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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD ting Ready to Fight the Italian ir, X; Lyi ' 7 , Ethiopia Arms 500,000 Troops That Premier Mussolini has a tougher nut to crack In Eduopia than he apparently Inugines was indicated by the diplomatic correspondent of the London Ii.nly telegraph, who revealed Interesting details af Ethiopias fighting resources, which, according to reports that may be considered an thentic, are constantly bum, mented by Importations. Apparently, the Ethiopians do not share Italy s view that they will be wiped out by their niodernly 'fqtieiiop adversaries. equipped Hi 3 Most reliable estimates, accord nl n lie fa to the correspondent, place the ing wr, vUio total of Ethiopian soldiers armed i din itn , f with rifles at 300,000 Of this num deielni , Mf her 100.000 have modern rifles and M nd "" in boxes upon their shoulders, these Ethiopian 13,000 could be rS ammunition h described as well at Addis-Ababthe capital, in readiness for the equipped." The total of if are mobilizing mn machine attack on their country by the Italians. The troops of Emperor guns probably does not exceed 200 id t in f 5vie are fierce fighters, but seem to have old fashioned Titles and supplemented by a number of au a form. a.i it ry tomatic rifles. i T s betneci Mr as shown hr1 e " 1 other (lijipiAG s held prjjj " ' " ' ETIIIOPL . . dly. r S the a (ni'ij! a real tty &t of Its the mm 1 Ini public e Showing Them How He Gets the Gold vy( underji m of eve. ' other har his fa or of pla mh Int of i oti jrnent. 'Til "count of the pre jec factmj fe work I ft hat rec k nubile she j tp usiness ipkins 4 the p I attem islng r Ickes i at It is piim 4 t job or m ns t of 0 n!( a Benjamin Totter, Amerl Lltor' is representing Ethi- Ing oflfciaj i the arbitration commission e consonsij t0 settle peacefullv t of slow! a ie vast suf u,e between Ethiopia and 'ieh threatens the peace of ieve pj ar in whidJ , Three fair motorists pausing near Auburn, Calif., to watch Peter eighty-fou- r years old, as he ekes a living from the mother lode district. They do not know that old Ieter once owned several bonanza mines and was immensely wealthy. For the past fifty years he has been prospecting, and he averages about $2 worth of gold a day, enough to support himself and his two burros. Voiss, anyway t nits fi rtht ition of th Out of ! lit Of nsuler til1 picking ' In the I ! the Cradle and Into the Army 1 how agat lationtii it if ig prlngflek of lira epub'tcai ir K Ok end of tt al p ifrot ack 10 hi tha hi be has tH 1 1 radi m. win Ms d 8 Bl1inf koSons decftI irlUre jy ot Here of the Wolf form the youngest branch of the Fascistl in Italy. Their ages range from six to eight are some of these Infant soldiers being drilled for their public appearance as they marched a of re hich ver. t tt 0 BROOKLYN RECRUIT Detroit Zoo Defies Safe Robbers thajSIl, mill fail him W Mi that aitelrJ po tPT II e s One ft t prod th f an ppnnM hie ill pa, f Motto Be BY DR LLOYD ARNOLD Profeor of Bacteriology and Pre ventive Medicine, University of i Illinois, College of Medicine. J THE HEART, THE ARTERIES AND BLOOD PRESSURE Since the deaths due to bout e are on the increase, pet haps It would he advisable to explain in some dot til the pumping of the power heart, and just the blood circulates. how Undoubtedly every one knows that the heart the blood pump of the body. The arteries lead away from the heart and the veins return It to the heart. The heart Is Itself part of the blood vascular is system. The heart consists of a left and a right chamber. The muscle coat Is very thick, and. In comparison, the outside covering and the Inside lining are very thin. Contracting normally 72 times per minute, the heart acts as a pump between the veins and the arteries. It maintains a constant pressure of blood in the arteries. The arteries, however, are not passive In this matter of pressure. They are made up of muscle tissue with a dense outside coat to prevent overdlstenslon and an Inside lining that Is thin and slick. This muscle coat gives a little with each heart beat so as to absorb the shock and to keep the pressure of the blood constant. The arteries are constructed upon the principle of a tree. The big trunk Is attached to the heart, and the large branches go to the stomach, the Intestines, the kidneys and other body organs, and one to each arm and leg. The large branches In turn break up Into smaller branches, which finally result In microscopic capillaries. There are many thousands of these Infinitesimally tiny capillaries In every square Inch of tissue In your body. The blood flows through them As soon as the bihod very slowly. gives off Its load of food and gases, it takes up waste products from the body tissue, and starts back to the heart through the veins. The venous system Is like another tree. When the blood Is distributed properly, all the capillaries have an even supply of blood. But after a meal, the stomach requires a more than normal amount to circulate through It, so less blood circulates In the brain. Now hardening of the arteries means that the walls of the arteries have lost their power to expand with the beat of the heart and to contract with Its rest period. So Instead of absorbing the shock of the rush of blood with each beat of the heart, as Nature Intended, they simply act as a rigid tube that passes this strong force unabated on to the smaller arteries which In turn pass it on to the tiny capillaries. And the thin walls of these smaller arteries and capillaries were never meant to withstand such high blood pressure. So there Is apt to be trouble. One of the tiny blood vessels may break. If this happens In the brain we call It apoplexy and say the person has had a stroke. d The valves of the heart are leaf-lik- e structures that close the chambers of the heart. Sometimes bacterial Infections cause Inflammation of these, and the healt ing process leaves scars. The effei of these scars Is to shorten the valves and pull them out of place, with the result that there Is a leakage between two of the heart chambers. Now the muscle wall of the heart always has to thicken to force blood through the heart. The leaking valves cannot hold the blood back as they should, so the heart becomes thicker and larger than is normal for It to compensate for the defect Then In later life, when the arteries become hardened, the blood pressure Is Increased, and the heart has difficulty in thkkea-In- g fast enough to carry the pumping load due to backflow through the leaking valves. A person with such a condition, known as endocarditis, must slow down his dally life to conform to the 1 Scene at Austin. Texas, when floods and high winds devitstited the region, taking 1! lives and doing vast damage. 2 Street tar binned during strike riots In Omnln, Nib. IS Speaker Dying giving to Mis, John S. Dennett, ch ilnnan of women's division of the better housing pilgiam, a sp ale to bitak ground for new homes In uginia and Mai j land. Speed Control Device for Autos Many Homeless in Flood Ayea Suffering in Midwest When Levees Break f f X W-'-N- ' v VT The most serious flood danger in half a dozen uildweslein states menaced by ragmg waters tenteied In Arkansas and Oklahoma as swol- len streams mounted to new highs and devastated thousands of fer tile acres. Moie than BOO families were homeless In the bottom lands of the 1oit Smith (Ark.) aiea, which was entaely Inundated. Various sections of Arkansas, totaling approxl matelv one third of the stale, weie cut off from the outside world after reporting they had been struck by a destructive storm. The rampaging Arkansas liver smashed levees at three points in the northwest section of the slate The released water swept over more acres of lowlands, rals Ing the estimated total of Inundated land In Arkansas and Oklahoma to more than 40,000 acres. Three persons have died In the fit),-00- t f .V J. J. Iluehsc her of Minnesota Is shown with his regulating rheostat mounted on the cowling of a car Just Inside the windshield. Hie position of the dial determines the maximum speed of the car. A white light on the left burns at ptoper speeds, and a red light at light burns when the speed Is exeeesshe. Oklahoma Arkansas high waters, and 14 are known to be dead In Texas Hoods. However, wnteis weie receding In the lone Star state, the Colorado river being the only Texas stream still causing trouble. New Supreme Court Chamber Nearly Completed v- i f 4 . 4 P4 (j At Ui I action. u couit in the nevv building JusThis shows the almost completed chamber for the United Stales Supieme In the near future. Tho first sitting new Into the building start to moving tices and their staffs are expected session Is expec ted nnoth.r momen o.w of the high tribunal in the new quarters will be In the fall. At this Administration, of vital Impor-tanc- e the Adjustment AgileuHtiral tlmt New concerning alTei Deal, the decision ting of architectural art ana a cmtHldered Is court nevv masterpiece This building to every fanner. Supreme is one of the outstanding features of the program to beautify tho Mtlmml Capital. Girl for Every Gob at the San Diego Exposition r ft vMV"C'irf'WVv . Sometimes, too, the heart muscle itself may have been damaged from some infection in early life, such as of diphtheria. Then when hardeningcirin causes arteries changes the culation and in bood pressure, the heart cannot compensate fast enough and a condition called myocarditis lisgi , Our GOOD HEALTH hearts howOve 'rev fiqf Is o Let thin-walle- Ittee ectlrt Scenes and Persons in the Current JNcws thieves broke Into tin Detroit zoo and took more thnn sure, Director John Mlllen dechletl It should not happen again d money bo was made for the park funds nnd every night it Is 1,1 Hie llonS' Mr. Mlllen has Issued an Invitation to safe r8 to try to get the money now. n le $ !XJ develops. The whole circulatory system acts as a well organized unit. The heart cannot be separated from the arteries and capillaries, and the arteries cannot be separated from the heart and capillaries, When one part becomes abnormal, the whole system must readjust Itself to the Only a few hours ufnr Frankie new conditions. Ordinarily the abSkafT received his diploma and a Is progressive, and hence hac'lic lurs degree In economies from normality Is a persistent effort by the there Villaiiovu college, he put on the to compensate and uniform of the P.rooU.vn Nitlorid remainingasports as possible unfunction nearly work league club and went t the der handicap. Frankie plnvs third base ned Is a ft Western Newnip.r Union. heavy hitter. I rrMtTtmwi- line fleet came In at Kan ii,t. u,,,io.n:.l DU go. Oil If., after minmivers, the .J rJ ! s rnnmnmmimmKmmtwm dlors enjoyed themselves at the (all 1N ,Jr 1""' |