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Show LEHI FREE PRESS. I EHI. UTAH seemed tehjnd him. -rocketed stars -- -: -s- HOTELS - MARTHA Salt Lake Ium fttate St. 1 k fte. k II j II AFAKTMENT HOTEL SHUBRICK HOTEL APT. U eta bwiik Ral Filled Waoieeal dtipiKaied hv eaali. Preacnpuuoa Brofcee J'n.-- TUB OPTICAL feHor. A. K. Frar IWm Beilaiaa Salt Lake Citr. I'Uk U SURGE MILKERS lt rv and (haw why SCRCK, the "ta MOKE and fae'xt aulkar ever eailt t'l.r.ANUt aaiik vita ieee time and later. for information. Wnie WALLACE TAYLOR. DMribalar Salt Cnr. t'tafc Waal T pU It a MARKET EQUIPMENT Werld's Beet" Batrkrri geppriee Mai .'. t. Barruirtaa feaw A Chopper Servie. 24 Hoar Kervire, tcir Far Laeipateat. HARm.SCTO.SH. 171 W. tad 8a.. H. L. C. b NEW All Makea, USED TYPEWRITERS Porta b la. Rebuilt. Staadarda. Terms. Na Interent. TtatwrHw I Cm.. arrrn No eng. Ml So Mam Sti Salt l.o REAL ESTATE EXCHANGES Aak far R social Plan an Bel line Firms a. V U - a.-Bvejaa,- taVk-Vllla.-UfirVtf1 TT a I ePea i navv (.JViia atDltkl COMPANY. It E. Ind Seatk. Salt Lakt City. ELECTRIC MOTORS Large stack af new A rabuilt electric motor WiniJirr A krnairing generators UTAH ELECTkUC MOTOR CO. MS-Be. BlaU 8L Salt Lake City. Ul INEXPENSIVE MEALS I'ha keat tend la gall l akt la served by The MAYFLOWER CAKK at 1M South Main POPULAR PRICED Lueeheons. Dinners and Sandwiches TRUSSES Instruments, Buigieal Hoapltal Onppliee, Manufacturer of Abdominal Supporters, Elattie blockings. The Phrairlaaa Supply Cespsns Halt l.aka City. Utah, 4' W tad South St Trunee OFFICE EQUIPMENT USED desks and chain, tlx, typewriters, adding atb'i, safes, S L. DUSK EX, U W. Broadway. Salt Laka NKW AMD KODAK FINISHING PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Developed with 8 Qualify Prints 25c Extra Prints 3c Wrap coin and film carefully ...... SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- DRUGS N Boi 749 Salt Laka City. Utah PHOTO-KRAF- "L D. S. Training Pays" NEXT TEAR WIU Taa Ba Jail A Vear Older T And will yoo ba qualified for the finest positions the field of buainoH lartlag aa to otter I tu Lot train you at wo have trained thousands of other successful young onea tnd woman. L D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE Bah Lake City. Utah HOTEL BEN LOMOND t : .3 s.?TT. - f si 1 Reaaa Sit Batha . fl.N to f.M CiaUly Booau far 4 arraom . . M II Ah Cooled Loung and lxihby Grill Boom . . CoSea Shop . . Tap Room Heme of Rotary Kiwanla EierulWea Euhanea Optima "2-J- " Chanter of Commerce and Ad Crab 1(1 Hotel Ben Lomond Coma aa yea are T. B. Fitagerald. Mgr. r Xll-Cont- iaued Florian shot Autumn a quick look from beneath lowered brows. "It's Bruce Landor, of course," he said, with a sharp inflection bitten with hopelessness. Autumn avoided his eyes, her gaze upon the window where, the curtains drawn back, the redolent, piny air of the mountains dri gently inward. "I knew it," he said disconsolately. "I've known it for weeks. That's why you're going away. You're running away from him." Autumn got up and stood by the window, looking out across the hills where evening was already settling down. She had been standing there a long time, neither of them speaking, when Florian got impatiently out of his chair. "Let's eat!" he said suddenly. "You're probably starved." She looked at him and smiled dimly. "I could do with a little some"What is thing," she agreed. there? I'll get it ready." "You'll do nothing of the sort," he retorted. "You'll sit down and have another drink while I fry the bacon and eggs." Fifteen minutes later, they were seated amicably across from each other at the little table before the fireplace, feasting on bacon and eggs, bread Aid butter and marmalade, and the really excellent coffee Florian had made. Florian, remarking with a derisive smile that they might as well have it as romantic as possible, had made a fire in the fireplace and had moved the prosaic lamp to a secluded alcove. Their talk was desultory and was concerned chiefly with the Parrs, since Autumn was reluctant to speak of her impending journey. Linda, he told her, had found herself a new passion, the object of which was a bemedaled war veteran who had come to the Okanagan and bought himself a fruit ranch. "Just a matter of changing from sheep to fruit for Lin," he remarked. "It's great to have an easy conscience." And so they talked in quiet amiability, while the firelight flickered pleasantly on the ruddy pine beams of the ceiling and coquetted with the shadows that lurked about the furnishings. Ever since Autumn had left that morning, an inexplicable sadness had lain upon Jarvis Dean, a heaviness of heart that was more than mere regret at her going. She would be back again tomorrow, he told himself, and they would still have a few brief days together before she left the Castle for good. It would be for good this time, and when he joined her in England in the fall, that would be his own farewell to this land in which he had known the heights and depths of all passions. Searching his heart for the cause of his melancholy, he came with acute anguish upon the truth. Jarvis Dean had reached an end an end of everything that had really mattered in life. An abyss of nothingness yawned before him. Without these stark hills and valleys that had witnessed with silent compassion the drama of his life, he would be as a player upon a stage without an audience. Frequently during the day, his eyes had roved hungrily over the noble prospect that had been his for more than a quarter of a century. By toil of mind and body and soul he had made it his own, and his being, in turn, had been delivered over in its entirety to the magnitude of this earth. All that he had known of joy and sorrow, hatred and love, the saga of his failure and triumph, was written across the bright tablet of this land, inscrutable to all but himself; when he left it his epitaph would be graven there. The sun marked noon, and the less explicit hours of the west. Toward the latter end of the day Jarvis went on foot to the temporary camp where his young Irish herder. ,7 ibj-.- Sv Buy the ROCK WOOL and insulate your own home. It will: Sato fuel In winter. Lower house temperature In Bmnier. Il'l FIREPROOF. U. S. ROCK WOOL CO. Sooth Main Salt Laka Cltr 0 The Sentinel Stoker an Intormountaln Product Sine 192 Built Right and Priced Right Term to Suit YOU SEE YOUR OEALER THE SALT LAKE HARDWARE CO.. Distributor AUTOMATIC COAL BURNING Bah Laka City. Utah V, CBAPTEB 16 LENSES DUPLICATED BROKEN Orulirt'i - Lake City IUH er Moaik by Week S.V. Work No. ! -- " iLnffi By as B.NO. NEVADA. HOTEL tOLLt-.N- - Hotel Plandome :ri-rr-.- r to Bruce SALT LAM Clancy Shane, was tending the few hundred sheep he had brought down from the range to be sold. It had been a matter of great pride to the boy that he had brought the band down single-hande- d and Jarvis had expressed his dry pleasure by raising the lad's salary. In a wooded hollow before he reached the rise from which the flock could be seen, Jarvis halted abruptly to listen. An unwonted clamor of excited barking was coming from the direction of the flock, mingled with the mad bleat of sheep In alarm, Jarvis scrambled up through the woods to the crest, where a furious spectacle met his eyes. The low, red sun shone obliquely across a turbulent livid sea of gray bodies, a sea which, while Jarvis stared at it aghast, seemed to become a vortex spinning closer and closer to the brink of a deeD arroyo, a sandy cleft in the ground that had been washed deeper by freshets of the last spring. The dog. in a frenzy, was striving to head the crazed flock away from the danger Suddenly the Irish lad leaped into the maelstrom and began beating his way toward the churning renter. Jarvis shouted a hoarse warning and began to run. OSTENSO 0 MAtTHA OSTENSO-W-NU him- half-stunne- d Bruce Landor was driving home from town. On a sharp decline in the road where it approached the Dean place, his gaze was arrested y by a wild figure that rushed toward him, apparently from nowhere. Bruce drew to the side of the road and stopped his car. The madman was young Clancy Shane. The boy collapsed against the running board, his breath a raucous wheeze. Bruce leaped from his car and lifted him to a sitting position. "What's wrong, Clancy?" he demanded. The boy flung out an arm toward the pasture. "Over yonder!" he gasped. "The master in the gully! Go quick!" With only a swift glance of horror into the blood-staine- d face of the youth, Bruce sped away. The sight that met his eyes in the arroyo froze his veins. There was a scattering of sheep, running and bleating idiotically still, with the dog valiantly struggling to bring them together. But across the gap in the earth there had risen a solid isthmus of dead or dying bodies. Of Jarvis Dean himself there was no sign. Bruce stood in stony horror. The sheep lay in the arroyo, ten deep. Two men came running from the direction of the Dean place." A strange quiet seemed to have fallen upon that land, when it seemed to Bruce an eternity later the western sky drew down an emerald curtain upon the glory that had been there. Three men stood back from their work, their bodies wet, and lowered their heads. The battered, still form of Jarvis Dean lay where they had placed it on the ground at their feet. Clancy Shane had told them the brief and tragic story of what had occurred. An eagle had flown down on the flock and terrorized a few stragglers that had wandered a short distance from the others. They had raced back and spread the contagion of fear in the flock. The rest of the story they could read for themselves in the havoc that had been wrought during the brief moments of the hopeless struggle. turn shrouded darkness far above 01 wail feral came the sinister, of wounded cougar, a trailing sound ovU malevolence. Closer at hand an tn-i of mockery in hooted as though v.e of other more menacing cry wild. A gleam of light through tne , dark-wef-t was of the pines, and Bruce to the gateway at open in driving about, car his turned He the lodge. for a painful moment the deff.-nr.-g was before him, and that duty in his mind, with all the the dolgentleness he could muster, As orous words that he must speak. could he car his from he got down hear a door opening in the lodge A moment later he behind him was face to face with Florian Parr. Even in that instant, when his distress of mind was uppermost, Bruce s detected embarrassment in Flor-ian'- manner. "Hello, Florian," he said as he extended his hand. Florian took the proffered hand in a brief clasp, then seemed to draw back hesitantly. "Bruce!" he exclaimed softly. "You're the last person I expected to see here tonight." Bruce glanced toward the house. "I've come with some pretty bad fren-ziedl- Hannah, in the kitchen of the Casface tle, lifted her from her hands. "You will have to go and fetch her, Bruce," she sobbed. "She is stopping the night with the Parrs at their lodge. You know the place?" Bruce looked down at her. "Yes I know where it is," he replied.--. "Will you go, then?" His lips tightened. "I'll go." he tear-drench- "Lin isnH here' Florian said heavily. news, Florian," he said in a low tone. "Autumn's father was killed this evening." Florian fell back a step. "Killed? Good God! How?" "He was over visiting the flock young Shane brought out to be sold. The boy says an eagle frightened the sheep and they got to milling. Shane tried to break up the jam and they got into a ditch on top of him. Jarvis jumped in and saved the boy but he never got out of it him- self." Florian ran his hand across his brow, speechless from shock. Bruce saw him glance abstractedly toward the house. "My God!" he groaned at last. "This will just about kill Autumn!" "You'd better go in and fetch Lin," Bruce said tersely. "She'll be the best one to break the news to her." But Florian was regarding him in blank consternation. Bruce, puzzled, began to feel an impatience at his singular attitude. "There's no sense in delaying it, Florian," he said harshly. "She has to be told. And Lin is the one to talk to her." As he spoke he glanced toward the house. It came to him that there said. was something strange about the In a few moments he was on his place. It seemed deserted, someway, the dusk thickening about him how, and although the windows were as he sped along the winding trail open no voices came out to them that led southward into the moun- from within. tains Two hours later he climbed "Lin isn't here," Florian said up out of the troublous dark heat of heavily. "Autumn and I are alone." the valley into the sheer, cool starlBruce stared at Florian through ight of the hills. Now the road begloom with eyes that seemed to came narrow and capricious, and the the dim and lifeless with the dull black spires of the dense pines made go flush that had suffused his whole a cathedral ominousness against the How like Autumn, Bruce being after that first sharp stab of sky. with thought frowning admiration, incredulity. "Oh!" he said then, in a voice to have driven over this road alone! One false swerve of the wheel and that had diedI before the sound issee!" she would have been at the mercy of sued. "Oh Florian's face was turned toward this solitary wilderness until someone found her and brought her out. him in the darkness. For a moment He strove to keep his mind on the he did not reply. "You don't see at deviausness of the way so that he all, you damn fool!" he broke forth might be possessed of a measure of at last. "Lin couldn't get here. We composure for the difficult task that were just getting ready to leave lay before him. He was glad, with when we heard your car coming up a bleakness, that her the hill. If you think- -" "Shut up!" Bruce rasped. "You friends were with her Linda Parr and Florian. They would be able to don't have to apologize to me. Go offer her comfort, as he himself was in and tell her. She's needed at home tonight. I'll drive ahead. I not qualified to do. He had telephoned to Hector Cardon't think I can be of any more digan from the Dean place. It had use." With his fists doubled up so that seemed proper that Hector should be the first to be informed of the his nails were like blades in his tragedy and, if possible, to break palms, Bruce tore himself away. He the news to Autumn. Bruce would had experienced for the first time in have given much to have had the his life the exhilarating and horrible old friend of the family with him on impulse to kill. Blindly he staggered this sorry mission, but Hector had to his car, swung it through the gate not been at home and Hannah had so that it lurched crazily toward the urged that the tragic news should brink of the trail before he righted be carried to Autumn without delay. it. then paused to await the sounds that told him that Florian and AuThe road began to steepen treacherously as Bruce approached the tumn had started from the lodge. All the way back down into the comparatively open shelf on the mountain where the Parr Lodge valley, with the shameless and stood. From somewhere in the heartbreaking sound of that other g CHAPTER XIII the Autumn thought with that detachment emotional; his exhaustion brings, how had been te drawing room that aloof and; its Vil' cent's preserved to impervious reticent singularity, oth-- , of the any unwonted experience Sne sat this. er quarters of the house. a in deep chair,; Basque Frock, Slip Included. i,tuss1v l..jji Here's a godsend for busy motiv cart of her consciousness attending a smoth- ers a practical pattern was bidding who Hanrah, (56) at the front door, to that includes both a basque frock ered good-b- y other the part the lawyer, aimlessly , adrift on that curiously ...u. .ut mai filled thp- ; attenuated sunngm shadows here, Sunhght-- no room. been peculiar-l- v had that room in the How oddly ironical. Millieent's! of the Even now, when the rest in mourn to sympathy house seemed 1 with the Laird's deserted study up-alone Pat kept Saint where stairs, vigil, this his dumb, broken-hearte- d de-- , room was a mystically serene an was it rather, of death. Or, mal affirmation of life beyond temporal things. Autumn pressed her fingers against I860 her eyes at the feeling of light-heaher. over edness that was coming The ordeal of listening to Snyder read her father's will had undone her completely. And that extraordihe nary codicil, that footnote that had written into it to Bruce Landor only a short time since But here came Hannah, with a steaming pot of tea! Snyder had refused tea had helped himself generously to the Laird's choice brandy, instead. Funny how resentful one could become, in times of emotional upheaval, over a small and irrelevant thing! She glanced at the tiny watch that hung on a cord about her neck. Hector Cardigan would be here again He had been coming faithsoon. fully every day, and now she felt that without him she would be utterly lost. A shadow, unobtrusive, gentle, fell for school, and a pretty slip. You across the threshold, and Hector en- can really solve most of your tered through the French windows small daughter's school problems from the lawn. Autumn rose and by using this two-wa- y pattern, drew another chair close to her own time and again. It's very easy beside the low table on which Han- and quick to do. Make the frock nah, with a silence that marked her of challis, wool crepe, gingham, own personal grief and not the depercale and in velveteen it will corum of a servant in the house of be sweet for parties, too. bereavement, had placed the tea The Patterns. things. With pale humor, Autumn No. 1860 is designed for sizes 14, had noted how Hannah had taken 16, 18, 20; 40, 42. Size 16 requires the loss of her master unto herself, 5 of 35 inch material; yards after a due observance of the amefor collar, 2 yards contrast yard nities in consoling the master's bias binding for collarless style. daughter. No. 8568 is for sizes 6, Hannah withdrew noiselessly, and 8, 10, 12 and designed 14 years. Size 8 reHector seated himself beside Auquires 1 yards of 36 inch matumn. terial for the frock, yard con"One sugar, I believe, Hector!" trast 1 17 and yards trimming. she said, with an effort at briskof 36 inch material for slip; yards ness. "And lemon?" 1 yards ruffling; 2 yards trim"Quite so," Hector returned. ming. Her very hands, she thought as Send order to The Sewing she poured the tea with an uncon- Circle your Pattern Dept., 149 New trollable tremble, seemed to have San Francisco, Ave., Montgomery lost their character. They looked Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in ?bins) weak and purposeless. each. Setting her cup on the table be(Bell Syndicate WNU Service.) side her, she leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes. "I'm adrift, Hector," she murmured. "Absolutely adrift." "Now, now, my dear," Hector stammered. "Life must go on, child. Even after after terrible things Serrrind Fctrurci fy happen to us." "Life must go on? Why?" She HUMANITY'S HOPE opened her eyes and gazed at him, as though in genuine wonderment. "Our nation is made up of myriads Hector shifted uneasily. He looked of people of all creeds, all religions, aB worn and shaken, she thought with all tongues. Our form of governidle compassion. His friendship for races, ment is the last hope of humanity. Our Jarvis had been a long and tried democracy must survive. It has surone; he was the only living being vived. It does not have to be made l who had witnessed the extraordinawork because it has worked." U. S. Senry drama of that soul ator Ik Styles Bridges. from beginning to end. Perhaps it was unfair to inflict upon poor Hector the irony of the epilogue. "That is an absurd question. Autumn," Hector said gruffly "The Here is Amazing Relief of daughter of the Laird will go on Conditions Due to Sluggish Bowels You are shocked and exhausted fldfiFu&ttvnrtlii If ya mDk M ' mv tkie w SUVKI Before he reached the arroyo, however, the outer fringe of the and band had run off tar.gent-wis- e were plunging headlong into the gaping earth. Instantly the whirlpool broke, the main body of it following the mad course of the first few into the arroyo. When Jarvis came at last and looked over the edge of the cleft, he found the pit filling with writhing, kicking, screaming bodies. A few had escaped and were straggling up the steep bank, bleating dementedly, their oblique, crazy eyes aglare. In the thick of the struggle, flailing out with both arms and sobbing frantically, Clancy Shane bobbed about, with hideous ludicrousness, like a cork. Jarvis yelled to him and plunged down the embankment, hurling out of his way the few anirrjals that rushed up at him. With all the strength of his powerful frame he fought his way to the boy, lifted him bodily above the descending stream of gray forms, and flung him free. As he did so, a dozen grizzled shapes came down upon him and Jarvis fell back among them. v CTART the day cheerily, & comfortable, crisp little rnora. ir.g frock, 1860, with four button. and several scallops. It has two-ay neckline so that you CJ vary its personality by making j! up both ways in different materia, sometimes with the tailored col. lar and sometimes with the plaj. Choose square neckline. percale, linen and calico f - tit Two Crisp Pallcrnt TTilJl Double 1'alarp. u cbtcti gin-ha- i if QUICK CJ M -- HEADACHE? dear" :.cin7(ff' la'" just try oil vegetable laxative. 4Zm2232Zaf "I have not been the mild, thorough, refreshing, invigorating. Dedaughter of fao pendable relief the Laird for a long time," Autumn from sick headaches, bilious speita, tired feeling when associated constipation. interrupted in a pensive voice "I Withnnt Diclr et a 2S boxwith of NR from yom know now that father riioH t,.' ... IIIUIUUI RISK druggist. Make the test-t- hea if aot return the box to us. We wot years ago. The ghost of him came w..Uu delighted, purcnase back now and then-o- nd price. That'a fair. on one those visits he wrote a note m of OetNR TablftB today! hi will to Bruce Lancior." Hector started. "A note9" WNU W 49-- 39 Autumn rose slowly and went to the desk at the farther end of the Royal Act room, where Snyder had sat 'Tis a kingly action, believe me, her and Hannah a half hour with o to assist the fallen. Ovid. When she returned she held an envelope ,n her hand. She removed from it a narrow sheet of rtormtartty Today's "Father must have writtenpaper of Doan't Pills, after this on of worldmany f a-- m h'S wiU imediatey Bruce came to visit him one day at fatner s request. could make neither head nor Snyder tail of . of course We shall have to give it to Bruce. Hector took the paper from hel nffp h He read, in the hand; Pent admission Laird's bold im "To Bruce Landor that I may have Qhe rong in many things. At this mo men s wntinglseem to see light But it flickers and V goes out an old man in darkness Tmg it if I help blunder through u, that envelops me. Life ha, Plaved . ma fio. ' of me that .c' I "'S. S would not hp For some seconds , i at the wr ?ing ,i h eyes lifted and Autumn Jas prised at the solemn radiance ofsur h'S face. It was a look of relief ' almost of happiness. mg attentively (TO BE t COMl.Mioj years wide use, surely i be accepted as evideoee of satisfactory And favorable puHie opinion supports that of the able physkiaas who test the value of Doan's tinder exact"1 1 laboratory conditions. too, 'ad pI7.sician5. approve evcry word of recommend DoanS PU m . good diuretic treatment for disorder M tie kidney function and for relief of and worrT " causes. pcople were w"- - of how ttie aneyi must constantly remove wa. "V tay in the Wood without there would be better V"1-1;. of wh7 th "hole body lufTerJ "fj" V" ' "n"t T' ti, .""i tcT b Ln diuretic medio-,'0r,,,ou- be more often employed, or too frequent nnn-fm?,- . "0met,",ei arn of disturbed kirtarr 0u maT ,uffer najjKing back- pm-5ent headache, auueka of dn- ,uffi' np niKnt' r the allV- j out. W-fe- el weak, nervous. tr It is better to rery oa .'..r''"? Pi. ctaSiTu"' that hM world-wid- knn2L thi"on owrthinn less Ash your neighbor! favorablT |