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Show lot to row Wta-js. ana iiiMjlrtiTM",JiL protect to T1S Tenness a 220-mU erto ince. -..r0 J Don Carlo sr. THE LEIII SUN, LEIII, UTAH mr-mmmmmm ORLORN ISLAND )Jjho Marshall 1w!nj Serrfc , . . ... 1MU0D MannaO HAPTEB Xl-Ontlnued Clanc7 They've all turned i. island did part of it t Rpmeruber that lve or uu h" " 4 will stick by his brother ; 'a " , ,. nihilist Syd- If li B iaifcv Fn u the most decent of the L count on Sydney Bill." ,aid quieuy. Wd he'll kill to get her." . ... rrlnr ta Cet aW8V Lr Roy asked. "The way tle shell of yours weathered TE bis bead. "You know I happened to Chechaquos lea, good paddlers every one, th were blown from Ignak touts the shoals. Kayaks are l deep water, but no good on cbance fighting, u we cu niiomar and Garge, we may ,nt the rest Ana tnere s one ti- h lire" ' Used. afrald t0 glve word8 P.nr Nun lemus uvp. forward, her fevered eyes isto bis, and whispered what both their hearts. Aleuts might help usl" . - the startled silence, oy disbelief. "They'll be more tn hein Sandomar. He's ilielr kind : and his whole gang i of 'em while we ve ig them around." i chance, Just the same,"' rsisted. "No one ever Knows an Aleut is thinking." iord3 were drowned out by thud in front of the house, ij listened, riveted In their the sound was repeated, and fi,;ng bombed and shook the Kan's quick mind was the "h gam the truth. tey're locking us In I" I sprang toward the threshold, popped, baffled. Plainly Sando-Wi Sando-Wi his crew had put their rs to one of the immense vol- ocks strewn on the ridge and ied it to the door. Yet prob-e prob-e situation was no more des- I than before. The prisoners I break out at any moment p the wall; In the meantime 'm no place for them to go. Jfit do those men mean to do?" vied, wide-eyed. fpose they want to keep us op till they're ready for us." I to concealed what he f their main purpose. While I two of their pack guarded Hsooerg, the others could haul toaU and seize the paddles. ! would be no flight tn tmf I the last ditch. Well, It was !. Sandomar was strong, i-rarrents were stroneer. jtonei he hurled were not so as the billow-swept rocks unoais. . i... .. . piy mey heard a familiar ttrongh the window. " 'Ear. $ oept close to the wall, care-p care-p w cast his shadow j5 that acted as a glass - "A? m wantr' was t T deflance In his tone. -totalkto'Orton.notyou. to yon later-on the ! ere to give 'lm till sun--t our terms.' termsr Horton o,erErlcsn and the two i it,. 00 Ise what IngaJ f itTPtyfor til na uav - uiuL .Mnnn a s Will . . i i f (ton ajwuvaj ailU the CUD Sydney B1U the se . I, lne st of yon can i 3 -I u can uve In refuse?" 1 B J0,1'Te sot too much ! m doat 'and 'em Wr litf w let a few re - It ma iT. V DIac as 5k h a at V h " ttne you lhJ.'' Wre W There kn . 'most ...r!l r-i . ",1U our. re- "l WSt hlSt K ek, were to ZJVC to ,t . i , leva t. " " Nan ole up be- we watch first I dont want to give any alarm until I can slip off and get back She drew a deep breath. "What are you going to dor "Find Flreheart, and ask her to j help us." "Do you think," Nan'a throat i filled, but she went on bravely,! "that It's worth the rlskt They may be laying for you." "I'll be careful. Anyway, It's our only chance for complete victory." He listened and watched a moment more. "Nan, hold up one of the robes between me and the lamp. I'm going to make a hole and sneak away." She obeyed without protest : soon the aperture would admit his body. "Put the clods back when I get out, so they won't see the light," he di rected. "If they find the hole anyway, any-way, and learn that J'm not here, let some light through. That will be a signal of danger." Apparently he meant to go on his perilous errand without a word of farewell, and she made no move to stay him. But at last, when his spear was ready In his hand, he swayed toward her with hungry lips. "Good luck, Eric," she whispered, her mouth moving against his. "Good luck, sweetheart. Don't worry about me. Just sit tight till I get back, and If you need me, yell at the top of your lungs. I'll keep an eye out anyway, and If I see they're about to attack, I'll come a-running." a-running." ' Bright moonlight spread before the cave entrance, but Eric crossed tt boldly. He found Flreheart kneel ing before the Ikon, lost In some old service passed down by a long-dead priest She sprang to her feet trembling. trem-bling. . "Why you no with white girl, In new house?" she demanded. "I'm In trouble," Eric answered gravely. "I've come to you for help." r The squaw's lip curled. "You come to Flreheart? She Just ugly squaw. Why you no go to white girl? She your wife, she help you plenty." "I want you to help her, too. The trouble has come to us all." "Me help white girl?" Her voice had a metallic rattle. 'Flreheart no-love her no-love you, too. You Eric moved to make a last ap peal, but the squaw's drawn face and smoldering eyes repelled him. His hope flickered and died. Turn- ine to the door, he made a brief survey of the moonlit ridge, then crept away. All that remained now was to carry the ill news to his friends, rally them the best he could, and lead them to some more advantageous battleground for a last, desperate stand. But he had not reckoned on San- domar's weird Intelligence, Garge's cunning. They had foreseen that he might try to enlist Flreheart Just too late to stop him and had euessed by what route he would return. As he dipped through the Inky shadow of a midway turf-house, turf-house, a vengeful patient foe came Into his own. Eric had walked Into a trap. Nor could he break free again; heavy shoulders smote his side, and strong arms encircled his thighs. Before he could turn to fight a second assailant as-sailant leaped on his back and caught him around the neck ; and a third, on the opposite side, wrenched the spear from his band. Their combined weight hurled hlmhead-long: hlmhead-long: the darkness was streaked with fire. It was a savage, silent attack; but some cool mind far within his reeling head was astonished at Its repressed power. Why didn't these foes Impale him quickly on their spears, while they had the chance? Why were they so careful with him, not striking him with their fists, anxious not to knock him sense less, nicely measuring their violence to hold him fast but not to break his bones? If this was mercy, it was a strange kind. It was as thouzh they wished to keen him fresh for some revelry to follow. They hauled him to his feet and In grim haste led him toward the beach. Only when they emerged full under moonlight did he recog nize his captore Sydney Bill and the two Smiths. They were breath ing hard, through set teeth a sign Eric feared. His vitals cold, his head swim ming, his temples dripping sweat Eric could not at once credit the scene on the beach. It had the un canny quality of a dream : silence. grayness, timelessness, and the difficulty dif-ficulty of telling what was alive, what was dead. The rocks, the sleepy sea, and the moonlit strand seemed to share the same repressed. sinister animation abiding In San domar's Impassive frame, Sandomar sat on a boulder, his paws In his lap, the moonlight In his brutish eyes. Back of him stood Garge, and for a long time neither made a move, said a word. Cooky and Petroff were dark shapes squat- on, unaware that Sydney Bill had spoken. "Garge get him ready." The little Cockney came weaving across the sand. There was some thing horribly exultant In the lightness light-ness of his step, the position of his bands. He held a spear-thong tied In a noose, which he dropped loosely over the prisoner's head. Holding the end, he slashed with his knife the ropes binding Eric's wrists. At the same time, Little Smith raked up the coals of the supper sup-per fire and threw on fresh fuel. "You showed us how to hold court, so don't blame us If we learned the lesson well," Sandomar went on, with Bomber dignity. "You're charged with the killing of Swede, You'll remember that Swede lay just about where you're standing now. Garge, you speak for the prisoner." pris-oner." Garge took a step forward ; In the spreading firelight his face looked sharp and pinched as a starved rat's. "I don't think we ought to be too 'ard on this 'ere prisoner," he began, his tone dripping with malice. "I think all we ought to do to lm Is cool 'lm off." There was a long breathless pause. "How you goln' about to do that Garge?" Cooky asked. Plainly this was part of a mock trial re hearsed beforehand. "We'll Just tie 'lm 'and and foot and lay him down on the tide flat The tide's Just turning In, and It will cool 'lm off proper in the next six hours." "Your plea for mercy for the pris oner is granted," Sandomar said, just as though Garge's venom had entered his dead ears. "Erlcssen, you've given us some cold nights, but it's your turn now." "He'll flop around enough to keep warm, when the water gets up to Is mouth," Garge rasped. "Smith, get him ready. Then you and Sydney Bill carry him down." This was no Jest The two execu tloners - moved toward - the con demned, a pitiless shine in their eyes, in twenty seconds more ne would be . helpless, "his doom written, writ-ten, his cause lost the girl he loved slated for suicide or worse. Now, In this swift Interval of time lay his only fighting chance. , He raised his hand In a commanding command-ing gesture. Some echo of his lost power stopped Smith and Bill In their tracks. "You pack of cowards 1" His voice rumbled along the deserted strand, "ril fight anyone of you for my life." His gaze moved slowly from face to face, but he found no manly pride, only thwarted hatred, mob fury. There was no hope here. The very cowardice of those who heard him was his doom. The waves IIP7 I hetter break out quiet fir, - w U At First the Spectacle Seemed Like a Weird Dance, Rather Than a Duel to the Death. lapped the shore, and the moon cast her sinister spell, as he waited tor an answer in vain. But there was one of his enemies who had not heard the challenge. For him, sound did not exist and for reasons of his own, Garge's nim ble fingers still hung motionless. "Garge, tell Sandomar that If he s not a coward, he'll fight me man to man," Eric said with stinging contempt The ratty face seemed to weazen. Eric's faculties were preternaturally keen, fighting for his life, or they would never have taken warning from the instant's paralysis of the lirtlB. delicate hand.' Then he saw it rise boldly up, the fingers wrig ellne like the legs of a water spider. With a suffocating heart, Eric watched Sandomar's face. All he asked now, Ilckerlng hope at best was one eleam of human anger In the deeo-set eyes, an Instant's bar ing of the simian fangs. But the dark visage stayed a brutish mask. The great limp hands never quivered. quiv-ered. It was a cruelly effective answer. It implied a whale's Indifference to the snarls of a polar near, a bu-premacy bu-premacy of strength beyond need of test His henchmen squared their Their looks grew sav- shnnidera. tin nn ha .a i mrelv exultant They coma wore tesque, ominous. There was a sil very glint on the crags, a witch-1 light over the sea. The waves rolled up dreamily and lapped the pebbled strand; the wind whispered, sobbed softly, died away. Fabulous rubles glowed in the ashes of the supper nre. At last Sandomar's monotone streamed into the silence. "I see you caught him." "Just where you said he'd be," Sydney Bill answered. In hushed tones. "So ni try him." Sandomar went their will on their prisoner now. with many a grim Jest ana no nusn of shame on their drawn cheeks. . . . He was not the Person or me Law but only a man I like themselvesnot them-selvesnot the Island king by right of worth, but a cold bluffer, a ,Me . . . Eric's blood rippled cold as the moonlight on the tide. But suddenly It shot down his reins like liquid fire. . en San- rnnld not be so inhumanly trone . . . Eric remembered the Months of Garge's love. He whirled on the little Cockney with an oath. "Ion didn't tell him what I saldl" You're a liar r Sandomar leaned forward on hts boulder, his dead ears pricking up in vain. What's going on?" he demanded. It was more like a savage bark, than a man's voice. But Garge dared not tell him. Des perate, he pulled the thong to throttle throt-tle his enemy. Eric saw his wrist twist just in time. His right hand grasped the thong, holding It slack. Beside him, Big Smith flung back his spear, but Eric could not combat this, or even glance at it Playing his luck, he stood motionless and the point slowly fell You let Sandy alone." Garge spoke in bitter anguish, his hand on his knife-hllt "If you don't 111 carve your heart" Ignoring him, Eric stooped and began to smooth off the sand be tween himself and Sandomar. Per haps no act of his life demanded colder nerve than this, to take down his guard in the ring of the hungry pack. Then, with his right hand still grasping the thong, the fingers of his left forming a pencil, he wrote Immense letters in the sand: OOWABD There was no sound but the whis pering wind, the lapping waves. The sailors stared at the great indict ment stretching ten feet across the beach, then looked furtively at their master. Sandomar rose slowly, with re pressed strength. The jungle eyes lighted, the long arms hung bowed. "I didn't understand you before,' he muttered. "I do not hear and Garge cheated me. You ask to fight me man to man?", Eric nodded. "I'll give you what you ask, but you'll wish you'd chosen the tide. With weapons, or empty hands?" Eric feared the terrible paws to the marrow of his bones, so he pointed to Smith's spear. Sandomar shook his head. "I am not handy with a spear." Then, turning to Sydney Bill: "Get two tomahawks." Three of the men were armed with these stone-age weapons, heavy, sharp flints lashed to stout shafts, and Bill presented them quickly. Let Erlcssen take his choice; the dull voice ran on. "He'll need that little advantage." He stood inert, a grotesque, forlorn, and trag lc figure, while Eric weighed the two weapons and chose the lighter, "Now take off his noose, and stand back. If that little monkey of mine tries to interfere, break his Jaw.' The gorilla lumbered forward; the monkey and the wolves drew back. With wings on his feet and cold rapture in his. heart, Eric came weaving in. . . . Mind and all it means versus Might Law op posed to Chaos. Bright-faced Man, slim, young, erect eagerly listen ingagainst the ancient Jungle, stooped of shoulder, dark and low of brow, deaf to the far calls on the wind. At first the spectacle seemed like a weird dance, rather than a duel to the death. The tide began to crawl in, the wind died, and the moon sailed from star to star, without with-out one blow, struck home. Sandomar Sando-mar lumbered over the sand, hammering ham-mering the air, his left hand thrust out as a guard. The least of his short choppy blows wouia nave crushed Eric's skull, but always the quarry danced away. Doggedly he followed him, turning as ne turnea, wheeling, sometimes standing still and swaying as Eric tried to rush In, lunging like a bear at every opening. Eric sparred for time, wo one knew better than be that he was fighting a losing fight; his only hope lay in some fluke of luck that for one brief instant would equalize tne odds against him. He was much lighter on his feet than ma roe, sup pler, better co-ordinatea, dui mis could not begin to compensate for Sandomar's superhuman strengtn. He dared not feint because he could not pass his enemy's guard. He knew well that unless he struck full force, an overhead swing at close range, the huge left paw would catch and tear the weapon from his grasp. Never before had he realized the full reach and power pow-er of Sandomar's arms. The watchers were grimly patient pa-tient With them, it was Just a question ques-tion how long Eric could dodge the terrible flint They hated him with all the fury of their throwback; thpy ached to see him fall; yet they gave him credit for his dance of death. He was like a fencer with out a iolL -inej B'v strange, terrible incongruity of his norfPotlT-tlmed cam ngauoon V. rtMi imrh a Banner, uuu emu a mnn on the beach of such a sea. He was like Sandomar's shadow, as hard to catch and destroy. ThPT foneht to the water's edge and back to the ridge. They fought in the firelleht anfl me coia moon " . . . .. beams. Once they drew ciear io ine dee of the mud reef where the .ir met the tide: Eric heard It suck, and smack its middy rips, just in time. To back into It would mean to sin over u Untrlnff Hilt. His eyes sunk in his head. Cold sweat drenched him head to foot There was a growing heavy pain In bis upraised arm; he mast strike goon, if at all. Even now, should the chance offer, he could not deal a fnll-powered blow. soon, the weapon would fall from his haDL (TO BE OONTIXt-BD) ueerGeojraphic Names 1 - LamW for SMp Building As early as 1799 there was anx iety about shortage of timber for ship building. Early In the nine teenth century the situation became so threatening public lands were reserved re-served to supply live oak for naval vessels. It was not however, un til the IQf that national legislation. began a systematic treatment of the forest problem. An agency was set up under the commIsioner or agri culture and a scout was sent to Eu rope by congress to find out what was being done in the Old world. r.. Pronouneinc "Powhatan.' The bureau of American ethnol ogy says that the origin of Pow. hatan is as follows: paw at cas cade, waterfall; ban na a stream of water, a river. The English have condensed pawathanna to powhatan; in the original the accent ac-cent is on the "t" However, gen eral usage has placed the accent on the final syllable, and Pow ha tan is the accepted form. Cranberry Picker of Double Trouble, New Jersey. Prepartd bjr National Qeonraphlo Society, aahlnarton. D. C WNU Bervle. TT THILE there are reports that y V some mothers have already " " named their new-born babies ba-bies for the national recovery act Nlra, a small Iowa town, denies that Its name Is so modern. It was named for a woman more than a half century before Gen. Hugh Johnson John-son took oath of office. Names, cities and towns have many origins. First families have left their famous surnames to designate des-ignate post offices and railroad stations sta-tions in the United States, and in addition many humble folk have contributed con-tributed their more familiar appella-Hons appella-Hons such as Dad, Bill, Nick, Tim, Floe, Vlck and Maggie. Aside from family names the homely nouns and adjectives of the work-a-day world have found their way by toe score to maps and sign posts. Greasy Creek, Tub, Biscuit Cheap, Busy and Dimple are Kentucky towns. There are Horse Heaven, Humpulips, Goo8eprairie and Step-toe Step-toe in Washington state. Pie Town, Dusty, Gallup and High Rolls are In New Mexico; Jelly, Needles and Likely In California; Cali-fornia; and Sopchoppy, Perky and Frostproof In Florida. Illinois has Sandwich, Joy and Muddv. while across the Btate line in Indiana there are Speed, Economy, and Harmony. Trump, Vim, Flues and Joes are In Colorado; Bumble Bee, Sunglow, Wlkieup and Cactus In Arizona; Asbestos, Ladiesourg, Fearer and Appeal In siaryiana ; and Deadwater, Grandstone, Thor-ofare Thor-ofare and Merepolnt in Maine. In Minnesota there Is BftllciUD, Hannvland. Otter Tall. Money Creek, Knife River and Embarrass ; and in Mississippi, Arm, Lemon, Whynot, Chunky, Shivers and Soso. ifnntana'a Bay Horse. Big Arm, Glltedge and Pray are equally as odd as North Carolina's Nags Head, Bearwallow, Pee Dee, Shoe,- Toast Topknot and Worry; and Missouri's Rat Gang, Damalte, Clever ana Enough. Accord, Teatlcket ana reeaing Hills are In Massachusetts ; An vil Location, Inkster, Almcek ana unnnr In Michigan : Echo, Happy Jack and Water Proof In Louisiana ; inv in North Dakota: ana Nov elty, Overpeck, Long Bottom and Charm in Ohio. More of the Queer Names. Oklahoma's contribution to odd place names is Antlers, Hominy, iipir slim and Scraper: while Ore gon has Wagontlre, Sixes, Tyee, Izee and Fossil. New YorK state gives Horseheads, Sag Harbor, Silvernaus, Yaphank and Whiteface; and New Jersey, Colt's Neck, Peapack, Tran quility, Ghangewater ana unews. Goodnight Razor, nors oyuuaj. Happy and Gunsight are towns in Texas; while Pennsylvania nan Shrckshinny, Showers, Moosic ana Bird in Hand. Cowpens, Silver-street Silver-street Nine Times and Ninety Six are in South Carolina;, Faith, Tea and Twilight In South Dakota; Devil's Slide In Utah and Idol, In-skip, In-skip, Littlecrab and Shop Spring in Tennessee. . Ferry passengers calling "hey to "Si," a ferryman, are said to have named Haysd, Virginia. Other odd names in the Old Dominion are Modest Mod-est Town, Cap, Crabbottom, Dandy, Smoky Ordinary, Traffic Fancy Gap. Duty and Success; while its neighbor neigh-bor West Virginia, has Joker, Cut-H.J Cut-H.J Rmntv Hole. Dingy. Hazy, Odd, Pink aad Quick. In Wisconsin there is Luck, New DIgglns and Rib Lake; In Wyoming a Doggie, Badwater, -., rrnrsA and Ten Sleep, What Cheer, Promise City. Coin, v.j.-.. ctnnt and Wick are UUIXKI " t . Avna- rd. Deepstep, Dewy- tt Tr are In Georgia; Co- cola 11 a. Cuprum, Inkom and Notus ta Idaho; Coats. Peck and Potwin la Kansas: and rugnnoy, us tt! tcrnnt In Nebraska. xi. it . rinun of Arkansas place oarnes in a row sketch for the im aginative a thumb-nail srorj: u. Corner, Reform, iieeun, r'" , r iv. an4 T St VP v-.mu f wfimen of distinction of the worlds cities. BUUI U rivers, provinces, and Islands. Lady Franklin Island, near Baffin island .rrtle circle, is named for IU I the wife of Sir John Frauklln, the explorer who lost his life in first finding the Northwest passage through the great Ice of the t'oiar regions. There Is perhaps no more beautiful story of untiring devotion and persistent effort than that of Lady Jane Franklin who, after the failure of many attempts, fitted out a ship, which, though It brought back to her the definite proof of the loss of her husband s expedition, es tablished his achievement or ms on Ject Pocahontas and Victoria The picturesque stories of the Ut tie Indian princess Pocahontas al wava will hold a loved place in the hearts of American childhood. Counties Coun-ties in Iowa and West Virginia, vll- laces In Bond county, Illinois, ana Cape Girardeau county, Mississippi, and the Rocky mountains in Alberta, Canada, are-named for her. Queen Victoria's name Is wrapped around the British empire from the Mnltal of British Columbia, ovef the heart of Africa at Victoria Ny nnza and Victoria Falls, and be. yond into the Queensland and Vic toria in far-away Australia. America, too. in its early days of colonization paid its tribute to the queens of the mother country and to the eracious ladles who braved the dangers of untried shores with their lords. Elizabeth, a cape in Maine, and Elizabeth City In Vlr- elnia. as well as the state Itself, together with some twenty-five other olaces In the United States, bear tne name of the clever, witty, versatile coquette, who took the dissension torn England and whipped It Into a olace as a world power. Elizabeth Carteret the charming wife of one nf th aristocratic proprietors or New Jersey, shares with Queen Elizabeth some of the honors of the name, Elizabethtown in North Car ollna, and Elizabeth City, in New Jersey, are named for her, There wasn't any Martha of Marthas Mar-thas Vineyard. The first name is auDOosed to be a corruption of Mar tin, a friend of the discoverer of the island. The word Vineyard was added later on account of the wild irrarH found on the island. Vln- land, the name which Lief Erlckson gave the North American continent waa suceested in a similar manner, Maryland and Virginia are fairly heanattered with the names of the queens and princesses of England, the very state-names themselves being be-ing taken from that of Queen Henrietta Henri-etta Maria, the wife of Charles L and the disputably fortunate estate nf Elizabeth. Then, too, there are Annanolis. named for the wife of Tampa f of Eneland: and Anne Anindpl and Caroline counties. In Maryland, called after the wives of two of the Oalverts ; Fluvanna coun ts and the North Anna river in Vir ginla named for Queen Anne; ana Charlotte, Amelia and Caroline counties and Charlottesville, the hnm nf the University or Virginia, all called for the wives and daugh ters of the English kings. For Constantlne's Mother, St Helena, the rugged little Island in the Pacific which nas sucn a soothing effect upon the restless ten-rienriPB ten-rienriPB of autocrats, bears the name of the mother of Constantino the Great who, according to legend, dis-mvered dis-mvered the cross upon which Christ died, during a visit she made to the Holy Land. She was known in tne early days of Christianity for her religious seal and piety. Helena, Moot, though opinions differ as to the origin of the name, is said to ,. hwm so called because of the resemblance of Its location to that f sl Helena, The naminc of Hart county, Geor gia, Is a generous tribute to a Dixie tiM-oine of the Revolution, Nancy rtart- n. harbor Beara In Ireland is aald to have been named by Owen More, king of Munster during the reign of Conn of the Hundred Battles, Bat-tles, for his wife, a Spanish princess. prin-cess. No saint perhaps holds a dearer place in the Irish heart than St Ite, or Ide, often called Brigld of Munster, and we find her name In several variations In the names of churches and places throughout that country. Prehistoric Tooth Found The tooth of a marsupial lion, a beast which carried its young ta Its pouch as do kangaroos, was found at Molong, Australia. The tooth, with fossilized bones, was discovered by miners in a limestone cave 20 feet underground. The marsupial lion is believed to have lived In Australia from about 20,- 000.000 years ago until it became extinct 20,000 years ago. City of Bath This ancient Roman spa in Eng land was a fashionable resort of the "auallty" in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries. Half a million gallons of health-giving water wa-ter flowing dally from the hot springs, rich in radium emanation, draws thousands of visitors and tourists. Colors of Japan Iris The Jarjanese Iris ranee In color from white through the various shades of blue to the deepest pos sible red-purples and blue-purples, the segments being variegated with, darker veins and streaks, or some times plain. There are also some lovely pink ones. Fourth Largest Inland Sea The Aral sea In western Siberia Is the fourth largest inland sea of the world, having an area of 24,400 square miles. It ts salt but comparatively com-paratively less so than a number of other Inland seas, having a salinity salin-ity of only 10 per cent Butternut Hutk Stain The dark stain of the butternut husk was an Important source of dye In the time when homespun cotton cloth was worn by men ana boys. The color produced through its use resembled khaki. PARKER'S . i: i rAff o k If f J- I ihina, UuubuS-BtoHi Hair FalllaJ ; 1 .... rl, mnA 1 v . . v mttsm mil mnn mi ti l Vi"te! hrm Wti,.lWWt,N.T connection with Parker'a Hair Bsiam.Makes to hair soft and fluffy. 60 rati by mail or at d"Hr guts. liisoox Chemical Work, FatchoKn, N.X. Salt Lake City Directory Ued Pipe. Fittings & Valve Newly threaded and coupled for all porpoaea, Monaev Iron and Metal Co. 70S So. Srd West - Salt Lake City, Utah. rRISMON A NICHOLS ASS AYE RS AND CHEMISTS Office and LAttoratory 129-131 s. neat Tomple Bt., Halt Lake City, Utah. P. O. Tt 17ft 11 Mtlln anvaloDaa and DriOM furnished on request. 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