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Show 4 THE CITfZEN WHY THEY DO IT. - i i. ; : her lip stick out When Dolly gets And with a dainty touch Accentuates the little pout That folks admire so much. And casts a soft approving glance Upon a tinier mole, to enhance she merely does it Her spiritual grace. i , gives her dimpling cheeks The color of the rose, And with a dab of powder streaks The apex of her nose, And sticks a tiny plaster pad Opon a tinier mole, Her actions only serve to add A glory to her soul. When Dolly When Dolly artfully has made Her wealth of wavy hair a lighter and a lovelier shade Than that she used to wear. And twines her glossy locks around The tongs, to make em curl There is no doubt that' she is bound To be a better girl. certain lots in Huntington Beach, Cal. They were considered of no commercial value at that time, but have since proved their worth, for they are in one of the most productive oil centers in the United States. grace with beauty grows The moralists declare." And that is why she dabs her hose And tints her cheeks and hair, For maids their beauties to conceal, They say it is most unfit And yet their sunts do not appeal To Dollys ma a bit! ! What a woman, wants she will have. Not even a railroad can stop her. For The other day a Denver instance: woman paid $40.26 for a ticket to Chicago and received a little pasteboard less than an inch square. She turned I it back to the ticket agent. "I want you to know I have travel- ed before and that is not the kind of j a ticket I usually get. I want one of not a bit of card-- ! board that probably wouldnt carry me any further than Curtis street. John S. McClue, general agent of the consolidated ticket office, was called and explained that the new tick-- I ets are displacing the old, awkward lengthy tickets. But the woman was obdurate. It was either the long tick-- i et or her money back. those long tickets ! I ! i McClure dug up one of the old tickets which have been discarded and gave fled. it to her. She went away satis-- j ? ! j i i : .) real soap mine in the Mojave des-er- t is the latest addition to the indus-- s trial enterprises in that section. The soap mine produces a colloidal clay which, with very slight preliminary treatment, is said to be a superior grade of laundry soap. It makes a soft Powder, and is said to set colors and remove dirt. A 1 ; ? j 5 i t f I The purchase of an encyclopedia set seven years ago, may make oil mag- nates of three Butte men, J. L. Corsh, George De Snell and W. L. Lewis. The book agent, who waited on the gentle-- j nien in his desire to negotiate the sale, mr' unanimously offered a special ln-- ) foment, which included deeds to NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Two farmers were having an argument and a little bet as to which of them possessed the best wife or, rather, which wife made the money go . Ruins which are held by archaeologists to be among the most ancient of Pueblo cliff dwellings have been excavated and explored in the Texas Panhandle by W. W. K. Moorehead, director of an expedition sent out by the University of Pennsylvania. Professor Moorehead believes that the Indians in the Canadian and Cimarron valleys were the first to desert the buffalo tepee for stone construction. Later these housing pioneers, in his opinion, moved west, and built their famous cliff dwellings in the Colorado river valley and other parts of the Rocky mountains. . The yak,, or I am surprised, said the first farmer, how little my wife spends on household necessities. You come and stay with us for a few weeks, and see for yourself. You will soon see how true my statements are. But what would be the good? said the other man. She would not be so good as my wife. Why, my wife makes money go so far that I never see it again. CONCENTRATED GOLF. Mrs. Robinson would never take her husbands golf seriously. She was one of those people to whom all games are woolly ox of Thibet, is soon to be transplanted into Alaska and the Canadian northwest by Dawson men. For centuries the yak has been domesticated by man and its haunts are the snowy highlands of Thibet, 20,000 feet above the sea. Its native food is coarse wiry grass, but . it will eat anything that cattle will. In size it compares favorably with range cattle 1,000 to 1,200 pounds. The meat is as delicious as beef, and the wool and ' hide are valuable. an absolute mystery. him to the links and followed him around, grumbling all the way. At last he landed in a bunker and spent some time floundering about in the sand. His wife sat down on the top of the bunker, opened her novel, and said, You see, darling, I quite affably: knew perfectly well that you could do all of your playing in one place, if you wanted to. ENRICHING THE LANGUAGE. ober, A. D. 1921. TRACY LOAN & TRUST CO., Administrator of the ..estate of Emily Shurtleff, deceased. JOSEPH R. HAAS, Attorney for Administrator. Date of first publication, July 30th, A. D. 1921. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. . Estate of Margaret No doubt, Ticket agents were either very indifferent or very haughty during the war. They are not that way now. A man who wanted sleeping accommodations on a train to Kansas City was asked if he wanted an upper or lower berth. he ARAMINTA E. EGBERT, Administratrix of the estate of Margaret A. Egbert, The difference is fifty cents, said the ticket man. Our prices to Kansas City are $1.50 and $2. You understand, of course, went on the agent, clasping his hands and looking earnestly through his headlight spectacles, You understand that the lower is higher than the upper. The high price is for the lower berth. If you want it lower you will have to go higher We sell the upper lower than the lower. In other words, the higher the lower. "Why do they all prefer lower? broke in the inquirer. "Because of its convenience, exMost people dont plained the agent. like the upper, although its lower on account of its being higher, and also because when you occupy an upper you have to get up to go to bed and get down when you get up. I should advise you to take the lower although its higher than the upper, for the reason that Ive just mentioned, that the upper is lower than the lower because it is higher. Of course you THOSE FOOL QUESTIONS. the lower if you pay higher, but if you are willing to go higher it The car had broken down, and the pair of legs protruding from beneath seemed to indicate repairs were being made. Had a bust up? inquired a passerby. Oh, no; only playing hide and seek came in muffled with the works! tones from the voice belonging to the Attorneys for Administratrix, Date of first pullcation, July 23, A. D. 1921. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Sam Grossman, deceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, to the undersigned at 1407 Walker Bank Bldg., on or before the 17th day of September, A. D. 1921: LOUIS GROSSMAN, Administrator of the estate: of Sam Grossman, Deceased. wilson McCarthy, Attorney for Administrator Date of first publication,. July .16, -- 19211 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Thomas Cole Spencer Smith, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 624 Kearns building, on or before the 12th day of September, A. D. 1921. WILLIE F. SMITH, Administrator of the Estate of Thomas Cole Spencer Smith, Deceased. F. C. LOOFBOUROW, Attorney for Administrator. Date of first publication July 9th, A. But the questioner was not easily daunted. What power car is it? Forty horse. Whats wrong with it, anyway? Well, as far as I can see, answerof the ed the cars owner, thirty-nin- e horses have bolted, and the remaining one is too upset to answer questions! Pittsburgh Clironicle-Telegrap- Estate of Emil J. Hollow, deceased. Creditors . will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 406 Judge Building, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 12th day of September, A. D. 1921. LEANDER J. PARCE, Administrator of the Estate of Emil J. Hollow, Deceased. ARTHUR E. MORETON, Attorney for Administrator. Date of first publication July 9th, disappointed when they learn that, according to the Dry Goods Economist, the dear girls are to carry shawls this summer to spread across their knees when they sit down. PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP NOTICES. Consult County Clerk or the Signers for Further Information. A. D. 1921. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Miles R. Taylor, deceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, to the undersigned at 1401 Walker Bank Bldg., corner Second South and Main streets, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 10th day or September, A. D. 1921. D. L. MURDOCK, Administrator of the estate of Miles R: Taylor, deceased. IRVINE & THURMAN, Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication, July 9, A. D. 1921. 8-6 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Johanna Grlese, deceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, to the undersigned at the office of West & Ricks, 808 Newhouse Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 5th day of September, A. D. 1921. M. WALLACE WOOLLEY, Administrator of the estate of Johanna Grlese, Deceased. WEST & RICKS, Attorneys for Administrator. Date of first publication, July 2, A. D. 1921. h. We wonder how many folks will be D. 8-6 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. legs. can have Ex. deceased. MORRIS & CALLISTER, says the Luray Herald, referring to the French brought back by our soldier boys, our language will keep such expressions as bean tote, bone jar, billy do, lingery, auntra noo, fox paws, Jennys pa, silver plate, three beans and toot sweet. Boston Transcript. inquir- de- Egbert, A. D. 1921. ed. will ho lower. A. ceased. Creditors will present' claim's, with vouensrs, to the undersigned at 224 Kearns lnig., Salt Lake .City, Utah,, on or before the 26th day of September, 1921. HIGHER VS. LOWER. Whats the difference? Estate of Emily Shurtleff, deceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, to the undersigned at No. 151 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 3rd day of Oct- . One day she accompanied Scientific American. FACTS AND FANCIES. ! f OUT OF SIGHT. the farthest. . For inward IS NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of William S. McCornlck, de- ceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, to the undersigned at 625 Clift Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 3rd day of November, A. I). 1921. LEWIS B. McCORNICK, II. A. McCORNICK, Executors of the last will and testament of William S. McCornlck, Deceased. FRANK J. GUSTIN, Attorney for Executors. Date of first publication, A. D. 1921. July 2, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Emma F. Swan, deceased. |