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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOT.PH, UTAH gimiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiirniHiuiiiK There If You Heed a Medicio You Should Havo the Best Have yon ever stopped to reason why is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says, Take for a sample Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Roopreparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it show, excellent te- suits, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale. According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Roo- t is due to the fact, ao many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney. liver and bladder ailments, corrects uri- i it -- t, fjASto ry of the Highlands j 1 1 WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE niiiiiiiiimiimmimmimiiiimiitiiiiiml Copyright, 1922, by the Macmillan Co. ROSSING the Missouri river Into d Kansas, the traveler begins a steady, upward climb, until lie reaches the summit of the Rockies. The journey through Kansas covern in fnur ,mlleS near,y hdr?d five thousand feet of the long, upward slant. In that long hillside there are three or four distinct kinds of land scape, distinguished from one another by the trees that trim the bottom. The hills and bluffs that roll away from the river are covered with scrub oaks, elms, walnuts and sycamores. As the wayfarer pushes westward, the oak west-boun- H SCS s? stsssr ern .h You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Roby parcel post. Address Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Advertisement. oiiows disap-- Is not a tree anywhere la eight, after planting time in 1880, the land and as the government that was gloriously green. But before July requires we should plant trees on our place, as the promises had been mocked by the a partial payment for it, I was so In hiss of the hot wind In the dead gfass. hopes that these would do well. They That fall one of their horses died. are burned up now. You dont know Saturday after Saturday Burkholder how lonesome it seems without trees." went to the prairie town and brought She did not tell the home folk that home groceries and coal. It was a her piano and the books had gone to source of constant terror to him that buy provisions for the winter. She did some day his wife might ask him how not tell the home folk that she had not he got these supplies. She hid it from bought a new dress since she left Illi- herself as long as she could. All winnois. She did not let her petty cares ter they would not admit to each other burden her letter. She wrote of gen- that they were living on aid." On eralities. You do not know how I many a gray, blustering afternoon, miss the hills. Tom and I rode twenty when Burkholder was in the village miles yesterday, to a place called the getting provisions, a straggler on the Taylor bottom. It is a deep sink-holroad might see his wife coming around perhaps fifty feet deep, containing the house, with two buckets of water ibout ten square acres. By getting in her hands, the water splashing lown Into this we have the effect of against her feet, which were encased hills. You cannot know how good and in a pair of her husbands old shoes, snug, and tucked in and comfy it the wind pushing her thin calico skirts seemed. It is so naked at the house against her stiff limbs and her frail vith the knife-edg- e on the horizon, body bent stiffly in the mans coat that ind only the sky over you. Tom and I she wore. Her arms and shoulders have been busy. I havent had time seemed to shiver and crouch with the to read the story In the magazine you cold, and her blue features were so sent me. Tom cant get cordnroys out drawn that her friendly smile at the here. You should see him in overalls. wayfarer was only a grimace, Mrs. Burkholder helped her husband In the spring many men in Fountain look after the cattle. The hired man county went East looking for work. went away in the early fall. This she They left their wives with God and did not write home, either. All the county commissioners. Burkholder through the winter days she heard the dumbly went with them. In March, the keen wind whistle around the house, covered wagon train began to file past and when she was alone a dread the Burkholder house. By April it blanched her face. The great grdfy was a continuous line shabby, tattdome seemed to be holding her Its ered, rickety, dying. Here came prisoner. She felt chained under lt. wagon covered with bed quilts, there She shut her eyes and strove to get another topped with oilcloth table covaway from it In fancy, to think of ers; another followed, patched with green hills and woodland ; but her eyes everything. For two years the movers tore themselves pen, and with a hyp- caravan trailing across the plains had notic terror she went to the window, taken the shape of a huge where the prairie thrall bound her serpent in the womans fancy; now It again in Its chains. seemed to Mrs. Burkholder that the The cemetery for the prairie town terrible creature was withering away, had been started during the spring be- that this was its skeleton. The treefore, and some one had planted there- less landscape worried her more and in a solitary cottonwood sapling. Its more ; the steel dome seemed set tighttwo dead, gaunt branches seemed to er over her,, and she sat thirsting for be beckoning her, and -- all day she water in the landscape. thought she heard the winds shriek After a months communion with her through the new Iron fences around fancies, Mrs. Burkholder nailed the giaves and through the grass that black rag over the kitchen window, grew wild about the dead. The scene But the arms of the dead sapling In the haunted her. It was for this end that cemetery gyrated wildly in her sick the gray dome held her, she thought, Imagination. It was a long summer. as she listened during the cold nights and when it was done there was one e, ears until three hundred miles to the westward the horizon of the gently rolling" prairie Is serrated by the scraggy cottonwood, that rises awkwardly by some sandbarred stream oozing over the moundy land. Another Air Mail. fifty miles, and a Garden City, high up "A air mall service on the background of the panorama Is promised between New York and even the cottonwood staggers; and San Francisco. Air mail to the Inhere and there, around some sinkhole terior of Alaska will soon be a fact. In the great flat prairie, droops a desoAir routes are now being mapped out. late willow the last weary pilgrim In postal service 2,000,000 miles have from the lowlands. been flown without a fatality. When the traveler has mounted to this high table land, nearly four hundred miles from the Missouri, he may walk for days without seeing any green thing higher than his head. He may Journey for hours on horseback, and not climb a hill, seeing before him only the level and often barren plain, scarred now and then by Irrigation ditches. The even line of the horizon Is seldom marred. The silence of such a scene gnaws the glamor from the heart. Men become harsh and hard; women grow withered and sodden under its blighting power. The song of wood birds Is not heard ; even the mournful plaint of the meadow lark loses its sentiment, where the dreary Mrs. F. G. Norman. clanking drone of the windmill is the When my daugh- one Portland, Ore. which song really brings good tid- ter was in high school and away from ... lt Long and flercey sounds home she was troubled with functional :??s . unrhythmical monody In the disturbances and pain, to the extent of almost having to give up her studies. night, when the traveler lies down to When she came home and I learned rest in the little d of her condition, I Immediately began town. The gaunt arms of the giving her Dr. Pierces Favorite Pre wheel hurl Its imprecations at him as rises t0 resl,rae hls into the Pellets and In a short time her system h.e became regulated and her suffering silence, under the great gray dome, ceased. I hope this statement will help with Its canopy pegged tightly down other girls who have the same trouble about him everywhere. Crops are as bountiful In Kansas as my daughter had."- - Mrs. F. G. Norelsewhere bn the globe.1 It is the con- man, 134 N. 16th St. &t Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- - Stent cr7 for aid,- coming from this tion today from your neighborhood Plateau only a small part of the state which reaches the worlds druggist, In tablets or liquid, or write and Dr. Pierce, President Invalids Hotel the world blames Kansas. gars, The fair In Buffalo, N. Y., for free confidential, springs on these highlands lure medical advice. to their ruin. Hundreds of men and women have been tempted to death or worse, by this Lorelei of the prairies. A young man named Burkholder are actually demanded year after came out to Fountain county In 1885. young fellow year by more people th an any other He had been a In Illinois, was a graduate of an Inland hoe in tbe world BECAUSE : college, a man of good judgment, or Jggyifl sense, of a mental perworkmanship they are spective. In 1885 money was plentiful. Protection against unreasonHe stocked Ills farm, put on a mortable profit Is guaranteed by the price stamped on every gage, and brought a wife back from pair. the home of hls boyhood. She was a Tears of satisfactory service have given them confidence young woman of culture, who put a in the shoes and in the pro. bookshelf in the coner of the best of tsetion afforded by the W.L. Douglas Trade If ark. the three rooms In the yellow pine "Her Blue Features Were So Drawn That Her Friendly Smile at the Way-- W.L.D0UGLAS shanty, In which she and her husband farer Was Only a Grimace." lato ili of oar 110 stores at lived. She brought her upright piano, faotory oost. Wo do not make and adorned her bedroom floor with to the hard, dry snow as' It beat more vacant bouse, one more among on oontof profit until the a 4 A g44 slpos are sold to you. It to W, L. bright rugs. She bought magazines at against the board shanty wherein she hundreds far out on the highlands. Douglas turns worth dollaro for yon to and portrait is th the Post Office Book Store of the I lay awake. There Is one more mound In the bleak romombot that when yon host ho at oar stores Trad known buy shoe Mark m th In the spring the movers caravan country graveyard, where the wind, town, She was not despondent. pralre T0U PAT ONLY ONE PROFIT. world. It itaudit or The vast stretches of green cheered filed by the house, starting eastward shrieking through the Iron fences and No matter whereyon lire shoe th htghmt standard Quaittv at th lowdealers can s apply yon with of her through the hot summer. There before planting time.. When the train the est pouiol cost, The dead cottonwood crackling, W.L.Doaglss shoes Theyoost name and price u was a novel fascination In the wide, of wagpns had passed the year be- branches, has never learned a slumber no more in Ben Francisco plmnlyjHatnped on than they do in New England. treeless horizon which charmed her for fore, Mrs. Bfirkholder had been amused song to sob for a tired soul. But there COMPARE iMrhfe a while. At first she never tired of by the fantastic legends, which the are times when the wind seems to shoes withany sShlKoiat fl or tl shoes msds. glancing up from her work, through the wagon covers white, clean, prosper- moan upon its chords like TO MKRCHASTS: If n south window of the kitchen, to see the ous had borne. Kansas or bust, the cry of some lone spirit groping Its Settlor is osar tom handle! . level green stretches, and the road that they used to read when headed west- tangled way back to the lowlands, the W.pDomjlae ihoa, write frwIJnH c ISfcSSW&LZ was the laconic green pastures, the still waters, and to4 Busted merged into the distance. She sat In ward. enectlurarlwu. the shade of house and wrote legend, written under the old motto the peace that passeth understanding. home cheerful, rollicking letters. As on their first eastward trip. Going There were female match-makeTraveling Trout thousands of years before matches for roughing it, she enjoyed it thor- back to .wifes folks, had been a common jocose motto at first. Mrs. BurkNo company of anglers can long be oughly. were invented. The crops did not quite pay the ex- holder and her husband had laughed together without having a discussion of the year; so "Thomas Burk- over this the year before, but this regarding the sea trout and what manpenses American people make their own holder and Lizzie hls wife put an- year as she saw the long line file out ner of fish he really is. According to laws accounting for their opinion of other mortgage on the farm. The of the west into the east,- - she missed the latest scientific view a sea trout some of them. books and magazines from home still the banners. She noticed, with a men- Is merely a trout which has been to And all tal pang, that those who came out of sea and come back again. A proporHow to meet trouble Is the real adorned the best room. the winter and spring the pre- the country this year seemed to be tion of the trout in certain districts through Good of life. fortune takes problem vailing spirits of the community thankful to get out at all. There were have, In fact, adopted a .way of life care of itself. buoyed up the young people. It was times when she had to straggle to con- similar to that of the salmon, driven Eternal vigilance Is not only the during the summer of 1887 that the ceal her cowardice ; for she wished to to it possibly by need of food, or per first hot winds came. They blighted turn away from the fight, to flee from chance obeying some ancient instinct price of liberty but of about everything everything. The kaffir com, the grass, the gray dome, and from the beckon- of the race. . .Why some trout should worth having. the dust-lade- n weeds the wayside ing of the dead cottonwood In the migrate and others stay in fresh wacurled up under their fiery breath from graveyard. ter Is a mystery deeper than the the southwestern desert. Mrs. BurkThe spring slipped away and another wholesale migration of the salmon, holder stayed Indoors. The dust spread sultry summer came on, and then a and lt is not exactly helped by the Itself over everything.. It came into long, dry fall. Mrs. Burkholder and her existence, and flourishing, of a MM the house like a flood, pouring through husband worked together. of half-wa- y type of fish which Is the loose window frames and weatherThere were whole weeks when she known as the estuarine, or slob trout, boarding. Mrs. Burkholder, looking out neglected ' her toilet ; she tried to and which lives In brackish water, of her window on these days, could see brighten up In the evening, and duti- growing sometimes to a great size. only a great dust dragon, writhing np fully went at the magazines that were 6 Bell-an-s and down the brown road and over the regularly sent to her by the home When Fish Walk. Hof wafer prairie for miles and miles. The scene folks. Two Arabic travelers of the Ninth Sure Relief seemed weirdlyonedry. She found hej-te- lf But she seemed to need sleep, and century reported the existence of an longing, day, for a fleck of the cares of the day weighed upon her. Indian freshwater fish which was able water in the landscape. That longing The Interests of the world of culture to walk about the land. Ell-AM- S grew upon her. She said nothing of grew small In her vision. The work The same fish was later described 25$ and 75$ Packages, Everywhere It, but in her day dreams there was before her seemed to demand all her by the scientist Waldorf, who saw always a mental itching to put water thought; so that serial after serial this finny creature in a fissure in s Into the lusterless picture framed by slipped through the magazines unread, palm tree not far from a pond. As h her kitchen window. It was a kind and new literary men and fads rose climbed lt pressed Its pointed and exof soul thirst, In one of her letters and fell, all unknown to her. The pile tended sdl covers against the side she wrote : of magazines at the foot of the bed of the crack, threw its tall back an'j The hot winds have killed every- grew dustier every day. forth, pressed the thorn of Its ana1 The Burkholders got their share of fin against the support, and closed Ilf thing this year, but most of all I grieve for the little cottonwood saplings on the sent to Fountain count gill covers with a jerk. In Ibis ws Seep 25c, Ointment 25 sod 50c, Tslcea 25c. the eighty In front of the house. by the Kansas legislature and, Just it advanced a step. twenty-eight-ho- dust-colore- d i pine-boar- - home-seeke- rs WLDOUGLAS 567 8 SHOES fl well-to-d- o well-arrang- sith sun-parch- rs Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Girls! Girls!! Sa ve Y our Hair With Cuticura t seed-grai- n This is your corner Make use of it for your information on questions that are puzzling you. . It will be my pleasure and privilege to answer care' fully and prompdy all questions submitted to me. Your questions must be limited to troo, aqd pour full name and address must accompany each letter.' For special information send stamped envelope. All communications will always be held in absolute confidence. All letters should be addressed very plainly Jn anI Helen Brooks, Box 1 545. Salt Lake City. , m Dear Min Brooks r I am very much pleased with your happy Sometime go Inquirer asked you for The Blue Velvet Band and you corner and have found it very interesting. Poem, I am delighted with the answers you hsvs wera unable to find it If the party who wanted it will their name and address given many others, so I thought if you did I will send it togive them as It is too long for not mind I would ask you a few questions. you to publish. Very Truly Yours, (1) I am a girl sixteen pears of age and MISS FORTUNE, Mantf. Utah I am rather short and chubby. I have PIe2 accept thanks for your thoughtful, fair complexion, brown eyes and hair. Do ness. Someone has very kindly sent me tha wa hava sent tt on to the one you really think I would look good with my poem and hair bobbed? It b not ao very thick, bat desiring it Please tell me what Dear Miss Brooks: It is quit long. to do. (2) Do you think it ia alright for May I come to your corner for advice? (1) a girl of my age to go to shows or theatres Will you give me "the words to the eone with you boy friends.! I do not care for tha "After the Ball? (2) How old is Shirley fS) Miss Mason and whera does she live? (3) How public dances, they have here. Brooks will you please tend me something old to Jackie Coogran? I hope I do not that is good to remove pimples from the face? ask too much. Just a BLUE BIRD, Utah (4) I would like to know some nice games Your song folows, Bluebird that four girls could play, their ages are IS to Shirley Ma Mjr Dear Miss Brooks: 17. Now Miss Brooks 1 hope you can help ms out With my very best wishes, sad must thank you in advance for your kindness. A JOLLY FRIEND1 (1) Bobbed hair, if curled makes the face appear broader, and scarcely anyone looks well with straight boobed hair, so it would seem that bobbed hair would not bs becoming to you. But without taking any of these not adthings into consideration, a wet. vise you to bob your hair. Bobbed hair not as popular as it once was, a- -a . nen you consider tu. difficulties encountered when you want it tc row long again it is not worth the trouble. So I would say by all means not cut u . (2)1 am indeed glad to know ,ou do not care for the public dances. Tt is quite proper for you to go to a show occasionally with a boy friend Now that you are just beginning to go out with boys, lie very careful to leave no room for doubt in their minds as to the manner in which you expect to be treated by them. Read instructions at head of column and always send full name and address. If you will do so now. I will send you what in considered a splendid remedy for removing pimples If of the skin only. Also will tell you where you can get a book of games. Dear Madam : Will you please answer the following questions for me? (1) What is the highest mountain peak in Utah? State altitude and location. When wa3 first ascent made and by whom 7 (2) Where in Utah is Mt Baldy located! How high is it T Is there any data as to when the first ascent was made! Thanking you in advance, I remain, D. W. L , Portland, Ore. O Kings Peak, having an altitude of feet, with Gilbert Peak a very close secthe re ond, t highest mountain peaks in Utah. They are both located in the Uinta mountains between Summit and Duchesne counties. Mt Baldy having an altitude of 11.730 feet, is in the Fillmore National Forest in the eastern part of Beaver county and is in the Parowan range of mountains. The ascent of all of these peaks have been made, hut there is no data as to when, or by whom. Dear Miss Brooks: I have been reading your corner. Just Between You and Me and I like it very much and have received some very good answers from it, so Im going to ask if yon will please answer the following questions for me. (1) Which is best after one has finish-edth- e eighth grade, go to high school or business college! (2) How old should a girl be when she gets married! (3) Is it proper to go with a young man who has been married but is divorced from his wife! Wishing you much success I hope to see the answers to my questions in next weeks paper. MELBA Richfield, Idaho. (1) It is best to finish high school If you possibly can, always. (2) This depends, Melba. Do not be in a hury. Twen-ey-oo or twenty-twis quite young enough. (8) You are the best judge of this, and you should use very careful judgment before making a decision. There is no way of telling who might have been at fault, other than a personal acquaintance with the interested parties, but he is open to criticism as well s his wife, and it is not often that one only Is ftt fault. hear Miss Brooks: I have read your corner for some time end have enjoyed it very much. I am writing to aak you to send me as many high school and class yells as you possibly can send me. I am in the tenth grade and would like to have as many class yells that would be appropriate for all occasions. Yours Truly, B. W Wyoming Here are few of the yslls which you request: Rocky-ey- e, Rocky-eyZip, Zum, Zlel Shln-gerst- a, Shingerata. Zim, Bum Bie! Zipzuml I Rah! Rah Zipzumt Rah! Karaborra! Kara-borr- a t Rah Rah t sis boom bah ! Cream & Blue. Kazzledazxle r&zzled&ztle t Sis, boom I Ah I I Boom--lak- a Rah, Rah, Rah I Boom-a-iaI Bow! Wow! Wow! Chfcka-Iak- a ! Chicka-lakChicka-lak- a Chow! Chow! Chow! Boom-a-IakBoom-alakWho art we? (name of school ) Can't you see ? Hulla-BalI Hulla Baloof Hoorah t Hoo-ree- l! Hulla-baloHoorah I Hooreet Hoorah 1 Hooreel Crimson I Crimson! I Rah! Bah I Bah I Hobble Gobble! Ramie Dazzle t Sis, Boom. Bah! Rah I Raht Raht Maroon and Black I Maroon and Black 1 These are the colors we will back I Sis Boom I Bah! Sis Boom Bahl Rah! Rah I Rahl I yell I You yell! All yell I Sear Miss Brooks: , I have read your corner many times and wonder if you will kindly give ftdvice to an eider girl! I will soon be twenty-fiv- e and have gone with a fellow for six years during which he has given me the most thoughtful attention and has never looked at another girl. What he has told his mother and his looks when I am around shows without a doubt that he cares --for me but he is naturally backward. I love him. Would it be brazen end forward for me to do the I am considerable worried over proposing. this question. Could you help me out! Sincerely, HALLIE, Utah My dear girl this is a difficult and situation I admit, and one which I hesitate to advise not knowingupon either of you personally I am a firm believer in womens individual rights in many, many ways, bnt have never been able to convince Wyself that one of them war the right to propoua. Nevertheless this man has. no right to monopolize all your time and at Jention. It hardly seems possible that after associating: together so many years, as you have he could still be too "backward to declare his love for yoa. Personally I believe Jitp plan would be to not give him al! of your time as you have heretofore, but devote some time to some other friend Have an engagement sometime whn he asks you for one. It might hurt but it may also wak him tp to the fact that he cannot g nr Indefinitely as he is now do ng You ere both old enough to know y ur own minds, and if he has not made up h s by this time it Is high tune b was assisted in some manner to do so Woman's Instinct, coupled with your intimate knowledge of his .dispel utson will assist you in this undertaking tnd bring it to a happy culmination I mi ure, but your part is to wake him up," no1 la do the proposing. j son is 21, and Jackie Coogan to 7 years old. AFTER THE BALL little maiden climbed on an old man's tiitc. Beg for a story, do uncle, please Why are you lonely, why live alone? Have you no sweetheart? Have you no hornet I had a sweetheart Years, yean, ago. Where she is now pet, you soon will know. List to tny story. I'll tell it all, I believed her faithless, after thejball. Chorus After the ball was over, after the break of morn. After the dancers leaving, after the stars wera gone, Many a heart was aching, could you but read them all. Many a hope had vanished, after the ball. The lights were flashing in the grand ball room, Softly the music playing sweet tunes, rkeie came my sweetheart, my love, my own I wish some water, leave me alone. When I returned, dear, there stood a man. Kissing my sweetheart as only lovers can, Down fell the glass, pet, broken, thats all. Just as my heart was after the ball Long years have passed, dear, I never wed. True to my love lost, though she is dead. She tried to tell me, tried to explain, I would not listen, her pleadings wera iir vain. One day a letter came from the man, He was her brother the letter ran, That's why Im lonely, no home at all, I broke her heart, pet, after the ball A Dear Miss Brooks : have been very much interested in your corner and now am taking the 1 berty of asking a few questions. I think your corner to wonderful. (1) Will you please tell me if there to any cure for -- blushing ? My tolks tell me I blush entirely too much I cant help it. (2) Also, how can. overcome my bashfulness? (3) Is a powder harmful to a young girl's complexion? (4) Is a good powder? I surely hope I have not asked too many questions as I may want to call again sometime. Thanlu mg you I am, JACKIE, Ufc (1) My dear, the only cure for blushing to to overcome Do not be afraid to laugh or say something1 when in crowd of people. You must toy bravely to overcome the feeling that someone might laugh at you or criticise you for saying or Make up your mind that doing something. you will enjoy yourself, and you cannot do so unless you "mix" with your friends, that is take part in the conversation and whatever going on. (3) Powder to not particularly harmful if you are careful to use one whieb ioes not irritate your akin and you can find that one only by trying until you locate the one. (4) I am not familiar with the powder you mention so could not pass judgment upon it. I Dear Miss Brooks: I would like to ask you a question which has been troubling me, and I would like your advice. I am a boy of X8 years of age and have never mixed with the gentler sex to any great extent. Recently I was introduced to a girl, who made me feel as no girl has ever made me Teel before, This girl seems to think that she to above my station in life, and always treats me in a cold reserved fashion. I believe that if I could once break down the barrier that to between us, I feet confident that she would return my affection. And so I wish to ask you, is there any way by which I could get on a more intimate footing with her? Hoping you can give me loliRion to this problem, I am. Very Sincerely yours, A TROUBLED MIND, Idaho I know of no other way than to be a perfect gentleman. Prove to her that she to not above you, by acting at all times and pieces as though occupying the highest st tion in life If you are doing this I am sure you will win her. She is probably of the reserved type of girl, and "faint heart ne'er won fair lady" yon know. But d not force your attentions upon her rather let her know of your admiration for her in more general way, until you have made "impression. Other than this I cannot help you I am afraid. It rests upon the personality" of you two just how it will work out but here's wishing you the best of luck. Let me know if 'this wee bit of ad vice has been of assistance to you. Dear Miss Brooks: I read your eorner every week and gals great deal of knowledge from it. I hope my questions will not reach the waste bas-k- et (1) My complexion, especially my nose is also always red and shiny. I -have used various kinds of creams and pow- - , ders. Would you please recommend a cream that will make the powder stay on my faee and give a fair complexion to my skin. What ean be done to remove or reduce (2a brown birth mark, when it ahows very plainly on the akin! (8) How can a good ivory comb be cleaned! With oceans of success, mm, MICKEY, Utah No indeed, Mickey, your questions will be, answered to the very best of my ability. (1) I have answered this question by letter. (2) There is not much you can do with a birth mark. Some claim are made that they ean be removed with 'the electric needle, but I would not adviss yon to try it (8) Wash your comb In soap and water, using a mild oap. It will not harm lt COMPTOMETER- Wanted at Ones Young ladloa and men between IS and - is yrs old, prefer high school graduates and stenoggpphera, to take up Comptometer instructions under system of Felt it manufacturers of the Comptom-cteAdding and .C&liwtating machine. We art very short of Comptometer operators in this ter- Tax-C- a. r. ritory. S30JaB?fclyC;Mnf.frgth. cit. BUSINESS COLLEGES D. 8. BUSINESS COLLEGE. School of Efficiency. All commercial branches. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St., Salt Lake City. PLEATING A BUTTONS Accordian, Side, Box Pleating, Hemstitching. Buttons, Buttonholes. Kid Corset Partor: E. Broadway, Salt Lake City. 10 SEB YOUR PUBLISHER Take your Book Binding any kind to your to. cal printer. Leith's Trade Bindery, Sait Lais. , - |