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Show . THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA, UTAH lluu ' iiskih j ".i'Miiii mu, wmn ww,tv.w;.) xqp RESURRECTION IVER g Wfc MOWERY COPYRIGHT WILLIAM BYRON MOWERY Jasper Wellington turned ap- oplectic. Why you you scoundrel, ending her up there, when I wrote her, when I gave her strict orders" . . He reached for the desk phone. i'Tll have her pitched Craig put his hand on the teleJust a minute. You wont phone. nave anybody pitched out. Your strict orders' dont cut any ice iwith me. Patricia has a right to 5'isit toher home, and you're not trample on her right. This ivisit home is my wedding present Ito her, and you wont break it up" Ill be damned if I dont " "Youll surely be damned then, ifor shes going to stay there, and i out" , engineer for 12 years, with my eyes . and ears wide open? If you werent Patricias father and an old man. Id go straight to Ottawa with what I know about your company's security manipulations in Canada and your wildcat affiliations and your dummy stock setups, and Id blow you clear out of the dominion I Ive been wanting to do that for years, and now Ive got the money and the backing. Whats it going to be between you and me peace or war?" Wellington glared in venomous silence at Craig, and swallowed hard. Silence, from hirtf, rneant that he was beaten and knew it. To save his face he swung on You handle this," he Warren. Do whatever you damned barked. care to! He tmwd away, strode into Russell Parkes office and slammed Jhe door. Some Reasons Why Boston Can by National Geographic Society, Waahlnfton, D. C. WNU Servtca. Prepared Geographically, popu- lation center of rich, industrial New England. A few minutes ride from Faneuil Hall are more than 5,700 factories and over 25,000 stores ot one kind or another. fish-freezi- cotton-manufacturi- ocean-born- deep-channel- ed high-grad- y .... I Watch hes ... d, ed that Its all-tim- its pulse-poundin- wont 77- - Among American. Cities High-Ran- k Boston does not flaunt these distinctions; yet seek and you find she has Americas largest drydock;the and worlds greatest storage plant. Here is a center of Americas pdper', wool, textbook, indusand tries, and the second port in America in volume of pas. senger traffic. Her harbor, whose At nine that evening Pati.cia modern piers connect with rails and came down from' the North Shore highways, is one of the most accesto the Loop hotel where Craig was sible on the Atlantic seaboard; it has 40 miles of berthing space and staying. I had to see you again, husband, deep water to accommodate the before you left for Winnipeg," she largest vessels. When Boston ships" traded hardexplained breathlessly, . in their suite. She was radiantly happy over ware for California hides before the fcer visit home, the visit that Craig days of 49, the shoe and leather inhad hammered out for her. Next dustry of New England began. ToWednesday oh, its so far away, day, a large share of all hides used in American leather and shoe facdearest 1" is bought and sold inside one tories But youll be visiting with your mother and Frances; and I'll have square mile of old Boston, where a big pile of work on my hands; even in the middle of the street you and the timell fly. Are you run- catch the acrid whiff of newly ning back to the North Shore right tanned leather. In Bombay is an old American away? No. I was meaning to stay here icehouse. It dates from the period, with you, till you leave at mid- beginning 1805, when Boston skipnight unless you're too busy and pers took cargoes for sale in Jamaica, Cuba, Brazil and India. Now want me to go now." e electrical machines, You silly I" vhich inefeide refrigerators, rank They sat in a chair at the window, looking out across the lights among Boston exports. of the city and the .dim moonlit Bostons pioneer, place in the imsilver of Lake Michigan, thinking of port and processing of tropical Resurrection and the chalWhy You You Scoundrel, things is still hers. She and her Sending Her Up There." lenging work that awaited them neighbors make now more than a third of all Americas rubber shoes; furthermore shes going to visit her there. Our barrens trip this summer, the trade name of one cocoa made home whenever she wants to; and here has been a household word for Craig well never get to make it, Ill tell you why. As the storm broke, Russell Patricia said ruefully, fondling the generations. Jute, burlap, goatskins, fleeces, bales of cotton, sisal, fruit, Parkes stole into his own office, black waves of his hair. We will make it. Well wedge sugar, coffee, all pass this way. to escape it; but he left the door Ask how long skilled workers have it in somehow, sweet. You and Ive open so that he could hear. Warserved in the same plants; hear ren stood aside, watching the vio- got that coming to us." It'll be wonderful, Craig Itll how many generations of a given lent clash between the two men, lisfamily have worked at the same tening to Craig's withering indict- bj like like Gods lake, again." and you begin to account trades, ment of Wellington, Parkes & LovI be wont Better, girl. always ett. For the first time in his 13 calling you a butterfly, and you for the vitality of Boston industry. years with the firm he saw old Jas- wont be always slapping me, as we Here is pride in good work, inherited knowledge, genius for .craftsper Wellington outmatched; saw the did then." man stop thundering, and begin to manship. From across the hotel court came listen, and finally draw back, fright- a radio song. It was too indistinct Made Banana a Staple Food. ened, as Craig kept rapping out his for Patricia to hear the words, but Hancock probably never saw figures and names and dates. the lilt of it was like the lilt of a John At the Philadelphia Cenbanana. Now, you can take your choice," another song which she once had tennial in 1876, curious exhibition, I heard; and her lips be?an fitting Craig wound up his philippic. in wonder at a crowds gazed oughtnt to give you any choice. the words of that other so'; to the bunch of them. Now everybody, You dont deserve any. Youve music of this one: from Quoddy Light to Golden Gate, gutted more operating mine comfrom Key West to Alaska, knows in more the worked havoc Oh, ptite Oiselet, panies, youve their smell and taste. in the Canadian mining industry, Bostons United Fruit company than any other man in North Amer- Your foot is caught in the snaie inmakes the banana, once a rarity ica. Where did I get these facts and visible, . . In the cruel babische wrapped in tinfoil, today a staple figures? Dyou forget that I was on food. American two for END THE and that your stall years, Yet its greatest feat is not in distribution, but production. About its success in turning jungle into rich plantations and its conquest of tropical disease, piles of fat books are written. All that is far from Boston, yet it was a Boston man, Andrew W. Preston, who conceived these incomparable tasks. When he began,' long ago. the world banana crop barely equaled what New York alone now eats in a few weeks! To get bananas the company had to raise them; so it became a vast agr;cu!tural coneern. Jumrle areas cleared and planted total thousands for it in our next issue. . . a of square miles. When Minor C. Keith, of United brand new serial story by Gilbert Patten, Fruit, started his railroad to Costa Rica from Puerto Limon to San the original Burt L. Standish who job that cost more Jose, a created Frank Merriwell! Now than 4,000 lives from fever, there was but little rail in all Central written another of these popular stories, America. Now the company owns and operates its tracks, trucks, and Frank Merriwell at Fardale. It will aerial tramways in a dozen tropic It has built towns, p;ers, regions. it bring back memories for adults radio stations, hotels, harbors, hospitals; stores, schools, churches, will give youngsters a new hero. Square-jawetheaters, playgrounds; shops, warehouses, markets; water, light, and stem-mouthFrank Merriwell is power plants, and workers homes by the thousands. coming back with more of the adventures Center of Fish Industry. made him famous with yesterdays Eesides growing bananas, it raises meat, vegetables, and other foods children. the same Frank Merriwell for its armies of workers, and operates sugar plantations, mills, and whose earlier stories set an e high refineries; grows coconuts, cocoa, and other tropical products; and in sales . . . g a grand, new annually carries some 40,090 passengers on its 97 ships from Boston, want to miss! story that you New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, and San Francisco to 25 different ports between Habana and Cartagena. Colombia. remote from Boston, Though grainfields and ranches, must go far far-awa- Ruth Wyeth Spears Charles River Basin and West Boston Brid.rs. W.N.U. SERVICE Ive been a geologist and mining CHAPTER XX Continued Old 4' m WILLIAM BYRON e for bread and meat, she also covers much of America with fish, as well as bananas. But what profit might arise?" That was King James query when Pilgrims asked him, in 1618, to permit them to sail for the New World. Fishing," they replied. So, God save my soul!" he exclaimed. Tis an honest trade. 'Twas the Apostles own calling." Theres a reason why the Sacred Codfish is an emblem of why its effigy hangs now in the statehouse. pptf has hung, in one assembly 'fiall or another, for more Jhan 200' years. It saved the early settlers from starving; preserved with salt from England, it became their first export, their first source of revenue. Boston, like Gloucester, catches other kinds now, from lobster many to- - mackerel, and helps feed the whole United States. And cod is no longer the favorite; haddock is more in demand. Go for a trip in a trawler. Heading f6r the Stellwagen bank, the r dingdong echo of your radio warns you that you are over the fishing grounds, and the big conical net is let go. Wooden wheels, set on its lower lip, let it roll easily over the ocean floor; big wooden gates at each enj, opening outward keep it stretched wide open, so that it scoops uf everything that swims or crawls, from sea eggs to squid. Green," or unfrozen, fish is shipped as far west as Mississippi; frozen fish, really fresh fish preserved by freezing which will keep in perfect condition a year or more, reaches the Pacific coast, while salted and dried codfish, or baca-lais consumed as far away as southern Europe, the Caribbean, and the coast of Brazil. Dawn brings the auction in a big "pit at the piers end. Signs on the walls say all bidding must be in English; bids are called in English, but debates rage with confusion of tongues. Then this big, busy fish pier Men in echoes with excitement. rubber boots, wearing caps with long visors like duck bills, throw fish into rope baskets and swing them to the docks. Others run hithd er and yon, pushing carts filled with fish, followed by wharf cats. sniffing, Bostonians Are Good Sailors. These Boston people love the sea. For generations they sailed it to make a living. Now many sail for fun, yet with all the skill and grim intent of adventurous clipper days. Be asked to sail in yacht club races, especially if all your racing experience has been on the deck of a mustang, and you hear a new language. On the first day of soft spots in the air, of tacking, luffing, crossing of bows and sterns, and shutting off of the rivals wind, sailing seems a sport not only of odd speech but of mysterious motions. Then, all at cnce, you begin tc sense these tricks of jockeying with boats. Here is horse racing, but on water! Instead of crowding the other, riding in to the rail to slow him down, you shut off his breeze power. Ship lires are only bridle reins; stiff breezes are spurs, and letting out a spinnaker is merely giving your nag her head. Fair play and good sportsmanship are ingrained. Inherited English ways and proximity of Harvard, with its generations of clean sport, have fostered this love for games. Plenty of Sport There. Gymnasiums came early, where circus acrobats and strong men used to be invited to show off for the boys. That colorful character in prize-rinhistory, John L. Sullivan, was born in Boston. Cricket, hockey, boxing, rowing, swimming, high bicycles, and ball players in full beards, Boston fostered them all; yet permitted no league baseball games on Sunday till 1929! Special "snow trains" leave now, taking winter crowds with skis, sleds, and toboggans, at the first news of heavy snows in the White mountains. Bom of the old East Indian battledore and shuttlecock, and introduced into England about a century ago by returning army officers, the game of badmintor. is now also much played about Boston. New among Boston sports is midget motor-ca- r racing. She oas a special Tom Thumb track, an oddly formed figure with seven turns. To it, on race days, tiny speed cars are hauled on trucks, for rough and tumble contests. Mdhsa-chusett- s; depth-finde- o, v y y T - I,, Jr - ; ,. ... g . V.. v - V- - .. . ; . . Crazy Patch Work at Home in a Modern Setting PHE crazy patch is the oldest as at A, allowing enough to turn of quilt patterns, yet there is under, as at B, where the patch something amazingly nfbdern in laps oer tje one nextjo it. Baste its angular lines. So whether your the turned edges down, as shown Wing room is tnaditibnal in style When a number of patches have or newer than tomorrow you will been basted in place, sew them be interested in the revival of down to the foundation with the crazy patch work for what our embroidery stitches and then re' move the bastngs. The backing grandmothers and cahea aslumber threw. is tied to the front with silk em A corner of one of these old silk broidery thread as cofhforters are ceazy quilts is shown here at the tied. Little or no padding may be lower right. The pieces were used and a plain band around the small many not more than xk edge is effective. inches wide or long. A variety of. Every Homemaker should have stitches joins the a copy of Mrs. Spears new book, embroidery Both pages of pieces. plain and figured SEWING. Forty-eigh- t p directions for making silks were used, the plain patches with slipcovers and dressing tables; reoften being embroidered flowers, fans and other amusing storing and upholstering chairs, motifs note the beetle embroid- couches; making curtains for evered on one patch. Several col ery type of room and purpose. ors of silk embroidery thread were Making lampshades, rugs, otto'generally used but in the most ar- mans and other useful articles tistic of these' quilts one color pre- for the home.. Readers wishing a dominated in the embroidery. copy should send name and adLarger patches with simple dress, enclosing 25 cents, to Mrs. feather stitch and herring-bon- e Spears, 210 South Desplaines St., stitch at the joinings also give a Chicago, Illinois. good effect. The pieces are sewed to a foundation of some firm soft material. Osting flannel or an old wool blanket are good. Pin a piece in place over the space to be filled, trim the edges to the right shape, great-grandmothe- rs step-by-ste- Household STARTS WORKIM III Opening Jars. A strap with a buckle on one end can be used to good advantage in opening glass fruit jars. Run the strap through the buckle and tighten it around the cap. This enables you to get a good grip on the lid. SECONDS 3 a bright-colore- hard-face- d i Small Molds for Pudding. In place of one large basin for a steamed pudding, try several small molds, placing them all in one large saucepan. They will take half as long to cook as one large pudding. - THE REASON BITER ASPIRIN WORKS SO FAST Drop Biyer AapJria tab let Into a tambler of water. Br Urn tine It hila the bottom of the glaaa it la diHintef ratio. Thia apeed of dlsinte (ration enablea (ermine BAYER Aapiria tablets to atart takin( bold of headache and similar pain a few inmates after Dried Peel. It is nice to dry the skins of several oranges and lemons and grate them, then putting them in a glass botffFlif the refrigerator to be kept for flavoring purposes. It certainly saves time in the future and one is inclined to use these flavorings in interesting ways if already at hand. Preserving Bright Color. takinf. All people who suffer occasionally from headaches ought to know this way to quick relief. At the first sign of such pain, take two Bayer Aspirin tablets with a half glass of water. Sometimes if the pain is unusually Cook- ing preserves or- - jelly rapidly helps to retain the bright color of the fruit. The addition of pectin shortens the necessary cooking time. Polishing Linoleum. Dissolve a lump of sugar in the water when washing linoleum or oilcloth, and a brilliant polish will result. Just for a Change. If you ' severe, one more tablet is necessary later, according to directions. If headaches keep coming back we advise you to see your own physician. lie will look for the cause in order to correct it. can- not afford to buy anything new for the house and you are just a little bit disinterested this fall, try changing the position of the furniture and see if that bored feeling will not depart. Crab Savory. 1 crab, 3 tomaCharacter Making 1 lettuce, watercress, 1 egg, man that makes a characThe pepper and salt. Shred the crab meat finely and mix with a little ter makes foes. Young. mayonnaise. Wash the lettuce and arrange leaves around and at the bottom of the dish. Place some crab in the center, then season with pepper and salt; add slices of tomato and egg and watercress. toes, hard-boile- d Spaghetti and Cheese. A nice way of preparing spaghetti that does not require lighting the oven. Fry one chopped onion and pound ground meat in olive oil until nicely browned. Add two cups tomato puree or sifted tomato pulp, one teaspoon paprika, salt and pepper to taste. When nicely blended serve over plain boiled spaghetti and over the top sprinkle finelv grated cheese. WNU Sfrrict. one-ha- lf Many doctors recommend Nujol for Its gentle action on the bowels. Don't confuse Nnjol with unknown products. INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL |