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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 9

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE TUESDAY MORNING MARCH 10 1936 Through the Carden Gate K'giMtrM a rtttni otnce) By BARBARA VORSE let these bright sunny days go by without gettihg some of your spring gardening duties accomplished Bazaars of British India report the best business in years in that city said word received her from Mrs A Hong South postmaster general has defied tradition by Issuing th annual with red covers Son Announced POCATELLO Mr and Mrs Frank Hong forjney of this city and now residents of Portland Ore announce the birth of a son t- lcni NEW STOCKINGS FOR A MONTH to walk out into the yard where perhaps still remain a few mounds of melting snowand discover dainty crocus holding its head above the grass As lovely and magnificent as the first peonies Irises delphiniums may be their "blossoms will not create such a stir The new of the first flower of spring starts visions of beauties yet to be surging through our minds and bids us to be busy No time should be wasted from now oh in getting shrubs and trees in the ground Roses will be thankful if they are set out right away The earlier work is don in the perennial beds ths better Do not to anyone who cooked as badly as Mrs Miller' did It said: running this show? do as told and when ready let you There was a rattle of china The light laugh that Meg had heard before rang out Then Meg heard a matter of fact ready now There does that please you?" Meg Know why but she have moved to save her life Miller said in a changed tone: "How are you going to do in the cup Put out the cracked one so that there be any mistake The stuffs quite This was the woman again speaking with an indifferent calm SYNOPSIS OP PRECEDING INSTALMENTS: For 10 years Bill Coverdale has loved Meg A year alter Robin marries her Colonel Garratt of the foreign office intelligence is convinced Robin was murdered while trailing the Vulture's gang Bill back in London after a year in Chile finds Meg without funds Professor Henry Postlethwaite her uncle with whom she lived before her marriage has isolated himself on an island in a lake at Ledstow left a packet with Horace Lane mank manager to be opened by Meg in case of his death Garratt advises her to legally prove death and when Bill asks her why she she says she thinks alive Jfojlt was horribly bad her flat found a newspaper Henry to shut himself up Th that Spring Blossoms Appear One of the greatest delights experienced by those who garden is to witness the unfolding of the first flowers of spring This last week many tiny plants have burst forth with color despite the fact that it is but the first part of March Here and there on lawns under trees in little clumps at the base of shrubs have been found golden crocuses dainty snowdrops English daisies and violets gay with little blossoms The buds on the aubrletlas and arabis are swelling so that we know it will not be long until they too will announce that winter is past Every yard and garden should contain some of these early blooming bulbs and plant Tiny as their blossoms are they are dynamic in the excitement and pleasure they furnish their owners No greater thrill is there for a gardener than we were first married Bob was surprised at all the new stockings I bought Mine went into runs so Quickly! Copyright 1936 by Patricia Wentworth To be continued 4 COMMON COLDSJ walied-ln poke of a house with the water right up to the walls and probably everything steaming with damp She made up her mind that she must insist on seeing him Only if Miss Cannock give up the key what was she going to do about it? BRIDE TOLDHER STOCKm SECRET A Pension Discussed RUPERT Idaho Davis of Boise state area manager of the Townsend plan discussed the of the Townsend Plan" here Saturday afternoon in the high school auditorium The meeting was in eharge of Smith president of the local club 11 began Luxing stockings cut down oh runs When I told Bob bought no stockings for month he thought I wss pretty cleverP PIANOS PIANOS PIANOS PIANOS PIANOS I Relieve the dlsis-L symptoms by apy Menthol atum in sseetsil ml rubbing on chst resting PPbdngiV nestrtteM with ink-circled letters spelling am alive" letters cut from paper to form and a maple leaf pricked through to spell When Garratt says nobody saw Robin after October 1 1934 Bill ay he saw him October 4 in a taxi with a woman Bill dining with Meg- sees this- woman Meg says he's known as Della Delorne That 'night a bullet nicks ear in the dark and an intruder leaves in flat a calling card: Robin A note seemingly signed by demands the packet of LaneThe messenger is shadowed but escapes Bill Interest Professor Postlethwaite in plight She goes to Ledstow and her letters and are tampered with Bill learns O'Hara was at Della flat at midnight October 4 and the professor on October 6 gttve Beatrice Thompson a note to deliver saying he was going to Ledstow but it was accidentally burned PCJviCOM ORTHO ALL PRICES EASY TERMS Lux cuts down runs saves money because it preserves stocking elasticity Why risk cake-soap rubbing or soaps with harmful alkali? They weaken elasticity-threads break easily runs start! Safe in water safe in Lux Cards Receipts $100 RUPERT Idaho Approximately 3100 was collected and contributed to the Rupert school gymnasium at a card party sponsored by the Rupert Women's club Friday night UTAH MUSIC 161 EAST BROADWAY If you prefer note drops or throat spray call for th MEW MEMTH0UTUM LIQUID In handy bottle with dropper Wei INSTALMENT 17 Meg had lunch with Miss Cannock in the room that would have been the study if Uncle Henry had his study over on the island Mrs idea of lunch for two ladies was three cutlets and a rice pudding one day and three cutlets and a blancmange the next The third cutlet set up a delicate Situation Miss Cannock in her role of hostess was bound to offer Meg- Meg hungry but polite as became a guest was bound to "refuse Whereupon Miss Cannock with an archly irritating laugh would daily remark: had better save its life or Mrs feelings may be The cutlets were very small and exasperation grew Miss Cannock could order four cutlets or even six if so disposed Today when offered the last cutlet Meg thought with a sudden spurt of suspicion wonder if starving Uncle and nerved by this she said ihahk you" where pnn Miss Can (lock helped her and then sat gaz-ng mournfully at her own empty plate Miss Cannock sighed as she said: 3 -am afraid it is not at all cheerful for you down here Mr Postlethwaite is at the most critical point of his book and I am naturally mdeh occupied with know" said Meg ought not to shut himself up like terribly bad for him He always did try to do it but we let him I tell you what go ver and see if Ican't drag him out Y8r ec walk this Mrs indeed I cpuldn't! Mr Postlethwaite can be quite severe and his orders his most stringent orders are that no 'one should Interrupt him when he is writing Besides he locks himself in you know at the far end of the bridge and though he has en- trusted with the key of door on this side it is on the distinct understanding that I do not let it out of my keeping" Her fluttering fidgeting hands picked up a tablespoon and a large fork "And how may I give you a little of this rice Meg's back was up If Uncle Henry was being fed on about half a cutlet and a scrap of burnt rice pudding it was about time some-body did something about it She scaped as soon as she could to her dWn room Meg felt as if she stay in the house another second Soon she went out of the front door into Walks Toward Gate a said Meg and went on walking down toward the gates She thought ehe would go into the village to buy some stamps She going to answer Bill's horrid icy letter today but perhaps tomorrow she would write him a few equally chilly lines just to show that she care She arrived at the gates and found them locked This was only what she had expected She would have to get one of the Hendersons to open them for her Meg knocked at the lodge door half a duzen tlmes and then went around to the back where there- was a litter of old newspapers cabbage stalks potato peelings and crusts of bread When she had banged on the back door half a dozen times she stopped to listen and heard a slow dragging footstep come down the stair Presently the door swung in a little and Mrs Henderson looked around it with a furtive air Meg said afternoon" When she received no response only that suspicious stare she said "Will you please unlock the gate? Tm going into the Mrs HendersonjeenLon staring at her She was very dirty and unkempt After a considerable pause she said hard of hearing" Meg had to come nearer gates are locked I want to go into the Mrs Henderson nodded always locked I want to go into the village I want you to open the MrsHenderson shook her head be done to be kept Mr or And Mrs Henderson shut the door in her face And bolted it said Meg and boiled with righteour wrath" That slammed" and bolted door had changed her lukewarm feeling that she might as well go and buy some stamps in the village to a stubborn determination to get there at any cost She would have to get over the wall but she meant to do it Meg worked her way along it on the left of the gates There was a thick belt of shrubbery next to the drive but between it and the wall there ran a neglected path There was therefore no hope of a tree with friendly branches to serve as step ladder The wall was some eight feet high built of brick with a small coping on the top and was in very good repair After about 30 yards the shrubbery stopped and the path with it In front of her now was the rough open park with an occasional tree or clump of trees and the wall running on sheer bltre and jjnclimb able None of the trees were anywhere near it Meg decided that her proud spirit would just have to bend to necessity and that the stamps must? wait for another day Returns to House She turned and started back to the house As she walked she made up her mind to see Uncle Henry as soon as possible She would Insist on seeing him And she would insist on his giving definite orders that she was to be- let out whenever she chose This sort of prison gate and eight-foot-wall business was absolutely medieval If he really wanted to be left alone with his Millers-and his Cannock and his revoltingly rude Hendersons he had only to say so revive her suspended allowance and press a cheque into her hand and no one would depart more joyfully than his unwanted niece These meditations lasted her to the front door which she found not locked and she reached her room without encountering Miss Cannock She read for a time and when she looked up from the book it was almost half past four She wondered if there was going to be any tea One of the irritating things about life at Ledstow Place was that you never knew whether there was going to be tea or not She went out of her room and stood there listening There a sound of any kind in the house If she went down the back stair she would probably be able to hear whether there-was any prospect of tea or not She wondered what she was going to say if she met Miller or -Mrs Miller coming up As a matter of fact she had never set eyes pn Mrs Miller though she supposed she had heard her voice It seemed very difficult to think of the owner of that light laugh and that odd thrilling voice as being married to Miller The door at the bottom of the stairs was not latched There was a gap of two or three Inches The passage beyond was dark In the twilight but a couple of yards away the kitchen door stood open and a bright patch striped the gloom In the very moment that Meg saw these things she heard Miller say in a grumbling exasperated way the sense of waiting about? 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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004