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Show Thursday, April 16, 1942 WATCH YOUR The New TELEPHONE DIRECTOR? Do you surreptitiously kick off your shoes under the dining room table or in the movies, or come home from a walk of ten blocks or a mile with your "dogs" barking? There is little that can give us so jaundiced an outlook on life as sore, aching feet. Tired or sore feet quickly bring about general fatigue, making it hard for you to do your work or enjoy your rec reation, and Impairing your health m general. I have always maintained that the majority of foot ills with which we are beset are the result of our own carelessness, that they are. self Inflicted and unnecessary. I am speaking of course, only of those cases where there is no co- genital malformation or other unusual condition resulting, for instance from an accident. The great majority of foot ills can be avoided. a, i 7T SITUATION encasing our poor feet in heavy, . 1 W . - me shoes all day long and r Jl never giving them a chance to eles Uh oh ifock Ijardi oslnq NEW SHIPMENT OF SPRING AND EARLY "breathe." Many modern shoes for both men and women, however, are demand Broad ANGELES allow ventilated and air to get at LOS SUMMER MILLINERY the feet, a healthy condition. for beef cattle and hogs featured irota fhi wppk. Learn to walk correctly. Hold Thrust your toes Prices of hogs reached the highest gl yourself erect. The Highlights of the Season are top J straight forward with each step levels since 1926 when the instead of inward or outward. Im- price advenced to $15.25 on c: proper walking quickly leads to Los Angeles market last week, Represented in this Shipment fatigue and often results in corns steers at $13.25 equaled tne and muscular aches. est levels of the year, mere PRICES HAVE NOT ADVANCED AND WE ARE STILL talk in the trade that the time Exercise Help Arches GETTING HIGHLY STYLED MERCHANDISE REGARDLESS distance when price ceil J If the imprint of your wet foot not far OF THE NECESSITY OF CONSERVING MATERIALS established on beef on the bathroom rug reveals a line ings will be was done in the case just as between the heel and the ball of cuts, of pork prices early in March. COME IN AND SELECT YOUR HAT WHILE OUR your foot that is as wide as your foot your arches may have fallen STOCK IS COMPLETE Buyers were apparently in urso far as to need attention. In gent need of all grades and classes most cases the right kind of home of cattle on the Los Angeles mar FROM UP exercise will do the trick, unless of ket and, while receipts are consid- demand course, Will: the arch is a broken. ago, erable beyond year Rules of Foot Care on the toes to tone up the muscles is still much greater than available In general, the entire problem of ana strengthen them. on the market. The sharp Walking foot hygiene can be reduced to a around the room c, the outer supplies advances in cattle prices at" middle few simple rules. These rules for edge and then on the inner edge western markets are being watched Exclusive Ladle9 Shop guarding the feet should be follow- of the feet also helps. with interest on the Pacific coast. ed faithfully, if you hope to life At day's end there is almost To some degree, the higher prices yourself up by your own boot- nothing more relaxing and restful on the Missouri river will undoubtstraps, as it were, and rid yourself to the person with tired feet to edly attract fed steers which otherof any of the foot ailments that are fathe them leisurely in warm wise would move westward. so common and, at the same time, water. For extra exhilaration try day afternoon at the Utah Valley so easily avoided. All grades and classes of cattle alternating hot and cold water. week last demand There is a saying: 'Use your met very active Here are eight simple rules that Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Sanders spent I have found so successfully over head and save your feet.' To this &t the Los Angeles Union Stock Saturday and Sunday at Salt Lake I a number of years: (1) Keep the heartily subscribe. yards. Medium to good steers out City. Mr. Sanders and his son in In these days when everyone is cf feedlots are selling mainly, at i feet scrupulously clean, 2. Keep law, aSm Hayes were the honored tnem dry, 3. Keep them well cush- - cn his feet more than ever, dointr 11.50 to $13.25 and the common! Eudene Warner, Correspondent guests at a birthday party on Sunbit for the war effort, in ad- - and medium grades of steers of Says . . . ioned from friction and shock. 4. his 308 Phone Those attending were Mr. day. only properly fitted shoes dition to carrying on his own af- McLean origin are bringing $10.50; EM WITH Wear Mrs. Thomas W. Stephensen and and Mrs. Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. wnicn are kept in good repair. fairs, it is doubly important that to $11 a cwt. Very lew native 5. Permit the feet to 'breathe" 6. we be able to keep on our feet steers carrying any degree of meat her grandson, Wayne Leavitt re- Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Clement J. Walk correctly. 7. Exercise the long hours without discomfort and covering are selling below $11 and turned home this week after a vac-sur- Sanders, Mr and Mrs. Rue Sanders, Mrs. cattle which originally would ation in California. They visited Mr. and Mrs. Glade Sanders,Jacob-se'EM WITH foot muscles to strengthen the undue fatigue. arch, and 8. rest your feet at the We owe it to Uncle Sam today bo going into feedlots are going wjth Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leavitt Helen Madsen, Mrs. Darlene to watch our step. Lynn Jacobsen, Kirk Sanders, end of the day. into immediate slaughter channels, and Mr. and Mrs. John Leavitt at Tf ii your root troubles are con There were a few loads of feeder Redondo Beach. Mrs. Stephensen Tom Hayes, Shirley and Marion Keeing your feet scrupulously clean is important from a hygenic tinual and serious, see vour nhv. steers som last weeK ai 3.lu.;mj 10 reports having had a fine vacation Hayes. and visiting many places Including point of view. Dirt can easily get slcian before they become to the 511.25 a cwt. Mrs. Jennie Brown spent the past worked into even a slight scratch uncuraoie stage. the horse races in Mexico. cows week in Salt Lake City. of the bulk Grass make up Dr. Victor G. Heiser, on the bottom of the foot, where Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Memmott receipts in that division and are your whole weight bears down on Mrs. J. M Beck and daughter selling mainly at $8.50 to $9.75, spent Monday at Salt Lake City. t, and possibly cause infection. It some as Barbara Jean of Gooding, Idaho lots as $10. high going is important to keep the nails propBertrand Rigby, son of Mr. and returned home after spending the Recent rains have improved grass "LFeach week erly cleaned and immaculate. feed in Southern California but it is Mrs. Thorval Rigby, underwent an past two weeks with Mr- and Mrs. you'll Nobody nowadays is considered a generally believed that rains have operation for appendicities on Sun George V. Ord. Mr. Milquetoast if he wears overcome too late to materially afadvertise, then shoes to kee his feet dry. Also, fect the movement of grass cattle the skin between the toes should this season. Canners and cutters be dried carefully after the bath, met active call at $6.50 to $8.25 for No. 1 as all skin suffers from being conthe bulk. Fleshy dairy cows are tinuously exposed to too much moisbringing in $7.50 to $8.50 and as ture. If your feet perspire more high as $9.00 a cwt. than the average, try wearing How to Get the wool socks, which absorb the mois continues in a The market hog ture. MOST out of It firm position with the extreme top In an average day a man weigh week at $15.25 and the bulk last ing 165 pounds takes more than of 170 to 240 lb good and choice 12,000 individual steps. In doing so Note: Every motorist needs to know how to get the most hogs at $14.50 to $15.50. Sows are he subjects himself to the equival at $12 to $13. a cwt. selling out of his car for his own and for his country's sake. Followent of 947 tons of jolts and shocks. The fat lamb market fails to So you can see how important it is ing is the first of a series of articles on car conservation. They show much attention and the marto have your feet protected with are based on material just published in a book, Automobile is with ket about good steady just well fitting, comfortable shoes. your business will have to choice spring lambs quoted at User's Guide, which was prepared by the Customer Research 11.50 to $11.75, possibly as high as Vanity Versus Corne staff of General Motors in cooperation with General Motors skies. sunny Medium spring lambs are $12.00. Avoiding friction of the shoes engineers. Proving Ground experts, research technicians and selling down to $10.75 and under. against any part of the foot guards service specialists. and against callouses, bunions corns. Corns are simply hardened To make your car serve for masses of skin cells with a hard the duration, you must be both core or root. There are very few a careful driver and a careful ordinary corn that cannot be re moved easily after soaking in hot owner. You must (1) operate SOON If you desire a change in your present listing, additional listings, or directory advertising, just call the Telephone Business Office. STEP air-tig- ht s:2 I I s. Nephi Social News Items The Air Corps YOU BUY BONDS! WE'LL FLY BOMBS! - BUY WAR BONDS EVERY PAY DAY! SareWM 2u& tke&ul I!RES ae n, - NORTHBOUND: and 1:37 P. M. SOUTHBOUND and 8:50 P. M. Lv. 10:36 A. Lv. 4:59 CARTER'S X 57 North Main ... M P. M., CAFE L Phone 264 St, ; Ii I g M fr A1jl? OJL.D VI nor Initio VW . 111 Sunny Brook BRAND Kentucky Straight Bourbon Vhiskey j f 1 Utah's fastest selling 5 siraigni Whiskey, 3? I it SOMYBMtf 1 SSSS II. I Tjf. v my I a2 ml S, "CIIEERFUL AS ITS 2VAME" W.4 Proof National Distillers Product Corp, N. T. 1 SS M asmmm. f't Po not usa bleaches or reducing agent, such a Javell water. Chloride of lime, hydrogen peroxide. 1. Do not breathe the fume of cleaning solvent since In large quantities they are usually poisonous. 8. In removing grease spots, start well outside the possibility of ring. tpet and rub toward It. Lessensmaterial with a cloth or 9. Always apply cleaning brush, never directly. and I the recomCarbon tetrachloride I It will remove gum, grease and oil mended dry cleaner. tain, lipstick stains, shoe polish and dressing, tar and other.. on the other hand most corns are self inflicted and unnecessary. The human felt, like the human and, is straight on the inside. If you allow your shoes to deform that natural straight line, I can only say that the punishment will fit the crime and you will suffer accordingly. Shoes should be large enough to allow the foot to assume its natural position when you walk and still fit snugly enough to avoid the friction that causes agonizing corns. After you get a pair of shoes that fits you keep them in good repair. Don't let them run down at the heel a ondition which throws you off balance in walking and hastens fatigue. Thin, worn shoes hasten fatigue by causing ain when stones are stepped on. Most of us are slaves of fashion, A. M- - Rlu Biu OO T:0O 7 .15 KL.O t UO OO .15 t1.30 KLO KUO (Hon Sa CluB IMon flat) CnecKtrooara rim Funnica (Sun) Uocit Nvwff Brft tn Nen tUoii-Sat- t UN 8oni ai Cnurcn KLO Tour Viclorv oardrn (M-F- ) 41 KLO Wonwn in War Mori Sat) Honda? larasill Fridav :00 Bioa Orpftana o Divorca IV Piua Honeymoon Hut OtfKt Wlfa JO Biua Jonn .4 Biua Juat Plain Bill Mnn-F10 OO KLO Oaden Ciaanfia4 Horn, iM-S- ) 10.30 Biua Nat'l Pari Hall Muair Radio Blue 8un) Cnj 1 1 :IK K LO P Nwt iMoa Pni lt.l! KLO atualral Train Moa-rr- t r I . IS eo 12 OO 2 S IktM MU4-(-t- unc K l0 a oo Bliaa MHi ni ICO IM.-- UO )1 .ou i vO S;jO co : :30 a hiu Biim Biw IMN KLO PO K1XJ MBS B.OO Rlu Hlua Blue 6. ' READING & WRITING water. your car sensibly and (2) see that it is kept in B:1S 00 0 :JQ. Bmi MHtl SO MBS 7:l :wo T:0 T:IS T fBS Blue MBS Blue K X 1 T:J4 T:9 t:S 1:00 S .V :to :SO ! 00 10 dO 10.4V l:oO Vi.OO H4!i Bua Boa unci a r CMmaa l A, those who have loved Paris will want to read Elliot Paul's new book, titled after Jerome Kern's popular song, "The Last Time I Saw Paris." Mr. Paul, as journalist for the Paris editions of the Chicago Tribune and the New York Herald, lived in that city for seventeen years, most of which time he spent on the Rue de la Huchette. It's of the inhabitants of this old city block, their loves, their jokes, their tragedies, that he I ;. tells in his book. By the time we'd finished reading it we felt as though we too, had known all these people for years, just as the author had Monsieur Henri, the gentle and wise keeper of the Hotel du Caveau; a Monsieur Panache, the unpleasant fascist ELLIOT PAUL floorwalker, whose misfortunes made such delightful gossip for his neighbors; Monsieur Noel, the taxidermist, who made a specialty of stuffing pet Jogs and cats with which their owner could not bear to part, and who took a sly pleasure in making the expressions of these animals resemble that of their masters. And then Maurice, who sold wonderful tropical fish. Every day Maurice would buy a second hand book from the book stalls and always the next day he returned it as partial payment for another book. His taste In reading matter was catholic in the extreme. He would read with the same polite attention a textbook on the care of bee or a volume from Fr to Ki of an obsolete encyclopedia. Here, too, are the magnificent vegetable market of Pari, the hotel with their friendly atmosphere and dearth of all modern convenience, oven the remarkable laundry for "one-shimen," where you could have done while you waited. your washing Elliot Paul is also author of "The Life and Death of a Spanish Town," a book about Civil War Spain which was a popular Club selection. In addition, he' famous for his deligh'ful Hugger-Muggdetective yarns. Besides being a writer, he has anolhet talent. He' an expert at playing Boogie-Woogi- A iV rt Hun I Foairr Moa) Fr1 Holt Lana Ckaniftad i Dally Waa Up Amanra iSum afutaai Uoa Caillna iSunl i.ofwrti HoariM"n cm Matin mil I 'tl Vinnt (MonTil Snow Orand rPPT Pai Sun) H'., imn K,n (ffuni ) Slate Canili, arfi for tar Fni Holirwood r.npreaa Dalirl Muatcal ol Prormerr Are Voica Fair Fldler Jimmy Keea Mr. iTue- 8un iMrml - Wed-0:0- Kelvfc iMun) Myelery "Motil Mj NameT (Tuet) Quia KuA fVV'edl (VuaBirf Fdltoe IF1 Tn Oreen Hornet fSatl Raneee fWed Frl lxe True Of Ftie I M Chltaco Tnemi laolt Lot What' I vValtef WteeMiJ (5un K IX IM Wl Jurr Tru.a (Toei) Ria I furl Uli (mrwf Farnl t RI.O Cotr editor M on Sat J MB rniifii oan-iJohn tsuni Hiua DtnaB "nor Biu until KU) AP Ifewn (Mm Frt) Mini or Tim lul'i rVroha Fri 'iiki (M-w- tar Blue MB Pi DO Biua Bn?e MBS Bin K1 MP M'id tlia Jonn Maawell B Hurne Will Hour Oood T W-- liitf I i.om and tner Inner ftunftcrri Mtrfif (1 Keep F.m nrlln Manhattan at hiiohunt Tre Star Tirade IMWFI M Fu'Vnai Tnt LlWar Jr Sat (Mon-Frl- ) I BM Anoerii-- a KiXJ F Tiwn MeMn auyupa Onip (DM) il (T flfSI top-notc- V 1 The removing of spots and stains from upholstery Is quite a problem. .To be done properly, it Is necessary to determine fabric, the nature and age of the stain', whether pike or type of fiber in construction of fabrto, and the effect of stain removal agent upon, the color, structure and general appear, ance of the fabric. It'll not a.lway easy to determine the nature of the stain and sometimes not the age. Pile fabrics, are, qf course, velvet, velours, and the flat fabric are the satins, damatkt, brocades, ete, t is, perhaps unnecessary to mention the general Instructions with, relation to the removal of spots but they are necessary for the success f the operation. 1. Use clean cloths at al Itlmet and be sure a clean portion of the cloth Is used throughout any operation. 2. A neutral soap must be used In cases calling for .... soap suds. 3. The use of hot water Is to be avoided In removing stains except where absolutely necessary. It should be wiped off Immediately before It ha a chance to run. 4. Do not use any gasoline as a cleaning solvent whro.h I lead. colored or which contain tetra-ethy- l In contact 5. Do not allow cleaning solvents to com or body, May produce local arm wit hthe kin on the upper ' ' Irritation. YOUR CAR er Under-inflatio- n From where I sit . . . Jy Joe Marsh Rummaging throogS my 'ecfe tka other day, I came acro som snapshots of friend of mine made back in 1933. If you don't think time fliaa if you don't think thi world over changes . . . you ought to look at in the women' hats and drew. those pictures taken 9 year ago! ... Wow! e. One by one our last romantic illusion are being shattered. We had gone along blithely all these year J supposing that the McCoy and the Hatfields of Kentucky were continuing that imperishable feud we used to hear about Now along comes Jean Thoma, author of "Blue Ridge Country," who live in Ashland, Kentucky, and has a McCoy family for neighbor on one (ide and a Hat field, family on th other. Not only ii her house not ieve of bullet holes. Mis Tbomas relates, but both the McCoy and the Hatfield join her each Saturday night in a aociable dinner. r v City children aren't alway a happy to be In the country a we are Inclined to believe, according to AKnes de Lima, author of "The Little Red Schoolhouse." Thi New York .chool ha a lummer progressive camp a part of it curriculum, and one day the teacher came across little David, crying bitterly. "What's the trouble?" he asked. And. aoDoea in reply. "I m used to house that are higher and tree. that ar lower.' UllLT7r Tr. condition. A careful driver, from the point of view of your car, is not just a good driver. Many things that a good driver can do under normal, peacetime conditions, a careful driver. would be foolish to do today. A careful driver would not drive fast today even on the best and safest road in the country unless saving a few minutes time were of paramount importance. Similarly, the rules of ear maintenance have changed. Points that were of minor importance before Pearl Harbor now must has always been be given first consideration. bad for tires, yes. But some were willing to pay in decreased tire mileage for a more cushioned ride. Today that price has become prohibitive. It will be worth your while to review your motoring haliits and decide how they must be changed to meet changed conditions. The next two articles in this series will discuss how to operate your car to squeexe every ounce of mileage out of it. Tires, lubrication, motor, brakes, instruments and car appearance will be dealt with ia subsequent installments. It gave then it set mo quite a start . . . and mo to thinking . . . and rememberin'l Lot of things aura happened in 1933. A new administration in Washington . . . the turning point of the depression . . . and tho coming of Repeal. I remember the of beer. It came before Repeal, when Congress amended the old Volstead Act to allow legal sale of -ZST beer. What talk and argument! they had in those days! One argument I remember well . . . was that beer would do a lot to help bring hack prosperity. I wondered at thp t'-- io whether that argumcr could he proved. A'o. 36 of a Scries I thought about that again, the other day. I decided to check up and find out. Well, I found out plenty. I found out that logal beer ha paid mor than 3 billion dollars in taxes since 1933. It has made more than a million new jobs. According to one of the reports I't teen, beer has put more than 15 billion dollars into ft ncral business circulation. Goodness me, that' a lot of money. Deer is sold today in every utile in the I'nion. Every state benefit from beer's jobs and taxes. And I guess there's no denying that beer did do it share in bringing bark better times. I'm glad it did, too, because beer is such a plcaant, appetizing And it stand for moderation and moderate people . . . it's not likely to get you in trouble. her-erag- e. Copyright, 1912, Bteuing Industry Feundatinn |