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Show LEHI FKEE PRESS. LEHLTTAH BISH FOR fOOD GRAND COULEE Dam! &EAKLT COM!-f Tfr airt tHtAP; i, KCH ..IC " 1.1. tr-- I t. . . . run r r. j y Salt La.- ( , GRAND COI if tTLfeB LAM CO.-- V. S. PivLl : I i t SYNOPSIS Agreeable Prof. Bjorn Mr. Dzudi, what U jrour idea cf civilization? Dzudi It'i a good idea. Prof., and I think somebody ought to tart it. Wading In "Can tee Mr. DulionV Miked the chanty collector. 'I'm turry," replied the maid, "but Hru Dohvm can't tee you now. She u in the middle of plate of soup." Some men smoke Impromptu eicarettes the kind you pick up as you go along. For His Comfort Stranger (savagely) You're sitting on my hat, sir! Old Gentleman So I feel, sir! And I hope in the future you will wear solt hats, and not these abominations. hard-brimme- d Soon to Know Hi, you can't go in there. Sergeant Private 9 hy not? thati the generaVi hut." "Then uhy hat ho got private on tht door?" "Stop ashing uhy. Do you think Tm "Because m fonir "l don't know yet, J only cam yetterday." George MeAualand a as 3S ear old wh he tailed from America to undertake tat post as a missionary in the Fiji Island A crime be had committed in a fit ot excitement bad (nattered ali his confidence ia He felt forced to avoid pretty hlrelf M iry Ooncaster. wiio boarded the ship She vas en route to visit at Honolulu. ere missionaries on ber parents. a no as attracted by CUead Island. Mary to avoid ber. On day George's attempts feiJ overboard Mary George accidentally unhesitatingly dove Into the sea to rescue When with In love her. George, who fails the boat approached her borne on Gilead bland, they learned that Mary's parents bad both died Georga volunteered to take necharge of the mission. Faced with thenow. ber cessity of losing Mary toif be left to be his her ask George forced himself wife. Mary accepted his clumsy proposal, and they left the ship to Uve in her furmer home on the island The scanty dress of the natives shocked George at first, but he soon became reconciled to their customs. Mary discovered that Corkran. a sailor friend of George s. had deserted ship to live He had come there to help on the Island. him. Their George and Mary if they needed was life Interrupted one day when peaceful a ship stopped in the harbor in search of attacked pearls. They see the pearl divers and their schooner sunk by a pirate ship. The pirates head their boat toward the George sends bay near their village to Mary Inland for safety and walks down the beach, alone and defenseless, to meet him the unwelcome visitors Natives carry back to Mary hours later, shot through the shoulder. hero CHAPTER VI Continued . -- 7 one of the young men asked Mary for Jarambo; but he shook his head, not looking at her. If George had not filled her thoughts, excluding all else, she must have seen a tautness In these young men, as though they were waiting, listening. But she thought only of her husband; and when in midafternoon he openea nis eves and looked. at her, she I spoke !J. In a quick tenderness, ciose oesiae him. "Quiet, my dear," she said. "You're all right. We're safe. Quiet. Rest, my dear." He stared past her, stared straight up at the thatch above them. She thought he did not know he spoke. He said: "They were angry because no canoes met them. They smashed w Still Feeling First Draftee You know, I feel like I'd like to punch that hard-boile- d top sergeant in the nose again. Second Draftee Again? First Draftee Yes, I felt like It yesterday. ... their boat against the rocks getting ashore, and that made them more man angry. One was a with a red beard and red hair all uiumdm over his chest. They all had guns. I told them we didn't want them man put here, and the me me and hand his pushed against contiijMtion over backward. One of the others ind knew what to do (or It. Nowadays shot me before I could get up." He hv many polite words for it, looked at her with a deep shame at meaning the same thing, but when his own weakness. "I fainted, Mary, we are listless, have bilious spells, like a woman." bad breath and gas pains with slug"You couldn't do anything against gish Intestinal action we still use their guns, George. Now rest, dear." AJDLERIKA, the product Grandma His eyes closed. "Like a womfound best 40 years ago. Take home he muttered again, and sighed, an," bottle of ADLER1KA today and and slept. try it At your Druggist's. In the morning George was stronger, able to sit up with Mary to support him, her arms around him, his In Silence Silence la the element in which shoulders leaning against her breast. men were gone when she The great things fashion themselves woke;young but later they returned, and at that length may they together; in their and majestic, Mary saw a red gleam emerge, not meet would their and, eyes eyes, into the daylight of Life, which hers. She wondered, and her heart they are thenceforth to rule. began to beat hard with a sort of premonition, but she was not afraid of what would happen. She thought that in some strange way she was DISCOMFORTS MENTHGLATUM terrified by something already past; but she decided this was merely the Quickly fleliiriM STUFFINESS reaction from her alarm of yesterSNIFFLING day, now eased, and put the fear SNtEZINQ aside. "What has happened?" she asked. His eyes flickered with something curiously like dismay ; and he looked at his companion, then at Mary One Science a Genius without replying. She insistOne science only will one genius again, the "Is ed: ship still there?" fit, so vast is art, so narrow huShe realized that he was confused man wit. Pope. by some strange sense of guilt; and her pulse pounded in her wrist. She looked back at George. He was asleep, so for the moment he no Salt bke's NEWEST HOTEL longer needed her. She said firmly to the young men: "Take me to Jarambo Or bring Jarambo to me." After a moment, one of them Jsc?" turned and darted off through the 5 forest. The other spoke, bidding her come. Presently ahead of her she heard a call go down the mountain, summoning Jarambo. Soon Jarambo spoke at her elbow J and she turned. The old man met her eyes and ! waited. She had never been afraid WVsV j of him, but she was afraid of Ja1! He rambo now. There was that in his eyes she had never seen there, a r blaze like a leaping fire, a drunk But fury, a reckless intoxication. not of was the drunkenness this rum. ' u.l.,MHwiwrm'$S?T!& 7 Nevertheless he was drunk with She looked at him insomething. Hotel tently; and suddenly her head rose She said: TEMPLE SQUARE "Jarambo, tell me." He said, under his breath: "Long Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY RECOMMENDED time we were men." red-head- cnlkdit red-head- full-form- Car-lyl- e. cOLflo l.'.HJiiililiMlin !K SO f Wf .... As s Rate$1.50to$3.00 It's a mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostelry Ernest c. kossitkr. mt. VIGILANCE COR31MMTTEE is a great vigilance committee, established and maintained in your interest, to see that the men who ADVERTISING aspire to sell to you will always be worthy of your" trade. She waited. He spoke explicitly, from the beginning. When the schooner anchored, George's insistence kept the canoes ashore; but presently a boat put off from the vessel with three white men in it. Those white men did not know the landing place, and they went toward the beach, but hey saw that the surf there was impracticable, so they came along the shor and they shouted, and some of the children went out of the jungle to the landing place, and then some of the girls. When the white men saw the girls they tried to land, and their boat was broken against the ledge; but they climbed ashore. They were angry because of the loss of the boat, and when George came down tne path and spojra to them, one of the men struck him down and then shot him, and he lay Like a dead man. But one of the children, a little boy who loved George, bit the hand of the man who had shot. That man caught the boy, and he broke the child's arm across his knee. The white men could not even catch the girls; so they came to Mary's father's house and profaned it, shouting and breaking things The child with the broken arm was screaming, and the people were CHAPTER VII Jarambo sent young men to carry George away and that was done; so when the white men returned to the landing, he had been borne to safety. When they were gone, Jarambo and the other old men decided what to do to these white men who had hurt the child. So by and by many of the strongest girls swam off to the schooner, with flowers in their hair, laughing. "And it was night," Jarambo told Mary, squatting at her feet. "In the dark, many canoes went quietly on the water, and many young men. The white men on the ship were busy with our girls; and then we came aboard in the dark, the girls held them lovingly while our war clubs cracked their skulls." "That was a bad thing, Jarambo," Mary said. He answered, "It is done." He said slowly, intoning an ancient tale: "The white men came in old times and killed my woman, and my moth er, and my father, and my two sons. Also they took my daughter. Before that, I was a man. Now I am a man again." When she could speak, her senses clearing, she asked: "Jarambo, did the white man with the talking bird help you kill those men?" He answered, with a shrewd glint in his eyes: "No one knows what a white man will do about killing white men. That white man with the bird which talks was given sleep to drink, and he sleeps now. He did not see the ship come. He will not see it go. Soon it was never here." His eyes as he spoke looked down at the schooner in the roads; and Mary saw that some sort of sail was set on her, and that she now moved slowly toward the sea. When the schooner was now outside the bay, a little skein of blue smoke had begun to rise from her hatch. It became a black and grow, ing cloud. She whispered: "They're burning her!" Jarambo brushed his hand, flat, the palm down, across a rock. He said again as he had said before: "That ship was never here! The pillar of smoke rose slowly above the schooner. Mary watched it rise higher and higher between her and the blue saucer of the sea, her eyes following the tip of that black cloud till like a pointing finger it reached the saucer s rim, the hori r zon there, where the pointed, the square topgallant sails of a ship, the rest of her still below the horizon. The canvas of those .sails was dark, blackened by the soot of many fires. She was a whaler! The Venturer, so long expected, was coming at last to Gilead. Somewhere along the mountain far away a voice sounded in a long cry. and nearer another, and then others The sound spread like ripples in a pond, flowing down the mountain side, reaching them and going on Jarambo at her feet looked up and smoke-finge- full-rigg- spoke. "Your man wakes," he said, and watched her warily. "He calls you." She turned to go to George, but she paused again and said, after a moment, in careful explanation: "Jarambo, the ship that comes there is my father's." She could not re member tne native wora tor uncle" if there was one. "My man and I will go away in her." She looked down at him and saw his eyes waver. "Better we go," she said gently "My man will die here." He muttered: "Ship sees smoke. She understood that he was sullen with fear that the ship now ap proaching would punish the Island ers for the killing done last night, and she told him, reassuringly, pointing to the burning schooner, That ship using his own words: was never here. Mary 1010. jaramoo: "My man must be carried to the house We go to him now." When they came to the lodge deep in the forest where they had hidden George, she found that he had waked fretful and hot with fever. She spoke quickly to old Itaui 'We shall take him home." Mary went ahead, to make his bed ready In the house she saw that rough hands had been here rummaging; saw her own garments pulled out and strewn around; saw all her possessions in disorder. She had come swiftly down the trail, and she had time to remove the more obvious traces of their invasion before George, muttering in a half delirium, was brought home. On his own bed, he sighed and seemed to sink and grow small and weak and helpless; and he slept. Mary covered him, and Jarambo came to her side. She thought the old man clung to her as though for protection from he punishment of his sins; but no one else cam near. air a id Mary knew that a manvu The peop;e up ¬ dangerous. .u. land were strur g ugm so at seeing Lhe Venturer approachua soon after the massacre. ir.y him ig drugged Corkran to keep norant of what was to men. now here came many white incitement small Mary thought any bloody madmight touch them intowar ciubs out ness again; bring the swinging. of hiding, set U.em u.m.iH important, wnen tr.e ven ana came turer in, to warn Richard questions. the others against asking All the others had disappear, but Jarambo stayed wim squatting on the platform,himwaiting watch her commands. She bade anand tell her when the Venturer The Great Four ine -- ureal tour j uh. chored. Italian art are Leona: Titian and Michtlani', : Pa Negligence, not Acddtnt Slost ' are Bo accidents, but are the ( netrlifrtni-carelessness, or plain bullheadness ar.,1 cussedaea It is not an acciikr.t if passes on a cune or u:i a h!!l at 75 miles and either k over tht tank or hits another trian. It is not an acoidvr.t he a person crosses against the lights and n gets hurt or killed. It aa cident that 76 per cent f all tars ci ;the highways have de:v:.ve brakes as determined by the University 0"J Iowa. ae-L- ' of , rr.uon reception fc5-J'.- . Ye7 frightful jam. Mrs. Heavy- had her arrn broken. weight -Dear me. how" way She happened to get in the door wnen the refreshment-roo" as opened CHANGEABLE N ATI RE In the late afternoon Jaramoo re Venturer ported that a boat from the was rowing toward the mouth of tne Jarambo bay. It would be night, came into whaiebuat the before said, the roads, and she told him to build tire on trie shore for Ja beacon i n at the landing piace, anu iu them at the landing. When sudden aark desenoea. on Mary brougnt one of Use wna.e set and wick lamps and lighted the it here by George's bed. Jarambo went to lend the beacon hre, ana she was alone. She heard shod feet come up the rose path toward the house; and she side and went from her husband's "Has Mr Dicks a pleasant disthrough the big central room to thea position?" door. In darkness there she met "It all depends on whether he is man, and thought him her uncle, something or coming and cried: "Uncle Tom!" and went selling toyou for it." collect around But into his arms, clinging to him. she knew as she kissed him and felt SUCCESS! his lips that this was not her uncle, and she pressed back, peering up at him. "It's aO right, Mary. Don t you know me? I'm Peter Corr." Before she could free herself, he kissed her again, his beard rough against her cheek and chin. "Peter?" she cried. "Oh, I'm glad you've come!" Then she saw someone behind him, tall and slender, and she asked, trying to see in the half light: "Who is it?" Then, seeing more clearly: "Why, it's Tommy!" Her voice broke, her eyes filled with happy weeping. "Why, Tommy, how you've grown!" She "How is your wife getting along caught him, and he clung to her, young arms tight around her neck, at her card club?" "Fine. So far nobody's put up a hugging her hard. He did not speak, and she smiled to herself, thinking: better lunch than she did." He's so glad to see me that he's STRIKE-CALLEcrying, doesn't dare try to talk for fear we'll know. She asked: "How's Uncle Tom, Tommy?" But Tommy, without answering, only held her harder, and Peter ' .u it. i R "Mary, where's asked urgently: your father?" "Father's dead, Peter. He and Mother died before we got here." Then, in the doorway: "This Ms my husband, George McAusland." Peter stood by George's bed. "Husband?" he muttered. "He's sick," she said. "He sure looks like it!" "And he's been hurt," she admitted, looking back to see if Jarambo had come in with Peter and Tommy, wondering how much just now to tell Peter. She asked again: "Where's Uncle Tom?" Peter said slowly: "Your uncle's dead, too, Mary." She noticed that he did not look at Tommy, seemed careful not to. HOTELb Whn In RENO. NEVAOA atop .1 HOTEL GOLDEN Krno't laigm most popular hotel. IK. ,f TREATMENT L INJECTION TREATMENT L Piles - Hernia PAINLESS PERMANENT n Spuria! reduced fees for pa'.itmi THE LAWRENCE CLINIC 144 East South Temple Salt Uki WRITE KOH KKEE POOKI.E'l VOCATIONAL 600.000 m:n SCHOOL WANTED Ai craft Fac'.oripi WE TRAIN YOU FOR THEM RADIO 0"E RATING and SERVICING Shipyard, Airlines, SHEET METAL BOILER MAKING LAYOUT PATTERN MAKING and WOOD WORKING. VOCATIONAL CENTER S ilt I.alce City, 3rd So. ACME 49 Wc.-i- EYE GLASSES Send Your Broken Optical Laboratories. Exact duplications Utah REPAIRED Dirc?t to So. Main. Salt Like. t!.e difference Sae Spectacle 'IW1 WALL PAPER Felt Wall Paper Compnny ha just received its first carload of New 1911 Wallpanen direct from the mills. All patterns priced extremely low. Extra special 200 or more 1940 Patterns from which to select No reasonable price refused. and save at Come early, shop FELT'S I Silt Lski State 245 South City RAW FURS WANTED FALL MARKET Price Paid for domestic and wild Rabbit Hydes and all other fun. Bring or ship them o R. C. ELLIOTT & COMPANY Salt Lake City 59 North 3rd West BABY CHICKS 'That fellow in the next room has called more men out on strike than any man in the city." "Is he a labor leader?" "No, he's a baseball umpire." ALARMING ANSWER BLOODTESTED U. S. APPRO". ED Sixteen breeds. Lefthnrns, Commoa Heavies. A $7.50. AA J8.50. AAA J9.50. H Mix $6.35. Prepaid lit Sexed chicks also. delivery. COLORADO HATCHERY, Denver. Colorado CHICKS 4 OFFICE EQUIPMENT. NEW AND USED desks and chairs. typewriters, adding men's, safes, WHEN IN SALT She was curiously not moved by this intelligence, as though she were immune just now to grief. She only Ilea, LAKE best food n Salt Lake is erved b The MAYFLOWER CAFE PRICED at 154 South Luncheons. Dinners and banowicn Th said: "Dead?" Peter wiped his brow with his hand, looking down at George. He said: "Yes. And my father's sick aboard the Venturer, Mary. I think he's going to die. Dick said your father knew something about doctoring. He asked, in a curiously boyish perplexity: "What are we going to do?" "Why, what is the matter, Old She said: "We haven't any mediMan? You look like you didn't have cines here. We've had a lot of peo- a friend in the world." ple sick and dying on the island." "That's it exactly. 1 have about "I'll go send the boat back, send as many friends as an alarm clock." them word your father's dead," Peter said. KNOWS HIS NOSE She nodded, and his footsteps deShe parted toward the landing. turned to the boy. Him at least she could help, just by loving him. "My, I'm glad to see you, Tommy! I'm so sorry about Uncle Tom." She kissed him again. Tommy spoke carefully, knuckling his eyes. "I haven't cried before, Mary, till I saw you." "I know. dear. But it helps, II I doesn't it? You'll feel better now." She asked, groping to find a need in him which she could fill: "Do you "Yes, there is a human side to want to talk about it?" gardening. For instance, the potato "I saw it happen," he said. "I has eyes, and the corn has ears " was in the crosstrees with a glass." "But what vegetable has a nose " His tone puzzled her, stiff and re"I do not wish to go on record in strained. "Peter's boat was right the matter, but the onion smells " They heard Peter rethere more than any other plant." and the boy bit off turning, stopped, the word, watching the door where WON'T FORGET after a moment Peter appeared. wondered She Peasked Mary why. ter: "Will you and Tommy stay with George while I change my clothes?" "Sure. You look pretty tired. Go to bed, why don't you? I'll keep an eye on him." "Oh, I'm not sleepy!" She left them in George's room, crossed to her own room in the other end of the house, came back with a lamp to light it from the burning wic' here. Tommy had disappeared. She asicea. "Where's Tommy?" "Outside somewhere," Peter said "Don't forget the waiter, sir. ' "1 don't think I'm bujfly. likely to. You are the worst that ever happened." (TO BE CUSTIXVED f SHOES HURT? 0te' Pep yonr 200.000 users can't be wrong. 314 TempTO" for sppi write 5 BM-- ., or Salt Lake. 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