OCR Text |
Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH He Pajamas Are Liked by the Wee Tots By JULIA BOTTOMLEY $ ( - $ - - Sun Suits Are Easily Made very prettily with a narrow scarf which Is tied In a soft bow over one shoulder. In all childrens style displays nowadays particular attention is called to pajama fashions. Just now the chief attraction Is beach pajamas and overalls. A pert little model for beach wear boasts an Eton Jacket. The material for this cunning outfit has a red background with huge pink, blue, black and white polka dots floating over Its surface like so many toy balloons. The Jacket Is sleeveless, worn over a sleeveless white dimity blouse. The trousers are very full and finish at the waistline with a picturesque troubadour sash. Overalls are frequently made of gay as gay can be prints. These are for the most part trimmed with a solid color. It Is said that pajama suits for children from seven to fourteen are far outselling nightgowns. (,"3. 19J0. West-r- n Newaiapr Unlou.) the United State Department of Agriculture.) A sun suit, after all. Is only an ab- (Prepared by breviated form of rompers, with certain features about Its construction which expose as much skin surface Goloshes and rubbers should lit the be large enough for the child to put on and take off. Let the baby be comfortable In hot weather by dressing him only In the kind of clothing his elders would like to wear. The pockets are adequate to store the trinkets which children take such joy In carrying about with them during play hours. The neckline Is finished If theres one place more than another where pajama costumes seem to fit Into their environment becomingly, that place Is In the childrens realm. Bless their dear hearts, how cunning they look flitting about In their little trouser and blouse outfits, and with what enthusiasm designers are creating pajama styles for wee folks. There are as many kinds of pajama styles for fashionuble youngsters as there are for grownups, ranging from lounging to beach types. ' For the making of juvenile pajama costumes shantung Is proving a most adaptable material. It has so many arguments in Its favor, first among Wldch Is the fact of Its perfect laundering qualities. Then too the lovely colors of shantung fit charmingly into the happy scenes of the lilliputian world. Shantung In a delightfully light green was the choice of the designer who styled the attractive aud very practical suit Illustrated. Borderlngs of white shantung make a pretty trimming. A unique feature Is the group of tucks down the front, the blouse buttoning at the shoulders. .I To keep berries, cherries or other small fruit fresh In hot weather, pick them over and spread them out In the refrigerator on a shallow plate or flat wire sieve. 1.),. By MARY GRAHAM BONNER S Theyre very erratic. Some comets have had as many as six tails, and they wont let people find out much about them. They have their own ways and they live their own lives. Yet they may let us go through their tails and never say anything Some Food Hints T By NELLIE MAXWELL I Who does his duty is a question Too complex to be solved by me: But he. I venture the suggestion Does part of two, that plants a LowelL tree. Some of these salads are more adapted for entertaining than for every days use: a, - Butterfly Salad. Split a small banana Into halves and. dip Into lemon juice to keep It from discoloring. On either side of the banana, placed on lettuce, put half slices of pineapple - to form the wings to the banana body, the rounded edge toward the banana. Garnish the wing with red and yellow aspics or fruit gelatins. Garnish the banana with chopped ripe olives and capers. Serve with french dressing after being well chilled. Beach Club Salad. Fill a scalloped grapefruit shell with shredded lettuce and diced grapefruit which have been Dec.well mixed with mayonnaise. orate the top with halved cherries. Serve on lettuce leaves. Cheaae Salad. Arrange a nest of shredded lettuce and place on It finely shredded celery, apples and radishes all cut Into small shoestrings. Mix with creamy mayonnaise, using two tablespoonfuls of mayonnaise to a half cupful of whipped cream.- Decorate with rings of olives In the center of which has been piped a rose of cream cheese. Serve with french dressing. A dainty dessert and one easy to prepare is always popular with all housewives. Here Is one : Marshmallow Dessert. Cut Into small bits a cupful or more of marshmallows, add a handful of blanched and shredded almonds, cover with a cupful of whipped cream and at serving time serve in sherbet glasses topped with shredded pineapple. Fruit Salad. Irepare a bed of shredded lettuce. Ilace a slice of canned pineapple upon It. Fill one-haof a canned pear with diced bananas and celery mixed with mayonnaise dressing. Lay on top of the Garnisli with strips of pineapple. - j lf as possible to the health giving rays of sunshine. The armholes are large and loose, the neck Is rounded down, t l 1 The Under Part or an ensemble Is a Sun Suit. Evening Story for the Children Harry, who was adventuring through tlie sky, had been hearing about comets. Well, you might go through the tail of a comet sometime and not know It," Cosmo announced. "Really? Ill tell that to everyone when I get back to the Earth. Ill say, Look here, at this very moment you may be going through the tall of a comet. Cosmo laughed. Maybe youd like to know how they got their name. The word conies from the Greek word Kometes meaning the longhaired. ! 1 I H Serve with french green pepper. dressing. A potato salad is one of the easiest salads to make and one which Is often the poorest. Potatoes are tasteless when cold and should always be marinated with a french dressing for two or three hours before the mayonnaise Is added. Carrot, Coconut and Pineapple Salad. Take one can of crushed pineapple, two cupfuls of grated raw carrots, One-hal- f cupful of shredded coconut, mix with mayonnaise and serve on lettuce. Sprinkle the top of each with coconut. ((Si. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) The Aurora Borealis. Water in Wallow Covered' With Heavy Film. Mange, which has been reported a Infesting hogs in several localities, may be reated most effectively by ap plications of crude petroleum, fuel oil, coal-ta- r dip or dip, says Dr. R. F. Bourne of the veterinary department of the Colorado Agricultural college. "The methods used In applying such preparations Include dipping, spraying, hand dressing or the ose of medicated wallows, Doctor Bourne says. "Cement wallows which provide for three or four Inches of liquid with allowance for a rise In level when the pigs are occupying them, have proved satisfactory In warm weather. Wallows should be charged with water only until the pigs become accustomed to using them. Then, for a day or two, the water may be covered with a heavy film of crude oil. This routine should be repeated as often as necessary to control the disease. Wallows should be In a shaded place to avoid the wnter becoming too warm to be Inviting. Spraying with fuel oil or applying It with a garden sprinkling can, In which the openings have been enlarged, often gives relief at less expense. Mange In hogs resembles Itch or mange In other animnls, and Is caused by a similar minute mite which lives exclusively upon and within the skin of hogs, although sometimes temporarily affecting other animals and man. The females measure only about of an Inch In length while the males are still smaller. The female burrows Into the skin and travels for a considerable distance under the surface by excavating a tunnel within which her eggs are deposited. This migration causes Intense Itching and results in much scratching and rubbing, which together with the direct effects of the Invasion, causes loss of hair, thickened, inflamed, and often furrowed and scabby lesions of the skin. The condition spreads to other hogs by contuct nnd probably nlso by Infested pens, the mites being nble to live away from their host for several weeks. In some cases tlie progress of the disease Is rapid and the effects severe, while In other Instances the disease Is only mildly Irritating and spreads slowly. It Is usually most noticeable In unthrifty anlmuls or In those kept In unsanitary, crowded quarters." Self-Start- er : ! ERADICATE MANGE Handy on Wagher Big Help Children need as much sleep In summer us in winter. Sleeping hours and naptimes should not lie shortened by long hours of daylight. Hwofti CRUDE OIL WILL h childs shoes but should eaoro especially In front, aud the legs short. At the hack the neck Is not cut down too much or the suit will tend to slide off the shoulders. A mother can make a sun suit very easily by adapting a plain romper put-terIf she Is adapting a romper pattern, It should be of the or "French panty" style, with a drop seat. The main proportions should not be changed. The length from shoulder to crotch and the width through the trunk Bhould be ample enough to permit all normal activity, such as running, jumping, climbing, squatting or swinging. In a girls tailored ensemble, tbs sun salt takes the place of underwear or bloomers. Light blue cham-bra- y Is used for both the overdress and the panties, which are stitched flat to an open mesh top of matching marquisette. The latter can usually be bought among curtain goods. Plain soft cream scrim or net might be used for the top. The shoulder straps are planned to let out for growth. They are tacked at shoulder level and held down with a button sewed through both thicknesses of goods and stayed with a small piece of tape, since a stay button might scratch. The long front opening finished with a flat band and three medium sized flat outtons makes It easy for the child to learn to put the sun suit on without help. The buttons are the A pocket for Inch size. a hanky" Is placed on the panties. would he used to give him a trip through the sky. There were some bright lights ahead, like arches of fiery clouds In the sky. There were beams and streamers of light going across the heavens from east to west. The aurora borealis or northern lights, Cosmo pointed out We wanted you to see them so put on a special performance for your benefit." Ive seen those In the winter, Harry said. "Yes, theyre at their best In the winter and at their best far north. They have their own electrical displays and there are many stories connected with them. "Sometimes they have been called the Merry Dancers. The Eskimos think that they are boys playing football and that the movements of the lights are the players struggling with each other. They say that If the aurora fades away and you whistle It will come back again as though to show that they know you like their football game. Then some Indian tribes have be With the many labor saving devices that are constantly coming on the market the housewife Is getting a good share that will help her in her household duties. The power washer has done a great deal to give the homemaker more time to do some of the things she likes to do. One of the latest conveniences to come to our attention Is an electric r gasoline-powerefor washing machines. This works just like the starter on your automobile. A touch on the starter sets the engine self-starte- h d going. lieved that they were ghosts dancing In the heavens, but we must hurry now, for you have an Important engagement and I know you're going to he pleased when I tell you about it." With the Moon?" "Right I With the Moon." "Have you thought how I'm going to he able to talk to the Moon or hear anything?" As a matter of fact "Yes, Indeed. that was planned before we started. You'll see nnd you'll also hear!" (. 1930, Western Newep&per Union.) Wire and Nails Often Fatal to Live Stock No Limit Hero If Napoleon could make the finest soldiers out of human mud and marshals of France sprang up at his bidding from the file, what ought to be our bearing In this America of snequaled democracy and opportunity? American Magazine. Farmers should take precautions to prevent pieces of wire, nails, or similar objects from being strewn around where cattle, swine, or other live stock may come In contact with them. Besides the Injury which may be caused by the animals stepping on such articles, there is also the likelihood that the animals may pick up these sharp objects with their feed and swallow them, often with fatal results, says Dr. W. L. Boyd, professor of veterinary medicine at University farm, St. Paul. We frequently observe the condition known ns traumatic Indigestion and occasionally pericarditis or Inflammation of the heart and Its coverings, clue to the migration of foreign bodies to the heart sac, says Doctor Boyd. The ype of foreign body which causes the most damnge Is the one which Is sharp on both ends. These occasionally occur In feed which has been ground and has a wire or nail In It that has been made sharp on both ends by the mill." Length of Ptiaioo Play The Passion play begins at eight o'clock in the morning, and, with a r interval for lunch, continues until six oclock In the evening. two-hou- about It! Its certainly a queer old world, Harry. It certainly Is, Harry agreed. Cosmo evidently had told the pilot to go rapidly after this for the rockets went shooting forth at a great speed, and Harry knew that when the rockets did this the plane was being forced to go rapidly forward. He thought of how little he had ever Imagined as a small boy that the same Idea that sent his rockets up Into the air when he was sending off fireworks Losses in Sheep From Acidosis Is Puzzling (Prepared by the United State Department of Agriculture.) The thoroughly modern girl and boy, too wants to know something about good diet. Whether the main concern is choosing meals at a cafeteria or lunch room, or helping with meuls at home, It Is clearly Important to everybody to know what to eat to keep well and store up energy, and what food combinations are suitable The older boys and girls together. In many families can be of great help if they can from time to time relieve their mothers of the task of planning and preparing meals. What a real day off a mother might have If the meals on Saturdays, for example, could be attended to entirely by one of her daughters, leaving her free to go shopping, visit her friends, attend a club meeting, make a trip to another town, or get caught up on other things I And the daughter would not only enjoy the change from books nnd lessons, although she would actually be learning something of permanent use to her, but she would have the satisfaction of releasing her mother for a few hours from her daily routine. A girl of eleven or twelve Is not too young to try planning und assembling a simple dinner without help. After she has gained confidence In bundling food materials and the kitchen lange, she might do this regularly when school work permits. Perhaps her brother would find It Interesting to help her, too, and at the same time learn why there should be more spinach than pie In his menus, and why fried potatoes and doughnuts at the same meal would be a poor combination. The bureau of home economics of the United States Department of Agriculture, a few years ago, prepared a brief circular on the subject of meal planning, which Is Just what the beginner In this field needs. It was intended especially for the use of club members, and Is written In simple, readable form, easily followed. Both boys and girls belong to these clubs, and as many of them have to take part In the farm home activities, food selection and meal planning Is one of the regular projects in club work. The circular describes each of the five food groups, tells which foods belong In each group, nnd makes a number of Interesting suggestions about combining foods In menus. It points out too that attractive appearance and texture In the foods served at a uieal Is Important as a stimulus to good appetite. This publication cun he obtained free by writing to the United States Department of Agriculture, ns long as the supply for free distribution Is available. 4-- Lower Temperatures Result From a (Prepared by the United State Depart meut of Agriculture.) A Ice chamber in a good refrigerutor soon chills the entire box to temperatures at which the more perishable foods can he safely kept. It is Important therefore, not to allow the temperatures to rise very much' after the box is once properly well-fille- d chilled. The next time the Iceman calls he should be asked to fill the ice chamber to capacity aguin, and continue o keep It filled. If the first large piece of Ice that Is put In Is allowed to melt away until It Is half gone or more before another piece Is put In, or If only 25 or 35 pounds of Ice are added when 50 pounds are needed to bring It up to capacity, the temperatures In the refrigerator will rise above a sufe point. Then the new piece of Ice will be melted faster to chill the box again below 45 degrees Fahrenheit than If the box were colder when refilled. The chart, which was made by the bureau of home economics of the United States Department of Agriculture, shows that a box made to hold pounds of Ice. when filled, will have a temperature of about 42 degrees Fahrenheit in the coldest part directly under the ice compartment when tlie room Is 75 degrees Fallen-hc!t- . It Is here that milk, meat, aud 80-10- Well-Fille- d Ice Chamber. other perishable food should be kept. The top shelf may be 10 degrees higher, but this temperature will be satisfactory for storing vegetables or fruits. The dotted line represents a temperature of 45 degrees Fahrenheit, which Is considered the maximum for safe holding of milk and meats. When the Ice has melted down to 50 pounds In this box the danger line Is ulmost reached. Both lower aud upper shelves will be two degrees higher than they were and the box needs refilling to capacity at the earliest possible moment In this case a "hi pound piece might do but a 35 pound piece will maintain a steady low temperature better, and last rela-tlvelonger. If the lee Is allowed to melt down to 20 pounds before refilling, the lower shelf temperature will rise three degrees more and the upper, four degrees. The addition of 25 or even 35 pounds of Ice then will not he adequate, as so much of the Ice will he melted the box that there will not be- enough left to keep tlie box steudily cold until the next The temperature will begin delivery. to rise much sooner than In the other Instance, and In the long run more Ice will lie bought with lest satisfactory results. ly Paralysis of pregnaut ewes, followed shortly afterward by death, has become a problem with sheepmen In the Middle West. The disease Is caused by an acidosis; the Indirect cause Is the condition of the ewes being too fat nnd not having enough exercise. The ewe becomes lame, gets weak, and finally collapses In a paralyzed condition. Two or three days later, she dies. Post mortem examination usually shows that tlie uterus contains twin lambs, or triplets. To prevent acidosis, cut down the feed, provide exercise, and feed a laxative feed not dry feed. Each ewe suspected of being affected with this disease should receive a quarter pound of epsom salts, dissolved In a pint of water and administered ns a drench. Alfalfa hay might well bo used in place of drv fodder. Animals to Cull In the fall of the yenr the live stock raiser should take an inventory, particularly to determine which animals he will cull out to fatten for market. Old animals that have outlived their usefulness should be disposed of. It costs more to feed and house live stock during tlie winter mouths, and this expense can he lessened if nofte but tlie most useful auimals are kept. Shy breeders, old stock with poor teeth, and tlie females which are cot good mothers should be sent to market |