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Show wnmu III The Living Truth not need to defend WJS : Truth is its own Not many years ago defC!nts and bankers, when mer Places of bus'"ned the lights and off ier Des .Wat heavy shutters. aside the blinds The urn on a strong light. the truth of it so Shaved to expose may see what it even-onus give up trying to Ss Let faith. It better far Sard our I I L IJ 1 l, T TV r ! ..... 1 I y-- . wuixe Upturn ",M'S URGE REVIVES! TmTnflTW hU Odor of Gasoline These Dayi as ii wwHmnvi WAUOJN "Home, Swert Home" Has an .111 I Fancy of American Public. I III I J Ask Me Another ' e Be'J ; find C. T Tylir, Extrusion A..iairStale r PjU Till Next Week thinks noth- hapThe geologist of a thousand years. I lent one ten dolSap-Gnight. last lars ' osh! Discretion teacher had been trying to of the inculcate the principles widen rule. she asked, "Now, Tommy, "what would you do supposing a boy struck you?" "How big a boy are you supposing?" demanded Tommy. The OH.FOR A STEAM SHOVEL ?5i IOI7 I'll have to dig all day that bulb." "Gosh! to plant Home, Sweet Home As the Poet Never Imagined It. By WILLIAM C. UTLEY must be moving in for we're back to the AMERICA wagon days again. cycles, But such covered wagons! There are those, to be sure, who will say that pioneers have lost their salt since the prairie schooner has gone streamline. But the real hit of this year's automobile shows in both New York and Chicago is the trailer. The sudden craze of the American people to become nomads albeit, of the de luxe varietymay soon bring $100,000,000 in annual business for the 220-yar- 2. Why are detectives sometimes called sleuths? 3. What three oceans form part of the boundary of Canada? 4. The son of what famous pot served many years on the United States Supreme court? 5. What is a flageolet? 6. Viho were the "grand moguls"? 7. Of what South American country is Montevideo the capital? 8. What is a marten? 9. Who was Jean Ingelow? 10. What was the "Wilmot Proviso"? Poul- Jrrey Already you'll find thousands of these 1937 prairie schooners with shower baths making camp in as many places in the United States every day by rippling streams, in sylvan dells, at Aunt Molly's Tourists' Haven, on cliffs overlooking the Grand Canyon, the great silence broken ditch's only by the swing music which blasts from the home on wheels. Chameleon-LikA recent issue of the New Yorker "I've a bookkeeper in my office who has gone gray in my service." magazine reports that there is even "That's nothing. I've a typist a family living in a trailer in a in my office who has gone black, parking lot off Broadway. The brown, blond, platinum, and Tidaughter of the house is a pretty tian red in my service " photographer's model, fond of going out in slippers and evening gown when the Gay White Way lights up. Boy friends in silk WOMEN WHO HOLD hats bid her good night on the doorstep of the family trailer. All she THEIR MEN has to do to lose a beau is persuade dad to move the NEVER LET THEM KNOW family hearth to some other parking lot. matter how much your NOback Statistics Are Unavailable. aches and your nervea cream, your husband, because he Roger Babson, the eminent statisla only a man, can never d not long ago voiced his pretician, why you are so hard to live with one week in every month. diction that Americans were desToo often the honeymoon extined to become more and more a press Is wrecked by the nagging nomadic people. The apparently tongue of a wife. The inwise woman never lets her husband haphazard growth of the trailer the know by outward that a fad from pleased sign that she la dustry ina victim of periodic pain. fancy of a few to an importanttrend For tliree generations one woman a has told another how to dustry seems to indicate go "smiling through" with Lydia E. which may bear him out. 's Vegetable Compound. It has the business Sn ranidlv helps Nature tono up the ' system, ,,v,.icinctK-thpre thus lessening the discomforts grown aiiu ju cm k1"" from the functional disorders which few statistics to measure it. are women must endure In the for three Just what the saturation point not ordeals of life: 1. Turning from be, may trailer industry prlhood to womanhood. 2. Preparing for motherhood. 3. Apeven the manufacturers themselves proaching "middle age." can be sure. Don't be a wife. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'8 one thing, they hue not nad Kor l ie VEGETABLE COMPOUND and Bnnr nn iiu uu J lime auj o Smiling too been Through." have two years they last But with the orders. filling busy interest in the life of the open road intensified by the trailer exhibits in Early Americans and the current automobile shows, they Pioneers Used Poulare now attempting to plan for the tices for Colds future. There is really no mystery to the koUMwiVM md;n It probmd. ih. nod.rn W.yi. beginning of the movement. h Dnr.r this: like ick , relief to ably started something over on mechanic a Doakes, or Joe i'JJP1'"?"in eh.st colds. Keep who your medicine chest. Avenue B in Amcricantown, At All Drug Stores wife the with likes to go touring Siie, 50c Practical Sise. 2Se got tired and kids in the summer,decided to and tent of pitching a a little cabin with four himself build 49- -36 solid walls that could be set v?un a chassis and towed by the .n,Uy Bide-a-We- e awe-inspiri- e high-heele- d under-ten- three-quart- er Pink-ham- three-quart- er JJ lH3" There is virtually no limit to the variety of the trailers. In the New York show there were exhibited some 50 different models, the products of half that many factories. Displayed ingeniously in attractive, if synthetic, rural settings, they gave the spectator a real idea of their usefulness on the road. Some of the less expensive trailers were merely carriers for baggage, folding tents and beds. At the top of the cost chart are the palatial "land yachts" with real beds, kitchenettes, refrigeration and radios. Some have even air conditioning and structural insulation. The type of customer for whom they are intended often governs their design. Some of the simpler types find favor with the itinerant farm laborer. Others are ideal for the traveling preacher or "circuit rider." Circulating libraries, carnival troupes and medicine shows use them. Traveling clinics find them convenient, and moving picture stars employ them as portable dressing rooms when they are "on location." But by far the bulk of the sales are made to the vacationists. Price Determines Luxury. Trailers are usually 18 to 20 feet long. One type, which ranges in price from $495 to $1,015, has Pullman type windows in double groups with sashes and frames of steel. The body is mounted on a steel chassis and running gear, with tongue and groove flooring. Concealed in the rear of the interior is a kitchen which boasts a combination cooking and heating stove, table high, porcelain sink, work tables, cupboards and a refrigerator. Adjacent to the kitchen are Pullman seats; when a folding table is assembled they make up an attrac- tive dinette. These also make up into a double bed. A studio couch converts into another double bed. Most of the remainder of the models exhibited are variations of the one just described. Their differences often lie in mechanical improvements. Some have two rooms, with a door in each. They likewise vary in degree of streamlining. Some of the cheaper models are but hardly more than the more expensive ones are designed to cleave the air with the greatest of ease. Quite comfortable models are available at less expense than the uninitiated would suppose. One line, which starts at $275, has streamline design, air conditioning, modern interiors designed by women, adjustable ro:.j clearance for wilderness driving, low floor level and overall heir.l.i, chrome molybdenum spr.Mgs, rubber mounted, and metal cabinets. Pastel shades are used in the decorating and windows in some models are of the type used in automobiles. The cheapest model at the show cost $119.50, but it was not a cabin type trailer. It has air mattresses now in the field. There are several dozen leaders in the industry which make trailers exclusively. It was not until last year that trailers really became numerous enough to warrant public attention. No one can be sure just how many were produced in 1935, but conservative guesses place the number at 0. somewhere between 20,000 and The total production for 1936 should be somewhere in the neighborhood of 60,000; the following year the figure may rise to 200,000 units. The total number of families now on the road touring in trailers is believed to be equal to about that figure. Sees Sale of Million. 35,-00- Manufacturers themselves cannot agree upon just what the future of the trailer is. One leading engineer and automotive designer, William R. Stout, attributes its popularity to the rising to favor of portaReasons for this, he ble "homes. says, are the housing shortage, fluctuating employment and taxation of property. Undoubtedly, if the trailer craze continues to grow, Un- cle Sam will have to devise some new way of taxing these nomads who have no real estate. If he can catch "em often enough to collect. Another manufacturer believes that Americans will buy a million trailers. "This may seem a Jutle ,, but with a he admits, optimistic, e continued tendency toward the cialistic state, you are going to find a large part of the population at- . .... v... LL'IIJUllllt; tu iiuva wii .3 Almc traii- ii am economic proutems, " v,.nnHrrfiil solution to the tl low-cohousing as well as travel so-th- st problems." There seems to be little chance that the trailer industry ever will rival the automobile industry in size, and few of the manufacturers think it will. The executive head of one firm states that he does not believe it will ever be very large and in a few years will settle down Another to "normal operation." manufacturer is even more skeptical, saying that the saturation point for' trailers costing between $1,200 and $5,000 "will be reached much earlier than many manufacturers expect." Coach trailers find their way from manufacturer to consumer in throe flivver. wavs, chiefly. Most of them are in Garaser,. Many Factories sold through automobile dealers Joe aid a but some are sold by independct mechanic. f"od a Being of it and spent an dealers who handle trailers e. pretty good job His accounts of sivcly and some through factory enjoyable summer. of the Gil cent, representatives. About the trip impressed some are PmhablV the Smiuis, tiic New York Times r car acai-Th- e the m.,, reguli sold through kui the street, down u.u makers of the more ex- ers. them a trailer, i ruicame io pa.s.i It ,ue.. iruneis uivui ..jo and the Browns or pensive fees Joe was receiving direct factory representatives. They the that . , ... . ,r,,-.remunei Jtle have to be expert at estimating his laoors nc So he quit costs on custom-buil- t jobs. shop his regular than u: nmi -started a little haik". Widely. Models I1JS :u-- 1 p- -r DOLL A DC J a utniTu lib l bill successful person is a healthy yourself be handic.pped headaches, a sluggish conditioa, "nerves" and other dangerous "'over-acidit- , . juu J...in his eara.iie and wrnt .,..,,-,." into the business in earticst. Tf ,,n inlv .Toe's ( se by a cmisiuri will have an able number and you the factories in barns sprang .... ovo, the how ,.r ii,nm " try. ooim: u.OU ." - MlLMse,. rnn vaavii rigmal milk of n1;'gnesla inwafer form, neutralizes stomach acids, afer p,Msant elimination. quus 4 Kach tcarpoonfuls milk of mag- -' ,st,.t"".20.-,.15c&riO- everywhere. of cotir.-- ill'S compa to see ,. nnr the nociy iHiian,., . WI HI iev' ' 'nnssi hlllllCs . ..i ,,.,,, vimatelv ;i!H) . slL.es, euS ism So. centers but the st thorn of ti.e it;an, wiierc most of the latter are Three plants are. Vary The principal buyers of trailers or famitoday are footloose persons breadlies' 'especially tiioie whose work. winners have retired from small have pensions, Some of then sav- or have act umidated a modest iwosi ui are olhcrs weaiuiy. nigs; travel south to avoid the unthem , f r.orlhern winters. ....n) n(,ss ... l i one manuiuL-ture- r Nearly half its output, to sold is persons just reports, of ,l,out to retire. The average age between forty a buver of a trailer is manyears, says another are there admits who ufacturer, nd 'iiftv n and pillows for two. The top, when opened may be converted into a re'-oris- ' j waterproof tent. A far cry from this is a palace on wheels which sells for $12,000. Six persons can sleep in it. It has everything you would expect to find in a small modern home. There are shower baths, radio, telephone communication with the driver, heating systems and accessories such as card tables, foot rests, spcedome-- i ters and altimeters. Even the automobiles themselves have begun to show he influence of the trailer. Two of this year's mod- els are so constructed that the seals may be folded into beds for "camp-- j ing out." si Western Newspaper Union. Colony Overshadows Denmark Greenland is the only coloni:. possession of Denmark and is 43 times larger than Denmark. 8. A 9. An mammal. fur-beari- writer English poet and story (1820-1897- ). A 10. from Mexico. proposal to bar slavery obtained from territory "Quotations" V Fiction is truth with Its face lifted. Rex Beach. Immorality, like war, is state of abnormality. Slowly hut surely we are swinging bark to normality one more. Count Keyterlinjf. Great beauty is as inspiring as great music or great architecture. d Wild Turkeys Nuisance, According' to Accounts books o 100 years ago and earlier show thit the domestic turkeys were then very small. The Gertrude Atherton. average weight of those sold in BosPoverty is one of the major curses ton was seven to eight pounds, acof mankind and we must wage tirein the Boston to a writer cording less war against it. Harry Emerton Herald. Fosdick, There was, as told in Bentley's a named Dairy, farmer and innkeeper William Breed, at Nahant, early in the Nineteenth century, who had domesticated wild turkeys which when dressed weighed 14 to 18 pounds each. These were sold in the A holiday season at Salem. At New London and Norwich, Ct., in the district which includes parts 1. Keep your head clear of that state and Rhode Island, the 2. Protect your throat turkeys were commonly 10 to 12 3. Help build up pounds, and some heavier, up to 14 pounds. This is the area long YOUR ALKALINE RESERVE famous for "Rhode Island turkeys," Westerly in that state being the ALL great shipping point. JQ DOIREEI Uhio settlers irom iMew t,ngiana in 1805 and for several years after found the wild turkeys there a nui sance. It is recorded that at the Useless Worry first seeding of wheat the wild tur is the tomorrow you worToday keys were so bold that some sowers ried about yesterday and all Is had to stop and drive them from the well. neighborhood. One woman trapped about two dozen in the corncrib by strewing shelled corn about it MB? ..miufl will VOU PttWt K and leaving the door open. Account DON'T WAIT GOLD FOR 5' 5 Molting and Production The length of time a bird is out of production can be estimated by the molting of the primary or large wing feathers, according to a writer in the Indiana Farmer's Guide. It requires about six weeks to completely renew the primary feather next to the axial (small feather in center of wing between primaries and secondaries) feather. The remaining primaries are dropped in order, about two weeks apart and grow in at the same rate. Occasionally a bird sheds several primaries at one time, which in estimating length of time out of production should be treated as a single primary. 'il 45 W-- . $V i 7HY WAIT for relief when you're ' ' troubled withhcartburn.sourstomach, gas? Keep your relief right with you al- Poultry Gleanings box-shape- run-dow- Answers Eight. 2. From sleuth, meaning track, as in sleuthhound. 3. Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific. 4. Oliver Wendell Holmes. 5. A flute-lik- e musical instrument. 6. Emperors of Delhi. ' 7. Uruguay. 1. d seven- ty-five. automobile trailer manufacturers. At the Count of Ten "That letter don't Beem to have said the pleased you 3ny," trainer to the heavyweight champion. "It ain't," said the boxer. "It's from a firm what wants to place an advertisement on the soles of my shoes." Mud-qu- quite a few sales to persons of uti mile? six-ye- 1.W WSU Service. How many times dos on d round a track to make a tl!rre. Recent turkey breeding studies conducted by University of California poultrymen indicate that it is not desirable to use turkey hens of more than two years of age as breeders. This study on the age of turkey breeders and the resulting progeny showed that average egg production decreased from 76.6 eggs the first year to 49.5 eggs the second laying year. Production the third and fourth years was 44 eggs, while only 27.6 eggs were produced the fifth year. Although production decreased with the age of the turkeys, it was found that the fertility of eggs did not change significantly with age. Hatchability of eggs decreased after the second year. The eggs laid in the second year were larger than those produced the first year. Poults hatched from the larger eggs were larger at hatching time, but there was Uttle difference in sizes of birds at 16 weeks of age. Mortality was a trifle higher among the progeny of the hens than among those of year-olthe hens. try nun, New iicte. 1. Most Desirable. ft, S if Birds Under Two Yearn Are it- - A General Quiz O V YOUNG TURKEY HEN BEST FOR BREEDER away from work and you that work can run. J I I s e to live i i I To-"Lp- & lehi free press, lfhi. utah ways, for unexpected emergencies. Cany Turns . . . like millions now dot Turns are . . . only 10c pleasant-tastin- g yet they give relief that is scientific, thtrouih. Contain no harsh alkalies . . . cannot your stomach. J ust enough antacid compound to correct your stomach acidity is released . . . remainder passing from your system. For quick relief carry Turns! 10c at any drug store, ECONOMY PACK for 25c. or the ro THI TUMMY aeail ... The size, shape and color of a hen does not affect the eggs. awr-alkal- iie Feather picking usually starts as birds. a vice in closely confined The yolk of the egg is employed in making the finer kind of tawed leather. ed Iftir TUMS AH ANTACID . . . LAXATIVE The total number of poultry and egg marketing associations in the United States is 154. NOT A e Oats or barley, when ground, may be substituted advantageously for corn in rations for chicks and laying hens. If chickens are given clean, whole some feed the eggs are superior in flavor to those provided with in- ferior or spoiled feed. Fowls that have been recently vacto cinated can transmit chicken-posusceptible birds with which ' they are associated. f SALT LAKE'S W E WEST HOSTELRy 1 Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled daring the snnroer isoatbs Radio for Every Room A , x L TT-- . Chicken lice bite the birds rather than suck blood. Mites suck blood. A clean range is conducive to the of disease and parasite-cleachickens. production HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.5Q to $3.00 n The difference in the color of the yolks of chicken eggs is controlled largely by the feed. start Geese, like ducks, ing at almost any time of year will crovided conditions are right. lay-- j Ttie ITtrl Tempi Square hat e atmoa-lhe,r- e. highly dnairahlo, frirndlrIt immao-ulatn, You will alwaye fine' aiinrrmftly remfortabl. end t horoaehly anreehlfi. Yma cea therefore umlmtana' why this hotel lai HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You ran alee appreciate wbyi of distinction to stoat If a tmark this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER. Mgr. |