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Show r - r . ' There's No PIjcc v XIke UUh to Live! Watch Us tirow! HERALD PHONES Bulbe ....... f. ..... I. ..23 4ttocJa m ttocley . . .". .7. . T.'. . i . . . I . . . . l' ) 1 I !. - -'- l l I T A FORTY-FIFTH YEAR, NO. PRO V O, U.T A H COU N T Y, . U T A H, T H URSD A Y,v 0 C TO BE R 1 6,1: 1 9 3 0. lTEN pages today PRICE FIVE CENTS . ' - - r vi i i if X .r i t 1 jl X jr t , I W t. t-a.. I c a ti V I - t J. ax Provo Residents Hear Proposals Jreh v A rgtxed At ' Meeting i "Question; Miller and VHunt Present r : Divergent Views G n Anien dm en t s. ' Carcfut consideration of the proposed tax amendments to bewoted on at the fall election was urged at a' masa meeting meet-ing held Wednesday eveniivf at , the high .school auditorium undtr the auspices of the Frovo chamber pi commerce. The" audience was gvkn a novel opportunity of hearing ljoth sides of the mooted tax question. Prof. Elmer Miller of the Rrigham Young university, and -a graduate of Stanford university, presented the -affirmative side of 4he argument, '-i. ' after Paul Hunt," Wasatch county N EWS WIRES By rNTTED PRESS OFFICIALS INDICTED -- GREAT FALLS, Mont.. Oct. 16 (ILL'V Chief of Police Ray SI Gau&t, three polce, lieutenants and - two patrolmen and about 30 other" per-sons per-sons we named in an indictment-charging indictment-charging conspiracy to violate the federal prohibition laws here today. -AMERICAN CAPTURED ; WASIUNGTOX, act. 10 U.n) The state department cabled instructions in-structions to dayto-Consul Walter A. Adams at Nanking, China, to do everything possible to rescue Rev. Be rt.N". Nelson oi Minneapolis, reported re-ported c aptured . by Chinese bandits. " - ARREST IS NEAR- , -GREEiFIELDN..C...OcL 16 d'j.) An frrtst was believed Imminent Immi-nent today in the kidnaping case of Mrs- ; Alma Wilson "McKinley, daugh'-ter oi a. wealthy oil man here, who was taken from . her home Monday night, held captive for-hours and released on promises of. a $10,CO0 pay-off. -IUEB QN FINAL LEG . WINSLOVV, Arix.:6ct: 16. (lU, Mrs. Keith Miller, Australian, aviator, lift Winslow at 7:4S a. m. for Los Angeles on the final lc of herv transcontinental flight. Mrs,AI ;.er, who is attempting to better the present cro3 country mark for women, , had an clapped time of approximately 22 : hours when she took off here.- V U. E.A. -CPEHS ANMIAL MEET - LT L,KE CITY. Oct. 16 fc.n The thirty-fifth annual .convention of .the UUh Education association opened at . the state capitol arly thlo affernoon when delegates from ' every 'county assembled 'in,, the house of representatives chamber. The opening session, was confined strictly' to convention business. .It was presided over by Amos N- Merrill Mer-rill Provo. presi4ent of the association. asso-ciation. General condition of . the associatior was- discussed ahd such commitees a& research. . teachers ioi nLMinn. i l.r::' rC;.::; "rrS. on. were scheduled to report York, showing that the classifica-Tabernacle classifica-Tabernacle Session V" tion of propei ty had not worked ou't Another important meeUng this - to advantage in those states. . afternoon waa the school boards . . jn conciusion, he appealed to the session in the Bishops building. rchoo,'s, good roads nd other iuc rouvtauua ui wnicn approxi- mately 6,000 school teachers, prominent prom-inent educators and "others are expected ex-pected to attend will last three da.ys.It closes Saturday, Friday Salt Lake City schools will be closed to permit teachers to attend the morning and. early afternoor. sessions. - r - ... -The first general session U' scheduled for this evening at th .tabernacle. At this meeting Merrill .will speak on The School's Professional Pro-fessional Force and Its Responsibility Responsi-bility in the Education of th Peo-pJe.- ' Weather Utah Fair tonight to-night and Friday; solder southwest, frost north .pr-ion .pr-ion tonl'ht. Maximum trmp. Wednesday ...5. Minimum temp. Wednesday ... SO ..(mm Both Sides of Moot j mining jnan, had given-the negative nega-tive side of . the question in a 40-minute 40-minute .address. : 'v ; Dixon JrIde- . . - H. A. Dixon, i president' of the Provo chamber of commerce, pre? sided" and introduced the speakers. D. Orlo Allen, secretary of the organization, or-ganization, was timekeeper. Each speaker was x allotted 40 minutes with no rebuttall. The order or-der of appearance was determined by lot, Mr. Hunt drawing the open-In? open-In? assignment. - , Both ; speakers were perfect accord ac-cord on one thing that' Utah's tax burden Is becoming more and more onerous and that the normal do-vtlcpment do-vtlcpment of the state is as a res'.i.t yeatly retarded. . But, while they agreed as to the aggravated present economic .situation .situ-ation in the state, they were dlemet rically opposed as to remedies "to relieve the Conditions. ' . Mr. Hunt preferred . to "leayo things' aa thy arc," .while Prof. Miller maintained that there wa3 stiong hope for improvement if the amendments were passed thu permitting- later legislature: to work out a modernTprogressive tax sytem. - " . " " "' . Anticipating Uie probable arguments argu-ments of-Prof. Miller, Mr.' U'mt'at the outset challenged the affirmative affirma-tive to- mention- the nameu of it ltast three Provo citizens who at uresent Ierivp lrjre 'ivrncs .from untaxed intangijUle--wealth. lie also expressed grave aout j that the ' t?x revision program I! i carried out would reduce the gen- eral property. tax as the proponents ofjhe amendments claim. . ; l Launchinj? into nis address, air. Hunt declared that the welfare of : thestate ia,based on four basic in-dusti in-dusti ies. . agriculture, stockraising, manufacturing ana mining. ' : Figures were quoted to show that the limit Is being rapidly - reached in the j first two of these" and that, the hopefrdevelopment of manufacturing manu-facturing vests solely with the.pos. sible increase, in populationof Utah's.Hrading area. V ' v "Utah's greatest opportunity .for expansion must lie In the development develop-ment of .her, subsurface wealth, or t,h" Tuning industry r" declared tlie speaker. ' ' - . :. ''.; ". J' "Arizona La the only state in ihS union, besides Utah, that, taxes her! miles at more than the net pro ceeds." 1 . . ' " ' .-' .:it ' Mr.' Hunt went . into detail to prove his contention that the farmers farm-ers and wage earners would not secure se-cure any relief unaer the proposed tax revision program. On the contrary con-trary he claimed that the proposed ,tax. on mortgages'-; and possible assessment of . property at lOOJier cent of its value would fall heavny on the.e .o'c'asses of people. -IJmlt Keached "The point of diminishing returns re-turns . has .heen reached in taxation taxa-tion in Utah." he ald. : "With almost al-most .50. per cent of the profitab.'e ,r, k B , the limit has, been attained income of th str.te being taken for Expressions were (Continucd On Page Six) Boyd, GonnorTPlan Westward ; . . , .. . ., ... jr,. , ....... . : Flight In Columbia Plane BV UNITED PRESS . Capt. J. -Errol Boyd and Lieut. Harry Connor, . who , flew to England Eng-land in the old plane Columbia, announced an-nounced in London they plan to fly from Croydon, England' or Bal-donnel, Bal-donnel, Ireland,, to North America in the same ship. " Lieut. - Irvin A. ' Woodrine. on peace mission of delivering to Washington and New York Japan s ratification of the navaj treaty for dispatch to London, flew from CJheyenne;Wyo ' to . Omaha and proceeded to Chicago alone when his companion, Lieut., William Caldwell Cald-well crashed near Cheyenne. Wood-ring Wood-ring lost "sight of his companion in a storm. Mrs. Keith- Miller, heading westward, west-ward, had reached Winslow and ILOTOe mm lie CMS H r . Plane Carrying Japanese Ratification off Naval Pact . Crashes in Storm; Body 1'cund in Wreckage. CHEYENNE; Wyo., Oct.: 16 (UP) Lieut. WillianrCald-vel! WillianrCald-vel! of the .aimy air corps perished in a raging Wyoming Wyom-ing 'blizzard late yesterday while on a peace-time mission of good will toward n foreign land. - . " .Lr:j -' . His body was-found today in the wreckage of his - plane 'near Lookout, Look-out, Wyo.. SO' miles west of Laramie. Lara-mie. - - "".-V. Craft Demolished .Conf ii niation of the fate of the missing aviator was- received here by the Boeing Air Transport com? pany, who notified army officials at Fort Francis E. Warren.' R. W. Meskimen, pilot of .the company's vestbound plane, repotted re-potted to tne officers here that he sighted the wreckage -of Xieut. Caldwell's craft, , and circling low over the . spot, saw thebody jstlll in it ; v " The message ; from ; .Meskimen said the plane was almost completely com-pletely demolished', in 'the crash. Meskimen informed the Boeing officers of-ficers here he flew, low enough to establish" bevond a 'doubt that the ! bodvN of Lieut. Caldwell was iiwthe wrecked craft. - . : 'Army, officers -at;. Fort Frances E. Warren." 'were'., notified and',' ah ambulance -was--cent to - tle-?jceive to take ciiartre of' the body. ' Tho i location of the crash glvenJ oy AiesKimen vas . one " unci une half miles cf.st of the railroad sta-5 ttnn of Lookout on the Union Pa- dfic railroad. -Lookout La. GO miles xrc&t of Laramie. ' " , Ixst Control x " ; Uieut.. Caldwell was last seen fiehtini: his way through a terrifie blizzard late yesterday on his vay. fo Cheyenne in the transcontinen- la cir race to carry the Japanese ralificat!onof the London 'naval treaty from Victoria, 13. C, to the ast coast. . IIlV' companion plane on the (Continued On Page Six) FOUR STATE t ai wii, w-t. 'f -r-Plan8 or: the creation of a. -four- state , coriipact which would Jdeter-mine Jdeter-mine the -distribution of 7.500,000 acre-feet of water from " the . Colo rado. river are .favorably viewed, by' Governor George Derh and .other , state officials. ' , ' ",. ' ' i This became evident at a confer-; ence between Governor ADern.- W. J W. Ray, member of the Utah-Colorado river commission; E. B. Deb-ler, Deb-ler, hydrographic engineer, and LGeorge M. Bacon, state engineer. The four-state compact "will .be Independent of the six-state compact, com-pact, but will contain no provisions quoted r' froniThat 'the'' lower states '.will .not ap prove. ' J ' " -Plans for the compact were .outlined, .out-lined, by Delph .E.. Carpenter, river commissioner of ' Colorado. .Under his plan Utah would receive large benefits as this state contributes; 2,000,000 acre-feet annually to ,thp Colorado ; river. " , . ,. ,. ;ioposed to proceed today for Los Angeles. . . - ?- William Cibbs McAdoo, - former seer eta rv of the treasury, was in ' Washinj'cn after demonstrating a business mau could go by, air from California to the capital in ,a little more 16 hours flying time. Laura lngalls started , from Wichita r irport this morning continuing con-tinuing her transcontinental flight to New York. ' ': . " Sitee.i year-old -Robert -Buck warmed up his engine to follow hen in what has developed into a friend- ly race. " . Roberts Friday afternoon at I2;15, Dale Dawson of Napolon, O-. and at which time B. F.' Larsen will Ralph Yengcr of Oefiance, O.. weri speak on -,thc customs of France killed . when their plane crashed . and Spain! - Music: will be furnish-near furnish-near Olathe, Kan. , cd by the B. Y. U, string trio. Artificial Lue:,, Wins Girl's j : rKigh t Against Slow Death r 7, i - if ' ikv - Since.Sept. 11 Frances McGaan, Chicago student nurse, ..has .beeii kept tlivc by .this oddrlpoklng rc-pirstor. rc-pirstor. UnS.bl3f.to breathe beqauca of infantile pa ralysis,. she, lias Jived in this machine which, by altcrnat-! lng intensities oi" air . pycs.surej foices air i-. and out of her hingq.' p. . i 0 , v 'I T y ' " , v .Doctors now say .shejwiircyentually recover Sh Is, shown here in- the respirator .with Iuisc jBloomquist-attending her; inset H a'closeup o: .Mis3 McGaan', taken before slac became ill. Taxpai8ring$ut Against Alpine District School .Board BE.MEABMS: PROJECT DATA . - - - -''''"' Denver Office Instructed TP aiake Study of -Deer Creek Project. WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 tr.n The Denver office of the reclamation reclama-tion bureau has been instructed to study the Provo river irrigation and water project to determine the extent to which the government wfirHeWlop the system jwhlch will Je- tted " to supplement the water supx-ty of Salt Lake City, reclamation reclama-tion commissioner Elwood Mead said today. I ' . -Mead said head refteived a letter let-ter from States Engineer Bacon at ) Salt; La k Citv reauesting specific Infoimation" as. to. what was lo be done on the project and what con .,; . v it.. .....i. t tributions or pledges the city would be required to make., This Inrorma-tion, Inrorma-tion, Bacon wrote, .was requested by 'Mayor, Bowman of the Utah city, Wirt is .anxious - to prepare plans and make . financial arrangements-! . "". ' ' ', ."I did not i have the information here, but asked. the Denver (reclamation (recla-mation bureau.- office fto." compile and,forw;ardit.to me In" order that I may reach ' a conclusion on the project," Mead explained! . According , to tentative plans, tha commission said, Salt Lake City. is to obtain supplemental water supply: sup-ply: to the Deer Creek reservoir and pipe it into the city. , . Rotarians Visit - Clubmen At Price Members of the" Provo Rotary t club, .headed by President ,.Q. -R. j Thomas, eft Provo at noon : for Price, where they -will - attend an Inter-city meeting withj the - Price club'. Prior to the. evening meeting the ' golfers of , tho' Provo : club will meet the golfers of Price in a team match on the Carbon County Coun-1 try c?ub . .Tlie Pi ice clubmen attended an inter-city meeting in ' Provo more than a month ago, and . they are anxious to repay jtfie Provo club for their hospitality. The 5 Provo Rotary Rolf .-team defeated . the Price linksmen when they were here, and Price is determined to turn .the tables today. ' , v The regular weekly luncheon of .the club will be held in the .Hotel - 1 : ." : 3 t - s S S - - ' -- ' ' S A .? f 0t : Reopeninff of Cedar Fori and Fairfield School" is Bcng Sought An fnjunctioh seeking to rrstiain thek Alpine school board, or itb em-ninvov em-ninvov from transporting seventh and eighth grade pupils, from Cedar icort ana J' airlieia 10 im, wu. sought in a, compralnt, filed . in the Fourth district couit Wednesday afternoon. - A group, of Cedar Fort and Fair-fie.d Fair-fie.d taxpayers consisting of Ralph Smith. R. L. Dubois.vEdward Chamberlain Cham-berlain and Henry Anm.tr ong filad tlie complaint against the. school board. ' " v j F. D. Worlton, Lehi; James 1. Clark, American ForkJ-1 N Ander son, Orem; C. A. Fugal, Pleasant Grove, and James B. Smith, Alpine, ichocl board members are named as defendants in the action. Sa f ety J.3orarzeX- ' - The. complaint alleges that .the school board Is spending $2,000 this year for transporting the children from .the two communities to Lehi. It is asked in. the complaint tha. the' board be lestrained from usins thlS money for transportation purposes pur-poses which ii. derived "from taxation taxa-tion for the support of the .'schools. It was brought out in the complaint com-plaint that transporting the seventh and eighth grade 'pupu's has seriously ser-iously jeopardized the safety of the younger pupils, due to the.fact.that they act as guardians of the small.' 'er pupils. : ' There1 is ample room at Xtm scnooi to take, care . cf the pupils and it would be considerable less expensive expen-sive than transport them, it is held. As yet the Alpine school district has failed to open the. Mountain school and steps are now . underway under-way to take, similar action against the board that the Cedar Fort and Fairfield patrons are taking. The scaoo: 'boerd .was asked by the ' Pleasant View patrons to let the state board of education .'decide the matter; This was refused by Superintendent David ,Goar ley,, according ac-cording toe a statement made-by Harvcv Booth Thursday rnornlng. ; " - .' ; CONFISCATION REPORTED WASHlNGTON, ,Oct. . 1C . lJ The ' Amet Scan consul at Porto Alegrej- capital of the - fBrazilian revolutionary state at' Rio Grande Do Bui, i f ported Ho the state department de-partment today .that rebels have contiscatd American automobiles, on. ana finer, supplies. ueisiu were give' in the.pohsul's dispatch. He promLi?cd to supply.thcm later. i AID REGISTRATION "I '' For; the advantage of all " res-' J jdents 'of the . country who will I ,be,outf.tQwn or impossible, to . j register on October 28, " tho J Utah coxmty c.'erk's office will j j be opened from .7 to 9 . m. J j;each night until October 27, ac- j j cording to County Clerk Byron j' I Dafctrup. -The county clerk's j f office i3 located on the third j i floor of; the cily and ceunty j ! building. ' - j AREA GETS fT BjUnj? Illizxard Strikes West, Crippling Traffic On Land and In Air ; Temperature off 12 Above In Montana. .DENVER, Colo., Oct. i(j (UP) hillmg winds,, snow and ffeetf gave the entire Kocky Mpuhtam region its i irst real taste of w inter today, to-day, crippled traffic on land and in the air, and sent he temperature in many cities to be.low freezing. The snow,T churned into a blizzard bliz-zard Jn jruany sections, swirled across Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Colora-do, Idaho and Utah. In Denver it melted as it fell, but froza again, covering streets with a dangerous Icy coating. CHICAGO, Oct 16 u:.P Winter's first visit o the middlewest brought snowstorms and temperatures tempera-tures not far below freezing today to the northern section of, theplaln-country theplaln-country between the Mississippi river and the RocKy Mountains. Teftriperatures Drop - Snow, sleet and ' cold wind were general jiv Montana, the Dakotas, northern Minnesota, Colorado, Wyoming Wy-oming and Utah TemperaJtures varied from .. 20 ' above -to almost zero. :! - '. - Airplane lines discontinued or delayed ' service- rn" tho '."hardest hit jections. Glare -of ice oa , streets, paved, highway and sidewalks yrun joverod .with' snow. Increased automobile auto-mobile accidents alarmingly. Tho Northwestern Canadian .pit-yinces, .pit-yinces, where the storm orginatcd, urofn hpUpvixl to have suffered .most. Snowstorms of blizzard Jn tensity swept down without warn- inff on J. prairie communities, in Manitoba', - Saskatchewan and Al berta.."' :- '"-', . . , The "lowest official, temparatur? in the United States was; 12 above zero at Havre, . Mont., but recbrd ings of five v"t six. degrees lower were' reported ; from unofficial ther-mometers. ther-mometers. Calgary, Alta., repoited sis above ,. for ithe lowest temperay ture in western Canada and Edmonton," Ed-monton," Alta,' lvad .4.0 above. 2 SENTENCES ARE IMPOSED Richard. Frazer. 22. of Denver, , was Sentenced to serve, from one to .20 years' in the state penitentiary , when he pleaded guilty to a second degree, burglary Charge on arraignment arraign-ment in Judge A. V. Watkins di-. di-. vision of the - Fourth district court ; Wednesday afternoon. -Frazer' was arrested by Police . Officer Bert Halladay at 1:30 Wednesday Wed-nesday ' morning 1 while attempting . to break ; into the . National French Cleaning 'company,' and ' in less . than 14 hours was sentenced in the : Fourth district court. He declared , that he wanted to get it over Just as quickly as possible, and so waiYed-his preliminary hearing when ho was arraigned In' the Provo Pro-vo city court and pleaded guilty in .the district court. William Grant of American Fork was sentenced to serve from five to 20 years inthe state penitentiary by Judge Wat kins in the district , cout - Thursday morning. Grant is (Oontmued On Page Six) ff 1111 fH 1 l Lngeles:.Man Burns to Peath ; iFirid ;Bo dy In k u rnace LpS ANGELES,1 ,Oct 16. U.b . l'ha body of John JIarron, .7fl,;atlv er of- Johnny iHarron, motion pic-; ture player, "waa found today cram, med.ln an incinerator, and. .burned almqst beyond recognition. . . ; . . - Tie discovery wa$ made an hour after Harron Je f this hpme , to go . to tspen - his service station on South Broadway. -The . inc ine rator was , at the reacJiof the service station. : Police said the circumstances. Indicated In-dicated that Harron either uvras, murdered or was5 the victim of a weird accident. Ap; examination of .the cash xeg-.. istcr at Harron 's' service station re- )StuMents Observe u 1 Of Church School Need of Endowment Fund Stressed By :J. F. Merrill, Church ''Commissioner;' Daughter of Founder Presides At Exercises. . The characteristic features of the fifty-fifth annivop- sar; honor i living descendants. y ot ounaers qay at Jiriiriiani apiincr university was the ing of the great founder, Brigham younc, thrctich his Ail the living children of. president Young' had been invited in-vited to be present, but oji account of illness and 'prcssinir duties, not all Verc in attcndAnce., The children of tbe founder foun-der -who were present and spoki at the cxerciHCs .were Su.ia 1 1 " , ' yZ Yountr tSateel Zina Young Carr, "Y" Honors His Memory KARL CJ. MAESER GROWTH OF. T i . : Old Fholographa in Provo Store Window Depicts History of School. Fift-fivo years of the growth of Brigham Young university iu depicted de-picted 'in a window exhibited by Taylor Brothers ln honor of Founders' Found-ers' day which was celebrated to-, day. The entire "island" in front of Taylor Brothero department store waa given over to a display of photographj and trophies which m,ark the growth of the institulton. fyo largo blue and white rostttej upon which are tho initials "B. Y. U." and from which sti camera f the school cclora lead down to the exhibit attract the attention of tho , passer by to what i3 probably tho most complete photographic history of the institution ever exhibited at any one place down town. ' There is nothing In the window but articles that have some connection con-nection with the institution. -Prized Painting-One Painting-One of the most interesting of the pictures is a paimting by the pioneer artist, Samuel Jepperson. Thlij ' -' ' . ''':. SHOWS shows a section or frovos mam .. - -street in 1875 when the school was i (jllUrCn ".McXTlberS r.lso old Lewis Hall, the school's ; first home, which at that time -stood j on the corner of Third West and ! Center street. The painting ehoMrs a view .ooking west from Second j Wet. In the foreground is the olj j. mill race and Centar street aa It then was. " photographs of various graduate ing classes' give a cross section of (Continued On Pago Six) vealed that it had not been touched cident or suicide ; theories .were most likely. ' Authorities also said a possibility of -suicide existed because Harron -recently had complained 'to members mem-bers trf his family of ill health .and poor ; business conditions, v To jhave taken hia own, life,, how-eyer, how-eyer, vJHarron - would have been forced to sit in the incinerator, a big iron. pipe set .on end, .and then ..lght. the .fire under himself. Fire. Inspectors expressed the be-' lief that gasoline ' had ' been : sprinkled on Harron's clothing be- ' fore the fire was ignited under hinv' ntversary V Rtigham MoM3 Youiig, .Clurisa Young spencer, Ahd ' Fannie Ypuntf Clayton! Grandchildren and 'other l el.it I vea were alW present. . Daughter I Speaker -; Church Cimmfosiunrr of EJuraj t tlon, Joseph F, Merrill, dciivcreJ i ty address In vhlch he .uet foith i the educational policy of the cnurcn, to o me maintenance or church seminaries and a gi fat university uni-versity f6r'.thj training of teacher for these seminaries. He stressed tho Importance of the . two million dollar enUowment fund now beln raised. - Preceding the ' exercises at Col-lege Col-lege hall, a. Founders day. parade ' headed by Brigham YoUng university' univer-sity' band marched ,from the university uni-versity .buildings on University avenue to Center street, thcno westvto .'tho original Bite of Brig-ham' Brig-ham' -Young acudemy, countermarching counter-marching east to First lijibt str' t and ; north to ; jCol lege ' hall. Tw ';prixes.wf'awarded for the be'. display In the marching The Tiuln-iug Tiuln-iug school capturing tlie one prize ind tho ', Junior college cla an the othr. In beginning the-exercises, President Presi-dent Franklin S. Harris expreaswd appreciation of the work done by (he great founder, of the school, and stated that it was. a pleasure to revere his memoiy through hJs clUldron.' 'Preald'int HuVtlu also cxpros.sed ''gratitude for the work done by I?arl C. Maese.r, Benjamin Cluff, Oeorge II. Brlmhall, and tlio members of the faculty of tho unl-vanUty, unl-vanUty, ; and . alaa 10 A. . O. HtnotA, Joasic Knight, and nonie ,5,0o others who had rendered financial assistance to the schoo. sHe presented Mrs. Susa Y. GatfH asVhairman of ' the txerelues, in which tho children of President YoungNverc to participate. Mia. Gate3 rtaied that she objected, as her father would have objected, to the -hoinage that was being done to mornbers of the Young family. " "Brlgham Young," una naid, "had a horrov of , man worahijl tr' anything any-thing th:it would place a barrier between man ahd hia heavenly Father." ' Sh expressed appreoliw tion of the, great personalities that had been . developed by Brlghum Young unfvcrslty. 't,ersonalitis, cho said, "make IIfe. ' The world would b nothing without , hunan beinga.'V " -' - Mrs. Gate) sketched brieny;th historical origin of. the school which grew out of her father's feeling of the need of a echool in which re-) ContInued OrcPago Six) To Aid In Site Bcautification The members of the Pr ovo Community Com-munity 'church are working on a progressive plan of landscaping the grounds adjacent to the church. The ' grounds have been , plowed, and .will be , seeded m . the uprinir- Other plans of bWutif lcation, Including attractive flower .bed, shrubbery, Boston ivy, ; and the planting of other attractive and appropriate ornamental shrubs and troea are in the general plan of landscaping. , ". Mr. John Olsen, the gardener at the state hospital, : is lending his valuable assistance In making the plan effective. ' ; ' . , - On J Friday afternoon, every man associated with the church la requested re-quested to be present as soon as possible after 4 o'clock for the purpose pur-pose of clearing the grounds of stone. . All who have . rakes are asked to bring-them, in order that as much work as possible may be done before winter sets in. The women, too,. are o,be present, pres-ent, and are going to Berve sand-, wiches and coffee to all workers. When the property has been f It tingly landscaped, it Is hoped that it will present a very appropriate - .setting to the beautiful Meno Tropo hall. |