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Show AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN amj-rr-t-vniii jiipittpbii, m I HE SUNNY SIDE OF I an Comics That Will Amuse Both Old Vatts v3Pr 7 , f pont WORRY, hepy 1 7W - SSW VvVV 'f1 y, KEMEMeEK V i HONEY-1 WONT SPewe 1 L ' - '"'w YW K PLOVJi7 I YOU'RE PUU. fi fKjZ-v TOO- $ V t I K mVXwl I NS'-?ALN!?STy jrf jSZux Z5H L THOUGHTS J 22 - HAS BEEN ) jpELLERS No Privacy By GENE BYRNES WvE. JUST BEENN I READ THAT "Ny VVOULDN' IT BE A NOT FOr"meT WEADING TH'-STOWY STORY ONCET. ZOOUE., A NICE. TO HAVE A PAIR MOT WITH TH' BIG ?F CINDEWELLA AN' I AN' I THINK IT'S K OF GWASS 5WIPPERS f HOLES I GOT IN H'GWASS SWIPPERS, V PRETTY GOOD TOO! WIKE. THAT ? V TH' TOES OF MY AN I FINK IT'S 7 1 V STOCKIN'S! J on the Seat of Hit PanU By J. MILLAR WATT TO ME I I NO YOLI SEW TO ME I I I I Vyj 1 IANE Hi, Neighbor! By FRANK WEBB CSX. J I I I I 1 'm S COLOSSAL PEOPLE' r'-' ' jSggX MLtJ (t'SiSc I?8 a4 'MfOSTS BEAUTIFUL 1 "The canteen wasn't doing well, so we pat In i side-line!' num..... . i ,rw jfflrcaTOifgaanmpPTff-h i y j frmfi So that's what he your LIFE and Young By BOODY ROGERS meant when he bet I'd see him at house tonifht!" That Old Chair Can Be Reclaimed With New Seat and Coat of Enamel MARK ON PLYWOOD 3. I WITH A T SAW THEN TACK TO 4. USE THIS PATTERN A SEAM FOR a THE COYER 2. MAKE A PAPER I. AWAY Tapes SEWN TO SEAM TIE TO LEGS t i By Ruth Wyeth S peart EW cane scats are expensive because the work is done by hand. Endless time is required also for scraping oil layers of paint to get down to the grain of the wood in doing over many pieces of furniture. The chair shown here did not seem to be worth this labor. la-bor. It was reclaimed with a seat from a scrap of plywood, blue paint and seat cover of blue and white ticking edged with white material raveled to make narrow fringe. The chipped white enamel that was on the chair was rubbed with coarse and then with fine sandpaper sand-paper until smooth. The new seat came next; then flat paint which was allowd to dry 24 hours before be-fore applying enamel. Next, the seat cover was made with a itraight band around the front and across the back terminating in ties t the back corners. Salt as Money Down the ages wars have been fought over salt. Roman soldiers received it as part of their pay. This was known as "salarium," or salt money hence our word "salary." Salt has been used as money from Abyssinia to Tibet, and it played an important part in the financial system of the Mogul emperors. Marco Polo commented comment-ed on salt money in his accounts of his travels. Cleopatra, knowing the preservative preserv-ative qualities of salt, had the body of her Roman lover, Antony, embalmed em-balmed in it, and ordered that when she died her body should be similarly treated and laid by his side. Radio Intelligence Since July 1, 1940, the radio intelligence in-telligence division of the Federal Communications commission has discovered and shut down 375 illegal ille-gal radio stations. Incidentally, the RID's listening post in Portland, Port-land, Ore., was the first in the organization or-ganization to pick up the secret Nazi station being operated in the German embassy in Washington, D. C. VERONICA LAKE speaking: Co-Starring in "SO PROUDLY 4Hi I, I,,, r1' &.iw,"N 4 ' . .... ;'.:.::,, i' i if A dentist's dentifrice Calox wsj created by a dentist for persons per-sons who want utmost brilliance consistent consist-ent with, utmost gentleness. Ja Scrupulous cleansing. Your teeth have notably clean feel after using Calox. 2, Calox gently cleans away surface stains, loosens mucin plaque. 3, Made by McKesson & Robbihs, Bridgeport, Conn.- laboratory with over 100 years' experience in making fine drugs. CUT KEYHOLE CHAR PATTERN 1 I IV VI J I WORN CANE 1 SEAT CUT j NOTE Thil chair remodeling Idea U ftom BOOK 10 which also contains direction! direc-tion! for maklns an adorable padded boudoir bou-doir chatr from an old kitchen chair; a high-back chair from an old rocker and an attractive upholstered chair from Odd! and ends of wood, a little padding and soma chintz. Send name and addresa with IS centa and receive a copy of BOOK 10. MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford HUli New York Drawer Id Enclose 15 cents for Book No. 10. Nam Address Lagle 1 rained to ilunt In Manner of Falconry In days of old, falconry 'and hawking, the sport of hunting with birds, was a popular pastime in both Asia and Europe. It consists in training the falcon,' goshawk, and other birds to capture their prey for man, rather than to de vour it. In a modern application of falconry, Dan and Jule Mannix, naturalists and explorers, have trained a golden eagle, which they have named Tequila, to hunt and bring back its subdued quarry to them. Bieeest came vet tackled bv the eagle, which has an eight-foot wingspread, is a giant Iguana lizard, liz-ard, five feet long, not including its whiplike tail. Tequila grips its leathery adversary and holds it to the ground with one powerful claw until the reptile becomes exhausted exhaust-ed with its futile struggles to escape. es-cape. Gigantic Refrigerator The War Food administration is now storing 75,000 tons of food in a leased limestone mine near Atchison, Kan. Its 12,000,000 cubic feet of caverns are equivalent to nearly one-tenth of all public refrigerated re-frigerated storage space in this country today. While the construction construc-tion of a warehouse with this ca pacity would cost about $15,000,000, the chief expense of equipping this mine was $1,000,000 for machinery to reduce its temperature of 50 degrees de-grees F. to 30 degrees. Wi HAIL a Paramount Pktvr -"-' |