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Show iHUKEK I'UESS. LEHI. Scenes 'and Persons in the CurremNewl IT AH WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... 4 f Items cf Interest to the Housewife AROUND .he HOUSE ggjg 1 By Lemuel F. Parton j brown delicately in a moderately 375 degrees hot oven stirring occasionally that they may color evenly. Sprinkle with salt after removing from the oven, and spread on crumpled ur.glaxed paBottles Have a per to absorb any surface oil. New WNU Service. little glycerine added to the water bottles are with which filed for the first time. This will make the rubber supple, and the bottle will last longer. Protecting Buttonholes A row machine-se- w ing around button holes in knit underwear prevents stretching and makes them last longer. cf ; 5 j Mr. Dewey's Rat Trap. VEW YORK. -- Our Mr. I Dewey seems to have made a better rat trap than his neighbor and the world beats a path to his door, with other cities wanting to know how he does it. Tne young rackets prosecutor, n.':t;::;g up seven more convictions, for a terfect score, has turned up extortion totalling about 5100,000,- (HKJ. He pets $16,695 a year. He se t :;";s to be a Eood investment. of 2.loi) years against the seven resracketeers, he's already drawing a bead on allied industrial rackets. Governor Lehman took Thomas E. Dewey, now thirty-rouyears old, from a $50,000 law practice for the bigaest municipal job of modern history. First, he put the panderers away, Charles (Lucky) Luciano and eight others; tbrn twenty-eigh- t loan sharks, with taurant r A: I All m .... - their Si (1,000.000 Mood money racket; then, with a bit of legal legerdemain, he turned policy kings into rats and put them away, too. ..l feik.s cf dccL-cMembers of the Supreme court who recently, in an t' e W s"i cr Ju Vos otix) is P,.;i: r S; :! .(. C;.rdn-,labor relatiors act constitutional. Left to riLl z .str-er:4deis, Van Hughes, McReynolds and S- -'u :!,-,b'v cv.ctcJ from the and local iara.crs. 3 1'. lU-- Lmrn of Ontario who Chocolate plant by Abated efforts of the C. I. O. to get a foothold in C.aJu :m irni.ei t:on v;t'i tie Motors strike Lis poLcv. and forced the resignation of two memt' i s i l,..s c l :i a who 1 onal iru d.x-U;- , l rc-;,- -- s t.c-:r- Nicholas Foregoes idlt Ioyal r f 'ont Fnr Steamed or Boiled Pud dings Puddings will not stick to the basin if two strips of proof paper are put crosswise in the basin before the mixture Is poured Sing Sing bell boys. He comes from Owosso, deep woods of Michigan. as in Windy Gap, the sheriff posed to drive out or lock crooks. Thomas E. Dewey BREAK YOUR BACK in. able Removing Stains on stains can be removed from the hands by rubbing them with a slice of raw potato. Hands-Veget- When loose Shrink the Cord covers for chairs, etc., are being made, boil the piping cord before using. This little precaution prevents unsightly puckers after the cover is washed. Frying Eggs Eggs are less liable to break or stick to the pan if a little flour is added to the frying fat. Boiling Old Potatoes Old pota- toes sometimes turn black electrical contracting, tenants' and boiling. To prevent this chauffeurs' rackets, and each case squeeze of lemon juice hrought a shout of "front" to the water in which they are DEMOCRATIC! ,E A D F R i t If x This betuuiul bmth la 20 ninuM Sanpl? PP')'t ' k dry and your won ii dune! li pulubo UK-11woo l cbrcLl Grcsirr w.tcr ruumci longer wrir. Inm on tne ca- - gic un - iFr1 m&i 5 itj i IN UTAH AND in the There, h HinKo ..... DrVno i t? 1 wue ft rpnnrlprl to hnve renounced all w oniQ tirhn j ljL3ir"uriJ in Kansas Gets Damp After 56 Years Crime Foe Siicago X . L iiv,J tt.;. i i men f,n .nnrnJH wue mw ms wnn oraer to stay exile. move into French Photograph shows Nicholas soon alter tneir marriage. royai rignts ton. They will ms A V Ape of 85 J. Loesch. noted Chicago pyer who achieved national fame few years ago for his vigorous :adership against crime in the city Frank "ij s ? I ? When the Shooting Starts. 140 books, E. AFTER writing Phillips Oppenheim, the British novelist, complains that diplomatic intrigue his favorite fictional theme isn't what it used to be. He knew the old patterns sufficiently to foresee events. His novels, "The Mischief Maker," "Our Great Secret," and "The Makers of History" predicted the World war with almost perfect accuracy in time and the alignment of powers. Given a certain number of diplomats, of standard specifications, engaeed in routine over old, established punctilio, and he could figure out when the shooting would start. But that's all over, says Mr. Opfor penheim, visiting this countryDinlo-mats the first time in ten years. call names and tell all they know, and more, on the radio, and the latgard novelist shouts "Wait for baby!" as they touch off more deviltries than he can invent. the At the age of seventy-one- , genial, sturdy Mr. Opoenheim is one of the few writers who can man two dictaphones at once, keeping a novel racing through each of them without stopping for water or teea. Caesar could work three stenog-- ; re-raphers at once, if this reporter cor-- i ! Latin 6chool his high members rectly, but it was a lost art until Mr. Oppenheim and the late Edgar Wallace came along. There was talk of staging a dictating race between them when they both lived at Nice. Mr. Oppenheim has been writing fiftv-on- e years, although his first novel, "Expiation," did not appear until 1887. Previously he had ptih-- I llshed short stories. Of his HO novels and the w,k 100 have been others volumes of short stories, three omnibus works and a travel book. He likes to have a good time duror ing the day, swimming, golfing when he's Luck. w;th Lady flirting on the Riviera, and usually works from four o'clock in the afternoon until seven, during which hours he keeps the dictaphone smoking. He never blocks out his yarns. He the story just starts talking, and Inlets1025. they unravel as it may. rudely taxed him out of England. He took refuge on the Riviera, but now lives on Guernsey island in the British channel. When he was eighteen, he was flunked in mathematics and quit school to work in his father's leather business. When he visited Paris, a French cafe owner told him some tales of underworld intrigue, with phe-nagli- If - ft . - . , " S 'American desert, and Kansas gets , rc.gn as he great islative bin per. A a 1cluxp'" Kansas-tr- uly sliehtlv damp as Gov Vin t r in 2 3 beer f o f mittine the legal and rcguUdrd dry pr0. After a My celebrated his eighty-fift- h neacl of Chicago crime raj. "SlrrilMinn .uiJ, the j!i ior llc i eceivea crean phrase "public enemy." beer. Kansas first went J, fcrnbstone ciiy m 18dl. Old Days Builds Memorial to Its Tough X Its i t rsrTff 9 ' ' . XD iA ' 4 IS . ;$ " Td vl .vrg - v..r.V. he I. ul'rr 'SJ-jr.zJ- w1-"- m 3 2 of some of the " ;5iiest pemorial t0 the t0USn old - fT.um.i"nP,ay in the history of the souuiw-.-- . 1 10 k the nameles dead who fell in front 01 ,c H"fw. Immortalized through Wane. - ". now a mecca for tourists. The dedication . - .a, the . j.,r,, .. ..Ttr:;kStor.e onv i3 si iown ubove. . . u sr-c- f Soulhwest,- international complications. That started his long writing marathon. C ConiolC'lrd Nwi Ftaturts. WNU 6rvlt. uiiukow lot lau THE ITS HOTEL BEN LOMOND Oflden's F mest . . One of Utah's Best 350 Baths 350 Rooms $2.00 to $4.00 Air Cooled Corridor Coffee Shop Spacious Lounge and Lobby Courteous Service Every Comfort and Convenience will be fcund at Delightful Rooms Grill Room THE HOTEL . "COME AS YOU ARE" CH AUNCLY W. WEST, GEN iruiia&Lau L Med. I fi1')) , THIS BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH ' ? roar wu unuinc ow toon boiled. ' S(r polishing Moot during add a to the fare of Shoes The nreserva- tinn of Datent leather shoes pre- is sup- - sents difficulties because, by the up the verv nature of the hara nnish, it seems will rrack eventually. But the to have brought this quaint small fateful day may be delayed by A town idea to Manhattan. He rides occasional v applying lust uie 'em down. smallest touch of Dure vaseline His father ran a country news-- : and rubbing it in well with a soft V- ' f shouia paper and he was the printshop dev- cloth. Patent leather shoes with a il, working on nearby farms when be polished by rubbing he was big enough. He expected boh cloth only. l to be a choir singer and it was bis Preparing Salted Nuts Here is baritone voice which won him a ' an ideal manner in which to preiv ; He Columbia. was at V I scholarship a paid soloist at St. Matthew's and pare your 6alted nuts at home: S St. Timothy's church in West Take blanched nuts, salt and oil. Sprinkle nuts very lightly with Eighty-fourtstreet. oil, using not more than one teaFinishing in law at Columbia, he spoon to one cup of nuts. Spread engaged in private practice and in one layer in a baking pan and later joined the staff of George Me- It dalie, U. S. district attorney. was 1P33 when he roned Waxv Gor- Mrs. Thomas F. McAllister, of don, one of the biggest and sleekest Grand Rapids, Mich., for several of the rodent rodeo. years a forceful political personalHe is married to an Oklahoma ity in Michigan, who recently be- girl. They have one boy four years diLla came director of the women's old and another eighteen months. vision of the DemociaUc national l" A, hot-wate- He moved on through the truck- ing, used brick, poultry, bakery, lw.:vr non-strike- rs Hot-Wat- AWa ''LOO GAME CARVING SET for only 25c with your purchase of one can of B. T. Babbitt's Nationally Known Brands of Lye This is the Carving Set you need for steaks and game. Deerhorn design handle fits the hand perfectly. Knife blade and fork tines made of fine stainless steel. Now offered for only 25c to induce you to try the brands of lye shown at right Use them for sterilizing milking machines and dairy equipment Contents of one can dissolved in 17 gallons of water makes an effective, inexpensive sterilizing solution. Buy today a can of any of the lye brands shown at right Then send the can band, with your name and LIFE'S LIKE THAT ZEKE 1 1 address and 23c to B. T. Babbitt, Inc., Dept. W.K., 386 4Lh Ave., New York City. Your Carving Set will reach you promptly, postage paid. Send today while the supply lasts. OFFER fSlgiS good !H5 WITH CY EITHER ggg BRAND Bafcbllt By Fred Neher W "I'll be goto to town with ya Jest u soon as Paw falls outa my boots!" |