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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH MEU OF VEIGHT IN THE NATIONS BELOW THE LINE In the assassination of President Cerro, Little Colonel of Peru," the world witnessed the exit of another Intensely dramatic character from the political amphitheater of South America. Of all the soldiers and dictators who have strutted their brief moment In that changing pageant, none was more colorful In temperament and background than the fallen President. A short, swart soldier and leader of forlorn hopes, he carried in his veins the blood of both the Inca race that built a mighty empire while Europe was still struggling through the Middle ages, and the daring conquistn-dore- s who looted, then toppled that empire Into the dust. His accession to the presidency In 19r!0 was a double victory. It lifted to power not only a repressed political party but a representative of the race which white conquerors had doomed to centuries-Ion- g obscurity. No South American title, however, exceeds In charm and Implication that of Juan Vicente Gomes, venerable President of Venezuela, widely known as The nappy Dictator. But that's only one of his sobriquets. He is also The Patriarch and The ueen Annes Lace By Frances Parkinson Keyes Sanches? One of the outstanding Gomez accomplishments consisted of shattering an odd tradition that all battles must be fought on Tuesday, the Day of Mars. As a military leader he sent his troops into battle on whatever day seemed propitious which to enemy troops, disturbed at their slestns, seemed as unsportsmanlike as It proved disastrous. The Happy Dictator is not only a statesman and a warrior, but a movie fan as well. lie likes to grin at apostles of the Merry Heart He also Blood and Iron likes progress. seems to him an outmoded slogan. Instead he has given Venezuela the a philosomotto Peace and Work phy of government which might be adopted with profit by many nations in both the Old world and the New. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold by druggists in tablets or liquid. Adv. Vanished Has Jones an automo- Sparker bile? Carker Not a bit of It. He hit a telegraph pole yesterday. , Doctors Give Creosote For Chest Colds For many years our best doctors have prescribed creosote in some form for coughs, colds and bronchitis, knowing how dangerous It is to let them hang on. Creomulsion with creosote and six other highly important medicinal elements, quickly and effectively stops coughs and colds that otherwise might lead to serious trouble. Creomulsion Is powerful In the treatment of colds and coughs, yet it Is absolutely harmless and Is pleasant and easy to take. Tour own druggist guarantees Creomulsion by refunding your money If you are not relieved after taking Creomulsion as directed. Beware the cough or cold that hangs on. Always keep Creomul-slo-n on hand for instant use. (adv.) Frances Parkinson Keyes down over her mouth and nose, tightly, tightly, oblivion the only mercy she sought if It could last forever. If It only could, her last conscious prayer. Her consciousness returned In waves. She babbled, telling secrets she did not mean to divulge, and yet unable to be SYNOPSIS Disappointed, through her Inability to put finishing touches to her costume (or a dance Anne Chamberlain is irritated by the stolidity si her escort, George Hildreth. At the dance a visitor fa the community, Neal Conrad young lawyer, is impressed by Anne preceding her fine character. A (ew days later she accompanies him and his hostess, Mrs. Griffin cm a picnic. At the end o! the day Neal declares his love aad they become engaged. The marriage Is solemnized. At Washington on their honeymoon the Conrads meet Clarence Hathaway friend of Neal'e, young diplomat. The young couple start housekeeping. Annes health begins to fall. Neal, engrossed in politics does not notice. She realizes she is to bs a mother. While Neal is away Anns has a visit 'from an old friend, Mr. Goldenburg. CHAPTER VI silent She felt bruised and beaten, she longed to be left to die In peace and-sti- ll they kept doing things to her. things that disturbed her, things that hurt her. If they would only go away ! She cried, weakly, the tears dropping down from her cheeks to the pillow, and yet she could not move to wipe them off, and no one else seemed to notice them. Then suddenly, Neal was there beside her, kissing the tears away; and between them on the bed, lay their little son. Continued 15 Mr. Goldenburg, disengaging his hand, walked over to the telephone. There Is a doctor In Hinsbore, I suppose hein? he asked sarcastically. Doctor Pratt? So led me see vat Is e his number Yes, CHAPTER VII In the next eight years, Neal built seven-thirty-fiv- yes. Doctor Pratt was In, he would be over, he said, right away. And, In the scant half hour that elapsed before his appearance, Mr. Goldenburg proceeded to tidy things up with a dexterity and a swiftness remarkable In so j)lump and placid a person. Then with complete composure he admitted the surprised physician, still wearing one of Annes aprons firmly tied about his waist. Doctor Pratt was not long In rendering his verdict There must be regular care and skilled treatment without delay. Annes condition was not dangerous, but he could not venture to describe It as otherwise than serious. Would she rather be moved to a hospital, or have a nurse and maid Installed? And of course her husband must be advised at once. It was useless for Anne to protest; Doctor Pratt spoke, brusquely, about the danger to the baby, when she tried to do so. Appealingly, she turned to Mr. Goldenburg. Do you suppose. If you telegraphed Mabel, she would come and stay with me? I wouldnt know where to get a maid, or what to do with her afterwards. But Mabel Mabel is my best friend, she explained to the doctor, except Mr. and Mrs. Goldenburg. Weve often planned that she should come and visit me, but somehow Then she Why not telephone? could get here sooner. Mr. Goldenburg was already In action again. Without much difficulty, he located Mabel, and Mabel said that she would be delighted to come, that she would be there In the morning. The doctor departed, promising to send around a nurse at once; and, within an hour, the nurse materialized. And leaving her to bathe the patient and make her bed, Mr. Goldenburg sought at first Mrs. Simmons, next Mrs. Conrad, and finally catching the last train to Belford Neal. . Anne never knew exactly what he said to any of them ; she was. In fact, too til to Inquire, or to care, for several weeks. But, as those weeks dragged their slow course through, she became vaguely and comfortably conscious, sick as she was, that she was happier than she had been In a long, long time. Mabel arrived. Miss Keep, the nurse, waited on her by inches. Neal came home looking very much cowed, badly frightened all the gay the driving energy, wiped from his face. He brought her flowers the first he had given her since her honeymoon, and sat down beside her on the bed, his shoulders sagging, and tried to talk to her, but couldnt because his voice shook so. At first, that Is afterwards he collected himself and spoke better. But not until she had seen how shaken he was, how sorry and. forgiving him, forgot there was anything to forgive. By the first of April, Anne was sufficiently better so that Miss Keep could leave, Mabel caring for her since now she did not need so much care and doing the housework, too. By the first of May she was up for a little while each day. The session of the legislature was over, and Neal was home again for good, home, that Is, until another election at least he had decided to run for office again then, this time for the state senate. He was very kind to her. very thoughtful. The first of June, Mabel went home, leaving them alone again, and they were very happy. Anne did quantities of sewing, sitting on the little porch ; she trimmed a bassinet with pink silk and white dotted muslin and lace which the Goldenburgs sent her, she lined a little 'wicker chest of drawers with scented tiny flannel pads, she feather-stitchepetticoats and hemstitched tiny muslin dresses. Mrs. Simmons did the wishing and Ironing and the cleaning, and Ieal took care of the garden ; but except for this help, she did her own work again. Annes baby was born In the Hins-borhospital on a torrid night near the end of August She was In labor hours. When the docfor thirty-sitor began to lve her whiffs of ether to take ofT the sharp edge of the pains, Neal, who had stayed with her up to that time, became deathly sick from the smell of It and left her. When Doctor Pratt finally held the. ether cone to her face, telling her to breathe as much as she wanted of It, she anatched It from him, and ulled it and found out about NR Tablets (Natures Remedy). Now she gets miserable along fine with everybody. This safe, dependlaxative brought quick relief able, and quiet nerves because it cleared her system of poisonous wastes made bowel action easy and regular. Thousands take NR dai y. Its such a sure, pleasant corrective. Mild, At your druggist's 25c. "TUMS kcanburaOnly lOcT Tired, Nervous, Rundown Read what Mrs. N. Try-o- n of 741 N. Gould SL, says: Wyo., Sheridan, Some years ago I was in I n condition. a was terribly nervous and headhad such awful aches. I was weak, every effort became a burden. I used Dr. Pierce's Favorand it, ite Prescription built me up just fine. Write to Dr. Pierce's Clinic. Buffalo. N. Y. New size, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00. Large W. Do Our Port. size. tabs, or liquid, $1.35. d PARKERS BALSAM HAIR Hair Dandroff Removes Stops Falling Imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c and tl .00 at Druggists, fliscox Chem. Wks..Patchogue.N.Y, Ideal for use in FLORESTON SHAMPOO connection with Parker'sHairBalsam.Makes the a. hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail oratdrug-gistHiscox Chemical Works. Patchogue, N.Y. o x PIMPLES HEALED Skin made clearer, smoother, finer, the easy Resiool way. For free sample of WNU-- W 634 up his law practice, which continued to grow, not Indeed ,by leaps and bounds, but steadily and satisfactorily. He also served four terms in the state Ancestry and Records Count Most for Breeding. AN EXPERT During the holiday traffic rush, two speed cops, noticing a young woman who was driving dangerously, shot ahead of her and drew np their car broadside, so that the culprit had to stop. Excuse me, young lady, said one of the officers, sarcastically, do you know anything about driving a car?. Of course," said the bright young thing, whats your trouble? Optimism in Handcuffs optimists we meet are like the chap spoken of in Passing Show, London. I am quite optimistic about the future. Then why do you look so worSome of those ried? I am not certain that my mism is justified. opti- - Women and Baseball Green (at ball game, as pitcher and catcher hold a conference) What are they talking about? Husband About what to throw to the next batter. Mrs. Green But they arent allowed to throw anything except the ball, are they? Airs. All the Policemans Fault Magistrate The traffic policeman says you got sarcastic with him. Mr. Nagger But I dont Intend to be. He talked to me the way my wife does, and I forgot myself and Yes, my dear. Stray answered, Stories. May Never Know Guest Do you make a reduced rate in this hotel If one stays more than a week? Porter Deed, boss, I dont know. Nobody has ever been able to stick It out here as long as a week. HIPPO STRATEGY Then With Complete Composure He Admitted the Surprised Physician. legislature, the third as speaker of ' the house, the fourth as chairman of the most Important committee In the senate. a During the same eight years, Anne, smothering again and again her disappointment at taking no tangible part In her husbands campaigns, and at being' left behind when he went to Belford, washed, cooked, cleaned, sewed, and took care of Junior; presented that husky youngster, when he was three years old, with a little sister, Nancy; took care of them both; washed, cooked, cleaned and sewed some more. When the second baby was minent, It became apparent that the little fiat, in which they had continued to live up to this time, would not suffice for the family needs any longer. So they moved to a cottage, which they were able to rent cheaply, and which was sorely In need of paint, paper, and plumbing. By degrees they persuaded a reluctant landlord to make it more comfortable and attractive. With two more rooms In their possession than they had had since their marriage, they converted one Into a nursery, and one into a den, while the large yard provided the children with a space In which to range, and Anne a space in which to plant and cultivate both a flower and a vegetable garden. Mabel came and spent a month with them when Anne left the hospital after Nancys birth, a complacent Mabel, engaged to George, who had become more and more prosperous and who had the largest farm and the finest barns In Ilamstead. After she left, Anne was unable to go motoring with Neal, or entertain her little bridge club. Worse than this, her close confinement g to the house, and the to tell her work of began drudgery on her heavily. She not only grew very thin herself, but the baby stopped gaining, became fretful, and turned blue under the eyes. Alarmed, Anne consulted Doctor Pratt, and he told her that unless she had regular help and equally regular recreation,' she would have to wean Nancy. And that, he added, meaningly, you should not, of course, consider In this warm weather. Anne's dread of the servant problem rose from a deeper source than the horrible stories she had heard from about the depravity her mother-in-laof all domestic workers; It rose also from her very sincere sense of her own probable Incompetence In directing, rather than doing, work, and her unwillingness to entrust the care of the children to anyone else. But to her Infinite surprise and relief, Dora King, the first applicant In response to the advertisement, came when she said she would, contentedly took possession of the attic, and seemed perfectly satisfied to remain. She was, like Anne herself, a farmers daughter, who had drifted to a little city. She waa willing to learn; and Apne, far from resenting her Ignorance, marveled at the quickness with which she overcame it. Im- How did the come out? game Hippo-Mon- k The Hippos won. One of the guards swallowed the ball and scored a touchdown. Scarecrows Must be a lot of gentlemen farmers around here. Yeh-uh- ? Never saw so many scarecrows wearing evening dress. Louisville Courier-Journa- l. (TO BE CONTINUED.! . Not much can be told about a hens ability to lay eggs by her looks. Her ancestry and record count for far more, according to R. E. Cray, extension specialist In poultry husbandry for the Ohio. State university. Recent experiments have shown that neither the shape of the head nor the shape of the body Is worth considering In selecting a hen for the breeding flock. But five factors other than appearance are worthy of consideration. Cray lists these factors as follows: Select for early maturity. This Is an Inherited characteristic, and is particularly important because fall and winter eggs are the ones that return the profit . Light breeds should begin laying at seven months and the heavy breeds, at eight months. Select hens that lay In the winter. Examine the birds In February, and select for the breeding flock those having the appearance of being In production. Another characteristic of a good prospect for the breeding flock is persistence in laying during September and October. If the birds pass the September, October and February tests, they have an excellent recommendation for a place In the breeding pen. Discard all birds that persistently tend to broodiness. Place a band on the hens leg each time she becomes broody. Three bands and shes out Winter pause period In should be of short duration. egg-layin- g Skim Milk or Meat Will Supply Excellent Feed In order that a poultryman may get every cent of profit coming to him he must avail himself of all the means at his disposal to produce cheaply, asserts a poultry authority In the Montreal Herald. When whole milk is sold anywhere from sixty cents to a dollar a hundred pounds, skim milk has little value; yet, If It Is fed to poultry, It will bring fair returns. If skim milk were used Instead of beef scraps as a source of animal feed, poultrymen would cut down on their feed bill and their cost of egg production at the same time. An experiment conducted at the Dominion Experimental station, Cap Rouge, Que., for five seasons proved rather conclusively that the lot of birds receiving skim milk laid more eggs and gained more .weight than the one which was fed beef scrap, Skim other feeds being the same. milk should always be fed sweet or always sour so as to avoid bowel troubles. Where skim milk Is not available beef scrap will have to be resorted to. Use of Cod Liver Oil When the hens do not have access to sunlight, the inclusion of good cod liver oil In the ration materially Increases egg production. In one test at the Missouri station, a lot of kept behind glass, when fed cod liver oil produced an average of 89 eggs each during the six winter months, while a similar lot kept under the same conditions, but fed no cod liver oil, produced only 61 eggs In Brown Leghorns, the cod each. llyer oil fed group averaged 93 eggs each, while the lot which received no cod liver oil averaged 62 eggs. With Our President has done his best. Bat home town folks mast show more ze We all know good old "Uncle Sam, Can't give each town a "Boulder Dam, Let's help make home employment by PATRONIZING HOME INDUSTRY THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY President Roosevelt in inaugurating bii New Deal acted chiefly on the principli that increasing purchasing power augment This same principle is u prosperity. strictly applicable to a region, such as ear Intermountain West, as to the nation it large. When the people in our own com. inanities are employed, and only then, art they in a position to buy. When we ban factories of our own and keep those fao tones operating, we are not only providing but aie employment for our fellow-me- n creating a market in our own midst for goods we ourselves have to selL Every individual is in a sense a salesman who must sell his products of mind or masdi or farm or factory in order to make a living. When we buy goods made in the intermeuntain region we make it possibli to employ men right at home, who in tun will be enabled to buy what we have to sell. In that way can the wheels of onr economic society be kept operating, and in that way can we profit regionally at well as nationally from application of the principle underlying the "New Deal", NELDEN F. JENSEN, Mt. Pleasant, Utah. At 400 Utah Oil Refining Service Stations In Utah and Idaho Lots of Em Kabitzer is Yiddish slang for one who meddles with others affairs. In bridge playing it is specifically a person who, although not a player, makes suggestions and gives unasked advice to the players. Write for our Free Feed and Nursery Guide Book Easier to Work in Morning Work can be, performed in the morning with less expenditure of energy than is required for the same work in the afternoon, tests conducted at Northwestern university show. An-con-as six-roo- neyer-endin- Sally Sez HENS CANNOT GET BY ON APPEARANCE WNU Servies, e, Headaches Splittanq" she learned why she was always , POULTRY New Reducer History Lecturer Can anyone tell me what makes the Tower of Pisa lean? Stout Lady I dont know or Id take some myself. Cappers Weekly. Beginning Friend How is your son getting along in his medical studies? Proud Mother Fjne; he can already cure very small children. Border Cities Star. Quick Thinking Pa Johnny, what is this 60 on your report card? Johnny I I think thats the temperature of the schoolroom. Brooklyn Daily Eagle. ' .Have Truth you Comes Out:. seen Kitty's ; engage- ment ring? Yes I wore it all last year. White Leghorns, the difference was not so great Poultry Notes SALESMENS SAMPLES Ladies Knit Suits and Dresses Off Now One-half UTAH WOOLEN MILLS Salt Lake City, Utah By an old grant one of the dukes of Scotland loses the right to his land3 if it should ever get warm enough to melt the snow from the highest mountain in Scotland. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR Bantams are not the useless birds they were once considered to be. Game breeders now- - quite generally use Bantam hens In hatching and rearing game birds. . flock Is The poultry inherently capable of producing eggs during the winter season, but it does require proper environmental conditions to bring out that Inherent tendency. The farmer must do his share. The 1933 fall turkey crop of Tom Green county, Texas, was estimated at 35 cars, worth more than $125,000. ..... If pullets are guilty of feather-pickintake stock of the number you have housed together. Overcrowding Is one cause of feather picking. ... Pullets should receive all. the milk they will drink. Sour milk Is as good as sweet milk. The milk containers should be washed daily and scalded at least once a week. ... There are three chickens on farms for each person In the United States. On most commercial duck farms, one drake is mated to five ducks, and It la assumed that it will he possible to produce 50 ducklings from each duck during each hatching season. The absence of vitamins In poultry feed causes leg weakness, sloiv development and growth, while cod liver oil, white fish meal and likewise meat and bone meal, supply the deficiency. MILK oS MAGNESIA AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT There is no need to create a w world of plenty we have enty enough. The problem of devising a new means distribution. Exchange. large-consis- ts Place Your Order Nownd For White Leghorns, Reds, Rocks Bred other Popular Breeds. Production Mountain Bred and Acclimated only short distance from our warm Hatch-re eries to your warm Brooder. We Brooder distributors for "Sol-Hand Lincoln chick feeders. Write f discounts special prices and cash orders placed now. "All Breeding Stock Blood Tested for Pullorum Disease. (BWD), by the BP Method, Whole Blood Agglutination since October 1st, 1933, and all indicated reactors removed." RAMSHAW HATCHERIES Salt Luke City, Utah TIMPANOGOS HATCHERIES 3687 So. State, Provo, Utah he world far more insures war, ks for and pays for war, than peace. per week will be paid for the best article on "Why yo msde Intermountaln mid aso oda Similar to above. 8end ir story in prose or verse toP. O. Products Column, z 1566, Salt Lake City. If your ry appears In this umn you will rove check for |