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Show s --TffFHTFTMTiTl The Weekly Herald Published Every Tuesday bv North StreetGunnar Rasrmjson, Editor. 14 Rodger, at "x$, Utah - l 30 coine in miles of This 'as for the company," bowing to bis involuntary hostesses, "it is likewise outclassed." "Ah I But you've got --your own. father's way of taikmfc" Mrs. Reed, gurgled, beaming. Then of course-,came out-a- ll the story of the tea the house," the colfservatory, the flowers each teacher bad taken away with . A Owens, Advertising Manager. Sqi ARE YOU A COLUMBUS? I'-- J Pecos, New Mexico, vas a flourishing city nine housing a cultured, philosophical people with a democratic form of government- .- In a good many ways their civilization was highly advanced. Some of the houses were three stories high. Apparently the people of Pecos "beat Columbus to it" by 1,000 years in "discovering- - America.' Columbus really arrived late in the day, if the claims of other countries are believed. The Chinese insist that their Buddhist exployera visited America in the year 432 and that in 464 expedition of Chinese penetrated as far as San Bias, Mexico. In 995 Bjarni, the Norwegian, was driven out of his course and sailed along what apparently was the eastern coast of Canada, in sight of land. Others who left evidence, well worth considering, that they visited America ahead of Columbus, were Thorfinn of Iceland, Madoc of Wales and Nicoli Zeno. After all, what difference does it really make, who discovered America first? The Aztecs already had a high type of civilization when the Spanish adventurers arrived with fire and sword. As a matter of fact, America in this year 1922 is not more than 10 per cent discovered. Most of it is known geographically, but the real America natural resources and potential powers still awaits finding. Each of us whether in a big or small way, is an explorer, gradually discovering America. Every real American is a Columbus. Hoei-schin- 'a m 4 1; ALAS THE ANGLE WORM. And now we have a device by hunted in his lair, brought to devoured for the sustenance of the hen. Peter J. O'Keefe, of Greenwich, ventor. 1 i worm is S3 Hi i't which the angle the surface to be great American Conn., is the in- The device is an electrical one and literally shocks the worms out of the ground. It consists of two brass rods that are pushed Into the earth several feet apart. A wire is attached to each rod and each wire connects with an ordinary telephone magneto. By twisting the handle of the mangeto the angle worm feels it is time to take the air. Rapidly he moves to escape, but, alas! the chicken is waiting, and as soon as the worm imagines he is safe from danger his troubles come.to an end. ii- Thus does the world move on. If the mentality of the angle worm were properly developed, he would sense the greater danger of leaving his natural- envir- J m - onment. on and the standard of angle worm advances, things may improve for him; but in the meantime, he will have to look for temporary protection to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Angle Worms, an organization which undoubtedly will come into being as soon as the cruelty of the O'Keefe device is conceived. As intelligence itiHi Si ?; s fir 'lit f ;i Us.- s- P OUR COLLEGIATE ICEMEN. American colleges prepared for the greatest year in their history. In almost every state of the union the enrollment figures show marked advances and records broken. Yale, Princeton, Wellesley, Union, Pennsylvania, Vassar and Dartmouth reached; the pinnacle of their prosperity. It is also true of many western colleges. Fact is that this prosperity for colleges is due largely to the change in the viewpoint of our educational institutions. Many cobwebs have been swept away. Today the college means more than the accepted understanding of academic teaching. It means a broader vision of life and a greater understanding of the necessity for the thing worth while The college man today is to be found everywhere, He is at the head of a great banking institution, he is a chauffeur, he drives an ice wagon, he tills the soil, he appears in literature and ornaments the plumbing establishment. Sometimes the unthinking criticize the college because its graduates may be found driving a milk wagon and the like. The answer, of course, is that if all milk wagon drivers were college men milk would be delivered more orderly and even our babyhood would be helped. The. greatness of the college does not lie in its' being the gangway down which one may walk to the Its worth is in giving to the country professions. men who can thoroughly perform the duty of the hour. .ft I i I THE OLD HOME TOWN. Mil' BY ST 'JrV A- ij? f mister WALK EC I Deal By M ARTHA hhWUidAMS Nesiir badlo&l.) bj McClur "Torment I Where in the world aw youT iltt. Reed her head cocked aidewise on her long thin neck, "Next door to right here I Here I Here I" a gay young voice chanted, the while a very handsome leg and pretty foot became visible below the spreading braocbe of the apple tree In the Miller yard. "loo know waste la wicked," It kept on. "Ha vent you ng told me so ever since you came me eat things I hated because there wasn't a pig. And these streaky Junes Just cry out to be eaten. I had to come over and help them. See what a beauty basket Tm bringing bonier she cried, swinging down deftly In spite of her bjroen. "Take your pick of 'em thee yoa can't say I'm stealing yon know receivers are as bad is thieves," stepping lithely through a gap in the division fence. Mrs. Reed sighed acidly. "To think your dear father was a minister," she said primly. "He was I'm the reaction from his painful piety," the girl flung back. "8o guileless be never saw through peo plenot even you." She merely thought the postulate. Since she must stay a while longer In the house with this Insufferable saint, she would keep at least a gloze of decency over the association. She had not always been 'so' wis earlier, there had been years of battle it was In them she had earned the nickname of Torment, which she had stopped resenting when her father died. He had gone from life clinging to her hand, and murmuring softly: "Daddy's comfort," so low other ears did not hear. She hud understixnl here in face of duath he was rendering her the Justice love for her had withheld in life. He had not wished to sharpen the edged antagonism already existent betwixt his child and the uiisQt new wife. Needs must they live together tHl Dare was one und twenty then, coming Into her grandmother's money, she could do as xhe liked. But she wns not quite sixteen Ella for all her cnstlron hardness would keep her iu safe comfort, hlie was rigidly Just, according to her own lights, which never took account of rhe mad distortions of Jealousy. "Ain't none of the new apples can match old streaked Junes," Mrs. Rood mumbled, her mouth crauiful, surveying as he spoke a deeply bitten core. Dare nodded, then sprang up, saying briskly : "By your leave or without It apple dumplings. I feel In my bones they tit the situation not quite sure though Just what it is." "Who'll make emr I won't you Dare can't," Mrs. Reed sniffed. laughed softly, saying over her shoulder, "Ton watch me. Or rather don't Walt till yon see results. Indeed play company I'll get the whole dinner. Supper we ought to call it, to save scandalizing the neighbors" "I'm 'fraid you'll need a pig worse'n ever one needed," Mrs. Reed interrupted. Dare out in the passage laughed proroklngly, then banged the kitchen door and bolted it fast Three hours later they had been strenuous ones Indeed she called from the cool dining room, "Dinner Is served, ma'am." And at Just that Instant came an Intrepid knock on the front door, undervolced by the Impaof small high heels. Next tient rat-ta- t half minute Mrs. Reed ushered In a tall young fellow and a small, very pretty, very cross young woman, who all but fell upon a chair, saying petulantly, "I'm here to get whatever It Is that smells so good. Motoring always makes me wolfish " "We have had a blowout here halfway to our dinner," the man explained. "While the repair man Is coming could you, would you, be good enough to save me from being eaten alive? This young person," nodding at his companion, "has been threatening It for half an hour " "if I can feed you, too," Mrs. Reed said with a wide, hospitable smile. "Just as soon as you wash the dust off I'll promise to find you a smack." For the very first time she felt distinctly proud of Torment, who stood unrullted, faintly flushed and beaming proudly over broiled chicken, baked cold lam, several manners of rrtMirs.-rhoT Mscutrs. brou n bread, wafer thin, fresh butter and 'Tup radishes set out in the best china upon spotless linen, with the real old silver gleaming in the low sunlight. Il"w had the iil done It?- - Mrs. Ueed bud neer suspected any such capacity in her young antagonist. Rut she was g!iol bejoiid words for this sudden de-of It. She had placed the Thomas Clair and .!;;ii..i':s-you- ng !i:e rich M ss Murray he was due to many shortly, (.'lair had given naines no moi'w - ears attentive to gossip ha drhe the rest. Years back Mrs. Heed ttnii Miss Green, high, school i had. tea at Clalrston, and teacher shaken hand with Its owners. Mighty tine, it had been, but nothing to c in pare In the matter of food with what, through Torment's uncanny prevision she was able t ftVr in return. "Heavens'. Nothing was ever quite so good." tthoda Murray murmured sinking back In her chulr after a dumpling. Clair echoed. "Hight-o:- " "I'm so clad we missed the roadhouse it s gu''e Impossible the dinner could have ( centuries before Columbus discovered America. So gay the scientists, headed by Dr. A. V. Kidder, who are excavating the buried rums of this ancient community Pecos in the year 600 is pictured as a walled city, WLFYI fpyr- Wl1 ft1 m I c f bali-houte- to half-wulne- here-makl- .; Iffy- - ; 1 see-on- t r itW HEW DRCSS MAKER TUB EDTTOM SHE IS Of ONLY THE WEEKLY Gitj Tt SHll-E-'S num - " 2ALEAX7TIOl5r I .AND HENRY FORD CteEgriX)W-- Ddddv'5 ! -- ! I'M??? i East First Entered as second clai mM matter May a, 1922, at the post- office, Prove, Utah," under the, Act of March y, 1879. .One Dollar the Year, in Advance Terms of Subscription. TTTFPPAY RFPTTMBEK we'd have had some garden flowers jon the table," the elder lady ended. "But J was lazy busy with my sewing and Torment I mean Dare couldnt spare time. 8he did everything" "Then she must be a worker of miracles," young Clair commented, heartRhoda Murray sprang up and ily. caught Dare's band, saying; "Why-- tell me is It possible to cook so eEvetii6 Fairy Tale ayv&famm bonder MONKEYS "What a good time we are having here In the zoo," said the Bengal .MT .11 af ,'.--.. ' .1 Monkeys. ip3 "Tea," said Billy Bengal "Tm hav Monkey, ing the best time la my monkey life. I don't know ' when Fve had such a good time beautifully and look as you dot" "Be careful bow you answer. Hiss Dare." Clair laughed: "Rhoda has half a mind to throw me over for love in a cottage. If yon encourage her, as I have bad to you may cava my broken heart on day. And I shall still continue to your conscience" "Broken for Joy at getting rid of ha ve a good time. mer Rhoda said, making a face at '1 am not in him. "But tell ma true did you do the least tired of all this? Just by y3ur lone selfT playing so shan't "Not I think mamma sent her stop playing 111 astral body to help me feeling in her keep right on. bones what was going to happen,? "There are so Dare said laughing. "But really," she "In Need of a many nice .games went on, "cooking isn't such a Job If for us to play Nap." here too. There you like to do It I do like It not for every day, but now and then It's a real are ladders and we can climb and lark. Still, I dont want to mislead run up and down the ladders. "Then there are swings for us to try as you might, yop'd hardly ever touch my dumpling! Stolen apples, swing upon. There are board benches where we can sit and think of what you see " "Forbidden fruit I I quite under- game we will play next Rhoda "Or we can think of what Is the stand," Clair interrupted. waved him aside, saying determinedbest game in the world, it Is bard ly: "Weill Can't I come here and to make up our minds about that, learn how to do a few thlngsT I am and it requires lots of thought so tired of all the rest dressing, danc"Even after we have made up our ing, eating what I don't care for and minds about it we cannot decide. So never feeling I've really done anything It Is well to have boards and benches worth whJleV' to sit upon and think over the good They drew apart, talking eagerly, games. There are two Arabian BaClair eyed them Joyously and when boons living In those two cages across the motor siren interrupted the con the way. One of them is sitting-u- p ference, made a great ado over ItsJ on bis high perch and he Is yawning He Shook Mrs. Reed's very hard. And he hasn't the manners impertinence. hand with quite vehement heartiness to put Ids band In front of his face Dare got only a deep reverence and when he yawns as polite creatures ' 'I ICic ft inSSfSi YTlKTCw I I BiBin T l a beguiling smile. But If she thought she had seen the. last of him she was be came again, yet sadly mistaken again to bring Rhoda to her lessons, flowers, fruit, new books to Mrs. Reed presently be was taking her for spins up and down the post road, what time the girls laughed and worked In the big kitchen. His people were away else he would certainly have the Heeds at Clalrston. But that could wait ; meantime he wanted coun sel, advice that might be the turning point of his' life, namely, as to whether an old bond and family comity should prevail against new love new on both sides. Rhoda had truly set her heart upon a young engineer, who had nothing but youth, strength and a big brain and the blood of gentlemen to offer bar; was he Justified In letting her break troth that had been pledged In their cradles for such uncertainty? Mrs. Reed pondered deeply. At last she broke out "Depends on bow you feel. Don't seem to me you can give her up easy after all this time," "It seemed so to me until a month back." Clair said a trifle huskily: "She Is so pretty, so winning, so sweet when she Isn't all spice and pepper, I thought myself daffy about her. Now I know better." "How did you find out T" Mrs. Reed demanded. "I think through apple dumplings and the girl that made them," Clair returned smiling. "If only I may have her, I'll call It a square deal." The answer to which Is too obvious to need writing down. PART OF GUTENBERG BIBLE Section of Earliest Piece of Printing With Movable Type Recently on Exhibition at Washington. A part of the Gutenberg Bible, the earliest piece of printing from movable type In the world, was a short time ago placed on exhibition in the division of graphic arts, Smithsonian building of the National museum. This piece of work was among the first to be done by Johannes Gutenberg, who by general consent is glveit the credit for the Invention of the urt of printing from movable type. It Is estimated that this Bible was printed between 1450 and 1455, in the town of Mainz, or Mayence, Germany. The book on exhibition contains 24 chapters of the book of Joshua, In addition to an introduction to the book of Judges. The text of each paue Is set In two! columns of 42 lines each which accounts for the name sometimes given Line Bible." It has It. "Forty-Twalso been known as the Maxarln Bible, because while It was believed to exist, no copy was known, until It was discovered In the library of the great French cardinal of that name. The last complete copy of this famous book to' come nn the market Is said to have been sold for SoOl.tOO. The book gives no information as to when It wns printed and, there Is also no reVord of the number of copies made. The copy in die museum Is printed on pages whbjb measure 15 By- 11 4 Inches. It wr.s loaned to the museum by (oibriel Wells, an art dealer In New York. o - Plane Files Uncontrolled. For fwrt .hom- the pilot of fln air plane had his bands off the controlling wheel on a Might from i'urls to l.oidon a dlstan.-- of about 2tHi miles The directional st.eiing wns done h. means of the rudder, the machine otherwise flying on an even keel uncontrolled. - . will do. They come from Arabia, and they live together in great numbers. Ves, lots and lots of them travel together In the rucky and wild country i f Arabia. It's a big", open country and they love it over there. But they are happy here, though that one Arabian Baboon does seem to.ie In need of a nap. He yawned again, Just a moment ago. 'How handsome those two fellows are with their gray suits trimmed with lavender, or tinged with lavender, I should say. They have such high, fine looking brows or fore heads and such long faces. They have whitish Lair and It Is very bushy and thick and It hangs down either side of their faces In a most becoming manner. In fact their hair looks something like bunches of cotton. They have very queerly shaped noses but interesting looking noses. "How quiet they are! They are really both sleepy looking. "Any one would notice them anywhere. People who come to the zoo look at them and admire them and call their friends to come and see them too. "Then there Is the Mandrill West African Monkey In the cage down the room a little way. "He lives on fruit and Insects, and be travels with many of bis relations when he Is free. Yes, they move about together. In the next room I've heard there Is a large Anaconda snake and he Is a dangerous fellow. I'm glad he isn't In here. I wouldn't like him for a playmate. Tve beard the people speak of him though and of his great size. The Mandrill West African Moukey. is leaning up against the side of his cage as though he felt tired." "But- - Billy," the other monkeys said, "you told us you weren't tired of playing, and that you were going to keep right on playing and that you weren't going to stop at all." "So I did," said Billy, "but I waa looking at my neighbors and admiring their looks. I didn't realize I had stopped playing for such a long time. "I didn't mean to stop at all. But now I will run races with any of you and all of and I'll you, swing and play see-saand any other game you I' KuoseiilKiiner WmSi Wjp Llf Sref 7 sft W?8 a stejenU dlf-- 1 motiionciure star there a man's You'll Pay $35 You'll cheerfully pay $35 for any one of the many suits we now show at this price. You that the values are unusual, that the quality is far better than you have been accustomed to get at such a low price. We need merely tell you that f 35 now gives you the opportunity of selecting a suit of see-instan- "Good," tly - said the other monk"We want to J eys. play, too. some more. F.xercise. "He Lives on Is very pleasant. Fruit" ill monkeys tlvnk so. Come on, Billy, you're IT." So Billy chased the other monkeys and they chased him and they did tricks on their swings and gave a little circus all of their owif- with ..., Hilly as the ringleader. And all the people who came to the zoo said : "Don't those monkeys ever get tired? How they do play!" Rut the monkeys played until' It was supper time and they felt both hungry and tired. . Of Course. Aviator The propeller Is at the front and can make 10.000 revolutions a minute. Miss Vnungthlng How very Inter estlng ! I suppose It Is put at the fmn' so that you shall be able to count them. READ AND USE DAILY HERALD WANT ADS KuppenKeiSer GOOD CLOTHES Nationally famous for half a century. The standard of style originality, fabric quality and tailoring construction. An extensive exhibit of totally new styles is shown this fall, models especially designed for sport, business, and informal dress. Other Suits at $25.00 to $50.00 The Schwab Clothing Co., inc. "the house of Kuppenheimer (ail sort of an oril "'"e the fire want." cu- WALKER ' cltT commission can rlrty.tne Y L JClJCrCome CLU NNHEN MAftgy AAARSHALOTEY 1 good clothesL |