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Show Thursday, March 10, 1938 THE PARK RECORD PAGE THREE Cellulose in Plant "Life Cellulose forms the greater part of the framework of all plant life. Periscope Used in 1902 The periscope was introduced into the submarine about 19011. STAR DUST ir Ruth Wyeth Spears oJ? PHOTOGRAPHY Photo Sam'sKS! They're larger, amazingly clear and embossed withabeautiful deckled edge, 100 better than the old style prints. 8 guaranteed Nu-Prints, 2 enlargement coupons, 25c. One day service. PHOTO SAM'S LABORATORIES pSSLUVU. i Urgsst Eicluilrt Malt Order Flint li the Northwest Old-Time Charm In Pansy Afghan Here's something different in crochet an afghan with a pansy design that's full of old-time charm. Make it of 4 fold german-town, german-town, entirely in single crochet a medallion at a time, with each flower a different color if you wish it's grand for left-over wool). Put the finishing touches on these sweet pansy "faces" with a few cross-stitches. An easy-to-follow chart makes this a very simple pattern! In pattern 6021 you will find directions for making the afghan af-ghan and a pillow an illustration of it and of the stitches used ; material requirements; and color suggestions. 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. ARE YOU 3 Mill If W 'A WIFE? UiilY A Men can never understand a three-quarter wife a wife who is lovable for three weeks of the month but a bell-cat the fourth. . No matter how your back aches no matter now loudly your nerves scream don't take it out on your husband. For three generations one woman has told another bow to go "smiling through" with Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system, thus lessen-in? lessen-in? the discomforts from the functional disorders dis-orders which women must endure. Make a note NOW to get a bottle of Pinkhsm'i today WITHOUT FAIL from your druggist more than a million women have written in letters reporting benefit. Why not try LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND7 Truth as a Sunbeam Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam. Milton. BLACK LEAF 40 f4f Keeps WgSAwayTrom V. atverereens.StiruDsetc. 4 '-fJ 1888 Use lTeaspoonful 1 1. Per u-uiun i oprajr. i i - - Fight for the Good It is better to fight for the good than to rail at the ill. Tennyson. SstflSSMSSS ,!e?ular X NS1ST OH GENUINE KUJOL Cose. 1837. Btaaao lae. SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY O Oar lobby Is delightfully air cooled daring tie summer months Radio for Every Room 200 Room 200 Saint F2 HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50to$3.OO The Ilolrl Temple Square has a highly desirable, friendly atrooa-phere.Yotl atrooa-phere.Yotl will slwsyi find it immaculate, immac-ulate, supremely comfortable, and thoroughly agreeable. You can therefore there-fore understand why this hotel is l HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Yon can also appreciate whys If a mark of distinction to atop at thi beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. -1 7 4 Cet I from J I your I I Dealer R U M OV1C lO By VIRGINIA VALE THE millions who have read and loved "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" will rejoice that it has been brought to the screen almost intact. A few rhemorable scenes of the classic clas-sic ' of ' boyhood had to be skipped, but the important ones, are all there, the whitewashing of the fence, Muff Potter under suspicion of murder,' Tom's startling appearance at his own funeral. Filmed in Technicolor, the tones are subdued and pleasant, making the town and all its inhabitants of some sixty years ago look entirely entire-ly natural. There was a great to-do a year or so ago over David Selznick's country-wide search for just the right boy to play Tom. Finally, Tommy Kelly, son of a WPA worker, work-er, was found in New York. Everyone Every-one who sees the picture will surely be glad that Selznick passed up the precocious actors of Hollywood and waited until he found Tommy. For Tommy Kelly fits perfectly the character of Tom Sawyer. All Hollywood is talking about the great change in Katharine Hepburn. The roustabout comedy that she indulges in-dulges in for her new picture, "Bringing Up Baby," has affected her manner in private life. No longer long-er is she aloof and haughty. No longer does she scurry away as if frightened, or very bored, when coworkers co-workers approach. Lawrence Tibbett will come back to the screen if Warner Brothers have anything to say about it. They want him for "The Desert Song" and he will have time to make a Lawrence Tibbett. picture soon, for Grace Moore is going go-ing to replace him on his radio hour. Joan Crawford was quite startled recently when she heard an early-morning early-morning news broadcast announcing announc-ing that she had left her husband, Franchot Tone, and would soon institute in-stitute divorce proceedings. She glanced across the breakfast table, and there was Franchot as usual. "Never mind, honey," he counselled, coun-selled, "they have been trying to separate us for three years, and I don't believe they can do it ever." Hollywood casting directors deserve de-serve a vote of thanks. They have put back to work three popular ac tresses who have been playing hookey from the screen too long. Zasu Pitts was dragged but of her kitchen, where she has been busily writing writ-ing a cookbook, to play opposite Victor Moore in "Strictly Accidental" for R. K. O. Joan Bennett, iust returned from a i usaa Zasu Pitts stage tour and very happy to be settling down in her new house in Beverly Hills, was persuaded to go to Texas to film "The Texan" with Randolph Scott and several hundred hun-dred long-horned cattle in support. And Claire Trevor, so well liked in her radio serial with Edward G. Robinson, was cast opposite him in a Warner Brothers picture. ODDS AND ENDS "Bad Man of Brim stone" revived Wallace Beery s career which has been under a cloud of so-so pictures lately. He will follow that up with a sequel Baa Man rrom Arizona Peter Van Steeden received vongratu lutorv telegrams from several New York university professors on the fourteenth anniversary of his radio debut. It seems that in 1924 they excused him from his classes one day so he could audition for a radio program. He has been on the air ever since . . . Martha 1 ilton who sings with Benny Goodman's Tuesday nifiht suing school did the song numbers that Joyce Compton appeared to be sinking in the film "The Awful Truth" . . . W hen you see the "Goldwvn Follies" you may think that Andrea Leeds it singinz, but your old friend Virginia Yerrill of the radio really recorded those song numbers. Western Mcwspuper Unicn. ; f ' " '' rftnf pin D Love, Honor LOOK.. DEAR. MV IS i If LOOVC, DEAR. MV DESIGN FOR sT 1 MPI THAT NEW NICKEL SECRETARV rtff TWT NEW NICKEL SECRETARV OF THE TREASURV MORGENTHftU IS GOtUMA GET OUT I' M HOMING PIGEONS SOS APTEH I SPEWD ONE IT'LL. FIND HOME AG AIM TO WHAT DO VOL) DO YOU KNOW the Stunt nr4 WUIJC received its : i .-j! 7. -r. v,c ui iana oarae at the defence of Fort StanwiV v i. . -.-w " IUIA, on Aui7u.it 2 Tk. 0 ? its npe ot red and white and A.1 M . 1 me stars ot glory" set upon a field of blue mnt rt i MVSlll a "cmnl rUA" .I " " lascn from the enemy at Peeks- IVIJl. -viw mnn Syillc WNU Service. 0 Strong Currents in Rivers of China Many rivers of China have cur rents so strong that junks traveling upstream sometimes can make only two or three miles a day, even when towed, from the bank, by as many as two hundred coolies. Collier's Weekly I I ONE IT Lu FIND ITS WAV BACK S E ' i IJMl HOME AG AIM TO MV POCKET. I w'L-iiWHft"r 00 vou thiuw: OF V f& 4 ) ii ruu ifV D DESIGN FOR ITS WAV BACK MV POCKET, TMIWW: OF By WARREN GOODRICH O Ell arndlcaU. . TfT HIT. f Colt4id H rwMw! "I think ya got something there." WNU Service. Marie Antoinette's Farewell Marie Antoinette's prayer book containing her last message is on exhibition in the public library at Chalons-sur-Marne, France. The farewell message, written to her children on October 16, 1793, a few hours before she went to the guillotine, guillo-tine, is as follows: "This sixteenth of October at 4:30 o'clock in the morning. My God! Have pity on me ! My eyes have no more tears to weep for you, my poor children. Farewell! Farewell!" A. 1 'k.Tj.i, and Obey J Stitch a Shirred DLANNING draperies is as ex- citing as planning a new frock. Curtains sound the keynote of a whole room, and this is the time of year to be thinking about them. The chintz draperies with shirred valance shown here are dignified and yet charmingly informal. They are easy to make; they have the smart tailored effect that is usually obtained only by using a valance board, yet they are hung on ordinary double curtain rods of the type shown here at A. The side drapes are made of. full widths of the chintz and are hung on the inside rod with plain casings at the top. Cut the valance va-lance material the desired depth and twice as long as the space it is to fill after it is shirred. Hem the ends and bottom. Now, make a ! row of gathers along the raw edge at the top, another row 2V2 inches below the first and a third row Ji inch below the second. Cut a piece of buckram 4 inches deep and as long as the outside curtain rod. Bind the ends of this strip. Place the shirred valance edge wrong side down on the strip of buckram as at B. Cut a casing strip wide enough for the rod to slip under it after the edges are turned, and place it over the val ance edge as at C. Stitch the casing strip and the valance to A Pig Was to Blame By the disobedience of a lad in 1809, a garden gate in Rhode Island Is-land was left open, and a pig got in and destroyed a few plants. A quarrel between the owners of the garden and the pig resulted, which spread among their friends, defeated de-feated the Federal .candidate for the legislature, and gave the state a senator by whose vote war was declared in 1812 with Great Britain. Brit-ain. Pat Paragraphs. Valance to Buckram the buckram as shown. Turn the valance over to the other side of the buckram and stitch through the other two rows of shirring as shown. Slip the outside curtain rod through the casing and the valance is ready to hang. Are you in a rut about your curtains? Do you know the different dif-ferent methods that decorators use to give windows individuality? In her book SEWING for the Home Decorator, Mrs. Spears has told the whole story with sketches and text. Slipcovers, dif ficult dressing tables, and making of lamp shades, how to bring furniture fur-niture up to date and many other technical problems are treated in this useful dollar saving book. Readers wishing a copy should send name and address, enclosing 25 cents (coins preferred), to Mrs. Spears, 210 So. Desplaines St., Chicago, 111. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are an effective laxative. Sugar coated. Children like them. Buy now! Adv. Mind's Portrait The countenance. is the portrait of the mind, the eyes are its informers. in-formers. Cicero. only EiUDEM'S MENTHOL COUGH DROPS will do these 3 things ... and all for . . . Qff Q Soothe inflamed membranes Q Menthol helps clear the head 0 Help build up your ALKALINE RESERVE WHEN A COLD STRiKESI Pore as a Moontaln Stream Oil purity ... an objective achieved by Quaker State's laboratories. lab-oratories. In four great, modern refineries . . . operating under the most exacting control . . . the finest Pennsylvania crude oil is freed of all trace of impurities, impuri-ties, resulting in an oil so pure that you need have no fear of motor troubles from sludge, carbon or corrosion. Acid-Free Quaker Slate makes your car run better, last longer. Quaker State Oil Refining Corporation, Oil Gty, Pennsylvania. Retail price 35c a quart W f 91 |