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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI, UTAH i STAI-- J nfTINrriON '- - c the smallest elate in the rSde Island ranks thirteenth ttl I Thanking institutions. HowIBrokelnto ij The Movies b Copyright by rUl Children make 9 1 yHEN nences children to eat! Tha Lboy who has no appetite has LLwhich means the cniia is rTT nut cathartics have caused urination than they ever Tbe "California treatment" C-1pure syrup of figs. Try ust rc few anys, f' Ui " ..mir vouuKster ).ra tlie colon -- eat will and that child I, , finlckj appetite will devour set rrrthiDg a treatmeni mm uot-- uiu.o than all children older or jabia Jlnre fad fuods. or tonics. law has provided the "raedi--joa'need to stir your child's EUSCleS into pruycr m;uuu. ij de-"'oraia syrup of figs. Pure, harmless. It acts on the L ,inn where the trouble is. LoiR effects on the intestines. yn tonight, wnn ims uiarvei- - ample U 1. treatmeni. Any has California syrup of an bottled, witn Directions, use the first time to cleanse the VcA mlon of every bit of poison ftard waste. Then just a little Uiweek until the child's appe llor, weight and spirits tell the stasis is gone. Whenever a "California jjist b other upset clogs the sjstem use tills natural vegetable iflve instead of drastic drugs. TAR.VING! There ere dealers Ifrtctice substitution. Be sure to feet your child ly looking for the It CALIFORNIA, on the bottle.- i a Good Thing politeness can greatly Overdoing much bo h matters. TROUBLE WOMAN'S OMEN who from softer C KemM By CLARA BOW SATT force look back upon my espe- - I feel that I cannot right fully say -- i broke" into the movies I struggled and worried and fretted and received disappointments galore before I reached my goal My goal? You ask. Certainly I lways had one a definite one, Who hasn't In this life? From my earliest girlhood I had a desire to become a motion actpicture ress I could never see my av clear to that end. 1 thought about ii a lot and every time 1 went to a show I placed uiyself in front picture of the camera and studied over wht would have done had I been privileged to trade places with the star. Then Ilrewster's anmagazines nounced a national contest with a screen test and a contract as the first I'nze. This was In my Junior year In the furls' Bayrhlge high school. Brooklyn. 1 took my father into my ennhdence. and. to tmiuor me. he en tered my photographs and the data requested. That's all I had to do Prccnt rn back and wait. Werts and weeks went by. My picture was never print ed among those of the other contest ants, and I was on the verge of giving up hope. One day there came a nrecionn it t told me that the ter. Judges, Neysa MeMein. Harrison Fisher and How ard Chandler Christy, desired to have a personal interview with me, and the time was set. I was trembling when I entered that reception room and found 15 or 2(1 oth er girls there ahead of me. Thev called us before the Judges, one by one, looked us over carefully and took down notes. Then thev let us eo. What an anxious time that was! That afternoon the telephone ranc and I was called back to the offices of the Brewster publications' in New York They wanted me to take a screen test An expert applied makeun. and I stepped before the cameras for the nrst time in my life. Then followed another week of wait ing, but finally the announcement that 1 sable pains every or the drains to mmm0:mmmmmmmmsm irregularities them drag fen take la, should 1 Pierces Favor- - 4- frescription. Read It Mrs. ail of Leon K. Meeteetse, VVyo., says: 1st months ago I was in very poor health. piumst impossible for me to be on my i was a snnerer ol woman s trou-- ! started taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre trial uui used Dr. Pierce's Lotion Tab- Bo now I am able to do my work with- m, can take long walks without in- me, and can truthfully sav I feel like oman." AH druggists. to Dr. Plena's Cllnle, n in ina medical advice. w Buffalo, MEDICINE wncdi l f.MU. iui i curs: I1 9i tlU '""'"ion peopk M0R,F t1 NH Tablet to. 3. Lt.wlUiceJul be healthier.- , hannir ".(. Tkj"""1. "ause of it lanv i 1 " n fnd fA v of them are men and "omen Past three scow ten, who have mad VW JRthe""'nedicineche8r 20 year, or more. N H has been as depend- uie as ineir lamily doc-to- r durino iKno. inritu. years when age threatens to alow up vital or- - llaniiwrZj 5 fib train, ! fetc TIM! rl - Wns.ThismiId,all-veire- rt,iTKJ the 1 inS neaaacnes. colds. Quick relief for acid indiget turn, oeartDurn. umy iw Miserable h Backache? Clara Bow. been chosen as one of the winners. Pleased? I was so tickled I couldn't eat or sleep. I thought that I was to become a star tomorrow sure. But I found that I was a long way from that coveted I had place. They gave me a lovely gown, a fine silver trophy and a contract that 1 was to play In one picture, "Beyond the Rainbow." which was being pro duced by William Christy Cabanne for Metro, featuring Billie Dove. My pan was a pitifully small one, so unimportant In fact that It was cut out of the picture entirely when It was finished. This nearly broke my heart, for I had taken a party of friends to the theater on the night the show was announced. My ! how It hurt me when i they laughed. It cut so deep that save un all hone of becoming an act ress and entered business college. Three months later a strange thing But happened. Why. I do not know. one Elmer Clifton called me at home come to his evening and asked me to crntin TTe was casting for "Down to the Sea In Ships," and he signed me to play a small bit as the stowaway. sub I learned later that one of the had magazines editors of the Brewster a chance. me to him give rged t invert that nart as though 1 had I gave been Bernhardt in "Camilla" T had. I must have been left me fairly good, for at least they n the completed picture Th.t trnve me mv chance. Next was signed to play opposite Glenn in -- firit " and then followed Increasingly better roles following my coming to Hollywood. i o chiilbere eave me my rem as a fea chance 'when he signed me his indepennem cuu, tured member of 1 gPtent backache, with 1 guIariti tbd .. .. "WM a- s- kii4n... or oiaaner "ty llkmv ISn we nd vn. Syajrwhae rely Raised for country over. Rr,U t "agists. ' PoanS Uls A Diuretic rorth Kidnes 1S33 rVaJ " ii 1. i. a A "4 Vs , "--w- Four Hundred Pound Shark. by National Geopraphlo Society. Washington. D. C WNU Service. the much-fearedenizeng SUAltKS, seas, now are eagerly along the eastern coast of Australia, for tbey yield 20 commodities to commerca The cry "shark" sends the bathers at Sidney scurrying to safety but not far north, at Plndimar, a sleepy village on the shores of Port Stephens, which Is the headquarters of the growing shark-fishinindustry, It Is good d news. Founded several years ago, the shark industry of Australia has at last reached the commercial stage. Like the rabbit, the snake, the lizard, the crocodile and the alligator, the shark has attained this status mainly through the whims-o- f Milady Fashion the world over. She demanded something new in footwear and bags, and she has it in sharkskin. Several years ago a trading company In England sent four experts out to Australia to specialize in sharks-sh- ark catching and shark treatment They were the specialist nucleus of Marine Industries, Ltd., the Australian offshoot of the English company. After Investigation, the quartette chose Plndimar as the scene of their operations. It had and has the first essentialsharks, thousands of them; all kinds and varieties; all sorts and a few miles of sizes; and all within " the shore. ' The Devil and the Demon, specially built motor boats, were put Into service. Staunch little craft they were, proving themselves so with the. heaviest of freights and In any weather. The first attack was launched at the entrance to the port, a stretch of water of a mile wide. The nets were unlike any used before in Australia. They were approximately 1,000 feet long, about 16 feet deep, of an eight-Incmesh, and they were leaded and anchored to the bottom, with glass buoys to hold them upright. On the surface, marking the anchors that helped secure the net to the bottom and at the same time holding It steady, were large drums. Usually the nets are set In the afternoon and raised the next morning. No Lack of Sharks. When the first net set was raised, the shark fishers discovered that, for once at least, the local fisherman had told the truth. There were sharks there in abundance all sorts and sizes "gray nurses," "whalers," "tl gers," "school sharks," "blue point ers," "hammerheads," "carpets," "shovel noses," "gummies," "angels" and "Port Jacksons." The shark fishers learned, too, that sharks would were really stupid. An egg-cu- p have covered the brain of the biggest shark, an This lack of intelligence Is demonstrated by the fact that once a shark runs into the mesh of the net, once he even touches It, his doom is more or less sealed. Though he may sense Its dangerous potentialities, he will not retreat; he presses ahead. And as he does so, those thin brown cords get tangled more and more securely around his gills. Then he Is there to stay. The Devil and the Demon are each manned by a crew of two and a "half mentwo very strong men and a lad. On the Job of raising the net, the skipper is at the tiller; right up "forrad" one chap, his legs braced against a little footrail. hauls, and a little farther Is along the deck, taking the strain, the lad. Hand over hand they heave and pull, until at last the "forrard man" calls a halt "Here comes one," he says, and, hplow. a mass can be seen tangled in the net, thrashing and writhing. Then the skipper leaves the tiller and lends his weight. It Is a man's Job. For even without the catch to increase Its weight a shark net when wet tips the beam at half a ton. At last that part of the net which holds the shark Is pulled to the sur face Then for daring, speed of hand and sureness of foot there is little to The forequal a trained shark fisher., and the over grasps ward hand leans No monster. tall of the struggling shark's size, the weight what matter and temper, that tail must be bitched. And when the shark boat is shipping Is a savage green seas, and on the net with the rage his venting foot-raforward hand baring only a tiny and grip, then to give him stance to a reali comes angler ,ha ordinary fishsation of the difference between ing for sport and netting for sharks. Getting Him Out ot me nei. shark's head is tangled in the . hu tail securely noosed. While ,he' forward hand Is fixing the noose, . oemc the lad has swung out me l linked up, the lad The tall loop h of to " I three-quarte- Peisimistic Wail out intellectual trlanta have been deflated, too. N Money from iit wun Schulberg became associate producer with Paramount late In 1925. he brought Famous-Lanof our unexpired Mm heennse th In "Pandng contract, and I played Mr. k Mothers," "The Runaway," "Mantrap made and "Kid Boots." Then they me a smr. made "It" and It" I have So you see. on top of It all, lot to thank Elinor Glyn for. "wob-begongs- ," il a Tomper? Why Not table. 8 The topepo is a new a pepper. and tomato i....nn ii works the windlass, and shark and net are hoisted Into the air. Follows another hazardous operationextricating the shark from th net The mesh Is wound round and round and fastened about his gills, and quite possibly, too, his fins and tall are entangled. With Infinite patience and the speed of long experience, the fishers pull the net cleat? pull It clear from razor-edge- d teeth, thrashing tail and madly squirming body until at last the shark is clear of the net and hanging by Its tall In each shark boat Is an outsize In baseball bats, or at least what looka like a baseball bat only It is rougher and very much heavier. There Is also a revolver of large caliber. With one of these weapons an "anesthetic" Is administered to the captive. Either the bat thuds with every ounce of the wlelder's weight on the nose of the shark, the nose being the sharkish equivalent of the point of the human Jaw, or the revolver does the Job another way. On the dock the shark "surgeon" is waiting. When he dons his bloodstained apron, bares his muscular arms, and delicately tests the keenness of his big collection of knives, the great fish is headed for a shark'a equivalent of the hereafter. Parts That Are Utilized. The salvaged portions of a shark, In order of value, are the hide, the liver, the fins, and the stomach bag. Contrary to prevailing opinion, the teeth are valueless. It Is generally believed that sharks' teeth pass as currency In many of the South Sea Islands; but although teeth, ranging from the razor-edgefangs of the tiger to the Ivory stilettos of the gray nurse, have been hawked throughout the Islands, they have never found a market To revert to the commercialization. First the shark Is killed. No stunning or this time. Next the carcass is washed and the "surgeon" sets about cutting away the fins and begins skinning. This Is a most delicate Job, for one false cut and the value of tbe hide is materially lessened. What makes the cutting so difficult Is the toughness of the hide. It la rough and thick and stubborn, a veritable piscatorial coat of mall, and each cut plays havoc with the skinning knife. So much so, that after six Incisions hone or oilstone must be brought into play. However In a few minutes the shark's clothes look like a cubist cross-wor- d puzzle. Then It Is tug and pull until the hide Is off. After shark and hide have parted company, the latter Is "beamed" the flesh Is cleared away from the inner side. Beaming completed, the hide Is closely Inspected. If any parts are faulty, they are cut away ; and then It goes to the shed for Its first coat of brine. A week later it Is given another coat, and two weeks later a third. It Is then ready for the tanner. The tanner, as a matter of fact, la the mfn who has made shark fishing a feasible and profitable proposition. Until recent years, although It had been proved that sharkskin was among the most durable of leathers, it was not found possible to treat it commercially with any great degree of success. But new methods have deIt Is now possible so to veloped. soften the toughest hide that It may be put to practically every purpose for which the best bullock leather la used. It Is also possible now to retain not only the markings that make sharkskin so distinctive, but also its remarkable qualities of durability. At present the most articles from sharkskin are manufactured footwear, handbags, attache cases, and luggage. The hide of the carpet shark, with its distinctively mottled shagreen. Is used for exclusive feminine footwear and pocketbooks. Oil From the Big Liver. Once you have seen sharks' liver you can understand why the shark fellow. He la is such a probably the liver champion of the world that Is, In point of size. Seemingly he specializes in big livers, for they put his other organs to shame. Plndlmar's record In this respect la that of a tiger who had a liver 13 feet long weighing 200 pounds. And other sharks are proportionately equipped. This dreadful-lookinorgan soon loses Its entity, or whatever Is tbe anatomical equivalent It Is dumped Into a big container and cooked. Heat breaks down the oil cells and the reolL the sulting product Is shark-live- r oil nearest blood relation to cod-livIf anything, it smell worse, but physi cians say that Its medicinal qualities are the same. The liver referred to, In Its liquid medicinal state, yielded 16 gallons. near-killin- d 15-fo- Sally Sez THE UTAH LEGISLATUEE The most severe cots la any budg- -' et ever prepared In the history of Utah are urged in the report of the "committee of nine" presented to Governor Blood and each bouse of the Utah legislature. The committee of three senators, three representatives and. three appointees of the governor, named to study the organisation and operation of the state government, In view of the present stringency In state revenues, brought In the results of their work, which was to work for a balanced state budget A reduction of $1,500,000 from tha total of over $0,000,000 requested by departments and Institution! as required to operate for the next two years Is proposed. To accomplish this the committee recommends cuts In all salaries averaging fifteen per cent ; placing per diem members on various boards, for the blennlum of suspension such institutions as Junior colleges, includllng the Branch Agricultural College at Cedar City, the state fair, the Juvenile courts and eliminating all appropriations for charitable or group-servic-e Institutions. It It also recommended the combination of the functions of the state securities commission, the state chemist, the state board of agriculture, the department of registration, the state training school and others with oth-departments and Institutions which it has been deemed necessary to retain. Should the revenues fall, as some expect they will, below such estimates, the committee recommends that power be given to the governor to reduce expenditures of depart ments or Institutions so that they will cpme within the actual revenue. A measure which would memor-- ' ialiae President-elec- t Roosevelt and the coming special session of congress to enact a copper tariff of not less than 10 cents a pound was introduced in the bouse. The memorial sets forth that the deplorable ' condition of the domestic copper Industry, and the great distress thru-othe western states is largely due ' to the dumping of cheap foreign copper on the domestic market Two bills designed to aid In the . liquidation and reorganization of insolvent building and loan companies were Introduced in the house by Eep. Calne, of Cache county. One measure provides that a building " and loan company, battling with fl-' nanclal difficulties, could reorgans ize with the Sanction of of Its members. The second bill enables members of a building and loan company, which had been taken over by the state banking depart- ment to decide on a course of pro- cedure either .liquidation or reorganization. Under the present law a company In the hands of the banking department has no choice but to proceed with liquidation. Complete copies of the following proposed laws, can be secured from your representative in the legislature. Introduced in the house: H. B. 81 Strengthening the bad check penalty. II. B. 82 Liability of hotel keep- ers. H. B. 83 Exempting Utah low temperature made gas from taxa- km kIw t TIs U kT mm caah mm fceaeV W cftae mU it. la thia Una, . Am lika a tool kataa to law K ' feat tla M gm4 aalaa w aaa It. , P ATBONIZI BOMK IHDUSTXt , Un er ut ' Location of Lapland a not It Lapland separata politW cal entity, but It is a region em bracing about 150,000 square mile In northwest Europe, lying partly in Norway, Sweden and Soviet Bassia,' Utah High School of Beauty Cuittri U nxr CU tld. M Uka Cft, Utat ill Imtj Critttt rnfisskf bm at liprtnlM 1m tm Mt lim I pHisiM Sal ttl uM M IMwafca kr a ml im int. Hi W winU MtrrsaB hurt mm Si mtta, fcmiluu m un turn, nm m ria hi m tiutifH. Hit m tm. THIS WEEK'S PRIZE ST0RT Intanaaantala food mmi tnm Intern k T IntonaoeataJa tooatala prodncta laborer for Intarawantaia fearar. Thara'a tha andlria chain of Intarmeaa tain proapcrity. Lafa aaea iw da US ahara ta kaay the (hala atrans. Bag MRS. GUT ODKW.' Cadar City, Utah. 4 . Place Your Order Now two-third- tion. n. B. 81 Relating to default of state land contracts. H. B. 85 Delinquency of taxes. II. B. 88 rlssuance of tax deeds. H. B. 87 Exemption from Jury duty. H. B. 88 Pertaining to building and loan corporations. II. B. 89 Reorganization of defunct building and loan associations. H. B. 90 Amending sections of mil km, ttrktrm. Kads, leeks Ml Dim ami PrMnctlN inl t'.cii,iatil X Mlutu fat lac. haters titrilwitri h "tat-mr aroaters, Hi kr mski, Hi Uwsli thick Inlut. Wrlti In tpaclaJ prlcM tat sisk estmts ta trdus tact' Ma. Fit hit ftn in Ramshaw Hatcheries IM Ml St. Sua Sunt, Ul Ltki Citr. Ski or Skis The plural of ski is cither ski of Ids. Frequently the plural is er roneously written skiis, due to tha fact that the double i occurs in skiing, the present participle form. JPJiJP SB GASOLINE Packed With Power Great Book Publishing Business The book publishing business ta the United States grosses approxW mately $150,000,000 annually. ASK YOUB DRUGGIST FOB APEX naors AW INTERMOUNTAIN Chinese PRODUCT and Japanese papers made of paper-makin- g fibers peculiar to the Orient and said to data back to the Fourteenth century have been found. Utah statutes pertaining to building and loan associations. H. B. 92 Special Improvement taxes. H. B. 93 Cadavers for school of medicine, University of Utah. H. J. M. 3 Tariff of 10 cents on f copper. H. J. R. 9 Survey of workmen's compensation act. II. J. R. 10 Minimum wages for women and minors. II. B. 08 Fixing time statutes he English sparrow was introduced in the fall' of 1850 when Nicolas Pike brought 18 birds U Brooklyn, N. Y. H. B. 69 Certification of statutes. II. B. 70 Adopting and legalizing Statutes. H. B. 71 Legalizing statutes for publication purposes. II. B. 72 Bonding the sale of 12S Na. Mala BU Bait Laka Citr Canaalt ear pobtie Adrhtory Dcpartmaal for an phaaa of Modern funeral ntatbods and chargea. Fifty 7ara at Berriea. take effect. clgaret and clgaret papers. II. B. 73 Sale and disposal convict-mad- e B. poultry. H. B. 76 Capital of banks, loan and trust companies. II. B. 77 Certificates of title for mistered motor vehicles. II. B. 78 Requiring registration of motor vehicles. II. B. 79 Licensing of motor vehicle operators. II. B. 80 Cost of proceedings brought by poor persons. Introduced in the senate: S. B. 01 Coal corporations at public utilities. 8. B. C2 Adjustment of fire losses. S. B. C3 Issuance of tax deed perfume is so expensive that most of it consist of synthetic substitutes. to Orchid make CASH PAID of goods. 74 Relating to manufactured goods by convicts. H. B. 75 Quarantine of diseased II. JOSEPH WM. TAYLOR, Inc. Funeral Directors & Advisers. Fir III M kvttri Btttal Cnwn, Itsim Bl W. M. Mc CONAHAY, Jeweler m iiu & btt uti ti tut wra ucEisa ftct at iM still ai Mir rltkt aw, ttat itritt tatt I alll it nunst is rn K nj task Mir sat utttfttttn. m MmiK,ILhninl I Ml N II. L tun omci Brut Lacking lemons, the early Colonists steeped sumac berries at s cooling drink. IAA II 1 Pr for tha twat artlcl. aa "Why ran hen Id aaa Intcrtaaantaia aiada Goada" Similar ta ahara. Sand font atary in praaa ar nraa to In. tarnmntaln Prodacta Calaain. P. O.. Bai ISSt, Salt Laka City. If yeat Af4 "HI ha paid .Tri d atory appaara colanw ma chtch fa cla W.N.U. A? $5.00. Bait Lake City Waek No. MOT |