Show THE SALT HERALD-BEPUBLICAN “ LAKE CITY UTAH y“A7:A' ’ -f - SUNDAY OCTOBERS ’ A u 7 5x 4-1914- ' ’ : t ' 1 s ' ” ’ WHAT i'11' EVERY Taste Dressing in Gift Is a " - ' ' - a Wv ' - ’ ' Also r - r- GownromDoeuillet ! ' three shirtwaists poppies made two or silks of and wearing varicolored wash this — with' gray supplanted gloves costume and brown belt poor Alice went forth as unbecomingly dressed as ever ‘Yet the things she pretty Cultivate Pretty Good for by It Z Substitute Utilizing Care ' A‘7 - At Ci At ? Old-fashioned and Reflects Styles ! MONKEY to Make It the UR is dominant trimming motif in this iVvorn by Julia Sanderson It is gown Call It made Whatever You Dark chiffon l white crepe with a black Bread Plain Cake Any velvet girdle and band or at the bottom jf the skirt Three strands of jet at Other Name Present Recipes the front of the Belt add another All Probably Are Variations smart touchto the frock LTTfa of 7 Scheme One-Color How One Original Almost Lost Probably you know some people who dress from year to year in practically the same colors Their friends never give them to anything wear made and therefore any other colors when they have bought a blue street dress they do not have to face the difficulty of the mauve handbag and the green suede btelt some one gave her for t and Gingerbread : The Patience Stage the: When wore were and of good material they just lacked a definite scheme of harmony of the-one girl look Jn the failure to other lies the whole as well as the secret of dressing becomingly on a little You must have some: definite idea in view before you single buy a article of your wardrobe and then no matter how inexpensiveor how anplain your clothes are you vill have air of individuality! and well beingIf you have a brown idea keep to it If you have a plan for fluffy clothes keep to that or if for smart severe clothes keep to that unless you have — a big clothes allowance Cherish Born Even Those Who Are Without This Quality Elusive May and Hard to Define KIW-t KNOW TO ” ( I -r J Imported ' ' 1 A- w : and ” ’ ’ --' - Seek to V" ' BY EDITED ‘ ’A 1 - ” WTS WOMAN : in Method Now Obscurity -in time” once said a plump little woman “I am going to live for a whole season on desert Island where nobody can see a her plain and me” Shedarksmoothed blue suit with her black-gloved hand gave a toss to her black with its velvet toque waving black the floor with her and tapped plume little black shoe “J’m going to wear velvets just what please qrimson — In bright stiff evening and green plaid silkspink the afternoon yellow and purple muslins with great big staring And my designs in the morning and hats! every color of the rainbow loaded— with all the gaudy trimming like The greatest hardshipof my life dressing in good taste” is say that dressing well is a natural gift and to a certain extent that is true But those of us who are even born without that quality elusive and “taste hard to define which we call With need not despair care and in the like the little woman sober blue dress we may gain a pretty good substitute for it rench It is trite to say that red-cheeked YfCIOME becoming Christmas But colors although this choosing of the does give certain individuality the wearer it is rather tiresome for most of us and we can get well if each very season we definite color a scheme when dark blue and black are in great is not very popularity to look tastefully dressed But if we of indulge in moderate incomes stripes and plaids and colors we gay soon meet our doom Color Da£k‘Blue Scheme a dark blue color for scheme this winter could be a dark Thereblack blue coat suit a velvet hat trimmed with a big or white flower and with gold or silver white gloves black shoes The same black velvet hat look well with afternoon would an frock of color and almost any as any sort of furs look well with blue they could be chosen especially to harmonize wirh the afternoonfrock’ A difficult brown color scheme is a little more The to handle coat suit can be brown black hat worn with the ever-useful but a brown hat looks better If other the same hat is to serve with brown clothes there might be a black with which the brown hat could be worn If the hat were trimmed with a gold rose and the black frock had a bit of gold about it the harmony establishedA would be top coat of brown arid black checkscould be worn frocks of totally different Evening be colors can chosen to relieve the monotony of the plan Of course you may have your clothes all in one color and yet they not may hat be harmonious An over elaborate spoils a strictly tailored street suit two shades of the same color that do not harmonizeare worse together than green and yellow your struggle to acquire But begin taste by looking the colors tvell to of your clothes and see if the result doesn your trouble while make worth Ifyou are one of the few who cannot help buying the right thing then you will not need to spendall this time planning your wardrobe But these favored are very few and it is an persons old story that even the rench woman good cook and thrifty housewife that she is never schemes and plans for her husband’sdinner until after she has schemed and planned for her own to inthe along choose W OA I ll t patience of Mt IWffl saying women well-dressed women can teach us great deal In the matter of taste But generally this we think when we say rench only of the part of dressing and called “creations” “confections” lace and velvet and the miracles of at chiffon and silk which we gaze with the shop windows and envy in read about with wonder in the fashion a gingerbread cupful 'gyJI ZW’W1 W - 3 wilt of flour one beaten egg bift the dry together into ingredients a bowl Add molasses milk and shortening Beat well Then add the egg Bake slowly in a loaf in a flat pan in small patty-cake or pans With More Eggx is a recipe for a Here that gingerbread sponge uses more eggs in comparison the other ingredients: to One cupful of sugar one cupful of molasses one cupful of milk three cupfuls of flour two of tablespoonfuls W baking powder one-half three well-beaten salt K-A" ’ goes Ml U i ii I- I ! ' 1 I ’ ll 4 ' than either of the other recipes given: One-half cupful of butter one-half cupful of two beaten eggs two sugar cupfuls of flour one-half teaspoonful each of allspice and cloves cinnamon one-half cupful of milk one cupful of molasses one teaspoonful of soda one-half cupful of boiling water Cream the butter and and add the eggs and molasses sugar Sift the spices and flour together and add alternately with the milk Then dissolve the soda in the boiling water and add last I I! I I a4 RteWmsss ' ' - ' U' $ 1 i i i J I t b M fl Without Egg There bread are some very good without eggs ginger one: WHITE --o I handle so ALL SHOPS THINGS this time the child A useful and straw the stand is made of woven there is a removablebasket capacious top a drawer shelf with and at the bottom retaining edge several inches high sleeping especially for children become so much of a fad that there are many things to and make it more comfortable One is sleeping an outdoor that it can be basket on wheels so about to avoid pushedseek conveniently them sun or bretze or to There is a brg hood that can be pushed about the sun at will to keep out of the child’s eyes Outdoor has Old the That Great rench Her Brother Bring ThanGood Woman Editor When Died ConvulsionsBrought rom Relates Eighteen on by BEST USE This Nagging As of a NOBODY one-quarter order MIRRORS i USE ironing board for children’s placed on a substantial little standardand can be placed on a table when in use in-tbe a between rubber over a A portable bathtub that strong folds can wooden frame bo obtained There is a faucet for the outlet of waste water there are small on the outside at one end to pockets hold accessories to the baby’s bath and there is a little folding towel rack the corner on which the bath towels at can be conveniently hung THE RAINBOW I I WE nXI! rm BOUDOIR NEGLIGEE j iron for ironing There is a special It has a long pointed clotnes smallthat will reach into gathers and end tiny sleeves It would be well convenient for clothes CAP AND EMBROIDER MOTOR GOGGLES I CASE ! I I w-here table A Remember as A decoratedchina plate set into a nickel frame Avhich holds hot wateris obtalnble ood put in the plate now is thus warm by the hot water for a long time It is a great convenience in carrying food from the kitchen to the nursery or for food for the chilli that eats slowly GIT Remember fingers becomes a -the -kept embroider CAREUL into A folding carriagetraveling which folds is for compact form roomy a reclining back so that a easily sleep In it is conven CANARY I ! end has child can ient behold COOK NEVER Tjk rocking horse now a rocking peacock He is provided with a safe and comfortableseat for in his driver and as he is enameledhis colors he is well natural worth price W instructive toy for the small child Is a doll eight Inches tail with a dress ready and’a set of underwear cuttheout clothe's to makej fit‘When made naturally the doll and extra cutout dresses can be bought to make 1 ' - hiscage A 1 DAINTY io IM O warm worth copying checks and there is well Ginart It a is for made white' tlio of This very little girl cloth edged with green flarincl vest ’J: rench model is green and white CASE daintyA -cannot a t -it' ’ ' ‘ -- e meringue ‘ " suit ’ 1 MANICURE I DOLLAR A MERINGUE " REMEMBER An cooking Memoirs Will 1 Results ! A be taught to cook girls can Little with toy utensils and from time to lime a very interesting collection of uteneils could bo given these Lamber Adam in White the ! n small clothes is a armful 1 necessity convenient of Scold a With Sour“old-time” Cream is gingerbread called in the family where it is made it calls for four eggs and a cupful sour creams it is hardly a hard-time recipe But it is reliable recipe for good times at any rate: These handkerchiefs might impress envies the title of a scold fairs Our servants we have to scold of dark brown sugar One cupful on the thoughtlesssmall child the And do not often them to keep them — in nowadays we any sort of cupful of butter one cupful of of dub a scold But nevertheless And children isn’t always remembering to carry a as four our woman sour one cupful New Orleans a fresh one there scolds scolding the of — the cream are many modern descendant among one teaspoonful each of soda us We nag and scold molasses our husbands rod that Solomon advocated? and ginger four egg yolks three cupfuls we nag and scold our mothers and brings But just remember that scolding flour of fathers scold our brothers we nag and more harmful results than good the butter and sugar and then and sisters and scold Cream O we nag our servants ones add the egg yolks and again and we scold our children the great cream Juliette Lamber Adam Add the ginger and the molasses and to be home on rench editor relates in her Men ought always woman mix well Dissolve the soda in a tablespoonful time for meals the servants don’t like memoirs that her small brother died and add to to be kept Men waiting ought to be when he was eighteen months old the sour of boilingThenwater add the cream mirrors ready to out with economically make every it go us evening from convulsions brought on by cream and the flour to the cake batter Bake count one would refresh them far more than scolding in cake after a long Place one the rench to sit at Tlio of this tale is homeof Our mothersand ought to scold! moral fashion — don’t over the fireplace to reflect keep abreast the times Your children servants why your the room don’t our fathers stop telling anecdotesyour brothers sisters and mothers place one in fashion to friends? Our brothers Or English our must not and fathers and husbands might not tlie windows at the end of a tease us they must not be so rough and all take your scolding as seriously as long narrow' room to Our sisters deserve the rating did the small baby in the tale But emphasize the noisy light there they get for interfering with our af anyway don’t scold Place one where it will reflect a charming glimpse of the garden have all of us heard stories of opposite it througha window the treasure at the end o£ the the hall opposite Place on in the I entranceinto the drawing or living A IN rainbow Thereis a pot of gold room to give a sense of spacious there you know And if we cotfid only ness walk TO far enough run fast enough we Place one on a dark vall wriiere it will catch the light might find it and be ever thereafter Place one in a bedroom it will you motor much you should have happy is what reflect the tell pair of That our nurses us mirror of the dressing a gogglesto wear In windy when isn’t it? sure to be appreciatedmight we are children the that flowers in front of a be made by any woman who likes weather These are sold in cases for we learn that And sometimes to ready marie prices ranging upward from $1 is a bridge and the thunder mirror are twice as attractive as flowers embroider: bought rainbow placed against it cost much than is the roar of a wall would more good with heavy wheels going over when A very sort is made a by that it that the ideal own clever frame for made Its cost is woman’s frame of some compositionthat mirror is 50 cents for a matinee are the stories that we hear inconspicuous as much as pliable when wet pn very hot in These childhood about the rainbow Children possible a part of wall ivlicre it jacket in pink white blue or yellow Water so if the pieces that go behind muslin ready to of other lands hear hangs stamped and the ears do not fit you many other you simplydip stories 25 cents for a stamped boudoir them in very hot water put them on In Greece tell the children cap to nurses match and the necessarymoney and bend them until they do fit 7 you that if any for lace to edge the cap and jacket and one by chance stumbles Then you let them dry in shape ! ribbon to trim them with — less than $2 over the end of the his or BE O rainbow her sex is changed A fine story that altogether to tell child! The little Greeks must J jacket is a The stamped with sunlike daisylike designs sprinkled over the run away from the ends of the rainbow or A instead of them to find our fronts and it is really very dainty and TO seeking hang your canary in ’a pretty pot of gold him plenty of fresh draught Give from his nurse The little Turk buthears Even less expensiveis a nightgown water every day that if he can touch the band of on shadow-striped muslin This Give him a bath at least every two stamped costs unmade $150 and finished without orange that spans the heavensin the days' that what makes a lace it costs $G5O rainbow his head will turn to silver any a wash his perches in fall is a of with rubies for eyes and teeth of gold Once week sudden draught thoroughscalding water and dry them In parts of Russia the rainbow cold air Brown a meringue slowly O M ismany called a and in Hungary pump and do not let it cook until it begins Keep a little fresh sand — change it it is called "God’s pump" and “Noah’s every day or two to blackenat the tips and points Then pump” — on the bottom of In the pull it to the edge of the oven and Russia in somewith provinces platforms lettuce plantain chick-weed wells Give him are strong leave it there in the open door for a covered or some other green at least so that the water ha or two Then it to a twice a week is the price of minutespot remove from them by the rainbow and A in the kitchen and let it indrawn him into the habit of eating and convenient little manicure set warm other provinces it is said that three Don't get He cool slowly and thoroughlyIt can then won’t miss it and it is "T angels have the rainbow sugar There is a leather box abou four be charge of chilled in the refrigerator bad for-him inches long and three sides and an inch one to draw water throughit from’ the to hini and attention deep and in this small pair of earth to give from to Talk pay some are a another water shoes the clouds to him for remember that lie depends scissors a little bone- stick a file a aridThe’ Japanese make waterproof and anotherto return the traveling bags as well as trunks on human attention for companionship buffer! a tube of pail paste and some ©£ water to the earth in the form polishing powder from the tannedhides of sea lions rain in lately Instead t Months linen handkerchiefsdecorated corner with colored animals and children in indelible ink sold are beneath grown-ups’ extract -add Don Be MoreH a a ’ to a child thing or one there are little electric or gag stoves in every cf the r?al stove but way replicas properly adjusted the child’s size to Then there are alb sorts of dishes in sizes to the child as appropriate our dishes are to us There is a small kitchen cabinet for the little girl too and a spice table fitted with drawers and jars of china to hold ginger marked cinnamon and other spices There are tea wagons of white enameled wood fitted with dainty white china tea sets: there are little chafing dishes Juliette and teakettles and china cupboard's To be sure these toys are expensive but little girls prefer many would them to an assortmentof cheapei tovs sorts of all cozy nightgowns Thereof are flannel and merino with draw strings at the bottom to keep the small sleeper's feet warm On Two ILLED WITH INTERESTING AS OR CHILD WINTER NEARS of year the outfitting for winteris of great of the shops are and all importance tilled with interesting things to tempt the fond mother to buy A little clamp-in the bedclothes device that holds keeps them from up over the child and slipping is advisable Many early-winter colds are the result of exposure night the child tosses the at when bedclothesfrom its body AT recipes for and here is One cupful New Orleans molasses one cupful of one-half cupful of sugar butter or lard one cupful of boiling one full of water teaspoonful soda one teaspoonful of ginger one-half of teaspoonful cinnamon four cupfuls of flour Dissolve the soda In a tablespoonful of ‘the boiling and add tri the Then water molasses add the shortening melted the rest of the boiling water and the flour mixed with the spices Beat until smooth and bake Ginger Sponge Cake Sometimes brown sugar Is used in gingerbread as it is in this recipe: cupfuls of brown sugar four eggs one pint of flour one and a half teaspoonfulsof baking powder one extract of lemonteaspoonfulof one of ginger teaspoonful ground or two-thlrds cupful of cold the eggs and then add the water Beat sugar and beat for ten Then minutes alternately the and the flour water with the spices Add the extract and mix until smooth Bake for about half an hour Brown Sugar and Molasses recipe used The foregoing brown but no sugar molasses This recipe calls for both these ingredients: One cupful of butter one cupful of browncupful one cupful of milk one-half sugar of molasses one and one-half pints of flour one and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder one beaten egg butter then Cream the andsugar andagain add the egg next add cream the molasses and the flour sifted with the baking powder Mix well and bake slowly for thirty-five forty or minutes -wardrobe THIS teaspoonful of eggs Called Molasses Cake family This is another recipe that the under name of molasses cake It is richer l ’ 1-X1 tea-spoonful teaspoonful one-color in-variably one-half teaspoonful rench Girl Dresses rench forget the working girl with Not so pretty as the Englishgirl figure no better than the American’s a and the sturdy without charm of her and sisters she is German Dutch — hat well dressed Wearing’ a with a scrap she has trimmed herself quill or flower Gf silk and a bright cost at 'r5 coarst cotton shirtwaist which a black cotton the most francs generally z gloves plain skirt and to our a W-mCy’ eyes flimsy and rather shapeless American black shoes there is V cheap nevertheless N S T Sis 'ir about her a certain charm and "Av 4a( L: H And she can give a les-son attractiveness practical value to cf the greatest any woman who wantsto dress well and has not endless resources to dress on this is the lesson: She is always And her heat clothes are always clean but all else everythingshe has on above looks as if it had been bought with an its relation to everything else idea of If her skirt is black she she has on black gloves and belt and a bit wears of black ribbon at her neck and in her hair If she wearsa blue hat she wears evening frock is made of gold and black brocade with jet trimming blue skirt and perhapsa blue brooch a and The long waist which reaches below the BAG an apron of black net bagat her collar A whites linen LINEN embroidered in satin and schoolgirls and the stitch is an acceptable There was once two who hips the straight shoulder straps square decolletageare features accessory eyelet alike They were to the white very much had looked of the autumn summer frock the coloring these bags the same size and same can be had simple enough to with the simplest and general outline of feature morning frock elaborate “I don’t know why Alice never looks enough for the most elaborate dressed as said her school dress this spring for Alice blouses tan belt gloves and shoes and Louise” one dayricher afternoonfrock theAnd their price ss well the prettier and I’ll the color so that the girls a cream-white varies accordingto the mother of change straw hat Alice’s trimmed with linen quality of the girls the of the won’t look too alike” soft poppies and of the two to mother Louise much well that spring brown mother the embroidery Moire ribbon in other “Everyone always says Louise looked very suit duplicatedthe suit in blue bought a white of course is often used in striped with looks well wish you’d let me copy a brown white brown hat and trimmed it with red for the stran of these bags We sugar New Orleans molasses one-half of milk sweet one-half of soda dissolved in one tablespoonful water one tablespoonful of butter or lard slightlv meltedginger one teaspoonful of ground one of cinnamon one-half of baking one and & powder lialf cupfuls afternoon-gown magazines liow the of cupful cupful Take lvj1 Old-ashioned difficult -it v Some ’ Now I another way eclaires and may come and but go gingerbread staj's on There was probably one original method of making this delectable sweet dark bread or plain cake — whichever you may call it But there have been devised so many variations on the one original method that it is almost lost in obscurity The Kind old family recipe for Here is an that has been tried and not found wanting by several generations: same I almost is which BABAS |