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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD PASSE fllr worn :!iru!1 was mu,'h davS of our Republic 'TAT ,, part important Tery nation clothed and a strs pathflnder Magazine. j : e FIRE LOSSES LESS Tojay most of our line $12,000 FOR ROADS in sum 4 practically l8 sma ;' t0 vn and un-i- the making of worsted yarns with wiu .e different telows. somet suiting, dress goods, g3 which are r wools, are 1 manufacture panelf fabrics of nearly' all de-. being especially well tweeds and blankets, choice citings, and very Copyright, Doubleday, Doran A Co., nni ' STBS. POUNDS GF i -- CIBNT GUT fl OH FOOD f lbs. by taking Kruschen bad no ill effect on me. I I 'down on a single food recommend it to any- - onewhoisoverweight. Mrs. A. Ropiak, So. Milwaukee, Wise. To win a slender, youthful figure take a of half teaspoonful Kruschen Salts in a '4-- 4K1 glass of hot water first rv thing every morning. While fat is leaving strength, health and physi-'oo- k younger. Many physi-ib- e it and thousands of fat have achieved er the world A jar lasts 4 weeks and trifle at any drugstore. But make sure you get r health p'l the SAFE way to re-- ( joney back if not joyfully want a room at Northern Hotel so te Chicago as well as 's Fair. .Convenient fill ntV theatres, depots and bicagos great civic 5a as. Right in the heart voull t Nearest loop thing. the main entrance, ru'd eret'S 400 BATHS s 0, SO, 1 modern, comfortable, requiree. friendly service, courtesy, delicious il S in cruonable for tliocati.on worries, prices, No con- - plainl. M&T evving JTNORTHERN 232 York HOTEL DEARBORN , QUINCY STS, CHICAGO JU.. W), , VicP... IHORNTON. SES 7a ry. been ink bi on Hands I have (Berli wa HssJed dim appen i iistancer6 wh eczema on my for a yrr 80 long. I could not In love ln much water because hed a ruSb I could just peel Dorhousr Pieces. It would form bothered me terribly, itching. My hands were was ashamed. it of different remedies an was A?1 1 sent for a free cura Soap and 0Int ig acrost" a lot I bought telped 7' T hands are com- when i'ertalnh' feigned) Mrs. H, S. son-in-!'- 3 find out up Peasant St,, Hollis-ra1933. Ointment 25 and 50c. Sold ket bs w everywhere. One t. Address: R, Malden, ree Cuti-Dep- Dustin ' ) specu from mu . i)N & N1CHOLS canjAND CHEMISTS ratory Lake S. 1 City, Utah. "S envelope West. ice til bride." e to lits; kisses." boy, but to dintfi ake West P. O. end price Citys Hotel f Lot vife and poor bai-rr- : lit Bret;! if e si I'-- f - 200 Tile Bath OM very room. 1.30 ' iloroo TOSSITFR, Mgr. In. SYNOPSIS Seeking death by herself from the ummit ofthrowing Lon Mesa, to escape dishonor, at the hands of a drunken desperado, Sonya Savarln allow herself to be rescued by her suddenly sobered and repentant attacker. Th girl Is a physician to the Navajo Indians, living on an Arlsona sheep ranch with her brother Serge, hie wife, Lila, and their small daughter, Baba She Is engaged to Rodney Blake, New Yorker, but her heart wealthy Is with the friendless Navajo and she evades a wedding. Sonya pulls Little Moon, wife of Two Fingers, a Navajo, through the crisis of an 111. ness. Two Fingers Is deeply grateful. Sonya again meets the man who had Insulted her. He tells her he bitterly regrets his action and has never had a minutes peace since that day. Sonya Is alTected, but unforgiving. She hears tumors of a Border bandit, El Capltan Diablo," who crucifies his and vaguely connects him with her attacker. On Lone Mesa, she again comes upon the strange young man, but she no longer fears him. double-crossers- ," CHAPTER IV Continued 5 "Who is the bandit across the Border who crucifies his ? cried Sonya like a shot and gasped at the sound of her own words. It seemed as if another person spoke them, so wholly unintentional had they been. The mans eyes flashed up to hers, and once again they were wild as any hawks, the black of the pupils spreading over the blue of the Irises. Slowly the color drained from his face, leaving it ash white beneath Its bronze, the lips pale as blue milk. "Good G d!" he said and was double-crossers- silent -- sew BOISE DAIRYMEN PROFIT TROTEST FEDERAL ACTION d wools, than fine jh the beco .iatly in the I Briefly told for Busy Readers M (ie y eut--;n Sally Scz tatenna'jntein Hews The girl was silent, too, and for the first time she felt a flash of fear, as If. she had set In motion sinister forces of which she knew nothing. They stared at each other for a moment aghast at this thing which had sprung between them, stark and terrible, and then Sonya flicked her rein, moved in her saddle recovering. She knew she had touched disaster too deep for a womans hand, and she drew back Instinctively. "No," she said swiftly, dont answer. I shouldnt have asked. And its no proof, anyway. I dont want proof. Whats past is past I take your word. The man wet his stiff lips. You do? Do you believe what Ive been trying to tell yon ever since that day: that I could kill myself for what I did? Do you believe me? Not that It Yes, said Sonya. matters, but I do." He took out a white handkerchief and wiped his face, which was sweating in the high cool wind. not No, he said unsteadily, that it matters to you. But It does to me. Why, I don't know,, but it does. More than anything has ever mattered In my whole d d life I beg your pardon I" "Granted, said the girl Serge swears." "Serge?" "My brother. Well, It matters, and Ive spent hours alone up here and other places wondering about It and why It does. Ive known women all my life, In several countries, and never a one that stayed In my mind a week after I left her. I'm a bad lot, as I told you before, and It dont mean a great deal what I think, one way or another, only I ain't ever felt so sorry In all my days over anything. I was Just wondering, when you rode around th wall yonder. Sonya regarded him steadily. It does matter, she said, what anyone thinks and does. No man lives to himself alone, as the Good Book says. To every man his place and a certain amount of Influence. And to every man his responsibility, Youve got too, for that influence. influence, somewhere for something, And something's changing in you," the girl went on, there's been a change In you since since the first time I saw you. In your face, In your speech. You're using more g's on the end of your words, for one thing, and your eyes are different. "If they weren't when I look at you, Id be lower than I am, and thats plenty low. said Sonya Granted again, calmly and watched the slow tide of red that swept up over his pale cheeks. "But the very fact of change outwardly argues change inwardly. Id trust you now a considerable way." lie drew a long breath of fragrant smoke and, turning away, looked out over the spread of desert shimmering under the early afternoon sun. When he turned hack to her Sonya was shocked at the look on his handsome face, a sunken look, hag gard, as If some cruel vise of the upon spirit had suddenly been It. lie smiled, for the first time in her experience of him, and something leaped In Sonya's heart like a captive bird struggling to be free. st By VINGIE E. ROE "Miss Savarln, he said, that, the sweetest and the cruelest thing you ever said In your life. Its a dangerous thing, too for me. Yet Tm glad you said it Itll be somethin' something to remember among worse memories. And now Ill be getting along. Please come here whenever you want to. Lone Mesa Is yours from now on. He swung Into his saddle, and the girl put out a quick hand and caught his sleeve. "No," she said swiftly, why should you give It up? There's something here for you, something good, I know. Its your eyes when you look out yonder, a peace and a healing, and I want you to have that You need it It Its something of the of the soul, If you see what I mean." Gravely he looked at her, shook his head wonderingly. My G d I he said softly. "What a woman you are I I didn't know there was one like you outside of th story books Are you, by any chance, a lady preacher? "No," said Sonya, of course not Im a physician. But Im a woman first, and I can see when a hearts sick as well as a body. Youre sick In your soul, your character, or I miss my guess and I usually dont do that. No," he said, you haven't now. But it dont matter In this case. Its too late for medicine even yours." Its not," said Sonya, and was astonished at the passion of her tone; "Its never too late. Not till ones last heartbeat only then. What are you tryln to do? he asked her gently, smiling Into her eyes again change th spots of th leopard? Be careful. There's no more treacherous beast alive. An I'm telling you true, Miss Savarin. Im a leopard at heart, cruel and fierce, and not fit for you to speak to like this, straight out, man to man. I dont deserve It. If you knew what an who I am you'd turn your horse an ride for that down trail like all possessed, and youd be right. Maybe I do know a little," Sonya flashed, but I'm not afraid. Im never afraid, of anything. No. You're like a white angel In armor," he said gravely; "you havent any need to fear. Even I could not hurt you when I wanted to. Youre safe anywhere any Th devil himself couldnt time. hurt you.. Will you remember what I say that Its never too late to change?" Til remember," he said politely, an thanks. and Now, good-by- , good luck always, Miss Savarln. "Good-by- , said Sonya, "and the same to you. He carried his hat in his hand as he whirled the horse around the corner of the ancient 6tone house, and did not look back, and Sonya listened to the shod hoofs striking Into the defile that led down the face of the sheer cliff. She sat stiffly quiet In her saddle and was conscious of a strange tumult within her spirit What had she done, talking here in this high solitude with this mysterious rider whose Inner self was black with unnamed sins whose very presence In the land was a menace and a portent of disaster? For she knew past all doubting that this was the Blue-eye- d One of whom the Servant spoke in his vague parables, that henchman of Beelzebub who went before trouble. And she who owed him hatred, who had vowed to take her pound of flesh from him because of what he had tried to do that day at the mesas rim I She had talked with him, earnestly, and without scorn I The next day she went to see Little Moon and refused the bundle of sheep pelts which Two Fingers offered her, along with the gorgeous finished blanket which the woman laid across her knees. Sonya stroked the latter with appreciative fingers, but shook hef 1 head, smiling. "What I did for you," she told them in Navajo, was a giving a service to my people. You are my I have chosen the Navajos people. before the Great Spirit Let be. It Is well." After a long silence Two Fingers said, "It Is well. And we and ail the Navajos around here are your A little people, under your feet soft blanket to keep your heels from the stones. It Is very well," the girl said gravely, and knew he spoke the There was to come a day truth. when she would have ample and tragic proof of that, but It was Just as well she could not see ahead. From Chee wash she rode down along the levels of the sage to where the debouching canyon had given up its pitiful small caravan that day she hud seen Mr. Fatter from the school taking away the children. On an impulse she turned and rode Into tills rugged cut that bisected the rising land. She rounded a farin turn and came upon a habitation. For a time she sat on WjiU Sorrlc her horse and contemplated it a good hogan set against the canyons wall. There was little sign of prosperity. No rug bloomed on Its hand made loom, the hogan was bare of comforts, the beds on Its floor being thin and scant Evidently these Indians were very poor. She did not call or move about, but sat still In her saddle, waiting, and presently her patience was rewarded, for a soft step sounded behind her and she turned to see the wild buck, the squaw, and the Uttlest child of that pitiful drama In which she had participated. She smiled at them, and when Sonya Savarln smiled, a window of her soul opened and disclosed a light The family came carefully up to her. I come to see If all Is well with you and yours. she told the man In Navajo. "It Is well with this one," he replied, touching the child, "but not with this one," touching the mother. "Her heart runs away In water, and she does not eat" And looking closer Sonya saw In astonished sorrow that it was so Indeed. The woman who hnd been plump and hale some weeks back, was now a scarecrow, her old velvet Jacket hanging loose on her form, her tragic eyes sunk In hollows. Her brown lips looked dry and hard. For a moment the girl felt such a revulsion against the whole white race as to give her an actual Well, of course Yes, of course! Thats IL Thats always It from the white mans viewpoint Well, old dear, you can Just hold yourself la readiness to bail me out of Jail, for I may need Tm going over to that school it and get those youngsters and take them back to that hogan. If Its the last thing I do. School Is already out for the season, and that fat Satter hasn't taken the trouble to return them or to even tell the father where to come for them. Can you beat that for sheer downright meanness? If you don't need the car, I'll take It and go over to the school sometime this week maybe O. K., day after tomorrow. Serge?" "O, K., honey. I'll begin looking round for ball In the meantime in case you find something you can use as an excuse to hop the school authorities." Sonya was, as good as her word. On Wednesday of that week Bhe took the disreputable old car and set out across the wild and lonely land In the general direction of the government school for which Satter was the gathering agent. The large rooms were sweetly cool In the early summer heat, and she took off her hat and leaned back In her chair In grateful enjoyment. She had not long to wait, for presently the superintendent, a Mr. Claude Spartow, came In briskly with extended hand. Doctor Miss Savarln Why, Savarln, I should say, though the austere title dont seem to belong to a girl like you this Is a pleasure, I assure you I Come right Into my office." He led her Into his private office, a spacious comfortable place, Its walls lined with filing cases, and pulled up the deepest big chnlr. I Am Hosteen Nez," He said ently, and She is Cactue PresFlow- er. nausea. Her hands ached to get hold of Satter's fat neck for one good minute. So," she said, I see. nave you told her that the little ones will be coming home soon? Did the agent tell you when to go after them?" and I do No," said the man, not know where to go. under her "Oh," said Sonya breath, the dirty beast I Aloud she said slowly, Well, you tell her to look up to the east and before many days she will see her What Is your children coming. name, Hosteen?" The man hesitated, since the naming of one's own name Is not good, but this was a desperate matter. hd said I am Hosteen Nez, presently, "and she Is Cactus Flower. And I am Sonya Doctor Sonya from down on the desert beyond Lone Mesa, and I will see the man who took the children. Maybe four sleeps, maybe five. You tell her eat and get strong. "I will tell her," said Hosteen Nez, and his eyes looked so deep Into Sonyas that the girl's heart hurt with their proldng. . "1 will come again," she said and, turning Darkness, went back down the great cut of Blue Sand canyon as site had come. That night, talking with Serge and Lila in the twilit patio with Bnbs asleep on her lap, she protest ed passionately against the treatment of the Indians by the whites In authority. Serge smoked In silence, his dark eyes gazing out along the gray sage stretches that were turning purple in the falling shadows. "Kid," he said presently, "you're the best little scout ever, but Im afraid that some day youre going to get yourself into a perk of trouble, messing in where you dont belong. "Jlessing In wTSere I dont belong! cried the girl hotly. "Do you call helping that mother get her young ones hark for the summer vacation messing In, when she's actually grieving herself to death in her Ignorance and fear? Suppose It were Lila and Bnbs, for instance?" Serge moved uneasily, knocked out the dottle of his pipe. There!" he said. "Thats better. Now relax. You must be tired" No," said Sonya, "Im not, and Im in somewhat of a hurry. Ive come for the two children of the Indian, Hosteen Nez, over In the big cut beyond Lone Mesa, Just on the line of the Reservation. This case Is rather pitiful, Mr. Spartow, and Id like to enlist your attention to it. Mr. Satter will remember. I came upon him taking the children, not so many weeks back very near the end of the term and the parents are wild Indians. They don't understand either the necessity or the methods employed In the matter of giving up their children, and X begged off the littlest one from Mr. Satter. The mother had run herself nearly Into collapse, hanging on the buckboards tall. She Is In a serious condition now, with her grief over their disappearance. Doesnt eat Looks awful. And Mr. Satter had forgotten to tell them where to come for the children. It Is rather hard, when you think of It, on parents,' you know, either red or white. As it would take the Hosteen some days to get here and bnek with his horses to fetch them, Id like to take the children to them myself. I will be responsible to you for them." As the girl talked the mans sharp eyes regarded her with an alertness of expression that changed to s guardedness as she mentioned Now he lapse of memory. leaned toward her, smiling. Why, how kind of you, my dear Miss Savarln I he said. "Few women of this day would take so much trouble for ignorant Indians. Of course you may take the little ones. But surely youre not starting back today? Youll stay with 'us for the night and get a good early start tomorrow, If I have my Snt-ter- way." "Oh, my, no I" said Sonya. Ill get on my way as quickly as possible. Will it take long to get them ready?" If you rpally think you must go, he said regretfully, Ill have them made ready at once. It wont take long. The two were presently brought to her, their belongings in a neat bundle. They still looked as they had looked that day In the buck-boar- BOISE, IDA. E. I. Horsfall, FER.V administrator, has announced that funds may be obtained now by Idaho for establishing schools and educational camps for unemployed women. The locations of the schools tentatively agreed on are Pocatello, Lewiston, W'elsor and Boise. TRICE, FT. With the develop-meu- t of Carbon countys coal Industry as one of the major objectives, the newly organized Price chamber of commerce has passed a Joint resolution with the Rotary club protesting governmental development Lifs Isnt Just m ef hnw. of hydroelectric plants. In discussWe often know things In edvonrs, know It brightens snjr woods. ing the mntter, the hoard of direc- WsWhen folks start buy In loo si foods. tors expresed the opinion the deLETS PATHON1ZE HOME INDUSTRY velopment of such plants seriously threatens the coal industry, reducing production and throwing miners out of Jobs. SALT LAKE CITY, FT.-F- ire losses lu the city for the first five THIS WEEKS ritIZE STORY months of 1931 nro 111,9(9 le than for the corresponding mouths Th Wfmlth ftnd Induntrlca of ihi of 1933 and much lower than recora IniRcly controlled by ords over a long period ef years, the buyer. region If ho could only reaiUo how FT. With but $500 of the stockholders liability of the closed Provo Commercial and Sav ings hank paid since February 27, the amount still unpaid totals accounts of the bank for the three-montperiod filed In the district court. PROVO, eb corrriKciD) At 400 Utah Oil h KANAB, tT. $12,000 lias boon Refining appropriated for roiul projects near Idaho Kanab. Six thousand dollars will Service Stations In Utah and be expended on a road between 0 IKSffiEtKSRANOJPlCKUJ1 i Johnson and Kanab, the other will be spent ou stale highway No. 89, from Kanab to a point near SPECIAL For Th Month Of JUNE Diana's Throne upon the sand north 175 Ion Cenplitt Six Months Beauty Coins of town. that You can now learn a $0,-00- RUTERT, IDA. Rupert school district will hold a special election In July to vote on bonding for $8000 to raise funds for construction of two classrooms to be built adjoining the present transportation building on the school property, IDA. F E R A POCATELLO, operations in Power, Franklin, Caribou, Bear Luke, Bingham and Bannock counties during the past week, to worknetted a total of $11,01-1.4ers, according to a report by the district disbursing officer. IDA.- -A total ST. ANTHONY, of $177,209 of federal lurid hank anil land bank commissioner's farm mortgage loans was made In Fremont county the past year, the farm credit administration reports. CHEYENNE, WYO. Heavy ruins and considerable hail brought a good supply of moisture to the ranges and fields of the soullicnst-tr- n corner of Wyoming. TROVO. FT. Suit seeking damages of $10,070.50 for the deulli of his daughter, Mon-ene- e was fatally inwho Anderson jured when struck by a falling tree at North (Sowiette) park on August 2(5, 1933, lias been filed in district court, by W. K. Anderson of Irovo against Provo City. rilOVO, LT. A budget enlling for the expenditure of $214,290.98, an Increase of $12,217.38 over last year, was adopted by the Provo city school board, following a public hearing, IDAHO FALLS, IDA. Formal application for $25,000 for drouth relief In Bonneville county ling been made wllh the state drouth relief committee by the Bonneville county commission. The sum was asked for the Immediate relief of livestock owners and Is planned to lie used primarily to Improve waterlioles and creeks In the range country east of Idaho Fulls. OGDEN, ET. A 22 per cent increase in water collections during the first five months of 1931 ns compared wllh a like period in 1933 has boon reported by Fred E. Williams, city commissioner lu charge of waterworks. BEXBERG, IDA, Carl .Madsen, federal officer from Idaho Falls, has been working in Itexburg for several days helping county officers in a liquor clean-ucampaign, IDAHO FALLS, IDA. A committee representing eight upx-Snake River valley counties was authorized at a muss meeting of approximately 400 upper valley water Users to protest delays in completion of promised reservoir site surveys on the upper river and also to protest any proposed additions to American Pulls dam which might result In increasing the capacity of that reservoir to the disadvantage of the upper valley citizens. like frightened quail. Sonya smiled at them, took their unresisting hands. Then she smiled at Spartow. I thank you. sir," she said gently, and I shall not forget your kindness In letting me take them. I hope you'll ask Mr. Satter to tell the fathers next time, will you, please, Mr. Spartow?" POCATELLO, IDA. History of Mr. Spartow returned the smile the past 100 years of Muho, the with a look that promised to ask northwest, and particularly of Fort the government for a mlllion-dolla- r Ilall, will be reenacted in pageouts loan If she thought It necessary. And presently Sonya Savarln was and parades, outstanding features celebradriving down across the illimitable pf the Fort Hall Centennial levels with Joy In her heart and the tion here August 5 8. Pocatello hushed little Navajos huddled In American Legion pot will sponsor n beard growing campaign to ad-against her with Instinctive trust. She was thinking what fun she color to the celebration. would have watching (actus FlowThe city was negligent In that it er's haggard fact when she took allowed the trees to lie removed them in to the hidden hogan in the from the park by agents who were canyon. Incompetent, the complaint states. (To when ho buyo Una region's commodities there would bo treater cooperation between the Inner and producer, wilh lntormunlaln this slogan always first, Made Goods are always best" LYNN ARGYLL, Spanish Pork. Vt. ho hilpa profession will make you independent for the rest 5 9 month of your days. only for per tho complete coumo ef all months, Rhone or write for our catalogue. HIGH UTAH SCHOOL OF GfMHY CULTURE Ho. Main Bt., Rnlt Lake City 121 FOR ASK YOUR DIUKbGIHT WAVE APEX SET AN I.NTKKMOUNTAIN PKOUUCT MADE Of THE FINEST INf.BEDIKNTB AND LEAVES NO HEHIbUE. ASK FOR BEET SUGAR THE ONLY HOME SUGAR A.nrWiiiiii AtomiTf t autiful flEHSil Modern New BEAVER BAM HOTEL r.n the Arhono Bfrip, Half Way to Eoa Angeles Highway No. hi .1 Miles Hryond Ht. frorR carinh and CAf e Hotel,Itrannnnble Kates Prohibition Repealed in Arizona First Indian Head Pennies Indian bead pennies wore first coined in tho year 1858. The design was changed a little in 1360, and a slightly thinner coin was made in 1804. The Indian head piece was made1 from 1859 to 1 1909, inclusive. KOUNDTRIP TO LQS ANGELES VIA SAN FRANCISCO Prom Salt Lake City and Ogden, travel to Los Angeles via Sm Vramisco lor exactly the same rmmdtrip Lire as via direct loutes. Tins low fare is good in standard Pullmans (plus berdi charge). $12 TO SAN FRANCISCO $19.87 TO LGS ANCCLES From Salt Lake City and Ogden, In roomy coaches on fast tiains. ib Wr-- k No. 3f23 tv gbe-- 4 A AWH L2 fcuoii Ja walwiC.ijsa For details, see your local railro id agent or write I). R. OWLN, Grucrul A tent, 41 South Main Street, Sail l ake City. W.N.U. Holt laik Utjr "A man dat tri- s io cheat all de time," said Uncle Khen, "rinds when terrible out o puth-nrhe gits soon o.' later in a fame where everybody is obliged to play honest. - his-so- lf CPO ft A sbo.UU P'f wrk will rn yi di' intrrnwmniitin to ftlxsv. W 1m pud . ycur iturr In Itotl'f) rbrrk for USD httmlur to lulrrmounin'n I'rm'ur's i HaII Lnk C ur. l O. Hoi in your itory unitcoi thu tulumii ycu will vert fur maid ftittrl hr r il |