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Show PROVO EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 5, 1921. THE EVENING HERALD UwlU4 la A ttewtfiiMper count, Juab's of L'lah interest and lh greatest deTeiupmeol leading agricultural and Industrial section. Uie IxnA J" "Never the twalaa hU dgtted ibe wuaUi bvj iaa be m the brakeaian throw the i iU h. u.' on Ge advance;. eimt: per year, ...,.... --- ,, . ? la Provo, Utah. Entered aa second clans matter at thepostofflc Makes for World Peace Scouting Row Scint of Switzerland, i tvo fnreiim aociations c ' :i ; 4- - t who was in attendance. indicate felicitations that good feelings prevail .These e th among the imseem would -common It a banded together for good. a program boWwtioafe that through up Drought possible such as that which is carried on by the Boy Scout movement could in after yearg through themselves at each other's threats as the nationalities of the world have done in times 4wers4heorld-bsr- boyg-and-- u II 'past. -- , " .'"; oe e POT CHER6S 7' J k Mt le . It chill in g. cil, Scott saya The other night , .. I wen( to the theatre . Wltb a low brow friend, And the orchestra played "The Little Brown Jug." Awl he thought . Italy, Finland International greetings to the Fourth Biennial . Conference 01 American scow, j&xecuuves which was held last week in Hot Springs, Arkansas according to "The ATKansns Traveler,' a bulletin published by the executives each day of the session, arid sent to Provo by A. A. Anderson, Scout Executive of the Timpanogos pistrict Coun- rvE-t H THET FOH LAlGrS PEKINEO OP girl be kDona la the one who walked Are cullea fur aa ideal ; PnrtiKrnl Turkcv. France. Sweden, Office Boy Scouts, and Canada Sent 4 .'U C 1 . . Sunday-taofoiig- it. v . AUT&MATiC. OP MINE HOUO bO. j; . you do not pay for Your grocer returns, your money. You keep the coffee. f.o0 in U a dally la Etfablinhed as a weekly In 1856; Herald building, J South First Wrt street, proyo, Utah every evening, Delivered by earriej la Provo, eieepl Saturday, and j,V View. Vtneyand. Oretn. Prove Bench, and Pleasant View, au com nuinta f vlmtPTw on tare should be made at once. Telephone 95-- Divorce tms lawyer get little ttasineaa row botutoe where but partlea thLnk Uk ma sboald be - - TVUS' EQUAL,. . , ! d o n o t, 1 i k t i t- -- ed i SchillingCoffcc approval. If you VUrt SOKET6M8Stt)NES lUH SOPPOAT MV, ARQ1MIMT. A HOCaS GOT FOU L&irrC AM" i'A AwtTfCrt OiVH TOO VJORRltO ABOUT "TrS"CUf?lf GOV, A SIX SHOOTtF? MAKES ALL MEW att-be- d BY THE HERALD CORPOEATION N, tiunuar RjtjjwMMWB. Editor aa Jdjutager L'tufc leered bf ail to XlUfediHates4r8tUJe . .. In advance ........ ...... . . ' " PLBI-IMIK- I) Delivered hjr carrier, per month ? Delivered fcy earnlefi p year, t WoRi wAawd tFiafpS CAT OU buy every. iiEiigEn usitep yusn Xssocution . Bu William Out Our Way, Th e . OFFICE . the national w And atood op,. ' And rdid, toa Darn him,-- ' antem - ". ' The bride and the (room were visiting 14 Springvjlle.. They stopped at a restaurant to cgat. A flip younp waltregs waited on them. "Would you eare for oie honey- Hioon8lud? ' ahe asked. "What la ltV asked the ropfuitod . .cope, grtjoBK ex&acts - - . . "Jiwt lettuce, ahme," replied the waitress. , ., Terry " irrVmt titiie.lg it? Kay Clark I wtft teU. There'a THE, "TfrAlUEtT, reasonable to suppose that a program universal( It seems "Xutr, said, the Provo Bunduy- - work trying to play rich man's two hands on thia rlm-- and T A,n't mm mn - 4: ,. ig a oertaln gains.' ,. ly carried out would break down national prejudices and siliwil teachw-iV.. would draw the people of the world together in a bond of art of the ehtiM'h called the ulUrT busbaud. Jluy heaven bless you, understanding that would have great weight in eliminating "Iteeanao," Mild One bright hoy, It'a nice to bare little things run- !.'HelpJ Help!. A burglar . nat authority, the flapper la merely era in my case," wrote a grateful sirs." the .woman toward health Con. it pioneering Is way la the where in militaristic its. people thunge their ning around the home, except when stole the Indianapolis, Ind.". war.. Instead, therefore, of Scouting Tseing police and eense In attire. Like moat pion- eern. "Wheir I -, began" taking ft six attitude, it is very broadest sense. they're, leaking, faucet,, dogr.T,abe is nilHimderatood. eers, ao weak I could weeks was I ago The Juz7. Age is getting us, snaps If the Scout program, or any program, can draw these Others' epportniiitiea elwaya seem not spank the baby, but now I am Thomas V. Pace. Wfl are beginning nations together in sutfh a way as to make them Chritian in Golf Pw n'B.. neiflectitiK (Jielr to b; better than yours. ... A , to eminent According California Tour remedy has worked wond- - able to lick the stuffing out of uiy to speiik v nW'M.. iim.''".iin ii'niu n jr their attitude toward each other, then surely that program is worth supporting. BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES-. iii. . ' Hl.il l"l 'n l MJ iliUl VUI l'ji;W , 1 1 I . . hj v . ifotent-medicin- -- " ' . , , . m 11. '.ion j - ill.rm i Ills Dream of Gold John Cooper was a structural iron worker in Kewanee, Perhaps it was "the" lieijrnt him dreaming. For dream Jolm Cooper did, there where the - gaunt skeleton "of, his building tower met the noonday sun John Cooperl dreamily uatdhing white hot ingots of steel, dreamed that yellow gold and not hot steel flowed through his hands. Dreamed that he commanded structural iron men such as he to build, and that build they did, great towering things that flecked the very stars. John Cooper dreamed so well that he lived his dream when at the whistle he left those eerie heights for the street " .. "I'm not a steel worker. I'm a millionaire," - CAN tX W& N,Ut TRtlNf tO 'p e A iM6 feO Lnivv-- T .TONtX ON ftts"TO to iat n -- nu. 1 6?ii ywe i BrMW ItL -- sraiwL - - g v below. . VifSlO Wieh;htha;let 111." he told them. "A nine million dollar estate is to be left if I prove myself worthy by succeeding with my own two bare hands." - I , Perhaps John Cooper went to the movies often. Perhaps men kicked forth into the world read tales, of by wealthy parents and told to make their mark 'ere ever they darkened the paternal door again. John Cooper told them that when he was 33 the fortune was to be his. He had the eventful birthday a few days ago. He wrote checks. Checks that totalled $200,000. The undreaming Kewanee bank called them "scraps of paper" even as did Germany the neutrality . . treaties in the. years ago. John Cooper is bewildered. He finds it hard to ficrure out why and how he is no millionaire when he was so sure up there on the world's skyline, hammering, throwing ingots. John Cooper only went a little farther in his dreaming than most us who dream the checks but have riot the courage to really write them. . ., he lily-hand- ed WASHINGTON TTOBS Tz" hard-hearte- d, . " ' ' rr-- v ! - ; BY CRANE r? - . - i . " For Men Still Are Boys - With her hold a writhing, crawling mass of fantastic sea life, and her crew.aglow with bizarre talesof the strange waters they had seen, the little schooner "Blossom" has just come home. The "Blossom," less than a third as big as the ship in which Columbus discovered America, was sent forth bv rich woman of Cleveland, Ohio, to cull unknown waters and islands and bring back rare specimens for her city's natural history. museum.' The little schooner was gone for more than three years. Some of her men turned back, yellow with fever or mal de mer. Mutinies aboard, Times of thirst and hunger. But the "Blossom" kept on. Now she is home again. Captain George Finlay Simmons .has exchanged the thrill of fiehtimr sharks jt tooted rip fish for the thrill of lunching at tired business i men's clubs and telling them of those three years upon a h far-osea; , ,He tells them df riant turtles that capsize boats as a whale might lash a. canoe. He tells of the graveyard of Moth-- ! rr Carey's chickens where the bleached bone of thousands of birds stick to the spent lava of old volcanoes ,;. ; He is Robinson Crusoe and the entire: .Swiss Family,.Rob-- i mson. He is a modern Jules Verne to these rioondav chicken He is Herman Melville with hia, white whale j Patty eaters. j and crazed sea captain. ..... ; ?,'. , , ... . Th hbon no"" becomes two,, three hours, and still i .. they ; listen. men become great business powers, but at heart they ever remain the boy who longed to be Crusoe's Friday or one of the Swiss Family Robinson young, and who even would change a bank director's chair for the crow's nest of a whaler, : w-- .' J . ,l ' ' SALESMAN $AM r ; 'S CoTboMV f . '" V ; I.,,.. j I " - . ,n tfit,rT . , ... . . tiv " OoVcKi. it'i':" ' TrtfiT X"1 W ( 7" Tl '- : - r- -: : " s 15l JSWA" f ('&") ff 1 - . , r ; ; to-d- ay ...... FRECKLES AND HIS TlRIEND-Seiu Dei iv i ..k3urei.wrnmys .laKin' lust'ry, an" he likes it kinda well. except for questions teacher asks that 'Jimmy ""cannofteli; He's started takin' books home, so his marks won't be so bad, an' every night, when supper's through, it's. ''help me, will ya, dad ?" ' - An when comes to 'rithmetic, he's awful, ferVfact He knows what all the numbers are. but pimply can't subtract. The adding and dividing stunt to him is just a flop. No wonder, 4!very evening, itis-'he- lp me, will ya, pop?" ,He gets his language all mixed up, though English has its turn in Jimmy' daily lessons. Still it's tough" fer him ta learn.. He's sometimes kinda backward, an' he hates ta go ta then you'll hear him say; "Aw help" me, will pa. So, now and ' ' , ; maw?" ya, real There's relief, in recess time, when kids 'er runnin1 loose, 'cause Jbjnmy seemsJ.know-lha.proper.wfltojraise the dtntce.lie7 calls oq mom and father when Jiis grades start fallln' fiat, iut. when it comes to playjime-we- ll, h$ peeds jt , y AAA SUllCHfeS. .n piooe ,. WL'ISl ...'fitJ r I I I rsr--1 - v" uf UCCAn rjr---- V : mj- arv - i V j , 1 JK. - 1 1 n r VI 'X1 .Jr - "' r .I ........i. .j By Blosser l t.yM ...liVt ' llC-- r ia- -- t Jy t . nQrVT KAiCW-.- I I I 1 ri I tMP- l- tuff AktT.f- 1- .- ., W ... ........... .a |