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Show ! vi 12 i 4 ! 1 I I j I . i i i cents on the strength of the Tribunes attack, but I venture to predict it will sell for all it is worth as soon as the public learns the truth. With regard to Broken Hills Silver Corporation and my connection therewith, I may say that the Fidelity Finance & Funding Company of Reno, of which I am president, paid into the treasury of that company for treasury stock within the past year in excess of $162,000. The mine was favorably reported upon by present Governor Emmett Boyle of Nevada and by Arthur Perry Thompson, the noted consulting geologist. The president of the Broken Hills Silver Corporation is the State Treasurer of Nevada. The other directors are public officials and bank directors. The proposition is as clean as a hounds tooth. The Salt Lake Tribune published an alleged statement with regard to my past history. It quotes an article in the Worlds Work, another in the Los Angeles Express, and another in the San Francisco Call. The Worlds Work article was written by Louis Guenther, a notorious operator whose record was exposed in the Wall Street Magazine of September 18th, 1920, and October 2nd, 1920. In my series of articles written for the Adventure Magazine in 1913 I exposed Guenther as a blackmailer. About 95 per cent of the Worlds Work article is absolutely false. The article in the Los Angeles Express states that 1 tried to establish a business in Los Angeles. That is pure fiction. I havent been in Los Angeles in fourteen years and never made such an attempt, and if I did nobody would stop me. The writer in the Los Angeles Express is employed to spread lying propaganda of this kind. "Fremont Older, the editor of the San Francisco Call, which the Tribune quotes, was publicly beaten up in the Palace hotel for slander by my San Francisco attorney, Charles M. Fick-erformer district attorney of San Francisco, and the Calls story is replete with humbug and falsehoods. i i i r i get-rich-qui- ! I i i i i i 4 ' ; h I THE CITIZEN I i i j ck t, : A DANDELION ERADICATE have no hesitancy in putting a bodice of one color above a skirt of another. The New York agricultural These bodices are not overblouses. ment station at Geneva, N. y. j3 They are tight, even though the development of a spray i3! They have fichus of old muslin or of the material. They are not called a "rather simple nuans In the words of Harry Lauder conbelted and they do not end in girdles. icating the dandelion. The spray cerning drinking Its not a habit; its Many of them are surplice and fasten tains a proportion of sulphate 0f S a gift, 'and this wearing black at all at one side with a velvet or metallic which, it is said, is the agent times has outgrown the proportions of rose. The large black velvet pansy sure death to troublesome dai a fad to become the chiefest fashion with yellow center is considered good. in a lawn. in Paris. The spray is prepared by dissJ As against the Spanish influence To be sure many are inclined but there is a strong belief that the spell from one and a half to two poul few are chosen to wear black with suciron sulphate, also known as copJ! of Egypt has not died out. One of the cess, and as you are well aware, there best of the French dressmakers accentand green vitriol, in one gaii is not a scarcity of persons feminine uates a silhouette that calls for a water. A wooden or earthenware who will run full tilt into the danger. straight line from the shoulder nearly sel is used for mixing. Its the fashion and there you are. to A gallon of the solution will g the knee, with a full, but flat drapMen may call it foolishness, but it is a ery joined to the upper part after the about 375 square feet of lawn. foolishness that has ruled the world fashion of a short Egyptian skirt. best results have been obtained .5 since prehistoric time. It is quite probThere is trimming on this shortened the solution is driven down amon 4 th( able that the Neanderthal men left in the form of straight bands of foliage in a fine, mistlike spray, g0 their caves in tiger skins one season skirt, of of some with of of erably type compre crystals. jet, beading, galloon, th and sternly refused to wear them the This is not a widely accepted silhou- air sprayer. However, fairly satii er next, because fashion decreed leopard. are to its results have bound to have tory day. ette, but it is reported nn And so the world moves, loves and The severest type of afternon gown obtained by the use of a sprint has its style. It is claimed the French worn can. by women who start the pleasA f .i invented the fashion of wearing black a at lunch restaurant, ure hours with Four or five sprayings are us 3 in through motives of economy, and is the a satin frock with required, the first being made bet' through reasons created by the battleshort box coat over it. Often the the dandelion blooms; one or W .slot fields. Of course the French look well frock has its upper part built of Georgditional applications at interval!! in black. Any woman can who posf emof Canton crepe, of Chinese ette, or three four finally, and, weeks; sesses a healthy, pallid skin, expresbut it is at its best when it or two sprayings in late summer fis sive dark eyes and a slender figure, and broidery, 1 satin. black unmixed is fall. The lawn may become blacked va and who knows the art of make-up- . after each application, but thiir.v3dc There is also a satin afternoon cosWould that our American women unsi tume, in black, which gives one a cause on alarm if the grass is pc derstood that art better than they do! clothes. But black is the color for the artist, strong impression of Chinese a wreather in midsummer it is thoi? not for the amateur. Women have The skirt is narrow, the packet like tunic trimmed with jade, black and advisable to discontinue spraying) been mistaken through centuries recollar Those who blue Chinese embroidery. The garding its difficulties. is high and the woman who wears such have been in mourning know its devasa suit usually adds a string of jade ers and by the seeding of grass ini tating habit of destroying whatever One spring and fall. If the proper pree: charm one has. They are aware also beads and pendant jade earrings. to this costions are taken it is said to be nee. of the ease with which one gets into who has individually added in a sary to spray only about every tk a careless rut through wearing black; tume a coiffure which started broad pating over the forehead and year in order to keep the lawn prc th.ey know the eternal vigilance ref ended in fine braids wrapped about the cally free from dandelions. quired. Economy in materials is imears. The officials of the Geneva stat. possible. The whisk broom must be caution those who contemplate nr ones constant companion. One must the spray against permitting it dress in a piercing light. The least The French designers continue enbuild: discrepancy in the costume is plainly thusiastic over Spanish costumery for come in contact with walks, visible for criticism. the evening. They have relinquished foundations, and clothing, as it ler These are facts that must be bcrne any attempt to make the public accept a more or less permanent bror f in mind by those who are bent on it for the afternoon. It might be said rusty stain. I To this caution we would add I following the new fashion. That we that the bulk of evening gowns to be may be in danger of appearing like a worn by American women will show other, namely, that persons whot i procession of mutes at an ancient funinspiration from Egypt and Spain. In try this solution apply it first only: eral is beside the question. The thing fact, it may be Asia Minor rather than limited areas. It is always to be:t is done. Egypt, the old empire of Byzantium membered that processes of this t j The sallow woman must learn to rather than the land of the Pharaohs, may work out very well in New' Tj f state or other parts of the coue put color touches where they will do from which the dressmakers draw inthe most good, the brilliant woman spiration for the commonly accepted and prove harmful in places of hi( The elevation, such as Salt Lake. Exp: must learn to tone herself down in evening gown of this season. order not to present too violent a connewer movement, however, is Spanish. mentation will prove the efficacy j trast to her costumery. The full skirt is constantly shown the method, and it seems to be 'It re wh slim I w'orth of the side the long, straight, trying hereabouts, by one. Distended hips are companions dandelion is a trouble maker for? The full skirt is getting its best repThe lace sons seeking to build up lawns i! resentation in evening clothes, but, to fiat uncorseted hips. Exchange. dressmakers are trying it out in all flounce is a rival to the pailletted drapto the figure. manner of afternoon frocks in a less ery that clings closely Surely women will regard their age exaggerated form. Women do not obFinal reports of the census buff U, and their measurements in deciding be1 ject to full skirts if they are not dison the population of Colorado ;io tween these two sharply contrasted tended and they see in such clinging ing compiled by the state immgrat, fabrics as lace, thin crepe and chiffon silhouettes. Unless they do, all is lost. department for use in the Coloff a chance to follow a new fashion withYear Book, show the total poi ulat A significant fact in the new evenout being conspicuous or uncomfortof ing costumery which is important to of the state at the beginning off j able. to have been 939,629. Forty-s- i woman is the change in the I every The slight bodice with its darts is sixty three counties in the stat1 It is considered better taste ed increases in a fashion of another day which is ofpopulation from 1911, to have a moderate neck line rather 1920, and seventeen counties bo fered in afternoon frocks and ignored i for street costume. The dressmakers than a Babylonian exposure. decreases. Womens World . broad-waiste- d. i one-piec- e & 1 . . k. r : P i . . m de-colletn- -- k i Anita Stewart m Playthings of Destiny |