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Show 'V-i THE IMlLf HERALD THE HERALD When rea'aae Herald rck Try aa B Want-AJ- s Mr thw MM nt mxi tune yea bun,, un 3KTXGHTft NO 115, JTEAIU 3Pii Daddy Are You?. Which Kind of STRIKE OF GAS - OF IRON ORE CTAI- I- Geaierafly fair soaltfii an J U lem- little Thar' NOW ASKS.FOR ASKS PROTEST FARH BY (M7NMCE SENATOR KING SIMPLE LIFE TO GERMANY Fort Collins Scent of Wild First Car Came From Cedar of Tariff Utah Senator Opposes Return Cows and Chickens, Not PoliRepresentatives Wilhelm of tics, What He Commission Making Study Wants: to Germany.. of Beet Cost Production. ORE TO BE SHIPPED . LARGEST GAS WELL EACH DAY IN FUTURE OF WEST STRUCK" KING TAKES ISSUE INVESTIGATORS ARE WITH PRESIDENT TRAINED FOR STUDY Bhimilar-4oM-ft)ldJro- Boom Ex-Kais- er City, Monday; Second Car, Tuesday. Scramble by Oil Speculators. Praise the iito Ore Daily. Another car of iron ore arrived International News Service. Tuesday over the Union Pacific sys With a roar that could be heard tem from Cedar City to the Colua-- I for more than ten miles, one of the bla Steel corporation plant midway largest gaa wells In the west came between Provo and Springvllle. in yesterday fourteen miles north of The first carload containing 46 Jre. y - Officials of the union Oil of California, declare more to the Ironton plant Monday noon, than 100,000,000 cubic feet of pis as told In Monday's Herald. daily la pouring forth from the well The second car contained more which la sufficient to supply Denver than SS tons of ore. Both cars and alk northern Colorado with were unloaded at the light, heat and fuel. yards at the plant. The ore bins The well is dry which indicates have not been completed yet Work one of long life,, according to offic- on the bins are progressing and ials. This is new territory and news should be completed in the near of the strike caused a rush similar future according to advice from the to those of the gold boom days. plant engineers. Fort Collin hotels are crowded. It is understood that from now on hunthe In stream V Telegrams ore will be shipped continuously speculators, from, the Iron Spring deposits near dreds, land owners, - farmers men from Cedar City to the Provo plant From yo- northern ColoradOr-aouther- n one to two carloads a day will be mlnr nnti Denver crowd the streets. shipped until shortly before the real Oil men beilere this territory will activities at the blast furnace begins a be productive highly eventually when from twelve to fifteen cars a oil district day will be sent from Cedar City. Several carloads of ore are also sent each week from the Iron county deposits to the Torrance, California, corporplant ox the Columbia-Steation. Before the activities of the Iron- ton plant begins next a fall a large supply of Iron ore will be on hand at the plant ao that no delay will be experienced in getting the ore for the furnace. ork on the various building ac tivities is progreslng rapidly and all the various sections of the first President Reported Against of unit of the plant will be ready early Sol on Mellon Stand next spring so that work may com nteore turning out pigiron for the aWs Bonus. various plants t the steel corpora' tlbn. r.FftRftR R. HOLMES International News Service' Staff Corresspoodeot 3iv com-pan- - tire-stor- FOR SOLDIERS r VASHINGTON, Nov. v ' 1 rwholesale-alashin- - gress, on December 4 or & Politics has become so eutwined with the bonus question that all participants are stepping carefully and gingerly around the issue raised by Mellon, which, bolted down, places the Issue in the light of "reduced taxes for a bonus." . With the entire hojise and a third of the senato coming up tor reelection next year, all candidates realize the poteucy of a tax reduction arcument on voters already groaning under a continuation of taxes. At the same Hlme, a majority of both houses are committed, orally and in writing, to passage of the bonus bllL ltuaUon.the Into-this-he-ctic n "legloirtossed today the direct that Secretary Mellon haa de liberately aupplied congress with misinformation concerning tha nation's financial condition. Pointing out that President Harding vetoed the bonoua bill after being informed by Secretary Mellon that the country faced a huge deficit with the legion then reminds President CooUdge that the last fiscal year was concluded with a favorable balance of accu-aatlo- - s -- and a rejection or the oonua. Neither has he indicated that he would approve the bonus bill, which is regarded as certain of passage early In the new congress. It is probable the president's attitude will not be known until the. delivery of his first message to con-- war-tim- e association of the Maeser schoowill hold its initial meeting of the year at the ' school Thursday evening at 7 :30 o'clock. An interesting program has been arranged. Tom Pierpont and Ed Peay will entertain on the saxa- phone and piano. An address, will be given by A. C. Johnson, second vice president of the Parent-Teac- h ers' association. Prof. S. W. Will lams, president of the Home and School association of Provo, will between the speak on home and school. A reading will be given by Mrs. Mrs. Ruth Beulah Hendrlckson. Mumford, school nurse, will speak on the health of the school children, while one of the teachers .will speak on home study. Remarks will be given by 4. W. Farrer. Following lhe programrefresh. The Provo chapter of the Service menta will be served and games will Star Legion met Monday afternoon be played. at the home of Mrs. Ardell Ash- worth Harmon and has as their hon ored guests the Gold Star Mothers of Provo. A delightful music program In eluded a nolo by Mrs. Marie Homer Uedqulst. accompanied at the piano HI NT. By HARRY by Miss Anna Uedqulst ; a trio from NEA Service Writer. the Provo high school. Miss Flor Harvard ence Prlday, violinist. A WASHINGTON, Nov. 14. Olsen, cellist and Clarence Olsen, third party In the field with a wopianist. A tribute to the success of the man candidate for president in Service Star Legion was 'given by 1U24. on a platform of "equal rights Preaidvut Mary Ilulsh Mrs. Prts- as well as equal suffetage for wocilia Swensnn, first president of the men !" Provo chapter guve an inspiring Such is the program suggested byJ State Mrs. Oliver 11. 1'. Belmont, president talk 011 America's heroes. President, Mrs. L. C Potter de- of the National Women's purty, In livered a splendid address, entitled, casv of the innsculimveoiHrolleu "Lest Ave Forget. political organizations do not react Kaeh Gold Star Mother was pre favorably to the equal rights amendsented with a cluster of red aud ment to be submitted to congress white roses and caruntlous. the gifts this winter. , of O. It. Thomas, of the Provo "I expect to see the day," says Greenhouse, this vigorns suffrage, leader, who .After lunch was served the Ser despite her seventy-odyears has vice Star Lcelon and Uold Star the henna hair and pink cheeks that Mothers motored to Pioneer park, go with thirty, "when a woman will where Mrsr Potter led the flag be president of the United States. salute aud a floral xpray was And I'm not expecting to live forplaced upon the bronto tablet bear- ever, either, war But whether a woman candidate ing the names of Provo's world . dead. for president will be projected to complicate-- next year's political puz- tle is up to the men, Mrs. Belmont declares. a The Woman's party, however, nda from congress and the presiWm. E. Baasett, who with his dent enactment and approval of the out legal Inartistic wife appears In concert next admentment wiping men and women kfondav nhtht in College Hall, will equalities between sine aa one of his numbers tha at the coming session, la refused If such amendment nrolocue of "Paillacd.n "Man" about Thia number la a favorite ot all and If both parties clear-cu- t Issue jn the musicians, It la the Clown, Tonlo's making It a Xamona apologia to tha audience. 1924 battle, then a convention of the Mr. Baaaatt's classic Interpretation National Woman's party, following of this number lends new. charm to hard on the heels ot the Republican and Democratic conventions, with a a never old aong. woOne at Mr Baasetf a selections Is platform built by women for women aa standard men and with on the Waves," rrancta Walking "8t result. by Llsst. This Is a picture story, bearers, may be tha "If wa put np a woman candifor aa Mrs. Baasett Diava this diffi cult clastic to perfect la bar inter- - date," aays Mr Belmont,! "aha will be of such a high standard of ability pretatloa, that tha story reveau and Intelligence that men as well as ta the listener. The concert to bo given by these women will vote for her." The election, of a woman presitwo artists la ana of tha finest aver dent, Mr Belmont believe would AffMd to a Provo audience. feminine not result in a " GAME FRIDAY-T- ha administration. Men would be giveu, full recognition, according to their Provo high and Granite ability- - There would be no high school football teama will of sex as, she alleges, meet In the state association . is l game on the B Y. V. on JAU the opposition now existing at field between the sexes, politically," she o'clock. This promises to be one of tha says, "is of opposition by man to woman, not of woman to man. Man most Interesting and exciting has not yet admitted Woman's equalgames ot tha season. ity, although he hla granted equal Parent-Teacher- ARMISTICE DAY tocome-fax- ea rf 300,-000,0- - "It was unfortunate," said a fetter the legion sent to Representative Green, of Iowa, chairman ef the ways and means committee, "that a high government official occupying the position aa head of tha government's financial admin titration will deliberately and officially supply Inaccurate and statements to congress for lta official oat la drafting feglala-tloaBale-leadi- ." . Concerning Meilon's new tat program, the legion letter aayti "Hla (Meilon's) purpose la of He wants to course apparent again fool tha people because ha wants to ret their backing, under misapprehension of fact for hla plan to reduce the mlUlonalrel taxes, as ha Is forced to Include tha ux -- reduction little fellow - la hla plana. - WOIIII -- . . I Inft?"am a MEET HERE GRANDFATHER V s V 11 The father of lS children,' the. grandfather of .160 children, the AGREE ii I of, li)U children of and the children, making him a progenitor of r.S4, xf whom 3KI are living. Such' Is the record of William Jex, . the SianisU Fork patriarch, 02, who mlilreswd the students ot the Brlg- ham Yoiin uiilvcrsity at the nooiM hour today. I know that God lives and hears the prayers of hl'j and niiMivr 1:1 111." llii' sturdy vcl- ?.in U'liiiiiit1; Ills repwrks.' "X lmvc live I Ionu ciioiu'li to npujcciate yoiuisj K'opic up pit'i'iiito. Hie lil invrs" yiiii enjoy,''. T I . WW tU'H.-iiv- "7!.-1...- i . . i 1 a i 1 Ii,. niW-- 'l i 11 y dlscrlrai-natlonKcau- Friday-afterno- ''' i ,1 now-true- " - It i' I I - fc r - - N II r ill! i- - oil 4. i liinc n:ui'iii H. r.rlniliiill. 1 v. nirn 01 11 4hiui or neaueu weiv.ln tne peuclcnuury tall n .l II v pcrioucivi iiumImt of incidents. The president puid trllnite to the Jex nihil d t.n. llil ,llnnn'n linii'u I. l,.t mm itiii ...n.nfru.ra ,xt tllA .ll,V,.tl Til. CLERKS u 1 u:.,lA .vv STAGE-THEI- R OWN SEE ,'. For some centuries, or since the first, store was opened and the first 4- , merchant hired his first clerk, it i ' A has been a much mooted question whether the merchant or bis clerks for the were, more responsible store's success. "The clerks are, of course." That's one answer, by the clerk's, IMFS TO FULL EgUALITY. CamPaiu.x THB,"BIG THREE" IN THK WOMAN'S of course. RIGHT, MBS. O. HrPr BELMONT, ALICE PAUL AND MAUD IOUN GEIt. But tbaf dwso't ctid thergu-ment- . intensive campaign for action optimistic, fighting suffragist main excepttug, again, of course, But recognition of full an ns fjir ns the clerks are concerned. nJlttv in politics; legal, will he begun, the famous suffrage j taUS) mme womnn will sit there. of congressmen beiug equ"lny,,7;..I a n.iifiMinns for Now, however, the argument Is to . When that day cornea, she be-- bo carried still farther. Into actual to bear.' Should, this fall, the major polltl ii,.vi.. the Krentest Kten forward will experiment at otic Provo. store. come." ' Manager Asht'in of Irvine's tne cat I ' hnv bee., taken toward harmonious r, , , ' to his clerks that possibly " " " International peace, and good will. WanWs Party will bo dis - " there was some truth in their argu- roemlieraof ,. MMCdin.ilctall.to Tn. em tu io,,t,.ri.1v-:n,Khiv nra f,t ii,., nieiit flnyiiow, hell Hue to strinjxut-nwnThen Iook out for tho Womeu's national, state ana wcai prove 11 rit;ui. im ii,iiKhmei,t nf n Wn"ninn' I'.ini and tie rest of tho at a conierencu iu pBrty wnvcntlon and a woman can- to, .which, will com- - miresen ! Uirln cl'Tlcft- rbnni tn produce of I ompn. on sr.lo Ut Troyot Sponsored,- . On Ndv. 17 a delegai , , .utanfr. Vartl,Bst(, dirci-teand managed by headed For tha 'right to sit in the presl - jouslv with eonarcHs. to discuss, mi- ilciks. I'ranclsco. Alice Je.u uU is," "It Advertising cxplnlned Irwin and other f nt'Xli. omcn wnlch are w,w rKut8" ft,r inri Me.1lrely. I.itcn.i.tloi.nl affairs M.tnuger ficoit. "a test to see If will call on rrrnu the fighting. Mrs, Itejmont .rejuluOj OS. ttud Intornallunal rlwkn can put arrora a alio- - nil submit a plea for 1hclr bns Tl(:ilt ariultJ Th(,t grunt womnn'a vlewpiiliit. ' ' cd. 'And Aimadiur before kmc. tlietuseics. without any hi,wx tror, ' admendment this lilghor-up.'- ! . With ;the convening of congress, . (Ctpyrlghtrlfl23 NTA Service, Inc.) 1 1: ...,' a .if tni "' card-catalo- g r'CTiiooiiWl s ,;: r1..' d Ita,,, w . y uu-ut,- Hyt m ?,,,, I vMJn Stt w during the first Ill the-fli- LITERARY -- CLITJ MEETS. Professor Alfred Osmond wlH read 3ullns Ceasrr to the first meet-tn- e of the B T. Literary - club on Thursday Nov. 15 at 4 ulrt In Collet llall. Each year the student bmiy Is of fetd a number, of tliesa rare the FhnkTierian lira LlPesIdM lctures and readings which co rive cfwb year at thu B. Y. IT. InvJleJ" toviirtoiis rrcf,70!)"lo"l pnfts of tbc VtatT w read befyro iilovary aocletlik on Pnsides belnif i .authorityHbnkesnesr, Prof, Osmond fa by4r1 ' . pnrt of IhHremlier wrll also bo dla--; cussed at the lueetlnL'. Considera- - , tioii will ulso be given the collection nf ileliiHpicnt fees, many member not having as yeTTpatd tUelr feea for the past year. The newly organized state tax organization will lie explained to tha directors and three- - committeemen from rtnh county will be selected to represent the county organisation-i- n this new association. The method . of financing the committee will bo ; divided apon; at tho meet tag, Reports from the county representatives who attended the wheat convention at Kansas City and tha beet convention at Denver will also lie given.. President L. L. Bunnell attended the. .Kansas convention, ; while H. W. Gore, vice president ot the organization, represented tha I'tnh County Farm Bureau, at the . Denver meeting. It Is expected that every local farm bureau will be represented at the county meeting gaturday- r-- ' 1 de-m- SEMI-FINA- I'rcsi'iii iit luimrviy Xr i iut'Tc.-ti'il- .' ii'-l- l One of the most important meetings of the directors of the Utah County Farm Bureau will be held la Provo Saturday,- - November 17. Tha meeting will be called at the court house at one o'clock. x The outstanding question to be discussed at the meeting wilt be the ineorKratlon of the various' 'farm A bureau locals of the county. rangements are now being completed to have all these locals iucorporated to the laws of I't.lh SO .' that the locnls will, lie permitted to"; do cimperalive buying and selling ' nit,! conduct other business in the' state. Kollowlng the Incorporation . of the locals the county organization will also be IncoriMirnrrd. The niiiwlgn for new member- sliips in the orsanlisnlion which 1 l!i save a number ltf of life in which tin1 j d it-l- f important Meeting of Farm Boreau-- to . Be, HelcL Jn Provo, Saturday. MAYHAVEOWNPRKIDENTLAIGANDIDATE - OPERA NUMBER TO BE FEATURED hveriTw FARMERS JO WILL F ORM NEW PARTY UNLESS DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS semi-fina- SCHOOL NEEDS DISCTSSED. Superintendent H. A. Dixon will deliver an address to the Provo Klwanls club at the weekly luncheon Thursday at Hotel Roberta- - on The Needs of Provo City Schools." , spe-cla- T The ' ident CooUdge, for the time being, has adopted a policy of watchful neutrality in the open warfare that Secagain has broken out between Andrew W, retary of the Treasury Mellonr and the " American Legion nror the soldiers' bonus. The president haa not placed his CL on the Mellon program lor a 1 MAESER PARENTS SCOUT HEAD GOES CONDUCTOR IS MEET THURSDAY LAID TO REST SERVICE STAR Pres- 14. r OIL8, Prussian Silesia, Nor. 14 CorrespoDdeot thiuga WASHINGTON. Not. 14. The "Cows and chickens are the former-Crown rrr Y-United States government should for mo not politics," said i L6i5o?eitn Mia Frlederlch Prince Wilhelm, exert all the power at its command in a talk with International New to prevent the return of the former Service correspondent upon- - hla kaiser to Germany', even as a private estate. Ha characterised It as hi Democrat Senator of citizen, King, declared today. He took Is - "Our work hag beenjseryjnuch Utah, princel was happx to ' sue President with Coolidge and beIhe hastened by the support that has back in hla old home with blf of on State this Hughes been given us by the farmers of Secretary family. Wilhelm walked over nil this section," said Mr. Funk. "The point estates and chatted with servant been announced this that has It first. day we were in Provo we inHe found everything In goor order, terviewed 17 farmers in less than a government would not protest the but Buffering from the general wave return. kaiser's day, which Is unusual. The study of depression caused by Germany! of the former "A return emporer," economic here Is being made under the coand financial collapse.' ' operation with County Agricultural King skid, "even under a pledge to as a private citizen, aa am here "I German to remain P. the government Welch, who has assign Agent J. I said before," con- have ' repeatedly would out to ed different farmers political affairs, probably assist us in wniJT JUm infi.m tlnued Frlederich Wilhelm. "I am h our work in each locality." not Interested In politic Previously to coming here, the Europe and perhaps the world." "I plan to lead a simple isolated summonth have three this similar Investigators King spent gathered life, devoting my whole attention to information from the beetgrowers mer in Germany and Russia. my family and my farm. It would of Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio and "While there is in Germany a Ka I a Hia hlroeat tvtfurihtA aervteA tA 1IIA WvsS" wjMflK Colorado. kvy V the ;Studyf genera tha Is "to collect reliable and detailed er monarchists, lOreaaOunrleave me alone; lung explained, Information on the cost of growing "there remains, however, the immi-ne- t I cannot make an extended statav ment It would embaraaa me." : . sugar beets in connection with facdanger that "this man of straw" tory costs so as to enable the tariff If he returns, may again become a The crown prince was as happy aa ' commission to give a comprehensive national leader and a most sinister a school boy after, a night'a sound report to the president and con- figure for the peace and harmony sleep beneath hla own roof top. He arrived In a big open motor gress regarding the sugar beet In- of the world. Scout Executive A. A. Anderson Muel-de-r, dustry in this country with "In this situation, it la the duty car, accompanied by Adjutant left last week to attend an Intensive his aide and a political police reference to the beetgrowers of all lovers of liberty in America Funeral services of Thomas M. and the public in general. training school for Scout executives to do everything to prevent the col official, who had met the party at . .1 1.1 at Oakland, California. This school Burke, conductor on the Utah, Rail 4 mt.. il me new uitt&iug lue Hiuuy in lapse of the existing government Ot Lthe frontier, as well as a personal is conducted by the National Council this county consists of W. C. Funk, Ebert. friend. under the auspices of the Executive way who died at Portola, California, G. A. .Billings, and F. H. Wilhelm' s daughters, who 'had Shellcdny, "An overthrow of the present govwhile his week last t Committee of the'. Twelfth' returning region who were formerly in the cost probeen waiting Impatiently for him Arizona,' home Jn Provo, were held In the duction section of the United States ernment, more shaky and unstable foT two days, ran out to meet him, California, comprising . now than ever before, means only . Utah and Nevada. Catholic church Tuesday." Father .1 u. uk ru Miiwire aim banging upon his arms and smiling Besides "better equipping the old' J. G. Delnire Officiated. TT1h monarchy pr up Into his fBce.WilheIm had dif fl-- 7 experience executives for the various tasks, this The musical selections were ren this type of work ; H. 8. Brossard, Ger- culty in freeing his arms to emschool is for the training of men dered by Murray Roberts. a Lokuu boy and a trridunte of the would follow an overthrow, the brace his wife. who are desirous of qualifying for A large number of friends and rel- Utuh Agricultural college who has man people, swayed by emotion, As soon as the automobile drove, such a position. There are about atives attended the services. Inter- been county agricultural agent and hate and fear, might easily be led to the castle gates, they through 150 councils throughout the couiitry ment was in the .Provo cltjrfeemetery agriculturist for a sugar company follow the former kaiser, or the banged shut, frustrating the reportCombe a would for opened path which are looking for several and knows under 4he direction f. the Berg years sugar ers waliigoutslde. trained and qualified to fill the posi- Mortuary. leet practice thoroughly: William munistic revolution thafonlyHniy Wilhelm' s room was fuledwtth-flower- s tion of executive and courses simi J. Kurtz, who was raised on a beet opinion, would engulf Germany, sent by friends and neighlar to this will be held in all the farm in Michigan, .is a graduate of Bulgaria, Hungary and the Balkan bors. BABY GIRL ARRIVES. ' other regions' to train men to fill Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bachman re- the MicbiKan Agricultural college state as well." were Communists declared King a aud these vacancies. hud bus few from their ceived word this morning years experiAll the executives of the four son Elwood In Snlt Lake, of the ar- ence In detailed farm cost account- well organized In Germany, ready to revolt at a moments notice. councils of Utah are in attendance' rival of a fine baby girl, born this ing. at this school. Indicating that the morning at the Holy Cross Hospital Monday aud Tuesday the study men comprising the councils are de- The mother and baby are reported was conducted at Provo, Lakeview and Vineyard, aud Wednesday they GREAT-GREA- T sirous of bringing to their districts to be getting along nicely. were in Payson. They will viBlt thejery test a ndl la test thaLis 0 be obtained so that thus great pro- zenshlp training will be more effec- - each community In the county ' to get a thorough report of the cost gram of character building and cltl- - tive. ..,v el BONUS 0 International 86rka.t New " nnd-busln- ess FAVOR (Copyright IKS by By KENNETH CLARK. . Interaatlonal News Senrka BUff 1 ex-cro- age cooQdgemay Ex-Cro- The beetgrowers of the Provo, Lakeview and Vineyard section have in every way pos sible with the government - experts who are here representing he United States tariff commission to ascertain the cost of producing beets, according to w.- C. Funk, in charge of the investigators' work i ' FRIEDERICK WILHELM INTERVIEW "LAST" TIME Return Would Ignite Spark TB Be Happy If the Press That WnnM Inflame. Says - Leaves Me Alone," Senator Says. Prince. Ex- - LJen4eiyComtxJKent and Farmers. IS Carloads of Iron Days Now Reported. 3 w AIDED IN WORK HAS ARRIVED BRffiCSGROWD , COSTEXPER SECOM) CAR 1C0LOARD0 -, and first delivered in the homes. Firt in hews, first In circulation, tint in advertising, J THE TTEATIira A 7 .of tta cc-- 4. f |