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Show i i- THE PROVO HERALD. PAGE TWO. - By BLOSSNER. ' f f i ' Established as a weekly la Mis; la a daily ia 1821; Isauv ev.ry vaSaturday, and Sunday line moraine; rural morning- edition tvery morning except ilouday. Published In the Herald building. South Kirst West street, i'rovo. i TM ecpt ii !5 tah. t'ulu c. A am luvinri f . matter f tba'postoffice in Frovo, Utah. tvlivered Silvered advance &M J DCWN Tf SPEMD AV AND SAV 'liSOXtT) 60,7X6 rt; f - 'iiil I I oT' I W ( A 50 DIME! vwiTM ) ) ) -- By C. C. DfXFORD, ' News rkT CHANGING VALUES. AMrnisnl of the estnte of the late Colonel Jeremiah Evarts Tracy, of ..i the rulted State army, lists his 1; service medal as distiiiRuixhod !' jf(V"orth only 50 cents and bin army-i,1navy nicdnl only 25 cents. There Is tragedy In this news Item. ', To Colonel Tracy their value was '' largely sentimental. That part of the !' value wan too hlub to lie figured In dollars and cents, and he took It with him beyond the grave. All that r is left Is a hit of metal The value The real fl of the metal Is small. t f02i! 7U0U6UT sT ver-mmzs'- J - I . Ml' Jl1 was obviously, imaginary. Tet, for such imaginary values, men risk their lives. Many other forms of "value" are Including gold, which Imaginary. has no more value than silver, except for its hypnotic influence, its power to command respect and The following poetical tribute formed a part of the program at the recent annual gathering at Sprlngville of the Sons and Daughters of the Indian War Veteraua and Pioneers and was written by A. J. Jacobsen, teacher in the Sprlngville high school. DAN DOBB - SAYS - obedience. A man, dying of thirst in a desert, if offered his choice of n tVi ton of gold or a glass of wafer, would take the water. There isn't nny payday for labor111! At an auction, E. P. North pays ing under a delusion. $240 for a copy of the first edition of Joseph Conrad's book, We have prosperity but not Folly," with pages uncut enough of it to go around. It's human nature to want to own It you don't know where they get something "exlusive." Explanation bootleg they get it in the neck. V is in the psychology of greed and ranity. A woman can't make a fool out of a man without his help. 'IV TRIBUTE TO THE PIONEERS 's i i 1 il " By A. J. Jacobsen. Welcome! Noble Pioneers! Thrice welcome are you today. We have here assembled Our tributes to you to pay. You, who left home and kindred ; Left all you held dear on earth ; And traveled through the wilderness To this land which gave us birth. From friends and home you were driven O'er the lone, lone prairies to roam ; No shelter for aged or feeble Death's grim reaper a rich harvest has mown. A thousand weary miles the trail winds on Where the emigrant trains went by; Yours was the task to mark the way With courage to do or to die. Few people like work because AN ERA OF WONDERS. there are so many other things to There is nothing fantastic about do. predictions of an era, not many Politics make Btrange bedfellows, years distant, either, in which the ad strange bred fellows . delivery in San Francisco of New York papers with the ink scarcely Very few good cooks can use a or write shorthand. in or typewriter of Chicago papers dry, Buenos Aires, will be commonplace; Your luck may be bad, but in St an era in which people will learn Louis a man's wife Is worth a for by radio or airplane that there tune and suing him for divorce. will hardly be any suspense about Where Ignorance is folly it is anything. bliss to be wise. The star newspaper man of that time will be as perhaps he Is now the man who has best mastered the control of the new servants of journalism and wields them most boldly. And the present stimulations that we get out of a taxicnb race 1 with another paper, or out of gaiir ing sixty seconds on somebody with 1 a "flash" on a prize fiht, may seem as mitiiiue as now seems the efforts of publishers in 1700 to bent each oilier across the Atlantic by a month or so with news brought on sailing ships. OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE. to a THCE ntT MoRer oivtctiex? fl A N M C5? MAISEe 1 fcl PCOPU3, im JL l U T3D Sill r UP TO Ttt AN D l.iiMT WMeSN ' TURN FLIP. FLOP A To , to 1 r' nrrK Q.T Jp it ff-- ' 7T 1 h, - The only worthwhile test of gasoline . Building bridges, digging ditches, Reclaiming barren, desert soil ; Murmuring not 'gainst cold and hunger, Content with honest, humble toil. Did you fail ? Behold your answer In our fields of golden grain, Thriving factory, busy city, Dotting our mountain slope and plain. - - View today the fruits of your labors ; Fields and factories, schools and homes; Sheltered from worldly den and strife, Guarded by lofty mountain domes, Building'here in love and honor, Toiling not for wealth" and fame, Cherished be your memory, Ever honored be your name. MEX REVOLT ENDED APIZACO, Mexico, Feb. Secretary of War Francisco Serrano speaking for the national govern ment, formally declared today that organized rebellion in Mexico is ended. lie pointed out, however, that the country must expect guerilla warfare for some time to come, during which the federals will be engaged in "dcan-upoperations, chasing and capturing bands of marauding rebels. " Is one that will.defmitely indicate its range of volatility, the pro fractions. portion of its ou, intermediate and higher boiling-poiThe distillation method is employed in such a test, and on the results are based the U. S. Government specifications for gasoline. Gasoline that meets these specifications is properly termed balanced gasoline the most efficient, economical fuel for the modern motor. Year in and year out winter and summer CONOCO measures up rigidly to these standards. In every sense of the word, CONOCO is balanced gasoline delivering full power at lowest cost per mile. nt THE CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY Colorado Corporation) (A e Marketing a complete fine of petroleum products in Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, Utah, Idaho and Montana high-grad- Ose Conoco Coupon Books. They are convenient and sara yw lime saxl trouble maiinr, chmnje. Good at all Continental Service Stations and accepted by dealers generally .P'"1 Harmless Means of Reducing Fat Many fat people fear ordinary means for reducing their weight. Here is an extraordinary method because perfectly Extraordinary harmless, no dieting or exercise are Marmola Frescript'nn necessary. You reduce steadily ar.d easily, with 110 ill effects. Procure them from your own druggist at one dollar for a box or send price direct to the Marmola Company, 4621 Woodward Avenue. Detroit. Mich. IMHAHBR0S Listen!! TIRE MERCHANTS ALL KINDS FINE FURNITURE, RUGS AND Ill 1233 W. CENTER ST:i PROVO L iII LINOLEUMS Behind the tire you buy from us is our guarantee of proper The merits or performance. demerits of a tire are hidden beneath the surface. The reputation of the factory, of your tire merchant, and of the tire itself is about your only surely. snnnna ARRIVING DAILY BALLOON1 AT IteaspoGiiM TIRE HEADQUARTERS BARTON'S. toil-harden- ed II . tkin-deep.- a Hail to Utah ! Inland Empire ! hands ; Built by your As earth's fairest garden now blooming What was once but desert sands. Hail ! ye Pioneers and Veterans ! Fearless, faithful, valiant band. Who fought long against privation, Hardships, hunger, and savage men. 1 J " remember that "beauty is only This winter, and along into early spring, especially after you hart traveled through stormy weather or over muddy roads, look vnier-neattoo. Proper attention to chassis parts springs, spring shackles, brake rods and linings, steering arms, the underside of fenders, and other units exposed to the road will add much to the life and performance of your car. Ice and frozen mud, particularly, should be promptly removed. Lubrication of universal, transmission and differential should be checked up and properly attended to, even more often than in summer. The wear on these parts is perhaps greater in winter than at any other time of the year. If heavy oil or grease acts sluggish, guard against trouble by using a lighter grade. i. 15-to- Hail to Utah! Land of Plenty! To our gloriaus commonwealth! To our fertile valleys, teeming with their fields of untold wealth. Hail to Utah and her founders To you, valiant Pioneers, Who trudged o'er a barren waste In the desert toiled for years. 1 7 the how proud you may be of appearance of your NO matter how careful you are to keep it washed and polished Did this discourage you, brave Pioneer Because, by the way some loved one fell? Ah, no! You still bravely trudged along With a song in your heart, "All is well." O'er raging torrent, up mountain steep, With perfect faith in your Father's grace, At last you view the promised land And hear the words, "This is the place." By C0ND0 Iwl-IA- I ME r--r1 ba -- ET-c- f Look underneath, too Who lieth here? Can no one tell The tale of this silent mound ; Where the gray hawk soars above And prowling coyote slinks over the ground? And this is one, but one, Of the many mounds in the sod ; Where weary, lying down to rest, The emigrant ceased to plod. 1 C IF M lT Only dully hea Simper In Itah it take t'iiv; Inrrest rlr. south of culntt- n of any newspaper In Utah lt Uk City and (Jgtlen. outnids TELEPHONE 85. value, Manager, Inland Fertilizer Co. The problem of every grower In 1'tnh what must be done to his a get be't land back into condition where It uee was? We proa duced few years ago around an average of 20 tons of sugar licet Here, and now it is down to 10 and 12 tons per acre. It will be down to five tons within the next five years, if continuous cropping Is to lie curried on without replacing some of the food elements that have lieen absorlied. We bU recognize that applying manure is one of the primary factors in keeping up soil fertility, but, with the rapidly decreasing supply of this material, it is logic that some other Fertilizer must be used. Commercial fertilizers are being used more and more every year by sugar beet growers through the couutry. This form of fertilizer does not entirely take the place of barnyard manure, but up to this time it is found to be the best substitute there is. The demand for our sugar licet fertilizer has rapidly increased the last few years until now we are supplying several of the western states with this fertilizer. It Is conservatively figured by scientific experiments uud tests that, say 15 tons of sugar beets will take out of the ground 143 pounds potash, 09 pounds nitrogen, and 32 pounds phosphoric acid, a total of 244 pounds of the three main plant food elements removed. Let us compare the value of manure with commercial fertilizers. The I'nited States department of agriculture reports that an average oirresn cow manure contains 0.10 per cent potash, 0 29 cent Ier nitrogen, and 0.1T iier cent phosphoric acid. Therefore, in ion pounds of such manure there is a total of 0.50 iwr cent, equivalent to 11.20 pounds to a ton. To replace the total of these throe fond nients absorbed by the n crop aeeoruing to these uTi, it would take tons of a good of the manure mentioned. grade Applying 1200 pounds per acre of our sugar beet fertilizer, analyzing 2 per cent ni rogen, 10 per cent phosphoric P01"811' 18 equivalent to the 22 tons of manureor, in o her words, 1200 pounds of potash, nitrogen, and phosphoric acid. x lie one mg recognized advantage using commercinl fortmn. beet land, in addition to keeping up the soil fertility and producing a larger tonnage of beets, is that the sugar content of the beet is materially increased. i, c Member littem.itionil Commercial Fertilizer Increases Su?ar Content of Beets, Expert Says. AT by carrier, y?r month, ific tiy carrier, per year, in II 50 by mail In Ltah county. Mrs and N. E. A. Service. SUGAR BEETS ?JJ $2.6(1 per year, advance ,. .l(vered by mail in t'nlted Stales. outniite i;tah county, per year. In I l.fcu sitvonr k. hoivikks Editor and i'uhhshrr. i FERTILITYFOR 1 Enn-ii-- YOU CALL ONUS. of many other hraMsThdtswky MAKE NO T.a Economy BAKING PQWQEH MISTAKE. Goes farther lasts longer it i8138lil Contains more than I tut BY A ii::::::::::: DIGNIFIED AND BEAUTIFUL with the results of perfect appointments and thoughtful planning our Sincere Service is in itself an attitude of deep respect. u ITMI IIAIJP runtKAL nunc vmm naitn tlllttnl Uphoke 160-- N. PROVO, REASONABLE Tmtfll 2 the PRICES. ordinary leavening i::::::U3 strength Barton's WORLDS GREATEST BAKING Open 7:30 Close 7:30 BEST BY TEST $ates2 rimescsmzxfi as that of any omerJxxzja ! FURNITURE COMPANY 730 If you throw me in the waste basket put your waste basket in the safe. RADIATOR SHOP SERVICE FIRST 213-21- POWDER Phone 5 QUALITY ALWAYS West Center Street. PARRY BATTERY & ELECTRIC Provo, Utah. CO. |