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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH ters and who were on their way, the one from Portland, Me., and the other , from Chicago, with all to protest. But in the efficacy of the protestations of married daughters Frank had little confidence. There remained the Mrs. Gallen, widow of Jallen. the butter king, fair, fat and forty-fiv- e and with a million in her By H. IRVING KING wn right About two years before aoo0ocoo0aamc Slihu, in one of his marrying spells, i(i, 11)22, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) nad fixed his affection upon the vidow and her money He had been Frank, said Eliliu Goodwin, corporation lawyer, to his eontidentia! luite broken up and cross as a bear clerk, I have a mission of a rather .or two months when she suddenly private nature which I want you to vent off to Europe. Fran la picked up undertake just to oblige me; its the morning paper and saw the widhardly business-- . Tears ago, when nat- ows name in the list of arrivals by urally I was younger than I am now steamship. Here was hope! Goodwin and a trifle more foolish, I had a was her attorney had been her husrather intimate acquaintance named bands. She was sure to visit his of. Reginald Fontain. We belonged to a fice. Perhaps, thought Frank, Elihu would speedy set, I am afraid. The lawyer turned toward the win- -' have on the one hand a girl, young dow and gazed unseelngly out over and beautiful to be sure, but penniless the city ; a reminiscent look came into and encumbered with a grasping, disreputable old father whose demands his usually Immobile face. for money had already been outin those of had money "Regy plenty rageous; and on the other an attracthe went he continued, and days, tive woman of suitable age and a pace. I saw little of him after I mar- million of money! Astd EUhu worried, for I put away childish things, The next day the money. shiped am now well I and fairly prosperous-ana sober citizen. But Regy, al- widow called and was shown Into the private office. She was there though he married, kept stepping on lawyers a long, long time; Frank in the outer went he I have heard the gas. office was on pins and needles with through his own fortune and his but with the lapse of evefy wifes, too. Some say she died of a anxiety, half hour his hopes Increased. 1 for heart. However, years While he hoped the married daughhVy tard nothing of Reginald today I got a letter from ters arrived,- each accompanied by an assorted lot of children and inhim. Its a barely disguised begging let- sistently demanding to see their Elihu heard their ter. Now, I want you to investigate erring parent. I voices; opened the door and said: and see just how the land lies. wouldnt mind helping him a little If Come in, Elvira ; come in, Cynthia the dear children. My dears, alit would do him any good If he real-- . and low me to to you Mrs. Gallen, ly needed help. If I went to see him who has present to become a loving consented be It first at well, might personally to I am getting old you. stepmother him. do much for I for cant awkward, I really cant afford to. But you go and need a companion In my age. Why, pa, we thought cried Eland see and report to me. Then Ill vira. know just what to do. We heard said Cynthia. But Now, Elihu Goodwin was rich and, they left the rest unsaid. as they say down East, mighty nigh. In the end he did the sane and He never did like to meet poor people and the dislike, had grown upon him sensible thing and everybody was satiwith the years. Still, Goodwin felt sfied. Reginald Fontain, it is true, to make trouble, but knowthat he could not entirely disregard threatened ing he would not live long to draw it Fontains appeal. There stirred In Goodwin calmed him with a liberal him vague recollections of financial transactions in the dim past In which pension. For the year which he surElihu had been the beneficiary of vived the receipt of his pension Bertha devoted entirely to her faReginald borrowed and forgotten ther. but as herself soon after his death as sums. Frank made the visit as reshe . married permitted quested by his employer and found propriety the shattered wreck of him who had Frank. once been the gay and reckless. Reginald Fontain reclining in an easy TO ENDURE FOR GENERATIONS chair in a cheap flat. The young man Canned Music explained to him that important Simply Means the business had prevented Mr. Goodwin. Preservation of Divine Sounds etc., and he had sent him (Frank) to Through the Centuries. ascertain how he (Goodwin) could be of assistance," etc. Canned Music" was the subject of Fontain at once launched forth into a talk given by a young man before a a rambling tale of woe, the only group of young people In a New Engsalient facts of which appeared to be land town recently. One might have that both Reginalds finances and thought at the outset that he was about Reginalds liver were In a sadly de- to deal Canned Music" (as sometimes moralized condition. While he was people contemptuously call music renor phonorambling on a door opened and a light dered by a pla.ver-plan- o Ah, said Fon- graph) a severe blow, but he fooled his footstep was heard. tain, my daughter! Bertha, come audience. What he had to say, on the here." In response to the summons contrary, is worthy of every music lovthere appeared a slender young wom- ers attention, for It upholds Canned whose face Music In the highest degree. an of about twenty-fivwas of a Madonna-lik- e Yes, call it canned music If you beauty. That care and sorrow bad been the por- will, he Is reported to have said, but tion of Bertha Fontain no one could it is canned only as some one might doubt who gazed upon her, but they say that the telephone, telegraph and had left as their traces only a look of wireless can human thought and exsweetness and res' "nation which add- pression, or as you would say that are canned when ed to the charm of her countenance. rtant-documents Frank Carey, for the first time In his you put them in the cornerstone of a You can ridilife, felt bashful and great public building. confused in the presence of a woman, cule anything by giving it a sneering and when, after a short conversation. nickname, but it is often possible for In which he somehow learned that the shrewd man to adopt the term and Bertha was a stenographer In a down- make capital out of it. If your friends town office, he left the fiat and took talk about canning music tell them his homeward way. He was In such a how the wisdom of the ages Is canned state of ahsentmlndedness that he in the printed word, how beauty la found himself In the uptown station canned In ' sculpture or fine architecof the elevated when he' wanted to ture. take a downtown train. Card Index Friends Tastes. When, next morning, Frank made town lives a In a middle-wester- n his report to his employer he said nothing about Bertha except that she woman who, though she does all her own housework and lives very simply, was her fathers sole support. A pale, womont creature, I supIs considered the most perfect hostess in her community. Her secret Is that pose, said Goodwin. ' stammered Frank, "she she keeps a little box of cards in her He changed kitchen with notes on the tastes nnd Is er good looking. dishes of all her friends. When she .the subject abruptly. "Well said the lawyer, I suppose expects an old friend for dinner she I really ought to go and see Fontain. pulls out the card with his name on it and reads the notes that she had I will attend to It tomorrow. EspeHe made the call and results fol- made on some previous visit. lowed rapidly. Fontain moved Into an- cially fond of pie. other and more expensive flat and lit- Does not eat tripe. , Takes two lumps She then gives him ills tle evidences of luxury and ready' In coffee. money began to appear about him. favorite food for dinner, avoids food - Goodwin, who had been a widower for that he does not like and, when servsix years and had two married daugh- ing the coffee, knows without asking ters and numerous grandchildren, be- how he takes It. Delineator. gan to spruce up and indulge in outrageously youthful cravats. He was Ownership of the Great Lakes. a constant caller at the Fontain flat. Lake Michigan is the only one of It was as plain as the nose on the the five Great Lakes that lies wholly face of a Roman senator the lawyer within the United States, and no one had picked out Bertha for Mrs. Good- of the lakes lies wholly within the win No. 2 and father was prepared' to territory of the Dominion of Canada. hand her over for a pecuniary remun- They form the' frontiers of the United eration. States and Canada. When states are Frank was frequently an ambassaseas separated by lakes op dor for his employer to the Fontain the boundaries follow the middle of establishment, and In one way or an- such bodies of water. Lakes Huron, other he and Bertha managed to see Erie and Ontario, which belong to a good deal of each other. He saw, Canada and the United States, carry and Bertha saw, what was up; but it the boundary line in the middle of the : never seemed to enter the heads of lakes, though the use of those waters their elders that what they thought Is common to bordering states. concerning It was of any moment Frank and Bertha, howAn Expert. whatever. "Whats his defense? ever, regarded their own opinions as ; An alibi. ' f the greatest importance. The law clerk saw that he must sue 'Can he make it stick? I think so. Hes a golf player, and out two processes In the court of love permanent Injunction to restrain is an expert at alibis. Ms employer and a writ of habeas In Plunkville. . corpus for the possession of -Bertha. "A lot of people in IMunkville seem But there were the two married Into have the camera craze. daughters whom some one had not fathers of their Them cameras are just new fangled folly formed Frank; he was above ansnymous let lunch boxes. their-children- The Due Process of Law This is your corner- - Make use of it for your information an question that are puzzling you. It will be my pleasure and privilege to answer care- fully and promptly all questions submitted to me. Your questions must be limited to two, and your full name and address must accompany each letter. For special information send stamped envelope. All communications will always he held in absolute confidence. All letters should be addressed very plainly in pen and ink to 1 " Helen Brooks, Box 1545, Salt Lake City. i Dear Miss Brooks: , I wrote to you about a week ago, and received your answer. Z thank you very much, and if I am not too, muck bother, I have another question to ask. (1) What good games ' are there for Halowe'en for hoys and girls between thirteen and fifteen? I tjiank you very much and hope I may call again. ALINE, Utah. ' Glad to hear from you again. Aline. (1) I have taken the liberty of sending you a book will answer yoi'r question as to Hal, which loween games better than I can, and hope it satisfies. bjN e, Impo- No-o-- lemon-mering- - land-loeke- . j 4 V WTfMATtOtiM. Turkish Quarter of Smyrna. Prepared by the National Geographic to ciety, Washington, D. C.) Smyrna, captured by, the Turks partly burned, is one of the patri-treh- s among" tne worlds famous Jities. Some American cities are proud of their age, feeling that a few .enturies entitles them, to distinction, n contrast to the newest oil town of Vexas or Oklahoma where cornstalks Jire probably still to be found along Uain street, Bostons 290-odyears ndeed justify a feeling of maturity, Vhile the four and a quarter centu--ie- s that look down on Santo Domingo Entitle that first community to be Established in the New, World to its bride of seniority. But both of them are in the heyday f youth when compared with London, which probably has existed for Elose to nineteen hundred years, or home with 26 centuries behind it. It 's when the Near East is reached, lowever, that one finds cities that are fruly old. Many, like Babylon and Thebes, Nineveh and Memphis, have Crumbled away ages ago, but here tnd there one comes upon a living boinmunity whose beginnings are lost in the haze beyond the point where history began. d Such a among cities is Smyrna, which. Is berfegd Ifl have been already long In existences: the time of the destruction of Troy, eleven centuries before Christ. In fact Smyrna is set up by some persons as a rival for Damascus as the oldest city In the world. The original builders at Smyrna chose their site more happily perhaps than they knew. The forces of nature have been kind to the locality. M'letus and Ephesus were formidable rivals for many centuries, but their rivers finally choked their harbors with silt and the cities died. Smyrna had no. stream of any consequence, and its excellent harbor the best In Asia Minor has continued to bear its heavy burden of commerce through the ages. Crescent City of the East Smyrna has a population close to that of New Orleans, and like the latter It Is a Crescent City, extending in a semicircle about its bay. But while the American Crescent City is wholly flat, Smyrna has ItsS rim of hills which under the magic of Mediterranean skies and sunsets Invest, the city with a beauty which detailed Inspection does not verify. Its terraced outskirts are picturesque, but they lack the striking quality of the terraces of Algiers, Hong Kong and e.-i- d gray-bear- - Like a number of other cities of the Near East, Smyrna is a Babel. Even under the old Turkish empire its population was composed of almost as many Greeks as Turks a fact which is not strange when it is remembered that Smyrna first readied dtyhood under Greek jnfluence and remained Greek for many centuries successively under Ionians, Macedonians, Seleudds and Byzantines. The city was wholly Greek for more than a millennium ; it was nominally Turkish for five hundred years, until the treaty of Sevres was written. Besides Greeks and Turks, there have been in the population large numbers of Armenians and Jews and lesser groups of almost every other nationality under heaven. Quite a number of Europeans have been living in the city, and there was a dean and fairly attractive European quarter with its modicum of hotels and theaters. In some ways the 'Turkish quarter has more the flavor of old Turkey than present-daConstantinople. In the latter the dropping of veils by the women is marked; but In Smyrnas streets the veiled figures from the harem still flit by in all their, old ' mysteriousness. Angora Noted for Temples and Goats. A city founded by Midas "of the touch of gold; overrun two centuries cousbefore Christ by ins of the Irishman of today; a great and wealthy community under Rome and Byzantium; and in spite of Its checkered history and its past glory, known to recent generations in the d West only because of a ,'oatj y , long-haire- Such is Angora, in central Asia Minor, where Mustapha Kemal Pasha set "up the Angora government of - . Turkey. The remote kinsmen of the Irish who figure in the history of Angora were 20,000 Celts from central Europe who, unable to push into Greece, decided to try their luck across the Heir lespont. After harrying the country for half a century they "were forced to settle around Angora, then known as Ancyra. . Their country became known as Galatia. There St Paul Is supposed to have founded a Christian church, to the congregation of which he addressed his Epistle to the GaIn the Fourth century the latians. Celtic language was still to be heard In Galatia, according to St. Jerome. The Celtic Invaders were always in the minority and were finally absorbed, as the Norman conquerors of England were absorbed by the Saxons. Mtlny observers profess to see the effects of Celtic blood in the people of Angora today, and describe them as lighter in complexion than the people of other parts of the Near East, and the most genial of the Mohammedans of Asia Minor. Ancyra dwindled to a village under Celtic rule, but following the annexation of Galatia to the Roman empire In 25 B. C. and during the hundred years in which it was maintained as the Roman frontier province, the city took on great importance. One of the most famous of the ruins of Asia Minor is that of a beautiful marble temple In Angora dedicated toJRome and Augustus. During the Byzantine period Ancyra became even more Important, Its position between Constantinople - and and" Persia-makin- g It Mesopotamia the metropolis of interior Asia Minor. The rising power of the Turks was indicated by the fall of Ancyra into their hands more than a hundred years before the fall of Constantinople. But Ancyra was captured shortly afterward by the Christian crusaders during one of their farthest sorties inland and was held by them for eighteen years until 1360, when It again fell Into Turkish hands. A City of Mud and Marble. Though marble reminders of its ancient glory are scattered about In the Angora of today, it Is predominantly a dingy city of mud brick houses and narrow streets. - A mosque is built against one of the marble walls of the noble old Augustan temple. The walls and gates of the city are constructed of fragments of demolished Greek and Roman buildings, colonnades and other structures. The city is 220 miles southeast of Constantinople. It has a population of about 30,000. It is perched on a rocky plateau to the north of which are fertile valleys and to the south of which stretch plains merging finalOn these ly into a great desert. southern plains are pastured large herds of sheep, and the goats with long silty hair which have made the name Angora familiar to western ears. Large quantities of wool and mohair are exported. Cats, and to a less extent dogs and other animals In the neighborhood of Angora, have unusually, long silky hair. It is believed that the climate' and perhaps the soil of the region are, responsible for this peculiar develop!' ment. . Dear Miss Brooks: I hsve been reading in your comer and am real interested in it, and am sure you can answer my simple questions, which are: (1) I" it proper to walk to another town to a danc where you are a stranger? (2) Is it righ for a girl to stay outside with a hoy or tn take him in the house? (S) Is it proper tr receive birthday presents Christmas presenter any kind of gifts from a boy when you have only known him for a short while? I am your friend. . MISS HILDA, Utah. I am glad to welcome yon, Rilda. (1) I d not think it proper, and 1 should imagine i would be rather a strennous way to have s good time that of walking to another town I dont believe I would, dear. (2) Entertain your boy friends in your home, always., Le them understand in the beginning that when you are not at some place of entertainmen or amusement your home is the place to entertain them. Too many seek their plea-ur- e and entertainment any and every place outside the home, and it is the girls who ca-a- nd should discourage such a practice. Ilav-musidancing, card playing, everything whicv is clean and you enjoy, but keep your friend ' in yonr home. Try it and see if you are no happier and more satisfied than when you spend your evenings in other ways. (8) No ue it is NOT proper to receive presents of from boys you are not VERY well ac quainted with. You should know them ven-wei- l indeed, before accepting presents from them. - Dear Miss Brooks: I read your corner every week and enjoy it very much. Could you tell me three antonyms for the following Remit, victory, accommodate and responsible; and six antonyms for bigotry. Would you please give me the address of some hook store where I could get r good antonym qnd synonym book and the price? Thanking you very much, I am, fried, A. W Aria. . I hope the following antonyms will he of assistance to you: Remit withhold, reserve, preserve, retain Victory frustrate, balk; fail outwit, baffle; accommodate unyielding, willful, enforce, disarrange, obdurate ; responsible fallible, changeable, uncertain, wavering; bigoby meek, apologetic, retiring, sedate, 1 sober. am sending you the tranquil, quiet, names of two good synonym and antonym books. Dear Desk Borrower: I hope you will not think I am presumptuous. I just want to tell you what a perfect, dear I think you are to have so much patience and ability to answer in such a delightful way the many absurd questions that ape put before you. It must be a wonderful feeling yon possess to. know that you have Z helped so. many out of their difficulties. wish you a great lot of success In your glorious work because I feel certain that you put your heart and soul into It. Please answer the following questions and I shall he ever so grateful. (1)' What is the address of a business college for girls in Salt Lake? Do they send booklets announcing the particulars of their school to anyone requesting them? (2) For one born in August, what would be the lucky and unlucky day? A loving friend. BONNIE BEE, Utah. I have had catalogues from several of our business Colleges sent to you. Sunday is said to be yonr lucky day and January and October your lucky months. Thanks for your many kind words, my dear, and I hope the information I am sending will also help you. Z)eaT Miss Brooks : r1j Tear Miss Brooks: May I bother you with a question or two? It) If a boy and two girls are walking down .he street should the boy walk between the--irl- s or where? (2) When it is ail right for boy to pat his arm around a girl ? (3) Can tell from this letter how old I am ? Thank-n- g otf you in advance, SOMEBODY, from Idaho t'l) This seems to be a divided and much 'iscussed question. According to the very best nthority I can find, and if you wih to correct, the grnt'eman should always tof thrt street and the the eut-id- e should walk together. Nevertheless, a rrat many educated, refined people follow the custom of the gentleman taking his place the ladies, but this is not proper, to tile best authorities on this sub-le(2) Only when you are engaged to (3) Would be hard to tell. From our writing I should judge you to be twenty, from the nature of your questions about fifteen or sixteen. Dear Helen: I am very Interested in your corner. 1 would like you to answer these few questions. (1) Is' it right to come home with a hoy if take yon ? (2) Is it right for s boy and girl to ride on the same horse together T (8) Is it proper 4o get married at 15 yean of age? (4) la it proper for a young man and woman to walk down the street arm in arm ?' With love, LULA, McCammon. (1) You should not go any place without an escort or some older person with you, and) should of course return with them. (2) No, it is not proper for girls and hoys to ride on the same horse. (3) My dear child, NO Do not think you are but a child at fifteen.of marriage for five years. (4) If it is at night the girl should take the boys arm, no .. otherwise. Dear Miss Brooks: (I) How can you think to wash your teeth, and what is best to wash them with? (2) Wears both fifteen, are we old enough to go out with boys if we are not, how old should we be? (3) Is it proper to let boys teach you how to ice skate? (4) Is it proper to let a hoy kiss you when he brings you home? (5) Is it proper for a boy to use slang before a girlT Ever yours, BILLY, McCammon. (I) By making a practice of doing it regularly at certain times during the day morning, noon and night. Use two parts table salt and one part soda. This makes a splendid wadi for your teeth. (2) You should wait another (4) No, year, girls. (8) Yes, quite proper. not at all proper in any sense of the word. (6) No, there is never a proper place for slang, before girls least of all. Be very careful about this yourselves, girls. - SEE YOUR PUBLISHES cozy llttli corner? - r PIANOS and PLAYERS . . Tear Miss Brooks: We have been readers of yonr eorner for osne time and at last have decided to write, are we welcome? We have some questions we would like yon to answer tor us, (I) We-wer-e in born June, what is our lucky color and day? (2) How can we win boys over soli ey will dance with us when they go with us n Sunday nights ? (3) Do you know the words to "Stumb'ing All Around (4) Will you please tell some girls from Other states to us ? Hoping you can help us out, wishing you loads of success in your-roowork, BILLIE AND BOB, Utah. To he sure, you are welcome, girls. (1) Red,, blue and white are said to be your eoiors. and Friday yonr lucky day. (2) Wy dance on Sunday nights? Perhaps the boys 'do not approve of Sunday night dancing and if so I do not believe I would care to influence them to do-a- s there are six other nights in which you may dance. What do you think? (S) This in a popular song and can be had hi the musia shops, so I eannot print it here. (4) Girls, youi see here are Billie and Bobbie from Utah, who-wis- h someone from other states to write to them. Send your names and I will forward: them to these girls. I have been a reader of your eorner for some time and find it helpful and interesting. I have some questions that are puzzling me. I wonder if you could help me? They are: (1) What does this passage mean and what is it in 'the book The Adventures of Tom Sawyer"? "To my wife this book is affectionately dedicated. (2) I was horn on Oct. ?, 1903, what day of the week did I arrive on? (8) I have a very dear girl friend whose name is Dora. Has it any specified meaning?- Wishing yon success in answering these, I am, DIMPLES, of Ida. (I) Nearly .every book is dedicated to someone, Dimples. Mark Twain no doubt wished to show the respect and esteem in which he held the devoted wife, who had inspired him in his work of creating the character of Tom Sawyer, and so dedicated the book to her. (2) You were born on Wednes(8) Dora is a diminutive of day, my dear. Dot, Dora, Violet and Loella, Utah : , Send Dorothea or Dorothy and means The Gift of name and address and I will endeavor to an--' God." swer some of yonr questions. Read instruc- tions in regard to sending questions. Dear Miss Brooks: We are two girl of seventeen and eighteen, and we enjoy reading your cornr in the. Arco Advertiser. We would like you to hetp us if you will. (1) How eld should a girl be he- -; Columbia. Sonora and Edlion fore startig to go with the boys? (2) Would! Phonographs On very easy term you please print the words to Beautiful Ohio? Send for Catalogue (8) Is it proper, to havq a hoys arms around you when taking evening walks? (4) We were DAYNES-BEEBMUSIC CO. E born iu November, October, what are our lucky days and colors. (5) Is it right for girls Mala St. South 61 Salt Lake City of our age to go. to public dances with boys to hseort us? (I) Is it proper for a hoy to ride on the same horse with a girl? (7) PI fnT highest market price for fure and IRQ hid Which is right, a girl to write to the hoy write for a price list or ship to can make up your furs and hides into ua We is to We write or first. he first remain, overcoats or other garments. Write for robes, BLONDY AND DARKEY, Idaho. catalog. (1) Seventeen and eighteen is old enough to American Hide & Fur Co Fnniers 4 Tanners go out with the boys, providing you go with 1 83 West South Tempi Salt Lake City othersortYou are never .old enough (he right near will in the This wise. , (2) appear BUSINESS COLLEGES song ' future. (8) No, Indeed. THIS is not the SNovember The for D. sort. BUSINESS L. COLLEGE. lucky day (4) right la Tuesday and the colors brown and black. School of Efficiency. Ail commercial branches 0 N. Main St., Salt Lake City. For October Friday, and the colors crimson and Catalog free. black. (8) It is never quite proper to go to pubBLEATING BUTTONS lic dances unless chaperoned. (6) No, unless under circumstances which make it necessary. Aceordian, Side, Bo: Pleating, Hemstitching, (?) The hoy always, unless It has been underKid Corset Parlor. stood that the girl should do so. Read instruc- Buttons, Buttonholes, 40 E. Broadway, Salt Lake City. . tions at head of column before writing again, Naturalness of Rhyme. How comes this confederacy to be more displeasing to you than in--a ?d6ce which is well contrived? You see there the united design of many persons to make up one figure . . . the confederacy is plain amongst them, for chalice could never produce anything so beautiful ; and yet there is nothing in it that shocks your sight. . . . Tis an art which appears; but It appenrs only like- the shadowings of painture, which, being to cause the rounding of it, cannot be absent; but while that is considered, they erp. lost ; so while we attend to the other beauties of the matter, the care and . labor of the rhyme Is carried from us, girls. or at least drowned in its own sweetMiss Brooke: Dear . ness. Dryden. May I Join your - ' L have helped so many others tint I thought perhaps you could help me. I am a country girl of eighteen, and feel like I ought to be working, but under the circumstances it is impossible for me to go away from home to work. (1) Coulcl you suggest something that 1 could do here at home that would be convenient for me? (2) Just one more question: Will the plaid ckirt be worn more this fall and winter than the plain ones? Wishing you success, I am a friend, FAITH. (1) As you do not send the name of yonr town and the postmark is not clear, it makes it more difficult to answer your question. Yon will note the instructions at lead of column requesting your name and address. If yonr town :s large enough you can make a nice little sum by taking subscriptions for some of the popular magazines and also for some dependable hosiery. The field is limited in a small town. (2) The plaid and striped skirts seem more popular thah the plain ones. Take your Book Binding any kind to your Ip. You Cal printer Leiths Trade Bindery Salt Lake ; |