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Show THE TIMES-INDEPENDENT, Embroidered Initials Are Newest Vogue Wives, Beware! (Bell Syndicate-WNU Service.) en By ee atria iia alii ne on nein Aeration ean ne oa 82 Sewing Circle Eighth Ave. Needlecraft Enclose 15 cents rn NO.....- eecee Name in SCHOTT Address SCH Dept. New coins H HEHEHE SHH York for SETHE ESEEEH Pat- EEE SESE EEEE EEE Se eeethctngddinae ats ad 98> POE ABCs are fun when they're wreathed with lazy-daisy flowers and embroidered on everything from handkerchiefs to household linens. Pattern 2435 contains a transfer pattern of nine 3 inch wreaths, three 1% and two % inch alphabets; illustrations of stitches; color schemes, Send order to: re ESTION from Indigestion 8 eat nourishing foods you Orn sick headache and upsets so often caused by e338 fluids ou feel. sour and ST ONE Noblest Work Princes and lords are but the breath of kings, ‘‘An honest man's the noblest work of God.''-Burns., WHY SUFFER Functional Se ener Nt Nhl athe panel a a Tanta aA, NN et pete s . - ermeinrineies tcc aes ec . FEMALE COMPLAINTS Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has Helped sands! Few women today do not have some sign of functional uble. Maybe you've noticed YOURS y petting res ess, m , nervous, de lately-your work too much fo - en Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable iso years Pinkham's Com dreds of thousands vous women, T'ry it/ und has helped hunweak, rund/iwn ner- Relieving Distress To pity distress is hut human; to relieve it is Godlike. a, Correct a, Before-Not After! 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If your condition is chronic, it is Lo to consult a physician. i HOTEL * Te ae ‘gg en sha se: cls ly nance thay canny sea io oe ie Salt Lake's NEWEST Heth ks, SCOTT by Western more than the Estonians, ever so humble each home reer tt att nya gitie aaa WATSON Newspaper Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Rates $1.50 to $3.00 It's a mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful RRNEST C. hostel ROSSITER, a By KATHLEEN NORRIS HEN the mother of a 16 or 18-year old girl advises her against doing something, or warns her about it, she is usually actuated by pure affection and loyalty to her daughter. She knows that the years between 16 and 25 are the years when a woman who is indiscreet, reckless, inexperienced, can throw away all the happiness of her later years. WV Thousands of girls do, and live to regret it for the rest of their lives. But somehow they never will believe that their mothers are right. ‘Mother Old-Fashioned.' ‘‘My mother hasn't the least idea of how things are today,"' they write me. ‘‘Mama is so old-fashioned that it's perfectly maddening. Mama thinks the most innocent things are dangerous. Mother doesn't want me to have any fun. My mother is always afraid of what the neighbors will think.'' Any explanation of her anxieties will do, except that she is your mother, and loves you, and wants you to grow safely to honorable and happy womanhood, and not make mistakes. ‘My mother talked to me the night before I was married,'' writes a Pennsylvania woman, ‘‘and if I'd taken her advice seriously I might have spared myself the misery I'm in today. But I always thought of Mother as straightlaced and fussy, and I didn't pay much attention. She told me always to put Len first in everything, and like all brides, I did make a great fuss over him at first. We had a dear little boy and were very happy for the first few years. Knew Billy as Girl. "Then a man I will call Billy turned up. I had known him as a girl, and we had had a pretty exciting love affair, of which I had told Len. Nothing wrong, but we had been engaged, and I thought Len ought to know. ‘Mother had never liked Billy, partly because hg is divorced, partly because he ig quite a sport. But he is very attractive to women, and when he sbewed that he still admired me J @idn't mind making Van a little jea4ious. This worried Moth- er terribly, for she adores Van. "When Billy went away after a short visit he asked me to correspond with him. He sent me books and articles, once a beautiful handkerchief, and once perfume. His letters were amusing and admiring and I answered them, saying a good deal more than I really felt. This was about a year ago. We wrote each other about every 10 days, so I suppose he has at least 30 of my letters. Bill's Lawyer Appears. "Yesterday a lawyer from Bill's town called on me with a great deal of discretion and secrecy that drove me nearly mad. He says that Bill's wife has gotten possession of these letters. Never having dreamed that he was married at all, I was shocked beyond words. I said that I had not known that Mr. D. was married, whereupon this horrible man said, ‘But you knew you were, didn't you?' She wants $1,500 for the letters or she will sue for divorce, naming me. Some of these letters I signed ‘Your-little-wifethat-should-have-been,' and others the pet names he had given me in his letters. Our actual relationship was always strictly within the bonds of morality, of course. "I did not close my eyes last night and I am half frantic today. At first this lawyer said he would be here until I decided what to do, but he telephoned this morning to say he is going back to Trenton, and will wait to hear from me. What maddens me was that I have never been in love with Bill, but only enjoyed this correspondence as a sort of romance. My husband and child are my very lifeblood, and any thought of trouble at home breaks my heart. I do not even know that Bill is married; it may be that he needs money and trusts he will get it this way. For the sake of a home, a good husband and an inno. cent baby do, do help me find some way out!'"' Thrills at an End. Poor Joan, she has had a whole year of flattery and excitement and Warning to Wives Here is a warning to young wives of 1940, who think they can eat their cake and have it to. Many young wives, according to Kath- leen Norris, seem to feel that once the security of a home and husband is their's they can put that security on the shelf and start looking around for new playthings. But that style of living doesn't always work out. Sometimes the little lady gets burned. Mothers still insist that their young daughters who are married should put -_- husband first in their hearts. ut the daughters often think that Mother is old-fashioned and doesn't know about "modern" men. Usually though, they learn that Mother is right. Naturally it's all right to know men other than your husband but "affairs'-no matter how innocent-are out. And if the mistake is ever made -if Mrs. Young Wife does engage in an "affair'-she had better tell Hubby and start all over again. Unless she does tell him she isn't playing fair and when she eventually gets caught it may be too late. the thrill of a secret love affair, she has made nothing of Len's rights and Len's dignity, and now she expects to be extricated from it in a few minutes! The mischief has been far too long in building for that. Her only way out is one of humiliation and courage and risk. Joan has been stuffing greedily on poisonous sweets for 12 whole Now for emetics and cas-. months. tor oil and general wretchedness. For' she will have to tell the whole story to her husband at once, and have him get in touch with some friend in Trenton, or some city authority, who can find out exactly what the engaging Billy's marital status is. If he really is married, then Van, Joan's husband, might write him, remind him that he has some letters from Joan, and ask their return. This may work, inasmuch as Billy may not want trouble with his wife over them, should Joan turn the tables and inform her of anything that has been going on. If Billy isn't married, the matter is comparatively simple. Joan's husband may ask for the letters, thus showing Billy that -he knows of their existence, and so spiking Billy's guns on blackmail. Then forget the whole thing. Joan Must Confess. Whatever the outcome, Joan's complete confession to her husband must be the next step. "And is it a crime to write to a man when you're married to another?'"'? many a young wife who is playing with the same sort of fire may indignantly demand. No, but the advice of Joan's mother was good advice. Put your husband first. Don't do anything that you wouldn't like him to do. Keep your men friends, of course. But keep them as a wife, not a flirt. Act like a woman embarked upon a serious business, not a free lance still in the market for affairs. There's no law against writing letters, affectionate, romantic, emotional, to a married man. There's no law against making a complete fool of yourself. There's no law against living on chocolate cake and sleeping in a bathtub. Terrible For a long Alternative. time after this scald- ing experience Joan will be a very meek and devoted little wife. She'll have to be. The alternative, divorce, and the surrender of her child, as being an: unfit mother, is too expensive. A few of thbse "‘little-wife-that-should-have-been" letters would convince any court of domestic relations that Joan was a pretty flighty parent. She's now put a strong weapon into Van's hands. For months, perhaps for years, he won't believe anything she Says. If she demonstrates affection for him, if she cuddles the small boy, praises her home, expresses herself as hap- py, Van may look on with a cold and unconvinced eye. So don't despise mother's suggestions, you younger girls. They have been won from that same hard school of experience that you have to face. They form that most valuable possession that a wife or any other woman can have. The impalpable, undefinable, indisp ensable thing called CODE. } bath house. Maids seeking ena g ment always ask to see the before deciding to accept a igh # tourists the bath is one of th, Cy 1tional attractions. Union.) ISTEN, my children, and you shall hear... I No, not the familiar story of the ‘"‘Midnight Ride of Paul Revere." It's the story of another ride by that immortal horseman- a ride that should have started more than 50 years ago, but didn't. Here's why: SensationalR ee ELMO (Released Yesterday a lawyer from Bill's town called on me. He says that Bill's wife has gotten possession of these letters. aE Lit Estonians Like Their Rasp. No people in Europe loves j ‘Listen, My Children, and You Shall Hear': Story of the Long-Delayed Start of a New Ride by Paul Revere Kathleen Norris Says: Young MOAB, UTAH Back in 1884, on the eve of the 150th anniversary of Paul Revere's birth, a movement was started in Boston to erect a statue to the Revolutionary patriot at a cost of $25,000. The city council indorsed the plan and appropriated $5,000 as its share of the cost, the remainder of which was to be raised by public subscription. Furthermore, the city fathers passed an order, authorizing the use of Copley square as the site for the proposed memorial. Next a committee was formed to have charge of the project and this committee issued circulars inviting sculptors to submit models for the statue. It made no suggestion as to the character of the design but offered to pay $300 each for the three best studies. Eight of ten models were submitted by sculptors from all parts of the country, all of them, of course, anonymously. From these models the committee selected three-those sent in by Daniel Chester French, who had made the famous ‘‘Minute Man'' erected on the site of the battle of Concord; by Thomas Ball, who was the sculptor of the statue of Washington which stands in the Public Garden in Boston; and by a certain ‘‘Charles E. Dillon of Utah,"' who was unknown to the commit- FIELD AND GRASS SEEp¢ U. S. Verified . Clean . Tegp . Dependable Pasture Graca Fertilizer . Pellets, etc, ¢ in and look them over, wring phone. KELLY-WESTERN Salt Lake City, Wasatch? 139 North 3rd West ( door to Salt Lake Hardy HOTELS When in RENO, HOTEL NEVADA stop GOLDEN-Reno's most popular » farges hotel. Hotel Plandome-Salt |. 4th So. & State St.-Single 75¢ . APARTMENT HOTEL | Block from week or Temple. RICHMOND, month. 70 E. Reasonable Rais Completely fy No. Temple, Salt FINE USED CARS 1937 of the CYRUS E. DALLIN, famed sculptor, and the plaster model White equestrian statue of Paul Revere which the George Robert ed commission have Fund trustees, headed by Mayor Tobin of Boston, him to execute in bronze at a cost of $27,500. The statue will be the erected in Paul Revere Mall in the north end of Boston, close to home of the Revolutionary patriot. was signed. But when the comChester French had in him! No mittee tried to raise the money wonder that he could comprehend for the statue by popular suband interpret the great and genscription, it found that the conerous Lincoln as understandingly troversy, which Dallin's rival artas he did in that Washington Meist had stirred up, had made morial marble of the Great many people hostile to the projEmancipator. ect. "From that day until his death, Within a short time it became a few years ago, French and I evident that the public had lost were close friends. I have alinterest in the project. Subscripways noted in life that the bigger tions to the fund came in so slowa man is, the more generous he ly that it was doubtful if the is toward others. There is no sum required for the statue could feeling of. jealousy in a great ever be raised. Swallowing his man. He is too sure of himdisappointment as best he could, self to fear others in his own the young sculptor started on anprofession. When a man is jealtee. other project. ous of another man in his own A Young Westerner. Remembering the _ Indians profession it is an open confesAfter long deliberation the comwhom he had known in the West, sion that he is not sure of himself mittee unanimously decided to Dallin designed the figure of an and his own powers.'' accept for the statue the design Indian, standing on the skeleton Soon after Dallin -was anby this ‘"‘Charles E. Dillon'' and of a buffalo and shooting an arnounced as the winner of the Paul row into the air. He exhibited it Revere competition, the city of in New York in 1888 and it won Boston gave him a contract to the gold medal of the American make the bronze statue. Then unArt Exhibit. expected difficulties arose, due to This new triumph had an unthe jealousy of an artist whose expected result. A wealthy Bosson had been unsuccessful in the ton woman who sympathized with competition. He started a conthe young sculptor over his diffitroversy in the Boston papers by culties in the Paul Revere comcharging that Dallin's model was petition offered to provide the historically inaccurate. Although money for him to study in Parother artists rallied'to the deis. Thus, out of what had seemed fense of the young Westerner, to be a major tragedy to an amthe dispute grew so hot that the bitious young sculptor, came his committee decided to hold a secgreat opportunity and he eagerly ond competition. accepted it. Dallin Wins Again. Soon after he arrived in Paris French entered it again, as did Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show arThomas Ball, sculptor of a statue rived there and Rosa Bonheur, the of Lincoln in "The Emancipafamous woman painter, took adtion Group,"' the original of which vantage of the opportunity to is in Washington and a copy in paint the American horses and Boston. But again Dallin was the their Indian riders. One of her winner and again the generous favorite models was old Chief French sent him a note: ‘‘DalRocky Bear. lin, you've beat us again. You're He Meets Rosa Bonheur. far and away ahead of the rest One day Dallin saw her at work of us!'' on a painting of Rocky ir. It Jubilant over his success, Dalinspired him to become a sculplin returned to his home in Utah, THE MINUTE MAN tor of Indians and horses and | there, as he says, "‘to celebrate from that inspiration came the Statue by Daniel Chester French my victory and to bask in the idea of the Indian on the site of the Battle of equestrian sunlight of the approval of my groups which are to be found in Concord. parents and friends.'' But he soon several American cities. The first learned that the celebration was it was soon announced in the of these was the familiar ‘The a bit premature. newspapers. Then it was disSignal of Peace.'' The next was He returned to Boston in the covered that they had misspelled "The Medicine Man' in Philaspring of 1885 to complete the the name of the winner! His right delphia and the next ‘‘The Appeal statue. He was called to the mayname was Cyrus E. Dallin, a to the Great Spirit'? which stands or's office and again a contract young fellow of 23, who had been in front of the Boston museum. born in Utah and had arrived in Since that time Dallin has proBoston four years before, penniduced many other famous statless, lonely and bewildered beues-"‘T he Scout"? in Penn Valley Paul Rides Again to cause he had never been in a big park in Kansas City; ‘Massacity before. Summon Legionnaires soit'"" in Plymouth, Mass.; ‘‘Anne His first work was in a terra BOSTON. - Paul Hutchinson" which stands in front Revere cotta factory and, while working rides again on the 165th anniof the state house in Boston; and there, he had made an ornament versary morn his famous tribute to the Ameriof the "ninefor Mechanics hall. It was the teenth of April, '75''-but this can soldiers taken prisoners by seal of the Massachusetts Chariyear the galloping tradition of the enemy during the World war table Mechanics association and Paul Revere will not halt at -the statue which he called it consisted of an upraised human Lexington's "Captured But Not Conquered.'' battle-green or arm which young Dallin had Concord's bridge. He also This did the Pioneer monuyear modeled after the upraised arm he'll go careening on across ment in Salt Lake City ahd of a young Indian, one of a delethe the continent to rally another Soldiers' and Sailors' monume gation en route to Washington to nt army of patriots in Syracuse, N. Y. from a wider see the ‘‘Great White Father,"' nation that stretches to Rio For Cyrus Dallin is now whom he had met on the train and one Grande valley of America's best-known and Oregon with whom he had talked in the sculpfarms. This year tors. But it is probable the annual sign language. that, for national convention all the honors that have of the "That arm is still there in Mecome American Legion meets for the to him, he will take chanics hall. I like to go around more pride oe -_ in historic Boston. in his masterpiece, which and look at it now and then,'' is to eally dates are Septe Stand in Paul Revere ptember 22 the 78-year-old sculptor of today Mall in Boston. It is the spirited will tell you with a smile. cE statue Paul Revere's is the of that famous midnight got the magnificent sum of two rider that adorns the bronze reining in his equally ae dollars for doing that seal. That famous Legion's twenty-second horse as he Pauses contwo dollars looked like $2,000 to to shout his vention medal. He is the pes: rousThe British are comme at that time-and it doesn't ing spirit of the Bay State Lelook SO small, even now, slonnaire organization at A few at naweeks times."' ago it tional convention nounced that the Suseten headquarIt is easy to imagine the young ters, 8 Beacon street, the Robert White fund, now £0sculptor's thrill when he learne headed hb ing full tilt on its mission d Mayor Tobin of Boston, to that he had won the Pay] had make eat. this return-visit of their Remissioned him vere competition. to execute land, sea, and air-force comReturning to in bronze, at a cost of his small studio he found @ $27,500, the rades from every card design state which was selected ee the door. On it was writUnited States Possession, and away back in the eighties. the en: greatest patriotic Pilgrimage So, after half a century, Cyrus "Dear Dallin: Dallin, the to the "‘Cradle of Liberty" I came up to u this Own young sculptor congratulate you on your land who had has ever seen. The wellcome out of the West, deserved victory.-Daniel gion's 1940 war-cry, "Keep Leis Chesed, and an undeserved vindicatOut ter French." and Keep stigma Ready," will be has been removed from his fame they say, "the shout Says Mr. Dallin: : "That ah Me wa s heard he And, ‘roun the kind of greatness that after d the a long world ." Daniel » Paul Rey i On another ide}. ce a [ Packard 120 Sedan. - Black, Whine Wall Tires. Super-perfect cond. $648, ¢, Ralphs Motor Co.._51 So. State. Saif SEED AND FERTILIZER Occidental Seed Company New %& SOIL AID PRODUCTS, 1160 South Salt Lake City. Selis the best Field Seeds for less. Also " completely balanced Fertilizer. Writs , Hyland 5454, 1160 So. Main, Sak MUSICAL Band INSTRUME - Instrument - Sales - Repair, j or Rental Plan. 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