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Show r Kerb's New Livery. aAt rear of Hotel Kent, TREMONTON, - Samuel Kent, - Item UTAH. - AUTOGRAPHS CAME I HEW HORSES, NEW HARNESS, NEW CARRIAGES, Everything First Class and Up to Date. Reasonable Charges. of Stranded c7VIanager. FOR WALL PAPER. Will Moot Prices on First Class Work. - - Utah. - is Inches Not Long Enough for Modern Millinery. Seven Money mighty useful to Here is an instance in point. A young New Yorker, a brother in law of Sir Philip Burne-Jones- , the artist, found himself stranded while in Albany a few days ago. Being unacquainted in the state capital, the problem of how to raise enough money to get back to Broad; way was a serious one Suddenly it dawned upon him that a couple of let ters which he had in his possession, and which he only recently had re and Rudyard ceived from Burne-Jone- s Kipling, the author, might be made to realize, if not train fare, at least the price of a ham sandwich. Acting on the inspiration, he took the letters to a nearby bookstore, which made a specialty of the buying and selling of original autograph letters of famous persons. Fortunately there happened to be nothing of a particularly private or confidential nature in the missives In question, and after examining them carefully and asking some questions relating thereto the proprietor of lie It House Painting and Decorating, Tremonton, Englishman Raised on Famous Names. OF SHORT HATPINS COMPLAINS I were a hatpin manufacturer," the girl fretfully, as she jabbed fiercely at a hat big enough for three girls, "I'd consult the milliners before made up the season's supply of pins. How In the world do i.'.ey suppose we can make these mammoth hats stay on our heads if we only have these tiny things to fasten them with?" And she held up a pin about seven inches long "Might just as well try to keep them on with a common pin. You stick this hatpin in one side of your hat and it doesn't come out at all. It just stays with its point imbedded in your hair somewhere, and your hat. wobbles every step you take. It's no use using three or four pins if they won't reach clear across your hat. They'll just meet in the center and get all tangled up with one another. I've spent all the morning on a hunt for a hatpin long enough to be of any use at all, and there's none in the market. So suppose my nerves will be worn to a frazzle this winter stabbing and jabbing with these baby hatpins in an endeavor to make them of some use. "If KMnetimea haw distinguished relatives. George Meldrum, HEADQUARTERS USEFUL. IN I I SCORNS TITLE AND WEDS AMERICAN You Can Get f$ vi'VN ijj :i' ''. j fy - oncrete Building Blocks fn any quantity and for any kind of building by calling on A. B. MANAUSA, Manufacturer, Garland, Utah. PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION. FAMILY LIQUOR STORE, Q. A. Woodward, Proprietor, CORINNE, UTAH. We keep the Choicest Wines, Liquors, Tobacco and Cigars. CO Co H O zm o co to 3 co T? CD ZO CO z- O I XJ 2 rn Z CO CO z H O m m O 3C rn co 1 BB HQ gSET fcj3,A oi a: i"! BIIHIirT Perhaps at no time in the past has there been greater diversity in styles and in materials worn at various functions. Skirts are trailing, of the short walking length, or just escape the floor; they are empire, princess, glove no or loosely fitting princess, with suggestion of the empire, or they show the Louis coats with trailing skirts, or elaborate coats and skirts, or the severest of the tailored variety of the latter combination. Velvet is especially smart in gowns and in coats, whether tight or loose. as a rule are prettier than Hats ever, but some extraordinary effects are seen. Although fur is now so much used a9 a trimming for evening gowns and evening mantles, I am of the opinion that the latter garments are most effective and distinguished when made on very simple lines and left practically tint rimmed. Of course, every thing depends on the dress with which the mantle is to be worn; if that be exceedingly elaborate the mantle or wrap can afford to be simple, and vice versa. Now that our evening cloaks are always made to accompany some special gown we find them in many different materials and styles. Perhaps the graceful burnous is about the most satisfactory and becoming shape. The burnous wrap looks best when made of soft cashmere and lined with liberty satin or of supple satin, and lined with a heavy make of crepe de chine. Beautiful embroideries are arranged on the fronts and hoods of the cloaks of this genre. r The reign of the tailor-madcom coat has length menced brilliantly, and now this delightful garment is almost And all the best of the new tailor-madcoats show rounded fronts. In many cases the hack is longer than the front; the sleeves reach almost to the elbow and are semi-Jaanese In outline. The white shirt waist can well be eschewed for the time being and a shirt of crepe de chine to match the cloth coat and skirt costume substituted instead. A dark blue serge skirt and coat would be most effectively completed with a dark blue crepe de chine shirt, made with broad tuck;-anspotted with white cotton. Whit, frills at the wrists and down the cen ter of the front, and outlining the col will, if made of very narrow and finely hemstitched lawn, give the finishing touch justly recognized as distinguishing between the blouse of yesterday and that of Perhaps the height of magnificen in dress is reached in the evening gowns. Embroidery appear on every frock, be it Greek or Louis XVI. Then is a great craze for what Is known as Egyptian embroidery copies of conventional old Egyptian desIgn The lreek keynote pattern Is alwa effective in rich fabrics. should say most of (he evening dresses have sleeves, and although II has been observed that there Is very little bodice worn In Paris Just now there is a good bit of drapery in the sleeve. The bodice Is cut very low back and front, for the most part square, and filled In with pieces of heavy embroidery, lace and tulle, an! the sleeve, as I have said, is a mas.-- : of drapery, often covering the elbow but leaving the arm bare at the top or veiled with a transparency. This draped sleeve is a pretty fashion, though perhaps not strictly classical The two frocks Illustrated in our large picture are Dimple but elegant In design. Thu first has a distinct Louu XV. flavor. It is made in apricot yellow satin shot with pink, while the draped fichu and center panel beneath are of gold filet lace, embroidered in raised chenille with groups of autumn-tinteleaves. The bodice points down the center in the front, and is cut short on the under-sleeve- Gladys Mills, who will wed Henry Carnegie Phipps of Pittsburg in a few days, is one of the Mills twins, well known in Newport, New York and London society. Though Miss Mills has lived much abroad and is an heiress, her name has never been associated with that of any titled person and she seems to have escaped the fortune hunters. store finally offered their owner $4.75 and I'll look like a fright, with my hat for both letters $4 for the Kipling bobbing all over my head." epistle and 75 cents for the Burne-.loneThe Time to Learn Singing. one. Needless to say, the offer Madame Mathilde Marches!, the was promptly accepted. eminent vocal teacher, writes in the Love Is Cruel, Indeed. Ladles' Home Journal: "For young girls all vocal training Love comes unbidden and flees from those who pray at his shrine. He before they reach the' lfith or 17th comes like all conquering kings free- year of age (and even then with great hearted, generous, great; he goes like caution) is a sin, and may spoil many-goovoices before their normal dea thief in the night, carrying away all that has made life worth the living. velopment. Young girls designed for instead of singing, He stabs us with the weapons we have a vocal coreer, their time in learnto our he and tears drinks employ ought yiven him, laughs at the tortures he inflicts, for ing music, piano and languages, all for good And yet we indispensable nowadays love is cruel. are ever ready again and again to bare singers to complete their education. our hearts to the blows. Men feel Flat singing proceeds, In general, from love with more Intensity than women, the fatigue of the larnyx." and they forget more swiftly. From And No One Answered. Madame. A little southern girl was sent to a Freshness. boarding school In New York. When The cold storage egg had emerged taken for a walk she seemed to be much interested in watching the autoafter three years of seclusion. "I'm as good as you are," It re- mobiles. After a while she pointed to the extra tires on the passing mamarked to the egg newly laid. "You're certainly fresh enough," re- chines and timidly inquired: "Why do they carry sponded the latter, with a smile that threatened the Integrity of Its shell. s three-quarte- unbl-qultou- gss f!ti rn r" S rn to a - r m 2a-- c sr a Cncn ... 3 DO N r 3 rt 7 rt.rajtf VSV--. rairH A run S T.Tti f I I jrmX fJor V I A 0k ATLAN11C PxCFAf xSr, . o- cr a- - fD TO ITS DESTINATION ROUTE OF THE FLEET p 8 ZmZSX GLADYS hips, and the little which the drawing scarcely shows, are of very fine net. Dedicated to the use of the young girl is figure Xo. 2. and it is made of white satin with little pleatings of tulle peeping beneath broad bands of O cr V 3 ft Co Op 3 5. 3 3 It - 3- ft J) O 3L N 7 5 ft p A I JJ ft ( 1 r Charming Afternoon Frock. which are. held together by strings of pearls, the skirt trimmed with the same decoration. The whole Idea Is expressive of youth, simplicity, and iKrhaps just a little Indicative of an expensive taste. Not that, when 1 come to think of It, the purchase of a sathi evening dreu should be termed expensive, for exlie as much in the makpense ing aa in the material, find undoubtedly it may be granted that a satin dress will outlive two chiffon dresses. nd chiffon nowadays Insists upon embroidery as well as a lining of chiffon, while net, which is considered a privilege for the thrifty, will call aloud for a decoration of ribbons, and main demands a lining of chiffon and and underlining of soft satin, so, to be really Just, the diaphanous gown, although It assumes the virtue of econt omy, has It not. We may, though, from the rule the frock of which can be made extremely on a slight figure when It Is trimmed with large tucks, or ribbons, .md allowed to dlsplaj some dainty hemlBette of tulle or lace threaded with ribbons. satin, r cah.o rfKH A,. 1 SOUS M - - J i . R0LT OF BATTLES WPS -- ftiuj i ) j FACiFSC ftl! tf JJ 1 J f J v" ? - 1 ' ex-ep- nln-on- i , roads in wave a On Dec. 16 the president went down to Hampton farewell to the fleet under Admiral "Bob" Evans when It started on Its Jour the start of one of the most remark ney around Cape Horn to San Francisco abie warship cruises ever attempted by a nation In time Of peeoe. It Is a movement on which the eyes of nations are centered and one that has called forth a lively discussion all over the worhi. |