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Show n mwn o. HAT'EKE, VOLu XXXVII. tcips SFiOTllE . NO, 22. IS. M. I. A. MEETING 1 A meeting of unusual interest to young and old alike will be the central meeting to be held SunIn the stake tabernacle day evening at 8 o'clock under the direction of the stake M. I. A Interesting addresses will be wade by Mrs. W. Monroe LIIIDEII COLLISION ' Jennie Larsen, IS years old was seriously injured in an automobile accident on Provo bench last night. at 1150 Bryan The ffirl ! irenue, Salt Lake City. She was driving with her uncle, W. P. Stephensen, of Payson, when the strident occured. 'L. A. Nelson, of Price was driving north in" a Ford coupe, when in attempting to pass a rar ahead new OuL-nobihe ran into a truck being driven southward hy The cars collW, P. Stephensen. le PRIPllE damaging both Ford ided, badly uid truck. 10 Neither of the men was seriously hurt, but the girl was thrown from the truck and injured Her Fl leg was badly bruised, and for a time was thought to have been broken. She was taken to the SPRIXGVILLE, June 30. Spring-vlll- e Provo General Hospital where her will celebrate Independence were attended and this injuries to, Borning it was reported that she day with a program starting at sunwas able to return to her home. rise, when the .salute ushers In the The collision came on the Lin- Fourth. The band concert will be at den hill, near the Orem station. 9 a. m. and the special program starts at the opera house at 10 o'clock." J. F. Mendenhall will be master of ceremonies. "America." Prayer, O. B. Huniugton. Cello solo. Ireta Roylance. ARE ON THE WAY Reading, Marie Clark Miller. Solo, Mrs. Hannah Packard. Oration, Rev. David J. Spratt. The dearth of population you Dance, direction Minnie Grooms. may notice iu Utah county cities Solo, Richard Condie. tomorrow may be blamed on the "Star Spangled Banner." Strawberry. Benedction, Bishop Huntington. Several armies of fishermen "are At 1:30 in the afternoon the oa their way to the Strawberry Provo Timps come down for the eservolr where, it Is said, there is doublebeider of an inter-citplenty of good fishing, considera- first ftllH ble Cnlrl WAflthp hrtata fnr with the Springers. Immediately after the game the two teams go to kms man a uura 01 mose going up. will play anWalter Freshwater is one of the Trovo where they exhibition other game. few very fishermen not going up, the baseball game Following but he is sending: Roy Freshat city water to represent the Freshwater here there will be sports of ishermen. Robert S. Curtis, cres park. The program consistsshoe gum cent of the. Utah County Fish end bielcle race, race, girls' flag race, wheelbarrow Game association, isn't going, he raee, boxing consays. But, according to reports, race, test sack race cracker eating con?rery other member of the fish test, pass ball relay race, Ford race, ind game club will be there early. suit case race,' egg race for girls, July when the Strawberry fishfiremen's ladder climbing and hose season starU. coupling exhibition, etc. A grand ball winds up the day's celebration. DITH y three-legge- 1 CONTRACT in mm in FAY:-ON- Bieed, wii!" MM ?R Prow's Daily Newspaper was First to News of The Big Steel Merger CREED ftt Hi! Wl M&sslna Young university summer school this evening has been postponed indefinitely on account of Mona holiday day being dechred and many students leaving for their respective homes this afternoon. The course in genealogy to be conducted by Prof. E. I). Part-- I ridge for one week will com-- I mence Wednesday morning, hue MEL FIRST NEWS OF STEEL. The Daily Herald was the first newspaper in Utah to publish the announcement that the steel merger had been o completed, and that the favored location was the site. This was printed in The Daily Herald Thursday afternoon, and was based upon telephonic and local investigation of reports arising in Salt Lake City Tuesday at a meeting of the Salt Lake Rotary club which was attended by California railroad officials. The Daily Herald, in newspaper language, "scooped" all other newspapers of Utah, including Salt Lake City and Ogden, on this important announcement, an announcement for which enterprising newspapers of the state long had been watching, and which means so much to the future business Spring-ville-Prov- Steel company, formally announced that a new flo,000,000 corporation will build a steel industry for the west. The new concern, to be known as the Columbia Steel corporation, has acquired the coal properties of the Utah Coal and Coke company in Carbon county. and vast iron deposits in Iron county, Utah, as well as the Portland. Ore., steel foundry and the Pittsburg, California steel foundry and rolling mill of the Columbia Steel company. Associated with Mr. Creed in the development of this project of vast significance are Utah men who have been instrumental in presenting the need for the development of the raw materials which this state has to offer in s.xii abund W. AVr ance. Among these .......q! ..rniilant i9 ul iur: Provo-Sprlng-vi- site. Outside of the reports as published in The Daily Herald yesterday and the Salt Lake paper of Springville today the people have heard nothing concerning the steel merger. Representatives of the steel interests have been In Springville at various times during the past few weeks but their investigations have been conducted quietly and nothing has given lout publically. i John Mendenhnll, cashier of the Mendenhall Banking company, this morning congratulated The Daily Herald for publishing tho good news first. "The first thing I noticed this morning when I picked up the Salt Lake paper." said Mr. Mendenhall, "was the fact that The Daily Herald had beaten them to the story of the steel merger. How did you do it? "We are extremely pleased to note that, the merger has been agreed upon and we are confident that Springville will be the site decided upon for the plants. Howstir ui all ever, tills nnvs up to renewed nc1iv!tie.-.- . We must jnot take anything fr granted. The C(;m:r"n in! chb of Springvi!l and of the Cl:a mt.er of ('.aimcrce for Missions bf-e- X" .na- tional CopperjtiiQui bank; L. F. Raijjs, president of the Carbon Fuel company; Attorney Adrian C. Ellis, Jr., E. J. Raddatz, president of the Tin-tiStandard Mining company, and Duncan MacVichie, an engineer of long experience. In San Francisco Mr. Creed is associated in the enterprise with J. D. Grant, A. M. Clark, D. H. Botchford, A. E. Boynton, Joseph Sloss. W. P. Hammon, John S. Dram, Herbert Fleishhaker, Morand Alfred timer Fleishhaker Ks'oerg. These men represent some of the most Important industrial as well as financial institutions in the west and bring to the corporation their strong faith la the important destiny of. the undertaking. la his statement today Mr. Creed .iiiu-uuii- y) Leave f V-V- 4 It V1 V v-il- A j 7, . - . l s SjL OF OGDEN NEBO CAD FOLKS ENTERTAINED OGDKX - . nht d'i--- j f - Chi-Icag- s ba-d- c Puff Handle IffPK SPANISH FORK June 30 Approximately 450 old folks of the Xelxi sfil.o were royally entertain- -' fed Wednesday at the City park' and pavillii)!. They came from las far' south as Sjntaquin and as tar north as S;ringvi!le. TRe hour's from 10 o'clock to 12 were spent listening to a program at the City pavillion in charge of T. F. Tol- -' hurst, clntniun. A feature of the program was a solo by Mrs. Mar-;gaMoiuy. who, for forty years isang in a Spanish Fork choir. She is 90 years of age. George A. Hicks of Spanish Fork was the only vionecr present who had seen and remembered- Joheph Smith At 12 o'clock dinner was served under the trees at the long tables prepared for the guests of each ward. Mo-s- t of the wards, in ad- dition to the old folks; served to the widows of their wards. In the an.i noun me agf.a guests were treated to a victjre show by the management of the Angelus thea-"- " Jtre. They were taken to their homes in the early evening because oj x uticaicning storm. j nt ' ' j toV'i U. S. FORESTER HERE, Col. W. B. Greeley, chief forester of the United States, was in Provo yesterday, leaving with Forest Supervisor W. W. Blakeslee, for an inspection trip through Uintah forest. They will study the grazing problem in the national forests of this district, which are said to be over-graze- pas-tuer- Col. Greeley expects to stop in . . . .. way D8CK 10 tne Or-- uia iv.u ju ki. MINE MU MARION, II grand jury vestlgating 1 1 of non untor in? miner Judge H v i Simulti j Provo-Springvil- rf ' r Anglo-Saxon- Evelyn Recovers Health I un-k- v ,,r one-hal- Cen-utr- a:1--- in-!:- nhy-dra- 1 the national anniversary. The Sorosis club has selected Mrs. Fern Broadbent Ercanbrack to represent the club as "Goddess of Liberty." The Nineteenth club has selected Mrs. Mart Roylance as "Columbia," and the stake Relief society has chosen Marva Jlodsen to represent "Utah." These three floats will be the leading floats in the patriotic sec tion, which will also have floats representing the Relief corps, the Martial band, the Indian War veterans, the Municipal council, the Elks, the Odd Fellows, and the Service Star Legion., One of the interesting parts of the day's program wl'l he the folk dancing exhibition nt Timpanogos park in the evening 'at 8 o'clock. Twenty-thredances in all will (be exhibited by the children of the Primary associations of Provo, who have been practicing the dances nor several days under the direc- APPEAL FOR BATHING SUIT3 tion of various play leaders at the The Women's Municipal council Young university summer school. .Community singing will be lead by is endeavoring to collect 200 bathW. C. Bradford. ing suits, worn or new, for use at the North park pool Anyone wishing to ,he!a in this worthy cause 'please notify SIB, and arrangements will made to call for them. til-?- i: ''IK ... ' Jurn ;'.('. Ilehcr scowS' rut'! "I years of I'i'ovo s: otili! his? Lo time in l! i thine-- ptYSrlt lit ii' & f Ju;ii! and ,' : f; 1 !i A coirmit "e s'.otild 1'0 '.::y. wholes le jobber I from tlw lwt organiswtiom ii' I at ih T'i" i t f;.mi'v n to fi'.- to it that m;l!r;i4 is left at 7 urect Twenty i'onrlh t ' a t. 0ir.;Vt u he i.:!ie.:n o'clock la t .Jright's lvs now llilli HIT ins fur this ;mi!iy months-All members of his fam try." -t H. Maycook, Cec.-gin ily were it the bedside when the of the S;;rin5vi:ie I'.ailking com-- 1 end :: to p'e.'isi-pressed bin ileum of t.ii' nierg'T. Krom cuvi AUTO TOP CONCERN MOVES he has had 'with ivpie- who sentutives of the company The Provo Auto Top and Paint 'have beu in Springville latolv, ie at 4H2 W'e 't company, formerly feels confident that the only site Center, are moving to 07 North consideration first West, where at one time the serious receiving from the steel interesls is the jrarugt) whs located. In adsite. He said that dition to the concern's auto top and Springville'' will welcome the new paint business automobiles will be ' plant and was certain that the en stored. tire county and state would benefit materially from its erection. M. Y. liird. agent of the Denver & Rio Grande railroad at Springville, said that the coming of the would steel plant to this region i emiUn ,,f i'ivpp in Carbon The Nielsen family celebrated in reunion at Vivian vark Wednesday with 175 members of the family present. They came from all parts of the state. The day was devoted to sports, games, a banquet and a formal program, which, consisted of: prayer by Congregation song; Bihsop John Johnson; welcoming address by Christian Jepperson; solo by Mrs. Griffith Nuttal; mimics and talcs by VV. G. Williams. Jr., reading by Miss Ruth Jorgcnscn; instrumental music' by hmihi-rs- ! hv rHrW remark -Bishop Charles Forsberg; duet by ot Lamont Willand Nielsen, Draper; solo by Juanita Jorgensen; story by Lars Eggertsen; reading by Naomi Seamount; reminisences incidents by Andrew Knudsen; connected with the old homestead in Odense, Denmark, by Enoch Jorgcnscn. "The Old Grandfather, Fifty Years After Parting." by P. A. Nielsen of Draper; stories by Gad Williams; 'America,' benediction Jj"" by all, and the Niels Johnson. A family organization to arrange for next year's reunion was perfected, with Wyman Berg, chairman and Mrs. Zina Seamount, secretary and treasurer. The two officers and Mrs. Mary Strong. Mrs. Mary Carter, N. J. Nielsen, Garfield; Anthon Nielson, Draper,.are members of the - executive committee. Mr. Berg said that next year a permanent organization would be arranged at the 1923 fmily reunion. a FOURTH OF JULY by telegraphic reports from Francisco and published in a Salt Lake paper this morning Is the main topic of discussion in Springville today. Everybody seems elated that the merger has been consummated and everybody in Springville is confident that the plants will be erected on the AI IIAI1 July 3. ivt comity character- - iron properties" rtf" Iron county. tj of the Amtlo- - Utah. The put chase will be effecthsf the rout-acIt is ed through tiie organization of a f expected that the road will Saxon engaging in the wis f -completed iu 100 days, a for existence; proud demo- - new corporation to ttikc over the l of ICLSIV: ance of G.6 miles foundries JKhiS, who left cratic aristocracy, an individualism rolling mills and CI.IK'FGltl) COOK, son of Mr. and Provo Wednesday evening tor the T:ie Phelps Construction coin- that prevents others from taking the Columbia Steel company Mrs. J. F. Cook of the Manavu 'and any, who will build the cement undue liberties; and faitbrulness to the assets of the l';ah Coal and Uastuia siaioa ln. siou fie.d of the An intensive inward, who left Salt Lake City WeChurc'n of Jisus Chii.-- t oZ Latt-r-daunerete state hitrhwnv ronnectinr a trust, the trust to be of his own Coke company. taiats. extending over a Rvon with Spanish Fork, through choosing and not one' thrust upon vestigation, dnesday evening for Great Britain, Mi s Lo-arrived in Provo six where he will labor as missionary . Ne'a. is busily enaaged in erect- - the period of more than eight months, its central plant near Salem years r.go, from her Professor Lewis read quotations has demonstrated that thecan Utah and be h .me in Vall.;al, England, and has for the Church of Jsus Christ of Md preparatory to pouring the from contemporary poets such as coal and iron properties Saints for two years. ment. The company expects to Lewis Untermeyrr, Edgar Lee Mas- used to form the ba-i- s of an inde- resided at the home of Mr. and Latter-daMr. Cook is due to arrive in "wnplete this road this fall. The ters, and Carl Sandberg, revealing pendent steel industry for the Pa- Mrs. LeR'iy Lixon in the Third cific coast and mountain territory, ward, since that time. She has '"tance is 5.74 miles. today, to meet with the consul the characteristics cited. Definite plans have not been ma-- been bookkeeper at the ofiice of general of the British government. tured except to the point of effect the Dixon Real Estate company He w ill sail from Que"bec, Canada, ins the purchase and consolidation, the past six years. Mi.-Kos was Sunday school on the Empress of India. July Z. but the program for future developments is now being worked out. Mr. Cook, who is well and favsecietary in the Third ward, and an indus active worker in the Mutual up un- orably known in Provo, was a stu'The west needs the tries of iron and steel fully de til two years ago, when she be- dent of the Brighain Young univer-sitv- . revolutionize business conditions veloped and an unusual oppor-tunit- came stake Sunday schoni secre- throughout Utah county. He is of in this for exists progresss the opinion that the subsidiary direction through cooperation of been designated. The Tribune pre- never will be an attempt made to plants that will come to this secin utilizathe sumes that this site will be chosen. include the steel location within tion with the establishment of the California and Utah tion of their natural resources." "It is regarded as highly proba- the limits of either city. Upon this steel plant will mean perhaps more Mr. Creed said further: "The ble that the blast furnace, and the latter point the merger interests to this county and state than the Columbia Steel company has been are decided. steel plant itself. coke oven will be Utah lake is only about seventy Arthur V. Reynolds, manager of investigating the properties of the Utah Coal and Coke company for erected on the eastern shore of miles from the coal properties near the H. T. Reynolds & Co., had the past eight months, during Utah lake," says the Tribune today. Castlegate, with direct rail connec- heard nothing concerning the comyesterday tions, and about 130 miles from the ing of the steel plant other than which time all of the properties Investigation made ts and this morning in Springville iron ore in Iron county. what he had read iu the papers. He purchased were tested by expe-Culmination of the long negotia- was certain that the coming to and the entire situation gone over show that the site offered by that with a marked degree of thorough- city has not yet been accepted by tions and the minute investigations Utah rounty of the new industry ness. Coke ovens were constructed the merger interests. It is be- of the properties and the possibili would greatly change the complexnear Castlegate and the coal actu- lieved that probably 500 acres of ties of the undertaking is heralded ion of affairs In general and that thus land must be added to what Spring as marking what may perhaps much good would come from the ally tasted in this manner, error ville offers, the Springville prove to be the most important allied industries that would spring eliminating any possible before the steel plant men economic step taken in Utah since up with the steel works. which might be made in a laborawill make their announcement. It the linking of the first transcontitory experiment BURGLAR ENTERS HOUSE "The purchase of the properties is known that Delta has offered a nental railroad system. The existence of Utah's iron ore will make it possible for the new thousand acres with water. Tooele A burglar entered the home of baa offered large induce- and its very high grade have been corporation to produce steel for county known for many years, and efforts (George Chappen, 216 East Fourth sale in the western states much ments" to get the plant. Two other conhave been have been made before to bring It South street, last evening, and was cheaper than it can be obtained sites in Utah county sidered. These are Lincoln Beach, to use, but with no tangible results evidently frightened away by the n. from eastern mills. . I until tnis mov was made. It is return of the family who had left As told in The Daily Herald ex- and Santaquin-GoshenTtjF But unconfirmed reports and conservatively estimated that in (the place about 40 minutes prev-- i clusively Thursday the exact loca300.000.000 The tion of the steel plant has not been close investigation seem to make Iron county there are in character iously for a drive downtown. winburglar had pimmied three made public. The Salt Lake Trib- certain this conviction: The steel tons of iron oreof better the Me3aba range dows, finally getting into the house. than the ores une this morning carries a news plant will be located at the site if the merger in- which made Pittsburg the steel He had rifled closets and drawers disnatch from San Francisco con A in his search for valuables. rights capital of the country. firming in detail what The Daily terests are given the water, was taken of a too, coal thousand amount vase small money Utah's deposits, across the Bert's Bvslyn Keablt and hw JapaneM poodl at Atlantic City. gb highway, readers its told yesterday. Herald of and for years the .from a purse, but another purse laiatd U pounds la several w-ud aha daniti abe'i ngae4 ta but does not state positively that acres of land, the promisesthere h?ve been known,on was overlooked. Page Four.) (Continued Snrineville-Provor chauffeur or tim plant has Trovo and Springville that anyonftt. h F AM 1 LY REUNITES PROGRAM coming soon. was the first The Daily Herald (then a newspaper in Utah to print detailed information as to the location of the steel plant in Utah county. The Herald reporter was the only newspaper man with the first investigating party which included Messrs. Rains and Botsford when they went to Springville last winter to look over the Springville pastures and the land up to the county infirmary. The Herald reporter was the only newspaper man with the party of men coming from the Pacific coast and which went over the fuel and ore fields and inspected the proposed sites at Delta and Springville. .' Rtm-iiis- iTTMiiiro I'D II prosperity of Utah. READY Eighteen hours after the first copy of The Daily Herald was on the streets of Provo, Springville, Payson, SAN FRANCISCO, .June 30. N. GUNNAR RASMUSON By Utah's industrial era and a new Spanish Fork, and Pleasant Grove, telling of the steel The Herald's Staff Correspondent. Everything is in readiness for the season of economic independence merger completion the confirmation of the story was printed SI'HIXGVILLE. June 30. The re- mammoth celebration to be staged of the west were inaugurated yes- in the Salt Lake Tribune, second paper in Utah to print the port of the completion of the steel here Tuesday, Fourth of July. Interday when Wiggington E. Creed, announcement, and which was the statement from Mr. Creed, merger as published in The Daily dications are that people from most of the communities of the president of the Pacific Gas & Elec- a statement The Daily Herald yesterday said would be forth- Herald last evening and as verified tric company and of the Columbia San county will be here to celebrate la discussing "The Anglo-Saxo: in Contemporary Poetry" be- says Spirit "The Columbia Steel company June SO. Oihhnns Sr. fore the Young summer school lias acquired the coal prcpei !P; ; o: who have t.li contract for students during the noon hour Coke comrirv the county hiiihwav from Prof. IJ. Roland Lewi? of the tho Utah Coal and and ext m. Fc.rlr tlirom-r'iy"'il to i:..:.,J!v r.f ij;:min, began laying the black dominant Anglo-Saxo- portion. by Oil CELEBRATE UTAH Generally fair tonight and Saturday; cooler northwest PRICE TWO CENTS. Pax-ma- president of the Y. L. M. I. A.; President I. E. Brockbank of the Y. M. M. I. A.; J. A. second counselor to Owens, President Brockbank. . The music for the meeting will be furnished by the tabernacle choir under the direction of Prof. J. R. Boshard. The Weather PKOVO, UTAH, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1922. Mi SAP GIRL ME PAUL! HE RALD 11 Powder, Mff. mirror. 'neverything, right in the handle of yuut sunshade. Mrs. Dorothy Rawlins, of Charlcstown, Mass., think It great her hubby Invented It. - a nounce cavatio. Coal J? o7 the folio bedf m ' |