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Show THE' ' C1TIZEN A.- & - HmmumHIIUHIWUlllimillllllHHIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMHIMIIIIIHII AMONG THE NEW BOOKS More than oyer before9 ueeettful business requires Banking Service of the broad, permanent character we give. V MHHinlMHMNWWNIMMNMMaMMMNIMIIIIHMIlllllllilllUIIUIIIIIIIIIIII. THE BARTLETT MYSTERY. By Louis Tracy. Published by J. Edward Clyde. the Bartlett Mystery it may be OFsaid at the outset that this will have some additional Interest for American readers because the scenes of the tale are laid in and about New i. t MCikmek CoJBAi f nra BUBUSNED ISIS . CAPIUL SNI SXWPUIS 90QUOOOS9 iwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir Every Dollar Paid For Insurance in 5 5 5 The Guardian Fire Insurance f j j Company of Utah Stays In Utah I The Agency I 1 Company i Managers - I 334 South Main Street SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH JllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIMlillllli-- s I , S. D. EVANS Modem Establishment New Building Salt Lake City State St. jiuiMiuuuiiiiimiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiliillilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilj v were a patr of it Corporal Hogan had the unusual experience of being temporarily disabled on three different fronts without missing a batle. He was always discharged from the hospital and clasified as being in At condition and sent back to rejoin his battalion just in time for another scrap. His really serious and disabling wound came to him during the fierce fighting in the Argonne, when in a duel with a German sniper he was shot in the left hand. This put him, out for good. In his chapter, Through Hell at Chateau Thierry, Corporal Hogan, besides recounting the terrific struggle that took place there, tells a story which seems worthy of retelling here: Lawyer Proof? I Every once in a while, a defec- I live will is the cause of somei court action. That means endless litigation and endless ex- pense. I We recommend to you the ex- -perts in our financing depart- - I iI ment to care for all your spedal work In this line. i No charge for personal confi- - Is Your Will dence. captain along the line. He was an unmannerly old Spartan, and insisted upon being annoying and rough even He set out after surrendering. to encourage us with sneering remarks. He outdid himself to express in rotten English his supreme contempt for America and everything American for the benefit of his captors. Finally he turned to his guard and said: You Americans think youre going to win this war, dont you? Yes, answered his Irish guard, and you think youre going to the ... gave hospital, dont you? him a punch on the jaw that almost knocked him west. An old mammy whose son was France received a letter from the heading of which was in him, Some- where in France. Cn reading it she exclaimed: Just like that fool nigger tc get lost over there! Anthon H. Lund... lit Vice Pres. George A Smith.. 2nd Vice Pres, F. M. Mlchelsen Cashier D. EL Judd Asst Cashier SUUUUHUUUUlHiMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIUUinillllllllllllllllllllllHHIlUIIIIIIIIIIIIIH i i Combining all the advantmetages of the high-claropolitan hotel, with the comfort of the best managed homes. ss s w.,1 Every Bite Tastes Right Royal Bread tastes right IS right. Kiddies thrive on it builds them to strong men and women. ROYAL BEHEAD C3 is made to excel. It DOES excel. Thats why it is the Loaf. Quality Supreme Royal Bread is something better in the way of bread goodness. Your Neighborhood Grocer sells it. He gets it fresh ever day. Royal Baking Co. SALT lake: WE PRINT THE CITIZEN OUR CRAFTSMANSHIP SPEAKS FOR ITSELF Century printing CompanyJ. Q. RYAN W G ROMNEY , i i i fcaiMOMIMIMM Portland Spectator. I CORPORAL I Main and 4th South And he THE SHAMROCK BATTALION OF THE RAINBOW. By Martin J. Hogan. Published by D. Appleton & Co. Martin J. Hogan tells easy style of his own in experiences, those of his comrades arms, and the story of the Third, or. Shamrock, battalion of the Old Sixty-ninth, of which he was a part. Ills is not a military history of the part battalion played in the war by that and concerns itself less with descrip- tactions of military operations and Newhouse Hotel Some of the men roused a German h Tel. Was. 6516 Apen All Nloht UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS 48 York city. The young woman aroundj whom the narrative centers lives on East 112th street. Every morning when the weather permits she walks about four miles on her way to work. She goes across the north end of Central park. Mr. Tracy tells you Just what entrance she goes in and by and just what exit she uses. He takes you with her to Riverside Drive. After the exercise of walking she takes the Ninth avenue elevated and goes to her occupation in Greenwich village. Be not disturbed, she is not an artist. She does not live in a renovated stable nor does she move along with a cigarette between her lips. She is a wage slave in a book binding plant where all Mr. Tracys stories are bound in red with black lettering on the covers. We dont recall that Tracy tells just what minutia of bookbinding Miss Bartlett attends to. But it is unimportant, anyawy. She is a modest girl and utterly at the mercy of a severe forewoman. Almost at the mercy of a smirking, floorwalker sort of male, too. But just when he is becoming most odious and obnoxious and objectionable and all those things, at a point somewhat later in the story, a fist swings and the pavement rises and cracks him over the head and Miss Bartlett addresses a chivalrous young mail the words which I am very lift him to the stars . . greatly obliged to you. Winifreds connection with it is through the woman, known to her as her aunt, with whom she lives. Why should Rachel Craik, the aunt person, meet Senator Meiklejohn and tell him in menacing accents that he must meet two men at the Eighty-sixtlanding stage" at 9, bringing $500? Why should the senator acquiesce and why should Ronald Tower, mistaken for the senator, be lassoed and dragged into the river? Well, it will not do for us to tell the why of these things. But the answers are altogether too simple, to our way of thinking. We are disturbed when We think how easily they may be guessed two- thirds of the way through the book. tics than with the true character and temperament of the manhood that CENTURY BUILDING EDISON STREET 231 Phone Waiatch 1801 SCENE FROM "UNDER ORDERS A T THE SALT LAKE THEATRE t MONDA Y, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Printer!. Binder!, Deeipen, Liutypan |