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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH FOREMAN HUSTED GAINS 15 POUNDS States Tanlac Ended Stomach Trouble and Restored Perfect Health. ; f If It hadnt been for the Tanlac treatment, I dont believe Id be on the Job today," was the positive statement of F. J. Hunted, 617 Murry st Oakland, Cul., foreman at the Oakland Meat Packing plant. "For three years 1 suffered with stomach trouble and during the last eight months of my sickness I could only work about half the time, I had absolutely no appetite, and the little I did eat disagreed with me fearfully. I didnt know what it was to get a good nights sleep, and I fell oft thirteen pounds. "But today I have a ravenous appetite, I have gained fifteen pounds. Bleep like a log nights and am on the Job steady every day. Tanlac sure i i Is a wonder, and I couldnt say too much for It If I talked about It all v day." Tanlac Is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. 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Jf You Need a You Medicine Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out The of sight and are oon forgotten? fsason is plain the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says, Take for a example Dr. Kilmers 8wamp-Root- , preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a It V i 'f k i - sale. According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have wsed the preparation, the success of Dr. is due to the fact, Kilmers Swamp-Kooso many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney, t A -- liver and bladder ailments, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Hoo- t by parcel post. Address Dr. Kilmer &, Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Advertisement. 1 1 J i Some Squad. First Conch Why, I thought you said If your football team became vegetarians they would win all their games. How do you account for those they lost? if Second Coach Why, the opposing tenm threw garden hugs on my men and they became afraid. I Hall's Catarrh Medicine Those who are In a run down" condition will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are In good health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease. It Is greatly influenced by constitutional conditions HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in Improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. F, J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, 1 t Works of Blind Composers. An edition of the works of blind British composers Is issued by the National Institute for the Blind. Twenty-fou- r fileces have so far been Issued, for piano, organ and voice, by twelve composers, the best known of whom Is William Wolstenholme, organist. If b ') i A A Lady of Distinction Is recognized by the delicate, fascinating Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Cutlcura Talcum powder usually means a clear, eweet, healthy 6kln. Advertisement. She drew toward him In the realization that he could find symputhy for others even In such a time as this. Harriet Santolne, clad only In a Wheres the key for the battery heavy robe over her nightdress and and magneto the key you start the In slippers, went from her fathers car with? bedroom swiftly down Into the study She ran to a elielf and brought It again ; what she was going to do there to him; he used It and pressed the she did not definitely know. She starting lever. The engine started heard, as she descended the stairs, the and he sprang to the seat Ills left steward In the hall outside the study arm still hanging useless at his side, calling up the police stations of the he tried to throw In the gears with neighboring villages and giving news his right hand ; but the mechanism of of what had happened and Instructhe car was strange to him. She tions to watch the roads; but as she leaped up beside him. "Move over! she commanded. It's reached the foot of the stairs, a servant closed the study doors. The great, this way! curtained room In Its terrifying dislie slipped to the side and she took order was brightly lighted, empty, ab- the driving seat, threw In the gears She had given direc- expertly, and the car shot from the solutely still. tions that, except for the removal of garage. She switched on the electric Blatchfords body, all must be left as headlights as they dashed down the It was In the room till the arrival of drlvewaf and threw a bright white the police. She stood an Instant with hands pressed against her breast, staring down at the spots upon the floor. Was one of them Eatons? Something within her told her that It was, and the fierce desire to go to him, to help him, was all she felt Just now. It was Donald Averys and her fathers accusation of Eaton that had made her feel like this. She had been feeling, the moment before Donald had spoken, that Philip Eaton had played upon her that evening In making her take him to his confederate In the ravine In order to plan and consummate something here. Above her grief and horror at the killing of her cousin and the danger to her father, had risen the anguish of her guilt with Eaton, the agony of her betrayal. But their accusation that Eaton had killed Wallace Blatchford, seeing him, knowing him In the light had swept all that away; all there was of her seemed to have risen In denial of that. Before her eyes, half shut, she saw again the body of her cousin Wallace lying In Its blood on the floor, with her father kneeling beside It, his blind eyes raised in helplessness to the You're Hurt! She Touched Hie light; hut she saw now another body Shoulder. too Eatons not here lying somewhere In the bare, wind-swep- t woods, glare upon the roadway a hundred shot down by those pursuing him. yards ahead to the gates. Beyond the She looked at the face of the clock gates the public pike ran north and and then down to the pendulum to see south. whether It had stopped ; but the penWhich way?" she demanded of him, dulum was swinging. The hands stood slowing the car. at half past one o'clock; now she reStop! he cried to her. "Stop and called that, In her first wild gaze about get outl You mustn't do this! the room when she rushed In with she You could not pass alone, the others, she had seen the hands said. "Fathers men would close the showing a minute or so short of gates upon you. twenty minutes past one. Not quite There are no men The men? a quarter of an hour bad passed since there now they went to the beach the alarm! The pursuit could not before! They must have heard somehave moved far away. She reopened thing there It was their being there the window through which the pur- that turned him the others back. suers had passed and stepped out onto They tried for the lake and were the dark lawn. A hnlf mile down the turned back and got away In a mabeach she heard shouts and a shot; chine; I followed back up here I she saw dimly through the night In Harriet Santoine glanced at the face that direction a boat without lights of the man beside her. She could see moving swiftly out upon the lake. his features only vaguely; she could Iler hands clenched and pressed see no expression ; only the position of his head. But now she knew that agnlnst her breast; she stood strainIt she was not helping him to run away; ing at the sounds of the man-hunhad turned west, It seemed; It was he was no longer hunted at least he coming back her way, but to the west was not only hunted; he was hunting of the house. She crossed the lawn others too. As the car rolled down toward the garage. A light suddenly upon the open gates and he strained shone out there, and she went on. forward In the seat beside her, she The wide door at the car driveway knew that what he was feeling was was pushed open, and someone was a wild eagerness In this pursuit. within working over a car. Ills hack she de"Right or left quick was toward her, and he was bent over manded of him. Ill take one or the the engine, but, at the glance, she other." knew him and recoiled, gasping. It There are Right, he shot out. was Eaton. He turned at the same their tracks ! He pointed for her. Instant and snw her. How do you know those are their Oh ; Its you ! he cried to her. tracks?" she asked him. Iler heart, which almost had ceased I told you, I followed them to to beat, raced her pulses again. At where they got their machine. the sound she had made on the driveWho are they? way, he had turned to her as a hunted "The men who shot Mr. Blatchford. thing, cornered, desperate, certain that "Who are they? she put to him whoever came must he against him. directly again. Ills cry to her had recognized her as lie waited, and she knew that he the only one who could come and not was not going to answer her directly. be against him ; It had hnlled her with he caught her arm. The Suddenly relief as bringing him help. lie could rond had forked, and he pointed to not have cried out so at that Instant the left; she swung the car that way, at sight of her If he had been guilty as they made the turn, of what they had accused. Now she ngain seeing the they were following. snw too, as he faced her, blood flowThe ear raced up a l.ttle hill nnd ing over his face; blood soaked a now ngain was descending; the headshoulder of his coat, and his left arm a ravine. showed a bridge o.-e-r lights dangling at his side; but now, as lie ! ! com Slow her companion Stop threw back his bead and straightened manded. In his relief at finding It was she who She raced the car on; he put his hnd surprised him, she saw In him on the wheel and with his foot hand nnd excitement she exultation had in to tried push hers from the accelera.vever seen before something which her presence alone could not have tor; hut she fought him; the car caused. Tonight, she sensed vaguely, swayed and all but ran atvay ns they Give It to the bridge. something had happened to hltn which approached she screamed t ldin and me! had changed his attitude toward her wrenched the car about. It was upon and everything else. across tt ; they they "Yes; Its I!" she cried quickly nnd the bridge and rushed to him. "It's I! It's I," wildly skidded upon the mud of the road again, they could hear the bridge You're hurt! she reassured him. She touched his shoulder. Youre cracking behind. "Harriet ! he pleaded with her. hurt! I knew you were! She stpered the c&r on, recklessly, lie pushed her back with his right hand and held her away from him. her heart thumping with more than the thrill of the chase. Did they hurt your father?" They're the men who tried to kill you, aren't Hurt Father? No." The speed at But Mr. Blatchford they?" she rejolr.ed. which they were going did not permit Dead," she answered dully. her to look about; she hnd to keep They killed him, then !" Yes; they " She iterated. He her eyes ou th$ road at that moment when she knev within herself and was telling her now unnecessarily that he had had nothing to do with It; was telling the man beside her that It was the others who had done that. she from that moment must he at one He released her and wiped the blood with him. For already she had said from his eyes with the keel of his It; as she risked herself In the purhand. The poor old man,'' he said, suit, she thought of the men they were the poe? old man I after not chiefly s those who had CHAPTER XVIII 1 t. 1 tire-track- s killed her cousin but as those who had threatened Eaton. What do I care what happens to me, If we catch them? Harriet! she cried he repeated her name again. Philip ! She felt him shrink and change as 6he called the name. It had been clear to her, of course, that, since she had known him, the name he had been using was not his own. Often she had wondered what his name was; now she had to know. What should I call you? she demanded of him. My name, he said, Is Hugh. Hugh! she called 1L Yes. Hugh " She waited for the rest; but he told no more. Hugh ! she whispered to herself again his name now. Hugh I Her eyes, which had watched the road for the guiding of the car, had followed his gesture from time to time tracks made by the pointing out machine they were pursuing. These tracks still ran on ahead; as she gazed down the road, a red glow beyond the bare trees was lighting the sky. A glance at Hugh told that be also had seen It A fire?" she referred to him. Looks like IL They said no more as they rushed on; but the red glow was spreading, and yellow flames soon were In sight shooting higher and higher; these were clouded off for an Instant only to appear flaring higher again, and the breeze brought the smell of seasoned wood burning. Its right across the road! Hugh announced as they neared It Its the bridge over the next ravine, Harriet said. Her foot already was bearing upon the brake, and the power was shut off; the car coasted on slowly. For both could see now that the wooden span was blazing from end to end; It was old wood, swift to burn and going like tinder. There was no possible chance for the car to cross It The girl brought the machine to a stop fifty feet from the edge of the ravine; the fire was so hot that the gasoline tank would not be safe nearer. She gazed down at s on the road. the They crossed with their machine, she said to Hugh. And fired the bridge behind. They must have poured gasoline over it and lighted it at both ends." She sat with one hand still straining at the driving wheel, the other playing with the gear lever. Theres no other way across that ravine, I suppose," Hugh questioned her. The other roads back more than a mile, and two miles about" She threw In the reverse and started to turn. Hugh shook his head. Thats no use. No, she agreed, and stopped the car again. Hugh stepped down on the ground. The double glare from the headlights of a motor shone through the s as the car topped and came swiftly down a rise three quarters of a mile away and around the last turn back on the road; another pair of blinding lights followed. There was no doubt that this must be the pursuit from Santoines house. Eaton stood Reside Harriet, who had stayed in th. rivlng-sea- t of the car. I going just beside the road herd fhe said to her, quietly. Im arifcbd, of course. If those are your people, youd better go back with them. Im sure they are ; but Ill wait and see. She caught his hand. No; no!" she You must get as far away cried. as you can before they come! I'm going back to meet nnd hold them. She threw the car into the reverse, backed and turned it and brought It again onto the road. He came beside her again, putting out his hand ; she seized it. Her hands for an Instant clung to It, his to hers. "You must go quick! she urged; but how am I to know what becomes of you where you are? Shall I hear from you shall I ever see you? No news will he good news, he said, until Until what? Until And again that unknown something which a thousand times It seemed to her had checked his word and action toward her made him pause; hut nothing could completely bar them from one another now. Until they catch and destroy me. or until I come to jou as as you have nev er know n me yet ! An instant more she dang to him The double headlights flared into sight again upon the road, much nearer now and coming fast. She released him ; lie plunged into the hushes beside the road, and the damp, hare twigs lashed against one another at his passage; then she shot her car forward. But she had made only a few hundred yards when the first of the two cars met her. It turned to its right to pass, she turned the same way; tlie approaching car twisted to the left, she swung hers to oppose It. The two cars did not strike; they stopped, radiator to radiator, with rear wheels locked. The second car drew up behind the first The glare of her headlights showed her both were full of armed men. Their head te tire-mark- tree-trunk- lights, revealing her to them, hushed suddenly their angry ejaculations. She recognized Avery In the first car ; he leaped out and ran up to her. Harriet ! In Gods name, what are you doing here? She sat unmoved in her seat, gazing at him. Men leaping from the cars ran past her down the road toward the ravine and the burning bridge. Avery, gaining no satisfaction from her, let go her arm ; his hand dropped to the hack of the Beat and he drew It up quickly. Harriet, theres blood here! She did not reply. He stared at her and seemed to comprehend. He Jumped from the car and ran to the assembled men. They called In answer to his shout, and she could see a man pointing out to them the way Eaton had gone. The men, scattering themselves at Intervals along the edge of the wood and, under Avery's direction, posting others In each direction to watch the road, began to beat through the bushes after Eaton. She sat watching; she put her cold hands to her face; then, recalling how Just now Eaton's hand had clung to hers, she pressed them to her lips. Avery came running back to her. You drove him out here, Harriet!" he charged. nim? Who? she asked coolly. Eaton. He was hurt!" The triumph in the ejaculation made her reHe wag hurt and could not coil. drive, and you drove him out." He left her, running after the men Into the woods. She sat In the car, listening to the sounds of the hunt She had no Immediate fear that they would find Eaton ; her present anxiety was over his condition from his hurts and what might happen if he encountered those he had been pursuing. In that neighborhood, with Its woods and bushes and ravines to furnish cover, the darkness made discovery of him by Avery and his men impossible if Eaton wished to hide himself. Avery appeared to have realized this; for now the voices In the woods ceased and the men began to struggle back toward the cars. A party was sent on foot across the ravine, evidently to guawl the road beyond. The rest began to clamber Into the cars. She backed her car away from the one In front of It and started home. She had gone only a short distance when the cars again passed her, traveling at a high speed. She began then to pass Individual men left by those In the cars to watch the road. At the first large house she saw one of the She cars again, standing empty. A mile passed It without stopping. further, a little group of men carrying guns stopped her, recognized her and let her pass. They had been called out, they told her, by Mr. Avery over the telephone to watch the roads for Eaton ; they had Eatons description ; members of the local police were to take charge of them and direct them. She comprehended that Avery was surrounding the vacant acreage where Eaton had taken refuge to be certain that Eaton did not get away until daylight came and a search for him was possible. Lights gleamed at her across the broad lawns of the houses near her fathers great house as she approached it; at the sound of her car, people came running to the windows and looked out She understood that news of the murder at Basil Santoines had aroused the neighbors and brought them from their beds. As she left her motor on the drive beside the house for tonight no one came from the garages to take It the little clock upon its dash marked half past two. WOMAN SICK TWO YEARS Caused by Troubles Women Often 's Have Relieved by Lydia E. Pink-barn- Vegetable Compound I had a great Medina, New York. deal of trouble such as women often have, and this affected my nerves. For over two years I suffered this way, then I read in the BuffaloTimesabout Lydia E. Pinkhama Vegetable Compound and have taken it with very good results. I am very much better and feel justified in praising the Vegeta- le Compound to my friends and neighbors who suffer from anything of the Mrs. Wm. H. Adkins, 311 Erin kind. Road, Medina, N. Y. After my twin Rochester, N. Y. all was My born I were girls neighbors thought 1 was going to die. I saw your advertisement in the paper and bought Lydia EL Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. The first bottle helped me and I kept on taking it. I only weighed ninety pounds when I began taking it, and I have gained in Iweight never and feel like a girl of sixteen. can say enough for Lydia E. Pinkham a Vegetable Compound. "Mrs. Nelljh Dorey,16 Skuse Park, Rochester, N.Y. run-dow- n. &S22 Constipation Relieved Without The Use of Laxatives Nujol is a lubricant not a medicine or laxative so cannot gripe. When you are constipated, not enough of Natures lubricating liquid is produced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and thus secures reg ular bowel movements by Nature's own method lubrication. Try it today. 16799 DIED in New York City alone from kidney trouble last year. Dont allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against trouble by taking LATHROPS The worlds standard remedy for kidney; liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Hollands national remedy since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed. Look for tho name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation CHAPTER XIX Waiting. Harriet went Into the house and toward her own rooms; a maid met and stopped her on the stairs. Mr. Santolne sent word that he wishes to see you as soon as you came In, Miss Santolne." Harriet went on toward her fathers room, without stopping at her own-- wet with the drive through the damp Stearns Electric Paste recognized as the guaranteed exterminator for Bats, Mice, Ants, Cockroaches and Waterbugs. Pont wa-t- e time trying to kill these pests with powders, liquids or any experimental preparations. is Ready for Use Better box, 35o than Traps 15--0 z. box. $1.50 60LD EVERYWHERE Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen Tendons, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stops the lameness and pain from a Splint, Side Bone or Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can be used. $2.50 bottle at druggists or delivered. Describe your case for speclsl Instructions and Interesting horse Bosk 2 A free. W. F. YOUNG, 1st., 310 Tempts St., SpriorfieU, Min. Don't experiment on them, use MITCHELL EYE 8ALVE (or ipeetij relief. Absolutely i&fo. Until I Come to You As As You Have Never Known Me Yet! night and shivering now with its chill. Her fathers voice answered her knock with a summons to come in. Where have you heen, Daughte-he asked. I have heen driving with Mr. Eaton In a motor, she said. A spasm Helping him to escape? crossed the blind mans face. He said not ; he he was following the men who shot Cousin Wallace." The blind man lav for an Instant still. "Tell me, he commanded finally, (TO BE CONTINUED.) at all druggists. Let Cuticura Be Your Beauty Doctor Sp 25c, Omtmest 25 and 50c, Talc am 25c need not be thta or streaked with pray Q B A N HAIR COLOR RESTORER wilt revive It beck and brlnr ell its original qojekljr color aod tururlanee. At all food dnirelau,7ie, or MEMPHIS, TEN It direct from KESS1G-ELU- W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. 18-19- 23. |