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Show THE LEIII SUN. LEIII. UTAH iT Svmbolizes 1 Jill i ' - , , 'Passing of the Red Man statue of an Indian with a f?r under his arm sitting on ."torse in an attitude of utter f fndon is Wended to symbolize passing of a great race-the ilnti once the unchallenged r ta of this continent, but who 1 , as the sculptor, James Earle t ' Ker. conceives it, stands hope-( hope-( land despairing at "the end of ft T . II T.HI FOR THIS 1ABEI I Attention Hunters! DEER HIDES WANTED IHighetl Prices Paid for HIDES, SHEEP PELTS, FURS I AND WOOL Call or See Nearest Branch tah BYPRODUCTS CO. I Ogden Garland Logan SALT 1AKE CITY - UTAH ilisf At Last 4 rorYourCougb rjcmBlsion relieves promrJL , it goes ngnt to me ee oi u to help loosen and expel I laden phlegm, and aid nature i9 and heal raw, tender, in-ld in-ld bronchial mucous mem-is. mem-is. Ten your druggist to sell you ile of Creonmlsion with the unhanding unh-anding r"i must like the : my ' . r XONOMICAL! Onder Block 1 lire-proof. i! tirmite proof. Derma 1 t iaeai ior cornea, ; )P. dairy bouse, eta, -j iB uable in any quantity Oft IRONING ISA 4 JOY, NOT A JOB A, MISSISSIPPI. Mrs. Solomor has discovered slerful relif 'or "ironing day ? Here ' what she said B-n to F - tless Starch re- "Insed to dread ironing day much, but after I began -I Faultless Starch, trrnitn? 9 I nleasnro Inctoaii nf a " ou dread ironing day, too? jkve to iron with a "stirkv" P-ab wonder! Your arms eet "i JOUT back aches, vrair npplr P work to iron when the iron me end of each stroke. :i?u,don.v'AVE)n with rt,t micil! PS Starch" ArWH'-w if Jrir1i a Slick Iron thKrt A!m Kli PAZTVG 13 rWs a simnU axatiod nea"1 0U See. it i mnrlo a ra. Wa .in. . ..... Li ' ne special tmngs ,peps F. Faultless Starch is that it S2E?!. !'?in8:W. already C, f wax make it easy to do F&f beautiful ironine. No i to fticky" iron! 'JO MAKE THIS STARCH - J isn't all. You know how are on washday. T'en t - - owjj ana lane 6 I'Im. c"iaii;"' iou maKe fr COOKING! Just cream r tl 6 C001 water. add boil-H boil-H fciti, , whae stirring and JiPjyou're through! Start. to !J i Ie the wonderful ad- 1 ir,JtleS3 Star NO C Jt NO "STICKY" IRONI iive aU your wash that f faultless look!Adv. . . - V w m v m r J R.l...ed bf W,.,ern N.W.pap,r Union. By VIRGINIA VALE THERE'S a line of dialogue . . in,;he scriPt for Interna-tional's Interna-tional's "The Stranger " where Loretta Young confides to Orson Welles that she's a victim of acrophobia. That word threw everyone In the cast but Welles. "Ifs a fear of high places," said he. I know because I used to have it myself. I cured myself by mountain climbing ta the Alps; Picked out the sheerest drops I could find and stared over the edge " But -for "The Stranger" they built the mPhPfit Cot Aira. . 1 cieciea in Holly, wood, a 13-story church spire; Ed-ward Ed-ward O. Robinson, Loretta and Welles do a dramatic scene part way up it. And who was It who had an attack of acrophobia? Why Orson Or-son Welles! Robert Benchley appears in Holly, wood Victory Caravan, the all-star featurette sponsored by the war activities committee, Hollywood div- W JIOBEET BENCHLEY ; oh, acting for the U. S.-treasury department, for the Victory Loan drive. Benchley appears with a stellar stel-lar cast of 20 other A.tables, in the screen world. 0 i Penny Singleton, t :'5rt of wor-toung wor-toung Wid- ' ''-A playing V on .the '.Xi "Columbia rled about her roli I S after seven A j ft' pic-strip ft Vr contra vails forer to do three 4 uctures a year she was d suddenly go cavorting arcauJ the way she does as "Dag- wood's" spouse. There's a screwball comedienne in "Young Widow," but Marie Wilson plays her. Penny had wanted to play a different role, and Hunt Stromberg, who brought her to the screen eight years ago in "After the Thin Man," gave her what she wanted; she plays a perfectly normal nor-mal person, the wise, understanding friend of the heroine, Jane RusselL Boris Karloff has been establishing estab-lishing a broadcasting record since he left Hollywood following completion comple-tion of his role In RKO's "Bedlam." Nine programs in sixteen days, including in-cluding three appearances on "Inner "In-ner Sanctnm" have kept him busy. Sitting through a Jap-made movie is the last word- in agony, according ac-cording to Tom NeaL fr plays the title role In "Fir f "., ik into Tokyo." Neal, cast "-rican serviceman who un,' ;oes facial surgery, so that he can pretend to be a Jap sergeant, for intelligence pur-Doses, pur-Doses, had to sit through "Kimona" 21 times, studying the performance of the Japanese star of the picture. instance Moore, "Gloria Dean" "Plywood Mystery Time," has . i .year-old daughter, uina, ,'! i pretty smart Connie was telling tell-ing tfriend she was "sans cook and sans nurse." Gina looked up and Inquired In-quired "Are they related to Sans Claus?" There's a lot of kidding In the J&int of the Burns and Allen show about George's singing voice. What very few. people know Is that Grade's long-suffering spouse actually actual-ly began his theatrical career as one of "The Pee Wee Quartet,'' at the age of 12. Howard Barlow has no piano in his "Harvest of Stars" orchestra; Instead, beautiful Elaine Vito plays the harp. Motion picture companies have tried to tempt her to try her luck on the screen, but she prefers New York, where she plays In Tos-caninl's Tos-caninl's orchestra. She Is also playing play-ing in Alex Stordahl's, while Frank Sinatra Is broadcasting from New York. So why bother with Hollywood? ODDS ASD ENDS Danny Kay. -Wonder Man" ttar, is iht first screen star to perform for U. S. farces occupy bit the Tokyo area entertained WW servicemen in the Neiji Shrine tufwn. . . . Seems herd to imagine Ethel Bar. rymore as the mother in Lade Worn, en"; she's to play that roU m Sehnick s Technicolor version of the story. . . . Gavin George makes hu first film appearance ap-pearance in several years m XoWry out"; 10 years ago, in Romance, M teas Greta Garbo's Uading man. ... Barry Fitzgerald and his stand-in held m too-man chess tourney of Parammmfs The Stork Chb -they were cheered on by Betty Button. ! infill . .. r:rir-1fliy,ji.9iinjiiuu f ..W-WVJ,1uy..ipj.iij ' j uomoVuow GWEN BRISTOW THE STORY THUS FAR: Bpratt Her-ni, Her-ni, moUon picture producer, married EllrabeUi after her Brat busband, Arthur Klttredge, had been reported klUed In World War L Elizabeth bad been or-Phaned or-Phaned when a baby and raised by her aunt and uncle In Tulsa, where she met and married Arthur. ShorUy after their marriage, Arthur enlisted, and soon afterwards aft-erwards was reported killed. Elizabeth moved to Los Angeles, where she met no married Spratt. Arthur had not been killed, but disfigured and left almost helpless. help-less. Dr. Jacoby worked over blm and managed to save him. Under the name of Kessler, Arthur landed In Los An-Seles An-Seles In Spratt'f office. CHAPTER XI He shivered with a cold gust of hate whenever he remembered how the Nazis had hounded that great man to his death for no crime but the unforgivable un-forgivable iniquity of having been born a Jew, and of being so rock-bound rock-bound in his own goodness that he was incapable of accepting the evil of mankind until it had crushed him beyond escape. There had been little he could do in his love for Jacoby's memory, nothing but get to the United States while there was still time to save Jacoby's child. His grief and rage at what had happened to his friend, and his terror ter-ror lest he not be able to bring Jacoby's Ja-coby's little girl to safety, had been so great that not until he was on the westbound steamer did he realize real-ize that when he got to America he was probably going to see Elizabeth. He knew her husband's name was Spratt Herlong and that he was employed em-ployed by Vertex Studio, and In his own luggage was a contract signed in the Paris office of Vertex. He would be virtually sure to meet Herlong Her-long some day, and it might follow as a matter of course that he would meet Elizabeth. He went into his cabin and looked at himself a long time In the glass, as he was doing now. If there was a chance of her knowing him he would break his contract and make a living as a translator, a clerk, anything that would provide little Margaret with three meals a day without destroying destroy-ing Elizabeth's peace of mind. But a long scrutiny satisfied him that there was no chance of it. In no sense, except the memory of her behind all that had happened since that explosion at Chateau-Try, could he believe he had any ij-fe of Ije Arthur Kittredge she had known. te.fjas Erich Kessler, dear friend of jit.jkte Dr, Gustav jacoby, author of Books based on case histories of Dr. Jacoby's patients, and the change in his nfirnality was as thorough as tb V--, tt in his name. No man who hatffnBured what he had endured in bod drld spirit could have much left in 4 common with a happy, arrogant youthfwho did not know what it was,.lo ivant anything he could not get." He looked thoughtfully at his image im-age in the glass. Crippled as he was, his appearance was not repulsive. One could see tha- in spite of his uncertain legs he I'ad been meant for a tall man, anS Jnce.his torso had to carry his wM; " scles there were power!.' tped. The effect was inevi 'ided, since his left sleeve S j Kmpty so lor?, but his rigl' was like that :i an athlete,;- . le hand which for twenty yea,. supported support-ed hin; upon a can4 . . i strong enough to break a cup be tween the thumb and fingers. His face had no visible trace of the wound there e; cept a scar that went upward from tenea' his beard in a thin curving li'ie. I hair was still thick, gray liky steeJ v beard was heavy too, and: dark'. le had let it grow with f o thou- of disguise, but to covr the scj is that all Ja-coiy's Ja-coiy's careful skin-grafting had not bfn ab'3 to eliminate. Now he was glad he had it and was so used to i'r, ir X in spite of having seen thou-$ thou-$ s of Hirer's pictures most '. Means s'. thought of Germans O'ng ifrof essors in dark beards. . he would not know him, but he cold Know her, as readily as he had known the picture standing on gpratt Herlong's desk. To be sure, he had been looking for it, but he would have recognized it anyway a ""uzabeth. She had changed in.Ahost; years, of course, but her alteration had been nothing more than the well-ordered well-ordered development from youth into the maturity that could have been foreseen by anyone who had been as intimately acquainted with her as he had. Elizabeth had always al-ways known what she wanted out of life, because she was so eminently fit to have it. Physically and spiritually, spirit-ually, she had wanted love, marriage, mar-riage, children, a home in which she would be no petted darling, but a versatile and devoted creator. From the beginning she had Instinctively known herself capable of bringing all this into being, and so she had looked toward to it with the eagerness eager-ness of those who have no doubt of their destiny. When he met Spratt, and saw the pictures of Elizabeth Eliz-abeth in Spratt's office, he felt that the change time had made in her appearance had been no more than the change one observes In the achievement of something of which one has seen the beginning. Now that he could think of her without the pain of the earlier years, he was glad he had been wise enough to aiep aside so that she could have it. fie saw the pictures last week, on ie first day he went i Snratfs ! Ece. Spratt had beeri some time about the script, and If Kessler's attention had wandered it was no matter, since he was going to read the script tomorrow anyway. When Spratt had finished, and he himself had risen to leave, he glanced at the photograph on the desk, saying with the casualness born of years of self-command, "Your wife, Mr. Herlong?" Spratt said, "Why yes," taking up the picture .and handing it to Kessler Kess-ler with the proud smile of a man showing his friend a treasure. "But that's not very good of her at least, I never did think those formal portraits por-traits were as good as candid shots, too smooth and pressed-out, if you get what I mean." 'Yes, I understand and agree with you." Kessler was Jooking at her face. "But this Is very charming." "Oh yes, so it is, but this one on the wall looks more like her. Over here by the door. Those are the children chil-dren with her." Kessler followed Spratt and looked at the picture on the walL 1 1 fen ,,flJJIMlllll "But this is very charming." "Yes, yes," he said with involuntary involun-tary eagerness, "that, I am sure, is more like her." , For it was like her, he knew that without having seen the original in so long. The picture had been taker somewhere outdoors, perhaps on ranch. ' Today, alone In his office, he let his memory go back to the days when he had realized he had to do this because he loved Elizabeth too much to do anything else. The first days after the battle were nothing but confusion, fever and pain. He was in a place where there were a lot of other men on other cots, and women with pale harassed faces trying try-ing to take care of them, but he could not understand anything that was being said or anything that was done. He was strapped up in bandages band-ages that were far from clean, and among the people around him was a man gaunt as an ascetic, who came over now and then and did various horrible things to him. He did not know then that in those closing days of the war in Germany there was not cloth enough for fresh bandages or soap enough to wash those that had been used, or drugs to relieve suffering, suf-fering, or that his attendants had white faces and 6haky hands because be-cause they were not getting enough to eat. Even when he began to discover dis-cover this he did not care, because by that time he had begun to discover dis-cover also the extent of the damage these Germans had done to him. He had no doubt that he was going to die, a 1 the only wish he was strong enou 'o make was that he might die if' ".. and get it over. Bablrn, ; in the only language he knew, hj , egge6 the gaunt cruel man to let Um alone. At first the doctor seemed to be paying no attention, at-tention, but one day his patient observed ob-served that he was talking, and after aft-er several repetitions the ungainly syllables acquired meaning. The doctor was saying, "Forgive me that I hurt you." His accent was so thick as to be almost unintelligible, but the fact that he had any English at all gave a flash of hope to the mangled object ob-ject on the cot. Any effort was torture, tor-ture, but if this fool of a doctor could be made to understand that a dying man wanted nothing more than to be left in peace, it was worth the effort. His own words were muffled muf-fled because of the bandage on his chin, but he managed to get them out "Listen to me. I am not one of your countrymen you know that don't you? My name is Arthur Kittredge. Kit-tredge. I am an American. Your enemy don't you get that' I am going to die anyway. Why don't you just let me do it?" The doctor said something. Arthur did not understand it until It had been repeated several times, and j h" finally caught the words i 'ewe rfSR they were not worth the trouble of listening, for all the doctor said was, "Quiet You be quiet." Arthur tried again, desperate with pain and weakness. "Do me a kindness. Give me something to finish fin-ish It won't you? Please listen I'm talking as plain as I can! Finish Fin-ish it That's not much to ask, Is it?" Again the doctor said, "Quiet" "If you don't care about doing a kindness to me, do it for somebody who can get up again one of your own men. Why should you let me fill up a bed when German soldiers are lying on the floor? Or waste food on me when you haven't enough for your own? Don't keep me' His words ended in a gasp of pain. But he still looked at the doctor, too weak to say any more but conscious enough to plead with his eyes. Whether or not the doctor had understood un-derstood all his "words, he had grasped enough to know what Arthur Ar-thur wanted. He shook his head. "No," he said. "No." Exhausted as he was, Arthur could see him groping for more words. Mustering all his strength, Arthur managed to say again, "I am going to die anyway." "No, no. You are not going to die." He spoke with a grim resolution that seemed to typify all Arthur had ever heard about the coldness of Germans and their inability to understand un-derstand any reason why they might not always be right Arthur was not able to form any more words, but he looked at the doctor with eyes that Jacoby told him later conveyed all his rage and disbelief. Arthur knew he was going to die and he wanted it over. But Jacoby's thin face had no yielding in it. Jacoby left him then, but he came back later, and this time his bony hand brought up a German-English die tionary out of rs frayed pocket, Even with this aiq, his English was so poor that he could convey nothing noth-ing but a repetition of his refusal. Alone in his prison of pain, Arthur thought, "At home they'd shoot a dog that had been smashed by s truck. But this can't last much long- er. it cant u I hadn't been so healthy it would be over by now. But, have these people no mercy at all? I'd shoot the most heartless German under heaven before I'd let him die a death like this." Fpwas glad Elizabeth could not se'4 , She would never know any-thi.- out this lingering torment They?, iuld simply tell her he was deadend she would think it had been quick and, clean. "He never knew what hit him," they would say to her, and at least it would be easi er for her than if she had to know how longjt had taken him to die. , ?e he did have one thing ft, ' ul for if that shell had to hit Siim,' he could be glad It had done Ira work. He would be dead andrdohe with, and would not have to go back to her a half-human carl cature of what used to be her hus band. Though that wretch of a Ger man doctor refused to shorten this last phase, though he might be beast enough to enjoy seeing one of his enemies get what was coming to him, even he could not Indefinitely prolong it But at last Arthur discovered, with a revulsion that he could not have expressed If he had known ttjej. whole dictionary cy nean, mat tnis was exactly what the doctor meant to do to him. Jacoby had been trying to talk to him for "some days. Arthur had ceased trying to understand him He had about given up trying to do the only thing that interested him, which was to refuse nourishment and get it over that way, for they fed him through a tube and he was too weak to resist. He hated the sight of the doctor with his gaunt face and thin cruel hands. But though he could not resist him, he did not have to listen to the man's awkward manipulations of the English Eng-lish language and try to make sense out of them. However, the creature persisted, talking to him with many references to his dictionary. Unable to .pronounce .pro-nounce Arthur's name, he called him Kitt'He kept telling him something, in a low, Insistent voice. He kept at it so long that at last one day the words he had been hearing arranged ar-ranged themselves in Arthur's mind and became an orderly sequence. Stripped of its grotesqueries and repetitions, what Arthur understood went like this: "You are not going to die, Kitt You will be alive a long time. Not as you were. But you have your eyes, your hearing, the Jaw will heal and there will be a hand. I think you will be able to sit upright. Walking I cannot promise, but I will try. It will be long and hard. But work with me, Kitt, and I will work with you Do you understand me? You are nof going to die." Arthur made an inarticulate noise. He looked at the doctor's steely blue eyes. They were fixed on him with a determination that made Arthur feel that this fellow was regarding him not as a man but as the subject of an Inhuman experiment Instead In-stead of letting him go, Jacoby was going to keep him conscious for years to come, simply to prove that he could do it fro BE CONTINUED SEWISG CIRCLE ISEEDLEffORK A 'Sleeping' Doll for Little Tots Pineapple Doily Easy to Crochet . mm- mmm 1 in mm mm l 'I milt'. ,i ,.vi 525: Sleepy Mary HpHE early-to-bed crowd Just A loves a "sleeping" doll which never opens its eyes! Why not make this one from left-over materials ma-terials from your little girl's dresses and summer pajamas. The doll is 22 inches big and is called Sleepy Mary. To obtain complete cutting patterns tor body and pajamas for Sleepy Mary (Pattern (Pat-tern No. 5232) send 16 cents In coin, your name, address and the pattern number. ,:!lM: Pour a little paraffin over the sliding groove in the drawer to make it slide easier. When storing empty fruit jars, replace lids to keep tops of jars smooth and free from nicks. Place a piece of gum camphor inside the piano case when going away from home. It will keep the moths from getting inside the felt. Keep such small things as salts and peppers, sugar and creamer, :ups and saucers, and napkins on a large tray. Place conveniently near, when ready to set table. To waterproof rope so it will last longer, treat it with a tar and tal low mixture. Add 20 per cent tallow tal-low to the tar and melt both materials mate-rials so they will spread over the rope easily, using an old paint brush. The rope will also be more phable. m --rtnn r-TT .rrns" k. easy way to UflCOREC STUFFY NOSTRILS When nostrils are clogged, and your nose feels raw, membranes swollen, reach for cooling, sooth, ing Mcnlholalum. Spread it inside nostrils. . . and snuff well back. Instantly it starts to 1) Help thin out thick mucus; 2) Soothe irritated membranes; 3) Help reduce swelling; 4) Stimulate Stimu-late local blood supply to "sick" area. Every breath brings quick, welcome relief. To open atuHy nostrils, get effective Mentholatum today, the Medicated Nasal-Unguent Jars, tubes 80c. Mighty Good Eating aw aw vrao mm MM RESPONSIBILITY FOR SUCCESS The man who advertises has assumed the responsibility for success. suc-cess. You would rather deal with a responsible man, wouldn't you? Tineapple Motif THREE balls of cotton are all A you need to crochet this easy-to-make "pineapple" design. It measures 16 inches across and is a charming combination of pineapple pine-apple motifs, palm leaves grouped around a center diamond design. To obtain complete crocheting lnstruo. tloni for the Pineapple Polly (Pattern No. 5186) send 16 cents In coin, your name, address and the pattern number. SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 709 Mission St., San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 16 cents for Pattern No.. Name. Address- To make thickening for gravy, put the flour and water into a wide-mouthed jar, with a screw top, and shake well. If you keep an extra dust mop and dust-cloth upstairs you can save yourself many trips carrying them from one floor to the other, If you try to keep tin shiny you won't have a shine or the tin. The thin coating comes off and leaves the metal open to rust To mix cheese with other ingredients ingre-dients to be cooked, cut the cheese into small pieces or grate it. If the cheese is soft, press it through a coarse sieve. Keep cake fresh by fastening slices of bread over the cut ends . with toothpicks. When the bread has served its purpose it may be used for toast or bread crumbs, or any stale-bread dish. 3 Tit Cititt Art (rut Feeds" Kdlotc'sCorn Flake brine yon nearly ail the protective protec-tive food element of the whole grain declared eaten-tial eaten-tial to human nutrition. UORN ft m I 1 1 i ? |