OCR Text |
Show 4 etcmm ism oar Newspaper vtlft m private axra U grind, 5 M selfish interests U puinal YEAR, NO. 153 FORTY-FIRS- T Wl ;PROVO, UTAH, THURSDAY. of MP Hffl il , ... vm',';. ! Hi Man Palmyra ; Elected President of Organization; of Beet growers' ' ralui.vra, during the past year secretary of the Utah County Faini Bureau " wis elected "president of the organization for the present year at the meeting Wednesday ' the' board of director. He succeeds .; .... pr, R, J,, Evans of Lehl. A. G." Ketch of Llndon was elected rice president, with. Ray LAbv ton of Highland aw secretary and treasurer. These, with the following, will form tile executive board f the federation: Hails Kiinrup Oaf Springvillev .. L. Warnlck of lanila, Mrs. Mary Westring of Benjamin,' and Mrs. Iran p. Gore : .. . of Genola. , Work Program Adopted A comprehensive program of work for the county bureau durfng 1U27 was adopted by the director an explanation of the var- Ions suggested- - 4optc by lkiJgeV. - : Swenson., jf . -, g . i ,lTIbwiig a .report of the, artlou , of the Central Sugar Beet Uruwers - association.- - by J. , W. jGillmari of Orem, president of, the organisation, the directors," uii motion of ,;c: L; Warnlck, lndorse-- the stand taken by the Central Sugar Beet Growers association in asking for $7.50 per ton minimum and a contract for 1921.; profit-sharin- . , . Salt ikuA: SALT - TttSTUDENTS &'M;k iui-m- Cory Ennksrhe hero of npttm.sm, was the speaker of Brlgham beforj Young university! on Wednesday mivrning. His principal theme was 'Vitalized .Education.? He made a plelTTor tin education that can be utilized, and urged the students Wlien ..such an ediicatiifh hhmilA .1 of ncnidietV.y) nne it in - - . i . pyelotss,-handle- That the Pacific States Payroll In 1927 With the report that the JVorth iiilly Mining company had encoun tered hugs body of ore extending for more than 100 feet In all dlreo tlong, mining properties In East Tin tic took a sharp advance Wednes day and the totals of trading trans acted on the Salt Lake Stock and Mining Exchange amounted to 108, 840 shares, representing a value of $32,12, rtitch is tbs largest aggre gate value of stocks sold for any day daring the last five years. , ' I Besoondlne to ' the advance of The following table of payroll figures was prepared by Secretary E. 8. Hinckley of the Proro. Chamber of Commerce, and was based upon s rmformatton aupplietl hlnLbyl of . tW. concerns listed. The tabledoea not" Include ' scores of smaller plants, no mercantile arid a few of the larger con cerns, who dltLaoltupplythelr mateji tn time for publication in the. Wportr state by the Mountain States Supply company of Salt Lake City. The letter tils "of . the his!) quality of ; y . aaxo-nho- v ll; 'PALS FIRST . in n iTirim KQKprl it anil-veg- -- : g 4fral t, . . Noall Will Speak fiefore Rotarians 1 - v J JMSJtJieliLEltiJf'Uudeiithad u- - L. It :'f:f y WA5HmQTmJ8WH stt . payroll 140 14 0 .... " .25 152, 28 7 44 150 , $(M),()00 80.5OT U.WB 125.000 85.000 182,225 14,089 2fl,ft46 8.40T 87,816 115,000 ...... ...... ........ ........ ........ n X),000 125 165j000 40 65,000 50 48.000 a '584 4,000 -8- .300 121 2l,000 ' 120 145,000 In wages.- - ' -- ;"""' diswill 103 85,000 Woolen ml'ls The Knight tribute $150,000" to its 150 employes to the St Paul for' productsj-en- t (M1KCAKM . 6,000 40 38.000 90 125.000 " nt -- 814.005 400 745,745 21 45.000 .... ....... .... - estab-lishme- 825 6 5 DIES AT HOFiIE RECREATION IS Carter, may be former manager' and owner of the ProyaAntn Painting company, carrleAlncooperatliinjJltb,the Federal aovernment. If desirable.-- - passed away Wednesday nlght at his home in Grandview, - t Extent of Peat Land- sair. uarter, was horn in Provo Senator Candland In discussing the bill later said that there are April 4, 1891, the ison of Richard about 10,000 acres of peat lands in and Ada Clark" Carter. - He bad lived in Provo all his life. Sanpete county alone, which it He attended the Brlgham Young and believed may be reclaimed made profitably productive, after wnlversltr from 1910 to 1913. On drainage and if the proper melhods February 13f 1S13, he married Eva of tilling can be determined through Butterfleld of Riverton, Utah, who died eight months after their marMdentlflc experiment; ' . ,'.; The blllvwas reffrred to the com-11.- riage. Mr. Carter waa engaged In mis tee on revision" and printing and the senate adjourned after a brief sionary work tn the southern state :- t'In 1914, being the first. missionary ." session. The house of representatives re- cjtlledfiromtherGrantJvieward eommuulcatlonfrom the afrer Its organization. At. the time ceived governor, at the afternoon session, of his death he was a prominent member if the elders quorum oi.the transmitting a report;of " r v soldier memorial committee, recom- ward. from his mission, Upon his return mending that a definite program vethe married Ida Otterbach of Provo, for erecting a: memorial to the erans of all wars on the site of the who with two ' children, Harold Utah armory In Salt Lake city, be Richard, 9, and Vera Adele, 4 sur-- .. j adopted and steps be taken to carry vive him. i V' : lie is also survived by his par the program into execution ents, and two brothers. 8. a. Carter, and Clark Carter of Grand view. vldes that' the experiments , : lt i tbe-specl- - ' - t- .v-- . Storytelling Carter, also of Grandview. Funeral services will be held in fhe Grandview ward chapel Satur,"S;oty Telling for Children, a day at 1 o'clock. Friends may view course which proved so popu'ar In the body at the home of his parents. Interment. will be made In. the Leadership Week last year at Brlgham" Young university wil be re- Provo city cemetery. peated,- according to' announcement mhde at the school Thursday. The course will toy Mrs, Ida SmK)t Dusenberry, and will cover kjuim tine loiowing lopnni, of the Installation of officer and his Biblical Literature", "Stor Provo Klwanls club will take place ies from the Bble". Christmas and at a meeting of that organization Santa Clans Their Meaning In .which will he help Monday eveChild UtdV "Christmas Stories,' 4 ning at I o'clock at the Hotel "The" Illujtfrutsd- - HforyrHw t This meeting will take, the The place "of the regular weekly meeting Show-- Pictures Jo ChlldteB, .dm:iiieet'Jlatl7.Jto tho after which" wad" ilated for today ut To Be Repeated -- . v be-gt- KiwaniQubto ven Install Officers ' Bob-erts.-- cancelled, -- - prop-entalle- -'- - . jeen-cer- ...,..; ... ....... n the-Veni- fellow-iiien- " wi-hl- offl-eer- -- 7 .v , "Both of these figures inav b- IncreasedrIr. Hinckley said. The proiiamtify u that there will be increases lnjnjnjrjlnea, particularly at ine steel piaut, and its subsidiary, the cast Iron pipe plant." The largest payroir will he that of the Columbia Steel, where the Provo payro'l will be $(100,000 with an additional. $2J500,(KM) spent in the state. The three railroads will spend over $800,0Win wages the county; most of It In and near Preve and SpringvlUe. The' western portion of Utah comity will, reap a wage harvest of . approximately ($750,000; fromtue Tlntlo Standard Mining company. Caunerles and packing plants will pay out something Hke"$125,00O la wages during the year; their range of employes running from 10 1fiihe dull- seasons to 1400 In the busy tunning weeks. t "Educational' payrol's, Including the young university and the Provo, city schools, mill total more than a quarted ef a million dollars and will J be distributed among ,240 persons. The. sole state institution here; rate hospital, will, pay out S80V. - .. 000 to 103 emp'oyes. The newest Industry here. Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe company, will pay out $166,000 to 125 workers and this sum anit the number-of- , increased during the year fit the plant grows Into larger production, an. accomplishment free-: ly predicted in Calforwa where It Is pointed out that yus is the only, cast iron pipe plant west of the J 1- -. aiaHletilppl riven. Provo long - has' been known throughout the west as the "candy town' of the lntermountaln region, and this year will give employment to more than 15(1 workers, and to fhem will pajnorc than $180,000 . ........ Cast Iron Pijie company product Is begin-Blng-- 4 be In demand In --the state of Utah Is evidenced by a circular letter .sent out to plumbers of the pipe produced. to supply all plumbers thplr ' Mr. Hanks Is" a former student of Arrangements Made arid Brfghara.v Young university Arrangements fqr ihe vsit of the since nieetirig with the terrible ac- Utah state plumbers' oh. January 21 cident which deprived him of hands are practically complete It la. anand eyes,- - ha traveled to nearly nounced, and the visit Is expected to valuable. every part of the. United States as a prove extremely The platform orator. plumbers are coming to visit the In beginning his address lie paid pipe plant and plant on the a tribute of affectioa to; the old'iinvttatvons of those firms, acting in Whool and dw'ared that the niem X0hjumtion with the Ptqvo cham cries of the past ..werepounding ber of commerce. Jan. 21 is the day through his brain so vigorously that following the meeting of the state he could scarcely get onto any other plumliers' association iu Salt Lake. The circularJjLiiisried-byLjh- e theme, lie said that he exiected to continue to come backJojJhej44STrtrTSncesupply firm, which is of school-a- s of the com- ionffrhe had locomotion f siieciallnterest and good schse lug inapecthm of the plant by the W iv jiiiricidturl Jnsiiexte inmi)ersTToiiows: of Letter to Plumbers ThayneHbetiewTioiinty. agrlcnltur- - Farrer. 25: Den program, class What l!tah makes, makes Utah;' at agent, aummarlzed the work se- '26. Fred Moore '26 and Nita Wake-fie2ft-- -Von have probubly noticed an ; lected by the varioua farm bureau j -- Old students oMheschooirwho Ittiixirtant annouhceiuent with ref . local lof the preaenr year, and erence to the opening of the Pacific the following projects" a do not; happen to receive one of county-wid- e educational projects: the circulars inviting them to the hratf; Cast Iron llpe company near l QV are requested earnestly, honieeomlng rovo. . Livestock, poultry i feed uoi their to let lWs pcfevent presence fruit Wfi re pleased "to announce tha t ... we are now stocking a nd distribut.i...,... table, weed, control, home-h- ea nti-- tomorrow. records search Into the jmisty "Pals First'?,, the: ing Utah Cast Iron Pipe. It is flcation and kitchen ImprovemeHt rA tef-h- e three-ac- t school reveals the f aet-t-hat comedyr-- to hunlly necessary gro remind you of Mtt'Tliayoe alsMHmmtieed whe4i institu- by the lrovo hHh school dramatic the' value to you of tile of weetings In the Virions lo- - the first class to lea ye. the supporting Utah r three-yeaciub, Wednesday and Thursday, industries,. : .. to be held from January 20 to tion after completing' a Ik? the to one " offered 19 the course, and by ne 20, promises only order will convince January m- , yorf as Tporuary ix. was one of the most Unique and out to the will be a mejuber of the city. school system at the time, superiority of this, Utah's "class of the 1915, newest eomp08edef32 standing productlonseveLplvenrbr product , extension dearrment and a memlier members as follows r Seymour 1). the students of the high school. An r."W would like I ho opportunity ; of the exe'iitive coniinlttee. Musical OrVnl ex and o WiigieiTWsrMIf: undercurrent of curiosity1 fiunlxhing your retpilremeuts In talent from thev Young university tiray, ser, lnta Bachman, Keuneth Bailey, cltement. surges over, one whenever this, Utah'p new'wt product will furnish entertaUimcntr--- T: Broad-benno Anna Arthur Batholomew, we would- - like, the opportunity mention' is made of the two L. L. Bxinnell of Lake View, Hugh Brown Kimball Bullock, torious ' pals, - the two tramps by of furnishing your requirements in chairman of the auditing committee this line and will appreciate bear' profession. farm bureau Margaret Bullock, reported that th Zenna fluff, Raymond Clark, The audience is sure to see as ing from you." . ,; boohf were in goqd condltinn. Fred Clark; Paul Eggertaen, Lysle rare a piece of character acting as Officers Are Thanked' Flemmlhg, Anna Groneman,, LaMar was ever seen lna high school piay Thir outgoing officers were given Hoover (dwased'), Donna" E. Hopbefore' when 'the two. weary wil lutereHt tht lr for a vote of thanks kins, William Halladay, yraaarllu-4k1i- , lies",- - graduates from the wms the In pushing nd utlrlng work Thelma Hulick, Kenlieth Kerr, Hoboes' college, step hemud.v the farm tureitn work during he past liUclile WUliHiuS; Harold. F. Tucker, Even, the students or. tnc . , Howard Starr, ,'Kalim Eggertaen, foot'ighH jear. I.. S. Noall, state director of part school are due for. a, shock,, wnen Vera Olsen, Ardell Harmon, Emily Reports were given by the pre see some" of: the most promi- time and vocational education will they shirtvin Murran-8 Hardy.-- " JepmTson, dents of the various JocaK nent Individuals in school are trans he the principal speaker before the that the locals begin the year under ipionar C formed Into characters emireij Provo Rotary club, which meets Fria more furprable circumstances thaiij .Three years earlier. In 1912, to their ature. Merely as day at the Hansen Catering com foreign r ninth-yeastn" ever before, Those renortinc were group of ambitious hint to more - complex bhubhou pany. His subject will be "The R. Lee Spen- - Mlsunderstooiioy imagine Judge TJeorge nf American Fork; C. --LrWjimicK Education for the addition of a Worthen of the Juvenile court will trnmn? it helciv-S--of Manila, Ray L. Alston ji Hlgh-- - tenth year course. This was sranted t Manv more stuprlsw-nwasupplementarsr address. " B. 'Harvey of 4, Pleasant and seven pupils took advantage trf audience Therets suretwiie thrllls land,-Blake ot Vineyard, A. the opwirtunity offered, completing 'galore In this, one oiMne-mo- si flrove, 3. 1913. t5l4 SQUADRON TAKES OFT Season." 'TjM. Anderson of Provo, H.. J. BoVer the popular plays of the Surlngvllle. , F. A. Oardncr of group whlck lsVconsldered the plo- ' -- SAN SALVADOR, SALVADOR. "'"'" fipnntsu ntw crass or the Ainmni association ; paiem, Neil uaroner . Thom- 13. (UP) The United States FAVORED W. of Jan. or- - ra.vwm, was made-u- p Wallace REIJEF , Kooinson rnrit, BijiAndersons Ralph BnV army's, PanvAnierican flight snnad-rotook off et 7:30 . m.' today T Unmons of"Lake'hore( VT. H. Set-- x lock, ISNilau Bunting, Torn7 Milliner,:- The house agricultural committee LolS RobtosoB and- Lncflle Fefgf- trtda voted UttaS to: report favor-- 1 'for Aiuupak, HoB(lrusk..Tlie Jliers sou of .PaUnjt8:S .Cojrdnot ' S Prem anS'A. G. Ketch of Llnaon. - Exchange; Many Provoans.are Stockholders. ! V PJ A.Bt horfegjlnn f small rowps of sot less than 20' 'population; to tnccrporate for constrjicong waterworks. . nurks. Dlavgroundg and cemeteries la propoaed in a lyorth - trfTlyBtock i uf pructlcuUy hlirlw rod uce Jl Into the houso this every 'property East Untie afternoon' by Iiepresentatlve B, district took oft new life and sold PUvnt Andrns of Salt Lake county. - . ? at unprecedented new. high marks. Beet suga r At the present time, towns must Activity Is High-Act- ivity SWlngville have at least. 1,000 population beon the Salt Lake Bakeries . . renifcinieil at a high polat Canneries fore, they can' bond themselves for , ..,...'.40-1405 ; ' those purposes. Thursday, North Lilly was sold Dairies at a price varying from $2T5 to Candy ......... Salary Raise Wanted Conslderable agitation has been $2.65, with th average fluctuating ,. Alpine pro. evidenced In the legislature to have between the two. Eureka Bullion Flour mil's , an increase in the salary 6f $4 per rose to $.37 rind $.39; Eureka Provo Ice--dajpnow Tld legislators during the LMy, to $.135 and $.b0, and Big Bill Herald session, which, it is suid. is.con $.13 and $15. Woolen mill d 'orth UUy Is a Utah county -- TTrTT... slderably under the actual expense Brick-Til- e -a number nd Provo of large by delegateerje'ty Steel It is possib'e that a bill asking for people are stockholders of this and Pipe an additional appropriation of f20WotDft-MmlDl- cwlthproperty la Creosote 000 may be proposed n: the near clone proximity 10 ue xvortn lAllj. : ' The Korth LHly Is owned by the Foundry . . future. Marble Conversion of thousands of acres International Smelting company and Mattress is located Just north of the Ttntic ofjjnitteloss jest.. landEof IXtiiU Sf v? . ahdardTprbperty7ir'tt thought Pottery into prodtictive agricultural acre Railroads . local men to be favoras by mining introduced bill age is designed In a Mines in the senate Wednesday afternoon ably located for the development Gas Co. .. of ore bodies as liifge the Tlntic Sanby Senator W. D. Candland of ' Tcitephone Standard. , pete county. , . ,( Power-Ligh- t 1 The bill provides for the .... I U Y. IL ... mw a a m of an experiment station, Schools. under the extension division of the State Hos., . Utah college, on Agricultural San in ground specially ".prepared pete county to determine methods and means by which the peat lands.! may be successfully .nuea. The mil calls for an appropria Richard Clarence Carter. 35. tion of $10,000 to defray expenses - tion SoOn Assembly m ; EarlndloioBeiml VO L. 36-40-0 - the-man- i S. ;tatt IS IN DEMAND Optimist Gives Inspirs Salt Lake Firm Specializes In Utah Product Jnspec-- : ing Message- at 'Y. - lass' CITY, Ex-chan- ' Hmith.-connt- North Lilly Company's Strike Causes Great Activity On : HANKS SPEAKS IPIPE PRODUCT riie "eviifiLthe dati5uiliried LAKE :;. year... Jan. 13 (UP). Representative Charles Redd f San Juan county, father of the Redd racin act,. Introduced a bill inte the house late this afternoon, repealing the net which he nrnlnnsly sponaoreti The samt biff of repeal was introduced in the senate by Senator Henry W. StaMe of Pavls and Tooele eountlcs. time-honore- d a ' . se tra- Observing a to become Is bound whii'li dition more. firmly r)ted with the passing vears. former students and grad uates of the Proro Mgh school will! asenib'ed at ..the echoed- - tomorrow afternoon to celebrate the annual Homecoming Day. With hundreds Marie Astarre, .tilia actress, came near being Mrs. Michael Cndahy, wife scion of the famous pjuking House family.. But young of tile, "old grads" having already of the signified their Intention of being Michael's mother frulstrtited his.three attempts to marry her In Califorpresent at tomorrow's activities, the nia, nd young Cndahy fiiiiilly gave it up. This shows Miss Astulre with day will doubtless be an interesting Bobby O'Brien, who waa to have been best man at the ceremony, - Lake County Repre- tirft Seeks - Incorpora-- i Salary-Increa- by members, of the executive beaded by IjeBoy J. Olson, association, president of the Alumni ' "' ! are. as follows: -n ttti un 1 p. m,-- .i lu'gimrauon. stndenU by classes in the ma'ri hail, Senior buiidlng. in 2fl3' p. m. Alumni prog-atiudUoriuin. " ;13 p. meetir.!; of the Alumni asgrrtation. 4:15 p. m --General renewa. of frici'KUip. 8 p m. BoVetball game, Proo Tv biogs" vs.-- Lincoln M.i.In gymnAlumni tad I:15 p. -- That Provtf and Utah county are destined to have their banner payroll year in 1927 is indicated by the latest wages forecast of the ProvoChambei' of Commerce according; to h: ; Secretary E. S. Hinckley. . There will be employment for.4428 workers in the largest of the industrial educationaV and - transportation concerns centering in Provo, according to C of C. atatistics. These workers wilt receive during the year the sum of t6$&2MQ$jt$m- based uponLthe wytiSc&.tbvguk rt?S3'"' T ig 9 t. County Year . Is-B- days." pay Is Outlined n?v Employment for More Than 4,000 Workers' Is Forecast for Coming Utah - tlon Bill Passage; Legislators Desire meeting waa held In the" office of the county, agricultural agent In the pew city and- - county building. Dr. B. J. Evans, retiring presl- dentTgave' his annual report of the " ' ' -activities of the farnrtmreau. dur- asium."'-'--. eventTif the day will The Xealure 1926. Among ing. things program at 2:15 accomplished by the bureau during 3miifesSTie aTtl i ; uslTmi t 'of ttPJt WtMl)Ci'"iiri? 1' that year Dr. Kvans emphasized the nnlng i..n parti firm in- -' in sill 4 tubercular, cattle test In which 16 - 642 head pf cattle-ba- v been inspeet-- f i the act'-- t i'; The program at the sfu Vnt body of the high ed and only 219 found. 4.i He also stresjset the cooperation school wll be guests will, be car. by Alumni, as - that had been given the county o- - ried out entirely '" follows ; ; ... ; local the and flctals, organizations " the eooperativer organization. v Program Amwunred Finances Are ExeeltentrU' Selectionsj by the tiiih Ischdol The finances, of the bureau are band; prajer pon i. Thurgood ,22; than they saxophone, solo, Carl Eugar, '24; In, better shape-'todaWelcome Alujnnl,". Principal L. B, v have been for some time, according to the report of Secretary Nellson. Harmon; trumpet solo, IVed A. The annual reports of their re- - Ijewls, '26; reminiscences, Seymour apective activities were glveif by Gray, 15; chajk talk, representing Evelyn Hansen, .'23; falter P. Smith, assistant county Class' of II.23, Aldous Dixon ; agricultural agent ; . Miss Buby remarks duet. Oaf I Engar, '23 and home ilpmonstriition skit, nnnt mC Helmr Vr. wenwmrTnrrm4 WalterViel,--'22t-in(-ti fhe Was Almost Mrs. Cudahy Highchool Homecoming; h Day. Friday reunion of former schoolmates and of "the dear old school a n m h m. Kip r- - i " n n f Grads" jAssembtear JIT'SeiTm j)f Hllam 01d of w PRICE FIVE CENTS 1927, " ' Hundreds Body Approved. ;...;...ts .. .....UW 187 DcpC ( , As Stand orm tdiuriai m4 JMn Society Edixr BUREAU HEAD SfeMillioh Is Estimate- STRIKE of Chamber ;r SCHOOL JANUARriS, Herald Telephones Business and Nev Tork markets. Provo Foundry A Machine company, will pay $48,000 to 50 employes, and the Republic Creosot- Unit Co. will pay $05,000 to Its 40 -employes. '4 , - TOBEPLANNED -r 1 Public- - inservlcewrporatlon?, Hiriey eluding ne V ian Mountain .States Tele "The recreation committees, of tfi Cpk Utah Power. Light and Co;, phone with wards of Utah Stake, together Co- - will have a comotnen payrou the officers of all auxiliaries and tn excess of $200,000, the latter priesthood quorums, and the bishop$125,000 to 90 em rics of the various wards, will hold leading with ' : a meeting Saturday evening, Jan- ployes. , - Manavu the eity ana county "Industrially theIn 7:30 15 at uary aeeord- ward chapel, to hear a dlseusslou of wiH- have a profitable year, of hands the in inrormatlon to the ? of lig recreation problems the the oonjrns operstake! Claude -- C. Cornwall, field the executives of Chamber of Comwill b ating here," the secretary of the M merce meetpredicts. formally the address in attetidance to the county will "Agriculturally ing and will alio lead the group be- 14 some, socializing events follow have a profltah'e year, too, I ' (Confinned on three) , Jage ing the meeting. The program is . as follows: . . "Music. String trio j prayer ; music Section chorus ; demonstration of commu- w ' ' .'- . 1 nity singingi C. C. Cornwall! address, "The Belaxation of the Recreation Movement to the various AuxUlary organizations in the Church," C C. Cornwall; discussion; socializing the group with games nnder the direction of C Cornwall, closing exercises. C - ' The officers of the various stake boards are also requested lu attendance, n to be T Health Of Leadership ...Week Arranged section of Ijeader- hlp Week, which' starts January 24 at the Toung university, has been arranged under direction of Dr. L. W. Oaks, who has a this section of the m for as follows :, , he of Monday "Hygiene Teeth and Mouth.", Dr. Madison W. Merrill t Tuesday "The Common Cold V Its Cause, Prevention md Treatment," Dr. L. W. Ouks; Weduesday-T-"PersoHygiene and Its Importance to Life." Dr, Th("-heait- -- pro-itr- the-wee- ; Provo People at Logan Convention Members of the Utah county of flcexif The txtefisjoh division of the Utah Agricultural College left Wed nesday, afternoon tor Logan," where they Lwlll be ln attendance at the extension division, conference beginning today and continuing until January 2tV Those who left Provo for Logan were W., J. Tbavne, county agricultural agent : Walter F, Smith, assistant county agricultural agent; Miss Ruby Smith, county home demonstrator, and Mh9 Vllatc Jeaett, ofco f ecretfry . t health WrChristopheron,"clty officer of Salt Jake City 5. Thurs-- Habits as Belated to Our i'onth In the Modern World," Dr. Walter T. Hasler : Friday "Toll and Prevention of Serious Household Accidents," Dr. H Q. Merrill. : This program of lectures Is Intended to give thejrlsltors understandable information on tbest? Important health topics. |