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Show THE LEHI SUN, LEW. UTAH gbroider Bouquets On Your Bedspread Pattern 6656 A SPREAD, In true Colonial style, of sprays of varied flowers flow-ers can be yours with ease these bouquet are ail in the simplest titches. Place them in a wreath jf you prefer. Pattern 6656 contains con-tains a transfer pattern of 18 motifs mo-tifs ranging from 6 by 6 inches to 1 by 2 inches; illustrations of stitches; color schemes; materi-ls materi-ls needed. Send order to: gewlni Circle Needleeraft Dept. 8 Eisbth Ave. New York Enclose 15 cents In coin lor Pattern Pat-tern No Name Address How George Came to Get His Face Slapped The dumb blonde on a country ramble had been paying a great deal more attention to her shy boy companion than to the fresh spring scenery. Entwining her arm with his, she gushed, 'George, I think you're wonderful!" wonder-ful!" "Thank you, Mary," answered George slowly. "And I think you're ditto." The dumb blonde pondered over this. Before long they came upon old Jollop, the farmer, who was tending his pigs. She took him aside and said: "Tell me, Mr. Jollop, Jol-lop, what does ditto mean?" Jollop thought for a moment, then said, "You see that pig over there by the fence?" "Yes." "Well, then, that other pig next to it. That one is ditto to the first one." INDIGESTION may affect the Heart w trapped in the stomach or gullet may act like a mr-tnggeron the heart. At the first sign of distress mart men and women depend on Bell-ana Tablets to en cm free. No laxative bat made of the fastest-KV.?.S.'?K',r,ne" fastest-KV.?.S.'?K',r,ne" known for add indigestion. If the T DOSE doesn't prove Be!l-ans better return bwtia to hi and receive DOUBLE Money Beck. 26a. A Working Day Life is a short day; but it is a working day. Activity may lead to evil; but inactivity cannot be led to good. Hannah Moore. j Read This Important Message! i jSj those "trying years" (38 to s Ni?DimTV?;SUr,Eettin' moody: cranky and ! NERVOUS? Do you fear hot hashes, weak-Si weak-Si 1 8pc11b7 Are you jealous of utter. Bonjotner women getf THEN LISTEN. ? i-.i?8 yn?Ptom often result from female i """U disorders. So start today and take Unoui Lydis E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-' Com-' EX v 'ar.07r 6 years Pinkham's Com-', Com-', EL?J , helpe1 hundreds of thousands of a? a",0?",10,0 "nfflni thru" difficult I EEL j .m " ha helped calm unstrung bWf n4 '??n nnoyin female funo-' funo-' jfrepilaritiee." One of the most tffto-" tffto-" womana,' tonics. Trj til Daily Growth J don't think much of 'a man m is not wiser today than he was yesterdayLincoln: intake's NEWEST HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE Mormon Tempi. bichlt Recommend nj h'.a r1-53 to 53.00 " 1EI1 " ifls ' i W I - ' I r ' . ' - kz ';? 1 !$ v - 4 . J I . . . - - asj 1 CHAPTER XV Continued 24 Nearing the camp of McQueen, Alan and Noel separated to close in with cocked rifles from different angles. At last Alan stood where he commanded com-manded a view of the fire which lit the surrounding trees with its flick-ering flick-ering glow. Near the fire a tarpaulin, tar-paulin, banked with snow, had been stretched across two saplings to reflect the heat. In the snow hole, beside the fire, huddled a bulky figure in hooded parka. Beyond, in the trail from the shore, stood the loaded sled. The four dogs, too exhausted ex-hausted to note the silent approach of the stalkers, lay somewhere asleep in the snow. The shed tent faced away from the anxious eyes of the man who sought the girl's familiar parka. He could not see her. Under that snow-banked snow-banked canvas Heather doubtless slept, dead with fatigue. He moved closer through the black murk of the spruce and stood directly behind be-hind the man hunched at the fire. This was McQueen. Where was Slade? "Well, Tom," mumbled the man in the parka, "y" wouldn't listen t' reason. Got tricky! Now you're ly-in' ly-in' out tonight payin' for it! It's a cold bed out there, eh Tom?" A bellow bel-low of a laugh followed. "Figgered on John McCord's gold and his girl, too, Tom, old pal!" chuckled McQueen. "I said: 'Hands off her!' But y were too smart got tricky! Well, Trudeau got his and now y got yours! The gold's mine all mine, Tom and her, too!" McQueen twisted around where he sat and faced the river shore. "Sleepin warm, Tom?" he jeered. "If you're cold, I'll bring your bag!" For a space he muttered into his hood before he went on, aloud, talking talk-ing into the fire: "With this Indian fish and meat I'll reach the cache. Then, Cameron, good-by to you! Heavy chance you had with four dogs! We started with ' six," he chuckled, "and got a present of six more with fish and meat thrown in. Pity you didn't get what the Indians got at the bend! Too bad it wasn't you, Cameron too bad!" Thirty feet from the man raving at the fire a rifle covered the middle of his back. But the shed tent, beyond, be-yond, was in the line of fire. Then a husky somewhere in the snow suddenly waked and snarled. The husky yelped feebly, then was silent There was no sound from the other dogs, too dead to stir from their beds. McQueen got stiffly to his feet and fumbled in his parka as he squinted into the blackness beyond the circle of fire glow, listening. He swung around and stared toward the river shore. The rifle now covered his heart "You here, Cameron?" he roared. "Well, you're too late!" Drawing a black automatic from his parka, he started toward the snow-banked tent "Come and get her, now!" Before the man in the murk could fire, a black body lunged from the gloom and catapulted onto McQueen's Mc-Queen's back hurling him headlong into the snow. There was the muffled muf-fled explosion of the pistol as a knife flashed in the firelight flashed again and again. Then the dogs broke loose from the spruce beyond the sled. A girl's voice cried: "Alan! Alan!" Al-an!" And the yearning arms of Cameron reached her'. Above the sprawled body of McQueen Mc-Queen a Montagnais, hollow eyes glittering, stood, stiff as a spruce, while he held the halft of his knife to his forehead and repeated: "Sleep well. John McCord and Na-payo!" Na-payo!" "Heather!" Alan held the girl In the sleeping bag to his pounding heart "You came at last!" she sobbed, hysterically, clinging to his neck. "It's been so long, Alan so long! I was asleep! Then I heard your name and saw Noel leap." Dumb with the wild joy and emotion emo-tion that choked him, he gripped her in his shaking arms, as if he feared he would lose her, kissing her thin face again and again. "I've loved you every minute-through minute-through those awful days," she whispered, "hoping and praying that you'd come come soon! It was so awful to leave poor Dad lying there in the snow! They shot him but he fought them until he died. And I had to leave him there! Oh, it was so hard to leave him!" "He was unconscious not dead," said Alan. "That night he died in my arms. Before he died, he smiled and whispered, "Heather'!" "Dear, dear old Dad!" The stricken strick-en girl gave herself up to her grief. When the paroxysm of sobbing ceased, she said, wearily: "I'm so tired so tired! I walked and ran most all the way except on the big lake. They let me ride there!" "You're going to rest now for days, dear. We're all going to rest" "You're so thin, Alan! You and Noel and the dogs must have killed yourselves to reach us. Rough and the puppies they're all right?" He pressed his face close to hers as he said: "You'd always think of tbem-our dogs! They're down the by O PENN PUBLISHING CO. shore worked out, but all right Now you stay here and keep warm while I bring up the dogs." Before he left he asked her: "Do you believe I love you, now?" She impulsively drew him close to her. "I knew you did, that day at the camp when you took me in your arms, but I'd been so hurt I've loved you so long ever since you left us on the ice to go to Fort George." He kissed her, then pushed back her hood to touch the thick gold of her hair. Replacing the hood he suddenly sensed the ugliness of the sprawled shape beyond them in the snow. Standing by the fire on which he had placed fresh wood, Noel waited to speak to her, but Heather spoke first "Noel, Noel!" she cried. "Noel, come here!" Heather impulsively reached and hugged the embarrassed Montagnais. Montag-nais. "Thank you, Noel! Oh, thank you for what you've done for me! You're both so thin; you've worked so hard! It makes me cry!" And she burst into tears. "Eet was wort' all de work, Heather to get you!" Noel's bony face shaped a grin, but there were tears in his winking eyes. The men placed McQueen down on the river shore beside the body of A black body lunged from the gloom and catapulted onto Mo-Queen's Mo-Queen's back. the partner he had shot while Heather Heath-er slept, then Alan went for his dogs. Somewhere back in the bush the Indian huskies again lay quiet indifferent in-different to the actions of the strange masters. . When Alan brought his weary and stiff dogs up to the camp with the sled, a hooded figure stood on the ice. "We'll have to wire the dogs away from the camp, tonight, Noel," he said. "They'll pitch on those Indian scrubs if they're loose." With a laugh the hooded shape moved through the gloom to the Un-gavas. Un-gavas. N "Roughy! It's Heather!" she cried, dropping her mittens and thrusting her hands at the doubtful lead-dog. "Powder! Shot! Rogue! It's Heather! Don't you know Heather?" Heath-er?" Sniffs, whines, then a mad chorus of yelps greeted her as the dogs recognized their old playmate. Trail stiff as they were, the four emaciated emaciat-ed Ungavas overwhelmed her with the tawing of fore-feet nuzzling muzzles and the swift thrusts of red tongues. In the crook of Alan's right arm, she walked slowly back to camp where Noel had steaming tea and caribou broth waiting for them. For two days the happy man and girl and the gaunt Ungavas ate and rested in a new camp across the river for there was plenty of Nas- kapi dried caribou and fish on Mc Queen's sled with the eight bags 01 gold. There, while Heather rested in her sleeping bag before the fire, she and Alan talked of John McCord Mc-Cord and the long race up the Kok-soak. Kok-soak. "You see they didn't know I had a pistol, Alan," she explained. "I had no chance to help Dad, that morning. They caught me in my sleeping bag. But somehow, poor Dad broke away from the tent and shot it out with them. When they took me away. I had my pistol under un-der my coat I knew I'd need it "Then, during that drifter," she went on, "while McQueen and Slade slept, I waked up in my bag to see that evil-faced halfbreed watching me. I tried to wake the others, but they were dead with sleep. I bad to shoot him Alan! "Slade was scared and wanted to take my gun,; she continued, "but McQueen wouldn't let him. He told me to shoot Slade if he bothered me. I wouldn't have given it up I'd have shot, first! At the last they were both out of their heads always al-ways watching the back trail, afraid you were coming. Yet they insisted they were fifty miles ahead of you. That's how they ambushed the Nas-kapi Nas-kapi watching for you." "When we reached the Naskapi WW. p&Qki IYER of SKULLS George Marsh trail. Heather, I was almost' kisk-wew. kisk-wew. as Noel says." 'They were terribly afraid of you, Alan," she said. 'They had heard at Fort George that you were the best shot on the coast We had such a long start it seemed almost impossible for you to catch us, and I grew so tired. The last day I lost hope and decided to shoot myself, my-self, as McQueen and Slade quarreled. quar-reled. They went mad, both of them. I knew I'd have to use my gun some day, soon. Then I waked to hear McQueen call your name and saw Noel leap from the shadows." shad-ows." i With the bribe of frequent feedings feed-ings of fish, Noel had won over the shy Indian dogs and, when the party started leisurely for the cache on the big lake, he followed Heather and the gold on Alan's sled with a team of his own. At the cache they rested again while they revelled in flour, sugar and pemmi-can, pemmi-can, and dogs and men rapidly put on weight Slowly but surely the superb vitality of the exhausted girl was working its cure. By the time they reached the cabin on the Talking, Talk-ing, which, to their surprise, McQueen Mc-Queen had not burned, she had recovered re-covered her strength. The shadows shad-ows had left her violet eyes and the dimples were again in her cheeks. There they waited two weeks to hunt deer and net fish, under the ice, for dog-food for the long trip to the coast One night when the stars swarmed low over the valley and the aurora glowed in the north, Heather, Alan and Rough stood on the river ice as the frozen feather of a moon hung above the western tundra. The girl in the hooded parka American Sucker, a Carries Own Bait, Although more than 25,000 different differ-ent varieties of fish already have been catalogued and new types constantly con-stantly are being brought to light there is only one species, which carries car-ries its own bait This unique fish is commonly known as the sucker and the bait is a mixture of greed and dishonesty, dishones-ty, says a writer in the Chicago Daily News. Thousands of these fish are hooked every year by con men who, although al-though using a variety of lines, toss out the same old hook which has caught the over-greedy suckers for generations. The fishermen themselves them-selves have a very low code of morals but they live up to it and do not class themselves with crooks or thieves. ('We just work the suckers," one remarked, "And if the fish wasn't perfectly willing to grab off some other sucker's kale he wouldn't take the hook. "Farmers bite? I should say not," he replied in answer to a query as to where the best fishing grounds were. "Country folk work hard for their money and want to investigate before they lay out a dollar. The big cities are filled with fish that have the bait in plain sight and all one needs to land them is a good line and a fairly strong hook. "What chance would a guy have to take a roll of "silk,' cut it up into dress lengths, and then go to some little country town and try to sell ' BEGINNING 0 IN this, her ninth overwhelmingly popular serial, Lida Larrimore has again written a story that is destined to be read and re-read by thousands of delighted readers everywhere. It la the story of Gabriella Graham Gay for shortwho was marry in? wealthy Todd Janeway because it was expected of her, and because, she told herself, she really wanted to. But she was surprised and disturbed by the effect that John Houghton, a young doctor, had upon her. Was he the man she should be marrying, or was it a temporary infatuation! Gay knew she must decide for herself. That decision makes one of the most appealing . A GREAT WNU SERVIC3 gazed for a space at the flickering lights on the horizon. "He wanted this, Alan. Dad told me, more than once, he wanted it He almost worshiped you. He wanted want-ed you and me to have this gold togetherto to-getherto be rich." "He knew before he died, I loved you," said the man. "I told him, and I promised him I'd get you. He smiled. It comforted him." uaaayi uaaayr" or a space the girl's grief swept her. Then she regained her self-control in the refuge ref-uge of his circling arms. "And now I've got ybu, Miss Heath er McCord. No matter how hard you struggle you can never get away from me. Whether you like it or not you're bound straight for Fort George with eight bags of nug gets and gold dust What a terri ble fate!" "It sounds pretty wonderful to me!" she whispered. "But I haven't told you the worst of it A friend of mine by the name of Stanton, an awful man who wears black clothes, is going to take your name away from you. When he's through talking, you'll be poor Heather Cameron." "Heather Cameron," she repeat ed, her face radiant with happiness. "What a beautiful name! Noel, at the water hole, smiled, as he saw, above him on the river, a hooded shape take another hooded shape in its arms while two wolf-rimmed wolf-rimmed hoods were blended into one, and a great black dog, standing stand-ing on his hind legs, pawed at the motionless figures, demanding at tention from the two humans he loved. (THE END.) Unique Fish Which Greed and Dishonesty these dress goods as material which had been smuggled through the customs. cus-toms. The dear old lady would go to the phone and give three long rings and a short one and the entire town would know that a smug gler was sitting in her kitchen and the town marshal would be on the scene before you could say Jack Robinson with your mouth open. "When the 'silk was taken down to the general store, and found to have been grown in the Carolinas, the fisherman would be called on to change his line and hook for a heavy sledge hammer and be sentenced to make canary bird tombstones out of big granite rocks. "I can take those same 'silks' into New York, Chicago or almost any other big town, put on some oily, soiled overalls and a blue flannel shirt and hand out a line about hav ing just come off an ocean steam ship and succeeded in smuggling goods through the customs and I will hook from 10 to 20 fish in couple of hours." Con men who invent new tackle look in scorn on those who persist in employing lines and hooks which have been used for generations. It is almost unbelievable that a man who had made a success of a legitimate legi-timate business to the extent of a nest egg of $20,000 to $50,000 would lay his entire savings on the line in some game which has received so much publicity in the press that the average reader should recognize "line and hook" at once. NEXT ISSUE bo By Lida Larrimore stories you've ever read I I SERIAL! Marine-Minded Martini Two industrious and marine-mind ed martins did their best to set op housekeeping in the whistle of the ferry at Isleboro, Me. -But every time the boat whistle tooted, the blast crew finally persuaded the pair blast wrecked their fragile "home. The erew finally persuaded the pair ta build the lovenest on a dock near the ferry slip. TVi firaf tk rHcrlrKruluh hekween sensory and motor nerves was Era- sistraus, a gTeat physician ol tne Third century, B. & Bats' Winter Quarter Bats have evolved a unique meth od of living threugh the winter. Most species resort in great numbers num-bers to caves, whera they pass the winter in a state ef drowsiness, hud dled together. HOTELS Wkm U RENO, NEVADA. St the HOTEL GOLDEN R-i lartaet n Ml papa tar heUL Hotel Plandome SaIt Lake 4th 8e. A Slate Ht. lnl. Tie - II. St.tS RENO KIT CARSON HOTEL Boom with Rath fi t Free Parkins S3 8. Vto-irlwls BU APARTMENT HOTEL Blork (ram Temple. ReaaonaMe Batee I da wk er month. Completely turniahrel. RICHMDND, 7s E. No. Temple, Halt l.a. I FINE USED CARS 1937 Packard 120 Sodsn. Black. While Bids Wall Tlraa. Super-perfect eond. IMD. Cannon. Kalphe Motor Co.. el so. Bute, Ban un MEAT DISPLAY CASE S-S Double Duty Porcelain Meat Ceae, Floor Sample s Bar.aln. HALT LAKE CABINKT r lXM KK Lll., S3 mrnaroa nu, nan i.aao. i SEED AND FERTILIZER Occidental Seed Company New Bloro 1 SOIL AID PKODUCT3. 1160 South Mala Suit Lake City. Belle the beat I-aws and Hl1 Need! for lra. AIM ' All-f4-un eompletely hslenrwj Fertiliser. Write, phone Ilyland 6464, 11BU Bo. main. 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English Child Labor In England 111 years ago a bill te limit labor of children to 12 hours a day in cotton mills brought this protest: pro-test: "The bill actually encourages vice it establish? idleness by act of parliament" FUR STORAGE Send your Fur Coats and Winter Cloth Coats to Utah's Oldest Fur Store. Refrigerated VAULTS "HUDSONIZING" Your Coats are: Dt-mothod Dust Free All CO for Rips Repaired Cleans your Coat and E? revitalizes the fur. ' SEND COATS COLLECT TO: HUDSON BAY FUR CO. 240 So. Main St. Salt Lake City, Utah Flying Cadets for the U. S. Army Air Corps Qualified candidates offered finest type of aviation training at Randolph and Kelly Field, Texas, snd certain selective aeronautical schools. QUALIFICATIONS Limiting ages between 20 and 27 years. Educational requisite: Full 2 years college col-lege credits or equivalent. Physically sound and normal; unmarried; and in American Citizen. ADVANTAGES ic Flying Cadet pay of $75 per month with uniforms, living accommodations, bod, medical (nd dental service pro-rided pro-rided free. fa Successful graduate commissioned Reserve Officer with pilot rating. Vkr 2 or more years active commis-ilcned commis-ilcned service in Air Corps Reserve. sV Opportunity to win commission In Regular Army Air Corps. FOR PARTICULARS U. S. Army Recruiting Office, 223 Ness Building Salt Lake City, Utah HOTEL BEN LOMOND 11- M ii 41 - - - a SS Boon. a S5t Bathe H IS Is S4.M Cattily Kooats for t oersene S4.SS Alt Cooled Leonse end Leber tirlll Roost Coffee 6 hoy , Tea Boos Bosse ol Rotary Klwanla Eierottrea Exchance Uptimes "20-40" Chasiber of Conawra aas As Cloh Hotel Ben Lomond OCDEN. UTAH Cetee as yea are T. K. Minerals. Mjt Utah Calvin O Jack, Mgr. .Mil '2 1i Jf,' p f . ; . , . V. mm- , J' ' ' ' r " ; . - V.J y past hi J 1 inn, ri i'Vim iflesYih innflf i |