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Show THE PROVO HERALD PAGE SEVEN. Ho! For the North Pole! vviixii uUi! Muni M a ; ft? - College Girls are Growing Fatter, Taller and Much Stronger Each Year 'BUILD IT NOW IS "HniM It was the XiiH-J- - fTi's'l irj Nt iln'ir miftini; mi t 1h lritiua Moiitliiy I'iniliii;. rnyj wn iii liaiul rviuly fir lnil-ik'sxsue! fimiT !u KiKti Nf'hi uiul hi g. eomiwloin Illl'IV Hint HIIVlowN 111 '( iitiiil'il lliat ti ii tlicy iK'livc iiiii.irt. rcuily wi-r- I'miiiiiillii'iiiiii for will nuitUKM ilif ward this rinitriliiitioiiH. .Tlu iii'W ward hinist" In ta I Imilt on Fourth Knsl mni't, tH'twti'ii Sixth nml Seventh North, ll will fmv the nst. In BeeoriliiiHv wlthj the new chiirt h im liltei ture the liulldini; will Imve no lntNeiuent ex-- ' It (vit for furniice tind Btore hmhu. thel will le in the foim of a "T," iuhIii iis'inl'ly room formlni; tins Klein, li ml htivine n wiitintf etiii!city of :tr Hdults or .VHl Siindtiy hcIhhiI chlldri'ii. The first floor of the "T" oroKS Imr will conliiin and prayer eirele and Koltef The nocond alory riMuiiM. t hull. The will Ih an font of the Ktrtielnre h $4(Uhi. Mr. Claude Ashworth U the lirohiteet. inliiL' s A FEHRUAKY sack Cenmule 0-l- b. sack Wheat Mush 24-I- b. 48-l- b. ."V. ' ' I W m kl f i ..',1 t' Two v ' I" Hf ... . .. . .... m,u la th xlvsno nartT of the U. 8. Navv' Knrth Pole KvnoHitinn ti..,, Lm washinpton. D- C There they will make n bane for the Shenandoah, the riant Left to dirigible. righto lofcrt Francis. A. K. Anderson, Lieutenant B. H. W yatt. la charge of party, and R. J. Carter 48-l- HE'LL HAVE TO USE BAIT TO CATCH THIS ONE II. i - Ji .liv-- a t 1 THE LONG AND SHOUT OF IT AT WELLESLEt COLLEGE. By XEA Service, WELLESLEY, Mass., Feb. 20. The average college girl la growing fuller, fatter and stronger eafh . year In But she is losing some of her lung cnpnelty. Lenstwise, that is what statistics, just tubulated by the Wellesley col lege department of hygiene, show. The girl now : Is 5 feet 4 inches tall Weighs 121.00 iHHiuds. Has a lung capacity of 2 98 liters of a gallon). (about Has n total muscle strength of 273 kilograms (about 000 pounds). Girls, how do YOU compare with these figures? A year ago the average girl was only 5 feet 3 inches tall, weighed between 117 and 121 pounds, had a strength of 240 kilograms, but a lung capacity of about 273 liters. This loss in Jung capacity says Miss Mabel Cumniiugs, head of the hygiene department, was due to the fact that the latest physical test came at the same time as the final exams. The girls probably were blowing off most of their wind at their finals. There are more short girls than tall ones 187 to ls2 in the 11)20 class, the group on which these statistics are based. The lankiest girl ranges 5 feet 1 1 a inches, while the shortest is only 4 feet 10 inches. The heaviest girl weighed 213 pounds when she came into college: but she reduced it to V.H pounds at the end of her first year. The lightest weighed only 91 iwiunds on entering, but raised it to ifj pounds during the year. The average gain over the whole class was 2.31 pounds. The difference in strength is of even wider range than 'that of weight The strongest girl in the class registers 458 kilograms, more than 1000 pounds. The weakest girl shows strength of only 170 kilograms, or 390 pounds. seh.-iol- 5 4-- 1 TRADE RECORD COFFEE one- - age per capita consumption in 1913, Abthe world's ouduL Our as stated by the Statistical was mted States, I of the stract See bill aversutes a million below 9 pounds per capita; slightlv oDari a day. Sooth Amer- - in 1918 10!'; poun :s; 1921 slightly uw chief home of the above 12, an I in V'Zi approximately ffee tree: it now nroduces 13 pounds per capita. And the coffee "habit" seems a kbont 910 of the coffee of somewhat expensive one, says the m world. Brazil our larg- - Tr ide Record. 'ien we note that oi the coffee im orce of supply. the stated bilported since 1913 s over Wi lion dollars in 'he lountnes from f"tt import into the United which brouplit aiH by the time it the calendar year 1923 to our ports, waree tne'larirest in th histnrv of is shipped roasted an.-- transferred to housed, "port trade. They aggregated. the consumer lias fully doubled in irade Record of The of price, suggesting that the people Mil Citv Rtit- -- ( more than have countrv paid the pWO.OOO txilinfli aorainct a w high record of 1,341,000,-- $3,000,000,000 for their coffee since the beginning of the war, and that 1921, 1,297,000,000 in 1920, coffee they are now paying for their 852,000,000 in the e year preced-"over a million dollars war: all of thru fimtrn considerably day. " to calendar years. The yalue But the people will have it irre" cottee imports of 1923 was terms $193,000,000 against spective of price, for the very year in which the import price made its :.000,0OO in 1913. whether highest record, 1920, showed larger quantities imported than in any year 'tn tms growth of our coffee preceding that date. The average ls. Hot v fn the t it is import price of coffee entering a fact that the fiscal year 1920 was, in quantity the country has rapidly increased since accordinf to the LVpartment of ioiai quantity imported commerce, practically 22 cents per J being 66 greater than fa potmd (2L98 cents), and the qwf preceding the war, wfaiU tity imported to that year LU-000,0COnsumintr t. peraU, or more than toeay i increased but earlier year to th history of the State consumes l V.. Vl. m 1 ea-t- v 00 14. Ha J PtlOn C! WUh is a b" n the 'L U" B1 "7 con- t - j. iact that the fcV.yearpre. Ptaent came into effect ir to ,tere ionr occasicni ' MZhltl1 wlrV.-Jf"1"1- on?y war in which imports billi0n PUnda ! the total exceeded 1923 the r and to fart b caWar by the recced oi the to apprw-inayear MM when the total &m f raw dinarily the import price coffee treraces from M to C and In the cal13 cents per potrnd. endar year 123 the average import price was about 13 cents per pound, the valuation of the coffee imported betes tinder the laws of the United State, "the actual market vah or wholesala price thereof at to the the time of estportatl a-eeed- eotmtry, 1, XJaited Statoi.fl-th- a markets of the country from whence Prices vary, however, exported." the coffee coming from Brazil in II mnr.thn nf 1923 for which detailed figures are now available having averaged 12.47 cents per pound, that from Central America as a whole 13.33 cents, from Colombia 16.81 cents, and from Java slightly more than 18 cents. of the While about coffee entering the United States originates in Brazil, the number of countries from which our total imports are drawn is, according to government records, over 50, the chief countries from which the 1922 imports were drawn having been, in the order of rank as measured in pounds, Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela, Guatemala, Mexico, Java, The Salvador, and Costa Rica. Total quantity imported from the principal countries in the 11 months of 1923 for which details are now available was from Brazil 834.000,-00- 0 pounds, Colombia 202,000,000. Central America as a whole Venezuela 48,000.000, Mexico 33,000,000, and Java &'A million About 2 per cent of this pounds. coffee imported is The United States is the world's take biggest consumer of coffee.' Wecoffe4 of the in fact about of the world and our per capita consumption is now probably greater than that of any other country. Brazil is the world's largest producer and now supplies about 70 of the world s coffee. The amount of money which we have sent to Brazil alone for coffee since the beginning of 1913 is over one has The coffee tree dollars. wandered far from its original the home,. Abyssinia, following tropical belt the world around but in especially successful prorinr America now which tropical Miss Eva Clark and Jack Miner. b. PHONE two-thir- 0, one-ha- lf Cleanses month and teeth and aids digestion. Relieves that overeaten feeling and acid mouth. Its flavor salisfies the craving lor about eindoal the world 223J fef - ttfi scj 425 WEST CENTER. Old Doctor Wise examined her; He said: "Let's see your tongue." Then, when they boasted what she ate, He smiled : "That's where you're wrong. A quart of milk is what she needs Each week day, Sundays, too. You keep that up, and in a month, She'll be as good as new." They followed his advice and bought Cherry Hill Milk each day. A glass or two at meals she drank, And in a short time, Say ! You should have seen how she filled out; Her cheeks grew plump and red. As health improved her eyes grew bright, .Her classes too she led. Which clearly proved the "Milky Way" To health and strength is best. So give your child Cherry Hill Milk-- Let Nature do the rest. In a year you will scarcely know he is the same boy they grow that fast. But photographs of the children never grow up. W;f from afar . . . a natural feeling of strangeness . . . yet how quickly it melts away over the tea cup ! TreeTea,of course! Earlycrop, mountain grown tea rare in fragrance, sensible in price. A chance visitor Larson Studio Makers of Fine Portraits, Columbia Theater Building. liiisi SPECIFY n umn ;; !! ilfelH ,, i Coil li'ljitj -- in your next order. IT BURNS BETTER mi 1 Wrigley's Is doable value In the benefit and pleasure It provides. r This Car Given Absolutely FREE! 1 ill Parity Come in and we will tell you all She favor lasts f West Center ASTS LONGER rii"N about it. 241 GIVES MORE HEAT -L- oiyiuui m oi Phone Anderson JFord Garage $p 48Q. " They fed her candy, cake and pie They fed her lots of meat. They gave her tea and coffee too Oh, how they made her eat ! But nothing seemed to help their girl; She just stayed pale and thin, Until her Dad made up his mind To call the Doctor in. The Home Culture club met Friday at the home of Mrs. W. H. The high school male Menary. quartet, consisting of liOwery Anderson, Byron Burt, Kichard and Howard Thorn rendered a selection. Mrs. D. A. Smith gave a piano solo and rcs Minded to an encore. Mrs. J. F. Wingnte gave a pajier, "A Visit to Washington, the Capital." Luncheon wag served to 20 I :3 bil-B- pro-dac- es .$1.G5 "THE MILKY WAY" Orange Pekpe or upon Green swee3s. Sealed in Package. $1.75 Ken-liedv- Tree SOCIETY Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Diamond were surprised by a number of their friends Saturday evening. Cards and other games were played and luncheon was served to the following : Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Alleiiian, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Larson, Mc and Mrs. Ed llich, Mr.' and Mrs. Ernest Weight, Mr. and, Mrs. Hoy Harrington, Mr. and Mrs. LaCell Bird, Miss iva iianiona $13.75 lots or over, per cwt TERMS CASH Vi SPKIXGYILLE $2.G5 WASATCH PRODUCE Mr. and Mrs. George A. Allen, Miss Rclia Allen, Miss Lois Allen Friday afternoon the members of and Miss Thelma Bailey, all of the Alpha Beta club were enterNephl, were the dinner guests Sun- tained at the home of Mrs. Charles day of Mr; and Mrs. H. Lee Boyer. Boyer. Mrs. A. O. Packard was in charge. Mrs. A. W. Boylanee gave Mrs. Ernest Weight entertained a report of the state federation. the members of the S. T. club Fri- Judge A. B. Morgan of Provo gave day evening at her home. Progres- a talk on "The World's Court." Miss sive "500" was played during the Lela Boyer sang two solos, accom evening, after which refreshments panied by Mrs. Mary Whitney on were served. The prize was award- the piano." Yellow carnations were ed to Mrs. Andrew Peterson. Those arranged artistically throughout the present were Mrs. Arthur Flnley, rooms. Invited guests were Mrs. A. Mrs. Leon Sumsion, Mrs. Manford B. Morgan and Mrs. Wallace Mace. Hutchinson, Mrs. Claud Smith, Mrs. Delicious refreshments were served. i $1.35 b. 500-l- b Mrs. Florence Taylor and her little son were the guests of Miss Uuth Buyer, Sunday. t 70( b. , Itnw liiml, Mrs. U. 1. Mrs. George Craiidull, Mrs, Ijewls Clegg and Mrs. Andrew! Peterson. Iuvlted guests were Miss Viva Diamond and Miss Evu Clark. AmasH 33 35 sacks Royal Payson Flour Ten sacks Royal Tayson Flour Coarse, white, llakey Poultry Mill Run, 100-lsack 48-l- BiniitM-men- ; TO 21, INCLUSIVE sack White Whole Wheat Flour sack Royal Payson Flour elimn-I'lNHi- f 18 9-l- b. iiml wi-c- 19 OS UTAH COUNTY rKODl'CTS FOR WEEK nciv A (til tlilntr-- . I'nnii'ft foiiuiiiittt'-lui'i- i Lire' cr'ii - 4. niliu-smMic Hit Mamnu ImililinK siiiuiittt. cf lmiiM- inttiiiii; .Vinliisin I? Special Prices MANAVU SLOGAN Mi r1 r 17. Standard Coal Co.,Salt Lake City St READ HERALD WANT ADS |