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Show I ! ! I ! i I i . ! I l'AGE FOUR forgotten. She would bo that gir! who was mixed up in an slieuatiou suit. It was all hideous! Her whole being revolted at to tb ught. Suddenly Susan realized her employer was still Speaking, t.e had almost forgotten him, so LLeorbed was sbe lu this new, terrific piohlcm. He wore the quiet, dog.u air of a man who bad gone ever the ground many Hines before. "What she esyec.aliy trad-- on is the night 1 drove you to the he told her. "She Was angry then and I knew It, but 1 Ir.ocght It of no Importance. "Surely she cant think, Susan Boreal r, "aui.y she must know you were ouly doing me a kindness such at you might have to any neighbor! i I: i f t i iron i I TIIE SECTION TWO. Hum Aok-royJ- BY MABEL 1 McELLIOTT Ain! i ! -- (iiisiit amm wc ban i TN spite of himself Heath I smiled. Sbo CHAPTER XXVII wzj so :rtest in her simplicity. He mast Uik her 'T'HE solid floor seeing to rotlc see. a a For under tha girl feet. "TlrUa Just it." he said. "You moment aba thought aha was golug to faint and put a bind out to werent juat any neighbor. You're steady herself. Ernest Heath re- toy secretary. That's the rub. Susan flushed. "I see, she murpeated abut he had said. "Do yon understand. Miss Car- mured. She utared through the big What do you want me ey T" ha asked. "My wife la golug window. to do? she asked. , to bring a suit naming you." "Nothing, at present," the mac "But aba cant do that!" Susan "I dont know told her. "My lawyer la meeting protested wildly. this rooming and I hop just what it neans hut It's all Mrs. Heath com to tom sort of an they may wrong agistment. I only waotad you to should Hie I tell "I thought yon," know in case the trohtlt halt man said dcgg'dly. "This Is all eoon. moat dtaagreeablc. Its horrible Susan wa tery white. "I set, hut there seotn9 nothing I can do. she whispered again. Ob, U wa Bnaail drew her bend orer her all wild and absurd bvt knowing res. "But what h- - i to do with that did no particular good. The It?" aba Inquired bewildered. "Iya cloud bung over her just as ft had. dona her no harm and I I scarce- She felt branded. ly know you." "Perhaps if I went to her myself. The man shrugged hopelessly. If I explained lust how It hap".Ail that doesnt eeuin to matter, she laid, grasping at a pened, ho sold. "What you and I must straw. Heath shook hi head, decide la what were to do about It." 'Tm sorry. It would only make wore. This," bs con"Do? But therea nothing I can matter do," Susan told him, "except to go tinued, "this is very painful to me as it la to yon. I appreciate your way." Braa that," Heath reminded her, position but I seem to be powerless. "would not aolre matters. The pub- There's only one thing 1 had thought of. If you don't aalnd I licity Bonn gare a little gasp of hor- should ilk to ask Mr. 'Warlng'a adror. 8ho was remembering sudden- vice. He'a had a graat deal of exly headlines and pictures sbe had perience. Ha might ba able to sugmob la newspapers. None of them gest some way out of this." taii Oeetned to mean much at the Susan agreed hopelessly. Jack lift but the thought of her name, Waring might aa well kaew. ' He hdr photograph perhaps. In connec- would know anyhow later. tion with such sn unsavory talo apWaring received the newt with admirable calm. palled her. Young as she was "You don't seen. iurprleed," knew that a girls lnnocenea or tUllt counted for little In affair of Heath commented dryly. thb sort Once branded, she must The younger man shrugged hi rtftaln to. Such things were never shoulder with an oblique ilanoe ; i i U j i n j , i I I f ! I i Err.:t Su-oa- HERALD-JOURNA- 1 answered the telephone, wrote letters and went to lunch, all In a sort of date. Surely this waa a bad dream, she would tell herself, from which ah would presently awaksn. 8ba would not let herself think of Aunt Jeeeie. How could Sbe bn mnkn her understand? longed, yet dreaded, for JIt o'clock to com. Waring stopped at her desk In midafternoon. Cheer up, be whispered. It not a bd aa It seems." But Susan refuted to b comforted. Her eyes when she raised them to hi were to shadowed and mournful that the man fait a new twinge of pity. Ha anything been settled? Susan asked fearfully, "Not yet" His tone, sh thought held false cheerfulness aa he passed Into th private often. Heath looked np. "Welt nir, I think I hare fodsd something which will eettla this bualneag ono and for all, Waring ' The Story of ; . . ft s i - ! ft I i i ft the Pour Marx Brothers .... By Ted Carle , 032. 1 By Ahern BIG CHOICE OF Mlaid "THAT t & NtoU loll) .riAiet AA Q Vo d. VeSTe-RDA1 WAS EyP&CTAiaACHC A t TaPAV 4 TOR B erf, A 2aa $ I VaLi , - Arl T IT TO ME A 3&0AUSB To (trrfTiRsiW'Als D iJM-A-f- f Is, FROM tVcU , WHsaJ YVoU y 6FFREI ' WgaSPER F, LET ME THeT BACK" ---THAT IS,. "TIDE CJE& HE la VJOUL-- tH'aJibackt .Hoiil-VcKll- CROP VARIETIES treKer.!. ame?! (tv Vtoje TTtf vit-LL- TPAIUNQ took a letter from hla pocket and held It out. "Before you reed this I want you to know how it came Into my possession," he said. "When you were In England last year and Mrs. Heath wa touring the south this thing was forwarded to the office. It came In a hotel envelope one of those Florida places and it wae opened along with the rest of the inatl. I dont know quite boW It happened. Believe me, it was an accident. The enclosure which had been forwarded to Mrs. Heath waa laid on my deak with all the others. I had read fairly through it befora I realised what It was. Heath's eyes were dark with Impatience as Waring handed the letter to him. He read It once hastily and then once again. The alow color stained bla face. Waring went on. "I had a little tin box of my own In the vault," he said. "I didnt know wbat to do with the thing and so I decided to put It there tor safe keeping. Of course I might have destroyed It but It hadnt been mine to read in the first place. I waa pretty well cut up about the whole thing, anyway. Heath squared hla shoulders. "You were quite right, he said I appreciate your discregruffly, tion." The phone rang and Waring answered It, Cupping hla band over the mouthpiece be aald to the other men, "It's Granger, Mr. Heath's attorney. Do you want to talk to him? Heath picked up tha receiver, Hla mouth was very grim. "Yea. Ive been expecting you," he said. "Is Mrs. Heath wlih you? Good. Would you mind telling her before you go any further with the papers that I bare in my hands a document I think will Interest her?" There was a brief wait during which Waring entertained himself by Imagining the exchang of remarks at the other end of the line. Then Heath said rapidly and clearly, "Tell her It a letter postmarked Nassau last February and signed 'Ernesto.' " He looked serosa at Waring, the room electric with suspense. (To Be Ohutlaued) FROM GAGS TO RICHES ' 'g ' . 1 rpHE hours barely crawled. Susan 29, OUR BOARDING HOUSE informed the older waa. Let me see it" Not just yet." Waring crossed the room and cloeed the door. You wont like this, he warned. It's rather disagreeable. It? snapped his supe"Wbat rior. "Out with It "I know jealous women,". he aald gravely, "and Ml too pretty to go unnoCarey ticed." ' Susan refined to meet hi eye. "Peibsp If I talked to Mrs Heath." Waring suggested, drumming on the desk with bis carefully manicured Augers. Heath aald, "My dear fellow! Sh likes you, of couise, but I'm afraid you'll not get auy where!" "It Isn't a divorce sh want, then? Waring asked. A caller presented himself In the outer office and Susan, scarcely knowing what sbe waa doing, withdrew. Heath answered the others quesN'u, thats not It," be aald tion. "I think whats happened alowly. is that shes got herself Into a blind rage at this girl and wanta to shame her publicly. HI distaste at this open discussion of affairs so Intimate was plain. "Not that wa haven't Bpoken of divorce before this, he sal 'I. "Ruth finds my way of living exceedingly dull, la fact, and her he sighed wearily, "Ive come myself to the decision that a divorce would be test for both of us. A cl.aq cut He removed bla eyeglass and polished them nervously. "If that i the case," Waring said with great deliberation, "I think pcrnapi I know way out "Wuat'do you mean?" Trust me, aald Waring. "Walt a bit and se what happens." at Satan. FRIDAY, APRIL LOGAN, UTAH, L, OF '85T You EvtC t KE .f' EP.lT MV 6AV AS ITS The MEM0f?Y,THAT ID ME A.SCtiVEWiR hard-workin- g a-- mV word, WdAT ' A WAD o requirements. ikr tsse "MA IS WELL HeelepJ WTIflQHl Z. 20.1)00 'Si a ft! which ranks highest based on its feeding value per acre is alfalfa. The crop which stands high as a giain teed is barley Where sufficient alfalfa cannot be grown to meet the demands of the livestock on the" farm, the deficiency may bo fairly well overcome in a great many cases by the production of cSVi pea and oat hay, grown together and cut at the proper stuge for the making of cured hay. While choice of crop is a matter of importance that of choice of variety is almost, if not quite, equally so Fortunately our experiment stations have accumulated much valuable information on this and are only too variety question . .armeis ib.ougn glad to their extension agents in coming a if to in doubt, as to decision, FORESTS AIDED NEEDY whether or not they are glowing HARRISBURG. Fa., April 28. the best now available. Let your d' P) Pennsylvania state forests county agent help you plan your provided 9,000 cords of fuel wood cropping system and the varieties for needy families during the best to grow past winter, according to the state department of forests and A new con-.has been discovWaters. The department issued ered in the sky by Prof E 1.100 permits for wood cutting in Delporte, astronomer of the Royal the state forest areas. Belgian Ohseivatory The A'eJ WHERE DAY BEGINS Each day on earth begins at East Cape, the easternmost extremity of Siberia, before it begins at any other place. This point UPi-Twe- n-ty is recognized tinction as having this dis- The Nero Deep, near the Island six miles deep, of Guam, is about reeze through traffic with the new SUPER-OCTAN- GASOLINE E ' Dll) IT SAN ,l( IKK, Calif, April 2U d'Pl One healing has sent m.iky crop in importance asb-o-- FREE Ll'MIIES KENT, O.. April 23. thousand free lunches were served to school children here during 113 days of the present school year. The average cost was 6 3 cents a meal. Cost of school children was the feeding met largely by donations from citizens and clubs. different keys. The audience howled with mirth. Down came the curtain and out went the big opportunity." A week Inter, in a smaller Boston theater, they found themselves nn the sume hill with a film nqtrndin tion of the Jcftiies-John- r To work in the Night, mmi fight impales the manager mude them the picture. Their .sing during harmonies mingled with excited trom shouts the audience. They were a musical accompaniment to a pi ie fight! ; (To lte Continued) loinl II BEATING BY 1KOF. J. C. IIOGKNMIN, Extension Agruiioinist. in farming, even in Success t'mes less difficult than these we are experiencing just no v, depends primarily upon tho application o' a high degree of managerial abilinvolves bettor soil ity which management, more cartful choice of crops and varieties and belter The victory is to the livestock studious farmer who needs advice freely and who puts the latter into piacticc as far , he is able This fact has long been recognized by our most successful farmcis who have realized that certain methods of culture, for certain crops, and that certain varieties or combinations thereof are best adapted to their particular farms and to their feeding f I M? women to a divorce comt, hut it look 1.010 of them to send Mrs Mabel hw trt. seeking sepui'a-- t inn from her husband, Jack Mrs Sihwartz's complaint, filed here, enunn rates (he beating, lopl of them, in 13 years of mar-inil 11 AY TO ..EARNING vTOCCIIO WAS IIIS ll)K. BY O mu f CHAPTER ONE More thun a decade ago a mere outh sat down to leach his on the ounger brother a tun nano. The first was Chico, the thet Haipo They were the two .idest of the Four Marx Brothers, of Paramount s iresent stare Horee Feathers. With only enough money in the lark home to afford piano lessons or One, Chico had taken them nd was so expert lie had a yb playing in movie houses Harpo wanted to eurn money, ut the piano appealed but little So, ) him strictly on the :oucho" system, he learned only wo songs, "Love Me and the and Walt Me 'orld is Mine round Again Willie . H. He OT THE JOB .To aid brother, Chico went ut to apply for a job as u pianist ad got It, Next day Harpo, who ked like Chicos twin, reported ir his task. But the monotony of two times rove the film house audience .most frantic and the manage!, uzzled at the youths appaierit ss of memory for the tunes he laved when hired, fired llai po On Five times this happened je fifth instance, Harpo s bv a was nccomprtViiejj tck. So he became a bellhop Then began a series of events in the hcoio .rt-eof the comedians ; Here ore Chleo, (iron elm, Hur and Zepim Mara, ready to entertain you for six nigliU willi their weird rolteetioin. of gag . Wlm'ops! his aneetlot.-H- saved railiond fine, to New and $10 in cash. Tllrt ( h oiois MlV-tlNt- . - Yoi r It Giilniuo (whose pime Zcppo took inftcr tho wui). was old enough So the to sing tcnoi and dnnoe mother of tho Minx Brothers formed an act -- 'The Three Nightingales," the third member being jo gu) soprano. a was meager, bookings few and the act's spot usually wars at that part of the - continuous vaudeville program when few were Then came opin the theater. portunity one night in Boston, when a main net fulled t i show were up and the Nightingales rushed into the gup The money ha put in a chamois bag around his neck, from whence it mysteriously wa lost. Starvation staring him in the face, Grou-ch- o worked on the kindness of old lady passengers for bags of peanuts. candy bars, fruit and an occasional sandwich. He returned home safely, but with a rash from too much fruit and peanuts. Bin k in New Y'oi k, Uioucho tried a short vaudeville seu.ion as a boy star In "The Men of Her Choice, In which he played IN DIFFERENT the heroic newsboy and sang, HF.YS to illustrated slides, between tho The soptano entered mid beshort acts gan the song. Grouoho and Gum-111KKMEMBEIt, sweeping In to Join her Hut 1 MMO? a lull house so surprised them that By this tune the fourth brother, they suddenly went into three life. WOOIM ARMNG BAYS HIM CEDAR ItAl'IDS, lu, Apul 23 a l'i llemy J Geiger was a carpenter by trade, with Woodoarving ha his spare-tim- e until hobby, business became so slack that he scarcely could make a living at carpentry Now most of his time is spent with his cmving, which 'T has put on basis. money-makin- Nw Zeilind lx glowing mod ern Moie than 63 per rent of its loads are loud surfaced, only 20 per cent of the ronds In the I'nited States are 0 Shrieking sirens the roar'of a'poAverful engine a red streak flashes by and shes on her way! Theres power for you real power the kind of power youd like to have right under your own accelerator! fionest-to-goodne- We Extend Our ss The U. S. Government specifies for its emergency use . . .a grade of motor fuel which it suitable for ambulances, fire engines, emergency vehicles, military and naval equipment. Fxcerpt from Federi pamphlet e ! lomie-tly-serio- r ITNCTl RED MltANO Grouche, third of the brothels, .Bowed in the mishap footsu-p-s He had been a hov Harpo prano in chinch until lie nad tnetured the organ bellows with I altos hatpin Ko, at 13, he it a job on the stage. As" one of two youths inmir- Tinting school girls with voices, he became a mrm-- r of tho LeRoy Tno at $r a k und er.jwtises Intortunato- Uie fist booking w.ts in Congratulations I TO THE MEMBERS AND DIRECTORS : . . . fan but it ftotttcthiujt h often you coul! not hi M1K Carl W. Sanders Coal ami Wood for anyone elite. Kit lily atm eotered. And K with the utoftl eilnti pant selection of ham) dipped Mickefl Phono LMl.'I i Iiin'oIm te. ARTSTYI.E ' r hoi- - MO I'll here Grouchos voue clniig-- ( from soprano to baritone us i Tint slipped from 13 to 11 ined the ait and the tno went MI'S 1.50 DAY Pm Luge Prescription Drug Co. randi-- . on MOTHER HER RAY MAY OF THE CONTESTING BANDS tnl-tt- o Ttie only job available w.o. Inv-,a gioix-ii, wagon bitvn r and Cripple Cnik, Colo, m a wiek. Hid from thd il.ii , id extra money singing ot tin tire lor llluttrnted elide:, Groucho for Today you can have it. Not the fire engine, of course, nor the siren nor the bell but the very same power gasoline which surpasses federal specifications for distillation range and vapor pressure for use in U. S. Government emergency equipment. Heres w hat Uncle Sam uses this type of gasoline for... ambulances, and fire-engiri- es emergency vehicles. What the Gov eminent uses for emer gency equipment you Can now have for your own every-da- y use at no extra price. Super-octan- e rating makes Texaco the outstanding Fire-Chi- non-premiu- Gasoline ef anti-knoc- k, motor fuel. And m remember Texaco Fire-Chi- plus Ethyl equals ef Texaco-- 1 Ethyl, now more than ever the leading premium gasoline.' theA TEXAS' COMPANY. r C W1TH0U ahfornta Corpo$t igu Tune in on ED WYNN and (he HKE CH1FF BAND, ever Tuesday night. Coast tocoast.N B ( - 5 1. P. M. P. C. Time 4:30 P. M Mountain lime ..1,1 Developed for Fire Enqin llij te l.an,.,,,,, price u |