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Show "i - V' T 1 - 4 r ! - -v. r - - .-4 v " 4 .... . " - t M A 3k aM mi t-i & r c j . . t. i l; !. .1 - - - - v ti f v u jU T A'tiJ KyE r .i JN xrE KA LTDj M QyN P A:YKltflrril 1 6, 1 936 PAGE SKVE WANT ADS PHONE 495 Want ada will appear on the Classified Ad Pag If thfey &fe in the office before 9 A. m., after which they will appear in the column 'Tod Late Tor Classification." Classifica-tion." Want Ads will be accepted until l pt m., 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 10 Cents; each additional Insertion, Inser-tion, per line 5 cents; one week, per line 30 cents; two weeks, per line 50 cent; one month, per line 90 cents. Minimum charge, 25 cents.) Count five words to line. Minimum accepted, 2 lines. Double price will be charged if payment is delayed delay-ed or collector must call. Legal Rate 10 cents per line per insertion, in-sertion, 8 pt. type. 2 T. TRUCK. $55. " Studebaker aedan. $25. Riverside Wreckage. ml7 MODEL T Sedu.i, $15. 128 West 4th South. ml7 5150 CREDIT on new Chev. Inq. 157 No. 10th West. ml7 MODEL. ILFord. Good condition. Reas. Ph. 06J3. Orem. ml6 CHEV ton truck. Any reas. offer accepted. 554 E. 1st South. ml3 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING FOR Painting, papering, interior decorating. Ph. 253W. Work guar. Kirkwood Painters. al2 FOR dependable wall paper cleaning. clean-ing. Phone 902J. ml7 BOD AND BD.' and rm. Oil ISroocleri' 100 ca" pacity for sale. 137 S. 5 W. m27 STEAM board. heated bedroom and 215 So. 4th E. ml6 FOR RENT FURNISHED 1 RM. for 1 or 2 people. 260 East 2nd No. m22 STRICTLY mod. 4 rm. apt. Close in. Ph. 1015W. m22 MOD. steam heated apt. with private bath. 339 E. 6 No. m22 2 RM. apt. basement. Acce?s to bath and 339 N. 4th E. - ml 7 3 RM. mod. apt. 236 S. 1 E.Ph 118 day, 1002M evenings. rnl7 FURN. kitchenette 1st West. apt. 233 No. ml6 CLEAN, cheerful rm. in young couple'a mod. home, for responsible respons-ible hua. man. 107 E. 6th N. m20 2 AND 3 Rm. apts. heat. 442 N. 5 EL Lights and al5 3 RMTnod. heated apt., private bath, G. E. 142 E. 3 No. m20 jath, C BAN CLEAN 2 RM. modern apt. $15.00 month. 115 So. 3rd West. m21 SINGLE lower apt., elec. equipped. equip-ped. Adults. Ph. 1525J. 270 N. 1 East. al3 STARTUP'S Apis., 67 N. 1 W. Electrified, hall service. Pop. prices. ; . m3l PLUMBmd SERVICE For Depenoabie plumbing and service call Gilbert Field. 1395J 3 S . " 4 ADDS jv feJj ' 11! .i 1 1 Mi ' " - - - I . a -tit- 1 ' 1 I i iiiii-t iiif.i nin iM-vmuiMt i ATTRAtartVE! New-oderniv oonw PftETTY HOME 1 Contract Substantial Cash Payment re quined. 1 '1 . MORS FOU iSi kOkEVl five Room Giriek---Larg Lot, N.E. Provo Fireplace Furnace Fur-nace Cove Ceilings Ideal investment. in-vestment. FRUITS! Acres of beautiful young trees- bearlng Modern M Home coops poultry included State High way near Jtrovo. DAIRY FARM! 262 Acres 62 Deeded Home Outbuildings FIVE FLOWING WELLS Loamy Ground. MONEY! First Mortgage Security. PHONE 1099 Willard Lw Sowards 39 West Second North St., Provo, Utah LNTERMOUNTAIN REALTY 53 North University Avenue Opportunity is here! See our specials, homes, poultry farms, dairies, ranches, farms. Business and Fire Insurance. PHONE 456 Today's Best Buys! 1.30 Acs. Land, good 3 room br. house; built-in cabinets. Water and elec. lights. Barn, coops, good Jersey cow; 160 laying hens, all for only $1650; terms. 20 Acs. near Payson; 20 shares water; house and stack yards. Only $650; good terms. Dairy Farms, Fruit Farms, general gen-eral farms, building sites; lots, homes, apartment houses, business properties. Always the best in Real Estate, Loans and Insurance. Dixon Real Estate Co It's So If We Say So 236 W. Center St. - Phone 75 Business Card The General Shop 159 No. Univ. Ave. Stoves and furnace repairing Jrates and linings furnished for ill makes We clean chimneys and furnaces at reasonable prices. We buy. sell and exchange used furniture. . Free call ana delivery service We pay cash for nl furniture fhone filSW. Satisfaction guarant eed Gen. Bills. MgT. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS GARDEN and field seeds. City Feed Store. Phone 114. al6 PULVERIZED sheep manure. 35c tV,o cnrk riel Ph. 516. 460 W. 1 South. m20 8 WEEK old pullets. Inq. Utah Poultry Co. 55 W. 5 So. m20 HAY and seed wheat. A. F. An-dreasen, An-dreasen, Vineyard, Ph.j 016J1. m20 HAY $6, $7, $8, $9 $10, $11 and $12.50. 1200 N. Univ. Ave. ml9 CARROTS, parsnips, com, alfalfa seed. J. H. Durrant. 1089 West 1 North. ml6 SPRAYER, Cheap. R. Box 206. Ph. 026 Jl. D. No. 3, m20 25 TONS7 1st, baled, alfalfa hay in warehouse. See Russ Traher, Inc., 150 N. Univ. Ph. 666. ml7 4 SHARES class A Provo Reservoir Reser-voir water. $50 per share. Ed Spalding, Vineyard. ml7 5 GOOD Guernsey cows. Farmers and Merchants Bank. ml6 ' i, MOD. 5 rm. brick home, lg. lot, barn, outbuildings, Reasonable. 597 E. Center, Sprlngville. ml6 GUARANTEED Goal. Phone 206J. $5 per ton. ml6 PERRY'S Seed Btbre, 408 W. Center, now open. Choice selection selec-tion of seeds, plants and btilbaf. alO if - SPANISH or Hawaiian guitar. Vt-158 Vt-158 South 1st West. mi$ GUITAR with case cheap. West Second North. 68 tf THREE DRAW FINES Three Provoans were sentenced .Monday tnorntng following arrest ar-rest Saturday night at the Utahna Gardens by the Provo police department. de-partment. Frank Swapp and Jim Black were sentenced to pay $10 or spend 10 days in jail for disturbing disturb-ing the peace. They were fighting. fight-ing. Hal Smith paid a $10 fine after pleading guilty to a charge of intoxicjation. Judge Don R. Ellertson imposed , the sentences. .5 .': jlc s w 'AtLiCES. AdV. lit ; Wnnrlprlnnd Lbhdon; 186." Write' Herald Bo 1 04-G. ' -;, tai20- 1 feURNED out r l m; p. trit tttbtbh Ph? lfctfw: mlS "ALictPS-: AclvenfUres in , Wohder- TMEfc? ltknffi i8Wr3te B6 10 ACRES lafld withJ ftous'e. Infr 4. 153 Est Sfd -NortE . V m!6 to A.v 'half r fruit, water right 4 ; jooo. bouse,. Orem. 705. .. 68 No. 1st -West. . i v j m20 PERSONALS HEADACHES . are effectively t treated by our CHIROPRACTIC ' method. , Examination without obligation. 15 yrs. m practice. Dr. E. L. Aiken, 32 W. Center St. (over Butler's). ml9 tr mlS t BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES j WASH TUBBS WHAT AAAKE5.Y0UM. BECAUSE THINK PUNKv AAGLtW 1 COGNJZEO AT MCtOUPS, WEARS A nseuisE EASY? ALLEY OOP WMi i V JS-VS P VOU iCAWAV, UNLESS HIDDEN. KING GUZZLES ATTEMPT TO DISCOURAGE DIMWY'S BLOCKADE OF THE GRAKJO WIZER'S CAVE EKJDEO W(TH DISASTER FOQ THE MOOVIAKJ STAWDIMG ARMy FRKLES AND HIS there's that guy they , SUSPECTED OF BUSTING A JEJmj. STOrtE- WINDOW ' VWERE .THERE'S SMOKE, THWEB USUALLY MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE After TMElR FIRST ANXIOUS NIGHT VKJCfe E5GAPtb4G FROM THE Ytft MVRA AND OACK ,TUKFULLY CREBTTtfe THAT. OAVI IfiMT I ftTKC GOOD EVEN 'MMMt r - dUfibB ppereasei with Faull' , less et &1." price Hits; and . ' samples. Ret. Police Station. T Reward. " t - , ml7 HOME in srL.!rioi.Proio n6me; f Inq. 133 E. 1 N. af,te ft;3Q,p, jtn. v work,' 24? No. 4th Eas RM. mod. apt. 400 So.Srd W. Call after 7 p. m. . nil8 MOD. home, $22.50. Phone 25. - - ittl6 FDR RENT - LAND 14 ACRE farm. 6 acres in hay. Inq. 589 E. 3rd South. m20 HE'S EASJLV R - ITSNOT ITOM DISSUISEP, HOW LIP THATO BE A GIVE-l YEP. MAJESTY -TMERES MO YEH-6UT WE GOTTA USE OF US TRYIM' TPULL DO SUMRKJ -Hmm.SAY .' OOPS DIWOSAUR AWAY FROM TH GRAND WIZER'S CAVE - HALF TH'ARMY ARE CASUALTIES, ALREADY FRIENDS IVE LISTENED 'A ID ENOUGH WASTY m RUMORS ! GOOD HEAVE I If ASTORIA WHATS THI! 1 hri i w. k i m ..til . ' V S J S 1 11 1 Tf lin I J I IllkJ M I U A 1 nkbH I IDVH 1 I r 1 I I K It 1 M I I kAL. I . I I 1 r m 1 1 f "AT AI rilTII- 1 LKUf I . .... I r-" 1 - KlASTvlNIGHT' k . - . HD. ULtl-, HUF : i4AS BEEN DRt5GFD hm to feoiucatiotClerk. ; Provo, on oir 'before TueSi, Mar. t . POn BAlilnOTTBTig f ItMJ, modi homfe. ; W'tn take latel y moder t. truclf or dairy cows (' if i uowB.,pymeni. yicu)r n .ii.n.v - . ..... ... tor - IirGTRUCTION HBNAVOMEN. Sthrt $105 to r $IT5 fttn. l- S: Government .! Jobs. 25 coached free, ivy next ' ProW- examlnatfohs.. FU11 particulars', par-ticulars', altll list - positions M; FREE; Apily tmnfedlaUly to day aurfr. Provo HeraW, Box TJ. - - 14 I WANT to talk to an ambitious man who wants . to. qualify for - a position to service, repair and install electric refrigerators and air conditioning systems. -No experience- necessary,., but appli-cant' appli-cant' must be mechanically inclined in-clined and willing- to- devote feome spare time, in training. For personal mterview, write Refrigeration Re-frigeration .Engineering institute, insti-tute, Box R. E., Herald. m!8 I GOT IT AS V ALL TH' MEM WHO STILL CAN syf L ' WALK if m HAVE BEEN US ICSHTV " but, if vouve V stands to reason A r 1 v WHATS THE IDEA IM I DONT HAVE TO STAND BY SOCKING MY SON, y AMD USTEM TO GUYS MAKE -t ELBERT ? -L CRACKS ABOUT ME,' T. 1 M 1 V , , RepdrtfPhoiie i-It-4 ilRS. OEOIlGE r E1XS Ur. and . Mrs. Reynofii ' CrooV and iwo children of Atton, Wybu J. Davi3 a Uheir home Thursday visiiea win Mr.- ana Mrs, ana Friday. . Relief Society wil not be held Tuesday so, tnat an women may attend the 17 of March stake (social at, the Uncoln auditorium. Mrs. Prudence Holdaway was a guest at a social held at the home of Mrs. -Brigham Johnson at Provo Pro-vo Friday afternoon. Miss Thelma-Blake of Salt Lake spent the week end with her parents par-ents Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Blake. Elmer T. Holdaway was in charge of the Sacrament services held Sunday evening. C. Wilford Larsen and James B. Ferguson of the Stake sHigh council were the speakers. Mrs. Osa Ferguson and . daughter Naomi sang the duet, "When its Lamp Lighting Time to the Valley" and the solo "I Knok There is Somebody Waiting" Wait-ing" was-sung by Mrs. Ferguson. Mrs. Junius Gordon was the accompanist. ac-companist. A. reorganization of the Primary took place, Mrs. Anita An-ita Varley was chosen President with Mrs. Ideal Toone and Mrs. HOvvi WVViE VOU Wit TO TVPV i 1 ( VoO VOU UE VOU MUCH ri S9E.fOL H0W0A) BECAUSE, PURJNO yiOJOW WE I NOTICED THAT WEARS A BLUE. ALSO, THAT BLUE, VEST WERE INSIDE. THEREFORE IT WAS i ..-3.. y NOW, MEM -THEM'S YER ORDERS BRING IN ALLEY OOP I DON'T CARE HOW Y'DO IT- SCOUR TH' WHOLE COUNTRYSIDE -ANYTHING BUT BRING HIM IN - FEET FIRST, IF NECESSARY NOW GOT GOIN7 L.OOK-A CHINESE ME ODDITIES IN TH NEWS BY tJNlTEI. PRESS i .NEW YORKt March 16 (UR New York , Irishmen resolved today to-day to ask the German consul general to help them spike "cheap English propaganda." John T. Rogan, president of the Kings county ancient order of Hibernians, Hibern-ians, started the movement at a St Patrick's day communion breakfast. The . English, he said started the manufacture of green pits and tattered, high-hatted Irish figurines as St. Patrick's Day lapel decorations. Now German Ger-man factories make most of them. A Hibernian delegation Is going to, ask the German consul general to ask German manufacturers to make something else. CLEVELAND, March 16 U.R) The village of Lyridhurst near here was rendered help- Grace Spalding as counselors. Mrs. Maud Handley will act as a teacher. teach-er. The retiring" officers are: Mrs. Vetta Madsen and Mrs. Nora Harding. VOT THE HOLDUP, ItlNOTlCEDTOaTHAT HIS PAKITS THE INSIDE WAS THE BUTTONS SELF TO LOOK TURNED WRONG - WANTED ION RYICE, INC reo. u..PAT. prrx THISTWN TAKE A LOOK GET S REWARP i E SA I CAN ) ALOWS ATYXJR SDN... WITHOUT -rrjtrr I inc. HEOUTWEfGHS UKES ME, AND IS WEAW.Y A HEAD NUTTY TALLER ! OFM3U, COOK1 ' BAD.' ) HEAVENS! LET jck1 this- man FEEL OF HIS,PULEf- Ies froto'ft polk viewpoint wiien its only night "prowr' car was stelen. -Four- hours later it was found , la - dump of trees. C CHICAGO, March 18 tttBi-Pol-. ice Sergeant Walter XSray and Officer Of-ficer Edgai Peterson took one look at an automobile stalled on a taiiroad crrssinr, and another at the tr'aiii roaring down the tracks. Frantically, they leaped from their car, Peterson waving down the-train the-train with his flashlight. The train topped With its. cowcatcher against the automobile. Officers beered inside the tar, saw a mm asleep. They roused him long enough en-ough to hear his name, Carl W. Giebel. The man slept through his trip to police station, and spent a restful hlgnt m his cell. - EASTON, I1L, March 16 0J.PJ Mrs. Hannah Armstrong Musch, daughter of the defendant de-fendant in tfao case In which Lawyer Abraham Lincoln pronounced pro-nounced his almanac defense, died last night at 71; Lincoln, defending William a. Armstrong, Arm-strong, used an almanac . to disprove a prosecution Witness' Wit-ness' story that he saw the defendant fighting with the victim in the moonlight. BY MARTIN ?tfWSte . ? VOU VAVit V5V ftt "WE TOTX Or 6TM6 SeveA-t AKiO UWEBTO ATfe MOV OUR WJ.T "KV XOO'Ot MHOt SOCV A FOOL OF VOO&StLr" J 13 BY WE A SERVICE. INC j BY CRANE BOM AT 7 WERE TOO 8K5. FAR TOO 8 . DDUCTOWJ VMy? BECAUSE Hb KAP5 MIM-JMOW.ALl. LIKE A FAT fT WE GOTTA 7 MAKI. 7 IPO IS CATCH r i i i SERVICt;TC.T. M. RECTO: S. I BY HAMLIN I'LL TEACH THAT SMART MUG A LESSON -SC HS DINOSAUR. TH' GRAND WEEK AN' THEM GO HIDE SO I CANT DO NO-THIM' NO-THIM' ABOUT IT TH' LOUSE DANG HIS ORNERY HIDE -MEBB5 SOU TWIUK I WONT TURN TH' HEAT OM HIM - HAH BY BLOSSER StXJ CAW CALL ME BAD, ip yu want to, but; JUDGfNG FROM WHAT i did ia him; ro StfY I WAS PRETTY GOOD V BY THOMPSON and COLL - is ih zomwm |