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Show PRO VOr(P:AH)'SUND'AiY--HERL'DrS U N DAY, D E C E MfiER- X-VV-i PAGE SIX ALLEY OOP By HAMLINl Herald OUR TROUBLES CAME H V llMMC HAWE A ft? Alteroo Jcpt Saturday MrMS ublihei by the Herald Cerjwrttioti. A South Fir Weat Street. ProVtf, trtah. finfcfrdM , tcond-cl matter At the poitofflce In Provo. Utah, under tb act of March $, 187., f i- . Oilman, NicpH AS. Ruthman. National Advertising riprenttli, N Ywrlc. San Pranclco. Detroit. Boston, 1. Anglft, Roattle. Chicago, At LAST QUICK SUCCESSION, BUT N0W A LOOK AT WERE ALL C WE HAVE IN OUR POS- ONE ' OF THOSE TOGETHER A SESSION -A WEAPON SPEAR-THROWING A6AIN-N0WJ NEVJ AND STRANGE, CONTRAPTIONS MAYBE SO NOVJ I THINK OUR WE CAN GET luck will change: Member umta mwi. xu. sa iir. ftri h RcrlDna Leaarue of Newspapers. SOMEWHERE: Liberty Subscription terma by carrier In Utah county. 60 cents the month: $2.75 for six inontfas, in anee: SSOU the year. In advance; by ft. all In Utah County. In advance. $4.50; outside Utan County. $6.00. tfcrKli all - tit Lui" f IS THIS TH YEAH .THAT'S RIGHT .'A A tyJJ ( VEAH, WttAT A MAN ) VAV YOU WORK A ( PULCER BACK WITH AVWW ,7( ( BUT, OH, WE FIND ) j h THIS O S V ALL YOUR MIGHT f I A MAN V IT HE'S STRONG OF f ) - -- - LUfAMOXf A ( AhA t ENfER. Ac-nIGLAD TOSEE ) ( w x V ELL' 7 uiA rri LAND ) 2 s k V NT LOVE . :i'v Liquor Responsibility Rests With Dealers ReacFther arguments now being advanced over liquor control plans, by the various groups, and you speedily discover dis-cover ihat the country is almost unanimous in opposition to return-of the old-fashioned saloon. Read them a little farther, however, and you also discover dis-cover that the country seems to be confused considerably about the exact reasons for this opposition. It-is sold on the idea that the open saloon was a nuisance nuis-ance and a menace, but it doesn't seem to know just what made it that way. ' One group seems to think that the presence of a bar., and the fact that men stood up to get their drinks, constituted consti-tuted the worst feature. So we get a number of state control con-trol laws which permit sale of packaged goods in liquor stores arid perrnit sales -by the glass in hotel dining rooms and restaurants, but which insist that there shall be o bars and no vertical drinking. Another group figures that drinking anywhere except in the home is an tvil, and comes out for sales restricted to unopened packages, with public drinking strictly prohibited. The fact that different states will have different laws is going to be a good thing, in this connection, for it will permit many varieties of liquor control to be tested simultaneously. simul-taneously. Meanwhile, however, this confusion of thought over the way in which liquor should be sold deserves some extended thought. The chief trouble with the old-time saloon wasn t the fact that men stood up to drink, or that their drinks were shoved at them across a polished bit of mahogany. Tt was that the saloon as an institution had precious little discretion. It sold, in most cases, to anyone who could lay a coin on the bar to chronic drunkards, to spendthrifts, to flighty youngsters, to men whose families were in want. There were saloonkeepers, of course, who had some sense of responsibility in these mattersbut they were the exceptions. In the main, the cornr saloon was nearly all that the prohibitionists said it was.V A liquor control law which permits any kind of public drinking must be framed with that in mind. Details of the sale whether it be at table or over a bar are unimportant. It is the spirit, in which the traffic as a whole is handled :hat counts. The traffic was socially irresponsible, in the old days; Heaven knows it has been socially irresponsible under prohibition. pro-hibition. If a firm understanding "of its responsibility can be forced into it now, the question of bar versus table becomes secondary. Pleasant Grove Happenings MISS VIOLA WEST Correspondent Phone Z&-W The M. lt A. board of the Tim-panogos Tim-panogos stake met at the home of pr.xand Mra. G. V- Anderson Tuesday Tues-day evening. Alfred Dexter played a clarinet solo and James H. Walker Walk-er talked to the group. Plans were made for the stake road show which will be held two nights beginning be-ginning January 13. Refreshments were served by the hostess after the meeting. The members pres ent were Mr. and Mrs. A. P. War-nick, War-nick, Ford Paulson, Lyean Johnson, John-son, E. R. West, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Walker, Estelle Fenton, Reed Walker, Ruby Williams, Maybell Farr, Arvilla Clark, La-.fayete La-.fayete Wright. , Thursday dinner guests at the home of Mrs. Adeline Nelson were Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson and two children of Lyndyl, Mr. and Mrs. James Oler and family of Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Hayden Holen- drake and family of American Fork. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Dalton, Merrill Mer-rill Warnick, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Roundy spent Thursday in Salt Lake. Mrs. Prue Coombs was a guest of Salt Lake Relatives Tuesday. Mr. and, Mrs. A. S. Burch of Roosevelt, Utah, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Beck. Mrs. G. Y. Anaerson gave a social so-cial Monday evening in compliment compli-ment to her daughter . Jean's eighth birthday anniversary. Games were enjoyed and as a cpncluding feature Santa Claus visited the party and gave each guest a present and a bag of candy and nuts. The elders of the Timpanogos stake sponsored a banquet party and dance at the Second ward amusement hall Wednesday evening. eve-ning. The purpose of the affair was to raise a missionary fund to keep a young man from the Timpanogos Tim-panogos stake on a mission. Mr, and Mrs. Hyrum Carlson and daughter May of Charleston spent the first part of the weelf visiting with Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Wadley. Mrs. G. Y. Anderson entertained Howdy, folks! Music critic says that, prohibition being repealed, the old-time songs will again become be-come popular. Such as, no doubt When It's Night Time, Downing Down-ing Burgundy. , The Bottle Cry of Freedom. Let the Rest of the World Go Buy. "A saloon," states Corporation counsel A. C. Van Soelen in an official of-ficial opinion, "is what is commonly common-ly understood by the term." Is there no limit to the profundity profund-ity of the legal mind ? 4l H STRANGER THAN FICTION This is Mr. Horace T. Clambake, Clam-bake, of R. F. D. Route No. 7837. Incredible as tt may seem, Mr. C lambake, in 20 years, has never listened in on a party telephone line. A subscriber wishes to know if Li'l Gee Gee's complexion is natural. nat-ural. Sure, it is! She has worn it so long she wouldn't look natural without it. CULINARY NOTE Spanish food is aU right, but some of it tastes like putting the wrong end of a cigar in your mouth. We don't know who invented these dinky little hats the women are wearing, but we think it was the same gink who designed the overseas cap worn by the A. E. F. during the war. Among the more common holdups hold-ups never recorded in the newspapers news-papers is that of friend wife who holds you up every Saturday evening eve-ning for your paycheck. GOLD-DIGGER Freddie bought a limousine For his little honey, Now he's riding tfrolley cars The gal haft all his money ! A coffin was recently found packed with bottles of whiskey, but no one claims it is the first coffin whisky has filled. Walk your horses. her daughters' teachers at dinner Saturday evening. The gusts were Miss Emma Bush, Mrs. Leone Told and Miss Marjorie Holdaway. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph West and Miss Josephine West were Spanish Fork visitors Wednesday. , Continued rrom rase One) was running up and down stairs, ducking in and out of offices, fluttering flut-tering round the desk of "Doc" Doran, alcohol commissioner, breathlessly trying to get importation impor-tation permits for the liquor interests in-terests she had once opposed. The first days of repeal caused more trouble to Washington hotel waiters than all the fourteen years of prohibition. Despite the fact that the District of Columbia was still dry, patrons kept up a barrage of inquiries for cocktails. The strategy tehind the quotas for Importation of foreign liquor is not merely the increase of American sales abroad, but the increase of farm sales. . . . The agriculture department figures that the howl of-California wine growers over the importation of foreign wines can be spiked if farmers in other parts of the country, get reciprocal benefits. Therefore Secretary Wallace plans to trade American rice and apples to Argentina for Argentine wines, and American pork and butter to England for whiskey, ale- and so on. LITERATURE AND ART Revelations of the senate bank investigation and reports that a fight will be made to amend the "truth in securities" act has revived re-vived interest in Justice Brandeis book, "Other People's Money." Despite De-spite the fact that it was first published over 20 years ago, demand de-mand for it became so great that a popular dollar edition has been printed. . . . Henry Mencken and Joseph Hergesheimer have literary liter-ary orders to fill, but they are spending a lot of their time sending send-ing each other scurrilous notes and telegrams. . . . The best of friends, the two writers live just around the corner from each other in Baltimore. . . . Mencken had some specially printed letterheads letter-heads representing law firms existing ex-isting only in his own imagination. imagina-tion. . . . One of his pet pranks is to send a letter from "Cabot, Goldstein, Greenbaum and Lowell" Low-ell" to one of his best friends, in whic hthe above-named attorneys threaten to collect damages for aggravated assault, mayhem or petty larceny. Huey Long is sending free cod-ies cod-ies of his v autobiography to mem bers of congress, but he is not being extravagant about it. . . . The copies are a cheap one-dollar reprint of his opus. . . . General Hugh Johnson writes all his speeches in longhand, has them transcribed on a typewriter" with specially large type. . . . Senator Tydings of Maryland, who used to paint in a purple robe in his Georgetown studio, now is etching tropical sunsets and brown-skinned maidens in Puerto Rico. . . . "Glad Tydings," as he is called in the senate, is chairman of the insular affairs committee. DEATH CALLS AGNES BEER PAYSON Mrs. Agnes Hutchinson Hutchin-son Beer, wife of Albert Henry Beer of Lake Shore, died at the Pavson hospital Wednesday night following an operation for gall stones. Mrs. Beer was born De cember 6, 1878, at Lake Shore, a daughter of the late David and worked as a teacher in the Relief society until her recent illness. Funeral services will be held oi Sunday at 1:30 p. m. in the Lak t - l J l . I v, . : i i auorc warn (.impel wan uuriai n She is survived by her husband j the Spanish Fork cemetery unde and the following: children Charles Lewis Beer, Eureka; Albert Al-bert Floyd Beer, Elko, Nevada; Thomas Lee Beer, Payson; Lila Madge, Dave Emmett, Glenn Woodrow; Sarah Pauline Beer, all of Lake Shore; one brother, Arnold Hutchinson of Lake Shore; five sisters. Mrs. James Barrett, America Fork; Mrs. Percy And erson, Spnngville; Mrs. direction of the Deseret Mortuary Blames U. S. LONDON, Dec. 9 U.R Sir Ar thur Balfour, leading industrialist, industrial-ist, said in a speech last nighi that the United States, by buying Lisle j gold above 'the world mice, hat iMooney, ana Mrs. gamine sooer- j deliberately postponed for a quar berg, Los Angeles; Mrs. Ed Perry, ter of a century the possibilitj Sarah McKee Hutchinson. Shdoun. Lake; inree grandchildren 1 of a return to the gold standard. -L OUT OUR WAY P3 BY WILLIAMS WHY, YEH, T I'LL DI1T I VAITU Vrtl 1 PER A PEW MINUTES THAT BIG BIRD IS LICKED, RICHT NOWf BYTH'TIME HE GITS OVER TH' SHOCK OF ANYONE THAT SIZE HAVIN' "TH AUDACITY TO EVEN THINK OF BOXIKT HIM i WHY, WILL BE UP. p L - rw, vrr, - ' - - - w9mm 4 tfe uri . . . . ... . . w w mwsrm mv wmmm tii nwn naL - - ajiJiu ILL 7jl. ' YEH, HE IS IN A TOUGH SPOT-IF HE LARRUPS TH LITTLE 6uY, HE'S A BRUTE . AND IF HE GITS A WALtOPlN' HE'S A BOOB THv LITTLE GUY CAM'T LOSE-HE'LL EITHER GET GLORY OK oYnrATnY V Kl APOI CnisJ &kir "TUP Hi rc Probate and Guard-Sanship Guard-Sanship Notices Oonault County Clerk or the i Respective Signer for Furthar Information. n ' NOTICE TO CUfcDITORS Estate of Benjamin Wheeler, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers at office of Brock -bank and Pope, 8 West Center St., Provo, Utah, on or before the 27th day of January A. D. 1934." i M. B. POPE, Administrator of Estate of Benjamin Wheeler, deceased. Brockbank and- Pope, Attorneys for Administrator. PUb. Nov. 26, Dec. 3, 10, 17, 1933. Legal Notices ASSESSMENT NOTICE Indian Queen Consolidated Mining Min-ing Company, principal place of business, Room 6, Roundy Building, Build-ing, Provo, Utah. Nptice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Board of Directors Di-rectors held ori the 25th day of November, 1933, ' an assessment (No. 7) pi six-tenths of one mill pef: share was levied on thecapital stock, of 'the corporation, payable Immediately to R. E. Allen, secretary secre-tary of the company, at Room 6, Roundy Buildingf Provo, Utah, i Any stock upon which this, assessment as-sessment may remain unpaid on Tuesday rthe 26th day of December, Decem-ber, 1933... will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auc-" tionjr and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 10th day of January, 1934, at.- 10:00 o'clock a. ni. of - said day; to pay the delinquent assessment thereon: together with the cost of advertising advertis-ing and expanse-of sale. jj .-. R. E. ALLEN. ' ' Secretary I Room 6, Roundy Buildings . Provo, Utah. j Pub. Dec. 3, 10, 17, 1933. jbiU k They've bpen looking forward, that family of yours, to the time when they can say: "Yes, we too are enjoying the comfort and convenience of Electric Cooking and Elec-trie Elec-trie Refrigeration. Make Christmas more delightful this year than ever, by giving them what they really want an Electric Range, or an Electric Refrigerator, or both. It is a step you are sure to take sooner or later. Make it a Christmas-event! It'ji the practical and sensible thing to do! And how pleading to every member of the family ! Electrical Gifts are inexpensive inex-pensive and most appropriate appro-priate for any name on your Christmas list. Your Electrical Dettler has a wonderful variety of high est quality appliances from which yon may choose. Visit' his store. He wiU give yt&u felpful sug: g&stions See the beautifuMTotpoint Electric Ranges an.l General Electric Refrigerators. on display in our nearest store. Take advantage of our easv pas -ment plan to equip your home for Christmas. Eery day in the year youTJ enjoy this wonderful wonder-ful service, and our combination stepdown rate makes its cost decidedly low, , EL A, Wl DO OVK fAUT rUim :PGWR R UCHT CO. IS '.ttti. . - ... .4. : imiii E FFIC IENT PUBLIC SERVIC E O . .4-' "V. s' |