OCR Text |
Show SECTION FOUR DESERET Locke Trinidad, and at ColSt. Johns lege, Cambridge, where hfi won high distinction in mathematics. Central Society of Spanish Architects, the Central Society of ArPortuguese chitects, the I nr stttule of America Architects. If Ra. sticks to his duties as hon-ona- . r e h itecturs chosen iva He profusion. has been secretary of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and if he appendhis , was shattared forever. They They thought her over tlrd. tennis parti. cheer her, up with lawn . At last they sent for Herold. It wa Harold who forced what had happened who made her listen to the true story and of Unity In all Ita grim detail, 10 when Herold went book to "om find the unspeakable , made an attack ou John Ute. murrted to her flat In IMlham with reached der In his heart. But death Mm Rlsca'e flat before him. That John might be free to love her fairy little poor commonplace princess, woman and Unity had dared to kill take her own Ufe. Herold insisted that Stella must be told the whole truth of the new tragto edy, and that ehe must be made face life like other women. She was brave enough to look at It. and eaw the threads of good apd evilw forever at last twisted In the pattern, and the "terrible splendor" of that patJohn for tern. But her glrtish love that had been shrivelled up foreverHerold morning on the cliff. It was who bad made her look at the truth. It was he who had always wandered with her through tbe magical lands of her dreams, and It was with him she dared to go out smiling bravely Into the "Threatening Land." Publishing Copyright. 11. by Poet Printed by Co. (The Boston Poet). permission of, and arrangemsnt with, John Lane Co., authorized publishers. Published by special arrangement with the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. All rights reserved. ' sion William John Lock too born in I of kit whimsical mood he should 1863, son of John' Locks of Barr I tell us what a society doss who bados. Hs was educated at ijueene chosen task is 'the propagation of Royal .College, architecture) , the A EVENING ry correspond- ing member of all these socie' $ ties, there would b s apparently little time left for the writing He of novels. string of letters to shotv the however, may, socihis have used eties tof which position for the he , is an hon cultivation of his WILLIAM JOHN LOCKE, or ary correspond- ; style, literary 501-11863' which is one of big member, he The Prisoner of Zenda," by Anwould need several alphabets to com- his real acquirements. It has had a thony Hope, as condensed by Prof. Fenwick Harris, will be plete the tale. They include the Im- large share in winning the generous William In the Saturday News. printed perial Society of Russian Architects, public esteem which has come to the Society for the Propagation of him' in increasing degrea with the George Eliots Warwickshire Architecture of Amsterdam (in one years. JL The centenary of George Eliot's birth has Just been celebrated at Nuneaton. The town has of course greatly changed since her day, "moving with tbe time." as the mayor said In the course of his speech at the opening of the Its progrem, however ceremonies, By WILLIAM J. LOCKE delightful to the commercial eye. says a correspondent of the Manchester (Condensation by MISS T. R. OSBORN) Guardian, "has been a movement away Stella Marla" star of the aea the ner, a hatpin thrust at Unity as she from the little world which George quaint fantastic name had become eo much a stood In a Christmas crowd was all Eliot knew in her youth. The market town of her day has been overpart of her personality that the people they saw of he!1, yet John knew she laid with Industrial accretions, whose of her little world, and ehe heraelf, was watching him, patiently waiting growth has been stimulated chiefly by almost forgot that ehe was only Stella her time to harm him. After the horrors of the trial Unity the opening out of the surrounding Blount, a little Invalid girl who lived in with her aunt and uncle In a pleasant had been adopted by John. He had coalfields, and the population has has house by the sea shore and believed established the absurd little house In creased tenfold. The country, too, her really an elf child of the clouds Kilburn, and tried to make up to her been blighted here and there by the a fairy princess Into in care and kindness for what his wife working of the coal. But fortunately and whose enchanted palace only good and had done.. She worshipped him like a much of the old remains. Nuneaton, one walks into it from the station, beautiful and happy thlnge could ever sort of divinity, and humbly cared for as hie creature comforts, the slippers and still proclaims Itself an old market coma For. because ehe could never see the hot cocoa of existence that count so town. On market days Its streets are In a mans happiness, and that packed . with people from the farms real world, but must always lie rigidly much notices while he has them. and villages of South Leicestershire still on her bed in a pleasant room he barely far Unity seemed from Stella and Warwickshire, . whose personal that looked out only on the eea and Very Maria, who of course never heard one characteristics and outlook upon Ilfs sky, they had helped her build a magic breath of her sordid little tragedy, who differ not unduly from those of the world of her own, a fragile rainbow did not even know of her existence, people who were used by the anther world, woven out of beautiful pictures but Unity had heard the legend of as the town and and books, and beautiful fairy stories Stella, at the pleasant house by the sea theher prototypes.are Both thick with places about life, and her.own dreams of the where they had sent her to convalesce. and countryside objects Which It la stated, somesea and sky. She had even seen her once, accidentno doubt with too much confiMost Important of the fairy court ally, for a few stammering seconds, times dence can be identified she held were John Rlaca, her aunte and though John gave her up as hope- In the and' positivism, tnd persons are spoken cousin, and hie frlendJValter Herold, lessly commonplace Unity too dreamed of who novels; walked the street but yesterday v. ho ever since she was a very little her dreams of a beautiful fairy prinas the orlrlnals of certain of the chargirl had come to forget the weariness cess whom she would gladly die to acters. George Eliot herself admits of Londomln Stellas fairyland. Herold serve. in Scenes from Clerical Ufe ehe Stella grew to bo a woman, a slen- that had something of her own quality of portraits with too incautious the elemental sprite. Together they der beautiful woman, for her disease drew hand. The placidity of the countrytalked dreams and visions, star shine, did not Interfere with her physical de- side In George Eliot grew up, and moonshine, "like a couple of elves velopment, and at 11 she still believed beautifulwhich but unromantic, with no He In John's palace, though Its details squatting on adjacent toadstools. little perhaps, height beyond the gentlest undulation danced lightly on life, and the gods, had been toned down awas unbroken. to widen Its horizon, most have had who do not like to be taken too seri- and the cobweb wall Its head an influence, largely, probably, a negThen after ecienoe, shaking and with him rewarded wealth, ously, so many years, one day per- ative Influence, upon her character. It over her on success the brilliant charm, and miracle or perhaps it was Is a country rich and sleepy with ferLondon stage. Only he had never mar- formed amiracle Stella Marla moved tility. Its effect upon the scattered sonature's to Stella as he for, ried, explained her head. In a year she was leading ciety which It nursed must hare been One cannot marry a dream. Mans the lifcdOf a normal woman. either to hill It Into mental lethargy John Rises, did not dance on life. He Still they dared not tetl her the or to drive it to intones Introspection charged through It blindly, home truth. Knowledge of good and evil and retrospection. It afforded ne vista down like an angry bull. Only in must come to her gradually. She could outer world. Its peopls lived Stella's sea chamber could he forget still live in a pleasant, sheltered world. of thefhemseltes the red rags It waved at him, and since But even in a pleasant house by the upon Tet It was and upon their own among the otiose and he could not take her wandering eea there are family quarrels, and pll past. people thus snugly through the clouds as Herold did, he fering maids, and tramps who slip by unimaginative had built a marvellous earthly palace the gates, and even the London Times reared that George Eliot found the for her delight. Here, he told her, he publishes murder trials In its discreet material forandher best writing. Her sympathetic mind eaw lived amid gold and marble and columns, and to a person with the penetrative nothing commonplace. Tragedy, pasjust sion, precious stones, and pampered Persian moral standards of an arch-anghopes and ambitions cats, and slaves of Circassian beauty. flown front heaven these things are movedexalting for her under these placid apAt fifteen Stella still believed In the more terrible than we poor, smirched was from her early exIt can guess. EMI began pearances. palace, and Arachne the slave girl, and perience In Warwickshire, too,1 that Lilias and Nephetoa. the cats, believed to creep up round her, and the world ehe probably derived some of the force in them as solid facts of an actual, that had at first seethed to smile so became the "Threatening which sent her mtnd so far along the geographical world so carefully had pleasantlya land where she dreaded to road of rationalistic thought. The they shut her In her dream kingdom, Lsjid" world tn which she grew up was far. and fenced It round with the cobweb wander too Herold no longer danced on life. He formed by Iron traditions In religion wall of Ues. and society. The narrow restrictive A bare enough life It was that John had found that it is not safe to wa to the far edge of the world with Idea Imposed upon the child's mtnd forgot in his mythical golden palace, ader woman. But ehe was still gave to her later thoughts a reboundthe life of a struggling Journalist In a beautiful to him, not a thing for men ing impulse th kind of Impulse the flimsy little house in Ktlbum to dream So he kept silent, and played which radiates from the negative end love. where he lived with his ward, poor, with her still, and took her to the soo, of a magnet." ugly, little Unity Blake, and his maidand there she called the Hon kingly en aunt. Miss Llndon, a"1ady with a because It reminded her of John Risca. passion for pets and muslin ancf rib- For, of course, John did not realize till bon. "If she had owned a dromedary, too late that we cannot kiss a beauti she would have fitted it out In muslin ful woman as we have kissed k fairy She swathed the child, and, though he tried loyally to and pink ribbon. house at Kilburn in frills, believing deny the impossible truth, he loved that thus she made It .homelike and Stella Marls, and Stella Maris loved comfortabla for John, and she vainly him. The chance ehe had waited for had strove to make of Unity a young lady, who should flutter the hearts of come. Johns wifa could hurt him at As Stella walked by her belast. tea cursteif at the mild partiee she And across this Incongruous, loved sea ehe met a loved. comic-oper- a of a household there fell woman In black, and the rosy glamour her first love was changed, to a always the evil shadow of a tight of as the full knowllipped black clad woman, the woman black ofnightmare, evil was burned Into her soul. John Risca had married as he first edge was John's mistress, the woman charged blindly at Ilfs, the woman Unity her. She had then to explain who had made his name the shrieking told a what mistress She had not horror of the yellow press, the woman dared to dream ofwas. so delicious a rewho had tortured her little orphan finement of torture. maid servant. Unity, till the callous Stella stumbled boms with the world shuddered with the horror of blight of evil over soul, the whole what she had done, who had come not world seemed evil. her Her own thoughts of the prison, where they sent her for and dreams frightened her. three years, a creature froxen to cold shrank away from all who dwelt She Your crops and your fruit on hate of John and all he loved. A this horrible earth. They too must be ruined. black skirt vanishing round the cor be evil .and her own world of lllu- yiay to his as is the way, a ed name.' British little . 1 Stella Maris sea-spra- y, . NEWS SATURDAY AUGUST 23 V v IU1U litial (0al (0)itty THE KEYNOTE OF THIS ORGANIZATION IS CHEAPER FUEL FOR UTAH AND A COMPANY OWNED AND CONTROLLED BY COAL USERS. Congressman Huddleston,' of Alabama, says that the coal men filled their pockets during the war, and they want to continue their profiteering in times of peace Tine Remedy, Is in your own hands. The Mutual Coal Company is the outcome of this state of affairs. Mr. Fred J- Leonard, President of the Mutual Coal Co. worked first with the City Commissioners for the purpose of having Municipal Ownership of the Coal Mines. This effort failed of result, because the State Legislature refused - to pass Legislation giving to the city the right to own, sell and mine coal. Mr. Leonard continued his work toward the end that coal eoqld. be obtained at lower prices, using surveys and maps made for the City Commissioners preparatory to opening up these Coal Mines. 4 The State Board of Land Commissioners granted a lease to Mr. Leonard recorded as Mineral Lease No 1 which covers six hundred and forty acres of coal lands. This lease has been assigned to the' Mutual Coal Company. The property covered by this lease is in Spring Canyon and adjoins the Carbon Fuel Companys mines, miners of Coal, the Morton Coal Co.; and near tbe Liberty Coal Co-- Standard Coal Co.' Peerless Coal Co., and Storrs Coal Co., (Jesse Knight's Mine?) The coal is the best quality coal in Utah. We offer $125,000 ,wo.rth of the stock of the $250,000 capital stock authorized. Our, engineers estimate it will require the first named sum to open and equip the property, for a production of 1,000 tons per day. f All subscribfrs to tis stock will be on the ground floor, 'il k i -' , Ili-IIe- at , i 0 I , ! No Promotion Stock No Bonded Indebtedness Coal Just equipment Digging Straight and in expecting that justifies ' , . us we will be selling coal to the Economy in mining, working, stockholders of this Company in 1920 at not more than $5.50 per ton and a saving to the coal consumers of tlie , city of more than one million dollars per annum. t We invite all consumers to subscribe, to the shares of this Company and desiring a wide distribution of the stock we invite small as well large subscriptions. ' .Mr. Mans H. Coffin has been made General Manager of the Company and active work on the property at once. We promise careful expenditure of the money entrusted to us. This company will give the people a square deal and cheaper fuel. will-begi- RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED BY TO THE MUTUAL COAL COMPANY: . , .Shan at ttd.04 t Sabarrtbe for. . per ihir and nun In full and mak all cheek payable to F. J. LEONARD, TRUSTEE MUTUAL COAL COMPANY Cullon Hotel, Salt Lake City, Utah NAME. . ADDRESS. The Mutual Coal Company addres Glv p FRED J. LEONARD, President MANS H. COFFIN, Manager. E, 0. COFFIN, Secretary-Treasure- r (N . . , di el earth-dwelle- rs MomUmm Mon foir WofEs nm Farmers Hail Storms Are Coming In the Chinese Republic There Are 400 Millions of People They have the same disease as the people of this country, and yet for longer than 4000 years herb have practically been the only remedies used In China. What cures there will cure here. ' Sooth and State Sts. Entrance S.S. CHUNG -7 Galena Block, Corner 2nd E. 2nd South. Office Hoars 9 a. tn. to 5 . p- - 69 Mar-rhesaa- nt n low rates. Heber J. Grant & Co. General Insurance SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ol sop f l t EXPERIENCED STREET CAR MEN INTERURBAN MOTORMEN AND CONDUCTORS FOR PASSENGER AND FREIGHT SERVICE FREIGHT BRAXEMEN LDTEMEtf CAR REPAIRMEN FREE RAILROAD FARE Good Wages and Working Conditions Hail Storm Policy m. -- i. .a xfut t to a APPLY Write and ask us about these IVas formerly one of the leading herbalists of China. Recently of the Herb Co. of I os Angeles. This herb company, which is known all over the United States for the curative properties of Its herbs, has a main office at $17 Hill street. Log Aneles, with branches at, 141 street, and at 531 North Virginia street, Reno, NeV. For eighteen been the mecca of suffering humanity, establishments those jears owing to the many cures effected. Former sufTejrers of Utah hdve Prevailed upon us to open a branch here, so that their friends could be treated without tearing their business, besides eliminating the great expense Incurred tr.ro., gh travel. JJLMKMBEK, WHAT CURED THEM." WILL CCRE VOC, hae Protect your hard work with CalfifloFma m. 126 Regent Street, Balt Lake City, Utah. , n |