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Show LEIII FREE PRESS. LEHL UTAH Two Royal Families That Are Soon to Be United , v i V 1 i By Bob Nichols Sbootins Yv'y ; j ' Edito. FicU mod Stream! gunners even the FEW upland ever how 11- HjCJtU.v A, - good realize fully good shooting depends on good standing. Most gunners go trudging through the brush without ever a thought ot where their feet ought to be placed to be In the most advantageous position for quick and accurate shooting. I will venture to say that at least IH) per cent of all misses made by good shots In the field are the result of poor foot and body position. The direct cause of the miss may be or or more probably But the primary shooting behind. cause i bad stance and let us use this term Instead of the other because it Is already a widely understood word through its association with correct form In golfing. Form actually holds as much significance in shooting as It does in golf. Once yon understand the principles of good form you can, through constant practice, adapt these principles to your No two golfers use the physique. same identical stance. Yet each is applying the same identical principles to his own peculiar characteristics of height, weight, arm length, and so on. No two crack shots use the same identical stance either. But you can rest assured that each, like the good golfer, is applying the self same set of principles to bis shooting. Good stance In shooting, as In golfing, is simply the elimination of muscular conflict which results in smooth over-shootin- under-shootin- 1 i. 4 ' ' 'if' 1 W It or . . : : a a Meiubers ot the royal families of England and Greece photographed outside of Balmoral castle, Scotland, where they were on holiday after the arrival of Princess Marina of Greece and her fiance, Prince George of England. Left to right are: Princess Nicholas of Greece, King George, Princess Marina, Prince George, Queen Mary and Prince Nicholas of Greece. "Picture Brides" Set Out to Meet Their Husbands ""2rr--- - With smooth muscular your hands and arms and legs synchronize In completing any given motion. You act with speed, and yet without hurry or bungling flusteratlon. Your bird flushes, your feet assume and unconsciously remembered positions, your hands and arms function faultlessly through the familiar routine, your gun swings onto Dead bird I your target and bang And the whole cycle took perhaps less than one second to complete. Having learned form, the good shot appears to shoot and kill his game with an air of easy carelessness. But behind his apparent carelessness lies an experience of perhaps thousands of practice shots. He shoots in unconscious rhythm because form has become automatic and mechanical with him. He no longer needs to think about It The average hunter walks too fast In the field and takes too long steps. On a surprise rise he Is Invariably caught off balance. Walk 6lower and you will not only kick out more game, but you stand a much better chance of bagging it when It gets up. In cover where it seems likely a bird or rabbit may pop out at any moment, your good shot Is a most careful walker. If d he is a shot he will take short steps, keep his feet fairly close together, take shorter steps with his right foot than with his left foot, and always his left foot out ahead of the right But his feet are never very d 1 Japanese girls, whose marriage has been arranged by the exchange of pictures, leaving Tokyo for Manchuria to who are serving as "armed emigrants." be married to husbands Hauptmann's Bail Set at BUCKEYE PASSER $100,000 , right-hande- far apart. a' C P A ' He knows that to shoot well you must swing your gun, using the body as a steady, supporting pivot. If flie bird gets up and quarters to the left (In front of a shooter) he pivots on his left foot For the right swinging shot he pivots on the right foot. His movements are mev-chanical and smooth. No pulling muscles to stop his gun swing. His gun movements are almost pendulum-likIn their freedom from conflicting muscle strain. ' Some good shots often fall Into a V-- ;' crouch when shootslight, But they pivot Just the same. ing. The loose-kneecrouch sometimes gives one a feeling of Increased security of footing. But If the crouch becomes stiff and exaggerated the shooter will find himself missing quartering and Stanley Pincura, quarterback, a Junior, one of the stars of Ohio's great crossing birds because the severe team of last year, and one of the Big crouch "freezes" his muscles Into rigidTen's ablest passers, Is in the Ohio ity and therefore prevents freedom of lineup this year. swing. Never try to shoot from bad footing If you can help it If the game zooms WESTERN CHAMPION out behind you, don't try to twist yourself Into a pretzel to shoot Turn around, get your footing then shoot Shooting in good form makes It easier right-hande- i ;7 d . ffel 'f e V: if spired and uninspiring as they may seem to one who looks upon them coldly and Impersonally 1 The setting to rights of the little tome, the preparation of the meal the family will enjoy are these du ties trying to B woman of imagination T For my part I should say the more Imagination, the less trying they ere. Every Job, of course, at some time palU, all work has Its good and Us less pleasant aspects. Duties which In themselves might be pleasureable become a strain when multiplied beyond the capacity of single person to cope with them, But If the demands upon her are within reasonable limits, I can very well understand a wife and mother with abundant Imagination enjoying the tasks Involved In the making of of chil a home and the dren. It requires Imagination on the part of the observer to feel the Joyous thrill In the task of making up s lnnch for little Bobby to take to school, to measure the unbounded flights of fancy enjoyed by a mother A bedspread in crochet la a work bent over the apparently monotoof art, attracts attention and fre- nous Job of making a party dress for quently becomes an heirloom. A her daughter. Is it that women are suited to mospread crocheted In one piece becomes cumbersome as the work pro- notony or that their Imagination degresses. How much simpler to cro- feats monotony? Bell Srndlcntt. WNU Service, chet one motif at a time and then assemble the motifs to complete spread. Watch your work grow when It can Records Whitewashed be taken along with you to social When John Vacko, headman of gatherings. Lhots, Czechoslovakia, returned boms The above Illustration represents he found that the walls of his room the "Snow Flake" motif and how It bad been whitewashed by his wife, so chows up when put together. This he beat her. John told the Judge tba motif when made of carpet warp local council meets In the room, and momeasures six Inches. Thirty-tw- o to save paper, he had written the tifs can be made from one pound of minutes on the walls. His wife's warp. This la only one of the 29 act caused the loss of sn entirs motifs shown In our book No. 27 on year's records. motif bedspreads. These motifs can also be used to make match sets for bedroom: curtains, pillows, chair- backs, scarfs, etc Write our crochet department Inclosing 15c for this book No. 27, Il lustrated, with Instructions, or send 25c and receive also book No. 26, Why with 72 edgings and Insertions In cro chet for all purposes. Address Home Craft company Liquid Dept B Nineteenth & St Louis avenueSt Louis, Mo. Crochet Motif for Bedspread free-movin- g 6 Hospitals Use a Daily Tasks for Wife and Mother Few Women Will Look Upon Household Duties as "Monotonous." "Women are best suited for monotonous Jobs." That heading to a news dispatch sent several of our readers up in arms. "Best suited Indeed. WTiat they mean Is that women did the monotonous work that was put upon them as long as they could not help writes one of the themselves," friends whom we heard from before. The basis for It all was the publication of a report of a British sociologist that women adapt themselves to monotonous work with greater success than men, that they can best bring themselves to the dally performance of monotonous work without losing their interest in life. It Is true enough that women have for centuries done uncomplainingly the work that was their duty, though it was not always the work they would have chosen. The reference Is of course to the monotonous grind of housework, the Job of home and children. But it seems to me that that Is not all there Is to It The question is, are household tasks as monotonous to the wife and mother as they seem? Are the routine chores Involved always as unln- - Laxative Hospitals and doctors have always used liquid laxatives. And the publio is fait returning to laxatives in liquid form. Do you know the reasons? The dose of a liquid laxative can bo measured. The action can thus bo regulated to suit individual need. It forms no habit; you need not take "double dose" a day or two later. Nor will a mild liquid taxalive irrUat$ the kidneys. The right dose of a liquid laxativo brings a more natural movement, and there is no discomfort at the time, or after. The wrong cathartic may often do more harm than good. A properly prepared liquid laxativo like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsia brings cafe relief from constipation. It gently helps the average person's bowels until nature restores them to regularity. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is an approved liquid laxative which all druggists keep ready foi use. It makes an ideal family laxative; effective for all ages, and may be given the youngest child. Salt Lake City's fewest Hotel A St VlHf,7 d uA Hauptmann (center), Indicted for extortion in connection with his possession of some of the $50,000 Lindbergh ransom money, photographed In Bronx County court when he pleaded "not guilty" to the charge. Ball was set at $100,000. Bruno IUchard 0l Coast Guard Gun Barks for Officers Head '4." f - 200 Rooms C Western Nwpper "vf ; $L E!ht-inc- h Coast artillery at Fort Hancock shown gun of the In action during an inspection visit by Gen. Donn! Nolan, confinandant of the Second Corps area, and Gen. William E. Cole, district commandant Fifty-secon- d Sirs. Hilda Stowell of Chicago won the western sectional tournament for women pocket billiard players at the World's fair and Is now qualified to compete for the national title against Mrs. Gertrude Baker McEvoy, New York, present national amateur champion, In Washington, D. O, next Funeral urns, In which ashes of Vikings ancestors have rested since placed In Denmark some 8,500 years ago, form part of a collection of Stone and Iron age Implements on view at the American Museum of Natural History, says United Press. There are In the collection approximately 3,500 Implements, among which figure weapons with which these primeval men fought and amber with which their wives and daughters adorned themselves. Consisting of daggers, spear heads and scrapers of primitive planes for smoothing rough wood or bone, the oldest implements In the collection are of flint Kazors, molded on much the same pattern as the modern ones, came later and were of bronze, dating about 1,500 hi ppout Mormon Tabtmadt C ROSSITER, Mgr. Union. Implements of Iron and r 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 11.50 ERNEST to scorel "8 ..-v- TEMPLE SQUARE II the nostrils lo relieve l HI Irritation and promote ill clear breathing. THE Stone Age Exhibited i HOTEL a C. Quake Deitroyt Farm Land Strangest of the consequences of the recent earthqimke in Bihar, northern India, is the complete destruction of most of the country's farm land. The convulsion forced millions of tons of sand up through the earth's top crust burying forever the tillable soiL EIOTTEIL 0 A Distinctive Residence An Abode. ..renowned Throughout the West Mrs. J. H. Waters, President Salt Lake's Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 pountB $2.50to$450 400 Rooms 400 Baths the Hotel fttewlaoiase W. E. SUTTON, Ceneral Manager T. WEST CIIAUNCEY Astitt. Cetu Manager |