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Show THE MURRAY EA( ;le, THE UNION BUILDING Eskimo Superstition The Eskimos, like most uncivilized people, believe thut inanimate objects have spirits. When a hunter dies, his ride Is buried with him, but first it is broken so that or spirit, can esthe cape and accompany the spirit of Its master whom It still Is able to serve. The KniK campaigned for 1'iiion IiuihliiiK will at last be a reality on the 1'niversit.v of Itah campus. Twelve architects in the slate are now preparing plans to be entered In a contest, which will le held In accordance with the rules of the American Institute of Architects. William E. Fisher, who is connected with the firm of Fisher and Fisher of lenvor, will act in the capacity of refree of the contest. At the last meeting o fthe general executive committee the following persons were selected to act with a competent and exiiert architect on a jury to determine the most desirable plans for the structure: Ir. George Thomas, president of University, Mr. Richard Hart, President of the Alumni Association, Mr. Ellis Itarker and Mrs. Edith John-so- u Linford, president, and resH'ctively, of the student body at the University in 1023-24- . The extort judne Is Mr. Thomas U. Kimball of Omaha, Nebraska. According to Mr. I. O. Woodruff, secretary of t he Alumni Association, Mr. Kimball is nationally known In his profession, while the other four menjiers of the jury have followed the I'nion Building Idea from lis "SAY IT WITH FLOWERS" Beautiful Fragrant FLOWERS Moderately Priced Murray Floral Kes. 1032 Ramon Tel 150 So. State 58:18 Tel. Murray 41 TOM KARAS Experienced SHOE SHINING Ladies and Gentlemen Opposite City Hall MURRAY, UTAH very Inception. The winning set of plans will le decided by February first, anil will lie displayed on the campus. Build- in K will iK'gin with the first favorable weather in the spring. It Is a 'significant thing to all those who have pledged financial support that something Is actually Isdng done to move thhe projest, and disturi the Another latent state of affairs. Union a see will Building year Building at the University of Utah, The Ruth Webb School of Dancing Is an Interesting place U visit Saturday afternoons. You will be surprised to see the splendid training the children are retchi- ng. o DEEATING CONTESTS The modest price charged enables every one to taake aadvantage of these Dancing Instructions. Tel. Murray 317 County Firemen's Hall (Old Postofflce bldg.) Here f IS WHERE YOU CAN SECURE ABSOLUTELY DEPENDABLE PLUMBING AND HEATING SERVICE PROMPTLY TIME PAYMENT TERMS ARRANGED. WATER PRESSURE SYSTEM A SPECIALTY I AUGUST GEHRING Phone Murray 319 214 Hill Ave. : I I -1- IOT.XKCOAW What is it? 4- Ytiti nlwavs know fiMnl you arc served. - Contest debating In the high schools of the state will again be directed by the Extension Division Ac of the University of Utah. Adamson. cording to Mr. James who is in charge of all activities on high sh(Hil day at the University, is greater Interest than ever U lng shown in the forthcoming de bating contests as evidenced by the increased number of sclnsds which have entered the league organized by the State University. In a letter sent out to all debate coaches, l'rofessur Herbert E. Maw !of the pub II SN'aking iH'partment !of the University, and who is in charge at the debating contests, the question for this year's arguments as follows: That Installment Buying Should le Condemned. I'rofessor Maw also states that the purchase of the following on the installment plan are not to Is Included in the debates; homes, bonds for purposes of saving, and buildings iiml equipment for business pui(Mses. The proposition of Installment buying should not only Ik- - of vital interest to those who participate In the arguments, or only to the students who desire victory over a rival school, but also to the iiiciiiIhth of the rotnmunlty. that more than It Is exiMs-tefifty high scloMtls will finally register to enter the league. The same plan that was used last year of determining the state winners will again I followed. The total iuiinler rcgHered will Ik- - divided The district Into three districts. winner will meet on High School I toy at the University on May 11th, and the state champion hkh k.IhwiI debaters will ! then declared. J the No Mistry j At MURRAY CAFE t it's hard for the man with lum- bago to ninke anyone timlcrs'and man that lie Is the most the world ever saw. If a Murray woman cannot get all of her husband's money any other way she t an rollis t ii lu the Thank You t1 "f Bl""l"iv; ACETYLENE WELDING Wgon Work, and ALBERT MARRIOTT, 4774 So State 18 Some Extra Good Specials In Radios and Electrical Supplies Brinton Electric Co. Phone Murray 106 Murray 5, 1928 Pape ' V IH.KKY'S (OTTAtiK SMUGGLERS THRIVE FOfUKXT Illicit Industry Revived on Cornish Coast. Imposition of the British duties and the drastic reorganization and reductloL of the coast guard have given rise to whispers that smuggling Is on the Increase along the English channel coast. No part of that coast is so difficult to guard as the wild Cornish coast, nor has any Briton In the past had so unholy a reputation for smuggling as the adventurous Cornish Celt, So whispers fly that smuggling has come buck into Its own, particularly In Cornwall. The old coast guard consisted of 8,000 men, the pick of the naval service, but It has now been split Into three forces, of which only one Is under naval discipline. Thepe three ore: A g group of 035 men under the board of trade; an untl smuggling bana of 450 men under the board of customs and excise, and a naval signaling unit of 312 men This is the result of a shake-u- p that was confirmed by legislation two years ago. Either as a result of It or as a curious coincidence, rumors of smuggling have been circulating ever since the change was made. Amateur Always Present. Of one kind of smuggling neither the British Isles nor any other couutry has had any lack. The amateur feminine smuggler who tucks 16 pairs of silk stockings Into the toes of 16 pairs of shoes in her luggage has never been absent from British custom houses. But the professional male smuggler who works on lonely beaches by nighttime Is a more difficult person both to locate aud to stop. The old coast guard came Into being as an aent necessary vo the combating of smuggling. It traces back to H. M. S. Ganymede, a blockade ship, which was stationed la the Downs off Deal in 1816 to close the Thames estuary to smugglers. The guard was originally confined to the Kentish const, and Its various detachments, when ashore, used to be quartered In the old Martello towers, built for coust defense la the Napoleonic wars. It was not taken over by the admiralty until 1850, by which time the organization had grown to such proportions that It covered the entire coast line. It had previously been under the customs service and had waged a long and fierce struggle against the smug gler. Havens and caves end old Inns a mile or tv o Inshore are still pointed out as the scenes of desperate struggles between smugglers and "preventives" In the old days. By the time the admiralty took over the service, however, smuggling had been beaten down to petty proportions. The Old Coait Guard. Under admiralty control, the coast guard formed a complete chain around the British Isles, the patrolman from one stiition Joining hands with the patrolman from the next station, at the end of what was often a long and lonely "beat." It Is many years now since the paths once used by these patrols, marked out by whitewashed stones along the cliff edges, were used. What is now called the coast guard Is a service, working In dl rect communication with the board of trade's rocket unit and with the lifeboat group of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. The preventive service Is compelled by the sraallness of Its forces to restrict Itself In ordinary circumstances to the porta. The result Is a succession of rumors, coming now from some lonely beach in the Thames estuary, now from some smug little bay hidden In the great cliffs of Cornwall. A tele spreads concerning some lonely country house, past which a heuvy lorry has been driven In the night time. Tracks, followed at dawn, lead buck to a beach where the lorry waited and where footprints and the mark of deeply laden small boat nre visible. In Cornwall, where the bays afford shelter, It Is said that smuggling has become so daring that It Is being car rled on In daylight and sometime even In the harbors. Much of the contraband Is said to be brandy and cigars, which are deposited In the Inns or the fishing villages and sold qulle openly. Only In the presence of strangers ts there said to be any of the secrecy usually associated with smuegllng. When customs men are on the alert In the harltora it Is said to be eusy to avoid them. London. Bilk 5 room from tiie green fruit. cott.-ige- , every Start convenience, garage, barn, pheJl u tiii large garden, .pply ut Vuiidy Bunk, Sandy, llnli. AGAIN IN BRITAIN eiiiiviilent o wheat llour mi l corn meal. From the plantains, iili aie banana-like plants, the fruit of which must le cooked before eating, a li.'tur Is obtained which is sometimes lived In making delicate puddings. Aiiohter relntue of the banana Is the ulinca plant, from which maiiila hemp liber Is obtained. The fruit of the iibacu Is inedible. PLUMBING and Baby Food 3 Years "For Right By Calling Us for Woman Eats Only ; 1928 Ilanaua Hour Is richer in protein than potato In food value it is almost Hour, years I ale only baby food, everything else formed gas. Now thanks to Adlerika, I eat everything and enjoy life." Mrs. Omni, Even the FIltST spoonful of dlerika relieves gas on the stomach aa:oiint-- f anil removes astonishing old waste matter from the system. Makes you enjoy your meals ami sleep ,lietter. No matter what you have tried for your stomach and lH)we!s, Adlerika will surprise you. MURRAY CITY PHARMACY HEATING ?. ESTIMATES Murray Plumbing & Was Big Enough ' 2 Per Cent in U. S. , Are 111 Heating Co. 1,1 1 mm m mwmwm (Bonded to the State of Utan) Mdiifyre Uldg. Salt Lake City Wasatch 3425 : A ,1, Bobbie room Utah I 1 Manufactured by the Peter the Great a Giant H. Banana Plants Yields Most Food Per Case of Any Crop The world's lending food crops, includlnc wheat, rice, com, and potatoes, have become great staples ' because of their large yields of foods in concentrated and palatable form. In a comparative study of these foods, the banana, it is said by a representative of the United States department of Agriculture In Hawaii, has been found to lead in tout I sr acre and In fuel value 1st acre. A fair yield of wheat Is estimated at l.ti'JO immhuIs pre acre. In the banana it Is .'12.0IHI pounds per acre. AhI lite lomparative fuel values from un acre are 2.t'73,IMMl calorics for whe.it and S,:t'1,KHl for bananas. Of rice, corn, white and sweet jHitatoes lite acre yield of HEALTH COMFORT STYLE sweet potatoes, with fi,n;o,(HHI calories, approaches closest to the Sold by Trained Representative banana, of the fruits I he banana Only Is much the richest in protein, havin ing approximately four and noe-haFor free, demonstration times as large a proMirtion as your own home, Phone the apple ami nearly live times the pineapple. Doug. For many races of the human or write nni' the banana in great part takes Mrs. G. F Smith, Box 260 the place of wheat, rye, barley, and Vine St., Murray, Ut. potatoes. Flour is sometimes made It. Born and Raised in Prince Nicholas of Greece iu his new book, "My Fifty Years," says that In the cathedral at ltoskllde on one of tno central pillars, called "the king's eolui in." are marked the heights ol several Danish kings and some of their guests. Emperor Alexander 111, who was o' T six feel In height, found the mark Indicating the height or Peter the Great. It was "a good twelve Inches above the emperor's head." II. Iiitermountain Broom Co. Murray, Utah enoruy-producln- fainting, Paperhanging and Decorating Will Furnish Complete Decorations for Home D. J. CAMPBELL o Estimates Furnished Free 617 E. 48th South Tel. Murray 482 CH ARIS A Gift Worth While The Best In Baked Goods Try Our Pastries lf 91-R- Midvale Bakery -4 CCext Up-2-Da- Bakery te No. Main Midvale, Utah 43 So. State Murray, Utah 4823 FRIDAY X Wm(Bt will b the most valuable cat JL1 Urn ever offered for so little money f rMltUnt. Tht 4 A JLFTER jl are to ready months of preparation, we present the perfected Whippet for 1928. You will be satisfied and delighted with every detail of its equipment and performance. You will be amaied when you learn how low is the price. For Willys-Overlanresources and equipment are now such that no car of equal quality can be built and sold at a lower price. d Engineering Leadership Present light car standards are a tribute to thepioneering theWhippet hasdone. Four-whebrakes lower center of gravity-gre- ater economy greater roominess quieter engines faster speed and pick-ugreater beauty no one today would think of buying a car that had not made these advances. el p Many Added Features Every Day Omaha. Two per cent of th population of the United State or 2.:vi0.0u0 pertons, are 111 e rry day and unable to attend l their dally tasks, and a grci many of them "eipect a tnlracl 10 take care of their doctor bill Dr. Karl C Sage, recretary of tl OmHha Douslas County Medici society, declares. Owe. You? We Collect Bonded Adjustment Bureau self-mad- 4856 South State, Murray life-savin- g Tompton Lakes, N. J. Arthur W. llolichuh, five feet two, policeman, In under suspension because of some trouble with Police Magistrate Uoa men, five feet eight After a wrau git In his court the magistrate said to the policeman: "If jrou don't stop that I'll throw you out" "it'll tnk- Msger men than you," retorted the policeman. But It didn't Who Unfinished Business 1 i In 5 Money for bad Debts Tor every umu there Is some woman willing to undertake the contrnct of making the alterations. Lynchburg necessary News. coast-watchin- all kinds of Machinery Repairing and Horseshoeing Expertly Done thupsday, January Among the many things you will like In 1928 Whippet are improved bodiea in the CuUioy n WUIr-OvcrU- a wide variety of beautiful colors, and fitted with cadet-typ- e visor, full crown an that doubles its rated fenders, engine horse-powefull pressure lubrication, silent timing chain, gasoline tank in rear, long, springs, oversize balloon tires and snubbers, an adjustable r, semi-ellipt- ic steering wheel, automatic windshield wiper, rear view mirror and stop light. Remarkable Records Owners have driven and tested theWhippet for more than five hundred million miles. It has established record after record in proof of its superiority. It holds the A. A. A. economy record, averaging 43.28 miles to the gallon. It set a record of 71.6 miles an hour in a speed test on Rockingham Park Speedway. It accelerates from 5 to 30 miles in 11.5 Coast-to-Coa- st seconds; turns in parks in 14 a 17-fo- ot radius, and feet of curb space. We suggest you sec the Whippet and get the new price next Friday. Frank C Howe Phone Murray 3 Hy. 283 1 MURRAY, UTAH |