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Show r r5 ."THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, FLBKUAKY jo, l'J27. -- PERIODS in Periodicals Fadeefit lies in the palm of my hand, This quaint, nosegae, me Giron to ty a sweetheart once In a dun, "romantic yesterday. Foteet that are yellowed now, And a rose of mellowed hue, Wit ha fnli Trfsilken, frati old tare- .Tied with a ribbon that once was blue. me-no- AMERICA GOES TO AID OF ENGLAND American Ifravel er Conspire in Coal ' Miners Strike to Save Lover. foiling THE JOYOUS CONSriRATOR Gibb. Publisher, Sear Co., Inc, New York. George J By H. GIBBS 1 kn of the. writer who in these days of Intensest realism still believes In fom&noe. He TPyflR. Van Dykes. And who should appear but Amesbury not indeed Aroesbury, but Lord Pern bury of Elmelow! Again romance attends the meeting. His Sitting, dressed in a once loved gown, lordship, somewhat startled by the coAlone on the quiet stain incidence. is et very gladkto see the little American again. Wickhampton The sunlight brocading with sheening gold A treasured comb it peaceful appearance, e?ma Js ia.my hair coal mines at the neaf-B- y A faint, sweet fragrance seems to come trouble is brewing; Lord Pembury, the n From heart of the my bouquet. hugest owner, has refused to meet And I hum the tune of a lilting waltr. the miners' demands, and a strike is Bom in a long ago day. imminent. Thither comes also Adrian Ruhl, In to j the pay of the Internationale, What memories lie in a few dead flowers speak at the miners meetings. With Tied with a frayed silk bow! the men further inflamed by Ruhl and A garden of shadowed, pale moonlight, matters other Imported agitators, And promises, whispered low. . . . move rapidlv forward to a climax But the cherished strains of a melod). Exciting Incidents follow cloaely upon one another, and Joyce, unable to tear And my dreams must be laid awav herself away from the spot, With the tenderness of a lovers wSrds, on In the struggle and With the satin gown and the quaint nosegsv. occasion a real heroine. GLADYS ANN WAG6TAFF. 8alt Lake Citr. It Is all rather old stuff perhaps, but Mr. Gibbs has a happy manner of he keeps the action of romances dealing with the Romance Writer Dead series medieval and renaissance periods in brisk, the conversation Intelligent, and Rome the industrial theme to proper proporand Constantinople Of the Nftlhsa G&iU&leL. "dean of the Cin-nme "tToreis.-fhtions'- Altogether, voe ig'HTTlnd The Red Cofr pneucinnati literati, died recently fewsor" and Jovous Conspirator a hook to Ixtu Woman were monia at his home In the Ohio oitv the latest, ailThebeing published h L. His splendid library, comprising nianv In Page and Company of Boston volumes of and about the Fifteenth spite of his Interest in the middle and Sixteenth centuries, wai be- ages, did Mr. not Galilzler the queathed to the University of Cincin- present, and he was known neglect as a sucnati, to be known as The Nathan cessful busincKS man time-wor- becomes-entangle- d story-tellin- ha not soccnrnbed Jo the modern im- pulse, he evince no dehe to psychoanalyze hi people. He subjects them To no Freudian tests, nor puts them under a microscope In order that he may study their Inmost thoughts and discover ail their hidden desires. No It Is Mr. Gibbs Interest to tell entertainingly a story. In which romance shall play Its proper part, and In this he achieves success. Hj characters may not have been studied wvh overmuch care; nevertheless, S. Richmond ha been a builddiscover human characteristics erGrace thy of stories for a great many years, and are, for the most part, very and shown a masterly hand In agreeable people, such as one might their has construction, as those will at enjoy knowing In real lite. who base followed her ehroni An automobile accident tn Paris Is test of of "Red Pepper "Juliet,' the beginning of this romance, al- rles Bums" and other pleasant people, of sunthough to Joyce Baylv the tall, whom the latest la Josephine Jenney burned. somewhat stodgy Englishman of "Cherry Square. of impeccable appearance, who resDuring the last year, however, her cued her and her frightened chaperon tell 11a, Mrs. Richmond hss publlahera from the Insistent French police, did tried her skill in a new field, as an not suggest the romantic. Far more actual of wood and paint architect picturesque and Interesting was that and atone. The big. gracious houss ardent socialist, Adrian Ruhl, who where she has lived since her martalked to her of his dreams, his plans riage and where .her children have for revolutionizing society. Ruhls been born, la ao complete that aha has somber subtleties f&sclnat her; to had little opportunity for the exercise her he represents a great cause, and of her talent 4n homebulldlng. But Ideas ehe has always had in mind the plan with some of his communi-stlshe is Inclined to agree of a little house that she would like A HASTY EXIT. to build, and so she decided that. If another house to live Still John Aroeshurv had been very she didnt want In herself, she could build It for some nice. Joyce had found him a very member of her family. pleasant companion at tea and at dinwork at once and drew ner at the Cafe de Paris. This nice herShe set to without the aid of an designs like seemed to had her, architect and, what waa much hardEnglishman too,, showing a sufficiently deep inter- er, succeeded In having them carried est to follow and rescue her from an out bv the village carpenters. The unpleasant experience at an underehe chose because nine big treee world haunt, where curiosity had led site the between shade a made pleasant her to go with Ruhl. Evidently her the street; and by careful bold adventure disenchants him. for house andevery one was saved planning off he goes to England, leaving no ad"Thev didnt like it, at first they dress. only a brief, hurried note of told me it looked like a hundred farewelL , old," ehe says. "Of course. I years Joyce Is an American girl, who, hoped It would look a hundred yeara. having been released from a practicalthe fresh, glistening paint beOnly ly sequestered existence by her stern lles tts antiquity, Mrs. Richmond havfathers death, has a desire to see ing kept to the simple New England all there Is of life With unlimited colonial Low ceillines throughout. wealth st her disposal she Intends to ings and huge fireplaces, and rooms to freedom comfort-anutmost. her the She. enjoy not large but built for Is doing Europe under the chaperon-ag- e for sunshine. Everywhere there are of an aunt. Mrs. Grinntead, who closets (there would be in a woman's finds the position at times An anxious house), but closets, unexpected one. as Joyce's and placed so as not to mar tbs wall daring often alarm her. For Instance, space. And many, many book shelves, this Ruhl, whom tboy had met In and rows of hooka everywhere. America Mrs. Grlnsfead is sure the "Never." Mrs. Richmond declacaa, acquaintance can do Joyce no good. "have I had such fun." Bha was actuBut her mind Is relieved for a time. ally sorry when the last nail was Joyce hears from a woman friend of driven Adrians a story of his past, and. DAUGHTER ARRIVES. thoroughly disillusioned, she packs immediately for England Pperlsl to The Trlbflne, LONG ARM OF COINCIDENCE. Feb. 1 TURNER VILLE, Wyo anIn the peaceful little town of Wlrfc. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wheeler hampton, Joyce and her aunt stop a nounce the arrival of A daughter at night to see Elmslow rattle and Its thrlr home Book Architect Shows Ingenuity in New Direction Gallixier Collection. His latest literary treasure, an elabSPRUCING UP. d volume once the orate Our muoum has acquired a new property of Lucrezia Borgia, and bearing her signature, passes into the Rembrandt" The other one About time, too possession of tbe university. Ulk (Berlin) Mr Gallixier was the author of a waa getting very old leather-covere- tures of Interest complete ber. the of Putnam, hia actual experience In dnt, romlng and going through th the little Black republic. "The Hilver army lines, regardless of danger, carCord" has in Papa Lol, The Beard rying accounts to the harassed execuof God, revered by the natives in tive of just how the men of the rank d file were feeling and thinking. connection wlrh their religious rite, an doctor, one of Ihis man is Henry Hlng, whom Mis Chamberlains most unusual creations. Tarbelt met down In Connecticut near num- ABOUT BOOKS AND WRITERS U country-hom- Books Received BEHIND - THK --SCENES WITH' A NEWSPAPER MAN. By E. J. Published by J. B. Htackpole. Co. Philadelphia. THE SPANISH HoLttE FOR AMERICA. By Kexford Newcomb. Pub- lished Jay J. B. Llpplncott Co., Philadelphia .THU XSriEXXUtS OF. MARX, By Karl Marx Published by The Vanguard Pres. New York IMPERIALISM AND THE STATE AND REVOLUTION. By N. Lenin Published by The Vanguard Pres, New York INDIVIDUAL LIBFRTT. By Benjamin It. Tucker. Published by The Vanguard Press, Nevr York. SONGS OF THE HILLS AND THE Bv William Sanger. SHV. Published by G. P. Putnams Sons, New York. TUB AMAZING CHANCE. By Patricia Wentworth. Published by J. B Llpplnoott Co . Philadelphia. FRUIT OF EDEN By Louise Gerard Published bv The Macaulay Comt pany. New York THE FROZEN FRONTIER. By Walter W Liggett Published bv The Company, New Tnrk. AND GENTLEMEN. LADIES By obb. Published by The Irvin S New Corporation, Cosmopolitan York PubBv Harrv Hervev.. CONGAT lished by The Cosmopolitan Cor poratlon. New York THE U.OLDFN LOTUS By G. E Published by L. C. Page & Ixcke Company, Rotnn BURNING WITCHES. Bv Marie d Published bv J. H. Montalvo Sear A Co , Inc , New York. c c c NEW her Its publication promised for March, Aain Helen R. Martlu adds to her Putnams aro announcing ofUpton SUNSET. the group of portraits of Pennsylvania Clone's first-han- d Impressions of the Min- critical eituation In China, which are Condition of primittveness among Dutch types, with Sylvia the Samoan-natlv- cs appear under the title, 'fh Revolt are uotm ttogether ute bmtighf out by- - Dnddr Mad tn ahat some writers would have us be- and Company recently Her Interest of Asia, the End of white Man's The author, who is Josef lieve, Harry L. Foster, a travel writer in these Mennonite people, who still lHnilname of much popularity, shows us tn an retain many of the primitive ways of Washington Hall, is one of the men on Chinese matters, and article concerning A Tropical Tramp their ancestors, is explained by Mr. in the Bouth Seas," the first of a Martin, who as a girl had the knack has but recently returned from a sevseries which la to appear in Sunset of taking off the outlandish accent en months tour of Asia. Starting out with a desire to gnd dialect ofJierJDUgtLboXip round -- rw trrx rwmFirfr TTo7rfprt, g - rur from rtTlhsatterj, rdfhid life .escape In the Lanciuster, Pa., and had been urged raw, Mr. Foster met with a few sur- to write stories alxuit them. Having ume just issued by the Columbia Uniconof which he tell in entertain- been asked to write an article versity preMt, haa as It subject Seba prises, Smith, who undeCthe name of Major cerning this fanning class for a maging as well as informative fashion. maJack Dowumg wa the inaugurator of The current .number being desig- azine, she act to work to gather nated a "Western Homes and Gar- terial by really thing in their homes. a new movement in American humor; and his wife, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, dens number, Its features include She says "I found that I had never really one of the early le turers on the eman"Beauty Borrowed from the Fainted reert, describing early Indian In- known anything about these people cipation of women The book is the fluence In architecture, by Frances from Inspecting them at a distance, work of Mary Alice Hyman. Quiaenberry; "How Does Your Garden and. that in my closer knowledgefic-of Other late issues of the Columbia Grow?" by Richard Ptener, The them I had struck a rich field for Present-da- y Charm of Spain in the Far W est of tion. My imagination was fired and University Frees include I In saw In the stories Japan, a treatment of anuent unique custom, Spanish castles California, by Helen and haraeterietics of a and modern hintorv by Dr uuke Lyman; Gliding the Gladiolus, by religion Tsuruml, a Japanese publicist; "EduH. J. Loken; "Lasts of the Old West, people who, living In America for genIn which Donald Hough' finds that the erations (having come here during the cation for Adults and Other Essays, real "teat is everywhere; House- persecutions of the Thirty Years war), comprising outstanding magazine arand other papers by Frederick keeping in Hoplland, by Anna Phelps still retained their foreign wavs and ticle P. Keppei, dittetor of Carnegie CorKopta, Caught with the Good"- - language." poration.Half-Bree- d which crtainlv has nothing to do and Other Rories "The Ggorefl-I- L IUl Harden Henfler- - Jpor February puMUAlicm abo Is a new volume of short stories try Wil- biFVaJt H hitman, whlTt contains a w fobr novel Mothens-in-laand sketches, is a will want to tead liam J Locke, whh h Dodd, Mead & short February Issue It V the first new Griff la MarsLn s story of "The Least Co bring out under, the title, "Stories Inwork by Walt Whitman lh more than The book Is to Comfortable Corner" and who occu- Near and Far. clude his hmg short stories written twenty -- five ears. pies it. 80 should daughter-in-law- . are since the publication of his "FarOther fictional contributions An addition of genuine interest to Them a Can Afford it!" by Marta away Stories the mas of Lincoln stories is Miss Ravner, Casco Omits a Detail, by Ida V of Tarbella "A Reporter for Linnumerous stories the Brereton. and the serial, While Charles pracThis Man and This Woman, by tice of voodooism going on in Haiti coln," a little volume whit h The Macsome Millan of the southern state company has Issued this month. Florence Bingham Livingston, a story and lu of the old triangle in a western set- are being told bv the press, George Here Miss Tarbell has written the enres of a man who acted as tn new hi feminist ting. Several excellent example of the Agnew Chamberlain relates poet s art and numerous other fea novel, to come shortly from the house unofficial news carrier for (he presi- - p , Ja Leads the World in Motor Car Value De Luxe Light Six 1085 f. o. b. factory d A , Folk r&j that I have wasted many hour In loitering along a UJao lane, In sprawling on a hilltop sweet with flower, in wandering thro ugh mist of summer rain. Long ginee hey eighed and left me to my dreaming; He will not plow who walks to meet the moon, Who whispers to the wan star softly gleaming And harkens to the songs the faines croon. 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