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Show . v THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION ") on THE (HOME FROfsLT WYETtSPEARSg) through. Rip apart Upset Sto Relieved in 5 minutes or donbl. . 1 When excess stomach dd "!b ng gas, Bour stomach and heT M,nf:l prescribe the J "f"-- '" symptomatic relief medicine i Tablets. No lajative Bell L'''' ;' jiffy or doable voor ENtoA 1 to US. 26c at 1I druggists; " P EH irritated skin 2 ,ai H ?ATrrWr work the filling and sew the new ticking with close stitches. NOTE- - This illustration Is from BOOK 2 of the book-lets Book 2 contains directions for all types of darning, patching and fabric re-pairing with large diagrams. Many useful hints for using old materials are illustrat-ed. Price 15 cents. Address: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents for Book No. 2. Name Address A Flattering Pinafore With Colorful Zinnias tH 71 s. TON"T be colorless at your household chores. Embroider colorful zinnias on this flattering pinafore. They are a needlework magic, they're done so quickly. Embroidered pinafore. Pattern 820 con-tains a transfer pattern of embroidery, necessary pattern pieces: directions foi apron. Send your order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. Box 3217 San Francisco 6, Calif. Enclose 15 cents (plus one cent to cover cost of mailing) for Pattern No Name Address .WIDTH OF CUSHION TOP - N s 7 CUT , TO MAKE THE TlV'-- f pS5-EP1.- 0 WOUND STITCH ENDS it Slggfeg-t- fV KAND TURN T. . , WvCT- - J : STITCH Vjj OUT 0N omE A HANDSOME pair of cushions to brighten up your living room may be made from things on hand or from remnants of silk. Frequently the largest pieces of the skirt of an old silk dress may be used for a pair of matching cushions. The backing may be made of sateen. A soft fold of a contrasting silk around the edge makes a smart finish. The sketch shows how such a fold is cut and applied. Eighteen inches square is a good size for the cushions and, if you have an assortment of cushions of different sizes, it is easy to trans-fer the fiDing into ticks of the size you want. Stitch and turn, leaving a four-inc- h opening in one side. Rip a smaller opening in the old licking; sew the large opening over the smaller one and then A " ' JIMi Where'd I find me another mom who B i& EL " "nl could make rolls F A A l J'-.- L JK 'h Admiral's taste? nf- c- rfjfr&yf MOM . Oh, it's easy f JTx v''V to make these S iR Tsr-W-Speedy Wheat Rolls! f yfefyA, V'- '. Bo I'd have more WA rjTfX' V?V--- , . time with you, 9 ; I tried a new, & ;, 'jy&LLj')j, fyiM;; quick recipe with ' 9? v ' yf. f if'tK h Fleischmarm's Jj 'd &TjtVlMWr( Yeast . . . which puts T. 19 ttj THE ONLY Y6AST FOR' 1 WFPPC,- - ) ( baking with J feyTl mi ' ADDEP AMOUNTS OP jRUl .MX ME' FtE'SCHMANN'S f VITAMINS A AND D, ) V- - NEW EDITION OF THE IV . as well as the MrJ famous'breap basketA VITAMIN S MpVVni OF V'" IS WWrK. 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It can be sent to U many areas th?,r blad, ZTTJ? t0 seicemen time--no requ from they , and in overseas any home, contain? ft "0ned- - S a blade letter aS? Can ughl at most stores, but if not avail Sener"s supply meanS weeks thl any JHty, blade letters can be bought from Ordcp akers by sendinS 'n the coupon below. " . : tSS! HAILS LIKE A LETTER I ,(bd Ic MSTASt ANnMDtt oWM f S"To relieve distress of MONTHLY-- N Fen?E.3 Weakness (Also Fine Stomachic Tonic) Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-pound Is famous to relieve periodic pain and accompanying nervous, weak, tlred-o- feelings when due to functional monthly disturbances. Taken regularly Pinkham's Com-pound helps build up resistance against such annoying symptoms Pinkham's Compound is made especially for women it helps na-ture and that's the kind of medicine to buyl Follow label directions. J.YDIA E. PINKHAM'S BBSJ WHU--W 25 i And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par It may be caused by disorder of kid ney function that permits poison out waste to accumulate. For triply many people feel tired, weak and miserable when the kidneys fail to remove exces acids and other waste matter from tht blood. You may euffor nagging backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness. tetting up nights, leg pains, swelling. frequent ana scanty urina-tion with smarting and burning Is an-other sign that something Is wrong witb the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment la wiser than neglect. Us Doan't PilU. It is better to rely on f medicine that has won countrywide ap- - proval than on something less favorably known. Doan't have been tried and test ed many years. Are at all drug stores. Hi ; BSSSSSSSS8SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS3SS8S8SSSSSS8SSSSSSS8I THE STORY SO FAR: Mary Suther-land makes arrangements to be met at Sughuaro, a flag station In Arizona. She arrives by train and waits for the sta-tion wagon from Wagon Wheel Ranch to pick her up. After a long wait, Len Hen-ley, of Congress Junction, picks her up, and drives her to his trailer house, where she eats breakfast. Henley decides that Mary should put up at a hotel In Phoenix from which she can roam around and secure accommodations at some dude ranch. BUI Burdan, owner of the Wagon Wheel, had gone to Hamilton Henley, Sr., for a loan. After Burdan left his office Henley purchased via phone the Burdan notes and collateral from the State Bank of Arizona. CHAPTER m She ebeyed, took a few sips and glanced as a desert raven . fluttered into the water and" started to drink. "Is that a crow?" she asked. ' "No, that is a desert raven. Didn't you hear him croak like Poe's ra-ven 'Nevermore'?" He assisted her to her feet "Everything is in or-- , der," he announced, "and you are acceptable to the Spirit. You drank from the Hassyampa and the Spirit sent his raven to light in the water above you, thus inducing you to gaze The legend has It that if you drink and gaze up-stream you will never leave Ari-zona, whereas, if you drink and gaze down-strea- vou will never tell the picion that Henley, senior, deserved some mild adverse criticism. "He certainly looks far more prosperous than his son. That car cost at least four thousand dollars and I notice he has a uniformed chauffeur.' Arrived in Phoenix he pulled up in front of a hotel and, leaving her seated in the car, he disappeared inside. The clerk reported the hotel one hundred per cent full, but Mr. Henley was not disappointed, for he had anticipated that. He went to a house telephone and called a room, announced himself and was instruct-ed to come upstairs immediately to Suite A. A handsome, middle-age- d woman met him at her door, took him in her arms and kissed him twice. These osculations he returned with interest and then said very solemn-ly, "Aunt Margaret, you have al-ways professed considerable affec-tion for me." "You great gladiator, I love you. You're practically my boy, aren't you? Didn't your mother beg me, when she was dying, to look after you? Of course you've never given me the ghost of an opportunity to look after you, but I've always been standing by, ready to try." "Your patience is about to be re-warded, darling. I've found the most wonderful girl in the world, there are only two hotels in this city fit "The blarney of you! Well, I tele-phoned her an invitation to cock-tails and told her you'd bring her to my suite." "Did she accept?" he inquired ea-gerly and stupidly. "I fear, Len, you have never fed a sardine to a cat. It's six o'clock and that girl is sitting, by the telephone waiting waiting-waitin- g." "How do you know?" "I know that the girl who wouldn't wait by the telephone for you must be too ill to crawl to it. Come up, you great simpleton and bring that lovely thing with you." "She's all dressed up and so am I," he crowed triumphantly. "You're taking us to a dinner dance at the country club at eight." "But I haven't reserved a table for you and this girl." "Woman, I reserved it in your name this morning. Better dig your-self up a beau." "I have one and he's all dressed up, too." Two minutes later Mary Suther-land heard a door open across the hall and men's voices drifted in to her through her open transom. Somebody said: "Hello, Len Hen-ley." Len Henley replied cheerfully, "Hello, you Wades. I hear you beat that indictment the grand jury brought in against you for cattle truth again. Of course, if you turned out to be a pathological liar you'd have to go home or be blacklisted." "I'm so glad I won. What are you doing with that rock in your hand?" "I saw that raven fluttering around, uncertain whether to land or down. If he had start-- 1 ed down-strea- I was going to throw this rock at him and head him up-stream." "Oh! So you want me to remain in Arizona?" "I love my native state and yearn to see it do well In the matter ef immigration." "But I must go home in the spring." "The Spirit of the Hassyampa is a broad-minde- d little gnome and perfectly willing to permit his chil-dren to make little trips here and there for business and pleasure, but he does insist that they vote in Ari-zona. So, go back to New York if you must, but remember you'll re-turn." "Will you be here when I return, Don Leonardo?" "If I'm living I'll meet you at the depot. In fact the moment I saw you at Sughuaro I had a feeling that meeting you might develop into a habit." "You're a dear to say that," and privately she thought: I wonder if I'll ever see him again after I re-turn home. "Of course not. Indeed, if I were stealing." The man who had greeted him said on a surly note: "We won't dis-cuss that, Henley." "Oh, yes you will," came the brisk reply, "because I have a very sound reason for discussing it. I'm glad I bumped into you boys here, because the meeting saves me a call on you at your ranch. I am of the opinion that none of you has sufficient in-telligence to quit the game and that you'll keep on burning over other people's brands and carting off oth-er people's yearlings to a bootleg butcher in your big truck and trailer until somebody gets you squarely between the cross-hair- s of a pan-oramic sight on an army rifle. I hope that job will not fall to me, al-though I assure you if it should I'll not flunk it I want to warn you monkeys that I'm going to buy the Wagon Wheel ranch." After having seen Mary safely en-sconced at the hotel, Len had gone out to the rodeo grounds. Pedro was there with the trailer house parked back of the barns in'the infield. Len Henley drew a horse known as Mad Hatter and when he an-nounced it fifty men cried, in uni-son, like coyotes, and one contest-ant, who had been a runner-u- p for the cowboy championship of the world the year previous, grinned at Len and said: "So you don't make first day money in the bronc ridin' tomorrow, do you, Henley?" "Why?" Len demanded. to neglect you I should expect Prov-idence to visit some sort of misery upon me." He took her arm and led her back to the truck and she paused at the trailer, climbed up on a wheel and looked in at the two horses. "This chestnut with the silver points is a beauty," she said. "Very well, PabUto shall be your horse when you visit my ranch and I have a fine silver mounted stock saddle that used to belong to my mother. It will fit you. I assume you can ride." "I belong to a hunt club in Vir-ginia and ride to hounds. Where shall we ride in Arizona?" She saw something in his eyes that sent a tremor through her. "Over the mountains of the moon," he answered enigmatically, and did not speak to her again for ten min-utes. When he did he said: 'Trn. worried about finding hotel accom-modations for you, Miss Sutherland. During the winter season our best "Oh! So you want me to remain in Arizona." to receive her and there isn't a va-cant room in either." "Where is she?" "Sitting in the cab of my little truck at the entrance, waiting for me to return with tidings of great joy. Margaret Maxwell, you have a golden opportunity to be a heroine." She eyed him humorously. "Start in at the beginning and tell me ev-erything, Len. No shooting in the dark for your old Aunt Maggie." So he told her everything, and add-ed. "You have a spare chamber in your suite, haven't you?" "You know I have. You've occu-pied it often enough. Now what is this all about?" "May this girl friend of mine oc-cupy it?" "How long?" "Until she can find accommoda-tions at some local dude ranch. You know how women are. They have to "Because Mad Hatter'll stack you. He stacked you at Salinas, at Cal-gary and at Pendleton, just as he's stacked every man ' that's ever topped him includin' me. An' he'll stack you again." "How many times has he unloaded you?" "Twice." "Did you learn anything from the experience?" "I learned that the man that can make time on that horse ain't been born and ain't likely to be." "Want to bet I fail to make time on him tomorrow afternoon?" "Would a cat eat liver?" "What odds will you give me?" "Two to one." "Big time gambler, aren't you, offering two to one on a horse that has never been ridden." Another man pressed forward. "I'll lay you three to one you don't make time on Mad Hatter, Henley. Seventy-fiv- e to twenty-five.- " "You've made a bet." Len raised and second best hotels are crowded, and for the next three days guests will be sleeping in the halls on cots. I may have to secure a room for you in some respectable private home." She had a mad impulse to inform him she would be glad to walk the streets all night provided he walked with her. She was almost dizzy with delight and didn't want to be bothered by minor problems. "What-ever you do is right, Don Leonardo," she answered. "I'm not a demand-ing woman nor am I a complaining one. When you volunteered to res-cue me this morning you let your-self in for something, so the wor-ry is all yours." A motor horn sounded behind them and a long, sleek, expensive con-vertible sedan, with the top down slid up alongside and held steady with them, while a handsome iron-gra- y man leaned out and waved at Len and shouted "Hi, boy!" Len Henley waved in return and shout-ed: "Hi, old settler!" Then the iron-gra- y man spoke to his chauffeur and the car slid away from Len Henley's nondescript caravan. "He was going to stop and have a chat with you," Mary said, "but when he saw me he changed his mind. He seemed terribly glad to see you." "That was my father," he told her. "Old Hamilton Leonard Henley, Sen-ior in person. He's looking grand, isn't he?" "I hope so." She added, oat of an InjtiHCtrve and wholly feminine sns-- shop around a little." "Well, since an emergency exists she may occupy my guest room. I'll lock it off from the remainder of my suite, and telephone the clerk to assign her to it and give her the key." "When my mother picked a friend she picked one," he declared. "Aunt Margaret, you're the lily of the val-ley." "You seem unduly excited about this young lady, Len." "You'll be crazy about her." "Do I have to meet her, darling?" "I knocked on her door just after the boy brought her up, Len, and when she opened it I asked if every-thing was all right in her room and did she need any more towels. She didn't need any more towels but she'd like a maid to help her un-pack. So I volunteered for that job, because I maintain one lady can al-ways recognize another by her wardrobe. And, of course, I got a good look at her and we chatted some. Evidently she thought I was the housekeeper, because she tipped me a dollar and as if the tip wasn't enough she thanked me and told me I was very kind." "Did you take her dollar?" "Of course. A good laugh is al-ways worth a dollar, isn't it? The girl gets by your old Aunt Maggie on probation and on the face of in-complete returns I've decided you're not so juvenile as I thought you were this morning." "Darling, if you were twenty-on- e I wouldn't even look at her." his voice. "Any other man willing to lay me three to one on Mad Hat-ter can meet me in the secretary's office after this rush is over. He'll be the stake holder. There will be no finger bets. Cash on the Rarrel-head.- " He was overwhelmed with busi-ness immediately. . . . When he left the rodeo grounds at noon he had made bets which stood to win him three thousand dollars if he could stay on Mad Hatter, without violating any of the Rodeo Associa-tion of America's rules for a win-ning ride, until the presiding judge should fire his pistol. He was re-garded by all who made bets with him as one far from sane, and, of course, the association's publicity man promptly seized upon this news to plant a front page story in the local afternoon paper, together with a picture of Len Henley on Mad Hatter in action and taken at the Pendleton round-u- p three seconds before Mr. Henley had been sent sailing off into space. Wherefore, Hamilton L. Henley, Senior, late that afternoon was made aware that his son, recently de-clared champion cowboy of the world, would be a special attraction on the opening day of the show, in that he had drawn Mad Hatter, un-defeated champion bucker of the world, who had already gained three decisions over Mr. Henley. Never-theless, the latter was accepting bets, at three to one, that the fol-lowing afternoon he would rid Md Hatter and "make time." TO BE CONTINUED) Elephants Mature at 20; Can Do 20 M.P.H. on Run People of Burma say an ele-phant is old when he is born, with jhis wrinkled skin and wobbling movements. The life span of the (elephant is 75 years. Maturity is reached at 20 years or less, and the animal begins to show signs of age at 40. The trunk of the elephant is a tube of muscles divided by a (middle partition, and bearing at the end projections that may be (Used similarly to fingers and thumbs. Elephants make love by wrapping their trunks around each other, suggestive of th eman-ne- r in which human beings hold hands. While the elephant can neither run, trot, gallop, nor jump, his shuffling gait can be stepped up to 20 miles an hour. Fresh Water Frogs Frogs are fresh water creatures , and would die if they stayed toe long in the ocean's salty water. |