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Show LEW FREE PRESS, LEHI. UTAH By Charles Sughroe TC T TI?T? Tl CTinJ UUVjil laj UU LTliHUHU VJ U1U MiXJiiJ - FARM Much new process of being dnUnli- i- of lakes and mZL uiuiargue, me delta of n which bas an area f square miles, in Franc ,i LANDTiSTj .1 fJ IT IS... MERE It LAMItKN i 'By gloves are NOW thatforwash everyday use, OUSQ Baron Lydi Le so home-launde- Tod Swimming Sensation " fa'- it r - y- Mi I - V.: ChiAdolpli Klefer, sixteeu-yeur-olcago high school boy, won back for America the world's record for the back stroke held by Toshio Arjle, of Japan, whose time was 5:42. The Chicago boy wound up the 4(H) meters In &:18.X Photograph shows Adolpb Klefer, who set record to win back title for United States, and later set a new world's record In the back stroke, clipping almost a full minute off the old record of C :4S.5. Klefer's time was 0:02.4. d remain, is that Never since tlie Pred Scott case were the findings of the Riirene court more anxiously awaited than In the gold clause case. The state of uncertainty pending the decision caused business to slow uu and T9 the security market r v fl to move at a snail's pace. When the decision which split the court, five to four, was finally announced, a wave of optimism swept over the markets. and for a brief time business was buoyant with hope. Securities advanced, and we seemed destined to advance more speedily toward recovery. All of a sudden something happened. The security markets slipped back Into their old rut, most of the advance gained before the decision and immediately afterwards was lost, and business assumed Its normal pace again. What really happened was that the public mind suddenly awakened to the fact that the decision In favor of the government left things much as they were before. Had the decision been against the government, something serious La l'tt.'ii 1. LEONARD A. BARRETT h f-- T 6i Decision By WNU Servtc. 0. Bell Syndlcat 1 The Gold Clause Walker have finger seams straight when putting them on for the first time afterwards. If once they are drawn on crooked the seams will refuse to straighten out. A glove with finger seams crooked does not dress the hand welL The style Is lost by such carelessness. and are often In style suited to dress wear, It Is part of a woman's province to know the best way to launder them. Wash kid and fabric jloves are the regulaThere are tion types to also certain glace kids that are It washable, and many suede gloves. is such a thrifty convenience to be able to have clean gloves at one's disposal Just for the washing. Fabric gloves will dry very quickly If hung over a radiator or by a heater. Wash kid of any sort should be dried more slowly. Do not use a harsh, but a mild white soap or white soap flakes. The matter of special Importance when washing kid gloves Is not to rinse every bit of soap out of them. It Is well to rinse out the wash water, and then rinse In slightly soapy water that Is pure and clean. The reason for letting some of the soap 400-niet- there Is a certain amount of oil In skin, and the kid will look its best only when some remains in It This is true of wool. So when washing woolen gloves remember to rinse thera also, In slightly soapy water. VToolen I 400-niet- Handwear. IV4 L1' - s. It Problems and Progress that problems make life Is said more Interesting, thnt without them existence would be dull. It certainly Is true that overcoming and surmounting obstacles, and solving problems correctly, give one a feeling of assurance of ability, and courage to advance. They are like milestones marking progress on the climb to reach the goal of high aims. ' f :i U.. Hit ;-- M suit of French origin. Pollu blue, chiffon Shetland Is knitted In a tesselated fashion for the open-froJacket with a moss stitch border and In panneled ribbing for the Bkirt. To Do a Good Puttying Job The blouse Is bluish pink delustered Putty should not be applied to cracks crepe floss ribbed and d and nail holes until after the first, or crocheted and corded bonnet priming, coat of paint, as the wood will absorb the oil and dry the putty, causing It to crumble and fall out would doubtless have happened, like bankruptcy of the railroads, etc. In brief, what was the Intent of the decision! Just this that a gold clause In a business agreement "deprives conBY ARNOLD gress of Its Constitutional rights to regulate the value of money." The government on the other hand, which Itself placed the gold clause In federal bonds, must regard them as valid. The paramount question before the court was whether congress had the power to alter the established value of the dollar. Whether the action of congress had been wise or for the best was not the question. It was wholly a question of right or power. If congress should exercise Its power In devaluating the dollar to the point of making any scrap of paper legal tender, the results would undoubtedly be worse than serious. So far no one has suffered because of the deflated dollar; not even the person who carried the suit to the Supreme court The real question Is, how far can we trust congress not to misuse Its power? . A three-piec- A M.INUTE I AMAZE SCIENTIFACTS ZX. -- electric light cure Th& NEW DESIGN CON TROLS THE SET OF SAILS AND PREVENTS BALLOONING, Ordinary Electric REDUCING OF WIND mm wa i I wsjm W w I r n. r m w i f fain m " LOSS OP THE FORCE ON THE SAILS. Ttr-- j" t: I f in SAILS A LIGHTS HAVE BEEN FOUND TO AID IN THE CURE CP RICKETS. ia . Something new Meteoric growth- Meteors FALLING the earth Surface would ado a layer m WttftlLllONAJtS, WNU earvlca, ON d u wwms. upumi car.dDo ,pH teMet-proo- f proof Ca't If tipped over. line for baru. feed kU. Borage u Ught of a Thousand t See your hardwar or hoiuefnn,un. er. If b doesn't handle. THE COLEMAN LAMP O STOVE cn MpC HUB, WleUlU, aau . 'La.Ajif.lea. Calif.; tomtu, Ontario, Canada. .ndVfa, toSh Snake. In a battle Kill Eacb OtW between a cobr m a mamba In London both wert K verely bitten, the niamba belnj n. first to succumb, and the cobra J, Ing while trying to swallow in enemy, each failing other's venom. victim to tin Will 10 buy anything chit givei more pleasure and satisfaction than a packet of flivver seeds especially if they're dependable and frtsbt FERRY'S Purebred SEEDS have a record of depend- 75-ye- Their freshness is assured by the date on every packet. ability. Choose wisely choose FERRY'S, from the convenient FERRY SEED RACK at a nearby store. Vegetable 5 JQi Most Flowers ai if e BAECIMG RESULTS Rev. Samuel Dunham of Binghutnton, N. Y., oldest living Yale graduate and believed to be the oldest clergyman In the United States, recently celebrated his one hundredth birthday. Mr. Dunham, founder and pastor emeritus of the West Presbyterian church in said that at one hundred, life isn't much different than at fifty. His principal wish, be said, is to live to be one hundred and five, at which age his mother died. Waits 39 Years to File Damage Action Ohio. Lisbon, or perfect Service Forced. France, Italy, Poland and some of the Balkan states do not recognize naturalizatian of their subjects abroad, and If they return to their native land must serve the requisite military terms. Incidentally, France is possibly the most difiicult of all countries in which for a foreigner to become naturalized. A specified number of years, residence Is required; and police make a careful Investigation of the public and private life of the applicant. On top of these the applicant is considered on his general education and whether G. F. Mason, Bing-hampto- u farmer who lives near here, Is a patient man, but he thinks 30 years is quite a spell to wait for court action. Back In 1S!X5, the common pleas court here Issued a restraining or der against the county and county Infirmary, to prevent the pollution of Cold Run, a small stream which runs through Mason's farm. But nothing much was done. So a few days ago, Mason filed a petition In court asking $1,000 for stream pollution. ""JWWKiwfiejwjjji "Printi" Identify Wood Ogden, Utah Identification of any piece of lumber can be made as positive through "wood prints" distinctive characteristics revealed through Its structure and annual rings as the Identification of human beings through fingerprints, according to C. L. Fors-Hn- g of the United States forestry service. ism Suffered From Tetter on Hands Relieved by Cuticura Readin', Writin', 'Rithmetk-Mcd- ern Way s i S "2 . all the "I tried different time. remedies, b a ft they failed, so I sent for Oinand sample of Cuticura Soap more and after tment I dirty-lookin- i"i 1 t "I suffered for two or three years with tetter on my hands. If I any work they would bleed ondW; come Irritated, and I could not betf to put them in, water. They were g purchased . Western Newspaper Union. -- Ati; P. Girl General Manager of Airport in Alaska McOrath, Alaska. General manager of the McOrath airport Is Miss Helen Koenlg. eighteen, dark, slender, part Eskimo girl. In winter she Is out to the field in early dawn, clad. In Maer and riding breeches, tendln? flrepots thnt warm the motors from the 30 to 40 degrees below r.pro tern She handles all freight peratures. moved by the planes, hauling It to the airport by dog sled in winter. In summer, when ships land on the river, she uses a smatl motor boat Helen Is saving her money to attcn I Alaska college at Fairbanks. Bight iBtoJaylGie plenty Was of iight for every outdoor T. 19 job at nieht in every lunj "S.SS tCIJ.Jt d e drop-stitche- I orous tests, Eu- - official or quasi official post tor ten of of tide emigration he years after naturalization. rtiean workers to the LVited States ha rtflnltelv been halted, statistics on file with the American consulate serv Creates New Instrument ice in I'aris revealed, as legislation was to Produce Rustic Music for being presented in Washington Wis A three-tineLake. near on Immigration, further restriction can and a piece of milk a savs William Parker In the Chicago nltchfork. chance recently with combined wire Herald Examiner. creOnlv 412 oermits of a total of 3.0SC In the hands of George Himes to for 1'rench new instrument a producing for ate the under available quota rustic melody. citizens were granted in liKil. ma Himes. while mending farm The fisures Indicated 19.S4 would, ior wire of a piece tightened riiniiinrison. have to be placed along chinery, over a milk can with a three-tineside the year of 1S21 when only C;3 foreign-borpersons entered Amer pitchfork. He happened to touch the wire and was pleased with the musilea to make It their future home. Since high tide In Immigration was cal sound It made. Exneriments resulted In the follow reached in UXI7, under stimulus of the first Russian revolution when 2Sr,349 ing arrangement, on which he has ap- foreigners entered the United States Dlied for a patent: One end of a as permanent residents, there has been wire Is attached to the fork handle. a gradual decline. the other end to the middle tine. The fork handle is Inserted In a slot In Quotas Not Filled. the bottom of the can to keep it from In lt)o3 due to deportations, almost sliding. Himes then fastens one tine as many aliens were debarred or de- In a loop attached to his chest He draws a violin bow across the wire ported as were admitted. Of late years, due to the American with one hand while sliding a cigar the box up and down It with the other to immigration act of March 2, l'.i-quotas of France, Belgium and Switz- vary the tone. erland have not been filled. In UW0, Belgium had a quota of 1,304, yet Yale's Oldest Alumnus 1,178 of this total was unused; France had a quota of 3.0S0 and only 2S0 French decided America would be a better place In which to live. The years of the depression In America saw thousands of foreigners go back to their land of nativity, In an comparable with the early years of the World war when patriot-Issent back a great number of Euro peans who had gone to the United States to live. Those who have come back since the depression have found themselves facing terms in the army. I'arii-T- Military tU7 and reason of language could be by Deportations Nearly Equal tempera'"''' be assimiliated into me After passing mese rig r.ice Admissions in 1933. no new citizen can hold ebb-tid- 1 Color Banishes Blues The chuuees are that your bouse has an attack of the blues now that the holiday decorations are stored away. It's many weeks yet till time for summer furnishings. A new cout of color for breakfast nook furniture, end tables or other Incidental furniture will brighten your whole household through the remaining winter months. After Laundering. It is not necessary to Iron fabric Pull fingers straight and gloves. smooth, and smooth out back, front, and wrists. When on the hand the gloves will smooth completely unless they have been creased in wringing, and these marks hnve been allowed to remain. The best result with kid gloves la obtained when they are very carefully put on before becoming absolutely dry. Put them on Just as carefully as the glove fitter In a store would when trying thera on. Whatever type of glove you launder, be sure to 5- - 1 500-met- The Important point to remember when washing woolen mittens or gloves is to keep the wash water and the rinse water of approximately the same Avoid rinsing In cold temperature. water after washing In hot. This shrinks gloves. A medium temperature at all times Is advisable, except when gloves are too large and should be Allow time to dry woolen shrunk. handwear and have a good circulation of air about the gloves, If possible. Cotton gloves can be washed In either hot or cold water and be dried alowly or rapidly to suit the convenience of the wearer. Silk can be treated with similar freedom. It Is advisable not to dry silk in the sun. The rays are apt to yellow silk. Suit Three-Piec- e Immigration Into U.S. At Standstill 1 ih ;' Soap using one cake of Cuticura Ointment and one box of Cuticura relieved. my hand3 were entirely R (Signed) Miss Mary Tratt, New Market, Tefin. and Soap. 25c. Ointment 25c r:'' : sample each free. Address: cura Laboratories, Dept R, Maiae. Xlass." Adv. A, 4 ARE YOU RUNDOWN? -- AS Anna Riiss.-i- i Th... mottnul of teaching same time they Urn whi JHiTCT . , . ' Mrs. ' pi'and nluZT' u lZo T"" St'"r Mo- ;, '' Her little m nil d im , 'S , , m.rimractured money In the frm ,,f cnl s gns nrc post,,, ah,It tl;P roon,. T r c chan.lng prices nd to replace the s.o k - has hit Z 521 P"n this X "iS,al,ed tW ""P'eS cans " as clerks. SpScStSJ r'T ta"ht ,r"tlons. kP " ,hp l S up wu! t J L. Fprto M. Pot St., says Uuh, M,T3 J!Jw'J,A'SS r ''J ir. and nan .pent, i i -- u'"; Pri, !WT New .IM, tablets 50 ets., I'1" Lnrife siie, t.ll'J. or liquid, $ Write Dr. pierce' Clinic, Biio loi free medical advice. f, 'V V j! 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