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Show CACTIE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH AN EXCLUSIVE DRESS SIMPLE TO CROCHET Keeping Up C h cience Aordic Type Lcat Numerous in U. S., SnVntLt Reveals .in Gay Cotton Print Dress Easy to Make ami Sure to Please Sprightly Maiden of Americans .tmlieil C !? Married People .Arc jlfealtliier and Live Longer, Study Shows 4 tj y-y- ate Is Highest Anion' Single IVrsons ' tin Imti.Ttlj fiiammiri il uf hi littli- rli.u iiut-ly tli. it's wluvuuf mill frm'k a ?' dainty fur tn( uf "tir tn UM. Sn asy t' iTin'hi1, f'u, In a liiil till . . i over piitti-rn- , by Juki' if plain as iln'iis anti i nliii'lt eurtt-collar. I'm white nr coloni Hiring. .'i'i".'l you uill find diIn i;it rections fur m.ik mr the ilreis slomn In sizes I, it atel S; iUnstrations of It mol of all stitches used; material requirements. Send la cents In coins or stamps (coins preferred) to The Seu Ini: Circle, Household Arts lpt., J'.ll V. Fourteenth St.. Nett- Volk, X. V Write plainly pattern mimher. your mime ami address. Un-t- i - Ui-- I luc-d- I - llriilt-erooni- s Lines, Don't Forgot W oman Vorer Mrs. Fsiher I'tirnell, who lias .'1.1 years ns n woman verier at Aiiinitlnes church. Fulham, has 'inotliered' 1.I lu'idcs. Flic-lan- She lias erected caeli with a moth- erly smile Ht the church door and my. helped them ihroueh the Sirs. I'lirgoll laid the buguy that hrhlecrooms or best men always forNot one of our brideget the ring. grooms ever forgot the ring, she declared. New l'ork Herald Tribune. BOYS! GIRLS! Head the Grape Nuts ail In another column of this paper and learn howto Join the Dizzy Iean Winners and win valuable free prizes. Adv. NEW I? YORK.-- If you want lualtliy, yet tu live lotiy; and le tnarricil. Figures showing that the married state, whether blissful or not. is at least a healthy one are reported in the current issue of the .liroiolltaii Life Insurance Ihilletin. company s .stalNth-ti- l '.Marriage, apparently. Is comhl-elvto long life and good health.' the report slates. -- At any rate, married limn nml women live longer than do single persons, nml married pie register lower death rates from nearly nil the Important causes of ilealli than ilo bachelors or spinsters. Result of Study. We would expis't these findings to emerge from any statistical study of mortality according to conjugal condition, for nuirrled persons constitute a select id group. 'The lame, the hall, ami the blind' do not marry, as n rale. Nevertheless, the differences between the respective death rates of wedded nml single persons are so large that lids factor of selection can he only a partial explanation of them. It would seem that the relatively staid nml regular course of married life Is more conducive tn health than are the comparatively free nnd easy ways of the mimnrrled. Bachelors Death Rate. Among males over fifteen years of age, the standardized death rate for bachelors Is 1,214.2 per 100.11 as compared with S33.9 for married Point of Wisdom men. The first point of wisdom Is to dls Among females the standardized corn that which Is false; the second death rate of spinsters Is 1,039.1. as to know that which Is true. Lac against S36.0 for the married of all tantlus. ages." Windshield Filter May Be Crutch for Color-Blin- d Drivers SEATTLE. simple and infallible help for the colorblind automobile driver who gets into difficulties because he A cummt distinguish between green and red tratlie lights Is suggested by Thomas Loss of the University of Washington here. In a report to the current Issue of Science, Mr. Itoss describes a contrivance that can he lilted to the windshield of the driver's car. The device consists of small LEAF BLACK 40 pieces of special glass which can Dogs Away from filter out either red or green light. r Keeps Etergreens,Shrubsetc. With the red filter placed above the green one, the driver will know that Cation of Spray. V par r IJ . when he sees a light through the top piece of glass he Is seeing red light When he sees the light through the bottom piece In this arrangement It Is a green light. The device Is Improved by placing a prism over each filter In such a way that Quality of Thought The happiness of your life depends the traffic signal will be visible opon the quality of your thoughts. through both filters at the same time. Device Ic Practical. This Idea has worked In actual trials, Mr. Ross reports. It could be adapted to persons suffering from other types of A variation of the red and green filters Is also suggested. One of the color filters, says Mr. Ross, might be perforated and parts of the other set In it like polka dots. Apply New De Luxe Or. Scholls a on any sensitive spots Thus, If the red filter were percaused by shoe pressure or friction and and the openings were filled forated relief. They stop pain youll have instant with the green material, a red trafof corns, callouses and bunions; prevent sore toes, blisters; ease tight shoes. Flesh fic tight or other red object viewed color, waterproof: dont come off in the bath; economical. Sold everywhere. through the resulting filter would appear bright with dark spots. A green object, on the other hand, would appear dark with bright spots." By Another Name Companionate marriage is very old but it wasnt called that. color-blin- PAINFUL PINCHING Zino-pad- mmM Zinopad 100 Bell rerfome profit to you. I ex- Quislte odors. 10c for sample anu sales plan. 22nd 8t. hew York. E. 28 Velvet Iarfumes, WNU 2436 W kidneys function badly and WHENsuffer a nagging backache, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, nervous, aif upset use Doans Pills. Doan's are especialjy for poorly working kidneys. Millions of boxes are used every year. They are recommended the country over. Ask your neighbor! ... Hairpin Goes Traveling; Reaches Appendix 1 A , ev WASHINGTON. How much glare can a person's eyes stand? This is the question that a device described in a patent grunted here to two Chicago inventors Intends to answer aeciirtiloly and quickly. The inventors are V A. Mendelsohn anil C. F. Shepard. Called a glarouieier (glare measurer), the device creates glares uf various intensities, and on a scale tells Just what Intensity of glare blinds a person's eyes. The readings obtained, state the Inventors, furnish a means whereby colored glasses of proper color nnd tint may be readily prescribed to protect the eyes of the patient from injurious effects from sun or other too strong or glaring light. How It Works. The glarometer, with its bulb and leus, looks like a lantern for projecting picture slides. In front of the lens slide translucent glass screens of frosted or ground glass. By turning a knob the light em anating from the built can he made as bright as desired or dimmed. As the knob Is turned it moves a pointer across a scale which Indirectly indicates the glare of the bulb at any moment. The person whose eyes are being tested looks at the mark on the screen with one or both eyes. The knob Is turned to increase the light until the glare from the bnlh is sn strong that it temporarily blinds the person and causes 1dm to lose sight of the central mark. Dog, Research Hero, Ilonoreil bv Monument Medicine here. The monument to the dog, as It Is to be called, will he erected at the suggestion of Academician I. Pavlov, whose famous discoveries in psychology were made by means of studies with dogs. The monument is to be a bronze Image of a sitting dog on a pedeson all four sides tal. of the pedestal will depict separate movements from the life of the dog at Pavlovs laboratory. s 1,( HOTEL Temple Square Kate i $1.50 to $3.00 Siro baa m The Hold Tempi lustily desirable, friendlyit atmus-pher- e. Yuu will always find lmnN upremrl)' evnifortoble, ud thoroughly agreeable. ou cao there fort understand why this hotel bi HIGHLY RECOMMENDED ults You cm alopprrcialenbyi ot distinction to step If 9 9Imark boautitul this hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITFR. Afgr, Pattern Distinctive Residence No, The time for gay little cotton prims both for older sister nnd the younger set is at hand, and nothing could he simpler than this darling dress so easy to make so comfortable for nimble dears nnd so smart to wear. Tlie French bodice effect and panel are cunning details which nil little maidens love, especially the flared skirt, because it provides ample freedom for playtime. Decorative features are hidden In the contrasting collar trimmed with ruffled edging, nnd brief puff sleeves. The material may he a printed percale, lawn linen or gingham. If It Is made in a plaid or cheeked gingham. you can omit the ruffled edging from d Art Abode. ..renowned Throughout the West Salt Lakes Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 DOUBLE THE Hotel IVewIiouse W. E. SUTTON, General Manager CIIAUNCEY W. WEST $2.50 to $4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths Assiato Oeno Manager J makes a close one ! r? vtemm ; Device Measures Amount of Glare Eyes Can Endure & ' MOTEL ' n. :v'' H l,n NEWBUOUSE Riding a Horse Wasn't One of Duke's Accomplishments. -t if ; I THE round-heade- people, mostly Teutonic In Well, I Mike couldn't rl.le a Imrse nny more than he could walk a tight modern distribution, and the Fast hut he wnsn't going to let that stand In Ills way of getting a Job. riffio, Baltic, also round headed, hut hhuul 'Sure can," he salil. And rigid there, his troubles started. ami wide nosed. He also recognized The big fellow told Duke he was a rodeo rider. He'd Just finas a definite physical racial type ished up working for a wild west show and was on hit way to Join the red haired, blue or another one In California. He told Duke he'd fix him up with a grayeyed Keiths. cowboy outfit and see if he couldn't work him Into a job someProfessor lloototi took his popuwhere. That was more than Duke had figured on. lation samples In three different 1 mean, he might have bluffed Ids way through the business of riding ways: from a eonsMeriilde number a tame horse, hut getting aboard one of those bucking bronchus they ride of prisons, from ordinary citizen" In the circus was another thing altogether. The more lie heard about that groups In Boston and Nashv ille, and Job, the less he liked It But before hed finally made up his mind, the from a group of rather highly edbig fellow had slaked him to a lot of cowboy chillies, and Duke owed him who visited the Cenucated person so much money that he Jn- had to have a Job to pay It hack. tury of Progress In Chicago. The Reward for Bluffing Is Usually a Show-DowNo Racial Superiority. Duke began hoping they'd turn him down when he applied for a Job Kspecially Interesting, in his estimation, Is the fact that the racial hut they didn't. The big fellow saw to that. He went to work at seventy-fiv- e bucks a mouth and his keep, and since It was the off season and the percentage la cai h group, whclhot Jail bird, man in due street or highbrow, was just about the same as Vthe percentage in the wh.de population. That Is, a really scientific analysis cannot discern any such thing as racial criminality or racial superiority. This does not moan that there Is no correlation between raeial type and tendencies in activities, whether criminal or lawful. Thus, criminal Kellies tend to soy offenses and to crimes Involving violence, while criminal Nordics ate "experts ' specializing In forgery and fraud, hut not going In very much for murder. Tq.A- - rAv'.,x Nes-torlu- n Noidlc-Aipin- narrow-nose- t fT W.MJ Servleo. Adam's Peak, In Ceylon, Is one of the world's holiest places, because It's sacred In four religions. A peculiar mark, like a giant footprint, on a rock at the summit of the mountain is believed by Buddhists to have been made by Buddha. Hindus say Siva was responsible for It. and Mohammedans that It indicates the spot where Adam stood to do penance when lie was expelled from Fourth claim Is put forward by Christians that the rock was the resting place of St. Thomas the Doubter. Pilgrims of all four religions come to the rock from every part of the East. London Answers. YOUVE medium colored, ta. HOSTELRY Our lobby it delightfully air cooled during the summer month Radio for ivory Room 200 Rooms 200 Both One of the Holiest Places; Pour Religions Claim Spot ! Rearing and Snorting the Horse Plunged Up and Down. show was in winter quarters, lie managed to bluff his way through the first couple of weeks mi the Job. Duke's method was simple, hut it had its kickback. He jut bragged so much about what a good broncho buster lie was that eterxlmdy took it for granted that he knew his horses. But ail that talk was just going to make tilings worse for him when the big showdown came. Duke fooled the rest of the show, but he couldn't kid the big fellow. When he found out Duke couldn't ride a horse, he started teaching him as much as he could. But you can't teach a man to bust bronchos in two weeks, and that's about all the time they had before the show went on the road again, Duke had a streak of luck the first week or two the show was on the road. They forgot about him or something. Anyway, nobody asked him to ride a Imrse. Then, in Knlispcll, Mont., the blow fell. And a tough blow It was, too. Dynamite Was a Tough Specimen of Horse Flesh. Kalispell was a great ranching town. A cowman tu me neighborhood brought in a had horse that went by the pretty name of Dynamite, and Dynamite's reputation was so bad around that neck of the woods that the show offered a prize of a hundred bucks to the first cowboy that stayed on his back. And the first nutue drawn to ride Dynamite was you guessed it Duke Kdwatds. I didn't say anything, says Duke, but I felt myself going Into a faint. By this time I knew how to mount a horse and ride it around the lot, but I'd never been on a bucker. It took six cowboys to saddle that brute and hold him so I could mount, but I had to act as if I wasnt afraid. I climbed into the saddle, and then, with a yell, we were off. The horse, rearing and snorting, went down almost to his knees and bounced tip again. I thought my head would snap off my neck. 1 felt myself fainting, hut I stuck to the horse until we reached the bandstand. r Quick, jim! give ON the rope! YOUR At" L I SADDLE ijtite- - Duke Played a Solo on the Big Bass Drum. It took Duke and Dynamite just about forty secouds to reach that bandstand, hut remember, that's quite a while to be ou a bucking horse. It was at the handstand that It happened. There, Dynamite put on an extra pound or two of reserve steam. He gave a last leap, kicked up his heels, and Duke went Hying over bis head. Straight into the bandstand Duke flew. He could tee the big bass drum coming up at him felt his nose flatted out as it hit the drumhead. Then everything went black until he awoke in the hospital with a busted head and a big cut in his forehead. And did they fire Duke after that? Well thats the funny part of It. Everybody sttid hed given that Dynamite horse one heck of a good ride. Duke stayed with that outfit for three years and rode plenty more tough horses. Then he went Into the movies and rode In western pictures, so you've probably seen Duke at one time or another, on the screen. And that one experience, he says, has given him the only rule of success be knows. First throw your bluff, says Duke, and then make It good. WNU Service. History of the Fan Is as Old as Civilization LENINGRAD. In honor of Ever since the vestal virgins used FLINT, MICH. A hairpin here has really carved out a ca- the dog, so often the hero and fans to encourage sacrificial fires, invaluable aid of medical re- women have prized these reer for itself. Implements of coquetry states It wandered so far that it search, a bronze monument will a writer iu the Kansas City Star. be in mentioned on will the be erected the of the probably territory Cupid, according to mythology, tore one of medical of a Institute Journal of pages Experimental a wing from shoulder when these days. Strange to the doctors is how the hairpin happened to end Us travels In a woman's appendix. "That is an amazing thing," said Dr. J. C. MacGregor, who removed the appendix after It had ruptured. He has never seen a report of such a large object getting Into an appendix. It Is not unusual to find tiny objects of foreign matter In amputated appendices. The woman recovered. llell HynJtt LAKES NEWEST SALT 'i T is an American? X"t a juii'e Nordic," t'ica!ly, aiil Irof. E. A. liuo-tui- i, of J bin ai d university, answering; his own question before the New I haven meeting of the American Association of Rilling Lesson (if three By FLOYD GIBBONS of the American g""i sued sum.:.-iliwt-soFamou Headline Hunter. popuialhtn, taken cial titel geographic backgrounds, heard stories about how people have learned to sw im the pure .Nordic Ivpe averages out thrown into the water and having to swim. Well, odds by long the least numerous heres the story of how I hike Edwards learned to ride a horse. only 2.23 per cent of the total. The largest groups, la the nine Duke lives in New York city. Maybe youve heard of him. physical types Into which Professor Maybe youve seen him ride horses, lie does it pretty regularly lloolon analyzed the American popnow. Rut Ill bet youve never seen anythin' half as good as ulation, are Nordic mixed with that first bronco-hac- k e.. u: dun Duke ever took, out in Kalispdl, Nordic Mediterrasomething elsi nean and Nordic Alpine. The first Mont., in July, 1912. of these two types liaie long heads It wa this way. Duke wai twenty year old and fed up with and darkish coloration : the second the big city. The old adventurer' blood wai pumping In hii vein type have round heads and medium and hia feet were Itching to go placet. So he Invested most of his coloration. money in a railroad ticket and Headed west. He didn't know what he was going to do when he got there. But that was soon settled Type Classified. for him. Other physical types added by Uti the train, Duke met up with a bird In a big. Iff gallon hat. He got the Harvard untliropologist to the Mediterranean racial to talking with him, and (..Id him lie was going west to see If he could triad of popular oonveisaiioti and get a Job on u ranch. Can you ride a horse?" the big fellow wanted to know. writing ure the liinarlc, a Ilo-ib.i- Death Club WII to any final aim nt With end, the greater part of mankind lh at hazard. Archbishop Leighton, the collar anil make the collar of plain white pique. Barbara Bell 1niern No. 1 xvj jj Is available In sizes 2, 4. li, , and 10. Nlze 4 requires l?i yards of 153 Inch iualerl.il plus yard for contrast. Send 15 cents for the pattern. Send your order to The Sewing Circle I'nttern Dept., 110 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Adventurers DiflVrciit Kim!s LIVING WITHOUT AN AIM Zephyr's he was flirting with Psyche and It to her to prove that presented he was the better man. Helen of Troy, Euripides wrote, knew when site suffered from summer heat how to cool Iter cheeks, fresh and velvety as a ripe peach, by the use nf a peacocks tail arranged Queen Elizabeth loved fans and her subjects vied with uoe another in giving them to her. It Is said she had 27 In her wardrobe when she died. Shakesnp.-irdemanded a " wing of painted butterfly to waft over the sleeping Titania. The history of the fan Is as old as civilization. In the beginning It probably was a palm leaf or bird wing used for winnowing grain, fanning fires or brushing flies. The first record of a fan, It is said, appears in the annals of the Chow B. C. The emdynasty, peror received as tribute two magnificent tropical birds. The birds not surviving, the feathers were made Into fans. Ancipnt sculpture shows attendants waving fans. Fans were first used by men, but women soon discovered their artistic possibilities and quickly apWhen an empropriated them. peror went to war two fans were nailed upright on his chariot as standards. The empress carried a fan to dust the chariot wbeela lest her robes be soiled. 1032-110- 1 BOYS! GIRLS! Join Dizzy Dean Winners! Get Valuable Prizes e Send top from one Grape-Nut- s package, with your name and address, to Grape-NutBattle Creek, Mich., for new membership pin and certificate and illustrated catalog of 49 nifty free prizes. Youll like it has a winning flavor crisp, delicious Grape-Nut- s all its own. Economical to serve, too, for two tablespoonfuls, with whole milk or cream and fruit, provide more varied nourishment than many a hearty meoL (Offer expires Dec. 31, 1936. Good only in the U.S.A.) full-siz- Pi"' A Th Sort son fln Mod by coroot, in Gvn.rol Foods now pockogo FREE! ombor.liip Fin. New 1936 solid bronze with red lettering design, Free for 1 Grape-Nut- s package top. PJzzy Doan Ring. And it's a beautyl Heavy gold finish. Fits any finger. Free for 3 Grape-Nut- s package tops. s, Durr Dean, co Gravb-- ijts. Battle end ntethe item(s) checked'bHow:Ut S Ck.Mich pckae Pfor w' Membership Pin (send 1 package top) Dusy Dean Winner Ring (send 3 package topa). Street. City -- State. " which |