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Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah ! i f B',SJ""srtaJ'aJS,"" a Woman's Through By JEAN NEWTON Eyes By DOUGLAS MALLOCH on a certain Helen I'oknrny for lots of ways these the affections of the hus THERE'S days alienating f STOMACH band of Marie Gross! To talk things together, Frau Gross charged that her hus Willi cabarets, and picture ptajs. but home eat at to refused band and books aud stocks, And HUSBAND U obliged tofuke dinner every Ma meals wllli Lis wife, took luncheon and weather, A MAN HAS ONLY ONE "A day In the rooms of t ruu I'okorny, elider home or outside I" a cook I the from we learn dully That, The husband declared that no afnews, was the ruling of a certain relationship existed befectionate CrimCentral Vienna In tlie Judge and the cook, but that him tween Hue a Indicted when he court inal he could Dot eat at home because I Considered quite a rover, now and then friends meet again And talk the old times over. met Jim Brown, of great renown. Who used to be my teacher, And also down In Mlddletown I ran across our preacher, Who couples spliced and sermons spiced. With laughter for his leaven, whom To the Christ of old sufficed, The same old hope of heaven. les, here and there and ev'ry where You're always meeting some one Who used to share jour hours of Hagan c It never does to count upon A thing until you're sure. It's often less than you expect. But very seldom more. knew nothing about that for he had not lived long enough to learn all that a Bob White has to learn, but he did see the open doorway. Across the yellow sand he ran and ABOUT B(5b WHITE Into the doorway and Just a little way down the ball, where he hid 'PHE hunter who had shot one of under some dry brown leaves which X Bob White's children chuckled had been blown In there. lie was gleefully as he went forward to atlhost the color of them himself pick up the poor little brown bird. as he squatted close to the ground He was having what he called and drew his fenthers as close to sport. It never entered his head to his body as possible. In doing this think of how the Bob Whites must he was doing a very wise thing, feel. He probably didn't think that thongh he didn't know It at the they had any feelings. Ue was time. You see, bis feathers drawn pleased that he had made a suc- tightly against his body that way cessful shot and be was pleased to prevented the scent which might have told the keen nose of that dog where he was. As It was the dog lost the scent at the edge of the sand and neither he nor the hunter once thought to look In that old hole. So while they hunted the little Bob White squat ted perfectly still, though his broken wing hurt him dreadfully and the ache of It made his eyes fill with tears. At last the hunter gave He was too Imup the search. patient to kill more. "Must be I Just wounded him." said he, without one thought of how dreadful It must be to be wounded. Probably a fox got him. Bet I kill the next one," With that he Bent his dog on to try to find the little Bob White's brothers and sisters, his terrible gun held ready to shoot the Instant !, WNU Service Wby 0cys Leave Home ZZTSdZZZ ,i. are grown. They are quite a pest to the plantation owners, as they delight In uprooting the young coftrees to nibble the fee ground fruit. Automatic coffee grinders are set as traps for the creatures, and when one enters such a trap and conies out the other end as finely divided sansiige, It Is then true ground hog. The one shown here Inspecting a discarded crank from a coffee grinder lias a walnut body ami double peanut head. The cars are split almond kernels, and the tail Is a pin Hint has been run through a wasiui.g machine several times to give It the kinky effect The legs are cloves, and to them are attached the split navy bean feet. I llctrounlltfin NcwsMituT Bervk.) ( nr k'-- n ' 1 Your Home and You 67 Betiy C&lliiter QUANTITY COOKING f SK might suppose that more subtle results might be obtained In small quantity cooking than In large quantity cooking, and that the niuce lit for a King would have to be prepared In n small samvpun Unit It would lose lis delicate ihtvor If produced In gallon quantities for all the king's men. Some chefs may be able to get belter results when working wild Miiall amounts, but one very expert French cook, the chef de cuisine of one of the finest hotels, fissures us that it Is more often possible to produce subtleties of flavor in large quantity cooking than In small quantity cooking. There are sauces In which the merest drop of a certain flavor would be ton much for a small amount. In a large qua lily of the same sauce you may use Just the amount needed to m 11 I WNU part the very subtle flavor you deAnd In a large quantity you sire. can use more sorts of seasoning to Just as get he result you want. an artist can often work out more Interesting color schemes on a large canvas than in a miniature. Another Interesting thing about large quantity cooking Is that It Is harder to give bard and fast rules MAIDENHAIR TREE as to amounts than in small quantity cooking, because a little deviation from normal In the flavor of (Ginkgo biloba.) the rir.v materials used makes a Is a tree of unusual far greater difference when they GINK(it) Its slender branches are used In large amounts than In and outward upwnrd eitending small. from the trunk at an angle of t'v MiClu- - Sv riitn-- t SmJ'.rit.) 43 degree. The trunk WNl," Service. and branches are straight but tapering, the lark dark brown or grayish, smooth In youth but beThe coming rough and seamed. leaves are bright green and KNOWING The TREES DISHES Coarser foods and fibrous 1 vegetables lire quite necessary In our diet and should be freely M times of the enr. The at giu-s whleli have no soft, smooth f. roughage do cot incite the peris lallie action in In Intestines, an 'plli; 1 1 F SUPERSTITIOUS SUE 111 short In the "Duration" 'due and crow from alternat-l- when one Is Inclined to constipn lion smb food only Increases the trouble. short, but-toIlkebranrho In clusters of from tbreo to Puree of Pe.is. Cook a pint of fresh green pens ait. and put through n sieve, add a la Clnkgo Is a hlespooilful of butter with two of peculiar rery tiolir. Well bletldcd. fait and pep- beautiful per to taste. Cook together until Ire, and often the Ktareli In the Hour Is weil growi to a height of tnori (ban It ,s very hardy and COoked. then add n cupful of rich fifty feet. tl mi'k mid whip with n dover egg anbjoct to few and dlnpase nttacki heater until light. Csliij fresh pea There Is an ol J Japanese tradil. makes it most tasty but ol Course the fanned peas will do;i tion regarding the (iinkgo tree to adding a bit of sonar also m the effect that young lovers will proves the puree. The addition of have good luck by touching the uiorp milk, if the amount Is wished batk or branches. There Is a spool-meIn New York city near tho Increased, will nt spoil the flavor. town hail which Is the Mecca of ro tnatdlc young people. Hominy Pecan Croquettes. Cook one half cupful of hominy wiih a half teaspiMinful of salt In two rupfuls of water for five mln-u'eI then cook In a double boiler two hours. Add two tntilcspoon tuts of shortening, one half cupful of chopped pecans and a teaspoon Cool and ful of scraped onion. shape In el1nders, I'.ent one cttf slightly, add two taMespooiifuls of cold water, roll the croquette In In crumbs and rcB. then crumbs and fry In deep fat. n I but In-e- n NGltiilGAG fWNU awi-- , Approximately 4;i:t new oiii' lar bills we'gh one pound. dl Four Hours depart-rtieti- know-better- BENEFITS OF DEPRESSION 'syf' 1LJ 1 "Being hugged by a fortune hunt y Opulent Ophelia, -- is Juif another way cf being preised fo n'oney." I t Ilebt rin, '.'""" f; he should see one of them. He was having great sport, was that hunter, while In the hall of old house lay a little brown Bob White faint with suffering and dreadful fright, Johnnj-Chuck'- (() br i O. Llord.) s WNU B,Tvlc. f I year ISO) will go down In as witnessing one of the most severe depressions the economic world has ever experi enced. Many experts are trying to explain how It all happened. Most Interesting writing this, but of little value unless this review of the tragic past keeps ua from making the same mlstukea again. Nothing Is gained by crying over spilled milk. To brood over past mis takes Is only misdirected energy. To determine not to commit the same mistakes la a valuable resolution. One writer remarked: "People hate been treatrd to a cold shower and have been sobered up." T b I a sobering process, how e e r, Is not without lis val liable benefit a no benefit Is that we have seen the value aW--?4:- , f a reserve. Mnnylnrgceor orationso were able t v. Ntwt.tt i ll.t t four n How It Started Mtf. L.rtMl Artb lsftrt b c.ir. fjnj 40.iwi ml,l. While nles. make slumtcr A Proteit ' "The Pnyang Mudu of Sarawak.'' poet fresh from Eurojie said, "keeps oiten house for modern poets and painters In her beautiful apartment on the Promenade des Anglais In Nice. She's very rich, you know. She was a Palmer the Huntley and Palmer biscuit people. "She's very rich and she's very She said to me one witty, too. day on her return from her dresa smaker's: "'Women's clothes are ever so much dearer than they were In the past; yet In the past It took two sheep to make a dress, whllo It ouly takes one silkworm now.'" ism CABBY GERTIE lm- - IhU phrase seems apt enough to le modern, we owe it, In fact, to no less a erson llinn our own Will Shakespeare, In whose woik. "Hamlet," we find what la probably Its earliest recorded use In Ihe cne Indicated. r, Drid a lH. t, j.e,otri.n;s to S.,nM eflr Srl1t roses thrlrs climbing grown on their own roots, and cun be propagated readily from cuttings. This Is such a t simple plan that any garden maker can Increase his stock If he has 1 single plnnL Dorothy Perkins can be multiplied easily by laying down the canes that are near the ground and covering them with a little soil. This plan may be followed with other free growing kinds hut with most varieties It Is better to make cuttings short sturdy pieces ol half ripened wood, cut off Just below a Joint and Inserted three quarters of their depth In sand or sandy soil In a sheltered position. (Coprrlnhl.) WNU Scrvlcs, IIAVK all beard or rend phrase which la practically always associated, and correctly so, with sleep which Is disturbed by the revels of Ihose who, bolsterousneoa by their howling, and other MrHo sSays: --- U7H 1 t tiWrW r HIDEOUS" nMi bridal. tn the World J ri rots (l e hurtMif tif 1T. Aiioifaii. The main anh Ms spnn of IllVI fori. The b'bU-- e , f, , ,,,. MnjMiuni, rp'i'ii cpacitjr of ion trains. r,;ni r-- Srodlcal WNU OOs0K0WH00 TO MAKE THE NIGHT Itoll if t!,p rt.e.ri,.f log Ihflf tV:s rotnpunt piid due. io (he crown as emir as II.! A. P. The swDnr 8rvlca. (Si br McClnr Jean Newton By Worshipful of Company Went or of the city of London, wblih claims to .e be of (he city fompnnirn. has reiehf atnd rij-- e " MANY POVVVACWVVWVVV0 Long llxtory The "dog-tooth.- ---- be-rn- li and what happens to It will happen to him. This Is especially true of teeth, the hardest and most lade- structlble part of a man. Younj children were always regarded as being particularly susceptible to magical Influences of all sorts. Therefore If a dog gnaws the cast milk tooth of a child a contagion Is set op and the tooth which grows In Its plnce Is a Many an old woman can point to a neighbor as proof of this. The superstition appears to be universal and In some countries the cast milk teeth are deliberately placed where rats can get at them In the belief that If they do the child's new teeth will be as strong and sharp as the rodent's. Old Gardener and while commodity prices are lower and the purchasing power of the dollar Increased, the majority are more cautious and less extravagant. We have come to see the folly of Installment buying, and will learn to be more content with necessities and less ambitious for useless luxuries. Economically, we have been "aobered up." The period of depression has also emphasized the solidarity of the race. The Idea that one can live In a sort of vacuum has been exploded. Everybody the rich and poor all felt the Impact of the depression. Corporations facing the possibility of wage reductions and dismissal of wage earners also faced their dependence upon labor Some still boast that they did no discharge a man. "They are now thinking and studying for which they did not have lime In busy years." In the trial and suffering of the period of depression all In some measure shared a common problem and many. In Hlieral con trlbuthms, helped to meet the sorrow of that problem. Socially we have been "sobered tip." Perhaps we are now ready to avoid those defects In our economic system which periodically "paralyr.es busl hess and deprives millions of men of their natural right to earn living." t'C list Wmrra s'.OTptr rjntoo I Till: WNU .'A Inquiry reveals this superstlllou to still be surprisingly common even . among people who ought to But Its absurdity Is equaled by Its antiquity and our barbarian ancestors regarded It as a perfectly reasonable projwsItlon. It works by "contagious magic" upon the principle that what has been a part of a man retains, though dissevered from hlra, a magical' sympathy with bis person, stem Ihe llde of liours III tb American army tuskdepression of their ing the world aafe for democracy, Vnoll was nn Albanian Immigrant Wrong rash reL. A. OarretL serves. They had who Joined up at II :M o'clock on llid hliorh-nmrning of November millions of dollars In cold cash In the Imhks, Had It hcen other-11, 1:1H. I'art of bis war service the bard times might hsve ronisied of standing In line, me, kit In Imiid. to reciive bis allotment pen much worse. The tendenry or chow and eating It (mitiy hMf of he American people to spend exan hour) and I he remainder wn travagantly and fall to create a apent I11 working with a shove). At int reserve has certa'tily been ar S.:iil I', m. he was fold that (lie wr pslllng. It was not surprising that was over and was then and (Iht oiirlts from Kilropii atmul achaM given nn honornMe disbars; wita at the way money was spent In a iloll ir In ranh. America. Conditions have changed 1 the rural districts were In very careful when a child lost Its first milk tooth thut the tooth should be burned In the Ore; for If It were thrown away and a dog happened to get hold of It the child would hnve a "dog's tooth" grow In Its place when the new teeth came. I Vad, according to Wnr record, spent eiartly old time nurses and By LEONARD A. BARRETT I'lipadkopiittn. tie t;ret Nw-mn- QirlsT ALL lis c'tl.t hundred: h am!!rriity, Jo Dollan by Weliht BABY'S TOOTH ol..t Tut 1 Beatrice Lillie of the films, a ni tlva of Toronto, u.. l. -' .... .. ": -i ineaincai profession sincii she was a child. One success fol. lowed another. During the war ihi sang at Soldiers' camps, after f which aha went to Hollywood, jnj recently she signed a Movieton contract. She prefera comedy roles,' Miss Lillie Is 5 feet 4 Inches tall weighs 112 pounds, has dark brown ? hair and gray eyes. Her first star. ring picture is, "Are You Therer ' H. IRVING KING FOR MEDITATION Sona sg-il- cant chance to register petticoat flection tor darting daughter, eh, By mt It wasn't a tery long war for America from April C l'.'l", to II, ISMS a total of one year, seven months and five days, tmly one other major conflict In which the I'nlted States bus bwii ninccrncd was aborter the I II day Spanish American war of l.'S. Hut any of the niHUotia who served through Chateau Thierry. nnd the Argmtne will Ml i'u that It was plenty long enough " ,w ever, that doesn't Include Vail dl-l- Scotch Oat CracKers. (wo cupfuls of rolled oats through the ment grin.ier. add one fourth of a cupful fach of toiik ate! I tnolase. fine and one half tahl (UiU spoonfuls of fat, one fourth tea fqmoiiftil of soii.f. one teapiMinful HER AUNT TOLD HER THAT of aalt and one fourth of a cupful If a girl's petticoat li longer than of tiiMns or nuts. Mix well, roll tier skirt. It It a sign that her fa- very thin and rut Into fancy (hnpe. ther loves her better than her I'.akc twenty inlnulcs In a niederale Out the way they oven. mother does. f t'ni..n I in. lfi5t,Wt drees today, loving papas have coin-pun- Armistice. "A good Ihlng, too. A (1 d good thing," one of the bucks of Wellness company remarked. "Only nn Armistice could keep the 'old run n from guln bark up there In tew more hour." have several clefts WHOLESOME An order arrived for the captain to retire to a dressing station. He Ignored It. A piece of shrapnel wounded Mm In the aide. He was forced to have the wound dressed, lie left a lieutenant In charge of the company and rushed away In an ambulance. At the dressing station they gave Welmer temporary relief. The surgeons mentioned be was to go to a base hospital, fur behind the lines. So. at pistol's rwilnt, be Immediately forced the hospital orderlies to send hi baik to his Again at the head of bis troops. Captuln Welmer blared nway with Ids automatic pistol. Ills Inspired men beat off attack after attack. The next day Captain Welmrr'a company was relieved for a rest. And shortly afterward came the 8tvIc.I flier's Cook Book ... Ily M LI.li: MAXWELL ... H The Why of Superstitions s (I :--. 11 ... WNU Servlra.) 0f Beatrice Lillie WrjJT Burgess c stopped long enough In to bargain with a farmer. The outcome of the negotiations was that the battalion owned a pig, had for which the sergeant swapped a sack of sugar, when It pulled freight for the Iihlne, A Thanksgiving dinner, with the pig as the chief tidbit on the table, Meanwas planned Immediately. while, nothing would be too good, It was decided, for the animal. It must be cherry ripe and bursting fat before the last Thursday of No1 vember. care The Second did considerable hikWhen care would overcome one. But the ing north ot New friends are line, to dance, to sergeant continued to feed delicadine, Ue watched Its cies to his pig. And now we're all In clover. and boasted of Its growth Jealously Cut richer wine old friends of mine Increasing size and sleekness. To talk the old times over. Members of the company became 1931. DoubIm Xlalloch.) WNU Service Intensely Interested In the pig. "It pnys to have been a fanner," they said admiringly to the mess sergeant. "You sure know how to take care of a pig. Look how It's fattened already 1" And the sergeant - smiled complacently. Two days before Thanksgiving the out lit camped on the banks of the Moselle. The time had come to butcher the pig and prepare the feast. Orders were given the first Must Be I Just Wounded Him," cook to "bring In the meat." Said He. After a short absence, the cook think that he was to have that ret rued. "There'll be no pig forThanksglv-Ing,- " little brown bird to ent, though of said the cook briefly, with a rourse he didn't need It the lenat In the world, having plenty of dirty look for the sergeant. "It's bit out there all right, but It's got nine orner tnings to eat. But when ho reached the nlnro Utile ones with It I" where he had seen Itltle Bob White fall there was no little brown bird A Hard Man to Stop there. No. sir. there not Talk to any member of one ol the sign of that little bird save a few Hundred and companies of the One reamers, lou see he hadn t killed Thirty-firs- t Infantry and he will tell the little Dob White aa he hmt sun. you that their "old man," Capt. Her posed, but hnd broken a wing so bert II. Welmer, P. S. C, was a mat 11 couia not ny. But there hard man to stop. On October 8, KUS, was nothing the matter with Its when this company was ordered to legs and no sooner lad It hit the cross the Meuse river and attack ground than It run na fust n evnr the enemy on the other side, a with- It could through the stubble. So ering lire of Austrian SS's and ma the little I '.oh White wasn't uhoro chine guns greeted them. Captain the hunter was looking for him at Welmer was Just swinging his men 111. Into position when a machine gun Of Course his doe helnrwl htm bullet penetrated his shoulder, tiut hunt and with that wonderful nose be carried on. or his be soon found the scent of Suddenly the Germans opened up that little Boh White nnd nnpnrlv from the left and from behind the followed It. It Just happened that Welmer detachment. It was trapped in mat held near where the lltltle on three sides. A runner was sent Bob White fell was nn ol.l bntna nf to battalion headquarters for aid. Johnny Chuck's, and all around the As be left be auw Captain Welmer entrance to 11 the sand had been wounded In the scalp by a machine spread out. Now sand does not gun bullet and be reported this, too. hold scent. The little Bob White rj 1931. Hill Syndicate.) E. The Roast Pig They Didn't Eat Just before the American third army marched toward Germany. after the Armistice, a mess ser of the Second division geant ISut Nutty Natural g History (.0), by Lieut. Frank Now, I have been, like lots of men, "I cannot touch what my wife cooks, and am being ruined in The health by attempting It." Judge, however, did not seem to sympathize with him. We don't have to Invoke the old f HUOH NOTION paying, that the way to a man's heart Is through his stomach, to THE COFFEE GROUND agree that Krau Gross had cause And far be It rrom for complaint. HOG us to deny that a man should eat wlt.'i his wife. RIU5 Is a very Interesting I!ut as a woman to woman It must 1 1 species of swlno found In the be admitted that the Judge's galvicinity of Santos, ISrazil, where lantry in upholding the rights ot (he belter grades of coffee grounds the wife would hardly have been vi olated by a suggestion that she take lessons from t lie cook. After all. a man has some rights and only one stomach! - "tattle Stories WORLD WAR YARNS TALKING OLD TIMES OVER i I H'll SilHiem 8rlr fv 1; Tats) Climbing Feet The Matterehorn was first on July 14, lsk by E. "Marvelous screen pictures r W hymper's party, three members of In the open apacea a's produced which perished with the gulda on and ooosa pimples." eyestrain di the "erni. (WNU Srlo. , |