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Show LTAH LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI, WorkThatYn I u TEACHERS WANTED tsh CLAY PRODUCTS PACE BRICK HOOKING TILB Flu aaa Sewer Pipe l.tnins .11 CLAY PHODL'CTB I TAH F1HE CLAY CO. . SALT LAKE PHOTO FINISHING Cola. with Print DESEKET PHOTO Salt Lake Cite. Vt. D Roll No eOC tsmp. SERVICE. P. O. Hoi M. FEMALE HELP Opening for lade 4a Deseatrt . CHARM COSMETICS Pit WHta l East Bar.. Salt Lak CltT. Utah POULTRY SILVER-LACEWinners WYANDOTLES can 112 : ease Evsry where. Stork EgmlOe; till. C. G. Ioeber. Van Nan. California. INSTRUCTION IF YOU LIKE TO DRAW. SKETCH or Write for Talent Teat (no real PAINT School. 0ie aaa and occupation. Federal Inr.. Dept. WN. Minneapolis Minn. ALCOHOL TREATMENT Cur accomplished without drum. Mineral or Narcotic under luoerviiion of tout ohvti Inttrnoanla.n Sanatoria riin if Salt Laka City 1149 Kant 6th South d.rd. FOUNTAIN PEN REPAIRS All Makes Pen Ex. and Pencils Point rh.nnwl All Part Held. Shaffer. Parker. Waterman Pern Pencil. 24 Hour Service. 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MOTORCYCLES HARLEY Price Write for eatalotrue. IJaod Motorcycle HOUSE OF HOPPER. 14 8. Bdy., 8alt Lake FURNITURE x 12 carpet rue $14.95: Used Monarch coal ranire 136.00 ; Uaed mohair livinir room act $38.60: Uaed upright piano 149 50. Bargain Basement Western Furniture Co. 16 South State . . . Salt Lake City New PHOTOS New Sensational, 8 floaay prints tn albametta A professional enlargements 25o coin. Reprint Sc ea. Star Film Company. Payette, Ida. t WNU Weak P 'H1. I gA1lT,. fAKM China at Height of Power China reached the height of its power under Kublai Khan In the Thirteenth century. i Deafness Overcome i With THE GENUINE ACOUSTICAN free Homo Demonetrstion er write for (ree hearing booklet Acoustican Institute 2C8 8a. Stat St. Salt Lake City to Patch Furniture Scratches Light scratches on furniture may How be remedied by rubbing them over linseed oil, turpentine with boiled and white vinegar mixed in equal For deeper scratches proportions. use a paste made of thick mucilage mixed with coloring matter to blend with the wood in question. For oak use burnt umber and raw siewna; for mahogany, Venetion red; for walnut, burnt umber, and Vandyk brown. Aztecs Knew Black Widow Spider Aztec Indians of Mexico knew the poisonous black widow spider, and used an oil extracted from it in medicines. Captain Cook, discoverer of the Hawaiian islands, was killed by natives on his second visit there it 1779. How Penguins Keep Eggs Warm Emperor penguins stand for ek during the long Antarctic night with the egg between their feet to keep it warm, the parents sharing the task between them. How to Clean Furniture To clean furniture that has become badly soiled, wash it with soap and water to which has been added two or three tablespoons of kerosene or turpentine. Then rub dry with soft cloth. The courier spoke timidly. "Excellency," he murmured unfortunately, I must be on my way, not being on a pleasure trip, like yourself, and . . . and there is a letter in there that I have on my conscience. I should have asked you about it before I left the presidio. It does not bear your frank." The Governor looked startled. "So? And who has sent a letter out without my frank?" "Her Excellency, La Senora La Gobernadora, Dona Eulalia." "Ah! Let me have it, and I will attend to it." The courier took the paper from among the rest and handed it to the Governor. It was addressed to the Viceroy of Mexico. The Governor shook his head and rubbed his eyes. The men watched him in amazement as he tore the letter open and read it." "A woman's tongue is only three inches long, but it can kill a man of six feet! You," he said to the trembling courier, "get on your way at once. I will keep this letter. And the rest of us will return at once to the presidio." At the exclamation of disappointment from his escort he laughed loudly. "But we will stay only a short while, and before this sun has set we will be on our way again. Our pasear is interrupted, companeros, not abandoned!" A little while later the presidio gates were again thrown open, and to the surprise of everyone, the Governor's party swept into the parade-groun- d in a cloud of dust and a clatter of hoofs. From her window La Gobernadora watched El Gobernador ride madly toward the palacio, and before she could control the sudden trembling that seized her, he strode into the room. Behind him came two soldiers, who had followed from the gate. "Senora," thundered the Governor, "I have come to place you under arrest." He motioned to the two soldiers, who stepped smartly forward and took their places one at each side of Eulalia. Their eyes goggled with amazement, but they clanked the butts of their muskets smartly on the floor, and stood at attention. "What Is the meaning of this," inquired Eulalia, "is it a drunken prank? For what am I to be placed under arrest?" "It is no drunken prank. Woman, you are under arrest for treason. I have here" and he slapped Eula-lialetter to the Viceroy on to the table "I have here a document written by you containing treasonable utterances against the Governor of the Californias. And any treason against the Governor of the Californias is treason against his Most Catholic Majesty the King of Spain. Therefore I put you under 's arrest." Eulalia grew white around the lips, and her voice shook. she stammered. "Yes; you have said here that the Governor of California has been going slowly but surely insane for the past three years. That all his acts are the acts of a madman, a maniac. That his governance here has been a long period of misrule. with That he fails to the priests in their religious work. That everyone is afraid of him, and dare not report his madness to the That he has repeatedly Viceroy. threatened your life, and the lives of others, and that he neglects his duties to consort with Indian women. Is that true?" sycamores, water alders wear. Well, are willows and all manner w roses get ready?" as he sr.Jfed the wild "I am not. I am not going. Please, shrubs, clear springs, the from and dram Pedro, do not do this to me, please.I as ne gazed at the mighty mountains I wrote because I am sorry The rolling restless it seemed the or at am so unhappy he laughed. Pacific only way. Please, my darling, -for California!" he said. life My adored husband. Please, oh, please worth it, the jade! By God, she is do not do this to me!" Whimpering on at herself child threw a she like Each morning that found them out stamped his feet before the scandalized eyes the road he carefully e often of the watching soldiers and servthe remains of the camp-firfires built had he toward moved where her, ants. Angustias on a spot did he as And her motioned but the Governor marv times before. back. His face was stern and drawn. this "he wondered. Out of these "Get up, woman! What a scene to ashes, on one of these little mounds, make before these people! A wom- would a city rise some day? Me an's tears and a dog's limping are sighed at the thought, but indulged not real. Will you go now or shall in prophetic retrospection. I be forced to make you?" And at the missions he visited long Still she knelt on the floor. with the padres; ate their good food, "No! No! I will not go . . . you drank their good wine; admired can not make me! Oh, Pedro! Oh, their fat herds and sleek horses. Mother of God! Oh, help me!" Then passed on to the next mission. The Governor clutched his beard Passed through much rich country, with one hand and gritted his teeth. or wild land alive with herds of "Pick her up," he ordered the antelope and elk, bear and mounsoldiers, "tie her hands, and put her tain lions. He killed the giant bear on a horse. Take her to the fathers he had promised himself, and carat Carmel and tell them it is my ried most of it to the Mission San orders she stay in the monjera un- Gabriel Arcangel. There he rested til I return. Under no circumstances for many days in the shade of the is she to leave before then. And if carefully tended trees, with the mushe misbehaves, she is to be beaten, sic of a little stream in his ears. And there he visited with some old, old friends who had traveled with him on the expedition. "I am retiring," said one old comlong padre, Don Epifanio Sanchez, Missergeant of the guard at the "I am retiring," sion San Gabriel. he repeated as Don Pedro sipped absently at his wine. "From what . . . 7" questioned the Governor. "From the King's Army. The King has granted me many varas of land. And I am choosing it well. There are springs on it, and meadow land for grazing, and land to raise corn and grapes. And I have already chosen the knoll on which I will build my house." He stretched his legs luxuriously before him and sighed with pleasurable anticipation. "Ah, and what a life that will you not going to CHAPTER XXVI Continued mm Ium Ills. la mm-MiaSpecial U teachers. snbjecta, I aseauis Trains, Caa etc. fat part fceekarepinf, shorthand, umt work for reeai and beard if easiresl SALT LA hi BI8I.SE.S8 COLLECB Atlas Bid-.- , bait Lake City. tUk SMITHSONIAN BUSINESS COLLEGE OC C Virginia Stivers Bartlett WNU Service VIRGINIA STIVERS BARTLETT Whta la tNO NtVAOA (to at HOTEL GULDEN steae'a larrcat test papular aetei THE WILSON HOTEL f t in ill heart cut Hates TS eaBall Lake st E tiMt S Bt I n With M istress of Monterey HOTELS HOTEL PLANDOME. SALT LA KB U N t fl.se 4th S. felata Kat qUET KKSPEtTABt.r CLEAN Dtitn. "Carry "Every word of it!" "1 mean is it true that you have written this?" "Yes, I wrote it." "Very well, then. I arrest you in the name of the King of Spain." Eulalia wavered. "But but you can not do that! What what are you going to do with me?" "You are to be incarcerated in the monjera, the quarters of the Indian women at Mission Carmelo until I return from my trip. Then I will consider your case." "In the monjera! You can not do this to me! I will not go! You dare not degrade me, disgrace me this way, before the whole community! I will not go!" "You do not hesitate to degrade and disgrace me before all California, Mexico and Spain, Senora. You shall go to the monjera, and at once. Prepare yourself." "No! No! I will die first . . . Angustias!" Angustias was cowering in a corner, watching the scene in terror. At the doors and windows frightened servants listened and looked. "There is no use calling Angustias. I am through being ruled by women. Angustias will remain here with my children, and you shall go. At once, I said!" he thundered so suddenly that Eulalia jumped. "And if you hesitate any longer you shall The go without any preparation. matron at the monjera will give you a robe such as the Indian girls live-oak- s, ...... be!" "But your wife?" asked Don Pedro. "Will she consent to come here and live with you?" Had you not heard? My poor wife, God rest her soul, died last year in Mexico City. She would never join me here. And I could not leave here. You understand? Life was lonely for her, I suppose. We had no children . . . and so . . ."He shrugged his shoulders. "God took her home. You are most fortunate, Don Pedro, in having Dona Eulalia with you. Most for- "I Am Retiring," Said One Old Compadre. like any recalcitrant Indian tunate!" "Yes," wom- an." "Pedro!" Eulalia shrieked. "Pedro, not that! Ai, Dios mio . . . not that!" The Governor was trembling as much as the terrified woman at his feet. "Very well. Not beaten. But if she misbehaves, she must be put in the stocks. Take her at once." As the frightened soldiers lifted her from the floor, she struggled like a cat, writhing and sobbing. "Best tie her hands," ordered the Governor coldly. "Or you will be scratched." He handed one a handkerchief, and watched grimly while her struggling hands were tied at her back. She faced him with features distorted, streaked with tears, but her eyes fierce. mad "Cruel, Pedro brutal, Fages!" she cried. "You will suffer for this!" She wrenched against the bonds that held her hands. "Oh, let me go! Let me go!" Fages merely motioned to the soldiers, who dragged her out of the house. Still screaming and struggling, one of them managed to throw her before him on his horse. Angustias rushed from the house wringing her hands and weeping. All the servants crowded The soldier touched his spurs to the horse. The shrieking writhing La Gobernadora and her escort started across the toward the presidio gate, Angustias running lamenting beside. parade-groun- CHAPTER d XXVII Forth on El Camino Real again rode the Governor of the Californias. The royal road was now a strip of yellow highway, slowly but surely, through pressure of many feet and of many horses, printing itself upon the pleasant soil of California connecting the Mission and Presidio of Upper California with the ancient Mise sion and capital Loreto, in Lower California. As he rode he remembered suddenly that 20 years had passed since he had first traveled this way. No road then; that first party of pioneers had pushed their way through virgin soil, breaking a trail through the wilderness, marking it here and there with cairns of stone, but often-e- r with crosses. Twenty years! He started at the thought. Nearly half his life. In twenty years more he would be seventy. All those years for the siren, California. As he looked at the smiling spring sky, the acres and acres of the canons full of well-define- hoof-bea- one-tim- wild-flower- ts d muttered Fages. "And what will you do with this great rancho and house you are going to build? Will you live alone? What will you do without wife or children?" Don Epifanio stirred uneasily. "Pues, compadre, you know how it is. I have already chosen me a wife. Just an Indian girl. That is, part Indian. Her father was a Spanish soldier, though God only knows who he was. But she is beautiful and very young, and has been well educated here at Mission San Gabriel. She can cook, and sew. She can even play the guitar! And she is young. Oh, yes, very young. Fifteen. But look you, I am barely fifty! So I will have many years ahead of me, and God willing, many children." He laughed. "Who knows but we will start a new race in this new land?" Don Pedro was very quiet as the other dreamed of his future happiness over his wine-glas"Yes," mused the Governor to himself. "You will have a happy life. An ideal life. Ah, yes ." The other broke into his musings. s. u'v,v Hn vou not retire. Don Pe dro? You have given the best years of your life to your King and this more country. The King would be than willing to award you a great slice of this land that you have governed so long. Why not do it? Let someone else be governor, and have all the worries and anxieties, wrme a grand you retire and establish chiland wife your enjoy hacienda, do the Indians the dren, and let rT work?" Don Pedro was quiet a long time, and watchidly twirling his beaker, in little washing the juice ruddy ing waves against the glass. All unconsciously his old friend, in relathad laid bare ing his own hopes, of the Goverthe deepest desires nor's heart. A great estate of his own! He could see himself riding over the land; could see the sleek herds, the could spirited horses he would raise; see the fields of corn and grain, he wansquashes, beans and chiles; dered through his own orchards and vineyards. Ai, Dios, that was what he wanted! A great house where he could entertain a hundred guests, and where a hundred servants would do his bidding; where there would be music and flowers and hospitality and at the end a host of strong sons to speed his departure into that dark uncertain land . . . But the vision did not hold Eulalia. With a bitter laugh he gulped his S'y Pattern you wherever a square-- (it affect the T SALT LAKE'S nt fango, S ia,with Mante set of I listmar; ST Sifts' inrt jQSj am I fr HOTEL Temple Squar Rates $1.50 to $3.00 TTntxl IVmrila Souars hsi inrnuij highly deslraDMt, will always find Itlmiliaa, phwe.You .. I ...nifn.tlM.. Bfll then thoroughly aa;rwahlr.Yoii esnholsl Is fore understand why this HIGHLY RECOMMEM1LU You can also appreciate whyt a mark of distinction to stop Ifs at this beautiful hostelry m Tli .1 Mff- ERNEST C. ROSSITER, WNU 2- 2- W GET RID 0 BIG UGLY PORES Gene lilted :impio h ti PineI KtJ b; Cnini Wried rti tiiTV At miTTC WfitV... DENTOl MADE MAGNESIA SKIN FRESH, YOUNG, J BEAUT Romance hasn't a chance wBenbig: Menloveti pores spoil smoothness of a fresh Denton's Facial Magnesia lor unsightly skin. Ugly PO i. skin becomes firm and smootn. yun3cS s can be dried and made poultices' iSdrnted f g'Vlng qUa,Ities- So is exported all trealment of rhe" matS i'Vw thG SClatK'a - 3nd other ail- Sent, ThUt' ' uics at Piestnny rise on the Ttse we8llISUoantdhrn lt;e,KlVer Va in the rock ?tr!.,P,the water ature of about 140 having a temper, degrees bJ on new M Watch your complexion take Evan the firrt low troatm V'iu.ranca. u, Magnaaia make a Ih. Denton Magio Minor you .km Wn the testae oi your day. Imperfections are ,w"kC' witD grsduallydiMppear. Before new I has brought you entirely "T. EXTRAORDINARY 'OFFER -- Saves Vou WoJ 0, Denton's Facial MSL,4 Yon libera? oiler w. have ever most . lew weeks only. W. wt ,b,Mgk bottle (retail price $1 ) rlu' Ma? of iamous Mllneaia Wale" n (, the country as the original' M Denton oj1, ,1 tableta;, phu the skin what your yon on trdir- j only $11 Don't mi a out "'l. ""ur (k", I f DENTON Facial Magnej 'l'ut uir 'ort speci" 4402 1 u -lot which oombinatloS' Homo. ' Strt Addroi City - f'j'V :ht nnaiei "the t skin-textur- frUS mineras-a- Mrs. NEWEST HOSTElf 0 Our lobby is delightfully cooled during the summer montk Radio for Every Room 200 Room 200 Bath Mud, a Strange Export One of Czechoslovakia's exports is mud. The mudstrangest is of a very special quality, for it is that of Pas a"d rfnm iron. Cal The outp ing ot radio waves all over world has caused bad weather without scientific basis. In comparision with the trerl dous amount of energy broads continually into the atmospherl a result of thunderstorms, amount added from thp radin tions is comparatively minutej life as a dull one. Pthf r healing Architi weather waves do weather, and statpn appeared from timi that have time that the tremendous French cuntry. the peasant still thinks of rS-0the- " The United States r?.Ugh the conS Ir-- reau says that radio may get on the chain in an automobile factory or punch tickets in a subway station. The average French farm has not been improved as the American one has within the last generation. The radio is rare; automobiles are even The standard of rar,er living is undoubtedly higher than before the s 4 Rad io and Weather Farm Life Has No Appeal to Peasants of France; Children Prefer City Life h'-- them you go and is just a squar2 e wine. "Before God, Don Epifanio, you are sent by Satan to tempt me! That may be your life, but it can never be mine." "I am sorry, my friend. For there are many of us who campaigned with you who are going to do this very thing of which I have spoken. In fact, many have sent for their wives and families to come from Mexico, and, as I said before, those of us who have not wives will find them here. Yes, we will found a new civilization, I think, in this strange new land, and you should be one of the founders." The Governor left San Gabriel, visited the troublous little village of Los Angeles, and left there shaking his head over the laziness and im morality of its inhabitants. South, then, to the Mission San Juan and at last to the Presidio and Mission of San Diego, the cradle of California. Then he turned north again, to return to Monterey, more restless, more unhappy, more disturbed in mind than when he had started on his journey. He had not left his anxieties behind. They had traveled with him. And to them was added the nagging certainty that he was at a crisis in his life. He could not continue living as he had been. He and Eulalia were killing each other. He must resign as governor of the Californias. And after that, what? One of two things. Remain in the province as an hacendado, and fulfill his dearest dreams, regardless of Eulalia. Or return to Mexico, perhaps to Spain. He groaned in spirit, and worried his grizzled beard as he considered that possibility. The soft breath of California kissed his cheek as he rode north. The very brambles and wild roses reached out and clutched him with clinging fingers; and when he lay uuwu ai lugiu uie warm eartn seemed to cradle him in loving arms that would not let him go. When at last h? rode through the gates of the Royal Presidio Monterey two months after he had swept through them, he had made a decision. He would not leave California. (TO BE COSTIMED) V 3 uarry form cloths, scarfs, bedspre ui pniuws. inere s rare ch fete in tnis Italian-typlace exclusive smart, and long-ing. In pattern 6030 vnn n.;n complete instructions for ma! the square shown ; an illustrafi ui it aim an stitcnes used; terial requirements; a photo'g of the square. To obtain this pattern, sen; cents in stamps or coins (r preferred) to The Sewing Cir nousenoid Arts Dept., 259 W. Street, New York, N. Y. . Sh! 6030. of beautiful lace . mi is a crochet hook and some FACIAL People leave farms in France largely for the same reasons as everywhere else. Ever since the foundation of the Third republic (nominally 1870) peasant children have been getting education, though the number of illiterates as shown by the army conscript examinations is surprisingly high. With education, the ambition of the average peasant has been to make his son a gentleman (a monsieur), which means generally to get him a white-colla- r job. His daughter likewise he prefers to marry off to a city desk worker rather than to a young farmer, observes a writer in the Chicago Tribune. By a process which has gone on in other languages, even the word peasant has fallen into bad repute is now It never used in the news reports of the Paris press. When a word must be used, a peasant is called a cultivater. The word ferm-ie- r (farmer) has never been used extensively, and not often would it be an accurate translation of our word farmer. Even if he cannot get a coveted ob with the government, the young peasant usually prefers to come to the city and take a chance He V? H a i s.-- 'f |