OCR Text |
Show L PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HER ALP, TILURSDAY, M A Y 2 9, 1 9 3 0. iV I WW i i hi f ii"w T " I f ?,Ttrf-Canffcld ink MeiraM A SCRIPPS-CANFIELD NEWSPAPER Every Afternoon,. except Saturday, and Sunday Ilornln; , Published by the Herald Corporation, N. Ounnar Rasmuson, president. In the nerald Buildin, 60 South First West street. Provo. Utah. Entered as second-class matter, at the postbfflce In Provo, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. -jthht t-hmrtf Gllman, Nlcoll & Ituthznan,' National Advertising Representative Can Francisco ' '. Wrhotit offlct, 607 Montgomery street; Chicago office, 410 North Michigan avenue; VT-? l Nsw Tork efflce, 19 West Forty-fourth street; Boston office, 18 Tremont , c tha land y street; Detroit. MlcMganx.fflce, Room 2-203. General Motors Building. Cubscrlptlon terms By carrier In titan coutftyrXOent the month; - J2.75 for six months. In ad- vmci v w u wu;f y mau, in ua county, ouisiaa utan county, $5.00. It. W. GOODELL, Editor, and Manager. J. A. OWENS. Advertising Manager Neither this newspaper, nor auy of its stockholders or officials has any connection whatever directly r- ' ;or indirectly, with any poliUcal party, piibllo utility, real estate promotion or other private business except the publication of newspapers devoted solely to disinterested publid Service. 4 ft G 6). Ilowdv. folks! Whv not erect a itattie, to the greatest, benefactor of the human racet We ' refeV, rentlemeo, to the man who Invent ed etrawberry shortcake, (Cheers.) '' v:- v v-t. ; Little , Homer - Provocation Jp, wants to know who Mike Huhtfy is. He says every morning at school they sinz Mike Huntry. Tis Of rhee!" . v .; - ' ; Bargain Offer. ' I When Lawyer a Tru To.Censor Newspapers ' L Comrnentlnfir on the fight to ; sileiice the Los Angeled, Record and so prevent justice being meted out to the wreck-era wreck-era of J ulian Petroleum, William Gibbs McAdoo says that: "Liberty itself will be a mere shadow if, thru admin-strative admin-strative tyranny or any form, of-censorship, the right to freely speak; write and publish opinion. shall be compromised or denied." ; t - '.XiJ-' - l A . That is the essence of the Los Angeles battle, in which a publisher and two editors are sought to be silenced by a clique of the local bar association. The newspaper, seeking some sort of justice for 40,000 westerners who were swindled "but; of $50,000,000 in the Julian crash, told a few wholesome .truths that proved embarrassing em-barrassing to certain lawyers. ' The lawyers thereupon turn around and seek to enlist the machinery of the courts to :stop publications of these truths ; to impose a censorship upon the paper's utterances. ThisJs arbitrary censorship hi its worst form. There is atleast a basis for rargument in the Idea that a government may censor certain .things,' but even a government govern-ment has no right to censor opinion-Tnd the men who drew up our Bill of Rights expresslyfsaid so .. , But there is no argument whatever in the notion that private citizens may censord the'opihlons of their neighbors, muih less resort to the courts to suppress that opinion. , ,0- ThU hiJTdv uttle hvcrauUo press U jut the tjig for squeectog (Tapea or cracking walnutt.. Ei-crta Ei-crta a preMuro of 1000 tons. ' With tUs machine, you can vert close the lid of a trunk after your wife baa 'pftcked $0 to CO, cubic feet of 2tMng In It! Write for partica-UrsJ;-', .. ' , . ;v. . : ; .'':- .'.' -'T. I' . 1A' , Oee Gee says a she always rides 'In a yellow taxicab, because! It hirmonlies ; so weU with ' he -jaundice..;' . ,.-t...,,.'-V',-;',;.''f., niinlno leaders say they want lnd5rndtnce like ours. 1 : Come neoDle never . know .when they are well bffi u. - f . ''' " ' I WtFE EDICT IRKS SPOUSE! J - ' ; rbr ; twenty - years; OmarMV. . fiancaae; n been humble ' and obedient huS- '- band, but, today he flatly revolted arainst one ox his wife's' decis ions. - "If you. Jn-slst Jn-slst upon ; wear ing a pair or those new beach pajamas, t h 1 summer, ho an nounced, "dcrned If I wont stroll around In my. old flannel idtht-shirt!' Correepondents describe the Graf Zpplin as " a great, , sUver cigar." Uut we'd hate to see anyone touch a match to it! 1 ' ) Will Hays has prohibited movies that "bring ridicule on human or natural laws. v ' . V' - :'. -v Dom this mean, they have to quit spoofing the law of gravitation? -ART SHANNON. OUT OUR WAY When the natives of Tibet meet friends they stick out their tongues, i this corresponds ;to the American handshake. V . The Soviet football team which was recently denied permission to tour England was. probably consld ered better at Russian than the . ... 4, i .mi. m i .in i i ... YOUR QUESTIONS . Vou can get an answer to any j answerable question of fact or j Information by writing to Fred- ertck BL Klrby, Question Edl- tor. JProvo - Evening - Herald's Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, , D. Cj- enclosing two cents , in stampa tor reply. Medical and legal -advice cannot be given, j nor Can extended . research be j made. , All other questions wiU ba answered. All letters , are j confidential. You are cordially Invited to make use of this free j j service aa often as you please, j i - EDITOR. 1 .r. " . . . ' .... ,. TEE. OBSERVER By JIM MARSHALL I The ' Wedding .; Month ; of June Jtrne Brides and their friends will be interested in a packet of fiye ofrour Washingtoh Bureau's In formative and authoritative bulletins. Here are the titles: x , v - - ' -;Y . 1 Shower Parties. ' ' . : . 2. Etiquette for Weddings. - ... , 3.. I.Iarriag and Happiness: . 4. Budffetin and House Accounts. "v" ": . 5v Cooking for Two. - . , ' V-. Ifjyou want this packet of bulletins, fill out thc coupon'below and mail as directed: ' ; . CI4P; COUPON; HERE' JUNE BRIDES EDITOtt, : ., J. .; :. . r . -- . Washington Bureau; Prove Evening Herald,-' ' 13?2 t New V York! Avenue, .Washington, D. C. ' ; ' :" ' - ' ' - -" I want the JUNE BRIDE'S PACKET of five builetins, and enclose herewith fifteen cents in. oQln. or loose uncancelled U. S. pdstage atampso cover postage and hahdiing costs: . - I- , . - . - i 'V--" ' ' :.vv;'rV'.-V:Vv'v-:rhi'-. NAME ; ..: .. ST. & no. ...... LrZTV. -, n- CITY ; ...... STATU ' - . .-.. v.- r , . ; I am , a" reader of ,tho' Provo Evening Herald. ' , . i ;; ' : t 0. CLIP : COUPON HERE - . - ' . . - '- .,:, , . xr" Mu-Tid .GZSZZi Q.. Who is the American governor govern-or of the' Virgin Islands? Is St. Thomas one oa' the group? A. Capt. Walda Evans, U. S. N. retired, is governor of the Virgin Islands. St. Thomas is one o the islands of the group. q. How many railroads of various va-rious clashes are there in the United States, and how is the class determined? deter-mined? A: There are 169 Class 1 railroads rail-roads in te United States; 251 Class 2 railroads, and 333 Class 3 railroads. rail-roads. Class 1 roads are those with operating revenues above , $1,000, 000: Class 2, thoa with operating revenues from $100,00 to $1,000,000; and Class 3, those with operating revenues below $100,0000. Q. Who' founded the College ol the City of New York? - - , j J . a Rlne the beginning of the 18th century the idea of a coUege iff the-, City of New xorK nas oeen cussed among the citizens, and when in 1754 a fund of about thirty-five thirty-five hundred pounds had been obtained, ob-tained, mainly through public lotteries, lot-teries, a royal charter for King's college col-lege was obtained from George II, and in the following year Trinity church gave, a plot of land on what is now Murray street and West Broadway. The work of instruction began with Dr. Samue.1 Johnson aa president and sole instructor, and eight students. TUe first college, building was erected on a portion of the King farm and' was comple 14 In 1700. - - v 1 Q. How many children are there In the royal family of Belgium? A. Albert, king -of the Belgiums and Queen Elizabeth, have three children. Prince Leopold, mnce Charles . ana f rincess maim who recently married the crown-prince crown-prince of Italy. - Or "What presidenl of the Unltea States lived the longest?' " ' " . a .fohn Adams, who was 90 years 8 months and 15 days old at his death. - Q. 1 What is -the correct abbrevia ttnn fn "AHJIfXrlflSlTml'? . i I ' ' A." Ass., Assn., AssW and Assoc. o--wh la the -resent welter weight boxing champion ?;v; !'' '-'A. Young Jack Thompsons wnO recently won the title from Jackie Fields,-on a decision in 15 rounds, at Detroit, Mich. . Q. When ;was John J. Pershing given his commission as general? A. He was appointed as emergency emerg-ency srenefal October 6, 1917,' and was. confirmed by the United States senate as "General of Armies 01 tne United States" on September 4, 1919. Qj What happened to the Sol diers who were convicted of murder in connection . with the Houston. Texas, riot in 19177 A. The thirteen soldiers convicted were duly hanged by legal process. Q. How far will a Springfield rifle shoot? I A. Filtysix hundred yards. TODAY (Continued From Page One) Jacques Gordon, famous violinist, carrying a $40,000 Stradivarjus. once owned by Paglnini, dressed himself in threadbare clothes and ninvfid on the' sidewalks of Michi gan avenue, with a 11U16 cigar box to collect coins. H'KPt few on five and' ten cent pieces, very few. for a concert for which he woum ordinarily be. paid $1,000. . -. Snrnwins concludes that the ex periment proves great reputations to be "an bauynoo. It proves : only that reputations are feal, but hearers are ignorajit. In London, a' man in a crowded street offered genuine gold" sovereigns, sover-eigns, worth $5 for sixpence each. He didn't- sell any.; The soyereignt were good, trie, crowd Was skeptical. D WIGHT PwC MORROW is. expected ex-pected to tell the voters of New. Jersey: tomorrow that he is not a candidate for president In 1932, and he doesn't want antagonism antagon-ism between himself and President Hoover. ',;: " '7 The presidential suggestion came from Mr. McBrlde, of the Anti-Saloon Anti-Saloon league, who probably would not grieve tat friction between the president, dry, and Dwight Morrow, officially wet. 1 Mr. Morrow, in business a long time, has learned to do one thing at a time. He isn't' thinking about one job while working to get another. Editors, have their gloomy moments mo-ments when they "grow.tiredof it all" and we have just been reading a homily, directed to his parish by a newspaper owner,'- -who writes that: ... i v . -, -"man is not virtuous by nature but "evllwhlch means he is by nature ; inclined to 'do thing's, he ought not todo . , . . this l lamlliar and lying-oli philosophy we presume arose from the non-payment of his subscription by one? of .the editor's readers . -or..elea the editor- had. taken- a drink and was in the process of regretting re-gretting it We dont know .who invented the Idea, that - man is not "virtuous by nature"' - - - "t ' or (hat he Is fundamentally evil - we know . lots of people who believe be-lieve both those things - and ,go thru life determined to make people "good" -according to some dtrange code of morals - . apparently put together for the purpose of restraining everyone from getting - the f slightest enjoyment enjoy-ment out of life ; . ' Virtue is after: all a human in-venion in-venion f , . composed mainly of "don'ta" and designed to rorce people into repressing re-pressing every-human instinct they have it i based on the idea that naturewhich na-turewhich after all has had slightly slight-ly more experience than humanity is all wrong and that the apex of man's ambition should be to live as unnaturally as possible ' ' . 1 What is Considered evil in one part of the world is considered good in another "Virtue" mean one thing to an American girl and something quite the opposite to some Zulu belle and something else again to the 'Japanese 'Jap-anese girl '. . maybe this editor is wise enough to know, whether the white race or the. black or the yellow race Is right but that's more than we do . -: ... However if white folks are evil in their customs then black folks and Vellow folks must be good and what becomes of the idea that ALL men are evil? And If all over the world-there world-there are 57 kinds of virtue who among us is safe enough to point to one brand and say "This is right and all the others. are wrong?" AND, LISTEN: All nature is good and all men are good according accord-ing to their lights if they 1 have a chance and aren't badgered around by professional ' world-saviors all the time. SCIENCE . I . . Where the picturesque pioneers used pick and shovel four decades ago, mining is conducted today in Leadville, Colo., by engineers with highly scientific devices. . An ore reduction mill, housed in a huge underground chamber, blasted from solid granite, was recently put in operation there. One of the principal reasons., for building-the mill underground was to prevent, as far as possible! the oxidization of ores taken fiom the mine. Experiments arc being conducted conduct-ed with ore to pro'S' definitely whether or not even the slightest oxidization increases the difficul ties of separation of the lead and zinc from the rock. Today's Oddity j A 1 The world's largest and most beautiful sapphire, 958 carats, was found lying on the top of the ground recently by a native of Burma. The native, with six of his fellow fel-low men, had saved for years In order or-der to go deep Into the jungle to dig for jewels. ' 0 ' It was while clearing the ground in preparation for the digging that the native spied what appeared to be a large pebble. .-. , : , He picked it up and looking at it closely- discovered that if was a magnificent sapphire. ' The stone is said by experts to be the largest, most nearly perfect and the most valuable stone of its kind in the world. - - I Natureland I U : 1 Altho numerous, the weasel is not known to most people. This is due, largely, to its habit of coming forth only at night. While the animal Is small it js ex tremely vicious. It preys upon rats. mice, rabbits, birds and other ani mals with tireless energy and "great courage.; It has the blood-sucking habit of , the vampire. It fastens Itself to the neck of its prey and sucks the blood from them. It eats little flesh and generally Rills many moro. animals than it needs for food-' In length it ranges from 12 to IS inches, the body is very slender and in color it is brown above and whilo or pale yellow below. The weasel lives in holes under walls, rocks and trees. George Hossfield of Paterson. N. J., recently became the world's champion typist; ne wrote an -av erage of 135 words a minute. The French government bought the famous statue of Venus de Milo for only $300; it is now worth many times that amount. In at 10 -Out at 4 Kodak Finishing: HEDQUIST ' 2 DRUG STORES & KODAK SHOP 5 y J nn Vo) o VJhen tempted to over-indulge 1 yyIieS!g!fo for .so 1 t- : ,.. ii- mm .. ... IwiiiMiy f I lfV X cast their . , A ' shadows beforo' I VaVsJJ ' . fl, f xJ ( L & - ' I - ' j : Ja I C , t 'W" S t . f IS ' ' if' Jj- ' : u: j n tun :v - Be moderate hermoderate In all things even in smoking. Avoid that future shadow by avoiding overindulgence, over-indulgence, if you would maintain that modern, ever-youthful figure. "Reach for a tweky instead." Lucky Strike, tho finest C i g arc t a ryx u.ovor smoked made of tho finest tobacco Tho Cream of tho Crop ''IT'S TOASTED' Lucky Striko has" an extra, secret heating process. Everyone Every-one knows that heat purifies and so 20,679 physicians say that Luckies are loss irri tating to your throat. COUII American mothers whose " sons had been killed in the war laid wreaths on the tomb of the unknown French soldier; , A French general who had seen royal ty and statesmen visit that tomb said he had never seen such deep feeling as those mothers showed. A Naturally. Only a mother, whose son has been killed, knows what war "means. . TUNE IN. Tit, Luckr Swlk" Imnce Orclve-" trm, rrerf Stur- dT Thur- OTir N.B. C sctnotkj. Your 7hrogt Protection against irritation against cough An investi gatiorj conducted by the Association of Life Insurance Medical Directors and the Actuarial Society . c f America revealed the fact that the death rate increases practically for every pound of excess weight - -carried between the ages" of 40 and 44 years. In other words, a man 40 pounds overweight at this age '". IMvas only 60 of the expectancy of life of a rhan of normal weight. We, do not represent that smoking Iv&Y Strike Cigarettes wiU bring modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh. We do declare that when r. - tetnpted to do yourself too well, if you will "Reach for a Lucky instead," you will thus avoid over-indulgence ' in things that cause excess weight and, by avoiding over-indulgence, maintain a modern, graceful form. - ' - -; - - 1930. Th Amertcta Tobieeo Co., Mfr. |