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Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION er or succulent in a pair of these, and give as a gift. Outlines for the two sizes, large and small, of the tiger, bear, pig and duck come on pattern Z9412, 15 cents. Send your order to: AUNT MARTHA Box 166-- Kansas City, Mo. Enclose 15 cents for each pattern desired. Pattern No Name Address I Pattern No. Z9412 pLEVER flower holders like these are grand for giffs or your own use and they are such fun to make. Complete directions are given, as are painting sugges-tions. Use jig, coping or keyhole saw to cut these from thin wood, assemble and paint. Plant a flow- - CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT ' PERSONALS will the United States be invaded? Read the answer in "WASHINGTON'S VISION." Podv 50c postpaid. iAiTEB DAY SIGN, FILER, IDAHO. Crude Manners Win Only Critical Little Smiles WHAT boorish manners! for his share of the movie tickets right before the girls: '"Forty-fou- r, no, eighty-eig- ht cents, that's for my ticket and hers. Then, let's see" And he's the man who wanted so much to meet a "really swell girl!" No "swell girl" will like a boy who doesn't even know that double-dat- e accounts are settled when girls aren't present. She knows and you could, too the simple rules of etiquette that please. Our booklet gives behavior for men and girls at dances, movies, games; when dating, entertaining, visiting. Discusses petting problem. Send your order to : READER-HOM- SERVICE 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 15 cents in coins for your copy of ETIQUETTE FOR YOUNG MODERNS. IJame Address More Raleigh Jingles Raleigh Cigarettes are again offering liberal prizes in a big jingle contest to be run in this paper. One hundred and thirty-thre- e prizes will be awarded each week. Adv. CuarcDlecd by rZ "Xs-- i l Good Housekeeping Tw VrV jTr: E&IM(if3 pen stimulate anpleatant t i stomach symptoms. May fTSPJ cause heartburn and gen- - A era! stomach discomfort. The Bismuth and Carbon. TTT atea in ADLA Tablets lieve sour stomach, acid indigeatioa. Your druggist hn ADLA Tablets. f I J Ifi Do You Like Jingle Contests ? Raleigh Cigarettes are now run-ning another series of weekly con-tests for those who can supply the best last line to a jingle. Over 100 liberal prizes each week. Watch this paper for details. Adv. PDDLE-AGE-n WOMEN J5) HEED THIS ADVICE!! If you're cross, restless, nervous suffer hot flashes, dizziness-cau- sed by this period in a woman's life try Lydia Pink-ham- 's Vegetable Compound. Made especially for womera.Helps to relieve distress due to this functional disturbance. Thou-sands upon thousands of women report remarkable benefits. Foll-ow label directions. LEND FOR VICTORY Make Your Money Count; Buy U. S. Defense Bonds Help Them Cleanse the Blood of Harmful Body "Waste Your kidneys are constantly filtering WMte matter from the blood stream. 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Third prize .... 25.00 cash Louisville, Kentucky, post- - In case of ties, duplicate prizes will bo c . ,.,. S marked not later than midnight, awarded. Winners will be notified by mail. lrlzes 50M "S" J April 4, 1942. Anyone may enter (except employees of 25 prizes of $5.00 . 125.00 cash You may enter as many last Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., their . I lines as you wish, if they are all advertising agents, or their families). All prizes of a carton written on separate Raleigh pack- - entries and ideas therein become the prop-- Of Raleighs ... 150.00 j age wrappers (or facsimiles). erty of Brown & Williamson Tobacco p Prizes will be awarded on the Corporation. 133 PRIZES $500.00 12-- HOTEL BEN LOMOND GDEN, UTAH f. 2.5ts!,m B,th' ,2M m-- 4 penonu - . 14.09 "IBoom Colwshop T.pRoom H" t Hot I S,r K!r"nl EiecntlTM Mr .1 Comm.ro and Ad CInb p Hoel Ben Lomond I 0GDEN. UTAH L B""rt E. VI,lck. Mgr. - J rNSTALLMENT SIXTEEN THE STORY SO FAR: Karen Water-son- , believing herself to be the heir to Alakoa, the Island estate of her grand-father, finds herself no heiress at all, when the old gentleman, Garrett Water-so-turns up after a long disappear-ance. Meantime she and her lawyer have been engaged In a dispute over the rights to the property with the Wayne family who have been In possession since the old man left, many years before. Richard (Tonga Dick) Wayne has fallen In love with Karen, as has also the lawyer, John Colt. After she quarrels with Dick, Karen decides to leave Ala-koa with Colt. Old Garrett Waterson has arrived at Alakoa and Is very ill with fever but expresses a wish to see Karen. As Tonga Dick goes to find her he sees that she and Colt have put out to sea. He is determined to bring Karen back to see her grandfather. Now continue with the story. The one eyed Captain Ramey was waiting at so nearly the exact spot where Dick took the deck that he had to jump back. CHAPTER XIV Even yet, behind the beach of Ala-koa, continued the music and danc-ing which was an extension of the wake for the death of James Wayne; relaxing now into an emotional deb-acle which had forgotten the reason that it began. Consequently the crew of the Holokai, held on the vessel when they had expected to go ashore, was in resentful and surly mood. From that frustrated and d crew any skipper could expect a sullen handling of lines and gear, and the uneasy, heavy-weighte- d obedience of men who like noth-ing about their work. But this time as Dick Wayne swung aboard the Holokai something different hap-pened. Tonga Dick came aboard relaxed and smiling, and every move that he made was lazy. The easy droop of his whole figure would have seemed, at first glance, to be that of a man upon whom anybody could Impose. And yet, as soon as he stepped aboard, a peculiar and discipline came over the whole length of the Holokai. The crew forgot the doings behind the beach, and the drinking they had missed, and the girls they had missed; suddenly they wanted noth-ing except to be out of range of the inevitable explosion. Tonga Dick didn't see any of that. He didn't notice the unaccustomed smartness with which deck Kanakas got out of his way, nor the naval precision with which Inyashi attend-ed him not too close. The rail felt unnatural as he swung over it be-cause his hands were cold and trem-bling; and he was seeing nothing ex-cept the wavering lights of the Seal, probing out through a channel which no one aboard her knew. The tall rollers that came across two thousand miles of Pacific were breaking low upon the coral reefs. No one could make his way through there who had not been born among those reefs not as the tides lay now. Certainly Captain Ramey, bad navigator and weak pilot, could not find his way through. Dick watched the Seal swing perilously in the rip of the tide; he waited confidently, even hopefully, knowing what kind of rock was reaching for the Seal's plates. Presently, he believed, he would take the people off the foun-dering Seal, and put them back where they belonged where he had told them to stay. He waited for the reel of the Seal's lights, the sick check of her motion which would mark the physical concussion be-tween John Colt's will and the actu-alities of land and water. There was a moment, suspended in contest, in which he knew the Seal could not live that the one-eye- d Ramey had made one mistake too many. Then, unaccount-ably, by a whim of the sea, the Seal shook off the reef through a course in which no vessel had ever succeeded yet and was free in open water. Even the broken-toothe- d coral seemed to have failed Dick Wayne. "Take your anchor up," Dick said. His voice was so low that Inyashi, waiting near as be was. had to ask him to repeat. "Weigh your anchor, and give me the Diesel! What is this? Doesn't anything I say ever stick any more?" The Seal was in the open sea; but now the Holokai was coming out, brought by a shorter and easier way. When Dick Wayne had brought her through the treacherous and an-gling channel he set his hip against the wheel, letting the Holokai buck brokenly against the cross chop. "Inyashi," Dick said, "that is our seems the image of a god, can look like scum in dungarees. "You see that boat up there?" Dick said. None of them said anything, and their faces were inexpressive. The question was rhetorical. Whatever these brown-skinne- d men might miss in this world or the next, they never missed anything on the face of the sea. "We're going to come up close on that boat in a minute," Dick said. "We're going to swing so close to her that maybe we'll smash her rud-der off. I'm going aboard, and I'm going to take her back to Alakoa. After I've gone aboard, the Holokai is going to stand by for maybe ten minutes. Within ten minutes the malahine boat will turn and go back. If it doesn't turn " Dick Wayne stopped a moment, while he turned the Holokai more carefully into the wake of the Seal's lights. "Then, Captain?" Inyashi prompt-ed. In the undistinguished yellow face the canine teeth were showing in Inyashi's peculiar new smile. "If," Dick said, "the Seal does not turn in ten minutes after I have boarded her, the Holokai will corrte alongside the Seal and lash fast." "And then ?" Inyashi said again. "One way or another," Dick said, "I'm going to take the Seal back to Alakoa." Dick Wayne didn't even look at the faces of the Kanakas he knew what was there. They were looking at each other then, but not in sullen-nes- s nor rebellion. The faces of these men were thick-skinne- d as leather, weathered by a thousand tropic suns; but now there was a cu-rious drawing up of the faces of the first man and the third different from a smile, and at the same time nothing else as if the d leather had been drawn up by inner cords. If any haole had anything these men could understand, Dick Wayne had it; and they understood him now. Without looking at them at all, he knew that they would take the Seal, if he named the Seal, no matter what else happened after that. Dick had to grin a little, but not without affection, as he rec-ognized that he was perfectly cer-tain of what these men could be counted on to do. "Get your buffers out to star-- Nobody moved on the deck of the Holokai as Dick went over the rail of the Seal. Everyone of those sea-ridi-men must have known what inspiration was in Inyashi's hand as he drew the Holokai past the Seal, against the restless swell of the countering sea. But they stood, waiting their turn, while Dick made his jump across better than a fath-om of open water; and, gaining the Seal's deck, signaled Inyashi to stand clear. The one-eye- d Captain Ramey was waiting at so nearly the exact spot where Dick took the deck that he had to jump back when Dick came down over the rail. "What's this. What is this?" "How would you like to turn your boat?" Dick said. "Listen wait listen!" There was a frantic expostulation in Ramey's voice, not without its note of ap-peal. "You can't do this! What are you going to do? Damn me, you can't do it! You know I hardly ever get a decent charter, and when I do, do you have to butt in, and" Everyone upon the Seal had known that the Holokai was coming from behind, had seen Dick Wayne come aboard. There was a ring of faces, now, all around Ramey and Dick Wayne. Through the quick fog that action makes he saw that John Colt, too, was there.' "You can't do this," Ramey said again. "I'll hang you higher than a kite in any court " Dick saw now where Karen was. She was leaning against the bulkhead of the cabin, detached still, with an unreadable face. "You don't even know what I'm going to do." "Sure, I know," Ramey said with as much black malice as can be put through one eye. "Go ahead and do it and see what happens to you! Will you, now?" "You have your choice," Dick said. "You can turn back, if you're willing to turn back." John Colt spoke then. He said, "I really don't understand " "Shut your head," Dick said crudely. He spoke across them all, to Karen who stood against the bulk-head of the cabin; and although he did not raise his voice, no one could have mistaken to whom he spoke. "You're going back now," Dick said. "You're going back, and you're not even asking why." John Colt said, with a singularly decent poise, "Are we to unde-The Seal was all out, and, as Dick rstand?" already knew, Ramey's boat bad a surprising turn of speed; but there was nothing she could do to get away from the Holokai, in the open sea. The Holokai had been built for sail, but she had taken to her power with a surprising surety, so that under her Diesel she went over the water like a thrown shell. Def-initely and steadily, with an arith-metic accuracy, the Holokai came up on the Seal; and nothing that men's intentions or present emotions might do could effect that steady overtaking. She could overhaul the unhappy Seal tonight simply by a mathematics of oil and iron con-trived by forgotten designers, some of whom were dead . . "I have to go now," Dick said to Inyashi. "You mean you mean " "Take the wheel, and throw her so close that you pick her wheel-man's teeth with the buckle of your belt." "What are you going to do?" In-yashi demanded. "I'm going to leave this rail, and go aboard this other boat," Dick said. "Tonga," Inyashi said, lapsing into the name under which he had first known Dick, "if I miss the swing, even by inches it just can-not be done." "You go ahead and do it. Take the wheel." The Holokai's deck crew were lounging against the weather rail as Dick left the wheel. They appeared to be resting; but Dick caught the gleam of a long knife in the belt of a boy who looked the laziest of all. "Stay back," be warned them. "Stay back until your time comes!" "You wouldn't understand this. An old, dying man wants to see what his grandchild looks like. I have guaranteed that he will. The girl is going back." "If you mean Miss Waterson," Colt said, "she is going where she chooses to go." ... "Sorry." The sound of the sea was all around them, but within it there was a peculiar silence, in which nothing human had anything to say. John Colt stepped forward across the swaying deck, into that ring of faces. "This isn't a hundred years ago. We're not in the days of Captain Cook; we're not even in the days of Henry Morgan. We're not living in the old days, Wayne." ' "No," answered Tonga Dick, "but this is the sea." "Am I to suppose " "I don't care what you suppose. I have to take Karen Waterson back to Alakoa." "This is an outrage," Captain Ra-mey put in. "I'll fight this through every court of admiralty that " "You will be very happy," Tonga Dick said, "not to raise your head before admiralty at all. How would you like the admiralty courts to hear what happened at Lord Randolph's Island?" "You mean to blackmail me?" Ramey screamed. Dick Wayne grinned. "You bet your life I'll blackmail you if it's any good to me" It was singular the way Ramey faded, after that. "I'll have you for this this Is piracy," John Colt said. "I can bring charges such as will " 'TO BE CONTINUED) "Our boat, Captain?" "I'm going aboard that boat and bring her back," Dick said. Something special showed in In-yashi then. Sometimes people won-dered why a squatty little yellow man, who looked like a clerk in a Japanese dry goods store, should be right-han- d man to Dick Wayne. If they had been watching, they might have found out something about that now Inyashi's face wrinkled m a peculiar grin; it was deferential still but a peculiar drawing of the lips' made the eye teeth show, so that all at once, without ever step-ping out of his place, Inyashi was something else than he had been before. "Are all the Kanakas aboard? Dick asked. M "All five, Captain Dick. "Bring 'em here." the Holokai d.dn The crew of look like much as Inyashi taought wheel which Dick them up to the look still held. These were slovenly not very well washed. Thir ing men, dark; the hau: oi: some faces were bush the of them had a crinkly nose, of some were nothmgfebf flat, and the lips surfboard, A Polynesian who, on a To retain the full flavor of pickles, keep the jar tightly cov-ered and in the refrigerator when not in use. Are you sure your chimney is properly insulated where it passes near wooden walls? Rock wool, asbestos or other insulation may prevent a fire. Enameled bathtubs may be cleaned with a tablespoon of dry salt, moistened with spirits of tur-pentine not too wet. Then wipe it over with a clean cloth. Thai new waffle iron should be brushed off with a stiff brush, wiped with a damp cloth, dried with a soft cloth, and slipped into an oilskin bag after using. Speed of Golf Balls The United States Golf associa-tion has recently ruled no golf ball can have a velocity greater than 250 feet per second. The as-sociation has so ruled to eliminate the threat of causing present golf courses to become obsolete be-cause of the golf ball. The velocity of the balls can be regulated by controlling pressure on the core of the ball and tight-ness of the rubber wrappings. At the Best, Boys Were But Two Out of. Three Two brothers, in appearance very much alike, were being regis-tered at school. "Are you two twins?" asked the teacher, smiling at the boys. "No, ma'am, we're not," replied the lads in unison. "You certainly look alike," re-turned the schoolmarm. Then as the brothers filled in their forms, the teacher noted that they gave the same birthday. "But you said you weren't twins, yet you have the same birthday?" she queried. "That's right, we aren't twins," replied one, "we're what's here of triplets." As We Think Life is beautiful to whomsoever will think beautiful thoughts. There are no common people but they who think commonly and without imagination or beauty. Such are dull enough. Kirkham. |