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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH rJ i for ainty Presents I aL ma .1 Hot-Dis- 9 Mats h kS I L - - w -- 9 sp w m We Have Changed AH That i tchwork i i 1 Copyright by Bobbs-Merri- ll WNU Service THE STORY Commissar Vilinsky's Soviet quad invades the home of Kras-iaristocrat at Kazan. Insults the daughter, Musla. Commissar Lorls is urged to confiscate the home. The family consists of Judge Krassin, Mrs. Krassin, llya. former officer, and Musla. Vladimir, former officer, is Musia's fiance. Mrs. Krassin expresses fear for hei son's safety. Ilya recognizes In Villnsky a former dishonest steward. Mrs. Krassin conducts Villnsky In an inspection of the home and contrives that he shall not see Ilya, The commissar brutally Insults Musia. Mrs. Krasstn's thoughts are all of Ilya. Musia feels herself defenseless. n, VII-Ins- I source of Inspiration for this mat is. none omer trtive liot-cis- b grandma's calico patcnworK blocks. The pattern speaks for This rlrcular motif made of fef bright calico patched together ir any quilt diock, is appuquea nf- unbleached muslin cut I Ich larger all around than the as- mnt which it is to cover. An fcork edge is crocheted around hnd a drawstring is run inrougn These mats are mq,i nf tiip hark. inlv useful, being removable and ible, but they are decorative. CHAPTER V 9- &H)n(ID wi Continued I ;::'';.& . . . and it's going to be an Atwatef Kent. What we want is performance, and so far as we're concerned there's only one choice. We want the Golden Voice of the new Atwater Kent good, clear, consistent reception, without a lot of noise. We want power enough to bring in distant stations. We want a dial we can read easily from any position, without straining our eyes that new Atwater Kent Quick-Visio- n Dial. Wa want the new Atwater Kent Tone Control, so that we can bring out the low notes or the high notes as we please. 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Dena f provements up-to-d- old-tim- . fit "So do I" j imm f2SH&WR I want" en-Jo- What was to become of her? For the first time In her life she faced or the first time in her life peril., she pondered deeply her place In the o a a world, and her familj and its place. In a way, she knew about her father fiaint Lamps Are in Vogue and her mother. She knew that on her mother's side they were a great family the Vaturlins; and that her mother had married the man ho was known li all the conversations of her great relatives merely as "this Mr. Krassin," who was only a msmber of the small nobility. It was difficult to think of the solid plain lady who was hei mother, as a little alrl; but yet she bad the aid of a pastel ,'hich hung on the walls of this very room: a picture of Mrs. Krassin as a child In a sleevet brown hair less dress, with hanging down her back, and a narrow blue ribbon across her forehead, and with a small dog in her hands and a slightly frightened look in her eyes-M- rs. Krassin at thirteen. Now, with the "rightened look occasionally returning, she had always been an inevitable sort of person, who married "this Mr. Krassin" because other suitors did not sue, and she wished to Vladimir Had Asked for Musla, and Had Gone to Her. She had controlled be emancipated. her marriage, her worldly affairs, all day had come. Mrs. Krassin espee quainter the more niodern is her life, with a virile grasp, enormouscially was in a cheerful frame of lioory advanced by interior dec- ly proud of her wealth, her power, her mind ; for Vladimir had asked for in resrurd to electric-ligh- t rank, her family. A hard woman, but Musia, and l ad gone to her where she trs for the home. Brides are with one absorbing passion, her love sat surrounded by her peculiar housepointed if their wedding presents for Ilya her son a passion whicli Ilya hold gods, In a room which was half fct include at least one lamp that seldom suspected ; for her every soft a study, half a sitting room, the cenas much of an as impulse was in the list of Mrs Kras-sin'- s tral feature of which was great fine illustrated, and they adore secrets. The only strong person with harp and guitar at hand, piano, candle should which it types, in the family and she had not reand statues, engravings and rare porS"aide as to "what to give" for sented It when Villnsky had done that. celains scattered about. The selecItmns. What, then was to become of her. tion and arrangement spoke of a in this earthquake of society? Musia, r O craving for variety and a restless $ As the night wore on, these reflecmind. His "Doggy" Lamp tions and the passage of time left her Mrs. llrassip had decided long ago, calmer. He was not coming tonight. when Musia and Vladimir were chilHer mother, searcWng for her, finally dren, the two distant cousins came and found her daughter alseep were to be married. Both families She gently cherished the wish for the alliance. by her father's door. stroked Musia's hair, remembering her Mrs. Krassin had never talked to as a pretty toddling babe, when she Musia about this, thinking it better to prattled her first words and what enJeavor by Indirect and Invisible those words vereB And then she re- means to bring the event about, so membered l.ow as she grew taller, that it would seem to happen in the they had grown apart as the barriers natural course of things. For a year of character and custom separated or so past, she had begun to feel a the older woman from the budding one. sense of disappointment and Irritation A sudden access n affection rolled because 'these plans were so slow in over Mrs. Krassin's soul as she looked coming to fruition; but she looked down at the pretty head and face, so upon a talk with Musia as a last reInnocent In sleep, at the graceful form sort. She had a feeling that she and the slim hands as if in anxiety In might encounter In her daughter someher lap and she thought of Villnthing tending toward rebellion ; and She stooped and gently kissed saying to herself, "You never can tell sky. The girl started beforehand how things will turn out Musia's forehead. with Musia," she declined to put the up screaming. to the test of an issue, like the affair awaken uot father, your "Do Maroosia," said Mrs. Krassin, standing cautious diplomat which she prided herself upon being. erect fad for animal ornaments in (TO BE CONTINUED.) I was frightened," whispered "I PVa tlirnnrrhnii I. ,1 uat,u"i .ivnutiy gill BCt" Musia. "1 thought some one kissed Mexican Code of Honor season. This porcelain me." nnj base cleverly interm-et- s her said one here," "I am the only Strange to Americans animal theme. mother. In many business places of the City faster of the kennels" will "I must have been dreaming," said of Mexico, cuspidors are chained to swing this lamn on his 1the desk or wall to prevent some In Musia. table, or. if he la n Wer at Mrs. Krassin walked quietly Into her truder from carrying them off. On f why not give "him" a lamp husband's room and looked down upon the streets office boys carry thousands i mimisome porcelain steed hlra sleeping. Much gentler was she of dollars In canvas bngs on their FS at its base? than usual, as she led the girl to her shoulders from bnnks to offices. Busiroom and told her It was time for ness men convey the day's receipts o 0 o to the banks shortly before the closher to be asleep. ft of Year-Roun- d Comfort "I .m afraid to be alone," said ing hour. Their habits In this respect are known to every crook in Mexico, Musia. chaise-longu- e . Mrs. Krassin lay on a yet It Isn't once a year they meet held the girl's and young bed with a holdup. One's cook is trusted the by hand. Musia slept with long quiver with from $10 to 20 to go to the mar in I ket, and she returns and accounts for Ing sighs. The sun at last shone arose, she window. Quietly the money, yet while her employer's at the back Is turned, she will shove five looked down at the girl for a moment, cents worth of tea, coffee or sugar and tiptoed from the room. into tier pocket. To take money in trusted to her to do the marketing CHAPTER VI would be thieving, but in taking little things from the kitcbeu supplies, she Love and Conspiracy Is following the custom of the ages. Vladivostok, in in 1920, One evening Russian an American talked with a Building Life noblewoman. She had fled from her IPPers of d quality-kinL Is a structure which you life Your walked had on loot, designed so as to slip Russian home and for which you select are building, often f i.n wisiiy. The "mule" below for weeks, a vagrant, shelterless, As you choose bematerials. the on Siberian rides kid Is capable of foodless ; had caught and pretense, activity sincerity tween f "Ht with the trnvest ml.mnc railway trains, stowed away in freight enthusiasm and Indiffer Inertia, and from rcofa on their cars, or perching ence, hoi e and despair, so you build a Sybarite td s tramp I to failure or success Urit KoitShe had Decome a nurse for GOLDEN VOICE I know what s; Co. KERJT OTEEBV th-o- By Herbert Quick and Elena Stepanoff Mac Mahon The chakB army, amid the most horrible of lack of supplies, organization end skilled personnel and a mortality which was terrible. She had gone ragged and and for lirty, weeks had not had even a change of underclothing. Uer clothes fell away h't by bit. As her stockings wore off at the toes, she cut them off and sewed them up until they were gone and a fellow refugee asked her. after a glimpse below her skirts, where she had obtained her nice, white stock-lugand was a "bit of American slang derived from Ked Cross workers in the Information that they were her birthday hose. She hud worked for the American Red Cross as Interpreter, typist, clerk and translator; for she knew Russian, Polish, French and Italian as well as English, and she couid coax wonderful music from the tuneless piano In the Red Cross barracks In Vladivostok. She had lost father, aiother, brothers, sister and fiancee, and was now, In what was left of at. old ball dress, dancing absorbedly to the Jaza music of an American warship's band in the long hall In the barracks. "I constantly marvel," said he, "at the way you refugees manage to y yourselves." "Well," said she, smiling up at him, "one can't be always weeping!" So it was with the Krasslns: they had already acquired the resiliency of those who walk daily in peril; and after "the terror by night" had passed them, and their little group had gathered as usual under Mrs. Krassin, their general, they were in rather better spirits than usual. A peril had passed them by. They had not been notified to quit their bouse. Another HEAD THROB? HOTEL Newhouse The woman who knows, would as soon start out without her purse ! She always carries Bayer Aspirin. When your head fairly throbs from the stores and crowds, reach for that little box. Take two or three tablets, a swallow of water, and lesume your in comfort. Relief shopping 13 immediate. Most people use these wonderful tablets for something! But da you know how many, many ways they can spare you needless suffering? From the discomfort and danger of a neglected cold. From serious BAYER SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH One of Salt Lake City'a finest hotels, where guests find every -- m TiirffiTiiiiiimTrftr?lfrMi comfort with a warm hospitality-. Garage in connection. Cafe and cafeteria. 400 Room. Each with Bath 12.00 to $4.00 flftf consequences of a sore throat. From those pains peculiar to women. From the misery of neuralgia and neuritis. Every drugstore has genuine Bayer Aspirin. The box say3 Bayer, and every tablet bears the Bayer cross. Tablets thus marked do not depress the heart. ASPIRIN . J. ft. RAYBURN, Manager Sunshi All Winter Long AT Foremost Desert Resort the of the West marvelous climate warm sunny dry invigorating days clear starlit nights air gorgeous mountain splendid roads the ideal winter home. scenes finest hotel Wrltm Cr CUtttey PALM SPItlNGS California |