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Show BUN. PRICE, UTAH au Intimately acquaint! and tha only part of him that can't go lot a picture FACE TOUR TEtg3&putt THE leant! Every Friday By Bus Publishing O. (lae.) K. W. Grockett. Subscription, $2.00 Office Phone Na 9. 123 m2. Msar. ReeiSence, No. Mail Matt, 4, 1915, at the PMtoffiea at Fries, Uuk, Uader tha Act at March 3, 1879. Eatersd aa Berend-Claa- a ecooecccBcaooae jua ADVERTISING RATES Dlaplay Matter Per Inch Par Meath, 50c. Special Pa $liO; Single Issue,Additional. aitian, 25 Per Ceat InserLegal Ten CenU the Line Each tion. Count Biz Worda to the Lina. Sammons, $12.50; Water Application, $15.00; Final Proof, $10.00. Roadera Ten Centa the Lina Eaefc In aertioa. Count Biz Worda to the Liao. Blackface Typo Twenty Centa tha Lina Each Insertion. Obituaries, Garda of Thanha. Resolutions, Etc., at Reading Nolle Itatea. Count Biz Worda to the Lina. Far Bala, For Rent, Found, Loot, Etc., Two CenU Per Word Each lease. No Charge Accounts. Aidita AH Communication to BUN PUBLISHING CO. Price. Utah ORGANIST DIES Noted Magician Paasea On Last day Up at Zion. Sun- John J. McClellan, well known over the United Statea and particularly 11a took up hia colors and brushes and resumed hia work while he continued hia talk. "Now heres tha alto atlon: I must keep the pot boiling by aelllng this cover drawing; I haven't any kid to nit nnd cry at me, nnd that young man nnd hia mamma have discouraged ms from any further at-- i tempts to acquire by borrowing, stealing or adopting. What can I do?" h naked with mock ''dejection, at tha asm time reaching toward hia table "Presto behold my model I" And ho held before my startled eyes a photo- PICTURE SHE PAINTED la Advssc. Bjr RUSSELL P. ASKUE TT IS not becoming In an author to maka la his story. For that . reason I had hoped this one might bo told from tho viewpoint of Oliver Twist For OUter Is modest and blind. Besides, ha knows much more about tha hero than I do. Bat a serious difficulty lay In the fact that ha had never met tha heroin. That pleasure having been mine, Oliver Insisted that X tell tha story. So hero i , goea Madame Ada Taunert was studying carefuly tha cover of a weekly magazine. It waa adorned with tha head month and of a baby with tlghtly-doao- d eyes; tho mouth emitting shrill cries of woo (simply because of the limitations of graphic lids someart) while tbs tightly-dose- d how permitted the egress of large, round, realistic tears. As aha gazed upon the unhappy Infant countenance Its misery reflected Itself npon her own face. "Armea Kuind," aha cooed soothingly, and folded the magazine tenderly to her breast. "Bad world bad people I She declared reproachfully; "why do they make the babies weep?" She bestowed a kiss upon tha little woebegone face, then sat down at her piano, and and L reposing In an easy chair near by, let my thoughts carry me back to tha man who had made tha baby cry. T" baby. Bob had painted thus, with laughter and levity. But the work of his hands was good. The baby face had received tha critical approval of the editor sitting at his desk. A baby tear bad fallen npon hia open check book, blotting oat some figures he had written them And when he wrote again tha new figures were larger than the oil Bob was at last coming Into his own. i When cold, stormy weather overtakes you and you are in immediate need of coal for your fires it may be extremely difficult in the rush to get it immediately. You will act wisely if you prepare for such an emergency and lay in your winters supply of CLEAR CREEK or CASTLE GATE coal now and BE INSURED AGAINST WINTER DISCOMFORT. Art! charming, lovable. Of all affection, whose so fond as hers I And who, at times, can be ao false as she? Sines early childhood Madame Taunert had striven to win Ah . feminine the lady's favor, and her devotion had been abundantly rewarded. Art had smiled npon her, and been very gracious unto her. .Through the years of preparation she had walked at the pianists aide, n helpful friend. She had been to madame a warm nnd loving friend, only to desert her now la the hour of her great need. For madame was to give her first concert In America, under the most Inspiring auspices she had ever known. The hoar was at hand, but her Inspiration had fled. False, deceiving Art I Steal her song from the nightingale ; from a lily her perfume, Pluck the pinions from an eagle and tear from tha dlsdple hia faith. Then if you wish t crown your fiendish, labors, entice from the true artist hia " muse. Late In the afternoon I called upon madame; entering unwittingly, where angela should have coma. Under my arm I carried a magazine, which I laid npon a table. Madame spied the cover and gated npon It long and ETC. thoughtfully. Then aha forgot me forgot everything and seated herself Each Insertion at the piano. The soul of music had Two Cents Per WardAccounts. No Charge returned. Phone Your Dealer Today - aide of hia Brimhall through Southern Utah, this The in many crises, and tha legs triumphed the orchestra the for pair comprising Weber comedy company, and making had always held their ground. Be music which was more appreciated could appreciate a funny situation on any empty stomach, and grin whan than the stage performance. told him his stuff lacked huIlia musical education was begun editors mor. right afterwards, being mostly obtained at Ann Arbor, Mich., being But dont misunderstand. These of he had not atsupplemented by European studies, heights a philosophy bound. tained at Upon leavsingle lie has been the church organist since ing art school he was at first Inclined 1900. Funeral services were conducted in to proceed at once to Europe and paint heads. Rut lacking passage, the tabernacle on Thursday, before crowned resolved devote himself to magathe great organ on which his perform- zine work.to Then It became hia deances have so inspired thousands. The to sire editorial heads. punch instrument was silent in tribute to the Tho from aspirations path pugilistic master. dead to grins waa long, and the journey had RETAILERS AS0CIAT10N HEAD taken a year. But on the way he learned many things. He became recADVISES MERCHANTS onciled to the occupation of tha front The retail business is in a soft, pages by Harry FI slier and Jimmy flabby condition as a result of the per- Flagg, and waa happy to find hluiself iod of inflation following the war, tucked In among the advertisers. And declared Lew llahn, New York City, about the time that he discovered president of the National Retail Dry that editors were human, one of them Goods association, Tuesday in an ad- commissioned him to paint a cover. dress before the retail merchants of Now this palntlag la the spool about Salt Lake Citv at a luncheon at the which our thread of narrative Is chamber of commerce. wound. Let's unwind. There are too many looking up inI entered Rob's studio on orlght stead of down in the business, and it April morning. ia time that inefficient business poliBob wap accustomed to havtcg me cies be abandoned for good, sound drop In upon him. My apartments business doctrine in this period of re- being situated on the floor above, I covery, the speaker declared. didnt have far to drop, and ao he Hahn said it was an aspiration. for didn't mind. He had merely nodded him to view the handcarts at the state upon this occasion. That greeting did espitol and to visualize he hardships not In any wise Interrupt hia Industry that confronted the pioneers on their ha was whistling a ditty and painttrip over the plains. He said their ing a baby. And not until I had exenvironment enabled them to with- amined the work on lila easel did he stand the trials of the journey, lie rest his brush and my ears and open compared the environment that promp- the conversation. It opened with a ted the pioneers to the environment "bang." . of the retail business at present. Fol"Just my lark I" he growled, and I lowing the jieriod of inflation, the felt that he meant me. '1 need a merchants have been resting on their model, and I've been praying all the oars, just taking tilings easy, after morning that the right chap would having had a great business without come for the Job. Now aee haw my mnch effort. petition la answered: I ask for a baby The time is here when the retail and in walks a bachelor." merchant must take things in his own With hia accusing eyes upon me I hands and clean out his inelH nl felt very 111 at ease, and sought to help and pollicies and rebuild lie calm his discontent "You're getting business to a standpoint of iMideru on fine without one, said L "and beaggressive ideas, Hahn sides' said. At that moment there arose from the house next door the most disquieting Infantile shriek I have ever had the pleasure of Rearing. Wife Who Threw Butcher Knife I clear, and vibrant with feeling It came to our ears. Held To District Courtand besides," I finished triumBound over to the district court to phantly, "besides listen to that!" Boh laid his color box carefully on stand trial for voluntary manslaughter. Mm. Alberta Dowell passed the the floor, and tiptoed to the window. "1 thought for a minute," said he, ordeal of a preliminary exauiination before A. Ballinger, justice of the "that 1 heard something. But I must last She is accused of have been mistaken, 'cause the baby in Eraee, her Tuesday. James J. lowell. that house never cries." busbaiul, "Never cries I" I gasped. "Are yon The l'owclls were living in the W. F. Olson house up in I'arkdnle, he being deaf, or am I crazy?" "I am not prepared to answer yonr employed on railroad work. A Salt Lake City attorney apearcd for Mrs. entire question, he replied; "let It Dowell, some of her lady friends from suffice to say that I am not deaf. An that place are on the bond under hour ago I waa quits sure I heard which she is at liberty until she will what you seem to have imagined hearibe tried. Witnesses at tho examina- ng, and I asked the lady next door if tion gave testimony along similar lines X might borrow her baby. Of course to tha story aa published in The Sun he asked what I wanted him for, and of last week, that early in the even- I was fool enough to inform her. I ing of July 28th, while at the supper told her I was trying to draw a youngtable, the Dowells quarrelled, the wo- ster crying, and desired to make a man throwing a butcher knife at the study of the real tiling in action. "And what do you suppoa that man, piercing his heart and causing death. Only one of the persons testi- woman does? 8ba reaches down, fying, Carl A Johnson, a family picks up the kid and snuggles him nn-dher arm, like this, as If aha was friend, claimed to witness the deed, he stating that he was just at the door afraid Fd carry him off. Then aha when the weapon was cast Dr. 1. points toward tha door and says Ool M. Jones, who conducted an autopsy You have Insulted mo go I My cho-lon Powells body, expressed an opinion never cries' I" Bob had scarcely ended this dramatthat the wound eonld not have been caused by the knife thrown in the ic Impersonation before he dashed back to tho window nnd hurriedly manner claimed. the sash. "Oh, no, I didn't lowered At the conclusion of the hearing the he explain! "But hear anything, Mrs. held Dowell in of bonds justice of sound, thats tha only part e twenty-fivhundred dollars, which speaking with which I ear of young neighbor were furnished as already told. ir . t np-to-dut- Full-throate- d, - er ll THE SDN SHINES! It had been clipped from an eld newspaper, and below it were the worda "Captain Murphys Football Face." Then while I watched In wondering alienee, Robert Alden transposed the broadly grinning features of the football hero Into the troubled face of a bo throughout the West and on the Pacific Coast, because of his position aa organist in the tabernacle at Salt Lake City and its associating musical connections, died last Sunday afternoon at hie home in Salt Lake City. McClellan was 51 years old. lie is a native of Payson, hia follu having followed the newspaper business at that place. Ilia father died during the on a early manhood. Even in hia Who aver heard of an artist with youth McClellan 'a musical talent was long legs and abort red balrt And to attention. attract marked such aa heard tha nam of Bob apThe writer well remembers that aa who aver to such attributes and appenplied Mcr much as thirty-fouyears ago Yat aoch was Bob Alden. Clellan made a trip along with Hy. dages? natura had MUST ANSWER mi YOUR BINS WHILE graph. wide-ope- n red-ha- FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1925 EVERY FBZDAT. THE UTAH FUEL CO. General Offices Salt Lake City Judge Building e- FORSIltWANTED, e e . Bob and I sat In the front row of the balcony. Madame, tall and graceful, and gowned with pleasing simplicity, greeted her audience Shyly. Her baahfulness disappeared with tha beginning of each number, and returned with the applause which marked its close. And to me It seemed her very artlessness lent a chnnn to her art The last number on the program waa played, and madame retired; but tha people Insisted on more. She returned and for a moment sat motionless upon the bench. Then softly and sweetly the music rose from her fingers. There were sad little diminuendos, followed by tender, comforting notes that rose to gladness. Unnamed on the program, unknown to Its hearers, I was sure the music still spoke to them all. The old man might have heard the echo of a life n that was passing, and the promise of a brighter to come. The maiden could hear love's stream breaking over the dark rocks, or feel It gliding In the sunshine. But I knew that It represented the sorrow of all earth's children, and the sweet comfort of. a mothers lullaby. There was no applause when madame bad finissoft-spoke- hed-only the full-heart- Smugglers By DON MARK LEMON FOR RENT Freshly renovated apartment Phone 70. rent nice rooms, board for if desired. Phone $19w. (Copyright.) FOR SALE A STEWART RANGE. Telephone lOw; 30(1 North Ninth. DINING TABLE. FOB SALE-O- AK Phone 133-m- 248 North Ninth 2, RENT FOR Phone A 96-- street MODERN APART-me& W. Golding. nt WANTED CLEAN COTTON RAGS any size for wiping machinery. Tha Sun. FOR SALE OR RENT NEW FIVE-roohome. Furnished or unfurnished. Phone 138m. m FOR RENT MODERN APARTMENT partly furnished. Telephone lOw; 3GU North Ninth street FOR SALE OLD NEWSPAPERS IN bundles of a hundred. Twenty-fiv- e rents. The Sun. WANTED Lady of many years experience wishes to lease or rent mine boardinghouse. Mrs. B. A. Hills, Medford, Ore. I WILL TAKE OONFINE-nierases at my home in Price. Phone 294w, North Ninth street Mrs. James XL NOTICE nt Alley. WANTED WOMAN FOR COOK AT Castle Gate Hotel. Must have experience. Not hard work. Sixty dollars and tribute of board and room. silence. , I wanted Bob to meet madni&e, but he left me and harried away while I went In search of her to offer my congratulations. She would not listen. "No. no I" she protested In her precise English. "It waa not I; It was tha wonderful artist that painted the baby. He made the music." Aa I climbed to my rooms I noticed a light In Bobs studloi The door was slightly ajar and I saw him sitting on a couch. He had not heard me. He had his hat on his head, his pips In his mouth, and he was talking to Oliver. (Now perhaps X conldnt help hearing, and perhaps I was eavesdropping let It rest that way.) Oliver Twist sat In a chair near Bob, dressed in a raincoat and old slouch hat Ills face waa twisted attentively to one side In n manner peculiar to him. "I don't know what It was aha played," said Bob, (as though continuing n conversation) "but she painted with lier music a wonderful picture. And I saw two pictures, hers and mine, aide by aide. Mine, this caricature of a kid with glass tears, Bara a real baby, with less tears, but more sorrow; the sort of baby a woman wonld cuddle on her breast, and sing to Bleep, and raise to be a man. Oliver said never n word. How could ho? Be was only a lay figure a dummy; with a sympathetic heart and n body of canvas and straw. Bob would never have confided such matters to any one else And now you know why Oliver la la tha story end the real reason for his not telling It "I wish, said Bob, aa ho blew a dond of smoko In Oliver! fact, "I wish noma time I might really paint something something that would touch the heart of an artist like madame I The Feathered Gem FOR SALE A LARGE MOSHLER safe suitable for mercantile firm or office. II. L. Pratt Electric Bargain. building. Price, Utah. LOST LEATHER TRAVELING BAG the night of July 3d, containing wearing apparel and other articles. Reward. Thomas II. Russell, Box 352, Spring Canyon. Utah. BUTTER WRAPPERS PRINTED TO order, a hundred for $1.50; two huu-dre$2.25 ; five hundred, $30 ; a thousand. $5.50. Sent parcels post prepaid where remittance accompanies order. The Sun, Price, Utah. d, By Real Mechanics . An automobile repairing job depends mors than anything else on tbs mechanic who does tbs work. Ho must KNOW nnd ho must he conscientious. Wo have some of the best in town. That tells tiie story. They have adequate tods nnd other equipment at their command which enables them to do every job right Handy accessories at low prices. Ford parte. BUNNEL GARAGE North Ninth St, Price, Utah were eight In all, and their THERE owner a little, wrinkled, grayeyed man was evidently very proud of the birds, as he Invited Baldwin Into his stateroom the fourth morning out to watch them feeding. he "Yes, sir, they're New soon reach as I "and explained, York Im going to spring the trap. Maybe they wont hit the bine I Just maybe!" lie wiped the grain dust from his handt and smiled with delight. Baldwin watched the birds as they eagerly pecked at the grain their owner had spilled for them, and after a bit realized that the little man meant to free the pigeons and let them attempt to find their way baLck across the Atlantic to England, where he had taken the steamer. Then he expostulated. "Really, atr," be cried, "you dont mean to allow those birds to recron to England?" The bird fancier took Baldwin by the coat sleeve in a conciliatory way. My dear air, he begged, "I trust you will not be ao Inconsiderate as to raise objections to my purpose. To be hour eat with you and honesty la the rule of my life I do propose that these carriers shall recron to England. And they can do It, air they can do It In perfect safety. They are splendid homers, and each shall carry one written word around its neck to my wife In Bath." i "One written word!" exdalmed Baldwin, thinking his traveling companion still more eccentric. "One word, sir, one word each, which will make eight worda In all. A sentencen greeting to my wife. Ah I yon understand me now, sir, understand me now. A little token of affection between me and my wife." Baldwin did not understand at all, except that hia point had been evaded, nnd ao again expressed hia disapproval of allowing the pigeons to be let loose. They would perish in the attempt to reach England, he asserted. "Why, my dear, air," cried their owner, "the thing has been done scores of times. It la nothing for birds like these to cross the Atlantic! even in winter. They will make 80 miles an hour tha whole distance Juat hit a current of nlr nnd slide there, as It carrier-pigeons,- " were." Now, Baldwin knew practically nothing of homing pigeons, except a vague idea of their nwlft flight nnd great endurance, and ao ha let the matter drop, wishing neither to do the little man an Injustice nor show hia own Ignorance. However, he decided to laugh at their own expense. Two can live aa cheaply aa one when they dont live ns much is one. gray-eye- d bar-gag- e gray-eye- e secret-servicgray-eye- d thorn-san- d Lawra Terracinm Laura Terradna was horn at Naplao In 1500. 8he waa mnch praised by tho contemporary UteratL She met wttB a violent death being killed hy husband, Bocallnl Manro. Four editions of her works were printed at Venice. These are prlndpally poems Chicago Journal. hr One of the worlds greatest mysteries is why the man who knows the most usually says the least. The people of Swamps rott, Maes., must know how it is to keep cool with Coolidge. that as soon aa Representatives from the Carbon they ahonld land in New York he chapter of the Forty and Eight will would lay dhe matter before the su- be chosen later. perior knowledge and judgment of the Brilliant millinery on the outside of But he was saved that trouble. As the head u not always too sign of a Fire island came In sight the door of dull intellect on the inside. which was now on the pigeon-cagIt requires a of opdeck, became unlatched and the eight timism for the high percentage husband to help with birds Immediately took flight the eupiicr dishes and enjoy it B.r.c.1 Some men are so stingy they refuse Their owner was Th- picture despair. They're gone I he exclaim e4 "Gone without any message I What will my wife think? "Yon had better cable her on lanfr lng," suggested Baldwin, and then hi noted vaguely another point of weakness In his knowledge of homers, to which the bird fancier paid no attorn, tlon. The pigeons, after circling onot or twice In the air, laid a course dlrecfc ly toward the Long Island coast "I thank yon for yonr advice X wflj cable her, replied the little man despondently, picking np tho empty cage and casting It overboard; but it will be a great disappointment to Agatha a great disappointment I" Amid the bnstle of docking and Inspection, Baldwin lost sight of the owner of the pigeons, and thought no more about him until a day or two later, when struggling with the of business on bla desk la Malden lane. Then, glancing through a crevice of the gronndglaaa door of hia private office, he both saw and d man heard a little, wrinkled, Tho for the diamond buyer. asking vague suspicion which he had entertained now took definite shape, and he hastily scribbled a line to the manager, instructing him to urge the visitor to return the next day, but when bo left to have a trusted clerk shadow him to his residence, no matter where It might be. At fonr oclock that afternoon tho emissary reported that the man lived out on Long Island and had Just returned from abroad with some fancy pigeons he had exhibited there. At six odock Baldwins chauffenr waa guiding hia car through the eastern outskirts of Brooklyn, drawing np eventually near a handsome villa. One on tho glance at a neat dove-cotgrounds wee enough for Baldwin, who briefly gave the order, "Home." But that waa the reason why tho e man awaited a little caller at Baldwins diamond emporium In Malden lane on the morrow, and why the government grow richer to the value of several dollars worth of gems, brought ashore hy Baldwin's feathered fellow passengers of the Rurltanla. e, |