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II II I I
GOLDEN VALLEY NEWS
i ii ii i i
I I ill i I IIll
ii .... : .... i i ii ii i
Mexican Tea Towels
In Brilliant Colors
i
I
I
UR good neighbors south of the
border provide these pictur-
esque tea towel motifs. So get out
your most brilliant floss and do
these bits of embroidery. Fin-
ished, they will give a cheerful
note to your towel rack and thus
to your entire kitchen.
Pancho's serapes and Ramona's.
skirts, the fruits, and the awning
should all be done in vivid colors.
To complete the set, there is a
panholder motif of bright-colored
Mexican pottery.
$ • $
Transfer Z9475, 15 cents, brings the
seven motifs for tea towels and the one
for matching panholder in transfers which
may be stamped more than once. These
extra stampings may be used for luncheon
-or breakfast cloths and napkins, curtains,
etc. Send your order to:
+
AUNT MARTHA
Box 166-W Kansas City, Mo.
Enclose 15 vents for each pattern
desired. Pattern No ..............
Naive................... o.............
Address ..............................
Recorded Acts
Someone has said that every-
thing that is done is photographed.
In morals that is a truth of great
moment, but it is not a high mo-
tive to right-doing. The great Pho-
tographer records our acts, and
preserves the record; but we must
love the right because it is lovely,
and do the right because of its
lovableness.--Dr. J. Duncan.
w
Life a Flame
Life is a pure flame, and we live
by an invisible sun within us.--Sir
. Browne.
I fro MONT.LV--'00
i|ffEMALE PAIJi
I ;E I If you suffer monthly cramps, back- I
I I I ache, nervousness dlstres• of I
I • I "lrrela. rlties"--due to funetiona I
I • I monthly dlsturlmnces---try Lyd E. I
I .I I Pinkam's Vegetable Compouna a |
I • I °noel pinklm's Compound is one I
I B r" I medic lne you can h today made |
I I eec(ally/or women, i
I I Taken regularly tbruout the I
I] ! month--Pinkbam's Compound I
I& I helps build up resistance against I
I • I such symptoms. Follow label - I
It I Uons. Wort tm,Z I
l| ' -"
-
Costly Revenge
I | It costs more to revenge injuries
-- han to bear them.
. AGAINST DISEASE BY
Killing It, s, Mite end Roa(s '
too.s
Don't Neglect en!
Nature dmlgned the kidneys to do •
Zgarveinml job. Their task is to kNp tim
no win]g blood stream free of an ex_ of
tozie smpurtlm. The act of tivins---e
Oe|f--is eonetanfdy producing
latter the kidneys mtmt remove Item
the blood if good heath is to endure.
. When the kidneys fail to function U
Natn intended, there is t..tmtton
vlute that may eau body-wide
re. One may ime mtggml na
Pemtstent heedaehe, at taek& of disztnem,
ttins up nights, swening, pufneu
lU|der+the eyee-4e tire nervou ma
;t Worn out. .+ ---in-
Frequent, fealty or .-- .
t are sometim further evidence oz m
L0 rentmt
r kdneys
+11
te
+t +
'"' I00OOD WILLj
The manulocturer or -_.
merchant who adver- .-.
s, mak public the .
hot that he wants
oux
good will And he eal-
tzes that the only way
that he ten keep It t,..
Meat
By H. L. DOW
(MeC2ure Syndicate--WNU Features.}
T WAS November and the north
wind that was sweeping across
the marshes and up the ravines
brought with it the smell of snow.
On a promontory that jutted out
into a huge heath stood a lone buck-
deer. No young untried spike-horn
but a lithe, strong muscled, sturdy
necked buck that carried his head,
crowned with its eight pronged
horns, high in the air.
For a moment he stood, etched
against the fading sun, and then
stepped lightly down the steep slope
and followed a well-defined trail
across the frozen bog. He plunged
into the woods on the other side just
as the sun sank below the horizon.
There in a thicket of green firs
stood the doe. Young, alluring,
vital and yet trusting, her sleek head
held high, her large brown eyes fol.
lowing his every movement, she
waited for him. Swiftly but silently
he moved to her side. For a mo-
ment they stood there together nos-
ing each other. Then, as though by
mutual agreement, they moved
away up the slowly rising ground,
the buck leading and the doe travel-
ing trustingly behind. Although
there was no real sense of reason-
ing within the buck's mind, yet he
instinctively welcomed the pale
radiance that shone about him, al-
lowing him to travel and feed at
night when there was less to be
feared from that dreadful creature
that walked on his hind legs and
carried a stick.
As they slowly threaded their way
silently through the woods they
stopped occasionally tonibble at
tender twigs of seedling beech and
maple that covered the slopes of the
hardwood ridges. As he was slowly
leading the way around the end of a
high hill he suddenly stopped. A
slight rustling of leaves and the faint
snap of a small twig came from the
top of the hill.
Swiftly and silently he wheeled iu
his tracks and bounded back down
the way he had come. Circling he
came up to the hill again further
on. A gust of wind whistled through
the trees and brought with it the
rank odor of man. The buck snort-
ed to warn the doe, who had melted
into the undergrowth at the foot ot
the ridge, and bounded rapidly into
the friendly shadow of the neighbor.
ing swamp.
All thought of his mate41 had been
driven from his mind and through-
out the night he traveled steadily
until dawn found him bedded down
in a little hollow underneath a low
growth of spruce far back in the
wilderness. The fear of man had
gone and the multitude of monpt-
onous little sounds that permeate
the wilderness lulled him to sleep.
It was the cessation o! the sound
that roused him from slumber with
every nerve on edge. The man
scent was again strong in his nos-
trils but wise buck that he was he
did not jump or run. Instead he
seemed to shrink into the ground
and only the slight movement of his
sides as he breathed distinguished
him from the forest floor. The sound
of voices drifted down to him and
shortly afterward two men came
into sight walking down the slope
and directly toward him.
So €loss did they pass to that
they brushed against the very
thieket in which he lay hidden.
Scarcely had they passed than,
scrambling to hi8 feet, he leaped up
the hillside. A shout from one of
the men and a sharp stab of pain in
his hip, as a bullet burned its way
harmlessly through the fieshy part
of his rump, served only tO urge
him to speed further and in a mo-
ment he dropped over the brow of
the hill and out of sight.
He traveled little that day for his
wound burned and the cool waters
of the sluggishly moving stream
that flowed through a small but well
hidden swamp were too enticing
to leave. Toward evening, however,
the thought of the doe waiting down
near the big marsh he had left the
day before caused him to turn his
steps once more in that direction.
As he stepped lightly down the
last slope a faint blast sounded
through the night. The night was
overcast but as he halted and looked
inquiringly along the edge of the
swamp he saw the faint outline of
his slim mate standing in a little
opening that led into the swamp.
The moon, breaking for a moment
through the clouds that covered its
face, poured its silver rays over the
big buck.
Suddenly and unexpectedly anoth-
er light bathed the deer. The buck
turned his head and horror froze
his blood. He was gazing into a
terrible glaring eye that would not
let him move. He could not even
look away. Then all was black.
For a moment only the doe stood
still. Then with a sudden leap she
ran brokenly for the shelter of the
thick swamp, her mind struggling to
comprehend what awful creature
this was that spoke with a loud
voice and robbed her of her lover so
suddenly. Only too well experience
had taught her that her mate would
never again stand by her side or
graze with her in the sheltering dusk
of the forest.
A coarse voice rang through ths
stillness. "The third one tonight,
'Ed', and a big buck at that. He'll
bring us twenty dollars if the war-
dens don't catch us bringing him
out.' '
Ph/ll/p00- .r
PRIVATE PURKEY IN LOVE
AND WAR
(Harriet Joins Up With the WAACS)
Dear Oscar--
Don't look now, but I'm in the
WAAC. If you're in an army why
not me? I got to thinking of you do-
ing your bit as a soldier and I
thought I would feel better about it if
I was following your example. Well,
anyhow, here I am out in Des Moines
and already I appreciate all those
complaints you used to make about
you' feet. Right now the girls have
made the army reverse the usual
routine and give us a light noon
meal and the heavy one at night. At
noon we just get salads and drug
store quickies but I wasn't here
three days before I saw it was all a
mistake as the work gives me an
appetite like a horse. And I don't
mean an ordinary horse.
Mess Sergeant Harry Decker says we
will all be shouting/or big meals at noon
in no time and 1 admit he is right. I
guess the girls all figured that they must
take care of their figures but this was so
much wasted worry. This army routine
will take care o] their shapes.
• $ •
The army has figured it out that a
girl soldier needs 2,700 calories a
day to a man's 4,000. But it must
have reached that conclusion after
watching you eat. It will take 4,000
a day to keep me at normal weight.
For years I have been nipping at let-
tuce leaves to keep my weight down
but in the WAAC I can see my wor-
ries are over. They can pass me
mashed potatoes from now on.
A man is boss of s. He is Colonel
Faith, which is a !retty name for a
colonel and he will have to live up
to it if he is to get any results
from this army. He is reputed to
be a strict disciplinarian but the
news should never have leaked out.
You know how a woman reacts when
she hears that any man who is to
tell her what to do is a disciplinari-
an. He has two strikes on him
from the start.
• • •
Quite a few army men are out
here in general charge. They try
to be stem but they look pretty un-
comfortable. I can tell they would
rather be anyplace but here. Susie
Graham says they must have been
detailed here as punishment for some
army crime. The first big laugh
came when army men showed us
how to make beds and insisted that
we make them their way ad no
back talk. They made them pretty
good at that but-we made 'era all
over again as soon as they finished.
We have steel lockers at the foot of
our beds and you are my hang-up
boy, of course, dear Oscar. One of
the girls asked me if it was a snap-
shot of Abbott or Costello. It was
just because the picture was taken
in too bright a light.
• • ##
Well, dear, I hope all is well with
you. How I wish we were in the
same armyl Your Yankee Doodle
girl never stops thinking of her Yan-
kee Doodle boy. I love you.
Harriet.
P. S.--Send me a mousetrap.
I Just heard some fmmy noises.
• • @
VOICE FROM THE END OF
THE LINE
Obstruetors of progress,
Whose act is a crime,
Are those who pick change up
One coin at a time.
Pier.
• • s
"Banana Farms to Grow Rub.
ber."--Headline.
Okay, as long as the rubbe
farms don't grow bananas.
• $ s
TO THE LADIES
"The WPB has restricted the purchase
el nail polish, mascara, per/umery, rouge,
powder, lipstick and ]acil creams."--
News item.)
Lips that look a little human,
Cheeks that are authentic, too,
Help some Yankee bomber's crew-
men
Blast a Jap out of the blue.
Noses that are sometimes shiny--
Faces that are real McCoy--
Aid in trimming Moe and Heinie
And that Hirohito boy.
Hands that are as God intended--
Nails as nature made all ten--
Help to keep explosives blended
As a help to fighting men.
Gals with all mascara missing,
And with faces as designed,
Mov a foe to angry hissing
As his legions fall behind.
Just a little touch of powder,
Not so many facial creams,
Tend to make a hopeless chowder
Of the Axis hopes and dreams.
$ at $
"A man isn't really a good poli-
tician until he learns to have his
picture taken without looking direct-
ly into the lens," says Merrill Chil.
cote.
$ • s
"Shortage of Meat in East."--
Headline.
Anybody who has asked for a
hamburger in a lunch-wagon lately
could have told you so.
• a •
Nobody," says Ehner TwitcheU, "is too
lar in the rear to ye !or a wvond tron
right easy."
!;i; !iill
!:i:.::i:L.'i:i'l
| |
• 1 :l
€,
,t.+ I g
I,I.,
, .',l F"
IF.I ,
,,+ ++I, I,: +
.O, YOU are going to have n
,,.i baby! Well, the clothes prob-
lem can be settled very easily--
with a frock and jacket--just the
type we offer in this pattern.
Frock has cap sleeves, pleats
down the front provide all the ex-
tra fullness needed and is very
easy to make. The jacket tops off
a very successful outfit which can
be produced at small expense at
home.
Pattern No. 8199 is'made in sizes 12. 14.
16, 18. 20 and 40. Size 14 dress and jacket
requires 6% yards 39-inch material.
Ribbon Banded.
HE short cut to glamour these
days is to add a dirndl frock to
your wardrobe. Today's pattern
brings you the very style everyone
seems to be wearing. For individ-
ual style excitement the long torso
top of this model is banded with
ribbonhere you can effect a plain
s
Funeral for Living J
Sometimes in the Orient, a
wealthy man who fears he might
"lose "face" by being deprived of a
funeral commensurate with his
prestige holds the ceremony while
alive so he can superintend it, re-
ports Collier's. On the big day,
he rides in a sedan chair behind
the casket in the funeral proces-
sion as it proceeds about the city,
accompanied by hundreds of hired
attendants and several bands. In
the rear are the wailing relatives,
dressed in mourning.
From an old French word
"mes" derived from the Latin
word "missus" meaning a course
Gt a meal, comes the Army's
name "mess" for its breakfast,
dinner, and supper. Favorite meal
with the soldier is chicken dinner
his favorite cigarette, Camel.
(Based on actual sales records
from Post Exchanges.) A carton
of Camels, by the way, is the gift
he prefers first of all from the
folks back home. He's said so.
Local tobacco dealers are featur-
ing Camel cartons to send any-
where to men in the armed forces.
.--Adv.
HOUSEWIVES: k * 4r
Your Waste Kitchen Fats
Are Needed or Explosives
TURN 'EM IN[ W
II
color contrast with a printed ma-
terialor a plaid, striped or print-
ed contrast with a plain fabric.
• •
Pattern No. 8186 is In sizes 11 to 19.
Size 13. with short sleeves, requires 4
yards 39-inch material
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
Room 1US
211 West Waeker Dr. Chicago
Enclose 20 cents in coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No ............. Size ........
Name .... ...........................
Address .............................
CLASSIFIED
DE,P, ARTMEN'
PHOTO FINISHING
ROLLS DEVELOPED
ight prints and (me enlargcmenb or
your choice of sixteen print8 wlthoat
enlargement. c. ReDrint 3 each,
NONTHWIT PHOTO SINI
IFere:o North
HONEY WANTED
nIGHEST PRICES paid---cane furnished
any quantity--large or small. Write for
further details. SIOUX hONEY ASSOC.,
SIoux City, Iow,. - Ll, Ohio.
AGENTS WANTED
Fifty Agents Wanted to buy old, blemished
or wild horses for slaughter. We also buy
all classes of market horses and mules.
ELDER HORSE CO., Jamestown, N. Duk.
Faro Directory
First National Bank andTrust Co.
Forgo, N. D.
Asses over Eht Million Don
Member NORTHWEST BANCORPORATJON
Cylinder Regrinding
AUTO ]gElkT PAgT
General Machine nnd Boiler Work
CRAIG BROIL
d06 N. IF. Avene - . Fargo, N.
In Name of Charity
O charity! What blunders have
been committed in thy name!
ALL-BRAN FUDGE
SQUARES--BEST
YOU EVERTASTED!
Every mother in the land will want to
bake these scrumptlgus cookies. Clll-
dren vlll demolish a plate of them In
a wink. Grown-ups rave about their
"different" taste and new crunchy tex-
ture. They're made. of course, wltl the
famous cereal, Kellogg's All-Bran.
KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN FUDGE SQUAI.S
$ squares an- 1 cup sugar
sweetenec % cup flour
chocolate cup All-Bran
b cup butter ½ cup nut, nears
2 eggs I teaspoon vu111a extract
Melt chocolate over hot water and add
butter. Beat eggs well. add sugar and
beat until light and fluffy, Add melted
chocolate and butter. Stir In flour,
All-Bran. chopped nutmeats and fla-
voring. Pour into greased pan, making
a layer about one-third lch thick.
Bake in moderate oven (S75*F.} abou$
20 mlnutes. Yield: Slxteen 24nab
equres (8 x 8 pan).
77/00" AIR OR O,,V 77/00"
,./' ALTITUDE ENGINEER TOM FLOYD or eouou+
AtlCIUtl,r CO.
CAMELS ARE
STANDARD EQUIPMENT
WITH E. THEY'RE E MILD
WITH A f:LAVOR THAT CLICKS
EVERY T/ME