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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD banner serial fiction- - WHAT to EAT and WHY C. ALT In !Hlh, doJ- A O Domford Yataa urfugue . . .fy, DORHI'OBD YATES WNTJ Service pe-- CBAPTEU fu UCTs"' lbfCame was as heavy as swift; had always been given money could buy. (Ji ;t mi t pI,ld nothing were dead, I h my parents expect any to led urDver been fair .estate. And then, one of the sills fe the when morning, lows of Oxford were gay with sole trus-- " i learned that my away. fortune my gambled J M'efill, lo )49 Utah DHL: ILL! nh Le Packed for me and told b?d done- - 1 was to leave jL of my help of the Head work in obtained soon I Z'L for which I was paid just I shillings a week, and though I bet-;fta- n that I might have done to rise efforts that, in my kL hmavey.r.6tePS- - Whe you And that was as the far as he got. day train. For a moment the AU that I haAarrangfd everythmg. w as to go to the had poor jaws Bank the next worked. And then the head feU m5,rn'nS and draw for him the money haveideways and the body went slack That he dared rn1ClhethWaV, Save him in my arms. L tho.URh check And when I had drawn the my 500 money So died the ninth pounds I was to bring It to the station Count of Brief. W0Uld 1)6 leaVmg And the secret of his House with aVhalbpast ten. As he said, so I did. I had no brain Two days later I learned to argue The only thing I could see was that an the Innsbruck road. uncle of whose existence I had been They arrested me on the platform . . . hardly aware had recently died In ey bought I was Ferdinand. do not blame them at all. You see. he Iwas Australia, leaving me all he had. nly my wife and my And he was a very rich man. father could tell us apart And they Though my adversity lasted no were dead. When they searched me. they found the more than a short two years, it money-a- nd Ferdinand's ticket for the would have been strange indeed if it k Hp Cblow )N I was beggar when a - take. A guest had Just arrived from abroad and the office had asked for his passport, from which to fill up the form which the police required. And now it had been returned to me, instead of to him. The passport was that of Percy Elbert Virgil, born in London in 1910, and domiciled at Brief. And the face was the face of a clever, unscrupulous blackguard, with as close-se- t a pair of eyes as ever I much unkindness that "resently withdrew from a battle ich I was ill equipped. with so et nd misfortune had a companion in summers, some of fifty ran 4, chain safd, ki 1 tate. seen better days. His so Matthew Gering-- or for though he looked Eng-j- b oo, had wLs , OOPS e t sa,d: LET1C wbilli, etc. CO- Lead Lane, Red i saw. I sent the passport back to the office, lighted a cigarette and sat down to think things out. Unknown to Gering, before he had been arrested, his brother had had a son. That son was now twenty-si- x and dwelled to his fathers house. ' And father and son were both evil. How did the Lady Elizabeth fare between two such wolves? Her position was ugly. I mean, she stood in the way.x I began to feel ill at ease. It was, of course, none of my business. I happened to know the truth, but that was alL Gering had made no request: he had simply told me his tale. But then he had not been aware that his brother had a child of his own: and he had not expected that I should ever be free. For all that, it was none of my business. I put out my cigarette and began to change. Even if I made it my business, what could I do? It had never entered my head to doubt the truth of the statement which Gering had made. But how on earth could I prove it? By declaring the existence of some secret I did not know? By alleging the existence of a doorway which no one would ever find? The thing was absurd. I had no proof. Gering himself had done nothing, because he had known very well that there was nothing to be done. And yet . . . (TO BE COSTIMED ) enough, his speech sometimes That he i0i.od an alien blood. unmistak-;- j was birth gentle ii d and I think that he may have fted till misery dulled his seemed the better for my He os. j, i -V EEZEK CREAK reason for staying had another I f Cream tit bonaiort share his lot, and after ffirg to three months I moved to t gamble lodging at which he had It by himself for 13 years. ass.on after this that I knew that if only for too d not leave him, nun- l.. Salt iyl sake. IMs was the way of it. manager of the warehouse at Mi we were used as clerks was The ospita 'man upon whose seemed to feed. Abaoffiittt r OOL levisum aphy ilog. vitals class Disappointed bigger game, he preyed with a For 15 fury on what he had. ars poor Gering had been his butt, f CoBPIJ t I ak r ha-s- d iwjig ter u ki ElUf what the slings and arrows I can only describe as a diseased: but my arrival did celling to take the strain, for he d to divide his attentions if I was have my share of inhumanity. t And so I stayed where I was for irly two years, when two things ppened together, to set me free. One gusty, April Ynorning poor traig could not rise, and when I Jd brought him a doctor, against the latter told me plainly a! he was a dying man. He has no resistance, he said. I l could have put him out rfr.s is congestion of the lungs. d course I did what I could, but H I came back from my work on following day, I knew at once Goring had seen his last dawn. isd KL COLLEl O Lake 'OS ano. M ,j ome Serna Sait Lake UNING RK?. s training s! 6th at S COLL:: r. 1 UTAH informal Each Je Week board i pi m so antttd iton did he. Hot ; now, Exon, very long n quietly k must he . . . been near ten had spoken no word tteirly an hour, when he put a d under the blankets and drew r s!leet of foolscap, folded in have and we Pock, I a:. s,i vould like Bid. I wrote you to read this, it down years ago. ever read it. It it been well received. ,ute even considered all day ri r I should show it to you you r have done so much for a bro-- f fan. You see, I am like a dog his been ill used for so long Bo one has "Id not have be 's suspicious ready to bite to caress the f's of kindness hand that his head. he began to cough, 1 e Paroxysm which followed ned me out of my life. At Wfive minutes went by before 'Hzure had passed, and this left so weak and shaken that even a would have known that the s,,at hand- - Indeed, I had for-- e 7 Paper, when his trem-angethrust it against my his words , Tru-- ! ,0 kind, st latown, be ,vn an ? rs too r of back on Ml borrC ' 'Vim : f n father at Brief, which slam1 Innsijruek, from In fhe ana tWflnty ?nrilintld of 1914 my fattier news from the English r was under ar Kery. I left for ur ArmeS d0n t r r,rwBd'"iu ae w,hal could 1 8nu,!"t my he tKU,ana"s;e1lable- - And from wa peifcctly ' at U EPrHtaldj 'All'' be ,pntdiland sloort his trial, ktn we u,!r Jr.5?n ,or several st fill on ,ene at last alone, my h L8,.k 8 nd. hogged me ot to hdP hm hi 1 ' do eseaoe Llke fool. 1 t sday. 'lM to onnements for him Id sin rcptltiously. houlh America at 'nR dnv. I booked his Th' and h"d'he thmgs waning I returned All 1 riKa1 V to ban h the follow in isVrS ' ; L .. Cte ".s t weu. W'as a"niting rue. ttmtrd vbulh dr,d. . , tl road. '"ned mp b'nsbruck a biiither,,ri;n,,r in dream. it wux hiki,,: s and he that touK ''r nt vi !t d b,,'n knied three-fourth- d and eggs, or the lean meat of one lamb chop. Sugar is a highly concentrated fuel food which burns cooked and fresh fruits, and fruit quickly and completely in the juice and milk beverages. body furnace. A Food of Many Formi one-thir- The Sugar Bowl Is a Dynamo It has been said that our pres- ent day civilization could not have reached its present heights without the driving force that sugar gives to men and women. And it is a fact that until comparatively recent times, only the very wealthy could afford this I quick energy food fk i J which we now con-f- moisture content, despite popular notions to the contrary. Most fruits contain easily digestible sugars, the percentage in dried fruits ranging from 50 to 75 per cent. Milk sugar is also hand-blow- DOTH these dresses are so pretty and so simple that you will want to make them up several times, in different colors. And with such beautifully simple designs, whose whole charm is a matter of line, you can use colors as gay as you please, now that A Real Stimulant While starchy foods require an average of from three to four hours for digestion, the body begins to burn a ration of sugar from 10 to 30 minutes after it is well-know- had nothing on dashing Richard Exon, Knights of oil who invaded the Count o Briel a the Brithli adventurer from his throne and wooed radle toppled the impostor title holder 1 Thats the story of She his niece, ibe real Dotnlord Yates romantic new ser.al Tainted Her Face, ,hc romanCC lc,wccn startin'- - in ibis issue- Duthes. laugh at Iticbard and Lady Elizabeth, youll II John Herrick . . . jou think it s and jovial of Whrlp the host stcry youve tvr Yn jr Painted Her Face She reading -- today! WNU C. Houston Goudiss 1938 -- 30. Darts at the waistline give it becoming slimness. The high square neckline and shrugged shoulder sleeves are very new. Its the useful kind of dress you can wear for shopping and business as well as around the house. Make it up in silk crepe, flannel, sheer wool or cottons. 1 WWW" Patterns. 39-in- 1576 is designed for sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. quires 4 yards of h Size 36 re- material. Fall and Winter Fashion Bonk. The new Fall and Winter Pattern Book which shows photographs of the dresses being worn is now out. (One pattern and the Fall and Winter Pattern Book 25 cents.) You can order the book separately for 15 cents. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) each. Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. Moral Rectitude His head Is seldom far wrong whose heart is always right. We bow down to mental greatness, intellectual strength, and they are divine gifts; but moral rectitude is stronger than they. It is irresistible always in the end WED, OCT. 5 AND EVERY WEDNESDAY The d Therefore, moderation , mummmtt press-the-butto- TEXACO STAR THEATRE 60 Mlnuttf of Music, Comody, Drama with Adolphe MENJOU Jane FROMAN Una MERKEL Kenny BAKER Charlie RUGGLES Jimmy WALLINGTON David BROEKMAN'S n be the watchword. that is an excellent rule to in regard to all kinds of For when consumed to excess, any food ceases to be beneficial. It has also been charged that sweets are harmful to the teeth. But recent investigations suggest that the teeth are far more likely to deteriorate because the proper minerals and vitamins have not been included in the diet. It is, however, desirable to restrict the amount of sugar given to childicn. That is because it quickly satisfies the appetite and the conmay theiefore dccrco-sumption of other good and necessary foods, particularly those containing an abundance of minerals and vitamins. Clrldren therefore can best take sweets in the form of sweetened puddings, should But follow foods. table- lf rial without nap. Collar and cuffs in contrast require yard. you are not so buoyant as you Moderate Use Desirable were when a gall Like all sources of great power, however, sugar must be handled The Answer with care. Too much sugar may He What sort of a bracelet prove as disastrous as too little. would you like? . . . Well, why Possibly because of this, several dont you answer? false notions have grown up reShe Darling, silence is golden! garding this splendid food. It is often charged that sweets KNOWS TIIE KIND cause indigestion, and it is true in when consumed that excess, they may ferment and result in irritation. one-ha- one-hal- The singing-glasse- s lie stormed her castle heart! . . . and won her and 1454 is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12, 14 and 16 years. Size 10 rematequires 21a yards of n until they become perfect glasses or jugs. In another room cutting is done, and in another Is a museum of various rare pieces made to those works throughout the centuries. One spoons of molasses supplies as f much calcium as one and cups of diced carrots. It is a wise mother, therefore, who uses it in making the cookies that children like so well. The mixed or blended sirups that are so popular with griddle cakes and fren h toast on coo! fall days, also add palate appeal and energy values to the diet. For in whatever form sugar is consumed, it remains natures n heat shortcut to and quick, healthful stimulation. home-keepin- g first-bor- n brea'th broke one or two of them. The same firm will still blow you such glasses today. The new premIn ises resemble those described Seventeenth century and Sixteenth treatises on glass blowing, and in children. d barn-lik- e may cannot see so far. My rights, Elizabeth that was my daughters name . . . Listen. The great tower of Brief the great tower. There is a doorway there which no one would ever find. You must go up, count- easily digested. Honey, molasses, corn sirup and the popular blended sirups are usually eaten in combination with other foods and are therefore unlikely to be consumed in too large amounts. Corn sirup is often added to milk, fruits, vegetables, cereals, breads and desserts. It helps to make these foods more palatable and adds 60 calories with every tablespoon. It is so easily digested that it is often used in infant feeding. Molasses provides significant amounts of both calcium and iron and is a good sweet for growing t sume at the rate of more than 4,000,000 tons a year, or more than 100 pounds annually for every man, woman and child. This peerless fuel food was once regarded almost as a medicine because of its ability to relieve fatigue and sustain vitality. And no wonder! For sugar is transformed into heat and power in less time and with less effort than any other foodstuff. t-- The quick pick-u- p of sugar can be obtained in many forms besides the sparkling crystals of granulated sugar with which we are most familiar, or the brown sugar which is quite similar in composition, except for a larger Scallop-Trimme- Rudo,f Elbert Virgil b Lount f Brief an HuVse- - My mother died twin.hmiherHKr 0niy olher ehild Bn hour af,er He was-- - tb-r- my m pseudo-Cou- Austrian 1 By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS old saying that good things come in small THERE is anThat is particularly apt when we pause to consider the nutritive value of sugar in its various forms. For two scant tablespoons of sugar supply as much caloric s value as does cup of cooked farina, or one eaten. It reaches the blood and muscles in a few minutes as rapidly in fact as alcohol! That is why concentrated sweets, which are I Saw Upon My Table an Envelope. largely sugar, are so effective in combating fatigue. boat. Unknown to me, he had put this had not altered my outlook for good Athletic coaches are well aware into my pocket to gam his terrible ends. and I all. had settled a down in And he had left for Innsbruck whilst I of the unique power of sugar as a was still at the Bank. By an earlier very pleasant manor, which had stimulant and restorative of entrain, of course. He was across the been a famous seat, but was now a Channel before I went to my cell. ergy. That is why school and colhoteL So he and I changed places. lege youths are so frequently givHe took my father's title and all that It must not be thought that I hjd en highly sweetened beverages was mine, and I was sent to prison for forgotten Gering or the statement of and other concentrated sweets beseven years. fore engaging in athletic compeMy daughter became his daughter, my his which I held. I remembered life became bis life. You see, it was so him constantly, and more than once tition. easy. Only my wife and my father had I wondered if it was not for me to known why I went to England. For the Military leaders also appreciate rest, I had gone away and now had take action upon the facts which I how it increases endurance, and come back. If my manner seemed in knew. And then it always seemed sweets are an important part of any way strange, the double loss I had best to let sleeping dogs lie. I had suffered was blamed for that. And Ferthe soldiers ration. During the dinand was careful. He even denied my looked up the House of Brief and World war civilians were urged 500 I He said that check for pounds. had found two things first, that the to reduce their consumption of gay colors are smart, and they had forged tt . . . widower a still was Seven years Is seven years. By the sugar in order to make larger look so pretty in the fall. time I came out of Jail, my cause, which and, secondly, that on his death the amounts available for the army, A Charming School Dress. had always been hopeless, was dead and and most people found it difficult buried as though It had never been. So This is a classic style in which I changed my name and sought work I indeed to forego this agreeable growing girls always look pretty. had to have bread. London Glassworks Three Centuries Old, food. The snug waist and flaring skirt That Is my story. I cannot prove tt, of course. I can only say it is true. Uses the Same Methods as Before Christ are so becoming, and just grown M. C. Indispensable for Most People up enough to delight them! In As I folded the paper, the dying wool is an such Just outside London is a factory front of them flourishes a fig tree crepe, cashmere, gingham or indispensable Sugar man caught at my arm. grown from a cutting taken from ingredient in cakes, cookies, pies, jersey, with fresh while collar and where glass is blown in substantialhe whis"Do you believe it? puddings and ice creams, it is so sleeve bands, it will be your ly the same way as It was 3,000 or outside the Tudor street building. The finest English glass, which in necessary in beverages, on breakpered. 4,000 years before Christ, writes a daughters favorite school frock. "Every word, sir, said L "I London correspondent in the Bos- the Eighteenth century was the fast cereals and with fruits that it Make one version of it in plaid. wish you had told me before. envy of all Europe, is flint glass. seems a great hardship to do withton Globe. Day Frock. Until 15 years ago the Whitefriars The ingredients are sand, red lead, out it even for one meal. "Listen. I say In that statement You should certainly have sevbecause of the dis- potash and saltpeter, with smaller that I have no proof. But I have. Works, We are extremely fortunate, eral dresses made like this it fits I have always had it a proof that trict in which they operated, were quantities of borax and arsenic. For most people will agree, to live in so beautifully and looks so smart. glass, only sand from an age when sugar is so high in in Tudor street, a narrow thoroughI could not use. to Fleet street. the forest of Fontainbleau is used, fare parallel running poor with excitement, quality and so reasonable in price. Shaking there since the year as it has been used for generations. In the Thirteenth century when Gering raised himself up, and, since They had been room where the In the 16G6. sugar was introduced to England it seemed best not to thwart him, I after the Great fire of 23, 1609, Samuel Pepys actual glass is blown, the men are him lend to him February through India, it cost the equivaarm about put my cenon his birthday went to the duke of grouped around fires, and each lent of ten dollars a pound in the strength. "and there, find- ter is called a "chair, from the monetary terms of today. The House of Brief has a secret Yorks playhouse, went homeward chair in which the glassblower sits. Refined sugar is now priced at a which has passed from time im- ing the play begun and there The chief blower is called the gafGlass house, to the son. cents a pound and one pound few Only memorial from father to cousins the making of fer, and he is helped by the serviover 1,800 calories! Moretwo persons know this: and they showed my supplies and the tor boy. made had several things Boy and Gal over, when you buy a branded are the Count and his heir. Ferdi- glass and content, and, the blowers the "chairs Around Old Lady (to chauffeur, who is among a backed by product, nand cannot know It: but I who was with greathad one or two go, to and from the blaze, holding I know the secret of others, I name, you have the assurance slow in helping her from her limthe which make an echo in their hands long tubes at the end that made, have who quality and purity are of the ousine) James, you are not so our House. And to you, of molten voice, the first that ever I of which are "blobs gallant as you were when a boy. highest. been my son, 1 will pass it on. It to the but so thin that the very glass. The men twirl fine glasses Chauffeur No, madam, and I saw; but use it, can be that you wine words. owing at my heels and read title would pass to his daughter, the Lady Elizabeth Virgil, now twenty-fou- r years old. The dreadful injustice, therefore, was over and done: it had in fact come to an end with Gerings death: and though the wicked flourished, the good was beyond his reach, . And then a strange thing happened. Summer was coming in, and I had been out in my car for the whole of the day. I entered my rooms to the evening, to bathe and change, when I saw upon my table an envelope covering something, but not addressed. Opening this, I found a passport within and knew at once that some servant had made a mis- Houston Goudiss Discusses Sugar, Sirup and Molasses; Describes Correct Use of Sweets, Peerless Body Fuel TEXACO Orchostra STAR CHORUS and FamoutGuftitStart vtry week In dra motic tkttchfii un derth direction of MAX X REINHARDT TtXACGtfilAltiri rrw got my name in the paper! I Only Newspapers bring the "lies always short never has news of vital Interest to you a dollar. "How do you know? "Havent I tried to borrow from him tune and again? The man who said that borrowing money was the same as borrowing trouble had got it wrong. Anybody can borrow trouble. Worthy Lesson his return ftom his first dancing lesion IloLby was asked how he liked it. "Aw, it's easy, he replied. All you have to do is turn around and keep wiping your feet. On Headlines may scream of death end dibabter without causing you to raise an eyebrow. But if your son gets his name in the paper that's rcul news! It i .n't by accident that this paper prints so many stoiies which vitally interest you and your neighbors. News of remote places is stated bnefly and interpret! d. Local new sis covered fully, because all good editors know that the news whuh interests the rcadcis most is news about themselves. Now is a good time to lemn more about Ibis newspaper which is made especially for you. Just fur fun osk yourself tins question: IIow could we get along Without newspaj ers? KNOW YOUR IKWSPAmi |