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Show WW THE MUURAY EAGLE Th Game of Bowls I done on the resera-- Z and bears no , ? Eire ,1 linf; j3 sedat variety America. In Eire it is a well as skill. 3 e, men from widely sep-contestants, the ?nac3 are ledbe n backel by the entire The f his own town. mi i" 'a eS&Maa S ? ott fffr. IV, OPPORTUNITY New Held ot opportunities! Transform discarded nrtlcles Into profit. "100 uses for wajte" 25c, Bos 1750, Hollywood, Calif. A Bghh&i tyiction Seual t 2.1 units furnished. U. S. highway 06. 90, 89. 100 ft. from MORMON TEMPLE. Good Income. Spare for mors units. S13.000. Terms. JOHN CLMHAUD, Mesa, Arliona. AUTO COURT. 0 H. lam C. Wirs By HAROLD CHANNING WIRE WNU Sarvfcs Sin I? Mt of a.ul tsers Si CHAPTER XIII Rope fihine industries ion pfjduceil osei!i 7 51 U 'lot. HOTELS State""1-- f- Tu t --in FELT Auto All Mnuv- be ! .d Itif Cuth i roots' " I " urn UMION TIRES iV'o lseass fiwrii sr01lVll D your local PRODUCTS CO, C.ty. Utah ee Soil, ..e Sa!t B O lotfce .lt Lake e, '" " other p; 'All.N.One2S01L-AI- . bt: I.ka So.. Salt .v Vd . TIRE , look' Salt Laks Prices Cut. s.il Pimm I J From 5 C.rvirP ideif. iy .,iM PIANO BARGAINS i Jf . e PARTS S'Hte 1 ( t ths Tn wf'TMNG CO. ;!s, Trailers of aml liu k rea . ll I net ian USED AUTO ; bes. i - ' . ,.s.A..LTLflKfi.Si MiVAUA. stop so .4-2- tBt: St D m he PUREJEEDS 1 ;assi. & ig. . Or r Iiict n w IvrJ wett thai. Jt nr. tendt hun er hi k.- Inrtrumi-nt- Maiiufacluren KVrt. Elastic Stocking Tin Pbniriam SPI'lT Company Utah jnd Snii'h St - S'.'t Lnk ( ny. a, traxrittrt, II of it t of m lA ihro'uf U . Salt Lake 'Hy VENETIAN CLINDS I .FREE SAMPLES AM) ESTIMATES bhidea Keversed fasrUtst Workm.n.h.p l.owe.t Prices Ak.mm .n (lid Kllrr, Shades Walrh 75 Sanders Window 1 ' Md Ordrrs Promptly Killed S'.ie si. Ml li.mli wouk ougb. ks, Steam terras. Msnufactorers C:l. ARTMAS Olfire Pture loSER-l- l ;m, fr- t tuiurei, S:.l. Csrbonators. AU rwonditionrd equipment Bar ghtaK eed Salt l.ak FOUNT AINSH'E ( REAM COUNCream cabinets FREEZE KS and MtH TS wondc - and chairs, files, rach J. safes. W. Iliosdway. 35 ICE CREAM FREEZERS th.es an b ls hs; hat FX- PKSK I :hildc dk I'SKD sddinic AND PMENT I jOFFICEEQU JCIW 1 TRAINING BUSINESS "L S. D. U Pay$!" Tninin9 Doesn't Cost ICOKING FOR WORK? ompas i eve." Set, IE ' "WHAT CAN YOU DO?" i short, intipcnsitt course In bunttt training, and you can answer ,1 iTAe eatt : L Sc an a Cte Real st M irs, al J COLLEGE BUSINESS D. S. wh'HTH MAIV SALT LAKE CITT PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTO-KRAF- j T 1 ECONOMY FILM SERVICE ! Any Roll Developed with Qwlirt Printj i stcn :. wis ones t f'f'l Pnntt Wrp coin and film carefully ? t pea? ich & or Ufc WTO s tea 749 rite. Uub KRAFT lt l J 25c 3c DRUGS SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- j iu Bo MINERAL WOOL '"ksJu. 8te.ne.h;rd inlManiion F r .day i iled. n shen who hpffl lor 3 i. abc cds, n . d RID OF THE OLD BRIDGES (GET ChW.'1 tfe. nviclia .nrl a.- CE r'kU trinPt. . ' ' ! N t,u . In the morning Breck found his telephone dead and patrolled the line until mid-dabefore discovering the break. Returning to Rock House late afternoon, he was halfway across the meadow when he caught a movement in the pines around his cabin. A horse whinnied. His hand had learned the habit of dropping to his gun. He went on, alert and tense in his saddle. Shadows about the station hid the animal tied at his rack until he approached within a short distance, then he saw the blue color. A moment later Louise rose from the log where she had been sitting and took a stop to meet him. He swung down beside her happily. "I didn't expect a visitor, or I would have left the cabin unlocked. How are you, Louise?" "Oh, able to be about." There was but a momentary warmth in her greeting, then she seemed to draw within herself. Her manner was again casual as she said, "I came this way to tell you something that is really none of my business." "What?" "There's to be a meeting tonight in Jackson's camp at Bear Trap. I rode that way coming up from the Potholes, and talked to JG himself." "A cattle meeting?" Breck asked. "Of course." He frowned. A meeting of cattlemen was not his affair. They would not welcome him, uninvited. He said thri OTcr ."' HinilwlM, re.ATtllW AYH, ATK lr''n PrUdly r"n Information ort Ur.ikos. rorrucnle.fi and Sulnlralnasa Tlpo. I DIM VI "I Mfg. Co. SeliL.lt Ciy Si. Bobv ' Ch.rU Its. t. " . r. r, VJ - fres elre.lars "rut ifrrw,Mh ! ME "AKHKItS " ajjajaa,,, I it v Ui.l I West from Bear Trap meadow rose the high, rounded top of Black keep comin'. We'll hava the fence down before the bunch gets there." He named three others to accompany the boy. They rode over to Join the men already holding the herd. The rest of the party continued up the mountain. Breck glanced over a dim mass of backs in passing. The cattle were quiet enough now, but once get them on the move they would be hard to stop. That was Jackson's plan. Cut the fence. Start the stampede upward. Spread his animals on the disputed grass lands before the Middle Fork outfit could turn them back. "Looks like we ain't been discovered yet," the man observed, riding close. They went on in silence. Presently Breck put a question that had been growing in his mind. "Will you hold your men back while I go up to the fence?" "For what?" "To do the job of cutting. I'm a government man. I'll take the re- - interested." She moved toward her horse. "Louise!" Breck caught her and turned her about until she faced him. "Tell me, be wide open for once, is this something I ought to have a hand in?" "It isn't on the ranger books," she answered, "but it is something you ought to have a hand in, very She paused, hesitating much." over her next words, then finished gravely, "You could do a lot tonightor nothing. I wonder Abruptly she gathered her reins and mounted. Then in the instant before she wheeled her horse and loped away, she looked down and completed her thought. "I wonder if I have judged you right." Breck lost no time m making a decision. He would take Louise's advice and go to Bear Trap, though she had not said what the meeting was about, nor why he should have a hand in it Some way to turn the cattlemen back into his friendship? They were in trouble? He fed Kit, cooked a hasty meal, and in half an hour was headed into the Bear Trap trail. Duf k closed the forest about him. bringing that sense of loneliness so often a part of the day's end. It was increased tonight. He thought of Louise. She too at this moment was riding alone somewhere across the mountains. Safe? Of course. She was a mountain girl. His horse clattered on up the ridge. Breck continued to thu.k of her, until suddenly in glancing about, he was swept by the foi!:ri4 that he had just become nwak; Louise must have ridden miles o:;t of her trail if she had Con.c ibis way. She might have wailed hours at the station to give him a rhanre with JG. She cared enough t.i d that! f behoved he could prove h.:r.?eif the men. "Idiot!" he fhirei. "yu diir.'t even say th.ir.ks!" I:r,ru!.vrly her. wanted to wheel Kit and He looked up through the pine Un s a strange new at the stars, ?di beauty in Iheni. Moonlight andunder-foot- . lay in soft lace patterns Swiftly a .yearning p.isse.ved was freat dial him. More-th- ere he could more say to her lonight! "Y i He turned upon himself. well U keep do roughneck, you'll your head on one Jib at a time!" About midnight he rode onto the table-lanof Hear Trap and was to Jackson's camp by n ii guided tary point of light II? arrr,;u!:"d the cabin, then even before he r a rr dismount, the d r Wh. J and a voice Give Your Towels Gay Fruit IL.,) dM-.ande- there?" "Ranger," I'.ie.k answerrd He t ' I Kit swung to the pround. M'curr th" toward a tree and moved "1! " where JG peered out ' aid casually, !' " he c'-i- everything?" Breck fell a steady crut y. the door opened He entered ;"d once a dozen faces cm fronted ',v.. ' some questioning, other - ' f. were None ; glaring. .a rccogniJP, thongh no d hiM they all been at the count and "e the most part cowhand? en.il Jackson. a!l -- c Thry sat about the That a way in singular cupicd w.-what Drcck saw fin "1 l led. aen-cleaned. out, being mostly. ed; ' some were rifle, t'tiota d h : : ' s tn ih.- - 1 ' ly . " r' ' enough, Drrck ..b- iv.-dloi.r. Uiis band of a d 7cn men for of cartridgrs Motifs4 immii a a a $ V"a ! Ml nil a Here's your chance to add color to the kitclicn in the simplest of stilchcry. Do the large fruit in npplique or outline stitch and let the (4 and give the finishing touch. e but Make them for the here's fair warning, you'll want to keep them yourself! In pattern C037 you will find a transfer pattern of six motifs averaging 4 by 10 inches and the applique pattern pieces; color suggestions; material requirements; illustrations of stitches used. To obtain this pattern, send 13 cents in coins to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 259 West 14th St., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, address and pattern number plainly. cross-stitc- h bride-to-b- How Women Their 40's in ..." d ' j . atg;.' "All depends 'm. tec dered moved and the permittees given their full measure of range land. Meanwhile cattlemen on government meadows were losing money. He felt the dozen faces turned toward him, and recognized the drama of this moment. The whole thing appeared as a stage; the men with dark, shadowed faces, singly or in groups. Their guns. The dim lamplight. The closed door and blackness outside the windows. Yet, looking once more into J. G. Jackson's determined eyes, he knew this was a drama of real life, and death if need be. His next movement was no gesture of the stage. He drew out his gun, put it on the table, then pushed out a seat and sat down. Without a word a man at his elbow offered cleaning rags and oil. "Well now, by God!" said old JG. "Boys, let's get along!" on how you go into it. But there, I thought you probably wouldn't be . Tfr'"T'""rer.t and Hull "" ""Wtto Kle. WUr,rs, TFR.i,. :Wr"Tl likrv r..-.- , battle. Rags littered the floor. An odor of oil and grease mingled with cigarette smoke. The room, after he had entered, turned uncomfortably silent. Jackson spoke first. "Grub in the box yonder, if you're hungry. We've had ours." "Thanks," said Breck. "I've had mine too." He crossed to the stove, held out his hands to warm them, then turned abruptly to face the gathering. "What's up, Jackson?" About the room men put down their guns, and sitting motionless, waited for their range-bos- s to speak. The old man moved nearer the stove. "It's business," he began, "plumb serious, maybe, and you oughtn't to have come riding into it." He paused. Behind him, the men took up their jobs of "You oughtn't to have come," JG repeated, "because you can't stop us." Breck remained silent. There was a grim tenseness in the room, some- - so. The girl shrugged. Hospital Supplie. Abdominal faup. Sirf, Dir. doufc -. MAYFLOWER TRUSSES ot eve ive It: Mothe COMPANY PEF in Salt Lake i served by CAI'E at 151 S. Maio lie POPULAR IT.1CKD. i ll.oarh.n. DinneiM nrl Snn.lwiche knot have i local Dealer vjur ' ,!: INEXPENSIVE MEALS ybd "i . itisSf. it " k1" frt'ni 4 OCCIDKNTAL broke 1 y "0" t -1- Can Attract Men fTora'a food s.lvir for a nmn during her b rhsng (usually (mm 114 to she'll l"M h r app al to men, who worn.) L- s -l, l.-- s of r--f. dizzy spells, moody spells. 8 and If jma hrs. air, reed a (rood fencral ayVem tonie take Lydia K. rinkharo'a Compound, rus.ls helps Nature build t$ptnailf or SFomm. Itthus helps girt mors up phyairal resistance, vivarity to enjoy lifa and aaaut ralmin( nerves snd diturl.me symptoms tbs jittery often aerompsnv rhangs of 111. VitU WUKTU TU.IN'U bout hot Hashes. "It in't thing that went well with the odor Mountain, and up its wooded slope, of fresh ammunition and the click shortly after midnight, rode a line of hammers being drawn and let of men who went with no words again into place. He knew the an- spoken between them. Breck found tagonism against him and weighed himself in a position near the lead, with J. G. Jackson's broad back his next words carefully. "Can't we get on the same level, next ahead. They climbed steadily, Jackson? You placed me wrong at passed the first slope and came onto the count. I understand. From your a more level shelf-lik- e part of the sound Take mountain. Here distant a I bad. looked of angle things my word when I say all that is go- came into the pad of their horses. ing to be explained, and right now Increasing, until at the moment of meet me wide open. Will you?" emerging from pines onto an open Jackson's expression space, Breck caught the restless Slowly changed. "You seem wanting to be tramp of hoofs and low crooning of men. on the square, sure enough," he "and for the time being I'm lakin' your word. But what I said, goes. You can't stop us! Tonight we're goin out to do a little fence b'aV.in". Up behind Black Mountain where the forest boundary ends and the Middle Fork range country be-i- : i. Anything been said to you ui. it that fence?" "No." Breck answered. ' Well, it ain't within a mne of forest line. True boundary takes !( !:e whole of Black Mountain, h it ,m . (i r if t fence was put along the t,i f.bone. That was five years agi we didn't think much of it at it time. I guess the big fellows own Middle Fork ranch had ;r thing to do with the wrong survey. Anyhow, years have been dry ; . ,v and up there is a grazing strip a v. ,le wide and several long that 1... ! eg In my permit." Why hasn't the fence b' en rr .ved?" Breck asked. J.ikson gave him a wTy lovk. V. i re sure new in the govern-- , i.it! Startin' three years ago I've tr i to have It done. Hell! 1 reck-- ; y paper ain't got through the " t r . Jlice yet." 1.;! I think Cook- -" k's all right," Jackson broke Ain't his fault. He's got to '. t the supervisor, and Die su r has to wait for someone else. ! tlad knows when any actum will , ,; ;,e, Meanwhile we're short of . r Well, what do you say? Ain't T. yrars long enough to wait?" r.T ck nodded. 'vc got three hundred head uii I this side of Black Mountain." "We're ridm' n continued. ,; ..re tonight, ana come dan a , v, have that bunch pushed on r, .( h the fence and scattered holJ ,. ,v! i re one man or two can He glanced m in this season." the room at his men brfore c "Maybe the Middle Forki what's comin' off. If they ; , to be ..v ., ttop us there's goin' " all that's Mioutin', by lu.tk's decision was made .... t.iw Jackson andel his argu. metre !, ,.,( He knew govert'n.rnt i'h five In another u or- be would u'lK the drift fence C . ,r. . . Jackson halted the line and rode on. nerve and upvt Clet more fresh on the ranger books," she answered. Two figures met him before he reached the herd and after a moment he came back. 'All right so far," he offered, 33 his cowhands gathered around him. "Now then, we've got to cut the wire first. No use cripplin' up any of these critters if we can help it. Some of us will have to stay here and help Jeff and Wade push the bunch across. Johnny, you f ir one, trot over there." Instantly a young voice burst cut in protest. "Aw hell. JG, let me go up in front." "Time enough for fightin'," Jark-so- n told him. "Get along now. Toll Jeff to start right behind us and sponsibility and answer for what happens tonight." Jackson's oath came across the dark between them. "Damned if that ain't white of you, Rangcrl But you're riskin' too much." "My Job, you mean?" "Hell, no, your neck! Those Middle Forkers are a hard lot" "Perhaps they don't know as much as you think," Breck insisted. "They aren't here, or they would have stampeded your cattle from the shelf. I'm going ahead anyway." Jackson did not answer. In a moment he held up one hand, checking his line of cowpunchers. "All right. Ranger," he said, "you go up. We'll wait here. The fence Is Just as you top the rise." Breek moved on in the dark, climbing until timber ended and the idope became an open dome i t the mountain. Here the fence, four barbed wires stretched i.n posts close together, ran lengthwise along the ridge. Halted by the barrier, he sat fur a moment listenof his own ing, and even as the pad h, rse ceased, he heard the sound , f others approaching rapidly below him. (TO HE C07Vt U) grass-covere- ' ' j Of a Kind The sincere alone can recogn!i sincerity, Carlyle. 'J Ask Doctor About ' This Ideal Way TO LOSE FAT ti i ju:aip Mil S"ie ill Up JTMtr Hut ii v f.inl Lit ,me n '.;- - v fake hat inf.. I !rt;(-dirts ait'l i i l i t ny uoitDl ! tint you'll tost .v ! trsllf nf life. nun Hut va women like j. t i! n't re.lm-- f s:i ln-- t V. Il f retS :lli tl tl.ltf f tt-- o t 4 Hi'!-- it 1 If - I F. .' !an I ..I ,! I V i f f ! Sir'.itlllljtrd in ortuns. ', r . I. r e m L'. S, A. .r't ! i i a 1 Ktut. 'a a n r. ft oi f ."i And Irt's I r, r ' ! t Want ! ovemig!, t! t ;l!r follow a I Itavti v t t Si v ntr'hud i f ,') f...ls snd lr.vi frrsh ptj's proper ' ' It I :.' v.:. t! e e d.. don't want on stirvstioBI ,iof t'rtciw. N A' .l I r tibia n; i'l'rf t i tt ! ..t:'.i: i 'f il jrau I t . t 1 erl 11.1 alrillht rltht BSW ahn.it hnt.fhrn, It Is harmful. It Is NOT Jul ttne aH a tern pennls mar Isnorsntlv bHtete, I nt. en the host 1 ou'H are It Is m blend nf fl nrtlte miner als hirh when diaanlved In water 4a aimllnr tn the f.mnua mrdieltint Psa. water whets we .lthy wmnen hava aa for yesra, it t ff A r i f Tt"' ' '1 r ' eerta l !" a tar KttiUT me, ta. (,e i t AWAVl At dr. . rvet))efe. ro-- Once Candy Was for the Kings and Very Rich; Is Not 'Bad for Teeth -- When grandfather was a boy he bought candy at the general store. Selection was easy, for there were few varieties, mostly hard candy. Today there are more than 2.0'H) different kinds, states a writer in Today the Philadelphia Record. candy is made by the hundreds of tons, when once it was made by the ounce. More than a billion pounds are produced in the United Stales each year, enough to supply every man, woman and child with a pound a month. Once candy was fur the and the very rich. Today evkings eryone can afford candy. And it seems almost yesterday that mothers forbade candy to children "because it's bad fur you." and that candy was "bad for the teeth." Both were superstitions, and both have been exploded by science. As to its being "bad for the teeth, scientists at the University of Michigan ended that legend in a year's test with white mice. At the end of a year those fed candy had no more tooth cavities than the ones not fed any. While the basis of all candies is sugar, so many other Ingredients are used that a pound box i f assorted candies may represent product! from 29 different countries, and virtually every continent. use mora American a year. tons cf sugar a million than It comes from Cuba, the Philippines, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and Louisiana. Beet and maple sugar fire domestic use 400,-- 0 products. Candy-maker'0.000 pounds of com syrup each year. The American industry uses ilMl.tK.iO.OlK) pounds of nuts a year. Hard candy is made of sugar, water, corn syrup and flavor. Nougats are made with egg whites. The mort important ingrcd.ent In caramels and toffee is m.lk. Butter, corn syrup, sugar and flavoring are Included, MarshmaMows are made almost entirely of gclai.n. Licorice Is made from licorice rastc, extracted from the licorice plant, and sugar and flour. Chocolate penny candies are made of Sugar, corn yrup, gelatin, water and chocolate. - candy-maker- s llnsli-- h Game Aunt Sally Aunt Sally" is an Ki ghsh game which consists in throwing balls at grotesquely dressed puppets, one of which is generally a Rgure called Aunt Sally. The object is to break a clay pipe which is generally Inserted in the mouth or forehead of Ut puptxt W.NU-- 14-- W Atom l'pn 39 Atom Immensity is made up of atomi. Leibnitz. Help Them Cleanse tlie Blood of Harmful IUxly Wast YmtT lednevs S- - fointanlly flltrrtrir Waste matter ft. m he hlood atrsm. ilul kidneys sometimes la( in iheif work da not art as Nature letetidH- - fsil t rs hots Impurit rs that, if fetsitwd. tt.irra and upart lb wboia Cn.sna (he ... ne-- y. r"S h Kurtt nseae tieni atent heads' he. at lark r.f ditJne, smrll.nt. putnness) up ftfUrt tSs undrt k.- -i f.lir of riavmaa e.f and slreentli. loss) Sid na.e'y tnhef s fes i t li dney of blsdder dia-d- er rxsy t burnirg, srsnty or tow Ireonent MMrafon. There should be no flnshl thai pevmr tteileet. few ,ta!met is laef thsn bars Nn snaasnf I'tl's. I thss forty yeus. raw friends f rstion-wid- s repulstioei. They hsvs tter.pl U Are reenmrnended by ne4of rourtry tvr. As rp ,' |