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Show BEAVER CITY PRESS state has the largest York New populutiou, the least. 10.3S5.117, auu 194,-kri- Wyoming . In area, Texas, I'&'.Rtfl square miles. Is the largest state, and Khode Uland, 1,2 18 square miles, the smallest. The total fire loss for the country In 1U21 Is shown by the statement to This Is about have been per capita. $41f.,-HiO,00- $4-5- 4 Ninety per cent of the storms which traverse the United States leave this continent in the vicinity of New England or Nova Scotia. I KITCHEN CABINET he j Enter the Bridal Cortege; Midsummer's Adorable Hats 1 n lf one-fourt- one-fourt- table-spoonfu- Its! t$WW' well-mixe- M one-four- th 'i Salt Lake City Firms T assart srmpt serrice and aalek retaras to these adrertlseaeaU aonUoa the aasse af this taper. DB. CRACK 8TRATTON Aaraa'a lasses s, Used diacneaiv Tumors, and acute diseases mcesssf alLake. Salt Judre Bid.. tuber-culoal- earonie ly treated. AIRKT IOI-J0- 4 BUSINESS COLLEGES u. a. bUbiNtaa COLLEGE, SehoN of Efficiency. All commercial branches. lataioc tree, so n. Main SU, Salt Lake City. beautt HINT8 Hare your combine or cutting made lata Na- - ' tional bobs or ilde ware. Face powders, creams. Mail orders solicited. Marinello Brsuty Shoppe. BOOKS AND SHORT STORIES BOOKS Any book too want hv mall. C O. D Ueaeret Bonk Cm. m East So. Temple PATENT MEDICINES Praebalin's Herbs for Hsy-feve- r, Stomach troubles, kidney diseases. Satisfaction ruaranteed or meter refunded. 426 W. T 8., Salt Lake City. SONGS SHEET MUSIC CfU IPC new and old All kinds. Sheet music by mail. COD. Beesley Music Co. J7 9 Main BICTCLE8 ACCESSORIES Hudson Bicycle Beat Grade. Easy Payments. Catalog: free. Knudson NoveHy Spt Goods Co. FRUIT BOXES VEGETABLE BERRY CUPS & CRATES! short notice. Salt Lake CRATES JrssSl t Lumlier Company. Box CAFETERIAS TIT Ln lon Kenyon Cafeteria -- cool and Restful stairs. Mnln fnd So. Sts. Ktr rtiffee fire RADIO SUPPLIES Rinif) WPPI IF fraltesto. And equipment write s, hutmrh Opt j BOTB WANTED To sell Pictorial Review. bet ladies" ansra-tin- e published. L C. Gaumer 47 E. Broadway. Write, Bhew-Mo- ntsn or Phone Waa. 76S-- Th Flewer H. Wh)U 12 West Uroadway. GEE GEE HAIR TONIC WIT Oee Oee Company. .r 1IU P-- Rrsynt St., Salt Lake City i -- - WAYS WITH SPRING FOODS Asparagus Is one of the most appre ciated early vegetables. Cooked until tender and cerved plain with melted butter It Is excellent, or served with cream on toast It makes a delightful luncheon dish. Another method which adds variety is to toss the rvtnked stalks In but ter in a hot frying pan. then spread with butter and grated cheese and brown under the gas flame. nollandalse sauce Is also delicious with cooked asparagus. Cream of as paragus soup is one of the most de licious of all cream soups. Served with a SDOonfnl of whipped cream on top of each bowl, with a sprinkling of minced chives or finely shredded al monds, the boud is par excellence. Cooked stalks thrnst through a ring of pepper or tomato and served with rich mayonnaise (a spoonful placed on tne side of the salad plate), makes a de lightful salad. Rhubarb Is one of our early fruits. It la especially food for the system and blends well with other fruits as drinks. Rhubarb sliced, sprinkled with amrar and baked in the oven until ten der is unusually good In flavor. Combined with strawberries snd pineapple a most delicious Jam or conserve Is made. The cultivated mustard Is one of the nicest ereens for serving, cooked snd dressed with butter and vinegar or lemon Juice, or cooked with a slice of fat salt pork. The fresh, pretty leaves served with lettuce In a salad add a test to the dish which Is well liked. Mustard erows freely and should be found in every garden as it continues to put forth leaves all summer. If the blossoms are kept picked the plants may be useful until late In the fall srnnih onion with green or red pep per In rings, radishes and watercress. all add variety to tne saioos oi mis time of the year. A fine dinner menu for this season witn a snce oi i. a dish of eret-nor ham. which salt pork corned beef, have been cooked together, potatoes, onion salad and rhubarb pie a dinner which is not only Ailing but medicinal. There is no food more healthful foi young and old than the frosh. Juicy s fruits. ' "Hutu. 7)WvtG, experience CHAPTEI Newspaper Syndicate.) FIX delved Into the large packing box and took out an armful of kimono aprons. She placed the pile on the counter and turned to her customer. "Here's some bran' new ones, Mis' Bean. They're real pretty an' the last I'll ever order. My son wrote that he has a good Job at last. 111 be goln" to live with him before long." "So you're really goln ain't your said Mrs. Bean. "I don't know how we'll get along without you. Mis' Fox" "Oh, I guess nobody won't miss me very long. Mllly Staples Is goln' to run the business," Mrs. Fix sigh belled the offhand tone In which she had spoken. Mrs. Bean's expression gave a hint of the words which followed. You know what "Mllly Staples! she'll do? She'll pile this place full of cheap, flashy stuff nobody ever needs." "Now, Mis' Bean," Mrs. Fix' mild voice Interrupted gently. "Mllly ain't so bad. She's young, but she'll learn. She's comln' to help me with the 'Change of Ownership Sale' I'm plan-nlto have as soon as John gets ready for me." e e " e e the During days that followed Mrs. Fix' customers, who were also her friends, heard much of the little woman's roseate dreams of the future. "John's so good to me I" his mother told everyone. "He says the store Is too much work for me, and he wants me near him because he misses me." Many were the confidential comments of Mrs. Fix' neighbors. That they did not reach her ears was due to the sympathy and regard that everyone felt for the brave little woman who, thrown upon her own resources by tire death of her husband when John was a baby, had risen from the position of clerk to that of proprietor of Centrevllle's Dry Goods Emporium. "That John! He's as shiftless as his father was," said Mrs. Hanscom, with an impressive wave of a horny hand. "What's his Jobr asked Mamie Mitts, pausing for a bit of gossip on her way to tle lunchroom. "She don't say," whispered Mrs. Hanscom. "But, whatever it is, he won't keep It I" "He never kept nothln' yet but bad company," contributed Mrs. Senter, who was tying strings on her fence for the encouragement of her few straggling sweet peas. Mrs. Senter's fence separated her yard from that of Mrs. Hanscom's, and much "friendly Interest" passed over its pickets. A month after' this conversation. Mrs. Bean halted by the fence to speak to Mrs. Senter, who was shell ing peas on her porch. "Mis' Fix sale is next week !" she called. "I want to know!" ejaculated Mrs. Senter. "You don't say! Come up and set down, It's real hot walkin' In the sun." L ,u meai Cd v For the Maid or Matron of Honor. bride, after determining on her wedding gown, considers those of her maids and her matron or maid of honor, with a reference to the beauty of the wedding cortege and to the setting they will make for her own bridal array. She may choose picturesque things of bygone days to set off her most modern garb, or she may elect that all shall be of corresponding style. still maintaining the center of Interest in her costume. With all the adorable frocks In current modes, suited to bridesmaids, and all the quaint fashions available, the way of the bride is strewn with sartorial roses In making a choice. To think of bridesmaids is to say "taffeta"; there are so many flower like taffeta frocks to make a colorful and gleaming background for the white of the bride. Probably nothing else Is slim- quite so popular as THE full-skirte- Millinery reaches its climax of beauty in midsummer and designers delight in a commission to provide headwear for bridesmaids. They take such occasion to make their dreams of picturesque and beautiful hats come true to the delight of the maids and they give their fancies freer rein than at any other time. Four adorable hats, any one of which might be selected to grace the head of bride or bridesmaid, are shown here. They are worthy the wedding procession and the fairest of faces. Silver tissue with pale gray and silver lace and uncurled ostrich In any color the bride may choose account for the small pofce shape and tiny, frivolous muff to match. The muff may be carried Instead of flowers. This Is a new and beautiful hat and will probably make the bride think twice befor passing on to consider another model Down at the Centrevllle Dry Goods Emporium, Joy unutterable sang In Mrs. Fix heart. She was going to her boy and they Would be' so happy. Of course, she hated to leave her friends. but there! John wanted her, and she was glad glad to go. She looked over the shelves with ar pralslng eyes. "You do look real pretty." she said aloud, "but you make lots of work for an old woman." The change of ownership sale was a big success. Country folk for miles around came to wish Mrs. Fix all sorts of good luck and prosperity in her new life. The little woman fairly radiated happiness. To every purchaser of one dollar's worth of merchandise she gave a genuine Dishcloth, guaranteed for six months. "Think of me when yon use It," she would say. "and try to be as happy a I am If you can." A week before she was to leave for the city, old Joe Lemon knocked at her door and handed her a special delivery letter. "Must be he can't wait for ye!" chuckled the old man. "It's from Noo Tork !" Mrs. Fix smilingly took the letter and opened It As she read, the smile gradually faded, the letter dropped from her hand, and she grasped the arm of the nearest chair for support. Joe waa thoroughly alarmed, she had turned so white. " Taln't 'taln't baa news, l it. Mis' Fix?" he stammered. Mrs. Fix had sunk into the chair, and for a long whllo there was silence. Slowly ghe rose and took an armful of folded garments from the nearest trunk. "No, Joe, 'taln't bad news. John's got married, and he says I needn't come It's only a small flat, an' he don't want to take me away from all my old friends. Besides, he says, he knows I'd miss tjie store, bavin' been In It so long. John's always so I 'I f .Li Vrtltney brlef-j- t is empty iv A'W'f ' sV 1 Unge the U the jit perhaps tl . .via ripsl 0 iu" " - I ,ut to shlfi it Ju8 tchful polli lently dui H rv':...V-.:rA- ' t bodlced frocks of changeable taffeta for the bridal procewlon. Maids lxk their dalntlfKt In them ami the bride who choowB them Is sure to please. Even more lasting are the exquisite frocks of' ftne embroidered batiste, trimmed with lace and woru over slips of colored silk. One of these Is shown In the Illustration and Is recommended for the nuld or matron of honor, when worn over a slip of the snnie color a that In the dresses of V.te tnribK It Is elaborate by n panel down the of alternillrg rows of rmhmldered ln tlste and ra hire Insertion, with llnitil ! frills of edging 't I" In groups across It. These frllla are a Inn Bet about tin, iotom tf the aklrt. The heavily embroidered side panels are outlined w't.'i Insertion and the hack of the skirt Is plain. The crowning glory of this n,.yi Is the Ktunll s'rnight 'uirk of the bodice, much rape nt elaborated w1'- luv k. e.nl.roJdery and lace. But perhaps her mind Is set on a hat ; If so let her consider the lovely pattern In fine straw, faced with crepe and bearing a unique trimming of butterflies (made of feathers). If the sagacious bride Is considering hats that will prove useful after the wedding, the lovely model In hnlrbrald, with chiffon roses set against the crown, Is likely to prove her choice. The upper brim edge is outlined with little ru fries of picot-edgeribbon and the same ribbon makes a background for the chiffon roses. Another hat that will appeal to mnny brides I A mall shape with applique of narrow braid and a scarf of maUnes shout the crown. Ostrich droops from the side In a cascade of lovely color, wide-brimme-d d ed 1 (. Hit. Weeura Neiispeper LsUoa.) thoughtful I "Joe, would you mUid helpln me lay this nig down again? I in't fcelin' so quite pert as usual I guess It must be the weather. An' Joe. don't you want to cell Mllly Staples to tell the folks I'll be In the store as usual nex' Monday mornln'T"' Windmill Power for Farma. England's ministry, of agriculture Is considering the nse of windmills for the generation of electrical power to drive farm Implements. th CfltCh throat yot fai iful to tn r i (lefactors they a. ieo mrpector fciouslJ' 81 L when t AY " Jussac ii L gnil h his '3mi soatlni g wn bis ned oy at satlflc ttmll MRS. GUSSIE L garette, w "I tnink," U call or st m and ant the pi HANSEN. Mrs. Gussle E. Hansen, nf oi 52nd Street, Is now numbered wlttf. muiiuuae or Lros Angeles mm women who have realized the vonfe. ful merits of Tanlac. In relating ki experiences, Mrs. Hansen laM: "It Is wonderful what Tanlac tm for one suffering from stomach tnt n ble, nervousness and to Onion. I have tried It "Before taking the treatment am. thing I ate dlsujreed with me n Oat I actually dreaded to sit down to tk table. I suffered from ccaurtlDattoalal awful pains across my back, and vut nervous and run down ery all the time. "Tanlac was helping so mgr others I thought It might help me, tt and It certainly has. Why, my tpri tite Is Just splendid, and my ttonadj is in such good order I eat to t? It was n y the urn ir amvet ay o content My back "1 Mr. S 'Anythli squ car. The Jot lllly, rf the iiiaost In lved at jly dlsp teels In a whl x perlo irganlz ctor A ;eu spector c Illy wl inmorou: 1 thl mletlv. doeirt bother me any more, and I sleep Btoi child at night I can't say too mA for Tanlac." Tanlac Is for sale by all good tar gists take no substitute. Over 17 a lion bottles sold. pinion ! "Wron dou't I boe itafi Bu hand Ya 'come ful W Basket Fl relets Cooktr, A tireless cooker In basket form hi been Invented for conveying food tt has to be served hot in f "Ther fjon tha aoveme c public places. know Ui oner, w' Willing to Begin. She A man should always embna his opportunity. He Won't you please be mine! tenant jour o stayed ccarat which Sure Relief FOR Into must Iftefl Inibb heart's an pte ie run-dow- 1 ployme hold. you we stablli makes INDIGESTION Billy 1 ar facts." Th. BEUfANS Hot water Billy, Toi Sure Relief 25 AND 75 PACKAGES the U Arkwi nnd taken DrWWim flnfori Vaseline- - No-Ru- b Headwear for Bridesmaid. 1 Dd & well-stocke- d Mwish. 1 yawning. caves -- n. . 121, by McCluf tr n' two-poun- one-fourt- (. "?a now Tell MRS.., FOOD Even In homes where meatless day Is not observed. It Is found profitable to serve nsn on Out of 470.000 tons of shipping as the launched by the world In the quarter Friday ended September 30. last, 307,000 tons markets provide were built In the United Kingdom. a greater variety for that day. Fish Veterans of the Spanish-AmericaIn most communiwar, now drawing pensions from the ties is a plentiful There and cheap food. government, number 45,055. are 9,11)8 widows of Spanish Var It Is easily dl- veterans. gested and nutritious. Baked Staffed Fish. Prepare a BEAUTY HINTS cupful stuffing forfish with one-hah of bread crumbs, cupful of melted butter, one-hal- f cupful of Handsome Is that handsome does. cracker crumbs, a few drops of onion Goldsmith. h Juice, teaspoonful of salt, Cheerfulness and content are jreat one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, beautlflers and are famous preservers a few dashes of pepper, and two of chopped sour pickles. of youthful looks. Pickens. Mix and bind with a beaten egg. Stuff There Is no beautifler of complexion, the fish and lay on strips of cheeseor form, or behavior, like the wish to cloth; this will keep the fish from scatter Joy and not pain around us. breaking when lifted from the pan. Bake until the fish leaves the bones. Emerson. Serve garnished with cress or parsley,' with sections of lemon. "BE BRIEF" d fish Jellied Fish. Cook a and and remove bones skin, all the Rous-eaAccent li the soul of speech. chop fine, and stir In a little at a time a half cupful of water; add a of salt, the Juice of three Brevity Is the soul of wit. Shakeone tablespoonful of grated lemons, speare. onion, 23 almonds blanched and finely chopped, and a dash of cayenne pepIs the soul of business. Dispatch per. When all these Ingredients have Chesterfield. d been add two tablespoon-ful- s has been softof which gelatin A sunny disposition la the very soul a cupful of ened In of of success. Matthews. water and dissolved over hot water. Pack In a mold and when thoroughly GEMS OF THOUGHT fxhllled serve In a crisp nest of lettuce with mayonnaise dressing. Light is the shadow of God. Plato. Swiss Crumpets. Beat four eggs, add one teaspoonful of salt, one tableThe purpose firm Is equal to the spoonful of butter, one pint of milk deed. loung. and six to nine cupfuls of flour. Mlx h of the Ingredients and roll Light Is the task where many the dough as thin aa possible; Cut In hare the toll. Domer. pieces two by three Inches and let a few minutes, then stretch them There are heroes in evil as well as each dry piece carefully until It is three in good. Rochefoucauld. times Its original size and as thin as a piece of tissue paper, being careful Don't despair of a student It he has to stretch the edges. Fry In deep fat one clear Idea. Emmons. until brown; dust with powdered sugar. Gold. Is the fool's curtain which Lemon Jelly with chopped vegehides all his defects from the world. tables and a few nuts, molded and Feltham. served on lettuce makes a pretty and novel salad. Serve with any well-like- d He who says there Is no such thing dressing. as an honest man, la himself a knave, Berkeley. Of all the men I hare known, T cannot recall on whose mother did TMlSmo SCHOOL fOK NURSES her level beat for him when he waa St. Mark's HssprisJ gait Lake City, (Own. little, who did not turn out well bed 1871) training school for nurses Address when he grew up. Frances Parkapplications. M. E. Hals, Supt of Hospital. inson Kerea. AnoVla-T- Ey MISS EDITH LOWELL tii. 121. WMim Newspaper Union I It Is clearly the business of the mind to build It more stately mansions as the swift seasons roll. For the. mind cannot remain fixed, no mafter what the psalmist thouffh about the heart. Ourselves, like everything; and everybody else, must change. Edgar J. Goodspeed. FOR FRIDAY'S .L'OS MRS. FIX' CHANCE Bien. Illl' IW. BsgutAeOB CARB0LATED PETROLEUM JELLY break too irnsfl com Inlil No skin for notice. Be very wiry of cuts, scratcha matter and skin abrasions, noi how slight 'Va$e4ine'Carbolj 'Ii In PP ated Petroleum JeUy at once lessens the possibility of infection. It comts ia bottles at all druggist! and ".1 And Iwl fun general stores. Tl:f CHESEBROUOH MFG. COMPANY d..t. (CsasstUasHl) Statt St. tM wHc7 sir New York wl I' ffcww. TOO LATE . Death only ft matter of Don't wait untU pains nd become incurable disease- painful consequences W fJ LATHROP'S ,' rw"1 The worid's standard remedy i f3 |