OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO THE TIMES-NEW- Thursday, March 13, 1930 NEPHI. UTAH S. "first Aid Homo Remedy Week tired Coming The Good Samaritan ia pictured at "The First First Aid" In the national reminder which has been sent to drug gists all over America, announcing the 0th anniversary of "First Aid Home Itemed Week." fixed for March The Idea of an advertlalng-tue- r drive timed with rhandlslng spring house cleaning was given t the drug world by Sterling Products Incorporated. In 1022. Preparedness for meeting accident or audden Illness la emphasized as a sensible and season able aales plan which serves to alle vlate needless suffering and undoubted ly save life. The National Association of Retail Druggists sponsored this plan and later added i'hnruiacy Week as an autumn festival for Intensive advertla lug and salesmanship in the drug world. The National Wholesale Druggists Association and the National Assoclu tlon of Drug Clerks have Joined the N. A. II. D. In establishing these festivals of selling as Spring and Autumn fixtures for the welfure of humanity. 'Fill That Medicine Chest Now" Is the slogan of "First Aid Home Item- edy Week," and has been from the beginning. It was Dr. W'lllluui E. Weiss, himself a graduate from the ranks of retail druggists, who first saw the value of "First Aid Home Remedy e Week," and wherever drug gists have by showing a window lllled with suggestive first aids for both accident or illness, und using their home newspaper advertis ing space, they hnve added cheerfully to their March business. 10-2.- By one-a-ye- s CT7ILBERT has a heart of gold. Will V V no one tell him what' the nutter why girl turn pale, and gracious matrons freeze at bit approach? Yet, we wilt This has gone far enough. Get a new pipe, Wilbcrt, and break live-wir- it in gently, thoughtfully, with Sir Walter Raleigh's favorite smoking I ture. When the curling , wisps mix- - YOU HAVE A DOCTOR'S of its WORD fragrance surround you, everything will te changed, Wilbcrt. How to Take Care LAXATIVE Sir Walter Raleigh Tobacco Smoking t Ifs milder for tiW J Take Boschee's Svruo and couching stops at nonce! Relieves whereothers fail. Contains nothing injurious but, oh, so effective! GUARANTEED. fa A M Boschee's Sytup -- r7 i lit ittle like many Continued flame-hatre- d. women, was ever-so- clairvoyant. She rend mv thought. 'I'hlf strlte. Phil." she said. "Is It because of me goln' gay. same as you yourself have gone. I'll lay-t- hat you won't? Because, If that's all" I In 1875, an earnest young man began to practice medicine. As a family doctor, he saw the harm in harsh purgatives for constipation and began to search for something harmless to the' sensitive bowels. Out of his experience was born a famous prescription. He wrote it thousands of times. It- proved an ideal laxative for old and young. As people saw how marvelously the most sluggish bowels are started and bad breath, headaches, fever-ishnenausea, gas, poor appetite, and such disorders, are relieved by the prescription, it became necessary to put it up ready for use. Today, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, as it Is called, is the world's most popular laxative. It never varies from Dr. Caldwell's original effective and harmless formula. All drugstores have it. ss, ' take! "'Well, so he is, pardner, so he Is, said the crooked dealer. 'You Just of fried chicken try him on a plate oncet and seel' " Anything nncouth that irritates you, proves you have an artistic Children think papa was. always serious and dignified as they now see him. HP Ft any Hp!-ce- flume-spirite- dog. You "Oln-Hling- Jinny, f on "Gin-Sling- 10 11-1- Tommy trip Daru. on the Island of fa pus. New Guinea, plunges overboard to save the lire of a young musical eomwly ." actress known on board as Amory Is chiefly conscious of the warm regard of girl lo the assemblage. He learna she la tia I.aurier, member of a weailhy New South Wales family. He tells her something of his life In Papua and of his knowledge of a wonJerful " gold Held on the island. tells him Pla la enxaged to Sir Itkh-ar- d Ka nulia w. prominent In the Islands, ills vacation ended, Amory rer, turns to Daru. There he meets on "development" work for Fanshaw. Amory recalls some years before witnessing the escape of a leper, fie Is convinced Fanshaw ia the man. Amory tells his friend Baa-se- tt of his knowledge. He believes Splcer overhenrd the conversation. Amory meets with an accident that lays him up for three weeks. Re covered, he sails alone for Port Moresby. A storm compels hlra to He put In at PlMherman Island. meets Fanshaw there, Amory re sume his Journey to Port Mores r anuria w follows in a motor by, boat, attempts to run Amory down and Is killed by the latter. With a party of black "boys" Amory seta out to tile on hla gold claims. Jlnney follows him. Jinny and Amory come to an understanding, the girl knowing of hla love for Pla. :!, Dead Game Frank Morrison, of the American druggists Federation of Labor, was talking to a W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. Washington reporter about a flagrant case of municipal corruption. Ffcw Very Rich Belgian "The apologists for this corruption," Only 2,400 Belgians were taxed on he ended, "remind me of the crooked Incomes of more than $7,000, accord- dog fancier who sold a chap a worthing to figures Just published. There less cur for a bird dog. "The chap, of course, came back In were 9,300 people with Incomes ranging from $3,000 to $7,000, while 3,343,-70- 0 a few days and said : " 'Look here, you told me that dog had Incomes of less than $750 a I bought oil you was a good bird year. Verbal Demonstration Teacher Tommy, what Is the of "I give"? a liner In eastern aalera, the narrator. I fillip young Amory. Englishman. World war veteran, now a trader at On a pleasure CHAPTER VIII of Your Pipe Otint Nt. 3) To make jout pip sweet from top to heel. snult:che pipe load when you break it in, ot fill the bowl half fall the fine few tunes to that the heel, and not mere If the top, will be broken ia. Send for our free booklet. "How to Take Care of Yout Pipe." B. own it Wiliain-aooTobacCorporation. Louisville,KcatuckT. Dept. 97. ' FOR THIS WHAT WENT BEFORE KritMT Optuim. ""I"""" MtNorNAMm mi r s 1 We can never Be sure just wha! makes an infant restless, but the "TOtrilf" remedy can always be the same. Good old Castoria ! There's comfort in every drop of this pure vegetable preparation, and not the" very promptly; if it doesn't, yoo slightest harm in its frequent use. should call a physician. As often as Baby has a fretful All through babyhood, Castoria spell, is feverish, or cries and can't should be a mother's standby; and sleep, let Castoria soothe and quiet a wise mother does not change to him. Sometimes it's a touch of stronger medicines as the child colic. Sometimes constipation. Or grows older. Castoria is readily diarrhea a condition that should obtained at any drugstore, and the always be checked without delay. genuine easily identified by the Tust keep Castoria handy, and give Chas. II. Fletcher signature thai it promptly. Relief will follow; appears on every wrapper. couldn't answer her. ! Dut mv hnnds on her wide, thin shoulders; her face was on a level with mv own, and I kissed it. "You're the best girl In all the world, and I love you, Jinny." I said. "unerringly, she read mv meaning through my words. I'm the best trirl but one?" she said. To deny Pla was I'o trnmnl nn the cross of my faith. xes, I answered, feeling as If had struck her. "Then, if there hadn't been ant Miss Laurlers In the world, It'd a Deen all right with vou ami me?" I could not answer her. There was no need. She flung me away with a suddenness and strength that all but sent me down anions' the trampled palm leaves by the river side. She was transformed. Instantly, Into a hag of the streets. As she might look in twenty years' time, battered, destroyed, so she looked now. In one awful moment of prophecy. She gave a scream that reminded me of the screams of torn horses during the war, and ran wuaiy down the bank of the I don't know where she river. thought she was going maybe to a spot further on, where the current swept, deep and oily, past a ntgn corner or the bank where. If she had leaped, the alligators would have bad her before I or any other could have done anything to. help but she was, In another moment, checked, as I was checked In my pursuit, by the amazing, unexpected sight of a government launch on a lower reach of the river, rapidly heading to wards myseir and Jinny, They stopped as soon as they saw us and slung out a dinghy. saw Dassett was In charge. The launch was drifting wilh the cur rent ; Bassett secured her by a cable passed round a tree, before he came up to me and to Jinny, who was standing white, staring. but more or less a little distance away. "Well," he said, with a certain forced cheerfulness, "so you've saved me half my trip; that's very obliging of you." "May one ask," I demanded, "what the blazes the government Is doing up here?" "You can nsk without the blazes. The government has business anywhere. We've been sent np to save this young lady from being carried off by cannibals like the star In a picture show. The Q. S. was at Daru in the Tauri, and news came down the coast native tele graph, you know that a white 'SInabuda' had gone up the Rotullly In a canoe with ha If a dozen boys, meunlng to strike inland. So the O. S. turned a handspring and had and parked me off three cat-fitwithout my lunch. So here's the Taurl to take her hack ; only I see you've been beforehand with us." He glanced with Interest at the figure of Jinny, who was contriving to look amazingly dignified In my khnkl shirt and trousers. "By the way. Sheep." he went on, "what's become of your expedition?" For he, like every one else "down West." had known ot my departure. It was difficult to answer him. "I came back,' was my lame reply. "Well," he said, "well" after a pause during which he had looked swiftly, keeuly, as both of us. "1 suppose I'm to have the pleasure of fetching you along to Daru also?" I was thinking rapidly; calculating Justwhat this new turn In my mean. The Taurl affirsVht 1 (Gold Bleep9 BEATRICE GRIMSHAW morning? Cei poisons oat of the system with the Chewing Gum tire. Smaller doses effective Lata, when takea In this form. A modern, acien. title, family laxative. Safe and mild. Feen-a-mi- Illustrations by Irwin Myers Kuili Copyright by Hashes ever WNTJ Co. precisely, "to be something In the nature of a friendly understanding between her and Mr. Splcer. 1 gathered an Impression that she was IMiintliiK out to him something In culated that the government would connection with the course of the owe me so much for doing Its work Rouillly river." at tny own cost. Half a day for On purred the launch; the stars Two duys to gel fell away rllit and left from her contingencies. through my four days cut In Iho wake, tiolug forward, where I bush. . . . Eight days In all could be more or less alone, 1 sal from now ought, to see me should on deck, and digested as best I could see me,- if I was alive once mure this unwelcome news. did It ut the point where I had turned not lielu mutters, or make me more back. If there was no one ahead hopeful, that 1 heard, once In a of me sound like some one, dowo way, "I suppose," I said to the waiting below, trying to stifle bitter weepBassett, "that you didn't see any ing. sign of another parly on the was fast launch ; she could take me home In a day and half; half a day to tlx up matters there and stores. a Then get day and a half back, In'ttie Taurl again I cal- - river?" Bassett was busy lighting a cigarette. "You suppose wrong, then," he snld, his head bent over Ida hands "There's a prospecting aud exploring party down at the river mouth at this minute." He did not look at me as he 6 poke. Bassett was Is a little gentleman. "How soon can we get away?" was my reply. "As soon as you can chuck yonr carriers 011 board, and get you and this lady on." He kicked me slyly, and 1 replied, as Intended, with an introduction to Jinny. "I'm sorry to offer yoo such rough accommodation. Miss Trencher," he apologized, fixing her with his grave ministerial stare. "But you are fairly lucky to be alive this minute, which I suppose is some compensation." "Do you?" said Jinny. "1 don't," and turned her back on lilin. I could only tap my forehead, and nod significantly nt Bassett "The bush," I explained as he moved a little away. It was explanation enough, for anyone who saw less clearly through a stone wall than Bassett usually did. We made a very silent party, dropping down river. With the current, and the speed of the launch, it was a comparatively short jourDusk of next day found us ney. on the opening reaches of the. Rom- Ulys estuary, with the gulf of Papua, flat and gray as a pewter There table, opening out before. was a long strip of beach at the river mouth; tau could scarcely see it at that f!bnr. But If you could not see the beach, you could see, quite clearly, that which stood upon It the pointed shapes of several canvas tents. "We'll stop here for a few minutes," said the magistrate. "I didn't call going up; Just hailed them, and asked If they had seen anything of a white woman." "What did they say?" I asked. "One of them Caxon it was, I think; I hear he went with them shouted back that they hadn't, and asked who she was, and what it was about" "Caxon I" I said. others?" "Who were the "Only one other white, ton know him Splcer." He gave an order d steersto the brown, man ; and our boat took a wide sweep, and began heading Inshore. "Caxon I" I thought "Splcer Is not such a fool as he looks." For Caxon, gold miner and survivor of a past era of mining successes, was about the ablest prospector who ever washed a dish between Daru and the Mambare. "Do me a kindness, Bassett, will you?" I said. "Don't mention to anyone ashore Just where you picked me up." "Right You not coming? "No fear." "Miss Treacher coming?" bare-limbe- old-tim- e "I don't" Silently Jinny's head appeared nbove the coaming, cutting off my words. She stepped out on deck. There was still some light, left ; 1 could see that she had found Bus-sett'- s CHAPTER IX , days pussed. and another EI0I1T to stood that, before again upon the ridge that I bad 1 topped with so light a heart on the morulas that I saw the unexpected arrival of Jinny. I had gone hack, replaced my stores, endured with what patience 1 might the hundred and one delays that always blocked the path of the Papuan traveler, and got away almost by malo force. First however, I had seen Jinny safe aboard a local steamer that was ' going to Port Moresby. Why she wanted to go there, wlint she was going to do II I V 'J i fttns,' a 7 1 til sou if ferries) pendent utterly on the leader. If I didn't take them through, these brown, bloodthirsty, muscular babies of mine. If anything happened to me, they would never, any one of them, see borne and wife and children again ; that wag sure. And if they were to full me, run away from me, as carriers have done times without number. It was all Port Moresby to a mango tbut nobody on the coast would ever catch-sigh- t or sound of "Black Sheep" Amory any more. We were dependent utterly on each other. "What would Pla think of It all?" I asked myself, wonderlugly. If she, the white-rosmaiden, had 1 tried to been here. picture It The sporting spirit of her would have made her a charming companion; 1 could fancy her, in exactly the right dress, the right boots, shooting, fishing, gypsying generally. . . . But I had never seriously contemplated such au outrage on probability, as that I should plnce the daughter ot the Laurlers In a New Guinea stick house with a headhunter for cook, and go on with my recruiting and trading. I knew now and little pleasure the knowledge gave me that there was only one girl who would be content at home. In the Papuan wilds, and that girl was not my but Genevieve Treacher Dreams, dreams I It was not dreams that lay before me now. If I meant to be fit next day. It was time for sleep. ... tl E Jl GENUINE FOR CO NSTI PATI O N e rose-maide- n, "Gln-Sllng.- ir Iv " I could, if I would, write the tale of every hour of that Jouruey ; relate in their order each blow of Nature and of Fate, and every counter thut I made; tell of hunger and of thirst, of weariness macerating mind and Of body into one insensible pulp. a midday when I and my boys, resting, were leaped on from the for est behind, and surrounded before you could have drawn two breaths, by tall brown devils whirling clubs and spears, and yelping the horrible yelp. Of how we fought them, one to five, L and firing low, shot one through the belly, and another through the head-hunter- s' Cold In Head. Chest or Throat? M usterole well into your chest throat almoat instantly you feel easier. Repeat the Musterole-ru- b once an hour for five hows what a glorious relief! cold remeThose good dies oil of mustard, menthol, camphor RUB ... are mixed with other valuable ingre- dients in M usterole. It penetrates and stimulates blood circulation and helps to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. Recommended by many doctors and nurses. Keep Musterole handy jars, tubes. AU druggists. To Mothers Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Chil- dren's Musterole, dog-sho- chest before they closed; almost ashamed 1 was, a trained soldier against these creatures with their savage weapons; and yet numbers are' numbers, nnd since they did I Was a Trained Soldier Against not fear our strength, they had to These Creatures With Their Sav- learn. Of how they drew off and came again and again, charging In age Weapons. line, pluckier than you would be when she arrived, I could not con- lieve, so that I'd have spared them ceive, and, in face of her hostile, If I could : but they brained my two obstinate silence, had little chance best carriers, and the other carof finding out I could only say riers rushed in behind me, clubbing as kindly a good-bto Jinny as she with rifle butts where they could would allow, and privately hope not fire; and so In five minutes Jt with a grudging smarting kind of was over and the tribe off Into the hope that was entirely illogical, but, bush again, with a bead they'd I suppose, human that she would taken from one of the corpses while console herself as speedily as might the fighting was too hot for me to y be. Then, being free, I hurried to my former turning-bacpoint, and drove the boys and myself for every ounce that was In us, up toward what I still hoped might be eventually called the Pla Laurler ranges. There was need for haste. I was not in the least surprised, when I reached the beginning of my cut through the forest, to find that others had passed that way since. The camp fires of Splcer and Caxon, the skeletons of their tent poles, their empty tins thrown away, were marks plain enough for the veriest For me, who tyro to understand. was no tyro, there was much more; things more disturbing, because more significant of trouble, traces of natives; who were clearly spying and following. These signs were plain to read, and caused me to ginger up my sentries, also to cut down iny own sleep to the very last point compatible with keeping on the road In the day. We had three weeks' stores, no more, since a native cannot carry more than he can eat in about twenty-on- e k store of clothing and looted A cummerbund of It recklessly. dark-blu- e silk circled the waist of days. I had some stores of beads, salt her my trousers; she hud white and knives with me, and meant to socks on, and a silk tie about her use them when fairly driven to do neck. - looked at her in amazement, so. Trading with the cannibal as she swung lightly down Imo the tribes of the unexplored Interior Is with death; but starvation boat, avoiding my eyes (she had playing death so there's little choice be not looked at me, or spoken to me, Is the two. since we came aboard). I saw her tween I need not say that I looked for go ashore with Bassett, disappear traces of Splcer's party, ceaselessly. among the tents. of Before I had time to grow more out so far, I had seen no signs them In than a little impatient, the boai was to all ttie distance ahead. 1 was. appearances, as much alone back again, and the launch under with my boys as If no other human What had Jinny been sayway. creature alive upon ing, doing, out there in the camp? the island had been leftNew continent of Guinea. Why had she been so anxious to go It was here, as I had told Jinny, ashore, and why, now that she had returned, was she siill keeping hid luckless Jinny, that the real work Down those appalling den, avoiding sight or sound of me? began. Bassett was sitting on the cabin ridges, as narrow as a railway cutI ting, then up again, climbing with roof, a whitish blur in the dark. edged up to him and. asked him feet and hands this was the day. , k Sometimes the river would prove polnt-blnn"Did you anyone say anything too wide and deep to cross, then we " would fell a tree as rapidly as posashore?" He knew what I meant. He did sible, and, one after another, cross Sometimes not look up, or turn his face, but It like rope dancers. he answered Immediately, in Bas we scrambled painfully along the tops of boulders In a river bed, sett's own crisp, precise way 1 "1 saw Splcer. asked him sometimes worst of all we had to what the delay was; asked If 1 turn back, lose the height and the could assist In any way. He said distance gained, and find, at Infino? It was all right; they had nite pains, another way across a stopped because he wished to buy ridge that had fairly beaten us. And sago; they'd be off tomorrow at all this had to be done, not at I got back to the boat leisure but at the highest speed daylight he spoke which I and the carriers could posMiss Trencher," then. carefully, seeming to weigh hla sibly keep up without I leaving any had picked words even more than usual "Miss of the party behind. Treacher stayed behind for a while : my boys; they were nil mountaineers capable of scrambling up a I waited for her." "Was she " I stopped; It was height with fifty pounds on their backs, till further orders, difficult to phrase. in sum. childlike, panicky, de-"There appeared," said Bassett yet, I- one-ln-tw- o BADACHE? heart de s at Instead of dangerous take safe, mild, purely NATURE'S fcEMEBT vegetable and tret rid of the bowel poisons IB pressants 0 that like fr headache cause the trouble. Noth Nt for biliousness, aick and constipation. Acts pleasantly. Kever gripes. ing: Mild. safe, enrelv vegetable At drMggima only 25c Ate ice the teat tonight. FEET; ZJKS A MILLION. TAKS ... notice. Yes, I conld tell much, a volume. But I will pass over that Journey In retrospect more easily than I passed in fact, and come to the crucial day, the .morning when I made Tatatata. We were climbing a ridge. Just like a hundred ridges that we had climbed since the start The ground was steep beneath our feet, as It had been for days; the air was thinning; nights had been colder. Yet, I did not think that we were very near; did not guess that the lane of our long Journey was reaching its turn at last. In front of us, the sky began to show pale through thinning tree tops. "HI halt there," I decided, "and fall a look-ou- t "Come on," I said to the carriers. "Double ration tonight." 1 had been holding back a little; 1 could afford that spur. They raised a shout, and I shouted with thetn, for encouragement. And so shouting, plugging upward and forward, like the men of Xena-phowhen they came upon the sea, we topped the ridge, found empty air before us, and saw The Pit. By Heaven, it was a wonderful sight. I was to see it often after, but never once did I come npon It. without something of the first thrill that seized me when I broke out of the forest, and viewed, lying far below me, the enormous slopes and scarps of the nameless basin. In the finding of which two white lives, and many dark, had already been lost Others yet were to be sucked down by that strange before It was done with. of prophetic Some undercurrent feeling may have hinted that to me, or else I was simply worn out I looked at the rocks, marked the lie of the hills, the nature of the whole place, remembered all I had heard of mining lore, and struck my hand, violently, upon the near I The Ideal Vacation Land Sunshine All W inter Zng Splendid roada towering mountain ranges Highest type hotels dry Invigorating air clear starlit nighta -- California's Foremost Desert Playground or A Chmffmy FWrlf 5riiis5vi Stretching Them Freddie had Just tried on a new pair of trousers. As all boys are, he was anxious to keep them on for the rest of the afternoon and evening. He thought for a while and finally said to his mother: "Mamma, can't 1 keep 'era on tonight and stretch 'em so they will feel good tomorrow?" Seven-year-ol- d The man who doesn't believe In signs will never make a good sign painter. earth-maelstro- est tree. "Found," I shouted. Tm made I'm made forever I" Then, across the visions of gold, gold and more gold, that blazed on my Inner sight, came wonderfully slowly, as come lovely things, a pic ture that outshone all other glories. From the horizon the clouds of early afternoon were shredding away. Slowly, steadily, the veils were withdrawn, making bare to my e sight the far, high, peaks of the Pia Laurler range. "I've seen it," I thought, and as If a sncrnment had been celebrated, splendidly, before me. "It's here," I thought ; nnd In the same moment "It's herself." Ice-blu- (TO BR CONTINUED) When Rest Is Broken Health Suffer When Kidney Irregular it ie Disturb Sleep. troubled with bladder irrita- tions, settine- ud at nizht and constant backache; don't take - Help your kidneys with Pills. Recommended the world over. Sold by dealers every-where- chances. Doan'm . 50,000 Users Endorse Doan's: Mr. Clara Niader, 696hadEn1 Ave., Mich., aayai "I Detroit, rjackacbe. and m dizzy apelia 1 feit so bred persistent thet 1 ecMildn't do mv housework. The were t too seers fmroent and ions kidney broke my rest at nig tit. After taking Uoan a fiUa I telt boa. "" n " |