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Show f SOUTH CACHE COURIER- ' NEW I GOVERNESS jl ' ' Jj THE I if 8 U S: IS ft: . - : :: J:ft ft ft: ! 4 I 0 j :S J , By Katherine Howe 5:j:j 'ft ift:;::ftftft:ft;:ft:ft:ft:ft:ft:::ft:::ft:::::ftft::::::ftft:ftft:: (Copyright, 1317, by V, (Jr. Chapman.) Mrs. Warren was delighted with the new governess. Elsje and Jack were certainly not the easiest proposition to handle. Jack, the eldest, a hoy of nine and hot temyears, was nffd two Elsie, pered, years Ids junior, was obstinate, and both were consid-- ; erably spoiled. A succession of governesses bad come and gone Hi various states of dissatisfaction or .disgust, so when the little Russian applied for the position Mrs. Warren caught at her as a drowning man does at a straw. Sophie Torsky had gentle, manners, and her French was irreproachable, and Mrs. Warren reasoned that if the children got only a smattering of these two desirable accomplishments it was better than a. state of complete Ignorance. ' As was to be expected there were at first, for two or three days, faint sounds of insurrection In the lesson room, but after that things moved with surprising smoothness. Mrs. Warren was so surprised she determined to see how It was done. She found that ky had love, patience and 'firmness. She seemed to love the chil; dren, and had gained their confidence. ' It seems almost too good to be true, said Mrs. Warren to her brother one evening when he had run down to the country for a Week-enwith her, Why, its wonderful, the way she manages those children. John Bayard looked at his sister with a quizzical smile. He felt like saying that in face of the fact that they had never been managed at all, something like a judicious effort in that direction was very likely to produce good results. Sb?s rather pretty, too, went on Mrs-- . Warren. She has the loveliest self-wille- blue-eye- d soft-spoke- n . well-bre- d , atfisw-Toic- d , ! anywhere, expe?tiy 8eu.U ed. Our modest prices make buy- C Ing easy. BOYD PARK FOUNDED 166 MAIN STREET BARGAINS IN USED CARS Randall-Dod- WANTED no, John; its Just because not susceptible that Im afraid youre it would go hard with you if you did fall in love. You see, youre no, longer a boy, and the measles always are a Jbit dangerous with grown-ups- .. Dont worry, was Bayards laconic Oh, response. Perhaps if Mrs. Warren had not ibeen so anxious about it, the very thing she had feared might not have happened. tBut she saw by Monday morning it had. When her brother started for the train, he announced that he Intended, to be out again the following Saturday. This was so unexpected and unheard of, Johns visits generally being weeks, and even -- -- K AND WOMEN. s' Lake City Now ii thT HAS MESSAGE FOR ALL Young Man Draws to His Lot. ' i? kS (S BOYS Lesson Strange Experience Which From Fell I wish. I could send a message to every boy in the world of a sad and burnot Hornet strange coincidence that happened to' cowrTE&v Trt'wet.oout guRfcfcu me when I was a boy, exclaimed a man the other day. young THE, SLAV1AKSKX JiAZAft One hot, sultry July afternoon-t- he hottest day we had that summer- -I In Moscows best departthousands. Russia, with had Just turned our street corner when in ment as Russia, the its largest store, capital, CENTRAL ancient Is at once the which was founded by Scotsmen In the I mqt my' father.. I wish you would deliver this richest and the most thickly forties of the last century, and is still package for me, Joe, he said rather populated .part of the country. conducted under British management, This region contains 18 governments, probably 60 per cent of the foreign weakly, as I remembered afterward. covering an area of 480,000 square goods on sale have been of German Now I was only thirteen years old and miles less than The range of retail had been out playing In the hot sun all -of the area manufacture. of the Petrograd district, but ..with prices paid, and the quality which satmorning and was all in when I met more than twice the population, viz., isfies even the good' class in Moscow, ,my father after playing a 45,000,000. As might be expected, says are distinctly lower than' in the better-clas- s !game with our side the losers. My a writer In the magazine, Russia, the first impulse was to refuse, but one trade of Petrograd. glance, at his kind, gentle face stopped large towns are both larger and more Fur Trade. Center of the me. numerous than elsewhere in Russia. Surely I will go, father, I said Moscow is the chief fur center for Moscow had in 1912 a population of pleasantly. is a tendency Russia, and there 1,617,000. Thank you, son, was the answer. Railway communications towards, a of the busitransfer gradual was I are, for Russia, relatively well devel- ness of going myself, but I dont feel subsidiary fkr markets, like very well oped here and to the south. today and I thought you . d As a place of business Moscow occu- the Irbit and the A would not as you have always refuse,' movement has to Moscow. been a to pies a unique position. The interests fairs, me, Joe. good boy section of located there control and serve the been initiated by the fur I walked father did away thinking of commerce and enormous area of which the city forms the Moscow chamber not care much about his only son, or to render the Russian fur inliterally the geographical center, in all Industry in future independent of the he would not send me on this jaunt matters of supply and demand 'for a dustry (about one mile and a half), on such ' market. a hot day. But somehow the words, mainly agricultural country; and it is Leipzig Leipzig has hitherto takenlargely 1 thought you would not refuse, and through the Moscow merchants and agency houses that foreign imports the Russian Taw furs ; has treated and You have always been a good boy to ' are brought most directly before the finished them, and has resold the fin- me, Joe, seemed to ring In my ears consumers. With characteristic enter- ished product again to Moscow. In and before I reached the end of my do more prise, the Moscow merchants have also future Moseow purposes to I was whistling a merry tune. of and Journey the process finishing herself, organized and may be said to control home, I saw our doctors Returning the Siberian trade. Many of the most' is endeavoring also to get into touch auto and a crowd of people at our successful of her citizens are Siberian with London, New York, St. Louis and door. One of my aunts hurried to meet and born, who find it desirable to live in other important me with tears rolling down her cheeks. centers, for the purpose of Your father fell Moscow to direct the financing and the dead just as he reachpurchasing end of their business opera- direct business dealings.' Moscow can ed the stoop, she said. under normal conditions supply fintions. ' i I found out later the last words my . ished furs such as squirrel, squirrel father Manufacturers Are Powerful-spoke were. You have always Finally, industrial Russia may be tails' ermine, marten, stone and baum been a good boy to me, Joe. said to center in this city, where the marten, hares, Persian lamb, etc, RusMoscow New Talking Movies. Manufacturers association sia, as is well known, is a very large alone forms almost a party in the buyer of fur goods. Application has been made for a state and ex if irises a potent influence patent, on a very elaborate device Historic Battlefield. on the tariff policy of the country. which would produce a combination of s A ride .from the main the cinematograph and the phonograph This association is responsible for the Russian textile industries, which, cen- gate of Pultava lies the historic bat- to give us moving pictures wherein the ter mainly here ; the iron and steel in- tlefield. The rolling plain where characters not only move but speak. dustry, and many other manufactures, Swede and Russian fought is covered The idea of such pictures Is not new, which are- - financed with local capital. with golden-yellowheat. It is the but the difficulties of synchronizing It was Moscows initiative, also, that most, peaceful-lookin- g spot in the have hitherto pnoved insurmountable. started cotton growing in the Cauca- world. Near the center of the plain By synchronizing is meant the exact sus and central Asia, which now sup- there is a mound about 25 feet high, coincidence of the motion picture, prply a considerable portion of the raw crowned by a cross. On the cross is ojected by one machine, with the speech material of the countrys cotton trade. the simple, characteristically Russian supposed to proceed from the chaThe air of business which pervades inscription : Here are buried the racters, which is produced by quite anthis strange but fascinating city is at- Swedes who died at Pultava. It Is other. Unless the speech comes at . laughtractive to a Westerner. Business grimly unsentimental, with no sweet the right instant, the result is men are more accessible than else- and fitting it is to die for the father-lan- d able rather than impressive. In the of ' where. They seem to have a grip on The Swedes were proposed device the actual speech about it. wiraffairs, and they pursue jlefinite meth- killed here, they were buried here, and the character is transmitted by ods in their dealings, which lead that Is all there is to it. The Russian eless telephone to a phonograph whose to quick derision and execution. These records the facts of the case, and in- complex receiving mechanism is syof the qualities, coupled with". a strong local dulges in no surmise as to whether the nchronized with the movements camera. patriotism and form dead men found it Sweet and fitting or moving picture the driving power of Moscows citizens, not. But once a year a mass issaid Much in Little. which cannot fail to secure for the city on the mound. Historians and. milian Senator James A. McDougal was ans influence in the po- tary men will tell you that this battle Shakespeare litical and economic development ot of Pultava was. the most important In orator who abided by Is the soul of Russia. maxim that brevity It that many centuries, ranks with elThe dissimilarity of the Petrograd Waterloo. It was certainly a battle wit. He could compact more othand Moscow markets is marked. with many of the elements of romance. oquence into a few sentences than lon8 Broadly, Petrograd disposes of a higher Two young kings were fighting for su- er speakers diffused through class of article at corresponding prices. premacy in half a continent. , Peter harangues. When urged to partlc Moscows clients belong mainly to the pf Russia drove Charles of Sweden pate in mortuary ceremonies he said. I doubt whether or not we should peasant class to the inhabitants of from the field. Great things were set the rural "owns, whose wants are re- tied on this little field, but the, yellow mourn for any of the dead. I anl con mournstricted, If not primitive, and who are wheat whispers In. the sun as though fldent that there should be no themselves In the Mage when new wants and It knew a secret more Important than ing for those who render and hoy habits are forming. This does not any of them. up as sacrifices in any Just s lessen vathe cause. It better becomes us to Pr necessarily range and that true It is riety of the articles desired rather and dignify them. Apples Most Valuable Fruit etethe contrary. But the attractiveness The apple 1 In the cities and 'kingdoms die, but the ot the articles, rather than the quality, household economy for no other fruit rnal thought lives on. Great thought, no does appeals, and cheapness is an excels it in culinary usefulness, Incorporate with great action, and life,factor. This attitude was clev- graces the table in a far greater va- die, but lives a universal uinlng erly grasped and exploited by the Ger- riety than any other fruit Of all fruits power Is felt, vibrating through man trader, and In this connection, grown in North America,' the all ages. apple spirit and throughout nowhere else so much as in Moscow is leads in amount and Intrinsic, value. the evidence of German adaptability, No fear of an overproduction, however, Elephant In Biblical Hebrew. wow and of German trade penetration" ot if the means of transportation and disIt Is said by scholars that noan Russia more apparent Moscows tribution are perfected. What if wa In Biblical Hebrew denotes fam stores were full of German goods. do raise 125,030 carloads of apples or phant, yet the Hebrews were Large numbers of these stores were 62,000,000 boxes a year? This is but with. Ivory, and the skilled workme obviously. German, while the represent- half a box to a person not counting Hiram, king of Tyre, fashioned atives of German houses In the dis- what we export That isnt very many. great Ivory throna of Solomon trict must have been numbered by overlaid It with pure gold. Exchange. i Suppose I then? asked a main, voice she recognized as the Russian's. I do not care I should .have to 1 see with believe Oh, I sneering my own eyes, before I would she said with intense feeling. know, he answered with a inflection, you must have trusted him 'entirely, but you must see now I see nothing, she broke In fiercely, but my faith in him. I know he will keep his promise! And it is two years now, he went on. You would like to go' back to your own people but you cant. You know that. With the shelter of my name, you could go. She interrupted him with passionate protest. (No! no! never! she cried. Now go! I do not want to see you ! one-ha- lf : -- ten-innin- g . . Nizhni-Novgoro- ' , concerned her brothers happiness she had a right to listen. Very quietly she drew away, and went to the house. It seemed to her there was only one inference to be drawn. Miss Torsky was hiding some secret. She had had a past. This was the reason she would not marry Jolin Bayard. Mrs. Warren felt it her duty in" pursuance . of the cure she was trying to effect, to tell her brother all she had overheard, with her own inferences added tfiereto. But instead of working a cure, her letter had the opposite effect, and brought John Bayard speedily on the scene. lie told his sister that if the woman he loved had been, through some great trial, and she had feared to tell him, that now was the time to let her know how great was his love for her. Sophie met him with a kind of gentle dignity, but the second day had passed without his- having managed an interview. Bayard was sitting with his sister in the living room, when Sophie entered with a new light in her eyes. Oh she said, you have both been so good to me, I think you will be glad to know what has happened. About three years ago my father and I were suspected of being revolutionists, and escaped from Russia just in time to save ourselves from being sent to Siberia.'1 My father died in, less than a year, and I dare not return to my people. I was to have been married in a short time to Boris Jvanoff, and it was understood that as soon as he could he would come to this country, and marry me, and stay here. I heard from him for a year very regularly; then the letters stopped. They always came in care of the Russian coifsul, who knew my address. But he could, tell me nothing.- I never doubted Boris. I knew If he were alive he would come. And now! This letter has just comet He has been in Siberia these terrible years. He has suffered the tortures of the mines, and he could not let me know. But now! Oh, thank God ! Hear what he says ! With tear-weyes, the girl read from I am coming to a letter: Beloved you The revolution has set me free Such a band as this never before trod these Siberian snows. The Irons have Worn through our bleeding flesh, 'but we feel it not. We sing hymns of thanksgiving! We know nothing bu the joy of liberty. Hunger, pain, cold, are nothing now. We are free." When the girl paused, Mrs. Warren with streaming eyes, took her in he? arms and kissed her, and John, taking her hand said: God bless you, Sophie I He deserves you I" et 1 1 Auto Co. Salt d ttercial St.. Salt Lake City, Utah ! on earth. Oldsmobil,. Guaranteed firs? terms if wanted Berg in gretrlarmuiil!6' bow open for 80 day. Only abort time Tools furnished and oommisnlon paid while Ins. Call or write Moler Buher School 13 N good-by- condition-ea- sy running . - SAIT LAKE CITY 50 splendid used ks, $250 to $800. that in something which so closely ! Iflft OFJtV.'ELRY - ried! uVwJh"tl cn fnd - think better of that. It Is Then he went. Sophie. Mrs. Warren heard the crunching 'Of his feet going down the graveled path, then the sobbing of the girl. She felt complexion, just pink and white. But youll see her-- at dinner. And I warn you, John, dont you dare to fall in JoVa with her Johns smile this time was rather more weary than quizzical. He was a with a clear man of about thirty-five- , cut strong face, not handsome but He leaned wholesome and reliable. back in his chair, and said in a bored way : Elsie, Im Just about as tired of hearing that advice as you must be of giving it. Anyone would think I was about the most susceptible boob buy7ouTJlmod as fine and as large You will , Diamonds . not Torsky. HYRUM, UTAH a as t0Sgow months apart, that Mrs.' Warren at once divined the cause. Her first Impulse was to dismiss Miss Torsky. But. no, that was not to be thought of; there were the children getting along so finely, and, besides, if John had fallen in love with the girl, nothing on earth would stop him. - So Mrs. Warren decided she must let matters take their course. Sophie Torsky, on her part, seemed quite oblivious to the fact that she was a storm center. . One Monday morning Bayard appeared at the breakfast table, pale and haggard.When he started to leave, he told Ills sister he might not be out again for some time. She at once divined what had happened, and drew it from him. lie had been refused by Sophie Torsky. One day a young man called to see the governess. From his name and appearance, - Mrs. Warren at once judged he was a musician. When he had called three or four times at short intervals, she felt sure she had found the cause for her brothers dismissal. Tlio young llussian was evidently the successful suitor. She wrote to her brother, telling him of her discovery. She now meant to cure him if she could. A tall, thick hedge separated the vegetable garden from the ornamental grounds about the place. And late In the afternoon. Mrs. Warren, who took a lively interest, in the growing of her salads, overheard from the other side of the hedge the excited voice of Miss Torsky. A It is a lie! she exclaimed. cruel lie I I do not believe he Is mar- again! Overheard the Excited Voice of Miss - ! ) , half-hour- w , e, 7 ever-increasi- 1 pre-emine- nt all-det- er - . ' |