OCR Text |
Show FREE PRESS. LEIII. UTAH ere Germany Advanced f .:wVi:";n , Protccloralc Demands NATIONAL AFFAIRS v HOW-T9.SE- W 4 RtvitwtJ by CARTER. FIELD Carter Field believes Governor Bricker of Ohio has a good chance for the Republican nomination for President, if the national convention should be deadlocked . . . Electric grid system shrouded in mystery. (Bell Syndicate WNV Service.) WW The chair was padded and ca f AO WITH COTTON B ATT IMG BASTED TO MUSLIN RlHOVt ered, as shown, and a new seat cushion was added. The tufting was done by sewing through tigrit ly with heavy carpet thread; adding a button on each side of the stitch. MAGAZINE! 53Jn,MOUIR o ARM NOTE: Detailed directions for changing an old iron bed into the latest style are given in Mrs. Spears' Book No. 3; also how to make "The Rug That Grew Up With the Family." Thirty other fascinating ideas for Homenaak-erIf you w ant to use this idea, better clip it out now for back numbers cannot be supplied. Don't delay in sending name Bnd address with 10 cents coin for Book No. 3. Send order to: feROWN SATE EM. bKttN FRIK&E AND BUT TONS TUFT 6f SEWIN6 TMHOUG ARMS. BACK AND kit ii ii Ib v it ii CUSHION J &'t'r'"4iir ' ' " rm nrn. .u. Pictured above is Oslo, capital city of Norway. It was here thai rifDSOf tne invasion, ai.u wnere me uerman minister ir Osln iiti the ultimatum that Norway be handed over to German, ui.h " forces, the ?sirjordyand cutting off possib.e German WASIIINGTON.-T- he Republican presidential contest has narrowed down to Thomas E. Dewey and Sen. Robert A. Taft, so far as the pre-- ! convention battling is concerned. Of course anything may happen at Philadelphia. There could be a deadlock, for example, with neither Taft " nor Dewey able to muster a ma" jority, at the end of which the lead' e,gn. ers would suddenly decide on the r.onowm8 "e seizure head of the ticket, or the convena,0D' tion might be hysterically stampeded to almost any conceivable candidate. Incidentally that is one of the advantages of not taking part in the preconvention battle. To be eliminated in advance, as for example in primaries, puts a handicap on a ,. .'w. man's being selected after a deadlock. Not always, however. There was Warren G. Harding, who did miserably in the primaries but was named after the three leaders had worn themselves out. John W. Bricker, governor of Ohio, seems to be in the prettiest position at the moment if there should be a deadlock. He is on the bench, at the moment, and must stay there until Taft wins or blows, by which time it may be too late. But if there is a deadlock between Taft and Dewey, with just a few scattering votes which neither can corral to make a majority, the convention might turn to Bricker. That would be all right with most of the Republican leaders. It would be all right with most of the big contributors to G. O. P. war chests, especially those in downtown New I'll W V , J". , r . " r,;:".. .pUSe.tt X . se""J European War Crisis Causes Stir in Nation's Capital c. ,v. '' wwinr. "oobcvMi ....... mm .; THIS 3? RuthWyeth Spears s. chair, now so smart in its and moss fringe trimming, barely ?scaped the trash burner. It had been such a comfortable chair that everyone hated to see it go. Sis said it was and positively untidy. Someone suggest-?- d it might be covered. Mother said that wouldn't be a bad idea if it could be padded first! That jave Sis a brain wave. Why not tuft it? By pushing a long darniout-of-da- MRS. Bl'TH WVETII Drawer SPEARS IB New York Bedford Hitla Enclose 10 centi for Book No. S. Name Address ng needle back and forth through the cover, padding and openings She had been the wicker? a tufted chair, so work began at once. The sagging arm rest, maga- in 4& wicker dne holder and frayed-ou- t around the legs were removed. Scented Divorce it, ladyl In 1700 an act was passed by Then WON'T rais clouds you down that parliament which laid of dust when YOU cfosf any woman, whatever her age and time the family joked about Once whether she be married, single or Mom upon Sis (bating ib dust anuni. Now, or of a widow, who by the use perhen they dust, they pick up the furry dtlStr cosmetics, paint, false ituff; it STAYS in lb cloth. You add a Josh fume, Polish to dustcloth or teeth, wigs, iron corsets, padded of genuint bust and hips, or mop, let it ttastn a bit, and now yout puts up and kttps the dust. Ask fun shoes, inveigles a male subject Df his majesty into marriage, shall be guilty of having broken the law which prohibits the practicing of witchcraft and other arts of black magic, and any such marriage MOPS, WAX, DUSTERS, CLEANERS ANb ELY AND MOTH SPRAT will be counted for null and void. O-Ce- high-heele- dust-clo- th d VPolish York. LITTLE BITTERNESS Up to now there has been little if any bitterness in the Republican fight, however, and bitterness is almost an essential in creating a deadlock. Taft has said nothing about Reported disturbed by the rapid spreading of Europe's war, President Roosevelt cut short his rest at Dewey, so far as has come to light, Hyde Park and returned to Washington to meet with government officials. Proudly displaying a new cane, calculated to make Deweyr his which he jokingly referred to as "the big stick," the President was greeted by (left to right) Secretary of friends eager to prevent Taft's nomState Cordell Hull, Assistant Secretary of War Louis Johnson and Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles. ination at all costs. The same is true about Dewey's utterances. On the whole the picture does not Music Box Economic in Second World War? look too bright for Mr. Bricker. Something may be said or done, before the convention assembles, to mar the harmony prevailing between the contestants. But there is no sign of it yet. In fact there is no prospect of it even if there should be a . He VLjh knock down and iiVF& Miss Evelyn Birrell of Washington, D. C, with a model of the first hand-drive- n victrola, vintage of 1898. The victrola was displayed in an exhibition marking the 150th anniversary of the first patent legislation. By way of contrast, Miss Birrell is seated on the latest model ; ... ..,.oi Control of . 1:-- .t rpsnnrres. iap snows Scandinavian countries ,,aiu' ,: Norway, Sweden and Denmark by Germany would m"n timber Mt stores of foodstuffs, copper, iron, lead, zinc, "fri'S radio-victrol- combination. a products. No Clothes Horse Nazi Invasion Endangers Three Crowns vl ftv fu 1 r i :f:' 'M Germany, lightning invasion of Ue traditional autonomy of the Scandinavian c are (le Je crowns of three monarchs. r.clurcd here of Gustav 2A0rway' eenter) King nations. . Hitler's action came as a Tiled Haakon "Uie . Den IN MYSTERY d two-pan- ts lrW;-.-'-Hi. vt.'W-- f in IS IMPORTANT TO ME. IT MEANS EXTRA MILDNESS - PER PACK. TD WALK A MILE CAMELl' FOR A r fT f MA ? t -- M SLOW-BURKIN- G A' In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25 slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-sellin- g brands tested slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to 'EXTRA SMOKES TER PACK take it for BEFORE you all the granted pleasure getting there is in a cigarette, take a tip from Joe DiMaggio's experience. Try the cigarctte.Try Camels. Enjoy the advantages of Camel's slower way of burning and the supreme pleasure of Camel's matchless blend of costlier tobaccos. Get extra pleasure and extra smoking per cigarette per pack. See if you don't agree that penny for penny, Camels are your best cigarette buyl slower-burnin- g ed FOR EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA FLAVO- EXTRA COOLNESS, SLOW-BURNIN- R- COSTLIER TOBACCOS G In SALT LAKE CITY THE dim si: iwHOTEL departments, notably the war department, was just about the most interesting thing in Washington at that time. So the national defense motive, while still present, scarcely seemed to justify an appropriation of $400,000,000. So the group inside the government so strongly interested in the grid system has whittled down and revised the plan. It now calls for an expenditure of only $189,508,200, and this does not require an appro- AND COOLNESS AND EXTRA SMOKING ISSUE SIDETRACKED The other was that war fever so obvious in some of the government's priation. It merely requires that the RFC loan the money to the utilities. Now the curious phase of the whole business is that the private utilities do not want the grid system. No longer is clowning confined Particularly they do not want any human performers. grid system to be imposed by the to Decked out in a suit, this government. So if it is to come it member of a circus troupe enter- will have to be forced on them, and tained a New York audience. The forced under the guise of ' national defense. donkey performer was a success. red-nose- l f tuit drag out primary Mystery continues to shroud the latest proposal for a huge electric grid system for the entire Northeastfrom Boston to Chicago and Milwaukee, south to St. Louis and east to Baltimore which the federal power commission group laid before private utility executives. But since there has been a leak, and a leak from federal obviously sources, practical engineers and utility men not in the original secret have studied what they have learned about it, and are far from enthusi astic. This is a revision of the plan proposed last summer, which was to have cost $400,000,000 and included four government built and operated steam plants, the whole avowed purpose being to bolster the power supply of industrial America against the possibility of it being called on for war production. Two things happened to that original proposal. One was that con gress was horrified at the notion of appropriating $400,0U0,UUU. The economy wave, which has been slipping a bit since, was in the process of birth then, and the White House was giving no encouragement to any government branches figuring on a big boost in the budget. G WITH ME 15 between Taft and Dewey in West Virginia, which looks more likely now than it did before Dewey scored so heavily in Wisconsin. SHROUDED ---- e SLOW-BURNIN- errocc Tue rtCABerre int wnibiiii inni ?vvic SLOWERBURNINC CAMELS. THAT SLOWER BURNING f Prize 1' it.'. likes his cigarettes il ' - t 1 Choiceof theDiscriminatingTraveler 400 ROOMS- - 400 BATHS Rates: $2.00 to $4.00 Our $200,000.00 remodeling ond rafurniahing program has made, available the finest hotel accommodations in the West AT OUR SAME POPULAR PRICES. CAFETERIA DINING ROOM BUFFET MRS. J. H. WATERS, PrttJcW Managtrt J.HOIMAN WATERSond W.ROSS SUTTON DINE Tfi DANCE Beautiful MIRROR ROOM EVERY SATURDAY EVENING |