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Show ""v: BtWa i'aiiBUMiiiliilftti ars ii THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH 'Xp&V:. r T7'0r 4 15 V, virfV 'y& V sst ' .V " Ai1 - " 77:,. . ,vtf .Sv 4 -- VS' .. , t?' 4) VjMSii ar- - $'- . w"S .- I - , eH. I 6y ' ' 't'S . UTTl 4,4 V m it !?? oung a ( i'f not will it iA. n mliuti te rt ff t unlL. jjided Ltonora i ' n to dis- - I a up"" V oro-- e a s.nce 'Lf.r hone fro r aband'"v ntu at , ,jis hi, Lto-- . of hir Italian midst iu lealires lututcn the L I 1 jtalous father dtalhbect in the . Don over u and L. Lam-ff'- trateain',o"ti m,.M. of Nora as e st.M fdlg school studMng Don on the return he delivers ms Ned Vn a job with sug-rLttdoun Un Nora v fcd " of h.ht mining away tfel TAW ,5 l')nth th are his nerves bout, he is ,t sleep et night, ,nUCh Ulh Nrraa 0t with her music him her F fa'her of Ned s spying than decices that rather L;,f broken, she will run awayto an end her father to put Janies Lambert Lambert tells and angrv with Don quits she will quit i L ho mil be through with her. of her bargain Hat If she tires Jnment e fI. uSeiess to come to him Don and Nora to buck Don promi&es ta for discuss the up. i uci it out, be sas. With the Is full of unrest Don spring. rf walks at ioerlust, and takes long Cue evening a poor girl speaks he gives land in his pity for her. A car passes at that moev on. c and moves hes headlights d heat wave ushers m the sum-iNora refuses to go to mean-vsiruate- s Ned. uith her father the to his father about tunings awav from Nora, but I refuses io listen Meanwhile. Lis over the undei mining of his At the height of the heat wave, d is finding everv thing insup-Nespeaks of having the goods a seen him girl having give When Ned scoffs at the true Don knocks him the episode He calls Nora, nd is through Is on running away with him rried realizing it is her job to Dm s faith in himself Her good-- r father is met w ith complete Don and Nora go to Maine and mn in the studio of Carl Venable, s artist friend of Don's, whose he saved from drowning. Nora er father. j ft K the Di 'out. CkiE M (A MlUO j pages with cheer-ting- iteynfis C:0- SSTiTSt T?y I mailed HAD s, letter that after-jfche- n went to the Port in they apron, think he'll answer it? you her voice; wondering e thing, thought savagely: a beast if he doesnt! though said was: I wouldn't expect ch of him at first, Nora.,fc s Lambert did not answer tier; but one afternoon some ys later when they turned from the post office, empty as usual, Jim Perkins, who j'Tressn!y the general store but office, hailed them jo- lestioned, hope in jn, who had been rl w wo ME; up ftere, Mr. Your Mason! baggage come m on the morn-- 1 Want I should it to the shack carry right now? they crossed the street klered the small frame build-jpe- h served the American Ex-- I Nora was thinking, I that man mean? Then her eu n the familiar steamer that had her fr Eurpe. accompanied Beside them, neat-Jwith her new name, stood robe trunk that she had nev-- r before a handsome one. art quickened when she saw ss Wefe But she wont always be beautiful. ey in it, Don that is, not more than a dollar or so for an emergency. But this looks . . . Don knelt beside her, taking a roll of bills from its golden hiding place It its a thousand dollars! he said after a moment, awe in his voice. Its ten bills, Nora! Are you sure, abso lutely, that you didnt leave it here? She laughed unsteadily. Of course Im sure! Do you imagine that I went round carrying a thousand dollars especially in a mesh bag for anyone to see? Even I wasnt as careless of money as all that! Dad must have put it there when he packed these things, Don. Oh, it was dear of him! How how can anybody b so dear, and yet so hard? He bothered to pack my clothes himself. I know he did. And he sent everything everything except my silver slippers. I wonder (she glanced up wistfully) I wonder why he kept the slippers, Don. Is it so hard to guess, darling? Don answered; and then, perhaps because she had been fighting them addressed in the I Clear script of a generation ew no courageously for days, Noras tears typewriters her came. . f Ce ha hersent my things, she voice unsteady, murmured: then to inn5")8"1 We're n our way I wi Jim. Send em along." n- C f - red-lette- mother-of-pea- rl inlay, something single yen!" eight-branc- the a kitchen of tried potatoes! Nora echoed A new born infant scornfully. could fry potatoes, Don! It was a happy time; and the rainy morning when Don opened the crates and boxes which threatened to crowd all firewood from the shed things he had found m far, far corners of the world, was a r occasion, never forgotten by Leonora. It was these treasures (though her unsuspecting husband didnt guess it till long after) which gave the girl her first sharp longing for a home. Hitherto she had thought only of possessing Don; but as she dropped to her knees in rapture before an arm chair of red lacquer exquisitely decorated with And see here, Nor did she omit ee black crosses below her They signified kisses. She ver forgotten them, even in sy days at college or when The girl knew, Europe. he had never told her in so tords, that her father would leated if those crosses (first ing in her letters when she l'y seven and James away on ks) were omitted. d of Roll in my mouth girl! (He was When I prying up a box cover.) first saw this candelabra it was the property of a Russian nobleman, a post-wa- r exile. Its said to have belonged to a Czar of all the Russias, though you may season that story with a grain of salt. I bought it partly because its such a beautiful example of Russian brass; but principally because the Grand Duke (or whatever the poor guy was) looked hungry. There! He held aloft an A stuncandlestick. ner, isn't it? I Oh, Don! breathed Nora. I am almost glad the Grand Duke needed nourishment! Don laughed, dived Into a corner for another box and stared at it, Nora. Uhl Of course you'll learn! The fried potatoes th.s noon were maivel-ous- , and those last biscuits melted a and ended as she had til her letters to him since od: I love you heaps, Dad-i- r q mess out the door. Do you Ill ever, ever learn, Don' suppose She looked so like a troubled little g.rl, tins usually sophisticated bnde of his that Don palled himself out of tiie big chair to secure a kiss. within her that is a part of every normal woman, stirred to life. Don smiled, watching the dreams he did not understand, dawn in her eyes. Like it, my dear? Ive a nest of small red tables, too. Beautiful, all sion clouding her eyes. of them. And somewhere round is Theres money here here in this a piece of flawless cloisonne thatll bag, I mean. I never carried mon- - make your eyes shine. I found it in Tokyo pure rose du Barry, with a flight of butterflies spanning the entire bowl. Got it for almost nothing, too; though Ill admit that chair you're worshiping left me without Continued UPTER VI covered six Buck up, dear, understand." "I think, she said a moment lnt er as she fitted a small brass key into its lock, I think he just wanted to get rid of everything everything that reminded him of of me, Don And its quite as likely, observed her husband with characteristic fairness, that he knew these things would help if we were hard up. He loves you, Nora. Never forget that. Nora arose and put her arms around him. Oh, Don! she cried. "If I could only be sure! James Lambert had sent his daughters entire wardrobe. Everything from my beautiful seal coat to the gold mesh bag he gave me Christmas. Nora spoke from the floor while she extricated this costly trinket from the toe of a smart tan overshoe. She smiled a little. Dad must have packed this stuff himself, Don. Martha would never have put that gold mesh bag in such a place. Why, how queer this is! I . . Her Voice faded curiously into silence, and Don turned from preparing lunch to join her. Whats queer? he questioned. Nora looked up, a puzzled expres- CHAPTER VII h puzzled. Wonder what's here. 1 seem to remember some Venetian glass, and By George! Ive completely forgotten the jade pendant! We simply must dig up that pendant, Nora, for you can wear it now, not wait, as youll have to for these other things until were old and wrinkled, and settled down. Somehow I cant just see us settled down, darling. It wouldn't be so bad to settle down with possessions as beautiful as these to keep us company. What on earth are you producing now, Don? Don't try to tell me its a jade teapot! It is Well, you must have been in funds when you purchased that! Her husband 'smiled, seated himself upon a packing case and answered, eyes dreamy with reminiscence: Youre quite mistaken. I bought this teapot of a most gentlemanly bandit, during that Chinese rebellion in which I had the luck to figure; and paid him what amounted to about six fifty of our money. It was loot, of course; but I argued that since someone was destined to get a bargain, it might as well be I. Isnt it a marvelous piece of carving? The thing belongss m some museum, I suppose; but it yours, lady, if you care to keep it. Nora reached out, lifting the piece of jade with reverence. she What I can't understand, said after a moment, "is why a man like you, with no home and no Don i white-cappe- 1 t y i.mg V 1 r ? fsjru it? Ship it to Vens studio in New York. A friend of his looks after things while theyre abroad. He's got my rugs. I couldn't leave em here for fear of moths, you know. Rugs! gasped Nora, sinking limply into the priceless chair. On top of all these treasures do you possess rugs? Only three, lady." Don spoke as But if confessing a grave fault. rugs, if you must know the bitter truth, are my pet weakness; and the three in question well, wait till you see em! His wife drew in a deep breath of astonishment. Is is there anything more? Don had to laugh as ne responded: Books, my dear. Too many of em to unpack here. I lose my mind when I go into a bookstore; and unless you want your children to go barefoot, Nora, you must lead me gently but firmly away from such temptation. She smiled; then after a moment observed thoughtfully: I seem to have married a most surprising individual. But why, may I inquire, when Father was probing your deplorable lack of bank balance, didnt you mention these treasures youve collected? The young man stared at her. eyes widening. (TO BE C()TIIED) Orchids and Other Plants Are Help to Prospectors in Finding Deposits of Ore Prospectors for iron ore, though weathLooking back on that summer may be hard boiled and over a span of years, it seemed to they know their to have may most tranquil erbeaten,and have some knowledge of .Ca ride on tre truck, both Leonora Mason the orchids For Don, the life. of her entire kJUSaswe'l as not, offered botany, sajs Steel Facts. -restbe to cheerfully adventurer, was too spent That he In many regions in this country a less. He wanted only the healing winkle, "if the ladys and others distinctive vegetation proud! condition peace of woods and rocks and definitely indicates a soil 0t Nra assured him, water, these and Nora! associated with reposits of iron ore, lost weight of this fact helps "tan laugh whlle Slowly, steadily, his to and knowledge mtkU ed 10 some tnvisible came back. His skin darkened the prospector. ' Bac!t iin tn'ig631' is the truck its accustomed tan. His buoyant In Brazil and Venezuela iron platform, Iry, and step which the girl had missed so hese tr a certain type of rare where found doW7' t0 Mr- - Ven-ack- though, sorely, returned also, old beautiful orchid blooms In the And get a move strangely perhaps, this was the last and preslatter country, moreover, the thing to mend. called the "co-petree trimki little a of ence ere locked. It was Don who instructed his invariably indicates iron ore ade'th!1" Sald Don when wife in the art of cooking. deposits. dlscovcry, -- that Not that I mind being chef to The ore deposits of Cuba support a!ong b? mail, I the Queen of Hearts, he told her, and partly a heavy growth pine, but youve got to learn, Madam. because of this Columbus is said to bu?"1 70111 fatherd L he will. Come times when your man gets discovered iron on his first on'y would! she an- - home after a hard days work he U have h the New World. One of 4 hpe vas vain. The want his dinner. But I wouldn t be- voyage to was mail firced to put in to his ships brought a registered gin with soups, if I were you, he the north coat of the island to refit containing trunk keys. added cautiously. That tomato the pine more a broken mast, and beneath ra. who had been rS the for a new down cut bisque was which as tree eager Laughter sprang into his eyesYou mast ore was found. d sappoint-4lh02e,ai- d said: Nora d and the met hers; they In the Lake Superior ard in a gentle band were a hero to swallow it' My fa Idl,s 0 15 n ret state Yoik New ther would have thrown the whole t desire for a home, should spend his money collecting things of tins sort What makes him, Don Love of beauty, replied the If strong young man promptly. enough, my dear, the love of beauty will account tor almost any crime. Didnt I steal my very wife from her adoring if unreasonable father, simply because she was so beautiful I couldn't endure the thought of a long life without her? But she wont always be beautiful, the girl reminded him. She will to me, Don countered Beauty is more, so much more than skin deep, Nora. I wasnt referring to that patrician nose which youre so proud of, or your level brows, or those starry eyes that transform you into a sort of dream come true; but to something intangible something deep down within, dearest: the thing that made you relinquish a fortune for a tramp like me. There! he exclaimed, slipping lightly from the packing case, thats off my chest. Ive wanted to say it for a long time and was too shy. scoffed Nora; but You shy? the eyes she lifted to him were indeed stars. And now," said Don, Tm polng to find that pendant. Jade is a symbol of virtue to the Chinese, you know; and unless my eyes deceived me when I bought the thing from an impoverished coolie (more loot, I fear!), its lovely enough for that most virtuous of wives my own." He made her a formal little bow, and Nora retaliated, laughing: You talk like a book! And you must have learned that bow in dancing school. But you've aroused my curiosity regarding the pendant, Don. Where shall we look? They found the pendant: a thing of such rare beauty that the girl declared she should regard it as her wedding gift They found an ivory elephant from Belgium; and a vase from Dresden so feminine and dainty that Nora laughed at the thought of a mere man's buying it But I bought it for my wife, She must explained Don soberly. have been in kindergarten at the time." While her husband, a kiddie of eleven, toured Germany alone? asked Nora, rising to put the teapot back in its case. "This jade is too valuable to be left here indefinitely, Don. What shall we do with minded country the botamcnlly prospector is less fortunate. In prehistoric times a huge ice sheet swept away accumulations of dissoil tinctly However, in the southern part of the United States, which was not overridden by glaciers, the outcrop formations can be of traced through distinctive vegetation. In the Southeast, for instance, the iron-or- e deposits are commonly overgrown with cedar in much thicker growths than are found in bearing soil In the east Texas brown ore field outcrops green sand supof the growths of heavy port relatively hardwood, almost the only hardwood in the locality. non-iro- n g First American Tourists The first tourists to leave America and travel about Eur pe were considered the most intell gent and prothage, and ingressive men of cluded Emerson, Poe, Fenimore, Cooper. Washington Irving, Bayard Wccdeli Taylor, Longfellow, Oliver Holmes and Horace Grteiey. rpjlT'Wd (2. Food 4jouton Qoadiii Noted Authority llelates the Miracle of VITAMINS anil Explains Why YOU MUST EAT THEM or DIE 000 By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS 6 East 39th St., New York. LIVE in the most inspiring age the world has ever Chemists grow plants without soil. Doctors men from death with insulin. Surgeons perform insnatch brain operations. And thanks to the amazdelicate credibly nutritional discoveries scientists, children enter the U'orld of ing tiilh far better chances for long and happy lives, uhile men and uomen of seventy are more active and useful than their were at fifty. Much of the hard - won green leaves and yellow fruits and knowledge of 'how to eat so vegetables such as carrots, sweet as to increase efficiency, curb potatoes, apricots and bananas. WE grand-jHiren- ts ?- - disease, and improve the chances for longevity is due to the discovery of vitamins. VITAMINS DISCOVERED Twenty-si- x years ago, a now-famo- scientist walked nervously around his laboratory, back and back and forth forth. He was conducting a nutrition experiment of vast He importance. didnt quite know what he was going to find, but he believed that he was on the verge of a revolutionary food discovery. The scientist was my friend, Casimir Funk, a brilliant Polish lie had been working on the problem for many years. At last, in the year 1912, his experiments were positive and conclusive. Then he announced to the scientific world that he had discovered a vital force. "This force, said Funk, I have called vitamine, because it is necessary to life. Thus, the word vitamin came into being, along with the first knowledge of these minute but powerful factors which exert such a tremendous influence on human health and happiness. st. SPARK PLUGS OF NUTRITION APPETITE AND VITAMIN B Vitamin B promotes appetite, aids digestion, prevents a serious nerve disorder. It is essential to the maintenance of a good digestion, which is vitally important if the body is to obtain full benefit from the food consumed. This vitamin is closely related to the energy metabolism, and the requirement increases with the rate of growth and with increased energy expenditure, so that growing children and working men and women should receive very generous amounts. Vitamin B is found in yeast, whole wheat cereals, oatmeal, milk, fresh and dried peas and beans, spinach, cabbage and other greens, egg yolk and liver. Building, Maintaining Family Health TN TIIE C. Houston Goudiss articles that have appeared weekly in this newspaper previous to this one, the nationally known food authority has described FOOD, as it provides the key to mental and physical power; PROTEINS, the foods you cannot live without; CARand FATS, BOHYDRATES foods that provide motive power for the body machinery; and MINERAL SALTS, that you must have in order to build strong bones, healthy nerves and rich, red blood. These subjects have been treated in an interesting and understandable manner, free of scientific terms, principally offering advice to the housewife that will aid her in the problem of feeding the members of her family such foods as will build and maintain their health. Every one of these articles has a definite place in your scrapbook for future reference. If you have missed any of these discussions, the publisher of this newspaper will supply them upon your request. If you have not already done so, start a department of these informative articles in your scrapbook at once! children and adults depend upon you for their food supply. It lies within your power to help them to health and happiness or condemn them to weakness, illness and sorrow. Do not fail them. See to it that every member of your household your children, the wage earners, the middle aged and the elderly get enough vitamins to VITAMIN C FOR TEETII, GUMS afford them the health that sciVitamin C plays an important ence has placed within their part in regulating body processes, grasp. ffi WNU C. Houston Goudiss 1938. and prevents the dread disease of viA of lack this essential scurvy. tamin results in profound changes What !s the Cause of in the structure of the teeth and Check"? "Spider-We- b gums, may be responsible for If not properly fed with a hemorrhages occurring anywhere in the body, and for the degeneragood oil polish, furniture in time tion of muscle fibers generally. develops what is known as checkl This appears on Vitamin C is most abundant in r-web succulent fresh greet leaves, such the finish, like wrinkles on the as green cabbage. It is also found human face fine lines, spreading in onions, potatoes, oranges, to- here and there in a spider-we- b matoes, green peppers, bananas pattern. This crazing, this light and strawberries. In most foods, cracking, is known in furniture it is easily destroyed by heat language as checking and spidebetter dechecking that is why it is so important to r-web include some fresh raw foods in scribes the condition. This is the on finish! Its the danger-signathe diet daily. indication of starving yvood! A warning to the housewife, that if the finish is not cared for immeVITAMIN D AND RICKETS Vitamin D is sometimes called diately and properly, the furniture the sunshine vitamin because it will develop cracks, ridges and check is gencan be manufactured in the body splits. Spider-we- b the result of either one of erally of sunthe action direct through these two causes: light on the skin. This is the vitaor the use of a poor, cheap polmin that is necessary for the without the essential fine, ish of utilization calcium and proper light-o- il base. When the furniture phosphorus in building bones and is periodically massaged with a teeth. When it is lacking in the diet of infants, there develops that reputable oil polish (the best is the pores of the wood horrible disease known as rickets. and the piece is preIn which the bones- become soft are fed check and twisted, resulting in pitiful served. Then spider-we- b deformities knock knees, bow will not appear! The use of a quality oil polish is the best prelegs, pigeon breast. formula for this ugly, ventive In foods, vitamin D is only checkl detrimental found in appreciable amounts in oils and egg yolk. That is why every homemaker should M R E1W0M E Nil) S E be so grateful to the scientists who labored to discover how to concentrate this precious vitamin from oils and add it to THANIANYTOTHERIKIND foods, or to increase the vitamin D content of foods through irradi. . . because not only deans spide- Other throughout the world including Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins in England, and Hart, Humphrey, Babcock, Steen-boc- k and McCollum in the United States had been working on the same problem that Funk had partially solved. They knew that the first step was to find out how vitamins affected the human body, and that the second step was to discover what foods contained these vital substances. And so there began a long series of experiments in the laboratories of great universities all over the world, which demonstrated what happens when a diet is deficient in any of the vitamins, and proved that if laboratory animals are wholly deprived of vitamins for a short time they will die. These experiments are of the utmost significance to every homemaker, because the same thing happens to human beings as to experimental animals. Today our knowledge of vitamins has progressed to such a degree that it is possible to state the exact reation. quirement for most of the vitato foods mins and designate the from which adequate quantities VITAMIN E can be obtained. Vitamin E comes in for less discussion than the others, because RESISTANCE AND VITAMIN A its significance to nutrition has not been fully determined. It does, To date, six vitamins have been appear to be necessary identified. Vitamin A promotes however, for successful reproduction and is growth and builds resistance to found especially in wheat germ disease. It is necessary for the and lettuce. of the mucous membranes health of the body and helps to guard against infections of the respira- VITAMIN G PROLONGS YOUTH tory and alimentary tracts. It inVitamin G is necessary for fluences the health of the hair and growth and for the maintenance to a is prevent necessary skin, of at all ages. serious eye disorder known as It health toand vigor ward off old age by helps is essential and night blindness, for the formation of healthy teeth. prolongingis the vigorous middle years. It essential to the Vitamin A is found in milk, but- of the skin, and recent health experiter, margarine that has been re- ments demonstrate that cataracts inforced with vitamin A concen- in the eyes may be due to a deoil, thin ficiency of this vitamin, which is trate, egg yolk, found in yeast, and In liver, kidneys, egg yolk, milk, cheese and leafy vegetables. Have You a Question? green One authority claims Ask C. Houston Gotnliss chronic disorders of the throat, stomach, lungs, colon, heart and HOUSTON GOUDISS has kidneys may be traced to vitamin of at the placed disposal readers of this newspaper all and mineral deficiencies. the facilities of his famous ExCertainly enough has been learned of vitamin chemistry to perimental in New York City. lie will make clear that the homemaker fails in her duty who does not progladly answer questions convide vitamins in abundance for cerning foods, diet, nutrition, and their relation to health. every member of her family. Both You are also invited to consult him in matters of personal hyA Day at a Time Its not necessary to giene. write a letter unless you deIt has been said that no man ever sank under the burden of sire, for postcard inquiries will receive the same careful attenthe day. It is when tomorrows tion. Address C. Houston burden is added to the burden of 6 East 39th Street, New today that the weight is more York City. than a man can bear. l, Polish-negle- non-greasy- ct ), - fish-liv- er fish-liv- er ANTI-STERILIT- cod-liv- 0 er as it polishes, but preserves your furniture feeds the finish, prevents drying-out- , cracking. Insist upon Polish, for SALT LAKES HEWEST HOSTELRY Our lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio for Cvory Room A 200 Rooms 200 Baths that p Kitchen-Laborator- y Gou-dis- s, 'CMS HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 Hotrl Tcm p r. Square has a nishly desirable, friendly atmoc pliers. You will aluaya find it Immae-ulat- e. supremely comfortable, and thoroushly agreeable. ou can therefore understand why this hotel 1st HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You eon alao appreciate trhy t Its a mark of distinction to stop "ffi at this beautiful koatehy ERNEST C ROSSITER. Mgr. |