Show THE OGDEN STAN DAttD-E- orotjy cDixs Jitter Box es ic 3 des-n6t- : Answer: summer camp for girls is the vnn nprl fin til one for the is whole summer and unless there llL yuu wan organically wropg something you will come back well and strong 'and nave with a different outiooK on me over made so seen many girls actually summer a at of months a couple by A rmsiiv — 11 A camp In the camn you'will be thrown intimately with other girls and Will dd more than anything else to cure you of yourshyness The that right and teach you how to be adaptable and companionable food and the proper jexercises will improve your lookjs by improving and do the your health and yoti will learn how to play the garhes will into an v fit so do that you things that other young people crowd And you wlll feet away from your family for tet while which is a good thing both for you ahd the family All teirls and boys should be sent away from home at 16 if their parenjts can possibly afford it because at that time they get upon each jother's nerves The mere fact that you recognize your defects and are anxious to set about curing them is a practical guarantee that you will succeed (For the only people who are hopeless are those who are so conceited that they are blind to their faults At 16 you are still young enough to be plastic sind you can practically make yourself what you will First begin witti your body Go to a good doctor and have him make a thorough examination of you and find out what it is who i not well for that ails you Nobody can be will health is beauty Strength give you grace of movement Proper diet and exercise will do more toward giving you a good comcan beauty lotions in the world and you calplexion than all the or thin as you please by counting your make yourself plumb ories Learn how tolwalk Learn how to carry yourself Many a woman's reputation for good looks rests upon the way- she moves and holds herself Clothes make or mar a girl and one has to be Miss Amer- g in spite of a dowdy or lea Indeed if she is still homeliest jmaideh can even the unbecoming frockj whereas a dress that Is so with of lack pulchritude camouflage her the jwearer posblemishes whatever hides it that stunning sesses No girl for instance could look as plain as she really might be if she had on white tulle ahd pink chiffon Is like the mantle of charity that covers a multitude of sins good-looki- ng " s rood-lookin- 1 This beinir the case look well to your clothes Find out the rnlors that flatter vou and the lines that bring out your best points ahd stick to them And if you haVe doubt concerning your own taste get some clever saleswoman in a good shop to pick out your irocKS ior you L t iuosi important oi an cure jouriiit ui juuf inferiority and complex Quit thinking about yourself as being homelyextent great 1ft her carrying herself with the air of a in hef m assuming mat sne is enuuea vo a place among beauty ana tne neauunerst Bbmebody has sa d that there is more moral support in know-it- s In the back than in the strongest moral Irig that your dress true The knowledge that you have On a is xnat cnncipies a party gown will give you a so swanky sports suit o? ravishing won't feel that nothing else in the world will You on your good deprecating and like taking a back seat when you get clothes Theft vou Will find that When you have learned to do the things that the other young people do? when you have learned to play tennis and to swim and how to dance and how to play a good game of bridge you won t De leit out oi the parties And if you learn how to do any one of these things well enough to become an expert you will not only be in the gang you will be at the head tof it ' Don't despair because you are unattractive at 1$ That is the at 16 turns into a ugly age Matty a girl who Is an Ugly duckling DOROTHY DIX glorious swan by the time she is 20 Dear Miss Dix —I am 23 and have been engaged to a boy for good job and does everything nearly five yeafss He has a fairly due to conditions! in his family possible for me For the last year we have been unable jto go about much unless I financed the patty which he refused to let me do Hence we have spent our evenings at my home and I idon't understand whether seeing him confor four nights a week and doing hothing in particular is stantly to blame for my picking on him about everything arid really being uncivil to nim or wnetner i am siowiy losing interest in mm ne loves me and I love h m but we don't get along together as well as we did In behalf o my boy friend and myself can you suggest us anything for us? self-assuran- ce : seir-cbnfide- Answer - j nee tles the Kingfisher and Mrs Rattles worked to feed the growing babies in the snug home deep in the bank of the gravel pit in the Old Pasture It sometimes seemed to Rattles that he had hardly made the last trip with food when it was daylight and time to start again He couldn't remember ever having worked so hard for a family of babies But then he never before had had so many hungry mouths to feed There were nine Of them "I knew Just how it was going to be when Mrs Rattles laid all those eggs" he grumbled "She laid too many She certainly laid too many I told her so Of course every one of them had to hatch If one or two had failed to hatch it would have helped some Big families may be all right to talk about but they are not aU right to feed not when ev ery morsel they eat must be found and caught It doesn't seem to me that-have had a full meal myself since those eggs hatched And every day is harder than the day before The bigger they get the more it takes to fill them Up I certainly will be thankful when they are able to get their owrt food There are too many of them for one pair of parents I told their mother how it was going to be- and so it is" So Rattles grumbled as he fished for minnows and hunted water beetles and other water insects and now and then chased a grasshopper But aU the time he was proud of that big family Yes sir he was proud of that big family He boasted of it whenever any one would listen to him He looked with scorn on some of his neighbors who had only three or four babies And how those nine little Kingfishers did grow! 'When they had hatched from the eggs hot one of them had so much as a single feather Ther6 hadn't been even a wee bit of down such as so many bird babies have at first But in a surprisingly short time they had sprouted air over them what Mrs Rattles declared were feathers Rattles took her word for it They didn't look like feathers to him No "Do you think there is ahythiht wrong with our babies' V he asked things grow replied Rattles "Those ing all over them ' don't look like any feathers I ever have seen" "Don't be foolish" replied Mrs "Of course Rattles a bit testily our babies All are feathers they at their like looked that always -- h f age"- "Did they? I don't remember I guess I never really noticed" con fessed Rattles "Of course if you say they are all right they must be You ought to know Just the eamet they look queer to me He went off to try to 'catch fe minnow but he was still disturbed and he didn't become any less so as day after day there was no change save that those quill or spine like feathers grew longer They were certainly queer looking Yes sir they were (Copyright 1934 by T W Burgess) - a The next story: "Rattles Has ' Happy Surprise" : 4-4- Girls To Hold Co-o- p Test In Housing Vt— (UP)— BURLINGTON to be introduced is housing at University of Vermont The Rand House Will be used next year by 24 girl students who find it necessary to limit living expenses Each girl in the house will hav a definite piece of work to do the1 division of labor being determined by such factors as collegfe schedules' and experience esadministration The sir they didn't He hadn't thought timates University each d will be able that anything about it when they first to live for $2 to $250 per week inappeared through the Skin a lot of cluding gas ice and other ' little points But as day by day they grew longer ahd longer and still not at all like feathers he became a little disturbed Those youngsters Band Second looked af if they were covered with a lot of quills instead of feathers He knew of some Other babies or about the same age and some a litd DECORAH la! — (UP) — The tle younger babies of some of the feathered neighbors Now and then European concert tour of the he flew so that he could look down Luther College band has been Into a nest and See them Their by college officials The band has Bained internation little coats were of real feathers while the coats of his own children al fame from its initial tour of the in 1914 didn't seem like feathers at all He continent c Prof Carlo A Sperati director mentioned the matter to Mrs Ratof the band said the hew tour will tles "Do you think there Is anything necessitate a three and a half 1 wrong wTith our babies?'' he asked months journey starting 15June The 1935 and finishing Sept "Wrong! exclaimed Mrs Rattles In a puzzled tone "I should say band now is in its 57th year as k not Never have we had a healthier musical organization and is rated lot You can almost see them grow" by U S musicians as one of the "They grow fast enough" admit-- 1 ace college bands of the country — ted Rattles "They ought to for they eat enough goodness knows It is Special motor taxes to federal state and local governments at the their coats I was thinking of" "What is the matter with their rate of $2041 a minute or more than $2900000 a day are paid by Ameri coats?' demanded Mrs Rattles "that is what I want to know" can motorists ooperative j co-e- Plans Tour Over Europe see-on- an-nouh- ced - -- -- - s? red-lett- D 1 i 0 DIX Dear Miss Dix- -I have been accused ever since I can remember many many friends of being egotistical Cani you surest & my by ALEXANDER j I I A very easy one only no conceited person will ever take it because they do not wish to be cured They desire only to have their ego lmiaiea siui more The remedy is this: Consider the people about tou who are io who are so much more intelligent and who much better-lookin- g' more than you have and compare yourself so achieved much have with them No vanity can survive that acid test I : ! : Copyright DOROTHY 1034 by Publie Ledger Youths Should Quit v' Being "Jcllyj Beans" is high ''CLEVELAND— (UP)-i- lt timi the American coSegt student Int DIX j — quit being like a "jelly bean"A- and according to Dr" - L grs?r up XJniTei-sltof Illinois Eaxhiu ftnd national head cf the Ilil-l- el ' foundation to a dress a Jew here Dr Sachar ish Welfare fund drive declared "College has been a lovely way of — — many of our prolonging infancy for 'rah-raThe Homestake mine at Lead S in students Too many stadiums have poisoned our intel- D is the largest (producing gold lectual life American college stu mine in the United j States y pro-few- er 1 ' ' hs Mil Many Mew Attractions This Year at Chicago' "pentury of Progress' V Interesting tKcm it vrcw last year A World'! Fair at Chicago Will be more than ever th plafc ta this summer! And rail laf5 ar lower than evir round trip Season fduftd trip (refor $372S Only turn limit Oct 31) only $5123 coach end $5650 lirst-cla-lavina daily May 1$ to Oct 15 Air eoaditUncd rtatiea ears dtlnia? em (mi Biggf ond even mote 25-da- end Powder you wbh yo evotd choked pores tho csuio of unattratilvo Cosmetic tkln You ccn y ss Examples of Low Fares East and West Limit Oct 31 Mat IS tt Oct llDasf Coach '" - l$-fUt- ur St LuU Eaasat City Idttoa" (tS-d- at (45-da- y Kw tork $5660 - Omaha 4SC3 50C3 return limit) rttum limit—via Nw Tfk) $4lii 4478 1C29S S3CS 10415 fSCl 8743 t3X3 y return liinlt) (Standard) 84S3 KiW York y fttura limit) (Diifrential) Slightly Liahtr tartt tor longer return limits For S ay ' enlarged pores tiny blemishes oiackneacs perhaps and Return Angelas limit $3750 ttlura Cosmetics : cises fari la t fleet Portland te San Fran r Spokane (21-da- y C -- For fall Darticulam call Union Passcnfer General Arent Station Ofden Utah Phone Mala 119 L McKNIGllT Harmhtt if rtmovtd this way 11 1 cant understand what's wrong limil) Slmilir low fte Fare quoted are from Ogden from md to other points Reduced round ttip Pull- tares man fares additional to first-claw m signs of unattractive Cosmetic Skin (4S-da- Sdtnt — have discovered the distressing (45-da- Los uo dl Iho Rougo thett a dash of roue Powder powder All day long you use cosmetics them toroo- And if vou remov i eriy they nevef harm your skin But if you are allowing cosmetics to cholf th potte you fnay already ears (drawing rtom and compart-!BnU- ) a many Uaioa Fdcifle trains this lummir ttll-reo- ta Boita dents have been too easy going They have shown none of the in terest in revolt of social injustice displayed by European students It's time for the campus group to live down the sneers of 'hard-knoc- k school' business meri" 444 TRAILS IMPROVED CRATER LAKli Ore— (UP)— Roada and trails In Crater Lake National Park are being Improved this year by members of two CCO camps stationed Inside the park boundaries r 7i: t an m jiip -- with my skin!" Many a girl is all unconsciously leaving bits of stale powder and rouge to clog the pores day after day It is then that ugly Cosmetic Skin develops Lux Toilet Soap's ACTIVE lather sinks deeply into the pores carries away ertrjt vestige tt dust dtrt embedded powder or rouge Ecfore you put on fresh make-u- p — AL- WAYS before you c° to oea at mgnr give your tkin this gentle cafe pttchus EUmtnts tn this soap Soap contains precious dement Nature putt in skin to keep it youthful The Hollywood stars have ' if is Lut Toilet w r " j d fh y I ' i i jr 'lilt 1 ( -- 'i £ j t 7 o ( Board Dormitories Plan — i t Sil-dal- '4 j I can mil ac - Answer: m 1 1 cure? hut more than words Then hi left the room Five minutes later wh he returned she was sitting at tX table but she had not touched tMr fpod "I'll show you to your room" on their backs a "whatnot" in the he said corner With china bric-a-bron its Over a bowl of chill eon corns shelves a reading lamp beside a stand holdlnjf a huge family Bible Madeline winked at Con David Oh the big center table a vase of with no thoughts for her partner purple and white lilacs stood and nor her aged relative Con's handbeneath a napkin the supper was some face held no answering smile laid eut Donna's glance rested up- Already he regretted the Invitation on and enlarged photograph on the brompted by his jealousy Made wall the picture of a small girl with line might be as pretty and attract- long fair curling hair and wide ive as Donna but she bored him Madeline of And he loved Donna The country eyes Questioning course ybuth who had taken Donna away look "It doesn't much like you fight be her cousin but if he was n!'t in love With her con knew little now" Bill said about love And why hadn't Made- f The old man's faltering steps led line gone with them? said out she of Con" him to the chair beside the Biit "Snap : to ble "Maybe you don't hold with "it's hot very complimentary prayer now fladdie" he said "but have you sitting there so gloomy rocking chairs With lace squares You ought to know anyway that I want to thank Ood that He sent you don't stand ace high with Donna" you to me before the call came "How do you know I dont?" "Oh Grandfather" she cried She beside on knees her him "She's told me She wouldn't dropped feeling suddenly that this was her marry a performer ho matter how home this old man whose feet much she loved him" touched the precipice of death was "She'll marry me!" her relative "Oh Grandfather!" Madeline laughed sharply 'Says In the midst of the simple prayer you! No she won't She's a door opened and the housekeeper for a home and children tmf It Mrs Planter came into the rom Wouldn't surprise me if she and Instantly the spell vanished Don- Bill Siddal made a go of It" na felt' the antagonism of the womYou said he was her cousiter an Trough Mrs Planter's thin Cousins don't marry" lips parted in a smile though she Madeline's eyes half -- closed extended her hand in cordial greet- "'Don't believe you're ing her pale eyes between hot told Con I hadeverything to protect her was not lashes informed Dona she didn't I?" welcome "Then sprang to his feet "I reckon you find your grandpa sheHedidn't to her go grandfather's?" "He's She said a lot changed "Of course not Sudden fear been failing fast this past yean she" too much had that implied too Yes And you've changed Madeline made heaven's add "For wouldn't have you've changed I Sake don't spread it I You know knowed you" found out about "Five years makes changes in ev- Renfroe and if he he might fire us both" it braveanswered Dona one" ery "Let's go" Con seized his hat ly It was ah effort to keep from stalked to the desk to pay the and 's betraying herself When Old Mr bit her lips in chaf ingertips touched her fea- billv Madeline was well It grin enough to argue tures lingering over the curve of was fair in love but if all that s her throat the chiseled straight-nes- Donna learned she had said anyof her nose Could time have would on that reflect her repthing made the differences he would find? would be there utation trouble Of relief when She drew a sigh "Listen Con" she said tersely his hand dropped When they were on the street "You "You dughta be in bed Amos" me You've got misunderstood "Mebbee young rasped Mrs Planter me word keen this u your give folks can miss their rest and not Hdi wnni ttaf tint to T"rWi n 4m feel itbut you'll be sick tomorsister and the man she went to row if you stay tip any longer" Visit is not hers Obediently Grandfather arose She did my grandfather to but farm the and go "Emmie Is right Vou eat your L to bed so'S supper Maddie and go "l don't give a hahg what she you can get Up bright and early or where she went!" the train did Bill will show you your room" He eh andswered morosely There's and kissed her forehead then permitted the housekeeper to lead him going to be a show down Monday She'll either marry me then or—" but of the room either morry me then or—" ft There was taut silence when She'l "I'll marry the first woman who- Bill and Dohna found themselves 11 have me" alone once more Then he coughed (To Be Continued) and crossed to the door "I'll put the car away " he said abruptly Impulsively she exclaimed "How r sweet he is!" Criticized "He's always been the salt of the earth" Bill answered coldly "How you could hive packed up and run away is more than rve ever been 8ALEM Ore— (UP)Practlc of able to fathom It puszles me more the State Board of Higher Educ since rve-meyou" "The loneliness and the monot tion In subsidising dormitories ohy" she stammered trying to re university oi tjregon ana vrcgou call Madeline's various excuses Eitate College was criticized sharp"And" with ft faint smile "my ly in an audit by the state depart ' ment Vanity" "I suppose" he conceded "it was 4 The men's dormitories Were built too much to ask a gin as beautiful at the two schools in 1928 to be as you are to stay hidden here for paid for from profits Due to ecothe rest of her days but I wish nomic stress profits have failctt to you could see your way cieaf to meet the required expenditures' for come back next winter It would principal interest and upkeep The new a on life" board solved the difficulty by mak Granddad lease give "I will come" she said deter irig the payments from other edumined Madeline Should do her duty cational funds i I think that you are just fed up on each other's society If you WOUld see each Oth§f for one night a week and that Ji fnm cm I iui itAHItu ui nidi juui nnnU iuur uii nuuiuJ linu IU msieau ntyt other had returned You see when ydu stepped out" two Of three times a week to some place Of amusemeht you had the diversion of seeing other motion that gave you new sensations the people of light and of a dance interest of seeing a movie the thrill and excltemeit But when you couldn't do this when you had to sit at home with nothing to do but talk you simply talked out and began to bore each other andithat led to your picking flaws in each other Yours is one of the modern-da- y problems You are so acto that customed you young people have lost being entertained to entertain yourselves You Must always be doing the ability somewhere seeing something new and exclt going something yourselves by sitting quietly at home ing Youas can't amuse girls and boys did in your fathers' and mothers talking time when there were no radios no movies no automobiles Ydu may well fear that If you find quiet evenings together io vrtn will find marriasre still more tedious For that will rarv tinte week will be amusement livelier than with other's com eac)h ho home at spent pany So consider well before you let yourself Into lifetime of it companionship that will have few thrills In DOROTHY A BEGIN HERE TODAY 4know hoW much he cares fcbout-- f GABRIEL and MADE you" LINE SIDDAL who call them-selvDonna sensed the disapproval "The Gabriel Sisters' are Bill had not actually expressed and trapeze performers with Benfroe't she shivered slightly NoW that she circus Donna's parents also cir- had reached her destination she cus performers ire dead Five years wondered if it would be possible earlier Madeline ran away front the to deceive a loving old man who middle-wester- n farm where her remembered his grandchild's voice grandfather AMOS SIDDAL lives the contour of her face Had the CON DAVID the animal trainer loss of his eyesight made his other is in love with Donna who regards faculties keener? If he realized ahe hint merely as a friend Madeline was an imposter could she conis in love with Cos vince him the deception had been Madeline's When grandfather well intentioned? And what would writes asking her to spend the Bill say? week-en- d at his farm hear Lebanon where the circus is playinf She had a sudden impulse to tell she persuades Donna to take her him the truth then an impulse she place Thus it is Donna (pretend-irif- f crushed instantly for the head to be the other rirl) who meets lights of the Car brought into stark BILL SIDDAL Madeline's Cousin outline the narrow austere brick ahd goes to dinner With him building which was the Siddal NOW GO ON WITtl THE STORY farmhouse light flowed from ohe of the 16wer windows and as the car passed through the open gate CHAPTER lit In the moonlight the road was way and moved up & driveway be like a silver ribbon uncoiling with tween rows of catalpa and sycamore amazing rapidity A heavy perfume trees a man appeared in the door drenched the night air a perfume way "There's Grandpop- - said Bill "I made of grfeeh things growing of fruit orchards Wild flowers and the reckon i the excitement of - seeing moist fragrance Of newly turned you again kept him awake" earth Though the Siddal farm Was He called "Hello there!' and the but five miles from Lebanon on the old man waved his hand main road Bill had chosen a longer Before the car came to a stop more eircultous rdiite at the front porch Donna had an The fear Wa3 a battered one bad- opportunity to look at her host He ly in need of paint but Donna her was tall fthd very erect HIS snow hat in her lap rested her head white hair Curled slightly and touched the collar of the dressing against the faded felt upholstery and drank in the night air With gown that clung to his gaunt figkfeen enjoyment Her half closed ure The pathos of his eager sightsaw myriads of less face caught at the girl's heart eyes everything fireflies darting among the wild rose and for an instant bitterness to bushes the streak of black k& d ward Madeline's heartiessness ban cat dashed across their path the ished Donna's fear of the ordeal be farm houses set in the distance fore her the huge gnarled oaks and rovs of "Did Madellh come?" the old sycamores man asked as Bill sprinted up the They had spoken but few words three steps to his side since Bill had guided her away "Here she is!" Bill beckoned to from the circus lot already a life- Donna who was just behind him less city with its tents deflated and "Grandfather" she Whispered rolled Into bundles Thete was huskily "Grandfather" much the young man wanted to Groping gnarled hands reached say but dared not voice There was for her old arms enfolded her much Donna Wanted to ask but she "Maddie my little Maddie" The hesitated When either of them did girl pressed her face against his shoulder hoping he would hot nospeak it was of something trivial Bill tice how fast her heart was beat "That's the Trager place said "Do you remember the Tra-ger- ing "I've wanted you for such a Jim was at School with me' long time and now I can't even see And a little later Donna murmured you" "I'm glad there's a late train Mon"I know" She choked tears in day One of the girls is going to her throat "Bill told me— you are Hde in my place in the parade" blind Oh I'm so sorry so sorry!" "We might have asked your "That's all right Maddie" he anpartner to come along" Bill sug- swered patting her curls with gested "I didn't think of it E)id trembling affectionate fingers "I'm she think it was strange we didn't old ahd affliction doesn't matter ask her?" sd much to an old feller Only Donna felt a queer little Stab hi I've missed you and wanted fyou her heart "She almost did come" But there there! We're not going she said sloWly recalling the scene to be sad for the little time you in the dressing room when Made- are here There must be a heap line With a sudden change of mind you've got to tell me and a heap haa decided that Bill Siddal looked more I want to know Come ininteresting enough to risk a visit side Mrs Planter laid out some home But for Con David's jealousy supper for you" In the light from the open winDonha might have remained with the circus and Madeline gone to dow Donna saw Bill's face His the farm However Con had ap- eyes pled with her to say "It isn't peared and to pique Donhk (at a short time Grandfather I'm goleast he had hoped to do so) had ing to stay stay With you always" Invited Madeline to have supper With all her : soul she wished she With him and Madeline had ac- could say those words wished that she could give to the lonely old cepts the invitation "Your grandfather may be In man the love and attention he needbed" Bill Mid as he turned the car ed Her strong young arm guided into a road only a little wider than him through the open door In books Dona had read of just a towpath "If he is We Won't wake him He's mighty feeble these such a room — quaint homely indays and needs all the sleep he can artistic but containing something er betweefa the four Walls that she had get Your coming will be ft day in his life You don't longed for ail her life There were DONNA Deaf Miss Dix— I am a girl 16 years old I am tigly shy me Can't swim skate dance My clothes look jclumsy on RATTLES IS DISTURBED a i I iI am paie ana ureu anit iuanu Vifiva By THORNTON W BURGESS viie jnuic m4 He at awake I night worrying ho energy and longing toT be like other fcirls I am toA Queer what nothings bother us onrf if rfnn't imnrnvfi I am coine Trifles over which we fuss kill myself Isn't there some place where I — Rattles the Kingfisher can go for the summer wnere i can ueuume fhpaithv and strong where I can learn to Prom daylight until long after iswim and dance and how tb be charming jolly rounds red Mr Sun had gone DISCOURAGED and graceful? to bed behind the Purple Hills Rat: TUkfibAy' EVENirm AM1NEU even if it broke up their act iBill looked at her and the steady gaze of his candid gray eyes said GIRL WHO IS UG1Y DUCKLING AT 16 MAT BEMSWAN AT 20 WILL COUPLE WHO BORE EACH OTllElt BEFORE MAR RIAGE RELISH LIFETIME TOGETHER? SURE CURE FOR CONCEIT — u u a will EGOTIST TRY 1X7 : X use cosmeticj but 111 never have Oosmeiic Kin— I —takes care of that I QifJfJi RKO'flADlO STAfl |