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Show J E DAILY id jcsimct 00-7:- 33 : NO. 20. VOL XXXVIL HI 1CP ALD PROVO, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1922. ,UM THE DAILY HERALD'S OFFER. The Daily : Herald will be sent, free of cost to the misProvo and sion subscribers, to all missionaries leaving Springville this year, and who go to missions within the United States. The offer is not extended to foreign lands beIn return The cause of the postal treaties now in force. Daily Herald will ask the mission readers to write an occasional letter for publication in The Daily Herald telling of their work in mission! fields. All Provo and Springville missionaries may receive The Daily Herald by sending name and address, together with their recent Provo or Springville address to The Herald office. . .This service may be done for :kam hv thoir Barents here, or in Snrint ille. ' I I The following young people of Provo leave today for A 'mission work for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y 7 fSaints, one, Clifford Cook, going to Great Britain, the other A five going to eastern states: VJf Clifford Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cook of the ' it is a subject for thought of all those Provo men and women who had hoped to see a complete daily newspaper published m this city, the only city of its size that until April 15th last had no daily newspaper of its own. The literal forcing of subscribers of a Provo to subscribe for the Salt Lake Telegram by this combination plan may make it more difficult to establish a complete newspaper service of Provo production, a thing The Herald management hopes to do. This giving of a Provo newspaper in the effort to increase the circulation here of the Telegram may halt for a time The Daily Herald's progress-inclu- ding POST PUBLISHING COMPANY, telegraph and more complete county news but The above letter has been received by some local subThe Herald still is confident that the vast majority of Daily scribers of the Post, and is self explanatory. It means, we Provo citizens look with favor upon the daily newspaper for infer that the newspaper of Provo now is link- Provo and will continue to subscribe for and read the Provo ing up in a circulation way, at least, with a daily (Telegram) of Salt Lake C5ty. Whether this combination extends into newspaper which in a week prints double the amount of Provo news printed in any other newspaper, and prints more ;. ownership or editorial policy is not announced. news of Utah county than all other papers of the county The Herald does not know if this circulation combina- combined. tion is aimed at the circulation of the Desert News in Provo, The Herald does not ask you to subscribe for a or at the Daily Herald ; possibly at both. It probably will Salt LakeDaily newspaper, nor does it attempt to take you from result in greater circulation effort on the part of both The either the Desert News or the Tribune, but hones, and is Deseret News, already strongly entrenched in the hearts and hard, to make this one county daily a newspaper suffiminds of Provo people, and The Daily Herald, which now has trying ciently interesting that you will subscribe for and read The a circulation SEVENTY-FIV- E PER CENT LARGER than Daily Herald for what it has to offer you and not because the circulation of any other newspaper published in Provo; you are getting it for nothing along with some other city's a circulation as large, we believe, as the combined circula- newspaper. tions of the next two largest newspapers published in this The Daily Herald realizes, as every business :nan must, county. that the present effort of the Post to increase the Provo cirThe Daily Herald is confident that the combined Provo culation of the Salt Lake Telegram will result in so many circulations of the Post and the Salt Lake daily more Provo people reading advertisements of Salt Lake rewill not equal the circulation of The Daily Herald by five tail businesses and will naturally result in taking to Salt hundred. Lake City trade which should go to the business establishSo, then, it is not a matter for our circulation worry, but ments of this city. warni iiffavtaim a i ipavph, rnnRV Tor i i Miss Margaret Thomas F. Pierpont era states. Miss r ItTpht isnTfnn Pierpont, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. of the First ward, leaves today for the Elsie Ross of the Third ward leaves today for the stern states. '. Leon White, son of Mrs. Joseph White of rd, leaves today fjor the eastern states. the Manavu Lamar Bird, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orson Bird of the ward, leaves today for the eastern states. IThird the Fifth ward leaves today for the Edith Johnson of Eastern states. JUNE CASTLETON VANISHES i LECTURES , semi-week- semi-week- GOLDEN RULE By ROY GIBBONS. 28. Jeanne June CHICAGO. D'Arc of pedagogy! Margaret A. Haley of this city - ORATOR committee appointed by Hill's magazine ha3 awarded the Napoleon Hill Golden Rule medal to Dr. B. J. Palmer, head of the Palmer School of Chiropractic, of Davenport, Iowa. The medal is the first of a series that .will ba awarded to those who are rendering the greatest .KerviceU to humanity based upon the Golden Rule. The purpose of the award Is to popularize the application of the Golden Rule to business and in dustry. The decision to award the medal to Dr. Palmer was based largely on the number of votes he received. He led the other three chief candidates by more than 150,000 votes, many of which came from foreign countries, Japan, Italy, tngiana, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Woodrow ' Wilson ran second to Dr. Palmer and then followed Harriet Luella McCollum, the lecturer on applied psychology. The gold medal was designed by sculptor, Adolph the On one side were the Wolff. words: "The Greatest Among Ye Shall Be the Servant of All." On the reverse side, "B. J. of Daven- port, for Serving the World Through "Throughout the Scriptures Napoleon toevease. How? By fighting for it. Federation Officials. Her official title is business representative of the Chicago Teachers federation, an organization which she aided in establishing. Her long series of battles for better pay and working conditions 0 ( 1 1 i IT l 40 1 I , i ( be-th- j ' 1 good fre- .1: 'light that shineth unto the perfect day,'" Mrs. McGraw said. "In the days of th prophets it oftimes glowed with a noontide clearness and again, as Mrs. Eddy says in 'Science and Health,' Its gleams seemed 'dim and distant, gray In the sombre hues of twi- way. "This is one of the most beautilight. In our Master's time It burned a clear and steady flame, en- ful spots in all the world," Dr.' "I am astonished, lightening all who came within its Dixon said. radiance. though, that bo few people are here : : "Today, we feel that this light of today." A mere half dozen persons were pure and perfect understanding between Uod and man shines very standing within the snowdrifts at clearly In Christian Science, the the foot of the cascades as Dr.'. topic upon which our lecturer, Mr. Dixon took snapshots of the waterEzra V. Palmer, C. S. B mem- falls and other scenic spots to sho-- r ber of the Board of Lectureship of New Yorkers a small portion of the Mother Church, the First what Utah county has to offer the Church of Christ, Scientist, in Bos- sight seeing tourist. Dr. Dixon was the guest of Dr. ton, will now address you; it gives me great pleasure to introduce Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Potter on his trip-t- o the Timpanogos country. Palmer." Wildwood to the cas--, Mr. Palmer spoke substantially cades wasfrom hiked by Drs. Dixon and as follows: "People agree that God is Spirit Potter, Mr. C. C. Hoag, a Herald reporter and some boys. and that Spirit is omnipotent, "There should be a thousand peo-and omnipresent. They agree on these three great funda pie here today," Dr. Dixon said. "If mentals because they are taught In this was within a hundred miles of the Bible, and because on no other New York these' mountains and basis can we conceive of a Supreme canyons would be crowded with Being. We cannot divide God's human beings." Dr., Dixon inspected the Boy power and still have 1 Ira supreme, and if His power is divided, to Scoats field, given to the Boy whom will we assign the power Scouts of Utah by John R. and P. Stewart. taken away from God? It we assign Scott " Awonderful place for boys," he it to another agency called evil, we divide ths universe; the one God, said. "There should be a troop or the great I AM would no longer be two of the scouts camping here all new troops coming as the supreme, and there would be two the time, powers arrayed against each other, others are finishing their outing. the powers of good and evil with More use should be made of this the result a universe of con- wonderful outdoors. There should flicting forces, of chaos and dis- be summer homes all through this order. Christian Science accepts area, with playgrounds for the and teaches these three great veri- youagstera..and4ilaygJiiO'iS Jtot ties of Spirit, omnipotence, omni the older people, too." It was explained to Dr. Dixon presence, omniscence, not tneoreti- that midway between Wildwood cally nor abstractly, but as living! and Aspen Grove a new community realities, and it teaches that in the is already ' funda- of summer homes understanding of these mentals lies the solution, of all planned. This is just off the Tim- - ' human problems. Thus if a Chris- panogos road at a point known as tian Scientist faces sickness, he Stewart's Flat, where two cabins relies on the omnipotence of God have just been finished and more to heal It; if he faces a condition are being planned. The North Fork Investment comwhere ignorance prevails, he turns to God and relies on the omniscence pany now is staging a contest to of God find the best name for the new the infinite This to supply him the wisdom and summer home community. same company now proposes to light to meet the situation.' If evil flood an area of sunken land for a seems to. hold sway, he know that universal lagoon, for boating and bathing, God - is omnipresent, and to reopen a saw mill long goM, and that the divine presence so that real forest cabins can I is st hand to destroy evil . standing; "On the other hand, the adher be built out of timber now ents of current religious teachings on the land. Isaac Wadley, contractor, has ; do not as a rule rely wholly upon and all finished work on the Timpanogos the uuu n. is in ueiusr cuuuiuou knowledge of God. If sick, tlieyjroau will usually rely upon drugs or. now uiau u cei woo. iuu ia iuo other material means and turn to, wfirir i niiHriHKHii iiv ihh rrnvn God only as a last resort when hope Kiwanis club, and makes Aspen more accessible to the motor of relief from other sources has Grove like- ing tourist. And so, vanished. utterly wise, the materially minded are prone to rely on human means for help when disaster appears instead of turning unreserveaiv to God. SPRINGVILLE, June 28 Funsral. They rely on others, trust to human will and human ingenuity to aid services were held for Sarah ' J. them, although experience has Johnson Carter in the Fourth ward proved time and again that these 'material agencies afford no sure chapel Sunday afternoon, presided it- th j (': n 'IS If I I : i dis-use- d, and genuine relief. The teachings of the Bible are perfectly clear on this point. Over and over again, the Scriptures call men to rely wholly on God for every 'Put not your trusi m need. princes;' 'Woe to them that go down to Egypt for help;' 'seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness,' are ome of the admonitions of the Bible. The great difficulty mortals have experienced in the past is that they have not seen clearly the difference between relying on Spirit and on human The acinerems 01 scuoi-asti- r agencies. theology and the materially minded have failed to grasp the real meaning of the First Commandment, "Thou shalt have no other gods before me.' They have not made a clear eisuncuon ' nvpr hv ftiHhnn (1. Rnv Mavpnnlr The speakers were Bishop May- .o3s. who read a biography of her life; John S. Boyer, Bishop O. B. nuiitiugton and J. W. Dangerfield. Musical numbers were furnished by the Coffman brothers and sisters quartet and a solo by Miss Melba Condie. The invocation was offered Bishop W. K. Johnson and benediction by Alva Zabriszie. matter and Spirit. Christian universe are mental and spiritual. nut the five corooreal senses do .?ot see spiritual things; to them. Spirit and spirituai things do not exist; they cognize the opposite 01 spirituality, the false bener or a matter world and a matter creation. Seeing only material things, the objectification of his own corporeal senses, the materially minded man relies on these instead of turning his gaze Spiritward and depending wholly on God. A man has made a treat discovery when he learns to rely on spiritual sense instead of physical. Through spiritual sense. man learns that he is immortal and perfect. Spiritual sense gives man (Continued on Page Four.) :. by J." Allerman dedicated the grave. Mrs. Carter is survived by four) children, 20 grandchildren, 25 great- - grandchildren, two brothers, Rubin ' and George James, and two sisters, s Mrs. bmma jonnson Koiia and Mrs. Jabez Dangerfield, of Provo. - UTAH STAKE n Science draws a clear and unmis takable line of demarcation Between the eternal things of Spirit and the false evidences of the physical senses. God Is bpirit, as Jesus declared, and man and the , the' W. SPRINGVILLE, SEVENTIES. June 28. Eldof! Seymour B. Young spoke to the , seventies conference of the Utah, stake Sunday afternoon in the Sec- -' ond ward. Ia the evening the four wards dismissed their sacrament meetings and assembled - at the--opera house, where Dr. p.-- g. Harris, president of the Young university of Provo, spoke on the subject of priesthood and its activities. - BROKEN BACK; - iU i well-know- - "If I had this within a hundred-mileof New York City, I could sell it for fifty million dollars," declared "Dr. Frederick W. DUon,: recreational expert of .Community; Service, Inc., New York City. . Dr. Dixon made the above Assertion the moment be came within eyesight of Stewart's Cascades- and surveyed the beautiful Timpanogos country for miles around. It w'a his first visit to Timpanogos and the first sight of all that area abounding so plentifully in scenery the like of which a New. Yorker never sees unless he travels ome thousand or more miles from Broad- quent mention is made of that 'liirut that shineth la a dark place,' the Pioneer park following the parade. Mart Rollance, commander of post No. 13 of the American Legion, will be marshal of the day and will assist E. A. Mitchell, chairman of brought her into national promi the parade committee, in arrang nence. ing the parade. Whenever called upon, she has Dr. George H. Brimhall will be to San Francisco, New journeyed the orator of the day. A male quarYork. Boston and other cities to ditet under the leadership of Prof. rect the fights of school teachers in Franklin Madsen will sing a few those places for a square deal. selections. W. C. Bradford of the And Margaret Haley Just loves a ' v Community Service, Inc., will lead good scrap. in community singing and the va "I've been in plenty of them," rious numbers on the program will she says, "but up to. date there's be interspersed with music by the not a scratch on me. Provo band. "For my teachers," Miss Haley Mrs. Fern Broadbent Ercanbrack has foresworn marriage and sacrias "Goddess of Liberty" will read ficed other comforts, "until free dom Is achieved freedom from the Declaration of Independence after which will be staged a Hag fear of authoritv and political domi- nation," she says. pageant arranged by Dr. Fred W. ChiroDractic." Dr. Palmer's popularity was due ii JUNE CASTLETON. 56 Battles Royal. Dixon of the Community Service, which of NEA V to the spread chiropractic Service. The fires of romance soon burred Inc. "The fighting schoolmarm" fig- . D. I BOSTON, June 28. June Castle- D, his father, sun- was discovered by ures she has been mixed In 56 . . themselves out, however, and Dan The celebration Will begin at . fin hai 1 i rise with flag ceremonies at the Palmer, and developed by himself. major engageraents and scores of ir" "a vauiBuea, leaving leanui and Jessie parted. to her parents and to Dan J jptes and county grounds by troop Doctors of chiropractic and their minor scrimmages during her 0 MARGARET A. HALEY. over America and But Dan kept up his friendship city J llaswell. 11, George A. Brattan, scoutmaster, patients from all years of constant vigil. literalcountries I June is a member of the from of many the foreign members Ziegfeld R. Besides and at Pioneer park by troop 8, "Sally" with other championing teachers, ly bombarded the editor of Napo- Miss Haley is also interested in the pmpany or was, until she spoke being especially nice G. Smith, scoutmaster. productions, telewith Hill's leon of magazine her high regard for Dan to Miss CastletOE. penly According to Chairman E. A. development and welfare of women HAVEN'T FOR asweii. Mitchell of the parade committee, grams, letters and special petitions, generally. She was one of the of be the In Palmer Dr. manager Caswell Is a Clevelander and heir consequence movers in the suffrage movethe parade will be divided into five requesting that a considerable fortune. He mar the "Sally" company which has sections: patriotic, civic, produc- awarded the first medal, which prime ment. he led Jessie Reed of the "Follies" a been having unpleasant times in tion, transportation, and distribu- convinced the committee that "I want teachers to have better YEARS; WILL MEET was the popular choice. Bar or go ago. after a courtship Boston gave Miss Castleton no- tion. conditions and better working pay ofiat warmed the hearts of Broad-ay- . tice. This is the first medal ever mean better Among the organizations to parbecause such the world based teachers," says things Then she vanished. Miss Haley. ticipate in the first section are the fered for service toRule. A similar Sorosis club, the Nineteenth Cen- upon the Golden "And better teachers mean be'ter tury club, Relief society, Civil War medal will be awarded periodically children. Woman's Relief Corps, as a means of directing the atten"It is for the children I am really A unique family reunion v.ill be II. KING veterans. ERNEST BAI16ERGER SENATOR Indian War veterans, Service Star tion of the world to the possibili- fighting. I love them even if I of the Bower family, originally that the who all to apply Legion, American Legion, the Elks, ties available haven't any of my own as I wish of Bower, Neb., which meets in this the Odd Fellows, and the United Golden Rule in their business and I had." The plan Commercial Travelers. professional dealings. WILLING TO city for several days, beginning The sports for the day has been was originated by "Golden Rule 5. August in the left under the direction o Dr. Fred Hill," who began his career NEARLY CHERRIES Five brothers and five sisters of W. Dixon. The committee working coal mines of West Virginia and B. H. Bower, nurseryman residing AGAIN, with Dr. Dixon has decided to aban- gives the Golden Rule credit for his don the old traditional sport pro- rapid rise to an influential position at Seventh South and Third West READY EOR SALT LAKE CITY, June 28 All gram of races, etc., and has decided in American journalism. street, will be his guests. All of SALT LAKE CITY, June 28. as to the position of United on something new. The plan is doubt the brothers and sisters have never HI Oct T) n t I. n ABP. Dixon. ...nnnAM States Senator William H. King now being worked out by Dr. been together bfore curing the last W a very laree majority of the regarding his attitude towards In the afternoon an exhibition base- SUTTON STAGES SALE istrlct primary elections held last nomination for a second term in ball game will be played between 40 years. All of them are now over light to select delegates to the the United States senate was set the Timps and the Springville io years of age. comChina and The Sutton Tea Lake coutty Republican con- at rest yesterday when intimate league team. This game will begin "Strawberries this year have! Tne family ls gcattered all over pit an stages tention morning no Saturday pany o known made win ooudi clock and 4:15 senator at this of the friends Saturday morning of unique in character brought more money than any the United States. One will come PWk. While hut f.,w of the m-his willingness to again accept the be preceded by a game between the aluminum sale in according strawberry crop before," said J. P.inere from Seattle, Wash., and an- and proportion, large of the kid teams city. tw? delegations received formal Democratic nomination. inner irum mauu, ria. Sutton. to Lynn Manager of frnm tha mcmhArl Welch, county agriculture agent, The senator, his friends declare, "Every piece of aluminum that this morning. Party, it was clear from the re- - would personally prefer to retire to be offered is guaranteed for yield, but this is due to the fact that DOUBLEHEADERTODAY will 1JM obtained from all of the city private life and resume the prac"Ana wnne strawoemes are sun ta manyother peach sections of the 20 years," Mr. Sutton said. "This fua&ries and a large number of tice of law. but in view of the presSow in the is going to be the biggest aluminum bringing money to the grower cher- - country the yield is below normal, outlying parts of the sure brought to bear by members of ries are ripening," Mr. Welch poin-- - making for a higher price. The Blue Birds battle on the dia sale ever held in Utah county." awity that the Bamberger forces the party, his friends declare that The same sort of sale in Eureka ted out. "The first of the cherry) "Excepting the Jonathan the r won a distinctive victory and he will permit his name to go be- mond at Tlmp park this afternoon last an hour, a crop will be on the market before apple yield of this country will be fol probably have the support of fore the convention. (weather permitting with tne Amer- last week did not worth of alumi- July 1. and at about the same time good. Jonathans appear a little e dollars' two we than 80 per cent of the 310 The thousand team. kid It is doubtful if Senator King ican Express 20 sold within ware will num baseballlsts being Ablegates tn tha Mimlv onnvanXnn raspberry crop will begin com-- , low the normal yield, of state youthful clubs will be in Utah prior to the store of the "Wheat will go above the normal doors to market. These two crops the after in? minutes first the starting aZ1 red delegations and some convention when nominations for play4 two games, agent alone will bring thousands of dot- - yield, and probably will total a half senate and for congress will be at o'clock, according to Manager ooened. A manufacturer's a million bushels hi the county. The will have charge of the sale at the lars to growers of this county. young son. made, but at the last moment it is Bill Boshard's will "The apricot next in ripening will wheat stand is excellent. Sugar Riittnn Tea and China store, the be: The lineup J the other two principal can- - said that he may una it possioie 10 Bluebirds Martin, lb; G. But- doors beine opened at 9 a. m. at be a small crop, when compared beet crop will be good considering r tor nomination for United be here in person. with other fruit yeilds. But hardly the curtailed acreage, but the price "We will sell aluminum ware tle, rf; Roberts, c; L. Buttle, 2b; .lenator- - to only one district, wholesale of will the cherries disappear than the will not be as high as the growers the prices half cf; Boshard, Hedquist, prices BAD CHECK 3b; FINE FOR Hughes, ? ! Daid in the past," Mr. Sut peaches will come on, and this year had hoped for. I 9,.- have Smoot p. If; Ray, p; 3. H. Ivle accused of issuing "r " congressional csn-- r Bih. e. "But this sale lasts only Utah County will harvest the larg- - "I am very optimistic about the That district adopted a worthless check, this morning plead Express Hardy, ss; Robinson, ton said. stock is exhausted, which est crop in its history. Peach prices crops of this county this year. It's the until riBUoa endorsing E. O. Leather- - miltv In city court and was fined 3b; Olsen, 2b; Marsh, rf; Jones, be long if I'm a good judge of will be higher than the growers ex- - going to be a good year for the won't Clemens, cf; If; also made He Mooney, congress he and the which lb; paid. $15, L? of the pledging ware." PWwt pected in the face of such a large mers, better than the past two." c; Hocrer, p. deler.t the amount of the check. f n 1 has earned the title. For 20 years she has been fighting for school teacners all over the country. That's why, to untold thousands she is known as the "fighting schoolmarm." The other day Miss Haley handed Chicago's grade and high school in structors a $4,000,000 yearly salary The X i t GASCADES large audience of Interested " people last night heard Ezra Palmer, C. S. 11., of Boston, Mass.i deliver a lecture on Christian Science in the basement assembly room of the public library. Mr. Palmer is a member of the board of lectureship of the First Church of Christ, bcientist, of Boston. Mrs. Edith McGraw introduced the speaker. ly WINS $4,000,000 SALARY RAISE FOR CHICAGO TEACHERS DR.G.H.BRiMHALL At a meeting of the general committee of the Fourth of July celebration last evening it was de cided to urge all business houses and as many of the private homes as possible to decorate with flags and buntings for the celebration. In keeping with the day the Stars and Stripes should float, from, every business block, and should also decorate the homes. J. A. Uwens was selected as mas ter of ceremonies and will have charge of the meeting to be held in FOR STEWART'S A ly semi-week- ly MEDAL- 50.000,000 SCIENCE ly HOLIDAY HERE CHRISTIAN . IS i I 192? entered lnt0 a clubbing with bait Lake Telegram whereby it is made arrangement possible for both to be delivered for the price of one 20 cents papers week. In making this arrangement we have done so in a per way that you will have no added expense or trouble. You merely pay the same as you have done in the past By this arrangement you receive the world news dally through The Telegram, while The Post carries the local news. We trust such an arrangement will meet with your approval, and that you will find the papers of interest. Yours very truly, : semi-weok- slightly cooler tonight. ' PRICE TWO CENTS, h" t08,4 UTAH Partly cloudy tonight and possibly local showers; 5 Giving a Wider Circulation in Provo for Salt Lake Retail Store Advertising TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS: The Weather RECOVERS. LEHI, June 28. Jim Rezams of Helper, whose back waa broken on the night of June 20, when Sam Papapatmepereon waa killed ia as auto accident on the point of the mountain, will recover, according to word from the Lehl general hospital. Dr. Worlton of the hospital say that Rezams' back is mending and within two or three months ha will be entirely recovered. |