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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEffl, UTAH Nothing but the Truth! SUCH IS LIFE our motwek go ( By Oiarles Sughroe t rUE CAN. ACVC WAV -- i SOU TbU- - Mfc MVAEN SUE WANTS TO KNOW HOW THE CURVES "GET THAT WAY" From the top of her night duk piano llelen Morgan looks atoUt ind see curves and still more curT and finds them all delightfuL But It Is not necessary to climb t the top of a piano to observe th anatomical phenomena which UorgaD discusses. There are curT on every hand, sometimes eoiergin. where they had been least suspetJ Everywhere the boyish figures of w. teryear are blossoming seductively d The and fend! line contours of predepression da ire as extinct as petticoats. prok ibly it may be set down to fejjimn, ontrarlness that the curves of fa on began to Bwell when the statli tical curres of business were all & slab-side- self the time lost In looking over articles, and to clear wanted space, such The Household Br LYDIA LE BARON WALKER are two definite things THERE home-makhas to consider la relation to gotx) housekeeping, namely: time and space. Kach person baa an equal amount of time at ber disposal. Each person haa at her disposal a certain amount of space in ber dwelling which may be a spa- clous house or a small apartment The 'apportionment of space la unequal, sometimes by pref erence, since there are persons who delightasInwellsmall as quarters, those who revel In large houses.' Hut, whether a dwelling ta large or small, there still exists the relation of time and space In re sect to the care of articles contained discrimination should be learned. It promotes good housekeeping. Mirrors in Decoration. Mirrors as adjuncts to decoration are enjoying a revival It la true that mirrors. In themselves, bave always been used. Their fashion waxes and wanes, but the looking glass Is never ay a decorative eleentirely ment It Is equally true that periodically the reflectors amount to significance In other ways than ar framed mirrors, and necessities of the bou- Issue men f'-- I doir. Electric celling lights are now fitted with mirrors to contribute to their ornamentation. Incidentally the reflections intensify the power of the bulbs. Therefore they do more than lend ornament but as this has always been true. It will be found that It la because of the vogue of looking glasses that such lighting fixtures are featured. The frencb side- - lights In e sconce style are bringing hack the beauty of reflections by having electric bulbs substituted for candle light Here we again find that It Is a renaissance rather than an entirely novel Idea. old-tim- tl 131. Bell Syndicate. She's slm WNU Service down to whether the things the home are worth the time required for their care. In this consideration the necessities are slm-iluand the proper enre of them la e ra 1 v e if the r, - i 1?K f home-make- ' I ' LEONARD I - I f: 1 t the majority rule? Only a cursory 4 J (! f i Miss Agnes Macauley Rodgers, of physical education at George Washington university, has the distinction of being the only girl selected on the hockey team. Women Announce Rome. Italy's most popular radio announcer la a woman SIgnorlna Maria Lulsa Boncoinpagnl. Most of the Italian announcers are women. Like) By Lame Bode 7 rV'" s S ' JT 1 yjT. , ; yV MILES PER HOUft Because op propelipg CC(l.TANrC UUCU niwiu. " " High cas-Gasole- ne POUUTEEN CENTS PE ft GALLON. ua tn svir. A plague op rats IN NORTHERN n!A WAS RECENTLY STOPPtO BY A GREAT UAILSTC&H VVHiCil 0ESTCOYE0 THOUSANOS. ria MAXIMUM SPEED, THE RECORD OF 0VER 0O MILES PER HOUR WAS OBTAINED WITH KYtCsa unr cc' - in France is taxed Rats in- structor ZM BARRETT forlty.' In the final anal ysis, however, does V!.e y-;4 A. The accepted theory Is that the ma jority rules. The legality of a vote depends upon the ballot If the majority votes yes, the Issue Involved Is declared constitutional Public of ficials are elected by a majority vote of the electors. The power to create bond Issues and enact municipal laws depends upon the will of the ma- - f r -- By ' f m ODD THINGS AND NEW ' t With the adveut of prohibition repeal It K. Joyce has an Important Job. ' over-crowde- valuable things is as touch an error as to keep worthless ones. To be determined to spare one's fi "MINORITIES" r. occupy. To discard fcl . 1 petent For example, there must be chairs and tables, dining room furniture, chamber suites or their equivalents, kitchen equipments, ,etc, to fill the requirements of the size of the family. So let us eliminate these furnishings and center attention on' the extras which, by this very cataloguing, cannot be Included under present necessities. ' Wasted Space. I For example, let us peep Into the closets and note whether the articles on the shelves are worth the space they occupy and the time required to or otherwise In keep them moth-proo- f good condition. Probably the ribbon box Is brimful of odds and ends, with occasional handsome ribbons In with them. The lace box also Is probably filled with an assortment of cheap and good length of lace, some real laces among them. By weeding out these boxes, material for little gifts may be found, the quantities so reduced that smaller containers will be sufilelent, d shelf afford and the apace for more needed things. There are few things so wasteful of time as going over articles stored way, yet this must be done repeatedly to see that the things are kept In good condition. It cultivates discrimination to do this, for one learns what Is valuable enough to warrant spending this time and energy on, and what things are worth the space they h . I Iro-p- Is a com- : . . He Is the new permit supervisor of the federal alcohol control administration and decides, with the aid of the board, the quantities of liquor that may be Imported Into the United States from the various foreign countries. Mr. Joyce formerly was supervisor of permits for the Cincinnati district Ail-Americ- an In woman . out-date- d In It. The Watches Imports ( re- view of the power of a minority convinces one that the majority may delegate by vote a certain power, but It Is Impossible for the majority to control that power. For Instance, who controls the affairs of a municipality? A small minority every time. The will of a corrupt minority is a menace to any community. Who controls the management of a large corporation? The number of stockholders In many cases numbering thousands of persons, have little or nothing to say. That power rests In the hands of a small minority of directors, and their decisions are binding upon the stockholders who really own the corporation. In any social group, especially If organized Into an association, club, r society, a minority can become the center of a disturbing Interest which may not only cause serious trouble, but result In wrecking the organization. In r.ermany, Hitler and his crowd, very small at first, were a decided minority. No one will deny the power of his leadership In Germany today. When Mussolini began Invading Italy with his political philosophy, he represented a small minority. Today he is the dominant power In Italian national life. While the balance of power rests In the hands of a majority, the minority exercises that power as long as the majority Is content to delegate It. There Is sufficient moral power in the majority of citizens to rid any city of corruption. So long as the majority is unconcerned about the moral life of Its community, the minority retains the right of way. Who, then, jwissesses, the greater power? The majority, who by its vote delegates the power, or the minority who exercises It? Which has' the greater influence In a nation, city, or society? , Camel Test in 1856 Recalled in Texas Daughters of Confederacy Mark Site With Plaque. San Antonio, Texas. In a remote and still sparsely settled section of Kerr county, Texas, stands an old stone ranch house, In the shadow of which a simple ceremony recently revived an almost forgotten chapter In and economic history of the military the United States. The old ranch house was not always such. Once it was the officers' headquarters building at Camp Verde, an important military post on the Texas frontier. Reputedly laid out by Robert E. Lee, later commander in chief of the Confederate army, but then a United States colonel of cavalry In Texas, Camp Verde became famous as the home of tl.e government camel herd Imported from the Levant during the administration of Jefferson Davis as United States secretary of war. ruins of the camel Crumbling or pen, part of whose 'dobe "khan," walls were sixteen feet high, remain near the ranch house as evidence of the experimental use of humped beasts from the Near East In American military and commercial transport Dedicate Plaque. In the recent ceremony the United Daughters of the Confederacy, division of Texas, dedicated a bronze marker commemorating what is left of Camp Verde, whose hallowed walls are linked with the past presence of such men as the illustrious Lee and Albert Sidney Johnston. History records that' Camp Verde, or Fort Verde, as It also was called, was established as a military post on July miles north8, 185C It Is sixty-fivwest of San Antonio. The old fort was captured by Confederate troops on February 28, 1SC1. As quoted in "Texas Camel Tales," written by Cbris Emmett of San Antonio, Lieutenant Hill of the Confederate forces reported that among other things captured at the post were "eighty camels and two Egyptian drivers." Jefferson Davis, when secretary of war In 1855, obtained a $30,000 e congressional appropriation the animals, brought the first shipload via old Powder Horn (Indianola), Texas, 75 Were Imported. thirty-fou- r camels were imported in two shipments was unloaded on May 13, 1S56, at Indianola, the Texas port which long ago was swept away- - by a gulf storm. Although employment of the army camels actually Included use in the pursuit of Indians, their outstanding uses were in Lieut W. H. Echols' reconnaissance of the Texas Rig Bend section (near the Rio Grande) with a camel train in 1800 and, prior to that Lieut E. F. Beale's camel expedition to California In 1S57 the "Great Wagon Road" over a southern route. Incidentally, the Southern Pacific railroad later was built practically along that route, and the advance of the steam locomotive seventy-fiv- at $31 a Coopwood buying sixty-sihead at San Antonio In 18G6. Use of the animals in private transportation enterprises, however, did not prove Eventually many of the profitable. camels found their way to circuses; others strayed off or were turned loose. x dining. How the transformation hag been effected is a source of contintm amazement to the uninitiated. Mia Morgan gives a hint : "The women took a tuck In their waistlines, pulled them up a bit and lo! The curves were there. She also lays it to the times: repeal, good food and good fellowship. But the curves beat to It by at least a year. Som thing must he said for food. The sweet young things who used to starve on Meiba toast, a lean lamh chop and a glass of water now frank ly admit that they like pot roast and mashed potatoes and are no longet ifrald to eat them. That's a break for the beef jnd totato Industry. One wonders, how ever, how long the mode will last shudders at the and Latest Parisian Hat r Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the original little liver pills put up 60 yean ago. They regulate liver and bowel. Adv. - a New Harmonica Typ "chemical harmonica," twin gw flames in glass sounding bells flanked by rotating mirrors, was one of the physical exhibits of A Century of A r Progress exposition at Chicago. The sounding bells are arranged as organ pipes with a metal stop at the bottom opening to permit the entrance of air which causes vibrations, giving forth the tune. Pitch is controlled by the length of the bell. The vibrations are visible only through the use of mirrors. One of the latest Parisian fashion creations Is this beige felt hat with navy and red grosgrain trimming. Curfew in Thuringia Berlin. The minister of educatlou in the state of Thuringia has decree 1 that boys and girls under the age of fourteen must not be permitted on the streets after 8 :45 p. m. In summer an i 6:45 p. m. In winter. let them get a strangle Fight germs quickly. Don't hold. combines 7 major helps d in Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by one. Creomulsion. e Burglar Alarm Turns on Electric Light Lepzig, Germany. (adv.) STOPPED UP No wires, electrical current or alarm bells are used in the latest form of burglar alarm. The movement of a human body Is recorded by an extremely sensitive arrangement of lenses, which in turn give an alarm signal by turning on an electric light The device may be placed at the side of a doorway, where it will be quite Invisible, and the alarm can be transmitted any distance. The device, which was demonstrated at the Leipzig fair, may be put to a great variety of uses. It Is placed before shop windows so that when any one approaches at night the lights In the show window Instantly are turned on and remain alight until the person has passed. NOSTRILS; Open the nostrils and permit free breathing by using Mentholatum night and morning. OLD COINS. Tour attic may contats fortune. 89 page Illustrated coin book,priM 20o 165 postpaid, showing prlres we BLUESTONK - Syracuse, East Onondaga . . Tormented for Five Years with Dandruff Great Editor's Dream Comes True Heated by Cuticura "For nearly five years I was towith dandruff. My scalp itched and burned and became wry sore and red from scratching, w hair became thin and dry and fejj out in handfuls, and the dandrul scaled off and could be seen on X rmented clothing. "I had lost all hope of ever beln? healed. A friend told me about Cm cura Soap and Ointment and I for a free sample. The first &PP11 tion stopped the itching so I bought more, and I used only one cake oj Cuticura Soap with two boxes Cutfcura Ointment and I was healed. J (Signed) Mrs. M. L. Carruthers, 1933. tersvllle, Va., Aug. 23, Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 5j& Talcum 25c. Proprietors: Ptter Drug & Chemical Corp., Mai Mass, Adv. "Old Ironsides" Fulfilled Woman's Great Ambition r, of go oul Clev- Dr. U3J. Wontern Newapaper Cnlon. Ore. Mrs. Alice Hull fulfilled a lifelong Welch, eighty-two- , ambition when the frigate "Old Ironsides" anchored in Portland harbor. Escorted by members of the Daughters of 1812. she stood on the bridge of the old ship where her Capt Isaac Hull, stood as he commanded the Constitution during the battle with the Ouerrlere. With her were her great-grannephews, Donald Hull Sauer, eight, and George W. Hull, fourteen. painfulness the deflation when the curves as suddenly as they came In. eland Plain Dealer. for the camels, and Maj. Henry Constantine Wayne, who went to the Levant for The first cargo of was one of the developments that discouraged continuance and extension of camel transport But during the Civil war camels carried Confederate cotton two bales to the camel to the Mexican border at Brownsville, returning with salt from salt lakes near the Gulf coast After the war private owners acquired the government camels, Bethel d i A 3 4 "Jllli'JLhiili I lie utvuiu of the late Col W it v i the Kansas City Star, was to give 'to HaJ has been realized, for the William JoKaims Ui B'f v D im dedicated and opened 5aHnry of art nS f0r exhibits were about liMnoSS the bu ? America, masterpieces. A pirt ' bSSESjhaiS'S AtkIn wnich Is the library of Colonel museum, in Nelson. f tS "iutST'"" 1 h5Jt IjTll ' wa W Ai ivlUt0' iuivi ' |