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Show THE BULLETIN New Play Dress and a Bolero Ensemble 1UST see how much playtime fashion this one design (1557) gives you. The backless, slinv waisted play suit is perfect for summer sports. Wear the skirt with it, and you have a smart daytime dress. Add the bolero, too, and you have a charming little suit. Make this of linen, broadcloth, sharkskin or percale, and trim it with gay ricrac braid. Bolero Ensemble With Bows. The bolero dress with princess skirt (1731) is one thing you simply must have. It's so useful for street and afternoon wear both, MOUNTAIN i.rwOTvli7ra MAN HAROLD CHANNING WIRE. f4m Tlaeat J All and extremely becoming, with its silhouette, wide re vers and bow trims. Flat crepe, silk print, georgette and street cottons are good choices for this. The Patterns. ed No. 1557 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 5 material; 10 yards of 35-in- ch yards of ricrac braid to trim. No. 1731 is designed for sizes 12. 14. 18. 18 and 20. Size 14 re materiquires 5 yards of al; 2V4 yards of ribbon for bows. Pattern Book New Send 15 cents for Barbara Bell's Spring - Summer Pattern Book I Make smart new frocks for street, daytime and afternoon, with these simple, carefully planned designs! It's chic, it's easy, it's economical, to sew your own. Each pattern sew chart includes a to guide beginners. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept., 149 New Montgomery Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in coins) 39-in- ch Spring-Summ- er step-by-st- each. ep Bell Syndicate. WNU VVM;1 a imast AIM SEVSl MaksamTM km el a arssvaaa CHAPTER XI Continued l-O- THE TRUTH ABOUT LOSING, FAT NEW YOKK, N. Y. In tot by prominent N. Y. physician 25and nation illy women loot anowa newspaper woman a total of 286 lb, in 40 days. YOU, toe, can follow this SAME, SENSIBLE plan rilht at home and here it ii: Fint of all go licht on fatty meata and sweets. Eat plentifully of lean meata, fish, fowl, fresh fruits and Tesetablee. And for proper functioning by removal of accumulated wastes tske a half teaspoon ful of Kruschen in hot water every morning. Knuchea DONT MISS A MORNING. is nude riant here in U. S. A. from famous English formula. And tarn m Important! Kruasasa H NOT harmful. It la not just one salt aa aoma people believe. Bather it's a Maal mi a matin aalaaraln. which when dissolved in water make a healthful aJaeral drink similar to highly eoee-tlv- e Bp waters whsrs wealthy wemea have gene for years. A jar of Krasshsn eats only few seats and lasts weeks. So, fat ladies rtt some sumption I MAKE UP YOUR MIND YOU'LL STICK to the above Flan for 28 days and Just sec if you don't lose fat and fed healthier and younger You can get Kruschea at drag-gists everywhere. Old Jackson's hands tell angrily about his gaddle horn. "Dam rob dollars bery I They cost twenty-fiv-e down below. "AJl right, take them back there. Jud moved to depart. Breck had remained out of the deal, turning away while the two talked. Now he felt Jackson's eyes boring into him, and facing the man. It was as if he had been struck. No eyes had ever viewed him with such scorn. They burned into nis race lor a moment, then went to Jud. "Pay me." Two thousand dollars in yellow bills were counted out Jud rode off to claim the herd. Jackson rolled up the money and stuffed It into his pocket with slow tense fingers. At last he faced Breck, bard-eyetight-lippe"I've seen some graft- in' government men," ha began, "but you do beat 'em all to hell! You with your talk of keepin' rules and playin' these mountains fair for everybody. By God . . . "Just a minute," Breck cut in. "Do you mind explaining what this d. d. is all about?" Deep Philosophy "Explain hell! Don't need more A little philosophy inclineth than a blind man to see what If s to man's mind atheism; but depth about How come Tillson to have in philosophy brmgeth men's cash so handy? Of course you minds about to religion. Bacon. this didn't throw m with hunt Hell no. You hold out our stuff and he just happens to have two thousand dol lars ready!" Breck started to speak, but there Kara la Amailna Hailof tor was little enough for him to offer. Conditions Due) to Sluogleh Dowata He couldn't go into details of the It yoB think an kuaons act aUke. just try this bribe. That itself would need consii viaeu BO Bifid. thorough, siderable explaining, and would only NUaflKsa TJepandaoi iBVlansllsg. fnsalng.. add a queer story to what these men spalls, Hrad asmlslsfl it 1 from box of your against him. thought rkteat tbea Without Risk Maue anantat. Mste the "Jackson," he said, "you're V ant delicti tad. ntura the bos to is. win rsrasa tne pursnsss branding me with a lie. In time HEADACHE? r TTTtTI ril always eaaay asia'"h?rav WNU W QUICK RELIEF FOR ACID INDIGESTION 18-- 39 A Sure Index of Value Vnrvurlarlrra nf N . . to mm wi iiiiitjxhiTar'i r amo anrl what it stands far. It is the most ceitain method, except that of actual use, tor judging we valim nf sn ynannfafS- tured goods. Here is the rati murantao arrxinsr WJ GBIBIBB . . wgiuaousiup v g use ol shoddy materials. UUJf ADVERTISED GOODS prove - CHANNING MIRE Bill mysteriously hilled in the pursuit of his duties. Cordon Brack, his beat friend, takes over Cotter's too, hoping to avenge his murder. "Dad" Cook, forest superintendent, warns Brack that the Tillson brothers, mountain moonshiners, are apt to give him trouble. Before leaving for nis mountain station. Brack Buys an out- fit and decides to attend the public dance run by the TUIsons In Lone Tree. Brack nances witn Louise Temple, pretty "cowgirl" for whom he takes a liking. Unknown to Brock, she is being courted by Art TUlson, youngest of the three TUl- son nrotners. Angered try Brecari attentions to the girl, he picks a fight which ends Indecisively when someone sets Ore to the hall. Brack and his chief set out for the mountain station. Halfway, they are met by Sierra Slim, moss-bac- k mountaineer who is also in the forest service. Brack learns from Sierra that tracking down Jim Cotter's murderer must be done cautiously. Cook, Brack and Sierra continue their ascent of the mountains. They sight the Tlllaons, re turning to their hideaway. Next day. Cook sends Brack and Sierra In one direction to repair the telephone line, while be takes another. Sierra tells Brack more about Louise Temple. "That kid's worougnorea." ne says, ue auto Be lieves that Art TUlson is not essentially bad, but is the victim of circum stances. Brack Is directed to go to Bock House Meadow, hia permanent base. On the way, he la the target of a pistol shot from an unseen assailant. The bullet misses, but his frightened pack animals bolt and Brock goes In pursuit finding aesertaa canto, ne takes snener irom the rain. A moment later the three TUlson brothers arrive and Brack hides in the cabin loft. Breck hears the three discuss a plot against his life. Waiting hia chance. Brack surprises the brothers ana nous tnem at tna Mint or nis gun. Jud, the oldest brother, offers a bribe If Breck will "make no trouDie. Brack Mvtends to take the offer under eonaid- the men go. Brack's duty nation, letscount at the annual cattle is to take drive at Bock House Meadow. There he meets Louise Temple who is running her own catue. Tranced m a narrow canyon ore the onruahlng steers. Brack's quick action saves her from being trampled. He takes her to his cabin over Art TUlaon'i protest With nightfall. Louise, now recovered, leaves tne caom ana makes her eamo in the meadow. Later. Breck rides over to see If everything is aU right finds Art TUlson who tries to pick a quarrel. Breck rides on and discovers a large herd of cattle being run out of me meaoow oexore tne count. They belong to Jackson, cowman who represents all the ranchers tat the cattle run. Breck tells Jackson that the government laws are to be enforced. The cattle count starts. Feeling among the cattlemen is tense as Breck turns back all cattle in excess of each man's allot ment Jud TUlson confronts him with the bribe ha had previously offered. Servlct. AT LAST! Is the least Impor Gordon Breck." Impatience that was so much a part of her nature flared openly. "Don't you un derstand that? You can't work up here with these men against you. They may be wrong but they're powerful. If you're a square-shoote- r, you've got to prove it" Breck stared at her. In some way, he could not tell how, perhaps in hei eyes, or voice, he caught a meaning beyond her words. She spoke of cattlemen, but it was as if she were asking him to prove his square-dealin- g to them and to "My opinion SYNOPSIS slim-waist- good. He sat across from Louise, Tem, pie at the end, and they talked of many things but not of cattle and grazing. There was a reason, Breck surmised, though if the man held any hard feeling over enforcement of the permit rule, he covered it well beneath his hospitality. The manner Louise had with her father gave Breck a new perception of herself. She was sympathetic, understanding, yet never once pampered him in ways that would only have emphasized his crippled condition. And Temple was proud of his glrL His eyes followed her, always bright with a strange eagerness. Over their dessert of canned peaches, he said, "You won't find many cowhands like the one I've got Rang- tant D itr W.N.U.SERVICC report last night be had told the men, and had cursed the Job that forced him to make enemies. 'What's in line for today?" he con tinued, "patrol?" "No; I'm not sending you on the trail until tomorrow. Look over your fire tools, sharpen up your axes and brush hooks, and get things in good shape. You might not have time later. Get yourself settled and feeling at home." "Suits me," Breck agreed. He spent the day with grindstone and files, putting a razor edge on double-bitte- d axes, and making the fit for any long curved man's war. At noon his horses and mule came to the fence gate nearby, thrust their necks over the top and said something about lunch. He fed them barley and they went off to nibble at flowers in the pasture. Be fore night he bad his tool box ar ranged for action. Next morning, talking to head quarters he asked Cook to send him on patrol to Sulphur Creek. "Take your time, son," the ranger answered. "We're not ready for that Today you might as well ride the Kern River trail. Look over the country west of you all that lying between Sulphur and the Potholes. There's your worst fire hazard. You'll find some tourist camps on the river. Go in and say howdy. Breck obeyed orders. Inwardly re volting, though he knew the old ranger was guided by wisdom of ex perience. So, day by day, he was forced to put down his Impatience and work at the forest's Job. He explored his district west and south, talked with tourists over their fires, climbed high peaks and from that vantage studied the geography of the maze of streams and interlocking ridges. As he be came more and more familiar with this roof land, the Sierra Nevadas lost some of the forbidding aspect they had presented at first brush-hook- s mid-da- y - The approach of July meant spring in the top country. Days were warm, though nights remained close to freezing. Now be rode through meadows purple with lark spur; climbed long rock ridges in a blaze of red snow flowers. At dusk he returned to his cabin with eve ning primroses opened in yellow cups underfoot filling the air with sweet delicate perfume. Repeatedly he found his thoughts traveling eastward beyond the bowl of Rock House. His gaze went often to a trail that led up the notch to ward a certain camp fifteen rales distant It seemed as if Dad Cook had read his wish when he gave the order one morning, "You had better swing around by Temple Meadow today." There, was a blazed trail from Rock House to Temple's camp, but Breck was in a hurry somehow and rode Kit up a ridge and along its crest on a route of his own. It was half an hour before noon as he crossed the last summit and de scended into a wide strip of grassland. A flag of cabin smoke came from a clump of trees at the fur ther end. He rode toward it rapidly, his eyes searching for a cowboy who was not a cowboy at au. Two cabins stood In the trees, one old and weathered, with a low, sheet-iroroof; the other of logs new within the past three years, for hewn surfaces still showed bright yellow. Red and white checked curtains in the window of this last told that a woman lived in it and the whole look around the outside was of a woman's neatness, with saddle gear hung on wooden horses, lariats coiled, pack canvas folded and piled In the shelter of a pine. The other was as plainly a man's shanty, where a man could kick things about and enjoy the mess. One window pane was broken and stuffed with a gunny sack. A black bear pelt freshly skinned and salt ed, was nailed on the logs of the front end. A low bench stood near the door, with tobacco cans littering the ground under it It was from this cabin that Breck saw smoke rising. A door opened as he came out of the woods and crossed a short clearing. He recogn For an instant the old man's glare lost some or its bard accusation. though he wheeled away in grim si lence. Breck mounted Kit and sat alone while the last of the herds vanished out of Rock House Meadow. No man came near him; nor the one figure he watched intently. She nized Louise Temple, though not the gathered up the cattle he bad at girl he had been picturing. lowed to pass, and rode her blue She wore a dress today; somehorse beyond the bowl without thing short dark green like the forlook backward. est with the red of snow flowers In it; and somehow he was meeting her CHAPTER XII all over again. She smiled, holding up ner hand ai sunrise the next morning Breck to him even before he dismounted. ran up the Stars and Stripes in front "Hello, Ranger. Sorry I didn't see of his cabin. Having done that he you after the count" could almost hear a hum of wheels He wondered if she meant it "I and the click of Forest Service ma was pretty busy." be said, as If the chinery turning into place. explanation should come from him. About seven he opened the iron "Things were happening that day." box and checked in to headquarters. "Yes; weren't they!" "How does the world look to you He swung down and met her anxnow?" Cook a iked. iously. "You think- -" Louise checked him with aa Im "Better." Break answered, in his INEXPENSIVE MEALS Tha at In Kail Lake In brtThefondMAYFLOWKR CAKE "Why do you talk to me like this?" he asked. With a quick little laugh she lifted her face to him. "Because you are so helpless!" Helpless! He had the impulse to kiss her mouth and then spank her. So that was it! "You take a big chance, young lady." he grinned. "Do I look so er!" Breck looked across at Louise laughingly, though serious in his an swer: "I'm beginning to believe it" "Ain't no man on the range can beat her ridin' or ropln'," Temple went on. "Just you wait till wo have a rodeo after saltin time al ways in the top money, she is." "Now Buster," Louise checked him. "Be careful. You know last weak?" She answered with dark eyes sweeping over him eagerly. "No, I can't say you do!" They both turned as a horseman trotted out of the timber and rode toward them. Then Louise darted Into the cabin. Breck heard a rattling of stove lids and saw smoke Increase from the chimney. "Thaf s Buster," she said on coming back, "hungry as a coyote and on time to the dot He's my father. Maybe you've heard him called Tom Temple." Remembering that Temple was an invalid. Breck watched with considerable wonder as the man halted at a tie rack, threw himself from his saddle and reached the ground on one foot, while bearing most of his weight with a grip on the horse's year mane. "The old dear." Louise said devotedly. "He does get around." She waved as her father looked up. "Come along. Buster! Steak's on the fire and we've got company for dinner." Temple turned his horse into the pasture, picked up a cane and approached across the clearing. "Howdy, Ranger," he said, offering his hand with no word of introduction. "I was thlnkin you ought to come and give us a calL" Qlad to do it" Breck returned, and at once he knew where Louise acquired her warm personality. Tom Temple was the sort to be marked to any gathering. Although an injury to his left hip drew "him a little to that side, he still retained a vigorous bearing, and when he sat upon the bench, showed none of his handicap. But the lines of his face, even when he smiled, told of suffering, and his hair was snow white. Breck could sense the battle ox a man suddenly reduced to camp chores. He wondered if Temple had ever gone to a good surgeon. There was an army friend of his who had done marvelous things with fractured bones, and a case like this . . . "If you men don't come and get hard-worki- ..." "They Judged you wrong, kid!" Temple declared hotly. "Where do you have this rodeo?" Breck asked. "Here on the meadow end of this month or first part of August Every outfit in the mountains rides a man1 or two. Better aim to be on hand." Breck promised he would. They sat at the table until the sun had passed the door and was beginning to slant through a western window. Reluctantly Breck thought of the trail to Rock House. "Hate to do it" he said at last "but m have to move on." As the girl's father stood up and walked from the door. Breck lin gered with Louise, helped clear the table, and watched with a growing Intensity of feeling as she paused be fore the mirror to give a little in definite push and pat to her brown hair. Then she came to him and they went outside together. Temple was not around, but Breck saw a thick canvas roll tied on his gaddle skirt, and knew that it was the cattle country's goodwill offering a present of fresh beet He could count this man his friend. After untying Kit he walked with Louise toward a gate In the fence that circled the cabins. Her face was averted and she did not speak as they approached the opening. Breck reached to pull back the bars; lifted one and put it down. He slipped his hand down over hers and the pressure of his fingers was answered. He could have taken her in his arms, but she gently moved away and pushed back the poles. It seemed a gesture for him to go. Mounting, he rode through, said "Good-by-" and passed on toward the forest At its edge he looked back. She had remained near the gate. The poles were still down. Her very poise showed how Intently she watched him, and when he turned, she waved with a quick eager movement of her whole body. (TO BE CONTINUED) Pocket Knife Has Lost Favor and the e Whittlers Have Passed Away HOTELS HOTEL PLANnOMkL SALT LAKK 4lh M. A Stale HI. Rales tl.ee. II QI.'lKT He8PKCTABl.K-CI.K- AN Jt Whea la RENO. NEVADA, slap st Iks Reno's largest aad HOTEL MJLDEN papular aawL APARTMENT HOTEL IIlark fraas Tsaipl. Raaasashls Kates I ear week ar bmhiIi. Caaiplrialf furnished RICHMOND. II E. Ne. Temple. Bait Lake. PHOTO ENLARGEMENTS S enlargements ISe ROLL DEVEI.OPED. at vour Drue Mure, or nail KNLAKUU, P. 6. Box ST. Rait Ike. PURE SEEDS Be careful what roa plant Insure your crops by bay ins Highland Rrand Alfalfa. Clovers and Grasses from your local Dealer or Direct from OCCIDENTAL SEED COMPANY Halt Lake Cilr. Vtak SCHOOLS BARBKRINQ tausht in a short time. Be sure of good jiay and steady work. Bar- bars are in demand Enroll now. MOLE It'S BAKBKB COLLEGE Kalt Lake HEMORRHOID TREATMENT Hemorrhoids (PILES) and ether rectal die-orders cares wiinaal tas Bails, ror aura-tar- e and iafarmatiea write The pocket knife with which the small boy of a generation ago carved willow whistles and played mumble-the-pe-g appears to have had its heyday. Either that or the simplification of modern industrial production has reduced its models more than half, according to the evidence of hardware catalogues, notes a writer in the Chicago Daily News. The volume of sales for pocket knives has not kept pace with the increase in population in the last three or four decades, sales off- report "Our latest catalogUv lists 30 selections among pocket knives," said one, "whereas our 1910 catalogue listed 104 different models. I don't think that the boys or men of today feel the same pride in possessing a pocket knife as did those of the previous generation." Where, years ago, the ud who owned a two or three blader with a handle considered himself something of a "big shot" today the average young man seems satisfied with a small ornamental knife on a watch chain. As for the "tough guy" of today, be most likely carries a toy gat instead of the stag-hor- n ed sticker" that snapped open when you pressed it That expert of the pocket knife, tha whittler. seems to have disappeared, too. There was a time when every neighborhood had a whittler. or two who could make a "toad length of chain out of a piece of pine, or maybe fashion a full rigged ship and put it into a small necked bottle. But these experts are hard to find nowadays. An exception is a Chicago man who has become known as the 'Icing of the whittlers." Whenever he finds a piece of suitable wood, of whatever kind, he immediately starts to carve something out of It But he is an artist compared with simon- pure whittlers who Just whittle. Another thing you don't see much of nowadays is the knife that fea tures several tools with In the old days you could get knives with various combinations screwdriver, awl, auger, wrench, scissors, Bunch. buttonhook, file and pruning and cut ting blades. 111 The work contained CLINIC TRUSSES inatrumcnta. Hospital Supplies, Surgical Trusses Manufacturers of Abdominal SupElastis Stockists. porters. The Physicians Supply Company W 41 Cnd South Bt Salt Laka City. 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DESK PHOTOGRAPHY PHOTO-KRAF- T ECONOMY FILM SERVICE Any Roll Developed with I Quality ...... Prints - - 25c 3c Extra Print! Wrap coin sad film carefully SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- DRUGS N Bos 749 PHOTO-KRAF- T Bart Laka City. Utah Efficient, Economical Water Control with CALCO GATES for every water rantrel situation. Write for full informatisn. A model The R. HARDESTY MFG. CO. Ml S. Third West St. Salt Lake City Get the results of Thirty Years ef Eipert- - 12,000 words 40,000 deflations not to be found in any similar publications. Webster issued aa enlarged edition in and Laka CUr Bait Templetea Bids. it Webster's First Dictionary The first edition of "Noah Web ster's American Dictionary of the English Language" was published In New York in 1828. As early as 1783 he bad published his "American Spelling Book," which sold by the millions down through the third quarter of the Nineteenth century. Profits from this book enabled him to devote some 20 years to the preparation of a dictionary. In 1824, when the book was nearly finished, he visited Europe to procure such information as be had been unable to obtain in America. After a short stay in Paris he went to England, where he finished his dictionary during an eight months' residence la Cambridge. In June, 1825, he returned to America. An edition of 2,500 copies of his dictionary was published in 1828, followed by an edition of 3,000 for Great Britain. a SURGICAL Old-Tim- icials by South Main HUl'ULAU PRICED Luncheon, limners and Handwirnn 114 home-mad- head. COPYRIGHT-HAROL- 3 m throw it away!" Louise had entered the cabin ahead of them. She stood now in the door, an apron over her dress, threatening with a bread knife. Temple laughed. "She means that too! We'd better go in and eat" Dinner was set on the bare boards of a slab table. A platter full of thick steaks, a bowl of mashed potatoes, then canned fruit end big e round loaves of bread. Grub for a man! Breck felt that food had never looked nor tasted so it patient wave of her hand. "Some times X find it best not to think at alL" "One's mind is never blank." "Mine la . . . often!" "But you're bound to think once in a while," Breck laughed, then added seriously, "I don't want you to believe what Jackson has said of me." A searching look came Into the girl's eyes. "The eattlemen think and thaf s what you ought to con it sider." "Let them," Breck answered. "Right now I value your opinion, not theirs." Sharply Louise shook her brown pTnM 101. W.N.IT. Week Ne. MLT LAKC |