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Show The Cache American, Logan, Cache County, Utah Pace Six Relief At Last 3S2ri motifs Intriguing l.tt.e mot.fs a multitude of l.ttle motifs for guest towel cm roidi-rn-are given on pattern ZM CL Every one of these is de KATHLEEN NORRIS 0NO8BIS MR: Cbarlntl orphan, hit bird I halnl lorqtbra'a convrnl at bool tlnr kb turn. Shi know ilmotl nnib In of ur early hUtiiry, but gradually rumrt la rralir that lib lb other fill I III ttbool th baa no family. Jude dud win Martbbanki and Fntma lUikrtl r brr ro fuardlana. Hbrn ah la torn ly, Marthbanka lella brr lha I mma baa gnltrn brr I arrrrlarlal potlllun In San friarlxa with old Mr. 1orlroua Porter hh fora firtl lo th Marahbanka man alun and dlnra alon with th Judi aa Iran, bta oun wife, and bla niece Amy, ar dining out. Kelly Coatra, aa arUt, drop la and Fran and Amy alop on fhrlr way out. Aa they leave Cherry 1 M hear laughing refrrenr lo brr convrnl rlothra and I biller. Ufa with Mr. Porter la monolonoua, and ah I thrilled wbra Kelly, boraebarlt riding la th park with ('ran, alop lo talk lo ber while ah I motoring with brr employer. Later b aendt ber a boa of candy and ah la jraloua when ah are him with Fran at a party glvra by Mr. Torter. Emma lUa ('berry that brr alaler Charlotte a Cherry mother. Kelly pirka np Cherry la hi old car to chaperon Fran on a visit lo hi atudio. Ilia A . car break down la lb rain, Fran and There was a alienee, (he judge was standing new too, bla face Cherry taka a tail and Fran aaka Cherry to atop at tha Marahbanka before go aa ahocked aa her own. "Von aald that Emma had told you! "Vet, but not lag home, wber Cherry meet Judge that! Not that! She only aaid my mother ahe didn't tell me anything Marahbanka' mother. ahe aald . . . Now continue with the atory. and told both girls to come down ing, ashen faced, one hand gripping TIIK ( KTORV ) Rialmci, SO & stairs. CHAPTER VIII Emma was going to tha tery; Cherry was going back empty house. She came out cemeto the of the big hilltop church with the other mourner. Across the street, standing quite still, was Kelly Coates. Cherry smiled at him. and he crossed the street and joined her and they walked away together. You weren't waiting to see me? Why wasn't I? he asked moodily after an oblique glance. Because I supposed you were waiting to see her, Cherry said. To this the man made no direct answer, muttering after a moment, God, she's beautiful! I thought she looked rather tired this morning, Cherry observed somewhat timidly. She might very well look tired, being dragged through a lot of nonsense like this showy funeral! They had to come, Cherry told him. Amys mother was Mrs. Porters niece, or some relative anyway. Amys mothers mother was a Wellington, and her husband was Mrs. Porter's uncle; something like that Emma came back tired at three oclock, and had a late luncheon In her room. Cherry, dressed to go downtown, joined her there. Emma You're going out? asked, mincing roast beef for the Here, if you must gray kitten. steal my lunch! she said to Cappy in an undertone. I thought Id walk downtown and see a movie, Cherry answered, dropping into a chair. Well, do that, Emma approved. You've got money? And then maybe if you feel like it you might bring your cards in here before supper, and well listen to the radio. We could have supper up here. Cherry spoke quietly. But the awkward little overture touched her deeply. She walked down the street a few minutes later, passing the Marsh-bank- s house just as the judge descended to the street. Hello, Cherry, he said. Walking? The little car is right here in the garage if I could take you somewhere. I came back from the office to get a bite of lunch but Ive nothing to do now. No, 1 really want to walk. Judge. Ive scarcely stirred out of the house for a week, and I feel so free today that I can hardly keep my feet on the ground." "You look it! he said with his Heres Amy! friendly smile. Amy came flying down the steps Where you going. to join them. Cherry? Im ashamed to say, Cherry anthat Im going swered laughing, to a movie in the daytime! Im going with you, said Amy. Funerals give me the horrors. Wait for me; Ill get my coat!" She dashed upstairs again just as the big Marshbanks car drove up and Fran got out. Shes seen Kelly; theyve had lunch together! Cherry thought instantly. Whereve you been, my dear? the judge asked casually. I suppose it was scandalous not to go to the cemetery and see the whole funeral through, Fran said, But avoiding a direct answer. there were things I had to do, and I just ran out on it! Hes probably crazier about her than she is about him, Cherry said when Amy brought the subject to Kelly and Fran a day or two later. You never can tell with Fran; shes deep, Amy answered. She had to come to the Porter house by appointment on this occasion; it was the afternoon when Mrs. Porters will was to be read. Two quiet elderly women were there from Pasadena; cousins, Emma told Cherry, who had been supported by their rich relative for years. The judge was coming, and surprisingly Amy had been notified to be present. She must have left you some money, Cherry surmised, or they wouldn't have asked you to come. She must have had plenty, Amy said in satisfaction. Emma put her head in the door Me, too? Cherry asked. Yes, I think so. Everyone In the Emma said briefly, and house, vanished. Cherry and Amy followed Immediately to the library, where chairs had been set in a solemn semicircle to face the wide, flat mahogany desk at which the lawyer sat Judge Marshbanks was near him; he smiled at the girls as they came In. Almost at once the will was opened. Their late employer had remembered them all, leaving to every servant a sum approximating a thousand dollars for each year In her service, and for Emma's eleven years of faithfulness a round twenty-five thousand. Cherry was stupefied to hear her own name read out as beneficiary for a legacy of fifteen hundred. The old house was to be given to the city as a museum. Everything In the way of personal belongings, upstairs furnishings and the bulk of the estate were left to the granddaughter of her beloved old friend Amelia Wellington, Amy Marshbanks. What are your plans, Cherry? Judge Marshbanks inquired. I havent had time to make plans, said Cherry, but I think I feel as if I didn't know anything. Well, the judge said, "thats not bad idea. It will get you among people your own age, shake you up, put you on your own yes, thats a good plan. Berkeley?" Stanford, I thought." Wait a Why not? he agreed. minute wait a minute," he added, I know a nice place down there where you might like to stay. Lots of youngsters in the family; you wouldnt feel so strange. What does Emma think of this? Have you talked to her?" Aunt Emma and I talked the night Mrs. Porter was so ill, the last night but one Cherry was beginning when Amy put in an animated interruption: Dyou call her Aunt Emma? Well, yes, I do sometimes. Cherrys face turned toward the fire, flamed until the tips of her ears were red. We were sitting upstairs waiting for the doctors to come out of Mrs Porters room, she resumed her story, and I said I hoped she would get well, and Emma said she was sure she wouldnt. So then we talked of what we would do, and Emmas going up into Mendocino, where she has a little place, and retire. Well, I should think Emma'd be fixed well enough to do that, the judge said again with an approving nod. And then with a glance at the doorway through which Amy had disappeared in quest of her coat and So she told you hat, he added, about your mother, eh? A month ago. Shock to you? Oh, no, I think, Cherry confessed honestly, I had been dreaming imagining that I might have well, different relations. I always thought Emma was my mothers nurse. But we we like each other. Youre a nice girl, the man commented, as if thinking aloud, d his eyes upon her. Cherwith flushed pleasure; her little ry laugh was proud and embarrassed. Did you did you ever see my Didnt you say you mother? hadnt? she asked, sobering again. No." He fell thoughtful; his linked hands dropped between his No, I knees, his eyes on the fire. was away I was in Washington for the back of a chair. You said you said she whispered, "that that your brother Fred Amy's father . . ." There waa a alienee. The Judge was standing now too, hit face as shocked as her own. Yon said that Emma had told Yes, but not that! Not yon! that! She only aald my mother ahe didn't tell me anything she said . . . The mans arm was Cherry! about her shoulders. Sit down, he said, "and talk with me a moment. My dear child, you mustn't take it this way! I'm sorry Im terribly sorry that Ive shocked you! She was breathing hard, but she was quieter. Her eyes, very big in her pale face, met his courageously. Its all right, she said, I ought to know. I ought to have known be fore! Emma was my fathers nurse and my mothers housekeeper, the man presently said. She was at ways a superior person, you can see that She had been Fred's nurse and mine in the hospital when we were boys, had been widowed and came back as my fathers nurse. Her sister Charlotte was much younger, ten or twelve years young er; she met my brother, naturally, she used to be in the bouse a good deal; Fred was always around. He was married; bis wife was expect lng a baby of her own when all this happened. There was nothing to be done except make her comfortable and provide for the child. Amys has fortune you understand? nothing to do with my brother. That came through her mothers father, her grandfather Wellington, he left that to her. But what Fred could do, he did. The money I have been administering for you was left you by my brother your father and in refer ence to this college plan of yours, Judson Marshbanks went on. In an easier tone but still watching her I want to keenly and anxiously. remind you that we have a balance a comfortable balance, and any profession you would like to take up . . . She was not listening. She seemed like a girl made of stone. So you see that I am your uncle the judge said really and truly, lightly, affectionately, after a pause. she whispered with I know, white lips. And then, with a sudden wince of pain that contracted her young face: Has anyone told Amy? Does Amy know? No. Nobody knows. My moth' er, myself, Emma. Not another soul. Your mother! She was talking of me then, when she said she wouldnt have me in the house! Did she say that? he asked with a little frown. Well, you must forgive a proud, unreasonable old Your grandmother too, woman. Cherry. Her eyes My grandmother! I were dark with bitter thought think thank you so much! but I think Ill go upstairs. Im tired, Cherry faltered, and was instantly in his arms sobbing against his shoulder. His hand patted her. "I know, he said. I know. Its very hard! Almost immediately she stopped crying, gulped, fumbled for her handkerchief. Amys calling you! she said thickly, and in another moment she was gone. She fled upstairs and to her room and to a restless agony of thinking to walk the floor, to pause, to burst into violent tears again and fling herself on her bed. The injustice of I he several years after married, of it, the cruelty of But I knew she was very it, humiliation said. her being one of two sisters who and trusting. very young were strangers and whose destinies he went on touched And you mustnt, almost the extremes of huyou mustnt man contrast, choked and maddened after a moment, too much. He her and she stopped her blame your father weeping was goodhearted; he was a decent only to pace the floor again, and alBut so in g many ways. fellow again to break into ways ungoverned unable to think tears. Ive always out consequences! It was eight oclock, and she was thought, the kind, quiet voice went haggard and weary, when she ran that what happened between downstairs to the telephone upon a on, him and your mother was the re- sudden desperate impulse and called sult of a single moment of wild emoa Sausalito number. tion two young things completely But when Kellys heartening, deprived for the moment of reason pleased voice answered her, h.r what is it. Cherry? Whats the tears came again and she could matter, my child? hardly make herself coherent: She had gotten to her feet, reel (TO BE COMTIM'ED ) half-close- self-pityin- i s 1 o QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS ON MEAT UAllONI.NO Q. I see that my 2's pound weekly meat ration include the bone. Does it include my tuichers hand? A. There may be some way lo keep your buUbrr'a (Ut out of it, but it will lake more Iban For Your CsueIi Creomulsion relieves promptly it goes right to the seat of the trouble w help loosen and expel Berra laden phlegm, and aid nature be-ea- ux to soothe and heal raw, tender. Inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quuklv allays Die cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis a global war, Comparing Things Q. The government says that if I have dinner in a restaurant and order a steak I should deduct its weight from my home quota. How can I weigh a steak in a restaurant? A. This Is a complicated matter. la aome restaurant the average weight of a steak ia about Iwa ounce Including ibe plate, knife and fork. If yea are lucky enough to know a restaurant that nerves a real ateak tbe waiter will give yoa tbe weight. Or yoa can use this formula: Let X equal tbe appetite; let B equal tbe steak and let W equal tha price quoted on tbe menu. Too then get tbe number of aquaro feet in each room and divide by the etorm window. Supposo somo friends invite me to their homo for dinner and serve roast beef. I take a second helping. Do I have to deduct this from my home ration of meat or just write it off under the heading of good neighbors? A.Your a going to eautt troubU if you try to weigh th portion served by any host. Q. Thus I knew that pups ore liki dogs, and kids like goats; bo I used to compare great things wilt small. VergiL lightfully easy to do. so make your spare moments productive by using this pattern to replace your own linens or make gifts. SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT RUBBER Thcr ar tils and Hrrs motif, a crane and a avian, three harmontoua flower de dainty bluebird. Grand for tigna. and the a fall bride I Paltero Zmi is D cenl. Send your order to: Rubber ! Mt tb Mf f m frM but It tt lufoa found In tub that run lunvtbwtou thruugbuut AIN'T MARTHA Ktona Bog IS W Encluat 15 cent City, tbn Innur purf t tbn bark Judiuidat leui ewnurt or eon tun a rubbur. Hmrdmtffm 33ml Mo. for each pattern bout, chuck inflation pruauaia onou wu mk. cback ururf tg Meatha, rotatn tuaa (inotadm to difiarant wh1 UTry ipmi) 3,000 Milr Itia net a difbcult babtl to aequua nnd it will kaap jom foil detlred. Pattern No wbUuqnt Nam Addreat lagloagur nn baur Why bulk art 31 wR 31 In iwwal I mil rtrkfiul a buur tbn limn fur nutnmua wHb tbn wakiff bit, In Arabic p4 Hubruw nnd LI0USEH01D I frintud films Tbn Amy la auppliad by bnndrndi at thouaa&dn ol rubbar-tua- d track, Mildew stains should be reQ. Mr. Wickard says that there are plenty of meat products that moved while fresh by laundering. are not rationed. He lists these as Remember that it is the contact kidneys, brains and hearts. How af heat with the dampened garcan I leam to eat those things? ment that removes wrinkles in A. Dark glasses and plenty of ironing. Dont wear yourself out mustard will help. bearing down on the iron. t Q. Sausages and frankfurters are to get even distribest The way not to be rationed. Why? bution of heat in a room is to run A. It would seem to prove a small fan. what we have always contended: Whatever Is In them, it Ilose hint: To save time and hosiery just rub paraffin on the inside of the toes of your hose and Q. Why is it all right to eat plenty you will have darning of chicken? to do for a long time. One appliA. There is plenty of chicken cation lasts through many launbecause It Is seldom served In derings. the army, due to the fact that the officers take everything but Buy sheets and blankets extra-widthen use them part of the the neck. It is rarely offered in the navy because of a belief that time with the length across the isn't meat. n 24 ton which tu4 ooatakel morn lor than 7 timaa mock rubbar you pamangar oaz Rnntnnn brldgnt nm built nn rvbbnr ftnnt thnt tnhn mura thun n tan nnd n bull nt rvbbnr B.FGoodricIi e, It Is Just aa well not to let sailors know there 13 a food other than beans. Q. What Is the situation about eggs? A. Thera is or will ba a ceiling on eggs, which, after all, is preferable to eggs on the ceiling. The hens have had a pretty good year. They were late learning about the war and didnt worry. What about Tootsy? Thats my airedale. Ive had him eight years and he has developed a habit of getting at the meat before I can reach it myself. He is very intelligent and there is no use trying to kid him Sit up and beg and by saying: mumsy will give you a herring. Last Tuesday he bit the letter carrier. Today he bit the milkman and two neighbors. The next thing you know he may cause a national calamity by biting a Gallop Poll Q. taker. A. It would seem up to all callers to wear leggings. Elmer Twilchell says he favors an immediate second front but questions whether Willkie is in shape for it yet. bed. A receiving shelf in a niche at the top and bottom approach to a stairway for articles to be carried BEN HOTEL OGDEN, UTAH up or down will save steps and prevent accidents. There is really nothing more pleasant than the warm glow you get when you know your gift is well received. For assurance of that this Christmas, send those smokers on your list Camel cigarettes or Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco. Theyre favorites both, especially with men in the service. You have your choice of three distinctive packages. Camels in the Christmas Carton, 10 packages of 20s also the gay Holiday House containing four boxes of flat fifties. Either way you give 200 mild, flavorful Camels. Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco comes in the pound canister all wrapped and ready to give. The packages even include space for mesyour Merry Christmas sage. Youll find them featured by your local dealer as gifts sure to please. Adv. I 2 In - gift-wrapp- ed Since the announcement that no provision will be made for any meat for house pets, nobody can charge any longer that this administration is going to the dogs. 350 Bath . 12.00 to M.00 J5I Room $4.00 Family Booms for 4 personas Air Cooled Loan re nnd Lobby Dininf Boom Coffee Shop Tap Boom Homo of Kiwanl Executives Rotary U2Q-3Exchanga Optimist Chamber of Commerce nnd Ad Clob Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Hubert E VLslck, Mgr Sometimes Mother has trouble finding h ideas for meals just when she has all kinds of work piled up waiting for her. A meat pie not only provides a bebut takes care of yesterdays sides. The recipe may be varied to suit your own refrigerator stock of Ingredients : Two cups cooked, cubed meat, two tablespoons fat, two tablespoons chopped onion, two teaspoons salt, teaspoon pepper, two cups peas and juice, cup cooked sliced carrots, cup cooked lima beans or any vegetables available, two tablespoons flour, two tablespoons one-dis- A New York woman turned her automobile over in the old metal collection. Elmer Twitchell says he could have done it with his jaloppy long ago, as ever so many people told him it was just junk. meal-in-on- e, left-ove- rs left-over- s. one-ha- lf The meat shortage is going to be a little tough on the lunchroom men who have for years been substituting veal for chicken in chicken pie. one-ha- lf one-ha- lf water. Directions: Brown the meat and onion in hot fat and add salt and pepper; then add peas and juice, carrots and beans. Blend flour and water together to make a thick paste. Add to vegetable mixture and cook until thick. Pour into casserole and arrange small baking powder biscuits around the edge. Serves six. As a Mere Man Sees It. Women, there really is no doubt. In spite of all their notions. Are truly fairer far without So many creams and lotions. Pier. WAITING FOR A CASE So long shes studied now first aid, I mean my friends wife, Myrt, That be has grown to be afraid She almost hopes hes hurt. Merrill Chilcote. Buy War Bonds !; - Lost Brooch blue, with ladys 107 Curtis street, head inserted. Bloomfield. Newark News. Something from New Guinea, no doubt. "Women will run street cars In Cleveland. News item. And Merrill Chilcote remarks that, since it is impossible for a street car to make a he supposes it will be all right. LOMOND 00" CO Vgiirrt? |