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Show THE LEHI SUN. LEHL UTAH ... fAnrin IUUHU . audi- r TT-.J At arus "" frrDt ith frag ua- , fragrant foliage wcrtr leaves wen various ased ugh the linen 4 lettered tbroi and for scenting L and other things. '...m-mo rose i ..ki, was a ori reran!- and other ..carl J "hen an" 'e ..i narked with the pet- onmnlete- ioiwasaded - wh CD IV al made a ueu ;rSES KNOW I tnany breakdowns and s illnesses causea oy k.5 lKm'untaitis too weak Ke doctors Prescribe fSSpfot people whoarene tired,unabletosleep.These flht have had a long e?e f they recovered quickly LEo with energy and health. Scan "pep up'Vur yitahry fe your spirits to the skies. This S tonic replenishes the body Btoble ingredients, so that even ifew doses start the change. Get fuine Fellows' Syrup from your je today. ULOWS Pesnut Seed's Vitality ut growers have thought thai lured more than a year or tw lose its vitality, but govern- tests Indicate that good peanul feu be used after three or foui f of storage. f tV Indigestion i Use Nature's PRESCRIPTION Mother Nature U thebeat doctot -mi could bring to the aid of la Nation, la bee fragrant herbs tnd!v, u packaged In Gar. StldTea, ihe git ei you mild but pottat prescription for clean. ia( taa boweli promptly, fully, futlj. Garfield Tea relieve! runtcs hearloeu, occasional MKlpittoB mtu htigutiea itABDrugglsU ARFIELD TEA SBrink Tie Coward! f-I th" ik I can get you i to madam, for cruel and lnhu pstment Do you think you W will fight the suit? jw-Pight! Why, the llttl. f b atrald to come Into an' J where I am! Pathfinder. Taey AH Are f!-Whatan unusual child! N Papa-Yes, he's Just Ufc pWes, thank goodness. jinr7theafter f that puUs hard. Man Mil. . tir - uo wins itaS an? errors from iCff"8 t0 lovt or 18 tor the alnd. EuIwct Nttfel the fate of Fitfim vT. traditiona an aJ "one, h,7 UBdon S tte Mlow back. I Jnv ! fcnon. lon - Skin .roredperfu f ' rA 1; L MMtmtJaxollvtQfiuiL I I i I Part music. CAGED By Courtney Ryley Cooper Copyright by Courtney Rri,y Coorxr WHAT HAS TRANSPIRED Joe Barry, country youth in New York, ekes out a living a care-taker care-taker n a poor-rooming house and accordion player In Louie Berto-llrti'f Berto-llrti'f restaurant Lured by the open country, be spends a night In the fields, near Newburgh. Bertolinl discharges him. Friendless Friend-less and "broke," he Is offered $10,000 by a man he knows only as "Martin" for a "few years' work," which Involves leaving New York and going "up the river riv-er a piece." CHAPTER I Continued : 2 ' " "That's what got me Into trouble, going up the river a piece. Every spring, I Just think I'll go crazy here in town. So yesterday morning, morn-ing, I woke up early and I Just didn't even stop to consider. I took all the money I had and went out and caught a bus and got off somewhere some-where up around Newburgh. Then I Just wandered around. Gee, It was fun 1" "Yes?" asked Martin, non-commit-tally. "Then what?" "Nothing, I Just kept on roaming roam-ing around. It would have been all right except that It rained. You know, It sort of made me not care If I kept my Job or not. I'd told myself in the afternoon that I'd nev- er go back. Well, I got under a tree and waited a long time until it stopped. Then I started out and got off on a side road. It must have been after midnight before I came back to the main highway. I guess there had been an accident. There were some red lights out and something that looked like a truck turned over." "Anybody around to tell what happened?" "I don't know. I didn't go up. I thought afterward that maybe I should have gone up there, In case anyone was hurt still they'd put out red lights, so people must have been there. I Just kept on until I saw a light in a farmhouse and went up and asked if I could stay all night The old fellow must not have liked my looks. He ran me away, bo I sneaked over in a field and burrowed into a haystack. I used to do that a lot when I was a kid. It's a great way to dry off ; the hay's warm and it soaks up the water." "Come into town this morning?" asked Martin. "No, this afternoon. 1 must have been dog-tired. I slept until after one o'clock. Finally when 1 did come out, some fellows were In a field in a wagon. They yelled and started for ma I heard one of them shouting to the other about getting a gun, and calling the sheriff. So you bet I ran ! They didn't see me again after I ducked into a little grove. I caught the bus about four miles down the road." Joe Barry shifted suddenly. "But here I've been going on " 'Quite all right It was very in teresting." Then, at quick variance, vari-ance, Martin asked: "I gather you haven't a sweetie here in New York?" "No such luck, Mr. Martin. Why?" "Just thought I'd ask." His voice became more crisp. "Now about my end of this affair. As I told you, I'm an attorney. Now and then I am called upon to represent persons who get into trouble. I have a case now. A young fellow I know tried to beat the Jones law transporting liquor, you know. Naturally, my client doesn't care to suffer the penalties. It's largely a matter of circumstantial evidence. So we come to the point How would you like to step into his shoes?" There was a moment of waiting. "I don't think I understand." "Well, I don't know how to make It any plainer. I'm offering a straight business proposition. You give up your freedom for a while the Jones law in Itself, you know, isn't so bad. Courts have the right to use their discretion on first offenders of-fenders who get the maximum, five years, with time off for good behavior. be-havior. My client can't afford to take the rap, as they call it You can. I'm offering you ten thousand dollars to do it" "But Td eo to Drison!" The youth's voice carried a tremor ; Martin met it with matter-of-fact-ness. "All right" he answered. "Well suppose that you go to prison. Think it over. You're a prisoner anyway. Aren't you a prisoner?" Martin asked sharply. "Are you getting any sense of freedom out of this life you're living?" No. sir: it's lust a bed ond thra meals a day." "Then von're alreadv rnrrpfl In a way. There wouldn't be any shame in it Decause a person must have something on his conscience before he can feel sorrv fnr an act Nnw the mattet of income. Suppose you naa to do two years. You d have a roof over your head, threp monta a day, comparatively kind treatment us long as you obeyed the rules, care In case of sickness, the chance to play in the orchestra and ho a trusty, and besides that you'd have me Knowledge that you were Just doing a lob for which von wpr ho- Ing paid nearly fourteen dollars a day. Sundays and holidays Included." Includ-ed." Joe Barry felt suddenly dizzy. "But how would I know " "That yon were to be treated squarely?" The man drew a band from his pocket "Lean forward and count that HI snap on the Hpht" The dizziness Increased. Joe Barry's fingers fumbled with the bIJ's; his lips moved with audible undertones : (WNTJ Serrtc.) Nine hundred and forty, nlne-slxty, nlne-slxty, nine-eighty, a thousand-" "A fellow could do a lot with ten times that much money," the voice beside him was saying. "Ue could go out into some little town and buy himself a little business and a home. Or get a farm if he liked that kind of a life. What's a few years anyway? You're only about twenty-five." "But I wouldn't know what to do or say. I'd have to give myself up and say I'd done things that they could prove I didn't" "Don't let that worry you. All you have to do Is to refuse to answer an-swer any and all questions. That's no difficult Job. Well." he asked quickly, "do you want that money? I'm handing you a chance to trade a few years for a good time all the rest of your life. Think it over" "But" "Kid," the man leaned closer. 'That word's licked more men than all the penitentiaries in the world. Can it Look here," he said, "I'lJ give you tonight to think it over. Keep the money. Come to Louie's tomorrow at noon if you're going to be a welcher. If not, get yourself your-self on a morning train and hop out of town for another good time. Just look the country over and see if it isn' t worth trading a few years for. Got a pass-key, haven't you? Give it to me, I'll have the chauffeur drop by and fix nn the nine. Vnr. get that part of it Take a day off. i u come to your room at ten o'clock tomorrow night and get the verdict Nothing difficult about that, is there?" "No, sir." "And while you're out," said Martin, Mar-tin, "I'd put most of that money in some small-town bank. Give me the name of the bank tomorrow nicht and I'll deposit the rest for you; rour tnousand more when you prove you're going through with It and the other five when von'rp rpnllv on the way. Well," his tone had nnauty. "Nobody ever got anywhere any-where by hesitating." An hour later, Joe Barry stood trembling in his gas-lit room. One sweating hand was clasped about the heavy roll of bills in his trous ers pocket What was a few years to a young fellow? A person had to get a start in life somehow bet ter than half starving half starv ing and Deing caged up here In the city, In a room like this. He counted the money for a second sec-ond and third time. He spread the certificates out before him, one beside be-side the other, until they covered the entire center of his bed.. There would be nine times this many more, put to his credit whenever he should say." Ten' thousand dollars would buy a little business, maybe a music store, and a home In some small town. Start him up in life where he could amount to something! some-thing! It might be the beginning of a fortune. After a long time, he counted the bills again. Then he put them under un-der his pillow and tried to sleep. CHAPTER II MONEY had done Its work by morning. Symbol though It might be of impending lack of freedom, free-dom, it now held the lure of something some-thing exactly the opposite. Joe Barry's ideas of penal institutions were based upon the small Jail at Waverly where the incarcerations of the town drunk were more a subject for laughter than anything "A Fellow Could Do a Lot With Ten Times That Much Money," the Voice Beside Him Wae Saying. Say-ing. else ; the county Institutions he had seen here and there, places to be avoided, it is true, yet not imbued with the formidable aspects which a knowled?e of a true prison can give one. Danneniora, Sing Sing these were merely names, without anything to aid in their plcturiza-tlon. plcturiza-tlon. Such thoughts, however, were not in Joe Barry's mind in detail. He only knew that he was going to lose his identity for a few years In some sort of an institution, and that he was to be paid ten thousand dollars dol-lars for doin? it He could call one thousand dollars his own, and there were nine thousand dollars more to come. He was rich ! It was with thi3 feeling of wealth, bathing his brain with anesthetic anes-thetic undents, that he took early train out of the city. A day out of town: to do as he pleased with no thought of anything except mm mm mm '"' e was wealthy and free I t ree from the querulous demands of that dirty lodging house on Third avenue, from the invectives of Louie, the uncomplimentary remarks re-marks of Fullhouse and the apathy of diners, gobbling their spaghetti f Jw a"' he was ,ree froii rear, that gnawing sense of the ominous which every country boy has in New York, fear of traffic. rear of the noise, fear of the friend- lessness and coldness, fear of actu- al hunger when a Job has departed and days lapse before a fellow can stumble into another one. By noon, Joe had done many tnings. iie had traveled some eighty miles from New York, into Pennsylvania. He had opened two sayings account of four hundred dollars each, told his first lies and ifl hls flrst a,las; 60Iethlng which he had found extremely easy to accomplish. They had not questioned ques-tioned his adopted name of Joseph Bradley and his address of Great Bend. Kan. His general air of nn-sophlstlcatlon nn-sophlstlcatlon had looked after that ; both banks had merely drawn a line through the section of the new account card calling for references. ref-erences. Then he had asked innocently: inno-cently: "Can't I Just leave this book with you? ril be away, and a friend of mine Is going to make some deposits de-posits to my credit" After that, he had gone forth to the spending of a part of his remaining re-maining two hundred dollars. There was the barber shop, from its bath to a shampoo and a massage. Then came a clothing store. At last, everything else purchased, a new Joe Barry, well-dressed, wplt Ih.t t. - ... groomed, alert the hard lines gone I iroin me corners or his Hps, paused in the fitting of a new hat. "I thought I heard band music," he said to the clerk. The salesman looked at his watch, then went to the door, leaning lean-ing far out "The parade," he said on returning. "Late as usual. Ever seen a circus parade on time?" Joe Barry heard only two words. "Circus parade!" he said and grinned. "Gee! A big circus?" "Not so big. Dayton Brothers Pretty good at least, it was last year." Joe Barry saw the fag-end of the parade. He could see menagerie cages rocking along far aheafi, with plumed horses; a clown rode the line of march upon a stilt bicycle; there were three elephants, tall to trunk, and a calliope, hooting forth a steamy footnote to the procession. After Joe had eaten his luncheon he went out to the circus grounds-Three grounds-Three hours later, he still was on the show grounds, merely wandering wan-dering around. He had seen the big show and the sideshow twice. A starved boy-man had found a feast in the thing which had meant an acme of happiness since his earliest memories. He stopped to talk to canvnsmen and roughnecks, asking them where the circus would go from here, and if it was fun to be with a show like this. He listened to the gruff roarings of the animals In the menagerie tent and stared at the maze of stakes and ropes, wondering wonder-ing how on earth they managed to pick up everything when they moved at night. At last he paused before a small tent, set apart from the dressing tent proper, looking down with sudden longing upon a glittering thing which rested upon a chair there. "Gee!" he said at last "It's an Iorio ! After a time,, he glanced about, like a boy about to go under a fence to an apple orchard. Then he leaned forward and touched It "Gee !" he said again. It was the first time be ever had seen one, outside of a music store show window. He glanced about him, then impulsively picked up the instrument, merely holding it in playing position without the strap over his shoulders. Just to get the feel of It and to run his fingers over the piano keyboard and to tap the tiny mother-of-pearl protu-beratious protu-beratious which denoted the "hundred "hun-dred and twenty base." Temptation was strong. At last be yielded. v He used the bellows softly, sur-repetitiously, sur-repetitiously, as if he were actually actu-ally stealing the melody. A truly professional instrument like this had figured in many a dream of Joe Barry's; the music of true steel reeds, the soft action of delicately balanced piano keys, the Instant response re-sponse to pressure; unconsciously his fingers played more swiftly upon up-on the keys and the pull of the bellows bel-lows grew stronger; the circus faded. "That's pretty," a voice said. The music ceased. Joe Barry felt the blood streaming into his face; he gulped and hastily replaced the accordion upon the chair. "I didn't mean to play it," he said boyishly. Dazedly he realized that the girl who faced him, now In street clothing, had been the person per-son of silk and tulle when he last had seen her. swinging gracefully about the center ring of the circus upon a dappled gray horse. Then haltingly: "It's yours, I guess?" "It's In my act" she said. A pause followed, awkward yet natural, the mutual dispersing of all else while two young persons took stock of ( each other. The girl was young, only a year or so more than twenty. She was vibrant and alert; with something more In the blue depths of her eyes than mere beauty. The sun came gliding ahour me tma oi the little tent and crept Into her hair, weaving a thousand meshes of gold there. She Ktralchtened; the clpan-limbed vivacity of her rounded round-ed into evidence even under the handicap of clothing. Suddenly she said: "Why don't you play some more?" Joe Barry stammered. "I don't know many things, he fenced and belied himself by reaching reach-ing eagerly for the gleaming Instrument In-strument on the chair. "I'm sort of out of practice You see." be. confessed, con-fessed, "I've been working in a place where it doesn't make much difference." "In a theater?" asked the girl Vo I was Just an entertainer." fie 'laughed. "My Job and I parted w P 7 5 1 th0Dght rt take d now." Then he quickly fenced. "A fellow doesn't get a SrCeJt0Jneet "P wltD IrI every day." - .J. 1 of a Professional no- 21?"' mucb about accor" "I'm afraid not," the girl confessed con-fessed and came closer. "You see. know-DaDMr' Daytoa yu "Oh, he's your under asked Joe Barry, somewhat awed. "Yea I'm Sue Dayton." She smiled at the Impressed look In his eyes. "My father and Uncle Dan were partners, until Dad died. Lnde Dan really reared me in the ring; Dad always looked after the business end of the show." "I see." In fact, Joe Barry had Paid little attention. Now with quick fingering, he drew a soft mel- ill "Uncle Dan!" A Red-Faced Man With Gray Hair and a Bulbous Nose Halted Abruptly. ody from the responsive instrument in his grasp. Then again: "Gee, I oughtn't to be fooling around with this; it's too valuable." "I wish Blackie Jordan thought so," said the girl. "ne's the fellow who plays for you?" queried Joe, "You saw the act, did you?" "Yes." Joe was awkwardly silent si-lent The girl smiled. "Well, go ahead and say it You didn't like It?" "Oh, I liked you." "But you didn't like the act? Well," the glrllshness of her bad faded into a youthful maturity. "I know it isn't what it should be. You see. In the beginning, the idea was fine. There was a young Italian on the show then who could play the accordion. So we decided on dressing Lombard! in a Pierrot costume, cos-tume, the same white silk one that Blackie wears now, and shutting off the rest of the show and having hlra sing and play In the center of the ring while I rested between turns. We could do that all right ; the tent is small enough for a voice to reach all parts of It Can you sing?" she asked naively. "Yes. I sing some," Joe Barry confessed. "I used to sing a lot." "I thought you did. I heard you humming when you first started to play." "Was I?" He laughed. "I didn't notice." "I gathered as much. Well, you'd understand what I mean, then. Lombard! Lom-bard! had Intended to put on a straight clown make-up not the funny kind," you know, but Just white, with black diamonds on hli forehead and cheeks. I was to dress as Pierrette, and he would sing to me. But of course," she added as though Joe Barry knew all about it "he was hurt Just a week before we opened, and I don't suppose sup-pose he'll ever be able to troupe again. We'd already spent all this money for the best accordion Uncle Dan could buy, so we thought we'd salvage what we could. Of course Blackie only plays a little and he hates it, so he doesn't help much." "You know, I thought thatl I kind of felt he hurt things," Joe confessed. "You were so so pretty and graceful riding around there and so, oh you know, sort of fresh and sweet looking and everything" every-thing" "Be careful !" Sue Dayton laughed and grasping a guy rope, put her head against her upraised arm. "Well you know. I was Just tell ing you what I was thinking. He didn't seem to take much Interest Then I got to thinking, how pretty that all would be if there were somebody In there who loved to play. This way, Blackie is that his name? is Just there. But it seemed to me that he ought to come In, like he'd followed you, and play as he entered the ring. And you would pose and throw kisses to him from upon the horse. Of course, It was kind of silly, I've never seen anything In a circus like that "Silly?" The girl had touched his arm. "Don't you know that it Isn't silly to think of such things, Just because they've never been done?" Suddenly she whirled, and called : "Uncle Dan !" A red-faced man with gray hair and a bulbous nose halted abruptly In bis swift course from the padroom entrance of the big top. "Well, what is It? What is It, Sue?" he asked. Then he noticed Joe Barry. "Want to see me, young fellow?" "No, but I do," the girl broke In. "We've Just been talking about my act He has the most wonderful idea for It! And I thought maybe the three of us could talk things over maybe " "Looking for a Job?" asked Cncle Dan. "Play that thingamajlgr "Beautifully!" said the girl. "Looking for a Job?" asked Cncle Dan again. tTO B CONTINUED I 60 years have been helped to sturdy childhood on Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. It gives them Vitamin A for growth, and its wealth of Vitamin D and calcium salts are invaluable for correct bone development. Doctors recommend Scott's Emulsion for infants, growing children, expectant moth era and invalids. Fine for adults too. In pleasant flavor makes it easy to take regularly. Scott & Bowce, Eloomficld, N. J. Sales Representatives, IL F. Ritchie & Co., Inc., New York. if L&tw re Seen JTiaiiitfo'a "Htmumtm of tt W iw ftmifav al r l M.MrAUtiimillMJ boa Anotum. A Ui I Iraaimii I ' iif Wi-f4$tty .mPHUp. Wi Open Air Marriages The church marriage ceremony, before the Reformation, was usually usu-ally held at the door of the church and not within the sncred Inclosure Itself. Talleyrand's Idea of Coffee Talleyrand's definition of good coffee was: "It must be pure as an nngel, strong as love, black at the devil and hot as hell." Sex of Smuggler Women make 90 per cent of the attempts to smuggle articles through the United States customs. -Collier's Weekly. Merely Superstition The old superstition that sleeping sleep-ing In the moonlight will cause a person to go Insane has no scientific scien-tific basis. Immunity There's one advantage In being a nonentity the kidnapers will leave you alone. Milwaukee Journal. Jour-nal. Ermine's Protection The ermine, or weasel, wears a brown coat In summer and white In winter to hide It from Its enemies. Moreover Irene Castle McLaughlin, whose home for homeless Chicago dogs recently re-cently burnt down, Is a great lover of animals, and at a luncheon she told an animal story. There was once a colored gentle man," she began, "who had a dog named 'Moreover. "'Queer came, that, for a dog,' a white gentleman said. 'Where did you get the name from, Junius?' "'Moreover am a Biblical name, sab., Junius, the owner of the dog, explained. " 'Yes?' snld the gentleman. 'How so? "'Don't you remember, sab.,' said the colored gentleman, 'whar de good book says: " ""'Moreover, the dog came and licked bis wounds."' " Girl at the Top in Health Tests Millions of boys and girls all over the world, thousands of them right here In the West, are being restored to health and strength by the purely vegetable tonic ton-ic and laxative known as California Fig Syrup and endorsed by physicians for over 60 years. Children need no urging to take It They love its rich, fruity flavor. Nothing can compete with It as a gentle, gen-tle, but certain laxative, and It goes further than this. It gives tone and strength to the stomach and bowels so these organs continue to act normally, nor-mally, of their own accord. It stimulates stimu-lates the appetite, helps digestion. A Kansas mother, Mrs. Dana All-glre, All-glre, 610 Monroe St, Topeka, says; "Bonnie B. is absolutely the picture of health, now, with her ruddy cheeks, bright eyes and plump but graceful little body and she stands at the top In every health test Much of the credit for her perfect condition Is due to California Fig Syrup. We have used It since babyhood baby-hood to keep her bowels active during dur-ing colds or any children's ailments and she has always had an easy time with them. She always responds to Its gentle urging and Is quickly back to normal." Ask your druggist for California Fig Syrup and look for the word "California" on the carton so you'll always get the genuine. From Many Visits "What happened to the boy who nsed to bring you all the flowers?" "He married the girl at the florist's." flor-ist's." London Opinion. If a young man chooses the work he likes, that will keep his feet off the desk. And Shin Health Are Linked Together. Daily use of Cuflcnra Soap thoronglily cleanses tie pores and does much to keep the skin healthy. If there are pimphrs or rashes anoint with Cutienra Cinf menf. Caticora Taleum adds a fragrant touch to the toilet. Soap 25c. Ointment Ec and 50c. TalcumSc. Proprietors: Potter Drtia & Chemical Corp, Maiden, Maae. Try the new of BABIES OlS Porllmd, RmCi aUIU'lftluiaM New Delhi, the capital of India, is a new city near Delhi and patterned pat-terned somewhat after Washing-ton, Washing-ton, D. Q. The old city la now referred re-ferred to as old Delht Cross-Bred Dog Dobermann Plnscker Is a cross between the German shepherd dog and fox terrier (G. Plnscher), named from the first breeder, Dobermann. Do-bermann. Jefferson No Anchorito Thomas Jefferson, for all his simplicity, sim-plicity, loved a good dinner. His wine bill, for his administrations, was something over $10,000. "Pueblos" The Spaniards first called Indian oettlements of the Southwest pueblos, pu-eblos, which is the Spanish word for town or village. Persistent Inventor Galileo, Inventor of the telescope, kept on improving and enlarging until he built one that magnified SO limes. Halfway to North Pola The city of Minneapolis la exactly exact-ly midway between the equator and the North pole. Fish Had His Watch Leonard Smith, of Calcamongn, Calif., went deep-sea flahlng. lie missed his watch and thought perhaps per-haps he had left It home. Smith caught a good-sized bass. An hour later he picked up the fish to clean It and thought he felt Its heart beating, beat-ing, Slitting open the fish he found his watch still ticking away. Because there are ugly things In this world, is no reason why we want to hear about them In every chapter. 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LinUCCTrtfJ CUlUPTlrtHlHMlfn.m.1. W. N. U, Salt Laka City, No. 44-1931. i Result? "I've changed my mind." "Well, does It work any better?" London Tit-Bits. CnUcura Shaving Cream. |