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McCOl McCORMICK, S. THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1937 COLD The modem way to ease a cold la this: Two Bayer Aspirin tablets the moment you feel a cold coming on. Repeat, if necessary, in two hours. If you also have a .sore throat as a result of the cold, dissolve 3 Bayer tablets in H glass of water and gargle with this twice. The Bayer Aspirin you take internally will act to combat fever, aches, pains which usually accompany a cold. The gargle will provide almost instant relief from soreness and raw ness of your throat. Your doctor, we feel sure, will approve this modern way. Ask your druggist for genuine Bayer Aspirin by its full name — not by the name “aspirin’* alone. t mu. DOZEN FOR 25c Virtually 1c a Tablet Discouragement a Destroyer Discouragement does not do tilings—it disarms and destroys. Still Coughing? No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can you with anything less than Creomul- ston, which goes right to the seat ot the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed mem- branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomidaion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulslon right now. (AdvJ The End When faith is lost, when honor dies, the man is dead—Whittier. Gas, Gas All the Time, Can*t Eat or Sleep “The gas on my stomach was so bad I could not oat or sleep. Even my heart seemed to hurt. A friend sug- S ested Adlerika. The first dose I took rought mo relief. Now I eat as I wish, sleep fine and never felt better." •—Mrs. Jas. Filler. Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowels while ordinary laxatives act on the lower bowel only. Adlerika f lives your system a thorough cloans- ng, bringing out old, poisonous matter that you would not believe was in your system and that has boon causing gas pains, sour stomach, nervousness and headachoa for month*. Dr. a. L. Shanb, N—m Tmrk, rmmorUi -In addition In InlnUinal •Uonting, Adinrikm grmatl, rmdueat bmatorln mod anion boeUtl.— Give your bowele a REAL cleansing with Adlerika and sea how good you fool. Just one spoonful relieve* GAS and constipation. At all Leading Druggists. Inwardly Right If inwardly right do not vex yourself.—Bersius. Lets Monthly Discomfort Many women, who formerly suf fered from a weak, run-down con dition as a result of poor assimila tion of food, say they benefited by taking CAUDUI, a special medicine for women. They found it helped to Increase the appetite and improve digestion, thereby bringing them more strength from their food. Naturally there is less discomfort at monthly periods when the system has been strengthened and the vari ous functions restored and regulated. Cardul, praised by thousands of women. Is weU worth trying. Of course. If not benefited, consult a physician. Women, Young or Older Mrs. Lillie Price of 1162 Neill St., Columbus, Ga., said: “Following an illness I bad no strength. Dr. Pierce’s Farorite Prescrip tion was recommended to me as a tonic and it cer tainly acted promptly. I soon improved after suit ing to Uke it My appe tite was increased and thru this I gained Strength. I also took the •Prescription* before the birth of my daughter—as a tonic and it helped me so much." Buy of your druggist today. Tabs. 50c Liquid J1.00 4c $1.35. MERCHANDISE Must Be GOOD to be [ Consistently Advertised \ ! i BUY ADVERTISED GOODS W ITH the midwinter social sea son upon us and festivities at southern resorts going at high tem po, smart women everywhere are preoccupied with new evening gowns to add glamour to time, place and the occasion. Greater formal ity than in years is the rule, and women are playing up to this edict by wearing gowns of rare beauty and richness. One may belong to either of two schools of fashion—that which fa vors heavy stiff heirloomlike silks with a regal air or the type which favors diaphanous sheer silks that float about one enchantingly as one dances or promenades in the great concourse of fashion. Stiff silk satins such as slipper satin or duchess satin are lovely choices for dramatic gowns. The “delicious” colors of these glorified satins are simply entrancing—make you think of moonlit rays that go glimmering over rippling waves, or icy blues that crown snow-capped mountains or the lovely tints of the rainbow as it enhances sum mer skies. To be style-correct these stately satins should be fashioned along graceful princess lines with quaint artfully gored skirts that sweep into widened hemlines. See the model to the left in the illustration. It is a frock of Edwardian period influ ence done in ice-blue satin with the new shirred bosom styling. The puffed sleeves and princess lines achieve a charming youthful silhou ette. The diamond sunburst worn suggests an heirloom that accords harmoniously with the type of silk used for the gown—a silk so grand and stiff it, as was the boast in grandma’s time, would “stand alone.” Some of the newest silk satins are studded with gold or silver sequins or rhinestones. To the right in the picture stands a modern J uliet gowned in gardenia white satin, all- over starred with gold paillettes with halter neck of matching pail- letted banding. Accessory highspots include a Juliet cap and a handbag done in gold paillettes, together with an exquisite white ermine coat. Warp printed silk taffetas have new looking patterns such as col orful bow-knots in vivid hues on white or green. Centered in the group a modem Jenny Lind greets us in a rustling silk taffeta frock warp-printed with red bow-knots. With it this lovely lady wears pale pink kid gloves embroidered in gold and pearls. The new and fashion able gloves featured this season are veritable works of art. There are pearls at the throat of this fair lady and she wears a superb pearl bracelet. Other charming versions of the princess dinner and dance gown are done in stiff Lyons velvets with puffed sleeves and buttons all the way down the front. Rich silk da masks are also fashioned in prin cess lines made square-necked, in puff-sleeve styles which look like Edwardian ladies come back to life. © Western Newspaper Union. FUR AND FEATHERS By CHEKIE NICHOLAS * For high-style this midwinter sea son let your hat be either fur- trimmed or feather-trimmed. The model at the top is a stunning fez turban of black felt and Persian lamb designed to complement a fur- trimmed cloth costume or a fur coat or cape. Smart vogue calls for fur trimmed millinery. With the cor onation in sight ostrich feathers are enjoying increasing popularity. A lovely British film star wears the delightful hat shown in the picture. It is an exquisite black felt with twin ostrich feather plumes in two shades of rose. Another cunning new style for young girls that takes on an ostrich trim is the little felt shape that is somewhat a Juliet type, being a shallow round skull cap. This is worn far back on the head with two wee ostrich tips posed perkily at the front. BLACK SHEERS FOR DAY AND EVENING For daytime sheer black woolens are smartly in fashion, and for eve ning the vogue for black nets and chiffons is everywhere apparent. Just now fringe trimming is im portant on the afternoon black sheer. The narrow fringe, placed row and row, «forms cunning short cap-like slee iss with accents of fringe elsewhere on the bodice or at sash ends, or that which is tre mendously chic—outlining the skirt hemline. In the early showings the new daytime black sheers are feminized with the daintiest of white lingerie details in form of frilly jabots, and novel cuffs and becoming collars and bib effects. The party-frock nets in black are made up in full-skirted styles with just yards and yards float ing about. Mustard Yellow and Beige Favored Colors for Spring Look for these colors in the new spring fashions. In fact the vogue is on at this very moment for these flattering and very new-looking col ors. Best dressed women are favoring tweeds in beige and gowns of light weight woolens in beige or golden hues are the “last word” for mid season, worn under the not-yet dis carded coats, in the daytime. For evening simply styled frocks of “old gold” satin are very pleas ing. Some of the newer brocades are also in this color. Peasant Jewelry Carved in brilliant peasant reds, greens, yellows, and blues, minute Tyrolean figures are set in a red and white catalin frame a fourth of an inch thick. The pins and clips are one-and-a-half inches square. Alphabet on Blouses Letters of the alphabet are spilled all over the fine cashmere blouses that are worn with winter street suits. The letters are usually in bright colors over a dull back ground 'Twas This Way a a By LYLE SPENCER © Western Newspaper Union. The Discovery of Insulin O NLY fifteen years ago, anyone who fell sick with diabetes was almost as good as dead. Doctors knew that diabetes occurred when a person had too much sugar in his blood. They also knew that the pres ence of sugar was due to an im properly functioning pancreas. But no one knew how to correct the situation. Along about 1920, an inex perienced young doctor named Ban ting was struggling to get estab lished in London, Ontario. An ex farmer boy and a war veteran, Ban ting knew practically nothing about scientific research, but he did have one brilliant idea. If the pancreas produces life-sav ing juices that prevent diabetes. Banting thought, why not isolate this precious extract from animals and give it to diabetic humans? The very thought of such a pos sibility set him on fire. He sold his office furniture and medical equip ment to get money for his living expenses in Toronto where he could try it out. Some of the world’s best scientists had already experimented with Ban ting’s idea. They had failed because they lacked his determination and ingenuity. With the help of Charles Best, a twenty-one-year-old chem istry student, Banting experimented first upon dogs and then upon chron ic diabetic sufferers. With his treat ment, most of them made amazing recoveries. The treatment consisted of daily inoculations of his pancrea tic extract, insulin. Millions of peo ple all over the world owe their lives today to Banting’s phenomenal discovery. Ordering From French Menus Y OU may belong to that great army of people like myself who can’t make heads or tails out of fancy hotel menus. Words like pate de foi gras and hors d’ oevres, al ways make me feel dumb. Even when the waiter asks me whether I am ordering a la carte or table d’ hote, I never knew what he was talking about until I looked it up recently. Table d’ hote is a French phrase literally meaning table of the host or landlord. Up until the middle of the Eighteenth century, restaurants and hotels as we know them now did not exist in Europe. The old inns were run on sort of a family plan, whereby everyone sat at the table of the host and took whatever was put before him. There were no menus from which one could order a la carte, which means according to the bill of fare. No one could pay for each dish separately, depending on what he wanted, but had to pay for the whole meal whether or not he liked all the courses. Thus table d’hote came to mean a complete meal served in courses at regular hours for a fixed price. A la carte and other such phrases were added by chefs who wanted tc give an impressive air to their res taurant. They can now buy books with all the French and Italian phrases written out, and often use them without knowing what they mean. But when you get in a tight spot over one of them, you can al ways tell the waiter to “Bring me an order of bacon and eggs.” They know what that means in any lan guage. And then, as a final touch, you might add, “Sprinkled with par sley.” The Royal Game of Golf C HARLES I of England played golf near the Tower of London while waiting for his executioner to get his axe sharpened. Royalty and notables of all kinds have played the ancient game at least since 1400 and perhaps much earlier. But golf has become a popular sport only in the last 30 years. The invention of the rubber-cored ball about 1900 is the reason for its rise in popularity. Before that, play ers had used little leather balls stuffed with feathers and later the gutta-percha ball. Golf played with the gut ball was no game for the ordinary dub. When hard and well hit by the profession al, it might possibly go 200 yards, but the amateur was lucky if he could get 150. Under those condi tions, what fun was it to push a little white pellet around with a knobbed stick? The India-rubber ball introduced something new. The dub could get 200 yards and maybe more. With the new ball, second and third-rate players could score as well as many professionals had be fore. That was what the game need ed. The first 18-hole course in Amer ica was not built until 1893. By 1916, there were 742 courses, and this number balloned to 1903 in 1923 and 5856 in 1930. So now most wives are widows on Saturday afternoons, but it’s worth it! Glass Used to Filter Light Glass is a good transmitter of the visible wave length of light but by varying its composition it can be made to act as a filter for keeping out or letting through particular wave lengths. They're So Simple to Sewl N OT only the sun, but the moon as well, will rise and set on these new styles created by Sew- Your-Own. This timely trio is one of the most wearable ever offered the members of The Sewing Cir cle. Yet, and you’ll love this, there isn’t a complication or a single trick detail to bother with in the whole program. Pattern 1981—Pajamas so com fortable, restful and entirely satis fying that the alarm clock will have to ring twice—no foolin’— that’s the boast and even the promise of this newest two piece outfit. It goes through your sew ing machine like a dream, and really is one made up in satin or one of the vivid new prints. For lounging, the long sleeved version in velveteen or silk crepe is a knockout. It is designed in sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 requires 5 yards of 39 inch material, with short sleeves 4% yards. Pattern 1207—If your day begins at the crack of dawn with a stand ing invitation to prepare break fast in nothing flat, or there abouts, this is a house dress you can well appreciate. It’s on in a jiffy and is just the thing for a two - handed, expert breakfast maker. The lines are clean cut and slenderizing. It has a large pocket that’s helpful, and general prettiness that is conducive to one’s mental and physical well being. It is available in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, and 50. Size 36 requires 4% yards of 39 inch material, with long sleeves 4% yards. Pattern 1978—This blithe little blouse will add spice to your Mighty Blast What was probably the might iest explosion ever produced by man was touched off recently in the Korkinko coal fields of Soviet Russia. \ The blast, produced by 1,800 tons of dynamite, opened a trench in the earth almost a mile long, 250 feet wide and 55 feet deep. It hurled more than 1,000,000 cu bic yards of earth 2,000 feet high and exposed a valuable coal seam which would have required two years to uncover by ordinary methods.—Washington Post. wardrobe at this time. Not enljr is it the essence of smartness and the last word in style, but the first word in simplicity, which is impor tant to you who sew at heme. It is feminine as to collar, delicately slender of waist and highly orig inal throughout. Yon may have it with short or long sleeves, as you prefer. It is designed in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, and 20 (80 to 38 bust). Size 14 requires 2% yards of 39 inch material, with short sleeves 1% yards. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., Hoem 1020, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each- O Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Miss REE LEEF says: CAPUDINE relieves HEADACHE quicker because its liquid... alnecuty dtiictred SORES, BOILS ATHLETE'S FOOT, BURNS, CUTS«ed ITCHING SKIN ,C At rout local otue non i m fOSIfAJ* m fmM mt pAm ! BOVSON CHJMKAL PkOOUCTS CO. ' JACKSONVILLE... tLOIIDA -SSaraOWSON’S BALSAM SMALL SIZE 60c LARGE SIZE $1.20 iA recognized Remedy for Rheumatic and Neuritis sufferer*. A perfect Blood Purifier. Makes thin Blood Rich and Healthy. Builds Strength and Vigor. Always Effective . . . Why suffer? AT ALL GOOD DRUG STORES Calotabs Help Nature To Throw Off a Cold Millions have found in Calotabs a most valuable aid in the treatment of colds. They take one or two tab lets the first night and repeat the third or fourth night if needed. How do Calotabs help Nature throw off a cold? First, Calotabs are one of the most thorough and dependable of all intestinal elimi- nants, thus cleansing the intestinal tract of the germ-laden mucus and toxines. Second, Calotabs are diu retic to the kidneys, promoting the elimination of cold poisons from the blood. Thus Calotabs serve the double purpose of a purgative and diuretic, both of which are needed in the treatment of colds. Calotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the fam ily package, ten cents for the trial package. (Adv.) Your Advertising Dollar buys something more than space and circulation in the columns of this newspaper. It buys space and circulation plus the favorable consideration of our readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons. Let us tell you more about it.