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Show i- - . ' THR BINGHAM IWLHOTN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH Thursday. April 12. 1928 USE BUCKLES IN NOVEL WAY; EXOTIC PRINTS NOW POPULAR at : i MARVELOUS wliut one little J a self-fubrl- c loop'1 I ,Y or two cun accomplish In the way ' , of Imparting the coveted style f ' ' touch. Tliere'stlieciinrmlng Rprlng , I vf . i coat In the .picture, for Instance. 'jr vV, , Can fancy conjure a model of more w,,.. convincing clilc? And. when the desire of possession, which sweeps V - j over otie nt llrst glance. Is analyzed, Sk& ' It will be found directly traceable!, to the fuct of the tinusunl side fa-.- . ; tenlng achieved by one trlcky-v- ( buckle plus a novel fabric loop. Ot'f" course the fancy; seaming which ' vv.-i- , VV'"' ' swirls around ,, the, liemllne andU ijt j jk ', , front opening In semi-circlin- g rowaSJ U'. Ijr'jA Jfc&y&f4 to meet the buckle and stitched ;V jJWV jfr .;,'!' loop tins considerulile to do withv iLJaS c the smurtnens of this coat. The-- .v a ' ''i too. the tan velours cloth of yhlch.ffv la mnde Is of exquisite texture nncT quiillty klnd fabric always counts for much wnen It comes to putrlclnn mode. Even the boutonnlere Is of the cloth of ttie coat. Thnl which Is true of this model In regard to arresting detail, applies to coats In K,e,neral thla spring. It Is the thoiisiind-and-on- "Intriguing ' '"Ideas" Involved In their styling which Is cap-turing feminine funcy. ,. ' No doubt the fact thnt so muny coats are without fur, made it Impera-tive that stytlsts resort to a strategic rubric manipulation, as an avenue of new appeal. As a result there Is an Interesting array of scarfs and enpes appearing on the latest coats. Mult! , tudlnotis tucks, fantastic senmlngs, di versified sleeve and pocket trentmerts Irregular hemlines, buckles, belts and such, all contribute versatility to the season's coats. Emphasis Is placed on diagonal lines in connection with semirings and CHARMING SPRING COAT r,i; - .V Id black, red and yellow. .The blotfsg is white a very startling contrast to. the bizarre print; Which, of course'., Is Just as the mode would have debonair, beguiling. No-- tlce, too, If you please, that the skirt la plaited fashion's edicts for modern styling The plaited skirt herewith and the hemstitched silken square about the shoulders, leads to a word of sugges-tion to home dressmakers. To take the silk print to the plalter Is a mas-ter stroke of genius. This Is because machine plaiting has a way of over-coming that bugaboo "homemade" look. While about It why not order a squure of matching silk to be bera stitched? yny resourceful woman who would achieve a costume of distinction would do well to buy a separate mono-tone blouse, either white, black, OHvy or some pastel ghnde, If not gray or BIZARRE COSTUME FOR SPRING tuekings, insets and appliques. An other outstanding note of interest Is the Jubot trim, .labots of I he cloth appear, sometimes two or three rlls posed here nnd there In artful fashion ing. Prints! Prints! Print?! Every-body Is going In for them. It Is sinil Impossible to escape I hem nnd be In fashion Not that anyone Is really wanting t sidestep anything so colorful, so nattering, so alfogeihei fiiscinatinc as tlie vivid prints which are lending such vlvacitj to the mode Ami wherevet the exotic print, tbere nlso the kerchief scarf. The terms have gmwii to be almost synonymous Milking Its debut as merely un ncces sorv item, the silk square has tin.ill.v worked itself Into the very structure of the frock or the blouse this spr'ng The picture emphasizes the effective ness ot tiicoiratiiig the scarf Into the making of Hie dress The print In this instance stresses 'he tact of hlgli color. It being patterned heie. Supplement this Investment with the purchase ot a few yards of bright silk print. Having had a sut-ficle-length ot the latter plaited. It Is a very easy mutter to nltach It to a straight underliodice, adding shoulder straps Add ihe Inevitable kerchief squaie and there yon have It a sprins costume de luxe whh-- b will not be meeting Its duplicate down the ave nue. One could go even further tn the path of economy nnd lndivlriimHU hy buying several separate blouses It one does not care to make them, thus Insuring diversified costumes. And have you heard the latest as to what some ingenious women Hrp doliii! in regard to ' the spring ensemble' Well, they ure making up a simple print frock or buying li ready-mad-securing a few extra yards id the silk The surplus silk Is purosed to due the cloth coat which they bought with a view to completing Ihe ensemble. JULIA P.OTTO.U1.KY . 191 Weatero Nwapiei Union I OKe KITCHEN CABINET & im. Wtstora Newspaper Union.) Th well-Inform- housewife will And no difficulty In selecting t combination of food that I nutri-tively efficient and at the aarae time, simple and economical Jor-dan. ' HOT BREADS AND THINGS Hot breads add much to the pleas-ure of brealfast, luncheon, or that coziest of meals the Sunday sup-per. With a hot drink, a little Jam, or marma-lad- e, one ean make a satisfying meal of' bot ' bread. Orange Waffles. Cream one-hal- f cupful of butter, odd one cupful of sugar and two well-be- n ten eggs. Sift two and one-hal- f cupfuli of flour with one teaspoonful of cinnamon and one-ha- lf teaspoonful of ginger, add to the first mixture, alternating with one-hal- f cupful of sour milk to which one teaspoonful of Boda has been added ; add one orange,. Juice and rind and beat well. Drop by spoonfuls on a hot waffle lrdrt and , ,bake pntll brown. Serve with butter and marmalade. , x. . . ;, ... Sunday Hot Bread. Cream together three-fourth- s of, a cupful of augur 'with two tablespoorifuie of butter, 'add 1 one Well-beate- n egg, oe-fourth- '' tea-- . spoonful 'Of salt and two-thir- Of a cupful of milk, then add one and one-ha- lf cupfuls of flour sifted with three teaspoonfuls of baking poer. - Beat' well,aod aaditwo-.-Ublespoomfu- Of orange Juice; the grated rind of the orange mixed with suger Is sprinkled over two layers w tjoe, ujniure,;y'cu icifce'-pabi- BakewetRy-De- ' niinites! In a"hot Oven aod-'serv- hot. Golden Getatln.-rSofte- n.; two tabled spooafnls of gelatin In one-ha- lf cup--, ful ofcold .water, theftx add one pint of boiling water and wheq the gelatin Is completely .dissolved' add the Juice of two lemo.18 and twb oranges with iugnr to taste. Four Into a mold and chill. Serve-wit- whipped cream. Steamed Chocolate Pudding. Beat one egg until very light, add one cup-ful of sugar, one tablespoonful of soft butter, one cupful o' milk and one and one-ha- lf cupfuls of flour, sifted with three teaspoonfuls of baking powder ntd one-fourt- h teaspoonful of salt, one and one-ha- lf squnres of choc-olate melted over hot water and one-ha- lf teaspoonful of vanlila. Steam two hours. Serve with whipped cream. Golden Corn Bread. Sift together one cupful of flour, one cupful of cornmeal, three teaspoonfuls of bak-ing powder and add one-hal- f cupful each of milk and orange Juice. Stir in the well-beate- n egg yolk, beat well, fold in the stiffly beaten white and add two tablespoonfuls of melted but-ter. Bake In a moderate oven about one hour. Springtime Green. We now enjoy lettuce in some form all year; In even the smallest tuar- - ket It Is found plentiful and reasonable In price. Lettuce Is a valuable food green and ehould be served at least once a day throughout the good year, unless some other green food Is supplied. 6uch H8 spinach. We all enjoy the crisp bleached heads of the iceberg type of lettuce, but our dietitians tell us that the green-leiive- d lettuce is richer In vltamlnes and they are the food adjuncts which we are anxious to accumulate. When buying lettuce, If of the head variety, choose a hard, firm head, as often the large, loose heud3 are unlit outside because of wilted leaves,' and may he spoiled in the center. Weight Is a good criterion to use in the buy-ing of vegetables as well as fruits. A heavy orange or grapefruit is rich In Juice, as we all know. Artichokes In the city market are at their height In the spring. The solid, tightly adhering scales murk a good artichoke. Until they are more plentiful the market price will be pro-hibitive for most housewives. Spinach is plentiful. It Is sold by the pound and should be fresh and green, free from yellow or wilted leaves. In muny sections where the spinach Is grown on sandy soil it will be nec-essu-to give It muny washings. The tinted" leaf variety Is almost Impos- - sible to free from snnd If grown In It. He careful to choose spinach free from Insects ; this can be seen from the curled leaves. New fublmge Is now plentiful nnd tomatoes are coming in well. The price In the northern markets Is high, but an occasional Indulgence Is not extravagant, for a tomato or two will add much to the appearance and vita- - mine content of a salad. Itenietnber that the ordinary leaf lettuce which Is grown In our northern gardens is the kind richest In the llfe-glvln-g vltnmine. Plant It In succes-- ! sive beds so thnt may he fresh and tender for months, for use In salads Scalloped Parsnips With Pineapple. Party cook parsnips with no water except that which clings to the veg-- etiihle lifter washing. Place layers of the cooked parsnips and plnenpple, the slices cut Into halves until all Is used. Cover with a sirup, using the pineapple juice and a cupful of sugar. Pake twenty minutes. O'DONNELL & CO. i. Funeral Directors Bingham Canyon ; Utah Phone 17 Wasatch 6461 Salt Lake Phone i' OONT auffer headaches, or any of those pains that Bayer Aspinn can end in a hurry I Physicians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affect the heart Every drug-gist has it, but don't fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And don t take any but the box that says Bayer, with the word genuine printed in redj 5'L"no"e;ueVcdr.t rt B.UeylleaeU ; "u 8 Government, highly recommnJ Washington Nursery. Toppantsn. Wun. Safety Razor Blades Only 2c Per Blade All Make. Send you blades to ,to be renewed and reaharpeued betleji than tlen ynu bnuaht , ; What You Want j How You Want It ! . When You Want It ZjTT For anything in the line of printing come Ji to us and we'll guar-antee you tatufactory work. at price that are right L i Bingham Stage Line .(.' ,. . , , i i .( ! i " Bingham Depot U i ,i i V Mam and Carr Eork j, .' 1'honcMl' ' ! ? SCHEDULE ! Cars' lea'te Bingham at'. ! ' r-.- ) fi9and.1V'.a-TO..l- . T.v V ; Salt Lake City Office S" Semloh Hotel , J ' 107 E.2nd South , Phone. Was.. 1069 t SCHEDULE Cars leave Salt Lake City at i 7,9 and 11 a.m. ! 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m. ' FARES l One wav . $1.50 t Round Trip - $2.50 ! I 1 il'1RVTr.j.Ju.,irr.ni n" V ' raO . flail's wl'h" colrf and mall to HAFKTY BI.ADK CO.. INC. . -- Htntlon K. Oeu. 10. Antelei. Calir. SEEDS PLANTS BULBS Your .eucces.e r- vflth ' ' Mountain Grown Tested Seeds and Trees. Write for lara;e lllus-tratl- -d catalog glvlnir full details. Salt Lake. DAA1C Any book you want OUUM mail. CO. D. Deseret Book Co, 44 East So. Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah i aBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa I P(riG to$ jjGet :j i: Your i: y From ! i; ftranite i Furniture Co. ! ; Isis Theatre Building ! Bingham Canyon il BEST WAT TO KILL Rate'-dMic- e 1 Always Ua 1 Etearns'EIectricParte V Sort Deith to toekroulMt, watorbnfi, atb 1 Used by housekeepers for 60 yearal Directions in i5 languages. All Dealers 2 or. 35c 15 oz. 11.50 Money Pack II It lalli For Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Sores Hartford's Balsam of Myrrh Money back tat Bnt bottla If not luttad. AO daakta, Keep your vital organs active and yotf can forget about your health. Aid nature and she will repay you with renewed life. Since 1696, the sturdy Hollanders have . warded off kidney, liver, bladder, bowel troubles with their National Household Remedy the original and genuine A A RLEM OU wTriTuTsalt LakeCity, No. 15-1- 82. ws UNDERWOOD Special GUARANTEED MODEL NO 5 $40 and $50 Terms $5.00 monthly if desired LA.TE MODELS RENTED One month $2.50, three months $7 Wholesale Typewriter Co.. Inc. 321 Vj So. Main St. AVasatch 2761 Stores: Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Sacramento, Fresno ft ;:News Notes;! ! : lt' a PriviUg to Liv in ' ', Utah MYTON The week beginning April 9 la the date set for the opening of the Antelope sheep shearing plant, which Is located eight miles west of Myton. It is expected that 50,000 head of sheep will be hundled this season. Ed Chris-tenso- n of Springville will supervise the work which involves about fifty men and several trucks to handle the wool to Price. The shearing season covers about six weeks. BRIGHAM CITY The new $30,000 armory and community center building was formally opened and dfidicated here by an eluborate and fitting pro-gram, which prominent state and mil-tar-y officials,, with local officials and citizens, participated. LOGAN Survey of the snow cover In Spring Hollow and on Mt. Logan made by the Utah experiment station on March 1, results of which were announced, shows a normal accumul-ator during March of about 10 inches of water. This, however did not over-come the deficiency of snow on Ma-c- n 1 and, as a result, the snow cover on April 1 la considerably below that of a year, ago. On April, 1, 192?,., there was about 41 inches of water at 9000 feet elevation. This year there Is only '31.2 ln.ches. Salt Lake Clearing skies and rising temperatures were following .oh one more real taste of snow, which rode Into Salt Lake with a brisk gale. of from three-t- Jive ' inches, which had dampanod cleanup "campaign ardor for a brief spell, was I .rapidly f' melting and before, nightfall "it was practically gone" on the lower levels. 1 i of. the. .sev-enth ,. . Opening, annual national art exhibit. "Was formally observed Keie :ln UVe iSpr.fag vllle thtgj. srhoojvaudltorlunt. !p .., Franklin .8. Harris president, of ihe rirtgVd'm Young university, was the principal speaker at the exercises. Hundreds passed through the halls during the afternoon's presentation ol nationally; known artists' works and favorable comment was heard. ; LOGAN According to C. Z. Harris Richmond dairyman, plans are rapidly progressing for the annual black and white day at Richmond, which hat been set for May 4. Considerable In-terest is developing among the dairy men of the county that are Intending to have their herds represented In the big event. MANTI A car of dairy cattle from Cache county was unloaded In Sanpete recently. There were forty-tw- o head of animals in the consignment, which were purchased for $3085. In the ship-ment there were twelve grade calves at total cost of $330: a registered calf, $75; twenty grade heifers springing, bred and yearlings $1717; two regis-tered heifers, $220; five young cowl $532.50, and two young bulls, $210. OGDEN Utah canneries packed cases of tomatoes, peas and mlscelaneous products In 1927, making the second largest pack In the history of Utah canning, the Utah Canners' as-sociation announced. The pack of 1925 of over three and one-hal- t million 1927 total. In 1926 the canners packed ' cases was the only one to surpass the 1,065,102 cases of tomatoes and 770C,,- - 322 cases of peas. Forty canneries i were In operation. ' PRICE That the Uintah basin is ' interested in the proposed highway ' from Price to Vernal via Nine-Mil- e ' was the word brought to Price by II. D. Ford, general manager of the tta-- ven Gilsonite corporation, who, In com-- J pany with Superintendent P. H. Ste- - phenson and Mine Foreman E. G. Gurr of the company, was In Price on com- - panly business. A. T. Burton, a good-- I roads advocate from Vernal, was with the party, and he said the suggestion would receive the undivided support of Uintah county. I OGDEN Twenty-on- e members of I the Weber County Fish and Game Pro-- I tectlve association went to Spring t creek In Ogden valley and built troughs to divert water into the fish I retaining ponds of the association. The ponds are now capable of holding 100.-00- 0 E flsh. E. L. Ford, president of the association, said. Ponds in Spring E creek itself also have been built with a capacity for 40,000 fingerling trout. GUNNISON In the Gunnison dis-trict year farmers will Increase acreages in every line, wlih several hundred acres turned to cauliflower growing, an industry moving rapidly to overtake celery growing In the j ' state. VERNAL One of the severest w'n in many years vislsted Vernal and Ashley valley recently, the gale reaching its height just after the schools had been dismissed for the noon hour recess. Many pupils found it difficult to return for the afternoon classes, as the high school is located In the western end of Vernal and the gale ras blowing from the west. j MANTI Last week saw the first eRgs go through Sanpete's grading plant at Mantl. Manager K. Jensen has the old box factory building Ik . supplies. A nsw 1 2 ton truck is shape for handling the egg3 and feed now on hand. It is painted white, with gold lettering signs on each side, "Milk-Whit- e Eggs." A carload ol feeds has arrived and has been un loaded. PROVO Industrial surveys show that many Utah towns and cities have completed plans for extensive street Improvements, with milps of sldewalki J and pavements for 1928. ' Lcuvain Library Soon to Be Open to World The' new $1,000,000 I.ouvnln.Dnlver-sit- y Library building, replacing the r old one which was destroyed by fire p In the first month of war, Is nearly , t completed. The monumental build-ing, most of the funds for which were collected In 700 universities In the United States, is built In the Flemish renaissance style, and is expected to be ready for occupancy by July. With a facade of 200 feet and a depth of 150 feet, the new library has a 275-fo-ot tower. In this will be housed a four-octav- e carillon, a huge bell to be christened 'Liberty,' and a four-dia- l clock, the war memorial gift of the New York Engineering foundation. The racks have a capacity for 2,000.000 volumes and are distributed over eight floors. In addition to the main reading room which can accommodate 400 students, there are 25 smaller rooms set apart for special studies and lectures. Among the 750,000 vol-umes filready In the library are nu-merous contributions from nearly every university and scientific Institu-tion. Styles in Handwriting A study by Leonard P. Ayres showed that from a point of view of legibility handwriting styles may be classified as follows: Vertical that Is, slanting from 00 to 80 degrees; medium slant, from SO to 55 degrees, and extreme slant, from 55 to 30 it grees. It's a Question Apartment Hunter How much Is this apartment with the piano? Manager Let's see would you mind playing It first, pleare? |