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Show f I I UINTAH BASIN RECORD THE FEATHERHEADS t Cold Cream w "n ifia 4 Many Have Achieved Fame While in Their Twenties BRISBANE THIS WEEK Not Spoiled by Money Freedom of the Air 500 Air Miles for $6 Jones Still Will Lend V FEATHER HEADS' AR& PEfiRM(r- - FOR TriE NlrHf yfl rlftIE? -- rwe asleep STEALS' HP W PARWJQf resident a TRAMfS-e-; 0 lg Hoflj-g- ENfy Th6-- IfJlOJpeR HAJ iwe ocoipAMrvT awakesp HBi HOfiSfc OF SMATTER POP-- Dont Relax, Pop, Watch Everything MESCAL IKE By s. i PAYNE A Timely Extension huntley FINNEY OF THE FORCE CM By 2z. No Volunteer KeEPiNS- - dinmY in the for A couple of fays-H- Cow hospital ABOUT iod XA ms-wH 0?ME? L HlS BEAT "tlLL HE r I WAV OUT firSTS OUT ? , l r..iE: if" REGLAR FELLERS Excepted Merry-Go-Roun- IF r HAD A MILLION. OOLCARS I'O 60 AROUN THE WORLD FIFTY BILLION TIMES I BETCHA AN'lb 60 NOT AN' IF SOMEBODY WITCHA AN' THEN ID 60 A MILLION TIMES MORE JU S' FOR GOOD LUCK.! ME. I WOULON EVEN 60 AROUN' ONCET ON ACCOUNT OF GOi N ROUN' MAKES ME TERRIBLE DIZZT! GAVE ME ANOTHER bles Are Encouragement to Todays Youth. Another airplane record. Howard Hughes, flying IS, 000 feet up much of the way. came from Los Angeles to Newark in 9 hours 10 27 minutes seconds. High up, where air resistance Is less, using a supercharging engine and helping his own lungs with oxygen from a tank, Mr, Hughes beat the existing record held Col. Roscoe Arthur Brisbane by Turner of 10 hours 2 minutes 51 seconds. Mr. Hughes proves that being rich does not always spoil young Americans. He flew from ocean to ocean without a stop, 2,450 miles, at an average speed of 2G0 miles an hour. Big broadcasting companies refuse to allow the Republican party to broadcast laughable skits on the New Deal. Now, or after some worth-whil- e upheaval, freedom of the air will have to be dealt with as was freedom of the press when the Constitution was written. For radio companies to say to the party In power, Because we fear you we shall take you to every home in the country and let you say what you please, and shall refuse to give the same publicity to your opponents," might not suit the American idea. It Is good news that Henry Ford has gone back to airplane building., His last trimotor plane was pro duced In 1931. His new plane, with V-- 8 engine turning the propeller 4,000 times a minute, carries 30 gallons, of gasoline, with a flying range above 500 miles. Five hundred miles of air travel for $6 worth of gasoline for two passengers would be cheap transportation. Henry Ford will begin manufacturing planes seriously, if and when conditions demand volume , production worth while. Jess Jones, chairman of Reconstruction Finance corporation, tells the banks that he will go ,on lending government money until they make credit and loans easier. Mr. Jones says: The big fellow, with unquestionable credit, borrows on his own terms, at low rates. Credit for the average business Is too sparingly given, at much higher rates." There Is rioting In Porto Rico, numbers killed and wounded In various places. It Is said a Porto Rico Young Mens Party" has decided to separate Porto Rico from the United States, Inspired perhaps by the departure at the Philippines. It Is supposed that this government will tell the Young Porto Rico gentlemen that they will not be allowed to separate, and might as well foiget about It. This country, In the way of protection, resources, education and civilization, Is necessary to Porto Rico, and strategically Porto Rico is useful to the United States. What would England say If Jamaica should announce We wish to leave the British Empire?" By FRED HARMAI BRONC PEELER KliNO.ffcTE-NEf? VA ALoUE TiL I Finish OUSTW HlS et?rRHE- s- He cant STAKE OUT His internal LL AHoTHtS IbrtoReo) 6eT anvwaY Va know vW To 6ET SHoRIYs 60 AT an Important post on the first expe dition of Records of Worlds Nota- The beginning of the new year in Germany sees the death of 1.000 newspapers, suspended by oflieial order because they opposed Nazi rule. Chancellor Hitler perhaps remembers Napoleon's statement: If I granted liberty of the press, my government could not last three weeks. lie might also remember that some governments that refused liberty of the press have also failed to last The government of the czars was of that kind. Sitting on the safety valve is one way, but not the safest Ambitious youth seeking to find :heir places early In life in a rnalad-tusteworld will find encouiagement they will take a look into the lages of history. E. B. DeGroot, California Boy Scout executive, In the Uotarian Magazine tells of a few of .lie young men and women who have done big things. William Iitt, Mr. DeGroot cites as lis first example, filled the responsible post of chancellor of the excheand served as quer at twenty-thre- e prime minister of Great Britain at d i iwenty-fou- .! George AVashington r. was when he led the Virginia troops against the Indians ind. French, Abraham Lincoln camr. paigned for public office at twenty-!ouRobert Louis Stevenson wrote Treasure Island" at twenty-thre3aloiS at nineteen proved that equa-:ion- s higher than the fifth order could lot be solved algebraically, and there-o- y advanced the theory of groups for the solution of higher equations. Westinghouse invented the air Alexander brake at twenty-threthe Great conquered and ruled the world before he was thirty. Sir formuIsaac Newton at twenty-fou- r lated the law of gravitation. AVhit-ne- y was not more than twenty-nin- e when he Invented the cotton gin. Charles Dickens wrote Oliver Twist Napoleon at twenty-seve- n it twenty-fivcommnd of the Italian In was twenty-searmy. Patrick Henry was but his ven made he conquerwhen ing and historic speech against the Stamp act Thomas Edison was not far above the Youth Service age lev-designated by Rotary (twenty-fou- r years), when he astounded and benefited mankind with many of his Inventions. Paul Slple, an Eagle Scout, was only twenty when he qualified for only twenty-thre- e e. Admiral Byrd to the Ant arctic regions, and he was chief bl ologist on the second Byrd expediV-tio-n. The average age of the mem bers of Americas Continental ,oa gress was thirty-five- . Two of itM members, at least, were under thirty Edward Rutledge, twenty-five- , aim John Jay, twenty-nine- . r: , Lindbergh immortalized himself 'af1,: twenty-five- ; moreover the best out o 300 poems on the Lindbergh fli ffiA across the Atlantic in 1927 was writ- C ten by Nathalia Crane, a fourteen C year-ol- d girl of Brooklyn, N. Y. And so on, almost without end could record the achievements and servi W" of youth in the fields of statesm.in. ship, literature, science, education invention and courage. Kansas Ciljltoi Jtive Times. fla o ber JAPAN IS MODERN, YET IT CLINGS TO THAT OF ANCIENTS- : en-- Ai r ids e -. omd AAooden clogs and straw sandals ft will remain the most common foot--? gear for Japanese wearing the tra- - - c ditional garb, but when the nativt rani sandals and western style shoe t. march side by side in the downtown3 u streets of Tokio, it Is only anothet h indication of the amazing way Jnnts which Japan has adopted modern se methods while it continues in Itsnod iy old, revered customs. Not only in footwear but through-- , "eo out the daily life of the people does r this discrepancy show Itself. Even,er the dolls have been modernized,11 along with the modern womans fre-- y t quent adoption of western halrt v dress and western sports. Yet whaeltr the female athletes are training ale sports the majority of the womeners are still under the sway of the tra-llditional etiquette. The intricate rules ten of Japanese etiquette must be care- fully learned, and pupils begin tnivi an early age to acquire the proper way of bowing, of walking, of greet-I, . Ing friends. Crocheted Potholders And while rivers are being har- in a Lantern Design nessed under western methods to r provide hydroelectric power, the art. All By GRANDMOTHER CLARK of flower arranging is assiduously cultivated, as it has bdhn for een-turies. Broadcasting has become a new feature in Japanese life, buiv u side by side with it continues U tradition of the old style theat which presents plays based on a clent tradition, ' Modern Japan goes ski jumping,, and mountain climbing in the ap-- 1 proved European fashion, while att- clent Japan holds a tea ceremony. Yet Japan, whether it follows the ( w ancient or modern tradition, has a )ry common meeting ground in Its ap- 0 preciation of beauty. Not only dur-my throughblossom time but ing cherry atK out the year the people take a keen Lav delight in the arrangement of their gardens, in cherished vistas of wl; Potholders are necessary In every Mount Fiji, and In frequent ex- - Gr kitchen so why not make them at- cursions to the country to enjoy the ha tractive when you do make them? shrines. I 3 I These potholders are crocheted with 'it spi heavy string crochet cotton forming an Jap lanterns and in colors red, green, Gi yellow. The design is the same on SALT LAKES NEWEST HOSTELRY all three but the colors are reversed, opl giving a very attractive and pleasing 0 Onr lobby Is delightfully air Tl effect. The finished holders measure Y cooled during the summer months 6 Inches each. No padding Is rew Radio for Every Room quired if made with heavy cotton. ice. 2 00 Rooms 200 Baths The Instructions for making this set, )U( No. 732, will be mailed to you for 10 E cents. Instructions with material will be mailed for 40 cents. ?ht Address Home Craft Co., Dept B, iat, Nineteenth and St Louis Ave., St. iini Louis, Mo. Inclose a stamped adT dressed envelope for reply when ery ji nd writing for any Information. e. 4. Read the offer made by tbe Postum Company in another part of this paper. They will send a full weeks supply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for It. Adv. Dry Ice From Nature Manufacture of dry Ice from carbonic add gas, which provides the elevating force of the mud volcanoes on the edge of the Salton sea, has been begun in the Imperial valley In California. ver HOTEL Weeks Supply of Postum Free I Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 The Hotel Temple Sun" Iia highly dealrablo, friendlyit gtincMH phere.You will always find immMj ulate, supremely comfortable tne thoroughly agrccoble.You can fore understand why thia hotel Hi HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You can al.o appreciate why I Its a mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Att t um 51 gn mal L" lam 're, hat ati mt ror: I itc ate a 0 rim 0 5 ' ) Mr. S. L. Rothafel, By CLUYAS WILLIAMS THE HELPER Th ffttf HE have fc TURfJ Jlfrtfrt SHOVEL? MUMS HE wans itiecf if pone Bll tyndlcAtu Inc.) MOSf FaIHTR U$lh6 HiS HAND THE Of If SACK ONfO fARf MEADf SHOftlfD GliHCKLV, tmhir siciiikb Kf'DK ItWllCEBEffERIi), f HIM HAW Aft'M TAKtS VlMWUS SWIMS WifH SHOVEL, SNOHl WT1IN& V.AS Nf KihLR.WHP UJ0KIN4, nif.irs RrfiRcs mro HOUSE fo 6Lf PF.V CCtnOCS JStef SO lEAVULS HIM IN Cf SHOVEL 60ES OVER BOV NErf P0CR. SWCW MUCH 1b SHATUNS fuNALOM SEE 11 theatergoers ns known to Roxy," Is dead While he slept his heart stopped, like a watch not wound. Men die too young In America, and weakened hearts kill many. Life spent without exercise or an adequate supply of oxygen explains the deaths. Man Is physically a machine; his heart Is the engine, and heart disease kills more useful men than any other disease in modern times. fifty-thre- e. which we should call hard rains in this country, Interfere with Mussolinis operations Soon will come the In Ethiopia. torrential downpours, big rains, making roads Impassable, except concrete roads. The Italians have built some highways. There are, however, other roads, unknown to ancient Ethiopia the roads of the air. . Mussolini's men may continue on those roads, with disastrous results for Ethiopia, in spite of ruins, lit. tie" and big." Little rains, Kiiii fceaturra Pviullcate, luo, WMJ fecrvic. V at KfEwnaqpusiE M0TEIL .fW t vr m Hu T art : A Distinctive Residence Mrs. J. H. Waters, An Abode. ;rcnowncd President Throughout the West H; Salt Labe's Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES RINGIK $2.00 to $4.00 IK'UIT.E $2 50to$4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths TIIE Oolel FJewIiouoe Y. t! i0. E. SUTTON, General Manager CIIAUNCF.Y W. WEST Assist. Gen. Manager ilf n bo tr. Ui Hi1 a1 |