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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE cmBEnJMB SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, r' '3 1926. New Lower Prices Greater Vaflyss : JW' O'NEILL SUBJECT of . We walked, my Terr dear and I. Into the mauve and golden twilight. Along a ruaaet lane and by A little house with lamps And then we stopped and listened long As a woman 'a voice flung high A quaint and lilting love song About a lover passing by. Powerful Drama Designated Also as Mystic and Poet. concerning him, Is the opinion ad vanced by Arthur Hobson Quinn In the current Sarlbners at the beginning of his critical study of our leading American dramatist. Particular-l- y la It Inevitable, he says. In the case of an artist who has come to attract attention internationally, as has Eugene O'Neill. The "O'Neill myth" has grown out of conflicting standards of dramatic criticism, Dr. Quinn states; criticism which calls him one day "a sordid realist," and the next, perhaps, "a grim primitive naturalist" or a "lying moral romahtlclst," or even an "Immoral violent expressionist," forgetting to take Into account "his varying at times in his methods and without thoroughly understanding the basio meaning of his art " Dr. Quinn allows ONeill himself to explain hit purposes In his art bv quoting a letter from the playwright to him: "But wher I feel myself neglected Is lust where I set most store by myself," ONeill wrote,, "as a bit of a poet who has labored with the apoken word to evolve original rhythms of beauty where hewutv apGods parently Isn't Jones 'Ape Chillun Desire etc and to See the transfiguring nobility of tragedy. In as near the Greek sense as one can grasp It, in seemingly the most ignoble, debased lives." ADVENT ANTICIPATED. "Tf Eugene ONeill Is primarily a poet." writes Dr. Quinn, "he is a playwright, too, but he Is a great dramatist because he Is more than a dramatist. . . . O'NelUs art Is progressive, wlthlrt Itself and as isrt of our dramatic history. To those who view our national art through he seems a radical deBut parture from all before him to one who views Jt In Its steady development he a an to be expend. he goes on, "drama "Essentially Is a celebration of the Individual in conflict with something Fate, circumstances, moral and social law which hampers or crushes him. . . With the twentieth century, political and economic rights having been secured, the dramatist, under the leadership of William Vaughn Moody, became concerned with the problem of the Individuals right to and the sanctity of rebellion was taught. . . . ONeill certainly marks "Eugene the next step forward. The individual no longer rebels against God or Fate for the right to express himself. He demands something more. The creative force, as tftart of its responsibility for the creation of the Individual, . Lighter Six Chrysler 60 Prices ... (Effective Midnight, October Ninth) 1 Hr HAT' whenever a creative artist arises Inevitably a myth develops i ! A woman working, and singing There can be no sweeter thing Into the heart of man winging Than to hear a woman ting smiled in the dusk, but I didn't betray That I sing a love song thru the dav? GLADYS ANN WAGSTAFF. 8alt Lake City. r A a A WOMAN SINGING OF CRITIC'S PEN Creator - , VISITATION Hers where these long, slow lights of spring are falling In soft and dreamy splendors over the ground, And birds aJong.the darkening wood are calling Ijcss like a sound than like a hush of sound Something comes back that was not here before, Lonely and shy and lovely with so name; Some joy I haa, some heartbreak that I wore, Ghost wise returns for this too ghostly fame. Now all the sadness that my heart has known, And all the briefest joy that could not stay The sighs and laughter that my breath had sown, Bind here again a hushed and lonely ay Through skies of dreamy splendor like their own, And fields as sad, as beautiful, as they. David Morton in The Commonweal. must express him. ONeill hlm,e indicates the essential dignity of his art. Whatever his characters may attempt, success or failure means little, but the struggle was worth ... while. MYSTICISM OF CELTS. "Back of the human lives he treats he sees a force so infinitely greater than any character that man cannot estimate It. but can only feel, dimly or ecstatically, the power he can hut There It la "the vaguely interpret. glory and the dream "For O'Neill la a mystic. Generations of Celtic ancestry flower In him, just aa generations of the Puritan mystio flowered in Hawthorne and Emerson. In him the Celtic riature, with Its intimate relations with the a gleam now and then catches past, of the dim regions where God brought Into being a nobler form of life than had before existed. Because of this clutch of the primitive . . . O'Neill goes down Into the depths of human life to study apparently degraded forms. His audiences gasp often, comprehend sometimes, but always apprehend at least that a soul s speaking to them who has something It is this Celimportant to say. tic ancestry which leads him to symbolism. The race. In Its painting, iis poetry. Its religion, thinks In symbols, knowing that mysticism has to be tied down to reality by some concrete expression. . , . REFUSES TO BE LABELED. "One of the most Interesting characteristics of O'NelH's work lies in his refusal to be neatly classified his first long Beyond the Horizon play to be produced, and The Great God Brown this year, seem at first ... 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This unique plan of between scientific engineering and precision manufac- co-ordinati- on STORY PRESENTS AN OLD PICTURE $1145 Prices F. O. B. Detroit , Subject to Current Federal Excise Tax. All to bs of a vastly different species. Of course, like any true artist, he moves on. His first plays were written in the accepted mode. But hat makes Beyond the Horizon still the best of his naturalistic plays la not Its form, but its flavor of romance. In that it is akin to everything he has done. . . . "ONeill takes his art, but not himself, quite seriously. The ONeill myth amuses him, for the simple sincere personality back of his plays has nothing of the theater In his appearance or general outlook. . . . He is, I think, passing through a phase of his development. His material has always been the romantic, whether It be chosen from the slums of New York or Bpain In the fifteenth century. . . . "But, no matter what new phftse In his development may come, inere will be apparent still the poet, brooding and creating, and the mystic, letting speak through him the creative force that lifts humanity from the beast that passes to the man who eternally aspires." Roadster C&r $1075; , of five to twenty-fivseconds. m iles in seven and Sixty miles, and more, per hour. Iiek-uAmazing economy of miles to the gallon. Characteristic Chrysler smartness and beauty. Phenomenal riding ease. Chrysler hydraulic brakes. and Full pressure lubrieation. Manifold heat control. crankshaft. Impulse neutralizer. Road levelizers, front and rear. Chrysler proved long life. Roomy, luxurious bodies with beautiful upholstery in enclosed models. Attractive new color harmonies. . Discontented f Wife Escapes to Find Delights of World Fail Her. three-quarte- e p twenty-tw- o four-whe- Oil-filt- r. Seven-bearin- el . g MAD RAPTURE By Eltzabeth Irons Folsom Publisher, the Macaulay company, New York. JN HER latest story, which deals with the old situation of the woman who tires of humdrum domesticity with a stupid husband and seeks a freer life, including, naturally, a more fascinating man, Mrs. Folsom haa developed some strong, clear characterisations and dramatic Incidents. Robert Farrar, mine owner and operator, born of a stolid, thrifty line of ancestors, had been caught in the tolls of business before his other rations had had time to flower, aspihis outlook on Ufa was hounded and by that sprawling town which "was typically coal . . . unlovely enough, It all of The houses of the were legendary as to discomfortminers and smudge. The streets matched the houses and the whole was a dirty spot In a wonderful country. as his father before him, he But, had made It, though be disliked it, give him a fortune. A wonderful miracle in your body! night nature give your body the power itself. A wonderful miracle but are you giving nature a fair chance? Take a look at the way you rest on your bedspring. Is your spine kept straight or does your whole body sag? Do you help the body rebuild itself by throwing oS the poisons of fatigue or do you let these poisons slowly collect, undermining your strength and health? Over a million people have asked themselves this question and purchased Rome Quality DeLuxe the Bedspring Luxurious In this bedspring they get the secret of perfect sleep. It supports the body so gently that you almost seem to float. It gives you the g blessing of deep, wholesome, sleep every night of your life. The dealer who sella Rome D Luxe renders humanity a true service. In Justice to him as well as yourself, let no one sell you a substitute. It is so honestly built it keeps Its resilience for a lifetime. Buy it for economy as well as health. The Rome "De Luxe is sold and Indorsed by good dealers everywhere. EVERY 4 - AN ALIEN . ( health-buildin- 1 THE BEDSPRING LUXURIOUS Tha -- D Ltute" way iM vie . aw to sleep Tbs wrong way to sleep u.,. a i, a, iw Row Sm Cfic ROME Uo to, m apnoi Mora T-O- bay.' Salt Lake City. jr t J CHRYSLER MODEL NUMBERS MEAN MILES PER HOUR tvs iiv Corner Motor Avenue and Second East Street Phone Wasatch 2346 Associate Dealers FAMILY. The Farrar brides for generations might have been offshoots of the family tree, so well did they adopt the Farrar traditions of thrift and economy. But Camilla Farrar had come from a world of far different aspect, where he had been permitted to develop "unhampered." with the belief that she must have what she wanted when she wanted It. 8lx years of married life with Robert amid the gloomy, fordid surroundings of the town had left her Impulsive, mining Impractical, beauty and spirit burning with rebellion. She hated Robert a petty economies, his constant nagging about expenses and quarreling w.th the servants over their waste; her one happiness had come to be In her little daughter, Mitly. When Camilla, In desperation, at last asks for her freedom, a divorce, 111, if he Robert rather reasonably one would aay, for ao stupid a husband-offers a compromise, to let Camilla go abroad for a time alone. He sure, that she will hope, and feels tire of It and come back to him contented. But Camilla on the trip across had met Archie Marbery, a very fascilist of nating Englishman whose women acquaintances was already a long one and. when she finds herself, as inevitably she does, Mrk to death of that freedom and wider life for which she had longed. It Is tco late. However, Robert has had hia opportunity, for Camilla? warned by (hat good friend, Tonimy Hoicome, of the flames attraction and sensing her danger, had written that she would come hack if he desired end he had not accepted. So one is not to blame Camilla altogether. A PATTERN. FOLLOW Mrs Folsoms heroine Is not preat-l- y different from many other fictional ladies who, dissatisfied with the monotonies of have domesticity. longed to break away and drink fuller of the cup of life, and have learned that the freedom they craved meant but new forms of bondage Nor does her story present many new angles of the situation. Even the complications which arise when Marhery, coming to America on business matters meets and falls In love with Camillas daughter, have been offered In effect heretofore. In Milly. a fresh young creature who combines her mothers vividness with much of her fathers we fnd these trsits blending into a nature seemingly able to stand by Itself The several other characters Introduced are of cmoin-piac- e type Constance Newbv. the woman who was Roberts advisor; Tommy, Camillas hopeless adrer. and Tommy s rtephew, Roger, whojla Mtuv's devoted lover The story la sufficiently we?! fold to be Interesting, if not( rurprUl igly matter-of-factnes- a. J onpoy In IN JTJLrOj RICHARDS MOTOR CO. 55 West Fourth Bo. Phone Was. 3885. SNOW-BROW- N MOTOR CO. 4869 South State. Murray, Utah. THERE ARE CHRYSLE R DEALERS EVERYWHERE original. Its title is ratherIs agrably little of misleading, sine there Implied, rapture, at least of the type move Its events aong portraved. not one does escape rapidly, although the sense of the directing hand. through. One thing only most I do: Quench my pride and cool , blood, Lest I perish in the flood." my A somewhat unusual anthology of our literary immortals is to Appear under the title, "Great Names' the ABOUT BOOKS lint of contributing editors including Ron Mgciulay. Yirginiw Ww ?if. ArAND WRITERS thur Machen, Latd Garnett, A E. l. Romer Wilson, Viola Coppard, Coincident with the Interesting news T. F. Fowva and Harold that Thomas A Edison has turned The editing and designing over to hla son. Charles, the manage- haa been done by the famous NoneIn such Press of ment of the Edison enterprises. England but the book order to have more leisure for his will be published this month by Linof George coln MaoVeagh-Th- e Dial Press experiments the publication S Bryans biography of "Edison The i Mher October Man and Hla Work." Is announced by of IJncoln publications Alfred A. Knopf. Mr. Brvan In his MacVeagh-Th- e Dial Press Include the volume gives a comprehensive sur"Anatole France 1 he Defollowing vey of Edison's astonishing career, generation of a Great Artist," by a subject concerning which no thor- Barry C'erf, professor In Reed college, ough treatment has appeared since "The Blind Bhip," a sea story from and Includes sn appreciation of the French of Jean Barreyre. and the personality of the great electrical "The Cathra M?ery." by a new wizard. writer of mystery fiction, Adam Gori don a MacLeod. d e Fulton Ourslers new book. of the Moon." haa brought forth j J, Jefferson Karjeon s last mvstery from Fannie Hurst the opinion that tale, "No 17." which was publlhed a new In the author is revealed hy this same company, was l. and exciting force In American le- jrerntv given a stage production by Earl tters" She writes to hla publishers. As "No. 7." it haa become one A fulfills wtiat "It Brothers of successful dramas the the of year Harper his previous novels have made me on Broadway, s suspect he might some day achieve. But somehow I could not foresee it to me that coming so soon. It seems d of the Moon' projects Ouraler to the fore of American lie Con. Fven his faults are the faults of a man who errs out of the richness of his endowment " In "Tom-Toby John W Van dercook. the culture of the black race Referring to the definition of poetry is studied at Its very source, Ms man stated It terial having been obtained at first- as Theodore hand In the jungles of Surinam and In hie "Poetrv and the Renftcnoe of Liberia during a trip mde by Mr. Wonder" "the concrete and artistic andetcook and hla wtfe, who Is a expression of the human mind In emosculptor. In the book la a chapter tional and rhvthmical languace which makes a plea for the negro. Miss Alice R. Eaton. In an address Harper A Brothers are the publish- 'given during the national convention ers. HociaiUn jof the AmertcanTJbrwriee at Atlantic City the past ed1d On the title page of Carl Van to this defining phrase the following new novel. Vechtens is alone "The mission "Nigger poetry a stanza from the Joy of eelf-Heaven," appears presaion In emotional a poem Included in- stress of Joy or grief, aspiration or de"Heritage cluded in Counte Sullen s volume votion. hut making laaguage vividof verse, "Color " Theee'Unes have ly animate as to secure avmpHthettc Mr. Van emohis text. understand!'. furnished and resixmsiv "AU day long and all Bight tion and coavktloo. Mey-nel- t 1 "Step-Chil- J Car-rol- Step-Chil- Poetry's Mission Subject of Talk at A. L. A Meet TYatts-Dunto- it nt "Manners and customs of nations differ greatly, as do systems of education, language, physloAl characteristics and national tradtha, but human emotions are the same the world over and have been of all time. Love, hate, religious fervor, merriment, love of beauty, Joy of accomplishment, all these are reactions of the spirit In all men4 and their azpaeaeion fn fitting language Is the poetry of the Its course the water sings. And life wakes at its flow.' The desert breaks In fragrant bloom We praise bright Idaho! And on the skyline cities loom Agalnat the sunset glow. From, out the mines rich ores eonfo, And far and sor Ihe power plant 3ium A song of Idahak world And. going on to urge the need of O clean, young land, may we keep efforts expended toward promoting you wider Interest in this bran- h of the Forever strong and brave and true, literary art, Mm Katun said. "A A glorious Idaho. studv of the poetry of ail nations and periods, with the resultant knowledge Boohs of the universality of the great cur-renof human emotion, will do much to promote mutual sympathy among THE CHARIOT OF FIRE. By Ber-nar- d the intelligent people of all races DeVoto. Published by the MacMillan company, New York. "Who sends his shaft of dream THE PALM OF THE HOT HAND. across the ache of time Puhlfsned by A By King Phillips. Shall lighten travelers on the C Md'lurg A Co. Chicago. path of gods . . . PA NTs IRA. By Arthur B. Reeve. He shall contact tides of light Published by Harper A Brothers, that ran New York When Plato was a boy . . . JOANNA OODDEN MARRIED. By Faslly he shall come to know bhella Ksve-SmitPuhlwhed by The open secret hidden through Harper A Brothers New York. the years THE KAYS By Margaret Demand. For to his awakening eyes Published by Harper A Brothers. All races a&J all nation shall be New York. one THE pEA D RIDE HARD. By Louis With, in their midst, a tmple." Published by J. B. Vance. Joseph Mary BJegriaL Lipplncott Co Philadelphia. FACE. By Sydney Horler. FAIE . Published by George H.'1'oran Co., New York HARMER JOHN. By Hugh Walpole. Published by George H. Doran Co., A poem entitled Glorious ttlahc I New York. TALKS AND OTHKRR. INDIAN was selected as the state federation By John O Neihardt Published by the song by women assembled at the tn-nuMacMillan Co, New York. state convention of .he FederBy Gelrre Eliot ated Women's Clubs of Jdsho. Ihe MIDDLEMARCH Modern Reader's Serlea Ihibllehed song was composed by Mrs Irene, Welch Grissom, who Is poet laureate by the MacMillan company. New York of the state, and wu choeen from I AM A WOMAN AND A JEW. Py among eight submitted Mr Published by J. H. Grissoms poem, the line ofi Ieah Morton. Beers A ro , New York which hsve a Ivrlcal rhythm and have rra been riven a musical setting bv Mr Bv prohibition Received Idaho Makes Choice of Federation Song Res follows: Bomar Stewart, reals ts at Clean your llrer and constipated bowels and feel fine Get s box now. Are tob keeping your liver, atom-acand bowel, eleaa, pore and freh with t aoarrt or merely fore-in- ? s p?e-weverT few dave with ealta, eathartie pilli or paator oil f This ii important. Casearetf immediately clean the atomach, remove the eour, andijieated tnd fermenting food and foul gaaea; take the exeese bile from the liver and earrr out of th avatera tha waste matter and poiaoa la the bowela. No odd how tick, headache, bilious and eonetipated you feel, a Caaearet tonight will atraightea von out by morning. Thev work while A box from voar yoa sleep. will druggiat keep your head clear, stomach aweet and yotur liver sa l IVoa 't bowela regular for monTha, h forget the worst. Irving Fisher. Published bv the MarMMIan companv New York. JOHN WANAMAKTR. I Vois By Herbert Adams Gibbon Published by Harper A Brothers. New York. The light is on the lofty peaks, ATI hail, bright Taho The land where nature ever seek IRRITANTS.' Her bounty to bestow. The forests rising green and deep There la nothing more IrrltnMnc Oer watersheds their vigil keep than th conceit of a bore, eleept. And gusrVthe plains below the eeeumeS mrKieetr of a From mountain, lake and countless perhape . . . ,reat personage Jj Baron Coefcw la Ufa. springs ehUdreB their little in- sides need a gentle eftaweing, too. (Advertisement.) "Ask Ycua txizzz- i J H i X 1 j v I kwi what Locky Tlrsr - fax foot How W hmyyf a betft WiU Nc 1 Sftasrt Mtwl fsor fcV sad wssn. lusfesasi r4 Attn tv "wtrw f - aw |