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Show 16 Pages Today 1688 f,, VOL XXXVI. UTAH COUNTY THIS YEAR PRODUCED $400,000 WORTH O F APPLES. NO. 48. PROVO, UTAH, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1921. mm jveti; Yorker bays: "Provo Will Grow" Af liil liJ: Ift M lb lS mt-xHai- ter-da- a . . r, Reclamation Chiefs in Provo ; . Roberts. iJLX farmer," said MrMnrin "was driving a load of products 4o-- market The endgate of the wagon came out and gradually every thing in the wagon leaked out upon the road. Finally the farmer came .to a mudhole, and the wagon wheels stuck. Looking around, the farmer first noticed he had lost eon in Hotel the load. 2WelI,Tby" neck!3ibfamf.'' claimed, 'here I'm stuck in the mud with nothing to. unload!" Mr. Munn. consulting engineer of the v. S. reclamation service, told Rotar-iaii- 8 and their guests of the work now wing done by the reclamation committee meeting in Provo.-- ' "We are trying to, save a dollar by not spending it," he committee is studying ot making dollars do explained. , "The ways and means their. most Just n&w the reclamation; service is hard pressed. The repayment being held P on many projects, due to the low Prices farmers receive, Isj seriously -Hampering thereclamatron work. It is only by these repayments that further work can be done upon uncompleted projects, nsv nir,4w. anfl .. ,,,!,. Later in the Interview for The Herald Mr, Munn explained the work of the special committee In session, outlining it as a study of means whereby the reclamation service may continue its fine program of reclaiming lands while, at the same time, receiving less of the revolving funds . than are due. , : The following reclamation officials, in session here, were guests with Mr. Munn at the Rotary meeting, presided over by Vice President Oscar - A. : Spear: Barry Dibble, project manager, Bur-ley- , Idaho: J. W. Beadl, assistant to the director, Washington, D. C; P. W. Dent, district, counsel. El Paso. Tex.; J. M. Luney, chief xierk.Denver office; W. A.; Meyer, examiner of accounts, Denver;-- J. R. Alexander, disA. Colo.;-H- . trict - counsel, Montrose, Cox,- district counsel,- San Francisco; L. J. Foster; project manager, Montrose, Colo.; A. H. Peach, chief clerk, Montrdse, Colo. S, 0. Harper, project manager, Grand Junction, Colo.; G. H. Murphy, chief clerjt. Grand Junction, Colo.J J. F.J Richardson, G. B. Snow, chief clerk, Fallon, Nev.; R. C. E. Weber, project manager, Orlaud, Cal.; C. H". Lillingston, chief clerk, Qrland, Cal.; J. E. Overglade, chief clerk, Provo;- - and W. L. Whittimore, project " manager, Profvo.f-t-r- rOther Rotary guests were J. Edwr j Stein, Jack Shirenian, and Mr. Richter, stores. manager of the Piggiy-Wiggi- y 8 iv - ROY BO REN. all and rved, officers of . the priesthood, thy might, - mind strength," and the second, ?."which is stake presidents, bishops and general like unW 4t??oi-"4ihaWeihy board members of the auxiliary organ neighbor as thyself." By doing this, izations, being seated In divisions espe President Grant said, everything will cially reserved, be well with the Lord's people. The tabernacle was filled, auditor The - M8ual expectancy prevailed lum anri eatlerV.TTua "frfririnar"Waa'rnh. (Third to enter.) JOHN S. SMITH. (Last in the ring.) WALTER, P. WHITEHEAD. - s 1 t - - (t Walter Whitehead."" bust"" today the mayoralty race. V W "i if .... en-ter- capdf--date1," - Apple Contest - ' m '& with-senio- , 1 . 2" ' (e " o ooa-cimo- n In.- . - ine-piciu- res , A , ' - . J. ' i - I JBuLJJiey-shQuld-nsell a superior-articl- e he asktnl as cheaply as buy in other factories, the payrolls of which never can float -- backipio sold elsewhere. You must "Provo stores." . , . . article inferior is an not balance an Ww The president of the Provo Foundry finds the same difficulty in getarticle purchased in New Knight article against a shoddy, or part-wo" ''.-- . ,;; 'England.". . ting customers at home. For him the field extends over Utah;1" There are few foundries in this state.. But these are not well patronized by Utah The Herald often has urged upon Provo citizens the advise of shopping at home. We have suggested to our readers thatit is to their finanpeople, rwho ratheHnsist upon spending their money inhe'easti-Jobber- s in this state give preference to eastern goods. In this they are wholly un- - " cial interest to buy in Utah county. We believe Utah county people should " "... fair to themselves, to the foundrymen of this state, and to the state itself. V" " patronize Utah We now carry the suggestion further. We urge upon Utah county Provo and Utah county will reap a rich harvest by spending within merchants the advisability of buying from Utah county manufacturers this county as much of its money as possible. whenever possible. Let's buy Utah county goods first, fruit, canned stuff; woolens, brick, ' merchants have said that they will, in the we must in Utah If outside of the county. go Already some candyr anything produced future, buy at home when they can dp so . Others will, let us hope, fall county let us stay within the state if possible; that is to say, if you can't ' buy it in your home count y, but it elsewhere in the state of Utah. Don't "r.V -- .... into line. ,."." db toward more will Utah . let ' your money go out of Utah if you can keep it at home. county prosperous and making Nothing, nothing will do more toward making Provo grow than the Money kept circulating IN UTAH has a better chance of getting back to you than if it is sent to Chicago or New Yerk or California. county program, enthusiastically and sincerely carried out. Let's build up the payrolls we now have in Provo, in Utah county, and Probably it may aid in the performance of this, program if Utah the state. county staged a Utah county exhibition, a showing of . goodi. - v What do you think of that"? Surely we can fill the armory, and then some, The. great est inducement you can offer outside capital to come in is with goods, manufactured in Utah county! : to prove to that establishments here now are making money. ' talks! It Every; person who produces, manufacturer ' and farmer, exhibit the speaks loudly. Money ; : h best of his county goods! If payrolls how here are made prosperous, other payrolls will. come in. will serve stimulate to exhibition an Such the loyalty to home, ani .'And they will not come in until those here now are turning in a profit for nearly 50,000 human beings Utah county is home, What outside textile capital would come to Provo tinless the Knight It will do more. It will advertise our goods. It will give us a better Woolen mills, already here, were prosperous? knowledge of what we really are doing. ; It will show to our own eyes hovr . . What capital will be tempted in as long as the city is one which will well we are making things many of us have gone far abroad to obtam. not patronize manufacturers already in Provo? If the best of the manufactured products of Utah county, from Lehl Of course, it is absolutely necessary that Provo manufactures sell ' to Goshen, were brought to Provo for the exhibition, thou-- . goods as cheaply as they are sold elsewhere. Otherwise it would be unwise own would our as learn mee must to sands of are both that they to expect liome patronage. They people competion, buying from other state? price :' r - ; goods inferior ,to what we ourselves produce. and quality. i' ,; . -- Qt - all-wo- : i.-- X e g-1 are-goin- county-merchant- - : s. . far-sighte- d - buy-in-Ut- ak C ' WhyT made-at-ho- ... other day a Salt Lake man was visiting In Provd. Hedecided trip here, he would take back to his wife a box . a souvenir of his "0VO canrlv walked into a Provo store and asked for a bo . made-inUta- of Provo v want to get a box of canay to take home n a mft. frnm Prnvn." he exolamed. u.ButA couldn't buv. in that Provo store, a box of Provo's candy. ..The frZ irThe Herald, though, has" seen, that Provo candy, in cities as far that in Salt Lake," he protested. pan. I eJnake Wankets as good as are made, any where," the manager of vvoolen mms said., "And we charge no more xuruwui M the same quality are sold elsewhere; yet most Provo dealers m : ' ? -- canT0111 ol ol " candies? nly tVe a Prov foundry if we are going to buy elsewhere? hy have a Provo brickyard if we are goftig to buy Salt Lake brick? 7 have any other if we prefer to buy manufacturing plant here "om ' manufacturing plants far distant? said that it was f.,iolheI!:ianager of the Knight Woolensrmlls-cently' wffi selling to merchants of other cities than of Provo. Why? .1'ie manager of one of Provo's candy companies said that he could sell n elsewhere but could not sell to our own merchants, IWS " . "hy should tWo Ivv v going to eat P10 Jas Paxman -- tliere be a Woolen mills here if ln7i,"ll0oM " ,,ruc seaboard for ourKnight woolens? n,,1"1 announced) DR. O. K. HANSEN. ' i , profound reverence to the word of the conducting and Prof. J. J. McClellan Lord as it fell from the lips of their at the organ. The opening hymn was we Thauk Theeij God, for a Proph respected leader. et." The opening prayer was by Pres-in Seated their usual places on the L, Chipman of Alpine idelitStephen stand, tier by tier, were the general The second song was, "How authorities of the church. President stake." -. . Grant and his counselors, President firm a foundation." President- - Grant referred to the Charles W-.- Penrose and - President r mem- financial stringency that exists, sayAnthony W. Ivins, ber of the Council of the Twelve occu-- : ing it is probably the most - severe pying the top row. Other members of since the very early days of Utah. the Twelve were on the second row. Much of he said, must be ascribed The presiding patriarch occupied bis to the failure of the people to heed place on the upper pulpit and on the the advice of the servants of the Lord third tier were members of the First not to run in debt to avoid extrava-ganv- e Council of Seventies and the member's and to live, without luxuries of the.- - Presiding Bishopric. On the that cannot be afforded. He hopes the bottom row sat "assistant church his- Saints will profit by this distress, turn torians, auditors and church school and obey counsel iij the faith that God officials. Mission presidents, temple will sanctify thin experience to their Saints know that presidents and patriarchs sat in two good.,. r Latter-darows of chairs Immediately facing' the God lives tdiat he can. sanctify their - In the front Of this he said he has an' part of the audi"tdtBtressr'-pulpittorhim the usual seating order was ol- - abiding faith. 7- r: i - " r with FOR MAYOR First in the ring:) ( A instance:" thP i? CANDIDATES 1, i IfcMaUe in This City County or Strte, They're the Goods To Buy ' 'onized; P,, 4 Provo High Football Team et ttis fixed in our minds: There is littletobe gained about uhtlTwe have made pay- nT1 nerebringing moTeyronsToTrovo, ' vua fx profitable freaay iUliey-wiH-Tior- be establishments are not profitable 'if the - Provo Vv u UvL 111) Mr. Whitehead arrived at Tils decision to get into the ring after- - con siderable deliberations, and, as he pat it this morning: "Only after many of my friends absolutely insisted upon. . my. running,": no li'l agaiusfany other Mr. Whitehead said. "I am for Walter Whitehead in this race, be-cause I believe Walter Whitehead can and will giye the people of Provo the kind of business administration the city needs, and Which the majority of citizens want" Mr. Whitehead has spent most of ... a , his life in this city, coming here when, im...m. m. ji.x..,-. a hoy of 1 from England. He attended schoqLhere, andjearned the print-,-, WALTER P. WHITEHEAD. ers' trade, working on the old Provo Enquirer when one of Utah's pioneer newspapermen was carving newspaper history in this city, Walter, quit the City people pow arejaklng a more print shop when his health made that He then .went l decided interest in the WoodtClifton move imperative. apple contest. Hitherto the interest work for Farrer Brothers company, ia has been more agricultural, among the dry goods business. Here he built up a wide circle of friends, and then fruit, growers Theyjow have done launched into business for himself. their share toward making a success That was ten years ago. f. of the first apple, contest staged In : Startingwlth a smalLgrocery store i utan county he gradually increased his 'business Yesterday the apples entered in the and patronage, and today has - two contest were placed nn exhibition at groceries doing a large business the Woodlifton store. Naturally the throughout the city and farming dis" " ? if " ' I . threejf prize winners received the trict w . places of honor. , Then came the spe cial mentions, and the honorable men of, Provo all my time and attention." tlons, Mr. Whitehead said. "I shall make Apples not receiving honorable men arrangemen ts - to- - retire-- f rora active tion wer$exclud3d from the exhibi- management of my stores so that I tion, In -- addition Hwo - Provo fruit can devote my energies and mind to concerns, not permitted In the con- the service of the city. test, rTeTxhibtttngrt2e5plesT My office will be in the city admin t.: '. These are the William M. Roylance istrative building. Any citizen with a. Excompany, and the .Utah Fruit complaint or suggestion, will always change. Mr. Roylance of the former find me at my civic post of duty, and company, and JMr. IWnaenoI the Utah he, or she, will always find a weleome Fruit, were excluded from the contest if it be a complaint or suggestion t r'AX' because they were Judges, I think the riehts of be delivered. store nas neen every citizen should be safeguarded." me w decorated with autumn leaves, while Mr. Whitehead has been interested much of the store space has been in civic problems for many years. At given voer to the apple exhibition. A president of the old Provo Commer- special invitation. Jiaaiheen extended cial club he gave two years of his to students ef the high Bcbool and the time to the upbuilding of the. city's : IT B. Y. Ui to come to the exhibition and business and educational institutions. get acquainted with the apples grown serving throughout the war as1 chairin their home country' man of the county fuel administrathree prize winners with their tion. f " vV alter Whitehead's work demon-apples" jtwm-'- photographed at the -that he was not a Kectional oaunjujjsji), sent tothe New York Times, peingtstrated the nor nartv man" a Provn man infm-m-. NTewspaperEntrprie-asociatioBrn- d edThe Herald reporterr to Underwood & Underwood, of New No. I. am not a mayoralty candi- The latter tnr the newrt date for nnv uartv" Sir Whitehead ork. . photographers who supply newspapers serted, "nor for' any faction, side, or all over the country with : news pie- Interests. I'm for the city of Provo. lures. riciures,,too, were sent to tne it Is my home. I grow as Provo grows Salt Lake newspapers. This means of 'and prosper as the city enjoys will, it is believed, help perity. toward, making Utah county apples i have no desire to be a municipal 11 better known all over the nation. 'dictator."- he added, "but I do believe . , , , x , . The prize box of Jonathans will be that as mayor I can serve the people, i . . . sent to the president of the United There is no higher honor that can. . States. Saturday evening. At the same iconie to any man than honest service, -- , ; . time the prize box of Rome Beauties !to the public." ' , ... k " " ' will be sent to'the vice president, and Top-roLeft ta'right: Kenneth Mcintosh,- VictorHedquist, AltonGilesr Afton " StoutrPaiil the box of Delicious will go to Mrs. PROVO GETS A NEW COP. .' j The Herald's plea for better policei ' Stewart,, Eph Homer, utility men. Second row Coach Edwards, main team: Fred Dixon, F. B:; Harding.- Mr. Butler today announced that protection was answered yesterday by Lawrence Peterson, R. T.; Garence Knudsen, R. G.; George Carter, R. H.; Kimball Mcintosh, Q.; boxes would be sent to the j the' city commission appointing Loring of Front row Orson Lee, R. p. ; Rulon Openshaw, 3LjG. ; John Taylor, L.- E. ; Ralph Thomas, L. T. ; editor of 'apples the New York Times, and " to! Harris, man. to the nlzht j police Eldon Dennis, L. H. Peay, the big, husky cental was sick the night the Tiicture was taken. the two senators from Utah. force: : laugh-produc- mm 1 ( Second . delivered in The best Provo was disclosed In the remarks of James Munn, of Denver, addressing the Provo Rotary club at today's lunch- fo) A (a) S. General' Conference Convenes L. D. wide-awak- - - ? nn second semiannual general conference of the Church of Jesus Cbrist of Lat y Saints convened yesterday. President Heber J. Grant presided and called the opening session in the Is much difference between will, bring together some of the most tabernacle to order promotlv at 10 successful business men o'clock.- ' . :w Prove 1 seVtayind the Provo . of the lntermountain region. '"" iJaynot-diwwidetanrtn- rfc Uibe a routine meeUng TJIrJ Grant admonished the Saints to obey ; -- . .'. - oauia was asxea. fU here." "None of our meetings are routine," the word of the Lord in every particuAnd E-- C. Sams, president of the at Penney, stores, . looked be replied.- "We get together to com- lar and thereby put themselves,; in Center street s pare notes, to report on progress made position to" "receive the blessinjts of up and Jtan West financial Mentally he was picturing the city and plan future steps to greater prog- the Lord in the try in stringency. that has spread throughout aa it looked to him the last time he ress. We're optimists," he smiled. "I find it easier to De optljnistlc in the land. If the people will be abso Physically he was was in Provo. the West lhan' back east," he added, lutely honest with the Lord ia the pay . seeing IN city of today "ind there'll fee still more differ "Western people never got as 'blue' ment 01 their tithes, if jtbey will obey Mr. Sams through the past period of depression the .Word of Wisdom, if they will patence next time I . come ronize home industry, he said, the sdded, mentally visualizing a city of as the easterners got "Are business conditions In money east the stringency will pass and norfuture. the mal times will come again. Much of "For, seemingly, Provo is upon the better than they were a year ago?" Mr. Sams replied: the stress, he said, is due to extravathreshold of a remarkable growth," "Much better, especially in silks, gance, to luxurious habits' and to a Mr. Sams continued. "This difference between the city textiles and lines that were first into disregard of Bound principles of economics. so, muca- - the depressed price era. The steel noind what it was is not In this, he said, the Saints have longest and now still a difference ot tmuaings, nor streets. Lord ; True, there have been many buildings has to face readjustment of 4 prices. disregarded the word of the marked fttherlssrlasT ourTiBT5elreves the Lofdwiusanc-- , Tim ueW"TBtonraeroBSTthg gMireii. street is adding Its share- - to the up- year and began 1921 with a clean tify the experience to the good of He admonished the Saints to building of the business section. No, slate, enabling us to do more business people. -the first great commandment: observe a and at than not i is ever, in the difference real profit" city the in a new at- - Beverting to Provo again, Mr. Sams "Jhou shalt love the Lord thy God in added buildings,-hu- t mosphere .1 notice. This is an atmos- pointed to what every Provo citizen ' so well: phere of optimism, of certainty that knows 'Your city is remarkably well lothe citjf is going ahead is sure to water-powepress forward and upward. Nothing cated, with minerals, coal, oil, and rich agricultural lands; under the sun can hold a city back are facilities transportation when once it gets that confidence of your Why notforgeahead LThe wrtaiBgrowtnvlThat; fry the way., is good the difference between a - progressing answerTJies within each Provo man and woman. Provo can grow only so cit? and a stationary one. "Mrr Sams was In" Provo yesterday, far as you want it to grow, and that .. en route from his store in Eureka to want must be translated into action. I'll .,mkmtmjtmtm ' -attend a district meeting of Penney I believe Provo is destined to be a disitore managers being held in Salt large ctty; it ought to be the The .meeting tributing center for a large area.? Lake City this week. tS' PRICE THREEXENTS. ui made-at-ho- , WHAT DO YOU THINK OF A : MADE-IN-PROV- O ' . EXHIBITION? LET'S HEAR FROM YOU! , |