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Show UINTAH EASIN' RECORD ESusi ter 'k Communication j!y 1833, Oregon was con-- of Union by act of ea- was action I il, fS this L until act. 1 transmitted to St. carried Vgraph and was to San Z o, go them, however of the the passage Overland mail hv 14 It 10. March on k Another It Ahe'new state. in to.Ox. ,5V steamer there on March For Small Son's Suit Two Happy Endings' Oregon, and parwas to bo S edtLlem, which A Bit of Embroidery li British Girl ADVENTURERS' CLUB Tex Bitter Shuns Horse lly Virginia Vale 'THEYVE been having I happy ending with Idiots trouble, into messenger Hello Salem, too well when the picture was previewed, so another ending had been was prepared, to be used if enthusiasU-Ime- d armal was Thus four distinct communication . relajmg continent jje other the news better than the audiences liked it original one. pre-relea- Now that Vivien Leigh is schedto shoot into stardom (if Gone uled hotels With the Wind turns out well for her), some of the pictures in which .I'.'.SfTAM CI she appeared in England will be ret lh - rTTtVAUA. .tap leased again over here. n4 nPN Renos largest Meanwhile we have the word of ,tL Cwl Ernie VVestmore, the demon makerHoUIPMENT up man, that another girl from the and chairs. file. British isles will burn up Holly, aB inch's, safes, Her name is Maureen ' di 3f Broadway, Sail Lake wood." Ollara, for screen purposes; in real t 1 'k TRUSSES Hospital Supplies, ol Abdominal Sup- - Kf." 18?1' a tlaff memher of the Springfield (i ass.) 1 ill LA training school invented a new game by corral tng two peach baskets , a soccer ball and a smooth floor. That man was Dr. James A. haismilh , note a professor m 6 L'nkersi,y f Kansas. Basketball , now played by dl), 000,000 people each year , got its real start at Lawrence, Kon. A member of the first girls team, organised there, was the future Mrs. ftaismilh, note deceased. The parents of this remarkable game are shown above, in 1928. ld ... Stockings r, M Dri7 n!n "t.h OCMIfccc - it in Sfi rv r fTcRIAM FREEZERS l.rSICElie Cream CREAM ' Learn -- Cradua'es in demand Visitor Paf Diy ernd Nipht 246 College, ffpitern Electrical s rffU Sait Lake fV.it mineral Free jiforaatMm t vented. cc J H i $LM.Ju..ccc.cf-.c- jH .. Pom-me- r, full-sleev- -- Wa.S474, S SaMJl&tt PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTO-KRAF- ECONOMY ...... Developed with - - - - - Roll Any i'ity Prints i Punts Vrap T FILM SERVICE 25c 3c and film carefully com DRUGS PFOTO KRAFT-- Box Salt Lake City. 749 Utah BALT Week No. 390$ i ua ?el of Powder Air Instead Used s LAKE ng air instead of powder their shells were used by ited States in the Spanish-- f in war. Fir, King Tree Douglas i most valuable tree in the commercially is the Douglas Inch for this reason is called I Mr. is approved baby chicks hfborni - Rtdi c and others Delivered Fresh Government and Stats pcrvwion for Your Brooder. feeders, protection. Etc. Waterers, PERIOR TURKEY POULT3 or wire for free circular and prices tched Right ew under r lt Hampshire Rocks ' THE Cooperating In NATIONAL POULTRY IMPROVEMENT PUN fAMSHAW HATCHERIES 187 South Slate Street ut Lake llty, Utah SALT LAKES Most Distinguished Apartment Hotel The belvedere 29 So. State ACTIVE TES BY jT.WEEK Street , " I s4&4 u Nfe fh ftr I; e, I - ' To our horror the chain was running wild. on the morning that the storm subsided, gear and began to hoist them aboard. rrv-mu- ar A Choppy Sea Made Footing George Rafts departure from Paramount was not exactly unexpected. It came as a result of his refusal to play the lead in Magnificent Fraud. Lloyd Nolan has formed the habit of stepping into the parts that Raft doesn't want, so rv he did it this time. Last August, .BiWMuiin lyr'irs when Raft refused a role in St. same the thing Louis Blues, Basketball now attracts more fans v a rifiir than baseball or football . Ned Irish (inset), who is this growth Partly responsible for Madison Yorks Square Garden teams to New To this desk came a touching sto- brings big college Fordham-Nethe taken was during above photo ry about a cocker spaniel named each year. The when 10,074 people in January, 1936, Rudy, given to Tommy Riggs York university game Vallee a year ago. Ac- attended. This till established a new attendance record. morning, midMonday morning until at least interviewing ttern f Maple night Monday night j. the material Pattern of maple ia the them and preparing broadcasts. his for under the ?,forminK and , to break through. ODDS AD f VIS Cahrirl Ilcnttcr uidic Hml he could gel another fiieit at S,cam Railway I! e, the People" n hod attract 1 8 "im railway to curry for listener a I ortt Mooney di many utn rs was tie Stockton Hijit alone utlh the annmimemint tl s n In England, opened In the Gone II till the U imf tier, comet V utter Lonnolh, ' A mwwwyawv 3 wU From old to new. Above: a photo of the famous first gtrlt basketball team at Kansat university. Right i a symbol of the games growth, a sign on the Gar den's marquee i d fJ TO " T iCU Hball, SO. . T u y , V' Copyright W Jcc, 1 the information that m ho u m tinned long og. lion t lie and lied hi option txpind. 1,irr,st nf tho rh!,P- - the cast; . . . rather tired of the ti hole thing makan 0t 40, Juiiinie (amey't istr ha bun test ing exrithnt rnnrien Newi-uir Unlow. it, Wisti 11 S'hVV116 '- su gl By that time, all three of them were pretty tired. The chain, with its big ten and a half inch Links, was heavy. The sea was still choppy, making their footing none too sure. But they worked away at the port chain until the coil rose high In the locker. Finally the chain stopped coming in. They could tell by the size of their coil that the anchor was up and out of the water and ready to be heaved on deck. The three lads had stopped work, and leaning, each in a different comer of the cramped locker, bracing themselves against the, pitching and tossing of the ship. We were waiting for orders to go back up on deck, says Jim, but the order was slow In coming. Imagine our surprise when we saw the anchor chain begin to pay out again. It moved slowly at first, and then quite rapidly. After several seconds of watching it increased its speed, we realized to oar horror that the chain was running wild! And those lads had good reason to be horrified. Great loops of heavy chain began whipping in loDg swings, striking the sides of the locker. Faster and faster it went, and wldeT and wider were the loops that lashed out on all sides. If it hit us, It It was swinging with terrific force, says Jim. vould break our bones like cardboard, or crush our skulls as If they vere egg shells. And there we stood, not daring to move out of our corners wondering when the flying mesh of steel was going to whip in after us wondering when a chance lurch of the ship was going to throw us oft balance out into the path of that whirling mass of metaL The Noise of the Links Was Like a Death Knell. J i r team at Kansas Dr. Nahmith't first 1 uniirrsitr. Bees Will Overeat There's a good reason why bees do not sting while swcrrlng. Be fore leaving the hive they gorge themselves with honey. Like a man who has overeaten, they're too stuffed and sleepy to mind disturbances. Bees swarm, or leave the old hive, when crowded out by bees hatched that spring. In each swarming, worker bees cluster around the queen bee to protect her each time she lights. Thus, ty cornering the queen, the whole hive can be eaplured. W.NU If Your Sore, Scratchy Throat You Can Comes from a Cold Often Get Fast Relief this Way Insecure. The din was terrific. Our prison was small, and we could feel the wind on our faces as the chain flew by. In wider and wider arcs it swung. The links, as they hit the walls, sounded like the beats of a death knell to all of us. I wanted to faint, but I didn't dare. Powerless to do any. thing at all, I kept my mind on the one thing that might save me standing right where I was in the scant protection the corner of the room afforded me. Loop after loop whipped its way around the Dttle hx ker and spun on up through the bole In the top. Only a few more of those loops to go now. Then theyd all be safe. Jim watchrd those last few loops go, and breathed a prayer of thanksgiving. They WERE safe. Over In their own corners stood While and Piercy, chalky-facebut unhurt. Then they called to the officers up on deck, who by that time, doubted If any of them were alive. The cause of the trouble, they had found, had been Old Man Neptune himself. A roll of the ship had thrown over the anchor chock, and another roll had caused the engineer to slip and throw the anchor winch out of gear. The anchor had to be raised again, says Jim, but we werent sent down to lay the chain. The next three men had better luck than we did. ' I the crew rigged an emergency Thats where Jim Evrard comes into the story. Jim was a , radio operator, but in a pinch, aboard ship, everybody turns to and lends a hand. And Jim was sent down into the chain lockers with a lad named Fiercy and another lad named White, to lay anchor chain. I guess that sort of calls for a word of explanation. The chain lockers on the Hatteras were a couple of rooms eight feet square, just below deck, up at the bow of the ship. They were used, of course, to stow the anchor chains In while they were not In use. Up on the deck, a big winch was hauling in the starboard anchor, and as the chain came In, it was passed through a hole in the deck, down into the chain locker. Well, sir, If that chain were just allowed to lie In the locker any way it landed, it would tangle and snarl next time the anchor was dropped. It had to be laid in a neat coil as it came down, and thats what Jim, and Piercy, and White were doing down there that fateful February day that Old Lady Adventure had picked out to give three sailors the scare of their lives. things tough for her imitators. y p F K himself doesnt . , to be a new hair cut for the ladies, named for Ina Claire; it will be launched with tons of publicity. Of course, Miss Claire has the kmd of hair that will take and and can hold any kmd of hair-do- , have it whipped into shape by an expert three or four times a week, or even every day, which makes by Rudy cording to this little tale from the alpress representative, the dog Saturto the listened Riggs ways to day night air shows. It began pine in a corner when a dog character was introduced on the program, not knowing that the dog was played by Brad Barker, an animal imitator. And, ran the story, a doctor friend claimed that, when of R'ggs died the next day, It was Rudy because of the nearest thing to a broken heart that he had ever seen in an animal. That doctor should have consulted the elevator boy in Riggs apartment hotel, who confided to me the fact that the dog died of distemper. But distemper doesnt make a lout liing little story for press agents. making his clothes and trimming them with little touches of embroidery. Do you think he is too old for this? B. II. You still have a year or so if you keep the suits smart and boyish. I am sketching an embroidered trimming idea for you here. The thread should match the color of the trousers. Mark an outline for the embroidery with pencil as at A. Work over this with tiny chain stitches as at B; then make larger chain or loop stitches as at C and D. Mrs. Spears Sewing Book 2, Gifts, Novelties and Embroideries, contains 43 pages of directions which have helped thousands of women. If your home is your hobby you will also want Book 1 SEWING, for the Home Decorator. Order by number, enclosing 25 cents for each book. If you order both, a crazy-qui- lt leaflet with 36 authentic patchwoik stitches will be included free. Address Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St , Chicago, 111. step-byste- Theres ing them. If Elman look out hell need something more than a hobby to prolong his. Since none of his Hobby Lobby guests arrive In New York before Monday he works from nine oclock t - I ? 4, Tex Ritter, Monograms singing cowboy, is on a two months personal appearance tour, with four members of the musical unit used in his pictures. They are traveling by car, with Tex in his trailer, and expect to stop in 52 towns before they return to the studio and another series of westerns. Got nny hobbies? Dave Elman, conductor of Hobby Lobby, declares that, according to statistics, the life of modern man Is prolonged for several years through intellicultivatgent use of leisure time in month J 1 4 ' Here is basketballs first team, at Springfield, Mass. VIVIEN LEIGH There are nine players, life Its Maureen Fitzsimmons. She whose number was later rehails from Dublin, is 18 years old, duced to five. Below is an artists conception of the and is the discovery of Erich discoverer of Marlene Dieb first game, played in black, rich. She is working in London in wool jerseys. the new Charles Laughton picture, with long trousers. Note the "Jamaica Inn as Laughtons lead- ball retriever standing on ing lady. the ladder beside the basket. wool And YcJPc. iruaranteed. Bldg.. " gave fttsirfc 7 u Semce. lenaes. Satisfaction 4 f . 1 REPAIRED Boaton bill Once the anchors were down, they had to stay down until the storm was over. While the gale was raging, the ship pitched and rolled so vioIenUy that it would have been dangerous to try to pull them up. But i jfcv' Sr U Tour broken wallowing the ships the point. been, Jim When Morning Came the Storm Subsided. , ? rad;ojchool prirrv "iL SHOP Jlycjf w ffJM 1TE GLASSES mid-ocea- n cccccccc yr w I cabinets Carbonators. Steam term.. ncoiuhlioned equipment Manufacturers CO 1 aka Salt C.ty Efi bad storm that had wrecked her steering gear and left her The captain had dropped both of helplessly in three-toanchors. They helped very litUe but thats beside The point is that those anchors were down. If they hadnt would have had no adventure. He'd have won no wed have had no story. ( j1"" stool,, f yarns in this column sir, weve about strong men who have been in danger of being crushed' to death by huge snakes twenty or thirty feet long, but Jim Evrard of Brooklyn, N. Y., went up against the of all the reptiles. Jims snake was three hundred and sixty feet long. It was made of solid steel links ten and a half inches long and five inches vide. It was the great steamer and when you get anchor chain of an ocean-goin- g one of those babies wrrapped around your neck, theyre worse than any python or boa constrictor that ever lived. It was on February 5. 1918, on the army cargo transport U. S. S. Hatteras that it happened. Jim Evrard had joined the navy as a radio operator in 1917, and here he was on the Hatteras, somewhere out in the Atlantic ocean. The Hatteras had sailed a wreek or so before, from Hampton Roads, Va. A few days out of port she had run into a tcn-doll- COUN-- and I ? The Iron Serpent 99 everybody: had two or three great-grand-dad- rxiUimf t-- -- 'TT.nmmts 4 Delight. In the play, the hero and heroine day the long prepared to die together. But carried by a that didnt seem to work out reaching same was 1 HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI By RCTII WYETII SPEARS MRS. SPEARS: Those FAEAR k- -' pages of embroidery stitche3 in your Book 2 have interested me greatly. I can never remember from time to time how to do even feather stitching. It is ingenious the way you show how to make each kind of stitch, and I turn to your book often. I have a small son now four and a half year3 old, and have always enjoyed 1. To pam pain And discomfort and re dure fever take 2 liAjrer TnbletA drink a gl aaa of WAtr. 2. If throAt is raw from cold, crunh And diwolve J Bayer I lets la Vt gin 8 ol water . . gargle Just Make Sure You Use Genuine BAYER Aspirin The simple way pktuird above often brings amazingly fist relit f from discomfort and sore throat accompanying colds. see your doctor. Try it. 'I lien lie probably will tell you to continue with Bayer Aspirin because it afij fast to relieve discomforts of a cold. Ant reduce fever. 'Ibis simple way, backed by scientific authority, his largely supplanted the use of strong medicines in easing cold symptoms. Perhaps the easiest way yet discovered. But get genuine BAYLR Aspirm. 15 C U TABLETS 2 FULL DOZEN 2S Without Progress Leisure without books is death, burial alive. Scnoca. OUT OF SCUTS? Here la Amazing Relief for Due to &luggtah Bowels Conditions k IftiMu J fu M' Utfr.UX..y Il.tKurit e MK If yo CO,, I. till IJ Mflitt. rlaKHl WHS conrtllM'l n t ttiout .a tl HqliU- -i ind It e l jrsliHM. Ink nil laTiittvr 1 l. V lat-- L'i to . r r. it leUlMl fin- - m l.u us. Ve wlU !!'. i, MilTht toil?, , UUU VS CARRY ef t it R'vrsr QUICK RELIEF rnu firm Service. Meaning of Name Gratia The came Gratia is a contraction of the Lat'n Graliana, meaning of exceeding grace. The Latin root of the word may mean not only esgrace but divine favor, or kindness thankfulteem, ness. The Italian forms Graziosa, gracious, and Graziella, thankful." come from the same root, and little graceful Gracicnne means one. It will be observed that grace may have both a physical and spiritual interpretation. St. Gratia was an early virgin martyr. -t OEUJ IQEflS Advertisemfnts to modem living They bring you txlnys NfcAVS about the food you eat and the clothes you wear, the stores you vimt end the home yru live in Factories everywhere ere turning out new end interesting jircxhiita And the pUce to fin ! out shout in thee new thing 1 u nht furs ore column this tiewipnper, filled with imputmt me you thoulJ rent. ore your gaido |