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Show THE LEW SUN, LEHI, UTAH I T'S utterly unfair, of course But if a man will smoke an outrageously out-rageously strong pipe, nobody is going to get dose enough to him to appreciate his heart of gold. Don't keep potential friends at a distance. Sir Walter, Raleigh's favorite blend is incomparably rich and fragrant yet so mild as to he acceptable to the most fastidious pipe-sniffer. Nor does Sir Walter lack body and real flavor. They're all there in Sir Walter Raleigh as you'll discover when you try it, iJ ' e.Am.. lo" -At. IT'S 15f! milder i I Cheap Heating for City I On the recommendation of the Icelandic Ice-landic Engineering association Ry-Uavik. Ry-Uavik. the capital city, is to Inaugurate Inau-gurate the system of using its natural nat-ural Lot springs for city heating purposes. pur-poses. At Wash springs, near Reykjavik, Rey-kjavik, a pumping plant Is being-hmlt being-hmlt and heavily Insulated pipes will 'rry the hot water 4nto. the city. 4 number of public buildings are ex-nected ex-nected to be equipped with this new gating system by winter.. Make dresses bright as new! I DIAMOND DYES are easy to Jf'JKo on smoothly and evenly; Ji-w. Never a trace of that re-y re-y wok when Diamond Dyes are w i ust truo even new colors JMt hold their own through the araest wear and washing. I diamond Dyes owe their superi-nty superi-nty to the abundance of pure anilines they contain. Cost more to make. Surely. But you pay no pre for them. All drug stores ' Joe. ' jjgjmt (Wrfr for SQ Yean Some Dome! Pome idea of the great size of the I me on the Capitol at Washington uL be 6ained by the reprt tnat ;f" gallons of paint was required ' cover It with a protective coat. liquid was nrpnnrml hv n for- !f,a, ''PProved by the bureau of ndards anl is expected to with- stand several years of exposure. fc ' va man a week was required to ape the old paint from the dome. f Importable Ts.sk ,1 on can't blame a woman for feel-" feel-" "osband Is unreasonable j'i J h 'nsists on her loving him as Tan .can't do-even with a halr-'f-Cininnati Enquirer. AUGUST pLOVER i"ss. sluffliLiflc.. helache, bilious, 'uggish liver, constipation. . Teste good appetite and f f'SMtion, and regular. 4QrJ r,?!uSh elimination. L GUARANTEED. I The Handsome Man by MARGARET TURNBULli M Illustrations by . lit WIN MYERS Copyright by Mariraret TurnbulL 4 . n. u. Bervlca. THE STORY i Returning to London, practically practi-cally penniless, after an unsuccessful unsuc-cessful business trip. Sir George Sandlson takes dinner with his widowed stepmother, bis old nurse, "Augy." He did not approve ap-prove of her marriage to his father, fa-ther, but her explanation satisfies satis-fies him. Little Is left of the estate, and Lady Sandlson proposes pro-poses that they go to the United States to visit her brother, Robert Rob-ert MacBeth, wealthy contractor. Sir George agrees. MacBeth lives on an Island estate with his daughter, Roberta, who longs for city life. MacBeth Is a vie tim of arthritis and almost help less. MacBeth Is glad to see his sister and asks thu two to stay. CHAPTER III Continued 6 51 It was Roberta who had selected Indian Lodge and had used her father's name when she telephoned and arranged ar-ranged for luncheon. Juan had, obligingly oblig-ingly in the modern manner, left it all to her. Juan, who had angellcized his first name, and was known' as "Jack" Navarro, was a slim, clever, dark young man of what it commonly called the Latin-AmeiHcan type. His eyes, looking like dead black cinders or live coals, according to his mood, were always capable of keeping his thoughts from Roberta. He was regarding her now with extreme ex-treme impatience and not a little contempt, con-tempt, though this Roberta could not Bee. She saw only his obvious good-looks good-looks and his odd, but to her, charming manners. Jack was "so different." It Was to come here and meet Jack that she had quarreled with her father. She saw herself as a daring and sophisticated young woman, hampered by an old-fashioned parent with ridiculous ideas of what his daughter should and should not do. To Jack Navarro, with a cosmopolitan cosmopoli-tan upbringing and a sophisticated outlook out-look on women and life, Roberta was a rather troublesome child. But he had orders to keep her amused and Interested and he was doing this, with an ease that bored him. They had reached and finished the dessert stage, aild Jack had produced, with a flourish, tie expected and inevitable silver fllsk. Roberta, though her. pulses qiickened at this sign that she was regarded as an experienced woman, shook her head. "Can't," she declared. "No nse asking ask-ing nie, Jack. In the first place I tfon't like it, and In the second place I've I'iven my father my solemn promise 1 w on't touch It until I am twenty-one." Jack shrugged his shoulders, helped himself and slid his flask back into his pocket Drinking was not rounte-nanced rounte-nanced at Indian Lodge, and one had to be careful how one did It, If one wanted to come again. It was a convenient con-venient place to meet this girl and Jack knew there was need of caution until he ot what he wanted. Sometimes Some-times he loubted If he would succeed with her She was to him so essentially essen-tially stupid, so unused to, or slow to grasp meanings of looks or words in the game they were playing. ' These North American girls were so often educated In everything else but sex. Still he had been told that to Intrigue In-trigue this girl was his share of the business on hand, so he lifted his eyes and gave her a lopg look and a slow smile. "Any hurry?" he asked. The girl looked at him doubtfully. "Well, I don't feel exactly comfortable leaving father alone so long. I should have gone back when I saw those servants going to the island. He can't move, jou know, without help." Jack's eyes were cinders. "Is that so? Permanent?" Roberta shook her head. "Oh. no. The doctor says he will be all right Id a little while. It's just that his rheumatism is rather severe. Just now." Navarro looked at her narrowly. "How soon will you be able to meet me again? Tomorrow night?" Roberta shook her head. I don't believe so. It isn't easy to get away at night. Day after tomorrow, I might, but tomorrow I'll be busy with the new servants. I won't have time for anything 'else." She took a cigarette from him and, as he lighted ft for her, looked at him a little curiously. "Funny, Isn't itr "What is funny r He asked it quickly, and with the foreigners sensitiveness sensi-tiveness to the American's strange Idea of what Is "funny." "That we should see so much of each other in this way. When Hal IJrlce Introduced n at the Princeton football game, I never expected to see you again. "Whyr "Oh, because you're so mtch older, and Hal said you were frightfullj sophisticated." Kavarro smiled, relieved. He had forced Brice to give him that introduc-ttaa introduc-ttaa at svtc and whether be liked It r not One never knew what an American like Brlce might say. They knew at once so much and so little. But Brlce bad fortunately held his tongue. "He is a nice boy. that Hal Brlce, and he plays a good game, but he is too young Just a boy to play my game." "What Is your game?" Roberta asked it with something of her father's directness. "Just now it's making you like me more than a little, Roberta," he said softly, and put his hand gently over hers. Roberta looked at hjm now' flushing, flush-ing, a little puraied. It wag part of this man's fascination that he spoke sparingly and was lavish with his caresses in private. It confused the girl, made it hard for her to Judge mm coolly, as she did the boys of her own set and age, She did not even know whether she liked It or not, whether she really liked Jack, but she could not run away, and she came back again, and again, still undecided. "I do like you. Jack, only" "Only what?" "Well 1 like other people, too." "As well?" "Better." answered the honest Roberta, with a smile that robbed her speech of all brusqueness. "You see I've known them longer." "The first time I saw you." Jack said It so softly and with such apparent appar-ent calmness that Roberta wondered at him, and at herself, "I loved you so "Just Now It's Making You Like Ma More Than a Little, Roberta." well that no one I had known before counted.. There has - been only you In all the universe since our meeting, Roberta." 1 v Roberta drew a long breath. It was marvelous and so tremendously grown up to listen to a man not a boy, but a full-grown man saying such things to her! Why. Jack must be all of twenty-five! And her father treated her like a child! But though Roberta was dazzled she was not blinded, nor carried off her feet, yet. She was conscious of a great disappointment with herself, that his words did not raise more tumult io her breast. It must be because she had grown older and more used to things, that she could listen to such speeches and feel, though her breath came faster, and she liked It, that she was not greatly moved. "Will you not come tomorrow?" Jack asked her again. "I ask you to." There was something behind the voice, something hard and Insistent, something some-thing mocking, something that said that she was only a woman and must do what he asked. It was the first touch of the iron hand of his will, behind be-hind the velvet glove of the foreign manners that so charmed her. "No!" Roberta said it almost angrily. an-grily. "I cannot come tomorrow. I will come Wednesday." There was silence, a silence that spoke of displeasure on Navarro's part. Then he said: "No. I cannot come Wednesday, but I will come Thursday." It was the girl who hesitated, and then made up her mind. "All right, Thursday, then. Where?" "Here." Why waste words on an obstinate girl? "No," Roberta said quickly, "I think you ought to come to the house and meet my father, don't you? I don't like dodging about to avoid father and the crowd." Navarro frowned. This girl would upset all plans unless she was kept In hand. "I'll come for you. I'll wait for you on the river road." "All right," Roberta agreed slowly. "Come to the house if you like." "No, the road," Jack replied. Casual Visitor Seldom If it is possible to reduce Italy to a number of cities, it Is further possible pos-sible to reduce those cities to a number num-ber of families. I have never lived long in Italy, but all my Italian friends and I have had many and all my non-Italian friends who have lived long in Italy, agree that family life is more Jealously guarded from outside influences than that of any other European Eu-ropean country. One can stay for a score of years in Rome and be Intimately In-timately acquainted with nobles and politicians and officials and the middle classes and the masses, meeting them In assembles and in clubs and getting on the most confidential relations with them; and still, at the end of a score of years, realize that one has rarely if ever been invited to cross the thres n paid the check and they went out Into the soft spring dusk, and he put her Into her car, kissed her hand and whispered that she was adorable, and then stood lighting a cigarette as the watched her tear along the high-way high-way at sixty miles an hour. It was slow work he told himself, but at least he had gotten somewhere and learned something today. I-ady SandiRon, having finished her own tale promptly, had had to listen to her brother's recital of his life and triumphs and then to a dissertation on Roberta, her beauty and talents, and finally to a short resume of Rob's difficulties with her. Listening. Aggy's lips had closed tightly. She was not one to approve of halfway measures, and was in full sympathy with her brother's determination deter-mination that things should not go on this way, for the girl's own sake. "What now, precisely, are yoo thinking to do?" she finally asked. MacBeth looked at her appenllngly. "I am puzzled," he admitted, with the frankness of the truly great "What would you do?" "It Is not for me to say," retorted Lady Snndlson promptly. "I have seen her but the once." "I'm not one for driving a girl to open rebellion." "No." agreed Aggy. tome, Aggy, you always bad a tremendous lot of sense and I'm in need of a woman's eye as well as my own. Could you be persuaded to run this house for me, Aggy, for money?" "You know well I'd do it for love,'' Aggy told him sternly, since love Is not a word to be used often and requires cautious use even between relations. "But that would defeat your plans. Use sense, woman. Nobody but you and I need know our arrangement and would It not be better for you to work for me than for a stranger?" "It would depend. How much authority au-thority would you give me? Things must lie in my own hands, if I'm to make headway and help you." "Done," said Rob MacBeth. "I paid my last housekeeper two hundred and fifty dollars a month." "MIchty me, Rob! I could not charge you the like of that I" "It will be a sa'vlng If I pay you three hundred," said the crafty . Rob, "you to take over the entire direction of the house, leaving Roberta with nothing but her own affairs to attend to. She won't like that" "Fine, I see your plan, but the pj''i far too high. Say two hundred." "Three hundred or nothing !" "Have it your own way. but I'm t to Hbe used openly against the lass." Rob was so busy planning his calft paign that he did not notice how he little blue eyes were twinkling. "I'm Just going . to make Miss High-ano Mighty see where she gets off, if she doesn't behave," he said. - "Have it your own way," agreed Aggy, demurely. "What about Sit Geordie? Can you no help him to ft place or use him here?" Rob MacBeth stared at his sistef. He said nothing for what seemed t her a long time. "I can't ask him to do anything menial," he announced, puzzled. "You cannot" Bhe declared shortly. "I don't know what he's fitted for." "He's had a lot o' expensive school ing; a lot o' still more expensive sol dierlng, when he was hardly more than a laddie, and a thin time of it in the wilds of Central America." "H'mm," said her brother, frownlny. "I'm away," announced his sister, rising, "to look over your kitchen and 6ee If I can get together a tea. for you, and him and me. You can be thinkiflg." She started toward the door. . "I'm very much puzzled," said hei brother. "Don't strain yourself," Lady SandV son told him drily. 'There's such things as secretaries in America, are there not? And you lying here tielp less far from your office." ; "By George! That's an ideal" Aggy looked at him without spear ing, and left for the kitchen. That Rob, after all these years, had accepted ac-cepted her and her problems, Includinj Sir Geordie. without either astonlslV ment or hesitation, did not seem ta her remarkable. It was what she hal expected. Would she not have done the same thing for Rob? Some twenty odd minutes later slrl reappeared, carrying a tray on whicH toast, deliciously browned, Jam, cake and tea were Invitingly spread forth, and went toward the library. Evidently Evi-dently Sir George had assisted MacBeth Mac-Beth to get there, for she could hear the two men talking. Both looked up at her. and Sir George sprang to clear a place on the table and take the tray from her. "You should have called me, Aggy,-he Aggy,-he said reproachfully. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Seen in Italian Home hold of an Italian household and to mingle intimately with an Italian family. fami-ly. From "Europe in Zigzag," by Sis-ley Sis-ley Huddleston. Sam Term Applied A golfing husband was entertaining a friend. They were left alone talking for some time after dinner. Then the wife entered the dining room to hear her husband pass some remark about "a hole In one." "My goodness," she said. "Are you still talking about golf?" "No, dear." said her husband, with a smile, "we're talking about socks." The "Scotland of South America" as Fatagonia is known, covers nearly one-third of the area of Argentina, Tirade Your Eig Car on The New Nlodcl Ford wv 24 W. Salt Lake All the new and Trucks "Efficiency" Carried to Degree of Absurdity Charles Cole, of the Union Pacific, was talking about efficiency. "Of course, efficiency Is n wonderful wonder-ful thing. It is an essential of successful suc-cessful business, but the so-called 'Efficiency expert' Is seldom the man who injects this necessary asst into a business. Some of them lire silly. "A young man who claimed to he one of these experts was sent to me by a friend. I was not Impressed and the chap tried to sell himself. 'It's this way, he explained. "You put a man on the Job he's fitted for; you make a virtue of his fallings. What I mean is this: "'Suppose a man has Insomnia. I would mnke him a night watchman. Then again. If I found a fellow whose band had begun to shake from "amok.' Ing too many cigarettes. I'd make him a mandolin player. "Los Angeles An-geles Times. The Heel Dr. F. B. Dande of Bnlse. who recently re-cently discovered In Oregon a carload car-load of fossilized scales of the mesothrorlum, tracodon and other enormous prehistoric lizards, said in an interview In Warm Springs; "You can tell a traction's scale from a mesothrorlurn's as easily as you can tell a white man from a colored col-ored man." Then Doctor Dnude chuckled and went on ; . "Take a colored man's leg. It is .planted in the middle of his foot. I lie has as much foot behind Ids leg as before it. '' "A colored man was walking down the street one day. Suddenly he looked round and said: "'Boy, git off mah heel. Git In-tirely In-tirely off.'" Reports Quillets Porcupine The Mexican hairless clog has a rival. ri-val. Charles Bolin, n guide In Jasper National park of Canada, while out on the trail, ran into a 'qui I less porcupine, por-cupine, "The skin on its buck was as white and unprotected as a woman's wom-an's hand," said Bolin. The porcupine porcu-pine was discovered part way np a spruce tree and It would have boon passed unnoticed if Bolih's horse hadn't shied. Disease Is the most plausible excuse that can be offered for this strange phenomenon. Big-Enough to Kit It Is pointed out that aviation has made the world smaller. This Ir true, but still you can't fall and nilcs it. Life. ' By wisdom wealth Is won ; hut riches purchased wisdom yet for none. Baj aid Taylor. MRS. CLARA RILEY 2100 Paxtoa fit, 4th Ave, Sioux CUj, Iowa "I began to take Lydia ptnkham's Vegetable Compound Com-pound at Change of Life. Now I take it every spring and fall and it keeps me in good health. I am able to take care of an eight-room house and garden at the age of 71 years. I will praise the Vegetable Compound Com-pound wherever I go for it is a wonderful medicine (or women. They should give it a good trial by taking about five bottles. Mrtv Clam Riley assataBftasfcaistMiMBkal fcis (a ,yjjik .y&Ay Vms- tif4tt. jsr fay'ytryfg ram its ( 5th South City Utah model Cars on display Heart's "Pacemaker" There is a small moss of tissue in the human heart which is called the pacemaker. In this the beut of the heart has Its origin. It was discov ered in 1905 by Mr. Taivara,' a Japanese Jap-anese medical student. Us for Spiders' Webi Strands of the webs of spiders are used for cross-lines in mlcroscopew, runge finders and other exacting instruments. in-struments. The web is wound on. a card-like thread. " , - . f Makes Rapid Growth Bamboo grows to u height of more thun iOO feet in Ceylon. It has been known to, grow as much as 10 Inches in a dayA A man's love for money 4seldoin of 'the 'platonlc brand. FOR CONSTIPATION effective in smaller doses "SAFE SCIENTIFIC Horse limpings' Reach for ABSORBINE For 38 years Aheorbiue has relieved hard-worked nuiadetaod tendons-a quick help to reduce strain-swelling. Promptly eases injuries, never blisters, blis-ters, loosens hair or causes Idy-ups. A great antiseptic for aiding quick healing of cut, bruises, sores. Any druggist 12.50s bottle. W. F. Young, Inc.. 5f0 Lyman St, Springfield, Mass. FACE BLEACH Positively eradicates (rom the skin all tan, moth patches. Fallow complexion, pimples, eczema. etc. At drug and dept. Mores or by mail. Price $1.25. BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE DR. C H. BXHRY CO. xrr Michigan A. Chicago, III. HiKlet funlir Cnatt l-umlxr and Mlll-wiirh Mlll-wiirh shipped from mill. Have money. at-4 at-4 In Lumber Hhliir. H-l. Seattle. Wanh. HOW TO I!E BEAI'TIFUL A manual f Id-auiy formultiM and health hlnt for rtrnonel una and profit. Prepared by a Kdentlxt of International reputation, roxltmi.l, tl ; particulars fr. JOHN J. '.REINER. 121 2Gtb Ht.. OK.Itn, Utah W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 37-1930. us sn HFRTTTA fiTFPHENS 21 E. Rom St, Lancaster, Pcoasrhraala 4I vas very nervous and rundown and weighed less than one hundred pounds I felt tired and weak and I often had to lie down I took Lydia E Finkham's Vegetable Compound Com-pound because I read the ad' vertisement in the paper. Now I eat well, sleep well, and have good color. In fact, I couldn't feel any better and I weigh one hundred fifty-five pounds. Iam glad to answer letters from any woman who wants to know more abouttheVegetableCom-pound." abouttheVegetableCom-pound." Mrs. Bertha Stephens M Oil f QutcMfi t i |