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The Day of Rest 9 see¥==. By Manrice Ketten The Love Stories “| cay Com a Se |Ot Great Americans) dent, 68 Row. 7 TO WALK IN THE WILL © REAR OUR SHAR Breuer, Ee how. ny COUNTRY iu CARRY By Albert Payson Terhune os — To bay ? ane Matter. N ‘WHE same traits that made them great Americana often made them ** Biases ie eoning| For neient. and the Bean ad great lovers, Bome of their love stories are as poetic, as thrill.” ss United Gtates all bcm oo] bP J \ ing, a8 tragic ae any fiction hero's. History paints their famous ee . $2.80] One Tear. ’ bet 4 5 deeds, but says little of their heart romances. + 8010ne Month. nan { } In their love stories you will see your country's heroes in 4 mows © "7 Nght: Washington (who “had ever an eye for a fine woman”) neglect. ~ WOME 54... . ccc ec cece ceceeeeeeeeeeeees es NO, 10,2! ing urgent military duty to stcat an hour with Martha Ouetle; Poel ri ee Sey ¢ ; Jones frantic to turn hie back on America and on glory. in order; tex THEIR CLASS 2 ‘ bask once more in the emiles of Aimee de Telieon, his French sweet- * 2 r een ener heart; Aaron Burr at seventy-eight calling on Ais old time frrestetbte e MELLEN’S attitude toward public ownership is enlighten- charm to win for wife the richest woman in New YorR; John Adame, e. is. Morgan's most pret os servant vy former presi- denounced from the pulpit as “a devil" by the clergymanfather of the ‘ : =! rain A girl he loved; Benedict Arnold, dragged from a hero-pedestal into the dent of the New Haven is quoted as saying: \ uae muck of treachery by the wiles of a Philadciphia beauty. ’ In company with many other men in big business I have = t f . This series shows the human side—often the pitifully weak human Jong believed that public ownership was inevitable. 1 did not 9 " side—of great Americans, and tells of the loves that strengthened or think, however, it was coming so fast as it seems to be ap- . i * wrecked their greatness. preaching now. You would be surprised to know how many im ~ : - men in the conservative walks of life secretly belteve that e i Coppright, 1924, br The Preae Publih (The Nov York Brvaing World) public ownership must come. The aera / on legion : i \ NO. 1I—PAUL JONES AND AIMEE DE TELISON. , Who are saying to themselves: “This as long as we ‘e. sia Gh, Wn Cele’ Bre stron DAPPER little man, with tho strength of a pugiliet and « heart REST VILLE N that had never learned to fear, burst on the social world @& “An old Greek proverb which runs “When I am dead let the earth OW THE NEXT TRAIN: ] Paris carly in 1780 as a ccnqueror and popular idol. He was wed in fire” is denounced by Cicero as an inhuman and dis- Joba Paul Jones, a Scotch peasant’s son, who had become am asying. Ite later version, es used by Mr. Mellen, has its ; American and had done glorious sea-service during the first half of the French regim: hich—aft fetten' | Revolution, A few months earlier he had been hanging around the ante- spe Semeccnategh ‘ ati le di bah pany Dep 4 ‘rooms of French statesmen seeking ald in fitting out a fest against Eag~ io leutheome excess, wringing people dry o° money VA Aliana, and tind been neglected or snubbed by such tew people of fashion ae in colossal and criminal extravagance at the expense of those s KN an he bad cbanced to mest, theeo interests it was eupposed to guari—finally realized that its vic- je! y\— But since that time, with @ battercd little pastworthy hulk, the Bom m were getting make reprisals, 1 itself thet ———— Ne a h Richard, he had captured the mighty Britieh warship Seraples ' would cbipen ads ad renee mide o (\ | | | | | | | | | | | | | hiv a HM siriking & blow at England's very heart and proving himself the greatest, Does'Mr. Mellen range some of the big financiers of his dey with a Yh sea-fighter of his day. So his life, after he returned to Paris, was ome a a a ee ie tie continuous ovation. People who had lately turned their becks on him Toyal scemps and super-cynics of History? — = AY | now went out of their way to get a nod of recognition from the hero, ————— One of the many women of rank whos home was always open to Jones ; é Nj | was the ecoontric old Marchioness do Marsan. On St. Valentine's Day, be ‘The Colonel has seen his duty and it’s right here in the “ | went to call on the Marchioness. re he was introduced to her jovely. 4 ‘There been - ‘ward and godchild, Adele Aimee de Telison. And that Valentine mest mussy corners of gel We at may have cleanups ~ = = te sek Toes se runla’ease of love.be Bret Rake hereabout—but wait How You Witt Go BACK Aimee was small; but her figure was exquisitely rounded. She had Se Go MY HANO TLL rose-leaf complexion and masses of red-gold hair. Give You My - King’s Daughter } About her hovered a certain aemi-royal giatowty ‘THE ROLL OF THE RECKLESS. BAGGaGe fl TRA snd Peasant’s Son.} Of q' mormanatic ‘union. between old Loule Xv. of HE time of year has come again when merrymakere in small = * tore the wan received eee a 8, Breten, nobyeran daughter. | ‘Where- _ . boats do thoughtless things that imperil their own lives and \ ncertasm position in society. ; = A “TRA 1 Many suitors had sighed for Aimee’s favor. But to all she had turned: the lives of others. ‘ M aie deat Ce the dashing little ‘Atharioan came Tats her life, ‘Thea the enn ro! ; she surrende: unconditionally. It was by no means Jones's first~or saad oonbgge ‘spain -ah aaioed ot Ireland with ers nth—love affair, But it was the grand passion of his life; the one beside ‘hich all the others were forgotten. v occurted, eo far as we can now determine, because the nevigator ‘ The powerful Duchess of Chartres had cast a more than fricndly eye . on J » But re x ship took « neodless chance. Yet will all these drowned ones. But now, learning that ho loved Aimee, she put aside all thoughts by the i ho risk lives th h , Of jealousy or revenge @: threw herself heart and soul into the task of ) a single one number of those who riek lives throug! | Smoothing the new love-path for him. arena | es en: the yn uae cay = This was no easy matter. For Almee was a King’s daughter, Jones 4 ‘was o peasant's son. And the French monarch could not be expected to fret cities during the season which has just begun? ea gy Bg ) From Tarrytown, N. Y., comes a ead tragedy of the holiday. . A 1%] have bothered his stupid head over it. But these two ardent lover wisho.! Jos “dare” fo cin inte te Gory that tried eaten, With ' pe Py, A EN she etepped into the boat. Immediately the bow was drawn = But Duchess of Chartres was able at Inst to find a priest who would ute, Gory Sled ual sek end the young wits drowned, = = == |Atmres in the chapel of Our Lady of Laretia. The Duchess was the caly anything be more cruelly ees? . PPAR AT Ere witness, Almec’s real ot entered tn the purist! registry <an@ Why ie Yt that people eeem to find extraordinary exhilaration in’ HKHHBHAADAABDABABDAAABAARBABAPA BABB! Tore wag pp Meese nag iiy Resa facns fa Toone, if ‘) ting dengerous stunts on water? Is there eome strange bedev- Lucky for Women Who Want to Go to Heaven lalled Soeen beck Se Atrios Atl the ee eae eea eer of reason that makes it seem cowardly to be safe? “ That the Recording Angel Is Not a Woman: enxiety to get back to Paris and to Aimee. The honors by Congress and by Washington did not allay the homesickness.. His. aianiebipiinng kebeaimmeciietae : APIABASJDADIPAPBABS ASA AISID ABI AID AD thes’ $0 taal wile Goring hin abwnnoe were fill OF finmattonce/ak thevtlevwane , “ lownesa in letting him get away. Beginning July 4 the Secretary of State of the Unite: ’ : B ACH B LOR intonation ot bet bittent’y vole the enact sestber ond trend of “retreat evoees 18 AUR, MEN eat AY EY ha Sea Gurls cole ‘States will again rise to hie full stature and become a three- Fay M ments” he has taken on the 5 CG0RL- for the realizing of the chief object of his haste. For his little son, Paul, — who had been born during Jones's absence, had died just two weeks before —++- After » woman hae fixed her husband's bath. laid out his collar and|‘™* Ke Goiner ‘prief tay te the. suburban cottage he hed bought fer HELEN ROWLAND shirt, found bis cooks, and handed him his handkerchief, his hat and bis Aimee and himself—a cottage where Jefferson, Gouverneur Morris and Fraak- FEW HAVE THE COURAGE. Gloves, he loves to sit around and make cynical remarks about “the length | iin used to visit them—Jones was offered the post of Admiral in the Russian of time's woman tates to Greve.” | eer | fate bis aocton the postiiont, Cattactue, Meare a . ‘Pubtien | jena). | * le im accept 1e lon. ‘atherine, PESIELAED Tense of the Pesce bat written lie ows funeral ow lucky ter BYE oe Waieal cle tats Hanes that the icre | ao ced aed of Russia, was strongly attracted to the little here. sermon and repeated it into a recording phonograph eo thet Recording Ange! is NOT s women! Oh, yes! Any man te capable of genuine platonic friendship for a jejeo' ve. But his heart still wholly in Almee's keeping, Re- it may be ready for use at the proper time. He is only : woman—before and after the frtation. | cnaired glee Wilh foneraleay venta scwcien th (Gee amen Cont sans ty end means to live to one hundred. But he wante to be Estimated from wife's experience, the average man spends fully one scene 10/6 /ehku etn ue Gah ce dovella atest a| ee months’ absence from France he returned to Almee—ts the right things are said about him when he is deed. He will | qnerter of his life in looking for bis shoes. eile eae cares hasten ui ba dehent‘ond'@ "erelae” toe woena who goes| The rest of his life he spent with her. But he had little time: to. lee, ‘to them from time to time in advance. gener dee’ ka audase|Gentn:| gk oe ing to adore @ hasband who never looks at her hats. Broken in health and hope and spirit, he fell ill. Atmee nursed him Jevingiy "+ A Pennsyivanis man did better yet. Last week he unveiled with vietel Sace cod Taio toe py ped beat lapeana agi sretantt —_ to the end, and he died holding her hand. ma hand « four-ton monument to ‘himself surmounted by « life-| own cold shower bath without a shudder of real panic. ‘After the average runaway cougle beve succeeded in gaining the for-| , fav etatue of himeclt, fired a salute to himeelf, prayed for himeelf, and —_ Givences of thelr parents, they epend the balance of their lives in trying to @ wreath on the brow of the marble image of himself. After a while a wife becomes so expert that she can tell by the first| forgive themselves, The May Manton Fashions "., Both these men will be edmired and i — * oa ene ree ere ee eM acatahs Macc.” : “ hs countrymen have to go ‘cok ih wot oe te on Hits From Sharp Wits. Straight From : but without the blessing of such nerve. stuny « mnt Toaaian tr eone|{ Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy {| The Shoulder — oo things is by those whom he em- ploys to do them.—Albany Journal, By Famous Authors Success Talks to Young Men. 4, Oe. No. 16—MAXIMS AND REFLECTIONS. By Goethe. a Om Bits YerP iveine West? 'T is not always needful for truth to take a definite shape; Keeping “ ¢ Side Out.” enough If it hovers about us like « spirit, on8 protec’ harmony; | 7 VERY pM man is like if It is wafted through the air like ra E a oa ae ne ne ——. “wrgng” side and « “right” front and at once greatest calamity of our time, which lets | side. | the rear when the netnee pide Hotere ae ‘one moment is conaumed by the next| No one alive in this worid to-day 4 ‘ a alk Phased for the night. How far and the day spent in the day, eo that a man is always living from hand|is devoid of human weaknesses and 7 i and any one of the 414 the messenger travel {f the army| Science to mouth without having anything to show for it. faulta and failings—which are the! / , a ke will be marched twenty-eight miles that day? & good man; . knots and ends woven into the e A. WILAON. ‘There te nothing more odious than the majority; it consists of a few| “wrong” aide. Ne. : man powerful men to lead the way of accommodating rascals and submissive; There is therefore but one right! ‘Gee Batter of The Brentag Werld: ” and of a mass of men who trot after them without in the/thing to do, and that is to wear the Did King Edward VII. pay e@ visit | for it. knowing their own mind. mi lal of which is made the gur- | For a dancing fre oh to the United States six months be- e e — ment of your life RIGHT SIDE OUT. “4 4 smart and attractive’ fore he died? It te emtoniahing how Peccnl Par yeod ‘Translators are like busy matchmakern: they sing the praises of some| This does not mean that you) P effect can be obtained » speech-a-day topliner on the Chautauqua circuit. Peace has its crises—mediatorially speaking. they were tats talk irresistible longirig | should play the hypocrite, pretending | Y | by omitting the to tisfied are they with the thought|half-vetled beauty and extol her charms and arouse an irresi whol play ypocrite, pretending f P ver ei that they never 40 anything.—Deseret |fer the original. that there is only one aide to your! \ : aad subetitutage se Sperone “sy bai rn | if this way with eee: bread winner roloni study of the lives of various men both great and means.that you should place y thy ray witha co eave the tousn hy mae eae Bh strate aoe thought: “In the web of the world the one may|good uppermoat—that you should, " uf lace makes 7 0 8 well be regarded as the warp, the other as the woof. It is the little |for example to others, for your im- . A man who !s good for nothing|men, after all, who give breadth to the web, and the great men firmness | press upon others, for tho fostering 9 in only” one | roficient when It comes | and solidity, perhaps also the addition of some sort of pattern, But the) oe your good and pleasant relations } the skirt, but It te nis friends.—! ‘Tele-| scissors of the fates determine its length and to that all the rest must | with others, give to the world and to! OW {9 joined to a yoke be- Join in submitting itself, your own life the best that is in you, | & neath the tunte ang turning down beneath thought and | 2,” or Hppee one of thi are surrounded by her and locked in her clasp; powerless Vugen “heen Ieaeaiaes, S06 tendencia | bs yoke at Whatever pole to leave her and powerless to come closer to her. She loves herself and | goo4 nor in the larger meaning of the| (he finish is ma, clings eternally to herself; with eyen and hearts innumerable she te | word profitable. | \ er ite 16-year sis wer making new creatures spring up to delig! Mt simply means suppressing the A} will requ: an fitesion, If a man destroys this in himself evil in you and bringing out the good. | yards of material like the hardest tyrant. If he follows her in confidence she presses him to| in the proper design of Itfe are 5} yards 36, 3 her heart aa it were a child. Her crown ts Love. Only through Love can Qgured linduese, tole ee sympa- Most people do unto others aa they| we come near her. She puts guife between ail things and all things atrive |torssty and ail the other things that {Pattern 8297—One-Piece Skirt With Yoke for Misses would be done by—leave them alone./to be interfused. She tsolates everything that she may draw everything | nays a pleasing pattern of ilfe. The and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. . oe 8 together. With a few draughts from the cup of Love she repays for ®/epiashes of color woven of genius, Faith, hope and charity often pet Mfe full of trouble. industry and talent are effective only | Call at THI? EVENING WORLD MAT MANTON FASSEROH company end wander by Bhe to all things. She rewards herself and peins herself and tn herself | when in combination with this back- BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-sesend etrest: —Deseret Hi to distressed. She is rough gentle, loving and terrible, | ground. py me tte Gimbal Bros), torner Sixth 3 ber everything ts Past Mitkies end eliruism are sot World te her Wternity, aly onde, carved U7 WeeTing cae face rf F re sx peee? as antiiy aes ef $797 =f