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PAGE TEN The Casper Sunday Tribune SOURT ANARDS' Books and Bookmen THHEEDECHEES, PRs, FOR ALL BLASPHEMERS, | conventional gestures, he had left lam was my grandfather, | to others.” | tall, spolied chila, | It was just this that tho profes A red, clay tower }sor had been unable to do. The — In Eden, green and mild y that Miss Cather deli y He ripped the Sinful Pippin js tches in is the story of his strug Fram its sanctimonious Hm } Ble to retain some fragment of Isola- Divorce Affairs Occupy} Attention of the Dis- Adam was And I take my after gra : Noah was m3 d to wrest from him. The ram+ trict Court. And-he got des shackle old house is at once the pees: There were planets in symbol of this iso‘ation and the Jast | And rds in his bunk of it Obstinately he E. Darn 4) He fell into the Bottom 8 cold, untt office un ' re Past Hell s, even after the new nell m Ola Aunt house has encircled the rest of his E, Lamb was re l'Bow thuch 'a existence. And through all his life Ai grar Q the de- d the lives of his wife and bis fendar failed to appear in dis-| ryith, she's any sweethear ughters and his daughters’ hus- court to answer the summons | ippy py rtstrings bre the memory of Tom | Wofld’ 1 aden ase ' 9 ofid’s first steamles: atlanti < Most of honey-pale | s transatlantic lider is being prepared for was igranted ie lrynn ator ners eneke Weta NER haan Aaa y S Gripsholm, fa Peerage a cS sethegherpaae reat diccovern Ho Bod aan te} 23,500 tons, is propelled by Diescl engines, {t has stacks, as you! 1 I can, out « W Mexico into the mia.| ¢¢» but they are dummies, used as elevator shafts. f Isal Williams was given a at body Above r } land univ y town, won his degree | <a Pred J. Willa The} a nice your | and the hearts of both of St. Peter's ‘ > led the custody daughters, perfected a discovery | tured fame and fortune with “The | delicate as gossamer. The epigrams ; mir iren Bacchus ‘was:smy “brothe that later was to make a fortune,| Hemp.” Three years ago his stir-|are whimsically impertinent with ant romer modified! Nimrod is my friend. Ja ne off to die in battle, His|ting “King David" won the Nation’s| the bright frony of youth. But it is decree previously issued Francis] ay) of them have talked to me he left to his flancee, Rosa. |@8nual prize and scandalized funda-| to the-‘baliads that the reader will L. Green against Mary Green. The] on how such courses er t. Peter, whose Jater-acquired | mentalists with its somewhat irrev-| return again and again. ‘They rep- de dant will be allowed the cus-) put when His Worship takes me up| pusband wring from it the last drop | erent treatment of the psalmist. In} resent a quality all too rare in con; tody of a minor daughter during] tow can I faro but well? of dividends and carns the jealous | this volume, which is published by | temporary the mon of Jur nd July of] jor who in gaudy Hell will care? hostility of Kathleen and her less-| Doran, he has collected the each year until the stele fe a4 —And I shall be in Hell fortunate mate / ~ | Hemp," “King David,"sthe glorious! ‘There are fashions in magazines plaintiff's mother at which time the raat : savy | “Wiliam Sycamore” which original-| as in everything else. ‘Three or four general custody will revert to the} yy “The Professor's House” eagaee oo ee A pase arldly | iy appeared in the New Republic,|vears ago the#'confessional” period defendant with the exception of two| acnopf) Willa Gather reveals the | itty, tidee tiélak, : ar d, there) ond two less-known ballads, ‘The | ical made Ata dppeatances and zatrice months of each year. same sensitive perception of char-| (yoo Shed Gant i aa Pe ne iat Mountain Whippoorwill” and “Moon then a dozen or so publishgrs have A decree granted Anna G. Allen] acter, the same wizardry in unrave and? seat ree ies Hovland ow’ | sland". A sonnet sequence, a nun rnered great wea'th. by glutting 1g James Aclen Also was modi-| ing the tangle of human moti DistatineN a aie ice aieagae tha| bet of lyrics and a coilection of| the shop-girl appetitie for salacity | fled ve the defendant the care/ the samo fine, resilient stylo that | Tue atesa, qt te this snlscde os ams in verse are thrown in| served up in the guise, of “true” of th hildren until f er orders./ have marked ev novel she has} wiih critics have taken exception. |‘ good measure. ories with a moral, the Sle aes written, She! has created in “Pro-] ory think our know:edge of Pon | ‘There 1s nobody else in Amer ue is waning a little; at any raté yes fssor St. Peter and Tom/Outlan® two | fessor St. Peter would be not com-|Wh0-can. tell a story in verse as|one of its most prosperous practi Eagle Shot VW hile well worthy of place | iete without ft. Outland's researches | Benet tells it. At his best he has| tioners, recently deserted the field. | Antonia and her “Lost |iot Cy oreasion of the hi neerity | all the gallop music of Noyes'| changed its nam nd began print-| , "7 AED | 0f purpose which endeared him to| “Forty ing Seamen,” «i the] ing fiction and. articles. Carrying Off Pig x , spre uate neni Pode sa. | the prog had become in essence | SPeed and suspense of Masefield’s| A year ago The Golden Book, de- | rae Other reviewers have not hesitated | 280rbed inte St Peter's own ex-| “! Bee ee in ee beens rmly | voted to repyints of famous fiction, | HARRISBURG, Il, Noy. 21.—] 03" ehitoize as a fupdamental defect | PeTience. In retrospect they typity"| at his best in these ballads. His| made its \bo ess has been (United Press)—Two hunters near} Cicture the manner In which | tt £elfless exuberance of hiy own| fhythms are Mngyy nnd gamit his | attested by pearance of a here shot down large American ea-| 7° Outiand'’s story is thrust up| C2" Work. ‘The Blue Mesa is a| Phrasing fresh as an Atlantic throng of ‘i Ainslee’s is Wileb it was discovered ter It] tniough the, middle of the profes-|S%™bol of the freedom which he| His figures have the feel of (he latest of these. ‘The last two| had fallen was carr pound |. natrative. They point out that hitnself has lost. tossed off jn mid-gallop, but ssucs ind‘cate that for the time: be- pig in its claws. some of Miss Cather’s previous| Perhaps it is a fault that the|*™0st never miss fire, ing it has discontinued the publica: | The bird was little injured and is | 1°01. ‘notably “One of Ours,” are | Symbolism of the book—it my gueas| “A Sorrow sat on the arm of his| tion of “first-run” fiction and is re now ‘Keptiin captivity by its cay ore, {pot we eas ver 1 wonder it| at ita "eymboliam. 16” correctechas throne pubtishing stories by such headliners the fault here may not be with the obscure to so many of Its} An eagle sorrow with claws of| as Cabell, a Merrick, EB. W reviewers rather than with Miss But I do not believe it Is one." : | £ jabatini. Kills Catareh Gera i cr STE, BEET et ele] hag ect aw Hang Ds am E is trying a daring experlment in| Incident but rich in implications,| “I can shape my psalms Uke dag new novel by Galsworthy, narration, an experiment designed | It may mean many things to many gers of jade, y REOR 38 ann : n ree Inutes to convey the subtler implications | reader: Ne before has Miss} But they do not shine like "the, gin in the December Seribne Chronio catarrh, no matter how baa, |°f her story as no other device Cather shown finer} compre!iension wghitst oe es 5 ted wae leat = fret since and cases of bronchial asthma now |could do. Certainly this sharp} of the s@gret mazes bf mind and In foon Island e@ tells how hite “Monk which carri yield instantly to the amagzing discovery | cleavage in structure brings out in| heart Certainly she has written a] “: - Time passed like the s:eep the fortunes of his rema of a French -acientist. ‘This drugles# | warp relief the contrast between} novel that grows with rumination,| Yellow emperors keep Forsythe famity | es, 8 positively harm : " ; : ‘ less to the most delicate tissues. Your | moment of achievement, and the] expioration Perhaps best of all is this from/ ©. Barrington, author of | bead and lungs are cleared like magic. | hrofessor's, rounding off in the nor epee $0 William Syeamore": us Apollo.” “The Divine Sufferers are relieved in a single night. mx 3 : y ‘ 8 , ¢ “Til I lost my boyhood and found] and other volumes, and L. Adams ox | ™Mal way of Mfe. Surely this con Tiger Joy,” Stephen Vincen 3 To prove it and to introduce Lavex | i - ‘ : my wife Beck, who wrote “The Ninth Vibra- to a million sufferers in one month, 1 | trast is In a sense the to the| Benet’s new volume of verse, 1 : . : offer to send a treatment free and| story. Miss Cather suggests it, high spirits, and an amazing| 4 8!t! like a Salem: cltpper Bont Anananner (Orianial Aomanoen, postpaid, to any ong who will write for | near the end, when she writes It establishes the yunger| A Woman straight asa hunting | are nd the same, according to You you can repay the favor by telling | ‘St. Peter sometimes wondered | Benet as one of the most delightful Pere enies z Exe Hunt, writing in Good your friends—if not, the loss is mine, | what would have happened to him|if not the most profound of modern| With eyes bright as the|Housekeeping. They represent two No matter what you have tried. Just | (rom), once the trap of worldly suc-| American poets. see ORE ] literary Ancargations (of ‘Mrs. Adama Foe ae ne ease srave | cess had been sprung on him... .| It was as a ballad-writer that| Very reader, of course, will have! Peck, an Englishwoman” who has the’ Vou con he rill of eat He had escaped all that. He had] Benet first won acclaim—back in| 8 Own preferen: ey SeeRaseg | ravarenewcely (asthe nCrients W. R. SMITH, 6746 Lavex Bldg., | made something new in the world—! the days, not so very remote, when| “°U!d fall on “William Sycamore, : — 3 Kansas City, } andathe rewards,’ the meaningless as an undergraduate in Yale he cap-| ‘he ringing autobiography of an} Four writers to whom Wyoming _—— ee "| American frontiersman. Perhaps | can lay at least partial claim are “The Mounta'n Whippoorwill? would | “epresented by recent publications. be second. It is an in'mitab’e ac-|They are Struthers Burt, whose 5 2 count of the hill-bilty fiddler who | »0ems were reviewed here recently; * came down from the backwoods and| his wife, Katherlne Newlin Burt, — Ps bested all the finest fiddlers of the| whose new novel “Quest” is “a fhe me | south at their own art: story of youth's search god”; Hal K yh lew | “My mother was a whippoorwill| G, Evarts, who has a new novel iid yal pert, of Western adventure. "Spanish ‘ === ey My father, he was lazy, Evarts,” and Dr. B. E on, head ithout electric- ity, the Maytag Gyrafoam is available with Gasoline Multi-Motor attachment. HEN the Maytag Gyra- foam was invented, we adopted a new plan for bringing thismarvelouswasher before the housewives of this country. First, we made a washer so “far superior,” sosuperlatively good, that it would virtually speak for itself. Then we asked the house- wives to permit us to bring the washer to their homes to do a washing. A Column ohGoup and Opinion — ON. By TED OL andfather tion which wife and daughters, with hin | the uncomprehending, well-meaning | mercilessness of relatives, are deter: TALK ? 9 Outstanding Maytag Features Washes faster. 6 Easily adjusted 2Washescleaner. 0 Your height. 3 Largest hourly 7 Clothes can be capacity in the put in or taken world, out. with the 4 Most compact washerrunning. washer made— ; takes floorspace Sep Cleans’ it- only 25 inches mors square, SAL] metal 3 Cast aluminum wringer. Self tub—can’t adjusting. In- warp, rot, swell, stant tension split or corrode. release. Reasons for World Leadership By’ this simple, practical method the Maytag, telling its own story, in less than 600 days became the most “preferred” washer—it leaped into world leadership. So we ask you to permit us to bring a Maytag to do your washing next washday. Just phone us—you will not be obligated inany way. And if the washer does not SELL IT- SELF to you, we will take it away again. Deferred Payments you'll never miss Gyrafoam “Washer gWiTH CAST ALU pesmi! 113 FIRST MAYTAG SHOP MINUM TUB,, ——— PHONE 960 SERVICE AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Factory Representative Always in Charge of Demonstration and Service Salt Creek Oil Field Representative JAMES L. MEIDE, EDGERTON, WYO. PHONE 28-F-3 | First Steamless Ocean Liner = { | its initial Voyage, from Sweden to New York. But I'm hell broke loose in a new | of Se'ence Service and one-time pro. store shirt fess: To fiddle all Georgia crazy.” Many of the lyrics which help fill the ume have this same youthful effervescence—witness the delight- Leonard Merrick, one of the most fully irreverent one quoted in ful!| ‘ndividual and charming of English | nt the head of the column. he novelists, is visiting in America. delicatory poem, “To Rosemary.” is He declares that he is not-golng to or of chemistry the Univer, sity of Wyoming, who writes “Ser- mons, of a Chemist Presents The World’s Greatest Clothing Bargain An ALL-WOOL Finely Tailored MADE TO YOUR MEASURE SUIT or Q'COAT FOR ONLY ft Age You must see the materials and allow us to explain our proposition to realize what a wonderful value it is, DON’T WAIT—COME IN NOW JAKE THE NIFTY TAILOR 227 South Center St. Phone 802 oP a i ane ete eel a OP Cn ane eM Tas AS ii ea SS or write -syndicate- articles newspapers and that*he isn’t » tell American ‘authors wha! ong with them. oture Fictional best-sellers, according to the latest st compiled by the Book- are as follows: A Hamilton Gibbs; Margaret Sinclair Michael “Soundings,” rhe Constant Nymph, Kennedy; | “Arrowsmith,” Lewis; “The Green Hat, Arlen; “The. Little French Girl,” Anne Douglas Sedgwick; ‘The Keeper of the Bees.” Gene Stratton- Porter; “A Son, of His Father,” Harold Bell Wright; "The Peasants,” Ladislas Reymont; “Barren Ground, Ellen Glasgow; ‘The Mother’s-Re- compense,” Edith Wharton. It 1s a creditable.list. There are only two books on it that are, by general agreement, entirely devoid of merit. peer emes mes SHERIDAN TALKS PLANS OF CITY SWIMMING POOL SHERIDAN, Wyo. Nov. 21.— Legal and financial difficulties con- fronting the construction of a muni cipal swimming pool in Sheridan were discussed at a spocial meeting called. by the Sheridan Commercial club. Although yirtually all of the per- ons present at the n.eeting favored . swimming pool, many problems which may hinder the construction of such’a pool were brought up for Vsussion. The representatives of various civic and we'fare organizations who attended the meeting will bring the swimming pool question before their organizations, LUMBAGO PAN “Heet” Relieves Instantly | wn applicator attached to cork brush “Heet’» over the pain} Immediate! you feel this Farm‘ess, glorious, penetrating heat draw the pain, soreness and eéti’- s right out of your lame, aching Besides, ‘“Heet" scatters the and establishes a cure. “Heet instantly relieves rheu- matic or neuritis pain in any jo'nt, muscle or nerve, whether in the arm, shoulder, neck, legs or body. “Heet"” contains two soothing, pene- ing ingredients, too expensive to use in ordinary lniments or anal- gesics. ‘Heet’ is a clean, peasant quid: doesn't stain, blister or irrl- tate the skin and costs only 60 cents at any drug store.—Adv. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1925 In the final analysis, Miss oe | COMEBODY HOLDS SACK |siss Sciaeaette Bess. and ig left holding the sack » Y said suck does not ho'd ten dy - worth of hosiery for one dollar, It is reported that the get-rict quick scheme has now spread to in clude other lines af apparel, also b gof balls, moth balls and automobile tires. It is reported that the state Wisconsin has. ‘practically stopp. chain selling hosiery. Coupon se) ers were placed under arrest, a tes arted and will come up f in the next couple of weeks. Any Casper citizen who is inter ested “in ascertaining by, finding out” Is welcome to review the’ in vestigation file at Chamber of Com merce, headquarters. By CHARLES B. STAFFORD Secretary, Chamber of Commerce. Inquiries have been directéd~ to Chamber of Commerce headquarters during the past week in regard to the chain scheme of selling hosiery. This ts just a repetition of the old scheme of trying to make the unsuspecting public think that they are getting something for sothing. i i | i Special Silverware Offer 26 Pieces in Compact Tray $14.75 Table silver is now so prettily designed and neatly arranged that every household should have a service. Larger assortment shown in same way. Replenish Your Silver Conveniently Our partial payment plan puts this silver within your reach without hardship. Pay a lit- , tle.down and the balance easily and system- atically. You will enjoy an account at this store. We give you 6% on all you have paid in wn- til Christmas. CH 118 E, SECOND ST. “Where You Will Eventually Buy” SCHEDU CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN ES Westbound Arrives Departs on nee teewenn ees + ------1:30 p m. 1:500 m Eastbound Departs No.'623%255. jewwwnnn------- 0:45 p.m. 6:00 p. m. No Sunday trains west of Casper CHICAGO, BURLINGTON & QUINCY Eastbound Arnves Departs ab ao 8:00 p. m. jo 82. 8:30 p-m. Westbound Derurte i 4000 m 133 E. Second CALLAWA YS? , the sale nber Sale must end. every floor will be just six more days at 6 p. m., November thirtie tagy must come off! The Great Annual Nove But to the last day—to the very last hour, crowded with great economy opportunities. If you are furnishing a whole house— a whole room or if you just look for what great savings you can make! eager buyers make big inroads. be gone tomorrow. if you are refurpishing a single coveted piece But don’t wait. Every day The very piece you want may Whole suites for bedrgoms, room: single pieces for every nook in h bedding, floor coverings, kitchen Bailptahat tie ever you may need you are sure to find at the sale and at big savings! TSRFePEDISR dining rooms, living Don’t lose the very thing you w need by delaying.” Such Saving is worth every effort. Come at once and make your selections. Most of the pieces are one of a kind—not to be dupli sated in value. Hurry---hurry for time flies and» November 30th---the Annual November Sale closes. ant and v <a _ _—~ a