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Show "': v 1 f AGE FOUR PROVO r (UTAH)" EVENING HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 193? SECTION TWO The Herald Bivcrr Afteraooa Except mtm4m.r a saaAay; llaraUa; ? " ., - f ' i ' Published by the Herald Corporation. 60 South First West street. Provo, Utah. Entered aa second-class matter at the poatottlce In Provo. Utah, under the art of March 3, 1179- Oilman. Nicol & Ruthman. National Advertising; representatives. New York. San Francisco. Detroit, Boston, Lob Angeles; Seattle, Chicago. Member United Press. N. E. A. Service. Western Features and the Scrip pa League of Newspapers. Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county 60 cents the month," 13.00 for six months. In advance; $5 75 the year In advance; by mall in county $6.00; outside county $6.76 the year in advance. "Proelataa ' LJfcanjr taraagli all the laad" Tke Ubrt7 Bell Hold up my goings In thy paths, that my footsteps slip not. Psalms 17:5. God should be the object of all our desires, the end of all our actions, the principle of "all our affections, and the governing power pow-er of our whole souls. Massillon. Team Work Needed To Move a Heavy Load Overtures toward peace between the Committee for Industrial In-dustrial Organization and the American Federation of Labor, however embryonic and ineffectual, arouse hope that America's Ameri-ca's prolonged labor conflict soon may be terminated. As a pawn between two bitterly opposing forces, each striving for dominance, the workingman has been the real loser in the year-long conflict. With a bright era of industrial indus-trial prosperity near, firm establishment of business upon a definite road to recovery has been impeded, if not blocked, by a turbulent labor situation. A team will never accomplish much if energy is wasted pulling against each other. Achievement is possible only when forces co-ordinate, in harmonious and united effort. If a wagon bogs down in sand, two horses may lunge against their collars until exhausted, churning up a great flurry of dust without ever moving the load. But two lighter, light-er, better trained and disciplined animals can move the wagon with comparative ease, if they pull together. If their avowed principles be fact, both the C. I. O. and the A. F. of L. are striving for the same goal, the improvement improve-ment of laboring conditions and a just distribution of industrial indus-trial profits. But in place of united action toward fulfillment fulfill-ment of that aim, the past year has seen factional battles, fraught with violence, for the right to control. Taking no sides in the controversy, the average individual individ-ual can easily see the gigantic waste of effort that might have been put to better use. That there are convincing arguments argu-ments for. organization along the lines laid down by the C. I. O. is undoubtedly true. And equally admissable are the contentions con-tentions of the A. F. of L. that the course of action it has pursued in organization is sound. But there is no truth, no basis in fact or reason that one faction, and one alone should b.e supreme, dominant in every instance. If labor would reach the goals it has set for itself it will be necessary for the leaders of these two great organizations to sit down, in amiable conference, each granting grant-ing concessions, each agreeing on "spheres of influence" and control. Only in this way can American labor achieve rrreatness. Farm Debt Decreases The-best news in a long time is the fact that the Farm Credit Administration will call and retire more than $70,-000,000 $70,-000,000 worth of Federal Land Bank bond issues Nov. 1 without refunding. That is, instead of paying them off by new borrowings, they are to be paid off from cash on hand and from short-term loans which should be paid as soon as further loans are paid off by farmers. This is all to the good. First, farmers are paying off their debts, at some banks faster than they were paying them in 1929. Second, it means that more of the income of many farmers can now go to buying things instead of to paying interest. Third, the government has less interest to pay. Fourth, those farmers, whose farms are now debt-free, debt-free, have a protection against the future in that they can now borrow more easily later in an emergency. Fifth, it dcreases the general load of debt which presses down so heavily on general recovery. It will be a great day when the treasury itself can make the same announcement regarding the general federal debt. , The Great I r 1 di Arc T OV6R-ACCeL6RATlOr4 1 PLSCfc . - OF MARKET VALUES I f55 THE PEMTHOUS6 OF ' I 1 3 AWEALTHVWAwUSr. CWAR ' peKCG 1 BROKER (DECEASED). .WL. X ( A ' EFFORTS (2VJ L characters: JM-hI viEW PeV & A 1929 FOLLIES CRL KJ3 LLl Iffe (j A F043EK7M MILITARY V-d5nraSy aS 1 i m officer 7MMMmimst 4 A DOMESTIC SERVANT M (J) A COVERrtMEMT !fMnJ m official sis rnr.v fi xvmtwZ m (Da mysterious i iJ4 VlaM1 t m A BUSINESS FR16MD ft MCkDiU m butler i a Mf kMIMIQPu M AM OUT-OF-TOVN CU6ST ff WI-ft (mp MWv V Jl- THE LATE F,NAJ vUfe f STOCK-MARKET -yf f hrJJrSk W f EVERYBODY BOOM l?lvS O & n business &JnM fVSnVOO CONDITIONS Wall St. Mystery OUT; 4Q.UR WAY C I wH.yTHis t rv NO, but rr kids used to OBAU WILL V f WU-LtE,IKi a H AVE FUM VEARS MAKE A HALF Yz A GOLDIE ITEM YEARS? I A6D BLfT-VOU- MILLION IN n Bl n TteOM MOW! " PAS$NT NOV- fVTWO MONTHS.' I 1 V A AN1 VYEULjSTlLL l'VtJR UTUfce ; i X: y I; BE MONTI N' J MKSHf1 SUFFER 4' is- ' ' - V MOSTLY Joes.) SO MUCH T 0 I N COMPETITION! n l 1 l OFTO TALK. I Nil Mt I COPR. 1937 BY NEA SERVICE. IMC COWL 137 BY NEA SERVICE. I THE V T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. Off ONCE NEWS, NOW HISTORY TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY - From the Filet of the Provo Herald Oct. 22, 1917 Hundreds of passengers on the D. & R. G. W. Coast Limited narrowly nar-rowly missed death when fifty-seven fifty-seven freight cars piled high in a wreck near Soldier Summit .shortly before the passenger train was clue. A freight brakesman was the sole casualty. Overloaded, the freight's brakes failed- to hold it on the steep grade. It left the track as it reached reach-ed Horseshoe curve. It was the biggest wreck in the history of Utah the Herald reporter, found. 0O0 The Liberty Loan drive went on apace, $132,900 being collected to date. Senator Reed Smoot and Walter P. Whitehead spoke at Spanish Fork. Arch M. Thurman, Bishop Thomas N. Taylor and Senator William hi. King taiKed at Payson. oOo Henry Jones of Provo was to meet George Hess, Billings, in a go for $100 side bet or gross receipts re-ceipts of the door. oOo Stanley Dixon, son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Dixon, was named first class sergeant in the 42rui regiment medical corps. oOo "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" was showing with Mary Pickford the headliner. On the stage was Kolb and Dill's own "Jazz Or chestra guaranteed to keep you swaying in your seats to its irresistible ir-resistible rhythm." oOo Prof. W. H. Boyle's theological class presehted him a birthday cake at B. Y. U. . . . Elks subscribed sub-scribed to $2,500 in Liberty bonds. . . . Charles Farrer lost four head of horses in a $4,000 fire at his and George Giles' property when their barns burned at First East Continued JOY OF LMN6 between Third and Fourth South. . . Sam J. Jones turned in the alarm. oOo Mrs. LeRoy Pharis (Pearl Jones) returned to Salt Lake City after visiting relatives here. . . . Walter Whitehead entertained at a birthday dinner, with guests Russell Hughes, Rulpn Openshaw, Ralph Naylor and Ralph Nuttall. . . . Nineteenth Century club elected elect-ed Mrs. Sam Schwab, president; Mrs. Leland Farrer, secretary; and Mrs. W. L. Biersach, treasurer. oOo Nelke Reading club met at the home of Mrs. John S. Smith. On the program were Mrs. Ed Hen-richsen, Hen-richsen, Mary Shipman Andrews, Mrs. George P. Parker and Mrs. George Smith. oOo Lester and Marion Taylor returned re-turned from two weeks in the Kai-bab Kai-bab national forest. New Testament Readings BY C. V. HANSEN THE PALSIED HFI F.) Jesus went first to the town of Capernaum, which was now regarded re-garded as "his own city." Capernaum Caper-naum was on the western shore of the Sea of Galilee. It was in the "land of Gennesaret," and was of sufficient size to be always called a "city." Ithad its own synagogue in which our Lord frequently taught. He went at once to a house probably the house belonging to Peter which He ordinarily used when staying at Capernaum. The news soon spread through the town, and crowds gathered until they filled the house and the courtyard court-yard that surrounded it, and the atiecL aiso, so mac mere was no access even to the door. . Now. there was in Capernaum a poor sufferer a man bedridden from a stroke of paralysis who had heard of the wonderful cures the Master had wrought, and he prevailed upon four friends to carry him in a stretcher to the house where Jesus was. Finding that they could not reach Jesus through the crowd they made their way to the roof, perhaps by the usual staircase-Eastern staircase-Eastern houses are low, and nothing noth-ing is easier than to get to their roofs, especially when they are built on rising ground. After arriving on the roof, they made a hole in the roof by removing remov-ing a few tiles, Luke 5:19, and let down the paralytic on his humble couch, exactly in front of the place where Jesus was sitting. The man was silent, perhaps awe-struck at his'manner of intrusion intru-sion into the Lord's presence; but when the Master saw t,he great evidence of fait,h on the part of the intruders Be sai4 unto the man. "Thy sins are forgiven." Our Lord had before observed the unfavorable impression produced pro-duced on the bystanders by those startling words. He again observed it now in the interchanged glances of the Scribes who were present and the angry look of disaproval on their countenances. coun-tenances. Beading their eyil thought he wA irtCt iusU?a ,to them. "Which," he asked, "is easier? To say jo te paralitic, "Thy sins are forgiven, thee;' or to say 'Arise and walk?'" T u"!,t that yo W fcaow that the Son of man has power -upon ia to lorgive sins. He said to the sick of the palsy. "I say unto you, Arise, and take up your couch and go into your house." And immediately im-mediately he vise up before them and took, ujp the mattress on which he lay, and departed to his own house, glorifying God. Luke 5. A small jointed animal, related to the fresh water' shrimn. i parasitic on the skin of whales ana is Known as tho whole house. "" Bjf WILLJAM Howdy, folks! All Europe larks for another war Is the price. The trouble with Europe is that it has learned to define patriotism as a perennial desire to kill a neighbor. U'L GEE GEE AT THE GREELEY GAME Oh, I do hope our team will win, Harold. I wonder which, team is ours. Oh, don't you know anything about football? Well, I do. I used to. know a girl that knew a football player. Oh, oh, there's p, touchdown! Listen, 'U explain it to you. That player ran all the way to those funny sticks and that counts six or 16, I don't remember which, ttold that line! Don't let loose of it! No, I don't know whether that's a touchdown or a ldck-down. ldck-down. No, Harold, I dont see the coach. They wouldn't run it right out on the field would they, silly? Oh, don't you think football is a DARLING game? f ff "i University of Utah psychologist psycholo-gist declares there is no such thing as pain. Nonsense ! If there is no such thing as pain, what is it some people give us in the neck? Ivory Ida gets dumber every day. We asked her this morning morn-ing why she rented an inside apartment, and she said because the day she took it it looked like rain. t, .. -.- , i Hint to Politicians: When a difficult decision has to be made, sidestep it by appointing a commission com-mission to investigate. - 1 YE DIARY (Lord's Day.) Thys morning, With Bable Brew, to kirk, she wearing her new hat, which do be called a "beanie," and it doth resemble the hair of an orange rind, being most comikal to see, but I do say naught of this to her, for Lord ! I be too brave a man to laugh at any woman's headgear, no matter how young she be! Mjany a boy is getting a rs.t-class- education these days working work-ing his way thru the School of Experience. sjj sji 5t The trouble about limiting the price of anything is that usually the sky is the limit. Second down, seven yards to go. CRACKSE 1. What color would your hair, be if you were: ? f auburn-haired?" flaxen-haired ? Titian-haired ? 2. Whftt. ar4u!fche following: clingstone, brimstone, gallstone, gall-stone, moonstone ? 3. Here's catch question: What part of Rome is in England Eng-land ? 4. Translate this into plain English.": "My gastronomic satiety admonishes ad-monishes .me that further de-- de-- glut ion would be inconsistent with thy dietetic- integrityJ L 5 f dozen eggs cost 15 cents, what will 16. eggs cost? " Answers on Page Sight BKcra -mxS& -til PAT )Trrvtot '"Tkandtr Mn." the fcrwrtst kaetea ta Mew Mexico, ka a rai endlag- wkea PEARL BAM DE FOREST. tlint mi three brother rff with aaHeMt nlf t h threat. T aefc at -4 reat brathera .' thrt, a -Pearl." PRARIi rJOHS -la the roaaseat. PEAKIj iPIEBCRB, next la age, takea; affair, order Tttte' tarBala at the aal debda. 'Th iohera arei TANTE JMKPB1HR' alaf aad aa lavaudi ntTTT .WEtCH, her yaaaic com. paaloai' RAHON VASQVKZ aa AMGEUdVB ABBYTA, Kaet at th.f;::j)ryrN"PROFESSOR SHAW, arcelom;lti BOB GRAHAM, tire- aaleaaaaau at the haeleada traHtac f ear to be repaired. fha badr f Pearl Sam dlaaa-aear. dlaaa-aear. ' La ter ' Raaaoa aad Aa. KeltQae leara ft baa beea bnraed. Thea Pearl Pierre la foaad. life-leaa," life-leaa," below a roeky ledc-e, the aaata katfe that killed hi brother ta hi throat. ' ' Pearl Joha armies BROKER SHIELD, aa India servant, of the' aaarder. Next day Taate Joaeahlae la dead aad Brokea Shield la aalsalaa;. Professor Shaw ' I lave titrating- the baaeaaeat of tke haaae wkea aomeoae sprtaajs n hlaa. Later he 1 foaad, aa eaaseioa. AaceUqae leara of a eeret pasaara la the baaeaaeat. Jealoa of Betfy, ahe foreea ker rata thl paare. Bob qaarrel with Raaaoa Ra-aaoa aad Pearl Joha aad he i plaeed la the aaaae nadrrfroaad Paare. Bob aad Betty try to flad their way oat, flaally come to it lighted room where they ee two meav flAhtl;. Bob con lato tke room. Betty, terrified. eea Brokea Skfeld raise the obaldlaa kalfe aad pluce It down. Tkea ahe falat. MOW GO ON' WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIV TWHEN Betty opened her eyes " she was still in the adobe room and Bob was bending over her with a look that made her put ber hand against bis cheek tenderly. ten-derly. The room seemed to hold more people than she had thought, and she gave a little cry of surprise as Pearl John de Forest came toward to-ward her. "You?" Involuntarily Betty's eyes turned to the huddled form lying on the floor. "Yes, but it was Ramon Vas-quez. Vas-quez. Not de Forest," Bob told her. "Look, de Forest." He pointed to a small, shining object ob-ject nearby. Pearl John stooped and picked it up. Then he looked around on the floor until he found a tiny square of paper. "The signet ring," he said. "It disappeared the night my oldest brother was killed." He held out his hand, and they saw the ring with its top open like a tiny lid. "This, went inside," he explained, holding out the paper. "It tells the location of "the de Forest fortune for-tune the money came from Captain Cap-tain Pierre de Forest's hoard of valuable pearls. Ramon must Call for a BY X REPORTER Every once in a while you read in the papers about somebody or other who has gone "tack to the primitive" by invading a wilderness wilder-ness not too far from a big city, with only a breech clout and a sheath knife, or maybe a bow-and- arrow set. The newspaper photographers are always on hand to snap the hardy citizen or, in some cases citizeness, who thus dares the dangers of the primeval merely to show how adaptable and other-Wise other-Wise glorious mankind is. Usually the citizen or citizeness shows up about four nights later at some remote farmhouse or miner's cabin, badly mosquito-bit, limping from stone-bruises, colder than a wet kitten and hungrier than all get-out. The farmer's wife fills the daring dar-ing adventurer up with buttermilk, hot biscuits and some warmed-up warmed-up roast and gravy and another summertime idyll comes to an end. The returning one always somehow manages to dodge the newspaper cameraman on the return re-turn voyage, and all concerned are ready to let the subject drop out ot sight in a hurry. Now what I've been wondering is this: Why doesn't some roaring adventurer of the Richard Halliburton Halli-burton or Ernest Hemingway variety va-riety undertake the civilized adventure ad-venture of besting the accumulated accumulat-ed forces of civilization rather than the raw forces of Nature? Let him start off from the postoffice or library. . steps some fine fall morning: clad only in a breech clout and armed with just one streetcar or bus ticket, and see how long it takes him to adapt himself to life in the jungles of a modern city. . Or, not to be too bizarre about it, suppose we give our adventurer a clean uniform of overalls and rations for one, day and a bed for the. night. That would be more sporting. -But from that point on, let him be., on, his own. No charity, no relief, re-lief, no gifts or trick acquisitions of 'money or goods from any source whatever. The adventure would be to see 'r LOYALIST COMMANDERS FACE ACCUSATIONS VALENCIA, Spain, Oct. 22 (ifo) '-r?Thret loyalist commanders were ; ordered td stand trial today on a 'charge of "conspiracy against, the republic." They, will be tried by a special judge of the supreme court and under TBilitary law, are liable to ; sentences of -execution by a firing fir-ing "squad. " The charges against -two were based specifically on ,the fall of the seaport of ..Malaga which the nationalists captured February 8. have nad il all the time." 1 A slight movement from the figure on tha floor made them all turn except the 'Indian. . "DAMON'S eyes were open and, as he saw de Forest, a slight smile crossed his face. "I'm your cousin, Pearl John," he said. "Other branch of the family. The money - was why I came. Knew about the ring. It would tell where. That's why " he paused so long that they thought he was gone, but finally the words came. "Why I killed them the men. You were next then the fortune would be mine." "But I don't understand, Pearl John!" Bob exclaimed. "It was Broken Shield who killed him he had the knife." Surprisingly, the Indian himself answered. "This is very old kiva. My people's. The knife theirs. It was always kept here. I brought it back. He " pointing down at Ramon, "stole it and killed Pearl Sam, Pearl Pierre." "But why did you attack Ramon?" Ra-mon?" asked Betty, looking at the Indian. "Sipapu very holy. Gods strike anyone dead if they touch." "The money from the pearls." Ramon's white lips moved slowly but the words were distinct. Pearl John knelt beside Ramon and felt for his heart beat. After a minute he arose. "No use," he said. "He's gone this time. You may ell as well know now; it won't make any difference. The de Forest money is kept down under un-der the sipapu. Come on." XJALF an "hour later Pearl John, Bob and Betty sat in the library, weaving the loose ends of the mystery of Thunder Mesa together. Betty told the part Angelique had played and both men found it easy to understand under-stand the Spanish girl's motive as they watched the firelight glowing on Betty's lovely face. "But how did either Angelique or the Indian know about the secret se-cret panel in the wall?" asked Pearl John. "We might ask Broken Shield," Bob suggested. They all went to the tiny room in the servant's quarters where Broken Shield was held under guard. Much to their surprise, they found him willing to talk. Evidently lie had decided his life was about over and it did not make much difference what be said. "Night Tante Josephine die, I -- Cy Halliburton how long it would take an ordinary ord-inary adult citizen, without help or "pull," to establish himself on an independent basis of comfortable com-fortable living. Of course, no "adventurer" is going to try any such thing. T. M. Ufa O. S. MT.fT. com. 1937 av nea snivfcc. inc. Now dp try to get in on time guests for ISIDE GLANCES ... By George Clark iff te j ATTENTION WE PAY HIGHEST PRICES FOR DEAD OH USELESS EES;AG3US: Phone Collect Spanish Fork 88, or Enterprise 30 UTAH HIDE & TALLQW COMPANY GEO. PRICE, Manager. Always Open forlBpsinesa By IDA, R. GLCASON fe 1936, NEA Srk, toe with her," he told them. "I wait outside window and come in when all others go. I always guard her room. She make me promise. Afraid someone kill her. I leave in morning before anyone come. I stay with her that night as long as she live. She told me .how to get through wall in basement when I show her I got holy knife. She say take it back to kiva." "Then you saw Betty pushed into the room behind the panel?" asked Bob. "Si. That night I come out and cut you loose. Think you come get her. I wait in basement but nobody come. Then Pearl John put you there. I wait again, long time. I going quick through wall when I hear someone come. Not have time to close panel tight. He follow but can't find. I hide in one of pueblo rooms. I wait, but he not come. Then I go to kiva. He digging sipapu. I fight him." "Yes, but we dont know quite all the rest," Bob reminded aa they returned to the library. "There's still Professor Shaw and Angelique." ' "I've a notion to. let the young lady speak her own piece," said de Forest. "As for the professor, profes-sor, we might stop in his room and see if be can't do some talking talk-ing now. The mai I left with him said he seemed much better." a CURE enough, the archeologist was better and when they entered, en-tered, he turned his head meekly. meek-ly. In answer to Pearl John's questions he said in a thin voice, "It was Ramon who struck me in the basement. He came upon me suddenly. I was sure the old pueblo was intact and also that the obsidian knife was hidden there. I still want it for the museum." For a moment the others, who knew where the knife was at that very minute, shuddered. Then Pearl John said, "If you still want the knife when you get up, Professor, Profes-sor, and will guarantee to take it away from the mesa, I'll give you the cursed thing. It's caused enough damage." The professor's face lighted. "You have the knife?" He half rose in his excitement. "I'll promise anything to get it." Then he added in a low tone, "I've seen strange things happen when sacred sa-cred objects were desecrated things I could never explain on scientific grounds." "So have L" de Forest answered thoughtfully. (To Be Concluded) . DEER HUNTER FOUND DEAD IN BED WHITE SLPHJR SPRINGS, Mont., Oct. 22 U.R) Ed Cameron. 42, Livingston cigar store operator, oper-ator, was found dead in bed this morning at the Bob Wells ranch near. Tenderfoot creek, about 50 miles north of here. Cameron was a member of a party of Livingston men who were on a deer hunting excursion. this evening. We're liaving supper. fc.T 1 V i -V- v;. ':'... |