OCR Text |
Show SECTION TWO A PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY- HERALD, SUNDAY, NMAY-- 22, , 1938 PAGE s FIVE. , For Want ads PHONE 495 want ada will appear on the -Classified Ad Page If they are in the office before , JK a, m,, after which they will appear In the column ' "Too Late 'for Classification." Classifica-tion." Want Ads will be accepted until 1 p. m. daily. On Saturday Sat-urday Want Ads coming in between 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. will be put in the "Too La to For Classification." Rates First and second day, each Insertion 10 cents per line; three days 25 cents per line; one week, 40 cents per line; two weeks, 70 cents per line; one month $1.20 pr line. (Minimum charge 25 cents.) Count five words to line. Minimum accepted, 2 lines. Classified ads, must be paid in advance. Legal Rate 10 centa per line per insertion, in-sertion, 8 pt. type. MISCELLANEOUS WOOD SAWING at $1.25 per cord. Inquire 340 S. 7 YV. m26 PAPER cleaning, kaLsomining. painting. Work guaranteed. ' Phone 848. m22 FOR paperhangtng and cleaning, coving, painting. Ph. 03GR4. Oliver M. Hansen. m24 FOR SALE HEAL ESTATE 3 CHOICE building lots. Reas. Inq. 862 W. 2 No. m24 LOST LADY'S wrist watch by new P.O. Reward. Mrs. Walter Anderson, Springville. m22 t . . SM. white dog with black harness. Reward. Phone 831M. m27 MT. Fuel Supply Co.. requisition book. 792 W. 4 No. Reward. m22 FO OR lease, furn. home with basement base-ment apt. 430 E. 5 No.' m23 MONEY TO LOAN LOANS A. C. Wickman (Wick) PERSONAL FINANCE CO. WILL LEND YOU $100 ON YOUR SIGNATURE $7.27 Monthly Repays $100 Also Loans on Furniture, Autoj . and Endorsed Notes, etc. Room No. 207, Knight Blk Bldg Second Floor - Phone 210 8 North University Avenue Over Schramm-Johnson's r r Z ' 1 REMODEL YOUR HOME WITHOUT .MORTGAGING Here's Check your home inside and out. Make a list of what you need.- We will arrange to finance it even if you have a mortgage. For Particulars See In-State 598 South University Avenue "HELPFUL SERVICE" 5 .-2,1?- 3 SPECIAL BARGAINS on New and Used Furniture! A large selection to choose from Trade in your old Lawn-mower Lawn-mower on a new one. WE BUY, SELL, or EXCHANGE FURNITURE " at 159 N. Univ. Ave. Phone 915-W THE GENERAL SHOP We Have Some Good Buys in Homes Any part of Provo or Utah County. Also farm lands, with or without homes. Business Busi-ness , property. Apt. houses. Service station. Groc. stores. Building lots. We sell you a lot, loan money to build. Also, Ins. the best. See Prows & Haws Realty Co., 53 North Uni. Ave. Phone 45C. FOR .KENT -FURNISHED FURN. bed rm. with bath. Good location. 35 E. 8 No. j3 5 RM. mod. home, including garden. gar-den. 590 East 4th South. m25 2 ROOM modern apartment. 258 East 6th North. m24 3 RM. apt. or sleeping rm. with bath. 326 W. 3 So. -m23 SMALI clean mod. apt. Reason-abb-. 180 E. 5 S. m23 SMALL mod. apt. Prlv. bath. 387 N. 3 E. Phone 352R. m25 5 RM. mod. home, for summer. 333 E. 1 So. Ph. 1088R. m25 2 RM. .mod. apt. H. W. and cooking. cook-ing. Cuuple. 459 N. 6 East. m22 CLEAN 3 rm. Mod. apt. adults. Inq. 589 E. 3 So. m24 3 RM. str. mod. apartment. 105 So. 1st East. Adults. m23 3 RM. mod., furn. basement apt. Just repainted and papered. Couple preferred. 593 East 1st North. ' jl SLEEPING rooms with bath. 385 South 3rd East. m27 FOR RENT Unfurnished 4 RM. mod. hs. Barn, coops. 3 acre ground, at "Orem $20. Ph. 71W, Pleasant Grove. m24 3 RM. mod. apt. 170 East 1 So. Adults Preferred. m24 4 RM. str. modern apt. 112 East Center. Phone 151. m24 NEY' 3 rm. mod. apt. Excel, location. loca-tion. Elec. Equip. Ph. 60. 184 North 2nd East. , m25 3 RM. mod. apt. 178 No. 2 E. Phone 1068.. m22 CLEAN 3 room mod. basement apt. 144 West 3rd Sol m25 PARTLY furnished 3 rm. mod. apt. 170 YV. 2nd South. j2 3 RM. mod. apt., sleeping porch. Adults. 579 N 4th East. m25 3 RM. mod. apartment. 187 No. 2 East. Phone 1190YV. m23 2 RM. mod. apt. Poulson Apt. Phonle 02J1. , m22 3 RM. modern apartment. Phone 444. 269 No. 5th East. m22 jy AND T O RENT UNFURN. mod. home by responsible respon-sible party. White Herald Box I L. . , mz How Lumber Co, Phone 20 FOB REAL REAL. ESTATE BARGAINS RENTALS Business Busi-ness or Residence Insurance, Bonds or Notary Work See or Phone No. 4 HEAL REALTY COMPANY 165 West Center Street Provo's New Shopping Center See our windows for specials Homes and IncomeX Eight Modern Rooms Brick Excellent Corner Lot ' Extra Lot Most Ideal Location, Paved Street. INTERESTING! BUSINESvS PROPERTY Near New Post Office 3xl2 Rod Lot, Old HouseATTRACnVE ! FIVE APTS. $3800. HEART OF BUSINESS DISTRICT! $4200, Five Room Mod. Paved St., NE. Provo. INVESTIGATE! o SUITABLE FOR DUPLEX 2 Apts. Easy. Close in $2000. New Four Room Apartment House Close to B. Y. U. Your Plan Considered. You will Like This Location. Modern New Home One Bloek from Post Office. Price and Terms Right. Ten Acres Fruits Nice Home Coops ONLY $3650.00. Prompt Service See Homes, Farms PHONE 1099 Willard L. Sowards AGENCY Office: 39 W. 2nd N., Provo, Utah FOR SALE Miscellaneous POINTER pup.s. 782 N. 2nd East. Phone 1344. m24 REPOSSESSED vacuum cleaner Granite Furn. Ph. 194. m24 WESTINGHOUSE Elec. range, small Stable, and bed. 344 East 3rd North. m27 LLOYD baby 'carriage, excellent corid. 849 Milton Ave. Ph. 684. m24 CHEAP. Miller combination gas and coal range. Ph. 289VV. m22 WHITE metal ice refrigerator $8. ,65 West 2nd North. m27 SPECIAL large nut coal $6 tqn. u. $3.25. U; $1-75. Delivered immediately. Right Weigh Co. Phone 525. m27 FOR quick sale, Miller com. gas and coal stove. Ph. 289W. m22 GOOD used baby buggy $3.50. 211 South Gth West. m23 1 . rr -w t - f i . i I iuu Lrs ice uux in excel, cunui-tion. cunui-tion. Cheap. 408 N. 5 W. m22 2 MILK cows. Weaner pigs. Inq. Cut-Rate Station, 16th W. Center. m22 FIRST class Jersey cow. Newly freshened. Call 039R2. m22 ONE work horse. " Call Henry Jones. m23 TOMATO,, cabbage, pepper and flower plants. Ph. G'rTW. 467 S. 6 W. jlu COAL, best grade, all kinds. C, Christopherson. Phone 791. m22 GLADIOLOS, 25 large bulbs, 50c. W. Reed Nuttall, Ph. 012R3. jl WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED girl wishes housework. References. Phone 1096. m22 FOR SALECARS " '33 PLYMOUTH coupe, good condition, con-dition, sacrifice immediately. Personal Finance Co. 207 Knight Block. Ph. 210. m23 INSTRUCTION MALE, Instruction. Men to take up Air Conditioning and Electric Elec-tric Refrigeration and better themselves. Must be mechanically mechanical-ly inclined, willing to train in spare time to qualify. Write. Utilities Inst., c-o Herald. m23 HELP WANTEDFEMALE WOMAIover 30 for immediate employment. Permanently locat-. locat-. ed in Provo, able to furnish A-l references. Answer Box 30", Herald, Her-ald, giving address and phone number. m23 FEMALE HELP SALESLADIES SPECIAL work for married women. wo-men. Earn to $21 weekly and your own dresses FREE demonstrating demon-strating glamorous frocks worn by movie stars. No investment. No Canvassing. FASHION FROCKS, Inc., Dept. K-2368. Cincinnati, Ohio: m22 NEURITIS Effectively Treated by CHIROPRACTIC DICE. L. AIKEN 32 W. Center . (Over Butler's) Special Offeringsl Choice Business Location Ideal for Atito Business, Service Station, Sta-tion, Grocery, etc. -r-oOo Modern Five Room Frame House with Four Room. Basement Apt. Two Sets of Plumbing Equipped, Equip-ped, with Gas for heat and cooking. cook-ing. Good Northeast location. Northwest Good Location Four Room Modern Brick Two Finished Fin-ished Rooms in Basement. Very good buy at $2250. Good terms. Southwest Six Room Modern Brick Full Basement, 3x12 rd. lot Good Closerin Location A Dandy Home. $3250, good terms. oOo Many Other Choice Homes, Building Build-ing Lots, Farms and Ranches. Complete Real Estate Service Dixon Real Estate Co 236 West Center St., Provo, Utah PHONE 75 HELP WANTED -Salesmen BIG MONEY MAKERS! Large line coveralls, jackets, pants, shirts, raincoats, etc. Names, emblems lettered. Low prices. Prospects enormous. FREE outfit. out-fit. Dove Garment Co., 803HG So. Fourth St., Kankakee, 111. m22 WANTED Miscellaneous FISHING . poles wrapped $1.25 each. Sample shown. Write Box X, Herald. j3 BOARD AND ROOM ,r BOARD and room for working men. 955 No. University. m25 GOOD board and room. Prefer working men. 218 N. Univ. Ave. m2o LEGAL NOTICES Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or the Respective Signers for Further i information. I NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Jean Williams, deceased. de-ceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 81 North 4 East, Provo, Utah, on or before July 25, 1938. LUCILE W. JONE'S. Administratrix. Publication dates: May 22, 29, June 5. 12, 1938. LONG DISTANCE FLIERS DEPART COLON. Panama, May 21(U.R) Five Dolish fliero on a lontr dis- tanCe flight from California to Poland via South America left here todav for Talarn. Peru " In Spanish-speaking countries, Christopher. Columbus is known as Cristobal Colon. ALLEY OOP WHILE ALLEV OOP AND HtS PR1ENPS REVEL IN QUIET LUXURY, KING GUZ LEAPS HIS HOMELESS PEOPLE THRU THE JUNGLE BOOTS AND HER OH.TV :0X Vt.Oi VT'& TVKT VOAW I'M 0fc VQCK3.Q OP VX MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE THAT'S IT.' THERE'S J, THE- ORGAN CONSOLE 'ACIC IS BUT THERE'S STILL. EXPLOCtW THE PCO- FESSOC'S RETREAT HIGH UP OKJ SM" WINO BLUFF : FROM WHICH COMETHS NO Slew OF LIFE A K AU LJCZ rcz ' STRAJKJSOF1 AN OLD CHURCH OCOAKJ.. PLEflSANT VIEW MRS. EARL FOOTS Reporter Phone 022J S i The Primary' officers entertained entertain-ed all the children of the ward at a dancing party Tuesday afternoon after-noon in the amusement hall. Special Spe-cial awards were given to the following children and Superintendent Superin-tendent Edna M. Hansen for perfect per-fect attendance records: Dicky Brereton, Victor Hansen, Harold Muhlestein, Joyce Patten, Lucille Nesbit, Margaret Buccio, and June St. Jeor. Refreshments were served serv-ed after the dance. Mrs: Katie Jarman has returned return-ed from Salt Lake City where she spent two weeks with relatives. rela-tives. The Page school closed Friday after a successful year. The following fol-lowing children were graduated: Garn Baum, Christene Bigler, Lois Campbell, Gene Campbell, Juan-ita, Juan-ita, Campbell, Wallace Chatwin, Wayne Davis, Keith Gordon, Edgar Ed-gar Hall, Jean' Hansen, Barbara Heinerman, Keith Jolley, Leslie Liechty, Billy McEwan, Laura Meldrum, Jack Meldrum, Dora Jean Meldrum, DeLos Miller, Lucille Lu-cille Nesbit, Arnold Olsen, Garn Penrod, Sheldon Penrod, Dallas Pierce, Glen Pinegar, Evelyn Pen-rod, Pen-rod, and Helen Richins. The Pleasant View graduates from the Lincoln high school are: John Ash ton, Wallace Anderson, Ander-son, Nita Bone, Vergene Ford, Elwood Fpote, George Franks, Gladys Hirst, Grace Liechty, Angus MacKay, Harold Nielsen, Lyman Penrod, Garn Phillips and Toffie Sawaya. John Bone's mother, Mrs. Dahle of Spanish Fork and Ruby B. Band ley of Lehi attended the graduation exercises at the Lincoln Lin-coln school. Theron Killpack and his Sunday school class enjoyed a swimming party at Park Ro-She Wednesday evening. The following young people from Pleasant View were graduated gradu-ated from the Sharon stake seminary: sem-inary: John Ashton, Nita Bone, Elwood " Foote, Vergene Ford, Gladys Hirst, Heber Ivins, Grace Liechty, David MacKay, Harold Nielsen, Lyman Penrod, Paul Penrod and Garn Phillips. Mrs. Emily (Baum completed the review of "Romance of an Old Playhouse" in Relief society Tuesday; Mrs. Frank J. Perry, iMrs. Zella Colvin, Mrs. Elia 4-Muhlestein and Mrs. Inez Muhle stein furnished music. Mrs. Esther Brown, Mrs. P. K. Nielsen and Mrs. Earl Foote will give the social so-cial service lesson next Tuesday. Kenneth Perry has been spending spend-ing several days in Salt Lake City with Owen Ford. Springville Firms Win Road Contracts SPRINGVILLE Kolob district scouts and scouters are planning a Spring: Camporee to be held at Mapleton canyon, next FriUay and Saturday, May 27 and 28, J. T. Wheeler, camp chairman announces. an-nounces. Approximately 200 scouts and visitors are expected to attend. Early in the afternoon the boys will assemble for a treasure hunt to be followed by several Inter- 1 x OUGHTA RFPM ncCTPOVPD SAWALLIANi WHRE BUDDIES Or- TVV TOVS TO 1 OSRtrO tr oa. som.- i ririir IF IT WEREKJT THAT THE CHORDS SEEM IN HARMONY, I'D 5AV THE MUSIC WA2 CAUSED. BY THE WttJD r tit.it 111 rl WHISTLtvlO THRU !-L ; By RACHEL MACK Cm . -rL - CHAPTER XXXI A MERICA was alarmed. The f1, English had settled with the French; and now a fleet of warships war-ships no longer needed to fight Napoleon was free to move against the United States. Soldiers too. Down at Bermuda, General Ross's seasoned British army had gone aboard' Admiral Cockburn's impressive im-pressive ships, and their destination destina-tion was the American coast. Norfolk Nor-folk was sieged. Hampton was burned. By the middle of July the enemy was ascending the Potomac Po-tomac with a purpose.- Onehot summer day Dick said to Polly, "I'm going to t Washington Washing-ton tomorrow by coach.'" "Whatever for?" Polly asked. It was August, . and little Richard was cutting some very bad teeth. His Uncle Dick and his medical books had been a great help in this1 trying time. "What will you do in Washington," Dick?" Polly demanded in dismay. "Offer my services. I hear they've horses to spare down south. I've enough put by to pay for an ordinary mount of my own. I can't walk, but I can ride, and I'll' join any cavalry unit they want to put me in. I've got to do my part, Polly." "Yes," Polly agreed, feeling weak with surprise. She had not thought of the war reaching out and laying hold of lame Richard. "I'll get your clothes ready, Dick. What Will you want to take?" . ' A ND so it came about that Dick Chelsey went to Washington. Dick fourJd a camp on the edge of the city where volunteers were joining the 600 militia stationed there. He was immediately accepted ac-cepted and permitted to purchase his mount for "a cavalry troop. And so he witnessed the nightmare night-mare that was the burning of Washington. On the morning of Aug. 24 the English . on the Potomac loitered downstream, but those under Cockburn and Ross had arrived by the Patuxent river and were only seven miles distant. These were in pursuit of Commodore Joshua Barney and his sailors whom they had chased out of Chesapeake Bay and up the Patuxent. When Barney burned his boats and struck inland they had followed, and when he took his stand, the Battle of Bladens-burg Bladens-burg occurred. Dick was among the volunteers from Washington who fought with Barney, and a motley crowd they were--shopkeepers, gentlemen gentle-men farmers, schoolboys, congressmen, con-gressmen, senators, and Negro slaves anyone, in fact, who could carry a gun in the defense of Washington. esting feature's including a barbe-que, barbe-que, to which all parents are invited' in-vited' At 8 p. m., a camp fire, program will be given. Eck VYhiting, pioneer pio-neer of Mapleton will teil some real Indian stories. Short talks will be given by, visiting officials and the scouts will present several fine numbers. Saturday morning will be devoted de-voted to a scavenger hunt and a nature trip the latter under direction direc-tion of Professor Bertrand Harm WELL. WOW THAT OUR. HOMEi we eo?, PKOFESSOG, I PRESSED BY YOUR'MAeac: THE. ONLY REASON I BAT WVste BLUFF THE, CHtKMCS AROUND THESE IS BECAUSE W PIPES.' AND ZEB BENTLEY ARE ALREADY my vcr- a tot npHE English used fire rockets. This frightened the pack mules of the. Americans; a stampede started which ended in a retreat. Pell-mell into Washington went the routed army, through the city and up the Frederick road toward open country. When the English had rested and recovered, they followed in good marching order. Many lay wounded at Bladens-burg, Bladens-burg, among these Dick Chelsey. That night he lay in a ravine undiscovered.' un-discovered.' too weak to call for help. But he had staunched his own wound with a handkerchief. Against the blackness of the night he saw the sky flame red for long hours, and he knew he had failed to save Washington. He smiled bitterly as he thought of his useless little" gesture his offered life. .Was he a fool, or had he touched the stars? A strange sense of lightness filled him, for he had lost much blood. But before be-fore dawn a downpour of rain fell on his upturned face and saved him. It was the same rain that stopped the spreading flames in Washington. "High wind accompanied accom-panied it. At dawn someone found Dick Chelsey and carried him to a farmhouse nearby, and he knew that he would live and that life was sweet, whether he had ben a fool or not. . . . While he lay recovering, the English fleet bon- barded Fort McHenry over at Baltimore (he could almost hear the guns). And-when the beautiful beauti-ful American flag stood fast through the night a mild and lovable young lawyer from Georgetown (he was, a prisoner looking s. on, and his name was Francis Scott Key) took an envelope en-velope from his pocket and wrote a poem called "The Star-Spangled Banner," which he happily set to a London coffee-house tune. . . . And so, even in this beautiful blood-soaked anthem that celebrates cele-brates their struggle, England and America were irrevocably joined. "TilCK went home by stage coach in November. And around the New Year when the treaty of: Ghent was already signed, old Andrew An-drew Jackson defended New Orleans Or-leans in a useless, bloody battle. When it was over, gallant Sir Edward Ed-ward Packenham and the flower of the English army lay dead there. To Polly, this was utterly heartbreaking. heart-breaking. She wept for days because be-cause of it, and because of American Amer-ican men who lay dead at sea, just as cruelly. She thought of her Jerry as among them. And then one day there ap peared a strange brig in Lyme harbor. Trepid Chelsey came son of the B. Y. U. Camp will be broken at noon. CARDS LOSE WARNEKE NEW YORK, May 20 (U.R) The St. Louis Cardinals, their pitching pitch-ing staff already weakened by the sale of Dizzy Dean, lost another ace yesterday when Lon Warneke left for St. Louis with an ailing leg. Warneke was struck on the ri'ght shin, by a line drive off the bat of Brooklyn's Babe Phelps on May 8 irj St. Louis. He fin AITXF . 'rSh, COP. AV STILL UNIM 'CLIFF IS CO WITH TOO TO WITHOUT A FUSS TAIN A LOOSE FR) ENID, JACK LANE, IKJ FACT, U lilt J if I 1 1 n i ii i mm HAD RATHER. NASTY y ti iii . i " k home with the news that a fine big vessel named the May Queen was casting anchor there. It meant nothing to anybody. Not until Jerry Whitfield came striding , through the picket gate, looking browner and leaner and tired cr and older, and said with his cap in his hand: "Does Capt. Trepid Chelsey live here?" . . . Not "till then, did the May Queen's arrival have meaning. mean-ing. Polly went flying from the house into his arms; and though one of his arms was stiff from a wound, he held her crushingly close. And when she cried salty tears on his face, his own mingled with them, unashamed. "I've a ship of my own, Polly," he said. "I'm a man of property now." "Oh!" Polly said. "Is the May Queen your own? . . Well, I've a contribution too. Your baby sdn is a year and eight months old. His name is Richard 'Jeremiah. Come in and see him " She thought for a moment that Jerry Whitfield was fainting, and after that she thought his expression expres-sion of dismay was very comical. "Before night falls," she surprised sur-prised him yet further by saying, "I want you to take me on your arm to our ship, walking very slowly past Mrs. Pell's house." T'HE young Jerry Wfyitfields have settled in Polly's old home at Lyme, for Dick Chelsey has gone" to medical college down at New Haven, and old Trepid needs his daughter and her children around . him. The house has a new wing; fresh white paint covers all, and w'ithin there are some impressive new mahogany pieces made by Duncan Phyfe, the furniture man. Polly has her "help" in the pine-paneled pine-paneled kitchen, as a sea captain's wife should, but of an evening she sits before the open fire tenderly ten-derly making by hand her husband's hus-band's shirts. When he comes home from sea in his merchant ship, the May Queen, it's as a lover coming home to his sweetheart. Last trip he brought her an ivory carved fan from China, and a little Mandarin coat, embroidered in lotus flower. These things, and another, are too much for Mrs. Pell. The other thing is their intimate friendship with Mr. Cabell Banks, junior, of Boston .and his wife that girl that was the wealthy Prudence Winthrop. She says, "You'd think Polly Chelsey Whitfield would be stuck up, but she's not. It beats alL I believe she's too simple." Yet not too simple for Jerry Whitfield. - (THE END) ished the game for his third victory vic-tory of the season. A week later while working against Cincinnati, he returned after four innings, complain rng: of his leg. KERCHIEF CURL CONTROLLER The newest member of the head kerchief family is made of the gayest of silk prints processed to resist dampness and has a short slide fastener which zips it closely under the, chin an amusing, lighthearted head covering cov-ering for sports and ' beach wear. By HAMLIN -atS TO mti -rur SCI TMS SOtOV IANP OF OFPORTOilTV W? mfte GLORIOUS fc"rr inn i rwf' SUN-PGENCHED BFACUFC WKYONV. HO TAXES . XT . Jm-mi 19M BY NEA SERVICE. WIC T M RtG U S PAT Off By MARTIN By THOMPSONand COLL HI rRlU 3 COPR. 93B BY hri FBVICf INC. T. M. REC. U S. PAT Off Z. f SPLENDID MY UTTLE PLACE ON THE PECULIARLY SUITED TC ENTER CURIOUS VISITORS YDU KWDW, BOARD -A WDDENSPRiNO. SOME FEW HAVE MM J ITliiI 9 Ta' It ft II H J iflMlll mr Vitll WM m II "ACCIDENTS sp nil Ji sfc1 ... m |