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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SALINA, UTAH News Notes MEN It a Privilege to Live in NOW DO MORE Utah AMERICAN FALLS Observant GAN na- turalists in American Falls are remarking the curious circumstances that several varieties of sea habitants of tk beaches of the Pacific, are unusually numerous along the Snake river this year. All summer long two species of salt water birds have frequented the. waters below the dam, and now a third has made Its appearance. VERNAL The'hordes of crickets In Moffat, Rio Blanco and Routt counties, Colo., are continuing their devastation of crops. So pronounced a menace has the Invasion of the insects become that the assistance of the federal government is now being sought to exterminate the scourge. BURLEY Free admission to the wil be the outstanding feature of this season's Cassia county fair to be held in Burley September 14, 15 and 16. Complying with requests from farm organizations throughout the county,- the commissioners decided' on a free gate to the- exhibits. The fair management,- expects an especially god showing in the sheep. department, which was omitted last year. Dairy cattle will also be featured-- Exhibits Manager L. H. Sweetser estimates that about $2500 will be paid out in fowl,-normall- wind-swe- ts premiums. SALT LAKE Because Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound Keeps Them Well fifty years ago there were few occupations for women. Some taught 8 c h o o 1, some did housework, some found work to do at home and a few took up nursing. Today there are very few occupations not open to women. Today they work In -- factories with hun-- d r d s of other women and girls. There are also women architects, lawyers, dentists, executives, and legislators. But all too often a woman wins her economic Independence at tho cost of her health.. Mrs. Elizabeth Chamberlain who works in the Unionall factory making overalls writes that she got wonderful results" from taking Lydia E. Pink-ham- s Mrs. Vegetable Compound. Chamberlain lives at 500 Monmouth St., Trenton, N. J. She recommends the Vegetable Compound to her friends in the factory and will gladly answer any letters she ets from women asking about it. If Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound has helped other women, why shouldnt it help you? Farmers of Utah' are THE KINGDOM WITHIN planning on planting 15 per cent more It supplies WISDOM PERSONALITY, INacres of winter wheat than were plant- STINCT. To learn what science and chemistry ed for the harvest of 1927, according to art now able to tell of this secret HUMANITY SUPREME. It is not a read figures, compiled by the United States lurid tale, but Is meant for serious, Intellscientific discovery department of agriculture, released igent. people. TheIn latest this surprising booklet explained u hich for a short tiiwe will be sent toyou free.' Monday. Total acres to be planted fully H K. GAIT this fall under the present figures 118 Lookout Avenue - - Charleroi. Pa- to amount 178.000, which is 23,000 more than were planted last fall. MOSCOW Idaho again ranks sevEXPERIMENT enth among the twelve western range sheep states in volume of wool proEYES duced, it is indicated by the 1927 sumMITCHELL EYE SALVE mary of production of states just isheals inflamed eyes, granulated lids, sued by the department of agriculture. styes, etc. Sure. Safe. .Speedy. 25c at. With her stock sheep population at all druggists. .Hall & Rucliel. N.Y.C. ' the beginning of this year aboiit in excess of .that at the first of Use and Waste 1926; Idaho was in a favorable position Do you think njortey has been used to climb higher in the ranking states, - ' . but a serious drop in average fleece In politics?".. Used! Senator for rejoined 1927 Sorghum. minimized the possible weight contribution of the increased sheep It has been cruelly wasted . numbers. . PROVO Plans are now completed for the Utah .county .fair, which will be held 'on. September 20, 2land 22. The final anran.K.man,ts were made at a recent meeting of the county fair, board directors, at which all directors and supervisors ,were present. BOISE Idahos apples are in big de- this year because of the serious shortage of virtually all the big producing states, M. L. Dean, director .of plant industry, announces. The Idaho crop is 25 per ce'ntof that, raised last year, while eastern states range from 37 to 55 per cent of last year.-PRICE A stock of 250 Chinese ' Proper Kidney Function Is More Than Ever Important. pheasants has been received here by County Treasurer E. N. AS we grow older, there is apt to be a Radeliffe and E. Bernardi of the state gradual slowing up of bodily functions. fish and game commission.- They have "Die kidneys are the blood filters. If their been planted along the river between action becomes sluggish they do not thorPrice and Wellington. Seven hundred oughly cleanse the blood cf poisonous age-ol- d -- MR 150,'-00- 0 ! ... I ' By ELMO SCOTT WATSON I IE recent arrival In this country of Frauleln Then Itasche, tlie forlm,st Uern'tin avlalrix and stunt t-) Y flyer. uml her announcenierrt-tturafter next doing sonic year, early will t she attempt to here, flying J make a nonstop flight from New York to Germany, are a reminder that women are following closely In the footsteps of men even In aviation. It has long Iwn n popular weaker sex Id(a that the have little or no Interest In those hazardous occupations which are supposed to be reserved for the hardier male sex. Aviation, where unshakable nerves and coolness in an emergency are prime, necessities, theoretically lias no place for the women, at least in performing some of the daredevil feats which the' aviators perform. Hut like so many other popular ideas this one In regard to women's nonparticipation in aviation Is an erroneous one and there have been in the past and are now enough fearless bird Women to prove that fact. Frauleln Ilasche Is only the latest one to command public attention. hiring her first flight from American soil at IJoosevelt Hold when she took up her little Flamingo for ten minutes of exhibition flying, army pilots from Mitchell field pronounced her a skillful and graceful flyer." She Is preparing to show that she is also a fearless flyer by exhibitions of stunt flying which she will give in various pnrts of the country and she intends to pit her skill as a racing pilot In the New York to Spokane, Wash., air derby tills month. Frauleln Itasche, however, is only one of several women pilots who have attained more than passing notice In aviation. There Is Mrs. Charlotte Alexander, who organized the only, women's aviation corps In this country some years ago; there is Maxine Dicks, who Is probably the only woman aviation "camera man now pursuing that occupation; there is Trehawke Davies, the first woman to loop the loop in a piano ; ami there is Mile. Adrienne Holland, the French avlatrix, who was the first woman to fly across the English channel hack in the days when that, was regarded as a feat of considerable magnitude, and who added to tier laurels by being the first woman to fly across the Andes mountains in South America. Other bird women who have been in the news lately are Miss Iltiby Thompson of Dallas, Texas,. who was the first woman pilot to enter the proposed air race fiom Dallas to llongkong, China, for the prize of $23,000 that has been ottered for that feat, who will he accompanied on the (light ; Miss Mildred by a navigator ns well ns a Doran, a school teacher of Flint, Mich,, who flew from her home in the Middle West coast within the last few weeks with the announced intention of attempting a flight to Honolulu with Aug.vTiHnTtr as"jnTot ; and Miss Gladys Hoy, who together with Lieut. Delmar I Snyder, g former army aviator, is planning to attempt e a New Miss Iioy is a flight. stunt flyer who, not satisfied with rh king her neck on the wing of a plane, added a sensational touch by doing her work with her head encased in a black hag. Among the other women stunt flyers are Miss Gladys Engle, the California avlatrix whose favorite smnt was to jump from one plane to another, flying Just overhend, and then, after making her flying leap, ti hang by her heels from the upper wing of the plane on which she had Just landed, and Miss Lillian Boyer, a girl of nineteen who, several years ago, gave the crowds a thrill by, swinging from a cable beneath her aeroplanej with only the grip of four slender fingers between her and the risk of a dash to the earth a thousand' feet below. e's 1 co-pil- York-to-lhmi- well-know- n well-know- n distinction of Mention 'of Trehawke Davies being the first to loop' the loop recalls the feat of ear-olI. aura Bromwell, a t went girl who on May. 13, 1921, made a loop tlie.lbtp record. when he executed 190 successive idol's in.one hour and twenty minutes. It also recalls her tragic death when her plane fell a thousand feet at Mitchell field near Mineola, the- next month. (June 5, 1021) and she was dashed- to .the earth. Miss Bromwell was not the first bird woman to meet her fate in the air. Probably the. first fatality among women aviators occurred in the early days of aeronautics when on June 5, 1012, Auguste Bernard nnd Mine. Hose Atnicel, two French aviators, lost control of .their machine near .Hue, France, and mine crashing to the earth where . both were killed. . But stunt flying has not been the principal contribution of bird women to the progress of aviation. Mile. Hollands flight across .the Andes, made in the Infancy of aviation, was a' practical demonstration of the possibilities of the aeroplane ns a means of transportation to which high mountains could offer no harrier. She left Mendoza on the Argentine side at 0:32 on the , morning of April 1, 1021, and soared high. above-the lofty peaks of the Andes with their treacherous air pockets where an accident meant Instant death on their rocky slopes, or possibly starva- tion in the wilderness even in case of a safe landing. However, the trip was made without mishap, nnd- she landed at Santiago, Chile, at, 10 o'clock, loss than three. and n half hours after she laid set out from the Argentine city-- To Miss Phoebe J. Fairgrave, an eighteen-year-olgirl, goes the credit for making a parachute jump which was a record for women nt that time and probably still stands. On July 11, 1021,- nt the Curtis flying field, near St. Paul, Minn., Miss Fair-gravstepped out into space at an altitude of . 13,200 feet, siiot down with, terrific velocity, nnd then as the silken umbrella opened, she floated grncefuly to the earth. But of them all there is one w.lio was acclaimed Queen of the Air" some ten years ago- and she still retains the major part of iter claim to that title. For tlie altitude record for women aviators made on September 27, 1017, nt Peoria, 111., by Miss Hath Law, stilj stands nnd that record is 1 1.701 feet. Establishing tills record, however, was not Miss Law's first' triumph. That had occurred tlie previous year when on November 1010, she made wlmt was then tlie longest nonstop flight record, from Chicago to llornoll, N. Y a distance of 300 miles, thereby breaking tlie record of 432 miles, made by a man flyer earlier in the month. . Her feat at that time was heralded ns. one of the greatest in tlie history of aviation, and it is interesting to read tlie following account of it which appeared In tlie columns of tlie Outlook Magazine' for November 20, 1910 : nift-n- d Long-Island- As We Grow. , ring-necke- d - ... and fifty birds,, which. will. be received Wa&ryroocf from Chicago to New York was 8 hours. 17 minutes. With true sportsmanship, Carlstrom was one of .the first to congratulate Miss Law, pronouncing her flight the best performance to date In American aviation." Few persons took Miss Law seriously when- - she announced her intentions of attempting the Chicago-New York flight. Although she holds tho womans record for altitude, she had 'never .before flown more than 25 m.iles across country. Moreover, her machine is less than half as large as the one In which Carlstrom made and carried only 53 gallons of gasoline as against 2Cn gallons carried by Carlstrom. Miss Law's record has been stamped a official by the Aero Club of America. ' d . . e The .following contemporury account tiuin tlie New York Nun 'is also worthy, of reproduction because of the parallel in many respects between Miss Laws feat and tlie recent one of Col. Charles Lindbergh. In It is reileeted tlie same cool daring of tlie lone adventurer who set out aimost casually on a great undertaking and modest wonder at all tlie popular, acclaim which followed. Tlie Sun article says: record-breakin- . tlie-sam- . 10-2- 120-pou- fAo&o entire trip of ijt miles, from 65 minutes Chicago to Governor's Island In and 35 seconds. Carlstroms total time in the air . record-breakin- Uncer'H'OOc Miss Ia-.tried to buy n bigger. machine such a Carlstrom had used, but Mr. Curtiss was afraid to sell her one for fear she would be killed.. He thought It would be too powerful for her. But when he heard Sunday night of tlie record flight from Chicago to Horncil he called the Aero Club of e America on the telephone nnd said she could have a new machine any time she wanted It, and she will likely want it for now she is going to try a nonstop flight from Chicago to Governor's Island. Carlstrom, whose nonstop record was bettered by Miss Law, had the best equipment that money and science could produce nnd back of. him was the entire Curtiss tirgajilzation. His plane would entry 147 gallons more fuel than the machine Miss Law flew. He trained for weeks and waited after day for favorable winds before making day his start. Miss Law, who never had flown more than 25 miles in a single flight before, Just had some new gas tanks put on her aeroplane, notified the Aero club to make the flight official, and started. Miss Law was thoroughly chilled when she arrived, but seemed to be In the pink of condition, resourceful and not disposed to take herself seriously. She Is slight, and weighs only about a hundred twenty pounds. She was openly pleased at the reception the army officers and Aero club officials gave her. but she was a little bashful at first and looked as though she was wondering just why they were all there. Although this woman has been flying since 1912, she Is only twenty-eigh- t. She has had an uphill without financial backing, risking her life fight In machines that were none too good and she seemed hardly to realize that she had at last attained a goal o popularity, publicity and official recognition of the Aero club and that she Is the peer of any male flyer In America. Miss I,w has always been In competition with men. flying In machines that were Inferior to their'a and thla time she won out long-distanc- . . fair-haire- d, wastes. This tends to make one tired and at a later date, will comprise the quota achy, with often a nagging backache, drowsy headaches and dizziness. A com. in this county for 1927. The pheasants .mon symptom of imperfect kidney action are from the state game farm at is scanty or burning excretions. Law completed the - THE HIGHEST MARK IN AMERICAN AVIATION No less Interesttng than the scientific features of g the (tight of Miss Ruth Law,-froChicago to New York, is the human significance of the accomplishment. Miss I.aw says the fact that she Is a woman makes no difference, but It does. The fact that the new American nonstop record was made by a woman of twenty-eigh- t, in a rebuilt aeroplirtie of almost obsolete type, doubles the prominence of achievement In the e popular public mind. General Wood reflects admiration for Miss Law, when as he helpvj r from her seat at the end of her flight, at Governor's Island, he eaid, Little girl, you beat them all. In a nutshell, this Is what Miss Law did. In a biplane she flew without a stop from Chios go to Homell, N. T., a distance of 690 miles, thereby breaking the record of 453 miles made by Victor Carlstrom In the New Times flight on November 2. Flying on to Governor's Island with a atop at Binghamton Miss Cider . Sprinville. . NAMPA Cucumbers by the ton are coming into the'IL J. Heinz jjlnt.here daily, and the staff has-hato b'e en- larged several times to take, care of the huge business.. Cucumber fields under contract to supply the plant here are producing so heavily that the company has decided to make extensions to the plant. Five new vats are to be constructed and the sorting and weighing platform is to be ex tended. New trays are now being con- strutted to handle the receipts.' SALT LAKE ScrA tered showers of the past seven days failed to be of. much' benefit to Utah crops, according to the weekly weather report issued by H. M. Hightman, acting meteoroi-- J Kst in. the local office of the United States weather bureau. The Warm,-- j diy weather was favorable for harvest-- j ing, threshing and haymaking, tho work progressing rapidly. NAMPA Nine hundred sacks of on ions to the acre is- tlie estimated yield of Tom Gregorys field in Deer Flat section south of Nampa. The crop promises to be one of the record onion harvests of the Boise valley onion growers 'here declare. The onion seed was planted in rows, twelve inches inches' apart. The rows are nearly a solid mat ef onions, large and of excellent quality. There is hardly room on the ground to properly cure the onions, and the tops had to be broken down to permit the onions to ripern and cure for the early market. SALT LaKE In 1925, Utah farms, produced approximately 3.196,000 bu-- I shels of .oats, with an average yield of 147 bushels per acre. Weber county frew 584.000 bushels of oats that year, or nearly of the total amount. MOSCOW Farmers in the Potlatch district have filed orders for 16,000 pounds of pyrotoL blasting powder to use in clearing r lands. Orders are placed with County Agent L. B. Taylor and the blasting powder, caps and fuse are to be shipped to a central point, thereby reducing transportation costs. The powder is supplied by the government at cost, as it is made from surplus war materials. Delivery of the order will be made after the close of the harvest season, as late fall and early spring are the best times to blast stumps, the ground being looser at these periods. Elderly people recommend Doan s Pill s. This tested diuretic is endorsed the country over. Asl( your, neighbor I . d BOMS. To3 STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS foster Milburn Co. Mig.Clwm.Buttalo.NY TT,?F 100.0-gallo- CORN I j . j Ends pain In one minute pain from corns is ended. Dr. Scholl's Eino-pad- s do this safely by removing the cause pressing and rubbing of shoes. They are thin, medicated, antiseptic, healing. At all drug and shoe stores. Cost but a trifle. BSSchoUs - ! j . at once Put one on-rt- he pain is gone I - INDIGESTION.- If you are troubled with indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation orders or similar dis- - Green's August Flower will-hel- you. Has been used success- fully for more than half a century. 39c and 90c bottles. At all druggists. G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, N. J. one-fift- Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh For Wounds and Sores Money beck for first bottle if not Baited. cut-ove- All dealers Play Tennise for Health. Pleasure. Profit. Day- tc.it Triple-LifSteel Racquets, Get m smart or $10 Blun Ace, to take orders $12.50 malA? from, and big profits. Postpaid. Geneiai Distributors. 5159 E. 24th St., Oakland. Calif. Ambitious Agent With Good Record nnd small capital. Join u. our business unique, highly prcfitableand eas'iy learned. Few hours week ly. Keeney. 39J9 Langley, Dipt. K. Chicago. Housewives Reduce Canning Time Ak drucgLsts, grocers for Mr Prices thinning Send r.ame and address of self and Compound. fiv.2 friends for me sample. Two extra samples 10c K160& North Penn. Minneapolis. M nn. 75. W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 3S-1S- 2L |