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Show 1 Scenes and Persons in tin- - i U KKKK PRESS, LEHI, UTAH Current "Keep WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... H ft rTf -- - .1 I Bring Alxnit Fulfillment of Ambition t f fit fTVTTTT Field Marshal V'i iTir Yi n Member is (It r:i.:.:. 's burn-- ace. Astute YORK. sKV; . TTf Vf r J n Li it i I ' ', c St " r x Imtvci's f.r.d i i'i ""S ' ("' ' :' 4 x 1 frt-;-- iPror-i'-en- t alumni c f . 5,' - - J ; ZZT.i'J x'. - Notre Dame i.nver ' ' c ,al dt Lnther :mv set up by i. !.. tfiprmap ambassador lo the United hXuic-iMac Arthur pass m review di Doug C-- r 11 : v.. I I 1 Sclioolbov Pitcher Awaits Var Yiz i'.m 1 ah: pijo(;h m 1 hi 1 'f D! :.- "I r.X'.y '.'..it W't ulnd; niom-cled- ' I J- - K 4 - Viscount Swmton, secretary of slate for air, who disclosed in parliament the plans of the British Royal air force for the defense of England and London from an air attack. To carry out the plan he announced Bob Feller, eighteen, of Van Meter, Iowa, who holds the American that the personnel of the force would iague strike-ou- t record for a single game, is shown with Steve O'Neill, be increased to 70,000 officers and The sensational young huiler who men with a first line strength of laager of the Cleveland Indians. its signed to a $10,000 contract hopes to have a record year in 1937. 1,759 aircraft. E$CPES Equine David and Goliath Meet FIRING SOU U) x ,il :... (.',.' ae Anderson de Cienfuegos, w tne Spanish Marquis de who came from Cuba to Poington to thnnlr iho Ho. pient for intervening and sav- u irom death as a spy, while W3S Servine in a InnmaHstip P'ty with the Spanish loyalist For 42 lived in a f j fj W .i v "w. ri , 4r Ci-FS- Qt-,t- o Pi days she, aungeon Eleanor is presented at the Melbourne, An interesting studv. in equine , contrast , , , ., p.verton. weishine a snow dn me iiu"1-- ' ,yu.ou.. .23 inches h.gh and weighing ton! and the midget racehorse, Wee Jimmy, ,,; 3b pounds. and Billy Pick Exposition's "Aquabelles" r.ot tiu e it uur i.iiiv.is . ! part: "Hitler still has a tight hold on Germany, but the real power is eas-- ; iiigr over to the army, and that means von Blomberg. Strangely enough, I have found more brains and more realism among the officers and imperialists of the World war days than anion? the nazi fanatics. I have talked to von Blomberg: several times and I don't think he believes a word of this racial nonsense. "He is an educated man who knows that Germany will have to make peace with the democratic powers to get what she needs. He is a diligent, and I believe open-- i minded student of history, and I know he reads books which an ordinary German citizen would have to read secretly. "I have an idea that if you read the papers closely, you will see be fore long more and more stories about Hitler's throat affliction and the necessity of his retiring to Berchtesgaden for rest and meditation. I have no idea that he will be overthrown. He will be merely indusenshrined, while the trialists and junkers pick up where they left off and get Germany back on the track, if they can. The nazis have been highly useful in solidify-- i ing the country, for their purposes at least, but in my view the ulti- mate power rests where it always has rested in the army and the money bags. "Germany is not ready for war. Her 'ersatz' campaign has been successful only to a very limited degree. She cannot redress her trade balaaice because her productive energies go into armament. She must either fight or bargain her way out. I have Cound the disinclination to war and the hope of new credit and trade concessions much stronger among the army groups and imperialists than I have among the nazi politicians. The former know more about the actualities of war than the latter, and they have a clearer understanding of the imperative need for rav materials and credit. "Von Blomberg is going to do a lot of 'fronting' for Germany in the next year. Unless I am greatly mistaken, he will bear many olive brandies. I do not consider him a liberal in our sense of the word, but he has brains enough to see that France, England and the United Slates have what he needs, and must have, and he is going after it. "As you know, I was caught in Germany when the World war started and I have no love for the junkers, but they have lucid moments and I am inclined to think this is one of them. Of course Germany will do a lot of growling and woofing as she starts bargaining for loans and raw materials, but that will be merely in the hope of scaring concessions out of the other side. Anyway and this is a strange choice to have to make I am glad to see power slipping into the hands of the army leaders." General von Blomberg, years old, tall, ruddy and athletic, has been in the army ail Ids adult life. In the World war he was a much decorated officer on the stall of the high command of the Seventh army. He is an eager devotee of music and the arts, regarded as the most cultured of German army He made many friends officers. among American officers on his visit here in 1930. bullet-h- eaded old-lin- ! e fifty-eig- nf Ij ""t Eleanor is aided ftte',oter,nhnnelv "nntmhp irr.. by ! j h 1 . Holm wno wui Jarrctt ... ea' wiectintj feature Sf the show will be a water carnival, wan jor... fojni .... the pnncipui d this mJivi.'!;:.! mer.t. '"Keep ;i ;; p. I i.ovv ; s. ys t'.,e wr iir.n- :vss iuite patently .! fir n t ars. I) alies h.nt that before Ion; lHr I ta i rer m!1 lie transported to a nivsuc vaihalla in a chariot of tire, there to remain as a symbol while some less tebrile citizen takes caw ol mundane affairs. That will be the intellectual, cultured, but not General von Hlomberg, accanhiig to news from the watch towers over seas. In the endlessly repeated story of the :..( a la;,!; aftermath of Nvar and rcv.'lution, he and his allies have the army. Furthermore, he is more capalle of rationalizing Germany and her needs in foreign relationships than the Gilbert and Sullivan Goerm;,', the inept von Ribbentrop or the intellectual rubberman Rosenberg. This writer has a friend, a former American journalist once stationed at Berlin and now engaged in commercial enterprise in Europe, who sees in the German junkers, to which class General von Biomberg belongs, the only hope Germany has for rehabilitation without war. He does not wish his name used as he passes in and out of Germany. In a letter mailed at Prague, he writes, in outlook for the future, for those who are apt to lie down under the weight of present troubles. Nothing stands still. Things r get better or worse, and they ar; fur more likely to get better if we per&ist in car efforts to ! - 1 liatt ei-t!- :c tt ti ni.riutcs thr.t I near nioie the h;n. oil the j ave!:.cnt, w.itc. !ir.;; rin.aud .siecehts. an i Lf.ter.ir.g, la krrt up his cry. h:s it,. ..urin i J . ;.v.:-v-.-:i- : 1 LKHAPS it is my fondness for viok is tisat rr.ai'.e me stand and v,auL t.;r:i. Anyw.y, tneie !:e was. v. it!: a w basket f scented iovc-li- r ess, tin'.pt.rc the -uii.g ti:;-- r:g e:i a Sa'uri:.;y i ';-- Hi cun.iula-t;- a I) vak nee cf t: is in l.is ti 'ht- t.e t .et:. s. ''V;okts. vli.!e'.y. l'ely vio'ets. ' Id on t':e armv and in IV.-ht Cart. ' hi.'s n ear, England Quarter a bur.th. Lovely i hieh I.:ke ;m t.: ; : :.r. sc:p, i.:s ajl:y is to tri'wn a T'.ew king. Tins e crrv. n some is t: yi:n; to cr.tt with ve.ee cried h:s was e, ;r..l ci!'i:.,t Near, t,.o. J - w n' Persistence in Efforts Likely lo By Lemuel F. Parton V- V.' A-Goi- 6 Cono)Matd TMewi WNU &rvlce. Feature.. I'nable t. resut oust, t a banc I:, ti;e tei::pt;. tan, e en as he i r. seived rue, he pcrctaatei the deal i with. "Violets, ;..! f i esh I I A:;-..- u. fir::! ;i"ie.n can r.'." Nvitii fulfll- - it, I know, if we Kiiitor of London . 1 '. IfouseJiold '" Persistence Counts. remarked, as I united fur my change, that he had a large basket to dispose of. "Yes," he said, "that's right, guv'nor. But they'll ail ('Ere you are. sir, lovely violets, all fresh.) Only you 'as to keep Everybody's in a hurry to get 'nine, and if you ain't persistent (yes, lady, smaller bunches you don't sell 'arf as many. 'Ere you are, sir, your change. Thank you very much. Violets, lovely violets. All fresh!" I walked away with my purple bunch and a lesson in my mind. What a motto! "Keep It reminded me of a little jingle Question? I four-penc- Surveys have shown that dish washing represents an economy of time. once-a-da- y Add two tablespoons of shortening to the griddle cake batter and it will not be necessary to grease the griddle. e) Lukewarm wash water, lukewarm rinse water and a moderately warm place for drying ar best for washing woolens. To improve the color in worn rugs add half a cupful of vinegar that is oft quoted by a rolling-- I to half a pint of water. Soak stone friend of mine, who brought and wring a large clean cloth in it back from the West of Canada, the liquid, then go over the carwhere he first heard it. It goes like pet with wide strokes. The carpet should be thoroughly vacuumed this: before doing this. H If it rains or If snowi. If it'i ralra or If it blow), What Orange SNveet Take the peel happen no one hnowi, So keep from the oranges and cut them into rather thin slices. Make a A athlete once told in a glass dish, cover with me that he had won many a sec- layer freshly-gratecoconut and a little ond and third prize by simply if the fruit is rather sour, sugar keeping on. Dogged does it. Even and continue in layers, finishing when he realized that he couldn't with coconut and sugar. beat the winner, he set his mind on being in the first three, and got Peroxide of hydrogen will rethere. move perfume stains from linen A Motto for Many. bureau scarfs. is a motto not only Keep for rolling stones and athletes and When you store fresh fish and It is a motto for meat in any refrigerator it should housewives who are faced with a not be covered closely. Bacteria for families in both of these foods multiply tiring washing-day- , who are faced with no very bril- - more rapidly in a humid atmosphere than in a dry one. Cover lightly if at all. 11 well-know- d violet-seller- s. & Associated Newspaper.. WNU Service, By 72, Grace Moore Opera Singer Spanish Chicken 2 young chickens, cut in pieces 2 teasixionful salt, pepper 6 tablespoonfuls butter 8 sieve canned plmlentos, rubbed CH$S m k. through W O onion, finely chopped 2 cloves of garlic, finely chopped 4 tablespoonfuls flour 1 nine Instant lighting Irofl. AH yna have to iois turn a valve. BtHke mutch nd it litflita JnfiUntly. You don't have to inMrt uie match inckie th iron no burntxl urtRert. Th Col wisn bfiat in m jiffy; is quickly raartr troumtf Furfaro in beatefl with rnriirt. even for paint the hotfpet. Maintain it iito fast worker. Entirr ly OpfrtM Season chickens with salt and pepper. Fry (saute) in three tablespoonfuls of butter. Add one teaspoonful of salt, onion, garlic, pimientos and boiling water to cover. Cook until chicken is ten-- I der. Remove and thicken sauce with remaining butter and flour. Cook together. Copyright. bt frr hiC an hour. You do your ironing with le I'fTort, in ona third lews time. mm? your nwit lluUman. iron ia l!a genuine It' the Iron every wmrma won (b. it'n a wonderful time an'1 IhIiot aiiver nothing liite It. Th Coif man ia the aaay wny to iron, Pwtt DctslM. SI MO POSTCARD for ritCE rehUr TH8 COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVB CO. Wichita, Had.; Ih.pt CMroP Itl.i lx Aagalaa, CaJif, ftri!artalgh1. I'M (Ola) WNU Servioa. I tof you Skagway wass dafc turn to BEFORE YOU NEED A QUART ' ..::.:': r ..,..- '3 ' -- Prove it tor yourself with the "First Quart" tcsr. Drain and refill with Quaker State. Note the mileage. Sec how much farther this oil takes you before you have to add the first quart. The reason is: "There's an exra quart of lubrication in nery gallon. " Quaker State Oil Iuiining Corp., Oil City, Pa. The retail price is 35(1 per quart. r- j -- V |