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Show SECTION TWO PAGE FOUR PROVO (UTAH)' SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 4, 1011 OUT OUR WAY by Williams limm I ' ? . .SS.l Wait Street. I'rovo Ulatv. Entered as aeonJ eti I l. ( " V at tha totofflc In Proto. Utah. Under ths set 1 lifv,'-VI Gllman. Nlcol A Ruthman. Nationa.1 Advanla i I'M ' ' I Mntltltn. New To: UI I rhro'iRh all tha land" Tss I-ltiertr Belt Putillnhed Evary Sunday Morning; Iliy Herald Every Afternoon Except Saturday and Sunday) Booth First as matter of March inr raprs- rlt. Sao rranclaco, Detroit, tioaton. Arisrelea. Chicago. Member United Praaa. N. K. A Bervlra, Editor" Kicbaac. the t-.-rii-p. Leaeua of Nepapers and Audit ilureas ut Circulation. Subacnptlon terma by carrier In Utah county. 6 cents the month, 3 0 (or alx monthe. In advance; tt.H the yesJ-, In advance; Jiy mall In county. IS 00; oatalde county S.t the yer In advance. , The Herald will not aatume Hnanclal reaponelblllty for any frrom which may appear In advertisements pullisht-d In It column. In thoa Inatancea where the paper la at fault. It will reprint that part the advertlaement la which the typographical mlatake occur. The World Has Caught Up With Us Isolation" is a part of the American dream. A great part of the people who came to this country from abroad from 1C07 to 1911 a long time, mark you came to pet away from something. They came to get away from religious persecution, per-secution, from useless war, from economic distress. For a long time America was a haven. f Today America is part of the world. It does not matter that we'do not wish it so. It does not matter that there is a little reticle of tradition down in the bottom of every one of us which cries protestingly, "No, no!" It is true. Science that obliterator of time and space, has brought the world into a unity. There is no place that is today "out of the world" not Tahiti, not the mountains of Ecuador. One may regret this, but it is true. Nothing could be more hopeless than to base action on what used to be true, or on. what we wish were true. Greenland was once, remote, an unreal un-real plavthing of explorers. Today it is a stepping-stone for bombers, a danger, and the United States had better "be there first," no matter what the cost. For whatever that cost might be, it is less than the cost of yielding; without a struggle, the outer rampart. A prominent Dread way leader of the show world has a motto, and it isn't a bad one for nations, too. It is, "Don't kid yourself." That is what we are doing when we try to reassure re-assure ourselves that the 'United States can go on, unmolested, un-molested, to achieve a destiny separate and unique in an interlaced in-terlaced world. It can't be done any more, if it ever could. The change is a change of this century. . It is during the past 30 years that transport has speeded up; until then, men traveled at scarcely greater speed than the Romans. The ... u ,-n which the United States was able to win the revolution revolu-tion (with the invaluable help of a French fleet) continued down to World War clays. It was not until after that war that U. S. Navy NC-boatsr made the first Atlantic crossing by airplane. The world grew smaller then, the world changed, more than it had changed in a similar period since Salamis. --. There is no salvation for the United States in mental retreat to a dream of childhood, any more than there is for an individual. AW. are grown up now, and the world, from which we might have likod to withdraw, is on our doorstep. We must 'ay our part in that world, and play it like free men and K'omen. . . Time, and the shrinking of the world by science, -have eft us no choice. " ' ' " " Closing the North Door The naval and military defense . plan is now complete rn which Canada and the United States : have worked for six months or more. That is the of fieial -announcement, of the joint defense board. , . - ' It is good news heartening news. From the uttermost end of the Alaskan archipelagos to Greenland there is a back door, or a series of back doors to North America, Tho interest of Canada and the United States in locking and double-barring those doors is mutual. Together they have settled now on plans to do it. To undertake jointly, to agree mutually, on how. to do it was the first step. That has been taken.,Now let no" material ma-terial thing stand in the Avay of translating those agreements agree-ments into physical establishments which will cause any power (r any combination of powers to. hesitate a long timp before attempting to violate the Western Hemisphere Defeat? . I SEEM TO GET MOW L15TEH X TAMGLED UP IM CORPOKAL IT THAT FAOMS TO I ASAMST ACM7 THE REAE1-AMD RHSUVATlOKiS FER. . I'M SURE J DOMT 1 tf PRIVATE TO DICTATE V HOLD THIS 3UM ) TO A cCORTORAL.' I ;l rF7 R-IOHT. DO IF MO, WE PASSM'T i, l . DICTATE TO A l' r V SUPERIOR. , J V v - RANK ) eOPB. BY Nr SERVICE. INC. T. M BEC. V. S PAT. OFF. -?- Editor, Llanager Of Annual lamed Dean DaUin Dean D;iHin, junior, and DonaM MacKay, sophomore?, will fill the positions of editor and business manager of the f . , - I'rovost, I'rovo - - j , high school's an- nual; for the 1041 - 42 school year. Dean was appo intcd by Max Gcrmcr, art instructor, and Donald was ap- pointed by Har-, Har-, old Boyack, i commercial in- structor.' Both were approved j by the faculty. Dean, a member mem-ber of this year's Provost staff, is also a member of the Fine "Arts club. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos D"allin, 57 East Fourth North street. A former student' " ' of the Farrer junio r h ig h school, he will succeed Alan' Carter, senior. I Donald has been active in commercial work' this year and is a member of the) bookkeep ing team. He al-; so wa s a metnbet f of the Farrer- student body be- fore entering Donald MaKay P r o v o high school. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David O. MacKay, 10 North Eighth East street. He will suc ceed Harold Monson, senior. . : , SHALL, SE 7ESrFeP .AvroYLr errre jvsczprwrt OiVsroAr& atome ear Mali LAMPS MtfESOVe Trie LAtv&KFM ttCO&P Of 77 MAfP, ANVMaWtfftfT IVIL tfMrf WM ALL . alw eteeiAsfAf&Y. PCIOPOAVesA wax. UL- J r a m m . -r- aw -.- r - --C1 ' . - UTAH VERSE Contribution!! to this column should be BCnt to Sirs. Anna 1. Idd, 1076 East Center street. Enclose stamp- for return of manuscript. (Clifford E. Hatch, a younR 15. Y. IT, student, takes life In his stride, as one taken iierpctiial spriner). 1 " TIME - BV CEIFFOUD I HATCH The world is such a lovely place ' So wide, so deep, so high The world is such a busy place I haven't time to die. I can't afford to miss these things . ; To love, to sing, to weep . t With eyes so limited in view I can't afford to sleep. The world, so full of beauty here, The sea, the sky, the rose . So much to see; so little time I scarcely dare to doze. The world is such a lovely place So full for them who care I haven't time, to halt my feet I must go everywhere. .- Spanish Fork lames Graduates SPANISH FORK Commencement Commence-ment exercises for the Spanish Fork high school graduating class of 1941 will take place May 23, it is announced by Principal Loren A. Anderson with the following prospective graduates receiving certificates of graduation: Junior Abildskov, Ann Adamson, Dale Allred, Fred Anderson, Nila An-gell, An-gell, Ray Angus, Gerald Argyle, Kenneth . Argyle, Ethel Banks, Gale Barney, -fclllen Bigelow, Neil Bona, Gloria Bowen, Phyllis Bow-en, Bow-en, Phil Boyack, Betty Ruth Brockbank, Lucille Brockbank, Wells E. Brockbank, Daphne Carson, Car-son, Lois Christensen, R.eed Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, Ed. Clayson, June Clay-son, Clay-son, Douglas Cole, Ruth Cornaby, Ann Creer, Lois Davis, Elaine Dcdrickson, John D. Evans, Pamela Pa-mela Evans, Phebe Evans, Myrl Ferguson, Ruth Francis, Mary Louise Gardner, Maurine Gardner, Gard-ner, Myrl Gardner, Shirley Hagan, Bcrnice Hales, Floyd Hallstrom, Elaine Hamilton, Jerry Hanks, Clyde Hansen, Nadine Hansen, Nadine Hansen (2 girls), Vivian Hatch, Shirley Mae Hawkins, Myrle Hone, Shirl Hone, Mack Hughes, vynone .Hunt, Ray Huntington. Esther Mae J ex, Louise Jex, Leah Johnson, Thora Johnson, Lois Jones, Anna Beth Keele, Frank King, Margie Koyle, Ruth Larsen, Glowe Lewis; Charles Lombardi, Marie Losser, Lucy Ludlow, Donna K. Lund, Mabel Lundell, Wilma Maland, Eliza Markham, Nora McGlone, Ruth McKell, Oreest Merabelli, Velma Miller, Elma Miner, Rhea Money, Myrle Nelson, Pauline Nuttall, Delma Peterson, Elaine Peterson, Betty Richardson, Eunice Richardson, Loraine Riley, Florence Roman, Evelyn Sabin, William E. Sackett, Reed Searle, Clifford Selin, Kenneth Sheen, Jay Shepherd, Faye Simmons, Jean Simmons, Billy Sterling, Clark Stewart, Thayne Stone, Joy Slawberg, Lenore Swenson, Merrill Swenson, Jay I. Taylor, Kenneth .Taylor, Rex Taylor, Rulon Thomas, Thelo Tippetts, Doris Turner, Gordon Warner, Helen .Marie Warner, Ray D. Warner, War-ner, Ross Wilson, Wanda Wride and S. Ruth Young. Farmers Urged To . Act At Once On ! Potato Diversion Birthdays SUNDAY, LY 4 C. B. HOPE MONDAY, MAY 5 ERNEST L. SW ALB ERG J. E. WELLS LEVI MANWARING MRS. MARIE CLAYTON KING REUEL JACOBS EN Eighty-five per cent of American Ameri-can farm families own motor vehicles, ve-hicles, kt:t : Authorization has been given for diversion of 9317 bushels of potatoes in Utah county, S. R. Bosvvell, county , agr icultural agent, said Saturday. Actual diversion di-version for livestock feed has been made on 3267 bushels. Tentative allotment" of 14,000 bushels has been set for the county. Mr. Boswell said he expects ex-pects this allotment will he used long before the end or the diversion diver-sion program, ' June 30. However, he cautioned growers, with warm weather coming on there will be less chance to feed any great amount of potatoes. Diverted Di-verted potatoes must be fed to livestock, he declared, emphasizing that the potato diversion program is not one of waste or destruction. Inspections under direction of L. W. Brewer of Salt Lake City, with II. V. Swenson in charge in Utah county are following up the authorizations with a check to determine de-termine the amount of U. S. No. 2, or better grade of potatoes which are to be diverted. As soon as this inspection is made, purple dye is being applied as means of preventing these potatoes from being sold for human consumption. consump-tion. Growers will receive a payment of 25 cents a hundred for the potatoes authorized for diversion and which have been dyed as the first step in actual diversion. . Mr. Boswell urged that any grower who is eligible and who intends in-tends to divert potatoes, do so at once before the county allotment allot-ment is used up. Information on the diversion program may be obtained ob-tained at the county agricultural extension office. i AUNT HET By ROBERT QUIELEN Ml "The way the crowd turned out for Tom's funeral. fun-eral. I don't care whether anybody comes to mine or not. It wasn't a tribute to anything but the fine weather." Once NevG, Nov History Twenty-five Yeara Ago Today From the Files of The Frovo Herald, May, 2, 1916. Seven hundred delegates gath ered at Provo for the Republican state convention. County Assessor H. R. Christen sen announced the assessea val uation of Utah county for 1916, as approximately $42,000,000. if- B. Y. U. college graduates, num bering- 50. observed "cap and gown" day by appearing for the first time in' the graduation togs and holding appropriate exercises Flower thieves were v reported making regular raids on well groomed gardens of the city, and police were seeking to apprehend the "culprits. Sam Jones, superintendent of the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph company for this division, drove from Milford to hus home in Provo in a day, which was considered a long drive at that time. if. A baby girl was born to Mr and Mrs. R. J. Murdock Murray Roberts had a narrow escape when he was struck by a car driven by Dr. Noyes on Center Cen-ter street. The fact that the doctor doc-tor was driving slowly prevented an Injury. I Was Thinking BY ELSIE C. CARROLL I was thinking of the destruction of St. Paul's cathedral and of the battle of Athens. How terrible that bombs have torn Down through that stately dome Beneath which England's warrior sons Found their last rest and home. There Wellington and Nelson lay In honor, long years through; Above them shone the cross of gold, Bright symbol of the true. I thought if they could see their land They were so proud to save. Their hearts would break to see the wrack Of those great gifts they. gave. I wished their spirits might return, i And England's hope renew. Their courage never faltered when The sun was hid from view. They lived and died for liberty. This cause would be their own. Again they'd champion human rights. And shelter England's throne. I grieved today that down in Greece 5 A battle fierce as hell Is raging 'round that grand old mount Where ancient god3 did dwell. . - I wished that Father Jove once more, As in the ty-gone day Might hold his golden scales aloft And all this carnage stay. - I thought of Jesus on His cross . His wounds. His thorns. His pain; .1 wonder if His spirit mourns And feels He died in vain. Dress Revue To Be Held Tuesday SPRINGVILLE With Approximately Ap-proximately 125 girls participating, a "dress revue" under the supervision super-vision of Miss Anna Beardall of thfr high schfol home making department, will be presented at the high school art building in the Little Theater room, at 8 p. m., Tuesday. Each girl taking part will invite in-vite one guest, cither her father or mother to attend. The revue will be invitational but 25 tickets will be available at the high school to the first number apply ing. Miss Beardall said. The revue will demonstrate various phases of a girl3 wardrobe emphasizing the theme, "closet cleverness." . Program numbers will include a vocal solo by Miss Ileen Felix; piano selections, Mrs. Mary Bird and other numbers from the high j school music department. . OREL! BRIEFS WINDSOR. WARD LOIS DRAGE, REPORTER Thone 06-J-ll Mrs. Ray Gillman returned home Wednesday after spending a few day3 at Tark City visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bert Lowder. Mrs. Kate Drage. Mrs. Elna Hampshire, Miss Margaret Anderson, An-derson, Mrs. Elizabeth Pratt and Mrs. Anna Anderson attended the president's visitation Mae E. West of the Rebeccah lodge at Mldvale MondayAnight. The meeting meet-ing was : held at the Methodist church and a dinner followed at the Fireman's hall. : Mrs. Ruth Gee of Provo was a guest of her daughter Mrs. Lois Harris Wednesday. Mrs. Emma Nicholes was hostess host-ess to members of the Arbor Vitae club Thursday afternoon at her home. Members present were; Mrs. Mahlon Drape. Mrs. Sam Harris, Mrs. Lucile Richardson, Mrs. Erva Brinley and Mrs. Hcs- ton Wilberg, a guest. Luncheon was served and sewing enjoyed. Donald Elsmore was a Salt Lake visitor Thursday. Mrs. Alfred Keetch is home after- spending the past week at Magna. l The Mutual officers and teachers teach-ers honored Mrs. Hannah Packard Pack-ard . at a social Tuesday evening at the Jarman home. Mrs. Packard Pack-ard is leaving Windsor ward soon to make her home at American Fork. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Evin Wilberg, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hansen, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Brinley, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Swenson, Swen-son, Mr. and Mrs. iMilton Kirk. Vern Marrott, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Walker, Mrs. Floyd Cook, Mr. and Mrs. ' Reed Hales, LeGrand Jar-man, Jar-man, .Mr. and Mrs. Karl Crawford, Craw-ford, "Mr. and 'Mrs. McKinley Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Richardson, Rich-ardson, Lydia Smith", Sarah Hooley, Mr. and itrs. Bud Hancock, Han-cock, Elwood Baxter, Ray Gill-man, Gill-man, Thora Hales and the guest of honor. Games were played and refreshments served. O SERIAL STORY BY OREN'ARNOLD LOVE POWER COPYRIGHT. 141. NEA SERVICE. INC. YESTERDAY f Bob I worried boot the X-UIX). When the plane runs into storm over the mountains, moun-tains, he In rerlnln thnt It will rrnali. that the A-1WU will explode. There las one rhanee. for esrnne. Quickly, he foreea Carolyn to don x& pnrnchute linrneaft, orders her to Jump. Mie kisses him, leaps Into blackness. . SAFE LANDING CHAPTER XVIII never knew what . pAROLYN strange, age-old Impulse within with-in her made her ..take that utterly impossible leap from the airplane. It was as if she had been stripped of all superficialities, all earthly pretense, when she had lingered there that last moment in the ship. Bob was crazed with anxiety for her. He had ordered her to jump. She was unafraid! And now, actually in the midnight mid-night storm, she still experienced no great terror. Her senses were temporarily numbed. She had shut her eyes tight against rain. She felt a harsh whirring, then a sense of ethereal, timeless floating float-ing as if in some fantastic nightmare. night-mare. First genuine consciousness returned re-turned when her ears began to "pop," as one's ears do in a swift elevator descent Next instant she realized the rain was gone and there was even a hint of visibility. "OH-H-h-h-h!" The shriek was snatched out of her mouth. But now she was aware! She clawed at the metal ring on her chest. WHOO-O-O-o-o-sh! Invisible arms grabbed her, pulled her, snatched her, turned her crazily around and then she began rocking. The wind changed to a smaller cross breeze, and there was a singing tautness in her head. Breath came in gasps. In the same moment, which had begun with a high point of fright, a triumphant exaltation seized her. Something in this appealed to her youth! Here was excitement! Daring! Dar-ing! Adventure! Success! She had no time to reason about that but presently her alert senses did tell her that she had literally dropped away from the storm. The worst part of it now was far overhead and driving toward the horizon. A flash of frenzy assailed her Bob Hale was still up there! but common sense made her look immediately im-mediately to her own welfare. For him she could only utter a quick, devout little prayer. The pilot had said they were over mountains and she . didn't doubt it. Obviously,' then, she would strike one of them "at any moment. She looked down. There was an irregular black void, swelling and bulging and boiling. But no! The apparent boiling was due not to its motion, but to her own. "In a minute in just a minute!" min-ute!" She could not actually Fpeak through the swift air stream, but she knew she was about to strike earth again and she wanted to do it safely. . She had no knowledge of landing land-ing technique. She realized only that she must land and then instantly in-stantly get out of her parachute before it dragged her. She felt she could do that. She loosened a buckle tentatively. The odd sense of elation and adventure in her was still strong. It was somehow comparable to riding a horse in a .wild run, or being towed swiftly on an ocean surf board. The end came in an abrupt jarring jar-ring that shook her hard, heels to teeth, plus a rolling and a scrambling scram-bling and a wholly feminine shriek. For a long minute she was dazed. - "Lordy!" she murmured, then. 'T'lIE landing had been much harder than she had imngined. She was bruised all over. She sat on rocks. Wet, blond curls were plastered over her face. She had no hat whatever had become of that, anyway,- she wondered. Her heart was pounding. And there, not too far off, WB3 a quite unmistakable un-mistakable mountain. She stood up. "Well!" she said, inadequately. She saw her parachute down the slope, flopping lazily. She had no idea how she ever got loose from the harness. She looked around. She looked up. There were stars in half the sky. The storm? A remote black spot, still doing some thunder growling but fleeing like a beaten pup. She took a few steps. She was still on rocks. Then a pin point of light assailed her from a distance dis-tance and below, two pin points. She concentrated on them; yes, they reallv were moving. "A road!" But it was a long distance away and, unreasonably, she was suddenly sud-denly terrified. She gave no thought to her remarkable exhilaration ex-hilaration during the jump. Some how that senseless plunge from an airplane, by a girl who had never done such a stunt before, did not seem frightening in the least, but here on good solid ground all manner of imaginary bugaboos loomed. In later, calmer hours, friends were destined to laugh at the feminine in that. i CHE walked about three miles to the road, slipping and sliding, falling over the rough ground. More cars following those first two guided her. She was wet and cold, but tha exercise of walking warmed her. She was happy to find a pavement. pave-ment. She stood there waving, thinking frantically now of Bob Hale. The first car to approach her slowed down, wavered, then went on. The next one stopped. A slender, wet girl waving here after midnight ! "Trouble, miss?" a genial voic inquired. "Oh! Oh, yes!" Then and only then did Carolyn Tyler act normally. nor-mally. There before a complete stranger she broke down and cried. Her Samaritan was distressed. It took him half an hour to hear her out, to comfort her and warm her with his coat, to . walk incredulously in-credulously back toward her parachute para-chute and then return without seeing it, and to start with her toward town. He felt that he had picked up some sort of miracle, lie was a pleasant gentleman, past middle age, to whom such things just never happened. I can never thank you enough, Carolyn began, when she was calm again. "Are can you tell me where we are?" "This is in Arizona, miss. Were you lost up there long?" "Years, I think. I must know what happened to my friend! Is Arizona nothing but mountains? Oh. I'll go crazy if " "Now, now, miss, take it easy. There's not many people, but some. I looked on the gasoline map. Little place name of Blair is next community, and " "Blair?" She sat up. "That's where where oh, how far from Boulder Dam is Blair? Where is there a landing field? No! He said he would jump, too! Or maybe "Look, mister, have you heard an explosion? Any kind of noise? A really BIG noise? So big that that!" She stopped, thinking frantically. fran-tically. The driver glanced once at her. Then he swallowed, and nodded in kindly sympathy. Plainly he had to rush this stranded girl to a doctor, he told himself; delirium was setting in, (To Be Continued) |