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Show American. ew-- II III 14H - U 1 ' .WNU.Wfl I E J i etie! ict; ibini 'totJ ?!YoJ eadicM toe, J III Wtoni ctti S.,t m have to know wnr-that you seem to Eculously-well. I've ,trfffiiraile like you! I' If"'" ieh " be went on. as . But T 'ln , to shows, let ZZvau don't have to . vour mother untU Vnnth. if yOU don' k DeJ" " nth-" Sheila said, find-""""..t find-""""..t think ifU be ..ina fef ' . ... nit, wants to hear ,s were locked in Frank's !alWW hpr fin. 'js; DOW sne -I fli:. .1 I least ft WtfJ In hoi r auto. I I fcuds were locked In Klpt: 13 I tank's big hands. of butts bakiojj vnc J UP 5: $1$ 55j held her for one last tell me, are you happy?" she echoed, trying to ears came into her eyes, sjkt, then. Now this" i "this is what we're go- lrun into town, d'you ar is right over there" sea looking at it" ml we'll have a party, tii department store and il sorts of things for your id Angela and you, too. sninded me of reading i Von asked if you had an ieezer, and Connie she's s-she said a radio, and :?s - and towels every- ie we'll send home. Shall A frank I" They were w, and she lifted the soft sown of her glittering hair. m eyes over which the pang drifted in a film. "Oh. p. toat'd be too much fun! " J he put hisarms about M her tightly, and she -si silence, trembling. Save to get used to this!" ' a whisper. " her mother rnllerl I They were apart again! m unn wud he stay for 'Mn' have some man- Said Mrs. (larsparM on tecadden, you're very , raio, glancing at his I have some shopping - Sheila has promised to i mought we'd go into ach." fflJ oat! "Sheila said m. P1 the house. When she came out, ten minutes later, she looked her loveliest in th blue suit, with the new blue hat The hemstitched frill that fell to crisp folds at the collar of the coat had cost thirty-nine cents, but It was plain and fresh; Sheila', shoes were shining, and if the chamois gloves she wore were still damp in the tips from recent washing, and had been snatched from the sunny back clothesline, Frank did not suspect it "You brought your topcoat? Good girl; we may be late." Prank approved. ap-proved. "I love that coat'" "You ought to. Your mother f .? cu",,0"1 f0r your sister Mon-ica. Mon-ica. Sheila reminded him. "Yu're goin' off for the dav? Well," said Mrs. Carscadden. bestowing be-stowing upon her daughter the near-est near-est thing she ever knew to praise "you look clean and neat and that's something." Til say she looks clean and neat," Frank agreed. "We're going to buy you ores-ents. ores-ents. Mother!" "I'll step over to the police station sta-tion and wait for ye." Mrs. Carscadden Cars-cadden said grimly. "Oh, that reminds me!" Sheila exclaimed. She flashed into the house, flashed back with a little photograph held in the palm of her hand. "Look what was forwarded to me. a few days ago," she said. They all looked at the picture of a California fruit orchard, in all the radiant flood of March bloom. A plain little farmhouse intruded upon one corner of the print, and in the center a pruniig ladder had been leaned against an apple tree, and a young man in overalls stood on the ladder. Below him, deep in the spring grass, was the stout, square figure of a middle-aged woman, with one hand dropped to her side to touch the head of an eager mongrel The young man was facing out of the picture. He was half laughing, his shirt was open at the throat his" shirt-sleeves rolled up; he had a saw in his hands. "Who's that?" Frank asked. "That's a bad boy, the boy who kidnaped us, and then went back to his mother and is being a good boy!" Sheila said. She slowly tore the pic-ture pic-ture into tiny scraps. "Nobody's ever going to use that against him," she said. "And is that all we're ever going to know about him?" Frank asked, smiling down into her honest serious se-rious blue eyes. "That's all." "Someone you helped?" "I don't know. I'd like to think I did." "Well, come on," Frank said. "I'll bring her back to you safely, Mrs. Carscadden!" "I've no doubt ye'll try to," Sheila's Shei-la's mother said patiently. "Ah, you love me, Mother!" Shei-la Shei-la was as radiant as the spring morning as she kissed her mother. "The black sheep is the fav'rite, Sheila," Mrs. Carscadden said with a resigned sigh. "And I'm your favorite child, Ma?" "I may as weii say you are," the mother said, "for it may be the last chance I'll have to spake to ye for the dear knows how long! When ye'd Walk out of the house on me, God knows I'm the last to know when I'd clap eyes on ye next!" Sheila and Frank were laughing as they ran down to the glistening, long shining bulk of the roadster. He helped her into the front seat, and Sheila settled herself there comfortably while he came about to his own seat at the wheel. She turned to wave at her mother and sister as she and Frank whirled off into the morning sunshine together. (THE END. Vs Name Is Kept on Street, Marking Past Historv of Georgeti m own the fwJ rioa vi - - fff5t rStrti Iff" fery store where pep- I 111 Slim J ."uiuupi are sola G ease, an old canal - m long since van- world, and a row of toggling up hill be- fch is the view where Thomas Jef- ?ergetown during 'ninlstratl0ru j!ih Georgetown ton. But for some J- little street be- escaped the WMdea gates remind Wlen Jefferson yFoxalL whose J to suburb etand played " r hours la the Jeffer,n man fciS Sis KftrStte town. Pte6 the frooljtobe American t0. the use of TP" .ections, landing ?T strudod in a matter .01 other ot days or weeks to do to Joy clearing TVie operation simply call3 to b cra ers : " 4QrPa and laying s0 simpi a givcu r me Way. : dle the operate oper-ate repaired HJative labor can hanoie ired. the most pnltlVX0heavy equiPVK! Almost ation efficiently, and 7 possible Thus, when a Je fedUties for me mediately to provide fa ,,alcanai air forces. .etureS fromu-- Ready-Made Landing m m m m mm Vields The show es. -t,ires from a accompanying J so installed. rpadv-maae . i -!t r J - .- 1 i 1 The interlocking steel Marsden mats are delivered in bundles, as shown here. The space for the airfield has been cleared and graded. min..!! i f 'i ....5vr - , ; ; J Here natives on Guadalcanal are laying the interlocking steel mats for a landing strip. Melanesian Allies who have been projected centuries ahead with the arrival of American task forces and modern production methods. The natives seem to be very "strong" for American-made pipes, to say nothing of American tobacco. place. It was then that Key wrote his poem which began O, say, can you see, by the dawn's eariy ugni. What so proudly we bailed at the twl-lighfa twl-lighfa last gleaming The next morning Key was al lowed to go ashore as he naa Deen promised, and his poem, which later lat-er became our national anthem, was first given to the public when it was read aloud by the author at a meeting of the Georgetown glee club. Now a beautiful bridge which has been named for Francis Scott Key crosses the Potomac just a short distance from where he once lived. Here also came George Washington Washing-ton in the early days. He frequently frequent-ly traveled along M street and spent many hours In Georgetown, either for business or for pleasure. The last party Washington attended was a birthnight ball given in his honor at the Union tavern on M street In the evening of February 22, 1799. When it was finally decided that the new capital city of Washington should be located along the banks of the Potomac, Washington issued a proclamation to that effect from Georgetown, where he was then staying. It ended In this way: "Done at George Town, aforesaid, the thirtieth day of March, in the year of our Lord 1791, and In the Independence In-dependence of the United States tha fifteenth. "By the President "GEORGE WASHINGTON. "THOMAS JEFFERSON, "Secretary of Stata." - 7 ,. Til ' 1 ll T' -4.- " zs r , A tkP i TOW W If f I I Iff S ;A 1 li ti Picture above shows landing mats being laid on the graded field. Right: In event of an attack uhere bombs ' ';;; 5i f- are dropping on repars can 6p moJc fcy .. sf eef mats. ?Z< ing new M- m r" 1 ' -mml ""f m ii in iji ui'.jJt-".HB8WW n jv U. S. army fafc orce mem5er Jirecl laying of a landing field. Notes of an Innocent Bystander t The Intelligentsia: Fred Allen has decided not to do a column. But he is quitting radio in June . . . Lucius Beeba admits downing In Chicago about getting a priority on a west-bound train "as. a lathe worker," but points out that you need no priority for train-riding. Eavesdroppers took it to heart, and so Beebe has the final titter ... Ben Hecht is making the slick mags again with his first-rate stories . . . John Brlggs, the N. Y. Post music man, has quit to Join OWI and hopes to be in Africa shortly. The Wireless: The Berlin braggarts, brag-garts, according to the short wave listeners, skipped all reference to the Tunisia' runaway. Rommel qual. ifled for the master race by putting on a masterly race of 1,430 miles away from the scrapping . . , Goeb-bels Goeb-bels probably regards the twin bombing of Berlin as a blessing. It smashed the radios and prevented the groggy citizens from hearing the bad news front Africa . . . R. G. Swing made a point for wide open info on the submarine sink tags. It will be harder to take, he warned, when the total losses are discovered. Besides, the truth would cure us of some of our cockiness, which isn't stylish when there's a war on. The Mat nines: Otto Kruger's letter let-ter to his daughter on her 16th birthday birth-day ta Cosmopolitan is grand. By all means clip it and show it to yours , , . "Hospital Ship" In the Satevepost, by Comdr. M. Lewis and J. Israels, II, Is eye-arresting . . . Those who deprecate the power of ridicule and words should dip inte a piece in Free World, which re. -veals that Goebbela Is so concerned about the epidemic of anti-Nad quips, he has urged Nazis to sock coses of those who tell them ... Gerald W. Johnson says in Atlantic Monthly that we are at war because be-cause the Axis thought we wouldn't fight, which gave them the Idea they could push us around. In fewer words the trouble was they believed be-lieved ostriches Instead of Americans Ameri-cans ... Sir Cedric Hardwicke In This Week relates a Shaw gag. The hostess cornered Old Whiskers at her party and inquired if he was en-Joying en-Joying himself. "Madam," be said, "that is all I'm enjoyingl" The Big Showr Sallies In Our Alley: Sgt Soupy Campbell, former actor, who is back from the Solomons, swears this happened hap-pened ... A Jap acrobat, who had returned to Japan In time to be drafted, was found alone frantically waving a white flag In' surrender. In perfect Amerlcanese he greeted the marine with: "Fergoodnes-sakes "Fergoodnes-sakes where the hell have you been?" . . . Two gents were discussing dis-cussing the wife-problem last night "Mine is really strange," said one. "She has the constant fear some-one'll some-one'll swipe her clothes" ... "Well," suggested the other, "why don'tcha have them insured?" . . . "Oh, I did, I did," was the reply, "but she still worries. Now she has some guy stay in her closet and watch them. I happened to find him there last night" Mldtewn Vignette: He is a new Broadway lawyer and he was eyeing eye-ing his new office and new furniture furni-ture proudly. He told his secretary that he was "ready" because he now had the necessary "front" to receive the biggest clients . . . There was a knock on the door, and both cleared the decks for their first action . . . Was this their first big client? . . . Well, let's be ready, anyhow . . . She opened the door and let the stranger in the cue for the new attorney to put on his big act . . . "I'm sorry, Mr. Ridge-way," Ridge-way," he said audibly, "my fee is still the same-$10,000. Good day!" . . . Picking up another phone he boomed: "I'm very busy these days, but I'll take your case" . . . The visitor was in the doorway by this time . . . The new counsellor, with a dramatic gesture, asked: "My good man, what can I do for you?" . . . "Not a thing," was the reply, '1 came to connect the phones I" The Maglo Lanterns: The news-reels, news-reels, which are working on a good story these days, put it all over the fiction dep't Best of the newsies shows the Nazi defeat at Stalingrad. You'll never get the glow out of a scenario that comes with a gander at Marshall von Paulus, Jittery as a hophead, reporting to the Russky leader to take what's coming to him . . . The long lines of German prisoners pris-oners against the snow also make a pretty picture. The Front Pages: Jonathan Daniel, Dan-iel, the North Carolina editor. Just added to the President's staff, is one of the nation's ablest Good enough, in fact to bring the ax-swingers ax-swingers down on him . . . Rommel's Rom-mel's plastering in Tunisia found the opinion gents reveling In delighteven de-lighteven those obdurate fellows who whimpered we could never lick the Nazis . . . This gives you an idea of the way some legislators think. The fight over the Rural Plan in Congress bad them more excited than Rommel's defeat Grow Better Seedlings Some farm families who have tries! te grow seedlings of tomato and ether garden plants in the kitchen windows, report that they get, better, stronger plants by growing them in flats in the win dews of a brooder house. Keep Milk Covered Milk is kept covered in the milk bottia in the refrigerator. Left' over milk is not put back in the bottle, btrt is stored separately and used soon. . o Work for Civilians Employees of the Fort Atkinson, Wis., public works department who night otherwise be layed off be cause of work curtailment are opening clogged sewers and laying drains for residents, work done formerly for-merly by private contractors. The work is done on a cost basis plus a 90-cents-an-hour charge above the regular hourly rate to pay for compensation insurance, public liability, lia-bility, supervision and use of small tools. A deposit is required before work Is started to eliminate possibility pos-sibility of unpaid bills. 130000050311 OFFICE EQUIPMENT WB BUY AND SEtL Office Fumltnr. Filei, Typuwrilerm, Addinf Michliwi, Safe. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE SS Wut Broadway. Salt Laka Cllr, Utah HELP WANTED Wanted Experienced Ford Parti Vtt Good warn and eleady work. All Npuaa confidential Ford Agency, Pooatello, Ida. LENSES DUPLICATED THE OPTICAL SHOP U Beaten Bide. Bait Lake City Lenaea duplicated. Wholesale price. 1 4-hour aervice. Mall in broken pieeea. USED CARS TRAILERS USED CARS TRAILER COACHES Liberal Credit Terma JESSE M. CHASE . Buy Sell Trad - 8TORE3 IN OGDEN, PROVO. SALT LAKE CITY, POOATELLO. BOISE, BLACKFOOT FOR SALE POULTRY WHITE LEGHORN SPECIALISTS IS year production of superior akUka. A 100 pur top ranking strain. Order straight ran, pallet er cockerel eaiska. Write for folder, price and early epaa dates. Graham Hatchery and Pallet Peas. . Hayward nail fie, ate, ARE YOU AFFLICTED? Allies Get Fooa Under leass-lend to the Allies In 1912, some 1,145,000,000 pounds ol meats were laid down at shipside. Nearly all of the meat delivered was pork and amounted to 9.8 per cent of tho total U. S. supply, o Repay Loans Last year farmers repaid a total of $28,000,000 on loans administered adminis-tered by the Emergency Crop and Feed Loan offices as compared to the $19,500,000 which they borrowed bor-rowed during the year. o Wood Pulp and Flour Wood pulp is an important source of cellulose from which a vast array ar-ray of products are derived, including includ-ing smokeless power, essential to every arm of the service. Wood flour enters into tho manufacture of commercial explosives, now of untold value in military projects and in the mining of strategic metals needed for war. ! British Supply Batteries Among other reciprocal aid items, about half a million electric batteries a month have been sup- ' plied to American troops in Britain by the British government 61190 (MmW$f All thlt mod areo serious illness msv ba due to B Complex Vitamin deficiency. pls safe! Take GROVE'S B Complex Vitamins and get all the mtdkslly rtcogaixtd B Comple Vitamins. Vita-mins. Quality potency absolutely attuvranteedt Unit for unit, you can't get liner quality at any price. Yet GROVE'S B Complex Vitamins ar oniy ?y cents tor regular size., .only a dollar for the large sue over month's npply. Get GROVE'S B Complex Vitamins today! GROVE'S . Pit1 .. ARB YOU AFFLICTED I Tf Yflfl have HvT .tnmi.lt IrMn aland, ltohlng pilea, rheumatiam, arthritis, varicoae veins, or ainue trouble, ae as, or write for particulars amd testimonies, NATURE'S MINERALS COMPANY, tie. sou utreet, ugden, Utan. OLD COINS I Viy all INDIAN-HEAD CENTS. Com. Elete catalogue lOo. TESTER, Box 8036, oiae. Idaho. PIANOS and ACCORDIANS PIANOS and ACCORDIANS WANTED Write Today BTJMMEHHAT8 MUSIC CO. IT W. lat South Street. Salt Lake iWhife Fawn Flour Leads Them All Ask your Friendly Grocer VTJiJO. Weak Ne. 411 SALT LAKE Acid Indigestion RelltVM) In 5 mbratM or double nwwy badi 4 IV baa (M itomacli Mid eauMA painful, iuffort far u, floor itomach and hwtburn, doctor twokllf prMcrib th CuUwt-actinv mwiirinett known fur rmptoBtf tie rlief mwiiom5. ilk tbotw In Hell-ana TablW. No Uxatir. HeM-aiui brinira comfort In ptty r doubt tour marwj bacit oo rvtora at boUto h ft ttfl ftt Alt drugvuUk SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT RUBBER A tingle 10-ton penton bridge eta ep 3200 pound ef rubber nd 3.01 pownde are utaa for ach roll ef edhealve plester made far the Area' aaedical ears. We're neatd lot about Ure twitching twitch-ing lately, but the practice would become more oommon li every driver driv-er reallxed that equalising wear oa all Ural can inoreaaa tieed mileage as much M 50. With eomereetlen In mind keep year rubber geeda In seel, dark place, preferably away free direct heat, or exposure ta sew light, ell and grease To male the bullet -aealino; gasoline tonka of a Flying Fortreea require 1660 pounds ot xubbet. Perth ontum Argent atum Is whet botanists call Ouoywleipr enounced) V-Yu-lee) a scrawny desert shrub ef Cent rel America and ft owthweef O. ft. which la being developed tor Its rubber content. BIGo2kic!i ef I LeV . WANTED! ! RABBIT SKINS Domestic and Wild FOR HIGHEST PRICES AND A SQUARE DEAL - Ship to NORTHWESTERN HIDE & FUR CO. 463 South 3rd West - Salt Lae City, Utah ATTENTION! Farmers & Livestock Raisers COLORADO ANIMAL BY-PRODUCTS CO. "A Utah Corporation" With plants conveniently located at OGDEN - SALT LAKE CITY-HEBEE CITY - LOGAN SPANISH FORK-GARLAND. And It Affiliate Companies IDAHO HIDE TALLOW CO.. Twin Falls, Idaho IDAHO FALLS ANIMAL PRODUCTS CO, Idaho Falls. Idaho IDAHO ANIMAL PRODUCTS CO, Nampa, Idaho Offer Tea Highest Prices for SHEEP PELTS, HIDES, WOOL and RAW FURS Writt 463 SOUTH THIRD WEST, SALT LAKE CITY |