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Show the area county news. - The Sole Salvage By MARTHA M. WILLIAMS fi). 1922, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate. bestowed upon Fay. A nameless present, a diamond pendant, winking back the morning sunshine, made Esme re coil faintly and drop it back in its case. The phone was calling insistently a little way off. Lapsley went briskly to answer it and caught an impatient drone, Hello I That you, Fay? Thank the Lord, Worse than sudden death to miss you. Say X C and Q bonds better than cash to do the trick. Be sure you turn up heeled with 'em else day after tomorrow will be The garden, a picture of tilth and judgment day for fair. Millions waitblowth, invited Esme to be happy. round the corner only got to turn She loved growing tilings, the clean ing it this one more time. So long! Resmell of newly stirred earth, above all, member ie's play and pay. birds, wheeling, darting, fluttering from after the first sentences had shrub to vine, or over the brilliant notLapsley tried to interrupt. He had a sense beds. Their chorus of joy matched that his eavesdropping was after a her mood this midsummer morning sort providential. The bulk of Esmes whose level early sunshine somehow Inheritance was in X G and Q bonds. transfigured her. She had come out Fay must be planning to get hold of for flowers; deftly, with tender touch, them somehow he surely would not she clipped the chosen blossoms. She daiv to ask her to lend them outright did not crowd her basket only the when neither she nor anybody else choicest blossoms were fit typ the day. knew very much about him. So John Her birthday half her world would the call was for Fay come later with gifts and good wishes. explained that an impatient friend, wanting to She would be grateful enough for all , make sure of his coming home. Esme yet somehow yearned for only one said He is going. I since Austin Fay had shall abstractedly, take him to the early train tocome into her life all beside him were morrow and say goodby. but shadows. Thereafter John' excused himself How her heart leaped at his joyous for the rest of the day. No he might hall. Rushing across, the turf he not get back for the big dinner, but snatched away her basket, set it down, she would see him again; on that she and took both her hands, saying ; Formight depend. Then he rode away give me, rose of roses; but I had to headlong, but not toward his own come ahead of the crowd. I knew it plantation. His way lay townward. He was my only chance of asking you knew call was tracing a something privately. Something dread- likely to take time, plus influence, and to me Can you maybe ready ensh. In the fully important sparkling guess what It is? gray dawn Esme, alone in her roadLet me see ; is it about the color of , ster, by Fays insistence, picked up your new suit? or if you had better her passenger and sped down the long sell Sir Lancelot, while the selling is white road to town. They were to go good? Or maybe it is what chance you to a minister remote, on quite the have with" Mme. Duvernay? Esme other side. living Warned by phone, he began, flushing happily. would be ready; would fill names Into All wrong Dead wrong, Fay Inthe blank license Fay had got a week terrupted. Not disparaging your in- -. back. After he had done his office, comparable wisdom, youre way, way and been silenced by a round fee, off. You, you only know the answer they would drive blissfully along towill you marry me tomorrow morning gether again into the country, circle Just around this time? about and come to the station upon Esme tried to hang back, to its other side. This would shut off gay and indifferent. Love prying or wondering eyes. Esme sat ' forbade; with drooped eyelids and silent and white. Even Fays ardent tremulous lips she half whispered: kisses could not bring back her color. This bioolhed for you just as I But she walked firmly beside him up did. It holds my heart in its heart the minister's steps and on through towith and myself goes it, holding the open door. Suddenly she was conward hiqj a royal half blown rose, scious of other heavier folwhite outside but with a glow of flame lowing, of Johns voice footsteps : tensely saying in scarlet its deeps. Cant let you be married, Esme, litFay took the flower eagerly, laid it tle sister, without even a best man. to bis lips, and said, Darling, the But before this goes further, stepkiss Is for you given vicariously In ping In front of Fay, I must know fear of prying eyes. The rose is a where and how ''you expect to get the happy omen it stands, you know, for bonds you need to save you from silence. And and what we do must ruin." be kept secret for Just how long I You get out of this if you want to cannot say. live, Fay hissed, making to draw a seEsme started faintly. "I hate weapon. Esme caught his arm, saying, crets, she said. I have never had Until you answer, this ends all. one. Father begged me to the very last There is just one answer, John could not do to never anything that He meant to marry you, interjected. bear daylight. force you to sign the bonds over to If you really love me you will him, and most likely lose your a trust me, Fay said in a hard, strained fiei has already lost his own. voice. Thqa. hrieflly.'he explained: He had It made Esme shiver, but she faced traced 'the call, found out things about him steadily, saying: If you can the caller, about Fay himself, and show me a reason stopping there therefrom deduced all that was to as she caught a faint, indefinable happen. Better not miss your train, change in his glance. He did not speak he finished significantly. Esme knows she went on, her head drooping:- I- I will take care of her. ' " ' do love you I am ready to trust you, about' "How minister this? the said, ' against all the world. But 1 cannot holding ouf the license when Fay had "do it blindly so much I owe to my vanished. name. Ill take care of that, too, John You must trust blindly or not at said. It may come in handy later all, Fay said, fixing burning hypnotic on. this her. Unless you do, eyes upon Sure enough it did the sole salvage Is goodby forever. of that adventurous morning. Esme shivered again. Heart, soul, body, every fiber of her yearned to ODD METHOD OF DISCIPLINE yield to him. But against that whelming passion stood the traditions of a long, long line. No Wyeth had slurred Something New, but Southern School or stained It since the first of them set Teacher Found It Exceedingly foot in America, almost three hunEffective Idea. dreds years back. Last of the name, she felt bound as no actual authority While a country school superincould bind ; but there was a traitor in tendent in the South was making a heart. aching camp her swelling, tour of inspection, he visited a negro Dully she heard Fay say something school where the order maintained by at first she hardly sensed it. Then the teacher was remarkable. Every ear: words hold her took his upon child seemed to be absorbed in the You are twenty-on- e today free! school work and yet the teacher did Your own mistress. And I ask of you not impress the superintendent as a Just this one small thing to let me disciplinarian. Finally, after watching I make sure of you before go away. for a while, he turned and proceedings Esme said said in a tow tone to the teacher: Then you lack trust, piteously. .You should not. A Wyeth JoKnson, how in the world do you promise has never yet been broken. keep such good order? Do you whip " Only a fool would leave his great- the children much? est treasure within reach of a burNo. sir, the teacher declared; I glar, Fay said impatiently. No need never whip them. to tell you, when I am gone John Lap-sle- y Do you keep them in? will make you forget me If he No, sir, I never keep them In. can. He is as mad about you as I am Do you make them do extra work almost. It Isnt In him to be fully for punishment? so devoted. No, sir, I never make them do any of him. Please we need not speak extra work. Esme said gently. I forgive what you Then how do you manage them? have said you are not quite yourWell, sir. Ill tell you, the teacher self When they replied confidentially. Stop! I cant be civil any longer. dont do right I just eat up their dinSay yes or no at once unless you ner, and I dont have any more wish to drive me quite mad. Fay broke trouble. 'in, his face working in passion. Esme loved him, yet shrank from him in this A Strange Death. guise. After a breath she said diffa great storm along the During icultly: I cannot at once. Give me bnnk of the River Wollondilly, New N until tomorrow morning. South Wales, a terrific wind swept You will talje me to the station, along the valley and bent the willows then. Good! Fay cried, catching her double. hands again. Think hard, hearts deA bullock owned by a rancher of light, and be sure you think yes. Now was feeding directly under Rossville, I must leave you to haunt the phone to see the fork of a tall tree when the hurriwell-wishe- r; e 1 -- for-tune.- - " ' half the day Instead of staying you queening It here. I would not go only next thing to life depends on It Go! at once! Esme Interrupted. She was too nearly faint to listen further. Breakfast was a" merry meal, with gifts heaped about her plate, and her nearest, dearest friends clotting the big house to do her honor. Of course they had eaten their fill even John Lapsley. Love surely had not taken his appetite. His gift was only roses more royal even than that Esme had cane burst. The tree, forced almost double, whirled downward, the forked branch gripping the ox from neck to flank and closing on the doomed animal like a living vice. To an onlooker It seemed as If the tree had benf and' picked the animal off the ground. One instant the bullock was feeding, the next he was the life crushed swinging in mid-ai- r out of him. The branch had such a strong hold that it hud to be sawn through before the carcass could be released. Randolph, utah Food Vahe of Milk B. Caine, In Charge .Department of Dairy Husbandry, U. A. C- If we place foods according to their nutritive value there Is one class that stands far above all other common products. Milk and Its products, propGeorge erly produced, are foods having all these requirements. Because milk is produced by the old cow, and cows are such common animals, it Is seldom given due consideration in the fumily ration. The people of the United States as a whole, 'consume about one small glass of milk each day for each person. This is entirely too small a quantity and should be increased to us much as one quart each day. It is not uncommon for babies a year old to consume that much milk, each day along with other foods. Adults should consume at least this much milk. When the prices of products rise as they have done the last few months many housewives cut down on their supply of milk thinking they are economizing. f This is a mistake. Cut down on the higher priced articles of food and increase the cheaper, more nutritious ones. An average price of milk in Utah is 12 This is equal in per quart. food value to any one of the following: 8 eggs worth $ .50 lbs. liam worth .25 5 ' .70 2 lbs. chicken worth Vi lbs. beefsteak worth .20 o .24 lbs. pork worth .. If you will consider, these figures for a moment they should convince you of the value of milk as a food. Not only does whole milk stand high !n the rank of food stuffs but all of do also. TliesT must its fie considered separatetly to giv e full credit to milk. Skim milk, the most common of the and the last considered as to Its value, should be made a regular part of the family diet. Tire sepmilk thoroughly arating of whole leans the product and extracts the fat from It. Taking the fat out of milk by no means renders it useless for human consumption. The follovv-n- g shows the average composition of whole milk and separator skim milk: 3-- 5 4-- The Young Mother. ILLS OF- INFANTS AND CHILDREN should be so weH known to the youngest of mothers that a reminder or a repetition of the symptoms of illness seems unnecessary, yet there are some mothers who overlook a feverish condition, a little colic, or a disposition to be irritable, If not corrected they may lead to , serious sickness. And to correct them, to bring Baby back to its happy self, is so easy by the use of Castoria a medicine prepared just for infants and children. It will regulate the bowels (not force them), aid digestion and so bring quiet and rest. Fletchers Castoria has been doing this for over 30 years; regulating the stomach and bowels of infants and children. It has replaced the nauseating Castor Oil, Soothing Svrnps, poisonous Paregoric and other vicious concoctions in the homes of true ana honest mothers mothers who love their children. Those mothers will give their babies foods and medicines especially prepared for infants and children. THE - -- so-call- ed Children Cry Ferr mr, ' SVSli 2 - 0$ tw few 6 PER CENT. As Preparafionfor Avertable simuatinthelood by Reula-- .LCOHOL-3 ' linfltheStomadis and BcwetsoL A Word About Truth. l-- i'lZs few n irtiy f'S Thereby Promoting Digestion Cheerfulness and RestContains nor neither Opium, Morphine Mineral. Not Narcotic gochtlh Sutt JtHUtSad H Worm Sard A hcl pf ulRemedy for Diarrhoea Constipation and and and Feverishness i little-one- s. .loss of Sleep resulting thercfronwnancy Facsimile Signature1 ThTcWTAVR to-da- y. just-as-go- od ClortdedSagar J&itnyrrM flavot a! Great is Truth, and mighty above all things. So says the Old Testament, yet it is equally true Truth Bhows no favors, fears no enemies. From the inception of Fletchers Castoria, Truth has been the' watchword, and to the conscientious adherence to this motto in tho preparation of Fletchers Castoria as well as in its advertising is dua the secret of its popular demand. All imitations, all substitutes, all preparations lack the element of Truth, lack the righteousness of being, lack all semblance even in the words of those who would deceive. And you! Mothers, mothers with the fate of the World in your hands, can you he deceived? Certainly not. Fletchers Castoria is prepared for Infants and Children. It is The BABYS need for a meddistinctly a remedy for the icine to take the place of Castor Oil, Paregoric and Soothing Syrups was the sole thought that led to its discovery. Never to correct BABYS troubles with a medicine that you would usetry for yourself. MOTHERS I G OMPAVf. Bmou. SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET GENUINE THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of From the above it can readily be observed that the skim- milk differs from (lie whole milk only in having the fat removed. Some of the other constituents are slightly Increased. The butter fat or creum in milk is by no means the only valuable part. Inhere is !eft in skim milk sugnr, mineral substances and protain. The latter' of these is especially Important because it not only serves as fuel to the body, ns fats sugars and starches do, hut it also supplies nitrogenous material. ' Due to the fact that the nutritive part of skim milk consists very largely of protein, it must be placed in the same class with such foods as eggs, fish, meat, and poultry. Two and one-haquarts of skimmed milk contain almost as much protein and yield about the same amout of energy as a pound of round beef. If skim milk sold as high ns four cents per quart (which t neve- - does in Utah) that would be about 2c per pound and if a round of beef were 20c per pound, 10c or any other sum of money, will provide nearly twice as much nourishment in milk as it will Itk steak. Skim milk can be used for cooking in place of whole milk most of the time with excellent results. Not only is skim milk valuable as a food Itself but from it are made some of our other most wholesome foods. The simplest one of these is cottage cheese. This can be and should le in every home in America. Cotserved and make a can he cheese tage main part of any persons lunch or supper. Prepared with cream, it compares very favorably in compensation and digestibility with beef and other One hundred pounds of skim meets. milk and 4 pounds of cream containing rihout 20 fat will make about 15 to 17 pounds of cottage cheese ready to serve. Charging market price for every-thnthe clice-- is much cheaper than meat of similar value. Cottage cheese has exceptional value on the larm where milk is produced cheaply and meat os rather hard to get. Cautions. If skim milk is bought In the city care should he taken that it milk of is clean. Bacteria in skiff! course will cause bad results. If milk s bought and allowed to stand several hours In moderate temperature then d,lmmed and the skim milk used there 's likely to be trouble from bacteria. Skim milk that comes from a clean separator properly cooled and handled IS generally good and can be used fjr any of the above mentioned foods. Any person who eats at a meal foods rich in protein s ich as meat, eggs, fish, dried, beans, or peHS, and drinks several glasses of milk is likely to leolde that milk does not agree with - Gives Cheerful Haw Color Tone to Old Curtains PUTNAM FADELESS DYES dyes or tints as you wish . tissue-buildin- There are iia.-pil- constituted ple Who dont care whether they peoex- It Works That Way. Sillicus Does the Bible explain press their opinions or not. just why Methuselah happened to live so long? Cynicus I think not, but The trouble about looking up to my own private opinion is that some people is that it encourages them to woman must have married him for his New York Sun. look down upon ns. money. -- Even when a man does have greatness thrust upon him he really thinks that he achieved it. A man has to believe something, Tlit confidence man is you know. looking for that kind. lf him. Aa?e WotEa the Fsrace J$ If me they are the big can and cheap kind because they may mean baldng failures mm YHAYS WHY The Economy PMRMS JPflftWffDEIFl Is the biggest selling brand in the world Dont let a BIG CAN or a very low price mis- lead you. Experimenting with an uncertain brand is ex- pensive because it WASTES time and money. BEST BY TEST The Worlds Greatest Baldng Powder |