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Show Magna, Utah, Friday, March 6, 1936 THE MAGNA TIMES Edith M. Nielson, Published Since .. Usher Editor-Pu- b 1906 Issued each Friday morning: at Magna, Utah Entered as second class mail matter under the act ( March 3rd, 1879, at Magu, Utah t " , ruWriptloii, la advance, per year SLM 1 t " Published By The Copper Printing Company ' FOR PEACE ably distributed could kill a million persons. The Peoples Column This is not the first time such measures for the extermination of troops and non combatants alike in OJJltora Note: Communications reasonable length and on topics the event of another great war have been hinted at of of general Interest will be published And there is little use to argue that such diabolical in this column All communications must be signed but the real means, if developed, would not be used. name of the writer will be withheld Poison gas in warfare was condemned and agree- if satisfactory reasons for doing ao ments to avoid its employment were made long be- are given: fore the World War, but it was used with telling ef- JAPANESE" WRITES OF CONCEIT AND BRAINS fects by both sides after the Germans resorted to it Hon. Editor Times and Leader: at Ypres, in 1915. Our experts declare that chemical Someplace one have read, one warfare will play a far more important role in any fu- guess that It was in Magna or Garthat conceit la pom- substitute ture war. And there is hot the slighest doubt that di- field, for brains. And one would almost sease germs would be likewise employed if a prac- conclude from statement that brains and conceit are Inimical quantities tical method of doing so .were developed. And It have that Inversely. With all these added horrors in prospect, it is lit- been vary rumored that It are common tle wonder that thoughtfuul persons everywhere are experience of brainy- person to get conceit knocked out of him very seeking to prevent another world tragedy-whic- h early in career. In fact, squirming might easily wipe out entire population. Civilization humanity have really nothing to get must preserve peace or' perish by the instruments of conceited about. But seemingly nothing can Jar destruction which it has created. kind - Christian churches throughout the world will observe a week of prayer for peace, beginning Friday, tfie first Friday of Lent. To som; it will be just an other 'demonstration; to others it wjll mean the exercising of faith; but in whatever way it is viewed if it turns the minds of the people toward peace and ths awful possibilities of war it will have been a worthy undertaking. Horrible as were some of the engines of death employed in the world war, they were probably far less destructive than those which might be brought into plan in a future death struggle of nations. Prof. Leonard Hill, in his address as president before a London satirary association recently cited one possibility which is b.rrifying in its mplications. He declared that a certain kind of germ which can b$ easily cultivated is so deadly that a spoonful suit , 7 1 t:::: cpxsik sam ,Vrtrr.trtr .: irim KATiau i: 'eiwri-SHMeaev ' hf CHAPTER X There wne little talk among the three as tiny rolled contentedly along; it was enough to be alive Jo the glorious summer dawn and , see the aim rise over the great .shoulders of I be eastern mountains, and send Ion,; stnoiraers of warm tiie orchards. San early gold aero-Jose. Morgan Hill, Gilroy, all the little valley towns were sound asleep, but when they presents reached Salinas chimneys were Smoking mid early housewives were astir, and unite "denly Tony was conscious i f it - .up stab of bun-ger- . , Urp-ikfas- wide-awak- Have reached you ages a ready V '.arry asked, pulling ou Tony s cl air. I haven't reached Antoinette's, Duncan mid modestly. lies jot a certain line," Larr. warned hr. But dont believe on word he says." The no sic recommenced, and thl time It was Larry who rose an held, open his arms for Tony. Top lose obediently, but for aome re d vj LHV ft you can enjoy more frequent contacts with members of your family living elsewhere . . . with the folks back home . . . sons and daughters at college... friends. Call them Sundays or any evening after 7 p. m. Now week AMAZE A MINUTE far-awa- SCIENTIFACIS -s. BY ARNOLD GARFIELD SCOUT NEWS Friday. Troop y 100 of Garfield held their weekly scout meeting by hiking to see the game Magna --Garfield and the Negro Ghosts. Six scouts look the merit badge of marksmanship at the Utah Cop. per shooting gallery. Ehch scout was given 30 shells. High- - point man was Blaine WalL During the week, each scout doto be donated a can of food-stuf- fs nated to a needy family. Cyril Poulsen, reporter. Notice To Creditors vjitn nr WID W eft JIM heaven.) But beg pardon and. oh yes, indeed brainy person have dignity. In fact possession of brains is greatest dignity that can befall any person. But conceit Is to dignity as paste is to diamond. Real dignity can ignore and excuse and forgive. sub-stitu- te There Waa a Second of Sickening Horror. she found It oddly exciting, thrilling, even frightening to move to the throb af the music over the wide floor with him, his arms about her, and her heart beating so close son S, 1936. Date of last publication Following the theatre last Wednesday evening, Miss Erma Peay entertained the following guests at Billie luncheon: a Clarke, Miss Gladys Smith, Jack Gardner, Miss Sarah Bohne, Mist Wilma Bennett, Ardon Barnson, Miss Grace Furrow, Floyd Ward. Miss Orpha Harvey, Thane Barnson and Fay Smith. hot-tam- to hts own hart Ruth wouldnt dance?" I asked her. She never does." She waa quite breathless when she went back to her snlad; afterward she danced with Duncan again, and wlh a boy that Duncan knew. Then Larry and RurtTsald that they were going hack to the cottage, and Tony said she would go too; they --vere all tired. On the way back shs said that she meatit to get up an swim before breakfast. said Larry. "Im "Ita a dal playing golf at ten. but Ed love It at eight, i'n-- l we can breakfast afterward." I'm playloi bridge." Ruth said. Alice telepho e(i about It. I dont believe I'll ge ip early and swim. to be scorcher." Tomorrow's gc Tony, my dueling, m.v dnrli; g "You can a owe .mnrself Sony., you're all how tomorrow T-- nt ? , (TO Uk CONTINUED! 1 rl'-'ht- MW -- Bottled in Bond BRAND reading, sewing and working under thn kind of lamp that actually prevents eye- strain. . - whiskey I. E. S. Approved Floor and Table Lamps maka seeing easy- .- -- a fine unhurried straight whiskey made the iiOld School way Fine whiskey .must be made slowly thats the principle of these Old School diV $4.95 up f- v Come Into our local stores and decide for yourself. . tillers. And after just one taste of its mellow delicious flavor, you'll, agree whole- heartedly' with them. A Schenley Product BOTTLED IN BOND" N2' under U. S. Guvrwmnt Snfervijitn PWTS Ka. 36 QCJUtTS OeVrrieM, MM, h 1 y66 I Q . I. -- March 37, 1936. Old age brings too much blindness in this world . . . much of it unnecessary. You can protect your eyes NOW by James E. Pepper . Estate of John Dowis Davis, Deceased. ; Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 313 McCormick Bldg on or before the 5th day of May, A. D. 1336. Hazel Davis. White, Wright and Amovitx, Attorneys for Estate of J. D. Davis. Date of first publication March coi-bir- e r !' to dissipate, to dance, and to driv automobile at ninety miles an hot? ones necessary education will be complete. No use to know any mor Besides people with large skulls 1 never very handsome. Maybe conceit is very poor for brains. But heck, conceit is tar more personally gratify, ing. - And I hope you are the sxw ' Humbly yours. 1 1 Tnshto Funyama. 1 Its . Mr. and Mrs, Claud Smith of Garfield announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Oladys Smith to Mr. William R. Clarke, son of Mr. and Mr W. D. Clarke, also of Garfield. The date of the wedding will be announced later. flew by; It mi m any other time To.i ever known. The hours a dreamlike, unreal, shot with 11 earthly sunshine, . perfumed viti, flowers that were sweeter than oio er flowers, set to the deep organ toned voice of the tireless green ocean Into which she flung herseii loaning with Joy every morning ind every afternoon. Cool and sweet In fresh linen, she went tilth 'tilth to afternoon readings, to one r two teas; ahe became a familiar are at the Beach club; her blue thing suit drying on the line, her ' ie eyee dancing over the lunch ooin with their appetite for Joy adventure never quenched. Lnrry came down on Friday d'jlit ; Saturday, Sunday flashed by. be holiday was over. Again the 'inens and organdies were packed, and again the alarm was set. Duncan O'Connor had come np to the cottage to aay good-ba few houra earlier. In the twilight, and she had walked with him In the garden for a few minutes, and let him klas her. Somehow It didn't seem Important, but It all titled Into the dream of youth and Joy and beauty and autumn beside the sea. She waa not In love with e noisy handsome Duncan, but liked having him think himself In love with her. Ruth waa not awake when she and crept from the hottfce 'he following morning In the soft t.mn; dew waa heavy on the gar-n- . and a blanket of tog ahut off ea. Tony felt strangely tad; dripping awning and beaded "inrs of grass seemed melancholy her. Almost .In silence she esta till bed herself In the front seat be larry; he threw her a rug o wrap, about her knees, and ahe was glad of Its warmth. "Next atop for breakfast!" Larry , announced, turning up his coat pulling on hli driving gloves. "And my party Is over!" the girl mourned. The burned brown hills, the veiled ocean, slipped by; re luctantly the sun pierced the land fog and drove It away, and Tony saw the flashing light of the new day reflected blazlngly In the windows of the sleeping little houses along the road. Breakfast at Santa Maria, and more mllee and miles and miles clicked off on the meter. She and Larry talked; presently he told her that It seemed to him the shortest ran he had ever made from Santa Barbara. Then, only a few miles ont of the city, suddenly on the left there waa the looming shadow of a truck thundering ont of a crossroad, and the veering of the big car that waa coming swiftly toward them. Their own car, reeling dizzily, was driven off Into the soft shoulder of the highway, slipping, slipping, wrenched desperately by Larry's hands back toward the line slipping In spite of it end the steep hill and ths bay just Mo-wTony gasped; heard him say sharply, Keep quiet, were all right I" before there waa a seconder sickening borror, and the alternation of flying whltejky and brown grass past the window, and the rending and smashing of wood. Then an awful silence, and a gentle little tinkle of glass. She was struggling with a door above her head ; she was out on the gras her hand to help him. Ijirry waa beside her. Tony looked up a steep hillside at a fringe of care and spectators against the sky above; looked down at jhe crawling gray level of water. She felt physl cally stek; tottered dizzily on her feet; was suddenly safe and tight against larry's heartr THE - CtiNIBM iiWRKd Just-A-Me- re CHAPTER JGV tinued t here or further down? not quite Larry presently rnld. "Oh. brsMkfast here I" the women S3 claimed together. They got out. a little stiff after the more than a hundred chilly miles, followed their man tntc the dean little bright breakfast ropm. fell upon sliced tigs, smoking hot eolTee. brown imr, and fried eggs with the appetites of wolves. Tony and Ituth took olT their coals and stowed them In shipshape fashion before getting back Into the car. The sunshine had strengthened Into a threat of real heat, now, and Ihe fl.ids and hill ridges between tali' oh fie road wound were scented w ';h 1: d tn rweed and the rich snu i of av es and prunes - Whmt dizsteJ gnl t in the light, - and the ujnunf'ims off to the southI east gave oir ttle dazzling spirals Of oily hot sir. The cattle had climbed to the hill summits to catch whatever little rifts of air might he moving; In one of the arroyos horses had churned a water hole Into dr.vlng mud. Ireseutly they turned west and were out on the cliffs above the ocean; for a hundred magic miles the road followed the lip of the sea. Ituth. on the front sent, went to sleep; Lnrry yawned, smoking one cigarette after another. But Tony watched alertly In Insatiable Interest and fascination, and was rtill and cheerful when they reached their journeys end, a comfortable hotel cottage In a garden, at four o'clock on a burnKuth preferred a ing afternoon. tub bath and a nap but at five Tony and Ijirry were ID the cool salt breakers, the girl almost mad with delight. "I tell you that the ocean does .something to me!" I see It does, Larry shouted back, as a great wave caught them. Tony fbnnd her room small and warm In the last heat of the day, but she herself was made anew, and could unpack and find a book and stretch herself for an hours with a sense Idling before-dinneof complete luxury and comfort. Ruth was evidently asleep, for there was no aound from the room next door. From the street came the "purr of passing motors, and of the voices of other swimmers coming op cool and rested from the sea. - There wnl a strip of garden Just outside heat opened French window; - roses were glowing there, and the tall spikes of phlox; there were eucalyptus trees; a sprinkler was ending a refreshing wet sound through the warm atr. Dressed lo the orange cross-barreorgandy, Tony reflected that he might be wearing the least clothes In Santa Barbara tonight, hut that that did not tnean that she was the least attractive glrL Evidence to the contrary grat-(fleher on all sides, as she walked at Ruths side across a streich of blazing garden to the hotel for din nr. And presently --there was n young man at their table to make their quartette complete and add to lo this pflchnnted night the further of loose smug of person who simply knows that he Mrs. Justin Peay, Mrs. Angus Wil- much better than he thinks he is. Dr. T. C. W egg eland has recovered from an attack of Scarlet Fever son and Wilson Peay visited with You understand, person who real Mrs. Peays mother, Mrs. Margaret tzes keenly that as an entity he beand la again up and around. Wilson of Pleasant Grove Tuesday. longs to select few, favorite of heaven, star among stars and somethMrs. Carl Madsen of the Magna to be admired from a far and Row entertained the ing Miss Margaret Wadley of Pleasant adored from near, Club at a one oclock bridge lunchespecially by ophome after sex. When he is dead and eon Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Grove has returned posite two months With Mrs. AnHorace Ensign won first prize and spending gene nothing comparable to him Wilson. gus will ever happen again. (Thank Mrs. Ray Thomas, house prize. e. 17 useto . . ,.eSssmsetsssMitsMiMMi ' - "Amuse myself!. I cc, myself here for a th- mTon make th's d'Hi op. seem fun P Larry said. WNTt Beer Kathleen Norris. Real dignity can be very great and at mm time humane and veix ordinary. But as substitute for brains, one really dont know. Conceited prig is never troubled with qualms of conscience of conflict of doubts that assail thoughtful. Besides possession of brains Is no longer needed. Time used to be when one could cast his troubles before Lord as say. No beautiful hymn longer dres one need to scheme and plan for future. When dear politicians get through perfecting New Epoch, kind generous government will take care of all our care Every human need will be provided for. In golden days to come very soon, when one learns UTAH rPOVEQ & JUGHIT .CO, - |