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Show "rvr . wyv sis."-i- i itt '.: piri mini mi m. jnT-i"! it vi v.... -- - iii- m m tm k m m PEOVa, UTAH. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1923-.- m y 'Afl'll Ai4llliiiw nniii nil in in iiiiii i iiii- uim ji iuriii iil iirL "f -.-- iini'i ii ii i Ii .III 2l1I III II i F i Nil W , w Li1 iiiiii in Tm mm mm n m tw m m n a u . ii ti b ...S....itii wii' ' r- - I at ir m u m m m am . v a tpi mrm . ju aa r mv mm u ' - ttii " . iijr aw n u & ULnrwi JiHjuumxEEiEBii bib- - m. n ' ' - aai i r - " I IHEnJHIE.U B w AEMORY HIMIi.1k DW I - .. .... . WVILLIAM aVLMUM 304PI R1KQSIDB, . , - From The Elks' Magazine) The story- - of theJronjjii-SteeliJn- 4 dusur in America is one of the jnost brilliant and picturesque chapters of American hiatop.' Rrnat namsa flnSll through JLIL1il4 some war with the names of generals gleaming" against background full of color ,pft adrenture and embattled struggling; Carnegie, never to be forgotten and his coterie . of . brilliant young men. Schwab.; Carnegie's aid. becoming president of the great steel corporation, branching oft to breathe new life Jlnto Bethlehem; J3chwab, again, grasping opportunity in 1914, when the world went to war, and being almost the first, if not actually e the first, to realize ,what thatmust mean. Caryr whoaa-naToday is almost synonymous with that of the industry of which he is the head. Then Corey, out of the corporation in the presidency of which he succeeded Schwab, but still in steel until, iust now Bethlehem i -- m Jtani it was near its ..end. The demand for steel, now that it bad been cheanened li ny tne ueaaomor procesu, grew amaswas possl "Nothing of news regarding the ingiy. Railway expansion steel site fund drive." reportB the ble; structural steel tor buildings was ' no a dream. The steel shin longer Provo Chamber of Commerce to- hoispmcea tne iron snip that, a few years before, had been revolutionary, "None of the captains of the Bteei rences, mane of wire, have canteams making a changed the whole character of agrl vass Have reported." culture on a large scale. "No more. money has been- re " Open Hearth Steel. ported,". The process is costlier to went S. Hinckley Secretary than Bessenlfer's, but .the product fs Salt Lake today with, the finer, and the tendency today la to delegation of lawyers to ask the supplant the cheaper process. And state Judiciary committee to grant before us lies the day of the electric the Fourth district another Judge. furnace, in which the finest steels may So steel stands still! be produced more cheaphLthafr 4 h r iron was not melted so that crucioie progeas, wuicn has never, old - catas-trOPh- m - m uniiiti r ! IIIIIIII . PAA r III! I I .iiinncsiiirtAt-;I I nrl T I r.V aa. - (Special to The Herald.) STEEL STANDING STltL. .V father, family, mnHiar, catedtha-a-favorBbleTepo- . house-to-hou- ' - gjgg'l The and evea children, - the youngest senate Judiciary committee today indi eight months old, are in Provo today. wouia oe stranded, homeless, and helpless. The father is. out of work, hunting made on Senator LeRoy Dixon's bill to do any kind of adding another judge to the Fourth tor work, willing work. -, Judicial district His name is Stephen B. Hayes, A delegation of 4Jtah county law If any person knows" of rktMaL a8 Hansen, that person Is urged to call Chief of yers, toclnxllBg-IgagEtlWren Wilkins - immediately appeared at the hearing before the Police and help the chief fined employment committee this and morning, Judiciary - for the man. urged the passage, of The Hayes family arrived. In Provo which would place two judges on the at 2 o'clock this mbrolngdlestltute,.: bench in the Fourth district, whlch"tn-- hungry, without as much its a dime. . Wyo. eiude8 Utah, Wasatch, Duchesne and They came fromto- -Evanston, ' where- - according Hayes ib cnnld yintah ouiitlea. una not employment. W. A. Foruier Judge. Morgan of ft was wait there until our little Provo told oFthe overcrowded condi lidn of the dockets in the counties of supply of money was exhausted . or come away," Hayes explained to'Chief f the Fourth district. in the" timber At the conclusion of the hearing the Wilkins. ,ha"I.hhad a job -"f liuiii-hircnii"iltPP with nni1 liirrpnt .rt.'.irtpg out and work That I couldn't find gave Ing vote, that of Senator Candland, me there favored the bill. Senator Candiand another job. People told 31. I open-heart- h dty the-meas- " b-t- forges it could iirpburcif; tliey" ylulJuJ fauTpl of fine'metal, which could be reheated and shaped and tempered to make steel. Then came the blow furnace the great step. The and cast-iromolten nfetal routd now he poured into mouldo: Then came tUU Use ol - ' """ p his Miavale com colte instead of. charcoal. In America. g pany. .Here are great names, but one Tn hundred, a thotts'aMT brgair Anipris iron making Look at the elites teci has ateedJ - arly. An iron furnace was begun on acres homes of with their spreading the and shops, their palls of smoke by abandoned- - iron was actually made at day and night, theirllamingluxaaces Lynn, in Massachusetts, in 1645. The reddening the .sky tor miles around:. chain that "blocked the . Hudson at Pittsburgh,, Gary, Youngstown, Bethe-he- West Point was roada at the Stirling Try to count the wealth that forges in urange county.'near Tuxedo. steel has added to the nation's riches, New Jersey, was active; Pennsylvania, and be dizzied in the attempt! With its vast future In steel still u- Before you can have steel you mu ade no iron tmUl have Iron. And iron begins as ore wel Unto the eighteenth century. But as the rich magnetite, the almost Pennsylvania turned early to the equally rich hematite, llmonlte, down blast furnace. After the revolution, to. siderlte. when Washington was inaugurated, Primitive Man's Iron. every state was making some iron. Man must have discovered the prop 'still deBut American erties ot iron when the world "was pended on charcoal, and, lif no iron ore very young. Primitive mank whea be district could, the forests hope to keep mastered Ore, found a strange, new up a sufficient supply for hjng. Engsubstance that remained when cer land gained long lead by developtain rocks were melted on his hearth. ing the use of coke; America lagged His acquisition of knowledge about far behind, in 1810 anthracite was iron was one of his first great steps successfully used. But 'at last Con - m - .. . -- m.m mm lllllll 11 nilll llllll'l lllllhr I ZnJLtlkmmmmm-nmi- MM WIILP. m iiinmn inn iiiiiiii ii mill l .. i - u mm . - sr . mm ii. i V1IL11 Jan. iuccest to Jlnlnj; up tht four cities After watching Boxer Balrie in the they hop ta a interest,-- Proro, Salt - iteirtoiilghlrwiar Wrestler Jones it -Br1gham." Uke, 0gden,-nThe movement Is being sponsored was frequently asserted by rlngslders: - Vernon vacs: uempsey-won- 't stand. mun br Clarence Brooks, "former Of a show if he goes into a ' mixed affair with Stranglef Lewis.'.' Snann. former BrlghaawJiJorthern Bill Boshard better tip Jack off to Utah Jeagu pay er. SnatiB now Is In Provo sounding that bit of information- r the baseball minds of this city. - He Henry Jones, who says: "For dike's acme down when he heard reports sake-sto- p calling me the pride of excellent teitt Provo bench-gar- ea grappler has It oyer "a r gate receipts- - in us central -- -' tan mony taat V leane. tighter on the mat Hen ended the "I am sure a four-tealeague would mixed bout in the sixth round With nay Mr. Snapp said today. "Ogden a cradle hold. Bus Balrie might have ended the for Um.Hiure Presi li strong f of the. Bees jwiiLfaMt4t4r performance in the fourth round had Proro. Ogden and Brigbam want a. Bus the ordinary boxer's Inclination to fourth team in Salt Lake. Mr, Brooks step in and apply the kayo. when. n gaea pasopau j opponent la groggy ana on a Knee. Deonle In the proposed league, and When the boxer passed up that opporthere Is n doubt about Brigham's de- tunity Tuesday evening he also passed sire to get Into a BtateJeaguet- - The up whatever chance he had of winning only questions'is about Proyo's stand.' ther mixed match: Thereafter Jones Ear Tlmmerman. last year's nresi carried himself most cautiously and dent of the , Tlmps, is , nthuslaBtTci yqltfirt t1" right moment in himhj Hm so is juerie cradle. .The main event 'opened with a Taylor, rice president In 192?- This lu year's prealdeat and vice president boxer, a wresUerand--swteme- r .toward another year inttSe'Iquared circle. . The - swimmer, Professor Leaf, staged a neat exhibi th eocunty league, it is said. "Provo .is big enough to. get into a tion of refereelng. state leacue." Mr. Timmerman said. "I Bus started in, as a boxer must do dent-Lanf- iiu w .. IW-IIhIIII- I" aV ; - K I 11 iininii IIIIIIIIL itate eeml-prThe promoter of league are meeting wl'J considerable -' , w.-- mi .Hat 1 i- w m -- N i - i VtP . JI... n iiir PRICE THREE CENTS. 1 -- The future of the electric furnace depends wholly upon the cheapening: of electric power, and the availability of . Henry .Ford, obtaining the Muscle Shoals power on his own irmft, rnnld probably make fluesleels by tha electric-furnacmethod at a cost that would enable-hilo- - sell and I had .heard that a steelautomobiles nt n price I fiHhiilfUm the majority jslile before the report- Is Tf plant jvas gojnjjgjjahdilt In JPrpjo-TOafraid to mention, lest it expose me to" made to the senate, e spentTSlTbur savings on rail- " ridicule. rodd tickets. Now I want a' job." The organization x)f the steel indus The chjldren'a ages- - are 15 of rests foundathe today upon Jry WIN FOR MEN 13, 11, 9, 7, land eight months. yeafs tion built by one great man Andrew WOMEN Chief Wilkins- - today- - askedChatr-ma- n The story of industrial ' ' Carnegie. '. it J. T.. Gardner of the county comsteel as It has evolved Into latter-dahope theurleajiWJeaguecaa In the face of the opposing argu mission to place the mother and chll- tier. But Bits tailed landing two to forms Is the story jof Carnegie and the ments of three bright young ganized." men last rlrpn In Mm Inflrmnrv until tha fathoi" "It Is proposed to make it a semi- -' Hen's Jaw and Jones dashed the boxer . Carnegie Steel company. aard chapel, can obtain employment, and support evening in tlia-tfirofessionaLleaETie the first year, and ito Uie mat In the rough andrtumble Lorneglft xaade steel. That- sums Three" bright young womea success L11C1U. then drift Into .Class D of organized 'that followed Balrie got in several 4jp the man's career. Three words-- yet fully debated the affirmative side ot -- aooWaii Mr Rnann nxnlflliund ''Until' short labs to the Jones' ribs but with- millions might expand them, orna- the That the "Resolved, questions wa an arranea for"more' than two 'out doing any discernable damage. ment them, make their meaning average of men Is greater base-- i In the second round Jones was on nmei' a week clear. What did it mean to make tan that mentality of women." is most of the which It and top would time; good be cheaper, ball yet. steelas Carnegie alone was content It was the onen meeting: of the M. T. u uu wouia lumisn nasenait asjas5asany'.pocy xo- - wnjBuor, n a gu; to mane it 7 It jneaiiLraw materiatAyln ' thsj!ltth ward. The ouhg men on did ' Bairle he's harder when DT top. Ore. Fuel. It meant the cheapest and who handled league. If thing In any Class the negative Were Ray on land Jones it the but Jaw a Provo will get Into; th state, league stinger the best processing. It meant the Ttnlhrnnlr Wendell PhHatnnnpn nnil - lacked steam and distance. The boxer r . T1 be a lO.".ruthless 'scrapping on Tuesday of aCsmond Crowther. Tyoungwomen assofollowed with soma real sugilism Directors of the Proro Athletic great expense in the. case Were Lucille Hatch, EItc Robert Nesbit, age 34, son of Mrs. heap. on Monday lfsomethlng better had, Jacobsen and .lcaUon" are sbceduled - to meet this when he turned toBusthe totop of the Dorothy Jacobs. The Sadie Nesbit died Tuesday noon at the mat in Jones hustles fdund. been It meant a Judges were Prof. J. M. Jensen, Joshua the family resdlence , 55. West Second . overnight, on the presidency of the Central Utah short order in' the third, severely pun business courage, a ' sureness and Hod son and Mrs. McDonald. The de- North street. Deaih." was "dua 4o of league. Those who favor an entrance ishing the boxer with a toehold and swiftnp'i.g decision, such asT busi cision was-tw- o to'ojie in fivor "oTThe Brlgiit's disease, of which Mr. Nesbit into the state - league Insist that body scissors, from which Balrie upward from ness, anywhere in the world, had yet affirmative. suffered the past year and half. IsTideal for Provo should not vote-on-t-he presi' I eseaped none too easily andjianded is know when -- thrs took places-Iro- n upon this "rose naa at its command. A feature 'of the debate was the Mr. Nesbltt's Illness dated back to a toucti to thtf' ribs. This round be older, far older, than history itself. the great Pittsburgh industrial disdenes butJhould aooept Carnegie and hla company rose to jetWiUal speecttof Miss Match. his service in France with the AmerThe earliest iron vanished long ago, trict. Lehi's representative that there will longed to Jones. . greatness, to wealth,' to iowerr upoa The preliminary music program con- ican expeditionary forces, when he " The punishment Balrie had received for iron, with all its strength is short be no Centra 'Utah league unless Nature conplrd to make Pitts- the rising tide of American prosperity sisted of a violin solo by Reed Gard vim Inlnrpd while hAnltnor Ammnnltlnn in the third made him more aggressive jf- liferit rnsts in Otttaot with the burgh what it still is the world's mat lonowed toe lireceipUTO-iO'- . Provo41vldet it boIo ending of the Civil ner, . bjvwMre,George ana gun crates, rne' nopitais were ae an in and oxide thetourtBr oi dis von, air: becomes kept mere were inteiruiewrsTfrrarding,soprano greatest iron and steel' center. The war. ,,..1.1 solo Toy Mrs. Ray overcrowded with influenza soprano patients at glove's length untU he had admin- solves into a reddish powder, and is coafigOTfttion-- of the com- panics; periods of depression. Still acted as chair and Mr. Noabit had to be Nelson, OlPlnlLowjur, the gone. But ySift3Sibwtbat iron was pels railways to pass through this spot istered a near His company man of the meeting sumvedCarnegie the barracks. He did not, under those well known' to the ancient Greeks, the of the meeting of rivers. Here, in the emerged unshaken -- from ' the dire the proper circumstances, receive and had all the. earmarks of a man Hebrews: Tubal Gain, in Gensia. sev surrounding hills, is coal; natural gas times that followed the panic of 1893. IN PAYSON. FUNERAL medical attention, - and thereaftersai While the- automobile has been ac- biting off more than he can chew. enth In descent from Adam, was an abounds. mites away is the He made steel and sold steel. Forty under the observation of army doctors cused of causing the; disappearance of Had the boxer stepped m men be Iron worker; 'Alexander the Great coking-coa- l of Connellsvllle. There is More amTinore Lchaply- - did he make " PAYSOX, Jan.;31. Funeral services untiLtheLllnie of hla discharge. From the horse, roadly speaking, agooil-dea- l of might - have --finished things. But knew four sorts of steel, at least. ithongh steel.jas, day by" day, the efficiency of for Mrs. Margaret Schneider-TT- efe time he gradually "became worse he But Blackstone, the magician, Who makes Bairle often has boasted most of the ore that Pittsburgh uses Ms plants increased. Cheaper and held Monday afternoon in the First that until he died. fel edge of Iron and of its smelting, com comes from the Incomparable Lake cheaper a horse disappearleforeryour-eye.8- r wrattiTan opponent when-'the- " did the delivered ore and wardjchapel with. Bishop William D. Mr. Nesbit was blorn Nov. 19, 1888, The noted, magician, who appeared low's going down, and he let Jones re paratively ancient as was the knowl- Superior mines again with cheap and coke and coal become as the means DlxoiTin charge. The opening prayer at Bloosburg, New Mexico. He 'ffldftrt on. the Columbia stage this afternoon, cover. When Hen got over nis groggi- - edge ot the tempering of iron for easy transoprtation. In the valleys of handling these products of. the was offered by F. A. Sphramm lu Tin Lie for several years, and four again tonight demonstrates that one ness he tore intoBus and pinned the steel, real progress in the arts ot iron all about is limestone, the essential mines were rffltml nni improvrd The speakers were John Staheli, G- teen years cannot believe a half of what one's boxer's shoulderS to the mat with a and agtmovedoPravcv-- was slow. Even to-- rerincfyy acf" thf lrp"1mrnl "f More and more did the machine sup- .Fred Ott, J. JrScharrer, Paul Wirth-IlHe attended the B. Y. U. for four " f,""l"l'ltl"g" iron ores. " n""""1" eyes see,,, at least not when.. Black-gto- a body hold. The round that began- so " and man. primitive the C. H. and plant supplement White. The benediction " years, graduating in 1912. Following is 6a the staffA,- fair for Bairlo ended belter toi Jones. persist in manypartspXlheworld. At last, after McKinley's election in was Gary and Toungstown are closely by Samuel Francom. this he was admitted. to the U. S. Ser" In a most unfathomable manner ThAtieavy going of the wrestling Yet amazingly fine results were linked, In a sense, to Pittsburgh, as 1S96, prosperity loomed ahead of all The pronounced musical were numbers furnished vice, and served in France for eight' - Blackston8'drSws"rabbits out of places mat was beginntngt. teU on the achieved, primitive though some of is Bethlehem. Birmingham, Ala., is America. Pools and agreements had ward choir. The floral offer months, with the 145th Field one Artlliary. fifth round was srow and the methods were. It may be, Indeed, another spot favored by an amazing failed to stabilize the steel situation; by thewere rabbits were. boxen and beautiful many He left Provo for Camp Lewis in that we have lost some things cer- geographical situation. The city lies now recourse had to be had to a de- - ings Why, he draws ducks out of a oy's unnrodnctlve of action. . M rs. Schneider wie-bo- rn nIb 'p leifitiit-T-irtniBatm"three pockets that a moment betorftt -Con4 -- W took ten seconds of the sixtl tainly we have no steel today as mar-- in a bowl surrounded by hills that vice gne re. months when he was transferred to strongejj.jneuILjifi marbles round' for Henry to get a cradle hold velousiy tempered aTwereeJJades4 tainedfhothlng but a Independent, separate, pro. celved the gospel In her native" land coupjeof where he was transana an oin tnn on Bus and the boxer weniJosaJor. andDamascus", if Hfe canTiS Colorado's growing Iron and ducers were merged- into great cor- 48 years ago. Font years later' the Camp Kearney, " v ' ' ferred, to Battery F, consisting mostly UtiflTnlTsecond and final fair lieve the stories of them that have steel Industry is 'based upon , local porations that bought out each indi famtlyrsme to America, i With the of Provo. boys, of the 145th field aruk. ' noon, accompanied The extra larea crowd of fans that come down. coal and iron fields. Other centers vidual producer at a liberal figure. young army exception of two or three years she lery. He went to France ih Septe;a-bv- r, . g oi assistants ana the horse that Tan saw the first mixed match in Pfovo Modern began with the are growing, as in Buffalo and Clevehas always made Payson her home. 191$. and iceturned February 19 lanes. An Orbm car was loaded to the were well satisfied" that they had re Invention of the blast furnace, la the land, where Lake Superior ore, She la survived by onr son, Jacob of the lollowing year. - His record In root wlUrmagical things that can be ceived their money' worth. meets fuel carried shipped by water, Schneider of this cttyLandJ.w the best recorded madMo do all sorts of stunts when In the curtain jaiserTerrible-Tur- it short distances by rail. fers, Mrs. Emma Wasuer ot Hunter by the war department, a hard workes, :over 'them. gained a fall over Young Stubbs- - In Steel In Pittsburgh. and Mrs. Of Utah, Condick Sophia conscientious .and brave. :. The magician made a decided bit nine minutes with a body hold. j Pittsburgh's preeminence will last j In diccussmg the problem Mr. Venhl't nni fi niftnitioii nt ,m of market- - Wst ',1'ordag. with .his matinee audience this after-- . - The' second .preliminary was about nn jt iuiirt.j,uiis:, wutoiiii3 ui mo tuc Provo Df.nit.of snow noon as the as froBty night1 Dagger that creatod it liuve vanlshni. f,?mi.r. ..liora. --'.wi - MOViE ,Uh atjthe Cplumbia.BILL PASSES. Of his lat illness former Post Com- hoftnn tirhnt irna to HT rnlvln ptm I.OKC U15T. .i"X..AiaiMl--gu,'- .. ....Ko- WiiUlutiipUlj . if hrlil.m t . . .. ' TOYLTTNCE RETURNS. - be a three-rouni hotn mi hiiAn iicalAuu in boxing bout' . But so i. .o nhw avnllqhla ' . no t His was the most cheerful dtsposl ihvn - ,.i innin y mil jiu lUiiiTiE to allow 8Uy tnls mornintr. imf little boxing; and somucn stalling was Thanks to tne r.y.p..i.i,.t. r.v?ni jm- r ni lUIT liiVI 1 l nj. rh mnon Pictures and other recrpatimml tlnn of any man I ' ever met :1IM "Villlam M. Roylance haa returned staged that 'Referee Al Anderson MiUfities Uf BomeTimes a source. of mat.,p, ,.nA9. f)vc heaillnff. 'nrnrtnp, activities nertalninz.to civic welfare IdeaH were high ahdJMs Jiabtts always from a trip east, where he spent con- - tosseOottLjeoungstaai out iOt .tion- - coopcration, transportation. Credit to. bo displayed in public schools-- , was of the best. During n1s long illness PLEASANT GROVE," Ian 81. Im profit. It is through these J ovens and fruit rmV and called for. a new.deat tVie tuat valuable incredibly funeral services were held In coal-ta- r parsed by thoJower hojusextf outiook markets. sprang to the Tescue pressive derivatives are obtained' for al(, .airmanship. tabernacle Monday afternoon for legislature Tuesilay ,without an upon life:" ay from and challenged Snow for the bantam- - the aniline-dm use .aumbwlnir yis, All business s. ..definition opposing vote though amchdments pio - Xjiu. - his return- - he went to Trout . given by Carfylo of FOURTH WARD WINS. welKht title of 'Utah, county. ...... waai in syntheUc perfumes, in would-- ' Creek, Juab cbuntyrwTie'ro offil0swere closed during the servtt dismal semswV posed. wu the floor of house,.... ne taunUt decided to settle that ' mameiituous housese . , . . , . .. . ' nr '" TOlnllla .1.. "T,n'"i,ii ua saying .uiat warnetinfr tr a human hMI'lt uo.o A.rAH..A.1 m!.. uiieuiiua ui me I.school, anu inter was leacner at Hip of-- other, products almost too numerFourthward "M" Men's ouestlon right there- - and then. Gene ices.! one D. out. that all. Interests E. 4he:Pirf)tward Olphvcf Bishop t club won its league games from the Glade refereed thli hlghlyJmportant mi , ii Mnniii'"'iiMiniwT,jnf ous to.be listed in anything but the study, the middle-mathe goat,' Ropresentatlva JL , A."S3kins of failed bim 'Pioneer ward lnh hv a annra hf J tn controversy, and la the second rouna conducted the services. The highnouse. jnau-orae- r or a as11 catalogue music mom i!4aat the luteieslfurnished make Sn amendment and be was obliged to, leave school.. JUaTTcounty propoped - 11, on-Jjieaad the Provo high gym floor last thfl fcountv bantamweight problem was school chorus Korth Dakota jfarmer . re J. whereby motion pictures couidmot siBte blnce that tima iir. Nesba has been , by Miss argjeAllra ".".:. Bight ' . solved by Snow placing a jab at the i 'i'i Great nineteenth Britain the century been 'Damn a have the middleman; I wish MlssXuclUe Dikeraou. aend duet by marked, displayed in. the schools in provo. lor the KTO. in i held the world Tn, wlnneiatook an --early lead at nit-o- f Earta-Btoma-ch " making leadership one was . in and I of them.' and Stella Barton. favof of such a proBesides MsVantherr-Mr?!Sadie Nes. speaking of the second quarter Some, announcements of interest to George .Cort devised the Invocation was orrereo oy u. is. of iron and steel. and Marketing,, said Professor Boyle, posal declared It would tend to - en. auu nem U tnmilPhnilt tha mmm a inclined fans were the furnace, puddling making A Tie point courage the motion, picture; house in brothers comes from Jrilin of l"am. ' Markham, Farnswbrth and Peterson made at' the by James O. Oarson, ring- :iron passed front" the control, of the used to toy eggs the shialler commliniry., ? moth,.T. Karl, ot Salt Lake, City, 'Chamber. .of Com. Bullock.- - The speakers were: josepn amlth- - to-- that of thrmachlne. NefM ed --out 109 Provo ecorers The v- """m for the winners. (L) The defeat of this amendment wnn ...... on a schedule 12. months a year, bat I F lvfiil-T1enr.lt fnMt Attnt nt w . litn Hi Adam s,AJL-- r Westj-E- zra ' WUHVUVHIKVlllltlj Jjrhtle Rigby played well on the guard merce is going to stage - aa athletic Walker. Edward VYadley, F. S, 'Hum son, also an Englishman, Invented the consumers did not stop eating eggs. followed by a second sponsored by ViviaiF" J." of Eureka, Mrs." J.A. Ben- , - throughout th entire - game. tournament tor the swelling .. of the furnace..And blast the blast r for and hot Other similar. Illustrations were given. Representative Atwood, also of Utah son of Eureka.'Mrs. J.'P. Waruer of : Payne and Collins were stars for the steel fundHenry Jonei has proffered phries, Bishop ,S. ,T- U- Swenson bereal came and Bessemer, the, Tne professor advocated tne study county., under which the motion nln. Spanish Fork, MIsa Artie ;NlosbU and V Bishop OJpin. intermeni was in peas then losers. his services gratis Jn a contest with ant ginning of the age of steel. "regulate fures and entertainments would have aims Grove cemetery,,. . by farmers xeabit both of Provo: alaa- - ' ' In . wrestler ."PlOXEER WARD. .the is iron Now steel any welterweight with,, a production ' as tar as possible, that been given under, the auspices of his pearl siniply Mt. Frarapton was born September Mrs. W. M. aged grandmother, ' ' - O. .T. F. P. world. 7 ' -2. 1859. and married Katie uecjc in specific carbon element; ttte" hianu farmers cooperate In storage and somo social, educational or religious Jacksoa ot Provo '' T . ' Collins, rt 8a . (2.)- - Bus Barrle Is willing to meet -15 4s fone of achieving transportation, and securing' - credit. society, . , . , will-bThe lunerit services na- 188. To them lj.chli'dren were bm,pct,uring problem held W or state of 0 9 any any , fjww. ur- - precisely me rig mi uuaiuib vi imu auu He did"not believe in their sincerity, After a few other talks the amend-.- ! Friday' afternoon lit 1:30 o'clock In " matc la Provo. eleht t)f whom, besides his wife, Chrlstenson, c... 1 0 tion in a William 0. Frampton, Provo;. carbon. It used to he' necessary to but thoughtthefn chiefly political. The ment was defeated and the bill, passed the Fmitta wafd meeting .bouue. Dr. vlve: R .Chrlstenson. 0 0 ,iv'.V;v; Frank Hampton, Cjiicago:, airs, ten burn all the carbon out of s.the Iron farmer, he denominated as a poor as .originally introduced. lg . . V. Black, state commander of the B. p. 'rttt t Ml Tft 4 CiUC. . S rg . L. HuckeL Haael. Bert which Isthen, practicarry-t-- wrougM salesman. .He Should grade his proAmeMcan Legion, will be one of the Ash, Mrs.-HJoseph E. DiUdn wiU leave Thurs- Raymond and Ella Frampton, Pleasant Iron and, to get steel; to restore the ducts, which wotjld help materially In -S MEETING. speakers. Pallbearers probably will . -- , Totals N. ' 4 22' 3 11 day evening for Amsterdam, Yj Grove; also 15 graridchiidren, four carbon by a slow and costly process. selllng'iheni."'' be members of the forhier 14oih field . ' FOURTH WARD. where he will become partner and brothers and sisters, Joseph And Otto Bessemer simplified this proeess.j-- He Aparent teachcrs.meeting will" be artillery.- - . company J. C, of the F. Penney andblew VI. p. manager feUCCESSFUL. used. . fair irf. OPERATION held' in the Parker 'school building i. frampton of thia placer; Mrs, Robert under greatTetort -- r Enor.'vnsworth, rf... 5 "5 store there. high pressure through and Mrs. Howard R. of Lynn Haws, of the, Buckley ft Haws Thursday: evenmgf at T : 30 o'clock,- - to DAIRYMEN TO MEET, Peterson. If....;, Mr. Dillon for a number of years Walker of" Sandy was the mous carbon 8' heat . , . an which, all parents of the district are generated; New York. Plumbing company, underwent ' s 8 6 was employed at the J. C Peaney Driggs so the iron was burned out; wrought A meeting . for the planners and operation - for appendicitis, at. the urged K. Rigby, i o 1 store. here, and the past three years I obtained was made steel again by the Prove-- General, hospital, Monday. Dr. Viola Russell of the TJS. "public dairymen is to be held Friday night MARRIAGE LICENCE ISSUED : o of company f : the' 0 . . been g manager an has , addition of . i. v alloy of 7:30 la the Lincoln high school. Reports this morning from the at health service will w(ve a talk on . 1am In ITtirAlra. s or splegel iron, each having a tending physician, were that the pa "Some Phase of Child Health", A pro-- at Prof, C. -: 5 T Cannon of the B. Y. IT. A marriage licence was Issued Mon-- ' friends, Dillon's many Mr. 0 Although i tient was doing as well as possible. afternoon to William Earl John- - definite, known; carbon content. b(t furnished wltl spenir bn "dairy, products, care of pupils are glad to and in Eureka, tmth Proro ' Total Carter, both ot England a supremacy now seemed and would probably-- be back on thorjtheflrskjecoad-attd-thlrd- grades dairy cattld, and the' future of market- r hi nromotion and his sue-- inn and Miss Thelma 11 S 2? unshakable. But, as a matterj)fjact joWbefore-tery-ion; of the school. . VSL tiW nndoubtedry wmmisi him. - Spanish ForkReteree, 8. JHxoal con-tro- wtaer-power- n e m' i.a JameXTtvCT-te620,-butiiajL:taJe- cd ' .i . f y ma . iron-makin- g - IT II II II - - " i coke-makin- . of - in the-wrest- . T HiHftwnDKQ'WnNnntQ rirtuiu iiuaiiujivuyuiu est laird-aim- treatein sleep-produc- - 'Jjoneswv-Benry-went-to-liisrkne- ; es ltJfl itnaf -- wl- astteient-as"-wasrtneKno- ; steel-makin- g -- n - never-suppos- Thi f ed4 "i tal. do gjflckstone-afrtTedyto-Pro- vu itya iron-makin- - " ekstone-nasserTrha- - FUNERAL CLOSES r i : d "i,Vn.r -- - Eart-Mang- um thej't' WiUlanv-R-Frampto- econ-drug- I i The-Prov- ... - .... "We-niak- e . , "the-teginni. tf boxing-wrestlin- ihat-hensr- - ref tfa; -- i - - , 1 y It k ' e flght-to-flnls- h . l ii . '' i.. , ; t rg.,...... : , it -- PARENT-TEACHER- - ... M i - ay..1!::::- nr-wl- u g; ll; by-th- e- f f |