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Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION Pattern 287 contains a transfer pattern of a 15 by 19',i inch picture; illustration of stitches; color chart; materials re-quired. Send your order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat-tern No : Name Address OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED desk and chain, fllta, typewriters, adding mch'i, safes, g. L. DESK EX.. 35 W. Broadway. Salt Lnk BEAUTY SCHOOL r SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE Q. Largest in the West 18 years' sue cessfuJ operation. Modern, thorough, prac-tical Enroll anytime. Write for catalogue. 838 South Main Salt Lake City, Utab RANCH WANTED Wanted Good Cattle Ranch Oar client has $30,000 cash. Send fall details of place to MILLER & VIELE, Box 807, Salt Lake City, Utah. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Reconditioned Band Instruments at bargain prices. Liberal trades BEESLEY MUSIC CO.. 70 So Main. Salt Lake City, Utah. USED EQUIPMENT INTERMOUNTA1N MERCHANTS SUPPLY (Dealers In Bankrupt Stocks) We buy and sell all kinds of business fixtures and equipment. Cash registers, meat scales, office equip 66 E. 4th So Salt Lake City Bendix and Hotpoint Washers We have largest selection of used washers. Slashed prices $12.50 up. 1 yr. guar. Terms. INTERMOUNTAIN UTILITIES 151 South State St, Salt Lake City, Utah Pattern 2837. TT'S fascinating to see this pic-ture appear so quickly under your needle all the stitches are easy, you know. L. D. S. RELIEF SOCIETY PIN L s2tM e rea'r diamond rings, $ii5Wvl Drianuiacture jewelry, make 111 clu pins pay 8ood prices lv' vvJ or diamonds, sell jewelry e wT fcift at reasonable price. 0. C. TANNER COMPANY 44 West 2nd South, Salt Lake Before burins a ssaK hearing aid f I . send for th I I J interestin story mSIUllOl OTARION of SALT LAKE 'f " "! 511 Mclntyre Bide. iiTWl0 Salt Lake City, Utah. rKiK f Please send me free r 4 booklet "The Story of Otarion." Name " i r Address . "I Should FFH Have JfejL Known Better" mff. She knew she was -- s'et eating too much! --" --kj Things looked so good she kept right on. And then GAS I Stomach and i intestines inflated like a balloon, and breathing an effort If a spell of CONSTIPATION caused this, should have been handy. It is an effective blend of 6 carmin-atives and 3 laxatives for DOUBLE action. Gas is quickly relieved, and gentle bowel action follows surpris-ingly fast. Your druggist has I Relief at last from that gurgling, smothery feeling in the stomach. When caused by B excess acid from food fermentation or R nervous excitement, try ADLA Tablets. J Contain Bismuth and Carbonates for If QUICK relief. Your druggist has ADLA Tablets. T AOTA ;r.1IDDLE-AGE-V WOMEN CSS) HEED THIS ADVICE!! If you're cross, restless, nervous suffer hot flashes, dizziness caused by this period in a woman's life try Lydia Pink-ham- 's Vegetable Compound. Made especially for women. Helps to relieve distress due to this functional disturbance. Thou-sands upon thousands of women report remarkable benefits. Fol-low label directions. V - J Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulsion relieves promptly be-cause It goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in-flamed bronchial mucous memb- ranes. Tell your druggist to sell you 8 bottle of Creomulsion with the un-derstanding you must like the way it Quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Do You Bake at Home? If you do, send for a grand cook book crammed with recipes for all kinds of yeast-raise- d breads and cakes. It's absolutely free. Just drop a postcard with your name and address to Standard Brands Inc., 691 Washington St., New York City. Adv. WANTED RABBIT SKINS HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Rabbit Skins Furs Hides Pelts Wool Write or Wire Colorado Animal Company 463 South 3rd West Salt Lake City, Utah or their nearest branches located at OGDEN SPANISH FORK LOGAN HEBER CITY r"V; DON'T LET CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP When bowels are sluggish and you feel Irritable, headachy and everything you do is an effort, do as millions do chew the modern chewing gum laxative. Simply chew T before you go to bed sleep with-out being disturbed next morning gentle, thorough relief, helping you feel iweU aRain, full of your normal pep. Try Tastes good, is handy and economical. A generous family supply FEEII-MiIIITl-o" HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH Ml Booms 350 Baths - $2.00 to 14.00 runllr Rooms for 4 persons! - - 14.00 Air Cooled Lounge and Lobbr Dlaln gom CoffM shop Tn Room Home of Rotary Klwanls Execntlea chan(e Optimists " Camber of Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Bnbirt E. Vliick. Mir. I LESS NICOTINE Yf THAT'S ) I IN THE SMOKE J I ) CLICKS WITH y m ME- - ND THAT J FIRST WITH THE i V CAMEL FLAVOR MEN N JH ) j V IS REALLY y mvy J 1 SWELL a A j ' THE SMOKE OF CAMELS CONTAINS 28 LESS NICOTINE than the average of the i other largest --selling U' cigarettes tested . . . less than any of them 1. . according to Independent sclen-- aST" tific tests of the smoke itself I . In the Navy, in the Army, In the Ma-- i ?A rlnes, in the Coast Guard actual salea JP xiF recordsinPostExchancesandCanteena Jtf show the favorite cigarette la Camel. ''0, THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS "Tt'lat wiH save you many a ; ;; d0Har will escape you if ; ;; yu fail to read carefully and ; "gularly the advertising of i Jocal merchants ;I jMjTlTlS PAPER - INSTALLMENT ELEVEN THE STORY SO FAR: Karen Water-so-convinced by her lawyer, John that Colt, she has a claim to the Island estate ol her grandfather, Garrett Waterson, comes with Colt to Honolulu and meets Tonsa Dick or Richard Wayne, a mem- ber of the Wayne famUy which has been In control of the property since her grandfather's disappearance. Dick's un-cle, James Wayne, manager of this is-land, Alakoa, dies from overwork and Dick attempts to work out a compro- mise settlement of Karen's claim. This Is refused. Meantime Karen has learned that both Colt and Dick are In love with her. On the Island, one day, Dick re- veals that Karen is not heiress at all, but that Garrett Waterson Is alive and is on his way to Alakoa. H and Karen discuss what tttitude the old man may take toward her claim to the island. Now continue with the story. "I've been perfectly sincere. Dick, you just have to believe that!" "I do. But Garrett Waterson may very possibly believe, by this time, that the Waynes took unfair advan-tage of him when they bought Ala-koa." Karen seemed strangely shaken. jtJ nothmg is settled at all, is "Nothing. They key has passed into other hands that's all." "And this fight has to go on, and on" "Are you tired of this fight, Kar-en?" "Something's changed it for me. I don't know what it is. At first it seemed such a glorious adventure; it promised to' open up a whole new world. But that's all gone. I don't know what's the matter. Some- - "But you don't know that you've lost the island." ' how I'm not sure, any more, that I want Alakoa." "Neither," said Dick Wayne, "do I. You know that." She turned a little to look at him; and the young stars made her face a pale oval, mysterious and lovely, but her expression he could not see. "You don't want your island?" she asked queerly. He took her hands, and made her turn toward him. "You know what I want. You've known it all the time." "But the island your broth-ers " "Haven't you?" he asked. "There isn't there isn't any way" "Haven't you?" Dick insisted. The resistance seemed to go out of her; she swayed forward, and rested her cheek against his chest. "Yes," she admitted; "I know." "There isn't any time to lose," Dick said. "I've had a radio from Waterson. He'll drop anchor in less than two hours. By that time it will be too late." "What are we going tq do?" "We're going to run but on this show. We'll be married in Hilo. I don't care what happens after that. They can go on with this infernal squabble until they eat each oth-er's last shirt." "It's impossible! I can't!" i. "Why? If you're still going to let John Colt " "Don't you see what position I'm put in? Do you think I've so little pride that I'd try to seize your is-land, and fail, and then edge in by marrying the very man I tried to bankrupt" "I don't believe you care any more about the island than I do." "You don't now. But some day you'd remember, and perhaps begin to doubt; and nothing could ever be" "But you don't know that you've lost the island. Nobody will know until Garrett Waterson shows his vaulted the rail in time to light upon the canoe's stern as it swept past The little craft reeled, and the ca-noe's .whole outrigger lifted out of the water;,then,she steadied, and her sail flapped lazily as she came about and pointed for the Holokai. - Karen stood beside Dick Wayne as he piloted the Holokai to sea. He was handling the wheel himself, as he always did in these reefs; but even while he was narrowly g his markers, the' sense of her presence there had hold of ev-ery part of him, changing the mean-ing of the vessel, and the harbor, and the night. The salt spray that he loved had never, in all his life, been so welcome in the air he breathed. The Chinese mess boy poked him-self into the wheelhouse and plucked at Dick's sleeve. He was in a white mess jacket, this time. "Captain Tonga, something is w'ong, I think. Somebody is in your cabin, I think. You send somebody in cabin?" "Well, who is it?" "Captain Tonga, the door is fas-tened." " ' "Oh, bunk! What's the matter with you. Seeing akuas?" "No, Captain. Somebody is " "Go tell the cook to make dinner for two and make it good. Get out of here and do as I tell you." The big combers that lashed over the d coral were close on the Holokai' s bows, but Dick seemed sure of his way. He fired the Holo-kai at the channel like a shot; the big Diesel had small range of speed, so that under power the Holokai went full out or not at all. He spoke from the side of his mouth to the Japanese who served as first officer, bosun, and copper-smit- "Inyashi, get the night glasses out of my bunk." "Yes, Captain." "We'll very likely sight the Sarah coming in that's your grand-- tie I know of him, I do understand. As if it had been myself!" He marveled a little at that. This utterly feminine girl, with her finely chiseled face and gentle small voice, could show flashes of something strangely reminiscent of Garrett Waterson; as if the mountainous and craggy fires of the old adven-turer had perpetuated themselves in a thread of fine steel. "I can tell you most of the rest," he said. "I " Dick suddenly spun the wheel hard over, and the Holokai yawed as the reef-rolle- struck her in the bottle-nec- k of the entrance; then she steadied upon the easy swell of the open sea. Inyashi stepped forward, and Dick turned over the wheel. "We can go below now, Karen. I don't think a whisky soda would do us any harm, do you? I have some of the same Scotch the British embassies use. And something to eat?" Below, he moved briskly about the cabin, switching on more lights. "This door back here in the stern is to my own cabin pretty small, but the only one there is. It's yours while you want it; I can sleep on the settee. But" It suddenly occurred to him that this was the first moment in which they had been alone since he had persuaded her to leave the Seal. He turned and faced her, his eyes gay. A hundred voyages among the islands of little known seas had brought him less adventure than he believed belonged to him tonight. For a moment she met his eyes and her smile was shy, misty; he had never seen her in this mood before, with her defenses lowered and the keen brilliance of her glance shadowed and softened. "But but" He forgot what he had meant to say. "But what?" she mocked him. "If you mean to suggest " She stopped. Abruptly the smile left her face, and the softness, to be replaced by astonishment. nana. "Dick if my grandfather takes the island, I'll marry you then, if you want me to." "No," he said. He released his hold, and she moved a few inches away from him. "No," he repeated. "I'm not going to marry an island either, Karen." "Then you see it's hopeless, Dick." "In another hour or so it will be completely. This is the last time we'll ever have any choice. Because now we don't know. Right now one of us is as good as broke but we don't know which. Perhaps nei-ther one of us wiU ever have any-thing in the world again." "Maybe," Karen said, "that would be best of all. Only we can't make that choice either, Dick. Neither one of us has any choice whatever, in anything, it seems." Dick said gravely, "The choice is yours, Karen; and you have to make I leave this it now, tonight-bef- ore boat." "What is it you want me to do.' "I want you to come with me, now, on the Holokai. I'll throw the Holo-kai over the bar, and run to sea. "If only," Karen said, I had a little time" "Time? Good Lord, Karen! "Even a few hours" He saw that she was frightened; because it to d and he was pleased, him that she wanted to come with h'You have a few hours," he said; if you want 1 11 "you have days, long as you want me stay at sea as we've talked it over, to Or when ru put back. Or I'll take you any to But now we ve Place you want go. get out of here-quick- ly-if here's ever going to be any hope atShe' from him and turned away hef hands gripped the rail hard; her eyes were on the Holokai, a with her trucks shape, storing against the stars- The mo- - tirkpd by. and the outrigger Karen, raising his voice over the roar of the shoals. "She's a good little vessel, but much slower than this. She must have started north no more than twelve hours after the Holokai, and you see how late she is. Did you know that 'Sarah' was your grandmother's name?" The Japanese quartermaster was back, bursting into the wheelhouse in the quick nervous way that marked everything he did. "Cap-tain Dick, I cannot get the night glasses you have left your cabin locked." "Locked? You're crazy the door's stuck, that's all. Give it a boot." Inyashi showed extreme embar-rassment. "Captain Dick, I did. The panel split. I think it was poor wood, but I can fix it. It is locked it is locked, I know." "Let it go. I'll send up the glasses. Get a Kanaka boy for the wheel we'll be in clear water in a minute. Set a course for Kalae; watch for a ship any ship and report all ves-sels to me." "Yes, Captain!" "That last is for you," Dick told Karen. The wheel was kicking crazi-ly- , but he let go with one hand, and pulled her close against him. "I thought you might want to see the ship that's bringing him in, out of the south." "Out of the south," Karen repeat-ed; "out of the sea, out of the past itself ..." "You'll like him, Karen; I prom-ise you that." "You and I have so much to talk about," Karen said. "I'm terribly ea-ger to know more about my grand-father. I want to know where he's been, and what he does, and how he lives. I want to know what he's really like, and if you think he'll ap-prove of me." "And," Dick said, "why he dis-appeared, and hid his name?" "Did he run from something. Dick?" "Only from his own pride, i un-derstand it; I understand it well. But it's a little hard to explain to quiet people, leading quiet lives." "Hard to explain?" she repeated. "No, not to me! Even from what lit- - After his first split second of sur-prise he saw that she was looking past him, and he whirled. The door of the inner cabin had opened, and Lilua was standing there Lilua, with balf-cla- d body and blazing eyes. She stood very straight, swaying with effortless balance to the lift and tilt of the sea as only the Poly-nesians can. She was wearing noth-ing but a wrapped skirt of tapa cloth not even a lei, or a blossom in her hair to account for the odor of ginger flowers that came subtly into the cabin from the doorway where she stood. She spoke straight to Karen; it was as if she could not see Dick at all. "What are you doing here?" There was appalling silence, filled with the rush of the sea along the ports. "Lilu", this is ridiculous it's fantastic!" "You stay out of this, Dick! It isn't your fault it's this woman. You can't understand her because you're a man, but I understand her. What she can't steal she'll destroy, She'll eat the soul out of your body, Dick and then go back to John Colt!" "Be still!" Dick roared. "I'll not be still! . . . Send her back to her own man. She has no right here. This is not her place." Lilua was speaking to Karen, ig-noring him again. Her voice was quiet, in comparison to his; yet somehow it cut his down, so that he stopped. "This is my man. You know that. Why don't you go back to your own? Do you have to have ever-ythingthe land, and the sea, and the fish, and all the men in the world?" For a moment a terrible exaspera-tion half blinded Dick Wayne. Some-thing that was worth more to him than the breath In his tfeth had been altogether his, until Lilua appeared. She had come abruptly out of no place unaccountable in her physi-cal presence, but even more unac-countable as a factor in his life. Search his memory as he might, he could not recall ever having sum-moned her not by so much as the trailing of his eyes. (TO BE CONTINUED) Long-Distanc- e Broadcast jj When a war correspondent ,; broadcasts from Manila to New York city, the number of times his voice is amplified is virtually in-calculable, particularly while span-ning the 7,164 miles of the Pacific to San Francisco, says Collier's. Even on its 3,000-mil- e journey by land wire from the West to the East coast, the amplification is about as much as the figure one followed by 90 zeroes. ', p.. r.. c-- o- - p.. cv. (v. o r-- - p- - O" c-- c c-- p.. r- - . ASK ME ) ANOTHER A General Quiz Questions 1. The Rubicon refers to what? 2. What is the chemical name for laughing gas? 3. What is a machete a ba-nana, a knife or a musical instru-ment? 4. Where do the natives speak the Manx language? 5. What was Romeo's family name? 6. Electrum is an alloy of what? The Answers 1. A river: By leading an army across the river contrary to the prohibition of the civil govern-ment of Rome, Caesar precipitat-ed a civil war which made him supreme, hence, "to cross the Ru-bicon" is to take the irrevocable decisive step. 2. Nitrous oxide. 3. A knife. 4. Isle of Man. 5. Montague. 6. Gold and silver. Vocabulary of Stutterers Persons who stutter, 80 per cent of whom are males, usually have a vocabulary half again as large as those who are free of this nerv-ous affliction, owing to their use of synonyms for words, which, at times, they cannot readily pro- - nounce. FIRST-AI-D to the AILING HOUSE .fa By ROGER 6. WHITMAN as Roger B. Whitman WNU Service.) 'Modernizing' Old Style Houses SOME neighbors of mine have a house built about 60 years ago. It is square and chunky, with nothing in its design to make it at-tractive. It is of the period when or-naments and jigsaw work were the fashion, but that today makes it look hopelessly Its occupants knew that it could be made pret-tier, but were undecided as to how to go about it. They finally made a business of driving through all of the surrounding suburbs on the look-out for houses of somewhat the same proportion, that might give them ideas of what to do. It did not take them long to make up their minds All of the jigsaw and ornamental work was stripped off, and the porch roof and columns were replaced by woodwork of modern design that they found at a lumber yard. The front door had been hardly more than a lectangular hole through the wall. This they replaced with a stock entrance of Colonial design, with a fan-lig- and side-ligh- opening on an entrance of the same design. This, and the trim of the house, which had been an ugly yellow, was repainted white. The effect of the house was completely changed. In-stead of being an eyesore the house became one of the most attractive in the neighborhood, with a dignity that had been entirely lacking. The whole job took only three weeks, and the cost was less than a thousand dol-lars. Broken Roof Slates Roof slates are secured by nails going through the upper ends, the nail heads being hidden by the slates of the course next above. There is always a little looseness in slates, and there may be breakage when slates are rattled by a heavy wind. In replacing a slate, the nails cannot be reached because of the slates above. By one method a strip of sheet copper is used, eight or ten inches long and two inches or so wide. This is secured by nails at one end about half-wa- y up the space left by the missing slate. The new slate is then put into place and is held there by bending the free end of the copper strip over its lower edge. .. ..... There is sometimes leakage through a slate roof when a. heavy wind blows fine snow or rain under the slates. This can be prevented by raising the lower edge of each slate enough to put a dab of roofing ce-ment underneath to secure it to the slate of the course below. This job is best done in warm weather when the roofing cement is plastic and spreads easily. Cigarette Burn Question: A mahogany table has been burned by a cigarette. I tried to remove the spot by rubbing with steel wool; but this left bare wood. How can this be refinished? Answer: If that ever happens again, scrape the charred wood with a razor blade, which is better for the purpose than rubbing with steel wool. For a finish, put on two or three thin coats of quick drying var-nish with a camel's hair brush to build up the depression to the level of the surrounding finish. Each coat of varnish should be hard before put-ting on the next. Knotty Pine Finish Question: How can knotty pine be finished to obtain a soft mellow ap-pearance? Answer: The usual finish is lib-eral wiping with a mix-ture of linseed oil and turpentine. After an hour or two for soaking in, wipe the surface dry. Repeat in two days. This will not check the mellowing that comes with age. An-other good finish is penetrating wax, which can be had clear or tinted with wood colors. Either finish can be followed by waxing. Damp Cellar Question: Ten years ago I had my basement ceiling and sidewalls cov-ered with chemically treated cement to keep water from seeping through. This has been satisfactory until now. I am having trouble again. What can I do to keep my basement dry? Answer: Age and dampness have destroyed the effectiveness of the ce-ment As this has lasted for ten years it has done very well, and your best move will be to have the treatment repeated. Finish for Tile Question: Last summer we put down a porch floor of quarry tile six inches square, with red mortar joints. At the time it was rubbed with linseed oil, but now it has smeared and the color is no longer pretty. How can it be brightened? Answer: Wiping with turpentine should clean the surface, which seems to be giving the trouble. With the tile clean and dry, put on two or three coats of paste wax, each well rubbed. Headroom Above Boiler. Question: I have had my rotary oil burner taken out of the old coal burning furnace and installed in a new boiler designed for oil burning, and hope to save oil. I have read from time to time that there should be 18 inches headroom from top of boiler to the steam main. I only seem to have nine inches. I should like your opinion as to how this in-stallation will work out. Answer: The distance is figured from the boiler water level and not from the top of the boiler. This distance should be at least 18 inches. Our Business To turn all that we possess into the channels of universal love be-comes the business of our lives. John Woolman. Value Health Look to your health! And if you have it, praise God and value it next to a good conscience. Izaak Walton. Man the Actor Man is a make-believ- e animal he is never so truly himself as when he is acting a part. Hazlitt. Secret Sorrows Believe me, every man has his secret sorrows, which the world knows not; and oftentimes we call c a man cold when he is only sad. Longfellow. As We Think or Feel The world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those who leel.-Wal-pole. |