OCR Text |
Show pachtwd:' PRO VP EVENING HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOEER 18. TII& EVENING HERALD OFFICE CAT J WOBD8 WITHOUT MCSie Wg jnajt. llYrwltlVHit poetry,, muajt r ft ti 192(5. " sniat Our Way ITEEWf l4t fcy liva IUk coaadenee and It U trae the TriasW-We- k lire without heart has taken to chewing eiib, atif live withoat friend w( ahould put a little of it on hi he ft putien ge&caled to be best bueresta and the greatest derelopmest ud tt a fellow bo taint l at le ftar nay Bve witbuut booka, .. . die. of lta county; Ttafc"t- tearing BgrtPBttnral and industrial aectioa. U going to collect the foreign debt But rlvlUaed man cannot live VI tt eut'eooka. It U bow powlWe to ik Taccinat- MUER MuWSPATKR KNTEKPRISK ASSOCIATION .JlKilBEIl L'MTIUJ! WiESa ASSOCIATION Another "meanm-niaa- " la the feJ ed again alum say low who tla a girt against net The Prince of Walea aaya he Hkea Jerry Cluft except gorf. MULISH KO BV THE HERALD CORPORATION will, (lien let tier know that he American typewriter, istunuei ut ' N. tiwauur rUamusoa, IxBlor and Manager ' know lie didn't ;. One reason, aaya K P. Egertwn, troaetteaf ' , Editorial Iteoum Telp$ioue ,, , ... why Moiomon a temple took forty- Chkkenset hot, not beraow year to build luigbt hare' been What animal Society Editor,, THNdiwne with C " " ' "T because he bad J001 wive to uakl ....... 86 they wear too mnrfa, but heeatiar ,fT"Kangaroo."" ttarU ' B Ostites X)fOct Telefdione ", " the law won't allow them to wear ."You're thinking of chlmen, tou auggeatlona, " TERMS OF SIBSCBIPtlON Jena. any find aeaa." la the then alwaya 40i Pelirered h carrier-- , per mouth delivered by carrier, per year, la advance ..' ,,....$4.80 Life darkest nntuifnt after It .$3.50 Delivered by mail In I'tab county, per year, in advance being naked how railroad erod raising gand In ilie raToterU the Delivered by nail In United. State, ouuide Utah eeunty, per year, . aeddf nta can be prevented, iKh ing .H60 (wraoa you thought waa a motor- inquirer are respectfully Informed ma a turns out ta be a cop. that they cad be avoided iiy not Established a aWeeklr la ISM: ma a dally In 1022. Published In the 5 ' TCKE the track ahead of a train. HeadllBes you" .neur Herald buUdlng, 00 outU Klrst Wert atreet, I"roro, Wan every evening, crewlng Gnmn indebtednetia U BMUally the In ITOvo, WOS carrier MS feM Delivered try JU'l'K SAY uodBT IIES" nwriring. and. except 8aturdajv' Lake View; Vineyard. Orem. Provo Beach, and Pleasant View, AU com result of groftg neglect INPUSTRIAi; MAGNATE. - ' OX A PICT ahoald 4w madd at once., Telephone 83 nfttui nlalnta of wbatevt' A wnaTTTtoy traveHng alope had a ift'dilkrTtd BeeTioaie ahlrtf for A Cincinnati bootlef king ' has Entered a fefond rliiss matter at the poarof flee In Provo, Utah. . severe coid arvl kept Dp a wntlna mt huwhand . Ruft- unea. , hlMiii. , , . .. ,, ul " lue '"uio pw doctor forbidden anvthlnir has oua. sniffling 'which irritated ad old pie are lodng all respect for royalty 'r lady',, a tVoaii' the 7arHle.,of the coaeK; starchy. recent taken effective most the is as step "Pi.v. hMven't you a hailflkefehlef T" What regarded France and Oermany are Seins ly toward crime Drevent on is the action oi uniei justice fmally anked the lady In deftpera- - Harold Calder aaya one button nice to.one another again. Now if anion Butta will hardly prevent the one or the ... Carrington- - T- - Marshall, of the Ohio supreme court, when he tion. other Just (loesa't aay issued a proclamation to the judges .of the common pleas "Yea. but I never lend It to Strang-r,- laundriea from , ripping off their too mochf .v an the boy'a proBipt anawer. customary 100 per cent courts directing them to bring to speedy trial all persons accused of felonies. Criminal cases must be given preference Well, Queen Marie Vaa finally Fiisldon. expert ar tt take a Dan, wnat'a a heifer t u a Pig able to find a ateamshipytbat wasn't over civic cases, the chief justice 6ay. The proclamation of ' the chief Justice, is unique in Ohio court annals, it being the rd and a quarter to make a drea or aheep? aaked two aallora. . " too crowded. An fetnlinint, A newspaper" ay John ry 1 BOOMtKHOOr KkJOW fHAfSMlP 'I: 8,-- e J. I IT! OlO CrOOO .ZSIS G05K To WASH IF OMEBOf FlUOS A MAlU CAKe.-- -r up .AKO Fellow VywntH SOUR STtPl 1 MEI TT1. ER HIM! " RV3-TT- USTfcU SDUUGr -- OOLO CHOKE OO FOR vKJTfiavjcr sakes: Ml: LAlOTE AklO. WE. SWEAVfeOlHE TOVSfEt A WAV - AWO PUT THE. STOVE. RAG IM - .V' MEJ-ftr- T - Iw-- o . Uu William , Tl I DOWE F1U 5 r- - Demands Soetdu Trial " fuia,modern H order ever was made by the Btate's The proclamation was issued under officer. highest judicial both constitutional and statutory authority granted the chief first time that such justice. . . Dan pauHed reflectively. Then ltP mates. police ha re darned eight more than "f, don't know much about poultry.1 try club and have taken jLfiam up golf.! ; quarter. They are thinking of carrying their' -caa t&r lte eoaarorken duun an the beat - ; putt, : tine Provo' man alwaya confided don't make enough to keep their col people In juil. MOTUERS ET GRAW , bin iHiHinesa troubles, to his wife- - lire white. " n the nuked him for nioBey. Charles Evans Hughes has becu ' The clothes that make the woman appointed to The Hague. We those whiskers Bcfole the Menosrapher, T.IKE IT TD FRANCE any ate tile clothes that break the men. omiNiny reveaK According tr a woman would get him Into trouble. her Idea of a dltitomat NKW Y(hk American tonrls these figures., two out of evvry 101, As the blushing bride, said to the who can make a mnn believe that in the ntiiulHT of 220,000 spent Americans fraveUng in France las Now. if we can Just keep our;S22t!.(HMMKHr In Kriinre in 1!)2.". un be thinks he' knows a lot more, furniture salesman. Twin beds are year were millionaires who wient ; T(rfCtirtKrrffns; Tefiflinafiriiv TDc BanTters''" TrTJsl on an average ot ifum. tttay taken a . trials impede just punishment Undoubtedly of criminals in many cases. A long delay, often arranged by a" clever defense system, keeps the result of the crime an un certainty until the public, shocked as it may have been at first, and desirous that the guilty person ,oe punisnea, nas haa lime 10 lorgei jne incident in me mpm yi uwcooiuu w startling events, brought before it. After this has occurred, it is not difficult to obtain more and more delays, and final upon-soiii- . Well, ar4y4 4g8trut4t' aid f ."To tIl fom he truth, Thfr-Detro- lt I tot-of-rh- long-delay- ed the pubcatilt nxed acmitral,itlH;he-ey-oi- thing else, .And the public has an interest m every crime, and certain rights in connection with it. It is a mistake to assume that a crime is only an affair of the criminal The people in his vicinity are outraged and their community is disgraced, and if he goes unpunished, the disgrace is not even partly obliterated by punishment of the criminal, but has an added intensity, The public of a community is more and more unsafe, according to the number of unpunished crimes, ine puonc may at times iorgei mis iavi.n jurae decree, because of the many, other things that attract its attention. But there are certain persons whose particular datv it ia to protect ' very purpose. It is their task to see that justice is meted out, regardless of .any direct demand of the public. It is their privilege to demand speedy trials and their duty to piatwlirThwjrpowerin Tnrway or aeiay ana evasion, it is ta bevhoped that the exahiple of the Ohio judge may be widely flowed. Certain and swift punishment is the one practicid wiy to suppress crime. u young woman., 1( 'tt tiMimuiiwittiit WV t er BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES !L wWlllll II .ttma.fln . .1 .Wtiuu. . .TT II J T MWD,'" H I A I "," A??" I '' OMlo?S Faf- f- ustm 1 rXi&MTTft 1 SttT . 1 . - rAw - VJf . 1 CAWSUHL -- rut -- V' . . WHY. TUP . nilu,, inn 1 V0 II I VuT UP SrtootPMT 6MBV6 I . fV I yimLiu:: v.f ., l fllkl W!fS II II A a - ' - By Martin . (VlT - CVvi t V SVM .1' ftOOQ II OR It VloM AtV TViE?4 JL A Via, 7 iic J- -i , -- WITAOO VOOOO. .Too, W Hi 1 VIMT 1At I I ic. Oo V AWVGHT-6o- --T5fc- l , V . II II II , . ... J, ! f--V m a -- rx sss iBjdzfng,And Us Results body of the Slaaifiilttjtalihe very student University of Michigan, must go. College facdlties began saying it long ago when students were killed, bound to railroad tracks by merry fellow students or maimed for .life by some equally coy prank. Hazingjiaa lost much of its fire as colleges grow older, but that it is still too far from f unnjr irdemonstratedwhen the students vote against it. It wis take a long time to really oust this tradition of the ol University of hazing. . They banned it long ago-inHeidelberg, scene of "The Student Irince." But even today the quaint old town streets are full of student with faces gashed intd a dozen patterns. They; no: longer fight the fencing duels on university : ftft---- pr6prty7uthereffT ' r- r- BY CRANE W w'" Cj'ww:, BeQiViSmeiAox news., P ri ,7.ysvPRM& - n N . . littlehouseacross the"TiverwhJ:re a buxon proprietress, serving her beer, laughs At the sword- slashing studenters,, and'where a doctor sits on his raiaed dias tolrirtd the wounds o,f the injured. Xou can tconvince a Heidelberg lad that hazing or duel- I Hes.firoud of his gashes: the a blueberry pieTthe better Iv'-- ; Ii ' V -- . - WASHINGTON TUBBS moreuhis-iace-resembl- ..wii II' r r ' sw , - a w,yifsm fi A - I - &il i - II i I "f( I I I 'I " What Does WellsMean? G. Wells, probably and author, has Clissbld" Britain's greatest modern thinker book. It is called "William just written a new Clissold is a garrulous sort, sayinir what he jolly well pleases. Now comes the great British public comDlainintr that what he jolly well pleases is very-ap- t to be jolly wen insulting to each and verys good Britisher. Some even go so far as to say that the nasty remarks Clissold makes are not his ai ,ut, ou Deiongio mis n, u. weus. They don't like this remark, for instance. Clissold. SDealt- ing of His Majesty, the king, remarks worthyj conscientious and entirely unmeaning and V:v : uninteresting sun of plump old Edward VII." ; Wells insists that he cannot help the frank speech, of ' hia friend, Mr.. Clissold. .r, , . IS 0 w, let's see how long he gets away with that ! "Thw-ello- r-- SALESMAN $AM ; r ; " ; ,4 - . V; . ' - BY SWAN . v . Jack and Gene Heavyweight Twins fti'-X-: -- ' ; -- vl ; fif 5ucn Biaeuuittiy Husky twina were oon, w Mrs. James Allen of Phila lelphla daring the world's' heavyweight 'championship flghf between Jack Pempsey and tJene Tnnney there that the proud totherjroyMlJ' taiiia.enj!j,ejt:ltft - aod. bewitliL. I9 ftelr ftrt jiicttfre. FRECKLES AND HIS wLPAeer ft ) tttlENb- S- j ' said vw vas' Cf t 1IZL ' -- )w c6 Y7ot x sdrrlSe 4, iL B15ss7r" By m t-- . rrgLP A i)rsy.s. v- - I |