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Show UTAH THE SUMMIT COUNTY DEE, COALVILLE, SUCH IS LIFE By CIIAHI.ES SUGIIROE No Lap Pets! WHEM OUSMUIP. f&K (SompuM I COME HOME Aiump Biff OUT, poes this pick 'Way Back TOAUEM, MW AUIMAIS ALWAYS PIP lummox oki By JEANNg FAMOUS SONG WKITERKEpT TAKE TO boarding house MEH HAP POff AT I wo,nen wh0 are Just housewives today would simple be famo if they had the time to take demands of their homes and fan? ilies. WASHT to Whein HAPPV EXCEPT IN MV LAP Carrie Jacobs Bond success because circumstances Restore Sight of Blind Eye by New Operation Surgeon Uses 40 Hot Needles and Electricity. New York. Dr. Oscar B. Nugent, chief surgeon of the Chicago Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat hospital, described how he thrust forty needles into a mans sightless eye, seared each wound with a short-wav- e electric current, and made the eye see again. The operation, said the doctor in an interview after attending the assembly of the United States branch of the International College of Surgeons, is typical of the new technique in which eye surgeors make new wounds to cure old ones. This stricken man a typical case suffered what is called a retinal separation. The retina, which is the inside coating of the eyeball had become detached. It had pulled away from other layers of tissue. The task was to bring the layers of tissue together and keep them high-frequenc- y, there. In this case, as in similar ones specialists are treating, Dr. Nugent said the first step was to cut the tissue covering the white part of the eye. Then in order to operate on the back part of the eyeball, where the retina should be fast like the paper ELEANOR HOLM 4I ..Sayvjvvv .& fh y. Then the eyeball could be turned inside out in about a quarter of a circle. After that, over the whole area of detachment the small electrodes were put. As each needle was thrust in the electric current was turned on, and it made its cauterizing wound. Each was left in its place until all forty were in the eyeball, each detached from the holder that had been used to place it. Each then, at the climax of the operation, stuck in the eyeball like a pin in a cushion, with threads extending from the ends so that all were shown in proper location. All Back Into Flace. Finally all were withdrawn, a fluid separating the retina from other tissues released, and the retina was forced by the eyeball itself back against the other tissues. The eyeball was turned around, back into place; and nature, in its process of repair of tissue, made all tissues grow together. The wounds in this case and in all such cases were made so that the scarred tissue would readily adhere to the other tissues, Dr. NuThe rough edges made gent said. by each needle were like rivets. They riveted the retina to the other tissue. He meant, he said, they rivet the parts if the operation works. Sometimes it does not. But his portion of sucessful operations of this kind now is 50 per cent. SMy cjSeiglibor 'r Says: c & on the wall, it was necessary to cut one of the controlling muscles. ' Hybrid tea roses used as background with blue ageratum and pink dwarf phlox as a border makes a beautiful garden. Cooked potatoes do not keep very well during warm weather. So carefully store them on a shallow dish in coldest part of the ice box. By e, to Little amazes professors four-year-o- Associated Newspapers. WNU Service AMAZE A MBYINUTE ARNOLD SCIENTIFACTS Disease Blown by the wind psycho-education- al at Harvards clinic who are d. d Chicago and made some money as a dressmaker and painting china. They were so poor that her son had to go to work soon thereafter as a delivery boy. Ambitiously, she devoted all her spare time to composing songs. Through financial support from a woman singer she started a small music publishing house, writing the words and music, and painting tie cover designs of the songs she printed. She even promoted the songs herself, and little by little she won success. Today the songs she wrote are remembered and sung througA Perfect Day, hout the world, His Lullaby, I Love You Truly, Do You Remember? My Son, and others. TO ALASKA OFTEN gold buried far away, some inaccessible part of the world looks easier to get than fortunes awaiting us right at home. Senator Key Pittman of Nevada started his career on a wild goose chase for gold, but came back to make his success in the occupation for which his schooling fitted him. in Key Pittman, who was bomTein law attended 1872, college nnessee. His career at that time looked as though it might consist of appracticing law, obtaining an and attorney, as district pointment with the forging ahead in politics United States senate as a goat. But it tha young Pittman could not see Alathe was reason the and way. skan gold rush in 1896. He rushed And what hapup to the Klondike! landed at DawPittman Key pened almost freeze of the ahead son just said that penniless. In Nome itofisa bucksaw he worked at one end SO ble of expression. In other words, self needs a body can both manifest which it through and express itself. These bodies of ours are living temples every part of which vibrates with thoughts, desires and An attractive cotton afternoon impulses. Think of our loss in muThe flecked novelty fabric dress. sic, architecture and in the mechanstripe is with its woven of a seerical trades, if we had to part with glorification an imported the human hand. Think of the unsucker weave. Catalin fastenings bearable silence if we should lose stripes? the stripe. The bandeau hat match the organs of speech. Think of the of room 9 is small My dining harmonizing linen. by is tragedy of blindness if the optic nerve should become paralyzed. Movement, sound, light: these belong to life. We protect these bodies of ours against the aftermath of death. Life 'A. insurance is perhaps one of the best ways to provide for those dependent upon us. But the phrase life insurance is a misnomer. We cannot insure life, for it is immortal. We insure these bodies of ours, and when they no longer function, we call it death. What dies? In reality nothing. Death means destruction, but not annihilation. Destruction of the combination of chemical elements which make these bodies, but the elements themselves are taken back by Mother Nature to herself. We should take proper care of these bodies of ours, for through them the personality expresses itself. In them we have the composite elements of humanity, capable of great achievement, subject to continual frustration. An impaired engine makes little progress. These bodies of ours are human engines that require food, sleep and care. The human body very largely determines individual efficiency. But, the body is not only the tool with Pictured here are this years honor men at the efJ5r New which we work: it is the temple of the Divine Spirit which dwells in us at tne United States Naval academy. Jack A. obermeyer and brings into being immortal tem- York, as selected as honor man number one, Eme y N. Y., number three; and Russell H. Wallace, Westbndgewater, ples beyond the tempests of tir-I afe Western Newspaper Unit number two. our personal son. not lose house in took in roomers. She eight-year-ol- Carrie Jacobs Bond did heart. She rented a large rose-color- ed Honor Men at U. S. Naval Academy Government WORKED HAVE gathered SPORES FROM An altitude OF 18,000 FEET IN STUDY-INPLANT DISEASE Food for thought 54 OF FOOD CON- Prehistoric SUMED fered IS PERISHABLE Lora Di Meo ld I wrent on a European trip and shipped back from Italy some very beautiful Renaissance furniture, inand two cluding a desk, book-cas- e Dantes chairs all hand carved in a very dark wood (almost black) which I placed in my living room. I made two dark red velvet cushions for the two chairs, wrote one of our readers. My three-piec- e living room set of taupe mohair does not go well with this other furniture, and I would like to either my three pieces with some sort of damask or get something new. The background of my rug is a dark red scattered with dark blue, green and yellow (a Persian hunting scene). Would you adivse me to get a new living room set, and if so, what period or style and what color should I get to go with my Italian pieces? Or if I would the one I have now what colors should I have the three pieces and what material? I have beige Venetian blinds and I use no curtains. What color and what kind of material should I get for draperies? Should I get a floral pattern or money, and an SENATOR PITTMAN RUSHED Italian Furniture tap-dan- ce ing iron rust. com-pos- e. m making a study of her remarkable mental development. Lora, who resides in the West End of Boston, can read, wTite and spell as well as warm. She an ordinary also can as well as child In preparing pineapple gelatin be movie prodigies and has a routine sure that the pineapple is first of 40 songs. cooked, otherwise the raw acid will prevent solidification of the gelatin. A teaspoon of salt and a dessertspoon of lemon juice makes an excellent salt of lemon for remov- nT HATS my best color, com-- I 11 and very near my living room. I mented Dottie Young as we saw a very pretty India drugget admired the lovely old blue of her rug. Do you think it would be apIt is true that they are not worth living-roowalls. And it does bring propriate? What would you sugvery much, these bodies of ours. out her eyes and makes her skin gest? About the cheap- - simply bloom. Here are our prescriptions: If the est thing for its She used her old mulberry twist living room furniture isnt too fat psm 7- - size in all the weave rug, then hunted to find cur world. Cheap, tains of a pinkish cast but verging but indispensatoward a pale mulberry tinge rather ble. We could not than the usual peach tone. This I- get along without was a rayon gauze that hangs deli.t them. We dress cately but its not really transparthem up as if we ent. She followed this tone through ( thought them a deep pinkish lavender which she very important. quilted and used as a slip cover We hang jewels for a pair of chairs. All the other ij v on them and furniture she slip - covered in a sprawling floral on a light beige spend tofortunes ward ground but with deep purply-red- s in When We Went on a European Trip. trying off the ravages of the pattern almost mulberry they and overstuffed looking, it could be time. We deco-a- ll were. rate them with and used with the sorts of cos lavfor lilacs and reupholstered accents, Crystal metics for the purpose of making ender sweet peas and iris and del- - Italian pieces. If it is too bulbous them appear other than they are. looking, replace it with heavy but Poor body! A marvelous peak in rather straight line pieces. These can be quite as comfortable as the the evolutionary process: truly, we other type. In any event, wed like are fearfully and wonderfully dark dull red for this either dammade." Physiology tells us that only ask or brocaded velvet. But wed the cerebellum, the back part of the not have the chairs the same, old brain, is essential to physical exisblue would be our choice for these tence. If the front part of the brain two chairs. A third upholstered is removed, the body can still funcchair could be in a deep dull gold. A tion in terms of physical reactions. blocked linen on a natural ground The front brain is the center of our might be a good idea for the dramental and emotional energy, which something with a large without the body, would be incapa- peries scale motif and a Renaissance type A Becoming Room for Dainty Dot. of design. Tall brass lamps and accessories of brass would be apphinium are Dotties favorite flowers here. She highlights them with propriate and attractive here, and AMAZES SAVANTS pink flowers when she can get just for the wall perhaps a reproduction the right pink. Flat silver frames of an early Italian painting. for her pictures made unexpectedly By Betty Wells. WNU Service. distinctive details . . . and her sil wver tea set repeated that note. "7 Dottie herself is usually to be FOR AFTERNOON found in something trailing and creamy colored, or else in simple pastel linens that go so well with her eyes and that room. The reason this room pleases us so much is because it not only suits dainty Dot, but it has substance enough to match her broad shoul dered gray tweeded Henry. And the furniture coverings can stand a growing family since they all zip on and off for cleaning. LEONARD A. RARRETT twelve-year-ol- Lovely Eleanor Holm, world backstroke swimmer, champion basks in the sun on the shore of Lake Erie during a respite from her appearances as Aquabelle No. 1 in Billy Roses Aquacade, huge musical and water extravaganza at the Great Lakes exposition. The exposition will continue at Cleveland through September 6. house-wif- d r7Lints cTfousQRo! By BETTY WELLS J ' THESE BODIES OF OURS Reserve leftover sweetened spiced vinegar from bottled pickles and use in place of vinegar and sugar in salad dressings. Cocoa can be all ready to make, or a cool chocolate drink if you prefer, by mixing your proportions of cocoa with a little water and sugar and bringing to a boil and putting aside in the ice box. Mixture is now ready, and all you nqed to do is to stir in with the milk and forced her to change from a to a business woman. Shee was born in Janesville, Wisconsin In 1863. She liked music and stud led piano from childhood until she married at the age of eighteen When she was twenty-fivshe re! married Dr. Frank L. Bond, who took a sympathetic interest in her music and encouraged her to She wrote one song, l3 Dolly Dead?, at that time and it' was accepted; but the work was merely a hobby with her and she did not produce more. She devoted-hetime and efforts to being a good housewife and mother for the Doctor and her little boy. Then, Dr: Bond was killed in an accident and she was left an invalid without toothache- - Toothache was sufOVER 50,000 YEARS AGO, PREHISTORIC REMAINS INDICATE. W vrw I g, fc .1; f WNU Service. 1 'y. - the pe'; make a 1,V18iisS t attorn pie made Shortly thereafter, the United States, settling laid the f to lda-pa- Nev., where he the tion of his fortune m .. first' Telephone company. in J In 1913, Key Pittman political contest, was el. u for United States senate, of h:ms j account given a good inHis greate 24 years. jveri to better the PsJonth preat pro- spired of course e Ll duction of this metal to J Stories of wealth foreign fields ,souocgUse the fields Eeem to alluring uJ;knrP probably represent the adventure. one e offer are Piningicljhere wishes while Jf-ad- vyd place. fellow |