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Show 4 PROVO (U T A H) v E V EN I N G HERA L D, T H TJ RSDAY, JUNE 1 8, 1 9 3 6 SECTTION TWO I This Curious r - THS FIRST OAME LAW RECORDED I 1 1 ,N E UNITED STATES CALLED l I V S&r: FOR A CLOSED SEASON OM ll I lXWWVV OEER, INI MASSaCHUSET-TS, BLOOD OF HUMANS. OF fi-(JOV INTO THE WOUND TO PREVENT COAGU LATON 13 Nt WILD LIFE was so plentiful in the United States in the early days tluit no one even dreamed that laws would be necessary to protect it The year 1739 saw the first game wardens in this country coun-try Most of the colonics had adopted some form of game laws b the time of the Revolution, and the first federal game law was passed n 1776. I Probate and Guardianship ! Notices l Consult County Clerk or the , Respective Signers for Further I Information. f , SHERIFF'S SALE In the District Cout in and for Utah County, Stale of Utah. Deseret Building Society, a corporation, cor-poration, plaihtifr. vs. Minnie R. Farrer and Utah Timber and Coal Company, a corporation, defendants. defend-ants. TO BE SOLD AT SHERIFF'S SALE at eleven o'clock a. m. on the 3rd day of July 1936, at the FriSnt Door of the Courthouse, in Provo. Utah, the property situated situ-ated in aforesaid County and particularly par-ticularly described as follows, to-A'it to-A'it : Commencing at the Xurthwest corner of Lot 4, Block 8, Plat "C", provo City Survey of Building ,ots; thence South 52 feet; thence .:a.st 99 feet; thence North 52 eet: thence West 99 feet to the place of beginning. Area 31.20 square rods. Dated June 11. 1936. E. G. DURNELL, Sheriff, Utah County, Utah. Publication in Provo Evening Herald Her-ald June 11. 18. 25. July 2. 1936. NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that Jonathan O. Mecham of Provo. loseyp and wortieay ERSKINE JOHNSON GEORGE SCARBO LVVSVYJ GOT Hi .MAM AS CANADIAN MOUKT1E-. Usee caccied gCCXJ3 TO VAVfE ENDS MEET. IEAU BGUMMEi-OF " SUlT. BgGjJigi BUILD . . REMODE . . REPAIR "Helpful Service9' TRI-STATE LUMBER COMPANY . , Formerly Smoot Lumber Co. PROVO. UTAH PHONE 20 World William Ferguson ONE OF THE TWO MOONS ORCXlNJGr THE PLANET MARS IS SCO CLOSE TO THE PLANET'S SURFACE THAT IT WOULD BE INVISIBLE. TO AN OBSERVER. STANDING AT EITHER. OF THE PLANET'S POLES. k ;v. -.v BEFORE SUCKING THE t. - INJECT A SMALL AMOUNT SERVICl. INC. b-iZ WAS HE MAD L CHARLOTTE, Mich., June 17 I tl'.l'. George Washington. 33, a ' negro, became so angered ate Mrs. I Clara Edwins of Sunfield Town-i Town-i ship, that he went to a barn on the Edwins farm and yanked the i tail off a cow. Washington ex plained to Circuit Judge Russell McPeek yesterday that his anger foHowed a refusal by Mrs. Edwins Ed-wins to admit him to her home. The judge sentenced Washington j to four years in the Michigan re-l re-l formatorv at Ionia. Utah. who. on June 27. 1929, made stockraLsing homestead entry, No. 047781, for N'-.-N-j Sec. 26, Twp. 6 South Range 3 East, X',SE;4, XE'iSW'i Sec. 3. N'-S', Lots 9. 10 and 12 Sec. 4 Lots 9 and 10, Section 5. Township 6 South, Range 4 East, Salt Lake Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the Clerk of the District Court, at Provo, Utan, on the 20th day of July 1936. Claimant name3 as witnesses: Eva Mecham. John Eastman, V. : A. Conrad and Sterling Ercan-brack. Ercan-brack. all of Provo, Utah. THOMAS F. THOMAS. Register. Pub. June 11. IS. 25 July 2, 9, i 1936. 7 A IAULCAVANA(rrA HElG-HTFgET U ailSCHES. WEIGHT 175 POZJNrxP. BRWN HAG. BLUE EYEJ. 6OGN, CHISLEHUQST.-ENG., MATRIMONIAL SCORE : ONE AURCIAG! ONE C1 VOECE. 'SI GniLDISI IDZAS RECEIVE BLAOE FOR DIVORCES WEST CHESTER, Pa. (U.R) Divorces are psychologically childish, child-ish, according to Dr. Edward S. Lindeman, leading New York social worker. Dr. Lindeman numbered divorces di-vorces among the characteristics in American conduct which, he said, proves that many adult people peo-ple are "still in their childhood," in urging a local audience to train their children ,o be responsible citizens. The divorce - desire, tie explained, ex-plained, was one of three crimes a person encounters during . a lifetime, life-time, and occurs between the ages of 35 and 45, when people begin to realize they are growing old. Married couples who have "grown up," according to Dr. Lindeman, have settled down to regular living at this time while those that have grown weary of each other and desire a change are "still childish." "So long -e you find people seeking something outsid- themselves them-selves upon which to fix the blame iui mir Tint, yji y. iics ur prruitu- mentis," he added, "you may know that they are not truly adults." BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES -11!: Mr . 3fe WASH TUBBS ALLEY OOP FPFCKLES AND HIS I SUPPOSE, IF WE REALLY WAWT THE: DCH3 RE-TURlslED RE-TURlslED WE'LL f.i4AT' YOU'RE THE Vsure I'M feEE W2! AN' VOJ WERE ) - - ViOAJ- Tr-oJc-r JOE PICKET. )1 I S'POSEP TO &e DRIV1N1 TH' WHAT OF'; SON OF JEt-F PICKET PICK gLy TRUCK A IT? ' ' -WHO GOT KMLSV? y " CANT SAY I'M SO HOT ABOUT W SSILr2l ITRESPASSIhA'AROUMD IM 5TILL I ymWS THIS PLACE -LOOKS LIKE ( AINT SEEM ylmM$4 SUDDEN DEATH fM BtG KIOTHIKI' TO MmK GOSH, I HAVEN'T AMY MOWEY TO DO HAVE. TO OFFER A REWARD ? THAT, PROFES- K 0 MYRA NORTH. SPECIAL NURSE (gOMIMG UPOM MYRA, AS SHE LEAVES HIS TEMT WITH THE 3IC EDMOND 'NSISTS ON 5MOWJKIO her: THRU THE TOMB BUT J5NT IT RATHER DARK TO VISIT THE TOM& NOW, SIR EDMOND ? HEW JOBS AWAIT TRAINED WQI.1EU PITTSBURGH (TIE) The average aver-age American woman fc drifting further from her traditional place lu the kitchen, recording to a survey sur-vey made by Quax, an honorary scientific fraternity for women at the University of Pittsburgh. The scientific cb-eds came to their conclusions while studying problems' encountered in a quest of employment. Their detailed survey sur-vey represented an effort to clarify clari-fy and classify the many-sided difficulties in job-seeking and their relationship with the university uni-versity graduate. Interviews, letters and phone calls to and from a thousand personnel per-sonnel directors of business organizations or-ganizations and public institutions institu-tions revealed that many positions posi-tions are waiting for trained women. Opportunities are available, it was found, in a wide variety of business, educational and scientific scien-tific spheres. Almost every branch ofcity, state and federal departments depart-ments indicated that women, especially those trained in science, are needed. The many possibilities included almost every phase of activity except ex-cept that centered by the kitchen. 6NT THPT AT DO FRIENDS WELL, SI MCE I AM THE ONE WHO IS MOST INTERESTED IN COMPLETING COM-PLETING THE PREHISTORIC PREHIS-TORIC SPECIMEN, I'LL TAKE CARE OF THAT f 2Z NOT AT ALL -I CAN SHOW OU ONLY THE FOCECOURT AMD THE CHAPEL AMP THEY'RE ALWAYS AL-WAYS DAJ?K AND GLOOMY, YOU 7"- KNOW -GOME- J Students Vote No On Whisky, Like Spinach EUGENE, Ore. (UJ) Spinach is preferred to beer, ein and whiskv j by 440 University of Oregon stu- e rages ranked third, fourth and fifth in a list of most disliked Tbods and drinks in a survey con ducted by Dr. Calvin s. Hail, professor pro-fessor of psychology. Spinach did net place in the first i? dislikes, and only 8 per cent recorded a dislike for it. Buttermilk ranked as the most hated of 150 foods listed in the questionnaire," with half of the students x checking it. Kidney ranked a close second. Calves' liver followed the beer-gin-whisky group in sixth and seventh place. Parsnips! hominy, and tongue completed the first 10 of the students' stu-dents' dietary "black list." Ice cream, beefsteak and chocolate, choco-late, near-unanimous favorites, were disliked by only two-tenths of one per cent of the group. The United States, with 21, 000,000 pupils, has the world's record number of children in public pub-lic schools. The fate of the family's meals, it was strongly indicated, is facing highly uncertain times. ctX3 VJ vV LEAST I'M RID OF THOSE 1 ft-" Nt- Ui V PESTS WHO WERE OOOOIN' MV FOOTSTEPS - MOW I CAM AS I PLEASE, WITHOUT HAVIM TO KAAKE A LOT OF FOOL. EXPLANATIONS I WANT NrtXJ TO PRINT THAT AD AGAIN EXACTLY AS rOU IN YESTERDAY'S PAPER, BUT TIME OFFER A REWARD OF SOMEWHERE IN THIS CHAPEL" PROBABLY IN THE WEST WALL, IS A SECRET DOOR LEADING TO THE SERDAS -OC HIDDEN CHAMBER THAT ROOM IS VW-4ERE THE SPIRIT OF THE DECEASED IS SUPPOSED f iYp-yEXPLAT OKjW V. -rT7 FDR THE DOG'S ) I I I , w m HEHTAL EXAMS POSSIBLE FOR YCU.2G MFANTS IOWA CITY la. (IIP) University Univer-sity of Iowa Child Welfare Research Re-search experts lieve they have found a way to' measure & baby's intelligence before the infant can talk. Tests are simple. If a .batay will sit unsupported fn the examiner's ex-aminer's lap, he wins his first rating, 4.2 months. Next he is handed a wooden cube. Then a second one ifr offered. If- it is accepted, the baby is considered to have a mental age of 6 months. Other tests: Trying to put a cork on a bottte, 11 months; piling blocks, 12 months; throwing a ball, 15 months; putting a key in a padlock, pad-lock, 16 months. JUDGE FINES FRIEND ' MANHATTAN, Kans., June 17 U.P Newton Cross of Kansas City visited an old college chum here, Police Judge C. A. Kimball. Cross passed the time of day, left and was arrested on a speeding charge five minutes later by Policeman Pol-iceman Lawrence Smith, also a college day friend. Judge Kimball Kim-ball fined Cross $5. T ettvA3 THW Or OF TO BE QOVE ftLONE VJTV HEV I GOTTA bs "TP tVT WASO . lTTOO Mr tt7 WHAT ANIMAL SQLIAWK.-W HAVE A LOOK- X MMS &5i i THAT SOUNDED ill CAN SPARE TH Fliif ME, I GUESS - yjP SV.g1W r WEA SEKVICE. IWC. T. M. KCC. U. S. PAT. OFF A J 10 L,. ' tT'1"' V' ' NrtXJ WOULDNT jj DID MINU vU( I INJ THIS THAT OFFER DOWN $p lb TO THREE DOLLARS AND A HALF T THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS !M MERELY HELPING YOU t WERE VERY CLEVER AT COM" ' r'U, j RND OuR SECRET fj CEAUNCj THE REAL SAR- f JF5 I: U IV1 l POR f ffr VANDALS AS Mr TPa! PWi WHAT ARE MJL) o qSg g lp , . 1 . a I i i m- - k. B 1 hmM. w m MAKING REAL X ' - s i i siw., " f i Jfl tun HnmW wifn Kir Every prison and the major police headquarters would be a crime Hollywood under a scheme for filming criminals which has been developed by the New Jersey State Police. Troopers Cyril F. Dol-ton Dol-ton (left), and Hugh J. Boyle demonstrate at Trenton, N. J., ho they take sound movies of prisoners for future reference in identification identi-fication and detection of criminals. TrE HEA.9. A WQO WZ. MV GOSH Y?) Mi BY KCA CTVtCC. tC T. M. KCG. U. &. f AT. Of Fp Wj it aac XAI IDDCDI tupv km i pr tppp RCKET, EA9V. n TO C?ET HIS y,? V j . 1936 BY MCA BUT A REWARD OF 7 3THATS JUST fT....rM 15" WOULD SPUR y A-RAJD IT MiGHT EvE : , MORE PEOPLE ON Si'JR ME ON TO C1XSE ) j TO SEARCH FOR DOWN THE PAPER K THE DOG ? J. AND LOOK FOR HIM J St7s-- , . -SS, MYSELF IfZ '( ' S gjiayteAscirVK:c.me. CRIME MOVIES If f L 5fc )V V r J BY MARTIN VJtQV 600D. BY CRANE - 1 AT NITRO TRUCK EX- AN NOW THEY'RE TRYING? SON. SERVICE. INC. T. M. HEC. U. S. PAT. OFf.zr BY HAMLir BY BLOSSER rv-f 1 1 r- 1 1 I r BY THOMPSON and COLL MERELY HELPING YOU FIND OuR n DOOR 'A |