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Show THE Bl II I.I IV BINGH M CANYON, ITAH J, SEWING CIKULb PATTERNS IJoutkfut, Scalloped jbate Sturdy Play Set for VjounqM CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT MISCELLANEOUS WE BUY AND 8KIX Office Furniture, Filet. Typewriters, Add-ing M.ichlm-s- . S.jfes, Cash lieglsti'rs. 8AI.T LAKE UKSK DXCIIANdE SB Weal Ilroudwnv. It LM OUT, titan. U 3 U 8862 i : Pretty Date Frock FEMININE as can be is this frock for the young in spirit scallops edge the flatter-ing neckline and brief sleeves, the simple gored skirt is graceful and flattering. Add a touch of glamour with a bunch of flowers or a handsome clip. Pattern No. 8862 comes In sizes 12. 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires J 'u yards of 35 or material. Practical Play St A GAY ard practical for youngsters of 2 to ideal for active summen dress has buttoned, shoulders, square neck i applique that can be m scraps. Panties to matt overalls with criss-cros- s brother or sister. Pattern No. 8974 Is for li: 5. 6. 8 and 10 years. Size J, yards of 35 or overall! panties, .8 yard; 2'2 yards i dress, 1 yard ric rac for over Due to an unusually larfie i current conditions, sliqhtlv mi required In filling orders fori most popular pattern number! Send your order to: SKWINfi CIRCLE PATTER' 709 Mission St., San Franelsi Enclose 25 cents in coins pattern desired. Pattern No. Name Address Buy U. S. Savings MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS RADIO PIANOS-APPLIA- NCES Just received car load of good pianos. $125.00 to $385.00 Alto used Radio from 97.50 to $38 Write for detcriplhn snd prictt HOME SERVICE COMPANY 43 Wetf Third South Sail Lake City 1, Utah POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. - U. S. APPROVED blood tested C ; chicks, 14 breeds. .Jx . J - Wrstofor nl prwtt to Colorado' (S2af) laront hatokory. Colorado Hatchery D.nv.r, Cot. SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC. Toramto, Cabbage, Onion, Celery plants, also onion seed. Send for catalog. Lake Mrad Plant Karma, Overton. Nevada. WANTED TO BUY HIGHEST CASH PRICES promptly paid lor postage atump collecUona und accumu-lations. Write today to: STANLEY C. BOBINSON, Bos 4. Albany, Orefon. Invest in Your Country Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! M TOMORROW AIRIGHI Mi DepWnW. Jll VHhBL? laxative BSpVaapjRS VRICEKRISPIES PC You can also get this cereal In Kellogg's VARIETY 4! B ferent cereals, 10 generous packages, In one handy caxtonl JilUfrSsK GARDEN u&rw o Spray (rith Black Loaf 40. One " ounce in 6 gallons of water makes E M an effective aprad-spra- y. II Black Leal 40 also controls leaf hoppers, J i miners, most thrips, mealy bugs, T lace bugg, young sucking bugs and similar . insects. V TOBACCO & Q m. CHEMICAL SP Louisville 2 Kentucky T LETS YOU TURN OUT BREAD I ata moments ttofic Quick acting... easy to use-ke- eps for we Jil on your pantry shelf MfflftZf IF YOU BAKE AT HOME y0" "HAkMhrs make aU the delicious br ad you s MI any time you want to with wonderful tfA$tKffl6n Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry YJ I'if Dfyirt. jm more being "caught short" with no. If llA$f IE the house . . . nospoiled batch because. Ml'--.-, ?,, M weakened. New Fleischmann's Fast" atOAglD' " If keeps fresh on your pantry shelf for '"' - j Keep a supply handy. At ; or gW fT i red, achy" mucleSI TL SPIINS smiNS BRUI$$j3fL!? fjfcglSLOAN'S LINIMEN WNU--W 1946 Help Them Cleanse the Klood of Harmful Body Waste Your kidneys are constantly filtering waste matter from the blood stream. Bui kidneys sometimes lag in their work do not act as Nature Intendedfail to re-move impuritiea that, if retained, may poison the system and upset the whole body machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of diutinesa, getting up ntghta, swelling, pufnnesa under the eyes a feeling of nervous anxiety and loaa of pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder dis-order are sometimes burning, scanty os too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Us Doan'i Ptfls. Doom's have been winning new frienda for more than forty years. They have a nation-wid- e reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the country over. As your nipa6or ''f""f' Wm!' Wf Wt wfa $fwf PJP V"W i'i 'f"' someone who normally lives in the city. It gleams new and white against the great trees which sur-round it and overlooks the Ob. The house would be indistinguishable from the great estates of the wealthy New York families along the Hud-son. It has an equally large staff of servants. The rooms are as large, as clean and as luxurious. Whenever the convenience of a high Communist is involved, these people can be as clean and tidy as the Dutch or the Swedes. So it is in this dacha. Below the dacha a private bathing pier extends out into the Ob. Down the hill we see a well-ke- tennis court, with flood lights for night games. To the right is a volley-bal- l court. We have a volley-bal- l game Russians versus Americans. There is considerable shouting. On the Russian side only one man does any shouting; the others play in grim Slavic silence. He is an un-dersized man in his forties, with wide cheekbones and a shock of curly hair quick as a fox terrier INSTALLMENT THIRTEEN I told him what I was doing here and that this was Omsk. They told me they'd been assigned as technical advisers on a big war construction project. "A mine up north," said Tex. "And now we're going out." Ed said, "At this little burg, they set up a whole Intourist Hotel to take care of us. Brought in wine, cheese, cigarettes, candy, noodles, and dried eggs. For the rest, we were supposed to scavenge off the country. They sent in a cook and an assistant cook, a bookkeeper in all about ten people taking care of us. "We really didn't get to know many Russians," said Ed. "Except it was different with the girls. They have some fine girls and nobody seems to mind if you take them out. They might have been assigned to us. Or anyway had to tell the NKVD whatever we said." "We know they gave the hotel em-ployees a lecture," said Tex. "Said live out your sentence," said Tex, they turn you loose, but your pass-port has a red line through it. That means you can never get a house or a good job you've got to keep moving." "Or you may not get sentenced," said Kd, "just arrested and investi-gated. If things don't look quite right, then you get a passport with letters in front of the numbers. This means that you are under some sus-picion, and you can never hold a key job." "You see a mining engineer gets about 1,800 roubles a month," said Ed. "They get one room for which they pay about 30 roubles. All they can buy on their ration cards amounts to 400 or 500 roubles a month. Then they must go to the free market for enough butter, eggs, meat, or fish." Now for a note on Russian sus-picion of foreigners. Russia does not yet trust the outside world. Diplo-mats are just as closely imprisoned in Moscow as are correspondents. At the time of our visit, the current I. who keeps up a running fire of com- - mand and encouragement to the Russian team. He is strikingly Some odd combination of chromosomes has produced out here on the steppes a quick-minde- tough little Irish-man complete with wiry hair and jutting jaw. He even talks out of the corner of his mouth. His name was Michael Kalugin. and although he turned out to hold no local office, it was easy to see how he had acquired the habit of command. He was Secretary of the Communist Party for Siberia. Novosibirsk has a shopping dis-trict about the size of Wichita's. There is a beautiful new theater, for the ballet, but Moscow artists also occasionally perform there. Near by, a smaller theater Is de-voted to operettas, and plays are given at a third. The post office is the usual Soviet shabbiness. The building is preten-tious but the linoleum is worn ' through. In the halls, tiles are chipped and missing. The railway station is from the outside an impressive, modern building. The architecture is dra-matichigh ceilings with sweeping vistas, but the materials are secon-d- rate. It is shopworn already, but the effect is beautiful. The crowd is fascinating. One great hall is roped off for women British ambassador had been unable to secure permission to travel out-side the capital. One of the Allied countries which has In power a left-win- g government adorned its diplo-matic staff in Moscow with a spe-cial labor attache, and appointed to this post an Important union official. He came to extend the hand of fel-lowship from the toilers of the West to their fellow workers in Russia. The Soviets gave him countless ban-quets but let him see nothing. This lack of freedom has so warped his viewpoint that he now Insists that the Soviet system of unions is only a scheme to get the last ounce of work out of labor. After the Revolution, Lenin invit-ed foreign concessionaires to help get Russian industry back on its feet. Later they were thrown out. Stalin invited foreign engineers to build the great factories and dam rivers, but later put some on trial for espionage. Of course, Bolshevik hostility aroused bitter counter-hostilit- A cordon sanitaire was built around Russia. France supported Poland in a war against the Bolsheviks in 1921, and Russia was for over a decade excluded from the League and de-nied diplomatic recognition. So their suspicion of foreigners came to have some basis in fact. This warped view of the world held by the Kremlin is slowly yield- - Lack of highways and motor transportation prove handicap to Russian development, we were foreigners, and anything we did they must report. Very sus-picious. "At their mines they sure do things different from what we do. In-stead of having big construction firms, they call them trusts and most of them are branches of one big central trust." "Any American child with a Meccano set," said Ed, "will start at the bottom and build up. But these Russians always start at the top, build the roof first and then raise it." "And work like hell, so they can throw up some kind of framework that they can hang a red flag on the tip of and make speeches," said Tex. "They've got no respect for ma-terials. They have no conception of how much work has gone into mak-ing them. They unload valuable pipe from a flat car by just rolling it down an embankment smashing hell out of it. And fire brick for smelters the same way. The way they'd heave it off, about 25 per cent would be damaged." with babies and small children. There are no seats. Their mothers sit on the clean-swep- t terrazza floor. There are polished wood benches in the spacious main waiting room-o- nly this is reserved for wounded soldiers who sprawl on every inch of the space, their crutches leaning on the benches beside them or lying on the floor. There must be between 500 and 1,000 of these weary men, most of them with an arm or leg missing. This is a normal hour of a normal day in Novosibirsk station. In the main hall they even have Indians copper-yello- w faces with high cheekbones and straight, black Mongolian hair. These, of course, are from Kazakstan down on the Chinese border. But I see no racial difference between Uzbeks or Ka-zak- s and our Osages or Navajos, except that these Soviet Indians are not so well-dresse- d as ours. Like ours, they were fighting nomad Mon-golian tribes until the Russians tamed them. At the dacha a Red Army band is tuning its instruments down bv "When we'd try to stop it," said Ed, "they explained they had a law in Russia because of the freight-ca- r shortage, that they had to be un-- I loaded within two hours after ar- - rival. No one seemed to see it would take more cars to bring more material." "We were only consultants," said Tex, "and if they got tired of us hollering, they'd get around it by not supplying us transportation out to the job. They'd say our chauffeur couldn't be found. Which was non-- i sense, because he was picked by the NKVD, and if he took a five-da- y vacation, he'd be shot." 'They don't understand mechan-ical stuff. They put things up out of plumb and then blame this trouble on poor American design. So they take it down and start all over. Once we saw them assembling a compli-- 1 cated steel frame out in a field, in-stead of on its foundation. They said they wanted to be sure it would fit ing to reality. After Lenin's death, Stalin won power and supported the thesis gingerly at first that socialism in one country was pos-sible and Russia could dare to de-vote her energies to building up her own economic structure. World rev-olution he explained, was desirable, and he pledged himself to bend all efforts to bring it about. But for the immediate future, it was not in-dispensable to the Russian Bolshe-viks. In recent years there has been a further change. For publication the Kremlin has announced that world revolution is neither necessary nor desirable from the standpoint of the Soviet Union. And the ablest foreign observers in Moscow agree that these protestations are sincere. They point out that Russia has been ter-ribly weakened by war and needs desperately a few decades of peace. They say she now realizes that Eu-rope does not want to be "liberated" from capitalist democracy, and that this could be accomplished only by a further bloody struggle involving sacrifices which the Russians are both unwilling and unable to make. Russia wants, they insist, only a stable and friendly Europe. Novosibirsk, Siberia's capital, lies in the center of this chill roof of the world, about midway between Ber-lin and Tokyo. The feeling of this big, sprawling boom-tow- n was like that of the West where the robust town-builder- s are proud of their city. West of the Urals, Bolshevik civilization has tak-en over the ancient towns and pal-aces and their new structures rise on the ruins of things they de-stroyed. Here in Siberia, they have chopped and blasted and dug their cities out of a virgin continent. And they have something to be proud of. Novosibirsk has almost a million people. We are whisked across the town to our quarters. Tiny potato patches are along the highway shoulders and back in forest clearings. Big hand-some girls, often barefoot, walk erect down the road with scarves around their hair and farm tools over their shoulders. The patches have been assigned to workers in the city. Some factories maintain busses to take the workers out on week-end- s to hoe the patches. But most trudge out from town, as we see them doing now. Presently we ride along the banks of a river as wide as the Ohio at its mouth, but as yellow as the Mis-souri. We are told that it is the Ob, of which none of us has ever heard, and that it is the fourth long-est river in the world. We come to the dacha a Russian word meaning country residence for 'V'l'W"' .X::. .w.... .'5 "I think their system," said Ed, "doesn't give them the personal am-bition, the incentive that ours does. And it's so complex they have to talk to so many people before any-thing gets done. They could never be a competitive threat to Amer-ica. We can always build in a year and a half anything It takes them ten to do. "You see," said Tex, "in Russia they don't have our penitentiary sys-tem. They herd prisoners into la-bor gangs, and the NKVD, which has charge of them, has developed a fine engineering staff. They bid on construction jobs, supplying both the engineers and prison labor. Often the engineers are also prisoners." "Politicals get the roughest deal," said Ed. "They have NKVD spies in the markets and hanging around the store counters, waiting for some-one to pop off. They usually get ten years chopping wood with no cor-respondence, and 500 grams of bread a day. If you are husky and can work hard, they'll give you more." "U you miss getting typhus and Omsk, one of the industrial cen-ters visited by Johnston and White. the water front. As it strikes up a military march a second band ap-pears, in even smarter uniforms, and begins tuning up. As we go in to dinner, a gleaming white river steamer ties up at the wharf. We are told that after din-ner we will go for a ride on the Ob. Mike Kalugin ushered us down thj river bank and aboard the steamer Mike waved us expansively to a row of deck chairs just forward of the bridge. The better of the two bands, lined up on the bow facing us, struck up as the boat moved out into the current. The band was magnificent. It was the official band of the Red Army. (TO BE CONTINUED) Poisonous Frogs Used to Change Color of Parrots Certain frogs produce a deadly secretion from their glands which primitive natives in Brazil use for poisoning the tips of their arrows. The poison extracted from the frogs, which are bright scarlet in color, is also used for the purpose of dyeing the feathers of green Amazon parrots. The green fcath- - ers of the bird are plucked out and the skin is rubbed with a living frog. As a consequence the new feathers when they appear are bright yellow instead of green, which enhances the value of the bird in the eyes of the natives. STAGEEN RADIO Released by Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE CELEBRATING 15 years all that time on CBS Kate Smith might well say "Let who will make the nation's laws; I'll sing its songs and help with its crusades." During her years in radio she's made more than 6,300 personal ap-pearances to help worthy KATE SMITH causes, and the success of many a song has been linked with her name. They say she's probably launched more hits than any other popular singer, but she won't help launch Just any song; it must be a good tune to begin with. If she feels that it's right for her, she studies it, and her flair for phrasing is like- - ly to make the composer feel that she sings it exactly the way he wants it done. Culminating on August 6, tv.tr-ner Bros, plans a four months' celebration of the 20th anniversary of talking pictures. A series of spe- - cial programs will continue on an International scale, honoring the scientists who pioneered In the Held and highlighting the scientific de-- j velopment and cultural contribution of the talking picture. It was on August 6, 1926, at the Warner the--j ater in New York, that the public first saw a complete program of mo-tion pictures In which opera stars and concert artists sang and played. "It Pays to Be Ignorant" returns to the air waves, and there's re-joicing among Its many enthusiastic followers. This is one of the few times that a program's been dropped for another one and then brought back to the air when its successor was dropped. Ever play a Screechcrbnot? Or a Moontassle? You've heard them if you listen to the Korn Kobblers, on Mutual four nights a week. Like the band's other instruments, they're made from salvaged tubings, brass piping, etc. Stan Fritts and the oth-er five Korn Kobblers get together in his basement workshop in Eliza-beth, N. J., and construct those fantastic instruments they play. When radio producers need a 3 year old or an 83 year old voice, a talking crow, or any other un-usual sound, they call on Miss Cecil Roy. She's also heard regularly on the leading mystery programs, playing anything from a snarling gun-mo- ll to a murdered man's last gurgle. And on "Daily Dilem-ma," on Mutual, every weekday afternoon, she climaxes her career by enacting all the roles! When Nan Merriam won the $1,000 prize offered by the Nation-al Federation of Music clubs in 1943, the radio program on which she was to sing was the same eve-ning as the big dinner where she'd receive the award. It was the party that interested her most, but she dashed to NBC, did her singing stint, and a few days later was handed a to sing over their stations. If you ever meet Evelyn Knight, (now on the Lanny Ross program,) make her happy by asking for an aspirin. She carries the tablets in a locket made of a huge uncut amethyst she got in Brazil, which was used by an ancient Indian Chief as a container for poison. If you heard the very moving broadcast in which Ralph Edwards chatted with Buster Roos. the eight-year-ol- d suffering from cancer, you'll be delighted to know that Ralph's appeal for funds for the Ann rican Cancer society's drive has been tremendously successful. ODDS AyD ENDS-Colu- mbia Pie turrs utii ertised )or eiuht Koriirous Kirls to portray foddeutt in "Down to h'tirth" and Jllll tn uulir imturrid. . . . Getftg Krlly, still in uniform, nearly dis-rupted life behind the scenes il the circus in Now ) ork uhvn he took his small dauuhlir haikstane to visit the tumults clottn. Emmet! Kelly no rela-tion). . . . An item on the hill for Metro's cocktail Mirfy for Van Johnson uhvn Van visited New York teas $2. 4(1 for milk drunk by the mu st of honor, of course. . . . That dress made of black fiass beads which )anis ';.. wears in "Her Kini of Man" weighed i 30 pounds. Cloth From Shellfish A species of pinna, a shellfish found in the Mediterranean, se-cretes such a strong silky fila-ment that, a century ago in Italy, large quantities of it were woven into cloth. |