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Show THE EVENING I IE RAID, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1925. rr-- Cl REST If MNTffi 17F1 STARVE RUM Horatio Jones Advertising RUNNER CREW to- - CLIFTON, N-- Ti May SL (UP) The dry nary made, lu Art move today to exterminate "nm row" by a process of starvation- - Twelve picket boats of 'the coast guard service Bailed -- for the aplt beyond tbe 12 mite Hmlt frm which the whiskey armada operate Their, work will be in tbe form . of reronnolssanee. The advance guard was quickly followed' by the remainder of the prohibition fleety- S7 vessels in all, which sped ewlftly dowa the ha roof, bent on starving out the Cosmopoll-tagronp.dt launches and tramp steamers that comprise - Liquor .. Lane. ' Coast guard officials announced that the dry navy would encircle the fleet until the rum runner hoisted a white flag and that any liquor Jaden ship that attempted to com municate with the shore would, b a - Phone 13 EL fired WASHINGTON, May Barter Shop ; ' .. ''; Y the Hosiery y America Legion is engaged in the most worthy and necessary undertaking of caring for the ntea children ? and, tt cooperation with the govern ment, of aiding needy disabled vet erans. It proposes to raiao an endowment fund for these" purposes of five nillHon dollars to- - which American citixea should contribute. America's-- part in this drive will I hope, be taken up in the same fine spirit that waa manifest In the vari ous drives, during the war.' We face no leas, responsiblltlj today In taking care of the 85,000 or boots or men and of. ex phans of service men and In helping the men who came back maimed for Mf It is the protection of this heir less childhood- - against poverty, disease, ignorance, vic and crime. that warrants The American Le gion's appeal for money enough to provide them real American hoi and give them the care, and ad tion of the more fortunate chil of the nation. It la the eoooeratkm of The American Legion with thaJ government tbat necessitates; the use of funds to provide adequate care for disabled. Not a cent of the principal will be touched but tbe Interest alone will be uaMr-Thirw- m Insnra a perpetual fund.for the care of those uniuriunatea wno sutler . tor . our freedom. I sincerely hope, that the United States will respond tba ap peal or The American Legion. - or-pb- Co. Phone 285 Utah Timber and iVP) "We'llilght it out along tEeAtlantlc coast' If it takes all Bummer and it will take all summer," coast guard official; said today as they put finishing touches on plans for their warfare against the rum fleet An immediate response to the opening of the coast guard's summer campaign Is expected in the form of increased liquor prices. t ' Utah 111 Good-Looki- hg ;;-:- v "A Square Deal to Every Patron" . RavIing's "get it at" D. Graham Printing ORSES ---- lt "'? ' -- with quality to match Here's hosiery for men young or old who know the importance of small details in dress. These silk socks have real snap and style lustrous fabricsnug, neat fit. ; They're comfortably light and fine yet wear so well you save money by buying them. That's the famous Holeproof combination of style and durability. Come in and see themT Pure si lk, 75c and $1.00. Light or ' heavy lisle, 2 pairs for 75 cents. ' -- Marksmen of the dry navy have orders to shoot to hit and not merely as a warning in .the event the rum ships try to send to shore. 5. - ... --END- ---7- FUND DRIVE "The Cameo Girl" '.'. on. . . 30 S. 1st West, Provo; n "The Cameo Girl" .: - Pro hibition jnpet nans to Surround Bum Fleet Vessels n AMU is what we want you to get ; Thirty-seve- tut.z: PERSHING DRY NAVY TO Just PAGE ' 1; . . Jenkins Knit Goods Co. 50 .: '.:- .- North University Ave. THE A MEQ, GIRL" ; -- ; . -- Coal Company BEST KITCHEN Incorporated - - -- - V -- SUCCESS TO THE IS SOUGHT LONGMQNT, Colo, May 5. Housewives of Boulder county went on tour today to view the best kept andmo8t, conveniently arranged ' kitchens In the neighborhood. After their tour, a prise winning kitchen of the county will be announced. Competition for that honor has been keen among the housewives. Kitchens from all parts of the county being entered in the contest TOO MANY FIRES ". DURING APRIL 26 N. Univ. Ave. "The Cameo Girl" I A complete line of Ftman ; 1: ywswbw anj PROVO DRU- P.O. Box Phone 232 Provo 295 "The Cameo Girl" , .it .... ""-- . LET US ALL ENJOY IT. 65 MILLION TAX DENVER, Colo., May B. The people of Colorado paid Into federal, state, county, municipal and school district counties, approximately In cash In 1922 for all governmental purposes-I- n the form of taxes, licenses, permit and special assessments, according to a compilation made by the atate Immigration ; 7 department. Utah Kunderd is one of the best known flower breeders in the His work with gladioli at Gorken,. Indiana, near where kit A pioneeringt forebears settled nearly a hundred years "Jago has - caused ,t . 1. r t t Limner t :.i fr" :: ri: .1, i' ana tu ptucc mm vn a- pur wm oiner wpwaerj. puroanK -- Worker. Kunderd from the observation of more than forty years has concluded that flowers, and flappers are subject to muck ' the same natural laws. . , . t COLORADOPAYS wlrFifth North Street 0 A. world. films- - . 150-16- 1 Li- - Third S. Univ. Ave. 0NE GENERAnOM nfla ($ j Building Material. DENVER, Colo., May 5. Approxl. mately 30 foreKt fires In Rocky Mountain forests by the end . of April whs altogether too many in the opinion of Allen S. Peck, government district forester., The menace from fire this year is one of. the worst in history, Peck said. Extreme drought has made the forests like tinder, fires so far have tshown. Fear has loen expressed that One of the numerous smaller fires would, get lieynnd control and cause a general conflagration. Authorities in many towns and cities over the state have advocated the complete curtailment of standing permission granted canqiers to allow camp fires. It has been sug gested that 'no one be allowed to build an outside fire without a sitevial permit. I .. p I' I afrifrndling, Lumber and" t s v i ini Open Evenings TQ ANOTHER ... u .i.i.i. ,,, -j - TF G- CO. By A. E. Kunderd We develope and print your f ilms-o- ne day service. ?JU Cameo GirVL. takes HfryUE "You full!" "Picture -- .7 onv Mother's Day "WeU, let's ankle'on." I don't frequent hotel lounges or corner stores enough to have learned whether this Is the alang language up to date or not last thorough - acquaintance with slang was of the "23 sklddo" period. Even ..that wasn't the currency of conversation, when It was familiar back about 19M. . Flappers, janes, skirts, dolls, frills such, .1 learn are some of the names used to describe the young ladles of today. ' Sheiks, cavemen, rMf . Mother's the biscultl" said a mouth eake-eter s,these are names for the young gentlemen. Breeding is SQmethJng at which' a young bond salesman has told me, "it Is to laugh." Trial marriages, divorces,- experimental matlngs, love nests, 'and the rest of lt"eound like quotations f V3 .M.s-sfc- r ft The writer In a field of his loved gladioli,, making notes on their progress and behaviour such as formed the basis for his present discussion of gsod breeding. from the censored portions of what was permitted to be read in my strike the eye of the connoisseur younger days. Yet the newspapers and lead him to study and experi.tell me that they axe ordinary oo ment. So In confronting the human 'curTeuces of life In 1925. v race I have naturally fastened npon ' what is, to me, at any rate,' Its Flowers Prefers f. I am a breeder of flowers. I most exotic flavor. That is unlovs beauty and grace, land I have doubtedly the flavor of flapperlsm. Another reason is a definite feel.found that flowers, except for refinements of type and color, are ing of alarm. If I permitted my to run as wild as some of pretty ,muca the same yesterday, gladioli, the young persons upon whom the today and : tomorrow.'' I suspect future depends are allowed that right down, underneath, the race's same thing is true of thse flap- to run. there would be no new or admirable variations tor me to prepers and sheiks, but it Is harder to credit than is the same theory sent to the public each year. The fixation of types would become im- about flowers. Confronted wllh -f choice hetweenflowers andgap4 nnaslMfl and the- prnsffrvatlonnamed histories and with varieties, pert,' or bulbs, and bandits, I hope. to their .credit, I may be exouBed If 1 retreat to accomplishments v would bs unthinkable. the flowers and bulbs! y y Consider the Lily Twlcs . There are several similarities Of course the entire world Is not breeding flowers and breeding humans. In the breeding of going, nor bas it gone, to the dogs, but It would be exceedingly profitflowers It Is the unusual and characteristics of them that able (or some of our modern youths - , - Columbia- BIdg. a' "The Cameo Girl" I w- -ri cTSfi the cartful discipline f and ear that are used hi raising the flowers. Mr. Kundertf s Idea of tba i corresponding cars of human breeding, is expressed In the cartoon at the left - parlof-Arab- - Studio --r- v; - ' to go to the gladiolus, the peony and the rose for a few lessons in wisdom. It would, pay them better than the study they seem to have given to the lily of the fields, which is a wild flower, and which, aa the Savior said, neither tolls nor spins. It may be clothed In greater glory than Solomon, as I've no doubt many modern flappers are, but ( does not breed improved varieties. Nor do those whd get married on a bet, at tbe end of jazsy motor-ride- , amid the scents of cir, , culating pocket-flaskFlowers Like Humans Without preaching a sermon I should like to pas's along little of the Information that I have ke en ired durmgJfortyjearsdesotedi-to the Breeding of gladioli and to efforts to originate new types, in all that time- - there havs resulted from my work only two distinct origtnstlops, as to forms or types; one a flower with a ruffled edged petal and one a flower with a Urinated or fringed edged petal, But t&ey havs added beauty to tbe - world and brought Joy to the heart! of minions of flower lovers. My success la bringing them into existence is not, however, what I want t6 'emphasise. Rather is It my Intention to call attention to the length of time that was needed to do just two things with a particular kind of flower a flower tbat tires through 'twenty generations while a human being is living through one, and which accordingly shows Improvements) quicker does. than a human-being- ! Artificial Maturity : In the first place my flowers were not speeded up to an artificial maturity. If they had been, the flowers that, came after would have been poor and weak and They were given time to grow, with tbe leisurely and beneficent action of the sun, the stimulat r wis-ene- ing affect of tbe air and the nourishment that cornea from good soil They had informed care to stimulate their good qualities and to protect them from the pests and diseases that might have rotted them to th cor. Children and youths need aa intelligent care, a quiet and leisurely an opportunity tor growth aa dn flowers. 'Are they protected against pests and disease by being permit-U4o smoke at fourteea years'o age. and to run about la promiscuous abandon by the age of sixteen? la a flower more precious than a human being, cap We of greater Inspiration when brought to a normal maturity, or mora subject to decay whea exposed to noxious Influences? I think not. In the second place, toy Cowers, which have become known all over d the world tor their sice, beauty and varieties, were not produced by a mating of kinds that had nothing to contribute to each other. Interior varieties were not crossed with superior ones In moments of casual abandon, because they seemed to make a temporary pleasant impression on aach-otheStudy and thought were given to the subject, the, condition under which they had to lira were known, the influences that enabled them to serve their own beneficent purpose In tha world were provided. The mating of flowers is the wedding of kings and queens, : Only those salted tor each other are used tor sanding on types to posterity.. Tarn from tha flowers, again to tha world of human beings. How much less sense la shown as a rule! What a lack of proportion is exhibited by the marriages that are made' and unmade lit a., space of lima that once was only long enough properly to begin a courtship, Are human beings married because they have mutual characteristics that it would be useful and desirable to pass on next icnerlllonTf course in, many cases they are, but' in tbe. great majority in the cases of those who are causing this post-wdecade to be known as an age of jaxi and joy what la It that determines mat Ingat Marry In Haste' It A. I aaspect a mutual love tor lanelcg, or motoring, or a niuinni' distaste for convention pr traititlun jotbe ar tbat brings many a young couple Into the justly named, "bonds et matrimony." They come together as rebels,' and being rebels they adjoining lower-bed Is more attractive than the one in which they happen to be, ' , and in many c&sos. it la no wooden Married in haste on whim or for superficial, reasons each one ot the sobered pair recognises tow ? Iate-- w too early as tha case may ?. be that his proper mate is some. Y on else. Nature,' when given a chance to express itself without interference, is tha best Instructor In eugenics. ; Couples whosa qualities are alike and will mutually strengthen each' other, are usually attracted to each other under nor. mal conditions though not in tha In excitement ot the dance-floothe byways that lead to blind pigs, or under the glnmor that la east by the ownership of a speody v (or a stalled one). . The Sunlight of Wisdom I would sunt 'up the observations of an elderly man wllh a paraphrase of the Biblical injunction: Consider not only the Biles of tbe field, but the Improved varieties if rose.- - apple, peony or gladiolus !ht iave been produced by. Civilised wisdom and the patience of nature, Aa flowers need the sunllpSt jf God's ouldoors, the youth of the ummn species needs the sunlight f wisdom and the slow,4.utet sour. hment of Nature in her normal nooda. 1 aWsorm-Trtedi-The,- -f- tor-ca- , |