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Show THE lUTU.KTIN'. mXfiHAM. UTAH Highest Navigable Lake The highest navigable lake In the world is Lake Titicaca, situated In the Andes at an elevation of 12.500 feet. Arsenal of Democracy Of course tlie entire nation is serving as the "arsenal of democ-racy m the current struggle against the totalitarian poteen. But the activities of the federal arsenal at Watervliet, N. Y., are typical of those going on in plants throughout the land. This series f photos taues you to the arsenal. I imii'iiiii mini if miwiiwii 33sUFi't.l CKv , If ", I At the left a worker is finish-turnin- g a major caliber gun. An-other big barrel hangs from the crane over his head. Right: This man is inside a major caliber gun hoop, measuring the bore before the hoop is shrunk on to the gun barrel. 7x1 4 - rew Through the breechlock seat of a major caliber gun you are looking at a skilled worker using a flexible shaft grinding tool on another rifle barrel of major caliber. Coated with a protective film, these gun bar-rels are parked in.o storage yard at the arse-nal. Guns do not stay Ions in storage fj now. if Jy. ,C " f - i.' 4, V- -t ' fetiffttX f SSlA Jbf,. s& & y"" "x fy 'ff " hi K;i ' I'.V5, ' (MX $ ltuLmh-T- l J Lv'j N yirxU . ,: J ft" fv bY n. "rS. 4 1 I, ? J)-l- " s r ' m?;- - i I " '..' .1. - iJ...Atkfc.Ai.eiiA'..il T iKF IT 4 IFAY! This giant gun barrel is partly assembled. n is'aoing for a little trip, swinging from a powerful overhead crane, to where the next touch will be given. . liv?t'C-- t aA i 'lAUKHAGE Urm&HomeHour Lrf .morning, Cy through Friday WA, Salt Lake I ,t 570 KC I end L 8ue Network Station ytJshTknows . . . l&'A Cakes are EASIE8 )vv ,0 bak blscu" ,r 80 lex- - light and hot roil are Vy7 ALWAYS good whea jS&Mik Vv! vj fibber Ctrl la me... vVilttt 0U p' him bu " 3j y mora, rSAL RESCWE OSURANO ' I r ANY FAMILY CROUP EXAMlNAlloTl NO MEDICAL N. f i5J5Sl. " '- - i r SanTtanclicos Largest and Best Located Hotel -- 1' 1000 ROOMS 1000 BATHS $4.00 ONI MRSON $.00 TWO MRSON hi. rnnncis H0TII jf ' SSI i ijj I TLAKEHOTELS M, it II 5 Well Famished itkinr- Cff Shop, (itrir.. JOTELS IEMI MSVADA ttop el the j)LDEN-K- no'i UrgMt end QTOJINISHING Printed 25 Per r0"- - "ell te m, Sugirhoiisr. Belt Leke City. ;RL WANTED lor cookinK end houiework. nqnired Box 1, Salt Leke E HELP WANTED m of your present occupetlon work, ere you interested in ) profits of construction work j job? Character and email rewired. Very attractive prop-- 1 limited number. Write Con- - 0. Box 15 5, Salt Leke City. ICE EQUIPMENT I'SED deski and cheira, file, iddinir mrh'e. tafee, X 35 W. Rroadwey. Salt Leke alii n 2)omyr ivy lis) 1 Ji- - 'w7?fturu :IWJ J Q .Mm Li.,, i.nin . , y;S r-r- - 'TrrWi"-aili- i ' I :t ffER SOFTENERS tr made oft as melted enow AINIER WATKH SOFTENER, niurer Supply Co., S. L, C, Ut FEAN'CHJSKS AVAILABLE MICAL ANALYSIS i for protein $1.00. Chemical Feeds, Fertilizer and Soile. EKS0N LAIIORATORIES BUSSES FITTED s:ockir.(ts. Crutchee and Bracee, Arch Supports, etc. ll jABYCHICKS Btthed Blood Tested Chlcke ertorm $G.50 AA $7.45 AAA '25; Heavies $7.15 AA $7.85 UAJ125. All prepaid. For Sexed Hicke write HATCHERY Denver. Coloredo kJo4U3-SALT- LJ minster College ? SALT LAKE CITY o WHIP Character Education 'LA --. Junior College f '! educat'on 2 Med:c, Engineering I ?'anal Science (2 yr.) '.ursmg (2 yr ) HOOL Last two yean ES Preparatory O ORIES - DINING HALL I w and art of living tI tt OF EXPENSE-W- ork Aid FORMATION write to Went Robert D. Steele, D D I '"ster College, 5 tUk' City, Utah. - ' YOU'D mO CMELS V fM0 CAMELS V, I WILDER. AND TOERE&yW TASTE SO GRAND Y ' : LESS NICOTINE IN M COOL AND FULL J ' m. maf a'"4tiS '""Tii'r tmki THE SMOKE OF SLOWER -- BURNING CAMELS CONTAINS than the average of the 4 other fSE?-- - largest-sellin- g brands tested ra less than any of them according to independent scientific tests j:j of the smoke itself ! JK ?pUURAL HOME! enjoy low-co- st gas 1 heating and refrig-",- h ame clean and by homes J itl he city ga, mains. manufactured by the OIL REFINING CO. A S delivered to your a "eel cylinders, ready For full details, Fountain gas co. Salt U:e City By VIRGINIA VALE (Releaeed by Weetern Newspaper Union. THE "Bahama Passage" won't soon forget' that picture. They journeyed to Nassau and began work in the middle of May at Salt Cay, a desolate island near-by. After that they worked on other islands, in caves and finally some of them worked under water. Edward Grif-fith, producer and director, hied himself to a submerged wreck and went down in a diving bell to officiate while scenes were made of Madeleine Carroll and Stirling Hay-de- n (we're assured that they didn't use doubles!) diving down 18 feet to the ocean floor. Shooting the under-wate- r scenes was no small task; It took more than a day to set up the heavy Techni-color camera Inside the diving bell. Fourteen-year-ol- d Stanley Clem-ents has already retired twice. A ii.jL.k.i2 Major Bowes dis-covery, he landed an engagement with theater manager in Chicago; home-sickness ended it, and he went home to New York. A few days later he re-turned to Chicago and a strep infec-tion sent him home once more. Then he Stanley jand;d "Ta" jnov ClemenU and Handsome," "Accent on Love" and now In Met-ro's "Down in San Diego." He's won his success in "toughie" roles, but he still has to fight against homesickness! With "The Reluctant Dragon" re-leased at last, Walt Disney has his next full-leng- th feature production practically completed. It's "Dumbo of the Circus," and stars s baby elephant who becomes the world's greatest circus performer because he can fly. It set a record the en-tire picture was wound np in a year and a half, instead of the usual two and one-ha- lf to three years de-voted to previous full-leng- th Disney pictures. Have you been listening to Guy Lombardo's new Saturday evening program7 He ana his Royal Canadi-ans have won no end of popularity contests, so prob-ably you've had them on your list of broadcasts that you want to hear since they began this se-ries on August 2. Guy plans to intro-duce at least one jf ' ?I '0 Ml new number week- - Guy Lombardo ly which he expects to be "the hit of tomorrow." While Paramount's testing to find the right actress for the role of "Maria" in "For Whom the Bell Tolls," Ernest Hemingway, the au-thor, cabled from Cuba that he's found the perfect solution. She's a Russian-Spanis- h girl who looks ex-actly like the heroine. If Raymond Massey didn't look so much like Abraham Lincoln be wouldn't have to wear a false nose. He wears it in the new DeMille picture, "Reap the Wild Wind." He plays a deep-dye- d villain, but he wears the same kind of clothes he's worn when he played Lincoln, and all of us have grown accustomed to thinking of Lincoln when we see him in clothes like that. So he's wearing a pointed extension on his nose, to make him look properly sin-ister. The announcement that Frank Capra and Robert Riskin, his writ-ing partner, would handle the screen version of "Arsenic and Old Lace" for Warner Bros, assured the pub-lic that the picture will be a good one. The sum of $175,000 was paid for the motion picture rights to this very successful and hilarious stage success, in which Boris Karloff re-turned to the stage. t Remember Singin Sam? You should, though he's one of radio's most unpublicized stars. He's been on the air for 14 years, and his re-corded programs are heard on more stations than any other program in America. In fact, it's estimated that he has more listeners than Jack Benny about 8,000,000 a day, the year round; his "Refreshment Time" is heard over 227 stations daily. ODDS AND ENDS Gene Auires signed to appear in the autumn at the two biggest rodeos in New York and in Boston . . . Al I'earce and his gang, who return to the air waves in October, will be starred in a feature film by Republic Studios . . . John Garfield vio-lently objected to appearing in "New Orleans Blues," but made up with the studio when he was assigned to "Bridges Are Built at Night".. . . Rich-ard Arlen's starring in a series of three aviation pictures for Paramount re-lease . . . Maureen O'Sullivan and lohnny Weismuller are housekeeping in tree again, for their new "Tartan" picture. !.. bi treated for paint- - f be painted With fins ail dissolved with It procurable from any f The mixture, of the fof thin paste, shel ? I j and dried again. When Labor Is Done Many tilings difficult to design prove easy to performance. Johnson. I E7r"!eIa,n wn be cleaned with a ened with kerosene. ( an 111111111 1 iiiiiiiiiiiinif 1 SpeaJuHf off I Isi?iaipi 1 By ROBERT McSHANE S lOMd by Wtiiwn NiwipoptrUnioe n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i "THE death of Howard Harding Jones, University of Southern California football coach, brought to an end one of the greatest coach-ing careers in gridiron history. During a lifetime of coaching. Jones was responsible for some of history's greatest football thrills. He is remembered in the Big Nine conference for the two champion-ship teams he coached at Iowa in 1921-2- He is remembered in the East for the two terms he served at Yale, from which university he was graduated in 1908 after starring as an end and halfback. .He also coached at Ohio State and Duke. But he Is remembered best for his titanic struggles against Noire Dame teams. When Jones went to Southern California in 192 i, the school was a not overly strong mem- - ber of the Pacific Coast conference, About 1926 the Trojans rose to their place among football's greatest teams. From 1929, Jones led five championship teams into the Rose Bowl, where he never was defeated. In those five thrilling seasons his teams whipped Pittsburgh twice and Tuiane, Duke and Tennessee. Rocknes Revenge The Southern California-Notr- e Dame series began in 1926. Rockne needed another game for the Irish and wanted revenge. Jones' 1921 championship team at Iowa bad broken one of Notre Dame's long victory marches. Football fans will long remember those three times Rockne's teams whipped the Trojans by a one-poi- nt margin. In the last game the Irish had little trouble, beating a favored Southern California team 27 to 0. It Is certain, however, that the Notre Dame team which will be re-membered longest by Southern Cali-forni- ans was that of 1931. Johnny HOWARD JOXES Baker's field goal won the game for the Trojans in the final period after they fought back in the last quarter to overcome Notre Dame's handicap. Some of the greatest crowds in sport history witnessed those tilts. On two occasions more than 110,000 fans fought their way into Soldier Field in Chicago. The Los Angeles coliseum, with a 101,000 capacity, was filled to overflowing by the struggle. Jones established one record which is ample evidence of his unique ability. During his 33 years of coaching he developed 24 all- - America football players-m- ore than any other coach. A couple of years ago he was requested to name his own His choice: Ends John Reed Kilpatritk, Yale, and Francis Tappan, Southern California; tackles Bill Horr, Syra-cuse, and Ernie Smith, Southern California; guards-Aa- ron Rosen-berg and Harry Smith, Southern California; center-Car- roll Conney, Yale; backs-Aub- rey Devine, Iowa, and Morley Drury, Ernie Pinckert and Gaius Shaver, Southern Cali-fornia. Except that they were overlooked by selectors of teams, Jones added that he thought Duke Slater, Iowa tackle, and Stan Wi-lliamson. Trojan center, belonged on his team. Powerhouse Jones' teams were based on pow-er-a-plenty of it. He paid little to razzle-dazzl- e and or no attention built a running game around terrific which, in turn, depend-e- d tackle play, on split-secon- d angle blocking. A native of Excello, Ohio, Jones have had a career in major league baseball. But football was his first love. He stood by the grid-iron game even though he starred baseball as a pitcher. Hurling "r yale-w- ith his brother Tad com-pletin- g defeated the battery-Jo- nes Harvard several times. An extremely shy man, Jones was more than a coach to his players. He felt that a school had a dcfin.te obligation to its athletes following their graduation. It was through that many of his players found Jobs. To him. footnai P,ay; more than a means crS were and dislike, and end. Their likes their pprsonalities wenni nrpl. edThe University of S..uil;rn Oil. forni won't be able to rrpla, ' -a-rJ Haritng '' '"' ... Notre ranie co-il- . r., RocVie Tenn, i closer to some t0WM than to Memphis, Truth Only h Safe All truth is safe and nothing else is safe ; and he who keeps back the truth, or withholds it from men, from motives of expediency, is either a coward or a criminal, or both. Max Muller. Hurting Others He hurts the absent who quar rels with a drunken man. Syrus. Our Knowledge Much learning shows how litlle mortals know. Young. The Example He who lives well is the best preacher. Cervantes. |