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Show i "-J- fv(;,y page two; ...-'. -. ;t SECTION I -THREE '. - , - - - Jir. :" i.V vv- 1 1 1 1-1 Vr 1PPP v Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) ' ; ; ' .. and . Sunday Morning ; ' Published - by the Herald ' "Corporation; i& South irst West -Street.. Provo. Utah. Entered as second :lass matter ' at the the act : of , March, 3, :'L Cllman , KTlenl A- I .u qui : '3i : representatives, Ifew xYork, , San " Francisco, Detroit TJberW0- eles,Oiiiro.i -..-v. throueh.11 MembecXTnlfed : Press, N. E. A. ' Service, Western, th land-LIi'tureB the Scrippa League of Newspapers. Tha -I ibrtv -Subscription ternis by carrier in Utah county, Bell - -60. cepta the month-f 3.0 for six months. In advance; ":' :,$51Sf5ithe year, in advance; by mail. in county 1 5.00; ':' outside county $5.75 the year In." advance. ' r Thou hypocrite, first cast out and then ahalt thoy see clearly to cast out the mote out of thyl brother's eyeMatthe-7t5r The hyiocrite showV the excellence of virtue by the necessity he thinks himself under of seeming to be virtuous. Johnson. Don't Splash ?. The melancholy days are approaching; when a pedestrian that.is, one who, has succeeded in evading automobiles to -date-will have to step lively on, rainy days to keep from : being dreiiched with puddle water as automobilists scurry : past him heedlessly. . " i Unless the Keystone Automobile club of Philadelphia rmoVflo itc i-kloa efi-ib-o ?nH stirb- in friA TUlhlir mnsClOUSTieSS. 1 Jf. Maxwell Smith, general manager of the club, points out that a generous splashing by just one too-speedy or. too-selfish too-selfish auto driver will make a man or woman on crossing or sidewalk detest all auto drivers for life. He pleads for more courtesy and consideration m driv- ing; It is being proved under drivers are the safe drivers. Pass the Doughnuts, I z Emily Post and a Boston ihave agreed that doughnut proper. Mrs. rost qualities lthat doughnuts will never be mmm . m -way. Tne theory 01 operation, doughnuts are, there dunking To a lot of more or less z ithe arbiters of the social graces rgo ahead and dunk. r But to a lot of the rest of Us it will be merely a vindi-cation. vindi-cation. A lot of us have known right along that dunking was all right, that is, satisfactory, and didn't worry too Imuch about whether it was perfectly proper. lit Is So Ordered -mm r This month America celebrates its discovery, on the Hl2th, by Christopher Columbus. r It prepares also to wash all windows on Novonber 1 rafter the kids have done with soaping them on Hallowe'en. ? Poets will be polishing up such words as "sere" and r'drear" to tell about the melancholy things that are going tojiappen to leaves which now make the countryside and -fort. of thp citvside porffeous. It is altogether fitting and proper, too, we think, that 'finis mellow month have one of its 31 golden days set aside f for observance of the beginning of a rare and fine old Ameri-jpcan Ameri-jpcan institution the pumpkin pie. ! -r , - Pine yellow pumpkins are ripening on the vine now and 1 soon the new-style pumpkin pie, always new, never-chang- ing, will be with us in all its glory. How about setting aside the fourth Saturday in October as pumpkin pie day, a sort of a preliminary testing-but and planning day prior to Thanksgiving? All right, then; it's a go! i HOLD EVERYTHING! ; : CCfir COPW. 138 BY XEA SERVICE. INC. I'm pretty busy today, chum tomorrow for an f V. i 1 " 1 t ' 1 , i -Tyy j -' . . ' , ! :0 ,: v ; - " I . . . 1 J 6 6ylinders 2).(n)(D Parts Ektra 1. Check Battery; Wire and 7. Check Valves, Adjust Over r All Connections S&'gS AdJU3t Cleaned SHSr Cleaner S V 5 10. Adjust Carburetor- . ' S. Test Compression ll. Check' Generator 4. Remove and .Sychronize 12. Check Starter , Distributor, Adj Points All Motor Adjustments puti 5. Test Coil nd Condensor Up to Original Factory 6. Set Timing Spedficationsff vj;-:-. LATEST EQUIPMENT - FACTORY TRAINED i MEN . ;ATn,0 SPECTAIXZED SKRWCJB ifoij; - 275 South -University 3 Ave. ' h-".-.- : Phone 649 Z costoffice in Prove Utah, under liliXr '--'--- Bnthmkn: Vttlnnal: Aflvertlain tbe beam out of thine own eye; test that consistently courteous Pappy instructress in social usages dunking is all right, perfectly ner statement oy pointing out served at a formal dinner, any- t J a I 1 1 . as we get it, it tnat wnerever is permissible. timid individuals this edict by will serve as permission to By Clyde Lewis a why don't you drop in estimate?" head Valves. OUT. OUR VAY 7 .r WELU, MA, I GOT A "4 wBUTTRNUTS ;ALU S WHY t a ocr. - C BAY AM i' Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) the Reorganization Bill was that private lands should come under Agriculture, and public lands under un-der Interior. In the Wallace reshuffle, all activities directly related to the farmer have been nailed down beyond chance of transfer to bis Cabinet colleague, Harold Ickes. But other functions of the Department Depart-ment have been left flapping in the breeze. For example, no provision pro-vision for the Forest Service has been made in the new plan, despite the historic fight between Agriculture Agri-culture and Interior over .its control. con-trol. This service la not connected connect-ed with private farm lands, but with public lands. F A. Silcox, chief of the forest service, has long resisted transfer trans-fer to the Interior department, and last year declined Secretary Ickes' offer of an Assistant Secretaryship Secre-taryship if he would -switch allegiance. al-legiance. Now it looks as if the Silcox agency is fated for transfer trans-fer anyway. The same is true of Public Roads, in which Wallace has no active interest. Still another agency left out is the Pure Food and Drugs Administration, an orphan or-phan child of the Department. Wallace stands ready to sacrifice sacri-fice an orphan or two, but the AAA has been safely folded into the family bosom and its name written down in the family Bible. : I AGRICULTURAL. I I CONFERENCE I . 1 : The day after reorganization was announced, a group of Agriculture Agri-culture officials were exchanging banter about the confusion it caused, and saying- they didn't know what agency they were attached at-tached to. Remarked Mordecai Ezekiel, who is economic adviser to Wallace although paid by the AAA: "I don't even know what agency I'm being detached from." : - I CONVERT I 41 This will be a big shock to busi 17ot Oft a Special Reduced Price t.J. ' Not a Discontinued Model . . But a tfew 1933 Model wfch EASYS Ist Features. iCere is the' only sciesfif Jcaify differeaf woahlag actios on th, maxkat today . . . iastar . mor effidaaf .. . 'arief ,,S not cooomiccd. Sores ;V4 to t4 washing urns . . handles : V bigger load. ClrcuknM dotiies la epirai path through top. center ..and ' bottom of tub washas all the clothes oil 0i time. A creat value at today's . new low price. t. IWI I f ft I p ; PRV- BUT 1 fiyEP . J. IVTOMQRROYV 1th-- : . T?' " l? 'EM SO THEY WONT J : . ' V ; . ' " " ' " .,k "'L"" ' " " ' v ' 57 North Univ Ave V - TH GOOD, , GOING TO, PO , ; MOTHERS- GET RAY ness and to A. F of L. moguls who have been whetting their knives to cut up the Wagner Labor Relations Act at the next congress: . . , Senator Ed Burke, their most aggressive sppkesman has changed chang-ed his mind about ' the whole Mea. He is against it now. Burke's conversation is the result re-sult of a vacation trip to England, where he made a first-hand study of labor-employer relations. Now he is telling friends that he" was all wrong about the evils of col lective bargaining, that he will make no; move to tamper With the Wagner Act. "Collective bargaining seems to have worked out excellently in England," the Nebraskan explains 'Employers told me that strong unions meant discipline and re sponsibility among their workers. 1 still think there ought to be some revision of the Wagner Act, but I now feel that whatever changes are proposed should come from the sponsor of the measure. Senator Wagner, t doht contem plate offering any amendments." Note Burkes 'discovery that in England collective bargaining has proved effective in eliminating labor disputes concurs with the report of the special committee President Roosevelt appointed last summer to study the British system. sys-tem. MERRY-GO-ROUND Because Walter Liebman, New Deal candidate against New York's Republican Congressman Bruce Barton, was formerly a law partner of C. L O. Counsel Lee Pressman, David. 'Dubinsky of the International Ladies' Garment Workers, personal foe of Pressman, Press-man, blocked the withdrawal of George Backer, third man in the race on the American Labor Party ticket. Local Labor party leaders support Liebman but despite de-spite repeated appeals, Dubinsky, who is on the verge of breaking with the CIO, would not allow Backer's name taken off the bal lot. In a three-cornered fight Barton is practically certain to win... Mrs. Roosevelt looks still taller with her new top-of-the-hea4 coiffure. . .Argentine Am-bsasador Am-bsasador Espil ha bought a new portable twpewrjter and now ans-wrea ans-wrea personal letters himself. U-ij t; h, -y u0j ij ijfo3S ' J ! r:ov7,c:iLY; , n fir ,r . ' 4 DyVILUAT.IS K - VsX', VM A - Held in Wife's Moved by the agony of his wife. who was dying from a stomach cancer, Harry C. Johnson, above, retired Hewlett, I I., distributor, is reported to have run a garden hose attached to an illuminating gas jet into Mrs. Johnson's room and asphyxiated her in a "mercy killing." He" is being held for possible grand jury action, 1 Utahns Seek New Policy on Lands RENO, Nev., Oct 13 Elimination Elimin-ation of the practice of including includ-ing large land tracts in national parks and monuments is being sought by Utah delegates to the National Reclamation convention here. The score of members of the state, group reported a resolution resolu-tion seeking that such areas be created only when necessary to protect scenic or historic points. and -such lands then only sparing ly. President Sidney W. Russell of the Provo chamber of commerce is a member of the Utah party. mi 1 1 minimi . j. mnii'imiiiiu ii linn - ' '"IT ; : - .' ,y ' ". : . s i . I . J : n .i-i i- . Phone 78-W Revard Offered By X RXPORTEU : Machines " have eiven us many things that's true, but . they also have . robbed us "of a most im portant' balance wheel, namely, the r necessity . for sustained ex port. iS f .By - sustained"; effort mean such ' things as " long sea voyages carrying ' goods ' to distant ; ports, and ; no . reward for" either, men " or master 'until .theVhome port was reached " again;: clearing wooded acres : and v buildihff house ; and barhT of "logs:' storing; carefully all summer affainst long, coia winters during which .food would otherwise be impossible to ob- tain. -" 'iT : " - -i Sustaining effort is not mere ly performing well a daily task over and over - again. It is per-fonnmg per-fonnmg a' daily task, over n long period? for. a reward that' is not receivable and: hence not enioya able' until many, . many days of labor nave been put into it. . A man can: tighten nuts on an assembly line "for 300 days of the year, v or putt paint on houses for other people from one month's end to another at so much per day or per week and he does not get the sense of creatorship that was the greatest compen sation of the earlier generations which built - the f; foundations of the present America. Oh, there are still many who enjoy the fruits, of sustained effort ef-fort and creatorship; but they are all too few. comnarativelv. The architect and builder of a fine buildlhg enjoy those fruits, but I doubt that the average workman comes in for a fair share of them. His interest in the job can ail too easily end witn the Saturday night pay en velope. 7 The author, of a good book en joys the fruits of sustained ef fort and creatorship. So, also does the farmer who can see the cumulation of a . year's: efforts only at harvest time.; What money the author may receive from his book or what money the farmer may get "for nis crop have nothing to do with the point at issue The printer who sets the type for the book, or the head of the mortgage department at the bank: may have more money , at . the end of the year than either of the creators. My point is that they v have something, measurable only in - rx . . . FOR Pn6UQS BEST llllfltinG UALUES! n The Only Exclusive Sporting poods Up Offer You Only rjatiphal jy Advertized Equipment! Hunting Coats t KedHead I C Better .Graded Coats from $5.49 td'$9:0B Hunting Gloves ;-; father, v. T"t1 fn 'Fleece yLinedr Vily GUNS! Remington Model S1A dr Winchester Model . 12 -Repeating Shotguns- in .l2,lff, 20 Gauges ' Only; $39.95 .j. ! 1 r ' v Stevens' Double. Barrel All Gauges $21.75 i r" . 'V, ... . ;..- y'i o:Hn,u ' T-1 - r ,iJ-i-f if OllltC 1C1 uutia . : in 12, 16, 20, 410 GaJ $7.49 . . . ' ( Side Glances I fcuess1! j?ot a coffee grinder somewhere, but Ihe profit would be so small it wouldn't be worth tuy time to hunt for itr I ; , 4- , . . . ; rrr r-r- - terms of satisfaction thru sustained sus-tained effort, that the others can never know. The only .reason for mentioning mention-ing the subject here is that if a fellow hears about that extra special satisfaction and has never nev-er experienced ' it, he can do something about it. Just a friend ly tip. ARABIAN DUST IN HUNGARIAN RAIN BUDAPEST, Oct. 12 (American Wire) The government meteorological meteorol-ogical department is studying details de-tails today cf a rain over Hungary which contained dust from Arabia. I The Better Shells Give You Results! Shotgun Shells Winchester Super - Speed Nitro Express .- Peter's High Vel. - Peter's Victor Shur.Shot - Ranger At Prices You . Can Affordl U. S Rubber Hunting Pads f .e v. " - ; Waterproof Hunting. Caps x at 59c and up . ji? Heavy Wool Sox 35c up: if- -yff- ' . "d 112 ; North Univ. ; Ave. KS By Clark Squaw Creek. Dear Newspaper Mr. and Mrs- Iadian Charlie celebrated their 20th wedding an-niversary an-niversary last rdght'witha crockery crock-ery shower., Mrs. Charlie threw the Crockery, and it showered all over Charlie and the; cabin. PIUTlJ JOE. V 9 Store in Utah Co, Med. Weight:?Shell Vests 98c and up Red Head, Heavy Weight $2.19 HUNTING ACCESSORIES : SPECIALS! j , : Ka-Bar Hunting Knives 98c and up Shell Belts . .89c and up " Leather Recoil Pad 59c up Canvas Gun Cases 98c up Sheepskin Bloccasins $1.39 Shotgun Clean. Rods 39c . - . -' 7-. " Bergman Shoe Grease 25c Everready Flashlights 57c and up 1 Marble's Anti-rust Ropes ; i; 49c and up Hoppe's No. 9 Solvent 40c Tri-Pak Cleaners ;$1."25 Hoppe's Gun Oil . . . . .15c f' " ': 1 :Sl - J 7 1 v 'i":.:.-tit. 4f f V- i ' |