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Show MILLARD COITNTY CHRONTCLE. DELTA. UTAH Be Smart! mi Short coats are easily the most outstanding fur fashion of the season. You'll find them In a range of furs that begins with the most modest and runs through all grades of mink. Styling is somewhat conserva-tive, with beautiful convertible collars that are particularly effective when worn high. De-signs are deliberately versatile, so that this coat is as good for wear with an evening dress as with a tailored street outfit. WOMAN'S WORLD Coat Selection Depends on Your Costume Shawl Collar Coat be somewhat more roomy than those whose clothes are mainly dresses and feminine suits. Most suits, even those which are sports-minde-have less shoulder pad-ding, so coat problems need not be too much of a challenge this year. How to Choose Color or Fur Color choice will not be as diffi-cult this year as in many others because all cloth coats are made up in what are called basic colors. This means simply that though a coat is blue, it may have a cast which makes it practical to wear with brown, black or beige. Red coats, even, may take to navy, dark brown or black, as well as other basic shades. It would be foolish, however, to select a definitely brown coat sim-ply because it's attractive though you have a wardrobe composed primarily of blacks and blues. Let good taste be your guide in the color selection as well as the com-binations which you combine and assemble with the coat. By Ertta Haley 1 GET A short, d SHALL Would a wiser coat be a long cloth casual? Should the coat be fitted or loose? These are but a few of the ques-tions women must ask themselves when they consider buying a coat for winter. Having seen so many styles in both cloth and fur coats, the question naturally rises as to whether she should have two coats in her wardrobe to be well dressed. In choosing the coat, which is what most clothes budgets demand, the basic consideration to bear in mind is the type of clothes you prefer to wear. If "ou like bulky, sport suits and are an outdoor type, you certainly can't be caught with a tight dress coat to wear for everything. Should your taste run to casual dresses and a few dressed-u- p things, you have little' use for the sports-minde- d greatcoat, even though it can be changed in some detail to fit any occasion. Decide, then, on what your activ-ities are, before you try on coats. Your next decision revolves around what you can properly afford to spend for a coat. If your dream has been to own a fur co.t, and budget has limited the expense of outlay, as well as the year to year upkeep, then it's best not to invest in such a coat because it might necessarily be a cheaper variety that would not give enough wear. You might, however, Investigate the possibilities of a f':, :;, Wis, .. ': ri'rlm "--it vi; mmm wmtym ' i One of the most popular fash-ions of the season is the draped shawl collar coat that may be Worn looped or loosely as a shawl. It is shown here from the Philip Mangone collection In red monotone tweed in a princess style. The new rounded hipline is accented with simulated pockets. In fact, a great deal of style change is possible with the long coat, es-pecially when it's made of cloth. It may be worn belted or loose, even though it is not too full. Pieces of fur may be added at the neckline, to be used if you want a more dressed-u- p coat. Your other accessories, hat, shoes, ' gloves and Fur-line- d coats are practical . . . short, d coat since these are usually tax-fre- Whatever style coat is chosen, the coat must do these things: it must keep you warm; it must be both casual and elegant, as occa-sion demands: and it must be keyed to the color of your other wardrobe items. Select Coat With These Tips j If you are buying just one coat i to wear for any occasion, it should i not be too extreme in style, al though it may definitely be fashion-- ; able.' The semi-ful- l coat, with lines running straight up and down, is an excellent choice. This coat may be of the short variety, or it may be long. Short coats are very practical for many women, provided they feel they can keep warm enough in them, without the extra length to give protection to the legs. However, if you want a long coat, these, too, may still observe the rules set up for the all around coat. casual cloth coats are smart, handbag may dress the coat up or down, as occasion demands. The loose coat in the tuxedo manner may be a very good choice from the standpoint of figure and usefullness in many instances. Here, too, the coat may be worn with or without belt, as suitability demands. For those whose wardrobe con-sists largely of suits, the coat must Housewives Can Inspire Meals With Novel Salads Made of Fresh Foodstuff iir NEVER have trouble thinking of salads to serve during hot weather when there's so much available of salad ingredients," says a homemaker. "But salad inspiration during winter is a big problem!" It needn't be so, especially if you check over these inspiration pack- - ed tips I'm giv-ing in today's column. All foods used are av a i 1 a b 1 e dur-ing cool weath-er, and you'll be surprised at what salads can be whipped to-gether without mental fatigue. Badly needed vitamins and min-erals are found in fresh fruits and vegetables to a much greater ex-tent than in cooked foods where water, steam and air have ren-dered many of them useless. The best way to get their full benefit, therefore, is to serve raw foods. What better way to do this than m salads? SALADS, when made FRUIT and beautiful enough, will double as salad and dessert or sal-ad and appetizer. They may be garnished with a scoop of sherbet or dressed with a piquant dressing. Fruit Salad Combinations 1. Alternate wedges of grape-fruit, Oranges, apples, pears and calavo. Serve with honey or lime-flavor- French dressing. 2. Fill canned peach halves with cream cheese and chopped nut mixture and garnish with unpeeled raw apples. 3. Put three cups fresh cranber-ries through food chopper with two apples and one large orange. Add two cups sugar. Serve, mounded, on a pineapple slice on a bed of lettuce. 4. Serve pear halves filled with a cream cheese and crumbled ginger-sna- p center on lettuce leaf. 5. Sliced bananas marinated in lemon juice, then mixed with orange "sections and thin, unpeeled apple slices look pretty, taste well. Careful ly When you're having hot soup for lunch, team it with a hearty salad and make the meal out of it. Macaroni with celery, cheese, hard cooked eggs, green pepper, bacon curls, ol-ives and banana strips rolled in chopped nuts makes a generous plate that takes care of main dish and dessert, LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Hot Tomato Juice Baked Halibut Oven-Frie- d Potatoes Creamed Broccoli Cinnamon Bread Fruit Salad Peanut Butter Cookies Beverage Recipe Given Golden Gate Salad Bowl (Serves 8) 1 clove garlic 1 cup spinach leaves 1 small head chicory 1 small head lettuce 1 cucumber, sliced 1 head cauliflower, uncooked, broken into flowerets 1 head watercress, separated 10 radishes, sliced 1 bunch parsley, chopped 4 tomatoes, sliced 1 green pepper, cut in rings Z carrots, shredded 1 cup chopped celery cup slivered onions French dressing Cut garlic clove and rub salad bowl with it. Wash all vegetables and dry thoroughly between towels. Tear spinach, chicory and lettuce leaves. Add remaining ingredients and toss together. Add enough dressing to coat vegetables but not to soak them. Serve from salad bowl. New England Coleslaw (Serves 3 cups finely shredded cabbage cup soured cream 2 tablespoons vinegar Z tablespoons sugar Mix vine Par and su"?ar with cooked or drained canned vegetables may be used in vegetable sal-ads with raw ingredients for contrast and texture inter-est. Here are some sugges- - tions: Vegetable Salads 1. Arrange 6 asparagus tips (cooked or canned) on lettuce, en-circling them with a green pepper ring. Serve with French dressing to which chopped chives or stuffed olives have been added. 2. Mix shredded red cabbage with fried and crumbled bacon. Toss together with tart mayon-naise. 3. Serve cooked chilled broccoli with a French dressing into which is placed crumbled, hard-cooke- d egg and crumbled blue cheese. 4. Cooked lima beans mixed with diced pickled beets, chopped pars-ley and onion are excellent on a bed of lettuce. soured cream and add slowly, stir-ring constantly to shredded cab-bage. Dust with paprika and serve from large bowl. Southern Chicken Salad (Serves 8) 1 orange 15 large grapes 15 salted almonds 1 banana 1 apple, diced 3 cups diced, cooked white meat of chicken 1 cup mayonnaise Remove seeds and membrane from orange sections and cut in half. Cut grapes fj&fT'Tirz5gg in half, removing QrtZripSf&K. seeds. Split monds; slice ba-3- d nana. Mix all gredients lightly f3fiV' but thoroughly. wfVivJ' Serve chilled on lettuce. Macaroni Salad (Serves 8) Z cups cooked macaroni 1 cup diced celery or encumber 1 cup diced American cheese, if desired V cup chopped pimiento Z diced, hard-cook- eggs Salt and pepper to taste Mayonnaise Bacon curls Banana strips with chopped nuts Olives, carrot strips, radishes Mix together macaroni, celery, cheese and chopped pimiento. Add salt and pepper, then just enough mayonnaise to taste. Arrange on platter, and garnish with eggs, bacon curls, banana strips sprin-kled with the chopped nuts, olives, carrot strips and radishes. V s? - 1 A combination of citrus fruits makes an excellent salad for cool weather eating. Dress it down by having simply the fruit on a crisp bed of greens. Dress it up by topping with a scoop of colorful sherbet. LYNN SAYS: Try New Food Combinations For Flavor Possibilities Baked, smoked ham butts take on delicious flavor as well as glaze if you brush them with orange mar-malade just before serving. Don't bother icing cupcakes after they've cooled. Simply swirl them in corn syrup and top with chopped nuts or coconut. Add onions and celery to potatoes when you're making soup if you want to sharpen the flavor of the soup in a subtle fashion. To extend quick-froze- n strawber-ries for desserts, mix them with drained, crushed pineapple. The combination is exciting for quickly made jam, ice cream or pudding toppings and shortcake mixtures. Meat loaf will be more interest-ing and colorful if you serve it with tart, bright red cranberry sauce, fresh or canned . Sliced oranges with halved and seeded Tokay grapes are an ex-cellent idea for a colorful, flavor-ful salad to serve with a heavy dinner. Nw is as "d Teeter, senioV h a bar with his son H,-- ' r few facts of life' leais; man who drink,' kTm(V f-- ity is no you must medium: Have iZl tte ly. but never, nk-- Yes, S1r," reDi' e" son, "but howamP etothls I am drunk'" lffl0'; father, -- if. y0u were,. H you'd know you WPr , ste "I can see only ee ,rU,i father," grinned. Meticulous Nobody ever imagied tlv f serious-minde- d and 4 editor of dictionaries te,l!i least of all his wife bT' she found him kiss ng and exclaimed- e,t;- - "Why John, I'm He retorted: surpriW! '.'Not you, my dear- -l am -- pnsed; you are astonished KATHLEEN NORRIS A Divine Friend Saves a Family says, "Follow me." Someone! I think Bruce Barton, in "Twiceborn Men" has given many instances of this violent change. The picture you give me of little girls dancing off to a coun-try church with their Daddy, and the grateful mother sitting on the step of a cheap seaside shack, watching the moon rise, and the deep breathing of the ocean, while the Sunday night vacationists surged to and fro, is unforgettable. You knew in that moment that a new friend had joined you; there would be a new guest at your table, henceforth; a new voice in your councils. It was indeed a miracle. All the more so because on the surface there was no change. Just kindness where there had been criticism and discontent, and above all con-fidence where there had been fear. To the lives of most young couples the nearness of an influential, wise and devoted friend can be an in-valuable asset; the Willettes have found that friend. The elements that change an un-happy partnership, fretted father, worried mother, puzzled little girls, into one more busy, happy Amer-ican home are simple. MJJBOUT THREE YEARS AGO I wrote you in despair," says a letter from Ruby Willetts of Brooklyn. "My marriage was going very badly and I wrote you about a divorce. Both our little girls were struggling with winter colds, fi-nances were very shaky and Harry was unhappy in his job. "I told you that we had no reli-gion, although my father, now dead, had been a clergyman and that the thought of breaking up our home and breaking our girls' hearts was certainly breaking mine. But Har-ry's rudeness, his manner of ac-tually disliking us, got worse and worse. "You told me," continued this letter, "to pray. You said to put the whole problem in God's hands. You said to kneel down every morning, after the housework was done, and very earnestly discuss matters with the unfailing Aid. And for six months I did. Things as far as I was concerned began to improve in a very startling way, but it was August before the mir-acle hit Harry. "Then we were down on the beach with about hall a million other holiday makers. At this beach you can rent a two-roo-cabin by the week, and noisy and crowded as it is, we take our vaca-tion that way. Sudden Transformation Harry had been in a quiet, re-sentful mood all day, grumbling that he could not give his wife and children what other men could, but after dinner he was silent, sitting staring off to sea. The fcirls had be-gun to fret because they, wanted to ... sitting staring off to sea . . . go to church; other children were going. But I wouldn't trust them with strangers and kept signalling them not to annoy Papa. Suddenly Harry jumped to his feet and said pleasantly, 'Come on, I'll take you to church!" And off they walked, down the beach, the girls hanging on his arms and laughing. "I cannot tell you of the feeling that came over me. I had never felt that way before. Infinite peace, confidence, I don't know what it was. It was as if God had laid his hand over mine. "Harry came back changed. In that hour he underwent a person-ality transformation that is only to be compared to being born again. For days I made no comment; I was afraid to break the spell. Then one day, on a wonderful walk, he told me of the strange compulsion he had had to race off to the chapel with Vicky "and Ellen. He said it was like a pressure whispering to him, 'All there. All yours. Comfort, safety, understanding.' Truly Miracle "Now we four go to church to-gether. It isn't the church I was brought up in, nor the one Harry went to, but it's Christ, and that's all we need. We plan together, and we pray and of course Harry, re-liant and cheerful, is being steadily pushed up in the store, when he was once being pushed down. We had a chance to buy a little rundown Staten Island farm last year, so we're right near our own beach. Nothing sensational has happened, yet everything sensational has hap-pened. Don't you think the sudden-ness and the completeness of this is truly a miracle?" Yes, Ruby, I do. Thousands are searching to find God, but it seems as if now and then God touches one naHbin mon nn IHa ahmilrioi and Classified DetarW BUSINESS &JNVFS1 UPh ARE YOU lnterestirSTTr Advertising business' n"1 ' F. J. Chesley, UtiA DOQS, CATS, PETS, ETC BEAUTIFUL Heg. GcTST pies. 8 weeks old. iu S(5 ,: Magna, Utah. Ph. 6119. ' FARMS AND RANCH t WE have good llsUot8"VsiS7T-lrrigate- d row crop, Dairying fV- - 1 residential property. -- For further information ( write to H. O. MUSGROVE HELP WANTED-TO- ik LADIES earn weeTT for Unitex, new sanitarv pa'nlee"v belt or tabs. We deliver Unitex Co., 810 So. Sprint, For Your Future h U. S. Savings Bonds At Grocery Drug Sloni milll SLEEP Y.'!!li CQm AD Y8!l FEEL Gill Try This Delicious Chewing-Gu- Laxative When you roll and ton oil nigU- - " headachy and Just awful Dew j: a laxative-- do HUB... CHew gum l&iatlve.The action of rtrs " " Bpeclal medicine "dctoops" tlx or That la. It doesn't act while In ui acn. but only when farther auras lower digestive tract... where rou act. Tou feel fine again quicM And scientists saj chewing i. fine medicine rare'-- ' tlv- e- "readies" U so It Hon i'nt" ; the system.Get drug counter-2- 5. Moron- l-fK FAMOUS . HOME REMEDY TO u j-- J OnlyVlcksVaPoRub; special ItSTlMUUTES chest jndtaA-fc-lik-e a warming keeps workingf or - ft& hours-eve- rt while you sleep I wnu w i See how SCOTT'S helps ;, build you up! "no colds hn J0", J maybe yon """"a&D enough trV,S. W Vitamin HIffb Broadcaster, Policeman Battle Over Commentary HAVANA, Cuba. Jose Pardo Llada, a radio commentator, had said some things that irked Col. Jose Carames, chief of police. The chief sent for the broadcaster, told him of his ire, and peeled off his pistol and coat. The two men fought with their fists. When everyone was satisfied, they each signed a statement that, the other was a gentleman. Neither was badly marked up. THE READER'S COURTROOM Falling Brick No Accident By Will Bernard, LL.B If a Brick Drops On a Pedestrian, Can He Collect Damages? A workman was hired to fix the brickwork on the front of an old building. However, no "safety zone" was set aside on the side-walk below. Sure enough, a brick slipped out of the workman's hand and landed on a passing pedes trian's toe! The pedestrian latei sued the owner of the building for A cottage was put up for auction, and a young couple decided to enter the bidding. However, every time they called out a price the man sitting next to them went a little higher. Finally the man stopped bidding, and the cottage was sold to the young couple. Later they found out that the other bidder was a stooge hired by the auctioneer to boost the price. Angrily they re-fused to go through with the deal. The auctioneer insisted that the cottage was "worth the price," but the court called the sale off. Is it "Theft" to Empty A Drunk's Pockets For His Own Good? An elderly man and a youthful friend entered a tavern one eve ning and began drinking heavily The whiskey didn't bother the older man at all, but his companion soon slumped down in his chair dead drunk. The man took the youth's wallet and started to leave, ex plaining to the bartender that he damages. The latter explained thai the injury was "entirely accident-al," but the court felt otherwise The judge said the owner should have had the common sense to fore-see this kind of mishap- - and to take precautions against it. ,May You Force the City To Extend a Water Line To Your Neighborhood? A man bought a house in a se-cluded neighborhood just inside the city limits. To his dismay, he discovered that the city's water lines didn't run out that far. Promptly he sued the city, demand-ing that the pipes be extended to his neighborhood. He said that he was entitled to the same service ' as everybody else no matter how much it would cost the city. How-ever, the court refused to interfere. The judge said that, in fairness to all concerned, such matters must be left up to the good judgment of he municipal authorities. wouia "keep it until my triena sobers up." But the man had no sooner walked out than the suspi cious bartender summoned a police man. The officer arrested the man for theft. At the trial, tie admitted taking the wallet without the youth's knowledge. However, in view of the circumstances, the court found him not guilty. The judge said that, far from commit-ting a crime, the man had really done the youth a favor by protect-ing his money. Fliers of Jets Disclaim Slang Say Jargon Attributed To Them Not Factual CHANDLER, Ariz. The air force's aviation cadets training at Williams air force base here to be jet fighter pilots declared that the new jargon widely attributed to them is the invention of fiction writers who sit up late writing but have never visited a jet fighter base. "We never call our flying blow-torches fizz jobs," Cadet Richard C. Brown of Castleton, N.Y., de-clared seriously. "You often hear them called stovepipes that's most common but somebody must have dreamed up the name 'lightning rod.' There's really no particular jargon attached to jet flying. "When you're going on a flight you get in the cockpit of the jet and set fire to its tail. You don't 'light the wick.' Then as soon as the engine's burning you taxi out and roll down the runway. As soon as you leap off, or break ground, you suck up the flaps and wheels and you're flying at jet. If you have a light supply of juice you climb at about 200. If the tir tanks are full you climb about 300 miles an hour. That's all there is to it." Cadet Arthur P. Lempanthis of Buffalo, N. Y., concurred and added that after once getting into a Lockheed 0 Shooting Star "it would be really tough" to have to fly in a wartime 1 Mustang that "mosies along" under 500 miles an hour. The 0 is a single-je- t fighter and a troublesome thought oc-curred to Cadet Brown when he contemplated the future. "We won't be flying 's all our lives," he said, "and some-time we might get into something like the That's a big pene-tration fighter. But it has two jet engines. Will people think we're box-ca- r pilots?" |