OCR Text |
Show PROVO 'UTAH) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2 4, 1935 PAGE SEVEN t 4 5 1 1 nt m i n njrnn ran rns i . l For WANT ADS Phone Want ads will appear on the Classified Ad Page If they are in the office before W a. m.( after which they will appear in the column "Too Late lor Classification." Classifica-tion." Want Ada will be accepted until 1 p. in., except on Saturday, when they will appear ap-pear in Sunday's issue if phoned into the office by 4. p. m. Rates First insertion, per line 1U cents, cc.jh additional insertion, inser-tion, per line 5 cents; one jreel:, per line 3' cents; two weeks, per line 50 cents; one month, per line 9U cents. (Minimum charge, 25 cents.) Count live words to line. Minimum accepted, two lines. Double price will be charged if payment Lb delayed delay-ed or collector must call. Legal Rate 1U cents per line per insertion, in-sertion, H pt, type. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS MILK cows. V. Christensen. K. F. D. 1. Box 75 J24 FOR quality c.r.i n.ht pno-call pno-call R D. W ells. 07.14 GO(I youne burses. I:.q ("barb-.-Peterson. 265 Hast 4 So j3 1 1ST. elas bay deiKvreii. Any amount ativwber.v $10 50. 1103 .No. 5 West " Phone 502 W. j24 3 BKKOI'kK buying your coal be 1 Mire to j' l n toii'-h with us We will treat you nbt on excellent nualitv ioal Hill Hi s Coal Co Phone 12i. 12," Center. j24 Cl'AR coal arid wtir.t $5 no ton 157 N 1 F l'lv-ru- 1144W.' 1 14 f tl'VY'TAl. r. 1 1 M ei 1 XA i( -S on brushes imiIis, diist.-iy. polishes Phone A M.ih' V, H)m;V or 111.! to! 1'vne. l'h'ine i2.K-. ,r 1144W Hi W AN T E D M IS pj. L I . ANEOUS 2 I.Ai'IKS v.i':t n iiisp"ruit " -n tu ( L..s Arik;-l'- ('.ill . l ;-.'." TO KKNT f. !-...ni h. .n.f el ' m Call 1HU. J'-'t jLIVF poultry Hii.-b.-st cash price?. Phone lL'T.'U KH W. fiUi So. lb FOR SALE OR TRADE ' COAL br .o.i.-r w "h m chick?, laying lay-ing h-ns. i.ar:ty. : a bbits. pi-e.jns pi-e.jns 2c- t.. r.O ''in l'oxmr . I gloves, bl.u k i:i..rit k hi..- to i r id-' id-' for elec. ua-nb .!..) and chit k.-n wire I'r-ov.. 1 ' t V.iid l." S 5th W.-st. JJ5 ClFOR RENT -UNFURNISHED A 5 KM. mo. ten: CI...-, .i: Also rm. rr.o-1 l;t t t: ! .n !' i i n.- T H H.-al T'i i'J.) FOR RENT BRICK Kara.m- near B Y C ' Phone 21JW. j-J4 This Curious LEAP FOR THE SUMMER'S CROP OF LEAVES. FORMED ON THE TREES IN THE EARLV SUMMER MONTHS OFW34 'it, 1935 BY NEA SERVICE, INC, H 'i ANV OF OUR. COMMON ON AN AVERAGE OF ONCE. Real Estate Trades! TRADE Corner lot property ' Four room modern house - -paved street priced $2500. TKADE - Two Acres Beautiful Orchards Four Room house--Alpine Priced $2300. STOKE Doing- good business land and building $2500 business opportunity may consider Provo property. prop-erty. STORK Land, Building Four Room Home - Established Establish-ed business - Small investmentIdeal in-vestmentIdeal living for a merchant. FA KM Ideal Ten Acres, Orem -Orchard, modern house water" and lights team, implementsowners leaving leav-ing Priced $4000. i K.M 00 Acres Six Room house, outbuildings trade for home any city Utah County. SAFE Ideal Old Home, divided two apartments near B Y. U. Rented good lot all furnished owners own-ers leaving. FARMS- Uinta Basin - Trades or Sales. S N'ev.- Five Room Home, half basement - lights, water good irrigation water, TWENTY ACRES BAND most productive land, valued $12,000 --Now --Now for $6500. TERMS Can be Arranged. TKADE Ten Acres Land in ox-eelent ox-eelent Orchard Water-Rented Water-Rented "Want a Provo Home. RANCH Fifteen minutes from Provo - 11 Acres -Land lOo Aeres mountain ground all for $.'5050 May tradf. (, MONEY TO LOAN l-'IKE INSI KAN( E o PHONE 10D9 Willard L. Sowards REAL ESTATE BROKER HO West 'Jncl North, Provo, Ftah Those who want Homes, Farms, Ranches, any size, and good buys Pirn- Insurance see PROWS A: HAWS X5 N. ( niv. Ae - Phone 018 MAY STRAW Sterling 'H: Nelson Co. Call Pn.vo 022-J-l f(J Business Card THE GENERAL SHOP 159 No. Univ. Ave. Stoves and furnace repairing. Grates and lininp.s furnished for all makes. We clean chimneys at reasonable prices. We buy, sell and exchange used furniture. Free call and delivery service. We pay cash for used furniture. Phone 915W. Satisfaction guaranteed. guaran-teed. Geo. Bills. M?r. BOARD AND ROOM FOR business or pi . .f. ssional people. peo-ple. Med. rates :i5T K 1 S. JL'H CJOOD l;oard ami room. 1G0 East Center. Phone SSI. jl!S LOST BROWN purs,- with B Y. V. student stu-dent activity card Return to Herald. Reward. j'27 to World fC- ALTHOUGH SPEND MONTHS., AND E.VEr4 YEARS, N REACHING AAATURiTV, MOST OP THEM LIVE ONLV LONG ENOUGH IN THE ADULT STAGE TO LAV THEIR EGGS. 935 BIRDS FEED THEiR VOUNG EVERY FIFTEEN MINUTES, PERSONALS i MEETING of Carpenter's local 1498. Friday. 7:30 p. m. Hotel Roberts. j3-10-17-24-31. F-7-14-21-28 m-7-14. WE PAY up to $2 for LINCOLN j PENNIES over 9 INDIAN HEADS, dime for buying: years old;; $25. Send ! catalog. H. 1 Coin Co., Hollywood, Calif. j24 mSCELLAOl DANCING at Utahna Gardens Wed. and Sat. Harry Black-well's Black-well's orchestra every Sat. Dob Orton's Music every Wed. j31 FOR RENT FURNISHED 4 RM. apt. Steam heat. elec. equip. 172 W. 2nd So. Phone 1430. j30 5 RM. mod. Close in. Phone T. H. Heal. 870. j25 BOOTS AND HER WHERE? WOT (AMY, I DONT SEE COME ON LETS DlDYA WANT WASH TUBBS Tickles mule, ESCAPES DOOMED TO BE EXECUTED, EASY WifS'UTOKTVlOVEL IDEA. mule kicks hole 1w prison! when tickled with straw. ALLEY OOP SALESMAN SAM 1 V-ACi T'eZccz S IT yep, THS IS OU21EMS CS-eMERL. .OR-E-,, THE FLRCE. Of ri(A3Cl SERVICE. pRWATe. SAM HOUJDy SPECIAL KlTTEUS FOR. SLE TH UTTfeR. -f Or s FRECKLES AND IT WAS BAD ENOUGH WRITING A COMPOSITION LIKE THE ONE YOU WROTE ABOUT THAT TRAIN.... BUT WHEN YOU PRETENDED IT ALL HAPPENED "To YOU PHOOGY Phone 495 lolwnns Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Pag-e One) end he pared costs to the bone. He fired postal employees right and left. He reduced services. He put into force policies exactly the reverse of his chief in the White House who was urging private business to increase wages and reduce hours. And after one hectic year, Jim finally came forth with the joyous announcement that he had closed his books with a surplus of $12,-161.415.03. $12,-161.415.03. This was just like sticking out an unprotected jaw to Republican critics. They gleefully came back with figures showing that actually BUDDIES IT, WOW 1 LOOK. r THERE IT IS ....THAT ''.'J ' ' '"" " KJOW OR WE.VEP, LADDIETUJUOQPCPI T A 7- iinnnv; v imm V rrms m i U f'JfT . ill JIC. Mm Jlfv m rlCI I I'M MDC N 2-uPTFl Akjd I'm. CfLLIW5- FOR. M.R.S. 0V aOVj OOtrO-Y Pups fob. sell x HIS FRIENDS 1 HOPE THE TEACHER GIVES YOU AM F-MINUS-IT'S SILLY ENOUGH TO HAVE CRAZY DAY DREAMS, WITHOUT LYING IN" THE BARGAIN. f lU. If l i -mi w W.JU i , i V&V-tAMX SURE HATE TO CM : .. .-mil M v the bargain: : y he had a deficit of more' than J $52,000,000. I Jim's legerdemain had been ac-i uumpiisnea uy omitting me cost of franked mail, ocean and air mail contracts. STAMP CAMOUFLAGE i 1 The actual fact is that underneath under-neath an elaborate camouflage created by selling ornate new stamp issues, Jim Farley's post office department has reached the lowest state of inefficiency in years. Complaints from businessmen have swamped the administration. Deliveries are sometimes two or three days behind schedule. Even in the city of Washington letters have required two days to go from one department to another. What Jim forgot was the human hu-man element. Despite the tremendous tre-mendous mechanization of the postal system, it cannot function efficiently without efficient, willing will-ing workers. And Jim had ground his postal employees down to such a point that they have gone sour on him. Typical of Jirn's postal administration admin-istration was an incident which occurred in the National Emer-j Emer-j gency Council. The postmaster I general complained that govern-I govern-I merit departments were misaddressing misad-dressing mail, that his department - c-y SOLDIERS ARE CAU0HT OFP GUARD wash and EASY CK XEM LIKE WILDCATS. 'COME ON, ALLEY - HURRY N may Be our onlychawce "TO ESCAPE WE VCA I I .... - . ... 1 twl-l -v LI ft A A W i i - i i a i Ar- m wlx l'd 21 SHE HSM'T A Phong. AMD SHE A-S.K.EO MS. To ORDER FOR, A 3AR. OF RouG-e- ( OK'.I HAPPEN To AND V'LL. SEND VT i 1 such a PEArn A h 'eM JSJ MR .WILSON SENT J y ' ' '' ME TO BRIMS J VEf1' j j1 'fe FRECKLES TO y I W HAMA.' THE PRlklCIPAL had to spend much time read-1 dressing. j The president asked Jim to bring in a report. Jim did. And : obviously reading it for the first j time, he blushed, stammered and stopped. Then, continuing to the : end, he revealed that his own de- partment was the worst offering, j ! MERRY-GO-ROUND - The face of Huey Long appeared appear-ed in the office of every senator and congressman on Capitol Hill one day last week. It stared out from the cover of a magazine featuring fea-turing an article on "The Mad Tyrant of Louisiana." The magazine maga-zine was broadcast gratis. . . . Young Jack Greenway, son of Arizona's congress wo man, distinguished distin-guished himself the second day after enrolling "Tn a Washington private school last week. He was the only pupil in the fifth grade j who knew the meaning of the word "apprentice." . . . The navy ; band is an organization of many I units: a military band, a symphony orchestra, and two dance orches-I orches-I tras. It is not supposed to leave , Washington while the president is in town. . . . Agriculture's bureau of entomology, in a bulletin bulle-tin warning against the Black Widow Spider, more dangerous than the trantula, makes the mild observation, "it is well to avoid Cone To Think of it; BG-TTER- SEND TCOO JftR.5 uj omly got Tooo JftRS (M Tve. PL Ace., AN' That aJON'T LEAVE Akiy HR.E FER. US TO sell' owe. oos-hta e.e FMOUGKf r r r' tr TfTl PI I NEVER SAW P U j ONE JOS' UKE I I T 6TORE j V IftitT. I ZC? 1S3S BY NEA Sf.RVlCE. INC. T. M. REG. U. S TAT. OFF ' VU- XM ( s v lT 6URE WAS A KINDA C THERE'S T-E ANSWER.') ttf ' wffll5 AM ( NIGHTMARE PLACE - LOOK AT THE BlGr, ' 'ful JJfc'Mjl' I EVER GLAP &UT I WONDER WHAT NO-GOOD, 1 1 t$r2P V TO &E OUT ) S EVER HAPPENED LAZY Lp, , rTTUV . OF THAT TO OL DfNNY LOAFER ( , 'l ( AWFUL.) Jl-S V I'LL.&e-) f V'jitS iflfi'1 JkjJr JzA A (S) 92S BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. Rgq 0. . AT. OfFS being bitten if possible," . . When the present term of congress is i completed, Adolph J. Sabath of Illinois will have served an unbroken un-broken thirty years as representative. represen-tative. He is the only member entering on his fifteenth term. Speaker Joseph W. Byms of Tennessee Ten-nessee and Edward T. Taylor of Colorado are close behind him. They are starting their fourteenth terms. ... In the senate, William Wil-liam E Borah matches Sabath in length ' of service. Behind him are Duncan Fletcher of Florida and Ellison D. Smith of South Carolina, who have been serving continuously since March 4, 1909. (Copyright 19S4, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) PAYSON I MRS. A. R. WPSON Correspondent Phone ft j !- ' Under the direction of the activity activ-ity committee of the Second ward a fine entertainment for all ward members was presented in the : recreation hall last week. A one-act one-act play " Second Best," was given I under the direction of Edna Snow j and Mildred obnson. The cast in-i in-i eluded Arthur Taylor, Bernice Tiu fcAV CLV5TC OF AN ERRAND E-CUE. ME FOR A FEW MINUTEG, WIL-L YCXJ? MoT for. HER I she's o Docxyone-o ) TViO- FACED I ' nii y we service, iwc t m nec o wt of f i ' -"rSZz i j, r ----- ' : '"' " r ADDRESS THE ASSEMBLY, AMD TELL THE SCHOOL HOW HE AND NUTTY COOK. AVERTED A TERRIBLE TRAIN WRECK J JfwwffTTTfi I B I Nelson, Edna Snow, Deon Bills, Lester Robinson and Rulon Hend-rick'son. Hend-rick'son. A reading waaglven t)y Miss " Pearl Johnson; vocal solo. Dale Reece; two dance numbers, Jack Snow; selections, Ladies Chorus directed by Carl O. Nei-i son. Mrs. Audrey Roland and son Reed left Sunday night for Vegas, Nevada, for a two weeks vacation trip. The members of the Nebo stake M. I. A. boards gave a social in the First ward recreation hall Sat-' urday night in honor of those who took part in the stake M. I. A. play and road show act. A program pro-gram was followed with dancing. Mrs. Stanley Done has returned home from Los Angeles where she has been visjiingf for several weeks with Mr. Done. Mrs. Dave Shuler entertained the members of her night bridge club Saturday evening. Dinner was served before the game with cards placed for Mr. and Mrs. Selby uixon, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. I .Barney. Dr. and. Mrs. J. H. i Ellsworth, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hillman, Mrs Florence Griffith, I Mrs. Ann Butterworth, Miss Madge Fairbanke, Miss Jennie Fairbanks, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent . Gilhool Mrs. Butterworth and , Mr Gilhood received the prizes. BY MARTIN I JUST THOUGHT SURE... 1 HAVE TO OO- "X BUN OM j 1 cee, i ( ( COULP SPEND A- AT THINGS HERS BY CRANE WHAT -A FI6HT TVVO AQA1MST SIX. A BATTLE FOR PREEDONf- A BATTta FOR UFE. WASH IS DOWN. HS'S UP HE'S D0WKI EASY TO THE RESCUE, SLUG6IN6, KlCUlUGJ 6UTTIKIG. HE GRABS AN En&MY" RlPLE HE'S BAT TING THEIR MEADS VVOTTA FIGHTER- PA' HAMLIN BY SMALL BY BLOSSER ( PARDON MY FACS FOR L LAUGHING IN I YOURS V X (c; 1935 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. ftEC U. S. PAT. Off. IV W ' s -- "- VI I DURING THE DAYTIME i-Zl |