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Show WHAT EAT and WHV fto Tbis Free Chart Makes & fjouiton (joudiii Uniatpteti the It -- Easy to BALANCE of Meat Modern Conception YOUR PIET Nationally Known Food Authority Explain Food Rates As a Top-Not- YOU will find it s simple Why It muter to sifts"" the of yoor family by serv- ch ing for the Homemikers Chert for checking Nutritional Balance e It By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS Naw York City Bart ami Krart, d of their to AMERICANS spend from total food budget for meat In order to discover whether this expenditure is justified, let us examine the nutritive value of meat, and consider its contribution to the diet Almost everybody likes the flavor of meat , from the man who considers that no meal is completa without it, to tha child who instinctively eats the meat on his but liver is also much richplate before he touches the other meats, er in this vitamin than muscle tisfoods. The desire far meat is one sue. Vitamin B is present in lean of the strongest human appetites. meat, especially lean pork, which For centuries, man accepted has a considerably higher content this craving for meat as an indica- than lamb, mutton or beef. tion that it was essentia to his well Value of Meat Extractives being. But with the Meat contains small amounts of advance in civilisaextractives. It is partly because an was there tion, me their misses savory flavor in increase many that a meal without meat often diseases, and for a fails to tempt or satisfy the appeperiod of years, tite. meat was blamed The extractives indirectly aid in as being a .contribthe digestion of meat proteins bekiduting cause to cause they stimulate tha flow of ney trouble, rheu- the juices. Experiments matism, high blood havedigestive demonstrated that meat inhardenpressure, duces a flow of gastric juice in ing of the arteries and gout direct proportion to the amount In recent years, there has been consumed. a careful investigation of the posThis calling forth of great physisible association between meat ological activity of foe stomach our of In the light and disease. is reason why meat is said (me newer knowledge, the old notions to be the most satisfying of all And in have been discarded. foods, and to stick to the ribs" many cases, meat now has a place longest, diseases of the in the treatment that it was once believed to cause! of Meat onfc-four- one-thir- th J Digestibility - Composition of Meat Meat is a protein food of the highest type. It is useful both for repairing the millions of cells that are worn out daily and for building the new tissues that are necessary for growth in childhood. The proportion of protein varies with foe kind of meat, and foe cut. In beef, lamb and veal, it comprises between 14 and 26 per cent of the edible portion. The other constituents of meat are fats, water, minerals, extractives, enzymes and pigments. The amount of fat present is an important factor in determining the fuel value of meat. And the more fat it contains, the less protein will be found in a given unit of weight The different cuts of pork contain less protein than corresponding cuts of beef and lamb, with the exception of lean ham, lean pork chops and tenderloin. it Meat as a Blood Builder glandular and mnsele g meats are rich in the mineral, iron, and meat also contains copper. The glandular ergans, particularly liver, have great value in the prevention and treatment of anemia. Pernicious anemia baffled physicians for many years until, in 1926, two noted American scientists discovered that Uver contains a principle which stimalates red blood eeU formation. This discovery has been ranked with the discovery of insulin as one of the greatest in eur times. Meat also contains a high percentage of phosphorus. It is poor in calcium, however, and this necessary substance must be obtained in adequate amounts from milk, cheese and green leafy vegetables. Both Mood-buildin- it of Meat Lean muscle meats cannot be considered as an important source of any vitamin except G. This vitamin is necessary for the prevention of pellagra, and also helps to prolong the vigorous middle years and to ward off old age, Beef, pork and lamb muscle contain approximately the same amounts of vitamin G, but liver has been found to contain approximately 10 times as much as muscle tissue. Some vitamin A is found in fat The Vitamin Send for This Free Bulletin on KEEPING In considering foe nutritive worth of any food it is necessary not only to analyze its contributions to the diet, but to determine how well its nutrients are utilized by foe body. Meat has a high food value because Its protein is digested rapidly and thoroughly. Tests show that 97 to 98 per cent of meat protein is digested and absorbed. The length of time meat remains in the stomach will depend upon various factors, such as the amount of fat present, the method of cooking and the degree of mastication. But there is no barked difference j the thoroughness with which the different kinds of meat are digested. Since it is so completely digest- - Cool, You ed, however, meet supplies little bulk, and it is therefore essential that an abundance of leafy vegetables and fruits should be eaten at the same time. Meat In the Child's Diet There has been considerable discussion regarding foe place of meat in the child's diet. There are foe same good reasons for using meat in the diet of the child as in the diet of foe grown-uMoreover, the childs protein requirement is greater than that of foe adult, in proportion to hie body weight. At the beginning of the second year, many authorities advise that small servings of tender and finely minced beef, chicken, lamb or liver may be given about three times a week. As the child becomes older, he may have meat more often and as his ability to chew increases, he may be given larger pieces. p. Regarding Meat Many people believe that veal is less completely digested than other meats. But it has been demonstrated that even very young veal digests as rapidly and as completely as beef. It has also been held that red meats are less digestible and, therefore, less desirable than white meats. There is no evidence to support this point of view. Someone with a gift for concise expression once remarked: No meat no man! His point was well taken. For considering its delicious flavor, essential food values, and ease of preparation, it is easy to agree that THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR MEAT. Some Fallacies C WNU-- C. Houston Goudiss 1S3S 31 Frocks ed few hot weeks will short pleated sleeves for coolness be a whole lot easier to bear if and comfort. Its very easy and you have some fresh new dresses to wear around the house cool, styles that are finished enough for shopping and porch wear too. Weve picked out two that we know youll like, one for slim figures and one for large. FAMOUS WASHINGTON WASHINGTON. A very prominent New Dealer, Tnurman W. Arnold, now foe official trust bustea of foe administration, frequently expresses amazement at the morals and sense of civie duty and mental processes which permit big corporations to cut wages or lay off help Development com-kuta- the waterway rence seaway la urged in a letter to Secretary of State Cordell Hull by Commander Eugene F. McDonald Jr. McDonald waa a member of the MacMillan polar expedition. McMany yeare experience, Donald wrote Secretary Hull, in navigation of the salt and fresh waters of the world, from within 11 degrees of the North pole to and beyond the equator, prompts this letter to you. Recently, while returning from a 12,900-mil- e winter cruise through the Caribbean and aa far as South DieAmerica, I brought my sel yacht Mizpah through the SL Lawrence waterways to Lake Mich1 igan and then on to Chicago have made this same trip many times before, but my recent experience brought again rather forcibly to my mind the SL Lawrence system as It exists today. Bom in Syracuse, N. Y., I have known the Erie and Barge canals since boyhood. For 25 years 1 have explored the waters of the Great Lakes and their tributaries, and have a deep interest In their development as waterways. I have no personal or commercial interest of any kind at stake. I hope I am, therefore, able to consider (he problems presented by n the proposed Great waterways with an informed, but detached and objective, viewpoinL There being no demand for ears, being the cause of foe situation, Ford would be (breed to do (me of two things. He could either store his product in the hopes that revival of buying would eventually take them off his hands, or he could lash prices in order to force foe ears out If he did the latter, he would eventually put all his competitors out of business. He would be selling cars below cost using up his surplus, in order to keep his workers employed. But the moment that times became better he would have a tremendous advantage. His plant would be going under full team. Big production would have cut his costs way down. Operation, instead of idleness, would eliminate He foe wastes of a shutdown. would be able to slash prices atm more in order to continue going full By this 35-inc- nt nt nt uj! g ut ck ttiproflhmgflM PWA Officials Find Sharp Decline in Loans Asked WASHINGTON. Public Works administration officials reported a harp decrease In the demand for federal loans to supplement PWA Iriuml Thats importaml Fa this re- grants. markable new cleansing ngant-IriMany states and cities sponsorhelps Pepeodent to remove those dull, that may have ing PWA projects, they said, found maiking eurfaca-etailong hidden the true natural beauty of It cheaper to borrow from private sources than to pay the 4 per cent your teeth Buy Pepeodent JVOWl Interest charged by PWA. Ibr PmiiSed AHtyl SnfMa Pepsodent done of all tooth powdsrs contains remarkable Iriam! 0 There's no denying it , . . Experience IS tha beat teacher. Bo we ley, "TRY FRPCODENT POWDER I See from actual experience . ..how Pepeodent can make tmile brighter, more atimctivel Remember, ONLY Pepeodent contain Pepeedert'e MS mark YOUR um ne 1 Under foe new program, PWA la HKNO GOLDKN -. s i . ft. SIR NfcVaii Keue' 'J " ' CLAY PRODUCTS PACE BRICK SEWER cownJj rora-WA- LL - ALL CLAY PRODUCTS FIRE CLAY CO. , UTAH "Js fc( PHOTO FINISHING BaU Dm with Png-- , No rtmmye. DEHERET p. is. " -- - C tv. n?."U a rvicr, To do this would be to ruin tha character and spoil tha story, of course and tha result would be that thousands of motion picture fans who liked tha book and have taken real interest In the casting of the picture would be furious. PHOTOGRAPHY 'C PUwe Dcwlsntd with I Print. 25 " I N. THE BUILDING MATERIAL INTERSTATE During Shirley Temple's recent visit in New York her mother actually dared leave her for a little while. Shirley was at tha office of national magazine, and her mother was in a smart department store, doing a bit of shopping. BI'CI Buddies and Fin Firs Clay Hallow Draia Til sue CO. -- Brick Saw FIs.. THa-VK- riM Bo. Roof ft nth b. if. m oH Lake CUf, Pick OFFICE EQUIPMENT (IBRD art chir IV ortloa nek', ala, tnowikan, SL L. PEIS WL atotirihltLS Mi AND NEW n, ATHLETIC GOODS ATHLETIC UEEAT WESTERN Bon, Gknoa, BaockoUa, VaHrhalK Adriatic ahiL ate. IDAHO SUPPLY aCHQOL CO liyJS Oak ICE CREAM FREEZERS SODA FOUNTAINS ICE CREAM nom. TER FREEZERS and let Cnaai aaNaut. Future. Bar Stasis. kn Carkeaiun, TaMao Aha ratarilt!aari aialsanal taT MOS IB. HARTMAN CO. Maaafartrm Flaeo - - SaR -- , IS Fast Pile MOTORCYCLES HARLEY ,JThn conclusions that have forced themselves upon me are the following: 1. A deep waterway a ship canal between the Great Lakec and the Atlantic ocean is, unquestionably, to be desired. Especially la this true when we consider that, in years of normal crop movement, some 12 per cent of the total United States foreign trade clears through the Great Lakes even with our present inadequate waterway!. 2. Why build this great waterway through Canada, either wholly or partially with American money, when the more logical, more economical, shorter route can be wholly an American waterway? I am peaking at enlarging the Barge ea nal. through New York state, to the proportions of a ship canaL 3. New York city, aa a seaport, la closer than the mouth of foe SL Lawrence to all foe world markets, with the exception of Labrador, Greenland, Iceland, Newfoundland, and northern Europe. Meanwhile, especially if the depression were of some duration, this very activity would have made the resumption of selling by his competitors more difficult There would not be the piled up demand that usually ends a depression. Jhere would not be hundreds of .thousands of persons who had run their old ears few years too long. They would have bought new Fords at the reduced prices. Carried to its logical conclusion, the company with a big surplus could thus eliminate its competitors, and acquire a monopoly in almost any field. Wins sender ha Enlarge Barge Canal blast a autaKSPKtTHlj!Lat. a,UHIICT HOTEL Lekea-to-ocea- that . ' i 185-fo- ot half-bake- d GpidbiD SL Law- rLANnoMIt'iarm-(i- HOTEL T IS reported that Norma Shearer, having won the coveted role of Scarlett IHara in Gone With the rind," now wants the story changed. It's said that she 'eels that the heroines character, in the last half of the look, is unsympathetic. ot an in lieu of Monopoly d Lloyd Antiquities By Virginia Vale Waterway an if they have a surplus at tha time. The curious element about this statement la that it comes from the official trust buster. It involves a very simple question in economics, which anyone who has ever been In business, even if it were a peanut stand, can follow. To dismiss all questions of morality, loyalty to one's employees, and that sort of thing, assume that the Ford Motor company has a huge cash surplus, which it actually has, but that none of its competitors has, which is not true. Also assume that Henry Fad is deeply imbued with foe thought that Mr. Arnold thinks he should have. (The writer does not know that Mr. Arnold has ever applied his theory to the automobile Industry. He talks mostly about steel when he is discussing it) What would happen when the normal situation, which results in cutting pay or laying off workers, develops? Obviously Ford, having a big surplus, would go on producing cars at top speed,, while his competitors, in this illustration not having any surpluses on which to draw, would have to cloie down.' 4td to 'hr CORRESPONDENT unhampering in line, so that you can work in it comfortably. Darts on the shoulders and at the waistline give it an unusually trim, slimming fit. A touch of prettiness is added by ricrac braid and foe pointed closing. This is a diagram design that you can make in ood for Thought a few hours, and youll want sevOne of the spokesmen for foe New eral dresses made just like foie-- in Dealers has Just written a short ardimity, calico, percale and ticle predicting government ownerseersucker. ship of the steel industry. The artiThe Patterns. cle attracted singularly little atten1558 is designed for sizes 12, 14, tion merely because nobody be16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 requires lieved it! Actually there la considh 4 Vs yards of material; erable food for thought in K. It or ribbon braid to trim. was far from the yards of state1533 is designed for sizes 34, 36, ment most readers thought. It 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50. Size 36 showed a study of the steel industry mahad been made by some of the inrequires 4 yards of h terial. 1 yards of ricrac braid formants of the writer, and it was to trim. remarkably accurate in predicting Success in Sewing. the probable course, as seen by men Success in sewing, like success inside the steel industry. -in any other field, depends upon For instance, the government haa how you approach the task in been seeking for several years to hand. To help you turn out clothes break down foe basing--poiprofessional looking in every desystem. Actually the basing-poitail, we have a book which plainly system was a lifesaver for the sets forth the simple rules of home mailer steel companies. It forced dressmaking. The beginner will foe quota tioif of prices as of cerfind every step in making a dress tain places, the basing points, foe clearly outlined and illustrated price always being the fixed amount within its covers. For foe experi- plus freight from this basing point enced sewer there are many help-fi- d Naturally, being the biggest of the hints and suggestions for sew- steel companies, and a merger of ing short cuts. Send 15 cents (in many original units, the U. S. Steel Both are very, very easy to coins) today for your copy of SUC- company has plants in more localimake, for of course nobody wants CESS IN SEWING, a book every ties than its competitors. Therefore, bidding eliminatto undertake laborious sewing home dressmaker will find of with basing-polAnd both are easy to value. ! these days. ed, and with all bids submitted proSend your order to The Sewing viding for delivery on freight cars wash and iron. A detailed sew ' Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New at the steel min, the company with chart comes with each pattern. Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, the most widely separated plants Day Frock for Slim Figures. Thsa little dress is right at the Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins; has a tremendous advantage. Buyers patronising it would have Vp rA new fashions, with its gored each. to pay only the freight rate from and shaped square neckline. the min of that company closest io Notice that foe skirt seams are foe point where they proposed to extended above the waistline, to use the steel. give a Lttle bosom fullness, which In view of this situation, it is difmakei the dress more becoming. ficult to understand why the Very short kimono sleeves, just section of the government covering the shoulders, give a has been so anxious to break up a much prettier line than sleeveless practice which actually helped frocks do, and theyre just as cool. maintain competition, or at least it The skirt has a charming flare, was until fola article by a comMake this in linen, dotted Swiss, paratively unofficial spokesman. He Beauty Is Mental dimity or organdie in a pretty flower print, and youll love it. True beauty is in the mind; and tatee tha only answer that has been the expression of the features de- made which appeals to the logic of Day Frock (or Large Figures. You'll find this straight, well-cpends more upon the moral na- those who have been wondering dress one of the moat becoming, ture than moat persona are ac- about the governments course. Frederic The answer, of course, is that the most slenderizing, you ever put customed to think. government la looking ahead of the on. It haa a deep and Saunders. immediate developments, and planning to take over tha steel business just as it haa been moving in on the electric business now for several years. slim-waist- Shirley Likes Cops Shorts for Colonel NATIONAL CAPITAL By Carter Field trust-bustin- iiiaily will he iar mors during tha next law wsuks if you sand fox Xanping Cool with Foad," oflsnd boa by C. Goudiss. It lists "cooling- - and "haating- - foods, outlinas tha principles of planning a haallhiul nmmsr dial, and is cosiplata with nsanu suggestion. lust put your aims and addraw on a post card, ask h Tsapiug Cool with Food, and sand Bio C. Houston Goudiss, 6 East 39th Stmat, Naw Task City. Slim-Waist- lists the foods and the standard amounts-- , that should be indaded in the daily diet. Contains skeleton means for breakfasts lunch and dinner or sapper to gnide foods in you in selecting the proper each classification. 0 A poet card will bring you this valuable aid to good menu planning. Just ask for the Nutruioo Chart. Address C Houston Goudiss, 6 East 39ih StreUgNew York THESE last A ' with food s be lanced diet if you send Star Dust SEEN and HEAR around the Fifca U a Writs for catikn Motoreyrlaa IMHTBE OF HOFPEt. 141 E. Mr.. jUkijS TRUSSES Swrieal InatnaaeaW, Hospital Bartia Naaufaetarcn of AMoauaal S Traaaca, Dorter,. Elutte Stocking. Tfcs PkraieiBas Baaslr Comruy SJV;3BriBorth-BtjtaltJ;akrCitoR- SHIRLEY TEMPLE She said that the almost never left Shirley, but that she felt that it waa all right to do so Just then The policemen assigned to her are uch nice men, said she, and Shirley is so fond of them. Just in cue youve Thermogenic Fever Aids Disenc Can Many chronic riiaorriera rark a artkitR rheumatism, pelvic dlaonlen ot wants. larmd prostate nlande hart mauecM a rbrrmowraie Fever Treatment! wiitoat wrtlnic to is retry. Infornwtiua art lima tare sent on raunest ft RUBRICAL CUMC JUJhmplrtaajBMjUltteAeritrsriil wondered what haa happened to Colonel Stoopnagie, formerly of Stoop-nag- ie and Budd," he's making movies. They are aborts, and he's doing it near hia Connecticut home, for Educational. The finished product will be issued as Colonel Cavalcade of Stuff. Stoop-nngle- o Dorothy Lsmour spent part of her vacation with her husband, Herbie Kay, at the recort near Houston, Texas, where he waa appearing with hie orchestra. She appeared with the orchestra one evening and sang two numbers; aha also announced that shed like to be back, singing with the band, but that ha wouldnt give her her old job again. And an she wanted was $50 a week and expenses. She also visited Galveston her career began there six years ago, when she was "Mies New Orleans in a bathing beauty eonteeL Waterway e SURGERY TREATMENTS route Buffalo, Cleveland, Toledo, Port Arthur, Fort William, Toronto, Detroit, Milwaukee, Duluth, Chicn go, and all the other Great Lakes porta whether Canadian or American and their tributary territory, will be 1,559.3 miles closer to New York and to all the seaports of foe world than they would be by the SL Lawrence route, with, of course, the few exceptions named above. From Buffalo to New York, via the Welland canal and the SL Lawrence, is 2,068 land miles. Yet it is only 506.7 miles from Buffalo to New Harold Lloyd has bought the negYork via the Barge canaL atives of 114 of hie early pictures "The Hudson rivnr is already fromPaths. dredged, and available for oceanPartly for sentigoing ships, from New York to Almental reasons, channeL with a draft bany, partly because route would mereTha some of thou ly entail foe deepening and widenearly pictures of ing of the Barge canaL the installs his. at which we tion of new locks, and the removal aU shouted with at fixed bridges over a distance at laughter, contain 363.5 miles, from Buffalo to Albany. gaga that can ba FENCES ELECTRIC FENCES Wonderful new anntrollera dmisnrt fee snm cr effeetiveneee art ianirond wfttf. unit eltetrifles ten aiilti of fcact. Frari from SIS ap to Srt.ii postpaid. Better! a poorer operated. Beit. mm Wintrd. INTERNATIONAL ELECTRIC FENCE C& Portland. Oman U BUSINESS TRAINING Hu a Jak Far Yea. Individual instruction. Rapid rtramtaau Earn your tzimitco. Free Ploermtal Stria ALT LAKE BUUNEbS COLLEGE Bnalnena AilMHjHjrWtJdir MUSIC Made Co. Pioneer Fins Fmk LUA Choir Mm Headquarters yon money on Pwro, Unaa urt Shrot Music Drum A Band iiwtrutiiww. ft. Boealey Will USED CARS Largest Stack of Tracks Wed in Intanr.'tmtais 1SS4 Feed Picks ISIS Dadat Sedan Delivery Lw.h. llh-TISIS c-tISM t. (ill LvA ISM L. S M r. ISM la.. M IB . ItST Cht Dad: Many U ' -- B- E- A. Hi OU DEAL. . . . : ::t . . . rd LYMAN MOTOR DODGE PLYMOUTH AND The Maaee ef DeyeadeUtty 520 S. Mata. Salt Lake City 27-fo- ot Another Suggestion more practical, economi-caroute can be made by merely enlarging the Barge canal from Buffalo, or Tonawanda, to LockporL and creating a new eanaL of a length of 12 miles, from Lock-por- t to OlcotL which is on Lake Ontario. The route then to go through Lake Ontario to Oswego, and enlarging the Barge canal from Oswego to Albany. This latter route would entail the deepening of the Barge canal for a distance of only 213.8 miles, and the creation of a new canal of 12 mitei. In my opinion, cither of these routes can be shorter, constructed for less than the proposed deepening of the SL Lawrence waterways. In ease of emergency, we would then have an waterway to move our much needed vessels from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic ocean. If a plan such as I have outlined were adopted, it would not be necessary, in order to get some of our vessels to the seaboard, to dismantle them and, in fart, actually cut them in two, as was tha case during the last emergency because of the inadequacy of the present L waterways. "LasL but not icasL It should be borne in mind that because of the more favorable southern latitude of foe route, it would open number of weeks longer each year than would foe Canadian waterway. The low cost of transportation by the waterway is bound to increase business and create Jobs for the unemployed." Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. has made 3253,400,053 in grants and has loaned $20,553,000. Grants hava been limited to 45 per cent of the project cost, white a loan of 55 per cent is available. Loans in 183647 droppeo to and grants fell to $150,597. 421. Last year foe total wae for loons and $111,789,008 tat grante. PWA hat replaced most of foe money it has loaned by eelling to the Reconstruction Finance corporation the securities it haa acquired. twe la sis times. ffiJhC S n I iHilir used again. Watch for hia . A still PHOTO ENLARGEMENT 2gc prlati Enlarqo Photo Servic F. new cm, just released Profeasor B w a r e." a Res IT Belt Lake Oty.P- - Thera may ba some of tha cient laugh jerkers in 1L an- A1 Roth, NBC musical director, ran into a lot of surprises and several shocks when he began tracing nursery rhymes for hie proposed Most of Children's Symphony. todays simple little songs for children were originally hilarious drinking songsl Naw York Founded by D1 New York, foe largest city d United States, started Amsterdam; it was Dutch immigrants. in life founded V , ODDS' AND ENDS Whan Eddie Cantor sailed for Europe he took along a supply of sturgeon from a Nam York delicatessen store, just to be sure of having the kind he likes best . . . Snm men end women, foe bias for famous monte stars of Hally, wood, smiled fee England ike other day to make e picture there , , . Weller Came ran, who ployed the sheriff in The Creel Train Robbery," in film. dams early days, will be teen in "Mmdo far Each Other m Ifs to ported that Simona Simons contract be renewed when wont it expires about September first , . . George celebrated Bancroft recently his IStk year in the movies . , . Madge Evens, yearning far experience on the stage is appearing at one of the little summer theaters near New York . . . Jane Pickens, far the tame reason, is doing the same (king in Massachusetts In "My BilT yoHll see Key Francis in a role new that of Ike mother of four children, wearing simple frocks instead of gorgeous ones, end giving as good a performance as if she were just beginning on e new contract, instead, of winding up an old one. 9 Wwtara Newspaper Palau. ... Language of the Been Civilised races use simple end easily teamed language, white primitive peoples employ tongues of incredible complexity, some of which, saye Collier's Wukly, are beyond foe comprehension of many eminent philologists. Produced Cyrano de Bergerao Benoit Constant Coquelln, tha French actor, produced and acted in Rostand's "Cyrano de Bergerac" in 1897 and thereafter it wae hie meet noted rote. SritLskaatyi 'Sj HpOwJ Hetal. Lscstad of 4i Soil When Bosnia Held AUks Russia held Alaeka by th of Berings discovery in 1? tha subsequent settlement country. In 1799 the bad ad by tha eaar to w company, which chiefly y Four 1863. until tend it the United States pureM territory. Oregon Grape. State F1 is the Oregon's state flower gon grape. Learning and Forget1 The ancient controversy praise or blame ie m1 in stimulating learning swered in foil way: It do any difference which you !ng and forgetting e"1 t an equal pace with eithw tJ. -- Seasoning Wood for Exclusive of the Ivon the wood used in U two on, it takes from H f.rt.rti . Sn1I& fsr |