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Show I 0 6 MIC (Continued from Fate 3.) before another fire. Mr. Roultoa spared Mer-ria- l ber prepared speech of self reproach. " Well. Ma Houlton." he eald, using a nickname of the west. you aura tare tea the surprise of my life today, Che waa acarlet at once, her. ayelaahe fettering. "Then Tripp did atop at your office to tell you. Dad, I had never thought of ouch a thing." This drew from bla moot expressive and yet moat guarded face a searching look. Never. Merrlal?" Honeatly,' father, rieaee don't look at me Uke that! Tou know Dm painfully truth-fuOnce, years and year ago. Tripp aald aomethlnt to me. And I thought it rather silly of him for auch a sensible sort of boy. But I put It outof my head. O. Merry, you have the queerest little bead I believe it's the queerness Inside that f makes your hair curl thaq's what your mother used to say curls inside and outL 1 side. Merry." This speech diverted Menial. Her chanceful face (learned Into earnestness. "Ive fen readlnc mother's letters the ones youcave me long ago so that I might get some notion of mothers adorahleness. But, you know, father, I haven't got much notion 'of the adorableness of some of her relations." Mr. Houiton's face had stiffened Into a chiseled hardness. With this look he was handsome and forbidding. , extraordinarily I'd rather not talk about them, Merrlal. I never have talked about them, you knpw. Im sorry. No. If It hadn't been for the letters, FU never have known that mother had any relations giving out there. Dad, just ons question, please, and then I won't bother you with It ever again. Does Dick know about the Beauforts and the Cokes T" The names teemed to prick Mr. Moulton. He moved uneasily at the sound of them and a flush cams Into his thin, clean shaven fact. No," ha aald shortly, and tne word teemed to snap off the light of .further Inquiry. "Ive never spoken a word to him about your English relatives. He doubtlma knows that your mother was a Miss Coke- nothing more." Merrlal dropped her chin on her small band and stared with Introspective eyes Into the Are.' Her father watched her through the smoke of his cigaret. He knew that look on his daughter's face of old and he was beginning to feel a trine uneasy. Whata the plan. Merry? She drew herself quickly back into the chair and the " planning look " disappeared with panic swiftness. " Dont try to be too clever, dad. I'm not always plotting when I. look like that "O, arent you? Very well, be mysteri ous. It's a woman's privilege, I suppose. Being such simple creatures, they Hke to us even or so veils for tiie confusion of the naturally complicated male. Wen, 1 you a pretty cool young woman. Tou - v '' " con-ald- C THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL can take poor Tripp and break his life In two return to your plana without a tear." , The speech was far lets severe la tone and 'oolt than It was In words, but for all that It draw blood. Martial winced and flushed and widened her eyes, la which the pupils had grown very large. "Esther, that's tha only really unktnd epeech you've ever made to maf. Don't you sen how miserable 1 am about Tripp? I'm miserable. So much so that I can't talk about It I ache with It And I know I've disappointed you dreadfully and hurt him. Tou needn't think It doesn't hurt me frightfully. I shan't sleep one wink tonight Tou ought to know me better. I don't cry sally." But for all this professed Inability, there war tears very close to the widened pupils and she couldn't finish her speech. "All right dear; 1 supposed you weren't quite the belle dam sans msrcl that you were looking a few moments ago. Tea. I am disappointed. And I do want you to taka the matter very seriously.- - Tripp la a splen did fellow. He's made out of stuff that I aometlmea think has been used up- - And I've watched him and trusted him since he came to ask for a job at tha age of It. Tee, and Iva worked him, too. Poor, stanch little ranch hand that ha was! I liked to see the " grit of him. Why don't you love him, lIer-rial?- , N. "I dont know, father," she said wearily, her color all faded. "1m sorry." He sighed, a rare Indulgence, threw his cigaret sway, and rested his strong, fine bands on the arms of bis chair. "Of course. Merry, I admit that you are right whatever you do." This he aald quite gravely, but with a sort of twinkle In bis eyes which began to reflect Itself in her fsoe. "And I wouldn't Uft a Anger to influence you In a matter of this kind. Also, I know It's none of my business. Will you allow me to ask you one impertinent question?" Tes, dear." " Did you give him any real hope to tako back to tha rangee with him? Its damn 'lonely riding under the stars without any, you know." Menial moved uneasily. " I Im not qylte sure. I think be thought so. I told him I was very busy with a plan I bad and. until 1 bad worked It out, I wouldn't let myself think of him that way.- - It would, you eoe, dad. be too disturbing." "I see." He suppressed a emlla " But afterwards I'd try to begin to think about it. Of course, I know there's no one in the whole world quite so splendid. There couldn't be. And he's really very handsome. Isn't he, father? Z never really noticed It before." Mr. Houlton, at this, laughed outright. " O, Merrlair She defended herself. " I knew he was graceful and strong and pleasant to look at, but not beautiful. He la almost that. Me looks like the Mercury in the Naples museum. Its riding, I suppose. He's so lithe and has such a grave, smooth, vivid facs. And that delicious big smile and laugh, with tha nice white teeth. He's he's wonderfully band- - N TT R. J (Continued from Page 2.) number In a hurry, and almost before It had a receiver to his ear. The voice. She came Into (be parlor. She was In black. Butler, stuttering like a high school oph caught with a pony, asked her nine been spoken there was A voice answered him. She looked a questions In eight words. thousand times mors entrancing than she had seemed In her father! home. There waa a spiritual highlight In her eyes, which looked tired aa from weeping. Her clothes were not the only striking symbols of sorrow that aha bore. " Forgive me for troubling you," she began. Butler nil but laughed. Troubling him! AMUSEMENTS (Continued From Page Four.) . New Rochelle. After a preliminary period, luring which she proved her right to worth-whirobes before the footlights, she was given leads. Among ths most prominent stage productions In which she and "It played were Madame Sherry Pay to Advertise, in which she had the le lead. Misa Castleton began In pictures In 191, playing leads. She has appeared on ths screen In some of the biggest productions of recent years. It Is the ambition of this young actress to do good dramatio work; an ambition achieved anew with each picture in which ahe plays. She has a particularly She la of medium appealing personality, hair and height, with golden-brow- u orown eyes. and her hob8he 'ovea the bhe bies are motoring and swimming, enjoys reading and spends much time with books and magazines IB " My father to dead. Killed. The revenue re tried to atorm tha bottom and my 'father led our men. Ha waa shot Our men drove them off. Next day they sent an aeroplane over the woods and It dropped a note saying that If we didnt surrender they would drop bomb on ua. To show us what they meant they flew right low and sent one Into the atlll. Ons of our boys took a shot at the viator and the ether aviator shot him dead. We surrendered. Father died that niglA, kissing ms and cursing tha revenuera. We bad a little money In the bank In Birmingham. So I came here after the funeral, and after the trial the jury was so kind; I waa acquitted without protest from the district attorney and here I are. I didnt know any one here, and I remembered reedy voiced soprano, sfho howled to the night some absurd ditty about something or other that never waa on land or sea. It's the pictures the comedies' observed Fatty Arbuckle recently. What do you mean? asked one of his confreres "Why, people get all the laughs from tha films they ueed to get from the Look how comio songs be explained. the films have displaced the dlne novel see BUI to of boyhood days. They go Hart Instead of reading about Buffalo Bill; they laugh at comedian instead of n reading the adventures of Terence or somebody of like Ilk. And the beet of It Is, it Is raising the quality ef the public taste, the motion plctur. The better things we give the people the better things theyll demand and desire. Isn't that a little responsibility for we of the fUm business? So Isnt It more worth while to make folks laugh at a good, clean comedy than to Incite their mirth by possibly an offcolor song? Of course, if we had the same class of song that Gilbert and Sullivan, Plxley and Ludera, the Smiths and others used to supply there would be no kick; but these went out, and we got over coon shouters and suggestive silly would-b- e Parisian guttersnipe lyrics set to music that was probably bred down in the underground dens of the apaches. Bo. lets displace this stuff by clean picHul-doo- fs the comic song of Oh, yea there are some, of course; but hot that tremendous ava- tures!" And nobody objected. lanche that perennially descended on the devoted heads of the public and aH but Everv apartment snowed them under, It isnt on record thst Buster bouse had Its tinny piano and thin and THOUGH has insured bis feet separately, as some of the notable beauties hare insured their of the- shew-worlimbs or famous pianists their fingers a Store on these useful pedal he does set extremlL.es of his. Of course, his feet are like other people's except that. they It is. after all. are pretty well trained Th cot of Skin dieae (oxtomo) md dt largely the Bhoes that make them so ab- How. iftm f th I tcftlp it known tobdifflcultAnd the way he wear r them on rtnd tht l entirely do surdly funny. n toed 'em. Those spatulate. turn-u- p pcodabl In thi divtrewinr and troubled have awakened risibilities e f thoudim Ihat is D. 1). D. prescription. sands while b was appearing In Fatly Me L. RANDOLPH, M D. Arburkle's comedlea. OftkhurtL, Tes Blister was a vaudavUlian before be Com In tod w will tell yoo antofthtitf about what D. D. D. ProarnptMia h accompiiihed m came to the screen one of the, famous Keaton family. He was the vaudeville w Botvhborbood. focr ioe mnop tor bJw th trot btti relieve yoo. Me, toe fall' guy from childhood. His father an od of snavlnga. hke him ueed nadli.tt He threw him around like a rag doll. Luster thought notnng of being toeeed through a scene and kicked off the n That was part of his dally routine. made It, In him, a quality of easiIHL Shin ness. . frb He can fa'l around Low tt all Drug. Five (51 Good Jtor1. (AiivertUeinint ) the country for the motion picture ram- - WHERE ' Doctor Praises -- Eczema Remedy. bro-ga- JI2).IED.IED. lotion for Disease hrm-n-John:o- tse Repe-ti'ln- hc-Ip- ME M E. some. I used to think Dick was better ing than Tripp." " And what about Tripp's inner man. look- Mer-rial- ?" Her fare shone with the loyal light of her friendship. " "But I always knew that was beautiful, father. It's Just Uke the west big and full ef sunahlna I suppose" she drooped I'm a fool. But 1111 I cant." He held out his hand to her and she came to him for a minute and hid her face against his shoulder. But they were not demonstrative people and she waa presently Sitting about the room, and when aha had by this method won back her Complete composure she returned to the chair and took up a book. Presently, after shifting uneasily In hie chair as though his thoughts werw not quite pleasant ones, Mr. Houlton stood up. " let's go to the theater. Merry. We need cheering." They were late and found their way to tbelr seats by the dancing light of an ushers torch, so It was all the more startling when, a moment after she had settled herself and slipped her arms from tha aleevea of her fur coat that Merrlal should feel a band laid quickly over bare. She turned and a vole laughed In ber ear: "Merrlal you wretch! Thtg give me a chance to reproach yon. Her waa tha very last sneountar poor Mania would have chosen for a cheering - process: Tripp's sister, Gertrude, occupied the seat next to hers, and, even through the halts darkness, Gertrude's eyes were allra with wicked Interact. They were wicked yea floating, and dark, and dangerous, as different as might be from the blue eyes of ' ' Tripp. "Menial." said the voice that had the rocking measure of the south, " I reckon youd have been seeking me out tonight If you hadnt bean ashamed of yourself. Good evening, Mr. Houlton," Ihe' leaned ever and murmured this sweetly, but resumed the whispering to Merrlal at once. "And you are ashamed of yourself, arent you?" The culprit flushed and begged for silence. "Do wait at least until tha and of the act. Gertrude!" "If youll come back and stay with me and spend the night. Aunt Helen and I are on our way south tomorrow. Otherwise 1 shall talk to you steadily all through the play and in between the acta, and your fathers evening will be spoiled and so wl li. my theater party." , It ended In Merrlal's moat unwilling assent. But, to tell the truth, she felt that she owed ' Tripp's sister an explanation of some kind. More and more It waa being borne In upon ber that this expectation of a marriage between her and her old friend had been taken as a matter of course by the whole world. She felt betrayed and ashamed. The scenes on the stage were acted to blind eyes. Thsy could see only Tripps white lips, her fathers disappointed dbok, Gertrude's taunting face. By the time she found herself in Gertrude's room at midnight, she was beginning to react to resentment She was quite ready te defend herself. i J 25, 1020. 90 By Katherine Newlin Burt you. No bother, dear girl dear child my dear my dear "Miss Emily. Have you forgotten my name. Perhaps I "Forgotten your name? I havent forgotten one hair In your exquisite head. X didn't know for the moment juat how to address way I should or the way I want to." Down south you would call me ' Miss Emily, tbank you. Now, If I may, I will tell you briefly what my silly little plans are. Teu ones told me you knew some stage people. I told you where my ambitions lay. I thought that you " O, please," he interrupted, with vehement Miss" Miss you-e-th- might" ora and escape where meat comedians would be sore for a week, if not damAnd he can uae those aged permanently. funny feet of bis In their funny shoes so aa to simply doubts one up with mirth. It's a treat to see Buster at work. He exudes fun. He gets so excited over a gag be la working up that he has to it, and while doing so laughs till a Is weak. He gets real enjoyment out of the business no wonder others do. Buster's trousers are also a hit. Tou never know whether hes coming or going from the unmentionable garments. Then his unctuous little straw hat his oversized coat his troublesome cuffs, hi vacant etare, his slow smile all tltese tilings with the native cleverness of the comedian render him one in a million. ex-la- in had a narrow escape JACK PICKFORD the part of the Llano playing Kid in his latest picture. He was to from a wagon to the of the top jump ground. The horses became frightened and started sooner than was expected. ' Adler-i-k- a earnestness. " Please dont. I don't want you to you dont want to become an actress. It la a shabby trade, a bitter business. " But I have longed so long and dreamed so hard. Burely I beg you to believe me. I have brushed up against theatrical life. It would break your heart." " put I hava felt a "Please don't think me cruel. But calls must not alwiys be answered. Tour father felt a call. See what tt led to." Then, what do you want me to do?" she asked, bewildered. ' I want you to be a law abiding citizen, not a moonshiner. Moonshlning la contraband. The existence ef an actress to contraband. All law, all Society, cries forth that a call" badly Injured. Is quite a difference In being In tha United States and countries, according to Cesare Oravlna. blgnor Gravina had his own company for more than thirty years, producing opera toi every large - city In Europe, frequently at the command of , royalty. A number of years ago be whs playing In Madrid and King Alfonso and the r, then regent, came to the performance. Queen Isabella sent word to Signor Gravina that Alfonso must leave the theater at 10 30 o'clock and expressed a wieh that the performance be Over by THERE in European queen-mothe- WILL RADIUM AT LAST THE DOOR OF THE GREAT UNKNOWN? If you are sick and want to Get Welt and Keep Well, write for literature that tells How and Why this almost unknown and wonderful new element brings relief so many aufferera from Rheumatism, After using Adler-i-k- a I am entire- to Sciatica, Gout. 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They might have been fathered and mothered a dozen times over bad not Trtpp'a 111 spelt letter though he was the younger, he had always been the leader to his southern relatives been met by an offer of adoption for one of the children of the unfortunate marriage. Tripp decided that Gertrude must be the choice. He waa old for his years, as frontier boys are. and he remembered his delicate mother. Gertrude was only too much Uke her. She was sent out to Salt Lake City, where a marvelously venturing southern Aunt Helen met her and caught breath at the child's loveliness. For nearly ten years Tripp did not see his sister again. He, setting his young Ups, had tramped down to HoUltona ranch, fifteen rough mUea away, and asked right manfully for "a job." Merrlal actually remembered the tyya first appearance and how, s Uttle shy, she had peeped at him around her father leather ehaperejoe and thought that he waa tha lustiest, brownest, bluest eyed boy she had ewer seen and wondered why he didnt smile at her. Later, he learned to amlle ah, that dear smile. Merrlal fell asleep in wistful memory. ' tr o bo continued. tCopyrtebt: 1920: hr Kslhertae Wewlla Bari -- Jack was thrown from his perch tinder the hoofa of the horses. Had it not been for tha quick work of his director, A1 Green, who pulled him out, he might have been OPEN dows, walked are-bsu- ED your kind Invitation, so I risked bothering oyr to the door that led lrto a adjoining bedroom, looked at Merrlal. ad switched out the lights. Merrlal smothered ber lsughtrr In ber plb low. Gertrude's look of affronted majesty waa qkit too much. "But I lost her confidence by saying that," ahe mused when ths laughter had exhausted ltaelf. Badnese repossessed ber now. Even her dear great plan looked gray and hopeless ahead of her. All Its difficulties towered. I wont think of It when Pm tired," she decided. " X must never let myself loee hope. IH forget that letter of Aunt Janes. TO think about Gertrude." But thinking about Gertrude meant thinks lng about Tripp. Bha could not help but all their history and wonder ever these two, born In tha poverty of a neglected homestead far away up Crystal creek and grown up now Into an extraordinary diverse-nes- s of charm and Interest. The delicate southern mother, who, visiting a ranch, the lightest hearted Virginia coquette on a summer holiday, daintily roughing tt for fun. had fallen In love not for fun but In the grimmest earnestness with a native westerner; just a ranchman with ths gravity and gentleness and noble simplicity of his kind. Sha had been mad enough and great enough to resent and to defy ber familys Interdict and to marry her ranchman. She was punished as such large hearted adventurer are too often punished. The hardships of frontier as wife and mother killed her. And, after her death, tha young westerner lost heart. Hia homestead was a failure. One day, In a reckless, desperate mood, he tempted a dangerous ford and was "I dont mean te be excited." stammered the victim of diplomacy coming back from her shuttered window and beginning to un. fasten ber drees with trembling Angara, ' but I can't stand hearing Tripp spoken of that way by the one person in the world who ought to stand by him, to understand him. to appreciate him." "Then I won't do It any more, dear. We talk about Tripp yrnlght. I'm sorry wont a Into herself thrown had deep Gertrude for him, traveling west in one of those trains low chair. Her wrap ware, Uid aside and and toesing about In a berth thinking of you. In ber tulle evening drees of pale yellow she Tripp's too big for train life. But you know looked Uke a soft tea rose. Oertrude was I always did believe In discipline for the very lovely, and the lock of dark hair that waa and ono to youthful mala. I've administered quite a tumbled always eyebrow lot of It myself." being toeeed back, and tha amlle that went "Toure a cruel little flirt, I know," said up on one aid a trifle higher than on the other, wero rather family wet known. She Merrlal, brushing her soft hair over her face. looked up laxity at her defiant friend and then " O, I shall settle down one of these days," he caught a slim knee la both bands, half Gertrude was lazily divesting herself of her closed her eyes, and laughed. Only, Merry, they are you ijnow petals. ch "Now, Menial, I ask you did you ever Idiots most man!" they know mo to alt in Judgment on you? Hasn't " I dont know anything of the kind. The it always been tha other way round? Why. men I have known are anything In the world bless your heart, honey, I think you've done bat that" the very wisest thing you ever did In your Have you rver "this question followed a life and nothing better ever happened to alienee, during which Gertrude's mind long Tripp In all his Ufa. I told him there was to wander pleasantly and Menial's seemed In hie a doughnut. Tripp going to be big hole to remain unpleasantly fixed" known much has gone striding along with his head In the about Englishmen, Menial?" air, taking suocess for granted aver alnoe Now this happened to fall In with one of he waa so high. And he'a grown up as rough Merrlals strong preoccupation and sucand raw as the wild west. Ho thought he ceeded In diverting ber mind Instantly from could juat come galloping Into Boston town Tripp. and pick you up and gallop back with you. " No, Gertrude," she brushrd her hair aside I'm looking for a great and beneficial change. In Maater Cowboy Tripp." and showed Intelligent eyes "No. But I'd love to know a lot about them. Do you?" Gertrude's laughter had two sides as it were, one for Merrlal and one foy herself. Why, rather! TbryV my epee laity. I The inner laughter was for her own quite always make a perfectly devastating hit with diabolical cleverness. Indeed, Merrlal, for Englishmen. Thats why poor auntie hates all her usual acuta discernment, eras thrown te go te Europe with me. Because Englishmen alwsya pursue us. 1 did my very beat off her guard. Her Indignation had changed to stave them off, this last time, la Faria. Ita quality and Its direction Instantly, nor did aho see that whan Gertruda dropped ber But, of course" soft cheek against her hand and lowered "There was an Englishman?" her slow lids that It was toade tha triumph Tea, aald Gertrude demurely, there waa an Englishman. I'm engaged to him! Poor of diplomacy. " 0, how angry I am with you!" cried MarKenneth !" " Do you mean seriously, at last, Gertial fiercely. t She The eyes of the diplomat opened to an Intrude?" Merrlal's vole was tender. loved this wayward, wicked friend of hers. nocent width. " Angry with me. honey! Now, I call that unfair. When I am only taking "Well, I suppose so; he seemed serious." Gertrude's tone was nettled. "There were. your part against my own brother!" In fact, two Englishmen. One was soft, as "Tou oughtn't te be taking my part Merrlal moved qgickly across the room, oft as aoap, and one waa hard, aa hard aa steel." looked out at a pair of closed shutter. " It Is outrageous of you to be taking my part "And the aoap melted to you and the hard And when you say that Tripp la rough and steel unbent?" "No." Gertrude frowned faintly and raw, It it makes me choke. Gertrude, think tossed aside the famous tumbling lock. of hie life youve had ail the smooth and he'a had all tha rough. Suppose, when your "Thats just it. Ths steel refused to bend. And It's left me full of hatred, malice, and father had died, suppose your aunt had tent all uncharltablenesa. 1 took It out on the for him and left you to grow up on a ranch, to vlork your own way aa well aa you could. aoap poor Kenneth Stanton!" Do you think you'd have ben able to earn Merrlal, ready now for bed, pulled her to and education work a gown about her, perched on the dreaming college yourself edge of her mattress, and amlled her own yourself to tho very top as Trtppa done? He mile of wlckad amusement. lent rough. He's strong and fino. Tour Bully for Mr. Steel though hard luck on Mr. Kenneth south has spoiled you. Toure soft. Tou'vo B tan ton! It serves you right! At last! Dont played about with those butterfly boys so you believe In discipline for the youthful long that youve forgotten what a real man la like!" female, then, Gertrude?" At which Gertrude pushed up two win Now, Merrlal." "Gertrude." she eeld before ber hoeteee could epeek and, te say it she turned from the tall glass before which she was unloosening her wrspe and stood straight and slim, her eyes Urge and bright la a flushed face, "I know everything you are going te say. And there Isn't a word of tt that I deservs. And, what'a more, you are the last person In the world to sit In judgment cn me." By , woman, a wonderful creature Uke you, should marry and make a home. Some women refuse to abide by societys dictum they are moonshiners. They do not moonshine for money, specifically, or for glory, or because they are willful radicals against accepted orders. But they let a whim, a caprice which tey have nursed into a passion, lead them on. And (t spells mischief and grief and misfortune. ' But I "Certainly you can. Tou (ton be a wife, following in the ordered and orderly valley of ordained existence, not striving with your bare, tiny band to scale the forbidden rocks ' toward barren heights." "A wife? Whose wife?" -- My wife. No, air." " Thank heaven! I love you, Emily. WO you love me?" Why. air IT1 try. It's sudden Ilka X ,5 never dreamt such a thing.", " I haven't dreamt anything else in months. How soon can we be married, honey? " "I well, I have to get aome elothea Great TouU be a regular New Torker In no time." . Next week an original story entitled Color" by Henry C. Rowland, iciH appear in this section. aer-vlc- Says Prisons C:zs3 Hedsohs Dizzinc.s - ole Utah as a Playground po-w- es teltl 1920: by Jack Copyright: Coated Tongue ' and Myriad ments In tha Spring. Even ed , you?" ladder. No director would engage the of an inexperienced person for a of any Importance simply because that person could snow a diploma of graduation from one of the schools. Anyone applying at a studio for or she has had no exemployment, if he perience at all,-- - must begin by playing extra parts and If tiiey possess bjiv" exceptional talent or screen personality tt will eventually stand out In their work and they will be rewarded with promotion. "Tbl applies to graduates of motion film companies most wait for picture sch ols as well aa to an one else When the Renown, the and it therefore can be easily seeu that armored yacht of his roial highness, Ed- a course of training its such school s a ward of Wales, signaled Its approach, waste of time and money. a Mildred Harris Chaphn picked up her skirts and fled to Ban Diego. And while ah danced with tha prince, the envy of every feminine eye, her director. Lloyd Ingraham, tore his hair and talked enraged about the deserted sets of the picture upon whlcn Mrs. Chapun (Continued From Fage One.) was scheduled to begin work that day. The only coherent words that left hie lips were: "And they talk about Nero fid yond expression, which lay over the distant mountains. dllng while Rom burned!" Into the valleys of title state came the T ACK FORD, Universal director, took Bpanlards, the French, and the English, hunting, trapping and living the wild an English friend to a ball game be fiee life of tne unknown and the untamed tween the Universal City team and the vaetnesa. The tragedies and the comnine from a rival studio. The British edies of the prepioneer days are Just cousin bombarded Ford with a volley of our into but they coming what, to him. seemed silly questions. Fi- form a historical possession, which ta nally the crowd yelled foul as what making Utah nioie background ever. attractive than looked like a h't turned eut to be otherAcross toe Into this and plains, dry wise. The Englishman by thia time had state, impelled religious fervor and a developed quite a aense of humor. FouL" desire to serve by God as seemed to he said to Ford. Oh, I say, - X saw- po- best, came the pioneers Of '47. them Who feehera," cares wnat dogma they profesed. to This waa too much for Jack, who came what church Thev were belonged? they back with, No. you aaphead; this hap- mighty In their faith, strong In their enpens to bo picked nine. deavors. unconquerable in the face of the deaert, and they laid the foumlationa for persons contemplating a career the conquest of the great IntermounUin MANYmotion pictures repeatedly ask if west. Ihese are stories that will make of q course In motion picture acting In one Utah a playground worth while to the of the schools for this purpose is of Imfrom afar, and to th citizen wiio traveler to the Marshall beginner. portance Nellan, producer, advises strongly against a in hia own state desires to lay bv tne burden of his daily life. As roads are course and states it Is a waste of monev. SnesKltig on the matter recently, Mr. built and the state becomes more accessible. convenient and desirable hotels are Neiian said: In the first place, the schools are usually run by people gradually being established. It la our who have had lftti experience themprivilege and our duty to Invite the travselves in tn motion picture business. elers of the world to bide a while to see They do not know the thoroucb workings one of the most interesting places on of a studio and are therefore Incanahle earth and to bear the atones of one of t is of Imparting necessary knowledge the most interesting of human conouesia In the wimt.ng of a garden from a forbidUe claim to possess to ot'iera, The screen stars of today a ding desert. 'Ihe map of Utah will not be rvmpiete natural tnle.it which has been developed through long, hard work and most of until It Include a full use of t:.,p oro of them began t the bottom rung of the our many resources. -- I" Why Mr. Butler ( "Tou don't want to be a moonshiner, 40 that time It wag something of a puzzie, but royalty had to be obeyed, even if the opera selected that night happened to have four acts and be unusually long. However, Signor Gravina cut It down and promptly at 19:80 tha curtain was lowered and the performance ended with Signor Gravina standing In front of tho curtain, watch In hand, bowing to the queen In the royal box and saying: It Is 10:30. Your majestys wishes are obeyed." Jack Las Ali- Grandma Remedy Now Sold In Tablet Lnlpberb Xableti. Many men, women and children need a Spring Blood Purifier. The blood becomes thick wtth poisons through the winter months. When spring comes serious ailments like typhoid, acarlet fever, coughs, colds, catarrh, neuralgia, rheumatic pains, los of appetite and a sluggish all-ifeeling prevail The bowels, the liver and the kidney need help. The blood needs thinning and purifying if pimples and botis are present, buipherb Tablets quickly relieve constipation and kidney inactivity and elimination of poison takes place and you are made strong and fit- - for Grandma gave spring and summer. sulphur and cream of tartar in aoWios. Now you take them in tablets wun laxa better mediative- purifying herb cine, easy and pleasant to take. Druggists sell them vi buc sealed tubes. Every package guaranteed Rautdarforv or Get buipherb Table Is money back. (not sulphur tablets). n 1:2 iviis Tt Fd L T ytti a r4 ft a. By t Oil of ItOTNft tr-- f fri- a ig of K3f" a Ky &sy 5 rat, tai Ujo ll Uire Biiw g. Nv ibg Is ij U y Ul ' R" 1 P AC IS h I"qt fw H5 A U rtfl hwd It b? T ) Cf if ""la t hiv Ivu it O lA ' , fvi t f PeaJurwii J, la 4 r ia t 0 X1 a tk1 nfctar b kt r? W n i t AS 1$ jq (tyeqfri1 "rtf tlWvwA i wl u i - Gshfrl or V I, - I r ? A - , |