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Show poor cop SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH COLOR S BIG PART IN HOME SETTING At least 50 per cent of the heme Interiors 1 have seen are drab and declares the color con colorless, sultant for one of Mew Englands manufacturers of dyes and tints. I do not mean. said the color expert, that these homes lack charac-- . ter and hospitality. They simply do not have sparkle or personality that the right use of color gives a home to inspire cheerfulness. A faded curtain or cushion or a dull scarf or bedspread will kill the ' livableness of a room. Such things are inexcusable in these days of inexpensive tints and dyes that can. be used so simp'.y. She believes that miracles can be performed with the correct use of color. Color can change an individuals personality. It can make a room seem larger or smaller, darker or lighter, cool or warm, dignified or frivolous, quiet or vivacious, restful or disturbing, cheerful or depressing. Color harmony is the most im portant feature of the decorative scheme. It is the least expensive and the most effective means of expression. Color has an emotional value to which the sense of sight responds as the ear to music. Each coior has some definite quality. For instance, blue is a cool, re-- . ceding color which makes a room seem larger, possibly because of its identity with the sky. It induces restraint and repose. Green is na-- . ture's color, restful to tired spirits and easy on tired eyes. It brings in the spacious coolness of the outdoors. Yellow is the color of sunshine. It is the great color and is often used in decorating dark city rooms which do not have a full measure of sunlight. Red and orange are exciting and aggressive colors. These are dangerous in large quantities. Red makes objects appear nearer than they are. By actual test this color can make a room seem 30 per cent larger than the same room n blue. Color plays a bigger part in our lives than we realize and many of us would be happier if we paid more attention to color harmony. light-givin- g Remember Gloves Must Always Be Immaculate Light gloves, especially, must be clean to give one that This is easy if the appearance. gloves are washable. Just squeeze them out every night or so when you do your stockings. Try this way: Make rich suds with mild, neutral soap flakes, always keeping the water lukewarm or cool. Put on the gloves nnd wash just as if you were washing your hands. If there are stubborn spots of soil, gently work dry soap flakes into the leather and continue washing. If the suds get dirty use a fresh lot of suds. (Chamois and doeskin gloves need not be put on the hands, just souse them around in the suds as you would a blanket). Remove the gloves by gently rolling them from the wrists and rinse in clear water, lukewarm or cool, to remove particles of dirt. Then work them around in light suds of mild soap flakes. Leaving a little mild soap in the gloves helps to keep the leather pliable. Squeeze out the moisture. Dont twist, and roll in a dry turkish towel to remove excess moisture. Unroll at once, blow into shape and dry at moderate temperature. Dont freeze or put near excessive heat While slightly damp soften the gloves by gently stretching and working the leather between the fingers. Then finish the drying. d The SILVER FLUTE By Lida Larrimore , Company WNU Service. Macraa-Smit- h SYNOPSIS On her eighteenth birthday, Barbara, motherless daughter of Christopher Thorne, artist, awakes with anticipation of the joys of the day. She receives a birthday ring from Bruce MacLain, young artist friend of the family, but more than friend to Bar- g bara. Barbara and Bruce go picknick-lnon the sands at Provincetown. He tells her a story of a gypsy boy, a little gypsy girl whom he loves, and the song of a silver flute. She knows It is her own love tale. Her happiness turns to sorrow when she returns home to learn her father has been drowned. Relatives arrive and take charge of things. Having been almost a mother to the others, Barbara cannot think of their separation, Kits sensitive nature bruised in Uncle Herberts household y cousins, and by his Gay spoiled by her association with silly Aunt Lola. Bruce urges immediate marriage, but that would mean separation. Desperate, the four children plot to run away to Barbaras Uncle Stephen Drake, godfather, whom they have never seen. - rough-and-read- CHAPTER V Continued Henry stood beside Stephen, holding his dinner coat with the sleeves arranged just so. Mister Stephen was taking great pains with the tie, he thought, doing it over and over, which wasn't his usual way. Youd think he was going courting. Perhaps Sarah was right. Perhaps Mister Stephen was going to marry that pale Miss Emily Trent. Looked like It, inviting her and her father for dinner tonight and tying his tie five times. Well, he wished them joy. How does it look? Stephen asked, patting the neat silk bow. "Splendid, sir." No hint of what he was thinking appeared in Henrys parchment face. Ill take your word for it, Henry. Stephen smiled and slipped his arms Into the coat. Have you everything, sir? Henry Mister Stephen felt responsible. wasnt himself tonight. When a man was thinking of marriage, he was apt to be absent-mindeEverythings Then Ill be getting downstairs. Henry, spare and neat and elderly, moved with measured tread toward the door. Alone In the room, Stephen was conscious of irritation. Was he in love with Emily Trent? He considered th question gravely. He admired her very much, enjoyed being with her. There Was, in Emily, a quality of serenity as rare as it was charming. He saw her moving through his house, always-serenand gracious, her head, with Its braids of light brown hair, lifted in the gently dignified way he admired. The picture pleased him. But he wasnt in love with her, not love as the poets described It, a sweet insanity, a madness of the senses. It was not youthful ardor which had caused his difficulty with the tie. Nor was it the fear of being refused. He was confident that Emily would accept his offer of marriage. Why not? She was well over thirty. And living alone with her father was certainly not too pleasant Professor Trent, a former Instructor at the university, was an eccentric old chap who devoted his time to translating the more obscure Greek and Latin poets. Her path through life had not been strewn with roses. She and her father lived a pinched sort of existence In a small apartment on the outer fringe of Rittenhouse square. He could do a great deal for Emily. And he knew that she admired him, even loved him perhaps, in her gentle dignified way. Emily would accept him. He was quite certain of that. No, it was not youthful ardor or fear of being refused which caused his present uneasiness. It was, he admitted it reluctantly, a fantastic dread d of changes. His life was and satisfying. He enjoyed his work In the law firm of Van Wyck, Penrose, and Drake, an old established firm in which his grandfather had been the faoriginal Drake. Aunt Edith, his thers widowed sister, capably managed his house. He had his books, his friendships, an occasional concert or play, golf or riding when he felt the need of exercising out of doors. He was content with things as they were. But would he continue to be content? He was getting on forty his last birthday. An elderly bachelor, he had observed, was a pathetic sort of sixty-eigh- t figure. Aunt Edith was His sister Natalie, twelve years younger than he, was married. He didnt want to be left alone in the house which had sheltered three generations of Drakes. Nor did he want things changed. Emily was the one woman of his acquaintance who, he felt, would make no attempt to reorganize his life. Did this dread of change moan he was getting old? Stephen crossed to the wardrobe mirror and gravely inspected himself.' He was not unattractive, he decided. It was strange that he had never known a real romance. He had a greater capacity for It than even his most Intimate friends suspected. But only once in his life had he had a glimpse of romance. His eyes turned to the painting above the fireplace. She had never known how ardently he loved her. A Drake Is always a gentleman and her husband had been his friend. She, perhaps, vas the true reason why he had never known a real romance. He had looked "or her, and never found her, in the vmen be had known. Stephen walked to the fireplace and, crossing his arms on the mantel, looked Pile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pile Ointment Q. R. (Quick Relief) Pile Ointment is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long afflicted, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this pile ointment on the market for sale, it was put to the acid test in both mild and severe cases, never failing to produce wonderful results. If you are. troubled with piles, Get Q. R. do not experiment. Pile Ointment. If your druggist does not carry it in stock, fill out the blank below and mail it to Q. R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah Q. R. Co., Gentlemen : Inclosed find fl.OO P. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. R. Pile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to Name P. O. Address.. On conditions that if I am not satisfied with results obtained, I am to receive money back upon returning tube to your J nsti7 Theres nothing like s good nights To make a person smite, site. True optimism comes from doing thing, we find worth while. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY door. Of course not Why? Stephen, again, was conscious of irritation. You were so long coming down.. Natalie and Robert are here. I supposed they were. I heard the piano. Aunt Edith was uneasy, too, he thought As always, he found It diffi- - uprem The giant cactus begins to beat at the age of fifty and is not fully grown until it reaches the age of one hundred years. ' fruit every bride Q FisCOURSE supposed to look her loveliest at her own wedding. Which is a perfectly good reason why the right choice of the right veil and headdress is so ship-shap- ... Sally Sez By CHERIE NICHOLAS up at the girl with the wind blowing her skirt against her bare brown legs. How lovely she had been. That was a Almost eighteen long time since. years. He had not seen her since. He knew that she was dead. He had never forgotten her vivid face, her soft brown hair, the dimple that woke when she smiled. . . . A knock at the door brought him back from the past Come in, he called. The intruder was Aunt Edith. She was a large, handsome woman who had been known in her youth as beautiful Edith Drake. But that, too, was a long time ago. Aunt Edith, now, was comfortably stout with waved white hair, the handsome Drake nose and a fair smooth complexion. She was a Drake by birth and a Van That fortunate Wyck by marriage. combination assured her of a prominent place on patroness lists and the boards of charitable organizations. Her customary manner of assurance was somewhat shaken tonight. You aren't 111, are you, Stephen? she asked when she had closed the ... well-ordere- Bridal Veils in Versatile Mood vastly important, for they can make or mar the picture. The fad that designers, when it comes to bridal .veils, are in a mood particularly this season Is a good omen. It means that modern brides are being veiled to type rather than following prescribed rules. The group pictured shows how very versatile present-da- y brides are being veiled. The exquisite ensemble on the seated figure at the top bespeaks a re&ent gesture among designers toward crowning the bride with little beret fantasies which depart from the regulation fitted lace or tulle cap versions. The circular flare of tulle about the face and at the back is perfectly charming. The r veil with Its rounded silhouette is an innovation. Not only are these beret arrangements in vogue, but some of the most fashionable brides of the season are wearing the most ravishing little hats of tulle with visorlike brims, also of tulle, a wreathlet of orange blossoms encircling the shallow crown, the veil draped with consummate art to fall over the shoulders en train. Then, too, In tune with this new theme of tulle hats with a brim, little sets are offered at smart shops, which cater to brides, which include enchanting flower toques, either of roses and petals or of orange blossoms and buds, with muffs made of the same, the newest idea being for the muff to be The voluminous veil is worked to fall in graceful billowy masses over this flower headpiece and the long train of the d Perhaps Mister Stephen Was Going to Marry That Pale Miss Emily Trent. cult to discuss Intimate matters with Annt Edith. The Drakes were not demonstrative. They lived within themselves. Are you going to marry Emily Trent? she asked after a moment of silence. I havent asked her. But yon mean to." Before dinner tonight. Stephen knew a moment of panic. He wished that he might recall the words. Too late. He had committed himself. Emily Is a sweet unselfish girl. She will make yon a suitable wife. It neednt change things," he said, wanting to reassure her, wanting desThis perately to reassure himself. will always be your home." Thank you, my dear. Aunt Edith drew his head down to the level of her lips and lightly kissed his brow. I hope you will be happy. The kiss embarrassed them both. They heard, with mutual relief, the sound of a car in the drive. Annt Edith Theres Thomas. We must go turned toward the door. three-quarte- heart-shape- SLEEVELESS COATS, CHIC ENSEMBLES The coming summer season, as well as this spring, will see the success of ensembles composed of contrasting coats and dresses, whether the latter down at once. be In plain fabrics or in prints. HowThe followed her slowly. Stephen ever, this new type of ensemble will was feeling of panic returned. That be different from the combinaabsurd, he told himself. He hadnt tionentirely which has been so much in evibeen forced into this situation. It was dence this last season, and which something he wanted to do. But the usually consisted of a plain coat lined In of spite panic persisted with print and matching the dress emsailor a reason. He felt like worn beneath. The new coat will not barking upon a strange uncharted sea. only be in a contrasting material and color from the dress but will be treatThis Is a charming room,1 ed as an entirely separate Item. voice. said in her gentle Patou has short gray coats A bit Im afraid. worm over raven-blu- e pearl dresses. Jenny was He the recede. felt panic Stephen has a vivid and carrot-re- d soothed by Emilys serenity. She was which she green over black coat, places rayon almost pretty tonight, he thought, in satin dresses. lacquered cream-colorelace he the particularly Sleeveless coats are sponsored by admired, her only ornament a coral leading dressmakers to give more imrose on a slender golden chain. to the full contrasting sleeves Its perfect, Emily continued. I portance she smiled to let of the dress. should hate you him know that she could never, under if you Designers Now Are Using any circumstances, hate him should change it in any way. Plain and Printed Linen A perfect setting for you, Stephen There already has been discussion said softly. That, at least, was true. about the importance of the printed The drawing room with its paneled worn with the monotone jacket, crepe walls, its rosewood and silver-greecrepe dress, and of the printed crepe a was brocade, perfect setting for accent Repeating this idea, but givBut he wouldnt ask her to Emily. ing It a fresher appeal, designers are marry him here. He would take her now using printed linen. into the conservatory. That would The dress In solid color that introplease her, he thought, smiling with duces printed linen as a trimming is masculine tolerance for if womans roin summery mood, the linen light also mantic whims. The orange trees were and bright, the dress in erepy or heavy In bloom. That would be are sheer. as well as A Thank you, Stephen." faint flush smart These sincepractical the linen is washfashions, crept Into her cheeks. You say nice able and the trimmings are usually do things so nicely. tachable. Did he mean anything by that? she wondered, frantic with hope and fear. If Stephen asked her to marry him it Chicken Foot Weave Used would make up fob everything; the in All Parts of Costume girlhood she had missed, the pinching Of course you are, or ought to be, and contriving, being patient with Fathoroughly familiar with that material ther when she wanted to scream and hit of the season called Le But she fly into millions of pieces. In all of its variation's. This must be calm. She knew that her chicken foot weave, be it in wool, silk was her greatest charm or what not, works tranquility up into costumes for Stephen. She spoke of the con- for from the top coat to everything cert they were to attend' this evening the bottom layer of lingerie next to the after dinner. skin. LABES 50 for $1.00 Post Paid Fits all Gillette Type Razors Money refunded if not satisfactory. COOMBS DRUG CO. Salt Lake City, Utah The inspiring thought about these lovely flower ensembles is that one need not take the responsibility and burden of working out these, beguiling fantasties at home, for they are available at most any milliner shop or stores which make a specialty of outfitting brides with veils and headdresses. Flower hats and muffs in different colors for the bridesmaids complete the picture.The alluring fitted lace cap and veil posed on the seated figure below In the picture is just such as brides-to-b- e dream of when . they plan their trousseaux. The f distinguishing feature about this veil Is that the rarely beautiful lace Is inset, Instead of the usual border arrangement. There Is something very interesting to tell about the veil on the bride standing to the left. The veil Is made in two sections, so that after the ceremony the bride can remove the long train, if she so desires, without interfering with the youthful capelike portion which so becomingly envelops her shoulders In a mist of tulle. Thus she can move among her guests after the ceremony with perfect freedom. The better shops are 3 this season. showing these For the bride who dotes on the un-- ' usual, the veil on the standing figure centered to the right should prove an, attraction. It is novel because of the high Medici pleated collar which so handsomely defines the neckline. gown. d THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY Intermountain sunshine and Intermountain rain Put natures heathful vita mines In Intermountain grain. Intermountain millers Grind Intermountain flour Intermountain salesmen Sell sacks of it each hour Intermountain pastures Feed Intermountain kine, Intermountain sheep and Iambs, Intermountain swine. Intermountain children Thrive on Intermountain foods. Try them for your family; Theres nothing just as good'. This Intermountain ditty I could spin another hour. Buying Intermountain goods Means Intermountain power! EMMA, R COLEMAN. Kexburg. Idaho. We carry big words in our head for the expression of our ideas, and short words in our heart for the . expression of our emotions. .SPERE TENT & AWNING ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR HAIR duo-veil- ' . 1933, Western Newspaper Union. CO. Tents Awnings Camping Supplies Everything In Canvas Goods Salt Lake City 270 S. W. Temple GIL AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Cod liver oil really comes from several different kinds of fish, such as haddock, pollack, hake, cusk, as well as from cod. mmmmm JERSEY GOLF FROCK Oil from the porpoise and black fish has been found especially good for lubricating delicate mechan-- ; isms. By CIIERIE NICHOLAS NEW MOTOR OIL Sold with a Money Back Guarantee clear-thinkin- g The origin of Yankee Doodle seems to be obscure, but it is thought that both music and words came from the Dutch. 4 A d -V- Y', ' ';ft ' n (TO BE CONTINUED,! . I There Is a new jersey which has all th? appearance of being The very dress pictured is made of this jersey, in bright blue. It has been given a very attractive styling. It is adroitly tucked about the hips so as to achieve slenderizing lines. The draw-strinneckline Is aD; outstanding touch. The little rope strands form the girdle which is fast ened with a wooden buckle. hand-knitte- d good-lookin- g g Linen Suit in Vogue ; Linen suits are going to have an im portant place in summer, wardrobes this year. You now can byy .linen suiting that Is nncrnshable' and. It, comes in dark, practical colors, InclucF lng black. Please send me full details about the new Frigidaire that uses no more current than one electric light bulb, and also the super models. w. H. BINTS CO. SALT LAKE CITY Bees, wandering from flower to .flower, will transmit the bacteria that causes fir blight. An nn per week will be paid for the best .article on Why you made should use Intermountain Goods' Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to In- -' termountain Products Column. P. O. Box 1555, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column you will receive check for Week No. 2324 W.N.U. Balt Lake City |