OCR Text |
Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Home Sewn Aids To Summer Bediiiy ADVENTURERS CLUB f f, ,',M AXroV ' ' . . ' 'J know, boys girls, I have often said that youll find adventure close to home a darned sight easier than you will the world. One who goes traveling in search of thrills ' foamingdoesnt find.any until he gets back into .his own bailiwick usually again. But there are exceptions to every rule and heres one of them. George C. Dorste of Bardonia, Rockland county, N. Y., met his biggest thrill when he was thousands of miles away from home and in a strange exotic country. The country was Egypt, and George landed there in the course of his travels as a fireman on a tramp steamer. The steamer was carrying scrap iron, unloading' it in consignments of various sizes at ports along the Nile river and its many branches. ,The year was 1912, and the ship laad traveled part way up the Nile and was anchored in the river just south of the town of Medinet El Faiyum. The ship was anchored not far from a pier.-Thweather is pretty hot in Egypt. In the afternoon, particularly, the sun beats down with such intensity that it is next to for anybody but a native to do any work. It was t the height of the hot season, and the crew of the steamer, dripping sweat from every pore of their bodies, were just about all in. Along in ' J ' ii ( mm aAssassin of the Nile 99 : - I smartness, your mer wardrobe by making the charming accessory set in gay printed cottons like linen, pique or gingham. Its very easy to do-e- ven the gloves, which have the new, roomy, blunt fingers. Your p pattern (1643),' includes a sew chart that tells you exactly what to do. sc y: 4 L HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELFI H.ELLO, EVERYBODY:and vf, color, as well ADD variety and to sum- - y' ,v ( i .s, ''73vV;'0 -- step-by-st- I U By LEMUEL F. PARTON i MEW In 1914, S. S. published his autobiography. As he was only 57 at the time, it was a sort of juvenile prank j - IDA LUPINO STARTS WORK. OK HER NEW HAND CROCHETED ENSEMBLE UNDER AN INSTRUCTOR'S GUIDANCE. LACY EFFECT OF THE BLOUSE IS GAINED BY AN OPEN WORK PATTERN ESPECIALLY COOL FOR SUMMER. TINY RED BEADS ADD A GAY NOTE. BLOUSE WITH BEADS (With mercerised crochet cotto. No. it -- uu kook 4.) Back. work la pinna decreasing inch. pattern otch at do overt oae-hc- li 4 timet. Work incbct straight. Increase one-ke- ll pattern on otch tide t timet, work until blouso metturo It laciu la til. Decreaso I pattern on each tide every tow 4 timet. Work patterea on tack aide every row 4 timea. . Cilia e the afternoon the skipper gave orders for all hands to knock off work for the rest of the day. The men didnt argue about that. Most of them just walked to the shadiest spot they could find on that hot ship, flopped on the ' deck and rested. But there were a half dozen young fellows George among them who had a better idea. They stripped off their clothes and dived over the side into the water. . The Hot Sun Beat Down on the Hull of the Vessel. The water was cool and refreshing. Those lads were in it, . off and on, for the better part of the afternoon. They came out, now and then, for a breathing spell on the ships deck, but the Mc-Clu- re e, ' ' mpossible YORK. This princess dress for afteris exactly what you want for hot summer days. This style (1752) is refreshingly simple, and it has a beautifully smooth, slim figure-linupped sleeves, and a noons 14 laciii one-ba- ll i . pattern on each tido. Then decrease until armhole it 7 mckea i a all. Decrease one-ka- li Front inch more to underarm at S I achat Ckatn i inchea decreaao tamo ta back, working above atari ot armhole. Decreaao I pattern at neck edge. Then decrease ont-btpattern every row at neck edge until shoulder matches keck shoulder. Shape same way at back thouldarj keeping armholes the same length. Pattern. I. Ck (chain) $ akin I a. c. (tingle crocket) a. e. in next stitch Ck I. a. c. in neat stitch Ck skip t a. c. D. C. (doubts crochet) I a next stitch Chl repeat between 's. . i. Ch I d. t. in Ck I between 2 e. a. on row below Cb I g. c. 1 Inch i loop on row below Cb I a. e. in next loop Cb 1. , Repeat these, two rows. String beads on cotton betore starting chain work ono bead in chain between a. c.'g on row below ta every Stb pattern end every Stb row alternating bends. one-ha- lt lt McClures Early serSy fa! Autobiography tended. Now, at 82 he is busier But a Prologue writthan ever, ing books and digging into socual problems, and the word is that next September he will revive his McClures Magazine. Lincoln Steffens, and others of his shining legions of dragon-slayehave passed, or else taken second thought, like Ida Tarbell, and. unless things change a lot between now and next fall, he will find the same old dragons still .around, and possibly quite a few litters of new ones, some of them strange breeds, and. perhaps a bit scalier than' any he ever knew. rs Two.years a go, the whippy little Irishman, with the rumpled hair and the rumpled suit, wrote a piece in which he indicated that the disquieting noises of the capitalist system were just body squeaks and that the engine was still all right. His idea is to go on from here, instead of backing up, and it is to be assumed that i Cham tor 2 Vi Sleava. 10 inchea work pattern increasing V, pattern on each stde tot 3Vt inches. pattern on oacb sido work i inches decrease Vt pattern on each aide avtry row moro inches. square neckline dipped in the will be his take-of- f for the refront to make it more becoming. vived magazine. After 60 years The frills at the neckline, sleeve of battling for civic righteousedges and foot of the skirt, make ness he concludes that the this dress very feminine and flower-United States Constitution is a like. And its so easy! The dress itself practically puts itself changeless and unchangeable-document- , which will in time set together,, and the frills can be sewn in, in no time! Linen, voile, everything right if we just stay within its ground rules. silk print organdy or flat crepe are pretty materials for tllis. Still crackling with aphorisms and The patterns. Greek quotations in his ninth decNo. 1643 is designed for sizes 14, he be ade, reminiscent talkmight 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 16 reing about Oliver Wendell Holmes, 2V3 .yards of matequires Theodore Roosevelt, William Dean for jacket; 3 yard for gloves, rial Howells, .Gilbert Parker, Robert Vs yard contrast; 1V yards Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, and s yard for bag. for scarf; Conan Arthur Doyle, James M. Bar1752 is designed for sizes 12, No. rie, et al. But he is chock-fuof 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 takes 4 today, and yesterday is just so much material; 434 ink through the printing press. All yards of the above and many others like yardsof pleating or ruffling. Pattern Book them were his business and social New Send 15 cents for Barbara Bells intimates. He has probably led more famous writers in leash than Spring - Summer Pattern Book! Make smart new frocks for street, any other man. daytime and afternoon, with these In 1866, when he was nine simple, carefully planned designs! years old, his parents, of a famIts chic, its easy, its economical, to sew your own. Each pattern. ily of farmers and carpenters, sew chart includes a brought him to prairie farm In Indiana. He sold $1 microto guide beginners. Send your order to The Sewing scopes on the street corners of Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Minneapolis, St. Paul, Duluth, and Chicago; worked his way Montgomery AveT, San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) through Knox college; got a each. job editing The Wheelman for the Pope Manufacturing company, started his syndicate, and, in 1893, MeCInres Magazine, in that other doleful day when his friends all said: The funerals tomorrow. He . says he is just getting wound np. . 36-in- ll great reptile was between him and the ship and not more than 20 feet from him. sun beating down on the iron hull of the vessel made it so hot that they were glad to get back in the water again. The afternoon wore on and the sun began sinking toward the horizon. As its scorching rays withdrew little by little, the day became cooler. One by one the swimmers climbed back aboard the steamer and stayed there. Finally all of them were out of the water except one. And that one man was George Dorste. George loved the water and he hated to leave it. He was swimming some distance away from the ships side, and about y between it and the pier. As he splashed about in the river he heard a voice calling, on shore and, looking up, saw a native standing on the pier. The native was shouting to George, but in a language he didnt understand. Then suddenly he began to point toward the ship. George could figure out only one reason for that pointing. lie immediately jumped to the conclusion that someone aboard had dropped something over the side and wanted him to retrieve it. He turned and swam slowly toward the ship. The native on the pier kept right on yelling, but George paid no attention. And then, suddenly, he saw it a thing that looked like a log floating in the water, but a log that had a rough wrinkled snout and a pair of glassy-eye- s just showing " above the surface! A half-wa- The Pier Was a Great Distance Away. A crocodile! The great reptile was between him and the ship and not more than 20 feet away 'from him. A shudder went through Georges body when he saw it. He turned and began swimming toward the pier. But the pier was a great distance away-r- or at least, so It seemed to George. He knew that beast could catch up to him in less time than it takes to tell the story. He was swimming as fast as he could exhausting himself in a spurt for the pier. And the crocodile was following along behind. It seemed to George that the great reptile never approached any closer than that original 20 feet the distance that had separated them when he turned toward the pier. Was the beast playing with him, as a cat would with a mouse? Or was it waiting until George had exhausted himself in his swim toward shore before those cruel jaws opened and closed over him? Still swimming frantically, he reached the pier. And then another terrifying discovery greeted him. As he made frenzied efforts to climb up the poles that supported the pier, he found that ' he couldnt. Those polls were covered with a slippery 'moss. He could make no headway up them. And all the time, now, the crocodile was coming closer, swimming slowly toward what it knew must inevitably furnish it its evening meal. He Scraped and Clawed at the Moss-Covere- d Spring-Summ- NOW IDA IS WORKING ON A PILL BOX HAT WITH TH-- ATTACHED WIMPLE. THIS SMART FASHION ADDS A DASHING NOTE TO ANY GIRL'S COSTUME. No. 4 book and Clark's O. N. T. Pearl cotton. Cb. 4. fasten with a slip stitch forming a ting. Sim a. c. into ring. Two a. c. top ot oacb atttcb on row below. Cb. 2 2 a. c. in neat atitcb. Ono a. e. in oacb ot next 2 stitches. around 2 row. Cb. 2 Repeat between c. in next atitcb. One a. c. in each ot neat i stitches. Repeat between 'a around I row. Cb. 2mcreaao 4 atitebea around oacb row ovenly spaced, keeping work perfectly Set until crown ol ket measures 5 Vi inches. Fasten oS. Ck. 2 Vi " a. c., in each stuck ol Chain. Cb. turn work I a. e. in top of oacb atitcb i i on row below. Contrnuo until atrip is length. it inches long or RIGHT: THIS PHOTO SHOWS IDA LUPINO OUT WALKING IN HER BRAND NEW COSTUME. PRETTY AND PROUD. AS WELL SHE MIGHT BE IN AN SHE MADE ALL BY HERSELF. NOTE HOW THE WIMPLE HANGS FETCHINGLY IN BACK. BLENDING WITH THE LACY BEADED BLOUSE. THERE IS A SPECIAL PRIDE OF OWN . ERSHIP IN A DRESS YOU'VE CROCHETED YOURSELF. AND IT ISN'T SO VERY MUCH WORK. EITHER. THE AP. PLICATION OF A LITTLE PERSE VER. ANCE NETS AMAZING RESULTS. NOT ONLY IN THE DRESS ITSELF BUT IN AN INTANGIBLE SATISFACTION FROM A JOB WELL DONE .HE INSTRUCTIONS SHOWN HERB ARE EASY TO FOLLOW. AND YOU WILL FIND OTHER ALLURING SIMPLE PATTERNS-EQUAL- ARB IUST BACK TO THE DRESS. IDA GETS A FEW POINTERS ON THE SKIRT WHICH IS FASHIONED IN A LOVELY SNOWFLAKE PATTERN. No. 4 book and Clark'a O. N. T. Pearl cotton. Crochet a looao cbetn over 10 tncbea long. Crochet on Jl petterne with t d. c aktp 2 atitebea, maka 2 d. e. la next atitcb, chain 2, make 2 d. c. back into same atitcb. skip 2 ttitcbea . Repeat between around t be row. Row 2. Chain 4 work la. c. under chain 2 separating d. c. of row below, chain 2 work I a. c. back in seme space, chain 2. work I d. e. ot row below. Chain 2 . Repeat tbesa 2 rows tor pattern. Work inches. Decreaso by making J leas d. c. la the S d. c. group (the iollo wing decreases will bo made in the asms manner). Work leebea, decrease: repeat. Work 4 inches, decrease ; repeat. Work J inchea. inches in nil. repeat twice. Twenty-si- x Finish with beading by making 2 d. c. Chain 2. skip 2. Work 2 tows ol a. o. around tha i i bottom. swimming crocodile. The piece missed. The native threw another and that one found its mark. ,It hit the beast on the snout, and it dived beneath the surface. By that time a boat had been launched from the ship. It came tearing across the water as Georges shipmates pulled hard on the oars. It reached George a few seconds after tha crocodile had gone down. As they .pulled me out of the water, George says, I lost consciousness for a minute or two. But I came back to life before the boat had reached the ship in time to see the steely eyes of the crocodile which had reappeared once more. It was following along, not more than 10 feet behind the boat. And George says that if hed had a gun then, it would have given him the greatest pleasure to aim it right between those two glassy eyes and pull the trigger. small-mout- large-mout- n until water conditions are suitable, and that the male bass guards the nest until the spawn hatch. While the nest is guarded, the male fish is in poor condition, is easily caught, and his capture means the destruction of the eggs. Full protection until the spawn is hatched is highly necessary to the welfare of the various members of the bass family, which includes bluegUls, crappy, sunfish and rockbass. VAN DOREN denies pARL is PUBLIC ECONOMY there any new barbarism in the world and says that what ailed us is the same old barbarism. There in continuity the choice of W. S. Van Dyke LY direct D. W. Griffiths film, Intolerance," which was a tolerably ing round-u- p of the old barbarism. That was 24 years ago, and the Sinclair Lewis opus picks up right where Messrs. Griffith and Van Dyke left off-- , without missing complete a flicker. In the worlds fair time capsule, Mr. Van Dyke might be memorialized as the man who calls Greta Garbo Kid and gets away with it or as the man who once spanked Lope Velex when she went temperamental on the lot. They caU him the director with the velvet touch. He is n Pj 41 f! O hard-boile- d r nigged, weather-beatea newsboy, miner, logger, n I I AM for a government rigorously ' frugal and simple, applying all the possible savings of public revenue to the discharge of the national debt ; and not for a multiplication of officers and salaries merely to make partisans, and for increasing, by every device, the public debt. Thomas Jefferson. direct the filming of Sinclair Lewis It Cant Happen Here. Not that there is anything barbarous about Mr. Van Dyke, but, as we recall it, he got his start help-- , stage-drive- six-foot- expressman, r, CONSTIPATED? Hero Is Aistilng flatlet tor Ou to Sluafllsh Bow la It rou think nil laxatives Condition YMtl mild, thorough, r Dependable relief from sick headaches, ttbooa vpeJl, lind feeilag when associated with eaemipatiow. Without Rhkl If not delicti ted. return tha box to us. We refund the purchase That's fair. price. Gel NR Tablets todaj. sll ( QUICK RELIEF PC ACID IXDEGESTKtt Latent Power Let the very humblest man Know that he may one day have it in his power to help the very strongest man he has ever known. Joseph Parker. gro- cery clerk and laborer before he went to Hollywood. d He got a in Hollywood by selling a few scripts. At first he was one of many of Griffiths assistants, later one of his aces. Producers like him because he goes straight through without water or feed. He used to make' a serial in nine days and a Western In three, writing his script as he worked. He did many jungle and South Sea films, such as Trader Horn and White Shadows. toe-hol- Wildlife Federation Works to Protect the Black Bass Wildlife Week stamps. It is pointed out that black bass do not spaw-- ek to AS er step-by-st- OUBetriwn (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) The National Wildlife federation reports a steady increase In laws protecting Americas most popular game fish, the black bass. In all but five states, there is a closed h and season on the Thirty-eigh- t h bass. states prohibit the sale of black bass. In 1937 a federal law was enacted prohibiting the interstate shipment of black bass illegally caught. A vote in all of the states gave the bass first place as the choice among 1939 sportsman's i Holds a Spell Over Van Dyke Piles. By now, George was mad with terror.- - He was still clawing and piles when the native scraping frantically at those smooth, moss-covere- d on the dock came to his rescue. Suddenly, the native picked up o huge piece of scrap iron from a pile on the dock, and hurled it at the . 39-in- full-leng- th 4,500 Fuller Brush Men Government Water Consumption An estimate, based on the fiscal The ubiquity of Fuller brush men is explained by a recent estimate year ended June 30, 1938, shows that J per cent, or 4,812.578,900 galthat there are 4,500 of them making 16 as many as 35.000,000 lons of water, were used by the States government in the calls in a year's time, more than Unite enough to visit every family in the District of Columbia. country at least once. More Power to Yea Good Friday's Child Although the average In early Christian times, the of the automobile engine has inname Christopher was given every creased 300 per cent since 1920, the male child born on Good Friday. It size of the radiator has remained means Christ bearer. the same. 3-- door-to-do- 1 or 1 horse-pow- er His father, a San Diego judge and a cousin of the late Henry Van Dyke, died when (he boy was eight years old. Rustling hard to help his mother support lie family accounts for his versatility and his skill in type characterization. (Consolidated Feature WNU Service.! Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Tour kidneys are constantly filtering waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes Ing in their work do ta resot act aa Nature intendedr-(a- il move impurities that, if retained, may Kiaon the syateat gad upset the whole machinery. Symptoms may ha nagging backache persistent headache, attacks of disaineea, getting up nights, swelling, puffinen under tha eyes a feeling of nervous anxiety and loaa of pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder may ha burning, acanty or too Irrouent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment lx t iaer than neglect. Use Deans Pills. Deans have beeo winning new friends lor morn than forty years. They have a ration-wid- e reputation. Are recommended by grateful people tba country over. Ail your neighbor! Irosmiarna I |