r ! PAGE canvass SPECIALS Apple Juice.” Zofez. lint; Z for . Zlc PEAS. 20ioz.,'lins. I2for 25: carnation-MILK. Zfor 29: Lu-go ONIONS. l0lbs. 65: Extra Luge. CELERY. each . . T5: Ripe TOMATOES. 11 en. bsld. 31.15 Green TOMATOES. pli. 49: l.ge. CAULIFLOWER. 2 for ... 29: CORN. dos. 39: Heinz viusoaa (gal. iurl 85: Heini KEICHUP. T2 bets. . .. . 53: Choice FOWL. lb. 43: CHICKEN .& DUCK. lb. 53: Phone Phone 2696"The Home Of Proven Values" 2697 norntity ilix Says Continued from page SE in beginning to think I am getting on his nerves orw:i3ImIec- 3'..”,f,.I aha wondering what he will do after we are married. treat me differently then? PUZZLED ANSWER: No. Marriage doesn't change a man. It Just makes him more what ho is. If he is cross and fault-finding and hurts your leellngs before marriage, after marriage you will be the scapegoat in which he will take out all his temper and irritability. and he will find his chief indoor amusement in saying to you the things he wouldn't dare to say to any man who could resent an insult. The thing a wife has to live with is her husbandls disposition. It is not his virtues. but his temperament that makes or mars her hap- piness. it is whether he is a grouch or a little ray of sunshine around the house. Wham" he is pleasant and easy' to get along with or as iifficuit to handle as s sore-headed bear that matters to her. And for a man to lay he is sorry for having wounded your feel- lngs doesn't heal the hurt. Nor does it keep him fmm duins 1! 5"- eiher time. I DEAR MISS DIX: Assuming one is equally fond of both. is it better to marry the man to whom one ll PHYSTCBHY 8tt!'&Ei-ed but 01 lesser education. or marry the man who is mentally your equal? - M. ANSWER: I confess I cannot understand how it is possible for a woman to be equally in love with two men. I would think there surc- ly must be some preference one way or the other that would tilt the scales for her. But assuming that this marvel is possible I should say that she would have a better chance of happiness if she married the man to whom she was physically attracted. even if he were a low- brow. than she would if she married the highbrow who comes up to her ideal. but does not fire her fancy. To marry a man just because he has physical attraction for you ' is a dangerous business because that does not always last. But to marry a man whorepulses you physically is also to court disaster be; rsuse it turns wedding cake ln'to dust and ashes on your lips. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, but will ens- on... Fair: .iIsiulIoii llsatly By little lady Chicago. Aug. so -(AP) - Bun- ning I show with a cast of no is s man-sired job. But a slande woman has handled it neatly for three years. , The woman is soft-voiced. sun- ” Helen Tickers Oernghty. she has housed the huge ,ssesnts at the Chicago Fair of 1060 and at the Chicago Railroad hit in 1948 and IOQ. It has been a tough task. She lost lost 23 of her 126 pounds the first season. But she managed to regain the weight despite a. 13-hour daily int. This year's pageant, "llirontiers of Freedom." was. new. Mrs. Ger- aghty. as producer and director, put in five months of work to get it ready. She mobilized a company of 250 -150 actors. sinners and dancers. plus drivers (auto and horse) locomotive engineers. riders, stsgahands and icians. she assembled 150 horses, sheep. goats and steers. She marshalled ions of pmps - buggies. automo- bile. railroad trains. fire engines. bicycles. thireshers. tractors. two planes. a horse car. a canal boat and an oil derrick. All were needed for a series of scenes that portrayed life and events at 14 periods in the nation's his- tory. from the signing of Penn's treaty to the building of the Jet plane. . TRAFFIC PROBLEMS But getting the men. women, ani- mals andcontraptiona on and off the 450-foot open-air stage four times a day raised a Licklish traf- fic problem. It was solved by pre- cise. split-minute timing. But Mrs. G-eraghty shudders during a rehearsal. This was the setting: Abraham Lincoln was speaking at Gettysburg. On the stage were costumed actors. a train waiting to take Lincoln back to Washington, and horse-drawn cais- sons and carriages. six horses hitched to a caisson bolted. They brushed by the trai and veered into a carriage .pulle by a pair of hackneys. The back- neys galloped off stage into a herd of 50 Texas ipnghom steers. The steers stampeded for the stables. climbing over a line of antique at- wmobiles on the way. "I could see bodies flying." Mrs. Geraghty says. ”but nobody was hurt badly." She hasn't had a day like that since then, but none of them has been dull. E K?f'R"K'R"R"R'7XoX"K'K72xK9TR"KR'm”:?s"RW'- How Can I ! ! ! By Aline Xshle ) -vo:xx"”-no;-xxx-re . Q. How can I eliminate any strong. unpleasant taste in tur- nips? A. when preparing. peel the turnips. then out Just as if then- were a core inthe center. discard this, part. and the turnips will nor. have any strong disagreeable taste. . How can I prolong the life of an old garden hose? when she recalls what happened - ' Continued T040311! to the charm of which she was so sure. but presently she realized she was quite outside his thourau and out there was no longer any use inlialking to him. At, least for the present. Of course she would win him back. But under this surface lay the disquieting conviction that she would never be nearer to him than she was at that moment. For a second the hope fllckgmd thgt he was thinking of -her. 500d-bile." She tried to put heartbreak into it. and loneliness. Mark turned as if on a released spring. and held out his hand. "Come over meiime," he grin. nod. "If you're not afraid of our reputation." I 3051 la?! aiming to her eyes. She turned quickly away and walked up to the house. She was afraid he would see the tears. The! were of rage. and even a man would know the difference. .3! the time she turned at the door Mark and the roadster had van- ished XX As he covered the miles to Wide Acres Mark refused to adml-t to himself that Elise hsd disturbed him. He told himself he might al- most have guessed Lucy was too good to laIst. He wanted to talk the whole thing over with some- one. He went through the list of his friends and discarded each, with the possible exception of Shirley. Could he really trust even her? Shirley had never married. she was rich. She had position through both her family and her literary success. She had beauty. She could have had scores of men. What would she want with him? And yet there was a strange ex- Drewion in her eyes, like some- thing lost looking out from a deep. still pool. Would a man find hap- piness and contentment if he mar- ried Shirley? impatiently he shook off the thought. He was worse than Elise. Why should any man marry at all? Except to do it- once and get it over. to build a sort of wall. He was. he decided, thinking rot. He turned in at his own, gates feeling as if he had escaped from something. He found Shirley. wrapped in the while bath coat. just getting into her, car. Lucy and Valerie stood together in their swimming suite at the running board. A "I only pretended to come for swimming." said Shirley. "As I use GUARDIAN. 7cnARLo'r're'rovvn matter of fact, it was gouip.”' Ma-rk glanced at her quickly. But of course it couldn't be Lucy. It it had. she would have made a' point of seeing himIsione. . "My dear. it's Gilda Rnddiug. You couldn't guess. She's elopodi" "She ran away with the milk- rnani" cried Valerie. She sounded as it were an event in the society column. Mark sat down suddenly on the running board. "Is this a racket?" he asked. "She did, sure enough." said Shirley." "You know how those things go. My maid heard. it from the Radding Cook. She and her mother had a dreedful row over something. Sophie said Gilda cried awfully, and went off to her room. 'Ilhis morning when they took her breakfast up she had gone. leaving the traditional note. She said her young man dealt in milk. Maybe it was getting a bit of her own back. Because she as- sured her mother she was sending the item to all the papers." "I didn't think she had it in her." said Muir. "Poor kid. I al- ways thought she'd be game enough if she could get away from the old lady. I hope he's a good milkrmn." I Mark was somehow glad for Gilda. No matter .how it turned out, lt,was better than life with Mrs. Rndding. He wondered if there was some way to endow Gilda for life without her know- ing wherc the money came from. He would find out about it from Lee Dagnall in a day or two. He was quite serious. He was already taking care of about a half a dozen people who had no idea their.lncomea depended on him. Arranging this was the great- est fun he had ever had with his money. He jumped in beside Shirley and drove with her to his gates. He had gathered in some mysterious way that she had something more to say to him. He was finding out that being a father was more com- plica-ted than he had realiraed. Shirley drew up just this side of the lodge. shut off the engine and sat looking at h-im. He looked back. his eyes full of admiration. There was something so fresh and sweet about her, with her camel- lia skin and blgxEYES about the soft white of her coat. He found he was suddenly un- troubled by whatever she was go- ing to tell him. I gathered there was something on your mind." he said lazily. "I dldn”t want to speak before - Valerie. in case you didn't ap- prove of what I was going to say." "Wbnderous wise-you. I mean." he said softly. Shirley smiled at him. "Rather stupid. really. However. I just want to give a little party for her. And Lucy too. of course. if she cares for anything so juvenile. - Buffer English as n. u. wanna uiasnn. aowjustrunaingaround-wtthtwo grown-ups. Cell bar hi the morn- ing and ask her. I'll tell Lucy 1. What is wrong with this sen- i.snIIce? "She was exceeding kind to us. .2. What is the correct pronune-. iation of ''massage"-. I. which one of these words is misspelled? Fantasia. fastidious. Pareriheit. farcical. 4. What does the word "respon- sive" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with des that means "to profane"? ANSWERS 1. Say. "she was exceedingly kind to ll." 2. Pronounce ma-sazh. both we as in ah. i second syllable. 3. !'Ihrenhelt. 4. Ready or inclined to respond. "You should be more responsive when spoken to" 5. Desecrute. That girl's a wonder. by the way." "I'm glad you tlrlnk so." said Mark. He wondered if she knew how glad. "I do. I'd never known Valeria. She was like I tlghi. pale little bud. Now she's a flower. Almost all the sort of pinched, hungry look is gone. Naturally I don't mean food hungry. I think you were wiser even than you guess- ed." He biased her mentally. "But I think she ought to be knowing some youngster her own age. i wouldn't want to give anything vgfy uy. say six couplm--all boys and girls of people we know. Dinner and a bit of dancing. At my place. of course. Always sup- osing you approve." p "I do. Emphatically. Nobody but you would have bothered. I mean. giving a kid's party can": be Very exciting. I suppose she is too old for her years. She's had sort of a-an unusual brinzins uP- And SERVED Vllfll yimer usrs ssrrtgu: I approve. And bless you. dear."g .. .. ...u-.-ea a 3 n E Ar 1!! ' d ' brigsdier-generrl) iuwltha mgriziah BRAND Army after attempting to betray v West Podntvto the English in the Revolutionary War. awn? Me (Mm! Folks who love Corn Flakes buy Kellogg's as fast as we make 'em. Yes. Kellogfs Corn Flakes are the freshest! are a sweetheart for freshnessl 1 261-mmw Flakes so crisp they rustle out of the box! Sweet as the milk you pour over them! Kellogg's Corn Flakes an . E" R T119 "Pi-Wet" of corn in every crisp bowlful . H. . delicious BAKING SODA - ... we The ants will not climb the legs. here today. was probhma as general hrtemnt through her column. A. very often a good coat or I . . BRUSSELS Au: 2IFmIIIIIeIIII pliable roof paint will prolong the your pamiw fwd t9 "bk mt” 9""33'- E” TTCEWY-Cit TIBPPITF" . . . . M, 0, ..., 01,, mg... hos, .... ...- I . enjoy the best! Get your Kelloggs Corn Flakes today! . -Belgium has decided to 91-00 I other season. , Deserves MOdOl'll EEIQUEHO unit of volunteers. mainly com- Q, now csnrprevent ants from I ' AYLMER . , ' mandos and paratroops. at the dis- ling up onto g table? ' I I 3' 'W'"'' '50 vocal of the United Nations on the my Dip a string in kerosene ah: I Quality . -ev.-e3x.wx.v.., l Korean front. it was announced tie a. place around each table leg A Q. If a girl is carrying a great , . . may packages and meets a men . of her acquaintance on the rtrcet. who offers to carry them. should the give all of them to him! A. If there are many packages. she should give him only the large: and heavier ones. If only two or three packages. she may let him have all of them. ' Q. when writing a business lat- ter in a woman, and one does not know whether she is married or tingle, how should the saluistion if the letter be written? A. As "Dear Madam." - Q. Does etiquette require that- giva her fiance-In engagement THERE IS NO NEED TO A ' HCCEPT ll SUBSTITUTE GIWEB BCIEEI SE10 . rm-mu, Ixire-Seething for Soft Sasuib Skin All. one A. No; this is neither requirei Ior customary. T Quaaaadee: The wear shine lasts longer. Repeated ' cleaning with a mop dampened in clear water does not wash the shine cwqyl saor oven. horas. ans. CHICAGO, Aug. 29 - (AP) - A . hotel credit manager was shot and tilled last night when he called on I meet to disease I 0104 hotel; bill. 9 tuest then killed himself. Dead were William S . 44., the credit mmser. and .10 A. ltlymmid. 35. the guest. ” a Tender But Steel: with rich, nsiuul gravy. It's 4 main dish ;;”W To "73"" . is-4-M-M--' 2.';r.'":.-':.::.::i:"- prepared In I lily. handy. to "ax Tr slsower8.,w1'th bath size mm mum. I I I ml)” vb . Palmolive and you'll are on work or weather gets you down, out thoroughly refresh: 900' ANT" .00 '3'!" step into a soothing Palmolive bash. Cream P-'lm0u"i 0'5! '11 "5" I your whole body with Pslmollva's extra-mild - lather. Soak . . . take is easy . . . let that restful, soothing Palmolive bath calm PAIMOUVI FOR 700! your nerves . . . ease aching muscles . . . I" I Keep your baby bullbjrall - "in ,0” dud mini dun with a daily I . I Md"" Palmolive bath. It's the Vdwm Guest tip-so-toe skin care New Exotic MON” you can give your baby. , T Thatls because Palmolive r- okom of uh II . sums comm 30,9," aw" l"”'I" :',',',',:',",;','f",,I"""'”'”"f mum in. ''''"m.. iensltlve slsinl lam”. Iii! .lI.ssgseuvg- IIIIIIIII. It