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Show PAGE THE SIX Stratosphere Balloon TIMES-NEW- THIS WEEK Food Preparations and Proper Kitchen Equipment Will Do Away With Much Unneo, essary Work in Cooking Meals. Such Fears, Such Worries The President Succeeded Man Prosaic, Woman Soars A Dandit Face Lifted !::: i,' The government once kept out of all business, now it runs every business. Including furmlng. Senator Italley of North Carolina says of the liankheud cotton bill limiting v' crops : "If the Supreme court passes that, I should know the end of all things had come In America, and I shall prepare for the Socialistic regime and dictatorship." However, facts count. American farmers In 1033 received In cash $3,271,000,000, an increase of $1.. Much ora158,000,000 over 1032. tory and Socialism would be needed to wipe out a fact like that This Increase of more than a billion Included cash of Innocent taxpayers, paid by the government to Major Kepner and Captain Stevens Talk It Over. farmers for plowing under crops InPrepared by National Geographic Society, sions. stead of letting them grow. But, his altitude During fly high Waliluicton. l. C WNU Barvtce. on the world's largest Ing be has collected much scientific farmers are not particular about balloon which will be data. In a flight over Dayton, Ohio, bow they get it. If they can get It In October. lKM, he reached an al- honestly. used In the National Geotitude of 30,150 feet and obtained Society-UniteStates graphic Army Austria, a little country, whittled Air corps stratosphere flights Is well the only complete record of thermometer readings ever made in down by the Versailles treaty, manunder way at the Goodyear-ZeppellcororatloD's plant at Akron, Ohio. America, allowing on the same day aged by Dollfuss, of size to match, the "temperature gradient" in the Dow Is planning "muzzling" of The balluoa makers will use acres of cotton fabric region from the earth to the strato sieech, press, theater, radio. That Impregnated with rubber la con- sphere. Other such records of tem kind of government action leads to peratures, from the earth to an al revolution, as surely as sitting on structing the bag, and It will have tltude of approximately 80,000 feet. the safety valve leads to explosion. of cubic of feet 3,000,000 capacity Is one of the objectives of the 1034 Men not allowed to talk, print or gas. Wlien the balloon rises from the ascents. Such data will be extreme broadcast will do something worse, valuable in weather studies. and you can't prevent that earth, only partly Intlated. It will be ly Auother This country shows an occasional of project a like importance exclamation shaped gigantic will be the trapping of samples of disposition to muzzle something, with the round gondola reprepoint air at several levels. radio being the object of a muzzling senting the period. As the gondola stratosphere leaves the ground, the top of the These specimens .will be analyzed desire Just now. Radio should be as free as the bag will be 2D5 feet above It ap- and studied later In physical and chemical laboratories. press. If radio had existed printing the a of proximately height when our Constitution was written, otllce building. Many Objects of Flight. When the bag becomes spherical In the thin air of The preliminary "agenda" for sci Its freedom would have been guarthe stratosphere, it will be large entific data to be collected during anteed, as freedom of the press buildthe ascent contains 14 other Items was guaranteed, perhaps more emenough to enclose an normal ing of height and of equal varying from high level photography phatically. width. and the ascertainment of the elec Thanks to President Roosevelt, The ascent, In which It Is hoped trical conditions of the air at varithe wise attitude of employers and to reach the highest point to which ous levels, to cosmic ray studies and it Is practicable for a balloon to lift efforts to determine ozone eoncen and employed, the automobile strike a man. will be made In the United tration. The mysterious ozone lay that would have tal:n millions a States. The purpose of the flight Is er of the upper air which some scl day In wages from the workers Is to clear prohletns of the upper air entlsts assert Is all that saves life adjusted. The President has set up that are still puzzling science. It Is on the earth from destruction by a "board of conciliation"; one labor man, one representative of employestimated that It will rise to a height ultra-shor- t light rays. Is thought ers, one "neutral." of more than 15 miles above sea to He far above the highest point The main point Is the statement level. that can be reached by a manned "the decision of the board that first ascent Is The will be made In balloon. It hoped, however, that June by Capt. Albert V. Stevens, evidences of an Increasing ozone shall be final and binding on emnoted aerial observer and photog- content of the air can be detected ployers and employees." That means compulsory arbitration in place of rapher of the army air corps, who 15 miles up. strikes and Inevitable conceived the project, and Maj. WilIn order to house the many Instru- disastrous liam Kepner, balloon expert of the ments and automatic recording de violence. Credit is due to the President for vices that will be taken aloft, the army nlr corps. If this flight Is sucMr. Green, cessful, the same balloonlsts will balloon will have attached to It n tactful management, and Federaof the American president make a second ascent In Septemspherical gondola of light metal. tion of Labor, not of vicboasting to ber, In order check observations eight feet four inches In diameter. men as less sensible would do, tory, uuder similar conditions. This diameter is one foot and a third "There Is no basis for a claim says: that than of the Scientists to Give Aid. greater gondolas or emused by Professor PIccard and Com- that either side, employers To advise In regard to the sciena victory over has ployees, gained mander Settle, and will provide a tific plans and equipment, and dithe other." rect studies of the data collected. cubic capacity more than twice as great. Dr. Gilbert Grosvenor, president of Man's Inclination Is to follow the The Instruments, many of them the National Geographic society, has rut. Woman craves independence. formed a committee of outstanding designed and mofllfled by Captain Adam would have been satisfied American scientists. Its members Stevens as a result of trials during with doing nothing forever. Eve altitude be will high flights, largely would eat are: the apple. Dr. Mary Dr. Lyman J. Briggs, director automatic, leaving observer and pi- Walker would wear men's clothes. to lot take up the many activfree United States bureau of standards, In the gondola that will re- She once called on this writer while chairman; Dr. F. V. Coville, United ities attention. A number of tiny wearing them, and the sight was quire States Department of Agriculture; when you see fat motion-pictur- e cameras, film, startling. Now, using Gen. Oscar Westover, assistant in ladies purple combinawaddling will automatically and tirelessly chief. United States Army Air corps ; tion pajamas and "pants," you simul"read" dials and clock faces S. Patton, director, United Capt. It. long for thin Dr. Mary Walker.with States coast and geodetic survey; taneously at frequent Intervals. tight trousers, cutaway coat and Dr. V. F. 0. Swnnn, Bartol Research Kepner's Fine Record. stovepipe hat. foundation. Franklin Institute, The latest cry of Independence Is Maj. William E. Kepner, who will Swarthmore, Pa.; Dr. Floyd K. pilot the stratosphere balloon, Is a protest against the KIchtmyer, department of physics, one of the outstanding balloon pi- nuisance. Mrs. Lucy Cotton Thomas, Cornell university, and member re- lots of the United States army. He married four times, who knows her search council, American Associatn re served In the World war In the in mind, announces a ion for the Advancement of Scifantry and was decorated by both volt"; she has shaved her head and ence; Dr. Charles E. K. Mees, directhe American and French armies will wear wigs, any color she likes. tor research laboratory, Eastman for exceptional services. He holds Says she: "This g busiKodak company; Dr. Charles P. four medals: Legion of Honor, ness has become a racket They get chief of United States Croix de Guerre with Palm, Distin- a woman In, give her a shampoo Marvin, weather bureau, and Dr. John Oliver guished Service Cross, and Good and a wave, and for the rest of her La Gorce, National Geographic soConduct Medal, United States Ma- life she is their slave." Ten million ciety. He has been an officer husbands and fathers, right hands rine corps. The huge balloon to be used In of the air corps since 1920, and holds raised, will swear to that the ascents will have a gas capacity the aeronautical rating of airplane five times that of the bag In which pilot, airplane observer, airship piOrdinary crime, and supercrlme, Commander Settle established his lot, as well as balloon pilot and ob- which Is war, adopt swiftly modern record last November; and server. ideas and inventions. War seized times that of nearly He was winner of both the na- on the airplane and poison gases. the Soviet balloon which In Septemtional and International balloon We might not yet be flying In earnber rose nearly 12 miles above the races In 1028, receiving the Litch- est had planes not been needed for earth. field trophy and the King Albert of killing. The exact point at which the ballHe was a classDillinger, the bandit, now at large, oon will take to the air has not Belgium trophy. mate of Commander Rosendahl of his band broken up, two sentenced been selected, but It will probably be the Los Angeles, and of Commander to death, a third to life ImprisonIn the northern great plains region. Settle, for three years at Lakehurst. ment Is said by police to have had Such a choice, It is pointed out, will Major Kepner holds a naval certifi- his face "lifted," changed in varoom for drift to the cate give ample as rigid airship pilot. He rious ways, by plastic surgery, a northeast, east, or southeast and a served on the Los Angeles as as- mole and a deep scar taken from his landing in open country, so that the sistant and received chin. Police show beauty parlor navigator bag can be salvaged. training from the German Zeppelin receipted bills found In Dilllnger's The for the completed plans crew. He commanded the RS-abandoned lodgings. flights are due to the efforts of Cap- semi-rigiand airship in 1027-192who tain Stevens, has gathered data was the first to pilot an all metal, Mussolini held an election reduring the past eleven months diairship In 1929. cently, the businesslike Idea being rected toward the use in stratoCaptain Stevens has made Innu- to let voters vote patriotically "In sphere nights of the largest balloon merable high altitude photographs, their own time," not interfering with which it is practicable to construct, some of them by the use of Infra work. It was a plebiscite, the and an ascent to the highest point to red rays, showing mountain peaks opinion of the people was desired, which It Is believed possible for a man more than 300 miles from the cam and Mussolini simplified matters by to rise in a gas bag, with hope of a era. Two of his photographs, of ex- writing out the program as he wantsafe landing. The mere attainment traordinary Interest to geographers ed it, putting no other program on of altitude, however, is not a priand are unique. One the ballot, thus saving ink and pamary object of the ascents. It Is takenastronomers, from a plane 21,000 feet over per. Ills Judgment was sound. Out desired to reach the greatest attaincentral Argentina Is the first pho- of 10,000,000 votes, he got about able height above the earth in ortograph ever made showing lat- 0,900,000, showing "a machine in der that conditions there can be oberally the curvature of the earth. good working order." served. The other, made at an altitude of Some dethroned bosses in this Stevens Has Experience. 20,000 feet over southern Maine, In country. Democrats and RepublicCaptain Stevens has penetrated August, 1032, Is the only photo- ans, should sit at the feet of the the lower levels of the stratosphere graph which shows the advancing Mussolini Gamaliel for a while. by airplane on numerous occasions front of the moon's shadow on the They would learn something. and also has served as observer on earth, occurring during an , King- Featured syndicate, foe. eclipse WNU Service a Dumber of army balloon ascen of the sun. rw;:: WUltK d n y hair-dressin- g "one-woma- hair-dressin- three-and-a-ha- 1 d - Thursday, April 5, 1934 NEPIII. UTAH BRISBANE Housewife's Time Is Money Labor-Savin- tii..!! S. g The business-woma- n housekeeper (and occasionally, as well, the housekeeper who has no outside Job but a big one In her own home) Is always looking for Interesting and g dishes. She appreciates labor-savindevices both of equipment and of method for her kitchen. She knows that the tlmeworn phrase "time is money" is true. She Is willing to expend necessary time to get good results but she begrudges unnecessary minutes in the kitchen. Sometimes she has an open mind and will try new products, such as pie crust, biscuits and cakes, all ready to add liquid and bake, or even biscuits all cut and ready to put In the oven, and If she finds the results good, she will continue to use them. One of the latest additions to e this group of foods, the biscuit, has become very popular. The ready mixed pie crusts differ In quality, but one or two of the brands give very good results. Several mixed griddle cake and waffle mixtures are time-savin- g cream. Here are some of these quick recipes : Graham Cracker Pastry. It graham crackers H cup butter I tablespoon sugar Roll or crumble crackers fine and mix with softened butter and sugar. Butter pie pan and press mixture firmly with Angers again bottom and sides. Fill and bake 25 minutes In slow oven, 300 degrees F. Lemon Souffle Filling. ess-- yolks X cup sugar 1 lemon Pinch of salt egg whites Beat egg yolks and combine with EXPEDITION FINDS Japanese Honor Great ANTIOCH HOUSE Among World Leader A hall enshrining Buddha, Socra1,600 YEARS OLD tes, Jesus and Confucius, with four saints and sages of Japanese origin, has been completed In Yokohama dedicated to the spirit of "eclectic conservatism," says the San Francisco Chronicle. Its construction has been made possible by Kenzo Adachl, political leader of Fascist tendencies. The eight-sidepantheon stands In a grove of old pine trees on the Adacht estate in the outskirts of Yokohama. Its architecture combines both Oriental and Occidental lines and symbolizes the mode a trend toward universality. It Is topped by a tower in which hangs an old Korean bell. On the upper floor Is an altar "on which stand small Images of the eight saints and sages. Over the altar Is a metal mirror of the type frequently seen In Japanese shrines and temples. On it are Chinese characters explaining that it is the symbol of "unlversnlity of the spirit" The four sages enshrined with the foreign Buddha, Jesus, Socrates and Confucius were all great leaders of Buddhism In Japan. They are Prince Shotokn, who established the religion 1,300 years ago; Kobo Da! slit, its greatest expounder and organizer, and Shlnran and Nlchlren, who Initiated great revival movements at different periods. The building cost 150,000 yen, obtained by public subscription. cup sugar. Add Juice of lemon and grated rind and salt Stir over hot water until thick. Add stiffly beaten egg whites to the other one-hacup sugar. Fold Into the lemon custard. Turn Into pastry shell and bake 25 minutes in slow oven, 300 degrees F. satisfactory. Quick Ginger Charlotte. 1 cup cream Usually a flavored gelatin is a 1 standby for a foundation for destablespoon sugar teaspoon vanilla serts. Some of the ready-to-us- e "pudEnglish Church Bells in 10 ginger snaps dings" are good, but they differ Use Since Year 940 greatly In quality. It is hardly necesWhip cream stiff and add sugar A few days ago there was an insary to mention the dependence and vanilla. Coarsely crumble ginger upon canned soups, vegetables and cookies and fold Into the whtpped teresting ceremony at Sherborne abfruits which the canny housekeeper cream. Heap lightly In sherbet bey, In Dorsetshire, when the eight bells of the celebrated abbey peal, keeps as staples. glasses. the heaviest of its kind in Britain, Another product upon which she C Ball Syndicate. WNU Service. were rededlcated. depends for adding interest as well The bells had been away at a as for saving time, is the large range All Meteors Cold When famous Whltechapel bell foundry, of crackers and cookies which will They Reach the Earth where seven of them had been keep fresh so long In their tin conMeteor authorities, due no doubt while the eighth, the tainers. The change from one kind ton Wolsey bell, presented of cracker to another gives a new to the readiness of ordinary folk to attitude toward a soup or a salad re- believe practically anything of stones to the abbey by Cardinal Wolsey, peated two days In succession in the from the sky, are among the most over 400 years ago, was recast Church bells are sometimes the menu. skeptical people on earth. Recently Crackers and simple cookies will we reported their disbelief In yarns subject of complaint by people who between mete- think they ring too frequently, but find another use In furnishing us the about Ingredients for quickly made des- ors and airplanes. Now It must be the great majority of people living serts. "Refrigerator" puddings of revealed that they also put no cre- near churches with famous old peals crumbled graham crackers, dates and dence in yarns about houses, hay- are proud of them. Their "music," whipped cream has long been a stacks or other objects being set however, sounds best at a distance. standard dessert In many house- afire by them. Indeed, It Is said that no one could Dr. Charles C. Wylle of the Uni- survive being shut up in the bell holds. A newer Idea, however. Is the graham cracker pastry which is so versity of Iowa, writing in Popular chamber when a big peal of bells quick and so certain. It Is made by Astronomy, says there has never was being rung. The history of English church rubbing crackers fine and combining been an authenticated Instance of a them with melted butter and a little meteor setting fire to anything. More- bells goes back for practically 1,000 sugar. You then have a mixture with over, the popular Idea that meteors years, bells having been cast In this a crumbly appearance which looks are Incandescent when they strike country since the year 940. London like anything but pastry. It can, the earth Is likewise an error. Their Answers. however, be pressed into the pie pan surfaces may reach incandescence and baked either with or without a for a few seconds high up In the Corroboration filling. It cuts well and has a de- atmosphere, but they are soon slowed They were sitting round the Are. licious flavor. It Is at its best filled down so much that passage through swapping lies. with whipped cream flavored with the air cools rather than heats them. "When I was in Montana," said one They stop glowing at an altitude of of them, "I saw a mountain Hon sherry. Crackers have other uses which several miles, and are cold when come right up to the camp one day. make them useful for quick meals they strike. Literary Digest It was a fierce beast but with great the most useful of which Is probably presence of mind, I threw a bucket of In supplying crumbs at short notice water in its face and it slunk away." Dogs Trained for Blind for scalloped dishes, croquettes and A kennel Is operated near Morris-tow"Boys," said a man sitting In a other dishes which demand crumbs. N. J., at which police dogs are corner, "I can vouch for the truth of The cookies will aid the dessr' trained as traffic guides for the that story. A few minutes after that The dog and master are happened I was coming down the prolieni In other ways than In sup blind. plying us the accessories to other brought together and the training side of the hill. I met this lion and, desserts. The chocolate, ginger or Is so skillful that after four weeks as is my habit, stopped to stroke Its other sweet cookies make quick des- the blind master Is safe even In whiskers. Boys, those whiskers were serts if crumbled into whipped heavy city traffic. wet!" London one-ha- lf ready-to-bak- lf d, near-collisio- n, Tit-Bit- s. TRAINING CHILD IN FIRST YEARS "The Earliest School la the Family." Froebel. National Association, fxew York City. Mrs. Wood, a young mother whose children would soon start to public school, was anxious to know what she could do to help them. At the beginning of the previous school year she had seen her neighbor, almost daily, bribing, coaxing and arguing to set her twin sons started with the other children. "What wns wrong there that they did not want to go?" asked Mrs. Wood of the primary teacher whose class the twins attended. at "Too much 'sugar coating home," answered Miss Doane, frankly. This, she went on to say, was not good for any child. This mother had never allowed her boys to feel that there were hard tasks to be performed and difficult lessons to be learned In the first years of their lives, and so they had not formed the habit of attack and had missed the Joy of achievement She had waited on them, had paid them for each little service and had tried to eliminate every hardship from their young lives. Miss Doane said the children best prepared for school entrance were those who had learned to wait on themselves, to sit quietly for short periods of time when there were guests, to perform little errands and chores without being rewarded for each net, and who knew how to work and play with others. "This,'' she added, "Is what boys and girls learn In kindergarten. I wish we had one here." So Mrs. Wood conducted a little survey of herself and her children to check up on the various Items. She found that she was waiting on her children more than was necessary and was "paying" them In pennies and treats much too frequently. On the other hand she had many strong By HILDA HITCHCOMB, Kindergarten points to her credit as she had always talked with them about school In a very happy way, speaking of It as being a great pleasure and one to which they would be admitted when they were sufficiently big and brave and strong. She bad been firm In not allowing them "treats" that would upset digestion a frequent cause of naughtiness In school and she had seen to It that they were fair and generally unselfish In their play. So with this good foundation on which to build she gradually eliminated the other habits not so desirable. She played school with tne children, representing It as a very de llghtful experience and she gave them specific duties, Including keeping their play desks In good order. At other times she set them tasks In the kitchen and dining room. And, extra although It made considerable ' work, she Invited many other boys and girls to the house to play. She soon saw a great change In the children. She had tried to keep them babies before, now she put emphasis on their development and the Joy of added responsibilities. "How did you know all these things?" she asked the teacher who Archeologlsts have dug up a villa that dates from 1,600 years ago. It has colonnades and mosaic pavements, along with domes decorated with colored glass and gold leaf. It was found at Daphne, or rather a suburb of that ancient place In Yakto, a modern suburb of V1 tloch. The discovery was made by the Princeton university expedition. There is in the suburb a huge circus or stadium, three times as large as Palmer stadium at Prluceton, that seats 53,000, and lead and terra cotta pipes were found in place, along with a huge bath. All were built. It is surC. by Qulntus Mar-clu- s mised. In 67-0Ilex, proconsul of Ctilcla. Antloch goes back to 300 years before Christ, and was named after Antlochus by his son. It was the ancient capital of the Greek kings of Syria, and was located on the Orontes, some twenty miles from the sea. Its port was Selencla. It Is frequently mentioned in the New Testament, and it was there that disciples of our Savior were first called Christians. Syria was first conquered by Pompey and later captured by the Persians and made a heap of ruins. It was restored by the Emperor Justinian in 538. In the Seventh century the Saracens took It and held It for 300 years. Now It Is a poor town, manufacturing silks, leather and carpets, and producing goat's wool and beeswax. at Autloca f a 0 Ancient Legend Lingers Around Famous Bridge The famous old bridge of Avignon, France, on which all beginners test their French in kindergarten, is still there for you to see or, at least part of It Is. Its beautiful old arches and the great palaces of the popes have been sketched by hundreds of artists. The inhabitants of this section of France still believe firmly in the legend of St Benedict, who, they say, built the bridge, and who was burled on It. Historians believe that St Benedict, or Benezet, was one of the Brotherhood of Bridge Builders, a medieval order which built most of the beautiful bridges of the time. The legend says that Benezet was a poor little urchin commanded by God to build the Avignon bridge. The populace hooted at him when he made this' claim, and he was dared to hoist a huge rock which no man could move, to show that he was really favored by heaven. Benezet said a prayer and easily hoisted the rock on his shoulders. So the bridge was built. In the Twelfth century, and its remaining arches are still one of the sights of famous Avignon. Know Any Older? piece of cloth two yards long and two feet wide, on display at A Century of Progress fair In Chicago last year, is said to be the oldest bit of plna fabric in the world. Plna cloth Is made from fibers of the pineapple plant in the Philippine Islands and woven Into the sheerest fabric. This particular piece, a mantilla. Is over one hundred years old. Exchange. A shimmering had guided her. Miss Doane laughWASTED SYMPATHY ingly answered, "I have dealt with now we hate to see another mas liabylsh children too long not to know or not to have the desire to help fooled, although he wants to be. when I can." The teacher was always eager that tfAikWC. the little pupils who came to her should get the very most out of their first school year, and that was what the properly prepared children usually did. Experienced Movie Manager So you think you can stand the severe duties of a film actor? You know. In our business we may find it necessary to throw you down a flight of stairs into a barrel of water! Applicant Oh, I can stand that. I was collector for an Installment furniture house for three years. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. 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