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Show LEH1 FREE PRESS, LEHI, UTAH Scenes and Persons in the Current News WHO Feathers for Three Fine NEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Parton X' EV VORK.-B- :g, bulbous Gen. craves action. Ker.g An.ong all China's rampant war lords, the old CL..st:an general is g least inclined General F eng to turn the other Doesn't Turn check, and the one Other Cheek n.ost conspicuous f roe ly from ch::res of dealing under the table with Japan. It was he, say the news reports, who ea.ed Chinese troops into the Japanese Tientsin concession, in civilian cloth.es, threw Japanese strategy into confusion and pretty nearly wrecked it. The peasants love him. If ever a human tidal wave engulfs the invading Japanese, he will be riding it. I.'t- - has been fighting, off and on, for about 40 years, sometimes as a regu'ar and sometimes Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia of New York shaking hands with Thomas E. Dewey, the young as candidate for district attorney on the Republican ticket special prosecutor who is running-mat2 Panoramic view of Shanghai's famous Bund which was rocked by explosions of bombs yith thethemayor. attack on the city by Japanese troops. 3 James Mattern (left), famed airman during who flew from California to Alaska to join in the search for lost Russian polar flyers, shown conferring with his navigator 1 racket-UTiashin- g e Robert Ballard Is Soapbox Derby Champ POWER PLUS in more or less private wars. The politicians d:s!:ke him and every once in a wh 'e have him sent oiT to the foi? belt. The last time was in 1921), who; lie stirred up a revolt in an tilort to start an movoinent against Japan. But they always have to call him out of rek tirement, as when Chiang was kidnaped last December. Feng always has enough loyal soldiers in reserve to count him in in any large-scal- e ructionhe has commanded as many as half a million men. When Chiang was rescued, he made peace with Feng and the latter assumed full responsibility for the national military council, of which Chiang is chairman. He was born of coolie parents in Chaohsien, Anhwei. In June, 1900, he was a big hulkMissionary ing lad, standiUnscrambles ng guard in a Kai-she- Snake Dream Peking compound, wneresome ! y ' I Although her skill and technique deserve full credit for Jadwiga recent victory over Alice Marble, American tennis champion, in the tennis finals at Rve. N. Y.. Robert Ballard, twelve, of White Plains, N. Y., smiles as he receives Polish star, demonstrated graphi-th-e international Soapbox Derby trophy from Felix Doran, cally in this picture, were the major an orhcial of the race. The contest,championship held at Akron, Ohio, was attended by a weapons in her armament. Here, record crowd of more than 100,000. A handsome cash prize and a scholar- - too, is evidence of the great stamina t nip to college when he is old enough were the rewards for Robert's skill that enables a In his soapbox vehicle. piloting i:VOY kiUing pace to the psinches TO KRIN Here's a Brand New English Custom 'tk,w . . 5fW. -- American missionaries had been trapped by the Boxers. He became friends with Mary Morrill, a mis- sionary girl from Maine. One night he had a terrible dream about a snake under his bed. He asked Miss Morrill to interpret it. What Miss Morrill made of the dream is not recorded. A day or two later, Feng saw a woman beheaded. He was troubled, without knowing just why, and again saw Miss Morrill. She converted him to Christianity. In the following years, the fighting trade was brisk in China, and Feng began to get a reputation, now as a free lance and now with the imperial armies. He preached to his troops every day. If his men didn't want to listen, he used to pay them. Each soldier wore a brassard, pinned on with a safety pin, and written on it the Ten Commandments. But Feng had done a rewrite job on the original. His ten commandments gave specific directions for overcoming an enemy in different situations. Every so often, Feng would announce that, no matter what the exigencies of battle might be, it was important for a man to discover his own soul. On these occasions, he would go to the country, wearing an old pad- e coolie coat, Mops battle with a vacuum bottle full of paint to Paint or Read Poetrvr crushes hung from a cord around his waist. He would paint plum blos soms for a while and then squat on his heels and read Confucius or Lao Tze. After a few months of this he would get back to his fighting. k When Chiang counted him out in 1929, he went to a hovel hung high on a rocky shoulder of T'ai Shan, China's "sacred mountain," a place set aside for citizens who wanted to take spiritual inventory. Nearby was the ancient "Hall of the Five Sages." Feng used the hall as a sort of private university. He hired a faculty of seven venerable teachers, he being the only pupil. The curriculum listed first a course on "the spring and autumn period of the Kai-she- John Cudahy, newly appointed minister to the Irish Free State, is A sign of the times in Old England is this photograph, made during shown as he sailed aboard the liner iiuuiam : navy weeK, wnicn gives you an idea of the extent to which ... . t -mri,4 x,u,atwuw wK up nis ministerial Europe is from war jitters. The oilskinned gents at left are duties. Until recently he was the members ofsunermg a "decontamination squad," who are rehearsing the duty minister to Poland. they hope they'll never have to up after a gas attack -1 . . do-mo- pping j $40,000 Hambletonian Stakes to "Shirley Hanover" -- n01'' consisted of a mat, a table and two straight- backed chairs and a tiny oil lamp, He always went to bed at 8:30 o'clock, to save oil, ho said, and to be rested for his early rising. When Miss Morrill converted him, she made him a member of the which means "beautiful, beautiful society." It is, In essence, the Chinese name for the Methodist church, but to Feng, the frustrated artist, it was an organization for the propagation of beauty. So when he isn't fighting, he ful- fills his Christian duty, ns he sees It, by searching out beauty. He is a pacifist and dislikes violence in all forms, but before he gets back to his plum blossoms and his Lao Tze, he would like to get just one good big walloping clout at Japan. Conaollrtatj"! New a. "Way-Way-Whay- ," 9 viMuJ iS (tali . ,k J First hont of the jj Hamb ugiu bong leading the field around one of the turns. An outsider, Shirley Hanover, owned by Lawrence jpara, upset the dope and won both heats to capture the coveted prize. Shep- - wouldn't b your weather prophet for the world, but you know, Milady, and so does that it's always fair weather when good fashions get together. Which brings us to today's three sparkling new frocks a whole crowd of style for the pretty part of any man's family. A Fun Frock. Rain, nor gloom, nor a flat tire (either kind), can dampen the spirits of the girl who wears this buoyant, young sports frock (above left) on her dally rounds be they on the fairway, the campus, behind the counter, or merely from pillar to post. You can easily see why it's a winner: a front, the matched collar and general shipshape styling make it just that. It's surefire in acetate, or silk crepe. Here's to Mothers. loves nothing more than catering to mother's wardrobe needs. The frock above (center) is for all mothers: old sweet ones, young darling ones, It is yes, even for mothers-to-beasy to run up, easy to do up, and best of all, easy to look at. Little Brown Girl. An suntan is her forte, and many sunny days are ahead for young Miss Fortunate whose mommy chooses to interpret the fetching model at the right. A scallop-edge- d waist front accentuated by trim is right down her avenue, and a gored skirt, that's second to none for class, fits into her scheme of things to a T. Mother, why not make one dressy version, as pictured, another finished differently for school? (Perhaps with a simple braid trim) Rayon prints, gingham, or sheer wool, will do nicely as the CEW-YOUR-OW- N button-all-the-wa- quires terial. yards of 4V4 39 Inch ma- Pattern 1207 Is designed for sizes 34 to 50. Size 36 requires 4H yards of 35 inch material. With long sleeves 4 yards of 39 Inch material. Pattern 1366 is designed for sizes to 14 years. Size 8 requires 2 material plus IV yards of yards of machine pleating. 8 39-in- Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (In coins) each. O Bell Syndic U.-W- Servtc. NU NEST YEAR GO TO y Westminster College SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH -- Yar Junior A Collag Two Rtfcb School and Two Colleg Yuri Beuf iful 40 ct ecimpui . Modern Buildings and lguipmnt. llinh Scholarship, Strong (JiiracUT and Social development. Special Music department. Phri cat education. Low Coil Tuition, Board and Koom in regulated homelike dormitories. Self help offered. Wntt for Ctalo&H ROBERT D. STEELE, AaaocUt Pre. Sew-Your-O- e. all-ov- er Post" "Trading RANCHES FARMS HOMES Any Place, Size or Price List with us buy or trade thru us D. RAY 171 INC. frou-fro- u 30 West OSS lit South SALT LAKE'S Salt Lak City, Utah NEWEST HOSTELRY Onr lobby Is delightfully air cooled during tbe summer months Radio tor Every Room 200 Room 200 Balha material. The Patterns. Pattern 1249 Is designed for sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size 16 i re-Ear- Tourist Camps The idea of tourist camps probably had its Inception in the car-- 1 avansary which was a structure for the accommodation of travelers in eastern countries. Cooking quarters were provided and storage space for the property and merchandise of the traveler. The caravansaries were located on important routes and were built by rulers cr wealthy individuals as public benefactions or else were a municipal enterprise. They remained open from dawn until night and had caretakers. Small, unfurnished sleeping rooms were provided and a space for the beasts of burden. HOTEL Temple Square Rates $i.SO to $3.00 Trio ffotrl TmplA baa a h Ik My d cairn litis frif-nrii- $qur atmoa-- p her. You will nlwaya fiml It Imnie-lin- t, aiinrrmrly comfortable, ami You can theretlmrouitliiy fore uiitleraiaml tvhy thia hotel lai fllClILY KECOMMENDED You rau a I ho appreciate ynhyt It's a mark of distinction to top at thia beautiful hostelry F.RNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. 1IOTIX Salt Lake's Most Hospitable Feature WNU Service. NEWHOUSE Hotel Invites YOU - It 1 aynasty." Feng is an ascetic, abstemious in his diet, wearing cotton coolie clothes, subjecting himself to rigid discipline. In his retreat on the sacred mountain, he rose every morning at four o'clock. His task was to draw on each of four sheets of parchment the four most beautiful Retires Early ch&T ac(er3 h e at Retreat on could possibly de- Sacred Mount vise- IIis furniture 4 I 1 j The Newhouse Hotel 400 ROOMS 0 400 hi BATHS The Finest in Hotel Accommodations Rates $00 to $a2 at Moderate Prices It is our aim to serve you in the manner most pleasing to you. Cafeteria Dining Room Mn. J. II. Waters, Pres. W. E. Buffet Sutton, Gen. Mgr. |