Show I r t "7 i THE GARLAND TIMES GARLAND UTAH 4 (4 I V(“H-4-'fT- The Plains of Abraham By James Oliver Curwood 9 Doran Servlca by Doubled WNU Co Ino X— Continued CHAPTER —19— To Jeems and Tolnette there was nothing spectacular In their first day or In the many that followed After the triumphal night the Indian tqwn fell once more into the routine of its existence Men hunted women worked children played Warriors met in councils and smoked incessantly as they discussed the affairs of their and planned for the commonwealth future The “Dark Year" was upon Winter threatened Hut there them were other matters to be settled news had brought unusuul Tiaoga The English under a general named had been defeated and masBraddock The French had been desacred Sir William stroyed on Lake George Johnson the White Fattier of the Sioux Nations was victorious and the Tills Mohawks were profiting greatly brought somber looks into the faces The eas’ern wilderof the Senecas ness was bound to run red with war His warriors wpre Tlaoga was sure sure The struggle between the English and the French was at hand and there would be no rest for the tomahawk until the land was free of one or the oilier Tiaoga and his councilors in Chenuf-aifaced war— and famine If their fighting men went into the east who would keep the people from starvation? It wag decided that Tiaoga should take the warpath again with thirty men chosen by lot while thirty of his braves should remain to fight and death during the winter hunger The drawing came but Jeems months was Shindas was not Included doomed to leave his sweetheart again These were days when misgivings assailed Jeems and Toinette In spite of their hopes and plans yet no cloud more than temporarily daikened their In the heart of each was the visions prayer thut a wandering priest might come tlteir way so that the ceremony could be performed which would make Tn the town them husband and w f e were a number had accepted Imjftjfc msbands in the j n t I I I ofjffvwhT hidianywj t'vite revolted 4 I i i F this practice She prayed and with her for Mary Paghlen pray?l (Once her mother the years through had died the Thrush had kept her The tSeneea worshipfaith unbroken ing her honored it Early In No ember groups began to leave each with the small amount of food which remained as Its share Mary was to accompany two fnmlles of eight people under th protection of Thunder Shield a valiant warrior and a splendid hunter They were goToinette ing toward Lake Ontario was given to Ah Pe Bpn the Tail Man a relative of Tlaoga’s Jeems their Hiding disappointment and Toinette encouraged themsehes with visions of a futur which they tried to paint In bright colors The months would pass quickly With the earliest days of spring they would return to Clienufsio Ev ery hour they would live In each other’s thoughts and at night their prayers would cross in the wilderness Next year there Would surely be a way Fate would not separate them again In their final moments together Toinette’s eyes with a depth of faith and glowed love which It was Impossible for Jeems to measure fully In this way they parted He went north and west river toward the Tynnngnrunte Odd which emptied Into Lake Ontario struggled between his devotion for He followed Jeems and for Toinette his master a distance then hesitated A and turned bark lump rose In Jeems’ throat and he could not see dearly as his comrade sat In the trail and watched until he disappeared Wuskoo led the way to a hardwood country In which he was sure there be hunting that would last would through the winter There were plenty of raccoons and the mergansers or fish ducks would come to the headwaters to feed as soon as Ice closed the lakes and the mouths of the streams Here they made their It was a new kind lodge of saplings Jeems built of home for Wood Pigeon it with a cooking hearth and a chimney and a tiny room set apart for Wood child's The herself eyes Pigeon glowed with delight at this possession Each day Jeems told her more about — Sol cared Tan Makwun how Toinette for her beautiful hair how it was part of her religion to keep lierself clean how and why she did this thing and that until thoughts and desires grew in Wanonat's head and she employed the comb and the brush which Jeems made for her until her sleek black hair was 'never nntidy Heavy snow and extreme cold came By the middle early In the season Jeems was compelled of December to hunt on snifwshoes and so bitter were the nights that the first of January found even the headwaters freezing out the mergansers This was the memorable winter of 1755 and 1758 the story of which the Senecas handed down from father to son for many generations— a winter in which all game seemed to have Rone from the face of the earth and when a te$tb hardship and starvation killed of the Six of the three westernmost Great Nations the Senecaa the Cayo-ga- s and the Onondaga At first Jeems was partly prepared because he had killed a buck and with had Wuskoo's shrewd assistance marked a number of tree Iq which But raccoona were aure to hibernate late in January famine drew closer about the cabin on the Little Set us In tile and 'Jeems traveled farther hunts until he was gone two days at In February he made four of a time these hunt and found no game The Tree cracked like cold waa terrific Bitter winds conrifle In the woods Wood tinued night and day eyes grew larger and her body more fragile as the weeks passed Eact time Jeems came In from his hunts she blazed up like a fire In her happiness but lie could mark the steady He hunted fading of her strength with almost Insane energy Everything was for her when famine hardest clutched at them Torturing fears assailed Jeems Toinette was never out of hi mind for On the Second of These Days He Married Jeems and Toinette in his sleep he dreamed of her too was a part of tills fight to life together night when the wind howled and he trees wailed in their distress sweated In fear and more than once the thought came to him to abandon his family and go In search of the fate which almight be overtaking her became His limits were not most unbearable took him more seldom aud now long from miles the than three or four cabin for his own strength was ebbing His only hope was to kill an occasional turd and it was in the darkest hour that an answer eame to his In a blizzard against which prayers he was working his way In half blindness be stumbled upon a doe ns weak Without as himself and killed her tills stroke of fortune Wood Pigeon and Wuskoo must have died When the thaws fame they were alive began to appear and fleshy roots could be gathered out of the opening a streams Early March brought wurm break in which Jeems and his started for Chenufsio companions on the way and Food was plentiful each night they gathered strengthening sap from the maples at Chenufsio The They arrived people there had lived frugally on tlielr supplies and from the first runhad makbeen ning of the maple sap Only four families had ing sugar preceded Jeems to the village and of tlielr number which wus No word hud been redied had the ceived from Tiaoga and ids warriors In The nmple sap ran steadily spite of tins opening grace of spring ttiere hung over Clienufsio a grim shadow whose grew darker specter with each day that passed Tills specter was death Scarcely a which did not bring' returned family grief witli it And Ah De Bah the mightiest hinder of them all did npt No one had heard of him No come he was one knew where Fifty — seventy— a hundred— and then a hunwho those had dred and fifty of gone were accounted for in the Among them by the end of March Of their number wus Mary Daghlen thirty had died Still Ah De Bab the Tall Man did not come Then he appeared one duy He was even She hold At Girls of Arabian rack of flesbless bones Tiaoga would not hav recogBehind him trailed his people Jeems counted them before he could tel! one from another Eleven Ht ran toward them and Toinette awayed from the line at the head of which a grotesque whom nized the Tall Man inarched lie might not have known her at first If she had not met him In thla way for those who were behind Ah De Bah walked with bowed heads and dragging steps like Her death figures in a weird parade eye stared at him from a face so bis choked strange and thin that It Her body was not heavier than Joy Then a child' when he clasped her she began to cry softly with her face against his breast Iler He carried her to the tepee clothes were In tatters her moccasins She waa ao small a worn to shreds burden that her lightness sent horror through him and his eyes were blinded raised a cold by a hot fire when ah "hand to touch his face He placed her on the soft sklna In the tepee then of Wood Pigeon he was conscious near him In a moment Mary Daghlen came In Jeems made way for them He went outside and In his path wn creature who leapt weakly against him It was Odd a skeleton with red and watery eyes and Jaws falling apart Jeems waited until the Thrush came out and told him she was going for warm water and food and that Toinette Wood l’lgeon was undressing All but Then he sought the others Ah De Bah had disappeared and were being cared for The Tall Man could scarcely stand as he told his story He had brought his eleven people back alive— the dog and he Like the truly great he gave credit to his Inferior Without the dog he would have failed in Ills struggle to feed eleven mouths and Jeems knew why Odd had not burn eat n After a time Mary Daghlen let him She was In her see Toinette again The look which had bed of skins frightened him was gone from her eyes and they were bright with the She held out her Joy of his presence arms to him and he knelt beside her Wood Pigeon looked at the two with shining eyes and a soft mist gathered After this Jeems in Mary Dagblen’s did not see Toinette again for so afternoon and a night During this time she slept and the Thrush and Wood Pigeon were never fas from her side The next day she walked with him about the town heart waa What was In Tolnette's The young also In Mary Daghten’a girl who had knpwn no other life than that of her adopted people since babyhood but whose mother had kept God and Church olive in her soul watched with increasing anxiety for the return of Shindas and she told Toinette that at last she was prepared to yield to and if no prjest came her environment or summer she would that spring marry Shindas in the Indian way Tills thought now held less of horror She had seen tlie fidelitj fur Toinette and courage of an Indian family in its struggle against death she had seen the Tall Man gnaw at bitter bark that big women and children might huve she had seen scraps of skin and flesh a mother hide her portion of food day after day that she might save it for she had witnessed a her children faith and devotion which could have less than been inspired by nothing of God in their souls the strength melted away in spite Her prejudices of unforgettable of their background tragedy and she began to experience emotions which had not come to her before And though she said nothing of It to Jeems the conviction was growing In her heart that she’ would not allow another winter to separate them even If a priest did not come to Chenufsio But he came following closely the months of starvation lie was man on his way to gaunt take the place of a brother who Imd died among the Indiana of the Ohio That was wliat he said History was to relate otherwise for a year later he was the force behind the Alienakis in their slaughter of the English at His name wta Fort William Henry He was a Father Pierre Roubaud cold terrible man of God Yet lie was He would have died a the Church thousand deaths for the Caii-- e of if not the which he was the spiritual moral representative He would have flesh In defense of It eaten human lie did see such flesh eaten by Ids William savage disciples at Fort Henry He remained in ChenuDio two days On the second of these divu he married Jeems and Toinette according to the ritual of the Catholic chuuli The gloom he brought with him was ClicnuMo dissipated by this event gave itself up to a few hours of daughter in honor of Tiaoga's and the son of Wuskoo ) (TO BE CONTINUED Race Beirut the lending center rf education In the Near East has more native and forschools and colleges eign than any city of its size in the But Its girls’ schools before world the World war were all forpign and more or less of a missionary character That is why Moslem parents refused to send their daughters to them But during the war when all the foreign schools were closed a Syrian woman Mary Kassab opened a native school In the building of the English The success of this school mission was such that the attendance In a few years roe from 20 to 300 and an enthusiasm for education was kindled countries From In all the neighboring Irak from Palestine from all parts world girls of the of all creeps— Moslems and Christians Eager Influence on Price Macauiey said with ttie eveep tion of the alphabet and the printin' press no set of Inventions has tended so much as (Rose to alter civilization which abridge distance— such as the railway the steamship the telephone and that conveyor of the telegraph the and advertisements information These all tend therefore newspaper As to decrease Like Coffee prico the best Gasoline is Blended CONOCO Gasoline k blended just ae carefully a the finest coffee In CONOCO bltniti gasoline you’ll finds Natursl Gasoline for Gasoline quick irie£Strtight-ruCracked for power and long milttgt Gasoline for its qualities Motorists arc fast learning that this it so The result it t fait increasing group of gasoline connoisseurs who have added to their knowledge of the good things of life the fact that good gasoline must be bltniti The CONOCO Red Triangle mark the spots where CONOCO Gasoline may be found Try it txaira cheerfully through window The tubtle fragrance of the morning coffee addt tat to the morning air advance notice of the joy to come a you give the “cup test" to the coffee bind of your choice Coffee roasting it important of coune but the moat skillful roaster cannot make popular coffee from just one type of coffee bean would not The coffee connoisseur deign to drink coffee made from a tingle type of beaa Neither should the thoughtful motorist allow an unblended gasoline to go into hit fuel tank Gasoline must be blended if it it to posses all the vital properties contained in the three types of gasoline sun THE eastern :i a£ BALANCED - BLE THE Elevator Making Slow Headway With Britons Although the eenturles-ol- great tower of Windsor castle whose topmost floor are the repository of state documents Is to be equipped with a modern elevator— or lift a they describe It In England— that convenience of modern life doe not appeal to a large number of Britons master of the Lord llanworth the think rolls who Is as should fix government for limit using elevators He the age never uses the elevator In the law courts because he finds that the exercise of walking up nnd down the stairs is beneficial to his health a distinBut Oldfield Thomas guished scientist who died a few years ago at the age of left In his will $0000 to Install an elevator In the Natural History museum He had toiled up two long flights of stairs at the museum dally for 40 years appeals were made to Frequent the government by the museum authorities to appropriate money for a lift but none was forthcoming Mr Thomas ttien began to set aside some of his own ninnev for that purpose A few days ago this lift was opened to um- by the museum staff It was on this occasion that on behalf of the trustees Lord llanworth received It and spoke disapprovingly by of the use of such contraptions persons under sixty five the elevator Idea Is Nevertheless in Britain Now and then spreading one still runs across even a new unbuilding of four or five stories lifts probably became with equipped I today t' N u it1A" Stag Property Draped In England Even stage properties rnnst be properly attired according to an order recently Issued by the As the result of lord chumberlutn his action one of the properties In “Victoria’s Vanities” a revue at the has Victoria undergone a palace In one of the scenes dechange ship of the Nelson period picting the hull of a galleon was shown with a partially clad female An ofdeficial of the lord chamberlain' partment who saw the revue Inthe producer formed Jack Taylor that the figure must be clothed The next night a covering with glittering the draped ((tangles figure Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong No alcohol Bold by druggist in tablet or liquid— Adv Worth Wbil Finding An unemployed man finding some pearls In a Ixrndon street took them and discovered to the police station that he was entitled to a reward of £100 The Port of London Authority sent a diver down to recover the gold pencil case which had been dropped by a lady In going down the It was regangway from a ship stored to her none the worse In tws days But the most rpmarkahle or all cases of articles being lost and found was that of the alrmnn who made a binding in the middle of an tiki i h GASOLINE D old bnlldings replaced had none of cases however In the majority they are feutures of the new structures for higher rents can be ehnrged where they exist —New York Sun the ! 7L CONOCO desert When he was la the air again he discovered that he had Some time lost a bunch of keys later flying over the same desert he again had occasion to make a landing When he got out of the plane he foand his lost keys lying at his eastern Eat Everything withoutFear of Indigestion lots of foods you can’t eat of gas bloating pains la the stomach and bowels? That's a sign you need TanlacI B or 1 0 year Tanlac has restored to health thousands who denied themselves favorite foods just as you do Mrs Arvetia Bowers of Topeka Kans says she waa troubled for years with gas bloating and dizzy spells but Tanlac ended her suffering quickly If you suffer from indigestion gas torpid liver — dizziness headaches to help you! give Tanlac a chance Get it from your druggist today Your money back if it doesn t help you Are there f — for fear Children Learn About Cow The board of education of Los that 25 per cent Angeles discovered of Loa Angeles school children have never awn a cow and 50 per cent huve never seen a calf Now each day a big truck travels from adjacent meadow land bearing one eor and two calves bound for public schools Tupils stare at the strange and learn all about horned creature milk and steaks and things Does any writer of fiction wish he could make $200000 out of one great novel and quit? NEON KOOF Beacon of Hospitality Castoria i feet GIANT i SIGN for CHILDREN’S ailment G 3 32 Rh ?” “‘gsi L RE render first you prepared to quick comfort the moment air youngster has an upset of any rt? Could you do the right thing immediately — though the warning— came without is a Castoria irhaps tonight? other’s standby at such times here is nothing like it in emergen-- ? and nothing better for every-i- y use For a sudden attack of lie or for the gentle relief of to allay a feverish nstipation ell or to soothe a fretful baby e at can't sleep This pure preparation is always ready ease an ailing youngster It is at as harmless as the recipe on f you see Chas e wrapper reads I letcher'l signature it is geniune vs 111 W ertWrOfN for Instruction and Druses — come today to the The seschool of Mary Knssah to a cret of Its popularity according writer in the New York Time lies principally In the fact that besides Tech being native It Is nlcaliy and executively also it enjoys an unusuul reputation J r HOTEL i and Newhouse SALT LAKE CITY UTAII On of Salt Lake City’s finest hotels where guest find every comfort— w i I h a warm boepitalily Garage in connection Cafe and cafeteria 400 Room s Each with Bath Castoria smallest you so It ts harmless to the doctors will tell infant You can tell from the formula on the wrapper how mild it is and bow good for little systems But continue with Castoria until a child is grown ' I - W ' $200 to (100 - SUTTON Mb MEN'S (illk CO W NECKTIES 60 regular Agents L&ttall Salt A Chics factory for Imports! PILK IMPORTING Pt Chicago (Im wantl N U i Lake City No r T t |