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Show TIIE BULLETIN Prize Winning Recipes To Be Announced Soon Goudiss, who writes our WHAT TO EAT AND WHY series, reports that the Cake Recipe Contest which he recently conducted through the columns of this newspaper was a gratifying success. A tremendous number of recipes were submitted and the home economists on the staff of his Experimental Kitchen Laboratory in New York city have been busy for days testing and tasting almost every imaginable kind of cake. They report that our town has some very fine cake bakers! They regret that it was impossible to acknowledge individual entries, but they thank every homemaker who entered the contest, and have asked us to say that each recipe will be given the most careful consideration. Because of the volume of recipes submitted, they will require a little while longer to complete their tests 'and to arrive at their decision as to the winners of the $29.00 first prize, the five second prizes of $10.00 each, and the ten third prizes of $9.00 each. Prize winners will be reported in these columns in the near future, and as announced at the beginning of the contest, prize winning recipes, together with those receiving honorable mention from the Judges, will be printed in a booklet to be distributed nationally. ' C. Houston Father Meets Stranger Son In Death Fight 9 NERVOUS? ID OG SI Ewrgreons,Slunhaetc. Be natal minafSpng. Great LItUe Things Little things are great to little men. Goldsmith. KILL ALL FLIES u Tear a all ataaua. ka at dealer. Harold Baum roe. UUDaKalbAmjrxirwN.Z. DAI SYFLYi KILLER ofiHeali Dont Neglect Them ! Vatura dealgnad th kidatyi to do 0 marvalow Job. Their task I to harp th Sowing blood stream free of oo asoam of toaic lin purities. The act of living tto iiutf ia constantly producing waata utter the kidneys muat remove from the blood if good health la to aaduM. Whta tha kldneya fail to fun ettoo as Natura intaaded, than la Mentlou f waata that may rause body-wida n. One may Buffer nagging backacb peraiataut headache, attacks of diuinaaa, fatting up nights, awellinf, pulfineaa Bnder th (yaw fari tired, aarvoua, all won out. Frequent, scanty or burning passage may b further vidanc of kidney or Mannar diaturbanro. Tha rarogniard and proper treatment la diuretic mediein to help th kidney get rid of poiaoMu body west. Uaa Dhb'i PiUe. They hav had mar thaa forty yaaro of public approval. Ara nrra tndanrd tna country era, I Don't Sold at all drag atone. N HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH IM Baaate 150 Baths ILH to ll.H FarnBy Seam a for 4 paraaoa IMS Air Caalad Lauag aad Lobby GitU Beam Caffa Shop . . Tap Beam ,. Ham of Bstory Kiwaala Eaeautlvea Kachango Optima fgAdV Chaatoarof Ccmaurcs and Ad Oak HOTEL BEN LOMOND Cam aa yea ara T. & FlligaraM, Uift Ignorance la Action There Is no more terrible sight, once wrote Goethe, than ignorance in action. J I kg Early Use of Magic Originally magic was the rudimentary beginning of medicine and science, but soon came to depend on occult and mystic devices. By ELIZABETH C. JAMES C OHRAB AND RUSTUM" by Mathew Arnold is laid in the days of long ago, when men fought to gain personal glory and to be Washington. New Deal political known aa the heroes of their tribes. efforts have now reached an The story opens in the gray light of approaching dawn, on a vast plain near the River Ox us of Persia. Two armies sleep in their tents opposite each other on the spreading plain. They are the Persians and the Tartars who have been enemies these many years. In the quietness of night, one soldier does not sleep. All night he has lain awake. Noiselessly he slips through the camp toward the tent of Peran Wisa, aged commander of the Tartar army. Who is there? Elisabeth ' asks Peran Wisa, James rising in his bed. It is I, Sohrab, coming to ask a favor of you, oh kind one, spoke the vibrant voice of the young soldier. What is it that you want, my son? Peran Wisa asked. To fight in single combat against Thoroughly Tried the champion of the Persian army, True friendship is a plant of slow growth, and "must undergo was the request. Peran Wisa sighed. Can you not and withstand the shocks of adsatisfied to be as a son to me be versity before it is entitled to the and to remain a leader in the Tartar appellation. George Washington. Briny? Story of Rustum. But Sohrab held to his request, ; telling Peran Wisa the story of his life and why he sought to gain renown in single combat. Sohrab's Di foa tool n Mrroua you want to eenonT jroa eras tad irritobUT to joe Mold in father was Rustum, mighty warrior diBIMt to thoa you! of ancient days, who had left his II your norvM or OB edro, by LYDIA E. PINKHAMS VEGETABLE COMPOUND. It oflro bolp Notar calm qaiming Barra. Vet ton (oaoratioBB on wan ha told ENGLISH CRITIC, POET Bother how to go amlling through1 with Lord E. Piakhama VagetobU Compound. It Thomas Arnold, head masDr, halpa Nature ton up the ayatem, thua Iran-la- g th dbeomlorta from th functional ter of Rugby Chapel, in reality which wonmi muat end urn. as well as in the novel Tom Hah a auto NOW to gat a bottle of world, fkmoua Pinkhama Compound today WITHBrowns School Days, was the OUT PAIL (ram your druggiat more thaa a father of Mathew Arnold, EngmiSKem woman ha written In letter r lish poet and critic. poitlig blMAt Why not fry LYDIA E. FIN SHAM'S Blatbew Arnold was born in VEGETABLE COMPOUND! 1822. He attended Oxford university, where he later became Old Adage professor of poetry. With his A drop of honey catches more family background and his work flies than a hogshead of vinegar. as Interpreter of poetry, he became the leading literary critic of England. lib personal attitude toward analyzing literature underlies the best of litermry criti."BLACK LEAF 40" cism today. f Keeps Dsgs Any fraei I Dictated Paradise Loot John Milton composed Paradise Lost in a house on Artillery walk, Bunhill fields. His daughters wrote-frohis dictation. BOOKS IN BRIEF young wife for war before their child was bom. He had instructed his bride to send him word concerning their child, so that if it were son, the father might return and teach him the art of warfare. But the young wife determined not to lose her son and when Sohrab was bom, she sent word to Rustum that their child was a daughter. In the early morning a flag of truce was carried onto the field that separated the two armies. An order for peace for the day was given. Rustam Agrees to Fight. The Persian leader approached Rustum and told him of the challenge but the warrior shook his head and said that since the Persian prince favored the young fighters in court, he should favor them on the field of honor. But the leader implored Rustum for the glory of the Persian army, so that at last he yielded, but only if he fought disguised. The two warriors walked onto the center of the plain. They were armed with metal shields and breast plates, and carried swords and spears. Rustum wore no insignia on his weapons. He spoke: I am a tried warrior. You may meet your death today, needlessly. Let us drop this fight and make peace between us and you come and live with me as my son. Feeling a strange sensation, Sohrab cried, Are you the mighty Rustum? But the older man thought that the younger one sought to learn his name and then to boast to his companions of fighting the mighty Rustum so he cried, It docs not matter who I am! On guard! They began to fight. Long and hard they waged back and forth over the plain. Then swinging his cudgel, Rustum hurled it and the shock threw him to his knees. Enraged at being on his knees with both armies watching, the older man seized his spear and roared, Rustum! Sohrab was surprised to hear the name of his father and he dropped his shield and stepped backward. The charging spear of Rustum thrust through his side. Sohrab had received a death wound, but his spirit was not killed. Rustum taunted him, but Sohrab answered with burning tone, Wait until my father, the mighty warrior Rustum learns that you have killed his only son! Rustum turned pale. Rustum never had a son, he cried. Sohrab showed the sign of the griffin on his arm. The other man fell to the ground. He seized his arms and would have killed himself had not Sohrab stopped him. The younger man in a weakening tone urged his father to live. 9 Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. ap-pare- nt nationwide scope in the strat-i- n tor control of Party Row egy the Democratic party machinery. It is no longer a secret if it ever were concealed that the White House board of strategy is determined to lick Democratic representatives and senators who have failed to respond to New Deal orders. This has happened despite President Roosevelts repeated declarations that he is keeping hands off of all party primar es. The only exceptions to the above information are in states where incumbent Democrats are so solidly intrenched that there is no chance to defeat them for renomination. The latest of numerous New Deal entries in primary races is in Maryland. David J. Lewis, a representative for many years, who is accounted a New Dealer in all respects, has entered the race for the senatorial nomination against Sen. Millard ladings, who has been off of the New Deal reservation many times. Mr. Lewis is to be regarded as formidable opposition. He announced his candidacy after a visit to the White House, and there was none who failed to understand that he had the presidential blessings. It had been known since the court reorganization fight that New Deal leaders were looking for someone to do battle against Senator Tydings. The Lewis candidacy virtually completes the list. There will be no New Deal candidate against Sen. Bennett Clark in Missouri. The reason is that Senator Clark, despite his frequent attacks on the Np Deal program, can not be defeated for the Democratic nomination. Much the same is true about Senator Lonergan of Connecticut. The New Deal board of strategy has no love for the Connecticut senator, but he is rather firmly entrenched in his state. So it seems the way to express the situation is that the New Deal strategists do not hate him quite enough to run a candidate against him. In Colorado, Senator Adams has opposition from an avowed New Dealer. Senator Adams has never been quite so outspoken as men like Clark, or Burke of Nebraska, or Wheeler of Montana, but he has been suspected of being none too friendly to the New Deal as a whole. The board of strategy, therefore, is taking no chances. Senator Adams opponent is Justice B. C. Hilliard. A few hundred miles to the westward, a son of Justice Hilliard is seeking the Democratic nomination for the senate in Nevada. He is after the scalp of Sen. Pat McCarran, who has jumped off of the New Deal bandwagon when he disagreed with presidential programs. So it has been decreed that he, too, must go. The Iowa battle is now over. In that fight, Harry Hopkins, professional reliever of destitution, sought to aid Representative Wearin relieve Sen. Guy Gillette of the Democratic nomination for the senate. The Hopkins outburst, given to newspaper correspondents here before the Iowa primary was: If I were a voter in Iowa, I would support Otho Wearin against Gillette. That raised plenty of hot winds in the senate and, since it came on top of the Pennsylvania primaries and on top of Son Jimmy Roosevelts endorsement of Senator Pepas per in Florida, it gave a tip-oto how far the thing was going. It was perhaps the Iowa meddling by Professor Hopkins that caused President Roosevelt to tell a press conference that he was taking no part at all in the state primaries. Prior to that time, however, he had quietly given his blessing to Senator McAdoo, over his several opponents in California ; Senator Barkley, over Happy Chandler in Kentucky, and it is understood he has shown a preference for Senator Bulkley of Ohio, who is opposed for the Democratic nomination by former Gov. George Democrats full-fledg- ed ff White. a a is shown by the records, things are not all milk and honey As Not All milk centers who Pr are t0T 100 and Honey seeking renomination. Mention was made of Bulkley in Ohio, and Barkley in Kentucky. Sen. Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma, the great advocate of cheap money and the man who forced congress to enact legislation allowing for printing of three billion dollars in new silver certificates, has opposition that promises a bitter fight to the end. The same is true of Senator Thomas of Utah, who is confronted with a campaign of a defensive character. He must show why he is so strong for the New Deal to win renomination in that state from which also comes Senator King. Senator King has been a violent opponent of the New Deal. Then, there is another 100 per center in the far West. Sen. James P. Pope has to fight off the attack of Worth Clark for the senatorial Health Hao Mental Factors Health is not a bodily matter alone but depends on mental as well as bodily activity. nomination. Mr. Clark, now a mem- ber of the house of representatives, is said here to be making a battle of it for Senator Pope whose chief claim to fame seems to be that he fathered the agricultural act of 1938 and nobody knows yet how to make the law work. Clarks record is regarded by many colleagues yx the house as proving him to be a Democrat of the liberal type, for he has supported the President on numerous occasions while voting against White House dictation when he felt that he should do so. The New Dealers have persuaded Governor Johnston of South Carolina to run against Sen. "Cotton Ed Smith. At least, it is the assumption that the governor was persuaded to enter the race. There is a fight on in another southern state also. ' Sen. Walter F. George has opposition for the Democratic nomination. Lawrence Camp, United States attorney at Atlanta and a Roosevelt appointee, has filed for the nomination against Senator George. The understanding in Washington is that the New Dealers settled on Camp when they found that Governor Rivers of Georgia could not enter the fight because he was vulnerable on several points. Senator George, one of the ablest constitutional lawyers in the senate and long highly regarded in that body, apparently has a hard fight because of the likelihood of a divided vote. There are several other candidates in the field and it has been suggested that the vote may be so divided as to bring about defeat of Senator George. Months ago, of course, Sen. Fred Van Nuys was marked for liquidation in Indiana because of his activity against the Presidents court bill. The state machine in Indiana is completely under the domination of former Gov. Paul McNutt, who aspires to the White House, himself, in 1940, and McNutt is sticking with the New Dealers. But to turn to another phase of the interparty fight, the question of use of relief funds in politics has become hotter than a pan of boiling grease. Judge Brady Stewart, manager for Chandler in Kentucky, lately wrote a letter of protest to President Roosevelt, charging among other things that relief was being handed out only to persons approved by the Barkley faction of the party. From Pennsylvania there have been many squeals about political use of relief funds by Senator Guffey, and in neither case has there been proof that the charges are not true. Undoubtedly, if the WPA workers are being used politically in some places, they are being used in many places; it is a condition that must be expected if the country is going to turn relief of destitution over to politicians. They will fill their gullet first. a a The death of an individual whom one does not know, however impor-- . tant the individual Pasting of Warren may be, creates only passing inter est. Perhaps that By LEMUEL F. PARTON CZECHOSLOVAKIA and an that may hang on its destiny is just an added starter in the cosmos of A. W. Robertson, chairman of the Robertson board of the West- Has Remedy inghouse Electric Manufacturing for Gloom company. It is the always assured and hopeful Mr. Robertson who announces his company will spend $12,000,000 on additions and betterments this year, and, from where Mr. Robertson sits, thats just a couple of white chips compared to spendings to come. Mr. Robertson is the H. G. Wells of industry. His shape of things to come, which he has been outlining for the last year or two, includes the following specifications: Migratory humans, shifting north and south like the birds. Just whether the children will be born in the North or the South, he said, is not quite clear to me, but I expect we will follow the policy of the birds and have the children in the North. Windowleis houses, pasteurised air, and artificial sunlight. n planes, with folding wings, kept in the hall rack, with the umbrellas. y Pocket radios for talk with anybody, anywhere. Noiseless eities with double-dec- k The First 25 Years Growing up isnt easy. The first years of life are spent just growing up physically and socially. It is a process so hard, so evident, so emotionally and mentally distorting, that we usually have to spend the next 29 years of life convalescing from it, and repairing with medicine and surgery and corrective exercises all the damages done to the psychic and social organism in the first, fierce upward push through M. B. Greenbie in Be Your Age. 29 the-year- s. CASH $250 ta Caaaaswrs $250 to Bracers Gives ci trio ISO ttib vaab--lf yoa act QUICK . . . Everybody eo onter flili simple, ouy Too One-ma- FLA-VOR-A- ID NEWS ITEM CONTEST two-wa- lit Mu E Lad SO 4ih Prbeatf bocb ISO Mn$S Prints Prim II each 159 Caih Prim Gfren Each Waak HERE ARK THR SIMPLE RULES streets. n Flat houses, with a ertne which will park the push-butto- the auto on the roof. He was a farm and village boy at Panama, New York, chore boy and rustler in his youth and hence not through grammar school until he was seventeen. Then he studied law in a country office, entered practice, got corporations for clients and then began owning and operating them. At forty-si- x he was president of the Philadelphia company and now heads a $200,000,000 company. He pays liberal wage bonuses and relaurges friendly, tionship between capital and labor. Compteto Im Cpapar or magaxlna. only a year ago that ert R. Young, 10 AIOUT b . . ." Attack aattv to wrapper from Ic pod or facrimilo. of oqo Add the Noma and Address of Grocor where yoa bought Sign your Nomo and Addron plainly. Mod Entry to JEL SENT CO., MOO S. Control Fork Avonaa, Chicago, llllnob not later than Wadaaiday, Juua 22nd. Jttdgat' dedsloa li final. Prbo Winners will I Juno !0th Eator na o IT WAS la CTHE ONE THING I LIKE EEST JU fart Cl Chicago, IB. Rob-- A thirty-nine-year-o- ld Texan, quite unknown to Wall Street, rode herd on the straying Van Sweringen Young Texan system and Herd on railed it. It was aU bewilderingly Rail System complicated, but, finally sifted down, it appeared that Mr. Young had picked up a rail empire with an original investment of $229,000. He is a quiet, inconspicuous, unassuming man, and now the feature writers are just getting around to calling him a Titan. cor-Rod-e $3,000,-000,0- He won a roek-and-so- SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY Oar lobby la dellgktfally air cooled daring the seeuner Maths 00 ck proxy battle for the control of the Chesapeake and Ohio railway. Within the last few years, HOTEL be has infiltrated gently into high finance, which is just now becoming aentely conscious of his presence. Hates SI.SO to $3.00 His family was in and around Th IIatel Torifel Square ban a G Canadian, Texas, before the battle (rindljr hihly desirable, of the Alamo. They started the will always find itlnraae-tilatphm.Yu an nod comfortable, First National Bank of Canadian, pronely thoroughly aarorobkhVaa ai (hero-fwhich is now in the hands of the nedaralamd why this betel U HIGHLY BECOMMENDED fourth generation. Yaw aa alao appro tat why i At Culver Military academy, RobIPO a merit of dlaffactton to oIm ert R. Young was graduated at the al IM bMtrtffuf bntofry head of his class, ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. its youngest graduate, and later he attended the Uni24-- 38 versity of Virginia. WNU W With the Du Fonts in 1916, he got his preliminary work-oin finance and joined General Motors in 1922. In. 1932, he founded his own Wall Street firm, with Frank F. Kolbe, his later associate in the Van Sweringen putsch. Mrs. Young is the former Anita fta.la.ee. ofj JLux.u.ty Ten Eyck OKeefe, of Williamsburg, -Va., sister of Georgia OKeefe, the painter. In 1939, they leased Beech-woo- for DISCRIMINATING TRAVELERS the As tor estate, in Newport. Mr. Young, a Democrat, like his father, paid $19,000 for a consignment of those famous Democratic convention books, which congressmen, badgering him at a senate hearing, insisted wasn't nearly so much of a bargain as the Van You are a bigSweringen deal. ger sucker than I thought you were, said Senator Wheeler. Temple Square is why so little attention was paid to the death, a few weeks ago, of Dr. George F. Warren. Professor Warren was nationally known as a Cornell authority on the economics of agriculture; he was known, too, for his famed experiment in causing hens to lay more eggs by keeping them in electrically lighted hen houses at night. But Professor Warren will go down in history for a much more important reason than either of these. It was he who convinced President Roosevelt that prices could be controlled by the federal government by means of changing the gold content of the dollar. Our currency structure had remained much the same for SO years until Professor Warren became an advisor, a consultant, for the New Deal. There had been many attempts, much fanfare, many blowings of trumpets, about tight money or Wall Street control of money, or various other ideas such as the free silver of Bryan days and the equally silly scheme of Senator Thomas of Oklahoma, who wanted to print three billion dollars in new paper money to bring the country out of the depression. The native intelligence and solidarity of the country, however, brought us safely through those periods until Professor Warren came on the scene. One need not review how the Consolidated Newo Features. Thomas scheme for printing money WNU Service. A beautiful Interior, with unrivitlud was forced through congress nor cordiality and charm, h tilt most Ideal how the Warren plan for control of of Nations Languages location In the city. Luxurious, tastefully was prices propagandized until Switzerland is not the only nation members of the senate and the appointed rooms. Service true to the house, knowing nothing about eco- having more than one official lan- badWonal hospitality of the West Unnomic subjects, swallowed the pro- guage. Palestine has three recogposal. The gold content of the dol- nized tongues, English, Hebrew and excelled cuisine. Famous Empito Room, lar was lowered the dollar was de- Arabic. Actually more than one GUY TOOMBES, Maaashl Master valued, and the government kept language is spoke in every country the profit, amounting to more than in Europe but one. Portugal is the ROOMS from 92.50 only nation having a single lantwo billion dollars. The important thing to remember guage. In Asia, India has 220 disBut is that a great government made tinct vernacular languages. even with four languages Switsuch a costly experiment on its citizens, and failed. For it zerland is not finished, says the must be said that the Warren Washington Post. There is still one scheme for raising prices has failed. more obscure dialect called Ladin, C Wooteni Newspaper Union. spoken by a small group of people. r- e, ar ut HOTEL UTAH Q d, I 130,-000,0- 00 - Salt Lake City |