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Show n "THBERAli);FEIDAy3lAy;8ri923r - - . I .11 Matrimonial Adventures One Man's Meat children,' whereas a rainy morning spent with the children .in the bous. ' always made Aunt Emily look a thousand years old. "they wore on her so," they upset so the perfect order of SOCIAL : ; CALENDAR lr FINE MONUMENTS wonderfully kept hcuse. And yet Itff 4 did their best not to wear on ber. by ; ber as much asj keeping away-fropossible. Tliey never went borne from ' school until It was actually supper Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Bollock enter time,, and always" played In our yard, j tained the members of the P, D. C ! not their own. ' club and s few Invited guests at The result was that Aunt Emily was "their home Saturday evening. The left quite to herself in a Sahara des- - j was In the form. of May party. affair desand ert of lonely housekeeping The rooms were prettily decorated perste economies with the poor pit- - j with May blossoms and pink, green tt that Uncle v tance which was streamers. The ladles and yellow face thin earn could Her Charles wore dainty a shemended paperjoostumes grew grim and dart-various spring flowers, and patched and turned and dyed and while the gentlemen were dressed' performed miracles on tough necks of as gardeners in overalls and straw mutton and cheap curtain materials. --Dancingr andamea were Alt of it she did with superlative skill features of the evenings enhut burning and raging Inwardly (and tertainment after which a delicioua many times not so very lnwardly tne necessity aomg it at uu, luncheon was served in gainst and crj lng ""out bltterlywtth many fits May, baskets carrying out the ideav I BY Dorothy Canfidd Brtssselna" Cap.'' Dm Bqautvl Cm,? The Bnt Twt," ef Olo-- y --" "A HonteMotlCUIMother UaUMr," area," eta. rfi IT AT EIGHT PRICES , : : A yery large variety front wUcli (o select. Beesley Marble & Granite Works 1 . The ' , v m insi oouui ox ae laoernacie ' " a Proro, Utah. -- j -- successes to ber credit and "la to versatile a person that one despairs of chronicling even a small part of exhfweMenta. - WheU " little more than a girl she had won two degree, a Ph.B. and a Ph.D., and 4t was not many years after that that abe became Xamoue aa an au- thor. Her booki art the type that live. To apeak of on of her latest big successes, "The Brimming CP. ' ealla up mention of her earlier 6t "The tWB anTslajrU fllseu-ito- n Bent Twig" or "The Squirrel Cage." or away from bar no vela to be booka on the Montessorl method. war-- eame-Mr, When Fisher "(ehe la Mr. Fisher la private life) went to France with her husband and two children where aha did big and important work. But all .the tlina aha waa working abroad she waa writing, too, stories that I .appeared In our leading magazines, and books that were published upon' ber return. MART STEWART CCTTINO, JR. Oh, yes, everybody dodged when Aunt Emily hove In vlewt father as much as the rest, In spite of all his extenuations. Whenever, we did have to go there, on unavoidable errands, we children would stand in the doorway, and assure her volubly that we couldn't come In, because our feet we're muddy. This brought about the more to buy a nd 1 Cords not only are KELLY on practically all kinds of roads and in all kinds of weather but they have the characteristic Kelly sturdiness that insures long mileage in spite of severe punishment . Truly, a rare combination of safety and service, yet it costs ho more to buy a Kelly. For sale wherever you see this sign ll ii ll w mm Mipii sasssTfl mmhbih r KEL-LY- buTlus eyes T)iV-- i face pale, but erf always. He waJ the .children as dressed themsell lessons and leu d, musical-minde- d ant In Emery's Emporium when Aunt Emily, very young herself, had mar ried him ; married htm, apparently for the same reason that he was In business, because there seemed to be nothing else to do. But Uncle Charles was no money-makeand Imprisoned In a grinding round of petty economies and inescapable shabblness, bow Aunt Emily ate her heart out, and what a ii RES Local Distributors for the famous Kelly - Springfield Tires "Everything (tor the AutomoEile work. As Uncle Chif he could sit np smoothly. Ills to a corner of lie could look could work wit he had alwaysf were never s r, Mdrrison Biros and Tube$ young account-- , 1 Aunt Emily's terrible energy .could put 'Into ber husband's gentle, artistic, uncommercial soul, a single gust of the -stormy ambition which blew like a tornado in ber harried heart - Uncle Charles hated all business desperately, nd fouhdJhe only pleasure In his . nfe In his children, My mother always said that those three Burton children would certainly Just have wasted 'sway, If It had not been for their father at this time. He night -- tPOlteaencla fat tray which "w ork, done or the mending Phoebe did th. en work tog broughtthel fatlier's beds! sons there. meat of such ments from , bad as great a gift for calming and cheering, them as their mother bad for damping the very Ufa out of them. Whenever Aunt Emily was away from home for a few hours, and Uncle . Charles was there with the children, what a good time they bad la those short boars' of respite, Uncle Charles la aa easy chair, th children plied on top of nun, his arms around them tight while they bad what they called a "visit," . Thle meant' a chatter of little tolces, birdlike and free; which Aunt Emily had never heard la ber life. Or perhaps they'd all sing to getber. for they . bad Inherited Uncle Charles' gift for music, ; Zt4l tad only had tlina he 'would hae ilven, piano, tessons to an the children, But, dear me, ha bad no time except for that account keepmg. . I and they hid no money to pay. a pro- My known befi yHTUncle b Emily bougti him on Chrl was aQ overt , and cheerful He alwaw iiacacedr'he '." the to teach. - V saw a child sic as Phoet gan to teacn light clear - bouse rang with the in used to lov School was itoch v rw : ddW tons flavor and satisfy teived byiiiistakiTonnlt tag tailtf"Of" ton; less than ton lots, 85c per cwt at store. i voa wdlrealtie wiut we i f wfcea we tavwis im iromtne "m-lf- Orte a eooitd , I I i (rota voararoee i II Wettem Sma lftSiag jgi X. Butte Cheeae Etr z .:..:.....'.. TERMS CASH. 7 :-' t-t t r ; e.V-'-.ei-- Iflf nnnffAhi I I . ; - - llnAawnAA af .PHONE 480, '-- rv I I I I I 7 I 42S,W CENTER. ' . .'-.- - . Specify STANDARD COAL From the Spring Canyon District, on Your Next Order. -I- T BURNS BETTER GIYES MORE HEAT . . : . ASTSLONGER ExdusiTft.AgentA: !:: i I SMOOT & SPAFFORD If your wife can't coot her I idon't- - divorce Keep her for a pet, and eat at the old- - j PHONE 17. STANDARD COAL CO. ; ' " :r 7 SidtLake, Utah. Greer Cafe I NANCE, Prop. - Wilford Perry CENTER. 338-WE-ST CASH PRICES 111 DISTANCE T1UPS k Guaranteed : . one 66Si rovo anofer . e' ' i... Co. IT. AND DAY pERYICE .Courteoos, Ezperi,ed Workmen.""" i - S- . .sLiiaTe just .. Field Fence, 4 feethighTdirect from the fartoryvt the ; ' Sar''vjpHrtO.rAdjr.' Fonritore, Haul Transfer Tironks. Most .Reasonable. 1 PHONE 117. WE DELIVER " " PRICES FOR WEEK ENDING MAY19 - Jove Bometlmes fessional i lion) -arlea always loohM ten" veer pouredI Into! onager after such a visit with his it might be SPECIAL cars of good Second Crop Alfalfa Hay re ' - to-pi- . Phone782-J-l. The tnlnnte yoa nawrap the ige and taste tha rich, to alt in a her salary, -- 1 . business,-"- and yet there bad never been anything but business In his life. He had been a handsome, ' dreamy-eye- SPRINGFIELD Vsl . r . " eV HtCREUrtERyCfi pt for QaaBiiylaEafSeFS -- 1 walla." Wilford Penrod 1 sufficiently singled oat for misery.' Uncle Charles fell on the stairs, and hurt himself terribly, threw , several vertebrae out of position, I believe, so that he lay almost wholly paralyzed from the waist down. And not a penny of savings to pay the doctor, not even for the grocer's bill at the end of the 1 The - first time tevefteSfi7Viie ramtn. it was disaster, absolute black, threadbare saying about a square peg irreparable disaster. Aunt Emily waa In a round hole, was when my father stunned Into silence, a dreadful gray used it In an attempt to 'excuse Aunt silence, as of some one whose grudge Emily. . Up to that time I bad never against fate is rising to mania. I remember hearing father say to mother, heard anyone say anything of her ex- after he came back from hlfr tnrpat jcept4hat she was aetegtitble woman with the most Infernal capacity for bespending a night of care for .Uncle Charles, "I'm afraid of the woman, 1 ing perfectly wretched herself and positively am. She looks as though "making everybody else so. What a she'd go maL? . "Well, it's not out of home she made for poof mild Uncle sympathy for her poor husband, that's Charlie, andfor-thelr- threa nervous, sureT mother answered acidly. children scrawny, rabbit-face- d What do you suppose was the result Too are not to think she neglected her home or her children. Indeed no -- of that terrific accumulation of emo tion in Aunt Emily 7 "What was the She house-kewith a fanatical comtremendous decision to momentous, petence and expended on the reach which, in 1885, It was necessary of her children an extravagant for her to rise to that pitch of frenzy t energy which filled the house to Its remotest corner, as a sawmlllls filled I Why nothing more nor less than this . . . and In those daya It was a de by the strident energy ,of the saw. clsion both momentous and tremenNever were three children so brought dous for any married woman with chilup as my" poor little cousins. Aunt dren. . . ahe put on-hbonnet Emily was determined that she should da her whole duty by them, that they yes, bonnet was in the last days of bonnets, when only young girls wore should be perfect, and do everything hats . . . and marched down town exactly right. Of course she knew to ask for work in Eatery's Emporium. mueh better than they what was right, She got It, of course. Even If It bad and hence had never an instant of renot been Aunt Emily, the humane head pose from her labor of pushing and of the firm would have felt under some shoving them into the way they should to the wife of a faithful emobligation to. such of ployee' long standing. And In Oh, how we hated to be sent on an errand to Aunt Emily's house. I spare addition to this, it was Aunt Emily . . . of course she got what she you therdescriptton.t what meal at went after. Aunt Emily's table was. with! 'Aunt was put' . . . well,' I don't She children manthe table Emily teaching know that I ever heard lost In what ners. There are plenty of Intolerable small corner she was pot at first a things in real life, without dragging . an experiment; something easy and into a story what happened when ' to suit her supposed Inexperisimple Uncle Charles .spilled gravy-oa clean ence of business and her supposed tablecloth. Incapacity, for It The life at Ion notice, perhays, that say "at feminine home was organized somehow, any Aunt Emily's table,", and not at. Uncle as best they could with different ann mat gets me at an- - how, ynariea turns to go In and help other angle of their borne life; what cousins taking out with the work. Uncle Charles did i that- - borne life meant to Aunt Emily's not softer any(paln, and was quite husband. He was what Is known In as far as bis head was con himself America as a man "with no head' for the bed, cerned, hi bodyOrtS a log Brick ed They are : cooler., far summer and rwarmer in winter -- to hurry along then, and not get, the whole house cold, with that door itand lug open. Then came the climax in their mis fortunes,-a- s if they were not already Sun-Dri- Inside of anold fashioned picrilcTunch. Participating m the denghtfulaffair were Mr, and Mrs, C. A Larsen. Mr. MrSr Charles Brown, .Mr-an- d Mrs. Orler Allen, Mr. and Mrs. La Mar Craven, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Holland Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wll . liams, Miss Ruby Phillips, . Mr. Ralph Bnllock. Mrand JJrs. X R. Hathenbrook and Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Robinson of Salt Lake City. of hysterical tears that she waildlling herself, for herfajyJand nobody gave her a bit of credit for It a.'- mo Use vari-color- SOMETHING ABOUT DOROTHY CANFIELD It-co-sts A:Save Money Ht. Copyrlihtbr Unite1 Feature Syndicate "fay- - h " |