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Show MY MOTHERS WEDDING SHAWL By ANNE CAMPBELL MOTHERS Ml' fine wedding shawl was Intermountain News Briefly told for Busy Readers ro trade gain shown A LCALA ZAMORA (third from left), president of the Spanish republic, escorted by (in white robes), Baja of Xauen, as he dedicated the new Spanish highway In Morocco during his recent visit to the Spanish protectorate. MUST PAY TAX WORK ON OLD TRAIL li White cashmere, fringed and gay With Taisley border, a design Much liked in mothers day. In fancy I can see her stand, A bride in the old hall. Arranging with a practiced hand Her pretty wedding shawL CHECKS DELAYED MINES REEMPLOY MEN that hid Beneath her white silk dress. Below her chin, as she was bid. With careless happiness She tied her flower trimmed bonnet strings. And smiled to think her4all. Straight lover would, with whls perings, Admire her wedding shawL .ghe wore it over hoops Bor thirty years she has been gone, But I remember well The day I begged her try It on; The tale she had to tell years gone by. Of quaint, And all that could befall A little maid like me, ere I Might wear a wedding shawL shawl of memory brings her to my side. She often put it on for me, And posed with loving pride. It is a symbol of rich years We treasure most of all! The wives of sturdy pioneers Each wore a wedding shawl. It is a That I think of those young SOME SHRIMP DISHES shoulders graced With that light weight of wool, And all the hardships that she faced With faith so beautiful. . . . The fragrance of old gardens, skies, And days beyond recall. And mothers dream of Paradise Live In her wedding shawL Copyright. WNU Service. Slip-O- n Jacket more tasty than THERE is notiiing shrimp, but with the canned variety one may always be sure it is wholesome and ready to eat. Shrimps should be rinsed ns soon a3 taken from the can. Split down the back and remove the black- - streak, wash and drain and chill on ice if to be used as salad. Never retain the luice from the can. Shrimp Salad. Rinse and chill the shrimps and The place on crisp lettuce leaves. curled leaves of the head lettuce make a most attractive nest. Place five or six shrimps for each serving. For salad dressing prepare a snappy french dressing, adding a bit of chopped celery, a dash of Worcester shire sauce and a drop of tabasco. Serve the salad at once after pouring over the dressing, as it wilts the lettuce If allowed to stand. Another salad: the Arrange shrimps around a mound of mayonnaise in the center, on lettuce. On top of the mayonnaise place a ring of green pepper; In the ring, straight up, stick a tuft of tender celery tips; around the pepper on the mayonnaise place six or eight capers. Serve from the table. Among the attractive timely suggestions for winter wear Is this velvet llp-oJacket trimmed at the neck 'with gold, red and brown velvet ribbon. n Shrimp Fricassee. Rinse and prepare two cans of shrimps. Prepare a pint of white sauce to which a few dashes of cayenne Is added; when boiling hot and smooth add the shrimps, broken Into small pieces, a few drops of Worcestershire sauce. Remove from the fire, add one egg yolk beaten and several spoonfuls of thick cream, add one teaspoonful of lemon Juice and serve on triangles of toast. If the cream Is sour the lemon juice may be omitted. Shrimp Wiggle. Sift two cans of shrimps Into two cupfuls of white sauce. When well heated through pour over rounds of hot buttered toast Sprinkle over each a few hot seasoned pens and serve. One may arrange the toast around the platter and have the peas In a mound in the center. . 1933. Western Newspaper Union. wmjfTEanw ment. He founded aristocracy. Hippocrates was also a leader of government. He discovered hypocrisy. Columbus sailors wanted to mutiny. Columbus had one deaf ear which he turned toward the sailors and went on. wheat-growin- The gulf stream rises in the Gulf of .Mexico, flows up the Mississippi river, through the Great Lakes and the SL Lawrence river, then across the Atlantic ocean and the Medlterraneon sea and up the Nile before being lost in the sands of the Sahara desert. The Constitution may be changed by a process called depression. Bismarck believed In a foreign icy of beef and Iron. ($. pol- WNU Sendee. 1933. Bel! Syndicate. IGraphicGolf So-uK6 My ambition is to work on a paper as a reproof reader. t6 CLUB useful, in Short Chip news- Shots. fcAVY SOue BONERS are actual humorous found in examination papers, essays, etc., by teachers. prevents tid-bi- ts Romeo and Mississippi. Juliet discovered the Aristotle was a leader of govern .CUTTinS TURF. SHORT SHAFTED CLUB FOR (CHIP SHOTS a club that a putter Is useful. Here the ball can be lofted d of the for approximately distance and allowed to run the rest of the way. While the star golfer generally uses a mashie or similar club for this shot, the average player would be safer with a less forceful and less demanding implement. Just the proper touch Is needed here to send the ball accurately to the vicinity of the pin. A small mistake in the swing is likely to land the club-heaIn the turf and ruin the shot. A short shafted club is particularly suitThe short ed for such situations. shaft permits standing near the ball and almost the same mechanics are employed as In playing a long putt. SHORT chip shifts ON can be played like one-thir- BEDTIME STORY FOR CHILDREN By THORNTON W. BURGESS REDDY FINDS OUT WHAT HE WANTS TO KNOW Mink. Who said that? I certainly If anyone said that they doni know much about Jerry Muskrat. Those fresh-watclams are only a side dish with Jerry. If he depended on those for all his food he wouldn't last long. He would starve. How stupid of me!exclaimed How very stupid of me to Reddy. make such a remark. Now I think ot It, I often have seen Jerry bring up a Illy root from the bottom of the Smll ing Pool, and eat it. If you havent youve been blind,' ' declared Billy Mink. He eats lllj roots and other roots growing In and the stems of some of the plants. And he likes other things when he can get them. What? asked Reddy In a verj matter of fact tone. Vegetables from Farmer Browns garden, replied Billy grinning broadIt Is a wonder you never have ly. happened to meet Jerry on his way there or back. , If there Is any one thing Jerry likes it Is carrots. Hell take a long chance to get some. Well, we all take long chances to get what we like, dont we? said Reddy, yawning as If he had quite lost Interest in the subject Its a nice day, isnt it? I think I will trot along and look for a dinner. Seeing you enjoy that fish so has made me hungry. Reddy nodded to Billy Mink and trotted off toward , the Green Forest. Billy Mink stopped eating long enough to watch him out of sight and on Billys small brown face was a Now what was that puzzled frown. fellow after? muttered Billy. Why U he so Interested In Jerry Muskrats food? It is for no good purpose, Ill I wonder If I said any be bound. thing I shouldnt have. I guess the next time I see Jerry Muskrat Pll drop him a hint that Reddy Fox Is taking a sudden Interest In what be eats. As for Reddy Fox, he turned as soon as he was out of sight of Billy Mink and with a satisfied chuckle made straight for his home in the Old Pas ture. He had found out what he wanted to know and now he wanted to think It over and plan a little. didnt. d er asked Reddy wanted to know Just what kinds of food Jerry Muskrat likes best, Reddy pretended not to bear. He let his tongue run on Just as if he hadnt heard that question at all That is sometimes a handy way of avoiding unpleasant questions or questions that you would rather not an- WHENwhyBillyhe Mink swer. Now that you mention that Jerry is fond of mussels, I remember having seen him sitting on the Big Rock openIt is funny ing them," said Reddy. I shouldnt have remembered that. Ive often seen the empty shells in the Who Said That Was All ths Food Demanded Jerry Muskrat Has? Billy Mink. water where Jerry had been having a feast. Do you eat them, Billy Mink? Not when there are fat trout to be had, laughed Billy, resuming his meal on one and talking between bites. It Is too much work to open those Clams. Jerry may have them all, for all I care. He doesnt seem Reddy laughed. to mind the trouble. I suppose I wouldnt If that was all the food I had. Who said that was all the Jerry Muskrat has? demanded food Billy , 1933, bjr T. W. Burgeie. WND Servlc. , Fashion predicts colored sandals or men, says catty Katie, and dollars to doughnuts it wont be long they will be having their eyebrows plucked and their chins lifted. be-or- , 1933, Bell Syndicate. WNU 8ervlce. He Didnt Did your new chauffeur turn out all right? No; pital thats why hes in the hos- SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Salt Lake City will issue $1,500,000 iu tax anticipation notes for 1934. The notes will pay 4 per cent interest and will be issued in $5,000 and $10, 000 denominations. They will be will payable January 16, 1935, and bear Interest on July 16, 1934, and on the maturity date. Sheepmen report NADA, UT. that snow on the northern slopes has become so crusted the sheep cannot travel without suffering from sore feet. Many smaller BEAVER, UT. herds of cattle within Beaver are being taken to nearby ranches to be wintered. ProSALT LAKE CITY, UT. cessing tax of $1.00 per hundred weight on all hogs slaughtered, save for the owners own consumption, went Into effect December 1 In line with the administrations policy of reducing the nations pork supply and helping the farmers. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. In 1931 more than 7 per cent of all eggs shipped to the New York City market came from Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Designation of the Old Mormon trail between Salt Lake and Henefer as a civil works project will be asked by the Utah Pioneer Trails and Landmarks association. g BOISE, IDA. Idaho farmers have failed to receive checks for acreage they have taken out of production under the administrations wheat program because county boards, as a rule, have failed to report to Washington on the amounts due individual farmers. BOISE, IDA. The mining situation in the Coeur dAlenes shows improvement over last June, Will H. Simons, state mine inspector, said on his return from a tour in which he noted particularly an increase in the number of miners with jobs and longer working periods for them. Between 300 and 400 men have been put to work by adding shifts, opening mines and extending operations, he said. Wages have been increased 50 cents a day and in some instances men are working five days a week instead of three. BOISE, IDA. Senators William E. Borah and J. P. Pope have begun to work individually with members of the public works board in the hope of securing an initial allocation of $2,000,000 to start construction of the Salmon river diversion, adjunct of the Boise project, estimated to cost $9,000,000. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Box Elder county, Utah, ranked thirty-secon- d among counties of the United States in the number of apricot trees of bearing age in 1930, according to a report of the census bureau. ranked county, Idaho, Canyon thirty-nintBox Elder county reported 16,073 trees, bearing 18,-3bushels, valued at $27,533. Canyon county reported 9454 bearing trees, from which was harvested 6676 bushels, valued at $12,341 SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Salt Lake led the list of western cities in department store business gains for November over a year ago. OGDEN, UT. A report made at a meeting at relief headquarters show's that more than one thousand Red Cross articles of clothing were given out in November. OGDEN, UT. The program of furnishing 940 undernourished and needy children with a hot meal each day in the Ogden city schools Is declared by school officials to be highly successful. This is financed by the federal civil works administra- 1933. Bell Syndicate. WND Service. Panama Canal Toll All commercial vessels using the Panama canal are required to pay toll. Rates are based upon the tonnage and the class of cargo carried. For the fiscal year of 1931-35,073 ships paid a total of $20,707,850 In tolls. From its opening on August 15, 1914, until the close of business June 30, 1932, 09,466 toll paying vessels had passed through the canal and the gross toll amounted to $292,804,830. Coming and Going at the Same Time tion. PROVO, UT. An erosion control project in the canyons east of Provo was approved by Utah county and Provo city at a joint session of the two commissions. A SALT LAKE CITY, UT. statistician and 28 assistants will begin in the near future to make a survey of unemployment in Utah, George A. Yager, state director of the federal reemployment service, has been authorized by Washington officials to employ the force. The authorization came from Walter Burr, assistant federal director of the reemployment service In Washington. The force will work In cooperation W'ith federal reemployment representatives throughout the state, and will compile records giving a complete survey of the unemThe survey Is ployment situation. believed to.be connected with President Roosevelts plans to ask congress for $5,375,000,000, Including a large sum for C W A work between March 1 and May 1. The unemployed, It is hoped, will be absorbed by the public works after May 1. structing. draining and gravel surfacing five miles of the highway between the Snake river and Lewisville In Jefferson county on a low hid of $51,617. BOISE, IDA. A call for 30 engl-neeand 70 assistants for work under the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey In Idaho has been issued by Ivan Crawford, Idaho ;rabllc works engineer. rs - d Servitors Still Valued on Farm More than 15,000,000 American horses and mules still hold their jobs on farms, and Wayne DInsmore foresees the return of these animals to first place In the esteem of good farmers, since men who stick to horses and mules, planning their work wisely, raise just as much crop at much less cost. Writing In Horse, Mr. Dinsmora observed, As a matter of fact, the horse and mule, as a chief source of power, never left the farm. Some decrease occurred. It Is true, but much less, so far as work animals actually In use are concerned, than Is generally supposed. In 1919 we had about 17,000,000 head of horses and mules at work in harness or under saddle on farms; In 1932 about 15,500,000 were so employed. This is a decrease of about 1,500,000 at work, due to an increase of tractors from 246,083 in 1920 to 920,210 in 1930, and of motor trucks from 139,169 In 1920 to 900.3S5 in 1930. Literary Digest. WHISPERED Great Complexion 5ecret ! . friend she TO her the secret of her flawless clear white skin. learned she Long ago that no cosmetic would hide blotches, pimples or sallowness. She found the secret of real in NR plexion beauty sRemTablets (Nature and cleansed J &...& edy).They cleared the eliminative tract corrected sluggish bowel action drove out the poisonous wastes. She felt better, too, full of pep, tingling with vitality. Try this mild, safe, dependable, Vx . 'jr $ corrective tonight. See your complexion improve, see headaches, dullness vanish. At al! druggists only 25c. Quick relief tor aoamd, vi ill C" PIMPLY SKIN soon improved and blotches cleared away by daily treatment with Salt Lake City Directory CRISMON & NICHOLS AND CHEMISTS ASSAYERS 1 8. West Office and Laboratory Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah. P. O, Box 1708. Mailing envelopes and price furnished on request. 229-23- Salt Lake Citys Revest Hotel h. BOISE, IDA. The state bureau of highways has awarded a contract to J. C. McGuire of Butte for con- and automotive engineer, demonstrated an HARRY HAETZ, race driver at the Central Park casino, New York, with its body completely reversed, in accordance with his Ideas concerning the incorporation- of aerodynamic principles into automobile design. His thoroughly revamped automobile, strange as It looks, promises to revolutionize motor car design in that It lowers wind resistance, accelerates speed and saves fueL Four-Foote- HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 1.50 Just opposite Mormon Tabernacle ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. v PILES Pile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Plies, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.PiEe Ointment Q. R. (Quick Relief) Pile Olnt- ment 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, do not experiment Get Q. R. 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 $1.00 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 i i |