OCR Text |
Show The C.'iche American. IOtran. Cache Count v. Utah Pace Seven te Sp wlien doing laundry with a wash ir.g machine, put th heavier pieces through tha wringer twice before rinsing. Thia causes the thick foamy suds to fall back Into the washer for the next batch of clothes. It speeds op rinsing too. Accident Cause Falls occur tn the farm home more frequently than any ether type of accident. Tha farm housewifa can help cut down on the number of fans by making sure ber kitchen floor is alwsys dry snd clean. MRS. MARY MAJOR STOPS STICKY IRON PENDENNIS, KANSAS. - Mrs. Mary D. Major has discovered ona of the secreta of Faultless Starch, according to a letter she wrote recently. She said, The last time I was in town, I purchased a box of Faultless Starch, and used it on my wash. I surely was pleased with the results, when 1 ironed nri? clothes. My iron just glided along. There was no sticky starch on my iron. The starch Is well named. It is all you say it is. It is absolutely faultless. Isnt that a fine letter? She saya that there wag no sticky starch on my iron and, of course, that means she did not have a sticky iron." STOP TOUR STICKY IRON If you have to fight a sticky Iron" every time you iron, change to Faultless Starch and see the difference. Its no fun to iron with a sticky iron." Its hard work to iron when the iron seems to stick at the end of each stroke. Your arms, your back, your neck, your legs ache with strain when you have a "sticky iron." But you dont HAVE to fight a sticky iron! Just starch your wash with Faultless Starch and see how eas it is to iron! You see. Faultless Starch contains ironing-aid- s that make your iron- ing smooth, easy and beautiful. With Faultless Starch you make ironing a joy not a job. And when ironing is a joy, its really fun to do beautiful-starching- . SAVE STARCII-MAKINTIME Another wonderful thing about Faultless Starch is that you can make perfect hot starch WITHOUT COOKING! And in barely a G minute! Just the starch with, a little cool water and add boiling water while stirring. Thats allf- Isnt that easy? So change to the starch teat Mrs.- Major says, It is all- you say it is; It is absolutely faul- - tless' FAULTLESS STARCH- -al your grocery store. Ad- v- Cotton Firehose g cotton hose has been developed. The new fabric may prove very useful as tent cloth, tarpaulin, and outer rain resisting clothing. A new water-holdin- Acid Indigestion Reltartd in minutes or doubts money bock Wbtn sxcefl itomaeh acid causes painful, suffoeat-In- f gas, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually medicines known for prescribe the fastest-actinsymptomatic relief medicines like those in BelPans s Tablet. No laxative. brings comfort In a jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle to Ba.26c at all drug S Do you suffer from MONTHLY HUS TEIISIOil with Hs weak, fired feelings? If functional periodic disturbances make you leel nervous, tired, restless at such times try this great medicine Com- Lydia E. Plnkhame Vegetable Taken symptoms. pound to relieve auch up resistance regularly It helps buUd Also a grand distress. against such Stomachic tonic. Follow label directions. COMTOUMD JUST A DASH IN FEATHERS.? May Wtai of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with Its burry sad worry. Irregular bablts, improper eating and drinking its risk of exposure and infeo tion throw heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They ere spt to become over-taxe- d end UU to filter exeeae add end other Impurities from the blood. You my suffer nagging backache headaches dizziness, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other eigne of kidney or bladder disorder are tome times burning scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doan9 Pill. Doan's help the kidneys to pass off harmful excesa body waste. They have had more than half a century of public approval. Are recommended by grateful users everywhere. Ask pour neighbor! OHARA MARY W.N.U. FKATURgS- THE STORY TUI'S FARl A White colt between bia teeth and crunched. bora oa lb. Cook Bor reach, high la Ha was clawed by the other leg. tbo Rockies of toolbcra Wyoming, lie his shoulder was raked and gouged. tolor Indicates that It Is a throwback head to Iho Albino, a wild atatlloo. Its slro Tha beating wings buffeted his like clubs. He held on. The beak Is Appalachian, a famous racing stud, k lew monthi oa tho range changes the struck him again and again. Blood khlte lost, named Tbunderhead but com' ipurted from his neck and belly. only called Goblin, from aa angalnly, Suddenly It waa gone, shooting awkward hea.t to a strong and Intelll straight upward, then sliding into gent animal, klg lor hi ago. Curing Ike tha of the plnea. Goblin stood shelter winter ke la brought la lo tho stables, alone, the thin shank, partly covered led oats, and given a little training. Gobtta Is sent back to tha range again with fine, closely set feathers, and la Hay, a (uU Bedted yearUng. Ona day the curled, cold, claw, danko tarts off loath ward oa a Iona Jourgling from hla teeth. There waa ney of exploration. Ha comet lo tha thin, blood oozing from loot of a range el mountains. the end of It He dropped It end stood ahudder-lng- . Is fist-lik- e g CHAPTER IX Another thinf that had happened a band of horsei waa grazing near the highway. A car passed, filled with noisy, men. Going up tha hill by the overpass, one of them had shouted, See that old mare? Bet I can hit her!" He had taken hit gun, stood up In the car, and pulled the trigger. The aectlon gang working on the railroad that ran alongside the highway aaw the whole thing. They law the man shoot, aaw the mare leap apasmodically, then go down with crash, heard the burst of raucous laughter from the men, saw the car speed up and vanish over the ugly-lookln- g hill. It terrified him. Then, with his Insatiable curiosity, be must stoop to cmell it again. Never would he forget that smell. It sent him up on bis hind legs, snorting. His ears were filled with the sound the eagle waa making a Karkl Karkl furious screaming, Kark!" He leaped away from th; fatal spot and went scrambling over the rocki downstream, working away .from the river bank toward easier going. The eagle peered from hla pine tree. He sat on a bare bough, balancing himself on one claw and one stump and hla spread wings. At bis repeated cry of rage the woods around became alive with small, frightened, scurrying animals. His Ken began to shake in bed. A white colt in a band of dark borses bow easy to mark and single out! However, there would have been the body they hadnt found any body. There was some comfort in that Goblin, meanwhile, was feeding in lush pastures south of tbe border. Though In a single afternoons play on the Saddle Back he or any one of the yearlings could run twenty miles and not know it, he had taken a full week to work his way to the foot of he Buckhorn Range. There was so much to see on the way. So many dells and ravines to explore. So many hillocks to stand upon, gazing and studying and sniffing so Wide a country so many bands of antelope and elk. The grass in tv-trmeadow tasted different It was in this fashion that the Goblin moved. After bis first start southward he had just drifted. Now here he was. It was the river that interested him. He had smelled it for miles before he reached it. He had never seen anything like it It took him a long time to decide that there was nothing dangerous about it, though it moved. It plunged and leaped. It hurled Itself over rocks It tossed chunks of itself into the air. It was alive therefore. It had a voice too. A loud voice that never ceased Its burble of sound. Incessantly, It talked, whispered, gurgled, chuckled. The creature was as big aa he Having power in himself, he knew that there was power in the river. was himself. Facing it, standing there on the and brink, he felt that it challenged him, eyes, terrible in their far vision were their determination, predatory to himself and he gathered fight fastened on the colt galloping northback. In an hour he had accepted the ward, a white streak down the dark fact that the river would not attack brink of the canyon and at last him. It ignored him. Nothing he moving dot on the plains, five miles did altered its course or its beha away. The Goblin used the speed that he vlor. He drank from it, at last, and the river did not even mind that. had never used before; that had He followed It upward. It was reached him, coiled like invisible, snakes, in the chromoleading him further into those hills microscopic which got steeper as they got closer somes passed down to him by his until they sheered up, leaning over forbears. It was a great run. him. And the river was narrower, Next morning when the sun rose, Its voice was between higher walls. a deep roar now. Occasionally, look the Goblin stood comfortably among the yearlings of the Goose Bar lng ahead, he would see it coming broadside to the dedown over a wall of rock blue on ranch, turned the slide, a smother of white below. licious penetrating rays, snoring softly in peace and blissful ease. So it happened that he was standIt lasted for a week the peace ing on a flat rock, just gathering and the bliss. A week in which, as himself to leap to another rock in it happened, no one of the McLaugh-limidstream when the thing was flung family discovered that the prodigainst his legs, so terrifying him gal had returned. his that he made leap badly, and It was during that week that was swept into the channel, and from then on knew nothing but the young Ken McLaughlin, In a fury of over the loss of his colt, struggle to keep his nose above despairon the top of Castle Rock and stood water and claw himself out. When he accomplished this he was hurled down the cherished stop some yards downstream. Even while watch which was to have timed the he was shaking himself, his head future racer. At the end of the week Goblin left turned to look back. What was it that had hit him? He must know. the herd of yearlings and drifted It was still there on the rock on south again. His terror had changed, which he had been standing, and it as all terror should, into knowledge and acceptance of a danger; a lesdidnt move. With his ears alert and his eyes son learned. And those mountains fastened on it, Goblin went back and down there exerted an Irresistible fascination over him. He went more investigated. He spent a A foal! Not so unlike himself, exslowly than before. a little with week band of of instead all grazing that being white, cept valley on the it had brown markings on it. It was, antelope in a dell-lik- e in fact, like Calico, his piebald way. And he explored extensively on both sides of the lower reaches Granny. Goblin was shuddering all over. of the river. When at last he reached the rock The foal had no eyes they had been he had been attacked by the where a half In dozen out places picked eagle it was near the end of July. there were bloody gashes It was at this moment that he This time there was no piebald across the rock in midleaped to meet the flapping black foal lying monster bird in the air. cloud that dropped down upon him stream, no half-hou-r a Goblin beat the spent Huge pinions by that from sky. about his head. The creature was rock, smelling and snorting, going as big as he was himself. Goblin over every inch of the little beach emitted the first real scream of his where he and the eagle had fought. life when, for a moment, the terriSomething like a dried curled branch ble face looked closely into his own, lay upon it with a darkish clot on and the great hooked beak drove the end. He circled it, then reared and came down pawing at it He for his eyes. cut it to bits and ground it into the Goblin reared and went over backward, the eagle flailing him with earth. He followed the torrent upward Rolling wings, beak, and talons. on the narrow rocky beach half in until he could follow it no longer. It filled the gorge. Streams ran over and half out of water Goblin strugcreaunder sides of the cliff to join it. In the the from to get gled ture. When he gained hi feet, with the crevices of rock were pockets the instinct of the fighting stallion, of snow. The stream was choked he darted his head down to bite the with the spring floods. It pounded toreleg f his enemy. He got it and churned. A dead tree drifting I EMf - Ve exo c mile enough Smith Bra. Cough Drops to tstiify everybody. Our output is still iwtricted, Buy only what you srrd. Smith Bros bare soothed coughs due to colds Since 1847. Black or Memhol-ct- iU only ft. down was hurled tens of feet Into the air. Goblin looked at the rtver a long time. He raised his head. What was beyond? Up there? His nostrils flared. The river and the rock walls were go gteep and so high that he could no longer see the sky, only craggy peaks, and ever more of them. But up beyond all that was where he must go. Cows and horses are by instinct expert engineers and will always find the easiest way through a mountainous country. Goblin detoured from the river on the eastern side. He had stiff climbing to do but there were breaki in the river walls and running with the brood mares on the Saddle Back had made him d as a goat Hours of ai hard going brought him at length to the last grassy terrace before the rocks shot up in an almost sheer cliff. The place was like a park with clumps of pine and rock, little dells and groves; and. scattered at the base of the cliff and on Its summit numbers of the huge smooth-surfacestones like the one balanced on the top of Castle Rock on the Goose Bar ranch. Some of them as large as houses and perfectly smooth and spherical, these boulders are to be found all through the country of the Continental Divide, creating a wonder In the mind of any beholder as to what great glaciers In what bygone age could have ground and polished them and left them at last hanging by a hair on narrow shelves of rock, or balanced on peaks, or suspended above crevices where one Inch more of space on either side would have treed them to go crashing down. Goblin was hungry. He took his bearings first, then began to graze. Rounding a clump of trees he halted and lifted his head sharply. There, not a hundred yards away, close to the base of the cliff wall, were two handsome bay colts grazing. Goblin was quiet for a moment savoring the Interest and delight of a meeting with some of his own kind. Then he whinnied and stamped his foot. The colts looked up. With innocent friendliness they trotted toward him. Being a stranger Goblin had to discover certain things im Were these mares or mediately. stallions? Where did they come from? Would they be friends or enemies? So, Just as children, meeting, always ask each other. What's your name? How old are you? Where do you live? these colts exchanged Information, squealing and snorting and jumping about This was interrupted by a ringing neigh that came, it seemed, right out of the wall of rock. The colts responded immediately. They whinnied In answer and galloped toward the wall, angling off to a place at some distance where a ridge ran up the cliff. And then to Goblins amazement they galloped right Into the wall and disappeared. Goblin galloped after. Turning the shoulder of the ridge, he found himself in a narrow chasm which spill the rampart of rock and led some distance Into the heart of It There was no sign of the colts, but the passageway was full of the smell of horses. Goblin trotted confidently m SMITH BROS. COUCH DROPS liL BLACK Off MINTHOl- -5 The Advertisement Mean a Saving to You Keep Posted on Value by Reading the Ad Simply Delicious sure-foote- 4 o. Ike (,. rar - jfr'i&ty CORN, d I r flams y' Worl Where Most Golds Start rCCIAL DOUBLX-CUTNOtKOROPt Y When a head cold strikes, put a little In each nostril. Its a spa-dallzed medication tha- tRelieves sneety, sniffy. im . v stuffy distress ofheadcolds. Males breathing easier. I Bo keep bandy and use It the Instant It Is need Va-tro-- ol ed. Follow directions in the lQuickly 77 77777777. HelpPreventmwfeidfrom UMRCH30L EXTRA LIGHT BREAD! yeast acts faster because it's fresh I Fleischmanns fresh active Yeast goes right to Full-streng- th work makes sweeter, tastier bread . . . helps insure tender light texture. IF YOU BAKE AT HOME use Fleischmanns active, fresh Yeast with the familiar yellow label. Dependable Americas d favorite for over 70 years. jag-gedl- time-teste- on. Suddenly there was a harsh scream from above, and the shadow of wide wings drifted across the chasm. As long as he lived a moving shadow falling upon him from above would galvanize Goblin into terrified action. He crouched, backing, and head and straining eyes his g tried to spy out his enemy. But not by looking could the colt see and apprehend the eagles eyrie, clinging to a ledge far up on the peak, with one eagle sitting on the edge of the nest, and the other the eagle drifting down over the chasm. Colts and eagles live on different planes. Only by the cold shadow falling on him, only by the scream, with its strange mingling of ferocity and sadness, only by the horror and shuddering within himself could he know his danger. He plunged forward, driving straight toward the rock which apparently closed the path. But arriving there, the passageway turned. He saw He went on, zigzagging. and heard nothing more of the eagle. At last the sides of the chasm sloped away, exposing a wider wedge of sky. And in front of him was a mass of the great boulders which seemed to have been rolled down the sides, choking the chasm completely. But there was still the smell of horses Goblin went on. And a turn showed him an open way through a sort of keyhole, roofed with a single great boulder which hung on slight unevenness on the side walls. Beyond, Goblin glimpsed blue sky and green grass. Galloping through, he came out into brilliant sunlight and a far vista of valley and mountain. Goblin had found his way into the crater of an extinct volcano. Two miles or more across and of an irregular oblong shape, the valley in the finest mountain was belly-dee- p grass. Here and there, rocky or hills rose from the vald ley floor, reaching as high as. the agged and perpendicular cliff which ringed it and shut it in. dGfFtsIZ fJlOfSTJFS w;th fresh .Eveready Batteries pafed one-legg- (TO BE CONTINUED) v I ' I j V V V ft Vv I -- il, 7) rlrv tPif' ;i0 " Clancy, y ' u A ? v - V think you done that on purpose! At LAST you can buy all the fresh, doled IJveready flashlight batteries you need! Your dealer has them now, in the size that fits your flashlight. Naturally, theyre still on the job with the Armed Forces but there are plenty for civilian use, as well. So be sure and ask for fresh, dated Eveready flashlight bat- teries. The famous date-fin- e proves that you get a jrtsh, Jull-pow- er battery every time . . . your very best assurance of dependable service and' long battery life. The word Everead y u a registered trade-mar- k VICTORY BONDS! Now of national Carbon Com party? Inc, the time to buy them |