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Show 1 THE HERALD ta L. Try tt- "- nest time yoi l! Ml II K M A A 11 I II I H M w A Ljj 5 lurt PROVO, UTAH. THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1924. NO. 213. YEAR. H lolfo) fji- - V . jyuiyJllJl!3 M oooo OOOO0O run V12 O O O O O Prof. j flgft SPRINGVILLE'S NATIONAL ART EXHIBIT OPEN Salt Lake Mayor Principal Speaker Opening Day's Program. wi mi' T i URGES SPRINGVILLE ANNUAL "ART. DAY" I H. CL.UDE LEWIS. Provo of iuprrintcndent InI speaker today at Kiwanis Collection On Exhibition cludes 168 Pictures From ilub meeting. w Artists Of Nine States. ProvoSchools Head Tells Education Ideals "The business of educating our boys Is our most important I business, the most important of city, state and nation." I That was the opening paragraph i of an informative, interesting, edu- Thurs-IdnI rational address delivered noon by Superintendent II. I girls and busl-'tiic- y JClaude Lewis, before members of tlie I'rovo Kiwais club In Hotel Rob- erts. "I am pleased to come here," Prof. Lewis continued. "It is a far I step to go from the rural district to such a city as I'rovo and to come into such a magnificent school system as you have here. I am reminded that it is a "far 'distance from the little red sehoolhouse of long ago, with Its one teacher to Provo'g school system. "But a school system, the best of them, is only one factor in the education of the rising generation and often it Is not the foremost factor. Iltlier thiiH'a should must 1m ennsfld. I ered, the home, the church, environ ment, industry, all of which must be considered in the educating of our children. "We know now the best way to teach spelling and arithmetic; our teachers have acquired a definite But now the school technique. problem is beyond the mere teaching of these things it is the development of the boys and girl of todtiy so that they may be the right types of American citizens of tomorrow. "First of all they must grow up to be men and women, citizens; without that all knowledge they may acquire will be of little avail." Prof. Lewis stressed the wave of juvenile delinquency, which, he argued, has grown higher throughout the country. He mentioned facts g God-fearin- g LUUUlUUilS 111 LUC BUUlUttCSLCIU part of the state and elsewhere a 1 I to show a widening disrespect for law. "It has been proved," the speaker Baid, "that fifty percent of school boys cannot resist temptation." The new superintendent of Provo schools gave a brief Insight into his future school policy by sugges- (From Springville Herald.) The Sprlngville National Art Ex hibit oiKMied at the high school auditorium Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock with a most excellent pro gram. Principal It. L. Done was in charge. The principal speaker was Mayor C. Clarence Neslcu of Salt Lake City. Mr. Xeslcn said during his remarks: "The word will go out if it has not already gone out that Sprlngville is the art tenter of the west. I commend the people of Sprlngville for this thing for it Is worth while. The Itcuefits that come from contact with this gallery will be felt all up and down this state. I hope the time will come when there will be Art Day in Sprlngville as there Is now Peach Day in Brigham and Strawberry Day in Pleasant Grove, and that people will come from afar to enjoy the feast." He paid a tribute to the women of Sprlngville and their organizations who have con tributed so much toward making the Sprlngville art collection what it is today. Others who spoke were Dr. C. X. Jensen, state superintendent of public instruction, and A. C. Xlelson, superintendent of the Xebo school district. Musical features were rendered as follows: Vocal duct, Elmo Coff in an and Lela Boyer; cello" solo by C. II. Chllds, accompanied on the piano by Mrs. Cornell Mendeuhall: vocal solo, Mrs. Fay Loose Stlehl of Provo ; steel guitar solo by Miss Austland of the B. Y. U. of Provo violin solo, Miss Florence Friday of Provo; vocal solo, Miss Melba Condie, and a chorus from the Springville high school. Visitors seated on the stand who were introduced but not given an opportunity to speak were all the board members of the Xebo school district, A. B. Wright of Salt Lake City, Dr. George Smart of Salt Lake City, Assistant Superintendent of Public Instruction Mathewson of Salt Lake City, J. F. Wingate, chairman of the art committee, and Wayne Johnson, head of the art department. The art collection on exhibition consists of 168 pictures that have been sent In for display from states as follows: California, 45; Oregon, - rain or 000000 ooooooooooooooooo ARE Baby Crawlers Ruled Out jSTEELMEN rtTmrim ninrv PROVO IS LISTED AMONG i MOST PROSPEROUS CITIES evibabycrawl from Its competitive state. In spite of the and who voices the opinion dence of physical injury, said to events, of the champion baby of a (Father representative group of inter- follow in the wake or these mild trawler of the L. 8. A.) ested people, claims that babies couqietitious the writer Is inclined The teu ard avycrawl has been have lieen injured for life in these to believe that the races art a U'ne-f- it eliminated from the program of strenuous sixirts. Many cases of to growing babies. uthletic events at the There is, however, some good readisability in the form of Young university invitation meet athletic heart, abdominal ptosis and son to ell minute the race on the Springville Husiness Men Get s and henceforth all crawling youngknee have come under grounds that too much of the InAcquainted With Columbia Foremost sters will be compelled to watch the the noted physician's observation fant's time and attention in taken Steel Officers. in of the from carnival annual spring and these have been blamed directly up iu training and possible too i much nervous energy lost in the In-- j crawl. grandstands or from their mothers' to the Inter-mounta- in . KIEuLEi TELLS laps. This rather nnexiiected action Sjxirt lovers throough the state tense worry associated with the blg(v. ofon the part of the church school will be sorry to learn that the ten meets. Of late years there has been OF IRON DEVELOPMENT City in Group. ficials comes as a result of num- yard hahycrawl will no longer form some evidence that professionalism J erous protests reaching the B. Y. l. a part of the program of the big is creeping into these crawling For Hetter Housing I'rovo is among the most prosperous cities in the United lt Oidiiuilj uu.iiII jced limac mi from parents, prominent medical B. V. U. invitation meet and relay rtiw.n(a I Willi nr nil Vliirs i 'orto Conditions In Springville authorities and from various better- carnival. This event has always known to offer promising youngsters States, according to Koger W. Babson's Sales and Credit map Is Emphasized. ment societies. liecn enthusiastically received for April which lias just been issued and which ar.ived in by Indirect eonici:sation in the form and to Dr. Titus A. Drum of this city, spectators at past carnivals and It of remunerative positions Provo Thursday. (From Springville Hrralil.) who Iiis tuken an active part in has always brought Into competition award them scholarships without The cities of the United States have been classified into Twelve olHTiitiug officials of tin babies in the merit. forcing the "Y" to eliminate the a host of the steel pbitit. Vtere guests of I in' three groups: the least prosperous, the fair, and the most Spriiiin ille Kiwanis dub, at the regular weekly luncheon held at 1n 01 utmost significance is the fact that no other city in biuii school, Thursday eveiiiu. the state of Utah RELIEF FUND the advisability of securing ting teachers of "more training, more '.maturity," he explained, adding: "Though we. must always continue the development of the newer, less experienced teachers." Prof. Lewis suggested that too Gratifying results have been many people interpret freedom as obtained by most of the Castle Gate relief fund workers in the county, Jlcense. f "We must develope our children according to J. William Knight, that they may be free free be- county chairman of the drive. cause they have themselves under Keports from most of the com Control.- Without self control you mittees Thursday morning indicated cannot have government for the that the people of the various com people, of the peaple, by the people." munities are responding generously H. Aldous Dixon, who resigned to the appeals made by the commit ,4tlie superinteudency of the Provo tees. "I have been in telephonic com 'sehoolso, presided as chairman of the Kiwanis meeting. Among the munication with each one of the guests of the club were Superinten-tden- t chairmen of the drive iu Utah Peterson, o ft he Nebo school county this morning and I feel as i district and Clerk Wm. A. Cornaby, though the drive is coming along of the same district ; 0. It. Jones, of splendidly," said Chairman Knight. "Most of the committees are more 'jSpririgville and Dr. Joseph Hughes, J Kiwanis lieutenant governor. than half through the drive. Claude Ashworth officially wel though there were one or two com comed Walter Itobiuson as n new mittees who did not begin work J member of the Provo Kiwanis club. until sometime this forenoon. "All of the chairmen are of the Lloyd Sutton won the attendance prize. Alex Iledquist offered a $5 opinion that before the end of the ; prize for the best song entitled, "On week Utah county's quota will be ,To Provo" for the district conven-- t in the hands of the general treastion. urer of the relief fund committee. I Mr. Jones insisted that "Spring-grill- e "Provo will be over the top beIs always there 100 per cent fore Friday night if the predic ..mi-oiiwnen asked to do anything tions of the local workers are cor,and Springville will maintain that rect." .reputation at the district couven-- i tion." TARIS, April 2. (1X8.) A note was received from Berlin requestf MADRID, April 3. (INS.) A ing the allies to turn over to the J cold wave, accompanied by heavy league of nations the military con' snow storms, is trol investigation in Germany. prevailing here. - I riduy C leer's Outlines His Educational Policy By E. L. ROBERTS. BY KIWANIS IN UNITED STATES BY BABSON Business Statistician Places Provo Foremost Group American City; Pueblo Only Other Same house-maid'- , pru.-'pcro'j- THE BUILDERS By J. A. OWENS. Friends, Provoiiians, Countrymen, Gird up your Loins. The hour is fast approaching when we must cither sink Into that fettered Lethargy from which there's no escape Save by some miracle of aid from source divine: Else break our bonds and take by dint of valor And persistence The place reserved for us In that bright sun or Accomplishment Which makes the world a bigger, better place To fill the place made vacant by A kindly death, To hang their head In shame, And oft decry the unkind fate That made them sons of nicu Who lived for selfishness aUuie. On with the cause! and let us well CAIUtY OX! We needs must learn that adage old And of Golden Truth, "In Unity is Strength"; And that strength of Cities And of Lauds Is but the combined strength Of puriKise and integrity of her humbest citizens. YOU are the arbiter of your place And you alone must well determine If yours shall be a life of usefulness Worthy of emulation by that posWhich Kei-.-ic- fulfill That great commandment of the God of Progress, Spoken in the day when men First broke the ImuhIs Of mental darkness And handed down to use as heritage t,lf.lJf.rtV?.I,?.-rWl!Co.- terity with the exception of Provo has been hated March 27. I. S. Brown iutrodii ('. T. in the most prosperous group. I'rovo is the only city outside of California in the southKeinloy, superintendent of the coke to in- ern division of the western plant ami asked Mr. slates which is listed in the foretroduce the other men. Kospondinu most classification. to the request Mr. Kcigley said that The closest city to the west in the same group is Los the men had all come from different states and that only three of them Angeles. North or south of Provo there are no cities in the bad ever met before, so in intro- same classification, and the nearest city east is Pueblo, Colo. ducing them he would give the state The nearest of east in same group is Cedar the Pueblo, city which from they came, which was as follows: P. W. Jackson, superin- Rapids, Iowa. The Sales and Credit maps are issued monthly by the tendent of the blast furnace, from Wicrton, W. Va., ; Fred Cornell, Babson statistical offices, recognized the world over as the general foreman of the blast furn- eading business statisticians. ace, from Buffalo, X. Y. ; J. J. Hale. resident engineer for Frcin Brassert from Chicago, 111.; J. I). Wat 125-HOUR Los fidd engineer from W, , A Ca,.. A. G. Stl,w(,nvnl(1. (,m.(in(; (,lidm,or fof ,,lt,slmrt,h 1 . v... imu.u " call we send so for all And the rule the shall Because we've lived. W ho deem themselves worthy of the future earth; It is our Zero Hour! Or If your days shall be consumed Xow at the dawn of wouderous Bv that Hell-firAnd win, by right divine may carve of selfishness growth and possibilities, J That makes of men a cankerous Within the Hall of Progress We who deem our city worth the meir own run name growtn name And add thereto in perfect truth Upon the body politic, And causes those who come In after This greatest title known to man Of Home and Homeland, "TUB BUILDER!" Must take the burden up and years you decree e , i SAFETY LAMP MIDNIGHT RKIIEAKSALS. ARB tOLI'MBIA PROGRAM. IE jPRQGREPF PROVO TOPIC ; iitniiiiiii, WT' Ail., ii. 1 ,z. v ill inirii.n'ii, winiioynirnt nixenr, irom miii ijikp; L. P. Guy, purchasing ngent from Juno, Alaska ; I. Palmer, master mechanic from Portsmouth, Ohio; .1. foreinsiu jX". Crawford, mechanical or i lie coke plain, irom .Milwaukee. Wis.; II. !!. Makiu. general foreman of i he coke plant from Portsmouth, Ohio; U. C. Street, battery foreman of the coke plant, from Pueblo, Col. : and C. T. Kcigley, supcrlntcndcnl of the coke plant, from Birmingham, In response to a call from the toastmaster for a speech .Mr. Kcigley expressed appreciation to the club in behalf of the other guests for the entertainment. lie stated that he had been very favorably impressed with Springville, that pome of the men had adready located hero with their families and that nioif of them would like to locate here if they could get housing acHe said that, he recomodations. cognized the fact that more homes to take care of the Increase In population is now one of Springville'a R. Phibbs To Tell Of Provo's Future Industrial Possibilities Tonight. Attempt To Relight Flame Lamp In Castle Gate Sent 172 Men To Death. 1 W. Every man, woman nnd child in Provo should be in attendance at the meeting to be held Thursday evening in the Provo high school auditorium, given under the auspices of the Provo Chamber of Com- big problems. merce. When asked what effect the steel The future growth of Provo, in- industry had had on eastern cities , JfjT I, dustrially and numerically, will be Mr. Kcigley replied that in INTO discussed at the meeting by men Birmingham, Alaoama. had less fully acquainted with the possibili- than one thousand population while ties of Provo and Utah county. today it has more than two hundred W. R. Phibbs, superintendent of thousand and that Gary. Indiana, the Columbia Steel corporation, will had grown in less than 15 years to be the principal seaker. He will a population of seventy-fivthoustell of the many wonderful possi- and. bilities in store for I'rovo as an A. L. GarU'tt acted as toastmasiron and steel center, supplying the ter. Community singing was led by intermountain and the Pacific coast M. E. Crandall, Jr. Ernest Lee re with these' products. 1 regions ported that at least twenty five ' Mr. Phibbs is a steel man of sev couples would go from Springville eral years experience, lie has seen to attend the international Kiwanis the transition that iron and steel convention at Denver and that it has made in other communities and was possible that they would chart taking these as a criterion he will er a private Pullman over the D. & tell what may hapten in Provo as R. G. W. R. R. a rcsuu oi mo .iine commodities follows : Mr. Crandall gave a report on the being manufactured here. All men entering coal mines in steel RALPH POLLOCK. day celebration to lie held in In his experience as a steel ojier-ato- Springville Utah in which more than five men and Provo on June 7. Because musicians are so busy Mr. Phibbs has seeu small lie said that it would be expected are employed on any one shift shall at all other hours of the twenty-fou- r communities spring into large cities that be equipped with electric lamps ap Springville furnish some kind Ralph Pollock and his Columa result of of continuous entertainment to take proved by the Inited States bureau bians are staging midnight rehears almost over night as nnd of iron manufacture actual the no of mines and flame lamps shall als at the Columbia theater. Those care of the visitors all day on that be permitted in the mine, except for follow the final performances at the steel, as for example, Birmingham, date. He said that fifty thousand Ind. and Ala., Gary, were expected to be here and testing purposes. All lamps used for Columbia and the Victoria. Provo as it may be ten or fifteen people while part of them were visiting the testing purposes shall bear the apPollock, widely noted for his suc be from now, may portrayed steel plant, the rest would have to proval of the United States bureau cess with hisiVictoi'iaIs has taken years of mines and shall be magnetically responsibility of leading the Colum- by Mr. Phibbs in his address Thurs- be cared for iu Springville and t Provo. locked and the igniters shall be bians, a new eight-piecorchestra at day evening. Arthur X. of President Taylor maintained in a serviceable condi- the Columbia theater and is spendR. L. Done announced the open the Provo Chamber of Commerce tion. r.t or the .National Art ing the time from midnight until 3 will ing preside at the meeting. "Mines employing five men or less good morning rehearsing the Columand exschool the high Springville Musical selections will be ren- tended an invitation to the club to on any one shift may be required bians for the opening program, Mondered by students of the Young uni- be to comply with the above regula- day. present at the opening program. Scouts of Provo tions at the discretion of the indusMrs. Frank Saulisbury gave a Clarence Allred will assist Mr. versity and Boy of their demonstrations will give trial commission of Utah." Pollock in the direction of the Colreading and Miss Catherine Dnugnll activities. Other recommendations were that umbians. rendered a vocal solo. Both responthat anxious are "We extremely rock dust Instead of water be used ded to encores. this attend of the residents all city in all main entries and slopes as an sec S. E. incetiiiL'." said Hinckley, explosive preventative: that water ODD FELLOWS TAKE NOTICE! PAPERS A banquet, will be given in the retary of the chamber of commerce, FILE INCORPORATION machines and lie used on milling r. hall Tuesday cvcnihs, "his is the first apportunity the The Utah 'entral Sugar Beet mechanical loaders: that there be I. (. to bad hear more extensive sprinkling of mines: April S at S o'clock in honor of the people of I'rovo have Growers association, orgam it 1!) that no gas accumulations be re- I. (. O. F. Vctei'son association. All from the lips of a real iron and riotis be Provo some time ago by the moved while the shift is in the Odd Fellows nnd their indies are steel operator what changes may inlocal farm bureaus, filed its of tli" a result as here to and expeted invited requested mine; that only permissible explo- cordially troduction of the iron mills of the cles of incorporation with the cot sives be used and that all shots be be present. Columbia Sieel corporation. an electric fierd from the surface by clerk Thursday. "Mr. Phibbs has seen what such system, but only after all PATIENTS IH KN TO DEATH. The principal place of li'isnc and meant has an introduction men are out of the mines. the in tcher organization is I'rovo, and communine for other done News Service. International Frank X. Cameron, manager of St.vics and incorporation is for ."'1 years. MoUtJANToN. X. ('.. April 3. At parts of the United the Utah Fuel company, said at the The officials of tile association of the Broad there is no reason why similar remeeting that he concurred in the least, two parieiits Oaks saiiitorium here were burned sults should not come to Provo and are .1. W. G'iiman. 1'lcasaii! Grove. investigators' report. to death when fire destroyed one Utah county. president; l.aiph 1). Morgan. Span"The chamber of commerce offi- ish Fork, vice president ; John A. wing of the building. Two bodies secretary-treahave been recovered from the ruins cials expect, to see the auditorium Fox. Springville, MADRID, April 2. (IXS.) Three persons were killed by a and officials believe that two or crowded this evening to hear this urer : Ben C. i otr, Lehi, and Charles II. White, directors. address of Mr. Phibbs." landslide at Bazavillagc today. three others lost their lives. FOR MAN'S BODY Officers V ft. ftr . r - , i KWl i ! $ X e 1 r, e . : shot-firin- HUNT Provo Elks To Install Alabama. OF STEELMAN MINE HORROR Use of electric lamps of a standard approved by the United States bureau of mines in all coal proper ties of the state was proposed by the state industrial commission Wednesday at a meeting the report of B. W. Dyer, chier mine inspector of the state; John Crawford, state coal mine Inspector and H. E. Munn. coal mine engineer on the cause of 1; the explosion which kuled lil 10; New York, 3; Kansas, Nebraska, 2; Idaho, 3; Ohio, 2 miners at 2the Utah Fuel company's mine Xo. at Castlegate on March Washington, C, and the rest from 8. Utah. The investigators reported that The display is open each day of the week to the public from 7 to 9 and attempt mnde by a fire boss to p. m. and on Sundays it is open relight his flame safety lamp, all day. It will last until May 1, which had become extinguished, The unveiling of "the prize picture was the immediate cause of the dis! will probably take place on Friday, aster. Laxity In reporting gas accumulations and failure to keep April 25. abandoned workings well sprinkled contributed to the catastrophe, the investigation showed. The proposed safety regulations PROGRESSING liinkiil; and o;irr. PRICE TWO CENTS. e 7i 4 Maimer Mitm First in news, first in circulation, first in advertising, and first delivered in the home ft. nUBTY-EIGIIT- VLUUL THE WEATHER IT All IntrraMiig rloudint-w- i and g s EXALTED RULER T. W. ASIITOX The Provo lodge, B. P. O. Elks install their recently elected officers at the regular meeting of the lodge tonight. Thomas W. Ashton succeeds E. B. Whipple as exalted ruler of the Provo lodge for the coming year. Mr. Whipple goes as delegate to the nnd grand national convention lodge sessions in Boston. other officers to be installed Powder and Water Force Used to Locate Snow-slid- e Victim. Eighty men were working on the slide Thursday morning, using Ixith jMiwder and water forces in 1uelr endeavor to locate the body of Don Allred, the remaining one of the two victims of Saturday's Bridal Veil falls snnwslide. The hunt for the body now has ti.kcn 125 hours. The Utah Power & Light company again turned water out of the company's flume to assist in washing away the huge mountain of snow and ice which last Saturday drove ."hi nicu into a race for life, lost by two of them. Mark Ilyslop, whose' body was found Tuesday evening, and Don Allred. More powder was used Thursday than on other days, as it now is proving more effective, as the snow and ice has become more compact and offers greater resistance to the explosive. Tuise Thursday morning rescue workers thought they had come upon the body of ttie missing man. In one instance a log was partially revealed through the water and the crv rang out that the body of Allred had been located. A moment later a score of men silently turned away and renewed their attack upon the snow and ice. The body of Mark Ilyslop was shipped to Vernal Wednesday evening. The funeral service will be held in Vernal Friday afternoon, when John Bates also will bo held. John Bates, 15 years old, died in Los Angeles, his body being shipped to Vernal, his birthplace, on the same train which carried nyslop's body. to- night are : Charles II. Ward, esteemed leaning knight. Hardy, esteemed loyal Leroy knight' Wilson Peters, esteemed lecturing knight. J. Edwin Stein, treasurer. Paul D. Vincent, .secretary. Eph Bergeson and J. P. Welch Lee L. Baker, trustee. Address Three Utah County W. E. Andrews will be the alterFarm Meetings. connational the to nate delegate vention. Three important farm ts' meet-i.'- s w. re held in Pleasant Grove, TWO CHILDREN BURIED. American Fork and Lehi. Thursday, nnd were largely attenueil ny me SPANISH FORK. April 2. oral services were held at the ce- - formers ol the respective coimuuiuond ward chapel Monday afternoon tics. President hpn iJergeson or iiu: for Oladvs 2 wars and s months federa-Frm- -t of a- -e daughter of Mr. and Mrs. null Stat.? Farm Bureau the fanners on Wells T. ti.,u addressed Whit wood. -s. r Beet Culture" and tv.gcl k was iu ( barge ef the p.rockl the planting and raising of mere M,rv;eos. Funeral services also were held j sr,e.ir Ncs than ever before. He th" present m. , at ilie rcsideii, e for Ruth ep1.,ln. d ihat under of M' small prices on oth r farm products l.lixabeib. hifaiu e liner am! w ith the high st of Utah and Mrs. Lester Thomas. URGE FARMERS PLANT BEETS pro-her- incur was ii the ('ii v ci meiery. dm ti..n, t':e larniei conbl not sugar beet in- - t t. e in a:t' in TREE PRUNING. , Agent J. P. Welch also Tree pruning d- moiistratb!i m clings on thrt v the farmers and w ere tu ide to he and a propfruitgrowers of lie Elhertn :i'l ecoicie.ei s of farmingbusiness. He st.rii,.' l.aUc districts Wcdliesdav by erly balanced farm mntv agricultural shewed how greater profits could J. P. Welch, be made through a balanced businteni'. ness in which the farmer would bo and the pay For- busy the year MADRID. April ". ( 1.VS.1 becks wou'd come each week InXuvarro mer Minister of Finance stead of once a year. Reverter died today. . |