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Show . THE HELPER TIMES. HELPER, UTAH SMART DESIGNS IN PLAIDS family and you get yours, and we'll go to the next meadow. There are good seeds of grain and other nice things over there. And I believe there are other goodies In the field." "How do you know?" asked Mr. Meadow Mouse. "Listen and you will hear," rea rjS plied Mr. Mole. By MARY GRAHAM BONNER And again they heard the voice the Fairy Queen, sending them HI HAVE heard." said Mr. Mend-- 1 Mole, "we had better do as she of a helpful suggestion: ow Mouse, to his friend, Mr. said, and move away." Mole, "that the farmer around these "There are goodies for you to try parts has said that he was beingIn the meadow just nearby. menitne Dotnereu oy Tery much Better hurry and go meadow mouse ra of the family Before the farmer starts to mow." " end the mole family." r i . t "The very idea," said Mr. Mole. soon Mr. Meadow Mouse Pretty "He should be flattered that we like and Mr. Mole were oil for the next Hi his things. meadow. Don't "Yes, and pleased, tool All the children went with them. you agree with me, Mr. Mouse?" Mrs. Meadow Mouse and Mrs. Mole "I can't quite say that I do had said at first it would be n agree with you," said Mr. Meadow great trouble to move, but when "I don't suppose he can Mouse. they had heard of the Fairy i be pleased to have creatures eat Queen's warning they hurried away in he and the digs things up plants at once too. the ground." And then they settled down "I suppose that's so," said Mr. where they were safe for a good Mole. long while. "Well, what shall we do, then?" llow kind the Fairy Queen had Mouse. asked Mr. Meadow been to warn them. "I'm sure I don't know," said They were certainly grateful to a. Mr. Mole. her! "Just then I thought I heard a The Sound Came Clearer. Western 1931, Newspaper Union.) sound," said Mr. Meadow Mouse "I would hate to have my head suddenly. Grayling Wiped Oat And the sound came clearer and chopped off." Michigun, which at one time was must be nt least one clearer and this was what a voice "So would I," said Mr. Mole, '1 noted for its graylings, now reports THERE dress In the fashionwas saying: wouldn't like it at all. I'll get my them practically extinct. able Spring wardrobe, not for"I advise you not to stay, getting a plaid blouse, together You had better go away, with a whole collection of acces- p For some day when the farmer sories which must Include a passes. scarf or two either one of the He'll chop your head off with the new big squares or the popular grasses." ascot which ties so smartly close By NELLIE MAXWELL "JQh, what could that have been?" up about the throat. A "sportsy" ailed Mr. Meadow Mouse. And FOR the cake par excellence, the careful baking is necessary for a matching plaid hat Is also a chic gesture to which add a the voice went on: Is one of the daintiest. light and tender torte. Schaum Torte. Beat three egg pocketbook of the plaid for the Our German cooks excel in this 'I'm not being seen, kind of a cake combination. They whites until stiff but not dry, add ensemble which is complete In But I'm the Fairy Queen. are rich with nuts, chopped or one cupful of sugar very lightly every detail. I've brought you a warning In the new fabric collections rolled fine, plenty of eggs and and gradually, not to lose the lightThis nice bright morning." one-hathere Is a plaid for every mood. crumbs, with spices. The baking ness, a pinch of salt, one-haThe plaid in the picture Is very "Well, If that Is so," said Mr. is another Important point, as slow, tablespoonful of vinegar and teaspoonful of vanilla. Bake choice, having been designed by In two deep layer tins for one hour. one of a group of artists who Pat together with whipped cream, have turned their attention away 6r add nuts and chopped pine- from painting landscapes and portraits for a brief moment, In the Inapple with the cream. Walnut Torte. Beat the yolks terest of fabric design. Note the artistic touch In this of six eggs with one cupful of pound of particular plaid which Is printed sugar, add walnuts and six lady fingers grat- In a single bright color on a dark ed, two tablespoonfuls of flour and background not a crude straight one teaspoonful of baking powder. line in It, the motif resolving Itself Add the juice and rind of a lemon Into a series of undulating curves and when all the Ingredients are which are the very quintessence of well mixed, add the stiffly beaten grace. This patterning tends to inegg whites to which a pinch of salt troduce a simpler effect In plaids, has been added. Bake In layers in so that even the most conservative a moderate oven and use the fol- can wear them with confidence. This plaid Is particularly smart lowing: Filling. To one beaten egg yolk In navy and white, such as has been add two tablespoonfuls of sugar used for the styling of the tunic s of a cupful of frock pictured. The flair for navy and milk. Cook, stirring constantly un- and white Is very Insistent this It has a rival, however, til the mixture coats the spoon, add spring. f one and cupfuls of grated in brown and white, a contrast walnut meats with a flavoring of which Is being made much of almond and vanilla. Use between throughout the couture showings the layers and ice the top of the of Paris at present. An interesting development Is the torte. twin effects, that is, a plaid worked ((c). 1931. Western Newspaper Union.) Fairy Queen's Warnini ft These Brands Are Intermountain t Made And Deserve Your Support A Story for the Children , Sally Sez Si as s1, t i V ij h THE TASTY TORTE 4ir 3. PLANT NOW! one-fou- j frf.. j Hewletts' Jams Home Fruit Home Sugar Home Labor Best Quality NEW out In light on a dark ground Is used with a pluid which reverses the order of colors. Dresses which have their yokes or top portions made of plaids on a light background, the lower portion being of the darker tone patterning, answer to the call of smart fashion. CHERIK , NICHOLAS. 1931, Western Newspaper Union.) Ocean Oddity The swellflsh is able to pump Itself full of air with amazing swiftness and swell up Into a little balloon. These fish when pursued by enemies rush to the surface, inflate themselves, and then let the wind blow thera along the top of the water like toy balloons. three-fourth- one-hal- "Universal" Language Esperanto Is an International language Invented by Doctor Zamen-hoan oculist of Warsaw, In 1S87. It has no Irregular inflections, and the most common stems or roots of the different languages are used as the basis. The Weekly Short Story t ! OING to decide upon a furred Choose "eifWt.and fashion will lend a smile of enthusiastic approval. Throughout the new showings it is rather a fity-fiftproposition as to fur or cal and at the same time flatterMost of the ing adjustable collar. ' Assuming that the decision Is In , of the there Is still another question to be settled shall it be chic flat fur or luxurious gray, or beige fox? Again, fashion la willing, be the verdict what it comfort. Note also that the designer has suceeded in Incorporating the new and extremely smart Idea of big square lapels. The adjustable par: of this collar is that at will It can be drawn up close about the throat, closing at the front so as to give an entirely different appearbelt and the ance. The wide cuffs are also Important styling features. With this arresting spring coat milady of fashion wears a natural panama hat trimmed with brown ribbon, her brown kid shoes also accenting the chic of brown. Speaking of color, the most out- vJU..r an unfurred coat? y fur. fair fur-trim- may. furs are manipulated as you see here, that is, they are positioned so as to set out about the shoulders, away from the head and the throat, thus insuring their long-haire- d There is no doubt about It, this choosing furs is a perThe flat pelts such plexing one. as galyak, dyed lapln, ermine and types of like character are worked on the new coats with such Intriguing dressmaker touches one Then, Jparce can resist them. when one comes Into contact ""gain, with such stunning models as the coat Illustrated maybe It would be a good Idea to toss pennies or draw straws or do something like that standing style message i3 that In as a happy solution of the prob- regard to the enthusiasm expressed for gray this spring. The gray lem. A point greatly In favor of the coat with gray fox is smartly In coat pictured, which is of beige vogue together with the frock of cloth with beige fos, next to its light gray crepe. & 1931. Western Newspaper Union.) handsome appearance Is its practi natter of self-fabri- c SUCH IS LIFE Worse V Worse! e ' much-marrie- Kate thought, a little unpleasantly. Then he and Tom Hampton went away and Kate sat there thinking. Perhaps those women on the bus top had been right perhaps any woman could marry any man she wanted to, providing he were free. With these thoughts was the Impression of the strength and good nature and the good looks of Tom Hampton. It is small wonder If Kate's thoughts wandered a little from her work that day, and if a strange new idea half impulse, half resolve took form In her mind. The next morning when Kate encountered Tom Hampton as he came Into her office she looked at him with a rather arch smile. "Good morning, Mr. Hampton," she said, and Tom commented to himself that It was an odd thing that he had never noticed what a trim and pretty stenographer Mr. Standish had. After that he felt a species of whenever she passed him. Always she looked at him a little archly. Mr. Hampton had to admit to himself that the girl really seemed to like him. When he talked now she listened attentively. Doubtless she found him entertaining. Well, he was rather entertaining, thought Tom to himself, and the next day he asked her to have dinner with him. Three weeks later Tom nampton asked Kate to marry him, and Kate said she would. "Funny thing Is, said Tom, "It all began after what Mr. Standish said about giving raises only to the married men. Of course, I'll be glad to get the raise," he added, "but I think I would have wooed When a man finds you anyway. the woman he wants, nothing stands In the way." And Kate murmured: so. too." (& Tuna in on MORNING Ask Tour Druggist OIL For AN INTERMOUNTAfN PRODUCT APEX HAIR NEON CLAUDE MOTOR OIL Flows Freely in Cold Weather Electrical Products Corporatiok Salt Lake City Insist on FOREST DALE POTATO CHIPS No Equal For Crispness and Quality Factory 47 Kensingtotn Are. Bait I.sks Cily Tel. Hy 1741 FAMOUS FLOUR Since 1S5J ASK TOUR GROCER Sperry Drifted FOB Snow Flour PIPE AND FITTINGS New and Reclaimed Write us for Prices ASK FOR SALT LAKE PIPE CO. 475 West 6th So. Salt Lake City Send this add and get a 10 discount ! LIGHTS 1046 So. Msin WANTED: Names of Agents ta sell Christmas Cards in 1931 through your local printer. Plsna (or 1931 being made now. Band in your name for details which will make your selling easier without the troubles, mistakes and delays yoa hod in eastern factories. Write representing W. N. U. P. O. Box 1S45. Salt Lake Cily. j j j MILK PROGRAMS BEET SUGAR THE ONLY HOME SUGAR be paid for the ff perbest weekWordwill article $5should on Why use Intermountain msde Goods &0 PERFECT EAH TAGS MADS ONLY 6V SALT LAKE STAMP CO. I 61 Wert Broadway ' ftALTLAKI CITY. trtAH.ll.5-A-. 1 j.J& atWAMaTlaT, IIIIHIH " MIES Or IMS SAMPLE FREE FOR SEND yon Similar to above. Send your story ta Intermountain Products Column. P. O. Box 1545. Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column yoa fSlf HA will receive check for... tPDaUU ASK FOR OSTLER'S Chocolates 6 PUD BAR MILK SLICKER BAR ACE HIGH BAR AMBASSADOR HOTEL By MARY MARCH drew a chair rather close to Kate as If for greater privacy of speech, and Kate, noting the details of his dress and careful grooming, again reflected to herself that the theory May morning. "It's my firm belief," said one, she had heard in the bus must be "that any girl can marry any man all wrong, at least in this case of she wants. If she goes about It In Tom Hampton. v the right wny." "It's a funny thing," said Tom "Oh, of course," said the other. Hampton, "but since I've been here In man I've just about doubled "Only providing that the the amount of business I've brought in question Is free." "Of course," Kate heard the but I haven't had one raise. And "So If a there are four or five of the men other woman saying. man Is not married it Is because no who aren't doing nearly so well woman ever wanted him. If womwho have had raises several times. en aren't married It Is because they Of course, It is Mr. Standish's afnever wanted to enough to make fair, not mine. But I wondered if the necessary little effort" you knew why It is that he never To Kate's regret she had to alight gives me any more." "Let's see," said Kate, dropping from the bus at this point. To be sure, the women whom she had Into her purely business manner, heard said nothing very original. "There was Jones and Grelgson Kate had heard some such notions and Ladd and Innis. They had expressed before. Still the converraises, and you and Henley and sation set her thlrfklng. She won Jackson didn't You and Henley dered whether it were true that the and Jackson aren't married the men who were not mnrrled were others are. Mr. Standish always single because no one had ever gives the men raises when they wanted to marry them. What about marry, and he keeps on raising Morton Cox and Mr. Hampton them. It's only fair" office, for Instance? "Not really fair at all," said Tom Kate was still thinking about Hampton. "A bachelor might have this as she sat at her desk arrang- responsibilities, a widowed sister and or a blind aunt, or a or something ing her pencils, notebooks other paraphernalia of her trade as like that. Besides, It Isn't any ol He should pay what secretary to Mr. Standish when Mr. his business. Hampton came Into her room. The we are worth." Kate Ilickson had never seen theory must be all wrong," reflected Kate. Surely, there must have Tom Hampton so fervent before. been plenty of women who would The mood, she thought became him have been glad to have become his well, but she said nothing. wife. There was old Mr. Standish, "Something ought to be done who had survived two wives and about It" he said. was married to a third. Certainly "Only one thing to do about It," his success in matrimony had not came a voice deep but 0 trifle trembeen due to any personal attrac- ulous from the doorway, unmistakd tions. ably that of Mr. Standish, the "boss." "Only one thing, "Say, Miss Hlckson," said Tom and that Is to get married. BachHampton with a little embarrassment, "there's something I've been elors don't deserve to get what they wanting to ask you. You know Mr. earn." Old Mr. Standish laughed, as Standish so well." Tom Hampton THE ONLY HOME OWNED MILK rSa. YICO f, Only Married Mm Are Raised T"ATE HICKSON overheard two older women who sat ahead of her on top of the bus as she rode towdrd her office In the city that Seed and Nursery Specialists SALT isAKR CITY, UTAH Help keep those around you happ and prosperous by using of their products. "Love thy neighbor as thy self." lf COATS OFFER WIDE CHOICE PORTER WALTON CO. ornina n lf s rs 0 i tr" ii fi This Week's Prise Storr! Childrin are the oorld'i greatest luitav tars. Educate in children ta ase roods. Teach then to know-tha- t raised in our kissed produce pure air. bj our mosintain breezes and ripened in our wonderful sunshine are best. When Sonny says, "I'll lake whst Father takes," let it be (rains, fruits, and vrge-tabl- ea rrown in our own soil, clothiu snsde from our own wool, coal mined in our own nines, and all othor produrta that this section of our country produces. P. 8. Ws are educating the children af Nefaa School District to use hme produeta. A content, using labels of USKD goods is now going in our schools, sponsored by our P. T, A. Much good is expected front (his. MRS. CEO. SKINNER, Spsnl.h, tTtah. and enjoy Beautiful Grounds this Summer Write for FREE catalog It Tells How, What and When 1 (. SjjlSl Jenst "I think 19J1, McClars Vownpapcr Syndicate.) (WNU Service.) By Charles Sughroe Li 3 8'?! isim Commercial rates to salesmen. C. A. SHAY, 145 So. 5th East Manager Phone Was. 3965 Salt Lake Cily LISTEN IN ON THE AMBASSADOR SEBANADERS EVERT SAT, 6:45 P.M. Named Great River . The Columbia river wa3 named by Capt Robert Gray, who discovered it in 1791. It was named for his ship, the Columbia, which he had sailed around the world. He was the first to carry the American flag around the world. Beauty of Overcoming Some one has said, wisely and wittily: "A river becomes crooked by the following line of least so does a man." It's a thought worth pondering. No man. is worth much who does not have a purpose to which he sticks through thick and thin. The line of Widely Different least resistense is a rotten line. Research men are concerned with Honor and glory are for "him that and establishing the overcometh." discovering laws of nature. The engineer's is to put these laws into use. Winter Feeding Expensive American Magazine. The winter feeding of big game animals is an expensive project. The federal bureau of biographical survey found that it required 825 tons of hay to take care of the elk herds at th elk refuge in Wyoming from February 6 to March 26 and it costs over $25 a ton to get No matter how severe, hay in the refuge. Without this winter food the animals would you can always have have a hard time through the winimmediate reliefs ter. up Bayer Aspirin stern pain qnirlTy. It does it without any ill effects. Harmless to the heart; harmless to anybody. But it always brings relief. Why suffer? BAYER The Cornish Language The ancient Cornish language has not been spoken for a century and a half, though many traces of it linger in the dialect of the country. In 1777 died Polly Jeffrey (nee Pentrcath, in her ninety-thir- d year, and she, it is said upon good authority, was the last person who spoke Cornish. She was born and died at Mouschole (pronounced "Mauzel"), a fishing village on Mounts bay. Highways Built to Last Veu.,pazuif I 1 DlPUr FORGET 'rft! TH' BASKET, Pearl Composition Tearls of culture generally posdured to the present time because sess a finer structure than those of their foundations were 4 and 5 feet accidental growth, or the naturals; deep and made of various types of but it is almost impossible to disEtona suited to the locality, princitinguish between the two kinds except by cutting the pearl and exampally limestone and lava. ining the Unreliable Staff Lean not on earth: it will pierce Exclusively Tropical Tree thee to the heart; a broken reed The coconut palm is the most at best; but oft a spear, on its widely distributed and most genharp point Peace bleeds and Hope erally known tree in the tropical expires. Young. regions of the world. The Roman highways have en- cross-sectio- tu Just a step from the business center. Quiet and Homelike. Poplar priced meals. Service Garage in Connection. R a t 12.00 to $5.00 per day. |