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Show n fe. wife .nd don't be- iieep the family bud- L dee and Quality, Home ITTTiu. Deflation Uan is a hero in his own f? leaves. Tmirnal. ton Jffu"s v" 3Ufi WOOL &7S PRIZE STORY . i... .! nnsnmpr of I producer " Wuct are dependent upon Lther. If each western con- would buy all nis gooas iru. n producers, business would Sourish, and both parties to msaction would benefit. ;j(e to the West the best yoa have ind the best will come I back to you. MRS. J. R. BEAL, Rigby, Idaho. IAsk Toar Drsnbt For PEX ASPIRIN I KTEKMOUNTAIN PRODUCT 1 Fidelity Makes Success pity is seven-tenths of busi- I success. Coleridge. ). SPRING PLOWING... I I use of "Caterpillar" Tractor !dt and leading track-type f-ctor. Prominent farmers owe ss to these machines. fritt for descriptive catalogs. titt Tractor & Equipment Co. fiSUlu City nd Tremonton, Utah t Swimming It Up , ar liberty wisely understood is I voluntary obedience tn the venal laws of life. DETENTS AWNING Co. I 80. WEST TEMPLE H-thing in Canvas Goods I Snapping Turtles I ft Srtles ? t mora fim r .t T - -nrorit ay. I jB Nutshell iLSw!tryl.t0.beri "hen he ia wrmio-. 3 b, Uii 10 55.00 PeF wk in be Dairl Jrtide on Why yon sd Good, onntain e. Zf, Similar to e ,r ,?J Jonr story ia 3, sTl t ?mn -r gtor, " Uke C.ty. If pr - .1 TTfih women luino pmiT LAKE C1TT I ill uvnu - -A ! NEW I MOTOR OIL LJFrom Carbon 6f I hi T - SiaJno,w revealed al- j ,X,CiWekNo.3205 ' Your Home and You By Betsy Callister MEAL TIME TALK WE TllIXK a great deal about the color schemes and the decorations dec-orations of our dining rooms nowadays now-adays and even women with very little to spend manage to achieve an attractive effect through Judicious buying of cblna, table linen, furniture furni-ture and curtains. We should say that American women as a whole bad become dining-room conscious. This room is no longer merely a convenient con-venient place to eat It is a place in which the housewife possibly other members of the family as well displays her taste and talents as an interior decorator. In that way we think a good deal about tone of our suroundlngs during dur-ing meal hoars. But there is another an-other sort of meal time "tone" to which we pay little heed. A cheerful cheer-ful color scheme can do little to raise our spirits when the tone of the conversation Is depressing or Irritating. Ir-ritating. One reason why meal time con-conversation con-conversation so often takes on a Jarring Jar-ring tone is because In many families fam-ilies meal time is the only occasion when the entire family meets. It seems therefore the logical time in which to bring up such controversial contro-versial subjects as the relative importance im-portance of boarding school for Betty next year or a new car, the IN THIS aerial view of lower New York the black line encloses the approximate area included in the elaborate plans of Fred F. French for raising a new "white collar city" that will ultimately house 10,000 people. About 14 acres of ground are comprised In the sites which have been acquired, and the convenience con-venience to the Wall Street district makes It likely that the new "city" will be largely Inhabited by workers work-ers In that region. Slit Skirt Returns Augusta Bernard, French designer design-er who created this smart "restaurant" "restau-rant" dress, says the allt skirt la coming back. The dress Is of black satin and is fashioned in sophisticated sophisti-cated style with an accompanying Jacket showing huge cuffs of black fox fur. Steel Production Steel Is made from pig Iron by first burning out the Impurities and then addicg known amounts of other oth-er elements, such as carbon. There are many varieties of steel, each having different characteristics, as, for Instance, high tensile strength, elasticity, extreme hardness, etc. "TOte Cottar City Planned for New York Mil,''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''fc'''','',AlA'ii ttr la 1 iw&i .siS?? 'in . in h i I, f.o r rWWWHW comparative advantn cam a ma... vw v& uiuua- tains or seashore for the summer vacation. In some families flnan-clal flnan-clal matters are never discussed anywhere but at meals. Of course it is convenient to thrash out family matters round the meal table but It Is hardly fair to the efforts of the cook to provide a good meal or of the housewife to produce a pleasing background. (. 1M1 UcClor. N,w.pp.r SyndlctO (WNU Service) llPAlPA KNOWS-' "Pop, what is a hearth r "Origin of a great deal of family smoke." (. Bell Syndicate.) WNU Serrlca. Conitellatiom The sun, the center of our solar system, is not In any constellation. The stars In the heavens are merely divided into constellations for convenience con-venience in studying them. HOT SANDWICHES FOB A quick luncheon or supper there Is nothing more satisfying than a tasty hot sandwich. Ham and Egg Sandwich. Take two cupfuls of chopped ham and two eggs. Put bacon fat Into a frying pan, turn in the mixture and cook slowly until the eggs are set Cut Into squares, lay on tonst-ed tonst-ed bread and spread with currant Jelly. Chickurry Sandwich. Mix together one cupful each of chopped chicken and ham, one tea-spoonful tea-spoonful of curry powder, three-fourths three-fourths of a cupful of thick white sauce and one-half teaspoonful of r-iai pnarriaaes will never get the crowd," says cynical Sue. Preliminary Pre-liminary bouts are never as attractive attrac-tive aa a finish fi0ht-" I WNU STlc) r - , - , ; ; Hunting AbandoneTfuTkish Gold . rtrr.&i' Vlll back In September, 1018, the fleeing Turks were reported to have dumped boxes containing 115,000 pounds of gold Into the river Jordan near Belsan. Search for the treasure Is being made, and In the illustration divers are seen anchoring sand bags In the river to divert di-vert the current Museum Prix In the fine collection of Jade objects ob-jects In the Field museum, in Chicago, Chi-cago, is a pair of Jade sandals worn long ago by Chinese rulers during certain religious rites. salt Mix the ingredients. Toast six slices of bread on one side, ; spread the untoasted side with a . generous layer or we curry and sprinkle thickly with buttered crumbs. Bake In a hot oven until the crumbs are brown. Serve at once. Hot Oyster Sandwich. Cut a pint of oysters Into bits. To a tablespoonful of butter add . -i. x ,f.il nt o!t an1 one-nan "";"'p ..j tne few flashw of cayenne Md the, liquor ana me uj-sicio. ( .raokar rrnmhfL Fill I buttered sandwiches and serve at This makes ten sandwiches. once. Fried Oyster Sandwich. This is a sandwich de luxe. Dip medium-sized oysters into milk and seasoned crumbs and fry in hot fat Drain on paper and lay on buttered snrpnd llzhtlv with tartar sauce. Cover one slice with oysters j and place the other slice on top.; Dust with paprika and garnish each sandwich with a stuffed olive. Keep j them hot until serveo. Hot Beef Sandwiches. Lay slices of hot roast beef dipped . into brown gravy between buttered . slices of bread from which the : crusts have been trimmed. Pour the; brown gravy over an ana eervevery hot with pickles or olives. Bacon and Butter Sandwich. Cut strips of bread one-half inch wide and cover with butter, softened soft-ened and mixed with chopper crisp bacon. Toast on both sides In a hot oven. ft Mil. Wettera Nwiper Cnlon. Stare Not Crowded Aj an Illustration of how stars throneh space. Sir Uro Dtaii"VM - i James Jeans says that If only three grains of dost were in an ordinary i room It would be far more crowde-l with dust than space Is with stars. j 5 sir kf EDTIME By THORNTON THE WHITE HUNTER ABOUT the time that Peter Rabbit Rab-bit had reached the Green Forest For-est that night after the first snow, a slim, trim little fellow yawned, rubbed his eyes, yawned again, stretched, and then abruptly made up his mind that he was hungry, and that it was time to do some hunting. lie scrambled up to the doorway of his home, which was in a snug hollow under the roots of an old tree In the Green Forest and thrust his bead out The ground was white; the trees were white; everything was white. He smiled as be sat there looking out at the white world, and his smile was a crafty, cruel," hungry smile. That white world Just suited him. It couldn't have suited hlmbetter. If you had been there when he made his first leap out into the snow you would have understood right away why he was so well pleased. His coat was as white as the snowt He was all white except the tip of his tall, and that was black. It was Shadow the WeaseL Now of all the hunters of the Green Forest there Is none smarter, none more eager, none more tireless than Shadow the Weasel. Reddy Fox and Old Man Coyote and Ilooty the Owl hunt to fill their stomachs, and when they have their stomachs full they stop hunting. But Shadow hunts for the pure Joy of hunting. When be has killed as much as he can eat he does not stop. Oh, my, not He keeps right on hunting. He Is like a great many two-legged hunters. It Is for this that he is so feared and hated by the little I people of the Green Forest j Now as he bounded along In long leaps there was a fierce Joy In bis heart With everything white he could be even bolder than usual, for In his pure white coat not even the wrathful eyes of Hooty the Owl, the one enemy he really feared, nnnlit ha Ilkolv tn baa him. It WB8 convenient that white coat H(J raQ gwJft, w,th ,ong boun(lgt BtoI)I).n onl lo investigHte the old and stumps and brush piles that he came to. Each of these he examined very carefully. There might be a Woodmouse biding there, and Shadow Is too good a hunter to be careless. So presently he came to the tracks of Peter Rabbit For Just a second Shadow smelled of the wltn hls keen "ttle nose, than UJf WeB brightened with eagerness. "Hal" said Shadow. "He passed here not very long ago. Nothing would or coulfl suit me better for dinner than Peter Rabbit, inis coia air makes me hungry, ne doesn't know Pro. about; unless Reddy Fox 'JB JSZtf Jr linni!ll(4B'Lil!k I PODBM J$0OHKH&lMHr00a LOW ROOFS By DOUGLAS MALLOCH 00HCH30iK5rCH5JOOOOOHr)a IN cniLDnoOD to a little churoh 1 My footsteps found their way. Life was not then the weary search Tor Joy It Is today. A simple sermon, simple song. An nnderstandlng creed. I found, when life was right or : wrong. Sufficient for my need. Today before a greater shrine Within larger place 1 seek again for words divine To give me peace and grace. But there is something missing now, The fault the church or me, 1 cannot tell it seems, somehow, That God Is hard to see. I think some day HI search It out (It's fifty years or more), The church with lilacs all about An oak tree at the door. For men ana cnurcnes both may grow . Too great too rich, too wise. remaps when roofs and men art low They're nearer to the skies. (0. lilt. Douilaa Malloch.) WNU Sarrlo STORY W. BURGESS or Old Man Coyote happens to give him a scare before I catch op with him it ought not to be a long chase." It was well for Wbltefoot the Woodmouse that Shadow had found Peter Rabbit's tracks ' after they left Whltefoot's hiding place, in stead of before. lie Is such a slim fellow that be could have and would have slipped In at the little door way and made an end of Whitefoot Presently Shadow came to the place where Peter had followed the tracks of Happy Jack Squirrel. "Hello I" exclaimed Shadow, "nas that fellow fel-low returned to the Green Forestt I'll Just keep an eye open for him hereafter." Then he paid no more attention to Happy Jack's tracks, but kept right on after Peter, t Presently he came to the tracks of Jimmy Skunk. He knew right away whose Now as He Bounced Along In Long Leaps, There Was a Fierce Joy In His Heart tracks they were. Tou know Jimmy is a cousin to Shadow. When he saw those tracks he scowled. He and Jimmy are not on the best of terms. Besides, at flrst he thought Jimmy was following Teter, and that would upset his plans. But In a few minutes min-utes he saw that Peter had been following Jimmy and that Bade him easier In mind. He felt Itill better bet-ter when Jimmy's tracks traded at the hole under the old stump where Jimmy bad made his home for the winter. Shadow sniffed at the door way and then showed all his sharp teeth In an ugly snarL "He's down In there and I'm glad of that," he muttered, and then with longer bounds than ever he kept on after Peter. by J. O. Lloyd. I WNU Service. Co-Operatito Purchasing The modern co-operative buying movement first Jtook practical form with the formation of the Rocbdalo society In England In 1S44. lOAwrrmAwrnf loavLuumuLLu -; 1 1 u I'm getting about 35 cigarettes from each pack of TARGET I SWITCHED from ready-made cigarette ciga-rette to the new Target Tobacco) and I've been saving over fifty cents a week ever since. "But that tant alL The dgarettea I roll from Target look and taete like ready-made. I even find them cotuiat-ently cotuiat-ently fresher. rTarget is real ciftt tobacco. It's a blend of Virginia, Burley and Turkish, just like the ready-made use. That's what you get when you put out a dime for Target 30 to 40 of the beat cigarettes you ever tasted. And who doesn't appreciate a real saving these days? "And you get 40 gummed papers free with every package." AND GET THIS Tbs V. t, Govaramcnt Tat on SO clfarettc amount to cents. On SO cigarette you roU from Target tobacco tb tax ia just about eo oact. And whar thtr i a Ut U on da-rcttoa, da-rcttoa, you save that much mora. Bald, offer you MONBY-B ACK GUARANTEE of complct aaturactkm. Try a package. II jrou doot tay they're the beat ricarttt you avar rolled, return lb ba.il empty packaga, and your store maa will rttura your dima. 0i .e The Rea Cgareffe Tobacco Brown Qi WUlUnuoa Tobacco Corporation, Muuvui, cLy. Salt Lake City's fewest Hotel 4 ?; :Vt f 4 h'4 HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM $1.10 Jul oppilt Morwn Tbrusd ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. sWs7' 1010 wiW'HWMiwiW ; ' i V . f. " -'. -." ' ; . " Si- '.. . . - ': ) Ml Known as Sea Unicorn The narwhal, an Arctic whale, is known also as the "sea unicorn. Like the dolnhln. It travels In schools, but It is seldom seen south of the polar seas. Little is known of it , hut in the logs of old-time mariners," there was frequent report of tha piercing of a vessel's hull by a nar whal's Ivory tusks, uecause tne cen-ipi cen-ipi nf the tusk, or horn. Is hollow. Ivory of the narwhal has never achieved commercial Importance. The Puszling Part Mose How yon gettln' on youah Mithmetlc. Lout Lou Well. I don learned to aau up ie oughts, but de Eggers bodder me. LiYsr 2nd Stomach Trcubla Could Not Digesl Ordway, Colo. I was just up and down for several months with liver and stomach trouble, and had a hard lump in my side, said Mrs. Martha Ulrich of Route 1. "I could not . . . take a sin of water without great HistJMs. My stomach and bowels Jere btdly bio" ted. and I could not digest an food. Finally I took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Sd also used, the 'Pleasant Pe&g and these medicines made me weu. rim'l Cuala, Bf ala. It . Dr. Pierce's Discovery wld |