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Show T" - ' v - . 7 ' " J'--- , 1'' " -- -- tt--' i fliGOTOIIE Special v. ATTENTION IS" CALLED TO THE LIGHTING SYSTEM OF YOUR CAR, THE SPEED COP MAY GET YOU-DRI- VE AND SAVE FIVE. PHILADELPHIA uiamona Grid rlVrc Year Stewart- - Warner Products; Parts; Culmer's Oils. Stromberg Carburetor.. new-fangl- Depart ment Offers an unexcelled ser Gen Sys-tern- s. xLhomeyand. aaemlngly-blndlnrnnd--w straining things which go with the rearing and protection of a young life. But, as J was soon to learn, even during that period all was not at smooth at might be. One day In Wray's absence Bessie remarked that delightful as It was to have a child of her own, the could aernerself tt little more than milk-cowith ialf, bound to Its service until It should able to look after itself. She spokeof what a chain and a weight a child was to one who had ambitions beyond those of motherhood. But Wray, clerkly tout that he waa, wat til bnt lost In rapture. There was a small park nearby, and here he waa to be found trundling this Infant In a handsome baby carriage whenever hit duties would permit He liked to specu late on the charm and Innocence o( naoyhood and wat amused by a hundred things he bad never noticed In the children of others. Already he wat planning for little Marie's future. If waa hard for children to be cooped up In the ltyr If he could wJnBea- sle to the Idea, they would move to some suburban town. They were prospering now and could engage a nursemaid, so lira. Wray resumed her Intellectual pursuits. - It was easy to see that respect Wray at aha might as tn affectionate and methodical man, the could not lor him, and that because of the gap that lies between hose who thnk or dream a little and those who aspire and dreaaumucb,' They were two differing rates of motion, flowtag side by she the quicker. Observing them together op8 could tee Jow" proud, he wat of her and his relationship to her, how he felt that he had captured a prise regardless of the conditions by which It wat retained, while the held htm rather lightly m her thoughts or her moods. Having won her back be now sought to bind her to him In any way that he might while she .wished only to be free. For surcease she plunged Into those old activities which had so troubled htm, and now In addition to himself the child was 'being neglected, or to he had thought The arrival not Influenced her In - that- - respect And what was more and worse, the bad how taken to reading Freud and g and allied thinkers and authorities, men and' works ha considered shameful even though scarcely grasped by him. . Once ha said to met "Do you know of a writer of the name of Pierre Loti "Tea,"-- replied. ! know his works. What about ttr , -- "What do you think of hlmr "Why, 1 respect . him. Very much. What about hlmr' "Oh, I know, from an Intellectual point of view, as a fin writer, maybe. But what do you think of his views of life of his books at booka to be read by the mother of a little glrir ."Wray," I said, "I cant enter upon I discussion of any man's works upon it Kraft-Ebbin- r ' s 4 good He-mi- ght purely-jnoral-soun-ds.- I , WCENTER. ---- 21S .yPhoneWO . ... ' " 1 ' t for some mothers snd evil for others. "That Is as you will. Those who are to be Injured by a picture of life must be Injured, and those who art t b benefited will be benefited. I canT. discuss either books or life la that way. I tee books aa truthful representation! of life In some form. nothing more.-An- d it rwould be an fair Jqanyone, who .Jtood-ta-lnt- el. lectual need . to . be restrained from that which might prove of advantage to elm. I speak only for myself, - how-eve.- ; GOOD out with IntelllrentneonlP. Rut It wssn't that, rfthar. If of bienhe-sort- . . J UUI1DISE 4-- -; . fY We nave heretofore Ebs Tatar Gecrge FMtera sneiaato GEORGE KIBBE TURNER from the inferior. George Xtbbe Timer stmrud his literary esreer when be ftrat cams out of college. He joined the aU8 ' of the BprlnsDeM Republlcen at a ' very modest ealsrjr. His next step B.ae.4b Black -- CatHrcttuttTJay a thin little magaslne which printed eurprisinsly Intereetlnc torte, , Then one day, a the phreee quite different In fact. Mr. Tuner wrote, a novel for VcClure'e -Vasulce. It had a KeW Bngland setung, and a poUUoaJ angle, and tt .received wide aad - Important Thereafter " (or nine eommeitt years Ur.. Turner waa one of Utt of McClure's Uata- -' shie and be wrote both articles and fiction en a treat variety of c k - I - - sfr ' iM T' v Jill , v I B Tears of experience, coupled with- - a-- keendesire :Ioj handle only the best, has le.-b- ut given many a housewife a confidence LI inu every ar- ticle ordered at our Btore. ' Today we have not se i-t- - rfi Subjects. -- v, Hr. Turner w the author of many short stories and articles, but "Hasar's Hoard." a story of the yellow Tfever epidemic In Memphis. Tenn.. filled with fact and drama tlo tnctdent, and "White Sboulders" are auajMteed to keep 'Mr. .Turner conspicuously to the fiwnt la euf literature. kTorIn the story that follows; 'written the 8tar Author Series of Matrimonial Adventures, the husband is drawn as only a man keen in understanding of men could picture hlra. The side of marriage that Mr. Turner presents tat '"Birth Stonee" is novel and at the same time universally appealing.-,- MART STEWART CUTTING. JR. aU over the -- - 't - r 3 Best Box for the least i money snaatlBlBBlBnaV ; For 20 years this box Jias stood the test It does double duty, saving both led and food. : "7 'TIT" a Special prices With your Grocery order we are prepared te handle your- Fresh and Cured West Center. WE SELL FOR LESS 164 Meat demands. rinn r nniiTr PHONES 6768 We ForYot1 X Hoover Brothers have" ; AT . ff mag ment j 'been makings Excelsior Flour for more than 80 r ' dependable service tooths people of Utah county U -- ; (6ur guarantee that celaior Flour Is depend- - ' able andutisfying. Ex-- r- SCHWAB CLOTHING CO. nar : -- ".-- - rrWh'enTOU want'flour, v insist: that your grocer send you - - . y-berv- lce ' ' ... Jr t1 .'..' " I f V. m2. niAAwi. wo specialize in tnat aina muuuoio yiKv. Ttri ' i .... , IT , a ', - of service. 1- -1 Eeelsior 1 ' ' . TRYUSo eJsTS Flour y . . means a job when you want it, as you want - IVS yes-prob- ablyli in. : .Buying Clothes id a necessitv." Buying good Clothes is a test of good judgment is a test of a store's characters good Clothes : Selling ' We sell and recommend -TKUPPENHEIMER GOOD CLOTHES" ' yearsr Thirty years of pre-aum- e. -- 1 at -Lanning's l' nm-brel- la s5S3 i:iniri!irKii!!iiyiii;nn;ai:5!Slitifiii OUR ME AT DEPTd It's GrW.M filiUItlll.j... Turnips . ..i-i- iv ., West First South, ere .the Flowe Green Onions , ... ' - RS Spinach Beets r r TTPhone Eight-O- , Asparagus red-face- d V 201 VqlumbidRefrjgerqtors Oranges ,New Potatoes ' Radishes ; - r i - .r Proiig CGrem House Bananas baa done." hie hands were de Instead of ..'--.- get them here, in bouquets, special dethe potted blossoms all suitable for grave decoration. Order today, strawberries L?.if! SLSLSSMSSSOJ. .h. hA PRICES . You can signs or just IUESDAY BUYERS AT JL.. These Jewel brokers are - AND MONDAY OCK-BOTTO- M 1 it with FLO WEES. A FEW SUGGESTIONS FOR 1" They were but are ho more, and we owe them a debt of gratitude,, even though they have passed on, And that is to cherish their memory. Let's do lected any specific specials for week-en- d buyi. we have but coming ing, in hourly : fine, afresh; fruits and vegetables, : bookev JniKiipfss- - - . . , for all kindt of business buying or telling I They're a wtse crowd. They have to be. They get some dangerous propositions put. up to them and some wild ones, particularly-Ihard to me. . , timet. V "Now, Wray," I Interposed, "bow They had tome extra wild onea to useless to say that Which of ut is that financial cave-i- n after the war as he ought to be? Why will you talk especially the Fifth avenue ones. Half sor the upper West aide waa fighting to v "But let me tell you what the did," drive the wolf from the new limousine he went on fiercely. Toa haven't an door. Idea of what I've been through, not an It waa a year ago last March t Idea. Snevtrled to poison roe ones " the worst of It when thlt one fm and here followed a sadrecttal of the telling you of drifted Into Harry twists and turns and desperation of Volpe's place on Fifth avenue In the one- - who wished to be free. "And she' late afternoon. was alone In Tolpa waa la love with another man, only the office, staring down out of his sec-could never find out who he waa." 'ond-stor- y window on the two streams And ho gate mq detalla of certain of automobile tops on the avenue, mysterious goingt to and fro, of se- r "You the proprietor cret pursuits on his part of actions atraneer hark nf hint at thasked thla n.nM and evidences and moods and quar- 1 a big. d with big husky, rels which pointed all too plainly to .thoolders and a small noaa..and-a-re. 4reach that could never be healed. ' a..LU. a ucvauv.' T . I iigurea nun ngnt "And what is mors, she tortured me, away theniuipe soma sort of a conas You'll never know you couldn't But tractor. x I loved her. And I love her bow." "8ure," ha said, coming over, dust Once more the tensely gripped fingers, his hands. yon haver the white face, the' flash of haunted 'tog"My name's "WhafU Den Ooogan eyes. "Ones I followed her to a res- aald the bis man. mtrodncintv Ooogan," himaif taurant when she said aha was going you," aald Harry to visit a Mend, and aha net a man. I "GUd to know suing him up.; "What can I I followed them when they cams out, Volpa, do for youf ' and when they were getting Into a cab wast wouia you say this wat I told them both what I thought of said the stranger, reaching In ;Woru.F them. I threatened to kill them, and and out big dlattondjecfcT dragging then he went away when thaloid.hla lace-th-ar seemedrto be lying loose, noma we to go. wnen got i couioai without any case, la the right-han- d do anything with her. . AO aha would lower pocket of hit coat ear was that If I dldnt like the way What you paid for It or what you ahe waa doing could let her go. She could realise Volpa asked him, still wantea me to eve ner a uivorce. na siting him up the way- - yon have to I couldnt let her go, even If I had In that business. And went aver It wanted to. I loved her too much. ;wltb hit glass and told him what be " Why- ,- aha - would alt- and Tfead"" and (mlght probably get If he got a buyerd me tor days Ignore days, without you'd have hard work finding j"But ever a word." one just now ror anything as big at "Yet."-- 1 said, "but the folly of It 'that. I know I wouldn't buy It sot alL' The uaelessnets, the . hopeless nowr r aw" iFTfon couldnt not If you wanted "Ob, I know, but I couldnt help It tor aald the other man. "wouldn't 1 was craty about her. .The more aba 'sell It for all the money la Wall disliked me. the mors I loved her. at reet- have) walked the streets for hours. And he looked at tf he meant It because wholadaytrTrnima, "But here'a the thing I want te couldnt eat or Bleep, And all I could ow," ha aald. "Could you pun nut nd think.-Athati enough stones do waa think,' think, troa thla to stand tor a Is about all I do now, really. I have tor a ten thousand-dolla- r never been myself since she left It's .pledge . almost as bad right now as tt wait I loanr. "Why Volpa. tw6 years ago. I Uva In the old apart. w dont generallrTrant to ment yet. But why? Because I. think l"Tbough handle unset stones. Because you aha might come back to me. I'walt knowr i- - ;, x . and wait I know it's foolish." but be to huht .Is "Theyta stolen, apt still I wait Whyt God vpnly Japwa mat it said the Big nuub. , Oh," he sighed, "It's three years now "Yeah. break out of them "They up three years." . their so cant be IdenO- Ha paused and gated at me, and t Jed." settings,. .......they at him, shaken by. a fact that was I "But , you've got youa setting here. I without --solution won F "I wasnt talking about thla," said dered where, she waa, whether, aha .Volpe. "I wu just telling you." aver thought of. him even,' whether J .' "Welt; about how many would you aha was happy In her new freedom. say the customer asked him. And then, ; without "more '..adoL.he And he told him about a third of slipped on hhi raincoat took, hla .. . . . them. j s and marched out Into the ram t Now the next thing." aald the man,' again, to, walk ' and 'think, I satisfied apparently, "la could you Aijd I, closing the door, studied take ths; could you take that amount the walla, wonderlngly. The despair, of stones out of their settings, snd the passlo'n, the rage, the hopeless- put back substitutes In their plac- eness,' the ' lore. Truly," I thought good ones, so they wouldn't' be no "thla la love for one at least And ticed thla Is marriage for one at least. He had. tht Is spiritually wedded to that woman, who despises hlm.And she.jnaybs r!?Ndw-"theo. another thing,"- h Bald, spiritually "wdedto:renother,"7wlu fixing his little blue-graeyes on him may despite her. , But love and as If thlt was Important "How long one have'neen at I for Vest, rtagV Would be the shortest time you could hers U thlt room snd with ,rNe v do It bv-- lf you. en couldn't have done as she He paused and clenched nervously, as though ha nouncing her to her face) V ex- chandise o that oar trade will receire only the best. Each day we are confronted with the same problem-txi- at of selecting the better grade f UB1U4 3 diso-imliia- BMkr.,''WhM Com'rlskt br V, plained how ingfr we select our mer-- . Aaihwee-lke1 -- "'; r Jtre ,Ia the matter ' of the Estate-'o- f September, 1523. ' ..Eooeo Rita. i" r , ALVA 'Creditors will present ' claims with Touchers to the undersigned Baker A Baker, 'AUoWT at hit office at the State Bank of Executor,' Provo, Provo, Utah, or to Baker A (First pubUoation Vay r w? offloe t publioaWon May r,MS.r Baker, attorneys, - Birth Stones ends slower, erators, Magnetos, Starting and Lighting , things, and I wasn't satisfied until she was. And now see! She leaves me and says I'm narrow and trying to bold her back Intellectually.' I shook my head.. Of what vtlue . was advice in the face of such a situation at this, especially from one who was satisfied that the mysterlestif temperament were not to be unrav eled or adjusted save by nature xvevertneiess, oeing appealed to, I ven tured a silly suggestion; borrowed 4nm tmoerr-HCK-aa said that If be could onlywlnBeV back be would be willing to modify the pointless opposi tlon aniKcontentlon that bad driven her away. She might to her Intellec-ty as the chose. If the .would only come back. . . ..- - Seeing him so tractable and so very wishful, I himself, before my lire. He looked suggested a thing another had done well enough, quite the careful person 15 clothes, but JltuatlonrHe was her back by offering her such terms as thinner, more tense and restless. He she. would accept-an- d then. In border said be. yrtu doing, very well and was Ho bintrber fo him, be was to Induce thinking f tak!nglaJong vacatlon-t- o cap visit soma friends in th West" (He ture her sympathy and at the same had heard that Bessie had gone to time insinuate an Image of himself California.) Then of a sudden, noting Into her affectionate consideration. that I studied htm and wondered, he Those who bad children rarely sep- grew restless and finally got up to look at a shelf of books. Suddenly he aratedor to I said. The thought Interested him at once.. wheeled and faced me, exclaiming: It satisfied his practical and clerkly' cant stand It That's what'a the mat soul. He left me hopefully and I saw ter. I've tried and. tried." I thought nothing more .of him for several that the child would make thinga months, when he came to report that work out aU right, but it didn't She all was welt with him once mora.- - In didn't want children and never for order to' teal the new pact he had gave me for persuading her to have taken a. larger apartment In a more Marie.' And that literary craze but the city. Bettle was that wat my fault I was the one that engaging part of er with-hon club life, and be encouraged her to read and go to the going was not opposing her. And then with theaters. I used to tell her- - she that; she 'ought to in the year cam a child, and for the wasn't next two yean all those simple. wake up and find out what wat going -- Our Service vice in Repairing these d d iJ- L ' Guaranteed for Two Remy-Delc- o. her; lit couldn't help It. recalled how tweet and Innocent and strange aha bad been when lie first met her, how much she respected her parents' wishes, and now see. wish to God," he suddenly exclaimed, "that I hadn't been In sue a hurry to change her. She was til right- - then, If 1 had only known It She wasn't in trill be loved "H In had " taken. ' Apart ' from - a solemnity and a reserve which sprang from a wounded and 'disgruntled spirit, be pretended as Indifference and a satisfaction with his present state which did-nsquare witb-n- ia past love for ben She had gone, yet, and with another man. He wafsurs of that, although he did not know wbeJ ine man was. it waa au doe to one of those two women about whom ha bad told me before,,tfiat Mrs. Drake. She had Interested Bessie In things which did not land could not Interest him. Theywere all alike, those people crasy and notional and Insincere. After, a' time he added that he had been to see her parents. J could not guess why, unless It was because be was lonely and still very much In love and. thought they might help blm to understand the troublesome problem that was before blm. ' There was no other word frnnvWra for much over a year... during which time he continued to live' In the apart ment they had occupied together. He had retained his position with the agency and wasnaw manager of -- a One' rainy November department night be came to see me, and aeated Matrimonial Adveniurts CWTC TO ?50T,Ck they (Continued front Trltoj.) terested which he waa so fond, i Wot searing directly from him as te this, I caUed upon him after a time and found, bint Bvmg to the, same large apartment 1 Battery Connecticut; !; is -- ' THE SUNDAY HERALD, MAY 27, 1923. - -- e4 Bicycle Exchange 416 W. Centers ...... - -- : L. 12. -- . Wall. |