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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Plunkett Greets Japanese Admiral at New York Daddys GIRLHOOD TO Mveiii& MOTHERHOOD Fairy Tale BONNER MARY GRAHAM COM.OI tv HMTSfAFfl FAIRY YBABS MUSIC - Y'bah was very fond' of music. Is was she "who . le.d the fairi She had. long black hair nnd. she wore a silver crown, with .a silver Fi?'y " ' the front.. . . he carried .a little' silver wand .wi-a silver stdr at the end- and .with ' tl'Tfc wand-.shkept time for the fairies" orchestra. " . . ' They 'Were going to give. a ball In' ' of course Fairyland that night-anthe Queen of the Fairies, wanted tiring her Fairy Ybab 'to' come-an- star In e orchestra. And . of course ..." ' nothing delighted Fairy Ybab.inore than to play for a .. . . . Fairyland hull'.. . The ..hall at took place promptly Pear Admiral C. I, Plunkett, ciminutndnni .of ttie Brooklyn- .'navy yard, ' hoarding tlie Japanese cruiser. eight .oclock, just as' the .night shadAsnuia to pay Ins respects to Hear Admiral O.sanii Nogano of .the Japanese training squadron' which arrived In ows .were beginning to dance,, too. ' New Y ork. . .Fairy Ybab was right on. time with ' her orchestra and .oh. the- music that . . J4,J5lt5' they played.! ' ' all tunes In latest the They played Sunstruck Hen Lays Fairylahd 'musical circles. One time was called Uoo.dlandi and Two Eggs' aT a Time It 'sounded like the woods in the after. Market! ltasen, England. The noon 'gentle 'breezes, blowing, the suit latest method of getting liens tO shining through the frees-anmaking them with sun- lay .is to nlllu--. s'ueli beautiful shining colors through stroke. . : the dark 'pines and tlie lighter greens. F. Parker of. tills city lias, a 'I-was a It iilu.de tune. hen uffected-bsunwhich was .4. ; everyone feel Vo happy and there was stroke when about a mouth old. .) a gay, guy dance rhythm to if that . . . Since it has grown up. if has .P.ut-wiiall these qualifications for made all the- - fairies .feel "as though been hrying-l-w- o a time at Youth Coasts of ij 'eggs College a .career of civil engineering atnl Jhe.v had never known anything so an average of four lays a week business', .Truehlood' (unitd, ami lie If and on two-- . occasions has laid Forging 300 in . Larger .lovely fis .this Woodland mu'sic. claim's the cause'bf his downfall. w;is . .Fairy Y'bnb. had, tumle it up lierself.; . tiiree. Cities of Country. . the big storm of 'last. year tlint washed She. imd just felt Inspired it. on-i- , other" the hens .Recently inflated values off Florida 'real es ' . . she ' the roost requited .this' infringe- Ore. Leroy W. True-blood, Portland, late. Then they played a tune called inent'of union rules and began college a beautiIn real' bail been Fields, and it .I "Sunny estat.e the" dickering ben. attacking Mj. .Parker graduate, claims to have. traveled ' . ful tune, 'top. for several months ..' " " ' lie said, (recordnthsepiira-telien In the the the United States from, widely during It . tire in 'the like and' had Increased 'fields ing er soupded police, hens and since then she has last eight mouths, and to have left a '' late summer afternoon's when there is With my. pile from $;!IH)-t'.been laying'll and 32 trail of bogus, cheeks, 'which he esti I . . . option on a piece mated number 200 and total $7, .Mm that took a eggs a week. g ! f in face value, so the Portland police of iieeiui front property 210 feet .long and 100 feet wide,, which wiis u part declare. . . lie related tils tale at police bead of the estate of Mrs. Richard D quarters, wliereho was questioned by.' Crriker,- widow, of ttie Lost Frisco Records leader, near Palm Pencil. The storm mid Mulligan Inspectors came the and. during Turn Up. in Lima, Peru period after lie Imd been urrested In u local I lie price of the land fell 'so suddeiilv hotel. As he told the story, lie shift San Francisco. The .Examiner ed nervously from foot to foot ns lie llmt I was tumble to unload my option says a ' large . number of manu1 was and 'wiped out, for the $0,400 Stood beside bis two suitcases In believed, to he official records bad Invested vvas only 10 per cenLJ'f scripts which tie claims to have a wardrobe rrf the city of San Franciscd which the price of' the land. which cost him $2, 0(H). The prisoner have been jnissing for more, than .a I found myself with only $00 In. Bays he lived In Elizabeth City, N. C. half century have been founil in Lima. until 1922, then moved to Miami, Fla. my pockets, nnd t he land game was Peru. . . . went to Baltimore After outwitting business men mul dead In Florida. The find was made known here by. and became broke. P.elng hungry, 'I Sendrita bankers and keeping clear of law 'ofNoenil- Beneditti, . who Is a wrote check for ficers for eight months, Truehlood, son $2 and ate. Then In a convent In San .Francisco. teaching another nnd another .nnd so on, keep of an army otilcer, fell Into the hands According to- her story, the They Played All the Latest Tunes. of .officers through the vigilance of liig n record of every person to whom newspaper 'says, the records were fid ward Drake, credit man for J. K. I gave a bogus check. For two months so much noise from little bees and about to be dumped Into a river Cill company, who had cashed a . I kept records of my victims, then, when alid other active, buzzing were hey by recognized worthless cheek for $25, drawn on the because It was so long, I threw It a Insects. ' as possibly being of.hls-torlepasserby I In looked First National bank of Portland, two away. my victims always ' And it almos't seemed as value. The p'asserby bought, . though the eye, told n hold story and showed days before. when Ybab's orchestra, played of the for $40. vvagonload papers 'Fairy I so that my forged credentials, was Bad Checks Mark Trail. The papers are believed to be those this Junp that you could see the never suspected. I started small, bub If the story the debonair and hand . daisies and the gold enroll and wrote bigger checks as I went, many which .were carried away 'by Parry some Truehlood Is alleged to have tiilil sweet ferns and the hay and the Francisco the San who Melggs, alderman, of them over $25.. in 1854 absconded with $250,000' obthe Inspectors Is true, he Is wanted In sunshine over them all.. Banker One of Victims; In tained' by forging city' warrants. Then they played d tune called the United nearly every large city Stntes and many small ones. At Eureka, Calif., Truehlood says, Meiggs went-to- ' Periil where he .built "Deep Blue Night, and. it vvas a . lie gave the vice president- of the the Central Trnnsandlno railroad over' glorious tune for. waltzing. Truehlood declares lie attended the It. sounded like the deep blueness University of North Carolina two First National bank n bogus check t he Andes mountains and accumulated a fortune of more than of the sky at night, and now and years. Five years of college life had for $100 after be bad 101(1 the 'hanker He made restitution of the again lovely jittle notes tinkled higher prepared Truehlood for a career ns h lie. was a government employee on a took away, but never returned than the" rest of the tune that made .nil civil engineer, and the degree of bach geodetic survey boat then In the har; sum-li. . . to this country. the fairies think of little stars peepelor of science which Poston College bor. of Technology was to bestow upon When arrested Truehlood produced ing out here and there in the blue ' n telegram that lie sent to himself him was pending one year of aeluai night sky. Finds Ruins of And it wits such a quiet, exquisite English; from Huge ne, Ore., to Portland. The practice In the civil engineering field, telegram was signed "It. O, OBrine." according to his statement. .Gold Rush in 157.5 tune.. It made them all feel so happy and peaceful and as though they loved, and said: "If possible- be present Mute reminders of an alChicago'. the whole, world so much and the orTuesday- night. Prepare a short talk most- forgotten gold rusti of- 250 years chestra so much and the music so on Potter Pond Movement." ago, .which came to. naught, but in much and Fairy Ybah so much that vvas Just a fake, Truehlood "Tli at which Queen Elizabeth nnd many 'of Dogs Raincoat Must " so the .they, could hardly hold ujl the love said, sent Ir Ungland's wealthy, noblemen were Inpolice allege. Match That of Owner to myself so could identify myself volved, have been found In the frozen tiiey felt. . Oil, it was one of' ttie loveliest bails music-hal- l when I cashed my chocks. I used that artist.-.jParis. A Are-.ti- c North by, (lie ever .held. In Fairyland. . They played method frequently. dressed by Jeanne Lanvin lias expedition of the Field museum, gay,' merr.v music,, arid ; they, ' played f set the fashion In Paris of ' Truehlood has Ills own t.lieory ot. William Duncjin "Strong, 'anthropolomusic Ihnt made you think lonely, matching her dog's raincoat, to. j crime. gist of tiie expedition, reported to the lonely-- thoughts u'nd then own. her they would . "Nobody wants to go wrong, and museum. music again. gay play 5 The Idea has made a lilt In everybody would love to reimburse The .report stated that 'the explorKveryone in. Fairyland said' that where a wet summer js Paris, those who lost to them If pnssilde, ers discovered the ruins of the. house, had never henrd the music . so J! made the raincoat everybody's they lie is quoted by the police us mining pits and Improvised shipyard constant companion. White sat- - $ "I knew all ' the lime that I saying lovely as it had been that night, nnd. would of Sir Martin. Frobisher, who, berlie Fairy Queen was delighted. . In raincoats are the smartest . get caught, but I coiildn't stophno tween 1570 und' 1578,. Jed tiiree ex. Fut above all. Fairy Yhali was deof the new season. ' Dog's np jjj to keep 'going to. keep from getting peditions, two lor. gold, into t he refor site loved her music better it parel, therefore, ts often white. lighted picked lit), and to keep going had t,, ' ' titan anything in the 'world. The ultrafaslilonnble .canine ? write more cheeks. So. there you are! gions of Labrador and Paliin Land. lu After the ruins, digging fragments has his name painted on bis 4 What can I do? of. brick, plasier, coal nnd porcelain slicker. Or If the name Is too Separating Each Other' To- bankers and business men. True were unearthed by Doctor .Strong,, H1 big for the dog there Is an In and Cordon are cousins and Arthur blood points a lesson In thrift; which tie said' undoubtedly were inttlul at either side. J to Inclined flgli.t with each other "Never- trust anybody until you're disputable proof that t he ruins are of grandmother's repented warn-- ' sure they are all right. ait and native Uuropean habitations. ings. . Hearing a commotion outside morning, she hurried to the tain the transformation of the Island. door to find ttie youngsters clutching Perhaps next spring will disclose the each other , and rolling about on the rolling oiean whore Bogoslof once porch. . ... smoked, or a larger and newer area "Boys, boys," she scolded, how can of latid. you fight like .this after what you . . . promised ine? of the of tlielr favor protest hurtling Rick Mass In Bering Sea on Fire We wiizift fightin, Gramma, proite home. Tlielr roaring- was audible Oak Where Wesley Began and May Pop Like Giant tested Gordon as the culprits hastily for' six mill's. Firecracker. Crusade Is Blown Down straightened up. We wuzn't fightin Thousands of sea birds,, generally Winchelsea, Sussex, England. The atall; we wu' Jest tryin' to sep-ratresting on the rocks of Bogoslof. Dutch harbor, Alaska. Smoking swarmed in the air about the island famous oak tree under which John each other." like an inferno, Bogoslof Island, Per There was a discoloration In the Wesley, English divine, preached dur lng sea. Is In a mess of fire and steam Afraid of Hitting Habit water and a distinct odor ing the early days of his crusade out surrounding with every Indication that It Is ready of in t he air Joe had just come At night the of which Methodism grew, has been sulphur to pop like a giant firecracker, accord heavens reflected the Inferno somefrom his playmate, a girl about blown down. away lng to reports brought here by th; where In the center of the Island. a year older. His troubled features A storm, which raged along the steamship William Tupper. Seattle showed he had a serious problem on Bogoslof Island Is 25 miles north channel felled the which tree recently, bound from Bethel. of the western end of Unnlaska Island stood near the he volunteered the exchapel erected here to his mind and The vessel ventured within three and situated in liering sou It disapplanation of the situation. his memory. miles of the Island, a course followed peared many years ago, and then re 1 dont want to get in the habit," by few ships. he said, of Ruth Spencer hitting nte. appeared when the submarine volcano The whole rocky mass- seemed to lie beneath It became active again. Soap Cures Blindness Smoke and steam Issued Since 1!)10 it lias been gradually St. Joseph, Mo Uarl Sears is able blazing. That Foamy Brine continually from every part of the is moling off until sea lions, seals anil to see out of Ids left eye now after don't want to go In bathing Elsie land and numerous Inge flame-re'water birds found refuge on the having been blind 20 years. Recently now. nutninm. cracks were discernible through the rocky shores. But no vegetal ion ever Sears was washing his face and soapMolher Why not. dear? marine glasses. obtained a foothold on the suds got into Ills left eye. He washed (Elsie (pointing to tiie surf) SomeCountless huge sea lions were In land. out the soap, to Cud the useless eye body else has been In and hasn't empthe water off the Island, roaring in The coming of winter fogs may cur ( ns good as ever. tied tiie soapsuds out yet ' - t t t S '. to-d- sp-id- twenty-four-year-ol- to-th- full-siz- e 20-da- - - , 20-da- y . . Quit.e. frequently the serviceman Is called in to give his views' on .he failure of .a home built 'tuned' set to afford volume and selectivity. Often this can be traced to the grid returns of one or .more of. the PF coils or the 'detector coil sec' ondary. being-- run to' ttie wrong filar merit lead. There is. 9 quick way lip on the former, if tl.ie set Is the usual type, using 90 volts .of B buttery, potential oq the plates ofull amplifier .tubes and 45 volls on the detector tube with a .4 V& volt negative bias on the 'grids.. It Is to insert a 0!5U scale rnilliammeter in the wire running from (lie uega-.tiv- e terminal of the "B 'battery to .the commoh A" and "B" .battery con' nection. If all Is well, the deflection of on the meter will indi-catthat a current of i7 mils or less When a greater amount of current is 'being consumed, first see that the polarity of.. the "(J bau'e'ry .is correct, and' that its positive ter. mlnal '.is connected 'to the negative "A" .lead. Next,. insp.esX I lie set and. make .sure that the PF amplifier grid to the negative returns side of the filament circuit and- that those'of the audio tubes are run to tiie negative battery terminal'. If a 201-A- ' type tube is' being us'ed as detector, .it should lia've a positive grid return, and If the detector .is' of t he. 2(10 or 200-A- " type,- the- grid return should lie negative. Tlia rnilliammeter reading of about 17 mils,, as 'mentioned 'above, vyill hold godd for storage battery operated sets that do not' use- power tubes,- as these .tubes will require higher .B and C.' 'voltages and draw 'a greater amount of plate current. . Sets using' ' tabes wiLI Various types of ' dry-cell draw slightly less. ; . . owners of 'factory .tuatle sets nre' replacing their type 201-.tubes Iff the detector with' the type 200-stage, and are . neglecting, to change, tiie grid Teturn. This is a point that inusf be watched if the nejv tubes are. To. function properly. If ever you hear a set owner complaining that a spe: dal detector 'is 'not .performing as; it shbujd, check' up on:tlie,grid return' before going to any 'further trouble. radio-frequenc- y audio-amplifi- e - - - - - . al - . $100,-000,00- - . - t - . Pinkhair.s Vegetable Vinton, Iowa-teen years- old . .' 'Aside When I was seven had to stay a home from school. I finally had to quit school, .1 was so weak. I suffered for about two years before I took Lydia I E. Bix Pinkhams Vege- children, and I have-- taken it before each one wras- born. I; cannot tell you. all the good' I have received from it.. When I am not as can be'I take it. I have been doing this for over thirteen years and it al- .ways. helps me. I read all of yOur little books I can get and I tell everyone I. know what the Vegetable Compound does for me. Mrs. Frank- Sellers, 510 7th Avenue, Vinton; Iowa. Many girls in the fourth generation are learning through their own personal experiences the beneficial effects of Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Mothers who took it when they were young are .glad to recommend it to their daughters.. For over half a century, women have praised this reliable medicind. - . l Boschee's Syrup has been relieving coughs for slxty-on- a years.- due- colds ' ' Soothes the Throat loosens the phlegm, promotes expecto- ration, gives a go.od nights rest fre from coughing.' 3.0c and 90c. bottles. Buy it at your drug store. G. G. Green, ' ' Jn'c.,' Wood.Bury, N. J. . ' For Pipe Sores, Fistula, Poll Evil Hanfords Balsam of Myrrh . Money back for first bottle if not suited. ,AU dealers. Personal Favor Ilow. about a- reference? . ; Boss Youll get a 'better job without the Id' give you. Smith . ; ' . Weekly, Sydney." .. Clerk- (leaving) - i - The Mean Thing f Mrs. Small "1 believe' I shall' have to give up bridge. .Mrs. Sharp . Isht the game worth the . Volume Use-ToeuMuc- ' table Compound, then. I picked up one of your books and read it. I began taking the medicine. Now I am a housekeeper with Really? Most Radio. Listeners' Com- pound Always Helpful . 1 - Iowa Woman Found Lydia E. ' How Radio Service Man Puts Action in Sets .altering the receiving conditions', the volume .of the loudspeaker rendition may be lowered. so as to make' tiie static background less ' conspicuous. 1'n fact, most Tadio listeners, do employ, too niuch volume. 'The Average, fiidio receiver hqs a satisfactory volume control that may be employed in r v'olume' to reducing the the desired degree, .to drop out Jhe static background. not provided with If .the. receiver-ia Volume control, then a variable 'high resistance of. at least 0 to 250,000 ohm range may be connected across the secondary of the first audio 'transformer as an 'effective' and nondisfrom loud-speake- ' How to Make.Money 'One way of making money is to lose $100 on- a deal instead of going Into' court about it. Atchison Globe;' ' The formulae. used by the Egyptians to color bronzes are . still used by French, British arid American mints, an .electro-chemiasserts. Selfish people are enough to keep .their themselves; not selfish troubles to s torting volume-control- Turning the filaments bf. the re ceiver up or down, does not constitute an efficient volutpe control.. It should be noted that filaments must be operated at the 'proper voltage a.t all times, irrespective 'of the volume desired. . Dimmed filaments may. result In 'severe distortion,-whilexcessively lighted filaments shorten the life of fubes. 1 Pavvson-MacMilla- . . . ; J J the-othe- r VOLCANO BLAST IS LIKELY TO SINK THE ISLAND OF BOGQSLOF . e Four-year-ol- 1 new-hor- i Power Speaker Part of Equipment for Radios ".It is evident from a survey of tne new radii equipment for the year that the. term'- loud .speaker is somewhat antiquated. Tiie newer form, and the more modern, is "power speaker. Tiii's is .outgrowth of 'Increased interest .and' experimentation .in power equipiiient for radios; These power speakers nre all that the name inipiies. They involve the. use of the most approved typb of speaker unit in combination with power amplifiers operated directly from tiie electric light circuit. Usually they nre a cone type. s"pcaker, although in the equipment the appearance of the cone1 may he submerged because of the form of the cabinet or box' in which the combined amplifier and speaker is housed.- - ' To Find Natural Wave Length of an Antenna To find the approximate natural wave length of. an antenna, add the and the length of the antenna, lead-iground wire arid multiply the total For exlength by one and one-halample, an antenna 120 feet long, with a ground wire, has a total length of 145 feet. Multiplying this figure by 1.5 gives the natural wave In meters, which, In this case. Is 217.5 meters. n 25-fo- For the LeacLin Insulator Instead of drilling a hole through the sash or window casing, or even In the glass, which usually defaces the cut building, to bring In the lead-in- , a strip of wood the width of the window r.nd two or tiiree Incites high The beard can be easily drilled to place a porcelain Insulator and then set on the sill under the sash. Why do so many, many babies' of .today escape all the little fretful spells and Infantile ailments that used to' worry mothers through the day, 'and keep them up half the night?If you don't know the. answer, you haven't discovered pure, harmless It is sweet to the taste, and Sweet In the little stomach. And Its gentle influence seems felt all through the tiny system. Not even a distasteful dose of castor oil does so mucli Cas-tori- good. Fletchers. Castoria Is purely Vege-- " .table, so you may give it freely, at first sign of colic; or. constipation; or diarrhea. Or those many times when' you just dont know what is the matter. For real sickness, call the doc- tor, always. At other times, a few drops of Fletcher's Castoria. "The doctor often tells you to do Just that; and always says Fletcher's. Other preparations may be just as pure, just as free from dangerous drugs, but why experiment? Besides, the book on care and feeding of babies that comes with Fletcher's Castoria Is worth Its weight in gem ! Children Cry for - |