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Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah the curtains so that the light might solve his doubts, and stooping, peered Into her face lu the s Inquiringly. WE HAVE ALIL THAT By HERBERT QUICK AN0 ELENA STEPANOFF MacMAHON tr eorfBICHT Tha WN.UtlP.VICt ccx bobbs-merri- Sasha looked at Musia In wonder us If she could not comprehend ' the paper nnd the message. Musin repealed It. Musia folded "But." said the maid, "Tovarisch thrust It Into the bosom of her Vilinsky has ordered that none of (Own then she took It out and un us shall be allowed to go." folded It. The Tartar woman. watch "Will you not go," said Musla tog her, saw how Musia treated the "and tell my mothlitter, and smiled. Musia rough! the. authoritatively, er what I have said?1' mile, and In a little embarrass-ifeiitWith her look of astonishment walked once or twice back tBd forth across the room; then she rendering her face blank of all and other expression, Sasha went; and turned to Lorls' messenger heard the tinkling of (he coins as In scarcely two minutes she retfcey went out of hearing down the turned looking blanker still. , "Your mother sends you word," After all, she said to passage. friend. said she, "that she does not wish one bad she bitterly, rememFrom that time on. she began to to see you; and she said think of him as really her friend. ber her very words that she knows of nothing which she would rattier U one who loved her; and n warm feeling grew up In her breast to- say to you than farewell, but that ward him. What did he mean by she begs to be excused from saying faying that perhaps he had really anything!" Musia walked out of the house given his life In trying to save Hya? She lunged to see him. and without hindrance. Her mother's There message seemed a matter of little talk with him about this. XIV CHAPTER Continued 11 her-elf- 1 was really nobody In the world In What was left of the world whom he fared to see. It seemed as If slip must talk to some one about I.oris: so she began far away from him In a with the Princess Khabcv rovska.va. Hrst discussing her affairs generally, and then her father and mother but when she reached the point of bringing I.oris In she was overcome with shyness and name, and the thought of where the discussion might lend. She was, after all, only n timid Child, hedged about with old conwith ventions, with humiliations, perplexities and with perils. Matters went on much as usual the day after she had received Lorls' note; but Musla felt that their mere going on was In Itself a fateful change, like the movement Of a ship Into new regions while one slept. And the little princess told her that Mrs. Krassin had arisen, been dressed, walked nho'jt, and would no doubt be down next day. This was great news In the old mansion, jin.l Sasha the maid re- told It to Musla with a very great ' 1 .ff 1 And even as the maid was git-ijMusla all the particulars about her mother, of how she moved about, how weak and trembling she was, but bow muih better, there wu a deafening rapping and pound- lag at the street door, the sound of great car In the street, now nl Boat times so silent, and Suslm. r! kMlng g.ino at Mtisla's request to rtef oat what was the matter, came back breathless and said It was the i it B9ahevl'hl again. i B was lite same squad that had there weeks ago and looked the bmise. tine of the soldiers wa 8 limn she had got acquainted : err J With that other time, nnd he said that Tovarisch Vilinsky was now tr- !f' really coming there to make this his headquarters. And that they must 'not r....e out any of the furniture. BO? must the family leave the place. Thetc were orders. Mo-i- a M:irte, up. nil her terror of iliiisky flooding her being. 1G She ri'iwt l!y anywhere away from thla hmiso. Sh.' turned to to lioiui. but the girl was speak gone. m' .Bterjlmdy was In panic; there jiff a subdued scurrying all over rrs the fcoltse. Pill'.- - took possession of Musla. 8he.t""k from a closet her Utile bag bat M put Into It the few necessary th" arttdrs of Lulling which she bail :t V elected, she quickly dressed for the rrecf. i,i'vg what money she had and I .T few Jewels In n little flnra. Tl:ese things she did ,sip wondered again Whether .,r led she should die of - surra let Willi . n straiten nl. f. ..v,.. , i, . ,, j ocians, Mlt mm, Illlller r,n a hot of chocolate bonbons (trf" iWnicti she bad had for a very long time-h- ut she forgot the bread ami ' wett which she hud hi smuggled Into htr room, though It iiv before her eves on n shelf of the closet. , tyt wnet, sue teit the room with I Tier chocolate tinder her n rm ni,,l ner jiiue nag in her hand, hiie nl iAt ran Into two of Vilin-kv- 's hJ Itg IB 1 .... v- t7 sail-'tt.- ""1 !"? fwUi : f otioii 4 wo of the ron-- , anion; the I'.olshe- - diard-t- T., - ,n i'Oipj shew ili',eerf.l,e!a! defed & if 41 f , ti. b a! l'I Mi ihe0 ih.. .ild plnrc ' slirt J f.-- r r. SI,.. r ' In It -- w it. i! fir i stp-.- i 1" Musin he t 'der ef ' J ,.,; ,t I. Mh It. I8l?w' mot i1 1 - , rj,,, Itj- - sat. J Snshn. '11 1 ''"", .tin HI, ((I., her y she f If 3 ), Torgotten Nah.i tbiince.l 'I et I bo tluor tr 'I! the I'.olshevlkl, r nnd nrresled My Ml , V. . "t-trr- ,t I e.-- ll "'Is, "biib i , . r T ,; ,.c room For that to her on J trr ,1 !!?d r eer,M MAli' never kill ' i"i!o-again ", th tn.ilher !,':, I ,, lwr tote t " world; Who I . '"T HI her .hil "' mtlrli of ,r lif,.' ,ien f , "ok into ner ' I her bhll It .tr.... t rotn.ne if. .a n Is she not l'c4 and e , lo see any bid her t'Htd by." called Kazan, were rapidly passing through the gate of typhus and plague nnd famine Into a city more mysterious still. The Cathedral of the Annunciation was there, and might be Imagined as engaged In carrying on a debate with the Suynmbekn tower, Judged by what they both had seen, as to the relative merits of Jesus and Mahomet. They now looked down upon Tovarisch Vilinsky In full command awaiting a Marat to displace a Bobesplerre. They looked down on the old Krassin mansion, nnd In It upon an old woman with purple Sots In her cheeks, tolerated because she was nseful as a caretaker and housekeeper. They looked down on a society In the Inst stages of dissolution. War, tyranny, anarchy hnd worked their will with the greatest of all empires, upon which thinkers had long looked as either the peril or Ibe hope of the world according to whnt use the Fates might make of It. It still remains even more emphatically ibe peril or the hope of Hie m of satisfaction. , "I have no one but you now," she said. "Io not drive me away!" He took both her hands In bis and pressed them respectfully to bis lips. She lifted her face to bis shyly. "Be good to nie," said she; "I am so tired !" "My dear I My dear!" he half whispered, still holding her hands. "Do you think you can care for me?" "I think I do." said she. As she said this, the train swayed, rattled and righted Itself, as ft moved over the switch points out upon the main line. Tovarisch Lorls Tovarisch no longer had made his sensational escape from Kazan: escaped In the very hour when Vilinsky had condemned him to death; escaped only a bare half hour before the company of sailors came to arrest him; escaped over the line which by his orders bis adherents had cleared for his train, and whose cars he picked up as be made bis wild flight. To what? Safety? There was never any certainty as to that All sorts of reports were accepted and rejected in turn. The Bolshevik handbills called newspapers stated that he hud got away with much treasure and a considerable body of men to the Cossacks on the Caucasian front. Itewards were offered for him dead or olive. Other rumors hnd It that he had won through to Constantinople. Others said that he had found refuge on a British ship In the Black sea, and with his young wife bad made his way to America. The Bolshevik! stated that he was a mere robber nnd bad carried away with him an Immense amount of loot; this was answered In certain circles that he had only restored the treasure to the Uusslan forces to whom It really belonged. And there were rumors that all the treasure he possessed, except his little girlish wife In her black dress, were certain rugs and curios. One thing was certain; Loris and Musla had vanished from Kazan together. Kazan lay next day stripped of Its summer greenery but otherwise as it had appeared when we first saw It. The leaves ha turned from green to gold, had fallen nnd mingled with the piles of filth In the streets, which were higher nnd fouler than ever. The mysterious old city, half jKtiropean. half Asiatic, was more thronged with people than ever; hut outraged nature here, ns In nil Russian cities, was taking care of that; for these human beings, crushed by the ruthless blind forces of revolution Into "You See," Musia Said Very Simply, Like a Little Child, "I Came." mud-hal- l ns she skulked her roundabout way under the shrubbery to that back gate through which poor Vladimir had gone to captivity nnd death. She opened It nnd stepped out Into the street. It closed behind her. with n sharp click, as the spring lock fastened htr out Into the beast haunted forest of Kazan. She moved away a few steps and then, turning hack, she passed her hands over the outside of the gate as If It had been the face of a loved one, and kissed It good by. The day had darkened down Into the early autumnal dusk. She could see nobody In the street. She a world In which hope tins become wulked ofr rapidly Into the darknn essential need, with the scales ness. In the ancient mansion of the Krasslns, there were now left sloping down steeply on peril"! of all that great family only a side. Travelers still came over the hills crazed old woman and nu Imbecile bound for Kazan, but not so many old man. Iown In the railway yards stool as In midsummer; and now they the luxurious vagon deluxe of Tova- drifted rather than traveled driftrisch .orls In Its usual state of ed like human flotsam In some ragreadiness for movement. And Tova-rlsc- ing stream. I'eople struck with Lorls himself came speeding palsy do not migrate; they drift. was down from a meeting of the council Of those who came now, n.-of commissars a meeting In which of the sort who. when I hey caught Tovarisch Vilinsky had carried their first glimpse of the city spoke of the Krassin family; nnd If one everj thing before him. Vilinsky was now the favorite of did, he spoke as do travelers nmong the ruins of Nineveh or Babylon the sailors. c had control. In tMisltlon to oust Loris from of what was once. Fate had si rin k that family down his position of superiority; and he In ruins; but thnt was the usmil had been too smooth, too depreca-jorto Lorls even while remorse- thing In I'ussln. Over nil the forlessly riding him down with votes. mer empire It was the same. The ! leave any doubt in the mind of people of the Krassin type had met that experienced young man. as their doom; nnd now (he wnve lo how that control would be exer- which bad overwhelmed them was cised. When Vilitiskv nu .,.-...- . rising to engulf every mind, wheth-e- r and discourteous, Lorls thought, he that of nn aristocrat or not. urn imngeroiis; what he was which could hot nccept ready-made" formula of the when he tried to be courteous was the n problem which Lorls believed him- IHctatorshlp of the Proletariat With which dictatorship. Hie proself effectively to Imve solved. letariat had as little to d ns the "It ineims n rupture," said to himself. -- Well, even so, I might Krasslns and I heir fellow s. To outgeneral lilm; but It Is tmt worth all, save tn the few maniacs who only-on- e while, thing bus kept had overcome their keepers nnd assumed rulershlp, bad come the same tne here so long and that" The nuimohHc Mopped nt his fate; desolation, disillusionment, car. nnd lie stepped out. He called dissolution, and the supreme trial lo him the Ulcers in charge. of souls. "Is nil ready he asked. The Bolshevik organization Is a "Heady, jour honor, Bl t niS mstcry n mystery full of terror. been for throe weeks." The people are afraid of what Is "Is all clear along the line?" safe, and they are not able lo "And clear, except for the unexHie danger of what Is perilous. pected." They feel os one might In "Then send out orders lo have (he dealing with wild beasts which wires cut. couple the engine on at might lick one's hnnd or devour once, and pull out; the nnexpected one. ns the whim or appetite might wp have always wlih us." suggest. One great element In Ibe lie was leaving the Itolshevlkl: Terror lies In (he Inability of poo. be strode across the tracks, leaped pie lo understand one another. HuUp Ibe steps, bis heart healing high man minds become mjstcrlous ns that I he great advrnture was un- I hey come under the sway of new der way. A Jar moved the train; putlHi'e. are offered new temptaIt was Ibe engine being coupled en; tions In the living of new lives. his machine, was working promptly. ITIIK i:m i In the car was the uual silence; ' Amatan Nations hut as he stepped lightly and buoyThere seem to have b'en three antly through the reception room, he stopped short A little dark figure nstlons of Amazons one In Africa rose, swayed toward him, shrank under Queen Myrina; one. Hie bark, and stood still. Aslaile, with an empire along the "Von see," Musla sntd tery Black sea, and the Scythian Ania I sons, probably a branch of the simply, like a little child. "I rame." He stepped forward, swept tia.ki Asiatic tribe. consequence, h no s , dully-altere- r How pHbao Horse injured? Reach for True Form Shown in Rehearsal AllSOHllINE By JANE OSBORN Absorbing is the dependable liniment when gushes, bruises, threaten Fast to ease inflammation and guard against infection, il'a a quick healing aid. Muscles ami tendons strained by pulling, too, respond to this liniment. No blisters no lost hair horse can work. A real economy All druggists $2.50 a bottle M'. F.Young, lnt, 510 Lyman St, Springfield. Masa lay-up- T l"CY BAIXiKR had been chosen for the role of the leadinir lady In the play for the benefit because she was so amazingly pretty. One amateur was us good as anotheror rather, as the professional coach they employed thought. ns bad as another. And Koduey Brltton hnd been chosen because he looked the part. But Mr. Brltton was stupid, thought the coach no To temperament ni Imagination. be sure, he learned his part letter perfect, which was more than most amateurs seemed to be able to do. But when it came to putting feeling into his part It seemed ns if be bad a heart of wood. In the second act where be held Fhiphne that was Lucy's rob In his arms and told her of bis Insane love for her, be might ns well have been em bracing his own grandmother or n lamp post nnd talking about the And when It came to weather. "Flying Ferry" Across the Nervion River, Spain. tracted Into nets by the fishermen's (Prepared hf th National Gwnrraphlr Society, W'anhlnKion. D. C.) on lamps. The helpless little morsel of sea food labors under the scientist's a city awakes is one of most outstanding characteristics by which a traveler can catalogue It. Bilbao, on the northern coast of Spain, has certain noises nnd activities all its own. When most northern Spnnlsh cities wake up In the morning certain fixed and rec ognized noises are beard, certain HOW formidable appellation of Maraen-Idae- Women Stevedores of Bilbao. Number two. The shrieks of bare women steve footed, dores are heard. This requires the explanation that Bilbao, the most Important port of Spain after Barcelona, derives Us prominence from the heavy out ward bound trallie In Iron ore from nearby mines and the correspond Ingly heavy Imports of coals from Newcastle to furnish fuel for the many Basque Industries. The Iron ore Is loaded with mod ern equipment along the river, but the coal is often unloaded by baud or, perhaps to be more explicit, by head. Women almost exclusively are employed In this dainty occu Kvery day a continuous pntlon. line is to be seen moving up one gang plank, with bushel basket In hand, and down another to the coal hills on shore, with a heaping bas ketful of coal balanced on each head. When these tollers gather, shortly after daybreak, to begin work there Is a great raw that has to do with preferred places In the line, some there being gang planks slightly nearer to the coal heaps than others. In addition to the conlsblps along Bilbao's waterfront nre also to be seen freighters flying astern the red and blue banner of Norway These carriers bring Immense quantities of baculao, cod preserved In great chunks like salt pork, which forms one of the chief articles of food, not only In Ihe Basque prov inces, but also In Asturlns and Cm events transpire, and certain movements of the population take place, nnd In Spnln somehow these little Incidents differ considerably from similar ones taking place at the same hour In other countries. The whistle of locomotives Is heard announcing the departure of early trains, and In Spain (lie best trains, apparently with fixed Intent, manage to depart nt about live o'clock. Tiny electric cars rumble through nnrrow streets nnd across the plazas, under the dnty palm trees, tinkling their little brass bells, or perhaps they haven't any bell nt nil, the coiulm-tosimply blowing from time to time a small tin born as sign of warning. The worker appears on the streets with his long blue blouse hanging to the knees, hurrying along noiselessly In bis nlpnrgalas, like canvas tennis shoes with soles of iied rope, nnd Ids boinn, a tiny blue cap with no visor, like a small tam with a piece of string an Inch long replacing the pompon, set at a rakish angle of bis head. Generally there Is also a shawl, nearly as large as a steamer rug and of about the same color scheme, rolled up on Ids shoulders, with a generous piece across the lower part of the face to protect him against the possibility of inhaling pure fresh air. Ucln. Shops Open, People Appear. In Ihe older parts of the town the Iron curtain covering both door nnd single window of the Utile stores, taverns, and wine shops of Ihe poorer classes Is pushed up with n rattle nnd the place Is then open for business. The church bells call Bilbao Is eight miles tip the river from the sea. Numerous towns, some of them devoted to ship building, Iron foundries am1 smelters, line both sides of the stream between the port nnd the sen. At the mouth of the Nervion the faithful to early mass, and are twin cities. Las Arenas on the among them are many women right bank, and I'ortugalele on the People are transported be garbed In black, further Intensified left. I In a unique man by the black mantilla over head and ween the towns shoulders, who slip like shadows tier. Flying Ferry Is Unique. through the early morning light. On each river edge Is a great Bread women call at doors, leaving the large rolls, or panocih, tower of steel, something like which, with a generous howl of'cof. wireless lower, but morn massive, fee and hot milk (half nnd half), over two hundred t high. These form the usual menu for the day's towers support a light Iron bridge first repast of rich and poor alike. one hundred ami fifty feet above The servant girls, also with nlpar-gala- the river, under which the largest on their feet and blin k shawls steamers pass and repass night nnd From this bridge Is suspendover their heads, appear, basket on day. arm. on their way to market for ed a "tl.ving ferry" supported by s the day's purchases. pel work of line w ire, w hich Is Movement coiiiini nces along the pulled biok nnd forth across the river. It bangs to within a few feet waterfront, w here Ibe rnllle of Is beard, the Hanking of the water, (no crowds onto the ferry, th of largo cbnlns, ntuj the lmnre cries of the second mutes Marling whistle blows, the bell rings, (he their gangs nt the day's work of Iron gate clangs shut, nway one moves smoothly out over the river cargo handling. as II were. The All that takes place In any of through the air, shore Is reached in n minthe Spntilsh rllles on Ihe "Mar Can opmitp ute, but It is a rather lit tabrico," as the Bay of Bl.-nIs tie minute at that. delightful called In the mother tongue. But I'otliigalete las narrow streets, at Bilbao there are two Incident that occur In the early morning and lis luilifiiled house stretch pic. which apparently are tihlque lo this, Iiircsquely up the hillside, while nl Ihe largest of the Basque cities of Ihe top l nn enchanting Ptlle tint hie church, which Is always the Spnln. way In Spanish (owns. They nl Number one. The oil lamps of wnvs seem to cluster nroiind a the nnguleros are extinguished church or two f..r protection. Now. nnguicri are fishermen who. admlnlir:it jve For since midnight. Ime been encaged Spain I divided Into r district In a peculiar branch of th psher or provinces, liegiountisui Is so man's art. They have been catchthat one tiuiv almost constrong ing nngulas. and nngiiba, in turn, tinue and state Hint there are nl.a are a vrrv ecnl!ar brand of fish III national language, :l national liitle white, nl'iiot transparent costume. P. and. last but choices, worms (perhaps It would sound Hot least. 4'. Millolial dishe belter to rail them miniature cel). Till would, perhaps, he a slight ben n hatch only two Inches long. out cue .nt remain of them Is fried, however. In olive fexscgerniion, tnt the Inhabitant of inch ill oil and served In an earthenware Met differ noticeably In charac(ili. with Us oil s(HI popping teristic front all the other. A when brought t the table, must man fern Barcelona Is Pr-- f n (onnolsseiirs will agree that there t'aiabiti and second a Spaniard. Is method tn the nnguleros eppnr of Corona 'p an Inhabitant rnt madness. le Spanish than (ialb'go nod a This delicacy Inhabits Ibe Illver person from Bilbao place bis Nervion end is caught along the Basque nationality before his Spanwalls lone of the quas, being at ish adherence, and so on, Nervion la-leI Tile sufferers from Protruding. Bleeding. Itching or Blind Plies. can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pile Ointment those kisses In the third act they were mere peeks. "Like a robin pecking at a green apple," said the coach. Koduey grew a little nt the coach's criticism. He didn't see, be said, why they had chosen such h fool piny anyway moreover, he had taken his part only because the coach Insisted and as fur as kissing went, since he had bad no experience in the gentle art, be generally mulled it. Lucy, who stood during the pecking ordeal with her pretty month held tight and her eyes shut, seemed to be ns Inexperienced as Itodnev The conch suggested that he go through the part with Lucy just to give Koduey an Idea of bow the thing might be done, but Lucy protested. They bad all laughed about the mutter of yesterday's rehearsal, but afterwards the coach took them aside and told them Hint It wasn't any laughing matter. The play was to come off In another week. It would be a fiat failure unless Lucy nnd Kodney pepped up the love scenes. They'd got to rehearse those kisses. He told them, practically ordered them, to spend the next Saturday afternoon at Lucy's house where she would feI quite at home rehearsing the love scenes nnd the kisses. They might do It before n mirror. Professionals sometimes did that They mast try to put feeling Into It. "Try to Imagine yon nre In love wit It Miss Badger," he told Kodney, "that you nre dying of love of her; that you cannot eat nor sleep for love of her. Imagination Is all you need." I.ucy and Kodney laughed, but they promised to rehearse their part together the following SaturLucy bad carried n long pier day. glass from upstairs Into the room so that they could work before it. The next minute Kodney arrived. They stood before the mirror In the library nnd went through their parts right to the iolnt where Kodney had to take I.ucy in his arms. There be stopped. "You know more about this business than I do," lie said. "Maybe you'd belter show I couldn't bear nie how to do It. having that greasy coach kiss you that's why I consented to having this rehearsal alone. Now, come on. 1 have to bold you In my nrms like this. Is Hint the way I ought to do It?" "How should I know?' asked I.ucy. finding It rather pleasant staniHn there within Kodney's strong embrace. "I don't know any more about this this tantalizing love business than you do." "That's a fill." said Kodney. holding her a little closer (ban before. He felt an unexpected thrill of pleasure as her soft hair brushed against his cheek. "I never laid a girl like this in my life before. And I really don't believe I ever klsse.I a girl" "I know I never, never let anyone kiss me." Mild Lucy. "But I don't believe It will be very hard. You ran Just Imagine for an Instant nit really love me " "Yes that's what I o been tryfind that bclps-pi- iis ing to do. you in the right iuood.'r Itoduey held bis arms very lightly around Lucy's slender young body. "Ifs Hot so bard," be nnd then bending down bis bead pressed hi own lips against Lucy's. After what seemed several long but ch. Ihions minute lie let her breathe and loosened bis bold ever so JiHlo. vvhi-pere- d. s ptn-ios- PILES Q. K. (Quick Kellef) Tile Ointment Is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long alllicted, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this pile ointment on the market for sale, It was put to the acid test In both mild and severe cases, never failing to produce wonderful results. If you nre troubled with piles, do not experiment. Oct Q. K. Pile ointment. If your druggist does not carry It lu slock, fill out the blank below and mall it to Q. R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah Q. K. Co.. Gentlemen : Inclosed find $1.00 V. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. It Pile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to Name T. O. Address On conditions that If I am not satisfied with results obtained, I tun to receive money back, upon reluming tube to your laboru tory. All That One Observer Could See in Mirror Max I'.psicin, philanthropist and patron of the arts he has just given Chicago university $l.om,(M) for an art galler- y- said nt a dinner at tin; Blackstoiie; ''Because fool novelists, stealing their ideas from Freud, make out that we have abandoned virtue ns a mistake, a lot of people really think that virtue has been abandoned. Absurd ! "People who think thai way are as far from the truth as the men in the niiecdote, "It's an anecdote about n woman who went to a sale and bought a handsome mirror lo bang above her bathroom wnshstuinl. The mirror was large but not heavy, and she decided to carry it homo. So .he boarded a trolley car, and sat with it upright on her lap. Naturally she couldn't help looking Into it now mid then, arranging her hair, you know, and maybe powdering her nose and so forth. "All t'ie men in the car were very much Interested, and one of tbeut was heard to say ; "'Well, oii never can tell what's coming next. It's the latest fad, I ' suppose.' No, I'm All Right "You admit that v..ii put a lead nickel Into the complainant's cigar vending machine, l'ou t y.i know that that the judge. "as cheating':" reproved "hid j cut ever smoke otic of those cigars. Judge';" I'm Hand lAprcss, America Far in Lead Olio third of Ihe world's mail Is handled b.V the liiite I Slate s postal system. Wise is ihe small wishes in vvite ! vvlm has onlv granted. Lucy looked nt him with misty eve uud heeks nt', line. "But. lio.j-liKILLS 103 RATS the kiss i..c ii t collie in this act." she said. At last came the evening of the final rehearsal. "It's going to be A Nt bracks farmer ki!!e-- I 10.1 rats bard." Koduey told I m in 12 hours with (Kills lists l.ar.l Ihe way It iise.l (. he onlv inly', the prolurt made by a special hard to forget that that greasy processor squill, an ingredient highly n il and ail Ibe cast are looklltth recommended by the I'. S. Govern, menu It is sure death to rats and ing on " act Ibe At Ihe end of the mice but liarn lisc to dope, cats, com. b rushed forw ard will poultry or ev en baby chicks. K-u today America's most widely us, d nicl. bi.l lend to Kodni y. rat and mousecxtcrniinalnr. Sold by I'utgfiificetil." be elicit, ns lie tirUfcg-s'on money back guarantee. At the end shook I'otlt'ey's hand. be would luce em of the third braced Koduey If Kodney had not backed away. "I have misjudged A A A A said the eo.i. h, von have the ye," t alent real talent." Then he sug .1 (.ested to Kodney that be tale up At IS fatamott acting a a profession, ofleting his tilO'l own service n n personal dirocior. of lh W,t morv(om tlimola tvnny ai "It was a I said," be boasted, ' Vici tSayt dof (tat l.t mgS dy fnv.gcHa'ing) bud lmt used your Imagination oif - iplanchd tood gorgovl ccon0'i without Imagination acting Is t wintcw ucntl -- flnul hal th A err Writt Cftrrwr "1 hen I'm no nlor." replied Kodney Ion. I MiniiiJi for all to hear. "I lave tiot ued my Imagination, nnd I was tod tit ling Mis Badger and c e "t:..f sis-on- "Su-pci- a at Sunshime II 'inter t.onr Drt idl ho. iwhMi'atitumtit svmyus I nre engaged." cOmiM In Dart of Old How far away and long ago It since the tet of a fallhful scs'in husband vvti hi fidelity In watching the rubber plant while the rest of the family was away. New Castle News. LIFE AND DEATH Mtf., tlPW fcfiiw f f ,( t f lt r'.ti!ti!.-t-- 1.t It U Jtn " iltthiltftnfl msiI Aft f.t nf Ih tltnn nm'1 Kiit. viilv. !'r rhr.trvi i loth i."v nit hi n ii imiimj to, Sun ftth M I, WTn. U., Salt li IV IM.-.- lk P. fMHi fc'VtP! im1t, City, No. tt'tfH-- 1 lit. 19 II. |