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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH THE UNKNOWN City That Has No Smoke or Grime By ANNE &! ft N ot ft Is '4c2sts s f css J33f - Py - ''"SPd ... ".S? V ,yk-S- ; I r': ':i':is,'S ... W,v,, ! Naw -- - "" - Bedtime STORy BURGESS'2 )By, THORNTON W. AN ENEMY PROVES TO BE A FRIEND The things we do end things we y, ( Tie true though hard to believe it o) Affect the lives of other folk Uore often than we ever know. IT is that friends often hurt SOeach other and In the same way enemies help each other without the least idea of so doing. It Is a funny world. It certainly is a funny world. Yon think only of yourself and straightway do the greatest possible kindness or an equally great Danny Overheard Mrs. Hooty Tell Hooty That She Had Seen and Heard Some One Moving Down Below. harm to some one of whom you are not thinking at all, and never know anything about it just take the case of Mrs. Hooty and Danny Meadow Mouse. Danny always thought of Mrs. Hooty, just as he did of Mr. Hooty, as one of the enemies he must always be on SIRLISAGP the watch for after dark, and Mrs. Hooty always thought of Danny Meadow Mouse simply as a good dinner If only she could catch him. The idea of doing Danny a good turn never in all her life had entered her head. Nor had the idea that she could do such a thing ever entered Darihys funny little head. Yet Mrs. Hooty did do Danny a good turn. In fact, all unknowing ly she proved to be a friend. Yon remember that Billy Mink had trapped Danny in a hollow log in the Green Forest Billy couldnt get into that hollow log because the doorway was too smalL So he promptly told Danny that he would keep watch until Danny starved to death Inside or came out to be caught Then Hooty the Owl and Mrs. Hooty arrived In a tree close Mrs. by and Danny overheard Hooty tell Hooty that she had seen and heard some one moving down below and that she Intended to stay right there until she found out who It was. Danny at once thought that she was watching for him. But when he had bad time to think a little he remembered that he hadn't so much as poked his nose outside that hollow log since the coming of Mrs. Hooty, so of course she couldnt have seen him. Could it have been Billy Mink she bad seen? Danny at once became very much Interested and crept a little nearer the doorway. He wanted very mnch to see what was going on outside. J&'---- 5Pw'-- I have Today - Tor some time nothing happened. Then he heard Bootys voice way off in the distance. He crept Just a wee bit closer to the doorway and peeped up in the top of the tree where he had heard Mr. and Mrs. Hooty talking. He was just in time to see a great dark shadow sweep silently down. He heard a spiteful snarl and knew then that Mrs. Hooty had tried to catch Billy Mink and had missed him. And he knew, too, that, having escaped, Billy would waste no time hanging about there, but would seek a safer place. Danny let a little sigh of relief escape. Mrs. Hooty had frightened Billy Mink away and did not herself know that Danny was there. He was no longer trapped. She who would gladly have eaten him had proved a friend by setting him free. Didn't I say that this Is a funny world? T W. Burgess WNU Servlet. DELICIOUS FRUIT DRINKS UEING the summer when much water is lost from the body by perspiration, more water should be taken In some form. The easiest drink one knows about Is lemonade, refreshing, cooling and easy to take as well as make. Keep In the Ice chest a jar of the lemon juice boiled with sugar and water to form a fruit sirup A mixture of grapefruit juice, lemon and orange, Is another drink well liked. Having a sugar sirup made to use for sweet West Below, Left to Right, Henry Ford, and Rexford Guy Tugwell. Above, Drouth Leads to Cattle Slaughter In the Complexions are always washed or creamed In a thorough cleansing process when blackheads appear, But If complexions were cleaned dally with a brush having firm but not stiff bristles, the dirt would not work Into the pores and become Insidious blackheads. Copyright br Public ledger, Ino. WNU Service. WNU Bervic.. In this lovely gown cascading back drapery Is held at the hips with a half round crystal clip. The tightly fitted bodice with draped shoulder covering Is fastened in front with tiny, glass buttons. Gay field flowers are on tbe black crepe. enlng Is a great convenience, as It sweetens at once and does not drop to the bottom like sugar and have to be stirred to be dissolved. Those who like honey use It often In preference to sugar, as It Is the best sugar to give children, being easily digested. When company drops In and needs quick refreshment on a hot day, try an orange ginger ale. For each per s son combine of a enp of d of a cup of orange juice, ginger ale, pour over a glass of cracked ice and serve at once. For a delightful Ice cream soda serve a glass two thirds full of orange juice and add a ball of vanilla Ice cream. Stir rapidly and serve. Orange Juice with lemon juice Is liked by many as a combination drink. Iced two-third- one-thir- IP A IP A 14 NOW- S- have been where he speaks of and I have seen the mud so deep down there that the farmers had to Jack tbe cows up to milk them. EGGS. n THROUGH a WOMAN'S EYES 0 Answer: That's a great rule for every one except the butcher. Helping with the dishes all hat summer, says coed Cora, more to do with wanting to rush back to college In the fall than the desire for a higher education NEWTON THE WOMAN OF FORTY CAN MARRY IF SHE WANTS TO HAVE news from England spinsters of forty are holding their own. And by holding their own we mean not having a good enough time, thank you, but In getting husbands If they want them Tbe news comes In the form of statistics that one out of every 81 English brides today is forty years old or more. And that doe not Include widows or divorcees. The actuiil number of brides over forty recorded was 9,179, thus giving further evidence, It is commented, "that the woman of forty is still a very vital and engaging personality and can easily hold her own when she chooses to enter the mat rlmonlal market That comment let It be remarked, Is definitely a matter of supererogation. We knew It all along. That is, every thinking person knew It. Our Information from England Is concluded with the statement that tbe most popular age for brides Is still twenty-two- . We might have surmised that too. There Is no denying the attractiveness, the of the downy cheek and pearl like contours of twenty-two- . But there Is no denying either, the value, in marriage, of the developed sense of humor, the perspective, the consideration and understanding, that are the result of more years of WE 1 life. We "Pop, what is worry? Carbon In the cylinder. , Bell Syndicate. WNU Service are not holding forth that forty Is the Ideal age for a woman to marry. But we do affirm without hesitation that the woman of forty can usually hold her own as the report says, If she chooses to enter the matrimonial market and there Is no reason why she shouldnt tX Bell Syndicate WNU Service Fighting Fire With Airfoam Tug-well- 8 you-leav- Dear Mr. Wynn: 1 have often heard that the worst blow one can receive Is the kick of a mule Do you think a mule can kick harder than a kangaroo? Yours truly, ANN TIPODES. Answer : I have never been kicked by a kangaroo, bnt once a mule succeeded In kicking me, and for the following six months every time I sat down I left foot prints 0 Associated brackets: First: To administer Newspapers. Fan Death Notices Used was the custom to write notices longhand, fasten them to a palm leaf fan and have a servant carry them to the doors of friends. approved Involving resettlement of destitute or low Income families from rural and nrban areas. Including the establishment, main tenance and operation, In snch con nectlon, of communities In rural and suburban areas Second: To Initiate and administer a program of approved projects with respect to soil erosion, stream pollution, seacnast erosion, reforestation, forestation and flood control Third To make loans as authorized under the emergenev relief ap proprlatlon act of 1915 to finance, In whole or In pari, the purchase project WNU Service. In the days when there were no newspapers In the Henderson (N C.) section to announce deaths. It C. UTLEY day Is fast MOVING hundreds of of Americas most destitute farmers since President Roosevelt declared his intention of rebuilding rural America and movfamilies Into ing poverty-strickenew homes where they may have a considerably better chance to make a living and find happiness. The moving bills will he paid out of Mr. Roosevels $4,880,000,000 work relief allotment, and the boss foreman of the movers will be Rexford Guy Tugwell, under secretary of agriculture and pride of Columbia university, who thinks he can lift pianos easier than the farmers can lift mortgages. For the eight main types of relief work to be done there are some 60 federal departments and divisions already existing to administer the funds and three entirely new divisions are being created. The one which deals with the retracing of the agricultural map of the United States under Tugwell Is the rural resettlement division. The recent exodus of 200 farm families of the North Central states to Alaska, there to begin life anew with the slate wiped clean, was only a cnrtalnralser to the main bout against rural poverty and privation which Mr. Tugwell and his forces will conduct. Single farm families who have conducted something of an Isolated battle against overbearing odds of depression, drouth and poor land, will be moved Into new and better lands and given a fresh start at Doctor' Tugwells discretion. By the same token, whole area groups of farm families who have collectively and In many cases literally bitten the dust will be gathered Into Doctor Tugwells moving van and rolled away to new homes where the land and the life will give them something more closely resembling an even break. Pale and underweight communities, suffering from economic pip In their Industrial sections, may be moved to where change of climate and a few honest dollars will revive them; If they cant be moved, new and healthy Industrial sections will be grafted (no double meaning Intended perish the thought) Into thm. Break for Slum Dwellers. Citizens who have found the going a little too tough In the slum sections of the larger cities will be moved 20 or SO miles out to the semi rural territories, suburban, given small plots of land on which to raise three squares a day and found factory Jobs where the hours are short and the remuneration adequate. Officially known as the Resettlement administration. Doctor division has been allotted $10,000,000 by the President for administrative expenses. What further funds are necessary for each authorized project will be allotted at a later date. President Roosevelt himself outlined the purposes of the resettlement by dividing them Into three By WILLIAM I Dear Mr. Wynn : In the past ten days I have read In the newspapers of thirty-fou- r men committing crimes. I discovDear Mr. Wynn: ered, by keeping tabs on them, that of the thirty-fou- r men A friend of mine has just re- twenty-eigturned from a trip through the ran away to Canada. How do yon South American tropics and he said account for that? Yours truly, that sometimes, while walking along, C. ELUSIVE. he would sink 10 and 12 Inches lu Answer: I am surprised, as, I the ground. What struck me rather peculiar was his assertion that thought everybody knew that it was farmers lived there and cattle the only place Toronto." grazed all around. How could catDear Mr. Wynn: tle exist In mud like that? I have an nncle who Is so stingy Yours truy, E. QUATER. every time he sends his pajamas to Answer: Your friend Is right 1 the laundry he sneaks a pair of socks In the pocket Did you ever hear of anyone as stingy as that? Yonrs truly, MOE BEEL. Answer: The stingiest man I ever heard of was a man who e starved to death In a pay as trolley car. HAMMOND Back Drapery 1 COOK BOOK WYNN, The Perfect Fool Dear Mr. Wynn: Dont you think a man will succeed later In life If he goes by tbe following rule: Live and let live? Truly yours, C Western Newspaper Union. MOTHERS BOX QUESTION ED t, serving these refreshing drlnka that they are not only cooling to the body, delightful to the palate, but are supplying the body with needed minerals and vitamins for health. Apple Straws. Wash and grate a red skinned apple. Place In sherbet glass and cover with the Juice of an orange. Top with freshlv grated coconut, chopped nuts and dates. Omit the topping for very young children and also remove the apple skin. I face It gratefully, Intending, No matter where the road thats meant for me Is wending To walk It as the saints their hard A f ASON CITY, WASH, is one way trod, '1 of the cleanest cities in the With faith In God! Copyright WNU Service. world, having neither chimneys nor grime, for electricity supplies heat and light for all its buildMAKE-UP- S ings. It has a population of 8,000 fyjiNUTE workers on the Grand Coulee dam project, and their families. . '' aJSfc i'Xt not know which way the A road may lead Tomorrow. My soul may tremble like a broken reed To sorrow; But though unknown the dark untraveled way, I have Today I This day Is steeped in Joy! Each shining minnte Has gladness In It No black forebodings steal skies clear bine; The sun shines through, And golden lies the path that winds this hour To love In flower. i s -- i N v, x ' cf lg'? 'f"& 'V CAMPBELL coffee served as an Ice cream eoda drink 1 most delicious. Drop in the ball ef Ice cream and serve at once. One should remember when is a scene at Feltham, England, during a demonstration of the apparatus wblcb extinguishes fires In quick time with smothering action. A mixture of 90 per cent air, 9 8 per cent water and 0 2 per cent Boap produces a foam seven times lighter than water, which excludes air from the seat of combustion and can be pumped to great heights THIS M. L, Wileon T of farm lands and necessary equip- Inhabitants of this land were said to be characterized by Incredibly ment by farmers, farm tenants, low standards of living. or farm laborers. In carrying out these threefold Resettlement Is hardly the am purposes, Mr. Tugwell was author- swer to the nations farm problem, ized by President Roosevelt to ac- in the opinion of the 150 delegates quire In the name of the United to the conference of agriculture, States government any real prop- Industry and science, which met at erty which he deems necessary. In Dearborn, Mich., to honor Henry administration Ford for his contributions to chem-nrgl- c the Resettlement are Incorporated the entire perfarming and to sign a decs sonnel and funds of the land pro- larntlon of dependence upon the1 Regram of the Federal Emergency soil lief administration. This land proPrincipal speaker In the conj gram has already been extended clave In the town that Henry Ford Into 25 of the states and Includes built was Louis J. Tabor, master ofj In Its operations the movement of the National Grange, who urged farmers and their families In the farmers to grow every plant an() Matanuska valley of Alaska. every product that can be grown In Never Before Tried. the United States. He said, Thai No projects such as these have American farmer hopes this confer-- l been carried out by any other na- ence will set in motion Influence Jj tions, according to M. L. Wilson, that will do more for rural Ufa assistant secretary of agriculture. than the politician has ever been This only nation wide planning able to accomplish." with the conscious Idea of removChemurglc" Farming. ing land too poor to farm from culWhat the conference, sponsored tivation Is being done in tbe United by Chemical Foundation, suggested States, he asserted. as the remedy was, of course, on resettlement the Commenting chemurglc" farming. This would he said that there are ap- shorten the distance between proJ program, proximately half a million farm dnctlon and consumption by bar-- ) families who are onable to produce lng the farmer once more assume anything to be exchanged. Their more of the elemental services and homes, which often average three processes, and claims that chemistry, persons to a room, are on the poorwill drive man back to the farm, est grade of submarginal land. Just as the machine age took him The land must be shifted to from It. better uses. It has been tradition Chemurglc farmers will bend In this country to get land Into mnch of their efforts to raising ownership, but the land on which farm products for purposes other families are falling because of Its than food. Farm production would poorness Is partly cut over timber need to be doubled If agricultural land, areas In the semi arid plains, alcohol replaced petrol as a motor land whose surface soil has been fuel, the conference concluded, and washed away by erosion, etc. It Is It would open np a new farm Inlargely land which Is not adapted come of $5,000,000,000 a year. It to private ownership. It Is break- was said that no unsolved technical ing Its private owners. The thing problems stood In tbe way, al-to do Is to bring It hack Into the though Important Improvements la' hands of the government processes can confidently be ex The solution Is the gradual pected." transfer of people on It to what It was only a few davs later we haye been calling rural Indus- when 4,000 farmers, mostly from trial communities. the South, marched (for the larger Assistant Secretary Wilson esti- part In railroad trains and automomated that three-fifth- s of the peo- biles) In a pilgrimage to Washingple on this kind of land have some ton, to express their thanks personIdea In mind concerning what they ally to the President and the AAA would like to do about It and have for what the administration Is trya little money with which they ing to do for them. Thinking they might carry out their plans The smelled a rat, opponents of the other two fifths will require assist- New Deal, on the floor of the senance from the Resettlement admin- ate and elsewhere, openly charged istration. d that the "marchers were Some families will be moved to by the AAA officials for a better land, Mr. Wilson explained. stunt to aronse public sympathy Then well try to get an Indus- for tbe program, and that the The peo- farmers traveling expenses were try located thereabouts ple who have been relocated will paid by the government find employment and will earn At any rate tbe 4,000 farmers wages. The government will sell cheered the President wildly when them land and honses. We can let he denounced to them the liars them put their common labor in on who criticized the operations of the building of the houses. FarmAAA. They expressed themers have their option. They make the selves to a man as their own decisions whether to In favor of the being heartily proposed AAA or go stay amendments, some of which even New Kind of Community. propose to make It necessary for Mr. Wilson even went so far as every manufacturer, wholesaler and to say that there must be a great retailer of food products to obtain to deal of shifting of population a license from tbe Department maintain the democracy, adding of Agriculture. Snch amendments that considerable economic plan- would pnt In tbe bands of that dening would be required. He said partment the prescribing of rules that a new kind of community, the governing business practices, ad like of which this nation has not vertlslng and the general regular had, will be created. tlon of the manufacturers and merThey will furnish a life akin to chants business. They aim at conthat of Europeaa villages where trol of every step In the process of they raise their own food and work distribution of food, Including the It Is for wages, he declared. advertising under Tngwell, who new type of Industrial setup, In has declared advertising to be an which Industry to quite an extent Is economic waste. decentralized. There are 110,000 food manufacMr. Wilson said that the economic turers, 02,500 wholesale and 911,000 svstem was developing more leisure retail dealers In food products who, time, and that some constructive no matter how small and Insignifuse of It must be devised or we icant they might be, would be subwill degenerate ject to penalties of from $50 to About 75 000 000 acres of poor $500 a day for violation of any rule sub marginal land were recommend made by the Department of Agried for retirement by the national culture. resources board last winter. The C Western Newspaper Union, cro-pe- i J hand-picke- |