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Show J SEPTEMBER 5, 192L THE PROVO HERALD, MONDAY, Ilifen m Utntikn W(Mth jSTij ! U1?J THE a.lEE-UOS-B- nephi j By OR. WM. E. BARTON. A commission of foresters and lum- ' bermen has lately teen making as nt thA timber resources of i the country, A forester i a man ha .1... ni.ntinr nf iLiire trt&. areas from, and the saving of tut-ove- r fire and spoliation. . v o, A lumberman is. or ueea w the lets dowa trees, man who cuts ftr tairft it course, and moves his mill out of the stumps to some other eSDsn , Wealth what is it? Houses and lands? But houses are built by human hands ; And lands are barren or rank with weeds, Unless man tills them to meet his needs ; . And gold is useless, save when it buys What labor fashions, what men devise. This is the wealth that the world will use-Hu-man intellect, human .thews, .Without which all of our gear and gain Is dross and tinsel, is wholly vain. sectror7rhicbr-ba!liPJ- ; - . v . ew " - EWTEP NOAM f PUTS N " MORE CSATS AMD CUSHIONS AJ4TV I' 6EXT3 THE COMPETITION . i V VJA if t ifeCVI . r x, - i " - - -- -- .- I - ,.; Aw I Enterprise.) II , n Fora This is one of th Devest member, of the eight It It the field runabout ' It Is a strong-limbe- d a boy which wbeeli dividing the work done by tour before. It Is tractor War Baker was much interested In at the army exhibit The broad caterpillar belt gives it a ery firm too n Washington. ' mj under all kinds of oil conditions well-Know- , WORK FOR STUDENTS r The Boys' Work committee of the Rotary club will vath the B. Y. university and Provo High school in providing work for the many boys who need aid this winter. J,Iany of the business men of Provo will recall how they v.xrked their way through schools. . Jobs were easier to get in those days and boys', work often went asking for boys. Times have changed. Jobs are not so pientnui ana macmnery taken the place of many men. Boys from off the farm could teir.e to our city if they were assured even a little help. One" young fellow stopped ,a certain teacher on the street When asked if he was going on with school, he made fomiUoT. rpnlv "TVft made enousrh this summer to carry unless I through six months', but I can't see the other three, . rr.student spends ?i - " ' " . In Band and Orchestra Instruments, and Music 'for Students and Professionals. Instruments Bought and Sold. Also Second-han- a montn in our wwiu The average v . re over sixty Btudents last year working their way through more if we schools of Provo. We could have had that many ouU have given them a little work to do. One hundred healthy spending four hundrea aonars aytw.-;--l,y students dollars worth to Provo I men The economic is not the most important factor. Most, wants .vzw that the fellow who works for his education, really' . He is the future leader of some community. t"0t,v ni' th nation's sreatest men worked at odd jobs m cent of the leading squiring their education. Over fifty per t of Provo worked for some of their money or board while :.t f:hool. The Herald will publish some of their stories during " d Exclusive Dealers in BAND AND ORCHESTRA INSTRUMENTS Provo Photo Supply " AND MUSIC COMPANY. 77 N. University Ave. " ' Phone444. car. a Fa Texas has some reputation as a watermelon state, finest fmm California, and eastern states where watermelons are grown in abundance said the Utah county melons are the best.R. N. Cooper, of the Carpenter Seed company, ftapUirfed that while. Utah county produces several varieties of excellent melons, the melons served at "The time has arrived, and la now of C. jollification feast was one the his company had propagated with the here when enforced liquidation by assistance or i. k. fierce, seeu experi- shipment of feeder live stock out of menter, who has won state fair- prizes this tate. must cease. The state de for Utah county melons. partment of agriculture has authentic information to the effect that there UTAH'S HAY CROP. are 2,000,000 tons of bay stacked on Bankers,. . farmers and . live. . stock the farms of Utah, a very large per -men nf the Rtata are called unon to of which must remain stacked join forces in following a course of centage art ion ta their mutual Interests in rumhflrine the (round deteriorating the feeding of the surplus hay crops and wasting, unless there be valiant. eiiort in the state, in an aaaress adopted conservative and Ftiday, at the meeting m salt Lane on your part to offset such a calamity of the agriculture com by seeing to it that this hay is fed to our own live stock in our own state mittee. I and The address in part reads: by our own people." Iff C . FOR SALE THREE LADIES' GOOD USED BICYCLES. CHEAP. HORRs " BICYCLE SHOP. EOR .SALE First FOR SALE Cows. rri r y , class farming i 2 ranKes. 2 neatui springs and n couch, chairs, W - nlemntjs: also stoves, bedsteads, tresses, sanitary Jars; buckets and cooking utensi high pressure hand water pump. S. 1st B. - Provo -- ns "Eack to School" program. un- Education is the only answer to.bolshevism and panicky " . . ." . n 4, kind may have.- Boys will you wish? we do What jobs Any the as work tending., work for money, room or board. Such car- and painting furnace, milking cows, cleaning house, light stenog-- r ntry, farming, janitor work of all kinds, bookkeeping, autoiug, 'ha$hing, garderhy, clerking in any line, printing,wish. "odd" may in you job fact, any nia, The following form is printed, with a hop? that it may reach done during the winter, i homes who need some-worc-;- J 7 d i'-e- biles ' J HOME GROWN MELONS BEST V "Best melon I ever ate!" So declared a Texan at the Hotel PohMf a melon feast Saturday- - night. -terday. . iirm-cipl- rr ' 7" work,". - . family: ctt r"'"" . Labor marches with heads held high ' The ranks go splendidly marching by; Labor marchesH-who- se strength and skill Build the bridges1?hd erect the mill, Frame the tower and burrow deep Down in the earth where the blind moles creep; . Labor marches a wealth of men Who shall make over the world again ; . ztzr: --rrzrirz Into the Future, out of the Past, - Labor shall march to us own at iasti -yc- learned from tnese men mai iuo lumbermen and the foresters are to work Joining forces, and planning lion and toward a common end. The the lamb are going to lie down to . , . gether. The editor oi a iumueriuu o ; . said to me: We have come to recognize that the private ownership of timber lands them an lays upon the man who owns the obligation not only to haryest lumber, but to perpetuate me of the timber." . He aid more, and I liked to hear It. do all ,He talked like a preacher. So men wSerrtriey-a- r an.EarupHu I catch this same note in Rotary clubs, in Lions clubs. In Klwanls clubs,a It is in rhmhr of Commerce. that never sounded so clear In I note the business world bet ore; u is me note that expresses the obligations that go with privilege, u is me strong recognition oi me ynm-iyrthat nobless oblige There aTe other ..obligations than those which the law can compel. inherent in .the - There, are .obligations enlrit nf nfihihtV. It Is the recognition or tnai as I gather, which has made ttio mPTi 'trhn market lumber? and the men who plead for the conservation of our forests not enemies out. ineuus. that the Thv must have felt all along common future of their, work lay in a a new plan, but now there appears recognition of the fact: ' " I am wondering how long it is going to realize that a fike prin to 'take ciple underlies all business. I oeiieye men recognize that today as they dirt hefore. If I am right about this, then those men are wofully mis worm is I taken who declare tnat tne A ppttlne worse. On this Labor day, I wonder how m toko lahnr and ranit.nl to li realize that in the long run their interests are common A interests, ftnd that the welfare of the country is to beSromoted, not by the ruin of either by the at the hands of lhe otherf-b- ut " recognition of their ..common. inter ests and their :common oongaiions. , t I Property, property T" Let us hold Due respect for our lands and gold. But first comes wealth of the human kind ,, Lord, how long shall our eyes be blind To the truth that wealth which, we. count injrnen Is treasure building itself again? The hands that fashion, the brains that plan,. ; Are making a world more fit for man. w ... ner. -- (Copyright 1921 by Newspaper V General - Apply H. M. M LwnW Hospital 'W. YjiWW w$jfo' -- k wry l "Name of firm or individaal- Kind of work to ORIGIIVIAL i J.V l,! Offer......! PATENTED FOE liow many hours per day, week or month .,.,......... V.ase to be paid Where work is to be dune. , work temporary or permanent Have you work tor a- - student to earn rent, board, of board and .room? Our men are kept busy installing comment as to' qualificationa of worker "information on employment may be phoned or' mailed to T. Earl chairman Boys' Committee, Rotary; H. Aldous Dixon. SupU, 5uv!oe, -rvo srhodio: Prof. William HoylP. ehalrman. R Y. V. employment. V A!)y : v. 1 t The Furnace that "... - HOMERS hcts stood , ir . ' dUers i',.,. ir.-- ties end nation.; m for wv. may ihr.r J. A. OWENS. tb.y f for sundry human tHu.e m n - 1 I I 'ir 1 r ''' i"' Kon.. full donation TpandHades' Ivt . J n s. cn-ts- - all the tests. - j mystrry there U no aif tli : (v. xuiftry as these ur.biddtQ gof-lfuccj. 1 h.ir'1 c money. tlirn laugh and tlihik it ' . ref-tr,.t'm,'!v w nicM I K'"t no tuil Ui, j t H '.::" Iislis, niunt to mi.' -y tluarest dOi-rt iin t:.at tUitiA i.j living Uido to my ovfroroM'dcd t - :urfn Ui tuoir Jiin- - vs, nod doar heaven tie. tny witness orld. no nevor more; quoth the Hicm, in t.ili I i ever want to r More" in Tcirty, rtiay t'.iey have to stay tliere steady, i:. ' ever ner nun-i- , quolli my f;uui!y. "Lver more." i n borrow, in:t t'jflr souls bt! TUi- d ith sorrcy, . : Uu..t t.t'ni, crowd vron tl:"u all the iw&t, , ; ,i re, O ih f.y I "then wilt rest me, h ' . I Ventilate Visiting Relations Ey ,N'V-',- ' J-- . r-- . . k.-c- . Let us chow you hcv) easy we can install one inycur noma. "-- i''nfi'':- - wi.-f'e- . V- , If', i -- 'v, "?"- - their ever lst." t 1 K V- - ' . 0Z" Ai Wi E:2-teE:":;- e Friend of the Workingman Center. -- ' |