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Show THE BULLETIN Core of Orchids VICTIM BY Orchids, after they are cut at the feurgery, are placed in refrigerator to harden and become accustomed to a change of temperature. Then, each spray if placed in a water-fille- d aealed glass tube braced in its box to prevent shifting and crushing, a limited number to a box o that the bloom comes from nursery to florist to you, having experienced only the most careful hand-dlin- g None of it is and shipping. accidental. From seedling to the day it comes into the possession of some lovely lady, an orchid has been grown with the idea that it can not be too beautiful, too glamorous to auit the purpose for which it is intended and that every woman in the world who longs for an orchid must have the best that can be produced. HOTELS HOTEL PLAN DO MK. SALT LAKB A Bui tit. Rate ll.ee Sl.tl th QUIET KKBHKCTABLB CLEAN Warn in KKNU. NIC V ADA. Map at the HOTEL GOLDEN Bane'a largaat aad 8. awl papular hat I. OFFICE EQUIPMENT AND USED deeka Bad chain. Sin. typewriter, adding awfc'a, aafat, aa-cu- n. W. Broadway. Bah Lake U. U DESK EXNEW - TRUSSES Itutrumcnti. Bargieal Tnina Hospital Suprltaa, of Abdominal Sup- Manufacturer porter.ThaElaatia Stocking. rhyaicfan Sapplr Cempany Salt Uo City. Utah W tnd Smith Kt ICE CREAM FREEZERS SODA ICE CREAM COUN- FOUNTAINS TER FRKEZEJta and lee Cream eabinete-B- ar Prelum. Stool, Carhonatora, Steam Table. Aba recendilieaed aqaipaMat term. CO. aunafaeturer - SS Peat Offiea Place Halt Lake CHt MOSER-HARTMA- BABY CHICKS DENVER HATCHED, blead-lratr- CHICKS. d Lerharaa anal AaasrtH 111. MAS. Lechera II J.ae, coenrem um, Jitary Kiieta, tl.it. Write far pricta aa A pallet. A and AAA trade. All prepaid. COLORADO Denver. HATCHERY. Col. KARAKUL FUR SHEEP rrlaa Winning Sana, Fredatlng Winning booklet aa "er. re. Caiajplete illustrated aaeat. UNITED KARAKUL FUR SHEEP COMPANY. Twin Falla. Idaho. RADIO SCHOOL Opportunity Graduate in demand. Learn Radio, Good Pay. Day and Night. Viaitor 141 Welcome Weateni Electrical Booth Main Street. Salt Lake. Cell, EYE GLASSES REPAIRED Mall na yanr broken hnaea. Service. Wheleaale price. Satiafaetlen guaranteed. OPTICAL SHOP. Baataa Dldc Bait Lake. PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Developed with 25c Quality Prints 3c Extra Prints Wrap ram and film carefully I SCHRAVM-JOHNSO- N JhOTO-KRAF- T f DRUGS 749 Box Salt Lake City. Utah FIRE EQUIPMENT FIRE TRUCK MS? eombiiiatioa how and chemical with pump. New Hareule motor. in perfect condition. Price cylinder, lite.- - Bountiful City Corp. BEO MINERAL WOOL laanaatnarra. Sara fnoL eaa-thlr- d lafarauUaa F r . Healer wanted. HEPSe. Was.9474 Baby Chicks U. S. Appreved Pallorum Taetai Leghorn - Reaa Hampahlrw Back and ether ProduetioB Brad, Mountain Bred and Acclimated Delivered Froah Hatched Bight Produced under Government and Stat auparviaion for Your protection. Chlok Broodore, Feeder. Water. Eta. SUPERIOR TURKEY POULTS Write, call or wire for free circular and price. Caaparatlns la "THE NATIONAL POULTRY IMPROVEMENT PLAN" dollar abend when the Ye Raauhaw bred You're RAMSHAW HATCHERIES SUT Santh State Street Salt Lake City. Utah WJf-- Week. Na. StSS icy she'd taken out last week it was kidnap insurance! Carlotta's sigh was gusty with relief. Nothing else about the situation really seemed to matter. She became conscious that the man was waiting an answer. 88 "I think," she told him, almost By THAYER WALDO haughtily, "that you may have forS) McClure Newspaper Syndicate. gotten what a dangerous game WNU Service. you're playing. Courts are giving the limit for this." A brief, derisive laugh. her hair a final touch "That's only when they catch you the mirror, Carlotta and the odds against it are still rose. Marie came forgood . . . But you haven't ward with her coat and Car- pretty answered my question." lotta slipped listlessly into it. Carlotta turned a little toward Dull fatigue lay heavy upon her; him. her body and mind were one great Momentarily the beam from a numbed weariness. street lamp shone in; she passing Six gruelling days of retakes, had a fleeting glimpse of bold, and the end not yet in sight. features an aggressively strong Ten, twelve, fourteen hours of handsome face with ironic eyes. work at a stretch had been the pro "Perhaps," she said, "I didn't ingram, with everyone feverishly on tend to." edge. And all because her schedThe tone held banter; an almost uled leading man had chosen the carefree mood was growing upon last week of filming to be stricken her. with appendicitis. Once more the adventurous asCarlotta thought of him, lying pects of this loomed uppermost quietly in a hospital bed, and sighed After all, one couldn't be very with envy. terrified at kidnaped by such It would even be worth the pain, an attractivebeing man. she reflected, just to have such a Opening her purse, Carlotta felt respite. in it for cigarettes. Pulling the coat close about her, A bulky envelope met her hand; she turned and then stopped short, puzzled, she brought it out and looking at Marie in sudden annoy leaned nearer the car window. ance. all her jaunty Then, in one The maid still wore her cap and relaxation was flash, gone. had made no move toward donning Across the white rectangle were her street clothes. three lines of heavy black print; "Well, what's the matter, Marie?" the first read: J. ROGER PRICE Carlotta snapped irritably; "why INDEMNITY AGENT, and she aren't you ready to go?" need to go on. didn't The girl stared at her with blank In that envelope was the kidnap eyes, stammered: "Why, you you insurance policy that had been sent told me I could have tonight off, her for signature; she had forgotten Miss Willis. to return it! "Oh, of course of course," Car Carlotta slumped in the lotta broke in, one hand going to seat. Here visibly was another of those her head in a vague, tired gesture; awful memory lapses this time a I I d forgotten." fatal one. She felt a baffled sort of vexation. An audible little moan of anguish Here it was again an utter loss escaped her. of memory. Then the man was bending closer, A dozen times in the past few to peer intently at the en seeming days such things had happened. velope. This relentless grind was simply He gave a low chuckle and said: wearing her out, fogging her mind. "I'll accept that now, if you like, Carlotta gave a hopeless little and save you the trouble of sending and once moved more toward it." shrug door. As her the dressing-rooCarlotta glanced up sharply. hand took the knob, Marie called: He was holding out a card. "Oh, Miss Willis you ve left your She took it and looked at the en- SALT LAKE Original Home, Sweet Home' of The original manuscript "Home, Sweet Home" is in the Sibley Musical library of the Eastman school of music at the University of Rochester, N. Y. 'Land of Shining; Mountains' "Land of the Shining; Mountains' was the name by which the explorers knew the present Glacier National park. The name originated in the fact that its mountain tops are covered with rivers of ice. Greyhound Is Remakably Wise The greyhound is swift, graceful, and remarkably wise. The ancient Egyptian and Greek royalty regarded him as a symbol of aristocracy. His distinguished lines and proud bearing appear on Ekyptian carvings dating to 8500 B. a Named After Saints One of the distinctions which visitors find in the churches of Holland pertains to their names. They were named after saints. Since the days of the Reformation they are called either Groote, Oude or Nieuwe great, old or new. The courtyard surrounding the Xutub Minar, near Delhi, India, contains the celebrated pillar of wrought iron which has weathered 15 centuries without rusting. REQUEST GIVING I" m handbag." Flushing, Carlotta wordlessly took the purse and went out. It was bad enough to be in such a state; to have one's maid a constant witness brought positive humilia tion. Across the deserted lot she slowly walked, heading for a little side gate where Somers would be waiting with graved lettering. It spelled: J. ROGER PRICE. "You see," he went on smoothly, "procrastination can be very hazardous in matter of this kind. So when you neglected to return the policy, I thought a little demonstration might prove salutary. You're not angry?" Leaning forward, he picked up the car. the speaking tube and said to the Daylight had nearly vanished and chauffeur: the studio buildings hulked darkly "You can turn back now. This against a fading sky. was ah a mistake." The only light came from the lab Carlotta closed her handbag with oratory windows behind her, where a decisive click and looked at him. they would work all night develop "Yes," she said; "I am angry-ve- ry. ing today's footage. You'll have to be taught a Approaching, the gate, Carlotta lesson yourself." glimpsed through its grating her With a quick movement she limousine's long lines. snatched the tube from him and Somers, she dimly saw, was spoke into it: standing by the side nearest her, "Somers, you're taking orders his uniformed figure motionless. from me again. Keep right on drivOdd, she thought, that he didn't This is an abduction." see her and come forward to open ing. the gate. Without calling to him, however. Coin Tests Riding Skill, she swung the barrier back herself According to Hungarians and stepped onto the sidewalk. In the Hungarian cavalry they There was a sudden swift move used to put a coin between the solment, and then something hard was dier's knee and the saddle to see if pressing her back. A low, crisp he was really holding on properly. voice said: a short trot or gallop, the If, "Keep right on going and set in. coinduring slipped, the soldier could not please." out promenading with his peasgo for an Just instant Carlotta wav- ant girl on the following Sunday. ered and stood still. But if the coin was found in place clutched Fear at her sickeningly; upon the return of the horseman, he the impulse to scream was strong. was a good rider and But the prodding from behind be- the acclaimed had her girl Sunday promenade, came firmer and the command was relates Ilia Brody in Esquire. repeated sharply. A Hungarian rider, properly She moved toward the car door never mounts a horse that schooled, which Somers, tense and distraught-lookin- wasn't led around the court or padhad opened. dock a few times after saddling. It "I'm sorry. Miss Willis," the not a superstition that horses chauffeur gasped; "he got the drop is coming out of the stable must just on me and" not be mounted immediately; it is "Be quiet!" the voice barked, really dangerous to get into the sadadding: "Take your seat and drive dle at this time, because a horse through back streets toward the takes a long breath and puffs himAnd remember no false self coast. up when saddled, to avoid a moves or you're finished." girdle. tight Somers obeyed as Carlotta enWhen he comes out of the tered the tonneau and shrank into his belly is still swollen, and stable. if the a corner of the cushions. rider gets on him, he may throw A man, tall and himself and both horse his face shadowed by hat brim and and riderbackward, have a good chance of upturned coat collar, followed quickbreaking their respective necks; ly and sat beside her. Then the if the horse has been walked, the car shot forward. subsides and the animal For a half dozen blocks no word swelling feels normal. was spoken. Before the Hungarian As the first shock diminished, puts four mounting, in flat between fingers Carlotta began to consider the thing the girdle and the horse's belly to calmly. make sure that the girdle is snug She was, of course, being kid- without being tight. If the four finnaped. Surely an unpleasant situ- gers squeeze in without trouble, the ationyet, somehow she felt a secret animal will be comfortable during little thrill. the ride. And a good horseman will Whatever else, it meant a break always mount with his back to the g in the deadly, monothead of the horse, and naturally, ony that had lately been her sole from the left or the near side. The portion. right of the horse is called the (offUnnatural, perhaps, to view it so, side.) Even when leading the creabut . . . His voice cut the silence: such a rider knows that he "It'll cost somebody fifty thousand ture, must walk on the left never in dollars to get you back. .Who's that front of the horse. Horses should going to be?" never be looked straight in the eye, Carlotta started. Ransom she neither should one stand before hadn't thought of that I Fifty thou- them, facing them directly. Horses sand dollars: a half year's salary. do not like to be stared at no matNot a fifth that sum was in her ter whether they're in America or account; the studio would have to in Hungary. furnish it. Then, months of steady work and unaccustomed frugality to How Birds 'Coast' Is Solved repay the amount And just when a The mystery of how vultures and vacation had been in sight other strong flyers sail for hours Tears of weary frustration welled without apparent wing motion was in her eyes. solved only in recent years after Then suddenly she remembered. gliders demonstrated the utility of d That dollar pol rising air currents. g, broad-shouldere- nerve-rackin- hundred-thousan- d, ADVENTURERS' CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! TIPS to mm (jardeners IE Making the Garden Pay gardens are VEGETABLE grown fresher, more nourishing food for the family, and to conserve on food bills. Therefore, crops must be wisely chosen and systematically planted. According to Walter H. Nixon, EVERYBODY! expert, the most imporvegetable HELLO, still learning what a terrific beating the human mind tant vegetables considered both and body can take and still survive. The latest one to impress for food value and garden space this lesson on me is today's Adventurer Patrick J. Laffey of required are: Beans, cabbage, beets, squash, tomatoes, Trenton, New Jersey. Pat Laffey, as a boy in Ireland, crawled carrots, and onions, peas under a locomotive and was hanging to the undercarriage when To get the mostspinach. from garden the engineer started his train. His description of the heavy steel space, plant two crops of spinach, rods as they started to move, picking up speed, shoving him, one in spring, the other in late summer. Plant Chinese cabbage battering him well, read the story! and parsnips about midsummer Pat was just, as he puts it, "a broth of a boy" in 1915, living in space occupied earlier by beans, he in Galway, Ireland. On this particular autumn afternoon, radishes and peas. Make sucand two companions set out blackberrying. So lovely was the cessive plantings of carrots and for a steady supply of small scenery, that they traveled farther from home than they had beets roots. tender ever before ventured some ten miles. Plant bush beans and beets on "We dared go no further," Pat says, "lest we get lost in our home- both sides of tomato rows. When ward journey. We were all tired now, so we started home, bringing our tomatoes need the space, those collection of berries along." will have been pulled earlier crops The boys crossed a few fields, when suddenly they came to and used. a doable railroad track. Rather than cross any more fenees, or Corn can be worked into thar' fall into any more ditches, they started home along the track. garden plan even though there is They had walked abont half a mile when their attention was not such space. Plant spinach attracted by a huge engine which lay on the sidetracks nearby. or beets or green onions between g "To me," Pat says, "who had never seen one before, this huge rows of corn. Then mass of steel presented one of life's mysteries." The boys watched grow pole beans (cornfield beans) the aged engineer as he pushed and pulled levers. "How that thing did to climb on the corn stalks. whistle and shriek," Pat recalls. "I think I hear it now." "Danger on the Rails" slower-growin- Mystified, Pat Climbs Under the Locomotive. A little later, the engineer left his position and walked down amongst other cars on the track. The engine was still steaming and hissing. "This," Pat says, "was our chance for a final analysis of our mystery-w- as this huge thing really alive?" The more they looked at it, the more confused the boys became. They walked around it, saw its dirty, greasy iron bars, its large, shiny wheels. "And now," Pat says, "my race with death occurred. I feel a cold shiver right down my spine, now. "I myself set the trap for the grim jaws of eternity. It was a foolish act on my part, as I learned later. Now, boys, don't get a fainting spell when you read this, but consider yourself in my position. What would you have done?" Well, here is the incredible thing Pat did. Being greatly interested in the engine, he examined it as best he could; so did his chums. Rather than miss anything, he crept underneath the huge structure. He was just in there, when the engineer returned. He rebuked Pat's two chums for their presence on the property of the railroad. The boys took to their heels as fast as they could, but ( Safety Talks AfosC objects, and goggles with unbreakable lenses to ward off sparks from the grindstone and splinters g from the power saw. If this be true, it may possibly account for agriculture ranking first as the most hazardous of occupational enterprises. The National Safety council reports that of 19,500 fatalities in accidents during occupational wood-cuttin- 1937, Pat's battered body was on the ground under the engine. Pat, rather than face the engineer's scolding, tucked himself under the engine, never aware of his life being in the other's hands, listening for every breath, hoping the engineer would soon go away. He did decide finally to go away, but as Pat puts it "not without the engine." Smoke blew around, irons clattered, brakes shrieked and groaned and there was Pat, gasping for dear life itself. He clung on with his hands and feet until a huge iron compelled him to lose his foothold. He now tried to save his head and arms from being ground to pieces. The engine pulled along. Pat expected any minute to be mashed to pieces. A thousand thoughts flashed through his mind how far was he going would the engineer ever stop how long could he hold oa? Soaked With Blood, He Sinks Into Unconsciousness. To Pat death was inevitable; he could see no possible way to avert it, no means of attracting the attention of the engineer. He remembered he began to shout for help, but his cries were only drowned out by rattle of the engine. He remembers, too, getting a that severe blow on his left side the cuts of which he bears to this day. He felt himself getting weak . . . wet with blood . . . he sank into unconsciousness Days passed, days for which he can give no account days with life in the balance. Then finally, on the fifth day, Pat again gained consciousness. There, beside his bed, stood Pat's parents, friends and neighbors, and, in the middle of the group, the unfortunate engineer himself. Needless to say, all were overjoyed to see this response to medical attention in a boy they had literally given up for dead. Pat afterward learned how it came about that his life had been spared. And again, it was just one of those almost incredible flashes of The engineer had occasion to throw a good fortune or Providence. switch, and while he was on the ground he chanced to look down at the engine's running gear. Imagine his horror to see Pat's tattered body lying on the ground under the engine. He signaled the fireman in the cab, the fireman's hand shot to the levers and the immense monster of snorting steel screeched to a stop. The engineer lifted out the unconscious form from beneath the undercarriage. If any of you adventurers ever want a ride on an engine, take Pat's advice, and be sure you get IN one, and not on the rods, because the odds, Pat says, "are against you." ever-increasi- ng ... Copyrlght.-W- NU Service. Historians Record Use of Dolls in Earliest Days of History; Customs Date to Antiquity The use of dolls as playthings, ornaments, and symbols of religion and mysticism dates back to antiquity. Historians have failed to unearth any period in which there were no dolls. Early Oriental mythd ology abounds with stories of figures used in religious rites, observes a writer in the Detroit News. In the Orange Free State in Africa a girl receives a doll when she reaches maturity and keeps it until she has a child of her own. Egype doll in the tians throw a Nile when it rises each year. Chinese mothers hang a doll in front of the house when a child is ill. Syrian maidens place a doll in the window to notify young blades of the village that they are ready and willing to take a husband. In Japan the annual Feast of the Dolls is a gay and impressive ceremony in gayly-decorate- life-siz- which hundreds of thousands of children and grown-up- s participate. Psychologists say dolls are useful, not only to amuse, but to educate and to develop imagination and the parental instinct in children! Dolls, they say, are helpful to little boys as well as girls, and any boy under six years old need not fear being called a sissy if he loves and plays with dolls. Dolls of cave-dwellewere crudely fashioned of mud, stones or bits of wood. Archeologists have found them in the earliest primitive dwellrs ings, often lying by the side of the remains of children. Through the centuries dolls have taken better form. European craftsmen of the Middle ages developed great skill In making dolls from wax. Later dolls were made of plaster, easily breakable. Today dolls art made of a wide variety of materials. Hazardous Occupation KfOST farmers probably would AY1 scorn the use of industry's steel-toe- d safety shoes, hard hats to protect their heads from falling agriculture, or farm acci- dents, contributed 4,500. Trade and service industries were responsible for another 4,500 accidental deaths. All other industries experienced fewer accident fatalities during that year, the council said. Machinery and animals were the cause of most fatal farm accidents, machinery figuring in 29 per cent and animals in 21 per cent. In order, other farm hazards and the per cent of fatalities they caused were: Excessive heat, 11 per cent; falls, 9 per cent; vehicular, 8 per cent; lightning, 5 per cent; crushed by falling tree, 4 per cent; all others, 13 per cent. A Three Days' Cough IsYour Danger Signal Vo matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or Droncnuui you brewing to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulslon. which goes right to the seat of the trouble and alas nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel germ-lad-en phlegm. Even If other remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, try Creomulslon. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money If you are not thoroughly satisfied with the benefits obtained. Creomulslon is one word, ask for it plainly, see that tha name on the bottle is Creomulslon, and youll get the genuine product and the relief you want (Adv.) Good for Naught Too good for great things too great for good. Fuller. and Don't Siesp When Gas Crowds Heart If you torn la bad and aaa't Ieep from eoar etipation and awful OAS BLOATING remea-5- " thi,: qoiek. fattaf yen must na DOCBLS Tajrt ACTION. You mut raliara tha GAB. Yoa moat tbar tha bowel. Adlarika Daeaues It acta aa too ion wna stomach a Ml BOTH bowel. Adlarika in BOTH aarmiaativs and eethartie. Carari-stiv- es tba warm aootha tba stomaeh and ami OAS. Cathartics that quickly and gently clear tb bowrh of wait matter thai may have eaiuod GAS BLOATING, aour atomaeh, akmlaai nights and ladigartioa for awn tha. Adlarika relieve atomaeh cm aunoat at poea. Adlarika utualtar acta on tha bowabi la ban than two hour. No waitiu for miM ad baUtfacmin. Gat aanuiaa SaUatattdnif (npa, i. not Adlarika afam tsdaj. May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action If odara IK with Its hurry aad worry, Invcalar habit, improper eatlnc and drinhint ha riak of Mpoaar andlnloa. tion throws btavy strata oa tbs work at tbs Sidneys. Tbay arc apt to barssaa and fail to Altar txen sndothar impwitioi from tb vw-tax- sd acid Yen may oaffar nacilnf baekaeao, haadacho, dittiaraa. getting np nighta, eel ranauntly leg pain, swelling tired, nervous, all worn out Other signs of kidney or Madder disorder any bo burning, aeaaty or too frequent urination. Una 0sn' Pill. Dean's help tha kidneys to get rid of exone poisoaous body wasts. They are aatiaepUs to the uriaury tract sad toad la relievo irritation aad the pais it causes. Many grata-l- ui people rsremmend Doaa'j. Ttty hava had nwre than forty years of aubtto approval. At pear neirftoer |