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Show THE LEHI SUN. LEW. UTAH !!gr- i mm 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 m n tK, WS i -ay-, Nutty Natural!! Wooden Bcad Ba Sally Sez 0 yicir Qy ;i i in ii in 1 1 1 ni in ii ii ii i in tut M 1 1 1 1 1 1 - History IT MWN NMTTON r e-Bjr J intra THE BLUE-NOSE BABBIT HpIIIS Innocuous-looking creature is responsible for the great vice among the natives of Sumatra, Su-matra, known as babbiting. Two full-grown babbits are put In a prize-fight ring after belug fed a mash of red peppers and ginger ale, and the natives place bets on the one that will first start the fight. The babbit is slow to anger, and the two slowly circle about each other, making remarks about ancestry, ances-try, personal appearance, etc,, until J ' . "is Vf ii vV i 1 ' 1 ' ill 4 fon'fMutf VWk,?i 1 h. tbe intrepid anj w. 1 Ms Mabel tfoMhe Women's f, national League for f EV Freedom" to on L fim Los Angeles to f'Su AH along the f.?. women, who are in are gathering s 1 r f h laid fftf hwS United States take the lead I beiDg to have uw conference which 16 f Sin Geneva S year. Our illustration fti ene in Los Ingeles as the caravan Is j start- continent, over mountains, des-ISS des-ISS wif mSoreWn tbree months, for , to fly. why has the robin f ?S. green desert dare, him lhTyearn to reacb remot- 1o5S. nm-if It were not Jto ber JSERT FORHOT DAYS illH gelatin in so many attractive at-tractive forms-flavored, plain Ltd and powdered -one have a different dessert for 1 hot day without repeating. I desserts are not only refresh-So refresh-So look upon, but are appetiz-fand appetiz-fand sufficiently satisfactory I I hearty meal. The following i old-time recipe, but is al- SnoW Puddina. p one and one-fourth table-Ms table-Ms of plain gelatin In one-It one-It cupful of water fifteen min-I min-I then add one cupful of boil-later boil-later and stir until well dis-i; dis-i; add one cupful of sugar, 5rta cupful of lemon Juice I stir until- tbe sugar Is dis-;d dis-;d tlen strain Into a large I Beat the whites of three 3 stiff and add to the gel- i Collegiate Champ ,1 t ' w 1 1 'M 'A mm of Stanford nnl-liTy nnl-liTy from Frank A. m Clicket club, Phlladel- S A r US r XJ J l77 ilHU-'.JJIS'A T Mm H 1 . - v.'f . "Sfl. J.r 1 - iV. --- ..!g......JL Lj the women depart often rrom the highways In order to visit as many cities and towns as possible. They expect to reach the National Capital on October 16, and their parade up Pennsylvania avenue will be something some-thing to look at. Miss Vernon has conducted a number of coast-to-coast caravans In the last fifteen years and knows how to run them. atin mixture when it begins to stiffen beat until very light. When stiff enough to mold, pour into a mold that has been rinsed In cold water. Prepare a boiled custard, using the egg yolks, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half teaspoonful of salt, and a pint of hot milk. Cook until the spoon Is coated, add flavoring and chill. Pour round the pudding when serving. Grape Ice Cream. Scald one quart of thin cream, add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, a pint of grape Juice if sweet lessen the sugar add the juice of half a lemon and freeze as usual. . Whipped Fruit Jelly. Take a package of any flavor of gelatin lemon , is good a5d a pint of boiling water and mix well. When cool and before it sets beat with an egg beater. Beat the white of an egg until stiff, add one-half cupful of powdered sugar and add to the Jelly with two bananas, one orange and one-half cupful of fresh sstrawberries, all cut Into small pieces. Make a boiled custard cus-tard with the egg yolks, two table-spoonfuls table-spoonfuls of sugar and one and one-fourth cupfuls of milk. Mold the jelly and serve unmolded with the custard for a sauce. ((E). 1931, Western Newsoaper Union.) I; 11 1 I 111 1 I 11-1 1 11 111 II 11 .Thistledown and Tree By DOUGLAS MALLOCH X Ml IIIM MM I11I11MH FOLLY Is the thistledown Floating on the air, Dancing In Its fairy gown. Knowing not a care. Folly scorns the sturdy .tree. Standing in its place, But in trouble mortals flee , To the tree's embrace. He who follows thistledown Is the sport of fate, Even if he find the town, Finding It too late. He who walks the straighter way Of the rooted right, He will have a bouse by day And a bed by night Folly Is the thistledown. Is a fickle wraith. Always with Its verdant crown Stands the tree of faith. There is shelter In the gale, Comfort, friendly hands; Yes, the thistle down will fail While the old tree stands. f(c)1931.Ious:lMMalloch.)-'WNU Service. Ironsides Visiting Coast Ports & 'i 1 i ft ' "mtt fir ti. f - WMKHUU, m. II.. L- l. m 1 iS stitnUon. better known as "Old Ironsldes," Wase Thg tonr of Atlantic coast ports. She 1 Ule difficulty of getting enough real Bailors till J "Liffle Stories r. Becltim ho Thornf onW y Jtmrgass Peter Rabbit every day. Tries some kindly word to say. GOOD WORD FOR GLUTTON TpHAT is where Peter Rabbit Is A not only nice, but smart as well. Kind words always make friends and never make enemies. And the more friends one has the better. But it isn't with any such selfish purpose that Peter does It Peter says kind things because he thinks kind things. Now as he sat on the edge of the pond of Paddy the Beaver deep In the Green Forest and listened to the news from the Great Woods Buster Turned and Stared at Peter Very Hard. In the Far North, as told by Honker Honk-er the Goose, who had just stopped over for the night, Peter was hearing hear-ing for the first time of Glutton the Wolverine. Buster Bear and Prickly Porky and Paddy the Beaver and Honker the Goose knew him well, and they knew no good of him. Buster had said that everybody hated Glutton; that he was so selfish that when he found more food than he could eat he spoiled what was left so that no one else should have any; that he was so smart In a bad way that no one could hide anything from him, and that he was so strong and savage that most of the people who lived in the Great Woods were afraid of him. In fact Buster had said that there was no good In him. Then Honker the Goose had told how he had watched Glutton follow fol-low a trapper and find and pull up all the traps, no matter how cunningly cun-ningly they were hidden, so that no one would be caught In them, at the same time stealing all the food which the trapper had put out as bait to lead little fur-coated people peo-ple Into the traps. He told how Glutton had broken Into the little log house of the trapper while the latter was away, and had stolen or ruined all his supplies, so that the trapper had been forced to go away to get more. Of course while he was away the little people in fur had nothing to fear from traps. Peter had listened with ears wide .open. When Honker had finished Peter spoke. "Did I understand you to say that Glutton Is all bad and that every one hates him?" asked. -Ton certainly did," growled Buster Bus-ter Bear in his deep grumbly-rum-bly voice. "He hasn't a friend In che world." "That's funny," replied Peter. t.i, nrMsVM-s thoughtfully. -What's the matter with the peo- pie of the Great Woods? I "Nothing's the matter with us, . pfnster. -The matter Is all with Glutton." . p. "Oh. I don't know," returned Peter Pe-ter "It may be you don't owe Glut-on Glut-on anyX. Buster but It seems io me that some others up there U, the Great Woods owe him great deal." JO 71 Mi I one Is thoroughly maddened. He then knocks his opponent down with his tall, delivers two scratches with his spurs, and the fight Is over. The monkey-like appearance of the beast is partly due to his baboon ba-boon ancestry and also to the way the filbert head Is placed and decorated. deco-rated. The body is also a filbert, and the eares split navy beans. A popcorn nose, painted blue, clove legs and almond feet, and popcorn spurs make up tbe rest of the Buster turned and stared at Peter Pe-ter very hard. "Peter," said he slowly, "you are the first one I ever knew who could find a good word to say for that ugly robber of honest hon-est folks." "Perhaps no one has ever tried to find a good thing" to say," retorted re-torted Peter. "I never have found anyone yet who doesn't do some good for others once In a while, even Reddy Fox. Now, who are you people who live In the Great Woods most afraid of?" "Hunters and trappers," replied Buster promptly. "Then It seems to me that anyone any-one who can and does get the best of them and actually drives one of them away Is doing something good, very good, indeed, for the rest of you. Glutton may be a robber, and may kill the smaller people when he can catch them, but when he pulls up all the traps so well hidden hid-den that no one else can find them, and leaves them In plain sight so that no one will get caught, It seems to me that he has done a splendid thing for his neighbors, and that they have no right to say that he is all bad. Just think of how many lives might have been lost in those dreadful traps but for him." "That's so," grumbled Buster Bear, scratching his bead thoughtfully. thought-fully. "I never thought of that." ( by J. Q. Lloyd.) WND Service. The honeymoon Is over," says Reno Ritzl, "when hubby begint to forget the thin anklee and noticee the thick head." E. 19J1 Bell Svndlcate.-WND 8errlc. Father Sivears In .f'-w mm -4 f 4. . .... y. Rfi-nPii R CtSSELL, SK, chief JusUce of the Ceorgia Supreme ICUi ivinz the oath of office to his son, Richard B. Russell, Jr, court gijlng we wj governor of the state. Em- tSkfrHlS SSVseco youngest man to hold the position. This good-looking bng In envelope en-velope style Is woven of large wooden, brightly colored beads In red, white and blue, blending with the colors used in the crocheted bands on the blouse and with color ' of the hat It Is a clever accessory for use with any sports garb. creature, excent for the tnll. which ! Is a piece of spaghetti that has1 oeen softened and bent (IE) Metropolitan Newspaper 8ervlce.) WNU Service.! P SUPERSTITIOUS q SUE HER BROTHER BILL TOLD HER THAT No gambler ever wants to win the very first pot, for If he does, that puts the Gypsy curse on him for the rest of the session and he will be writing I. O. U.'e before he is through. ((E). 1931. McCIure Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNU Stsrvlce.) Old Gardener .Srys!- WOMEN who work In their own gardens and find the ordinary or-dinary steel rake heavy and cum bersome win oe ueiigntea wits Darn boo rakes, which come from Japan and are very cheap. Metal rakes now being made in this country have the same pattern and are almost al-most as light These rakes are especially useful when cleaning up leaves and grass clippings, out can also be used In garden work of a light nature. They can be handled in much the same way as a broom, and with much less effort than Is required to manipulate rakes of the old-fashioned type. These rakes do not look very strong, but will stand a remarkable amount of hard service. Naturally the metal rakes are somewhat more durable than the Japanese product but the lat ter is cheap and surprisingly sat isfactory. (Copyright.) WNU Service. Ancient Wisdom The shortest and surest way to live with honor in the world, is to be in reality what we appear to be and If we observe we shall find that nil hnman virtues Increase and strengthen themselves by the prae tlce and experience of them. Soc rates. Son as Governor 1 1XZ 4t n r 1 1 t Both producers and consumers will "net" more profits if they keep the profits from These Brands Are Intermountain Made And UTAH KIH SCHOOL OF BEAUTY-CULTURE trd Floor. Clift Bldf. Sell Like City. Vt. If ya are Planning a Paylnc BoiineM Fatare, Inreetigate Our Plan Write For Catalogs THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY Let's all use intermountain prod ucts The best in all the Land, Let's keep our busy bees at labor And the money at our hand, Let's keep out competition, Home industry keep in mind, Then our intermountain Interests Will never go behind. A farmer's wife. ELLEN LARS EN, Ferron, Utah. ASK TOUR GROCER FOR Fanciful Names In earlier centuries, observers thought that land animals had counterparts in the sea, and so they named seals 'sea-wolves," fur seal "sea-bears," manatees "sea-cows". "sea-cows". FOREST DALE POTATO CHIPS No Equal For Crispneae and Quality Factory 47 Kenainfton Ae. Halt Lake City Tel. 11 y 1741 Masculine Axiom It's humiliaTmp; to any man to realize how much more his wife knows than he does. American Magazine. THOMAS ELECTRIC CO. PUMPS MOTORS WATER WHEELS BOUGHT SOLD REPAIRED 84J-9 WEST nd SOUTH SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Summing It Up It is a rood thing to be rich and a good thing to be strong, but it is a better thing to be loved by many friends. APEX OLIVE OIL I or AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Variations in Calendars The first month of the Jewish calendar is Thishri, which has thirty thir-ty davs. The first dav of Thishri always falls in September or Octo ber. "GRAINS OF GOLD" THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Cream Taste Better" Western Made For Western Trade Aak Toar Grocer Counterfeit in 1862 Tha first counterfeit "srreenback in the United States was one imi tating the ten dollar bill of 1862. It was circulated in the same year. Off A A per week will be QOtXJXf paid for the best 50-word article on "Why you Should use Intermountain made Goods" Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Intermoun-tain Products Column .P. O. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. If yonr story appears in this column you will CJfT Aft receive check for Vvu , itISLilnr., llllllll AMBASSADOR HOTEL C A. SIIAY, Manager 141 S. Itk Re ?"W."" . ,vrT T". P.",.' LISTEN I.N ON THK AMBA53AUUPr.R.t-j" L." " flitting too far away from home. Deserve Your Support PIPE AND FITTINGS New and Reclaimed Write m for Prica SALT LAKE PIPE CO. 475 Watt 6th So Bend thli ad and got Salt Luke City t 10 dieeount Not a Fair Proceedir$ "It's true," said Uncle Eben, "dat every man mus' have some faults, but dat ain't no excuse fob. deliberately choosin' some dat happens hap-pens to strike yob. fancy. Washington Wash-ington Star. NEW MOTOR OIL Free From Carbon Looking at Art The art of a thing is, first, its aim, and, next, its manner of accomplishment. ac-complishment. Boyec. Aak Tour Dealer For Intermountain Made Brooms By Name Silver Crown-Princess-Biua Bird" Business Idea A storekeper. puzzled just how to dispose of several second-hand suits, hit upon the idea of display- ing them In the window with this placard: "Very Much Worn." CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS Electrical Product! Corporation 104 So. Main Salt Lake City Depression Explained Women are struggling for equal rights in Japan. They are behind the times. In more advanced countries coun-tries men are doing the struggling. FIT-WELL ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. Braeea Artificial LImba Trauea Cru tehee Arch Supporta Extension Shoei Elaatie Hulaery ExtablUhed in Salt Lake In 190S Ph. Waa. 264 Satiifaelion Guaranteed 135 W, Third So. I Salt Lake City, UU Evolution of the Male The life of today and the wife of today are conspiring together in the job of domesticating the male. Woman's Home Companion. DLUE SEAL CLEANSER Wonderful Sultary Household Cleanaer and Water Softener SOLE DISTRIBUTORS Zm Hardwarceo. a ASK TOUR DEALER Another Anniversary Chocolate has been used in cookery cook-ery for precisely 150 years ever since a chocolate mill was started near Boston. Woman's Home Companion. Spend Your Vacation at IDEAL BEACHBEAR LAKE Boating-Bathing-Dancing-Tennis Good Cabins and Meals . Reasonable Prices J. W. NieL Garden City, Utah WANTEDt Name of Areata t aell Cadet, aiae Carde In 1931 throorh yonr leeal rlnter. Plane lor l31 aewe; made now. Bend la rear name lor detaile wlurli erIU make year eeiUnc eerier eritneat the troablee. aaietake and delaye yea) Bad rn repreeentla eaatera frtr-- Write W. N. U F. O. Bo IMS. Salt Lake City. Jaat a etra freaa the aaiaeae center. Quirt and Bonwlike. Poa-alar Poa-alar arlted aieala. Rate $2.04 to per day. IJ.M CoBMnereial ratca to aaksewa. Serriea Oarace la Ovnertiuo. Salt Lake City |