OCR Text |
Show tmwnmmmmw A HOMS PAPER PHatad far Baa By Bnn Pdopb h A HOME PLANT ?!BEWy!TTwi?. A WEEKLY NEWSMAGAZINE OF LOCAL AFFAIRS (Optaioae AT PROVO, UTAH INDEPENDENT Caleb Tauner Files for 10 Concerts What do H Roth Quartet You Think PUBLISHED DEPENDABLE FBIDAY, JUNE 14, 1940 To Start Here Monday The appearance of the famous Roth String Quartet in concerts on five successive evenings beginning Monday, MECHANIZATION has intermountain significance for several reasons, awarding is a revolutionary word in to itwj Pr. A. C. Lambert, dean of the Brigham Young university field. Not only has it displaced soldiers in war but It baa created summer session which is sponsoring the concert series, thla series provas that . First, unemployment In peace. In mining, rallroada, agriculture, aa well tbs chamber music festival" Idea MUSSOLINI aaya thla la a war between the new and the old. It la a war between one century and the next. It la a war la which youth will find lta place. He la undoubtedly right, but not in the way ho thinks of it. Regardless of who wlna, this la the end of the present world order. Italy and Germany, dominant exponents of force, cannot win, in the long run, because force Barer did win ultimately, and neror can, bat the struggle will break the old order, and a New World will erolre out of It Aa Tennyson said: "The old order chaageth, yielding place to new, and God fulfills himself in many ways, loot one good custom should corrupt the world. God is given no place in Mussolinis nor Hitlers. program therefore they cannot win. Democracy must prerail because God has decreed ''free agency" as a foundation atone upon which humanity Is to build Its own degtlny. Both Mussolini and Hitler will be forgotten in the pagee of history, except as the men who roused democracy to a new high lerel of social consciousness, making the democratic peoplee fight for the right to lire the higher order. Truly it Is an age of destiny but It spells the end of force, of power, and of money, and a new golden age of liberty and social planning by the gorernments of the world. PKEPARIDXE88 may hare soma surprises In America when it comes to lnraslon of our land. Note the surreys of electric power lines now going forward In Oregon, Washington, Utah, and In fact all lntermount-al- n states. This same surrey has already been made In the East. Do you know what thsy are really surreylngT Well, we hare It on the authority of sereral prominent electric experts, that the Federal gorernment has something up its sleeTe which will surprise the Germans and Italians when It comes to lnraslon of America You hare heard of the strange "ray gun,, or perhaps seen weird pictures of Its use In tbs movies. Whatersr man Imagines seemingly has some foundation In fact somewhere. The Idea Is that Americas power linee are to be sufficiently linked together and thus powarful enough to form a complete elrcult orer the continent, powerful enough to project this death dealing ray to any dee-tri- e motor whether In a car or a plana, stalling the motor Instantly, as it passes along the highway or la the air. As tanks or bombing planas arrlro within the drels of thla protecting ray their motors no longer can function, and the enemy's mechanised unit stope or drape to Its death. This may sound fantastic, but the secrets of the American gorernment may contain more surprises than thla for the oncoming hordes of human vultures. FOR EACH DEATH ON EUROPE'S BATTLEFIELDS the nations at war are paying 150.000, to say nothing of what tbs neutrals are paying and suffering, a glimpse of which may be seen In America's vast 'preparedness program of more than 14.000.- 000.000. In the world war of 1014-1- 8 the coet per death of killing men was (21,000, and In the American Civil war only (5,000 per man which shows bow tremendously war eosts bare ris-- Caleb Tanner of Provo Wednesday filed application with Stats Engineer T. H. Humpherys for appropriation of 10 eacond feet of water from tho Provo river to extend from April 1 to October (1. The application proposes to leva tho 10 aeeond feet of water from percolation and seepage loee by trauporttag the entire stream for 1M miles through tho Provo Bench canal rather than to the natural river bed. The canal, Mr. Tanner claims, la practically water' tight. , The water from tho natural channel, according to tho application would be confined to when tho river carries 200 Water raved lesson would allowed to (low Into Utah lake end in payment (or each, the baa caught tbo imagination of tho mountain atatea. Reservation! and lnqulrlea bava already com In from neighboring states and from all parts of Utah. Second, tho initial tatormount-al- n performance of Professor Lo- Roy J. Robsrtaona piano Quintet In A Minor, winner of first prise In a national contest in IMS, will bo given on Thursday. June 20. It wns requested by E. Robert Schmlts, eminent French pianist, who wiU augment tho Quartet on that night. Third. the finest music by muter computer. will U played In the festival which will provide an opportunity to show continuity, contrasts ana rraemo-lancto chamber music literature. In addition to three American composers, who . are Chadwick Loefflar, and Robertson, the fol- lowing mutera win bo represent- ed during tho estival: Haydn, es Brigham Young showing together ste Art Center In Salt Lake City. Characteristic of the show is the Tarlety of Bedia and approach ln which almost every student or tostructor strives to express hlmadf not to copy the work of others. PlT 0ll ,hown bjr Prof' m F. Larsen, bsad of tho Art Brigham Young prtment B. He Do- en k r w,tk fln t0 get fine k,p Md mnB mood and atmosphere into his work. His Street la Marrakech orBrrad Market to Marrakech era filled with the color, noise, al- th man- - " of m old French city Leraen ha. pa nted with the of building., them- - ed lo.. than (00 vote, having been cast by more then 1500 growers. In Utah county with 592 grow- era only 85 cast their vote, either for or agelnat tho agreement. state. R R. Boswell, county ex- tension agent. Ballot, have com. and to such small numb- crettTt nnwll- oreedwUb1 the ach pr marketing plan, nnlra. more grower. Interest themrelre. to It. ha explains. We are not concerned whether they vote for or agelnat the marketing agreement, but we do went n sufficient number to express themselves so aa to guide ns to our plane, states Mr. Peterson to a letter to Mr. Boswell, to which he extends the date to Juno 15 for ballots to be received. Mr. Boewell, however, la much concerned about tho altnatlon, end urges every Pc'b groww to'vota Immediately, as failure to vote indicates to the Federal govern- ment that no merkotlng problem .to If we permit this Imprrarion go out, grower. chance, of Sot- ting any consideration i on the peach market question from any Federal agency to greatly reduced. Prof, Edgar W. Jensens Oak sad June Grass in uses n strong diagonal line blned with excellent tone values. His Old Western Horae shows his fine sense of colors and makes n vary Interesting repetition in the tree and to the roofllno of the house. The B.Y.U. art department . be tu pr de? 1Ulf ,n dent to .xprera himself in his own creative developing wty th rk not ,mlUtlTf' No. tkta Qa,lery ,B wWcJ J1""4 Created on June 14, 1777, by the Continental Congress, become the Stars and Stripes of United States of America, and ao today, Friday, June 14, the Nation will observe Flag Day, by displaying the colors on their homes and in their places of business. State Spanish War Veterans are holding their convention in Provo this week end, and Robert Crosbie of the Veterans gives the following hints on "Etiquette of e the Flag "When the flag goes by, rise if sitting, halt if walking. If you are a man, take off your hat and hold it opposite the left shoulder with the right hand; if a wombn, simply stand at attention until the flag has ' wltb ftour. ,B - ,r worki ,n ckarcoal. pencil. Ink, and th 'dent's pMtel whIch mentation with different thnI1'done a,,p we ent. nd ,how City Affairs WAR MATERIALS ere found to abandonee to the raw to Utah eouaty. believao Mayor Mark Anderson, who ease la the preaent preparedness program an opportunity for Utah to retrieve Itself from the effects of Federal finds which have been pouring Into thla state at the rate of (40,000,000 annually for the put several years, bnt,wbleh are certain to cease coming to the near future. Provo end Utah eopaty, believra the Meyer, meet' coat the poraibllltlw of ratahflae-in- g Industries hare , which win fabricate oar raw materials, ao Iron, eoktag coal, end nnmorona other minerals, ; which with ear , fluxing stones, water, and power, are the ingredients required Car the manufacture of steel and Iren, the aaeoatlel material! to the manufacture of mar materials. At -present Utah is skipping Its eop-peat to the raw state, Its Iren sad coal also are loot, end yet this state and Colorado ere the only states which poaaa these raraet-l- al materials to ell 11 western OWEN WOODRUFF Announces hia candidacy for the U.8. Senate on the Repabli-trenafcan ticket, today. Mr. Woodruff ia a Salt Lake City business men, and an ardent advocate of er er Belf-tim- es help, strongly favoring all move- - meats to which local enterprise and cooperation indicate poesibl-b-e Utica of balldieg tor community etetee. betterment. He enters the Senate race on a UTAH H IMPORTANT three-poiprocram: both geographically end physic1. Keep oat of the naropesn for the present war prepared- ally from the river during the high war, bat bnild edeqeate detents assorts Mayer And- water period of tho irrigation sea- - Bt borne. Thla state so tar reload son, tho application atatea. I. Create employmeat threagk that It le safer thee moot atatea It ia proposed to nee tho water p projects for the Jehlera, from oataide attache, ed at tho for irrigation of S4T urea of lend thee cutting oxpeulro eosts to the set oral to tho Tlmpanogoe uxpayers end at tho same time moeatate barriers acetaet belonging Canal company and 4122 acres of raising the standards of Uving for ue. It pooeearaa oU lend of the Provo Beach Canal and the needy. the leoaoeory togredieetq. at least Irrigation company. , Economy to defense pro-- it u so believed bet to n Investigation of tho applies- by preparing for defensive dednRaly whet ke roaoerera ere, graal tlon will ba mode by tho state rather then offensive war, and by rsetriallr el Utah coeaw. Merer engineer prior to any action by inaugurating a national self-he(ndaraon, working with Qqhe him. program for employmeat. Jenkins of the Chamber el Mr. Woodruff to e ustire of Salt mereo, hoe requested II A. Lake City, 40 yean oI age, a sea sliy autocar, sod S. O. of Abram Owen Woodruff, form- - lUf'inr far the Mum No erly a member of the L.D.S. Quor- - camyaay, sag Dr. urn of the Twelve Apostles, sod of B. Y. U. to prepare y1 Helen Winters Woodruff. He le extensive surrey el this Provo wee visited thla wash by e graduate of B.Y.U. end of U. Based ou their Merer 1 e delegation from Salt Lake City, B. Navel Academy at Annapolis, Andersen e atop to fyt representing tho Apartment Hones Md. Ho has . filled a mission to ho takes to place Prove tad Utah association of Utah, seeking date the Eastern states end to England, eonnty definitely la a" bettor "5-o- n electric light and power ached- - Switzerland, Germany, and Terk- poaftiou through ratahlhh ulea aa they affect Apartment ey, as well as soma time to Mexico, tog toduetriee here, thu owners. Mr. Woodruff has had n varlad the eoamenlty to meet the rttao- W. Harvey Rose, president; L. experience to Industry and hast- - tlon whoa the praaeat flew of Fed R. ness, having been assistant egrl- - oral aid money le withdrawn, Peal Roberta, F. Herding, secretory-treasurer- ; cultural superintendent for the which has boon (4 tor every (1 end V. A. BattUyon, director, met utah-ldah- o 8nger company, and paid out to federal (y the and Commie- manager of e wholesale food die state. Mayor Anderson ' loner Jem Howe end J. P. Me-- trlbutlng firm of hie own. Ho ' Quire, City Engineer E. A. Jacob, operated the Ute Sentinel et Mid- - A LAKH AIBPOKT end Superintendent R. C. Adams Yale for somo year, and la at may result from promt efforts, to conference on Provos rate present engaged to the Ice eroem tocledlng tho Mg Sunday at 4 and confectionary business, and piny at Utah Lake being held Jno Evidence gathered from Mr. U also deeply Interested in 14, believra Meyer Aidereea. Ademe to e closer atudy after tho number of p programs, ex-- Utah Laka has many advantagep open conference disclosed later- - tending from Washington D. C. to ever any other air port site In the rating date which will be com par- - north Carolina, including Utah, west, ho declares, for the hupp He to married ,hei fire children, combination of flat ground and . ed, they raid, with the Utah Pow- or A Light companys schedule In and resides at 1220 Yale Avenue, fresh water aear each other mol effect In Salt Lake City. Salt Laka city. (Continned on Pago Two) U1 MAKE RECKLESSNESS ANTISOCIAL By Foster Kuna Traffic end Safety Engineer The present nttltnde which too exists to regard to violation Uw Vthtt t.U.,C aider somewt smart 11 ll3r BU,wid tk get away with it Many motorists consider It quits gumoroni to be stopped by a po-t- o llcaman or p.trolman for a minor Station of the law. The Incident when eaborsted and told with proper actions and empbaato mabee a very good story to relate at dr0Up gntheringe. The seme individual would, however not tell the story himself If he were caught by an officer for petty thievery, such as picking a cash box or coin machine. It to quite Without such consideration last year the peach deal wwll have been almoet e complete (altars , raid Mr. Boewoll. For tho sake of the Industry end future efforts to solve our marketing problem every peach grower, whether ho markets loe- - likely that he would bo conslder-all- y or ont of the state, should ed as an undeairable acquaintance, s. vote one way or the other, ha because society scorns end proves of any of the latter actions. Even though tho man who Ballots are available at: Agrl- office, Provo, or et the totes a traffic law to a menace o following plaeas to Orem: Orem the whole community because he Berry Growers Fruit Stand, B. takes hie life end the life of other M. Jolleys residence, Ray E. motorists to hia own hands by Loveless residence, D. Orlo Allens auch actions, he to not disapproved residence, C. M. Wentxs residence, but aomewhat praised by society But George W. BldwelTa residence, for hia bold smart actions, and Orion Prestwick's residence. the man who snitches a few coins doing vary little harm to anyone, and endangering no onee en. Think of the millions of men life to an outcast of society, The author does not suggest by being killed and then think of our taxea at the rate of (50,000 per this that the latter individual be man, and wa get a picture of mod- - pralaed or that hia reputation be era warfare. Then who and where lifted, but rather that the man Is the man who shouts "Hell who breakee the traffic tow be if he la going to made to feel Hitler? diaop-tfrge- al taras-Phyaleel- ly lp landscapes. Peach growers to Utah ere pasto sive, at least marketing their products chargee William Peterson, director of extanelon service, following receipt of ballots cast recently to the state wide marketing agreement! MMSSSSMOSSSSSMMMJ - bued with the peacefal serenity of late afternoon. Flora D. Fisher shows Cartas which is rich to tone and pattern PASSIVE ht aelf-hel- Camille. Dhoaanyl, Beethoven, lTea Tschalkowsky, Brahms, Boecher- Vbrla Bferety exhibits several Ini, Debussy, Franck, Bach, end watercolors done with delicate Borodin. Each of tbo concerts wlU begin variations of eolor end vitality. Late Afternoon, Holliday is Imat 1:15 p. m. to Utah Stake PEACH GROWERS Fr U. S. Senate Twenty-Eif- nt tk' wkh Three-Num- ber Second Feet of River Water by The Editor) aa manufacturing, mechanisation hae diaplaced from BO to 71 per cent of the number of men formerly employed. .For example the D. A R. Q. railroad apent a million and a half dollara In Utah to mechanise its round house and ahopa. The result was a reduction of more than BO per cent of the men required In the ahopa. Mining likewise has installed machinery which has reduced lta workers to half or less than formerly. Agriculture today la operated on a large scale almoet without men. Volume - passed. "Always stand when "The Star Spangled Banner ia played ot sung, but do not applaud at its conclusion. Always allow the flag to hang flat, with the blue field in the upper left hand corner if the stripes are horizontal, arid in upper right hand corner if they are perpendicular. When the flag is crossed with the flag of a state or another country, it should always be at the right The Stars and Stripes should be raised at sunrise and lowered at sunset care being taken that it does not touch the ground. When used in unveiling a monument it should be carried aloft to wave out during the rest of the ceremony. No advertising or lettering should be placed upon the flag, nor should it be used as a trade mark. A flag tom or frayed by wind should not be hoisted until it has been repaired. Worn out flags should be destroyed, preferably by burning." bo looked down apon by hts ac- quaintances for such violations. The Important point of beginning for any campaign to "make to to berecklessness gin with an analysis of one'a own attitude, check our own recklessness, express disapproval to stories ivolving ' such subjects aa "What I Told tho Copa, and make each and every one realise that violation of traffic laws to more to be scorned than thievery. Lets make reckless driving and careless walking habits antisocial! antl-aocl- al Deapito wartime demands, the world has about 1,400,000 bushels of wheat more than it will consume during the marketing year 1031-104- 0. Store a atari to 1(10, meat inspection by the Federal Government now controls the preparation of about of the domestic meat supply. two-thlr- BAPTISMS ii . eolf-hel- Youth Council Speakers Till of Utah Conditions; Report Efforts to Romodi Youth wants only a chance to have a home, to many and have a family, and to live a normal American life," declared Wilford G. Frischnecht, N.Y.A, state administrator, discussing the problems of Youth at the Youth Council in Provo high school, Monday night before representatives from almost every church and service organization in the city. conditions prevent thin the highest per capita of any normal desire on tha part of pree- - western ntata on Its edaeatlonsl ent-da- y youth, ha declared, point- - work., lag to tho following major causes Utah's Doralnaat Chinch of youths problems. maintains a missionary system 1. Utah to a Poor Btata which keeps 2,000 youth out to ths poor little rich stata, me- - tha field constantly, costing to Mr. Frischnecht who hape more than a half million California author as iarl annually. No ona desires to bowing that Utah to bereft of its change this condition or practice. Industrial poralbllitlea, and 1U but It to one of the reasons for Community Church natural resources by exploitation, financial drain on Utah, commented Mr. Frtochnccbt. The morning Church services bi outside capital. will bo held it the Community 4. Only One Third Church this Sunday morning at of Utahs people are gainfully 11 o'clock. The theme will be The national average employed. "The Road To a Better Ufa. to 44 per cent. This means that Church School will be held as one third of Utah people keep the usual at 0:45. Tha Young Peoother two thirds, which prevents 2 meet at will Church the at ple young people from marrying and o'clock, leaving at (:I0 for the owning homes of their own. If Hot Pots where an outing and do marry they become dethey services will be held. pendent upon the family for supThe Ladies' Aid will bold their port For example, Mr, Friaeh-nerannual picnic at Canyon Glen this pointed to Juab county Tuesday at 1:10. It to a covered where n survey showed 210 young dish affair. married couples living with their Baptisms will be performed at the Administration building Snn-da- y at I p. m. for girls of both Utah and Provo stakes, under the direction of the Bonneville ward of the Provo stake, with Blahop Morgan directing. , Many g dol-qaot- ed ht and dependept , gpe In 8anpete it was foasd that 1100 ypusg man sod wemae between M and (I yean were dependent upon the family lemep for rapport la Utah the figarra mounted to T,000 youth not employed, end unable to provide for parents them. themselves. A Utahs cannot ebeorb the atataa natural increase In population. Aa average else of 42 scree to found for 20,000 . Utah forme, while 15,000 farms have lose than IB acres, end (,000 of them are lose than I acre. Rural Utah to poverty stricken, ha , doctored, forcing 50 per rent of Utah's high school graduates beck to the farm, supplanting thalr fathers and mothers before they normally would retire from the term. S. KYA Assistance hoe been reduced, end thousands of youth era unable to attend school at all unless helped. This agency bed helped 47 per eent of 11 .indents at Cedar City; 70 par eent in Carbon county; 12 per cent in Dixie college at 8L George while even In B.Y.U. 11 per eent had been helped. The condition to critical, he ad-- ( Continned on Page Two) |