OCR Text |
Show : . THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. UTAH t Wholl Get the Call for 1940? It May Be One of These Men -- ADVENTURERS' CLUB r. ' . . HEADLINES FROM TH.E.LIVES. OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI Hello, What to Eat and Why rpODAY a host of Presidential aspirants crowd the political C. Houston Goudiss Offers Practical Advice scene "but their numbers will be sifted down to one Democrat Regarding First. Meal of the Day; Some and one Republican before another year is out, leading to the '19 tO election. President Roosevelt has yet to decline a third term Break fast-Tim- e Wisdom for Homemakers, offer. Provided he does not run, astute observers say they' re .pofi-. tive one of the following men will occupy the White House seat . By CHOUSTON GCfUDlSS THERE is one meal that can be regarded asmore impor- from 19 il to 194't. Picture Parade thumbnails " their careers, reviews their private and political histories and recites the qualitantthari dny other, that meal is breakfast. It corties after the which tongest fast and precedes a major portion of the days fications according to their sponsors should make them work. Thirteen hours elapse between a 6: 30 supper and a 7: 30 contenders for America's No. 1 elective position. breakfast, and the body engine requires a new sypply of. fuel before the daily activities are begun. Yet all too frequently this first meal is inadequate in food values, andis gobbled in haste . . . with consequences that may have a ufacturing process not by whetheffect upon health. er it is hot or cold. It is desirably 1 Down the River Road everybody: .. . . . a yarn that packs thrills enough to last through a whole night. At least, it did for Mrs: Dorothy Murphy, the Bronx, N. Y. Many years ago, Dorothy was living on a farm in the Chestnut Ridge section near the little town of Dover Plains, N. Y. She set out to drive to the railroad station three miles away, and before she got back shed had enough adventures to last a . lifetime. That was in February, 1914. Dorothy was just 18 years old. Her aunt had been spending two weeks with the family and it was she whom Dorothy drove to the train on that cold February evening. Automobiles werent so common then. What Dorothy horse named drove was a surrey, drawn by n old, half-blin-d .( far-reachi- Brownie. The train pulled out of Dover Plains at 6:45 p. m.,and Dorothy turned the horse around and headed for home. Already it was dark a moonless, starless night. . The way back lay along a steep, rough, unfenced country road that climbed for nearly three miles before it reached Chestnut V G.O.P. Arthur Hedrick andenberg, 55, senator Ridge. On one side of it lay thick woods covering an up- pom hit natite Michigan ward slope of the ground, and on the other was a steep de- tinct 1928, former neusfia-peman at Grand Rapids. clivity. For part of the distance, that declivity straightened Not highly popular because out into a tall cliff. And there was nothing to prevent a carriage frtrni going over it, if it approached too close to its edge. That was Dorothys first thrill the prospect of driving over that road In the dark. She hadnt thought daikness would fall so soon that night, and she was scared stiff of that cliff. As she drove along, and the darkness deepened, she couldnt see her hand before her face, and. she gave Brownie a free rein, hoping that his instincts would keep him on the road. 0 C. O. P. Thomas Edmund Dewey, 37, native of Michigan and r hes refused to advance hu candidacy, therefore might loom as a compromise choice because of unquestioned ability he has shown in senatorial duties. racket-bustin- g New York district attorney since 1937. Ranks first among Republicans now but must win support of doubling Thomases uho question his lack of administrative experience. Barely missed New York goternorship last year. Dorothy Felt the Wheels Slipping Over the Edge. They were going along the top of that cliff, and all was going well. And then, all of a sudden, Dorothy felt the wheels slipping over the edge. Poor, old Brownie had failed her. He half-blin- d obert 0 G. O. P. R Alphonso Taft, 50, career Cincinnati lawyer, ton of late President William Howard Taft. Ranks second to Dewey, gaining tremendous support in short period since he was elected U. S. senator last autumn. Ambitious, he has lost no opportunity to gain public ng to give whole grain cereals a prominent place in the diet. This rule can be followed even when cold cereals are used. For there are many nourishing ready-to-ecereals made from substantially the whole grain. These appeal to the palate because they are so crisp and appetizing. And they supply important minerals, a good amount of vitamin B and some vitamin G, in addition to energy Men who set forth after a meager breakfast are licked before the days work is started. They never seem to get into high gear and they lack the energy to perform their tasks efficiently. Homemakers who find themselves fatigued and irritable before the mornings work is completed may be surprised to learn that their lassitude is due to a skimpy breakfast. And children who go to school after an insufficient morning meal cannot hope to make good grades in their studies. They fatigue quickly, find it difficult to concentrate and easily become cross. Moreover they are apt to experience hunger pangs during the middle of the morning ; and when it is time for the noon meal they will either eat too much or will have lost their appetite, thus ' disrupting the entire food program. at vah''. A Cold Cereal Analyzed interesting to analyze a pop- Its ular ready-to-e- at cereal, made from wheat and malted barley. We find a wide assortment of nutrients, including protein, energy values, phosphorus for the teeth and bones; iron for building rich red blood; and vitamin B which promotes appetite and aids diattention. It has been estimated gestion. that a serving of this cereal s of a cup with cup of whole milk, will provide an adult with 7 per cent of his total daily requirement of protein; 11.5 per cent of hiscalcium, 11.2 per cent of his phosphorus; 9.75 per cent of his iron, and a Starting the Day Right It is therefore essential that total of 125 calories. every homemaker recognize the . Vary the Method of Serving necessity for providing a substanTo help make breakfast intertial and satisfying breakfast. This is not difficult to do; nor is it nec- esting, vary the cereal from day to day. Or offer a choice of sevessary to spend a 'great deal of eral kinds of packaged ready-to-etime in its preparation. cereals and allew each memWhen I hear such complaints as ber of the family to select the one eat wont breakfast, "My family prefers Vary the fruit also. or Theyre simply not interested he And occasionally you may comin food in the morning, Isuspect bine canned or stewed fruit that the menus are dull and with fresh, 0 DEMOCRAT Cordell monotonous; to make a cereal . cereals and perhaps mem- sundae. Hull, 68, quiet, cultured Further variation may U. S. secretary of, slate bers of the household have the bad by using brown since 1933. Former (1907-2habit af sleeping so late that there be introduced sugar or honey in place of white and ' represen-lul- l is no time to eat properly. And on occasion the cerefrom ie Tennessee; Both situations are easily rem- sugar. als be baked into muffins, senator from Tennessee may Author of federal edied, and they are closely linked. waffles or pancakes. if For menus are the breakfast income tax system, father It is also possible to serve the made sufficiently attractive, it of new I). S. trade policy. in many different forms eggs to be wont difficult from Like Gurner, suffers persuade baked, scrambled or in poached, age handicap. every member of the family to a plain or puffy omelet. rise a little earlier in order to If these suggestions are folenjoy a substantial, unhurried lowed, it should be a simple matmeal. ter for homemakers to serve A Model Breakfast wholesome breakfasts A well balanced breakfast in- tempting that will send their families away cludes fruit or fruit juice; cereal; from the table well fitted for the an egg or bacon; bread or toast; activities. and milk, cocoa or cereal bev- days Questions Answered erage for the children, with cofMrs.'S. C. Yes, it has been obfee for the grown-upThe egg or bacon may be omitted occa- served that there is a special sussionally, for an egg may be in- ceptibility to dental decay during cluded in some other meal during adolescence. This may be due ta. the day. But cereal in some form the fact that calcium and phosis usually the mainstay of the phorus are required in such libbreakfast menu, and there are eral amounts for rapid growth. many kinds from which to choose Its advisable to include these both hot cereals and cold minerals in the diet in generous ' cereals. quantities, together with a liberal allowance of vitamin D. Cold or Cereal Hot O. P. Alfred Mrs. A. M. C. Milk should be 0 G. London, Some people have the notion the foundation on which 52, governor every of Kansas from 1933 ta that cereals must be hot in order to be nourishing. This is a fallacy. adequate diet is built, for it con1937, Republican presidential candidate in 1936. Has For the nutritive value of a cereal tains the greatest assortment of substances of any single grown in political stature is determined by the grain from nutritive food material. since his defeat that year, which it is made and by the man WNU c. Houston Goudiss 1939 85. fear but three-fourth- one-four- th at - John 0 DEMOCRAT Nance Garner, 71, V. S vice president since 1933, U. S. representatne from Her arms were aching and her head was swimming. She hear Brownie wander off. t had gone too close to the edge! The surrey gave a sudden lurch ' and Dorothy was thrown out into space! Says Dorothy: I clutched at the air as it slid past me, like a drowning man clutches at straws. My hands grabbed some bushes growing out from the side of the cliff and I hung on for all I was worth. And there I was, between earth and air, and ' with nothing to save me from death on the rocks below but my precarious hold on those shrubs." Dorothy says that time has no meaning under such circumstances. The minutes seemed like years. Her arms were aching and her head was swimming. She could hear Brownie and the surrey wandering off In the darkness. Evidently the old horse had pulled the surrey back on the road after she had been thrown out. For a terrible moment she clung to the bushes, and then her fingers encountered a branch of a small tree growing along the side of the cliff. She caught it with one hand then the other and drew herself up over the cliff to safety. She lay on the ground for a while, sick and weak. Then, having recovered a little, she got up and stumbled to the road. Brownie and the surrey were nowhere in sight. Dorothy started walking toward home. Youd think shed had enough adventuring for one night but the big thrill hadn't even started. She had only walked a few steps when she heard a sound that froze her blood in her veins the haying and yelping of dogs. Wild Dog Pack Pursues Terrified Dorothy. Dogs dont sound so dangerous but Dorothy knew better. A short time before she had seen the body of a boy who had been killed and partially eaten by these same dogs. They were wild animals descendants of dogs who had run away from their mas-ten to live in the woods and had reverted to type. Every once in a while, in those days, packs of that sort appeared in the woods in various places throughout the country. And they still do, in wild, outlying regions. A single dog would run at the sight of a man, but in a pack, and in the middle of the winter when they were half starved, they would attack almost anyone. Dorothy knew all too well what would happen if this pack caught up with her. She turned, stumbling, into the woods and ran until she found a tree. It was a tree with a low fork of its branches one she could climb. She began pulling herself up into it. The yelping of the pack was coming nearer and nearer. She wasnt a minute too soon. She had hardly clambered into the lower branches when they were on the spot, yelping and snarling at the bottom of the tree. "And there I was," she says, "perched in the tree while the d brutes bowled and snarled below. I still turn sick and cold all over when I think of that moment. The worst part of it was that I was afraid Id grow weak or faint, or so numb from the cold that Id fall out. I knew what would happen then." his native Texas from 1903 to 1933. Wont talk, but tolerates boom uhich has skyrocketed him to the post of No. congress-sponsore- Democratic fiossibility. Advanced age is biggest handicap. 1 - 0 DEMOCRAT James Aloysius Farley, 51, career New York business man and politician. Postmaster general since 1933. Democratic national chairman since 1932. Might be ti re presidential candidate with Garner or Cordell Hull (see right). Is nations most astute and most popular politician. N - ( 1 1923-31- ) 1931-3- s. illiam 0 G. O. P.74, Wsenator Edgar from Borah, Idaho since 1907 and chairman of powerful senate foreign relations committee since 1924. Perennial candidate, unquestionably able, but would probably refuse candidacy and throw his weighty support in favor of a younger man. 0 C. O. P.-H- erbert Clark Hoover, 65, President o) the U. S. from 1929 to 1933; Moss-ma- secretary of commerce,1921-29- ; famed as V. S. food Now administrator, 1917-1regaining much of the popmany Republicans ularity he lost during early '30s, but liberal Republiplacing their money on a cans fear he uould be an horse which lost its first old fine candidate. important race. Juvenile Spread in Crochet teddy bear border is done in three pieces for easy handling. Simple lace stitch sets off the lettering. Pattern 6334 contains instructions and charts for making the of spread shown; illustrations spread and of stitches; materials needed. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th St., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, address and pattern number plainly. hunger-maddene- With the First Streaks of Dawn the Dogs Left. Hour after hour Dorothy clung to that tree, wondering why her folks didnt miss her and come looking for her. Wondering why they didnt realize something was wrong when the horse and buggy came home without her. She didnt know that old Brownie, turning completely 0 DEMOCRAT -- Harrs L. around in his struggles to haul the surrey back on the road, had wanHopkins, 49, natneof loua, dered back to town and was spending the night in an open horse shed. career welfare worker. New Her folks thought Dorothy had decided to spend the night with relatives 1 ork state relief admints ; federal rein town, as she often did, so they didnt worry. And all that night, she trator, ; V. S. lief chief. crouched in the tree racked by the cold and harried by terrible fears. secretary of commerce since As the first streaks of gray appeared in the sky, the dogs then. W ould be President slunk off through the woods, and when she thought it was safe Roosetelt's choice as sucshe came down and crawled to the road. She couldn't walk, but a cessor. lias surprised critics by doing good pb in farmer, driving to the milk depot, found her in the road and commerce. brought her home. Dorothy says shes written this story for us other adventurers to read, but she adds, "Usually, I dont think of it if I can help it. 1931-33- 1933-38- (Released by Western Newspaper Union ) Works of Fifteenth Century Genius on Display in Milan More than 200 working models of the outstanding inventions of Leon nardo da Vinci, phenomenon of the Fifteenth century, are on display at Milan, Italy. A three search for original year, world-wid- e drawings of Da Vincis inventions has resulted in this exhibition. A great artist, painter of "The Last Supper, Da Vinci was also an engineer, architect and inventor. To- one-ma- day, more than 400 years after his death, the basic principle of his "differential is still being used in every automobile. His pile driver is copied almost exactly today with a few modern embellishments. The original principles in his rolling mill, printing press, concave glass polisher, olive press, saw mill, pulley system and canal locks are used today the world over. - 0 Paul DEMOCRAT 4 ones McNutt, 48, career actu tty politician and man. . Indiana university : Amerilaw dean, can Legion commander, 1928-29- ; Indiana goternor, 1933-37- : Philippine commissioner since 1937. Might pull heavy tote from war veterans, but unknoun 1925-33- Courageous Asking 0 DEMOCRAT Patrick . I am prejudiced in favor of him who, witfipirt 'impudence, can ask Joseph Kennedy, 51, career financier. Extremely versatile. Headed securiues and exchange commission, 1934-3headed maritime commission, 1937; ambassador to Britain since then. Best qualification: Is New Dealer, yet has confidence of big business men because he is one of them. He has faith in humanity, and faith in himself. No one who is not accustomed to give grandly can ask nobly and with boldness. boldly. 5: . Pattern 6334. A kiddie would love to own this spread and its fun for a grownup to make too! The center panel, with the childrens prayer and all the fascinating juvenile figures, s crocheted in one piece and the V A 1(ah VY I f I I . "VOU can depend on the special "1 sales the merchants of our town announce in the columns of this paper. They mean money p Q saving to our readers. It always pays to patronize the merchants who advertise. They are not afraid of their merchandise or their prices. tm I I CDFflAI vit I - |