| Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SUNDAY MORNING AUGUST 2 1936 HEART TO HEART- TALKS— By Kathleen Norris - Should a Woman Desert Her Husband and Children?— A Tribute to Girl Who Overcame Many Handicaps anything that I set out to do! Perhaps that is my trouble as you will discover for yourself if you go on Mrs Norris with this letter’' I am ambitious and no one ever has helped me In any way to realize my dreams - late-come- rs MALEF1CARVM IN TRESR TD1VISVS E p S A Concurrent! ad mal?fi‘ optical Illusion NS0£ IS THE DOTONTHE OPfTHE OUTSIDE OF THE BOX O?' 'cormoHm Inpfc SSiSSS--- 1 EGG “ ixamm iwlic" rnsm to WITH WAS Ernest Otto Work 6 YOLKS Owned by Ennis Coble Athens Ala- isanatt&rhey BUTHEHABA90N LAID BY A HEN GeorgeWillWoak Clinton Iowa - made or by It Is only wheh we make our present lives perfect that the surplus of ideal living Live for a begins to flow into them year or two entirely for Rickey 4and the girls Study ways to make them happy forget yourself Coax him into eating the vegetables and fruits that are so good for him put up an awning somewhere for suppers on hot nights find a tiny beach or mountain cabin to which you can all escape for his Realize above all monthly holiday that unless you make the present perfect the future never is going to be right either There's happiness there’s self-seeki- ' ” st sudden rage any 'more the cooks rage when theamazing than just dawdles cheerfully about family and won't settle down to a meal "Please come while the' are puffy— pieaa remember popovers that it’s a soufflee today— please get started!” the cook poor pleads And very often her reward is merely that the say pleasantly “What’s the matter with the salad? Limp again What’s the reason the soup is so cool?” Career Already Chosen If you husband lives on meat starches coffee and If he works in the big bakery furnaces watching this batch to see that it doesn’t burn and that one to see that it isn’t too then he really has some excuse pale for times of nervous irritation And since the wife you he loves "age unhappy and since a tragedy took away his adored little son— the son who is1 always more important to a European than to an American father — then there are two more good and sufficient reasons for short temper Your career you say But my dear Dolly you have already chosen your career You involved yourself in sacred responsibilities to that man when "“1 married him to those babies when M ALLEY My advice to you is to try to appreciate first that neither happiness nor are ever found ready- is will-neve- By Robert L Ripley nothing hard-workin- 90? dies “Now this has never been my idea at all as I came to Hollywood at 18 and would probably be in the movies now had not the hard times come and many of the studios closed entirely To find myself cooking and slaving for a man and two babies often has seemed strange but it was only a few months ago that it began to make me Now that unhappireally unhappy ness has taken hold of me like a fever and sometimes I want to scream and putting plates on the table I want-tbreak them This simply is not my life although I love my husband and adore Doloreaand Bebe and I do not believe any woman can live a life that denies her without a nervous breakdown some day Longs for a Career "Rickey comes home to lunch at 12 and supper at 6 At half-pasix he is sound asleep and I awaken him at about 4 in the morning when he must have coffee eggs rolls— in fact a Fruit vegetables regular breakfast and salad he r touch rit must be meat mekt meat hot bread cake and crullers My meat bills are large but we more than balance our budget because bread costs us nothing 'TSy 8 o’clock In the evefiing the babies are in bed and I am awake and alone By 5 in the morning Rickey is gone again He was born in Lorraine and is German in many of his ideas although the name is so French and he thinks a woman should be quite happy with plenty of money and good food and two daughters I think he would like me to have a son if but no one could ever take possible Jackie's place Jle has three days off a month when a substitute comes in and then he likes to go of or under trees and have thermos-bottles of coffee and have me cook meals If I talk of plans for myself he is very gentle and considerate but they seem to come no nearer! “Would it be right for me to place the girls in some good place where we could both see them often and try my luck in the studios again? Will you advise me? My mother and father are divorced and have gone out of my life completely my mother not wishing me to give up my chance of a career to marry Richard but we were both madly in love and I could not hear her But should a wife have to sacrifice her work to husband and children and might it not be best for us all to have me make the break now and do what I must do or be forever miserable? am crying as I write you this letter I I hope you will forgive its length and if you oan advise me "Lovingly yours DOLLY DICK” Curiously enough Dolly Dick I had another letter from another baker's wife a few years ago and I remember that her complaint also was that her husband was apt to be cross Good steady devoted but cross Thinking about her case I remember answering her that it is the cook's prerogative to be cross I do a tfbod deal of cooking mys? lfI know that there is no - - — - Believe It or Not— Now you want to you bore them throw them down and try to crowd yourself into an already overcrowded field where your chances of an opportunity much less of a success are about one in seven hundred If you did leave the hot little house back of the bakery did put your bewildered daughters into a good home did attempt to keep on frlehdly terms with an husband with the babies with the dressing and beautifying that in Hollyare essential to wood you wpuld only add failure to failure and mrive yourself into a nervous breakdown indeed You have only to read the movie magazines to realize how many failures there afe in Hollywood nurseries except when the mother-actres- s gives up her career completely for the sake of the children or when she doesn't have them until she Is a recognized star You would have neither a home nor a job chilYou would have dren nor freedom nothing And believe me there are hundreds of divorced women drifting about Hollywood with exactly that— "Dear Mrs Norris: I am writing you for advice and I suppose also for unhap- sympathy for I think I am the ' ' piest girl in the world and there must be some way out It is so terrible to be unhappy! “I married when I was 21 that was seven years ago I can hardly believe that I am getting up to 30 and have not yet accom-piishe- d “My husband works in a large bakery we have a cottage only a few He makes very goood steps away money now receiving 'eighty dollars a week but his hours are bad and he is an excitable exacting man who is quite sharp occasionally with me and We have two girls of the children four and two years Our little boy was killed five years ago when only one year old when a truck broke in from the street to his sand-bo- x My husband has never recovered from g this blow However he is and I believe deeply devoted to us all He does not drink and he gives me his pay checks we are saving as he plans to buy an Interest in- - the business when the senior partner who - V ' there are tremendous unexplored opportunities for you in the exact execution of what you’ve already set out and chosen to do There’s no happiness elsewhere What Another Woman Did Another letter! “My dear Mrs Nor-xi- s: Some years ago I read an article of yours about girls whose childhood was handicapped being able to make something of themselves in spite of their disadvantages I am really from a slum I finished grammar school and that was all I had married most unhappily and was really despairing at the age of 17 when 1 saw this article about culture and reading and It has had a great effect on me and now at 22 I am beginning to see a little daylight ahead I have read poets and Shakespeare have tried to uplift my thoughts and also have some effect on my husband who was a truck driver for the city garbage works when ws married in 1931 In trying to Interest him in books and also in personal matters such as bathing and shaving I was also lucky in seeing some fine moviss and Harry thus becoming interested now wishes to become a tree doctor which of course is a great surprise to me When a boy also of the slums he worked for two summers with surveyors and foresters and has now interested an older man who has placed a sum in the bank at our disposal that my husband may learn his profession So this seems like a dream come true to me and I would be glad to know what else I can do that Harry and my little boy Calvin will never be ashamed Of MaliViTt y TV e are going to the city where Harry will work on small pay to learn his business and I will have x a gas stove etc etc and will be free to do some real studying Many t thanks from Harry’s Wife” I have already written Harry’s Wife a personal letter I quote her letter here because it touched me so deeply to think of this girl fighting and struggling toward higher ideals from so much darkness poverty ignorance and handicap and because it gives me such pleasure to pay her gallantry and courage this public tribute and to telpher here what I told her in my letter that she need never be afraid that she will not continue to be what she has proved herself already a real leader in that needs leaders so badly Copyright 1938 The Bell Syndicate Inc ice-bo- Writers of Rocky Mountain West In a story Jeremiah Stokes local attorney who is the author of "Thunder Cave" and other 'works has written a novelized history of the Mormon people from 1830 to 1848 The work is to be published by Carlyle Suttonhouse Ltd Los Angeles scheduled for appearance on September 15 The Deseret Book company will be distributors for the Intermountain territory Mr Stokes has purposed to keep his book free from doctrinal principled adhering solely to the facts as history records them with such imaginative coloring as belongs to the novelist This novelization of the story relieves the dryness of the usual chronological work allowing the characters of those stirring 18 years to enact the scenes through which they passed and the reader to become a member of the throng traveling the long road from Colesville N Y to the Great Salt Lake valley 325-pa- Two writers of the state are represented in the “American States Anthology— 1936” published by the Galleon Press New York City Jane Rawlins Sheean of Salt Lake City who is an associate editor of "Horizons” a poetry magazine of the west has four poems in Vol II— “Crossroads" “One Supreme Law” “Old Dobbin's Pasture” pnd “Brook: Voice of the Lilac” An Ogden poet Blanch Kendall McKey has two eon-two-volu- P ntonium Bptunum l J7’ I CHICKEN WITH 1 FULLY DEVELOPED MS HEARTS Wha owned by MJWALSH McHenry II I CAUSED THE DEATH — of a Million Women A1aeus M&leficarym The (Witches Hammer') law book on which all Witchetrjals were based The HIGH FLOOD of PERSECUTIONS For SORCERY UNDER ITS INFLUENCE STARTED ’ 4 I EXPLANATION OF THIS THE BOOK OF A MILLION DEATHS— The belief in witchcraft belongs to the darkest days or human superstition It was believed that women who allied themselves with the Evil One thereby acquired a supernatural power to the detriment of their neighbors Still prosecutions Jor witchcraft were desultory and infrequent until two German “experts” Heinrich Institoris and Jakob Sprenger sat down and wrote the Malleus Maleficarum (Witches’ Hammer) This book transformed the ancient superstition into a system of latys which codified every aspect of witchcraft and systematized the prosecution of witches into an efficient law book Warts birthmarks and sties were constituted facie evidence of witchcraft Torture was authorized for the purpose of compelling confessions Immediately upon the publication of the “Witches’ Hammer” the perse- cution and burning of witches assumed gigantic proportions Between 1489 the year of the publication of the “Witches’ Hammer” and 1877 when the last five witches were burned alive at San Jacobo Mexico it is estimated that 1200000 innocent women were convicted of witchcraft and burned on into-nrim- Grant Wood Given First Fellowship Award of its first fellowship to Grant Wood Iowa artist is announced by The Limited Editions club Mr Wood will make a series of paintings for the illustration of “Main Street” by Sinclair Lewis to be published by the club next year An awarding committee of five art critics will soon be announced its function to be the awarding of five further fellowship each of $2000 to leading American painters who will be commissioned to make illustrations for outstanding American books The edition of "Main Street" containing Mr Wood's illustrations and with a special introduction by the author will be printed at The Lakeside Press Chicago Literary Award Caroline F E Spurgeon has been awarded the 1936 Rose Mary Crawshay prize by the British Academy' This prize is given annually for the best historical or critical work on English literature by a woman of any nationality Miss Spurgeon received the award for her recent book "Shakespeare’s Imagery and What It Tells Us” published by MacMillan nets “Carl” and "The Unknown Nurse” The last issue of "Horizons’’ was devoted to “Our National Parks” both in verse and pictorial presentation with Miss Sheean’s “Bryce Canyon in Starlight” included SUNDAY’S CARTOON evidence drawn from the “Witches’ Hammer” Among the victims were not infrequently children of very tender age THE ACADEMY OF POISON— Locusta the most notorious concocter of poison in all history prepared the poison which killed Emperor Claudius She was also the poisoner of Britannicus Emperor Nero often employed her services He appointed her official poisoner of the imperial court and gave her ‘official absolution of all accusations pending against her He authorized her to open a public school for poisoning in which she taught her pupils het JUtL— Her poisoning factory was run on lines of the greatest For an exacting customer who wanted proof of the efficacy of efficiency the poison Locusta “carried” a supply of living slaves on whom the poison could be tested While Locusta is personally responsible for hundreds of poisonings at least 10000 poison crimes can be traced to the pupils she instructed She was executed at the order of Emperor Galba with a great many official criminals exposed at the time Copyright 1936 King Features Syndicate Inc Mystery and Adventure ADVICE LTD By E Phillips Oppen- heim Publishers Little Brown & Co Boston Here is a collection of eleven yarns which Mr Oppenheim “king of storytellers” evidently dashed through in Deftly turned out as they are thqy are lacking the ingenuity and the logicality Mr Oppenheim manages to give as a rule to his most Involved tales of foreign intrigue and crime Expanded any one of these tales would no doubt prove equally as absorbing as his novels most have the material for a story in Mr Oppenheim’s hands The mysterious and beautiful Baroness Clara Linz to be found behind that office door bearing the legend “Advice Ltd” is a charming creature indeed and one wouldn’t doubt her intelligence One would however like to have more knowledge of her methods or of those unknown persons she employs in dealing with mystifying matters The lovely baroness dines with a banker and the puzfTe of the “Thirty-Nin- e Wooden Boxes” of gold bars which vanished at Dover Town Station is solved She knows how to deal with a heartless newspaper magnate to prevent “An Olympian Debacle” because of a stolen treaty Tm drastic action of “The Ritz Hotel Conference” when a dead hand signs a document might have brought international complications but for the baroness’ cleverness The business of Advice Ltd is to help people who find themselves in difficulties they d&re not take to Scot book-leng- th land Yard but againlt is the Yard itself which has occasion to turn to ths baroness as in the case of “The Listening Lady" when a wicked old lady's plot proves too much for the inspector The baroness deals effectively with family misunderstandings broken engagements and murder even with an odd matter of stolen dress designs— and not being always occupied with business captures & handsome husband for herself TRAIL SMOKE By Ernest Haycox Publishers Doubleday Doran & Co Inc Garden City N J Back in the West’s younger days when men meted out their own justice and it behooved a man not to be caught without his artillery the tall lean young gunman Buck Surratt rode into Morgantown from"' “across the desert ' seeking peace only to learn that the ways of a man’s life always catch up with him His life had been woven In a pattern of trouble and it seemed trouble lay in wait for him— which when from his last camp he heard that shot in the night and discovered that left lying in the line rider’s cabin he knew he couldn’t escape Nevertheless he doesn’t avoid the own where q hostile encounter with big Bill Head whom even the marshal allowed was boss sent him to the Torveen the ranch of the one man who didn't truckle to Head Since Torveen proved his friend when Head came after him with the sheriff Buck accepted the job Torveen offered despite surprising animosity T I displayed by Torveen's hands It was apparent the young rancher has plans Afoot bound to bring him the deeper enmity of Head who meant anyway to eliminate him frohi Judith Cameron’s path— and Buck is not one to desert a friend Besides he is curious concerning that shot in the' night There is abundant opportunity for Buck to repay his friend from the night the rancher brings his flock of woolieslnto this cattle country promptThereafter acly meeting opposition tion never lags Buck’s guns hardly being allowed to cool until that final facing of the crafty boss In the streets of Morgantown at the instigation of Old Martin Head who hated a Head to be a coward And the end of battle Is of course to give romance sway with thg gunman well rewarded Challenge to Church In “A Parson in Revolt" a Dutton book to come in mid-Jul- y Joseph McCulloch a young English rector writes in protest against the Ineffectiveness of institutionalized religion issuing a challenge to the complacent modern church Mr McCulloch demands a drastic reorganization a “decarbonization” of "all the grime of centuries of equivocation” SWELLING REDUCED - And Short Breath Inc relieved when caused by unnatural gollectlon of water In abdomen (eet and legs and when pressure above ankles leave a Trial package FREE dent COLLl'M MEDICINE COMPANY Dept 273 Atlanta Ga i-t |