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Show Page 6 Earth Will . . Head This Way P""""" " """" " """" "" "" " " """"""" " """"" " Sacrifices of War . - . . """ " "" Cndtnstd rtm I. I is happier who does for himself alone. He who would save bis life first must lose it. This loss of self is easier for ., ANYONE With Mr, and Mrs. Garfiantua the Great, the world's most pub- licized gorilla couple, as its super-featur- e, the Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Circus will exhibit in Salt Lake City on Monday, August 25, bringing to that city 1,600 people, 50 elephants, menagerie animals and hundreds of horses The performances will start at 2:15 and 8:15 p. 1 and m., with the doors open at 7 p.m., admitting the public to the radically restyled menagerie, gorilla tent, horse fair and big top all redesigned by Norman Bel Geddes, of New York World Fair Futurama fame. Among, the outstanding features are: the new fairyland fantasy, "Old King Cole and Mother Goose,' designed and costumed by Bel Geddes, with ensembles staged by the famous Albertina Rascli. Hollywood and New York musical show dance director; Alfred Court's three mixed groups of performing wild animals of , . 1,009 ID DE FENSE BUY UNITED STATES "BONDS I AND STAMPS JPL- - ' I v. ... t' 'r ) ? p , , j' almost every known specie, appearing simultaneously in three steel arenas; the new Birdland aerial ballet, starring Elly and costumed by Max Weldy of Paris; the many aerial and novelty acrobatic troupes from outh America, headed by the three famous Flying Diego, Fernandez acts; the new high school and liberty horse offerings headed by Viscomte Roberto the famous Riding Cristianis; the great Truzzi, juggler; the Three Flying Concello troupes, with Antoinette. In all, 800 performers. ty SPRING I A3 tJl'f ' NN All 11 ' n for Kun Pirtrtrl RofrcVimntQ mrs. J. CLARK, Prop, 18th South ai"l 9" . ! . Beer Parlor City Hall Murray, I'tah Opposite lteVPr FINANCE SERVICE If you cuitemplute the purchase of a new or uited car on a deferred payment bal, e u. We are In a position to mtslst you In arranging - (Inanelngfavorable on terms. 40 Of Two Decades J deep perplexities of her own. One of the greatest, writes Margaret Case Harriman in the June issue of Good Housekeeping: magazine, is the fact tfiat although she has written five novels and three other books, she is known chiefly for Eliqurttt or the Blui Book of Social Vau which she wrote in 1922. It has made her the foremost authority on social manners in the country. Mrs. Harriman says it has run through four editions, which means sixty printings or more than half a nvllion copies. Even though it's loRical to Ruess from her book that Mrs. Post is a stickler for formality. Mrs. Harriman reveals that her manner has an easy charm that breaks candidly into impatience or an occasional mild profanity in the presence of anything flossy or phony. When asked by a linen company to comment on an advertisement of a table fancily set for a formal dinner. fcIord," she stammered, "it lousy." Mrs. Ilarrinun's article relate that Mrs. 1'ost was born and brc t in New York City where she wai the belle of her debutante season, IS'J''. Now she is a pay. friendly woman, very handsome and with tho spirited Rood looks one romantically. associates with the eighteen Shortly after Mrs. Post's father died, she divorced her husband, and suddenly found herself a divorcee and. through necessity, a working woman at u time when divurce nor gainful employment by gentlewomen was recognized by tl ! kind of people Mrs bad known. Cf'ifP Tolicy Will Save You Approximately On You Insurance Cost, I L'"-C- 3 Ccsf-Dresse- d VIRYOXi: is f.imilur with die annual newspaper listing of the best dressed women in the world. Hut what about tlu- be.niti-fullgroomed women in fiction? I low do they rate? Carnn-- Snow, editor of Harper's 3E GLAD TO IIELT YOU (No Charge for This Service) - y I J. REX HAMILTON SOUTH STATE PHONE Ml'RRAY 163 ICE .VU 1 vm X Odors can't mix! iY '"p air in a modern ire refrigerator is actually washed hy the constant o .ireuUtion. And it's nlways the dinc even lempeneurc insuie your safeguard thnt fninl won't spoil. With ice, you don't have to be careful where you place food on the shelves because there isn't any in- terchangf of wlnrs. lee is the modern, convenient way to preserve fords and it costs you far less. SHE THE NEW LARGE ICE A REl IWJERATORS AT any-thin- X out STORE Cn's-wonhy- 'a X Dial In Murrav M i l' I'.ROS SERVICE and Ml'RRAY SERVICE GARAGE 45th SOUTH and STATE ST. g, well-know- ARCTIC ICE COMPANY South Temple Paz.inr. has chosen six women she considers fashion "tops" in the wor'd of literature. Included in Mr--. Snow's list which appears in the June issue of tlood ilou'ekrf ping maga line ire the inevitable selections Rebecca in Daphne duMaurier's sto.y of the same name and Scarlett O'llara. Although the first Mrs. De Winter in the duMaurier bonk is never introduced to the render. Mrs. Snow points out that her elegance is strikingly revealed in the scene where Mrs. Danvers shows Rebecca's wardrobe, to tha second wife. The sable wrap, the chinchilla could wear stand any color" g"ld brocades, wine colored velvet. ,shp t.Ven died dashingly, says Mrs. Snow in sl.'ii'ks and a shirt. Scarlett Oilara in Gone thi H'mrf is another favorite of the fashion editor. She likes particularly the dress described on the lirst page; the green flowered-rmHi- n winch "spread its twelve yards of billowing material over her hoops and exactly matched the flat heeled green morocco slippers." Other nominations made by Mrs. Snow are; Fleur Forsyte in Fortytt Snoa, Iris March in The Crrcn lint by Michael Mary Ogdcn in Gertrude Ather-ton'- s tory lUark Orm, and Madame Ellen Oten-km TAe Agt ol Innucrnct by Edith , Wharton. "s-h- y 233 West f ' ' lit r. I By Committeeman TUST because she receives some three thousand letters a day from people asking advice about social and personal problems doesn't mean that Emily Post isn't a woman confronted with several mmt I LL 49C3 N ' l "Hot Wheat" Escape Outlined Emily Post Notes Social Oianges FicJian's Our "Continuing ' - mm-tecs- the . T HEIDELBERG 'm ft 5- e Happy Meeting Point for Fine Fellows Sb1 , nr America OS Guard! ?rr)?t. - v woman than for man. However complex and selfish a woman is as an individual, when she has a child J uul1 Above ia a reproduction of the Treasury department's Defense Savings Toster, showing- an exact duplication of the original "Minute Man" statue by famed sculptor Daniel Chester French. Defense Bonds and SUmps, on sale at your lank or poBt oflice, are a vital part of Anenca's defense preparation. . . r I Vas-concell- SAVINGS - , Ar-del- :4i w Ar-le- n. a ' Provisions whereby farmers who have stored excess 1941 wheat under the marketing quota may seed below their 1942 acreage allotments an dobtain reelase of the stored wheat for marketing without penalty was announced this week by Joseph Skeen, member of the Utah State AAA committee. 1 The amendment to the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 approved May 26 provides that the farmer who stores excess wheat under the 1941 marketing quota program may take out of storage and market without penalty excess wheat equal to the amount by which he reduces his following year's seedings below his allotment, measured in terms of his normal yield, or equal to the amount his next year's actual production falls below the normal yield of his .allotted acreage. In cases where seedings are below the allotment, Mi Skeen said, county AAA committeemen will release a corresponding amount of 1941 seedings measured. For farmers in winter wheat areas where no spring wheat is seeded, this means they may convert their excess wheat for free wheat this fall. Winter wheat seeding usually begins about September 1 in some parts of the state. To explain this provision of the marketing quota program, Mr. Skeen pointed out that a e farmer who has a wheat allotment and a normal yield per acre and who reduces his 1942 seedings to 80 acres will be entitled to release 200 bushels of excess wheat In cases where seedings equal the acreage lalotmont but where the actual production falls below the normal yield, the determination will be made at harvest time in 1942 and the amount of excess wheat to be released will depend on how much the actual production is reduced below the normal. 100-acr- she goes down into a simple and elemental experience, which drives self 'away, divides that self into another and brings all of life into its simplest primeval terms. There never wai. ' woman who was not the better for it. Sublimation there may be; but she searches for it, aware of her incompleteness. But in our changed world man has no such opportunity left him for return to the elemental. Once he had it, perhaps, in the hunt, the chase, the risk of death. For the loss of self carries with it always the risk of death, and death has a fearful and endless charm for human creatures. For war to man, like childbirth to woman, is simplifying in its emotions and activities. All the real problems of life can be put aside while the one thing is done, and little thought is needed to do it. There is for him an actual relief in having an expected war break. His hatreds can be expressed without censure; he can let his emotions run free; he can behave as dramatically as he likes, and no one laughs at him. It is almost impossible for a man to behave heroically in the cool and ordinary time of peace. But in war anything is allowed him; he is praised and applauded and made much of, as women are excused and allowed for during pregnancy. What can be offered to man as a substitute for the blood bath of war? Where shall he go for glory T That question man must answer for himself. The skies are open to him with all their stars and suns; the earth is beneath him, full of materials he does not know; the very air in which he moves is waiting with its secrets for him to plumb. How necessary is the blood bath for men and women ? Men and women will have to work out some sort of compromise on this matter of having wars and babies. They manage to negate each other as it is. Women fulfill themselves in having the babies, and men fulfill themselves in destroying them. There ought to be some other more profitable form of pleasurable sacrifice for the human race than this sacrifice of the innocents. Perhaps we shall find it, someday. Governor Nels H. Smith of Wyoming as its official driver, will once again make the runn from Deadwood, through Cheyenne, to Denver. There, Governors Ralph Carr of Colorado, Ratner of Kansas and Carville of Nevada; Mayor Stapleton of Denver and Chief Francis E. Bouck of the Supreme Court of Colorado, will join with association officials in a gala reception. It will be the first national convention, or "rendezvous," of the American "Trails association, which is a recent expansion of the Oregon Trail Memorial association, whose many years of historic research, the of frontier trails and "story spots" and the permanent marking of pioneer graves has won it national acclaim, since it was founded by Ezra Meeker. MURRAY PLUMBiNG CO. II 3 1 1 1 1 i lj thehfeofthepSetS edtol2 years or morc, of a few cents per post. KEEP COOL with a CM f TWO fLam -- ;ji-st n nil J what V i FREEZER X FRESH! j J Ql'ART READY PACKED! PRESCRIPTION DRUG 4914 SOUTH STATE ST. PHONE MURRAY 4 100 DELICIOUS WITH A HIGHBALL BOURBON 1 MADE A if1- : i' . hvl-lM- i Ask QUESTIONS! No Oblirallnn Patronize Your Local REAL ESTATE DEALER! Murray Real Estate Exchange 49G2 South Slate Street Vt 3t PT.-C- ed J PTCod 40 2 GAU-C-od Hui uhitkty 4 U YEARS Proof Nl'lDwailerirro.l.Cfr; 93 Mt'RftAV... ...(., QTCod OLD Thones Murray 611 or 108-- J Local Agents for the - a(Ys$afi liftuuI. ninnL-vi- ! uanuc.lj HIIIHttllWItlMmHHIim.,, NX PHONE MURRAY 186 ! ii J nr.i I Tin? i Upen Until ' "MtaWM U 1 11 uutiun ordered: 4 ' yj nj.i,,Mm,,11ltM(M1Mlt(ilMMi(iiii B o, -f ) 4 4 4 11-1- 7, "- . m Work East 46th South Thone Murray 717 "Prompt, Efficient Service!" WHOLESALE and RETAIL lo EVERYONE The Only Slore of lis Kind in ihe Siaie of Uiah! takes more metal farmerc ...v. been using steel fence p laeeu wnn possibility 0f ha again to use wood. Tm recommend a treatment , decay for the los, durab)e J such as aspen, ash, or elm. By taking thorough green round posts with the hd on and forcing a solution of Plumbing Heating General Repair GROCERY CUT-IRAT- E Defense Takes Steel Posts As. the Tlefense progra 1 130 With four governors and scores of other public officials taking part, several hundred members of the American Pioneer Trails association, from every part of the United Slates are joining this in a comweek, August memorative trek from Marys-villKansas, where three of the great western trails converged, to Denver, Colorado. Amid pageantry and dedication ceremonies at many points, the delegates ome of them survivors from Covered Wragon and are proPony Express days claiming, "The spirit of the pioneers as the first line of national defense," according to Dr. Howard H Driggs, the association's president. The old Overland Stage, with 94 II. Towers A. Towers Commemorative Trek Covers Old Pioneer Trails J I Gtoi HoMsikfptni Magaiint) """" "" """ Ringling Barnum & ISailey Circus to Exhibit in Salt Lake a- Buck Decries Pearl In The Old Days Greatest Show i On Thursday, AugusHj, THE MURRAY EAGLE 11 o'clock Every ,T..u |