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Show Household Question? as eye oa Keller, the KEEP University of Maryland outfielder now hitting so hard for Newark. High Yankee authorities suspect the youth will outclass even such bright young men as D1 Mag-gland Henrlch in another season , . , Abo watch Rosar, a swell catcher who may have a bit of arm trouble but who slugs like Dickey; Gordon, the infielder, and Pitcher Donald, a kid who has all the poke of an Alexander out there on the mound. Thats only the pick of the crop from one farm and so you may as well name the Yankees to win the flag in 1939 and 1910, too. Joe Di Maggio hit his first home runs of both the 1938 and 1937 seasons on the same day of the month. May 10 . . . Young Freddy Rammer, the former Princeton hockey and baseball tar. ia giving the Jersey courses such a workout that he might be a good long shot (very long, though) in the amateur golf championship this year.. . . Benny Valger, the French Flash who now manages Frankie DeLillo, hasn't a mark on him to show that he participated in 464 ring battles George Conway, who trains War Admiral, won the Belmont Futurity with Proctor Knott in 1887, hb second year on the turf. Tip for the Davb Cup daddies "There's a husky seventeen-year-ai-d youngster named Bill Cleveland playing on the Exeter tennb team d who has all the elements of from diamond ts court only thb spring, too." . Tho Cube will travel IS, 541 miles thb year to appear ia their seventy-seve-n sway from heme National League games . . . Midget Wslgast, former flyweight champion (the limit for that class is 111 panada), Frocks Made Gay Errs in Potatoes Bake toes. potaCut oil tops, scoop out cen- ters and season with butter, salt and a little pepper, mashing thoroughly. Half fill shells with potato mixture and drop a raw egg, salt, pepper, a little grated cheese and one teaspoon butter in each. Put back in hot oven for four minutes to set egg. A Eliminating Food Odors small quantity of charcoal in a container on the top shelf will help eliminate food odors from the refrigerator. 6 New York PoaL WNU Service. Sports Nicknames Really a Subject for Deep Scholar now and then when one To one EVERT Rhubarb and Figs more erudite writing pound rhubarb, after peeling and masters runs abort of rhetorical cutting, add half pound good figs, he glances at the poor folks cut into smallish pieces. Place in pearls on the other aide of the newspaper war a saucepan with a very little railroad tracks. Then be lifts hla ter and about a dessertspoon gold- hands in horror and, when he brings en syrup or sugar and gently stew them down on a typewriter, another till tender. Serve with a rice or little gem of a column dealing with milk or hot pudding. sports nicknames is completed. sago mold It is a good racket with soft hours Hole in Tablecloth If a small and probably I will be labelled as hole is burnt or worn in an otherpopinjay for bringing wise good white tablecloth, it can a green-eyebe "mended most effectively- by up the subject Yet, for the life of cannot understand why these stitching a motif in fine crochet me, I over it and cutting away the high clerics of the literary world Add dispose of this pet sports assignspoiled fabric underneath. one or two more motifs so that the ment with such superficial sneers. For instance, a scholar might necessary one does not look odd. This is certainly more decorative spend some hoars tracing to its source the nickname of sons fathan an obvious darn! e mous baseball player. Where did Unwrap Food Food should not he get the monicker and whyf b be stored in the refrigerator while he still called hy the name which wrapped in paper because the pa- distinguished him from his fellows per prevents the cold air from in college or sandlot days? Or has he had a progressive series of such circulating freely over it. titles while developing from farm Keeps Cauliflower White A ta- team to farm team on the way to blespoon of sugar in the water in the Mg time? which cauliflower is cooked will After tho scholar gets that over keep it white. with he con be faced with other troubles. More often than not the To Keep Frosting From Run- great athlete may have three nickning A half teaspoonful of bak- names one known only to the arting soda added to boiling frosting ists who do occasional favors to will keep it from running. the world by writing pieces about WNU Service. sports, one by which he is usually referred to when fens or practicing sports writers mention him, one seldom used except in the family circle of his teammates. There was Christy Mathewson. The lupreme fell of ell fell I "Matty or "Big Six are the this: the first doubt of one sell names by which this great pitcher Connie da Gatparin. is most familiarly remembered by Only by sacrifices can men ad those who paid to see him play, vance sacrifice of leisure, of health, of life itielf, to attain natures g That other Buc knell alumnus. ideal. Sir Arthur Kaith. Moose McCormick, recalls though There ia no nrh thing a a great that teammates seldom used such man or a great woman. People bea hsadle. They called him "Gnm-my- ." lieve in them a they uaed to believe The name was derived from in dngona and unieonu-Ceor- ge the fact that when he first entered Bernard Shaw. the majors Mathewson- floundered The wont of it is, diiarmament around ih the field as if he were ha been left to the pacifists and wearing gum boots. peace ha been left to die mililsrisU. David Lloyd George, Similarly there was die name The ultimate value of onr scienwhich Mel Ott has outgrown only tific achievements reft upon onr within the past season or two. In ability to use them to broaden and 1927 the very youthful Ott; already to enrich our livea-Os- wd Sarnoff. a regular outfielder, was warming boxes. "My, up near the first-basmy, exclaimed a lady fan. "Just look at him. Isn't he the spirit of springtime. From thenceforth. In the privacy of Giants dugout and bridge games, Ott was "Springtime." d - - e How Kiki Cuyler Got His Monicker KILLS INSECTS Occasionally tho obvious thought to the origin of a nickname is ON FIOWIIS a rtUITS VEGETABLES A SHIUIS i not correct or only Partly so. Witness Kiki Cuyler. Cuyler 9iyr came into baseball Mom to the time when Belasce was Neglected Ideas achieving success Some ideas which have more with one of Ms best than once offered themselves to remembered p the senses have yet been little auctions. So a quick taken notice of. Locke. conclusion would be that the Redo outfielders nickname come because of hia fancied resemblance to the character ao well portrayed by Mbs Leonora Ulric. Probably "For thirty year I had stubborn constipation. Somotims I did not ao the fame of the play b what really for four or flvs day. I aim had awful did make the name stick to Cuyler hoadaohta and paina in ,? It,njl. Adtwrika halpad right throughout all the years. Bat acaway. tually the namea have little la common Id way of pronunciation. Cuy,nd tnjey ler got hb title because when playIf you ara suffering from constipation, stocplnonau, sour stomach, and gaa ing center Ms two outfield mates for you used to yell Cuy qu,ek Coy" when ho M"r 'Port action In to take the ball. aftor I!' "'no?; taking just one complete action, ,Adtrik Sivoa Sometimes an athlete may have ordi-BJyour bows I tract two or three private nicknames lxatlvo do not ovenwhara roach. fhm Yarik, even while sojourning with his .? tmSfcewK a,. addition Irntmtlmml dmmilma, AOlmilm mates. Thb b particularly true of iaUMimml kaefartoand the Yankees whose mint affectionboW8, essl claanslng Jf1 Ailtrlkt and in how good tfAS you ate name for the man variously rslisv., IS .stubborn spoonful, known as The Babe, The Bam," constipation. At all Loaning Druggists. and The Big Feller," was Demand original aealed hotttoa, from peer ilsalsr Constipated 30 Years m, SEraas Y Jid-gie- ." WNU W SALT 2237 LAKE'S HEWEST HOSTELRY b Our lobby delightfully cooled during the ftariio foe Every a, 200 Noam-2- 00 Baths air Consider Lefty Gomez. Early In the cpring his teammates, for some reason not Investigated at the moment, delighted In calling him "WeaseL" Now, by virtue of the fact that he standi straight up and down much as do tho hands of a clock at such an hour, he b known ai "Six oclock." Such changes, of course, make it almost as confusing for a new arrival in the dugout as does the fact that Joe Glenn will answer just as cordially whether hailed aa "Clark Gable or "Frankenstein. Strangely enough some appropri- ate names fade in the big Ume. Lon Warneke, for Instance, still Is known so Country HOTEL Temple Square ffofeo t Tha $1.50 to 3.00 n.lrl Train!, 8oum Nan a friendly ataioo. kjnhfr dvolrnhln, will alwayerindHImae- ulala, eupmndy comfortably and t hmashry aawvahhhYnu fun audentaad why (111 Mariam, hotel lot 1IICIILY RECOMMENDED aba approalatowhyi fll a awh of dlatlncUaa tm ate tkia ERNEST beautiful Seatefry C ROSSITER. At,,. down in Arkan- sas although none of hb big city friends would think of calling him thst. By the same token baptismal names are not entirely barred In sports no matter how much it may part-tim- e sports-writin-g pain the virtuosos to hear the newt. Two of them pop into mind. Mrs. Dean would as soon start another war with Jack Miley as call her Dizzy anything save Jay." And at Belmont the other day I heard a veteran friend refer to Pompoons trainer, widely acclaimed in the preu aa Humpty Dan" Clark aa, of all namea, "Cyril. ... great-Switche- weighing 138 pounds when he appeared ia Philadelphia recently. Probably distance still averages its best licks while lending enchantment to the view but sometimes even Shy-loc- k would be em- barrassed by the re- action to tha loan. For Instance there that group of celebrated golf pros woo gabbing in a locker room the other day. Not one of them agreed with public tradition which Boboy Jones makes Bobby Jones e golfdom's greatest The records, they said, proved that his game was not as effective over a long period aa waa that of several other top flight all-tim- They were talking merely about men with whom they had matched wood and iron from tee to green. Henry Picard, himself likely to be remembered with the heat b the only one who need bo quoted here. He says that stroke for stroke. Light Hone Harry Cooper b tha greatest golfer he has ever seen. In Transit is one of the most appropriately named thoroughbreds. He waa foaled on a train while hb dam, Peggy Amour, was en route to Montana . . . Jack Coffey, graduate manager, will tour South America with Mrs. Coffey this summer . . . Al Poiitia, former Fordham end, recently was made prosecuting attorney in his New a, Britain home town . . . Mike great blond tackle in the Cavanaugh Ram regime, recently passed the New York state bar . . . Harold Parrott b the new sports editor of the Brooklyn Eagb which may soon make one of those gorgeous newspaper mergers and absorb ib Brooklyn Times - Union sbter . . . The original paddock fence of the Rockaway Hunting dub, built in 1886 now surrounds the judges stand there. Why dont the Cards make more use of Outfielder Padgett who looked o good down South? . . . Chicago fans hope the Dodgers' directors got red necked again thb year and, ia the midst of their ire, send another such good player as Lonny Frey to the Windy City . . . Could it be true that the short Preskneso price of War Admiral was largely duo to 1M,000 worth of comeback money being dumped into the machines by that New Jersey bookie syndicate? A. Gordon (Dean) Murray calls attention to something that most Ivy Leaguers, whose memories go back almost fifty years, could scarcely have noted last winter. That was the death of Charlie Dana, one of the first college ball players to have big time clubs begging him to sign. Dana, still recalled as the greatest of all Princeton first base-meperformed in tHfe early 1890s. He was the Tiger batter who gave great Yab pitcher named Amos Alonzo Stagg more headaches than ever came later from years of coaching Chicago's football teams. Tom Henrlch, the boy who carries one of the biggest Yankee bate, made hb first appearance aa a Yankee la a Latboye uniform. That waa during au exhibition came at West Point, Just before the start of the season, ncnrich had Joined the club on such short notice that there was no time to fit him to a uniform. Bo they stripped the bat-bomade a quick exhange of costume, and sent the stocky little Tom Ford-ham'- s Mis-kini- n. Into action. Jake Flowers, the old Cardinal and Dodger infielder, b writing scenarios in Hollywood . . . Every member of the Athletics' squad, except Earl Mack and Lena Black-bum- e, coaches, addresses Connie Mack as Mr. Mack. . . . Earl calb him Dad and. Blackbume Boss. . , Second Baseman Tony Lazzcri has teamed with three shortstops, Mark Koenig, Lyn Lary, 'and Frank Cro-ett- i, since joining tho Yankees in 1928, and all have been fellow Californian! . , . Matty Bell, head football coach at Southern Methodist university, claims that the best high school football ia played in Texas Jean Fletcher, daughter of the New York Yankees coach, b captain of the Western college softball team at Oxford, Ohio, and a younger aisbr, Betty, plays on the Co I1L, high school dub. Fashion By Lemuel Fs Parlon o Be careful Season Lightly recipe not to when doubling double the seasoning. Use it sparingly at first, then add more if needed. With Stitch Flower WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK... National Topco Interpreted by William BrucLar? National Pros Washington, A Bulldlns C, Temperamental Sculptor. YORK. Farm leaders have Washington. gone before congress again to press a new agricultural Urge New program. Like Farm Programnvenl that have In come through years, the new proposition is based on a subsidy. The current program, like the old AAA. is predicated on agreements by which farmers thing end be paid tor not doing it To obtain tha subiidies from the federal treasury contemplated in the new farm legislation, farmers will have to sign contracts agreeing to curtail their acreages up to twenty per cent of their average cultivation for the bit several years. If they fail or refuse to sign these contracts, the legislation describes them as not and, therefore, they would be denied the right to obtain loam from the federal government and they would not have a guarantee of parity prices, as a penalty. Moreover, those farmers who failed or refused to in thb manner would be subjected to prohibitive taxes on the sab of products grown in excess of limits on totals to be prescribed by Secretary Walbee at the Department of Agriculture. The announced basis of thb new program b for "conservation of the soil. Further, ib sponsors contend that It will mean a gradual upbuilding of the fertility of the soil so that, in the end, fewer acres will have to be cultivated to produce the same volume of com or cotton or wheat or whatever other crop b grown. But I think there are few individuate who will say that the above reasons honestly constitute the basis for this new farm legislation. I think it must be admitted that the plan b only a subterfuge; that, white it may help some farmer! by giving them cash, it is pure politics with cash as a sop. I am not one equipped to say that agriculture doee not need subsidy even though prices of form products ara now almost double what they were In 1933. It b entirely possible that farmers throughout the nation still need help in the form of cash. It may be the better part of wbdom to vote such payments as are contemplated in thb new legislation. On the other hand, however, if there b that need then let us be honest about it President Roosevelt lately has signed e new tew which provides subsidies to shipping companies in order that America may have its own merchant marine, but those payments are tflbe called subsidies. They are not disguised nor concealed. It seems ridiculous, therefore, that the farm leaders should not be frank with the members of their organizations. If they feel that a subsidy b needed, why not put it up to congress that way so that those farmers who believe in subsidies aa well as those who want to see agriculture left alone for awhile can understand what b going on. the last half-doze- n I imagine that the farm leaders who are sponsoring the new tegiste tion could scarce-LAoly have chosen a te Bad Time worse time for of presentation their program. I mean that, in presenting this type of legisbtion when congress is undergoing a wave of economy, the program is likely to receive leant consideration. It always has been the case that legislation goes through several stages of hauling and filling in congress with the result that after much debate a bill satisfactory to the majority emerge. In presenting their program at thb time, therefore, the farm leaders are not doing a very good Job of leading. There will be much agitation on the part of the farm leaden that will get just nowhere at all because of conditions in congress. Edward A. O'Neal president of the American Farm Bureau Federation. recently was quoted as saying that the new plan would not require any payments direct from the treasury; that ia, it would pay ib own way through the medium of taxes if it works perfectly. That b the rub. I find doubt in nearly all quarters that the plan can "work perIt b ao complex and refectly. quires such a bureaucracy for admin is trail on of it that to expect it to work perfectly," b virtually to expect that legislation will control the weather. I think everyone will agree that congress and the administration has not yet been able to find the formula for controlling the'' weather. I believe it can be said fairly that many farmers are dissatisfied with the soil conservation program adopted ai a substitute for the AAA which the much criticized Supreme court held unconstitutional by a unanimous vote. Even those b of the Department of Agriculture who are frank will admit that the soil conservation is not an effective means for controlling production. It does have merit as far as it goea in conserving the soil But there b another phase: It has been pointed out too often almost to need repetition here that tha soil con offi-eb- Courtyards, Patios in Many New Orleans Homes One of the characteristics of tha old homes in the New Orleans Vieux Carre are the courtyards, or patios, many of which are in a good state of preservation. To tha French, the flagged or brick "backyard waa a court but with tha coming of the Spanish to New Orleans tho term patio was used end remained In favor. Most of tha patios have fountains in tha servation law, as occurred under the AAA, results in millions of dollars being paid to individuab and corporations who ara in no way participating in conservation activities. Now, whib Mr. O'Neal thinks that the proposed bw can be operated without expense to the federal treasury, there la yet the conviction in some quarter! that it probably will coat about six hundred million dollars a year to pay the subsidies and pay for administration of the law. Six hundred million dollars a year b a brge sum at any time and It bulks much brger at a time when there is a nation-wid- e cry for a balanced budget tor the federal government It b a sum that if the budget of the federal government otherwise were balanced, would be sufficient to frighten thousands of holder! of United States bonds. It would seem then that the farm leaders ought to take into const d- era tion the status of the federal government's financial affairs if they want to develop a program that will live. I have heard from many students of agricultural problems that, the remedy for form conditions b not an expensive new system of farm subsidies. They assert that it will be impossible for Uncle Sam to continue annual payments to some three million or more farmers and they are convinced, further, that most farmers themselves objected to being placed in the category of relief clients. An argument b abo advanced that more and more farmers believe federal policies that cause money to be handed out free to farmers will. In the end, destroy the independence of agriculture. However that may be and however the majority of the farmers feel about receiving money gratis from the government at Washington, it cannot be said that agriculture b being placed on a sound footing by politicians and political farm leaders whose sole objective b to loot the treasury. "A very temperamental sculp- says A. E. Demaray, associate director of the national park service, in explaining to the house appropriations subcommittee how difficult it was for his department to estimate the degree of progress on the Mount Rushmore memorial at Rapid City, S. D. tor, Commenting tm Mr. Demaray statement, the sculptor, Gutzon Borglum, ever pungently articulate, remark that the memorial b not a road contractor's Job nor one feet c,n be measured by the engineers rule and com past. In both thrust and riposte are marked a certain mildness usually net absented la Sculptor Borgluma controversies, wherefor it may with confidence be assumed that the current issue ta at miser character, with Utile or no chance of ib development lute some such contretemps as that between the eminent muter of chisel and hammer and the Stone Mountain Memorial association la Georgia. That ended forlornly with the destruction by the sculptor of all plana, models and work In the carving of heroic figures of the Confederacy on the face of the mountain outside of Atlanta and hb withdrawal from the enterprise. Temperamental? Yes, quite so. But, as well, a thinker, a man of original views and conceptions, and physically as powerful as he b mentally dynamic. It wu Borglum who startled the country back in the early 1909a when, in the course of au embattled interlude with critics of seme of hb Ideas concerning sculptural embellishment of the outer walb of the Cathedral of SL John the Divine, on Morningslde Heighb, New York, he announced that all angeb were male; that a female angel wu unThe Department of Commerce known In the heavenly phalautery which has supervision of airplane set forth in Bible or reUgious traffic has an-- rubric. Air ruots nounced that it Ouf of Raceg wU1 not permit Spain's Strong Man. American pilots to LAB GO participate in an air race that was PRANCISCO who handed in his manLERO, for summer. The thb raea proposed was to have taken place from New date as Spanish premier because of York to Faria, but the Department communist objections to hb proof Commerce has vetoed the plan posal of pbns for a new government following the recent ministeunequivocally because it considers erbb, is not included In the aa race the nothing more than a rial new cabinet formed by Dr. Juan stunt Necrin, former finance minister. It may occur to some that such a Thus Spain's fourth premier since ruling by the Department of Commerce constitutes an interference the outbreak of civil war last July with private business beyond rea- passes from the official life of his son. I cannot share that view. The embattled nation. But those who know this militant Department of Commerce and its experts have been unable to find in Marxist this man of courage and thb proposed race any possibility deep social convictions, have no of benefit for aviation nor any ex- Idea he will disappear as a national perimentation that would lead to force of Immense influence. He wu more scientific flying. It has taken j one of the leaders responsible for the position that there b too great the overthrow of the Spanish mona danger involved for those pilots archy and establishment of the rewho are foolhardy enough to under- public in April 1931. take the three thousand two hunThe key to Large Caballeros dred mite flight across the ocean. character lies In the fact that he Its position b further fortified with wu a typical child at the poverty-strickthe argument that if any of the Spanish muses. At the pilots should lose their lives in that age of seven he began a tong strugtype of aviation, it will cause many gle to earn hb living and at the thousands of persons to lose faith in ume time to educate himself, cirthe airplane as a means of trans-- j cumstances which explain hb fiery porta tion. In short, the department adherence to socialist doctrines thinks that there are only disad-- 1 from Mg early youth. vantages and no advantages in Learning the trade of atone maprospect son, at which for many years he White many persona may disagree worked, he wu in 1917 tried and with the position the department haa j sentenced to life Imprisonment for taken, it b heartening to those of , hla share in the organization of a us who like to see private business j revolutionary strike. Hb election encouraged, to know that a respect- - as a socialist member of the Cortes sibte federal agency charged with saved him from hla sentence. of a private industry b ! rested and imprisoned thereafter at again functioning as it was intended various times and on various to da For several years, the De- charges, he was at liberty when the partment of Commerce, with par- present civil war broke out; he ticular respect to its aviation di- rushed to the Guadarrama front and vision, has been in a state of tur- participated in many actions. moil. There were wide differences Holding for a united front of Span- 1 Lnl lard o Parties and affiliations against the forces of the insurgent Genera Franco, the premier was willing to grant representation in the government even to anarchists, for whom he has no regard, as well . Patten , J u .. decrees that bloom on our dresses in flow, embrofc ery this Spring and Sumrn Give thia smart touch to that n frock surprise yourself and T your friends too by what it do to renew that plain dress fiS last year. So easily done in sing 5881. and running stitch, you'll find t fun to embroider these large ag small nosegays. Choose all tk gay colors you wish, in wool, floss or chenille and know you'll in style. In pattern 5801 you wg find a transfer pattern of one uu one reverse motif 7 by 13 inches; one and one reverse motif 5 by 6 inches and six motifs v by 3 Vi inches; color suggestion' illustrations of all stitches used.' To obtain this pattern send cents in stamps or coins (coin preferred) to The Sewing Cirri, Household Arts Dept, 259 I Fourteenth Street, New York N. Y. Write pattern number, you name and address plainly. Foreign Words and Phrases Nous engageames dans la vi lee. (F.) We entered into (pets trated) the valley. La dette neat pas settlement e inconvenient, mate ella est us catamite. (F.) Debt is not 00k an inconvenience, but it is a e tamity. Bella donna. (It) A pretty woe an. Grande amoureuse. (F.) Gre lover. Enoncer une pensee. (F.) To e press a thought Alter ego. (L.) Another self. Etre mal enonce. (F.) To I badly worded. Mauvais gout (F.) Bad taste. Mon bonheur s'est enful (F. My happiness has fled. en ment of Commerce. In criticizing the governments inactivity, no observer would be fair unless he abo called attention to the frailties and the failures of tha industry itself. It b true that some of the brger lines lately have made sensational improvements in the equipment they use In the air and In the operations part of flying. It is true that larger and better planes have been built and are But it ia likewise true building. that a number of airlines have adopted penurious, penny pinching policies and have refused to replace worn out and obiotete planet because they did not want to invest additional money. Until the air industry awakens to the necessity for spending money and until tha Department of Commerce becomes a smooth functioning supervisory agent, the air travel of thb country will not even approach tha limit of lb capacity. Western Newspaper Union. center and gardens of plants. Huge wide-mout- not warm. But in the end, hb plan for himself to take over the portfolio of national defense, with the aim of imparting new vigor and better direction to the war, was not acceptable to opposing factions. So he retired. Award for Merit. Dr. James Lewis Howe, dean of the school of applied science and head of the department of chemistry at Washington and Lee university, goes the 1937 award of tho Herty medal which, symbolic of outstanding work In southern chembtry, b annually bestowed by the southern division of the American Chemical society. Dr. Howe, however, b a New England importation, stemming back to Newburyport, Mass., where, in 1859 he was born. Graduated from Amherst In 1880, he took degrees as mailer of arts and doctor of philosophy at Gottingen after a course of study in Germany ending in 1882. (One easy fort from Ogden or Salt Lake City, good in coaches or chair tort.) We have die FASTEST TRAINS to San Francisco, all meals on the Pacific Limited. 31 ROUNDTRIPtoSsnFran- cisco; $32 ROUNDTRIP to Los Angeles via San Francisco both fares good in standard Pullmans (berth extra). Southern Pacific For tafarmatim write D. X. Oman, Gta.Ad Drpt. A. 41 So. Moia St Salt Lata C1 IN UTAH AND T'O x B OonsolldMeiewsrtaturss. Heaviest Losers In World War Russb, with 1,700,000 men kilted in action, suffered the heaviest loss of any nation in the World war. Germany waa second with 1,600,000 and France third with 1,300,000. About 65,000 Americana were killed. earthen Jars that carried overseas tha oil from tho olive groves of Spain found their way Into many of tho patios. Originally they were used to catch the rain water from the gutters and downspouts but later for ornamentation. , Oldest Jewbb Cemetery Patios in New Orleans are not The oldest United States Jewish confined to the old section laid out was established in New by Bienville who founded the city cemetery York in 1858 through permission of In 1718. Many of them can be found Peter It is maintained in the heart of tha business district by thaSluyvesant Spaniah and Portuguese ITS THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND Ogdens Finest . , One of Utahs Bet 350 Rooms 350 laths $100 to $4.00 Air Cooled Gonid Delightful Rooms Grill Room Coffee Shop Spacious Lounge and Lobby Courteous Service Every Comfort end Convenience will be found at THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH "COME AS YOU ARE CHAUNCEY W. WEST, OZN'b MGSi CLASSIFIED CIGARS ! MIm Klarlda Tampa Cigars, boa hundred postpaid Ihiee dollurs, saUffi tion guaranteed or money relun BUIen, 111 g. (allaa It., Kyracese, ; |