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Show THE SMITH FIELD SENTINEL. SMITHFIELP. UTAH ' First Hymphony Orcht-ntr- s The New York Philharmonic society in 1842 organized its Orel orcheatra in the United ym-pho- Staler III lie Saying I have heard great men apeak," aid Hi Ho, the aage of Chinatown, but never one whoae voice ia a loud aa a cannon. Population Mavra Weatward The population of the United Statea haa moved weatward at an average of 42 milea a decade. Mistress of Monterey Contlnurd CHAPTER XXVI CASH wear. Well, are you not going to get ready? I am not I am not going. Please, Pedro, do not do this to me, please. I wrote because I I am sorry it seemed the am so unhappy only way. Please, my darling, adored husband. Please, oh, please do not do this to me! Whimpering like a child aha threw herself at his feet before the scandalized eyes of the watching soldiers and servants. Angustias moved toward her, but the Governor motioned her back. Hi face was stern and drawn. Get up, woman! What a scene to make before these people! A womans tears and a dog's limping are not real. Will you go now or shall I be forced to make you?" Still aha knelt on the floor. No! No! I will not go . . . you can not make me! Oh, Pedro! Oh, Mother of God! Oh, help me! The Governor clutched his beard with one hand and gritted his teeth. Pick her up, he ordered the soldiers, tie her hands, and put her on a horse. Take her to the fathers at Carmel and tell them it is my orders she stay in the monjera until I return. Under no circumstances ia she to leave before then. And if she misbehaves, she is to be beaten. ...... What is the meaning of this, Inquired Eulalia, 'Is it a drunken prank? For what am I to be placed under arrest? It is no drunken prank. Woman, you are under arrest for treason. I have here end he slapped Eulalia's letter to the Viceroy on to the table 1 have here a document written by you containing treasonable utterances against the Governor of the Califomiaa. And any treason against the Governor of the Califomiaa ia treason against his Most Catholic Majesty the King of Spain. Therefore I put you under arrest." HOTEL Temple Square RainlUOtsMOO bun haa a Tha llatal T daalraMa. frinoSly ainua. phara, Yan wUI always find It 1 lata, paw sly eemlortablo, aad Mskly f tulliat thla batal lat IkrajUV nmiUntu face ilwatawd why RECOMMENDED Yea eaa also appreaiata why i 111CULY ffa a aw af dlatfisctfea to afep illMihaaaliMtoaklnr ERNEST WNU C ROSSITER, Mgr. W 24-- 28 Eulalia grew white around the lips, and her voice shook. she stammered. "Yes; you hsve said here that the Governor of California has been going slowly but surely insane for the past three years. That all his acta are the acts of a madman, a maniac. That his governance here haa been a long period of misrule. That he fails to cooperate with the priests in their religious work. That everyone is afraid of him, and dare not report his madness to the Viceroy. That he haa repeatedly threatened your life, and the lives of others, and .that he neglects his duties to consort with Indian women. la that true? Every word of it I" I mean is it true that you have . written this? Yea, I wrote it Very well, then. I arrest you In the name of the King of Spain. Eulalia wavered. But but you can not do that! What what are you going to do -me? ojj JIukuXu withYou are to be incarcerated In for DISCRIMINATING TRAVELERS the monjera. the quarters of the Indian women at Mission Carmelo until I return from my trp. Then I will consider your case. In the monjera! You' can not do this to me! I will not go! You dare not degrade me, disgrace me this way. before the whole community! I will not go! You do not hesitate to degrade and disgrace me before ail California, Mexico and Spain, Senora. You shall go to the monjera, and at beaaOM A Interior, vdlb snrivalled once. Prepare yourself. cordial ily and chans, hi the nett Idtal No! Not I will die first . . . localijc In the city. Luasriem, taitefully Angustiasl Angustias was cowering In a corappointed room. Service hue to the the scene in terror. baditional hmpiblHy of the Wad. Un- ner, watching At the doors and windows frightened excelled cuisine. Fastens Empire Room, servants listened and looked. There is no use calling AngusGUY TOOMBES, tias. I.a'm through being ruled by women. Angustias will remain here from with my children, and you shall go. At once, I said!, he thundered so suddenly that Eulalia jumped. And If you hesitate any longer you shall go without any preparation. The matron at the monjera will give you a robs such as the Indian girls HOTEL UTAH f) Palace lA I n003IS 9250 Salt Lake City . sycamores, water alders, willows and all manner of trees and shrubs, as he sniffed the wild roses and drank from the clear springs ; as he gazed at the mighty mountains or at the rolling restless surf of the Pacific he laughed. ! he said. My life for California the jade!" worth ia she it, By God, Each morning that found them on the road he carefully stamped out often the remains of the camp-fire- , on a spot where he had built Area many times before. And as he did this he wondered. Out of these ashes, on one of these little mounds, would a city rise some day? He sighed at the thought, but indulged in prophetic retrospection. And at the missions he visited long with the padres; ate their good food, drank their good wine; admired their fat herds and sleek horses. Then passed on to the next mission. Passed through much rich country, or wild land alive with herds of antelope and elk, bear and mountain lions. Ha killed the giant bear ha had promised himself, and carried most of it to the Mission San Gabriel ArcangeL There he rested for many days in the shade of the carefully tended trees, with the music of a little stream in his ears. And there he visited with some old, old friends who had traveled with him on the expedition. I am retiring, said one old corn-padr-e, Don Epifanio Sanchez, long sergeant iff the guard at the MisI am retiring, sion San GabrieL he repeated as Don Pedro sipped absently at his wine. From what . . . ? questioned the Governor. From the Kings Army. The King haa granted me many varaa of land. And I am choosing it well There are springs on it, and meadow land for grazing, and land to raise corn and grapes. And I have already chosen the knoll on which I will build my house. He stretched his legs luxuriously before him and sighed with pleasurable anticipation. Ah, and what a life that will live-oak- bel at attention. ssner When la RENO NbVADA Map ,lT HOTEL GOLDEN-Rt- aaa lerseal awat papular batrl THE WILSON HOTEL IB thp Saart (1 1 tha alls Raua Tb fn4 Sa. St IS Bali .. a The courier spoke timidly. he murmured "Excellency, unfortunately, I must be ball, covera II acrea. on my way, not being on a pleasure trip, like yourself, and . . . and1 The First 25 Years there is a letter in there that Growing up isn't easy. The first have on my conscience. 1 should 29 years of life are spent Just have asked you about It before I left the presidio. It does not bear growing up physically and socially. It is a process so hard, so your frank. The Governor looked startled. evident, so emotionally and menSo? And who has sent a letter tally distorting, that we usually have to spend the next 25 years of out without my frank?" Her Excellency, La Senora La life convalescing from it, and reDons Eulalia. surand Gobemadora, medicine with pairing "Ah! Let me have it, and I will gery and corrective exercises all the damages done to the psychic attend to it. The courier took the paper from and social organism In the first fierce upward push through the among the rest and handed it to Be the Governor. It was addressed to M. B. Greenbie in ?ars. Age." the Viceroy of Mexico. The Governor shook his head and rubbed his eyea. The men watched him in amazement as he tore the letter open and read 1L A woman's tongue ia only three Inches long, but it can kill a man of six feet I You, he said to the trembling courier, "get on your way at once. I will keep this letter. And the rest of us will return at once to the presidio. At the exclamation of disappointIf y act QUICK TmutbWalivui from his escort he laughed ment , , . fiesnfbedy caa antar But limpta, aaay loudly. FLA-VOR-A- ID But we will stay only a short while, and before this sun has set SEWS ITEM CONTEST we will be on our way again. Our 2nd Prints lit PrfcatSO ia interrupted, companeros, pasear 4 Print MPrbatlS not abandoned! IPrkaaflaadl IMMtasflh 1ST CaW Prim Gftraa Each Weak A little while later the presidio HEM All THI SIMPLI IULES 1, Clip (he amt aaawal gates were again thrown open, and Han tram year papar to the surprise of everyone, the Gov2, CampMa fbk atefaaca la ernors party swept Into the parade-groun- d in a cloud of duet and a clatter of hoofs. A Add the Name and Addma of Grocer From her window La Gobemaobeia yau bweht dora watched El Gobemador ride A llm war Nana aad Addran plainly. A HaJEahv to JEl SHT CaTlM 1 madly toward the palacio, and beAvtoua, Cklcapo, fore she could control the sudden aat War.lhaa Wadaeedar, Jaaa Sal l k Saab trembling that seized her, he strode Into the room. Behind him came two soldiers, who had followed from the gate. thundered the GoverSenora, nor, I have come to place you under arrest." He motioned to the two soldiers, who stepped smartly forward and took their places one at each aide of Eulalia. Their eye a goggled, with amazement, but they clanked the butts of their muskets smartly on the floor, and stood Ov lobby la delightfully Mr cooled riming tbe maths Radio far ffrory Reaui virslnla Sttvara Barttett WNU Sarvtea VIRGINIA STIVERS BARTLETT Largeat Hall Earl's court, Kensington, claimed to be the worlda largeat exhibition SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY HOTELS HOTEL FLANDOMK. SALT LAKk 4th Be State-Ra- taa l.N la (z h I Am Said Ona Old Retiring, Compadrs. But your wife? asked Don Pedro. Will she consent to come here and live with you? Had you not heard? My poor wife, God rest her soul, died last year in Mexico City. She would never join me here. And I could not leave here. You understand? Lifo was lonely for her, I suppose. We had no children . . . end so . He shrugged his shoulders. God took her home. You are moat fortunate, Don Pedro, in having Dona Eulalia with you. Most for-lunat- e! like any recalcitrant Indian woman. PePedro! Eulalia shrieked. dro, not that! Ai, Dios mio . . . not that!" The Governor was trembling as much as the terrified woman at his feet. Very well. Not beaten. But if the misbehaves, she must be put In the stocks. Take her at once." As the frightened soldiers lifted her from the floor, she struggled like a cat, writhing and sobbing. Best tie her hands, ordered the Governor coldly. Or you will be scratched. He handed one a handkerchief, and watched grimly while her struggling hands were tied at her back. She faced him with features distorted, streaked with tears, but her eyes fierce. Cruel, brutal, mad Pedro Pages I she cried. You will suffer for this! She wrenched against the bonds that held her hands. Oh, let me go! Let me got Fages merely motioned to the soldiers, who dragged her out of the house. Still screaming and struggling, one of them managed to throw her before him on his horse. Angustias rushed from the house wringing her hands and weeping. All the servants crowded The soldier touched his spurs to the horse. The shrieking writhing La Gobemadora and her escort started across the parade-groun- d toward the presidio gate, Angustias running lamenting beside. CHAPTER XX VII Forth on El Camino Real again rode the Governor of the Califomiaa. The royal road was now a atrip of yellow highway: slowly but surely, through pressure of many feet and hoof-beaof many horses, printing itself upon the pleasant soil of California connecting the Mission and Presidio of Upper California with the ancient Mise sion and capital Loreto, in Lower California. As he rode he remembered suddenly that 20 years had passed since he had first traveled this way. No road then; that' first party of pioneers had pushed their way through virgin soil, breaking a trail through the wilderness, marking it here and there with cairns of stone, but often-e- r with crosses. Twenty years! He started at the thought Nearly half hia life, in twenty years more he would be seventy. All those years for the siren. California. As he looked at the smiling spring sky, the acres and acres of the canons full of well-defin- ed ta one-tim- wild-flower- s, Yea, muttered Fagea. And what win you do with this great rancho and house you are going to build? Will you live alone? What will you do without wife or chil- dren 7 Don Epifanio stirred uneasily. "Pues, com padre, iron know how it is. I have already chosen me a wife. Just an Indian girl. That is, part Indian. Her father was a Span-is- h soldier, though God only knows who he was. But she is beautiful and very young, and has been well educated here at Mission San Gabriel. She can cook, and sew. She can even play the guitar! And she is young. Oh, yes, very young. Fifteen. But look you, I am barely fifty! So I will have many years ahead of me, and God willing, many children. He laughed. Who knows but we will start a new race in this new land? Don Pedro was very quiet as the other dreamed of hia future happiness over his wine-glasYes, mused the Governor to himself. You will have a happy life. An ideal life. Ah, yes . . The other broke into his musings. s. Don Pe- Why do you not retire, dro? You have given the best years of your lifo to your King and this country. The King would be more haw willing to award you a great lice of this land that you have 10 long. Why not do it? Lot someone else be governor, end have all the worries and anxieties, while you retire and establish a grand chilhminria, enjoy your wife and do the Indiana the let and dren, work? Don Pedro was quiet a long time, watchidly twirling hia beaker, and in little washing the juice ruddy ing waves against the glass. AH unconsciously his old friend, in relating his own hopes, had laid bare the deepest desires of the Governors heart. A great estate of his ownl Ha could see himself riding over the land; could see the sleek herds, the spirited horses he would raise; could see the fields of corn and grain, squashes, beans and chiles; he wandered through hia own orchards and vineyards. Ai, Dios, that was what he wanted! A great house where he could entertain a hundred guests, and where a hundred servants would do his bidding; where there would be music and flowers and hospitality and at the end a host of strong sons to speed hie departure into that dark uncertain land . . . But the vision did not hold Eulalia. With a bitter laugh he gulped his wine. Before God, Don Epifanio, you are sent by Satan to tempt me! That may be your life, but it can never be mine. I am sorry, my friend. For there are many of us who campaigned with you who are going to do this very thing of which I have spoken. In fact, many have sent for their wives and families to come from Mexico, end, as I said before, those of ua who have not wives will find them here. Yes, we will found a new civilization, I think, in this strange new land, and you should be one of the founders. The Governor left San Gabriel, visited the troublous little village of Los Angeles, and left there shaking hie head over the laziness and immorality of its inhabitants. South, then, to the Mission San Juan and at last to the Presidio end Mission of San Diego, the cradle of California. Then he turned north again, to return to Monterey, more restless, more unhappy, more disturbed in mind than when he had started on hie journey. He had not left hie anxieties behind. They had traveled with him. And to them wee added the nagging certainty that he wai at a crisis in his lifo. Ha could not continue living aa he had been. He and Eulalia were killing each other. He must resign as governor of the Califomias. And after that, what? One of two things. Remain in the province as an hacendado, and fulfill his dearest dreams, regardless of Eulalia. Or return to Mexico, perhaps to Spain. He groaned in spirit, and worried hia grizzled beard as ha considered that possibility. The soft breath of California kissed his cheek as he rode north. The very brambles and wild roses reached out and clutched him with clinging fingers; and when he lay down at night the warm earth seemed to cradle him in lotting arms that would not let him go. When at last htr rode through the gates of the Royal Presidio Monterey two months after he had swept through them, he had made a decision. He would not leave California. gov-ern- ed ... (TO BE CONTINUED) Farm Life Has No Appeal to Peasants of France; Children Prefer City Lifo People leave farms In France largely for the same reasons aa evn erywhere else. Ever since the of the Third republic (nominally 1870) peasant children have been getting education, though the number of illiterates aa shown by the army conscript examinations ia surprisingly high. With education, the ambition of the average peasant haa been to make his son a gentleman (a monsieur), which means generally to get him a white-colljob. Hia daughter likewise he prefers to marry off to a city desk worker rather than to a young farmer, observes a writer in the Chicago Tribune. By a process which has gone on in other languages, even the word peasant haa fallen Into bad repute. It ia now never used in the news reports of the Paris press. When a word must be used, a peasant is called a cultivater. The word term-ie- r (farmer) haa never been used extensively, and not often would it be an accurate translation of. our word farmer. Even if he cannot get a coveted job with the government, the young peasant usually prefers to come to the city and take a chance. He foun-datio- ar may get the chain in an factory or punch tickets in on auto-mobil- e a subway station. The average French farm has been improved aa the American not one haa within the last generation. The radio ia rare; automobiles are even rarer. The standard of undoubtedly higher than beforsTtlS d cuz?enta of life now flow SeVrtUh gh 016 French cuntry. peasant still thinks of his life as a dull ona. .Str,nee EPort One of Czechoslovakias strangest exports is mud. The mud is o vary special quality, for it is that n other famous contains radium, silica, spas and cal. cium and other healing iron, mineral. at F,e,tany. the mud, known driad and made fa an?0' can cubes and poultices, without dehydrated, it is exported all over the world for the treatment of rhevh aciaticB and other ait ments. The greatest rise Yu:eat Picstaiy in tha on thebath! River Vah. These the rock trataPuroU8h nsurea water having a temperature of about 140 degrees. jng EYE GLASSES .t REPAIRED Mail aa yaar hrahaa lenses, I haaia Whalaaala prices. Satiafaclisa CaaranM Optical Shop. Boston HilMinp. Ball ikt SCHOOLS Barharfac taasht ia ahart lima. Ba aan aaS atciAr warib Barbra an demand Earall Naw. HOLERS BAKBEH COLLEGE. 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