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Show Friday, September UTAH VALLEY SEWS Soccer or to Public Opinion PnblLhed IT North flrat sv-rj- British Economist Advises Journal Friday morning by r PUBLISHING CO. UTAH VALLEY Want Proro, Utah. matter Noramber aterad aa aaeond-rlaa- a at Proro, Utah, under tba Act of March II, 1117 at the pout S, 1871. Mutual Understanding LABOR DAY is celebrated mainly for the pur- pose of cementing a IhjiuI of friendship ami mutual understanding between Capital and Labor or at least it should be so observed. Disputes and misunderstandings hare cost this nation hundreds of millions of dollars, whep all that was needed was sympathy and understanding between the two great forces of industry capital and labor. Our sympathies are naturally with Labor, but we also recognize that Capital has added its forces to the upbuilding of this great land. Nevertheless everywhere we go across the country we see the results of "labor, even in those great industries so often thought of in terms of capital only. Efficiency experts and production experts may study and analizo the worlds work, and tell us how to is the thing which succeed, but labor makes the wheels turn round. The Working Man is our friend he is the friend of all. Upon him all our stores depend for o patronage, not upon the rich few nor the families. Great stores are built upon the patronage of the common laboring man and his family. Even manufacturers depend upon the' demand of labor for its products. No industry or commercial enter-priz- e but depends ultimately upon labor and wages man-pow- er well-to-d- America is America today because of the labor performed and being performed every day of il3 history. Tho American working man is the mightiest force in the nation. He who has the friendship of labor has won power beyond money to grant. On this Labor Day may we concentrate onr prayers and our hopes upon two great objectives: First, that Labor may be wise and united in its leadership, conservative in its demands, and above prise in its efforts for reform and improvement in the nations business. Second, that Capital may seek the viewpoint of Labor, may attempt to understand its needs and objectives, and may unite in a spirit of fairness with Labor to keep our great country at tho top in the world of industry. Writ-slwsy- Pay as HANSENS "The need for industrial or vocational education is very evident when surveys show that the majority of our high school graduates, aa well as many of our college graduates, cannot find work in the professions or cultural activities in which they have been trained, T. W. Dyches, Provo city school district coordinator this week, just as school begins for another year. ; Two employers. Two employes. ed per per at L & H Tire Go. for per per for per ? ? Y t ? t f j X tr0WDER X Zl in 15 ( SWAIiSDOWN USE FLOUR er Packaye 27 COCONUT f.;ilx I Rwenson. Oivil A. Watts. Farrer Junior High 19 J 29 Iilv FORK and BEANS, Fargo . . per can 10c MIRACLE WHIP per quart 39c CARROTS turnips BEETS Y ONIONS Y OLIVES 5 TISSUE HEINTZ CATSUP Sr 2 hun 2 cans for 25c per roll 4c per bottle 19c Fresh Quality Meats All Meats are U. S. Inspected Y LOAF CHEESE (cream loaf) ... lb. X SOUP BONE (nuckle bone) SPARE RIBS (lean - meaty) per lb. SLICED BACON (mild riavor) . . lb. ft 50c week se for t Chief Henry East of tba Frovo city police department received high praise this week from J. Edgar Hoover, head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation at Washington D. C. who wrote u personal letter to l'rovo'e chief. The letter follows and is ,B a Fruits and Vegetables The superluljudent of schools. The coordinator. Ona neutral person. Y "What duties woniu devolve Mr. Henry Knst, Chief of Pulli'p, In such a upon these persons Provo, Utah. eapaiity "That could be answered only My Dour Chief: ol the by a detailed analysis My attention has been directed ,Y problem, but some of the duties of to the splendid cooperation furnunthis advisory committee ished by your department In condoubtedly would be as follows" nection with the Investigation & relative to Wilbert Fay Klng, a replied Mr. Dyches: "1. To advise as to toe adsorp- fugitive who wa apprehended by tion power of the various occupa- you and officers of your department at Provo. Utah, on .August tions for new employes. 1 "I. To advise aa to fitness of 11, 93. I want you to know that I various training stations. "3. To advise aa to setting up personally appreciate the very fine cooperation which you exof wage schedule. tended to the Salt Lake City of"4. To approve all training fice of thia bureau In connection agreements. with the Investigation relative to "8. To transfer or cancel train- this fugitive, and I also wish to ing agreements as need arose. commend you for the splendid 8. To advise as to new fields manner lu which this case was of training. handled by your department. Note: Mr. Iiyrhes has spent Assuring you of my desire to several summers studying prob- cooperate with you In all matters lems in connect ion with his field of mutusl Interest, I am. of city school coordinator, and is Sincerely yours, very much interested In the J. Edgar Hoover. vocational side of hla educational artlviilra. He promisee a aeries The first flock of geese seen of roniHicnts on this important matter to all parents who have flying south over Provo were E boys and girls growing Into man- honking their way to their southhood and for whom work moat ern homes Wednssday morning about 8:80 oclock. be found aa the years pass by. ' TIRES er Vocational Training Emphasized By Provo City Coordinator de-dar- Sol Jacobs, one of Provo1! veteran merchants, is starting something In Provo never before attempted here: It 1 his new TO CITY OFFICIALS store over Hedqulsts Drag K0. 2 with tha slogan: Walk Up and Save, the first upstair ttore tn lty Dr. Parley 1 Christensen Canadian wheat, British West Indies sugar, Indian That Provo is in a posi- Provo Center ntreet business. la my last article I pointed out that between the jute, Australian wool. Went African vegetable oils and Mr. Jacob state the federal that various metals, including pig iron are to lie gathered in years 1912 and 1928 the fixed capital account of the tion to obtain cent of the going out of business soma ainea tint 43 the of to inflated per was grant a vast gtorehoiise in Great ISritiau, under a $2,500, 000,000 Utah Iowcr and Light Company agu here, ho has studied the the of cost proposed total inflation and this reprefinds situation, iimount of $25,230,120.17 and that real government storage plan for the protection of the Britis tunitiea for thrifty buyingoppor. fOT sented 32.2 ier cent of the entire fixed capital of the municipal electric system ish Isles against starvation in case of blockade, accordProvos public by opening his of unanimous were opinion the 1928. means that This properties ing to news dispatches in Canadian pajiers this week. coiniwny as of this store "upstairs". Ho Invites you each and all to "Walk np and The plan la proposed by Pro- given a value on the books of the "operating company city officials expressed Sava". Ho will specialise feasor John Maynard Keynes of of $25,230,120.17 in excess of what they had cost the week. MEMBERS mother bonds have been Ladles costs only. Cambridge, mud waa advanced be- 116 STAFF revenue "Our which originally purchased "holding company fore tba economica aactlon of tba by tho people; them. It means that 32.2 per cent of the capital account voted favorably Brltiah Aseoclatlon for tba Ad- LISTED BY MOFFITT the Supreme court of Utah has of the Utah Power and Light Company in 1928 was mere upheld onr bond ordinance as wall j vancement of Science. The plan would extend over u period of as the engineering contract; and padding. to Utah Securities Cor- wa will. If nccescary, repeal tho yeara, according to Mr. Keynac, Provo city schools are comAnd I told only part of tha ally Issued who la officially food adviaor to in the acquisitions In proposed amendments to tho bond pletely staffed and all buildings story. Other "properties ur se- poration which Inflation shown above ordinance, In order to speed tho tba Britlab government, and who the for school curities, for which prices la exrwcalla that during the Great War will be la readiness occurred. Ac cnccecsor by reor- project and obtain the grant from of cost to cess affiliated their Britain at one time, opening. It la expected, announced of 1814-181- 8 to Utah Securities Corbefore it Is too companies were paid, were not of ganisation Electric Power end tho government by mean of blockade, waa with- Superintendent H. C. Moffltt this such u nature aa to be poration, declared Mayor Marls Anlata," chargeable and derson Wednesday. became, in a few weeks of starvation. week. Including principals and to the eompauy'i fixed capital sc--1 Light Corporation of all No fear Is held by the city comKeynes proposal suggests that teachers, 118 staff member! were count," but they did serve, never- continued to he, the owner outstanding common stock of tho mission na to the franchise vote, the government should offer listed Inflato rsise the total theless, to Mr. Moffltt, ready by Utah Power and Light Co. Tho nor as to efforts being made to storage to all empire producers of begin the school year 8ept. II. tion of tha company's accounts total Inflation of 834,330,348 la defeat the municipal program, acspecified raw materials, free of to 134,330,348. (Senate Docuequal to all of tho $80,000,000 statement leaned towarehouse charges, and for a Principals E. Welgnt, Kenneth high ment 13, Part 48, p. 888. 70th book value of common stock and cording to a nominal Interest charge, provided day: JunCongress, First Session, 1838.) 84,330,840, or 10.8 per cent of school; J. F. Mower, Dixon "The Power Interests have they chip their surplus produce to ior; J. W. Thornton, The purpose of such pudding Farrer tha book value of preferred stock tried nearly everything that can tn Britain. warehouses approved Is not to hard Since discover. the FrankK. Emil Nielsen, II, outstanding on December The government would not own Junior; of to defMt and delin; Oscar Bjerregaard, Maeser; rates that a utility company may 1980." (8ee document referred to, ) be thought the stocks outright, tho producers H. lay our program. A few local men R. 8tahell, Tlmpanogoa; Fred charge for lu "cervices" arc P. 1687.) who have pretended to know retaining ownership, und taking C. Struts, Parker. largely determined by the amount tho risks of price changes, and lot about municipal plants arc of the company ha capital that Teachers will bo as follower being free to dispose of them at Provo High School rather desparata because they are invested, It Is smart business' for HOBBY MAY A any time, bat tha government concerned about caving their acto It Its Inflate Investment Eunice E. Reese Bench, Bird, would issue advances on them at faces. They know tho municipal J. Boyack, T. W. Dyches, count. It Is one of the best ways Harold treasury bill rates up to 80 per A. H. Fisher, Max Oerner, Glenn In the world to get something for BECOME A plant, when It la built, will refute cent of the market price. everything they have said about K. Kenner, Orlfflth Kimball, Mau-rln- e nothing. With the Utah Power I "In a war, reserves would be it. To think that tho people of Pax man, and Light Company and Its mo--. Murdock, Ernest better than a gold mlno", de- Wesley Pearce, Grant Rasmussen, ther holding companies Provo will vote the Power comthe PROFESSION clared Keynes, and in peace the Rudolph Reese, Dortha Reid, Ven- method bed worked admirably. pany a new franchise to compete You Can Get By Mary Ellen Cain with the peoples own plant Is plan would become a first step ice Robison, Doyle D. Seller, For it la a fair Inference from toward making possible a steadier Glenn Simmons, H. R. Slack, An- the evidence that the patrons of both Inconsistent and ridiculous. scale of output of tho principal na Smoot, Allen B. Sorenson, the Utah Power and Light Com-- 1 Mrs. Anna Prince Redd, who la raw materials. Ethel Spencer, Ray Stewart, Wil-m- pany have for twenty-riv- e yean president of tho Provo Chapter short stories. s Vocabulary has alwaya held a It would be a demonstration W. Tanner, Sherman Wing, been paying to the power syndi- of tho League of Western wanted to bo a writer. faclnatlon for Mrs. Redd, and she of reserve resources which would Olive Wlnterton, Ivan W. Young. cate a "fair return" ou from fift Exceptionally Low Coat teen to thirty-fou- r catch the Imagination of the Dixon Junior High millions of When she attended grade school has made words her hobby aa well world. And if It abould also Leland Buttle, R. Eldon Crow-the- r, dollars which were never actu- she wrote stories and rend them as writing. Early In life she formand on to her school mates and friend. ed the habit of never passing serve the reuses of peace and Elva C. Dean, Maurlne Dix- ally invested. The bona fide stockholder of She also wrote and directed plays over a word she did not underprove to be a new and useful on, R. F. Goold, John G. Hllgen-dorf- f, EASY PAYMENTS the Utah Power and Light Com- that were produced by neighbor- stand her dictionary waa always Instrument in our armory for the S. H. JOnes, Georgians a close friend. control of the trade cycle (other Johnson, W. F. Johnson, Grant pany should be doubly concerned hood children. Instruments are needed), let no Larsen, Farrell D. Madsen, Elds about this padding of the comShe never allowed anyone to Her poems, short stories, and you ride me complain. Ostler, Dale Schofield, A. A. panys accounts. He has probably Interrupt her reading and writ- playa all denote that she devotes been doubly deceived. As e eon- -' ing. Often when her older slaters mnch time and caretni tnonga AS LOW AS I sumer of light und power he has, thought she would bo helping to her writing. like the net of ns, unconsciously with the housework she was sittAmong other playa and pageoffered his monthly sacrifice to ing on a smuggled cushion high ants which have been presented the padding at the pay window up In the fork of n friendly old in Mrs. Redd wrote tho Provo, of the company. Ac a stockholder tree. for tho pageant which waa script ha probably has unconsciously To Illustrate her determination, at the 1938 Easter cun-ri297 North First West Phone 397 shared the dividend earnings of as a child, to do the work she produced services at Utah Lake. the company with holding com- loved, Mrs. Redd laughingly said, When naked her opinion as to pany stockholders who have not, "One I was upstairs tha value of a hobby Mrs. Redd morning like him paid good money for a trying to finish said most convincingly, "Thera is their stock. That la, It looks as which was to be writing in play our no better way to employ one's produced ORANGES if the Inflation has been used by barn 2 doz. 35c that afternoon, my slaters, spare moments than In doing some 248 I the holding company as a device W. Center Phone 403 hoping to chastise mo for shirk- constructive work. One should 300-siz- e doz. 32c to secure large blocks of Utah ing my home duties, locked tha choose LEMONS, that which la closest to and Light stock for prac- stair door. When I was to one's heart and then do tho very BANANAS ready lb. 5c Power tically nothing. There Is certainly coma down, I threw a feather bed beat one possibly can and before a suspicious looking correlation out of the window. CANTALOUPES 3 10c Then taking one can realise it a hobby becomes betWMn the amount of the Infla- a the bed, I tied one profession. PEARS bu. 99c tion and the amount of stock held endslatof afrom long wire to It and placby the holding company. Spaee ing the slat acrosa the window I CABBAGE lb. 2c does not permit n discussion of proceeded to slide down tho wire, The landing point In this article. 10-lb- s. SPUDS 8c this safely on the feather bed following paragrapn from the replay went on. YAMS lb. 7c port of the federal trade commis- the 3Vhen In high school she was sion will, however, furnish the interested reader something on I a reporter on the hlgn sehool which to ruminate until more ean paper and wrote many poems and BAKE-A-CAK- E be said: Total Inflation In relation to common and preferred stock isY CALUMET sued. As of December 31, 1930, Y ,the Utah Power and Light Co. had common stork of no I outstanding POWDEllED j pur value carried on it books at oUuAn o poin,js $30,000,000, which was the total value of common stock orlgin- jpar NOW.... for its support How would Utah procoad If adequate vocational or Industrial education were contemplated 7" he was asked. "Before anr adequate industrial or vocational education can be established In anr community, a food representative advisory committed should be organised", be , replied. Ur. Dyches' racommendatlons for this committee are that It should consist o( a minimum of seven persons: Walk Up and Save PWA GRANT Co. Light SEEMS CERTAIN tah Power Vast Empire Storage Plan And Its Inflations Utah Valley News & 2, 1933 SHORTENING (white cloud) BEEF CUBE (boneless) 2-l- bs. 2 for PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE i Bort K. Bullock, Otis G. Carl- lr.g, E. Ilceil Collins, William Connell, l.uMarr Hawkins, Ross L. JriiM-ii- . Till eta Kay, L. W. Mil cllell. Merrill Sandberg, Gertrude Sauer. Claude: S. Snow. Pearl Snow. D. V. Tregeagle. Franklin School Vera lingley, Hannah J. i. Mary Dahliiuist. Helen Esther U. Edmonds, Hazel Car-idel- ff, Fletcher. Jennie Freckleton. PS a Grant Creer. Ruby Hansen, Neva Hanson, Ida Knndseo, Grant F. Penrod, Jean M. Rambeau, Ricks, Uaxel Westrope. Barbara Bagltn, Catherine Decker, Clarence Mary Huff. Essie Keeler, Kate Mathews. Lily Meldrum. Marion J. Olsen, Gertrude Pnge, Mlmu Rasband, Olive 8. Reeve, C. H. Rigby, Helena 8tewart. Parker School Genell Brown, Rhoda C. Muriel Christensen, Genevieve Ellsworth. Wyora Hansen, Manrine Johnson, Luctle W. W. Jones, Ida Lleehty. Blanche Nelson. Dorothy Powelson, Floy L. Turner, Lyda Van Lenvan. H. D. Whatcott. 'Tlmpanogoa School Margaret Boyer Edna M. Boyle. Chester GraH, Jennie Harding, Florence Jones, LaVar Knmp, Moth Marie Krueger, Belva Monties, Florence Miller, Gene Phillips, Wcnda M. Snow, Tna Webb, 8uaa P. Whitaker. Special Lot of Men's and Boys DRESS HOSE 15 One Lot of Special fail of Boys' Kino Dress Shirts Sale Price ... Girls School Dresses 69 2 FOR $1.00 49c Step-In- MEN'S or BOYS' Kneli $1.00 kTo 25 Extra Good Grade, Men's Work Shirts Uwtl, II, lit cotan - .1,0. Vataf 15 BOYS' SCHOOL CAPS or dresses All Sixes Extra Quality, Boys' School Pant s Panties Ladles' Rayon Bilk SHIRTS or SHORTS New Special Lot of PEASANT DRESSES Sixes 8 to SO Men's Fur Felt WORK HATS Bargain Price Special Lot of Ladles and MisoeH Rayon Bloomer, Ileal Special Lot of Polo Shirts 49c flc Values .... Boys Maimer School Irma Acord, Burn-Ingha- 15c 5c 15c 23c 21c 29c Children's Broadcloth Bloomer or rayon and cotton Panties Mioses 98c 84 IQ y nv iScioo Pure Thread 811k Rayon DRESS HOSE Z3C One Lot of Small Boys' Navy Bine Corduroy Tommies Girls' Length Hoee Fancy Mercerised 15c Extra Quality Broadcloth Shorts or Fine r 98c Ffletidhieffs 3G8 West Center St Provo 25c BOYS' POLO SHIRTS 25 |