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Show THE PROVO HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1923. PAGE FOUR. DIED ON BIRTHDAY; BURIED AT PLEASANT GROVE PLEASANT GROVE, Dec. 28. The funeral of Charles 'Stagg, who.: died Sunday, on ,hls thirty-thirbirthday, wuh held Wednesday In the. Pleasant Grove tabernacle. BJuliop M. S. ChristianWrn and was also conducted, 'one of the speakers. The invocation was offered by Jariies I). Thorne and the, benedicVeek-dation by .foupph Olpin. 'Wic inucicitl bed tviery except Saturday, awl numliers conshffcd of violin solo, Al- moruiiig, at The Herald Building, South First TTivil Savchsoii : iinnrtet. Alda Fngitl, reet, Provo, Utah. Telephone 95. Xornia ('bristitiiison. Ore and Keva 3 OK SUBSCRIPTION Daily and Sunday, West. The speakers wore Bfshop A. L. by carrier, X cent3 a month, or 3.50 the 'ullimore.. Albert Anderson and a year; Sunday only, year in advance; by mall. 1iivid H. Tliornu of Liudoti ,and. ... ... In the advmee.. $.1.09 year, by mail,' Joseph Hilton. . About seven jxnjs ago, while . ED1TOK AND PUBLISHER lu nlini 'kIliii mi a. weistertr desert Mr. Huxea whs with ' matte" June 6, Kiiiilvsi.s jfrmn whichstricken lleraid "as entered as scond class-nia- ll The recovered. le was unmarried. HI, ai. II'he '.Sunday Herald,,wernntered as second. class 'Besides lii:s mother, Mrs. .Eliza under the Act of March 3, lay 9, '922, at ti:? ostoffice, I'rovo, Utah, ' Since SbiK'll. he. is survived by one ' a879. . brother,- William Stags .and- three, sisters, Mrs. P. Chritrtianaon of Ilmpa. Mrs. Owen Christiansen and "TOO MANY" LAWS.' Mrs. Len Walker of Lindon. MAN ST" J d moyo,uTAH. a .... a a 0 H ' ' -- reform-organizatio- Ctah-Idah- . A ' '" , ' - m V , r ' fWs,fJA ' ) -- jJ Jjjjla . - . pl y ' 1 I upV' 1)1 J ' - J " ' ' Jr J iL si - A ' - - --- '; - i' mplifying existing laws instead of making more. UTAH VALLEY. By H. R. Merrill As Utah Valley smiles in winter's sunlight ' . 4 net-wo- ' r.s' LHVt .LJ, JT .-- --c S '.ir-rv- I think ' " ! "It is a cornucopia ' LONDON, Dec. 28. The humble FREE. skin has at last come into its With all subscriptions to the Daily and Sunday Herald, rabbitatisl of r rr nmnlnA ia onlsll in either be! "advance, new'orwesent subscribers, will paid and other fashionable fnra ' from given free annual subscriptionto-- i the following monthly public favor here, ' .'v',-- ' Baroness de Brlenen, member of magazines : an old Dutch famUy, Is the chief The Farm Journal- - t rtit-i- i 11 I " j mLA T11 r I.- The Household top-hea- - TIT t AMMJtll AfL IUV 'I1CW OUC IIUS LUT. opened a salon In aristocratic Mount I -I ' JL . Bow, where she sella the transformed skins to many the Duchess of Tork and Lady Louis Mountbatten, who have both bought items of wearing apparel, from fur' coats to fur- foot warmers, from the" Baroness' store. The transformed rabbit fur looks neither nasty or cheap, aad It is doubtful if;the unlniated would recognize Skins are first treated by a people-Includin- - it g special preparation after which they are dyed to many colors and Info replicas of expensive chinchilla and ermine coats- - motor rugs tnd even opera cloaks. It is as imitation chinchilla, however, that the rabbit skin give the best results. Society evidently appreciates the tact that .in addition to looking as good as the originals, the new fur Is much cheaper than its mote aristocratic fellows. . Good Stories All these four magazines are included with annual subscriptions when paid in advance and at The Herald office. : without any increase In prfce. ' The subscription price of tTis Daily and Sunday Herald,; when delivered by carrier, including the four magazines, is $150. By mail, in Utah county only, the priee," including the4 , magazines, is $2.50. This offer is good until January 1, 1924. , firm orp I I H , well-know- n International New Service. FOUR MAGAZINES ... .. . ' " rgl T"" - RABBIT SKIN NOW STYLISH - strung around with opalescent pearls P All ' ijVl "s. f- ' l . '."Reports of reconstruction in Tokio and Yokohama show that prophecies made after the great earthquake are . not being realized. The Japanese capital is not rising from its ,. ashes a Washington or New York in modernity, nor even a . London or Paris. There is Considerable widening and straightening of ; thoroughfaresi and therie will be ymore.largej solid construction than formerly, aldng American lines, but Tokio will re- main oriental. Most of the streets will still be narrow and crooked, most of the architecturkwill .be of the flimsy and Japanese type rather than American brick, steel and concrete. The seaport of Yokohama will have modern harbor works, but the city itself will Be-- modernized only in ' , 1. spots. " K3t IMt 'ffie ' Japs do liof" re American construction, especially for resistance, to earth-- ! uakes, and 'do not want it. Tke trouble over there is the " ' X rk , Long Timics F-C- . , The gold of vibrant reeds. The of barren branches of old willows Traced in purple against both lake and sky; Groaning under leads on loads of luscious apples Ahdjcelery and beets, Decorated with sleeping pastures, Sprinkled as they are with feeding herds, And" all around, the mountains, Snowy white against the azure sky THE NEW TOKIO. jmewbleataftlicttheJaverageAmeTtcan in this era of frenzied a lack of vJS2rTS''M ' -- . : wellworth" UndrrsellsAii f j X . building money to! rect the kind of building desired. Neither the Japanese Dvernment nor the Japanese citizens can afford what they efer. in a way, it is not to be regretted. Of what interest "would a wholly westernized Japanese city be to Americans or Europeans, except as it suggested greater business oDPor tunities? Romance, sentiment and ,the everlasting liking for variety ernand tnat the orient, at least tor a little while yet, r: should remain oriental. The f orld will tjecome monotonous all too goon, in the approaching airplane age, t . " " Our overhead is smallMherefore we are enabled tq sell at a lower mar giru , i OUR NEWSPAPER Long tunica, full and circular In cut, cover the skirts of new dresses to within few inches tf their hems. They may be divided in front or be complete oversklrta. They may be plain or flounced but they are sure to be seen on the fashionable dresses of 'the season. ,game. Real efficiency begins with making work, attractive, rather than fh speeding-up- 4 stunts originated by business doctors with huge tortoise-rispectacles. Few can work at a dull task. Good Stories' 0mt .', r "" and Oxfords at. $3.50 tMnfiNftlMI mr0mt .... One. or I Extra-go- ...... . Men'g-Work--.'f- od 00-Sh- O . at at and Oxfords Men's Hosar; mrlH rirvm Girls' and Boys' Shoes, extra good quality, at prices that can't be beat. plrtfmm.' GRAIN OF SAND YEAR-ANOT- HER oes Men's Dresses Shoes lot Ladies' Slippers, X Boys' All Wool $2.69 Sweaters ANOTHER N ...;.PiiuU at m . , A Few LowPrices for Saturday rou&tMLEmflhesc SPORT The mallrderli6use that put roller skates on ,the clerks who fill orders in its big stock rooms, announces that much rivalry has developed in the matter of speed. So the clerks are working harder and faster all because their "work has been made more interesting, in the nature of a a . '"m'h' jjfe' mUSfSit waS. '""' ' sj - . . M v - - - V,. T "i if X- t ' 'jMm' ' , '- - -- riA. Wyj'' S Q& . i , ' JC W NX. . - . W '" " - ':"$ "iC.- " : W . N." ' i X'5 '" . t ' ' "' ; rs . ' ' , . ;f!f 'iKKS Jv4-.JBp- Eah Center Strch' ' " J There you have" . - pass, o I 'r 1 ; o for this season about Jan. 6, It was announced by Officials today. Only the situation in a nutshell. Everybb3y, two factories remain open. 6neat everywhere, admits that there is too much legislation, and BrUtham City and the other at Garland. Factories at Lebl. Spanish that," in the words of Artemus Ward, "we are governed too Fork, Elsinore, Paysou and West much." And nearly always he remedy proposed is more Jordan, Ltah. Blackfoot. SucaH ny, Idaho Fulls and Shelley, Idalegislation,"' . r ho and Topplnish. Wn., are Law-makealready assume, not unnaturally, that their busi- closed. , ness is making laws, so they go right ahead imitating inAll of the factories of the Amaldustry with jtsiitquafltity production. And" the very con- gamated Siixnr company in I'tab msisi stituents who that there should be fewer laws and less and Idaho have completed their by officials. government ' are"" always urging their representatives to pass runs, it Is 'announced' The, factory at twin Fairs was the . new bills. last to close. The factories of A American1 statesman once remarked that "the way to the Two states"hnveeight used more than to sume is to resume." Likewise the way to stop is stop. If rHKUKKUons of beets, being the secle nervous urge to legislative attive cannot be cured, it ond largest tonnage in the "historv ight well find relief for ihe next few "years in repealing or or tne company. congress-t- " ,.m 0 meeting at Washington, sugar factories will COMPLETE BINS JAN. 6 complains that the country is suffering "too many laws,' Factories of the wants and. thereupon submits four new measures which it Sugar company are expected to close A political . mortician. J 1 ''., . ' ' 1 ' yi .BERG MORTUARY 9 ' ' ' SjJCtvLfv" . M d A" Lr 7fTVnn . - U H , mail-matte- , , When clrcunistanc;s suggest conserva-..- , :tlve costs, you will always; find us will- fully and sympatheti- lug to , caiiy. For 53 years It has been our unswerv- of selection to ndvl.se the fng policy fntwal necessities in keeping with the means of the'patWi.i. An(t otherwise, In the arrangements, 'tlie. same complete and "lwas H 1 costs : KJ - 3' SL'GGESTING t6xSERVATIVE - " TMT FLIVVERED THE FLIVVER ' Ladies' Lisle, Silk Wool Men's and WoofHose. Sweaters x ............... W 00 Wellworth Store Goncipariy & Thomas No. . Successors to Fletcher "'.- - t m . a m MMwr'. MMma ' mx j - rr i t .y, i ti . trt mt.it i - i 5 klv w..U v. : t -- v-v,- - - kh vvsr0 " 368 WEST CENTER5T. nRRiixxniiiiiiixiiiixuinciuinnsRiuxKiBXuniKsn '' KUEUZZXXXZZla S .'':. '." jI: -r--mz S s?y- tjftif?" ftmM-'- -. s-x- - r.i'.H35KWf5a Mwm .Mi. 2 '' " RememberMond ... - v ' r"V at 8 o clod . - - -- : We will give away 2500 pounds 6f Hoover's Flour to our customers. Be . at our store and get yours. . t ' pistor Oil, Paregoric, "Teething Drops anJ'SKthin8 Syrups !: ' InfantnaTOS prepared to relieve " - - Flatulency Diarrhea , Aldia ; Childreull and To SwecternStcniach Regulate Bowels , the asslmflation of Food, promoting . v ' . ' m nrh .. " . " ; m J rrVre, V- -- y PhysicUm everywhere reco'mmend ' H, I . faSsJ'tf ! - - , V ' 4 'Ml l ' ' - - ; T . ' M'ih XxWeff'' . " . ..,,...-- . ,, :. X v ' ' , , ... ....... I - jf!w'" S I ' ' mJLY J . . , " ,. . g Whitehead Mar Mil -- imi.....jii;.:...,-- i , , . ' ' , , , - 3CTSSmm -- 9 3 j flVA i&mSg . . ' - - Qwrfulncss, Rest. and To.vokllnJutic,arway.lckfbrthe. 4rmni a ' . . ' .' ..,..., s N . ... ' k , " ' , ...A ? r |