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Show THE MURRAY EAGLE Detective, Then Ccp; Now He Is a Hobo Ohio man who Sandusky, gave his name us Jumps Murphy find who said he whs a former member of the Cincinnati police force was anums a number or wanderers rounded up by police In the "Jungles," hobo handout In a .Sandusky suburb. "(Julie a Hop. from policeman to tramp, wasn't It?" Inspector Schlhley, Chief of the department detective bureau, asked Murphy. "Oh, no," Murphy replied coolly. "You see, I was a detective before I went on the piMtee force." A Air Cell Make Soap Float Any tiimp can be made to float by manufacturliiK It by a process that presses air ductH Into the bar. These ducts nlao speed up carina, permitting the soap to dry outfron, the outside. So small are the ducts that they retain nlr, preventing wa ter from entering. This results In floating. The old method was to beat air Into the snap before It was shaped Into bars. This made the soap porous, since It was filled with minute air cells. Popular Me chanics Magazine. THE LUCKY LAWRENCES By Kathleen Norris Copyright by Kathleen Norrla WNU 8ervlos ThE STORY i CHAPTER I. Tha luck that had brought tha Huston Lawrence! to .California Juat as tha beginning of tha gold rush seems to have desert d tha prexent generation. From a 4.000-acr- s have ranch, (heir shrunk to a small farmholdings and tha old e. home In The family death of their poetic father forced tha tbree eldest children to work ao that Sam and little Ariel continue tbelr education, t'hll.might now twenty-fivhad 'gone from high school to tha Iron works. Gall works In the public library and Edith In the book depurtmont of Ulpperavllle's largest store, besides their financial worries, seventeen-year-ol- d Cllpp-rsvlll- CHAPTER 00 rWMrcnippersvllle to be proud of Lucky Lawrence. A thniH.ind pleasant little episodes, a the summer wore along, told Hall thai she was famous and that her friends and neighbors were glad. The Challenge ran her picture with a llatteritig article. Patrons of the dd library, coining and going In the hot afternoons, smiled at her over the desk top, "Tickled to death to hear we have an authoress!" the women whispered, nodding and smiling, (lull would flush brightly. Joyfully, In return. If Lily telephoned her, and she had to stop In the market, she saw the market or the fruit store or the with new eyes. Their wilted wares, their wearied salesfolks, their anxious bargainers were newly dramatic. When some shabby woman from Thomas Street hill, with a fat. drooling baby on her arm, and another stumbling and whining at her knee, priced the pork chops, priced the chopped beef, looked worried from one to tho other, Oail felt her heart go out on a rush of love and sympathy for all poverty nil motherhood. She dhl not know why. She had letters that acts that way," Lily eralized shrewdly. e In It X from person unknown persons, praising her story when It was published, (lull answered them simply, unable to believe the words that flowed from her fountain pen. She could presently write: "If you liked 'Simply Impossible,' 1 hope you will like 'Post Office Closed Tomorrow.' It Is coming out very soon In some magazine." The great Ha rues Rutherford, HI, Idling In a palace on the Maine tho coast, wrote her. He, sixty-five- , dean of the greatest profession ot all, could Dud time to write to a little Cllppersvllle girl, and tell her he thought "Simply Impossible" wa a good story I Even more touching were the literary folk of Cllppersvllle. It had so many I Wistful, discarded men and women, living In shabby little cottages smothered In dusty vines, suddenly appeared on all sides, and proudly claimed kinship with the writer. Gall accepted their condescension" graciously; she knew that she was not of their Ilk. far-awa- Miss Llbby (Jntty had sold 1 story e gen- e e t In September Lily's daughter was born. Gull carried the newvoiuer down through the big pen house to the kitchen, where she tremblingly wiped ami idled ilie mottled, writhing, weeping Utile scrap of womanhood. "God grant that I don't hurt you. baby!" wild the Second Gall Lawrence to the Third, abuid. The baby did not die under her' ministrations, anyway. She whimpered, as her waving saffron arms were Introduced Into the microscopic shirt, hut when I'hll and Lily's mother came down, hot and anxious, half an hour later, the little Gall was sound asleep In her name- sake's arms. "She's real pretty. I'hll I" said the grandmother, proudly. "Is she?" "Well, she's Jest as elite's she can be. I don't know's Lily's ever had A better lookln' baby. She's got the Lawrence look, all right" "Look at the Lawrence eyebrows. Phil." "Gee. she's sleeping hard," I'hll observed, In a half amused, time. "Lily all right?" "I suppose s!" he muttered dis'My G d !" he said, contentedly. under his breath. He went to sit on the doorslll. his chin In his hands, elbows restThere was the si ing on knees. lence of a dreaming autumn Sunday afternoon In the house thai had been ringing with agony for the last endless hour. Old Mrs. Crowley went through the room with an unsightly bundle of linen. She lingered on her way to the latin dry tubs to smile at the youngest Lawrence. "She looks kinder mad at the way she was treated yes, she does! She says, 'Why did ye yank me round that wuy, and spunk jne good, I when ain't done nothing!'" crooned the toothless old wash woman. "How do. Mis' Wlbser. How's all your folks?" "All real well, thanks. Mis' fire. How's Hazel?" Hollywoodsupposing them Crowley. still to be In that neighborhood-wo- uld "Hazel had a bad spell last Sun only it lame Ariel with a deday 'twas a week ago." "You'd oughter be glad you don't sire for luxury, fame, money. have to have "em!" Mrs. Wlbser It was almost three years now Said to Phil's still bowed and horsince the memorable Christmas day rified back In the doorway. She before Ariel's eighteenth birthday, chuckled. when she and Pick had run away "Look at her sleep the darling," from thera all. Gall had had two Gull murmured. communications from her since; the "I always say that If the men had first was the scribbled note she to have 'em every other time, there'd had left In her deserted bedroom, only be two babies, his and then the note they had all read with hers, and then no more!" old Mrs. such amazement, and consternation; Crowley said with relish. and the second had come a few "Baby?" asked Biff raff, at Gall's months after Edith's death, and had knee, with a solemn upward glance. been postmarked Phoenix. Arizona: "Your baby sister." "Gall, dear, I am so horribly sorry "Mrs. Lawrence." Betty Crooks, about darling Ede. but Gall she was sailing Into the room In all her for- happy. She was too good for this mal nurse's regalia, said authoriworld and only would have had tatively. "Mrs. Lawrence wnnts some trouble and dlsnpixitntmenL I am one to go over to the Wllllamses' for well and so Is Pick, and we are the other children, and she said to coming home soon to tell you all the tell you, Mr. Ijwrence. that she news, so no more now except that feels fine and wants some tea!" I adore you." "Tea!" Phil echoed, outraged. It had been signed simply "Ariel." "Certainly. She feels fine, only and had borne neither date nor adshe's sleepy. And she can have some dress. tea before she goes off to sleep. One day Gall had driven Phil's Say," said Betty, who had been In car, full of small boys, out to the school with Phil and Gall, "you Stanislaus ranch. It was prosperaren't too tired to go up there and ous now, and the money see her a minute?" troubles, preposterous and unexpect"Too tired, no!" Phil said dazedly. ed as the situation seemed, were "But but she doesn't want you over. Phil was doing well, Gall had heard her she feels as If I was had a raise, the oil station paid Its to blame " hundred a month faithfully, and "Oh, for goodness' sake, that wathat money Phil handed over Just at the finish 1" Betty said, to his sister. "You go up and see wholesomely. The remains of the once magnifiher. and tell her I'm bringing up cent Lawrence estate were divided; some tea!" the old house was Phil's, the r Phil, with one w ild glnnce about, hud been surveyed and measfled to the accompaniment of womured and given to Gall, the s en's laughter. property was wholly for Sara "You're going to be lucky." Gall and Ariel. Bent went monthly Into murmured to the child. "The girl the bank In Ariel's maiden name. born that Is on the Sabbath day Sam paid his board to Lily. Is wise and lucky and good and Gall looked at the old ranch wistgay !" fully. She had dreamed once a brief The little warm, pulpy hand held dream of coming there with Dick, tightly, confidingly, to her finger. It of being mistress of these acres of seemed gripped already about her orchard and pasture and wheat heart. There a smell of to the Illnek Cat twenty-fivyears ago; a story that one of the Judged had thought deserved first prize. Miss liOU Bennett had known Edward Townsend, who wrote the Ariel Is becoming mora Chlmmle Fadden stories, when she and more of a problem, and Phil Is had been In New York with her fascinated by 'that terrible" l.lly In 1 81)7, and had met ArchiCasa, whose himtiand has deserted uncle her. She hue three little children. bald Claverlng Ounter. "Oh, my uncle knew everybody 1" CHAPTER I!. Young Van whose family owns a chain said Miss Lou, tossing her withered of flour mills, returns from Yale. Ha and Call had been vary close head, growing splotchy In the face friends before he went away to colat the mere exciting memory. "He lege and Gail now has visions of knew Frank Munsey; he knevr the turning of the luck. Dick Stebblns, Phil's best friend, !" everybody has the run of tha house. Ariel JusThen there were the poets, most tifies her sisters' fear by sneaking out of the house at night for joy of them women. They tremblingly rldea. 8he la almost detected on her return from one of them, but she brought out for Gall's Inspection hoodwinks the family and they think their hoarded clippings, discolored they have suspected her unjustly. strips of newspaper or magazine CHAPTER III. Van has aupprr Mrs. Jadwln, who ran a pages. with the Lawrences, dancing later with Gall at a roadhouse. She feels boarding house down by the flour aha Is making no progresa In gainmills, had once won a ing his affections, and regretfully prize for a poem called concludes she Is not his "type of girl." Phil auKgests. to the girls' "Cloud Voices." consternation, that they Invite 1.1 If "Oh, my dear!" said Cass to supper. Gall and Edith feel Hatty aha la not "respectable." and arc Schenck, who wrote women's club ta a ouandary CHAPTfcK IV. Van asks Gafl to news for the newspapers all over him for a week-en- d at Los the state, and nature poems begin60 withwith tha Chlpps. his unci andaunL Phil and Edith disapprove ning "Hall!" and whose pen name because tha Invitation did not coma was "Lillian Lynne." "Oh, my dear. from Mrs. Chlpps. but On.ll Indulges Is there any moment In the world In a little deceit, which satlsttus them, and goes. She Is received coldlike the one when you know you're ly by Mra. Chlppa and her It, you're la the mood? For, getting Tha second night the house guests. party guests drive alsty miles to Mocker-son- 's you know, I can't always write," roadhouse. where there Is Hatty rushed on. "Sometimes . . ." much drinking. As Gall's Is about to leave, she glancea party There were times when she Just from a window and sees a raccoon-coate- d felt dull and blnnk, as If she'd nevor man helping Ariel Into a roadster. CHAPTER V. Gall hurries home written a line. And then, suddenly, tka neit day and asks Ariel If aha perhaps when she was In the kitchknew of Mockerson's. Ariel admlta en with Mamma , . . ha was at tha place, at night, and "Oh, I know!" Gall would syi displays no remorse. Gall tries to 'hava a serioua talk with her next palhlze, with dancing eyes. day, but Ariel la defiant. Gall Is And all the time, deep within her, gloomy aa she considers tha family's outlook. she knew that she and Hatty were CHAFTEK vi.-G- alt again aocom not alike. She knew that she could panles Van tn Ixs Gatos for a week end visit. She meets his mother, lean down to Hatty, but that Hatty housewho Is very distant and Gall over hears her referring to Van'a going could never reach up to her. It hold oils, of clean new flannels, of made her humble, and sometimes, sweet around "with a Cllppersvllla girl. The baby baby dutiipnes Angry an mortified, Gall find an when It catne to her with a fresh. excuse to hurry back heme. While seemed to wig limply against her the family Is at dinner a policeman pang of realization that only Edith, arm. brings Ariel home, announcing that could have shared all this truly, a child has been killed In an auto"You look like you could sit there mobile accident and that Ariel and that only Edith would have appreholdln" that child. Call!" forever, the driver of another car In a triple ciated It indeed, that she owed emash-upar"I feel as If I never wanted to booked for manslaugh, ter. Ariel, who was with two boy much of It to the let her go, Mrs. Wlbser." companions, both admittedly under truth loving little sister-s- he tha Influence of liquor, was driving "They won't do that with every felt a deeper sorrow even than the csr at tha time of the accident, one," Mrs. Wlbser said "lay so the younger sorrow had been. although aha had ao license. I'll bet good! quiet, and act CHAPTER VII. Dick Btebblna. "I can kinder tell by your eyes you're goln' to think a sight of that who has been admitted to tha bar, defends Ariel, and has tha case when you're thinking of your sisbaby." against her dlmlssed, but she has ter." Uly said once. "I'll bet I am," Gall said avrlotisly. to testify at (he trial of the other "Edlthr driver, named Miller. Miller la con "Well," said the old woman to vlrted. Gall suddenly realises that "Well, I was thinking of Ariel, her granddaughter, "you're started she loves D rk, whom she has then." known all her hfe. and not Van. on a hard Journey, young lady! "Ariel . 8tebtilna and Ariel elope, according , Gall always spoke Some day." she added to Gall, "some to a note left by (he girl. Gsll Is the name on a long sigh. "She day she'll be teltln" folks, 'Why. stunned. bu( ly (he summer of the yes. she couldn't wait." she would third year afier tha elopement her I was horn In a place called Cllpold placid life has been resumed. muse aloud sorrowfully, "tvosn't Ain't that CHATTER VIM. When Gall and persvllle. California.' It seem funny. Lily, for a person Edith rrturn from a vacation, Phil funny?" announces that he and Lily, now to go awny Just as If she had died life Is Just a succession idowed, had been married and that and never to write never to of "Maybe his wife and her three rhlldren Gall thought. births," e would make send any wordT eir home In the "If they take The Bella of Saint hone. Gall has Jut about re"She may have a houseful of kldi Olles,' " she mused. "I'll covered from this shock when her go to New slater KdHh la fatally Injured In aa by now," Lily, whose mind rather York for a visit." which little one accl1on( for t'anny, dwelt upon this subject, might sag. of t.llv'a rhlldren, la Innocently reA little laugh broke over tht new sponsible. rest. head. Gall's novel w 11 barebaby's IX. After Edlth'a CHAPTER "Even If she had death Gail passes through a period ly begun; she did not know that of heartbreaking grief. Months after, "Ild you like Itlchnrd Stebblns, It would ever be a novel. But still aha rethough still tar from well, Gall?" she thought: "If they really do take luctantly rgrvrs to go on an outThis seems A a,u!ck twist at hor heart. ing with (he family. A The Bells of SL Giles,' I'll go to to be (he turning point: always a New York." great reader, she begins to writs quick incnmry of a man's ugly, flue and i.er (tret story Is accepted by face and slow smile. t!ut Gall's She loved to hold the baby at the editor of a leading magatite. this time of the day, snd when Lily The colossal Munhisnn fortune la voice would come quietly enough. swept away, and Van tacea the "Oh, ery much. was downstairs again and autumn world almost pennllesa. As be has "Even IT I could account for was deepening, darkening Into win-teaa a typlral long been rewarded Ariel. I couldn't account for hltn," specimen of the worthless "glided five o'clock often found Gall, ..u h" of the day, there Is little she ald once. with her little namesake In her sympathy evinced for him In Clip persvills social clrcisa. "Every family has some member arms, rocking, gossiping In the old e e, Mur-ehlso- n, twenty-flve-dolla- r kitchen, while Lily bustled h,,f and the little the dinner-yetting- , on fresh-cuthemselves stuffed boys bread and peanut butter at the table. ' The days grew shorer; It home now' came Gall when dark from the library at five o'clock. As she Hat cuddling the baby she could see the oak branches tossing In the dusk of the yard and the leaves scurrying down. The snap of the wood In the old French range and the smell of toast and tea were very of grateful now; there was a sense It. about hnmcness of cozlnes, At this hour she would often fall to dreaming. It was an hour In which to remember Edith, talklnj eagerly of poetry, of drama, of Utopias and philanthropy, as she buttered pudding dishes and peeled apples an hour that brought back Ariel, spoiled, petulant, beautiful, always to be excused and adored willful Ariel, by her sisters. and discontented, scolding, raging, threatening, and presently to be whisked. limping and pitiful, upstairs to be comforted and sponged and soothed to sleep. Above all. In the winter twilights, with the soft lump of babyhood tliiit was another Gall Lawrence In her arms Gull dreamed of Pick and of the brief moment of romance that had somehow seemed to give her true values In life. She had been , playing, playing Idly and superil-dailywith Van Murchlson, and she had awakened tn the full realization of what her heart needed, what her heart could give. Just a moment too late. It had been Ariel, all the time, for big. sober, quiet Pick. He had never seen Gal); nhe had never tried to help Mm find her. But she knew In her heart, that she could have given him a thousand times what Ariel could give. Ariel must be changed Indeed If she had become a helpful, tender mate Her restfor a struggling lawyer. lessness, her haughty discontent, would not be cured by anything that Dick could provide for her. Ariel's Ideal was not one of home making, of quiet and domesticity beside a - . e poem-loving- book-lovin- g, law-renc- r r, cor-ne- Stan-Islau- But Gail was barely conhad. their existence. She was of scious when she only vaguely regretful or to had disappoint them. hurt It Just did not seem to mean anything, marrying anyone else than Pick, and until It did, Gail would not consider It. But sometimes she did consider r lie situation the strangeness should Pick anil Ariel come back to They would never Cllppersvllle. was know that this brofher-ln-lashrined deep In Call's heart. They reed never know. But It would be hard--- It would be hard to gee him. to have him kiss her In fraternal fashion, to hear Ariel complaining of his treatment of his new clothes and of the care of his children! Once, after Edith's death. Gall had written a simple, friendly letter to Pick's mother, trusting the post olllce to forward It to her In Oregon, where she lived now with a Did Mrs. Stebwidowed daughter. blns know Just where Pick wa now? Gail had asked. She, Gall, had a book that he had wanted -and so on and so on. And Mrs. Stehbins had answered In a painful hand, on ruled paper that Pick was Just about the wors letter writer that ever was; he hail been some In L. A. and after that up to Las Vegas, and la.t she heard he was In Phoenix for three weeks, but he was coming home, according to what he wrote, and Just ns soon as he did .Mrs. Stebblns would see he wrote Gall. Seemed like he had lost sight of his old friends. There was no mention of Ariel or Pick's marriage In either letter. Gall had not dared risk the secret, and either Mrs. Stebblns had been equally cautious, or Pick had not taken his mother Into his confidence. Gall suspected, as the months wore along, that there was but one adequate explanation of Pick's and Ariel's silence. They were not happy; the Impulsive marriage that had found her so young had proved n mistake. They were quarreling, perhaps already separated. The secret would remain always a secret no one would ever know. And perhaps Ariel would come home some day, bitter and disillusioned, and take her old unhappy place In Cllppersvllle society. "Poor Ariel, poor Pick, poor all of us!" Gall would think. "It's hard to clasp air and kiss the wind forever! I can be a writer, I suppose. I certainly mean to make myself one. If work and trying will do It. But It would have been wonderful-wonde- rful, to be a wife!" DIRECTORY, BUSINESS-PROFE- s WHF.RE TQ TRADE IN SALT I.Avr o RHA' & MEIR FURNACE t til ..... C , Katies and AGENCY PARTS Venetian makes on all Service ISIinds- Expert Engineering 25 cost fuel reduce your wll of furnaces At lower nrl,.0. to 35 per cent. Uu'oukIi our method of window shades ind Air cuiiditlouliig and general Install!"!!Pert workwan-hf- t I cull i'lcune work, sheet metal estimates us t fui MORRIS C. JOHNSON Was. 1189 850 South Stale XI rainy October afternoon and the three older children were delayed at her mother's house down ou Thomas Street hill, the shabby cabin light hearted Gall and Edith and Ariel Lawrence had once so despised, and Gall found herself writing alone In the big house with the tiny Gall. Sain traveled up and down the coast now, doing press agent work for a string of vaudeville theaters, and was as often tn Portland or In Angeles as at home In Cllppers- ONE Is vllle. us: 33-3- E. 6 7 keep clean" 2485 lly. 2484, So.--Hy. i-'- l: .Ir""" THE AMERICAN LINEN SUFfLY CO. tleavy Hauling n i.i i i v.uM.,ui,e . 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Mate Broadway any WJ Market-Qua- lity Manufacturers of Setup and folding boaes, Corrugated Shipping Cases. PAPER WESTERN PRODUCTS CO. day at our Ket, delicatessen, iMBs: ,iM.to: I jMoien I. Your shopping plete until you have ig ,f visits) MARKH ;M'BS r (HIP CO.MP.VM WALT WILLIAMS USED H 47 Ii Kensington Ave. FURNITURE STORE 556 South State lly. 5iZ"t Typewriters Vacuum (leaner Repairs All makes. Late niolflsret' MASTER ELECTRIC SHOP 433 East 3rd So. lly. 8100 A 1 SO.OO. 1 month $2.50.3:' There Is nsthlng more complete ss a food Utan 81TEKIOII DAIRY MILK. Ucie riecr.-sar- y. ss you get all the protein well as the five vitamins that help klildlea ; grow that create energy and rmlsunre to disease. Insist on SL'l'KlUOK dairy milk. 1856 Tlw SITERI0R DAIRY South State lly. 3280 Klcctrical Appliances Have iMBs IMBS hiMBs ilM'BS MBS Mill. .JMW. -tn MB? IMBS jMuui iMtto IMBs !MBS IMBS Initial rent spplM; Adding machines. mtors. check writers, k: aud rciMtirs. Tut rw chase. SALT LAKE k .iHTl M'M SMB.- - ili U TYPEWRH COMPANY EXPERT MOTOR REPAIRS AN 333 South Main IGNITION WORK 1 WHS. ilM'BS Wu. Full line of gas aud coal ranges Saratoga Chip- sHigh chair, new, $1.75. Kitchen Forest Dale Chips are ir chairs 50c, Coal Kuuge $7, Dresser but never equaled alwaj! All kinds of other useful $3.U0. qualit; and crisp. articles. We buy, sell aud repair. gist on Forest Dale Cbipi We try to beat everybody's price THK FORF.ST DALE SARA J iu used furniture and atoves. the home, s-- pastry uc stand. BROADWAY Have your vacuum cleaner working at the peak of efficiency lor your spruit g. l'arts and aervlcs for each and every make ot vacuum or washing Bischlus made. Wrlnjer rolls (or every make ot vtssher. Guaranteed workiuan-slU- jM:i!: id 41 Kast Broadway Stove and Furniture Store : -- r.yn ,jMis: OOMFAN L lis 4i I. t amount AND l(M.B-'- : meivhamlise In ill dt'partnit'iits. Every day ii i Paper Products : lii ;l large size crib compkC mattress, crib blank" beautiful Baby Book';' 3592 i iWJUl) Serve Grain,, heat Cereal fot fast. 96: Oiler This ad Special I pouucl and 4 Uc euUtk-- bearer to one clilli for seasouiug specially prepared Wo are tho leadiug spice Impowder. Instore our aud Visit I. In tab. porters spect our merchandise. 162 energy. v note t w.: Contractors, equipment and heavy 5C4 Southi. ri toi 'machinery hauling our specialty. siect them. State Locul und long distance hauling Cereal Products of all kinds. For that School TRANSFER Tonight Gall half expected him, Crt the most out of your machine by and half expected that when Phil having your motor work at the peak of ctrlcleucy. Carbon removed, valves dlsiivered his family's absence he ground and sdjusted, ptsUio rings replacwould drive at once to the Wlbser ed, new gasket installed. Let us cliecK your electrical system before It falls you house ami bring them all back. oo Ihs road tsr from aid. Our work Meanwhile, In a rainy twilight that guaranteed aud priced reasonable. made the lights and shadows of the POWER AUTO SERVICE old kitchen more than usually pleas1095 South State Hyland 3460 ant, she fussed away contentedly with preparations for her own sup- LUMBER per tray, for although the clock Building Material of all kinds. We said only half-pas- t five, this was a can elp you finance your Buildspecial night at the library, and she ing program. had to go back for a directors' McFARLAND LUMBER CO. meeting. 2220 So. Slate lly. 1303 Suddenly she heard a motor car on the old side drive, and heurd NAT IKE'S DRINK fields. I Alt kinds of Linen and Uniat reasonable forms furnished L'tau Industry a Patrouiiu.' prices. to keep your fellow uiau at work. to or." .td tr SujK-rio- CHAPTER r J. 151 VL.r1-- -: 541 So. West Tempi: Linen Supplies -- - "It pays fBS: -- MB) JMB; PATRIOTIC COSTUMES H HOLIDAY NOVELTIES Costumes of General ton, Goddess of Liberty, t ental and British soioien 49'er costumes, false whiskers, suits and boc2 kinds of Haliday novelties noisemakers. Call in and larce assortment. SALT LAKE COSTIME .JMu 216 So. Main NMB W- .1Mb: -- Ti :JMit: IIM'Bi MB: 1Mb, 1Mb Mb svn .JMy iMfa, an, 'Mb M Old Cold Wanted TSirn vniir niil IB: Th ''Ml Jewelry. i.H.U'esL old att! 'IMl '(Ml HlC, old Into cash today. mid. Trade your on a new one. -- Mi b. Ml KKF.I) ( KI SKR SouUl 61 Fast lt Abstracts a ft P abstracts, tin Whv sihmi.I valmiMe Have l moment opportune i.lwlriict nvulliil'le. GihmI :M 'M! H It u you a convenient outlet for that They would have been hnppy new floor lamp and other electrical appliance there, living In the moon faced old Let us give you mtlmstrs on THOMAS HOMER pities, etc, Wa carry a couiplcte Una uf farmhouse, under the great towerelectrical appliances. 101 So. Male ing oaks and eucalyptus trees, sur'JM WOLTERS ELECTRIC CO. it. rounded by a tangle of sheds and Vw-t- i... l MoinC .38 South Slate Was. 670 Overl.-uxIB fences, corrals and pastures, barns it.,..! wrvlce snd fowl runs. They would have country mountain C Lenin Best on Mountain Pa ale had children, would have driven lW ' 1M household K"hI One of the hlKlreRt monuments In Into town In the old car. stopped f Iton-lcit ml M the world, a bunt of Inln. Is locatfor mall, for feed, for needles snd nui. iisf or ' ed on -- .: S. rv if i.i . egg beaters and Ink at the five peak In the Pamir range. It was carried to the heluht of 7.12(1 t tl.Hit'"7 Pick would have had cases Fireproof meters by a group of Soviet inoun In the big courthouse In the mnmr.. IIIIIII ,,; ahady : .v a wrnR.V'' tain climbers. I square, where geared little Ariel lOVwl tir.l had been summoned years ago, and Gall would have gone Into the liTwo Polica Forcaa In London brary to ask the girl at the desk London hn two police forces, the for the new novels. City police and the Metropolitan 'Ii-And on Sundays they would have police. The former cover onlv the Phil and l.lly to ask telephoned I "Oh, My Darling My Darling!" small area of old London, or "the what the chances were of a picnic while the hitter rover the my." op at the old dam. It was going to the enclne stop Bnd a car door mure metropolitan dlatrlct be hot today, and the children slam. Then there were footsteps, would love to get near to the wa- on the M.r h. and the handle of the Siam's Temples ter. Gail had cold chicken and kitchen dix.r turned. A c..nd later Of the HtnMhlst X tomatoes. If Lily would stop for as Gail turned an Inquiring glance temples of Slam nlch are usually 10 that and said way e cake somewhere, aloud, jrtmrded by , "phll?" tha .ssMT Images of Rlnntu, expected "I might have had a boy and a d..r swung open, and the dimly to scare off the Kvll One. the tnoat girl by this time. But certainly I lighted aperture framed a woman's outstanding a the Emerald Huddha wouldn't have had time for any alefider figure. In the I A young wonmn In a royal palace enclosure, furred coat writing. There's tlmt to think about! tieneral ItiMirmire (OIIIP . . Pick, I'd give tip the chance spattered llghlly with rain, with a of America Cloth From Asbestos of writing another Iliad to have had small hat drawn down over drifting 50"'.. S.W1M Although, hair. flyaway golden ashest,,. u , mlnpra, Ariel. you love me. to have been Mr. Dick loin Ihcii cavim.' I'f"!lh'lr ... mined Gail simul, stricken from the earth Stebblns these three years." and on I h "- - .if will not .tlonlesg a burn, rust for moment. or Then Ariel came, Gall was twenty seven now, and dlalnto,rrnte, t Cfln Minima 'V" V, woven Into cloth i the birthdays were coming faster with a bird's flight, across the kitch. weighing mil i,i - i ,. N possiliK tin" Thin snd faster, Men had wanted her, en and flung her arms tiddly about "be pound to the arpinre yard. . . i .... , r i,im .esTli WliTllon-- i "i some of them fine men, men who Gall. fVt . n. flh . comi-- ".' . .... ... n mutual Miiir could have glen her at least the my (inriingr Napoleon'a Homo Slsnds ."- Oail whispered, "You're back!" hlKhcKt rai-position Dick's wife would hare St. Helena, it 111 , lend nil ,'" (S preaervltiR the N"Io1eon at Long-wooJ"" It (HAS. S.WOOlWAK.M (Cvntluued Next Week) n,l,e from the African coast. 413 Vermont IluiUIn 1 II :. ami-ten- ' ., WW, gro-triqu- lt-;- c irtf'J .,.fii i.. ' --- DO |