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Show THE ursday, November 30, 1939 TIMES-NEW- NEPHI, UTAH S, a frantic search about the place, Dickie confessed he had seen Simmy go away in this direction and 1 rode out at once. The men are scouring the hills. I had no idea he would have come so far." "It was sheer luck on my part," Bruce told her. "One of my men was over this way and told me he. thought he had heard a child cryJ ing. I took a run over and " "Simmy, you little idiot!" Autumn, scolded the boy. "We might never have found you. If it hadn't been for Bruce " She cuddled the youngster and smiled over her shoulder at Bruce who stood watching her. 'Send the reward to Ned, my herder," he said. She set the boy on his feet and drew a sigh of relief as she looked down where the birches stood along By 111 AGENTS O MARTHA OSTENSO istributor Wanted profit-makin- g ty SALES MANAGER Room 2222. 20 North Wacker Drive Chicago, Illinois. Lovely. Independent Autumn Dean, returning home to British Columbia from abroad without her father's knowledge, stops at the home of Hector Cardigan, an old family friend. He tells her that she should not have come home, that things have changed. Arriving home at the "Castle of the Norns." she la greeted lovingly by her father, Jarvis Dean, who gives her to understand that she Is welcome tor a short visit. Her mother, former belle named Milllcent Odell, has been dead for years. Autumn cannot understand her father's attitude, though gives him to understand that she Is home for good. She has grown tired of life in at the England, where she lived with an aunt. Her father gives a welcoming dance young man of the castle. Autumn meets Florian Parr, dashing, Late In the evening Autumn leaves the dance, rides horseback to the countryside. neighboring ranch where she meets Bruce Landor, friend and champion of her His father Is dead, childhood days. He takes her to see his mother, an Invalid. As soon as his mother sees Autumn she comthought to have killed himself. mands Bruce to take her away, that death tollows in the wake of the Odells. Autumn Is both saddened and perplexed by the invalid's tirade. Bruce, apologetic, can offer no reason for his mother's attitude. Autumn calls again on Hector Cardigan this time to find out the reason for Mrs. Landor's outburst. From his conversation she interred that Geoffrey Landor lulled himself because he loved Milllcent Dean, her mother. d QUESTIONS Lime water will sweeten jars jugs which soap and water to cleanse. It is admirable cleaning milk and nursing ttles. e When Washing Gloves. If a few ops of olive oil are added to the ater when washing chamois bther gloves, they will not be- - me hard or stiff. Prunes, to be properly cooked, ould be stewed very slowly for least two successive days. The unes will come out whole, soft id tender, and with the richest, ost delicious juice. Soiled Linoleum. Grease marks hd dirt can be removed from Inoleum by washing with warm ater to which a little paraffin as been added. Dry with a cloth lad afterwards polish with a good bor polish. e Tarnished table silver may be levived if placed in a quart of oiling water to which a good inch of washing soda has been dded. After boiling for a few hinutes remove and dry thorough- with a soft cloth. e Removing Paper From Raisins. If the paper sticks to the pack- ge of raisins, place them in the ven for a few minutes and the rapping may be removed easily. will also cause the raisins to eparate and fallei apart. oj When preparing shrimp for sal- d, put them in a bowl of water which a tablespoon of vinegar as been added; drop in a lump ice and let stand in the re- rige-at- or for several hours before uttmg the salad together. You ill find them greatly improved. in Continued OP co- m- Every year new and delicious corn recipes appear, to make ew friends for this old favorite. lere is a treat for your family and bop g Caramel Corn cup white sugar cup white corn Isyrup ablespoona tsorghura t cup water 1 tablespoons ,4 tablespoon 2 quarts pop butter vinegar corn s, Combine all Ingredients except e corn. Cook until syrup becomes lttle when tested in cold water, bur over popped corn, stirring the rn while pouring. Turn on to but-re- d platter. EEL GOOD Hera U Amazlnc Relief of Conditions Dm to Skiffle Bowels 'FrTtir.TTv trr ell aeaetabie laaarMva. Btilti. Uioruuitii. refreshing. Uvrteoretins. rea dable relief Irani etc beadatbre. bilious eprlla. $ fading wbea aaeoriated with conaUpatkm. J Ml of NR from your X tmx. u.k. u Vitnout Risk doc delisbted. return Lbe bos to um-- um a. We will d 1NLT 48 W - Your Keiieciion , . i rrilie worm ' i is l i muiting 39 , tiass nnd gives back to every man the rpflrT-tirinf riifl nujn fart Thackeray. Hay Warn of Disordered Kidney Action life dtb l tmrry an 4 worry, end Imntulsr habita, improper eating infeo-tion noanr and of drinking ! throws heavy etraia on the work of tha kidnaps. Thay ara apt to baeome and tail to Hilar atcaeei and. evrr-taejand ntbar impantiea Ixom too If Mere rk Wood. Yoo mr enffar eacrlne, kmakarne, dif.irwai, fetting ttp ttirhta, ewllinc leel eonetantly pain, all eorn out. Othar eignea nervnoa. trd. leg r disorder ere eoma-timaburning, scanty or toe Ireqiteat urination. Vxint kale the Try (imi'i Pill".barmlul efeea br,ly kldar Thlo y haveoff bad mote than ball a sraa'a. Ara frnia. o, pnbl.f ornliiry tnenrt'd by gratofui aaars eroryweare. of kidney or bladdf-- J'l Ass tior the creek. - Abruptly and disquiet-ingl- ImmiRration Report Pancake Marathon? The 'United States immigration Two favorite dainties of Holland committee reported as long ago as 1907 that the lack of skill of immi are poffertjes and wafelen, which grants encouraged the development are traditional dishes at the ker mises, or fairs, of the nation. Pofof the machine in America. fertjes are little blobs of pancake dough, baked hundreds at a time, Japanese Movies twisted and spread with sugar and Japanese movie goers are forced butter. Accordinsr to an ok! cus by a wartime ban on foreign films tom, one first eats 24 of them and to choose between national films and then two wafelen, which are oblong those brought into the country two wafers also covered with sugar and and three years ago. butter. New Aerodromes new aerodromes will License numbers for vehicles long pre-dathe era of the automobile. be needed in Britain for the exOne of the intersting exhibits in tension of the voluntary air reserve. the National gallery in Dublin is an Cotton Seed Ice Cream ancient list of license numbers for A cotton seed derivative was used sedan chairs. The list is dated 1787, the year the American Constitution experimentally in making a bisque was araiteo. XMames on it are ar- type of ice cream at Memphis, Tenn. ranged alphabetically with the resi REAL ESTATE EXCHANGES dence of the owner, and the whole was published in accord with an old Ask for Special Plan an Baffin Farms at Ranches. What Have YouT ZIONS Rt&ALTY law. Old License Numbers Twenty-thre- e te y out of the obscure weave of the past, a pattern, a color, stood out vividly before her. This was the gully she had visited years ago against her father's desires. "I used to come down here often," she said. "I still do sometimes," Bruce re COMPANY. J2 E. 2nd South, Salt Laka City. Home of Copernicus Torun in Poland is the birthplace of Copernicus the great astronomer, The charming old city has erected a statue to his memory and visitors may enter the home he had 400 years ago. plied slowly. She was sorry then that she had spoken. A wistfulness had come into Bruce's eyes that caused her to turn away. "Come along, Simmy," she said quickly. "We've got to get you back home." "I'll go along with you," Bruce suggested. "You won't be able to manage alone." "Thanks, Bruce," she said, and got into her saddle at once. When he had seated the boy be fore her, he lifted the lamb and mounted his horse, and In a moment they were riding slowly up the hillside on the way to the trail that led back to the Dean ranch-hous"I hope you will try to forget what happened last night. Autumn," Bruce said when they had gone a little way in silence. Autumn turned to him and smiled reassuringly. "One doesn't try to forget such things, Bruce," she re"One tries to understand plied. them." "That's better, of course," he said. "I am sorry it happened." "It couldn't be helped. It was I who insisted on going down. Besides I think I'm glad rather than sorry." "I can't quite see that," Bruce protested. Autumn was silent for a moment before she replied. Finally she turned and looked squarely into his eyes. "You and I, Bruce, have grown up together without knowing much about ourselves. I lay awake last night wondering why your moth er should have" hated mine for twenty years or more. I think I have learned the reason. I spent an hour today with Hector Cardigan." "Hector?" "Yes. Has it ever occurred to you that your mother's bitterness comes "I hope 4th So. A State St. Hotel what happened last night." afternoon was a pure amber sprayed Here it was, with lacy and on such a day as this, that Geoffrey Landor had last looked upon the world he had loved. He lifted his eyes suddenly at the sound of a child's whimper. Only a few yards away, behind the shining birches, a small boy was. leading a lamb at the end of a rope. At first he could not believe his eyes. But when he called and the boy turned his face toward him and began to cry, Bruce knew him at once. It was the young son of Tom Will-maJarvis Dean's foreman. In a moment he had the boy in his arms. "Why, Simmy! Where did you come from?" he asked. Simmy buried his face on Bruce's shoulder and sobbed. The lamb promptly lay down in the fern that grew beside the water. Bruce laughed at he hugged the boy close. "Where in the world do you think you're going, Simmy?" he asked. "I want to go home," Simmy sobbed. "I want to go home." "Sure you do. Come along, son. and I'll take you home," Bruce com forted him. He caught up the lamb under one arm, and carrying the boy on the other, made his way quickly out of the birches and whistled to his horse. Almost at the same instant he heard a woman's voice call from the hilltop to the northward and looking up he saw Autumn Dean riding toward him. He hailed her and waited until she had come down to him and had dismounted beside him. "Where did you find him?" she asked Bruce. He "Down there in the gully. locked as if he was getting ready to put up for the night." "Simmy, you little imp!" Autumn said, stretching her arms out for him. "Come to me, darling." Bruce surrendered his charge and stood by, the lamb still In his arms, while Autumn wiped the boy's eyes and cheeks with her handkerchief and kissed him to still his crying. "Don't cry, darling. Autumn will take you back home." She looked at Bruce. "Could anything be sillier?" she said and laughed. "That's Mo-mo you have In your arms. The men told Simmy that they were go s tail this after Ing to dock noon and Simmy Just wouldn't stand for It. He ran off to hide He must have been in the hills. gone for hours before anyone missed him." "How did you know where to look tor him?" Bruce asked. "We have young Dickie to thank tor that. After all hands had made half-hidde- n r, Mo-mo'- Mo-m- o an Intermountaln Product Since 192S Built KiRht and Priced Right Terms to Suit YOU SEE YOUR DEALER THE SALT LAKE HARDWARE CO.. Distributor AUTOMATIC COAL BURNING CO.. Manufacturer Salt Lake City. Utah APARTMENT HOTEL BROKEN Salt Laka Citr The Sentinel Stoker Salt Lake tl to fl Ratal HOTEL APT. West 4th South Snlt Lak Rate by Werk or Month HEARING. South Stat Street B annock Pocatello Cafe and Coffee shop SHUBRICK City LENSES DUPLICATED Filled. Oculist's Wholesale Prescriptions Broken lenses duplicated by manL, Prices. THE OPTICAlSHOP. A. E. Fehr 914 Boston Building Bait Lake City. I'tnh SURGE MILKERS Let us prove and show why StTR(;E. the fastest milker aver built gets MURE and CLEANER milk with less time and labor. Write for information. WALLACE TAYLOR. DHtrihntor it So. Wert Temple Salt Lake Citr. 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"Do you think it possible that the two your father and my mother may have been in love with each Newly and luxuriously furnished in the modern manner - yet retaining its characteristic and traditional hospitality, genuine comfort, efficient service, and real economy Delicious meals served in the Coffee Shop Cash REGISTERS & Acer. MACHS other?" Bruce's eyes were straight before him as he replied, "I have never thought of either of them without the other." There seemed to be nothing to be said after that. They rode forward together, aware of a deep and silent understanding that was more than words. Once Autumn permitted her eyes to move quickly over his strong brown hands and along his arms to the powerful curves of his shoulders. And once he turned and saw that her rippling hair had come loose from its knot at the nape of her neck and had fallen deliciously n cheeks. Her about her hair must be a sort of auburn, he thought, but in the low sun it had tints of plum color. He found him self thinking that she had deep-se- a mermaid eyes, luminous eyes gray-greeHe wanted to tell her so, but forebore. And just then a rider came rac ing toward them across the range. It was one of Jarvis Dean's men who had been searching for the lost Simmy. The REGISTERS. 125.no and Up NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO. Salt Lake City. lit. USE1 132 East Second South WILLIAM ELECTRIC MOTORS REPAIRED J CLARK. Managat work sraaranteed In minima Satisfactory time on motors and transformers. HtllRAG FXFXTKIC CO.. 141 PieriHint. Salt l.nk INEXPENSIVE MEALS The beat fond in Salt Lake a served by The MAYFLOWER CAFE at 1M Sooth Main POPULAR PRICED Ijonrrvenns. uinnera and rtandwiehee HOTEL BEN LOMOND TRUSSES instrument. Hospital SorfficaJ Supplies, Manufacturers of Abdominal Sup porters. fLiatuie btockintrs. Th Phrtrftfiana Sonrilr Cantos nv 4" W 2nd South St Salt City. Utah Truea 11 rose-blow- OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED deafca and ehah-e- . lea, Rich a. aa Tea. ban addinar tyaewrttera. S. L. DESK EX 2. W. Broadway. Sail Lake PHOTO-KRAF- ECONOMY Any Roll 8 Quality Prints Extra Prints Wrap coin SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- .133 'L d FILM SERVICE Developed with - - - 25c - - - 3c nd film carefully ! Boaaia 4S( Bath ta (4.0 SI. Iff Faaillv Rooms for 4 ptxmnm Air Cooled Leanre mat Lobby Grill Booaa . . Coffee Shop . . Tap Roes DRUGS N - COM I MID! Hosae D. S. Training Pays' af Rotary Klwsnls KieratWea Eschance Optlmue "20-3Chamber of Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond lt slanting beams across the dark green rug that covered the floor. He must have dozed off, he thought, as the clock on the mantel chimed the hour. He had no idea it was so late. Dinner would be on before he knew it. It was odd that Autumn had not yet come back. Florian Parr had come up from Kelowna tor the day and the girl had gone motoring with him. They would be In any moment now, surely, drinking their abomi nable cocktails and shattering tha Sunday quiet with their Inconse quential chatter. Well, the younger generation had come to claim its own. It was only natural, after all. he supposed. But the coming had trrltatrd him. He had never given much thought to the younger generation until Au tumn had returned unannounred and taken possession of the gloomy old house with no other thought, appar ently, than that the place was hers It was surprising, too. how immrdiate and complete the possession had m 3V Worn . NEXT YEAR Will Yaa Ba J a ft A Yrar Older? And will jrou b qualified for th finest rtartinir position tha field of businaas has to otTcr T on train ynti m w ha-traind thnuaanrU of other ucee-f- ul young men and women. L 33 T Boi 749 Salt Lake Citr. Utah In his tomber-tonestudy Jarvis Dean sat smoking his cigar. On small, low table beside his chair a large book lay open, face down ward, at the page where he had left oil his reading nearly two hours ago. It was now five o'clock and the Sun day afternoon sunshine lay in long BE ,.r KODAK FINISHING CHAPTER IV (TO -- 1 PHOTO-KRAF- been. Im- ACOUSTICON INSTITUTE $1.50 to S5.00 74 an provement a correctly fitted new ACOUSTICON makes tn Gift 2fi8 Hotel Plandome See what Perfect HOTELS of" She hesitated you will try to forget The Whan In RENO, NEVADA, atop at tha MUltL. UULJJKN Krnn i largest and moat popalar hotel. e. three-year-ol- great-horne- -P- said Bruce and rode away. At the entrance to the ravine, Bruce swung his long body out of the saddle and walked slowly into the birches, letting his horse wander off to nibble the sweet young grass. On a little rise of ground he stood and listened. The shimmering air held a sad stillness; even the coquettish young leaves of the birches drooped in a melancholy quietude. He had been standing there only a moment when from somewhere deep within the birches came the tiny bleat of a lamb. Bruce knew it could not be one of is own flock. Ned was too experienced a herder to permit any of his wards to stray. Besides, the sound had come from well within the land of Jarvis Dean. The responsibility was not his and yet he stepped down from the rise of ground and strode through the birches till he came to the creek. He followed the shallow stream downward until he came at last to the fatal spot which he had marked years ago and which he had visited occasionally during the summers that had come and gone since his boyhood the spot where the sheep-herdhad found the still form of Geoffrey Landor lying in the shallow creek. He paused a moment and looked about him. The light of the waning been hostile, people said, ever since the death of his beautiful wife. If Bruce was perplexed at the Laird's There was no mistaking Hector's stony refusal to acknowledge him meaning. He would say no more even as a neighbor, there was at about it at present On the other least some consolation in the fact hand, his very manner was in itself that the dour sheepman treated ev a confession. Autumn's question had eryone alike, granting each a sort been answered. She had no desire of individual eclipse with the extrato leave her old friend in an unordinary power of his unseeing eye. It was the light pleasant frame of mind. She looked up at him and laughed. falling moist and sweet from the "Hector, you old goose," she said, green of the hills into the curved "I believe you are almost angry. valley where the Landor ranch After all, there isn't much that ei seemed to hide in humility from its ther of us can do about it now. more magnificent neighbor, the do Come along, darling, and show me main of Jarvis Dean. The ancient weeping-willotrees drooped like a your flowers." ceaseless .tain into their own lovely the at In Hector's orderly garden and dark shadow, and like earth; stood ot blue rear the cottage, flags d paint tall and brave, cupping the sunlight. a phalanx of ireen-tippeAutumn stared at them and tried brushes the long avenue of Lombarstroked the sky, sway desperately to check the shaking dy poplars in a whispered rhythm from the uncertainty of her own heart; it was ing in Bruce Landor's eyes that she had corrals to the Landor ranch house. seen that same clean and gallant In the tiny patch of sunlight that lay like a gilded shield between the blue. house and the somber poplars, Jane irises bloomed, purple, yelThe moods which had attended Landor's and then again purple, on each Bruce Landor all day had been of low, two disconcerting extremes. In one satin lip a brilliant sunny stain. Jane hands would probably nevmoment he would be swept up to Landor's er trim those beds again, Bruce heights of emotion as he thought of how Autumn Dean looked at him on thought as he strode down the walk their meeting last night, the quick, leading from the house to the. corrals. The voices of the ranch hands, shy veiling of those luminous gray-gree- n the bleat of sheep, the occasional eyes of hers, a concealment that had brought a strange throb to barking of a dog, were rarefied to bis blood. In the next moment he unreality through the blue filament would be in the depths, remember- of the air. From the woolshed came the ing how she had been sent away. whir-r-- r of the shearing machine. had When Autumn had gone, he Two or three hundred sheep stood done his best to soothe his mother in the corral outside, a ranch hand and dissipate the fears that had bethem into the shed as quickset her wandering mind. When he running as the signal came from within. had finally succeeded in getting her ly These were the pick of Brace's flock to sleep, he had sat beside her for of more than three thousand; they a long time, xelu.ctant.to call the were great d Merinos," nurse from her room. their bodies richly wattled. All his life, it seemed, Bruce Lan He went into the pen, dor had been compelled to adjust where the great tall shearing hemp sacks himself in one way or another to were rapidly filling with wooL As He had the nervous his mother's humors. from the sheep passed that scarcely known a day at home hands of the shearer, they were behad not been marred by her vana ing caught by the brander, who gave ble temper that often flared up over each a smear from the branding the merest trifle. It had begun when brush. Bruce stood by and laughed he was eight twenty years ago now at the ungainly look of a d and verv soon he had Brown, in ram as, shorn of his magunder to his pathetic boyish way, nificent coat and branded, he stand that his mother's sudden out dashed to freedom.duly of bursts were her only means pre When he had inspected the work serving her sanity after what had arid instructed his men, Bruce went happened to his father, that dash- out and made his way to the small ing figure romantically and tragical- pasture back of the poplars, where ly limned in memory. She must he whistled to his horse. When he have loved Geoffrey Landor with a had saddled him he mounted and singular and rather awful intensity, rode off to the southward to visit and Bruce could imagine the dread- one of He found the camp his ful scene in the birch-hungully deserted. camps. The flock, he knew, was recurring to her with cruel sudden- grazing to the eastward, close to ness in the midst of some familiar the edge of the Dean property. He task. He could imagine her lifting sight of the sheep edging her eyes from her sewing or from caught their way across the face of a hill. her work among her flower-bedThe was bringing them back and beholding again the stark verity to herder for the night. camp downof Geoffrey Landor lying face Bruce rode out and circled to the ward in the shallow, amber-clea- r of the flock, where he found his creek, his head lying downstream rear and the white stones under the water herder at work with his dog, bringthere becoming red as sullen gar- ing up the stragglers and keeping nets. Out of his own young heart- the sheep on the move toward camp. 'We'll be ready for your bunch break had grown a great pity and tomorrow, Ned," he told the man. patience for her. "Right, sir! I'll start 'em in first In all those twenty yean Bruce had never heard his mother speak thing." Bruce ran his eye over the flock. the name of Millicent Odell until she "You've seen nothing more of that had spoken it last night. His memory of his father was on the whole big coyote hanging around?" I'm thinkin' ye'll see little o' very vague. But be could recau one afternoon in summer it had re- that one from now on," said the mained with him like a vivid dream herder. "Them two shots I got at when they had ridden together him day before yesterday come down the birch-fillegully where close to puttin' him away for keeps. they had gathered pocketfuls of But, since ye're askin', I did hear rounded pebbles from the creek and something this afternoon over on Bruce had used them in the sling- the Dean place. Seemed like it was shot his father had made for him. down there somewhere near the He did not know how he had come Gulch or beyond." to think of his father and Millicent "You heard something?" Bruce Dean as friends, but somewhere in asked. had he recollected that dimly past "It sounded like one o' them cats seen them riding together down we get up in the hills sometimes-li- ke some forgotten trail and his boyish a young-on- e cryin', it was." fancy had clung to the picture so down to see what it "Did that he had rarely been able to was?" you go think of them apart. He remem went as far as the Dean place, bered, too, the day when Jarvis but"I I could hear nothin. I heard it for had died. He had wife Dean's once or twice after then an' I could gotten the words his mother had swore it was a kid cryin'." spoken that day, but the bitter spirit 'a' "When did you hear it last?" in which she had spoken them had "Mebbe an hour back after I lingered with his curiosity concernins the relationship of the two started headin' tor home. I thought I'd come out in the evenin'. Just to women. And now, after nearly twenty make sure." Bruce turned his horse about and years, Jane Landor had once more looked eastward beyond the line that spoken the name of Millicent Udell, bitterness and hatred that separated his own land from that of with time itself had failed to vanquish. Ot Jarvis Dean. "Perhaps I'd better ride down tha late, he knew, there had been somehinithing almost fanatical in the proud way," he said, then bethought manner in which his mother had self. When he had been very much the men talk spurned Jarvis Dean, but Bruce had younger, he had heard found some excuse for that in the among themselves of the haunted Gulch. His haughty arrogance of the old Laird gully known as Landor's himself, who for years had lived herder had doubtless been loath to venture too far that way alone. almost as a recluse in his formid ble turreted house. Jarvis Dean's "You're sure you heard a cry of manner to the world in general had tome sort, Ned?" Bruce asked him. CHAPTER HOUSEHOLD "Oh, indeed I did, sir. As J sa- yyoung-on- e cryin", it was. "I'll go down and take a look," like a a life-tim- e ffif WNU SERVICE THE STORY THtJS FAB andle products of pany selling equipment supplies to retail stores. Exceptional connection in up lortunity for coming industry. Exclusive territorial tracts near your home. If you are a d worker and own a car this is an for a steady, bigger Income. tallment paper financed and open ac- nts carried by company. Must be able finance self at start. Earnings should eed $3000 first year. Write fully stating rience. Address well-rate- MARTHA OSTENSO ove. PAGE SEVEN Com at a re von T. E. FiUa-erel- Mar. D. S. BUSINESS Malt Lad COLLEGE Citr. titan Week No. W.N.U. Your friends will thank you for directing them to an Apartment Hotel for 4S f COMFORT ? CONVENIENCE .4 i SERVICE The ' BELVEDERE - '1 APARTMENT HOTEL Kales: $2 50 Day; $15 Week Up Sou III Stale St. Salt Lake City. Utah V'-'- ,. " 4, Calvin O Jack. Mgr SALT LAKH |