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Show CACHE AMERICAN'. LOGAN. oooooooooooooooooQoooo I I)iil It Because o g The Story of a Jealous Heart By Fannie Ilurt o 0000003000000000000000 It THERE w i !ef tbJl IA St Pm tit! are certultt thing H an and miracle of miracle, ih had married Bennet. am a had Well, when bequest Ilk tlmt, Itcnnet was apt to argue maniac of with hlniM'lf. it mad him. It mi tike owning Jewel with no vault. caket, or cast strong enough to protest It. Ami strangely, adding fuel to Itil secret fire within licnnrt, !h only source of solac In Hies terrible years of the realisation of her folly lay In the quiet sympathetic moment she could manage to spend with her rector. Dr. Bradford losee, who since Ilia marriage of Elaine and Bennet had How adored become engaged to girl who wu finishing a limit year' missionary work In C'ldtin before coming home to tier marriage, seemed to realize belter than any one else, the quality of anqulsh that resided In the heart of Elaine, anil at the same time to hive a sympathetic understanding for the plight of her husband, "I think Til have to leave him, Bradford," stie cried to him over and over again, aa time after time the fire of Jealousy had raged and bunted In the household, 1 can't stand it. I love him, I'm truer than true to him, and In hi heart be know It. but he's killing me, Bradford. Killing me." God and time will work their evil miracle, Elaine. There Is in Howard's heart. Only weakness and doubt" That was true. Anil true also was the fact that deep In Hint twisted forlorn heart of bis Bennet knew his wife to be Innocent; Innocent of the suspicion he catne more end more to harbor, Hint between her and Bradford old fires were kindling. He knew her to be Innocent with his mind and with Ids heart he burned and hurt nnd raged snd flayed. Time after time, coming home according to his old ruse a- few days before schedule, there occurred In his household, because he had found her In the Innocent company of this or that person, or In Innocent tasks pertaining to this or thnt relationship, scenes too shameful to bear telling, and time after time she had crouched beside her rector, begging him for strength to go on, and time after time, out of the wide sympathetic understanding for both of them, Bradford bad given her that strength. It wag on the occasion of one of the unexpected homecomings that, finding her on her knees beside Bradford In the library of their home, without a second's hesitation, Bennet reached for his hip pocket and fired. . . . sitting there in the witness chair, the steel beads of sweat out alt over him, and trying to begin to explain to the Judge, why he had committed the heinous crime of killing his wife and her rector, suddenly Bennet knew the futility of the attempt There are certain things so close ly enmeshed within the complicated pattern of the human heart, that to even try to explain the more subtle and terrifying of human motives and emotions were worse than useless. ... J Omaha Has This Bridge Natural Keeps Skin Young rs U k- -k wood-Calgar- y, a V Snow-cappe- W w rw r v gni A. .3SK, , JML. M. These four gentlemen make up the most famous bridge f outturn In existence. Left to right the player are: Georg F. West. 0. 8. North, Bred A. East and i'remont I South. All are member of the Omaha (Neb Chatnher of Commerce. Three of them favor the Culbertson aye tew, the other like Lens. BIG ENGINEERING PROJECTS OF 1931 nt - At on point the Wetland river Is siphoned under Hi canal. In November the Panama cans) was temporarily rinsed by Hi first major landslide of the year. The OslM m) qie li4 psl it U tkee slide was quickly cleared iwty. i veivdr wu Hint MifJismd rray ad yna . 1 a lwue el Ua Work was begun on the bug liMly Hoover dam project on the ColorahllSSsl.IUdrui do river near Lis Vegas, Nev. Old Water Male Numerous dims were completed, In waterworks d.un near Laborer unearthed part of a eluding Can ; the Bugnall dam on 'n liter main, at bu- -t a reutury old, the i mi go river In Missouri; Hie in Kprltigfleld. Mima. The conduit fimlihmed from hollowed pin Kaluda d.im near Columbia, C, and Hie Tljunga dam near Lo An- - log, about ten Inebe In diameter, j'lhe loxlde of the log w re charred, gHc, ltniO'-tan- t railway construction apparently to keep the taot of pin prohiildy led U other engineering np from the water, In wide (Retribution sctlvltle throughout the world. Of great Ignltlcanc was Hie building of e railway section In Belgian Congo which made II possible for the first time for passenger snd freight to move by rail arrow Africa from Lblte on the Atlantic to Belra on Hie Indian ocean. The line otwned up rich copper mine sress In Katanga, Belgian Congo, and In northern Rhodesia. One of the moat Interesting hits of railway building was la the BerTk Troth at Dd muda Islands, where a line 20 mile The women out our way long was opened to traffic. It te secret society," Hie Brat railway to be built In this formed Tull Women don't know how to old British colony. Legislation has heretofore prohibited railway In keep secret," But Hd society Isnt to keep these Islands, U' lo tell them." Exchange. "In the Mnisy peninsula a railway was opened along the east coast, establishing communication between Kingnport and the border of Siam's long southern tall. Unlit were pushed ahead etrad lly. adding to the world's railway mileage In tucb widely scattered Finland. Brazil. Turkey, region the Philippines, Nova Scotia. At" gentlna, Algeria, Colombia, Manchuria. Japan and Ecuador. "In the United Suites an Important link was built In southwestern Pennsylvania; a cutoff from the southwest corner of Kansas Into New Mexico; In the Texas Panhandle; In northern California, and In a Dumber of other western states. A short but Important line was built In southern Nevada, connecting the site of the Hoover dam with existing railways. In the Netherlands the first polder project was put Into use. These 33,000 ecres were reclaimed With Castorias regulation from the sea after remaining since 1284." When your chjld tosses and cries out In Ills sleep, It means he Is not comfortable. Very often the trouble Is that poisonous waste matter Is not being carried off as It should be. Bowels need help mild, gentle help hut effective. Just the kind gives, Castoria Is a pure vegetable preparation made specially for children's aliments. It contains no no narcotics. their confidence. He sits down with harsh, harmful drugs, rest and your them In the waiting room, gives Don't let your child's them better cigarettes then they are own be Interrupted. A prompt dose accustomed to and mysteriously a of Castoria will urge stubborn little bottle of vodka appears. In a few bowels to act Then relaxed comfort minutes more the peasants are con- and restful sleep Genuine Castoria vinced that they have met a rue always has the name: friend. They go back to the train only to fetch their bundles and remain on the station waiting for the next train to a nearby town, where a large chemical combine Is under construction. Their friend" reWants Him Ready Made ceives his reward, pluB expenses, when they are delivered to the conMany a wife Is perfectly willing to tick up her nose and wear expenstruction manager. sive finery to advertise what a success her husband is, who wouldn't WITH CROCHET SCARF turn her little finger over to help muke him one. Cincinnati Enquirer. By CHERIK NICHOLAS McrcolizcdlVax s within the cmiiplk-uii-pattern anil fiber of the human heart, that to even try to explain tho nmro auhllo nl terrifying of human motive ami emotion a era worse than uwina. Ba fill Howard Bennett aa be cat forward on bla chair, with the bead of sweat hanging from hi brow. Who knonat Tertian he should never have married. Perhaps that streak In hi nature, destined to tioll hi happiness from the Drat week of It, wight have developed under any clrcumstnncea. Ernest, aotnetlmes trying to anal j re hi alckne, and It amounted to that, felt differently. If, perchance, he had married a woman with whom lie hud been less, passionately, less devastating!? In love Ihun he had been with Klntne since the hour he laid eyes on her. It ail would have been different. How could one, he argued to himself In the hitter reaches of many a sleepless night, find one's mere traveling salesman of a self married to the frailest, whitest, most Illy like creature Imaginable, and not fairly burn, as a amel-lnfur nare burns, wlib Hie Jealous terror of losing her. The fact that this lily of a girl, this almost naively tutoring, patient and confiding wife of tils hnrbored neither a strajlng eye nor a at raying fancy, did not serve to mitigate the chronic torture that befell the luck less youth, as more and more the precious truth of her desirability Impressed Itself upon him during the Orst few years of their alliance. To add to anguish, his role of traveling salesman took him from home four, six and eight weeks at a time, and It was borne In upon Bennett, during these some few years that his equipment fitted him for practically do other kind of work. Once, Indeed, he went so far as to resign his nine-yea-r position with a wholesale shoe firm and set about the perilous task of finding a position that did not take him from the home. After three months of one serious case of maladjustment after another. It was a chastened young husband who sought, and obtained the old position, which owing to secret and utterly unjustified pangs of Jealousy over tits wife, be had resigned. , After that, realizing that his fears and suspicions amounted to insanity, and that Ills ceaseless jealous carplngs were wearing down even the sweet and gentle resistance of his wife, there was a pronounced Improvement In the manner and attitude of Bennet. He no longer Always Springtime in reproached her for the slightest Quito, on the Equator wandering of her glance If they hapsuburbs of Quito, the capital The on pened to be walking together the street; ceased dropping In from of Ecuador, nearly touch the equahis trips, one, two and three davs tor. but Its 100,000 Inhabitants enbefore he had announced himself joy perpetual springtime, says a buldue, and for awhile It seemed to letin from the National Geographic the luckless Elaine that now, at society. The city nestles In a bowtwo miles Inst, she had got her marriage on lshaped depression nearly high among the Andean peaks. some kind of an even keel. mountains are visible But slowly, surely, like a beast Before the comfrom streets. the there Its on prey, crept creeping up railof the pletion of while heart the into back Bennet, with traveling, the old terrors and sus- road, connecting the capital Ecuadors principal gateway and picions concerning his wife. She was so fair. She was so in- port, Quito was isolated. The few visited the city finitely desirable. She was so over travelers that nnd above any qualities that existed trekked for two weeks over difficult In any woman he had ever known. trails to reach Quito. Now, by rail, at the Quito depot Naturally, men would covet her. they may alight of the second day out Why not? She was something to be the evening coveted. She was something worth of Guayaquil. Many Indians make Quito their coveting! At last, all her goodness come and sweet patience to the contrary permanent residence; many the rural districts with notwithstanding, she was only hu- and go from the Quito sun. In the market place man. the bright shawls and ponchos of the overshadowed so there And the natives add color to the piles of household, torment and fear and all fruit and vegetables, homemade the ugly anguish that follows In the dolls and dyed cloth. Some of the wake of jealousy. d visitors, particularly With her lovely blue eyes that had those who specialize in selling more than their cried share, already prefer the streets to dispose Imploring sanity of her husband, it of their merchandise. Nearly all of sometimes seemed to him, holding them wear Panama hats because her closely after one of his tanEcuador Is the home of Panama trums over a trilling nothing and hats. be the that to forgiven, Imploring In nearly three centuries that of fear dilemma his out of only way ruled Ecuador they satconcerning this darling of his life- the Spanish Death for them urated the capital city with their time, was death. The principal square, both. Then he could be sure . . . customs. Plaza is laid out In Spanish Mayor, . . then. only a with Spanish government style There were so many possibilities It. Here and there, for losing her. He was away at least building facing the city, ornate facades six months of his year. Before her throughout churches rise above the of Spanish marriage Elaine had been courted roof tops. The narrow cobbled in than more any girl and sought flanked by white, her set, God knows, he used to ask streets, houses with balconied upper stories, of himself, why she chose him. It recall streets of cities in Spain. must have been his adoration . . . his mad, blinding adoration, that Old Rule for Longevity drew her. Speaking, reading aloud and singThere had been many a heart ache Bennet could ing, are useful kinds of exercise and over this marriage. have counted them off on his ten it is supposed that this Is at least a cause of the great longevity of clerfingers. Even the rector of her gymen, public speakers, teachers In sought young, talented, church, universities and schoolmasters; and after, the type of man who "had observes, everything, had notoriously been In Doctor Andrew pleasantly women require love with Elaine when she up and that one reason why less bodily exercise than men, is, eloped with Bennet. that they are in general more loquaElaine, who "had everything, could in turn have had Dr. Brad- cious. London Spectator, October 22, 1831. ford Losee who had everything euiiH-ul'i-- Puff Sleeves in Versatile Mood ITAII Many Changes in Commer- cial Geography of World. A C' i j ; goes the modern sleeve. Most often the sleeve In the newest parly ami afternoon froeks make the gesture of a single puff at the top, which Is quite early Victorian and ever so quaint and charming according to the lovely gown pictured. This girlish velvet frock tells n fascinating story of the little puff sleeves It Is nn Ideal tires for the college girl. It Is chic for nil Informal occasions and may even be worn for evening, ns it Is quite the latest for party gowns to have tiny Thus a gown of puffed sleeves. sheer velvet, us la Hie model pictured, has the advantage of doing double duty. It Is not only the naive puff sleeve which Intrigue for the new square neckline of the duluty lace yoke Is likewise beguiling in this frock. A puff or puffs are apt to locate anywhere on the sleeve, singly, doubly or In numbers as fancy may Ink The little dictate sketches, grouped about the attractive velvet gown In the Illustration, reveal a versatile fashioning of sleeves which make puffs their feature. When two little puffs hre set at the top of the sleeve, as sketched below to the right, then the effect suggests a Florentine painting of a medieval lady, especially If the it distinguishes be gown wlilcli made of royal velvet or handsome brocade all very formal and picturesque. How ev er, all sorts of puffed treatments are depicted In the outline drawings herewith, from formal to informal, some showing Intricate workmanship. The elaborate sleeve with Its series of puffs arranged row nnd row at the bottom of the sleeve, ns delineated In the oval, shows a l)UFF, puff, puff I pen-an- d d MANY BUTTONS By ( III.KIE NICHOLAS characteristic trend where self fab rlc Is Ingeniously worked as In the Instance of many of the handsome velvet evening coats which have no other trimming save their own material, which ha been extravagantly puffed nnd shirred. In the latest dres-- o there I general tendency to emphasize width nt the shoulders. The sleeve with a puff playi an Important part In this movement. In this connection even the once popular leg o'mutton sleeve has been revived by certnln Tarls designer of high standing. Speaking of sleeves In general, not for years have they been so capricious, Their eccentricities are the more accented In thnt frequently the rest of the gown Is severely plain, a highly or ornamental note being sounded In the sleeves only. One notes this tendency especially In the simple evening gown of velvet or satin preferably, which has a deep-cu- t armhole, the short sleeve being of spangled chiffon or some other sheer material, which scintillates with sparkling embroidery. Sleeves In many a modish after noon gown call attention unto themselves in that they are made of an entirely different material than that of the dress proper. Thnt Is the sleeves may be of lace or richly embroidered effects, or thnt which Is especially favored, sheer metal weaves. sleeve continues The to be a theme of interest. The evening or afternoon gown of sheer fabric with a jacket or a bolero usually displays a band of fur on the short or long flowing sleeve as the case Ruches of pleated matemay be. rial also border many s'eeves. Sometimes these ruchings are formed of Bowers. (. 1933 Western Newspaper Union THREE TYPES OF SLEEVES ON VIEW There ore three types of sleeves on daytime frocks that stand out from the general mass, as It were the balloon-tosleeves, tight between wrist nnd elbow or a little higher; the rather loose, straight sleeve which Is attached to a wide shoulder yoke that ends midway between shoulder and elbow, and the peasant-puffesleeve, with the puff over the elbow, nnd tight above and below this. Coats, of course, dont have puffed sleeves, but they do In teresting things with fur just the same. Sometimes the sleeve Is fur from wrist to elbow, or else from elbow to shoulder and the very smartest and newest are entirely fur! And shoulders? These are effects, given by wide shoulder yokes; kimono style, or rnglan. They are roomy and generally square. And though there is an occasional sloping shoulder, It, too, is comfortably roomy. p d bronze-skinne- blankets, Hosiery Made to Wear With Toeless Sandals hosiery has been fashioned for wear with the toeless dancing sandals. These have no reinforced toe effects, but are practical because of the quality of silk employed. One of the new sandals with a squarely cut-otoe Is of shimmering gold kid. Another Is of satin piped with crepe and kid. New d Ocean pearl buttons of matching color serve as a practical fastening at the same time that they ornament this tailored blouse of Algerian yellow silk. The suit is of brown tweed Black and Green collared in red fox. The new mid The new rough surfaced wool winter and resort collections stress was used for a dress that has everythe importance of buttons. Pretty one could desire, iu chic and effects are achieved in that many of thing The skirt of black practicality. new buttons are the very colorful wool was topped with a Jacket e made to enter Into the color and blouse of the same fabric in 8 scheme of the costume. bright shade of green. 932 U eMern Newspaper Union.) a-- V avhlngton. engiImportant neering project of ltd wrought many changes In the commercial f the world, according geography ta a bulletin from the National Geographic society reviewing the outstanding construction accomplishments of the year. The year saw the greatest highway construction program to the history of the Lulled States." eaj the bulletin, been use of a liberal expenditure policy by federal, state More thao and local government. 11. if to mile of federal eld highways alone were under construction it cost of over a third of a billion dollars. "Cuba contributed the most spectacular single highway project of the year when In February she threw open for use the pnved motor rond extending from end to end of the Island. "At Washington, the United States government brought almost to completion a mode automobile road, built In preparation for the of celebration the birth of George Washington. It ts the Mount Vernon Memorial highway, extending from the National Capital to the home of the first President "The Mount Vernon roadway Is wide enough for four lanes of traffic, and Is to have on each side parked strips of lawn, flower beds and shrubs. No road however unimportant ts permitted to cross the highway 'blind. The least Important roads have staggered crossOthers must cross between ings. The Important safety Islands. cross roads are carried over the highway od ornamental viaducts. The most notable engineering event of the year was the completion In October of the George Washington Memorial bridge across the 700-mll- e Prisoner Pleads in Vain for Lash The unWindsor, OnL usual spectacle of a prisoner pleading to be flogged was witnessed In Sandwich police court when Magistrate Smith sentenced Clarence Menard, twenty-threto seven years In the penitentiary for burglary In Amherstburg. Menard asked In vain for a shorter sentence, with lashes to make op the difference. I spent the best years of my life so far In Ionia prison," he told the bench. 'I am willing to pay for the crime, but I do pot want to spend the greater part of my life la prison. Magistrate Smith pointed out that Canadian law does not permit Imposition of the lash for burglary. Hudson river between New Jersey and Manhattan Island. This bridge with a span of 3JMU feet Is the longest suspension bridge In tlie world. Only a few weeks later, the nearby Kill Van Kull bridge between New Jersey end Staten Island was completed, the longest steel arch bridge In the world. He length, 1.032 feet, one Inch, exceeds by two feet, one Inch the length of the arch In the Sydney Harbor bridge, Australia, virtually completed In 1931. In Africa, a new combined highway and railway bridge win put Into operation In Uganda across the Nile near (he rlver'e point of reIssue from Lake Victoria. As sult of this completion, the first railway train entered Kampala, one of the leading cities of Uganda. The outstanding canal completion of the year was that of the New Welland canal In Canada between Port Colbome on Lake Erie and Port Weller on Lake Ontario. RESTFUL SLEEP for FRETFUL, FEVERISH CHILD THEFT OF WORKER NEW SOVIET TRICK Shortage of Labor Brings Keen Competition. Moscow. The shortage of labor In the Soviet union has led to keen competition for working bands among various state organizations, carried. In some Instances, to the extent of stealing each others workers. The luring of peasants bound for one job to halt at another en route has developed, according to charges In the Moscow economic press. Into a profitable racket" for those en gaged In It The Russian slang name for a racketeer or swindler Is It appears that railroad beetle." stations are Infested with beetles, who waylay and captu-- e raw labor power, using vodka, cigarettes, tall promises, and sweet words. The beetles receive five rubles, and sometimes more, for every laborer lured Into the employ of organizations suffering from lack of labor. The newspaper Za Industrlall-zatzlreveals that of 11,200 peasants enlisted In the Tartar Soviet republic for service In the Donbass coal fields, only 9.S20 reached their destination. For weeks the 1,380 missing men were sought by the Danbass authorities. Finally It was established that they had been decoyed to construction Jobs by beetles. A graphic description of the labor thieves at work Is given In an Indignant attack on the racket In the press here. A train bound for Donbass arrives In the Moscow station. A group of peasants gets off to look around. Soon they are spotted and approached by a beetle. At first the peasant distrusts the man, but In a few minutes he wins 1 CASTORIA e Quickest Way to Darken Gray Hair Naturally Dontdyehair. Science has discovered a quick, simple way to darken gray hair naturally so nobody can tell restore its original shade safely and as easily as brushing. It makes the hair healthy. Finest way known to get rid of gray hair, as thousands testify. Try it. Pay druggist only 75c for a bottle of WYETH'S SAGE & SULPHUR and follow easy directions. Results will delight you. DREAM OF LOST GOLD COMES TRUE One of Most Dramatic Stories of Lost Riches. Mexico City. Twenty years ago, a German dreamed of a hoard of hidden gold. Now he has found a tunnel which he believes will lead him to the treasure of a king. The scene of this Is In the hinterland of Mexico, and the story Is one of the most dramatic In the annals of lost riches. Twenty years ago Ernesto Loeck was a rising business man In the He german town cf Dusseldort was then Just forty, and his diligence and acumen were enabling him to put by what promised to be a handsome little competence. About a year after his wife died he had a vivid and remarkable dream. The scene was the crest of a high mountain, and along a narrow track wound a long line of d and scantily clad Indians. long-dea- d light-shinne- Cas-tor- la They marched In single file, and on the shoulders of each was borne a roughly made hide sack a sack containing gold. The carriers seemed to disappear Into the heart of the mountain, and watching them was a tall man of noble aspect. Just as the dream faded there seemed to appear written on his brow In letters of fire the word Calzontzin. The dream was so vivid and made so great an Impression on Loeck that he began to wonder whether history had any record of a man A long search named Calzontzin. revealed that it had. There was a Tarascan king of that name who was ruling In a part of Mexico some 400 years ago, and who had vanished with gold worth $30,000,000. Now, after 20 years of search, Loeck has found on the summit of La Bates de Oro a narrow underground passage. He Is confident that that tunnel will lead him to the bidden gold. Not the Rule Ezceptioi Willie Pa, where is tobacco ound? Pa In the southern states and in ome cigars. KILL COLD GERMS A touch of hand crochet on ones frock Is considered very smart this season. The modish frock pictured Is of dark green wool crepe with yoke effect In fagoting, done with Clears head ihstantly,f a trim stitch thread wrhich has a firm twist and a glossy surface simSfopsycold spreading.' ilar to silk. The scarf Is InterestSprinkle your ing tn that It Is similar to those handkerchief during the day noted on many of the newest Paris midseason frocks of sheer woolen. your pillow at night It Is hand crocheted of a fine if AT 7 I mending wool which comes 30 AU DRUG' yards to the card. You can make STORES one of these scarfs for yourself, as It Is nothing more than a straight piece 6 Inches wide and 50 inches long, crocheted In French mesh W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No, stltelL 932 (ffl. 19SX, Wasters Newspaoer Union. V |