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| 2! TUESDAY TUFTER EASTER revents Fu- rch Law Prevents a During Holy Week patos Wet Sipe primary Fe = pull arrange Pyare not Deen day, April 15 Syat as the date > Biaborate ceremon Fequrchmen from v A pnited States Shae 4 pecause this Is yee: Ns £ pamesibie 1 S gntit after S ops are Te Tove durin JARRES IS MAN wilt Be Nominated for| German Presidency BERLIN ‘¢ Awl be : Dae pre Hindenburg bas no! William P. ‘Trimb! traveling wit . and Fourth ng on Marion M.S. Wooster, uty assessor, W fook around cou Ehie B. Cox, fog to Lions luncheon at Diympic Hotel. J. W. Spangler, Ynker, walking to work Madison st. John Jackson, wan shooting gloom on ave. Gene Ernst, Wanger, flirting with at shine on Cherry st. J. H. Hardy, | | | pmsmith, pulling up Ma: 3B. MacPherson, mercha: eming the situation wit ~ Blend on Second ave. J. D. Dole, Susiness man of Honolu fering at the Washingt dha N. Pyle, { @a lunch at the (PEN NEW PARK ‘Utah Scenic Wonderland to} Be Ready May 15 SALT LAKE jwenie wonderland of ‘which embraces 2 Cedar Breaks and § ant (Mtlonal parks and forest se: yhaild and = modernize : 's. » Thirty-three miles of rail Maye been built from the 1 Sinetion at Lund to Chlar City, wh con ¥ the Hotel Fi F Bar been completed. speci TeMor buses will be run on Metween Cedar City, Zion Cit 24 Cedar Breaks, ‘Explorers of Gobi Desert Renew Work AN FRANCISCO, Cal, April 7 The members of the third €xpedition sent out by the Museum of Natt 4 now en route to Chi lla, having sal President Lincoln comet chapman Andre st, in the Orient, The party to reach Peking oD ah em ay ngolia on | AM tn previous the trans. | } Of the party will be by mo- Te The samo route tor the 900 10 Teagan Nor will be followed Was used on previous trips, but that the party will again do i Mg work by motor into the years, APRIL 7, If ‘WRISTIE. BURIED, ‘hg desert, le par the Principal ettorts ot | be directed atong | saeeontologicat tin rt es. The two yea maiety done in Mongolia ery ising results in this field | fe eile now have an insight | ; me animal life of this hitherto Fegion at the nine different | Of ite" history {he period of mat Mand extend Reptiles a hp i: rector P, Lewis, stud i These stages | iy millions of | well back. in. the well down to | ° Olympic Ho- TILT BEATTIE STA a? PAGE 15 | Is There Any Limit To a Womans Love? he loved William Manning with all her heart and all her soul. And the day he asked her to marry him was the happiest in her life. Then she made a terrible discovery that filled her with dread. She learned that the man she married had contracted the drug habit and that faster and faster he was falling under its deadly spell. With all her might she worked to save him. Never did a wife battle with more primitive fierceness to free her husband from the dread- ful influence that was destroying him body, mind and soul. But as against the power of the dread narcotic her efforts were as nothing. Froma position of wealth and respectability he went downward with frightful rapidity to the very dregs and gutters of humanity. And Lotta, led by her great love for the man who used to be, went with him, down, down, down till it seemed to her that there was no lower level to which they could descend. But she did not know the awful power of morphine to kill decency and self respect. Little did she realize how low a victim of narcotics can fall or the shocking demands the man she had sworn to obey would eventually make upon her in order that she might get for him the drugs he craved. The despair, anguish and terror of those days are still too recent for Lotta to tell of them. Now that it is all over, she wants only to forget. But William Manning himself can and does tell them. Hiding not a single detail, sparing himself no shame, he frankly bares his whole life—and Lotta’s, too. He tells how and why he fell into the terrible net cast by the Dragon of Evil—and how only the strength, the unfaltering faith and deathless love of a good woman helped him to fight his way back to manhood again. Manning’s story (since no man would have the moral courage to tell such a story about himself under his real name, the name is dis- guised) appears complete in True Story Mag- azine for May. It is entitled ‘““Dope’’—and is undoubtedly one of the most powerful, most dramatic true stories that has ever found its way to the printed page. What happened to William Manning might happen to anyone. Your own husband or wife, your sweetheart, daughter or son could, through ignorance or in- nocence, easily fall a victim to this greatest curse to humanity. Don’t miss William Manning's startling story. And it is but one of many heart-stirring features in May True Story Your newsdealer can supply you. Get your copy today. Also Read These Other Unusual True-Life Narratives In May True Story Magazine “The Fortune Teller’s Daughter”’— Although she was a girl of the finest ideals, there were ugly whisperings about her in the little town where she lived. So she fled toa nearby city where at last she found love—but the price was dishonor. What did she do— and what was the outcome? A true story that every girl in America should read. “Should A Woman For- give?” —If every woman knew how slender is the tie that binds husband and wife together, she would not rush into marriage in the first white heat of love. The wife who tells this story loved—and trusted her hus- band. But when the other woman—her dearest friend— threatened the sanctity of her home—well, what she did and its unexpected outcome makes a poignantly pathetic and in- structive story that every wo- man—married or unmarried— who wants to avert tragedy in marriage should read. “When Men Betray’’— When a married woman is dis- contented, danger is not far be- hind. Had Ruth known more about life, she would not have No man the risk. tal of # Those who ha fires of yet to come, acter - building No one who rea going wrong. May rue True Story Teaches by Example who is made to see the agony of a girl betrayed would care to carry to the grave the responsi- bility of having caused it; no girl who has seen it would dare to take No person who has seen the men physical torment of the to drugs could ever be persuaded to take that fatal step. To the young man or woman who sees the price the criminal pays for crime, the years of languishing be hind prison bars, the loss of respect of men, the idea of seeking gain out- side the law becomes intolerable. eryone who learns the lesson rifice and self-control is better prepared to do his part in building a cleaner, finer world. been tried in the and have come out P furnish powerful examples for those whore trial is These are only a few of the char- word - photograr from life that True Story places be- fore its readers month by month. plead ignorance as an excuse fo been blinded to the certain tragedy that awaited her when she decided to leave her home and husband for the doubtful riches, love and hap- piness offered by her new and impetuous lover. Read what happened to her as a result of her decision. One of the frankest, most powerful narratives ever printed in True Story Magazine. Other Stories in the May Issue Are: “The Law You Can’t Forget” “Fires That Die” “Tangled Threads” “Where I Found Love” “A Country Girl’s Experience” “A Man Couldn't Understand” * “Empty Arms” “The Curse of Beauty” “Who Was Her Mother?” “Whom God Hath Joined” “Told in the Hills” “Fine Feathers” “The Double Price” “Her Big Sister” “Two Brave Hearts” When “Jazz” Is King If ever there was a time when humanity needed a sobering, control- ling force to restrain its mental and physical excesses—that time is now. Thoughtless, pleasure-seeking men and women—foolish, irreverent, dar- ingly curious boys and girls—are becoming moreand more indifferent to the promptings of conscience. In this True Story can Stor A Macfadden Publication Magatine reign of the “King of Jazz,” discretion is tossed to the winds. It's “anything for a good time.” Thunderous preaching, moralizing, and the hurling of precept and fable are of little use in attempting to restore a pleasure- zed world to a basis of spirit- ual health and strength and moral sanity. It is only through a true, frank and personal revelation of the horrible tragedies resulting from folly and sin, that the minds and hearts of humanity can be shocked and awakened to the swift, terrible penalties of wrong. That is why Bernarr Macfadden publishes True TRUE STORIES in the form of beautiful, appealing love stories will be found in our magazine, Dream World—published on the 15th of each month, 10 days after True Story. TRUESTORIES exactly like those in True Story Magazine can be secured in True Romances, published on the 23rd, 18 days after True Story. TRUE STORIES of exciting adventures in the world of detectives in our magazine, True Detective Mysteries, also published on the 15th of every month. “Then you won't go and get the styff?’’ I screamed, grinding my tecth, and grasp- ing her savagely by the arm “*No, not for you, or any other foul beast.”* —From “‘Dope’’ in True Story for May ’ Story Magazine—a great national forum where, every month, men and women—even boys and girls yet in their teens— bare their lives, confess their mistakes and, by example, lay before True Story’s millions of readers the truth about life so that others may see and avoid the errors that they have made. True Story Magazine has been charged with being sensa- tional. If sensationalism consists in telling the truth about the fundamental facts of life—if it consists in exposing the pitfalls and snares that every year entrap thousands of our sons and daughters—if it consists in warning against the fatal errors that blast the souls and boc‘es of young and old alike—if it consists in planting the seeds of decency, right- eousness, clean thinking, and clean living in human hearts— then True Story is the most sensational magazine you ever read, after the manner in which a great evangelistic preacher is sensational, Every story in True Story Magazine is true—it actually happened, Every Story in True Story contains a great - moral lesson pounded home so strongly with facts taken straight from life that no one who reads it can ever forget it. . Those who hate and fear the truth hate and fear True Story, Those who have the moral courage to look truth in the eye, love and welcome True Story as one of the most powerful forces for good in our day. Use This Coupon If You Cannot Get True Story At Your Newsstand ——— TRUE STORY MAGAZINE | 64th Street and Broadway, New York City T want to take advantage of your Special Offer. I enclose $1.09, for which please enter myname oh your malling list to recelveS ibeues of True Story I Magarine, beginning with the May number, I (Ifyou prefer to examine the magazine before subscribing simply mail us 1” 25 cents and we will send you one copy of the May issue at once.) H Street H