OCR Text |
Show THE BULLETIN 'orns May Be tlie Result of ' Improper Habits of Walking There When serving lettuce be sure that no water Is on the leaves when frnch dressing Is added. The water will spoil the dressing and the oil will not adhere to the lettuce. Do not put dressing on lettuce until It Is to be served. Don't keep gas stove burners turned on full after foods begin to boll. Turn burners down and keep down gas bills. Soap Improves with keeping, so when the stores offer sales of soap, it Is economy to bujr a quantity of It If you are able to store It In a cool, dry place. Twelve Stories Up By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Hcadlina Hunter. GOING d right-han- d fbleman LANTERN I tks Htt THIS 1 Lantern with lb bl hrilUbM. It UgfeU fewtmntJy nd I linn Mdr tor Uehtiag job. la aay mathar. . . th light laa Mod (or aatdaar Am (ora. tor hutnt. fWitnr. mart. niter Hop Mtia Prrm Hla-tlt- e n ptrwlaia sub, d Hlitar too, Lite Coteooo I aoipo. ft oaka and bom Hi Mm mo romlar eiaeHn. It' a Ms vale. with room bin f daaaadaMa UakUag aarvfaa. for only suis. aM tateWli Bkkto-akta- 8aa THE ih. LOCAL DBALBS-- te VOUB for IKfiofahbr. COLEMAN LAMP AND ur w mi up and began untangling the wire. The superintendent opened the car door and stepped out onto the twelfth floor. "Hey, Ed," he called, "I'm going down the hall for a screw driver. Ill be right back." Ed yelled, "All right," and went on with hla work. The wire waa fastened a little higher than hed thought He grabbed the grating under tha motor and lifted himself up. Ills toes were barely touching the top of the car and he waa straining hla free arm to reach the end of the wire when he beard someone enter the elevator Write STOVE CCX w Shiftleia People Shiftless iicople don't apologize. They're past that Thinking It waa the superintendent another lunge toward the wire caught Ik below him. to tha Grating. he paid no attention. He made Elevator Descends; Ed Is Left Dangling at Top of Shaft And then, to his consternation, the motor began to whine and the car dropped away from under him, leaving Ed In a panic, dinging to the Iron grating with both hands. By tha time Ed's presence of mind camo back to him tho elevator was halfway down the shaft Ha started to yell, but ho waa so close to the motor that he couldnt bo heard above Its noire. The elevator went dear to the bottom and stopped. The door clanged open and someone walked out Then everything was quiet except for Ed's cries What had happened? Could It bo possible that the superintendent had for. gotten all about him? Ed yelled again. The Bound echoed hollowly In the long shaft Then silence the dead, aerlo silence of an empty building. And Ed hanging by his fingers 12 stories above tha ground. The seconds" he says, "seemed like years Try as I might I couldn't get my mind to working. It waa racing like mad trying to figure a way out hat It never found oos There just wasnt any. "The grating was greasy and 1 could feel my fingers slipping Blipping. Suddenly I heard steps In the hall and yelled again. It was the superintendent coming back with the tools He must have guessed what had happened when be beard me and saw the elevator door waa closed. He yelled something to me bnt I waa so scared I couldn't make out what he was saying. My fingers slipped a little mors Then I beard him racing down the stairs" Superintendent and Elevator to the Rescue The Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra (100 Man) And LEOPOLD STOKOWSKI IN CONCERT (RCA-Vkt- or Sponsors) Salt Lake Tabernacle Tues., May 5, at 8:15 p.m. Seat Sols Opens April 29 Glen Brothers Music Co., Salt Lake $2.24 and JMO $L12, S1.CS, rues ntnjniNO tm n la said that a man can success- fully lie with his eyes, but not with his mouth. The face Is such an Index of character that the very growth of the latter can be traced upon the and moat of the successive lines that carve the furrowed face of age out of the smooth outline of childhood ere engraved directly or indirectly by mind. There Is no beantlllcr of the face like a beautiful spirit The want of mind lowers all the powers of the body; but so doea an evil and debased mind which Is still more wonderful. Brian Brown. for-me- r, FRUITS VEGETABLES & SHRUBS PrasHd orfglnef sitlrd ksllln, front gawr dealer It Yf y WNU Servloa. Sacceit ON BOWERS I Again Ed's fingers slipped. He tried to hang on with one hand while he got a fresh bold with the other and almost lost hla grip altogether. It seemed like years seemed aa though he was holding on with nothing bat hla fingernails, when finally he heard the elevator start upward and knew that If he could hang on Juat n moment longer he'd be safs "Thera were tears In my eyas," ha aaya, "as that car came shooting up toward pie. My body waa covered with sweat, and I cant say If it was cold sweat or hot My hands slipped again aa tha car came on. "I didn't have the courage to look down didn't know how dose the elevator was when at Inst my clawing fingers lost their hold on the grate. I shut my eyes as I started falling. A prayer ran through my mind and. And then Ed came to a stop with a thud safe on the top of the car, about sfz feet from where he bad started. When Ed got off the top of that alevator cab ha was limp aa a rag. It wasnt until next day that ha found a solution to the mystery of the moving elevator. A doctor on tho twelfth floor camo out In a hurry and, seeing the cab without an operator, ran It down himself. He had beard Ed yell, he said, but. paid no attention to It "And If yon could feel one hundredth of the horror I felt as I hung In that dnrk shaft," says Ed, "you'd realize why I shiver just a little bit, even now, wlit-- umm-boilmentions that doctor's name." It KILLS INSECTS the barnmnloue movements of walking, and the foot Itself la a complicated structure varying considerably la shape to suit the stresses throws upon it It Is asserted, for example, thut standing on one leg actually makes tbe foot smaller than when standing at ease on two, but If muscular balance la poor, then an Increase of weight thrown on the foot forces localized areas of akin against the shoe leather, and corns result Corns, the enigma of even the moat proficient chiropodists, are diagnosed In the current number of the Lancet of London and are found to be due' rather to faulty muscular balance than to Koln'a Cathedral Dominates tha Rhine. footwear. It la accepted that shoes which fit huw some of the factories make use of badly do play some pari, but what Prepared br tha National Geographic Society. Waahlnfton, D. (X WNU Service. their smoke by extracting gases which are termed "bad muscular habits" be will of the cities that help turn the wheels In the mills from are held to be of more Importance. economically by the which It comes. In brief, corns are often an Indicamovement of Nazi houses with doorsteps tion that the patient walks badly. Quaint, gabled to troops are the cphhles of narrow Americans who have enjoyed happy protruding upon the venerable 8t Savior's and streets, vocation days In the Rhineland. Among a fine Gothic edifice, whose them are Koln (Cologne), Duisburg, church, rises 812 feet above the city, and Koblenz (Coblenz); cities that spire take the traveler back a few centuries, WORN-OU- T HUSBAND; have beckoned to, and charmed travbut moat of Dulaburg la aa new aa any have reproached him log elers from this able of the Atlantic. 8hiafilcould of America's colonial towns. oi temper-f-an all in' Koln la one of the most popular stopBut wiarlv aha aaw in ha In the middle of the Nineteenth cenThe Rhine. eoida, ha frequent out," the city, ping places along liipd had only 15,000 Inhab"on edge" condition tha W with Its bristling trade and with one tury Dulaburg herarll tronhi aha bad whippet itants and Ruhrort, 7,000. Today both of the world's moat famous cathedrals Constipation! Ths cities have a population of nearly 300,-00morning alter my drawthe is, perhaps, valleys greatest taking NR drawn from nearly all parts of Remedy), ing card. and many parts of Europe. aha adviced. na Germany, Whether the traveler approaches t lika hi: As the rich Ruhr district la further funneled Koln by the keenly again developed, Duisburg, as the water gateaieft peppy. chearfuL NR the passenger boats, by train, or by motor aa (jfppahla, to fair bids Ruhr of the district, ' laxative and corrective over the numerous highways that radi- way continue to glow. wcrtagertly . thoroughly, net. ate from the city, the massive catheunllyTuatimuUtaaiheelim-A large portion of tha working popufata live tract to wpieie. dral, blackened by age, first comes Into lation of work In the great Duisburg regular functioo-biview. The huge structure dwarfs the steel mills of the t.Frearea. Duisburg dose-buil- t, gabled, medieval houses and quently they. crowd the city stadium modern structures. at dniggim, which accommodates 40,000 spectators. The Koln edifice Is a flue example of The opera, and some of Germany's Gothic architecture ranking fifth In finest orchestras and enthusiastic audisize among the world's cathedrals. It ences here. Don bo lb Many churcbea and govIs richly adorned with a profusion of ernment muas well as the buildings, turrets, spires, flying buttresses, elab- seum, are adorned with paintings, orately carved cornices, fluted col- sculptures or Industrial art works. Ittn11 unMieviUe umns, and stained glare windows relief foil oau the The newer portion of Dulaburg la framed In beautifully executed tracery laid out with modern thoroughfares. From Its heights numerous In the business districts of which are work. I In the fine at passers-bgargoyles gui the streets shops. Frequently streets beneath. Into the broad squares where The twin spires flanking the western open has placed atatuea In honor Duisburg facade, each nearly as tall as the of local and national patriots. DulaWashington monument tower over the burg was the home of Gerhard Mercadty and the swift flowing Rhine "like tor, and In the Burg-PlntDon't give up! la a fountain fingers pointing the dty to heaven." Faithful use of commemorating the mapmaker. Glover's Mange Koln Is Ancient But Busy. Attractions of Koblenz.' Medicine and Although Koln la two thousand ' The traveler finds that there la little Glover'sMedicsted Soap for the ibaapoo years old. It reflects Its prosperity and wonder that American soldiers liked helps ward off excea- -' modern development in wide, tree-line- d their assignment to Koblena after the (if Fallios Hair sad broken here and boulevards, Dandruff; promote! World war. there by flowering gardens and parkscalp health. Start Few cities and towns, even In the today! Sold by all Dniggita. ways ornamented with monuments, Rhine the picturesque enjoy valley, and equestrian atatuea of celebrated Aik Koblenz. For many miles Yh German countrymen. Fine shops and setting of above and below the dty, the Rhine mansions border these shore Is studded with imposing villages, like thoroughfares but now and then one on a gracefully curving wanders into a section where medieval gems strung vineBehind them, well-keKoln reveals Itself In tortuous, narrow, string. DO YOU LACK ENERGY? sources of tlie famous Rhine yards, cobbled streets, walled by ancient clothe the steep river banka wine, gabled house fronts and dimly lighted from the "Soma tlma a so I village backyards to the foot not feeling right," by antiquated gaa posts. of massive walls of castles that a few Frank Risky of The Roman wall that once surround- centuries Sieves SL, Ogden, Utah. were the gay gathering ago I had no appetite and ed old Koln has long since been dedidn't aeon to hava any places of some of the great and nearstroyed and Its foundation now forms great of Germany. energy. Dr. Pierre' Golden Medical Diacovery one of the city's moat beautiful bouleFrom the opposite shore, or from the helped to build me up, vards and parkways The Ring. Only rail of a Rhine disgive me a. fine appetite Koblens river boat, and I felt better in every ' the gate ttwers of the walla remain, no evidence that there waa a plays way." Sold fay drusaiata for nearly 70 yearn old the limits of the marking city. town on Its site 2,700 years ago. A today. New tin, tablet 50 da, liquid "Buy Large ils, tab. or liquid, RJS. Beyond them Koln has spread out, ab- colossal equestrian statue of Kaiser numerous Its until suburbs sorbing Wilhelm I overlooks the Rhine from the population now la nearly 700,000. Junction point of. the Moselle and Aa Germany's great river port and Rhine riven. From this point to the one of Its major ruilroad centers Koln opposite end of the city, the Rhine Is the SL Louis of the republic. Under shore is lined with a wide, open the graceful arched bridge that con- apace with shaded promenades and nects Kolr with the east bank of the numerous grassy parks. you suffsr burning, scanty at Rhine, pare long strings of barges, No sooty smoke stacks and wareLr too frsqusnt urination backed); lumber rafts, barge steamers and pala- houses are visible to mar the skyline hsadschs, dizziness, loss of energy, tial passenger boats. of modern buildings and lofty church leg pains, swellings and puffinem Koln has a large trade In corn, under ths eyes? Are you Hied, neru-osteeples. There Is a landing place on feel all unstrung and dont wine, mineral ores, coal, leather, timthe riverside but it Is spotlessly clean know whet is wrong? Some of the and free from unsightly piles of cargo. ber, and porcelain. Then give some though! to your products of the cltyi Industries are Koblena Is a great wine, market, 'but known by their names such aa Koln after viewing the fine buildings, and kidneys. Be sure they function props ly for functional kidney disorder per brown, a brown coal, or lignite, used palatial residences set amid wide nits excess wests to stay in the blood, as a pigment In paints; Koln ware, a lawns, travelers search for other eviend to poison and upset ths whole plain hard stoneware, mottled gray dence of the city's livelihood. On the system. orna-centla made Into and brown which Moselle bunks they find It. Barges Us E)oan's Pills. Doan's ere for 9m jugs; Koln spirits, a rectified constantly come and go from the only. They are recommended kidneys the world over. You can get the genliquid containing DC per cent alcohol; quays and a visit to the nearby streets Doen's at any drug Koln thread and Koln blades. uine, time-testreveal busy piano, paper, and dye facstore. Duisburg, Germany's largest river tories, and chemical laboratories. On port, Is more than 1,000 years old. the riverside are small yards from There was a village on Its site In 430 which slip some of the boats and n to the barges that ply the Rhine. A. D., and It was Romans when they occupied the Rhine Along the Moselle bauks also are a country many centuries ago. When few narrow, crooked streets, lined the city charter wua banded to the with venerable houses, business buildDulsburgers In 1120, the port's com- ings and churches all that remains mercial Importance Iind been estabSALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY of old Koblenz, formerly Confiuentla, lished. because of Its situation at Viewed from a Rhlue river boat, the confluence of the Rhine and MoOsr lobby Is delightfully sir there Is nothing In Duisburg to suggest selle. cooled dnrtng the summer moathu Its age. The traveler looks out upon Tlie church of St. Castor, founded a maze of shipping. Duisburg and eleven centuries ago; the IJebrrauen Kulirort were merged In 100.1 and the church, a Thirteenth century strucquays of the two cities. If spread out ture, and the municipal picture gallery, In a single line along the Rhine, would formerly an old castle, are a few span 2.1 miles of river bank. of the Interesting historic gems found within the site of the once walled Duisburg a Crowded Port A constant stream of boata Is coming town. A pontoon or boat bridge crosses the and going from the Rhine channel. Iron products, steel, coal, tobacco and Rhine leading to Ehrenbreitsteln forttextiles move from this port to many ress on the east bank of the Rhine. parts of the world, while some of the The Stars and Stripes flew over HOTEL Incoming boats bring Iron from Spain Ehrenbreitsteln from December, 1918, Beautiful 1923. panoand 8weden to keep the wheels of to January, ramas of the Rhine and Moselle valMeanDulaburg mills In operation. view of while the Ruhr river, which flows Into leys and a splendid bird's-ey- e Wafas $1.50 to $3.00 the Rhine at Dulaburg, la filled with Koblena la ample reward for a climb Tha Hotel Teuaplo Sow bn baa a vessel and barges, many of which to the fortress whose walls rise 385 friendly hiubly dobabla, wiU wlwaya find It Immacdock at the busy port where their car- feet above tlie Rhine. eoraCurteble, .and wnpwwmly ulate, to are transferred o goes craft, thnroanhly auieabio.aa na law-farwadanuiad why thl hotel iai or conveyed to Duisburg mills Day for Dancing HICDLY RECOMMENDED In Ilclstnn, England, the whole popBeyond the quays, lofty smoke stack Tow ana alao appreciate why . rise above huge steel and Iron plants, ulation Joins In celebrating the "Furry ire mark ef dfathvctfon to stag rolling mills, foundries, machine shops, Dance." All day long dancers surge I IMs beautiful buatofry enter and streets houses, chemical works and shipyards, and through the C. ROSSITER. Afgr. ERNEST Far from benow and then on the brightest days, ilu tiring and caperiug. the blast furnnccs belch a volume of ing ii i met oy this Intrusion, housewives "aine nnd smoke that startles the trav- (nimidcr It a sign of good luck, and eler. A Duisbiirger will show him pity those whom dancers do not visit MANY well-know- n Mat SHE TOLD s ano-ciaa- u. 0, (Ns-tiar- a'a a black-and-whi- Non-habi- d Tormented y.sel esmol y Dont be BALD! x pt Ho Clung Perilously by Hia Fingers THE DESERET NEWS presents mus- g up! Take the next car, please! Its an indoor aviator whos to tell us his tale of woe today Distinguished AdventurWhen papering a room cut off the er Edward T. McCrann, one of the best doggone elevator pilots that selvage on rolls before you ever answered a buzzer. begin to paste. Leave Ed jumps around almost as fast as that elevator he used to drive. selvage uncut The overlapping method of papering Is far easier than try- When I first heard from him he was living in New Haven, Conn. Two weeks later, when I had occasion to communicate with him he had ing to place two edges together, a a moved to Washington, D. CL If a fish bone gets caught In the It's fiva years tinea Ed has run an alevator, and ha still remembers it aa one of the most monotonoua Jobe he ever had. It waa Juat the throat, suck a lemon and the juice eame old trip, from morning to night The same old buzzer ringing will quickly dissolve the bone. and the eame people getting on and off In tha asms old building In Hartford. Only onco did anything out of tho ordinary occur but Ed You cant kill plant lice with a admits that that occurranca relieved the Job of all of Its monotony You must dose them with poison. for a few minutes. some kind of liquid that will smothIt hnpiwiied about 7 o'clock on a June evening In 1929. Nearly all the er them to death. Kerosene emulsion tenants were out of the building. The superintendent came up from the baseor tobacco dust will do this. ment started looking over the elevator. He said there might be something and e Ball Syndicate WXU Servlca. wrong with It because he bad heard a rasping sound In the shaft that shouldn't To keep clean and healthy talcs Dr. have been there. Flsiees Pleasant Pellets. They regulate Elevator Man Goes Up on Top of His Car. liver, bowels and atomach. Adv. One look at the top told the atory. Some workmen had been doing a Job on the inside of the shaft. They had strung a wire to furnish them with light, What Is Lai ura? and had left it behind when they finished. That wire tangled with the main Leisure la not Idleness. It la easy cable, way up at the top, just where the cable came out of the heavy grate to define the latter. that supported the motor. The super asked Ed If hed ride up on the top of the elevator to the top of the shaft and unfasten that maverick wire. Ed was Just a high school kid then. Ha waa lean and active, and tha Job didn't look any great shakes to him. Ha consented readily. After all, It waa something to break tha monotony of that everlasting up and down trip. Tho super got Into the car and dropped It down below tho door levtl. Ed climbed on top, and up they went to tho top of tho shaft, Juat above tho twelfth story. The super ran the car slowly as they neared the top. When It got dose enough so that Ed could reach the dangling wire he yelled, and the super topped the car. The car halted Juat even with the twelfth floor. Ed reached wrivN a left-han- are in all about thirty cles concerned in each leg with Find Castaway ' Robinson Crusoe was discovered by the crew of the French windjammer Tolosa, on Itlnca Island, 100 miles north of the Strait of Magellan, South America. He was clothed In gegf skins and uttered guttural cries, though he led them to a natural spring when they Indicated they wanted water. The man appeared to be of Nordic stock, either Scandinavian or German. or possibly British. lie Is considered to be a shipwrecked sailor who has lost tlie power of spech, probably through never having spoken to a aotil for many yean. A r0 us al ed well-know- Temple Square ataua-photw.Y- sen-goin- g ou |