OCR Text |
Show LEW FREE PRESS, LEHI. UTAH LurLan Unmask-- d NATIONAL AFFAIRS Rtvitwtd by PHOTOGRAPHY CARTER FIELD ROLLS DEVELOPED or yor of it units wllBoel efcotc KxrrMwnT Fare - WL mra ifmct - tM Embroidery Is Design Fun to Do Free-Hcm- d Rt'TII WYETIl SPEARS IT IS not often that a mere mat-- " ter of stitchery strikes a national note with Americans, but here is something from a school teacher that may touch your pride a bit. She says, "Your Book 2 on Gifts and Embroidery interests me because it is the only thing I have seen on this subject that shows simply and clearly how to use a little originality in hand work. The women of all nations but ours find pleasure in expressing their own ideas in embroidery end needle crafts." emHere is another broidery design that should be as By free-han- l"! ' 'j A ,1 & d 1 J ' htm 1 much fun as those in the book. This attractive border is suggested here for a bed jacket. You will have no difficulty in finding a pattern for a jacket as they are quite the thing to wear over sleeveless nighties. Your freehand border will dress it up for a Christmas gift. If the jacket is pale pink, the rows of running stitches might be In several tones of rose. The cross stitches could be in deep rose and turquoise blue to simulate flowers. The long and short stitches, shown at A and B, should then be done in apple green. Lines may be drawn with a ruler as a guide to keep the rows straight, and evenly spaced dots may be made to Indicate the cross stitches corbeginning the spacing at ners of the design. Are you ready for Christmas; birthdays; and the next church bazaar? Do you turn time into money with things to sell? Mrs. Spears' Sewing Book 2 has helped thousands of women. If your home is your hobby you will also want Book 1 SEWING ior the Home Decorator. Order by number, enclosing 25 cents for each book. If you order both books, a leaflet on quilts with 36 authentic stitches will be Included free. Address Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chicago, 111. te A Three Days' Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or bronchial Irritation, you may get relief now with Creomulslon. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulslon, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel germ-lad- en phlegm. Even if other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, try Creomulslon. Your druggist Is authorised to refund your money If you are not thoroughly satisfied with the benefits obtained. Creomulslon is one word, ask for it plainly, see that the name on the bottle is Creomulslon, and you'll get the genuine product and the relief you want, (Adv.) Dare to Choose For all may have, if they dare choose, a glorious life or grave. George Herbert. LOST YOUR Hr la Amazing Conditions Duo to PEP? Rallal for Sluggish Bowel va think all Ixutlvm !,. Ulk Jm try UiU WflMtbl, mild, thomuirh- m. rrlW from frenhlng. Invljunillnff. IrpMliiM ark bMriutiM. btlloui nwlM, Und hUa wben II Ho morUMd with eotuntiwlloa. Without RiskK&M'K delighted, nturn u rafuDd t purchM It bo ALWaV box to m. Wa will BBm. r ."'a CARRY, 04.Tn QUICK RELIEF inmiffi FOR ACID INDIGESTION Good Thoughts Live Good thoughts, eyen if they are forgotten, do not perish. Publil-iu- s Syrus. BjCLASSIFIEDa ADVERTISING Ca i tifid AD at Results I late you so y thio g aroun i the house you would likt to trade or sell? Try clai 'fied ad. The cost is on I fc cents and there art Pbolylotoffolkjlook for whatever it if ing u$t you no longer hye use for Carter Field $ieculate$ on the problem that uill face the Democrats in picking a presidential candidate, uith special reference to the standing of Bennett Clark . . . The Palestine question creates a new division in the ranks of !etc Dealers, involving Secretary Hull . . . W allace in battle to save his farm program. Sneaking of .Swrfs and should back op Great Britain in Palestine, but insists, and there comes the real point of difference, that Britain should hold Palestine's door open to immigration of persecuted jews from Europe. There was not enough difference to be noticeable on this Palestine question until rumors came that Britain was about to make peace with the Arabs on the pledge that no further Jewish immigration would be permitted. Then there were quick repercussions from surprisingly wide- ly separated groups in this country. Now it so happens that the one criticism which the left wing element of the New Deal has been making of Secretary Hull has to do, in part, with a question of British foreign policy. It has concerned the Spanish civil war, with the left wingneuers insisting that the of against policy embargo trality belligerents actually helped Franco and hurt the Loyalists. Hit Hull Over Shoulders 'Carver Boy ,' Of in mind what has hapBearing pened to everyone who fought Hall in this administration, notably George Peek and Ray Moley, left wingers were a little loath to stick their necks out. So they invariably attempted to fasten all the blame on Sumner Welles, the under secretary of state, and the "career boys" in the department of state, especially as it has always seemed comparatively easy to enrage the public against the "spatted teacup balancers," who "ape the British both in accent and clothes," etc. Actually they were hitting at Hull over the career boys' shoul- ders. The campaign, nevertheless, has been carried on persistently, the left wingers "leaking" allegedly interesting incidents of how t.ie woul was being pulled over Hull's eyes to their favorite newspaper writers, and always with Sir Ronald Lindsay, the British ambassador, as the master mind in the strategy, and the teacup balancers the eager stooges. Be that as it may, the left wingers have reinforcements in their determination to force Cordell Hull's hand, and to insist that the "hands across the sea" business with England must come to an immediate end unless Britain goes down the line for the creating of a political refuge in Palestine for all of Europe's persecuted Jews. Secretary Wallace Fights To Save His F arm Program Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace is not only battling to save his farm program in his stumping n tour to persuade the farmers that AAA is fine and every thing will be all right when controlled production really gets into operation; he is fighting to make it possible for some New Dealer to win the presidency next time without the third-terhandicap. Careful study of the election situation by experts forces the conclusion that unless Wallace can vindicate himself and his farm program it will be absolutely necessary for President Roosevelt to take a third nomination unless he's willing to accept Secretary of State Cordell Hull as a compromise or else permit the Democratic party to name a Garner, a Byrd, a Jesse Jones or someone else who can get the backing of Democrats hostile to the Roosevelt economic policies. This situation is partly due to the complete failure of the New Dealers to win any state primaries where a strong organization opposed them. Part of it is due to the fact that the magnificent political machine constructed by Jim Farley cannot be controlled by the Corcoran - Cohen Pen-dergas- Kansas and machine wu:i easily. In NoB . ftftfl vember a record fx ) majority is promised for him, with such normally RenewspaSenator Clark publican pers as the Kansas City Star preferring him to the G. O. P. nominee. As long ago as last winter Sen. Burton K. Wheeler of Montana predicted the probability of Clark's nomination if Roosevelt should fail to score heavily in his purge battle (Clark was one of the nine Democratic senators who opposed the President on the court issue who came up for renomination this year, and every one of them won) and provided also that the President did not take the nomination himself. Not that Wheeler and Clark always agree on issues, or could be said to belong to the same faction. Far from it. It would be rather difficult to classify Clark in any faction. He is found voting and orating with one group today, and another next week. But, as Wheeler pointed out when he made that year-olprediction, everybody likes Clark. Certainly he has few important eneL A ilium'' City d mies. Left Wing New Dealers Want No Part of Clark His nomination, however, would be regarded as little less than tragic by the left wingers in the New Deal. He does not sympathize with their objectives at all. For example, he is strongly against any proposal which would further enlarge the powers of the White House. He is a "reactionary" to most New Dealers and a "liberal" to most conservatives. There would be a lot of poetic justice in the story if he should be nominated and elected President. Back in the early days of the century practically all liberals and progressives were clamoring for the direct primary for the nomination of senators, governors and presidents. The first convention affected by the preferential presidential primary was that of 1912. Senator Clark's father, Champ Clark, then speaker of the house of representatives, ran in a lot of primaries. He won almost everywhere. Notably he defeated Woodrow Wilson in a series of clashes for popular approval. The conservatives had not taken the primary idea seriously. For instance, in New Jersey the bosses had not even bothered to enter their choice, so it was won by James E. Martine, by a small vote, despite Martine's utter lack of political strength. The bosses had no thought of paying any attention to the primary, and directed the legislature to name someone else. But Woodrow Wilson, then governor, made the "people's choice" by primary an issue, and forced the election of Martine to the senate. Which incidentally he came to regret later. But at the Baltimore convention it was a different story. The liberals and progressives fought Champ Clark, the people's choice, tooth and nail, although he had a clear majority of the delegates on ballot after ballot. William Jennings Bryan finally turned the tide to Wilson, in the primaking the runner-umaries the victor at the convention. Missouri now thinks the wrong may be righted 28 years later. New Division in Xew Deal Ranks Involves Hull A new and interesting division has occurred in New Deal ranks in Washington, and for the first time there is the possibility that Secretary of State Cordell Hull may be involved in a real factional dispute. This dispute may involve Hull because it is directly concerned with foreign policy. One group thinks that the United States should take a firm stand against religious and racial persecution, as it considers it, OKI D S fastest indoor gamewell not ice hotkey, as might game be supposed, but an ancient -to you. called Jai Ala., "hy-lie- " The National Geographic society it was is authority for the fact that w me p'aved three centuries ago Spain. Basque country of northern There U is known as pelta- - mfan: ir.g "small baa. itfsau-c- l of Dy HLKB ROGER g sjmple v:,,age past:me hundreds wa.J. the of church few PROBABLY ball.t0sS;rg against 1 u js g major sport not only of thousands who watch the big To these games football .n but ,B South America. intercollegiate fa'J Saturday afternoons have ever Meyjc0 Cuba and even such remote alal football. heard of "six-macenters as shanghai. Now jai Init-smail more than 2.000 schools in that many- sp(ms lQ bfi taRing root in the counthe throughout smes of the teams in tne trv have Qw reason or the spread its is field this season. .. . simpiH.ii. . l.ttir It ,rP's rooDulanty only space, three nign Ketorts troni siaie requires .'.h!"t c associations indicate that walls, a ball and a curved basketof innvml er will lt aouDiea like scoop lashed to the arm born onlv four vears ago, the game ea-- h plaver. When plavcd by hardswaddling its has already outgrown """"" , 6 Man Football Clicking Fast In Rural Areas i i pint-size- p football .s 1 Ori-r.- -itr teachschool Ches'.i-high (Neb.) a in er i:a::.t-- Stephen Epler. Back of r. JM4. he Cot tired Sei wa'tchit.i? students twiddle their days of thumbs from the s:x-ma- n crop-contr- ii i opening school until basketball season rolled around. He felt tnat Chester students should have a fall sport. His school didn't have enough students to man a r"''',ion football team, and even if they had, there wasn't ennuh money available to put them int football gear. of his So. with work. to went s:'perint!nrfe::t. F;:'er He started to rc::::.ke football from the miK.o!: do'.Iur spectacle it had become mu a r.i .l. t sport that would fit the1 nur?" a"-- personnel of l..c sn.uli tu... sc.iwji. i i - !,:! f ! . VfV S 7 it Hf out went two men and two uniforms. Then Epler took the guards. The team has to have ends to run down punts, receive passes, turn in the offense. It also has to have a center to get the ball in motion. But who ever heard of a guard making a touchdown? So on each side of the center a guard was left jobless. His team now had a center and two ends. He had chopped off four men. When it came to the backfield it wasn't so easy, but Epler shut his eyes and crossed off one halfback. His team now consisted of a center, two ends, a quarterback, halfback, and fullback. Three men in the line, three in the backfield. Because the town couldn't provide a regulation gridiron, 100 yards long by 160 feet wide, without ruining a good crop of standing corn, Epler reduced the length of the field to 80 yards, the width to 40 yards. Safer Game of this A condensed team is a marked decrease in the hazards of football. Surveys show that many football injuries result from the simple fact that in a pile of 14 men, some one has to be at the bottom. Fewer linemen reduced this major hazard. Also for the sake of safety, Epler added one rule to regulation football. The man who receives the ball from the center must pass it to a teammate, either with a backward, lateral, or forward pass, before crossing the line of scrimmage. j This slowed up the offense enough to reduce much of the effect of bruising line plunges. When the game opened ud, the of fense had a shade too much advantage, so Epler handicapped the team in possession of the ball by requiring an advance of 15 yards instead of the regulation 10, in four successive downs. Surveys show that more injuries occur near the goal lines where players of both sides get desperate than in midfield. To remedy this situation, Epler widened the goal posts to.25 eet made them at least 20 feet in height, lowered the cross bar to 9 feet, and awarded a pre mium ior goal kicks. A after touchdown nets two points if maae successfully by kicking, only one point if made from scrimma?e This encourages kicking in place of scrimmage wnen a team nears the goal line. - BABE RUTH King of Swat tries jai alal. professionals, the game is in the extreme. The ball, hard and about the size of a tennis ball, is served from the basket and driven against the front wall, to be scooped up before its second bounce and returned by a member of the opposing side. Teams range from one to four on a side. As in tennis, the technique lies in slamming the ball to a spot from which it is hard for the opposing player to return it. When played by experts the game appears easy, but great skill and endurance are re quired. There is also an element of danger, for a ball traveling at ter rific speed for a distance of 150 to 200 feet is enough to knock out a player who allows his head to get in the way. hitting spectacular Here and There The tiny mule mascot of the Army football team is a gift from Ecuador's minister to Washington . . . Charley Keller, Yankee rookie out fielder from Newark, is hailed as a second Joe Di Maggio . . . Millard triple-threa- t White, Tulane's back, is shot put and discus champion of the Southeastern conference . .,. Pop Warner, Temple coach, was called the Texas Steer in his playing days at Cornell . . . Helen Jacobs will lecture on tennis at the San Francisco world's fair . . . Whizzer White says his first three professional games gave him more bumps and bruises than he suffered in his entire college career . . . Santa Clara has won 21 out of 22 football games since Buck Shaw became head coach two years ago e . . . The record for stolen bases in the International league is 112, made in 1887 by Mike Slattery and will probably never be broken' according to present theft frequency. 216-pou- six-ma- n Western Newspaper Union. Pocket Billiards By CHARLES C. PETERSON President, National Billiard Association of America and World's Trick fj rtt rrH Vile i t i nn V k l. throw the satirist ovtrc .ird r But the satirist. know:r:g his went right to the captain, ts start of school and the start of basketball season has been a void for popular sports, football has proved to be a natural. It starts the school year off with a bang and recruits for the game were not long in coming forward six-ma- new-fangle- ." - v i today,- the DroDhet u.-"W.l(JJ. way successful to his diy of dnf Eagle, Symbol of a.w Supremacy "airjiiaj flH, may arise, the eagle, ancient hnl nf sunremaev.. is IIWpIv Joe the scene. It is the national blem of the United States, CwcU - -- siovaKia, jwexico, Humi. Yugoslavia, Albania, Panama, Austria, Bolivia. Chile. Colombs and once it flew over Germany j' i ranee. Age of Redwood Trees The ages for most redwood trees range between 400 to 800 years. After they have passed 500 years they usually begin to die down from the top and fall off in growth. The oldest redwood scientifically examined began lffe 531 A. D. Definition of Dietitian as officially defined by the executive committee of the American Dietetic association, ii one trained in an institution of college grade in the science of nutrition and the art of feeding. A dietitian, Fredominating Color of Blossoms It has been estimated that in an average collection of 1,000 plants about 284 have white flowers, 220, red; 141, blue; 73, violet; 36, green; 12, orange; 4, brown; and 2, blact The Ordeal by Fire When we speak of going through fire for someone or putting the hand into the fire for something, we little suspect the pagan origin of the expression; the ordeal by fire. Gatllng's Machine Gun A machine gun firing 350 shots a minute was invented during the American Civil war by R. J. Gatling and later was adopted by nearly every civilized nation. Many Executed for Witchcraft It is estimated that 300,000 per- sons were executed between 1484 and 1782 for alleged practice of witchcraft. How Indians Flavored Soup flavor their soups for gala feasts the Indians sometimes put the whole head of an animal in the boiling pot. To Legally Dead After Seven Years In most American states a person absent seven years without explanation may legally be presumed to be dead. Crocodiles and Birds The crocodiles are the nearest relative birds have among reptiles, their ancestral species. MTF Michigan Famous for Copp'r has the Northern Michigan world's greatest deposits of neural metallic copper. Eton College Founded by Henry VI Eton college, England's famous boys' school, was founded by Henry VI, in 1440. T ff Height of Lincoln Figure The figure of Lincoln in the Lincoln memorial in Washington is 19 feet high. War Troops in Spanish-America- n Nearly 280,000 American troops were engaged in the Spanish-America- war. r six-ma- n the i Shot Champion. football every man team is eligible to receive a pass; every man is a potential hero. Playing time is in four periods. Other changes from the regulation game are minor. In most of the towns where football is being taken up the reigning sports were baseball basketball and track. A survey made by Epler shows that more than half the .ugh schools in this have never played football, country whereas better than 90 per cent of the schools play basketball. But because the period between s- - all-tim- in lcguwuun iooiDau linemen have a thankless job. The ball car rier geis cneerea by the crowd, while the poor tackle who opened the hole through which the carrier advanced merely has his face stepped on. A center's chance to score is jusi aDout nil. But in prophet. m ,nnstpr whether hej land or sea on an lr.te: .izi tr:p V j propnei warned nim put::e'.T , 'Q traveling by sea and The Name Roswell The name Roswell, of Teutonic origin, is a form of Roswald and means "mighty steed," or "power of a horse." It is one of the horse names derived from the national emblem of the ancient Saxons and thus supposed to be lucky. Every Man a Hero on the . ; Soap of Early Days Until fairly recent times, the manufacture of soap, like baking breai was a home job. Each family made its own by boiling down scraps ot fat and adding lye, obtained bj soaking ashes of a wood tire. Thu soft, watery soap was hardened it a salt solution. Too Ma :y TVkles J . ven tackles, he decided, are altogether too many. When they come together the spectators can't see what's happening, and the players themselves hardly know what it's all about. Tackles only get in the way of the ball carrier, anyhow. So Lucian, the R jnii:. Second century, sec- - Free State of Maryland The Free State of Maryland is called because Maryland was the I first colony to provide complete n, I ligious toleration. That fact andthil remarkably tree institutions whictl have prevailed since early Colonial! days led to the title. It is not at official name, but merely a popular appellation. t!-- e -I- WNV Sorviea. ii . ckes-Hopkins Bell Syndlcatt. d ... m objectionable last spring. Senator Sheppard Busy 'Mowing Barhiry Down' Hitherto a regular and almos. humble follower of the national Democratic leadership, no matter who was in the driver's seat, Sen. Morris Sheppard of Texas is "mowing Barkley down" by his activities as chairman of the campaign expenditures investigating committee. The senate won't get sufficiently worked up over the report Sheppard is writing (with some special investigators still working) to refuse Barkley permission to retain his senate seat. But on the other hand no one thinks, from the set of Sheppard's jaw. that Barkley will look like presidential timber after Sheppard is finished with him. Wallace alone of the real New Dealers remains unsmeared, if one eliminates those who simply lack political sex appeal, as for example Harold L. Ickes, Harry L. Hopkins, Robert H. Jackson. Wallace's weakness is the low price of farm staples after six years of operation. His alibi is, of course, that the Supreme court kicked out AAA and left him for two years minus a program. in n Middle-Wester- wing of the party. More A. J. Farley important, however. is the fact that no one is even run ning in the election this year whose victory would boost the chances of any 100 per cent New Dealer for the presidential nomination with the sin gle exception of Sen. Alben W. Bark-le- y in Kentucky. And Barkley, to the conservative Democrats and many idealistic New Dealers, is anathema since the odors of the WPA campaign machinery grew so i 7 d WASHINGTON. A convention situation which would compel President Roosevelt to fight for another nomination to prevent the naming of a man, Bennett Champ Clark, who has opposed the White House on such outstanding issues as the Supreme court bill, the government reorganization bill, and neutrality legislation, is considered very likely by many shrewd political observers here. The Missouri senator is in a very strong position. He won his renomi- nation by an overwhelming majority. Six years ago he defied the utmost efforts of Boss Fastest Sport A LESSON NO. 4 kiss shot for the corner It is of pocket vital importance that the balls are spotted carefully accordto the diagram. Every ing object ball must be touching (frozen). Again the striker must make a firm solid bridge, hold the cue absolutely level, and use no english. If you miss the shot it will be because you did not adhere to the instructions given. Again let me warn you to leave your cue on the line of aim, ii you wish to master the game AYE LASSIE. IT COSTS LESS BECAUSE !T BURNS BETTER AND LASTS LONGER" m, imp kP9 V'i w'i, f . ra ish tb |