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Is
Sheer and Cool
PATTERN e~MI
Keep a Weather Eye peeled for
tour comfort. This cool flattering
gown will do itself (and you !) proud
in ~ny member of the Sheer Fabric
Family! And that means cotton or
silk according to your taste, and
either a neat geometric or splashy
. floral is suitable. Just decide whether
you want It for a handy little run
around frock---or to fill another im-
portant niche in your summer ward~
robe. Any figure wlll appreciate the
flattery of the softness that gathers
on to the smooth yoke, the alrlnes~
of the loose sleeve and the slender-
heSS of that gracefully panelled
skirt !
Pattern 93S6 may be ordered ~nly
in sizes 14, 16. 18, 20, 32, 3,t, 36, 38,
40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3% yards
89 inch fabric:
Complete, diagrammed sew chart
Included,
SEND FIFTEEN CENTS in coinl
or stamps (coins preferred) for this
pattern. Be sure to write plainly"
your NAME, ADDRESS, the STYLE
NUMBER AND SIZE..
Send your order to the Sewing Cir-
cle Pattern Department, 232 West
Eighteenth Street, New York, N, Y.
, ,, ,,
REVENGE
"I don't care," said the little girl
Who had not been invited to the
party, "I'll be even with them."
"What wlll you doT' asked her
mother.
"When I grow up I'll give a great
big party and I won't Invite anyone."
T/rues Have Changed
Haw--You 11 have to hunt further.
I'm not the little financial sucker I
used to be.
Expert
"I hear the glrl you're running
around with now is a reduclug ex-
s0! You should see
Mugs.
zinc.
b Revenged
"So the man who first introduced
~ou to your wife is dead now?"
"Yes; I saw to that."
THE BEACH REVIEW
II i
Five Necessary Essentials {
To Real Co-op ExpanMon
According to Earl W. Benjamin,
general manager of the Pacific Egg
Producers, .'her© are five requisites
to success In forming and conduct-
ing an agricultural co.operatlve.
First, qualified executives must
be employed to handle the eo-oper-
atlve's affairs.
Second, the co-op must be sour.d-
ly and adequately financed.
Third, it should ~tand on Its own
legs and meet competition through
" advancing the efficiency of opera-
tion, and should 80 far as It 18 pos-
sible avoid depending on govern-
mental subsidies.
Fourth, it should limit its actlvl.
ties strictly to the business pur-
poses of the co-operttive.
Fifth, It should keep all me.m,-
bePo thoroughly Informed as to
what Is gOing on.
As Mr. Benjamin says, ~-opsra.
tires lacking any of these requis-
Ites are doomed to trouble sooner
or later.
BOSS SAYS AAA HAS
ACREAGE PREFERENCE
Would Rather Have Adjustment
Than Make Loans Now
Requests of northwestern and
tnldwestern farmers for govern-
ment loans on rye and wheat so
tar have failed to gain the favor
of the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration, says Andrew Boss,
University Farm, St. Paul, state
director of AAA programs in Min-
nesota.
Rather, he asserts, this agency
prefers to increase benefit pay-
ments to farmers who cooperate
In holding down their acreages of
these commodities, ff the Supply,
because of abnormally high yields,
should depress prices unduly.
This policy has already been
adopted in the case of wheat, he
points out, on which ~dJustmout
payments have been increased
fror~ 29 cents a bushel in 1934 to
33 cents a bushel this year. Ad-
Justment payments will also be
made on rye this year, for the
first time.
Details of the new wheat and
rye adjustment contracts are now
bqing worked out by the Agriculo
tural Adjustment .Administration,
following conferences with rePre.
sentatlve producers of these com-
modities in Washington early this
month. The wheat contract, which
will follow the one now in effect
hut expiring when the 1935 crop
is harvested, will probably be rea-
dy to offer farmers early in August
and the rye contract later in the
same month. Present indications
are that beth contracts Will run
for four years, unless ended be-
fore that time bY a referendum of
the growers. The administrative
work of the two programs lu each
county will probably be handled
by one production control associa-
tion.
The request for governnwat
loans on rye was formulated by
150 ~armers from 20 Minuesota
counties and sue North Dakota
state represent~tive in a confer-
ence at St. Cloud June 29. The
question of adopting a loan pro-
gram for wheat was discussed in.
formally in a conference attended
by farm leaders of eight midwest-
era states and representatives of
the federal government at Des
Moines, Iow~ June 12. Interest in
these loans l~a direct outgrowth
of the produce~~ fear that the
production of .th~so commodities
this year may exceed the effective
demand and so dbp~,ess the prices
of all cash and feed grains.
WISCONSIN CHIEF
SEES CO-OP SYSTEM
LaFollette Tells Newspaper Folks
That Change 18 Sure
A cooperative economic system
is inevitable in this country, Gov-
ernor LaFollette decalred in a sig-
nificant interview granted to the
North American Newspaper . Alli-
alice.
"The old system has been break-
down kind of centrifugal
edge only
this
{JUNIOR LEf DER DISCUSSES CAMP ACTIVITIES[
Theodore Krebs, professor of
business economics at Stanford
University, Californiar has been
made chairman of a new federal
central relief board .that will func-
tion as a board of review to eo-
ordinate surveys proposed by fed-
eral, state and local governments
as part of the works-relief pro-
gram.
i
Gladys Talbot Edwards, leader of the Junior and Juvenile depart-
ment of the Farmers' Union for North Dakota, makes some ~uterestlng
comments on the camp work for Juniors in a recent issue of the Farmers
Union Herald,
She discusses the whole camp plan, and gives a very interesting
resume of its development. In talking of the past summer activities,
she has this to say:
The project which began with a week's camp in North Dakota last
year, followed by a week in Montana for both North Dakota and Mon-
tana Juniors, has spread all over the northwest this year.
North~ Dakota held four one-week sessions, Montana held three one.
week sessions, our sister .~tate of South Dakota held two one-week ses-
sions, and Wlconsin and Minnesota each a one-week session in AugusL
Approximately one thousand people, mainly Juniors, but with a fair
sprinkling of seniors, have attended these camps. They have done real
studying on the problems that confront, not only the American farmer,
but the entire world today. They ~ave learned that cooperation is a way
of living, not Just in the Local, the county, the state; not Just in the
Farmers Union, but in the whole world. That it is a way c~ living which
would bring about world peace, that it would abolish unemployment,
through an equitable distribution of labor between men and machines;
that it is the means of decentralizing wealth, of making machines work
for men and produce for use instead of profit. They have learned how
to get on their feet and say the things that they must say If they are
to be useful workers for the cause of cooperation. They have learned
how to conduct a meeting according to parliamentary law, and how to
set up a cooperative business activity, so that it will work according to
the Rochdale plan.
The Encampment project is definitely established as one of the
mediums of education which will be used in the Farmers Union here.
after. Its value cannot be doubted. Comments by the teachers, the
visitors, the Leaders and Juniors who have attended the camps, serve
to prove this.
The next step is toward an all-state camp, to which those from each
state who have done outstanding work in summer camp may be sent for
further instruction. And then, who knows~Encampments that will last
all summer, where all the members of the Union may go for study and
inspiration. This bears thinking about. It would be a most definite
educational movement. Think it over---a permanent summer encamp-
meat in e~ch state where adults and Juniors alike might enroll for edu-
cation in cooperation.
A dream-~ vision~yes: What great structure was ever built that
the vision of the dreamer did not. go before it? This will be.
, i i
N.w Bo d BIG CO-OP RALLY AT
BRULE, WIS,, SEPT, 1
Noted Speakers from Central West
On Elaborate Program
Plans are going forward for the
greatest co-operative rally ever
held in the northwest, to be held
Sunday, Sept. 1, at Co-Op park,
Brule, Wis. One of the principal
speakers will be M. L. Herren, edi-
tor of the Nebraska Unio~ Farm-
er, and a national authority on co-
operation. He holds that coopera-
tion offers the only method by
which people may start from
where they are and evolve a new
and better social order without
revolution. Another speaker will
be H. V. NurmL manager of Cen-
tral Co-Op Wholesale. A wide va-
riety of sports, games, and music
is being prepared. Delegates are
expected from all northwest states,
CO.OPS HAVE DOUBLED
The number of co-operators in
the British Isles has more than
doubled since 1914, from a little
over three million to more tha~a
seven million members in the co-
operative societies today.
O0 GOOD CROPS SOLVE THE PROBLEM ?
• ,@ 4) 4~ • 0
By Chas. D. Egeley
J,.,
Crop prospects in the northwest generally speaking, are good.
It
seems to us this is the chief factor in creating among farmers a better
feeling. Higher prices on a few agricultural products and AAA benefit
payments, may be a contrilmttng factor, But at any rate there seems to
be tess dissatisfaction; less complaint.
And so, the question I would like to ask is: Is a good crop all that
is necessary to solve the farmer's problem? Does that mean modern
conveniences in the farm home? A high school education for the farm-
er's children? A high American standard of living for the farmer and
his family?
I am quite sure when we go to •
market with this near bumper
crop we are going to find the ques-
tion of '~riee" still very impor-
tant. Not only the prices farmers
get for the things they sell, but
also the prices they pay for the
things they buy, It is the spread
between these two, as I see it, that
causes our trouble for both the
farmers and workers.
The spread is too wide. As a re-
suit, those who produce--farmers
and workers~are unable to buy
back as much as they produce, and
these so-called surpluses accumu-
late, and we have suffering and
misery in the midst of plenty.
When the farmers go to paying
their taxes and interest, and buy
the necessities of life (and every
worker should be entitled to some
of the comforts of luxuries) I am
afraid they will find that the price
they get for their pr0duets will not
Pay the bilL The worker, too, is
confronted with the same problem.
The wage he gets isn't high
enoUgh to give him the American
standard of living to which "he is
not only entitled, but which should
be easily possible in a country so
productive aa ours.
So I don~t believe the nation's
economio problem in general or
the ~ problem in :parUcu~ar,
has nasn SOlVe~ with a good crop
come and outgo of the farmer and
worker can be solved only through
the establishment of a new social
order, where business is conducted
at COST for USE and SERVICI~
instead of PROFIT. I do not be-
lieve the capitalist system can be
made to work in behalf of the
masses because it Is based on ex-
ploitation of these same masses
through private profit.
A profit is something over and
above the full value of the things
a man produces. And if one mar
gets "something over and above"
if one man gets too much for the
things he produces, somebody else
gets too little. The man who is
lucky enough, the man who gets
too much, gets richer and richer,
and the man on the other side,
the man who has to take the re-
sulting losses, gets poorer an4
poorer.
Such a system cannot be made
to work. A system based on ex-
ploitatiou cannot be made to work
in behalf of th~ masses. The capl-
tallst system is based on exploits-
tion through p~ivata proflL There
cannot be exploitation unless some
body is~ exploited. The way for
the exploited to get rid of explol*
tenon is to get rid of the syste~
that makea~ ezlgoltat/~n possible,
or is based on exploitation.
so I say the only way to get
get rid o~
eatab-
~. nell Syndlcate.~X, VNU Service.
I|111
Because only thinking and educated
people know anything about thelr
bodies and how to
Cost el~ keep them in health,
Ignora~ce hundreds of doctors
must do work that
~hey ought not to have to do.
Because great numbers of peoples in
great cities do not understand that
huddling together in closed and ill
ventilated rooms results too often in
tuberculosis and other deadly ills,
cities must pay many physicians and
their assistants, whose services m~ht
be used in other fields.
Ignorance is one of the most ex-
pensive evils that cities have to com-
bat.
It is true that a family of five or
more people, all dwelling in two or
three tenement rooms, can hardly be
expected to keep the premises sanitary
and well ventilated.
But if they were made to understand
how their lives and those of their chil-
dren are menaced, they would pay more
attention to the advice of the visiting
nurse as to what should be done to
guard against ep|demic diseases.
Ignorance has always been a stum-
bling block in the way of progress.
Happily, enlightened city. govern-
ments are constantly finding new ways
to combat it.
This is being done in almost every
important city in the United States by
education.
Time was when tenement dwellers
taken from infected fiats and sent to
a hospital were terrified because they
believed that sooner or later they
would be forced to drink from the
"black bottle" and would never return
to their homes alive.
The desire to care for the ill and the
unfortunate is a fine tralt In human
nature. , • •
I am beginning to tl~ink better than
I used to of listless and often incon-
siderate human nature.
The world may not be getting better
very rapid!y.-it has still to make ~ war
on war--but it is improving in thought.
]ulness /or its ~elloto creatures, and will-
ing to spend money to rid the world o~
plagues and pestilences.
What the world may be like a hun-
dred years from now I naturally have
no guess.
But I am sure it will be free from
most of the pestilences that now deci-
mate the population. And in another
hundred~or perhaps two hundred
years it may get rid of the worst
pestilence of all. which Is war.
You will get fortunate "breaks" as
you go along, and, unfortunate ones.
But your success
Luck and depends on you, and
Superstition not on outside clr,
cumstances.
If luck comes your way, take it.
But, after you take It, use it as a
starting point.
Don't figure that it is going to keep
right on helping you out.
If you do, you are going t? get a
very unpleasant disillusionment before
long.
If you have good intelligence, enough
to teach you to keep at what you have
started, and a real desire tO De some.
"="st
~o~
thin~ more than j. average" ou
are, m baseball parlance, as far as hrst
base.
It depends on whether you get to
second base or third base or home or
not.
There are capable basemen on each
one of these.
Their business ls to keep you from
where you are trying to go.
It is your business to outwit them.
If you don't, the manager is pretty
sure to drop you out of the team be
fore so very long.
Make yourself worthy of trust.
That isn't going to be easy.
Life is a competition, and there are
plenty of entrants.
If you are going pretty well you will
attract attention, and some other tel.
low will be after your position.
Don't let him take It away from
you.
Don't waste your evenings wander.
ing aimlessly around hunting for some~
thing to do.
If you like what you are doing, and
want to keep at it, you will find plenty
to do, and you won't have any time to
"hear the chimes at midnight" or trot.
ling around town with the gang.
Bear in mind that today there are
more trained and educated people in
the game of life than there ever have
been before.
But remember ell the time tha~ belief
in luck is beHet in superstition end that
superstition is disappearing, as men groin
more i~elligen¢ end more ~mbit~om.
If you haven't an education---get one,
There are many ways to get one,
The country is filled with schools and
colleges, there are chances to take spe-
cial courses after you have knocked
off your regular Job fdr the day,
What's the use of being in a live
modern Intelligent world if you are
not going to take advantage of your
opportunities?
Keep thin~ing about the future.
Keep learning. Get ideals and keep
them.
Maybe it won't be always pleasant
at the time. But what counts Is the
to
at work.
SWEATERS FAVORED
BY COLLEGE GIRLS
IN NATIONAL POLL
What will the well-dressed college
girl wear?
According to Miss Helen Cornelius,
director of ttarper's Bazaar fashion
service, the big thing is sweaters
and skirts. Miss Cornelius said:
"The college girl's contribution to
fashion is as American as baseball
She wants the right clothes for the
right time. And from a poll taken in
some 50 colleges over the country,
sweaters and skirts were the unani-
mous choice for all-around wear.
"Every school has wha~ is known
as 'pets.' These might be any sort
of gadgets frem hair ribbons to ankle
socks. And each school-going maid
will have tucked In her wardrobe
some of these little tricks to spring
on her fellow students."
For the classroom and campus,
sweaters of angora or brushed wool
in pastels are comfortable, youthful
~nd smart. They may be either pull-
over or cardigan style, and by all
means wear them with sleeves pushed
up well above the elbow. Skirts are
circ ula r o r button-down-the-front
style to give plenty ef freedom for
long strides.
Week-ends college girls will take
their dressier clothes from hangers.
Included In this group are silk after-
noon dresses in dark colors, neatly
trimmed with metal cloth, velvet or
some contrasting color.
Out of hat boxes will come
foreign-looklng things to be worn
with fur or smart cloth coats laviSh-
ly trimmed with soft furs.
Evening gowns of slinky satins or
sophisticated models in lame and
velvet are popular.
Kills
MOSQUITOES
,.SPIDERS
Quick, Pleasa.t
Successful Eliminatioa
Let's he frank--there's only o1~.
way for your body to rid itself oZ
the waste material that causes acid"
ity, gas, headaches, bloated feelings
and a dozen other d|scomforta
Your intestines must function and
the way to make them move quick-
ly, pleasantly, Successfully, without
griping or harsh irritants is to che~
a Milnesia Wafer thoroughly, in aC*
cordance with directions on the bet-.
tie or fin, then swallow.
Mllnesia Wafers, pure milk of
magnesia in tablet form, each
alent to a tablespoon of liquid
of magnesia, correct acidity,
breath, flatulence, at their
and enable you to have the
pleasant, successful elimination
necessary to abundant
Milnesla Wafers come in
at 35c and 60c or in
at 20c. Recommended by
of physicians. All good
carry them. Start using these
ant tasting effective wafers
Tortured
with Itching
Fimples
Relieved After
Using Cuticura
"My face was a mass of
due to some external
I was in agony for" three
The pimples were hard, red
large and were scattered all over
face. I was tortured with
lag and It kept me awake.
"I used many remedies, but to
avail. A friend asked me to
Cuticura Soap and
did. Soon
seen, and after using for two
half months my comp~ -ion
clear." (Signed) Joseph
1078 S. Blvd., New York Clty,
2, 1935.
Soap 25c, ~)intment 25c and
Talcum 25e. Sold everywhere~
sample each free. Address:
cura Laboratories, Dept. R,
Mass. "--Adv.
Plus Q."
el,
gloss prints and
LARGF, MENT, 25c
0WI