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Show ITAII CACHE AMERICAN. Sc: !y -l- , t How I Broke Into V Georos By LUPE VELEZ MUST broke IAI I broke lulu llte Ask Mil) boil ome of Copyright by iwc Z ZZ Herman my in It before c I 4. Him lui worker) m no ton III mutormeii, aohlter and mliltlnmcn, well a In many plividcaily exa ting fattory Job. Now ilia coal mine. Tlie employ ment of women there I part of the CntumuuM campaign to gel Women out of the kitchen iiietiiiliig (he borne. But If there I anything mure edifying about the coal ilt than the kitchen It haa yet to he allow n, say a one of the most noted women writer. Nome of my readi-rmay thrill to thl "prooP that women can do any kind of men'a work. Personally, I do not. For my part 1 aee nothing thrilling or inspiring In the spectacle of men laboring In the bowel of the earth to dig out couL Tlie thought of women doing It affects uie less agreeably. Then I hare never been an eMineiit of that great human sport whleh niiglit be culled fooling ourselves. Ami for women to compete with men on a basis of brute strength to me so obviously trying to fool ourselves. The claim thut women can do everything ns well as men will never have my vote. But I believe they no do a good many thing better 1 1, I Wfc un ktlkrB Mk ymlmUt alt V kii IfliaHM Krlfs 4 mro kiMiMr 11 fcr Ik bHW MTUmauat. W, )K1 trrt iiomi rATHOMi Num indlstit. GIRLS WANTED lif 111, ItNt) fn'uiBt IV.l-- c ill la Coupma 1M . CUf Quinh School of Ilosuty Culture Iv a 'la wnfMll Lri fli rwn liti. I M . D ! Laughter The person eho know how to laugh, when to laugh, and what to laugh at, ha achieved philosophy all hi own. 1 i , I ASK TOl.B DBUCCIST APEX a I aal-ar- It sh-ir- So) let, We knew, of course, that In Russia women Here working a hrlckhijrr. and theyll tell you III the hCeali'nl training ruliool In (he wot hi If you mirv Ire liny! Koine of Hi? things (lii jf ninke you do. aial Bntne of the rlnkg ynu Imre to take In (he ) IL tvilirs! I My life slur I wn tmrti nenr Mexico City hit lntn full of exeliemont. and I'ut alwuya the Iwt il -( where there la tile tu il exrlteim-nt- . I waa hnrn l.tive Villa In Ima. Vi le wa the pmfeiuiliinnl name of my I nuither, an opens ginger. and when I went on the alage I took her name Inxlead of my f hi her'. He waa Colonel In the army, amt when I waa very young I rude with him and sitvr men killed. I .oia of rxrltenipnt In those tiny. At thirteen my mother sent me to e convent In the fulled States Our Ijttly of the larks In Sun Sltidled Knslihlt. I. Ike to dn nee. ( Plena I waant milch of a autre aa a student. Went hark to Mexleo, gut a Job In a llienter at the age of fifteen and da need my way to stardom on the miiHlenl comedy alnge, My wa $50 a day, whleh waa the must money eurned hy any star In I wanted $75 dollar a day, Mexleo. hut the theater manager wouldn't give me the rnlae, so I broke my Had an offer to go to conlraet. Cuha, and another to star In Ituenoa I Aires. And then an American suggested I go to Hollywood; that Itleh- - (n Commutil-- t newspaper In recently fi attired a plmlo-grapnf four girl In red scurf umJ l bkirts carrjlng miner lump. I he.v ere member of a "shot It brigade" lu a Soviet emil mine. Ami above the picture wa printed In Work In the Inrga type, "Women A Voting l!u-- iio-vl- rimnlii Mothing Appealing in Soviet Idea of Taking Women Out of Kitchen i srl. Beware the Cough or Cold that Hangs On Tmulent coughs and cold Ied ia aerioua trouble. Vou can atop them now with Creomulxiun, an emulsified creom that ia plrasant to takes Creomuliiun u new medical discovery with tvro-- f old it soothe and heal the in dimed membrane and inhibit germ growth. Of all known drug, creosote it recog-Hire- d by high medical authorities a on of the greatest healing agencies for cough and cold and other form of throat trouble. Creomulsion contain Inaddilion to creosote, other healing elements which aootheand heal the infected membraneaand stop the Irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and check the growth of the germ. Creomulsion it guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of peniatrnt cough and cold, bronchial asthma, bmnrhiti tnd other form of respiratory diva sea, and i excellent for budding nj the natem tfter cold nr flu. Money refunded if nr couplror cold, nomatterof how longitani Ing. i not relieved after taking according todirectiona. Ask your druggist, (Adr.) THEY HAVE FOUND A WAY TO RELIEVE SORE THROAT HK All Pain And Soreness Eased In Few Minutes This Simple Way dniS?pes AN INTr.aMOl'NTAIN PKOIHCT FOLLOW Precedent i than men. Home making, educatt,,!. sociology, certuin kinds of literature science, and art open to them field. In which the feminine umieratandlag can offer aotiiethlng that men do nJt have to give. Ami nutumlly Working In these fields where they fiave ini tiling exceptional to offer must firing them the hlkdiest form of self exprt. h.n. What a pity that a whole n. tloiiul culture should he devoted t0 or crushing out th! stamping In the creative lililquoin-.iability f women aud making them slmpij a Imitation men. of And we Imr poor not mentioned the loss to tlie f.umiyj 1111 (V IS1. Svn.llral. WNU f The referendum Idea isnt new Noah cent out a dove to see if the land wa dry. Arkon Beacon-Jou- r DIRECTIONS PICTURED BELOW " 3 2 y.al. Utah High School of Beauty Culture lx (to CM IS. Tk lusty Csttui frstiitM Ink as IsytiuM lian i bUbmi M N sat ns lrtmw w k no o im tut. in m Mt awra i min. tmvutju m un w H It M l tann I PteM aa f MlhM 8BI UU(M. k CMS. ADDRESS. this WEEKS f To sr th riUZE STORY pivot aropn revolve: which fh Mil- lh th power t InCmlr; WWI on, SLortrr, th ft rwna In 1 givra direction, pi Shot rcrl.ter; iliart the whel torninr la roar direction hr oapportitig th tndotlrlc that Bap Bar IntrraioantaiB Bid good port r goS rar Blotter will rtara ta roa. MISS VEKDA liiChLNS. Richnond, Utah. r Place Your Order Now Uttorts, Ids, IkU mi ittar pwlv hifc, ftrtl mi ccllii 9 Hiwiii bM m a art iistriltiare far "Sal Itf ynr fcrMfcn bmI UwaA diet Irdrs. frill tar facial btefert, plus . n pJacatf mi cast Ascaiats aa fm Ifclti hMcifu lttrs A Hatcheries Ramshaw ts. sun sum. salt tau mi un, ins Intentions Let a man be true to bis inten-- ( lions and hia efforts to fulfill them, ,and the point is gained, whether he succeeds or not Letters of i' ;Thomas Carlyle. i JOSEPH WM. TAYLOR, Inc. Funeral Directors & Advisers. 125 N. Main SL, Salt Lk City Consult nr pablie Advisory Department for any phase of Modern funrral method and charge. Fifty year of Service. Hesitation To hesitate is to yield, to deliberate is to be lost; we must act allways on principles; we must never pause to calculate consequences. (Agrippinus. i- - GASOLINE 1 j Packed With Power Not Quite Safe Manufacturers have now learned to make the office safe from almost everything except sticky fingers. ho Angeles Times. Lillie to Trickle Down Your Throat. Lupe Velez. fc. ard Bennett needed a girl like Lupe to play In The Dove on the stage. So I started for Hollywood. Started Is right, for when I reached the Anterlcuu border they wouldnt lot me pass; said 1 wasnt of age. I was seventeen. All the way back to Mexico City I cried. But I'd show them. I would get to Hollywood some day. I appealed to our president, to the minister, to everybody lu Mexico City. After a lot of letter writing between Mexico City and Washington and what you call red tape" they said I could cross the border. Hollywood at Inst and then Rlch- ard Bennett decided I was too young and Inexperienced to play In his show. I finally landed a Job done ing In Fanny Brices show at the Music Box theater In Hollywood. I worked hard, and one day I was called to Interview a motion pic-- , tore producer. Hal Roach. Come- dies? Sure I could make comedies. I worked in several, darn near broke my neck, but I felt I was getting some place in this town, where what you do counts, not what you did b fore you came. Douglas Fairbanks was looking for an actress to play a wild mountain girl In The Gaucho. It was a Spanish type. I got the part It was my big chance and I gave them all the wildness they wanted. I rode with Doug, danced with him, fought with him, made love to him In the picture I Was I happy when The Gau- cho ,, opened and the public was to Lupe? Not happy delirious! I? ao til a 5 Dwnnttitljxno Taw , V, nice to me, made me a star, and Im still deliriously happy. Delivered Lat Dying Mesage The Countess de Caen, grand- of an English admiral, daughter iA tiMvX.'adS' iZ who, during the war, was known as the little mother of the troops," Theres only one certain way to has returned to London after com- tell a woman3 age; ask another pleting her task of woman. London personally giving last words In French hospitals to their mothers, wives and sweethearts. To carry per week will be paid for the best out her work she traveled more than article on Whj re miles In England and In should ase IntermoanUin msde It has taken her 14 years Goods" Send Similar to above four story in prose er verse te In to do so. She said in an Interview termonnUin Products Column, P O. that every message had been given Bos 1555, Salt taka City. If your except In a few tragic cases where story appears In this column you will the relatives were either dead or check for . could not be traced. Nearly every last words were about hi W.N.U. Salt Lake City Week N. 305 soldiers mother. - d Tit-Bit- s. $5 rf Repeat Gargle and Do Not Rinse Mouth, Allow Gargle to Remain on Membranes of the Throat for Prolonged Effect. GARGLE ThorThrow oughly Your Head Way Back, Allowing a TK.TBtggE5yjtTraflKacgvaPKj:'t-sj- 'S? - ttJiKbaa ao, r In Uie Gardens at Mount Vernon SCOTT WATSON URING the year Just passed the various coremonies connected with the celebration Washington have revived in the memories of all Americans our debt to "The Fattier Monuments and of His Country." memorials of all kinds, names of towns, cities, counties, a state and the capital of the nation all serve to remind us of Washington, the soldier, the statesman, the President, tlie first American, the world figure. But for all of those he remains in our minds something of a dim and legendary figure, the type of person who is Just outside the realm f our experience, Perhaps the best wny to get an adequate idea Washington, the man, the human being, and dispel some of the awe whleh sm rounds an Immortal Is to pay a visit to his beautiful estate, By ELMO I I I I I ' ,in Tlie lllst,ir-- of Mount fes l'u '?ll,e nll,ldle of the Se'enteenth century In Um, or 1C-ashmston who had been certain Joh,n a Ca'ftller Enghind during tlie Cromwellian crossed the Perlod wl" hia bro,'r Atlantlc to VirKln,a tlle refue of s nJny K"'V alists during the Puritan regime in Knglaud. John Washington made his home at Popes Creek in Westmoreland county and there married Ann Pope. In 1G74 Lord Culpeper sold a grant of 5,000 acres on tlie west bank of the Potomac river, about 15 miles below what Is now the District of Columbia, to Nicholas Spencer and John Washington and on that tract John Washington built his home (now known as Wakefield) at Bridges Creek, about a mile from the Pope home. He saw some military service against the Indians and held the rank 0j coonei He lived the life of a gentleman-nicpanter for twenty years, death coming in 1077. His son Lawrence was the grandfather of the Illustrious George. Augustine, son of Lawrence, married twice, left a widow and aD(j at His death, in geven children. There had been three other chil dren, four by the first marriage and six by tlie second. Lawrence, first born of Augustine by his grst wife, Jane Butler, Inherited the estate soon to be known as Mount Vernon. George, first of the five surviving children born to Augustine by his second wife. Mary Ball, inherited an es tate in Stafford county, Va., nearly opposite Fredericksburg, in whlcti estate, however, tiis mother had an administrative Interest during his minority, as indeed she had in the estates of her other children, George was born on February 22, 1732 new style of cording to the dar), on his father's plantation at Bridges (now Creek, In the parish, of Washington Wakefield), Westmoreland county, Va. In tlie next year his father built a brick barn on his Hunting Creek (Mount Vernon) property, and in 1735, or a little earlier, seems to have erected a dwelling house also, for the record shows that v e 17-1- 0 calen-Americ- Proves Only Medicine Helps A Sore Throat Thelbrnb of Washington. George Washington lived a few of Ids childhood years there. He was about eight years old when the family took up residence on tlie Stafford county estate which Georgs Inherited in 1743. Ilis father was a man of landed wealth, and evidently enterprising. He made several trading voyages to England, sent Ills two ehX-ssons, and Augustine (Austlne), to school in England, profited hy the sale of iron ore deposits on his Stafford county estate to a smelting company and the carrying of cargoes of pig iron to England. All of tlie children of Augustine Washington received a good Inheritance, but inasmuch as tlie Hunting Creek estate was bequeathed to the eldest son Lawrence, It seems likely that their father looked upon It as his principal estate, though lie lived on the Fredericksburg Lawrence Washington served as a plantation. captain tinder Admiral Vernon in the expedition against Cartagena, in 17 10, and never recovered from tlie effects of that brief campaign, though death did not come to him until another twelve years lmd passed. Lord Fairfax, whose estate adjoined that of the Washingtons, was also at Cartagena, and this friendship between the two families was to grow closer in later years through the marriage of Lawrence Washington into the Fairfax family and the fondness of I.ord Fairfax for George. In 1743, after inheriting the Hunting Creek estate, Lawrence Washington built a house that was in keeping with his station, and renamed tlie estate Mount Vernon, in honor of tlie British admiral under whom he had served. Wealthy and of good family, Capt. Lawrence Washington lived in gentlemanly slate at Mount Vernon. Lawrence was fond of his George, this fondness developing almost into guardianship. George loved his brother, and was fond of Mount Vernon, too; so, much of his time in adolescent years was spent at Mount Vernon. In 1751 he accompanied his Law rence to Barbados, whither the latter had been ordered by tlie family physician. But Lawrence did not regain his health, and George himself contracted smallpox. This slightly pitted iiis face for life. Lawrence died In 1752, and at tils death George became responsible for the administration of Mount Vernon and also for the care of his niece, Lawrence's only child. The daughter did not long survive her father, and at her death George Washington, hy the terms of her fathers will, Inherited Mount Vernon. During the period of peace the calm before the storm Colonel Washington saw much of Mount Vernon. In 175H, he married the richest woman In the Potomac region. Martha, the widow of Daniel Parke Custis. Of the next few years in Washington's life one historian has t e war-tim- filled with aristocratic visitors. He had his stud of tlie highest breed, Ids fox hounds, and all tlie luxuries of a prosperous country gentleman. Ilis kitchens, his smoke houses, his stables, his stewards, his tobacco sheds, his fields of wheat and corn, his hundred cows. Ills vast poultry yards, his barges, all Indicated great wealth, and that generous hospitality which is now a tradition. His time was passed in overseeing his lurge estate and in sports, following tlie hounds or fishing, exchanging visits with prominent Virginia families, amusing himself with card playing, dancing and the soclul frivolities of the day. It was this luxury which Washington was willing to give up In response to the call of duty when the fight for American liberties began. After he had successfully led that fight, he retired to Mount Vernon, only to be called upon again in 17S9 to exchange his role of Virginia planter for that of Presidont of a new nation. When he was ready to lay down the cares of state in 1797 and retire once moro to Mount Vernon, only two more years of life remained for him, for he died on December 14, 1799. At his death Mount Vernon passed as a life interest to his widow, Martha Washington. Under the terms of Washingtons will some of his effects had been dispose! of and hy his widow's will most of the household belongings passed to her four grandchildren. Thus the original Mount furniture of Vernon became scattered. Mount Vernon, itself, passed, in succession, to Bushrod Washington, John Augustine Washington and John A. Washington, Jr., changes taking place in the furnishings and interior decorations of the house, as convenience or inclination prompted the respective owners. The Washington family, in the generation of John A. Washington, Jr., were desirous that the historic estate should, for hettpr preservation, pass Into tlie possession of the nation. He offered to sell Mount Vernon to the United States, and later to the commonwealth of Virginia. Both projects failed. But what legislatures could not accomplish private patriotic agencies could achieve. Miss Pamela Cunningham of South Carolina appealed to American women, and In 1R50 she was able to organize the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. One great American, Edward Everett, took up the cause, toured the country, and gathered SOS, 294.59 for the Mount In 1S5S, therefore, the ladies' Vernon fund. association was able to buy from John A. , Jr., 202 acres of the Mount Vernon es tate, including the residence and attendant buildings, the gardens, etc., and also the tomb of our revered first President. The price paid and was $200,000 interest. Subsequently w ritten : through the generosity of Jay Gould, in 1SS7 ; as the lord of Mount Vernon Christian Heurich of Ilis style of life D. C in 1S93. Washington, was almost baronial. He had a chariot and four, and Hugh McIC. Landon, in 1925, the total area with black postilions in livery, for the use of his owned by the association has been Increased to wife, while he himself always appeared on horse- approximately 200 acres. back, the finest rider In Virginia. His house was ( by Western Newspaper Union.) Modern medical science now throws an entirely new light on sore throat. A way that eases the pain, rawness and irritation in as little as two or three minutes. Results are among the most extraordinary in medical science. On doctors advice, millions are following this way . . . discarding old-tiwashes and antiseptics.' For it has been found that only medicine can help a sore throat. Simple To Do. All you do is crush and dissolve three BAYER Aspirin Tablets in half a glass of water. Gargle with it twice as pictured above. If you have any indication of a cold before gargling take 2 Bayer Aspirin Tablets with a full glass of water. This is to combat any signs of cold that have gone into your system. Keep on taking if cold has a hold. For GenuineBayer Aspirin will notharm you. Your doctor will tell you, it does not depress the heart. Get a box of 12 or a bottle of 100 at any drug store. NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE CHig a Reduces Infection, Eases Pain Instantly. Gargling with Bayer Aspirin will do three things: Relieve soreness at once. Allay inflammation. AND reduce infection; which is the important thing in fighting a sore throat. It requires medicine like BAYER ASPIRIN to do these things! That is why throat specialists throughout America are prescribing this BAYER gargle in place of old-tiways. Results are quick and amazing. Be careful, however, that you get real BAYER Aspirin Tablets for this purpose. For they dissolve completely enough to gargle without leaving irritating particles. Watch this when you buy. yTN BAYER ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS 1S r half-broth- Wash-Ington- the Give your akin is protection of the best and safest soap. The experience of it regularly every day; it not only cleans es but keeps the akin mil- lions, during the past fifty years, teUs you tnat your best cnoice Cnticara Soap. Use & Chemical Corp., MaldsM WV in good condition. freeing it from all cause of irritation El Mirador PALM SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA Americas Foremost Desert Resort . . . Th lore of the desert , . . Lazy days . . . crisp exhilarating nights. Sunbathing . . . tennis . . . golf . . . riding . . . swimall facilities for recreation and health. ming ... Write for dtscriptiv booklet WARREN B. FINNEY, Managing Director |