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Show i t THE LEIII SUN. LEHI, UTAH I mBBS " . n Wall 1I 1 W I, Hi, 'la,,.1 t a Cat, i as. tjv eat to i that k i first i stilt j; litlon T felt wj; ti. be state oif of Bu J I seniu all rag plain fe ; MKi on ne; ral tree onda to get ; Dong ! fair1: 1 be ik I f thai, Hi e cod:; Wasfc that fe at re$ ilr pc (wutei! In relit' ire'l pry i In r meat k f atloi k I tad tin r ID KT hatSr iclc t I C4 label lathes Be: 5 prior cartoot aw r it ?toit 4 nidsif Ml ant indr- I pr? rst aofi at -i at r, si Set i !af f if 3 we ft - . m TtAll T V.. f rpfld in the pa akUtWB" . . .m fl13 Craig to Craig. Was getting an .riv to make the big hop around the ,eM. NOW tO get ready for that would take me just about as long as it wouia most people to get ready to drive to town Saturday after nnnn and atay -icture show that night. I mil. old soft flat red grip, wfc . t . ,i ( whan 1 . that if I jUt wu " - ,Sltiai u j a few l.riM tt WW V"- " . &ir wit" the collan tfr Lud I little batch of under Lo all these you can afore anywhere, (I L I hare done it) then throw L ohm away. You dont figure Sdry at all. And its cheaper, L you start paying excess on ("aeroplanes, brother, till then Wueenany excess. So me L uttle red bag and type-L type-L om extra suit in it Its al- packed the same, no matter if Xef York or to Singapore. till time it was different, I fas women folks along. Ma f 5oing along and she said I fjt be trooping along with her 35 1 looked the part. So with all Sussing, and buying and pack-t pack-t Rogers Ranch was in a I tor days and days, tromping fss makers, cutters and fitters. the boys were both away, and lit that she had to dress them laote control to get them ready. Ill it seems that there was con-Id con-Id t scheme before we all em-Id em-Id on this present enterprise, jjthe master "Ha Ha" meaning Jfioold be diked out as never fe, They started dragging in f beach suits to fit onto me when fc!d hate been up roping calves. dragged me in from the polo where I would be working a horse to try some white shoes e, Well they might Just as well m on the horse, he would have tore comfortable. And then the I baggage commence arriving. we are a race of people that i lived in grips and trunks all Ives, but it seems the old bag- was kinder rusty, and that ik and Japan would turn up if the Rogers come in with Boiled portmantous. 'i these palm beach suits- I Icare how not it gets in these so 4 tropics around Honolulu, we to have sent those suits to bends back in Arkansaw and tfoma, there is your tropics for fill summer, or in fact any part S" old U.S. (I don't want to get with any particular part a. Country; its better to get In J with all of it). Then besides fa beach suit is not supposed to J it does, its uncomfortable. Ma fi-s argued that she hadent been f 'aere a 80 long, that she Just t?.aa out of clothes. (Any of rtfs ever heard that talk be-!' be-!' ae had just shortly before fr New York, but she tat call that anywhere, and f 4 bMn to Honolulu two sum- . so she had to get sorae- Jgtt enough for Honolulu and 1 else heavier for Japan, fbave never been to Japan i l!!rer time' but summer & cre,SnotaIot ot differ- 'Jaowisoofallth. fitting i itn'8tore8 have a habit l-t you er it. 'weal owp n ... ' if there u " 6U" -f uA nere lsaparty or pic- in the meHmo M Howe About: Conversation On Quitting Work The Country , Bell SyndloU. WSV ttervlc. isBi, that- it so you s --"mcemark. I JIaitrvii, I o tie f " lu IUCK nt my I im ? C0UId 8alTasa the .n have L, 'P'-l Th9 I -B I had f ts when I teciej me Kemper ? w 800- t in 55. Ionian 10 wear them out Well I Pack fa , .ut wf" f :3.i . -yuine ana i I Paclr. . "uvt" " nights. M.eha4 ath robe H to, I! iaat the last Wear tnen en iSll,rom ""Perm- Ftta, ,1 a" taki8 sit . ,uiiiaii t,-; . ,a'.tS.a.tn,reher. life By ED HOWE I HAVE met some opposition In my contention that a man may learn much from conversation going go-ing on around him; that he may thus acquire education as unconsciously uncon-sciously as he eats his meals, attends at-tends to his work, or otherwise meets life's Incidents. I have known a telegraph operator opera-tor to sit Idly for hours In a room full of clattering Instruments, and suddenly grasp a key when his call came out of the confusion. So ft man constantly In the babble of conversation may pay little attention atten-tion to It until something of Interest attracts him; a bit of wisdom, news, or a jest he has not heard. Oscar Wilde left In books as great a number of bright sayings as any Englishman. All of them were suggested from mingling with men, first nsed In conversation, and the best of them later transferred to print Men acquire education laboriously from books they are compelled to study as a duty, but easily out in the world, where every one has a little, and Is busy distributing It "Because a man loses his job," I read somewhere, "it does not follow fol-low he should quit work." That is good sense.- I know a man who lost his job as a maker of radio parts. This morning I bought vegetables of him; be continued con-tinued work on some land a neighbor neigh-bor let him use, and he has not suffered suf-fered the humiliation of calling on the Salvation army, the Red Cross, the county commissioners, or con gress. I have another neighbor who lost his job In a machine shop. He did ! not quit work, either; he Is now operating a laundry In his home. In case I am able to change shirts this week, I shall certainly arrange with this man to wash my old one. Some of my other neighbors are getting $15 a month from the county, coun-ty, and regularly their names appear ap-pear In the papers, nnder the heading head-ing of "Disbursements to the County Coun-ty Poor." I shall make a hard struggle to keep my name out of the list I know most of the people peo-ple read It, and make ugly comments. - If the people are starving, what Is to be done about It, since nature has no more to give? I once lived on a farm, and while I am able to recall some discomforts, I always had enough to eat Frequently, we used parched rye for coffee, and sorghum molasses for sweetening. The other day I found sorghum mo lasses on the table, bought from an old-fashioned farmer, and thought it still very good. We grated corn meal for bread, and always down In the feed lot were pigs coming on to supply meat when the smoke house began to show signs of emptiness. We had catue for plowing, and to supply sup-ply milk. Chickens almost took care of themselves about the place, and supplied eggs In addition to a surplus of old roosters which, when boiled long enough, made fairly good eating. We had wild plums, blackberries, and preserved them for winter use. There was plenty of fuel In the woods, and one man In the neighborhood tanned beef hides, from which another made shoes. In almost every house there was a loom, for the manufacture of a cloth called linsey woolsey, and this supplied clothing. It was a poor start, but we were never hungry or naked while waiting wait-ing for times to get better. And times never did get much better; indeed. I think they are harder now than I ever knew them to be on Big Creek. The big-headed town people should remember there Is a place where they can at least always get enough to eat, and move out Into the country. Pretty much all the land will soon be owned by the government gov-ernment through tax sales, and almost al-most anyone free to file on It In one of the periods of depression depres-sion In Rome, Silerlus called the poor together. "In your meetings," he said, "yon make Tery severe charges against those who are feeding feed-ing yon. It Is not usual to criticize the poor, but many of you have very bad habits, and are not doing your part In an emergency all should help. Some f the rioting yon have Indulged In has only resulted re-sulted In destroying such food supplies sup-plies as we have. I give yon frank notice this will not be submitted to again. If any of you have not heard of It, I announce I am head of the army, and will not join you In unnecessary destruction." The world has agreed for thou rands of years that the most dan-rrcnis dan-rrcnis period In the life of men la Wat of wild oats from sixteen to twenty-six. ... So of course an au thor appears to say the dangerous age is between forty-five and slxty- nre. ... I believe we are all better bet-ter behaved as adults than we were as savage' children; and probably the most dangerous age of savage chlldrea ts between twelv and seventeen. Scenes and Persons in the Current News IAJIJLJ-LJ.J.H ' - J 'tit b kit I U14XAW ft 3 -n, WHf'5., III rfTr 1 tMi .... k . jet- "tv&mr um 1 1 rf- ... I 11 1 First-class cadets from West Point getting firing practice with six-Inch coast defense rifles at Fortress Monroe, Virginia. 2 Pickets surrounding the American Aluminum company plant ai Alcoa, Tenn., with temporary tem-porary shelters prepared for a long siege. 8 Lowering the Stars and Stripes at the marine barracks at Cape Ualtlen, as the American forces finally evacuated Haiti. Alcatraz Island, Capone's New Residence J"jv ...... j O 1 View of Alcatraz Island In San Francisco bay, the new federal prison for Incorriglbles, to which Al Ca- pone, ertswhile public enemy No. 1, and other convicts nave been transferred from the Atlanta penitentiary, . i SUMMONED BY A KING i ft in & Minna Slender fingers of this San Diego woman surgeon, wielding a tiny knife with watch spring precision, may save the eyesight of the king of Siam. Half-way around the world has come a plea from the monarch to retain Dr. May Turner Itiach for the operation which Is to be performed per-formed In New York. Doctor RIach Is the wife of a retired British army surgeon. HELEN WINS AGAIN Helen Jacobs of California reasserted reas-serted her supremacy In tennis by winning the women's national singles tournament at Forest Hills, n. r. Chief Came of Blindness The principal cause of blindness among the 3,000,000 sightless persons per-sons throughout the world today Is trachoma, the rest) It of unbalanced diet, Insufficient food, and unsanitary unsani-tary 11-rtng conditions. About 65 per cent of these unfortunates are natives na-tives of China and India, the Inhabitants Inhab-itants of which countries comprise 40 per cent of the world's population. popula-tion. Tit-Bits Magazine. Mast Be Paid jerry Experience Is our greatest great-est teacher. Isn't It? Perry Yes, and there's no hold-I&g hold-I&g back her salary, either. Develops Paralysis Vaccine ;----' '"- U. v Vs ' 4 V '.. , , ''J ' I f V ! " - n h mh . Dr. John A Kolmer, professor of medicine at Temple university, and director of the research Institute of cutaneous medicine of Philadelphia, shown here at work In his laboratory, Is credited with the discovery of a vaccine that It is believed will produce Immunity from Infantile paralysis. paral-ysis. After years of exhaustive experimentation with animals, Doctor Kolmer injected his vaccine Into himself and a young woman assistant. Miss Anna M. Rule. Boone Bicentennial Half Dollar ? '-TLA f - ''A. 1 r-- - i The obverse and reverse sides of the model of the Daniel Boons bicentennial half-dollar, as designed by Augustus Lukeman, following tha authorization by congress for the manufacture of 600,000 of the piece The money from the sale of the coins will go to the Daniel Boone bicen. tennlal commission of Kentucky which will acquire four shrines to con stltute the pioneer's national, monument Sl Was EngafeJ Circus Proprietor Yes; we want a lady who can handle wild animals. ani-mals. Have yon had experience? Applicant I have been a saleslady sales-lady at bargain counters for years I Job Back Ship's Cook (to new helper) Ever been on a ship before! Helper Sure; I. was a gunner la the nary. Cook Wen, start ribt m and shell the peas. BRISBANE THIS WEEK Hostile to Christianity Hitler's Great Power Fourteen-Pound Baby Quite Easily Said In spite of a gigantic vote, about 88,000,000 to about 4,000,000, that gave Hitler absolute power In Germany, Ger-many, Hitler's ardent admirers are annoyed that even four million votes should read "No." The Jews of Germany could not well be blamed, since there are only 000,000 of them. They could not well cast 4,000,000 totes. Herr Goebbels, Hitler's propaganda prop-aganda chief, suggests in his newspaper news-paper Angriff that the anti-Hitler votes were cast by German Catholics. That "No" votes were Catholic votes seems probable, In view of the attitude of Hitler's government toward religion In general, Catholicism Catholi-cism In particular, and emphatic complaints made by the Vatican. It Is feared by Protestants as well as Catholics that hostility to Christianity Chris-tianity may develop and spread among Germans as it has done In Russia, Spain, Mexico and elsewhere. Hitler now holds In his name all the powers onoe exercised by the kaiser, the relchstag, the various separate kingdoms and governments that make up the German empire. Also, quite important, "Ilerr Hitler Hit-ler has the power to declare war and to make peace." It might be easier to declare war than to make peace in these times. He Is commander of the army, navy and air forces, which Indicates rapid progress for a gentleman who was not a citizen of the German nation four years ago. Mrs, Ted Glovler, of Moorefleld, W. Va., weighs 120 pounds, her husband hus-band weighs 133 pounds. Not that his weight makes any difference. Their little boy, named, as you will guess, Franklin Delano Glovler, Just arrived, weighs fourteen pounds. Franklin Delano Glovler, will not attract as much attention as do the five Dionne quintuplets. But the mother Is proud of the fact that her Franklin Delano weighs at birth one pound end a half more than all five of the quintuplets. Franklin Delano Glovler's father says, "I can't account ac-count for It." No accounting Is necessary. nec-essary. Every baby, big or little, li a marvel, and weight at birth makes little difference. One sickly little baby called Voltatre started a work that overthrew a long Hue of fat French kings. The big steel companies talk of abandoning the NRA code altogether, altogeth-er, fearing the consequences of putting put-ting their Industry absolutely In the control of organized labor. "More easily said than done," they will be told. An old horse mired In a swamp might talk about "abandoning the leeches that cling to him," but the leeches would cling. American industry must go all the way through the process of being managed by those that never successfully suc-cessfully managed anything else before. be-fore. Maybe the experiment will lead to the millennium, maybe not All must hope and co-operate, even the mired horse. Lloyd George, in his memoirs, says that while England was borrowing American dollars so Industriously, the "United States, shocked by the cost of war, was suspicious as the allies asked for credit." He does not add, as he might that Americans Ameri-cans would have been wise to refuse re-fuse the credit, since all of "our gallant gal-lant allies" have turned out to be gallant wclchers. New York presents to your attention atten-tion an Interesting robbery In the borough of Brooklyn. A well-organized gang of highwaymen surrounded surround-ed an armored car, with machine guns carefully planted in a peddler's cart and in parked cars, held np the armed guards, stole $427,000. The robbers escaped In three high-powered automobiles, the armored arm-ored truck pursuing, one machine gun that the robbers overlooked spitting bullets. That appears to be the record for robbery In the public streets. A big diamond Is coming to the United States, fourth largest In the world, called the Jonker gem. The tebble" was found In South Africa Af-rica by a farmer, and sold to the diamond corporation for $315,000. The corporation refused $."jOO,000 for the stone, now coming here to be cut to best advantage. Ladles will wear diamonds as big as pigeons' eggs, but hardly as big as a turkey's egg. That would be conspicuous. Hoboken, N. J., Is shocked. One gentleman, who liked the looks of another gentleman's wife, bought the wife for $700, to be paid In Installments, In-stallments, like an automobile, "with her romantic consent" the last Installment paid recently. That makes all that are absolutely absolute-ly well behaved shudder, although many millions of human beings on earth never get a wife except by purchase. Other millions may sell a wife If they choose, and no evil Is thought of It It Is thinking tint "makes It so.- Q BTiEf Ftor rndloU, las. Housewife's Wea Box To Preserve Poluh on Brass Brass bowls and other articles are beautiful only when kept polished. This Is usually difficult to do. How ever, If you thoroughly clean the brass, removing all stains and grease, and then apply a coat of clear copal varnish, your bowl will look beautiful beauti-ful and will retain Its polish Indefinitely. Indefi-nitely. THE HOUSEWIFE. Copyright by Public Ledger, Inc. WNU Service. PILGRIMAGES TO FAMOUS SHRINES OF OLD QUEBEC Quebec's famous shrines attracted throngs of pilgrims and tourists from Canada and the United States as the church assumed a leading part In the colorful celebration commemorating commem-orating the quadrlcenteunial of the discovery of Canada by Jacques Car tier. The annual feast of St Anne brought many pilgrimages to the celebrated Bhrlne of St Anne de Beaupre, located twenty-one miles north of Quebec on the St Lawrence river. Devotion at this shrine Is not confined to feast days and religious celebratious, however. Large numbers num-bers of visitors kneel here dally, more than 1,000.000 pilgrims annually visiting vis-iting the shrine. According to tradition, St Anne's dates from 1(358, when the first church was established by ' Breton sailors In thankfulness for their rescue res-cue from a storm on the St Lawrence. Law-rence. Discarded crutches, canes and braces are piled here by the pilgrims, who are said to have experienced miraculous cures. Sharing the Interest of pilgrims are Quebec's other noted shrines, St. Joseph's Oratory in Montreal, which has become famous within the last four decades through the works of Brother Andre, and the National Shrine of the Blessed Virgin at Cap de-la-Madelelne, near Trols Rivieres. Historical students as well as the religious visit the ancient sanctuary of Tres Salnte Rosalre at Oap-de-la Madeleine. Built In 1714, it Is one of Quebec's most cherished antiquities. Esploretory Surgeon Did you operate? Also Surgeon Yes, for appendicitis. appendi-citis. ; , ' Surgeon And what was wrong with him? KEEP COOL SAVE TIME SAVE WORK SAVE MONEY within fie" if u - THIS Coleman Srlf-Hesrins Iron wlB 1 mv too more dm tnd work than 1100 .00 waahlns nuchinri It will aava four atrength ... help you do betcci iioninS earin and quicker at Uta coab Instant IJabllnt! ... no fearing with matches ot torch ... no waiting. T iia evenly-heated doubt pointed baa Ironf garment with fewer Broke. Large gUat amooth baa tilde eailer. Ironing tiro to reduced one-third. Hear toe If... tie tt nrwhere. Economical, too. ..coat onlf Vi an hour to operate See your hard-war hard-war or houaefurnlihtng dealer. It local dealer doeen't handle, write u. THE COt PMAN LAMP AND 8TOVB CO. JW WIU, Wichita. Kane.! Cblewo. IU. VbUadrlphla, fa.; to Anirei. Calif, i Toronto, Ontario, Caned tao Salt Lake City's ?ieest Hotel a .-'PlTi l-X 3';.?H.;r'"if.i,"., hi HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms ' 200 Tile Datlis Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM fl.50 art fpoittt Uctwmm TsitrmatM ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. SmecfttClealSkitp Don't endure pimples and blotches. Allay them quic kly with pure Resinol m Soap ana sate, emcaciooj WNU W 85-34 |