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Show THE EVENING nEFUJrFRIDAYJLTYlOriS-V- " St ranc Four Showa Daily . 4:00 . 7:45 . 9:1' 'i t- .IZTl 'UNErds tart' of feet above the street pigmy figure glides across a cobweb. Nearby, one of his fellows leanrfar over nothingness to xatch a glowing met, tossed casually aloft from the furnace. Another anVman is driving home one of these" rivets with a while still clatter of 1 mighty .. . Tl a into auouier .iuscb a girijer ynia surely as though his feet .were on of - " a r hand's 'oiid earth instea4 ' breadth of steel t The city'a daily circus has opened a circus that loses nothing of inter-i est because' there is no admission wds gather.. At, times charge, traffic.TT Stiff necks they all but block i- - 11 I J r w mem. xierc, uvuuug k a Roman holiday.- - The trapeze performer of themuccu, circus ias ma net in tne event oi a iau, tne equestrienne nas at east an equal chance to land in the sawdust But the 1 : ago. maaonry eonstrnctioa towering six tar alnd Stories high waa considered the maximem for safety and atulty. Tbaa - came Bessemer steel, and later open hearth steely Here was a material l that, weald, perform wtta exactness. A steel coturns ot a gives alas. aatabUahed that it would do a specifle amount of work In a mora efficient naansr than any other knows matertat"f This development of steel came at a time when Und values ia ths busl sees sections of the larger cities were becoming almost prohibitive. Teller be tiding were the only solution, and structural steel made '"' then possible.' Tailor Made" Buildings Quickly there developed, between the rolling mtlla and the purchaser, 'Pot air-gu- 1 1 'SL; L uu - 7 o tu : played by the atructural ? ' v ? . - - 4 v:f . J Occasionally the structural werktr relieves the monotony by ft Ing the sidewalk erewd a real thrill I r eteel-Korka- r. Divergent Viewpoints.: bimbo mutt be a nut to take mcV chancei," chlrpi a pert younj mlrt, as ehe pauses en route tether Job in the notions de--' tiertmWJt" She ironld probably be nld utter lv dumbfounded 11 beer the "nut" remark to his nheee here. h1eh heels the airla Am are awful dangerous!" A fe Jean bq H was common occurrence to see one or more workers, riding aloft da a, girief -.whldt'ewayed and dangled from a derrick bpom. In most cities the ddewalk fang hare been cheated k f tola j thrill by ban Imposed through, legislation, but this one cne.ip,the drama Is, not missed. Alter all. it hardly compares with the feat of skipping serosa a beam, or dodging a swinging girder, or no larger standing on a drift-pi..than the.. thumb, which has been thrust In a rivet hole w.Ith nothing ,to hold It there except the worker's 'welghtlupon It! i Al In Day'j Work But' it' all In the day's work -- wllh'Jheaa met 1 The" men in the. street would probably say that they .had lost their perspectire on dauger that they were so accustomed to looking possible tragedy 'in the face that it loses its Identity, The cartoonist who drew one of" the most popular sketches That j -- -- - Yssva v it? j : 1 - mhe-oo- v er9e dy , n ' ' In vcars c&ueht Vhe real spirit ot this high 'disdain of danger. It was a picture, ot two steel workers, draped In complete relaxation npon a narrow girder far above surrounding structures. "I wish I was .makln the Jack mihlla-heil- those drag r dowa," box-flght- b(n' 2! arehoseBoin vigorous- v with which people' watch any hazardous undertaking. .Not that the work of the structural-steel worker Is the most hazardous occupation in the world. Of course It Is not the safest, as attested by life lnaucan.ee 'statls tics. TW-mawho chooses sucb a' calling flBually has a peculiar physical qualification for his work, and he has a sixth 'sense which usually operates to warn him ol danger'. It , may be that an unseen gtrtier: is swinging his - way. : He have been written 'upon curiosity, anticipation, and allied phenomena,. The crowd that rubbers at the acrobats ot the skyline Is net actuated by the. same psychological Impulse as the one that stares at a billposter, or listens to the patter of the patent ' medicine vendor, Anticipation probably beat describes the mental attitude of those who stand open- mouthed While th"riveter perchea 1 nits delicious eating, per " Soda Grax . . . . .. . 1 lbTSchillings Cof fe- e; t itii;.veta' and spine. .Its Joints lb$. ; e , ' can move ever So slightly wheh heat expands and J cold) WtfaaV OTdriretTso braced are they that it can resist the strain of storm. The stomach k ths &wnaeaOiffl sttrsao null . iigui na power. r lum 11 heart the boilers and machinery spread the arteries, whlcb.carry ths equivalent of blood throughout Its bod-thpipes which warm the radiators In ' winter." ' Continuing the figure) the archi tect likens the steam and water 7 mm Jl s Above the sidewalks, of almost every city, such men aa thsse perfocm feats that would make afty. elreus audience gasp. ,. T! - tinof'' pipes to ths human circulatory system;' the wiring system to the nerves; the ventilating schsmn to the respiratory system. : : ' Wider Field of Steel The field of usefulness of strue-:- tarsi steel contlnnee to increase. Architects, engineers and city planners art forecasting cities that will towef higher into the ether tbaa anything that has yet been planned. , It ma be necessary ' to use Held glasses to get a good look at ths structural steel worker ot a fe w years hence--- ! has - beea sneei is cap- uouudf ifsis bis of doing more and better work , than has heretofore beea required ' ot tt.-- . This fjhasa of .the tltnsMoa-ha- s been the, subject ot. exhaustive Investigations by the American Institute of Steel Construction, an , organisation which represents almost ths entire, fabricated steel in-dustry of the United States . and Canada." As a result of thess in vestigations, a standard specifica tion for the fabrication and erec tion of structural steel has been developed which makes possible a saving of not less than twelve per. cent on all steer 'structures as tostpared with old methods. r Technical,' sohpvlsi research 'laboratories' aud goverhmertt bureaus discovering new capabilities uses fot'stesL iNew alloys are being developed.aiaifeittatawitdieaifc--'" And the. sidewalk firowd.Js look ing fowaW'to'Qie'ftpenint bt the" greater. show, when fthe drama- ot , the e!hloCand ehglneer Tor ths ityt 0 tvndrrow ra translated Into' towering piles of steel, surrounded, f by brick ."add stone and cement and tile. REAL HISTORY . - . C0LUMDK Tonight T:30 . 9:15 , James Cruze Production "THE GOOSE HANGS 1 I HIGH" Mack Sennett Hardships! ;;i . , . Comedy.-"Honeymo- ' lii of".--an- d s .: , - BUCK JONES M ",", HE-MAN-WHO -,"T- 18c ''. ' 7t SPLAYED SQUARE" ' '. nv .' , iA Jyery ticket purchadefl, matinee ,or nifht .will ?be iven coupon! ' , STAR TOURING CAR by Narlor Auto Co. - i UPRIGHT PIANO by Walter Robinson Music Co. SAVAGE WASHER: . by Bates Stores Co. ( Next Monday's Prizes SET SILVERWARE ,fromA8hton'8 Inc. u- - WALL TAPESTRY . , J M Ui frohl 5 s 26-P- c. -- Barte-Furniture" Cer-LAR- GE FERN " ,V ' from PaVo Greenhouse.' - PRINCESS' ALSEATSlOc Tonight And Saturday EDMUND LOWE - - AMONG MEN7 HONOR anrl'cbmedy : ': " T- - d , --rrr- MRSrJONES"" - INSPRIZE : as- d Ra-mo- Har-woo- d Whitehead's Cash Market Wr. i Ore-son- Open Evenings Springville News - SPAMS H FORK Harvest Queen HIGH PATENT FLOUR" . :, 2.05 per sack Delivered . . . ; . ; ii. gr, gkJnlwift 1818 1 'i,:, .... The nipp was drawn by Wil liam Itector, surveyor for the United of Missouri and Illinois.' Some fallacies in the con ception of the country in those days were revealed,. The Cascade range ofjimmntains wassshown to extend inly, so far south as Mouhlt Jepper- tuti and the WtUiamette river was marked to start from a; point where Salt Lake City, t'tah, is now sHhated.; .Coeur d'Alene lake in Idaho was shown much larger than (factually is. ..The Simknne river was marked . as "Basket Tot riverr." Stated-territorie- 114 Health and Vigor DELICIOUS HOME GROWN t; JEED STORE Phone 7' 1 $1.75 . . .$2.75 r j of Salt Mrs. William Owsley Lake City and Joseph E. Jones were guexts of Dimnjlck Huntington Sunday. Erling Itoylance .and Ted were home to Fourth, they .are working at siK-n- Hay-mmi- d the Scho-fil'ld- . - Mr. and Mrs. W, G. Mendenhall and daughter Odessa spent Tups-da-' in Salt Lake City. ,. . y Mr. and Mrs. Patrick .OWen Ward of Kurekn, Cal., are siendliig a few Apricots j.Arc now readyjforcanning. jjGetoifl order in early as the supply thlssuminer" i x is limited. CHERRIES 9cANDUP all kinds ; .Home grown cucumbers, tomatoes, carrots, beets, cauliflower, beans. All kinds of Fruits ' and vegetables. . ; clean, wholesome; and mock irately priced-:-,.- '." - i 3 for :.'..-.v..:.2- tare Portnblr C 10 materials one shipment. No delay. . Wc builders S200 to S120O, Fi- ent materials .ut-t- o fiu Prk inchid rnmber, interior finish, lath, siding, floor-ins- , roofing, ' glass, sash, etc., complete puns, simple instructions, rrefgnt psic to your station for limited time. tirn. with America's largest bomebailding or uuzauon. i years ot success. tGet Big Plan BooK bena 50c tor yttu moot ot 136 Mastsr Design and incea, or asa roc rK&& Boot fACiric READYUT; HOMES. INC.. 111 8. HU1 SU Loa Angeles. CaHf. .a READ THE WANT ADS ... thousand readeitfaily.1 Just Eighteen " t , -- -a ' think, you can insert want ad In 12-wo- the Herald classified . r column for one entire week for the small , ' x City Fruit Store 97 N. U. Ave.' ; OPEN EVENINGS PsciSe art savins 5 Utah Plums, 2 25 Peas picked fresh as you need them from our own field. ; - Yoa . lbs". i ffomes-No- Hoims ti wbolewk-Oct- . to M& erpcnH 18 lumbar tnd 4 bis prohtt en labor, lumber, Killwork, point, hardware. All Fuaoua -- Utah Onions, lb. : .iO Utah Cucumbers,, 2 15 String i Beans, lb.: 10c , Permanent ' . sum of sixty cents and reach the people of over 3,100 homes. Call 95 and tell them about the thin? you have for sale or have "lost. - :. HERALD WANT ADSPAYt u. - - I $1.00 3 for I on Saturday ,' i iei : Univ. Ave. "7 Nonchalant la the word that best desorlbee the sUltsde of the ctprs , In this son trem the dally aerobatle set of ths eky ad 5lr . .;. Wheat, bushel . Mixed Chicken Feed, cwt. CLAIRE WINDSOR FRANK KEEN AN ' LLOYD HUGHES "'' Chri8ty Comedy ,Vv;, , ' "COURT PLASTER"' i it. Dougall, "Mrs. Melvin Done,i Mrs. days..ln Springville, with Mr. Ward's and Mrs. W. A. McKenzie. parents. Mr. Ward .has been away yjvian .Wilson. Mpand, Mrs. Glen Mrs. ,E. T. Oaks baa .returned tor Xllan. from Springville for the' past six Mr. and Mrs. LynvAndTua, of ' ' : years. . her ohme In California after spend- ftalt" Lake Clt LeonardBeU of ing some time here visiting with Eureka and Mr. and-'- - Mrs. Guy Mrs. William Goodman ot Eureka, her slsteraJdisakArllneMendenhall. Thomas, of Salt Lake City, is the guest this wek of Mrs, Melvin wal!aK"- Mrs. M. V. Bird-anJJone. A. Mrr p; Miss Barbara Hendricks of Bolt "iA copy of the original map has Packard and . daughter, Virginia, Lake wa sthe guet..t ot Miss Portia . Im-permanent-obtained phtced -- miss rreai racsard ana- Miss spent 'fuwrtay JMSitit Lake City. Davis a few days last week. ' Miss ly in the public library here. Margaret Watsoa Of Salt Lake City endrleks 1b the daughter of Mrs, were visitbrs in Springville on the Mr.. nndW-MrCLfl, Salisbury Ella. Davis endrickA. " J,OSTLANrOretJfulyt;P) h7-siuiit"lfie Fourfli"arMapre Tiell m rpnrt Sonio Iiiterestine sideliirbts. : vvV ,Mr. and Mrs. One! M, Whttemore early history in the Pacific northMrs. Thad and west were, revealed when the. voldaughter, Buth, were Week-enguests- of Mr., and and- son, Dick 'of at MrsTSbe TJIIock. iittrfnoits files of the war "depart CiuclnnaTtTTOhtoTp: are viBiung witn Mrs. Thad s par a sewing party, Tuesday evening. ment lu AVasbinKtoh, D. X?M revealed ents, MrniHiJrJlJj'ftC. Jat't-Eva41 r ThJi.in(,A)idedJUissJRamjQQa fvUw-w- i f Thomas, Miss . Katherine Dougall, Eureka were week-endrawn in I8is. , ' guests of Mr Mrs. It. S. Lawrence of v.Ogden Mrs. Melvin Done, Mrs. Alice Rey- und Mrs. .' C. AUeman and Mr,, and The WHmniettc- .rivelSsjhen- was CIAGO, . July. 9- - (UP) Mrs. spent , the third,- - fourth -- and fifth nolds of Provo and Mrs. Vivian Wil- Mrs. Lee Miner, " without a iiume, so fur us the limp .:. ., indicated. Tula fact casts consider- Melvin Jones, of Olympia Fields, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. son. wo' A. In the won Gross McKenzie. low the ".-prize Mr. and Mra .William Co able light on the mnsty controversy of two Iu honor of her sister, Miss Provo celebrated the Fourth of concerning the correct spelling of mens western gojf aswK'iation at the Midlothian Sirs. Hazel Itoylance spent Tues1 Thomas, who- - is. visiting In July in Sringville.wilh friends. the stream's. aine,- -V. Mida day visiting in Salt Lake City with Springville; Mrs. Stephen Deal enThis nmp, more than 100 years golf course here. Mrs. Lee 15. B. Mrs.? R L. Lawrence of Ogdeff, tertained at a swimming party at old anjl never published, was sought of Butterfield and Mrs. of tHriuplu Fields, were sec Glengarry Tuesday evening, ?Other tot a year to clear upji uuinncr-oe Ir, and Mrs.- ifcKenzleniembersfhe-partywerMrs. qnesllons onireEiiSorj' pf this sec- ond and third. "f Ogdcn were Sunday guests ot Mr, Alice Reynolds of Prpvo, Katherine . tion.':;. irs, It was believed generally that the 's 1S18 Hiap spelled the name of own river V'WUl'ianictte.'' This f aniposyion arosei from the PROVO FRUIT AND VEGETABLE MARKET It E. Dnllin who has. lwen visitituJ fuct that a copy of the ' original. with friends and relatives in Spring-vllle ' ' for the last week returned made about 1851, so designated the 382 W; Center . . Phone 1059 , , stream.. Tuesday for his home in Chicago. Leslie Scott, in compiling 1i1h , , FREE DELIVERY SERVICE notes on the early history of the The Springville hand went to the Oregon country, concluded that this Sprihgvillo Canning factory on In- depend largely - upon the' siwlling, could no be traced to the dupencencp. day nnd played to the fresh" vegetables and' fruits first map and decided Ji. origins ted employes. who were unalilu to' leave from 5 reeuhbw's history; issued their work htat day.. ph&t ' should comprise a dliout 181(5. The old Indian name large portion, of .our daily 'aa23Koilamrt,?:i flrat u given by Mrs. Sanfortf Fuller" is leaving food supply. Lewis and Clurk and taken from the soon for Roxmirg, Idaho, to stay a !j Our stock ia always fresh Iinlinn name of the fishing grounilH while with Jier daughter. . - - Soap 2l51. arms;sia . Other rivers were named differently. The Takluia river was the 'iiipetle river; t'ma t ilia river:was Hie Dechutes "Yourmartalla" ; ,.vcr-watne "i'owardnecocKs'1; jdljivDay river was "Lepage" and Wiilh! Waln river was the "W'alla- - BIAP REVEALS 39c Those Good Spring Frys ifi!ITY "'-- with - ; v 1. OLD OREGON t31-2c- : r Large box "t m 25i 42c. . . Thee Many books- lb.--; ; .0 . . Honey J Watermelons for . t . . 3 bars Jap Rose - ducka his head and the 'danger .. mere passes. He may have seen it out of the corner ot his very alert eye er he may merely have sensed It ' aion working uxe a giganuo wooa- - " Confidence Of Worker pecker. Probably heoould not tell you Spectator Expects Tumble just how he knew that' his safety "Some day that bird la going to was menaced. more could he take a tumble,", soliloquizes the spectator. Following out this line of thought, even though It may be subconsciously, the man on the sidewalt feels that some day he may see him take- the tumble. all BmaBhed up," replies No. 'Full Quart Bottle . v- says steel worker No. 1. ly combat this theory.' But it is "Sure, but they take a chance of borne out by Jbe morbid intensity fflS'ITEHEAD'S -- in ttestorsbr Catching a sizzling rivet, cast daftlv aloft from the forge. ' help-es-th- . the Job, each piece bore a number which designated its plabe in the skeleton, it became the steel worker's job to put each piece in its proper place, and drive home each previously designated rivet. Tha ateelworker's aglfltr and sntrancs the pedestrian. to bravado ls danger .fc, ,0 ct1r, Just pan of the Job to too snaa who Batches the la fitting together the steel pussls ratalf atitibgether of the builder, the Imagination that is to flnslly emerge into a architect and the business man. v great skyscraper. r: Uke Human Being This structural steel acrobat's trade is one of many unusual oc ' A speaker at the recent Archl cupations that have been developed tectural and Allied Arta Exposition, In America The skyscraper, which In Grand Central Palace, New York, created his trade, is peculiarly an built his address around the asAmerican institution. A halt cen sertion that the American sky like a human being, scrapex-lsuland does practically everything a man does except walk. His simile is well worth quoting: "The metal feet rest on the solid rock, which wsa reached by huge caissons. Its.frsme work of steel Is a eompleteikflrtoo with ertffcu- reached tett 70a clearly how be manages to tread his narrow footway fat a high wind with such a aureneee of step, such an exact allowance (or wind stress,. What would mean immediate disaster to the untrained only serves to give the ateelworker added confidence. What appears h orse iriHANDICAP" -- the plant era' of ths fiir-Fs- e bMlrg and the; structural ateel worker. . From the; engineer's drawings and sped flcatlooe Oia framework of the great structure was fabricated by the structural steel mUL When It hun-sire- whims to e etreet ot danger! khich probibly appall him! 'Where ti the eifcna thrill that can compere vith thla workaday game ot tag . theitaiclnjljteelbr Now was coma, indeed, : "THE DIXIE :- 1 no lut resource. Bieeiworter A. d mlMtep.metux dl8ster, A lie tfc&M d7 h jivet .the treiedv; nd vrben the wfaletle ()kwe he elide blithely down Tonight fThei most exciting; race in years. . ' mams-maUea- n, .' 2:30 WflNDiERFUL. FREE PROGRAM.tiNiQjlJE! THE LAKE! SurRidingV Gamesl . Bathing and Picnic! Oy Motdr Boatingv BoyiJoin the bi omniunlf fechool outinj |