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Show Viday, April 1, 1S32 MAGNA TIMES. MAGNA, UTAH CcrcalizcJlVn:: Keep C!:b Yctinrj .. n a Not Going Back mm$ liUi til h4 m pwmmm, Recks ia Dtiuid An unprecedented demand for rock for ornate garden of Cleveland residences has brought a new source of revenue to many farmers In the northern Ohio district Boulders, which formerly were only sources of are being carefully select- -' fiance, and sold to companies which do a Nourishing brokerage business with home owner. A Search for Lost ' Youth it By FANNIE HURST (O Sr McCisr. Nmutpe WKU Senrloa) IrMlcKi) ABRICB SPELLMAN, had reached the stage where everything he did was Im- portant , International banking Interests .watched him. A real estate bny of bis in a given district started fluctuations upward In that vicinity. Ths possession of his box at ths opera mads adjacent ones especially deslrabla to their owner. A special body of town coups popular because be chose it originally for his own use. When he decided to dispose of his Fifth avenue house and build himself n thirty-roohouse In s section of New York hitherto undistinguished. It became quite the esoteric thing to live there. Shx used to call him darling . . . Now Many Fifth avenue mansions were he's so tired out that be never takes her subsequently deserted for the East River district mads suddenly imporsnywben. So weary, that the no longer tant and desirable by the presence '" '' ToveSbiffi' of WTMaurKff Speflffitnf"'" Yet It U so easy to hold fast to youth, Whet actually prompted Spellman to bring back the bloom of young vigor to move, however, was not a desire and health. Milliona of average people to create a new social colony. On diahave done it with Fellows Syrup, the ths contrary. It was something to that opposed metrically fine old tonic which doctors recommend. There had been growing within You can start feeling better end younger, Spellman, as bis success mounted tomorrow. Just get a bottle of genuin he fonnd himself a and aa at forty-si- x FeUowsSyrup from your druggist, today. power among men, a sense of a need of respite from ths growing demands of his position. Success had not coma to Spellman without grim battle For thirty of his forty-si- x yean ha had fought for It rung by rung. From ths lean days when hs lived with his parents and seven brothers A Spellbinder ' - ' Tour . wife make a splendid and sisters in an old water-frotenement, to his days of newspaper speech.1 Yes, replied Mr. Meekton, "and selling along lower Broadway, then X noticed she Impressed an entire on np to the stlJ lean bat eager audience the same way she does me. days of his cub reportershlp, when four-rooShe says what she likes and no one be shared a walk-uwith In street Greenwich back. even thinks of talking apartment three other fellows, and so on and so on. Through mors years of straggly deprivation, faDnrs, straggle,, then failure again and finally ths' first glimmerings of success Ths foray Into Wall Street on the slender savings out of two years of newspaper work.' Success A plunge with ths winnings. More success. A clever sideswipe into copper. Twenty thousand dollars profit over night. Then If stabbing palna the deluge. shoot across your From then oeu practically everyback and crlpplo Spellman touched turned to thing you, tub on good , gold , . old St Jacobs Oil. Feature writers had blasoned hla Raliaf comas before I story over enough Sunday aupple-ment- s too can count 60! Relief without buns I to pave the way from hla I home to the tip of new thirty-roolog or blistering. This famous oil f Seattle. I out simply, draws' Slogans for success were. Invited inflammation 'and f , from him by ths bevy of waiting pain. It is soothing, reporters every time he stepped off healing. For the! aches and pains of train. Dls arrival or departure Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago. time or anywhere was a matter any -Neuralgia or Backache theres noth national of Importance. mg so quick or aura to bring relief. All this from the man who fifGet a small bottle of 8t Jacobs Oil teen years before had been Bill .Tom your druggist Spellman, n struggling young reGolf a la Mod porter who shared a rather dingy down-tow- n "Golf Is pie for me." .fiat with three other "It mast be. I see you Just took fellows, two of whom slept op cots tother slice. In ths same room with BUL Strangely enough, although In a much less spectacular way, these boys had gone on, too, - As If contact with the success-destine- d per" sonality of Spellman had cast Its I ointment drew, out your I cold like a power over them. Spike Qulkley, magnet when nibbed ou I chew tad throat Emm breathing erstwhile police reporter on . the when limited Is stuffy Herald, while Bill had been rewrite . aoMrOa. Jan and man, was now president of a large motor car corporation. Red Dyke, also man, had recently presented his daughter with ' s check for dollars, on Even Slow her wedding day. Pleased Both Parti. writer for the A European scientist says man Thompson, special Town Review, had since corns niceremoved are farther and ths ape Into his own ss real estate prothan baa hitherto been believed. ly moter In ths land parcel deals . This news will please both parties. Ths old "Greenwich Guys. ss Newark Evening Newt they had been pleased to can themselves, had til come along In ths ' Birds Killed is Flight so to speak. -- Thousands of birds, especially world, valued those' days. Spellman walhlers, are killed during migra- Looking back, they sometimes tion by flying Into telephone wires seemed to him to have been the or buildings, or by similar accidents. happiest of hla Ufa. They were the days when hs had . , Japastte iageaulty dreamed of writing. Before tbs By crossing barnyard fowl with moll and the toll had eaught him copper and green pbeasanta, Jap la their clutches and flung - him anese fanciers raise roosters with around on the great belt, aa It tails more than 12 feet long. were, of the gigantic wheel called - s thlrty-elght-roo- m ItSiiiiMi ltl ' ' FELLOWS' SYRUP nt p, Rheumatic Pains Relieved this QckWay -- m t - -- . fifty-thousa- . fiat over-cramm- They lit the days and night. They wers ths dreams of Idealism. Of youth with bis head in the clonds And then th delugs Th deluge of th material success that made of Ilf a eyclorama. A success so blinding, so amazing, that the world clamored for its reclps No wonder that under th atrese of It th atraln of It there camp th time when Spellman, still In love wlth success, mind yon, felt however, the need of a retreat from the maddening crowd. At first hla family rebelled. Hla wife; young; a product of the world h had grown into, held back from that move off the Avenue. Hla children, fiery, spoiled. Intelligent creatures of their kind of environment shied at first and then capitulated to the novelty of the Idea. In tha end. tha move tamed oat to be on of the most brilliantly diplomatic things Spellman bad ever done. It proved hla position In the social world which hla wife and children craved. Society came flocking over after Spellman to th hitherto obsenr section along th East river. ' A new and looking boulevard began to take shape over there. Brilliantly successful aa It was, In the eyes of his family, and the realty dealers who profited by the land boom, sa far aa Spellman .was concerned. It was a failure He had defeated his own par pose, in seeking to escape the maddening crowd, he had only brought It tagging along with him. , Spellman wanted leisure now. Bat his Long Island boms was a social rendezvous . and hla Adirondack camp that asm kind of center all over again. New Mexico became the tad, no sooner be had bnllt an adobe hnt out there, and a private office In the forty-sixt- h story of ths Woolworth office building remained private for about two weeks. Spellman wanted leisure. Spellman wanted to write again. The old urge was upon him. Ths desire to pnt Into, printed, palpitating word tha human panorama as It had marched so dramatically before hla still young eyes. Spellman wanted mental peace. The quiet kind of boon that yield up dreams. One day an Idea struck him like a benlgn flash out of heaven.' - Within three hours, secret agents had been dispatched down to rickety Qttle old building In quaint old Greenwich street Twelve hours later, the property had s&cretly passed Into the hands of Spellman. One week later, and with a degree of secrecy that only power and money could command, Spellman walked into almost an extra replica of the dingy old flat of days gone e. COMFORT for COLICKY . The first night that Spellman pent In hla new retreat promised to be one of the greatest peace be had known In years. A long quiet evening before the tnnnel-shape- d Uttle old grate In the dingy flat. Books, Memories Dreams.' Ideals But, of course, It was hard to concentrate. By .' eleven oclock hundred details were crowding Into' SpeUmans mind, making It difficult for him to use hla leisure. There was no. telephone. There had been none In th old days One bad to go to the corner drug stors That made It In the last year. Spell difficult man had developed a slight heart leakage Unimportant but he required. n certain amount of restraint to his activities ' By eleven, Spellman, accustomed to chilled mineral water at hla bedside, was There was only the hythirsty. drant And no ice In the large refrigerator. There had never been any In the old days, unless one of the feUows ran' over to Gradys saloon and brought back a nickels Of course there was no worth. Grodya saloon any mors When finally SpeUman turned In, th magic of th old conch was all gons The old conch hurtl If' shot Into hla riba with a cruelty that kept him wide awake and concentrating upon hla discomfort rather than any of the old dreams he had used to enjoy with his eyes staring wlds open Into the comfortable well-earne- C ASTORIA'S REGULATION GENTLE The beet way to prevent colic, doctors say, la to avoid gas in stomach and bowels by keeping the entire intestinal tract open, tree from wests But' remember this: a tlny baby! tender Uttle organa cannot stand hank treatment They most be gently urged. This la Just th time Castoria can help most Castoria, yon know, is made specially for babies and children. It la a pore vegetable preparation, perfectly harmless It contains no harsh drags, no narcotics For years It has helped mothers through trying times with colicky babies and children Buffering with digestive upsets colds and fever. Keep genuine Castoria on hand, with the name: Redistribution of Industry Seen by Harper Leech. New York. Giant cities wUI grow na larger and will lose their present financial and Industrial Importance; Industry wUI break np Into smaller units and operate In what are now rural districts j the worker wlU receive a greater share of hla employer's profits In order to maintain baying power; and the cost of kUUng n Chinaman will jump from 150, the present level, to approximately $17,500, aU In the comparatively near future, and because mankind haa discarded human aod animal energy .based on food cultivation and substituted for it hla newly discovered ability to convert solar In the energy Into work, principally form of electric power. ' These' are some of the predictions affecting the welfare of humanity made by Harper Leech, writer on economic subjects, In hla new book, "The Paradox of Plenty." That "thla la not n depression but a mishandling of the greatest era of plenty the world has ever known,1 Is the thesis of Mr. Leech's book. "The plain fact la." be saya In hla preface, that after thousands, per haps millions, of years of living on the energy grudgingly tendered by the sun through annual harvest of crops, man suddenly became aware that the same sun had been storing energy for mUllonsof years;' He discovered In coal a'Ufenfcrgy store with millions (of times the energy available from his own ''muscles. Nearly two hundred yeara later, he till thinks of carclty when there Is no scarcity. And, falling to ad just his institutions and bis financial mechanisms to the conditions of plenty, he has failed to realize the advantages of plenty. Transformation of tho United States. The transformation of the United States Into a new form of Industrial odety, through the Interconnection of electric power and transmission of energy, has already started, according to Mr. Leech, and "la now proceeding ai rapidly aa the previous political and economic inter gratlon of America by railroad con traction." Mr. Leach points to recent developments in the Carolina! as typical of what may be expected of the future Industrialism of the United States In the wake of Its constantly expanding use of electrical energy. "In the Piedmont region of the Car he writes, "the first quar oQnaa, COACH FOR PRINCETON blackness Th blackness annoyed him now. had the sensation that vermin might be crawling around and about him. The stiff blanket Irked. Th air from th shaft was fonL At eight oclock th next morning, Spellman,' who had 'fallen off Into a brief-hour- s sleep, awoke stiff and nnrefreehed. - A blurred mirror gave back hla lined and weary imH -- . Bill 14-19-32. hla Comedlt Humalns was going to There la no going back. CASTORIA Electricity Dooms Big Cities 1 .y-u BABIES .THROUGH old-wor- ld ' ageTha Uttle old room of hla memn dreamer had been back In A sunflower plant requires about had So all those partio-nla- r ories was a dirty smear. that days a quart of water a day. A beech little nest of fellows The . The old BUI was gons Spellman tree may need as much ss eight evenings over pale red waa In hla placs long, talky same time. quarts in ths ,j wine and greasy Italian table dhote Emerging from the rickety Uttle In aubcellan, dinner dreaming, building that morning, eager for Not SoCCOM Tost re- taxi and a trip uptown to hla warm Wealth, notoriety, place and pow- talking, planning, hoping And and meUow bath, he fonnd a battaler are no measure of success what- belling I Spellman had been a rebel la ion of reporters and photographsoever. H. G. Wells, English Novel-1sthose days er lying in wait for him who and Historian. Hating Injustice. Crying out leaped Into action at sight of him. "Mr. SpeUman, have yon anything against monopolies .and against Word to th Wit mans Inhumanity to man. Spell- to say click click click on the If you listen to tbs neverdoa, Its man bad dreamed of writing tbs subject of never done. David Lloyd George. great American Corned! Humalne, "Yes fellows I havs said Mr. only, aa he outlined It to the Green- Spellman smiling as he hailed his wich Guys as they tat talking on taxL ' "He who would seek his lost , Salt Lakt City, No. and on Into ths dream-U- t nights youth, must find it In hla heart struggle-for-exlstenc- Nda Peeve They lit ths dinginess of the poky Uttle A certain movement of his circulated rumors In Wall Street Variation ia OurPet -- right kr ! lwt nmwi. laa it im hI ua a4 Ymt ilM Uii yun wwif, UtntiiMl ,Ji,qy, w fwritii. ! Unrttiiiw mmhulat - show humanity ths grim tragedy, aa well. Oh, Spellman had dreams, all Herbert 0. Crisler, best known who was athletic director of the University of Minnesota, . as "Fritz, has accepted the position of football coach at Princeton. His annual salary la to be $12,000. Twentieth century witnessed a repetition of the industrial revolution of th A Eighteenth century In the north of England. There waa the same shift from agrlcnltnre and cottage Industries to factories but no growth of cities to correspond d to the growth of the Babylon like Manchester, Leeds, Pittsburgh or Chicago, which gathered into themselves the great constructive forces of th Nineteenth century. "The new type of Industrialism which la seen In most characteristic form In the Carolina has been subjected to much criticism. But It brought to the Inhabitants of those regions a far greater net gain of Income and welfare than come to the people who lived through the great transitions from agriculture to factory life in regions of earlier Industrial maturity. Whether urban critics like it or not the Carolina today are a prototype of the future Industrialism of America. The mammoth metropolises of the modern world already show signs of overgrowth and nverspedallza tloo which in the organic world foretell the doom of a species. "Because of the congestion In cities, there has been built up a com ter of th steam-generate- Lights of-- New JuHan Sfreet has been qualifying for the Explorers dub. Be recently discovered New York. True, Ur. Street bas been a man of Manhattan for yeara past but this was soother city. It wss the New York of th dawn age. Because of an early operation on a member of his family, Mr. Street was abllged to reach the hospital at 8 a. m. Knowing the night before that be was to make the trip, be conferred with Mrs. Street as to transportation. -- Take a . taxi.". she said. Dont be silly," he responded. "What would a taxi be doing out at L . Simple EipUutioi cant J She I wonder - why w Uplex system of distribution. There save anything! ..... are brokers. Jobbers, wholesalers, He The neighbors are always do" , and warehouse men, all adding tre- ing something w cant afford. mendously to the expense of transportation and handling. Ur. Leech points out In his book that th vastly increased ability to produce agricultural and other prod nets that electrical energy has placed In the hands of men baa destroyed completely ths promise that scarcity is a measure of value. With the energy now available, he saya, It takes but a small proportion of the population to supply the essential needs of the whole nation. 1!ovj Therefore, he adds, there can he no scarcity, and scarcity ceaaea to be measure of value. - --In conclusion Ur. Leach strikes a note of optimism for the future o: the United States and Its cltlzenff Now without using dangerous dyes and for western civilization aa a can darken gray hair naturally, you whole. "Slowly," be declares, "th quickly restore it original shade by force of economic and technical realthe world's finest, sale way which ia ities has been removing from the now keeping millions of heads young the hair as it darkthroat of western mankind, the dead looking. Benefits ens it to the shade you want As simhand of obsolete economic doctrine. ple aa brushing. Try it Pay druggist The evidence Is unmistakable that 75c for a large bottle of WYETHS can from the humanity escape SAGE & SULPHUR and Just follow . prison house of want; and, although easy directions. still rubbing eyes blinded from Diacuaaioe long confinement In the dungeon, can now se world. Id rather be right than be Presl-- I -- i easy to got rid of Gray ; . -- KC?E&!tatI!jD:rk -- dent" York -- "You think a fellow cant be both!" S toons McCboK.-TTe- Fairchild, asked ' him whether he an experienced driver. Mr. Fair-chilassured the farmer be had been around with horses deal, but neglected to mention that Itliad been with the artillery during the war, when be rode the caisson and others handled the horses Still, all went well. Mr, Faircnild got his family Into the sleigh and when the farmer handed him the reins clucked In the approved fashion, which apparently threw the animal Into first speed and away they went. The horse took them for a very nice ride and brought them that hour! "I think there will be taxis, said back safely. It was then that the Mrs. Street, "but, of course, one difficulty developed. could always charter a milk magou." The farmer wasnt around, but his Emerging from bis door a few moments before six, Mr. Street found small boy said hla father bad told a New York he did not know. The him to ask Mr. Fairchild just to unair smelled crisp tnd dean, tree of hitch the horse and tlq him up in gasoline fumes. The voice of .the the stall In the barn. It seems that city was stilL But there was s when yon stood alongside thla horse. It seemed about the size of a small taxL elephant, which made some of the Air. Street now believes the taxi buckles and things hard to reach. was driven by s man training for But Ur. Fairchild undid them all, the motor races on the Indianapolis except that be kept the bridle and The streets apparently reins Intact When he had manspeedway. were empty and the driver took full aged to get the horse oat of the advantage of the fact Mr. Street shafts and all the other strap and maintains that through the window things off the horse, he realized be he saw what appeared to be one of never had known how many parts those movies, where they speed up there were to one horses harness. the film, of s deserted village. He Taking th reins Into the barn, he thinks they passed other taxis; It passed them around a post st a corwas just like' two limited trains ner of the stall. Then, by walking passing In opposite directions, If the away with them a good deaat you engines bad cut loose from the cars might hoist a mainsail S pulled and were going right along without the boraqjnto shelter without takthem. He aaw some objects he ing s chance of being stepped on. opine might have been milk wa- That was a smart Idea, as when the gons; and claims he beard the voice horse reached the post. It automatof a newsboy, blown sway by the ically put on the brakes. This acrushing air. He thinks s railroad complished, Mr. Fairchild,, who waa station or hotel flashed past, but now out In the yard, returned to the isnt anre, as he waa too busy bang- barn. - Being careful to permit no ing on and yelling at the driver. But alack, be wound the reins half a It waa very bracing. Mr. street (till dozen tlmei around the post and Insists we sll should rise early In tied a good firm knot. He then the morning and see the dty tree went out again and collected the from traffic. pieces of harness and laid them on the floof under some pegs, where It was Willard Fairchild who dis- other harness was hanging. He had covered the horse and sleigh. This paid the farmer tn advance so he was In the hills of Connecticut at didnt wait for him to come back a village which baa no railroad sta- But be knew the old chap would be tion and plenty of snow. Th horse pleased at all the care he had taken and sleigh belonged to e farmer, to leave his property In good order who before trusting the outfit to Ur WNU Sorvlca. , IMS. Bll Syndicate wab d and Stoploss br'. "I couldn't sleep very well at night end was a little nervous," said Mrs, Ella Thrill, Route 4. "I learned of Dr. Piercee Favorite Prescription , bought a bottle, tried it and then bought another. I think the Prescription' is a splendid tonic for women. I am feeling fine." If a woman has backache, severe pains periodically, end suffers a great deal, she should take this tonic. It is sold by every druggist in both fluid and tablet form HmSFillFiaintylM Iwy psekaee ( Dr.Hot. syatma nl nail I, M Dr. rianah CBif. adlaal adriaa, Baaff N. T, fa frt Mala, 10a If in am a Mai paifcaaa af . well-kno- Dr. Pierces Prescription Any city man going to the country to farm can only figure with certainty on one thing: hard work. STOP RHEUMATIC PAINS WITH HEAT OF RED PEPPERS Relieves Almost Instantly Good old Nature he put into tad heat pepper a marvelous therapeutic that gets right down to tha source iff trouble and almost instantly relieve the paina and ache of rheumatism, tiff joints, lumbago end neuntra. Thousands hare found it the ooe against cheat cold. toe. Now this genuine red pepper' heat i contained ia an ointment that you ju rub on. In lea than 3 minute yen feel lief come. It ie called Rowee Nod o Pepper Rub. Safe. Will not hum sting.Get a small jar from your druggist aafe-gua- rd CHEST COLDS Yield Quickly When You Use B. & THS PFNmtATINO Tula OtRMtCIDS Your Driissist Can Supply It Large size $125 F. E. ROLLING CO. I) BEVERLY ST, BOSTON, MAS 4 , . |