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Show PACK TWO THE The Tim(Nws Norma Knlkt Every Thursday at Nephi, Juab County, Utah Published "Come In !" Copyrlfht br the bobbs-MniTt- U Ce. WMJ Service Virginia Bowles AiStotiate Editor Boy E. Gibson A. B. Gibson Publish Editor and Manager Vacations and 13 JtlEALTH By Dr. ERNEST H. LINES AwWIn ltaMNmmTfh Ut mmd CKUf UM OiracMr mm Ct CHILDREN IN SUMMER MONTHS j children, tht summer months are FOR the look forward schoolroom, playtime. Free from the tasks' eagerly to the games and pleasures! of the vacation period. But intelligent and careful planning for the holidays Is as essential for children as for adults. Since ths routine of school health! 1 t. ti is suspooaea, riuu responsibility for health falls on the shoulders where children may pick them up of parents. The Institute of Makers of Explosives' The vacation period of the average reports that 600 children are killed orj dty child is usually spent with adult Injured annually from playing with relatives at summer resorts, at blasting caps. Most of these accid dents occur during the summer! organized camps, or in the I months. city environment. It is the unfortunate children who spend the last type A still greater number of children' of vacation who require the closest are maimed by the explosion of' supervision. firecrackers. Lock-jaand burns arei Don't let thej They should be particularly warned a serious danger. Fourth of July be a reminder that! and heat against ... .... uiia k.. irt ki. nr. against eating foods handled or soma fingers from a firecracker Jby street vendors, and against ths dangers of accident from automobiles. explosion. The most tragio aspect of the child's In short, plan the child's vacation (vacation period is the increased so that it combines the greatest number of avoidable accidents to freedom from the nervous tension of the formal classroom with the highest jehildren due to ths failure of parents jand children to carry on the safety regard for the rules of healthful living waged throughout the and the greatest care to avoid acci-- l joampaign 'school year. dents. Continue the child's regular rest period. If possible, bring the j Although swimming is excellent child close to the lessons of the great exercise for children, particularly outdoors. See to it that, with an jsince it teaches them how to take care abundance of sunlight, air, rest and Jof themselves In the water, care directed recreation, the little citizen should be taken to avoid the pollution goes back to school with a sound jof "the old swimming hole." Children mind and a sound body. who go to summer camps should be examined in advance by the family physician and a record should be sent This is the second of a series of 12 to the camp authorities so they may articles on Vacations and Health. in the child's activities j regulate The third, on Camp Life, will dance with his physical condition. answer the questions: I. What first aid should be administered Explosion for snake bites? X. How should Many accidents to children occur a camp site be selected 7 J. How from the explosion of dynamite caps should firearms be carried? 'left lying around vacant houses, 'summer cottages and other places (Copyrtlbt, 1933. S.Y.U.L Co.) they nuwn I year-roun- w over-exerti- pros-Itratlo- n, i ac-,e- or ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS The late Congress will go down in history as an extraordinary body Its total appropriations were exceeded only by the Wold War congress. Almost without a dissenting oice, it gave up to the president powers and prerogatives it has priced since revolutionary days. It has been the most docile, the most obedient, and the least imaginative congress since the war. A list of its major bills, passed mainly at the request of the President, follows: 1 A bill enabling the President to Inflate currency by forcing the Federal Reserve to buy Government securities, to issue a new currency, to lessen gold content of the dollar up to 50 per cent, to accept silvpr instead of gold, In payment of war debts. A bill giving the President, 2 through a coordinator, wide powers in reorganizing and revising the rail-- , roads of the country. 3 A bill authorizing vast Federal developments in the Tennessee Valley. 4 A bill creating a Civilian Conservation Corps to employ 250,000 otherwise unemployed men In the national forests at $1.00 per day. 5 A bill authorizing the Presid- ent to regulate transactions in credit, currency and other coinage, to place an embargo, in whole or In part, on gold; to forbid the hoarding of gold by any Individual in excess of $100, and to restrict the activities of the Federal Reserve System. 6 A bill authorizing beer, in spite of the Eighteenth Amendment, thru revision of the Volstead Act. 7 A bill initiating a $3,300,000,000 public works program in the interest of employment, to be controlled by the President through a director of public works. 8 A bill to reduce agricultural acreage in production, with compensation to farmers for all land withdrawn from use. 9 A bill giving the President control over industry, with powers to eliminate competition, fix minimum wages and maximum hours of work, regulating production, etc. There were other bills of course, but these are outstanding. Most far reaching of all is the last it has not yet swung into action, and it Is not widely understood. Operation of ihe bill, in relation to particular industries, will be as follows: A trade group will draw up a plan designed to settle wage, price and production adproblems. It will apply to the minister of the bill for authorization to put its agreement into effect. The administrator will then find out ofif the plan meets with the favor most units within the industry. Representatives of labor, and a group of consumers will be consulted. When all has been settled, the agreement will go to the president. If he finds it equitable, he will it. If not, it will have to be re drawn. When industries are unable to agree among themes ves, the President will be able to force a pact on them, by power of a licensing system. The bill will strike directly at "depression born businesses" unhealthy sweat-shopaying employ ees 15 and 20 cents a day and sim-ilianti-sociinstitutions, and v;ill eliminate depression-prolongin- g The competition. danger or weakness in their bill is that it will very likely make it more difficult for the small business to operate, and will favor the more efficient, large business. ps ar al Most encouraging phase of the general business situation is not only that improvment has appeared in basic lines, but that it is being continued. In recent Months there ha-- e been no downs there have been many ups. Recently reported was the sixth consecutive weekly lncrase over 1932 in electric power output and each gain was larger than the one directly preceding it. Car loadings are up during the week ending June 10, they were 12.5 per cent over the same week in 1932. May cotton consumption was close to double that of May of last year. The commodity and security price indexes have shown climbs for several consecutive months. The number of business failures has taken a sharp drop. Iron ore consumption in May reached the highest monthly total since November, 1931. Improvement In employment and wage situation is reported from all parts of the country. The United States is not alone in experiencing signs of recovery. Unemployment In the United Kingdom has declined. Favorable factors predominate in French businesses indexes. Conditions in Spain are fairly satisfactory. Trade optimism persists in Canada. New business activity is appearing in Japan. While economic conditions in New Zeland are dull, prices of export products are showing sharp rises. Prices for Phll-lplexport products have been firm. ne Curing Cro-E- y The National Society for the Prevention of Blindness says that all cases of cross-eye- s are curable If taken in time. Treatment should begin before the sixth year, and preferably before the third year. o Famous Near Bath, Chetnut Tree Northampton county, Pennsylvania, Is a tree traced directly to Washington. It Is considered the largest horse chestnut tree In the state, and Is said to have been sent from Mount Vernon by Washington to General Brown, one of his aides. In NEPHI. UTAH my youth wrestling with nickels and dimes, or the lack of them, when there Is a man waiting to give me everything a girl's heart could desire V "Still up?" Cary'a voice asked outside his door. Cyntkia! -By-- S, "Then you did pay them out of your own money!'' "I did no such thing I" He rose and stood towering above ber. "Didn't you ak me to promise not to and didn't I promise?" In spite of tils new tenderness for Cynthia, In spite of the fact that he knew for the first time what love meant, the old faint hostility was rising between them. When Cynthia's weakness pulled at bis heartstrings, when he would gladly have rushed out and died to save her pain, he was snapping at her In exactly the old quarrelsome way. Nor had Illness quenched Cynthia's smoldering "Are you trying to tell me thut you have run this bouse" "1 most certainly buvel" lie slapped the little pile of bills down before her. "Grocery bill receipted In full; milk, ditto; Tenny's coat, ditto." She fingered the rubber band that held the receipts. "I'm afraid to look at these. I can't believe you've done all that without without " "I give you my word I haven't spent a dollar of my own money," he assured ber. "It's all come out of your own funds. It's been an education to me learning the prices of things." "So valuable to a chemical engineer," she taunted him. "Why not? Cooking as I see It, is, after all, a wholly chemical process. Take, for Instance," he began In an oratorical tone, "the effect of heat on vitamins. In cooking tomatoes " Cynthia, whose look of bewilderment had given away to mirth, laughed until tears ran down her tomatoes " "You and cheeks. she gasped; caught sight of his dark frown and went off Into a series of weak little shrieks. "Geoff, you've done me a lot of good. Will you come in tomorrow and tell me more about the chemistry lessons?" For a week the pleasantest of relationships prevailed between the two. Geoff congratulated himself upon having learned to manage Cynthia. He grew a little arrogant over his present success and thus prepared himself for the fall which Is destined for the haughty. "I'll take over the budget tomorrow," Cynthia said one evening. "I'm quite strong enough now." The new sweetness and gratefulness of her manner persisted. If he Geoff's heart was singing. could just hold himself In check for a little while longer until he had regained some of the ground he had lost with her at first I "I've just got the hang of the thing," he urged now. "Let me keep on with it until after Christmas, at least I've discovered that I'm lots better at this Job than you are. For Instance, you've been buying what Marguerite calls 'stables' in the smallest possible quantities. That's all wrong. By buying In quantity " Cynthia's sweetness and gratefulness vanished. "That shows how much you know about colored help I If I bought buckets Marguelard in rite would simply riot In deep fry-lnAs for soap if there was any way I could buy half a cake at a time, I'd do It! Geoff, listen to me ! I'm grateful to you for taking charge of things while I was III terribly grateful; but that doesn't give you the right to dictate to ma about things you can't possibly understand " Geoff realized that this Interview wasn't going quite as he'd planned but he stuck stubbornly to his guns. "Listen, Cynthia I" He bent forward persuasively. "Just let me try running things for you till Christmas well, until after Thanksgiving anyway. You're not strong yet, you ought to take things easy " Suddenly she yielded, with a sweetness and docility which should have warned him. "Very well, Geoff I Have It your way." She looked pensively Into the fire. "I'm having a guest from New York next week, and It'll give me more Ume to be with him." "The man that wants to marry you?" asked Tenny. "Yes, Tenny, the man that wants to marry me." She gave Geoff a glance of friendly malice. "I hope youll do your best to give us nice meals while he's here. He's a wealthy man, used to every luxury." Geoff went upstairs to his room In a state which bordered on col lapse. This was the first Ume he had thought of Cynthia In connec tion with another man. What a blind idiot he had been, taking It for granted that Cynthia bung like a rosy apple on the bough What a ready for his picking! consummate fool he was to Insist on running the housekeeping! If Cynthia had domestic problems on her mind it was a cinch she wouldn't have much time to devote to the New Yorker. But wait a minute! Maybe all the sordid little money cares would ten-poun- d g. Cary had startling news. "I'm married," he said, without preliminaries. "Married!" Geoff laid his pipe on the table, took his feet down from It and stared at the boy. "Again or yet?" "Again." lie perched sociably on a corner of the table and begsn his explanations. "Cyuthla doesn't approve of the new Mrs. Cary Aylesbury " "You surprise me," was Geoff's somewhat dry comment. Cary remained unperturbed. "When she knows ber, everythlng'U be K. O. Nobody could resist Baby. But here's what I started to tell you. Cynthia saw me riding around with her once or twice and she gave me thunder about It " "Why?" "Well, partly because of the alimony, I guess, and partly because, as 1 said, she doesn't know Baby " "What Is your wife's name?" "Florence Geraldlne McMlchael Aylesbury !" "Help!" "You see! Better rail her Baby-- It's simpler. No.v the point Is. Geoff, I want to bring her home. It's a dead sure thing her people arent going to take us In. They thluk I'm a bum, always getting Jobs and always losing them." "And so you are." Long ago the Indulgent amusement Geoff had first felt toward this brother of Cynthia had departed. Now bis tund acquisition of a wife at a time wheu Uie family was having unusual difficulty In meeting the usual expenses aroused In Geoff an anger which It needed all his to keep In leash. "You expect to support two wives on your present salary? It comes to that, with your alimony to be paid every month." The youthful bridegroom's face clouded. "Say, wouldn't you think that ahe my first wife, you know Wouldn't you think she'd dispense with alimony now I'm married again?" "I wouldn't cherish any hope In that direction. You plan to bring her here, you say self-contr- ol "What else can I do?" Cary demanded. "Her folks will raise h 1 as I Intimated a moment ago. We were married this afternoon but I thought perhaps we'd better wait a day or two." "Lost your nerve?" Geoff asked bltingly. Cary rose to bis feet and stood with his shoulders squared. "No, I haven't! If you must know, I Just began to realize, after we were married, what a deuce of a position I'm putting Baby In. Miss Nonall be sweet to her Miss Nona's always sweet to every one. But Cynthia" The wrath which had been simmering in Geoff's mind burst forth In leaping words now. "Oh Cynthia! You're a little afraid Cynthia may not be 'sweet,' too, are you? You surprise me, Gary! Cynthia leads such a carefree life, she has so little responsibility, the men of her family look after her so splendidly, there's no possible excuse for Cynthia If she isn't 'sweet' about your new wife!" "Good gosh, Geoff!" "You give me a fine, large pain," Geoff went on, glaring at the boy. "Leaning on a girl a girl younger than you are, by the way! the bravest, the strongest, the sweetest child I ever met In my life " Cary cocked his head. "Oho I Sits the wind In that quarter 1" Geoff lost the last remnant of his l. He took Cary by his surprised shoulders, husUed him out Into the hall and shut the door behind him with a vigor which echoed through the entire house. household budget could not bo stretched to take In the second Mrs. Cary Aylesbury and pay alimony besides If Gary lost his present Job and that he would lose It, Geoff thought there was no shadow of doubt. He and Cyuthla were back on their old terms of brisk skirmishing. The girl appeared to delight In commenting adversely on Geoffa management of the household. Geoff was apt to retire moodily to bis own room after such incidents. Did the girl think be liked turning himself Into a combination of petty bookkeeper and bausfrant Had she no realization that It was for her sweet sake that he studied loathly cuts of meat and Juggled the light and gas bills at the end of the month? He remembered longingly the hotel life be had once He bad wanted home despised. life and mother love. Ood knew he had his fill of both now I The evening before Sutton arrived, Geoff and Cynthia found themselves alone In the parlor. "Geoff." said Cynthia sweetly, "I want to speak to you about Mr. Sutton's being here. I'd like te have the meals extra nice. The only way I see Is to draw a little more money from the shop while he la here " "No." Geoff shook his head. "This house Is going to keep within Its usual limits while I'm running It, Sutton? That's easy. I'll charge him board while he Is here." "You'll do no such thing I He's my guest I" "I was your mother's guest, but you charged me board." "That's different, and yon know It! You are here for a year " "A year or a week. It's all one," Geoff declared firmly. "Yon needn't bother about It, Cynthia," he soothed her. "You won't figure la It at all. I'll just draw your friend aside and aay: 'Look here, old deman, I know your mands that you make a financial recompense for all the kindness which Is being showered on you la self-respe- 1933 ooo WOODBURY'S PRODUCTS 50c Woodbury'.FACIAL CREAM 50c CREAM CLEANSING Woodbury. 50c Woodbury's COLD CREAM 50c CREAM TISSUE Woodbury's 50c POWDER FACE Woodbury'. 50c ROUGE Woodbury'. 50c Woodbury'. LIP STICK 25c CREAM COLD (Tube.) Woodbury'. CREAM (tube.) 25c Woodbury. CLEANSING 25c CREAM (Tube.) Woodbury'. FACIAL 25c SOAP Woodbury'. FACIAL 75c Woodbury. FACIAL FRESHENER ASTRINGENT and Woodbury'. SKIN TONIC Woodbury'. LARGE PORE LOTION Woodbury. BLACKHEAD LOTION Woodbury. JERGENS LOTION $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 50c WE RECOMMEND AND FULLY GUARANTEE THESE PRODUCTS Co. Nephi Drug eeeeeeeeeeeee oooo ooeooeoooo eeee e The boys cooking club of the Juab Clubs met at the high school Wednesday. July 5. Mildred Hall and Florence Duckworth were in charge of the class. The boys were taught how to cook cereals of various kinds. 4-- H The members ofi the Senior ClevClover Club met Monday July 3, at the high school building. The itme was spent in preparing and in serving a luncheon to the following: Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Smith, Mrs. WaKer Anderson, Mrs. Louis Garrett, Mrs. Helen Burton, Mrs. P. B. Cowan, Mrs. Ernest Foote, Mrs. Heber McPherson, Mrs. P. J. Sanders. Mrs. Jack Wrigt, Mrs. Robert Garrett, Mrs. Verno Boswell, Mrs. Joseph Vickers and the members of er the e D.U.P.NEWS ews class. No Mistaking This Frequently the sign "Please" suffices to keep people from crossing one's lawn, but a certain suburbanite didn't find It so. Finally he had to put up the notice: "Please keep off the grass. Who, me? Yes, you." A biographical sketch of Ann R. Paxman will be given by Mrs. Geo. rge McCune before members of the Salt Crk Camp of the D. U. P. when they meet at her home Thursday evening, July 13. The remainder of the program will be as follows: Musical selection, Herman and James McCune; reading, Mrs. Leeta M. Squire; musical selection, Herman and James McCune. The time of the meeting has been advanced one day because because of the Mt. Nebo program Friday evening. The Fort Wall camp of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers will hold their regular meeting in the South Ward RAelief Society hall Friday, July 14, at 2:30 P. M. Mrs. Emma Memmott will discuss the trail, and an Interesting program will be fur nished by early pioneers of I. south ward, who will rcaite earl; pioneer experiences. The regular meeting of Camp Birch, Daughters of Utah Pioneers will be held at the home of Mrs. Luella Ostler, Thursday, July 13. The history of Thomas Worthing ton and his wife, Susan Pass will be Boston Transcript given by a descendant at the meeting. A program as follows will be Worth-IngftoLibrary Arrangement Lesson, Books were not' always stored presented: vocal duet, Sylvia Delia Ostler vertically. The Romans kept their and Zella Cazier; reading, Alan scrolls on shelves or In boxes. Re- Ostler; vocal solo, Lulu Worthlng-ton- ; reading, Ellen Blackett; vocal ligions books, too bulky, were laid sldewlse. But with smaller books, duet, Will Worthlngton and daughbetter bindings, and the practice of ters. putting Utles on the backs we got Land That Never-Neve- r our vertical habit of storing. Utopia will always remain the Ideal because we shall never get Or He Wat Spiked It Is said that the ancient Greeks there. It adds to our happiness to Is beyond played a game much like our foot- have something that saves ball. So, maybe Achilles sulked reach. The unattainable In hi tent because he was ordered us from disillusionment. Toledo Blade. off the field by the referee. n; "You're Quite Capable of 8aylng Just Those Words to Mr. 8utton." this house. I think the rate of sixty dollars a month will be right" "I hate you," Cynthia remarked calmly. "I've known all along that I disliked you, but It's only tonight I realize what poslUve hatred I feel toward you. You're quite capable of saying Just those words to Mr. Sutton." "You're darn' right I am," he assured her. "Who is this Suttoa that his sensitive ears must not be affronted by talk of money?" "Very well!" She turned on ber heeL "Ask him to pay board I I'm sure hsfll be entertained at the conspectacle of a husky cerning himself with chuck roasts and the price of nut butter. It's even aroused my r admiration." That stung, si she meant It to do, but he kept his bland smile. "Now that that's settled, shall we talk of something else? Baby, for example. Do you know, Cynthia, I begin to believe Cary hasn't done so badly for himself after all. A clinging vine sometimes holds up CHAPTER IX what It encircles." She swallowed. I've "Geoff, Discord. TJABY arrived today," Geoff meant to ask you how did Cary wrote to his mother the next get the money to pay his alimony? morning. "I feel as though I There's no record of fifty dollars " ought to add : Mother and child do- being taken out of the shop He hunted frantically for a plausing welL She's about what you'd expect In a girl that would be will- ible explanaUon; began several, faltered under her clear gase and ing to marry Cary Aylesbury! 'Til say one thing for the Carys. stopped. "You paid It!" She swallowed an emerBreeding certainly tells-Ithen came blinked, rapidly, again Miss Nona this. like and gency Cynthia welcomed her as cordially close to him and shook his arm as though she'd arrived with pig- frantically. "Do you wonder I hate skin bags and the scent of orange you?" she demanded, and ran from blossoms still In her hair. They the rooj -(To Be Continued) were all broken up, of course, about the marriage. I'm free to admit I ducked telling them. When I came Riches home at night, the bride was sitting There Is a greater thing on earth stiffly In the parlor and Cynthia was being heavenly good to her, than riches. With It, the poor man Is rich, the rich man Is poor. Begwhile Cary, the fatuous Idiot! gars msy possess It, It Is not to beamed as though he'd done something clever. Take It all together It be bought by kings. The greatest was a thoroughly characteristic thing In sTl the world Is lore. Charles Halman Cary situation. "When the 'millionaire' he was born In Boston and now lives In New York, by the way arrives, our Writing on Photograph little household will be complete. Before writing on a glossy-finis- h Better add yourself to the party photograph with Ink, sprinkle taland laugh yourself sick!" cum powder on the picture and shake It off. The Ink will tend to As the Ume of Ben Sutton's ar rival approached, however, Geoff's adhere and will not have the tenH. Waters dency to draw up In spots. Popu- Mrs. J. enjoyment of the situation notice President Mechanics lar Magazine. It occurred ably diminished. THE Newhouse Hotel six-foot- SALT LAKE CITY IN THE CENTER OF THINGS - self-contro- n July 6, Thursday, him suddenly that Cary'a marriage bar sent ber scooting Into bis might be the determining factor la arms! Mah she'd say to br-el- f Cynthia's plans. They could not go : "What's the use of my spend-taf- f eo Indefinitely as they were. The Oh Entered In the Poet Office at Nephl, Utah, as second class mall matter under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 TIMES-NEW- What A First Class Hotel Should Offer. CHAT 13 With all its complete efficient services, the Newhouse Hotel offers the greatest hotel value in Salt Lake City. We have enjoyed the patronage of the Intermountaln West's nidustrial and social leaders In fact all . . . who truly appreciate the pleasant atmosphere of service that permeates our every ... portal. Offering Fallowing Special Intermountain Double Rate Single Rate Plus 50c $2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 $2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 4.50 Outside Rooms Each with Private Bath oarare Faculties Adjonlng Single Double All XL1 HOTEL NEWHOUSE it W. E. Sutton Genl Mgr. Channcey W. West Ass't Genl Mgr. |