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Show P It 0 V 0 (VTA H) SUN D A Y H ER'AL D 3 . - - w - v. a m am u xv, r- o u J-r a JC A A XV U A A X v y, JL y O v - -i . . -v b U JN D A Y, F EBRUAR Y 9, 19 3 0, SECTION TWO i- OUT OUR WAY By Williams TODAY or JLJ 1 A SCIIIPPS-CANFIELD NEVSPAPEH Every Afternoon, except Saturday, sad Eunfiay 22onx!ns Published y the Herald Corporation NOunnar Hasmuson, president, in the Herald Building. 50 South -First Wert street, Provo, Utah. Entered as second-class matter at the postofflce in Provo, Utah, under tbo act of March 3, 1879. Oilman, ITlcoll & Ruthman, National Advertising Representatives San Francisco office, C07 Montgomery street; Chicago office, 410 Worth Michigan avenue; New York office, 19, West Forty-rourth street; Bostoh office, Tremont street; Detroit, De-troit, Michigan office, Room 2-253, General Motors Building. ' , .. Subscription terms By carrier In Utah county, 60 cents the month; $2.75v for six ' months. In advance; $3.00 the year In advance; by mail, in the county. $4.50: outside Utah county, $&00. " ' . "rtocl&tm. liberty. It. W. GOODELI -:- - ... ... EBITOR and MANAfiRH J. A. OWENS . -:- -:- -:- ; ADVERTISING MANAGER p . I.I tiirocjhout the land" ' . THE TRUTH QUICK y 7- neither this newspaper, nor any of its stockholders or officials has any connection whatever, directly or Indirectly, wiUv any political party, public utility, real estate promotion or other private - business except the publication of newspapers devoted solely to disinterested public service. YOUR QUESTIONS You can get an answer to any I answerable question of fact or ! Information by writing tafreK j erick SI. Kir by. Question Edl- I tor, Provo Evening Herald's j I Washington Bureau, 1322 New j York Avenue, Washington, D. j CL. enclosing' two cents in I stamps for reply.' Medical and legal advice cannot be given, j nor can extended research be I I made, All other questions will j be answered. -. All letters are j confidential. You are cordially invited to make u3 of this free I BervlCA an often ba von nlMtu. ' I Vinrtiini lfo n,sl ' I EDITOR. The petition for a viaduct under the railroad tracks irn Q What are tundra and where the southwestern part of the citv should briner the necessarv are they located? results. .. A. Cold desert treeless 'plains So, many instances of lone delays, made necessarv to JJ?Z A J j m - 0 - m - i iuipp evUU wrVOld Alio Uaulv-- IBs 4L19V motorists and pedestrians in that section,, have been brought generally applied to a similar area to light, that the average citizen can see nothincr for it ex- m North America. The word is of Cept the logical remedy Of the Viaduct. , . :a Russian origin. -and, means a In that. obvious fact of convenience, let us not Wet marshypiain. The, prevailing low tne lmporxant mauer ot safety. Kailroad crossings are al- hier latitude and oroximitv to W -II 1 '. . A 11 1 V - I fill 11 T M - lit.' t fc..if- "crt" " 1 1 3 - - ' I IIowdy folks! A hitch-hiker I a man who. tftr vao Have riven him w - - i , , - WT . .ca-w.kuwv auu. vivAllllllT I.U luc a lift on tho roal, tells you that ways nazaraous, no matter flOW well-known and emphatically frozen northern ocean, and result you have a bum car. . stressed that crossing hazard mav be. I .-Wbpn ' mnfnriatia roaliro fbaf mmr V.n.m 4-. ,,r,r,4- A fortune awaits the man who ' " Y" ,Z - , . "V" "Vr' -.? tcuuwa uuuivci v& uvw I , - , ... ... r jent by inventing n anti-necking ty are quite iiiceiy to taxe reckless chances, regardless of jasoUne. , now-iooinardy they recognize such action to be. ; Save time and save lives by granting the petition for a viaduct! , , . . . Will Meet All Comers! I Sammy "Bad News' YVoofleburz, ocal welterwelsht. issues a chal- lenre to meet Cities Have Characters, Too ..all comers. This in very scanty vegetation. Q. Who is, he American minister to Holland? . ' ' , ' " A. John Gerrit Dickema. . " ; Q. Is an oil well a discovery or an invention? . " A. The machinery used in drilling drill-ing an oil well is the result of invention; in-vention; the location of the well is a discovery. An oil well in its com plete. form as a producing', unit, is therefore the result of both dis covery and invention. .. . Q. - Is any other - state than Louisiana divided into Parishes in qSSTe TV DCWr OtMowiAL VOU! 'i-iR ' 111 I . kIm (wo Ave- wou' I !1J I - XAiHHM .. V e"FF voo was Vr he ii I - M - v !;' "ooHM"G,rs about. BRst- 7- A ' ' ' . Thawed yl h- wrWsiriAtv De 6muli lilt t V our y v acsim ? savru stx) I I 7 ! 1 ' ' " '' ''' Anyone who travels about very much over the west must lad claim a de- have remarked the difference m the characters of cities oision over hinv Here is one town m which all the buildinirs snarkle f 0 l.t.lii. XI T 1 1 II . 1 .. .. . v . , i in sunncnt. 1 reoDie oust m'nm it tno srrppra ' 'hov aponi. a. no out in lszTbVal ceeriuv ready with a nod to a stranger or a smile for a wild i w i n rl friend. Traffic moves with a snap, stores are colorful, the which missed town gives one the impression of knowing where it's going his opponent, and of being on its way. . and landed on What gives a town its character? Every city has its his own jaw, rum -rafrnfAlcaa rf ita otofo rf nfianamfir Cnm "Had News" hash v.Avvmwuw obv tuopviiijrt kvmic citica diijiic, an oritinai styief some snarl, some blink sleepily, wondering what it's all of boxing, lead- aDOUr. i with hi chin and blocking ail f Qurs, we believe, is one of those that smiles. inches with his nose. Address. all! If VOU traced fl citv's character hnrlr tn ita nrirrm vm't I and fabrics, but there Is little d- immnnlcAtku ta bl mankrer. I t - tt . . . ' I j t i tt-h.j cii; ' -i urnii n Tinn . 1U6T nna : man w-t a limn i r n i a uiauu lur il ill ujc ljuilcu 3ULLea.-; i. nn..l. i I vm a v. juiiv wa iiv vv ' jv ' Ch mail Uc I --- -- ..... . - . I iiirui in rnfir n i-i i v nil r Trnm I in iiwav rt r i ... -v - . ' ... ... . ?nac nas Decome 01 me oiu-iqjia- i iioiovvci nioixo a. tuk w -ii.v. xiiv ciiaiiiuer ui com- I n whn ia r.nvcrnm f aiooIq neJ hotel where you had to get up merce Or board of trade that thinks its duties end With get- and what is name of the delegate ! ' Cj; What is the selection ' played on the ' piano- by one of the Marx brothers in 'The Cocoanuts"? A. "When My Dreams Come True,'! by lirving Berlin ' Q. i Wliat is an Angora Rabbit ? Is its fur. useful? A. It has long silky wool instead of fur, and the pelt, is worthless to furriers. The wool is used by some foreign concerns, to make .'yarns jfcre breakfast because they need 1 your sheet for ar tablecloth?-' ' .OSII DO I JLOOK LIKE TIIATT No one every really , know' how rrible he can look until after tne ishUffht photo of, the company .nQuet 'has: been "developed and Gashouse Gus was " roughly ndled yesterday for; violating the ma laws.; He . was caught shooting with idad ' dice. ' v , ; -. -' ' UI Gee Gee says her" sweetie has ton up swimming. In the last let- r he wrote, he said he was spend- r all' his "time at Kelly pool. ting a new factory, is doing only half a job. Character counts in cities as well as in business. THE OBSERVER I: 1 By Jim Marshall I (This . column ; is guest-conducted is that we're all hopped . upon a by P. Sw J. M.) -.. Dear Jlm I, read your column- the one in which you said that: "Somehow or other there has grown up the "notion that man who wasn't consulted about being iome Insects, have their hearing put Into the world owes a sort jaratu3 in their feet, resembling cf duty to the old planet ; . - iti clans who also have their ears I and I disagree wltn you quue definitely ; because as a matter af fact or fancy the notion that we owe a-duty a-duty to the world Is a fine idea only nobody goes in for it any 3 to the ground. J'l Gee Gee always calls a bank e ""William. She says she never omea Intimate enough with one call It B11L-. . ' jr" Janitor has shut ' down the -.ace, as he has burned up. the more The woild had one great trouble ne DM.DuniK- up me , . . . wfn y,aVa nother ee lumps of coal he bought last lI J,T " lember-at a bargain 'sale. ART SHANNON. one next Century but lust as the passing moment the great trouble' with the world THE NATION'S LEADERS 1; Our Washington Bureau has ready for you a special packet : containing four of its bulletins, dealing Tith the presidents of the United States. They are of -.pecial interest and value to boys and girls in school vcrl as well as to grownups.. The titles are : , 1. Fivetlreat Presidents. . - . ' 2: Biographies of all Presidents. " y : 3 Wives and Families of the Presidents. v : 4. The Presidency- Its Powers and Duties. . If VcUvWant this packet of bulletins, fill out the oupon'below and mail as directed: : V CLJP COUPON ilERE - ."'"''" - - -s : - : " ' f , V - - - AJrinUCAN IIISTORY EDITOR, , --Washington Bureau, provo Evening Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C r vent the-p'acket of four bulletins on THE PRESHDENTS and enclose herewith 15 cents In coin or loose, uncancelled, U. S. postage stamps to cover postage and handling costs: NAME CT. & NO CITY .... rw.....-rSTATEv. I an' a reader of Provo Evening Herald. CLIP COUPON' HERE great ided '' which we like to call "pagan" -. in- other words we think the world owes us some happiness and I don't need to tell you that the real pagan idea was a good way;' from that in a, forward direction di-rection j , - The old Sophists ' said: "Know thyself!" . and I'd like to know how an intelligent man could get any hap-piness-rout of accurately estimating estimat-ing his own; personal, bundle '. of prejudices, fears and ; petinesses the things that go to make up what we call personality ? the average man who-, really knew himself would be the unhap-piest unhap-piest human being alive because he would realize his own futi from. Alaska to the United States i CT ' - j A. George A. Parks is governor, l and Dan A. Sutherland fe..tb.edele-. gate. in congress. w Q. What ?. is . the word for "Twi-Hgiii" "Twi-Hgiii" in Spanish? A. Crepusculo. - , Q. Vhat is the most , precious metal? , V . A. Radium, , Q; What caused the . death of Nero, the Emperor of Rome? A. He committed suicide the 31st year of his age and the fourteenth of his reign.-Q. reign.-Q. What is entomology? - - ; A. The science of the study of in sect life. '..,' - Q. When was the law providing for the electrocution ; of persons sentenced to death in Pennsylvania, passed? " - A. In 1913. ' Q. What is the correct abbreviation, abbrevia-tion, of Pennsylvania? A.-Pa.'- :."..;,-.-. . .'' i. Is athletics singular or plural? A. It is a collective name for games and sports, and is both singular and plural. Q. Who was president of the continental con-tinental congress? - A. Peyton Randolph of Virginia. The name "Austria." rnmug from "Chosterreich," meaning "east land." But I'm willing to proclaim If there "aren't too many -intellectuals around to give me the ha-ha " that knowing himself gives a fellow a reasonably good line . on how to .be decent altho human ; I'm not advocating J the conquest con-quest of fear or the remission oi sins or the heroic life ever after I do believe that an honest man will admit he's no cherub 'and that most of the jobs of work and the knocks of -the world that assail him he brings on himself , :.vV: ' AND, JLISTEN: The Bible Is a pretty good sort of book but no body with any sense or steadfast ness needs to read "the" classics to !arn that nowhere in the Book is it written . . .. .. ' r. ,. that man should be happy but that it Is frequently enjoined upon us to live righteously. : Radio isn't a, musical instrument: attorney general of Alabama says SO.i ji This West of Ours, Its Romantic History Naturelahd- -The Northern-Pacific trains puff slowly up the mountainside at Wicks,; Mont., and the passengers sit - idly looking at the hill above them. Little do they realize that $32,000,000 in ore has been taken from the 32 miles of tunnels which honeycomb it.-' ' " f- :- Yet there was a timawhen WJcks" v.-as a , typical . mining city -of . the pioneer west, with :a population' of 1500 ' and five , dance halls and 22 saloons, which never closed by day or night. Playing . cards were-strewn were-strewn over the. main' street so thick that a man ; with a team of horses -swept the ' streets . every morning! Today only a handful of old-timers are left in the little town. . ' - . ! ... I fr'.-j , , ,,, m. " t -T, : , The sooty tern, so calledbecause her feathers look as thp they had been liberally dusted with soot, is the "chicken" of the West Indies. The sooty tern lays eggs which are edible, and highly prized. The breeding grounds of the birds are systematically raided by the egg gatherers, v The industry is one of the most .important in the . West Indies, for the egg3 are widely ox-' ported in cold storage. - The adults have beautiful black and white plumage, but the young have liffht, sooty-colored : feathers; For some reason the tern, who is a- member or the seagull - family," doesn't object to having, her eggs. stolen, and cheefully. keeps, on lay ing like a hen.- Columbia university. New York, has more than 33,300 students. "Insects On Ice, - :-, :-, ; Thaw In Spring When a large cargo of '.praying mantis arrived in Seattle from Ohina the other day, the port of-fials of-fials were puzzled. 'J-'he mantis, giant predatory grasshoppers; . eould not be sent to T3U6MT , WtMTlR J 1 v putting the whole cargo of thous ands of mantis, On IcerThey are now in cold storage, and wIJK, re main dormant until they are need ed in spring to wipe out cater pillars, and other orchard pestsr The praying manti is al huge grasshopper about four Inches long. He kills other insects in wholesale lots, apparently for the pure Joy of killing. As such, . he is a valuable ally of the farmer. .. their destination ' until .spring. And kept in Seattle, they would soon reach their growth and die. ' v -"TheTnwzle was finally solved-by MISSIONARY TO SPEAK SPANISH FORK Elder David Morgan, son of Bishop and Mrs, Ralph D. Morgan who has recently returned from a, two. years mission to Germany will be the principal speaker at a welcome home, meeting meet-ing to e held Sunday evening in the Third ward chapel. A fine musical program, has been arranged arrang-ed and Elder Morgan .will tell of some of his experiences In Germany.- . '., . : Mose easterners come west by water than westerners go east by the same route.. (Continued From Page One) to the Mexican under dog. "CONGRESS votes more than fiva million; dollars, that . "Gold Star" mothers may visit their sons' giaves In Fiance. Of 11000 mothers entitled to go, 6,000 have expressed a desire to go. Many cannot' go, because of duties at home Others, perhaps, dread the sorrowful shock. piCHARD Stewart, rug merchant v of Warren, Ohio, is In jail. Judge Perry found him guilty of molesting, n woman Stewart offers an excuse as' old as Adam, "the wo man; led me on." In Jail, Stewart refuses to eat .... and is very thin, after 23 starving days. It would have been fortunate for Adam, and for -..us,; but bad for the elothlng business, had Adam likewise refused re-fused to eat. " "X5NGRESS has .appropriated V 587,000 tofight the pink boll weevil in Arizona. An experimenter in this state believes that cotton, and other plants might be fed in such a way as to discourage pests that destroy them. Certain minerals, it is suggested, could be ; harmlessly absorbed by plants and would be fatal to the attacking at-tacking insect, life. Perhaps what Dr. Ehrljch didwith his salvarsan might be done to other pests, as harmful as th salvarsan specialty. S on I A ..1 :Ltf- ' - - 24 Houlv service . " T" ;., ... .. I - 0 01 .1 e never keep you wait ing for cash you need In a hurry. Speed characterizes character-izes our service; Your car, or. other personal proper- ty, will do as collateral. . ' ' ' i . .;- ,, Our Service Is Confidential COLUMBIA BOND & MORTGAGE A COMPANY PHONE 1277 9i North Unlv. Ave, PROVO, UTAH The world now has 2,320,000 tons of battleships afloat; in 1913 the total was 3,953,000 tons.. J1 . L 1 .- Coll For SERVICE PAUL The Radio Man 290 NO. FOURTH EAST -1305-W. ,. fit ..... . . - ... ........ i. - ,.- .. .. . . .. . , ; v. , ..: - :j2:! si jce s cost m p ire - s : S 017GAIH i Visitors to Moscow were caught. and compulsorily shaved during the reign of .Peter .the Great;, he disiiKed oeards. . It is estimated the land arma ments or the world a "civilized ' na tions cost about $200,000,000. TAUDCOD uvna oil, ClFASAtlTVA k . i J 1 7 H I I. I I ' J 9 . .1 . ... ' ' ' "w. ... y" m.. d w v m"n -w . . . I k Ba w jrMlMk Like Old Mt. Timpanogos, Stand Highest In Their Field Get more high-priced fall and winter eggs I "Better Chicks Mean digger Profits" BOOK YOUR ORDERS NOW , For Large White Egg strain. Production-bred, Acclimated. White Leghorn Chicks. . . " . : Call, Wire or Write for Price List and Circular All Breeding Flocks Accepted and Certified by. Licensed American Poultry Association Judge. ; Agents . SOL-HOT BROODERS COAL, OIL & ELECTRIC PROVO 1 Accredited 32 SOUTH SECOND WEST ST. Visitors VlroTi UTAH Tha Commander is an Sght of atruo cham-pionship cham-pionship calibre one of the three great Studebalcer Eights, which hold the highest world records and more American stock car records than all other makes combined. , The Commander Eight has the thrift of a . six yet l a makes of. sixes cost more. Studeboker offers eight-cylinder power, at : moderate cost, modern to the very moment in style and engineering . . Champions with such features as the New Full Power Muffler and Ball Bearing Spring Suspension, both pioneered by Stuclebaker Hydraulic Shock : Absorbers Duplate Safety Glass Cam-and-tever Steering Automatic. Radi-; ator Shutters controlled by thermostat-Bodies thermostat-Bodies steel sheathed over hardwood foundation foun-dation Lanchester Vibration Damper. . . f STUDEBAKER EIGHTS COST NO ; V MORE TO BUY OR TO OPERATE Dictator Eight Club Sedan ' $1195 Dictator Eight Four-Door Sedan . $1295 Commander Eight Four-Door Sedan $1515 President Eight Four-Door Sedan - ' $1795 PricM at the factory . STUDEBMRo ERSIIItiE SALES Seasoned Eights and Dynamic New Erskine -Meet With Healthy Buying Kesponso Studebaker sales for January, 1930, ' showed a 72 increase oyer December, Decem-ber, 1929. Total January shipments, both export and domestic, were within 3 of last year. Shipments to do-mesUcdealersexceeded do-mesUcdealersexceeded January, 1929.- .i - In New 'York, where the recent uneasiness" originated, more Studo- ; .bakers and Erskines were delivered to retail purchasers than during any . January in Studebaker history. The public still has the cash and ' the desire to. buy motor cars which offer champion . performance, comfort, com-fort, safety and beauty at One-Profit 'prices. , V'A The Studebaker Corporation : .. y , '.;: of America ; : , ' . . A. IL Erskine ' . , President ' TO CO. 218 West Center St Phone 261 Tmm in "StuJehaler Ckamphns" Smvday tvtnlng 19:1$ Eastern StMJ&rJ Timt. , StatUnJPEA F and ft B C. nitworh |