OCR Text |
Show 1 . 3 PAGE TWO 1 PRO VP (UTAH) EVENING HERALp, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. 1938 tkYak aU the ImuA" Tk Liberty ell The Herald Bverr Afteraooa Except 8tmry and Sunday Moral as Published by th Herald Corporation. 60 South r irst West street, Provo, Utah. Entered as second Uass matter at the postoffice In Provo, Utah, under the act of March i, 1879. Gllman, Nicol & Ruthman. National Advertising representatives, New. York, San Francisco, Detroit. Bostojv-Los Angeles. Seattle, Chicago. Member United Press N. E. A. Service. Western Features and the Scripps League of Nswspapers. Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county 60 cenWi the month. $3.00 for slxtaonths. In advance; $5.75 the year In advance; by mall In county fS.QO; outside county $5.76 the year In advance. I am the good shepherd: the good shepherd giveth his life for his sheep. John 10:11. Life is a quarry, out of which we are to mold and enisle and complete a character. Goethe. By All Means, Let's Put Them To Work Harry Hopkins, WPA czar, made a statement that should meet with at least 99 per cent approval of the American people. peo-ple. He asked that the government eliminate direct relief to able-bodied unemployed by providing sufficient funds to put everv jobless man to work. That's an excellent suggestion. We hope it can bedone. The catch is going- to be in putting everybody to WORK. But if it can be done, then the chiselers, the loafers and the bums will be done away with. Unless a man is sick or definitely incapacitated for work, he should be denied relief. He is entitled to the opportunity to work but that is all. And if he doesn't want to work, he is entitled to nothing but publrc disdain. Let's bv all means adopt Hopkins' program. Stop direct relief to able-bodied. Put the unemployed to work, demanding demand-ing an honest day's work for an honet's day's pay. And let those who are not honestly unemployed and unwilling to work shift for themselves. OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS All Is Transfusion Not a great deal of doubt seems to remain at this stage that when the fighting in Spain is done the country, will be Franco's. Just what kind of political structure will emerge then as the national government is a matter' of some dispute, but that it will be some form of Fascism all the best crvstal-gazers seem to be sure. How many of the crystal-gazers have heard about the Count de Covad6ngas blood transfusions? The count has had so many transfusions during his stay in the United States, he savs, that his blood is now completely democratic. And if "his people" want him back as king (Franco's intention inten-tion might be to have a kind of "throne behind the power," like Victor Emmanuel) that will bo ok with the Count de CoVadonga, he says. If the great transfusion news doesn't reach Franco there ought to be a lot of fun when, and if, the count gets installed. in-stalled. Now coursing through the count's veins is the blood of a cowboy, an opera singer, a taxi driver, a newspaperman, and a doctor. It goes without saying that with a newspaperman on fv.p throne a free press would be ensured. Have you heard the saying: A free press means a free country? And who could handle the common herd better than a cowboy? The cab driver certainly ought to be able to get his people through the worst jams that might arise. Any time the Franco-philes got suspicious about the democratic tendencies, the count could just let that opera singer's blood boil a little and the doubting Thomases would instantly recognize the true Bourbon they had. And no matter what kind of fate the country suffered, you've got to admit that it would be just what the doctor ordered. Arise I Men! Did you read about the recent discovery two psychologists made after a study of 500 New York college girls? A mimeographed report reducing the essentials of the discovery to simple, easily understandable language should be placed in the hands of every young man of marriageable mar-riageable age in the United States. Women who -are dominant, it has been found, started getting that way in their girlhood. These were among the facts discovered about the college girls with a touch of the dictator complex : they had been closer to their fathers than their mothers, they had been to camp, they had had allowances, allow-ances, they had rarely had to count the pennies, they had had dates before the age of 15, their parents had "treated them -as individuals with privileges and responsibilities of their own." The future, young men, is yours, if this thing is put across in the right way, but there's no time to lose and everybody's every-body's got to le willing to sacrifice his own selfish interests temporarily for the common good. You've got to make the older men with daughters see the necessity of quick, unified action. No more pampering of girls, no more summer camps, no more allowances, no more dates before 15, and no more of this silly idea of treating treat-ing girls as individuals. Except . . . except . . . how to do it with that dominant domin-ant older woman around the house? A NEW CAR The NEW 14-foot WILLYS CLIPPER Family Sedan is this Spring's motorcar Price-and-savings sensation. Built entirely of rugged steel lots of room for five big 13 cubic-foot luggage lug-gage space Willys offers important features found on 1000 cars. Owners report up to 35 miles per gallon and savings of 810 to $15 a month. Take a ride NOW. WILLYS CLIPPER $549 . . . for the Family Sedan: Federal, State mini local taxes and transportation charge from the Factory at Toledo, Ohio not included. SEE YOUR NEAREST WILLYS DEALER NOT ME I DON'T LIKE TO WATCH MISERY I LESSEE, WHAT 1 WOULD MAKE A GOOD FOEM - OH, TH' FISH ARE SPLASHING IN' V TH' STREAMS' iWIM NO, CAM-TOO V THISISAGRE!) W l'i I'VE GOT TO FW ) LESSOK) TO ME-- W ll FER, THAT NEW SEElW TH' EFFECT II )' III BIKE I BOUGHT ON OF A WEAK WILL- I 1)1, TIME I'LL BE BUSY POWEK.' I MAY WAVE r f'V ALL MV SPARE MOWEV IN TH A TIME FOR. A LONG J SOME DAY AN I ' , WHILE rl I DON'T WANT TO BE . 0 I A FAT HEAD i SO I'M iPv B V GONNA STAY AN j I X Q I i cr-r tui fiDAi: IN ii I mmmmmt m mm w w amr mm a w - M S" FOR. VALUE RECEIVED v 8gBvtec. wc t. m. wco. u. s. ft. orr. -- I Was Thinking By ELSIE C. GARBOLL I was thinking how important it is in life to try to keep a true sense of values. Arnold Bennet in an interesting article on "Settling Down in Life," says: Existence rightly considered is a fair compromise between two instincts the instinct of hoping one day to live, and the instinct to live here and now. In most of you the first instinct has simply got the other by the throat and is throttling it. Prepare to live by all means, but for heaven's sake don't forget to live. You will never have a better chance than the present. This you are living now is lite itself. it-self. . . Grasp that truth. Dwell on it. Absorb it. Let it influence your conduct, to the end that neither the present pres-ent nor the future be neglected." ne-glected." We all want happiness. We get it chiefly by realizing that happiness happi-ness is within ourselves, not in external things. We get through finding the true values in each day as it comes to us as a gift from Time. Arnold Bennet is right we keep our eyes too much on the future, fu-ture, the future which so often never comes. The poet puts it so: "Enchantment is ever for things far away; Youth fills the future with windows of gold; While' the things we possess and seldom survey, Are the happiest things to behold." be-hold." Most every one has to go through periods in this life when he feels that he can't go on that the future holds nothing. It is then that the philosophy of today of living today ' and finding some worth in it, is a saving philosophy. We may feel that we cannot face a year, a month, or a week. But one day of course wc can get through one day. Choose Opportunities If we could keep that formula before us when we are not in trouble then we wouldn't need Mr. Bennet's warning. If out of each day we would choose those opportunities oppor-tunities that have greatest value, then our Uvea would be worth while. For every day brings its own opportunties for doing that which never could have been done before and never can be done again. Too often we spend our hours in wishful living day-dreaming instead of in real living, doing something for ourselves or someone some-one else that has real importance. Today I have twenty-four hours stretching before me. "I know there are tasks to be done that will take up most of those, hours. How then do I have a choice ? Certainly in the attitude I take toward my work. Certainly in the matter of my contacts with those with whom I work. Certainly in the many thousands of thoughts I may think while I am doing my routine duties. Then there is the matter of leisure. Surely most of us have some leisure moments which we may spend entirely as we choose. It is the way one spends his leisure leis-ure time that marks his sense of values. We know many of the great men and women of the world not by what they clidin the regu- SIDE GLANCES By CLARK COPR. 939 Ht SERVICE. INC. Joe Bungstarter was trying out his new electric razor yesterday evening, and it slipped out of his hand, and before he could recover re-cover it, the darn thing wiggled its way out of the house and had chewed two feet thru the laurel hedge. Bride When we go anywhere now, we always take the streetcar. street-car. Before we were married, you always called a taxi. Bridegroom Exactly. And that's why we always take the streetcar now. A prejudice is a conviction not shared by you. And then there was the Scotch boxer who used to hit with his open palms until his manager put a nickel in each hand. YE DIARY Thys evening my son doth arrive ar-rive home, his eye blackened and his nose bruised, and I do ask him why he did not do as he promised prom-ised me and count to 100 before he fought. And he doth reply, "I did, daddy, but look what the other boy did while I was counting:" count-ing:" "Sock 'irn again, Warts!" Piute gj jONCE NEWS, NOW HISTORY! D11TJ1S1SW YiSAKS AGO TODAY with a score of 55 '4 at the "Y" events. Captain Homer Wakefield was second. Twenty-one athletes took part. oOo Parker's girl baseball team defeated' de-feated' Maeser 20 to 1; and Franklin Frank-lin feminines battered Timpanogos 7 to 2. In the boys' play Franklin, trounced Timpanogos 16 to 1 as Parker won from Maeser toy 7 to 5. Clyde Craven pitched a shutout game for the Franklin boys. Home" run queens for the Timpanogos girls were Phyllis Mortenson, Laura Pasewalk and Erline Bray. Isabell Henrie fanned 14 Timp ladies allowing a single hit. From the Files of the Provo Herald April IS, 192S "Y" students made a cleanup of the mountainside numeral,- then went on to do "kitchen police" on parts of the campus, i oOo Speaking of the value of Rotary club to him Judge James B. Tucker Tuck-er said, "Physically I have benefited bene-fited by joining Rotary I have gained 14 pounds in weight." oOo Mieth Maeser won the Edgar McArthur gold medal for the best all-around track and field man Anti-Crime Examples Squaw Creek Dear Newspaper: Mush Hank says two things he tries to keep away from are astronomy as-tronomy and statistics. If you get to studying the stars you get dizzy and if you get to looking at figures fig-ures you begin to feel bad. Hank say he was reading the other day where 60 p r cent of American men are married, 38 per cent own radio sets and only 2 per cent are happy. PIUTE JOE CRANSUM CRACKERS Danger Signals! Squinting or Frowning, Headaches Excessive Tiredness Let Us Examine Your Eyes Our Glasses Give RELIEF and COMFORT! Dr. G. H. Heindselman Optometrist - 120 W. Center 'Now if my wife acts huffy because you blow in with me. we II just pay no attention. lar hours of work, but by what they did in the hours of leisure. We know nothing of Charles Lamb as a clerk in a shipping company. But we know and love him through his essays. How true it is that . "We live in deeds not years; In thoughts, not breaths; In feelings, not in figures on the dial. We should count time by heartthrobs. heart-throbs. He most hves Who thinks most, feels the noblest. Acts the best.' City Court Four motorists pleaded guilty to or forfeited bond on traffic i charges in city court Wednesday. Jim Russell, Salt Lake City, and Norman Tanner, Provo, each forfeited $10 bonds on speeding counts. For driving on the wrong side of the street Vernon Winterton, Charleston, was assessed $5 when pleaded guilty. LeGrande Smith forfeited $5 on a stop sign charge. Which word in each of the following fol-lowing lists does not belong there? 1. Feline, saline, porcine, entwine, en-twine, equine. 2. Bayou, inlet, peninsula, strait, gulf. 3. Gauguin. Chavez. Renoir, Kunyoshi, Benton. 4. Tort, appeal, petition, colophon, colo-phon, pleading. 5. Duodenum, cardiac, molybdenum, molyb-denum, epiglottis, hyoid. Answers on Page 8 I know a young man wio is in the penitentiary. Thru quite a few years of newspaper work I have become acquainted with many men and boys on their way I there, or just out. I The young man writes me j that he has high hopes and good iwvtic ksiiig a i r vi wii parole pa-role this spring. The thought of freedom must be quite overwhelming, over-whelming, for he has been cooped coop-ed up inside stone walls and iron bars for several years (and despite certain poetic declarations declara-tions to the contrary, stone walls do a rather effective prison pris-on make, and iron bars a cage). My young friend wants to go on to university and take training train-ing for a very pretty knack of writing which he possesses. Financing Fi-nancing such an undertaking seems like an almost insurmountable insur-mountable obstacle, and, sad to say, those of us who would be inclined in-clined to help him have some very real financial problems of own. I've been trying to think a way thru this obstacle for the young man. and have flirted with what I believe is a new i'Jea. It may be entirely impracticable, imprac-ticable, and still I know there's a value in it somewhere for the "losers' (the ex-convict) and for the society which punished him. The young man's number in prison is nearly 16,000. which means that society has supported support-ed that numbers of men in that particular institut-un for periods ranging from one year to probably prob-ably 40 to 50 years. He let acute selfishness and ; impatience take possession of j him to such an extent that he set j out once to take property, fore- i ibly, that belonged to someone else -property that someone else had worked hard and patiently to acquire. Other boys and young men will doubtless do the same in the future, and almost despite j all the home and school train-I train-I ing we can give them in an op-! op-! posite direction, and despite all ! the preaching and shouting we may do along the lines of the old formulas, "Honesty is the best policy," and "Crime doesn't pay." I'm wondering if this young man, who has thoroly reformed and is determined to make his way in the world by the slow, patient, honest process, couldn't give some first-hand and anti-crime anti-crime arguments that would be a valuable part of any university's curriculum. Penitentiaries graduate many object lessons each year, at high cost, but society makes almost no use of them as such. Catholic Church Father Valerian Girardot will deliver his final address, "Religious "Re-ligious Tolerance and Intolerance" Intoler-ance" on the current Church of the Immaculate Conception Lenten Len-ten course series Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. at the church. Non-Catholics Non-Catholics are invited to attend. Father Valerian's talks are centered cen-tered about the theme "Approaches "Ap-proaches of Catholicism." j LEGAL NOTICES , Probate and ! Guardianship Notices I Consult County Clerk or the j ! Respective Signers for Furth- I i er Information. ! - NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to Titles 80-10-5 and 80-10-49, Revised Statutes of Utah, 1933, notice is hereby given that the following described personal per-sonal property: 1 Preakness Maible Game 1 Track Odds 1 Center Smash 1 Jumbo 1 Play Time Game will be "sold by the Utah County Assessor at public auction at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. on the 20th day of .pril A. D. 193S at the front door of the City and County Building, Provo, Utah Count v, State of Utah. L. M. ATWOOD Utah County Assessor. Pub. April 13, 1938. A Reasons Why Farmers Can Save Money for Ypu On Automobile Insurance Our "Continuing" Policy eliminates the usual annual re-sale cost . . . Only ONE initial aquisition charge. You save about 40 after the first six months. We sell through our own agents to carefully care-fully selected automobile owners. Management expense or overhead is definitely defi-nitely limited by policy contract to 20 of premium deposit annually. ASK FOR QUOTATION ON YOUR CAR Farmers Automobile -Insurance Clarence P. Greer, District Manager Commercial Bank Bid. Office Phone 72 Residence S5S STEPHEN MUKDOCK, Salesman New Emblems Available to All Policy Holders ..ft-:. . IF YOU HAVEN'T BEEN HERE YET YOU'RE MISSING SOMETHING! n rr UK I.-L mrs Prices Slashed For Quick Disposal mm iwci?s? MEN'S AND BOYS' SUITS SHOES ..... AND FURNISHINGS! The Store is Completely Torn Up, But if You Are Looking For Values, Come In and You Will Be Amazed At What You Can Save! GET YOUR EASTER OUTFIT AT A SAUING! MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR |