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Show THE HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 15, 1922. i: THE DAILY HERALD 'II Published by The Herald Company. EVERY WEEK-DAAFTERNOON EXCEPT SATURDAY. ll M THE DAILY HERALD'S WOMAN'S PAGE ; i m Chats With Entered as second clasi mail matter June 6, 1911, at tbe postoffice, Provo, I'tah. under the Aft of March 3, IS?!. Term of Subscription: Delivered by carrier, 20 rent a month; by mall In l'th county, $.'! a year; outside the county, $:.r,0 a year. CIRCULATION. both hand to her bosom and crying out In a thrilling volcaj "Egbertf Mr. Laughlin kept hit temper under Um sting ot tbia epV could thet; all the aanae, anyone he dJBp't fancy It a bit However, nrst and always ths gentleman, ha bi Your Gas Man OVER 2200 IBf While other merchants question that is being raised more and more frea mar is whether retail firms for may not care what you quently by credk managers do with an article after p he 1 account. wife should be notified when his opens a charge !! buy it whether you you replies to this question indictae that there is no criterion as it to a wasteful use put to what constitutes good business practice in this regard. I or not we are greatly n member of the Asso However, according to a interested. We want you A CKtt well-know- to get the most for your ciated Retail Credit Men of New York City, Inc., there are money out of the gas you several reasons why the husband should be notified. use. We want you to "In the first place," said the credit manager in question, make your gas bills "good business demands it. Secondly, the husband is en thrift bills. titled to it, not only as courtesy, but as a right. Further than this, notification really works to the advantage of both the The reason we desire store and the customer in the long run. this is because we know "The husband is entitled to notification as a courtesy. from business experience that waste of gas means His wife having opened an account, the store is presumably I big bills, complaints, in a convenient journey from their residence, and therefore vestigations, should be a convenient place for him also to make purchases, letteH writing, delayed with a resultant profit to the store. He is entitled to it as payments and other exa right, since, except in the few cases where the wife has inwhich, when penses, mean distaken resources the husband's or are together, dependent means, earnings satisfied customers. those from which the store's bills must be paid. Therefore, if the store expects him to pay the bills, he is entitled to a customers Satisfied notice that an account has Deen opened on the strength of his to us worth more are . credit. derived revenue than any "When a man requests that an account be closed, the from wasted gas. We store does not question his right to close it and will not atwant no money we do not earn. tempt to continue charging the wife, except on her own financial resources. , If, therefore, the husband has the right to close the account he should certainly first be made aware We live up to this of its existence. A few of the policy every day and are advanced women take glad to aid you in choosexception to this, on their theory of equality, but it should be the most economical ing remembered that the man is more often the producer and gas appliances "and tell that the law compels him to pay his wife's debts. It does not, how to avoid waste you however, compel her to pay his debts. by using them "In a recent case, a woman applied for credit and questioned the justice of having purchases withheld until the store received the approval of her husband, a major in the United States army. She claimed to have an earning capacUTAH VALLEY GAS ity as a writer and professed to feel humiliated on being considered dependent upon her husband. It was pointed out that her earning capacity was merely a vocation that she had & COKE COMPANY the privilege of discontinuing at any time, in which case she would be dependent on her husband's earnings. It was further shown that he was responsible for her purchases but that, as she was not responsible for his, there was no obligation on her part to continue earning. As a matter of fact, the major did not approve the account, and subsequent events proved it a bad risk for the store which opened it. "About 12 per cent of the present marriages in the United States terminate in the divorce courts, which percentage is considerably increased by eliminating a considerable section of the population whose religious beliefs will not countenance divorce and a large number too poor to assume the expense L.EHI of litigation. The percentage has been increasing steadily Mrs. Earl Condor and children of for the last fifty years, and shows no signs of diminishing. Provo are tbe guests of Mr. and "Prior to legal proceedings of this nature being brought, Mrs. William the husband is none too well pleased to pay bills incurred by C. D. Pox ofRolfe, Salt Lake was the his wife, and many losses are sustained through the hus- Sunday guest of his parents, Mr. band's successful denial of his ability for purchases so made, and Mrs. Robert Fox. Woodhouse of either by showing them as extravagant purchases and not (Mrs. Morgan is visiting her parents, Idaho, necessaries, or by denying the wife's right to pledge his Mr. and IMrs. Robert Gilchrist credit and proving that she received an adequate allowance Mr. and Mrs. Christian Hanson and children of Garfield visited Mr. from him. Klrfcham, Sunday. "The most satisfactory method of notification appears to andMr.Mrs.andHyrurn Mr. Harold Goodwin account as if are the guests of Bishop and Mrs. be to inform the husband of the opening of the it were a regular routine matter, sending a signature card, if S. I. Goodwin. customary, and mailing it to his office when there is any reason to doubt his consent." Stage, as the layman understands that term, there was none; but the floor space as a whole was rather elaborately cluttered with what Lu clnda wag to learn were technically known as "sets," In various stages of completion and demolition; a set being anything et up to be photographed, from a single "side" or "flat" with a simple window or door, or an "angle" formed of two such Ides joined to show the corner of"a room, up to the solid and pretentious piece of construction which occupied of the left and reprofully duced the Palm Room at the one-hal- An the sands of people have done it, and are doing it every day. it by doing over They do their furniture with Vernicol varnish stain. old Vernicol comes in a can. Is quickly and easily applied with a brush. Made in all the popular finishes, one of which is sure to meet your fancy. It stains and varnishes with each stroke of the brush. Makes old discarded furniture look like new. Anybody can do it No matter whether you prefer mahogany, walnut or oak, there is a Vernicol stain for each. And because it has such PLEASANT fine for floors. Phone it.-v j. iff fc vv J" ? 'I. ' - sV 7 r. M 1 w v 1 tained the V(n;g Mothers' her home. 5:1. -.i r .1 Ti-- ft J1 WtttlrX yfHt' . 'Mi ' Amee Walker. iMi s Hhcl Slioeil S. and R. c'tib at V'-- entertained the her home Wed- nesday evening. Norman Radmall returned Tues- day from San Antonio, Texas, after c'.ut) at V t- Mi-- Read and Use wan t Ads M P.i a;-.- 'ri. l; KI jj.hI n New-n- I a v ' tt p'ft f"t' (Vah il!. to u'ith .Mr. .niii Mis. l'taT.i, Nium.a t r nt I. 1 Mrs. in S.iit iike with r!;i lives. Mrs. li. W. Tanner and son. Karl Deon, of Ogden, visited ut the h im of Mrs. Tanner's fattier, Joseph !.'!; J BOSS. HOVM joy of new U4ii.Lt the r' coated peppermint tid 1? WOULD iikf rnrAit it 0 we rappers Good for valuable premiums Pay Cash and Save Money We are doing business on we Att-r.ii- are passing on to you the savings. Tell Us Your Paint Trouble. Get Expert Advice Ft Practical Painters. Prompt Delievries. laikiPant Qm Co, rg - gpeatscott: havengot the Tickets i -J -- CHANGED MORNING --- .11-- 11 '. !'.:.-to- Mrs. Hayes, Mrs. Swenson and Mrs. Hose 11. S L. llny.-- t IMOM- f' a. only, ON ALL PAPER, PAINTS, VARNISHES, AUK TINE AND PAINTERS' SUNDRIES. n I Voy A BOX SEATS FOR THE BAllSAME ! -- a cash basis 10 PBI an DO SCOUT pat-ter- pchoul at Kosharem. t'ath, during the winter, is home for the summer SPANISH FORK SOCIETY vacation. Miss Jones, who has been Mr. Effie Dart entertained the teachingDcra school at Aurora has reofficers of Sego Lily camp, R. N. turned home for the summer vacaof A., Thursday evening. The time tion. was spent in a social way enjoying Mrs. Andrew Halvorsen of Maple-torimes and .music until 11 o'clock, entertained at a chicken dinner when a buffet luncheon was served Tue-daevening in honor of her 'Mrs. Charles Dart. Margaret Dart Rcrd Halvorsen, nephew. who and Berniece Jensen assisted the loaves 13 for a mission to New May hostess. ft.-the L. D. S. church Mis Su an Johnson, who ha! from Suar.:,-- a Fcrk wer been teaching school during the Mr. and Mr. Thomas Huvorsen winter at Price, I'tah. will leave "! fsmi'y. Mr. and Mrs. James Surday for Berkeley, Calif., to nt- Halvorsen and family, Mrs. Mary tend the commencement exercises Peterson and son Roy. of Berkeley college, were her Mother's day was" observed in sister. Miss Dorothy Johnson, is re- th ward of Spanish Fork l.er degree. ceiving Jp ernay witn appropriate exer- AM:- - Aln Rcc,'hill. who taug'it cises. I'VE GOT TWO I r-- n 1 272 West Center. Phone l Open 7 :30 A. M. DUFFS -- DAV? miss the Dont aaiSkSAi win n tt judg-men- d went to Pruov to attend a lecture given by Mrs. Jensen. Mrs. A. K. Thornton and Mrs. Nettie Walker were American Fork visitors on Wednesday. Mrs. Harold Walker entertained at dinner Monday evening, the oc casian being her birthday anniversary. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. J. I,. Harvey, Mr. and Mr-L. P. Harvey, Fra Walker and benefit e crown-down- j Combines pleasure t Sir Tight- - we'll MY THI5 ? AND FORGOT .J I I COME 01 HELtN. WHERF IS THAT HAD ON YESTERDAY ? Tom! ( ' 1 A "' - '.'J H V. j AMD WE CAN STOP "t HOUSE. BOSS WE GO) mg STRAIGHT Tcf THE forthem or ARE r-- 5UIT fJ I MAKE IT ALL PIG HT S-J- IT TOTAKTHEMOUT! w. - WANT TO GET SOMETHING VJt w . wr , w ir" KT 5EUT IT'S I t "-- On J SSX ) 1 THE !t; lloldaw.-- 1 OtWgtl 9A&Ai GROVE 'nrill ;i: d Hen Ruby Sunt' Mtvr.iin-,- a' .1 mutts' v nins; at t'i. .:i'"y on T,', si iv f M!ss smttu in honor tf V.,-- - i Hii ClitlMMv'ftt tif l.iaii :!. rSrWAii Art pervad- spending three years there in th? air service. A daughter arrived at the home 9 of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Richards and Saturdav of last week. J. Hayes. MKs Anna Rasmussen of Ameri-an Fork spent Tuesday in this .iiy with Mr. and V.is. Ernest Rasmussen. Mis. Burton H. Adams enter.Mis-,-- i apathy .1. interesting literature. West Center. of living-room- v in and see the sample panels and ask for Come Provo Paint & Glass Cc. 110 atmosphere and aids appetite and dig Cleanses mouth and tt A great boon to smf relieving not, ary mouth. . ed the place, as if nothing of moment was happening or expected to An effect to which happen. SHE CAUGHT HOLD OF THE contribution was made by the lugubrious strains of a three-piec- EDGE OF THE TABLE AND orchestra, piano, violin, and PULLED HERSELF UP. 'cello, stationed to one side of the lj to the woman; "Now. Alma, living-rooRet. dear , . ." This tr'o intrigued Lucinda's InMiss Daley, herself not unconterest. Its prifcence seemed unacscious of a fashionable gallery, not more so but :han its countable, rendition of plaintive melodies, tunes shrugged slightly to signify that she which one more familiar with the didn't mind if Mr. Laughlin thought it really worth while, and made a cant of the theater would unhesitatleisurely exit from the set. At the ingly have classified as "sob stuff." same time, Mr. Laughlin walked off Guided by Mr. Lane, the exotics by a door approximately opposite, gingerly picked their way across the and the young man In the mcrning-coa- t coils of electric cable that ran in strolled down to the front of the confusion all over the floor, snaky like exposed viscera of the cinema; set and settled himself to observe and Lucinda presently found herself and absorb the impending lesson. Mr. Laughlin then , on the side lines of the in between It and the dogged orchestra, character as a degage gentleman and well out of range of the camera. with an uneasy conscience. IndicatShe could now see three people on ing this last by stealthily opening the set, two men with a girl whom, and peering round the edge of the thanks to the wide circulation of the door before coming In and closing it lady's photographs, she had no diff- with caution, and his gentility by iculty in identifying as Alma Daley holding hat and stick In one hand herself a prepossessing young per- and carelessly trailing. the ferrule of son with bobbed hair, a boldly fea- the stick behind him. Relieved to find tured face, comely in the flesh rather the room untenanted, he moved up than pretty, and a slight little body to the. table, placed. the hat on it th. stick which she used with a rather fetchpropped against it. turned and gave the door ing effect of youthful gaucherie. in the right-hanwall a hard look, Of these one was tall and dark, then bent over the table and pulled with a thick shock of wavy black out and began to ransack one of its hair, a wide and mobile mouth, and drawers. Thus engaged, he said great, melancholy eyes. His clearly: "All right. Alma!" and Im morning coat displayed to mediately gave a start, whereby it admiration a splendid torso. The appeared that he had heard footother was a smaller, indeed an falls off, and slammed the drawer. undersized man, who wore a braided At this Miss Daley entered, 4 listless emoking-jacke- t but no pain, on his little figure so preoccupied with fuco of an secret woe, that she pinched, weatherworn quite failed at actor. first to see Mr. Laughlin, and when "King Laughtin," Mr. Culp's secre she did, gave a start even more vio tary informed Lucinda "man in the i lent than his had been, clasping Mr. and .Mrs. Robert Hell Mrs. David Spillsbury and daughter, l.olene, of Salt Lake spent Snn-da- DOINGS OF THE here as guests of Mr. and Mrs. ss it's f e Mrs. Ralph De Camp of Garfield Mr. and is visiting her parents, 'Mrs. Charles Linclstrutn, and other new, but TRADE it for old. Thou- e room. SANTAQUIN Hol-';ul;i- lng-Jack- At the far end of the room a substantial set represented a living-rooa good part of it was masked from Lucinda's view by a number of massive but portable metal screens or stands arranged In two converging ranks, at whose apex stood a heavy tripod supporting a small black box. To these stands lines of Insulated cable wandered over the floor from every quarter of the Bur-le- Furniture for New , he always wears one when he's working greatest emotional director in the business, nobody "can touch him. Why, alongside him, Griffith's a Joke in a back number of Judge. You wouldnt guess hundred." what he gets: thirty-fiv"That's almost a thousand a week, isn't It?" "Thousand a week!" In accents of corrected: he ome. compassion "Three thousand five hundred every week's what King Laughlin drags down in the little old pay envelope. But that's Mr. Culp all over; expense's no object when he's making an Alma Daley picture, nothing'! too good." "I'm sure . . ." Lucinda agreed vaguely. Out of the corner of an eye the director had become aware of a new audience and one worthy of his mettle. Dropping the easy, manner, Mr. King Laughlin snatched a silk hat and stijk from the other's unresisting hands. "Right-O- , Tommy!" he said in the nasal voice of the English Midlands. "Just to make sure I'll walk through It with Alma." He turned gracious- smoklng-jacket- Ritz-Carlto- i Trade Your Old JoMjkYuo. husband, Society NU-o-- Li HARRY, the film studio of the famous screen star, ALMA DALEY. Fanny explains that a moving Harry hopes to Inform California. On picture company the trip to the studio In Ninth Avenue, Lucinda muses over the break with her husband, BELLAMY. Wealth, youth, beauty, had failed to bring happiness to their Fifth Avenue home after five years of married life. Heavy drinking and an Insatiable appe tite lor paomiscuous nirianon had been the means by which he her early love for him. destroyed And now KI CHARD DAUB EN BY, her old sweetheart, had returned to New York. The trip to the studio would give her a chance to forget GO ON WITH THE STORX so-call- ed relatives. Mrs. Reuben Peterson of Cali fornia, formerly Miss Stella Wilson of Payson, spent last week-enhere with relatives. After two weeks' stay here with relatives, Mrs. Don Wadsworth and little son have returned to their home in Salt Lake. ,Mrs. Orris Jennan of Eureka sKnt Sunday here with her sister. Mrs. Anna Openshaw, and brother, Charles Higginson. After spending a month in Salt ! Lake with her daughters, Mrs. line Ilorgensen has returned to her home in Santnquin. Mr. and Mrs. Cloyd Halloday left Sunday by auto for their home in Poca tello, after visiting a week here wiih relatives. Mrs. N. S. accompanied them. Mrs. I.miiy Brown o: Sandy and Miss Rhoda Borgensen of Salt Lake came to attend the Olsen reunion '11st Monday. They were guests of their mother, Mrs. N. Borgensen. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Openshaw and Mrs. Ohristena Crooks were Provo visitors last week. t BEGIN IIEHE TODAY To forsret the bitter trouble of her domestic life, LUCJNDA URUCE accepts the Invitation of her friend, m FANIS" LONTAINE, a school girl chum, to visit with her English j 1210? offered Miss Daley a niAgnanlmoua hanSs. .In gesture of outstretched face brightstantly the poor girl' ened with a Joyous mile, a happy lipi a aha cry trembled upon .herenfolded her, ran to hi arms. He with a fond hand ground her features Into the shoulder of his amok and turned his own toward tbe camera, working them Into a cast of bitter anguian. rescuing herself. MUw Gsntly and Daley discovered Egbert's hat tick, turned to him and looked him up and down with damning horror( audibly protesting: "But, Egbert! you are going out!" He attempted a disclaimer, but the evidence of tho wa top hat and the smoking-Jacke- t too damning; and in the end he had to give in and admit that, well, ys, he was going out, and what of it. Evidently Miss Daley knew isny number of reasons why he ought ta stay in, but she made the grave im take of trying to hold him with aTe tion's bonds, throwing herself up his neck and winding her arm tightly round it. And that was t much: Egbert made it clear thai while he'd stand for a lot from a man to whom he was Everything there was such a thing as piling on too thick. And, against her fren zied resistance, he grasped her fra.". young wrists, brutally broke her embrace, and flung her from him. St. fell against the table, threw bacl. her head to show the pretty lines o; her throat, clutched convulsively a1 and subsided upon her collar-bone- , the floor in a fit of heartbroicen sobbing; while Egbert callously took hl hat, clapped it on his head, an..' marched out by a door In the real wall, his dignity but slightly impaired by the fact that the tun wai several sizes too large and wouU have extinguished him comp etely W it hadn't been for his noble ears Mr. Without Lau;thl pause doubled round to the front of the skl, threw the waiting actor a hrusnu "See, Tommy? Get what I mean';' and encouraged Miss Daley "That's wonderful. Alrna, dear go on, right through i.he scene " Miss Daley, lying in complete collapse, with her head to the cani"r;i, writhed up on an elbow, planted her hands upon the floor and by itn strength pushed her heaving shot,.-dur- s away from it. keepina a tortured face turned to the rami ra Then she got ner tc-onthroughout. wind, caught hold of tne ec's.-of the table, pulled herself up looked round wildly, realized that she was a deserted woman, saw her hat b Tappe hanging on t!ie back of a mor ris chair by Ludwig Baumann seized it, rushed to the door by "vhich Egbert had escaped and threw herself out in pursuit. Mr. Laughlin clapped gleeful hands, "Pine. Alma, wonderful! Tou're simply marvelous today, dear Now, Tommy, ruiT through it Just once with Alma, and then we'll shoot." Mr. Lane bustled about and found chairs for Lucinda rd her fr.ends. upon which tney composed themselves to watch Tommy interMr. King Laughlin's tuition pret. in the art of acting for the screen. To the best of Lucinda's t, however, the greater part of Mr, Laughlin's efforts had meant to Tommy precisely nothing at all Beyond the rudimentary mechanics ot the physical action sketched in by the director. Tommy made no perceptible attempt to foltoTr his and disregarding entirely its conventional tut effective business, embellished the scene instead with business which was such as it was, all his own. or more accurately that of a dead era of the speaking stage. And when Mr Laughlin tran quilly approved this performance and announced that they wouid forthwith "shoot It." Lucindu bega to wonder if there were possibly something wrong with her own powers of observation. "But." she protested to Mr. Lane, "he didn't play the scene as Mr. Laughlin did." (Continued In Our Next Issue) Ml LOUIS JOSEPH VAN' THE WIFE'S CHARGE ACCOUNT. njjjjj I 1 CLEANt ph' Cz'hJiIJQrU O K Cl |