OCR Text |
Show UINTAH EASIN' RECORD Keeping Up cience IS if. , ervce Service. 7ence , o First j; nv Discovered Pacific Isles erries Geographers Fv York. Minute Pacific ds, worthless to any but Ir inhabitants and a few traders until the the of transpacific air nt but today essential tice, the for giant steel and ,ns that roar iov clippers conti- -' from the sky rough ?nt to continent across the grids widest ocean, are and using geographers atesmen sleepless nights be-- l Uje their ownership is ) iior Gerisi Sguej WNU Service. esti disputed. many of them, before not aggro of the sextant and e mvention 'auitirg ajj, tonometer, so that their exact was doubtful, these small are masses in the watery immensi-- L and jjjve been relocated by modern please cr cethods. Ownership of the islands les port ypends on who first claimed them. wour uns made on the basis of old er ether, L Nervations are likely to have studies, ft ;rong locations given because of the of the instruments used. The s from i one of deter-tm- i pblem now becomes EelleneSr what islands were just tier art j( juried for what nation. f been opcr 'Studies of old whale-shilogbooks latest sttf supplying ire geographers with Des fis cr.. clues to the any nJar shot of these Pacific outposts. Dr. untnes !ser f itemore Boggs, State depart-a- i ide ot C.J h geographer, writing in the to furniture cal Review, cites a number die difficulties encountered in this rer regVe art to determine just who dis itisticiaa wered and claimed what d ep fa Early Mariners Made Errors. oint of viet Doctor Boggs says, Medana, ms. jy dead reckoning, underestimat-ts and Draii. the distance from Peru to his Western Isles (Solomon islands) by Ice of the IX'O miles. Cs you Errors of 1,000 miles in consideslj mgitude were not uncommon in the by diafja: ateenth century. Today, the ed youwtt a China Clipper must be able 'Tut an island only a mile in the follows hmeter by use of navigating and tter" irvealc,. I Discovered, lo-3- 5, d the -- the p dis-sve- Geo-jrap- t pi-Jrt-ot fc ad go are of books of Log ; small-tow- : is whaling and trading diaries of captains and ps, drunk thirds o i each tons WO n newspapers, sea-E- and bonds deposited by min-- r of guano on the far off Pacific 1 umption i lands are all being searched for J derce of discoveries and occupa-Vfl- s g dropped which will make certain some 127 pccili 50 000 00C (cords of pe 400 is onsumptioa in the las" f much t the lowing Berliner it it'er is inich, not 4 or.p I. Jine ccuni g art n: Jr Here Is How to Make Your Own Diamonds But They Are Small THE CHEERFUL CHERUB WHOS NEWS ilands now once s and h paid .r for girls O' o! Howeve b ante norkeh jmes, & utmg ker sb ition ecked " tumn 11 to eople sstd, O' i' d to ' and store are a great American summer institution. The above old beauty contest was ruined by an invasion of youth, but it was still fun. Below, Joe Constamagna ran three and a quarter miles to win a waiters race in San Francisco, balancing a glass of water on his tray without spilling a drop. CONTESTS iron-carbo- n Death Rate Among Boys Increased by Use of Bicycles The death rate among a result of collisions be- New York. lake bed. are believed to be the that have ever been made ut. aricu nd g Potato Skin Cork .bull Xe ecUr') shau lour".h,1 of )J'S A eriua id. !ff r, n Dr. llans Mayer, direc- the Research Institute for unserving here, has succced-- 1 ''rfecting a simple method by cork can be made from po- 43. The product is claimed all the qualities of the bark J'e cork oak." V" Glass tape made Pittsburgh. from spun glass fibers Is now being used experimentally by engineers of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company here to increase the power and efficiency of electric motors. Improved motor performance is claimed for the glass Insulation, which is said to be moisture proof, fireproof and to have improved dielectric and mechanical strength characteristics. JEW Farmers: Finest proposition in West Productive improved, imbued farm lands to $80 per acre. Including water. Write IiielHUejr Realty Ce.. Lakeview, Ore. HARNESS LAWRENCE cat-call- s. world-famou- r .4 s & V I V? V h t 1, 4 "i i 3 4 r ; ( 1 , .14 Mere man invades a womens knitting contest V 1) .t'Jki tut . . and wins! J quality- Service. Quarrel or Fight Many a man seems to enjoy a quarrel, said Uncle Eben, on de theory dat its better dan a fight. - QUALITY SSTTSJ pen THE SE0RGE LLgUeefc low prices. workiuaosUlp Utustmttui eafalop and term UBRMCE CO ,306 S R Tint Fortlai Ortros Wntt or f hKN For Early Summer Days something very 4 yards of MAKE yourself to wear yards of ricrac smart and pretty material. Is 39-in- as soon as the bland summer days are here. These are so easy-e- ach is a diagram frock, which means the pattern is amazingly easy to work with. Both dresses bring you leading fashion notes in dresses for summer daytimes that are still soft and dressy enough to wear to afternoon parties during tire summer. to trim. Pattern Book. Send 15 cents for the Barbara Bell Spring and Summer Pattern Book which is now ready. It conSpring-Summ- er tains 109 attractive, practical and becoming designs. The Barbara Slenderizing Lines, Everything about this dress is flattering to large women the the short, rippling sleeves, the smooth shoulders, front fullness, and waistline, snugged in by darts. Youll want to wear it all the time, when you In see how becoming it is. georgette, chiffon, voile, or thin silk print, this will be your favorite and later on your coolest-dre- ss. Frock With Slim, Crisp Lines. Cleverly fitted in to minimize the waistline, puffed high and wide as to sleeves, full at the skirt and with a demure round neckline, this is one of the most charming new dresses you could choose. A bit of ricrac braid and two little bows are all the trimming it needs, the lines are so perfect. Make it up in silk print, duruty, dotted Swiss. The Patterns. 1504 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52. Size 38 requires 5Vi yard3 of material; collar in contrast (if deyard. sired) takes 1502 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires Bell patterns are w'ell planned, accurately cut and easy to follow. 39-in- ch Each pattern includes a Wfhich enables even a beginner to cut and make her owm clothes. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. sew-cha- rt Have You Entered This Cake Recipe Contest? Bell Syndicate. Prize $25.00 Five Second Prizes of $10.00 Each and Ten Third Prizes of $5.00 Each First recipe in the you submitted nAYE Cake Recipe Contest now bebig ing conducted through ibis newspaper by C. Houston Goudiss, author of our HY series? "WHAT TO EAT AM) If not, take time today to write out your favorite cake recipe, and send it to him, attaching the coupon below. There are no restrictions as to the type of recipe that may be submitted. A simple loaf cake has an equal chance with an elaborate layer cake, provided its good! So send along the recipe for that cake wliiih never fails to d light your family and friends. You11 agree that this is one of the easiest contests you ever entered. Ao letter to write; nothing to bur. You wont have long to wait either, to know the outeome of the cont st. For all recipes must be postmarked not later than May 31, 19J8, and prize winners will he announced as soon as possible thereafter. Prize winning recipes, together with those receiving honorable mention from the judges, vill he printed in a booklet to be distributed nationally. The winning cakes will be selected ly experienced home economi-t- s on the staff of the Experimental kitihen Laboratory maintained by C. Houston Goudiss in New York City. Enter your recipe in this contest today. Mail recipe and coupon, properly filled out with your full name, address, town, state, and the trade name of the shortening, baking powder and flour used in your recipe, to C. Houston Coudiss, 6 East 39th Street, New York City. Do you fed bo nervous you want to scream? Ara you croaa and lrnuble? Do you acold those dnarest to you? If your nrvea are on edpe, try LYDIA F, FINKHAMS VKCLiAULE COMPOUND. It often help Nature calm quivering nerves. For three generations one woman has told another bow to go smiling through" wuh Lydia E. Pinkharas Veg table Compound. It helps Nature tone up he system, thus loosening the dmeomforts from the functional disorders which worrvn must endure. Make a note NOW to get a bottle of world-famo- us Pinkharas Compound today WITH-O- U T FAIL from your druggist more than a million womm have wruum in letters rebenefit. porting Why not fry IYDTA E FINKHAM3 VEGETABLE COMPOUND? Truth Beauty Beauty is truth, truth beauty that is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. John Keats. KILLS INSECTS Oil FLOWERS VEGETABLES 3 IY9 HELBiKIDNEVS To Get Kid of Acid nd Poisonous Maste Your kidneys help to keep you wed by constantly filtering waste matter from the blood, if your kidneys gH functionally disordered and fail to remove exceoa impurities, there may be poisoning of the whae system and body-wid- e distress. Burning, scanty or too frequent Urination may be a warning of some kidney or bladder disturbance. You may suffer nagging barkache, persistent headache, guarka of dtzz'neaa, getting up mghta, swelling, puthnees under the eyes feel weak nervous, ail played out. In such rav ft U better to rely on ft medicine that baa won country-w.d- e acclaim than on something Itas favorably known. Uae Doan $ Ft lie. A multitude of grateful people recommend Doan's Auk ynur ncioJihorl cake recipe Name Addrei Town My recipe calls tor My recipe calls tor My recipe calls (or FRUITS & SHRUBS Demand original gaoled bottlee, from your dealer Cake Recipe Contest C. Houiton Goudm 6 East 39th St., New York Plcasa enter (ha attached in your contest. WNU Service. NERVOUS? relation-Friendshi- WNU SADDLES & Y IAAMKNPS fanners and swikracn f r bl year sold on MOMU1 YORK. cat-cal- ls wil-Jw- Pf Meeting Francesco Malipiero at a party in the Royal Danielh in Venice soon after the World war, I thought he was one of the most charm- Maltpiero ing and brilliant Was Person and, at the same to Remember Ume- - most cryPtic men I had ever seen. There was In the company another Italian musician, a famous conductor, who was the lion of the evening. I have forgotten his appearance and his name, but everything about Signor Malipiero is vividly remembered. On the way home in a gondola, I asked the conductor for an appraisal of Signor Malipiero as a musician. There was considerable condescension in the reply. Malipiero was gifted but erratic, it was even hinted that be was (unsound, in some deeply subversive sense. But my Virgil eagerly agreed that the signor was a most extraordinary human personality. As recently as four years ago, a Malipiero opera threw the Royal opera house of Rome into a tumult of howling and Mussolini banned it as "inimical to the faith and sound teachings of the new Italy. But, by this time, Malipiero s musihad become a cian, and be was soon restored to favor. This status is unquestioned as his symphony, Elegiaca, wras given its rs performance Outlaw of in New York, with Barbirolli Music Now John For conducting. Is Lionized many years, critical opinion discounted him as somewhat of an outlaw and disturber. Now it has caught up with him, as it did with Stravinsky and Richard Strauss. Both the Fire Bird and Salome were met with when they were first produced. Critics note some mysterious enin Malipieros ervating influence new symphony. It may be an afterthought, but the explanation seems clear as I recall my conversation with him. His face saddened and he seemed ten years older when I mentioned the war. For his ballet, Pantea, he had written of the struggle or a soul hurling itself into the struggle for liberty, only to find oblivion and death. The war had been to him a tragic and devastating experience. He said it bad profoundly shaken both his art and bis life. Never again would the suave fluencies or banalities of music have meaning for him. He was impelled to a deeper search. This disillusionment was sublimated in irony. He was suspected of slyly sabotaging the grandiose new Italian state. It in March, W'as 1934, that his opera, The Fable of the Exchanged Sons, with the text by Luigi Pirandello, all but caused a riot in the Royal opera house. So far as I could learn at the time, there was no brash heresy in the work, but, as elaborated by the text, a subtle hint that ultimate truth is forever elusive and supreme power dead sea fruit. That, of course, is dangerous doctrine in a totalitarian state, and it was quickly and savagely resented. The next day, II Duce forbade another presentation. Malipiero is a poet and a mystic. Of dominant presence, with sharply cut Roman features and hair brushed back in a thick pompadour, be is at the same time extraordinarily gracious, friendly and unassuming. He lives in a quaint stone villa, forty or fifty miles from Venice, centuries old, rambling and tumble-dowCut in the stone door lintel there is a Latin text, "To the obscene, all things are obscene. That was his answer to the critics of one of his operas. The art of living engrosses him as much as the art of music and he studiously main-Ha- s Gift for tains a p ship of courtesy, With Animals dl8nity and friend-l- y intimacy with the creatures in his retreat he has a gift for friendship with animals and thinks that much of the trouble of mankind is due to its insensitiveness to the subhuman and superhuman. His music is apt to range into those zones. He was born in Venice in 1832, beginning his violin studies in his sixth year. ILs father was a political exile and the family was in Germany for many years. Wagner was a crashing strain of modernity which profoundly affected his work. Nnwf Feature. Cimso1' j- ; seccis FARM LAND By LEMUEL F. PARTON Kansas. i xclus ve -nowJ(l instruc-o- - "music j' I like green onions too, 5o iF your not cultured iovl WEEK chemistry department of McPherson college, McPherson, g lands VitJcI-crgt- THIS nebulous claims to the called American Poly-c- u boys as tween bicycles and automobiles has doubled within the past three yaars, B the sources are ever adequate-studie- d and reported on, states statistics of the Metropolitan Life etcr an interesting and Insurance company for its industrial Boggs, 'Wcant chapter in American his-policy holders show. In 1935 the death rate from this will have been illuminated. cause among boys from ten to fourteen years was 14 9 per million, ornstalk Provides Rival while in 1937 it was 29.2. For the group from fifteen to nineteeh age f Valuable Coal Tar the rate rose from 20 per million in 1935 to 42 8 in 1937. Contest winners always get their pictures ui the paper, as does young (Mbs Texas. Coal tar, highly contest Hes a shoe in the ages Charley Baker (above) who won a balloon-bustinThe increase, chiefly 7 sable raw material by which or-- t between thirteen and sixteen years, shine boy. Below are first and second place winners of a barrel rolling is chemists fashion scores of is due to increased numbers of boys contest Its foolish, but its fun! rftetic chemical products, has a at this age bicycling on the highr val in lignin tar obtained from ways. islalks, it was indicated in the Most effective way to prevent t to the chemists meeting these accidents would be the provitof G. Leon Bridger of the chem-- I sion of more cycling paths, the life engineering department of Iowa insurance companys health authori4 university. ties point out. Other preventative VJ hetic resins, plastics, drugs, measures suggested are laws, strictperfumes and flavors may be ly enforced, requiring bicycles to cubetured in the future from at night, and educalights carry '""cultural materials like corn- - tion of adolescent boys to the danjss By digesting cornstalks with gers of cycling on the highways. fig alkalis like ordinary lye, in absence of air, a black tar is Cortez Got , duied which is somewhat similar Sulphur From tar. It is, however, far rich-- r in 1519 a phenols. Moreover, the yield Popocatepetl is much greater and as a Dallas, Texas. Mexico, whose ex4 about 40 times as much phe-- i ! are obtained from a pound of propriation of foreign oil properties, has centered Interest in its mineral jf1 as from a pound of coal. The Paration of phenols from the resources, was itself a victim of more than 400 ns expropriation by destructive distillation its conquest by tsd scovered ago, during by Dr. Max Phillips years A United States Department of Hernando Cortez and his hardy band of Spaniards. In 1519, it was de'culture. scribed to the Chemical society reCortez sent his men into the 'tos Plants Grown From cently. crater of famed Mount Popocatepetl and obtained sulphur with which he Centuries Old was able to make gunpowder that helped him to conquer the country. Oriental lotus plants Jcago. Donald B. Mason, chemical enrown from seeds esti-e- d gineer of the Freeport Sulphur comto be from 300 to 500 years pany, told of this episode from hisField Museum of Nat-- 1 tory in his review of the worlds lsry. The seeds were ob-- , sulphur industry for the chemists. rom soil that had once been was the first proCortez's le Attorn in southern Manchu-uca- r duction ofexploit sulphur in the Western Port Arthur. Records that the lake was drained hemisphere. time between 100 and 200 Gla-i- S Fabric Tape Used rago, and since then large s have grown up on the a3 Insulating Material 'i die like Andt Dallas, Texas. How chemistry makes real diamonds in the laboratory, synthetically, was described at the meeting of the American Chemical society here by Lewellyn D. Lloyd of the Under the direction of Dr. J. Willard Hershey at McPherson synthetic diamonds have been prepared by successive groups of graduate students. Here is the simple formula for making diamonds: Mix two parts of chemically pure iron filings with one part of pure sugar carbon, by volume. Place in a graphite crucible and heat to a temperature of at least 4,000 degrees Centigrade or a little over an hour. Then remove the crucible and plunge into a freezing solution of ice and salt brine. Treat the hardened mass with hot aqua regia for 300 hours to dissolve the iron and digest the residue as much as possible with various acids. Tiny, But Real Diamonds. Finally search the remaining carbon dust for the diamonds. Use a microscope In the search, for any diamonds will be very tiny. But they will be diamonds, which is what you started out to make. But seriously, the simple statements above have required a great amount of research to bring them about. When Dr. Hershey began there was no way in which temperatures of 4,000 degrees could be controlled In a fashion required in the research. And there was the problem of building a fire brick furnace that could withstand the high temperatures. The continued research has shown, Mr. Lloyd indicated, that the formation of the diamonds seems to depend on how fast is the cooling of the heated mass of iron and carbon. This cooling, and the tremendous pressures which are built up mass during inside the cooling, seem to turn black carbon into the transparent carbon which man calls a diamond. As white hot molten iron cools to a red solid it expands, Mr. Lloyd said. As it cools from a red solid to room temperature it 'contracts. Thus the outside of the iron, which cools more rapidly than the inside of the mass, is contracting while the inside is still expanding. The carbon, dissolved in the iron, is thus subjected to a pressure estimated at 180,000 pounds to the square inch. 1 . State (Name of ihartei.ing) (Name ot baking powder) (Brand name of flour) WNU W 2138 SPECIALS OTIIE on the special sales can You depend mer- chants ol our town announce In columns of this paper. They mean money saving to our readers. It always pays to patronize merchants who advertise. They are not atraid of thotr merchandise or their prices. |