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When cotton ih:d, wet the[
spot with water and cover it with s
thick paste of laundry starch.
Mter it dries, sponge it off with
peroxide; iron the article and put
it in the sun for a few hours.
• • *
It you scorch linen, cut a raw
nion in half and rub the flat side
af it on the discolored area; then
oak the linen in cold water for
evez al hours
It you have no regular bath mat,
use a turkish towel as a makeshift.
lust lay the towel on the bottom
f the tub. Or fashion slippers
put of a discarded turkish towel
and wear them in the tub to pre-
vent slipping.
To keep snow from sticking to
the snow shovel, rub it with a
candle stump or piece of paraffin
Defers using.
Rust on tools can be prevented
in the first place. Heat two qunces
Df powdered resin with twelve
ounces of lard until the resin melts
completely. Then add one pint of i
benzine, and apply the mixture
,paringly to the metal parts oJ
the tools. It will protect them
against rust for quite a whil in the:
ampest kind of climate.
It's Wonderful the Way
Chewing-Gum Laxative
Acts Chiefly to
REMOVE WASTE
GOOD FOOD
• Here's the secret millions of folks have
discovered about IgN-ArlINT, the mod-
em chewing-gum laxative. Yes, here M
why rrN-A-MINT'S action is so wonder-
fully different I
Doctors say that many other laxatives
start their "flushing" action too soon...
Fight in the stomach where food Is being
digested. Large doses of such laxatives
lpset digestion, flush away nourishing
food you need for health and energY.
You feel weak, worn out.
But gentle FZr-A-MlWr. taken as
ommended, work chiefly In the lower
bowel where It removes only waste, not
good food[ You avoid t31a typical weak,
lred, worn-out feeling. Use rZ-A-MItCT
and feel your "peppy." energetic selfl Get
-a-Mrl NO Increase in price--stlU
25#. 50# or only 10.
May Bnng
Restless Nights
Tnen Mdney function slows down, man
folks complain of nagging, backache, hess-
ashes, dlz¢ineea and Ios oi pep ann ener.
Don't suffer restle nights with thee m
comforts if reduced kidney function is get*,
tins you down---due to such common estmJ
am etreN and strain, over-exertion or ex-
posure to cold. Miner bladder irritations
due to cold, dampness or wrong diet may
€use getting up nights or frequent paage
Don't neglect your kidneys if the condto
teens bother you. Try Dean's Plll--a mild
diuretic. Used suecefully by millions fo
over 50 years. While often otherwise caused,
it's amazing how many times Dean's give
happy relief from these discomfor.to-Thelp
the 15 miles of kidney tubes and flltem
flush out waste, Get Do's Pills tocht
DOAN'S PILLS
Do you suffer distress from
0000000FEMALE
WEAKNESS
which makes you
NERVOUS several
days 'before'?
Do female func-
tional monthly
ailments make
you suffer pain, feel so strangely
restless, weak--at such times,
or just be/ore your period?
Then start taking Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
OUnd about ten days before
relieve such symptoms.
Plnkham'a Compound works
through the sympathetic ner-
voU. system. ReguIar use of
Lydia Pinkham's Compound
helps build up resistance against
this annoying distress.
Truly the woman's/riend!
Note: Or you may prefer
Lydia E. Pinkham's TABLETS
with added iron.
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
THE
Forgotten Man .
Iu'OST HOUSEWIVES don't real-
LvA
ize it, but the honest meat
dealers are the forgotten men in the
big squabble over the price of beef
These wholesale and retail meat
men are caught between two of the
most powerful and vocal groups in
the nation--the organized meat
packers and the angry, unorganized
housewife.
Hundreds of these wholesalers and
retailers have been taking thei
beating in silence because, if they
;protest, they fear they'll be black-
balled by the big packers. And they
have good reason to fear the pack
ors' wrath.
Said one meat wholesaler:
"If I complain to the OPS, and
the packers find out about it,
I'll never be able to buy an-
other pound of meat. I'd have
to leave the meat business and
become a wholesaler for vege-
tarians."
Here is what the meat middle.
men are up against:
When the government freeze was
imposed last January, choice beef
In carload lots was selling for a top
price of 53 cents a pound. Despite
the freeze, and in direct violation of
the government's order, the price
of exactly the same carload of beef
0ntinued to mount. By April the
price had moved up to 57 cents, was
even quoted openly at this figure in
the trade journals.
Grocer Gets Squeezed
This four-cent rise at the whole-
sale level meant about a 10-cent
rise per pound to the housewife--it
the local grocer passed on the ille-
gal increase. But if he didn't pass
it on, he had to pocket the loss and
thereby risked going bankrupt.
More recently OPS has adopted a
new pricing formula, whereby each
cut of beef is given a specific price,
and the price must be posted for the
housewife's inspection.
This new scheme is aimed at
showing up the price gouger and
bringing an end to the black mar-
ket. But, to get around the law.
" 'iCh Gooe! TO W T
ocolate Now ar For aste and Tonic
Washington, D.C. -- Chocolate the fact that millions of taste appeal, out it was not
1 : s once again at the battlefront as chocolate bars were consumed the 19th centm-y that the price i
!a diet ruper-charger for the across the globe in the form of fell low enough to make it a popu- i
American soldier fighting in win-
ter-bound North Korea.
i
I The popular energy food is con-
sidered so important to the G.I.
Ithat it is now included in every
iperational ration issued by the
Department of Defense.
i Food Packet Survival Arctic,
for example, provides no less than
ifour chocolate bars--two with al-
monds-per man per day. Sol--
:liars going to the front lines for
eight to ten hours are issued two
ne-ounce bars in their Food
Packet Individual Assault. Rattan
--the basic canned operational
rationeffers both chocolate and
cocoa disks.
Three-fourths of the candy com-
ponent in the 5-in-1 Ration, de-
s':gned fr group use, contains
chocolate, while the Ration Sup-
plement Sundries Pack, for 100
m e n, includes 200 two-ounce
hocolate and 48 two-ounce choco-
late-covered bars.
The fighting man in Korea is
not only getting a dose of energy
with his (hocolate but something
tasty as well. This was not entire-
true during World War II, de-
HELP v.
This boy00
in da nger
some packers--including some of]
the biggest names in the industry t all youngsters as human caution signs,
--have now come up with a new 1
wrinkle. They're forcing their CUS-] 0
tamers to accept tie-in sales, to buy t
umvanted cuts of meat in order tel
get the most salable cuts. One I
wholesaler, for example, was re-'
cently forced to buy 4,000 pounds of
highly perishable sausage he =
couldn't possibly sell. Nevertheless
the packer required him to buy the
sausage before he could purchase a
single carload of beef.
Net result of this price goug-
ing by the meat packers is an
intolerable squeeze on the
wholesaler and retailer.
Friend of Big Business
GOP Congressman Kenneth Keat-
ing of New York has emerged as
the newest congressional champion
of big business.
Keating's district, Rochester,
N.Y., is a long way from California;
yet it was he who pulled chestnuts
out of the fire for Pacific Gas and
Electric in California and sponsored
the amendment killing urgently
needed government power lines.
Colleagues who wondered what
the Rochester, N.Y., Republican
was doing meddling in California
affairs also were astonished when
he popped up as sponsor of another
project of the big-business lobbies
--aimed at crippling the antP, rust
laws.
His amendment would undecut •
plan proposed by another Republi-
can, Herbert Hoover, who, when
President, urged that the Clayton
anti-trust act be strengthened in or-
der to prevent the acquisition o!
"assets" such as factories and
equipment in mergers that created
unfair trade competition.
Presidents Roosevelt and Truman
both followed up Hoover's recom-[
mendation and finally this impor. ;
rant addition to the Clayton anti-i
trust law was passed by congress
last December. One of those who
voted for it was Rep. Keating at
New York.
However, when it came time
to appropriate funds by which
Last year 120,000 schooI-age children
were injured or killed in .traffic accidents.
Many of these accidents could have been
prevented if the drivers had learned to regard
......................................................... the federal trade commission
WNU--12 25--5l could put the new law into op-
My pal SMOKEY says:
Emergency Ration D. This ration
--containing four ounces of choco-
late and some 600 calories--was
designed especially to taste "no
better than an unsalted baked
potato" in order to keep the G.1.
from eating it as candy.
Today, the army's new choco.ate
policy is to give the men the
nourishing food in the form of
!sweets they have eaten and en-
joyed since they were kids. In en-
couraging the use of chocolate
the military may well be remem-
bering the words of tbe Spanish
explorer, Cortez, who wrote in the
16th century, "A single cup of tins
:rich drink gives a man sufficient
I strength to march all day."
Although Cortez was quick to
recognize the energy value at
chocolate--a product of the native
American cacao tree--he did no!
appreciate its taste as prepared
by the Aztec Indians. When he in-
troduced the food into Spain in
1528 it was used primarily as a
medicine and was far too expen-
sive for anyone except the rich.
An unknown genius added sugar
to give chocolate its first wide
lar beverage with all classes. In '
the United States alone, raw cacao
imports leaped from 500,000
pounds in 1780 to more than 6001
million pounds by 1946. ]
A room that is inclined to be
dark and rather gloomy can be I
given a sunshiny aspect by paint-
ing the walls a pale tint of yellow. I
A ceiling painted white will re- I
fleet the maximum light that falls]
upon it In one such room, the i
wood-trim was coated in a
grayed-lavender tone and dra-i
peries were a silvery gray. The I
upholstery combined blue-greenl
and gray and tangerine toned
accessories added gayety and life
to the room's decoration.
"Hush-A-Bye, Baby" is the
theme song in the home of an
Oriental silk farmer when his
silkworms begin to spin their
cocoons. The family talks in whis-
pers and walks on tiptoe, fox
silkworms will cease the spinning
process when frightened. Many
silk raisers share their homes
with the productive little moth
larvae.
oration, Keating had a mysteri-
ous change of heart.
He calmly rose on the house flooz
and sabotaged the measure he had
once championed by offering an
amendment canceling $245.000 of
enforcement funds needed by the
trade commission. The amendment
carried by a vote of 73 to 49. And
since a law is no good without funds
to enforce it, the law Keating origi.
nally voted for now becomes just so
much printed paper.
Small Airlines
Mild-mannered Sen. John Spark-
man of Alabama, the consclentious
chairman of the small business
committee, is burned up over pres-
sure from the civil aeronautics
board to suppress a report lam.
basting the major airlines.
Mysteriously, a copy of this re-
port disappeared from the commit-
tee offices aud was seen by air.
lines, though marked "confidentiaL"
The report criticized the CAB's
order closing down the independent,
i nonscheduled airlines on June 5,
Remember this whenever you drive near •
school or playground," Slow down so you
can stop in an instant, You never know
when a child may decide to dash out from
between parked cars,
Be careful--the child you save may be your own!
This message sponsored in the interest of child safety
• . , APPLIED ON sOUND TIRE BODIES
OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES
other
00izes
SIZE 6.00-16
AND YOUR
OLD TIRE
IF IN SOUND
CONDITION
• 25% Longer Mileage- Made of Cold Rubbe
• Same High Quality Tread Materials as UKI in
New Tires
• Same rreod Design as in New Tires
• Same Tread Depth as in New Tires
• Same Tread Width as in New Tires
• New Tire Guarantee
Tea Cloth
Crochet Cloth
A fast moving filet crocheted
cloth that's certain to ple
every woman who wields a
hook. Wide bands of white
joined together and edged
bright green cotton.
Pattern Envelope No. 5313 contains
lete crocheting instructions and
stration for "Mile-a-Minute" cloth.
• • •
It's filled with ideas for nimble
--the Anne Cabot Album is only 5
contains dozens of crocheting,
embroidery designs Send today for
copy.
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLWORg
367 West Adams St., Chtcaso 6, Ill,
Enclose 20C in coin for each pat-
lvrn. Add 5e for 1st Class Mail it
desired.
Pattern N'o ..................
Name (Please Print}
Street Address or .P.O. Box No.
City State
Keep Posted on Values
By Reading the Ads
NO CONSTIPATION
FOR 25 YEARS
"My husband introduced me
ALL-BRAN shortly after we
married. I use it in my
well as for break-
fast. The result:
we're regular as
clockwork !" Mm.
Antonina Graziano,
453 Garfield Ave.,
Jersey City, N. J.
One of many unso-
licited letters [rom
ALL-BRAN users.
If you suffer from
to lack of dietary bulk, eat
ounce (about cup) of
Kellogg's ALL-BRAN daily,
plenty of water. If not
after I0 days, return
to Kellogg's, Battle Creek,
to" nOTIRT,P VO|IR MONEY
HERE'S HOW
TO ENJOY
BAKING
A .Pleasure ..
o lay to se.:V OaEe, and
depend caking YOu--
with C# . ever yOu bo/,
o,,
ralXing bow°'Y sure, In the
Clobba z, /a the ov
dOuble o_. 'rl; bo/o,,€;
boker', f"On/s ho a'- u
"Stand.by, ""e