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Show fame-Wanin-g Dog Gobbles "Hot Dogs" . S3 r in 'ith w i --Hot dogs I That we wonl" So woofs Jack, lead dog ot the winning i team In the famous American Dog derby run at Ashton. Idaho, when his owner. Fred Prints, rewarded him with a few yards of the elungated tld hits t for winning the classic, Mr. Prints prizes were the cups In the foreground I FOR FORMAL WEAR Wit .''iV-4- r i 1 SCEAXCA r kUsk'. v YOU have undoubtedly V . used Bayer Aspirin for , headaches and know how N t promptly and completely , j theie tablets relieve the pain, "jr V, V, ITiey are even more wonder- - V , f ful in the relief of such i 7 serious suffering as sciatica; v ' ? lumbago; rheumatism and " Wvi those aches and pains that & F are bone deep. They don't $ t L affect the heart, and they do ; ViHt dispel the pain. There is v nothing quite like genuine ' v I j Bayer Aspirin, but see that you get the genuine. It has . ; I Bayer on the box and inside y i ' are proven directions for ' ' many important uses it is . ; well to know. ' K H"! ' , - ? I ! ' 1 : V-J-tV PR r Aiplrfa U thl trmlt mark of tint ilurtetw o( MonouiilMdilMUe aaUqrllwia ' A Pulou model evening guwo ot gold striped pompadour la Tel a In shades of rose and blue. The devol-Iftnu- e neckline la repented In the Una at the bottom of the bodice and the skirt shows flared tunic with a train achieved by a double fold ot taffeta extending to the floor. Women Cured of Leprosy Stay on With Lepers Cnrrvllle, La. Because there Is no one outside who cares for them two women pronounced cured of leprosy have chosen to spend the remainder of their lives In the United States leprosarium here. One woman has spent 23 of her TO years here and the other 14 of her 2& Both told authorities their rela-tives were unwilling for them to re-turn home. "So, If you don't mind, we'll Just 8tny here." they told Dr. O; E. Dcnney, chief, physician In charge of the colony. They are the first In the history ot the leper colony ever to remain aftei they had been pronounced cured. Cure of the dread disease Is rare. In the history of the colony only 40 peruon have been pronounced cured, Doctoi Denney said. Abnrbine win rcdue b r fluiMd.twolleajoinu.uiKln brutao, tot t bunches. Quickly Ml JliJ hamte boil poll vil, quIttor.VT A ftstuli and infctdorLWillf I t II Dotblutorormnonhmir.YouQI H yh cut work horn while tulni. ;fi tTV ' S2.fi0itdrurolati,arpotpai(l. J IT1 J fly Send tot buuk IS (in, IV jUAyl bam. Ntr manrthinr ywld f U M to trratnrnt to qnlrkll. Will sot f t W Salt Lake City Directory PICKLES ARROW BRAND 7or thnsa who want tho bent OTAH l'lCKUt CO. SALT LAKE CITY. . 4 "i SemloH Hole! tf. 8 hut H ialt uiri rrrr v Hf'fJT! 'ff'ff nv.fL T. - Hoephality ' POPULAR PRICES COMMON 8KNSK BVSTRM lSoS; Beauty Culture COMPI.KTB CJOt'RSK. Inciodlnr Porm-no- nt Wavlnr. With oar oomplsto eoom yoo eon work In any obop. 17 K. lit Ho. Waa. 6635 Salt Lakav OfTloo Faraltnra and Sopplloa. Thoator ano! Cborch Furnlturo, Edloon-Dtf- k Klmoorraph and Suppllea. Full Lino of stationary, Wrap-ping Fapor. oto. OldMt and Larvoot School Supply and Kriulpmpiit rlouao In tha Wool I M U0OL KI PPI.V CO. 1M So. SUta Stnot Salt Lake City. MWUOUUt AMQTOIOO." ttt9fi0m M IW. F. YOUNG. In& bltllvminSI., Sprmgfiold, Mjm. Snloomen Wantrd with car to aU ahnrk alworbor of Kieot merit, low prloa, food dis-count. Apply Factory,' Superior Rfboiind Control. Inn.. ISOS toth St., Kenoaha, Wla. EUROPE 2!XZ CUNARD UHt, f2 alaye, 0O te 1 1100 Spain, Tanrier, Algiers. Italy, Riviera, Sweden, Norway, Edinburgh, Tros-sach- s, Berlin (Paris. London. Rhine, etc. ). Hotels, drives, fees, etc. included. MwdHemmeaa Cntlaa.Jan. 2, $600 mm WwrntUt, C. Clark, Tltea BMfr, W. T. .' Bealth Cilvlng TTI All Winter Long JmLjM Mamloaa Olmata Good Botela Tourirt GWW For Efficiency and Service tua Gill ptitoo tinia, Ray Day and Arrow-ha-ad piatooa, kinf Pino, Eroaoo braka bninx. COX PISTON RING CO. Camp Splendid Road Gorxoouo Mowntala Viewa. 71m tmuUrful drt row' of (ha Wmtt aim Sprfn&ijb CALIFORNIA Clan Direct from Factory to Connumor hand mads. Hoi to 10o alio. ta.It, or lot for 17. at postald with m. o. Satli. guaranteed. W. M. Kcr.ktenwald, 142J Clybourn Ava., Chlcaxo Character Read from llandwritlnir. Send page written In Ink. Trial reading 12c. Complete analynla tl. International Correoponaence Society, Bo (10, Grand Raplda, Mich. it last 4t Senth . Salt lane Oty J THI PHYSICIANS SUPPLY CO. IS Weat tad South, Holt Lake City, Utah. TBI' SH ICS Blaetle Stocking. Abdominal Supporter. Maternity Supporters, Invalid Chalra, Crutrhea, Canea. lure-tea- l Instrument! and Hospital Supplies. For Pool Tablet and Supplies and anrthuif to Show Cases and Store Fixtures work wrkt W. L. WETHEBBEE $ W. mm. Temple - Salt Lake atjr DIAMONDS, WATCHES "i'SJdT Buy your Diamond now for Chrlatroaa, Will send to your bank (or free inspection no obligation. TUB CAPITOL JEWEUY CO. 13 East Seat Soatk SaltLakeCUy v Kttp your money in iht Wat and Buy HAWK BRAND Work Clothes manufactured by PYKEMfG.CO.,StllLakeCtly.Ulak ; Choose a Profitable Vocation ; ; t Xmtk ths Beauty Culture Course aires by a , mut that bu taucbt ) students bow to , , asm BiO MONSK. Catalog sent on request. , , 'J UTAH HIGH 8CHOOT, ' Olf HKACIK CCLTCUK ! J S31 CU?t nidg. - Salt Lake City ); f?fff Sf ff f f s ffTf ffef f W. N. U , Salt Lake City, No. 13-1- 92. DIPPING INTO j; I , science o Why Damp Clothing Injures. " i - The reason we catch cold i S from sleeping on damp sheets I or from wearing dump clothes ' W Is iieiMiise the dampness ab-- sorbs the heat from our bodies ! more rapidly than they can , mirke It up. ; Thla lowers our J I power ol resistance, making ns i more susceptible to the disease J germ which provoke colds, pueuiiitiiita, bKonchltls, etc " l& I3. Western Neerapaper Union ) (Cf 1 You can get results after a fashion with any old dye; J I but to do work you are proud of takes real anilines. That's ? . tyir 1 why we put them in Diamond Dyes. They contain from ' 1 three to five times more than other dyes on the market I .; ipSt ! Cost more to make? Surely. But you get them for the i lQ I mt ice M re ' ' ther t , Y Si P 1 1 e5rt time yu want to dye, try them. See how easy it 1st ' I to use them. Then compare the results. Note the absence I $ that look; of streaking or spotting. See that I , they take none of the life out oi the cloth. Observe how Jk JUi1 the colors keep their brilliance through wear aod washing. - ; V I Your dealer will refund your money if you don't agree j SI lul Diamond Dyes are better dyes. - , WIA, l! The white package of Diamond Dyes is the original "all- - I IVVf ' 'H P"rP0se" dye for any and every kind of material. It will liV In I C dye or tint silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon or any mixture eiiVSXl fr3 of materials. The blue package is a special dye, for silk or wool only. With it you can dye your valuable articles of silk or wool with results equal to the finest professional j work. When you buy remember this. The blue fack-- age dyes silk or wool only. The tt'Atf package will dye I mmmmr: every kind of goods, including silk and wooL Your dealer j has both packages. tiiMiiiniiaw '"" ' ' .. .' DtambnA D$f$sj: Easy to use Perfect results 1j! AT ALL DRUG 8TORE8 War on Insects Atlantic City. The future will see "titanic" struggle for existence waged between man and lnnecte, member ol the New Jersey Mosquito Kxtermlna lion association were told by Dr. L. O Howard, chief entomologist of the United States Department of Agrlcul ture. "Insects now consume each year the equivalent of the labor of a nillllou men," Doctor Howard aald. "They lave a great advantage over human beings both anutomlcully and physi-cally. Mun's aii)erlor Intelligence Is all that has 'enubled lilrn to even be gin to check the advunce of Insects. A serious struggle la ahead. . "Rapidity of motion, and frequency of multiplication, quick adaptation to conditions, powers of concealment and no long period of helpless Infancy, are some of the advantages that Insects have over men.' As a means of preparing for the battle with Insects. Doctor Howard suggests that colleges and uulveral-- ' tics devote more attention to en tautology as a step In the mobilization of a trained army of Insect flylitern capable of waging successful warfare agnlttBt the enemy. The Importance of oiling small bodies of water and emptying casks and tin cans containing water whs emphasised as a means of holding mosquitoes In check. J Harem Customs Bring ;; Argentine Protests jji ! Beirut, Syria. -- To protest ;; against the attitude adopted by '; ;! Syrian Moslems toward Argen j! J tine women, the Argentine gov- - !! ernment has closed Its consulate ' J In Beirut. V: ; The consul stnted that Argen-- J J tine women of the Christian !; K faith marrying Syrian Moslems i $ abroad and later accompanying ;; ! their husbands to Syria suffer :J j conslderolile hardships. On ar- ! IJ rival In Syria they are confined jjj ;; In harems as la customary wltb ;: i native women, and forced In j every way to conform to the !! J Moslem mode of life. NEW PIRATE TRAINER GO Mike Chambers, formerly of the University of Iowa and Ohio State university, who has been signed as trainer of the Pittsburgh Pirates, of the National Baseball league. Avy Monarch Trained ' ' r tain Knight threw pieces of meat and dead rabbits as far as he could, and these were brought back to him by the eagle. Among those who witnessed the flight was (.'apt Bob Bortlett of the Morrlssey, who took the Putnam ex-pedition to the Arctic. New Tork. Cupt, C W. B, Knight of Englund recently demonstrated his trained golden eagle before an audi-ence of about SO bird enthusiasts on the estate of George Palmer Putnam on Long Island sound. Mr. Putnam explained that the flight was merely to give the bird exercise and that the bird enthusiasts, some of whom were members of the Explorers' club, had been given permission to view the eagle. The eagle weighs about 10 pounds and has been trained to retrieve game and other objects thrown by Captain Knight. The eagle, which Is being kept at the Bronx zoo, was brought to the Putnam estate In a closed car by Cnptaln Knight and was kept blind-folded until ready for the "exercises." Captain Knight explained that he was better able to keep the bird under control when It was blindfolded. As soon as the blind was removed from the bird's eyes the engle perched oo Captain Knlght'8 shoulder. Cnn- - Know the Leaot They know the IchsI who know not how little they know. Los .ngelet Times. SUCH IS LIFE - - - Just So - - By Charles Sughroe f (oh, its sMPty X. W moor. (raiuiw, . Sn pvps auo kittems wov ffSLj" SEL t RAiwiwa ykX f passes, b juvjior. WlilAYR i i BI,ly wwJ 3$gr IKtro ' 1 stunt attention gives them. And be Is one of the most thoughtful and tact-ful men she has ever meL He doesn't make much of a hit wltb me In spite of his slick appearunce. I ran onto Cliesler when I was out West a few weeks ago, ond we got BEING YOURSELF I By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK I ; Dean of Men, University ef Illinois. $v 1 suppose we are all more or less Imitators. We have our secret heroes whosectplolisand accomplishment a and particular methods and man ners we try to re produce In our play upon the stupe of life, and we have pointed out to us by our mothers and our wives examples which It would be good for us to follow and models to talking about his uncle who Is a professor In one of the eastern col-leges now psychology or sociology or psychiatry he professes. The uncle has been abroad some and studied for a while In New England. He was horn In Ludlow or Fisher or some near by Illinois village and ran s the prairies bare-foote- d like the rest of us. He used as much slang and bad grammar as any other native born and flattened his as beautifully; but he picked up a wonderful manner and exaggerated New England pronuncia-tion somewhere and Is now no more like himself than Lindbergh Is like Charlie Chnplln. He's a Joke to any one who knew him when he was a boy, for his manner and his pronunci-ation nnd his nssumed erudition are a disguise which tends to hide his real self. It's a mistake to try to be anyone else or to Imitate anyone else. The great men of the world, no matter how little the world Is In which they do their work, have been Individual. They have gone at things In their own particular way. They have not tried to stifle their own personality or to camouflage tt by pretending to be something that tbey are not. I met Jimmy Dawson Inst May. Irish Jimmy Is. with a sense of humor. He's been everywhere In the world since I Inst saw him thirty years ago He's met great men In all countries; he's a great mnn himself rich and but he's still at henrt the same hearty, natural, unaffected Irish-ma- I knew when he was a lad. He's himself. & Hit. Western Newspaper Union which we would do well to copy. Bill Thompson was the model which mother selected for my Ideal of con-duct and accomplishment If I could only be as good a boy as Bill was all would be well with me In this world and the next. If I could do my work as carefully and conscientiously ns he did success would reward my efforts, ond the way In which he helped his mother about the house was gratify-ing to nil the neighbors. Bill and I never got on well together. I disliked him from the start and profiled very re little. I am afrold, from bis noble ex- - ' (f ample. Nuncy has pointed out to me often what wonderful manners Seth Toylor has-l- mw careful he Is with bis teeth and his linger noils. They simply glit-ter with the high polish which con- - Robots SeywjPuhlic If the question asked Is a "stick-er," the man at the control station, and through him. Rupert says: "Walt a minute," and the right answer Is looked up In handy reference books. One mnn In the central office. It Is de-clared, will In this way be able to handle I he questions asked of, soy, a dozen or more Robots Installed In a railway station, big shops, hotels, or even on street corners, and It Is pre-dicted Hint within the nest few years these grim formidable Robot servants will be commonplace sights In all large cities. London. Although Gngliind'a first Robot was creuted only a ffew short months ago. he already has six broth-ers runglng In height from Jasper's six feet six. to little Ruiiert's Ave feet ten Despite their tender ages the serv-ices of all seven have been hired out under the contract-labo- r system dur-ing the schoolboy's exhibition at Hor-ticultural hall, and soon after the ex-hibition rloses the Robot family will be broken up and the brothers sent oul to different railway stations ami street corners to take doy Jobs answering questions and giving directions. A pathetic fate for such youngsters, that would seem to call for Intervention on the part of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children 1 ... How these dully gleaming giants of steel work bus now been revealed for the first lime In connection with the schoolboys' exhibit, where Rupert, a bright little fellow. Is to be seen with his chest and head cut open and all his InsldfS revealed. Young ,Jhn Bull, Jr., presses a button on Ru-pert's tummy. Almost Instantly lights stare from under Rupert's heavy eye-brows and a voice Incredibly deep for such a youngster booms out : "What do you want to know?" Young John, startled, stutters: where can I get a bite to eut?" . . "Take the third aisle on your left nnd walk straight on," booms the voire. Then the lights die out and Rupert Is once again a senseless struc-ture of cold steel. Bewildered, young John follows the directions, and sure enough,' Walks straight into a restaurant. Now what has hnppened is this: When the youth pushed (he button on Rupert's tummy a light showed on a switchboard In front of n man at a table In a control room. He tmnieilliilely "plugged In" on liu pert, lighting up Rupert's eyes and establishing a telephonic contact with a microphone hidden behind a silver gauze-covere- d hole in Rupert's front. Thus the limn nt the central control station heard young John's question and he promptly answered back by telephone, his words being mnpliilcd by h loud spenker In Rupert's thesL Husbands Made Butt of Flippant Jokers Judge Ben B. LIndsey, champion of companionate marriage, eugenics and sucb-IIk- e advanced movements, said at a luncheon In Denver: "There's a flippant cluss of people, who try to make the role of husband a ridiculous and Impossible ope. "Even Hudson, the great nature writer, takes a whack at husbands In his Turple Land.' Hudson says, you know, 'She did not love the youth, for she was married, and how can a married woman ever love any one but her husband? "People will sometimes say of a man, 'lie? Ob, be Is a horn hnsbnnd.' It's the most Insulting thing they can tliiuk up. , "Wagner was once rehearsing an orchestro In the love music of Tristan and Isolde.' The lack of passion and Are In the performance displeased him, and he rapped with his baton for silence. Then he saM: " 'Come, come, gentlemen, this won't do. You're all playing like husbands Instead of lovers.'" Detroit Free Press. DUceveret) Customer So you're Spanish. Are yon the Sevllllan barber . ef grand opera fame? - Barber Oh, no, sir; Tm the bar-ber that trims civilians close. J Queer things are always happening to some people, who hardly' eeem to be aware of It. ' Grain Links History of Egypt, Abyssinia Leningrad, U. S. S. U. The hints ol Herodotus that the ancient Egyptians and the Abysslans were somehow con-nected has been corroborated by botany. According to Investigations of the n Russian botanist, K. A. Klaxcnburg, a striking likeness Is now established between the .old Egyptian emmer found In the sarco-phagus of the priests of the twelfth dynasty and the Abyssinian samples collected by the Vavllov expedition In 1927. These Egyptian specimens dif-fer strongly from other forms of em-mer and especially from the Persian form In which some scientists found grain. From Abyssinia the emincr Is be-lieved to have spread to Arabia, In-dia and Egypt. In Persia tonus arose willed are allied to the Abyssinian ones. In Serbia other forms differen-tiated which approach the Abyssinian types. The Russian emmer originated from these Serbian forms. . I It is easier to make yourself, tire-some ' than agreeable. ; TO BE MAY QUEEN J ? . 1 f-- ' ; f. ' - i ; 1 , tajSOB of Lafny- - Miss lielle rtiotketibrouBh . etift'lniL h.is -- n t""sen by ' "f Sweeih-la- r college. Virginia, K. H.elr f,.n a. tha hnmuil Ma, Flees From Angry Wife Into Wild Beast's Cage Los Angeles, Calif. A wild animal cage was the refuge place of a circus man when his Irate wife chased him about the "big top" with a horsewhip. This was the testimony of Alpheus G. Barnes Stonebouse, the "Al 0. Barnes" of circus fame, In court here In con-nection wltb a suit for separate maintenance. Stonebouse said he had divorced Sarah Jane Ilardlgan Stonebouse, his second wife. In Las Vegas, Nev., In 1923, and that she was not entitled to an allowance now. The woman claims that her husband was not a legal resident of Las Vegas and th it the decree Is void. Back to the Arctic for Him 1 Takes Ores From Mud as Did Ancient Greeks Miami, Okla. A machine de $ signed by W. A. Butchnrt of t ! Joplln, Mo., la reclaiming mil Z Hops ot dollars In ore that for . j merly went Into toe waste piles Twenty-fiv- e centuries ago Hero T dotus referred to the recovery J of gold from the mud by means J of feather daubed witb pitch. ? J Today oil and various chem len I reagents are nsed to re cover valuohle lnc and lead ore from slimes, or mineralized mud. and from waste piles of tailings f that at one time were cnnsld- - J ered virtually valueless. ttf'rt-- ' KrXJv y(i I A philostipher says i v'i that one has to be In business with a mnn JM5n4 or in love wltb a . . r f J woman In order to know that he doesn't know them. |