OCR Text |
Show jacket and 2 yards of terial for the skirt. tWOfndeMv 0 1499 .pj afternoon it Mistress Fashion Iorfant Spring mo 39-in- is designed for sizes chapter 34 36 38 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52' Size 36 requires 5 yards of Virginia Stiver Bartlett XVH-Centi- nucd 14 Pero Fife heard h lPd er Book which is now ready, it contains 109 attractive, practical and becoming designs. The Barbara Bell patterns are well planned, accurately cut and easy to follow. Each pattern includes a sew-chawhich enables even a beginner to cut and make her own clothes. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) rt each. C Ml Syndicate. WKU Servlet. Uncle Xkll d SojjAs What About Adam? 'Tis said a garden keeps a man out of mischief. What stirs the admiration of everyone is to see a man who is always equal to the occasion. each ii If one is a gentleman, it is betwmplete and detailed ter not to get into arguments which make it so difficult to rechart main one. )tta With for want you Not Bo Boasting style the actly and May The man who says he is war, shopping trips so The jacket blouse is may be taking the blame. icthre, with its pull Cutting personal remarks hardlittle and saucy I waistline ly ever have the sympathy of the with worn your be can It am. of those who hear them. too. Make it up majority K suit skirt, When owned a horse or you wcor inunodiete it crepe for two of them they were pets, later in linen or pique, using to follow and Jaeket-BIoua- e. self-ma-de ley' blouse which an automobile can never be. me color or a printed Rolieva tho Strain as pictured. plain skirt, You'll never get I trouble For Large Women, with slen-iin- g looking for your own faults and very graceful dress lines, thanks to. the other peoples good points. the cape If you are going to teach a boy, oth shoulders, make him like you. Then he is res, always flattering to plump . and the skirt that's narrow putty In your hands. On second d the hips and slightly wide thought, make a boy like you it hem. Gathers beneath the whether you are going to teach in shoulders make the blouse him w not. It is bread cast upon the waters. and becoming. In georgette, When Diogenes went about nosertp or polka dot silk, this be your spring favorite. Laboing into places looking for an honring hot weather, it will be est man, there were many who joy in dotted Swiss or voile. thought his lantern ought to be taken away from him. The Patterns. n is designed for sizes 14, 16, 1 , 40 and h rds of Size 16 42. requires Spray Roses Frequently material for the .I find that there is one simple point in aphis control that is overlooked by a majority of rose growers, says Melvin E. Wyandt, rose specialist of Painesville, Ohio. It la simply that they should spray often. Now dont misunderstand me. Practically all rose growers know that they must spray with a good insecticide to control aphis, but they do not realize that aphids multiply rapidly. An effective spray for aphis control is made by mixing one to two teaspoonfuls of nicotine sulphate in a gallon of water and adding a little dissolved laundry soap. Nicotine sulphate is a poison which kills by contact the method necessary with sucking insects such as aphis and in addition, being volatile, it gives off fumes which also kill, making it doubly effective. "Quotations" A i pad wuk if ever loft. Many m bum be rsnlrnl te mw ; oth-vimm to reap the harveaL ll tfaficr. rnj trait ef beauty may be traced mm virtue, aa te innocence, ran pnerwity, modeaty, and bero-StPim- t. batle to diachargo Uipiiaa ia a aort of ingratitude. itekefouauld. its Ibae ever hear that tliinga ill M ever bad toreeaa? Shtkr-re- . i ertraardinary nil and good worka if the end of Miaa, and eonaeience of the &e aerompliahment of man's iLONGlBILllNAVJLTOBACCOK The Spirit of Friendliness and Fair Dealing which - Prevails at the 4fotl NEW HOUSE In SALT LAKE CITY u Hu UUidai Its Reputation Oaa of the Nation's Most Popular Hotels. 400 ROOMS 400 BATHS Ratal: 'Wolf main $2.00 to $4.00 Singh dining room buffet atreaaosablaprioM fnWG DANCING FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHT WWM. ftualdut Pt. frie. iind es She read rapidly until ihs reached the words that had sent tho Governor raging to her. She let the letter lip to the floor as she stood with trembling lips, her hands pressed over her heart staring at her huaband. You made promises to him . . . to help him when he was desperate! You kept me from him when he was ick. dying! You kept ms from him when he was laid In the grave. You drove him to that grave with your false friendship and. your empty God knows what your promises. Plots and tchemea were, but they will never succeed, for you are a murderess!" He stopped as though the word choked him, then putting his hand to his throat flung tho accusation at her again. Murderess !" Eulalia took a wavering step toward him, her hands outstretched as though to ward off bludgeons, then sank at hii feet CHAPTER XVIII The Lady Governor, La Gober-nadorreturned to Monterey with her husband in a pleased, unusual and utterly unaccountable state of complete subjugation. Unaccountable, at least to his Excellency: If Dona Eulalia had a confidante, and having one, confided In her, much might have been learned. But the Governor went hla way with n little sense of guilt after his outburst in San Francisco, and enjoyed the favors of his docile wife greatly. He enjoyed watching her nurse the child, who flourished like his enjoyed seeing her r; a wild-flowe- and watched the beauty airs of foe Monterey peninsula give his lady's cheeks a clarity and glow that had never graced them before. The lady herself drifted for two whole years in this state of docility. She even grew to enjoy the simple CHAimCir W. WMT, Manage the air. ,4V I 1 IDAHO I want te Siva my family PROVES PHtecti2 I undrratand your oollete 11.000 mambara andmoro JJaa ,Jf5S,by Ytr In fore. PlMII ( broteeUoa diun!;0g' 8 vt. dfi- - .... Addroii C11Z I - Htata Under Stale Bupervlaion a ... j 4 Ruth Wyeth Spears 1 BLACK 2 RED 3 HORIZONTAL 4 VERTICAL 5 BLUE MIXED STRIPES MIXED STRIPES P 6 TAN Hook an Old Fashioned Bag Bug rag rugs the hooked sewing for the home, you win type is the most fascinating want a copy of Mrs. Spears book, and economical A rug hook, such SEWING, for the Home Decoraas may be purchased in notion tor. Forty-eigpages of practiand cal working directions, with comand faneywork departments, ing strangers. Through his glasses burlap a little larger than your plete illustrations. A dollar savhe strove to make out the flags they finished rug are the essentials. ing book for every homemaker. flfcWe Most rug hookers also use a Send name and address, enclosing Whet are they? Who ere they? of slats bolted together at 25 cents (coins preferred) to Mrs. breathed Eulalia eagerly, her chin frame comers. the They stretch the bur- Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chioa hla shoulder. over the frame and tack it. cago, III lap He propped foe glasses before her Some like a rather large stationeyes, holding her to his arm. frame. Others use a small ary Look and see, perhaps you ean one and many hooked rugs are tell better than L made without any frame at alL X seel . . . Ohl A fleur de list . . . Here is a quaint old rug patSoma Water That . Frenchmen! Yes, you are right! tern that you may mark off on That will he the expedition of whom your burlap with a yardstick and Glitters Is Gold I have been advised by the Viceroy. pencil. The numbers indicate the La La La Perouse , . , colors used for the original rug-n- ow SEA water there are grains of the Conda da La Perouse. more than a hundred years FT pure gold. Columbus seeking A count! shrilled Eulalia. She old. The finished rug measures New world was actusnatched foe glasses from him and 26 by 34 inches. Allow two inches gold in the through it when hia ally sailing pointed them as though she expected at all edges for hems. Overcast crew threatened mutiny and wantto see the French gentleman smile the edges, then mark the solid to back. ed turn Many of .the one-inc- h at her. border just inside the Forty-ninewent in Ah! she said after a long hem allowance; then the large to California to find clipper ships gold. They Wo must prepare eight-inc- h look. squares; then the small too sailed through waters of gold to entertain them X suppose. She two-inc- h squares; then draw the without knowing it. From presaid It very calmly, but her heart diagonal lines across the large historic times men had dug gold waa aflutter. Two shiploads of squares as shown. Use wool rags out of the rocks and from beneath French gentlemen, end n count; to if possible and cut the strips not beds of sand and gravel Then inch. Hold one her that meant news of ths world wider than one-ha- lf in a laboratory found in man for which she longed, news of la the atrip against the wrong aide sea water particles of the precious belle France, of Spain, of open, of the burlap and pull loops of it metal to aide with the the . . . modes books, theater, coiffures, through right He knew that sea water conAs she rode back to tho presidio hook as shown. Short strips are tained many elements beside comto prepare for the entertainment of as useful as long. Just pull the mon From a very early salt. mind ran over the articles of her ends through and clip them. it was known that sea water own wardrobe, jewels and coemefe-lcs- . If you are planning slip covers, time also contained epsom salts, gyp-socurtains, or doing other Spring and magnesium chloride, but "Now, she sang, pralae God, waa not until 1870 that Sonn-stait something will happen!" detected gold. Since then It wee late afternoon before the the analysis of modem chemists frigates, the Aatrdlebe and the has revealed the existence of 32 Bouasole were safely at anchor, and out of the 80 known elements as foe Governor, who had not left off A Central Quit existing dissolved in sea water. O watching, saw two put The remaining elements, it ia beout for shore, seeming to thread lieved by some authorities, also their way among the whales diving exist in minute particles in it t The Questions and spouting about them. Sonnstadt detected gold by 1. What waa the most western As the boats landed, strong baremeans of a color test. He estiof the colonies outpost during the mated there waa one legged Indians assisting the sailors Revolution? grain of who leaped into foe water, Pedro 2. What city stands on seven gold to every ton of sea water. Testa for extracting it were based Fife stepped forward to greet a hills? officer, to impleasant round-face- d 3. Was George Washington ac- on this estimate. maculate epauletted uniform end Since 1927 projects for extractborn on February 22? white curled peruke, and accom- tually 4. The abbreviation L e. is ing gold from sea water have panied by several other gentlemen. used in the sense of that is. For been given up. .Anyone who tries For an instant, even while he had what Latin words do to dip up a few tons of glittering they stand? hla hand stretched to welcome, he 5. What states were carved out sea water will have only his labor had a moments panic. These were of the Northwest to show for his energy and his Territory? Frenchmen, end he spoke no 6. What did helium gas sell for optimism. It doesnt pay to exFrench, that is no decent French. the World war and how tract gold from the ocean waBut the Canto de La Perouse was during ters. It has been found that it much does it sell for now? him to broken already greeting 7. How much did it cost to sehd takes 3,858 million parts of sea friendly Spanish, and the Governor a letter by the famous Pony Ex- water to produce one part of pure Mixed the Count's hand gratefully. press from St Joseph, Mo., to gold. When Don Pedro Invited La Pe- San Francisco, Calif.? 6 Britannlca Junior. rouse end his aide, Le Panto Dage-le- t, 8. Where are most of the undera young man who spoke no water movies made? Noble Reticence 9. What southern town has anSpanish at aU, to dine with him, True happiness ia of a retired hla wile expected them, nounced that henceforth a birth laying that the stranger raised his eyebrows, in the town would be announced nature, and an enemy to pomp and noise; it arises, in the first and accepted. by a toot of the local mill whistle? place, from the enjoyment of to 10. wifel" Ia it still against the law to one's he said His French in the next, from eaide to his aide. Surely there are print pictures of United States the self; and,and conversation of friendship no ladies here to this postage stamps? a few select companion. Joseph pot! Addison. Aa they entered the adobe palacto Answers The they saw La Gobemadora framed to 1. Fort Laurens, about a mile candlelight from what is now Bolivar, Ohio. Le Perouse snatched hia 2. Rome, Italy. d hat from hia 3. Though George Washington faultless peruke. So did Le Pants was born February 11, Dagelet' Both gentlemen bowed actually 1731, it became February 22, 1732, from the hips, deeply, amazedly. shift to the The lady greeted them to French, through Englands calendar 'in 1752. with e slight hesitation and a tiny Gregorian 4. Id est. accent of Castilian that the gentle5. Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michimen found delightfuL KILLS INSECTS Rnd Wisconsin. gan AU through the dinner, which, 6. In 1917 the gas was sold to FRUITS ON riOWERS though strange to their palates, they users for $2,000 a VEGETARLES A SHRURS relished, they watched La Gobema- cubic foot, and now the price is dora to surprise. The deference, one cent Dtmund ariflMl Mala per cubic foot, their obvious curiosity told the lady tottln, trmm ytmr rtailar 7. At first the company charged of their admiration with every look JlVT e for eacj, letter, and and gesture, S thouh ,h WM , jj later the charge was reduced to to with things sey things bursting $2.50. which must be said she played 8. Approximately 90 per cent of foe part of ths Lady Governor with all under-watSALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY movies made in dignity and chaste smiles, keeping this country are taken at Silver a wifely alienee while her lord and Oar lobby to Betlghttany Fla., because of the master made speech with his Springs, of cooled iartag that clearness the water which elimguests. inates camera difficulties. Radio Hr ffvarr Room But when the Governor and his 9. Greenville, Ga. 00 Ra around chairs guests pulled their 10. The Treasury department has the open fire. La PerouM began recently authorized newspapers speaking. and other publications to print pic"Ws have been here to your Cali- tures States postage le Monsieur few but fornia t he hours, "and have al- stampsofforUnited first time In histhe said, Gouveraeur," Formerly prohibited because ready met many surprises. First It tory. was a surprise to find the place. of possible aid to counterfeiters, What fogsl Is the weather this way the pictures were made possible by an act of congress sponsored aU the time? And then the whalesl X did not know smelled by stamp collectors. Only Pofi they HOTEL reproductions are so badly, when they blow that beaumitted. tiful geyserl It is a very bad perfume. Pedro Fages laughed defensively. ffilw H.SOfof J.OO High Explosives We do not smell that ashore here. Thffi Hotel Taapln The velocity of explosions valm kuitataMe Le Gobemadora smiled. Mllhly d Will If Mils AMIv Gasoline-ai- r ries tremendously. Very often, shs murmured softphf.Y itt mixtures, when ignited by a ly to French. wave . an produce explosive sharp-lylooked spark, her at far nteabwl ky thin fcatal la, Tbs Governor with a speed of approximately 30 HIGHLY MCOMMBNDKD niTNT while and a Van aw afan awaateu why a feet second, It Is to be laughed. I Perouse on the other hand, ICs mar dUUmettn to hoped not, be replied to foe same troglycerine, at HHa taastflal SaaSeirratae with a vedetonation a generate tongue. ERNEST secC ROSS1TER, Mgr. locity of about 25,000 feet a (TO BE COSTIXUED) ond. Collier's Weekly. HF ALL ht Strange Facts I I ... ... Jlsk Me Another 1 long-boa- The Governor Seised the Count's Hand Gratefully. social pleasures of foe presidio; foe clam bakes and foe dances, the gossip with other women of the colony. Sometimes in the midst of some simple gaiety she would pause, and her mind would grope as though to remember something. Then aha would recall her grievance, and withdraw into herself. California! Here she was, after two years! And she had vowed she would be in Mexico City before that! She would wring her hands helplessly. There was nothing to da Nowhere to turn. Junipero Serra she shuddered. He was In his grave. And Nicolas Soler, with his wild dreams of the governorship, had slowly but surely gone blind and returned to Mexica 8urely, all who had crossed Junipero Serra suffered. often sho And Indizuela . . looked at the girl lissome, brown, mysterious, who served her master the Governor, like a dog, and wondered. Something might be done there . . But days, months, years slipped by, and nothing happened. Nothing happened to Eulalia. She sat in front of her mirror and Manned her black tresses for silver threads, frowning, with a sick fear ... y; Idaho nez, commanding two Spanish frigates, the old San Carlo and foe Princess, that lay to the Bay of Monterey, saw two lofty ships loom out of the fog for e moment, before disappearing. Then they were reported by a lookout on shore, ana ell day watchers saw them glide like phantom ships out of the mists. At night they disappeared entirely. Morning brought sunshine, end a closer view of the ships. Dim Pedro ordered Don Esteban to send out two pilots, and watched the little pilot boat put out toward ths drift- VY A dt She has won him over, our beautiful Gobemadora whispered tho women happily. Grselas a Dios! But the men glowered at the domestic scene, and muttered, Shs has wan, the sorrel Then sU uncovered and knelt hastily as the bells began tolling for the passing of Junipero Serra. Both men and women were wrong. A few days later a small package and a letter were brought to the Governor. It waa the last letter Junipero Serra had written, to be opened after his death. And the package . . . Pedro Fages opened it before ho opened the letter. Ho found a small square of grayish-brow- n cloth, coarse and worn thin, made into a scapular. He did not need Francisco Palous accompanying note to tell him what it was, but held it in his hands a moment, then opening the throat of his leather jerkin, slipped the scapular around his neck by its cord until the blessed scrap of Junipero Serra' robe rested on the strong arch id his breast Then he picked up the letter and read the opening words, My be. " loved son It was obviously the letter of of very sick man; one at the point death. The thought rambled; the sentences staggered up- - and downhill Ho spoke of hours they bad of spent together on the mareh,Matblack heaps, little hundred the tered the length of California which they had had been camp-fire- s shared. "If I had been a soldier, or you a at one point, priest, he had written you bet"I could have understood could not ter. Pedro my son, but I have loved you more. the GovDuring all tho perusal with ernor's eyes had been filled times had many he so that tears, to dry them- - But at the last paraa flash of rage dried the heart-breakin- g Caste " m SUA litas - From Franca came Marie Jean Paul Roch Yves Guilbert Motier, Marquis da La Fayette, general end statesman. Two years and a month later two ships sailed grandly into the Bay of Monterey, es whales frisked and blew around them. France wee wondering about America . . . thoughtful about whet country lay weat of that nation visited by the Marquis deLa Fayette. Dreaming, perhaps, that another empire might lie beyond the mountains and Inland seas, foe desert and plains, weat of foe mighty Father of Waters. So His Most Christian Majesty Louis XVI of France sent two ships around the world, to visit California, under foe leadership of on accomplished Mientlst and gallant gentlemen, the Comte Jean Francois Galaup de La Perouie. It happened one gray morning to September that Don Esteban Marti- rs at her heart But events marched, nevertheless, graph around the lady. And though ihe '"When all else had fallen away waa unaware of them, their influreached her, penetrated her from me." said the faithful wife ence defenres. your that had hoped Eulalia Cells da Fagea found the could accomplish talk together white hair she had feared finding, impossible. In our he oud set her teeth, pulled it then wept she had promised that on her husband's breast in tho gubintercede with for the founding of tne ernatorial bed. And the Governor smiled, and liked it S.ta Barbara. bavem.de no Pedro Fages went about long dehas failed, for you not Dot. Eulais and plans tor sign. And that tried. I had layedmission to Santa Barbara, and ha she for fault lia's foe when listen to her still another, Mission La Purlsima. hoped you would ahetoid you the message! have wrote scathing diatribes on foe He in lent; of my truat, and confidence laziness, bestiality, gambling, profand Immorality of a little but ligacy El Pueblo da Nuestra Sonora Governor read no furtherhand In his do Porcluneula U Heins ds Los Ancrumpling the letter Ha fUn which the natives called Los went toeek hi wife. d geles, crude cr,dle' the over (The diatribes did no Angeles. leaning a trrtalnmmnI w NEW SB (DUSE lhl' n a silenes so that no one had dared disturb n,'Jknew how far- - or where. h. ?,ed with mly hii companion. But ho was seen, a sloof, bleak crags; sometimes .long walking. one hand tugging his beard, the ,cl5nched him, the horse following with bent neck, cropping at the scant grasses; or riding furiously with tho wind. On the night of tho christening, Gobemadora took her to her bed and did not riae from it for days, defending herself from the Governor's black mood and despair with a fever that burned her hollow-eyeThe people of the Presidio of San Frenelcso trod softly during the crises of their Governor and his lady. The women whispered, askance, In comers, and took the part of La Gobemadora in her attitude toward her huaband. But the men remained silent, or cursed softly when the ladys name was mentioned. As though to mock Don Pedro, when the news of the Padre Preai-dentdeath arrived, the day was clear, sparkling, as sometimes the days are in the San Francisco country, ia late August sad early September. When he received the message, Dob Pedro weat straight to La Gobemadora' room for the first time ia days, sad stood before her formally, He is dead, he said curtly. Eulalia closed her eyes. Still tho Governor stood sileotly, awaiting some word from his wife. After a while shs opened her eyes. I am sorry, she said softly. 'It must be a relief to you to know that it is over. She tried to sit upright "Will you help me? she asked. 1 think I should like to get up today. It la the flrat time I have seen the sun for such a long time." 1 win eaU Angustlas . . . No, please. You can wrap ma la a coyer, and carry ms outside, if you win. He bundled her into a quilt and took her in his arms without altering his expression. Light as a child aha was. as he carried her outdoors, and into the golden sunlight Servants hurried with chairs, Angustlas followed with the baby. Then the people of the presidio were amazed to see the Governor, in his arms, sithis youngest-bor- n ting quietly beside his lady, taking Z C Virginia BUvara Bartlett WXU Servlet of material. If contrasting 8err, he was already bur- collar is wanted, it requires frL the hour5, thatthathe h,d yard. had laid' an Pattern Book. embitred farewell to Francisco Send 15 cents for the Barbara :.VVin throuh the rain to the of his dying brother, tho Gov-iBell Spring and Bummer Pattern Spring-Summ- oTvontereyUrW.To CEW J inconsistently with good.) On a bright sunny day to. August where lay hi. little daughter. about the time that Eulalia 1784, he Roughly PulkdJE!jJi,liJ!? to her California flower, and birth Infant gave from the there was a great hubbub to foe to towh that harbor of New York city. AU foe "You have no right ha laid, his taw working notables of ths new nation were et hand to greet a distinguished visilowl the tor. who, with a love for the young than woman, lower face to her country to hia young heart, had hand pyi.H put both back. traveled acrosa the ocean to pay a s she staggered of congratulation. There were visit it? is What "What do you mean? congressional nubile receptions, Washington extendWhat has happened?'' Georg honors. letter the Pedro Fages stretched the hospitality of Mount Vernon Bead it read every ed toward her guest. the to " word te God-forsak- three-corner- gold-lace- half-ounc- er black-and-whi- te Temple Square t |