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Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah CIMARRON T By Edna Ftrber CepyT'l tt by Ida farba WHAT WENT BEFORE distressed, mn'am. We was going to bring the boy back safe enough. He wandered down here lookln" for his pa, he said." He was standing with one hand resting lightly, ten- Yancy Cravat, Just returned from the newly opened Indian terhe participated to ritory where the rtun over the border, relate! his adventures to a gathering of the Venable family. Yancey la a criminal lawyer, editor of the Wichita Wigwam, and husband of Sabra Cravat When the Run started, Yancey raced his pony derly, on Clm's head, and looking down at Sabra with a smile of ut ter sweetness. His was the almost caressing voice of the southwestern cowman and ranger. At this Sabra's anger, born of fright, vanished. Besides, he wus so young scarcely more than a boy. "Well," she explained, a little sheepishly, "I was worried. . . . My husband went off on the track of a deer . . . hours ago . . . he hasn't come back . . . then I came ont and when Qlm he was gone. I wat so so soft-spoke- n, against the thoroughbred mount of a glrL The thoroughbred broke two legs and when Yancey stopped to shoot St, the girl grabbed his pony and beat him to the land be wanted. Yancey, with his wife and son, Cimarron, start for the Oklahoma country. four-year-o- ld m CHAPTER Continued. II The wind, at certain periods of the year, blows almost without And when ceasing In Oklahoma. It rains the roads become slithering bogs of greasy red dough, so that a wagon will sink and slide at the same time. They bad two which they days of rain during plodded miserably, Inch by Inch. Clra squalled, Isaiah became Just a shivering black Imp of misery, and Sabra thought of her dimity-hunbed back home In Wichita; of the garden in the cool of the evening; f,t the family gathered In the din ing room ; of the pleasant food, the easy talk, the luxurious ease. At Pawnee Yancey saw fresh He saddled a horse doer tracks. nnrt was off. They had, before this, cjiught bass In the stream, and Vance? had shot prairie chicken mid quail, and Sabra had fried them delicately. But this was their first promise of big game. Sabra welcomed this unexpected halt. She and Isaiah carried wuter from the creek and washed a few bits of clothes and hung them to dry. She bathed Clin. She heated water for herself and bathed gratefully. She set Isaiah to gathering fuel for the evening meal, while Clm played In the shade of the clump of scrub oak. She was quite serene. She listened for the sound of horse's hoofs that would announce Yan cey's triumphant return. Vaguely the began to wonder If Yancey siiould not have returned by now, !e brushed ber bnlr thoroughly. '"Joying the motion, throwing It over her head and bending far tor- ward In that contortlonlstlc attl tudo required by her task. After she had braided It she decided to leave It In a long thick plait down her back. Audaciously she tied It with a bright red ribbon, smiling to think of what Yancey would say She wus She tidied the wagon. frankly w.trrled now. Nothing could happen, of course nothing could ' linn'!- - And In another part of l:er mind she thought that any one of a dozen dreadful things could happen. Indians. Why not! .ome wild thing In the woods. Broken bones. A full from his horse. He might lose bis way. Suppose die had to spend the night fllone here on the prairie with the terribly . hit !n't mint out this minute." A thrill bote of terror crept Into her vUe. Sli began to scream bit tiame, ber voice cracking gro ly. "dm I Clm J" She prayed ''li m she rnn, mumhllngly. "0 Cod, l" !p tne find him. u God, don't let anything happen to blra dm J ClmJ Clmr She ram to little mound that dipped suddenly and uneipecledly to a draw. And there. In hollow, came upon him, seated before rave In the aide of the hill, the frtmt and roof Ingeniously Umbered to make a log cabin. One might within Bv feet of It and r.etfr find It, Four men were elated about the doorstep outside the ru'le cabin, Clra was perched 1,0 t!.e knee of one of them, who waa narking butt for hlra. They were laughing and talking and munching and hating altogether time of lu Sabra! kneel sod Vt,!t hocame weak. She wat trctn-M'- t a She stumbled at she ran to-iltiltn. Her fac worked qocr-lr- . The mm sprang up, tbclr bands t tt.rir hips. "The man It cracking tinta for ," remarked Clm, aoclably, tnd t uppriailjr g'ad to c her. He man on whoa knee be sat tllm young fellow with mustache and red handker-v-l' rf V noiicd fahlon cowboy round hla throat He pnt the toy d ti rni!r a Sabra came up. and row wiih a (lnd of ray grace. "too ran you we bunt" ed C. an she Hammered. t 'l t.iirt M tears of mingled en g'r and rriirf Ti' atitn young man aocmed the ls f s'ilr urtr : aay thnuch the other three .lnicnl; older than be. wat Im real eorrj you ien,n, - . t bold-face- d d the newspaper. be" bark. faced, wat be? And or About nineteen yonnEnterJ What twenty low voice, tnd kind of "Oh, sweet, ta though he tang tenor. And hla teeth- -" Interrupted. Yanrey werrnt thryt The two at the tide. I mean. 1.1k -Do jou H"w did you Yea. knot him?" "Sort of," Yancey answerc-Ihoiiiihtfully. "It waa Sahra wat piqued. who lucky for ua It wna someone Because yoo know a you. probably, dont aoem to car much about hat might hat happened to Thin elr woirr us-w- happened." hare -Toil aald roo t pioneering." Welir snted to go A score of plant were teeming In hit mind. "You'll be all right," he had said. "A good night's sleep and everything'!! look rosy In the morn. Ing. Don't look so down In the You're going to mouth, honey. like It" ship-shap- load, looked round "1 lef biro playln by blt-l- f rlnht byah when An go fetcb tie wood. Aln' be In da wagoaT "No. No." "Might be be crep' In de print wacnn," She ran to the other "WegonT wagon, peered Inside, called, lie was not there. Together they looked under the "Clm I wajoii, behind tht trees. Clm I Cimarron Cravat, If you are hiding, I shall punlsb you If yon P4 meet you." The young man smiled more sweetly than ever, and the others looked at him, an Inexplicable glint of humor In their weather- beaten faces. "I sure thank yon, ma'am. We're movln' on, my friends here and me, Fronto. Floyd, how about yon getting a piece of deer meat for the lady, seeing she's been cheated of her supper. Now, If yon and the little fella don't mind slttln' np behind and before. why, III take you back a ways. You probably run fu'ther than you expected, ma'am, scared as you was." She bad, as a matter of fact, In ber terror, run almost balf a mile from cam p. He mounted first. His method of accomplishing this was something of a miracle. At one moment the horse was standing ready and be was at Its side. The next there was a flash, and he was on Its back It was like an optical illusion In which be' seemed to have been drawn to the saddle as a needle filet to the magnet. Clm he drew on to the nommel. holding him with one hand; Sabra, perched on the horse's rump, clung with both arms round the lad's slim waist. horsewoman, she Something of noticed bis fine Mexican saddle. From the studded with silver. sides of the saddle hung ered pockets whose bulge was the outline of gun. A slicker sucn as Is carried by those who ride the e trails made compact roll behind the saddle, suddenly she noticed that the young rider wore gloves. The sight of them as uneasy, made ber vaguely thonch tome memory had been stirred. She had never seen olalnsman wearing gloves. It was absurd, aomebow. A hundred feet or so from the camp be reined In his horse abruptly, balf turned In his saddle, and with hit free band swung Sabra gently to the ground, lean lost far from hit taddle tnd keep firm bold on Clm tnd reins ing t he did to. He placed the child In ber upraleed arms, wheeled, ana wat gone before the could open word of her lipt to frame thanks. The piece of deer meat, neatly wrapped, lay on the ground at ber feet. She ttood staring tfter the railnplng figure, dumbly. She took Clm't hand. Together they ran toward the camp. Isnlah had flr going, pot of coffee bubHit greeting to Clm was bling. tternly dmonltory. Ten minutes later Yancey galloped In, empty banded. -What chne he led me I Twice I thought I bad blm. I'd have run blm Into Texat If I hadn't thonght you'd sabra. for the first time since her superior to him; wat marrt;. felt hit tale of prowess. Impatient of She bad her own atory to tell, aplced with Indignation. ". . . and Just when I waa ready to die with fright, there he waa. talking to three four men. and alttlng on the knee of one of them at though he'd know blm all hla life, eating Dots," Yancey seemed leaa Interested In the pari that she and Clra had In plaved In the adventure than the appearance and behavior of the four men In the draw, and especial It the charming young man who bad to gallantly brought them balr-cov- Qmr dropped . ,' two children. In a sudden panic she stepped out of the wagon with the feeling tiiat she must have her own buman t!.ing near ber Clm, Isaiah to talk to. Clra was not there playing with bis bits of stone and twigs, lie had gone off with Isaiah to fiit tier fuel, though the bad forbidden It Isaiah, bit long arms full of dead leaves and small branches, was coming toward the wagon now. Clm was Dot with him. He . ...... "Won t you sit and rest yourself, ma'am?" suggested the spokesman. The words were hospitable enough, yet there was that In the boy's tone which conveyed to Sabra the suggestion that she and Clm bad bet ter be gone. She took Cim't hand. Now that her fright was past she thought she must have looked very silly running down the draw with her tears and her pigtail and ber screaming. She thanked them, us ing a little southern charm and southern drawl, which she often legitimately borrowed from the ancestral Venables for special oc casions such as this. "I'm ve'y grateful to you-allshe now said. "You've been mighty kind. If you would Just drop around to our camp I'm sure my husband would be delighted to g "Where's larrlaa. ITNTJ "This Is It Stir that fire. Isaiah. Yancey lifted bis great head and BeSabra, get that meat the heavy lids that usually drooped cause we're moving on." over the gray eyes and looked at "Now? Tonlghtt haft so." said the But It'a late the marshal. thought we were camping for other, as though In agreement at the night" the end of an argument "1 reckon "We'll eat and get going. Moon It goes fur killers and fur killers of . . . Well, boys, we'll light tonight I don't Just like it killers. here. There's been a lot of time be lopln'. Good luck to you." "Good luck to youl" responded lost this afternoon. We'll push on. In another day or so, with luck, Yancey, politely. we'll be In Osage, snug and safe." The three whirled their steeds Yancey spectacularly, raised their right lney ate hurriedly. seemed restless, anxious to be off. hands In salute; the horses pivoted Clm They Jolted on. Clm slept a lit on their hind legs prettily. tle ball of weariness. In the hock crowed with delight They were of the wagon. Isaiah drowsed be off In a cloud of red dust made redside Sabra. She must have dozed der by the last rays of the setting off, for suddenly the sun's rays sun. were sharply slanted, and she shiv Vancey gathered up his reins. ered with the cool of the prairie Sabra stared at him lu bewildered "But the person who Voices had awakened Indignation. night air. her. Three horsemen bad dashed shields a criminal Is Just as bad out of a little copse and stood In as the criminal himself. Isn't he?" the path of Yancey's lead wagon. Yancey looked back at ber around They were neavlly armed. Their the side of his wagon top. Ills smile bands rested on their guns. Their was mischievous, sparkling, Irresistfaces were grim. All three wore the ible. "Don't be righteous. Sabra. It's badge of United States marshals, middle class and a terrible trait but there was about them some In a woman." Late next day, Just before sunthing that announced this even be fore the eye was caught by their set after pushing on relentlessly The leader ad through the blistering sun of midbadge of office. dressed Yancey, his voice mild, even day, Yancey pointed with bis wagon whip to something that gentle, looked like a wallow of mud dotted "Howdy." with crazy shanties and tents. The"Howdy." "Where are you bound for, pard- - atrically be picked Clra np in bis arms so that the child, to might ner?" see. But he spoke to Snbrv "Osage." "There It Is." he said. That's The questioner's hand rested our frjtare home." lightly on the butt of the at his waist What might your CHAPTER III name be?" "Cravat Yancey Cravat." The spokesman's face lighted np LONG before the end ol that nightmarish day In Osjipe, with the slow, Incredulous smile of Sabra bad confronted her husbanfi "I'll be a delighted child. He turned his slow grin with blazing eyes. "1 won't bring on the man at his right on the man up my boy In a town like this I" It bad been a night and a day at bis left "Yancey Cravat I" he said again, as though they had not fantastic with untoward happenheard. ' I sure am pleased to make ings. Their wagons had rumbled wearily down the broad main street your acquaintance. Heard about of the settlement a raw gash In you till I feel like I knew you." Ail about on either "Why, thanks," replied lancey. the prairie. modest and laconic. side, were wooden shacks, and Inunusually Sabra knew then that Yancey was dians and dried mud and bitching and crude wagons playing one of his roles. lie would posts and dogs It looked like pictalk as they talked. Be one of like their own. tures Sabra had seen of California them. "Almln' to make quite a stay In In '49. They had spent that first night In a rooming house above on j Osage?" of the score of saloons that enliv "Aim to live there." "Go on I I've a notion to swear ened the main street Pawhuska avenue. It was called. The street you In as deputy marsnai now, abruptly at either end and darned If I am Citizens like you stopped Is what we need, and no mistake. became suddenly prairie. The greasy food set before thera Lawy'ln'?" In the eating house sickened Sabra. "I'm planning to take np my law She shrank from the slatternly practice In Osage, yes," Yancey anwho slammed the swered, "and start a newspaper as dishes downgirlin front of thera on well." oilcloth-coveretable. At this The three looked a little per- the with them there was same table at turbed at this. They glanced a long board accommoeach other, then at Yanrey, then only one, twenty sat red- dating perhaps "Oh, newsaway, uncomfortably. In great rough men faced talking paper, buhr There was little en- voices, eating with a mechanical thusiasm In the marshal's voice. and absent-mindethoroughness, "Well, we did have a newspaper potatoes, canned vegeta there for a little while In Osage, shovellug Into their months with bles, pie 'bout a week." Clra was terribly wide knives. "A daily?" awake and noisily unruly, excited "A weekly." the sounds and strangeness There was something sinister In by about blra. this. "What became of It?" Sabra bad taken hlra up to the "Well, seems the editor name of bare and clean enough little room died." Peeler which wat to be their shelter for "Who killed him?" wakethe night From wide-eyesurA little shadow of pained Clra had become suddenly fulness prise passed over the features of limp with sleep. Yancey bod gone the marshal, "lie was Just found out to see to the horses, to get dead one morning on the banks of what Information be could about shack for renting a bouse, and It's and those men Those dreadful men." "'For my part 1 bad rather be the first man among these fellows than the second ninti in Home.' He kissed her: was gone with crest flirt of hit coat tall! She heard hit light Hep clattering down the flimsy wooden stairs. She could distinguish bis beautiful vibrant voice among the raucous speech of the other men below. The boy wst asleep In rude box bed drawn up beside thelra. Black Isalab wat bedded down some little kennel outside. where In Sabra sank suspiciously down on the doubtful mattress. The wallt of the room were wsfer thin; mere Dine slats with cracks be From the street bclo tween. came women't thrill laughter, the sound of piano hammered horrl bly. Ilorset clattered by. Vnlcet came up in Jocose greeting; there were conversations and trgumentt ricrurlatlngly prolonged benenth Set somehow the her window. hnd fallen tnleep In utter exhaus tion, only to be twnkened by pit aerlct of bloodcurdling tol ahntt. yells, the crash and tlnkl of broken glass. Then cam screams of women, the sound of boraet gallop. Ing. She lay there, cowering. Clra Itlrred In hla bed. sighed deeply. slept again. She was too terrified to go to the window. Her ahlver. Ing teemed to shake the bed. Slit wanted to waken th child for mm' fort for company. Sim tummmed courage to go to th wlndo peered fearfully out Into the dim street below. Nothing. No on lt "It's horrible I I Pawhuika Avenue, It Wat Called the Canadian. Bullet wounds. But bulled la ill pretty much alike, out here. He might 'a' killed himself. plumb discouraged." The tlience fell again. Ytncey broke It "The first edition o the Oklnhoma Wigwam will be off the prest two weekt from tomor row." He gnthered np the relnt at though to end the chance meet"Well, ing, however tgreeablc. gentlemen, goodevenlng. Clad to meet you." The three did not budce. "What wt atopped to ark you." said the spokesman. In bit gentle drawl "wat, did you happen to glimpse four men anywhere on the mad? They're nesting somewhere In her, the Kid and Ills gang. Stole four homes, mhhed the bank at tied Fork, thot the cashier, and lit out for the prairie. Light cotnplWted tllm young II of 'era. The Kid It fella, light hair, red bandkcrrhlef toft spoken, and .Idea with glove on. Hut then yon know what like. Cravat well a I do." Yancey nodded In agreement "Kverjpody'a heard of the Kid. No, sir, I haven't seen blm. Ilavenl seen anybody the last three daye bunch Kaw on pony and but wagon of dirty Chryennea In Funny thing. I never yet knew a bad man who wannl light complect ed ir. anyway, bine or gray eyea." "Oh, say. nowl" pmteted the marshal, atmklng hla sandy mus- th atreet Yancey"! bleeding body lying In the mad; bt masked men. Nothing rcaln but the clink of gtnea and patea; tht tinny piano, the alsp of rtrda. with outterb!i She lone-longing, not for th sweet security of her bed hark In Wlchtta-i- hat seemed unreal bow out for nights In the wagon on lb prairit with no sound but the nutle of tha scrub oaka, the ocenMonal stamp or hordes' hoofs on dry clay, U rippling tf I rieart'y stream. It wat tntdhlc!,! when Tsncry rsm in She sat np In bed In her bleht-gowlong sleeved high necked, Iter eyes. In tier whit face, wer two b'aik bolra burned In tache. piece of paper. -V "What was II? What a Fact. Vnti take the Kid. and "What was whnl? Why atrnl the James boys, and Tom OThal-Hard- ", and tr whole Mnlllna gang yon alwp. ancatr You're "Tboe ahoia. And lb a trait "llow ttMUt youraeif? pretty good with the gun. from all Ing. And tr-- mm hollering. tccounts. And black aa crow." (TO PI! CoNTISl KUl wat Cot d b'i tr-n- l Sally Sez Machines That Are Almost Human fly Jtnien By E. C. TAYLOl Electric Fleas watch a circus of DID you ever ftens perform; sea them Imitating human beings In their stunts beneath a microscope? Science has trained electric "fleas to Uo much more. These electric "teas" are wonderful creatures; they have been made to put out fires, guard money, turn on street lights and perform other marvelous tasks. These "fleas" are cheap, too. For nkkle one can buy 50,000,000,- 000,000 of thera and they are easily put to work, according to Dr. Philips Thomas, research engineer of the Westinghouse Electric and labora Manufacturing company tories In Pittsburgh, Pa. An ounce of these "fleas" repre sents 100.000 kilowatt hours of energy. You press a button and 100,- 000,000 of them a second rss along the wires of your cJeciric toaster at the breakfast table each morning. Doctor Thomas christened them "fleas." These remarkably ener getic creatures of science are electrons, the "building simply blocks of the universe." They are all exactly alike and can be depended upon In their actions. Electric "fleas' mnile their public debut nt the annual meeting of the American Institute In New York In February. 19'J9. They watched the guests at dinner, counted them and guarded thera from a fire. Instead of speakers, a pan or mixed gasoline and kerosene was placed at the head of the table. Beside It was a device controlled eye. This Is a by a vacuum tube resembling nn electric light bulb and It Is so sensitive that It registers the most minute changes In light faster than the human eye can perceive them. Doctor Thomas struck a match to the pall of explosive mixture. It flamed, but Just as the flames leaped high, the new mechanical marvel went to work. It promptly put out the fire. The ll;.'ht of the flames when It reached the vacuum started that tube machinery brought a fire extinguisher Into play, and a blanket of p;;s poured over the flumes quickly smothered them. The Instrument looked something like a hooded camera. It moved around until It pointed at the and then released the flames, streams of Doctor Thomas predicts that this machine will eventually do away with expensive apparatus. "It Is almost human." he said. "I got too close to the Ore while experimenting one day and It squirt ed all over me. I'll swear I heard It chuckle. It would be operated from ceilings, with a number of photo cell units and wide area lenses covering the floor. The pres ent sprinkler system needs heat to turn It on. This will need only the light from the fire, and It would operate In the restricted surface of the light." demons! ration of As another what bis harnessed electric "Hens' can do, Ivwtor Thom:a presented "nnstus," hi mechanical man. with nn apple on hla head and the William Tell eplsodt. Ills bow and arrow were ultra modern. It shot light rays Instead of arrows. The light flashed &nd the apple fell. Bnatiis stood up and bowed and spoke a few words to his audience, then sat down again. All this was done through the medium of the new vacuum tubes, In which the electric "fleas perform at the bidding of their scientist trainer. Scientists are at work jerfectlng ttila device for work In the Indua-trle- a on a large teal. New Intimations are being given continually, said Doctor Thomaa, of the vast scope of the tarti the electric "fleat" may perform. One demonstration showed that It could be made to turn on tnd off the street lights of city. The photoelectric tube, highly sensitive to the fading light of day, aerlet of aireet llghta turned on a duk fell, and when daylight approached the neit morning, it turned them off. This highly sensitive dcvlc by alight variatona In light la now at work In runny branches of Industry. It mntchrt n.lora. aorta fruit and vegetable! and doea many It in the other (aka that A of thinking machine. cln lutmMt nil. feln UncompWteJ Tatit The N:flce knon aa Dhk'a pr-a-r Intended log la f'r NcJoni!le. sa maMcnr. The build masi of Spanish many mm mm SUMMER TERM STARTS JUNE 1ST Special and Regular Courses All Summer students to earn living expenses. Opportunitiea for cmcr' flitcliir. pai"u rtti. to N. T airurture ruiitaliilng It g thirds competed, but lMit ftom prg't and M!"ire for th the ronctife ba t W to ovtcriotflie and ttek d"wn. thla build ng would If of the lnri-r- t and ba bfn one reid'-trIn AmeriHioat beautiful ca, or ti leat along the lludaon. fr Call, write, or phone for full information. l.e-cu- n m f$jfft jpjj7, Jf ,tf Forest Dale Potato Chips N. JLL," Equal For Crbpwu ma Quality Kwt.rj 47 Ktmlncloa B.U U.. fh,--T. Hr A. ni GASOLINE el1l,mt. Packed With Power Arch Support Crutches Et.n.Km Sho EU.lie Hucr, In W In Salt Ph. waa. :4 Satisfaction Guaranty w. Third 8. I 8it Lahi citr. Vu Yin j, llit Etbliahl ZE WEB". FrQm The first parachute descent from an airplane was made in 1912 at St. Louis by Captain Berry. in s'1 Thomas Electric Co. "Any community that is capable ptMrs motors water wheels of riming and manufacturing aurh Bon.iiT hold rkpairkd 10 bVlt :idv1rrie,,r ! pr,r,uct? aa the Intermountain region does. Uncle Eben ahould receive all powtible encour- u't easy", said Unci awaya agement and aupport by the home Ebon, "to show yoh independenca consumption of tuch good. and quit vork. Startin' it np asrin Homo purchase or home products j, iab!o to he de hard part." makes home prosperity." Washington SUr. xzi ana.- " M A KG A It ET C H A Y KR, Berry Cups and Crates men UTAH CHERRY CRATES SCHOOL OF KE Third rUor, t'lift HUf . Hall Uke Cllr. VU farina- Uaalnaa I'l.nolnf if IlKALTY-CTLT- l Waa. - tWXJ ffiff T.TtttTTr SLEEP O.N Bt FjicvaK-A- t WON la Ha. Mam in an ,Ke like the present they even resent being: on their feet Cappcr't Weekly. BLUE SEAL CLEANSER LIGHTS l.aa Any Rc.pnru.e? men Are Advertiser deirrs to meet ont who la not," read a want td- London ncwapa- vertiaement in recently , rr - V tM jVf . Kal - Tla-T- lOUr etJ article on "Why you thentd aae Intermountain made Goods" Similar to above. Send your atory in proae or ere to Intermoun- ul(l frodurtt Column .P. O. Hot 1313, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in thle column yon will QCf Art reccirecheck forVJ"" at Aitata ta ,nl "" to ,""-hi - S"d ftrr mO Ckrla. Ural rf taum tar tnallt Mk IH llbmil Ik aIB Mai olataka a at e.lan faa hat la iHtariaa. Wrha fnaatlm O.aaalara W. K. Rat Ida, tall Lata City. V-- i " APEX OLIVE OIL IMlBMOfXTAI C-'fii'b- taa Ireaal, Peaceful Indiana The Ilavaigpal Indiana, whow rervaUon la in the Crml Canyon National park, boant that none of their tribe hat ever kill'd a white man. AN 1U jwvce. W ANTRDt Naa VM,. 1 OnO tffrVj " akl bncrry Drifted - .lira. 4 far Itan muukt as by never repeating 5.00 tu" in " liar. Evidence of Discretion U not A wund dillCTe0oB indicated by never making a mu S0-or- d ALL THE LATEST AWNING STRIPE PATTERNS w w.t.ti. Rait lata city " " "Shakcpcare says til YOt'R PKAt.FR BEDI THE SPERE TENT & AWNING MIG. CO. " ASK City Ship Small Tht ittona, In which Magellan first tailed around tht world, wss ft ship of only 85 tons displacement. AUTO DISTRIBUTORS -'- M.gcll... AUTO TENTt ZrZrZ"Z riK&aU c Hardware CO. BULK Paooocri Coaroaurto halt l itni h'n J tl!AJ7BESS MFC, t (). CLAUDE J Almost Impossible Ebcrhardt's Moorest Inner Spring Mattresses SALTa ' BOX CO. 8a th Weal LaVa Cllr. Utah SALT LAKE awaiiata Oar flaa talr. Vrita .r i.iai.,. $Wrf Not Work f On Aaltier "Th Arabian Nights' Entertain roileciion of anment" It merpiy hlch wer cient oriental talea first collected In their present form tlKttlt th middle of th Fifteenth century, probaUy In Cairo. Th true origin and tuttiortiip of th teen lo. various stortea ha C.altand tranlii!rd them Anton! I7n and 17'H Into French tnd through hit work the Arabian er Introduce! to lair Nlfihtt pean. Among Mo!amu.dnna th Arabian Nights r b"t retarded ta twlong'ng la pollt literature and tliime who red thrrn tr open tu th church of having a depraved taste. Pathfinder Magarin. raMle, These Brands Are Intermountain Made And Deserve Your Support c photo-electri- (B Many local manufacturers and producers have been saved by that life belt. raopt'CT Life Stary of KUt The kiw developed out ef the primitive habit of rubbing tiiapa a wi'.h o man whn our equal Sn the tori! trale. If you met superior, then you rubbed bis face with yeur rmse. In lime, ft beraroe the rulom for two p"rna who were greeting earn other to tou to tips in'ra l of noaea. And years laier the ki lost iU reremonial importance and became an alTeriinnale pture ivre frietidi or lover. But many racr "(ill rrUin salutation. Tht Ma- rubbing ai t rn Induration Imperative Ai ti fiot in any p.. tense an apple until it la ripe, so a human txintr is not in any proper aenre t human being until he it edura'ad. Horace Mann. , m, E. r" T -- i orU cf New Zealand fmi tVIr nodi's If rethrr whrn ihey meet, an I In Mrar eia It is the cutom to put your re tUc prron's and to snift. to the other Itudding Iliptomatt The fiim!cr of tpplicanU ta the I'niti'd Mjilra foreipn STvice ex am nfco ia pot uniform frotn year to year, anj li is difficult to ghre tt aveiace that would be tcpr arntalive. In the lat few years at many a 2 0 hav taken the for rirn bout fertile 10 to tO eafninatinn icr crnt patea. tnd |