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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEW. LTAH Good Taste Today San Francisco's New County Jail Is a Model - f i - f ifi(inlir,i!!iiinn,!lll i it i it II 17 II 11 MM. 'BBS ir si it t? III. j 'is g i; I , IE I U ft It ff. i I i ! ! ? ?l '1 JIF2 , i DEAlt MY please Mrs. Post: Would you sum up a list, including waitress to remem- .11 items, for my table for ber when setting the dinner s dinner party! Auswer: The Items of a properly equipped dinner table Include: or I A tablecloth, or place mats, or foundation the be to Is whatever the setting. 2. A centerpiece, of fruit or flowers, or an ornament complete In Itself. a 3. A place plate (often called of service plate) marking the center at each person for each place set & i .5 - -- .".BBBUBBEEOadBUUB.t a.. yrtfr ETC DINNER GIVING . fir?"? ihm Author o) --ETIOL'ETTE." THE BLUE BOOK OF SOCIAL USAGE," : : M M v n ii si fni ip'M'p'iiflfs m BY EMILY POST ! 4. Flat silver: whichever Implements are necessary for the courses to be served, but three forks, three knives and soup spoon, and either Thfl new county jail of San Francisco, Calif., held to be a model penal Institution, has Just been completed. It fruit spoon or oyster fork maximum U about fourteen miles from the city, on Sneath Ridge, Las Its own water and sewer systems and cost $700,000. amount 5. Never less than four candlesticks or two candelabra. Two candles are absurdly out of proportion to any table candles bigger than a card table. (No i Just a Little Canine Harmony, Folks r Id daylight.) a Two dishes of sweets on a refecor tory table, four dishes on a round square table. 7. (Jlasses for whatever you serve. (Never put on glasses or pieces of flat silver, which are not to be used.) 8. Salt cellars and pepper pots be- A 4 si - tween every two places. 9. A napkin on each place plate. At a family dinner, bread and butter plates are allowed. Bat never at a halfway formal dinner party. Conventional place cards are not very A4 left "Folks, Tin going to treat you to a bit of real music. Don't you kpow me? I'm Taffy, a Welsh terrier, and I live In Chicago." Center "Just half a minute and I'll be tuned up." Right "Owoo-o-How do you like that call of the wild? What, no applause I I'm doggone chagrined. I guess my master is right I can't sing worth a dog biscuit Well, I tried my best So long. See you at the show." o. v LADY IN UPPER SIX Making It Unpleasant for Criminals suitable for dinners of less than ten or for lunches of less than eight. On the other hand, if you like fancy place cards or favors, there is certainly no reason why you should not set your own table with what youjike especially at Christmas or Thanksgiving, or at a birthday party, or a wedding anniversary, or other intimate dinners. On more formal occasions, plain place cards are best. Salted nuts are put either In small Individual dishes above each plate, or in a pair of dishes; one at either side or end of the table. Certain hostesses always Include them, others rarely if ever do, Just as olives, raaisnes ana celery are always served at certain tables and never at others. CONCERNING THE YOUNG Mrs. Post: Should a young DEAR of fifteen pay a party call after dining '"iiTj","my'S'i";'" .. '""'..-ay.w.-m- -- vM v3l r um the hostess' daughter is a schoolmate of hers? And should she leave a visiting card? After such an Invitation, Is there anything a girl of this age can possibly do to return the Invitation? Answer: It would be polite to go to see them, yes. Whether to leave a card or not depends upon the custom of your community. If all young girls have cards, then yes. Otherwise, always best to do as others of your neighborhood do. Return this invitation by inviting your schoolmate to your house or to the movies or to whatever you can that you think would amuse her. r - 4. with strangers, although in,..,,.. is My dear Mrs. Post: I am going to college this fall and would like to know now what Is expected Of a boy when he Invites a girl from out of s town to any of the or dances at school. What share of her expenses Is expected from him? Answer: He should meet her at the station and take her to wherever she Is to stay; send her a few flowers, perhaps, to wear at the dance; and he should make whatever agreeable engagements for her that he can. But he does not pay her railroad or her hotel bill nor that of her chaperon. house-partie- ' 5 ( i t ' . ''"' : i j This U not a, scene from a motion picture but a view o the new style upper berth In the sleeping cars with which the Union Pacific streamline train fs equipped. Folding stairways take you to the upper, end a little e nation-widplatform provides room enough to on led is drive crime that by the federal DepartJoining the A sliding stand up while dressing. ment of Justice, the New York police rounded up scores of known criminals and suspects. Some of them are here seen behind the bars waiting to be aluminum panel completely encloses the berth, making it In fact a small questioned. compartment. All berths, both upper and lower, are provided with individual washstands. The new style sleeping car is one of the innovations lelng shown at A Century of Progress in Chicago as part of the Union Pacific's streamline train. w- - AM' ' , She Grew Tired of Women's Work JACK FIGHTS AGAIN v tt Dear Mrs. Post: I am a divorcee. How should my daughter Introduce her father's wife to strangers? She stays with them sometimes because we both have agreed that she should not be deprived of either her mother or father. Answer: As her "stepmother." My dear Mrs. Post: When two boys and a girl (or perhaps two girls and a boy Is more usual) walk or go to the movies together, or ride In a car, should the odd person sit between the other two, or Is there some other way In better taste? Answer: When they walk, the girls together, the boy on the curb side of the pavement In a car or at the movies the boy sits next to the girl whose especial friend he Is. If he knows both equally well then he sits wherever there is placenext to one or the other, or he can perfectly well sit between them. On the street a man Is not supposed to be sandwiched, because he must walk on the curb side of the street At present this rule Is being recognized as rather senseless. by Emily Port. .... Jack llere la ew York's first woman truck driver at the wheel of her vehicle. She is Miss Ann Middleton of Washington, D. C, who became tired of women's work bout the home, nnd swung to the opposite extreme. A-V- Jt" "''Vv who retired some yeafs ago cs ,th"e undefeated" lightweight champion of the world, has entered another fight .But. this time It la In the politleal ring. Jack want! the Democratic nomination for a. scmblyman from Queens county, N. T. McAullffe WNU Service. Word Urge, at a Noun Urge as a noun has been restored to the language gradually within the past twenty years, and can be said to be In good standing again, says Lit erary Digest As a noun, It was In re trlcted use In the early Seventeenth century, then disappeared until Walt Whitman brought It to HKht In 1SS4 In "Leaves of Crass": "Oh, I am sun they really came from Thee, The urge, the ardor, the unconquerable will. TITJ 1 nas inaue nis science "IlT C TT ll 1! k r l Age oi ouper miracles the first steam engine a track at a dragged single car along and the an hour, miles five four or Clermont chugged her labored way first teleup the Hudson, and the out the mesgraph tediously ticked God wrought!" bath "What sage, men and women sensitive to these "We live in an developments said: .- And the phrase age of miracleshas been repeated until it has lost much of Us original meaning, has be come a mere bromide of eonversa tion. A new denomination appears to be needed. For example, a man flies from California to New York In less than twelve hours as little as a doi en years ago such a feat could have been Imagined only by a professional novelist or a professional lunatic ; no one seriously believed that any stub thing could be done. And even more Incredible was the notion that residents of opposite end of the earth might talk with each other. Yet recently. Dr. Anton Lang, Jr., Georgetown university, exchanged Oberam-mergagreetings with his family at undeteran while Germany, mined million "listened In.' Also, by a marvelous technique of reproduction, a thousand movie the aters just now are showing In colors as rich as life itself a pageant of the Court of St James in 1S15 the screen blossoms Into glory beyond the dreams of any genius of the past; what would I'.envenuto Cellini or Richard Wagner have said of such a medium of enfranchised art! Scientists meanwhile climb the stratosphere and plumb the deepest depths of the restless sea, look out Into the boundless heavens and watch storms passing over planets of which the ancients never guessed, dig into mountains and drag from hiding elements which their immediate predecessors could not foretell, snatch from the grasp of death victims of accidents and ailments which once were accepted as Immutable whims of an unkind Providence. Each hour that runs Its course provides news of unexampled victory over circumstance. e And so it happens that a of mass reaction is achieved a psychological laissez faire on the part of the public. Young folk, es- When super-miracl- UNKNOWN GENIUS GAVE AMERICAN BUGGY TO WORLD Many of our land transportation methods are of European origin, but the old family buggy is distinctly American. No one knows just who did build the first one, according to Carl W. Mitotan, of the Smithsonian Institution, who spent a lot of time looking the matter up, but it was used in this ountry first of all. American roads were extremely bad following the Revolution (some still are) and the only conveyances were the heavy wagons drawn by horses or oxen. This was a very slow" method of transportation. About the best way to get any place was to cut across the hills and walk. Of course, if you were and owned a horse and saddle, that was faster, too. Yankee ingenuity wouldn't be d even then, and about' 1820 some smart fellow built the first light wagon and equipped it with springs. Thus we had our first sprng'-wagoThus we had our first spring-wagofrom which our buggy was developed. Then, about 1S10, somebody else wanted to go still faster, and built the first "one-hos- s shay" and the gig (the same thing in a different form) with two wheels in which the sports went rattling about at a great rate of speed. Of course, the railroad came along about that time, but you didn't have to lay tracks for a buggy, and it held its own throughout the Nineteenth century, until the auto finally just about put it out of business. The depression made a lot of folks get out their old buggies, r, so we still see a few of them around even In the National Capital. Pathfinder Magazine. well-to-d- - peclally, are so accustomed to magic of the century that thev tat' It for granted. One must be at th e post of existence t to the full what is occurring earth ; one must be able to reffiemh tallow candles, horse cars, gasolZ and the old waxyIinZ talking machines to appreciate to th full the wonder of the present er Perhaps it Is not too much to sat that fortune has been particular!! kind to those who have been priw Ileted to see the age of miracles by the age of That Is the greatest story in the !m tory of the race the progress of th past five decades, the grandest super, miracle in human experience. ex. change. mid-mil- 1. super-miracl- KEEP COOL SAVE TIME SAVE WORK SAVE MONEY with the THIS Coleman 4 Mve you more time nd &lf-Heti- n Iron will work thin machine! $100.00 wuhing It will iave youri Krength...hclp you do better ironing easier and quicker at leu cost. Instant Lisbtlntf no heating with matchn or torch ... no wiiting. The evenly-heate- d double pointed base irorn garments with fewer strokes. Large base slides easier. Ironing time is reduced one-thirHeats itself... uie it anywhere. Economical, too . . .costs only Vli an hour to operate. See your hiri. ware or house furnishing dealer. If local dealer doesn't handle, write us. TIIB COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO. Dent. ViU.W. Wiehita. Kans ; Ctairgo, Ul ; Philadelphia. Pa.; Loi Antreleo. Calif.; Toronto. Ontario, Canada 14300 ... Little Girl's Face Inflamed by Psoriasis Healed by Cuticura "My little girl's face was so ln flamed that her eyes were swollen almost shut The trouble was diagnosed as psoriasis. She scratched night and day and was not able to obtain rest. The scratching aggravated the trouble and each finger tip was red and swollen with infection. She became so emaciated that she was very pathetic looking. "After, three months' suffering I recalled the Cuticura treatment used by my mother. I bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment and used them according to directions. The first treatment brought relef and she is novr healed." (Signed) Mrs. Marie I. Johnson, 4720 Ames Ave., Omaha, Neb, March 14, 1934. Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c Talcum 25c. Sold Everywhere. One sample each free. Address: "Cuticura Laboratories, Dept. R, Maiden, Mass." rAdv. Salt Lake City's fewest Hotel a 0 o de-ne- MHwiifALs n n how-eve- t HOTEL SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Ttfe Bathl Radio connection in every FROM $1.50 room-RATE- nt oppottte Mormon Tobtrmadi ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mp- - THE MEWMUtlE MTEIL A Distinctive Residence it An Abode. ..renowned Mrs. J. H. Waters, Throughout the West Salt Lake's Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES - the Hotel Mcwlaousc V SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 DOUBLE $2A0to$4.50 400 Rooms 490 Baths t s ' i f E. SUTTON, General Manager ! CIIAUNCEY W. WEST 7 A$Ut. Cen. Manager 1 J; 1 I |