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Show MORGAN COUNTY NEWS. MORGAN. UTAH to the Catholic the Penitcntes Los Hermanns (the Penitent Brothers) Is a society of flagellants which exists According i Eney-clopedi- a, rirrr1 Mexico and Colorado, and also Ins among the natives and The discipline consists of dians. flagellation, carrying heavy crosses, binding individuals to a cross for hours, tying the limbs to prevent the circulation of blood and other acts of bodily torture as a moans of expiation of sin. SYNOPSIS George McAusland waa 38 yeari old when he sailed from America to undertake his post SB missionary in the Fiji Islands. A crime he had committed In a fit of excitement had shattered all his confidence tn himself. He felt forced to avoid pretty Mary Doncaster, who boarded the ship at Honolulu. She was en route to visit her parents, who were missionaries on Gilead Island. Mary was attracted by George's attempts to avoid her. One day George accidentally fell overboard. Mary unhesitaUngly dove Into the sea to rescue George, who fell in love with her. When the boat approached her home on Gilead Island, they learned that had both died. George vol Mary's unteered parents to take charge of the mission and to be his wife. She accepted asked Mary his clumsy proposal, and they left the ship to live In her former home on the Island. The scanty dress of the natives shocked George at first, but he soon become reconciled to their customs. Mary discovered that Corkran. a sailor friend of George's, had come there to help George and Mary if they needed him. Their peaceful life was Interrupted one day when a ship stopped in the harbor In search of pearls. They see the pearl divers attacked and their schooner sunk by a pirate ship. The pirates head their boat toward the bay near their village. George sends Mary Inland for safety and. walks down to the beach alone and defense-essNatives carry him back to Mary hours later, shot through the shoulder. Natives killed the pirates that night and set their boat afire. The whaler, the Venturer, arrived. Mary was told that Its that his sons. Richard captain had died, and now in charge as capand Peter Corr, were tain and first mate. She liked Richard, but was told by Peter that he publicly laughed at her affection. George was a sick man when the Venturer arrived. George agreed to leave the Island when he saw that the epidemic among the natives was caused by his consumptive condition. A native gave Mary a small bag of pearls as a farewell present. The attitude of the crew toward Peter bothered Mary, so she decided to find out if he was really responsible for the death of a seaman who had been killed while whaling. GRAND COULEE DAM NEARLY COMPLETED RICH Mil. dirt CHEAP: 40 Yexrs. without interest, to pay Water Right. Crop Rotation Plan; Govt, soil Maps: Soil Samples; FREE eolored MOVING PICTURES at 5 Exchange Plaea Halt Lake Citv. GRAND COULEE SETTLERS LAND CO. V. F. PAVEY, Mgr. Cake Removing Upside-Dow- n Have you discovered the trick cakes about removing upside-dow- n from the pan? First, grease the pan well with pure vegetable shortening Then, after baking, turn the cake upside down on to a piece of waxed paper, as soon as it comes from thr oven. Let the par. remain over the cake about five minutes. The sauce will cover the cake and will not stick to the pan if you will remember this little hint. Get the Genuine ACOUSTICON I I CHAPTER X Continued ACOUSTICON Suit. 11 McIntyre Ridff. South Main St., Salt Lake City ( 8 308-30- 9 A Generation A generation is generally taken to be equal to about 33 years, thus al- lowing three generations to a cen- tury. HOTELh When tn RENO, NEVADA atop at the HOTEL HOLDEN Keno'a largeat and most popular hotel. NON-SURGiCA- TREATMENT L TREATMENT INJECTION Piles Hernia - PERMANENT PAINLESS patients. 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Richard said grimly: Ive noticed a lot of trouble made, more than once, by trying to be responsible for other peoples business. Do you seriously mean to bribe your men to obedience by turning them loose like wolves on these helpless girls? Georges eyes were hot. Playing on their weaknesses, just as you played on my weakness at Gilead, told me I was killing the islanders in order to make me come away. Richard said after a moment quietly: Maybe I was wrong. Maybe Id best have let you stay. He hesitated, said at last curtly: Mr. McAusland, do as you like; but Ill have to run the ship my way. He turned away. Peter had joined them in time to hear the last word. Dick takes his job too hard. Hes all blown up with it! Mary ignored him, urged: Perhaps Richards right, George. And even if he isnt, he must do as he thinks wisest. Come down to the cabin with me. But George declined to do so. Ill not shut my eyes, he said. Im not a coward. So they stayed on deck that day while the work of provisioning the ship went forward. They could not be ready to depart that afternoon; and the boats stayed ashore well into the night. Next morning they made to sea. Mary hoped that once they were away George would forget his anger at Richard; but he did not, and for days after they left the island, the few minutes they all spent together at the table were made awkward by her husbands wrathful silence, and by Richards defensive dignity. The stop for provisions had altered not only the humor of the crew but the very appearance of the Venturer. They had taken on tremendous quantities of fresh fruits. A huge cask lashed to the port rail was full of green coconuts. Bunches of bananas hung under the boat house and wherever else room could be found. The potato room where Tommy Hanline slept was so full of yams and plantains and breadfruit that Tommy had to crawl over them to reach his bunk. spears19 flowers in tones of d rose with leaves m deel tones r green. This diagram shows vo v make a scroll th0 may use in different I.?1 rule a piece of Ju paper squares and then follow u. iamctl Then she saw Richard swing the There was at that a quick and instant stir upon the Venturer. Mat steering oar in a great sweep, and Forbes at a word from Richard ran the whaleboat swerved on a pivot to and instanthalfway up the mizzen ratlines and let the whale slide by; she thought shouted to the men aloft to make ly it darted in again till the bow would ride up on that huge haste with the topgallant sails. Richard came to the port rail to look ofI body just awash. Richards great across the leaden sea. Mat Forbes voice was like a trumpet. Sock him, Pip! spoke quietly to Richard on the deck below him. She saw Big Pip, knee braced in the clumsy cleat, the heavy harpoon Sharks at him, Capn Corr. Richard nodded. poised, drive it in and down; and All right. Clear boats and stand instantly, before the boat veered off again, he sank the second iron.. by to lower. the loose coils of the Feet moved along the deck to Big Pip swept box warp overboard. He and Richto Mat Forbes, descending obey. ard changed places, scrambling the deck, said quietly: the oarsmen, who bent low over sir. Whales moving this way, thwarts to let them pass. over the Richard looked at the weather to the time Richard was in the bow By the westward. and Big Pip at the steering oar, He watched the work, watching the whale saw the boat riding there, the Venturer come to and fall off and lunged toward them; and the lazily. .men swung hard on the oars, and The whale drew nearer and even Big Pip dodged out of the whales from the decks they could see now path and in again. Mary saw Richhis efforts to beat off his attackers. ard drive home the lance, deep into He surged to and fro, flukes now and that black side. then rising ponderously and as the Mary saw only a smother of confight came steadily nearer them, fusion, action too swift to follow; but they could hear the thrash of the the men on the Venturer and in Mat flukes, the sigh of the spout, the Forbes boat, watching more wisely, broken water when he drove this knowing without seeing what went way and that. Peter, standing with on in that fury of torn water, saw George and Mary although his men that Richard was as wild with the were ready by his boat yonder, heat of battle now as was the whale. moved restlessly. For after a desperate minute or Theres something wrong with two of this fighting, he or hed have closed with his antagonist. him, he muttered, Under driven them off by now. Might be his strong commands, the men hes hurt or sick or something. May- hauled in on the line till the boat He was close be hes got an iron in him. against the whales side. licked his lips in a nervous tremor. Richard reached far over the bow Richard said just behind them: to grip the line and draw the boat Weather coming, Peter but well further forward along the whales body, and while close alongside, Richard drove the lance deep and deep again, searching for that huge reservoir in which the whale stores fresh blood for his long stays under water and which whalemen call the RUT,U'YETH ti'i ' V' gram outlining the scroll Us lines cross the Tj dl as they do here sou, scroll out and trace the burlap repeating it 11 ' corner; then fill in ALF the fun of hooking rugs is EJ E A NOTE. There are several ru in making your own designs. sluns with directions in and braiding m llook All you have to do is to mark the series of booSL' h: pattern on burlap with a wax Mrs. Spears has prepared f? a over with of it Booklet 6 with Copy crayon and then go numbers In the senes" U warm iron to set it. Simple flow- other to draw and in the to readers who will send ers are mv. ''h honie-makin- easy olden days real leaves were used for patterns. Scroll designs combined with flowers are popular now for use with Eighteenth century furniture. The scrolls of the handsome rug shown here were hooked in gold color outlined in brown. The edge medium blue; the center darker blue and the dress with 10c in coin to: MRS. RIT,I WVETH Drawer SPEAHJ IB Bedford Hills Enclose 10 cents lor Book I Name Address life. The whale could not bite them, nor could its flukes strike the boat. But if it rolled toward them, they must be crushed under its body and left helpless in the water. Big Pip bawled : Ware roll, Capn! Richard, braced and firm, as much a part of the boat as though he were nailed to it, drove his lance again. Tommy screamed: There he rolls! But the whale rolled away from the boat, not toward it; and in so doing, its under parts were for a mo ment exposed. The whale rolled over and over in a smother away from them ; and suddenly its flukes lifted high and then it was gone, and the tossed water began to quiet where it had disappeared. Sock him, Pip! try for him anyway. Ready to lower? The Venturer, counter-bracestill made a little way. He called k Back the to Mat: yard, Mr. Forbes. The men leaped at Mats command. Dick, hes a crooked jaw, Peter exclaimed. Hes ugly. Hell be a fighter; and if he busts a boat, the waters full of sharks. His voice cracked as he spoke, and Richard looked at him briefly. Mr. Forbes and I will lower, he You keep ship, Pedecided then. ter. Peter cried sharply: Hell bump us. the way hes headed! The Venturer was almost motionless, the whale now close aboard. Mary had been watching Peter, sick and ashamed at what she saw; but at his word she turned to look and saw the whale, close now, rolling blindly on its back to bite; and she saw the thrashing body of a great shark caught in its jaws and cut in two. She cried out in awe and terror at the sight. d, cro-jac- Another change took place in the routine aboard after they left the island. George remembered his calling, and with the air of one expecting a refusal, asked Richards permission to hold a Sunday morning CHAPTER XI service on deck. Richard consented, and the thing was done. Mary The whale righted itself and came suspected that Corkran was responsible for the quiet and respectful quartering toward their bow in a demeanor of the men when they as- sudden rush. Richard leaped forsembled; but when George began ward into the waist as though with to speak, he held them. George, his own hands to fend the creature and an instant later it shoulfacing an audience, had a spiritual off; dered against the Venturers side. fine were and authority dignity that to see. She realized, while she lis- Mary, looking down, saw the great tened, that her attitude toward her black bulk in the water, and the husband had always been protec- slender gray shapes of the sharks in attendance. George clung hard betive; her tenderness a little condeside her, and Peter gasped: scending. Godfrey, Dick! Hell sink us! She told him afterward how proud Richard ran aft toward where his she was, and Richard also spoke to boat hung. The whale drew off, cirand George gratefully appreciativecling slowly, lifting his head as ly. She hoped the constraint between them would be forgotten. But though in an effort to locate the ship for a new attack. Richard called George did not relent at all; and matters were still thus tight and briskly: Lower away, Mr. Forbes! Peter, strained in the cabin, on the day when at last they sighted a whale. get the Brand gun. Sock a bomb into him if he comes near the ship A whaler may kill and save in the course of a voyage two or three again. His boat struck the water with a dozen whales; and she may kill oth- smooth The boats were ers and lose them by sinking or in carried precision. to port, Richards farthest a sudden gale. Most of her captures Mats forward. are routine; but now and then a aft,Mary felt young Tommy Hanline whale makes trouble. What hapto her arm, his small hands hanging to the Venturer pened today was one as a tourniquet. Mats boat of those extraordinary and isolated tightthe hit water; but Richard had alphenomena which become legends; ready darted away from the Veand it would take its place in whal- nturers side, the long oars bending as ing lore. the men put into them every ounce One of the sailors aloft, a New of strength. Mary thought for a moBedford man named Gibbons, called ment the boat would meet the whale down to the after deck: head on; and she heard a voice Sparm whale on the port quar- scream a warning, and knew it was ter. sir, about two miles off. her owd. Sounded! Tommy cried. Mary could see the line now snaking out over the bow of the whaleboat, the bow sagging downward and then rising with a jerk as Joe Sassnet kept a strain on the line around the loggerhead, yielding only when he must. Richard in the bow was leaning forward to look straight down into the water, lance in hand. The bow of Richards boat rose suddenly as the strain upon the line was eased. Haul hard! Big Pip shouted. Sassnet took line hand over hand. Richard spoke over his shoulder, not turning his head, watching the water under them. he said crisply. Ready oars! Then men poised. Suddenly he cried: Starn all! Hard astern! The oars bent like bows; the boat darted backward like a squid. Then for a moment from where. Mary stood on the Venturers deck, boat and men were alike blotted out of sight, hidden behind a vast black column with a blunt end which rose ponderously out of the water, the white mouth gleaming, the bent jaw opening and closing in a vicious futility. That black mass that was the whales head rose and rose, slow and slower till it was above the level of the Venturers decks, till Mary thought it would never stop ascending. It seemed to poise and hang for a moment, and then ponderously toppled forward, parting the water like a plow; and she saw the boat safe, secure, beyond the flukes. Then the whale spouted, and its spout now was a thick crimson cloud; and Mary saw Richard strike a sharp blow at the line with a hatchet, saw its free end disappear. She cried, sick with sudden disOh, hes let it go! appointment: Its dying! Tommy Hanline told He always her, proud of Richard. cuts before the flurry unless theres another boat that might get fast. He dont take chances when theres no need of it. The spout was a fountain of blood as the whale again began to move, but there was no long flurry. Too much of the creatures strength was already spent. It surged a little forward, lay still, seemed to turn half on its side, laboriously righted itself. Fin out! said Tommy Hanline, and he looked up at Mary with shining eyes. She tried to speak and found her throat dry and constricted. She Is it dead? Did Richwhispered: ard kill it? George, at her tone, looked at her quickly; but Tommy said in high pride: Yes! That was pretty wonderful, wasnt it? Yes, she said, not seeing her husbands eyes. (TO EE coy TIMED) ft, JJ W .. "! ,swx..v.v.wew.w.w . . Sunkist California have! DEALERS SAY: Get these richer-flavore- d in every glass. Oranges for juice! Enjoy more vitamins and minerals too. HOUSEWIVES ADD: Theyre tops for salads and desserts Seedless. Easy to peel, slice and section. Sunkist on the skin identifies the finest oranges from 14, Order seve cooperating growers. Best for Juice and Every use!' copr. iB4i.c.!iiomumiitoro"'KhB' PM, EST-M- oo, CBS SuMotu-6t- lS dozen for economy. Br Bodda Boppor't -- Bollywood"-Ma- wy s no mo his abilities, and for Our Responsibility tell whose sphere Every person is responsible for none can Gail Hamilton. all the good within the scope of largest. In SALT LAKE CITY the IIOTEb r. 400 , 400 ROOMS I Pftfes $2.00 to 40U th Our $200,000.00 remodeling and refurnishing made available the finest hotel accomm West AT OUR SAME POPULAR PRICES. NE - OANC'l CAFETERIA DINING ROOM MRS. BUFFET J. H. WATERS, Pnudonl Managers J. HOLMAN WATERSondW ROSS SUTTON QtatrtiW ROOM MIRROR, EVEN!5! EVERY SATURDAY Lh( |