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v THE OGDEN STANDARD: OGDEN, UTAH, THURSDAj JUNt 0, r m 1 5. f , . . r ft 1 Woman's Page ' I BECOMING CLOTHES ALWAYS AN ECONOMY I The question lof dress has always been a serious one and an expensive one, and one which, if it is not wisely considered, will easily become an ex travagant one. Now. however) wartime das are with US, and we cannot afford most f us, to spend our pennies unneces 1 tartly or thoughtlessly, and because we cannot we are seeing to it that we' are receiving good value for our money. I Value Received There is no wind so evil that it does, (not blow some good, and that is one of the desirable results of wartime' conditions We women arr boeonunc saner and more sensible Bhoppers And we are learning to do without the nonessentials and to take better care of those things which we already pos- ; I sess. JuPt because we are realizing the, folly of hoppinc,- OUl of one fashion into another just as quickly as v, o ran wr ;; do it, and are concluding that it Is wiser to wear the same type of thing for a season, at least, does not in the least mean that we are going to dress in poor taste. On the contrary we know that now. if ever, it is up to us to lock our ber.r So we are more careful what we buy and more certain that it is not what the public mar have taken a sudden fancy to, but that it is what suits us. Becoming clothes are always an economy, but those that are not are extravagant failures. Once upon a time the failure could be 'brown aside and we could try our 1 luck again, but now patriotic necessity demands that we stick to our choice. I and few of us will want to face the mirror nay auer day garbed in a failure. So those of us who have natural taste use it, and those of us who have not acquire It, and all of us think twice about what we need and then we sally forth and purchase those things which make us look Well. There is nothinc which is prettier and more practical for wear at this season of the year than thp all-in-one frock that is so little trouble lo don in the busy times. ; This little dress appears in all types, for the street, for afternoon affairs and for the more intimate hours at home. As a rule its silhouette follows the straight and narrow path and the skirt is short, with no fulness that, can be I avoided. I Rather unusual is the gown pictured I today. Of heay black jersey cloth, em broidery of a deep blue in a. character istically Oriental design makes thus I dress undeniably striking. I A feature of the day is to introduce I vivid ornamentation upon a somber ff background, which, as may be imagin I ed, carrier a brilliant effect This ornamentation may take the 1 form of embrolder . of beads, of metal braid, or of touches of contrasting ma- teriaL I Some of the newest models are eo- I voted to the tunic and show the upper 1 part of silk and the under ol some suo- ! stitute wooden fabric and rice versa Apron effects are also the ordr of the day. but the laurels of popularity must be given to drapery. One favorite decolletp is a V which closes at the side and another Is the Short V which can button up at th chin. If one so desires. But the low oblonsr opening with the filling of net or tulle, and the simple yet trying, round neck are most orten seen. Black is a favorite background for gold or royal blue or cherry, and jet embroiderv has received second lease I . of life. Good Taste in Dress k. There is much variety In every Hp phase ot fashion now W All we have to do is to make a cer tain study of the modes and choose! what suits us best To educate ourselves in good taste In dress is not frivolous, and the h knowledge gained will stand us In 1 good stead always FIVE EXCELLENT SOUP REGIPES FRENCH ONION SOVP- (""hop four large onions and put ihem in a stew pan with half a cupful of chicken fat. or other drippings and saute until tender but not brown. Stir in a heap ing tablespoonful of flour and when smooth pour in threo eupfuls each of hot water and milk Simmer twenty minutes, then season with pepper. s-a and a teaspoonful of sugar Beat two egg yolks with half a cupful of grated cheese, mako several slices of toast and spread with the mixture, then place them in the bottom of the iur een. Pour the hot soup over the toast, cover five minutes, then serve ENGLISH TURNIP SOUP. Melt three ounces of butter or a good fat In a stew pan and add four large. m thinly sliced onions six medium sized white turnips, pared and sliced thin and one cupful of broth. Simmer for twenty minutes, then add a pint of broth and cook for one hour Put through a puree sieve, season and heat and, if convient, add half a cupfu.1 of cream, though it is not a necessity. SWEDISH APPLE SOUP Peel, pare, core and quarter two pounds of boiling tart apples. Stew them in w Purities YiJk Highly am-cpuc-iji Used aa a curativta agent for all externafVcr skin troubles. Conceals fmW" permanent blemishes kwM and reduces unnatural color. Ideal for correcting y greasy ski ... ,mmm yV" . Gouraud's ' Oriental Cream Send 10c for Trial Size FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON. New York sdi i BELTED CAPE FOR I IJD-SUMMER WEAR fiiii it A cape having a belt which nooks behind has been added to novelties intended for mid-summer. The design is an excellent one to carry out in velvet or even in silk if a turn-oer fur collar is used for trimming. thre pints of good stock until tender; put ail through a puree sieve, season, heat and serve. Float a few toast squares on top of the soup SCOTCH POTATO SOUP. Boll six large potatoes and mash them smooth, adding a little butter, pepper and salt and the juice of a large onion. Have ready a quart of hot. mutton broth and add it gradually, stirring until all is well blended. Serve with toasted croutons. AMERICAN ASPARAGUS SOUP. Take a bunch of fresh asparagus and with a sharp knife cut the tips ofT Wash, scrape and chop the rest of ine bunch coarsely, cover with three pints of water, add a chopped onion and a pepper, a stalk of celery, a bay leaf and a slice of bacon. Boil gently one hour, then strain Add a pint of rich, hot milk, thiekm with butter and flour rubbed to a cream and the tips that have been steamed tender, season and serve. MOW PLEASANT HAS A CLOUDBURST MOUNT PLEASANT. June 19 One I man was drowned and property dam aged to the amount of $100,000, follow I ing a cloudburst in the canyon above here late this afternoon The water poured out of the canyon several feet high and carried with it huc boulders and mud. The torrenl rated through Main street, Inundated cellars and did i much damage to merchandise Two blocks ot track of the Rio Grande rail -j road at the north end of the town were washed away. Ixiuis oldbam. a farmer. T,- years of age. whose ranch is just below the mouth of the canyon, was swept awa ! in the flood. Houses in the nor a sec tion of Mount Pleasant were washed 'away and toppled over, and many per sons had narrow escapes from drown ing or being killed in the wreckage. A haystack, intact, was arrit-d through Main street on to crest of the flood and was left in front of tne tithing of fice. The electric system was put out of commission and the people of Mount Pleasant will be without light for sev 1 eral days Mud several feet deep is j piled up on the sidewalks and in the streets. The flood lasted four hours. Mr. Oldham is survived by his widow , and four children, all of whom had I narrow escapes from death oo GERMANY REGRETS BULGAR CHANGES AMSTERDAM; -June 19 Comment ing on the selection of M. Malinoff as head of the new Bulgarian government th Kreuse Zeitung says "It is regret - j able for German that there should b a change in the Bulgarian ministry fhi' 'oliiL-ui' Yolks Zeltuns derlares that a crisis has existed In Bulgaria , ever since the conclusion of the Buch arest peace, but. that the censorship I prevented any allusion to it With the retirement of Premier Radoslavoff, the last of the leading statesmen active at the outbreak of the war lays down office oo NAVAL RESERVE ! AVIATORS KILLED PENSACOLA. Fla., June 19. B. E. I Sylvester and A. B. Blair, naval re i serve aviators, were killed near the I navy air station today when thdr air- planes collided. Both men were sent here recently from the Boston school of technology to complete their train -! ing. Head the Classified Ads. Read the Classified Ads. j MICH AT STAKE IN WORLD WAR Viscount Grey Sees Fate of Whole Modern Civilization Involved in Struggle. LONDON. June 19 (British admir alty per wireless press.) -The widest interest will be evinced in a pamphlet on "the league of nations" written bv iscount Grav of Fallodon. who was seeretary of foreign affairs in the cab met of Herbert H. Asquith at the be ginning of the European war "There is more at stake in the war than the existence of individual states or empires or the fate of a continent," says Viscount Grey. 'The -whole of modern civilization Is at stake and whether it will perish and be sub merged, as has happened to previous civilizations of older types, or whether it will live and progress, depends upon whether the nations engaged in this war. and even those that are on look era, learn the lesson (hat the experi ences of the war ma teaeh ihem. Nations Cannot Stand Still. ' It must be with nations as with individuals in the great trials of life, they must become better or WOtSC thev cannot stand still They must learn and profit by experience and rise to gTeater heights or else sink lower and drop eventually into the abyss. If ihis war does not teach man kind new lessons that will to dominate the thoughts and feeimg of those Who survive it as to make new tbingj pos sible then the war will be the great est eatasfrophe as well as tin mo 1 gr!evdlis trial and suffering, of which the world has auy . ecord." League o' Nations. Viscount Grey lavs down twe prin cipal rondihon.' which be saya niu.-t be fulfilled if the league of nations 18 to be effective. ' The first is. the idea is to be adopt ed with earnestness and conviction by the executive heads of states. It must become an essential part of their Tac tical policy, one of their chief reisons for bring or continuing to be respon sible for the policy of their st;t es They must now adopt it only to ren der such service to the persons whom it is conenient to please or ungra cious to displease. They must lead and not follow; they must compel, if nec- r-SSarV and nnl tn ho rnmnnlla " This condition. Viscount Grey tl.inks. is actually fulfilled as regards the executive head of the United States and is, nor will be. found pp ent as regards the entente govern ments, while Austria has publicly shown a disposition to accept the pro posal As long, however, a? military rule in Germany continues. Germany will oppose a league of nations, he says : Germany Will Oppose. "Germany has to be convinced," he continues, "that force does not pay. that the alms and policy of her mili tary rulers inflicts intolerable and also unnecessary suffering upon her and that when the world is free from the menace of these military rulers with their sharp swords and mailed fists, Germany will find peaceful de velopment assured and preferable to expansion by war. and will realize that the condition of true security for one nation is absence of security on the nart of all nations. "L'nul Germany feels this to be true. I there can be no league ol nations in the sense intended by President Wil son " The second condition, says Viscount Grey, is 'hat the governments and not the peoples of states willing to found , it must understand clearly that it will Impose some limitations upon the na ' tlonal action of each and may entail some inconvenient obligations. The I smaller and weaker nations will have 'rights that must be respected and up- held by the league. The stronger na tions must forego the right to make their interests prevail against the weaker by force, and all the states ' must fon ;;o the right in any dispute to resort to force before other meth ods of settlement by conference, con ciliation, or. if neee" be, by arbitration have been tried. This is the limits tion Force, the writer insists, must be brought to bear upon states that re fuse to settle their disputes by arbi tral)' power. Viscount Grey urges that the pros pect of a failure of the war is intoler ahli and adds: "Peace can never be ensured by the domination of one countrv securing Its power and prosperity by the submis sion and disadvantage of others and the German idea of a world peace se cured by the power of German militar ism is impraci ieable as well as unfair and abhorrent to other nations. In opposition to this idea of Ger many, the allies should set forth as ('resident Wilson has already sel forth the idea of peace secured by mutual regard between states for the rights of each and a determination to stamp out any attempt at war as they would a plague that threatened the destruc- tion ol all When those who accept this idea and this sort of peace can in word and deed speak for Germany ' we shall be within sight of a good peace." TAFT URGES JAPAN 1 TO ACTIN RUSSIA NEW HAVEN. Conn, Jim- 19. Gl'ta lo Vale university in the past year and Credited is endowment ma Ic a total of Jl. 279. 724. the alumr-i wa informed by President Arthur 'J' Had ley, at the luncheon which followed comment nient exercises ih aftoi noon Former President TafC spcklr.y at the alumni dinner, urged that Japan and her allies be allowed t ; go Into Russia by way ol the Siberian railroad o establish an eastern froL' from which to strike toward Berlin He also praised the work of Herbert Hoover, federal food administrator, and Henry P. Davison, head of the Red Ctoav bu reau both of whom received the hono rary degree of doctor of laws from Yals today. oo . WOUNDED MEN RETURN WASHINGTON. June 18 SLxty-one sick and wounded men of the Ameri can expeditionary force were returned to tho l?uited States for treatment in the two weeks ending June 11, the sur goon gejuwals' office announced tonight, TEUTONIC ALLIES LOSING SPIRIT : Troops Do Not Plough Through Enemy Lines With Former Spirit. The Teutonic allies apparenth hare lost their spirit of do-or-dle. Their at tacks every where lately have lacked the tenaciousness of days gone b Instead of ploughing through enten- te lines with stubborn indifference to j casualties so long as an objects o wi -gained, they now waver and then halt I in the fare of the artillery and rule fire of the men barring their waj , with . the points they were trying to gain still far beyond their reach. Ambitious attempts by the troops of the central pow'Prs in the past fev weeks hae proven this The opening of a gateway to Paris through the wes tern front runnine from Ifontdidier to the Marne, failed completely, the 0 fensive on the Italian battle I in launched by the Austrlans seeminglv has failed miserably In the mountain regions and apparently has almost been .s opped along the ra e while i stroke -tarted by the Germans against Rheims broke down In its inception without the enemy taking a yard i l territory And in these various attempted en terprises the high commands of the t.ernian and u - i-o-Hungarian a rm i -have seen their men literalK mown down until battlefields have been clou ged with dead or wounded as recom pense to the allied troops for the small bits of terrain they yielded. The Austrian offensive jn the Ital ian theater there is still in progress along the Piave river, but in the mountain reinn after the sharp r. -action by the Italians. British and Prt nch troops, who in counier-attacks pushed haek the invader from th points he had reached in his initial rush, the enemy evidently Is fearful of again trying out the metttle of th defenders On the Piave numerous attempts have been made by the Austrlans to gain further bridgeheads on the v., tern bank of the stream but the Ital ians everywhere are holding ihem with their gunfire and also doing sangui nary execution v 1 1 b in the ranks of the enemy across the river with bomb and machine gun Are. I he Austrian war office asserts that the Austro-Hungarian troops haw ' crossed the Fossata canal at some j points where Tuesday it was claimed they had made advances and also that 1 several Italian lines at the southern foot of the Bfontello plateau, the key lo the Venetian plains, have been plerc ed. Rome on the other hand, declared that all the weak attempts made in the I Monteiio region were completely re-1 pulsed. More than 9000 men havo been taken, by the Italians since the! offensive began and many guns and j several hundred machine guns have been captured That intensive air fighting also has taken place is shown by the fact that fifty enemy planes have been shot down. Only two of the allied machines have failed to return to their base The attacks of the Germans near Rheims resulted disastrously to them. ! Hardly had they left their trenches after one of the most terrific bombard ments with shells of all calibre, in eluding gas projectiles, ever exper ienced on the western front, nearly M0.000 men were faced by the rein-1 forced French armies and llterallv cut' to pieces and forced to fall back pre- I clpltately Only at one point, to the' east of Rheims, did the enemy succeed In penetrating the French line Hero' they were ejected almost Immediately. I The German official communication describes the attack as a demonstra- tion of artillery' and mine thrower Little activity has prevailed on the remainder of the western front, except the usual reciprocal bombardments and operations In the nature of patrol I engagements. The results of the recent naval at - j tack by the British on the German i submarine base at Zeebrugge seeming- 1 ly was more suecessful than anticipat ed. Twenty -one destroyers, a large number of submarines and numerou auxiliary craft are bloeked in the can al by the ships sunk across the water way. 00 Mamma - "Why, Tommie. you look quite pale!" Tommie "Yes'm; I've washed my face twice today!" i ill Summerfe 9 Mil Comfort JSSHSKSs. Depends on whether or not you are being -fTJBlir"! refreshed and entertained by the soft sweet tones I MM COLUMBIA 1 I LH grafonola I wl I Whether up the CANYON or in town M Li w deliver anywhere FREE. H , EASY TERMS II B "Ogden's Phonograph Headquarters" II GLEN BROS.-ROBERTS PIANO GO. H HI Tel- 181 2472 Hudson Ave. IS WAR CASWLTIES V ; WASHINGTON, June 20. The array casuality list touay contained 73 names divided as lollows: Killed in action. 17; died of wounds. 9; died of airplane aecident 2; died of disease 7; died of accident and om er causes 1; wounded severely 32; wounded, degree undetermined, 4; missing in action 1. Killed In Action Lieutenants Henry' L. Eddy. New Briton. Conn. Judson P. Galloway, i Newburch, N. V. Corporals John C Brown. Atlanta, Kan. George D. Dole, New Haven, Conn. John P. Owen. Mattoou. Wis. Wagoner John T Cassidy, Providence. R. I. Mechanic Ray A. Hanson, Shell Lake. Wis. Privuif.s Harry Barrack, Townsend. Mont. Patrick Bar'helette, Backoo. N. D. Hiram Q. Cox, Fairmount. lnd.j William Gallagher, Londonnery. Ire land. Fred B. Jenkins, Huntsvillf K Frank J. Just. Pcnyan. N. Y. Josepn L. Javoy. Chicago. Joseph H Regan, I Pittsfield. Mass. John Stevenson, Chi cago. Marvin Williamson. CoUinsvttle, aba ma. Died of Wounds Lieutenant Calvin L. Capps. Lucama. N. C. Mechanic Jim Arnold. Belle Buckle. Tenn. Privates Reuben Blesecker, Mohov ri, Wis. Harry T. Brooking. Kirks klllo. Mo Antonio Grassl. Mazzani. Italy. Clarence St. John. Cleveland, 0. Dale L. Scott, Rinard Mills, O. vValter Stelmaszek. South Chicago, 111. Sergeant Edward A. Tenbroek, Springfield. Mass. Died of Disease Major Edward Shoults, Alexandria. lra. Corporal Edward Lowery, Prince on, Ky. Fireman Juan Diaz, Colonla. j Spain. Privates Percy Bergin Lisbon. N. H. Percy E Cobb. Attleboro, Mass. Wil liam Hill. Rocheport. Mo. Robert A. (Murray. Jr., Braintree, Mass. Died of Airplane Accident Lieutenant Joe G. Trees, Pittsburg, Pa. bergeant Frank Ennia, Valley Falls. R. I. Died of Accident and Other Causes Private Thomas Payne. Dayton, O. Severely Wounded Lieutenants james P. Arnold. Butler. Mo. E. T. Ericksen. Livingston, Mont. James C Ferguson. Tipton, la. James Alexander Henderson, Brtdgeton, Mo. j N'orbert W Markus, Quincy, 111. Leon j G. Ruth. Clinton. N Y. Frederick R. j Stokes. New York City. ' Sergeants Charles F. Davis. Bonne Terre. Mo. David P. Hay. Campbell -irille, Ky. Corporal John Bennett, Jacksonville, Fla. Privates Joseph Ciechowski, Rock ville. Conn. James C. Cox. Indiana polis. Ind. Joseph T. Farmer. Yonkers, N Y. Harvey Green. Rockfort. Ind.; John Grogan, Jr.. Rumson. N J. John! Grubb, Wilmington, Del. Martin F. Hayes. Syracuse, N. Y. Albert Hew ett, Stafford Springs, Conn. Lawson' E. Hower. Frackvillc, Pa. Paul Lauro-I kovic. Minski, Russia. Charles Marc-! zewski, Schenectady. N. Y. Paul M.I Muarrent, Pembrook, Pa. Daniel' Plummer. New York City. Fred M. Reynolds, Delton, Va. Richard S Rus sell, Will's Point, Tex. Walter S. Stewart, Lakeview, Mi-.-. William L'l rlch, New Britain, Conn. George S. I 'near, Tarnopol. Austria. Bert T, Wl Idner, Sapulpa. Okla. William West, Richmond. Va. Benjamin C. White. South Hadley, Mass. William E Williams. Shrewsburry. W. Va. Wounded, Degree Undetermined Privates Leverelt E. Bishop. New York City. Artie E. Browning, Wash ington. D. C. John W. George 1602 Livingstone, avenue, les Moines ia. James L. ReiUy, New York City. Missing In Action Lieutenant Oliver J Kendall, Naper vllle, 111. t W I Prisoners, Previously Reported Missing Captain George C. Freeland. West ville. Conn. sergeant Harold W. Y-'tii Tucker, Providence. R. L Jjj . ' I orporals Jack Bathgate, Orange, Conn. Thomas A. Barry. New Haven, Conn. Harold A. Bergman. New Hav en. Conn. Melvin R. Carlson. Jamaica 9 i I Plain. Mass Arthur F Johnson. Mid- dletown. Conn. 1ml Mechanics August H. Chapin, Gol chester, Conn. Peter F. Plant. Quincy, Massachusetts &! Privates Adellard Barbeau, Daniel- 1 son. Conn. Percival Barnes. New Ha- " ven. Conn. Lester Bigelow. New Ha ven, Conn. William S Cardelle, Cran- ' A ston. R. I. Harry C. Caverly. Man- 9 KM Chester, N. H Clyde D. Charette, 1 If I South Dcerfield, Mass. Lowry R. ll Clark. New Haven. Conn. George E. ' Collver, New Haven, Conn. Ernesto i ; de Martino. Hartford, Conn. Oliver , j T. Elliot. Boston. Antoine Gagnon, ; li Bristol, Conn. Howard M. Garton, ; ' Pawtucket, R, L Frank Gillespie. Dor- l Chester. Mass. Luis J. Goldman, Phil- j !'j adelphla. George L. Hawley, Hart- lord. Conn. William R. Hier. Bristol. VL William Hopke, Brooklyn. N. Y. F,J Lewis R, Lenhart. Soraerfield. Pa. : Lloyd W. Litchfield. Needham. Mass. John J. Milan, South Boston, Mass. Joseph A. Roche. Ridgefield, Conn. Earl C. Rodgers, Danville, Vt Frank Sutcliffe. Fairhaven, Mass. Arnold D. I'mba. Middletown. Conn. Note: Previously reported killed in action now reported missing in action: Private Clareuce L. Massey, Columbus, Georgia. I oo Camphor, so frequently used to preserve furs, will keep away moths, but it is liable to impair the beauty ! ' of the furs by dimming the tint and gloss. I j SCcnO to $rf fid of them I II Skin specialists arc tracing fewer and troubles to the blood more to bacteria and para- j jfcj y y sites that are carried into the pores with dust, . , , M. soot and grime. Clear your skin of any blemishes caused by tmc Get a cake today and begin to brinC to your this most powerful and persistent enemy by this ,kin (hjt crcatfr clearnc$J freshness and charm effective local treatment. Just before retiring havc lonped fof Woodbury's is for sale at wash in your usual way with warm water and drug sfores anJ toHet Roods counters everywhere Woodbury s Facial Soap and then dry your face. throughout the United States and Canada. Jnow dip the tips of your fingers in warm water and rub them on the cake of Woodbury's until Write today for a week's size cake they are covered with a heavy cream-like lather. Cover each blemish with a thick coat of this soap For 5c we will send you a trial size cake of cream and leave it on for ten minutes. Then Woodbury's Facial Soap large enough to last for rinse very carefully with clear, hot water; then a week of this Woodbury treatment, together with with cold. the booklet "A Skin You Love to Touch," which Use Woodbury's regularly in your daily toilet Wet thuc. Vro?c "catmcnt for all of the com- This will make your skin SO firm and active that moncr skin troubles. I it will resist the frequent cause of blemishes and ?or 12c we "ill tend you the treatment booklet and keep your complexion free from them. Sf.iV1 Vood;bury': F.ac,al SoaP' FAaci' Cre.am I r v f l.icial Powder tend today to The Andrew Jcrgcna You will find a 25c cake of Woodbury's Facial Co., 9050Sprinp Grove Ave, Cincinnati, Ohio. Soap sufficient for a month or six weeks of this jf ,.-., Canada, uddrtss The Andrew JrrSens h J k treatment and for general cleansing use for this Co., Ltmned, qqq 6itriroeke Strut, Psrtk, Ontario. I , I