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Show THE LEI II SUN. LEW. UTAH : . -1 i S 'a "B. I asfcrf rriEgl on, I rs svl ockii mat It U,i B 4 VI I'Ut SALT I xomsgj iting I jrsfasni t stoa while ifl loistae ving :omfd UJLE21 eupo make 9 ooi ! 801 Sdentf SaJ 5W WJnSm r&tr r sBv JOSEPH McCORP WM II n Mi) it Larry Cotter t .rrt it was fear that be knew ;ble not to rf that be WT v-m for BUTC a,D' vnc "she said "Tin love with Lar-D Lar-D fi. I haven't Slough He's... . m a thousand. Ten fit wu enthusiast: ,13 to know him long mat out I T,i that I know J1lcr "vo.-th.r do you," im, 11 I would have h better taste if he had on that subject ;bout him. it very aps be will on your way Vince sugBca- L be will not!" . L straightened her smaU sed rather completely, col-. col-. into her cheeks at P Larry strolling toward comes Larry," sne 5au guarded voice, "ease U nodded understandingly. It .m him, however, that L bad forgotten to say hat do you think or au tarry inquired smilingly. He uett cross-ieggeo on u his wife's feet. i very pretty place," she bkM. im lOOKing lurwaiu U up here and spending felt , , . ceiy jruui mum ,1 gt mischief. You reauy Inange to take your own va- W, here. That dinner was just le of what goes on nere k Wasn't it, Vince?" . fcj nodded silently. He was a the younger pair with ties. Jacqueline was un- ibly aware of what he was i save to work," she ven- fcilingly. .. "And I think we It starting back to the city i very long . . . before it snr you say. The days are i ... but there will be no rait Unless it's very late." some desultory conversa-alae conversa-alae again mentioned the of starting for the city, to his feet at once and would get the car ready. bidding the group good-by, lingering kiss pressed on cheek, Jacqueline allowed assist her into the roadster. Msed brightly that she back again some day. was sending its long lev- ainst the house as the car the yard. ... ! not inclined to be talk- which Jacqueline was For the first time in their fue she was decidedly ill lb him. It was impossible mat Vince had told her. raised a barrier between take one of their longest remans: I'll be leavini? th Mtn Hy to come ud here. lor how long." said." 't tell you that I don't pe anybody know where I mow whom I mean, of appose I may trust , py me , , h trust me better than I "! It a nut k feowit Shebitwi; H exactly . , .? i; are not verv rang your word." has friend Vince been lght sk him yonrsci ta silence for a few ucu mey reached the - U1U aere jack, Pe. I thvv ... . : Klik. "Mother. Im1 disturbed ana rii-i.,. icantauitP - tgdio," SJ to keep SJ ,from say- jn2rihad to n even better M?.. voice. J Urry re- itmy at-3ce? at-3ce? 00 else" K 1 ld fc "un that fi.- . -1 Will . " Masons. 'Werai , ,7 wat you 0531 1 have INSTALLMENT THIRTEEN ilned a contract .providing that Jacqueline Jacque-line may continue her present mode of Uvinf for fix months, after which she could tear up the contract Jacqueline warned tarry that a detective was watching him. When her father, Vince not lived up to the letter of our official offi-cial agreement" "What do you mean by that?' 'There was a clause in it . . . number four, if my memory serves me. You didn't like it and I ap preciated how you felt But you did sign the agreement as it stood, what have you to say about that?"r "I gave the money back to you," Jacqueline retorted. "Nearly all ol it, I mean. And you shall have the balance just as soon as I can save it!" "Yes, and I took it back without a word. I didn't remind you that you had sidestepped the contract. Nevertheless, Nev-ertheless, I consider you morally culpable." Jacqueline swallowed a sob and blinked rapidly to keep back the tears. Never had she felt so thoroughly thor-oughly humiliated, so . . . "Jack!" Larry's voice had changed suddenly. There was a note of tenderness in it she never had heard. "We're not going to quarrel, dear. Look at me." She kept her face turned obstinately obsti-nately from him. So very still it was about then that Jacqueline found herself fearing that Larry would hear her heart pounding. "If you think I've broken my promise," he went on gently, "I "They told that you goods " me out in Chicago could deliver the suppose there is no great wrong in doing it again. I'm not sure when I will see you again ... or how." Larry was speaking in quick, hurried hur-ried sentences. "There's no way In which I may tell you how utterly I've loved you from that first day. It's been almost al-most unbearable! To be near you, to see you . . . so many more times than you've been aware. And all the times my arms have ached to hold you. No one could love you as I do! They never have. They never will." "Larry! Please . . "No! You must understand that it's always going to be that way. No matter what happens, it will be that way. You are the only woman who ever has come into my heart. It belongs to you. So do I. I'll wait forever . . . if I have to. But there never will be anyone else. Please believe that Please ..." Neither of them could have told how it happened. Jacqueline was in her husband's arms, pressed close against him. His cheek rested against her hair. She felt his heart beating . . . heard his broken whispers. "Jack . . .my own little Jack ... . I love you so." She struggled to release herself, pushing at him frantically with her small hands. "No, no . . ." she choked brokenly. bro-kenly. "You do love me, Jack . . . Just a very little. Tell me you do!" "Oh, I ... No! Let me go .. . Please let me go!" He released her at once. "I'm sorry if I have hurt or offended of-fended you, dear. But you do love me. I know it and so do you. You needn't be afraid. I won't forget again." x The ride to the city was made in silence. When they reached the Courtland street house, all Larry said was, "May I see you and tell you good-by before I leave?" "I ... I don't think so." Jacqueline Jacque-line was fumbling blindly with the car door. She bad it open now. "Sorry. Good night. Jack." The car was moving as he reached out and closed the door with a ruthless bang. "Larry . But Larry was gone. CHAPTER XI Larrimore Cutter left an elevator at the mezzanine floor of the Ray-near Ray-near and stood for an instant looking look-ing about him. Anihony, became 01 Larry invited Um tato the country to live, a week later Jacqueline accompanied Larry to see Vtact at the farm. She was shocked when he said Larry loved her. Now continue with the story. Almost at once, his eyes encountered encoun-tered a woman sitting by herself on a small settee, one arm resting on the marble balcony raiL apparently studying the busy lobby below. She was modishly attired in black. A small hat of the same shade was perched Jauntily on her decidedly blonde head. Rather noticeably made up, he decided. But attrac-tive. attrac-tive. He approached her slowly. "Miss Morris?" She turned with a start, her red lips parting in a friendly smile. "It's Mr. Cutter, isn't it?" "Yes." He took a seat at her side without waiting for an invitation. Larry frowned a trifle, as he remarked: re-marked: "I'm sorry you didn't arrange ar-range to meet me somewhere else, Miss Morris. Didn't they tell you about that?" "No. I thought this would be all right today." She glanced about carelessly. "I wonder if it wouldn't be better for you to call me Alma ft "Very welL And, since you are here, we may as well talk. First of all, have you had any luck?" "Not a bit, I'm sorry to say. I haven't overlooked any bets so far." "Have you had a chance to go through things pretty thoroughly?" "Rather. I thought I was on the scent the other day. It was a wall 6afe. Looked promising. It's an old-timer and I didn't have much 1 trouble getting into it" , "Papers?" "Sure. But nothing very hot." "They told me out in Chicago that you could deliver the goods if anyone any-one could. That's why I've been marking time, hoping you could save me the trouble of getting busy on my own." He leaned forward interestedly. in-terestedly. "But I would like to know how you landed that job." "It was easy enough. Jerry , . , you know who I mean . . he came out here first and sized up the lay of the land. Made all the necessary neces-sary contacts. He stumbled onto the old gentleman's weakness and . . . I'm the newest one." ."You certainly had a lucky break when you landed that job as secretary," secre-tary," Larry tqjd Miss Morris. "I merely suggested that he needed need-ed a secretary," she explained. Tne idea was a new one to him, but . . . Well, I'm good in my own line." Larry laughed in spite of himself. him-self. Then his face grew grave. "I've been afraid that you would draw a blank. I've been making some plans of my own. I think I'll sit in the game. Maybe two heads will be better than one." "You don't care how you spend your money, do you?" "Not this time." Larry's mouth tightened in a grim line. "I've waited wait-ed a long time for this chance. I expect to recoup before I'm through." He lowered his voice a trifle. "I'm being followed here. Got a tip not long ago . . . Checked up oh It"".,' . . "Local cops?" "Yes. That's why I wasn't so anxious to have you meet me here. You can guess who started that." "I'd be dumb if I couldn't figure that one." "They haven't showed their hand yet and I'm going to beat them to it I'm leaving here tomorrow. I'll see that it's well advertised. After a few weeks . . ." "I get it." "That's why I want you to stay on the job. You may get a break. And I may fall flat. If anything happens, hap-pens, you know what to do.". "Sure Beat it And I wish I could do it now." She reached out and ground the stub of her cigarette ciga-rette petulantly on the tray of a smoking stand. "If you knew what I've had to put up with out there. I'm fed up on it! If it wasn't . . ." She broke off suddenly. "Se careful" care-ful" she said in a low tone. Larry turned his head Instinctively- . . A young woman was passing close to the settee, walking slowly.1 "Friend of yours?" inquired Miss Morris, noticing Larry's scowl as he stared after the intruder. "She works here," he explained shortly. "Hope I haven't mixed things for you. I had to come in to the city on an errand, or I wouldn't have risked it." "It doesn't make any difference, I think. I'm leaving tomorrow any- wav. Tell me . . ." He changed tr.nie suddenly. "What is the situation out there?" "As to what?" Tamily and that sort of thing." "Nobody but the wife. I feel sor ry for her. She's a motherly old thing, rather delicate. Keeps to her room most of the time." "Well I hope it won't last much longer. I guess that's about alL Tm going back up on the elevator." Larry rose as he spoke. "You know what to do, in case ... If I were you, I'd go down the other stairway and out the side. Thanks a lot for dropping in. Good-by and lots of luck." "Same to you." He walked swiftly away. (TO BE CONTINUED) Kathleen Norris Says; Fomen Pay Great Price for Indiscretion (Bell Syndicate WNU Service.) NOT WORTH IT No amount of good advice will keep some girls from saying say-ing to themselves "Everyone else does it, why shouldn't ?" So they willingly give away their future security and peace of mind. Perhaps they do "get away with it" for a while. But sooner or later they must come face to face with their earlier . indiscretion, only to find that it really wasn't worth it after all. Be sure to read Kathleen Norris' advice to the "J. G." of this letter, a happily married woman whose girlhood folly threatens to destroy her home and the love of her invalid husband. My married life mas perfect until man I knew in college turned up in our neighborhood. The story of our affair is not new. All the lessons in the world can't save me from what is going on now. By KATHLEEN NORRIS NO LANGUAGE is strong enough to convince young boys that theft and forgery are wrong. And not merely wrong in being punishable crimes. Wrong because be-cause of what they do to a boy's character, even if he is never found out. Wrong in boyhood, because the stolen quarter or the forged school excuse are steps to more serious seri-ous forgeries and thefts, and once schooled well in those directions it takes heroic fortitudeit forti-tudeit takes indeed a complete com-plete change of personality, to resist later temptations. In the same way I wish I could find words impressive enough to help girls to see just how great is the price women have to pay for that thrilling "giving in" to the young lovers of school and college days. If your husband told you, one or. these cosy winter evenings, that dur-ins dur-ins his senior year at college he supported himself entirely by steal ing and forging, you would be horrified. hor-rified. You couldn't laueh it off. tell him that it didn't make the slightest difference to you. You could not honestly say. "I love you for what you are, dear, not for what you were. Havins sold his honor once, you would feel and the world would feel he might sell it again. And in exactly ex-actly the same way a man knows that a girl who was reckless in giving giv-ing her favors in girlhood, is not going go-ing quite suddenly to attain an entirely en-tirely different position toward what ought always to be the sacred symbol sym-bol of her honor. These are old-fashioned phrases, and to girls mine seems an old-fashioned attitude. But I can assure them that viewed in the light of later years, they will see the whole thing differently. It would be easier for a young wife to explain to her husband that she lifted some money out of the department-store cash register when she was working there years before her marriage, than to explain that she was intimate for a few months with one of the men who is known to her husband in business. Buried Secrets Reappear. Of course, if she can avoid it, and hope permanently to avoid it a girl doesn't tell her prospective husband these things. But that security isn't always as sound as it seems. Hardly a day goes by without bringing me a desperate letter from some young wife who has supposed her secret long forgotten and buried. Many of these women say that feeling it would be more comfortable comfort-able to admit to the affair before marriage and start on an apparent ly honest basis, they have softened the story by saying that the man was "someone you never met He died the following year." .ooth things over for the moment Few men. especially in anticipation of an Immediate marriage to an adored woman. wiU waste time on Jealousy of a dead man. But matter, are much worse when the perverse turn of events brings this man into contact with tte family again, and the unsuspect-S unsuspect-S husband is perhaps cordial to SL so that the wife must eUher make clean breast of the whole SS or put up with the insuffer-We insuffer-We situation of having secret wXone of the guest, of Rehouse that would crush her husband's pride and faith in her if it were made known. Such a case is that of "J.G.," who writes me from Georgia: "When I married my husband, I loved him," says her letter, "but now after 11 years if unclouded happiness hap-piness I know that my early Jove was only a shadow of what real love could be! He is not a strong man; we live for our garden, our books, and our one daughter. "Reggie was invalided after a terrible bout with pneumonia four years ago, and we took what capital we had and bought a tiny farm, which my nine-year-old Rachael and I have brought to the point of being an asset rather than a liability. Meanwhile Reg had started writing, little bookish essays at first, for which he was not paid; later more ambitious literary studies, one of which is to be published in book form in the 6pring. Our lives were perfectperfect per-fectperfect perfect until a man I used to know as a college student turned up in the neighborhood. "The story of our old affair is no new one to you. I thought it concerned con-cerned only ourselves. I was away from home for the first time, and 'every other girl did it why not I?' The 15 years between that time and this have been disciplinary years, and I know they have made me a finer and wiser woman than anything that was promised by the nature of that girl of 19. "But all the lessons in the world can't save me from what is going on now. I suppose you would call it blackmaiL Victor amuses Reggie, who calls him a 'rough diamond,' and Victor wants to come and live with us. He has no job, no money, no ambition. He has grown heavy and lazy, but on the three occasions when he has called he has, as I say, made himself amusing, and outlined what he would like to do with the farm to develop it "Oh, Reg wouldn't divorce me or leave me," the letter concludes, "but his faith in me, his pleasure in what he calls my W girlhood, would receive re-ceive a terrible shock. He is not strong; be cannot go about as other men do. He has so few pleasures! His utter pride in Rachael and me is the greatest of them aQ." I've written "J.G." telling her that the only way out is the way of full confession. That means she can dismiss the odious Victor in no uncertain un-certain terms and then resume her happy way of life with no further reference to the cloud that has come up so suddenly. Victor will have her old letters, of course, and she the sting of old memories. And Reg will have to replace hi. idealistic love for his wife with something less fragile less perfect I wonder what her answer would be today If she could hear that girl of 15 years ago, asking, "What's the difference?" Vitamins Required for Youthful Health, Looks XXTIIEN winter comes, can snif-vy snif-vy fles be far behind? They can if you've the live, singing, joyous joy-ous health that vitamins give you. We need all the vitamins to keep our youth and looks. But we specially spe-cially need foods containing vitamin vita-min A yellow fruits and carrots, sweet potatoes and parsley if we'd resist Infections such as the common cold. Such a diet need cost no more than the meals you have now I Our 32-pafie booklet suggests menus bursting with vitamins, gives "Keep Fit Diet" and a chart show-ing show-ing vitamin content ot everyday foods. Explains role ot vitamins in retaining eealth, energy, looks. Tells 10 ways to preserve vitamins In cooking. Send your order to: READER-HOME SERVICE 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 10 cents in coin for your copy ot VITAMINS TO KEEP YOU FIT. Name... Address Unoriginal Paintings Among the world's most cete brated paintings that have re quired so much retouching and restoration that no part of the original picture still remains is Leonardo da Vinci's famous Last Supper in the church of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy. t V:;'X "II . 1 1 "1 """" Nature puts "extras" In California Oranges You sm t deeper color-tasti color-tasti a richer flavor-enjoy more vitamins and minerals in California orange juice! California oranges ripen la ftll-yeu sunshine. They draw on fertile soils scientifically scien-tifically fed nd watered. These ittdles Navels are easy to peel slice and section sec-tion for recipes, lunch box and between-meals eating. Those stamped"SunkisrM are the finest from 14,000 cooperating growen. SniOfeo Copyright, 184a, clUorol Jfrvut Orawm Original Names -Originally, Brazil was called the Land of the Holy Cross, San Francisco was known as Yerba Buena and the , Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks was named the Jolly Corks. 1 jT DARLING, IF WE BAKE AT HOME, REMEMBER.THE ONLY YEAST WITH ALL THESE" VITAMINS IS FLEI5CHMANNO n rnrmi i r I o.so Per Cake VHumln A-3100 Units foJ VHomln B,-150 Units (Int.) Vitamin D-400 Units (Int.) Vitamin O 40-50 Units (Sb. Dour.) Vitamins B, D and G axe not appreciably lost in the oven, they go right into the bread. For Great Cause , . No man is worth his salt who is not ready at all times to risk hir body, to risk his well-being to risk his life, in a great cause. Theodore Theo-dore Roosevelt. WANTED RABBIT SKINS HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Rabbit Skins Furs Hides Pelts Wool Write or Wiro Colorado Animal By-Products Company 463 South 3rd West Salt Lake City, Utah or their nearest branches located at OGDEN SPANISH FORK LOGAN HEBER CITY On Roman Architecture Although the famed architecture architec-ture of the Roman Empire produced pro-duced an extensive contemporary literature, there exist only two books on the subject that were written by Romans.De Architecture Architec-ture Libri Decern by Vitruvius and De Aquis Urbis Romae by Fron-tinus. Sampans Busiest The sampan largely replaces the rickshaw at Tai-O, principal village on the Island of Lanatao west of Hongkong, where most houses are built on piles along the shore. Don't Boil Don't boil your milk when a recipe reci-pe calls for hot milk, as for instance in-stance in the preparaUon of custards, cus-tards, scald the milk In the top of a double boiler. Tularemia Germ "Hunters, think .twice before shooting the lackadaisical rabbit" warns the American Red Cross "because It may carry the deadly tularemia germ." , Quality Stakes Stakes for such plants as beans and tomatoes should be of good wood. Cedar, for instance, will last years longer than ordinary softwood soft-wood stakes. One Pound of Uranium One pound of uranium, the substance sub-stance which scientists the world over are trying to produce, if combined com-bined with water would release enough energy to replace millions of gallons of oil. American Pilots American pilots ferrying bombers across, the AUantic for the British are paid $7,800 a year. One hundred hun-dred and sixty-two pilots are ferrying fer-rying American bombers to Britain Brit-ain right now. 'Frisco Leads On a per capita basis, San Francisco Fran-cisco leads all other large cities of the world in its number of telephones. tele-phones. It bas 44.58 telephones to each 100 population. Tungsten Ore Although Burma produces aviation avia-tion gasoline and other petroleum products, its most important war mineral is a tungsten ore known as wolfram. |