Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SUNDAY MORNING 3UJY 28 1838 HEART TO HEART TALKS—By Kathleen Norris Hard Work Which Will Bring Independence Is Greatest Solace to Woman Whose Husband Has Decided to Go His Own Way "Dear Mrs Norris: I have been marspend his money on theater tickets taxis and flowers for other women for ten years and have three No I would remind you instead that adorable children girls of 8 and a boy life isn’t always fair And whpt is 5 Two years ago more important life isn't always even after having always been successfufTn Things go up and things go 4own: tobusiness my husday may be Jim's hour tomorrow band through no yours Thousands of women with less fault of his own courage and initiative than you have have pulled themselves out of deeper lost his job We had difficulties You nrtjst put Jim out saved something of your life for a while and be YOURand for a few weeks SELF There is nothing more agonizhe hunted for new work and we had ing for a woman than to let go the prop that has meant love and happihappy week - ends ness for her but you have to do that and mornings with now To join Jim to force yourself the babies in the and the three children and the multigarden and little plied expenses of a m6ve on him vyould meals in the kitchonly precipitate disaster en and we called it our second honeyThere is a happy useful full life for moon Then he got It won't you right where you are have the glamor of love in it' that good position In a town 400 miles married happiness of sharing all your away For 20 months now he has not lived at hom and we see him only plans and dreams and meals and hours of leisure with the man you love He’s once in every month or six weeks killed that Jim’s pay is $250 a month It would But thousands of men and women are killing that exquisite be riches if we were together! But it costs Jiim more than half that to relationship today and thousands live in a hotel keep himself well more will tomorrow It does not last care and take dressed and groomed except in the thousandth case Resolve to live bravely without it of the incidentals that come up when a man is alone— taxis movies books Tut boarders in those big upstairs rooms and arrange for the children a tips and so on "Most months he sends me $100 tin shower and a wash basin outside the kitchen door Their ancestors occasionally a little less and we live on that It doesn’t include luxuries kept healthy and clean by these simple means you have a downstairs lavaIt means thrift and good management payments on the old house we bought tory the shower will cost you only a ten years ago are low but there are few dollars Make the girls help with taxes and repairs children’s shoes you train the children to rake and sweep and keep the place clean There straightening for the girls' teeth a thousand and one demands beside is no neighborhood in which strays are those of bread and butter The house not glad enough to find a place to sleep is shabby it needs painting repairing and eat in comfort Work hard read changing the furniture is shabby and good books see good movies distract of course I am shabby It is not only yourself and discover— as so many women do after these years of shipthat I have had no money for new clothes I have had too hard wreck— that cracked and mended a life Cleaning cooking raking hearts are stronger than the ones that never were broken sweeping handling greasy pots and with pans and caring for small girls A Selfish Mother Can Wreck a Man’s measles are not helpful activities for Married Happiness clothes here’s Now an answer to another Visiting Father Finds Children woman in trouble This woman went Tiresome with’ her two little boys to live with "Three years ago we used to say her mother-in-laas a temporary acthat if we could ever get hold of a commodation to her husband during thousand dollars we would turn the the depression years The double houseupper story of the house into a sepahold didn’t work the two women were rate flat rent both flats and have a basically uncongenial and the husband nice little income from them to invest a widow's only child and badly spoiled in a better place But that dream is was inclined to take his mother’s side evidently long forgotten now When in any argument According to the Jim cornea home he is absent minded even tried to wife her mother-in-lacool he seems to feel he is doing me prejudice the little boys against her a favor he comments unfavorably on certainly she destroyed discipline by the general shabbiness of everything giving them sweets their mother had is impatient with the children and forbidden and telling them to come up always leaves before he need leave to Gammy’s room when their mother telling me casually at Sunday lunch sent them to bed After two years of perhaps that he is taking a 3 o'clock it the mother felt she was going crazy train for the south He tells me of the and departed to visit her own mother friends he has in his new environment in a distant city She and the boys still that his boss' wife is a wonderful are there In the beginning her hushas no children apd a good band wrote her asking her to return servant and that some other man’s now forten months he has not writwife served them a perfect dinner ten at all But his mother writes to the flowers randies delicid’us food no effort at all boys sending them sweaters and books and pocket money "from Daddy" "That I am discouraged tired lonely Now the father wants them to come hungry for happiness and companionand spend the summer with his mother ship and love never occurs to him I She has a young relative with her who need him so terribly I want so much will be she writes like "a big sister" just a little of the old love and laughto therm The picture of this harmoniter that we used-t- o share and I seem-- ’ to have lost him so completely! ous adjustment doesn't please “Margaret and yet as the father sends her Wife and Family Handicap money every month for the boys’ upto Him she feels obliged to do as he keep "Last summer when the hot weather wishes two was over I wrote him long letters This is a hard problem to solve’ for saying that I thought I should joipN his mother and naturally him bringing the children and we a clever and unscrupulous older wo should start our home afresh but he man can always make him think that is violently opposed to this My first she is innocent abused devoted and letter on the subject he ignored to that it is the wife who is making the one it he answered that second my trouble Deliberately selfish and unwas absurd we should still have to truthful persons can make an enormous pay $19 a month on the old house amount of trouble in tjtiia world and rents are hign in his new locality and there is no Immediate cure ‘until we can do things in the right Show Your Husband He Is In the way your cpming with the children would be tT real handicap to me as Wrong this job has its social side and I have Why not get some new clothes Marto keep up a certain appearance' garet steel yourself to be nothing but "Four years ago we put our house amused friendly happy and go along on the market but as everyone knows with the boys? Your mother-in-lathese have not been good years for can’f refuse you house room and perreal estate and we are in a bad secafter a long separation your haps tion either for residence or business husband will be ready to see more The railway that made the property clearly that he is deefboying his life valuable has been removed and with and yours for the sake of a twisted It all business has switched another old woman way To Margaret and other girls and "Two things that have happened women I’d like to say that letters adthis week have determined me to dressed to Saratoga Cal come straight write to you to ask you if you know to me and no eyes but mine see them restore use to can any arguments I my life to its old basis ps a married woman happy in her home husband and children Qne is that Jim has sent me only $65 this month explaining that he ‘simply has to clear off’ some Just from Doubleday Doran is a debts and asking me if I will start book on "Percy Hammond" which is 'a little emergency fund so that after a collection of pieces about the death a while he need not feel that the failure to send a monthly check means inconof the dramatic critic by his colleagues venience to me’ The second is that Franklin P Adams in the theater: through a relative of his employer I John Mason Brown Brooks Atkinson learned quite accidentally the other Burns Mantle George Jean Nathan day that in January he received a Grantland Rice Walter Winchell and commission of seven hundred and odd others These personal tributes will dollars constitute a lasting memorial to the "These two things show me that his man who for 30 years wrote dramatic interest and loyalty have gone elsecriticism where I don’t mean necessarily to a woman I mean to another life than the Not only will "Harvard Has a Homone with us If I were your daughter icide” by Timothy Fuller be the first what would yau advise me to do? Atlantic Monthly Press detective story "Adelaide” published through Little Brown it Is Life Isn’t Always Fair also the first story of the type to run If you were my daughter Adelaide serially in the Atlantic Monthly during I think I would not weaken you with its 80 years of life Fuller's story is the sympathy that 'surges up in my to come in book form in September heart at the picture you have painted nor further excite you with any ref“Pacific Adventure" Is the title of erence to the rage that this situation -a book scheduled for August publicaand it is not tire only one of the kind -tion by John Day whose author is Willard Price a journalist living in always arouses in me 1 would not waste any words at all on the injustice Japan who is the first American since the smug selfishness of a man who the World war permitted by Japan to can carry a loving mate visit her Pacific islands held under mandate of the League of Natiohs along just so far involve her in the Mr Price's bpok reveals what Japan responsibilities of home and children Md poverty pnd Idea utroll out to U plagptpjf ia’hetfislajxY pmplre Believe It or Not — By Robert L Ripley ried w w man-ager-rs- he w Circles The4 NUMBERS inEACH LAR& C1RCLEPIUS CENTER Every diagonals numbers plus center The 2 highestnumbers in any THE 2 LOWEST large circle and NUMBERS IN ANY CHHER IARGE CIRCLE PLUSCENTER85 5TARTWUH CIRCLE29 ADD MNEXT3 NUMBERS TOTHE RIGHT PLUSCENTER85 SKIP 2 NUMBERS THENEXT4 NUMBERS PLUS’ I I lWo Most Cosav CENTER85 There Words in History are 8 groups intoe inner ring of circles 8 GROUPS fNTHE OUTER RN&ofCIRCLESTHAT Together wrrH the center AND WILL EQUAL Portugal j 85' pm1234000000 Ameal ziAoy Los An gel ei I FlDELlSSMO FDR THE RIGHTjTQ INCLUDE' 8oxer IlSCALLED IN HISTltLE A It tmvi'JhE Most Faithful King' ALTHOUGH - Watering Pot IN USE 44 YEARS OvneA by GERTRUDE Philadelphia ATKINSON t- AN UPSIDED0UN&YZ IS Rl&HTSIDE UP WHEN wu b twin SpScm ImI Watt ntba mrf IT IS UPSIDE DOWN - EXPLANATION OF THIS SUNDAY S CARTOON title or It is as if a modem king had paid $5000000000 for a two-wor-d THE COSTLIEST TWO WORDS IN HISTORY— King Joao V of Portugal (1689-175a ruler enamored of pomp and luxury received the right to $2500000000 a word This money represented all the wealth which Portugal had up to that the title of “Rei Fidelissimo” (mo6t faithful king) in 1741 time extracted from its Brazilian colony But when the king died there This two-wor- d title is the costliest in all history For these two words was not enough money in the treasury to bury him decently and a public the king paid a total of 400000000 cruzados equaling $234000000 at par But the purchasing power of money was so much greater in 1741 that the subscription was necessary to defray the cost of the royal funeraL sum mentioned does not give an adequate jdea of its value at the time Copyright 1936 King Features Syndicate Iric Sometimes other'directlons go to hotels cross and recross the continent and the personal answers are thereby delayed Copyright 1936 the Bell Syndicate Inc The Literary Almanac hard-workin- g 85 First chapter of Dorothy Thomas’ new novel “The Home Place” which Knopf is publishing on July 27 appeared last year as a story in Harper’s magazine and received second prize in the O Henry Memorial Prize Stories Ruth Gannett contributes 16 drawings and jacket for the book The first book for three years from W E Woodward is "The Growth of the American People” which will appear shortly under the auspices of Farrar & Rinehart Mr Woodward is spending his summer in Woodstock This autumn also will come Edgar Lee Masters’ autobiographical book "Across Spoon River" announced as "the frankest personal statement" ever to come from the pen of a great living writer Mr Masters jpmarks on his honesty “Don’t think I don’t know that I have given myself away” He also has a book of poems "Poems of list People" on the Appleton-Centur- y Hanna Astrup Larsen who has just been awarded an honorary degree as Doctor of Letters by Augustana College in recognition of her work for Swedish literature is the author of a biographical work “Selma Lagerlof” which js to be published by Doubleday Doran lo' farlj) “August Mystery and Adventure FOUR TIMES A WIDOWER By Adam Bliss Publishers Macrae-Smi- th Company Philadelphia When pretty Lili Temple comes to Kirk Larrabee convinced that her sister fifth wife of the millionaire Jerome Jarrold is likely to follow her predecessors all of whom had died unor apparently1 of their expectedly own will Larrabee is persuaded she has grounds for her fears So Mrs Penny the comfortable widow who aided Larrabee Upstairs" has to postpone a holiday to become housekeeper at Jarrold Park —much against her Inclination particularly when she meets Laura Stover that efficient but disagreeable lady who had supervised her brother-in-law- 's home since his first wife-’- death Very soon Mrs Penny has reason to wish she had defied her friend Kirk’s orders For after a first night it is her lot to discover the sinster contents of the hnen closet hamper Yet instead of her sister Mrs Jarrold it Is Lili herself who is dead— at the hands of a In this curiously vicious strangler almost anyone composed household might be the guilty person If Mrs Penny’s observations are correct It was whispered that Nina unfortunate daughter of the first Mrs Jarrold- confined to a third floor apartment sometimes escaped the surveillance of her nurse and the Jarrold private physician dapper Dr Leonard Helene fUna’q twin" fond 1 long-plann- s much-disturb- ed of such pictures as f“The Hanging Man” had been jealous of Lili and the half-sistrestless Fay seems to have her own secrets But it was Dr Leonard’s tie that had enwrapped Lilt’s throat With all these curious elements well mixed and murder following on murder's heels Mrs Penny and her boss have their own troubles before they uncover the source of that hatred so alive In this house The book is a fair successor to "Murder Upstaifs” SECRET AGENT NO 1 By Frederick Frost Publishers Macrae-Smit- h Company Philadelphia In the matter of plotting an Involved tale of foreign intrigue and secretserv-ic- e vigilance a compound ofold-bloode- d brilliant counterdevilment thrusts swift daring action and continuous excitement Frederick Frost proves himself an inventor who puts no governor on his imagination even resurrecting the dead for the purposes of his tale and a skillful writer who packs into his yarn the meximum of suspense and thrills It seems a Japanese Organization plans a movement in Russia that would involve the whole Western world in a conflict that would make the last war seem like a mere tea party in order that while the Russian bear is fully occupied Japan can carry out her expansion schemes in the East without hindrance And Japan’s Numbep'One man la la Mont Capla perfeoyhg the Kauri r tvin ploUpeibftp er presided over by the lovely Californian Mary Michelson and whose guests oddly enough seem to represent each of the countries bordering Russia or interested in her future Yet Mon Sourir’s guests are only such as might be found in any pension on the Riviera and surely the beautiful Mary could not be a conspirator with Japan! Here is Anthony Hamilton head of the American Secret Service In Europe set to find out what is going on in Monte Carlo and the identity of the clever head of the Japanese organization where no Japanese Enacting a witless person appears fool stepping 'lightly on the edge of a deep abyss Anthony penetrates Mon Sourir performing incredible exploits of reckless valor facing unscrupulous enemies and uncovering an amazing plot yet endangering all by losing his heart where reason forbade d narrative jumps from The scenes in Monte Carlo to danger-fille- d Paris where in the sinister Le Mdsko-Vlt- e cafe the valorous Anthony once more proves himself the man of steel bringing the affair to a climax rescuing the man who was but In his own cause and saving his own fast-pace- half-hearted love SWELLING REDUCED And Short Breathing relieved when caused by unnatural collection of water In abdomen feet and less and when pressure above ankles leaves a Trial parkage FREE dent COLLLM MEDICINE COMPANY ”wbSM£SSi!“v |