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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUTE, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17, 1929. taBles for Two By Weare Holbrook The country home of Mr. and Mrs. across the middle. Yon have to open Alfred Peregrine at Higgtos point has the upper half first; then while you received considerable publicity, you are unfastening the lower half, the may have seen pictures of It in the upper swings hack and whacks you glazed paper magazines, along withjon the side of the head. This is one family croup of gladioli and adver of the reasons why so many of the tisements of wrought iron sun dials. young men of America are seeking It was. originally a barn, and the white collar job. We got into the house with no casPerefrrlnar have spent a fortune in an effort to preserve its barn-lik- e at ualties except a couple of pinched ' finders. "This is the sitting room. moppnexe. I can remember the time when Al said Mrs. Peregrine. "It used to be Peregrine and his wife were so poor the harness. closet and the black out the ihey had to live in a house and an smith shop, but we knocked apartment house.at that. They had partition and made one big room of only the barest necessaries, such wM it." elevator service, hot and cold run Oh!" rasped Phoebe. "Isn't it just nlng water, steam heat and electric refrigeration. "By George!" I exclaimed, taking But now they live in a bam as luxurious a home as any horse could my cue. "It certainly is!" ask for. Mrs. Peregrine" found it at Fireplace Really higgins point, on a farm mat nad A Smithy's Forge. I'M abandoned by an old Ntw En "You see this fireplace is really a pi and family of excellent Judgment. forge," said Alfred PereIt was more than one hundred years smithy's "Here are the bellows and grine. oid and was (tui gtandmg on its one anvil everything, Just as we found inal foundation. This, considering them. andI've been doing a little the state of the foundation, was no search among the records at mean feat: the masons who built it the town hall, and I've discovhad scorned the use of mortar, mere ered that this barn belonged ly laying one flat rock on another to a man named Elam, who and trusting to the force or gravity, was wounded In the war of out Phoebe and I spent a week-en- d It was doubtless the there last winter. At that time the 1813. con work of remodeling had been under scene of many Incident nected with that historic conway for a year and a half, and you of , never would have guessed that the flict, such as the making the shoeing of place had once been a stable that ammunition, horses and the storing 1. if you kept both your eyes shut cavalry of rations. If you will step this ...... T ...fit tight and held your breath. Wi1. a.wua suvvf. jriu ay ww.ik ' . ' hole." Original lines Had It was evident that there had been Bleu left Unchanged. other weekend visitor, before us The original lines of the building hundred of them, probably for Mr. had been left unchanged, but the Peregrine spoke with the glib ef-- beaten walls had been paint ficiency of guide. I td white, and the broad door of the felt as if we a professional everywhere rafters lurked " ought to buy a few postcarriage she4 tiad te?h Teplacedbyi cards to send to the folks back In a pair of windows with green blinds. Iowa.as a table. They had left served this The platform of the hay scales served as they had found it, witn it just he announced de rather "That," ara sort of porch; when several peo f iantly, full of chisels, screw driv pointing to a spot on the wall a tool rack ple walked across it simultaneously anove tne iirepiace, "is a ouaet note. ens, reamers, files and other Imple it "swayed in a seagoing manner like It looked .to me like a nail, but I ment ranged along the side, and a the floor of a Coney Island crazy large Iron vise fastened to one end. house. "You 11 get used to it," said was in no position to argue about it. The edges of the work bench were Mrs. Peregrine-- - reassuringly, as Well, well!" I exclainkd. ''A bul scarred and splintered; apparently eh?" let hole, Phoebe and I clutched at each other hole!" cried Phoebe; gat- it had been used as a chopping block lor support. "Alfred always says a ing"Aatbullet same erratic carpenter who the it raptly as if her fondest by scroll on the porch Is as good as a beams in dreams hod been realized Phoebe, dedgn-- d the rough-hew- n cocktail before dinner." had been born in Chicago, only the ceiling. It was not the ideal am The front door was one of those who ing table, but it was1 conducive to eld fashion ?d stable doors,; divided s bomb's throw from the loop. "It's very interesting," I remarked, good manners, at least; you couian t "but sUll, I don't believe it s the put your elbows on it without getort f thing' I should care to live ting them full of. slivers. I half expected our hostess to serve . witn. us with nosebags, but the dinner was "We like It," said Mrs. Peregrine. conventional, except .that we Tookhed Converted W WTto 111 , - quite were obliged to alt on three-legglet? Refectory. milking stools which must have been The toolshed had been converted made in Germany, where they nave into a refectory, with very few dachshund cows. At first I was so changes. There was a battered worK far below the level of the table that bench in the middle of the room and I could have used a siphon for my soup. Later I evoked a sort of , - ka or almost overt said she had scoured the country for that lantern; but she forgot to scour the lantern Itself. Guest Rooms Located In What Waa Hayloft. The guest rooms were In the hayloft, which was divided by parti tions, and entrance to the loft was gained if you were lucky by means of an almost perpendicular stairway. The steps were just wide enough to With a running allow a toe-ho-ld. start, you could get half way up in no time at alL but the latter part of the ascent had to be negotiated One misstep slowly and carefully. semi-crou- TJE stands for V itiirmiUU health. in ons of homes the world overv: He bring, protection to old and young against winter wet andtold. He beams on babies who need more sunshine. He offers you the easy, MEDITERRANEAN CRU.'SI JaB. 2. tCOO U f 7SO lili NewS.STjniiglvma,Vfififav.Ma. 1 UNI, S2 daya, 00 to $UBO Madeira, Morocco, Spain, Algiers, Italy,- - Riviera- .- Sweden?--NorwaEdinburgh, Holland. Belgium, Paris, CUM AND pleasant way of taking that c cod liver oil. great food-toni- SCOTTS EMULSION : , j ' ITEMS ADVERTISED ON OPPOSITE PAGE look for the service sign McKesson on window A" -- J for Aerial , chic; LOS ANGELES . ,,,- ,-,,, iV -. 1 O ! - . . ns -- d fit, eft. include J C Clark. Tlsats IM, N. T. WrtmH ch - (London, Rhine, Oberammergaa Passion Play). HoItU, drhu, miss-and-- and State ICE PIC l -- by hand. Ill take you up there . later." Mr. Peregrine glanced surrepti tiously at his watch, and Mrs. Pere grine tried not to notice a large smudge of oil on her white kid gloves. "Do sit down urged Phoebe, in dicating an empty gasoline barrel in the corner of the room "We don't have any chairs because we feel that tlvey wouldn't harmonize with the tone of the place. But there are some " old seat cushions- "Oh. I'm not a bit tired." said Mrs. ' Peregrine sweetly. "Those dents in tne rear wan,'' i xDlained to Mr. Peregrine, "were I made by the original owner, whose originality seems to have consisted in stopping his car without applying the brakes. Now, if you'll step into the dining room. I'll show you some and a genuine antique tire-Irohand-sew- n blowout patch. The Peregrines did not linger long. They left that same afternoon and there was a noticeable coolness in their voices as they said, good -- by. "Oh, dear!" sobbed Phoebe when they nad gone. "I'm afraid they didn't like this place at all and I thought they'd be so enthusiastic about it. Probably it isn't quaint enough for them." "Nonsense!" I replied, wiping away her tears with a handful cf waste. "There's just as much atmosphere in an old New York garage as there is, in an old New England barn every bit as much. They re just Jealous, that's all" So. WE FEATURE with on ly an -' i- ' lour-poste- detra. Canary Islands, Morocco, Spain. Greece, Palestine, Egypt, Italy, etc y. iiu'ixuuu"innATiiiiii--i-i-i-- 4th Ml LES ut and you were back where you start only more so. Not being human Hies, Phoebe ana I found that the business of getting up to our bedroom was rather a affair: every time we missed a step we hit the bottom. When I finally did reach the top, I felt like yodeling. Our bedroom contained as cnoice half sitting, half standing. collection of antiques as I have It waa great exercise for developing aseen off Madison avenue. There the thigh muscles. r, a was a mahogany tetumeq room Mrs. Peregrine showed us the black' walnut bureau and an Otto -: lowmention to highboys, hoof marks on the floor, the Wooden man, not Uttls boys, attaboys and several had on wall harness where the pegs which were so been hung, the wrought iron hinges square hooked rugs,were practically on the feed boxes and the old water- thick ,tbat they cubic. ing trough which had been made into "Oh!" exclaimed Phoebe, when she a bookcase. We had to take her word saw the bedroom. "Isnt this for most of it. as the only illumina ducky!" Ducky was the word. The an. tion ancient by was five feet pnly high and coal oil lantern. It was one of the doorway celling not. much higher. You "reflector" variety, but the had to duck when you came in, and its reflections were . entirely intro- keep on until you went out. spective, owing to a thick layer of Whereverducking you went there were raft-te- rs rust and cobwebs. Mrs. Peregrine overhead big, rough-hew- n lurking beams that had cracked many s cranium in tneir oay. Another Hasard In Form Of the Feed Chate. There was another hazard in the form of a feed chute midway between the bed and the bureau. It was a hole in the floor through which years ago hay had been pitched down to the animals in the stable.- undress (Copyright, 1929, by the N. Y. ing by candlelight, I stepped oh it, Inc.) was another hooked rug. thinking it The next moment the wind was rush ing in my ears and I landed with thud on the foot of Mr. Peregrine bed, one floor below. Breathless and shaken by my fall I pointed to the hole in the ceiling. you ought to nave boaraea it up, I gasped. "It's dangerous.' By John Wife "Oh, I don t know." musea Mr, the las happiest Merle annis we time have Peregrine.. "In all the In all thlr Kttlr town: lived here only tnree people nave And my sserrv fcMurb and sfarina; 1 ake th nlaoe of and f rrwn. fallen through that hole. And one of tot JOHN HAS QUlf HIS UiUNklNa And U Hk hnwp, if enee mere. them was a mere child. Vd th. world to (net perxMee We like it" added Mrs. Peregrine With tuck hsppia la swral complacently... our or V.Jf"11 stay During the remainder with the Peregrines I managed td 'hi con I feed keen of hut out the chute, r Jjwm tinued to batter my brow against llfCN g rafters and pick up ?"tfjWv splinters and trtpf over ramps that were entirely loo rampant, 'inere were moments when, listening to the , stable talk of our host and hostess, 1, "NruJ VJ I actually felt like a horse, and Phoebe said that on the last night of our vVTVdR II visit there I chewed the bedpost and 4 (,Vi I' Whinnied in my sleep. I Sv5 I suppose the Peregrines felt sorry for Ob us, going back to live in a plain, 91 mm f; . I, "Marr'a Mirtuk,," the un. Ji ordinary house that had never been ft, i And l kI. thmt Joti but a house. "Really," V 1 .1 8 wot lor GOLD K.N TttLATUENtJ ', 3-- J Phoebe; confided to me, "I'm almost (As ttm)4 M V t Aad I sut It in eks.ui t Mpoar ashamed to invite them to our home. A ; 11 Aadl putiliahnU. It's so modern and conventional. It Awl H tMrt tmt HttW sM; -.. Htd wocdarno yog VfiVkH yjIl has no atmosphere.". w moothevt kind tf tathac Vtn ft ft, Abandoned Garage I uiue ivoccdt mm. WSkZlIn I wtrbrf swl gmvtid And nd I I I Ml For the Peregrines. And tflrd orr. too. I frrMU J Wf I vh won i iu ut irrMtsMt But when the Pereerines returned 11 our visit a few weeks later we were And Mia s?w fiimifftit a , IllimTlVwfef H wta btnif rard of dnrk. prepared for them. True, we hadn't AjuJ sum tlr'l U sVellMUiroM, able to find any abandoned It mkm m ? to hmki Ul M been tjc try tor jlnltui bam to remodel, but we hed found I'm twurnuH to n b BLw be h Ajrcd of JHektr, the next best tiling an abandoned AllBll.Btthfl. gara?3. Johfi ft watt dfakvf "8I Oh. how quaint! exclaimed Mrs. rwit fmv It limtm moougtI AM hot and kwthi hqoor Peregrine as we turned into the grav A h mauul pnwm, tQft eled driveway. "And you you really And rhn I f mjr at wbM A ttuankfol aa rnprrf live here? Am i I pro- ff Jthn th mrt of fl Yes, indeed," replied Phoebe. "Of course, we've made a few changes, but not enouch to destroy the char HomeTreatiaent forPrunkards Ju acter or the building." Notice tne line old padlock." I Oisrlisa Taatalaea-A- ar LshsV Cess Gira said, swinging open the door. "It's k Sacntir at HevB m Tea. I looked authentic . CitaaFeeJ it up in the catalogue." Mr. Perennne hesitated for a mo Nothing Try ment on the threshold, and the door If real bav a fesKband. soo. tmahvr. ratbar after the manner of garage doors ar friend wka a rctitn of tin u or, all you baea swung shut, sending htm sprftwlins to w to aaaej roar Mtnet and aeMreaa oa tha on the concrete floor. When he got coupm bow. It baa hclpejd mane and ahonld the tbiac roa want. Vuu mar be thank-fu- l up his fiends and knees were black be ;ut aa kais' a ysa hra that tow did it. with oil. You can see it's a genuine ga I" Free Treatment Ceape asserted Phoebe proudly. rage, n n1M aedresa on . I J" ,tmr. betom, Thea cut out tliie pointing to a pool of grease on" tin i..r,'J and maU It to Dr. J. w. Haines I noor. "Tneres wnere tne cars used I coupon Co.. Sf.lS Olcnn Bide.. Cincinnati. O. I to stand, and those nails on the wall You win receive In return enouen of I treatment In a plain sealed pae- - I were for wrenches, overalls and old to prove to jou that it will stop I (the inner tubes This is our living room in any form. You alve It now. and weve converted Idtunkennesa tea. coflee ot, food ... The : I top drinkina without shop and the toolshed into a , knowmst why. Nam I St. Addrm "Th?re were all kinds of curiosities i In the cttlc." I continued. "We found .. i! a 1C2J license plat?, and on-- of than ed ed FISH; ed or overhead COOMBS DRUG CO. Visitors Must Have Exit Visas to Leave." One of the chief complaints of the visitor is the arbitrary exchange whichmakes Russian travel exorbitantly expensive. Within the country 1.94 roubles are given for an American dollar, but it is Impossible for the American to buy a dollar for that amount of roubles. Russian moey cannot be brought in from abroad, and to buy It elsewhere than at the official banks within the country is a criminal offense. In Warsaw you can buy six roubles for a dollar; in Berlin, eight. In countries farther from Russia, the rouble has no value at all because of the ban forbidding its importation. A visa to enter Russia costs $12 and it is nof easy to get a visa if you have been in Russia before and are thus able to compare the appearance of the country now with Its state under the imperial regime. A surprise for the visitor is supplied on leaving the country by the necessity of ac- I met one American . delegation from Russia at the Polish frontier at Stolboe. All of the member of the party had lost weight, some of them a much a 10 pounds in five weeks. Even honored visitors could not be guaranteed sufficiently nourishing food In a country whose agricultural system has rotted under the influence of the communist regime.: Some of the visitors spoke of their Russian trip as a wonderful experience. They meant it was a wonderful experience in the sense that arctic hardships or tropical dangers might constitute a wonderful experience. quiring aa exit visa as well. Once having lived through the nightmare of Russian life they were willCrews are uncannily accurate in ing to relegate Russia to a subject prophesying a storm. WARSAW (CTS) Russia's at tempt to gain American favor by carefully chaperoned tours into the soviet stronghold has failed. I have talked to many Americans returning from Russia and find that the ef forts of the official guides to present Russia in a light have failed. Among the visitors to Russia who have left the country through Warsaw were Mrs. Jacob Baur, John Sen-tof Chicago. Attorney Alvin Unter-maye- r, Jesa Writh, the New York Albert Ottineer. A. B. Camp bell of Washington, and many others. At the other end of the scale are poor inhabitants of New York's east side, who have saved their money for years in order to visit the "old folks" in the little villages of of Podolsk in soviet Ukranla. Rich and poor are glad to get out of Russia. Yet the American visitors see the country from its most attractive angle. Elaborate) programs have been prepared for the group of tourist and business men who have passed through the country. Officials showed unusual deference to them, special hotel accommodations were granted, customs inspections were omitted, train, schedules were revised for their convenience. , "' Foreigner Receive Many Unosnal Glfta. The bar against visiting the Krem lin was lifted, and valuable gifts were privileges, given them. One of tneirVianstjxt. fa. ...mUI m.Mn. was laft vor. Tne guiaes, wno servea at uie same time as spies lor tne oreaaea a. P. u.. the Russian secret service. were not only charged with showing the visitors what Russia wanted tnem to see.-balso with keeping them from seeing what she wished to hide. They were uronaganda agents, and they received for their work $10 per day, a feouiou wary in Doianevm : : Russia. rose-tint- - -- it henceforth Many Americans Who Have Been Taken Tlirough Soviet Country Speak Against Nation, Conditions, Despite Many Attractions for 'Benefit ; of Tourists. . . of conversation and keep away from Russian Attempt to Gain Fav or by uiaperoned Tours Meets Failure Herald-T- ribune, ;p guqpse's HAPPINESS FROM TODAY'S WANT ADS! iMTWVi IVfSiAYYAiOsIV f1 ' lre. Sffy 'yA;& Incumbrance!. $100 mS&SsZtn? si,tS yf'i.m Vif IrifaJailii - - On Down-4T- 22 I JWWwil rfJtU if a I aril raw and welt Vpper Tale dlMrteW new, rooin brick colonial, with built. mens room and brtakfaat nook. Finished, 1,1 matioienr and oak floors throuthoul. Htlna room and m- Execotlonallr In. to ter bedroom. R?ndjr tie,M. inoc A real "id !W0 down with easy terms. home for the disc nmlnntina oerson. 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