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Show ' THE DAILY HERALD OF UTAH COUNTY, TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1922. wtfb. BRUNT '(.'nine: She did not turn the knob; placed t her lips to a crack instead. down and. needing payM1 Hiilef.JJeaJdey let) me taketUm down to me avert witn aiein exierneoo. Wai't ui trliapoer oa the floor wasn't lilrs. J. IL Spencer of Salt Lake was "&m ; veb old Em-tel- a In Just ratjt Pleasant Grove on business Friday aack nought,, tltt . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mad sen and ; son and of cajtdir daughter, Paul and Gladys, of t , . I taae. hta down Lakeview, visited Mr. and' Mrs. J. H. an :it Km,iani "SatyY1in die, only to know If. the baby' ' , The door swung back .upoa ber, re vealing Mr., t oddle la a gray and well of Eoblson last week, rerded to to tb 'wtatU Ulrb frtai off frayed flannel buuKe-gowBert Smith returned home Thursday the floor to the yther Just nboney (the at the waist, end a anile 4aat lift from Des Moines, where he has been little geetcer so." the looped up corners of his wort act She wlthdrewtjher handoftly trom well toward his eyes, " ,f Rttki the heart of tbewcrlb, but sr. little wall "Well, of. all the ttlgh-toneIt. rose wkh come In wanna J" Pont neighbors. Me and Beasley are going-ove- r to "See, he l!ker; my hand," and she the LeffingweU .church this morning. replaced it with 4a --tremolo of great pride in her voicei he likes 4t" Mr. Foddie sesttpd himself? in the carpet rocker and .fitted the ten,' tips of his Angers together. His mustache, so suspiciously llgbner than the hair brushed so painstakingly across the thinning spot, ralseaagain in a smile, revealing a flash of 1 teeth and celluloid-d 1 By FANNIE HURST otnif kt, in, kr n wuii itmimi, in, "80 do I," he said. The lights of the Tillage burned through the wall of rain like the (lazed eyes of the dying, but In Spnr- tan the nights are long,, and even as she walked the tracks tie by tie, she could see them blink out In the box. shaped houses, except In the glitzier', whose wife lay lew of and In Abe Brodle's, made sim ple, poor soul, by sunstroke, and who loved to count far Into the night Inuig' Inary ransoms of Imaginary kings, Across the tracks and In the hollow an unaccustomed lamp In Liddy Kln- eady's side window burned without flicker. But Annie Klneody gathered her strength and ran. A whlHtle rone off the flatlands behind her, She ran faster, her black skirts flapping about her and a wisp of black veil flying back. At the dim station, low and squat as a hut, the telegrapher ralHed tip, regarding her from under his eye shade. The Cry, Half a Cough, Rote Again H'llo, Annie." Louder, "H'llo, Joe." "St. Loulsr "Yes." Mr. Foddie, only hearing the baby kind The Accommodation slid rustlly Into of coughlng-r-- ' the station. She found a seat In the 'Wonder you wouldn't ask a poor day coach and ant on the red plush old widower to go along." ; seat, telescope across her knees and "Why, Mr, Foddie, y6u yourself eyes squeezed tight against nausea home sick from the store yesterday, "' ' and rising misery. , and little Robbie--- -" Across the aisle a large party with He struck himself resoundingly upon a heavy gold chain spanning a convex the chest and smoothed his hair, so waistcoat leaned to her with a queer smnothJy pomaded across a thinning; chirring noise underneath his breath, spot and three shades durker than th In flesh, glow- too brown mustache, his eyes, t, ing across at her In quick appraisal. "Never felt better In my life." "Some kid," he said between moist "Beasley says that's what you alchirrups. ways say after one of your heart: Washington avenue, Just above Jef- spells, and then right away start to ' ferson, has seen better days. Its overdoing." hrown-ston"Never felt better In my life. - Me fronts, even In bellicose times, when St. Louis showed pan- for the store tomorrow, like I'd never talettes beneath her hoops and traded been down." slaves on the courthouse steps, had "Oh, Mr. Foddie, forgetting right; not the sagging stoops or the copings away and taking all sorts of risks, sunk. Instead, there were storchly when the doctor told you that excitecurtained windows and the copings of ment Is dangerous and " sandstones, even the granite pairs of "Nothing Is dangerous around thlai door Hons scrubbed well Into the crev- here Joint, Miss Annie, except you." ices of the carved mnnes and, too, "Cut that !" "What'd I say thnt.wah wrong?" the carriage-stewhltely scoured for the comings and goings aivl doings "Nothing, but cut It; that's all." "I was only fooling, Annie." and dancings of the I'oplns and YVhatr ("houteaus, Garrisons and Choplns of "Miss Annie,' I was only fooling, Miss those debonair pioneer days. Annie. I like to see you get hiad with Then becuuse of the West-Entemper of yours and movement, and because people are that constantly prospering or falling back, those great Mg beautiful Cut It, I said." She moved back and the street cnr franchise cutting through the seclusion, and a new gen- from him Into the gloom of halls and toward her open door. eration turning front a brown-ston"Well, of all the little spitfires r. front age, Wnahlns- to a white-stona quail's, and The cry rose, thin ton avenue Just above Jefferson evachack toward him. she turned Let" Into "To uated and slipped decay. "He was croupy all night, Mr. FooV begun to stnre from empty windows, doors sagged out of plumb, and dually, die; I could hear him. Did you fix up like ghouls to the corpse of yesterday, the tent over his crib and burn creo the rooming house Invaded, the lodger sote under It like I shoved your "Just don't know. Miss Annie, what's for the night laying a furtive head beneath the high, culcltnlned ceiling of ailing the little fellow. Got the lamp ulrlghty; but what does It mean, Miss prouder days. Annie, when his little body Is hot ail At 2505 Washington avenue, sinister looking with Its front door sagging over, not real feverish, but ' Just hot, ' In like a toothless mouth, its indoor drjilke?" "I'll see." She was past him Into shutters closed and milk bottles and the en n s of the add foods of the lodger on the window and toward a small crib, In Its corner, sUls, Mrs. Lucy Beasley, to whom life bending over and Into It, her large consisted of two frayed ends which white hands gripping Its sides. would uot meet, conducted n lleomlng "If he needs a doctor, Miss Annie, I House Light Housekeeping. ain't the one to spure expense " She raised her face to You to whom Light Housekeeping Is him with her finger laid across her but a card stuck In a murky window, lips, "lie's dropped off again. It's look to It well that you never know nothing the matter with the little fel more. It Is the hearthstone and the h w, Mr. Foddie, but just croup. My my little one used to get Just this family board gone to smash, and In but their stead a tin can over the gas Jet. way, too, hot and Women sick with the heaviness of not real feverish. Just you burn creo Light Housekeeping sometimes forget sote toniirlit .again and see how It to turn off the gas, Men In such lixes him up." lie advauced toward her, sloughing rooms sit through the long hours of In liis felt slippers the length of the workmluys, oftiines planning no good. Children cry here, uot floor. There was a spaciousness an.) an air of upholstered f comfort about knowing why. a silt of a that, room once .removing It from the In her room overlooking a segment of alley chilly category of the' "neatly fur and the roofs of the King Kuallty shoe nlshed." An upholstered sofa, bulgy factory, Annie Klneady, brushing out but spacious, was drawn out along her Hood of hair, heard one such cry side a fireplace cut In a monstrous beut agulnst the thin walls of her room marble mantelpiece and shaped like and paused with her brush held away an inverted U. A patent rocker ui- from her and looking back at herself bolstered In carpet and a hassock relics of Mr. Foddle's connubial era In the square of wavy mirror. Into the quiet of Sunday morning sat by Mini a folding bed, already church bells rang swung to concealment behind red rep A lambrequin with ball roundly. She stood there with her curtains. fringe huug from the mantelpiece. Be head cocked to the cry, her hair (lowfore this mantel, l! pier mirror of ing down and over her bare arms and more than ever brilliant In the meager better days tilted to reflect the room view of Annie room, with Its cot still awry from her Mr. Foddie paused for beside the crib. rising, a table spread with her poor Klneady there "If that kid of mine gets any fonder and ends of toilet and a howl and pitcher. Besld It n tin slop Jar. of you, Miss Annie, his pa'll get Jealand besides that her empty telescope. ous." "He's the sweetest little thing, Mr The cry, half a cough, rose hkiiIii l'oddie. Just the sweetest little thing, louder, and she tossed down and wound her hair In Its loose and so smart for only three." "Image of his pa." coll, Slid Into her black dress, with "He he Just don't look one bit like her neck rising whltely out of It, squirming to button It up her hmk. you, Mr, Foddie." 'There you go lgnlu, running me Slipped out Into the dark hall, with the medley of breakfast smells oozing down." from everywhere, and knocked, at the "Why, he he's Just the sweetest door, adjoining hers. little thing, Mr. Foddie, Yestenl. typhoid-pneumoni- , e p d d e e . three-window- k d od-.t- gums. looking th'rd-floor-fro- f "Whatr S&i t n Shops "Like itr J Her glance flashed to thai door. It Work. Rooms c stood open. ) "None of that," she said, v The use of Barreled Sunlight, "Why not?" ) .Rice's Gloss White in small shops "You know why not." s and offers the same splen-- j "You great big beauty, youvS what's did advantages that have benefited so that got to do with It?" many of the great modern factories. . (Better workmanship, Jess eyestrain, "Nothing to you and lots to me." more cheerful surroundings, greater "You've left him!" comfort for the workmen, and more ' "Have not!" in the shop follow "Whatta you call lK'ng away from i order and neatness Barreled Sunlight gives its him like this six months and trimmln' , a application. finish permanent hats for a Uvln', I'd like to know, If j that can be washed and Will not need it ain't that? New way of living with .repainting for yearK' Because of the your man." special process by which Barreled Sun"I know what I'm doing. What you light is made it will remain white long-- : er than any other similar product; don't know about my business would A SIZE FOR EVERY PURPOSE fill a book." J "Tryln' to reform a drunk, eh 7 Bet- - Gallons, kail talloni, quarti, pints, hall fir.lt ter try to run the Mississippi river up PROVO PAIN5T1& GLASS CO. Washington avenue. "What do you knowT Why, hy, Wall Paper, Art Materials. he ain't touched a drop since the 110 W. Center St.. Provo. Utah night I left, and I've got his sister to He's it. taken the six prove pledge months ago and Is as sound as a dollar since. I I know what I'm do ing!" Then why don't you go back if you ain't afraid? Why ain't you following up the postmark on them let ters I see layln' down for you on the ha track all the time? You're so crazy about him you wouldn't even see him that time he came to town after you. I got that straight from Beasley her self. Is that your way of showing you Throwing Away Old Tires. ain't afraid Bring Them to "Why, you you don't know nothing about how things are with me and CLAYSON AUTO TIRE CO. and him. I've stuck this long, and to For Repairs make sure I'll stick It out another few Harness Repairing. Expert me. It months if kills Llddy herself Phone 649. says I should. I'm going to see It through .until May day, and then If it's lasted I'll be sure enough to go I will do your PAINTING, home and " PAPER HANGING and WALL "Until when?" "Until aw, what'a it to you? It's PAPER CLEANING. my business." Satisfaction guaranteed. "Tou big sassy doll, don't you talk to me like that, you big sassy doll, ROBERT i ( and, ! spending the last three months attend log the Babcock School of Pharmacy, The Mrfiieterv read U now practi cally complete. Nearly "200 loads of gravel "have been hauled there for tne repair work to make two splendid driveways through the lot Mr. and 3in. Melvin Nelson are the baby prodd parents of an eight-pounboy. Mother and babe doing nicely. of A baby girl arrived at the home Mr. and Mrs. Aveiyn Kicnaru All concerned are doing fine. Raundv Thorn returned to Pleasant Grove from Idaho, after having spent the winter there. He reports tnings t hnine verv oulet up there. Mr. Thorn expects to remain here for the summer. Mrs. B. C. Linebaugh and daughter Jewel were American Fork. Tisitors Wednesday. ,Mr. and Mrs. Tim Richards of American Fork' have moved to Lin- don to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Morel Kicnara 01 Magna spent two days this week here visiting relatives. Mrs. Maude AXwood and Marvin Smith of Salt Lake spent Thursday and Friday here visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Kicnaras. W. E. Clark was among the business visitors in Salt Lake last Thurs- ' Thirty Years In Business-- - d , weu-nesda- Six Kinds of the Best Utah Coal on the Market SATISFACP:! Smoot & Spafford Uptown Office, Commercial Bank. Yard Phone 17. day. Superior Gasoline work-room- WMM " 1 light-reflectin- , ; r '; he-w- Repair Column Old Things Made New STOP! r COCKRELL, 258 W. 4 No. '. you." "Ain't you ashamed, tryln' to cut up like that with with her, your your wife only dead two years?" "What's that got to do with It?" "Lots." "I married her late and she died on me early, that's an there's to that. That's all. What has been ain't got nothing to do with now. Gave her a square deal, too. Five rooms up on 'age avenue, furnished up for her like out of a catalogue. Bought her bel ter duds than she was used to In a thousand years In the umbrella department where she worked eight years on my floor. I gave her a square deal while she lived, and that's more a than lots can say. Made twenty-fivon her. Veek and spent twenty-fiv- e IVhat'a that eof to do with now?" Phone 650-- , 332 West Center. C.; W. CLARKSTON, Mgr. Have It Done the ROYAL Way Where Quality and Workman ship Count, We Win. ROYAL SHOE REPAIRING CO. We Call and Deliver. e 208 W. Center. Phone 674. FIRST CLASS SHOE "Promised her the night she died to stand by REPAIRING lilm, and have I stood, have 1?" We absolutely guarantee ou; Toor, little Robbie." "Why, easy as snapping fingers I work. Prices reasonable. could put the kid up in a home, comlike PROVO SHOE REPAIRING CQ fortable, too, and live for myself a gentleman, If I wasn't doing right 127 N. Univ. Ave. Phone 418--J ' that kid 'ud have a father . What I get being cooped by up in a cheap Joint like this? On twenty-fiv- e per I can live like a genPROVO TAILORING CO. tleman. It's because I need a woman Jike Beasley who'll look after the little fellow daytime. Nobody can say 1 We guarantee to make your old ain't doing Lenle's dust proud." clothes look like new. "That that's no way to tulk, Mr. her-dust- Foddie." "Fine girl, was Lenle; fine as you'd want, Miss Annie. A bit spavined, 1 used to tease her, from standing in umbrellas all those years, but not bad when her bangs was frlxred and her pony skin on." "Is that what she's got on In the picture there on the mantel?" "Same. She was a great one for style, Lenle. Used to love to do Iter flat and then dress up like a horse and buggy and come down to the umbrellas, glvln' the, old girls heart failure the first time she sprung the pony skin on 'em. Sixty-flvcash that coat set me back, girl." "She was right pretty, poor little thing." "Got It packed In camphor down In Beasley's ceJlar now. Gad, but that coat would look neat on a figure like yours. On your figure It would be a coat sure enough." "Poor little thing, right pretty around the eyes, and Bobble's got her mouth." "Pretty, but irnd, girl, I've seen lots of 'em In my time ; been hlrln' 'em for eighteen year, but never clapped eyes on one like you: Where'd you get that hair, girl dip It In fire? I hired a girl for the laces once Just because the bad hair thai shade, but nothing up to yours! Gad, where'd jou get It?" " "Steve used to call It hlshls next j laan.T, fPntrtlnued e I fitOYO C. F. JIafley, commonly known as California Frank, was in the city the latter part of the week in the inter and rodeos, which est of his round-up' he is staging in .the principal cities throughout the nation, While in the citv Mr. Hafley was in communication with Secretary Elmo cunntngnam 01 the Chamber of Commerce trying to here some ia::ge for a round-ut'me durinjt July. According to Mr. Ha.'ley he has on his ranch at Rldgway, Colo., all the stocit necessary ior c real cowboy roundlup, such as buck-luhorses, longhorn steers, saddle liori;es and Brahma steers, which rave never before been seen in this part of the country. Air. Hafley,. who has been in . the how business during the last 20 at years, last year staged a round-uSt. Louis,, said to be the blggert ever staged, at which $2000 were given away in prizes. Nothing definite was decided relative to staging a rodeo in this city. iMr. Hafley Intends to "come here at a Jater date to make the necessary arrangements for his show. Phone 475. We Call and Deliver 1 trs 1WHY WORRY? We can you save money ay repairing y our lrId shoes. r ECONOMY SHOE SHOP 403 West Center. C. CHARLEY CURTIS THE MAN WHO KNOWS I ft. BUSTER BROWN SHOE REPAIRING FACTorv - 27e s . m (Ealloii AJ. Superior Motor Co. p g Tell Your Auto Trouble To The State Garage Just Open New Equipment First Class Mechanic- aA Service First Institution Ignition Experts In fact, this is a Real Service Garage, operated by ' Real Mechanics. WAS DECLARED OX WEEDS Corner Third South and Seventh East. Provo, Utah. By C. J. SOREN80N County Crop and Pest Inspector. The state board of agriculture, In regular session IMarch 20, hereby de clares and proclaims white top (iLep-ldium Draba) to he hereafter a noxious weed in the state of Utah. This, bull In addition to Canada thistle, thistle and burdock make up the list of noxious weeds In the entire state, but several counties have added by petition certain other weeds to the list in those counties. ' White top belongs to the mustard family,, being closely related to peppfr grass and consequently is hot, peppery and distaseful to animals. It is a perennial, which means that it prorogates by running root stocks as well as by numerous seeds, and lives over from year to year. This is the earliest of all our perennials. It be; gins about the same time, as alfalfa and ripens seed before the first crop of hay is cut, Canada thistle Is also a perennial. It has long slender stems and pinkish-purplflowers, usually in clusters. The leaves are small and extremely spiny. It spreads by seeds and running root stocks. It has quite a start In some sections and is so aggressive that If not soon controlled will spread and do considerable damage. Thlsi Is a later and slower grower, maturing its seed in August Bufcfocir ahdrhnll thistel are biennials that infes twet places, neglected pastures and lands. Preventing these plants from producing seeds for two years will eradicate them and one cutthe crowd about blooming ting below s to prevent feeds from do time veloping will suffice for either of these1 weeds. ' Section 1 of the noxious weed law reads as follows Sec. 1. Destroying Noxious Weeds. Every railroad, canal, ditch and water company, and every person, firm and corporation owning, controlling or occupying lands In this state, and every county, municipality, irrigation- or drainage district having the supervision and control over streets, alleys, or other lands lanes, rights-of-washall Cut and destroy all Canada thistle, bull thistle, burdock and all other weeds designated by the stata hoard of agriculture as noxious and Injur ious to vegetation before such weeds shall propagate or spread and when ever required by the state board or the county erop pest Inspector. The law alohe, however; is of little avail if public sentiment is not behind it and a majority of the" community is voluntarily living the law by practicing good farming methods and by effort in public meetings, demonstrations, etc., are. enlightening the masses and creating public sentiment.' eLt us look for cleaner and better farming, eradicate the bad weeds now in our midst and prevent others from gaining a foothold. Now is the tinje to begin work on weed eradication, especially of those perennials that grow and reproduce from running root stocks. The one sure way to get rid of these weeds is to keep the tops cut down so thoroughly! that they cannot develep any green leaves.. The leaves manufacture (out of the raw food) the food that keeps the roots and all other parts of the plant alive. Therefore, If no green leaves are allowed to develop the stored up food In the., roots is finally exhuustcd and the plant perishes. Thoroughness and Constancy are nec essary because If leaves aro allowed to develop they soon become green and make food to continue the life of sose pernicious roots. liiiiii . PROVO HOME SHOE REPAIR ING SHOP AND SHOE SHINE (HfARAIlTEED e so-a- What's happened? Your car looks like new? , . Sure it does! I took it to THE AUTO LAUNDRY and had it washed and polished. They certainly do fine work. Keep your the enamel. car and save We maintain an . up-to-d- greasing and oiling service. riaxfield Auto Top Building Phone 121. 390 West Center. 4 HEMSTITCHING AND PICOTING DONE. -- - CLEAN-UTIME IS HERE. This is the time not only to clean houses and yards, but clean clothes. Last summer's clothes, cleaned, will Sive many weeks of wear. They'll look like new. Men's Suits and Ladies' Garments cleaned now will make happier Easter, and a less costly one. P 11 NATIONAL Phone 85 (IJ 125. --w OUIt MONUMENT ,.r (Itn fitw-i- t of nA The designs and the 'in '? best and the prices are fir If you contempliil' craii memorial before Invite you to conic nml n" w large variety which for lettering. ready IJEESLEY GRANITE l,, WOK r Cnuth nf Tabernacle, |