OCR Text |
Show THE LEW SUN. LEW, UTAH . ; CLASSIFIED Area of U. S. Push in North Pacific SfcFLICKA' DEPARTMENT RAZOR BLADES - MA . . I " v ..is I to lea-year-old !tof .. ride ny " on ill ranch, but be Z rtfuie to 1V. ium l''irsd-i improve and P uM 'eslw . thai ' f".Tw lust what Ken fw j the w" " i hit uu no rt" -f his older brotner, Y. manajee to do t .winces ner nu " ... nasi, and Ken .wlU. the story. "Pheti :e wheri spewfcl typewr; ils of tj ...PrJ Walfori crostf 'te, pint, iloakrood whitewasl among i old J i hot se housei f wai hU 4llti !4-hour jl ng tbtoul welkrJ social y !StJ . . , ss drench! wple in seating to ids (or. id men They are and the stf ? pity embi de i show id stale gt! girl holdii while i It are made le future. into schools Is beitM ibeingki lace. M mk that si d in the sai maon pci ar agencies made thai rywhere taS w ... Ho J Sic jams m tche. :ed anrH uilding wx Joints, ng the enter! rf Broadway all gaiety per at midrJ where to4 He their op! . .Themal istrologers he crystal ing (or W!e in the clogge terviews, w natives ol tt he war toe emselves W , , FoliScos .oughts to snored ae s they lose tni CHAPTER VI ooe morning in tht fid to face the win-Wa win-Wa L,i faintly KfhVot uP -i stood f.l hriehten in the trje n" .nnueh light yet for r thing clearly. It ..A f near-darkness, in ...-d ond a" " u: hdowy. His gating Ho tike that. too. !v familiar footing in h "Lathing was changed. St e' , intn him . nao - Kvpn rim . c n neiciiv. . iMV einpo JccA him the colt, j h-Mted him as il he it But SOmeuiu'B too; and someumes it so that he was in a U was outside. The door it was wmay ana u.u- I hurriedly, loaay ur Umust choose his colt He fcleup now onio uic i'6 , it the yearlings agaui. ;tin dark when be stole out t door and felt the terrace Ljer bis feet wo one naa That was good, tie tnt Howard along. Going s early morning was almost into the underwater , tie world of a picture, or U. Not quite so 6afe as because he did have to i torse, or, if he was climb- Castle Rock, he had to be bii footing, but still noth- l the ordinary world of the Lady was a big red roan u;if, . , black tail and mane. She moved quickly; her head had a proud, high carriage; her dark eyes were full and Intelligent Ken slid around her, close to her haunches, one hand on her tail, and then gave her a whack and said "Get over!" The mare moved over with her quick strong step and Ken rubbed down her other side. He put on the saddle blanket then the saddle, and cinched it as tight as he could, remembering re-membering the blanket he had lost-lastly lost-lastly the bridle she had finished her oats. He led her out of the corral and shut the gate. There was a rock there upon which he often stood to mount the tallest horses. He led Lady up to it. First he tried the cinch again. Loose! She always blew herself up when she was being saddled. That was what he had forgotten to do the other day with Cigarette. He took the cinch up three more holes, mount-ed, mount-ed, and moved off. The four broncs that Ross was breaking were grazing in the Sta ble Pasture close by the corrals, and when they saw him, they trotted over to him, and Ken drew rein and stood there, letting them come ud and sniff and nicker at Lady; and she nickered back. When he went on they followed for a little while. and then turned back to the corrals waiting for their oats, he thought. Ross always gave each one a measure meas-ure of oats before he worked them. softly across the Green a Pasture to get his horse. been a night wanderer he had learned to walk li climb over the edge of M would wake, hearing a tie hall or living room, the baby's crib empty and i for him. Mm somewhere in the tiling or standing unsteadi- !iil of his nightgown and p him up and carry him i tying the bottom of his r in a knot with his feet f. be merely became more balancing. Then she hob-tith hob-tith a soft diaper, but he a swing both feet together sae of his crib, hang with pey bands, drop down, and pad of walk. was older, sometimes moots in the night ma that herself. Rest- table to sleep, she would m bed, he a robe around ?Ulow and blanket and go hammock, and lie with to the sky, watching the ad Lady just inside th 4e Calf Pasture, and when as hand and srwki. t JU r i move away but let d of her halter and lead WashmgtoJ; . Twilight' the city s which m o notce . hnnt Of m h mid-to evening P, .a Tniries M vinieht . osphereofl t i get a o4 hinged "N' gobbling wo n ratchet .aeer to P t-crazy) ..ir home House and K do doing doing- biawtaH ....irhtelH L!t dot oiesatPl - h toWB" -he tw . x?4 "Might's well keep him going and git it outen his system." Their names were Gangway, Don, Rumba and Blazes. Sometimes, Ken thought, as he cantered toward the County Road gate, the names his mother gave the colts in their first summer didn't stick, because the colts changed so. There had been Irish Elegance, so smooth and classy-looking the first summer that Nell said she was naming nam-ing him after a beautiful, copper-colored California rose. But the second sec-ond summer he had turned into a little mick, so they dropped the Elegance Ele-gance and just call him Irish. Ross was having a tough time breaking Gangway, a big blood bay out of Taggert, the tallest and hand somest of the four. Yesterday Ken and Howard had sat on the corral fence watching Ross working with him. Gangway was bucking, and Ross had called to Howard to open the corral gate and let him out. The horse bucked out the gate with him, and Ross swung his quirt and srjurred him, and Gangway sun- fished and cork-screwed and jack- knifed. Ross sat with a little grin and his quirt going all the time, and when he came past Ken, ex Dlodine in great grass-hopper leaps, he said, "Might s well keep him goin and git it outen his system. When it was over and he had rid den Gangway back into the corral and dismounted, Ross went over w the fence and stood hanging on to it vomiting. Ken had to dismount to open the gate to the County Road. He was careful to hold the rein tight as he led Lady through and closed the gate behind him. He found another rock to mount by and started up the Saddle Back. All the clouds had turned pink, and behind them the sky was a faraway, far-away, fiery blue. The higher he climbed the wider the sky was, and the farther stretched the fleet of tattered clouds. They were getting more color every ev-ery minute, some of them blazed ah the stars had dis- i7T "P the little th appeared except one. which snone th corrals I oeiween lwo cluuua' Lady wanted ner neaa. There was a strong current of sympathy between the boy and the mare. When he wanted to stop and look around she understood perfectly perfect-ly and stood with ears pricked and head turning, absorbed in.ccntem ' riding Lady all week exercising tho ing for Rocket t. yearlings. He had gone yearlines sn, j HJhis mother had rid- They hadn't been them anvwhero tie. they !nmnJ ... litre a a. I Win. .k ..'t6'",CUl. . " ana saw -m Of cn W n,- tt. i. U1s "own b was beautiful .... y -uue m suns f. had ridden rtn his lu ie ..Tt. . "smounted ieii , 'ear 01 PjbimV. "tc aarK Ntob,.". k J11013 mark- k Tlr. and Bin,... con- beyond C -aung." she told U5leetandKlossv. SO f.,11 . . ..,. Kl WOUld buret 5 hiA v. ft.J",.lne r,ch feel own. but hem an and "ta tv,. were the d,":106 corrals. Prboxin I said, nJ wr: anl began "tToiause addles do it any- ?JUst M he was- ex-actly ex-actly the moment when he had had enough she knew it and would uve wrward without the tienal. Today she was excited by the col-or col-or and the electric quality et the air -u u Ieeung of movement in the grass and the sky, and she kept asking for a free rein. When Ken gave it to her, she stretched out her nose and went up the steepest part of the Saddle Back at a gallon. Ken looked for tho where they had been yesterday but there was no sign of them. He rode around for an hour, thinking that Shorty would have taken him rigw to them, but Lady didn't have that much sense, she was Just ex-cited ex-cited and wanting to run in any direction. All the sunrise enlnr had gone now, and the torn shreds of clouds were purple and gray and stormy looking. Ken rode up to the highest nenit of the Saddle Back so that he could look all around for dozens of miles; but the range was empty, not a head of stock anywhere. Still, he knew they could be hidden in the ioids of the hills and never show an ear but which fold? Which hill? He rode on. and suddenly, com. ing around a curve, he saw Banner standing out in front of the brood mares, intent and alert gathered for action. Ken had barely time to turn his head when he saw Rocket and a sorrel sor-rel filly cantering toward the bunch, and then he saw Banner trot out to meet them with lowered head and an expression of irresistible intention inten-tion in his whole body. Rocket and the young sorrel halted halt-ed together. Rocket whinnied. Banner Ban-ner screamed. His head snaked along the grass. He reached them and circled around them both. Rocket began to gallop away. Banner Ban-ner pursued, first on one side of her then on the other. The sorrel colt clung close to its mother's side, whinnying nervously. She got in Banner's way. He gave a vicious, snarling neigh, plunged at the little lit-tle one and bit it in the ribs. It screamed and fled, ' Banner pursuing. pursu-ing. Lady was taut and trembling with excitement as Ken was himself. The brood mares, too, were motionless, motion-less, watching the chase. The filly showed Banner a clean pair of heels. How she could run! Rocket trotted nervously up and down near the brood mares. The filly made a big circle, with Banner Ban-ner thundering after her. She came back to the mares, and as -she passed them Banner swerved and went for Rocket. The filly fled past Ken. He saw frightened eyes In a tangle of streaming hair and slim legs, and a pang went through him. For a fraction of a second she had looked at him, and it was like an appeal. He wheeled his mount and followed her, turning in the saddle to look back at Rocket Rocket was cantering away again with Banner close beside her and before the curve of a hill shut them from view. Ken saw her come to a stop, and the great body of the stallion stal-lion rear over her. For a moment the two of them, twisted into one shape, were sculptured against the stormy sky. When Ken turned and looked again for the filly she was nowhere in sight He pulled Lady up short. The range was empty, with no movement but the clouds and the grass, and no sound but the panting pant-ing of the mare he rode and the thud of his own heart beating. ' Rocket's colt a yearling, a filly and his own. He hadn't had to choose one after all. She had just come to him. His own because of that second's cry for help that had come from her eyes to his; his own because of her wild beauty and speed, his own because his heart burned within him at the sight and thought of her; his own because well, just his own., Then, from far ahead of him came an excited whinny another and another. an-other. The filly appeared from nowhere, no-where, a tiny shape, running on a ridge in front of him, tail streaming against the dark tattered clouds, she plunged over the ridge, he heard more whinnies, he kicked Lady in the ribs and gave her her head, and in a few moments stood on the ridge, looking down, and saw the beautiful filly rejoining the band of yearlings, who welcomed her with excited chatterings as school-chil-dren welcome each other at reunion in the falL Ken rode down the mountain in a daze of happiness. No dream he had ever had, no Imagination of adventure or triumph could touch this moment He reit as a ne naa burst out of his old self and was something entirely new-and that the world had burst into something new too. So this was it this was what being alive meant Oh. my filly, fil-ly, my filly, my beautiful- 'For once you're back to breakfast break-fast on time," said Rob, as Ken took his seat at the table. Ever since she had read in the Government bulletins that all prize stock was raised on elaborate formulas for-mulas of mixed grains-or ground oats and had noticed that the dogs, when they were hungry, squirmed through the wire fence into the calves' corral and ate the ground oats from the feed boxes, oatmeal had t place on her breakfast table. no he comtimedj ATW ViutS, t dD t? nl PJ .ft? FOX ISLANDS NEAR ISLANDS 7SBMJ- k amchithT ISLANDS n fcxh p RAT ISLANDS WA"D 0 C M KENT BLADES h.lm r ftMW raw Xbe Outstanding Bladl Vlklo PLANTS Bardr Tomat Plants, 1,800 oy 100 postpaid Sl.oo, (xpiess collect $5 00. Crystal Wax Oniorv eed pouna posTpH.n .j... MEAT OVERTON, NEVADA. GUERNSEY HEIFERS , HIOH GRADE GUERNSEY HEIFERS, under one year and yearling! past. Also rRkTAN FEATHERS WANTED FEATHERS WANTED, NEW OR OLD Ship "write to Sterling Feather Company got) N. Breadwajr, St, Louis, Missouri. I! rniPI1Tll Soothe Itch of simple MtUIUHim rashes -jtj, Mexsana, POWDER FOR formerly Mexican FAMILY USE diaper rash.haat rash. Bay War Savings Bonds The rtraterfo nosltlon of Attn Island. In the Aleutians, where the navy landed strong forces to engage Japanese troops, is graphically shown In this official U. S. navy map. Japanese troops occup.ea w.c about a year ago. In the upper left hand corner Is a chart of the comparative distances from Attu U vari- ous points in the Pacific area. Assembly line in Southwestern Pacific i i ' -WMAfHr w?' ' f m ! I SAID GOOD-BYE TO COIiSTIPATIOll Harsh, medicinal laxatives only griped me and never really stopped my constlpa- , tion. It always came back. Then I found out why. I lust wasnt taking on enough, 'bulk"-formlng foods. So X started eating kellogq's ail-bran regularly and drinking plenty of water. And I "Joined the Regulars!" Regu-lars!" That's because kellogq's ail-bran geta at the cause of constipation like mine and corrects it by helping to form a soft, bulky mass In the intestines. If your trouble Is vhat mine was, why not try XELLOOO'S ALB-BSAN? It'S made by Kellogg's in Battle Creek ana tastes aweu. grovement tkthlna RmIhciI allavi irritoUon el extctnally cauitd pimple, that hartcninj healing. Try it today I OINTMENT r AND SOAP their mass Droduction assembly line methods with them to the Southwest Pacific. Here troops take parts of trucks, Jeeps and ambulances as they come from the ships and put them through the line. One improvement on the assembly line system Is their Change ever. When the boys tire of one operation, a command switches all members of the line to a new position ana a new Job. Left, rear running gear of a two-ton truck Is assembled. Right, a cab Is added to the truck and soon it will be ready for duty In a battle zone; Maltese Tribute to Stalingrad U y- fx ' 1 r--fev e-4fn A stone shelter on Malta, most bombed 6pot on the earth, bears the name "Stalingrad." It is a tribute from Malta to the Russian city which also rocked under Nazi mass raids, yet held out grimly to victory. Be-neath Be-neath Malta a great system ef subterranean workshops hewn from solid rock were the battle stations of thousands of workers who made British tools of war even as Axis bombs exploded above tnem. She's a Major $ Kills A nuir One ounce makes tlx gallons I of aphis ipray Full direo f tlons oo label. Insist on f M factory sealed packages. Tomno it-Nooooj 1 omwcai m coi location, mcHnm .-1 touitviui. mutucm t-II t) t Army Officers Quartered in Metal TXC " 1 1 Mi J f " w 1 , o: r , ,..ii fat i r These metal buOdings In Iran were formerly used for storing grain. Vnw thrT serve as officers' quarters for U. S. forces in that country. Three tenants standing outside of their peculiar homes are, left to right. Captains B. E. Seitsinger, ra?rfiei!l, Iowa; J. w. Coier, ouisvuie, ny.; and S. L. Clayton, Minneajoij, nur.n. The first woman physician to be commissioned directly Into the United States army Is Dr. Margaret D. Craighill. She Is shown being sworn in as a major by Col. Fred erick Schoenfeld, commanding of ficer of the Philadelphia recruiting district. Outta My Way yyii'"v;yiyiw..yii.wti,mw) What Is the most welcome gift you can send to a man in the service? Well, surveys among service men themselves show that one of the favorite packages from home are cigarettes. And first choice among men in all the services serv-ices is Camel, based on the actual sales records in Post Exchanges and Canteens. Though there are cow Post Office restrictions on packages to overseas Army' men, you can still send Camels to soldiers sol-diers in the U. S., and to Sailors, Marines, and Coast Guardsmen wherever they are. Adv. vnn uiruru uiun nirrra rnnu HOT MvM tt you suffer from hot flashes), dizziness, dizzi-ness, distress at "Irregularities", are weak, nervous, irritable, blue at times dua to the functional "middle-age" period in a woman's Uls try Lydla S. Plnkbam's Vegetable Vege-table Compound the best-known tnedlotn you can buy today that's made especially tor women. Plnkbam's Compound has helped vnousanoa upon thousands ox women wom-en to relieve such annoying symptoms. symp-toms. Follow label directions. Plnkbam's Plnk-bam's Compouad Is vortK tryingl WNU W 22-43 7. ' .v.. .-wwi-itnirtsa Dashing over the home plate, j Babe Barna of the New York Giants knocks both ball and glove from the hands of Catcher Hernandes of the j Chicago Cubs during a tight game 1 at the Pols Grounds in New York. BBS For Yon To Feel Well tl hears every day, T days every week, sever stopping, the kidneys Blur waste suitter (ram the blood. .II mora people were aware ef hew the BMneyt ssust eonstaatly remove but-pins but-pins fioid, ezoess acids and other wests matter that cannot stay in the blood withoat injury U health, there would be better understanding ol way the whole system is upset when kidneys fail so iunctiou properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urlna-tiom urlna-tiom sometimes warns that somethinc is wrouf. You may suffer Bagg-iac oad.-ehe, oad.-ehe, hesdachee, dizziness, rheumzti. pains, getting up at nights, swelling. Why not try Dn PilUI You wO bo using a medicine recommended tho country ever. Doan't stimulate the f uno tioa of the kidneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood. They contain nothing harmful. Get Doss's today. Use with confidence. At all drug stores. 1 1 |