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Show THE MURRAY EAGLE 7 HE M i lm URR AY EAGLE i Wallace, Editor C. B. BY ROBERT down-rollin- cover from the two killers near the fire. A drift enabled him to crawl to another tree without being seen by the man off to the left. A sideward shift brought him to the shallow channel of the frozen spring rill. He swim? the body of the constable across his shoulders, stepped Into his siH'Wshoes, and ran aslant downslope. Every few seconds that passed without the roar of a rifle behind him, meant a widened margin of safety. Whatever the cause of their delay, he had gained a long start before more yells told him they had cut his trail. At the outburst, Gnrth eased off a little on his desperate speed. His fast mushing had already covered of the distance to the stream. It was now a simple matter of running on to Increase his handicap over the killers. Only a little time would be needed to cast free the cabin plane. As she drifted out In the current, the cross-winwould swing her around. Then n quick run out the water lane, and the take-offClose ahead, he caught sight of Lilith IUniill. She was sitting on her snowshoes. Her right foot was drawn up on her left knee, and she was rubbing hard at the ankle. At sight of the limp body on Garth's shoulders, she started up, horrified. "Oh, oh, Alan! Is is he $li0 50 $2.00 LIQUOR GETS SNUBBED WILL liquor withstand the sudden blow from an unexpected quarter? Smugly impervious to the attacks of such ophad ponents as Oipsv Smith and the late Billy Sunday, itPost. of Emily failed to protect" itself against the followers Lushed to the wall with its own battering ram of "smartness" can it longer hold its position in polite society, now that America's custodian of etiquette has withdrawn its vaunted prop? Mrs. Post has been known for the last twenty years or so as America's "Authority on modern manners and social customs," acording to her listing in Who's Who." So the young wouhLbc "smart" people will pay at least some attention when they read what Mrs. Post has recently written in her weekly newspaper columns, in reply to a reader's request for information concening the conventions governing cocktail drinking': It seems to me that the trend among the youngest fashionables is away from the idea that hard drinking is "smart." three-fourth- brothers and sisters who, during the days, became dependent upon continuous stimulant, depend upon it still. But among the really smart and young there would seem to be signs of a reaction. For example, in a certain ultra fashionable club a few weeks ago there was an older group men and women in the thirties who, following the practice that has been in force for however many years it ns, were being served all varieties of potent drinks. On the other side of the room a younger group of those at the beginning of tea their twenties were gathered around an table eating bread and butter sandwiches and drinking tea. A short while ago a group of the same age would have been shaking gin or drinking whisky and soda. At a dance given lately for a leading debutante in the South, at the bar, around which the dancers constantly crowded, the most popular drink was milk. Here are signs that American youth thinks for itself) and that it is refusing to be deceived by flattering lies of an avaricious liquor trade, feeding1 it specious argument for the cultivation of abnormal taste. From The Christian Science Monitor. k BUSINESS-PROFESSIONAL- 1 g g "Murdered. And you 0 d! you here, all this way from the plane. Rifle gone. They're coining. (let up go back." "Coming!" she cried. "That murderer! He'll kill you. too! Go on, Alan. Hurry. I'll follow." She turned around on her right foot without a wince or groan and bent to slip her moccasins under the toe thongs of the snowshoes. Deceived Into thinking her sprain not serious Carth slued around her and ran on at his best gait. He would get the body of Constable Dillon aboard the plane and mush back for the girl. If she followed even at an ordinary walking pace there might yet be time to get away. He made the plane In short order and got the dead policeman to the cabin by way of the wing. Leaping off, he rushed bark at top speed to meet Lllltli. He had to go all the way to where he had left her. She had slung the snowshoes on her back, floundered through the firt drift, ami cnl!:ied. When he came up, she was rubbing snow on her bared ankle. She looked up with pain and at him. white-facedespair. "I tried. Alan. I can't even walk," she said, "fio hack. It's all my fault. Hurry and save yourself. Maybe I can delay him." For reply. Garth swung her up across tils shoulders and headed again for the plane. There still might he time. He put all his strength Into another burst of speed. They came to the glacier stream, with no sight or sound of the pursuers behind them. Garth lifted the girl fnm hU shoulder and set her on the front edge of the monoplane wing. He grasped hold to vault up beside her. A bullet fanned the glrl'g cheek. Another bullet struck the wing edge between her and.Gnrth. He Jerked her down off the wing. The firing ceased. After murdering Constable Dillon but before starting to trull Garth. Hurby must have sent one of his men running along the foot of the tundra sloH to fake possession of the planes. Garth had outrun the miner. Hut the man bad come with'-Ieasy rltle range and clear rlew of the plane at least of its upper parts. Garth did not hesitate a spilt see. ond. He carried Mlith to the moor-Intree and slashed the line with his knife. Then, diking the girl pickaback, he set off up the stream bank. HU one backward glance showed Id in that the plane win drifting out Into the lake. But, the eros wlnd had died doccn. The lessened stream current could be counted upon t carry the plane "out beyond reach before It was stopped by the skim ACAIX the United States has come to the end of a year of epochal importance in uur history again our 125,OOU,OUO peopje enter a new year with hope and ambition and courage. During the year just closed industry and agriculture, the only .sources of wealth and employment, recovered some of the ground hot during the worst or depression. Most industries made progress some even came close to the production records attained during VJJ. Near the end of 193o, business as a whole reached the highest point since early 1931. Business commentators are almost unanimous m expecting V)M to show improvement over 1935. Even so, business does not feel the jubilance it would normally feel under such circumstances, nor docs agriculture. The upturn in business is encouraging; stability. While the financial and industrial barometer Continues its climb, unbiased and observers are gravely wondering what the future holds. Why should this be so during a period that, measured by figures alone, cannot be called other than a period of I lu re are many answers but this, to put forward a generality before apppioaching the specific, is unquestionably true: Industry is afraid! It is alranl of government policies, principally of federal origin, that seek to negate the spirit, and often the letter ol the Constitution. It is afraid of a spending policy in which the federal has led, and has been followed by many local units vu gmc niniciii that has caused our national debt to reach an high, that has greatly increased taxes, and that must inevitably nuke still higher taxes necessary. It is alraid of political programs which, carried to logical loikhiMon, m.ike it impossible for industry to earn profits. A number of industries have had a tasle of this already they ....ve sold more goods, employed more men, kept more factories in operation, ct have enjoyed no comparable increase .it ilicir earnings. It is afraid of persecution of industry, and of measures which, in effect, transfer management from the owners and executives of industrial properties to otTiceholdcrs in Washington, and, to a lesser extent, in state capitols. otis uess is alraid that private initiative and enterprise, .tiu stones of the republic, are in danger; that our u moeratic theory is becoming tinged with alien theories which have sounded the death knell of liberty and freedom in oilier lands; that ccu a dictatorship looms on the horizon. It cannot be di puted that the old status of State's Rights, for example, h.t been drastically changed that the federal power h.is crept steadily into spheres lli.it we used to believe weie the sole province of state and local powers. This, whether we realize it or not. and whether those responsible tor ll.e change realize it or not, is the first tcp toward dio of government, t.(ii s!np. I'tidci our Constitutional set-uno diil.tt. r could seize absolute power because the seats of were purposely made many and widespread one each in the l--i stules. and one in Washington. As the powers of sua are abrogated or lessened, and a the central power is augmented and strengthened, the opportunity for successhcihcr it bears that name fully establishing a dictatorship or another is immeasurably improved. It must not be forgotten that a short time ago a number of nun holding responsible position. in government advocated, cither directly or by intimation. Constitutional amendments and changes whuh would hue given the federal government tin u cede sited povrr over indviduaK. over industries, over ,gtiu;!lurc, over all the fights and libel lies for which our foict.ulnrs fought. I. cm is beard from high sources of such changes now but the kind of thinking that first advocated far-sight- d e d . . n g p ot Ice. The rifleman up on the edge of the tundra was .ff to the rkht of the stream. Garth knew he bad ft thick screen of spruce tree and scrub all the way ti tlmbcrllne. A he cllinVd, the man nlmve began t Jell and halloo. Garth had no doubt that the fellow was shout lug about the oiitdrlft of the cabin plane. il it'i n mains Before long, ether j ells enme from 'IT. fears and uncertainties mentioned here, plus too much the lake shore. They were followed po'.i nes tioni ,.11 f ictions, are the greatest bars to real by rllle shots. It was easy to gin-and to pctmancnt stability. America still has her that one or more of the pursuers fcrti'r s..d she still b.i her industries andiier factories. She had sighted the plane and opened still has thr pihIiiths which Can produce the things th.t fire, on the snppoition that Garth was biding In the cockpit. create genuine and that raise the standard of livin.; Garth tnoderntej his rush. Keen of all the people. Mie still l a the American spirit that faces his steady iiphlil slogging so, gladly, that approaches the most difficult gre,,t obst.ieh bin) near titnbcrllne brought with t.rt the cloud of doiilil be seattcied. task the four men sot together down at nd wc can c tio way but forward! the lake shore, For the first Ihno shoe CMENIA RFMIKAII LODGE N. 15 will hold an installation of cnnj the plane, be sike to lailth: "Try ciheers meeting on Tuesday even- - j LN5TALL OrFICLRS out farther from tny tirk. holding ing, January ?. 1836 at the Era- - Miss Baiulil We're safe enough The Onirnia lubekah Lodge, tcrnal Hall, Murray, Utah. j . 1J I I the air was thick with snow. Fortunately for 1,111th, the storm was only an early autumn blizzard, not a .".it or 40 below zero gale of the subarctic winter. The rabbit-fu- r Inside the buckskins undersult $9.95. Ea.sv Terms. "A Good Deal For Your Money" WESTERN FURNITURE COMPANY Was. 8152 South SUite 133 wo; Broadway Market Quality merchandise In all of departments. Every day is sneds day at our meat mar ket, delicatessen, pustry and frup stand. Your shopping ls not eon Furniture Store ? plete until you have visited Full line of gas and coal ranges BROADWAY MARKET : High chair, new, $1.75. Kitchen 41 Last Was. 10H; Broadway chflirs 50c, Coal Kunge $7, Dresser All kinds of other useful XATUiE'S $.'S.(H). DKI.NK articles. We buy, sell and repair. There Is nothing mure complete hk a leu than SI i'Kliloit UAI1IV .MILK. Hm We try to beat everybody's price you got all the pruleliu. necessjrr u in used furniture and stoves. well us tlie five vitamins that help ki'ddu Stove and grow; ttrnt create energy anci nintai, to Ulscuse. Insist on tSl'FEttlOU diUi WALT WILLIAMS USED FURNITURE STORE i"K South State tnllk. Hy. 5327 Typewriters All makes. Late model rented for the home, 1 iiioiuu $2.50, 3 months $(i.(Ml. Initial rent npplicd on purchase. Adding machines, dupli- s hurt?" THE FACTS WE FACE i DIRECTORY, j down-slope- . . .iil-tini- WHERE TO TRADE IN SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH filter than snow-splttin- TERMS hip-flas- climbing What Saves Fuel? Stop the cold uir from coming ur Furniture and the warn air from going f Western Company, mountain side. A western (CONTHNUED FROM LAST WEEK) Strips, Calking, Iusuu! wind gust whooshed aslant Juvenile department is the Weather tion now Installed by experts ' With his knife Garth slashed out the tundra turned He sharp in Utah. slope. Special largest small monthly piiyuents. the cvetiH of Dillon's snowslioes. to the left and headed uphill towards yt. large size crib complete with estimate on any amount of Worli Then, worming his way backwards. the foot of the glacier. Before he and blanket crib mattress, KAWSOX AND (O.MI'ANV started to dm? the body had covered another hundred paces, beautiful Baby Book, all for 53C So. State SL The tree put lilin under j(1 Entered as second class matter February 8, 1927, at the Tost Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, under Act of Mar, 3, 1879. OJder AMES BEXXET Service, Copyright by Robert Ames Bennet Telephone Murray 35 OF SUBSCRIPTION Salt Lake County, Utah One Year in Advance Six Months In Advance Elswhere In The United States One Year In Advance We're , they can wade the drifts." With less than a hundred paces. Garth saw a whiten pall surge out clouds on the from the v"N"U Associate Editor, J. B. Wallace Issued Every Thursday now. Caught in the Wild cators, check and repairs. 1 writers, supplies, Th HI Vl'Umn I8.6 South State Iliv y. Old Gold Wanted Turn your old jewelry, dental crowns, bridges, old watches, etc! into cash today. Ilipbest pricts puid. Trade your old watch ii on a new one. (ki sku i;ei:i Last First South St. 64 SALT LAKE TYPEWRITER laciimu i leaner COMPANY Have vnur :m Soulh Main Was. 27f.l tue peuk Kt pairs ...... .. .... jor your of abstracts, pot pood loans. Why spend valuable time at an opportune moment. Have a pood 433 East 3rd So. abstract available. Good THOMAS HOMER saved her. Though greatly chilled, she was only slightly frostbitten when Garth reached the brink of the lateral moraine, a little hi low the foot of the glacier. He went out across the rock strewn gulch bed. Within a fev moments Lilith suddenly found herself out of the wind and snow and the white gloom of the storm she could not see. A match tlared In Garth's upraised hand. The light glinted and tparkled on Ice walls. She wis in the mouth of the cave, up Inside the glacier-streaitunnel. The rock lloor was heaped with the eurilmu meat. At the side of the entrance ;artb ;,v t ie pothole stone th.t had made into an lamp. He pointed to an outspread caribou skin. "Crawl In on that. Then rub your face nnd pound yourself." She scrambled to the skin mat. her teeth clenched on her lip to keep from crying out from the pain Carth had struck of her unkle. another match and held It to the i:io: s wick of the stone lamp Lilith bad already rubbed her cheeks and nose into a glow, lie laid bi- - net! ax on a hind quarter of caribou, and smiled at her In the growing light of the wick. "Chop off a shank or two. We'll need bone spits," he said. "But First warm some of the other skins and wrap them around you. Also put more fat in the lamp I'll be gone two or three hours." Over near the far end of tlu glacier front, he found h drift with crust packed by a four-Incof t!n wind during the previ He went at It ous snowstorm like an Fsklino, slashing out big loiiiilio shaped blocks with his knife. After he had gathered a high pile of the blocks on i fairly level spot Just beyond the drift, be started j to cut others mid lay tl.em odae- wise In a circular wall around the pile. Two feet up he began to lean blocks Inward, j the j By the end of throe hours, he stoi d In the blackness of a snow beehive, half a font h'gher than his bead and over sec on feet across at the lloor level. Low down In the w all he cut boh. There was little more than space enough between the Igloo and the glacier front for h!m to crawl out. lie lrebi around (he snow dome and the big drift, through the thik swirl of snow, and reerossed the stream. In the race he found Lilith and hovering over the lamp, as she broiled thawed caribou stock on i shank bone suit lie picked the girl up In her skin wrapping, nnd carried her out and around to the Igloo, then went hack for the rest of the skins, the lamp and some of the meat. While sh. went oil with her cook- Ing. over the relighted lamp, he cut more blocks and built a low entrance tunnel from the door t part way around the curve of the lgo wall. When he backed In. he bloiked the luoulh of the tunnel with a snow slab. The Inside of the Igloo was at j o warm from the lamp bent j ready that the Inside of the dome roof was beginning to soften. But Garth .. .. . i,snew mere was no siigtitet danger of It falling In. As fat a the snow melted, tie Oioi.tme was su ke I oifcaoU. It met the rold of the oi.tsitlo (l!r nnd fr,,ro bard. The g;rl had a st.uk of raribod M.ak bio 1. d for blni. !o s,(t down, without a word, and to at In the mbU of the mral the snn-kand bent be, nine stifling that he hud to cut a two inch ui hole In tlie roof. All the time he pare no sign that be tercclved the look of misery ( J So. 101 frost-whitene- State Was. 5692 Building Materials Renovize now! We will handle under national your building Immediate housing act direct. action. No delay. UTAH LUMBER CO. (I tali rionecr Hoofing ( o. 3:1.1 West 1st So. W I'.i Hy. jj o ynjy.ivo 7 'THE ; AMERICAN LINEN SUPPLY CO. "It pays to keep clean" E. 6 So. Hy. 2181. Hy. 218; as. 2105 Olilsinobile Sales and Service Never before have our salesrooms housed a finer buy tha: the new 1936 models. We X? in- J ' V1 5C1 vw l kilt-Il-l. l.jpV, A. E. T01RSSEX South State Was. BOOKS . MAKE GUI F.XfFT.T.FA'T - GIFTS r- A Complete Variety is Availablt Make Your Shopping: Com- v 'ft. gyy.-''-6- .o.u.: All kinds of Linen unit r..i forms furnished at reasonable priees. Patronize a Utah industry' to keep your fellow man at work 33-3- 7 Service AboveAlf 1 it .1 i ItlMl ...... " PESEREf MORTUARY 1 Your local grocer recommends and sells GRAINS OF GOLD AND j , KELLY'S QUICK'COOKLNG TOASTED BREAKFAST WHEAT Demand the Best plete by Visiting the DESERET BOOK COMPANY 44 East South Temple Was. 696! Tl'FFIE & ROSIE WHERE. YOU GET FRESH BEER 26 cz. glass 15c Sandwiches 5c SPECIAL EVERY MONDAY CHICKEN SANDWICHES 5c 502 South State ILLIMS 1 TOlTr rnHhMKM T STORIES for e B4Y Plus This Newspaper At j Reduced Price an offer that v ill appeal to all American Magazine and this newspaper at a special combination bargain price. The American Boy is the favorite m.i&uinc of more than 500.0Of U-- i anA young men. Its fiction carries hen s on the wings of adventure to all parts of the world. Its sports articles by famous coaches anj cthlrtes arc studied by champions. I Icre you ill find the finest stories on sports, aviation, business, humor, and travel. Even at its regular price of 1.00 a year, The American Hoy is considered a bargain. But now you may obtain it and this newspaper HERE is school-activitie- s, d $1.25 COD S ONENESS i EMI'llASIZII) "Gk1" is the subject of the sermon to be read in all Churches cf Clui.t, Scientist, on Sunday, Jan- uary 5. The Golden Text: "Among the (4nis Du re is tunic like unto the c. O tird;. . .For thou art great, end doest wondrous thincs; thou arc Go alone." is from IV.lms JO R.10. The? also includes the r.ihle passage: "And God said lesson-sermo- HA : d unto Muses, I AM THAT I A and he said, Thus thou say u the children of Israel, I AM h sent me unto you" (Ex. 3 i! and the following correla' ;v froni the Christian Science t book, "Science and Health w ill, Key to the Scriptures," by M 0 Baked Eddy: "The theory of t! I persons in one God (that personal Trinity or suggests polytheism, rather U the I AM. "H sr. O Israel: the Lord our God is nc Lord'." (p. 25G). 1 Tri-ut- i. J nt ! n . . CRAirj . . FEED . FLOUR . . COAL PRATER QUALITY FEEDS FRED CARLSON & CO. veil-tilat- i rilONE Murrey Lilih's eves. (CONTINUED NEXT WEEK) . I'uris and service for eaiv nnd every make of vacuum or Washinji machine umde. Wringer mils for ew nuike of washer, (iuurmiiewl ship. A 1 MASTEU EI ECTK1C SHOP I Abstracts For the First Time Since Leaving the Plane, He Spoke to Lilith. 3SM i 4X1 OrpiU Clly IUU ;' |