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Show AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN . OA Cynthia, i T NORMA CHAPTER XI Continued 11 "Anywsy." lira. Ensloe concluded, he's been popular with flrla ever alDce be put on long trousers. I'm rather surprised you don't like him. "Ild he say I don't like hlmT "Cynthia, I'd really enjoy ahaklng you! For two centa I'd do It, too. You ought to know Geoff well enough to realize he wouldn't come and complain to me whatever you did I Tboee first lettera of hla were like report of border warfare. Lately he hasn't mentioned you at all." Cynthia's presumable pleasure at this omission was skillfully con cealed. Mrs. Ensloe herself knew a moment of triumph at the expres sion of dismay which spread over the girl's face. "Aha, young lady I That Irks you a bit, doean't Itr She let the subject drop for the time being, but Cynthia soon disco ered that Geoff's mother waa conducting con-ducting an active no less active . because It moved bo quietly that none but those two knew of It- campaign In GeofTa behalf. The girl early learned that she had a ski lied 'opponent Mrs. Ens-loe'a Ens-loe'a quiet comments which stubbed Cynthia's complacency, the wordless but effective manner ahe had of Indicating In-dicating the difficult position which had been GeofTa In this household, above all and harder to bear than anything else, her air of pity for " her goddaughter because of her blindness towarl GeofTa real character, char-acter, kept Cynthia awake for many hours, aroused in ber a lively If antagonistic an-tagonistic Interest In the young man which hla mother viewed with silent si-lent satisfaction. CHAPTER XII Changes. ONE morning the Captain failed to appear at breakfast, and Mlsa Nona, going anxiously to his room to ascertain tne reason, came down with a troubled face. "He says he'a not 111, Juat tired," she reported. "I think I'U call Doc- lm IIUhaiM '4s to ka. mm IWI UlUOUl, JUOl IV VU VU fcUV Nil aide." "Call me after he'a been here and tell me what he says," Cynthia asked. requested report "I'm afraid your grandfather la pretty 111, Cynthia," she said. "It's hla heart, the doctor says." "Seriously 111. Mrs. Ensloer "I'm afraid so, my dear. Doctor Blgham wants a nurse -Oh, he must be till U he In palnT" "No. But the doctor seems to think there's a dropsical condition " She could hear Cynthia's gasp at the other end of the line. "There's no Immediate danger. No need for you to come home." But Cyothla did come home at once She knew bow much Miss Nona would need support at this time. The nurse had arrived by the time Cynthia came. Save for ber presence In the house. It did not seem like an Illness. The Captain Cap-tain lay serenely on his high pillows, pil-lows, smiled at his daughter, had a Joking word for Geoff and Cynthia. As on a previous occasion Doctor Doc-tor Blgham drew Geoff aside. "Look here I The old man's going'': go-ing'': r z:-r:.::: - . "What!" said Geoff, astounded. "Yea. No possible doubt of It He'll allp away In hla aleep, I hope. It'a the rest of the family I'm worried wor-ried about Mlsa Nona Is going to take It awfully hard" "And Cynthia!" - "And Cynthia, of course. But after an, trs Hiss Nona who wm feel It most I'll be here as much aa I can, but I've my practice to think of. If the Captain should go In the night I want you to call me Immediately." Im-mediately." After that Geoff spent most of the night going quietly to the Captain's Cap-tain's door to open It s crack and peer In, to receive the nurse's reassuring re-assuring nod and allp back to bed where he dozed for an hour or two only to repeat his visit of Inquiry. Day after day went by, and there was no change In the patient Miss Nona and Mrs. Ensloe cared for him In the daytime, the nurse at night Cynthia came and went as "usual from the shop. Gary came In each evening to alt with hla grandfather, and Flossie proved to be of unexpected unex-pected value In helping with the nursing. They were all at dinner one evening. eve-ning. Flossie and Gary, too. Sudden ly the nurse's voice was heard calling call-ing from upstairs. "Mrs. Aylesbury! Mr. Ensloer Tbey raced up the stairs Cary wltb his arm about his mother, Geoff stretching out his hand to Cynthia. 'The Captain was gone. l v r muiiMA iiJHlUtl 1 Mill KNIGHT "ue lay serenely on his pillows, so little changed by death that bis daughter could not believe he had spoken to ber fer the last time. Miss Nona drooped sadly after the funeral. At last Doctor Blgham called Mrs. Ensloe aside for a talk, at the conclusion of which she announced an-nounced briskly that she was returning re-turning to New York and taking ber friend with ber. "You've been promising me a vis-It vis-It for 25 years, Nona." she said. "Now you're going to pay It" "But Cynthia r Miss Nona asked. It was plain that the plan lured her. She needed a change and she had always loved being with Eunice. Eu-nice. "What could 1 do with Cynthia Cyn-thia and Tenny? They cant stay here alone wltb Geoff unless they hsve a chaperon," For a time It seemed aa though that obstacle could not be overcome. It was Doctor Blgham who found the solution. "Look here," he said one evening when he had dropped In for a friendly call "Why on earth do roo folks keep this big house? I happen to know that an apartment house company would be glad to buy It-house, It-house, garden and alL l-et Cynthia and Tenny take an apartment for themselves for the rest of the winter." win-ter." Cary seised on the Idea with avidity. avid-ity. "Cynthia could pay off aU those old bills that have been worrying her, and UTas Nona would have a tidy sum left The doctor's scheme sounds like good sense to me, Miss Nons I" It needed a great deal of persua sion to convince the legal owner of the bouse of the wisdom of such a course. She had been born here, she had been married here, both of her children had opened their eyes In her bedroom upstairs. Her husband, her mother and her father had died In this house. She wanted only to be allowed to spend her few remaining remain-ing days "Few nothing," was Gary's derisive deri-sive comment "When you get to New York and spruce up with a lot of new clothes you'll took tike a sixteen-year-old. Besides, think of Cynthia Cyn-thia I ItH put ber squarely on her feet for the drat time since she left college." Cynthia herself opposed the plan violently. She honestly believed that her mother's health, never robust, would be seriously affected If she left the old house. That ahe herself would benefit by the sale only strengthened her opposition. At the same time she had a feeling of balloons bal-loons tugging at ber heart To be free of those harassing debts I "Geoff could move Into that nice quiet hotel near the laboratory," Mra. Ensloe said brightly. "It's only four months till he'll be leaving Denver anyway." She slid her glance toward Cynthia's face as she spoke snd was cheered to see the startled expression which dawned on It - Flossie, too, pushed the sale. She felt that when the last link was cut between Cary and his home she would be surer of him. "Our (irst wife" gave signs of being In earnest about her present flirtation. "You're all against me," Miss Nona aald mournfully. "There's only one thing I ask, let me get awsy with Eunice before a book la packed or a room disturbed,.. want to. remember re-member my home as It was, not all torn ap and dismantled." - - So Cynthia and Geoff, with Cary, saw the two women off to New York. "Where are your Geoff demanded one afternoon, coming home early that he might help with the work. A ralnt halloo from the attic Informed In-formed him of Cynthia's where abouta. He found her sitting on a three-legged stool before an open trunk, poring over a gray-leaved kodak book. "My father gave It to me on my eighth birthday." she said. "Look-here "Look-here he Is I I used a whole roll of films on him before I learned to focus. And here's Miss Nona, and here's Cary In bis first long trousers, trous-ers, and here's the Captain" lie took It from her and turned Its paj(s with eager interest Here were dozens of Cyothlss: Cynthia In pleated skirt and white sweater, leading an English bulldog 'on a leant); Cynthia In riding costume astride a pony; Cynthia wltb Cary, hla arm thrown protectively about her shouldN&Cynthls in her graduating grad-uating frock, all frills and with an armful of roses; Cynthia. Cynthia, Cynthia repeated over a range of an entire decade. There was one little picture that wedged Its way right down Into a corner of GeofTa heart and stayed there. It was a very small Cynthls Indeedtaken before the birthday camera had been given, and pasted la the book by Mlsa Nonav She was sitting oo on of the Hons, her small feet stuck out straight before be-fore her.' The seriousness of the occasion oc-casion had evidently been Impressed upon her for she wore an expression expres-sion of deep gravity. Curls rioted en her email head, short curls, silky curia they looked to be. Her small arms were bare, ber brief frock showed bare knees and shoulders, Altogether she -war tbemost be guiling bit of babyhood that ever sat for a picture, which would eventually meet a lover's eye. Sur reptitiously Geoff slipped It out of the strips which held It When Cynthia's head waa turned he put It carefully away In his pocket "If I only knew what to do with an these things,"1 she mourned. "Here's a trunk full of the Captain's Cap-tain's wedding clothes, striped trousers. ;hogr satin tie, high silk bat and slL These piles of Leslie's Weekly go back to the Spanish-American Spanish-American war. I hate to burn them or sell them to the rag man. Here's the saddle I bad for my Shetland pony hla name waa Carnation Perfume Per-fume because. I thought that was the only name nice enough for him. Cary called him Tarnation. That boi over there Is full of things Dad and Mlsa Nona brought from the World's fslr st Chicago ; spun glass and shells from Bermuda and a blown ostrich egg all sorts of trash that have memories attached to them." "What doesn'tr Geoff asked sensibly. sen-sibly. "If I were you I'd pack one box wltb useless souvenirs and throw the rest away." The work proceeded slowly despite de-spite the number of willing hands. Tenny. was In ber glory, dragging out old silk dresses wltb bustles, and ruffled trains, rescuing Cynthia's Cyn-thia's biggest doll from Cary's devastating de-vastating hand, scattering the books Cynthia had sorted, generally behaving, be-having, as Geoff told her good-naturedly, -as though she were six pairs of twins snd a single. It waa their last night In the old Cary house. The rooms were stripped and bare. Only enough furniture remained re-mained for their actual needs. GeofTa belongings had already been sent to the hotel where be was to stay during the remainder -of his time In Denver. Cynthia had found and, furnished from -their own beautiful beau-tiful old pieces a five-room apartment apart-ment which was not too far from Tenny'a school. "Look here, Marguerite," Geoff had said that morning, "this Is my last day here and I'm going to run the housekeeping again, at least as far aa dinner Is concerned. Just disregard any orders Miss Cynthia may give you, and yon and IU plan a meal that Is a meaL" So tonight to Cynthia's surprise, they sat down to delicately broiled chicken, to artichokes and white cherries In aspic, to pink rosebud Ices and cake, "What on earth r ahe demanded. "So that my last meal here might be as much like my first aa pos sible," he explained. "I wasn't sore about the details but Marguerite re membered." "That was the day Hadji was killed " Cynthia recalled soberly. "That was the day yon started hating me," said Geoff. "Do you bate him, Cynthia 1 Oh, why? I love Geoff I" "That's right Tenny. Yon keep on setting Cynthia a good example and maybe shell follow It" "At least" Cyntbla told him softly, soft-ly, "I've got past the hating point I'll even admit this: I'm going to miss you terribly after today. Cary, I suppose you and Flossie" "We're going to take some things over to our apartment," Cary Interrupted In-terrupted Importantly. "Tbla girl of mine has set her heart on hoarding all sorts of my youthful possessions. I'll have to see the Janitor about storing them." floasie amlled. "Our first wife" bad Intimated In a telephone conversation con-versation with Flossie that day that after next month no more alimony would be expected. Tenny was a long time getting to sleep that nlgbt It was thrilling. In tbs first place, to g to bed In a room which contained -a bed and nothing else ; not I rug. not a chair, not a picture on the walla. Excitement Excite-ment over the next day's move contributed con-tributed to her wakefulness. But finally the white lids dropped and Tenny, herband tucked beneath her cheek, was wrapped In slumber. Geoff came down from a final trip to the attic and found Cynthia In the old parlor. She had not turned on the Ughta but the ahadea were up and moonlight atreamed In from the windows, Geoff saw that she was crying as be crossed the room to ber. "Why. Cynthia I Why, my dear!" "Yea, I know," ahe aald brokenly. broken-ly. "But It's parting wltb all I know of permanency and security and and home I No other place will ever be the same to me. I . understand now how Miss Nona felt" "Cynthia," Geoff aald gently, "will you let me make you another borne, dear!" There waa a startled silence and then ahe said; "Are you asking me to marry you, Geoff?" "Yea, my darling!" "Geoff ... I'm sorry . . . I I can't" "You dont love me, Cynthia r "No." She shook her bead and the movement dislodged the bright dropa which brimmed ber eyes. "I'm fond of you truly I am." She laughed a little forlornly. "That's more than I ever thought I'd be able to Bay, Geoff 1 I like you better than any man I know, Geoff, but It Isn't enough 1 told you once "I know," be said. "But It's a great deal that you feel that way about me. Thank you, Cynthia I" Ue bent hla head to kiss the hands he held and quite simply she offered of-fered him her hps. Instantly she was swept ute hla arms, held In as embrace that smothered her. She struggled to free herself, realised the futility a&d relaxed In bis anna, "I'm sorry, Cynthia," hs-sald, re leasing her. 'q,, V.i, &r& U 1 am I i have that to remember, anyhow I" "I'm not angry, Geoff. I'd give you more. If I could." She slipped quietly from the room and Geoff stood before the window for a long time, staring out st the moonlit garden. - The next morning all waa bustle and confusion. Cynthia found, to her own enqoyance, that It was she Instead In-stead of Geoff who flushed and averted her eyes when they met at the breakfast table. Geoff was hla usual cheerful kindly self. The scene In the parlor might never have occurred oc-curred to Judge from his matter-of-fact "Good morning!" Somehow ahe resented his self-control self-control She became very businesslike. business-like. "See that the men are careful with a box marked 'Fragile,' Cary I Marguerite, are you sure you have the kitchen things all in one packing pack-ing boxt Geoff, here's a book of yours I found In Miss Nona's room." "I'm coming around to take you two girls out to dinner tonight," hs said easily, -"Geoff, ws can't possibly "I know It You can't possibly eat the right kind of meal In all that disorder. That's why I'm call ing for you at six sharp. Tenny, will yon see that Cynthia has her hat onr" The movers were out of the house. Nothing remained but to lock the doors and go. Cyntbla was Itartled to hear Geoff's light steps, running down the front stairs. She had thought he had driven away before the last wagon. "Give me that" be said, holding out bis hand for the key. "Hop In my car It's parked pretty far down the block on account of all the wagons and wait for me there. No need for you to watch the curtain go down." A girl's perversity made her allude al-lude to the subject she had determined deter-mined to avoid. 'Tm so sorry about last night," she said and then could have bitten her tongue with chagrin cha-grin at ber own tactlessness. Again Geoff did the unexpected. He put hla hands on her shoulders, bent his head to look Into ber eyes. "Cynthia, something tells me that you're going to love me . . . love me the way you said you'd have to love the man you marry, 8wt I want you to promise me something. Promise that If that when you feel that way toward me, you'll let me know I" A flash of her old hostility returned. re-turned. You're very sure of yourself, Geoff Ensloe 1 And sure of me, too, aren't you? I suppose yon base your belief on the fact that you've always al-ways been what your mother described de-scribed aa 'popular with girls' I" He gave the slender shoulders he held a little shake. "I suppose on our way up the aisle you'll, stop to say something hateful to me," be told ber. "Never mind 1 1 never could stsndthose sickly sweet girls with lovely dispositions V CHAPTER XIII Flossie Gives Advice. A FTEU the excitement of moving and adjusting herself to the new apartment Cynthia fell Into the routine rou-tine ahe bad dreaded Valentine day, with Its spurt of trade, passed and only au occasional customer Invaded the quiet of the shop. Elsie took frequent afternoons off now snd offered to relieve Cynthia In turn; but there was no particular place ahe desired to go. "Get some new clothes," Elsie advised. ad-vised. "That's always interesting." March was ushered In with a billiard bill-iard that raged att"daj, Tenny waa fibf allowed to go to school and moped about the ajpartment Marguerite Mar-guerite had "neurology" In her face and waa cross. Cynthia ..tramped to and from the shop, the mink collar of her coat turned up against the stinging wind and aleet, her feet cold In their galoshes. life was drab and uninteresting. It gained no color from the fact that Geoff was being mnch sought In s social way since he left the Cary house. The hotel in which he lived was known as "The Bachelors' Hive" and was run In conjunction with a club which gave exclusive and rather amusing parttea. Echoes of Geoff's participation In them reached Cynthia now and then, Once two girls came In looking for a particular kind of Benares brass work which could be obUlned only at the Odds and Ends. They were almost too deeply occupied In chatter about a dance they had attended at-tended the night before to give heed to their purchases. "I noticed you kept the new man pretty well to yourself," one accused ac-cused the other vivaciously. "Rather "Rath-er a pig, weren't you?" "You keep away from my Geoff," the other answered, "lie's a duck nd . dear. .nd ( don't care who hears me say so ! Did you know he's going back to New York In June to be vice president vice president my dear! of that Enaloe company that Dad s trying to get Dick Into?" He tell your TO BB CONTWUKD.) I r i. AT . , . . I -. 1 R uueerpeograpnig , r - Cranberry Picker of Double Trouble, New Jersey. Prepared by National 0ofpM SooUly. j WMhlngton. IX a WNU Srrlo. WHILE there are reports that some mothers have already named their new-born babies ba-bies for the national recovery act Nlra, a small Iowa town, denies that Its name Is so modern, It was named for a woman more than a half century before Gea Hugh Johnson John-son took oath of office. Names, cities and towns have many origins. First families have left, .their . famous surnames to designate des-ignate post offices and railroad stations sta-tions in the United States, and In addition many humble folk have contributed con-tributed their more familiar appellations appella-tions such as Dad, Bill, Nick, Tim, Floe, VIck and Maggie, Aside from family names the homely nouns and adjectives of the work-a-day world have found their way by the score lo'mapS and sign poati Greasy Creek, Tub, Biscuit Cheap, Busy and Dimple are Kentucky towns. There are Horse Heaven, Humpullps, Goosepralrle and Step-toe Step-toe In Washington state. Pie Town, Dusty, Gallup and High Rolls are la New Mexico; JeUy, Needles and Likely In California; Cali-fornia; and Sopchoppy, Perky and Frostproof In Florida. - Illinois has Sandwich, Joy and Muddy, while across the state line in Indiana there are Speed, Economy, and Harmony. Trump, Vim, Flues and Joes are In Colorado; Bumble Bee, Sunglow, Wlkieup and Cactus In Arizona; Asbestos, Ladiesburg, Fearer and Appeal In Maryland ; and Deadwater, Grandstone, Thor-ofare Thor-ofare and Merepoint In Maine. In Minnesota there la Ballclub, Happyland, Otter Tall, Money Creek, Knife River and Embarrass ; and la Mississippi, Arm, Lemon, -Why not, Chunky, Shivers and Soso. Montana's Bay Horse, Big Arm, Glltedge and Pray are equally as odd as North Carolina's Nags Head, Bearwallow, Pee Dee, Shoe, Toast Topknot and Worry ; and Missouri's Rat Gang, Damalte, Clever and Enough. Accord, Teatlcket and Feeding Hills are in Massachusetts; Anvil An-vil Location, Inkster, Almeek and Honor In Michigan; Echo, Happy Jack and Water Proof In Louisiana ; 1-eaky In North Dakota; and Novelty,. Nov-elty,. Overpeck, Long Bottom -and Charm In Ohio. - More of the Queer Names. Oklahoma's contribution to odd place names la Antlers, Hominy, Slick, Slim and Scraper; while Oregon Ore-gon has Wagontire, Sixes, Tyee, Izee snd Fossil. New . York state gives Horseheads, Sag Harbor, Sllvernalls, Yaphank and Wblteface; and New Jersey, Colt s Neck, Peapack, Tranquility, Tran-quility, Ghangewater and Chews. Goodnight Razor, Fort Spunky, Happy-and Gunslght are towns in Texas ; while . Pennsylvania has Shlckshlnny, Showers, Mooslc and Bird In Hand. Cowpens, Silver-street, Silver-street, Nine Times snd Ninety Six are In South Carolina; Faith, Tea and Twilight In South Dakota; Devil's Slide in Utah and Idol, In-sklp, In-sklp, LIttlecrab and Shop Spring in Tennessee. Ferry passengers calling "hey" to L si, a ferryman, are aald to have named Hayst, Virginia. Other odd namea In the Old Dominion are Modest Mod-est Town, Cap, Crabbottom, Dandy, Smoky Ordinary, Traffic, Fancy Gap, Duty and Success ; while its neighbor, neigh-bor, West Virginia, has Joker, Cut-lips, Cut-lips, Smoky Hole, Dingy, Hazy, Odd, Pink and Quick. In Wisconsin there Is Luck, New Digglns and Rib Lake; in Wyoming a Doggie, Badwater, Four Horse and Ten Sleep. What Cheer, Promise City, Coin, Nodaway, Stout and Wick are Iowa towns; Cad, Deepstep, Dewy-rose Dewy-rose and Ty Ty are In Georgia ; Co-colalla. Co-colalla. Cuprum, Inkom and Notus In Idaho; Goats, Peck and Potwln In Kansas; and Istighboy, Flats, Hire, and Wynot In Nebraska. Half a dozen of Arkansas' place namea In a row sketch for the Imaginative Im-aginative a thnmb-nall story: Lost Corner. Reform, Health, Prosperity, Romance and Love. Names of women of distinction adorn many of the world's cities, rivers, provinces, snd Islands. Lady Franklin Island, near Baffle. island In the Arctic circle, ls named for ames in the wife of Sir John Franklin, the explorer who lost his life In flm .finding; Jbe. Northwest passage through the great Ice .of the Polar regions. There Is perhaps no more beautiful story of untiring devotion snd persistent effort than that of Udy Jane Franklin who, after the failure of many attempta, fitted out a ship, which, though It brought back to her the definite proof of the loss of ber husband's expedition, established es-tablished hla achievement of his object.-" - -- . Pocahontas and Victoria. The picturesque stories of the little lit-tle Indian princess Pocahontas always al-ways will hold a loved place In the hearts of American childhood. Counties Coun-ties la Iowa and Weat Virginia, villages vil-lages In Bond county, Illinois, snd Cape Girardeau county, Mississippi, and the Rocky mountains la Alberta, Canada, are named for her. Queen Victoria's nsme Is wrapped around the British empire from the capital of British Columbia, over the heart of Africa at Victoria Ny-anza Ny-anza and- Victoria Falls, and beyond be-yond Into the Queensland and Victoria Vic-toria In far-away Australia. America, too. In its early days of colonisation paid its tribute to the queens of the mother country and to the gracious ladles who braved the dangers of untried shores with their lords. Elisabeth, a cape in Maine, and Elizabeth City in Virginia, Vir-ginia, as well as the state Itself, together with some twenty-five other places In the United States, bear the name of the clever, witty, versatile coquette, who took the dissension-torn dissension-torn England and whipped It Into a place as a world power. Elizabeth Carteret, the charming wife of one of the aristocratic proprietors of New Jersey, shares with Queen Elizabeth some of the honors of the name. EUzabetbtown in North Carolina, Car-olina, and Elizabeth City, In New Jersey, are named for her. There wasnt. any Martha of Marthas Mar-thas Vineyard. The first name is supposed to be a corruption of Martin, Mar-tin, a friend of the discoverer of the island. The word Vineyard was added later on account of the wtld grapes found on the Island. Vln-land, Vln-land, the name which Lief Erlckson gave the North American continent was suggested In a similar manner. Maryland and Virginia are fairly bespattered with the names of the queens and princesses of England, the very state-names themselves being be-ing taken from that of Queen Henrietta Henri-etta Maria, the wife of Char lea I. and the dlsputably fortunate estate of Elizabeth. Then, too, there are Annapolis, named for the wife of James I of England ; and lAnne Arundel and Caroline counties, In Maryland, called after "the" wives of two of the Oal verts ; Fluvanna county coun-ty and the North Anna river In Virginia Vir-ginia named for .Queen Anns; and Charlotte, Amelia and Caroline counties and Charlottesville, the home of the University of Virginia, all called for the wives and daughters daugh-ters of the English kings. For Constantino's Mother. St Helena, the ragged little Island in the Pacific which has such a soothing effect upon the restless tendencies ten-dencies of autocrats, bears the name of the mother of Constantino the Great, who, according to legend, discovered dis-covered the cross upon which Christ died,' during a visit she made to the Holy Land. She was known la the early days of Christianity for her religious seal and piety. Helena, Mont, though opinions differ as to the origin of the name. Is said to have been up called because of the resemblance of Its location to that of St Helena. The naming of Hart county, Georgia, Geor-gia, Is s generous tribute to a Dixie heroine of the Revolution, Nancy Hart ' The harbor Beara In Ireland Is said to have been named by Owen More, king of Munster during the retgn of Conn of the Hundred Battles, Bat-tles, for his wife, a Spanish prin cess. No saint, perhaps holds a i dearer place In the Irish heart than j St Ite, or Ide, often called Brigld j of Munster, and we find her name In ! several variations In the nsmes of churches and places throughout that J country. IP building f "th c,t J? I Tels. hw.;1 H the 70, CaS3 cult'" snd a sT"1 being t Tl'e bureau bve condensed taJ Powhatan-ln cent is on the "t oral usage hs on e final ijU; . i ine tooth of bjJ beast which rarrte Its pouch as do found at Molong, tooth, with foJnl J discovered by mine,,! cave 20 ft oade!,' marsupial Hon It teflli lived ln Australia frj extinct 20,000 , , 1 City oi W This ancient Rossi i land was a fashkum the "HiiHlity" in ,1 and Eighteenth mtwJ minion gallons of baRt? ier nowing daily W springs, rich In radltstl araws thousands of tourists. colors of Jtpia The Japanese Iris ru from white throws if shades of blue to the 2 slble red purples u 2 the segments beinj tw darker veins and streak times plain. Then in lovely pink ones, - Fourth Largwt Uk The Aral sea la tat Is the fourth Urges! 2 the world, having ta in? square miles. It U auu paratively less so dm of other Inland sett, Url lty of only 10 per cot ButUroat HmiS The dark stain of o busk was an Importia dye In the time vbal cotton cloth was won I boys. The color pn Its use resembled khtU llABF-STOM SHAMPOO' hair aoft ud o8. gists. HiseM Chsmhml Wufch- Salt Lake (M Used Pine. Fitting swlr thfle3 mat ... .ISL-i Monsey irw-ri So. trd WW 70S CRISMON AMC ASSAYERS AND CT Offlcs J! Lsborstwr Zs Tnnl Rt.. Salt lw 1 jyam. jiwo. . famished os m 17UB. Alanine PILES: Pile sufferers Bleeding, Itthbif r can iMw-getrellfI . lan) MSB) ment to a new rem treatment of pDl matter how tool g anteedtorfvs or money Tdj Before pufc, ment on the ' n2?j was put to the wM mild and severs csw , log to produce I"" U1U9. if iMvrrK do not exierieBLy' Pile Ointment jrlst does p AH out the blank sw;. UaR. OIHTJJJS; Salt UW CltT men"" " - ,hi Order for One Ointment toDt" ; j Name r. O. Addresi..-r satisfied w l2tr returning tot " j tory. ZZ3 1 J PAkX HASBA I' y DkaQalC |