OCR Text |
Show THE SPH. PRIOR PAGE EIGHT E Ribbons Welcome the Baby LAMBS AHD SHEEP lilflt Cffll UTAH-EVE- KY nFOR FRIDAY, MARCH 21 FRIDAY. FASTER discussions were D. D. McKay, president of the farm bureau; James A. Hooper, president of the state association; F. R. Marshall, wool-growe- of pretty baby are made of ribbons, and they soon follow bis arrival Into the bouse favored with a 'Visit from the stork. Relatives and friends express their congratulations tty sending gifts that rival flowers in their color and texture, and are much snore lasting. Only a few of these graceful tributes to babyhood are shown here, but there is a long list of them, beginning with ribbon cov-re- d and ribbon trimmed baskets for the baby's toilet and including booklets, Jackets, bootees, rosettes, sleeve-garterpillows, carbags, riage robes, sachets, cushions and ttows. The picture above includes a small carriage robe and a pillow. link or tdue satin ribbons in light tones are used for them, and sometimes the two are combined. A wide ribbon is choaen for the role, three lengths of it stitched together, the edges overlapping, to make the cover, which is lined with a plain thin silk and interlined with cotton or wool batting. Harrow satin ribbon makes the frills that border It and tha scroll that fins, s, ishes it A narrower, soft satin ribbon Is wised for tha pillow, which is made by joining four lengths of ribbon. Nar- pinned to a small satin covered cushion. One at a time they are used to add a final touch to the baby's A pretty pin tray is dainty toilet dteked out with ribbon about the edge, and bolds an imprisoned doll tied in with baby ribbon. Satin ribbon in two widths serves to maks and trim many dainty bootees Ilka or similar to thoae pictured, and ona of many little begs, for bolding safety pins, is sn easily made but convenient accee-aor- y to tbs baby's dressing basket Each of its seams is outlined with a frill of baby ribbon and a rosette ornaments tha opening at tha top. Tiny safety pins dangle from little rings that are suspended on baby ribbon and fastened to the aides. cowomt sr vtiras levasm Soma Simple Place Cards. A quaint place card is about one inch wide and three inches long. At tha top is a picture of a pretty girl, whose hat, when tilted back, reveals the guest's name beneath. Another card shows a small messenger boy carrying n small grip. When the grip la lifted the name la found beneath. A lady with a little fan would be another clever idea, or pansies with attached leaves would be neat By G. BERNARD BHAW, English Man of Letters. Masculine affectations were always a mistake. During the movement for the liberal education of women and their admission to the professions, the followers of John Stuart Mill and Henry Fawcett cut their hair short, put on mens stiff collars and cravats, wore wsistcoata and shirtfronta and watchchains, and made themselves mannish above the waist while re- it maining quakcrish below The has not balanced itself yet culminated in the It campaign of the suffragets, which was conducted with extraordinary violence end resisted with frantic sav- ageiy. But before it broke into volcanic eruption it had obliterated the would-b-e manly women. The suffragets insisted on their womanliness much more consciously snd strenuously than the Victorian women. The manly phase, however, had established toleration for practices 'which, though formerly confined to men, were really as proper or improper to women as to men. For instance, women gave up crying and fainting, and took to swearing and smoking. When my mother formed her liahits, smoking by women, or even in their presence, was unheard of. There waa not even a smoking room in the house. Men went down to the kitchen late at night and smoked up ' the chimney. When women discovered that the toleration and even the practice of smoking was the price of male company, they first tolerated and then practiced. The habit is one of the most extraordinary aberrations - of our civilization, imposed on ns as it was by the redskin at the climax of the Renascence. Men were always a little ashamed of it, and were to-tually heading for its renunciation when women gave it an enormous impulse and made it quite shameless. In the nineteenth century we could hope smoking might, disapjicar in the twentieth. Now people who do not smoke have to choose between stale tobacco and social ostracism. As refinement was supposed to be proper to women and roughness proper to men fifty years ago, the great increase in companionship be-tween men and women during that period was bound either to refine the 'men or roughen the women. It has done both. The feminine refinement, 'which was only silliness disguised by affection, has gone, and women are liardier and healthier, and the stock sizes of their clothes are larger in. counter-moveme- nt 'consequence. The masculine vigor that was only hoorishness, slovenliness and neglect of person and clothes has fled before feminine criticism. But the generalization that women are refined and men rough by nature is a superficial one, holding good only when, as often happens, the mans occupation is rougher than the womans. GREEN RIVER HOTEL IS thronged with a merry crowd until a orchesOPENED LAST SATURDAY late hour. The Black Dragon tra furnished the music. GREEN RIVER, March 21. The Many guests were present from out Black Dragon hall given by the Green of town. Grand Junction, Colo., Kiver Commercial club at the formal Moab, Monticello, Thompsons, Helpopening of the Midland hotel Satur- er, Soldier Summit, Salt Lake and day evening, was a grand success. Ogden were all well represented. The spacious basement had just The Salt Lake visitors came down "been newly decorated and a new in a special Pullman in charge of hardwood floor laid. The floor was Harry Cushing, passenger ngeut of uJJJt Utah. March 1. 111. NotuV! fir. rf-Dalby given that Hyrum Seely Utah, has made appUntu? accordance with the riuir-m.- -. the Compiled Laws of Utah amended by the Season La, un ISIS, to appropriate one and half (ltt) eeeond-feof water an unnamed wash in Carton mn Said water will be diverted north 2 deg. IS min. west f7iPSait from the Southeast corner alS1 Twp. 14 South, Range I eJV1' Lake base and meridian. andcoavT ed 10,660 feet in a ditch and used from April 1st to October ti? Inclusive, of each year, to irrigate acres of land in parte of the a!? Sec. 27, and W SeJ SS, NE township and range aforesaid. Thu application is reslgnated in the at engineer's office as No. k72 protests against the granting of appUcation stating the reasons for must be made by affidavit in dal licate, acccompanied with a L $3.60, and. filed in thia office with? (601 thirty days after the compiE2 of the publication of this notice, r F. McGUNAGLE, State Engineer Hate of first pub.. March 25 Date of completion of public.ii.. J: e, T rs' secretary of the National Woolgrow-er- s association; W. Armstrong, president of the National Copjier bank; A. P. Bigelow, cashier of the Ogden State bank; C. J. Fawcett, chairman of the wool marketing committee of the American farm bureau federation, W. D. Candlaud and others. It was bronght out that under the national wool warehouse act, wool can be stored under federal in bonded warehouses, and negotiable receipts issued therefor. Under this plau wool may lie marketed in orderly fashion, the route shortened between producer and consumer, and the product got in better order for sale. Messrs. Armstrong and Bigelow, as bankers, approved the plan as agreed upon, and will later present the same for consideration of the Salt Lake clearing house association for local banking opinion. u- April 22. In compliance with the provisions of the Seegtniller measure which placet the burden of collecting and prorating taxea collected on transient live stock on the county commissioners, the state board of equalization has returned to the counties the grazing certificates received for 1920. The county commissioners will forward the certificates to the state treasurer's office and the taxes collected for 1920 will be returned to the counties. The laws enacted during the Thirteenth session which are repealed by tha new act, although enacted in 1919, did not take effect until 1920 and the taxea for this year on transient live stock are the only ones affected. The chief objection put forward against thia apportionment among the counties being handled by the equalization board waa that this body would have to go to considerable expense to apportion these taxes whereas the counties themselves have at hand all tha information necessary and could prorate tha taxea with more efficiency and less trouble. The local sheep shearers of the Buhl country in Idaho have reduced their prices more than 30 per cent from the prices charged last year. The prices announced this year are 12l, cents end board. This schedule is based on the prices charged by shearers in the Boise valley. The first shearing this spring in Grand county waa done last week, when the H. 1L Turner goat herd, numbering about five huudred head, waa sheared. The mohair was taken off by machines and averaged somewhat more than four pounds to the fleece. The mohair was consigned to eastern buyers, the seller receiving an advance of ten cents per pound, final settlement being subject to conditions of the eastern market. Fitzpatrick Brothers and August Nicholas, sheep owners, are erecting a temporary shearing plant at Cottonwood station, says theMoab Times Independent, and expect to have their herds sheared by hand with blades this year. Work is being rushed on the corrals and necessary accomodations for the shearers and wranglers and they expect to begin its ojieration about the 23d of March. Fred Ualyean will conduct the commissary for the plant. Aime slight pickup in Utah woolq on the Kansas City markets is reported to the Utah State live stock board in a communication received Monday. Although the prices received are low the fact that there has lieen as much activity as is reported is taken in an optimistic light by the live stock board. The bulletin reports that a few Utah clubs have changed hands recently at 17 cents as against 6 and 70 cents last May. In the fleece sections 23 to 29 cents has been jiaiil for medium and about 30 cents for fine wools. Dr. E. A. Bundy, veterinarian, and deputy state live stock inspector at Ogden, has reported to the state live stock lioard that four head of rattle had died recently near Tlain City from blackleg. He ,vaccinated other young cattle in the neighborhood. Dr. K. W. Hogan, state live stock inspector, says that blackleg commonly prevails at this season of the year, and that vaccination against the disease is in order and is being done in several parts of the state. In Davis county the vaccination is being carried on under the direction of the county agent. the D. R. G. Among those making the trip from Salt Lake were Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rich, Mr. and Mrs. George Swartz, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Storey, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Finn, Miss Hazel Adams, N. O. Hardy, T. C. Hardy, Charles Rich, J. C. Anderson, F. W. D. Wolf, Sherman Armstrong. A. T. Tolton, W. E. Adams and J. II. Gregory. 121. OF ASSKKSMUXT CdT bon Water. Land and Power (Z pany. Location of Principal Plan Business, Price, Carbon County, I'tak Notice is hereby given that at a ing of the board of directors held as the .. day of March, A. li. assessment of fifty (60) rents m waa levied on share the capital stock of the Carbon Water, Land and Powir a company, corporation, payable once to Carl R. Marcussen, treaaunru at Price Commercial and Bavin ni bank. Price, Utah. Any atnek upon which thia assessment may remain unpaid on the 23d day of April, a D.. 131, will be delinquent and for sale at public auction, .- -j unless payment la made befure wlllb old on the 28th day of May, A D 1131, at the hour of 4 o'clock of th afternoon, at Price Commercial and Savings bank, Price, Utah, to pay tb delinquent assessment, together with the coat of advertising and expentm bf aale. CARL R. MARCU88EX Secretary. Price Commercial and Bari Inga bank. Price, Utah. First pub.. Mar. 26; lari Apr. 16, lift NOTICE lth GRAZING CERTIFICATES RETURNED TO COUNTIES row satin ribbon gathered along tha center conceals the seams. It is also sewed crosswise on the pillow cover, narking off oblong spaces, each one of which is centered with a small ribbon blossom. The reverse side of Combine Colors. Paris dressmakers hava no hesitathe pillow is made of plain allk and ruffle of ribbon finishes the edge. tion in combining n skirt of ona Color Many little sachet bags made of and a knee length Jacket of another, marrow satin ribbon are suspended such as bright blue with black or WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN trom short lengths of baby ribbon amoks gray with rose pink. OF THIS SECTION OF UTAH When Lovely Woman Gave Up Fainting and Took Up Smoking Instead. XOTICE TO WATER VSFRsZ Engineer's Office. Salt et (Concluded From Pago Two) WHOLE forflocks the 1Wl Spring and Summer COATS in fORSME, WANTED, ETC. Two Ceuta Per YTml Farh Tnsrnina No Cl targe Accounts ROOMS FOR RENT Phone 3S7M. FURNISHED. FOR SALE AMERICAN BAKERY. Address Lock Box 476, Price, Utah. OLD NEWSPAPERS IN BUNDLE! of one hundred. Twenty-fiv- e osnta This Sun. SALE ONE GREAT Range. Coet $176, but for $100. Phone 262M. FOR MAJE8-tl- FOR SALE ONE NEW TEN twelve house tent. Inquire of FRICEeUTAH, Store No. 12 Frandsen, Phone WANTED You want die caiboa removed from your engine to give it power and to atop overheating. You want to uve the price of a new set of fender by having the cracks welded today. Anything worth welding you want welded right by based and experienced workmen THAT GUARANTEE THEIR WORK. We weld anything that ii metal and cut any thickness of steel into any shape. Come in and let us show you one of the latest' and best equipment in America. c will stU BY Lea 170MS. FARM WANTED OWNER OF A farm or good land worth price asked, write L. Jones, Box 661, Oiner. Ills TYPEWRITER PAPER, RIBBONS carbons, second sheets and a federal lina of office supplies. Alvar in stock. The Sun. FOR WOOD-e- AND n tanka In many styles and sliaa A. Fisher Brewing Co., Salt Ukl City, Utah. Porioffioe Box 1266. FOR SALE ONE WIDE CARRIAGE FOR SALE STANDARD OIL DRRc Remington, one standard Remington, a Reliance and a Smith Premier. Terms Aim, two used check protectors. The Sun. ne Carbon County Welding Company E.'W. McINTIRE And F. D. BRYNER Corner North of D. A R. G. Warehouse, Price, Phone THE 120-- W ling rig. fully equipped with lot af casing and tools, boiler and the Ilka Located about eight miles abovs and easy to get out to railroad Or may be taken out down canyon te Uintah Basin country. Will send mu with interested party to show it Chen for cash. K. W. Crockett, Price, Utah Sun-nysi- UNIVERSAL CAR It is most important when your Ford Car requires mechanical attention that you place it in charge of the authorized Ford dealer because then you are sure of having repairs and replacements made with genuine Ford-mad- e materials by men who know all about Ford cars. So bring your Ford to us where satisfaction is guaranteed. Pssuip aajAias juapjjjj 'jdiooi and Ford cars if you wish to buy. p ALGER AUTO CO. Authorized Ford Sales Service. Foctoffice Box 786 Phone 153 |