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Show Y .PROVO (UTAH) DAIIg HERALD, : .WEDNESDAY, APRIL, .10, 1940 PAGE TWO VT Tl VI 1 I i 11 f J . - - '-W. VT' IUI Til "Libert? through all th land" Tha t.thrty Bll Everr Aftr"nonf Excepting- Saturday ant Sunday) BunJay Jlerald Iub'.Uhd Suntfay Horning Published b tha Herald Corporation. South rtrat We Htreet, ITovo. CtaU. Entered a aernd elaa matter at the postofflca In Pron, Ltah, under tha act oB Marc 'oilman. Nlcol A Ruthman, National Advertln repra-' entattvea. New Yorlt, Ban Francisco, Detroit, Boaton, Lo Anelea. Chlcai. Member I'nited Frea, N. E. A. Bervlca. Weatern Faaturea. the x-rtpna ' I.aar or Newapapere aud Audit Bureau at Circulation. ' ' ' Subscription terma by carrier In Utah county, f centa the month. $1 00 tor ill inonttia In advance: $i.7 the year.. In adrrnce: be mall la county. .!; outalda county IS.1t tha year la advanc. OUT OUR WAY By Williams Tha Herald will not aanuma flnsr.elol - rewp'inalblltty for any wore whleh mar appear In advertisement puhlleld In Ite eolurnna. In thnaa Inatanoea where tha paper la at fault. H will reprint that part ot tha advancement to whlcn tha typographical tutelage occura. ; .--.. - ,r Kap thiovM nnr fnvi-innt. nnr drunkards, nor revllers, nor extortioners, shall Inherit the kingdom of. God. I Corinthian 6:10. It I gTappIe with sin In my own strength, the devil knows he may go to sleep.H. G. 'J. Adams. War Mortgages-the Future The losses of war arc paraded before our eyes, and they are terrible enough. j But unseen are the. losses of the future. They are the sum of the things that would have been had the war not come, but which now may never be.' . ; The Rockefeller Foundation has been noting some of these losses, lest they slip into oblivion without our realizing realiz-ing it: ' . . , . . . The University of Warsaw has ceased to exist. The entire Polish faculty of the University of Cracow is believed to be. in a concentration camp.. The University of Madrid library , was devastated by. Moors who used the books as rifle emplacements- The University, .of Prague has fbeen closed by the Germans. Half the universities of Germany have been closedand at the University of Paris the student population has shrunk from 20,000 to 5000. . - - . For these things, life will render its bill later. The New Forest ' ' , ; ; " Try to imagine a forest so vast i that you can-, easily, pick it out on a small irap of, the United States.. Imagine it stretching from Cleveland to Pittsburgh, then down to Charleston, W. Va., across to Columbus and back to Cleveland. Cleve-land. ' , t, 'V ' ' ' ' ' it. ' " 'i Try to imagine all this being; planted during the past five years'or so, a staggering new.: physical, feature of our country. j ' v , It is not entirely fantasy. This spring the million-acre, mark will be pissed in tree-planting on national forest lands That's 1500-odd square miles. And that is a- square roughly 125 miles on each side. It. would show up on, the,mao sorrier thing. like the rough rectangle described above Of course; in reality the tracts are in different places, not all in one., Every man, woman and Child in the country is richer today, more secure in his country's future, for this planting. (till I IliilPI II t THEVRE V VES TAKE X ! i II ' 1 7 CLE AM X W THEM OPF I X . ' , - Mldiii ?Mt7F ri THRU WHEM VOU . " 'Ml 4 GOSH EXPECT I WASH , SO fe feT H A GUY TO PEOPLE WONT , i . 'W& V-BE ALLUS. TMINK' VOU'RE NflV.- JkLlI : W UVTAKIM EM -.A. WEARING DARK Llll I "- " :,7-. l.i '0. I" I . rav nea stawice. inn. rT. M. fC o. 8. put. fr. WMV MOTHERS ET GRAY It-; Airlines Entering On Boom To Surpass Wildest Dreams Obey That Impulscl - " Along about this time, pf year 'comes the Great Amer ican Urge. - . ; '--'-. . . The first sunny days, the first. birds. singing around the corner of the house, and your average man's hands itch for the heft of a spade or the feel of a paint brush. And his wife's thoughts lightly, turn to, slipcovers 'arid new paper for the tVUUW .""!,''..'". .. - " It's a laudable urge, and, what with business a little bet ter during the. past year, and prices holding steady, there ought ta be an awful lot of slicking ud going on. uretty soon The best of it is- that especially on the outside work on the house and lawn, you not only get the satisfaction and joy out of it yourself, but the sum-total of it all raises the tone and looks of the whole, town, and. everybody shares in tne general brightening-up. ' s Let's make the old town shine this spring as never be- lorei . - i - " .... -i ... . . .- - - n ! V: 7 . . mm)) I 7 I a arij. a r- -."St nr. - ctAi. rjou, ters PACKARD-MAYCOGK MOTOR CO. 35 North Third West Phone 4 la; BY BItUCE CATTOX Dally : Herald Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, April 10 Commercial aviation in th United States Is - entering- on boom -such as it had hardly dreamed of before. - ' During the ' past year, about 2,000,000 passengers were carried on U. S. transport Jines, counting those which cross the seas. Dur ing' 1940, the Civil Aeronautics Authority estimates, this figure will jump to at least 2.500,000. Meanwhile, the . number of pil ots is increasing at a prodigious rate. - By June SO, CAA figures there will be 43,000 , licensed pilots the nation, as compared with 26,000 , a 'i year J ago. About i half of the Increase Is due to CAA's civilian pilot training; program; the rest is made up of young men who just- decided they wanted to learn to fly: ' .- Probably 10 per cent of . the new pilots will go into the army or , navy as cadets. Of the ' rest, maybe half will remain ."pleasure flyers the rest will enter one form or another of commercial aviation. . - " i More Transport '' niofs Are Needed ' ' Meanwhile, as the transport schedules Increase, there 1 is de veloping a shortage of airline pi lots. Previously, they were drawn largely from the army and navy, The ' services are - keeping their men now, however, and the air lines must look elsewhere. To aid their own training schools, in which they believe an intensive 18-month course will fit an al ready 'qualified flyer- for 4 a co pilot . job. There are today about 3000 pilots (outside the .airlines' : staffs) , with " commercial U censes; perhaps 600 of theo have ' the. 1200 hours-in-the-alr. necessary, for. airline rat-, rat-, Ing. CAA figures that .these UOO wilt provide the , Uncs L . North Carolina ' Cherokee Tn- with all . the new men tltcy dians still play the ancient form .need during the next year.' of the stickbali game from which - Altogether, the. CAAipeople es- modern, lacrosse originated. timate a young man must spend around $5000 on his aerial education educa-tion before ho can get an. airline rating (tuition : is v not free - at these new schools); but they be lieve he'll get as good a return for his. money as any profession can offer, since an airline pilot s useful professional career is about 30 -years, with an average gross return of about $5000 a year. Safety Record Jumps Rapidly . Meanwhile- why the . boom in aviation,, anyway? Mostly it seems due to the fact that the airlines and CAA, working work-ing together, have- Just about got the safety problem licked; A glance at the figures shows the astounding strides: made In the last two years. Best guage for measuring air safety - is the number of passenger pas-senger .miles, flown- per. passenger fatality. From 1933 through 1938, this figure varied from a low, of 10,000.000 'to a high of 22,000000 Variations were pretty haphazard and practically no improvement was visible over the six-year period. ' Then thlnn began ta hap-pen. hap-pen. The 1939 record Jumped ' to 82,000,000 passenger miles per fatality. And 'even that' four-fold Increase la safety looks small compared .with the new record. At the end of March, commercial airline transportation set the amazing amaz-ing mark of having flown 750,000,000 passenger mljes without. a fatality.- " To - make that graphic. V CAA points out that it is equivalent to taking the entire population of greater New York on a 100-mile airplane cruise - without a single mishap. peppery Fatter "Si SvA DUILD NOW YOU GET MORE HOUSE NOW FOR THE MONEY THAN EVER BEFORE FINANCING IS AVAILABLE ON EASY TERMS EEAT RISING COSTS. LET US ESTIMATE ON YOUR LUMBER AND. OTHER BUILDING MATERIALS. OUR PRICES ARE THF LOWEST LOW-EST POSSIBLE CONSISTENT WITH QUALITY. F.HJL OR OTHER FINANCING ARRANGED. ? MUTUAL COAL & LUMBER CO. l:i V 5lh South and 2nd West, Provo - Phone 337 WrrniN the next two weeks even Joe Ixul wUI be going down for the count. - ' If . m Berlin and London, beer shortages comes, can peace be fax behind? " Why make big news of the fact that a Texas restaurant man paid $125 for a grand champion cham-pion chicken when, at the Jack-una Jack-una Day dinner, many Democrats paid $100 for Jat the neck? - . , 9 m . The economy vaudeville act of the senate In refusing to vote $25,000 to repair the roof of Its chamber should finally bring down the bouse, , , t" , ':A Connecticut census supervisor- resigned to take a post-mastership, post-mastership, figuring he could get' more real information from the passing postcards than by direct questioning of suspicious citizens. . .. , t til 'A TCmv Hampshire msn. aged ? 00, 'who ! died the ether day, , rial med to have been the first to vote for Alf Landon in 1933. Nor was be very far from the 'last. ' . ' . - . New York state manufacturers manufactur-ers - produced more than seven million pairs of shoes last year, and they could have made more 'in a pinch. , An art Jury of eight rhlladel-ph?a rhlladel-ph?a business men awarded first prize to the portrait of a gorgeous gorge-ous blonde In a $5000 mink cost. Which shows how past experience experi-ence colors human Judgment. . - An eastern school super hi ten-dent ten-dent declares that "little Johnny doesn't bring an apple to the teacher any mere he slips her a ' package of cigarettes." We alt know Johnny never was quite 'sincere in .. keeping ; the doctor away.'.;.;,. , - ' ;. t . ' Britain, has ordered its chief censor away for a two weeks' rest and we hope he takes it In ; Bermuda. PAT. EDGEMONT MRS. EVA GILUCSPrB " '.' Reporter rhone OiO-J-2 O SERIAL STORY K. O. CAVALIER BY JERRY BR0NDFIELD cerrnKT. f-aa. nia a c a v (CL ic TESTER DAT I Val Eddie a aaar llkabla tita Ikaa aha kadi fmaftlard. Krli. icr Wooa" of rol.oalac him. kit Ike OImh rook; fiplaina ikaf ara.lrkaraa la ke raame mt tbe Baaaaft-rr'a 11 U a. r,t r.aai think, -vara alarr KrUo'a "pohro las' la 1 CHAPTER X rjpm sun hid behind a big, dark cloud tne next morning but the sea was calm. Eddie took a dozen turns around deck to get loosened up and then worked out on the light bag while Mike Kelly skipped rope. "Okay," said Pop. "Lei's go, now. About five rounds, fairly fast, will do it" Val sidled up to the veteran trainer as the two fighters climbed between the ropes. " "How's Duffy thl3 morning?" she inquired. . . "No better. He can't look food straight in the face. Not even orange Juice.. He Just lays there end moans. He tried to get up once aad almost fell fiat on his face.- , Such a pity," she, murmured. And -then business-like: "Pop what do you think? About htm, I mean," nodding toward Eddie who was , having his hands bandaged by Kelly. . - . - - "He's In great shape," raid rop. He didnl need much more than this. Just somethin to taper oft with. But you gotta admit that this is no place for a fighter to taper off for. th most Important bout so far in his career.?. ? "Granted.- So what? Anyhow, go on and bandage Mike's hands and let them get going." Mike shuffled out and met Eddie in midring. -"Throw everything every-thing you got, Mike," Eddie told him. "Don't be afraid to .olt me one." ' - - Mike grunted and rtuck a left out experimentally. Eddie blocked It, bobbed low and threw his right It Landed on Kelly's ribs but Mike worked in close and shot a left and right o his own to Eddie's midsection. He worked Cavalier info a corner, cor-ner, Jabbed a left and swun a hard right but his target had vanished. van-ished. Eddie weaved. bounced off the ropes and was back of Kelly before the latter was barely turned around. . Pop's eyes glistened. "Did you see that?" he chortled. "Benny Leonard' or Tommy Loughran couldn't have done any better. I've een a lot of 'em, be confided, "but this kid has 'cm all beit "Time!" he shouted, locking at his watch. 'pliEY rested for a minute and then went at it aain. For five rounds it was a fast pace Mike Kelly threw everything he had but Eddie slipped the punches, blocked beautifully and peppered Mike with slinging lefts and rights. "Couldnt have gone another round," Mike panted when it was over. The legs. The old legs ain't what they used to be." "You're a good bey, Mike,' Eddie told him.- "How about you, Eddie?" Pop rubbed him off with a toweL "How's the wind?" He was breathing heavily but not too hard. "Swell, Pep, iwelL CouldVe gone five more just l.ke that Honest Pop, straight stuff. Y'know, 1 think this salt tea air is doing a lot for me." Vhat'd I tell you." said VaL leaning on the ropes. "Youll owe me a debt of gratitude yet "Incidentally," the raid, saun tering over while Pop was stripping strip-ping the bardag?s from his hands. "It wouldn't make me too mad if you won. In fact, I'd consider takirif a lot of credit for it if you do. Maybe later on I could do a yarn on how I shanghaied Eddie Cavalier into the middleweight championship." He drew the twel around his neck and rot Into his sweater. You really wouldn't be rucli a disagreeable sort cf wench if you could just forget your rrewsper angles for a minute. You're so all wrapped up in cold print I'm beginning be-ginning to believe yeu have ink la your veins instead of blood." . Astounded, fhe watched him duck down the ; compsnionway with Mike. - - .. , That, Val Douglas thought to herself, was the most startling thing any man had ever t&ld her. Ink in her veins" instead cf blood! She had to grin in rpite cf herself. She glanced at Pep Crimes and he stuck his hand in his pockets and turned away, whistling. He hadn't missed a thing. TTDDIE CAVALIER locked across the table at noon mess and was-somewhat surprised when he taw Val's chair empty. But he had his answer when she came out cf the galley with a tray of hot , biscuits. She went back - in and came out 'with two big pots of coffee. , What's this?" he nskeu Barney Mae-Grcgor. "Who's the new galley gal-ley hand?" Earr.f r speflrc-d a t.'srult -wfth a fork. "It teems we had a mutiny on our hands," he said. "You get Wong Lee so scuppered with ytur special diets- and. such he tys he quits unless he gets h-f'p. We". t.r, Captain Hansen d dr.'t feel l.ke assigning one cf tV ab'.e- bedied hands so Miss Dcujlas Vps and volunteers." Eddie Cavalier's mirth ws -mr.t unccrr.troilstle. H? laughed until the table shook. Pep toe ' a hand after Eddie had knocked over a glass cf water Into h! Is?. "What's to funny. Pretty-Pants?" Pretty-Pants?" Val asked In a hsrd. brittle brit-tle vcke. "Maybe ycu'd l.ke-1 drop in here and do a little potato peeling and pot-scouring yourself." your-self." His face froze immediately. took her place at the title and filled her cup with cofTc-e. "Report to Wong Lee this afternoon after-noon at tvixj bells," the sail grimly. "ThLsU- mke a stcry, too." Barney MacCregor cmvcmer.'ly choked cn a piece cf Lttcuit behind be-hind his napkin. . T7DDIE CAVA LI EH stared arh:,t at the pile cf potatoes V."cr.g Lee placed before hL-n. Edd;e had never teen to rr.?.y potatoes at orv; tL-ae. E;g c-xi, little r.es, rvedium sized cne-s. Sand-covered, primy potatoes, lie STtorted disruiicdly. . "Hey, Wen r. There's enovgh here to feet the whole merchant msrine. I 111 tske me 33 dys la get these peeled." "Only 25 pounds," "Wor Informed In-formed him. "No take long. Two hour, ir.c-bbe, if jtu wrrlc chp-ch-p. - - Vsl esme in about S3 benrr later. "How's he getsing along. W&rs?" Vong shoek his head sadly. "Better we cek peels. Have mere pots'c-es that way." "So I notice," Val mum-ure-l. "But don't Ret d: stouts eed. Mister Cavalier. YouVe cr.'y get about 12 pound to go." "I d rather ght 12 rairtds," he sai.i iloomily sni she laughed, "Say, Worr," he inquired ruri- ousiy when he bad Cnhd. "lion? do you find lime to get these spuds peeled when you're here by yourself?" your-self?" - Wong pointed over In a comer. We use Heetric peerer," he raid blandly. Take mebfee 15 rrart-utes. -Eddie 6rcpped his paring knife Into the huge pot at bis feet "That dime's huTrxr kill me," he moaned. "If I thought there were any sharks in these waters I'd throw her overboard." (To Ba ConliBoedV Mr. and Mrs. Austin Movie and family vLsited. with relatives in Salt Lake . on Sunday. , . . Mrs. Caroline . Farnsworth Mrs. ; Cordelia Booth, Mrs. Mina Marriott!, Mrs. Ella Baum, Mrs. Margaret Pulsipher and David Rowley, Jr., attended the temple excursion to Salt Lake on Mon day. - , , Mr.' and Mrs. Elmer - Mel drum and - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mel- drum spent Tuesday at the Mel-drum Mel-drum farm in Levan. ' Classleader Vana Neilson ; gave a" very interesting- demonstration at Relief . Society Tuesday after noon, of numerous houseclean- lng hints, such as paint and wall cleaners, shampoo for carpets and overstuffed furniture, silver pol ish,' hand - lotion and several others, which - was thoroughly enjoyed by the - twenty ladies present. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Thompson of Salt Lake spent Sunday with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Me Id rum. , Miss Christine Bigler . plaved the piano solo, "LaPaloma" during- the assembly program at Mutual Tuesday evening. Winston Downs gave a very interesting talk on the , origin and develop ment of the various stringed in struments and played popular melodies on the different Instruments.: Instru-ments.: Mandolin, Guitar. Violin and Banjo. He was assisted by his mother. Mrs. Lois Downs on the piano and his brother Robert Downs, who sang & solo and also accompanied his brother on the guitar: Mr. DYiwns also played several numbers on a musical in sisting of various ' sized 'bottles mounted with wires on a frame. Extensive plans are being' completed com-pleted for the- honor night program pro-gram to be given next Tuesday evening commencing promptly at 8 o'clock, -details of which will appear later. Christian Science Church -2- of Christ, Scicntlist, on Sunday, April 7th. iThe Golden Text was: "Truly in . vain is , salvation hoped for from the hills, and from the multitude of mountains: truly In the Lord our God Is the salvation of Israel" (Jeremiah 3:23). , Among the Biblical selections were the following: "I have seen all the works that are done under the sun; and; behold, an Is vanity and vexation of spirit For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge in- "Unreality'; was the subject of creaseth sorrow (Ecclesiastes Correlative reading included the following from "Science ar.d Health with Key to the Scriptures" Scrip-tures" by Mary Baker Eddy: "Ho-wr trj;e it is that whatever is learned learn-ed through material sense must be lost because such so-called knowledge is reversed by the spiritual facts of being in Science. Sci-ence. That which material sense calls intangible, is found to be substance. What to material fense seems substance, becomes nothingness, noth-ingness, as the sense-dream ran- the lesson-sermon at First Church 1:11, 18). For the wisdom of this fishes and reality appears" (p. 312). world is fooli.shness (I CorinUuana 3:13). with God. One K P i7av Keeping ouv r ki Va t ! !l t t - - . v i tt t r - - -- - i . r - y i i s.V'i n '.-.-; 7 rlH' CI lilil 70 n PJtillo What a changed uvrlJ it was forthc first belloonlst, He saw hills, and. valleys level out. He saw dark clouds serving a thrilling thrill-ing purpose when they reflected a gorgeous gor-geous run set, He got a new perspective. Wise is the man who takes a broad view of today's events and keeps them always in true focus. He makes no mountain moun-tain out of a rumor and sees no valley as deep as the despair of the pessimists. He is confident that be can take the hurdles as they come. Such a man has the will to work and the good judgment to relax when work is done. Moderate in all things, in his thoughts and in bis activities, he is living rea'Jy living with, and for his family and ernor.g his friends. (He is unusual if he doesn't usually serve Budweiser.) He is, indeed, the backbone of America. ANHEUSIK-IUSCH Hsktrt Vrli-fmut Brrr O r - . . . MAKE THIS TEST: Drink Budweiser t P. A s iL. .1. J f 1 i or jive uuys. wn ine sixth cay iry iM to drink a sweet beer. You will want j I ' , Budweiser's flavor thereafter. Big- Four Distributing Co., Wholesaler. Second East & Sixth South 7- ' . H4 tWHMn(l , at. MM M. strument made by ' hiajselfa- con I |