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Show t CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH 'HUHHHIIIIIIMtltH DISTINCTIVE SLED DOSS to COMPETE for OLYM P C Stationery Sue B r DOROTHY DOUCLAS In A v VJ t'Kt tHIl llll Q M VI J T"'1 I K,tj I HH HI H o uiTt, alien iuliwnjr Hint Mt'Hillig lut morning, Hint h tit III only girl a ho lit roiihl on ilnjr tour hi heart to hrrta If ah mlJ "no' Intlead of r.i I ,V i There aer plenty of Sonia b rub hour, il Tom Ml (loan perfect nr agon In a delicate mnuve roaiume. Apparently h aai a htmlti reading oer girl, fur h aa hlli'h of teller alth hualneaa (lend Inga And from Ih aalft if dell' nil glance Tom an able to get at them, he knew them to t order Turn crimed li la neck a til and rewarded alth a trifle more In formation. The Arm name lo almm the letter aer addressed aul Sue tVentaonh, Ine." Arrhlng al til olflca h looked up the telephone book and found .the name he nought. And after II iau one word Siatlonery." rue l( an JtiMheal(mat aIh B P a at u n HI IH it a I KS dMaT Vaseline '! ' ! f Wf--' I Iv jii r i a s' Honors A Cold a-- ft T HOME PLANNING AIDS REVIEWED ON RADIO Seppala on the Trail i i 4 V b a fc k a a P fi U h d Jv I fA. - t, n f ' I, , F 1 C--A) ribbons, carle. n paper, pen;rlerblottera, etc, alien they rl1- i ' ' 'C , - 'I'dred them. , t i tv?; '? Y 1,0 I'11'11 A1; V- I "' St Godard Seppala and Derby a w c cold of any itage. And genuine aspirin can't hurt you. Toke two tablet of Bayer Aipirin at the first Indication of a cold, end that' usually the end of it. If every jymptom han't disappeared In a few hours, repeat. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart. Take enough to give complete relief. And your throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in water and gargle away all soreness. In every package of genuine if Bayer Aspirin are proven directions for colds, headaches, sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis. Millions who used to suffer from these things have found winter comfort in aspirin. BAYE R wr ASPIRIN snow-covere- d fXk AyQav Many Government Speakers on Aii a r;. -- -- '' j fur-cla- d "Whistlin' Hutchinson Kaare o French-Canadln- d 150-mil- e 123-mtl- lO 200-mii- 408-mil- play-actin- g I At PENNEYS ((S)b McClu Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNU Berries) AS SCIENCE VIEWS ADVANCE OF MAN ; JL'. b .df . O' oull,,,'e to noW- - ,le ft w , telephone booth and called I P Slle Wentworth. Inc. " A delightful voice, crisp, but L . pleasant, answered linn, "T1'11 Tom Jacks, Ine.." wild 1 nnt lo know how soon 1 ,Tl""- .can KPt (,me supplies." Well my calling days nre Tups Emiie Friday when I bring my VHAfR10 l -- hi I iniples for selection." Quebec Winninq Hut I'm In a desperate hurry Two HisHusvcies of not a alieot of letter paper In the office." Tom said, and In III mind's Jpcts. shelve; eje saw hi By ELMO SCOTT WATSON I Another episode In the experl there no way I can get my order T IS a far cry from the sub zero temences of the United Stale Forest In?" perature and the hills Rangers will be given on Thursday, Certainly, If you care to aend surrounding lake I'lacld In northern January 21. Thla series, Inaugural- - some one along lo my ofllce I can New York to sunny California and the ed this month, Is designed to arouse put your order straight through great stadium In Los Angeles where greater Interest In forest fire pre then. the 1932 Olympic games will ba held ventlon and proleetlon. Since It's most urgent. Til Just tills summer, but there is connection pop along now, said Tom. between the two. Starting In Greece ; ' " more than 3,000 years ago, Olympic And If Sue Wentworth smiled It ' wn games have been held at more or less only bemuse she had so very orders r; regular Intervals In many different urgent 'many strangely VL-Ar-' V Five hundred and fifteen broad enough mostly from masculine buy countries during those 30 centuries, but this year v . 'era. for the In wili first time incasting hours were utilized by the history the games United States government over the Tom might have known her ofllce clude sled dogs race. 4 & networks of the National Broadcast would look like tlint. It was apple Obviously It would he impossible for the sled Ing company during 1031, M. II green enamel with black furniture, dog races to be hold at the same time and place as the other branches of Olympic competition. Aylesworth, president of the com and there were flowers about which Tom gazed dnrkly So that Is why Lake I'lacld, N. Yr., comes Into Goners at pany, reports. The United State Department ol because he had a hunch from the the Olympic picture. It has one of the finest Agriculture made the greatest use ol variety of them they were brought sled dogs racing courses on this continent and radio during the year. Exactly 251 by a lot of stupid men who perhaps there on February 0 and 7 the tennis of husofficials of this department gave 6SI came In when they didn't need sta kies," driven by their mushers" will talks before the microphone. Mosi turnery any more than they wanted race 25 miles each day to win Olympic honors of those talks were broadcast In thr a glass of warm milk. Lyd" for' the nations which they represent. Frevlous National Farm and Home ITour Sue was placing her samples of to the races at Lake Ilacld, elimination conbroadcast each week day at 11 :30 a letter paper and her big albums of tests are being held In various parts of the Mrs. ITanSen. Vi. to 12:30 p. m., central standard envelopes before him and he started country, notably in New England, to determine was originated by a Nome lawyer, Albert Fink, time. tire American representatives in the Olympic a dog lowr and experienced sourdough musher. a random selection. President Hoover, Mr. Avles Assisted by a company of friends he raised "Ill have some of that mnuve pa- finals, so these finnls will see in the entry lists worth's report shows, spoke 29 times per, with monograms put on," he the names of some of the greatest sled dog a fund of $10,000 to be awarded to the winners are the annual races at Poland Spring, Maine; Laconia, N. II.; Ashton, Idaho; Prince Albert, which Is the greatest number ol said. My girls are both In need drivers and teams In the world, pitting their and they spread the word of "race of the cenSaskatchewan; Quebec, and Fairbanks Alaska. times any President has been heard of some and endurance was the speed each northland. The And we result other. against tury" throughout private stationery. The American Dog derby at Ashton, Idaho, over the radio In one year; Vice want a dozen Outstanding among these will be such drivers that Nome was packed with spectators and a Is ran each year on Washington's birthday over typewriter ribbons President Curtis made three radio some billheads and a few thousand as Leonard Seppala of Alaska, a native of Nor- long string of famous dogs and experienced a a large crowd of course, and attrr-'tspeeches; the chief Justice, Charle envelopes. I dont remember all we way but now a naturalized American citizen, mushers ready for the race. It was won by spectators from all over the Northwest. Evans Hughes, spoke five tlmps. need, but Ill go through the stock the man who with his heroic lead dog. Bnlto, John Hegness, who ran the 408 miles across the Perhaps the best known of all the dog races bleak wilderness and back, after a steady grind, Every member of the cabinet faced and come along again with the thrilled the world a few years ago when they the microphone at least once during order." carried the diphtheria serum to stricken Nome: night and day. In 119 hours and 15 minutes and is the Eastern International Dog derby held at the year. ' I'll come along on my next call Emile St Godard of Le Pas, Manitoba, a young most of the way he had to fight one of the most Quebec during the third week in February each Thirty-twmembers of the senate Ing day it will save you troubling who has won three world severe Arctic blizzards known in the history of year where world championships are awarded the winners. There assemble the winners of the made 52 radio addresses, and mem to come here," Sue championships; Frank Dupuis, another Cana- Alaska. suggested other contests, to race over a course of abont bers of the house spoke 25 times. In race a was Entered second T. Arthur the Walden of New youthful 120 dian; sweetly. HampAmericas three service bands were miles, run In heats of 40 miles a day. 'No I wouldnt have you carry shire, experienced Alaskan sourdough musher hardware clerk whose name was destined, in beard In 241 contests, many of which In the a romantic attracts the best drivers and teams to and dogmaster later for Commander oscupy Quebec place years, tn like that. about alliums Byrd these great were In the Nutlonal Farm and Home in odd from all parts of America, and rivalry runs high northland. annals of the Walter the Allen, Scotty of who Antarctic; Channing no Boston, can come here very easily Hour. The Army band broadcast 10!! I has twice defeated teams from both sides of hours at the store, had managed to assemble during the three days, attaining a fever heat on trouble at all." times, the Marine band 71 times, and a team of dogs of doubtful value as racers. His the last day of the race. The winner of the world I must say, all the men are very the border In the annual races at Lake Placid: the Navy band G7 times. a Joke; he was asked championship In the first International was ArI can assure you I Charlie Lyman, the barber of Laconia, N. IL, entry was regarded as to but nice me, Numerous officials of foreign go who has defeated veteran mushers, fur trappers how he had got up the nerve to list them but thur T. Walden, of New Hampshire, experienced to it used am my carrying quite ernments also spoke over the net and mall drivers of the Northland; Norman Scotty won the 1909 classic. In 1910 he was de- Alaskan sourdough musher, who started trailing samples, I mean." She smiled more works. John Johnson, who es- dogs across the frozen wilderness back In 1896, E. Goodnle and Fred Crockett, "the feated by Iron Man Vaughan, You Tom. see, Since Ids Inauguration President or less directly at a record never duplicated over that during the gold rash, and who was dogmaster tablished Musketeers of three South the and many pole; Hoover has made GG radio addresses I'm a business woman, pure and others. 408 miles, thanks to an exceptional team, his with Commander Byrd In the Antarctic. In his seven years as President, Cal simple, and except to do these In 1923 the International was won by a French a In which only rare skill and a good break In weather. JohnNor is sled sport dog racing vin Conlldge spoke only 87 times things. son's time was 74 hours and 14 minutes, the Canadian, Jean Lebel, of Quebec, much to the men If successful Although compete. Seppala, busiYou are no doubt pure and over the radio. Many of President elation of the Canadians. Earl Brydges. of Le In the trials, will represent his adopted country fastest ever made In dog racing In the north. Hoovers addresses were made direct nesslike, but youre not simple not But Scotty Allen was not discouraged. Back Pas, took the next championship, and Into the rather than his native land, Norway will probof latest Sues the a said of bit It, from the White House. ly be represented by a former American, the he came for another trial In 1911, and cut two arena of the 1925 derby stepped young Emile St And with that sort of ably admirers. woman dog driver of the East. She hours off his previous record. He Is the only Godard, still in his teens to begin his unoutstanding All known records for a continu to best It note he thought personal paralleled record In dog racing. lie Is now the Kaare Is Mrs. Nansen, who before her marriage man who ran In more than four ous broadcast were broken recently go back to his own office and break and eighth only man who has won three championships. when Gene and Glenn were on the the news about the new stationery to the son of the famous Norwegian explorer, Sweepstakes the first, second, third was Mrs. E. P. Ricker, Jr., a formidable com- - and final and he won the distinction of always Frank Dupuis won the 1926 race over St Godard air from WTAM In Cleveland for to the or condi- by a margin so narrow as to make the race one girls. petition to the men in many an exciting dog finishing a race, irrespective of weather more than seven hours in the Inter But Mr. Jacks, were completely race. And a competitor from the West may be tion of his dogs. In 1915 Scotty took 440 Alas- of the most thrilling, and to establish a new est of the Cleveland Christmas fund stocked up you ordered everything Miss Lydia (Whistlin Lyd) nutchinson whose kan dogs to France; for distinguished service he time on the trail. St Godard won the 1925, program. from pens to paper clips last fame is intimately associated with the fame of was decorated by the French government with 1927 and 1928 races. In 1929 Leonhard Seppala Miss Smith. entered with a string of seven wonderful dogs. the annual American Dog derby at Ashton, the Croix de Guerre. An admirer of Lowell Thomas, month, expostulated but Idaho. Ah, ha, laughed Tom ; The same world conflict that claimed Allen This was the third year he had made a detersent him a heater for his automobile mined bid to win the worlds championship, and that was last month. Anyway, Ive What horse racing Is to the people of the drew the other men of Alaska and the ranks of from Hope this will keep you from catch decided that distinctive stationery start to finish, Seppala ran one of the most Imwas It so that racers the became depleted more moderate climates in North America, sled ing cold, read au accompanying races ever seen at Quebec or anybusiness is a great asset. From Is to the people of the north where possible to hold the big race. Thus the 191G spectacular note. Next day he got a dozen in racing dog where else. Not only did he defeat St Godard now on Jacks, Inc., will revel in the snows are deep, the winds bite cold and the event became the last. During that winter a handkerchiefs "In case he did. the abont an hour, but he broke St. Godard's own finest thats to be had. trails defy man and his principal company of sourdoughs met In Le Pas, Man. by worlds record, and again put the Americans Into was revived. It was race And Tom talk suggested Inc., certainly Dog Jacks, to sled them. the of dog, conquer burden, Elaine Paige, style expert of Worn beast the game. Dupuis took second honors and St ens Radio Review, mentioned In a did blossom forth In some pretty Part timber wolf, part Labrador husky, the fierce that Le Pas hold one and the date was set for Godard came trailing In third. In the opinion ol course from a over art of late stationers that fine the In won winter, their place specimens talk a new style knitted beret that history shaggy malemutes the Judges, mushroom Seppalas Siberians completed the town, Le to associates Pas FUn His mining Flon, began during the Klondike gold rush a third of a cencould be made at home, and received and printing. e grind fresher than any racers they had three thousand requests for dlrec to suspect that Tom was acquiring tury ago. But their usefulness by no means and back. ever seen ; and they were awarded the condition temperament and hoped for the ended with the end of the gold rush. Today In tions. Few preparations were made ; the drivers used something unusual In the annals of dog best the land which lies north of 53, day in and ordinary dogs; they themselves were unskilled prize, But Tom wasn't acquiring a scrap day out these dogs haul provisions, medicines, In the art of racing, and a bitter struggle fol- races. Usually this award goes to some driver more temperament than he had ever freight and supplies. They are an essential part lowed across that trackless snowy waste In quest who trails In later and who has saved his dogs In the mad dash over the snow. possessed, which wasnt much but of the fur trade for with their help the trappers of the $500 prize and the title of champion. But It Is such drivers and such do'gs as these who on was bent e he most certainly trap lines and bring back to It turned out to be a singularly exciting race. will patrol their In the Olympic contests at Lake acquiring something that was far civilization the furs which fashion decrees The winner had an accident that staved in two Placidcompete within the next few weeks. ribs ; but he hung on until the finish. From that greater than anything else In the milady must wear. The sled dogs are trained for their life work world a happy beginning to a love The sport of sled dog racing Is comparatively day to this Le Pas has staged each winter one Just as soon as they are able to walk ; they are affair. races and of has In the most thrilling favor and In extent developed new but It has grown And Sue well, she Just sat tight more than most people realize. It began back some of the finest men and teams In the game, tied up and soon acquire the habit of pulling. At about sixty days of age they are given over to and knew that things were happen- in 1908 when the first of these picturesque most famous of whom is their own boy, St. the care of boys, who harness them to small sleds e wil- Godard. ing rather as she wished them to, sporting events was held over the or wagons. The dogs appear to be willing to do but never, even on their golden wed- derness trail in Alaska from Nome to Candle Since that time the growth of the dog derby this In the harness, and come to him tell she would friend had best now races such anniversary Mans are made until ding idea has been rapid creek and back. the pastime. that she had purposely sat reading It possible for the golden riches of Alaska to be held in different parts of the United States, enjoy number of dogs may be used In a team, Any her letters In the subway hoping Sweepstake Canada and Alaska. Outstanding among them, although 15 Is about the limit obtained, so the first It pays to shop the for very thing race was dedicated to the huskies. The plan besides thi one at Le Pas already mentioned, well, Just hoping ( by Western Newepaper Union.) that happened. J, ore common becausa paopla are earelei. Prompt uia of aipirin will olway check a cold. Or relieve your Cold TI,""',1 n,,nial, ecln Speaker Will Cover the Preai I Till , dent Homo Building to buy atuilnnery." Heretofore lie Conference. (had left this line of ofliee aupplle Ihe tan girl alio purchased type- - r V , 7,oy r Ilrue I MeMn. research ere tary of Ihe committee on Farm and Housing, of the President' conferenee on borne building and ownership, will tell National Farm and Home Hour listener nhat aids to planning furm and city houses can be bad from the committee, when be speak In Ihe United Stales Department of Agriculture period ol the Farm and Home Hour. The Farmer1 educational and Union monthly broadcast will be beard In Ihe National Farm Home Hour on Wednesday. Jannary 20, and will feature a prom Inent speaker on agricultural auh cm j f t Erect Position Put Him Above Beasts. From a single fossil skull discovered In the desert wilds of Central Australia, Sir Colin MaeKenzie deduces the fact or at least the conclusion that the erect posture dominates mans Intellectual system, and shows that all Intellectual development has a muscular basis. At first glance It Is a little difllcult to perceive how a skull which is not a whole skull, but only a portion of one, and which is supposed to be, and probably is, a relic of a primitive kind of human being, can teach the scientist all that. It takes a good equipment of imagination to under-- i stand it. We must first Imnglne the creature from which man Is descended going on alt fours. lie had not yet assumed the erect position. lie was then like any other beast of the Jungle. Any bigger beast might tread him to death under Its feet. Mastery was a matter of size. But one day, the beast, groveling In the tail grass, through some accident, or freak, or the help of a stump or a rock, gets upon his hind legs. In that position he sees above the grass. He is enabled to observe the approach of the possible mastodon who will grind him to death, and to hide from him. With his incident, this groveling creatures relative advance begins. From that time on, he and his species struggle toward the maintenance of an erect position. They employ craft; they learn a superior mode of physical progression, and thereby they attain a superiority over other creatures. A step surely resulting from this point is the liberation of the creatures forelegs from the function of progression and their gradually increased usefulness in providing easier means of subsistence. With practice, now, the creatures front paws become hands. By development, one of the paw projections which once were mere claws becomes a thumb, which by repeated use becomes opposed to the other claws now fingers so that the creature can seize and hold any article. Now the animal who is on the road to become a man has achieved a point of superiority to the npe, all of whose fingers are In a row who dos not possess the opposed thumb. Counting by thousands of centuries, the new man now gets beyond the ape by leaps and bounds. Without the opposed thumb the man would have remained In the half erected, or only occasionally erected position of the ape. Together, the erect posture and the opposed thumb Pacific Salmon Unlike the Atlantic coast salmon which spawn several times, the Pacific salmon spawn but once and dla Immediately thereafter at the river spawning ground. Ail the five varieties of Pacific salmon are members of the same one family but show interesting differences In length of natural life span. The piqk lives only two years; the coho, three; the chum, four; the sockeye, four to five, and the spring, six or seven. made man the master of his own evolution. Of course at the stage noted tha mind is yet to come. But It Is now an Inevitable thing, for the Improvement achieved makes the newly developed species gregarious. Superior Individuals learn to dominate their fellows. Communication becomes necessary. Language Is developed from grunts and squeaks. Society Is organized. Thoughts are expressed. Thus from the hone and muscles of the legs, from the htnes and muscles of the hands, an Intellect tml development has been evolved. The great thing waa to get started, and tha start was the erect posture. Quod erat demonstrandum, says the professor. But of course all thl Is not a demonstration. It Is only a speculation. Sir Colin MacKcnzIe'a notion about the dependence of Intellectual development on muscle Is Lamarck was pure Lamarckianism. a French naturalist who was born In 1744 and died In 1S29. He was the forerunner of Darwin, who accepted his doctrine of acquired characters. What Lamarck taught Is concentered In his account of the manner In which the giraffe acquired his long neck. An ordinary antelope who lived In a South African region where, from Increasing aridity, food for the antelope on the earths surface disappeared, could graze only at the tops of trees. Such Individual beasts as had the longest necks could reach food and survive. Those Individuals survived when tlielr shorter-necke- d fellows perished ; It was they who propagated their species, which became Increasingly The primitive man, getting on his feet In the tall grass, is practically doing the same thing that Lamarck giraffe did. Sir Conlln MacKenzies deductions from the discovery of the skull in the Australian desert demonstrate that Lamarck is coming to his own in the field of evolutionary science. They demonstrate nothing else that Is, as yet. Boston Transcript. long-necke- It pays to shop At PENNEYS Tidal Phenomena There is only one high tide and one low tide in the Gulf of Mexico each day. The diurnal Inequality has become exaggerated to such an extent as practically to extinguish the tide in the Inner parts cf the gulf, giving high and low water only once dally. Normally there are two high and two low tides every 24 hours, but there nre numerous variations in tidal phenomena In various parts of tha world. semi-diurn- ,1 |