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T D L O B e da e M. Dok 22, L SYNOPSIS: Disaster threat- ens Scott Glenn's irrigation dam project. Ranchowners at- fack and dynamite a portion of the dam; then =2id Glenn in filliny the breach after he tarnc the course of the flood- waters from {hcir homes. In the mecntime his estranged bride, Anne Wilmot, fights off °s of Leon Morse in tain cabin, then faints. A sucpicion that he has misjudged Anne develops when Pelphine te Glenn his wife neade help. Glenn goes to the oabin and finds it vacant and concludes Anne left with Morse, He confronts Morse on the trail, A fight follows and the beat- en magnate, the source of all Glenn’s trouble, tells him Anne dgove him from the cabin. @lenn crders Morse cut of the country and runs in the direc- tion of an old washout after hearing Anne’s cry. Chapter 32 LOVE HEALS WOUNDS A glimmer of something white through the trees—then Glenn gounded a sharp bend in the trail and came out in plain view of what had been the old washout He brought up with such violent abruptness that the shock sent him staggering backward a little. ©On the very edge of the chasm, now a swift, madly whirling tor- Tent, bearing. on its surface black | debris, logs, uprooted trees, hov- gred the white, ethereal figure of| Anne poised as between earth and! gky. Her hair was flung loose to the wind; her filmy robe whipped | in graceful little circles and eddis J‘her eyes left his, went wandering' [lhat everybody was gunorprn:.um-] ( One morning some weeks after| |ably back to New York. |the eventful night on which Glenn ihad saved his reservoir but so| nearly lost the woman he loved,| Anne opened her eyes, |clear of fever for the fir: linto his. For some moments looked at one another in silence. | Anne reached out and touched his hand where it lay on the edge |of the coverlet questioningly. | “You are safe ?" she said. “Of course.” He let his other| hand close reassuringly over hers| |—but not too vigorously. Her | |reality seemed still uncertain and elusive. | “All this time— couidn't quite |be sure—" For the first time over the room in puzzled silence.! lThen, “F did go away—you told |me to go away and—I went—" | Glenn nodded. “Yes, you wen |away, but—I brought you back.| |Now—I hope you're going to want| lto stay.” { “It was strange——" Anne’s mind | {was groping back slowly and pain- |fullyalong unused paths to flm(‘ last tense scene whi burned | indelibly into her memory. "T| thought I heard you step—ou | lon the stones. T was just fight- ling for time—thinking every mo-! |ment surely you would come—T |don’t know what kind of a story I ‘dld make up to tell him—-" | “It wasn't true then—the story?”| Glenn carried her hand to his| lips, buried his face for a momvm‘ against it It was very difficult| to keep his volce steady and—cas-! ual. | “Of course not,” she laughed a little. “I had to tell him some- | | thing, didn’t 12" | “Of course you did.” | “But it was queer,” her m:n(l‘ labored back again to the thing| that puzzled her, “I was positive I| hedrd your step outside, and I said | about bare, white ankles. Glenn crept noiselessly and stead- ily forward on hands and knees. He dared not speak or call out to her. He had guessed already from her pose, from the singular cry which he had heard, that she was not her | i gelf. He knew that the slightest Come when I needed you so much | sound, a whisper, the crackling of |—I felt as if T couldn't possibly & twig might send her hurtling|hold out another moment—and fdown over the precipice on which|then—but I must have been mis- ) ghe swayed so perilously. taken—it wasn't you—it wasn't any- | g When he was still more than a|body!” J | yard away, she suddenly flung her| Glenn fought down the impulse arms high over her head and be-|to throw himself on the floor be- gan to y rhythmically to and| ide her, to tell her that she had | fro—just as she had done the other |nOL been mistaken, that he had| night when he had been standing | fatled her, that he had been blind, | ' on the bank helow to catch her in stupid, brutal—that he did not de- | his arms. At last, his fingers|serve her love, her loyalty. | clutched the fluttering tip of her| “And then” she went on, lifting _white robe, closed about her ankles, |herself a little in the pillows, “I then locked convulsively about her“i'v“w m.‘y old sweater on the couch, | knees. A cry full of terror came And— ) f from her throat as he cireled her| Glenn lezned over her, his heart | With his arms. Then he drew her (beating painfully. “And then— : from the death ‘which had|he encouraged gently. X | 4 ::1::(1 so alluringly out of the “I pretended I had Iamtflcdfll ] treacherous whirlpool below. didn’t have to pretend much!” Her | § TN Sank back with her against a|Mouth twisted In the derisive little | 5 tree trunk, trembling with the vio- [smile he knew so well. i "? Aefice of his reaction. ‘Then he let| *“Of course not, with your arm d het down against the ground,|he said quietly. stripped off his coat and wrapped “He laid me on the couch, and her in it. He lifted the arm with |T g0t the revolver out of the sweat- | " the bandage on it and it fell back |er pocket and drove him out of the‘ 4 Heavily. He tore a handkerchief Toom. — And—oh, yes, bolted the into strips and bound the wound door of course. That's ali I seem ¢ more tightly. to remember—" Her brows con- { “Anne, dearest” he entreated,|tracted in a puzzled frown. | leaning down very close to her, Glenn had fallen on his knees “try to remember—try to tell me beside her; he was covering l?m': what has happened.” hands, her arms to the elbows, with ‘But she only stared back at him|Kisses. “Don’t try to remember any | {‘:“::iy-arms and started back to-|[choked a little, “the rest doesn't| ward the cabin. “Try to tell me— matter—" More had, after all, told | What—has happened,” he repeated |him the truth. slowly and very distinctly, close to| “I suppose Anne said, “they're her e};r. . all back in New York now—Leon, J 3 ] : ;, to myself that I knew you would |couver, Wash. Presently he lifted her more,” he said in a volce that| ¥ For answer, there was only a small, cold hand fumbling uncer- tainly at his coat, up to his throat—then questioningly, caress- ingly .across his face—as the blind feel for resemblances. Then with & sigh of complete reassurance, she jet the hand fall again. e It was many days—days and nights of anxiety and almost in- tolerable suspense—before Glenn kpew the whole truth. Part of it, that Anne had known nothing about the gold, he learned from Sheb, who went tiptoeing noisily about the cabin like a loose-jointed ghost. Delphine, who ruled the bousehold with a rod of iron and hever permitted the one-time ma- jor domo so much as a peep at her jmmaculate kitchen, had not failed to impress upon his mind that it was he and he alone who caused a1l the trouble. Had he not put the bullet into her mad-moiselle’s arm in the first ? Had he not disobeyed the Mr. Douglas, my aunt of course— “Probably,” Glenn assented. Finally he laid one arm about her ghoulders. least bit—sorry?” he asked. —sorry I didn't come years ago— to you,” she whispered back, not very steadily. (Copyright, Ruth Cross) THE END DEAN SAYS PUBLIC | TO DECIDE FATE OF NORMAN, Okla., Feb. 3.—Dr. A. business administration at the Uni- versity of Oklahoma, predicted in a prepared statement here that la frankly commercial basis unless |steps are taken to curb what he termed “hidden eommerdialism” in scholastie and collegiate sports. M’sieur Glenn'’s orders about bring- ing her home and getting & doc- tor? Had she, Delphine, not been thus obliged to go away and leave her beloved mistress at the mercy ‘of the pig of a M'sieur Morse? Had mot all these causes brought it “In the end” said Dr. Adams, |“it will be up to the public. If the ‘\publlc demands super-football teams {turned out by our universities, the best way to get them is to pay sal- |aries to the players. “If the public believes that our ‘about that madame should get the mnspeakable infection in her arm, the fever and everything else? _.The Lodge had been closed now for some time. It was seftling ‘back already into that abandoned A t-window aspect which it worn ‘before its recent rejuve- college institutions should be edu- {cational in nature, then athletics ‘should be handled by the uni- versity in & way that would make | sports subordinate to education, or |athletics should be severed from |university life, and allowed to take |their place among sports already Burkhalter and the ranch-{y,ge professional.” had found neither Morse nor there on the occasion of gooms From an| gteam heated rooms, newly paint- unsolieited visit. ———————————— ROOMS ¢ 2O0OMS A silence fell between them.|: “You're not—just the| She lifted her eyes to his. “Yes | : | & COLLEGE FOOTBALL | B. Adams, dean of the college of | college athletics will be placed upon | HAVING TO LISTEN TO SHE'S PUT POLLY AND HER PA AN’ AS FOR POOR PAW HIS NERVES 15 ALL SHOT T0 BED, IS INSANE! The N. R. Lang, with a large cargo of paper, caught in the ice of the Columbia River, necar Van- It was the sccond time in 42 years t A T T B A R Iespans King Winter Holds St eamer in Icy Grip | BREAKS AL ‘I'wenty-four Carloads Is Amazing Record Recently Made by Cele- | brated Medicine — Overwhelming Demand ' the One Great Outstanding Proof of Its Merit —- Rapidly Word Throughout America, ENAND FOR SARGON| L RECORDS in 25 Days in 27 States Becoming Household ' s e, GARBAGE HAULED AND LOT CLEANING E. O. D.VIS Phone 584 s Phone 427 for Appointment | The Florence Shop ! “Naivette” Croquignole Perm- anent Wave BEAUTY SPECTALISTS | ) ’;\HU.\‘T medicines are sold by the dozen or by the gross.| il A few are sold in larger quantities, but think of a med-| icine that sells in such enormous quantities that whole- | sale dealers are forced to buy it in solid carload lots to sup-| ply a demand that hes been so phencmenal as to almost| stagger the imagination. That's just what has happened with Sargon, the cele-| brated new medicine that is now sweeping the country like| W. P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE—DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS— MAYTAG WASHING —Associated Press Photo. CREWS BATT LE FL TO SAVE HIGHWAYS i { i Indiana State highway commicsion crews building sandbag dikes to. protect U. S. Highway No. 41,! through paved route to the south, from the fiood waters of the Wabash river near Vincennes, Ind. | £ [ ¥ i < e | ARKANSA given by E. T and Ida Foss Mrs. A. Ha |Saturday night RAILROAD TRACKS SUBMERGED Telegraph poles along the C. & E. I. tracks in Indiana just visible over the flood torrent which has engulfed the territory. Home in Little Rock, Ark., entirely maroened by flood waters. Many families were driven from their homes on the outskirts of Little Rock by floods due to heavy rains. DANCE TO FISHERMEN | WELL ATTENDED HERE | A private dunce w0 the local fish- ermen, their wiy and friends, was ier, Anna Jensen Sam Gazaloff, and nd, at Moose Hall It was given, so | speakers announced, in a spirit of man whom they routed out of edq with hot and cold running wat- | good fellowship, to the men who servant’s quarters—Jarvis er. Beautiful marine view. $15.00 “seemed, béen left to finish the monthly. Private baths. Home pecking—they had learned only Boarding House. —adv. are soon to resume their somewhat hazardous calling on high seas, ‘the men of the halibut fleet. ~ EXHIBITED IN JUNEAU TODAY 1930 Model Is Received Here—Is Purchased a great tidal wave. Not only lead lots, but they Mass Pills. t the river was frozen over. { Twenty-four carloads in 25 days| And so it is everywhere Sargon sold in y 27 States is the amaz- ing record recently made by these wonderful medicines. In the State of California where Sargen was introduced in April of last year, it has required 20 car- lcads to supply the ever-increasing demand in this one state alone. Texas dealers required 9 carloads in only four months. A single New York firm, with lesale branches in leading cit- ling at the rate of ion and a Quarter bottles a ax “Fhenomenal and bew: the way one of the big drug job- bers of the comntry describes/the marvelcus demand for Sargon. “It's the greatest scller within the memory of the cldest members of our organization,” said another. “We are selling more Sargon than any other ten medicines put together,” said still another. s are buying carload after carload. each car containing over 20,000 bottles of Sargon and Sargon Soft! is the trade buying it in ur-; has been introduced. Its leadership | and its preeminence are unques- ticned. Its enormous and ever in-| creasing popularity is the one great | cutstanding prcof of its merit. No medicine, no matter how extensive- | ly advertised, could sell and con- | tinue to sell if it did not produce! positive and actual results. Mil-| lions upon millions have used it and have told other millions what | it has done for them. That is why | Sargon and Sargon Soft Mass Pills | have become the real sensation of | the drug trade throughou! America. When this famous medicine was | first given to the world, well known | enthorities believed it would be a |8 great boom to humanity, but they | little dreamed it would become a household word throughout the ccuntry in so short a time. Butler- uro Drug Co., Agents. —ady. DOUGLAS NEWS 11\'E\V ELECTION ORDINANCE | SANCTIONED BY VOTERS {Saturday on the new ordinance lgoverning municipal elections {brought out only about a fifth of |the regular v but was carried |by a large majority of those who \did vote, the final count being 3 The special election held here | | Commissioner Chas. Sey’s court Sat- furday afternoon and was sentenced |to 60 days in the federal jail. Ar- | ticles of wearing apparel stolen from | Daisy Del Rosa of Juneau, consti- | tuted the offense. B |HILL BRINGS BRIDE | FROM EASTERN TRIP Clarence Hill, elevator operator ! ‘in the Goldstein Building, who re- turned to Juneau several days ago after a long absence in the east, was married while in St. Louis, Mis- |souri, it was made known here to- Front Street MACHINES—DAY- FAN RADIOS Phone 1 Juneau 3 AMERICAN LEGION ARENA Next Smoker ‘ FEBRUARY Auspices American Legion S HOME IS MAROONED supposed | ROOMS whether | midnight the floor wes crowded to|er- The dance program varied from | |the oldtime dances, such as the Parisian Schottisch and the | zurka, to popular jazz. |was served to more than 200 per- Luncheon by E. C. Guerin A new Ford town sedan of the 11930 model, was received on the steamer Tanana by H. I Lucas, agent for the Ford Motor Company, and may be seen at the Juneau | Motor Company’s garage. This is the first car of this model ot arrive in Juneau. It has been sold to E. C. Guerin. 5 The new sedan embodies all the| 1latest conveniences in motor cars | for safety, comfort, power, speed and ease of control. It is fitted | with steel-spoke wheels, automatic windshield wiper, and theft-proof jignition lock. The smaller wheel scize, with larger balloon tires, low- ;ers the center of gravity and {brings the car closer to the road. A Friplex shatter-proof glass wind- shield—made so that it will not fly apart or shatter under the hardest impact—is a special feature of this iseason’s Ford. The manufacturer fclaims a speed of 55 to 65 miles an thour for the car. ; The sedan received Saturday is (flnished in maroon, but buyers may ‘have their choice of a variety of ieolors, according to the local agent. It has graceful flowing lines, the {exterior metal parts being fashioned lof rustless steel. The rear com- ! partment has silk curtains, disap- Teported in Deputy U. 8. Marshal| —!pearing center arm, and stationary (W. E. F-uo Sa‘urday afternoon, Judging by the size of the crowd,|arm rests on each side. the halibut fishermen have many! The dance wa; to be a private affair, but anyone who went was admitted, e —— ROOMS |monthly. Private baths. Home right eye socket which might have | Boarding House. —adv. [been made by a bullet. WORK — e ——— ATTENTION Ms-l Why wait until Spring, have your terior painting, paperhanging and Max H.| Mrs. Lucy Fox plead guilty to th> —adv. [charge of petty larceny in U. S. rating done now. Mielke, Phone 1191, i ROOMS |visiting the scene, Deputy Feero | Steam heated rooms, newly paint- |around for identify:ng clues but, they had a card or not, and before €d With hot and cold running wat- |Was unable to find any. There v ! Beautiful marine view. $15.00 2 hole in the skull just above tha 2 “ | day. Although some of his friends| knew about the wedding, it was kept generally secret until his re- turn to his job here last week. The | bride was formerly Miss Anna May Perkins. e —.———— Have you triea the Flve o'Clock Dinner Specials at Mabry’s Cafe? JoB Printing Quick Service ito 2. | In conformity with the new or- dinance, when the next eity elec- tion rolls around on April 8, voters will be given a choice of candi- |dates for Mayor besides those for |council and three of the latier will |go in for a two-year term. ,——e— LIBRARY MEETING A business meeting of the Li- |brary ladies will be held at 2 |o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank Pearce. Al members arc urged to come to the |meeting. if you want it—reliable service i < RSP MUSICAL NUMBER .l"ay‘ We .l.w‘y‘PI“' P guarantee of satisfaction back of A violin solo by Astrid Loken will be heard tomorrow evening at the Parent-Teacher Association meet- ing as a part of the regular pro- gram. The PFreshmen will serve irufreshmems after” the program. —————————— HUMAN SKULL FOUND ON DOUGLAS BEACH are good printers—know it— and are willing to back our ‘The finding of the upper half ofy a human skull on the beach of the native village, which had apparent- 1y beea washed up by the tides, was | Morris Construction Company GENERAL CARPENTER MrS. Annic Jack, daughter of !‘leu-“l ry Stevens, made the find. Upun1 took charge cf the skull and leoked COMMISSIONER SEY METES OUT SENTENCE FOR THEFT Phone 62 There’s good health in good food and that’s exactly where our bread comes into prominence. It is a bread that rep- resents the highest type of food purity and wholesomeness. Peerless Bakery “Remember the Name” decide to have a piece of printing done want it at once. Weare well equipped to give prompt service on your work. Furthermore, it will not look Like a hurry up job, since our ability to handle rush work enables us to give it the same careful attention that