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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI, UTAH . a, Scenes and Persons in the Current News y , -- ' f " "" '" 1 v ""TV-"?, - - " " ' ' They're Cinches to Sew WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Part on f ffTfff?ff?flW????ff?TTf?? XJ EW YORK. Alonzo B. See, the elevator man, has long been this reader's favorite epistolarian. His letters to the newspapers caused more people to hit See' Letters the ceiling than Make People did his elevators. Just now his A. B. Hit Ceiling See Elevator com r pany, which he founded years ago, is being dissolved and its properties sold to Wcstinghouse. It is hoped he now will have time to catch up with his His son, Alva B. See, who has managed his business affairs recently, did not 4 ' fifty-fou- r letter-writin- 1 M 1 follow in his father's Mr. See's first big turn in the headlines came in 1922 with his insistence that, for the good of all con-- I cerned, we ought to burn down all the women's colleges. He was a ve-- i hement opponent of feminine education, "beyond knowing their A B C's forward and backward." In support of this view, he offered the findings of his own research, which were that women's brains were, on the pen-track- s. Mrs. Bibb (Dixie) Graves, wife of Alabama's governor, whose husband appointed her to the United the Supreme court. States senate to fill the vacancy created by the appointment of Senator Hugo L.ofBlack to Knute HiU of WashMaverick Texas, (left) of Maury Representatives congress, adjournment load-tn- g 3 marines States United home. for tickets their railroad Kansas of M. Houston buy ington and John n China. in for to leave as duty they prepared their packed sea bags on a truck 1 war-ridde- STATESMAN Three Royal Ex's All on One Spot IIMMIIWWB'?glWIljM'll.rilW'l)W 4 Mi PASSES Ml ilimiiJIMIHHHMUIHWl , " iU ' ' " tax-eate- - - average, five ounces lighter than men's brains. "No college woman can be a fit parent," he contended. He assailed pedagogues, and all tech-- ; educational contemporary niques, writing and publishing a book called "Schools," in 1929, In which he insisted education should be "under the guidance of men who have the intelligence to own and run a shop." He was a porcupine individualist, denouncing governmental parasites and and Betes Noir by hinting that Herbert Hoover ought Thousands to be examined Enrage Him for his sanity in governing by commission. Cigarettes, high heels, extremes in style, slang and a thousand other betes noir enraged him. elHe is a benevolent-appearind derly gentleman, with spectacles and white hair, living in a nice house in Brooklyn, where he has lived all his life, building his elevators and registering dissent. This writer never caught himself agreeing with Mr. See on anything. but hopes he will keep on kicking. Most businessmen, when they get angry about something, sluice it off in some dessicated chamber of commerce committee which takes all the sap out of it. Dissent is too refined these days. I once got all the "Letters to the Editor" contributors together at a picnic and published the first photograph of "Vox Populi" ever taken. They were a quarrel- ,some lot and we almost had to call out the militia, but you couldn't help liking them. rs g steel-rimme- r 4 . r C 11 ( x i Although royalty is ever clannish, whether they retain their crowns or not, it is unusual to photograph three royal "ex's" in a group. They are Amerle of Portugal, at Lausanne, Switzerland. Left to right: g Alfonso of Spain. The occasion Ferdinand of Bulgaria and g niece of Alfonso, was the marriage of Princess Marie-Poloredescendant of an old Polish family. to Prince August Czartory-Sk- i, ex-Ki- ex-Kin- ex-Kin- s, R IIiOW QUEEN "Eve-Droppe- ';. National honors were accorded the memory of Andrew W. Mellon, secretary of the treasury in the cabinets of Presidents Harding, and Hoover and one of the nation's leading industrialists who died at Southampton, N. Y. Coo-lid- ge Babv Faces Camera r" CENATOR ELLISON D. (COTTON ED) SMITH of South Carolina still follows the cotton boll as his political lode star. Like other south ern senators, he "Coffon Ed" has been shaken by the reFar Off Base cent Democratic in Party Split split, hut now he is out for the New Deal subsidy medicine, "to keep excesses off the r; Vi . . j off-ba- -- market." 4 4 iSfSS llMWiW;iiill ! x ,, , i ' in' ; "eye-droppe- r" Giant Transatlantic Planes Near Completion which Columbus first crossed the Atlantic are the six giant flying boats now ap- c servic. Cutaway proaching completion on order of the Pan American Airways system for ships are designed to carry 50 passengers on diagram of one of the liners is shown above. The three-decschedules between America and Europe. They will have a top speed of 200 miles per hour. Larcer than the ships -- -- blow-torc- h Miss Anna Bell Weir, who was selected Rainbow Queen in the first annual Queen of Queens contest at Long Beach, Calif. Scores of beautiful girls who were selected as Jacquelyn Clement, New Orleans baby who was born at queens of various events throughout six and a half months, weight a scant two pounds, is shown as she was exCalifornia in the past year were en- posed to the public eye recently for the first time. Dr. Roger Knapp, Baptist hospital interne, is holding her for her first view of the cameraman. tered in the erent. j old Senator Seventy three year Smith, in congress 29 yenrs, has a sizable cotton patch which was granted to his family by George III in 1747. In the senate, he has been the leading champion and defender of cotton. With his southern colonel's mustache, and his chivalrous defense of southern womanhood, he is the most authentic survival of the days of "Pitchfork Ben" Tillman. He walked out on the Democratic convention last year, because they had a negro speaker. He remarked, "I don't believe in the Fourteenth or Fifteenth amendments." As chairman of the agricultural committee of the senate, he is an important figure in the reshaping of farm legislation, to be taken into account in the new agrarian drive for subsidies. -- in trans-Atlanti- k Berlin NORMAN EBBUTT, of the London r battle Times, loses his GerThe Nazi opposition. against man foreign office Boot of Nazis asked the Times Is Applied to to withdraw him and makes it clear Herr Ebbutt .g not if be would he expelled. This done, is the culmination of continuous disagreement between Mr. Ebbutt and the Reich. The foreign office asked that he be replaced by a correspondent who will "more nearly reflect the official version of the achievements of the regime." Mr. Ebbutt has written his own and not the official version of events in Germany. In 1933, Mr. Ebbutt was president of the Association of Foreign Correspondents in Berlin. The day before the election which put Hitler in power, he wrote a dispatch in which he said many citizens were afraid to vote for fear of watermarked paper or invisible ink which would reveal them as oppositionists. This angered the Nazis and they demanded He sent another disretraction. his story. patch, substantiating Many times threatened with expulsion, he has stayed on the job until four-yea- now. ft Cono!H'itrd News Feature WNU Sorvlc. sewing bug will get sizes 12 to 20 (30 to 38 bust). Size YES, the if you don't watch out, 14 requires 3 yards of you, young lady 39-in- And when it does material. Send your order to The Sewing there will be a hum in your life Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New head mean we don't noises). (and San Francisco, Right now is the time to begin; Montgomery Ave., 15 cents (in coins), Calif. Patterns to is the here get your place right I So inspiration. it's sew, sew, all together, girls: each. C BeU Inspiration Number 1. The vivacious model at the left is the number 1 piece for your new autumn advance. It calls for taffeta, embellished, as you might expect, with grosgrain. You may use vivid colors too, Milady, for Fashion has gone color mad this fall. Reds of every hue, bright blues, lavender, warm browns, all are being featured in smart avenue shops along the Rue de la Paix. Morning Frock, For most of us, each day demands that a little work be done. appreciates this and the need for frocks that are practical, pretty, and easy to keep that way, hence the new utility frock in the center. Five pieces are its sum and total; seven mornings a week its cycle. Any fabric will do nicely as the material try one version in printed rayon. Tailored Charm. The waistcoat used to be a gentleman's identification, but, alas, like many another smart idea, womankind has copped it. Here you see an attractive example of this modern contraband. Not only does it have suavity, but it is en-- j tirely feminine, as well. The ex-- i quisite waist line, sweet little collar, and puff sleeves, moke this a number you can't afford to pass Sew-Your-O- Syndicate. WNU Scrvtca. mm BUCK LEAF 40 Keeps Dogs Awav from rs Cvergreens,Shnibs etc. par Gallon of spray. SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio for Cvry Room nmnr-v- v moui. tub-we- ll up. The Patterns. Pattern 13C3 sizes 12 to 20 (30 14 requires 3 material, plus 18 HOTEL Temple Square Bates $1.50 to S3.QO The Ilotfl Templn Stpiara baa a atmoshighly datrnl)r, friiVmllyIt Immacphere. You will alwayaflnil and comfortable, ulate, supremely thoroughly aureeable. You can thereiai hotel fore understand wiry this You IIIGIIXY RECOMMENDED ran alao appreciate why I It's a mark of distinction to stop at tin's boautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. is designed for to 40 bust). Size yards of yards of ribbon 39-in- HOTEL BEN LOMOND for trimming, as pictured. Pattern sizes 34 to yards of Pattern is designed for Size 36 requires 4 1354 4G. material. h is designed for 1252 TavolitQ ofa rffkftfi the Kecipe - " 4P IVealc I) REPARE apple sauce by your favorite method and then try this delicious summer recipe. Frozen Apple Pudding. 2 cups unsweetened apple 4 tablespoons suflar l3 cup orange marmalade. sauce lj cup cream, whipped Combine apple sauce, sugar and marmalade. If apple sauce has already been sweetened, omit sugar. Fold in whipped cream. Turn into freezing tray of automatic refrigerator and freeze without stirring until firm (about 2 hours), using low cold control for freezing. Yield: VA pints or 6 servings. SiL''., tm .a fZjkr' Jv OGDEN, UTAH 350 Batha $2.00 to I4.0S ) Family Rooms for 4 persons 8S0 Booma Air Cooled Lonnca and Lobby Grill Room . . Coffrs Ehon, . . Tap Room Home af Klwsnli Exeenttres Eichangr Optimus "20-3Chamber of Comnverca and A4 Club, Rotary HOTEL BEN LOMOND Coma as yon ara T. . Fitzgerald, Hlgi. Classified Advertising anything around the house you HAVE YOU like a classitrade or sell? to Try fied ad. The cost in only n few cents ami there are probably a lot of folks looking for just whatever it La you no longer have use for ' Classified Ads Get Results |