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Show V ;5)Atffes shafts ; THE WEATHER ,,r 7UTAH Ceietly Mr tonight and (Saturday! not: much change In. ' f, " temperature li VOL XXXVII. NO. 218. OA LY HERALD 7 PROVO, UTAH, FRIDAY, MARCH . " - Ti - - - -- SO, 1923. - The Herald la, delivered EVERY day except Saturday. BEFORE six o'clock at tha home of EVERY Horald ' aubacribar in ' Prove, and Springville ( -- 'V '" v 5 . PRICE THREE CENTS." - l l : i - Hit : Iff ilf I I Hfflll 1 I 1 ' ' - ' ' VA - 7 : " i I I mjtu")! Uie. perfect plan serrico," aaid Elder Stephen, h. ff OOOO GreatSteel Future j,4 1 .. , I of Rich- - arda ln his address .at the special priesthood conterence of- the Utah Thnra talte tethwao-!taeniac-ir day evening.' 1 call it the jiBrtect plan of aerrice because It was given by God to man stf that he may serve - mora effeclJTyhan4ecOttld-witt- 4 out that power. Service is the very essence of our religion." A good representation of the members Mt the . Tarlous priesttood quorums of the stake was; in attendance when President T. N. Taylor called the meeting to order. Prof. J. R. Boohard led the congregation In singing, "Our God, We Raise to Thee," "High oajthe Mountain Top," and the pttfVvk. - regMMfifIi)xa.,., nt, Columbia Steel; corporation at a ner ln the Zzrrz TV - teep asked to , I . 1 f 1 4 I "I have aft appolh(m'nt to meot all ; i l HeTe-TBars- aay, th- din- - - yfcoa-tho- T , . (Staff Correspondence. 4 "sn,1 SGTrCCEr"itfatc1i it). What' Abra. probahly was OiOL.Lifil clientham I.incJln passed away : wl'veY th"doatli Thursday of- - NicUola Orbes- was. "recorded on tiio Tlgo r ' " I ' :'" - ' - " . bk rtah : Wm. H. Ray. president of the Steel tity Investment eompany. returned Thursday from the. Pacific coast," Tlfinnclivr backing; Torllie of several hundred dwell ing houses to be erecteff Inthis city and Steel City subdivision as rapidly - be sold. I have been promised as much money as we need for houses." Mr. Ray said today. "The Pacific States . w'fll"'leac4 Jn J'tahi;th'in Pfl Spring history-anot- hor of tbo few ro- ' J' J? f ""Sv' f- ilTH-R- - Wtll Utal I " - - : V' - i."! i t 111 3 - a 1 ' "" . two those who crossed the plains with the hardy pioneers inorj than half a cen tury. agtw -- , That Nicholas Groesbeck was fcnown far and wide as a' pioneer, as a mer chant, as a devout churchman, gen erally was conceded; that he was one of the last links binding the present With Abraham Lincoln, has not been so well known. Soy en years ago . JSIr Groesbeck began writing his autobiography, Starting withhla. first- - impression of Joseph Smith and continuing on to the date of the writing. . One . of the most interesting chapters in. that life Is the one devoted to Abraham Lincoln. Many a historian has written of Lincoln, .the President; Mr. Groesbeck' writes of him Lincoln, the lawyer. Mr. uroesbeck, at the time, was a mere boy. His father and uncle, Cor nelius Groesbeck, were piling hay in a field. A young brother John, was permitted to help Nicholas and the men, John wbb set to work starting a tire for the lunch. A wind blew a handful of burning hay from John's hand and set f ire to. a neighbor's stack 8 of wheat and oats. That neigh bor demanded IU0O in payment for the damages he insisted had been ' -- -- iUkemitencyrz" tires cheap ' ' iiilip J.. Hale, ensukimr engineer EO!i'.n.Brasacrt & C'o arrived ln I'rovo llils afternoon with Duncan MacVicbie,: engineer of the Columbia Steel corporation, with headquarters at Salt LakeCIty. 'MrV Hale arrived In. Salt Lake City Wednesday even-- , ing and has since then been in consultation, with the engineers and some of the officials of the Columbia Steel orporaWn. Late this afternoon Mr. Hale and Mr. MacVicbie accompanied J. D. Wat- son, steel corporation engineer, to the Mr. Hale expressed , plant site. self as delighted with the appearance the-plaan site, and said' j of ideal location for such a plant Arrangements were made this afternoon to stake out the buildings for the blast furnace tomorrow morning. More then 600 white-toppe-d stake are on the ground for that purpose. The work will begin tomorrow morning and will be rushed to completion as him-Lincol- n, , it-w- nt Lift Boycott ' , Anothe rJmfflniiFlalli pro-the- cut-rat- y e Off Armory Floor -- hlagt-farna- co; J With Business Man j Co."-Tir- ot e tiref l frind n i slde--trac- torth-te-etev- ate d. X . - . - , T7I he - .- . six-fol- r It' r ' ie BrnBr-CT10g-Tgc1f- -JrR. - clerk-carrie- ' out-of-to- 1 " ' .LI Qt.lkQ Musicians r ,'V' ' If I do not see the- - steel corporation officials here when I return I will meet with them later in San Francisco and will rthen go overiaeir.eyraaplans In detail with them. "It appearaJa Jha that the coming nf" th boa1 nlant ta Utah fountv will .I . - 1 . ,. . & .oan company has offered F mai- imvo Savings open up natural weauiiH and will the finances necessary to build homes been untouched previously mean much for the development of we can sell. There's no limit to the the industrial activities of the state." number. NICHOLAS GROESBECK. . "We will buiW about ten to start Senator and Mrs. Reed Smoot and Suit was against Nicholas Groes- as we sell those will build and with, Lake Smoot Salt of Harold City, son, beck, his father and uncle. Abraham SENATOR SMOOT. motored here at noon today. They others. Next week we expect to start then .an almost unknown law- the two of small or construction three . "The steel development In Prove were guests of the FJrst ward at it 111., was employed at Doxolojgy. yer Springfield, for Provo, Springville, chicken dinner in the ward social hall. houses on Columbia avenue, near the Patriarch Albert D. Clark offered will mean much to defend the Groesbecks. Lawyer Steel But - ifhd site. real the Utah plant Sen building the entire state," The First ward is the home of countythe Invocation and. Patriarch Joseph Lincoln conducted the defense so well program will start at Ninth East and said Senator Reed Smoot today when ator and Mrs. Smoot when ln Provo, B. Keeler the benediction. the Jury brought In a verdict that After the senator's return to Utah Ninth South streets, gradually extend"We art Tery' happy to see such a interviewed by a Daily Herald re the father, who possessed clearing to the southward steel Anbig plant' wealth to have covered the large turnout " said President Taylor porter at the Provo Commercial and he' intends to make I trip to Los enough Mr. said the the of Ray prices geles and San Franclco and may In opening the meeting. "We feel Savings bank this afternoon damages, and rendering judgment rantre would to houses from $2,000 oh President later Harding "Since I am not thoroughly acquaintaccompany yon appreciate the priesthood of God against Nicholas and his uncle, neither $3,500, and will have from three tCtlve thaLhaa fceen given to you. We re ed with the plans of the Columbia his trip to Alaska of whom had enough wealth to satisfy rooms. Senator Smoot the judgment joice in the splendid support we are Steel corporation, it Is impossible for While inthe city. T. possible. "I was surprised to meet so much F. Flerpont The judgment did not bother young The staking out of the buildings receiving from you, the high council me to say just how much the de-- was In conference with on Mr. steel enthusiasm the coast" " endThe Telopment wffl mean to lhenatyTadfrrToC:E. Loose, regarding the Nicholas very much, as Abe Lincoln must be completed before Thursday, and said. businessman "Every naa expiamea to mm mat being a when President Wlgginton E. Creed, The next quarterly conference of county. HadI known just exactly the visit here of the offlcials'of the Colum- Ray banker on the coast is enthusiastic Utah stake will be held Saturday and extent of the eoerporatlon't plana per bia Steel corporation. minor, it could not be collected. But D. H. Botchford and other officers and 'the, Steel in about here Utah Industry Salt for Mrs. Smoot left (Continued on last page.) directors of the Columbia Steel xor-- -' the Sunday, April 14 and J5, whioluwlll haps I could- tell mora minutely lust . Senator and more enthusiastic than county, necessttaU the postponing .of . the what it win mean to the vommuntties Uka City early this afternoon. poration tron the .Pacific. coast arrive people who live here." here for the inspection of' the progress monthly union and prieethood meet-ln- g of Utah county. until the following Sunday, April "However, even of the work, as told exclusively ln 22. menu as announced at present it will tUVOIO CLEGG FUNERAL SUNDAY. Utah first Wednesoajrin The 'Daily "We have a wonderful stake here. mean a great deal more to this county Herald. The Tfsl Tiere of tho diroc-It navs an automobile owner to ' There are In-- our than anything that has happened here tora of the company 18 not for any stake 4,0(7 men SPRINGVILLE, March 30. Funeral buy good tires, tires that have a name as yet on Page Eight) public ceremonies but only for a priand reputatkm -f- eaekMrt 4hem," sald- - services over the remains of Israel E. Ciegg will be held in the First vate Inspection of.the property before Knoa Rrimhall. of" Brimhall Bros. ward church Sunday at 2 o'clock. Mr, th& actmil bgHThing of construction "Of course there are cheap tires y work on tho the following and they 'are cheap, which , is why Ctegg arranged Mr. Hale' will. .have charge of-t-he prices., gram before his death: The old famtl-Thecan he0ld ta foTistructlon work of the blast furare the klHdwof tires that are iar songs by the First) ward mate Tho boycott of the Provo chapter produced by some of tho the quartet and Richard Condie; made to sell, not to wear. imported or- naces, the contract for the construction of which hasbeen let to his com-- , r speakers will bo Bishop J. F. Bring: of the American Federation of Mus- chestras is what "A tire . dealer ought to work the dancing public e the IjesTtttefeofetf the automobile hurst. Bishop G. R Maycock nd J. icians against the armory has been WantH. I agree With them that some puny, the Freyn; Hrasser.t.aV owner by selling him tires that wear. S. Boyer, Sr. Mr. Clegg is survived called off by action of tho board ol of that novolty stuff Is good, but we Columbia Steel corporation, will--nhave anything to do with the construcfor he saves him money in' the long' by his wife.'Vernoa A. Noakes, and the directors of the local union, according can furnish them the same thing. If tion work of these buildings, but will run by piftting good- - tires on the following children: Mrs. Wallace Bird, to Samuel Jeppersou, president of the the dance' will managers pay us as jMrs. John WhitlngMrs. Earl Condie, organization. offer for his department It he yould auto." Mr. Brimhall added. much as they do the Salt Lake orches do all of the directing of the construc IToday The Daily Herald pub.Mrs. Law. all Mrs. Mark Laceli manufacturers mrd, a series of promise not Jp reopen a store in.lhei ... Reputable tire lishes the seeond-The poycott against Gad Williams, tras we will guarantee to furnish tion of the industrial railroad tracks'. out Eastham Clegg and Lewis Clegg, all The only 'railroad construction crew" are now sending talks with local busiof the Saturday night dances them with us good a vocal quartet to He offer the "moved orerthecoumty and city. accepted 27 grandchildren. manager and at work tqday at the plant site was the Springville, cheap and-wilness men. One of these special against warnings at tho armory, is still on to Provo. notislng with the orchestra as there I to j that of tho Orem railroad, which Js be called off until such a time as the ' be had. in the state for the money. features will appear dally from "We 'like Provo better than any dealer, the man who markets the and remade now on. Editor.) dance manager corrects "We have 'lust as eood slneern In pushing the building of its spur as rapcertain place in which we have lived," he cheaper grades? seconds, .-as In reduced Idly possible. tires 4 RAY A. OLPIN Up price.,u- Upftm WUVMV H1IU said.' ""We like", the climate and we tires, wrongs alleged to. have been com-- j Provo as they have any other place By UVIU IIVW The surveying work of the other like the peopled Although not a mem when afa matter ot fact, tire manmilted against the members of the in the state and we can give them ex- Daily Herald Staff Writer. i Is completed and the crews are rr am not spurs Surro&tided by picture fraine ot Jer olCtli dominant. Ghupcb I ave facturers. say. such, tire union here. niiralclans' want. what However lactly they Road Pearls To a worth to be placed In the field. are Long but ' in ready duced really of price, wall The controversy, according to offi there is one thing that the Prove every description and never had any antipathy towards the paper Keports current around the City tocials of the union,- began some time- - musician's positively refuse to do ;nd every conceivable pattern and design, Mdrmons, I believe they-a- re a good q more, if as much as thy .price at are to the effect that the officials j an unassuming and quiet man and his people and I think everybody has a which- - they are offered. ago when, Williams 'Is said to have en- that is to stoop to anything low or day of Salt Lake &. Utah Railroad the wife busily engaged themselves in pre-- t right to their own belief. gaged two Provo orchestras for the suggestive in their playing.- We have same night, and cancelling one three been ' beeeeched by. the city officials company has refused permission for "I was born fh the town of Amity. aring Easter displays. BOY STARTS FIRE days befOre the dance and tho other and the dance committees of the vari- .the other railroads, the Union Pacific But a moment or so with this county, Washington Pennsylania, system, the Denver & Rio Granda fn the afternoon of the danca. was sufficient to warrant a where Joseph Smith first began writjjoiia organizations of tbo city and wo While no on ewas home this after ' "The main thing that the union have given our promise to give noth Western, and the Utah railroad, to conclusion that he is a booster for a ing the 'Mormon Bible.' I lived diag- noon at the residence of H ,B. Schultmembers object to." said Mr. Jepper ing but the highest class of music at cross the Orem lines with their bigger Provo. He is full of optimism. onally across the street from the house hess. 277 East First North street, a for. the plant site yard. It is son following the meeting of the local tho dances aj which we furnish the ia county and- - nimors will amount to," I asked Mr.l TRIhg" ahouT half a for these roads to cross the necessary I music, un ioiu to have! ''la their Gessford, rumors tulnkg that the about what .engagement block awayi9ajdtoJavetereaihe distance north of - the a Orem short one or annulled It three has be the steel plant will do for us are not always seemed strange to days before "WelJ.jweall jtMnk Provo will nlace and set fire to some doming, ln order to get into county Infirmary to "I they are going play. In that way me that no matter how many efforts exaggerated In the least. Moreover, better than it was," he replied. The fire department rwas-'iaa- ed he has based his decision In this mat- don't think that, the steel stories have when neighbors smelled 4h smoke the they lose mnnoy an thay gftnarally it are put standard" ' If the reports are true it would inthe meantime have refused other en Of music appreciation among the pubWhat Provo lias, and detected the fire. Damages to ter uu actual experience ln another T5e"eH overdone. dicate that a delay will be made in the gagements that have- - been - promised lic, as for as example the music memsimilar community ln another section lacked ln the past was a payrolLTbere the extent of about $100 were bus them. If their engagement Is can- ory contests in the schools, the dancers work of the railroad constructlonr of our country. have been no factories here as there tained, according to Fire Chief Reed A crew of- men are at wotjc today celled all of the players should be paid of the community still Insist On) havThe person referred to in J. W. Gess-for- are in the' east A payroll is what Boshard. the anal for the temporary ; digging Just the same as if they had been play- ing the lower type "Of music played manager of the Provo Paint and makes business hobm. The little boy is said to have con water supply for the construction ' situation at dances." the Glass copipany., seen verified ing." this "I have fessed to the fire chief bow he started r, Local musicians who are always Citizens ln general greatly appre- wort A beginning has been made at. Mr. Qessford is not a native of Provo InJhecommunity from which JLcame. the fires. He is said to have gone .Into ends of the canal which should or of Utah, but has been in business When 1 left Washington, Pa., there one of the front rooms and lit a. match theady and wilting to play at any time ciate the; Provo band, as has been both . here for the city and for the various re- demonstrated several times. They be completed within a few days. for twelve years past For seven were Kbout 25,000 people there and I to some clothing that had been' ironed Another crew of men are at work. . , .v -- ..1 a. ligious organizations' of the city, re- realise the members of the band are years after' coming to Provo he was don't think there was a street that Bna. piacea in a leaiuer ruiKr. iiuiu on the Taylor place cleaning up and ' sent the importation of orchestras always ready to assist In any civic engaged as .manager of-tJohnson. wasn!tJiedxButJt-Jf8i-notalwayA) there he went into another room and from Salt Lake City and other places affair, at which their services are tearing down some of the outbuild., Paint and Glass company. wajf. . fire Jn a that ; is said to have started -when there are all kinds of first class sought it seems unexplalnable to Ings, in'antklpatlon of the visit here" Mr. Gessford came to the west from Washington is an old town. It was night shirt hanging on the wall. musicians who are in a position to. them why the local musicians should ot the directors' of the steel 'corpora . Washington. Pa, a city with a history for a long time a residence city and Asked by Chief Boshard, why he set tlon. The Taylor residence on tha play at the dances given at the armory be overlooked when- there is 'somethat foretells that of Provo. , He first boasted a population of only 7.500 peo- fire to the jelothinft the little Jellow Heal property win be renovated just covers contrast Is a " hwili that to In whlc do and a small other halls, located In Seattle but only remained ple. It is a beautiful town just 32 is said to have, replied,! "O, r Just thing bring J.JERI as the family moves out The as soon stretch of thousands of there six monthsr. Front the coast he miles south on the old wanted to see It burn." According to Mr. Jepereon about ten income. If the Provo musicians are construction offices oi the corporayears. On Julia Faye's right wrist of the beat players of the band at the good enoughiojlayfor-nothlng,.wh- y came to Salt Lake, where he had heard national turnpike connecting Brownsis a curious bracelet of shells and time It won the state contest at the are they not good enough to play when tion will' be maintained at that place.1 of. a store for sale. He Conversion of scenic southern Utali i -' purchased the ville, Pa,- with .Baltimore. When teeth bound ' by leather Elks' celebration in Logan have left It la a paying proposition? That Is picture frame department of 13. W. was there, as In the days ot the stage into a tourn lets' paradise assumed "thongs which together was "after the the seems designed not was because there to city, enough trafquestion that, strange Mldgley company 'and saw his busi- coach, toll was collected .from all more definite shape today with the long research among museums as inducement for them to remain here. many Provo people who have seen the ness increase ROTARY. AT FIR8T WARD. d the second year fic On, this highway, fillne of articles of incorporation with cava adornment for the a proper "There ahould be no reason in the apparent disloyalty, on the part ot be operated The. third, j;ear again uThen,vTn that residence city five the secretary- - of state by the Utah lived in prehistoric times. wortd why.Mr. WilUama-ogirl who any other dance'managers to' bring . in The Provo Rbtary . club today brought Increased business "and "at--' glass factories sprang up. And in just Parks company of Salt Lake.' On her left wrist is the modern eon orchestras dance, manager should want to get in which; he worked an . , , a from heads formed cOrooratlon jumped UeJiJtsgujar.jneeUngt. Jtte.of 1 .by This played.around ten years, Washington LlrMteolorfuL pearliTha, First ward Social hall, partaking of 26,000 Bystein wttirK malnder ot the make-u- p 41 J,ei? olty:afiS00;peepl4-it- y cos. and CIVIL SERVICE TESTS. right here wa have tome of the best xv no feelings toward the Mormon oeonla. ; Other factories followed in caoiUl stoc kof ?50,0OO., divided into turns are ot the cava the fine dinner served by the period shown. musicians In the state," said Mr. ladles of that ward. No formal People.". the and tor formed the 1100 shares is carrying in a prehistoric cutback in Cecil a. the path of glassifactories is not an idle boast, but Hodsoftclvtt service aecre' nroeram' had beenT oreparedr al Mm thlnwW Jppeahere " 4ii4nipro a reality. - We have proved, that time tary, "will conduct ah examination tracted the owner of the waU paper aura.?.:. though several tnatiers oT club' the railroad in development of the tten "Adam'a Rib.' .'' April' 4 tot income tax auditor and business wera discussed. r ' andagainr department of the - same - firm.- - Mr. -- Mr. Gessford al4 thai when he ac-1- . Zlon Rational park and contiguous terr " at the Provo postotfice. k Gessford wti made an attracUta 'They tell us that tha novelty staff (Continued o Bag I) ritory for tourist trade. weeks.. -- . .f.-- - ' " " - -- com.-missio- -- II Bfl "tSi w III WHIhWl; aaJiaM"liMn: come to Washington immediately. I will leave for the national capital Sunday to be in attendance at the meetings of the British Loan " I 1 come DutJ am unable, to otel ytah fH at Hies UllUllaLU OOOO |