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Show Movie Monopoly Coatesville, Pa., ia the only Uwn in tha United States when the Y. M. C. A. has a movie monopoly, Itl only competitor was taken over about seven yean ago The town frequently sees first run pictures befon Philadelphia or New York. lrfhVlJnilSU rjtXt time I, tkrM U iw uani i nnn.ii,lnii,l,nn,iIl, iRip !?if!H H uiuitir titaiimim Ruth "Wyeth Spears Firat Womaa Minister Olympia Brown Willis of Malone, Y, was the lint Ameriran rubbing the which woman to bo ordainer a minister in apeck ,Mt0Pt- - except 'it effect jSTia.tb.rn Eases Her Conscience payment to the city A conscience 60-ce- nt or U) Be pest t fund" eased tha mind of a middle-age-d former Pittsburgh bnwh. She appeand at the health womaa P"1 ,nd the PPr bnnau and paid for two bottlei of rough, then the paper off without much hand lotion taken mon than two d year ago when employed at the municipal hospital. lea Ue gtffl Farmers Build um of American farmen spend between atiU JqJJoOO tons of lea amm- $400,000,000 and $500,000,000 a year on new buildings and improvement!. It with cold mechan-IAmeriea- Jr gflrer Lining a (Over lining relief laat Newfoundland. ',! ni iti for 84,000 winter in IU great and wood-pul- p have been ro--Jj dosing of the Baltic, ud line mine are again in the while enlistment and civilian fore try un- aUo helped U reduce the Jtarw Father of Ciippinga Robert Luce of Waltham, Mass., ia tha founder and president of one of the largest press clipping bureau in tha country. Ho eoined the phrase, dipping bureau." One of his first customers was John Wan amaker. Ho recently told the house in Washington that the government was paying far too much for its dipping service. Chick Bexing Foeping loudly from their ventiJdy Caution mold or 'ennentaUon lated boxes, the vanguard of Amerateri-- I icas annual 800,000,000 chick popuglasses muat be lation was being rushed by mail and felly must have a perfect hatcheries to poultry-me- n. Ml and the jelly muat be express from cool, place. dry el at jJjj, 4 Radium Radium wai discovered by el agji when he left uraof 100r piece approximately ndacea tm pounds of milk each year. nium on on a photographic plate. Hath Milk daily herd of 25,000,000 Bee-quer- ffj Family Cowpunchers Bearer Built Dama Ben Greenbrough of Packsaddle sev in been planted lam have they Red Lodge, Mont, claims to have I lend streams, in hope will benefit ir-,!- -. tha brone-xidinge- st family in the I MU jama that The animals have gone United State, dedans the AmerHis two ions and ak promptly and already have ican Magazine. barricades up in several two daughters go the rounds of about 25 rodeos every year, and consistently npa in tha championship Vanishing Furniture varnlah-- I get the best results in fmiture, the varnish muat be priaei. Ts Wrong Tabla Pasteur picked up the wrong test list in even, warm temperature, and thna discovered the eftube too neither plentifully pd fects of vaccination. rtss gingerly. I EDIDERARTMENTi Hides & Deer Skins Wanted HOTELS t0 torct SEMI. NEVADA Da Ilia GULDEN Ship your Hide. Pdta, Fan, Dear Skins to COMPANY Hinhcat prirca KAUFFMAN Balt Laka City Ul Ba Srd Wait 8t. 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Medjcsl Eagiaeerf, Sgid and othsr Carps, Quarto mutter Corps, Anns and tranches. CONTACT U. S. Army Recruiting Station 223 Nets Inilding Salt Lsks Gty lower your HAULING costs HOTEL BEN LOV OGDEN, UTAH With yMANS Job Rated trucks "wit. ind Model -Reconditioned and By Our Lifetimt on Truck ijS Per"d Mila 5 Cento on 2"?" Wil1 B Out of Town Buyers. man MOTOR CO. 51X16 SALT LAKE TEL JJ'JJ Baa ma II Balto penaae Family Benaa fat AW OmWd Laaacc aad lotto Tap Baam CeOaa Ska OriH Beam Hama af IN t RatoT EKraato Kaccatlraa af Oammamr aad Ad CJak Hotel Ben Lomond OODKN. UTAH Omm a raa arc R Ftuaerald. Met T. JJ' ka INI SALT LAKE 1" thank you for to an Apartment Hotel for 9 Hiem - service COMFORT CONVENIENCE The belvedere Jartment HOTEL l C&iU "Si CO. FOR ANALYSIS JNal.ftic protcia ll.SC. Chamleal Stack aad Poultry Paada ttTEISON LABORATORIES hllalc at lath to Ai MArnowEB 'Jjljwk Nil a POPULAR PRICED Pmam ani gandwtehea .CHEMICAL LAND SETTLERS Acs. N Brattle. WaL COULEE MEN WANTED! MEALS INEXPENSIVE Week Up Salt Laka Clly. U NOTE: The chintz severed lamp shade and the spool table also add intense to this window. FuU directions for making hade like the one iUustrstod am in SEWING. Book 1. Direction! for the spool table an In Book S; also descriptions ai tho first four booklets in this sariem. Then an Zl homemakinf projects in each number; tor which then to a aervlca chars of 10c each to cover cost and moiling. Sand order toi CHAPTER 1 na taduitriei yj 17 flowered chintz in rose and plum tones, lined with plain plum cot ored chintz. One yard of each kind of chintz waa required for each window. 1868. TwaDpaper may be removed! , SEW HCW- - one to an hands aboard tillthing; time is another. At dusk, sailing Captain Keen moved tha Sunset from the wharf out Into the stream to wait nwntol tide. She was a ff. ship of three hundred and frigged rtweven tons burden, bound the Fiji Islands to load with sandalwood to Chines and Indian ports; but .he was under charter to the Mission Board to carry certain wght and passengers from San Francisco to Honolulu and to tha Marquesas, on the way. I want to five the men overnight to sober off before the missionaries come aboard, Mr. Chase," Captain Keen told the mate as the ship swung to her anchor. "And another thing. As long as they're with us. I'll have no going ashore at Honolulu, or at the Islands, nor any native girls coming on the ship at all." The Reverend John Gale and Mrs. Gale were returning to their post in Micronesia after a years leave at borne; and the Reverend George McAusland went to serve his apprenticeship with them. MeAnalanH was not a young man as years fa but his training the ministry was only Just concluded. He was rather small, and decidedly thin. He was, actually, thirty-eigh- t years did. John Gale, aince they met a day or tera before, had studied his new assistant He had soma misgivings. McAusland seemed full of a restless earnestness; but tha old minister knew that too much seal could be as dangerous as too little. Aboardshlp, Mrs. Gale went to her cabin to settle her belongings there; but John Gale and McAusland stayed on deck to watch tha business of departure. What decided you to become a missionary?" Gale asked. Why, sir, at the Seminary I read a great deal about tha mission to the Sandwich Islands, and I want to be like the men who led that work. They did so much, and evMcAusland eryone loved them. added humbly: I want to help people, and to be loved. I'm pretty clumsy about it, though; about making friends. The other suggested: The trick is man to like people. People like who seems to like them. He asked: "But what turned you toward the ministry, at your age?" McAusland answered frankly: Td killed a man, in Nevada City, in the e mines." Then may have been in the older man's quick glance, and an unspoken question, to the other explained: "I suppose I don't look like a man of violence; but I lost my temper. He was drunk, and (hooting at me, and I threw a pickaxe at him. It hit him In the head. John Gale thought he would have to readjust his estimates of this young man. "Wasn't that Just an he suggested reassuriaccident? ngly. I suppose a man la responsible even to his accidents," McAusland insisted. He had no family. There was nothing I could do directly; but I wanted to find some way to atone. Captain Keen, one eye on his ship, jftinwi them with some casual word. McAusland walked toward to watch them cat and fish the anchor, and John Gale looked after him, and after a moment he smiled and asked the Captain: Would you take that young man for a he hesitated, used McAusland' I own phrase a man iff violence? The Captain said wisely: "There's never any knowing. The quietest little man I ever knew killed four Malay piratei with a capstan bar. He and I are going to work toGale gether, these next years, John out Tm trying to find explained. what sort of man ha is. find Captain Keen (aid: You'll on the out, presently. Being shut up same ship with a man, you come to The ea atrip him know him. him down till whats wears down, inside him shows through. The old minister nodded; and durfollowed, while ing the days that the Sunset took her peaceful waya across the peaceful sea, he thought that McAusland was no more than an enthusiastic boy. he himThe first morning at ea, self cam on deck to find the other hii sober black trousers a rolled up his thin (bins, pushing down the pl"h-in- f and up holystone under the instruction of the sailor' sailor with the parrot The two name was Corkran; and the McAua-tand'- a were toughing together at The pamff awkwardness too. ito head watched Georg -ind, and presently it nipped Corkranto eer and aald whecdltafly! "Mighty pretty- - Mighty pretty Corkran toughed and clapped There, on tha shoulder. Reverence!" ba said. That Pat to you. way of saying he takes two The friendship between these an was Corkran rapidly. developed level eff hto able seaman, abovs the and he did forecastle; fellows in the completehis work so cheerfully and certain taeit privihad he that ly was on deck, lege!. Whenever he were apt to ba toha and George was intensely McAusland gether. He curious about ship's business. uep to to cur-pris- aome-time- bare-foote- d, 1 worked under Corkran' i instruction to learn the knots and bends and hitches, and how to leixs and splice and serve. John Gale, observing the friendship between McAusland and Cork-ratried to understand its basis. Ha saw that when they were together, George waa always the listener. Tbe mate called Corkran to soma dutys and George, turning, saw John Gale near them, and (topped beside him. "Corkran' a strange man, he said, and ha colored in a slow Moat men are ashamed of way. their vices, but Iw brags about his. He's simply an animal." The older man suggested: You can't always Judge men by the way they talk, George. T suppose not." McAusland toughed uncertainly. And I like him, in spite of what he to, he admitted. I dont know why." One tote afternoon. George, under Corkran' Instruction, was learning to put an in a discarded cable when the piece of eight-incmasthead man sighted the first distant peaks above Honolulu. George laid down spike and maul and swarmed aloft to see himself; and when presently he descended, n, WTRTH SPEAKS Mary turned to look up at him. Tha THE newest frilled curtains lL BOTHDrawer give IS sun from the skylight fell full upon a frill, lavish effect. If they BUIS New York MM tier countenance as she turned, and make your old curtains look a bit Enclose 10 cents for each book George stopped like a (truck man, shaken and trembling. She thought dejected, like those shown here Name he would fan, and aha rose quickly at the right, dont be discouraged. eases eisfieiseiies to help him, slim and yet warmly The window at the left uses those round in her tight bodice above loose same curtains with a dash of full skirts of sober stuff. The button glamour added. at her throat waa unfastened; and She discovered that a diagonal Good Breeding which took up the curtains Georgs aa hto eyes fell before here, dart, at more the fullness threw back, aw her smooth white throat. She Good breeding, as it is called to the front, thus giving the new touched hto arm, steadying him; and . . is different in almost every smart line. a high drape John Gate spoke her name and hto, and merely local; and evof valance country, were and made and she said: ery man of sense imitate and Here, ril help you. Sit here. conforms to that local good breedGeorge said defensively: Tm an ing of the place he la at. He freed himself and sat right, down; but hto arm where she had touched it burned long after her A General Quiz flngera were removed. He sat beside her at the table with Captain Keen at the head, but he could not The QuettionM look at her. He ate briefly, a little, with trembling hands, silent, so that ... delicious... hoif work. ..has his alienee oppressed them all Aft1. How many men now make up fim...hGH money.. .healthful... erward he took refuge in hto cabin the United States senate? order, today, from your grocer. 2. What European country has again; and when next day, hii ankle hobto waa able ha a region called Georgia? quickly healing; ble on deck, he walled himself be3. Are white elephants atill conhind an Intense dignity. sidered sacred in India? 4. Do monkeys hunt insects aa But if he was afraid of Mary, he was attracted to Joseph Neargood. they ait and pick at their bodies? 5. How many member has the The Marquesan wai youthfully Impressed by hto own consecration to British house of commons? 6. In a bear market what are the Mission work in which ha would presently assume a place. McAus-tan- stocks generally doing?hto own life committed to toad the Island people to Christianity, The Atuwm aw in Neargood a fine example of what could be done in that direction. 1. Ninety-fiv- e. The ninety-sixt- h The Sunset waa five daya out of to a woman, Mrs. Hattie member waa Honolulu; and the day lovely and serene, with a light steady Caraway of Arkansas. 2. Russia. breeze and a long easy swell so that 8. Yea. They automatically bethe breast of ocean rose and feB aa come royal property as soon as aa of a bosom the sleeping sweetly 1 womaa Two saOari on a stage born. 4. in of No. are search They lung over the aide toward i small masses of a substance scraping and painting, and Mary which exudes fromsalty the pores of Living WeU Doncaster and Mrs. Gala stood by A wise man keeps on good terms the rail above the catheads, idly the akin. 5. Six hundred and fifteen. with hia wife, his conscience and watching the men and watching tha 6. Going down. hia stomach. porpoises under the bow. Now and then aa they talked together the sound of Marys laughter rang out pleasantly. Captain Keea near the two missionaries aft, cocked hto In SALT LAKE CITY head that way and chuckled. WeH be sorry to say good-by- e to Miss Doncaster, ha remarked. The girl has an honest, friendly sound in her toughing. Mary and the others were coming aft toward them; and George, always apt to avoid Mary, went toward along the other aide of the deck. She looked after him, her eyes sobered by hurt; and a moment later, when Mrs. Gale and ChoiceofthcDucriimnatingTruvtler Joseph Neargood had gone below, she smiled and said to John Gale: 4O0TQOMsT4OoTATiS 1 saw you talking with poor Mr. McAusland. He chuckled. "Now I wonder why Our $200,000X0 remodeling and refurnishing program has you call him poor. made available Hie finoet hotel accommodations in the "But isnt he? He might have so Wool AT OUR BAME POPULAR PRICES. to afraid take but hes many things, them. CAFETERIA Afraid? DINE DANCE Well, at least sort of ashamed, BUFFET DINING ROOM The ImdM and shy. MIS. A H. warns, Ashamed of what?" The old man MIRROR ROOM Maeagen watched her with a lively interest ROSS SUTTON HOLMAN warns srfW. The i. Ashamed of life, perhaps. EVHY SATURDAY EVBUItS Dont girl's cheeks were bright you know people like that? Old maids who insist that there's somela a certain compensation of good Good WiU thing ainful in loving and marrying? Whatevef may be the apparent will and evil which renders them People who persuade themselves that the things they want to do and difference between fortunes, there equal. don't dare do are really wrong; and who think everyone else ia wicked doing them?" He spoke in an affectionate amusement "So wise so young I" Tm not so awfully young, Mary assured him. "I'm nineteen. Remember I lived on Gilead till I was ten. end the Island girls start hav ing bablea when they're not much older than that (TO BE CONTINUED) Tie-bac- Jlsk Me (Another O Delight your unexpected guest eye-eplic- e h to d. StEB.& ,CT1 THE HOTEL She looked after him, her eyes sobered by hurt. dropping from the ratlines the tost six or eight feet to the deck, he stepped on the marlinspike where he had left it It rolled under him; and the remit wai a severely sprained ankle. John Gale bandaged the hurt; but in the morning when they wire anchored McAusland was too tome to walk. The Sunset would lie in harbor overnight while Captain Keen lightered off the freight consigned to the Honolulu mission but Mr. and Mrs. Gale went to lodge with friends ashore, and they urged George, despite his lameness, to come along. When George decided to stay aboard, Mrs. Gale thought he was shyly relieved at having a valid excuse to avoiding a casual meeting with many strangers. Ashore, she and her husband found that two other passengers would board the Sunset here. One was n Joseph Neargood, a tall young convert trained in the college at Oahu, going now to take hii Fatu-hlvplace in the native mission at The other was Mary Doncaster. Her father and mother had established themselves twenty years ago on one of the smaller northern islands of the Marquesan group, which Ephraim Doncaster called Gilead. Mary was born there a year later, and lived there till when she was ten yean old they sent her home to New Bedford to school Now she was returning to them; and John Gale, when he had talked with her, approved Mary mightily. He and Mrs. Gale agreed between themselves that it would be good to McAusland to have the girl's com pany aboard tha Sunset during the real of the voyage to Gilead. When they were ell rowed out to the ship next afternoon little before sailing time, the old man looked toward to watching McAusland's face light with pleasure at first sight of Mary but George was not on deck to greet them, and John Gale found him in bis bunk with a slight temperature, presumably from the pain of hii Mar-quesa- a. hurt George did not come to supper, not see Mary till next Gale had told him John morning. aid of sayaha was aboard, She's ing too much he said only; the daughter of Ephraim Doncaster, the missionary at Gilead. George inattentively expected Mary to be like a younger edition at Mrs. Gale. Mrs. Gala was pretty ai pawith per flowers under a glass case, a pale and delicate beauty that would not disturb a man; but Mary was mightily disturbing, beautiful not with youth alone but already had ripely. The ships carpenterout Georg fashioned a crutch and a block of timber e a cut to fit the minister's shoulder out socket When George hobbled were into the cabin, tha others with ready at table, Mary sitting Gal John but to him; hick her and greeted George aa he appeared, io he did bub-afr- to mop-handl- Rates: $2.00 to $4.00 MM to Exciting is the word for BEN AMES WILLIAMS New Serial THE STRUMPET SEA Here Is a story so vivid end real that it will fairly lift you aboard the home-bound whaler, "Venturer where things are happening thick and fast Read It in This Paper an SET TBE EXTRAS WITH SLOWER-WM- THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS |