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Show TOE SM1T11FIELD SENTINEL. SMIT1IFIELD, UTAH Strange Wedding Customs Our Presidents a 7ACHARY TAYLOR never stayed in one place long enough to qualify as a voter. During the panic of 1837 Martin Van Buren could not always get his salary. Woodrow Wilson and his wife slept in Buckingham palace. Theodore Roosevelt, in commenting on living in the White You dont live House, said: there. Youre only Exhibit A to the country. Andrew Jackson was the first territorial governor of Florida. Warren G. Harding went directly from the United States senate to the White House. ioM 3hmhd about Personal Indorsements. texas. i used Houston,pretty fair hand at indorsing things. But I realize now what a piker I was. I indorsed only one thing at a time. For the present champions, I offer a suggestion. When that distinguished world traveler (Bringing Testimonials Alive") and that eminent movie star, who lives in Holly- Back wood Live Reading Matter and is authoress of Miss Colddeck Recommends, get through indorsing everypractically thing else, let them then club in and attain the very highest peak of by jointly indorsing the famous society queen who has indorsed more products than they even, or anybody. Maybe its a sign of the times that today the most fascinating lit- DEOPLE get married each da y in all part of the world, but ivery country has its own unique ceremony. In America, where tradition has been thrown to the winds, people are likely to get married any place. In Los s, for example, an An-ecle- enterprising photogra-phe- r caught the above wedding under water. It was a publicity stunt and participants equipped with erature were most familiar and the names are found in the advertising sections of a magazine rather than in the table of contents. micro- phones. In Holland (left) the bride feeds her husband a traditional mixture of brandy and raisins. He's making a wry face but she says, You might as well get used to my cooking now, young Tavotita Mtecipo right next to Noted Ancestors. THE little n Hogg-Dickso- '''ranch at Casa Blanca, 300,000 Mexico-o- nly acres I met the caporal, or head man, of the cow herd and one famous as a rifle-sho- t, an upstandMexican, but, I faning, clear-eye- d cied, with some faint indefinable sugin his gestion of the Anglo-Saxo- n facial contours. However, his name, as I caught it, was pronounced Ernesto Boo-nwhich, to my alien ears, sounded Latinesque enough for all purposes. He knew no English, yet, when I mentioned Kentucky a thing Ive been known to do before he poured out a rippling flood of Spanish. Louis Kresdorn, the Texas-bor- n manager, translated: Ernesto says he has heard of a y place called Kentucky. According to a legend in his family, his once lived there was muy valiante, muy vivo, and was the nephew of an even greater Gringo warrior who drove the savages before him like tumbleweeds before a wind. So I saw a light and I inquired how Ernesto spelled his last name he spelled it the orthodox way. So, as members of the same stock, a pioneer ancestress of mine having married a kinsman of the great pathfinder, I held a reunion with this mighty huntsman, who is proud that he too, collaterally, is descended from Daniel Boone. man! a, In Japan, where many a romance hasrecently been shattered by war, brides follow age-ol- d customs in preparing for their wedding day. The coy miss at the right, atop 's her horse, is en route ,to the neighboring village where she will join her husband - e at the wedding. far-awa- father to-b- Austrians, Hungarians and Baltics lead all other peoples in making festive on the wedding day. Preparations start weeks in advance, the entire neighborhood sharing in plans to get the bride and groom off to a prosperous start. Although preparatory operations almost overshadow the marriage itself, there are many complexities to the final ceremony. On the morning of the wedding day in Serbia, relatives of the bride go to the home of the groom and stand by him during the ceremony of having his face shaved dean. Its a strange world I oft tkf lVeek'mm' Shrimp Creole for Sonday Night Supper. CHRIMP Creole is an excellent dish to serve for Sunday night supper, not just because it is especially good to eat, but because it can be made the day before they appear as shown here at D. or in the morning and reheated Now turn to the wrong side and when ready to serve. That is a sew a ring to the back of each real convenience for the housewife plait as at E. who does her own work. Every Homemaker should have Shrimp Creole. a copy of Mrs. Spears new book, a cups esnnod medium ilu I SEWING. t tomatoes on lone sliced pages of directions for making S cup sliced celery S1 cups canned tbsp vinegar tbsp shortening slipcovers and dressing tables; 1 tbsp 1 flour tip sugar a cups canned sell restoring and upholstering chairs, 1 Isp I tbsp chill shrimp couches; making curtains for ev- I to S cups hot boiled powder ery type of room and purpose. 1 cup water lice Making lampshades, rugs, ottoCook the onions and celery in mans and other useful articles for fat until a delicate brown. the home. Readers wishing a copy the should send name and address, Add the flour, salt and chili power 'and blend until smooth. Add enclosing 25 cents, to Mrs. Spears, the water (use the liquid drained 210 South Dcsplaincs St., Chicago, from the peas as part of the waIllinois. ter). Cook until thick and smooth, stirring constantly. Add the toMore Jobs; Less Cost matoes, peas, vinegar, sugar and In 1300 the infant automobile shrimp and heat thoroughly. industry provided jobs, directly Serve with the hot rice. or indirectly for about 80,000 peoIf the shrimp creole is made ple and what today would be con- before serving time, you will find sidered inferior cars, sold for a double boiler, or casserole $5,000 and up. Advertising created to use for reheating it. a demand that today provides jobs The amount of chili powder to for approximately 5,000,000 peo- use depends upon personal taste. ple, has resulted in radically im- It would be a good idea to add proved cars and has reduced the just one tablespoonful and after price to where one out of each the finished product has been samlive people in the nation can, pled more can be added if desired. MARJORIE H. BLACK. and does, own a car. J 7HETHER you line your new draperies or not will depend on how heavy the material is. It is important, however, that the top of draperies be stiffened when a French heading is used. A soft canvas which may be purchased in drapery departments is generally used for this purpose. From four to six inches is a good depth to cut the heading canvas. Turn the top of the curtain material over it and sew as at A. Now measure the width of your curtain and plan the plaits to take up half this width. In heavy material, four or five inches will be enough. It is a good plan to let the space between the plaits be the same as the amount of material the plaits take up. The first plait may come just inside the finish of the outside edge of the drapery or it may be placed two or three inches in. Start to sew the plait about an inch down from the top of the drapery and sew it the depth of the stiffening, as shown here at B. Pint-this plait into three small plaits and, starting two inches down from the top, sew through as at C. Sew these plaits the depth of the stiffening, so that Forty-eigh- step-by-ste- p coo-venie- nt h Dachshunds. LIKE dachshunds. Theyve more sense of humor than anything I ever saw that came out of Prussia. I always figured the breed was produced by crossing a rat terrier on a German compound verb, and I still believe you could combine usefulness with their natural comedy by training them to retrieve collar buttons from under low bureaus. I indorse the phrase of the mathematical sharp who said a dachshund was half a dog high and a dog and a half long, but I claim Captain Mike Iloggs chauffeur, Mose, coined the best description yet. When Mrs. Hogg brought home the first one Mosc ever beheld, his eyes on bulged out like twin push-button mahogany door-jamLawsy, Miss Alice!" he exclaimed. whut is this here thing? "Its a dog. if you Wcilum," said Mose, hadn't told me. Id a said it was a snake on roller skates. T b. Hunting in Texas. hard even the seagulls were trying to get in the clubhouse. So the ducks went away somewhere, out of the weather. So the hunters, who were less intelligent than the ducks, came back from the blinds dripping like so many leaky hot water bottles. After being bailed out, we sat down to viltles nothing unusual, just the customary club dinner. All we found on the menu was beef hash, duck stew, liver and on'ons, country smoked sausage and homemade headcheese, also hot biscuits, corn pones and rice cakes; likewise turnip greens, rice, sweet potatoes, squash, snapbeans and eye hominy; moreover, six kinds of pic'ths, preserves, jellies and jams; besides stewed pears, apple p:e, paprrshcM pecans and various fruits. Then Mrs. Jacob Smothers, the clulf hostess. came in to say that, if anybody in the future craved anything special, she'd try to fix it up and wondered why such of her gorged guests ns weren't too far gone uttered feeble laughter. Being now convalescent, I am able to report that Southern Texes is one part of the Un.tvi where eating is still being carried on as a regular habit. IRVIN S. COBB. F1 wed-inOn the island ol Camargue, France, a balky horse might ruin a on the church to ride the shall Custom demands the bride and groom fol-sek of the same white horse. Their attendants, also on white horses, This groom seems to be monopolizing the saddle while his unhappy oking bride hangs on as best she can. g. WAS raining so Copyright. IVNl) Scrvua. WHAT 4 OiAAASEDj ri UP EARlv EVERY MORNING, J. ' GREAT JASf SINCE KE sil jr ?:SMTCMD7& 1L poSTuM AND GOT jAridofm JO! IP S'MTCNINO DOafNfT r..n TO PC'S .If,! VCO! HrlP lut ditii!: MANV proplo a. i iii':i.'.i- - t hi ,1 tint tha nl.'.-- in nwi J Vilin.i'i .lie I'" I of coi'. llr u i'.iU n IT il .Id ii i, (.,. -i uj nit i Puiluni I'uiil.iiii.-v till vi.nr I1 General o . I i, S'.) twi r i.m - I ,.iI,.n: -.i ('.- my others li yen yu.i.tiy it in. u r in Canada, v. 11 l,.,n.l ... lrtr si cent ins no It is simply wtiole wheat and bran, ru.isl.--d nn, sl; sweetened. It cum.-- s in lor tvo L'ere.d, the Umd you li:::l or l.".o , . . tm.l Inainsit lV.t'im, r.i:! - mst in ti-- cup. iisy lo Yon m .v mi s cnTee losf.iin j own rich I! ivi r. A prii.hii-- o( C.i iu r.'.l h,:o.!. (',!. hut or irt-J-. firit, but you'll toon lov nnb, at d'li'-io-as- , t I tier, return the to ni, n wj ! (If you live 1,1,!., ! chiiii:. Out.) pnst.i;--- Po-li- tu i:- - li.li.U il. ci.. i;h 1 i:,iy ',ru: '.,imii u'lil r purchase price, plus S ni'.-- r cpitct July 1, f rwr v? a Uti'AII-P1I- HK. |