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Show SPACE TWO PROVO (UTAH) - SUNDAY I1ERALD, SUNDAY, JUNE " 11, " 1939- SECTION TWO (& . i f mm Daily 7 Herald Afternoon (Excepting: Saturday) and Sunday Morning: j L.ltsrty through all th lHOd" The Liberty Bell - Published by ths Herald Corporation. 60 South Tlrst Writ Street. Trovo. Utah. Knfsred as seconders second-ers matter at th poetofflc In Provo. Utah, under th act of March S. 1879. . Oilman. Nlcol & Huthman, JCHtlonal, Advertising; roprenentatlves. New York,- San l"ra aclaco, Detroit, Boston. Los Angele. Chicago. v Mnoer United ' 1'n-ss, N. A., Fei vice. Western fentureo nnd the Ken pps League of Newspaper. " .Subscription term' by carrier In -Utah county, r.O cents the month. 13.00 for six mdnths. In advance; $5.75 th. year. In mdvance; by mall in .county lfc.00; outuida county $5.75 the year In advance. The Herald vlll not assume financial responsibility f for ; any, errors which may appear In advertisements published In Its col-umni. col-umni. In those Instances where the paper is at fault. It will reprint that part of the advertisement In which t&e typog-rapb ; leal mistake occurs. . " ' . ' A Place For the Kids To Play Probably there is fiot one city in the country which, has ?nouph playgrounds; and play space for children. Perhaps there 'is enough such ' space 4in Radburn, the specially', designed Vmortor-age," -city : in New Jersey,' .or in rircenbelt, Md where a town has been designed with just ?ueh end3 inview. But generally. speaking, no large. city has enough play, space for children, and hot many smaller cities. Admitting the fact, the usual. American reaction is. to ihrug a shoulder, remark, "Why doesn't the city provide more Darks ? -Broke, I suppose' and let it go at that ' V ' ' f . r-; Not much of the old rugged individualism spirit there! Something can be done about it; done. without the aid of the ;ity park department, donewithout a WPA project, done vithout Anything but the determination of a group of parents hat they will themselves make a safe.place for their children o piny,:: Y---;1 K'- ' '" ' Any three or four adjoiningjiouseholds where there are children can throw their back yards together, tear down the fences arid create a coromon playground. Tfn$, families -can :hip in for swings and seorsaws, and the mothers can take -urns watching over the plot for a' couple of hours a day each, Other families nearby, but j whose back 'yaisQriiotvpfn the plot chosen, can bear a proportionately larger, share of ;he equipment cost and the supervision, to offset the sacrifice of gardens and lawns by those whose yards are usedi v Wise lanaioras usually don t object. One said, "What it 'hey do use up the grass in the back yards ?lFjust means i hat tjieyni stay off .the grass in the front.' x " v vards back into grass and gardens. Infinite1 'variations on his plan can be tried. according to local situations.' ' Parents who are really intent on keeping the kids off the Greets will hot feel that the, cost in energy, initiative, and rouble.was top high. . OUT OUR WAY By WILLIAMS ' ... i .-, '. f. : ;. (. ' -y '"' 1 ' Ivfe1 ; Mil:- Piro , - V '--r - imHrT'cll HEROES. ARE MApg -MOT BORN . r. 6oo y i oc .Viuclv rowing, r rallying V ill Do svro y Tampa ra m e nt For Happy Married Life Held by Nazis ;7 1,.: 14 EJIFIIA.SIS ON COURTSHIP ; Wrong emphasis on courtship can. spoil marriage. Younff men and women taught to look, on th secondary sex - manifestations (pettmg and partying) ' cs Something final . in 1 life often do not marry r or, having-, married, (often they look .back with 'such lonsring on the' joys of courtship days that they sign regretfully ' for their return. The typical disillusioned voune wife finds her new husband ; soon learns to like his : pipe and his slippers, hate3 to "step out," dislikes the ; premlmunaries and nice- Till ) atii. ,;4 :M':::': v- r- -. Old of the Jungle, Hooray! .Every" mother in America and everydad who has ever been sent to buy a shirt for his smallNson will give a cheer at the news that the American Standards association associa-tion has worked out a standard system of sizes for children's chil-dren's garments. From jnow.onj your won't go into one store and find that a pair of pants, for a 12-year-old is really built for Oliver Hardyi while in the store across the street, "12-year-old trousers" are . tbo small for a Singer,'s Midget. Many and many a husband has gotten in the doghouse, at home because' the shorts he brought for son Willie have been all wrong due to the confusion in marking sizes. The man who started the present , system of marking sizes must have been ths-feilow who invented crossword puzzles; one is as hard to solve as the other. Like explorers comhj?g out of a jungle maze, Dad and Mother America will sigh with relief when the size situation situa-tion of children's garments is finally straightened out. Now, when. finally they re-number women's clothing so that a 45-year-old matron, doesn't wear a size 16 housecoat, house-coat, the shopping problems of American males will be eolved! Dies Ho Dig Deeper Into Fascist Secrets v v , ' . , it At , ie at at at ties' he indulged' in as a wooing swam. In order, to be happy, couples should, develop together. r ThfeLp responsibilities must come along together so that ' the young wife loses her courtship longing m a gradually; Duuams-.mieresi in her home,' her children and hcr-pla.ee in tne conunuiuij'. TTnfortunatelv. loorjular love story magazines, movies, other amuse ments rf end to Idealize courtship and ;"romance," tend to minimiza the Importance and joy of mature mating.." ; : : m - Td many sheltered individuals, life is not a matter of dadly earnestnessfighting 'for a living-and to reproducehut a'dream lifAfHtiTi!tnnsOv in n mind fed with fanciful fiction; These peopH often find it hard to reduce. 'themselves to reality as ;inevitabiy they must as they mature. -VPVS'- S'--y.y-' f . I When they do mature, the discrepancy; between: their dreams and , actualitv Is so sharo as to embitter i them or to render tbm unfit for nonrialJives..v;-vv . Obviously, the solution Is a more, common understanding of the 'real problems of the real lives : of . men and women. Armed with that understanding and fully conscious of the necessity of maturing mentally as well 3.3 physically, no individual phould regret rthe, passing" pass-ing" of the courtship period. Nor should he tryto prolong It'by mTifitant.' Rtiriea nf 'affairs' with the emphasiar on sex preliminariei -at than nn 'final and permanent matinr1 To do this la to deny development and maturity, and to invite. longy years of unhapplnesa - ' 'rovo iieraiu Washington ,- Correspondent WASHINGTON, June 10 Con trary to general impression, the Dies committee is " not Yiearly through with" its inquiry Into- the activity of .Fascist-type; oraniza- uuua. . v It was freely predicted here 'that the committee would J- drop rt the whole subject when it got through with General Mosley As a matter mat-ter of fact, it has been an extensive extens-ive program ahead ofit In ; the current recess, the plan . of campaign cam-paign is being perfected.' During Moseley's last hour on the stand" the committee's counsel, Rhea Whitley,, read to him; a 'list of approximately "20 names, ask-inghim ask-inghim after each name if he had been in correspondence with that person. The names were those of people who head Fascist-type out- tits ; and most , of :, them, it is learned, will b .called in'.' as wit nesses. commission's ' construction ' program, pro-gram, the - names "of 4 the . ' proud old clippers were dusted off and applied Staghound, " Challenge, Ooniet, Northern ' 'Ught, and so otC? The public seemed to like the idea, judging by the letters the commission got,' ' ' - But there's many ' : au slip, etc The first' batch ! of these " niccly-naraed niccly-naraed ships were oldr to ;a ; soulless soul-less corporation, : wliich r ripped ' off the' names and named " tle ships for girls Cora, v Clarabclle, 'Genevieve, 'Gene-vieve, and so on. KECAL.LING ANOTHER 1 SUB MELODRAMA; . ,ft The tragic case of the British submarine Thetis, ' which: ' rested for hours with one end on the bottom bot-tom and the' other at the surface while rescue crews tried to; cut a hole in the surface .end" and let the trapped men out recalls one of the most " dramatic escape-stories escape-stories in the annals of the U. S. Navy the storyr of the submarine S-5. J-r- , . There are a good many organi- anti-SemiUc type to .-America . to- - S-5 went . put f or a swim ho what th miftoo "mt of ,, the, Delaware ? breakwater to find out is whether any effort sometime back In 1920. She made is being made to' tie 'them all to- The first Jewish court of justice in the U.. S- is operating in New York. What a swell place to try Hiyer! Whoa Cpme Back! Foul Ball! gether and co-ordinate their ac tivities under one central body or leader. ; " i: ; " ' Apparently one group sought to nominate Moseley. for that job,t although al-though the ' general Insists ' he didn't 1 Want It.' ' The committee wants to know' if "any one else is trying the same thing '. . and, also, how many ' "angles", these different groups have succeeded in tapping for finances. SHIPS FALX. TO SEX APPEAL The Martlme Commission thought It would be nice to restore re-store famous old American ship-names ship-names to the high seas.' ' -So, when new boats began to Lcome down the ways under the & V 0 him . js. .1 1 m w m V , V tJt' i -7 1, sr- sSCNA ... - i'r .... , ; nJvN. . If-?-' - a dive, some valve or other went wrong", -and. she nestled on the bottom' in 'about' 180 feet of .water. Luckily, v it was a bow compartment compart-ment only, that was .flooded. Skipper of the S-5 was a young lieutenant, C. M. Cooke now a captain, on the staff of the commander' com-mander' in chief of the fleet. T For-some For-some "reason, t an TCookes5 in . the navy get" nicknamed 'Sayvy,' and this Cooke was no exception; but before the episode of the S-5 was over" he proved' that he 'deserved the' nam'e.v . "!T, : He knew the depth of the water wa-ter knew the S-5 wos 230 feet long. So :f he ' completed heflbddrrigdf the extreme bow, blew clear all the other . compartments, ' and caused the7 stern to float tojthe surface, the ' ship resting jtbse-down jtbse-down at an acute angle,.. the very tip of her stern breaking the sur- face as Cooke proved by shinny- mg up there and, listening: to the waves, lappinff "outside. " ' '' ,' '. .There . were no "escape lungs' in : those days, : the S-5 had no stern torpedo tubes, there-were no hatches in the tiny part that was abovewater; ' and nobody ashore seemed to know that the S-5 was outV and overdue. Furthermore, passing vessels that saw the stern-tip stern-tip mistook it for a f ishng buoy and pai dno attention. So Cooke, got out a hand drill and brought his men ; up to the stem compartment; ; one by one, to drill, a hole through the thick steel plating." After hours of labor, a hole about art inch thick was made.! Then Cooke got a thin rod, tied some :' seaman's undershirt to it, stuck it up through the hole, and waved it back and forth, hour after hour. xln the end the army transport, General ' Goethals, . spoted it, decided de-cided this 'was no fishing . buoy, went i over to investigate. Cooke explained ! his 4 plight through the one-inch hole; the Goethal'a !men gotout an acetylene torch and cut' away "a section of the steel platingand plat-ingand Cooke and every, one of his ; crew climbed Out, 'unscathed.: i t ,1 'i f . - --4.' 1 . ; t -i. V ",'7- xstl 1 ' ' '' ' r m. PLEASANT - SCIENCE NEWS, : Keeping JJpli 6. Date . The nabbing of speeding automobiles auto-mobiles by police cars has been put on a cowboy basis by a Georgia inventor. Instead of being be-ing lasooed, however; the- speed- ing ! autos are 1 grabbed by .claws on the . front bumper of. the po-' ,? Uce cars. The jaws open up and -grasp' the rear bumper of the law-offending 'machine upon ' pressing a lever. . A weed puller operated "by water pressure has been design-f ed by Eric Olson of South Bend,' Ind. A special nozzle' attached; to ' a hose is pushed ' into the grass near, the weed. The pres-: sure ' of the ; sharp stream of . water loosens the dirt - around Hhe weed's roots, permitting: it to be lifted out cleanly and easily. ' GrahiimiXrackers WIIAT'DO 'VOU KNOW ABOUT WOMEN?. r" ' Because William Curts, former Unl- ; versity of, California student, wrote a foui-line uncomplimentary vers9 about the Nazi regime on a Munich restaurant menu, he's beinz held in a J . Heldelberz Drison.. . . Harold Christensen, Fidac chair man. Nominations for officers to be voted on at . the July meeting will4 also be made and an urgent Invita tion to all unit members to be present is extended by President Foylarice.. .":- " )T-r GROVE nSS VIOLA WEST Correspondent rPhone 2S-W . Richins and XU chins 1 of - : r Mr,, and Mrs. Ab Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Vernal visited the first of the week with " Mr. and Mrs. ' Oscar Richins and other relatives. : Mrs. ' Oscar Oler and- chUdren Leo, Fern, Helen ;an'4 Maurice of Shelley, : Idaho, ' spent the week A New Jersey, experlmentex has "put golf on , a . mechanical' basis.. He has perfected an elec-" trical meter which registers the -; speed, at which f the ball is hit ? By use of the device, the golfer is able to estimate how' hard to hit the . ball . in order to carry any given distance.1 - w This is. the second, in series n of 12 quizzes prepared V by": 1 NEA ' Service 1 writers and columnists who are 5 regular 5 contributors to ' this i J newspaper news-paper - ; Bij ItUTn MELLETT ' Writer of NEA's "Wey The Women" Women get a place' in the . cur rent auiz craze, too. - ' - . But even if you're a jnan, I in vite ' you to try this : test. You get I five for each -correct- answer, if your total score is 20 ' or better, you 1 now the . girls pretty weu. THESE .THREE women appear ed nrominently in -recent, news. Do you 3know why?,- . ' ; 7- : "a--Queen'-Geraldine. . . b--Crowni Princess, Ingrid.. c Marian- Anderson. 1 ; iTHESE THREE- women receiv ed hisrh honors within ' the lalt iyear. -What -honors 7 - . . a Bette Davis . . t b-iPearl Buck" -' -r ' " r ' c Mrs. Ellas Compton In doubt? Then' see- the correct 1 Answers on Pago Three T with Mrs. Oler's mother, Mrs. Adeline Nelson. ' - - . : - , The Tinipanogos -stake Primary board member3"attended the Dir dav special,. meetings at the an nual June T convention' Stake" and ward 'workers 'attended Saturday and Sunday meetings also. Mr. "and Mrs. Orrin Holdaway and 'three small .sons . of Af ton, Wyo.; : are- Msiting , at. the - John Holdaway home. . t , . Lj r t : , 'ijTfW ffl !lS KMM&f-. I- . :. ' -S: , ! See the New, Quiet i vith the Llasta Did! ."--rom this day, you can own one -iVof- these beautiful, q tiie t. new , 1939 LeonarctsAnd'once you see it,V you'll.xeaiize, there's no' refrigerator ; '.like it in the world I" : V'- " ; Only Leonard has .'the ( Master; Dial with -Tsuilt-in thermometer : that lets you ?'tune7n" thetemper-.' . ature you need gives you protec-; tion in hot weathersaves cAirrentl Only Leonard has the genuine in-' sulated, long-life Leonard cabinet ' . . . handy Rearranging Shelf and 3-way. Len-A-LatcH on the door.: '.' . Come inand see this, beautiful new refrigerator, . Find out about Leonard economy with the nev Glacier Sealed Unit and the new stainless steel Zero-Freezer. And find out about Leonard's new low price ... for it's esy to own! '.iimlL'l', J N 1 I : . . .. t - n r, ..." , . , - n 7 . AuHiary Meets ; :J.t;'SprihgviIIe SFRTNG VILLE-r-The . v monthly meeting of - the-American ; Legion auxiliary will be held . at 8 p-;m; Wednesday dt Memorial nail, announces an-nounces President Hazel Roylance. It is Fidac month and a talk on that subject will feature the meetings meet-ings under the v direction of Mrs. r v- Cxi HQ Completely v RenoAated - - t Repainted ' . Swim' in Filtered and Chlortn- ated Water Hot or Cold. PHONE 213 . t : . ' Spring1lle t : Make Reservations For . . FAMILY OUTINGS. BABY CHICKS TODAY C. S- Approved Baby Chicks! Whits Lrcboru, R. I.-Ilanpobtrcs. I.-Ilanpobtrcs. Frodsced. mmirr jroremment and stst mnpt-rri-Im for yor prelect low. Cfcl-k brooder, wsterers Bod rte. Aim Mperlor trnrkey swvlts. -- -' RA3ISnAW IIATCITCKY 805 S. 7th East - Ph. 61S-W tkese t:z::a zx?.r.$ rurjis- . t!tter DUl, wits Miiirnuktbi . . S. KtamafiBt SImU m As' 4. SlvrBmg Ut strs SaiblM.T' sir thorny. " ' T. A3 "lc.-f wer br :-' Wlltti ' ' 3- S. SknrciM Fm4 fr I. UB-A-Utek 3-wf 19. UsrJ S-Trar Frte- 83 NO. TJNTV. AH TIIONE 18 CI E;n G D Ek OJJ I ! - ff" ' ' "n ' ' ' ' ' " ' 1 TrT ....... ' , j ! REMODEL!-' REPAIR! .;. This is the time to do it so your home will 1 be livable, smart, more ' valuable,- witru complete improve-ments. improve-ments. ; -You ; need . go '.no :f urthcr.' than :our , own ? shopping - district to find ; the 7workmen-the mater- 7 ials to make your home a better place to live in! " : 7 - 7 ; 7 r 1 7-! 1 1 k 'i, m i. 13UU- vL-iiUls-LikJU Finance, Under the EAS7. noiiraLY, , pArriEiiTS : I JO 'DELAY!' u WL C-3. 164 West Fifth North Phone 232 . NEW SUMMER PRICES ON COAL! |