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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH Ills queer dark eyes looked down at I BnifgnninTliiiiiiiimiiiiiTmTiinminrn'iTwnmmmnn'niiiir her, unlit by any least hint of amusement, until it made her quite nervous, and sire twisted away from him, the ! bright color coming up Into her face. Have you only Just auclvedj she went on, hurriedly. . I entered the. ballroom wifh Lady Cordelia and St. Abb, "precisely as the young man in green stripes yvas pro; claiming the rules of the gumd;. he told lier. I cant dance, but this next . dance Is obviously mine, if you .will sit (Copjirlfht.) WNU Service. It out with me? I came in here to find I stood quite near you In the you. ballroom whije the game was being .are you smile upon that; laugh with another; arranged. I,Jow. many .dances . and did not lyiow that behind all her. fcoing to give me?" She wasnt qulty prepifred for that; brillihut gaiety she was thinking, she . equivocated. to decide. And sh.e thinking; trying "But you say you don't dance1? bad a feeling that tlie jolly evening She was destined to find out then with all Its light land sound and gaiety, that equivocation didnt work with was rushing her toward. some difficult flames Lee. He said: , . crisis. . Do jou think youU find It. dull It was during an interval In thV work, sitting out a Mance or two' with fliat Ames saw her dancing captured, amt cornered by three determined Jiie.? and his. sullen gray eyes. were . young men, who each put forth exeel- - challenging. She colored. she said, slowly, but .quite "No, lont unisons wJiy he shoufd have the next daneewith her. truthfully. No, I shouldn't think Id find it dull. . . . Only . . ."there I But cant donee wirti all three, Lucy was laughingly protesting, when nre . , .pthermen I must give some . . . There's Mr. Green-stripea tall youth in a .tight .costume of dances t And a promised him and whitw ;I congreen stripes, suddenly itomeo I Tinda vero; them; promised stituted himself master of revqjs, and and theres . . . ..!he caught a sudfrom., the cleared centurof the 1a!J.-roden, q.uick breath, and halted. floor nftufc this .elegant proYes? he prompted. . . . clamation; . . Oh, just my cgusin, Oliver Agies. Oyez!. Oyez! Knotfall ye By He has to the.se presents and all that sort of IIes oiuS away tonight. leave at eleven ; I must . I mean Joll.w old hunk. Tflilled down, what I . I want to dance with him. . . mean Is this: that if tile girls wflo havent fixed up the. next danceJl She broke off, conscious that fefie was m nervousjy. Co.nsclous, too, T and. hide, well pop giwe.em tjirbe rattling " tlftit those queer eyes.ef hihever left and come find 'and thep miput.es. "them. .. . . ilows, tjiat.fo a brain her. face. You wave?" I nfuqt ; or .you wifnt .to? Whitfli? he asked jitJruptly: A cliorup answered him. . She looked up a him ; looked away ; FlneT Get pn with fit!". ."Scatter, " all ground. Things were going faster . . .. you.glrN ! . than was quite, couffortable. She . And asnid chatter and laqghter, the . girls scattered, I.uty with them. Most equivocated .again. I promised to. of tnem did hot bother to makq theirs T her relief liS Sot the time at hkling places very obscufe, but .Lucy left them. and l.urned toward the back leagt left It at that 'Well,' "he of the' house, pushed through a green said, wtf are sitting out this one any r way." .He pushed up & deep leather- baize (jhor'into the main on . the other side of. thef 'staircase anil covered cliajr for hey. Dont you want to ga anil watch slipped into the library. There was no one In the rbom. single. light. shaded .the dancing? she askail.. ' in deep crjmson, cast, a somber glow Why should I? he a'nswered. And she had no gootl reasons to offer. So over her fucy flounces,"- jis khe acrohs the room, climbed .into a deep they remained Inthe library. She, windosv seat and "pill led a heavy cur- - sitting in the deep chair; he, "sUtnding, tain in. front of her. was glad leaning back against, the. mantel, lookof the peace ajid quipt this refuge gave ' ing most of the time, down, at 'her. her. . . . She waited tothTnk.. . ; She. was recovering now, from the surMust think. . . . Must decfde. . prise of findipg that this guest of , The sounds, of. Jollity came to Jier hers. vas that man. who had shared '. . that tiny adventure tyith "her, and befaintly. . .. . feel that ever since thg jJay of Five ipinutes Imd iiot gone" y when gan shh heard thd door open, and p step that adventufte she had realjy been, She waiting to meet him again. sounded soft upon the carpeted floor. H- - Esther, hadn't known it, buj it seemed so to her she perhaps, thought, ; amt .she moved, very cautiously, alqng now. Beojjuwp, disconcerting "as he the window seat, to peep round the fras; there was a sort .of feeling of ,curtalp. A hand appeared, and the utter rightness in bging With him curtain was IlunJ; aside. Her startled again. fTp kept her. guessing as no man eCqr haM before; madff her shy; "eyes, quickly Jiftefl, saw the dark, unneckiace-aihentursometimes; yet iappy, smiling face'of the in a new and bewildering way. that man. And once again her eybs. ware slip didnt. id the least understand. He asked suddenly: iYo.u say that caught and held' by the look I.ady 'Cordelia has. told you a Tot about sullen, stormy eyes that met hers.. .. me. What exactly has she told you? You ! she cried out. . ' . . he 'Tisu't fair to ask tlmt, she counYes," answered, And yoiv!' . " She laughed, .ever so slightly;, "a tered. to little tremulously. say. thipgs behind a . 'Tisnt fajr I . . . I'fn hiding, sire said, kid- - tjjans bad that? yoif onldivt " kay to , dishly, a nervous qulvecin the ;ords." his face. he retorted. . Yes," he said again, his voice very" Oh, she said she liked, yoh- very deep against the distant, sound of niach, and that Air. St. Abb was very revelry from beyond the romu. keeq otr yini. Afid that you came from' I'm finding you, Canada or Australja she wasnt sure which ,nd. . . . I . . . didnt know you ware "in .Lucy broke gff . there. the game," she said. " Yes? It's obvious that I am, though, i.snt . She mused futl-ttit? lie replied. eyes to his;' since Yes . . . T suppose" It js. . . ." he had; aAed. he should be told. She scrambled off the sefrt nint stood She said you weren't exactly wild before him, looking like a little girl as or woqllv, but still you weren't really she shook out her fleecy flounces . . , tame; and 'that you. were very strong "Hut Id no idea of seeing yofi irml silent and never vnjoyed anyhere. . . . Who . . . who are you?" thing. . , . She said sli$ thought Id Let's introduce Ourselves," lie said. like you immensely. . . . . "My name is Lee. James Lee. And do you? . She looked up at him quickly. So What an odd conversation to have ibis was lerr.v St. Abb's chief. . . . with anyone when you've only met The latest thing In millionaires. She him twice! she laughed. ' held out a quick, girlish hand. Time hasnt anything' to do with Im so glad you were able to It. Do you? come. . . . I've heard so much of you She looked lip at him. from Lady Cordelia. . . . I'm Lucy "Well, d'you know. I havent' thought. Gresham, you know. I've been too busy being interested He took her hand in a rather mighty to think whether I like you or not. clasp that seemed to swallow it all Are you interested in Oliver Ames, up. and said slowly: too? How dyou do, Lucy Gresham?" The word came from her What? Slie laughed up at him, her hand so startled Hint it was almost a cry. still in his, and : He repeated the question, and beHow do you do James Lee? she fore she realized it she was answering answered merrily. breathlessly. Hut he didn't share bee- merriment. (TO BE CONTINUED.) efolaia dpresSasanoa5 j ;... . munmrnuiuftmi chauctf, hit on the evening of . THE STORY . . . . meets Lee chance James By Lucy Gresham, daugljjer. o. Sir John Gresham wealthy ship builder. Lee, unjustly accused o Gresham the firm, was robbing sent to prison. He blames Oliver Ames, Lucys cousin, and Greshams manager, and seeks reyering-LeInherits wealth and, irr compliance with the will, change; le his name from Warrington, secures an invitation to.Uietfirl's .. birthday party. . . . CHAPTER II . - that very day, when she had had that queer, fleeting adventure wlfti.the stormy-eye- d man who had nearly run her down with hisliig blue car. .. , . h hud Just seemed to her that to . say definitely' and Yes, I will rndrrytyou on sui-fwas a .terribly irsuch a day. . . . revocable tiling tr say. . Only to form the words in her mwid had uiude Mr cqtch (j quicK breath, almost of fear. She explained It to herself that she did not want to marry anyone y4. That she wips utterly lm;fpy at home with her adored and adoring father; that lTfe and youth were so lovely and so sweet, thgt she didn't want to do anything to change tlfe happy ('purse they were run- i . 2 Lucy Meets James Lee Again . When Oliver Ames, gorgeously uml effectively disguised as .a SpViiTstl grandee of the time of Velasquez, arrived for Lucy birthday festivities, Lucy herself was Just com-llndownstairs into the hall. Sliewas dressed after the (ashlon of her own grandmother, In flounce upon flounce of delicate, creamy lafe, flmt billowed cloudily round hi;r as .slle moved. Her wide-se-t eyes, so almost unhelleyably . blue, were bright wlthrklddish excitement In the occasion. .... . She greeted him very swretly, with ohly the smallest hint of nervousness; and topk him Into the drawing room, where her father was ready to. help her receive guests. Sir John Gresham, tjill, whlte-l'alreand handsome, welcomed him warmly. Im glad youve come In good time, Oliver, he said as tlfey shook hands. Well, sir, I have" to go earjy, sjo I wanted to have all the time I pould, Answered Ames' 'Theres some hitch over that big Norwegian timber deal and theyve cabled me to go over tfnd see about it without delay." Wont old Nlisen.sell after all? . asked Sir John. . .I fancy it Is young Nilsen who Is creating obstacles. Perhaps he can get a better price, answered Sir ; John glanced at film, Ames; . . flulckly. You dont piean that Llnforths are liuve bidding against usf he asked they the means? . . Ames rubbed his chin thoughtfully. ; . .Then snld : "Three months ago, I should" have' said no, .without hesitation. Hut lately, they have shown signs of renewed life. . . . I'm not sure of them,. . . Anyway, I'm going over to look Into, this business myself. I'm faking the midnight to Hull. Lucy knows I don't Ames turned to the girl, want to. his eyes rather longingly on the' picture of grace and loveliness she made. Oh, Im awfully sorry, she said, Hut of course, I undercordially. stand." Well, Oliver, If you must go, you must. Hut I'm sorry. Anyway, enjoy the meantime, said Sir John. Lucy Is keen for you to see (he ballroom before the crowd arrives. She (dunned the decorations all herself, and I think they're quite tolerable." His handsome old eyes twinkled round' at Lucy. In his eyes she was the sweetest, and the most beautiful girl In Hie whole world. She could do nothing wrong; he spoilt her so consistently, that it says all that need he said for her Innate soundness of nuture that she was almost entirely unspoilt by It. He had married late In life, having reached fifty before meeting his Ideal. He bad Idolized his wife, and when she died, when Lucy was only five, was so frantic with grief that Ills friends Rll feared lie would not long survive her. lie pulled through, however, hut was greatly changed. Something had, been knocked completely out of life, for him. He could no longer give to 'Hie' business of Greshams the interest he always had given. Year by year he had left It more and more In Ames hands, until five years ngo, lie had definitely retired from active service. Lucy, growing up in the living linage ' of her mother, absorbed most of his Interest in life. It had been an understood thing for years that some day Lucy wji8.jjpJ.ng to marry Awes. Every one looked UKn it as settled, except for such details as precisely when and exactly where. Lucy had known Ames all her life. She had been brought up so" much with him that she looked upon him almost more as a brother than as a cousin. And although she had always known that some day she was going to marry him, yet It was none the less a surprise, and something of a shock, to her, when nearly three weeks ago, he had asked her to make the some day a definite day. He loved her tremendously, und. It seemed to him, that loving her was the chief reason of his existence; the thing he had been born for. lie felt that he had waited long enough. Hut Lucy had been curiously unready when he had asked her to name a definite day; she had not known what to say, and didnt know why she should be so unsure. . . . She could find no reason for being suddenly so flustered, when he asked her when stie would marry him. Perhaps It was just because, Instead of asking would she marry him, he had asked when would she marry Or perhaps It had been him. because be had, by some unlucky . g ... (Eail MERREL lUj CONCORDIA . . . nlng., . . .. .Hut Oliver had been insistent ami she had realized suddenly that Ills love, for Jier was a much Iflgger emotion than she had ever, known. So, with an unaccountable feeling of being driven, she had compromised by promising to give 1dm a definite answer on "this evening of per. nineteenth birthday,. She hfld thought thatsdie mttSr surely haye decided by then. . . . Hut she had awakened this morning, with ail fierdoubts still upon her. .. IT Hut was why this evening was1 something so mucli more than a birth- - .- s; coj-rido- - tlfi-toe- d e . He. CAmo : a Step Nearer and . . Her Hand. Caugh't . day party, to her; and that was why of restless excitement. In the ballroom she began a lively chatter, simply because she was afraid of silence between them. There are going to be heaps of people here tonight; some I don't even know Mrs. Theodore lale asked if she might' bring a party; so did the Melviltes and Lady Cordelia Upton; she wants to bring among others Perry St, Abb and the man lies secretary to. lie's the latest thing in millionaires, you know, tine James Lee. Doesn't It sound lively! Lucy rattled on, more for the sake of avoiding silence than anything. He came a step nearer and caught her hand In his. Lucy . . . you havent forgotten, have you? Do you remember what you promised? . . . of course I do. . . . It kept her in a quiver And I ... I will, Oliver. , . . Only hatve it a little longer, . . she answered breathlessly. Its such ft.. . . Oh, such a very big thing to decide." 'Tve loved you so long, Lucy. Waited for you so, long. And Ive waited faithfully, dear. . . . Theres been no woman In my heart but you. , . . You've got my heart In these little hands of yours, and got it forever. She caught a breath. It seeemd awful that it should be hers to make him lmppy or to make him suffer, Just with the speaking of a word. From sheer pity the word that would make him happy was on the very tip of her tongue, all ready to he spoken, when the sound of her father's voice calling to her made her start away from him, Jerking her hand out of Ills. There's dad. He wants us . . . I she said breathlessly. suppose peojfle are beginning to arrive. . . , How uwful-o- f me to neglect She laughed a little my duties so! tremulously, and ran to the door, but he came after her, caught her hand and pulled her round. Refore I go, Lucy. . . . Give me my answer before I have to go. . . . Remember, won't you? he urged her. Oh' of course Of course. . . . I'll remember ! And she was on her way to the hall, her full skirts swinging round her. . . . ... The big house seemed alive with an uncountable crowd of young people all bent on carrying the occasion through on one unbroken ripple of gaiety. Rut Ames scarcely knew how to live the evening through even though his time was all too short. Lucy was so much In demand. He watched her all the time; saw her glance at this man; - - , ... '. . - icx J Machines That Are s - - :: How Wood Came to Be Used in Making Paper hard today, when forests demolished to provide paper, to realize how lately paper was first made from wood, writes Mark S. WatSun. The son in the Baltimore Chinese had used fibers and the early F.uropean papers were made from shredded rags, which, of course,' explains why paper of that day was so Hut not until much more durable. 1710 did Reaumur, the eminent French physicist, propose that wood he used. And oddly lih'.lnspiratlon came from the humble wasp, whose nests form very fine paper. . . . "They extract the fibers of common wood, lie writes. They teach us thaCpaper can be made from the libers of plants without the use of rags and linen, and seem to invite us to try whether we cannot make fine and good paper from certain woods. In succeeding decades Reaumurs advice (and the unabated demonstrations hy the humble wasp) captured Ft is are-bein- g 'tin increasing amount of attention, but It was in 17Go that there started the most notable developments In the use of new materials as substitutes for rags. These were the work of Jacob Schaffer, a Saxon clergyman then resident in Bavaria, who, like, Gilbert White, of Selbourne, Is better known for his scientific contributions than for his clerical labors. Oldeit Money Although various sovereign states have been bringing out coins for the past 2.000 years or so, no coinage ever has enjoyed the continuity given to coins issued by the popes. The first papal coins are said to have been struck during the reign of Hope Hadrian, about 701 A. D., circulating not only in the papal states but beyond, due to the temporal power by the popes from time of Hadrian down to the end of their temporal power, far longer than the coinage of any other state authority. Almost Human By E. C. TAY'LO ? 3 "47 y R The Invisible Policeman S FCENTLY In New York city a $50 bill was offered to any person who could pick it up without causing an Invisible policeman to sound an alarm. .No one got the $50. The Invisible policeman on guard as an ujjseen ray. It was set up at a meeting of the New York Illuminating Engineering society In the Westing-hous- e worn out, Why go on feeling all in . Lamp company. n and when you ought to t The bill was put In a safe be as hearty and as happy ask youngster ! . with the door closed but unlocked. The vajuajfle elements in Fdlows Somewhere athwart the safe, probsestora what Natuse demands. Synip . ultra-violacross an the door, ably You quickly gain new strength and ray of light was placed. The ray stamiifa new vitality and vigor netf could not be seen. interest in living. It could not be felt by the You feel, the mental and physical touch. Vpipk-up- " aftfr ttje Jgt few loses of . c Tilts "wonderful tonic. It Improves appe-- . . 'The ray shone upon a tite banishes nerves. Be sure to asjo eye some distance away. Anyone the druggist for the .genuine Fellows . attempting to take the $50 bill from Syrup, presoribed. by doctdtj ll ewer the safe would Interrupt the ray, the world. b theueby casting on unseen shadow npon.the electrical eye. Thereupon the eye would loudly ring a burglar . alarm. With these rays,"'sard Mr. McCoy, It. Is possible for Jewelers, bankers and other custodians to add greatly to the security of their valuables. It can be made Impossible for an Intruder, to move about without detection, .as CELTIC LANGUAGES the rays can. be placed at various In a rewm. angles They may bperate CYMRIC ANEf GAELIC a tear gas barrage, or set off a silent Then can be projected . far alarm. iloth Irish artjj JTeMi are living . enough to protect the entire mouth of languages. .They belong to the a harbor In war time witlj a w&rrildg Celtic group, as fcnglish belongs ta signal belt." tlfe Teuto.nig roup. Qeltjc language One of these Invisible policemen are diviilbd into two s.ectkms, tlfe now ktjmds at a gate In Springfield, ejynric and .the Gaelic. .The Irish, Mass., and counts automobiles as they language, oj; Gaelic of Ireland, pass on the adjoining road. The robot yb!l jis. the Sgots Gaelic. gind Manx has no physical contact with tjie pass- , copie .within the la.tter category. No jwlres stretch ing automobiles. vhile the. Welsh belongs tb thCym-.ri- c aefoss the road to' flash a signal whea The languages within . . ;roup. star passes. each of. these groups resemble one . The unseen nfy of light Is used. .another closely, yet they present When an automobile passes. It breaks many important point.-- of difference!. the ray, and the mechanism within The Welsh! has aQ almost .perfectly the robot adds another to the totar of phonetic spelling, while .the Irish . . . . the cars that have passed. y spelling .i5 historical am7. Is being This new "black light does not give a. trfle picture used mor and more extensively to of its. preseutpi;ontinCIaTIoji. . . expose fraud. It can disclose forgeries . Irish (GaelTc of Ireland),, which and counterfeit money. It 1j.as been Is moie .than' two tlfousand Jeaitf used even to trap bootleggers. The perhaps, the .only language, .old, makers of Industrial alcohol can put usetf jvas ifi lre.lanjj before the Intraducsome flourescent a very small dose of tion of. Christianity. Tlsen catne Lht- dye in their alcohol, and the dye will in, but it did not displace Gaelic.- - ' shine when the unseen ray Is diThe language of the Gaeljc rected on It, rro matter how much the people, remajned am I the. English emigrants bootlegger had "cooked" or otherwise tft Treland learned to spea.k lt Bub tried to disguise flils product fo CromwCUs accession' powef A new fever tube giving off rays marked .the' ed of its uputMnaq.v. similar to this, developed In the radio e Under, his law.s tlj,e Irish, had to research laboratory of the General English' .in speech, thought affd .Electric company at Schenectady, N. religion or Jiecome deprived of eduY., has aroused in the mind of Its InThe inhabkcational opportunities. ventor, Dr. W.. R. WhitneJ, director of tants fit the Bale .of .terri. sttip the laboratory, the thought that radio tory on the eastern coast, of the is- may eventually be used to heat the . lan.il .nearest tb Tlngland took rpomers Instead of the.room. English, . Lnt Jhose outside of the : It may be possible, he. holds, by Hale remained Irish aiel conse- - ; jislng ap adaptation of the fever tube fluently had fhwer. educational ad- "to supply heat to the occupants of . .vpnfages. s. . homes and office buildings Instead of . During tlnilast halTsCenf irj Qiaqg. heating the hoipes or .buililings have been. made to restore nttenrpts We heat thousands of cubic -. tire ailcient Irish language and feet of space, he asks, merely to keep and Irish is now, under the a body warm. Maintain "sufficient heat Free State, the officTftt I.Thgunge, al'-In the person instead of an excess of the English language In thoiffrh steam In radiators. . The Irish Ja;i-- . rdcognizeil. equally Doctor Whitney's fever tube sends is 4 guage .compulsory subject In off unseen rays of heat that are abthee schools, the Gaelic league. carsorbed by the body upon which they ries on" the work of teaching Adults,, are. directed, but which are not.felt tn mftfty other organization en- jml the sense of being hot to the touch. deavor tq establish tjie, habit of ITis suggestion Is that his device Irish so that it maV per-speaking might be placed in the walls of a room? 4 nieate every asphet of social life. of across the the rays directed path not bus But.it yet rebelled the dail . greatest activity, and then, with winor the senate"; Irish iS rarely, It no cellar furnace In. the dows open, of these1 two ever, sfioken in and no radiators to look after, the Inhouses. . . warm. would be habitants' comfortably ' Welsh rs the nearest "sister tongue Scientists are making wide use of stretch Gaelic, ayd over tp It. of unseen and variations these rays sea is spoken by .perhaps a mil- - . of A weird light has been produced that causes moving objects to slow lion people. It is tlje language yf chureh; and chapel and produces a down or appear still. This light, relarge crop' of. prose and poetuy. It on a flash turned huge light, sembling is the mother tongfle of .Lloyd. a whirling electric fan, caused It to George. Cleveland! Plain Dealer; look as though, the blades were at - Double Ytfur Pep run-dow- five-foo- ihoto-elec-trl- FELLOWS' SYRUP -- . Cbhse-quenH- - ... them-selv-ft- fn cel-turv- rest . . Engineers have used this to find out what caused erosion on the tips of airplane propellers during a rain. The light made It possible to see the cracks forming In the blades when artificial rain was turned on while they were In motion, and this showed how to protect propellers against this. ((c). 1931. Publishers cant find Tint tlie.rei son whysome books sell enormously and some doijt, because tjicre isnt, . . . , any reason A cheap pirn "spoils tlie next be a "Dafu-grap- h, ..... even ff the .latter happens to good-one- . . Western Newspaper Union. Curious Colloquialisms Queer names are given to the local holidays in northern villages In England. The district round Huddersfield At a'lone ' supplies a rich variety. Slaithwaite the strange title of was used to the end of last century, and it still lingers, maybe. At Honley they have a feast," at a rush, at Longwood a a rant" and Kirkheaton at "thump, Meltham has one almost as curious as Slaithwaite: IT Is, or was, called a bartleby." There must be dozens of others, although the wakes and the feasts" are probably in a huge maSan-Jem- is ickness comes' with, flies U ' ' . o Kill them quick! jority. On the Dot "In some parts of China, says a New York writer, they tell us, people are able to tell the time more or less accurately by lboking at the eyes of a cat." Skill in this art is not confined to the Flowery kingdom. Hereabouts, too, when a man sees a pair of cat's eyes gleaming on a fence at night and gets hold of a missile, it Is time for the animal to leap down. This Is the last word In accuracy. Largest Seller in 121 Countries M? n Y PencMK'irt oonnctlot. Partorfuil Hflll UHILJ time. Mon, women. Froftti ffrenteftt hr4 Um'..HnTrfeno.1nTMttnnt I0RTH AMERICAN W. N. U., nmtAoessary AI0 SOCIETY WICHITA KANS. Salt Lake City, No. 32-19- 31. |