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Show - ! V The IHTerald Every Aft moon (Except Satar4y) and Sunday MoraJnff Liberty throng all the ldM The liberty Bell Publiahea by the HeraM Corporation, 60 South First -West Street, Provo, Utah. Entered as second 2lass ifiatter at the postofflce in Provo, Utah, under ihe act, oifarch 3, 187. ' UilmdrT. Nicol & Ruthman, National Advertising representatives. New York, San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago. , Member United Press, N. E. A. Service, Western Features and the Scrlpps league or Newspapers erras by carrier in uiaa county, th. $3.00 for six months, in advance; advance; oy mail in county .; 3 outside county $5.75 the year in advance. teaiures ana me J Subscription te 150 cents the mont! IS5.75 the year in e i Right From Main Street These are the statutes and judgements and laws, which the Lord made between him and the children of Israel In Mount Sinai by the hand of Moses. Leviticus 21-46. The people's safety is the law of God. James Otis. The Chamber of Commerce Drive Once again tije chamber of commerce, spokesman for Provo's business and community life, is-making its annual drive for membership funds, adequate to finance its manifold mani-fold activities for another year. No, organization in .the city deserves a stronger and wider measure of support from all classes of peoplehan the chamltfT of commerce. It is the voice of the community, in all matters affecting the welfare wel-fare of its citizen. its business and industrial interests. Whenever outside forces, unfair to this section, are found to be affecting local interests adversely, the chamber of commerce com-merce will always be found ready to raise its voice in protest. pro-test. Without such an organization the business and commercial commer-cial life of the community would Ixi without a voice, and the community would "be deprived of representation in the for-mulation for-mulation of policies and recommendations affecting the people peo-ple of Provo and their interests'. One of the greatest achievements of the chamber of commerce to date is without a doubt, the bringing of the $300,000 Utah Valley hospital to Provo. With excavation already under way, construction work will soon begin and the long cherished dream of a first-class, high-standard hospital hos-pital for this city will soon be a reality. This is just one of a great many projects gained for Provo through the efforts of the chamber of commerce. Such an organization deserves the unstinted-support of '.every one. It is to be lioped that the drive now underway will go over the top before the end of the week, thus giving notice to the world that Provo business men s-tand behind its chamber cham-ber of commerce 100 percent. Symbol At Work Treaties, agreements, alliances, acknowledged or merely understood, tend to lose their quality of reality in the public mind and become mere cartoon symbols unless they happen to evidence themselves in some startling, dramatic fnanner. The other day Paris wanted urgently to communicate with Prague by telephone. It tried to call through two chan-nels. chan-nels. The first was transmission through Gremany; the second, sec-ond, through Italy. Neither could be obtained. German und Italian telephone officials refused to transmit the call. Contact was finally made by telephoning first through Germany to Warsaw made possible by international agreement agree-ment and then having the call transmitted to Czecheslo-rakia. Czecheslo-rakia. - The Italian and German refusals of transmission cut France off from eastern Europe for a period of hours That sudden, calculated isolation must have brought, -SSe proXt- do'Xaysome the Rome-Berlin axis before the eyes of the French with such true and "don't always" is about a semblance of reality that they must have felt they could the mildest phrase I could think of almost put out tneir hands and touch it. A Welcome Awaits So Maude Adams is going to take a part in the movies! And many a heart flitted a little flutter when the news was posted. Maude Adams! Peter Pan! Babbie! Romance! love! Shy daintiness. Fairy beliefs. The heyday American ineaioiv with all its subtle glamors. Maude Adais come back? Yes, come back, Maude Adams. Ex-champions cannot come back, they say, but you have never been "ex." You have merely rested overlong. Those of us who knew you away back when, and those of us to whom you are only a glorious, glorified name, will be waiting to welcome you with open arms and eager hearts Come back, Maude Adams. OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS jCAXbJr WEAMEAA jOfrth bottle vrr- ' KJATURE'LL. "DO THAT ; VOU'LL HAVB TD MAMAAY THEM ON TH' BOTTLE TTLL THEIR NECfc GEOW LON)rEMOUGrl TD REACH GRASS ASAeavenJU AD Aktl MAKE FT 3CDVS TAXL&P, TO REACH THEM. '3T1D OF A-TCyiW TO MAKE THEM REACH IT BUT THEM IT WOULD TAKE MORE WATER. FERTH . GRASS THAW MILK. ' FER.TBEM, SO THETS OUT,' Ji A S2S" J it. v 1 I .W H SHORT (3EASS LOM G LEGS T M. RIG. V. S. PAT OFF. tt-2. BY X REPORTER - I don't envy the smart fellows who know everything or who at least appear to know almost everything. every-thing. For me, il would be too big aload carrying all that knowledge and wisdom around. For instance, I can look at one figure on the stock market page of my evening newspaper and know about how things went on the exchange that day. I've watched watch-ed it for years, and it is an unfailing un-failing indicator of the day's trends. By the way, I don't own a share of the stock this figure represents. Some city fellers, I know, carry eerything on the board, from Abbott Lab to Zenith Rad in their heads, not to mention 30 industries 20 rails, 20 utilities, 40 bonds, and goodness knows what other averages. aver-ages. I've been reading a loU too, about what spjneof the alleged smartest dopsters think bout businss prospects, end of the depression, de-pression, business pickup, and all the rest. It makes pretty good reading. The thing I've noticed most tho, is that the prophecies of Purest of the that would knowingest apply. Some of the of the Wall Street and Washington crews have hobbl ed their guesses so oacuy in uie last year; or so that if a fellow missed as badly in any other field he'd be asnamed of himself. Mr. Roger Whoson-i:ehV everybody every-body to climb aboardx the bandwagon, band-wagon, that the storm is over and he who tarries and doesn't get options on everything loose is a big sucker. And Mr. Kipling, or some such name, tells his sacred clients that he predicted the Spanish Span-ish revolution and they'd better be prepared for the worst, even when everything looks rosy again if ever. And greater and lesser lights all over the place" keep adding ad-ding up two and two politicaly, economicaly and financially, and getting -results that range all the way from 5 to 26 ty. Now I've been down in my town the last couple of Mondays, and noticed a very strange thing. The streets and stores were busier than on the average Saturday of the last few months. And when business is good and brisk on Mondays in Hayberg or Fishville or Kowtown, I can make a pretty good guess that some of the slack is going to disappear generally prettysoen. And, Wall Street can lay to that. There is no charge for this exclusive set-vice. A moving picture actress, about to be married for the third time, says she is going to take her new husband's name. It hardly seems woth while for such a short time. . . The senior class at the uni versity will graduate soon. Bank looking for a president will please communicate with the university. ju vr - All radio playlets should end happily, says a writer. We agree and the sooner the better. 5J ' YE DIARY - FORUM fn Agin 'Em nn nn n ! (UL BY BOB BURNS one of the worst things an actor can do is to rnake a date way ahead to appear at some benefit because when the date comes, he pret near always al-ways finds that he's contracted to be some place' else. I wish I could be as methodical about such things as my Uncle Skinny Flint. He was engaged to. be. married and the date was set for a Tuesday. On his wedding day he went running around to his girl's house and he says "Wo can t be married today because I jest fingered it out and that would put our silver wed- uuig anniversary on a Thursday and that's ioage nigni. s my Copyright. 1938. Esquir Feat ures Inn Mayor Charged With Snubbing Opponents Editor Herald: It is regrettable that Mayor Anderson, who has so many fine qualities that . admirably fit him for the position of mayor, should possess one serious beseLLing fault which, if not overcome, will cause him-to become more and more unpopular un-popular the longer he holds office. of-fice. I speak of his habit of snubbing snub-bing and insulting some of the best citizens of this city. He should know that it is only in the small hick towns that officials treat those who differ from them as enemies and crooks. Since, the holding of the municipal mu-nicipal power plant election in 1936, the state utilities commission commis-sion has brought about a marked reduction in power rates, and also the interest rates on bonds have come down. For this reason a large number of business men, farmers, laboring men, and educators, edu-cators, sincerely believe that the city should not now launch into the building of a million dollar plant and distributing sysLem. I happen to have been chosen if 3 Beesley Marble & Granite Co, ...... M Manufacturers of 0NUMENTS- MARKERS and BURIAL VAULTS "Preserve Thoseender Memories in Induring Granite" . . . Distinctive Designing - Reasonably Priced - Call and See Our Large Assortment PROVO, UTAH 51 West First South Phone 1064-W chairman of this group of citizens. When we learned that representatives representa-tives of Nuveen and Ulen companies com-panies were coming out here, we sent a telegram to them stating that we would like to meet with them and discuss the power question ques-tion from our point of view. We believed that we were living under un-der a democratic form of government govern-ment with the right of free speech and that by merely discussing a matter as American citizens, we would not thereby incur the wrath of the mayor, and be accused of intimidating and buying off such fjne outstanding gentlemen as are the representatives of the Nuveen and Ulen companies. In fact, we think it is a serious reflection on the characters of these men for the mayor to even intimate that they could be intimidated or bought. We wish to assure the mayor that we have nothing to HIDE out for; that throughout this contest con-test we do not Intend to impugn the motives of those who differ from us; and in all that we may say or write we plan to observe the greatest gentlemanly courtesy. We also hope that the mayor vll see the error of his ways in using such harsh, uncalled-for langauge and follow a like course. JACOB COLEMAN At noon to the Dirty Spoon coffehouse, where ask Pete, the waiter: "What kind of meat have you today?" And he doth reply: "We have three kinds of meat today hamburger rare, hamburger hambur-ger medium and hamburger well-done." well-done." Pox on the smart aleck! ' 5; 5; Please Pay Cashier. CRACKIR -'I Senor Molina, who had a large western ranch, left in his will the S of the E. of the N. E. of Section 20 to his son, and the N. E. of the S. E. V of the same section to his daughter. Which had the most land and how near together were they? (Answers on Page 4, Sec. 2) FORMER CHAMPION TAKES OWN LIFE HONOLULU, T. H., June 2 OLE) Edward Carter, 35, former territorial ter-ritorial flyweight boxing champion, cham-pion, was decapitated today by an explosion of dynamite underneath his -bed. Police said it was suicide and that Carter had been in ill health and had had marital troubles. INSULATE Tour Home with U. 8. ROCK WOOL (Utah Made) Cool Summers - " Warm Winters - For Estimates Call 1547 W, GRANT EKINS Radio Programs THURSDAY, JUNE 2 4:15 KSL Knighthood of Youth Radio Club. 4:30 CBS "We the People." 5:00 KSL "Howie Wing." 5:15 KSL Adventures of Jimmy Allen. 5:45 CBS Boake Carter. 6:00 CBS Major Bowes Amateur Hour. 7:00 CBS Essays in Music, Columbia Co-lumbia Concert orchestra, orches-tra, Victor Bay conducting. con-ducting. 7:30 CBS Americans at Work, the Columbia Adult Education program. 8:00 CBS Just Entertainment with the Andrews Sisters Sis-ters and Jack Fulton. 8:15 CBS Hollywood Screen-scroops Screen-scroops with George McCall. 8:30 CBS Kate Smith's Variety Hour. 10:00 CBS Orchestra to be announced. an-nounced. 10:15 KSL International News. 10:30 CBS Hotel Utah dance or-. chestra, Eugene Jeles-nip Jeles-nip and his Continentals. Contin-entals. 11:45 CBS Ozzie Nelson and his orchestra. Midnight 12:45 CBS Black Chapel. FRIDAY, JUNE S (L M. 6:00 KSL Sunrise Serenade. 7:00 KSL International News. 7:45 CBS Deep River Boys. 8:00 KSL International New3 8:15 KSL Buyers' Guide. 8:30 KSL Breakfast Time Tunes. 9:15 CBS Kitty Keene, Inc. 9:30 CBS Romance of Helen Trent. 9:45 CBS Our Gal, Sunday. 10:00 CBS The P & G Hour, "Vic and Sade," To be announced. an-nounced. 11:00 CBS Big Sister. ti id V" FiC- llJJkkJJsX At JJMX f - " 1 EUNORE COWAN STONE NEA Smc, Uc rt CAST; OF CHAXLACTE&9 ? j- COKSTANCB IIAIOWELI-. fceroiaet the taad.la. DEREK KAHTHOir-B artlat BILDGOARDB THORVAID-. Derek painted her portrait, v DR. HOG EIIS he met kU meat Alfflealt ease. 5 Yeaterlayt At work arl. Cm mte harrlea home the ftrst atsht expectlm that letter from Derek. CHAPTER IX "DUT there was no letter. from Derek only a forgotten bill from her dentist. When Constance realized that, she sat down on the lower step of the stairway--lirnp and sick with disappointment. In a moment, however, she was able to tell herself that she was unreasonable. Of course no letter could have come from California yet even by swiftest airmail. The Thorvald ranch was probably miles from the postofflce. . . It was douDtful if Derek had her letter let-ter yet, although she had written it the day he left and sent it by air with a special delivery stamp. Perhaps even at this moment Derek, too, had turned away from an empty mail box hurt and angry. She knew how tragically incredulous Derek could be when time and events did not keep pace with his own desires. She wrote another long letter to him that night. It was a little difficult to frame the paragraphs without telling him more than she wanted him to know. . . . She did, at lengthy tell him about Bart-lett's Bart-lett's making high comedy of her experiences of the afternoon before be-fore making it all sound like a lark to lighten the tedium of their separation. Bartlett's was quite the swankiest swank-iest store in the city. So exclusive was it that an anecdote was gleefully glee-fully told concerning one reverent customer who, going home after a day's shopping, complaining bitterly bit-terly that people had coughed and sneezed around her all day, finished fin-ished hopefully, "But then, I was in Bartlett's all the time. I don't suppose I've caught anything very bad." ONSTANCE learned a great deal during her first few days at work. She learned that, although "Papa Anton" was nominally head of the publicity department, and appeared to lend Continental luster lus-ter to all public occasions, it was Elsa O'Dare who did most of the work, arid made most of the important im-portant decisions. Papa Anton was celebrated for his spectacular exhibitions of temperament, tem-perament, during which he shrieked and gesticulated with a fine falsetto Gaelic frenzy that delighted de-lighted many of his subordinates and intiiuiited few; because, T un derneath, he was the most harmless harm-less and spineless of men. Con stance came to suspect that these theatric outbursts were often de liberately staged and encouraged as a smoke screen to cloud the battle front- when some undercover under-cover inter-departmental war of which there were many was under, un-der, way. Elsa O'Dare, on the other hand, could .be as soft as silk and hard as nails when it came to getting her own way and all without raising her voice or lifting an eyebrow; eye-brow; -could say things to meddling med-dling department heads or shiftless shift-less subordinates that left the victims vic-tims helplessly gibbering with rage or speechless with humiliation. humilia-tion. "And she's got the fight idea," Gertrude, the tall blond, confided to Constance. "In list Job, when they start trying to damn her, what she's got to do is to damn them right back in a perfectly ladylike way, of course." But Elsa O'Dare knew, too, how to be tactful and wise and above all, fair. . . . When she could be, she was kind as well. As for the other models, except for a few amateurs who appeared only occasionally, some of them, gave themselves the airs of cinema stars; most of them hoped sometime some-time to work into positions as buyers or as executives like Elsa O'Dare; and they played politics with a silken feline ferocity that left Constance sometimes amused sometimes a little frightened. HPHERE was no letter from Derek the second day, nor the third. On the fourth, Constance played a game with herself. To keep from hoping too painfully on the way home, she counted all the cars that passed on her side of the bus, betting with herself that there would be 5000. But she soon lost count, . . . And this time the letter was there. "My darling," Derek wrote, "you can't imagine what a picturesquely pic-turesquely lovely place this is- with an old-world atmosphere of legend which I cannot put into words. "The ranch house, itself El Rancho del Oro is set in a vast open valley, with mountains just close enough to break the flatness and make a majestic blue and violet vio-let back-drop, without crowding in upon you. "The house was originally built, I am told, by a Spanish grandee, Don Felipe Sedillo, but has been added to extensively. The older part of the house has walls two feet thick. It is U-shaped, and its three inner walls are constructed about a flowering patio with a pool and fountain, in the Moorish style. The fourth side of the patio is . bounded by a high wall with a wrought-iron entrance gate beyond which you see masses of fruit blooms against the blue of the mountains. "My studio, with a bedroom and bath adjoining, is in one of the outer wings to get the best light, for the inner rooms about? the patio are very shadowy. "The spaciousness and shadow of the old house wrill be very agreeable in the near future, for already it is very warm here. The patio is a mass of flowers and shrubs, and some of the dozens of climbing roses about the inner galleries are in bloom. Suchva-riety Suchva-riety and magnificence of color! ... If you were only hereto share it with me." pONSTANCE read that line re-peatedly. re-peatedly. "I have taken time," Derek went on, "to look about a UUle for a small house for . us. But except for the shacks of the Mexican laborers, which would be impossible, impos-sible, there are no small ' houses on the ranch. When you cqrAe, we shall either have to live in "the nearest town, which would be rather inconvenient for me or here at the ThorvaldsV As soon as I can, of course, I am going to try to pave the way for that." Rather inconvenient, Constance repeated to herself a little blankly. Pave the way There was more. . . . The Thorvald Thor-vald family consisted, besides Ernest Thorvald and his daughter, of a son, a year or so younger, than his sister. "A good deal of a spoiled brat," Derek wrote. "Hildegarde is the Baron's companion com-panion and confidant, but George, I gather, is the apple of his eye. "I shall be glad," Derek finished, "when I can actually get down to work. For that will mean that I can be with you much sooner in case there should be any slip-up about your following me here." That last sentence gave Constance Con-stance a bad night. So bad that she dreaded the next day at Bartlett's. Bart-lett's. However, the" Museum would have been infinitely worse, with its barrage of pitying eyes and carefully phrased inquiries about Derek. Anne Cable, thank heaven! had gone out of town. And at Bartlett's every one was too much concerned with his own plans and ambitions to have ay interest in hers or so she thought then. - (To Be Continued) LIN DON , MRS. LAWRENCE WAJLKJCB Reporter A leading event of the week was the swimming party enjoyed Friday evening at Saratoga Springs by officers and " teachers of the Sunday school. After swimming, swim-ming, a picnic luncheon was enjoyed en-joyed by the following Misses Cleora Wright, Thelma Gillman, Maxine and Jennie Walker, Austin Aus-tin Dittmore, Clark King, Mr. and Mrs. Will Dittmore, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Keetch, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cullimore and Mr. and Mrs. Reed Gillman. - Mr. and Mrs. Alma Rad mall, Lorena and Reed Radmall of Pleasant Grove, were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Anderson Friday evening, Mrs. A. B. Walker spent Sunday Sun-day at American Fork, guest of her son Mr. and Mrs. Jesse M. Walker and family. Miss Beverly Fife of Cedar City is visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Vern Gillman. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Jesse R. Walker of Delta are visiting Mrs. Robert Walker and family. Miss Amee Newbold of Draper has returned to her home after a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Gillman. 11:30 CBS Captivators. P. M. 12:15 CBS To be announced. 1:00 Myrt and Marge. 1:15 CBS Pretty Kitty Kelly. 1:30 CBS Hilltop House with Bess Johnson. 2:00 KSL. American League Baseball Game. 3:00 KSL. Words and Music. 3:15 KSL. International News. 4:00 CBS Northwestern University Univer-sity Bookshelf. 4:15 CBS Jack Shannon, songs. ALENE C. SIMMONS and DILW0RTH SIMMONS (Recently returned from study under Sergei Ternowsky of De Paul University in Chicago). , , PRESENTS A Six-Weeks' Summer Course In Piano THIRD WARD CHURCH - Registration June 6 - 7 Cor. 5th W 1st North - For information Phone 1298 ELECT OFFICERS Utah Beta chater of Theta Al pha Phi, national dramatic fra ternity at Brigham Young univer sity have elected officers for 1938-39. dent from Huntington, is president; presi-dent; Vernon Wilcox, Salem, Ore., who was president of the campus Mash club last year, will be vice president, and Oliver R, Smith, Ralph Ungermann, junior stu-1 Palmyra, N. Y., will be secretary. ((72g? IN SUMMER for electric frf j ran9es are insulated" Plsfr "SAVES TIME WORE ( Jfo for it cooks automatically" . "NO MEALS SCOR( OR BURNED for the Jieat can be controlled" TTS EASY TO COOK-ELECTRICALLY COOK-ELECTRICALLY even my little girl can cook well" "IT'S AN INVESTMENT THAT PAYS FOR ITSELF Electricity is-Cheaper Than Ever Now" These Are Actual Statements About Electric Cooking Which Have Been Made By Housewives In This Territory AS LITTLE AS $5 DOWN s5 A MONTH will put ELECTRIC RANGE ia your torn. Or, S L |