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Show m PROVO ' ' (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, ? TUESDAY, AUGUST 8; 1939 PAGE ' FOUR V V II i it II lir nil ii , r t Publ1h4 '' by tho nraia Corporation. 99 Soutn r rint 1VtEtrt, Provo, Utah. Entered mm second ... rltii matter at the poatoffloe tn Prpyo, Utah, under the act. of March S. 1879. i . . . oilman. .Nlcol & Buthraan, National -Adrrtielne; . 4 representative New Tork. San Francisco, Detroit i .fiotton. ispm Anle, Chlcae;.--''-' !-- Member United Preae. N. E. -A. Berrlce. Western Liberty' . tnrbnrtt all thm lnd Ta Liberty ouiaiae county V" - The Herald will not aaaume financial vreeponaiblllty for any errors which, may appear In advertisement published In SU columns.' col-umns.' InVboee Instance ' whera the paper Is at ; fault. U will reprint that part of the advertisement In whloh the typocraph-lcal typocraph-lcal mistake occurs. : ; .. ' V - And ye shall Bene the Lord your CLan5J he shall Ness they bread, and thy water; and. I will takefstekness away from the nUd5theExodiri23:33. , . - ' . Obedience to God Is 'the mdst Infallible evidence of sincere and supreme love to him. Emmons. A National Emergency - . ' When an emergency arises, the American people act. : When an epidemic strikes, the nation mobilizes to con-t con-t quer it. : - . N -'. -; When flood, fire or hurricane roar across the country, millions of dollars and trainloads of food and clothing pour into the strjeken area. ' ' I I If a&enemy -invaded our shores, every one of us would ' rush to the defense. i . N i Today, we are faced with as any of these greater, in lar and arouses less alarm. 1 i This emergency is line rising traffic toll. ( V i A lot of us have had the smug idea lately that we had thef traffic problem whipped, kast year the nation cut its death toll 19 per cent. This year started out the same way. . Then .something happened. W$ started stepping on the - gas and jaywalking 'again. Accidents shot up. The- safety drive faltered, then bogged down. And in June, the National Safety Council reports, the traffic death tollwent up for the first time in 20 months. fin Junealone2,330 people were killed on streets and highways. Eighty ' thousand others were injured. And the heavy vacation months, still are to be heard from. fti&ht here in Utah county we have seen, 12 deaths from traffic accjdents this year, a shameful record, compared with ;he nine deaths, which was period in 1938. At the rate m danger of seeing last years black mark of 18 deaths, once more exceeded. 1 v Is that an emergency or not? i Yourhelp is needed needed just as much as in fire or flood. c . ),- X .r Not your moneyt ;Not your time,. Not your services. Just a little common horse sense when you drive and walk! ; , : . Fortyjrhousand Bridges Vt ,6flCg. rAWf;rt rini, w uftiL.wHaw wvu vh. 0u u,. MK. , .,w , reports are an old story by now, and yet as time passes, the sheer figures grow more and , 1 Six years of work are now behind the 2,500,000 young men, War veterans, Indians and territorials who have passed through the camps. s And today, the United States hasinong others, these things which it did not have beforef 4,741,000,000 treesv 104,000 miles of truck trails or minor roads, 71,000 miles of telephone lines, 40,000 bridges, 4,700,000 check dams in gullies gul-lies to reduce soil erosion, 5390 largf inipounding or diversion divers-ion dams. f; "I am proud," reports Director Fechner of the CCC, "of the fine performance record of these young men' He should .be prou, and so should every one of us. " . For the physical results of the work do not , stapd alone. men than tney mignt otnerwise . greatest accomplishment of all, Youth vs. Age 1 it is well known that-the proportion of plddr people in ; the population is constantly, growing larger, j- t As a result, political power; is gravitating toward older people by sheer weight of numbers. Aubrey. Williams, na- tional youth administrator, believes this change in. balance )is so great that youth, must organize, to protect itself against the-"terrific organization pressure being developed by the aged." " 4 ' . - All efforts to develop and emphasize class cleavages are bad, the goal being to. eliminate, class stratification. But to . emphasize a youth-age Hvalry is worse than most such class ' cleavages. . " Williams favors the Reeves plan for a constitutional amendment- to reduce voting age to 18 instead of the present pres-ent 21. . - ; , . . Thbre may bemeri t in this, simply on the ground that 18-ycar-olds are better qualified to yote than they Used to be. " But it is on that ground that the proposal should be considered, con-sidered, not on the ground of a potential tug-of-war between -youta ancragea groups, wnn middle.' . A ' vrl ; They've los.t a 6-foot,- 100 bridge. Strange nobody heard i x' Five Michigan men went : fishing with dynamite, expect-ingjp expect-ingjp bring back some big ones. It was the police, however, whefdid the catching; . ? . yylr " s . , , r A r . A EXPERT FINIS iVhy Size Roll! . DEVELOPED arid PRINTED ioTSo . and . Twice-a-Day. Service -. ,10 Discount on Eastman Film MDQUIST -sDRUG Daily Herald' Afternoon Exoptln Caturdy) ' and (Sunday Morning V Feature and the Scrippa Leacu of . Newepapera. Subscription r. terms by carrier In- Utah . county, (9 cents the month, 13.00 for alx months, In advance; 15.76 th year. In advance; by mall In county, I .00; s.it in ywr ia if ms , a national emergency as great fact, because it is less spectacu bad enough, during the same we are going, Utah countyvis ia mmmoA G.V WriV more overwneimmg. nave Deen. Ana tnai is me I me mass!w uie puuuc ui wic N t ' - ' i: - pound key ho a Calif orriia it when it dropped. : OUT OUR WAY f'f KOW OMCET ANf FER ALL 1 WAMMX, SET . . ;v J THIMCrS STRAJSKT ACXJNJD HZSGWHO : y ' . PAYS OFF IN) THIS HOUSE.? YOU'RE TH' It - 1 B.lM3 ME MV OWE VOHDATCLEAMUPTH' , I- . PCCKETBOCJ-C ) fu CELLAR THEN YOU EWP ME TO , ; . , . Vv X XAD TO COLLECT AND HE WOKJ'T . t S ; - , ' ": ' AS i ' COME ACROSS -SOMETHJM'3' . V: -f " ' T r i; . OOTTA BE DOME ABOUT fAYlr x ' ': . V J ! S I V' OUC PEBTTSACOUND HERE.' THIS v S: '-Vi t " , - . , - --AIH'T TWCIt?.TTIMg' . x'-Vg:T7W 1 T J1ST LASTV ;;v;f ' , : fjl- ; J : .... ... u d:l.;H v t. m. arc. .tw. orr. WHY Presentingrlame - Winners Congress- And How They !irf BRUCE CATTON Provo Herald Washington ! . (Correspondent . WASHINGTON; Aug; 8 UE) You gret a different set of "lead 's" out of each session Congress. " - - Every year a certain number of men stand 1 out as the ones who are most influential , with their fellows. The group which they compose $s worth studying, because ,it may obtain the next president or possibly the next- president-af ter-the-next. Certain ly it contains the . men who, for one reason or another, have been most effective! in shaping "their country's policies. Sometimes a man srets in this group by Ixia f eloquence Sometimes Some-times he gets there by a plodding earnestness whicn maes him an acknowledged . authority on some particular subject. Sometimes he coUeaguea haye - come v to haVe espeeiai re8pectfor his intelU- gence and hMmowiedge! some- times his rise is due to his political shrewdness; sometimes his presi--avall- it is simply due to dential-year political ability." THE STANDOUTS , In any case, here is a- sample list of the men who, in the session ses-sion just ending, have risen to prominence in the, J'leader" class. . Congressman Eugene Cox, Georgia Democrat, for his dominance domi-nance , of the all-powerful House rules committee and his effective opposition to all aspects of the New Deal's labor program. Provo Instructor To Attend Coast Red Cross School Paul.Hcnrtchsen of Prpvo i3 one pi r the 'fifteen swimmers In the seven western states selected ,to attend the world's first Surf and Sailing" school, which will be conducted con-ducted by the American Red Cross at Alamltos Bay, Long Beach, California, from August, 14 to 19, First Aid and Life Saving in the Paclfio area, has ' announced. v Only graduates of the American Red Cross Aquatic schools., were eligible for selection and those chosen to attend the school are outstanding - In the swimming world. " Mr. " Henrichsen and his fellow students will be instructed In the proper use of paddle- 'boards,: surf I hoards and cylinder buoys: nn ex tension . rescues; in theory, of "life saving In the aurf ; and In the property, study of . beaches, wave formations, and rip-tides; and-, van be." afforded the . opportunity of - . .r . m ....... a. ,Ji . .. .-J Studying ine equipment ana systems sys-tems used at various Southern California beaches. Harold Terwilliger. of the American Amer-ican Red Cross -will be .director of the Surf and Sail school, and 'his staff of . assistants will Include Capt. Henry Coleman 6f the Los Angeles .Life Guard Corps; Capt Myron Cox of the , Los Angeles City, Life Guard Corps: Capt. R. J. Miller of, the'Lorig Beach Life Guard Corps; and Frank Davenport. Daven-port. ' superintendent of Aquatics of the City of Long Beach. The surf work, as well as the sailing instruction, will be taught the selected students: so that they may re teach the proper procedure of ocean recreation In t their own communities."" , ' ' Ninety-eight per cent of milk Is assimilated by .the human body, scientific tests show. Digestive ac-tirtn'nti ac-tirtn'nti 'rnllk iM ouir.ker- than ' on meat, r eggs, , or , fish. , . J , . MOTHERS CjET GRAY in -'d . linked with him in the same bracket is Congressman Howard tW. O 111 A til. UUI.CI. vw..vrM. Smith, Congressman Joseph W. Martin, Mar-tin, Massachusetts Republican, party remarKaDiy snrewa ana effective generalship throughout the session. . roninKRfmn riiftnn tVnndrunv' Virginia Democrat. who was . more influential than any other man in Congress on bills affecting: af-fecting: the WPA. In the same. connection, Congressman . John Taher, New York" Republican, can also be given credit for some1.(JiJemocals.' . v highly effective work. ;, Senator Claude i'epper, Florida Ccigressman Carl Vinson of I Democrat, for steady pro-New Georgia and Andrew, J. May of , Kentucky, both Democrats, who halTcharge of the huge navy and army appropriation bills, respec tively, and who piloted them, through the House successfully,, Mr., May might also take,. ; a bowl moreanCTt Uentiment than had nreviouslvjA sentiment than had previously J been evident in the house. Senator Arthur Varidenberg) MichiganJtepublican, for consistent consis-tent and . intelligent opposition to New Deal projects, ranging; all the way from" revision jt the neutrality law to .the.; lflorlda. shi. canal and , extension 6f the President's, monetary powers? Also noteworthy on the neutrality neutral-ity law to the . Florida ship canal and extension of the Presfdent's monetary powers. Also- note worthy oh the ' neutrality issue were senators Bennett Clark of Missouri, Hiram Johnson of Cali fornia, William E. Borah of Idaho, and Gerald Nye of North Dakota. , Child's Earliest Forms Lifelong' 50 THE GROWING PERSON I It hs only lately been realized by parents that thei?. . child is an individual, and that every point in the life of an individual from early infancy to old age is simply a The suggestion and trahv ing of the parents formulates formu-lates the early habits that grow into personality.' The study of children has revealed re-vealed that these habits are formed at a very early -age, and that it becomes increas-s increas-s ingly "difficult to . change them as the individual matures ma-tures along certain, set pat-; terns - l- The wise parent studies the elements of- child psy- : -chology as a necessary preparation for parenthood One of the first truths apparent to the student of psychology psy-chology is that the emotional habits of the child can be directed into healthy channels from the start. Failure to : so direct them is as serious as failure to properly safeguard the health of the child. . . - c ; '' . . ;- "- v ' . .The emotional immaturity that handicaps the individual in making adjustments toward happy -marriage can be blamed on. a poor start, in life, a poor early starts The , individual is largely the product of . early training. - - 1 . The child's first demand of the parent brings the first crisis, i The shape of the' individual's "lhV largely follows .' the pattern established at this and subsequent crises. If the child, makes an unreasonable' demand and goes into a tantrum on refusal, the parent has its first oppor- Ntuxiity .to. contribute either for good or evil to the emo tional development of the individual entrusted to her care . The parent who gives in to the- child is well on the way to establishing 1 the belief ;in the growing individual that it can get 'what" it. wants in life by being disagreeable .'enough.-' ' ' The parent who , strikes the" child or stops the tantrum by forceful means may develop hysteria, and other emotional emo-tional complications in the child. The parent who ignores the tantrum long enough to establish its complete unim-portance, unim-portance, then later explains to the child that tantrums 4 are ineffective, has taken .an- intelligent and : important gtep m eiiective child training. By WILLIAMS ..." a wv i L.kinii Fading Senator Alva Adams, Colorado " Democrat for a steady fight for economy, jt Senator Robert Taf t, Ohio Republican, Re-publican, : for a workmanlike job under ' rather trying circumstances. circum-stances. Senator James E. Brynett of South Carolina, for a widened r sphere of influence on many matters. Among other things, he put through the reorganization bill and the bow for this can Irs shared by Congressman John J. Cochran of Missouri and lind- say Warren of North Carolina, Deal efforts plus a Ureiess, I though unsuccessful, fight for the Jt'ownsend plan. V : Senator Carl A. Hatch, New. Mexico Democrat,' for putting through the - clean-politics . .bill y which bears his name. : AND. THE jy OLD - TIMERS . Some mention ought also to be made of some of the old stand bys; Nevada's Senator Key Pitt- man and -Illinois' Congressman I Adolph Sabath. for instance, who had such ill luck, respectively, with the neutrality, program and the House rules committee,; ; Majority Leader Sam .Rayburn of Texas had the thankless job of trying to lead a nopelessly divided party - in the House, and am as wen as tne new Dealers could fairly have expected him to do. And, of want' to : forget Vice President John Garner. Training: Personality i -1; n iiiie: i iy yh; O SERIAL STORY : ' - . BORDER ADVENTURE - Yeefvrdayi - Taklsa: taereaalaa; . rinks, Betty irora to lierro'a raarh. ' There eke will try tet fid .eat wfcei he will naaggle ever hi allene. .. t . CIIAPTEIt XVIII '1 pHE ranch home of Luis Faus-. Faus-. tino Rodarte y Barro was well known in 6ie vicinity of Juarez. It was like other ranchos in Chihuahua, Chi-huahua, save that thisone was reputed re-puted to be rather luxuriously furnished fur-nished and maintained. From time to time . cattle appeared on the hundred or' so acres behind it, but the information seemed vaguely to be that Don Luii made his money mostly by, buying and selling cattle, cat-tle, father than raising them. That is, to those persons who knew only superficially abouVhim. , ' The enti-ance was a long curving driveway. to the house proper. And the house' was indeed striking. It was once owned by a member of the historic Terrazas .- family, wealthy s f olk of another ; decade. Ocotillo and niagueys and yuccas and many bizarre : cactus plants adorned the yard. " Barred and grilled windows, graceful arches that were shadowed and deep, balconies bal-conies here and there, a cool patio, all were part of iL The'rooms of the building-seemed to ramble In-terminably." In-terminably." " The main ? entrance was labeled with; a fainted sign, after the manner of, so many old Spanish or1 Mexican homes. This one, JDon : Luis had ; caused to be named "Casa Hermosa" beautiful home.':; 'y " yz "Oh the lovely old ? carretal Betty Mary saw it with an artist's eye, a genuine old ox cart with two immense, wood en wheels standing near the entryway.v Several peo pie were out front too. , ;They. ap- -4-peared merely to be loafing there in the sunshine, enjoying the lovely love-ly desert and mountain' r view. Juarez and El Paso were plainly visible five miles in the distance, and between them the silvery Rio Grande snaked off across the far plains. The elevation of Casa Hermosa Her-mosa added immensely to the view. Betty Mary noted the hill or mountain that rose abruptly immediately im-mediately behind the house, too. "Senorita tosee Don Luis, the taxi driver told a man servant who appeared in the arched entryway. ; T) ETTYn MAKY got out, paid the driver generously and told him not to wait. She wanted an excuse ex-cuse to be here as long as necessary, neces-sary, now that she had dared to come. She gripped her sketching pad hard to avoid showing ner- Lapusness, and followed the servant Y inside. He opened a ponderous, hand-hewn door and motioned her through. It led to a great. living room-which held 15 or 20 people mostly menwLuis- Barro waav itjducel her-to a duenna the com AT; ASPEFJT017N News from Bfigham Young University Alpine Summer ' School By' OLIVER SMITH When the first three dramatic productions of the Alpine term are staged Wednesday night at Tim- contain a : Cross section of the panogos . theater, their casts will summer school's ' cosmopolitan student body-- In "Manana Ban dits,' each . member of - the cast represents a different " state Utah, California, Wyoming,, and Arkansas. The director la from Arizona, and , the setting of the play, is on the Mexican border. - Provoans are cordially wel-- -, corned - to I iiew the plaj-s, according ac-cording to Dr. T. - Earl Pardoe of . the ' speech' department. Visitors . Wednesdar; night Mill . be In - distinguished "'company' for members of "the M.LA.. -general boards will be present to ' see the ' presentations, beginning be-ginning at 7:S0 p. m. Classes which begin at 7:30 each morning-- would sm rather early during an ordinary quarter, but at the Alpine term it's different. Living "near" the mountain tops endows en-dows students with a peculiar capacity ca-pacity to thrive on the bracing atmosphere of the early morning. . . - ..- . ; - - ." y ' , ' - ' - . v One genuine help to the . early risers at the Aspen Grove dormi tories, -is . the anticipation of the delectable breakfasts served at "Happy "Hall,! the , dining room. Hotcakes that actually I melt in your mouth and home-style dishes of . many kinds, tempt the appe-titie appe-titie . to more than" usual propor tions and give the student vivid memories of . the occasions ; spent with -knees under, table. .. s -. Class bells are rung at 7:25 and 7:30, 8:25 and. 8:30 and' so on to 12:25. which is the welcome signal for lunch. - And-it's -a substantial lunch; too, like" they " serve back home on , the farm. The bell sounds " again for three hourly classes in the afternoon, begin ning at 1:30 Students take turns - . . - - dril r ting at a table with several persons around him. "Senorita!" He jtimped up in high surprise. - "Hello hello, Don Luis!" she began her artist manner again. "I just couldn't resist calling on you ! in so lovely, a place! So picturesque and all! It just must be painted! I should think" ' "Miss Jordan! How you come here? How you know this place? How you what you do here?' '. "Oh, I just took a taxicab. ; It was a lovely drive. Really it was! The hotel or "somebody, . I forget i who, showed me where you lived. I have ' always ', wanted to visit a real Mexican rancho; dear me! So nice of you to welcome me. Aren't you going to Introduce me to all these interesting people?" -. Her chattering had .given Barro time to collect his own wits.. He made a pretense of introducing his companions, . mentioning them as business callers - from Chihuahua City. "And let me present Senorita Bettee Marie Jordan," he bowed to her and to them. , . 7 NoW, in all truth, Luis Barro had been . highly . impressed by Betty- Mary's, beauty. When he was in lighter, mood, ' feeling romantic ro-mantic and a trifle devilish in the Juarez I cafe, that - day, v he I had maneuvered to become acquainted with her and Impress her, as he thought, with his own good manners. man-ners. It ;was a social contact he fully meant to follow -pp, So utterly ut-terly charming a girl was not to be taken lightly. - r And in truth also, he would have followed up that meeting at once if circumstances had permitted. Ha did shower her with every fcourtesy he could in' the first few days hf knew her. He. took her to dinner twice, to lunch twice, to a theater once. ' He sent her . an exquisite bracelet in Mexican silver filigree work, so delicately "beautiful that Betty Mary loved it Instantly and felt like a hypocrite for accepting It. But meanwhile, too, his private business -had been experiencing some very definite upsets and trou bles. Black anger had .suffused him when his avenues for smuggling smug-gling cocaine had suddenly been detected. "I. have been so sorree not to have see you as much as I hoped," he purred at Betty Mary now, as If in apology for his first lack of hospitality. ."It is honor to have you calL senorita!" That was more like it, thought Betty Mary! She breathed a little silent sigh of relief, wondering just what tack she ought to take now. She fell back on her sketching sketch-ing again, deciding to move slowly and: begin to pump the servants when she could. She talked gaily as Don Luis himself showed her to a beautiful sun" room and'intro- -- sounding the gong this, week' freshman Carol Oaks of , Provo is the toller. After the carefree afternoon at Aspen to wn, dorm occupants occu-pants are ready for a satisfying satis-fying dinenr at "Happy HalL" The cool evening. Is the time for a baU game or a hike, and then study. Curfew sounds at 9:30, books close, and another perfect" day at Alpine ends too soon. : -" . f Cranium Crackers WHO'S WHO , y .. Only ' one pf the : answers In MPh pnsa nf :thla fief nf mtiolrnl queptionl9 ja ; rxrrect.r See how many you can; pick. ; . . :- :. 1- Adelina Patth was: (a) child-care child-care specialist; b) inventor of a candy bar; (c) opera singer; (d) famous female chef, i " ? 2. Walter Damrosch, conductor, at 1 77 la entering a ' new field of work. Is it (a) goingu In i the movies (b) abandoning conducting conduct-ing to compose; (c) taking up;me-chanical up;me-chanical reproduction of music; (d). promoting: nudism. " I N ; 3. A: famous 7 singer . recenuy sang before an outdoor audience of nearly 250,000 people. Was it (a) Lauritz Melchior; (b) Lawrence Law-rence Tibbett ; ; ( c ) Kirsten Flag-stad; Flag-stad; (d) Lily Pons. r 4. Two of these ; we II -kn o wape r-forniers r-forniers ' at the " piano are blind. Which? (a) AlecTempleton; (b) Fats Waller;, (c) - Eddie Duchin; (d) Art Tatum; (e) Ignace Pade-rewski. Pade-rewski. t; J Answers on rage Eight . - STEAMER AGROUND . . PETERSBURG, Alaska, Aug. -7 (U.E . The Alaska Steamship Company freight Depere was fast aground near Prowlewy Rock "in the treacherous Wrangell Narrows Nar-rows today after, stocing in its bottom on a lighthouse , beacon bouy marking the: rock. :, Capt. Henry Burns v and "his crew of 34 men were still aboard the ; craft -with the coast guard cutter . Cyane standing by. The boat - carried no passengers.' - Urco.'iing Lchi SPECIAL 10 Days Only . USED LUMBER r : : hrtei. per aii sizey:My;yyy&u3V m All Materials from Factory For Sale! Apply at Lehi, or write Monsey Iron and Metal Co. 700-730 So. 3rd West, Salt Lake qty, Utah BY OREN ' ARNOLD COPYRIGHT. 139. . NEA SERVICE. INC. bined - woman servant and chap- i eron who so of ten. is a blessing in Mexican homes He promised to join her soon, then went back to t his business callers. ' t ; 1 --' AT 2 p. rru that same day, Hope Paso and ordered $5 worth of roses sent to Miss .Betty Mary Jordan, .-. Hotel Montezuma,. Juarez. "And give them to her in person,' or ask ' where you can take them to her," ', he commanded the ; delivery boy.' Say they are from Oscar Smith. in El Paso," if anybody asks.' Here's a dollar for yourself." . "Yes, sir, Mr. Smith! Gee!" -In an hour a long long hour for Hope the boy was back. . Hope , had kept an eye on the florist shop, . watching, for him. , - , - 'Sorry, .. Mr. Smith," he apolo- , gized. "But she wasn't in, . and - hadn't been in several hours. They -didn't know where she went, but I left the flowers in water, in her room.". . , - - - ' "In her room? . .Was the were Uie shades the windows" Hope didn't want to talk., too much. but ; -! ; - . - ..-'-- ) "Oh, the shades ,were .pulled," K the boy'assured him. "They won't ' wilt." ' : ' "' :" "' ; Hope-didn't ask any more. ' But -he didn't like it. This was the first ttime " in days that the two, white cloths had been missing. He . hoped that perhaps Betty Mary was -In El I Paso again, and so ' hastened "back to headquarters to be there if she should telephone. - "She Jhasrf t called here, and her window's blank,"5 Sheridan Starr informed him,' looking exceedingly glum. "It's been nearly six hours now. 'WhatH we do?" . Lets so over there," Hope rus-. gested,-glumly. '; : "Shell skin us. . Anyhow if Barro was back of that submarine business, and rm sure he was " "You scared to go?" Hope glared at his buddy. 3 ; , .-. ' ' " -Course not! But all riht, let's go!" ... V Sheridan left his chair and started start-ed toward the door, but Hope himself him-self retracted his challenge. ."Walt, ; You're right. No use,., being foolish. Regardless cf Barro, we cant mess up her plans nov. She may have something else coi In mind. It's still daylight. But tonight" - , - - . "Right, Hopey.; He was eyeing his pal closely, though. , Suddenly -Sheridan lowered his voice per- t ceptibly. "Listen, son. you're in love with that little txick, aren't ' you?". ; : .. : Hope ignored him, his face stem. He took out his pocket knife, and began slowly to trim bis rjer nails. Finally he muttered an answer, an-swer, "WelL arent you in love wiU fcer.f'too?- , . . i CTa Be CoslIatted" w v., v,fc. PRICE CUT BRINGS . THRONG TO FAIR . NEW YORK, Aug. 7 d& The World's Fair was back 'on a pay- 1 Ing-' basis " today, witn" a "reduced week-end admission getting the crediL- "More than 180,000 visitors took 'advantage of the new 50-cent week-end rate "yesterday and fair officials said the total for Saturday Satur-day and Sunday ; reached their goal of 200,000. t r. ' t' stop ivoonvino AOOU SAFmr t:.::.d W3Y tl STCPS YCU2 Cil BRIMIIALL BROS. Tire" Merchants Provo, Utah -"Phone 2G0 Sugar 7cciory! T S OS rrC - i . 'A V : |