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Show Our Job Printing will please you. ID) Phone 13 .ROV O Containing a Resume of the News of Provo and Many Features and Human Interest Stories VOL. XII., NO. 88 Utah Federated Womens Clubs is scheduled to be held in this city Saturday, December 2, when represen- tatives from Utah, Juab and Wasatch counties will be present. The program for the morning session, which will be held in the Womens Municipal Council rooms at 10:30,rw as follows: Selection, la dies quartet; address of welcome, Mrs. Frank McGraw of the Nineteenth Century club; response, Mrs. F. E. Ware of Payson, vice president of the district federation; response, Mrs. Maude Glover, president of the Athenian club of Lehi; selection, ladies quartet; address, Mrs. C. E. Maw, president of the district federation; remarks, Mrs. E. O. Wattis, state president of the federation; a roll call of the clubs of the district, with responses by the presidents ofthe clubs, who will offer suggestions "for the future work of the district federation. Following the morning meeting, the ladies will be entertained at a reception and luncheon given at the Hotel Roberts in honor of the state officers and visiting ladies. The reception committee having this entertainment in charge are Mrs. Alex Hedquist, Mrs. Henry Gease and Mrs. W. T. Hasler, assisted by the past presidents of the federation. The arrangements committee include Mrs. C. E. Maw, Mrs. Ray Timmerman and Mrs. Henry Gease. The afternoon session of the federation will convene at 2:30 oclock, and due to the large attendance expected, will in all probability be held at the Central school auditorium. Following is the numbers constitutSe ing the afternoons program: lection, male quartet; "Appreciation of Womens Clubs, Mayor O. K. Hansen; musical selection; a discussion on the budget system. Miss Jean Cox, state chairman of the home economics department; musical selection; discussion of Americanization as Applied to Practical Needs, Mrs. Edgar Levi Young of Salt Lake; address, state president of Womens Federated Clubs, Mrs. E. O. Wattis; community singing. All members of womens clubs, whether federated or not, are invited to this district meeting; also all women interested in tbe work. LONCHEON "I SERVE ONLY WHEN SAYS WANDERING DOLLAR When interviewed at 2:30 oclock this afternoon, the Chamber of Commerce "Wandering Dollar lamented First Installment of Tarkingtons Delightful Story, Which as Narrative Is Fit to Go Along With Dickens Immortal Christmas Carol TUESDAY be fun and in connection with the Pay-u- p week of the Chamber of Commerce this week, it is expected The , maple-bordere- d come street wms Co my reason for thinking It the those in charge hope to throw into the arrangements for the four divisions of men, will'tend to assist them in selling the idea of community cooperation to the citizens of Provo. The workers in the Pay-u- p week campaign of Wednesday and Thursday will be arranged in four divisions under the names to be chosen, characters known the world over. The entire sales organization of four divisions of eighteen men each, are being called to meet tomorrow noon at a luncheon at the Roberts hotel, at which time the leaders will assume their offices and all receive the brief instructions required for the work. With the that is thrown into the affair and the large number of men called to service, it is expected that the work can be quickly finished and complete reports made by Thursday noon. With the large team organizations as listed below, it is expected that there will be not more than five calls to be made by each salesman. The campaign committee," after its early morning meeting around the breakfast table, announced the sales organization in these four divisions light-heartedne- j j ing; clear October mdonllght misted ss through the thinning foliage to the shadowy sidewalk and lay like a transparent silver fog upon the house of my admiration, as I strode along, returning from my first nights work on the Walnwright Morning Despatch. I had already marked that house as the finest (to my taste) in Wainwright, though hitherto, on my excursions to this metropolis, the state capital, I was not without a certain native jealousy that Spencerville, the county-sea- t where I lived, had nothing so good. Now, however, 1 approached its purlieus with a pleasure In It quite unalloyed, for I was at last myself a resident (albeit of only one days standing) of Walnwright, and the house though I had not even an Idea who lived there part of my possessions as a citizen. Moreover, I might enjoy the warmer pride of a for Mrs. Apperthwaites, where I had taken a room, was just beyond. This was the quietest part of Walnwright; business stopped short ofsec-It, and the fashionable residence tion had overleaped this forgotten backwater, leaving It undisturbed and unchanging, with that look about It which Is the quality of few urban quarters, and eventually of none, as a town grows to be a city the look of stV being a neighborhood. This friendliness of appearance was largely the emanation of the homely and beautiful house which so greatly pleased my fancy. It might be difficult to say why I thought It the finest house in Wainwright for a simpler ..structure would be hard to' imagine? it was merely a brick house, painted big, brown and very plain, set well away from the street among some splendid forest trees, with a fair spread of flat lawn. But It gave back a great deal for your glance, just as some people do. It was a large house, as I say, yet It looked not like a mansion but like a home; and made you wish that in it. Or, driving by, of an evening, you would have liked to stop your car and go in; it spoke so surepeople livly of hearty, welcome you ing there, who would merrily. It looked like a house where there were a grandfather and a grandmother ; where holidays were warmly kept; where there were boisterous family reunions to which uncles and aunts, who had been born there, would return from no matter what distances ; a house where big turkeys would be on the table often ; where one called the hired man, (and named either Abner or Ole) would crack walnuts upon a flatiron clutched between his knees on the back porch ; it looked like a house where they played charades; where there would be long streamers of evergreen and dozens of wreaths of holly at Christmas time; where there were tearful, happy weddings and great throwings of rice after little brides, from the' broad front steps : In a word, it was the sort of a house to make the hearts of spinsters and bachelors very lonely and wistful and that is about as near as I can next-door-neighb- as follows: FIRST DIVISION H. G. Merrill, Division Head. Leader H, G. Merrill, O. R. Thomas, E. B. Whipple. Leader Edgar McArthur, R. E. Sut-- ; ton, J. W. Clark. Leader T. L. Schofield, J. A. Bullock, Mark Anderson. Leader W. L. Whittemore, F. G. Warnick, H. R. Atkin. Leader J. E. Allen, R. J. Murdock, M. C. Merrill. Leader T. H. Heal,' W. F. Bulkley, C. Don Reddish. SECOND DIVISION O. A. Spear, Ii ision Head. Leader O. A. Spear, G. M. Taylor, J. A. Boshard. Leader Wyman Berg, H. A. Dixon, Julian Greer. Leader Lloyd Sutton, J. Edwin Stein, I. E. Brockbank. Leader Ray Timmerman, Spafford, P. P. Bigelow. Leader R. L. Anderberg, W. M. Roylance, LeRoy Dixon. Leader Alex Hedquist, R. A. Moore-fielH. F. Thomas. THIRD DIVISION H. W. Startup, Division Head. Leader H. W. Startup, George Barton, N .Gunnar Rasmusen. Leader A. O. Smoot, C. C. Hoag, Claude S. Ashworth. Leader Lowry Nelson, W. T. Hasler, Stanley Dixon. Leader J. M. Jackson, J. M. Jensen, George P. Parker. Leader E. L. Roberts, T. L. Martin, W. H. Boyle. d, ita idlpnpQQ "I am highly insulted, said the "Dollar, "I came to this community and vvolunteered my help. I ask for work (and my services are always dependable), yet too many people deme preciated my value. They locked I so here to curb ambitions, my up am now, just about where I started. Of course, after all my experiences elsewhere, I realize that to such large business houses as Provo Leader H. R. Clark, C. S. Pierpont, K. BSiSauls. supports, my value is scarcely worth FOURTH DIVISION considering, but I would appreciate a little thoughtful respect from the Walter Adams, Division Head. merchants here. Furthermore, I like Leader Walter Adams, J. D. Dixon, publicity, and I must have constant ; George Startup. communication with the Chamber of Leader J. A. Buttle, Dell Webb, I will have the public Commerce. C. Swenson. John know that only one firm this morning Leader Wilford Gray, George Lev-enotified the chamber that I called E. G. Hughes. on them. From now on I beg of all Leader Heber Ruper, C. E. Beebe, firms and individuals that my T. H. Sumner. whereabouts be phoned to No. 105. Leader A. N. Taylor, Bert Sutton, "At 9 oclockthis morning I parted Vern Greenwood. with Miss Edna Holdaway, secretary Leader Scott P. Stewart, L. C. Potof the Chamber of Commerce, and ter, G. W. Fitzroy. went to work for the Gas company. is also expected that the various It for me, divisions will be properly introAlthough it had many uses over to duced to Provo on the program at the manager turned me John M. Vick in payment of services. the big Community Geftogether DinMr. Vick needed a door mat, so he ner on Tuesday night. Fursent me to niture company for one. This firm have seImperial fortune-teller- s notified Mr. Blackmore that I was lected 14 for the wedding November with them. The manager asked at Pekin of the boy Emperor of 17 years old and unMary Russell to accept me as part China, Piu-yi- ,repayment on salary, which she did. throned because his country is aMan-chu bride-elea is Miss Russell was in need of my public. The a was she of some shoes of because but birth of woman help high buying, sc I directly sought work at poverty-stricke- n family. Taylor Bros. There I was locked up my the rest of the forenoon. Finally would rather be Idle than waste cause. some to to Owens me to for unworthy abilities go Lily they asked "Folks say they envy me my mishelp pay her salary. I did this, only to be transferred to the Provo Photo sion. Well, how would you like to I have been authorized Supply for photos. Where will I be substitute. V. H. sent next? Speelman, register of the by "I have fears and hopes, said the treasury, and Frank White, U. S. I am hop- treasurer, under act of March 3, Wandering Dollar. will be 1863, to take part in all transactions ing that my services some to further worthy that will not Involve my Uncle Sam employed cause. How I would like to help beyond one silver dollar. I am one of some charity fund! How happy I a series of 1917. Many of my brothwould be to help better conditions in ers before me have suffered their this city! I hope I might get a chance bodies to be torn into fragments in their mission. to assist in paying membership dues order to fulfill I appeal to the to the Chamber of Commerce. Through the press me with retreat to I citizens not be am afraid I will Provo "But disgiven sufficient opportunity to do my spect and decency while I am Com-mercof inChamber the best. I one am afraid some will . patched by terfere with my attempts. I am goWhen introduced to a Post reporting forth on my mission praying that I might not be lured into too many er by J. H. Blackmore of thd Amercosmetic shops by the ladies,, and ican city bureau and Edna Holdaway of the local Chamber of Commerce, gambling dens by the men. In conclusion the "Wandering Dol- the "Wandering Dollar presented a lar appealed to the Provo public not very fneat and appealing front. He to leave him long cramped in small wore a green suit and displayed a of purses. badge bearing the portrait I love fresh air and travel. I de- George Washington. His dispatch in test vanity cases and plain view I j number was lN4367645A. like to be kept on pocketbooks. the move, but n, ell ct e. old-fashion- you-llve- NM-ri- l finest house In Walnwright. as The moon hung kindly above Its that the large community sales or- till as a country Sunday; so quiet ganization will have some serious that there seemed an echo to my foot- level door In the silence of that Ocwork to do and that the fun which steps. It was four oclock in the morn- tober morning, as I checked my gait I WITH MAN Ki-wan- d old-fashion- :-- t trees bordering the sidewalk, and the man at the window had not seen me. ' he called, softly. Boy ! Boy ! Where are you, Simpledoria? He leaned from the window, looking downward. Why, there you are! he exclaimed, and turned to address some invisible person within the room. Hes right there underneath the window. Ill bring Mm up. He leaned out again. Wait there, Simpledoria! he called. Ill be down In a jiffy and let you In. Puzzled, I stared at the vacant lawn before me. The clear moonlight revealed it brightly, and it was empty f any living presence ; there were no nor even bushes nor shrubberies shadows that could have been mistaken for a boy, If Simpledoria was a boy. Thera was aa dog in sight; there was no cat; there was nothing beneath the window except thick, d grass. A light shone in the hallway behind the broad front door; one of these was in silhouette the opened, and man- - In'S long,-(Iit thin figure tall, : ? close-croppe- old-fashion- ed dressing-gown- . . Simpledoria, he said, addressing the night air with considerable severity, I dont know what to make of you. You might have caught your death of cold, roving out at such an hour. But there, he continued, more indulgently; wipeyour feet onthe mat and come in. Youre safe now ! ne closed the door, and I heard him as he arcall to some one the ranged fastenings: Simpledoria is all right only a little chilled. Ill bring him up to your fire. I went on my way in a condition of astonishment that engendered, almost, a doubt of my eyes ; for if my sight was unimpaired and myself not subject to optical or mental delusion, neither boy nor dog nor bird nor cat, nor any other object of this visible world, had entered that opened door. Was my finest house, then, a place of call for wandering ghosts, who came home to roost at four in the morning? It was only a step to Mrs. Apperthwaites ; I let myself In with the key that good lady had given me, stole up to my room, went to my window, and stared across the yard at the house next door. The front window In the second story, I decided, necessarily belonged to that room in which the lamp had been lighted ; but all was dark there now. I went to bed, and dreamed that I was out at sea in a fog, having embarked on a transparent vessel whose preposterous name, up-stair- s, Most anyone can understand this: "Close your eyes. Now imagine there is no town where Provo stands. There are no streets, railroads, no houses, schools, churches, or factories just fields as they are in the open country. "Now open your eyes. We are going to build Provo. It is going to be a town over 10,000 people. Quite state that the prisoners enjoyed the naturally we would call these people services, and an invitation was ex- together to ask them how they wanttended to Mrs. Ewer to "come ed the town built and their suggestions would be valuable in planning again. for the many things we would have to put in it. With all the thinking people of this large group thinking Held on Mitton and working together, we could build a fine town that would be a prosBad Check perous town and a place so good to live in everybody would want to live for salesman stock E. there and it would grow very rapR. Mitton, Control Mitton-Brale- y idly. Aeroplane the these folks "We would company, was arrested in Salt Lake into a Chamber organize Provo Commerce. of so what we do is to Friday evening on a request from is here, already Sheriff J. D. Boyd, charged with hav- organize a Chamber of Commerce check in pay- with its members being all those citiing issued a fictitious a local hotel, zens who desire to help make Provo at bill ment of a board in change. a better and bigger place in which to $5 received he which upon Satur- live and do business. to Provo Mitton was brought Chief and D. That Is how J. H. Blackmore told J. Boyd Sheriff day by be of the fourth and fifth will Deputy Carl Boshard, andJames B. the children the Provo Chamber of about grades Judge arraigned before next two. or Commerce today. the day within Tucker Is Charge Simpledoria. II. to loiter along the picket fence ; but Mrs. Apperthwaite's was a commoof a showed house the light dious old house, the greater part of it suddenly its ojvn. The spurt of a match took of about the same age, I judged, as Its e my eye to one of the upper windows, neighbor; hut the late Mr. Apper-thwaitfever told then a steadier glow of orange had caught the Mansard me that a lamp was lighted. The winof the late Seventies, and the building dow was opened, and a man looked) disease, once fastened upon him, had out and whistled loudly, ntn er known a convalescence, but. I stopped, thinking he meant to at- rather, a series of relapses, the tokens tract my attention ; that something of whIMi. in the nature of a cupola and might be wrong; that perhaps some- a couple of frame turrets, were terrione was needed to go for a doctor. My fyingly apparent. These romantic mismistake was immediately evident, how- placements seemed to me not inharever ; I stood In the shadow of the monious with the library, a cheerful ns shabby apartment pleasantly where 1 found (over a substratum of history, encyclopedia, and family Bible) some worn old volumes of .Godeys Ladys Book, an early edition of Coopers works ; Scott, Bulwer, Macaulay, Byron, and Tennyson, complete ; some old volumes of Victor Hugo, of the elder Dumas, of Flaubert, of Gautier, and of Balzac; The AlLalla Rookh Clarissa, Lucile, Uarda, Beulah, hambra, Ben-HuUncle Toms Cabin, Little Lord Faunt-leroy- ; She, Trilby, and of a later decade, there were novels about those delicately tangled emotions experienced by the suof adventurous preme few; and stories clean-limbeof young tales royalty; and some thin American manhood.; volumes of rather precious verse. Twas amid these romantic scenes that I awaited the sound of the lunch-bel- l (which for me was the announcement of breakfast), when I arose from my first nights slumbers under Mrs. roof ; and I wondered Apperthwaites the books were a fair mirror of Miss Apperthwaites mind (I had been told that Mrs. Apperthwaite had a daughter). Mrs. Apperthwaite herself, in her youth, might have sat to an illustrator of Scott or Bulwer. Even now you could see she had come as near being romantically beautiful as was consistently proper for such a timid, gentle- - little gentlewoman as she was. Reduced, by her husband's insolvency (coincident with his demise) to keeping boarders, she did it gracefully, as If the urgency thereto were only a spirit of quiet hospitality. It should bemadded in haste that she set an excellent table. Mcreover, the guests who gathered at her board were of a very attractive description, as I decided the instant my eye fell upon the lady who sat opposite me at lunch. I knew at once that she was Miss Apperthwaite, she her went so, as they say,-vit- h more been could have mother; nothing suitable. Mrs. Apperthwaite was the kind of woman whom you would expect to have a beautiful daughter, and Miss Apperthwaite more than fulfilled her mothers promise. I guessed her to be more than Juliet Capulets age, Indeed, yet still between that and the perfect age of 8h was of a larger, falter. (Continued on Page 2) down-stair- s, r, d to-go- IN FISH AND GAME LAY ARE DISCUSSED Masquerader." Mr. Guymons inter-- , might well be characterized pretation as professional. Mr. Edmond Evans and Miss Alice Ludlow played well together in the Silk leading roles of Mr. and Mrs. conMcDonald. They both have had siderable experience ajid their performance indicated that they were quite at home on the stage.acts took The second and third place in the boarding house of Mrs.d McDuff, an Irish lady with a daughter, Euphema. Miss LaVieve Huish- and Miss Florence Baird proved equal to these difficult roles, and they occasioned much merriment by their clever interpretations of the characters. Julia Anderson in the role of the sweetheart of the unfortunate Jimmie, moved the audience by her open expression of sad emotion just before she followed her Jimmie to a voluntary watery grave. Miss Jepperson was as carefree, natural and "innocent as Molly Clark could possibly have been. A well filled house greeted the cast in their first appearance in public. It showed the Kiwanians that their efforts in building are greatly appreciated. The net proceeds of the play will be divided between the community the free welfare committee an health clinic. Approximately forty members of the Utah County Fish and Game Protective association met at the county court room Friday evening and discussed the proposed amendments to the fish and game law to be introduced at the coming session of the legislature, according to Walter Freshwater, secretary of the organization. Ross Ratcliffe acted as temporary chairman of the meeting. State Fish and Game Commissioner Madsen, in whose office the new bill was drawn up, was detained from the meeting because of family sickness. Outside of a few minor suggestions the bill, as first drafted, was approved. The Utah, county association expects to hold another Meeting in the near future, at which time it is hoped that State Commissioner Madsen and the legislators from this county can be present. The proposals of the new bill not included in the present law are given herewith in full. Special points of interest to; the general puh-li- c are the proposal that special licenses be sold for certain, kinds of hunting and fishing to , both residents and and the proposal to extend the dqck season fifteen days and make the open deer season from October 21 to to October 31: Gambling Must Stop, Section 1. The appointment of the fish and game commissioner, the Says Chief chief deputy, deputy wardens, hatchunder Civil "We dont propose to tolerate ery superintendents, Service examinations. gambling in any form if we can help Sec. 3. Propose to omit advisory it, was the statement of Chief of board, with the understanding that Police Wren Wilkins, Saturday, folthe fish and game commissioner will lowing the arrest of Otto C.- Peteradvise with the various sportsmens son, Carl Hansen, A. J. Allen and P. organizations throughout the stftte. H. McDonald,- all of thiscity, who Sec. 5. The state commissioner were taken into at 3:30 Satshall receive as compensation "the urday morning custody by Police Officers sum of $4500.00 per annum. The James Snow and Loring Harris, salaries of all other employes of the charged with gambling. The arrest department to be fixed by the com- took place at a local rooming house, missioner subject to the approval of where the men are said to have been the board of examiners. found 'with their and poker Sec. 6. Paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 chips Qn the table. money One man had $8 to be changedxto provide $5.00 resi- on the table at the time the officers dent license for shooting deer. broke in on them, which with the A 50 cent resident license for poker chips and cards was confiscatanimals. ed. Each man was placed under $10 trapping A $3.00 fishing bond pending hearing in Judge James i B. Tuckers court. (Continued on Page Five.) j simple-minde- - RECEIVE HANDSOME od ut SPRINGVILLE BEET GROWERS er I and School Children Prisoners of County Asked To Visualize Jail Visited by Salvation Army Building of City The dozen or more prisoners in the county jail were given spiritual advice Sunday morning when the local branch of the Salvation Army held a special service there under the direction of A. E. Ewer, who has charge of the Salvation Army work in this city. Reports from the sheriffs office Get-Togeth- ed upon gla s UfeTelt-in- g .h ih. here and there from an Invisible rail, was It was a wholly delightful performance; a spellbinder; an altgeth-e- r agreeable surprise. OF TODAY These and many additionalcompli-mentar- y expressions were heard conThe citizens of, tomorrow as well is manner in which the the as the citizen of today will be heard cerning players presented Willard at the Community Macks famous drama, "Kick In, at dinner tomorrow at the Roberts Columbia the theater, Friday evehotel. Mr. Alma Smoot, represent. ing the student body of the Provo ning. a local troupe has if It is doubtful high school will speak on the subon ever the stage to betappeared ject of "The Provo of1 Tomorrow. He will tell of the things which he ter advantage than did this comand much cedit is due Edmund has found, as a' coming citizen of pany, Evans for the commendable manner Provo, and aS;gathered from his in which the play was put over. classmates, what the younger genIt would be a indeed, to sineration is expecting of the commun- gle out any playertask, as a star, for every ity when they assume the rolls of one started in his or her respective leadership which will be theirs in a part. few years. "Kick In is a detective story of Mr. E. II. Harter, president of the and, like most detective stomerit, student body of the B. ' Y. U., will ries, the suspense and rapid action draw upon the training which is be- make it extremely difficult for amaing received through the university teurs. However, to see Glenn Guy-raoin the study of economics and sociol- of the drug addict. ogy and other subjects concerning ; LaVieveportrayal Iluish as the stern Irish coinmunity development, when he speaks upon the subject of The Future of Provo as Seen by a B. Y. U. Student. Probably a number of B. Y. TJ. students are watching for an opportunity to establish their homes in Provo, and Mr. Harter may be able to point out some of the requirements which these highly trained young citizens required of jheir prospective home town. Chester Deal, manager of the Utah McDonaiu, a man with a record, Wholesale Grocery company of Salt but who now" is going "straight, asLake City; President T. F. Pierpont, sists Jimmie of safety, but to a Mrs. W. T. Hasler, and other local Jimmie kicks in.place speakers are expected to present the The whereabouts of the jewels and past accomplishments of the Cham- the disposition of Jimmies body form ber of Commerce and point to the the mysteries of the play, and the immediate possibilities of Provos puzzle for the detectives to solve. future. That the program will conThe play opens with the chief of tain most exceptional entertainment detectives putting Jimmies sweetfeatures as well, is indicated by the heart, Jennie Stromberg, a part playannouncement that the B. Y. U. or- ed with a keen perception of corchestra, the Ladies Trio, composed by Miss Julia Anof Miss Carol Poulton, Mrs. James A. rect interpretation and Molly Clark, one of the derson, Bullock and Miss Marguerite Jeppergang, through the third degree. son, and community singing under Here Mr. Martin as Chief Dennison the leadership of Professor G. W. won the appreciation of the audience Fitzroy, will furnish the musie of the with his pop and firm conviction. He evening, and that there also will be was determined to find the stolen additional entertainment features. rocks because election was near, The re3ults of a survey of the stu- -. an(j gang 'With. recdent body of the Provo High school ords inhaunteithe manner: In this merciless a which shows what the students- - ex- he was Massisted Edgar by ably pect to follow as their life work, how cArthur t as Walter Noble, Sergeant many intend making their homes in as Detective Stone and Dr. E. Provo and what the five hundred, or Adams Mr. G. Hughes as Detective Brady. more young folks think to be Pro- McArthur each provoked laughter carvos greatest need for future devel- time he appeared his slouch opment, will be given as a part of riage and a salute by to hfs" superior ofthe program. was made to contrast The invitation to attend is ex- ficer which with the abrupt moveeffect tended to every resident whether a ments of the short chief. Walter member of the Chamber of Com- Adams clear voice and clear-cactmerce or not. It is urged that reshis part justice, as did Dr. did ing ervations be made by telephone as Hugh es. the accommodations are limited. Glenn Guymon in the role of Freddie Logan, the dope fiend, gave us a weird and almost uncanny portrayal of the drug addict, the like of which PROPOSED CHANGES has not been seen on the local stage since Guy Bates Post appeared here in the famous dual roles of The ss i. WITH WILL EXPRESS VIEWS S S S HIT COLUMBIA PATRONS MAN OF TOMORROW Tarkington r V Though there will light-heartedne- By Booth BEASLEYS CHRISTMAS PARTY WILL OUTLINE PLANS AT pne-minu- te Taylor-Dixon-Russ- DISTINCT PROVO first district of YOU USE ME, A JL SALES ORGANIZATION A meeting of the KIWANIS PLAYERS MAKE T WOMENS CLUBS TO IN ESTABLISHED 1910 PROVO CITY, UTAH, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1922 DISTRICT FEDERATED MEET ID EIGHT PAGES ALL HOME PRINT NO PATENT SUM ' report from Springville states Springville-Mapleto- n Sugar sent out checks to the farmcompany ers on the 15th of this month amounting to $100,000 for beets received during the month of October. The companys labor checks for the mohth of November will be approximately $20,000, according to officials, making in round figures, $100,000 put in circulation this month in the vicinity of Springville by the sugar industry. Beet digging is practically completed, according to reports from the factory. While the sugar beet acreage was considerably less this year than last, the yield is said to be much better. The beets will average 13.5 tons to the acre this year as compared with twelve tons per acre last year. The sugar content is said to be about the same as last season, while the purity is some higher. The factory officials expect to finish cutting between December However, the run on discard molasses will begin about thirty days later and is expected to continue for eight months. The price of sugar this year is said to be better than has been received for two years. It is claimed that should the present prices, continue the farmers on the sliding basis will receive $7 per ton. A that the 10-1- 5. ? non-residen- ts, Wilkins ' - - fur-beari- ng non-reside- nt i |