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Show PAGE FOUS f . - , " ft: D A " STUDEBAMS a ret studied her remotely through threw her arms around -Sybil and THIS HAS HAPPENED " kissed her on the mouth. clouds of smoke. SYBIL THOKNE. home from "Sybil Thorne! I haven't seen "Rather nice, lant It?" he reghastly honeymoon, I living- with you for agev Only this morning I Nobody marked Idly. mother In Boston. "Nice? Oh, Craig, It's wonderful was saying to Aunt Emily, T simply knew .Sybil is married excerpt MABEL BLAKE and - Mabel's being together, I mean," she as- most phone Sib I don't know what My dear. TJanoe, JACK MOO BE. Sybil mar-rU- d sured him. "I havent enjoyed any- shell think of me . glad to see you. What an adorable BICHARD EU8TIS to "Ha thing so for ages." courtship at Through dinner he remained dis- acquette. Sit down, honey. I've 40 vana after a five-da- y people waiting to see me but let sea. The marriage lasted two weeks. tantly affable and air the blessed 'em were walt Whats ths news. Bib!' of intimacies ago nui her little of long after learning Sybil, Sybil proffered her package. band's unbelievable. Infidelity, re- - like painful memories. "I've been intending to get down fairned In Boston with Mabel. Sybil poured his coffee and when ! n NKWHALL. her old he had taken it from her her fin- with this for ages." "Oh, my dear, It's lovely perfectsweetheart, meets her at the pier, gers closed softly about hi wrist ' ' ' Then, swiftly, he sought her eyes ly exquisite!" but his manner is strangely distant, ' Mabel conhandled .it rapturously.' she until bent know them could and If he hld ; and Pybil wonders so never saw beau "I beads. Is anything her to She romance. fused, finger '.. anything Of .her " ' She wnisperea soniy. tiful." "Craig wretchedly unhappy because of her not all that that's "Well, to want me, brought of still marry "Do because you ' " tragic secret, and also me down," admitted Sybil, and ; the recent death of her father,' and Craig? He took her bands then, and held glanced apprehensively toward the TAD, the marrtase P her brother, room. "Can anyone hear us, - v xi whip, WEST, a frivolous them with both of his. " Mab."V,:',..,. ' "You know I do, dear, he said. mnifiuh litUe debutante. nj "Not a soul, dear. What's on your i - MM THORN K. who 19 r also . She was tempted then to tell him mind.". Bvervthimr. I heartbroken, takes up psychp-anal"I'm going to have a baby.' me," she asked, sis at Valerie's suggestion ana geIn "Would you marrybeen a very bad The night gown slipped from ; "4f you knew I'd ..imk on life." Valerie, Mabel's fingers, and all the joy In i on of her tantrums, flings fromaer--the girl?'' ; v to He smiled and inclined his head her good, " plain" "face . turned ' room because sybil ana iaa misery. on gravely as one humoring a child. efforts her of f BnappreciaUve "Are you sure?" ' "Yes'm." he told her seriously. mother's behalf Mrs. Thome, "I went to the doctor's yesterday. some ' their apologetic for Vat suggests "If you knew I'd been-o- h, always perhaps?" Next May, he says." ; that maybe she; Is going to have a thing dreadful married, and mussing nis "Sybil turned, suddenly faint, toThen.he. laughed, t baby ward the wlndowLanLwhejLMabI ; 0VV CO OH WITH TrfMTOBY . had opened it, she leaned on the table. center on the ot.the. JSAVJJ. heap CHAPTER . "Come orr" he. Invited" heartily. sill Spasmodic dry cookings and horrible sounds came-froher "Vallir dance! And lav" off this mar throatm rhimee." she opined. - - She threw her arms over PoundstufC'will Sybil? you, riage " yesterday f Mr't Vhnrnebornblushed her g stlfle"the noise she ing away on a sore spot's no good, made.face, painfully. -- - "You shouldn't say - things like you know." If if " be so wouldn't bad "It crie-a- . meant she "But I itr that" she reproved, her daughter ' ""Yes", .you did!"" he muttered. She could not say it mildly. There were tears in Mabel's eyes, Inten "Who started it?" demanded Tad. You've got about as much tion of marrying me as nothing at .but Sybil's were hard and dry. and catching her to him, kissed her all. "Don't, dear," she cried. "It will So let's stop discom1 roughly and laughed at herheart set Do your theorizing talklng.jibout.ltr ; with some other be all right" her Mother's ' got head.--fort, "It shook ner Sybil guy, because It deosfft get any on a grandchild. I guess 'you'll have awfulfshe gasped. "I r where with me. Sib." to get married Sib." hate him, Mabel I hate him! His we Shall danceTshe Jhlm Jtsked he head mother's ' Across his --- - babyrrr.T" -- winked broadly. "A. girl ought to stiffly. ; stood She with back to the bef He held her closely and looked be willing to do that much for her window, and her head against the on the down littl6.mauv grimly poor old mother". on his shoulder. glass, moving it restlessly. Her eyes Mrs. Thome pushed him gently hat that nestled were wild and haunted. Her Jtt,.brjDnvwsre eyeatbeneath from heri (To Be Continued) he course tears. wet of But with the "Freshle!" she murmured Jn and Mabel prepare for (Sybil nor could not know guess that fashion of her girlhood and slapped when a Christmas at the Settlement House. tin drop splashed big salty him: with a pink rose. And that was the And Sybil, her heart softened, disher violets .. , j covers that she does not hate Rich..j romance. of their a for while, " September was" hot "In Boston end,v.-ard's child. A new glimpse of SybU r that year. Quiet .with hardly Ina AutJna. followed on the heels of In the next chapter.) ' the heat rising breath of atrf-anSummer; and November was little puffs from the cobble stones, Indian Dead cold and drear and gray. in swam small school boys , After In dusty spirals and leaves whirled patand Pond grownups ths Frog a penetrating dampness made Sybil ronised the swan boats. Firenen shiver as shs set out one afternoon And the streets. sprinkled down the to call on Mabel at Wester House. newspaper chronicled ths temperaJack was home again and Mabel ture In screaming headlines with had now. Not the convenher lists of prostrations In red print tional ring engagement ring at all but Mrs. Thorns felt the heat painfully. a delicate Committees are working hard for platinum circlet, set with "If you'd had sense enough-tsapphires. With It she would wear the big community fair to be held Wlanno!" reproached Bybtl at stay her wedding ring, like a guard. And In Payson September 24 and 25. Ex- Valerie. It on me." later Jack would give her a twin hibits to b In place by noon Mon .That's right blame band, set with pearls. Sapphire- s- day and Judging will begin at 2 p. m. "Well you dragged Mother home." diamonds pearls it was the very The best ip all departments will be "Oh of course ItT all my fault" idea. They were to be married taken to the Utah county fair. The The girls had stopped speaking, latest In the Spring. general committee consists of Heber when Valerie decided to visit Sybil was carrying a white tissue A. Curtis, E. E. Robinson, - Mrs. New In Haven. friends A Mable Stewart, Mrs. Ann J. Loveribbons. "You'll be glad enough to be rid package, tied with satin : d nightgown of jcbiffon less. r ef me," she remarked, which wassoj In roses are with satin flesh, assisted palest the compink They being by from refrained true that Sybil peeping through the sheerness of It following department committees: ::aaent. r L... gift to Mabel And, Advertising and publicity, George Tad was to make a western trip Her engagement primarily, hsr excuse for Intruding Whetman, Roland Lindsay, James on business. on a busy Wednesday afternoont Clove. Mrs A. R. Wilson; arrange"And when I get back," he . The telephone operator directed ments, R. D. McKell, O. C. Nielsen. firmly, "Val and I are going her to the -third floor.- - Mabel was George Chase; finance, Mayor X D. "to "look around for a place of our clinic director of a place called the Stewart B. F. Ott Mrs. George It's , an awful Imposition , own. O. Y. N. did not know what Chase, Mrs. Birdie Barnett; crops, staying here. Val doesn't realise, that meant,Sybil apparently it was a Fred Ott Blaine Hanson, S. A. Harof . course but Mother's not so clinic for but women the most de- ris, Armond Hancock, Joseph Hea-to. young as she used to be." distressful women. John Francom, Charles Gale, , It was Sybil who packed his bags pressing, They sat about on benches, their Jesse Hall; fruit Henry Erlandson, and sewed his buttons on and drove odorous In the un- Louis Bates, Arthur Daley, Tom him to the station when he went damp clothes warmth of the place. It Hynes, Ed Loveless, Paul Cesser, pleasant an had Valerie engagement away. was out, and slushy, and Roy Haskell, Earl Page; horses. that evening to play bridge. The some raining of them had left rubbers on Sterling Taylor, Sargent Barnett next day she was leaving for Con- the Dave Shuler, L. L. Gilpin; dairying. register. necticut Now the rubbers smelled, and uarroi Wilson, Ivan Ballard, '. their cheap furs reeked with the -It Harding; beef cattle, Flint Dix was lonely for Sybil when she and her mother were there alone, loathsome smell of wet dyes. Chi- on, Charles Douglas; poultry, Angun about their knees, wiiiey, Owen Loveless; sheep and since Craig had more or less effaced ldrenplayed to their skirts; They were hogs, C. P. Olson, Wilson Mitchell himself, and Sybil was rather avoid- clinging unhappy, frightened looking chil- Glenn Cowan, Elmer McBeth, Orris ing her old crowd. dren with running noses and ugly, Wilson; Junior department Mrs. Craig had declared himself quite misfit Genevieve Ellsworth, Miss Chrtsta clothing. definitely. Mabel looked up- - from the desk Olson, Mrs. Kathryn Betta; flori"I don't like being a footstool," where sat before a, great card culture, Mrs. Alta Lindsay, Mrs. he told her. "And I'm all through Index. she A woman who had been cry- Amy Haynea,: Mrs. Jack Dixon: bothering you, Sybil. I guess may- ing softly turned away, and Mabel clothing, Mrs. Julia Hancock, Mrs. be you've found my protestations wrote on a little card and Inserted J. F. Harris, Mrs. Otto Erlandson. annoying. You know I" love you. I'd it in the Index. Mrs. E. H. Street; domestlo art Mrs. do anything for you. But I don't "Next Thursday then, Mrs. Bren-nan,- " Eustace Mendenhall, Mrs B. L Jen- seem to know how to make you care she said. "And you musn't be sen, Mrs. Stanley Wilson, Miss .for me. So I'm going to drop out of May ;, frightened." . the picture for- a while." Mcuetn, urs. Dave Shuler, Mrs. C H. White, Miss Sutherland; applied . f Absence makes the heart grow Then she saw Sybil standing un- art, Mrs. Edna Snow, Mrs Charlotte fonder," she parried lightly,-hal- f in the doorway, her eyes Stewart, Mrs. Gene Hillman, Mrs. glad of the relief of promised soli- certainly shiftiftg from one frowsy, wretched Earl Page; food, Mrs. Birdie Bar . tude. .. creature to another. In a second nett. Mrs. Frank Wheelwright Mrs. "So I've noticed," he retorted, Mabel had crossed the room- ,- her Will McClellan, Mrs. Ed : Patten. J"f onder of the other man." . white clinic apron blowing out be- Mrs. H. A. Curtis, Mrs. Henry Dris-She wondered it there wag any hind 'her like a starched sail. She sell .. In the remark. significance - "If there's ever anything I can do for you," he offered. "Oh. Craig!" she protested, "don't - be ' ' silly! tWell, Tlust wanted you to know," he insisted awkwardly. "Any time 1 you want jne. Jet me know . " hr ' In ' r nti . '. . i " X-r- : y- . " ; . ' - m -- j erie-wasn- - .... COMMUNITY FAIR SLATED The microscopic eye of Studebak-er'- s engineering department was In constant attendance at the Atlantic City speedway when the Studebaker President Eight recently gave tne world an unprecedented endurance record by traveling 80,000 miles in Al 26J62 consecutive minutes. though the run was under the constant supervision of the American Automobile association whose tim ers and Judges kept a day and night check on the run, there were none who watched the passing parade oif President Eights with more interest than men from, ths Studebaker enelneerinff department Among the features or equipmem on The President Eight which came in for class observance during the run were Btudebaker's new and ex clusive ball bearing spring shackles. Although these shackles had been tested in 177.000 miles of driving at the Studebaker Proving Ground and other parts of the country, the engineers were anxious to see how the shackles would perform under the strain and stress of high sustained : peed The shackles came tnrougn tne 80,000-mil- e ordeal without , the slightest sign of failure. It was interesting to note thatthe engineers had Advised owners and dealers that the ball bearing spring shackles needed to be lnspectedonlyTitm-terval- a of 20,000 miles when lubricant might be added if 'necessary. But the shackles on each of the four strictly stock President Eights which went 80,000 miles In less than that number of minutes required no attention during the entire run. At the finish, they were functioning as quietly as the day the cars stared. .a-...- . . 7 TOUT OUR WAY : :. : : BANQUET The third annual banquet of the J Utah county chapter of the Ameri-- 1 i can Institute of Banking was held in the banquet rooms of the stake if tabernacle in Payson Wednesday! i fed evening. Officials and employes of all banking institutions in the county and their, partners were in attend ance.. Ray Monson, cashier of the State Bank of Payson, was toastmaster and was Introduced by Charles H. Dixon, also of the State bank, who Is president of the Utah county chapter. The principal speaker of the evening was Ray Wilson, cashier of the National Copper bank of Salt Lake.' Other speakers were-- Herald R. Clark, instructor in banking and finance at the Brlg- nam young university, U. J. Lewis of the Continental National bank of I Salt Lake, and the president of the Salt Lake chapter of A. L B., Mayor L. D. Stewart of Paysun and Charles I H. Dixon, who rendered a detailed report of his visit to the national convention of the American Insti-- I tute of Banking which was held at Philadelphia in June, and which he attended as a delegate from Utah . county. " The musical program was given by the Nelson male quartet Of Payson and Lor is Stewart and Ivan Shepherd -- of Provorlnstrumental- rvn eeH40 I'M VOU "D0MBXE KiOT WATCrtfeD uoni vw 1 iMTUcRe flua,-CKAD- M nu l i a fcVEK oeaOHM VTJO K5R 1 lAflUlN' 1 .c II 1 irrJTrol mm ' -- ' ists. The total of 120,000 miles of high speed testing piled up by the four cars "reproved" to the engineers been proved on what had previously ar Studebakes-nfflrrbrTdollproving :. ground ... r : -- ' tzzJJljL1! iJ -- ' ' -- ' ; t wmwrwi -- .. - flAr1"ftft Affli-U- Unl " ' ; r. W' VJ . . " . y I ,1 I I I - ' ". - I ' " - ' ''"witf. ) Not OTJcJbnt frjcrr, Studebaker Presidents-al- l strictly stock cars each corered 30,000 miles at areragc speods from 64 to 68 miles an honr - ; In each engine more than a quarter of a bHIion explosions beat their anil pistons that knew no cooling rest. tattoo on More than 60 million times each crankshaft 'whirled, and each shuttling piston flashed a ((roond trip' through its glistening chamber! Each . valve clicked open, Tni'Tllin La-ba- Why ;- then shut, more than 30 times in an inferno of terrific heat. this heroic test made? To prove to you, with the verification of the highest court of motordomthe American .; 1- Mm mmxa.c- J I AutomoMcAssociatioTt thatthe $1685 President Eight which yona can7 huy from your Studebaker dealer is a car of superHstamina, of utmost dependability a car which your motor money cannot better, though you doable and treble it! ..There - is - a - Studebaker President Eight r awaiting you here clothed in smart style in tune with today, and tomorrow backed by Studebaker's 76 years of integrity. . The New President -- also offers you sensational riding comfort the result of Stude- - baker's exclusive ball bearing spring shackles. Gome drive this marvelous car enjoy it for an hour, or a day, then for thousands of miles to come! - . -- - : STUDEBAKER PRESIDENT EIGHT - . .. f ., . L - OtJua Studebaker -- Enldnm Model j , -- ' f?Tl . r - After that she- - saw him infrequently, and she missed him more than she had thought possible. Occasionally he sent flowers and a box of candied fruits to Mrs.--- Thorns, " Who was pleased that he remembered her preference. Munching a sugared pineapple or succulent pear she would contemplate Sybil gloom ily over ner sweet and remark, as usual, that she could go further and - "built Tires and get - fare worse..--- ' Once after that, Craig tookSybil a road house. It war the first time she had done anything gay for weexs. sue wore a dress of lilac chiffon and pinned a great bunch of silk violets on --her shoulder.' She wore a top coat of soft mauve and a 'to little felt hat that matched. Almost all men, she reflected, -tiked orchid and purple and an the royal shades between. Craig had trften told her violet was his favor ite color. She slipped a long string of amethysts about her neck and fastened gleaming quarts, fashioned like grapes. In her ears. , Across the candle-Ji- t table Craig bent toward her desirously. It was Bice and cozy, sitting across from, eacb other like that Impulsively shs, reached for his' hand, and brushed It lightly across her lips. He smiled quietly and pinched her Cbfek; then gravely lighting a lg- - KiSSl OLDFIELD COURIER AIRWAY 29x4.4021 .29x44021 39x4.4021 too yttf 29x4.4021 'i .. ' QWittOMlrtorflwiahVln ,We give completr8e"rvice"wjthreverjr tfrt JndudlngliW"' cation to your car and regular inspection! through th lift of the tire. The service, of our experienced men is sure-t- result in many extra- miles, which will mean lower costs fpryou this year than ever pcfore. Comejn today. - - i , . aran a s mr m w m m.i uM 4ivvmvia mi j v 'V .'" v 525 1022 BALLOON ;; illustrated Is Thi IVeiit'-Bght Slate Roadster, $1&SQ Car i "7'lfl 218West Center Street . ; - - ; II II ' MMles imi S(B,3S6 inniiitlii&sl n, - I ByWilliams 3dD,(D)(!I)(D) ' : v BIG HOLD mmmtBmtmm knife-pleate- - BAflERS SHOW ABILITY ELEANOR EARLY - ' PEOVO SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1928. . . 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