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Show PAGBFOUR PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, MONDAY, 'OCTOBER 24, 1938 f ft I i - The Herald Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning: First -West Street, class matter at the ie act. oi juarcn 3, 1879. I Oilman. Nlcol & Ruthman. National Advertising representative, New York, San Vranclsco. Detroit, Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago. il . i thronsh alii Member United Press. N. E. A. Service. Western Features and the Scripp League .of Newspapers. Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county, SO -cents .the month, $3.00 for six months, In advance; $5.75 the rear. In advance: bv mall in countv S&.00: tttac land" Tb Liberty outside county $5.75 mjFhank You, Mr. Churchill! - Winston unurcmil, British Jul ana stirring speecn against To the world audience he tonic like talking asrainst such , - 0 qf - O KJ mother But after roasting Herr Hitler to a nice Nazi brown, the wily Churchill then comes to the real meat of his speech. I . .The United States, he says, should join England and Prance in a'united front" against Hitler. That remark reveals Churchill as a run-of-the-mill British Brit-ish statesman. He may oppose Prime Minister Chamberlain utterly on local issues, but he is heartily in accord with all the British politicians of the cast decade, who have tried acain and again to reneat their former success in lining up the United' States on their sid for another European war. The United States will aorree with Churchill that dictatorships dicta-torships are bad. We certainly don't want one here. . But, jikt because we are against that form of government, govern-ment, jdoesrrt mean we want to line up with ANYONE in trying to suppress dictatorships in distant parts of the world As the United States has indicated time and time again, ill that its people want in this world is peace, anl a chance I to develop national prosperity. I - After the polite applause for Churchill's platitudes has died down this nation's answer remains the same: : We don't care for any military or "moral" allience which could serve to drag us into war. Thirty -TMiursday All seriousness aside, if California tries out the $30 every Thursday plan and finds it works, she may set an example ex-ample for the rest of the nation and the world that will be invaluable. For, il a way can be devised to pay all persons over 50 their $30 every Thursday, it will take merely the change of a Ijfew words in a law to make the payment $50 every Thursday, jand for all persons over 30! J The Californians who sponsor the rosy plan aren't going !to be like the man who started lifting a new-born calf every j day and developed his muscle so he was finally lifting a full-jgrown full-jgrown bull They plan to start lifting an animal that is Just about half grown. Those of us on California's fringe jand watching the proposed feat won't be surprised if it j'proves on undue strain. j If the thirty-Thursday plan works it will upset all eco- jnomic ineory ana practice, ana win reiute me trutn inai inoney is merely the token oi, produced wealth. The California Califor-nia optimists may teach themselves and the rest of us how jjto live without producing anything. And wouldn't that be fjust dandy I Why Pupils Quit Sclwol A federal survey in San Francisco has been investigating investigat-ing the affairs of youth to determine why pupils quit school. pThey have found, as they could parent, that lack of funds was Lack of interest, incompatibility, bashfuhress, falling in love were other reasons. But the best reason comes from a youth who quit school simply because he hit his teacher over the head with a clarinet. Unfortunately the name of this apt pupil was withheld, but it is an even bet that the young man will go far in a fast moving world. Once the flimsy instrument had crashed on the teacher's head, the unnamed hero lost no time in idle deliberation. He walked quickly to the nearest exit and ended his school days then and there His music may have suffered by his experience, but his logic in quitting school appears to rate 100. Now Im7 fO T : I cee! 1 W,SH 1 Kill YM I KNEW SOrveTHlfvlGr UK t( m CJ rt. ABOUT ALL THESE WA I - r? n I OTMeR wre5 UM I q, p 4 Jm, f ill L 1 1 g I Provo.. Utah. Entered u second . postoffice In Provo. Utah, under the year in advance. statesman, makes a oeauti- aictaiors. addresses it is a sure-fire thine-s as beatincr vour own have learned from almost any the most important reason. Is the Time to Find Out OUT OUR WAY GIVE ME W BOOTS AND KY SADDLE 1 t. M. RCC. U. S. PAT. OFF. COPtt BY NEA SCWVICE, IWC ONCE NEWS, NOW HISTORY Fifteen Years Ago i Today From the Files of the Provo Herald Oct. 34, 192S Provo's primary election proceeded pro-ceeded slowly with only 68 votes cast by 2 p. m. oOo The Herald asked for endorsement endorse-ment of a Football Boosters club at B. Y. U. with townsmen enrolled. en-rolled. oOo Civil war raged in Germany. Twenty were killed and 40 wounded wound-ed in riots at Hamburg. France admitted its plan to separate the Rhineland from the German state. oOo Graduate Manager Harvey Hancock Han-cock of the U. of U. announced willingness to play the Redskin-Oeugar Redskin-Oeugar football, game. here. oOo Schfoield Auto company began excavation for its new building on First North. Deer Creek Land Case Tried Today Condemnation proceedings tor rights of way for Deer Creek reclamation rec-lamation project open Monday in Heber before District Judge Abe W. Turner reports Counsel A. V. Watkins for the Provo River Water Wa-ter Users' association. The trial will determine amounts to be paid, possession is already granted. One-hundred-fourteen acres are involved, with Orval Scott, defendant. de-fendant. Other trials will be heard shortly. i m fi&fflr WSSk A DAY ON ONE O' M TWO FER EVERY COW IN TrZtf! THEM GUITARS AN R TH' COUNTRY--" I WONDER , J imvrT, LOOK WHERE WE A WHUT HALF OF WHUT COW J l w m b r r 1 1 f b& v si til 4 k s t i i l& s . - - I COTTON . I FEEL ITS A GOOD JOB .1 SrOSE TURRI9LE WHEN I BUT TH' COUNTRY IS GETTlN' THINK OF OUR KINDER LOW ON COWS MISSPENT LIVES FER THEM COWBOY tTICTCCM MIMI ITC C? I f.l 1 1"T AO CIWr.CDC TUCDC'C THE BEEF SHORTAGE HOLD EVERYTHING! I r i fcnr ioo pm0fmm'3' " COPR. 1938 BY NEA SERVICE. !NC. X01 j 'lie told his wife she looked like a monkey in her new hat." Where Is Up? BY X REPORTER Those ancient fellows who first charted the stars undoubtedly undoubt-edly made their studies and their maps while lying flat on their backs. Anyone might say, "Well, why bring that up?" or "So what?" To me it is a fairly important fact. Here's why: If a human being studies the stars long enough while lying flat on his back his brain eventually tells him and makes him know that he is looking "out" upon the stars instead in-stead of "up" at them. And it simply is better for the human intellect to be properly oriented than improperly. There actually is no "up" as far as the earth and its relationship to ,,the planets and stars and sun and moon .re concerned. All of those are "out" from earth, not "up" above it. The response of our senses to the force of gravity outlines an "up" and "down." In that connection, con-nection, but we misuse the terms and the sensations of upness and downness when we apply them to the heavenly bodies. On some fine autumn evenings, warm as summer, when twilight ended earlier than in summertime, summer-time, I made occasion recently to put my own brain and senses allegedly normal thru the experiment ex-periment of tvaing theoretically lashed to a slowly whirling spheroid and looking out upon the stars. I am confident that, if persisted per-sisted in, this mental and physical exercise would generate gener-ate in the human consciousness what would almost amount to another dimension. That consciousness, con-sciousness, trained to think of the rest of the universe as "out" rather than "up" would be both broader and deeper which means, I suppose, more understanding. under-standing. Galileo bettered the methods of the ancient astronomers or weren't they rather astrologers of Greece, Egypt and Judea by studying stars thru a telescope. tele-scope. But he also fixed it so men had to look "up" to do their star-studying. My notion is that the real star student, to be in the proper relationship re-lationship to his subject and even tho he be looking thru the 200-inch telescope at Mount Palomar must be, at least mentally, in a prone and horizontal hori-zontal position. Then he is looking "out" at . the universe, and that is where he really is out! , By WILLIAMS O -24 By Clyde Lewis I - VINEYARD MRS. (1EOROE F. WELLS Reporter rhone 01-lt-4 Mr. and Mrs. Rex Blake announces an-nounces the arrival of a baby girl born Saturday evening at the home of the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Harding. Mother and baby are doing nicely. Mrs. Jennie Fox has spent the past two days in Ogden, with her sister, Mrs. Lida Chase. Mrs. Milton Holdaway and son Leroy, spent the week end in Salt Lake, where she attended a wedding party for Miss Annie Madsen, a friend. Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle Bunker entertained at their home Saturday Satur-day evening in honor of her brother, Junior D. Carson, who leaves November 3, for Germany Ger-many to fulfill a mission for the L. D. S. church. Hallowe'en motifs mo-tifs were used in the table decorations, dec-orations, where covers were laid for her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Carson and her sisters, Leona, Bertha and Delia, and the honor guest, Elder Carm, all of Lehi. Miss Mterlene Wells attended a beauty operators' convention held at the Paris in Salt Lake, Sunday. Mrs. Ella Hebertson will jive the social service lesson Tuesday Tues-day afternoon at Relief Society. All women of the ward are asked to attend. Mrs. J. W. dinger of Rig-by, Rig-by, Idaho, visited here Sunday with Mrs. Olena Gammon at her home. The M. I. A. adult class is sponsoring a Hallowe'en party Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Clerggwill have charge of the games. RefresHmenta will be served ar3 all adult members of the ward are invited to come in costume and enjoy the social. Mr. and Mrs. Axel F. Andrea-son Andrea-son and Mrs. Carl R. Andreason h.d as their diner guests Sunday Sun-day at their home Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mitchell and Mr. and Mrs. James Mitchell of Clinton, Weber county; Mr. and Mrs. Lee Olson of Sandy; Mrs. Melvin Grant and two daughters of American Fork and Miss Dora Frandsen of Ephriam. The home missionaries, Joseph E. Booth and David Rowley Jr., were in charge - CT the church services Sunday evening in the ward chapel. Max Blake of Salt Lake, spoke on spirituality in the hoipe W. ic Allen conducted the music, with Mrs. Elroy Mur-dock Mur-dock at the organ. o RADIO r' 'PROGRAMS KSL MONDAY, OCT. 24 CBS Rhythm Roundup. KSL. Rhythmic Melodies. KSL. Dick Tracy. KSL. International News. KSL "Let's Dance." KSL Twilight Musicale. KSL Serenade in Song. CBS The. Lux Radio Theater. Thea-ter. CBS The Serenade with Wayne King and his orchestra. CBS Eddie Cantor Caravan. CBS Lum andAfcner. CBS Pick and Pat wttn Benny Kreuger's orchestra or-chestra and Edward Roecker. KSL International News. CBS Little JacK little and his orchestra. CBS Jack Meachlm and his orchestra. CBS White Fires. Ted Weems and his orchestra. or-chestra. CBS Wilbur Hatch and his orchestra. CBS Prelude to Midnight. . KSL Goodnight. TUESDAY, OCT. 25 4:00 4:15 5:00 5:45 6:00 6:15 6:45 7:00 8:00 8:30 9:15 9:30 10:15 10:30 11:00 11:15 11:45 A. M. 12:15 12:45 1:00 A. M. 6:00 KSL Sunrise' Serenade. 7:00 KSL International News. 7:15 CBS Montana Slim. the Yodeling Cowboy. 7:30 KSL The Morning Watch. 8:00 KSLInternational News. 8:45 CBS Waltzes of the World. 9:15 CBS Rhythmaires. 9:45 KSL Shopping Bulletins. 10:15 CBS "Her Honor, Nancy James." 10:30 CBS Romance of Helen Trent. 10:45 11:15 P. M 12:00 12:15 CBS Our Gl. Sunday. CBS Vic and Sade. CBS Big Sister. CBS Aunt Jennie's True Life Stories. KSL Stock market quotations quota-tions and Internatton-al Internatton-al News. CBS American School of the Air. CBS Scattergood Baines. CBS Pretty Kitty KeUy. CBS Myrt and Marge. CBS Hilltop House starring Bess Johnson. CBS "Music for Fun" with 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:15 2:30 3:00 Wm 3:30 4.00 . Spier, commentator; Child Guest. KSL International News. CBS Eton Boys. j SERIAL STORY HIT-RUN Yesterdayi Larry appear la a cvr cart alata Pat could iafinenee raffle court officers. CHAPTER VII ENVELOPED in one of her u mother's big aprons Pat added inother places at the table; made in extra salad, sliced Mrs. Mc-Graw's Mc-Graw's rich, moist chocolate fudge cake on a best plate company touches since Larry had accepted the invitation to stay for dinner. Even while she hurried around the warm kitchen sniffing the tantalizing tan-talizing odors of cooking food, listening to the voices of th.. boys discussing the latest automotive news with Larry broken fragments frag-ments of her own conversation with him on the way home kept beating a refrain in her brain. "Those boys in the know could fix just about anything ," "Judges and. prosecutors can be influenced by the right powers ," "Even a pretty pair of eyes like yours " Subtle remarks, innocent inno-cent enough yet charged with a hidden meaning. The nexi two hours passed dully. Even Larry's early leave-taking leave-taking failed to arouse her from her inner concentration. It was on the bus crowded with office workers bound for town that she saw &t morning paper over a man's shoulder. Automatically Automati-cally her eyes scanned the lead stories. Then one stood out, headlines head-lines seemingly written in fire. Isolated words leaped at her. "Hit-runner caught," "Witness "Wit-ness returning from week-end away gives police necessary c 1 e w "Salesman arrested," "Car traced by loosened fender," "Kent refuses to discuss charge." COMEHOW all these past hours she had known that eventually these would be the words she "vould read. She had said them over to herself subconsciously, yet now their actual printed presence hit her like a physical blow. Larry, her fiance, the boy she loved, the boy she was to marry in a few months. Larry whom she felt she knew so intimately, whose every thought she felt, she could understand. Desperately she tried to understand him now. Fear, blind unreasonable fear must have driven him to such action. ac-tion. The accident with the frightful fright-ful feel of bodies flung aside, the ghastly cold facts staring out at him from papers, the hue and cry of the police search those must have been the things that had driven him to lie and plot so frantically. fran-tically. .And yet again the calm, concise explanations had fitted so perfectly at the time. Her thoughts whirled again. TT jiearly ajLbour before the -Jtjscalled - a recess and - in SIDE GLANCES .... . i.:... r..... vuii i hum iiwiii KiittwiiiK nit M1IU( on tills Itev' $15 play pen?" CRANIUM ctiActcoa Answers on Page Eight Some of the following statements state-ments are true, and some false. Which are which? 1. Lew Fields was once a famous fa-mous matinee idol. 2. The Eiffel Tower is the tallest tall-est structure in the world. 3. Chrysoprase is a term describing, de-scribing, a stage of insect development. develop-ment. 4. Australia is below the equator. equa-tor. 5. The present British sovereign is George VI. U QUARTET MEMBERS Miss Pauline Clyde, SpringvUle, and Miss Thora Whiting, Maple-toh, Maple-toh, have been selected members of the University of Utah Girls' double quartet. Both girls are sophomores, music majors, speech minors, and members of Beta Delta Mu. Miss Clyde has been active on the student publications at the university. f t LOVE that time she had captured a semblance sem-blance of poise. The few moments of free time found court gossip turning to the prospect of an examination ex-amination of Kent. Morning papers pa-pers had arrived and Sweeney read snatches of the story to big Sergeant Lewoski. "Examination probably tomorrow," tomor-row," he said. "The judge wants to go to Metropolitan Hospital this afternoon to take testimony from an injured man who has been there a couple of weeks. He's trying try-ing to clean up some of these older cases." "Gives this guy Kent time to line up a lawyer, too," the sergeant ser-geant said. "He'll be dumb enough to try building up seme screwy defense." Tom nodded. "Sure. We know that. Only this time the guy's got to 'have a swell one. Every additional addi-tional hour between the time of the accident and his arrest made it worse for him. The time will take explaining. I'll be glad to work on this. Only hope the boys from the A. I. have something to really give me. Looks as though they will; this story says they found his car in a little repair garage with the fender still damaged." dam-aged." Pat couldn't trust herself to talk to Tom that noon. He bent over her when the judge declared time off for lunch and grinned with an honesty that made her draw a tremulous breath. "Going to grab a sandwich?" She shook her head. "Not right now." he caught her breath at the almost imperceptible way he drew back. She hurried to make an explanation. "If we go to the hospital it will take up so much time that 111 never get all these notes finished. I'll try to get them off now so I won't have the whole thing to do. when we come back." "Oh, of course. Some other day when we aren't so busy." She looked up gratefully. "Yes, IH plan on it." . pLAN? would She wondered if she ever be able to Dlan again., So many plans had been made these past few months only to crash around her head in a few, brief hours. No cloud was ever to have darkened her happiness with Larry. Nothing was to Interrupt their arrangements for the near future. Things were so certain, running so smoothly. And now She pressed her hands against her forehead. Anything could happen. The frightful possibilities crowded around her. The trial, the agony of testimony,, of. questions and cross questions, the alibis, the fight for release, tiie fight for con- By CLARK i ....... i. u .i Sh- Ward Names New Bishop in P. G. PLEASANT GROVE Harold Wright was named new bishop of Pleasant Grove Third ward at ward conference held Sunday evening. eve-ning. Joseph Walker and Niel Fugal will be his counselors. Frank D. Atwood, the retiring oishop has served efficiently for the past ten years. During his tenure of office, a chapel has been built and many other worthy projects proj-ects completed. His cooperative counselors were first W. W. Lim and Albert Olsen. Later Mr. OLsen resigned and Wilford Neves took his place. Bishop Atwood is now a member mem-ber of the hirh council. An aircraft radio beacon receiver receiv-er weighing only four pounds and three ounces, having a range of 194 to 420 kilocycles, will soon be in production. In England, the chances against having twins are 80 to 1. BY MARGUERITE GAHAGAN COPYRIGHT. I9M NBA SCRVICS. INC. viction, the stories in the papers, and then the verdict. If guilty, weeks, even months in prison. If not guilty she wondered .wearily what would be worse. If not guilty in the eyes of the law, there would always be the knowledge in her own heart of Larry's explanations, his remarks these past few days with their hidden meanings, the lies and implications. im-plications. And yet he needed her; needed her' as he never had before. Wasn't that what real love was for? To strengthen one when a real crisis arose? It must have been fear that made him build up this defense. de-fense. Horror and animal instinct, not the desire to deliberately beat the law. Surely he wouldn't have done that She must believe he hadnt meant to do that' She rode to the hospital with the judge and Tom.- The afternoon's after-noon's work was more routine to them, ' and for that reason they talked of other things. Of the opening of the baseball season, of golf scores, and the primaries. "You'll get it for prosecutor, my boy," the judge told Tom. "And Butler will step out of that office when he wins for attorney general. gen-eral. Well be sorry to lose you, even though you've been with us only a short time. Bat yoiill start climbing. I knew your uncle: a fine lawyer. The city needs more of that old school type." Tom laughed with a pleased embarrassment. "You'll have Miss McGraw thinking I'm a civic leader," he said, turning to bring her into the conversation. "I only wish I could be sure of having as good a secretary as she would make." Pat joined in the laughter, joined in the good-natured jesting, jest-ing, walked between them down the long white hospital corridor to the ward where the patient was ready to testify. Some place else in town wis Larry, questioned by police as to Lthe accident that had caused the death of the mother, and the serious seri-ous injury of the child. Pat tore her thoughts from that and concentrated con-centrated on her notes. Tom was beside her, his voice calm and gentle, his presence at nee comforting com-forting and yet filled with the power of the law. She must call Larry. She knew that even as, she gathered her wraps about her, closed her pad, and got up to join the others filing fil-ing out of the hospital. She must speak to him learn what he had to say, give him a chance to . explain. ex-plain. She .must believe th-e was an explanation, .must give him her faith, and: love when he. needed it now mor than ever, before. v.- (To.Be Continued), |