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Show UTAH THE SMITHFIELD SENTINEL. SMITHFIELD, WHOS Mistress of Monterey 17 he sibilated, the laborawe will be It If tory camp. making some last observations of I will be waiting for the stars you. I will manage it even if it is I will wait. Can you not clear disguise yoursrlfT She caressed his shoulder with a feline gesture that made him shiver. Fear notl I will be there, prepared, starlight or fog! The Indian games and dancing were over, but the program Fray Lasuen had planned for the guests was to continue with some of the old Spanish dances, and another group began tripping to the music of some guitars and a flageolet. One figure stood out among them. Indizuela scorned the Indian dances of her people, but had taken pains to learn those of the Spaniards, and while her face showed stolid and indifferent as she danced, her slim body was alive and graceful, supple as a sapling. The others stopped dancing to admire her, and she stood alone. When she had finished there was a burst of applause led by the Governor. "Ole! he called. Bravo, ninal Viva la nina de los ojos negrosl With a gallant Viva lo morenal gesture he threw his hat at her feet. She picked it up gravely, and after a slight hesitation put it on her head, did another impromptu pirouette, and stood with her hands provocatively on her hips. The Governor half rose to go to her and claim the sombrero with an embrace as was tiie custom. But La Gobcrnadora, who was staring at the performance with set jaw and disapproving eyes, clutched him before he could rise. Sit down! she commanded. Do not make a scene of yourself. Well done, moza, she called in a high Well voice, with a chill smile. done, indeed. The Governor subsided automatically before he could protest, and the Indian girl, her face asmolder, carried the hat to him, presenting it with a contemptuous gesture. La Perouse rose and stretched himself delightedly. Magniflquel he shouted across the space to Fray Lasuen, who was moving toward them with a pleased One of the most interestsmile. ing performances I have ever seen I These Indians, whom I had thought so crude, so stupid, can really do things, can they not?' Ah, Senor el Conde, replied the priest, you must not underestimate my poor children. Perhaps you would like to come through the establishment again, and see what they have done? he invited eagerly. La Perouse protested hastily. Non, non, mon pere. I have already carefully examined the Mission San Carlos, you will remember, and have made notes about it all, and about you. Perhaps all Europe will some day read of this little place, and of your good works! Now, I am leaving you a souvenir of our visit. It is a mill, a hand mill upon which to grind barley. Thereby one woman can do the work of many, instead of grinding the meal by hand on stones as I have seen them do here. I will have it sent over tomorrow. Lasuen began an exclamation of pleasure and gratitude. "And I am leaving something else, aussl, something for you, and for my host, his Excellency, the Gouverneur. Perhaps I am being presumptuous In thinking there is anything you need in this California, and I have been wondering what it could be that I might leave as a gift, and to insure the fact that you, perhaps, will not forget your French broth- at ...if clear Tomorrow night, on the beach ... ... ers. He paused and looked about him, beaming. It is two sacks of potatoes, he I noticed that you announced. have none, either that you have planted or that grow wild. And these we have brought from South America. So I will leave one sack with you, Pere Lasuen, for your mission garden, and one for you, Monsieur le Gouverneur, for that garden of yours of which you are so justly proud! After the Governor and his party had ridden away from the mission, when the Indians had retired for the night, Fray Lasuen sat in his cell and wrote carefully in his jour- nal: This has been indeed a day of historical importance. This day the potato has been introduced into California. in his arms, and tossed her into his own saddle, swung himself up behind her and said, I think I will have you ride with me, chiquita, like a little peasant girl, tired and sleepy, from the fair. Que no? Eulalia tried to ait bolt upright to express her outraged dignity, but Don Pedro only pulled her closer and there was nothing to do but lean against him, in the circle of his arm, and be quiet. On they rode, silent under the thick bestars, with neath the horses' hoofs, and startled night birds rustling among the trees at the disturbance. From some of the riders came bursts of song, the twanging of a guitar. The hone ambled quietly, for no one seemed in a hurry to break the spell of the night. Eulalia abandoned her dignity, nodded and dozed. La Perouse and Fagea talked in low tones. They spoke of La departure, and a little wistfully of his visit In California. The Frenchman had fallen under the spell of the country so beloved of Pedro Fages, and would leave regretfully, he told his host. And the Governor had found a warm friend in the genial little Frenchman, with his quaint Spanish, learned in the mountains of his native South of France; among the Basques. He pine-needl- es Pe-rous- As the cavalcade of the Governor were mounting their horses to return from the fiesta at Mission Carmclo, Dagclet stooped for Eulalias foot to assist her into her saddle. Suddenly he was jostled aside by Don Pedro, who, in sign language, made known to the young Frenchman that he would take care of the lady. Then, to Eulalia's surprise. Instead of seating her on her horse, he took her good-natured- ly besides, Conda de La PerouM has his hands so full of important matters that it would not be fair to ask him to do it. Thinkl Ha has two great ships for which ha is responsible, and many men, and machinery, and instruments, and plants, and food supplies, and ammunition, and He stopped, for he realized he was talking to himself, and was crying in her shawl. Yes, he was talking to himself, he suddenly was aware that he was wishing that it was Don Pedro Fagea who commanded the two ships, and the men, and was sailing away to find new worlds. He spoke harshly, both to himself and the weeping woman. No. Out of the question. I forbid you to ask him, mujer. Angustias drifted away, sniffing as sadly. Fages bent his head again over the sleeping Eulalia. There was a warm perfume from her relaxed body, and the weight of her sagging against him was delicious to his senses. Let him have his ships, and men I and distant lands, he thought have Eulalia. He lifted his head, and saw with eyes accustomed to the dark the wooded hills, the more distant mountains. He breathed the heady odors of sea and pines that mingled in the air, and heard the ocean pounding restlessly on the cliffs. he And I have my California, said thankfully, lifting his face to ess-decked the stars. At the great gate of the presidio grounds good nights were said. "It has been a marvelous day, said La Perouse almost sadly. And a beautiful night I hope tomorrow night will be as clear, for we wish to make some astrological observations before we sail. We will not dismantle the observatory until the last moment Angustias, about to turn into the gate, heard him. s TomorSo! she murmured. row night he will be on the beach at And his funny tent I Perhaps . . she whispered her hopes to herself. I have never been insubordinate, she muttered to herself. "But his Excellency doesn't know everything. Especially about a woman's heart "Tomorrow Night, lated, on He Sibi- the Beach. would miss him when he was gone. Not since Junipero Serra's death had there been anyone in California with whom he felt such companionship. All these things the two men made known to each other, with few words, as men speak, but of profound meaning, then were silent. Although formal farewells would be made later, this was the real leave-takin- g between them. Fages felt deeply the importance of the visit of the French ships, the first foreigners to visit California. And he wondered vaguely, what other people, and ships of how many other nations would visit the shores of the distant province. Ships and peoLa Perouse had ple and cities, predicted. Fagea pondered. So deep was he in thought that he had not noticed Angustias riding close beside him. When she spoke out of the darkness, he started. On my word, Angustias, you almost frightened me. Ai, Senor, sniffled the woman, "forgive me for speaking to you like this, but there is something I want you to do for me. It means much to me, Excellency. A matter that has lain sorrowfully close to my heart for days . . . Speak, then. What is it?. It is about Chichi. He is dying, Don Pedro, in these fogs and cold weather of Monterey. I have managed to keep him alive so far, but I am afraid he will die. She sniveled dismally. But what can I do? asked the Governor in dismay. I want to ask your permission to give him to the Senor el Conde de La Perouse." she said. "He is going to tail from here to the tropica I understand, where it is warm, and a safe place for little monkeys to dwell. Chichi would become alive and well there. She was tumbling her words one over another in her excitement. And though it will break my heart, I must let him go. When el Conde reaches those tropic isles, he can release Chichi, and then and then he will be happy and well. And he will perhaps forget hit adoring Angustias and," she sniffed loudly, find him a little monkey wife! she ended, her voice breaking on a high squeak. Fagea saw the need for being firm. "No, Angustias. You must not ask it. Chichi has managed to live here this long, and will not die until his time comes. He would die away from your loving care. I know. The jungle is no place for him. And HOTEL FLANDOME. SALT LASS IM to H.M 4th B. But QUIET RESPECTABLE CLEAN to WNO. NEVADA Mop it th Who HOTEL ff THIS Sendee TUI WILSON HOTEL Balm Tic to the toart of Ojo city Salt M E. lad Ba. St. WEEK cypr- ... CHAPTER XXI WNU HOTELS Ef VlrflnU Stivers Bertlott VIRGINIA STIVERS BARTLETT CHAPTER XX ConUnued NEWS TEACHERS WANTED the beach in the dusk, her face covered by a conBy LEMUEL F. PARTON cealing rebozo. She might escape YORK. Georges Bonnet, unnoticed, for Pedro Fages was XJEW 1 v Frances new foreign minister, s ss of provisions nriing loads advocate of a farewell present to his friends the has been a vigorous alliance. French explorers, and many IndiHe is regarded as ans were being pressed into service. French May more in accord She hopped footed, slip down to an giggled excitedly, from the chest, opened it and gathering as many things as she could, piled them into a heap, then tied them in a blanket She tried to lift the bundle, but could not budge it from the floor. Sighing impatiently, she began discarding heavier things, and at last had a weight that die could lift She wept again as she discarded the lovely gowns of brocade, velvet satin and lace. Eloping was not so easy, after alL She had dreamed she could flee, unencumbered by baggage or impedimenta, to the waiting arms of an impatient and potential lover, but here she was struggling with bulky bulgy bundles of clothes, like a washerwoman. All her lovely clothes ! But then, she thought with satisfaction, the expedition would no doubt atop at tiie Filipino Islands, and there, in Manila, a real capital, she could buy new raiment. It would be bet-tthat way, for it was only too probable that her clothes, which she had had for more than three years, were demode, and in Manila she would find lovely things from Paris. She lifted the load to her head, and experimented with a few steps. Yes, she could do it. She looked at herself in her mirror, and swayed there, her hands on her hips. In the mirror she saw the face of her baby, staring at her in amazement Hastily she dropped the bundle and whirled on the child. The baby's Indian nurse came hurrying in after her, and stooped to pick up the child, but Eulalia stopped her. Wait! she cried. She sank to her knees and held her arms out to the baby enticingly. Come, come to Mother, darling! she cooed. The baby only stared at Eulalia, nonplussed by such behavior on the part of the lady who generally ignored her Darling, please, my little darling, come to Mother . . . won't er good-naturedl-y. VIITIII Taachaia Wanted NOITH TEACHERS AGENCY. Bolt La ho City, l Special ta teacher. Baa, Mr caana to taa moraial oahjoct I month ULN. Try, toaUaaptog. charthaad tte Co ct h, Um walk far naai and board If dcafi BALT LAKE BUSINESS COLLECT Atlaa Bid.. Balt Laha Cite, Utah SMITHSONIAN BUSINESS OOLLECS Ortta. Utah CLAY PRODUCTS with the Chamber- FACE BUCK BOQVING TILE Flaa Unto Bower Pip aa4 Policies than aK CLAY PBODUCTS Pouer Pact km his predecessors. UTAH PIKE CLAT CO. . BALT LAKE With the downfall of the Left govPHOTO FINISHING ernment, the conclusion of an Anglo-- I Ball Dor. with Print Ceil. the OC. Nn appointtali an agreement snd DESEBET PHOTO ZOC (tamp ment of M. Bonnet, interpreters of SERVICE. P. ft Ba M. RnK Loko Cltr. lit. POULTRY European politics see an advance toward a four-powe-r pact, possibly WYANDOTLE8 Winaara r, with Poland in, and the Everywhere, 8toek EmlOe; tt earn lit : euo Colifaral C. B. Laohor. 120. Vannaya. immobilizaand isolation further INSTRUCTION tion of Russia. of the The abandonment IP YOU LIKE TO DRAW, SKETCH w Write for Talent Tcet (no he) PAINT French-Sovitreaty is expected Glow ue and oampation. Federal School to be an immediate issue in what Inc. Dept. WN. MtnwropoHo. Mina. clariis regarded ss a sharply ALCOHOL TREATMENT fying outline id dominant conserwithout drain. Mlnonla. Oar aeroapllohod and In France vative policy n or Nareotieo under wporrbioa of roar If latormeaataln dealred. Sanitarian England. Emit Ith Sooth - - Bolt lot, City lit M. Bonnet, shrewd, suave, dressy, BUILDING MATERIAL ia a somewhat rakish figure, with his hat usually on the back of his INTERSTATE BRICE CO. Sira Clap Bulldlnf and Tlra Brick head, but a personage of power and Hollow Vitrified Sewer Bulldlnf Til Ha Roof forum. Tilt and Drain Mantel. in the political Pip dignity HIM S. 11th E.. SALT LAKE HT MO. is of the younger school of French OFFICE EQUIPMENT politics, and, in that connection, one of the best Jai Alai players in NEW AND CSED deck and chairs, (In. Join Four SILVEE-LACE- D five-powe- et phni-ela- France. At his country place at St. Georges de Didonne, he spends much time making M. Bonnet incredible kanga- roo leaps, playing Cufi Didot Pelta basque, as on Estate they call it there. But, in statesmanship, he is no rubber-heeled bounding basque. He is rather a wary and adroit fencer. When he was appointed ambassador to the United States in January, 1937, he brought with him a years supply of truffles and pate de foies gras. He had to take most of it back, however, as, in July, he was recalled to save the franc in the Chautemps cabinet ne was supposed to have saved It, but, as usual, it didn't stay saved, and, in the turn of the Ferris wheel, which is French polities, he was down-under snd up again. He is an economist but also u she added grimly. At the door of the palacio Don you?" philosopher and author, in the chamThe nurse stood stolidly by, s ber of deputies from southwest Pedro lifted Eulalia from his horse and and carried her into the house. jealous warmth in her dull eyes. France at tiie age of thirty-si- x At last the baby, finger in mouth, a former minister of budget, penCHAPTER XXH sidled to the nurse and buried her sions and finance. He budgets a few wisps of hair carefully across face in the woman's skirts. his bald pate and surveys tiie world So the next morning Eulalia went Eulalia rose to her feet. about her preparations for depar"Take her out of here!" she de- warily through spectacles. ture. manded imperiously. .... y blinded her as Tears of The nurse hugged the child dose she packed. Lonely, insulated from to her and hurried out of the room. JAPANS strongly authoritarian the world in this most remote and There, you see? said La government with its feudal desolate of the Kings colonies, with to the Madonna who was ver, has never fitted exactly into nothing to look forward to but more smiling sadly at her. "You see? any of the molds of absolutism. loneliness, as the years passed; per- She does not love me at all! She The haps more children; and at last the never comes near mel She prefers intensifying issue final desolation of being laid in the that black Indian woman, and her of fascism which father! You see? It will never make Campo Santo of the Mission may force out the That was her life. For she the slightest difference to her whethpresent governwas sure now nothing would ever er I stay here or not. ment spotlights several to call Pedro Fages away She paced back and forth the happen "strong men" as possible sucfrom California. There were no length of the dirt floor. cessors to Premier Konoye, more troubles with the Franciscans, As tor young Pedro, he never The only one with apparently and El Gobernador served his King sees me! He is with his father all clearly formulated ideas, and a flutoo- well in this colony where few the time. He cares only for him ent line of totalitarian talk is War men wished to come and bury them- and for his pony. Will he miss me? Minister General Hajimi Sugiyama. selves to be recalled by the Crown. Does he need me? No, of course not After several years of EuroHer jewels were already stored Absurd! No one wants me, no one studies in dipean away in their case, and she was needs me I am gding away rect action, he returned to talk She cast herself on the bundle sorting out her clothes. Weeping, of national renovation, deand recounting her grievances to of clothes and wept cadent ' parliamentarianlsm, she filled, a great leather herself, "I am going away . . , and no unity and discipline, and the chest, and as she sat on the lid to one will care I am going so like. More than any other leadclose it, a thought came that made far on the ocean! I will be er, he employs the standard her gasp with dismay. She could seasick, Oh, Dios mio! She turned of fascism if that terminology never get this bulky thing to (he toward the Madonna and held out means anything. beach. There was no safe way of her arms. On 27, 1937, he gave the diet sending it . . . she couldn't carry Please, Our Lady of the Seas, quite May a lacing and said that it would it. For a moment she sat there, make the ocean smooth, oh please ' have to behave, or then a beautiful idea came to her. please! .Ve will dissolve She would make a bundle of her After a while she sat herself at a Sugiyama it." Since he was clothes, then she would dress in a table to write a note to her husthen a member of to Behave peasant dress, like Indizuela, carry band. the bundle on her head, and bare- the ruling military BE (TO CQSTIXVED) triumvirate, this was no casual edi- addiar mek'a, safes, typewriter!, S. L. DESK EX.. MO S. State, Salt Lite. ATHLETIC GOODS WESTERN ATHLETIC GOODS Uniterm Bata, Giavo Baoohalla, Softball O Athletic abac ate. Vail) ball SCHOOL SUPPLY CO Salt Into GREAT ICE CREAM FREEZERS FOUNTAINS ICE CREAM COUNTER FREEZERS end lea Cream eabinrtt-B- ar Steal Carbon tar Fixturea, Steel Table AIm reconditioned aqaipawnt tern SODA Manafactonn CO. K Peat Place - - Salt Office Lake City MOTORCYCLES Price HASLET U e a d Motorcycle. Writ for eotaloftua. HOUSE OF HOPPER. 140 E. Bdy.. Salt Laha FARMER ALMANAC FARMER ALMANAC ter Ready". Price SOe a easy. - Bimliwtn, N, T. AtlM Printing Co. MacDONALD-111 Now FURNITURE Naw a II carnet re 114.(5 ! Uied Monarch eoal ran ire I1L00: Uaed mohair lieia room ISOAO: Umd uprixht I4IJA --Waatera glum C Its South State - - - Balt Lake City . Now SoaaatfaaaL PHOTOS I fleooy print to albamette 1 proCmaional talarnamaBta Slaeoi Reprint tea Star Film Company, Payette, 14 WNU Wad No. Mil BALT LAKE gold-rimm- ed self-pit- carry-o- Gob-ernado-ra ultra-mode- Car-mel- VACATION rn OR BUSINESS o- likely-looki- - ... ... . torial Chinese Use Brutal Trapping Methods to Capture the Animals Fur-Beari- ng tie musk deer to secure the musk pod used only in the manufacture of perfumes, but more often than not h?Jthe fema,e musk deer, it ctufted deer and other small wild animals which are of little or no value. This trap is perhaps the most brutal and wasteful in use more humane means am- - .J. h?d?i. nt the deadfH. raised the ground in such a way as tofrom on the quarry when it releasea fell a cleverly set trigger. Tha is used a heavy BOULDER Glamour DAM-Won-derful YELLOWSTONE Playland GLACIER PARK Coolness post-gradua- te ... ... Game laws mean very little in China. In the more remote sections, where trapping is carried on the operators use extensively, bombs and poison to make their catches although this form of hunting is forbidden by law, but there are no wardens to enforce the provision, notes a writer in the Detroit News. The Chinese hunter has many brutal methods of capturing wild animals which are just as injurious as the steel-jawe- d spring traps used by his American and European colleagues. Thousands of animals suffer the torments of a lingering death in Szechuan and neighboring Tibet in a foot noose trap set in a runway and fastened to a bent-dow- n sapling in such a way that, when the animal puts its foot into the fatal ring and springs the trigger, the noose tightens up, yanking the wretched victim into the air where it hangs suspended by one leg till death frees it from suffering. This type is used primarily in capturing the male lit-- HOLLYWOOD log we. he is fifty-eigyears old, he hits e politics with a strong momentum, not a contender tor high place until 1938, and hence not track-sor- e, like some of his rivals. He did not become a until 1938, after the army year' He had been of war and head of the military air force. His heavily underslung face, resting, neckless, on a heavy torso, la asymmetrical, with one eyebrow cocked, one aide watchful and Banda mai of a dicta-fo- r. He is of the army caste, gradu-ate- d the national military coL While "The Notional Pjifci Renta" Western Air Express Aatla La . Lao Vera Idaho Fall Batt Hrlea Bring Sob Laha Pacatalla Gnat Falla sa Optimist A man kin ba so much of an optimist," laid Uncle Eben, dat he simply goes through life sell in' gold bricks." lf ht big-tim- St vice-minist- er ys represented Japan at the disarmament conference at extensively in the Manchurian for-- Geneva, remaining in Europe tor ests where there are many kinds of several years thereafter. NEW GRAND M.H. THOMPSON Manager felt Lika Citys Hotel, Loco ted Popular Medina Priori South and Moil at dtb mSS' THE BELVEDERE fur-beari- animals. The set-ru- n is also employed and usually kills instantly but ia danger ous to a person extremely walking along the runway on which it is set. , ; Origin of Word Vaudeville The name vaudeville is a cor. ruplion of the French Vau de Vire a picturesque locality in Normandy where a number of popular humor! ous songs were written in the Fit teenth century. An ccoMM,daw,w;r..iu Salt Lake's Elephant Remembers elephant walked along a road Apt Hotel Largcat Bengal, . man ardn ohoulcd and made facesin ata anlblcd kto the 144 Apt aad Raaam Day SI.M Week IILM gor-lhn.b- ?k the mahout restrained it mocker fled to safety When the elephant returned Mw road the tame night it rushSd si; wfit hou" "i bir aad aa ThepELVEDERE HOTEL APARTMENT 1 fl flUte HU HeH Uk9 City Tfl, Wee. I ? Mm C'Alvin O. Jrk. |