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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH, UTAH A Complete Jewelry Store THE IMPOSTOR Known for Service Famous for Quality Easy Prices Is it Possible to Legislate By FRANK L. PACKARD ji life and Brains? BOYD PARK FOUNMDI66S MAKERS MO MAIN STREET of jewelry CITY SALT LAKE Swift & Company is (Copyright) only waiting for the fever Business Courses Stenography Bookkeeping Dictaphone Typewriting Civil Service Posting Machine L. D. S. Business College Salt Lake City, Utah Day and Evening WIDE All the Year DIVERGENCE IN RACES of Pacific Islands Furnish Something of a Study for the Ethnologist. People The presence of two distinct races of man In the Paeific islands suggests two periods and sources of immigration. says a bulletin of the National Geographic society. The Papuans and Polynesians appear to show the widest divergences, with the Mlcroneslans occupying the intermediate ground and possessing affiuitles of race, language and custom with the other two. The Papuans may be generally said to inhabit New Guinea, the Solomons, New Caledonia and Fiji. They are Irieilgious, democratic, quarrelsome, cannibalistic, and hostile to strangers. They paint their bodies rather than wear clothes, cook In earthen pots, and their speech consists of a number of broken dialects. The Polynesians differ widely from the Papuans. They possess an elaborate religious system, an established order of hesod reditary chiefs and cial castes. They are fond of dress, are friendly to strangers, are good seamen and navigators, and tatoo instead of scar their bodies, and seldom practice cannibalism. They also possess a common language, understandable throughout New Zealand, Hawaii, Samoa, Tahiti and the Paumotu Islands. well-define- SET THEIR MINDS AT EASE Cases Are Numerous Where Wrong-- i doors. After Many Years, Make Restitution to Show Regret. I, 1 The sting of oonscience Is not always dulled by the lapse of time. There Is no more bitter penalty than to spend ones life with an accusing conscience, no more unpleasant memory than of a wrong done. That is particularly true where It is In the power of the Individual to repair the wrong, to show by restitution that regret Is real. Conscience money Is frequently received by Individuals and corporations. There may be times when payments come from Individuals who are mentally afflicted, but In many cases where payments could be traced back they were made to ease an accusing conscience, to right a wrong of years ago. There are other individuals who do not use mystery, but who come out in the open and pay debts long since outlawed, many times forgotten. There ,are stories of these belated payments frequently printed, the last one coming from North Dakota, where a man paid a debt nearly thirty years old. He not only paid the debt, but he paid Interest to date and cleaned the transaction np as a man ought to do. Ohio Etate ' Journal. Short Course In Wlfo-- raining. We want wives who know how to do things, say the young North AfrV Let us cans who fought In Europe. And have girls from your hostel. then they are disappointed because the missionaries cannot supply the ' To satisfy the waiting list oi soldiers the missions plgn to open World short courses In Outlook. T J wife-trainin- Concerning Swanking, Swank Is bombastic behavior or talk accompanied by ostentatiousness of manner. A "swanker Is a pretentious person who strives to impress others that he Is superior to others, or something different from what hea not really Is. The word swank is modern term; It dates back to the and early years of the last century Bachelors Thomas in found has been English Orthoeplcal Analysis of the Bedford in as occurring Language, shire dialect. The book was publ.sh ed in London In 1809. LOVE, ADVENTURE, FIGHTING! The Impostor is a story to run its course. That would take maybe a few hours more. A voice within him seemed to keep Hounds! Youve got to whispering: make rounds, make rounds." For two of action of love, advendays or nights, or whenever It was ture and fighting. Its no since Johnson had first taken sick, he had made rounds unceasingly with the society novel. Its no detecmedicines; that was why the meditive yarn. Its no study of cines were on the skylight, so that he the sex problem. Its no wouldnt have to go below. But making rounds was over now; preachment in disguise. Its was no one to make rounds for there narrative of a there was only himself. Bounds! the sea, with an unusual Make rounds; its time to make rounds ! the voice insisted. plot, ust enough mystery to He roused himself. Yes, that was keep the reader guessing so. Last time he had gone along the and the fascination of the deck Ting Wah was still alive. The man would be dead now probably, and Orient thrown in for good the medicines werent any good, anymeasure. way; It was air, Gods air, that was The adventure comes wanted. Rounds ! Make rounds ! He staggered up from his chair, colfirst, as it should. Then lected some drugs and, reeling to the comes the fighting. And in ships side where the rail would help the events leading up to the support him, made his way painfully forward to where another awning was finale Cupid takes command. stretched over the fore-decHe kept The hero is American and his eyes In front of him; there were worth while. The heroine is shapes about the deck covered with anything that had first come to hand American and lovable. The shapes that should not have been there pirate villian is able, mysonly at the last Johnson and he had been too weak to do anything but terious and aggressive and throw coverings over them. He didnt when the hero evens up the want to look at the shapes. score youre glad of it. There was one form, only one, that was uncovered, and he knelt beside It And the story is well writTing Wah was still alive. ten. The word pictures are said Wallen hoarsely. Medicine, The Chinaman pushed It away. graphic. You can get thrills in No can take," he answered weakevery installment. Youll be Me finish. ly. eager to get hold of it and Wallen steadied himself with an youll wish there was more. effort, and looked at the other closely. It was near the end ; but still, as under .certain conditions it sometimes CHAPTER I. did, the disease had left the mans intelligence unimpaired. The Last Round. Look here, old chap, said Wallen An oily sea ! Stillness absolute cheerfully through his own cracked stillness, save for the groan and creak lips. You never know. Buck up. Take of the yards and booms,. as the bark the medicine." He stooped to lift the rolled lifelessly on the long, shimmerothers head gently, and nearly fell ing swells. Not a breath of air; only himself in doing it. a stifling heat that beat upon the decks A sudden gleam of gratitude came until the pitch In the seams bubbled. into the Chinamans eyes. Only a waste of water that reflected You glood man,.he whispered. the merciless tropic glare of the Sun You all same glood man. But no can and hurt the eyes cruelly. take all same finish now. He pushed Under an awning in the stem a man in cotton shirt and trousers, who was huddled In a chair by the cabin skylight, lifted his head and mumbled through cracked lips. Twenty grains of calomel, twenty-fou- r quinine magnesia, peppermint-wate- r red-blood- ed gone.. His hands fumbled with the drugs from the ships medicine chest that strewed the skylight, and guessing at the quantities, carried portions to his mouth. He swallowed with difficulty, and relapsed into a huddled position. After a little he raised his head once more, and began to count upon bis fingers. One, two, three, four, five was it five or eight days, or ten, or a month that the calm had lasted? He did not know. He had lost all track of time. But it worried him, and to his sick brain assumed very vital proportions. The ships log would tell , primarily an organization of men, not a collection of brick, mortar, and machinery. I I know. Making Rounds Was Over Now. the medicine away again; and then plucked at Wallens sleeve, evidently trying to get the mates head down closer to his lips. The man was going fast Wallen tried to force a kindly smile. What is it? he asked. Listen ! said Ting Wah. Mebbe you die too. Mebbe uo. All same me tell you glood man last night bling medicine all night you glood man me me tell " His voice trailed off weakly. Yes? prompted Wallen kindly. The man tried to speak, tried again, but without avaiL Wallens own head was reeling, premonitory of coming nansea. Its all right, Ting Wah, its all right, he said soothingly. Better not try-ttalk. But now Ting Wah, with a desperate effort, raised himself to his elbow. Yes, me talk! he gasped out. But must talk quick. Me here, Won Su here, four more all same Chinamen come on bloard and make crew on ship here for all same knlfee you. There was contortion in the mans face, a pitiful struggle to fight back the weakness and exhaustion that was upon him. Wallen stared at him in w dazed way. Kill me, Ting Wah! he cried out. What for? You you dont know what youre saying, do you? You The Chinamans dont mean that! elbow was slipping gradually nway from beneath him, liis eyes were closed. The medicine spilled from Wallens hands onto the deck, and he caught at the other, propping him up. Wallen rocked unsteadily in his chair. What a frightful stench the ship possessed or was It only his What was it he had imagination! been thinking of? Oh, yes, the six Chinamen who had come to kill him, and the gray house where there were so many bars and locks, and where every night his father and Gunga turned the keys and the chains rattled on the doors as they fastened them. He raised his hand and passed tt across his eyes In a startled way. How vividly it came back to him, that night as though it were just happening now, as though he were in the very act of living it again ! A crash in the dead of night through that silent house, and he had sat up, trembling, in bed. Then a cry, the report of a pistol shot, and the echoes of the shot rumbled and reverberated through the house, striking terror into his young heart. And he was crawling out of his bed, and out into the hall and down the stairs in his nightshirt down he stopped In And half-wa- y horror. Below, In the hallway, stood the giant form of his father holding a candle, and on the floor lay stretched a huddled form, and Gunga, with a revolver, was bending over the Thing that did not move. Then came his fathers voice, Iff a strange, queer note of tense eagerness. Look again, Gunga. Has he one finger on the left hand? Stacey Wallen writes in the log: Died today, S. Wallen, first mate. (TO BE CONTINUED.! Ii Packing Plants, their i equipment and usefulness are only outward symbols of the intelli- l i gence, life - long experience, and right purpose of the men who compose the organization and of ii i! it those who direct Will not Government direction of the packing industry, now contemplated by Congress, take over the empty husk of physical property and equipment and sacrifice the initiative, experience and devotion of these men, which is the life itself of the industry? -- What legislation, what politi- cal adroitness could replace such life and brains, once driven out? Let ot send you a Swift Dollar. It will interest you. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, 111. Swift & Company, U. S. A. THIS SHOWS "WHAT BECOMES OF THE AVERAGE DOLLAR RECEIVED BY f SWIFT & COMPANY! THE SALE OF MEAT ANO BY PRODUCTS OS CENTS IS PAID FOR THC LIVE ANIMAL 12.90 CENTS FOR LABOR EXPENSES ANO FREIGHT CENTS REMAINS FROM 2.04 - him. He reached for it and began to scan the entries. It was strange that trying to read brought red flashes and pain to his eyes. The words came only to him in snatches. October 10. Still becalmed. Intense heat Native boatswain took sick this morning. October . Buried boatswain last night. Four more of crew down. Weve got yellow fever aboard. God help us If we dont get a breeze ! His eyes went on down the page in a haphazard, irresponsible way, skipping entries here and there unconsciously. Still becalmed. God have mercy on us ! Native crew all down. Chinaman named Won Su, after making a murderous attack in his delirium on Walien, the first mate, jumped overboard. Yes, he remembered that. He was Wallen Stacey Wallen the first mate of the bark Upolo. It had been a horrible sight The poor devil had rushed at him screaming and he shuddered a little he did not want to think of that. What was this entry here? The heat is horrible. Survivors too weak to bury the dead. Captain Mitchell died at 2:10 a. m. That was the last entry. There wasnt any date on it. He couldnt remember whether it had been yesterday or the day before.' Well, what did It matter; and, anyway, it was time to make rounds. Hounds ! ' What rounds were there to make? Everybody was dead. Johnson, the second mate, had died that morning, though he hadnt made the entry of Johnsons death in the log; what was the good? There wasnt any more use for a log. Everybody was jjead except himself the other two white men and the crew, who were all natives. And now he was down, too; he was Ting Wah! Ting Wahl he cried again, shaking the man to rouse him. What do you mean? Ting Wah, dont you hear me ! What did you mean to kill me for? There was no answer. The man was no, not yeti Ting Wahs lips were moving. Wallen bent his head still closer to catch the words. DUnk-Hous- e Sam Singapore him know. That was all. It was over now. Wallen straightened up unsteadily, and lurched to the rail where he could cling on to something. Six Chinamen had shipped as part of the crew so that they could kill him. Why? He laughed in a sick fashion. What did It matter? They were all dead, those six and every one else and in a few hours he would be dead too. He laughed again, a little hysSam of terically. This Drink-Hous- e Singapore, whoever he was, ought to be satisfied with that ! He clawed his way back to the afterdeck, and dropped Into his chaii again. His brain seemed to go numb for a time, to be indifferent to everything and then suddenly to become strangely active. Six Chinamen bad shipped as members of the crew so that they could kill him. It wasnt a pleasant thought, even If the whole six were dead now, and that he himself would be dead, too, before long. Oh, yes, he believed it now, right enough why shouldnt he? What about that murderous attack Won Su had made upon him, and that he had thought was delirium ! But that wasnt all, he had reason beside that to believe Ting Wahs story; reason enough, God knew! now that he came to think of the things that were crowding Into his mind. Out of the shimmering heat waves that rose along the deck and seemed to hover so weirdly over those covered shapes that ought not to have been there, another scene gradually took form, at first Indistinctly, vaguely, then In sharp outline, startling, distinct. It was a stone house, a gray stone house, all by itself, without neighbors, isolated, a silent place. Yes, he remembered it! It seemed to bring a chill upon him now the cold, dreary, lifeless house had done Its best to crush even a laugh out of his boyhood with its eternal, silent "brooding mystery. That was why he had run away ten years ago, when he was fourteen. All his earlier recollections were of that place. His mother wasn't there, he had never seen his mother. There were just his father, and that tH, swarthy Eastern servant, who frightened his boys heart just those two and himself. He never saw anyone else. No one ever came to the house. No one was ever admitted. Gunga, the servant, fetched the- supplies from the nearby village. His own education was superintended by his father. But there had never been any intimacy between his father and himself. He had never questioned his father but once after that he had never dared to do so. He remembered the deadly whiteness that bad come over the morose, taciturn face, the grip of iron upon his shoulder, the hoarse passion in his fathers voice. Never speak to me again of that, his father had said. When you are older, when the time comes, you shall . Fitting One. What kind of a pet has your lege tutor? Naturaily, he has a coach dog. col- Jap Merchants in Philippines. the approximately 10,000 Japanese in the Philippines, 2,000 are said to be merchants. Of WITH SWIFT & COMPANY AS PROFIT Clear Your Skin WkileYouSIeep withCuticura All druggists ; Soap 25, Ointment 26 A 50, Talcum 25, Semple each free of Ovtlrara, Dept. , Boston." FOR SWAMP-ROO- T Reduces Bursal Enlargements, Thickened, Swollen Tissues, Curbs, Filled Tendons, Soreness from Bruises or Strains KIDNEY AILMENTS There is only one medicine that really stands out as a medicine for eurable ailments of the kidneys, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Hoo- t stands the highest for the reason that it has proven to be just the remedy needed in thousands of distressing cases. upon thousands Swamp-Roo- t makes friends quickly because its mild and immediate effect is soon realized in most cases. It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N, Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. (tops Spavin Lameneti, allays pain. Does not blister, remove the hair or lay up the horse. $2. SO a bottle-a- t draggiite or delivered. Book 1 R JR., for mankind an antiieptic liniment for bruise, cut, wound, (train, painful, twollen vein or gland. It--, heals and soothes. $1.25 a bottle at drag gists or postpaid. Will tell you more if you write. Made in the U. S. A. by W. F.YOUNG.P.O. F., 11 0 tt. SprlnoRobl. Muti. Tli BELCHING Caused by Acid-Stoma- ch Let BATONIC; the wonderful modtn True. stomach remedy, give you quick wUf Pa, what Is the most difficult kind from disgusting belching food-r- e peajtte Indigestion, bloated gasay stomach dyspepof hunting there is? sia, heartburn and. other- stomach mlsseiesi House-huntinfrom They are all caused by my boy. ' which about nine people out of ten sufter in one way or another. One writes aa folBefore I used EATONIC, I could not lows; Important to Mothers eat tt right up sour Examine carefully every bottle of and abitter X have belching not had a bit of trouble CASTORIA, that famous old remedy since the first tablet Millions are victims of Aci&tS4omaeh for infants and children, and see that it without knowing it. They are weak and Bears the ailing, have poor digestion, bodies improperly nourished although they max eat heartSignature of ily. Grave disorders are likely to follow if an is neglected. Cirrhosis of In Use for Over 30 Years. the liver, intestinal congestion, gastritis of the stomach the are only a Children Cry for Fletchers Castori catarrh few t of tho many ailments often caused by h. Easy streets with good intentions. sunny side Isnt paved Travel Is fatal to prejudice. Refreshes, Soothes, )Vn Rests, Beals Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy. If they Tire, Smart, Itch, or Burn, Sore. Irritated, HmtVtC MJK Inflamed or Granulated, use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult At all Druggists. Write for Free Eye Book. HulM Eye Beatty Cn$tnjf , Chicago, U, S, L Qr LIU A sufferer from Catarrh of the . tomach of 11 year, standing writes: "1 had catarrh of the stomach for 11 long years and I never found anything to do ms any good Just temporary relief until 1 used EATONIC, It Is a wonderful remedy and X da not want te be without It." If you are mol feeling quite right lack energy and enthusiasm and dou know Jus where to locate the trouble try EATONIC and see how much better yo i wl feel la every way. At all drug stores a big box for Me ond your money back If you are not satisfied. "ATOMIC irrOR yOPR |