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Show 3i - - f. ' if yea de aet roeeive yeur HaraW fwetilarly, aleaae aietlfy the eMoa Teieahena t5 and wrTI, s1a eusaw the matter with year earHer. .. . - , a inini iwjr n tin M n r 1 I 11 111 UUUU UUI ri n i 11 v 1 T ' g" '? J ' . . . . Vt - - OB. JAMES E. TALMAGE Coming baclctft the school of Ma ; youth B. V. U. Steel - R. OEANnTWELVES Of the executive committee In T. program. ctaaroe-eMhe-U- ay Program 6 IN PROVO v ABREAST OF (Special to The Sunday Herald.) 1 Professors Fred Buna, Charles B. SPANISH FORK, Maw, B. T. JLarsen and Hermese only know one city In Utah and Peterson of the BrlghantToung unl- - JlfirlM Prom" said National i)mJiersItyhave been granted sabbati mander Alvln Owsley of the Amer cal leaves of absence tor next year. ican Legion when Uylted to vtolt Professors Buss and Maw will go to Utah during his western trip. -- - Stanford and Professors parses and Peterson to eastern Universities,' . "I was in Provo at the state con. This action Is In acoordanoe with vention two years ago and spoka at that time at the Rotary, luncheon the policy of the Institution to kepp v When I come back to Utah again a number of its professors os graduate schools continually, thus i want to visit provo once more and renew the very pleasant ac strengthening the faculty and keep- j: abreast In of the times edaca ,4tng made which I at that qualntance tlonal progress. time." . John E. Booth of Spanish Fork, The following professors - who on sabbatical leaves of national committeeman from Utah have gone absence this year getting their doe-,- -has Just returned from the national will next year retors' headquarters of the American Le sume degrees, their ln'the univerpositions nawhere at the Indianapolis, gion as follows: tional executive commltteeLhae: sityProf. William J. Snow, who has been in session. been at the University of CaliforAt this meeting Commander Ow nia for two years, in the history de sley devided to' visit Utah in partment; Prof. M. Wllford Poul- August. Provo will be Included .In.' woonas oeen- - ai vmcago m- this trip and arrangements will e jj son, the. psychology department j 'and made to have all of the posts In n rof, Carl F. gyring, who jj j - pos-sfble-- - - t.u -- ' yat - haa-bee- TKURSDAr-JUNE-- Ts and Spencer present llllf llll .sbsjv.. III Illlfl HI kUV III In possession of this iquipment we leei no nesiiancy in T ilp emSnowvrBail4 Paul Hippie, IRoy Passey Sutton Pf-as- i Colvey, Glenn Ripple, 'Munetf -- Iems and sol vlng them. and "We are standing today on the Roy Elliott, ge'cond; Vineyard, Joel threshold of an active life. We havi Andreaaen, Willis (Madsen, Howard every chance tor success. We have Anderson, Bernard Anderson, Wei everything back of us that the peo by Gammon, Fred Fielding, Fay ple that have gone out oetore us Fielding and Cart Fielding, third. have had. and they. have made a Water Boiling Mapleton,' Robert success We are in the possession Snowr Lewis Harmer; Sprlngvilie of a heritage that has been tried troop 4, Frank Brown and Rapbel and tested and been found to pos Palfreyman.; Sharon, Fema Lossee seas the elements that are neces The . Wasatch Mountain club of and Crea Kofford; Ptoot troop 1 to meet the emergencies that Salt Lake City will make its first Jesse Nelson, Araond Eggertaen sary life may its complexity annual hike to Provo canyon Tues Knot Tying ProYo "troop S, JI of affairs. present'in Conover, Irvine Mabey,' Ward Mc We have bees orought up in day afternoon, May 29. One huniwnaia, wonnr Proro troop , Ken where we have been taught dred and fifty club members and dall Colvey,. Henry Stewart; and the principles that build tor char friends' of the organization have trop l, Sharon, Sari Mecham,'cret acter and for service, for manhood signed up for the trip and small Kofford, tied, Seconal; Proro troop and (or womanhood. We have had groups of hikers from Payson and 11, Arthur Sutherland, third. the opportunity of attending an Provo will also Join the party. Fire' by friction Troop 8, provo Tuesday evening there will be educational institution that is dis William Mortimer, won; troop 10 because of (he principles staged a bonfire and a bonfire pro tinctive Andrew Jerry, second; troop 6, at Vivian park. The depart upon which It stands. We have had gram ment of aesthetic dancing of the Passes third.- -. - with the opportunity of associating the hifhest type of individuals, in Brigham Young university will furan ideal environment, with men nish dancing numbers' for this enand women that will In later life be tertainment Among the students feathe leaders in the affairs of state who will' take part in the dance and among the foremost in the solv- ture will be Alice Taylor, Elva Crosby, Muriel Smart, Lyle Nelson, ing of problems of the nation. Olive Huish "We must realise and I think Lucy Bee, .Huish.Crane, Nina Jennie and that we do the (act that "appreciate . Wednesday morning short hikes the best thing we will carry away wilkbe taken from the park to inwith us from our alma mater willt After nearby points. not be what we have here prized teresting luncheon the excursionists wiU be the most and held In the greatest ArJf admiration, .hot our knowledge of followed By W. 0. BEE8LEY. ; by a dance in the pavilion. the sciences, languages, literature,, Forty-fou- r In the late afternoon the hikers years' ago last March, I felt deeply lmpressel to take a art; It la something Infinitely wiU return to Salt Lake City. than value more .of eacred, greater car of apples to Evanaton, Wyo. 8. The Wasatch club extends a cor 8. Jones, a leading merchant of our all these, and that la our aroused dial invitation to Provo people to our town, scouted the idea of my un- - ambitions,:' our discovery of in their Vivian park outselves, of our powers and of our participate uenaaang this project. ing. Reservations' must be made be to our resolutions The apples consisted of a varr possibilities, before Monday evening because the distinctive character, Bellflower better cltlsens, and the more ready club does its own cooking and' it an assume of to the responsibilities Davis and Spitienberg. I had bees orders provisions according to the to Evanston below, so I 'wrote the enlightened citizenship. number of persons who sign up for postmaster asking the price of fruit. "We have learned to play a man the trip. Be said he did not know, but told ly part' in life, to do .the greatest me to load a car as pricea were fav- - and grandest things possible. This will mean-- a great deal more to us .' oraoie. ...... .Theae large apples cost 0 Mints than the things that we have tears BOYS a bushel At Evanston, they sold ed from the books and lectures." GIRLS Misa Wanda Boyack In a clever three pounds for 26 cents. L Five hundred and forty Bushels parody on Kipllng'a: "l," portrayed throws Into a car without any other the members of the class- - as fresh IN AUTO WRECK equipment makes it n6t expensive. men, ; sophomores, Juniors,: aeqlora i ODtainea an ordinary ear. The ex and gradautes. In Illustration as-of pense of loading the fruit, freight ker poem, iMlss 'Boyack had the and other things coat me 8 400.00. sistance of five gentlemen members My object was to wholesale, ' and of the class. Each of he first tour, (Special to The Sunday Herald.). May 26. Two SPR1NGVILLE, after apending three daya, 1 representing the lour years of colIn getting the moat suitable lege, had an Improvised head. That boys .and two girls narrowiy of the freshmsn was big, impor escaped death here at mianigni place Cor selling the apples. I located a frame buildln in th tant, and grinning; of the sopho Fridav when the automobile they ater of the city, and then began more, eomewhat reduced in else but were yidlng in turned turtle on. the head "Was state highway near the Jenersoa (nuimgi in me mttt. The first still smiling; the Junior to obtain a lot of smaller with little amUe left;" the school building. Xea Hansen, 80 yeare old, or The (40 bushels senior waa almost normal; the graduate-entirely, so.Xacb of the men Mapletonrwedriving the arBus Were; quite a carried a book, the size Increasing Bowen. of Spanish Fork, and two lame arising from the annles " auto i the yeare passed by. 'really refreshing ,f f girls of Sprlngvilie were in the of ue nspseries a acciaeui Fred him when Markham, in with The fruit Mores Is Rock Springs, from were iwhI. The dealt returning reen River, and quite a number) well, drawn chalk pictures f places au came to me. Of course with a similar these. He revealed a dance in Springvllje. the green freshman, ' the yelllni Hansen was driving rapidly when made a reduction Is prices., I remember to crossing the Echo sophomore, the beautiful Junior boy, ii BtteniDted to pass, by another to one too anyon It was - quite cold. And ue normal senior, and the aigni-fie- automobile. Steering waa far guwrag car Hansen graduate. side the early every morning I warmed up A. Ray Olpiu told of the aenlor turnednovefrowlnritf Uccupants he room. The elevation la eonsid project," the. sUrtlng of a fund, for out7-- OnsLgirr vu aeyerelyl hurt, rably higher thanThere, Y. U. stadium. . Each senior hut-nseriously. It waa reported The apple business 44 years ago a The as a wonderful undertaking. At Is contributing $5 to the ntnd, this i.t.F h Dr. John R. Anderson. .with Hansen escaped and more 20 M f during other year promises girt hat time there were only .. a . few out Injury. Bowen suffered bruises the following two years. pie produced them.' solo a Th four were taken to the Ander Cart rendered Chrlstenseh i aoni think there vert any hosnltal by N. Qle.dhlll. anf and Hood," "Robin the from opera ppiea destroyed. I remember Sandwich Jenkins gave a" early Saturday morning wefe takes losed the apples , out la three' Joseph " costume.' dance to their homes. Island Is ' time. IIIHLIIO PII La-Ro- y mm J"?? if . - V J . : .- . r HEAD B. Y. U. KEEPS LEGION .Si 1 lips, Irvine Mabey - 1923 s proyo-top-JA-l- rt.?n- PRICE TWO CENT3. BACCALAUREATE ftERMQ Scoots from Utah stake crowded Elder Melvln J. Ballard of "Norfif park Saturday afternoon (or The program for the twentieth annual outing and grand the quorum of the twelve will the district field meet to pick the council meeting of the United Commercial Travelers of ser representative! from tbie district to deliver the baccalaureate America, district of Montana, Utah and Idaho, Jind the large I thVffo'untTjauLgeet to he held in moa te the graduating--clasof Bteel day celebration brf jijiie irndtrhaa now been com- -j 4 Prdvo next saturuay. June J the Brigham Young severalty committee in charge. pleted by the or ue district Sunday, June 3. The services AH of the troop -JFroniithftzfirstdaweting a4lL will be held to. iJWJPfMI..i-hiJMt- t f 'council Thursday- - morning. June 7.rjntU the . close' of the eonsiderabel Interest: was manifest tabernacle. -. 4dane8--ai thearmonMtnd theMozart halhSaturdarweningi t4. The scouts showed keen com each day wm be crowded , with meetings, luncneons, enter petition in. the various 'contests. That success or failure in the The various events were ran off life of the B Y. U. graduate means tainments ana Bigni-seein- g tqps. with a great deal of speed, much something more than success or The Provo committee has left no stone unturned to the events sane were than faster failure of the individual It means, make the meetings and the outing here one of the best that . run off a year ago, showing .thai in-a- measure, the success or failure Dr. James. E, Talmaae was one of has ever been given, by the U. C. T. The officials of the the scouts has been practicing dill of the university, waa the outstand to 29 students to attend the Columbia Steel corporation have assisted in every way the first twelve ''the past gently during ing thougfirof Uie speech of Le : one to and celebration make a the 48 Young Brigham acquaint worthy months.university years r Grande Noble, president of the , ago, and was a schoolmate of Pres the -- thousands of visitors expected with the new steel in fhe results were aa follows: ' class.' ..... ident George H. Brlmhall and Pres Himt.rv ftf triA stare First AldPrOvo troop 2, Golden "The graduating class of 1923 ap Brimhall, Ray Phillips, tL G. Clark pears before you on the rostrum," id,ent Joseph B. Keeler. ft is exOne of the main features of the outing will be" the mam won; Provo troop 6, Kendall Col Mr, Noble said. "They assemble pected they will fee present at the moth narade to be staged at 1Q o'clock Saturday, Business rey, Roy rassey, Kaipa biuou, sea themselves here in this oostume, "alumni reunion June 7 and concerns from the various cities of Utah, and industrial ond ; Prove troop 8, Arthur Hasler, after having successfully finished Idaho' and .Montana will be represented with floats in the Carl Harris, William Mortimer the requirements of this educational " , . parade. '. .. ,. .. .third. v institution, after having obtained and convention is as fol The for the program outing - SigflaJing school therequipment Ihat-thl- rlows: Mortensen, Ward McDonald, Golden offers to one to help him meet and ji ' - . PR0VO, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1923. Bisifiicf OF " 1 IW Iffl tf SUNDAY" EIERALD I'lilllG VOLIL NO. 3. I - t Wtfie7i u " . . ot . IU 9:00 A. M. All meet Tech- at Hotel Roberts, - National Committeeman Booth is U0,U'' raSaOBna, VSill., fif" the mathematics department brief cajeJ now In communication with the to the leave of aV distinguished Provo post officials in an effort to Isa a addition aa.aa. ft Meeting. oflRe grand council of Montana, King Tut Merrill. Utah and Idaho, United Comercial Travelers and a fishing rod of America at Elks' club rooms, Provo, Ctah. themselves at Rotary ladles' night lum..ta Hotel Roberta dining room Frl- not this ,,tT of Washington and Prof. FrankU. C. T: ladies wiU be guests of 2:30 P. 11 banquet will be given un Madien tht. day evening when Rotarlans and 0me m Eu. bia theater. or after the state convention' tore for . all traveling men and their their ladies made merry, and Dr. 7 :00 P. H. O. Merrill did what most doctors cided ladies at Hotel Roberts. upon at thla time. r v rr f!c"wy. ".5!, do only to their patients buried . Commander Owsley was to havekTi19., 9:00 P. M. 43rand ball, state armory. ' visited UUfeMay 28 and June himself. -' FRIDAY, JUNE 8. 1 Tmr S ""J Encased in a 9:00 A. M. Grand council reconvenes. case but due to unforeseen condlUons' i aimer the present auperlstJA vi. 12:15 P. M. Grand council and delegates will be special Cr. Horace Tut Merrill reclined ? guests of Provo. Rotary at luncheon, Hotel amid a shower of pinkish light, as which w,U b. that he Roberts. , John S. Smith, as that to spend two full days in UUbf.ln w, piofeawTln ladies of grand" council. entertained British scientist disguised 12:15 P. about two monthe later than bia (h. remember (you at luncheon by Provo U. C. T. ladies council. name, we don't) braved the his first visit. proposed, re2:00 P. M. Grand council reconvenes. cesses of the tombs bia, will be in the department of 8:00 P. M. Opera "Erminie" at Columbia theater. foods and nutriUonr-t-nand after being neatly bitten by a Misa SATURDAY, JUNE 9. Emma Brown, student at Columbia tsetse fly discovers- the mummy M.T-C. T. .and Steel Day parade, starting ;it case in which has reposed for 2000 ORAL EXAMS FOR U. 10:00 A. and formerly supervisor la Nebo " fountain and district primary supervisor. parading through the principal years the mortal remains (some The following new Instructors what dried up) of King Tut. business streets. ibeen engaged OlDlnf A. B.: ' site- ently but firmly 12:00-- M Free barbecue at teel-plMASTER DEGREES mKiuemaucs; uanRay removes the mummy of dear vnnstensen. B. s 3:30 P. M. Timpanogos baseball park,' fancy rifle shoot- Smith old King Tut A few well directed Sv B. 8., chemistry; Stewart Wll- ing by G. L. Becker of Ogden. restores breath and action to Strenuous oral examinations for llama, B. 8.. physics; Edward atV-- y slaps 4:00 P. M. Baseball gamef. Ogden vs. Provo Timps. King Tut who immediately dlscov masters degrees are .in progress at Rowe, A. B., Edward k. Morgan, A. ' " , League game. ' era .that his harem had Joined the the B. Y. U. this week. B. Glen B, English; Anna Egbert, a SL- ? 7:00 P. M. Band concern and street dancing in front of Provo Rotary club party. English and 'dramatic artf Harold " Smith and iMlss toiwtatm; , Tkaaaka aaa Ml - U M.--A- TH ..- .4. - ,,,, - ..- - near-mumm- y - UtSff .0 mi7Z7ZZl? wltibSJ; M.-Vis- iting near-Egyptia-n ant ... d : 3 - rt : - ' fire 8 :30 P. M. hall. U. C. T. band dance, state armory and Mozart. WHAT NEXT Dellla Hlggs bare "Dear ones of long ago," King gone the grind with a sigh Bentley, Spanish; Grace. Plersos, through , exclaims-Merrill Salt Lake county, training school; Tut "when you of relief and are happy. Both are Edna shodlc the dust of Egypt off your Holdaway.jofflce practice. of the department . ot the following will be student, as-i- " feet you left behind you some trin- graduates Of education. The sub- philosophy slsUnta: Brlant I Deckert biology kets of rare (emphasis on the rare) value, which now I gladly re- Bponiie ot we Adolescent Boy to the Arthur U Crawford, geology; Archie Bobbins, physical educatloaj store to you,' of Miss Boy Scout Movement;' Donald Parker Leon .TWUliama And fifty ladles were recipients hat---Xxtent "To Should ' of ancient Egyptian trinkets pur Hlggs.' accounting. Women Participate in Athletlcsr . chased late Friday at Provo stores. Prof, will have ThomaRomney Te students yet to be examDr. Tut Merrill disproved the as ined for the masters degree are charge of the work In geology. He has given much time and attention sertion of modern science that- a Willis, A. Smith. Maud Beeley to this line of work. mummy dwindles IS size by spend Jacob,' W. H. Boyle, Hyrum Ing a couple thousand years In the Wendell Stout, Henry lower floor of a pyramid, and Ernest E. Jacobsen. Hatch, And Reed L. Anderberg, former . .The candidates are examined by secretary; went fishing "Saturday the respective faculties ot the col-- ' 10 PEHHEY with that nice new fishing rod Ro in which theft major work! leges tary banded him Friday evening has been done, the dean of the col and former President Oscar A lege, and the committee on iradu-- ' Spear walked up and down. Center ate TrorkrProfessora Christen Jen ER HERE j street halt a dozen times Saturday M. C. Merrill and Hugh Wood-- , to show up that fine brief case Ro sen, A wrsd. tary gave him. J. H. Bratlaford, manager of the ? G Merle Taylor presided over the J. C: Penney company store No. 89 . festivities and introduced .the new at Fort Msdlson. Jv, ' visited i The Rotary officers, President James B ; ueraia xoraoe .Thursday .iiauy Tucker,' Secretary Clayton Jenkins Mr. BraUsforov who la a native of and. Treasurer J. A. Boshard. Sprlngvilie, began "hl career with A splendid musical program was the nation-wid- e Penney company furnished by the string trio, Miss FATAL TO several years ago as, a clerk la the.. ' Alette Phillips, Miss Gertrude Olson Sunnyside, Utah, etore. Later he and Harvard Olsen. was transferred to the Heher store . Misses The Alice Taylor, Muriel waa promoted from there to be . and Mrs. ElixajRlchlna Dayley, 25, Smart and Elva Crosbie, la costume come manager of the Fort Madison gave several Interesting Egyptian wife of Cbauncey jLee .Dayley Of store. --7 i- - dances. Ogden, died at the home of her ale .The J. p. is the company Penney A. Mrs. J. ter, Clayton, 840 North Second East street Friday sight largest dry goods store ot that city and Is doing a large amount of fi Death came after a sickness that business, according to Mr. Brails-had extended 1 qrseveraj jjrearjL toror Mra. Dayley waa born la Mexico He came west to attend1 the fu December 25. 1897 the .daughter o! (A unusual Interest women the late Charles Rlchina and Mra neral ot his father,. Charles Brails-for-d of Sprlngvillei His sisters. of Provo and Utah county la the Agnea Rlchina Ai the outbreak of Mrs. C. Reese ot Los Angeles w, electrlo cooking ...demonstratlor the Mexican trouble ia 1912 she school oondttcted- - - by the - Utah came with her parents to Oakley and MraJHenry Wymaa ot WarPower and Light company at the Idaho, where she became acquaint den, Mont, vere also at the fam Women's Municipal council room In ed with Mr. Dayley and married ily home at Sprlngvilie during the the Provo .commercial banlq build him May 8, 1920. They later moved past week. , tog.' BUl'n. two brothers and two The aemonstrauona win be con capaeities in the sisters, Jesse W. xivntns of Twin ducted by Miss Bars ice Lowsa, an Primary and chotr Falls, Idaho; John Richins and expert demonstrator land one of the! '.'Since last January Mra Dayley Mrs. Clayson of Provo, and school! best la her profession. The has been living at the home ot her Mrs. Agnes Beatrice Smith ot Verden, N begins at 1:20 o'clock' every after sister, Mrs. Clayson, on account of M. .i '; nootf seztjwebk wltk the exception her serious illness. She has been Funeral services' wilt - be., hold I under doctor's care ot Wednesdsy, Memirtal say. for several Monday afternoon at-o'clock In Krt amlulnn Wtlt ha aliawaJI yeare but suffered from the Fifth ward chapel undar no MlklUUon.wm atlTe Y " ' - r -- -W- MITCHELL TELLS . - By E. A. MITCHELL, Mow that the city commission has enacted that law compelling merchants and others in the bus! ness district to have their aide- walks sprinkled tmd swept by a. m. every day. unaer penalty oi tine and Imprisonment, the wonder Is: what next? Here are a few more regulations which they might attempt: 1. Business men shall retire at n m. everv flaT. i ney snail autre themselves in pajamas, sleep upon Ostermore mattresses, in a modern sleeping porch and must not snore. 2. Business men must arise at i m. every morning. They must take a "bath and shave and do their dally dozen. They must then im mediately kiss their wife twice, squeeze her once and say: Good morning, dearie. 3. Basinets men must breaktas' every morning at :13. Their break fast shall Include.! fruit... cereal, eggs, toast and postum. They shall At th lima kind oi mill 01 tiro. wmss&st-m- Si cfreal, 'V' lngs. I"Business men shall put on clean lines every morning, have i of neckwear at least three ehan times a week, a ebange of suIU at inme least twice a week and a shoe ' everyday; K Business men snail snow rea la the affairs of their. cue - m ift They shall have full confidence In the ability, honest and devotion of all their clerks snd,employes. Above all they shall' subscribe liberally without complaint, to those benefit causes for "which, occasionally, sub scriptlojua, may bo asked or tickets sold. 6. Business men shall never in any way belittle the quality of their competitors' merchandise, nor laud their own; nor shall they in the least degree by statement Infer ence or otherwise injure or attempt to Injure their competitors' character.-' J" 7. Business men must aU belong to the chamber ot commerce, to one civic society, to a kolf, tennis or . other outdoor dub and . to the church. They must faithfully sup port theae organisations from pure, ly unselfish motives and never allow themselves to get behind In their dutea. 'yC ' :r 8. Business hies must 'phone their wife when leavmff the office for attendance;" at the meeting of their society, stating the time when they will be back in the orace. At tendance at the dub abai; be at the " wlte'a discretion. ; There are, numeroua other customs which should be improved tor the benefit of business and collectively, so many, In fact that the wonder la what Ir regularity will the commission reg ulste next - dually men-Indivi- RETURNED MISSIONARIES MEET iALLIN VISITS HOM.E TOWN A meeting of the Returned MisE, sionary association of Utah stake SPRINOVItXEMay X Dalits of Boston, 8prlngvlll " sculp o'clock In the admlnlstratloa build tor, will vUlt withT relaUvea. and member are. srf ed Jo at. friend la home tows Wednes tngr-- Att . tend. day. , ' 21Ct iitreldtatternoonrt-- lit Man-warin- AJ ,C. 1 ... . OnilGILLIIESS 111 i -i to-th- .mSIS ' b.e" . ... . - .... .. uub, im lV7r'J aurvtvea by her mother 'of the Manavs ward. : |