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Show THE CITIZEN 6 INSIDE INFORMATION Tomato catsup and thick mayonnaise, mixed haf and half, make a deliciousi dressing for plain lettuce and some, other salads. In choosing curtains for the living room, select a fabric that will stand light and laundering. The colors should tone in with the other furnishings in the room without making the windows too conspicuous. Use the juices from canned vegetables. If the food is good, so is the juice, and it contains valuable minerals which the body needs. Serve the juice with the canned vegetables or use it in soups, stews, or sauces. Loosely fitted long sleeves are most becoming on fleshy arms. If open at the wrists they are graceful and comfortable. To make the arm seem longer and more slender use bound slashes, bands of material, rows of buttons, etc. Sleeves gathered into a tight cuff with a puffed effect should be avoided by the stout, woman. nish such a diced pickled beet, strips of pimento, chopped green pepper, or sliced raw tomato, and French, mayonnaise, or boiled dressing. Or for a more elaborate salad, mix the cheese with chopped nuts or olives and form into balls or mold in cups. Cottage cheese also combines well with fruits, fresh, stewed, or canned, in salads. A Leading Member of The Cradle Song Company WOMANS BEAUTY BILL The Womans Bureau of the Federal Department of Labor finds that the annual cost of preserving beauty to the American woman exceeds the war debts owed by a half dozen countries to the United States. The female of the species is far more costly than the male in the amounts paid out to maintain their beauty which is the pride of the American woman and their male relatives. The statisticians find that five million dollars a day is paid in fees in the beauty parlors of the country, and that the total cost of eight and eighty runs to one and three-quartebillions of dollars every year. The vanity of the American woman, says the report, is making millionaires. The real money in beauty culture is to be made by own- ing a shop or by manufacturing cosmetics. Scoffers may howl in rage over the rs . Tuesday is better than Monday for wash day. A day is needed in most homes to straighten up the house after Sundays relaxation, to look over the clothes, mend them when necessary to prevent larger tears, remove unusual stains, and put the white clothes to soak. Then an early start can be made on the work on Tuesday Pear salad is unusually good. Either fresh or canned pears may be used. If using caned pears, drain the fruit, but save the pear juice for a fruit punch, with lemon or orange juice added. Wash and chill the lettuce so that it will be crips. Arrange the pears on the lettuce, sprinkle with grated cheese and garnish with salad dressing. Fresh pears must be pared and cored just before serving or they will discolor. Cottage cheese is delicious in salads. Pile it lightly on lettuce leaves or shredded cabbage. Add a colorful gar expenditure of nearly $2,000,000,000 each year for the beautification of wives, sisters and sweethearts, but most of the males with good eyesight will hold to the opinion that the results justify the cost. NEW CALENDARS January 1, 1928, falls on a Sunday. The next time our present New Years Day comes on Sunday will be in 1933. So if the calendar is to go into effect in the easiest possible way, beginning the week exactly as at present, something must be done about it fairly soon, or we shall wait another 5 years. The idea of the calendar, which is strongly favored by the U. S. Weather Bureau, is that there will be 13 months of exactly 28 days each, necessitating an extra month, probably set in between 13-mon- Miss Zita Johann, who will appear November 23, 24, 25, and 26. June and July. There will be one day left over, and it is proposed to call this Year Day, and make it a universal holiday between December 28 and January 1. All in favor, say aye! TRUE LOVE BIRDS th 13-mo- nth at the Salt Lake Theatre on One life and one love is the rule with swans. These beautiful wild birds are soemtimes bred and reared in captivity, and the experts of the Department of Agriculture tell of their monogamous habits in advice to prospective breeders. Swans are slow to mate, they say, and remain mated permanently, the satisfactory way to buy them, therefore, is in guaranteed mated pairs. Under normal conditions never separate the birds of a pair. THE CHEST AUDIT The audit of the Chest recently completed was made to cover the peri od April 7, 1926 to March 31, 1927, in order to definitely show the expense of last years campaign, administration expense and the amount given to the agencies up to the beginning of the new Chest year. Among items of interest may be tooted the increase in subscriptions, which numbered 12,558 in 1926 for a total of $131,802.95 and 12,789 in 1927 for a total of $138,340.70. The expense of the 1926 campaign was $9,237.59, of which $2,923.00 represented amount The paid for professional services. balance covered salaries of office workers, stationery, forms, cards, postage, advertising, etc. This was 7 per cent of the amount pledged. In 1927 the campaign cost $5,933.52 of which $1,830.00 was paid for professional services. The campaign cost was $3,304.07 less than the year previous. It was approximately 4.3 per cent o the amount pledged. The administra-- ' tive expense for the period was distributed as follows: 5 American Smelting & Refining Company Purchasers of GOLD, SILVER LEAD AND COPPER ORES Consign All Shipments to American Smelting & Refining Company Ship Lead Ores to Murray, Utah. Ship Copper and Siliceous Ores to Garfield, Utah. Send Bills of Lading Direct to Plants. Address Correspondence and Hand Samples to 700 McCormick Bldg., Salt Lake City, Soloists of the Great Florentine Choir from Italy, which appears at the Tabernacle Next Monday Night. Utah. |