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Flesherton Advance, 6 Dec 1933, p. 3

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.A y - â- f Bulk in the Diet Tie housewife In search of appetiz- ing new vegetable dlahea to tempt the family palate will And a wealth of po.sslbllities In kale, lioblrabi, turnips, par.s'^ips, beets, winter carrots, cab- bage and onions. These good cool weather vegetables possfcss certain dietary qualities! which are most desirable and should not be ovtrlooked. Kale very acceptably takes the place of spinach. TurnipH and parsnips are valuable because they supply bulk, always a necessity In the diet and some carbohydrates. These vegetables all supply some min- eral matter and vitamins. More Salt Needed When cooking these vegetables, one should remember that their structure is 'very different from that of the suc- culent summer vegetables. Boiling water or Intense oven heat Is neces- sary to soften the woody fibers of tur- pina, parsnips and the like. They also must be quickly cooked ia a generous amount of water. These precautions prevent them from becoming soggy and unappetizing both in taste and appearance. Add salt to root and tuber vegetables when they are about lialf cooked. Remember, too, that these vegetables require more salt than the delicate summer varieties. Kohl-rabI is delicious served in a mock Ilollandaise sauce. Turnips in piquant sauce are so rery good that one would mistrust their humble origin. Kale scalloped with bacon Is nour- ishing and appetizing. Carrot timbales served with white sauce make an excellent main dish tor luncheon or supper. Baked Beets are superior to ordin- ary boiled beets. Baked onions are unusual and very good. Kale With Bacon Two cups cooked and chopped kale, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 egg yolks, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-3 teaspoon each pep- per and paprika, few gratings nutmeg, 1 tablespoon minced onion, 4 slices bacon, 2 tablespoons grated cheese, 2 tablespoons fine dried bread crumbs. Cut bacon in dice and cook until crisp. Drain and keep hot. Combine kale with butter, egg yolks, salt, pep- per, paprika and nutmeg. Put half in a buttered baking dish. Cover with minced onion and bacon. Cover with remaining kale. Sprinkle top with grated cheese and bread crumbs. Bake In a hot oven until brown and serve from baking dish. Make Use of Apples Do you serve apple sauce with pork, goose, grilled sausages or, for the children, on bread and butter with sugar. It's also good for fillings for cakes and tarts. Peel, core, and slice apples and al- low 1 cup water and 1 cup granulated sugar for every i cups fruit. Flavor â- with cloves or lemon rind, to bo re- moved when done. Cook for about half an hour, stirring constantly, when they should be "mushy." Store in jars or a few weeks. Will not keep Indefinitely. Apple Snow. Cook apples, with sugar to taste, to a pulp and pass through a sieve. Whip the white of tin egg and fold into the whipped ap- ple. Pile in a dish, sprinkle chopped pistachio nuts on top. Apple Ginger. Melt S cups sugar in 2 cups water, and when a clear syrup add 8 cui)s eating apples peeled, cored and chopped. Add the juice of two lemons, the grated rind of four and 1 Dz. green ginger which has been boiled In a cup of water with sugar until Softer and finely scraped. Boil the preserve for two hours and test be- fore putting into jars. Winter Foods . An eminent ph.vsician recently made »n extensive survey of the food his patients had been eating all their lives, with the idea of discovering â- whether or not there might be any connection between their diet and the Various aches and pains from which they were now suffering. It was found that most of the diets had Been lacking in protective foods â€"milk, fruits, fresh vegetables. When these foods were given as treatment. Woman's Woria By Mair .M. Morgun 73 per cent, of the 501 patients were greatly improved. The value of such foods Is to-day generally recognized, but with winter coming on the important and protec- tive fruits and vegetables appear with decreasing frequency on most family tables. .But the planner of the daily meaU should not endanger the family'.-! health. Fruits and vegetables are available during the winter months. Modern methods of canning and preserving make this possible and add Immeasurably to the variety ob- tainable. One of the most valuable of all win- ter foods is soup. Take tomato soup, for instance. No garden product is richer in health ingredients than the tomato. Vegetable soup is another food which should appear frequently on every table. Ordinarily when vege- tables are cooked in the usual way, many of the valuable mineral salts are boiled out and thrown away in the boiling water. But in the making of vegetable soup the rich, healthful juices are retained. Enlarging Your Rooms Do all you can to give your house an appearance of vast size. For in- stance, if there is an unnecessary door between the dining room and the liv- ing room, why not have it taken out? Small rooms should not be over- crowded with furniture. If you need lots of seating space for guests re- member that a studio couch or a divan will seat several people and take up much less room than three or tour large chairs. Small windows should have their curtains pushed back toward the sides to give an illusion of greater width and short windows look much longer if the overdrapes touch the floor in- stead of ending at the windo-.v sill. Tasty Desserts Here are two unu.?ual des-ierts that â- will induce the man of the house to compliment the cook, and the guests to demand the recipes. Ch'ocolate Crested Custard Pie Pie crust, 3 eggs, slightly beaten. V4 teaspoon salt, Vi cup sugar, .3 cups milk, scalded. 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 square unsweetened chocolate, melted. 2 tablespoons hot water, 2 tablespoons sugar. Line a deep 9-inch pie plate with pastry, rolled to 1-2-inch thick- ness. Combine eggs, salt, and sugar. Add milk, stirring constantly. Then add vanilla. Pour into pie shell. Bake in hot oven (400 reg. F.) 15 minutes, then decrease heat to moderate (350 deg. F.) and bake 30 minutes longer, or until knife inserted comes out clean. Combine chocolate, water and sugar, and blend. Pour over pie filling, place in slow oven (300 deg. F.) and bake 7 to 10 minutes longer, or until choco- late is set. Cool. Collar and Tie Offers Contrast At the very moment when every- thing in fashion had been fixed up so that girls will be girls this year, a boy- ward trend appears. The particular news of this statement is that this snap-of-the-finger gesture toward femininity occurs of all things, even in evening fashions where girlishness has been flourishing to the boiling point. By way of stating the outlet of this boyish manifestation, it is sufficient to say that it is a collar-and-tie-impulse. The recipe has for a basis the shirt fashion of daytime styles, conceding all that elegance has to offer in the way or rich fabrics and capitalizing on the formality of the floor length skirt, and the newness of the suit for evening wear. So. with all these in- gredients blended, the result is a very young, saucy costume suitable for restaurant or theatre wear, described specifically with long slim skirt and kneelength tailored coat of dark vel- vet, with shirt of a rich texture ilke metallized silk, or thin velvet. The turn down boyish collar is the inevit- able touch, sometimes with a tie. and we have even seen long sleeves that are finished with jeweled cuff links. Notwithstanding the comparative isolation of this boyish tendency in the midst of so much completely op- posite style, the idea becomes new- just for the very reason that the re- turn of the womanly figure and lavish fabrics are so incongruous with it. Sunday School Lesson Lesson XI. â€" December 10. Paul in Caesarea.â€" Acts 24: 10-23. GOLDEN TEXT. _ Herein I also exercise myself to have a conscience void of offence toward God and men laways.â€" Acts 24:16, THE LESSON I.VITS SETTING. Time.â€" Paul's two years in pri.s.m, A. p. o8, 59. Paul's appeal to Caea.ir (the Emperor Xero), A.D. 59. Placeâ€" Caesarea. Jerusalem. HAVING HOPE TOWARD GOIJ. '•And when the governor had be-U- oned unto him to .^pcak, Paul answjr- etl." 'Friedrich uraws attention to the frequent mention of beckonmu, rir making signs, as characteri.-it:c of I.uke's writings; compare Luke 1: i2, (52; 5: 7; Acta 13: !«; 20: 1; l'4: 10, etc' "Forasmuch as I know that thou hast been of many years a judge unto this .nation, I cheerfully make my de- fence." There is the greatest dl.T.ir- ence between the calm, truthful, .uv.d self-respecting introduction of Pali's speech, and the ful.-;ome complimcnfi of Tertullus. "Seeing that thou canst take iuiowl- edge that it is not more than twt;!-,-e days since I went up to worship at Jerusalem." 'Only twelve days, and five of these were used to arrest i-.im and keep him in Caesarea. The oimple statement of the facts refutes the charge.' ".A,nd neither in the temple did f'C-y find me disputing with any man or stirring up a crowd, nor in the .;yna- gfjgues, nor in the city." The (.-our^s of the temple would be possible places for riotous disputes; so would thc- meetirgs of the synagogues on the Sabbath and on weekdays; so would the streets and squares of Jerusalem; but Paul had been found ever>'where peaceable. "Neither can they prove to thee the things whereof they now accuse me." Roman law is proverbial for its fair- nesi! and its insistence on proof; but in the two most notable instances in history in which it had a chance to prove its character for justice it failed disgracefully, namely, in the trial of Christ and the various trials of Paul. "But this I confess unto thee.' Only one charge could fairly be brought against Paul. Heresy accord- ing to the view of the Jewish reHgiouis leaders. "That after the Way which they call a sect." .\ sect is a schism, something cut off from the parent church. The Way wa< the name for Christianity adopted most commonly by the Christians of that time. "So serve I the God of our fathers." Paul claimed the same spiritual heritage a-: other Jews, no less a son of .\bra- ham than the high priest himself. "Believing all things which are ac- cording to the law, and w-hich are written in the prophets." Paul's writings are full of quotations from the Pentateuch, 'he prophets, the psa'.ms. and the other sacred books of the Hebrews. "Ha^'ing hope toward God, which these also themselves look for." Thii hope was that there would be a resur- rection, and it was held by the Jewish nation as a whole, of which some rep- resentatives were there ^â- 'resent. The doctrine of the Sadducees that there was no resurrection was held by a comparatively small section. "That there shall be a resurrection both of the just and the unjust." Not merely the just shall live eternally, but also the wicked shall die eternally; and Felix felt in his heart that he vas himself wicked. A. CONSCIENCE VOID OF OF- FENCE, Acts 24: 16-21. "Herein I als^.• exercise myself." Do I also myself take exercise, take pains, labor, strive. Old world in Homer to work as raw materials, to adorn by art, then to drill. "To have a con.science void of offence toward God and men always." To be like God was Paul'; supreme ambition. Many a man has made it his chief ambition to flee from the wrath to come. Not so Paul. Ae shows no fear of hell, and apparently took no interest in talking about it. "Now after some years." He had been absent from Jerusalem for four or five years â€" no chance to organize an insurrection from Europe or Ephe- sus! "I came to bring alms to my nation, and offerings." He had come to Jerusalem with the splendid gift to the poverty-stricken Jew^s froaa the churches of Achaia and .Mace- donia. "Amidst which." Engaged in thj making of the offerings last referred to, "They found me purified in the temple." Having complied with the rules for formal purification as laid down in the Jewish ritual. '"But there were certain 'Jews from Asia." Bigoted Jews from Ephesus. We ha.e already seen with what bitterness these enemies of Paul foilo->ved him from place to place. "Who ought to have been here t)e- fore thee, and to make accusation, 'f they had aught against me." It is the way of all luch mm to make their charges in secret. "Or else let these men themselves.' The Sadducean members of the San- hedrin who had come to Cae.sarea with th<i high priest Ananias. "Say what wrong-doing they found when I st<jod before the council." That is, the San- hedrin. That was Paul's only formal trial precedent to this before Felix, and, being before the chief asssmbl -• of the Jews, it should have probed the matter to the centre. "Except it be for this one voice." Paul will himself adduce the charge (. heresy, if they will not. ''That I cried standing among them." Paul ?â-  ststement, it will be rememhered, had been made or the purpose of setting the Pharisees of the Council again/t the Ssdducees, thus dividing his ene- mies against themselves. "Touching the resurrection uf the dead I am called in question before you this dty." No charge except that of sedi- tion would count, of those brought against Paul, and it was evident that that would not stand. Paul had no need of a lawyer. FELIX'S PR0CRASTIN.\TION, Acts 24: 22â€"26: 3-2. "But Felix, having more e.xact knowledge concern- ing the Way." His wife Dru.silla, a Jewish princess, would have told him i'»f the differen'-es between the ^ects of the Pharisees and the Sadducees, and the hostility of both to the harnn- less Christians, 'men of the Way.' He saw clearly througr the whole mat- ter. "Deferred them, saying, When Lyaias the chief captain shall come down." 'Down' from Jerusalem, on its hills, to the low-lying Caesarea on the coastal plain. "I â- will determine your matter." Like Pilate in the case of Chri.Tt, he was putting off as long as possible the manly and just de- cision it was his duty to make. ".A.nd he gave order to the ce.".- turion." The captain of a company of one hundre<i soldiers. "That he .should be kept in charge." Should remain a prisoner. ".\nd should have indulgence." Evidently, like all the Roman officials who had to do with Paul, he was attracted to him. "And not to forbid any of his friends to minister unto him." Peter and John, Barnabas and Mark. Lazarus, Nicc- demus, Joseph of .Xrimathaea, Jam^s the Lord's brother, â€" these are some of Paul's friends whc may be sup- posed to have 'isited him during the two years that followed. And always there was Luke, the faithful physi- cian, close at hand. Every Housewife Ent'tled to This Code of Conduct Beaumont, Tex.â€" Hearing nothing about a lO-hour week for housewives, a home-maker o£ Xederland, Tex., has proposed a code of her own. Received by B. B. Johnson, County judge, in a letter which suggested its consideration by President Roosevelt and modestly signed "Mrs, L. T. P.," the code follows: •'Every housewife shall be taken out to dinner at least once a week. "Husband or some other member of the family shall dry all the supper dishes. "Every housewife is eutitled to a minimum of two movies weekly. "Husband shall help children with at least halt of home work. 'Every housewife is entitled to 10 per cent, of the family pay for person- al expenditures on self or clothes, cos- metics, etc. "Every housewife (except where sickness or other emergency exists) is entitled to sleep late at least two mornii'gs weekly." Married Women's Right to Jobs Urge<l in London London. â€" The atmosphere of 'ae pre-war suffrage campai:^s was r - vived in Central Hall. Westminster, recently when 3,000 women cheer>i- speakers in a symposiurp. on "Sha I Married Women Earn." Suffragette hymns vjr: sung a-'-d old suffrage arguments a\vanced l<. show that married women >u»ht to b-~ allowed to earn their own '.ving Mes- sages of encouragement wtre sent by Ruth Brjan Owen, .\merioa.n Minister to Denu.ark; Florence B. Hi.les of th- National Woman's Party in the L r- ited States, and leading l^rainbts jf other countries. Lady .A.stor was appia u'ed w'r.en she called Britain's at-itude on t.'.-- subject "deplorable." Potato Warm Storage .sewlvHlug pv'atoes have their skias. The st-'o continues to grow in storage and boc-omee thicker and somewhat c-'/rk.v. As the greatest !o^^es ii. weign; of stored potatoes are due to losses of water it is sug- ge.-ed contrary to general usage, th?'. tht^ first ien days' storage sli.'uld bo i>t £ temperature of 60 de.r-ees in c'dei to thicken the skin ar;i^ :':v'.s red'."-»- th& loss by water. "IN THE AIR" Uadio's .\11-Star Fresentationa >>•>•»< WAVB UH.^sji ^^n BElJlfi aADIO [ <r~PECEl)TtO N MLUO« fJSt P/X mocuct OF(.'I). <:fkb, CKAL, „KCK. JHCl', â- HML JRCO, -KOC â- KPC •KI.W .J'KY, StatlOD >.K.NC roronto ^^ CfCb', Muntreal â€" . "KCH. Nurtb Kay , Chatham ,.. Toronto Uolitrctu ,, <Vat«rl<jo _ i'urC'Dto ... HamlitOD .. lil'ava _,, HariilltoD .. t'r f.ati.0 .... '•Vtmiaiir-lAi I'uruniu .._ H.IIKA, FUtaLurg _ K.\I<)3C dt. I..jol» .. WABC, Skw ifork . AiiiiM uin-.a*. ,. •Vi.KN numnu ' . ._ •VKAI- N.-* v.,r|i . WE.MR, Chicaso ... vv'.jlt. HufbilL • ' • •â-  . Scririt.-rtaUy . â-  V li.vii. ttuc !ivr.ier , wisiuv Uu.Taty . . vVJ/'.. New Vurk „. •VJlt. Detroit WIW, OlncliinaU .. .vM.Ay (.rnicaso ^^ ^V T \\\ 'lirvclaiUl . These profc'iams ar UttreM .. «»1 .. 322 .. VJl . . 435 ,. 4.i » <«5 .. Hi M. Ho ndoo Hi 341 5.^5 361 â- <Ji ST, 2«1 3ii .153 ;s.>,i «6 . â- itr, 64j 373 ^ei 2112 i\H illU 428 447 2ie Jjuot to 1^1 1» Cyclea 1U3U Suu :t3u 121i> iln 73U 64a V6u aju lutu IDliJ 33U .: t" lt4o »3u 1 J.)ll iiiO 110 91J0 tan ~'j 63 ij 7»0 IISU Hii ;8u 7UIJ 67U lilTK change TBU3SOAS. Caatem Standard Tim*. e M. S.iju â€" Kujy Vallee CRCT Captain Otatnooct ...^ WJZ 8.30 â€" Hii.rle.Ti 3«renade ..«.~.CB'U3 9.U0 â€" tireimdiers CKCr VVJ AH DeUlcalloo .... â€" ..CKKB Sh>iw Ljuat .„..WL;ti;N ». 30â€" Dramatic iSuUd «...CFRB !i).3«^\Villard Robinson C Hi Paul Whlteman CRCT FBIOAX. S.iJUâ€" Rosarlo Buurion ....... .CRC'i 8,iO â€" JIm.iile Johnson CKNC March of Time ....^....WcJR 9.0Uâ€" Fred Allen ..â€" WBK.N Irvln S C'JbD WKUn 9.30â€" Uema rrom Lyrica CRCr football Show WiiH Victor v./ungs. Orchestra. WBKN 10,00â€" oiaen and J<ihnaon >... â€" WHtiNV First Ntghter WBh;:* 10.30 â€" Luti- au.l ADher WBE.N SATUSOAY. 6.00 â€" M?et ths Arllat 8.00â€" "K.-?- -. 8.30â€" Urldgea of Paris ....... 9,00â€" Tri-.jle Bar-X Da.va .... Baron Munchauiitn .... 9.30â€" Leo I'.elsman - Slnelng Strings lO.uo â€" Dancing Party .._.».. 10.20 â€" George Jeissel ......•>• 11.00â€" Vancouver Krcllo .. â€" . SXrXDAT. 2.00â€" B.'oad'.vay Melody ..«. Gene Arnold - â-  30- Hollywood Show 00â€" Philharmonic Orchestra Opera Concert .30 â€" Hoover Sentinels ,00 â€" Roses and Drums 30 â€" Crumit and Sanderson . ,30 â€" Joe Penner ,ou â€" Jimmie Durante ...... Freddie Rich 9 00 â€" Seven Star Revue ««. 9.30- Album of Muslo «.... 10.00 â€" Jack Benny _....- Sunday Hour U.OO â€" Fireside Hour tCOlTOAX 8,00â€" Svrup symyhotiles .... Blaxikfoot Trails ^-" 8.30 â€" Bing Crosby .• Canadlanettea ...... .^. 9,00â€" .\. & P Gypsies Gaiety and Romance â€" .. 9.3U â€" Big Shew ••• Ship of Joy _...- 10.00 â€" Contented Hour ... Wayne Klnff TtTESSAT. i.ooâ€" C.-'-.tiU and Sanderson . 3,30 â€" Wrigley Hour Wayne King .......« â€" 9.00 â€" Ben Bernle California Melodies 9.30â€" .Nino Martini Don Vorhees Orchestra 10.00 â€" Legend of A.merlca .... Lives at Stake ll.»0â€" Moonlight on eaciflo .. . .CtHiLi .WBEN . .CKCT ..CFRB . WUkl.N .WBEN ...CKNC . .cRcr ..CFRB ..CRCT ..CFR" .WBE.N ...CFKt! ..CKKB _.CRCT ..CRCT .WKBW . „vvi;r , .».WJZ ^CP.CT . „ WiJR , .. W'iR ..CRCT .WBE.N , .CK.NC ..CRCT ..CFIUi ..CKNC ...WGR ...CRCT _WBEN ,..CRCT ..CFRB ..WBE.'^ , ..CRcr .WKBW , . WBli-N ..CFRB .WBE.N .WBEN ..CFIii ..CFRB ..WBE.N ..CFRB ..WBEN ..CRCT WEDKTESDA'Z. 8.00- Bert Lahr J^So"- 8.30â€" Albert Spalding '-'"^S Waltz Time }^o^ 9.00 â€" One Hour With Tou ....... CKCl 9.30â€" Burns and Allen -••••-" V.f^^.X Leo Relstnan ^Jil:.^ 10,00â€" Ortiz Ttrado "•••â- i:}}i:h Corn Cob Club " â-  '^SH'S'^ Harry Rlchman wik.bw EULOV.A. correct lime daily over Sta- Uons CKCTâ€" CKAC. One Way Out I'tte defea''ani was being sued be- ca.ie his g-^at iiad eaten up the p'.a-itiffs gi'dei. The goat was in couit and little sTiention was paid to h'.ui wliie witnesses were being ch )sen. Waen the tlrst witness was to be swo;n they looked in va!u for the Blhle. "Yo-ar hoii-:r." b.iid the prosecutin.s atiortt'iy, "that goat bas eaten the court's biblB " "Well,' grumlik-d th-e court "make the witness itis: tte gcat. )^'e can't adjourn rouif to get a new Bible." â€" Fr!e SEPABATES STATIONS INCREASES ^ANGE GETS DISTANT STATIONS HEOUCES INTEAFEaENCE Tl ccMfun ANO SMfu SAtCnoM CNOOSE) 0^*1 ontAit MONEY .BACK ir NOT ]Ari(»cii „ ^ a.sO MChCr C»D£» C« fCsT/.. -<;r£ AlSO S&II C i« CAWACA OH../ Famous Host Seeks to Find Another Inr London. â€" An advertisement ii btnal! type In tl'.e "Agony Column" ol The Times recently revealed thai John Fothergill one o{ the few real. :y individual innkeepers left, woal4 be giad to re.jeiTe offers of smaL° hotels or propo.^aU for co-operation in bigger enterprises. .Vr. Fotliargl'l made a fine old coaching house the Spread Eagle Inn at Thame one of the most fam- ous hostelries hi England, and re- cently wrote a book about it, "An Innkeeper's Diary." Abont a yeai ago he lef- Thitue to take over the Royal at Ascot- now he has !eft As- cot and has nowbere to go. With a reputation os a bizarre anf. eccentri? vcrf-ion o"' "Mine Host." Fothergill was accustomed to wel eouie hib guests â- with .stately cour- tesy, clad in _ knee breeches with brighr buckles on hla shoes and a flowing tie. An;.-th!ng ug'y lie woald not stand, and f.'equently was known lo charge "face money" to persons whose looks hy disliked, to compens- ate himself and his Inn for the dia- plta.--.ure of ttcir presence. HIa fastidiousnes'', bow^-vp'- .sprang from a genuine ana intense love and knowledge of gtod food and wine. There is a ch3n'rc- that he may sel up shop in London, continuing tt serve the English food which drew throngs to his hostelries at Tham« and Ascot, but he say.s he mast have his own gard-^n somewhere to supplj the herbs he rei'uires for salads and saiic 5. A Q'.iestion Pat c-iilej o;; li.e priest and said: •FiXher car I .'sk a Question?" 'Saie. Pat" said the priest. • VVe.l, Faiiiet,' said Pat. "I know al! ab.-ut St.ovc Tuesday _ .\3h Wed- ni.day, and Cond Friday, but what the dtvil is ."su- Sjndae." Clothes for Women Under Five Feet Foui Hollywood, â€" L-ssons in c'otiies foi women under five t'eet four inches it height are to be found in Mirian Hopkins' screen wardrobes, thinil Travis Banton, whose job is design ing movie stars' gowns. 'Fashions are originated tor wo men of average height, which meani five feet four inches or more," th« designer said recently. "This r» quires a little skill on the part o; small women." A gray wooUer afternoon suit trim med with silver fox is an e.icampl6 of the outfits designed for Miss Hop kins. The fur is manipulated below the shoulder-line to avoid a bulk,» appearance. A medium size flat mull of the same fur is carried, while her hat is a small black turban that rises in the back to a.tord height. Another outfit tor the smal! woaiar is a tailleur o! black lightweight tweed that adopts the double breasted long coat and narrow skirt The shoulders are not padded sine* width is avoided by the short woman. The coat ends several inches above the skirt, in place of the usual threft- quarter length which |.s another eesture to add the inipor'.;:nr illusion of height. Proletarian Furs Goal of Moscow's Rat War -Moscow.â€" A r-i Liunting campaign has been inaugurated by the Mos- cow fur tru^t. which will use the pelts to make coats Ca the proletariat. vV'orkers and office employes ar« induced to chass rodents by the of- fer of a special price for each skin and a coupon entitling the holder to spend al! the mot.ey thus earned for clo'hing. shies tobacco and ofiher ra'ioned art'cles. Traps are sup- plied" free to fsftories. oflloes and house committees VVesieru .Vo-a Sto;U iishciuiec s'..nd to bencfi' from $100,000 tc JUOOoo thrjugli lobster purchasaa W'lhlu t.ie next few months by a new ly.formed corapaiv la the United Sfnes, accci:?ing to Connie Cohet prrmineM dealer of Boston. MUTT AND JEFF- By BUD FL5HER A Rumble Seat Can't Be Any More Uncomfortable Submerged. / thsts M'.svrry is.cs of voj *>->J / AMO I C6RTMNL1' ATP^CiATE ] \ VWR KlN^rseSS.BuTDONTeETOC. lomS my wife is in TrtS LI RUMBLE SeAT ,. ; >-;;^ â-  gj?» ^ ' ; ,': â- 'â- â- 'rimii^f^^sssiar^'x-rTK'r â-  .-.jftarrriie :^t-i;z'';5i3»Kt ,

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