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Show >- THE TIMES-INDEPENDENT, -_- THE GIFT WIFE... © RUPERT HUGHES- WNU CHAPTER XV-Continued -15- One day the Pogodins came home with a child. They said they had adopted her. SLASSIFIED Lg eh ey That was at N}_FIELD AND GRASS SEEDS TER musical S. Verified . Clean . Tested | ependable Pasture Grasses . rtilizer. Pellets, etc. Come and look them over, write or one. KELLY-WESTERN Co., \it Lake City, Wasatch 2766, \\9 North 3rd West (next | por to Salt Lake Hardware) HOTELS When in --. HOTEL 8 RENO, NEVADA, stop at the GOLDEN-Reno's largest and most popular hotel. Lake APARTMENT HOTEL Reasonable Completely No. Temple, Rates: day furnished. Salt Lake. ae Mx| __ FINE USED CARS Tea? Packard 120 Sedan. Black, White Side ll Tires. Super-perfect cond. $648. CannonIphs Moter Co.. 51 So. State, Salt Lake im SEED AND FERTILIZER ) idental L AID Lake Mild Seed Company New PRODUCTS, 1160 South City. Sells the best Seeds for less. Also Store Main St., Lawn and ‘"All-N-One" ndsimpletely balanced Fertilizer. Write, phone dand 5454, 1160 So. Main, Salt Lake City. "™ MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS nd - Instrument - Sales - Repair. Lesson Rental Plan. Our service best. Contest fe soon. Repair your instruments now. -Butler Co., 25 E. 2nd So., Salt Lake. -- aD rican HOUSE TRAILERS | wo495 and up-24 Months to. Pay RETAIL AND WHOLESALE DEALERS WANTED smn Morgan bs gift South Motor Main hm Salt Lake Co. City, Utak SURGE MILKERS ela r Presi mS. st us prove and show why SURGE, the stest milker ever built-gets MORE and ANER milk with less time and labor. ite for information. WALLACE TAYLOR, Distributor So. West Temple Salt Lake City, Utah a 1940 WALLPAPER PATTERNS our Bc - 10c - 15c and 20c new Spring ror@matterms. We buy direct from the mills- ‘ er undersold. Write for samples. Mail d rs promptly filled. Established 1917. osm 0 ‘Felt Radio & Wallpaper Company 5 So. State St. Salt Lake City, Utah bee TRUSSES r torical Instruments, Hospital Supplies, fusses Manufacturers of Abdominal Supirters, Elastic Stockings. - The Physicians Supply Company 2 W 2nd South St. Salt Lake City, Utah TH OFFICE EQUIPMENT AND USED i desks and chairs, files, bk-cases. e INEXPENSIVE he MEALS best food in Salt Lake is served by The MAYFLOWER CAFE 154 South Main-POPULAR PRICED suncheons, Dinners and Sandwiches USED PIPE AND MACHINERY 2 its -P. A. C. 3ph. 60 cyl. General 1790 R. h starter $375. ® Electric P M in Motor 440 A-1 shape 1-10 in. Centrifugal Pump ss impeller in very good condition, $175.00. tons relaying rails 20 lbs. to 85 Ibs. with izle bars, reasonable prices. 3000 ft. arm- ed electric cable at 35c per foot. Sterling Type Boilers, 125 lb. od shape. Fire brick furnished. esel Engine Fairbanks-Morse. 2-240 H. pressure in 1-90 H. P "$5 f . o down. 10,000 ft. 1l-inch B verly Machinery and Supply Company 6% E. 8rd So. Phone Hyland 87 Salt Lake neta ____ KODAK FINISHING yi) ~ .ECONOMY PHOTO-KRAFT FILM SERVICE pot NE 5 te B, Any Roll Developed with 8 Quality Prints- - - - - 25¢ Crs < «+ fe (Ow eC Wrap coin and film carefully SCHRAMM-JOHNSON DRUGS PHOTO-KRAFT-Box Salt Lake City. 749 Utah USED TRUCKS - Carleson's Used Truck Lot. 0 E. 5th So. Salt Lake Internat'l Y-Ton Panel .........-- $395.00 Dodge Yo-Ton Stake ......---- _.. 355.00 ) Ford Ya-Ton Pickup ....-.-.ce----- 325.00 Internat'l Yo-Ton Pickup sss 90.00 | Chey. Chev. 114-Ton Duel .u.ceeccceccoee 145.00 BO] 1¥o-Ton Duel .....cccce-x-- .. 290.00 Chev. 1¥o-Ton Duel oon ceccconcse-oe 395.00 BABY CHICKS : White, oe White Orphingtons and and Barred all Reds, Rocks, leading va- 3687 U So. - PIONEER waterers, etc. HATCHERY S:ate Week Salt No. 4014 - Lake SALT City LAKE Ruptured Persons Read This fected ya hold Method of Rupture Control perby the Clinic is guaranteed te your Rupture safely and with Perfect Comfort. Thousands of Satisfied Patients have been benefited by_ this Method. Many report being retiev / "B entirely. Write for Measurement Blank or call in person at the Offices of the Clinic. Consultation ch 4 Free, National Hernia Clinic HERBERT DEANE, M. D., Specialist 330 Ness Bidg. Salt Lake City, Utah \ took he would wish he had taken the other; and that every day of delay increased the difficulty and blurred the track, was maddening to Jebb. He gave Pataky the money for Cynthia's little destructions and got rid of him with curt phrases. When Jebb reached Vienna the next morning and went into the breakfast-room he found Miruma waiting for him. Her face was luminous with welcome, but it turned gloomy as she cried: **You deed not finded child. Aman! aman!"' the claimed with unusual fervor for him. ‘"That's my religion, and the closest I can come to a prayer is an operation. And as for experimenting-it's the crying need of the world, Miss Ludlam. If only a man could have a lot more money to spend and all his time to devote to exploring. Experimental surgery is the new world; it's unbounded, undreamed of-why, my God, it's -excuse me!"' He collapsed in full flight, ashamed of his own excitement, but sister Jennie cried: ‘‘Don't mind me-I'm used to Charlie. I love to hear you swear. It shows you have the frenzy that a man needs to be great. You are the man I need to help me found this memorial. It must be just a little different from those that are already established; it must-but you know so much better than I do what is needed. Won't you please-please-take it for charge of me!" Jebb almost fainted at this gift, so great he had never even dreamed of it. They talked formed them complaining. till the porter that the whole in- car was When the train at last reached Paris, the Wentworth Ludlam Memorial Hospital and Experimental Cynthia *‘Leesten.-Do you speak Polish or Mosgovian?" Then He shook his head. she ran on, eyes flashing with delight over am her scheme: cherkes-Circassian born, "It isn't everybody that could have got this," he said; ‘‘I had presence of mind enough to realize that if I said Mme. Janghir was a Turkish lady there'd be all sorts of red tape. So I said she was an American." ‘"‘Well, she is, by intention," said sister Jennie. Miruma blushed and Jebb sighed. The Warsaw train left at noon and required seventeen hours for the journey. Jebb's train to Paris took twenty-seven hours, and he was weary of globe-trottingThere was so little time to get Miruma aboard her train, and there were so many instructions to give her, that leisure was left to talk of nothing else. And Jebb was sadly glad of this; it saved him from the torment of restraining his words of adoration. Jebb's mood was funereal when In his to his hotel. he returned absence the Ludlams had decided to go to Paris by the same train-a conspiracy hatched by sister Jennie to console him. dinner was When told Charles Jennie finished sister to go to the stay and smoking-compartment, there; and she asked Jebb to come cione of back after the expiration As soon as he had accomgar. plished his cigar he wandered back Then she unfolded to sister Jennie. her plan: "When I first saw you in Vienna were the other day, and thought you very rich, I told youl wanted more of your help, you remember?"' Jebb ‘‘Now that I find you are smiled. a keen not an idle millionaire, but don't lift and brilliant surgeon-oh, a your hand-it gives you away as of surgeon, and Miruma has told me it was. in-wherever miracles Before Wentworth. see soul, a them to memorial of that beautiful cursed through no fault of his by ancestors what I want I die an that sorrows from inheritance had or to despair. poor heaven knows to drive poor, dear failure My could orother was started wrong, he to he ought aever hope to be what have been. hospital for a that ht "So I thoug and the malformations correcting little chilof the inherited handicaps mea good as about dren would be as I Wentworth for poor morial d. of its hit) I wanted a large part it I want al. work to be experiment finding new to keep investigating, You dark. pe into methods, pushing , don't you a all I understand in ete aed this world, Miss Ludlam," Jebb ex- Cynthia, dawdling in the corridor as before, saw a shriek. The child's speech was: him : first first and set up distinguishable "Oh, Nunkie Dave, you never told me what Thinpat the Thailor had in the thoot-cathe he bringed his little daughter Bridthet.'' And before anything else could be told Jebb had to ransask his excited brain for a catalogue of gifts that would have foundered the reindeers of Santa Claus himself. And after this, Cynthia must tell her own adventures with the Pogodins, and she must show off the Russian she had learned and the Polish words, and what a nice woman Mme. Pogodin was-though not half so nice as Aunt Miruma. In fact, there was no silencing the child till fatigue put her to sleep- or at least they supposed she was asleep. *‘And now, hanim effendim-Miruma-tell me how you managed to find her-you wonderful, angelic-" he stopped short on the brink of a plunge. From the sighed. It depths of his seemed soul Jebb impossible to keep his love secret any longer. He had no right to deny her that tribute. It was her privilege to know that he loved her enough to relin- and I learn some Russian as child, before I am taked to Turkey. "But leesten? You shall go to Paris and look,- and I shall go to Warsaw. The one who finds the child feerst telegraphs the other. I bet you I gone to find her the shekerbuli-the sugar lump feerst. What you bet?" By this time the Ludlams met in the breakfast-room and came over to their table. The story and the scheme told all over again enraptured sister Jennie and even opened the fat eyes of brother Charles. As a much traveled woman, sister Jennie scoffed at the idea of any difficulty in Miruma's way. Brother Charles volunteered to get the passport from the American consul in Vienna. An hour later he came back with it boastfully: royalty basis with a guarantee of a good income for life. When the Nord-Express pulled in at the station, Jebb ran through the cars searching. "Oh, eet ees such a long story. They were not hard to find, the Pogodins, but they refuse to geeve up the baby. They say she is their own, and they defy me to proof she is somebody's who is in America. So I go away much afraided. But I come back and wait in the street. Not till next morning Cynthia comes out alone to play and I- stealed her from the stealers-oh, how I runs! He told the story briefly, hastily explained his new dilemma. She solved it in one instant: own, all an see a real modern chick maternity hospital. Visitors always welcome. ' UTAH to this Y-shaped trail that whichever way he "T spoke to you of my poor brother ' TURKEY POULTS ers, To come and realize your HATCHING DAILY brown and buff Leghorns, Hampshires. In answer to Jebb's frantic demands for a guess as to the probable destination of the couple, Mr. Pataky pulled out a business card, the duplicate of the one Jebb already Mr. Pogodin was in business had. He | both in Paris and in Warsaw. "IT & Finance St. made haste to pack up their belongings and ship them to the station. Mr. Pataky being away from home did not learn which of the stations they went to, and from. "I am sure you find them in Paris | or in Warsaw, if maybe they ain't gone to some other place." YS} So. & State St.-Single 75c - $1.-$1.25 , Mick from Temple. Ooks Pe er month. of fe HMOND, 70 E. had Pogodins the | had not done well in Pest. Cutt otel Plandome-Salt se» evening while Mr. Pataky the Folies Caprice seeing a work, By RUPERT SERVICE quish her for her own sake. And then with much left talk to History has a way of fading into romance with the passing of a century, even though the facts are kept meticulously aligned. So it is that when one thinks of the development of Michigan, Ohio and the rest of the Northwest Territory, he is apt to think in terms of gold-braided boundary jugglers, coonskin caps, long rifles and buttered rum. of Station was pretty well talked out, and a good deal of it was mapped on paper. The first place Jebb sought in Paris was the office of the Machinesa-ecrire Flaubert. The president and his son received him and recognized the name of Nikolai Pogodin with contrasting feelings. The younger member of the firm laughed; the elder swore. Mr. Pogodin, they said, had been their agent, but his interest in the race tracks of various capitals had mixed up his accounts so that they had regretfully erased him from their rolls. The Flauberts promised Jebb any information in their power, but they doubted if Pogodin were in Warsaw, or that he would remain anywhere long. CHAPTER door. of misspelled fog Through this words a blast of sunlight came that almost smote Jebb Saul-wise to the floor. It seemed intolerably long to Jebb before the Ludlams returned to the hotel, and when they came in they The telwere fagged with shopping. new egram acted like an elixir of life. But the true laggardliness of time to was felt only when Jebb tried live out the day and a half between him and Miruma's return. the He spent a large portion of cabletime writing and rewriting a was This Thatcher. gram to Mrs. her not easy, for he must inform well that her child was alive and husher that home, and on the way and band's good name was rescued faithdocumented, and that the poor which invention an ful soul had left place on These were men whose letters reveal that they were hard-working journeymen and laborers and seafarers whose main concern was not with the dangers of frontier life, but with the ordinary business of getting jobs and founding homes. Out of New York state these boys came, to spread as far north as Ontario, as far west as St. Louis, and south to New Orleans, with the Bible-reading father always in the background, giving good Scriptural counsel, wife -oh, should the gift be refused?- should you ruin my life forever?- should you-oh should you make me all the proposing?" Those compartment-cars are very cosy for settling disputes of this sort. And Cynthia was asleep-or at least they thought she was asleep. : {THE END.] Homes He e HIS charming little frock has such a beguilingly flattering figure-line, and it looks so crisply tailored, that you can appropriately make it up ih spun rayon or thin wool for runabout, as well as in gingham or percale for roundthe-house. Its piquant simplicity looks especially attractive in gay prints and high shades, punctuated by buttons and braid. Full over the bosom, high-shouldered, with a tiny waist finished by a sash bow, pattern 1909-B is just about as new and becoming as it Nina-You were seen with Mr. X on the night of the storm. His wife knows everything. See page 19 of the May True Story Magazine, now on sale.-Adv. Eat Yet eat of the in in manufacturer, had inspected the market Charles and for her would on smash hits as the a custard day.-Pope. EEE EEE EES EEE EEE care that You can DUST and never RAISE a dust. Use O-Cedar on your dustcloth Mother, here's a TIP: Use genuine O-Cedar Polish on your DUSTCLOTH. Then, it pucks up the dust. You don't raise a cloud; you n't chase dust around from chairs to table to piano and back to chairs again. Instead, pick it up and dust dustlessly; add a dash of O-Cedar Polish to your cloth. Ask for: Caar MOPS, WAX, DUSTERS, CLEANERS AND O-CEDAR FLY AND MOTH SPRAY Kellogg's have been America's favorite for 34 years Ki Sa, a, E a PET Bi Ses Cage C SF SWITCH TO SOMETHING YOU'LL LIKE! such ‘Copr. 1940 by Kellogg Company i Ci Me My Mey, ly, ly, ly ye eer i i tl th i i Atlan Peerurvw~S Dee eee ee ee ee In SALT LAKE CITY IRISH EYES KATHLEEN NORRIS to move. Wherever Sheila Carscadden was, things started been Trouble. Action was her middle name; it might well have a Returning some money she found in a pocketbook started , led train of events that made two men break their betrothals s to her kidnapping by racketeers, an escapade the racketeer her the talk of the country, involved her loved. in an airplane crash, and finally won for her the man she Read every thrill-packed chapter. STARTS EEE THERE 1S A DIFFERENCE IN CORN FLAKES! "Make never forgot, made for HEHEHE Sorrows of Others who for others' sorrows Dreams dreams authors, also wrote HEHEHE EEE no jot, the name of ‘‘man'' man deserveth not.-Saadi. ea of America's most beloved who coins John-Don't listen to her. Tragedy is sure to result. Read ‘"‘A Girl and My Husband'"' in May True Story Magazine and be warned. It's on sale now.-Adv. A Superb Story one in HEHEHE Half-Time Kings MADE BY KELLOGG'S IN BATTLE CREEK by cents Natives of Dahomey in Africa have a new idea of kingship. They consider the job so important that the king must be on duty every hour of the day. But since no human being could stand a 24hour job they have two kings- one for the night and one for the day. First There was Thomas, a roistering wanderer in sail, whose papers show that he sailed in 1816 from Kingston, Ont., with a cargo of 40 barrels of beer and 427 pounds of cheese, at a time when memories of the war with Britain were still fresh. It was Jeremiah who wrote of the boom which followed the war in Buffalo, only to complain three years later that jobs were hard to find. He had just finished his' apprenticeship as a carpenter and was starting out on his own. "T am this day pretty good looking, half white and 21 years of age (half Indian, perhaps?). I am now square with the world-I owe nobody and nobody owes me.,"' Jerry wrote to his sailor brother. Thomas had evidently cautioned him on the folly of wandering, for he continued: "Free and independent, you have advised me to refraim from rambling and be steady. I should be glad if you would take a little to yourself, for I believe you stand in need of becoming more steady than what you have been for these six years past. For you have traveled thousands of miles and I have n traveled half of one.'' 15 No. .i< cécenties SPHERE SOPH I I give myself for a gift-then-then do Enclose Pattern Name Believe Wife," "Red Silence," "Sea Gull," and "The Secret of Margaret Yorke." "VE ARR NORD EXPRESS JOOST OUTSITE RUSSIANS BORDERS VE ARRIVAL IN PARIS DAY AFTER TWO MOROW CYNTA IS GOOD AND SENS LOAF TO NUNKEDAY. "MIRUMA." Ludlam, Alvin Hamer, Detroit bookseller, has discovered a collection of letters written by the five sons of Josiah Colburn, a dour Yankee of the early Nineteenth century, to let us know the first of the 1800s was not altogether a, time of the grand gesture and political pow-wow. be your SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Montgomery Ave. Francisco Calif. San XVI Jebb went back to his hotel to tell sister Jennie that he resigned his in her great project. stewardship He must set out on a dismal journey But sister Jennie was to Poland. She was shopping not to be found. He went to in the Rue de la Paix. dismally was and room his own suitcase his into things his flinging when a telegram was brought to his a prominent If I should Letters Rate Jobs, Century-Old Leisure was nothing else. hesitation, his mouth full of the ashes of confession, he began to tell her of his other self. "Do not tell it me," she said, "It hoorts you, and I know it all many days. Seester Jennie tells it, and it makes me such joy to theenk that you have been shrinking from me not because you did hated me, but because you did loved me all thees long time." "Then you understand why I kept silent?'' **Yes."" "And why I can never ask you to be my-my wife?'' ""No. Leesten, Jebb Effendim, you theenk you have another self that you cannot keel. I theenk you can, weet the help of Allah and weet my love to make you a home. Even if you cannot keel that Meester Pierpont, still when you are that man I could keep you close, take care of you, save you from to run allover the world, and, perhaps some day be made dead in some tarrible should guard you and when the long seeckness was over you should wake back to yourself in your own home and in my arms always. Then soon, I know, I know Allah would answer such prayer from two such lovers, soon the other self comes less and less often, stays less and less long. That could be-couldn't eet?'' "Yes, it could be-it would be, if- but I love you too much to let you endure it." ‘*‘Hush, Jebb Effendim. I theenk you want me for wife-yes?" Jebb only cast his eyes up in despair of words to express this desire. "‘Then-if thees time instead of to be gived by somebody to somebody, 2 ee can be-definite proof that, be it ever so simple, everything you wear this spring has to be very feminine and pretty. This is a particularly easy dress to make. Try it, if you haven't done much sewing, and have been wistfully wishing you could. You CAN, with these easy patterns. Detailed sew chart included. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1909B is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, and 40. Corresponding bust measurements 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, and 40. Size 14 (32) requires 3% yards of 36-inch material without nap; 15g yards braid. Send order to: HUGHES place. ¢, EPARTMENT NEXT ISSUE THE NEW HOUSE ti Average Reading Distance ourteen inches is common!y eed upon as the average distance which books should be held from eyes in reading. ATTERN i ed that any canines found in those inties might be killed, with no Spins allowable against the person nmitting the act, according to the in historical records survey. nG 3° &¥ ti law HOTEL i colonial ti The i ago. 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