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Show THE JOrKNAl.. LWION. LomaliUNsk ()UTKI! 1 ilMSzl : l i . ti e i ov t r if ;s ' Vit Ci ,, olT of t Well, if thats only I thought sum-las?- dont think dar 1 00 jeanr r osc, ip1 cepted fawri'J- - farora! 00 ICp' ie liirr test Ik no atorr 0 'lore o' tie k lend I And i j It,; .tt S . -r i, ag'sji' "" 'jf k' Vh' ? ) k X wjteitijtiiihifrihiivir-- i iri ik'rewwni Mass production of the new Curtiss Iomahawk lighters for (,reat Britain's RAF now total a new high of eight planes per day at the huge Buffalo, N. Y., plant, a part of whose final assembly department Is here shown. The Curtiss Tomahawk Is the British name for the ( urtiss llawk pursuit. The planes shown above will soon be ngland bound. 1 A : 'A,r." thought Kay, ' y.r dr'' CdTie' u adv had f I'll stick to my work and d a: !;. -r esnt bring some ard as she dressed ' evening week 'e been really thrilled a lat-- d Brown, brilliant e de-!'F- r f lire r! e w tv-a- the "G w t f - tie i I d ' d a - up. S ) and st..- II R t v ll ill 1 ' ti.t i i i I , ( n ' M, i . l t i , , M M - p u Oil ill , 111 ll' J h ll! I t'l lt ini tmii In l"v Mi earn to tin top (111 bank and should In- li v v (1 Home Via Axis 11 J ' l ) oil.IMoU.il lit t V fllll ill UlU'llOl S I 7 ILL the little tots he proud of in hlippets! They come in thiee Me s. You can use angora or anotlu r wool for the dots tii at aie etnl iroideied on. these .Si ml pn Ii i oi th hf win film w n k i .a I i n , i Im g In ell but tin m In i ii as tin thud I n in ii iv w H u dime and t, inter w In n is si o k K I'm Abundance of Kails When Kreetintf Buildings ' (lection of f.iliu buildings, muling of joints is if tt ii tiic c.iiisf of l.iter d image to these build mgs by windMoims Skimping of of means often mills immlier the Axel Anderson, live, an American A poor Job costs p iipket boy who was stranded In Norway rewhen the Axis took over, arrives In of muling m (be consti uctiun or of use and of the fat in buildings New Yoik from I islion. The label pair In ton nails result or few small loo to lie k had shows go around his ne( s at the joints Many farm wi aknessi v la ltei tin. buddings aie blown down or sag lie cause not enough or too small nails were used in their construction and while small nulls do not craik the lumber so much us larger oius, they are not so effective In holding the building rigid. Good nailing practice consists mainly in using the proper kind, t'i each sie, and number of nails for strucparticular part of a wooden In order to get the full ture strength of the common wire null under a side-way- s pull, it must be s of Its driven at least length into the piece receiving the wood is being point if light-weignailed When it is not possible to get this much penetration, more nails should be used because the strength increases directly with Uie In Uie pom Secretary Iurvis, head of the Treasury Henry Morgcnthau Jr., left, and Vrtliur of the British purt hasing commission in the Fnited States, are shown at the entrance of the White House cxm utiie others, alter s luncheon conference with President Roosevelt. Purvis said they had a general talk on supply matters and the situation in London. Chinese Welcome New Year ( Alaska Draft uminni'iim rnunii two-tlilrd- number of nails. For wall sheathing and roof boards of the ordinary kind, two eight penny nails at each nailing point are usually enough. In assembling rafters it is well to consider that a severe storm may lift the roof as a whole. Therefore at least three or four nails of the proper length should be used to fasten each rafter to the top of the side walls The proper number of nails in such places sometimes seem to be more than necessary but they may mean Uie difference between a wrecked roof or one in place after a storm. Ernest H. Gruening, governor of shown above, announces that young men In the territory must register for selective service on January 22. At this time the snow will be hard enough to permit of safe Alaska, travel. Auto Dealer Turkeys Compete for Prizes i .. g r . ,r J ' 1 e Agriculture Is prepared for na tional defense better than any other Industry, according to N. E Dodd, western regional director of the AAA. Farmers are better trained to produce all the nation needs without damaging the land as was done during the World war, and there is enough food and fiber for every use. There is enough wheat stored on farms and in elevators to feed the people next year if no more wheat is grown. We have enough cotton in storage for a supply if we don't raise another bale. And th( re is a half billion bushels of coni in storage so there will be plenty of grain two-year- live-stoc- k feed acre contains 43.560 square feet or, what is more commonly used, ICO square rods. A square acre measures 208 feet, 8 Vi inches on each side. A strip of land Vi rod wide; 1 mile in length equals an acre. To find the number of acres In a rectangular field, multiply the length by the width In feet and divide by 43,560 or, multiply the length and width In yards and divide by 4,840 or, the length by the width In rods and divide by 160. An in the Choice turkeys will compete for prizes from D . N. January 20 to 25. The tom Forks. In Grand be held s' of turkejdom last year. left, was named grand champion in the show. The entered toms M Is seen inspecting a e ri-ater sold for lower ;Y,n-idr- c right turkey pictured in the h - id 3. CO a pound. 20-2- i (tills Neeillerraft Pept. New lork In coins fur lst- - Klglith Avs IS Km-lin- cents tsi n No Nanis Ail, lies! Another ('.home After the Final Cood-llMiss Hud y Tne fellow thrt ati n d to i nnimit sun ide teitain girl (eiy tune a She refused tin ned him down. him again the other night, and the next morning a messenger boy called with this note: Dm ling Hy the time you read tins, my body will be floating down the river. Life without you is not woith wlule. Shed no teals over me, hut rumember 1 have always loved you. Good hy for ever. The girl went white and nearly fainted The hoy still remained. "What are you waiting for? she asked. The man who gave me that note suid I was to wait for an answer, said the boy. INDIGESTION nay iflefl th Heart Uw atuoiarh in fullat mar art like a u IwarL At tlw Diet ala of dlltreae wurnm itvpcnd on lltll iui Tiblrti M but motto of tko No lull! t ii fr l1 UwHgtlon If th acting miMllrlfM known for a t 999 hell rgtura KIltMT lmK iUX lKtliU0 bvUio lo u txui Oaa trapped hair Ulaav smart Hi on tnn tod 6ur. ikcIi We Are Cheated Real happiness is cheap enough, yet how dearly we pay for its counterfeit. Ballou. Salt Lakes NEWEST HOTEL f JUl .r ' .1 isss 3 Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Hn TmU Oppodta HIGHLY KECOHMENDES Riles $1.50 ts $3.00 Its a mark of distinction to Stop it this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. BOBSITER. Mr. WNU W 241 s Figuring Acreage Stanley Horner, president of the National Automobile Dealers association, will preside at the organizaannual convention'! twenty-fourtin held to be tion Pittsburgh Janudealers automobile The ary part In national defense will be the convention theme. II Farmers Prepared For U. S. Defense for tn oi(ht Rewliig a gi Is , mm mum an he doin' ill rut the slope mat hue s 1" Win for I'aUrin 2M3 emit ins till k tUm miking h;n4ri la 2, 4 snd 6 year tlae; Inll' all. wn of Utrtn nut stitches, mats-d- f Mali rrtjuiirtl. photo pattern itlU'h. Boles cut In fall and wilittr when the willow aie doimant will live and in spi mg will loot In the bank and Mini up glowing shoots that I AiQvYiS? V of logs laid up and down and lit Id by stout slaki s l ''4 I I ll .1 i Ilf d 111 girl examines the puilahlr ra- laid about two feet up.ut tin d ly T dio transmitter width was used hv tin ai i i ut to pi ev i nt ill mg two Cierman spies who slipped into the poll iv iUi a to 12 im h layer of In glum! as refugees. Kiev si nt blush using the willow piunmgs hark military movements to (.ii ma- ind olhrl blush if needed Atiihoi the blush mat with old ny. The spies were exei uted In l'lli w oil n tonville prison wire laced logi tiler with Miioo'h uire Sit stout posts In the bank and tie the mat down M !, wins fi om the posts to hem v shun s sunk m the sin mi below the mat iii.niimii, t I I A l Wjr i 'll slopt t t ' .1 t I limit. h lo i in the 1, f H n 111 t I t i I. foi m a hv mg I ,1 n.itf i low of t 'Z3- -' nificance. In InDot, dash, dot, dot, dash mis-sagher flashed she ternational cofle mto the dark Over and over she spelled it out. But Billy Bcwen, once a sailor ir. the navy, read it crly once asY he i stood on the deck rf the N w a " boat. Ten has' !y sii 'i coat and shots h c r ' ' ' n iut far ved d and rail w utv rs i 'or a - v n V, shru 111 fin lm 'V III i i III II It I In s III lit kl II I " '.ll ll ll girl! 1 t lilratcr with h.m she with Dougl.is c" aJ ac,lcs Hes lost what i j ' ll it I j In- - I 'X ci '.! 1 , , I I Iti il (.,i e ' I UV black-handle- d - (?jj Illll ll 'ill Ill N breathlessly climbed the iron stairs to the light. She could see across the water the lights of the great a ship like a string of jewels on knew she and of black velvet square that Billy Bowen's eyes must be turned towards the light She placed her little brown hand copper firmly on the knife switch that controlled the light, and the great beacons rays, like sumplaying across the water mer lightning, took on a strange sig- A dt I - III fcblnjfrv&fe'bXol t After supper she crept into her own little room to sob her heart out in the twilight of the summer eveZoom-m-m-sounded the on January ning. Chinese Americans will celebrate their New Year, day York boat BiNew of the of the whistle old. Highlights centuries are 24 In accordance with tradition, that llys boat He was standing on the celebration will be dragon parades like the one shown above and the the girls above deck, looking at the light. of fireworks. Ceremonies performed In church by Mary Ann sprang from the bed, shooting to observance. the add s somber note slipped off her shoes, and softly, too 'kat . . glad to have me ,gain- But I'm ready to York's too much for too impersonal, too ' u" x in ( it i i l - tV i III. ; bathe her face and brush her hair to hide her sorrow, for father must not know of her sacrifice She heard the sound of her fathers oars, and soon he entered the little kitchen. he said happily, "Mary Ann, a been good daughter tc "youve me, and it has been hard on you here all alone with an old fellow but its over now like me . . Jane Hatch said today that shed marry me, and I guess I know what you'll do next! Ive been watching that Billy Bowen making eyes at you. Maybe we can have a double 'e X' A . A love me! And poor Mary Ann, loyal to her dead mothers trust, could only watch his lithe figure striding away without one backward look, and cry and cry and cry. Then she must wedding, yx i X' H spatkhng August ir mmng her father had rowed across to the mainland for supplies, and just afur he had gone Billy Bowen had come to see her. He looked so handsome with his thuk black hair, bronzed face and white teeth, as he pas sionatily urged her to marry him' "Ive waited for you two years, Mary Ami, and I need you'" he declared, and when she replied that her father needed her still, he lost his temper, and bitterly asserted that he did not believe she loved him at all. He vowed that unless she would promise to marry him soon he would take the boat for New York that night and she would never see him again. "When the boat goes by the light tonight. Ill be on it, he said, his boyish voice rough with feeling; "and I'll be thinking. Theres where the girl lives who doesn't d, nks T t 4b British Purchasin':n Ajrrnt at White llouc WNU Service "! r. 1 vt j'if 'i Th'S nat-eacti- l. v s t ' v HA i"' s her. good job. the first novelty of suc-- s and accomplishment had worn Kay bund other visions min-n- g With those of her progress to r.e. And, being an honest sort of d irl,, she faced the facts and to herself, after six months New York, that she would give everything she had gained or M fcok forward to for the sake of fside Douglas in quiet little Station. She liked her work. .Hind her new friends interest , Jbe thrilled to New York, with viid life and fast tempo. She yyd the few gay parties she indt me for. But her heart was h iuglas letters lately had been few d far between. Perhaps he didnt fcr her as much as she had hoped he did. Perhaps he r4 fur someone else. She knew ag. really, of his friends and Shed never been in Forest and in the mountams where id met him at a resort hotel mmer before they were both, arse, among strangers. She fern nding herself that he had told her anything to make her he really cared. Perhaps her that he did was only the to what, she now was her love for him. foy worked out a scheme to fit if Douglas cared, ir Douglas she wrote. "This a very cheerful letter, for I Im going to lose my job. Isnt oo awful? After Ive had such id done so well. But the cruel, seems to be too big and for me. waited for a sympathetic anyone came. She wrote: ie blow has fallen. Im just hig city sort of person. Ive ry lrb And in this unfriendly I d'Ht know where to turn t'other answer. In her next letter: York is pretty dreary when dewn and out. Ive been the streets today looking F r And there isnt any. Of r I tr all right, for my father te or'y m' yOv 1 1 Oh r. ndu ate 7 V ! ICS ; m 1 i On it, i t 1 Down-and-Oute- RM srm:M to mJKh or tin Little Folks l WILLOWS SAY K that Ann, and Mary Ann loved Bi.ly, and et she could not foi get the lonnsi she had made to hi r mothi r that she would loi k after her father for J When '- ! - ad-tie- Poftrr L OP . 1 ;j jJ '"P'HE lighthouse stands on the point where the great ships steam past to enter the canal, ami there lived Mary Ann and her father, who was the keeper of the light. Mary Ann had kept house fur her father for the five years smee her mother died, in spite of the constant urging of Billy Bowen that she marry him. It was hard, h ird for botii of them Billy wantid Marv really oetryc- ro V jj -- 17 IG SIC . . ii in , 'wi k By DOROTHV C. WAYM great. "lad, indeed, done unexpected, though she hated to have naUsls;. antrastdc give luck all the credit. In 1 depression, she had got into fee big stores. And, because ? a no :if ; fal genius for using words 15, j I she had obtained a place it emen' le advertising department, and requiT ttiout b I been promised a speedy rise to u r Cupids Code (McClure . 00 r 81-- later, after talking itlis. and there was no ap-to anything like sentiment F I poor little d - g k i didn t know how you were getting on, do you Courtney kept me posted And I realized that if I didnt come to rescue you soi n youd get away from me for ever eSt was doctor i i f iter i r ,t 1, 1 Make Warm Slippers Kadio ( t , t ike f . sui i V MilLu.i have ti explain, m Douglas, not ri ally down and out I ji.st wrote that so I could find out how ou felt about me " She watched his fact anxiously for signs of disapproval He beamed I know Courtney Brown is an old friend of the family hes taking my sister to dinner and the show in your place You let-fro- toe: r n, a i - it l o.i ' m, t il't- ' I 111 i them. if that was the k dfcided Kay, eMt about it, she would show Shed be as good a business iaaa;. she could. Shed beat him bis Own game. reekl passed. An occasional Douglas. He was getting he wrote, 'lig d wly but surely, the law "office where he held a nor f irtnership. Not big money these t.mes in a small town when you com-- i nps in t not bad, either, He was ve the ipipmsts and income. She success. of her hear ta i -t- o have struck a great piece taffet; working her way right up allar, d : jlop Hard work, of course, e piet In fla J(u lite that kind of thing, of IRIKA: - w Nazi SnI jUr i i -- tT-- ing o e sleft a little RAID li l U ( f 1 ' t I" d i ,m ,t 1 , till' sav 1 , r f i d v Jm Auaiu-- t s 1'1 t . n i I w But Ik'ugl is in New York. each; i y i r I forgot Whiles Couiti.ey Brown lies my h s and 1 was Ami going to dinner Willi him lit-ju- st ATTEB' jmerj li ' Half an hear " think last asked Kay softly. Jjs'bouglas voice was a that you werent the rl whod think that kind of necessary to happiness. I sum-- htl youd like oh, last I mountains thought youd ie 1 rent things. But if you like rk and think you'll make re. why thats that and othing more to do about it. He was unk youre right. now, accepting practical ly as a woman, but as a struggler in the I think I make a living. success of chance better me in Forest Station than end ora 1 I h ' l"l dill p j Fnitst City be tegan stailtd things at the small tow n pj , d to see her. l.ved JJny said Douglas, at first thin more and lously, "The small town it Mill in one e m t ,r v It .1 id I f?Vi M , d v ii w n tin "1 1 . t ' P . I -- Bn , bt 11, O,. .. mi, all a i ai mi h.-I- 1 r I v I' llv h- our style. you feel irier did you f' s WALTON h id pbl'GLAS Kjv Bergen to many afternoon she huJ t It - u IS going to New V t k would have x, M f d Kay him at Porwith happily Shed moie than half tion and a good deal would Tted! l ftfcar hoped he would But f J. .. On a business ti.p fiorn the city where he lived . lit I Ictw fe i it t or.rM ti s)"'N1,LIJ NU ijeri H L 3 I for Tom I I "All the Traffic Would Bear" There was a time in America when there were no set prices. Each merchant charged what he thought the traffic would bear. Advertising came to the rescue of the consumer. It led the way to the established prices you pay when you buy anything today. |