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Show J PAGE TWO V PROVO (UTAH) DAILY -HERALD, THURSDAY, -JUNE- 1; 193& SECTION"-" THREE I I t I1' Hi I' (Cf) 'In V ILY. Liberty throueb all tli land" Tb Liberty CU i r The Herald will not aaaume - financial responsibility for any " errors which may appear In advertisements published In lbs col-,.umni. col-,.umni. In those Instances where the paper Is at fault. It will - reprint that part or tna advertisement la which ths typographical typograph-ical mistake occurs. . , , , -. ' i - . ., Submit yourselves therefore . net) rroraiyou James 4:7. As thou wilt; what thoul No Round Table Tor "'Us! Alf Landon, as last candidate i'or the ReDublican nartv. Is privileged to ; speak out in meeting as leader jot the opposition party. .7 . . - 7". 1 So, from a political standpoint It-Is all right that, he ;.; , has come out urging a Vround-table conference of nations" tobring about world peace; . It is also the privilege of Americans to disagree with any of their politicians and in this case they certainly will. ';.;.'. .:: , . vy.,' ;-. ;y - I Such a "round-table conference," with us at the table, ; V Is what Europe has dearly ; desired ever since the end of J the world warrafter the nations learned what a treasure . box we were for financing conflicts. There Was one such round table it was called the league of nations. 7"77:..7;7:' - , There was another it was called the world court. ; . If such a conference was called Europe would pull , X strings and, the first v tiling we'd know the conference i would be on a permanent basis,' with. Uncle Sam sittingr in as a permanent member. . - , V ; Then there would be developed a policy of "policing" the world so that whenever any fiery nation started a t war we'd be committed to send our ihen and a supplies to J i stop it. , ..', 7 1 F , If GoVernor . Landon has any ambitions foe a political ; comeback he'on the wrong track with Inia :itun-table Idea. Many political careers including that of j Presi-: Presi-: dent" Wilson have been wrecked in the well-meaning attempt to get us into some league or organization with ; Europe. ' The American people, time and time again, haye : shown that they want no part hi such a scheme. i ; Britain Tries the Draft ! . One of fingland'fl iiggc ! world that She, too, is a democracy, has been the, fact .' that she has not had-forced military service for. her ; young men, such! as is commbn to all the dictator coun-r coun-r tries.- ' : r , ?? v'j.-y ) I . The British government now i$ taking the big step of "forcing air her young men into conscripted service for six months, on the ground that there Is a national emer- r - A great deal of f opposition has developed against conscription con-scription and It is interesting to note that working men, i ,- who are against it, declare that such conscription is really, a step toward Fascism, instead of being a prp-! prp-! . 'tection against it v . The .opposition's !theory Is that the six-month conscription con-scription is just an Opening wedge and that, after it ia fc established, the British government can declare various , 'emergencies' that will force labor to be regimented and to , worjc at government-fixed Wages and hours, without the slightest attention being 'paid to the wishes ofthe . lndividu?L worker.. ' France has already put on the garb of dictatorship In recent weeks. V It will be most interesting for America Amer-ica to watch how tile English situation ' develops. If England DOES slip into a regimented form of gov , . ernment, America will have still anotjier reason to thank her stars that she has no alliances ; with the Old World powers. . We don't want, to be involved in any "emer-; "emer-; gencies" that could serve as the first step toward Nazi-: Nazi-: Ucation of these United States! x . YOU CAM NOW CO TO IF YOU WAMTTO CO V ri i TLS" t . J :-7' r?ri m0J.-'-1 7)- v w ' ; "'i7 "v'7 ' :" - 5 . . rt s7'"7 '-'-i-f' ' Herald tttry Afternoon (Exoepttnr Saturday) and Bund&y Morning . , .,- , .. Published by th Ilerald Corporation, 60 Eouth Vrt VVet Street, Provo, Utah. Kntered a second rlkii matter at the pottofflc In Provo, Utah, under , tb act of March , 1879. ' ' . -Oilman. Nlcol - A Jluthmin, National Advertising rprantatlvf a. New York,' San Franclaco. Detroit, Boston, Los Angrelea, Chicago. - - Mewoer United. Press. N. E. A. Servlea, Western , Features andv th Scrippa League of Newspapers. Subscription v terms by" carrier In Utah county, CO cents ths month, 3.00 for six months. In advance; 15.75 thfc year, In advance; by mall In county, ft.00; outalde county 6.7& the, year-In advance.. - - , .-. to God. Resist the devfl, and be will . . V- N ' ' ' wilt; t .when - thou 4 wUt Thomas . A. Travel Note UROPe IM LlTTLC MORE THAM A PAY TO EUROPE. OUT OUR WAY f usten; worry WARTI REALIZE ;. TS THOUeMTFUL OF V0U TO BURV YOUR POO'S BONE SO DEEP THAT ' . " OTHR MUTTS CANT GET AT IT . , ALL X WANT TO KNOW 15 HOW V : WILL VOUR VO(b - . J ' " . r . . , JSS" 3ET ITT : ' ' ' - N '. ' - : iiJX q - . SIMPLE.' I'M v : A ftWV- " . GOMNA Pl3 A VHA"- ' . TUNNEL FROM 1 rs Yl A f - x ' HERE INTO - -1 . pL'-'Mf-.-QSA- f ' - .H1S hooseW V y:- ,. f7,r-f. ' 7;;-'; --C" "7; i loir-j-w-Vv, ;,vc.-'rv--.. 1 1. m. acc. U. . rT. of. -: - V COPft. 193 BY WE SaOVICC. INC. New Map. of , . BY BRUCE CATTON Provo Herald Washington i .:.f CTorrespondent WASHINGTON, June , 1 You'll look & long way before you find a more unusual loo tnantne one held by Q. ETRuebsam, wha works for the Department of. theIn terior. . - ' , " v Mr Ruebsam . spends all cf his time bringing the official map of the United States up to date. It s a job that meyer ends because as fast aa gets one set of corrections correc-tions made .they bring him a lot mor e. . ilLjfames - change; v towns spring, up pr vanish, nvers shift their courses, (boundaries are alt ered and there are some, millions of acres, that have never yet been properly surveyed. - , . All -of this comes down on Mr. Ruebsam. He is the engraver who makes the big copper, plates from which the - master w map of the United States is printed. He"does' it all by hand, and he .has ta do it ail i pacKwara. rrne wnoie tmng is Just about the most exacting and painstakings - jot I e vv , had a look at. . . PECKS AVVAV '.kt: -rv' AT PLATES The 1938 edition of the official map is Just.now being, issued by the General Land Oxfice of the Interior Department. It comes in a big; sheet seven feet. wide, by, five feet high; and as far as the government gov-ernment is concerned, it is ,TH15 map of, the United States. , Work oijthe ,. 1940 ..edition has already -begun,', anJt . Mr, Ruebsam spends his days hunched over a copper, plate, .pecking .away; at; it with : an assortment ;of f Inq-poiht-ed j gouges and routersv . : , , . Up until .1901, official 5 U.' S. maps were, hand-drafted on." paper with pen and ink.. In that" year, however, - the government decided to (have an official set of copper plates made. - Af set ' pi : copper electrotypes were, .struck off, the original., plates t.were, filed saway, , C. . , h : - I ! T. M. ate. U. S. rAT. OFF. ---:.. . ' Ht..tMK HWUKM - VTHE.E ARTH WORM Utah Keeps and, the electros were put into service. . j ... They don't make new plates for each (biennial issue of the map; just make ' changes in the old plates. Mr. Ruebsam has been on the job since '1922, and he says he's still using the -plates that were in service whenxhe started. "The big map is printed from six rectangular' sectional plates each measuring 30 by 33 inches. For the . current onap, Mrs. Ruebsam found he . hadNto make, the most changes in sections one, two and four, covering the Tstates of Virr ginia, West Virginia, vNorth and South Carolina, Tennessee,, Kentucky,, Ken-tucky,, Georgia, Alabama, vMls-sissippi. vMls-sissippi. and Texas. Chief, reason was that they changed the boun-claries boun-claries of national parks and forests for-ests In all of .those states, adding new ones In some .instances. . t RE-DOINO UTAH Right now he ia finishing a job that has kept. him. busy off and on for a. year and a half making a ;new. map, of .Utah to insert in the' next big, Ur S map. A-lot of park and forest boundaries had been changed, in Utah, and, new and s. official surveys had a come througli ; . r.i figured he . couldn't inake the necessary changes in the old ' plate ; without spoiling - u7so he started in from ' scratch', to make a brand-new one. 'j 1 , - v:,Now., when you figure .that every, single feature on this map has to e put on the copper plate by . hand, ,includingall of the lettering, let-tering, the shaded mountain, areas, the land range Unes, . latitude and longitude lines, railroads .and; so on; and' then when you . add the fact'.-that . this" Is all . done, back-i ward, and that every tool-prick, on the map has to be put iri just ex-.actly. ex-.actly. the right location then you -begin to. see why this little map or Utah'.has kept .Mr. Ruebsam; busy for 18 months. ' . y i , wAlthough every.:. word.:. on:r the map is hand lettered Mr. Reub-sam Reub-sam has to keep up on type Tonts Elitraneiiisr Vista. i . - . ' ' -.. .- ... ': . I : .iIS::::w.4 ' 1 : 1 ( a - i ' " I -.-,.. ... '" I . ' ' t , - -;- - -; ; v , t " - A . x h . r. I " ! f :7 ' " When it comes to beauty, the mafic isle In the middle of San Francisco Bay which is the site of the California World's Fair, is a setting which leaves nothing to be desired by even the mest imaginative. This spring the thousands and thousands of tulips have been a show in themselves. Here is a portion of Treasure Garden which is a riot of blooms, with the romantic Soutli Tower ia the background. , ; A . .. : By WILLIAMS j Engraver Busy one kind of type being used for big cities, anoUier for smaller towns, another for rivers, and so on. . , . . . -1 -sV; The printing is all so regular that I tried to pjy Mr. Ruebsam a compliment; told him the lettering letter-ing looked as "if it had been set up in type, He promptly blasted me. Type-lettering, it seems, is too stiff, and formal; hand-Tetter-ing flows more freely : and looks lots better. With the best of intentions, in-tentions, I had ; deeply ,. insulted him COLOR- , COMI UCATIONS . . ki " . , ' . ' When he makes a change - on one of the old plates. Mr. Rueb- sam must first gouge out the part which is to 'be changed. Then he puts the x plate. in a little gadget which looks much like a notary public's seal-stamper and - fills in the gouged-out -place by pounding tho j plate , up, vtrom the bottom. When : that :..has , - been pounded C wyn .smoath7-he's- ixa4y,'.tfl putKln the nev f lines. V - ' ' Although the big map comes in just six sections, it takes 18 plates in ;all to print iL The reason is that it takes a different plate for each color.-. ;S , 1 Rivers, Jot instance, go v on. in 4Jue "So, in making .this new map 7 of I Utah, -Mr. - Ruebsam had to nake. two plates side by side;1 one 'containing everything,.: but the state's, river systems - ancj. 'the , other containing nothing ..else but . rivers.' - - 7 , U-I-TEAM wins 7 : -f. -Ofc-tf : --J.1f.-a-.-;-'.---. , .,'- , -- " - ' - ' r SPANISH FORK The Eureka Softball - team .took a severe drubbing drub-bing "at the hands of .the Utah-Idaho Utah-Idaho Sugar company team for the , Central Utah Softball" league Saturday ; night .at . the .Spanish .Fork . softttall park. The - score was 21-8 c. in favor of . Spanisli Fork, the visitors being considerably consider-ably outclassed by the locals. j MINUTIA T1UTII PARTRIDGE RICIIAA To a birthday brawl iast night, and folks, here is news. I have been suspecting for a "long time that there were goings on in the early days, and that no one need to deplore the romance and color of -other locales, because we had plenty' right here among us. Well, here is something that rather bears me out. A gentleman gentle-man at the party told this; .he has recently been improving on some land which he owns not so far from the mouth of Provo canyon.: lie hired a man to come and do some leveling off, and the man came, back and said to him, "Why, you don't need - to put up a service station or work at anything; you've bought a old mine." Of course, : the own-i .tar." pf the land ..is. all of a dither. to know .what goes on. and so the other.takes him up to a huge boulder, 4 and there, chipped ; into the good-, old. rock, is a : very legible map, . with . directions . and explanations and ,"X" marks the spot and so on, and here is the yarn. .. .. " . ' - " A. man with a payroll $5Q0,-000 $5Q0,-000 in GOLD which by the way would be a wad consideraUy bigger, big-ger, than ' would .be needed to choke ' a , cow, . (I wish someone would jestimate' howt much that would 7 weight . and,, tell . me by easy, stages) where, was I? Oh, ye.s ! ? Well, . this payroll man being be-ing of sound mind and body, got the idea after he had been sniped at by the . noble Red - Men, several tims," that he would , have a better chance of , arriving at his destination destin-ation with . his hair, where . nature intended- i it,t rtf he ; cached; his heSvyload of .filthy "lucre and proceeded oh - unincumbered ; and penniless. Which i and what he did, chiseling the exact spot of the t'cache , on a huge -boulder; knowing ; darn- well that the Jn dians, . even if . they - found .- ,-it couldn't read writing.. Now the main marks of . identification were dry washes, orf wet washes, take your pick. Soooo, he proceeded down into Sanpete and he might as ; well have, Jcept the money, and died a rich 'man,' and sooner be cause ; . he los tjv Jhis - life . and . , no doutt - his hair "at the ,hands of the Sanpete variety, of Lamanite and that, as far as he was concerned, ; . was certainly- TrfAT. Now, the ; people for whom he was carrying the money, became restless as people wiu-when tney lose $500,000 and " sent a . , posse out to find out what-, in tunke,t was delaying., the. mails. They traced ; the road to . the big ; boulder, boul-der, and that , was that. Then .they DUG. But washes wash, if -you know what I me, and it . Was no go. ' It ; seems that other people have' had the -same ; Idea in the O SERIAL STORY t -i MRS. The characters and situations in this story are wholly fictional.- . 'J- " .; - Terdayi ' Alaa 4elde t sr r ia St. r,oala. ntilcb axralnat hit real treiinK. IZmily Is drlifchtrd over - the dtelaion. Krturiilnjt kome tkt nighty Alan receives a.telrjcrram. ' 7:;7;ciiAP,TERr:v;7 : : - A LAN. ripped theenvelope, open, reread the message "quickly. He I frowned." c . - 3ad news?" Emily asked so licitously.: : Alan, handed her the telegram.' - - o- ' . r .- , , : . "LETTER ; RECEIVED, she read. ''IMPORTANT THAT YOU COME AT. ONCE TO SIGN CONTRACT. CON-TRACT. LEAVING FOR EUROPE -AT NOON"- TOMORROW- TO SERVE ON .INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ASSIGNING JEWISH JEW-ISH PHYSICIANS OF. VIENNA AND BERLIN HOSPITALS , TO STAFFS OF AMERICAN MEDI CAL SCHOOLS.; EXPECT YOU ;BY,NINE'A: M.;;- r: - -r WILLIAM! PETERSON.' -""What's - so bad about that? Emily queried.; "You can catch the midnight train and be - mere In plenty of time. Sign the contract con-tract and we'll be ready to move any time Dr. Peterson says. IVhy, Alan,' what's the hiatterT ' -"I - can't go tonight!" he answered. an-swered. '. : . i : ' n - You cant go tonight! Emily echoed.- ; '.Why? She almost screamed the question. ' f; 7 'I can't . leave. ' Mrs. Howland is in the hospital." Grandma Frank may not live through the night .'. IH wire Dr. Peterson " - "'You will -not," Emily ordered. "You'll call .Dr. Farrell and tell him .-: to look out; for ' Grandma Frank and to take charge of Mrs. Hovland. Then you'll catch that midnight train."' V. . i "No, Emily, t couldn't & that These : people aiei-ipendins ; on me. I'm notlkidding myself that Far rell couldn't take care of them as well as I, but I owe it to them to stay here. Mrs. Howland engaged en-gaged me because she had confidence con-fidence in me, even after she had lost . her first . baby. : She migjit have gone to a vspecialist In the city, but she didn't And when I tock the case, I gave my word that I'd be here when she needed me. She needs me tonight I can't break my promise. And Grandma Frank"--;. ' ' ' "This is no time for your knight in shining armor' philosophy," Emily broke in angrily. "You're too . idealistic, Alan, too ethical. "And if - you don't ' go to St. Louis, what will Dr. Peterson think? You've" already written that you'd accept his offer. I've hoped, I've planned 'V Emily saw her dream' castles tumbling. -"Peterson may understand. I'll r tt WISMLD CLIfllC Oil 7' This is one of a series of articles on the relationship cf men and women in modern marriage, prepared and published tinder th direction of Norman S. Hayner, professor of fcocioloy at the University of Washington, and outstanding authority on the family. ' . . . G CHOOSING A T.IATE (Personal Characteristics) .7 There is no such thing as an "ideal" man cr woman. Sc -t is absurd to demand an ideal mate. - r The best we can do is to look for certain general qualities In others that attract us and we do much of this uncon- sciously. ' , ' - " . f : Altho the average educated girl wants a husband who ia in good health, with judgment, courage,, patience and a sense -Df humo", it is obvious. that in modern life we cannot make n .impersonal and thoro search for all these qualities. 7 ; la general, mating is a matter of personality. We make ' friends with people because we "like" them and not because , they fulfill an abstract set of ideals. After we "like" them we are likely to think we find evidence in them of the posses-' sion of all the desirable qualities we seek. This process of - rationalizing is as near as most of U3 get to finding an ."ideal." -. . : .7 . - ;:7'' A ' ' Obviously, the only chance we have of regulating the kind of people we "like" is. in forming our tastes along'certain .ideal lines. . The child who is taught to admire honesty and 'courage in others-will come to "like" honest and courageous i people. " :; .. - " After our tastes have been conditioned by our early train-ing train-ing at home, in school, in reading, listening to the radio and -. seeing motion pictures, we have little choice in the matter of ."Uking! people. ; J 1 - ' . : 7 . . -' . - - -' These tastes provide" the background for the attraction of .youngmen.and women. Lovers are delighted in each other's company as much because of companionship as because of . .the sheer" pulling force of sex. And companionship is based on mutuaUy attractive: personality . - - .In courtship "and in.the marriage relation there is a strong .craving for A the presence of, someone :who fulfills 4 all the V requirements of personality we have built up thru yeare of v childhood conditioning. m stsvrwlif In-ni-nrr f o fnra rf f Vi a fnfnrt Will Vw the study; of marriage and mathigjn schools.':-Already, univer- eittoa oro nn-nrfn ntlnvr rlnmPRtir' relations COUTSeS. Slid the tendency7 is toward ? installation of such courses in high school. This should be a practical step in teaching young people to find and admire the best marriageable qualities in others."--'':. , .' 1.' 7 7 -..'. ' - (Next: Companionship before marriage.).. 50 years which have passed since they failed - to find . the cache. The. man who owns the' land now, says he had been wondering what all . the, holes were he . .found on his new property, i . . Well,. that is that. "No. I'm not telling who the man is, or where the property Is yet, but it'a, there DOC BY TOM HORNER try tb ; explain. 'And' it he doesn't'. " ; - . "If he doesn'trthen your chance to be a professor to amount to something Is gone . -. . forever.' TT . would always ; be like this, Emily knew. Even if Dr. Pe terson. did accept Alan's explana tlon, ven U Alan went on with his plans up to the last minute, even" if they were ready to step on to the- train to leave Sumner forever,, there would always be something. like this to hold Alan here.: .He could not break ; away. He. would not " He never would. The tiss were too strong. - ' - - : And Emily? AVhat.did it "mean for. her?, t She pondered, the question. ques-tion. ; Endless years, just as this last one had. been? . ; thought '- of Eric ' Cashed throughher mind. Eric offered opportunity to escape all this. JBut aj quickly she put him from her tl.oughts. This was " her problem -and Alan's. They must settle it alone, 1 without interference of a third party. ... .' Could she let her dreams of returning re-turning to St Louis go"? Could shs resign herself :, to da ; and nights . of; loneliness? Could she ever be content as a country doc-tot's doc-tot's wlfe?v - xu" ' - ; ; .v .That she lovea Alan she knew. But whether she loved him enough to remain here, buried in Sumner, she was not certain. ..Alan loved her as much - as he . could ever love anyone. ; No doubt of that! But his profession came first She wa j ' outside, alone. An ever-, widening gulf of misunderstand- i ing was separating them. They were growing farther and farther apart Where would it end? She buried her face in her hands, tried iu uuiuw cieariy, - . . -. ; -- . . -. . : m .-. "... A LAN realized, too, that a final decision must be made to night. If he failed to comply with Peterson's virtual order to appear tomorrow, V there ? likely would never be another . chance. A hun dred men, -older, just as skillful as he all experienced, teachers were available in Europe. -They would gladly jump at the opportunity oppor-tunity and Peterson would be practically forced to accept them. v And what of Mrs. Howland? and Grandma Frank? They had a voice in this, too a pleading, persistent voice that would not be stilt . . If Emily would only understand. If only something could change her so that she could see his work as he saw it. If . she could even become a part of it helping rather than hindering him. " Suddenly Alan" kricw what he would do. He squared his shoulders, shoul-ders, faced his -wife.. .. , i i L -- XorK all to see and I'm going to go up right away ' and have a look, and it I. take a shovel, it won't .mean a thing. OH YEAH? By the way, we are all proud of our Florence Jepperson Mad-sen Mad-sen and her new success in the composing field. More power to her. COPYniCHT. 1030. NEA SERVICC INC. 'y7HAT are you going to do? - Emily , asked him calmly, evenly; ' Alan ' had known the would be like this in a crisis. No tears,; no hysterical pleading. : i"Im staying here, Emily. I'm wiring Peterson: that the whole thing is oft I doat want to be a professor. I want to be a doctor -and that's what I'm going to be." -"He went to the telephone. Emily winced as he dictated the message. This ; was the end. Fighting to keep, back her tears, she waited until he had replaced the receiver. That is your decision, Alan," she said. "Now listen to mine. I'm : going to St Louis. If you won't come, IH go alone. "Emily!" His face was white. . "This cant go on," Emily went on swiftly. "You can have Sumner Sum-ner but you -can have it without me!- --? --? "What do you mean?" Alan's Mps -tried to setin'a thin, hard line, but they quivered, involuntarily. involun-tarily. "I mean that we're through. Alan.- I'm leaving. Til arrange for the divorce" "Emily, wliat are you savins?" he shouted." -v: "You can have your patient3 they mean more to you than I do." "But they don't You can't do this. Think what it means." Alan was finding control again. "Our : life our, marriage. Think think what you're doing." "I ;- have , thought Fve done nothing but. think for months. I know what I'm doing. I don't be- long. here.' I ".'.:-;---.;. :The jingle of 'the telephone In terrupted her. She paused as Alan answered. "It's I.Irs. Howland," he said as he turned to her "again. "I'll be at the hospital.".. ". - Even now Emily thought after J he had gone when his own marriage mar-riage hangs in the balance, they L Call and he goes! rpHE: telephone was still wans from his hand when Err.ily lifted it eSSed a number. After a long wait a man's voice answered. an-swered. -; "I want to speak to Eric Kr.e Emily said. - : . "He's out on the dam. Can I have him call you?" the man shouted at her "It's important that I rpeak to him immediately. Please call him," Emily replied. There was another prolonged wait At last Eric answered. "Oh, it's you, Emily. Sorry to keep you waiting. Having a little ' trouble this rain " "Eric, I'm leaving Alan." She spoke, evenly. "I'm going home. I need ycu, here, r.o'w. .Will you come down tonight?" (To Be Ccr.tir.ucl) |