OCR Text |
Show UINTAH BASIN HECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH Planning for the Future? Buy THE READER'S COURTROOM U.S Say Wife for Reason Ho Mistreating Jealousy By Will Bernard, LL.B. In Mistreating His Wife? housewife sued for divorce, listing many examples of cruel and inhuman treatment by her husband. In his defense, the husband said: Perhaps I have done wrong, but its only because of jealousy. Im jealous of my wifes friendship vith her night-schoteacher. However, further evidence showed that (1) the teachers interest in the young woman was just fatherly; and (2) he was 74 years old! Under the circumstances the court ruled out the husbands excuse and granted the wife her freedom. His Honor felt that jealousy especially based on flimsy grounds, was no justification for the husbands misbehavior. A young ol May a Schoolboy Be Expelled For Refusing To Take Dancing Lessons? young man, out for a ride, decided to look around for a good movie. As he neared a theater, the youth slowed down a bit and looked at the posters. Unfortunately, another car stopped just ahead of him to get into a parking place and there was a collision. The occupant of the front car was injured, and sued the young man for damages. At the trial, the latter I wasnt going fast, and pleaded: besides I looked aside for just a moment. How could I foresee that the car ahead was going to stop? But the court held the youth liable for the mishap. The judge said that, even while moving slowly, looking at a movie poster instead of the road ahead was gross A m , As part of their regular curriculum, the students of a certain school were required to take lessons in ballroom dancing. As it happened, the parents of one of the boys considered such dancing immoral and they forbade him to participate. When the school finally expelled the youngster, his parents sued to have him reinstated. At the hearing, the school board insisted: During school hours, its up to us not to the parents to decide what the children should be But the court disagreed taught. and ordered the boy readmitted at once. The judge said that, when it wont interfere with general school discipline, the religious scruples of parents ought to be respected. ACROSS 4. 1. A remnant 5. Vessel 9. Like a wing 10. 5. 6. feathers Ships d 7. Sultans 8. decree Edible (Venezuela) 12. Harangue 14. Jumbled tuber type 11. Sacred bull (sym.) 13. (Egypt.) Periods of time Ishmael 18. 19. Choking bit 15. Neon 16. A son of 26. Jewish month 27. City in Italy Guidos highest note 30. Sharp iron hook on a pole 29. rodent rootstock' 11. River swinging door was Incoming back fast from inside. stinctively he put out his hand to protect himself, but he only succeeded in getting h i s fingers pinched between the edge of the door and the frame. Painfully injured, the man filed a damage suit against the owner of the store. He based his claim on the ground that this kind of a door was a constant source of danger to all who entered the premises. But the court granted him nothing. The judge figured that swinging doors are such a common phenomenon nowadays that shoppers ought to be able to get through them safely. just as the PUZZLE Dress, as Long-eare- A man walked up to a cigar store, 17. Naive girl Aloft 20. Greek letter 23. The 21. Body of (archaic) 31. 33. 35. 36. Trader Music note Ascends Unit of force 3,8. water i mo1 a msm P E RIIF A ft L E Bl NO. 63 40. Surfeited system) Plate used Red-brea- st' with 43. microscope BEFORE AT THIS LOW price! ANSWER 41. (C.G.S. H&BR WEEK'S LAST firemen Edible If a Customer's Finger is Pinched In a Swinging Door? Is a Store Liable May You Glance At a Movie Foster While Driving a Car? Does Jealousy Justify a Husband ed bird Perceived 48. Sum up 22. Lever 24. Bone Baths Popular (Anat.) 25. Fuel 28. Diocesan With Ancients center SO. Gadolinium (sym.) 32. Trick 34. Youth Grecians, Romans Had Luxurious Facilities PlIOSE STORIED footprints in the sands of time probably led to the local watcrhole or mineral spring. We are merely following in those same footprints when we immerse ourselves in water whether for sport, for relief from the heat, for medical treatment, or for cleanliness. While in many things we can count ourselves much more advanced than the ancients of Greece and Rome, we are not far ahead of them in bath equipment and facilities. Bubbling baths, natural hot baths, saltwater baths, and swim-mi- n hole baths all figured in their scheme of living and on a lavish scale. The medicinal qualities of water have been stressed down through the ages, and in the 1600s it was not unusual to stay chin-hig- h in water 124 as for hours at a long as stretch. Today the Spa, or health bathing resort, is extremely popular on the continent, and is favored to a lesser degree in America. We have just as many kinds of natural waters for the treatment of disease, but our forte has been the advancement of the swimming pool and of Indoor bath facilities. A noteworthy, although impracti- cal contribution, was that of a 19th Maka mornlou cakes avaaRnii 37.Copper (Rom.) with EmutsoriM. 39. Collection 42- - Not real 44. 45. 46. 47. Behold! At home J Snowdrif- t- of books your Squeeze handle. Degrade 49. Paradise ..It sifts! Release handle... it sifts! screen sifts as well as double screen! Extra-fin- e Aviator White enameled 50. Lateral 51. City (Nev.) 52. Concludes one-han- red handle! metal-bri- ght size -J- ust right for Snowdrifts 3-c- Beautiful... long-wearing- ci quick-metho- d what a bargain! ... This bargain is offered so youll try Snowdrift-acompare it with any other shortening. as New d cakes must be made with emulsorized shortening. And Snowdrift is for quick and thorough blending. Gives yj cakes-wi- thj d richer, lighter, moister 3 minutes mixing. ten ef ,Whats more Snowdrift "MIXES QUICK for 11 biscuits-CU- TS IN QUICK for flaky pastry-?1QUICK for light, digestible fried foods. wl DOWN 1. Pillage 2. Eskimo tool 3. River (Fr.) quick-metho- emulsor-ize- Paratrooper Jumps 107 Times for Record FAYETTEVILLE, N. C. ing 107 drops. Averaging better than one jump every 6 minutes and exhausting seven pilots, Sgt. John W. Swetich, broke the record with his 106th jump 10 hours to the minute after his first leap. He successfully topped the official record of 75 leaps by a Yugoslav in London and the unofficial record of 105 leaps claimed by Juan Iriarte of Buenos Aires. He made his leaps into a plowed field. He wore a sweat shirt and regulation paratroop trousers, boots, and helmet. He taped his arms where the chute straps bound him. After each jump, a jeep and a pickup truck met him. The jeep rushed him back to the Piper Cub plane which took him aloft again, while the truck took his chutes to the hangar where six men were kept busy repacking them. Ills only complaint at the start was, If I can survive those jeep Century American inventor with a Rube Goldberg imagination. He constructed a tub apparatus which allowed the bather to sit on a stool and pull a hand lever which raised the water to a spout above his head and simultaneously brought a brush In position to scrub his back. Later refinements of bath equipment have been less piquant but more satisfactory. We still have to tcrub our own backs, but our bathroom plumbing is looked upon by ome countries as a miracle. rides, Ill be 0. K. quick-metho- A for- mer paratrooper from Dillon, Mont., has set a worlds record for parachute leaps in a single day by mak- Swetich twisted his ankle and sprained his knee on the 51st jump, and slowed down long enough to have his right leg taped. After the 99th jump his aides, all buddies from the 82nd Airborne Division, decided he should jump from 900 feet instead of 700 because his reactions were slower. From 900 feet he would have time to use his emergency parachute if necessary. He took only two breaks throughout the grind, and ate only a milk shake with three eggs in if and a few candy bars. Doctor Reports Long Life Possible On Milk Diet ITHACA, N. Y. Dr. C. M. Mac-Ca- y reports his investigations prove that it is possible to live a long life on a diet confined to milk alone. He said his experiments show that white rats lived to ages with 70 to 90 years for comparable humans, with no other food than milk plus a few minerals. A control group of rats lived on normal human food. There was no difference in the Jife span of the two groups. d You get this One-Han- d Sifter only with ' n: 0E PURE VEGETABLE BY THE SHORTENlNjj-MA- WESSON OIL JfcrryS&tcffa Awf l i Snowdrift P. O. Box 8110--A i Chicago 77, Illinois Sifter. I Please send me your new d the word Snowdrift clipped from metal strip with key. i NAME. i i i One-Han- i i t i L. STREET CITY 1 STATE Offer expiree Oct. 31, 1950. Offer limited to U. 5. andm000 |