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Show THE SUNDAY HERALD, MARCH ?0, 1924. PAGE TWO. wit belief Tho HERALD ralnc 6ouu Lit. oMofflc fol'.vorwi It pwd. Newapaper drertbanf li wore accurate in this respect, being closer to the people. Magazine in a general way rtfloeU n.rJ moraine: national euBditiona, while new paper ada are more confined to the Fir.t Wen l aUMt. Provo, local situation. Entered tho Uiat timet are going to! nt elaM matter in trovo. Utaft. by carrier, per TJ'ISf idiiii :t Vii.:;d outalde LUh at ' tnJir,", ..... E. C. ROuQeKS Editor and Publisher. Member International Newa Ber-ric- e and N E. A. Service. tn 5It,.h Only (tally aewepaper ootb ot Belt Lake City; Urreat of any newepaper In Utan iut. de Bait Lake City and Oifden. TELEPHONE IS. PREDICTING HARD TIMES f l(JF, J STtP riiV m I V RiOHT UPSTAIRS DOCTOR. f 1 A A COuaeS UW'J SEEN Alt (NO C CAVS AND THIS MORNING Sne HAD RiGHTf oaus. o i put ' Uy TAYLOR SO Twt UTTLt CtCtM TOUNd 1 ,tM . KASHT J 3 A WLjr urr set n-v- ow . TASTES IMPROVING. 1 cowaty, advene $fQ$f Considering the numerous statements that hare been made within the past few year Jo the effect that Americana are dete rktrating in tb.'ir femes, aa shown by their in literature and preferences it is refreshing to amusements, Warn that, from a reading standpoint at leant, there is some Improvement. If the mind of the aver-tir- e American la Indicated in the election of his books and works of art, then matter tending to a sobriety of thought and a desire for knowledge predominates over what some critics and philosophers have termed the "jaws age" and its appeal for material regarding aex, scandal and the criminal. The most noted increase ia in the general subjoct of religion, it is said. I.h r go libraries in division points I Near Tork City; Lee F. KandoJphe, San Franc! aco, Calif.: Jean Mannheim, Pasadena, Calif.; i. T. llarwood. Bait Lake City, Utah; Mabel Frasor, Salt Lake City, Ctab; Myra Sawyer, Salt take City, Utah; G. Wesley Browning. Salt Lake City, Utah ; William Parkeoaoa. Salt Lake City, Utah: i. B. Fairbanks, 8alt Lake City, Utah; C. V. Hansen, Provo, Utah; Kdwin Evans, New York City; Alfred ftchroff, Eugene, Ore. ; Wm. A. Oaw, Berkeley, Calif.; ,john M. Oamble, Santa Barbara, Calif; V. O. Uafen, Eugene, Ore.; Donna Schuster, Los Angeles, Calif. ; Marinm Brooks Jenkins, Salt Lake City, Utah; 'Elisabeth Cook, Salt Lake City, Utah; Mary Teasdala, Salt Lake City, Utah ; Max Santa Barbara, Calif. ; Benjamin Brorn, Pasadena, Calif. : Lydia M. Cox, Seattle, Wash.; Lanrenee tsijut res, Salt Lake City, Utah; Mattes Sundona, San Fran-clarCalif.; H. V, Law, Oakland, Calif.; Eugene Xeuhaua, Berkeley, Calif.; IteUa Miller, Kanaaa City, Reindel. 3? 4 Th: Tint for i -- 260 2S3WLCtMTU: PROVO Toc-xore- k, "It looks bigger and better, takes bat little air pressure and most ride very easily. ' The tread is pliable, the traction greater. Give me BALLOON TIRES," 8jys Mr. Thoughtful o, i r JUST OPEN SOU MOSTM J rcC AND STICK CUT . Kearly all of us cotild make dulte bit of money now and then If we condl-tion- a could "dope out" business advance. In several months For instance, a .man buying or to building a home might be able of the country, universities, literary, ' ov casn u save It lot oi music and art institutions, pubwhether prices later were going to lishers and dealers without excep' riae or fall an tion Interest in reading report HI Prediction of business conditions aud the arts not observed In recent i! was aa uncertain as pre- years. The popular demand by 1 formerly dicting the weather months ahead. groups embraces the subjects of But now It la becoming almost an religion, biography, psychology, etiexact science. radio, quette, science, astronomy, The stock market rises or falls drama, poetry, home economics and from three to six months in aa vocations. Fiction circulation, it Is ranee of eeneral business condi reported, maintains Its position but tions. If the gamblers think hard librarians. report tho public is retimes are coming, stock market quiring that It be clean. The world war is partly responprices fall, anticipating depression. Similarly a bull market, with prices sible for the era of better reading shooting upward, means that the matter, according to the head of a gamblers are betting on good times leading Chicago book firm. Army ahead. and navy libraries, depleted of light offered reading, histories, biog These prophetic movements in the technical books and essays raphies, stock market, of course, ere the to the service man, he explains. e tendencies. Trouble is, Once the desire for this kind of! The annual race between weeds an outsider watching the market is was created, they became and vegetables is starting soon. reading apt to mistake a temporary setback eager to learn. After the war they e tenor advance for a set about studying books which A presidential boom is often Then, too; even the most would dency. them for a new place caused by political log rolling. prepare crafty of market speculators often in the business and social world. guess incorrectly. The is another The tax returns that most taxAnother business influencedally newspaper in turning the public payers are interested in Is the barometer is the production of pig of 25 per cent of their Income .reader into channels of Iitera- t ... . . , uuu. iuuuj Miieris '.uiiin. iron out' ture. Regular book and art review tax. pnt rises or falls about six months pages have become established feaahead of general business condi- tures. A three-tub- e set in South Africa tions. All of which is encouraging, and picked up Schenectady, N. X., so the natives may have uprafned their Shipments of freight over the il doubtless be received with tongues pronouncing it. 7, by those who are business trends. They reveal how Inclinedparticularly Even with the American vessels to look upon the dark side manufacturers and retailers are it Is hard to find a ship as dry as a of conditions. "betting", on the future. But this chip. foini of prediction Is too uncertain DELAY. What the world needs is a good to place bets on, for sometimes movie senmlal to take the place in freight movement Is heaviest just The president takes his Job four the papers used by Teapot Dome before a smash. This was the case months after he is elected, because now. on the eve of the hard times that it takes that long to count ballots, Spring makes people lazy. The started about four years ago. get word to him, and bring him to other seasons that make people lazy Freight traffic had been big, most Washington In the early days before are summer, fall and winter. people believing that money would railroads and telegraphs. We don't know much about a bee grow on trees forever. When administrations The latest scientific business these four months are lost chance, in a bonnet but a man usually motion, thinks a woman with an Easter barometer, according to the Har- periods of stagnation and uncertain-t- y bonnet got stung. vard committee on economic reRepresentative White, of Kansearch, is advertising in newspapers sas, officially starts the ball rollBuying an auto Is ail right if you and magazines. Some experts, how- ing for a constitutional ammend-men- t don't run Into too many creditors. ever, think that advertising foreunder which presidents would Being a presidential candidate Is casts price changes rather than begin their terms January 24. A hard on your past life. sales volume. sensible move. The date should je No wonder babies grow up to look Lots of advertising means a gen- - moved back farther. like their fathers. All they do Is loaf around and raise a racket I ' V i.- - , (j'SE AWT MAD VATCHAt-- '" . t .tL."U; j Mo. Moat of the 200 pictures exhibited will be in competition for the $500 prize offered by the high school. The prise picture will be chosen and announced some time In ApriL There will be no general charge to aee the exhibit 'The guiery wiu oe open every aay aur lug the month of ApriL 1 v J. u-- ! OGDEN ARMOUR , Springville National h N -- ;Jf Art Exhibit Opens long-rang- long-rang- semi-sclentlf- lc "J Snrincvllle Illch school's third annual art exhibit will be open to the public April 1. A program in keeping with this big event haR been arranged for 2:30 p. in. Artists and art lovers all over the state are anxiously awaiting the optrtnnIty to view ,the work of the to be exbest artists In hibited at Sprnjgville all during Ami-rlen- April. Judging from the number of artists and the number of states represented, the exhibit will be truly national in character. In addi tion to approximately 75 puftited by Utah artists, more than pictures shipped from various stues will cover the walls of the large high school auditorium. California artists alone will exhibit between 40 and 50 fine paintings. Oiegon artists have already sent 10, ond more are yet to come. New York artists have sent nine. Other states to be represented in the exhibit Include Nevada, Wash ington, Montana, Idaho, Ohio, and Massachusetts. Through the untiring efforts of the committee In charge and many other art lovers, some of the most prominent artists of Amerlca'have become interested In the Spring ville art exhibit. Officers and frienda of the high school have been working incessantly since last October in order' to make this the best exhibit of fine paintings ever brought together in the west. Over 350 Invitations were Bent to prominent artists all over the nation. The enthusiasm with which many of these artists entered into the project speaks well for America's growing interest In New York union elevator oper- fine arts. The answers to the inators have been given a raise which vitations especially commend the method used by the Springville high will help In their ups and downs. school In "putting the exhibit over." Keeping a stove from smoking Is The students who do the work will, easier than keeping a boy from as one artist says, better appreciate art because of the part they have smoking. taken In the project If you must get mad at the wet The following artists have althis April consider Burma, its an- ready sent pictures to the exhibit: William P. Silva, Carmel, Calif.; nual rainfall is about GOO inches. . ' ti' j ". tsliiti lion LeUr Hunt's BY HARRY B. HUNT " NEA Service Staff Writer. jtlTASHINGTONOn the wall of Senator Samuel Moffett Rab talon's office, hung where he faces' Sit as he sits at his big mahogany a. picture. It shows a great hairy mastodon, prehistoric times, being beset by .41 host of unclad aborigines, armed jwith spears. It. is a battle of many on Against. jnjghtjjivlthsualtles oh "sides, for although the beast is frenzied from the spears thrust through his hide, he has whirled one of the natives aloft in his trunk and is about to dash him to the ground. The picture stirs Ralston's Imagination. In his meditative he sees in it a great political Bllcgory.' "It represents to me." he tells ihis friends, "the eternal eonilict between Democrats and Repub- jiV .2esic,-Jljyre- vote-whic- i -- i ts J licans." In Ralston's interpretation, igreat beast is the the Republican party. Its human antagonists ara the 4 'I? Democrats. And just as surely as the aborigines brought about the final extinction of the mastadon, Ralston believes, Democrats will work the ultimate overthrow of the G. O. P. Anyway, it is on this picture Ihat Ralston gazes as he meditates whether to enter the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination this year. He already has substantial backing. His might he the spear that would vanquish th'a beast. But again arresting thoucM he might be the aborigine huriiJ aloft and dashed to juiiy unCr trampling feet! o I of Oscar THE sweeping bydefeat William Gibbs 'IcAdoo in the Georgia Democratic primaries has not presidential dampened the Alabama senator's determination to make the bitterest possible fight for the nomination, Georgia, Underwood backers ex plainis inclined to claim McAdoo as'a"'favorlte "son, since" he was born near Marietta, that state.1 Therefore, the popular One real sign of spring is when 'enabled him to. carry 117 counties you see a farmer trying to get credit to Underwood's 32. at the seed store. To prevent the duplication of the It pays to be honest, and it costs. Georgia results In other states, if possible, Underwood's candidacy Do the Teapot Donio fighters has been placed in the hands of an to get a Itonns? C. C. Carlin, active manager. "Canny Charlie," former congressman from Alexandria, Va., who THE OLD HOME TOWN. managed A. Mitchell Palmer's 1920 campaign, is now directing the km! i Underwood fight. Oliver P. Newman, former newspaperman and commissioner of tho District of Columbia under President Wilson, has assumed command of Underwood's publicity guns. As "Ollie" was not only a crackerjack reporter in his day but also a major of artillery in the late war, some hot shots from his bat teries may be expected. . h rcii the fact that William Bryan announced in Omaha that he might consent to run again for the presidency, if drafted, he has little chance for tho nomination. There might be an investigation and scandal if he did run. For speak it in whispers, William Jennings Bryan has a financial interest in the Demo-erlie result. 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