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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD s Valve leaks u in osible to ae, a Kathleen Norris Says: few the ruMe'. re and v eak untj Ernest Haycox filed. E STORY SO FAR: Although he Is a rancher. Clay Morgan decides to a lone hand against Ben Heren-anothrancher, who is trying to he cattle country his own way. Of Rack Breathitt is that per Id friends, only on his side. The others like Gurd t, !.ige White and Charley Hill-- i ed Bottom are supporting Herendeen, more coast of $ ss in self defense. Gurd Grants for land Catherine, is In love with Clay nffle good S at his ranch when Hack Breathitt tie Dutch up followed by Herendeen, Lige an extinct t and Gurd. Catherine hides, but ut of the recognizes her horse. Herendeen and wn is ca" lues his war on .nesters vcloping s not ha g its fiR; ptic nerve s Dont Rob Your Children Bell Syndicate WNU Features. cloth. The suit is trimmed down fo essentials only a topper Which can be worn tucked in as a shirt, or as a jacket overalls and an abbreviated romper suit for sun worship. The last named carries a sail boat decoration which can be applied as a bright patch of contrasting color, Pattern No. 8166 is in sizes for 1. 2. 3, and S year olds. Size 2 years set takes 1 material. 3U yards 35 or yards nc rac to trim rompers. Send your order to: down in, ters by warning the Gales to get reached h te range. Vet the be v continue with the story. s are mad uled up th CHAPTER VI ea below. ! 4 jti.ij.rgan entered War Pass In first Mess, putting up at Gentrys. would be supper for him at tT" but for some rea-1- 1 at wasnt very clear to him, nt to the Long Grade saloon, Hack Breathitt, and took him hotel for a meal. en he got to Ann McGarrahs Suddenly Jesse Rusey slid from the shadows and was before him. und her kneeling before Janet, ting the pleats of Janets dress, iff Nickum came into the light of pression of any kind. It was a sigsh nor & McGarrah said: Ill get you the hotel. People kept crossing to nal. before as ai, Clay. the Odd Fellows Hall and the music Morgan said: Maybe youd like lbbles wh, o, he said, I didnt want to and the scrape of feet made quite a drink of water. the finis r. I ate at the hotel. a racket, and She had been too long in the counshowed him a quick, faintly top of not to know. She slipped her Jesse Rusey slid try Suddenly off into surprise, but covered it up at arm through his elbow and they left from the shadows and was bethe reir We should be starting for the floor, passing Harry Jump withfore him. be stirrec chool in a little while. He had the of a out giving him notice. They went k the liqu tn I taking you to the dance? cat, this marshal, and eyes that down the stairs into the soft dark could burn through a brick walL shadows. irring con said: You hadnt asked. Harry Jumps boots It gave Hack Breathitt a moments scuffed the stairs, following. He oughly m) now Ill ask. to think Rusey had come passed them, saying from the side rgan and Janet passed through tore and sat on the porch steps, on him thus unawares, but he stood of his mouth, ,, Not here, Clay. crowd rB along the fast, not saying anything. The mar- They followed him as far as Gen Mo shals hand reached out and hit Hade ntrys and stopped before him. welve, bu came Breathitts flank, where the gun was. All right, said Morgan. rom 13 j McGarrah presently dressed in a pearl-whit- e You sure? gown; Afterwards Rusey, no man to ask said Harry Jump, e ber eyes darker, it made questions, made a turning circle on staring at Catherine. ays sevrad black hair shine by contrast his heels, looking the whole street Ill go, she said. you & Never mind, answered Morgan. ling before her, marveling at through. He said then, Be careful. f rnoon. You know better, Harry. ' and stepped back into the m what change, he reflected that she Hack, Well, then. I rode through Goves are b different from the women of shadows. ernment Valley before dark tonight. nel is the own Parr Gentry called for a schot-tisch-e Theres a notice posted on the buildgow of the crowd car-e- n ng Navyr gene Lige White came over to ing. The land office is selling the in the hem up the hill to the schooL At uard. (Be301 Jane left them and Morgan claim Ann McGarrah, leaving his valley at auction tomorrow afterrds from two seats near the front of a wife with Clay. They went wheeling noon at four oclock, in Sage City., He waited for Morgan to speak ocal dealt- - made platform. Breathitt and dipping around the floor, Mrs. cartons a, n the rear of the room, crowd-servic- e White very graceful in his arms, and when Morgan kept silent, he He and very pretty; but her glance kept added: That notice should have fi etween other townsmen. lt Breathitts eye but Hack only following her husband with that been posted a month before the sale. Adv. his head, unsmiling and clear- - calm indrawn attention Morgan had Somebodys got at somebody to hold noticed so often. off until it was too late for you. Its Sed by something. d Death Herendeen had kept Catherine nine o'clock now. Eighteen hours rent by grades, some singing, . . e united, am until four tomorrow. Hundred and (janc1g some reciting. He Grant to himself. After the basis of iiervous not White ninety miles to go. Mrs. returned When Morgan it realizing re are equ. came forward to the talkMorgan said: I talked to Fred edge of to Lige and stood awhile, idly iron andiage a fine sweat broke across ing. The stag line thickened. Gurd Rich at the post office a few- - days is from rehead and he pushed his legs Grant was over there and Gurds ago, and he knew nothing. He and drove his hands in his in gases Cjt the floor, pockets; he trying to remem-ha- t glance was directly on him, the first line of her poem stayed on him without recognition. had his head up, he was watching Pick your the mouth of the Odd Fellows doorParr Gentry said, Afterwards she made a quick and her voice came over the partners for a waltz, and the fid- way. But he wasnt seeing it, Cathagain. Clay erine realized. He was a long, still precise as it always was, and dles began tuning-umonc sure. When she was through remained in his tracks, head-dow.shape in the shadows, quietly cond causes painful iie&rtoum.tioctct sidering this little treachery. He still, not looking around at puzzled by Gurd Grants cut. Some"neobtetbSi 'iier people. Ann said thing was in the wind. He couldnt had a way of absorbing trouble and him, turning him. She was catch it with his mind, but he knew punishment without showing emog with that brightness which Herendeen had somehow gotten at tion; he had a way of storing these so close to tears. He mur- Gurd. He debated it coolly, trying things in his mind. He said: All id 15 StripJ Yes, and was thinking of to make up his mind, until he heard right, Harr. He turned back with Catherine. bo would have been happy to Ann say, What is it, Clay? om 1795 t he said. Nothing at She said: Nothing, tbsEeen Speculators, Clay. Or was all ahout 15 g had She knew how he felt about all. Herendeen and Catherine were Ben. 1116 of ird was for it Program, 13 it had Government Valley. only a few feet away. Catherines ;inal plan k Breathitt The music had stopped. Coming touched him, brief and inglance went into directly ell as a s then he forgot Gurd up the stairs they saw Herendeen and terested, a saw drade and line solid Tn isii t3n s bar. . Nearest him were a and put his hand to Ann McGa- and Ann standing at the edge of the ,es conv . Crowfoot riders, rrahs elbow and moved her toward hall, neither one liking the other 0j Qranfs 1 It amused him to see enough to keep up conversation. stripes v friends hig BiUy Mc. Herendeen. id so the c sa,d Herendeens ruddy face show in- Herendeen never bothered to conhere Hack. ..step He said to Cathfor intolerance. ceal his feelings. He displayed restant es, Breathitt shook his head and ored. ced on his heels, his face cool erine, Should be ours, I think, and sentment now as they came formoved away with her as the waltz ward. He ducked his head at Cathooth and tough, Herendeens erine. "My dance, he said, and iad gathered at the far end of began. Catherine said: I wondered if led her away. Out on the floor he and these he watched sol- looked toward Morgan, a thoughtfulBiard Connor and Bones Me- - you would. g one more ness on bis cheeks. One more week e I d' were at the bar, Ann said: Dont make me dance i VyrS.II'd from him, but he knew they dance. War Pass, the Burnt Ranch A D V I im spotted in the back bar mir- - school, the old hall at Chickman with him again." He said: I guess I've got to stiess, zui? He pushed up his hat and Creek. This goes back a long way. home. Ill have to ride." ellngs, dizz . on of take so you remember Do many you iiarities" niaking a turn behind She got her wrap at once and lybere wasnt any space those dances. Clay? vma table' tw0 he said, I guess I do they went down the stairs. The ;en them, but he came against Yes, when Im dancing with you. These sense of wasting time pushed Moripound lea and shoved them aside. gan along, making Ann McGarrah tressciue v stared straight ahead, into the dance nights were like markers On the store porch al disturber. leading into the back years. He walk quite fast. Tell lorted gm n- - with the reserve he had seen could visualize most of them; he he thought to lift his hat. label dixtt' times before in moments of could remember the fun of most of Janet Ill be back to take her home he said, and swung Je. He knew what the expres-nean- t. them, fit is an odd thing, he said, on Wednesday, away. The barkeep came down and was puzzled by his own sentiFor Ann McGarrah the evening in the matter, but it seems to py. waiting for his choice; menta habit Im afraid to stop. Like went flat as she watched him go; hitt said gently: Not now, be a man that has done one thing so he had not thanked her, he had not When I drink, it11 be in of her these last molong he cant quit without breaking even thought ments, he had not taken her into was a sound that traveled something that holds him together. id him. The talk in the saloon She murmured: This dance, Clay his confidence and mentioned the trouble that now made him disapHE PKJLIr, a little and he with me? saw, still watch-U- I We pear at the head of Jthe street Still ie mirror, mens hats and heads Ten years of it, he said. Biard Connor pulled his were pretty young and all our and dark and hurt she looked down ALlltb. aside. Bones McGeen we had a at the smooth front of her dress, suddenly friends were young, and ed over his whisky glass. fine time. As long as we keep on knowing that she was pretty and she had, for a moment ,BJ.Hacks voice was the flat mel-- a weve still got something left, of knowing his heart. And then this warmed used that Of man on edge. everything Maybe it those times. had gone. She thought of Catherine, Ust at accident when you boys to be. It is a way of keeping yesit am fjf coolly and critically, and turned intc led bdo me down by the hotel. terday alive, I guess. ige the store. Janet was asleep. StandClay. If die will sometime, It je. theres something in your WAS ing over the bed in the dark room, it. .LY I hate to think of you dont have to go to that Ann McGarrah watched Janet bethe hall around le. I can hear English, if you all were They It isnt the go9d small sweetly mature face, seeing sads can talk it 1 dont like fore she spoke. eet stepped on. Ill be out on times you want to remember. Clay. there so much of her mother. This can street all evenin. Try it again. It is one person you never want to was the secure grip Lila held on ik I watched you Clay Morgan this was Lilas power, I know. withdrew from the bar and forget. of forever remind icd with "ed to the door with the solid Janet spoke. I knew this was her way tonight when of the past, and this was you on 1 ':e of the crowd following him. what you were thinking. Not of Jan- Ing Clay of holding him to an unSaving atted the doors aside with his et, not of anything or anybody in her way obligation. Thinking ol real, unjust it? was wasnt Lila, ders. On the walk, he turned the hall. It all this, Ann McGarrah hated Lila toward his horse, which was Why, yes, he said, in some sura secret, passionate fullness Ompu Gentrys. He seized his gun-ro- prise. How would you know that?" with turned back the extra coven She of the the wih swing buck-the saddle horn and t Slowly turning around him and pulled the waltz, he saw Harry Jump come up from the child and left the room. ru of his coat over it. Going up Stage Street, Clay Mor AND One the stairs and move through the reached Harley Stewart's houst the at the qf gan on edge the horse, he loitering stags resting hed the street, knowing that the floor. Harry Jump was here when at the top of the hill When Stewar; been forty miles out came to the door, Morgan said: s, Idaho was no longer safe for him. he should have Come down to the bank, Harley f,t Morgan wheeled tbe Moguls. in the Herendeen .bunch Idaho got to have some money insids Ive around, losing Harry ' Idano--(oicd up at be Bong Grade door, Catherine he realized they would be Jump, and catching him again. of fifteen minutes." 3, his way soon enough. Sher- - Jump saw him and showed no ex (TO BE COST ISC ED) SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 14H New Montgomery Street San Francisco Calif. 20 Enclose cents In coins for each if 'Ik pattern desired. Pattern No Name Size ,.1 Address - a ! self-affro- rs a- schot-tisch- p t0 Ea side-by-sid- C 1 11 . m About four months ago I went tilth Mother to a lecture and afterward went in to congratulate the sjteaker, who is a friend, lie introduced me to a young captain, who asked to call on me. By KATHLEEN NORRIS little while you EVERY some mother, or perhaps some mother and father, who completely sacrifice their children to their own whims and comfort, and are rather proud of doing so! They dont understand or even like children, and they make no effort to do so. They leave the children- in hotel rooms, or drag them about in hot cars, neglect them, laugh at them, spoil them, criticize and ignore them at will. Everyone knows these badly fed, badly managed children, - who are by turns shy and bold, and in odd ways both stupid and shrewd. Children who have been left to nurses whose companionship would in five minutes disgust their parents. Children who are lonely, bewildered and uneasy in childhood, and destined to be lonely, bewil- dered and uneasy all through their lives. Rich Child Suffers Most. These are by no means the children of the very poor. It would seem rather that they are the children of the most privileged classes. In poverty, in the crowded slums of New Yorks East Side or the packed tenements of the Bronx, there is always companionship, rivalry, excitement; there are always dishes to wash and errands to run and babies to tend. No, its in the comfortable isolated mansions of the o that childhood suffers well-to-d- most One extremely wealthy girl in whose case I was interested, hardly saw her own family for the first years of her life. When at seventeen, she was finally permitted to enter the drawing room she was a fat, giggling, embarrassed and embarrassing creature who spoke infantile French and German and Italian and so was supposed to be educated, but who told the eligible young man to whom she was introduced that her favorite game was jackstones, and her favorite reading the Oz books, and who grabbed so eagerly at a box of candy and stuffed so much of it into her mouth that it was decided that Kathryns introduction to society must be still further delayed. Then there was the case of the 'unfortunate wife of George the Fourth, a princess raised in a German castle, but so noisy and dirty in her habits that the dignified old ambassador who went to bring her to Engldnd as the regent's bride broke it to her as gently as possible that her chances of holding the affections of George would be improved if she would make a habit of daily baths. Neglected Human Contacts. It is a strange thing that mothers who will spend time and money, who will worry for years over the book education of their children, often deny them the social help, the simple training in human contacts, in nice manners, in the making and adding of friendships, that is so much more valuable. It is a sad commentary upon our handling of rur children that a book called How to Make Friends and Influence Peor ple has deservedly been for years. Here is a letter from a girl whose parents are apparently both highly cultured, persons. But aow they have failed BettinaJ My mother Is an angel, and my father la a very wonderful man, writes Bettina, from her home l.i the suburbs of a great eastern citj . Social-Registere- oest-sclle- g YOUNG LIVES They are precious, those young lives entrusted to your care. They represent one 0 Americas most valuable assets; for without healthy, happy children, we can hardly hope for the kind of disciplined and courageous adults we need to keep our nation strong. The years of childhood pass quickly, and before you know it your little son or daughter will have grown up. If he, or she, has had love and guidance and companionship, he will be able to face the problems of life unafraid. The rest is up to him. and iliej give you well-traine- VES, your youngster is ready for A hours and hours of play when you make her this cunning suit- -in a stout durable cotton which can take it! We suggest seersucker, poplin, denim or broad- - I ? ASH MS ANOTHER A 9 5 I General Quiz We live in a small but beautiful house with a lovely garden; I went The Questions to a school near Philadelphia for seven years, however, so I have no 1. The symbol IIIS represents friends in our immediate neighborhood. My father is a scientist and what? 2. What is the meaning of al is writing a book; my mother seems entirely satisfied with her flowers, fresco? her books, and the company of a 3. How does a meter compare few old and intimate friends. with a yard in length? We Are Isolated. 4. Where was the legendary My fathers book is about obisland of Atlantis supposed to be? scure infections and he is certainly 5. Didactic writing is intended more conscious of them and more to what? chiefly afraid of them than most people are. 6. Which of the following is a We take a few precautions that are mammal barracuda, porpoise or unusual, I suppose, never wearing shark? street shoes in the house and sun7. Who made the Mecklenburg ning the newspaper before we open Declaration of Independence? it, but they are not serious enough 8. Approximately how long is to make people think we are queer. the Suez canal? But yet we are isolated. 9. How many avoirdupois pounds In all my life I never had a party, or a friend to visit me even make up a gross ton? for one night, the letter goes on. 10. Who expounded the doctrine "Other girls visited each others that any means, however unscrufamilies in vacations; this never pulous, may be justifiably emhappened to me. In the summers ployed by a ruler in order to mainwe go with an old professor and tain a strong central government? his wife into the mountains. Everyone is always kind to me; The Answers I have an allowance, I know my father is fond of me, and Mother 1. A contraction ol the name would do anything to please me Jesus. except that, as she always says, Fa2. In the open air. ther must come first And Father 3. Longer (39.37 inches), doesn't like company. Voices make 4. West of Europe. him nervous, dear. He doesnt un5. To teach. derstand young people. This sort 6. Porpoise. of thing I have heard all my life. 7. Citizens of North Carolina. When I was about seven we went 8. One hundred miles. to China to study germs. There were small children on the boat, and the 9. A gross ton is 2,210 pounds. first time I played with them I was 10. Machiavelli (Florentine hysterically excited, and I had an statesman, ). embarrassing accident and they laughed at me. My mother took me away, to give me a whipping for this misfortune, and my sense of shame was so great that for the rest of the trip I would not play with the others, but played up on the boat deck by myself. At school I had dear and warm friends, but we are all scattered now, and I dont ever see them. Discourages Possible Suitor. About four months ago I went with Mother to a lecture and afterward went in to congratulate the speaker, who is a friend. He introduced me to a young captain, who asked to call on me. My mother told him that we have 'a very busy house, and she was Daddy at afraid caller would disturb him. But the officer persisted, and wrote to me asking me If my mother and I would meet him for dinner somewhere.My mother said I must tell him that it was out of the question, we would hope to see him again at some other tine. This morning I see announced his engagement to a very pretty girl, a neighbor, whose home is quite famous for informal fun and hospitality. 1469-1527- cn-- oi recommmW by flm U. S. NUTRITION Kelloggs Corn Flakes are restored to Whole Grain Values of Thiamin (Vitamin Niacin and Iron. Everyone needs these vital food Bi), elements every day. ALL CLREALS m't WHOLE CRAIX mUmI r rlr4 VALUES ,emmm4s4 ICH t lfllVIM fcy A lU4 Chinese Cannot Whisper A whispered conversation can- not be carried on in a tone language, one of which is Chinese, because variations of tone, or pitch, are used to distinguish words of different meaning that otherwise would sound alike. |