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Show UJbKii. iu i hvKXlrtii Monday a.ugusi m i9iy NXiVVti Furniture Shipped at Less Than Freight I In our through cars. We are making; up cars now for Los Angeles, Seattle, Kansas City, Hair- will entertain O NORING her sister, Mis Or Chicago ancl all eastern points. avenue Wilson on at her home jean Chlpman, who with her evening at a ahower in honor of Mias Pearl' Call or telephone us before Wilflt Mrs. parents, JJr. an(J James, whose engagement to George shipments. Chlpman, and sister, Melba, R. Dent has been announced. The, making any ' - . to make their home, Mrs. J. YTacey Wootton la entertaining at a denla acne on this afternoon. In the ser of the table is a basket of variof a bow with tied colored nasturtiums bluo tulle. Covers are laid for six and the bo tens la assisted by, her mother, ,, Mrs. William Wootton. U bride also will be the guest of honor at a ehower on Thursday evening atj the home of Mrs. George. W. Dent oni Storage Company Miss Winifred McDonough and Mias Rose McDonough have returned from a visit to Los Angeles and San Francisco, Cal. - e 1 The Misses Ruth and Esther Daughby Miss Betty members of the Entre Nous club this erty, accompanied tha afternoon at the Newhouse hoted. The Morehe&d, will return the last Inof Neranch luncheon table is graced by a wicker week from the ONeil been the guests basket of deep yellow marigold v As- vada, where they have Jeff of Mr. and Mrs. James P. ONeil, for sisting the hostess is Mrs. J. R.Memthe past month.e e e , and Mrs.. Oliver Meredith, Jr, bers of ths club arc Mrs. Arthur M. N. Mrs. E. Ballard, formerly Mias Bailey, Mrs. Max Beaver, Mrs. 8. M. Madeline Danqulre, a recent bride, has Cofman, Mrs. E. H. Chapman, Mrs. Z. Foracutt, Mrs. Bert Fox, Mrs. R. J. left with her husband . for an extended easti They will later Jeffs, Mrs. A. R. Meredith, Jr., Mrs trip through the their home, Stevengo to Indiana toe make G. W. Morgan and Mrs e son. Guests exclusive of the members A. Moss and Mrs. Mr. Robert and are Mrs. H. K. Scheller and Mrs. P. little daughter, June, accompanied by W. Madison. Mrs. Moss mother, Mrs. M. W, Earl, Miss Margaret OBrien entertained of Salt Lake, are spending their vacathe members of the Young Ladles tion at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John . , Sodality of the Cathedral of Madeline F, Lee, at Rexburg. Ida. yesterday afternoon at the O'Brien Miss Frances Mandell, who for the country home In the Cottonwoods. Ths rooms were effectively decorated with past month has beet) at Fort D. A, Garden flower. The hostess waa as- Russell to visit her brother and sister, sisted by her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth CapL and Mrs. Harold C. Mandell, will return to 8alt Lake next week. OBrien. E.-M- u see Fashions For Americans Draped skirts of on sort or skirt proces.usually lead the " Severely plain, sion in all style straight Una models are .legitimately classed with sports apparel, and Jvold sway to the exclusion of practically anything else during summer; cooler weather and mors or less formal social, funetiona make the dressy sep' arate skirt a favorites The sketgh offer a design for a charming model featuring a narrow underneath section with graduated tunic and deep yoke. The yoke of self fabric Is richly, embroidered In contrasting color.- For this embroidery, beads, heavy silk floss, wool or chenille may he used. The skirt fastens at tha. left side. Satin In any preferred color; crepe meteor, crepe de Chine, toffeta or .one 'of the soft wool fabrics may. be used for a skirt of this type with very good effect. A smart separate blouse of sheer material rounds out a satisfactory afternoon froek. Fringe Is one of the popular skirt trimmings. Tarts designers - prefer fringe that is practically skirt length, a narrow yoke serving ad the foundation to which the1 fringe is attached, with narrow underneath skirt of self or contrasting color.. Among the newest fringes one formed of lengths of sillf cord finished at the' end with tiny Very knojie or acorha Is effective narrow ribbon Is also used to form fringe of various width Ths influence of the war la notice-- able In Wool fabric skirts, plaids of ths Kilties being especially popular. One novelty recently shown is a blue poplin striped to represent the ribbon of the Croix ds Guerre. WcK Second Sooth 'Street. Salt Lake City, Utah, Waa. 73 and Waa. 713. rbone e Mrs. Mat Rumph'ls entertaining the seen their neat over PeterP Peter shook his head, pfou probably wouldnt see It anyway, declared It lehtgh ,,!up, aqd Jeny Wren. those loaves are so thick that they hide it It's a regular lltttle basket fastened In a fork near ths end of a branch, and It la woven almost as nicely as la ths nest of Goldyhe Oriole. ' "Whats Next storys More Trouble From Sally Sly. (Copyright, 1918, by T. W. Burgess). , CORN PIODlCTS P.ktaillt umm COMPANY Mew York A real cotk 'book. Sixty eijlxt -- page of splendid, practical recipe. Write ns today for the new Cor Pre-dnCook Book. ets i VtMwrA act oil for cooking and salads The Old Gardener Says: affords some helpful light. In his practice among the physicalwas ly and mentally eick Dr. Lorand instruck by the fact that under the fluence of fewer or mania there sometimes Is an extraordinary heightening ordiof the Intelligence. Persons narily dull become bright and Imaginative, even shotoing unsuspected creative power. Or, as Dr. Lorand spe- t cifically report: I have In my possession a wonderful pen drawing by en Insane man whom I observed la the asylum of Nizza. Hie mind waa so wsak that I could - keep up no conversation whatever with him. When, however, he became excited he waa able to' make the most beautiful drawings; for example, heads of children ideally beautiful with curly hair. Draped P Idris Featured for Fall. ' And: In eubjecte with low mentality a high fever may sometimes produce very beneficial results in Improving their mental development. A very gtupld young man who could not be made to comprehend even the relation of an adjective to its noun happened to become affected with a malignant fever. -- A few days work to account for the augmenting of study power through Interest For it has been experimentally shown that Interest, like fever and mani. If in less degree, raises the temperature and stimulates the circulation. That' is, when one Is Interested the blood flows more freely to the brain, and the latter therefore functions more actively. Contrariwise, as Interest wanes' the circulation through the brain grows more and more 'Sluggish. .It then becomes correspondingly more difficult not merely to think but to pay attention. Until finally, a sufficiently anaemic condition being developed In the brain. student nods over his book and mayhap falls fast asleep. Which, Incidentally, helps us to understand why many eminent men. enthusiasts In their work, sleep very little. Their intense Interest keeps their bralt vortex flushed with blood l And thus maintains rigor, while at the same time enabling them to Into awake far the habitually keep night. (Copyright, 1819, by the Associated Newspapers) thelr-menta- frame now for planting seed, because with the glass put on after the weather gets a little cold the plants will keep right on growing until long after the outside garden Is cut down. If kind you do not object to the loose-leof lettuce like Grand Rapids, you can get a supply very quickly, and by making one or two sowings will have let-- 1 tuce of your own' long after your neighbors find themselves obliged to depend upon the green grocer. af ! Buttons For Soldiers . ... The announcement was made connection with arrangements for the "welcome home telebratlon to be held at Logan next Wednesday, that victory buttons will be distributed to returned, soldiers iif Cache county at the army recruiting station at Logan during the celebration. Captain Frank C. Bird, of the Salt Lake 'recruiting station, will distribute buttons to men who present their discharge papers In -- HAPPEN O Al'farr IS. . Copyright, 181. New Era Features. French gain at 1814. gain on wide. front; . Russians advance Russia completes mobilization and Verdun in Carpathians defeating Germans Invades East Prussia . . . Liege and 20, M0 civilians Turks French forces evicted forts fall Lille working on Ger32 miles within Alsace, Saarburg man heldfrom French farms. . High evacuated by Teutons German fleet sighted off Heligoland 1917. . . . President Wilson issues PHIT .... i U. S citizens to Hoover urges per capita saving of proclamation urging remain "neutral in thought as well pound of flour per week aa in action" . . . Emperor America to return separate reply to Francis Joseph of Austria 84 years Pope's peace tiled . .111 air men drop 2S.OUO pounds of ezplosives old . .L-- , . 1915. General German bases that Germans capture Kovno and 400 Pershing in Paris antroOnces war. will blows" hard win cannon, Vilna being evacuated, "only whole Russian army threatened ms. . . . Zeppelins kill 10; wound 36 on outskirts Rrltish drive forward on of London Venizelos again Greek premier. front in Rlanders, gain 2 000 yards . . . Czechs in Siberia call on 1915. , . , Germans re Allies for aid New attack nets Allied duce national bread ration SONGSTER. ALL-DA- Proper Food Makes Health and Stren&th . - mrib, LfctflS OF Tells How She Was Made Well by Lydia EL Pink- -' hams Vegetable Compound.. Brooklyn, N. Y., "For one year I was miserable from a displacement, which caused open- - n conera! dition with head-achand pains in my side. My cistcr induced me to try Lydia E.Finkharas run-dow- Com- Vegetable I found I. -' knows or by this later he was able to speak very good too much to know that it Is Latin, without .applying thought to it, and in conversation he subJICt to any easy study particularly developed Ideas such as never came to in which- one Is. keenly Interested. him before. la Now, In fever and mania there la Commonly it la said .that tht always a quickening of the circulaattention promote cause tion of the blood, as well as a rise In This means that the temperature. power. Which la true enough, so far as it blood supply to the brain is more abundant than usual. Lorand believes goes. It does not explain, however, that herein we have the explanation to think of the Increased the Ability raises Interest why Intelligence temporIt you are fond of lettuce and want as well ax the ability to pay attention. arily shown. Undoubtedly he la right. And un- to have a supply on hand lasting unOn this point an observaUon by Dr. Arnold Lorand, a European savant, doubtedly the 'same mechanism is at til Thanksgiving at least! use your cold on ths in a map!'" tre OVER of Farmer Brown's door- Vlreo lived the Redeye yard his mate.. Peter little and Babbit knew that they had a nest Jenny ,Wren had told thre so.becauite He would have guessed It him anyway, because. Redeye spent so much time In that tree. No matter what hour of the day Peter visited the Old Orchard he heard Redeye singing over in the maple tree. He thought 'to himself that if song Is riuod. Your grocer sells Mazola at1 about half the cost of the best Olive Oil- And. the most suspicious palate accepts Mazola as the very finest olive oil in dressings. Prove this, yourself. Follow your usual recipe for French Dressing, Mayonnaise or Cooked Mayonnaise. Everybody - ' - v (For The News by Hi Addington Bruce.) -- AN lit!, on ths ISth of August five women, accused of witchcraft were hanged at Salem, Mass. During ths spring add summer of that year a hysterical wave of- superstition swept the Massachusetts- colony and charges of witchcraft were made against several hundred Nineteen . were persons. hanged, and one unfortunate victim was pressed to death. Tne phobia forand in tunately was of short duration, the succeeding winter there was a general return to common sense and the for witchcraft was. abolpunishment' ished. On the' ISth of August. In 1800, James Lenox, philanthropist and founder of the Lenox Library in New York City, was born. .In 1812, on the ISth of August, the battle between the U. 8. 8. Constitution and the British, ship Guerrlere The Constitution, under took place. the Captain Isaac Hull, captured forty Guerrlere. after an engagement of minutes. This battle was tlm first tiayal engagement between the United States and Great Britain In the war of 1812, and the victory waa a sensational event both In this country and abroad. The Constitution ranks as the most famous ship in the1- United States navy. She was built at Boston, and launched in 1787. In 1880 the navy department condemned the ship and ordered her to be broken up. Largely owing to Oliver Wendell Holmes poem of protest upon this occasion "Old Ironsides great popular feeling waa aroused and the his- (ortcal old Constitution was taved and recommissioned as a school ship. In 1814, on the 19th.of August, British forces landed in Chesapeake Bay and commenced their ' march to Washington. 'On thelBth of August, 1847, the battle of Contreras, Mexico, was fought. General Scotr was In command of 8,000 United States troops against General Valencias Mexican forces of 4,000. The conflict, which lasted throughout the night and into the following morning, resulted In a decisive American victory. Why Interest Helps . y t It made off asked Peter. Strips of bark, plant down, spt- deris web, grass, and pieces of pa per, replied Jenny. Thats a funny thing about Redeye, he dearly loves a piece pf paper In his nest Hes as fussy about having a scrap of paper as Cresty the Flycatcher is about having a piece of snakeskln. I had Just a peep in to that neet a few days ago, and unless I am greatly mistaken Bally 81 y. the Cowblrd (las greatly Imposed on the Redeyes. I am certain I saw ons of her eggs in their nest." kin-oth- er I . FlffiprOOl RgySBT JJTALIANS accustomed to the best olive oil j now prefer Mazola? TOMORROW. N Rates will leave tomorrow for Los Angelos, Mn -- it me very much and snch a splendid tonic thet I am recommending it to any woman no similar troubles. Mrs. Elsie G. Lewis, 30 emon Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Such conditions as Mrs. Lewis gnt ferea from may bo cr.used by a fall or n s general weakened condition of the system, and the most successful remedy to restore strength muscles and tissue and bring about tja normal healthy condition hae proved to be this famous root and herb medicine, Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. If you have disturbing symptoms you lo not understand write Lydia 11. Jmk-laMedicine, Co., Lynn, Mas4, The result of their 40 years e,.pcrience U at four service. i run-dow- m Rcslcvc Was a Little Fellow of About the Size of One of the an expression of happlneas Redeye must be the happiest of all birds. Uedeyewas a little fellow of about the size of one of the Warblers and quite as modestly dressed a any of Peters acquaintances. The crown of his head a as gray with a little blackish border. Underneath- - he was white For the rest, he was dressed In light olive green. The first time he came down near enough for Peter to see him well, he understood why he Is- - called Kedeve. His eyes were red. Yes, sir, his eves were red, was and this fact alone enough to distinguish him from any other members of his family. , But It'Wasnt often that Redeye came down so near the ground that Peter could see his dyes. He preferred to spend most of his time In the tree tops, and Peter only got of him now and then. But glimpses If he didnt sfa him often, it was less often that h failed to hear him "I dont see when Redeye finds time to eat, declared Peter ss he listened to the seemingly unending song In the maple tree. Redeye believes In singing while he works, said Jenny Wren. For my part, I should think hed wear his throat otit. Just listening to him make niv own throat sore. When other birds sing they dont do anything e'sf, but Redeve sings all the time he ,ls hunting hi meals, and only stops long enough to swallow a worm or a bug when he finds It. Just as soon as It Is down he begins to sing again while he hunts for another. 1 must Sav for the that thby are mighty good nest build ii. y ' Include in your diet building food that creates no trouble in digestion such, a food' as Cut out food and drink, that disagree or that do not have full nourishing Value. Do these two things and you have helped yourself wonderfully toward that mental and physical snap so requisite to success and comfort, "There's & Reason" 1' : ' V i 1 , . . . , i j |