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Show THE HER PAGE TWO. 9Y HK(.n HkKU IB, TOB1 sbe akarea aa apartmeatm H HI tw'i HOLM, alaa v.ith in tid I. Kt a stow Tkr rlarlu style TIM JAMIKlON aeallhy vhu ahowera ber with atteatloas fur a time. 1 ina leaves Iowa for eall few days, proraialair Tubi as soon mm he returns. The time stretches out and as word rniiiM from him. HILL, HKAM)T, aa old friend of Toby's, asks her to yo to dinner but she refuses, preferring to stay at home aaltiat to hear meeia 1 r from 1 im. WITH TIIK hTOKY CHAITKK XXI rpilElth was no time next day for Toby to sit at home waiting for from Tim Jamieson. At 8' 30 a call came from the Models' Lvncue. Marty Hiatt wanted Toby In jiose for some magazine Illustrations and the Job was to be on location " Toby knew wbat that meant making pictures outside the studio, some place where the background and surroundings were exactly what they were supposed to be Instead of studio props. Youre to be at Hiatt's studio ut 11 oclock." Sally told ber. NOW CO ON Yes. Youll need a thb summery dress not an evening drees, the sort you might put on on a summer afternoon It you wanted to be a little bit dreesed up. It should have ruffles or lace, something sort of frilly. The color doesnt matteT, bo long us its light. Have you like that?" Til get lt, Toby promised. Vhite shoes and light hose, of course. Then youll need a sweater that will photograph dark and a light skirt. That's alL Remember youre to be at the studio at 11. Toby said shed remember, and Ive got put dqwn the telephone. to have a frilly summer dress. she told Harriet. "Where on earth do you suppose I can find one? How about my flowered organdie?" Toby shook her head. "No, It Isnt supposed to be an evening dress. Its to wear in the afternoon. Ill have to buy something, I guess, but where can I And n dress like that at this time?" It was the last week In March too early for new summer dresses in the shops, months since the last from the year before had disappeared Thats the way," Harriet grumbled "They always want summer clothes In winter and winter ones any-thin- g Toby dressed hurriedly nnd set off on her shopping trip. She went to four stores before she found n dress that was summery-lookinwith short sleeves and frills at the neck. It was In the home frocks" too big but it could department be pinned over in the back. The dress was crisp and fresh and in a photograph it would look like a delicate voile or organdie. But the shopping had taken time. Toby, glancing at n clock on a building across the street, saw that sb had less than an hour to got back to the apartment, press the new dress, pack It with the other things she must take, and reach the studio. She did It. though. She stopped to buy fresh light hose and then rushed home. Five minutes before II oclock, carrying her suitcase, she pushed open the door of Hiatts studio. worse-for-we- ll TARTY her cheerfully. III "ii'are greeted you, Toby?" he. said. Early Aggie Graduate Named Research Head Dr James T Jardine, 19i6 graduate of the Utah State Agricultural college has just been appointed by Secretary H. A. Wallace as director of research for the United States department of agriculture, advised college officials were Thursday. Dr Jardme has served as chief of the office of experiment stations in the department since September 15, 1931, and will continue in this capacity. His additional assignment becomes effective immediately, the announcement said. As chief of the office of experiment stations and director of research Doctor Jardine will be responsible for three major activities. Ha will continue in charge of the office of experiment stations, which administers federal grants to the states and territories for the agricultural experiment stations, and coordinate this work with similar research of the department. As director of research for the department, he will cooper SISTER MARTS English. 3 6, In 1907 he became a special agent for the forest service. He was forest supervisor from 1908 to 1910 and inspector of grazing, in charge of the national forest range investigations and range surveys from 1910 to 1920, when he became director of the Oregon Ha Agricultural experiment station.comremained m this position until ing to the department of agriculture in 1931. Doctor Jardine has been selected from time to lime for immissions, government portant among these being a study of the Alaska in agricultural situation and a survey of the Land Grant colleges and universities. He compiled the report of the findings on research in this latter survey. This gave him an unusual opportunity to familiarize himself with the work of the experiment stations throughout the country. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, member of the Wash- Herald-Journ- BY MARY E. DAGUE AKA Service Staff Writer TUCKED d fire-plac- lur-ni-- h j . . sherry and seasonings and pnt over hot water pan of chafing dish to keep hot for serving. It you cook this in a sauce pan whlcit ean be sent from the stove to the Add s. table a chafing dish isn t saty. Sprinkle with grated eheese and solve ill pastry shells or OB loast points For a delightful dinner serve buttered potatoes or rice, cauli-livflower Hollandaise and a Swedish pastiy with the fish dish. name of Princess Astrid is the a delectable pastry that Mrs. .Nordstiand says is a favimitedes-fies- h To make sert with her hollow out a delicate butter-spong- e it, New In a burg Shrimps cup cake, fill with a One pound fresh shrimp or 2 creamy custaid and top with rans shrimp, 2 tablespoons butter, whipped ci earn. 2 tablespoons flour. 1 cup milk, Hut ter Sponge Tup Cakes cup cream, 2 tablespoons sherThree eggs, 1 cup sugar, 4 teaspoon ry, 2 teaspoon salt, malted butter, 2 cup pepper, few grains sugar. cups flour, 2 If fresh shrimp are used cook cold water, 1 them in boiling salted water lor teaspoons baking powder, few Remove Lom grains salt, 2 teaspoon vanilla. twenty minutes. Mix and sift flour, alt and bakMake a cut along the shells. outside of the shiimp, either ing powder 3 times. Beat yolks of freshly boiled or canned, and re- eggs until thick and lemon colormove the black line. Melt butter ed, beating m sugar Add water in sauce pan, add shrimps and and dry ingredients. Beat in melt- took over a low fire for five min- - ed butter and fold in white of, s beaten until stiff. Add va-intes. Sift over flour and stir s full. tally with a fork until absoibed. nilla and fill cups Add milk and cream snd cook and Bake twenty minutes in a mod-vti- r carefully until sauce boils, leiate oven ( 2&0 tlejrees F.J. neces-shrimp- er 2 This Great Offer Is Open to Old or Hew Subscribers S spoons 2 care-'egg- two-thiid- Film Producer Walter Wagner today wrote off a $5,000 loss to fire of undetermined origin which destroyed eight reels of film in his general service studio projection room. Five reels of Fatal Lady and thfee of Palm Springs" were lost, but the celluloid was only a master print. The positive was saved, will be necesand no sary, it was said- Henry Fonda and Margaret Suilavan were among players driven from the room by the blaze. GflECi- - mu WJ - Magazine from seSggi Sr GARDEN! V ! m ONE 0ICE OF ANY rilESE MAGAZINES rican Girl stian Herald Outlook ents Magazine Stall Culture year Oear ulio News TWO MAGAZINES , Amofican Boy OR carrier So Very Woman's" Wo'r!d reen Play Screen Book True Confessions order The HERALD-JOURNA- L ""2 X 1 year yrs" Year Year ANfrK,AGAzinE group a 3 IN ALL ! ORDER BLANK FOR NEW OR OLD SUBSCRIBERS The You simply 1 IH2S2edReV,W Covers the Entire Cost of BOTH Newspaper and the 3 Magazines This Offer Good Only in Cache Valley year yrs. X 2 Gardens X year Sports Afield ..... X year Household Magazine 2 yrs Needlecraft o vrs Pathfinder (weekly) I year FOR ONE YEAR It's Avtaoj ounset Magazine Better Homes & mQ3 S , OF THESE MAGAZINES By Mail $2)5 l Reviews -- 6 weeks) 1 berty (52 .. YOUR CHOICE OF ANY TWO 1 Z 6 mos. -- 1 Dower Grower . ATliuj' 'Culture l Zs Magazines from This List c Press) impressario. 1300-mil- (pQGCi e"f described by the Toni Lani-- r, late Florenz Ziegfeld as "the girl with the million dollar legs, was convalescing in a Hollywood hospital today after an emergency appendicitis operation. Miss Lanier had just finished a film part in The Great Ziegfeld, follie.. based on the life of the forest, Zions national park for One Year al r HOLLYWOOD, April 4, (Ili Max Reinhardts next film production will be a picture based on the life of George Jacques Danton, leader of the Paris mobs in the French revolution, Jack L. Warner announced today. will be The motion picture adapted from the play Dan tons which Reinhardt presentDeath, ed in Berlin several years ago. Danton, who was described as a giant of a man, with lion maner and a voice like Stenfor's probably will be played by Errol Flynn, although none of the five important roles in the film has been cast yet. William Dieterle, who with Reinhardt on Midsummer Night's Dream, probably will do similar duty on Danton. Calling forth his choicest adjectives, Warner said, Danton will be realism red blooded, historical on a melodrama produced majestic scale with impressive spectacle. TO TRAVEL SOUTH v7 Roundup 1936, by United south-easter- n In Combination with The HOLLYWOOD (Copyright Juan county; the canyon country n Utah; the Navajo of country of northern Arizona, the Grand canyon. Boulder dam, Kai-ba- b BOTANY STUDENTS and the Mohave dsert. It is planned to visit the many Mother nature will be the main wild life zones; study the great instructor for natural history stu- variety of plant life and geolodents of the Utah State Agriculwhich can be e tour gical specimens tural college on a in this region. The college found of southern Utah and northern is very fortunate in being located Arizona, April 18 to 28, Professor so near these natural laboratories Bassett Maguire, of the botany and this trip promises to be one department, announced Thursday. of the most forcible and instrucDr. J. Stewart Williams, of the tive courts in natural history ofL. Professor geology department. fered at the college, said ProA. Stoddart. of the school of foresfessor Maguire. will Professor and Maguire, try, supervise the tour. all students to The trip is open BRIDGE RECORD CLAIMED of botany, forestry, range manlife management, agement, wild geology and zoology, taking stuof agriculschool Jhon the dents from BERKELEY, Cal. (I.fii and arts and Drucquer claims the distinction of ture, forestry, science. The trip is the function having participated in the first of no one department but is a bridge game ever played in England. The game was played in ington, D. C., Academy of Sciences, cooperative move of all departmember of Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa ments of natural history. Pro- London 52 years ago when Druc12 years old. His Phi, and of several other honorary fessor Maguire explained. He esti- quer was he states, intromates that between 30 and 40 brother-in-lasocieties. from Holland duced the game The Kansas State Agricultural students will take the trip. a visit where was known as "Dutch it include will The dehim on the itinerary conferred college of San Whist." to the natural bridges gree of D.Sc, in June, 1935. MAGAZINES The KITCHEN Mrs. Vela Nordstiand, a native of Sweden, and owner of A Bit of Sweden suggests shrimps a la Nedbuig served piping hot as the main dish for an inviting Smor- gasbord supper. Made with frerli plenty of milk, cream and butter, and topped with par- mesan cheese, this is a substantial dish. To go with it, have goat cheese, molded vegetable salads. paste, boiled fish with Hoi-- , iandaxe, beet and herring salad. Mrs. Nordstrand l,kes to use fresh shrimps in season but can-- , tied shrimps may l.e substituted if ones aie not available. in 1 9 THREE FAMOUS 1 thekiuhen. ate with the bureaus in planning and coordinating their research As a third function, work. he will have general administration of a special research fund made available by the Bankhead-Jone- s act. approved June 29, 1935, including the planning and coordination of the research program of the department under this fund. Doctor JaAdne has recently served on several important committees in developing plans for research. He is chairman of a committee for soil conservation research and is serving on the land policy committee, the committee on plant and animal improvement, and many others. Doctor Jardine, a native of Ida-:.-t, was born November 28, 1881. Hu, early life was spent on a farm. He was graduated from the college in 1905, after which he did special work at the University of Chicago. He then returned to the Utah Agricultural college as instructor 4, X riran Boy away between big in the heart of Chiinn, cago is a charming its walls hung with quaint Swedish embroideries and reproductions of famed paintings. with pokers and brushes, brass and topper kittles hand woven linens and hand hewn furniture from rural Sweden a romantic atmosphere By the flickering light of randies, maubhs in colorful Swedish cos- tumes serve you or you mav help yourself to Smorgasbord while the hot supper dishes aie prepared ill SATURDAY, APRIL UTAH, half-froze- summer" In U. And now for the boat ride! Going to give you a boat ride today. flow'd you think youll like exclaimed Hiatt. Toby went into the house again that?" He led ber to whore a young and pat on the ruffled summer mao and aa older woman were dress. She came back, huddled in her coat, and found Alper, costless standing. Mrs. Gregg, Hiatt said, this is and in white flannels. They walked to the rear of the Toby Ryan. Toby Dick Alper. You three make up the company today. bouse where the others were wallWell be ready to leave as soon as ing. There was a private boat landing and, securely fastened, a Frazler shows up " Frazier. Toby learned, was the art rowboat bobbed on the rippling sureditor of the magazine for which face of the water. Get ia, the photographer inthe photographs were being made. and push off s little They were to illustrate a short structed. story that would appear months way." Toby dropped her coat and sat later, Toby was to be the heroine and Dick Alper the hero. Mrs dowr In the boat. The wind, over the water, was raw and sharp Gregg was to be Tobys mother. Where are we going?" the girl Alper pulled on the oars and the boat moved away from the landing asked. Out on Long Island. Theres a Toby leaned bark against a trash bouse there, belonging to some ion, tried to smile She bad beep friend of FYaziers. and a bay where told to drop one band into the wa She did. we can get the Bhot of you and ter, raising It carelessly. The water Alper in the boat. How about and almost screamed. was like Ice. wardrobes? Have yon all got everything you were to bring?" The suitcases were opened and TIOM the bank Hiatt shouted shaking bis bead that some the costumes checked. While they were doing this Dwight Frazier ar- thing was wrong. Alper headed rived. He was a abort, square-faced- , the boat back, and they tried It individual who spoke in a over again. They tried It a third voire. He looked time and then a fourth. Toby was low, at the costumes, said they would chilled to the bono by this time and the hand she dropped Into the do. Presently liey set off in Hiatts water folt numb. "Come back." Hiatt called, fiei car lliatt and Frazier in front, Toby with Alper and Mrs. Gregg out and put your coats on fur a while. Then well try It again behind. Toby said, climbing op on the Toby liked Mrs. Cregg at once. my The older woman was pleasant and landing, "How can you when Im friendly. She asked Toby about ber picture work and seemed interested in the "Well get It," Hiatt assured her answera Alper told them be was And they did. Twenty minute studying an. The year before hed had a Job as a commercial artist, later the pictures were finished at r. he said, but had discovered he all of them were back In the house could earn more and make better drinking hot coffee and eatln use of his time modeling. His wife sandwiches. Mrq. Gregg Insisted Toby should was In the chorus of a musical show. Some day," he said, "she's toast her feet at the radiator and that Alper should sit beside her going to be a real actress." "You two children," she said, "look Its dangerous to risk A LPER told them about the "real a cold at this time of year" break" he had had a few She took coffee cup away months before when he and a dozen to refill it,Alpers Toby, looking after other models had boarded a cruise ber, said, "Shes a dear. Isn't she? ship for a weeks trip to the West Where In the world did Marty find Indies, enjoying the deck sports her?" and swimming pool, sunning themAlper looked surprised. Why. selves by day and dancing by night. dont you know?" he asked. That's Camera men had been making picGregg?" tures meanwhile to use In cruise Margaret He saw that she did not underadvertising, but the models enjoyed stand, and went on, Twenty years themselves and were paid for their ago Margaret Gregg was one of work. the best known actresses in New It was after one oclock when York. She played leads In half a The dozen Broadway shows. Then she they reached the location. house, set apart from those about got older and went Into stock. it, was on the edge of the bay. It Since well, I guess shes had one farm- bad break after another. Now and looked like an house which, Frazier told them, then she gets a little part in noma was what the story called for. play, and she models whenever sbs They left the ear and went up gets the chance. Hiatt likes her, to the house. "Well take the porch and so do most of the photograshot first," Hiatt announced. phers. Shes a real trouper! This was to be a picture of Toby Margaret Gregg came back with and Mrs. Gregg. The two went in- the coffee. Here, she said, drint to the house and a servant showed this. You want to be thoroughly them the room they were to nse warm before we start back to the for dressing. Toby slipped on her city." sweater and white skirt and Mrs, Toby looked np at her. Not all Gregg put oa a simple eotton frock. the lines In Margaret Greggs face She put on spectacles, changed the had come from age. But there was outline of her hair and Toby was courage there, and something that amazed at the transformation. spoke of sweetness as well as Then they went out to the porch strength, and Frazier explained the pose. Toby thought, "Shes seen sufMrs. Gregg sat in a low, fering. Shes known real trouble." chair and Toby oa the step Her own doubts and difficulties below. Frazier was exacting and suddenly seemed less important. When she reached the apartment the scene, though it was simple enough, had to be rehearsed and that night there wa a a letter lying tried from several angles. At last oa the table. It was addressed to Frazier was satisfied and the cam- Toby Ryan. ' era clicked. (To Bo Continued) TODAY U m cummer-ri-nl HVAN, MiiiR for pbolo-l.ru- b model, l be mbp4 la advertise nn.ia. 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