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Show THE TIMES-INDEPENDENT, MOAB, UTAH | IRISH EVES tisiccs'sen| © KATHLEEN NORRIS- WNU Pry | As Usual They Split agn dctstand that those ~fians have split." two Ss, fifty-fifty!'' jillbilly singer is one who ; by | Ge ear-through his nose. "to eat food that will develop scientist says THUS we "Oh, Suge tle the THOUGHT en Bi 8 ) ‘ nal Moy takving Instructor-In case of gency, the first thing you ¢ into do is to put on the brake. _Maid-Why, I thought it fin] With the car. e? ~aie eet Hm-m! teacher was testing the __edge of the kindergarten Tossing a half dollar on ask, she said sharply, ‘‘What it?" "antly a voice from the back coat room replied, ‘Tails!' He's Stuck y my son getting well groundlanguages?"' sig WOuld put it even stronger at,'' replied the teacher, ‘"‘I ‘say that he is actually ll ¢ 29 st pled on them. of te . ° sarowth With Activity alii growth depends on activity. actis is no development, physial for intellectually, without ef- IlI-Continued ean. said Mrs. Me Cann, in voice and with her gen- smile, bag. up Weary Fly- I've got to get over this bridge somehow. One slip and I'd go down into that yawning abyss. ---- An Accessory? at for } "‘these'll go well with They're Monica's-she's Kenwood, an excuse ern Coolidge. and to money in it. Judge papa's Mc old get bottles, from your dealer he One as All ewe one human being purely g#warmly, and you will love _ Richter. =z *"‘Kind, has been Cann my dear! When so good to me," said humbly. Sheila across again; it was there was still lighted lamps She the Lord Ellen Mec went with the wide hallway darkened now, but a dim indication of beyond the library archway, and in some smaller room there were subdued laughter and the sound of voices. . Mrs. Mc Cann herself opened the big front door for her guest. the s: WHY ; & SHOULDN'T " STEAL HI-A FROM YOU AF I CAN ? } tar "gave her my best, but-my sister < ved me, laybe it was because we were a iif-sisters. Our mothers were difrent; as different as we were ourfives, But, I had promised our hither on his deathbed that I would rit pe that Gladys got everythin il she was old enough to loo for herself. p® was faithful to that promise. peiadys was beautiful, po ular-and im spite ofmy efforts-wild. And she a me the man I loved. Yet she Mght have found real happiness, as Sheila dark young came down sweep of joined Mrs. "a * * * i laybe you, yourself, are in the sition of Jane Kent, or merle a know some one who is. How fould you work out this human a oblem nat there is a wa out-a real lution -is proved i y the human, poignant diary of Jane Kent who sé7irites her seal life story under the "Wild Sister" in June a[iue Story Now On Sale man who he had en- as "Mr. Frank," palm-decorated central Mc to leave doorway just after who had been ad- the big, the about Cann said. stairs, at the He and door. stopped impressively. "Bernadette said she'd telephone you in the morning, Mother," Frank Mc Cann said. Suddenly he laughed, and his mother looked at him in it, Frank?" ‘"I'Il-I'm go"Nothing!" he said. ing to see Bernadette." Mc Mrs. love!' her my "Give son "My at Sheila. looked Cann said. she home," you drive will ‘"‘That's better than the subway." Sheila him!"'' have wouldn't I "Oh, is protested, shrinking. "Why not?" Frank asked, pulling But it was not a on his gloves. glance at question; he did not even ; her. stunning look don't "Well, if you said, in Monica's old coat! Gertrude "You look joining them. suddenly "I'm added, she lovely. Aunt Ellie," If I don't I'm sunk. gong to bed. Grandma for taken be to want I've got Keane at my own wedding, sleep." some to get This "Where you going, Frank?" Sheila's heart Peter's voice. was could she but plunge, rose on a great not look up. a having They're "Kennedys'. from Syradinner for Dette's aunt late."" I said I'd come out, cuse. Peter?" are you going, "Where d. the mother aske a while." "IT am going out tone told SheiHis confused, husky nded to go. He la where he had inte her. to accompany intended had alone with her. have a few words home her drive to But Frank's offer alked him. she look at him; not d dare ate Mrs. Mc Cann was was choking. to her; she and saying good night were descending the big ne steps. me here on the curb, sooo across the car's parked right my Sheila stood Frank said. street," as she then, And still, trembling. e Peter was besid ha@ half expected, and there second, her tor half a r in her hand. was a slip of pape Peter mumyou!"' see to "T've got Frank was He was gone, and bled. car up to d close l bringing 4 smal got in. In a daze Sheila ner. I'm going to mar"The young lady ' Frank Duyvil," ry lives in Spuyten there. "T'm on my way d. explaine sat silent *"‘We've been beside engaged Frank went on. "That's a long him, and five years," time." ; "it's a good test of mutual affection, the man said in satisfaction. This handsome oldest son of Judge Me Cann was well pleased with himself, Sheila decided. "Peter and Gertrude," he resumed, "‘were a little quicker about grown up like brother They've sister, of course; we're all de- it, and voted to Gertrude. But Miss Ken- nedy and I wanted to be sure. "‘We haven't so very long to go, now. June. Then I think we'll run over to Europe and stay until September."' "It sounds wonderful,'"' Sheila ob- served respectfully. ‘Well, it's time I settled down," Frank said. ‘I'm twenty-seven." He laughed, with relish. "Are you four years older than voice; it became less sure, less patronizing, less satisfied. He spoke And like we know is she "I-well, I met him. in "We only knew each other And maybe he mine." ‘"‘Ah-h-h?" awakening. mused *T will not!' Mrs. Carscadden answered. ‘If you choose to draw down the anger of God by pretendin' to be in throuble whin you're not, thin it'd be a fine job draggin' your mother into it!" ‘Mamma, if you'll just stick to the truth but sort of make a poor mouth of it,'" begged Sheila after an interval of unhappy thought. "I had us all but starving in the streets!"' "Well, they'll find out we're not thin. They'll not put their little toobs down my children's throats, fell silent; speak. *"You knew Sheila was gered, iw -_~ pea that not getting married on Tuesday?" "Oh, yes."' Another silence. "Peter told me that he had met you-lI suppose it was you," Frank observed. He stopped the car at the forlorn dark Bronx doorway. ‘‘Well, good night,'' he said, a little at a loss. Sheila said, "I thank you," and "good night,'' and was out of the car, and heard it roar and hum away Her as she mounted thoughts steps. stopped her feet sudstill in the odorous stood she denly; of the dim lower atmosphere thick her own About hall. the crying; was the her pots, above and of banging sound of radios, phonographs, quar- voices rels, closed doors. Her heart smoldered; One look at Peter still the and stood Cann, she Mc that enchanted of agony behind from echoed had day and night-they summer her upon one-was the but had kissed her, to lied had He afresh. waither, and she had believed him, ed for him, while he had been courtdaughman's rich a winning ing and suit ter, a beautiful girl in a slim and furs, who could fifty dol- lose lars without ever knowing it. And now beside all that, Sheila in the would be made contemptible loved eyes of these friends who had kind her father, who wanted to be They would discover to Mamma. that play-acting, that she had been she had been a hypocrite. she Even before this oldest son She must appear as an impostor. angel as was no such artless little in the Me Cann she had seemed her out baw] Mamma would house. President himself the tomorrow; And lie. Mamma make couldn't Cann and then all of them, Mrs. Mc know would Frank, Gertrude, and had that their pathetic little beggar a bluffer. been no beggar at all, just would Peter and Mamie would know, hear them discussing it- She the pa- remembered suddenly per in her hand, unfolded read it by the hall light. "Be at the Maritime Law it, and Library, Petop floor-four-thirty tomorrow,"' written. "T've to got see ter had you." Sheila mut"J see myself going!" teréd. even after entering Fortunately, few minutes the kitchen, she had a in and to which Cecilia muring recover Moore herself. Joe there, mur- were at the table. No one else was in sight. rePresently Angela and Mamma coat and turned, and then the new admired, and handled hat had to be and the story told and retold. ever you people loveliest "The all so happy saw, Mamma-they're together!"' and so kind, and laughing the "Paul Mc Cann, I rimimber mused. mother name well," Sheila's feller, wit' "He was a square-built on um." a head of black hair Ma." "That's the one, Mrs. fine people," were "They Carscadden said fell asleep. or tell me how many pairs of shoes I'd buy thim in a mont',"" with some dim yet still smouldering of settlement workers' memory long-ago visit. "Mamma," Sheila began, now genuinely appalled, ‘‘Mrs. Mc Cann isn't a charity worker! She's coming as an old friend-how could I stop her! If you'll only be decent to her, Mamma, if you'll only be just polite-"' "Polite to one and all I'll ever be-"' her mother began, in an unyielding tone, "‘but beholden to one I niver seen-"' "Oh, Mamma, for heaven's sake! Beholden!"' Sheila was tired, emotionally shaken, close to tears. Joe spoke suddenly. her think we were made ‘You and Sheila, aren't, we something even if it was only a joke, it seems Ma drag to fair to me that it isn't into If it. Mrs. really Cann Me she which tomorrow, come does will probably won't, why, Mamma have to explain to her that it was just some of your nonsense!"' "IT get a chance to meet people like that, and then you queer it!" Sheila muttered bitterly. ‘"‘Maybe she'll just think it was funny, Sheila!" Angela said. of "Who but you would ever think such a thing!" Cecilia, who enorthe spirit of the admired mously younger girl, said, shaking her head. "Oh, that one!'' Mrs. Carscadden observed, with a glance for Sheila; a glance in which motherly pride, mollified resentment, and a desire to show herself friendly again were ‘‘You couldn't stop that all blended. she claimed. one wit' a thruck!" felt the Sheila a boast. It was but and atmosphere, friendlier for Peter, of memory scalding that confimight have been reasonably bed. dent and content as she went to of confusion As it was, a jealous in her raged fears and thoughts She hated Gertrude, because heart. beshe was lovely and rich and happy, and she hated Peand loved him. ter, because she, Sheila, loved She got into bed, seeming to the interested in be mood. a_ Angela talkative and strangely to hour last half- that tremendous end- that pretend of theirs, that ing to their great day, curred They at all. had met ~ had not octel carrying Bats' winter dled lunch; Just one long tale ey!" keep an eye on When in HOTEL So. with St.-Single KIT 75e FUR STORAGE - $1.-$1.25 HOTEL $2.00 Virginia Free St. Bath 639 S. Labor a ae CARSON APARTMENT Parking Send your Fur Coats and Winter Cloth Coats to Utah's Oldest Fur Store. HOTEL Reasonable Completely No. Temple, Refrigerated VAULTS Rates: day furnished. Salt Lake. FINE USED CARS 1987 Packard 120 Sedan. 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Y-Ton Pickup ........... 90.00 WNU - Week No. 4018 - SALT Air Grill Cooled Lounge and Coffee Shop. Room Home Lobby Tap Room of Rotary-Kiwanis-Executives Exchange-Optimus-"20-30" Chamber of Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN, UTAH Come as you are T. E. Fitzgerald, Mgr LAKE Your friends will thank you for directing them to an Apartment Hotel for - another life on Mc Cann said piously, reaching for his coat, "I hope I'll have fewer throubles!"' was nervous in the office morning; always pale, towas unwontedly pale. The COMFORT - CONVENIENCE - SERVICE The BELVEDERE girls looked at her respectthey knew that she had been (TO BE CONTINUED) State Block from Temple. week or month. RICHMOND, 70 E. because we're Country Club, after six now! me-do someWon't you do fired, and although to their care-free ranks this meant little, yet it was to have the invincible impressive and subdued Carscadden Sheila complaining of headache and of a bad night. & Room ling." other fully; hud- Child In England 111 years ago a bill to limit labor of children to 12 hours a day in cotton mills brought this protest: "The bill actually encourages vice-it establishes idleness by act of parliament." RENO, NEVADA. stop at the GOLDEN-Reno's largest and most popular hote RENO be?" ‘Well, he's not home; he's not here!" ‘‘He's on his way home then, dar- Sheila the next day she Child Eating Habits Children learn to like new foods if they eat small amounts of them often enough under pleasant circumstances, child guidance specialists say. English of drowsiness, Towns thing older and cannot go to Europe, they take a cruise to Havana which was in the West Indies a hundred years before the Mayflower landed at Plymouth. Hotel Plandome-Salt Lake 4th she'd be the greatest help to Katie. Then I could get some idea of what she can do, and what they need- what is it, Gertrude?"' The last phrase was an abrupt interruption. Gertrude, clad in a dressing-gown, and with a tragic face and loosened hair, had entered the room without announcement. ‘‘Aunt Ellie, do you know where Peter is?" "Do I-Peter? Where would he start sharp at seven, all going up to the and look-it's twenty Ah, don't laugh at thing, won't you? something?"' "If ever I'm given this earth,"" Judge in a state Old Englanders love their old but when they want some- Quarters together. Veronica- ‘"‘Aunt Ellie, he's not! He was to go to the tailor, and meet Frank and pick out the ushers' pins and everything, and then he was going to meet me at the Paulists'-and he hasn't done any of it! He said he had to go to the library at half past four and he would meet us at five. We telephoned the tailor, even, and Frank is just about fit to be tied; he says he's afraid Peter's been hurt!'"' "Oh, for heaven's sake-" Judge Mc Cann said, annoyed and impatient. ‘‘Don't lose your wits!" "Well, Uncle Paul, all I know is that tonight is the night of the dinner dance at the Cahills'-our last before we are married, and it's to Winter New towns, HOTELS | "TI knew the minute I saw the child it'd be something like that," he said. ‘‘God be good to us all!" "Paul, was thinking- was wondering, since this girl has lost her job, whether she'd come to us for next week? We're going to be simply rushed out of our senses. She could Havana's marine-mind- SST back," he had three fellers to of how good God has been to them, and of what a wonderful son she has, and that Sheila-the girl who came here is Sheila-ought to be an actress, the way she -carries on. She made a joke of it-the child's honesty, and her returning the mon- Martins and Bats have evolved a unique method of living through the winter. Most species resort in great numbers to caves, where they pass the her It was Judge Paul Mc Cann, unresponsive Sheila lay awake long after her into had crept noiselessly mother bed beside her. Peter had wanted to see her. Well, what else could he do? He could hardly Long on Tuesday. hard-luck ‘story. Sheila Long, industrious The first to distinguish between sensory and motor nerves was Erasistraus, a great physician of the Third century, B. C. of a Perfect blue-eyed, honest, generous, good- the only conception Sheila had ever had of kindly human fatherhood. He would discover that he had been deceived in her, that she was a liar. Her cheeks burned with fear and shame, and her dreams, when finally she slept, were only a hundred troubled versions of exposure. "Paul," said Mrs. Mc Cann to her husband the following evening, when they were in their own magnificent room just before dinner, "the goodness of the poor breaks your heart." **Ye got to see the Carscaddens today?"' he asked eagerly. "I made it a matter of duty, Papa,"" Mrs. Me Cann said. "Well, ye found thim?"' ‘In a little place-Mrs. Mc Cann sighed, and repeated her former phrase. "It would break your heart." "It would, eh?" he asked uneasily, reluctantly, as he sat up on the edge of the bed. "Three rooms, Papa. And you could put all three into this one." "‘Ah-h-h!"" he muttered, as if in pain. He shut his lips, brought his feet to the floor, and began to walk up and down the room. "If you could see the dignity of the mother, Paul. No whining, no his tell- could that Peter a End It was long after midnight when Sheila fell asleep. And after all it was neither Gertrude nor Peter nor Frank, nor even the intractable ‘"‘Ma,"' on whom her last thought lin- one he he got back from "The Sheila had been Keane remember aloud, ‘"‘I remember ‘‘There's "I'm going up to town in the morning,'' she had said. *"‘We're going Monday. Well, I'll see you in town,"' he had said. And that had been the end. No word from him, no sign from him, no knowledge of him until tonight. And he was to marry Gertrude one Frank said, as "I. remember," of and "T've got to get said. ‘I'm driving Good Ground." his name. didn't supper, light, for Peter to carry away. ButI didn't I didn't remember strains Trail," sea. know until tonight who he was." **You didn't know who he was?" day. clam-bake pocketbook, through this marvelous week of beach holiday, and she had opened it to find a pencil and a piece of paper, and had scribbled her name and address, there in the fire- This sum- mer, at Tiller's Beach. and Day." Afterward there had been silence; peace about the dying fire, and moonshine gaining over firelight, and the soft rustle and rush of the r Pete?" posses- Marine-Minded Two ed martins did their best to set up housekeeping in the whistle of the ferry at Isleboro, Me. But every time the boat whistle tooted, the blast crew finally persuaded the pair | blast wrecked their fragile "home." The crew finally persuaded the pair | to build the lovenest on a dock near the ferry slip. had seemed to them that their very souls had risen to Heaven on the said?"' aI immediate they had danced at the Casino- strolled out into the moonshine to talk, danced again. The others had been singing; Sheila and Peter had sung, too, and it stunning, I'll bet I saw his picture surprisedly: **You taken sion of her, they had watched the yacht races together, they had been together-alone in the mob-at the the paper with her last Sunday!" Cecilia said with animation. Shabby and tired and poor and young, talking sadly of their prospects with her Joe, she could nevertheless brighten into interest at the thought of this more fortunate girl. She and Joe had been engaged for three years; she knew that they easily might have to wait three more. "Mamma," Sheila demanded, her arms stretched across the table, the dangling light bright in her eyes, and upon the shining, flattened fringe of hair across her forehead, "if Mrs. Mc Cann comes tomorrow, will you talk poor?" Peter?" It had slipped out. Sheila's very soul shriveled with terror. There was a sudden change in Frank's He IV was in surprise, and over his rather dark young face a smile broadened at the sight of Sheila. ‘‘Well, you look better!" he observed. ‘‘Mother,"' he resumed, ‘I'm going out to Bernadette's for about an hour. I could run Miss-this young lady home." ‘Well, so you could," his mother "It's right on your way. agreed. My son's young lady lives in Spuyten Duyvil," she said to Sheila, some- Frank Sheila could make no answer. ing me-when visit-aha!"' CHAPTER Just surprise. "What =a ree ig that what AS is' ones." over tomorrow to have a little talk with her. And you've your nickel for the subway-?" **You're awfully kind to me, Mrs. Mc Cann," Sheila could only mumble. She had completely abandoned the brogue, but neither of the other women was apt to notice the omission. ; ‘‘Mother," Demand original, sealed new glad And tell Mamma dressed by Mamie ON FLOWERS e@ FRUITS VEGETABLES & SHRUBS be Cann was one of your friends, and that I'll be tered this same ‘Sheila had, and Many Insects she'll Her hands lingered in motherly fashion about Sheila, as she helped to put them on. She smiled at the results, and Mamie brought her hands together with one convulsive clap of triumph. Sheila, her sense of shame deepening every second, hung her head as she stood before them. It was all like a nightmare. Their warmth, their kindness; their goodness were all completely disarming. **You've the purse, dear, and the méSand effort means work. Work isi} a curse-it is a prerogative Atfitelligence, the only means to -00d and the measure of civi- sure. Sheila, will reward her liberally. She looks upon the escapade different wh enters the magnificent home, og the be the Mec toa family, ald friends, now wealthy, of there she sees Pe ter, her acquaintance of the previous CHAPTER "‘Here,'"' her gentle Peter had *‘And the girl their son's going to marry-the ward that their son is going to marry, Sheila," Angela asked wistfully, ‘‘is she nice?" "Gertrude Keane." "Is that her name?" "It was her purse I found,. you know." FAR anium. -~)gy-Well, I could suggest an Saypriate menu-noodle soup, cheese and coconut pie. n thes AWFUL Sheila had been with Kobby Blake not that either Sheila or Peter re membered Robby afterward, at a]! barbecue "Oh, the owner as a lark. She feels cee ors to ee ather. An d Getting Ahead gy - A STORY | SERVICE York Sheila ‘by aeemodian Carscadden, , blueblue-eyed, reddi sh-haired and 21, loses he eful but ae eqestions to her hee erie minine, she chooses th er "‘new'' purse-which sh at a second-hand aoe toPie her cousin, Cecilia Moore. The marae bn memories of a boy she name, all she remembered, was Peter. At home that evening, waiting for her, are her mother; Joe, her brother, :and Angela, her crippled sister. Joe, too, has lost his job. During the not-so "happy evening Angela finds fifty dollars in a secret pocket in c Sheila's purse. both happy at the discovery, only to be disheartened whence faane, af FiTP THE | APARTMENT HOTEL Rates: $2.50 Day; $15 Week Up ; 29 South State St. OOD Calvin O Jack,' Mgr. Salt Lake City. Utah OE OSES OE) AD OTST ST OS |