarns of W. H. Til man, leader of the British Mount Everest expedition, now getting un der way. These stories from the Tibetan base camp have a professional ease and fluency, along Yarns From with a ring of in Mt. Everest tegrity which Rine True gives assurance * that Mr. Tilman is really writing them. There is no ' ghost on the job here. Mr. Tilman is thirty-nine years old, a keen-faced, hard-muscled Britisher of medium stature, who has been exploring ever since he j left college. He has climbed mountains in the i Alps and in Africa, including Mounts | Kenya, Kilimanjaro and Ruvenzori. This is his fifth expedition to the Himalayas. The entrants in this high hurdle event are not young sters N. E. Odell is forty-seven, F. S. Smythre is thirty-seven and the others are all over thirty. (0 Consolidated News Features. WNU Service. Rats Drink Ink at Night Rats have been drinking black ink at night in the Swellendam, South Africa, city hall. Possibly they were blondes who wish to become bru nettes, is one suggestion. P. Heyns, the municipal foreman, says he fre quently has found his ink well, which he kept in a locked room, empty. Before leaving the office one afternoon he poured the ink into a saucer. Next morning it was empty. Wash Weaves Gain in Style Favor By CHERIE NICHOLAS THERL Is grerter high style appeal in wash ma terials this season than ever. The acceptance of glamor ous, gorgeous linens (plain or printed) and spun rayons (new star shining bright in the fabric firmament) as “dress-up" materials is one of the outstanding milestones that marks the progress of fashion. If you would see piques and cotton voiles and rippled or varied-type cloque cottons, organdies, seersuck ers (sheer or sturdy) and gay stripes or plaid ginghams or the new corded cottons, likewise cotton nets and laces “show off" in all their glory, tuning to every phase of fashion from simplest houstdress, housecoat or swim suit, to most exquisite wedding ensembles, eve ning formals or party frocks, get yourself invited to the spectacular event presented each year in ven ous style centers—the Cotton ball that pays homage to “King Cotton." However, sans the Cotton ball, you will not lose out in seeing this sea son such pageantry of cotton ma terials and other smart washables as you’ve never seen before, for all the stores are these days making a countrywide display of the love liest wash weaves fancy might pic ture. It is really a very intriguing thought to know you can go to the most "highbrow” affair and be classed among the best dressed, gowned in a simple wash voile or a pin-tucked batiste laden with val lace edgings, or a tailored gingham that is fashioned decollete, with a full skirt and bolero. Not that we are losing sight of the style element and the practicality that wash materials ever maintain for sportswear and general utility wear. That side of the question is a subject so exhaustless we will not attempt to touch upon it in these few paragraphs. There is, however, this conclu sive argument in favor of modern wash fabrics whether they be for mal or utilitarian to the effect that if you are careful to buy the right sort of washables they carry with them the guarantee of being both non-shrinkable and non-crushable. It is indeed a comfort to the woman who is her own seamstress to know that from now on with these latest improvements in tub fabrics she can buy her patterns exactly the right size without having to allow for pos sible shrinkage. In the picture we are showing three “reasons why” dresses of handsome wash materials are out standing in the spring and summer style scene—charming enough to wear most anywhere in the day’s social swirl, you’ll agree. Fine hand blocked linen glowing with colorful naturalistic rose and bud motif (a glorious fabric for the more dressy type of “onlooker” dress) fashions the center model. Miracle of mir acles, such a "dressy” sport frock is exactly as practical a3 its more mundane sisters, for being pre shrunk, its “lines” and its colors are permanent, regardless of numerous tubbings. And the same may be said for the gowns that complete the group. For the dress to the right soft tailoring brings out the beauty of a most likable spun rayon fabric that you can rely upon to go through tubbings victoriously and that will capture your heart with its color ings and striking patternings. A Mexican motif on the print pattern ing, gay buttons, a bright raffia belt, carry out the blithe mood of the gay caballero linen print that tailors to perfection in the youthful dress to the left. Any young woman would do well to tuck such a frock away in her vacation trunk. It will insure conquests for her. © Western Newspaper Union. CHOOSE POLKA DOT By CHERIE NICHOLAS Dots. dots, doia are repeating and repeating in the newer silks. Here pictured is a very up-to-the-moment young fashionable wearing a direc toire double breasted daytime dress styled of smart polka dotted silk. You have the Paris angle of a lead ing summer style trend when you choose dotted patternings. Note the oval-shape bib of gathered white net and a tie of white pique. The white pique directoire bonnet she wears is the “last word’’ in milli nery showings. SOME HIGH POINTS IN LATE FASHIONS Dresses and coats alike have a tendency to pull fullness to the rear or the side with draping, plaits and panels. Long sleeves are by no means out, but many designers, like Lucile Paray, show elbow sleeves for everything, including coats. Equally as popular as the skirt and-jacket ensemble for sport and daytime wear is the dress with its own jacket or full-length coat. Jack ets are moulded to the waist and unbelted; generally single-breasted, simple in line, but feminine in ap pearance. Down to the hips is the usual length, but Mainbocher shows them tunic length, and Chanel likes waist-length jackets and boleros, many with little bustle-like peplums. Smartest Spring Dresses Are Seen Featuring Lace Some of the smartest street and tailored dresses seen this spring are of lace. And not only the solid, fabric-like laces which have been and still are so popular, but the sheerer types which have hereto fore been associated only with eve ning wear. These are seen in the simple one and two-piece versions of the classic day dresses. Some times they are all lace, and as often you see them in combinations of lace and fabric. Popular Trimming Pique for sports and informal wear; lace for dress-up occasions; organdie good the clock around— that's the way the fashion world di vides the honors in trimming this season. Evening Mode Both the wide skirt and the straight line are popular for eve ning gowns. -cm* sew Lif— Ruth Wyeth Spears 'T'HE charm of a rag baby de pends upon her figure. She may be molded with your fingers if the cotton stuffing is pushed into place very tightly a little at a time with the blunt end of a pen cil. An extra bit of cotton may even stretch the fabric considera bly to give chin and chest a shape ly contour. Leave the opening for stuffing under one arm. Stuff the legs up to the knees, then sew across. Stuff up to the hips and then sew through the body again, as shown, before the upper part is stuffed. This makes the doll joint ed at knees and hips. To make a pattern for the doll, rule an eight by fourteen inch piece of paper into one-inch squares. Number the squares, as shown, then outline the doll so that the lines cross the squares exactly as they do here in the di agram. Back and front are cut alike. The dotted line around the doll in the diagram indicates the seam allowance. Eyes, nose and mouth are embroidered, yarn is used for the hair, and the dress is made of straight pieces. NOTE: Mrs. Spears’ latest sew ing book contains three pages of doll clothes; 90 embroidery stitches; fabric repairing; table settings; gifts; many useful arti cles to make for the house, your-' self and the children. Price 25 cents postpaid, coins preferred. Just ask for Book No. 2, and ad dress Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Des i plaines, St., Chicago, 111. For Early Summer Days MAKE yourself something very pretty and smart to wear as soon as the bland summer days are here. These are so easy— each is a diagram frock, which means the pattern is amazingly easy to work with. Slenderizing Lines. Everything about this dress is flattering to large women—the v neckline, the short, rippling 1504 1502. sleeves, the smooth shoulders, front fullness, and waistline, snugged in by darts. You’ll want to wear it all the time, when you see how becoming it is. In georgette, chiffon, voile, or thin silk print. Frock With Slim, Crisp Lines. Cleverly fitted in to minimize the waistline, puffed high and wide as to sleeves, full at the skirt and with a demure round neckline, this is one of the most charming new dresses you could choose. A bit of ricrac braid and two little bows are all the trim It’s a Change With a Bit of Company The rural postman was describ ing his job to a visitor. “Yes, sir,” he said, “being a postman on a round like this means a lot o’ leggin’ about. Twelve and four teen mile a day very often. But there, I mustn’t complain. My va cation is due soon and that’ll put me on my legs again.” “And where do you propose to spend your vacation?” asked the visitor. “Well, sir, it be like this,” said the postman. “They generally sends a young feller from the head office, and as he’s a nice sort of chap as a rule, I go around with ’im just for a talk.” ming it needs, the lines are so perfect. Make it up in silk print, dimity, dotted Swiss. The Patterns. 1504 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 514 yards of 39-inch material; collar in contrast (if de sired) takes % yard. 1502 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4 yards of 39-inch material. 1% yards of ricrac to trim. Spring-Summer Pattern Book. Send 15 cents for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book which is now ready. It con tains 109 attractive, practical and becoming designs. The Barbara Bell patterns are well planned, ac curately cut and easy to follow. Each pattern includes a sew-chart which enables even a beginner to cut and make her own clothes. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Price of patterns, 15 cents (in coins) each. © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. I KILLS INSECTS I ON FLOWERS • FRUITS I VEGETABLES & SHRUBS I Demand original sealed E bottles, from your dealer I Greatest Proofs To be capable of steady friend ship and lasting love are the two greatest proofs not only of good ness of heart but of strength of mind.—Hazlitt. NERVOUS? Do you feel so nervous you want to Bcream? Are you cross and irritable? Do you scold those dearest to you? If your nerves are on edge, try LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. It often helps Nature calm quivering nerves. For three generations one woman has told another how to go “smiling through” with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system, thus lessen ing the discomforts from the functional dis orders which women must endure. Make a note NOW to get a bottle of world famous Pinkham's Compound today WITH OUT FAIL from your druggist—more than a million women have written in letters re porting benefit. Whv not try LYDIA E. PINKHAM’3 VEGETABLE COMPOUND? KILL ALL FLIES 'l Placed anywhere. Daly F17 I Ktiler attracts and kill* flies. ■ Guaranteed, cftoetlve. Neat, ■ convenient — Cannot spill— ■ WUInot soil orlrijure anything. ■ Lasts all season. 20o at all ■ dealers. Harold Bomers, Inc., ■ 150 De Kalb Ave-3'klyn.N.Y. | | WNU—U 21—38 Skill Wins It is not strength, but art, ob tains the prize, and to be swift is less than to be wise.—Homer. Best of Life The best part of one’s life is the performance of his daily duties.— Henry Ward Beecher. THE KEY to fast, firm-rolled "making" smokes that stay lit! ) THE “MAKiN’S” TOBACCO THAT’S GUARANTEED IIIMIUH '--"■ v.w § raR 9 ■- r \