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Show LaE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, WEDNE SDAT MOKXINO Jonvrurat. ICC? O - MARSHALL 8, 1923. 2H You Have Always Wanted a Phonograph ateClor Xswspaper Eradicate,) - J- A MARY DECEMBER HERE'S YOUE ! CHANCE Short skirts. Ilk thort hair, are go- - with fairly long skirt. The drapery the left side hangs considerably Ing to be very hard to banish, from oh below the rest of th skirt, thus givfashion. And speculation concerning ing a long line that adds to th effect V'.tht tlm and th manner In which of alenderness. ram two will mak their fashions ft AND YOU. YOUR HOME . . - i ' - ja iouoiieas I iwfftwkr iis aooul Colorful automobiles are coming I j;' conjectures about th lnhabltanta of i Mara Most of us assume, as a mat- - back into favors .and avrydajr you tsr of course, that long skirls will see more Interesting colore pass you replace short skirts again Just aa we on the road cars the color of assume that long hair will come back of of mayonnaise dressing, Into Us own. Most fashion I are fresh lettuce leaves, cars the color of f' transitory. But then we must not forget anent short hair that at one time men wore ahir long, but that once they got the habit of having It cut they never went back to long locks, and no one considers a revival of long hair as a possibility for men. Also men1 once wore knee breeches, but they seem to have permanently adnnted' lonr tmueera. The fact that some of the ' dressmakers are making skirts longer, and that practically all the dressmakers make occasional long skirted frocks, rtoes not really lndl cats aa Imminent passing of the short sktrt. Lanvln Is making longer skirts for evening. Word comes from Parts that Madeleine 1 making all akirts two centimeters longer than si did a sesson age that Is about an Inch. Rut that does not really mean long 1 akirta In this country recently we i have heard some comment anent the fact that majesty, the queen of f1 Rumania, her wears fairly long skirts. Ten Inches from the ground Is said to he her rate. But we must not forget that there are plenty of American women of the age of Queen Marie who have never followed the fashion of extremely short skirts. In Rurope queens no longer set the fash ionthough In America we sesm to think that the royal precedent should count for a good deal It Is certainly a mistake to think that anv sort of skirt may be worn The. frock that la designed long. hort must be worn short. . The longer skirt, if It la not o appear actually dowdy, must be either of the bouffant period type, when It Is frequently made longer In back so that the facing is revealed, or of the draped type, sains of tne first sort are suited best to the young and slender end the uneven draped skirts are designed especially for the older woman of more matronly figure. The sketch shows a draped frock J CHI , ;i r 7-- rni L en . r u. bargains en slightly used Instrument. 13 free Eeoords With Each Outfit difference, ed coffin TAKE YOUE CHOICE limoo Sonora ...167.00 .120.00 Columbia 38.00 175.00 Edion Consol. 87.00 275.00 Victor J7.00 175.00 Victor 69.00 -- ........ Columbia ...... (Walnut case.) 150.00 75.00 Victor - Mix -1- ... 25.00 Victor 235.00 Victor $5 - 41.00 67.00 89.00 and $1.00 per week on balance. Zmas Shopping Early 1 . Glen . Piano Co. Bros.-Rober- i Mnnr$ tor 6t00 DOWN Do Tour " 161 SO. U MAIN ST. the difference have forgotten that we ever felt prejudiced against the colored sort. A salesman for one of the highest priced cars tell th story of a young woman who quitly mad up her mind to buy a certain model he. had shown her because It matched the color of the costume eh was wearing at the time. Many fashionable women make a point of matching their car to their costume or rather their costume to their car. With a green sports car It Is smart to have a green sport coat of leather or cloth and a green hat. A black car with red trim Is a good background for the red costume. cars The upholstery 'of high-clshas received much attention recently and many women make special selection of the material used In covering etc. One of the dressmakers seat, has been making mrftor set consisting of fur coat, fur rug and fur gaiters to be worn presumably in th open car In cold weather. BY GELETT BURGESS " 'ofir rr.. Children . " ffiri "ve Good snappy GOPPSI 'f -norlabody well-dress- Ltston in -- lobsters before they ara cooked and afterwards soft gray car, tan cars and even white cara Fashion changes In this matter of Borne years ago we ad ir colors. mired colored cars, and then perhaps over done, oeoause was tne matter the sentiment spread about that there A A Daily x ilf ', .7 This frock designed for th elder women who does not wsnt to wesr short skirt Is msde of black satin with dull gold embroidery. was more elegance in the car of dark, subdued tone than of the more noticeable tone. And now seemingly we are tired of the subdued cars and ill IF ss atrAJ" YOU have been led to believe that pound of coffee is a pound of coffee' you will want to read this: Recent tests made by independent inves tigators in a typical home kitchen prove, beyond question, the lasting economy of M J B as compared with "cheap'-coffees- . These tests show that, pound for M-J-has far more body, more pound, strength, more coffee substance. It's concentrated coffee that's the dif' ference! That's why you can use less of M-J-and still get more in the way or scr-calle- d ifS 1 The Unwilling Adventuress lOsfgrrlchti lffM: By Th Otirees Tifuuns. j lJi. by Metropolitan Newspaper Service, New York. I LOOKING OVER ONE'S SHOtfLDER Few thingt are ruder, or are bolder, Than locking over tome one's shoulder When some one's reading. Never do it I There's something so familiar to it I Something that makes one want to say. .T Yon are a Goopl Please go 1 way I 1 I Q ' 1 By MILDRED BARBOUR Copyright, SYNOPSIS. Shortly after the death of hi wife, known to th operatic world as Elaine Vanessa, Edgar Mackay ' disappears, abandoning their baby daughter In a railway station while en rout to visit his wife's aunt. Miss Els! Toung. Th child, Doris, Is claimed and reared by Miss Toung, who 1 determined to give her an operatic career, since she has inherited her mother's exquisite voice. Chapter a "Well, yon know what I mean," he stammered, flushed and disconcerted. '0s;i Doris, I'm craiy about you. "Here are the woods," she Inter- - n 'or booklet giving recipet Buy from your grocer or neighborhood deeler Full-iii- e 3'lb. cant Real Hop Malt Syrup The finest you can buy. A perfect blend fr of fine imported Saazer and choice v. domestic hops and the pick of America's finest barleys. Prepared by America's best maltsters, it comes to you backed by a name that has stood for top quality for more than , 69 years. You'll know why it keeps growing in favor the very first time you try a can. t rupted him.. "Turn to th right and follow th lane. Th berries are wonderful. I cam her last summer and got more than I could carry home." "Oh, but you've got- my car he assured her proudly. "We cannow," carry home every berry in this woods." "There' twenty miles of It!" scoffed Doris, leaping out without waiting for assistance. "Old Weber told me some people got lost in It once that and weren't found for days." "Rats! I'v gone- - hunting here. 1 know every Inch of this place," he boasted. "Hurry up," ah urged. "Bring th pall." Sh ran lightly ahead of lilm, while he et a rock under the rear wheel of his car and prepared to follow her. He was a slightly stout youth and It made him puff to keep up with her. They found the berry buehe near th outskirts of the woods already stripped of their fruit, so they penetrated deeper Into the morass of tree and underbrush, where great, juicy, purple globules weighted the vines. Their palls were soon full and their finger and lip stained with th spoils. It was then that young Turner spied an old trail. He proposed they follow It. They left their pall and 'began an arduous scramble through the underbrush. It seemed a perfect wilderness to Doris, but her companion led th way with a certainty that won her sdmiratlon for hi woodemanshtp. Briar tor at her frock and scratched her arm and ankle, but she was gam. . It began to grow darker much darker "than the thickness of th tree would account for. She glanced up at the narrow strip of sky vtslbl through their tops, and saw that It was black and ominous. "Oh. Danny, It' going to storsa," h cried. "We'd better hurry back to the car." He, too, saw the sky and abandoned th trail with reluctance. "Only a summer but t guess we'd betterthunderstorm, get out of this befor U breaks." warned Doris, "that" I "Llstn!" thunder already. Oh, dearl I hope It doesn't lightning. It scare m to death." "Not while I'm here to protect he declared stoutly, fie linkedyou." his srm reassuringly through her and they turned back. But they missed th trail. When the torm broke In all it midsummer fury, with thunder and lightning and wind crashing through th forest like demons loosed In screaming frensy, they wer completely lost In a pathless tangle of trees and underbrush. THB PROTEST. A group of people gathered on the veranda of Miss Elsie's trim little white house in the bright of th August morning after sunlight the storm. They even spread out over th neat lawn and trampled th smooth still damp and apongy from th. rain, and walked carelessly over flower whos heads hung heavy with moisture. It emed to th Inwardly harassed but eatwsrdly calm, lady of the house that the entire town had gathered on her doorstep to speculate upon the e fact that her and Turner had not returned home Danny from their berrying expedition of the u afternoon. It was th most exciting hsppenlng In Drayburg since the outbreak of the war. Small wonder that breakfast dlshee were left unwashed In a score of kitchens aa soon ss tbs news went around, and neighbor, friends and mere acquaintance hastened to Mis Elsie's to verify the rumor. Men familiar with the woods, hunt-erprofessional and amateur, were already out seating their way through the forest In search of the loot ones. Meanwhile Miss Elsl could do no mors than wait and pray for Doris s safety, and her fellow townsmen wslt-e- d with her. Work was abandoned for th day. Drsyburg waa enjoying great-niec- pre-vtn- ST. LOUIS W. He BINTZ CO. - Salt Lake City, Utah Dutnbutor$ a, BM4I "' I SI i I J coffeccontentment Why not test the truth of this statement in your own kitchen? Get a can of at afraid be little Don't use a to your grocer's. less to the cup M-- B's extra strength will take good care of that! Use any method of coffeemaking you like. Then note the difference in fragrance, in flavor, in sheer - green-swar- ANHEUSER-BUSC- H A r. , a MutUot, M-J-- J coffee-satisfactio- "After aH," you will say, "the price of coffee isn't everything." M o B CoffeG - there's Economy in its Strength Arid don t forget TmeTba, Orange Pekoe Black, h or Japan Green v for your money, tool, you more L tea-val- ue When the storm had come up suddenly the evening before. Mis Elsie had not bean alarmed. 8h waa confident that Doris and young Turner would already have been on their way back to town and would probably take refuge at the house of some friend near the edge of the village. The storm had proved terrtflo the worst of the summer. It laid telephone wires low and the street became running rivers, impassable for a car. Mis Elsie, her anxiety mounting with each hour, had been helpless. It waa Impossible to or to search until th storm telephone had spent Its fury, which wss not until shortly before dawn. Even then Miss Elsie stilled her alarm by assuring herself over and over that Doris must be at a neighbor's, but. Ilk herself, waa unable to communicate by phone. And now It waa nine o'clock of a bright morning and there waa no trace of Doris or young Danny Turner. Old John Dawson, the town busybody and a rejected suitor of Miss Elsie's, who had hurried to her as soon as the news went rosnd. laid a hand on her shoulder and said In hi deepest tone: "Ton must be brave Sea, on. of th searcher approaching. Be brings us news " A man In overalls strode down the street and pansed at the gat long enough to shout l "We found a tree of th.m. Danny' flivver parked by the woods and there s full berry pells not far olf." He hurried on past. "AJU" breathed Dawson, ."That 1 1 that Mis Doris and the young man actually went to the woods, as claimed, picked their berries and. they for some reason, abandoned their spoils." His emphasis was subtle and his eyebrows I spoke eloquently. "That also proof," he continued, "that the miscreants did not elope to the county seat to be married, aa we at first suspected." "As you suspected," snapped Miss Elsie. "But, Mr. Dawson," a neighbor put In, "Danny's car proves nothing. They oould have taken the trolley, or even the train from Monmouth station. If they wanted to put us off the track." "Maybe It Isn't Danny Turner who's with her," suggested somebody" slse. "Maybe It' some other fellow, and Danny got onto it and followed 'em." "What do you think thla I a movie?" a man nudged th speaker significantly and winked. "Of course," Dawson said, "all this Is only surmise. We can only suspect that Danny I the boy. Nobody aaw them net off together." He turned to Mis Elsie, "tan yon not u tell ha little Miss Doris an an admirer with whom she might have all well, la short, that you could sua- proof look th same look with which ahe would hare regarded a snaks In her petunia bed and marched Into the house. 8he bed not come out again whsn n a boy waa seen running down the road. Re was th courier of glsd tidings, which h panted oat breathlessly: "They're found." "Where?" a soors of throat demanded. "In a ahelter Danny'd made eat of a couple of sapling. Hs waa asleep when we ran acroee them, but ahe waa eating blackberries aa cool aa a cucumber. They'll be here In a minute now." There waa silence. Mia Elsie had heard and ahe came out onto the veranda. Dawson stood beside her. He folded hi arms with determination. "T shall stay at roar stds. Ton will need me." (To Be Continued.) - MOTH CMS ARK OUISTS. tpertal s Tbs Trlkeas. CA8TUS DALE, Dec. T. The Junior girl of the T- - U M I. A. under the direction of Mrs. w. W. Bnuty and Mr. S. IL Johnson, gave a so"Too all suspect too much snapped cial and baiwnet In honor of thetr Mia Elsie. "I wish you d all go horn mothers at ihs Relief society hell. and leave me be. Tou stand around Mis luhna Nlelwen anted aa chairhere gossiping and insinuating. And man for the decoration: Helen eiv all the time something terriol msr chairman of refreshments: FWnnna hsve happened to those two children " Peuey, chairman of entertainment "I very much fear It! I verv much Same were played and the mooter tear It:" agreed Dawson seputrherally. were toested. Luocheoa was served Alia gave him a ukbsou kji .P'Otk. fSS TRrTP Uj ReralndsV r c sOadndtS : Salad fiTi |