OCR Text |
Show j , , THE BINGHAM NEWS. BINGHAM. UTAH LATEST IN OUTING FROCKS; , PRETTY DRESS ACCESSORIES j . - - TUB course of appnrel has been set many a season steadily to-ward daintiness, both for outer and undergarments und from "top to toe." When good sense dictates n sturdy fabric, with dependable wearing qual-ities for a frock, designers Immedi-ately put their wits to work to give It an airy touch somehow, either by means of accessories to be worn with It, or by combinations of materluls or by Its decorations. Manufacturers of gingham hive made things easy for them.. The neat prettlness of checked for n Jeweled girdle or necklace or corsage to be worn with It. With the most practical and severe of tailored suits they find It necessary to wear a gajl striped scarf or a hat and scarf to match, and even their Joy In a fur neckpiece is Incomplete until they have posed against Its dark back-ground a cluster of flowers In glowing colors. All of which contributes to their charm and to the generul cheer-fulness. The shops are showing just now many handsome girdles, many of them k?Z4& 1 j h7 I fill ! v r krfS I'll i - 4 Hi-- t tsi - ' Gingham and Airy Organdie. ginghams end their beautiful colors prove an Inspiration thut accounts for an endless variety of adorable mid-summer frocks. Everywhere gingham, Joining forces with organdie, makes morning and outing frocks of unrivaled freshness, and every week sees new developments of this combination. Two of the lust to be launched on the seas of midsum-mer fashions are shown here. In both of them glnghnm, showing a small check In a color with white, Is com-bined with white organdie, and the dresses are attractive In any of the fashionable colors and In black and white. The designs are novel find the picture tells all their simple hut de-lightful story. The use of flat pearl buttons, as a decorative feature. Is worth noting In theiu (It has been cleverly done) and the Importance of making the gingham up partly on tlio silver link chains, , set with mock jewels or motifs of jade. Sometimes the girdle serves as an ge for drapery In the gown, but more often It simply Indicates the waistline and adds color and a point of Interest to the costume. ... For several years we Imagined that earrings had passed to the realm of forgotten things, but now they are among the moat popular of ornaments, Long pendant earrings of pearls or sliver filigree In elaborate design, pen-dants of Jade and Jet and many other stones serve to express the love of or-nament that lies In the heart of wom-ankind. . Combs for the evening coif-fure are gracefully shaped and glit-tering with a variety of colors. In their company tire buckles that rival them.. Slippers have their film re of decoration In buckles and slides In many shapes, set with rhlnes'one- - I j iVnrrrrn ey" jsmw ! !' wmij ' "'"frnv-- w ' "B1 iwi'j'umih" uiwa ma .' 'm ' liiiiii - - - vmt i t f nfiiirT it t f Latest in Accessories. hliifi and pnrtly on the straight of the nuitei lul. The frK'k nt the left mukcs new tie-pa- r lu res with a bias ruffle about the hips and u I0113 orpmdle siikIi IioiiiuI with the k'inlium und tied nt the left side. The bodice fastens tinder tlie close-se- t row of buttons down I lit' front. The Imiiluntton of the de-signer of tills little frock caused her to make effective use of shallow seal, lops about the bottom of the ovcisknt nml bodice and on the double collar and cuffs, and to accent a new varia-tion (if (hem with Cat pearl bullous, line of the best things aboil! these pretty frocks, for any lime of day, Is Unit anyone may make them. The materials are to be I1114I e eryw ln-r-nml are Inexpensive. The designs and easy to make. The "eternal feminine" ren-a- it hell' III the love of finery thai runs lifter all sufts of pretty ilnss ihiv Ri'l'ies atel ot herv. yenr'm mill out. When women elect in e,it. a plain frock, that is sutlici at excuse f Hiickles of gold or silver have mnda their appearunce on street shoes and are promised n growing vogue.' Hot among all the pretty trinkets which lltul favor in the eyes of women, neck-luce- s make the strongest appeal, and among necklaces pwirl bends hold first place. Glass bends In all colors i,ij of. all kinds are universally worn. Women have grown exacting In the matter of shopping hags as Is d by the demand for P'od quality and fine finish whatever the materials use,!. Leather bags maintain their' leadership, but the bet-ter grades of beaded bays and line mesh silver or gold hi-s- , ,,ro liked fr dressier wear. A little pocket mirror ocms Um parable from ,a(..s ,,f n Muds and is often nllaihed (,, t, n. side vf he bag .y a ribl ui, or set In 0:1 liie Insiilc (.f the Hap. ,.. 7 cchomt rt vc.'iiu) Nivgy rt'moij that are puzzling you.' It will be my pleasure and privilege to -- answer care-fully and promptly all ques'ions ubmitted to me. If a more detailed amwer th"n .can ?e 8iven Aeie columns is lesired. send a stamped envelope and it will be given prompt attention- - All communications will always be held in absolute confidence. ,e"e" c, dd,r"d 7 plainly in pen and ink to Helen Brooks. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. . w y ' .. quaintance with him before you feel that you really know him. Bide your time, dear if he likes you he will let you know bout it, and in the mem-tim- e go to the shows and enjoy then and do not think too mufh about whether he likes you or not. He evi-dently enjoys being with you or he wouldn't care to take you any place, and that is all that is necessary at the age of sixteen. Dear Miss Brooks: , Please tell me what day of the week I was bom on. My birthday is on De-cember 25, 1907. ' i LEXIA. Roosevelt, Utah. I fid you arrived here on Wednes-day. Let me hear from you again-- Dear Miss Brooks; ; f'r ,' ! v wonder if you can help me with a puzzle. I always use a tub instead of a wash boiler. I bought a new one for that purpose, but I cannot make water boil in it I put it on tho range and had a; coal fire under it for nearly three hours, but the water would not boil. When I took it off, where it had stood on the stove all the , polish or smoothness was blistered just like a sun blister on a varnished article. Of course as soon as I cleaned my range it all chipped off ' and every time the fire is out for a while those places rust. I feel aw-fully sorry about it and hope you can explain it a little to nm la there any way I can stop the rusting? Thanking you so much, A READER, Richfield, Idaho. Don't you think the reason the wa-ter doea not boil in your tub 1s be-cause the tub is not flat on the bot-tom? By taking the rusted parts and I having them ground on an emery stone I until smooth and then polishing with I steel wool which can be obtained at a I hardware store, your greatest trouble I My dear Mies Brook: I have two questions which have been botharing ma for a long time. 1. When a boy nay. "I am ery glad to have met you." what ia the proper "reply t I. 1 a boy wr.tea to a girl, then atop, and then atarta again, and then stops, and the girl writes lat. would It be good form for the girl to write iSin, thinl: S"l deal of this boyt Thanking yon, , LEILA. Salt Lake, (t) A pleasant mile and a aulet "Thank yoa. h. all that ia nereaaary, la answer te a boy a expression af pleaaare at baring met T V T wr!to t "' time would net be bad farm a he might net hare re wired the firet ones but da net consider writ-In- g after that, ae it la Yery bad form te continue writ ng. Just aa it not rocd form to continue la try to Interest a bay after he haa shewn jm plainly that he doea net care fur your attention. Dear Miaa Brooks: .Two of our town girls have questions and wish you would answer them. How old I "J rl b,,or trting to go with a sbh?o7ul',d. T i. what kind of games you play at a party T MAGGIE and MEIUOS. Kingston, Utah. Ton should be at least sixteen before r-- i ly going ant U parties with boys, and then you should ga only with boy yoa and year parents know well. Yeu will net regret fol-lowing this adriee, I can aasars yen. As I cannot take the ssact te explain many games. I will gire you ane an the contest order which ia interesting. Select plctnrea ef motion pe-tu-re stars, or of well known, naUonally ad-vertised articles. Cat these pictures put. nam her them and fasten them an the walL ef the ream. Give your guests paper and pencil, and the ane who gives the greatest number ef correct answers as te who the stare are, at- - what the article ia, receives a prises and the ana who haa the fewest cor- rect answers gets the booby prize. Dear Miaa Brooks t ... Can yon tell ma what to do for a scaly and blotchy complexion, and also what to do for my hurt It is Ju.it like It is dead and It isn t oily at all. . Thanking you In advance. BETTY. Utah. The blotchy condition may be due te many raasana and cannot nraallr be remedied by treatment through tha skin. " The scaly condl-Me- n is probably- - caused by wsshlng tha face wt iaapura seap. Try cleansing the face wna reed cleansing cream. Da this reg-Mar-ty at least anea a day. If yoa use powder Chang te asm ether goad grade. It may be aha powder which la cauaing the trouble. ig your hair, roar scalp needs a goad. tMraugh massaging with the tips af the nagera In a circular movement DAILY. massage rawline ar alive e4l tat tha scalp thoroughly and shsmpe with a road tar sms. Rinse In water In which a lemon, akin and all, has been boiled and then Strained. Clip the ends of soar hair ence a month until it Improves. Let me hear from fwi aftor you have followed these directiona faithfully far a month ar two. will be over. After this use psrafine wax or a good machine oil for some time to prevent the rust from re-turning. You may then continue to clean your stove with parafine wax or polish as you desire. This is the best and only method I could suggest to remedy the difficulty. The oil alone would possibly prevent further runt but would not make yiur store smooth. My dear Miss Brooks: I am deeply troubled and feel that I ehould ask someone's advice. About two weeks ago my girl friend and I, in company with my fiance, were out boabriding and the boat was accident-l- y capsized. We girls were both good swimmers, but ray fiance made no ef-fort to help me but seemed very anxious to help my girl friend. That evening he called on her to see if phe suffered any ill effects, but did not call on me. Since then he has called on me the same as usual. As I do not feel that it was merely a friendly in-terest that prompted him to cjll on her, should I receive his attentions the same as usuaj, or should I break my engagement? Please advise me what to do. "ANXIOUS" Rigby, Idaho. Absolute sincerity and frankness Is necessary to al! friendship of what-ever degree, so it would seem to me that an explanation was due from your fiance. Unless he could give a satisfectory explanation of his con-duct at the time of the accident, I think you should offer to free him from his engagement You should te able to tell by his actions since that time whether his feelings hare chang- - ed towards you. Breaking an engage-ment is of course a thing, so you should be sure of your reasons-Whateve- r prompted him to act as he did at the time of the accident may have passed and he may now be as loyal to you as ever. , , My dear Miss. Brooks: I Wave two or three questions to ask you. (1) How old should a young ay oe oerore bceinninir to think of marryinz? (2 Comd you tell me how anyore could take a scar eft of .heir arm aftr r it had been on there a year or more?, Thanking you in ad-vance. McCammcn, Ilqho. (1) - You might begin to THINK of marryhg at a very early age, but I hope you will not connider taking this most important step before you are twenty-on- e or twenty-two- . You will then have ample time left for the responsibilities and s of marr ed life. Enjoy your girlhood rnd hold your ideal of a husband very high. (2) It depends a great dal upon what kind of a sc:r you hav? rs to whether it can be rcmov d. If it is a deep scar it cannot be remov rd, but if only a slight one it may be pon-- i sible to remove it. A deep near such m vaccination makes, cannot be re-- ! moved. , ' Dear Miss Brooks: I have come to you to ask a ques-tion. I am sixteen yr-ar- old and I have a bov friend who is the same af;c. He will go with me and take me te the show, but you don't know whether he likes you or noU Will you ple-tc-tell me if you can how I could find out whether hn likes n.c or not? Sometimes art? so funny you' ' would, i't think he liked anybody. I uin liujiin'i to hear f roni ' y soon. Your true friend, A WOXDF.nr.Fl of Utah. Watchful wiiitintr would -- i em to he nlmut th only course you o n purHtie. Your fri nd U very likelv the coie! renrrvetl typ- - in eccentric also, and it ou!tl t.ik- - lonjc re- - . CANVAS MUDGUARD IS GOOD FOR SPEEDSTER Devices Are Removed to Reduce Veight and Vibration. Oiled Cloth Affords Necessary Pro-tection From Dust and Mud Il-lustration Shows Method of Attaching to Car. When rebuilding a car Into a speed-ster, the removal of unnecessary ports .' Is "desired, on' account of the reduction In the weight.' Mudguards are removed because of this and the vibration thut ensues when riding at nigh speed. It Is, however, desirable to provide guards for protection from dust and mud when the car Is used for riding other than on the track. Oiled canvas mudirunrds afford pro tection without adding to the weight or causing vibration. In the appended Illustration the manner of attaching these Is shown. Each fender is held by a single support from the side of the body or frame. Using these as supports for ' the upper end of the guards, the cnntns Is led from these to the running-boar- d or to brackets. The canvas should be doubled and seamed, then soaked in linseed oil to make it waterproof. When made about eight Inches In w'dth, these af-- ' mf V mmm:ti During the Rainy' Season Canvas Mudguards Will Add to the Comfort or Riding. ford all the piotectlon the driver re-quires and are noiseless and the weight Is reduced to a minimum. Popular Science Monthly. , I DIRT IS ANCIENT ENEMY OF MOTOR 3 ' Ij Undesirable Near Working Parts j of Chassis Because It j . Starts Rapid Wear. ! KEROSENE BATH IS FAVORED ' : Unclean Engine Means Loss In Ef-flciency and Premature Trip to Repair Shop Starting Motors - ; ! Require Attention. . Dirt Is undesirably no matter where t it Is, but the average automobile own-- j er has yet to learn that dirt on the i running gear does more than merely cover up some painted or unpulnted j metal. Joints seemingly as tight as I '; a mechanic can get them allow dirt j to pass through. The reason for the t .. tUrt being so undesirable near work-- ( tng purts of the chassis is not so much because It doesn't look well but be--; cause It eventually gets to a moving surface und starts rapid wear. Around the engine and other parts ef the car there are supposedly tight I joints In addition to actual openings. ; i Take the front end cover, cbmmonly called the timing gear case cover. Vi bration may loosen a few of the hold'- s lag nuts, allowing the cover to move , away from the crank cuse a small ' fraction of an inch. With an accumu-latlo- n of dirt over the cover some ; of the dirt Is bound to gvt to the gear i teeth. Dirt and lack of lubrication of front end gears are responsible for rapid wear and noisy operation. Every owner ought to keep the ek-- I glne clean by an occasional kerosene bath. Spray kerosene all over the en-- ' glne and wipe off every bit of dirt you ; can. This goes for the crank cuse as well as the parts that you can see when you lift the hood. Dirty oil, oil with sediment, old oil not changed for f some time are all causes of rapid en-- J fine wear. j , How many owners ever see to It ! that the combination breather and oil filler is clean on the inside? - In some i designs there is every chunce for a I quantity of dirt to settle on the In- - side, and that is washed down Into i the crank cose when the next oil I filling is made. J A dirty engine means a loss In ef-- flciency and a premature trip to the j repair shop, where the cost of parts I replacements will be higher than ex pected. The timers are usually cov- - ! ' ered with mud and dirt, and this gets inside, cots the segments, interferes j with proper ignition, and brings about the need for a new timer in a few j months. Look Inside of a timer that i Is generally dirty on the outside and ; one will find dirt also. Generators and starting motors on the average car ! do not get very much attention of aty J . kind by the owner, but they deserve a good cleaning. Some starting motors i are not fully Inclosed, while others, even when covered, seem to accumu- - i late dirt ! I would suggest to the owner that, j when he has a few hours to spare dur-- ! Ing any month, he give the engine a I . thorough cleaning, removing dirt from all Joints, from oil holes, and the like. The underneath parts of the car are admittedly hard to get at, but that should not be afi excuse for total neg- - lect. Underneath the car there may be ' . many places that require oil through j small cups, oil holes, etc. While some manufacturers are so far behind as to continue to use oil holes In exposed i places, the owner of a car using them : sho' ld not let them became filled with dirt If I owned a car with exposed oil holes on cross shafts and other parts I would have a mechanic Install auto-matic feed oil cups. Universal Joints at best are hard to lubricate, and even If covered with a leather boot are not proof against the ravages of dirt and mud The more dirt that you allow to accumulate around these parts the more dirt will get to the working surfaces. USE VASELINE ON TERMINALS Best Medium Available for Coating Connections Prevents Corrosion From Acid. The car owner should hot forget ' that ordinary vaseline Is perhaps the best medium available for coating bat-tery terminals and connections. - The vaseline has the great advantage of preventing corrosion from acid or water that may have been spilled. SALT LAKE BUSINESS DIRECTORY BUSINESS COLLEGES I. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE. School of Efficiency. All com mere al branches. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St. Salt Lake City. ROWLAND HALL SP8 All denominations. Write for Catalogue. Salt Laka City I YOU AUTO KNOW That In cold weather a kettle and a. dishrag or any other :::: convenient piece of cloth are ;j: often Invaluable In starting a enr that otherwise refuses to . work. The cloth should be wrap- - ped around the carburetor so that It does not cover the air In- - take and boiling water should then be poured on the rag, al- - ways being careful not to let It : get Into the Intake. The applies tlon of the hot water will heat the carburetor and Intake pipe to such a degree that the engine '' will "catch" almost Instantly, al- - though In extreme cases It may :: be necessury to fill the cooling system with hot wuter so that the carburetor chamber may be :;! raised to the proper temperature. '.' Whenever dilllcultles of this ;:; ;!; kind are encountered, however, :;l cool water should be applied ;! first, then warm and finally hot In order to avoid a too sudden expansion of the metal which Is likely to crack with surprising ease. It should also be remein- - :: bered that Increasing the rich- - ness of the gasoline mixture by means of the primer or choker Is ': :; usually very effective In starting j: with a cold engine. (Cotiyrlaht. 1912. by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) POPULAR SHEET MUSIC By Mail Old Fathionmd Chl (Fox Trot) 30c Thrum O'clock in thm Morning (Walt) 40c Moon Rivmr ( W tt 30c And every otL t popular piece. ft. THAN TMH STATE OP UTAH" I, f" OLDSVIUblLE DEALERS WANTED In t'tah. Mnho, Wyoming, l.ineml rmiuniMmiii will tend representative on reqtMt. A. F. TOUKSSfcN-Distribu- tor. KNOWLTON BEAUTY SHOP Kverythlnf known in brmity culture. t ui tell aiwiil uui Cica.i.s. Tu Jr." aid Hr.i; Got i. S Mln CLKAT1NU it HUT! ONS Accorilian, S.de, Box Pleating, hemstitching. Buttons, Buttonholes. KiJ Corset Parlor. 40 E. Broadway. lake your H'Kk Blnding-a- ny kind to your to-rsi printer. LeHh's Trsde Bindery. Salt Lake. UTAH METAL WORKS. HTi'i Type Metals." i p I ...Superior ir-- - ar' I I I SERVING TABLE FOR AN AUTOMOBILE ,ii - I. .... , i - ! ' i ( ' :''' ' ' ' j ' ' I i ' - it v ' , ! '. ' v. ) it 'Vr sl r.r.vsi-- ol rid.-i,g- I. - Jin-- t invented ail autoiiinlule serving- table, whkli will greatly add ! the enjoyment of nnioisis, and when imt In uso ecu be utilized 1iy pleni'-l:i-rs- Tlie table tits i,n the .side, of (he car anil lunch or refreshments can be M ied on It. When mj in use it can be f..ld--- d and OCCIIpieS Very lit! 10 ri nil!, - j Te photoj-rnp- Khous niie of the tables belli;,' use. on an :n:i!!ioli,'e |