‘ I 5}! ; . te ‘ .-l :- Q lU_ l ‘ 9 - 71' E. t ‘ "'3 '. l l E a i i ': .' ; 7 l i fl “ ' 5 . i l ,‘K.. .. I 5 5 ’ l E I Y: 5 s _' . 7; ‘L -*;;a€-. ‘ 1 7»? ‘ 9 r 3:‘ I’, :- .3."- V E {:3 » 1 ii - i ii‘: 3:. '‘fi. ‘ ll f'.~ -:‘ " . . 5;. ill '( l" 7»; : ‘E ‘ -I 4‘ gi E.‘ - . i. 1 7 ,_ .g§: I" L!‘ l 2 ' 5 ii '— 2. it ii 1 a a - . 'o».._.,,__ _‘ . - '- .".'!'.—...._ kme ‘ Agreatloveisang ‘. 2 J Euovmuiniiiiiszsi Local LE5 6 _ to. be -"notional sown.- Jay William Bu . u. author of “Abbe PicI'I’¢o"' I dc.” and f’l'he Eternal phrase. a nobility f character, even; they ml! have wooed: they may have married; but they have not loved. ‘ ‘ ’ A1303: 136 CD514! PW’ cession of lovers ere must he a few who have found something the love that endures. Why, there is that hr lbve itself that ‘so xalts any lower, no matter how base he is, ‘t for the moment. it tends to _raise him to the higher reaches of its er meanintt ' ° ° 511 ‘"9 tends to he spiritiml. We wander far from the visions of youth: blit we come back to them. All civilisation. men, lovers. It is inexorable." ' He ‘coufinues “ the world. is round in more Iensestlian one. 'viliaation. treads a clvcullr -pathandsowith ve. Itgtaijtawithdreamand wtnrns to dream. A men may forget what love once ‘meant to hi ‘but his soul shall know no peaceuntil he find it: primal glory .011“! I88‘!!- ypse. . PROHIBITI_0i HAS RUINED pwz-:31‘, s YS OLD TEXAN “l\&‘WastheDI!I°‘ While Owen P. Wti‘1!.'an old-time Texan. {D * his collected stories ,§the rexiorrvest of the Pecos Riv_er.‘"‘1‘hem Was the Days." 8tTlV¢8 *0 5° away with the romantic stories that have grown up around the old West. be may also be called 117- .‘ ‘ . , l A He is evidently ’a hard drinker of many years ‘standing. as hC_is infinitely well-informed on the topic and understands lull of the accompanying sensations. ' He writes “The Thxasnsnzer is no more. And he has passed away, not’ gloriously, with his ' ‘boots on, and wrapped in a winding sheet of his six-shooter-";sin_’iilie, but, ignominionsly and an: pinely he snccum to the hysteria of a nation, and, along with "number of time-honored and excellent instiuuti he. has become a col- stories is to say tha many of them were first printed in The llercury. Such is their amt by‘ Dr» Ia;v~,Wt71ia'?i . ' i ” One ofBe$t_ of 1925 loves-—and would do it silently without*,aIlowing' the friend to eizlier the woman or suspect his love. In the end, opportunity is found for the paths tothe lives of the four to he joined as ‘_ they should he, and the circle of love is completed once more. “A circle-—an eternal circle—en- .closi.ng all things, embracing all Love is the one great thing that is never finished. At‘ iis best.‘ it is forever attaining. but never quite’ attained. And that is its glory and tragedy." “A BUSH _THAT BURNED”" IS .4 MODERN LIFE COMPLEX “A Bush That Burned” Iariorie Barkley In.-clan linens. Balch_a'nd company Mrs. McClure is the author of ‘A “High Fires.” a; novel published in _.1924. Her Tbooks show a knowledge oi’ American people. human - people in human situations, the “nice” people ‘that are recognizable in the places one knows. , ~“A Bush ‘Hist Burned" deals wifii a strong- willed. girl, Harmony Hale, whom ‘we meet first in a tantrum, and who hit the piano because she didn't want to practice her music lessons. Her 5 her cousin whom she cannot 4 liemveristoi-ever putundercontiol the sto ofherianiily by r’ can t hill-0!'!toldherbyoueo!‘:iletwo h aunt.wifi whom she lites‘. She Ctinllnllegmbgefi 83 F07 1’-ohe ‘lot hithldealsandahility. ' "" in her girlhood‘ she fall; in ion with marry. moralsthathasconietotii duri h abroad after the war. cm at or ye” Adhering to her home principles. Harmony out alone in her “old fashioned” bend; her childhood nearly wrecks Harmony’. engage. ment to Morton until an accident or series of ac- cidents clears the way for the couple. . e book is a thoughtful portrayal of an disillusionment that many rigidly brought-up peo- P19 experienced in the post war indulgenuyog. society. It is naturally written and mm” . minimum amount of the sensational rather than plncins 811 emphasis on it as many novel. has done in recent years. Shop Talk of Books and Authors Dr. Saxton Pope author of “Hunting With the _Bow and Arrow." is had: from his big game shoot. 138 ¢XPedition in Africa. Considerable excite- ment was caused in the Putnam office the other day when he drifted in to see his publishers car. rim: his famous how and arrow. The unfor. tunate clerk at the reception desk spplrcntly mis. W03 1118 Illthor f Douglas Psirhanks—-and was guite ready for xcerpts from Robin Hood. Dr, 0De's story of’the entire expedition will be pub- lished by Putnam; next year_ “Some American Ladies" is the title of a new book by Meade Minnigerode,_which the Putnams will publish in the early spring. The chap“;-3 deal with the following feminine notable; {mm Pikes of American history—Martha Washington, Abigail Adlms. 5 Dorothy Madison. Elizabeth onroe. Louisa Adams, Rachael Jackson, and Peggy Eaton. NOWELLS Canned Food Wejek Monday, Nov. 9 -You will be surprised how * uch you can save by buy- Eig in quantity for ’ your winter's needs. ‘ See what you buy, for we will have these open for your inspéction to sample. H 5 -Q in items- plainly and of course f‘You Must -Be -Satisfied”: I :NOWELL$o Phone 74 Ninth and Walnut L The Viegay Toilet Articles are all the rage—just ' now. A new Bouquet odor that will please the most exacting. Perfurne—pocket size ....$1.00 Perfume—one ounce 3.75 Toilet water-20% .of the ‘ 375 perfume . . . . . . Compacts—refillab1e . . . . . . 1.25 Talcum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . L00 Face Powder—-all shades . .j 2.50 Free Demonstration. Only at The Drug Shop 5W. C. Knight; Prop. , Phone 302 /§_.;