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Show Books AT MURRAY COM GROVE BEAUTIFUL NEW fudebaker Sedan given away absolutely FE&EE abor Oay Nig 111 Monday, September 1st BROX MUSIC LATE DANCING WELCOME SALT LAKE COUNTY FAIR VISITORS! 5 fir, ' Pulham, Esquire, By J. P. Marquand This is the latest best selling novel of John P. Marquand, one of America's gentlemen writers and creator of that shrewd oriental detective, Mr. Moto. The story is Mr. Pulham's own account of his life and times. He is a Boston aristocrat with a British soul, keen on tradition, playing the game and all that sort of thing, you know. Perhaps he would have lived his sterile years as his stuffy father had done, had it not been' for a working girl with whom he fell in love in a restrained sort of way. The girl, Marvin Myles, was not like the majority of her sisters. She had an ambition to gain wealth and fame in the business world, and though she could have married Mr. Pulham and had the first of these, she turned him down, knowing she would never fit in to his social class. It all began when Henry Pulham came home from the war. So foreign to all he had been taught and all that he had been accustomed to was the grime and the brutality of war that he returned to New York a bewilder- -' ed, ineffectual young man. Being perplexed by his experiences in a realistic world he felt no desire to return to the insipid life of a Boston gentleman. So he took a job with an advertising agency under the aegis of a friend. There he learned how some people make a living and met Marvin Myles. Marvin took a maternal interest in helpless Henry and their friendship burgeoned into a dignified passion. Then Henry's father passed on and he found himself heir of the ancestral acres, and master of the house with a hundred petty duties. He could not escape. Marvin wanted him to return to his job and marry her. He wanted her to live with him in. the mansion. Neither could find it possible to deny their chosen ways of life. Henry then married in his own set, a neurotic handsome woman, also thwarted in love. PulFrom this point on Mr. becomes progressiveham's story children arrive. ly domestic. Two The parents bicker a great deal over nothing. The children grow into spoiled brats, unloved. Mr. awkand Mrs. Pulham grope fulfillsome for" spiritual wardly ment without success. The tale comes to a febrile climax after 20 years of marriage, when Henry meets Marvin, since married. In those 20 years, Henof her and ry had thought often had been tortured in thinking of what might have been. Being a strictly honorable man, scrupulous in doing the proper thing, he had never sought her commeetpany in that decade. Their his of reunion 25th at the ing Harvard class was calm and reasonable. After it, Henry felt better, knowing that his romance was quite dead and that the past could never be regained. He left her more at peace with himself than he had been for a long time. This humorless satire on the emotional life of the American patrician is hard to take. If the characters are typical, the top of the social structure is in a bad way. Here is a kind of spiritual desolation unknown to those who must work for a living. Here too, is a way of life without sufficient purpose to make it worthwhile. Henry, timid, frus- trated, without ambition or sin couldn't say that having all the money he could use, meant DEADLINE NEARS FOR INSURING 1942 WHEAT CROP Salt Lake county farmers who intend to plant winter wheat were warned today by Jas. H. Jensen, chairman of the county AAA committee, that August 30 is the deadline for making application for insurance on their 1942 wheat crops. He urged that growers of win- ter wheat protect their incomes with "all risk" insurance by guaranteeing themselves at least a 75 per cent of normal crop. An application for insurance also is an indication that the grower intends to cooperate in the 1942 farm program and places him in a position to receive the benefits of the national cooperative farm plan for better I SEE a, me-ol- 311 when he will make bigger "strike." One day last week, he packed Salida, and hopped the "Scenic Limited" for Denver. He barged into West's office and sad: "Well, I'm ready." Gimlett left the next day on the "Exposition Flyer" for Philadelphia. He will return shortly before the Prospectors begin regular service September ry) Deals Hurry WE 3qr Hurry! must have 5,009 ions Auto-bodie- s, fenders, wire and all kinds oil drums of black pilCCI 1IUI1. Highest Prices Gimlett become America's most famous living prospector for gold when he went to Washington, D. C, last January to tell congressmen and senators about his monetary and mining views. The "gold digger" is interested in the new Prospector trains because he helped lead the way for Rio Grande trains into virtually every bonanza gold mining section of Rio Grande territory since 1878. One thing that disappointed Gimlett was the necessity of leaving Sampson at home. The old man seriously considered taking the animal to Philadelphia, but finally decided it was best to leave him behind. Paid Utah Compressed Steel Company West Salt Lake 641 8. 7th South City, Utah OUR BEST WISHES TO SALT LAKE COUNTY FAIR Montgomery Ward 107 South Main Salt Lake City, Utah s 1 e Give s" Shadow-Strip-e- d Cord. HUDSON offers the Drive-Mastat a moderate ctst on all models for 1912. The Drive-Maste- r you to start the m itor and GO. Prom ihen on permits there's no need to touch either the gear lever or clutch to meet any ordinary driving situation. i here's nothing to get used to . . . except the thrill. The new is c.ne of the foremost advancements in a lecord of eritfineering leadership. Mr. Brockbank promises you that your first trip with the DriveMaster in the 191 lit DSON will he one of the high snots of your automobile rarrer. Call Murray 703 for a Drive-.Mat- A A demon-stratio- FORD Fordor FORD V--8 Sedan PLYMOUTH Sedan CHRYSLER Sedan PLYMOUTH troupe BU1CK Sedan Jl CHEVROLET Fordor PLYMOUTH Sedan J 'J 'j n, Service . . Repairing Lubrication . . Painting . Ur ,alk through traffic in IN own wav. . . . on the road . .' . wherever ou ve a mind to go. ar.d prove that vou have never seen an automobile that rould do so much for hen vou return from this ride see if Mr. you. L. II lirockbank doesn't offer vou terms and a will put you In a 1.1 DSON with all the Ask For Demonsiraiion! rnn j Batteries . . Tires . . Tubes thrS im 2 Come in or Call . . . We have the Car that will give you Low Cost Rides! er 32-ye- ar Djl A 1937 1938 1940 1937 1936 1933 1936 1933 interior-exterio- lt nd i52 Excellent Used Cars at LESS Than Market Prices! safc-tirivin- into any ear . . . Patented Double-SafDrakes and Patented I rout Wheel Control. Dressed in a JtrUinff new fashion, with longer, lower" lines, tailored sleekness and sparkling new colors, the trimly HUDSON DeEuxe Six offers attractive r color combinations. Upholstery is a new Klit !l',,sos take you day nthcr Buttons on "TonTTMiT clothes should for the child to grasps tains. a crude baggage kit, left his burro, "Sampson VI," in a stable at lutZ? hi.bun-0- . USED AUTO SPECIALS e I pocket streamliner built for the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad for overnight service through the heart of the Rocky Mountains from Denver to Salt Lake City. He is Frank E. Gimlett, better known as "The Hermit of Arbor Villa" a ghost mining town located near the Rio Grande's narrow guage branch between Sali-dColorado, and Monarch. From the time the first was made by the Rio Grande about its new stainless steel "Prospectors" last May, Gimlett kept a steady stream of letters pouring into the office of General Manager E. A. West, insisting upon having the privilege of bringing back the first train of its kind to operate exclusively in the Rocky Moun- Althoueh at was worth more thaT Simlett after discovering a EolH today he has no money age pension. IT,, if,, pt tonel, cabin at Arbor y;? once a flourishing of 3,000 persons. buTS ed to two T um'1" e dealer 1942 HUDSON for 1!U2 is AMERICA'S SAFEST CAR! A splendid line of Sixes and Eights to Choose from! HUDSON'S (ireat Ntw Six offers yon a unique combination of hljr car roominevs. fiqe car performance, and economy ear savings on gasoline, til and It gives you salety as only a HUDSON can . . . upkeep. starring two of the greatest g features ever built Auto-PoN- ii A crizzled old prospector, tpyi- cal of the men who built the gold and silver west, today is in Philadelphia to bring back "The Prospector" of 1941 a sleek new Now the Murray Jnludso i OLD PROSPECTOR TO BRING BACK NEW D&RG STREAMLINER ffilffllKIlTffi Call ai Murray i 28 Iru. The South Stale 4955 LIBRARY II. M. i i Thursday, August THE MURRAYEAGLE Page 4 Ly ...at... IK HUDSON . . P0NTIAC . . CADILLA We Call For and Return Your Car! rilOM.S: DIAL , 'j 'J MIS UJ :03 J I 1 'A 'A A U U 4955 SOUTH STATE ulululllull UrLrULruuuUU U UUUUUUUULrLrLr L' ST, Lt A A |