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Show r . . v V " PRO VO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, JANUARY 22;- 1933 -1 Strip p-CWctJ Subscription terms by carrier in $5 00 the year in advance; J. A Owens, Business Manager. A Great Response To a Great Need Spurred by the eagerness of a great need, hundreds of -men and women from many parts of the west are preparing to visit Provo next week. They are coming, full of the perplexities per-plexities and worries of these times, to seek guidance from the thinkers who have been chosen to speak in the Twelftn Annual Leadership Week of Brigham Youn university. They will not be disappointed. Their .-ariiest desire to find ways of improving conditions has been anticipated by the men who have organized the huge and varied program. Authoritative counsel on urgent problems of the day awaits the visitors of Leadership week. Best of all, though there will be discussions of transient phases of modern life, the groundwork of the instruction will be a robust spirituality, for the leaders of Brigham Young university believe that the only sfe foundation for rrtustrnftinn i tViP ptpnifll fundamentals of existence. i tVvllOVl V4 V V A W A A - VWV ww'w- ' Hope will be revived in many visitors by the exhilara-tron exhilara-tron of great music and the vision of a finer future which great intellectual ana spiritual leaueis win give, Those who are fortunate enough to be in attendance through the week will go back to their homes to infuse new spirit into the social, religious and economic life of their " localities. They will initiate confident new movements where there is chaos now. They will aid in clearing away the debris of the slump and in building more worthy and serviceable institutions. . Investors Responsible, Too Auditors of the affairs of the late "match king." Ivar Kreuger, state that he swindled .investors in 160 enterprises out of. $115,000,000 in about 15 years. . Yes, and just so long as investors put tneir money hhw -enterprises and then forget it, just so long will crooks like r Ivar Krueger swindle them. If people who invest money aren't interested enough in f it to check up on their investment continuously, they V shouldn't invest in the first place. If they just give their t i iia f. inrir tVinv flrp niirtlv to blame lor money away cinu nuoi iu u) whatv usually, happens. SQUANDERMANIA! I How Politicians SQUANDERING With cotton prices down to next to nothing, the federal farm board is paying out huge salaries to "executives" to manage cotton production and sales for growers. ;i . One man, handling cotton transactions., gets $75,000 a year, With cotton at five cents a pound, this means growers ' h&ve to produce 1,500,000 pounds just to pay this one salary. 1 - A wheat organization representative gets $50,000 a year with prices-the lowest in history. It takes 100,000 bushels of 50-cent wheat to pay his salary. More than half the world's telephones are located in the United States. How many wrong numbers ")uld that make? Excuse it, please! Something everybody New Jersey, was purchased Until the year 713 B. C. ten months. Maybe they had Joan X HORIZONTAL ; 1 Skin blemish. 5 Trappings. 10 Laid, as a street. 12 Harsh noise of a trumpet. . 14 Vow. ' 16 Type of theft designated as grander petty : yTaw. IS Sea bird, family fam-ily Alcdae. , 1!tWo groups of " , hlars. oi which the North Star is one. " 21 To emulate. ' '22 Never ( contraction), con-traction), 24 To entrap. .25 Wagers. ' 26 Rain as in f winter. 2STo make lace. '. 29 Hodgepodge. 30 Vessel for - heating water ; , tit. the table. SI Gazelle. Answer to 151 pronoun. 36 Social insects. 39 Chestnut horse. 40 Dupe. 42 Moved througlx water fish-fashion. fish-fashion. 41 "Work of skill. 4G To hire. 47 Bugle plant. 48 Colonist. r.O Empowered. 52 S'aelu 53 Work of fiction. fic-tion. 54 Finishes. TR Q1S M DEJ M QNg V Irs QIRUW I N SUN E P L1ad PTE RjSP QPP SORE 5r I tLt OlwNQPjA U S E stgrftlSL APQgCT l . MANXA "iJciQN "ARQ AGfEjNf ZlpKp SAJLX jt -S3 Hoary. " 3 ;cminino ' It U b U I is p J j hi' nnL io fn F" JF I so Hr . ; W inr- -H i.i'-v-' V r 31 l r -,-r X NXS fill m : prpr ssssr 35 ass n55! ss5o Si s2 ten I T"grr J IT f 3P j - ESS-- ' I I53" j j- 1 Hp:- L 1 1 "proclaim liberty, Uiroufhout the land'Wrbe Uberty Beti Herald A SCEIPPS - C ANFIELD NEWSPAPER Every Afternoon, except Saturday, and Sunday Morning; Published by the Herald Corporation, 50 South Flnrt West Street, Provo, Utah. Entered as seconjd-clasa matter at the poatoffice in Provo, Utah, under the act of March 3, IS79. Gllman, Nicoll & Huthnxin, National Advertising representatives. New York,-San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago. Utah count y 50 cents the month; $2.75 for six months in advance; by mail, in -the county, $4.50; outside Utah county, $5X0. E. R. Rasmuson. Managing Editoi t Waste YOUR Money BALES OF COTTON should know: Hudson county, from the Indians in 1658. the Roman calendar had only technocrats in those days, too. of Arc Previous Puzzle 11 Railway station 12 Hallowe.l 13 Colors as fabric. 15 Regrets exceedingly ex-ceedingly 17 Insects' eggs. 2-0 American widgeon. l'3 Where was Joan of Axe. burned ? 25 Food for which Boston, U. S. A., is famous. 27 Twisted. 29 Ratite bird. 32 Blood. 33 To clatter. 31 Portion. 35 Devoured. 37 Ribbed fabric?. 55 Tints of scarlet. scar-let. VERTICAL 1 Uttered. 2 Eccentric wheel. 3 Greedy. 4 Amber. 5 Dazzing light. 3S To rescue G Where is the 39 File. malleus found (pi.)? 7 Part of a curved line. 8 Overseers. 0 Spread of an arch. 40 Game of skill. 41 Singing voice. 43 Manufactured. 45 Lump of cloy. 4G To rant. 49 2000 pounds. 61 Cot. I IE 151 ICMIA1R1P Sitting Atop the World With Jim Marshall One-of the ideas of the Technocrats Techno-crats is that the value of anything any-thing is simply the amount of work necessary to produce it at least that i3 what we get from the rule that "the value of a commodity is to the value of every other commodity as the working-time necessary to produce one commodity is to the working time necessary to produce others" but if the Technocrats are going go-ing to build a new world on that one they are going to have trouble The price of most things is set not by the time they take to make or even the expense but mainly by the amount of human desire to possess them For example there is probably prob-ably less human energy consumed in making a diamond than in making a loaf of bread but one costs maybe a billion times as much as the other simply because there is an oversupply of bread and an un-dersupply un-dersupply of diamonds A Japanese who labors all day in the rice paddies certainly uses more energy than we do in printing print-ing this column yet he is very poorly paid and we get enough to maintain a much i higher standard of living maybe this is all wrong but if the Technocrats want us to exist on a coolies wages we shall have to object putting our personal per-sonal comfort ahead of the com mon good" as every man does -when it comes to a showdown The main reason for the disparity dispar-ity between ou; wages and those of the coolie lies in the fact that almost anyone on earth can do the coolie's job and very few can do our job (and are we blushing?) so there is a great deal of competition com-petition for coolie jobs and very little for ours and the amount of energy expended ex-pended in each case cuts no ice whatever on the paycheck The " price system to which the - sprang out Technocrats object - of human nature and has the law of supply-and-demand as its basis it is true the law is detourcd and blocked at times but by and large it works as it always did and always will to say that diamonds should be cheaper than bread because thev reouiic less enerev to nro- duce is a fine theorybut noth- ' ing more AND, LISTEN: The "value' there is to anything own or produce lie: in just badly somebody else wants it. Jersey Club Boys Elect Officers Glade Johnson was chosen president presi-dent of the Provo Jersey 4-H club at a meeting held last week. Ray Marrott was elected vice president and Wesley Knudsen was appointed appoint-ed secretary and reporter. Appointees to a showmanship committee were Gaylen Johnson, Albert Knudsen, Paul Nelson and Blain Anderson. The meeting was under the direction of the club leader, Ralph Anderson. Plans for the coming year were discussed, and record books were distributed to the members. Ways and means of developing a win- ning stock judging team were gone over by the members. Those present were Ralph An- derson, Ray Marrott, Wesley The Modern Progressive Poultryman DEMANDS BLOOD TESTED STOCK TIMPANOGOS HATCHERY is now in a position to supply the demand. Every hen furnishing eggs for this plant has been tested and found free from B. W. D. (Pullorum Disease). NEW LOW PRICES On Our Production Bred, Acclimitized, Blood Tested BABY CHICKS - Only ILaV Each ORDER NOW Phone . . Wire or Write . . . Book your favorite date Timpanogos Hatchery 307 SO. SEVENTH EAST PROVO, UTAH PHONE 613-W OUT OUR WAY MO -VJO! inAlS FEW Trt" ARgA OP TvV WAD, sl i-US AiVlT KiO BCMlJtR, 1NJ P 1933 BY NE5 SCRVIcr, irR, 3 catioit Howdy, folks! Now they're talking about inflating the currency, do you suppose they'll print the dollar bills on rubber, so you will be able to stretch them further? Li'I Gee Gee, the office vamp, has bought a bicycle pump and is going to inflate her own currency, if she can get some currency, She is also in favor of beige currency, to match the First National bank. Joe Bungstarter says he sees where a good canning season is j expected, but hos it won't affect I him personally. He never feels ' sorry for anythi'- that is canned, j "After all," he says, " a peach is only canned once in its life." Joe . has been canned 187 times since the depression started." ! No matter how good times get, dentists will always look down in the mouth. We will now gather a-ound anil sing the husbands' gnod-night j song: "loot's Turn off the Fight1 and Go to Sleep!" j DAILY LKSSON a sentence ccntaining Make-word Make-word the IDAHO I'd weed 'If Idaho the iraidr-n. FAMOUS STATESMEN This is Solon Simuk'ns of Aldct Holler, who got turc by promising promis-ing work for all, $5000 a year for every- jobless family, a $20,- i !M).nO bond is- j sue for n e w". . . , and lu i- taxes. 1 i is iu... noss is exceeded oulv by that if his constituents, who believed him. The beer blue in congress is having a hard fight, hut Its slogan Ls still: "Back to Bock!" During the snowy season in i Chicago we suppose one gang- I ster takes smother for a slay- ride. Write your name and address on coupon and mail to us with 10 cents in stamps for free sample. ART SHANNON. I Knudsen, Glade Johnson, Gaylen Johnson, Ronald Knudsen, Morris j Rich, Paul Nelson, Albert Knud- sen, Roy Knudsen, Lyman H. Rich and Heber A. Knudsen. ' how I fC lE.V'EfW BOOS TRVim' "To Be. A -TT-UMef?! -That feua loaoikj' COOV.O USE.-A UTTi-e I vtev.P-, Bur MOU 1 v SUNDAY FIUST WARD Members of the Delta Plfi of the P.. Y. U., national honorary missionary mis-sionary fraternity, will have charge of the sacrament services in the First ward chapel this eve-n.ng eve-n.ng at 6:30 o'clock. Kenneth Ctringham will preside. John McAllister will give a talK cn "What Delta Phi Is Doing," and Kay Berry, African globe trotter, trot-ter, will be the principal speaker of the evening. The Delta Phi ouartet, consisting of Ellis Doty, Kobeit Men, Alva Maxwell and Fred Horlacke: will render selections, selec-tions, and Rulrn Jones will play piano numbers of his own composition. compos-ition. An instrumental trio, composed com-posed of Miss Maurine Romney. Miss Joe Bachelor and Miss Martha Mar-tha Coleman, will furnish numbers. SISCOND VVAHD j Nej.'.ii Nielsen wilf be the spcak-I spcak-I ei at the Second ward sacrament meeting to be held this evening ;t 7 o'clock in Uft ward chapel. Good music has been arranged i by the ward choir. FOl RTII WARD Pr. .1. J.. Weight will give an 'ddrcss :t the Fourth ward meeting meet-ing this evening ;it 6:30 o'clock in the ward chapel. The D. P. W. club double trio will render selections. FIFTH WARD A special musical program w, 1 le furnished by the Fifth ward choir (35 voices) at the sacrament meeting to be lfld this evening at f:30 o'clock in the ward chapel. .Mrs. Velum Rasmuson is in charge. The choir will sing "Thanks Be to God." and "Teach Me to Do Thy Will," the solo part of the latter lat-ter scl"' tioti to be sung by Murray Hubert'.;. Harry Dean will play a irdm ninnber and Mrs. Dean will render a solo. Don W. Conovcr will be the .speaker. j SIXTH WARD Ward Relief Society conference i will be held in the Sixth ward chapel this evening at 6:30 o'clock. The theology committee has ar-j ar-j ranged a splendid program, and a j fine musical program will be fur nished under the direction of Miss Marguerite Jepperson. Save Money Here! Used BED SPRINGS DAYBEDS, With Pads Used 2-Piece MOHAIR SUITE Used WASHERS Used RANGES Used KITCHEN TABLES BY WILLIAMS rT OwW "TAv6 3 OM7L LABORER TO Vtep eePm' v-n Bugs'--vsineprH. r used To SERVICES 4- MANAVU WARD A missionary welcome home testimonial tes-timonial will 'be tendered F. Mc Lean Swenson, son of Prof and Mrs. Jonn C. Swenson, this evening at 6:30 o'clock in the Manavu ward chapel. Tha young man has been laboring in France. The following splendid program has been arranged: Welcome remarks, re-marks, Dr. William J. Snow; selection, selec-tion, "The Lord's Prayer," B.Y.U. ladies' quartet, consisting of the Misses Lota Paxman, Inez Starr, Mary Clark and Norma Bring-hurst; Bring-hurst; missionary experiences, F. McLean Swenson; remarks. Prof. J. C Swenson; selection, "Gleaning," "Glean-ing," ladies' quartet; reading. Miss Vera Jackson. BONNEVILLE WARD The speakers for the sacrament services this evening in the Bonneville Bonne-ville ward chapel, will be E. D. Reed and Peter E. Anderson. Music will be furnished Under the direction of Mrs. Hannah C. Packard. Pack-ard. Meeting will commence at 6:30 o'clock. PIONEER WARD Miss Mary Birch and Arthur D. Taylor will speak before members of th"e Pioneer ward, at the sacrament sacra-ment meeting to be held this evening eve-ning at 6:30 o'clock in the ward chapel. Special music will be furnished by the choir. THIRD WARD Ward Primary conference will be held in the Third ward chapel this evening, commencing at 6:30 o'clock. A fine program has been pre-pareefby pre-pareefby the Primary officers and teachers and tl.V children of the organization. M. I. A. OFFICERS Important matters arcjj'be discussed dis-cussed at a special meeting of the presidencies of the ward Y. L. M. 1. A. and superintendencies of the Y. M. M. I. A. to be held Sunday at 2:30 o'clock in the administration administra-tion building. It is urged that there be a lull attendance. ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH "A House of Prayer for All People" Rev. James L. flayes, Pastor 50 West Second North Street 5andE mr nn m .so a"d 1 $fo7 a"d 0 11 U IM ws z" I RIGHT TO BE LAZY illlll Billy's, views In his aally stones are his own. They do not necessarily coincide with those of this newspaper. EDITOK). Most writing, and practically all oratory, is for the hour only. But There are fellows who say something that is just as true, and just as important, 50 years later as when it was written. When I discover such a writing I not only thrill, I immediately sit me down and tell you folks about it. HILL BILLY carts the manure, hauls the crops. "Look at the noble savage whom the missionaries of trade dnd the traders of religion have not yet corrupted with Christianity and the dogma of work and then look at our miserable slaves of machines. "Jesus in His sermon on the mount preached idleness: 'Consider (he lilies of the field how they grow: they toil not, neither do they spin: yet I say unto you that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.' "Jehovah, the bearded and angry god, gave his worshippers the supremo example of ideal laziness; after six days of work he rests for all eternity. "All the individual and social woes of the proletariat are born f its terrible passion for work." That is not sophistry, it is exactly what the technocrats arc saying this very minute, yet this smart fellow, who never dreamed of auto matic machines, foresaw the entire vision and the actual result of "(he passion for work." Jaziness is not a sin; laziness is the highest duty to the ego, and as night follows day. therefore the highest duty to all of us. Holy Communion, 8 o'clock. Church school 10 o'clock. .Morning service. 11 o'clock. The young people of St. Mary's parish will be in c'haige of the 11 o'clock meeting. LUTHERAN C HURCH 155 North First West Street Sunday school and Bible class at 10 a. m. Sermon on Rom. 13. 8-10 at 11 o'clock, theme. "Love Is the Fulfilling of the Law." Efcvine servicer' will also be held in Spanish Span-ish Fork at 2:30 o'clock. B. SKOV, Pastor. HIGH PUIESTS' MEETING The high priests' quorum meeting meet-ing will be held in the Fourth ward meeting hous.T Sunday at 2 p. m. AH members are requested to be present. A. L. BOOTH, President. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH Rev. A. B. Henergardt, pastor. Sabbath school. 9:45 - 10:45 Saturday. Sat-urday. Preaching at 11 o'clock. All are cordially welcome. CATHOLIC CHURCH Rev. Victor Herring, Pastor 180 North Fifth West Street Masses at the Catholic church will be held Sunday morning at 9 o'clock and 10:45 o'clock. Instruction In-struction for children will be held at 9:45 o'clock. REORGANIZED CHURCH Regular Sunday services at the Reorganized church, 234 West Fourth South street. Sunday school at 10 a. m.. morning services at 11 o'clock. The Young Folks' Recreational Re-creational society meets every Tlivusday evening at 7:30 o'clock. S. S. HOLM, Pastor. PROVO COMMUNITY CHURCH (Con s,Vegtio Ilaj ) Sunday srhool. J0 a. m. classes for all aces and groups. Morning service at 11 o'clock. This will be featured by a comprehensive compre-hensive review of our new hymn books, when favorite hymns, botl? dd and new wi'l. be sung, and the orders of service examined cmc-f cmc-f u H v. Everybody is welcome. The Intermediate Christian En- You Should Have A Safety Deposit Box OR a few cents a week you can have the protection of a Safety Deposit Box. F Valuable papers, jewelry, things not to be lost, destroyed or stolen, will be safe in our vault. START SAVING REGULARLY NOW We Welcome YOUR Banking Business Provo Commercial Savings Bank REED, SMOOT, President By Hill Billy Recently I was blessed with a small pamphlet by Paul IaFargue, wr'.iten nearly 50 years ago. entitled "The Right to Be Lazy." For some years I have dimly' heard the message, ever increasing in its gentle reiteration, "Be Thou Lazy." I have preached this message in this corner, but I had the notion that maybe I was sui generis in a busy world. That a wise fellow, 50 years back, discovered the same notion as a fundamental philosophic philo-sophic concept intrigues me. Listen to Brother LaFargue for a moment. "In capitalistic society WORK is the causo of all intellectual degeneracy, of all organic deformity. deform-ity. Compare the thorobred in Rothchild's stables served by a retinue of bipeds with the heavy brute of the Norman farms, which plows the earth. Observations By C. V. Hansen WOMANHOOD The world pays homage to pun womanhood, and without her pure society, the earth would become a barren waste, without a single oasis. Woman! What a word! No language lan-guage on earth would be complete without it. Woman, man's mother. Men's hope and inspiration. Without With-out her this old earth would roll into eternity, without the melody of God. As this magic word "WOMAN" "WO-MAN" makes the world akin, and her inhabitants brothers. Woman, thou art the angel to breathe the spirit of virtue into the minds of thy daughters. Woman, thou art the one to plant the seeds of manhood deep down i: the hearts of thy sons. Ah, woman, wo-man, within thy hands lests the fate and destiny of future generations. genera-tions. Woman, inou art wonderful. Thou art the noblest work of God "A virtuous woman is far above rubies in price. She can be trusted. She stretcheth out her hand to the poor, and reacheth forth her hand to the needy. She looketh well t ihe ways of her household and eat eth not the bread of idleness. He children rise up, and call her bless ed, her husband also. A woma that feareth the Lord, shall lr praised." Proverbs. deavor society will meet Sunday evening at 5:45. The Senior Christian Endeavor Society will meet Monday afternoon after-noon at 4 o'clock. The Woman's Missionary society will meet on Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 at the home of Mrs. C. E. Lawrence. The devotions will be led by Mrs. W. H. Olsen. and Miss Virgie Bectar will read a paper on "Medical Missions." CHRISTIAN SCIENC E CHURCH First Church of Christ. Scientist, corner of First East and First North streets. Regular Sunday morning services, 11 o'clock, subject, sub-ject, "Truth." Sunday school at 9:45 a. ni. Wednesday evening meetings arc held at X o'clork Reading room open daily from 2:30 to 4:30 o'clock, excepting Sun days and holidays. All are welcome f 31 B West Center Phone 25 "Where You Save" r I, mm |