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Show BSIN UINTAH fHA T TO EAT jn d WHY k 2) 611 of tb tnd C fhe 9 Lak Copyright, Miracle of Italic the Cheapest and Most Nearly Perfect Food uu Coin. HTo y. tit By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS 6 "! East 39th Street, New York City. the foods known and used by man, milk is su Jpreme. It is a miracle of perfection a veritable elixir ALL life. has powers possessed by no other food. It builds sturdy jies for infants; strong bones and sound teeth for growing Milk helps to maintain vitality in adults; and to delay i onset of old age. a greater assort j contains materials than nutritive it of It is the other food. single i Idren; idation of every Considering the services it orms for mankind from in-- . it is the cheap- y to old age New iood we Oom- - have. that I al- the Benjamin Franklin of foods. It is a vast treasure chest of nutrients the most complex product of natures chemistry. It contains nearly every chemical element of the body itself, in proportions adapted for quick and easy assimilation. 'jk is so many-side- d s thmk of it as diet. -' fulfills requirements of a three-fourt- two-thir- hs t five-ye- d ten-ye- ar one-thir- ar d. one-four- th "s one-thir- one-four- th F, free-for-a- e; re-m- al A-B- -C Last pttb Street , kesu York City. T' A s? j -- MS'.!- 4 , i K$ 4 , A J - I6S- -. Seven years ago Helen Dobson deserted society life in eastern cities to buy a ranch in the Sawtooth mountain wilderness of Idaho. Here she has learned to do everything a should, chopping wood, handling horses, hunting big game and even building her own house. Her former society associates may scoff, but Helen likes it Combine Crochet and Cross Stitch i rancher . ; i Pattern easy-to-croch- et ROBERT MONTGOMERY gave them the services of Robert Montgomery, James Stewart and Robert Young, when they had the right stories for these three young men. And time passes, and they dont seem to have yet found the right stories. AT ANY PRICE1 WNU C. Houston Goudiss 1938 19 Maybe yon think Its summer, but the football season is already under Paramount is way in Hollywood. filming its yearly football picture, y Touchdown, Army, with the same cast that last year did Hold Em, Navy. Taking one college a year, they can keep going forever at that rate. Paulette Goddard Is taking her career seriously at the moment. She plans to go to the Cape Playhouse, on Cape Cod, In time to appear In French Without Tears, and its said that Charlie Chaplin will coach her. And of course, If the plan should be a great success and be done in New York, with her still In the cast, she wouldnt be at all annoyed. 12 50 nl ! The BELVEDERE APARTMENT HOTEL 2 Tel So. State St . Salt I.akc City 170 Calvin O. Jack. M?r Hu. A yard-lon- g 500 volts, which I ? cm r- -- has mother Rogers Ginger stepped out. She was a newspaper woman way back in the Texas days when Ginger was just a youngster wV, ' 1 j X? I VA fe p J s 4 J' J 'e- V - X-- i Helens ranch is 90 miles from a railroad, who did the which is a long way from Charleston awfulbecivilization. But shes ly well. She has come so adept at horsealways stood beback riding that distance hind her talented means little. Even the daughter, helping cowboys say shes good. her along and encouraging her. Now, she feels that its time for her to make a life for herself. Mrs. Lila Rogers doesnt Ginger need her now, she says. So she packed up and went to New York, with a play, Funny Man, that needed a producer. She also, though that wasn't generally known, was on a hunt for new talent for the screen. There are a lot of a Wi i.'iyiI. diotxa. Its a far cry from Manhattan cocktail parties to a western range Helen has forgotten about cocktails! rtmym -- ny t ' i t - tti J - i uj s, mag ODDS AD ENDS Jean Arthur collar for a hat Leon thoppinK for cut, and then having to explain to th tulnpeople that the really uunM it for a bahy lynx the If i Id Bill I hchok company brought the lynx back from Ltuh, and Jean unritx to keep it for e pet , . . Lionel Barrymore tpends hi t I pare time M the Itiulio designing t compass . . . And James lias a 16 mm. movie camera, with u Inch hes been snapping eierybody in You Cant 7 ake It U uh You" . , . John Beal is breaking in a new meerschaum pipe , the gift of hluard Hohtnson. leu-ar- C Wcotern Newspoper fa, t quivering from annoying symptoms wtiuh ofa a accompany f male functional disorders, mVshy not give it a cnance to help YOU? Over one million worn, n have wrhten m reporting wonderful benefits from l'lnkhums Compound. Landing Up Between Las Vegas, N. M , and the Grand canyon, there is an airfield that is so high that airplanes have actually to go up in order to land. KILL ALL FLIES rivrfl i . r V V iWB 1 JL J. s J u00 ftnywhrm. Dnly TMy . hcLH mrI tiiid fli fill t tlvu. !N' it. (.innuiN c nvuib nt ( nnnot Fjlil Wlliuothoilorlnjuit A1onjtiLijr K) kt liU ill N IMU I clt tli m JTfirulti loO-D- rr WNU tff rm m. iUilb Ave ,Ji In , ln,N. . 211- -23 W Generous Tree Clear, cold spring water flows from the trunk of a tree on a radio stars ranch near Grass Valley, Calif. that its the second profession that you follow, not the first one, that brings success. Jack Jsenny began as a violinist Burns and Allen were tap dancers. Lum and Abner were blackface comedians before they adopted the characters of rural storekeepers. Phil Baker was a musician, and Fred Allen was a Juggler way back in the beginning. who believe of Shimoda, Japan, lies Monkey island. As the name indicates, this island is famed chiefly for the several families of monkeys that make their home there, and provide a constant source of delight to visitors. port Day IERV0US? w Monkes Cavort the 144 Ants, and Kooms The Electric Eel electric eel develops passes down Its large electric organs at a speed of about of the Virginia Payne, the star 700 meters a second or at the rate popular radio serial, Ma Perkins, of about 1,800 miles an hour. vacaher made for all has plans tion. She wants to go to Alaska and phe wants Mrs. Patia Power, Tyrone Powers mother, to go with her. Mrs. Tower has agreed to go. The only Ho you feel so nervous you want to aerea-ndifficulty Is that Miss Payne, after Are you crone and irritable? lio you aeold elaborately making plans, may those dtarest to you? have to stay home. Shes not like if your nervea are on edye and you feel you md a yood yem rul Bvstem tonic, try those lucky radio stars who write Lydia b. Pinkhaiu a Veritable Compound, their own material, and can just tua ie especially Jot women. For oier t0 y.ara one woman has told anwrite themselves out of a sketch other how to go amlling thru' with ri hat to for a few weeks when they want Pinkhams Compound, it hi lpa nature build up more physical resistance and thua h Ins to go away. calm nerves and hsw n discomforts was one. Beyond Apartments Plus Hotel Service - 500-mil- j HOME COMFORT prao-tleall- ll d 610G. quick beauty treatment for your linens this border and simple embroidery motif! Pattern 6108 contains a transfer pattern of two motifs 6 by 11 inches, two motifs 4 by 12 inches; and two motifs 5 by 6 inches; chart and directions for crochet; color schemes; illustrations of stitches; material requirements. To obtain this pattern, send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. Fourteenth St., New Yoxk City. Please write your name, address and pattern number plainly. A dog-trai- P 6 rT Whereupon Metro offered her a screen test and possibly a contract But she wasnt at all sure that shed accept; said that she wasnt particularly interested in a movie career. At Universal theyre sort of out on a limb. When they sold the Madame Curie story rights to Metro, they made a deal which nerve-wrackin- d a reach-norm- ens of Lynchburg, Va., was May Queen at Randolph-Ma-co- n college, and as a result pictures of her appeared in the news reels. 500-mi- five-eight- hs high-typ- ROLLS DEVELOPED enlarvtnients. bpn nisi double weitftit or your choite of lb prints w thoul enlarnntn'HSSt. coin Reprints m da. NORTHWEST PHOTO SERVICE Fence - Dept. K - NertN Dakota have TIMES certainly Miss Vera Dick- six-fo- -- vita-UD- WNU sub-Arct- g PHOTOGRAPHY By Virginia Valr Chip-pewy- per-ta- h- .rst: It fat for Coy Beauty Queen Summer Football half-bree- supplies carbohydrate heat and energy. ouN.jcond : It furnishes protein that Milk for Pep and Power nets jitable for building new tissues A quart of milk daily supplies terms! repairing the millions of cells of to from rera are worn out daily. a total calories the by required .ird : It yields minerals which child. For a year-old bones and teeth and regulate old, it provides about half the Prices subtle internal processes of days fuel requirements, and for iSlTi Even a old, fourth: It contains every known a obcould man active moderately amm in some degree and is of his energy retain wiles, adantly supplied with the to quirements from a quart of this that are necessary fluid. It is also interestwth smooth running of precious TJtah to note that cup of body machine, and to the pre- - ing is equivalent in energy value milk bon of infecj many types of to one and eggs, or two OALl ounces of lean and fth: to act It contains !bS water, beef. ev,E solvent, a carrier and regu- A quart of milk yields more ipany, than an ounce of pure protein of ixth: It is easily digestible. the highest quality. Moreover, nuS Tus brief summary helps to authorities hold that under trition unique place of milk in normal conditions, it is the most one ration. Think of it! In completely digested and absorbed Laksi, we find protein of the of all food proteins. and fat; carbohydrate the vitamins ; every one of the mtaei erals demanded by the human Milk for Minerals lke,v: water; and an easy digesti-- As a source of calcium, milk is 7 that readily changes these indispensable. Without milk, it is edients into vigorous life. practically impossible for the ment a mcc body to obtain enough of this capof the minerals for normal : tain The cm Biggest Food Bargain skeletal development. e occasionally hear the charge It has been estimated that when ZT milk is too high in price that the calcium requirement is met a luxury to afford enough of use of milk, the need the through master food to supply a quart lor Ta! phosphorus will also be adefor every child at least a 3ncy 17 01 for provided. quately each adult. That is ridic-- i Though milk is not as good a cois! The cost of milk is much source of iron as of calcium and aper than the cost of illness. the iron is present i milk is not a luxury, but an phosphorus, and in a form that can be easily ppensable necessity. utilized by the body. ,, 9 contend that no homemaker k afford not to buy milk in ade-- e " amounts that if she desires Milk for Vitamins th, efficiency and longevity Milk is so rich in vitamins A her family, she must provide the addition of a quart ufucient amount of milk be- - and G, that to a good mixed diet of milk daily sbe purchases any other food. practically guarantees against a deficiency of either of these preood for Children and Adults cious substances which promote build resistance to Jmankind needs milk as the growth, help of life, crs m the garden and the disease, prolong the prime old off to and ward age. help ns in the field need the bless-o- f It also furnishes a considerable rain. amount of vitamin B, which proprived of milk, children de-- motes appetite, aids digestion and a multitude of ills. They helps to prevent a nervous dis'me thin and weak; their order. is low; they fall easy vic- Milk contains a relatively small to the germs of disease; amount of vitamin D, but this can 6 is small hope of their be remedied in both bottled and manhood and woman-1- , evaporated milk by irradiation, or of a vitamin D cont is milk only a food for chil- - the addition is less dependable as centrate. It It is likewise essential for is who desire to live longer, a source of vitamin C than any other vitamin, as the amount it Ner, and healthier lives to naturally contains varies with the diet of the cow and is reduced by YOU KNOW HOW TO pasteurization or evaporation. This deficiency is easily made ilai good, however, by adding to the diet fresh fruits and fruit juices and raw leafy vegetables. This Free Chart Makes It k Simple as of Milk In Producers Praise Helps to Safeguard Health As milk is mans finest food, the Planning a balanced diet will men who are occupied witb its Cease to be a Puzzle if you send for the Homemakers Chart for ( heck production are engaged in the worlds most important pursuit. log Nutritional Balance, ottered, free, by C. Houston Goudiss. They labor to provide the nation Itltsts the foods and the standard with a pure, safe, clean supply of amounts tint should be included n the the food that makes life worthdaily diet, and includes aheleton menus for breakfast, while for children and helps to dinner and lunch or supper, to prolong life for adults. Sutde you in selecting the proper Let no one say that milk is exfoods iu each classification. pensive. Rather let every homet postcard is sufficient to brine you tins valuable usd to good menu plan. maker come to realize that this ""M Just ask ft r the Psutntum magnificent food would be CHEAP Oust AddressC Houston (toudsss. -2- tnr Oust half-bree- six fortify their bodies against the assaults of disease to retain or regain mental and bodily vigor. It is indeed a Fountain of Youth! Milk tbaiui itial v. 1""' ff Jt Gingers Mas Career A LL the outfit he had was the clothes he wore. In his right hand, held high, he carried a Bible. Just where he came from no one knew, for he very suddenly appeared on the Saskatchewan plains calling upon all to Repent, and seek Eternal Life. Now and then he changed his text and warned us that the Day of Judgment was at hand. After we staked him to some food, and a warmer coat donated by the most notorious blasphemer in the group, he was on his way again shouting his warnings. The poor chap was obviously a bit cracked, but as long as he kept to the prairie he was not in much danger. But, the poor misguided prophet kept heading due northwest, and just when the terrific wmter took a good grip on the Athabaska lake country, he came to grief. He was found badly frozen, and dying of starvation, on a trail that might see a human being once during the wmter. In spite of his serious physical condition he was still shouting texts d and singing hymns, but the who found him knew but few words of English anyway, so the warnings and texts fell on deaf ears. At any rate, the breed soon had the demented white preacher in a warm bunk, and warm food inside of him. As the days passed, though, the roving missionary developed d into a ravmg maniac, and the benefactor left for safer surroundings. He did not actually desert the unfortunate white, but be did get a report to the Fort post of the Mounted Police. When Constable Pedley, certainly one of the most courageous trailers and trackers ever to wear the scarlet and gold, arrived at the tiny log hut he found an extremely violent lunatic in charge. Moreover, in spite of frostbite and emaciation, the lunatic possessed prodigious constable strength and the had a tough time to get the prisoner under controL Wise in the tricks and wrinkles of the northern trails, Pedley wrapped the lunatic in two great big sleeping bags. Then he tied him onto the sled, and shoved off on a mush to the nearest hospital, at Fort Saskatchewan. Even to this day all the details g of that trip have never been told. The big, strapping constable bad his hands more than full while the mercury stuck at 40 and 50 below all the time. It was out of the question, of course, for the constable to keep the lunatic strapped up and tied down all the time, so every time he released the prisoner he had to get into a fight whether he wanted to or not Apart from this, there was great trouble feedmg the crazy man. The constable took extreme measures in this, however, for he realized that his patient would soon die of exposure and starvation unless he was fed. Mile after frozen mile they mushed, day after day, with the lunatic centering his hatred and vituperation on the constable, and the latter centering his attention on the trail and the dogs and doing all possible to get the patient to shelter and warmth and medical attention. To add to all this terrific mental and physical punishment. Constable n was often beset Pedleys starving by packs of timber wolves. Pedleys integrity is beyond reproach, and he stated that he didnt stop to light fires until it was absolutely inevitable that the wolf pack would jump the train In another minute or so, so ravenous wolves. were these Finally Constable Pedley and his trag.c load mushed into Fort Sasand the demented katchewan, preacher was soon in good hands. After a few days of rest for himself and dogs, Pedley started off on e return trip to his post the All alone, on Lake Athabaska. e mushing through that land, God only knows what thoughts were Pedleys as he moved across the snowy wastes thinking over the events of the past week3. At any rate, halfway down the Athabaska river his own mind snapped, and he wandered for days in the bitter cold until found by some Cree Indians who, strange to relate, tied him to a dog sled and mushed him back to Fort Saskatchewan, where lay the demented preacher. The preacher was as right as rain, mentally and physically. Inside of two months, but almost a year passed before Constable Pedley came back to the world to which he belonged. The force gave him a fairly decent Job at headquarters. As the war left its mark on those jwho saw real front-lin- e service, so did that trip through the Arctic wastes, with a lunatic for company, leave its mark on Mounted Constable Pedley, a real hero if there ever man-killin- balanced l. aream h ADVENTURES OF A HERO AND A LUNATIC Food Authority Explains Why It Is hTes ;;;gd the - by Captain G. Elliott -- Nightingale Recount1 -- I if t ..Ylounted -- 2, ffou.lt on Cjoudtn RECORD Union. Dont Nculcct Them ! the kidneys to do marvelous job. 1 heir tank is to keep the flowm blood strenm free of m exec of toxic impurilios. The act of living hf$ constantly producing waste mattpf the kidness must remove fiom the blood If yooa hoiltii ie to endure. V hen the kidnes fd to function as Kature intended, there Is retention of wate that may mim boly-wil- e trws One may suffer nnrving ba kn he, permit ent headache, at t i k of di- m su, fptiing up ntg.hta, suril'ng, pu Lm under the eyes KhI tired, nervous, ail Worn out. Frequfnt, scanty nr burning ravages Tnay be forth r evidence ol kuiruy or bladder disturbance. T he n cognized and proper trcamnt !b a diuretic (mdinne to lulp the kidni . r t rid of exons pr sonous bdv waste. I m lonn'$ Idls. '1 ht v have had more than forty veara of public approval Are rn Horsed tne country over. Insult on livan . bold at all drug elutes. Kature irt'Fii i h rJ OMidk t s |