OCR Text |
Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD LavishAppearance VHOS Theres loveliness right at youi fingertips! A file lace cloth thats By easy to crochet of everyday string, and quite the most beautiful ever! The two 10 inch companion squares are delightful together, yet one could be repeated and used without the other. It wont be long until youve cro-- ' - r'JV,o 14 ' t Pattern Ji THIS WEEK... Lemuel F. Parfon -v. Vyttyttttttvtvtttttttvtt' cheted any number of these simple squares to combine in checker-board fashion. Scarfs and small refreshment pieces are also handsome in this choice design if you use finer cotton. In pattern 5895 you will find Instructions and charts for making the squares shown; and for joining them to make various ar- ticles; material requirements; illustration of the square and of all stitches used. . To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, address and pattern number plainly. A Three Days Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold, or bronchial Irritation, you can pet relief now with Creomulsion. Berious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel the germ-lade- n phlegm. Even if other remedies have failed, n. Creomul-Eioclont be discouraged, try Your druggist Is authorized to refund your money if you are not thoroughly satisfied with the benefits obtained from the very first bottle. Creomulsion Is one word not two, and it has no hyphen In it. Ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and youll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.) . They, Too, Are Warmed Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves. Barrie. HOW IS YOUR TN THE new movie, Hollywood Hotel, Bennie Goodman, trump- eter and swingster, again demonstrates that he gets all the college trade. The boys Grunt-Iro- n whinny with Makes citement at Mr. Kids Whinny Goodmans most toot. Ex peditions sent by this department into the far domain of youth say its that way all over the country, particularly among the collegians. The Dossier says he does it with ic d barrel-house- gut-buck- , music." and grunt-iroBe that as' it may, it nets him n $100,000 a Phofni, Mr. Ariz. Frances Cooper, lSS W. Garfield St., tavi I wai o uncomfortable after due to gas and heartburn, and I felt draggjr and tired, had no inclination to eat, and couldn't good night' sleep. enjoy Dr. Pierce Golden Medical Discovery helped to relieve me of the better in stomach upset and I felt 100 everv wav. Ask vour druKRist for it today. va - ' 'fc wflKX 4 u L 4 ' sT - I ' 'v'T :A., svv a ", il rrn .4' v. v v v' 'ijpussinfl'1 'y . 'NjKjvenw M t S'i- - ' LXt 6c MS ts his s 4 jrbart W' yeiy. At the age of ten, he was a semi-pr- o vaudeville musician, earning around $2 a week in Chicago's Ghetto. He was the eighth of eleven children of a tailor who earned $20 a week. He bought a. mail order clarinet on the installment plan, and, by the time he was 'thirteen, was a journeyman musician, but still in short pants. He first got out in front In California, running his first band in 1931. He slumped down to $40 a week in 1934, moved in with Billy Rose, hit his stride again, and, via radio, is a recent arrival in the brackets. He is twenty-seven- , tall, dark, athwith rimless ocletic, tagonal glasses, and, the more savage his music, the more money he makes. mott gunther, Franklin minister to Rumania, decorously, and quite unofficially, he says, challenges the new m in He is a Ru-M- r. mania. Created Big suave career News in 1914 lomat who dip- - once headlines pulled as big as a Rumania war would get today. That was in 1914, when there was less news. He was a guest on a yacht anchored in Christiania harbor. The harbor master told him that spot had been saved for Kaiser Many doctors recommend Nujol for Its gentle action on the bowels. Dont confuse Nujol with unknown products. INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL Copr. 1W7, Buaoe --WATCn the Specials You can on the special sales the merchants of our town announce in the columns of this piper. They tomean our money saving readers. It always pays to patronize the merchants who advertise. They are not afraid of their merchandise or their prices loa to ti t ias Isas bbi Looks at Record Between Dips 100 HOURS AWAKE oat: .Yeiiro' Ins m,i STITCH in time goes a long A way toward making your days brighter and your burdens lighter when the bustling, busy days of. Spring roll round. No time then for leisure hours with your sewing kit, and fortunate indeed are the early birds who have got on with their Spring wardrobe. The moral? make your selections now and be off to the races when the season starts! Practical House Coat. There is a versatility to this clever pattern which makes it a prime favorite for the style conscious and the thrifty. Designed in two lengths, it lends itself perMiss Ruth Jimmerson, nineteen, to either of two needs as fectly of Unadilla, Ga., one of six students Far from the sidewalks of New York and minus his brown derby, an apron frock in gingham or at the University of Georgia who Alfred E. Smith, former governor of New York, is pictured reading bis seersucker for busy days around completed 100 hours of voluntary in- newspaper between dips in the briny at a popular resort club at Palm the house, or as a full length beach vacation or somnia in a psychology experiment Beach, Fla. The Happy Warrior enjoys an annual sports coat in chintz or linen in the South. in the interest of pure science. The princess lines are crash. smooth and flattering and there are just seven pieces to the patGolfer Picard tern a cinch to make and a joy Gives to wear. Shows Affection Slimming Silhouette. 'T , This handsome frock in linen or for Pet Putter crepe does wonders for the full figure, sloughing off pounds here w Ilenry Picard kissing the putter and there with the utmost 'I that helped him win the Pasadena ease.bulges from the shoulStreamlined f $3,000 golf open over the Brookside , at the waist ders and buttoned course at Pasadena, Calif. Picard A with two graceful scallops, this is i the sort of frock which answers 4your need perfectly for almost any social or shopping excursion, a standby to see you through the Summer. There is a choice of long or short sleeves and the simplicity of the design just eight : pieces in all insures success A even for the inexperienced in I yards of 35 or 39 ine5' plus 3A yard contrast, Diego. e in Pattern 1439 is diKral,o r! 34 to 43. Size font yards of 35 inch ms: i sizes 2 and yards oft T required for finishing. ;CHAPT Send your order to :j I Circle Pattern Dept.je Gove Montgomery Ave., Sarjhisfec one-ha- lf Patterns Calif. each. 15 cen;:ions, i o aen K Bell Syndicate & j S Dr. Tierces Favorite Pre Yhy, y tonic which has been Pere?of all ages for nearly 70 j I its? Result of that we are All what we have fr? -- Thou.ges is t thought. -- isuea iv: c mid-wint- o BECAUSE BEILBIXct Tardy Handshake Farr ALKAIIf RESERL fjr f to helps you the repi resist werethi E.UDES. the Menthol Cough Eoing mL Ar ! i n HOTEL !,i ;! 4 i 1 4, A, ! t Tommy was victorious with a total of 276. lie made the final turn home in 35 which added to his outgoing 34 gave him a total of 69 for the final round and 276 for the tournament. ten-roun- amicable meeting, Jim Braddock announced his retirement from the ring. American Locomotives Bound for China : "3. -- v Attractive Apron. Swell isnt a word the teacher recommends but it is highly appropriate in describing this handy apron frock which goes about the business of being an apron, not just a postage stamp model to wear for effect. Appealing in design, easy to wear, extremely serviceable, with two convenient pockets, this perfectly swell apron was designed by a busy housewife who knew her oats! Six pieces to the pattern. lonest-to-goodne- V Farr, left, shakes hands with Jimmy Braddock, who won a d decision from the Welshman at Madison Square surprising Garden, New York, recently, as the two met in Promoter Mike Jacobs office. Farr, greatly disappointed over the result, said he had not seen Braddock coming over to shake his hand. A day or two after their Ill ( f.;sf home sewing. 'A vs T JLVgT , - A L ;s4y . ij" i A II-- 4! y- i f'':' 'Ai -- JL. ss The Pattern M OGDEN, "''' Air Cooled loune Wire hejle . Coffeo Shl Grill Room of t Size 01 tr L.Shinj I KlwastoVw Hon or 39 inch material for short length without nap. Five yards of braid required for trimming. Housecoat length 714 yards. Pattern 1448 is designed for sizes 36 to 52. Size 38 requires 5V4 Hotair Exchange Optimf IC'f n Chamber of Commote feJlac BW, L HOTEL Corns ss V cPei.S si J.Pel0 jt't bt .a t 1 ' "'j l SOCIAL and ACTIVITIES . .... v v- t BUS!r a( CENTESf SL te 4jotal si -. - f K'-A- r NEW HOU ConsoliHntpd News Features. WNU Service. In SALT LAKE Ct K:j Thousands of repeat year attest the p0P'v" '3 this fine hotel. - f i 400 ROOMS Rates, $2.00 MixvMvAtKMiWW.VMW. CAFETERIA DINING ROOM f3. 400 to $4 BUFFET All Located oil Main Lobby 3 DinniG DANCING EVERY FRIDAY First of a shipment of 20 locomotives being shipped to China by American locomotive manufacturers from Philadelphia. The shipment, one of the biggest made from the United States In rrcent years, was bought and paid for by the Chinese government. Plans for getting the locomotives past the Japanese blockade were not disclosed. and Hotel RUE Mr. J. H. WATERS, Entertainment r NIGHT SATURDAY w Pri d,n i Ordfrir ET- - jjav S50 Rooms 35 Baths Family Booms for 4 pntlive?Qh for 1323 is designed 46 (32 to 46 bust). 16 requires 5 yards of 35 y&u ididfe Patterns sizes 14 to " : fit: i ' i SMTCi N yacht Collective Bargaining Collective bargaining Is a labor union term referring to a method of determining wages, hours and working conditions by direct negotiation between the representatives of a labor union and an employer. Instead of acting individually, as in tire cose of individual bargaining, the employees act as a group in presenting their demands, appointing representatives who hold conferences with the representatives of the employers to adjust matters of dispute. The individual employee subordinates himself to the common Interest of his fellows and in return receives benefits which he could not obtain alone. am and Wi- There was an argument and the harbor master said Mr. Gunther had clipped the cap off his head and wouldnt pick it up. It boiled up into a big international story, but Mr. Gunther came through it nicely to continue representing his country in many foreign ports. President Coolldge made him minister to Egypt in 1928. He is a native of New York, fifty-tw- o years old, an alumnus of Harvard. P Dun- ,'ounf of good-lookin- lhelms AugUSi U)on that (Jlexico lid ice-fill- y Gunther ZJil i Pedro.'r of t This twisted mass of steel girders among mountainous blocks of ice is all that remains below Niagara into the gorge which collapsed Falls View International bridge the American s de. an ice jam for 24 hours. This view of the famed honeymoon bridge was made from falls 500 structure blotted out for a moment the roar of noise of the crash of the 4,500,000-poun- d who had been sent into Workmen buckled. the as watched of girders spectators yards upstream. Thousands came. the gorge to strengthen the bridges supports narrowly escaped death when the crash (ViwA.WA'.vAvM'.vJtiM Victors in the End The universe is so made that truth and justice alone can endure. James Anthony Froude. ; ' ipsase.' -- d DSGESTIOM? ( '"O v , L l 3 v I g r. screw-bal- - r: ' If great-grandso- his v fpV f s - - - New jumped outa of prisoner a two-window and escaped, 123 ago, today newspapers wouldnt be frontpaging the description of the biggest star in the universe, 3,000 times larger than the sun. They should have named the star Napoleon, Instead of Epsilon Aurigae. of events His was the touch-of- f which finally ranged out 3,000 light years and brought news of the giant star. Chronologically, as the astronomers would put It, it was like this: Friederich Georg Wilhelm Struve was a studious German jtouth who wanted to be an astronomer, but lacked opportunity for study. For no apparent reason, a ranging band of Napoleons scouts seized him and locked him in a prison on the banks of the River Elbe. to He timed his high window-div- e the passing of a ship, made a long, hazardous swim and was pulled aboard. The ship was homeward bound to Russia. The czar was a patron of astronomy. The young man was encouraged and became not only director of the observatory of the University of Dorpat, but one of the founders of modern astronomy, with Herschel and BisseL His sons and grandsons became famous astronomers and it is his Dr. Otto Struve, who, with his assistants at Yerkes observatory of the University of Chicago at Williams Bay, Wis., discovers the facts about Epsilon Aurigae. He is director of the observatory. He arrived here in 1921, after fighting with the white armies in Russia and fleeing to Turkey with their collapse. He became director of Yerkes observatory five years ago at the age of thirty-fouYORK. queer-lookin- 5895 in Time NEWS ter-resti- al r Stitches Ice Tears Atvay Niagara Falls Bridge Budget Lace Has a mi CHAUNCIT k HI t W. WESt1 if : |