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Show THE HELPER JOURNAL, HELPER, UTAH nrrTl ,L, I vr By DOUGLAS 1,JJW, MALLOCH Sheer, Lovely Cottons for Summer By CIIERIE NICnOIAS , "T'UE 'rr; - ftONERS ENOUGH Why Machines Are Not Wanted in China - ?A 1 old home place is Dot as Bne As lots of places up the line. If size Is all you care about, But I can shut all that quite out : know, within this bouse of mine, Or hers, or ours, that our own stuff. Though plain, has always been enough. U bi The old home place is Just a farm. Dad cleared the brush with his own arm And sowed the seed with his own hand. Well, other houses may look With 19 BEDTIME 'By THORNTON SHORT-TAI- L 7 HEN I'eter Rabbit returned to the dear Old Brier I'alcli he oukl think of nothing but his new the Shrew, acquaintance, Short-Tai- l j This was quite like I'eter. Anything new arouses his curiosity so that he of nothing else. He would ( can think liked nothing better than to gossip with some of his neighbors about Sin ri Tail and his affairs, but to do this lie would have to admit that he knew little or nothing about Short-Taiand this he couldn't bring himself to do. Tou see I'eter felt very, very foolish every time he had been one thought how Short-Tai- l of his neighbors for so long nnd all the time had been mistaken by him for a member of the Mole family. So Peter said nothing to anyone, ' not even to little Mrs. I'eter, but resolved to make .up for lost time. The very first chance he got he slipped over to the old log where he had He intended to met Short-TaiNow Peter couldn't make a call. t.ee under the old log, so he couldn't was there or wW whether Short-Tai- l not. IIe called but got no answer, lie thumped with his feet. Finally he thumped right on top of the old log itself, nnd then looked quickly to see if anyone ran out. No one did. It was quite plain that Short-Tai- l r? l, Robin Hood Hat I ' ' I V . - : ',t. ' i harm Unless we quit remembering That we've enough of ev'rytblng. BONERS are actual humorous f AN power Is so ctionp Id China found in examination pathat tiiere Is little call for maetc., by teachers. essays, pers, Our there. photograph shows The old home place, or any spot, chinery two American marines near Tientsin By this is judged, though big or not : The finest animals on earth are watching a Chinese coolie unloadIf It has housed you, fed you, too. mice. ground In from a bricks canal the barge ing And both seemed good enough to primitive manner of the Orient. you. Three birds that have black feathThat's all that matters such a lot are the crow, raven and Jailbird. ers And this old place, through dry and wet, Watered stock Is cows put out to nas never really failed us yet pasture beside a running stream. The old home place has warmed Space between the bones Is filled "FEW GOFERS and fed, with mucllege. BURGESS W. TURK! ENOUGH," ' And kept a roof above our head. STATES So we can pass the others by It is the duty of the governor to MAC Smith. Without a jealous look or sigh, Of course such a little felbeg all pardons and fill all the seats path. And live contented, as I said, In the house. low as Short-Tai- l wouldn't make Because, when times were good much of a path. It was very much or tough, column Is a collection The like one of the private little paths The old home place has been of bonesspinal up and down your of Whitefoot the Wood Mouse. In running enough. back and keeps you from being legs fact Peter would have supposed that WNU Service. tupn Booy . 1933. Douglas Malloch. clean up to your neck. FOEELV this was just what It was, had It not TO had said. been for what Short-Tai- l Swing FROM An Oxonian is a man who drives INSIDE OUT. It was only about half an inch wide. "He told me to follow his path and pair of oxes. WNU Service. 13 1933. Bell Syndicate. we might meet," said Peter to himself, there being no one else to talk Manchuria Advancing to. So he started to follow the lit- "The desire to be educated Is not BRING AROUND THE a new ambition among Manchnrian LEFT SIDE young people; but the fervor for clean unblemished bodies and saniof the most prevalent faults tary surroundings is sweeping QNEIs failure to let the left side across the land like a fresh sea turn around to the right on the breeze blowing sweet across Even those golfers who backswing. drained moors which hitherto have do, are often far short of a combeen miasmlc sloughs of putrefying plete turn. One reason for this is ditch water," Dr. Arthur Torrance that they want to guide the stroke narrates In an article In Hygela and not being confident of their Magazine which shows the treturn little. but take They swing mendous advances that have been the club back with the customary made In health education in Manwrist and arm movement but allow churia. The school children in that the left side to remain where it county now receive the benefits of was fot fear of destroying their bal"Wh"!n you hear the first bars of the most approved modern methance. The proper method Is to let your wedding march," says wooing ods of training and are given exthe left shoulder turn naturally as Winnie, "you don't realize that yo'j cellent medical and dental care. the It ft arm is taking the club back are In for such a long, long walk." WNU Service. 1933 Bell Syndicate. until the backswing is complete. In some cases the player's back Is pracThere Was Short-Tai- l Darting Along tically at right angles to the objec- full use can be made of the left arm. One of His Little Paths. MacDonald Smith affords a Smith Is a firm advocate of a comtive. tie path. Presently he came to an- fine example of this turn and at plete pivot and lays the blame for other little path, and when the Ihe top of the swing Is set to hit much ;if the slicing on this failure THCATRt-- ' two little paths joined I'eter sat from the inside out with perfect, bal- to turn enough. In and freedom. this position WNU Service. 1933. Bell Syndicate. down and scratched his head in a ance I? V. tid-bi- ts oYou Know- ! "Now how am I to P'izzled way. know widen way to go?" he mutVtered. Finally he decided to stick to the one he had started on. Half a dozen jumps brought him to where this little path branched. Peter was stuck again. Finally he chose one of the branches and started on, only to have this branch lose ttself in a whole lot of little paths, which crossed and recrossed and were seemingly all mixed up. Just looking at them made Peter dizzy. "I'm not going a step farther," declared Peter. "What is the use? I don't know which path to follow, and if I did, it would merely lead Into another little path and I A sudden wouldn't get anywhere." thought struck Peter and caused him to sit up with a funny look on his face. "I wonder," said he slowly, was simply "I wonder If Short-Tai- l planning to have fun with me, when "Pop, what is a mummy?" he told me to follow one of his little "One who can be seen but not paths and perhaps we would meet. bearu. WNU Service. 19S3. Bell Syndicate. Anyway, I've tried to make a call, and that I couldn't is no fault of Now I think I'll go home. mine. My gracious! What a lot of mlxed-u- p must do an paths! Short-Taawful amount of running about." "I have to," snapped a sharp WARM WEATHER "I'd starve If I squeaky voice. PAPA liNOV- 5J Moll il didn't" DESSERTS Peter looked behind. There was Short-Taidarting along one of his nicely For summer wear a New Xork hat little THE and frozen custard paths. makes au Ice designer shows this jaunty little Peter. Cut "Wait a minute!" cried cream which holds up when frozen P.obin Hood sports hat In stitched Short-Tahad vanished. and is nourishing as well as refreshsuede cloth. WXU Servlc. , 1933, by T. W. Buritess. be sliced very thin. Press the fruit through a colander, add one pint of cream and a tablespoon-fu- l of lemon Juice, Mix and freeze as usual. Pack the freezer and let the cream stand for an hour or two. should hhat Sherbet. Orange f Take one and cupfuls of orange juice, one and teacupfuls of sugar, spoonful of salt, three cupfuls of rich milk and two tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice. Heat one cupful of the milk and add the sugar, stir until the sugar is dissolved. Add the one-hal- other Ingredients and freeze as usual. cool. Mix there are nearly nightly by fans. 15,000,000-movi- e This is five times as many movie houses as there are in the United Kingdom; six times as many as in Germany and ten times as many as there are in France or Italy. and 1933. McClure Newspaper Syndicate Velvet Lemon Sherbet. WNU Service Take the Juice of three lemons, Plenty of Water Poib!e f one and cupfuls of sugar-t- wo If all pumps In the New Orleans cupfuls if the lemons are large one quart of rich milk and a drainage system were operated to fourth of a teaspoonful of salt Stir capacity at one time, they would thirand mix well. The mixture will cur- handle three billion gallons, or of water In four dle but when frozen will be smooth teen million tons as velvet A bit of the lemon rind hours. That Is enough water, say experts, to float 200 ships the size of may be added If desired. one-hal- S5. the Leviathan. 1933, Western Newspaper Colon. On Way From Norway to Chicago Fair German Fireworks - m -- it " . French Ice Cream. one quart of milk and add very slowly to four lightly beaten of a cupful of eggs, of teaspoonful sugar, salt; cook until the mixture is thickened and smooth and coats the Cool, add one cupful of spoon. heavy cream and one and teaspoonfuls of vanilla. Freeze as - tnree-fourth- ! - - i 4 one-hal- f usual Strawberry Ice Cream. and hull two quarts of strawberries. Chop them and cover with one cupful of sugar, let stand In the Ice chest for three hours Press the fruit through a fruit rlcer. Wash 4 add a pint of whipped cream, one fourth teaspoonful of lemon Juice. Freeze In one part salt to four of Ice. Freeze slowly at first, pack with more Ice and salt and let stand two hours or more to ripen. ,. .ifr'H. Peach Ice Cream. training ship, leaving Oslo with all sails SOnLANDET, the Norwegian started on her way to the Century of Progress exposiTake three cupfuls of ripe peaches, tion In Chicago. She Is manned by UK) sailors between the ages of fifteen cover with one cupful of sugar, teaspoonful of salt and let and seventeen. Her route takes her up the St. Lawrence river and through stand for an hour or more. The fruit the Great Lakes one-fourt- h Jq i x ' v 4 " - f ' A ' ' ' ? i , ) CIIKKIt cott ons are tri umphant In the mode. Of all the fiuttery-rufflseasons the coming summer 1 promises to be the one we have known for years. With all the dainty crisp organdies, dotted filmy moussellnes, nets and Swisses and simicottons which lar the vogue calls for, It is in evitable that our summer raiment will go alluringly feminine, which It does to the point of enchantment. Commencement frocks especially yield to feminine persuasion this season. They are all that any fair one might dream of In the way of beguiling effects which myriads of little ruffles and "oodles" of tiny edgings unfailingly bespeak. The prettlness of these frocks, made of plain or embroidered organdies or sheer moussellnes and the like, is simply devastating. Their full long skirts (usually ending above the ankle) have a picturesque grace about them as they fairly revel In a frou frou of ruffles nnd ruchlngs and such. If not ruffles and frills and decorative treatments, then adroitly cut ample flares and circular movements, such as distinguish the winsome frocks pictured, accomplish the coveted fullness for the new skirts. Let no one assume, however, that the presence of wide hemlines means that slender silhouettes are to be sacrificed. Not for one moment! The new "lines" call for slim fitted hips and not until a point Is reached between hlpline and knees is the skirt allowed to sputter out Into whirling, swirling masses of little ruffles or develop widening flares. flutterl-est-rufnlie- st airy-fair- y The sleeves of these prettily feminine frocks are as whimsical as a passing summer breeze. They are, almost without exception, short, and they are either puffed or ruffled or or stiffened to stand out as sprightly as a ballet dancer's skirt. Sometimes the cunning puffs are ensnared by a neat band which makes them demure. Necklines, too, contribute In no small way to the prettlness and of these fascinating summer frocks. The gay and debonair gown posed to the right In the Illustration, has a lovely neckline. The material for this winsome model Is a durened starched sheer cotton. The embroidered dots are The belt is green velvet green. The white organdie flowers which outline the neckline in lei fashion are repeated on the skirt, for the newest gesture among designers Is to distinctively feature attractive d back views. The keynote of the frock on the seated figure is Its simplicity sophisticated simplicity, if you please, for the durene embroidered white organdie which fashions It Is a last word In fabric lore. Nothing could be prettier for graduate wear. Later this same frock could be posed over a pastel taffeta when It goes to parties and to dances. . 1933, Western Newspaper Union. CHIC LINEN SUIT By f I1EKIB NICHOLAS The importance of "Sunday night" stressed by one Paris house, for it has designed probably the majority of Its spring and summer costumes with this particular evening In mind. When you think of it, It 13 quite an Inspiration, for Sunday night Is a time for relaxation, Informality and congenial Intimacy. Hence ensembles that fit In with these feelings must be very lovely and restful, provocative of delightful conversation, restful to the eye and refreshing in every detail. And that Is Just what they are. The black crepe frocks have graceful sleeves with much fullness about the elbow, often of white diamante tulle or In a heavier blls tered crepe. Lacquered lace makes possible many stiff, standuplsh frills for the outlining of decolletnges which give them a crispness that Is almost fragile. Organdie is used In the same manner. lli f ; 1. W A 3 ' j may wear the frilliest of Victorian creations or you may go In for a simple Fascist! shirt Put blouses you must have, for this is a suit season. For Informal wear, candy-stripeshirting, made up In severe mannish style with a collar which may be worn open or closed, is a favorite type. Gay plaid taffeta, or checked surah silk are made up In youthful overblonses, belted at the waistline, with cap sleeves, and huge scarf bows tied under the chin. Linen, with drawnwork of stripes or checks, in butter yellow, brick red or old blue, Is being made up In simple blouses for wear with tailored jacket suits. There Is practically no limit to the variety In more dressed-nblouses, for town wear, and for bridge, luncheon or tea. l JTou s one-fourt- .'V. x- V... - More and Better Blouses Fashion Slogan of Spring Ue-i- t A i r ! ing. - r ' , Is il mrm ' . i V.U d . ' " f L" - GOWNS BEING MADE FOR SUNDAY NIGHT 20,000 motion picture theatres in America attended h l, f " Graphic Qolf STORYl . I grand. larger fields, and that's no IJfl l. wasn't there. what Peter remembered Short-Tai- l had said about his private paths, and jumping down from the log he began to look for them. Now it didn't take Peter long to find aJittle path, for there was one lead-- j ing right away from one end of the old log. It wasn't much of a Ramesps left mummies of himself all over Egypt ii 1 I Then JE2B3g3 1 PET La TRIES TO CALL ON A A'-- Novelty Organdies Very springlike are the (lowers of the new gay crisp organdie blouses. Some of t tic very newest ones are of crinkly organdie with stripes like Others are of blistered seersucker. Still others are of the organdies. sheer starched organdies. P fi t -- V i ' ?! i , ' r r T i if E Those w ho know fashions are enthusiastic over the Idea of linen as a medium for the new jacket suits. The new tweed weave linens are as soft as fine woolen and the beauty of them Is that they crush little, If at all. Smart Parisiennes have started the vogue of the dark blouse with the natural colored linen suit, brown or navy organdie being especially sponsored for these blouses. The young woman In the picture has chosen to wear a navy and white striped blouse with a soft-tienavy scarf with her attractive noncrushable tweed linen suit. d Match It Up new niiiteh-lt-uaccessory ara plain pumps that can be worn unadorned or with selections from an assortment of bows to match the costume. A |