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Show FREK PRESS. I.EHI. Words fcrei OOOOOOOQOOCft Q terra levis. (L.) May tha H ,ct . b "fitly on you. I (F.) All tha BY THE (L.) By force and force. hv "'See aux dames. (F.) Maka feSDt ternble. always making !T ;s BY e ti.e : MAl'Tl LIDA LARRIMORE ' inoppor-embarrassi- :i remarks. i ar and c i ii w siidow faiew ell. j K II the road." the denned to j out of the V..: nec-c"rS- St.. , :.)..! ly. th.e t:: :i t t ru" Youi . ia a How urug- u Willi I, ;i!iJ uv.ve. f d'ist and cM:..d:r.g a j pennies Child's Life? a'.t.'d i ' ; 11 . bih'v Td l.t- ol tablets jiy a teaspoon-lof genuine Magnesia Phillips Old Age MLK0F magnesia Is Deliberate Young men soon give and forget affronts; old age is In both. Addison. soon slow Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how you have tried for cold or bronchial get relief now many medicines your cough, chest irritation, you can with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed membranes as the germ-lade- n phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have railed, don't be discouraged, your Druggist is authorized to guarantee creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with faults from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) d MbS I! Keeps Dogs Away from Evergreens,Shrubsetc. at WNU-- RI ATI IFAF Aft w 1 W UVTUdllVUVI . - IN UTAH AND s .. ... ..: -- ? V Tt ' ai.v. - (,l o ph. tild, ". 'U t ( I "u.d i ci v l,tj l.ot j;. ::i (y to ID ;.- aeaaicd batii. '" ery eha; i to a :.;.-- w o .id ith t1:,' leas le her! l v.iai werkeii (,n the plaet per-ha- i . 11 a- l.l-.- I i.,..-l,-1f.- sur-iuttn- ' ; -- THE hotel ben lomckd Si'n'3 finest . . One of 350 Rooms Utah's Best 350 Baths $2.00 to $4.00 t'M Air Cooled Corridor Roon, Coffee Strap -- Pac ous Lounge and Lobby Courteous Service tv?rY Comfort and Conveniens will be found at Cm II THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH -- hauncey w. west, ocn'l msh. t ' . ,.;-l)o- i:.v , i Hos-t:!:!.- es From Tv.o H'; u (hv Smart Pattern She nodded. main-tame- I ! v . I liii-i!..- '. ah..rhed app.trer.tly the Su.-an- ." "Why?" "Because and rvn ill iii a - i . !(, t,r m I (T: a. , It Was a Nice Looking l'iace, Jim Decided. business of handling a bamboo rod that she was. unaware of Jim's ap proach. He walked more slowly, his amused glance fixed on the intent figure poised precariously over the stieam. She was ten or eleven, he surmised, a thin little girl with thick short hair the color of pulled molasses tafi'y. A grubby little girl. "Hello!" he said. "Any luck?" The child made a quick startled movement and the law of gravity completed the disaster. Her body plunged forward. Two small bare feet wavered, kicked frantically, disappeared from view. Jim heard no outcry only a splash and then an appalling silence. He reached the rail of the bridge in two hasty Perstrides. She'd gone head-firs- t. she was badly hurt! he haps thought in a flash of alarm. He looked down from the rail of the bridge and was instantly relieved. The youngster wasn't hurt. She was, however, very angry indeed. Her small pointed face was crimson with rage. She sat in the water and glared up at him through hair. dripping locks of "Now see what you did!" she exclaimed. "I'm sorry. Feel all right?" he added. "You aren't hurt, are you?" She ignored his solicitous questions. "You scared him away!" she said furiously. "Scared who away?" "My fish. I nearly had him." taffy-colore- d "Then I'm more than sorry." Jim's voice was appealing, contrite. His expression indicated remorse and an ardent desire to make amends. The grubby little girl was impervious to cajolery. "Haven't you any Letter sense?" she asked scornfully, "than to yell at somebody when they're fishing?" She scrambled up from the bed of d "I sluuld think the stream. have more sense 1han that. Kven an idiot, I should think." Her glance veered from Jim to the brook and tier expression altered. She s'ooped to pick up the bamboo rod. "It's broken!" she cried. She was frightened, Jim thought. Her hps were trembling r.ow. "Maybe not," lie said consolingly. "Here let me see it." "You go away and let me alone!" Her round eyes blazed in her small stricken face. "It's all your fault! if you It wouldn't have broken hadn't made me fall!" any-body'- "uh, come now" Jim protested. know wdiat you'll do!" she wont on. scorn in her voice, a hint of sobs "1 staunchly checked. "You'll go 1eil Cecily that I broke Daddy's fishing :od. 'That's Ju evaohy what you'll do. Y.vi'il go toil Ccciiy and I'll get tne (' v.h" l won't." Jim ai u; od her. "I .iih,b.'t. I dot.'t know Ceedy. V. a is she? your soier?'' i had made impression at ' he child louked un at him k, t. cuiioii v a don.shiiient in her tyes. "You dor: t know Coe,Y?'' she It was apparent that she asked. I ... found it difficult to believe hire. Word of honor." Jim's expuls- that tli.s ion was grave. He ten-cwas a matter of great impoitanco. "I thought" lie gave it up. For a moment she seemed to deliberate. Then, abruptly, she extended the bamboo rod. "Here," vTw "Well. Sue," Jim continued, "I came to visit the MacPhersons. They're here, aren't they?" "Sure," she replied. "That's our gardener and his wife." "They're friends of mine," Jim continued, "I used to know them once. A long time ago." "Did you? He's nice. She's bossy." Jim laughed. The child, obviously, had no consciousness of class distinctions. "So," he went on, "if you'll tell me where I can find them " "I'll show you," she offered. Her attention turned to the fishing equipment. "I've got to do something with this," she said obviously perplexed. "Can I help you?" Jim asked. She paused to consider, frowning. "I guess we hadn't better take them up to the house," she said at length. "Somebody'd give me the devil." Her eyes brightened with inspiration. "I know! We can put it in the until tonight." was in the The meadow, a short distance from the drive. Jim walked through meadow grass with Susan. It was pleasant under the light rain of the wil- M.rKS i.i , V VV V vou 'Sue' once. 4J ' ,','a. people 1 that's very nice." "Tiiey don't. They call you Susie.' " "I'll call you 'Sue.' Well, Sue' Like it?" Jim asked. "Hetter than 'Susie.' " Her voice was She did not mean to lower her defenses all at ! I,e-nar- e. a flag of truce. werej for the moment susJim examined the break, pended ;.i.d i: e child. w:t!i the agility of a monkey, swung herself up on the bridge. "Can you'" she asked. "Do you supH se sou can fix it?" "Fasiiy." Jan smiled down into the small anxious face. "A Little twine and varnish will do the trick. See, the break is here at the end." The puzzled expression returned to her eyes. "I should think you'd know Cecily," she said. "I mean you look " Again she abandoned the difficult task of making her meaning clear. "But I don't," Jim assured her. "You see " he smiled "Are you a Vaughn?" j he was at ti.e chauileur. Ti;e imminence of seeing the The blue eyes Jim again added to Jim's inthought he detected about her creasing felicity, that lie mouth a return of the scornful ex- was able to recalllie foundweek-enthe pression. with less acute humiliation. Why "You aren't afraid of him, are had he let the Callendcrs get under you?" she asked. his skin to such a disturbing deThe words implied a compliment. gree? It wasn't his fault that he Jim felt a little embarrassed. He hadn't a Fellows smarter than shouldn't have let her assume that he were job. in the same predicament. he was on his way to the Vaughn He should have been jaunty. estate. lie shouldn't have encour- "Brother, can a job?" you spare aged her to talk of the fam.ly there. Debonaire. The light touch did it. She'd probably be offended. He'd lost his genius for the light "Oh no," he said, smiling a shade ioueh. He'd last his sense of prouneasily. "It's merely that Well, portion, his convicjan that life it's too hot to v;.)k thiee ?nik- " hould be lived in t rms of a come"Wall;!'' she echoed. Jim read dy. He hadn't been cast for a tragic in her inr;vdulus i the rale. He was tao healthy, too blond, mind. her thought running through too naturally chcoi;uh He'd gotten She probably presumed that lie had out of cliaraeh r, and a fleet of Daimlers anchored at the glowering and sens-'ivel- glooming magnifya Or outside. Packard, at ing trilles into slights and insults. curbing least a roadster, perhaps, with Jim grinned sheepishly and the melleather upholstery and a flock of ody he whistled, rising in trills of tricky gadgets. mocking notes, reached a derisive "I came out on the train," he crescendo. As a tragic figure he said. "They weren't expecting me." was absurd. He'd get back into He hoped she wouldn't refer to the character and stay there, to extend garage or the edan placarded the metaphor, until the third act TAXI. curtain. He was going to marry She mentioned neither the taxi nor Lcnore The whistled notes ceased abruptthe garage. After a moment of thought she produced instead, an ly. He saw her in minute detail, her small exquisitely groomed figoriginal suggestion. "I know!" Her voice was warm ure, her dark hair parted demurely with enthusiasm. "We have some and pinned in a shining knot at things to send to Clarke's. Their the nape of her neck, her long dark place is a mile this side of 'Meadow-brook- .' eyes, her skin so nearly the tint You can ride out with Herand texture of the gardenias which were her favorite flowers. She was bert." "No, thank you," Jim said hasti- lovely looking. Interesting, too, ly. "I'm taking the first train back He'd been so crazy about her into town." He glanced at his What had become of his young watch. "No, I'm not," he added in passion for Lenore? Jim walked an altered voice. "I've missed that more s'owdy along the dusty margin one by 15 minutes." of the road. It had been real enough "Herb won't mind you riding with the summer she'd spent with Kay him." She slipped down from the at "Whitehall." He was nineteen stool and glanced at Jim with a then, just through his first year at mischievous expression. "You could Princeton. The details of her visit walk a mile, couldn't you?" she were lost in a roseate mist. He'd asked. "You look as though you been down for the count from the could, I mean you aren't a cripple!" moment lie had met her at the sta"I might manage a mile." Jim tion, petite and enchanting in some costume frahesitated. "But I don't like to im- sort of a silver-gregrant with gardenias. pose." What :m egregious young ass he'd "Forget it! Herb likes company. Wait just a second." been! Jim thought with amused She disappeared through an opencompassion of the young Jim wdio of the had been himself a very long time ing in the rear partition store and Jim heard, indistinctly, a a.go. And yet he was fond of If only murmured conversation. His new Foiget it! Time was a enough, tar her tomorrow, the rest acquaintance, he thought, couidn t, of h:s life. Today was his. Lenore capable voting lady. He with decency, refuse her friendly had no part m it. He whistled again, his persona! tentatively at first and then with suggest ion. Whatever inchnat .or..; mirdit It. he was about nioi" to visit "Meadow-brook.N.ce tout. try. he thought, ernerg-i- ; in of tt mta nmihL'ht in 'in the shade Whv not go1? Impulse pointed moved His inchnation. of woods. eyes Peisonal sUoteh a that direction. r fields and woods, rolling meado he had to admit, was m i;ivi and worm-fences- , I,ut .c ows, horse-jumpthe project through. seeing in t con.fort-;h'- e lanes winding earrais. had forsworn impulses. " briefly glimpsed hour an dwellings ag", solved, less than Witil .... trees. o.,..lthrough .. nave 'u,ini' waa,; I.ivinu, hero, would be simple and treacherous mrbiiahons. to isia isant. Summt r places, he sorback Pa'. Lorg mini! id retreats for (;tv K; m nie.rrv him i ed, week-enA count ry. who W ... r he rs i.earted.v. wh-- le approve isant hie; horses, dogs, hun'mg, !,!... rive That v.h.te I.e'iore He ing and a ch.ecK. :: hap-on the ir.e be would c:. T:ie l.r M weii. live ever aha had' said "A in the die:: " had cfo: e ." .hia ,, .'.;. e on l 10 a .1 the further, : t!e h n it'i v. r h.wed by a th":. ll dtied smithy '; : a a pa' a ran-- of jok- with a:a!v ;.,a' Anani's p1'. He-- a !' '."' h It w as im o i'; '" ii ilk ens ; a reenod ,: ,;! , h Jim had toe it v:a :;; ir:eh-i, v.:,s huiit o! Mo ii t a, , a n'ed white. "U and t;.rne had eouec a . with t if an :v 1 p!.v oo'.; g place. Jim :i , a e voll M t.ha.e " '.e tiit ' proi.aldy man Hody's d,.d. code, a hit 11' ft.a '!1 .,01 jnore eiahorate. Tins hai Tl e estate, as far ;,( ':ve. brusooely. V'. ,','uld see, had an ordeted, of Po.., ;mv friend door, Hail-- , i' . appetirar.c e. She went wath them a sa. edged whi'e-..Ti,.,,'K d ;: and d i'ws lo.imir.g witii daisies "Thank you for Sac cnn.ilcd ;aei;a s ha o. .Vino eves jlr.r ,. ch;irm of Mn.piicitj , Jim Maybe you can fix it.M . " Cot alv. Attractive dawhro.-', ;t wio w.is Tommy? Some-a;- e s - i m-- dei:er her i...us(-hoh- e sa.J The iud Vaughn? mut ' ITS ;h a It stunu-- ! s 1137 W ''' eheclful. had needed jmd y Genius Alone Fortune has rarely condescend-tto be the companion of genius. Disraeli. Ell a. May ;!t ' ! "Which one?" "I'm Susan " Her manner bej'! e who had came defensive. "Go on and si.:, the excl. ..tt n 'i l.,y on her I know it's an awful name." laugh, :: si oil a h;.iis;e hpa!:r:ir.g the d Jim, with some difficulty, 'li e i;j or ,i:t (f lur body i: a crave expression. ', i e.,nd the idar.kmg and ' Hut it isn't," lie taid. "It's a :.! ri' the stre;.n. She was to at ere named advantage m in th.s d Phillips' Milk of tadly. Ti.e sign at ti e gateway informed Jim that his surmise was correct. He en his coat and adjusted his I. a! to a conventional angle. Ti.e drive was bordered with ce-dars and oaks. Jim walked at a leisurely pace, grateful fur ti.e com His parative coolness of shade. tnouShts turned to the family at Meadowbrook. There was "Cecily." Odd that the name had m his mind. And a "Tommy." Weil. Tommy" was hardly a mcii.ber of tiie family. One of D. 1.;. 's swains. Gnod Lord" Was Mac-Plurso- uhen you buy. Comes now, also in tablet form. Get the form you prefer. But see that what you pet 13 labeled "Genuine Phillips' Milk of Magn- istheequivskut ''' "" a' a " h d.s.cretii.si. IPS' MILK OF MAGNESIA" FORM . ;' " : your child unknown remedies tithout ashing your doctor first. All mothers know this. But sometimes the instinct to save a few pennies by buying "something just u good" overcomes caution. When it comes to the widely used "milk of magnchildren's remedy esia" many doctors for over half i century have said "PHILLIPS." For Phillips' Milk of Magnesia is the tlandard of the world. Safe for children. Keep this in mind, and say "PHILL- WSO IN TABLET Each tiny tablet itrf.i f! Don't give esia." 25 for a big box of the at drug stores. W " " doctors agree. That is: ically all :r.v a- h- ;h;oJ t. pract- . . .I'.at .uti A, one point, on which t,.dT. taste ai.d tie a 4 There is - p:oh.,' :y .th I).;iy. .ti.lv. .she !,) (1 Ul.t. :.t U'liiy I K., ... AtU ,:, Don' Try fo "Save" on Home Remedies Ask Your Doctor !:.;-- I. city, i.l r:.-- e s'..-pe- to re-p- e 9 mutandis. (L.) The been having Mutatis He folded " J H. Vauciin a yt i.tloman (.f a;s- 1, .v- If "f .s v. . s the Mac Pi;i-- : sons l.adn t br..,k." fa:i.-- Mac- - of !t ;r.( -- . t.: J i ' child A (F.) e ! ie.-- o -p. e c!..- -. hd .'! a.:. W (.:!:!- -. Aunjerei. t deliver t : t:.e The latest to a 4 ' i J.:- -, ':.-..- r v am 0er T .' . : arra. ladies. cri. (F.) fad. '' f - x; rT.ifcl. v ; i 1 fi'et -- ' scete.tFAstagese, '"lilt dt ("r-- - c scenic effect, thought, ratl'.er asked vou l':r--' ITAII V"o .A I dit! a a hi . ..'hi , a if. 7 ll "l r y No. 1271-- B Blouses, like crocuses, alwaya bloom early in tha and here are two versions that can be made from the same pattern Spring, that will brighten your wintry wardrobe just like a pot of flowera brightens a room. You can maka the dressier version, with charmruffing, out ing machine-tuckeof an airy organdie. And the sportier blouse with revers and d two buttons and a peplum, will do nicely in a silk crepe or crisp dimity or percale. There's bouffant charm in tha dropped swing peplum and the big puffed sleeves. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1271-is available for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponding bust measurements 30, ."2, 34, 30 and 38. The dressy blouse, size 16 (34), requires 2 yards lows. fabric, plus 3 yards of machine "You won't forget that the rod's pleating and the sporty one 2 broken, wdll you?" Susan asked. yards. Send your order to The Sewing "You could get some things from MacPherson and come here and fix Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New it." Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, That would require some diplo- Calif. Pattern 15 cents (in coins). Dell Syndicate. WNU Service. macy, Jim reflected. But he was, in a measure, responsible for the accident. He looked down at her. She was looking at him, her plain little face anxious and solemn. She was not a pretty child. She had a tilted nose splashed with freckles. Her eyes were too large for her facxv Nice eyes, though, widely 15C FOB 12 spaced, fringed with curling lashes. "I won't foiget," he promised. 2 FULL DOZEN This seemed to be his day for FOR 25c DEMAND making promises to ladies. AND GET They returned to the drive. Sue's spirits lifted. She moved GENUINE along beside Jim in a series of skipping steps. They fell into a comBAYER panionable silence which was presently disturbed by a dismal whistling. Culture Needed "Music," Jim observed, his atThe enj lyment of art demanda tention engaged in a closer survey of the house at the end of the drive. a certain degree of culture. "That's Tommy," she said. "Tommy!" Jim glanced inquiringly at his companion. "My brother," Susan explained, OX THtl and then added serenely, TYimrT7 " c II in love." sv a "That's interesting," Jim re- marked. "You can aiways tell," the child continued. "Tommy whistles like that all day long when he's in love." Jim smiled. He was conscious of a lively interest in Tommy. Or Ihea ' Never Neglected The curiosity, perhaps. Was the Rirl CORRECTIVE in the the temporary obwonder cM folk! talk about Nature' ject of Tommy's affections? NO Tableta), the lie was spared a prolonged period unlive. Tliey (NK work ta (tcntly, yet thoroughly. So refreshing kind are to the bo of speculation. Triry normal. So many aches bikJ pains vanun "That's him," Susan said when and when bow ls are cleansed of their cumulated in this way not by mere partial action, they had turned the last bend in poison rind out (or yourself what thousands of others the drive. have proved. Try Nature's Krmrdy today. Get Jim's eyes followed the direction tin economical of her pointing finger. He saw, re.... ... -Sr, rnl. !t (Ft i any drugstore clining against the trunk of a not the dashing Don Juan of his imagination, but a lanky llrought to Light boy, eighteen, perhaps, with an enA man's character seldom viable complexion. His costume adis it merely revealed. changes suffered he the vertised fact that from growing pains. The soiled duck trousers were too short and very much too tight. The sleeveless jerMi si I..n;r.i 'ire Vy of sey which once bad been, presumr)l Walnut St. I.v. rrtt. ably, a delicate robin's egg blue, . W.nh.. !) a! "I w;n tn't stretched tightly over his chest and B't e;lt nit! n wr.il; .ill'! royiri tneit seams. strained at the under-arW"'i 'I" liaidly Last summer's clothes. Tommy, at (tl Or. trok nrr h ' ..4 1'ieTLe't F ivmiir ISeirrip-linthe moment, Jim surmised, was not of me a it lelirvr spring-hous- spring-hous- d plain-edge- B e e 35-in- LOOK FOR THIS CROSS ASPIRIN IFITwHAPPYi ft jf, drug-stor- e 1. ayU-m- , copper- -beach, Young Women S t 1 'Mi-- n on Mirade. The boy appeared to be unconscious of his sui i ojiKimgs. His at- titude suagesteil reveries, dreamy contemplation, a secret communion wild spirits invisible to other eyes than his own. A lock of hair, a shade or two darker tha iv .Sus:in s, hung limply over his f cad. Tomnv on parade, Jim decided, was, doubtlessly, a nice looking kid in the last painful stag taffy-colore- of adolescence. HO III: COMIMLD) t:.1 lliat tiir'l. in iv.:' ferLin. -- s t t.i.l i .:i,Vn,'i .nnf.etita nit t'iru tliil I (?aitie'l in e.iry .iy." e, Muv of your (inictr;t now. Niw 50 ct. LarRr sue, tahi. or tatiift $1.35. MORNING d MUX DISTRESS issiue to ami, upset Btomach. Milnts.a wafers (the original) quitkiy relieve acid stomach and give neceisary elimination Each wafer en'iais4 teapoonfuls of milk of magnesia. 20c, 35c Si 60c |