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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH SUCH IS LIFE No Cheer Wanted! Sally Sez By Charles Sughroe WM VA VAOW Gouv, UP suy WHO'S A ETTWO Huu, pies, TtXJR. &AQ? OF PEWLTTS, eOTUE? OF POP -- wo WATERMELONS Doing His Stuff UNCOVER WORKSHOP 50,000 YEARS OLD , Washington. Discovery of a great Solutrean workshop iu the foothills of the Pyrenees In southern Trance is announced by the .Smithsonian Insti- worked flints and finished tools Is only about 15 per cent of the whole. In the nearby cave of Tarte, Russell reports finding traces of a hitherto neglected Aurignacean industry in poor quality quartzite. Two layers of artifacts were foun.d, but the form of the quartzite articles was limited by the poor quality of the material, and no purtieular form was recognizable. They may have been made in the nearby workshop. The possibility is suggested that even the cave man had his cheap and his expensive artifacts. 'The Tarte material consists mostly of crude choppers and scrapers, stones retouched on one side only. tution. This open-ai- r factory where crafts- inen of approximately 50,000 years ago fashioned tools and weapons out of flints and quartzite extended over several acres and. now is covered by a forest. J. Townsend. Russell, collaborating archeologist of the Smithsonian staff,- made the discovery while passing through the forest over a cart traek. Ills attemtion was 4rawn to some obviously 'man made flint .flakes, and .soundings made the area revealed the width . through and extent of the ancient workshop. 2t is within- a few miles of tlie cave of Marsoulaa where the Smithsonian Institution and the University of Toulouse are conducting a joint archeo. . logical .enterprise.. Cave-Ma- n in Culture. Step The workmanship of the Solutrean artisans represents an important stage In human culture the acme of- the chipped-stonIndustry and the transl-- tion to the stage when stone tools and Weapons were fashioned by grinding. It is the' second stage in the chroculture. The culnology of cave-ma- n ture is distinguished by the "laurel-lea- f blades of stone knives or daggers. Pieces of flint were beautifully flaked on both sides to produce sharp-cuttin- g The ancient edges. workmen made large, thin spearheads, scrapers and saws by the chipping process', at which they had acquired great skill. These artisans presumably were cave, dwellers, although there may already have been some specialisation of craftsmen. ' Toward the end of the Solutrean period came the revolutionary discovery of the possibility of making tools by grinding instead of chipping. This was one of the great transition points in human culture, but resulted for a time in a marked artistic deterioration while the new method was being perfected by many generations of toolmakers. ' The site discovered by Russell is believed to mark a transition Stage front .the .Solutrean to .the succeeding Aurignacean period. ' ' Twenty-On- e Soundings Made. Russell made' twenty-on- e soundings through the. forest. Below a level varying from about sixty cen- timeters to more than a meter' in thickness was .a layer fifty, centimeters thick, consisting of quartzite pebbles and flint nodules of poor quality. tightly packed, with earth. This area had been superficially quarried' .from 'the surface. Artifacts and debris of manufacture were found in this level, as well as in the lower part of the humus. In one sounding a considerable quantity of flints was found where the quarry layer appeared to have been dug into deeper than elsewhere. The stone bad been thrown aside so as .to mako a cuplike depression, whose borders were covered by' only a few centimeters of humus. Despite the extent of the workshop, 'Russell reports, the yield of the station is meager and the' proportion of rain-"washe- d Rare Metals in Oregon Is Hard Problem for Inventors James V. Jameson, who has been selected as one of the University of California's quarterbacks, is here seen in one of his early workouts, showing considerable action in both figure and face. Stunning Fall Costume USE A POWER OR LOSE IT By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Lata Dean of Men, e University of lllinoi. Brown, who has been proud of his ability to do athletic stunts, hurt his shoulder a few months ago. The doctor to whom he went gave him some simple directions about what be was to do to get him into shape again, told him not to use his arm too strenuously while the joint was inflamed, and let him . - d . go. The mole jacket of this Rochelle green wool suit Is really so short that It is no more than a fur trimming. The fronts cross and fasten with square silver buttons at either side. s Victim of Heat Freezes His Ears With Dry Ice Chicago. Karl Marvin froze his ears while the temperature stood at 97 degrees. Like hundreds of thousands of other persons, Marvin was seeking ways to . get relief from the heat It occurred to him that it might help to put ice on hts head. He tried regular ice, but it melted and the water ran down his neck. Then he thought of using dry Ice. A few minutes after he had applied the dry ice, his ears began to burn and turn white. A doctor Informed him that they had been frozen. ODD THINGS AND NEW By Lame Bode WHAT'S IN A NAME? . ' the Fi H mi.vm ZOCATfP ON vmmsmei. San Francisco RAfPH 6. DEAD IS A RESIDENT OF tombstone, Arizona ELEPHANT ROCK URAL FORMATION A MAT IN COLORADO Brown Medford, Ore. Billions of dollars worth of complex metals lie in the ground of southern Oregon but the master key for their extraction Is lacking. "Southern Oregon has more rare metals than any other district In the world, besides large quantltlee of the commonly used commercial metals, but they are all mixed together, declared one expert These rare metals sell from $19 to $75 an ounce. The mining of them remains as a challenge to the metallurgical world. They are so mixed with each other and with baser metals that their full value never has been properly appreciated. But It is agreed among mining authorities familiar with the region that the chemist, or metallurgist, who devises a process of separating the precious metals not only will build himself a great fortune, but will cause Oregon to become the most Important mineral producing state of the Western hemisphere or perhaps of the world. Millions of dollars in placer gold already has been taken from southern Oregon soil and millions more will be A vast project financed by taken. eastern capitalists and calling for de-ar Man X PATKONIZK8 Summing Of I INTO TO Mt Nly puts it HOUSEWIFE Rice paper NOT MADE FROM RICE... IS Wswihsw lyifltm pd my tiM. pexitwaz. Nts k A cloth dipped in vinegar and rubbed over the kitchen stove befors it is blacked will remove all the greas that may have accumulated on It COLLEGE Km sMnts mj i (ta tta ti git th tat PL tmtnt - lH Ub It pays m-r- start. 0. Itto Tuberculosis Great Chopin, John Calvin, John Wesley, the Bronte sisters, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Simon Bolivar and Andrew Jackson are a few who suffered from tuberculosis. Powdered alum sprinkled In thl crevices of upholstered furniture will exterminate moths. . Strong soap suds and hot water will remove stains from pewter that hai THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY become discolored and dark. got to win th. priio thia iraik. It. Whll. mountain days art ounny. When using flour as a substitute foi cornstarch when sugar is used, mix the flour and sugar together, and thi flour will not curdle. (T MJ 8ci vicoj fa . - want to bay nm wint.r grub, Alans with a Jar at honey. 1 I want ta bay aama winter clethaa. New plrau don't think it'a fanny. I can To keep steel bright, dip a piece of rag In a little kerosene, then in fins ashes, and rub the steel briskly for a few minutes. Then polish with a clean, dry cloth and dry fine ashes and you will be delighted with the result do How 7 all thia if I win tho prixa. Jntormoontain Good with intormountan Money. NELLIE ' U. VAN DEBVEKB. Jackaon, Wyoming, To prevent hard-boileeggs becom lng discolored plunge Into cold water Immediately after boiling and befort removing shells. I First Adhesive Stamps Adhesive stamps are said to have been invented by James Chalmers of Dundee, Scotland, in 1834, and came into use in 1847, when parliament sanctioned their use. Qabby Qertie J In UTAH WOOLEN MILLS Trade for BLANKETS Charles C. Wyatt of Mayfield, Ky., has been paid $1 a year as treasurer of Graves county, Ky., since 1914, but has repaid the county "a million for one, being the leader in the dairy industry from which the county reaps an annual revenue of about $1,000,000. banker-farme- r, Your Wool POTPOURRI ASK YOU The brightest star in the heavens is Sirius, the dog star, one of the constellation, Canis Major. Although it is among those stars nearest us, it takes eight years for its light rays to reach the earth. The constellation Canis Major means the "Great Dog, and Is in the southern hemisphere. , 1932, Western Newspaper Union. DRUGCIBT POH APEX A?AX The Brightest Star . Balt Laka City, Utak Excellent Vaiaes-Sen- d fer Sample Twin Fishes "Siamese twins among fish are a common occurrence. In state hatcheries, even specimens with five perfect heads to a single body have been found. AN INTEHMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Wonderful Fog Horns Fog horns with which Germanys two great passenger liners are equipped weigh nearly a ton yet are economical of steam, as they use four diaphragms to produce unusually low tones. "Marathon dancing for six consecu- tive days almost makes one weak. NEW Historic Raleigh Tavern Restored MOTOR OIL Expert Studies Effects of Chess on Children Sold with a Money Back Guarantee Artificial Way Best Leipsic. Whether or not playing chess affects the formation of the body, hnd especially that of the skull, is at present being investigated by Dr. R, Orau of the Institute for Kthnol-ogand Anthropology, at the University of Leipsic. Doctor Orau is lucky, for he has at his disposal the most unique material for h's studies namely, the entire population of the little village of Stroebeck, province of Saxony, known as the "chess village, where the royal game has been played now for close to l.OiX) years. In Stroebeck chess is plajed In every house by young and old. Chess even forms part of the obligatory curriculum at the Stroebeck school. Lake trout eggs hatch better in artificial hatcheries than in the natural spawning beds on the lake bottom, experiments conducted by Ira Smtih, conservation warden of y Wisconsin, showed. GRAINS GF GOLD THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Cream Taste Better Western Made Fcr Western Trade Ak Yonr Grocer Obeying and Commanding He that hath learned to obey will know how to comand. South. r epos SfOtaB yes is BUSINESS ytn tttnnl talttt! tautlM M rtu to mUIw -- Oakland, Cat. " ivM per week will be paid for the beet article on Why yoe should ase Intermoontain made Bead Similar ta above. Send roar etory in proa r verse ta In termoantain Products Column, P. O Box 1645, Sait Lake City. If year story appears in thia column yon will receive check for $5.00 CHINESE j POSITIONS HENAGERS esrent roliano UPSIDE Down AND SPELLS BACKWARDS It Up The true wisdom is to be always seasonable, and to change with good grace in changing eircuna-- 1 stances. . 0. 1932. Western Newspaper Union. HOMK INDUBTBT. QiCTHIIE LEE' reported. . Do!lar-a-Ye- fol- lowed his directions, favored the arm whenever It was possible, and since his job involves mental rather than physical activities, used the muscles on his left side very little! He was surprised one day when he caught a glimpse in a mirror of the back of his shoulder to see that instead of a round vigorous muscle, there was only a depression where the muscle had once been. Not having been used for several weeks. It had atrophied.' And the distressing part of it all lay in the fact that having lost the power, it took a great deal longer to get It back than it did to lose It. - I was the lightning typographer for a time in the printing office in which I worked to earn my living while I was in college. I could carry on a running conversation, fill my "stick accurately Hnd rapidly at the same time, as any typesetter can. I knew the case perfectly. That was a long time ago. I hardly know where a letter is now; I would set a line of type hesitatingly If I held a stick in my hand, and if I had to employ the less used letters I would grope about as I might try to find, in a dark room, a lost collar button. The power and skill which I once had Is gone because for a long period of time I have not used it These are largely physical or mechanical things to which I have been referring, but what is true of them is equally true of spiritual or intellectual things. One has only to neglect moral obligations to discover how much easier It Is entirely to ignore them. Once slip and it is hard to get back. Unused power is weakened or lost. velopment of the rich Mount Emily and Grave creek deposits on a 50 year basis was recently launched. Large quantities of gold have been taken from "pockets, or from oxidized free milling eres. But as soon as these ores went below the oxidized zone complex sulphides were encountered and were rejected as too complex or refractory to treat The experts declare that souther Oregon holds vast deposits which comchrome-iron- , gold, pound together platinum, paladium, Iridium, osmium, ruthenium, tantallum and other rare metals. Ores that ran from 10 to 20 pounds of tantallum a ton have been Some men don't cure much for a brother man until they can help him out of trouble. Compassion is an old, old road to In the restoration of the colonial city of Williamsburg, Va., by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the work on the Raleigh tavern has just been completed. The photograph shows the Apollo room, most historic room In that tavern, as It Is today. It was the scene of colorful social festivities during the Eight- eentb century, and In it, according to tradition, was organized In 1776 the honorary scholastic fraternity Phi Beta Kappa. ' $5.00 j ' I W.N.U. Salt Lake Ciy Work No. 3241 ' |