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Show MOAB, UTAH THE TIMES-INDEPENDENT, - Z Keeping Your Linen Shelves in Order eive ieTH aia J Ye SE tpt "02 eeeho gee SPEARS the house, always as we ELE Ey evs HOUSEHOLD Kathleen Norris Says: 43 Pa Faas closets are in spare corners all os pver Y * * ee C It's Your - 9 Ammonia OwnService.) Fault may will be needed. be found kins in the ~~ a rooms Bake Towels in the bathroom, pantry or kitchen sakes a the bed x eae] ‘BOX : SS Ss : is Nome ANONAPKINS we STICK WITH TACK AND STRING ( WHILE BRIGHT ENAMEL DRIES ---~ | James James ee oe TOGETHER Peers OF RIBBON RUN A S"PIECE OF ELASTIC THROUGH CRE THEN ON (<> at . . . .. .« : . Martin Van Buren . . William Henry Harrison | a a ©) hn Tyl "emoine uly . 11, 1767| Massachusetts . . . |Nov. 24, 1784 Virginia . . . 7, 1800.New York - 23, 1804New Hampshire 23, 1791 Pennsylvania . 3 Nov. 2, 1795|North . . . . . . . |Oct. . . . . |Nov. |Oct. .. |Mar. 18, 1837|New P ‘ Aug. ton, 20, 29, 1833| Ohio 1843| Ohio |Jan. |Nov. |April j 1801) 4,4, 1809) P 49 1797/March 4,4, 1801)March P iaecach 4 4, 4. 1841/April 4 1841 hi a , March , ao 4, nied 4, 1841 4 184513 h 4 1849] Pos ae ie 9. 1850) ie 1a ming booklevs the other numbers, as well as 32 pages of clever ideas fully illustrated. To get your copy send 10c coin to cover cost and mailing. Send order to: MRS. RUTH WYETH Drawer 10 Hills Bedford Enclose ordered. Name SCS 10 EH cents SSeS SH for ESE SETS SPEARS New York each book EEESESEE EEE Address Deliciously safe at home plate... healthful for growing boys; ; : easy to prepare ...least work ; < ; least time...least money. Order, today, from your grocer. " 1. OOMOTOR <5 ? ae By ELMO (Released | } t by Western Porkand 3 ay NY "Feast-for-the -Least" End of Man The end of man is an action, and not a thought, though it were the noblest.-Carlyle. Salt Lake's NEWEST. HOTEL First stands the lofty Washington, That noble, great, immortal one. The elder Adams next we see, And Jefferson comes number three. The fourth is Madison, you know, The fifth on the list, Monroe. The sixth an Adams comes again, And Jackson seventh in the train. Van Buren eighth upon the line, And Harrison counts number nine. The tenth is Tyler, in his turn, And Polk the eleventh, as we learn. The twelfth is Taylor that appears, The thirteenth Fillmore fills his years. Then Pierce comes fourteenth into view; Buchanan is the fifteenth due. Now Lincoln comes two terms to fill, But God o'errules the people's will, And Johnson fills the appointed time Cut short by an assassin's crime. Next Grant assumes the lofty seat, The man who never knew defeat. Two terms to him; then Hayes succeeds, And quietly the nation leads. A man of intellectual mold, In action cautious, manner cold. So when his single term was over There followed four years more Grover. oe internal strife. the jurist, reached the years he held control. goal, = a of To fill the interrupted term, "Our Teddy" followed, staunch and firm, A fighting statesman, forceful, true, And brilliant as a scholar, too. He taught the nation strenuous life, Taft, quiet = ie cs leer SIE eo oS oc te bik BEN In peace was Harding's term begun, But death claimed him 'ere it was done. Then Calvin Coolidge, calm and cool, Gave to our states a cautious rule. Next Herbert Hoover of Belgian fame Added to the list the thirtieth name. And next a Roosevelt we see- Not Theodore but Franklin D. SQUARE = It's @ mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostel ERNEST C. ROSSITER, iv = SPECIAL BARGAINS yan you see the specials of our merchants announced in the columns of this paper you can depend on them. They mean bargains for you. @ They are offered by merchants who are not afraid to announce their prices or the quality of the merchandise they offer. Now, the question is: when another couplet is added to that jingle after November 5, what will it say? Will a new name-that of Wendell L. Willkie-appear in the list of our Chief Executives? Or will it remain unchanged, so far as the addition of a new name is concerned? If the terms, then that will only two other Presi- dents had ever tried it. The first was Ulysses S. Grant, elected in 1868, re-elected in 1872 and an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination in 1880. The second was Theodore Roosevelt, who became Presiderit in 1901, when President McKinley died, who was re-elected in 1904, . failed to win the Republican nomination in 1912 and was the un- successful candidate of the Progressive or "Bull Moose" party in that year. Even if Roosevelt is defeated in November, he will have had the distinction of being one of the 11 Presidents served who have been one term, 1885-1889, was defeated by Benjamin Harrison, then beat Harrison when he was a candidate for re-election and served a second term from 1893 to 1897. William Henry Harrison had the shortest period of service as President, dying after one month in the White House. If the Republican nominee is the successful candidate this he will add several interest- elected name of our Presidents, there having been five of them. John and William tie for second with three each and Andrew and Franklin third with two each. There has been one each of the following: George, Thomas, Martin, Zachary, Millard, Abraham, Ulysses, Rutherford, Chester, Grover, Benjamin, Theodore, Woodrow, Warren, Calvin and Herbert. There would have been two Thomases if Thomas Woodrow Wilson hadn't dropped the use of his first name and chosen to be known by the two beginning with the "W."' If the Republicans are victorious in November, Willkie will be The first native of Indiana to become President. Virginia still holds the title of "Mother of Presidents'? with eight who were born in the Old Dominion. Ohio is a close second with seven, and New York comes next with four, North Carolina has given the nation three Chief Executives, Massachusetts and Vermont two each and New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, New Jersey and Iowa, one each. Although Willkie Indiana, his legal New latter, mark a new epoch in American history, because it means that, for the first time, a President has been a successful candidate for a third term. Before Franklin D. Roosevelt upset all precedents by seeking re-election after serving two twice. They were: Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Lincoln, Grant, Cleveland, McKinley and Wilson. Nine (if Roosevelt completes his second term) served eight years- all of the above except Lincoln and McKinley, the victims of assassins' bullets. Grover Cleveland was a two-term President whose record is' unique. He first Then Woodrow Wilson, Princeton man, Eight fateful years of rule began, For under our armies brave Went forth a whole world's peace to save. The war was won, but at what cost- The nation soon this leader lost. Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Rates $1.50 to $3.00 Union.) ing ‘‘firsts'' to the history of the Presidency. For he will be The first bearing the name of Wendell. James has been the commonest McKinley then, the well-beloved, A most efficient pilot proved. A crazed assassin laid him low- Again the nation voiced its woe. Next Four TEMPLE - Newspaper year, Then came the ‘"‘Man of Destiny," Honest and strong in policy, Grover Cleveland, whose first term Made the politicians squirm. But when election day rolled round Harrison was more popular found- Yet kept it from Hotel - York city. So, was born residence his in is election would add the seventh to the list of Presidents who have gone to the White House from the Empire state. Besides her four native sons, Arthur, born in Vermont, and Cleveland, born in New Jersey, were residents of New York when elected. If Wendell Willkie wins- He will be the first President of German descent. The majority of our Presidents, 16 in all, have been of English ancestry. They were: Washington, John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Madison, William Harrison, Tyler, Taylor, Pierce, Lincoln, Johnson, Garfield, Cleveland, Benjamin 4, Pen 3, 1923|March |March 4, nae T WON'T be long now until some volunteer poet will be adding another couplet to that famous bit of doggerel called ‘‘The Presidents in Rhyme." Perhaps it has been a long, long time since you recited it in history class or on some Friday afternoon when everyone in school was asked to "speak a piece.'' If you've forgotten how it goes, here's one version of it, brought down to date: Arthur's term was then begun, Which made the number twenty-one. Van G@mps 7" 55 SCOTT WATSON Garfield comes next, the people's choice But soon ascends a mourning voice From every hamlet in the land. A brutal wretch with murderous hand Strikes down the country's chosen chief, And anxious millions mourn in grief. ' ee 2, 1865|Ohio 4, 1872| Vermont SRNR ? warm water of water). and mild soap ; es #0" 2 Quickly rinse Well with Harrison, Taft, and Coolidge. Next most numerous-six-were the Scotch-Irish: Jackson, Polk, Buchanan, Arthur, McKinley and Wilson. Four-Van Buren, Hoover and the two Roosevelts-were of Dutch descent; three-Monroe, Grant and Hayes -were Scotch; one, Harding, was " 1929 : te 4 -. -. ; : - peed , 4 -- lawyer-Presidents - more numerous than any other profession-includes: Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Jackson, Van Buren, Tyler, Polk, Fillmore, Pierce, Buchanan, Lincoln, Hayes, Garfield, Ar- thur, Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, McKinley, Taft, Coolidge and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Incidentally, Willkie would President who had be the never first held public office before going to the White House. In case the Hoosier candidate is successful, another name will be added to the list of our soldierPresidents for his service as a captain in the field artillery in the World war would place him in the company of Washington, Monroe, Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Taylor, Pierce, Lincoln, Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt. Whether Roosevelt remains in the White House or Willkie moves in, the religious faith of its occupant will be unchanged for both are Episcopalians. There have been more Chief Executives of that sect than any other-nine. The Presidents who were Episcopalians were Washington, Madison, Monroe, Harrison, Tyler, Taylor, Pierce, Arthur and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Those claimed as Presbyterians were Jackson, Polk, Buchanan, Lincoln, Cleveland, Harrison and Wil- son. The Methodists were Johnson, Grant, Hayes and McKinley. John Quincy Adams, Fillmore and Taft were Unitarians. Van Buren and Roosevelt were of the Reformed Dutch faith. Harding was a Baptist, Garfield a Disciple, Coolidge a Congregationalist and Hoover a Quaker. Should the voters send Willkie to Washington to be inaugurated in January, he will be one of our "‘young Presidents," that is, under 50 and well under the average age of all Presidents when inaugurated-54. Willkie is 48, the same age as Franklin Pierce when he was inaugurated. Only three others have been younger- Cleveland, 47; Grant, 46; and Theodore Roosevelt, 42. The oldest President at the time of his inauguration was William Henry Harrison, who was 68. Four others-John Adams, Jackson, Taylor and Buchanan-were over 60. Willkie would also be one of the ‘‘tall Presidents.'' His height of six feet one inch would place him third in the list. Lincoln was the tallest, six feet four inches. Washington was the second, six feet two inches. Madison's five feet four inches made him the shortest President. Four of our Presidents-Jefferson, Jackson, Van Buren and Arthur-were .widowers when they entered the White House and the wives of four others-Tyler, Fillmore, Benjamin Harrison and Wilson-died during the time they were President. Tyler had the most children- seven by each of his two marriages. William Henry Harrison was next with 10 and Hayes next with eight. Washington, Madison, Jackson, Polk and Harding were childless. If Willkie is elected, he will be the only Presjdent with only one child-a son. a : aand handicaps of these foreigngn. Bob has small sympathy P with the struggles born musicians and accuses me of being in love with the singer, Vanni. By KATHLEEN NORRIS ck a a new occupation represented in the White House, that of utilities executive. However, since his first training was in the legal profession, he would be the twenty-third who were lawyers before they became President. The list of i. layers of the sliced apples as they are placed in the pan. s aa ae 29 r over juice lemon -. 4, 1897 Scotch-Dutch; and one, Jefferson, was Welsh. Willkie's election would mean these e S15 reggae 2 1941 ieee : 7 ; ee go! Wash it well fing suds to which a few drops of am. fyi RAS 4, 1885 3 4, 1889 fs e : eee b sth B tain its luster. The flavor of apple pie is greatly improved by sprinkling a litt, resins March Aug. a published service tocontains our readers and No. of8 a description e Light colored painted furnit,, must be carefully washed to ya aoe 55 51 are just }s# ae Soe 20, 1881 March March 4, 1885/March one. The table cloth case in Book 2 is another good linen closet 10, 1874|/Iowa a delicious flavor © ar 4 at> 6 47 lar #1900 Mah acisish4 \March 1921] 28 |"."4 wen 4,4 1913|March 1921/Au 2,4 1923} Herbert C. Hoover . . |Aug. j y 7 cored 54 a. 56= idea. see of hone cold water. Wipe dry. Then po. ##pci furniture polih into is aan ish with cloth which a a litelittle abp ee eer eae tn Took 42 | | remntre Roceewelt = - (Oct. 27, 1858)New York ee ee cats tactate gifts pit s for anp.| | Woodrow Wiam Tait.» +. . [Sept 15, 1856) 1857/Obio and they make dainty for any Wilson |Dec. 28, Virginia |Nov. {july Sumner Fyin monia have been added (one tea, spoon of ammonia 4a va 1 11 4, 1893) March . « in of a ap preparing apples for baking with a 4, 1889)/March 4, 1893) 4, 1897 seu, 1% te Warren G. Harding. Calvin Coolidge - ti0 Wace 157 1865|March 4 1869| $10 19 /prl 1877| 8 er ae 1? . oe oo :4, als ae 56 46 10, 1831 Ohio 5, 1830; Vermont Jersey "5 7 26 used the aoe heart gives them 3 1 ia 4. 1853\March 4, 1857| 4 iT se9¥ladaich . aha 4 1861|/April 15, 1865) 4 March Cleveland Grover Benjamin Harrison William McKinley su 1 teaspoon into when ee .. 11 4 March March tractive gifts, too. And speakin of sath on and drawers; gir A eo 55 53 at- make would like hae oo Praed 4 a small |, . ayonnaise 84 -.-. -._- ag 10. 1850\March 4, 1853| 2 0 - 4, 1822|Ohio [March March h s . . |Feb. 12, 1809) Kentocky |Dec. 29, : .. |April 27, 1808/North 1822|Ohio Carolina | James A. Garfield Chester A. Arthur Varnish - i . a the chan eweet eae plots |March 8 -. -164114. oaerittercs 4,4. 1837| aren 4,; 1829|/March 51 Carolina Length o o_o 4, 1797/7 10 4 March 61 54 68 1767 North Carolina 5, 1782;|New York 9, 1773] Virginia ST tom SS \April 30, 1789March a 57 a|Mar. ae15, |Dec. |Feb. remove ewe sug ‘ in tend of water, the desserts wit 4 be much richer. 7 *: ee a aul £ cho sley, mincea March 4, 1809/March 4, 1817/ 8 _. -as h 4 1817|March 4, 1825] 8 _. _- 57 58 Millard Fillmore Franklin Pierce James Buchanan =~ Dol 6157 16, 1751/ Virginia 28, 1758) Virginia Zachary Taylor in blue and white, luncheon mats | | Rutherford B. Hayes may be rolled on a red stick oa. ee = a on one 35, , 1735 Massachusetts | aa |Mar. [April = ge 29, 1790| Virginia thinks it is more efficient to roll | | Abraham Lincoln many bestpieces than mayto fold them, | | Ulysses Andrew Johnson The napkins be banded S. Grant ae JRE 57 In the State o |Mar. a likes to keep things in sets identified with colored bands and , OF UNITED . . [April 13, 1743) Virginia eee Te: Andrew Jackson . . sO) BAND OF GINGHAM 2"WiDE, Madison Monroe + |vct. 7 water if left-over fruit juice is useq jy ATES - re 1732 Virginia |' | | Thomas Jefferson ROLLS HELD WITH RIBBON-COVERED: ||| : wk PRESIDENTS B COLORED BANDSLINENFOR|| | | John GeorgeAdams Washington SETS OF BED Sacks OF - acteristic flavor is not disturbed. : gelatin desserts, ¥ When preparing I + lsuckue SCORE' aa ee apples Wee on amount o I have sketched the whole story here of how one homemaker keeps ner linen shelves in order. She and proportions will from furniture, (Bell Syndicate-WNU close as possible to the place that the finens 4>,' QUESTIONS Bored With Marriage, If You Are 9 - oi 1a HERE : are terrible i mo- ments in any marriage, when it seems to both man and woman that the light of love and happiness has gone out forever, and the only possible solution is a complete break. Sometimes these moments come in the first year of marriage-but not often. Quarrels are cured then, and tears and despair forgotten, in the comfort of making up. And with the joy of being friends again the young husband and wife are almost ready to agree that the trouble was worth while. After several years, too, 12 perhaps, or 15, difficulties are less apt to arrive. ,If there is fine quality in both partners, a real willingness to forget and forgive, to change and concede, to grow together in habits and likes, then the marriage gradually becomes a real thing-the most perfect companionship human beings can know in this life. But in between the first year and the twelfth year there may come a bad time. The glamour of honeymoon days is gone, the novelty of the new life has worn away, life has fallen into a routine of responsibilities and duties; office, meals, dusting, telephone, bills, getting the children off to school, petty cares, petty amusements, petty worries. Dangerous Years-for Women. For certain types of women these are dangerous years, when there gradually grows upon them a hunger for excitement, change, romance; in short, a hunger for selfexpression. For they are apt to find that self-expression along lines that hold no interest for the other member of the team. Take the example of 36-year-old Jean Porter, a Springfield wife and mother. Jean's husband is employed by one of the big utilities corporations and earns a salary of about $100 a week. He travels a good deal, and is fond of golf, poker, fishing, movies, and his luncheon club. Jean taught harmonics in the public schools before she was married and has never lost her interest in music. She plays the organ every Sunday in a community church of no special denomination, but writes that she has no religious convictions. ‘He's a Good Man But-' "Everything Bob does or likes, except our common interest in our girl and boy, is intensely and fearfully boring-boring-boring to me!"' writes Jean. "He is a good man, who pays his bills and loves his children; I have never known him to be mean, although his horrible habit of teasing me about my aspirations and my ‘pipe dreams' and ‘delusions of Hollywood success' are as bad as meanness. I gave up my profession when I married, but I have kept up my organ work, and naturally I associate with musical people. Three of these, to whom Bob especially objects, are a RusSian violinist and his American wife, and his brother, who Sings baritone in the choir where I play the organ. ‘"‘Home life, for Bob and me, has grown to be mere civilities. He is scornful of everything that means self-expression to me, and I cannot reconcile myself to Wasting time upon the sort of entertaining and party that he likes. Men in to play card games, frankfurters and coffee at late hours, trips off in the car to some place where he can play golf, while the children and I amuse ourselves, never any talk of culture or improvement, never the reading of any worthwhile books-for Bob's only reading is the newspapers, a The ns t ' remove a slight To INCOMPATIBILITY li To preserve the color of | vegetables cookSethem uncovered. g covered, : iron scorch mark from white clothes rub the twelve yen 6 more ost critical, according ide. ‘Then rinse' it [ann r : y ay Kadilecn Neca The husband | | cold water. Peroxide removes the and wife sometimes tend colored they "find it impossible apart during these to years drift because to develop similar interests." Miss Norris attributes this to a failure to build upon those in common. gerous, but interests they do have "This is not only danstupid," she explains, "because happiness ready made." is never found couple of weekly magazines, and the radio weekly-that doesn't seem life, to me. Appreciated by Another. ‘I have a church rehearsal one night a week, and often ask my friends into my home for an evening of chamber music. Bob has small sympathy with the struggles and handicaps of these foreign-born musicians and accuses me of being in love with the singer, Vanni. That I like him, that we have interests and ambitions in common, that he is one of the most fascinating and cultured gentlemen I ever knew, I do not deny. ‘Incidentally, Vanni is penniless except for occasional~ singing engagements, and has no intention of marrying me or anyone else. But he is sensitive, congenial, stimulating to me, and-our love for music is a great bond. Would you advise me as to a separation, Bob going his own way and I mine, with infinitely less friction than we experience today, and freedom for both? Surely it isn't necessary for two persons of completely different tem- peraments a position Build to force themselves that is a strain on Common color ever. * Perhaps this letter gives us a rather extreme instance of what I was trying to express. Neither Bob nor Jean, in this case, has been wise enough to build, during the years, upon those interests that they DO hold in common. They have developed, rather, the things that separate them, Bob sneering at Jean. Jean cultivating friends who despise everything for which Bob stands. This is not only a dangerous situation but a stupid one. Every woman, married or single, has to learn to live with someone, learn to adapt herself to that person's ways of doing. Women who flatly refuse to change, to understand, to cultivate other than their natural tendencies, are presently lonely women, with the history of two or three unsuccessful marriages behind them, and with a final dismal conviction that they might have made a success of the first marriage, after all. Women to Blame. In Jean's case I think she is to blame, or largely to blame, as I do in most cases. For it usually is the wife who sets the tone of the marriage. If her husband gets the idea that what he does is contemp tible to her, he naturally retaliates. He wants to show her that he can have a good time in his own way, and so the breach between them widens, and all the spirit and flavor departs from their marrie d life. Wiser wives and husbands begin early in Marriage to cultiva te similar tastes. The husband may never appreciate classical music; the wife may never make a good poker player. But companionship is more preClous to both than an adolescent deSire to hurt each other, and so by degrees each learns to extract from uncongenial things a certain amount of pleasure, and the Marriage deepens from its beginnings into that miraculous relationship that only the most fortunate human beings ever know. Happiness in being together dependence upon each other, the delight of sharing even the simplest plans for the childre n or the holidays, this is true Marriage, and ninet ie y-nine out of ever y hund ; red might achieve it if she would * clothes, hoy. «& Punches and fruit beverages jm. prove upon standing. Place them in covered jars and store them in the refrigerator for at least % hours. A tart beverage is alsg more refreshing than a thick si. upy one. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT PERSONALS Dr. mail. VERY WOMAN'S FRIEND Murray's Hygienic Powder. Sample by 4200 10c (coin), Melrose MURRAY Ave., MED. HOLLYWOOD, . CO, CALIF, ie As Life Is Life is like the orange tree that blossoms and fruits at the same time. We are gathering the fruit today yielded from yesterday's bloom, and the blooms of today have the promise of fruit for to morrow.-Silas K. Hocking. f ADVISES YOUNG GIRLS into on both?" Interests. from WOMANHOOD| ENTERING Thousands of yo girls entering womanhood have toean a "real friend" in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to help them go " thru" restless, moody, Ser rens spells, and ea e g fainting spells due to female egularities. Famous for ovet WORTH TRYING! ,, 0 years. Brotherhood There is a brotherhood, not of equality nor of likeness, but of giving and receiving.-Ruskin. WNU-W The Borrower He that trusts to borrowed plows will have his land lie fallow. 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