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Show 1he provo Punished , The Herald Company. Provo, UuU. by EVERY MONDAY, if. herald ' .' ifflflKIGS , ; WEDNESDAY AND FfUDAY. -- aterta t "Six Mentha, $1.7: C ROWERS and Publisher. TIMPANOGOS TRAIL act,-lt-- has v to do with the trails up Tirnpanogos. as-reads The story oDogai "Ainerican Fork. Committees from Salt Lake, Lehi, Pleas- ant Grove and AmericanTork met with the Utah county commis sioners during the week to urge the commissioners to give aid in jl v f , r : at thebase f last year havinfbeed washed out tyTieaHmirthii spring.. Con. "siderable opposition was heard from the Provo Commercial club," canycm, etc., etc, " '. - That's the point The Herald wishes to hring to youratten. tiori: The "considerable opposition from the Provo Commercial : club." ... is this American would What have Salt Fork "opposition"? Lake readers believe that Provo is assuming a selfish position, playing the proverbial dog in the manger. This is far from true. Provo has done more to develop and advertise Mtr Timpanogos than have all ether towns and cities within a thousand miles of the mountain. It was Provo ; that first "discovered" the mountain. It was a Provo man, EJLfc.Roberti, whalksljcame to Jknowthatbut two of the Alps rival Timpanogos. v "'": It' was Provo that blazed the first trail up the mountain, and ' . first began the hiking parties up that trail. ' . a earnest Provo's was that efforts It government through cttre4 tpprepriatien to build trails up the mountain f inally-wa-s Then it was that American Fork began reaping the fruits of toi ; American Fork suddenly woke up, not Provo's ten-yemore than a year ago, and discovered a grand, and wonderful, mountain at her side, something Provo had known for years and" r years. "fhrotigh inrrorof "Bana T. Parkinson, forest supervisory alt now-famo- us ar - - ; ntw (Vn. VITPV rvyTjtpua avnanAoA 00 ' - ( By ttt,-"f- tn Vinilrlintr a trail nn tho American Fork" side of thrinountatoTentirelytlisregarding the trail already started on the Provo side. Dana T. Parkinson has not yet explained why he spent all that money oniheA.merican Tcrk trail when it was Intended by the government that it should Le equally divided between both trails. Dana T. Parkinson has not nd with American yet explained why he is Fork to divert tourists from the JVovo canyon trail, admittedly the more beautiful, to the American TFerk' side, until so recently con?idered by American Fork itself as fit. only for sheep herding. Dana T. Parkinson sometime will have the duty of explaining the tj - federal roverament whi he has been so unfair to Provo. Tor Dana working-hand-in-ha- -- i... 414 vsi arch-champi- 1. S -- I A', j - 'siSt a ".-...- . v'-- -- " ' -- v -; .' t :.i ." : m M m Jewelry and service are kinonly when the selection is and money becoming th&.---besi:.-you- ' can buy. Our terms fit your venience. I V A con- -- . ----"- S :, :r - ltre -f also-endea- vor -- Becksteads Exclusive Jewelry Store n "l thif Losed Out Billy, loved, to ay pieces but he never, never said them Just as they were written. Rhyme and rhythm .were nothing In bis young life. "8e : Fonr-yeaol- . t. three-year-ol- H d . The ether day he attempted to say "Mother Hubbard." and when he came to the part where she went to get the dog a bone and be got none, he said, "SO he losed ent" a n Him 36 West Center St: , - Lines to Be Remsmbstji gentleman puts words Into nd sorts what he says to ths fe" He Is broad and faJtThe nilgai biased and petty. A gentleman fr- Slders what is right The vulgaris considers what will pay. a genttaac wishes to be slow to speak and to act He helps the needy; Bij I not swell riches. Confucius. A OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT: TRUE By C0XDC : 1 d .DlIgcff0? wm : 5 4impsap SS M 8 , .' - puss .ki:...I s- jmJSxf wok6 or this I WEATHER AND I'LL BE ABOUT TEMPTED TO TAKE OFF MY. l.-- wooueNS X o t ..;..p pw-- 4 I"":-"- S Xw 1 "taw.1"! j pi fell"-i'-' . XN. . .. vr . mm . c - v w3 ii l iv,vi - ijj, w-- j 2cnatnP! - rr,--- s . . three-year-ol- - mountain. f)' - v When first it was proposed by Provo men, under4he leader-th- ip of Timpanogos, E. L'. Poberts, of the of that 15. Y. U., that Mt. Timpanogos should .be set apart as a national forest, that the people might use it for their playground, their recreation spot, their American Alps, Provo heartily entered into Fork's attitude? that suggestion. ''But what was American We will teII you7Mr. "Parkinson; r At the 'fi the natter, when government officials met; with Utah county men, there were representatives present from J'rovo. They be llided for the reservation." They' asked that: the mountain THE LIMIT. ' " : ;v given to the people. i By Berton Braley. American Fork. from Also there were present representatiresf There's lots of jobs I wouldn't And whom did they plead for? The people? Not on your tor; life t American plead -- for the sheep A trainer in a lion's den. Is not a task I'd like, and therefore herders, , They 'pmt est M against giving the mountain to the I'll leave that stuirt to other men; handed should be 'insisted mountainside the that I wouldn't care-tpublic They tame a rattler- over to the Bheepherdersv that they might wax ricTToff the free Or stare a tiger In the lump grazing for their herds. American Fork then fought against Xor be the poor, misguided battler Who's sparring partner for for a building- trails, They fought against every plan to, improve the Fork's-representative- ---- -- Who Senses Bes dry-blow- n . f extt-nujo- in one of the rSavTwspapersi-eminatinsfrom American Fork, is s? notoriously untrue that The tria:f Go -- ; Pleases Cost u, ftorypublished - Herald fe3rwn..1toftn;ftubK oo oo oeoo '.. a New York Merchant lie of held here "Bngtaair Toting "unf-eMit' . ; a Monday, an extennk a tatiisbed with. Lurry NVso fas v-- w director. M r t.fiTti-- . th it a 7 x. g r a d u a tc of j t n.' ..." :vit it .f .I :.:T-Vffl&r.,n- r 'b miirttn laranumbera- of the Utah Agricultural, collt-ge- , re Of .extraordjnartly heavy, he Jalfiiuaervt-tmbe with .. Mot Reduced Wages. ,,.. sirs; .n.j."t enar"h" wa president i aornhjisirativ'.., and field opeftt-Pruv' . gse3in tailing on m iucn irapvriaui, eiriuJi work for the d:vUion A that Mr. Sam dUcusseJ business mat - of overhead a salaries. or wages, rent not re- i.i ... "w,""i acd aiTvertieine. J o w t in , m mnanii He Is at present, editor t io.. institution. iin1. " We have Uiui iiMon,.! i is-- i , i sf ti v aueea nave,-iwaes. and r.vArhA&d we' vrt ,..nt.chOTtneaerTW t.f tie Uuh Farmer. tsolaiki 44 ereaeed .them fWnad rceatly of tiomr t ' When "piiTident-elef- i Hants ksiuvM-'thavfrv Provo . buaine&s cas. Rents have not come aown. for advertising, we have increased aked what the nature of the work of' man ilLlind:Jbe article blow buuuu our appropriation, oeuevius Ibis sew division of the university formative and helpful ith the Vl HI" would be. foe said :' The to gham Garment New. The Herald quotes to bring morepeople into our stores Young university is a church univer- Mr. Sams as follows --and to mcreaae saie- s- wrr..fillfT that thig ft lOttr-18 In nL.r.i,nl.i.l being. Well vv sity and its aim i to serve not only v ( mk. ITnacol (U viv u v u tntal hayiceDVU the people of Utah and aurrounding selling expense or overhead has re-- rewarded." Mr. Sams was asked It H is not states but . also the church. We not mained about stationary so far during true that the chain store systems 1S21 thewith in a few to individuals tram figures comparison only expect for last, year, said Mr., Sama. -- 'The j thrive during periods of business de-of pression, suea as occurred when comttal figures show- - a decline modity prices began to reced in 1920. through oute?teolonylfilonnd'SKtit!i' "Our experience, at least, appears to tbe church organizations, which give cent tor the first quarter of 1921. It us. an almost unlimited number of is neceesary, however, to refer to bear out that statement" he replied. other field agents, wa expect to be able to other facta and figures which- - throw -- Widespread nemployment-anfactors which have been unfavorable render a service of very great value additional light on the subjeoa. tortrade In generaiiiavjeevidently 19 erery commnnrtyr Rapidly Increasing.' "Our. eatenakm division is- to have "During the last, year our business reacted in our favor. Large numbers four bureaus. The bureau of social has been ateadlly and rapidly increas- of working class people have found service will bave as its purpose toe ing. We now are operating 100 more that their dollar wUl buy more in our than we had at this time last stores' than it could elsewhere. That assisting of th- e- various community business is the most ..plausible Interpretation of ieaaera; church officers, and teachers. year, and tie facta" This- - bureau - will to handled as indicated by cash-retur-'ns Plan of Cooperation. develop welfare work, such as . Indi- has increased 85 per. cent During It-- may not be inappropriate to add vidual and community health and sani- the four months ending April 20 re tation, home nursing, charities and ceipts were approximately $13,000,000 a word concerning the foundation relief work, social dancing, dramatics, as compared with sg.500.ooo for the upon which the business of J. C. pageantry, and .home entertainmenu. same period in 1920.. Disregarding Penney Co., Inc., has been built. The The bureau of ublleatlona will larae the- - act ual increa se organ! zation is founded on the idea of from time to time bulletins, circulars to natural expansion as shown by the Every employe is a prosof our retail establish- pective partner, and many of them tionand periodical in- multiplication containing formation for people interested: in ments jrlthln a single year, there ha? actually do share In the profits in to th responsibility tor which various lines of work." The bureau of been a net increase of:ii per cent correspondence study will offer'manv Jn our cash Tolume fbr the first auar they demonstrate the capacity of asas against me nrst quarter suming, their energy and success. courses appearing .in the university JM:r 01 1920. Each store manager has the powercurriculum for home study. whll "1 am loss to ful at how bureau of lectures and entertainments backing and support of a large. explain rHy organized to sunulv anurnnrlato 1p. we can show even a: slight flegrpaRe centralized buying power, which he tures for M. I. A. or ward lyceum ll? 1Be rai, 01 overneaa to gross in- - could not hope to obtain were he in ' courses, etc, through the winterfcome' notwithstanding the fact that business for himself. And buying 18 a deal cardinal a to do l,t has to us power usually months and to provide Itinerant prinelpt with great summer schools and chautauciuas." ikfeP doi'n our selling expense as low with the prestige of any business or' i" posible In order' to offer merchan- - ganization in the market. consumer at the. most at-- ' The company's first . store was F0UR CHAMPION JERSEY COWS dise - tractive price. There are several established by J, C. Penney at Kem- months reasons why This apparent decrease merer, Wyo., 1902. .Sales during the starting test at twenty-tw- o aifficult to explain In the first; first year were $29,000. This year-th- e of age Fern's Pair Adelaidn finished - nnwi rn r tet' 910 4)-il .aow i-eeft - 0 la-rxotird 4 Kiwlnrthm m .c.r.A.m nlirC Fir jAlk . hava larger volume or re--, stores are expected to exceed $30, pounds of milk and 438 .pounds 0f "onuis' ana butter-fat- . No new stores have been means 000,000. This makes her. the cham - icelpts thls year than la8t JroIum-:nierehandlse1 opened einee-te- st f rall.'rAt the present plon- -i Jersey - yearling-produ- cer of ttnat Je-un- Jt Uath. She la owned by C. Y. Cannon distributed Is considerably greater. time the company is apparently The 0081 r handling so much larger its gains", and is not conProvo, Utah. or goas has heen larger. templating opening additional stores Pogis' China Spot " exceeds"' the' nuaniuies : ... That is It must al8o.be in the. Immediate .future. state record for senior . Jerseys, Starting test at two "years and nine months of age, she produced Gold Found Almost Everywhere Terror of West Indian Hurricane. 9,029 pounds of milk and 541 pounds Gold, though the most precious of of. butter-fa- t She is owned by W. oetaJa,ln In. the tVest. Indies the naUvet have commoijise, la by far the A. Nuttall, Prove. Utah. ' named tne burrlcana warnlna flae. most widely ; distributed a Thr, in the junior '"class irdly-aar eeaatry on earth, fro: -whlcb -la dllayed Ausoiiua. uiuko uie ciass tMMuator to, the rean. "el nanueln dtl Diahin" a t ptvlea, wherMt U record with a production of 16,812 f ' devil's not handkerchief. found. la varioua It' of ; The out pounds of milk, yielding pounds hnrrlcanea are named after aaintr ht Hertestwas begun th scorching anda-o- f western-A- n the' church, and birth dates, at three years and eleven months of trails, blasted from the dlffi of fro marriage age. She la owned by Lew Mar Price, en Spitsbergen and washed from tha dates and death dates are reckoned from them. Arctic beach at Cape Noma. Provo, Utah. d The . senior record was broken by another Jersey owned OFETirNEFHr . : ! ? HV STiVTrv by W.' A. Nuttall. Merry 'Maiden's Betty "produced 10.128 pounds of milk. yielding 635 pounds of butter-fa- t Her test started at three years and seven montbB ot age. ' seconT class jnaiLmaUtr June , ISH, at the poMof!:c, Prove, ; ; ' Tub, under the Act of March' S. 1IT9. 1150 a Year. . rr tie meet hi f barl executive ' ; the cpEtLly At iGCfBXl). B u s i n c s sTal k to B u sin e s s Mo n Provo went aheadTand ftetfnttowtai7l5cwed "from I've had a football outfit jump me. I've ridden on a bucking bronch, Hie government a slender strip of mountainside for a trail, which And had the plunging critter bump Provo mm fenced in, improvedxind madextejisivejuseof. " me ; r"' When all this was done, when photographers and artists With awful force upon my conk; famous that and paint I've faced a lodge Initiation tame from all over the world to photograph And had mybrowwith fear grow not till ihen, did American Fork wake-ur.nunt?n,- - them-f.n"damp'. I r.nd realiez the beauty, the grandeur of Timpanogos. Also, Axrier-i-,- n But I don't want the situation for tourists. Fork then realized the mountain's attraction: Of sparring partner for a champ! When it touched the pochetboolc American Fork wanted the moun-- . tain trail, and wanted thexciusive trailrAmericanF'orkrthrough Vou don't get any cheers or glory For all the blows that cut and ih o strange generosity of Jlr. Parkinsonr got the trail. Every sling, ParkinMr. was cent of the government's appropriation spent by Each day Is just the same old story w n ort the American one - Tran. - rrevu gov iiuimu-iiuiuk Of getting slugged "around the rlilg; t hocn out, and American -- Fork asks that Provo You istand for every Jolt and wallop", : ' For blows that hatter, bruise and ' hf i rebuild it. :r . cramp; . more to " Lake Salt' all newspaper The Herald today asks Oh gW. I'd hate to be the lollop fidlv acouaiiit themselves with the true facts regarding the Who's sparring partner for a champ! trails' before: they4, print other' stories ' about the Provo (Copyright 1921 by Newspaper . l .riimercial club's "opposition." Enterprise.) The Herald today sends a copy of this editorial to Mr. and to the U. S. Forest Service. Washington, D. C, hoping CORD TIRES ALL. that either or both may take advantage of the columns of The V. mhl to in trail Hail, the cord tire! Though its explain Mr. Parkinson's apparent-favoritisrise to popular favor has not been ' " r -t- " r -t 1 p --- d- rT f 7rr J .. &r?Jg Pop uernw -- px .inSTicfi w&)t-ee.MAfpg.'- f . o' TnePECsr itJ?r? - ft CTN' - " 'QT" 1" ; . Tim-rr.nc- Park-Lirro- os and through spectacular, steadily sheer merit lt has established itself la the realm of motordom. Not many-yearago cord tires were considered only as equipment for luxurious cars Their cost was considered prohibitive hand of Provo will be extended, 'gladly and by the average motorist They The were v to the bankers of Utah when they come here Friday for use9 almost exclusively on the boulethrir thirteenth annual convention. Not alone will Provo prove vards of the big cities during their t the state's financiers that this city is glad to see them, but it early days. Today they are found on every type ill convince them that Provo is one of the very best and most of passenger car and have even in w vadf d the . truck, field Jind.ln some rorressive of cities of the whole intermountain "region, It ls to the IiFst inferesfs orairFrovoT)UsTriess men that the hues of motor transportation have ' ers of Utah leave us with a fine impression of our. industry, ousted the solid rubber tire. , Prac' tically every make of passenger car and ambitions. : has- adopted them as standard equipNot or;l is it rood business to make a good municipal show- ment The popular demand Is for - ! re t!:2 viUors. but it is in Iceeping with Pravo's reputa- - cords for. replacements and cord equipped new cars are the most at rf ir-j- a "convention city of the first, rank. tractive "buy." The cord haa been found as rugged for ".rouRh.xountry roada as for city pavements. Probably the biggest single advance In the career of th cord tire when a 20 per cent price reduction of :e?s r?en' WJeye 'that by prompt payment was announced In the of Silver conditions in this city will be vastly town cords by the B,price a FY Goodrich . - is rurh ltric in their argument that early piy-- Rubber company on May 2. Cord tire ii y..w;;,ie thfrn to grive still better bnr-- . were placed within the reach rtf thou-ssud' of motorists who had previously thi-;i' in turn, to p'y their bills !'! considered, their price prohibitive. ii'.uhdii z faster, r.nd farther.. Thus it Tod.iy tire sales are running heavtb , -Iv , .' i v ; v' i - ,., - ..; f wh... - C If Wn V.Mt fM? .V-- i' V Cli.?'i s THE BANKERS OF UTAH itr,-rc?ourccs- .jstKiW. n. m -n- ,. What is So Rare as a Day in June? Then,ii 'Ever feet Days- - Perfect: those days to come by getting the very latest and best in JEWELRY Choose well and wear wiselyOurs most exacts ing Requirements ?AYWG BILLS PROMPTLY !''j-'.np- ss . fs-r- n, s to ronR . 172 .117 J- - C , i u Phone 99 jn |