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Show - PAGE TWO II II THE HERALD PEOVO EVENING HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1928! OUT OUR WAY Published by the Herald Corporation, E. C, Rodgers, president, at matter 60. letW.SU Proyo, Utah, daily. Entered as econd-cla- s at the postofflca la Proro.tab. Member of the United Press filLi Serrtce, Paine Editorial Service, antf Ue James O. Borippe NewirjkpeWV; 4- - 1.-- :' th':- . , SO S )( 7 ( aato-ciatip- ij, f otir. be. oopeo By Williams .... ' ''' i . . - -- . -- "'-"- lasJ Ttiirinm attki, M Society reporter, lOTj Editorial room, U08. If yon do not receive you paper before I p. re, alephone M and a copy will be delivered to your resldenoa. .1. I 1 I 1 ...... 1 U- -f I I f -- r. .'M I , J . Subscription terms By carrier ftt t County, M cenU the month; tSM the year In advance by mall In the octy, iie ouUlde county, ; R. W. Ooodell, 'managing J. Gunnar Raamuson, alitor pnd manager; A. Owens, advertising manager. J. Hicks, county editor; editor: N. C .., , ' , ' ;W&.fr& hot H ft iict Blows f ft the-natio- n , " ' ' l ., .. t badly beaten.. It should ,be xememberedV .of. course, that the bulk of - these voters are from city, folks,, and Smith's strength lies districts probably ainly-i- Bh ; altho not surely would show Hoover ahead."" ., Smith .may be said at this election to represent the wave ""ofTeellng against repression; he is the symbol of the-ci- ty man's growing distaste for harassing regulation. Hoover, on the other hand, represents the status quo; he will be the champion of people, who wjsh to "let well enough alone." There.are, today, more people concentrated , "cities ..than "are spread over. the country districts. That Should jTieortically. give. Smith an advantage, especially if election , day. happens to be stormy and the country vote ,. is cut down. ' The Wail) deduction to be drawn from the straw votes assuming they are honestljr taken is that America still is widely split on prohibition nd probably, has a long, hard road to travel before order can be brought out of the present chaos ciUesJArc . - ," , .,.' .!' A .: f'i "T -.'.' Chuchnovsky Welcome Chuchnovsky, the Russian fivlator who" performed so well in rescuing survivors of th Nobileftascorln theArctic, New York, according to has accepted aaJn vita tion to visit ' tlZ'", . press dispatches.; -""Here .is a pilot whom it will m a pleasure to greetln his exploits jn.the northland he displayed heroism beyond oi airmen courageouarace that oi most men; even among me ' T '. r he stands out. : T- Of course; timid soute.wfll "probably fear that to shake the hand of a Bolshevik aviaior will cause the foundations oi the republic to tremble, and some nitwit or other undoubtedly will try to have his visit called, off ; but it can be anticipated that'Amerlca will give him a royal welcome. Bravery inows no international boundary lines. mmsmm '- - W VJ wvM - . r.-- " - ' : ( ... The trouble with poker la that the card you draw Is like an extra pair Honesty may be the beet policy, of panta. It never matches the suit ... but padlock manufacturers are still you have. - - . . . doing business. t" V - . , , .. . hr , vacatloa, H'brn my wife's on At hard work J always blink. And I stack with great elation. Dirty dishes la the sink! LTL GEK v ., . .,.. , t Ixve ft tike gee H worst In When a girl compliments you, by . , Addled Axiom: saying you look like a movie actor,e find out if she means John Carry-mor- as W smile. ' ". or Bull Montana,. . . , . . . , . POPULAE 1 SCIENCE This Is Miss dertle Gumboil, Trovo girl, who. has yia vented a bathing suit for flappers that is guaranteed to, be amallrr cumberan4. n some than .any now on the marked isiua Gumboil's suit, for which paints have been granted, Is not made 6f wool, silk or other material, but is simply tattooed on too wearer. .! An Is one who can remember when ladies removed all hairpins from their hair during an . electrical storm. t old-tim- '5 . ... , V of Abagall Applesauce's daughters have. won beauty; contests, and the other one doaant help Two . Ml CI; , ,. hayfever." You th' spring. ' , A miss Is as good . . , : LOCAL BTJStNESg MAN ts killed! W . TW OFriCE VAMP, SEZ:,., ; Believed to - " ..,;rr ataas . t.t. ' RfcAD THE STORY, THEN When all the stuff that Clowny poured was on the man, the Tinles roared, "Oh, look, his feet are mov- Inir and hia eves are blinking, too." Thfv all utenned back 'cause they were scared, and Clowny giggled as they. stared. . "I told, you an,: ne shouted, "that a funny thing I'd do. - "Well. IhavtLJB one. (V you n ad mit And I'm not frightened one wee bit This wooden man has He oon.wUl. be In oome to-li-fa. trim. You'll like him ooon, as like as not. and you can all thank me a lot The thing that made him wake up was the stuff I poured on him." Then Scouty said, "Oh, that'a a blurt. Juat tell us now, what was that stuff?" "Gee, I don't know." laughed ClownyTbut It worked just like a charm. A voice within our big crock bid me use it Just the way I did. It brought the man to life, so after all there is no harm." Th vnfiitni man then looked around and for a moment he just cinder in your eye; '.' - 4VcY . Na-tion- al v .1 G.O. P. PRIMARY . I r 0 'TJ m2 at 2. Sleep (Coppy catches the wooden man In the next story.) in the are Mr. and Mrs. Alonso lot .of, ., transportation in ' these two used - cars. A . -- 8neese-and-Srif-f- le er d. . : KbMni-ailnde- -- -- ed ' Timpanogos . Fifth Precinct, Parker School. Provo city is - apportioned 23 delegates for each convention as follows: .First precinct, 44 delegates; second precinct, 4 delegates; third precinct SV4 delegates; fourth fifth precinct, precinct. 5 delegates; fl delegates.- . E. H. STREET, Chairman county central committee Mayor John E. Booth of Spanish In response to the urgent sollcitlatlob of his friends throughout the second Congressional District has announced, he would be a candidate for the Republican nomi H.A.PIXON, Temporary city chairman. nation of U. S. Congress at thaR- . C. H. HARMON, publican Congressional Convention Temporary city secretary. to be held In Salt Lake City, August ' Adv 11th. -. .. "Really, You'd Thihk It Was a NOW Is un-us- ed I DODGE COLTE Very good mech-- r anical condition. 1927 CHEVROLET ROADSTER "Spare tire, good finish. A buy at $400.00 Natlvo of WE ARE THE a good time to us clean that heavier woolen Buit for fall. Youll be delighted with its look! of newhe'ss and the cost' is so little. Call 475. AUTHORIZED jl REFINISHERS FOR PROVO North Univ. Ave. -- , 4 . FURNITURE FOR SALE At Sacrifice A high grade Piano In splen did condition. Bargains In all kinds of household furniture at . . 444 EAST SECOND NORTH Phono M7-- W ttah" Mr. Booth was 'born at Spanish Fork. Hla parentaL.are early pioneers coming to Utah in 1870. - His Booth, has held father, Chaa-Wmany prominent positions IH" city, . county and state affairs. He graduated from the grammar and high schools of Spanish Fork, after which he attended the University - of California, AUTO A D S E N Cleaning: Co. 119 Fork - New Suit" " snd-den- ly .. Precinct, Prompt, efficient service. , Blott; He tittered when she dubbed a mashle shot! .. r. Fourth School. : . , Divorced school. Second Precinct, Central. Junior High School. - Third Precinct, Franklin School. i frowned. "I wonder whafs the matter," Bhouted Coppy. "Is he mad? I'll bet that it would be a treat for him to walk upon his feet Let's stand him up and try him out He may not do so bad." The wooden man said, "Say, that's great Come on now, please don't hesitate. . I'm mighty tirettpf sitting dowiv- - Won't someone Jend a hand?" "Oh, my,", cried Carpy. "he can talk. "He's asking us to help hlmwaHc'' And then tbe Tlntes lifted him and showed him how to stand. .. He teetered back and forth a while, which made the little Tinles smile. And then he took a forward step and Clowny- shouted, "Hey, He's started running down that hill. If he should stumble he will spill. I thtnk we'd better catch him now, before he runr away." 8 o'clock. First Precinct, Maeser C0L0E THE PICTURES , dog-hous- e. have been .struck . . upon the head by a blunt, wooden .InA movement has been launched to strument .possibly name a national flower. As a huma rolling-pi- n Amos ble member of the 4.. Dewlap, bualneas Hay-fevclub, we wish to go trader, expired on record as being unalterably op this morning posed to the selection of the golden-ro-- -' at, bis home here. .... .....,-.iMr, Dewlap," who had. been In the . Continued en Page 465 try and . habit of jotting find It! , . down figures on : .. : - Art Shannon. reOJutrsjU. t a h I cwths while hutching , with busmeas The turtle - of the- - Galapagos associates. ' Is be Islands lives to 800 or 400 years lieved to have grown d old because he doesn't think, says at homeland attempted to figure a- - scientist : We're beginning to compound Interest oa hla wife's beat think some people are lying" about damask linen table-clotThe fu- their ages. neral will be beta Wednesday. ... -- Photo by G. M. Taylor. - Men are more intelligent than ' - .. women, says a political writer. MayHow to enjoy all the luxuries of be that 'a why they have to wear traveling by Pullman without. leav- double-breastsuits on hot days L Stlck 'a while the ladies are keeping cool. ing your own home! y- ii 3, 1928, : . i inn Non-wrec- kt . ; '- - - - A'nolher goithdfrn liar . Is Silas 3. McMarden; . He aays be feeds his boarders Ou stuff grown In his garden! ' n, 1 . ... i "According-t- o statistics given In various papers last- winter there there's something wrong with the LEARN ATJTOS LVLOS ANGELES were from two million' to eight milmur n J nil ,n ; and you must ad system but juBt what it la we lEarn $40 andup per week. Any lion unemployed ' X mit that a fair percentage of them don't know tnan can qualify quickly;, iiewlob- would- - wiUingly- - have worked at re we knew "l6years ago when method.- Eaay',-suanything they could have , found wn were voumr and It seemed sim experience training . autoiricch-anlway to big pay as to do.-ple to remake the world overnight "There; must '"'be something j electrician, battery expert," etcr with-thwe have bebut years wrong with the economics of a come despondent about It. -' I i Earn Room and Board while learn- o country as large and as And, LISTEN: The only thing liig. Big Illustrated Auto eoolr as our fair' land when men are to do until Free. Tells (we think sometimes) be to forced Idle and their families everything. Write ' the system is changed is to take In want - .....:-.BAr-40- 04 Antomotfv "Sk; are to. beat as and thinks try they 1 "and then how about the the game aa it Is. ' Los Angeles. Flgueroa, Ad'. y bootleggers political grafters and So forth 7"is society granting them a re ward lor producing prosperity 7 JOHN BOOTH FOR U. S. CONGRESS A Republican primary was held Monat Mra. course. Well Eastman in the Payson city building Mr.. Rockefeller JFord day evening at the call of Chair- Henry.more and . money than they can man Charles H. .White. Delegates have were named for the judicial con- spend but each of them on the other vention to be held at Provo on hand built up a huge machine August 15; for the congressional convention to be held at Salt Lake that gives employment to hundreds of thousands of people both direct on August 11 and for the state indirectly att)gden on August 16. The ly and ana mrs nociceieuer at leasi judiciary delegates are John C. Tayhas given away millions of dollars lor, Mrs, Phoebe Reld, R.. W. R. A. Porter and Mrs. L. D. to scientists and so forth to Sci Stewart. Alternates are W. H. entists who are trying to make the ) Reese, Asa Hancock, Mrs. Martha world easier to live in Kapple, Charles H. White and Earl There ought of course to be no Page. The congressional delegates are Arza C. Page, Mra, P. C. Wight-ma- unemployment in a young country Lee R. Taylor. Mr, and Mrs. like America with most of the -- areMr. world'smoney and many things and Mra. La baa Harding, Mrs. Arza Just aching to be done and as you say, Mrs. Eastman C. Page, Mrs. Lee R. Taylor and Phllo C Wlghtman. CALL FOB BEPVBLICAN The state conventional delegates PRIMARIES are E. H. Street, George Chase, Samuel E. Tayier. Mrs. Julia HanLiockTand Mrs. Lucille Butler. Alter Republican primaries for Provo nates are William Shermer,,' Mrs. city precincts for the purpose of E. H, Street, P. H, Hurst, C. H. naming delegates' to the state Re 1" White and Grant Simons. publican convention to be held In Ogden. Utah, August 16, 1928; to the "Louvian Library Wrecked Again, secqnd congressional, district con says a newspaper headline. What vention to be held at Salt Lake City, Belgium seem to need is a Union August 11, at 2:30 p. m., and to the a j - jse n of " s of the Louvain Fourth Judicial district convention ti to be held in the county court house. Provo, Utah, August 17, 1928. at 2 o'clock p. m., wiU be held at the following places Friday, August ' at the unkind things that are being other embers Of his party; declares that the Italian government wty, investigate the whole thing until all and insists that , the , world reserve j udgment ' .: , theactsr presented ObvwUsly, it Is unjust to form, opinion on scanty knowl edge. But Mussolini hasi only himself laid his compatriots to blame if this has been done. ;., 7::7.rT;, Ever since the Italia crashed theJtaHana hav,e been Srhly secretive. They have allowed widely different ver sions of every. Incident to creep outv Their attitude hns hoi only encouraged the spreading ,b rumors I it has given the pressKMi, rightly at wrongly,. inarmerewas .sometning . , they were trying to suppress. Mussolini demands that: the world reserve judgment until it gets the facts." The world haS A right to demand of Mussolini with equal bluster,, one might the Italiaii government resort to complete frankness. (Copyright 1928) Hewily, folk! ( There U aly one plao nwa4ays hete; yoa can spend a quiet, peaceful va-catioa .without belfig dlabubed by picnic parUf. awlei tourUt, or amateur eaaophunC players. . ' JalL ' Stamps are Interesting and potential little beggars, but few fellows that stamps are prophylactic aye, and prophetic too. The last time I went to town I found son laid out; son is unfortunate be doesn't ' have his daddy's tuff stomach; when, son gets off his feed he is off, and ,"-he is sick from his gizzard to his ears. ., V Summer malaria, sleeping sickness, I don't know what he had, but ha was a wobegone, pitiful little prune for a couple f days.. This kid when he is well is a tuff, bimbo, but when, he gets a tummy ache he wants his ma every minute; an appealing little beggar when he gets 111; just so darn helpless and clinging; I've seen professional nurses on this son of mine; he will get the goat of the hardest-boile- d ' ! 3 ! " nurse on earth.' ' ' So, after 48 hours of grief, son managed to munch . bit of .dry toast, but he had ho Interest In life. - - h a"Wouldn't you like to play with the spider and the web puzzle," said the wife. "NAW!" said son. went to the beeg city's heartand.,talked to'my ' ? jrA.V pet stamp dealer, and told him the situation, and he said: ."This set will interest the boy; it la the most remarkable set I know about" And I bought the tet. ' I a 'k i ana went nome. ana son was an crabbv like, and &MMX-,'izxi the wife and daughter were trying to please him, and HILL BILLY hitting every ball a fouL and I said. "Son. here's n ." good one. Mother shook up his pillows, daughter pulled the covers over' bis feet, a faint gleam came Into the eye of son; he knows that when I say ' 1" it is good, it la good. Then I showed son the Death Mask stamps from Serbia, Quite the most remarkable, stamps ever issued I'll tell you the story about those stamps some time, when you get sick and lose all Interest in life. " And I showed son. and daughter and wife the Inner significance of the Death Mask stamps, and told a bit of a story about how the world -war started, etc., etc., and that boy went to sleep and slept all night ' and Woka up' next morning without fever, with clear eyes, with appetite, . and tfte jirstuiinjjjie demanded was Where s my album?"' Prophylactic T Absolutely, ; l jttszz know PAYSON HOLDS Mussolini, incensed around the house, "either, " . e Wid about Nobile find S i well-to-d- -- . . c, - PROVO-rATinN- l jfV"; . , i Mrs. Eastman writes: "Admitting that, one man'a talent may be far more valuable to society than another'sit still seems to me that the good things of this earth or at least the neceaailifia could be more , equally divided. "The Lord gave eacn or us. a . 24 It in hours with day "The laborer sells eight hours for four or five dollars - "Henry Ford John D. and have more than 24 hours others but they have In their days amassed great fortunes that they never, could really have EARNED In alifetime i , ' - - . . The Herald, backing any presidential candidate, and this editorial is hot to be construed as endorsement for : L: any candidate or policy.) Straw1 votes 'taken by many papers thruout " surprising: strength for M "Smith. They seem to disprove the assertion of politicians that the New Yorker will' be v - "The argument Is all very well far as it goesbut I think it's a bit narrow4n Its scope." . By HELL BOXY . The other day this" Turret of Tur bulence announced it was rather skeptical about the working of so ' " cialism we thought the weakness lay while it might in the fact that a evervona. an bjf possible to gn-equal share of wealth it wouldn t be possible to get jifluequaL con-- 1 tribution of labor from everyone and Mrs. W. E. Eastman who a mother and housewife says . 13.00,.. (Hill Billy's views, tn his daily stories, are his own. They do not, necessarily, coincide with those of this newspaper. EDITOR.) , By Jim Marshall . - felVjli'mi'riii" Prophylactic Stamps THE OBSERVER ... Keep your car looking new. Our workmen are all ex- perts. We repair and - ref inish - furniture City Auto ,Top & Painting Co. PHONE 848 - 432 West CenUr SW Prova Is serving his second term on the National Americanism Commission the - American Legion," whichfor--mulat- es all the Americanism policies of the organization. Outstanding Services Among, the positions he has fill- ed are those, of President of the Spanish Fork . Rotary Club, Director of the Utah County Livestock Show. - He Is a member of the Utah Pharmaceutical Association, Utah Farm Bureau, and Fish and Game Protective Association.'. Because of hia many and varied activities, ho is knowrt in every city of Utah and has gained a national reputation by hia work among the men of America. Successful In bus- -, iness and prominent In civic af.. fairs. Candidacy Interests Political -- , , Former Utah, State Legion Commander During the World , War, Mr. Booth served his country in the United States Army. After returning home, he was instrumental in organizing several American Legion Posts and has . given hia time and service In seeing that the disabled men- - and their families have been properly taken care of. Through his esteemed services, he was. elected State , Commander of the American Legion In 1925 t6 head the 22,000 men of Utah. During his term of State Commander, he visited every city and hamlet of Utah, having charge of the Valslng of the'iWbrld War " Orphans' Endowment Fund. Also Armistice Day was made a state legal holiday under the Legion's Legislative program that year. He has served three years on the National Executive Committee of the American Legion which ranks next in legislative powers to the Congress of the United States. He (Paid Poll Heal - . . Circles Mr. Booth - has always been an active Republican Worker by taking part in primaries, convention and general elections. He was Exe- cutive Committeeman of the Hoover for President' club of Utah. He was a member of the Utah delega- tion at the Republican National Convention at Kansas City, - His record as Mayor of Spanish Fork' commands respect of all, old and .:, :z. young::r :.r. ..; ....... - Mr. Booth has an Intimate knowledge of the trend of the times and what Utah needs, through his extensive travels of the United States. -The announcement of his. candidacy has attracted great interest circles and-h- is record aa a public official and private citizen makes him the leading candidate for United States Congressman ol the Second District. A man of the people and for the people. It Is your duty to attend the :'".'" ,"T ". Primaries rr,; , . itical 1 ".. Advertisement) Wednesdays Saturday's |