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Show llTCBDAY, JUNE 29, 1924 SYNOPSIS ' " nsrVieuc CHAPTER I Word that their nlrttly Volici arc dlataataful to a party of id at Lodsa. among (bam an mny oaptaiB and hi iatar ot 16 a ma name as bimaait la brought to kck Kilmeny (known to his Inllmatta a Crumba) and somo frianda camping. ilia Ounnlaon In Colorado. CalUd account (or tha uproar bjr Dobyanv trlnder, anobblah millionaire, mam bar if tha Brltlah party, Jack snubs that dividual and has a frlandly chat with laya Dwlsht, attractlv Irish srlrt. CHAPTER It- KtlmenrV father, bamber of an Old Irish family, had harried a Colorado srirl, now dead, ba-wn ba-wn whom and her husband's family lad developed a bitter feud. Jaok s iympatbles have bee a all with his othrr,. nd he baa no use for his trltiali, relatives, two of whom be inowi are at the Lodge. While flan. rr. KHmeny again meets Miss Dwlcht. ind by her Is introduced to the other ambers of the party, chief of whom u-e Lord and Lady Farquhar, as J Mr. frumba," which she has heard him -ailed. -Jack is Immensely tmpreased y ine loveuneea 01 joyco tteiaon, cow- fi Dion 01 Moya. . ' CHAPTER lit, Nait da t m pwn of Ounnlsoa. the Farquhar party tore "Mr. C rum 6a" win the bucking ironcho championship at the County Fair association show. He disappears Sfter the contest. On their way homo loya and her companions are over iken by a sheriff's poaae in pursuit of mo men who- hare robbed the trees Irer of the association of the proceeds & the show. The sheriff declares tha hen-sro Jack- KUmeay- 'iCrumW Kaiul Ila friend Colter. Captain Kllmeny and ila alater India realise that Jack IS Jieir cousin. His participation In tha bbbery seems assured. ( (CONTINUED) CHAPTER IV "I'm Here, Neighbor.'' Moya still rode afternoous with her Mends, fished occasionally, and took r regular hand nt bridge. But It ras nnaceountaMy true that her sest h these amusements was gone. She KniJil give no satisfactory reason for it, hut she felt as if something had based out of her llf-j forever. It was fs if the bubbling youth In her were ueneued. The outstanding note of ler nau oeen me eagerness wur ttilch she bad run out to meet new jxperienees. Now she found herself Shrinking from them." Whenever she tould the girl was glad to slip away Iy herself. To the charge that she as In love with this young vagabond 3e would have given a. prompt denial Nevertheless, lady parquhar recog-. Used the symptoms as dangerous. On the fifth day after the Gunnison yip the young people at the Lodge jade a party to fish Sunbeam creek, jliey followed the stream far Into the Ills, riding along the trail which bor-ered bor-ered It. Kllmeny and Verlnder cur- Ied lunch baskets, for theywere to nke a lay of It and return only In me for a late dinner. 4 Moya made her brave pretense of ayety. With alacrity she responded Verinder's challenge of a bet on le relative sizes of their catches. ut as soon as the rest were out ot trltt she-sat -down-4n.-a ..ahady spot, ad fell to musing. The voice of a grizzled rider startled rr from her dreams. Her lifted eyes k In the grim look of the man. nnilshed with weapons ready to bis innds. "Momlu, miss." he nodded amiably. ";oo-mnrn!rfg." And swift on the eels of It, "Yon are a deputy sheriff, re you notf- ...... "liurii tjjft bejl, ma'am. You belong Id tlML-ICngllsh outfit. I reckon. Funny liut some members of your crowd uvlng the same name as the man e're looking for." , "Mr. Kllmeny. you meanT "Jiiek Kllmeny! Yes. ma'nm. Come froiii the old country, bis father did n of sume hljj gun over there. ' Like ly he's some kin to your friends." He put the last observation as a nt'stlon, with a sharp glance from iniler Iris heavy gray eyebrows. Moya Ju ne to regard It as a statement. "Are you still searching for hlra?" she asked. You hpt ir rtt ' Tli ahprlfTa frnt V notion he's up In these hills goine-Vheres. goine-Vheres. p.ut If you ask me, I'd ay e wns htisy losing himself 'way off In outt county, clear off the map. He set! to punch cows up there and he nows all kinds of holes to hide In." 'Yes," Moya assented listlessly. 'He had his getaway all planned efore ever lie came down here. hat's a elnch. The fishing was all a luff. The four of them had the hold- P arranged weeks ago." "Don't yon think there's a chant e didn't do Itr she asked In ' a for-rn for-rn way. rt "Not a rhnm-e. Jack Kllmeny and vter pu'lfd olT the ploy. What the jMu rs hud to do with It I don't .know." 1 T!ip deputy passed to the fishing In . lis conversation, hoped she would lnve luck, stroked his white goatee, nil presently departed. The man hud scarcely disappeared roimd n Uinl In the gulch before a "'fid startled her. Moyn turned t'lickiy. to see n man drop dmvn. the ft'''" of a large rock to the ground Em n l-efofv he turned she recognized tint i patitherlne grace hnd her heart lout a'beuC lie enme straight toward her, with the smile In his blue eyes that claimed comradeship as a matter of course. " "You here," she gasped. - Tin herev neighbor. Wiiert ought I to be In Routt county losing myself?" my-self?" Her little hand was lost In his big brown fist, her gaze locked In his. "You heard himr "Couldn't help it. I was working down through that ,srove of pines to the river when I saw hlra. . ' "lie may come beck." "I reckon not. Let's sit down and talk." Her first thought had been "of his danger, but she remembered something else now. "No, I think not Mr. Kllmeny." Kll-meny." .. . The deep eyes that met his steadily had In them the rapier flush. lie smiled. "Because I am a miscreant, I reckon, he drawled. "You 8ay.lt, not L" - "Now you're dodging, neighbor. You think It." "If so, do I think more than the truth T Your actions convict you." "So you thmk. Isn't It Just possible "yuHdotrr"unde' was the - faintest -bint of tlerlslon In nls polite Inquiry. A light flashed In her dusky eyes, a shining hope newborn in her eager heart. "Are you telling me that you are Innocent?" "You've been thinking me guilty, then," he countered swiftly. "What else could I think?" "You might have waited to hear the defense." . "If you had stayed to make one, but you ran away." "How do you know I did V "You were gone when the officers reached your camp." ' Ills smile was grim and his voice defiant. "There was a man up In the hills I wanted to see In a hurry." By the look Jn her eyes It was as It he hnd struck: her. With fine contempt' her answer came. .. "Was there another man up there In the rocks Just now that you had to see until the deputy left?" "Anyhow, there was a young woman down by " the - banks of Sunbeam. I wanted to see after he was gone, the fugitive claimed boldly. A faint angry flush glowed delicately delicate-ly beneath the olive of her cheeks. "Evaslons-notblng but evasions." She turned away, sick at heart Re had. treated with flippancy the, chance she bad given him. Would aa inaor cent man have done that? Swift as an arrow his hand shot out. caught her shoulder, and held her firm' ly.. The eyes that lifted to his flamed with proud resentment Tm not golnr to let yoo go like this. Don't think It" "Sir." - "Ynn'll -do me- Justice first Ills hand dropped from her shoulder, but the masterful look of him stayed her steps. "You'll tell me what evidence you've, got against me." Again an Insurgent! hope warmed her heart. Wild lie might be, but errely no criminal if there was any truth In faces. What she hud heard against him she told. "The. robbers were riding horse? like yours... .You left the fair grounds. early. When you passed us on the rontf you wire anxious about something You looked back two or three times Both you and Mr. Colter showed yor were In a hurry. Then you ran awn? tjefore the sheriff reached your camp Does an innocent man do that?" Kin put her question as an accusation, but fa. the voice wns a" little tremble thai asked to he refuted. "Sometimes he does. Xow listen to me. The horses rdden by the roh- jbers were Collar's aad mine. We cer tainly were worried about the time we met yon. And we did break camp In a hurry so as to miss the slierl IT. Does this prove me guilty?" She brushed nway the soft waves of dark hair that had fallen over before-head before-head In little escaping tendrils. Hie fearless level eyes of the outdoors west Were looking straight nt her. "I don't know. Does It?" "Well say this evidence had piled up ngnlnst Captain Kllmeny Instead of against me. Would you have bfr lleved -him guilty?" j "No. He couldn't have done It." On tliesnine evidenee you. would acquit him and condemn me. Is that fair?" "I .have known him for years bis standards, his ways of thinking. --Art 4t4 life he has sduiuled himself to t rtm a straight course." "Whereas I" lie waited, the sardonic sar-donic frosty smile on his leun strong face. Moya knew that the flutter of her pulses Was tellln- tales In the pink of her cheeks. "I don't know you." "I'm only a orl. ingnmn. and an-American an-American nt' that so it follows that Ii. Hist be. a ifimliial," be answered AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN With" touch of liUerneiiT "No no I Bat you're different There's something nntamed about you. I don't quite know liow to put It If you had been brought op without restraints, as if you didn't cart much for law. . "Why should It Law Is a weapon to bolster up the rich and keep down the poor," he Hung back with an add mile. "But there's law and law. Even In our class we have our stand- arus, alien as wey are. i X'na It'a mnn .- I...' .h. ' " " " . m jvn IIIRI lout IW told him quietly. "You know I meant nothing like that The point to that X don't know what your standards are. Law doesn't mean so much to people here.. Your blood runs', freer, less evenly than ours. You don't let' the conventions hamper you." . "The convention of honesty, for ln- "I didn't want to believe It, but" The penitence In her' vivid face pleaded for her. He could not refuse the outstretched hand of this slender lance-straight girl whose sweet vitality vital-ity was at once so delicate and so gallant gal-lant Reluctantly Ids pnlin met hers. "You're quite sure now that I didn't dolt?" "Quite sure." "Even though For wild and law less?" "Aren't you?" she flashed back with .a smile that took from the words any sting they might otherwise have bad. Mirth overflowed In hbi eyes, from which now many little creases radU ted. , ?Ym'n, , good one,., neighbor. But since yon will have It, I am. I reckon my standards even to honesty wouldn't square with yours. I live b) a rough mining camp where questions have two sides. It's up to me to play the game the way the other fellow plays It. But we'll not go Into that now.". Strong, clear-eyed and masterful, she, knew blm a man among ten thousand. Strong, Clear-Eyed and Masterful, She Knew Him a Mar Among Ten. Thousand. Thou-sand. ' 1". lie might be capable of great sin, but what be did would be done with h'.i eyes wide open and not from Innate weakness. Her heart sang Jubilantly. Jubilant-ly. How could, she ever, have dreame.1 this crime of him? Hei trust ,was now a thing above any evidence. "' "And yon'li: alt .down with me now if I ask you, neighbor, he laughed. ' She did not wait to be asked, bat sat down, tailor fashion, and looked expectantly up with, a humorous little lit-tle twist1 of the eyehrows, Flakea of dappled . sunlight . played on her through the-fljovlng leave and accent-, ed the youthful bloom of her. With a sigh of content he stretcheJ himself on the sun-wurmed loam. "It's sometimes a mighty good world, neighbor," neigh-bor," he said. "I'm thinking that myself." she admitted, ad-mitted, laughter welling softly out 0 her. The sun lit the tip of the pines, so that they looked like burnished lancen .In battl3 array, poured Its beams over the ' 'scitrre'd liIHslde," ami bathed the little valley In effulgent glory. "You enn always find It somewhere," he said with deep content, leaning on an elHow Indolently. Rhc asked for bo antecedent to his pronoun. Whin he meant was not ambiguous to her. "If ne knows where to look for it" she added softly. "That's the trnuHe. We get so busy with our little everyday troubles that we forget to look. Hut the Joy of life Is always there If we'll forget our grouch and see It." "Yes If liavliig eyes we see." . I'm comforted a heap to know that you believe In me even If I'm not' Captain Kllmeny." he assured her with his slow rippling laugh. Had be been looking at her he would have seen the telltale color tide her cheeks. "If, that Is a comfort Tod are welcome to It. ,1 might hnve known the Idea of connecting you with such a thing was folly." He glanced whimsically at her. i'Don't be too siik of roe, neighbor.' I'm likely - to- disappoint, yxtn. ... You'd have to make a heap of allowances for me TfTrtre your friend." "Isn't Hint what friendship Is for to iniike tittowanc.-"!?"- "You've found that out already, have you?" The long lashed lids fell to her cheeks in self defense. Not for worlds would she have hnd It I ita guess the swift message n'adv to leap out tii-wnrd tii-wnrd Mm. He skeined to lie drawing her soul ! to hN unconsciously. Tingling Tin-gling In every nerve, nthroli with an emotion . new and. fnej-pllcaJKlej , shy drew, a" long slow brSaTTTana" turned herSVfld away. ; A hot shame ran like aulekstlver through her veins. She whipped herself with her own. score. was sns me una or gin met gavel nor iov to a man who did not want Itf Ilia next words brought to her the shock she needed, the effect of ft plunVft into Icy water on warm day. "What about your.- friends what bout Miss Seldon did aha believe me guilty toor He could not quite keep the self-consciousness out of his voice. "Hadn't you better ask her thatr she suggested. Kltmeny's alert eyes had swept again and again tha trail leading up the gulch. He did not Intend to ba caught napping by the officers. Now ha rose and offered her a hand up. "Your friends aire .coming." JBwIftly Moys came to earth from her emotions. In another 'moment shet was standing beside the fugitive, her gsse on the advancing group. Captain Cap-tain Kllmeny was In the lead D1 was the first to recognize her companion. ? Moya took a step toward her friends, so that for the first time Jack Kllmeny stood plainly revealed. India's pretty pret-ty plo,mir.t face set to a red-lipped soanless whistle. Joyce stared In frank amusement Verlnder, rutted In rnste and respectability na only, a social so-cial climber dubious of his position can be, ejaculated a' "God Wess my soul!" and collapsed beyond further articulation. Cataln Kllmeny nodded t 0e westerner without embarrassment embarrass-ment - Momtn', Mr. Cramba." - "Good-momlng. But you have the name wrong, sir." "Beg pardon." The captain's eyebrows eye-brows lifted In Inquiry. , - ."Kllmeny," the American corrected. Nonchalantly tha captain came to time. "Same name as onrs. Wonder if by any chance we're of the same family. Happen to be any relation of Archibald Kllmeny, who died In Colorado Col-orado fifteen years ago?" Jack looked at him quietly. "A son. "Makes ns cousins. lie was my fafJier's bwlher.'.,.. ; L ...The westerner nodded cooily.'notTri the least Impressed. "Yes." It would have been easy to read hos tility In his bearing, but India sailed past her brother with hand extended. "Glad to meet you. Cousin Jack. 'Member 'Mem-ber me? Ijisf. time you saw me I was a squalling flve-yenr old." The American warmed a trifle. "I remember you. all right Never snw a kid before so fond of currant Jam." "Stlil am. You've Improved In your personal appearance. Last time I saw your eye It had been beautifully blocked, kindness of Ned." "Fortune of war. My lip was swollen swol-len for a week." her brother laughed as he extended his band. " 'Neil -ot caned for fightln with a guest Served him Jolly well right' MlssLKUweny sold. ? Joyce soiled forward Into the picture pic-ture gracefully. IIr radiant beauty took the westerner's breath. "Youll stay with us for Inncheon," she said with soft animation. "For, of course, this la aa occasion. Long-lost cousins da not meet every day." Verlnder, making speechless sound of protest at this indiscretion, grew very red In the face. Would ha have to sit down to eat with a criminal at large? Jack., hesitated, scarcely a second. He could not take his gaze from this superb young creature, whose every motion charmed, whose deep eyes glowed with '- such a divine warmth of, molten gold. "Thanks awflly, but I really can't stay." He bowed to one and another, turned upon Joyce that look of dumb worship she had seen on the faces of .ninny men, "and swung off into the pines, as elhstlc-Iieeled,"ii,onndPnt and competent a youth as any of them hnd seen In many a day. India's eyes darced. Bhe was Irish enough to enjoy a situation so unusual. "Snubbed,. Joyce, by a highway man," sh- laughed. But Joyce merely smiled. She knew what she knew. . CHAPTER V ' ana M6ya Highwayman. D nner at the . Lodge, wo just finished.. fin-ished.. It wns 'riie' one hotir of the day when anything like formality ob- tn!- -in Unless tl ere wns to be night fi.-Liiig the whole puny usually ud-jomned ud-jomned from the dining room to the river front porch, where such niembtrs of it us desired might smoke the post-prandlul post-prandlul cigar of cigarette. Tonight in l .!y cared to gt out rod and line. Voices drifted up the trail and pres cnt! riders came Into sight. They ha't"l anions the trees, where one din mimmcd and came forward. lie Lowed to his audience In general, and again -and more particularly to Lady 'iirquhar. ' i:ening, ma'am. My name's GUI sherliT of this county, I bate to trouble trou-ble you, but my men haven't had a bite to eat since early this ino'nlng. Think we could get a snack here? We'll not get to Gunnison till most eleven." I.ady Fnrquhar rose. "I'll have the cok make something for you. How ninny? , ... .. ... "Si., MtHh obliged Just anything thr.t's handy." , Sheriff t;l lieckoned to the men In the trees, who tied their tiorse and prcM'i.Hy came forward. All but one of tii-m wire heavily armed. Thai one alked between u 0-"0 antja "IV.' spec turliin". If was observable th.it the men with tl,ie rifles did not lift their eyes from him. Moyu felt her heart 'flutter like that of si caged bird. The blood ' ebbed from Ijy li' an I -li"w.-iyej Jn.l;;" seat TEe'prlsouer was'Jaci XTltuienT. Fareuhar, sitting beside tha girl,-let hla hand fall upon hers with com forting little pressure. : 8teadyf his volet murmured so that ahe alone heard. Yet his own pulse stirred with tha i aheer melodrama of the scene. For aa tha man cams forward It chanced , that tha luminous moonbeams haloed I Ilk m enntlli-ht tha thlnnd hoarf anil splendid shouldera of the prisoner. A1 - cn Pw Never In his gusty lifetime had ha uon Prment must accompany ad-looked ad-looked more tha Tsgobond enthroned. , 'ertlsemant - lie was contless, and tha strong mus- 1 ' - r cles sloped beautifully from tha brown,! roR SALE 600 , yearling hens. throat. A sardonic smile was on the devil-may-care face, and those who thai anilla laholot It ImnOiient rih- onalr, or whimsical, as fancy pleased. . Jack Kllmeny nodded with cool equality toward Farquhar and tha cap- inJnJUmojredetln(lerLandjmille ge-J ninny at maia. ror aioya ma iooa had a special meaning It charged Her vim mo uui; vi tauu u oiui. Somehow, too, It poured courage into her sinking Heart. Wahted-Good Glrj id do Cooking and "Afraid an engagement at aunnlson nnil)IBWftrV " i v with Sheriff Gill won't let me stop for ppl? Amer,can Por any poker tonight," he told his host j" ttimwr"- Farquhar was on the spot to meet ..vp, . . . him in the same spirit. Verlnder win fUM-beaded purse. Owner ma be glad of that I fancy my pocket- have by calling at Drlggs Phar-book, Phar-book, loo, will be fatter tomorrow acy and paying for this ad, -28-lt morning." ' ' l3HT . ".' ' 1 Biggs oppenred to take the newly rOR AUt-MaUlum slse Primrose arrived party In charge. Aa they '.separator. Good as new. Call 118 J. starteiito follow hlui the prisoner came j American Fork ' : . . -21-11 face to face with Joyce, wlio waa-Just "" coming out of the house. Under the iFOR SAJ.E Slightly used White Sit- lowered lights of evening she seemed to swim In a tide of beauty rich and mellow. The young man caught his breath at the sheer pagan loveliness of her. . "What Is itr she asked In a low, sweet tremulous voice. Ills assurance fled. The bravado was sponged from his face Instantly. He stared at her In silence from fascinated fas-cinated eyes until he moved forward at the spur of an Insistent arm at his elbow. India wondered how Lady Jim would dispose of the party. Jack Kllmeny mtgbt-be-a-rrlmlBo-but -ha. happened, , to h their- rousln. It -would .hardly. do to send blm to the servants quarters quar-ters to eat. And where he ate the sheriff and hla posse would likewise have to dine. The young woman need not have concerned herself. Lady Farquhar knew, enough of the West and Its ways not to make a mistake. Such food as could be prepared at short notice was served In the dining room. Having washed the dust of travel from himself, the sheriff,, returned to the porch to apologise once more for having. made so much trouble. Farquhar diverted blm from his regrets re-grets by asking hlra how they had made the capture. - "I ain't claiming much credit for getting get-ting him," Xiltt 'admitted. "This here was the way of Jt A kid had been lost from .Lander's' ranch strayed away In tha hills, y'understand. She was gone for f orty-elght hoars, and everybody Jla the district waa on. the hunt foe ' her. Looked " .like they weren't going to git her. Soon It would br-'-tew late, evenUf . they did find her, Besides, there are a heap of mountain lions up In that country. I tell you her folks were plumb worried." wor-ried." Moya, listening to every word as she leaned forward, spoke vividly. "And Mr. Kllmeny found her." i ' The sheriffs surprised eyes turned to her. "That's right ma'am. lie did. I dunno how you guessed it, but you've rung the bell. He found her and brought ber down to the ranch. U Jnst happened weliad dropped In there ten minutes before. So we gathered blm In handy as the pocket In your shirt." "The s1icritrretlred-toth- dining room, whence came presently snatches of cheerful vtalk between the prisoner and. bU raptors. In their company Jack Kllmeny was frankly a western frontiersman. "You passed vlose to me Wednesday Wednes-day night at the fork of Rainbow above the J K ranch. I was lying on a ledge close t the frail. You disclosed dis-closed whether to try Deer ..creek fit follow Rainbow to. Its "headwaters," 'the- miner -said-. ivs.:k.f .- -.-iTm "That was sure one on ns. Hadn't been for the kid, I don't reckon we ever would have took you," a deputy confessed. . "What lic!i!s me is why you weren't a hundred miles cwny In Itoutt county coun-ty over in jore old stumping ground," uuother suli:i:lted. "I bud my reasons. I wasn't looking look-ing to hv ciiu; ,t unyliow. Now you've got nie you am to wiiteli nut cl.ise," the pl'isoinr lldiieed. "We're wntchlng you. Iion't make any mistake about that and try any fool break." Ciil nnswered, quile uu- dlsturlicd "Hi's ill-.- o. I. i;t hand 1 ever heard," Faruuhar. iid...tlp the' pnrty on the porch. ' If I were u highwayman I'd like to hnve bim for a-partner." "Ik'-'s not a highwayman, I tell' you," corrected Moyu. "I hope he isn't, but I'm afraid ie Is," Ind.a coiili h d In a whisper. "For whatever else he Is, Jack Kllmeny Is a man." "Very much so." the captain nodded, between UoiiJo'cd j,ufisof Jils pipe. m "And I'm i' .iig to stand h him," announced hi-i siHU-r witn Redetermined to.vS of. her pretty . i'Mid. ' Mojn slipped mi aiiii quIi-kTy orounT lier waist. Mie.was nioro grateful for this support (bail she. could say. It meant tbat Ind a at least bad dellnlte-ly dellnlte-ly accepted the American ns a relative rela-tive wTrtrt.lie obligation that Implied. I'.oth girls waited for Xed Kllmeny o declare himself, for, after utl, be wnji the head of the fumllyvi " .v (TO HE CONTINUED) SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1924' . Telephone W. J. Strong, 69R4. 8-21-lp FOH SALE Spring wagon like new a bargain.' H. A. Laurson, Fleasani Grove. ; ' tk. ' ., ' -1 KUH SALE Ford roadster, delivery body( good con),1Uon. Uutlul Cream.t ery. Straight latest model sewing machine - half prlpe, terms Martin Nielsen. FOR SALE 104. shares of ' Alplns Cattle Ranga Co. Stock. Sea. Mrs. Earl F. Carlisle, or phone 66-J. ft-21 4p - Top prlcet for your Spring fry an old hens. Call It E. Shelley, 186. American Fork, . ' 5-S-f FOR BALE Ford Truck, 1921 modal ' Fannelod body. Self SUrter $125.0 Phone 87-J-l Pleasant Grove. FOL'ND-i'Ut'iria Preniant croTaoo- - Strawberry "Pay. Owner "may " mm I same by Identifying purse and pay- lng for this ad. Mrs. Martin Monson, Pleasant Grove, 6-23.lt, Wanted: Men or women to take or-L ders tor genuine guaranteed hosiery; for men, women, and children. Eliminate Eli-minate darning. Salary $75 a week full time, $1.S0 an hour spare time ' Beautiful Spring line. . INTERNATIONAL STOCKING - .? MILLS, Norriatowin, Pa. 6-28-10t HOME , FOR SALE-Slx roomJ modern, with nice surroundings, closed In, very reasonable. '"' Also business, block, Income nine per cent Big die- count on both if sold .within alxtTf days. Will seir separately. Inquire1 of L. W. Galsford. Just north of Apollo HalL 6-21-3t: MARRY IF LONELY; for results, try, me; best i'and - most successful.1 "Home Maker"; hundreds rich wlsV marriage soon; strictly confidential.! most reliable; years experience; def sniptions free. The . Successful. Club," ' Mrs. NASH Box 658 OAR LAND, CALIFORNIA. 6-13-3tr RECONDITIONED CAES Bulck Six. .' ,:. . .. , Ford Touring 1923. Chevrolet Chasls $125.00. Ford Truck 1923. Ford Touring $85. NIELSEN AUTO CO. AmertcairForlr Li ,t "I Jtafci Tuberculosis In Swine Due To Poultry In Some Places In some localities poultry Is largely responsible for tuberculosis Infection, among swine, according to the flnd- ings of the United 8tates Department of Agriculture. Although scientific and: laboratory . studies ... of . the different differ-ent types of tuberculosis have tbuB far not yielded definite information rs to thi.deRree In which the various types of tubercle, bacilli affect animals ani-mals of different species, field report shrJw clearly that swine are susceptible suscep-tible to Infection from both poultry and bovine sources. The infection Is a given locality may be fromi either one or, the other source, or from both' Tuberculosis In fouls occurs chicfi? among the elder birds, especially thos more than two. years old. The most conspicuous symptom Is "going light meaning as the nam Indicates, rapid loss of Weight especially th emaciation of the Tircast muscles. Otb er symptoms are lameness and ruff lee plumage. On post-mortem examination examina-tion tuberculous fowls usually shor whitish, grayish, or yellowish spot on Internal organs,, notably the II vet The prompt disposal of old! fowls will ellmate most of the tuberculous lo-fectn,,but lo-fectn,,but when serious on the farm'"" It Is advisable to' dispose "of The "rn - tiro flock, to disinfect the poultrT"" houses and prerojse3- -thorouhly. nd then to Introduce new stocK known t be healthy. Dead fowls should b burned or burled never fed to hosi' Deep Scottish Locht Many of the Scottish lochs are a toniililnKlv deep, the depth of one l.och Tliree-- lieiiiL- known to exceed I.(nh) f. ei i ! I- r, J |