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Show ' To Of Ouidoor i H4 k 1 -i' . "' ' . -,7.. . , ea V Bp Ami Lmm Hovers 4 Most rrv - -J ' WHAT FOLKS SAY "A man cannot be both a patriot and a tax-dodger, and today most Americans are busy devising schemes to avoid paying taxes." George In-galls, In-galls, railway-official. FORTY-SIXTH YEAR, NO. TODAY -By-Arthur Brisbane (Copyright. 1032) Two Kinds of Debt We Need More Money Wheat Goes Home Hogs Are Up Good News HAVING SIGNED THE AGREEMENT AGREE-MENT permitting Germany to settle set-tle her war debt by paying of seven, sev-en, hundred and fourteen millions dollars, Instead of eight billion dollara, Europe now looks at Uncle Sao"asklng "What will you do" No one in Europe acknov, hedges any difference between money taken by brute force from a beaten enemy, and an honorable debt for money borrowed by gentlemen ''with their backs to the wall." v This nation will see a difference, whatever its officials may say. THIS COUNTRY. NEEDS MORE MONEY not 'inflation," but refla-tion, refla-tion, as W.. R. Hearst has pointed out repeatedly. Our monetary. system, sys-tem, today, reminds you of a small boy'a football, witin all the air out of It, It lacks bounce. Evething is .sagging down, reflation, re-flation, pumping new money into the world of business and industry will he like pumping new air into the deflated football. onntnr Borah is trvine to make the natevae -tha'trlX'A effort is mixed up with a ngnt against beer, that confuses the issue. is-sue. The amount of gold we possess would justify the addition of billions bil-lions to our currency. Leaving the iollar as sound as ever and business busi-ness much 'uealthier with the sacred sa-cred "gold basis," intact. The problem ts how to get the , new. money Into circulation, into the hands of those that would spend It in stores, and elsewhere. Dumping it into banks or other corporations, to be hoarded, or used to repair mistakes in financial judgment, as the finance board dumps its billions, will not solve any problem. THE GOVERNMENT thinking to hod up the price of wheat; . forgetting old "supply and demand" de-mand" spent hundreds of millions, for grain and storage, did not hold up the price of wheat, and' did not know what to do with that grain, "eating its head off," in storage. stor-age. The Red Cross was invited . to distribute wha among the needy, and has got. rid of more than thirty-one millions bushels of It. '. ., Eleven million bushels of the wneat,have been fed "to livestock, which; seems-'amusing. The wheat left the farnv4rveled to- Chicago, or some other wheat center, ;waa handled, and re-feandleL stored at great expense, then taken;' back tp the farms, perhaps the Very farms where It was grown, to be eaten by animals there. j . Tnat-will amuse farmers and old supply and -demand. 1 appears also, that a considerable, consider-able, part ,pf tjje wheat- was used up In "Red Cross Expenses,'" for milling wheat )nto flour, transportation,, transport-ation,, etc J;, . It , .Js4 an amusing story of a .capitalistic" .cap-italistic" government trying a little Bolsbevllr experiment, not too successfully suc-cessfully -'-. ONE LITTLE ULBAN OP 8UN-SIlLNE,-and It- comes from the f arral Pricti 't or "stock are rais- ing, iicga; have gone up since Iay 28th jt wo dollars and. twenty cents per hundred weight, and cattle have improved also.--" " TwoVdollars. a' hundred more for hogs means - to . many: farmers the difference between reasonable pros- (Continued on. "Psgs Eight) A ' 1 r-rr TheWeAther n (?. H : 11 ft 1 V t A .it Local ho errand thunders tor nu fh I 'afternoon' and tonifht, cooIk er tonfghf;.. .nortbA w portion; Wednesday settled. ' Maximum temp., ; Monday p IIoadayV . . . ,Cd 231 PILGRIMAGE TO D E I ON JULY 22 Mountain Trail In Bfcst Condition For Hiking. By H. R. MERRILL. On July 22-23 the Timpan-ogos Timpan-ogos Hri,'e comes of age, according ac-cording to Charles J. Hart, general chairman of the hike committee, who was in the city Tuesday getting everything every-thing in readiness for the big trek to the summits above the clouds. Mr. Hart reports that he has already al-ready ordered 1000 Mt. Timpanogos summit club badges to be given away at the flag-pole, 12,008 feet above the sea, on the morning of the hike. He reports that 902 were given away last year on the top, and that he feels confident that 98 more people will make the hike this year on account of the fact that the mountain will be in better bet-ter condition for the hike this year than- ever .before, -is-. - -" Clubs Cooperate Copious snows last winter, according ac-cording to reports from the summits sum-mits made by Mark Anderson and others who have been up, have supplied sup-plied the peak with snowbanks which In turn are supplying plenty of water for the falls and flowers. All of the civic clubs of Provo have shown great interest in the hike and have proffered cooperation, coopera-tion, Chairman Hart reported. Attorney Jacob Coleman, president of the Klwanls club, has assured the chairman of a splendid bonfire bon-fire Albert Kirkpatrlck, president of the Rotary club, has agreed to present a project to his club for action; Commander L- A. Christen-sen, Christen-sen, of the American Legion, has promised that the American Legion, Le-gion, Provo Post No. 13, will count the age of the hike with 21 skyrockets sky-rockets anf then add one for the hike to grow on, and felt: certain that the tlrum and bugle corps would be present; and thexProvb chamber-of commerce, through its secretary Clayton Jenkins, has (Continued, on Page Six) Kiwanis To Hear Taljc On Sctwiols "The Economic Crisis and the Public Schools," is the subject of an address to be. given at . the. Thursday luncheon meeting of the , Provo Kiwanis club at the Hotel Roberts by -S. R. Logan, associate superintendent of. schools, Winnet-ka, Winnet-ka, Illinois, -t Mr. Logan is a visiting lecturer at the - Brlgham Young university summer school. LITERATURE CLASS WEDNESDAY , Mrs. Maud B. Jacob 'will conduct her regular weekly literature class Wednesday at - 3 p.- m. at - Pioneer park. All women interested are Invited. STONY; FORD 1MTRDDDCMG to euKop&- ; JMlRT rr THIS new OF -TH , WEST,' TfiiAauM viouiiC 7rx VT XT sTK, . , . , . . .,,.. .. P R O V O, U T A H C Battleship Utah, Of U. S. Navy W0 1. J 0 - o t! V tTl I - WP JJ MISS MARGARET-'MAHANY1 ' 1 ? DRIVER HELD Mrs. LeRoy Powell, 27, 444 South Sixth East, Salt Lake City, was found lying on her back on top of the overturned car which had been driven by her brother-in-law S. L. Powell, 41, of Washington, D. C, one-half mile south of Springville on the state highway at 5 a. m. Tuesday. How Mrs. Powell was thrown in this position was unexplained but she was only superficially injured in the crash. Shewas bruised about "the body, had c. burn on her hip from the heated engine of thel car and was, cut on her left ankle. Her brother-in-law was but slightly bruised when he was thrown into a ditch in the ciash. Powell was arrested following the accident for reckless driving by J. P. Gourley, deputy slieriff, who with Deputy Reuben Chris-tianson Chris-tianson investigated the accident. The accident happened when the car attempted to rrnd the corner near the Springville cannery at a high rate of 'speedy went off the road on the! east side for 250 feet, breaking off t'ae "Entering Springville Spring-ville 'sign, then skidding onto the" road again and over to the left side of the road, where the car turned overt Mrs.' Powell is in the tieorge Anderson An-derson hospital of . Springville where she was joined Tuesday by her husband. ... "Y" Faculty Men ; At Press Meeting Dr. Lowry Nelson and Professor Harrison R. Merrill of Brigham Young university attended the state press "association summer convention at Fish Lake on Saturday Satur-day and Sunday, July 9 and 10. Fpl-lowing, Fpl-lowing, the cbnventioh on Sunday evening. Dr. -Nelsonr Spoke" in the First -ward church at- Richfield and Professor Merrill talked In the Second Sec-ond ward of the same city. !' 'J . : W- r 1 : : i ; a V fciST 1 r;:sPj 'r.W.sy.vv i i !MIERCRASH 5 ' LtwarMW-iwrwrsTawj&e sight ,to hs stfrt im iw-taktit. 1 N T Y, U T A H. TUESDAY, JULY 12, Once Pride To Be Blown Up Girl Travels 6000 Mites To See Once Famous Ship Sunk. , SAN PEDRO, Calif., July 12 4-"I've 4-"I've come out here from the east to see my dad's battle-wagon blown up," explained Miss Margaret Mar-garet Mahany, when she landed here from the Santa Elisa. ? "Huh?" said everybody. ' So miss Mahany had to explain that her dad Is an officer on the old battlesh,p utah- The Utah is to toe blown up In 4hn Tarifr Hie. fall rlnrtnar f loot M i.sav a. uv-1 1 iv vino aua UUt i- . maneuvers. Of course her father won't he aboard but still, it's a sentimental sort of thing to be with "tne old man" when his battle-wagon takes the count. That's what Margaret thought, . anyway and made a 6000-mile ;'f journey in consequence. Now she's bothering naval officials of-ficials for permission to go along and watch the upheaval. i: r Better Road I Is Recmested County Commissioners J. 7W. Gillman, A. O. Smoot and Charles White, Monday tabled a petition of seven Pleasant Grove taxpayers wlio sought assistance from the county In oiling the road leading to American Pork canyon. Ezra Swenson, road supervisor of the district, told the commissioners commission-ers that the gravel was already at hand on the road. The road was said to, be in poor condition. The commissioners will check the cost of he project, examine further the need at the present time and compare it with other needed county coun-ty projects before making a final answer. The. delegation consisted of S. L. Swenson, Cliftcm Clark, Hans WilliamsonNets Wil-liamsonNets Swenson, Neils Fugal, R. D. Wadley and Ezra J. Swenson. They represented the chamber of commerce, the city council andjhe Lions club of Pleasant Grove. Frank Eastmond headed a delegation dele-gation in the afternoon asking for the oiling of the Saratoga road. ' WORKER IS INJURED The breaking of a wrench which be was using in putting in some threads on top of a locomotive at the Provo Union Pacific roundhouse round-house Monday afternoon caused Haskell Bates to fall, backwards from the top of the" engine into the cement pit be&eath causing a.slight concussion of the brain. Mr? Bates wak rushed to theVTay-l&f theVTay-l&f ''clinic and j then taken to, his home.: Df.1 Fred R. Taylor repotted TuesdayCttiat. 'nothing serious had developed,in his condition thus far. E RABBIT BREEDERS MEETING A, meeting- of 'the - Utah County 'Rabbit 'association wUI be,h.eld Wednesday at grp. jh. Jij, the "agri- vuiLurtu omce ji me euy anu cojmty building, " according to Merle Blgler! . -Those interested in rabbit breed- Ijing are asked to attend as an or- !ficers elected, " v L-4HWtitf STIMW&e SIGHTS , TO 15 .leralld - - I . . i Cff You! . . . And you and you and you! . . . Sky th' mitts and sashay right down the jSage, where the Stony Ford gang, come to hie, is waiting to greet you and introduce in-troduce you to the wildest wild west comic strip of them all . . . STONY FORD! Yippee! SHMOfSfM OUTING READY Old and Young To Make Merry At Annual Outing On Wednesday. All members of 'the Lincoln high school band or those who have beon members in former years, are asked to bring their Instruments and be at the Geneva resort, Wednesday at 9:80 a. m. by W. M. Vernon, band director. Residents of the Sharon stake, numbering more than 1,000 persons, per-sons, are expected to attend the third annual outing which will be held Wednesday at the Geneva resort. re-sort. Preparations carried on for several weeks by a committee consisting con-sisting of Victor C. Anderson, Robert Rob-ert L. Elliott and Elmer Holdaway are practically complete. Band Concert The Lincoln high school band will play a concert on the grounds, beginning at 10 o'clock, under the direction of W. M. Vernon. Promptly Prompt-ly at 10:30 the program will begin in the pavilion undtjr the direction of P. W. Madsen, Carl Banks and Bliss Allred. t President A. V. Watkins will give a brief address of welcome, and other members will follow, including includ-ing the best talent from each of .the wards. Two anthems will be sung by the Pleasant View choir runder the direction of Sterling Cluff. Awards will be given to the wards with the greatest attendance. attend-ance. '.In order to give assistance to the clerks in checking the attendance attend-ance of -each, ward, it is desirable that all members wear badges of the following color: Lake View, gold ; Sharon,; bhie ; Timpanogos, jed ; ' V Edgembnt," purple ; Pleasant The? merchants. vof Provo have (Continued Oh Iajse 5lx) McNEnX TO .PREACH . John T. MciNeill, professor of church history, at the llolverstyy of Chicago wljtf give,:h'e sermon at ihe 'Community church Sunday morning morn-ing at 11 o'clock ddring tKe absence Of Rev. N. C. Wallin'who '' .far in Los Angeles, according to an announcement announce-ment made Tuesday 'r SEC-'Im RCfTAl"tT Phones 494 405 1932 BEER MEASURE FAILS WASHINGTON, July 12 U.H The senate buried beer in a capitol committee room with no prospect of further action until next session of congress. The-.yotewas 50 to 25. Refusal immediately to legalize the manufacture of 2.75 per cent brew came on a motion by Senator Robinson, Derh., Ark., to refer to the judiciary committee the Bingham- beer amendment. 2 WOMEN DROWN TWIN FAIiLS, Idaho, July 12 U.E Two young women of Bur-ley, Bur-ley, Miss Gay Taylor 21, and Miss Margaret Buchanan, 20, were drowned in the main canal near here early today when their car ran off the Oregon Trail highway. A third passenger. Miss Esther Buchanan, 20, is in the county general gen-eral hospital recovering from shock sustained when she swam down the canal and saved her own life. HOOVER VETOES BILL WASHINGTON, July 12 Oil; President Hoover Monday sent to congress a prompt and . vigorous veto of the $2,122 000,000 Wagner-Gaifhtr Wagner-Gaifhtr unemployment relief bill." The president's veto message was dispatched from the White House less than 10 minutes after the bill, passed by both houses in defiance to Mr. Hoover's relief views, was received from congress. CONFER ON DOTSERO DENVER, Colo., July 12 (U.K) Officials representing four railroads interested in construction of the Dotsero cutoff were scheduled to confer again here today. For the last two days the officials offi-cials have held sessions behind closed doors. All queries regarding regard-ing developments of the conferences confer-ences have been met with the remark, re-mark, "Nothing new yet." RINGLING NEAR DEATH NEW YORK. July 12 0J.E John Ringling, last of theseven brothers who for a quarter of a century have dominated the circus business of North America, is critically ill at a private hospital and both legs have been amputated, it was learned learn-ed today., Confirmation of his illness was obtained at his home here. The hospital is near Seagate, N. J. He is said to be suffering from a form of blood poisoning. KILLED IN RIOT ATHENS, O.. July 12,U.R A night of rioting, incendiarism and dynamiting near Chauncey, was climaxed early today by an open battle between striking miners and national guardsmen in which Ray Freeman, 18, was killed. Freeman's death was the second sec-ond fatality, in 43 hours. Steve Bowen, 40; pf Buchtel, died "yester-day.in "yester-day.in a hospital from effects of a bujlel wound. . CURRENCY EXPANSION WASHINGTON, July' 12 (U.fc) The senate voted Monday, 53 to 18, to expand the nation's currency by "almost 000,000.000 by issuing bank noesno national banks with federal bonds bearing 3 3-8 per cent interest or less as security. NEWS WIRES By JNITEti r-Ttltt" i . ' " V: TRY WANT; ADS You'll find the classified pa go of this newspaper news-paper a fin? bargain counter for used cats, houses, personal property, and there you may locate a job or obtain help. Those advertisements ad-vertisements coming In Lute appear In the "Too I .ate to Classify' column on aitother 150 Enjoy Cruise On Utah Lake Chamber of Commerce Mem-ben? Mem-ben? Stage Meeting On Lake Yacht. While a July half-moon made a ribbon of light on a choppy THah lake, Monday night, and soft Maori music welled up from the deck of the Snuth-Strong yacht, 150 members and prospective members of the Provo cham- oer of commerce united with the bonds of good fellowship on the tirst annual chamber of commerce tftah lake trip. 14-Mile Trip The two-deok boat made a 14-mile 14-mile trip, beginning at Provona beach, going' out eight mile3 from shore and almost to Bird Inland on the south, while within the lower deck, 150 Provo men heard speak-era speak-era tell of the results of Provo's chamber and what it is possible foJlie chamber to do with a -Mlronglm-gan ization. The boat trip was under the general gen-eral direction of- Clayton Jenkins, secretary, and the arrangements and all the details of the party were worked out.. by a committee under the chairmanship of Ed. Stein. Walter Weist, Horatio Jones; "Lewis 'CuTbertsdhr "Jr.;- Clyde Clark. Orson Slack, Ed. Helm, Andy Anderson, I.on Kump and Harry Stagg comprised the rest of the committee. Speeches were made by W. R. Butler, president; I. E. Brockbank, director; G. Ott Konmey and Clayton Clay-ton Jenkins, of the local oiganiza-tion oiganiza-tion and Gus P. Backman, secretary, secre-tary, and A. S. Brown, president of the Salt Lake chamber. Cooperation Is Theme ' All five of the speakers stressed the importance of belonging to a chamber of .commerce, the good such a membership does for the community and for the member. "Courage and cooperation is needed need-ed for tiding over the present sit uation," was the concensus of the speakers' opinions, "and the chamber cham-ber of commerce is the one big I'ommunity co-operative organization." organiza-tion." Jean Paulson also gave a special humorous speech. The party was entertained by string and vocal music from the Maori trio, Joe Hapi, Tom Clark and Wi Pere Amaru, and from the string trio of Frank Goold, Howard Anson and Berlyn Hair. Utah Oil Delegation s The party from Salt Lake included in-cluded besides Mr. Backman and Mr. Brown, a delegation from the Utah Oil Refining company. They were M. J. Greenwood, saies manager; man-ager; Burton Musser. of the legal department and state senator; John Lang and W. H. Lovesey purchasing pur-chasing agent, and A. A. Allen, advertising manager. A. E. Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, Salt Lake contractor, was also in the party. A buffet luncheon was served to the party just before the program started. Mr. Butler, in making the introductory intro-ductory speech, introduced the following fol-lowing as directors of the chamber: cham-ber: John O. Beesley, Alex Hed-quist, Hed-quist, Mark Anderson, W. A. Huckins, Herald R. Clark. Isaac Brockbank Clayton Jenkins and Fred Warnick. C. T. Keigley and H. Aldbus Dixon are the other two members of the directing board of the organization. MEET THE GANG! .VOVCE IS w fit RTi A.1 PRICE FIVE CENTSvJ PROJECTS PROPOSED CO r L BY REHra Federal Relief Bil May Give Provo Needed Funds. Three projects for Provo city's water system were proposed pro-posed by Clark Newell, waterworks water-works superintendent, pro-, vided some money from a federal source is given to cities in pending bills, in his report for June, submitted to the city commissioners Tuesday" morniivfj. Tiie three projects, which Mrj Newell says will give Provo a wa- ter supply expansion needed fot future development, aie the buiid- ing'of the Bradhead Meadow dam) at the head of Provo river, the development de-velopment of the holdings of Provq city on the south fork of Provo; river, and the acquisition of proper ty at Canyon Gien. fJ Property righU; for the Broadil head dam were secured from thAI building of the Lost Lake dam, which was cOiffpleted last year, theH report says, and the preliminary; survey nas been made. & The development of .the property on the south fork of the river la to protect the filings already mads by the city and which require a! certain amount of construction! work. Future complete control should be the aim, Mr. Newell states. The acquisition of property at Canyon Glen would be for the pur4 pose of protecting the main line' from pollution, made dangerous through r.iivate ownership. APPEALS FOR U.S. DEBT AID LONDON, July 12 (ILP Premier Prem-ier J. Ramsay MacDonald appealed indirectly to the United Scates today to-day to act on war debts. Defending the Lausanne reparations repara-tions agreement before the crowded crowd-ed House of Commons, he indicated indi-cated his fervent hope that th .United States would fulfil its promise prom-ise of doing its share towards rescuing res-cuing the world from economic peril. Europe, lue contended, ha now settled reparations, as suggested sug-gested by the United States. He denied any secret combination combin-ation of. European claims against the United States had been reach ed at Lausanne, and reaffirmed the Balfour policy, under which Brit ain undertakes to collect as much from its debtors as it has to pay the United States. MacDonald denied any private war debt understanding .had been reached with the United States and removed the belief that Britain in tends to file representations witt Washington, but he clearly made a "hands across the sea appea for war debt readjustment. Provoans Plan Uintah Trip Members of the board of direc tors of the Provo chamber of com-l merce put the final touches to tha plans for the good-will excursion into Uintah .basin, at a meeun Tuesday morning. The excursion will take plac Saturday, with a return to be ma Sunday. Stops will be made at chesne: Myton, Roosevelt, and Vfc nal. The purpose of the excuTsioi is to discuss problems or mut concern as they affect; Utah county and the Uintah, basin. Talks willbe given to point ou tha fiifura nnetsihilitieci -Tif th baairt and its development as arecreatioiv area, - - ' - 'Hkv"! i.ne leniauve j;ieuuci ui - rw. group lncludes.W. R. Buuer prsi dent and Clayton Jenkins. ecre-l tarF; -Joha O. Beesleyr-HeraldlfU Clark; Ott Romney,; Marlc 'An4eH sott.lWalter Adams, .Aiey Hedqust H. C. Johnson, W. Stajrtup, ' M- ,BJ Pope, Frank Jfr EarTC'A. watH kins, Harlow Smoot R.' E. AJ ul 4 - '4 ten; H. 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