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Show St j The Standard's U. L C. Bureau' j a Articles of Interest to Farmers, Housekeepers and Others g I Written f or The Standard by Experts at Utah's Noted J ' j Agricultural College at Logan t m iiiiii ii 1 1 1 I mini 1 1 n I n mi mm r i m i n i in n m i i n mi 1 1 "th ii i i hi n i w iiim J mi urn t 11 1 iiih . iT0DAY IN HI5T01O ' SLIGHTLY JAZZED U Un the 16th day of June, 1520 932 ' 1 years ago today Pedro do Musa, a lay brother with evangelical tendencies, tenden-cies, came back from Mexico to re- I port that he hod scooped Billy Sunday. j Pedro had just completed a brief re- j vlv.il among the natives of Hot Ta- j 1 maleland and had brought some two ! j hundred thousand of thorn into the fold, 1 1 We wonder it Pedro ever gets Billy on the oulja" board and tells him his t system ? L : -00 fl The world's principal jade mlnq is. j 'fl in Burma, where the privilege of mln- ing the stone has been in the possession posses-sion of one tribe for many generations. : Crolide Compound iires j S -2 j 1 Resist the Action of 'Oil i ; " s r and Water ' s g S Contact with mud, water and oil rots ordinary rubber ZZ " I tires and shortens their usefulness by many miles. 1 J Thermoid Tires resist the rotting effects of water and w wm- oil because Crolide Compound seals up all the tinv pores in the tread, making it impervious to moisture ml I of any kind. mm ! Thermoid Tires are the only Crolide Com- w pound Tires made. Put one on your car " mm and prove for yourself that Crolide Com- o 2 pound is 100 per cent tougher than ordi- nary rubber. JJJ mm S 1 BRQWMlNfi 1 Z flH brqs.co. 14s, iHBs 0- DiSTFUBOTOFLS hucsom flflflfllflflflflflfll 2 t OGDEN, AVEJS flfll mm UTAH, mm siiitiiiiiMiiiiittiiiiiiiiiMsitiioiiijf .:m AMERICA'S HOME SHOE POLISH J( M I Pjfe Wax and Oils I BsmJ wy ii polishes,- protects andpresevves H all leathers. Always if) . . BLACK-TAN -WHITE -OXSLOOD - BROWN I |