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Show -.t - ., - ' . . . .'( -' PROVO (UTAH)V SUNDAY- HERALD,- SUNDAY,r JANUARY: 8, 1939 A 1 v WANT ADS PHONE 495 - 'Want:' ads wUI appear on the Oasaif led. Ad Page if . the are in the office-before 9 a. after which they Phil appear in the column "Too Late For Classification." Classifica-tion." Want Ads will be accepted 'until 1 p. m:, except on Saturday, when they will appear, ap-pear, in Sunday's issue if phoned into the office by 4 p. zn. Rates First and seeond 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 per line. (Minimum charge 25 cents) Count five word to line. Minimum accepted 2 lines. Classified Ads -Must Be Paid in Advance Legal Rate 10 cents per line per insertion, in-sertion, 8 pt. type. Best Bargains in New and Used Furniture! Beds or Springs, $1.00 up;. New. Studio Couches, $24.00 to $49.00; Used Living Room Sets, $15.00 to $25.00, at THE GENERAL. SHOP 159 N. Univ, Ave. Phone 915-W Repairing on All Makes Stoves -WOMEN WANTED Address our catalogs. 2c each paid in advance ad-vance plus bonuses. Everything Supplied. Free Details Furnished. Furnish-ed. ROYAL PRODUCTS, G. P. O. Box 164, Brooklyn, N. Y. j8 WOMEN EARN $18.00 vDozen Sewing Dresses. Everything furnished. Materials cut, Trimmings Trim-mings and Instructions. Experi- ence unnecessary. Write, Qual-ity Qual-ity Dress, Church Annex, P. O. Box 245, New York. j8 SCHOOL girl to work for board and rm. Two in family. Ph. 224. j8 KIDDLE aged woman to take care of home. Ph. 665W. j8 FEMALE HELP-SALESLADIES SELL dresses as low as $1.24 to friends. Experience unnecessary, unneces-sary, but write fully. Harford, Dept. 842Q7. Cincinnati, Ohio j8 WE WILL ALLOW On ANY CAR, regardless of condition, ON ANY CAR IN STOCK Priced Over $100 (During January) Special! '35 FORD Vi-Ton Pickup . . . Ask About Our No Down Payment Plan ! C A HH ON -ASH TON, Inc. CHEVROLET - OLDSMOBILE 191 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVE. - PHONE 155 GET MORE FOR YOUH COAL DOLLARS . . . MOST FOLKS BUY TRI-STATE COAL! Tri-State Lmmlner Co. 598 South University Avenue Phone 20 "HELPFUL SERVICE" FOR RENT Unfmnished 3 RM. mod. apartment, heat 65 North 2nd East. Jiu OR FURN. 1 Might nskp. room 56 East 2nd South. j3 3 RM. mod., newly dec. apt. Elec. equip., garage. 345 W. 2 S. J13 3 ROOM apt., sleeping porch. Phone 360W. 636 N. 1 W. j8 3 RM. cottage, call afternoon or evenings. 610 W. ,1 So. jl2 ELEC. equip. 3 rra. apt, heat, h. w., garage. 511 E. 8 N. jlO 3 RM. Seated apt. also one rm. f urn. Ph. 363J. 227 E. 3 N. jl7 3 RM mod. apt., stoves. 144 West 3rd South. jlO MOD. 5 rm. house. 271 W. 4 So. Inq. 621 E. A st. jlO OR ptly. f urn. bsmt. or ground fl. , apt. new, mod. 574 No. 7 Wey. j8 3 OR 4 room modern apartment. 469 North 6th West. j8 MOD. 3 rm. apt., sleeping porch, elec. range. 579 No. 4 E. J15 5 ROOM modern home. Furnace, garage. Call at basement, 731 North 3rd East. jll ATTRACT, new 4 rm. apt., heat, h.w., elec. equip. 172 So. 2nd East. j8 JONES new 3 rm. apt., floor coverings, cov-erings, elec. range, refrigerator, garage. Adults. 270 N. 1 E. Phone 1525J. j25 BY owner, two 4 rm. mod. homes, small down payment, balance like rent. Inq. 155 No. 5 W. jlO HELP WANTED MALE ABLE MAN to distribute samples, sam-ples, handle Coffee Route. Up to $45 first week. Automobile given as bonus. Write MILLS, 1601 Poplar, Oakland, Cal. jlO HELP WANTED Salesmen MAN WANTED. Good nearby Rawleigh Route now open. If willing to conduct Home Service Serv-ice business while earning good living. Write immediately. Raw-leigh's Raw-leigh's Dept. UTA-72-45, Denver, Den-ver, Colorado. j8 LOST BETWEEN Provo-Pleasant Grove One 2 in. pipe trypod 12 ft. long. Ph. 1064. Reward. j8 BSaL ISSAI E3TATB nARQAINS XIXAlZlt Bust new or Residence Insurance, Bonds or Notary Work -Sea or Fbon Nov. 4 B2A1Y BEAMY COMPANY Its Watt Center Stmt ".-... . " : - " Provo New Gaopptnj Centex Sea our windowa for pedals Sale of Real Estate! EXCELLENT RANCH 300 Acres 2 Houses Lake Black Soil Close to Provo. Ideal! COTTAGE Basement Apt. Brick Close to School. Priced right! GOOD HOME Clost to Postoff ice . Fireplace ; Furnace Six Rooms Convenient "Place to Live! - Phone 1099 For Property Willard L. Sowards AGENCY Office: 39 West Second North St., Provo, Utah FOR SALE Miscellaneous LITTLE pigs. 750 South 11th West. Phone 030R3. jlO PINKEYE beans, Russett potatoes. pota-toes. Phone 02J1. jl3 WEINER pigs, also building lot. Davenport. 11th West 2 No. j8 TWO 9x12 congoleum rugs, and hot blast heater. Bargain. 40 South ' 3rd East. j8 HAY. Phone 040R2. Jess Smith. f4 APPLES, cooking, bottling, (spe cial) 40c and 55c bu. Delicious, Jonathans, Romes, Winesaps, bu. or truck load. Sweet cider. Thomas. Phone 1048. f4 COAL, best grade, dependable, free delivery. Christopherson. Phone 791. f4 GOOD clean, hot coal. 94 West 10 N. Ph. 999. Vera Bullock. f4 ROME Beauty apples. Henry Maurin, PL View. j9 MATTRESSES remade with and without inner springs. New Mattresses at factory prices. Overman Mattress Co. Phone 679W. Jll FOR RENT FURNISHED 2 RMJ. mod. apt.; also dining set for sale. 364 E. 2 So. j8 OR UNFRUN. 3 rm. apts. Poul-son Poul-son Apts. Near Lincoln Hi. jl3 2 LIGHT housekeeping rooms, piano. 167 W. 5 North. jl5 OR UNFURN. New 3 or 4 rm. mod. apt. 690 W. 5 No. j8 STRI. mod. 3 rm. apt., close in. Phone 1015W. jll STEAM htd. sleeping rm for gentlemen. 110 S. 2 E. Ph. 997R. 2 RM. mod. apt. h. w. 136 West 5th North jlO 3 RM. mod. apt, heat, h.w., and garage. 715 W. Cen. Ph. 954M. jlO BEDROOM, large enough for couple, heat. 56 So. 2 W. j8 3 ROOM modern apartment. In quire 79 No. 5th West. j8 2 MODERN rooms .288 South 5th West. j8 Basement apt., $3 75 per wk. heat, gas, hw. 264 W 3 South. jlO 2 ROOM modern apartment. 138 East 1st South. j8 3 ROOM modern apartment, Couple. 170 W. 2nd So. jll PAPER hanging for cash, milk eggs or what have you. Ph. 874 J9 WOOD sawing $1.25 per cord inq. 340 So. 7th West. jlO DANCE at Silver Dollar every night except Sunday. j8 FOR SALE OR RENT PIANO $65 accordion $37.50; lessons. Prof. Williams, Ph. 940R 308 East 3 South. J13 WORK WANTED DRESMAKING and alterations 96 W. 4 N. Ph. 1125W. 120 WANTED Miscellaneous 10 OR 15 acres good onion land. See Stan Innes, 391 W. Cen. j8 WANTED TO BUY COOP, give dimensions and price. 650 So. 2nd W. j9 YEARLING Leghorn hens. Phone 016R1. 18 i"iiiiiirinrmri.rtnn BOARD AND FOR men, hot water, heated. 41 East 4 No. Phone 13491 J13 BOARD and room, men prefer 4 Homes s For Sale : 3 R. Stuc, bsmnt3x4 rds ground terms' $900. - 5 R. Frame, modern, 3x 12 rds. terms $1800.r 7 R: Mod. Brick close in, 4x12 rds., $4750. 4 ' R. Mod. Frame, 1 a. ground, trade or sale, $2500. 10 ac. and 14 acs. for sale or lease reasonable. rea-sonable. See Prows & Haws Realty Co., 53 No. Univ. Ave, Provo, Utah. Phone 456. FOR TRADE A Nice 5 Room Modern Home, well located in Salt Lake City, for small Farm with good home on it, near Provo. Call GRAY REALTY - Phone 870 LEGAL NOTICES Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or the Respective Signers for Farther Information. ' NOTICE - OF ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Provo, Utah, will be held at the office of the bank in Provo, Utah, Tuesday, Tues-day, January 10, 1939, at 10:00 A. M., for the purpose of amending amend-ing the Articles of Incorporation to read "The number of Directors Direc-tors shall be not less than five directors and not more than eleven directors" and for the purpose of hearing the annual report, electing elect-ing directors of said bank and for the transaction of such other business as may properly be brought before the meeting. FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK By V. J. Bird, Sec. A mm briefs Windsor Ward f LOIS DRAGE, REPORTER Phone 055-R-l Dale and Janice Harris returned return-ed home Monday after spending the past week with their sister Mrs. Sidney Peterson. Mr. and Mrs. Verdun Richardson Richard-son had as turkey dinner guests Sunday evening Miss Fae Hrein-son, Hrein-son, Karl Lowder, Miss Naomi Ferguson, Mike Peterson and the host and hostess. ,Mr. and Mrs. Gus Kelander and son Arvid returned home Tuesday after spending the past, ten day a at Los Angeles and surrounding towns with friends and relatives. Elwood . Prestwich is here from Bingham to spend three days. Mrs. Oscar Cragun entertained Saturday evening at a card party for Mr. and Mrs. Martell Keetch, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer York, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hansen and Mr. and Mrs. Cragun. A delicious unch was served. Mrs. Florence Richardson had as her house guest the past week her father Moroni Gerber. Most Eskimos do not swin, al though they , spend most of their lives near the water. ALLEY OOP WASH TUBES COOVO COtAfc, P. I TNlWKA. V MAM.' WUR. HAD TW RIGHT DOPE.' T rtOSE BUMS AFTER- ALL,OlT I OKAV TU. aWIMCOK) THIS VgOULD-BEJ ACKtUTOFfJ KAKKV, HERE, I RESCUE SO HA-D VZEl! I TOUGHTA BE MOQE V HELL BOOMCE TILL. Xkf- SEi RED AtHAW A CyoOC!0 - vji2 Z HMD A 9tWECT.V MYRA NORTH. SPECIAL NURSE r ..-ird incrTMy I SuQOEULy THE ROCM GROWS UGWT I I CAPTAUJ COMS QUICK-' I fl VC . g. r- . . - r - . ; - -; O SERIAL STORY sum. - CAST OP CHARACTERS - . JUDY 'A LOO T Tatatral' Kfcter. She fae a cktlec . fcetweew tw mwy aaitor. - ' DWI GUT CAMPBtLMM. i tlwi lleatcMan lie ac4 m chlee 4ketwc bl wife and datr JACK HANLBY-Ayim wiUor. ' B (acci a twt f m. Dtirait MARVEL HASTINGS UT7 ? wife She faced the test ef ketaar m gea aaller. . j- :" Tealerdajri Marvel aeeasea Ju4r of levlaje ker koaaaad. Dwlarkt. ad of waltlaa; areaad to ick tke boaea of aay aaarrtasre. CHAPTER XVIII TODY never- knew, how she got J off jthat ship. Marvel, following follow-ing her out of Dwight's room, was admirably self-composed after her passionate outburst, but Judy's lips were white and her knees were shaking. T Riding home, Jack Hanley noticed no-ticed her quietness, the way her fingers picked at the bag in her lap. But he said nothing. Maybe he thought it was seeing Dwight again that had unnerved her. "I'm going straight back to the Enterprise," he said, as the car pulled up in front of.' her door. "We. shove off in the morning. More routine flights. The battle-wagons battle-wagons and cruisers will be leaving leav-ing for the North, but no one seems to know whether we'll go later or not." She clung to his steady hands. "Call me as soon as you get back, Jack." Her smile was tremulous. "And happy landings!" With most of the men gone, the station settled into an unusual quiet in the next few days. The wives of the men on the battle ships made plans to drive to Bremerton. Three or four girls went in each car, and even those with children were making the trip. The wives of the pilots on the Enterprise were the only ones who were uncertain of what would happen in the next few weeks. Diane said cheerfully, "We'll sit and twiddle our thumbs." Judy wanted to ask her father when Jack Hanley's orders to report re-port to North Island would come through, but she didn't quite dare. Once or twice, in the evening, while e read his Naval Proceedings Proceed-ings or one of the old books of sea lore, the collection of which was his hobby, she girded herself to ask. But each time, something within failed her, and no sound came. The Enterprise was steaming miles off the ( coast somewhere, she knew. As always, when it was out there, she tried to picture the great gray waves, the long deck with its white-painted lines, sectioning sec-tioning off the squadrons. Because Be-cause it was one of the newest of the airplane carriers, the Enterprise Enter-prise had a high plane deck, with cabins and the usual quarterdeck -- Record Set in Tax Collection Collections on the city's street paving special improvement districts dis-tricts have set a record for promptness of payment reports City Treasurer Almo B. Simmons to the city commission. Ten years is allowed property owners in which to pay off the in- 1 I V4N3 A. POECTW 111 I rKJt .r.. Aw EIGH accommodations underneath. It was curious, she thought, how infrequently in-frequently she had been on board Jack's ship. s. Was it because his wcwk meant so much to him that he ardly ever spoke "of it? That would explain his instinctive shy ing away from parading the ship on which he worked. , o WfHEN.- she went to bed -he couldn't sleep. She lay wide-eyed, wide-eyed, through the still, dark hours. She kept remembering i that. Jack was out at sea. Navy wings. But he wouldn't be flying now, at night. Or might he? She had heard BUI Bell speaking of landing land-ing flares; she had heard him Joking Jok-ing about flyers who got lost and couldn't find the ship when they got back. The Enterprise was a mother eagle, sending aloft her 'eaglets. They roamed the sky, they, flew miles into the blue, ahead of the slow-moving ships of the line, and then they "came back. Really, she knew little. of the flying branch of the service. Long ago she had visited on the Station at Fensa-cola, Fensa-cola, but all she remembered was swimming inside the steel shark net there. That and the hangars, the line of student craft drawn up, the fledgling flyers standing at attention beside their ships. Lakehurst was a more familiar world. Lying there awake, she would remember achingly how she and - Ward had entered the dimness dim-ness of the huge hangar. How they had compared the small Los Angeles with the huge, silver Akron.' Ward had explained their new water recovery system, and he had shown her the toggles which released the ballast There had always been r. sign in front of the marine sentry's hut, as you entered the station. "Condition One." Or, "Condition Two." Or, "Condition 3." Condition one was when all the men were actually at their stations. Ward had explained ex-plained about the non-rigids, taken her across the flat, sandy field to the hangar where they were kept. The "k-3" was the ship on which he had trained. He told her that blimps not only had a distinct naval usefulness for convoy, anti-mine anti-mine and anti-submarine work, but they also allowed restless lighter-than-air men to get into the air and "keep their hand" in. At that time the Macon had not yet been completed. She thought sadly of how Ward's dreams had been dashed to dust The beautiful, beau-tiful, beloved dirigible had killed him. The other one, of which he talked with much pride, was gone, too. Jack Hanley, flying over the ocean in the darkness, might never have a chance again to hook his plane into the belly of an airship. air-ship. debtedness on street paving, but at the rate collections are 'being 'be-ing made full payment will be in prior to that time, Mr. Simmons indicates. On District 25A, now run 25 months, 33 per cent or $10,790 has been paid off; on districts 26 and 27 which have run 13 months, payment of $10,796 is in; and on 28A which has run only one month, collections already total 12 per cent or $8,904, he reports. Total . collections on the districts dis-tricts for the three years are VitU. 1 It 1 I A BY BETTY WALLACE eorYKMMT.1SSSKKASC1tVICK.tNa' ., TUDY wished! that Jack was given to talking of his work as Ward had been. Perhaps that would makevher feel closer to him. . She was a Navy girl, and shoptalk that, might "have bored a debutante found her .an eager listener. She wondered; whether Jack didn't confide in her because he thought, she wouldn't care about anything that touched his personal life. After all, she had told him plainly she didn't love him. At moments like this, alone in her dark room, Judy wondered how wide was the margin that separated the trust and faith she had in Jack from love. Love. But then, quickly, there would flame into her blood the memory of Dwight Campbell. No kiss of Jack's could set her senses reeling as Dwight's kiss had done. It must be that she depended on Jack, and respected him. Once a curious thought struck her. If Ward could know Ward who had died gallantly with his ship in the dark waters of the Atlantic At-lantic wouldn't he have wanted Jack to take his place? Jack Hanley Han-ley had been his closest friend. And Judy was honest enough to admit that Ward had ever disliked the type of man Dwight Campbell was. Why was It that she could see Dwight's faults so clearly, and love him still? One night as she was lying in bed, and these things were churning churn-ing in her mind, the telephone rang. Judy had no extension in her room, and she waited, suddenly sud-denly wide-awake, for her mother to answer from her own room. But Mother had not heard it It rang and rang, until Judy reached for her robe and slipped downstairs. down-stairs. Her heart was pounding with a sudden, sick foreboding. "Admiral Alcott?" said the male voice at the other end. "IH get him. What is it?" But the officer or the enlisted man, whoever it was, only said, "Get him quickly, please." She ran back upstairs and pounded on her parents door. "Telephone from the station. Father. Oh, I I think something has happened!" It couldn't be the Enterprise, she told herself. Her father would not be called in the middle of the night, like this, unless it was something right here in the station. sta-tion. The affairs of the Fleet afloat were not his province, now. She heard, her father pick up the phone at his bedside. "Admiral "Ad-miral Alcott speaking." Then she heard the silence. The awful, menacing stillness, which must mean that something dreadful was coming over the wire to his ear. She heard her own voice crying, cry-ing, "What is it, Father. What is it?" (To Be Continued)' -: $30,490. The original assessment against the property owners for the 22 miles done is $146,331. SNYDER SENTENCED HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (U.E) Martin (Col. Moe) Snyder, convicted con-victed of attempting to murder Myrl Alderman, who succeeded Snyder as husband of blues singer sing-er Ruth Etting, today was sentenced sen-tenced to a term not to exceed 20 years in San Quentin prison. iwe'tr fcOT.GOSH- PART. AV ! fcCTC ?6&tR5S BOOTS SAV) wovo cozy Ki'vxKWw.v SOWcTVMvV VViORVC OKi VAiASKi'T OVdA f mm 1 CO. 1 By Marble Machines To De Regulated SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. h ium Utah's secretary of state, state engineer and state superintendents superintend-ents of public instruction will be putting their nickels in pin ball machines if a proposal for investigation investi-gation of the machines is decided upon by the state. In response to requests by cities that a law be drafted to regulate 'the machines and to decide whether they are games of skill, Assistant Attorney General S. D. Huffaker has . suggested that E. E. Monson, secretary of state, T. H. Humphreys, state engineer and Charles H. Skidmore, superintendent super-intendent of public instruction be named as a board to investigate. Kuffaker suggested the state take steps to license machines which were found to be games of skill and to collect a .share of re-receipts re-receipts to provide for a permanent perma-nent inspector to make sure they continued as games of skill. The assistant attorney general said a law to provide uniform regulation of the games is needed. Storm-Bound Air Traffic Released SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. (t .I United Air Lines planes were back in the air between San Francisco and Omaha today. Salt Lake airport attendants said. All flights were cancelled Thursday afternoon and evening as a "precautionary measure" because be-cause of snow and rain storms in 4-many sections of the west United planes on the Salt Lake City-Portland flights and Western West-ern Air Express ships flying from this city north to Great Falls, Mont., and south to Los Angeles were also temporarily grounded. British health statistics show that men have more accidents than women, but wonen have more operations than men. 7VT up to $300 Borrow cash to pay your bills. Then hove LESS to pay each month, because you have only ONE place o pay. There'll be more LEFT OVER for living expenses. Main requirement, just your ability to repay small sums regularly. No co-' makers. No indiscreet inquiries. inquir-ies. Quick, quiet, friendly service. Come in or phone. Floor No. 2 Knirht Block Boom No. 207 - Phone 210 IS EAST CENTER ST. Over Walgrten's Drug A. C. WTCK3IAN, Manager By HAMLIN wt scvcc. wc. t. m. eco, u. s. nt. Off. By CRANE -oo cvi t-vocw soV.'$c V. i BASS. COOVJeD A W?A.TtASST SO b?C 0OKT X'H"OSl. OTb ? SV WC SERVtcCl t. m. mto. vTsTfAf. er.' -7 THOMPSONand COLL L . I' i I , i i i L red, 955 N. UnlV. Ph. 458. J14 |