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Show IF YOU Piano With Radical Wing Design Makes Successful Flight HAGERSTOWN. MD, - An air- craft with wings like two halves cf a barrel cut lengthwise made flight. Willard R. Custer, inventor of the strange machine, said. The craft uses what Is known as the "Custer channel wing." Eventually it will hav two straight wings airalong with the foils but Custer said the device is being flown with only the channel wings to demonstrate that they alone can lift it. The pilot on several short, straight flights at Municipal airport was Frank D. Kelley, commercial pho- iti first successful semi-circul- tographer. The plane has two engines set on spars across the top of the two semicircles. The propellers are at the trailing edge of the channel. They draw air through the channel, giving the effect of high forward speed even when the machine is standing still. Because of that, Custer said, the plane is able to rise almost vertically. He said the plane took off at a speed of about 30 miles an hour and rose very sharply. Because of the radical design and necessity of acquainting himself with the strange ship, Kelley went up only 15 feet or so on the first flight, Custer said. The plane has no brakes. Take-off- , flight and landing must be done within the length of a single runway until the machine can be maneuvered for a circuit of the field. This probably will not be done, Custer said, until straight wings are added outboard of the channels. Custer, a former automobile mechanic, has been working on the invention at his small chicken farm west of here for 10 years. More than $200,000 has been invested. BEAR RIVER VALLEY The DONT VOTE YOU HAVE NO KICK COMING enjoyed and games LEADER. Sharon Holman of Burbank, refresh- Cal-forn- ia. Utah Trem-nto- n. Thursday, Oct,;;vr Clearfield at the home of Mrs. Ben Fransisco and children, thev also called on Mr. and Mrs. James Burt of Ogden and Mr. and Mrs. David Allen of Perry, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. McMinn 'and two children of Pocatello, and Sunday, Monday spent Tuesday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Wight. ments. Twenty-on- e guests were the evenand present Mr. of enjoyed Mrs. Holman and Harry Bv Delia Coombs 3urbank, California are visitors ing. The Future Progress Guild met of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Anger, Mr. The Social Development club; and Mrs. Rendell Draper and Thursday evening at the home of met Thursday afternoon at the Mr. and Mrs. Claude Allred and Mrs. Ray Wood, the program behome of Mrs. George Combs. The other relatives of the valley this ing under the direction of Mrs. Ida Cannon. The speaker of the program was under the direction week. Lunchof President Blanche Hansen.: Seymour Nielsen of Hyrum, a evening was C. E. Smith. eon for the afternoon to Mrs. Leo Farnsworth, accom- was hostess j The speaker the served by recently returned missionary 18 : r.Vt turf If rc l t ... Tremonton of Kleon Kerr members. w;is and a companion of Richard cui-for- d Mr. and Mrs. George Bowcutt Arch Richardson and Mrs. Luncheon was served by the Petersen in Denmark, visited to of McMurdle Tremonton, members to were hostess twenty eight evening at the home and children of Ogden ' Thursday where and two guests, Mrs. Nelva Han- - of Mr. and Mrs. Noble Petersen, weekend guests of her parents, Bear River City Sunday, sen and Mrs. John Coombs. She where he showed pictures of his Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Standing. Uhey visited with Mr. and Mrs. was assisted in serving by her travels in Denmark. He was acMr. and Mrs. Earl J, Holt and iDarrel Gardner. Louise Mr. and Mrs. Leo Farnsworth Mrs. Mrs. Bob Whitney of TremonHarper companied by his parents and daughters ton visited and Mrs. Ella Holt. at in sister. spent Tuesday at Franklin, Ida- Ogden Friday Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Anger en- the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill :ho on business. Mrs. Ernie Anger entertained Garn is receiving last Tuesday in honor of her tertained Saturday evening in Stokes. Wayne Mr. and Mrs. Jack Munson son Robert's fourth birthday, honor of the birthdays of Don Wayne Gam is receriving where a group of little friends Ward of Salt Lake City and spent Monday and Tuesday in medical care at the Valley hos- ; ' ri 1 ; -- : week. , tpent the Jack Garn and his mother, with her parents !,jr Mrs. Wesley Garn flew to Salt Era Mason. Lake City last Thursday on busiH. ital this George Coorr.bs 0 , called on his Parents , Mrs. Wilford Farnsworth of Mrs. G. R. Coombs Los Angeles, California, is visitThe Home Builders ing with her mother Mrs. James Builders of the Primary'"; H. Hess. Hallowe'en Party at Peterson Mrs. ness. Mr. and Parley gave a Birthday supper Monday in honor of her father Wesley Garn. All members of his family were pres3nt. The P.T.A. held their first meeting at the school house, under direction of Pres. Helen Mason, on October 21. Ralph Baird talked on the community project to obtain a moving picture machine for the school. Lunch was served by seven members. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Jackman of 1 ; I i i;-3- V l f - i t 1 a by all. Lj'a Johnson, 3t V 1 i. or recently returned was guest speaker at evening Sacrament serv' v,-;i- Island n to-- k Thomas. St. Coix and former Danir.:i March 28, 1917 t"J ' ' 'house Friday evening and refreshment re 61 Li .....j tf 11 tbj ' St ir"' WeS' Mf ir It 1 1v f 32 English Dignitary Defies Tradition, Speaks Frankly ENGST. PAUL'S CRAY. LAND. British dignitaries, when called upon to launch new public building projects, traditionally dig up a few inches of soil and then proclaim: "I declare this sod well and truly turned." London Councilman I. J. Howard, launching a housing project here, jabbed and twisted futiley with a chromium plated spade and finally gave it up with a disgusted: "I could'a done better with a pick." For Representative In For Governor Congress HERBERT B. MAW L WALTER K. GRANGER HARRY S. TRUMAN For President Of The United Slaks i r ' 4 11 t 1 I S it I f r s n i n. a 3 s ALBEN W. BARKLEY t t j For L lJU Loan Shop Owner Discovers nt of the United States n Bargain Furs Are Expansive - Max IND. INDIANAPOLIS, Sacks was sad. Those two $250 fur scarves he bought for $30 each had been such bargains too. Detective Sgts. George Hubbard and Ernest Hughes said Sacks, pro prletor of a loan company, told them a man came in some time a no offering a scarf he said was worth $250 for $30. Sacks bought it. Some time later the same man came back with another also valued at $230. The scarf man returned to the loan company a third time. Sacks, suspicious, whispered to the detectives, who were in his office. They arrested the man on a vagrancy charge. Detectives listened to his story and then arrested his former wife on a vagrancy charge. Sacks was surprised when he learned her identity. The woman, he told detectives, was his employee and the scarves he had bought were from his own vault. Vice-Preside- M i ! lit I i I I niiniwiiatiaia if i i naiBftiiii risi fWian r A A r--. iwi- nW vmnnii nrii n " a government For a continuation of National Prosperity and Good Government for the majority and not the few for the good of the common man Ucr State Treasurer VOTE STRAIGHT DEMOCRATIC , aU L- FERRELL ADAM ' ".v... For State Senator J. HAROLD H. , ' e ii REESE - Nature's Moods Overcome By 'Manufactured' Weather TOLEDO, OHIO. Known in Indus- try as temperature and humidity, weather can affect the quality of dozens of items of every-dause, from candy to coffee and sweaters to shower curtains, but industry has way to beat Mother Nature's moods. Production men call it "manufactured" weather. Without It. the processing of beans In boston, nylons in New Vork and gasoline tn Galveston can be thrown off baUnce by such tricks of the weatherman as excessive dampness, a sudden cold snap or even a hot, dry spell. A case hi point, the tobacco Industry must minutely control the atmosphere in factories and warehouses and many textiles and plastics can be processed only under Ideal temperature and moisture conditions. y v. A i V 1 County Commissioner M ... f . I : ' For District Judge Term LEWIS JONES For County Commissioner EDWARD D. WARD r' .. , 1 1 Iir - Term 1 J. WELTON WARD ROGERI.McDONOl L For State Auditor REESE M. REESE Woman, 20, Marries Suitor, 37, Esfara Capacity Crowd MOIRA, N. Y. Mrs. Eliza Mur- to be over 90, and Clarence McGce were married before a capacity audience in ray, believed v. i the Methodist church here. Bath are residents of Brushton, a gmall northern New York village about two miles from here near the Canadian border. The bride gave her age as 80 for the marriage license, but her son James, who is 69. said she was "over 90." The bride has three living sons and daughters. Her first husband, Charlie, died at the age of 83. Ite4 Crou Lector t More than 800,000 persona wart reached last year through Red Cross nutrition lecture! and Ioo4 'rnonstratl'iiis. -- ; ' ' i i I ' ! ' - t St, 5 - r f i. it FOR For District Attorney LEWIS E.NELSON 1,,.....!, m , -- . I . Aui i I i ..V . i - ...I.,, ! i STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 2 ARTHUR D. CAPENER For Attorney General CLINTON D. VERNON For Superintendent Of Public Instruction E. ALLEN BATEMAN ) ton -y win For Secretary of i;ta'j '.'Mm HEBER SENNION, |