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Show . - THE HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, HERALD THEDAIiy .aniT laughed. , , They could see that She was dressed j J Published ttf the Herald Company. well, hi dark red cloth, with a little i' j tilting hat anda drooping yell, he SATURDAY. AFTERNOON EXCEPT EVERY. WEEK-DAdid not seem in any wise upset, nor. jjffavfK for that nervous laughter, did she show her excitement. Entered as second class mail witter June 6, 1911,, at the "WelL but he's here with you, Isn't postof tlpe, Provo, Utah, under1 the Act ot March 3, .isss. hef Dwlght demanded. "Isn't he .Editor and Publisher here? Where Is he?." .. E. C. RODGER3. "Must he 'most to Oregon by this Terms of Subscriiitipu; Dtlivered by carrier, 3;--Stime," Lulu said. "Oregon I'.., month; by mail In Utah county, ji a, year; otiuide the county, "lou see," said Lulu, "he had anr. 13.30 a year. otlier wife." exclaimed "Why, he had not! Dwiglit ubsurdly. "Yes. He hasn't seen her for fifteen yeurs and he thinks she's dead. THE BEEF TRUST. But heisn't sure." q ' George L. Record, star of the Chicago convention "Nonsense," fcald Dwlght "Why. now ofIf Moose he course Bull she's dead thinks so," movement, when Roosevelt headed the ' ,'M I Tnili I ; . l ' curinaina Vila "I bad to he sure," said Lulu. A'cw Copwrlahr b O.APPUETON AHP COrlH.N" comes i.m , At first dumb before this, Ina now loft at the hept harons. mercnesslv ex mamma again" Ina's breath caught. cried out : "Munona Go upstairs to 8YNOP8IS control. of their system Into her fare came something of the bed at once." posing demands The facts are so patent that fairness lovely tenderness with which she "It's only quarter to," said Monona, 1 APRH QenereJ Uctotura la the sometimes looked at Monona and Di. steps be taken immediately to put an end to the abuse buw with assurance. of wife of her Herbert filter In, She of sprang np. She bad forgotten to which spells nothing but control prices, the ability Deacon, In the small town ot Warbleton "Do as mamma tells you." to extort from the people the heavy tithe they must Lulu Bett lesda dull, cramped existence, put some cwpper to warm Sfor "But" The lovely light was still which she Is constantly at enmity, mamma. "Monona !" pay nowadays for the privilege of living. Fortunately with though apparently satisfied with her lot lp her face as she bustled about She went, kissing them all goodMr. Record does not stop at exposing the system. He She has natural thoughts and aspirations time the of mamma's recovery night and taking her time about It against brother-in-lanor which her neither tieter her to relief. the way points from her tantrtm. Dwlgbt's face was can comprehend. To Mr. Everything was suspended while she The railroads have few or no refrigerator cars to Deacon eeemlnfly r. comes Bobby Lrkln. recently like this when he spoke of his kissed them and departed, walking comIn both these beings there graduated youth, secretly carry meat or perishable products. The Big Five, slowly backward. Deacon's elder daughter, of enamored their have meat was refrigprivate monopoly, something which functioned as prising" the "Married V said Mrs. Bett with an applicant for a "Job" around erator cars. Small competitors are thus placed in an Diana, the Deacon house.' He la engaged, his pure love. apprehension. "Lulle, was your tardy .Mamma had recovered and was eat-- impossible position. occupation to be to keep the lawn In trim. husband married V They must either put cars of The news excited of orer an is the scrambled family on cold the corner ing eggs husband was "Yes," Lulu said, their own on the roads or hire cars if they can get approaching; visit- - from Deacon's brother of the kitchen table when the Ice married, mother." "my Nlnlan, whom hs had not seen for many cream soda party was ready to set Deacon Jokss with Lulu, with "Mercy," said Ina. "Think of anyIf a little fellow puts his own cars on the roads, years. subtle meaning, concerning the oomlng out. Dwlght threw her a casual "Betthing like that in our family.' some railroad obliging -meeettng. says Mr. Record, there is always ter come, too, Mother Bett," but abe WelL go on go on!" Dwlght cried. official ready to sidetrack or divert them until th ice shook her head. She wished to go. "Tell ua about It." condition. unmarketable n MAT. Chiefly beoausa of the ripple melts and the food reaches an wished It with' violence, but she con. Lulu spoke in a morioume, with her placid, colorless existence which It does not take many operations of this- - kind to put Inthe her ' arrival of Nlnlan will bring, lulu U trlved to give to her arbitrary refusal old manner of hesitation: meat the average small man out of business. Thus the lntarested and speculatlTe, meanwhile of were When "We to quality contempt. Oregon. First going Jenny i.i.. i a watching with something like edvy the IllUJIUpUiy IB I11B1UUUI1CU. of Bobby and arrived with Bobby, she bad brought down to New Orleans and then out Mr. Record points out that government ownership Diana. Vnexpectodly, Nlnlan arrives, la a sheaf of gladioli for Mrs. Bett, and to California and up- - the coast." On of railroads would defeat this system.' The people the absence ot Herbert, at his business, took them to her In the kitchen, and this she paused and sighed. "Well, and of Ina, resting. Thus ha becomes .should not be compelled to wait for so uncertain a solu- aoqflamtad with Lulu Bret and la a meas- as she laid the flowers beside her, the then1) at Savannah, Georgia, he said carcommon as should ure understands her position la the bouse. young girl stopped aad kissed her. be (nought I better know, first ,So be roads The tion. compelled man To Lulu, Nlnlan la a "You little darting I" cried Mrs. Bett, he told me." riers to provide an adequate supply of refrigerator of the world and tvea the alight Interest and "Yes welL what did he say?" clung to her, her lifted eye Ut use to not of the amiss be and it might prohibit which he takae la her la appreciated, cars, by something Intense and living. Bui Dwlght demanded Irritably. It la something new la bar Ufa, priv&tfe c&rs when the ice cream party bad set off "Cora Waters," said Lulu. "Cora The right of the rails to the meat trust, to the at last, Mrs. Bett left her sdpper, gath- Waters. She married him down In which aa the outing Pullman company and others, means that these family takes, Nlnlan and Lulu become In ered up the Sowers, and crossed the San Diego, eighteen years ago. She monopolies get the benefits of public service corpora- a measure confidential. Hs expresses his laws to the old cripple, Grandma went to South America with him." of her treatment as a sort Gates. tions, without restrictions or regulation. They enjoy disapproval "Well, he never let us know of 1t dependent la the Deacon horns. Lulu "Inle shant have 'em," the old If she did," said Dwlght franchises which never have been granted to them. of hag vaguely had the same thoughts, but woman thought -. "No Jhe married hjf JusJ before The subletting of franchises puts the public in jeo- "LJafilf cfSyL'fs sS And then It wag jjulte beautiful Jo he went. TrTien In South America, - -- - " twrrto. watch her with - Gr adma "Gates, after two years, she ran away again. . As a fact, passing the right of way by the railwhom she tended and petted, to That's all lie knows." before and Diana he leavea Bobby, roads 1s perhaps a greater public menace than passing city whose complainings she listened, and In the oourss of "soft nothings," discuss "That's a pretty story," said Dwlght should be The railroads buck the by the government. the possibility of sloping and "surprising to whom she tried to tell the small contemptuously. whole school." Lulu, despite herself, compelled to supply refrigerator space in railroad cars the events of her day. When her neigh"He says If she'd been alive, she'd has awakened to pleasant possibilities sold at a price to all alike and under government had gone, Grandma Gates said been after him for a divorce. And bor toward Nlnlan's Intentions concerning herself, the more so becauas hitherto shs that It was aa good as a dose of medi- she never has been, so he thinks she has been a practical nonentity In the cine to have her come In. must be dead. The trouble Is," Lulu household, having little to do with Its Mrs. Bett sat on the porch restored said THE PROFITEERING SEE SAW. again, "he wasn't sure. And I simple social function a The fact that and pleasant when the family re- had to be sureJ Now we hail the period of prosperity. Analysis Nlnlan had walked horns with her causes all sorts of speculations to disturb hsr turned. Dl and Bobby had walked "Well, but mercy , . said Ina, of the boom discloses that wages rise rapidly, some- slumbers that night home with Jenny, "couldn't he find out now?" times to incredible heights, but that, the cost of living "Look here," said Dwlght Herbert, "It might take a long time," said rises still more rapidly, and to still more incredible "She TJon't put her mind on her "who is It sits home and has-ic- e Lulu simply, "and I didn't want to cream put In her lap like a queen heights. Soon we strike the reaction the period of Weals," Dwlght Herbert diagnosed it. stay and not know." , "Vanllly or chocolate?" Mrs. Bett that wages fall rapidly, but "Oh, bigger bites than that!" their he en"Well, then, why didn't hesay so demanded. that food prices simply stumble. They never drop with couraged his little daughter. here?" Ina's Indignation mounted. ' Ina "Chocolate, mamma! cried, Di's mind had been proceeding along "He would have. But you know the thud of the workers' wages. with the breeze in her voice. how sudden everything was. He said From March to April of this year, for example, we Its own paths. "Vanllly sets better," Mrs. Bett snld. he you going to take Jenny and thought about telling us right there learn that the average weekly earning of New York "Are too?" They sat with her on the porch In the she Inquired. restaurant, but of course that'd state factory workers declined 42 cents. This is a reate. while she on rocked Ina creaka The whole party." been hard wouldn't It? And then "Certainly. of reduction a and from board. Dwlght swung s leg over duction of $2.05 April, 1921, "Bohby'll want to pay for Jenny ing felt so sure she was dead." the railing. Monona sat pulling her he 1920, which marked the peak of and I." $4,78 front-Octobe"Why did he tell you at all, then?" over her ' skirt and feet, all humming "Me, darling," said Ina patiently, demanded Ina, whose processes were against inese iigures ine vnneu oi.ai.es earning. one. note. There was no moon, hut bureau of labor statistics shows that.the Cost of living punctiliously and. less punctiliously on simple. warm dusk the a had quality of added: "Nonsense. This Is going to "Yes. Weill Why Indeed V Dwlght If it were lit in all as transparency be little party." papa's Herbert brought out these words with March, 1922, in the country as a whole. Its particles. "But we had the engagement with , True, since June, 1920, there has been a drop of The gate opened, and some one a curious emphasis. " It was an engagement." "I thought that. Just at first" Lulu 23 per cent, but despite this the cost of living remained Bobby. came up the walk. They looked, and "Well.- snld Ina, "I think we'll just "but only Just at first. Of course said, was It Lulu. . 67 per cent above 1913 in march of this year. set that aside that Important enBeen rl8ht. And "Well, If it ain't Miss Lulu BettH?iat wc,uld''t The retail cost of food did not change at all from gagement. I think we just will." men, you see, ne gave me my cnoice. ! in whole or March to April,' either in the country as a "Papa Bohy'll want to be the one "Gave you your choice?" Dwlght to pay for Jenny and " the leading cities of the great Empire state, , echoed. "Dll" voice Ina's dominated all. "Yes. About going on and taking , Surely bur political economists can find a lesson "Will $ou be more careful of your nose rn such figures. When we poke-und- ... the public the chances. He gave me my choice . 1 V I grammar or shaU I speak to yon when he told me, there In Savannah, again T" Georgia." is create condition a we that and faulty taxation, ing WeU. TS rather use bad grammar :; "What made him conclude, by then, work- - than than than " she looked American The appalling, if not inflammatory. re . 1 , X 1 that yon ought to be told?" Dwlght man never can nse to a state oi tnappmess ana content- sentfully at her mother, her father asked. ment if he is the continuous victim of the profiteering Their moral defection was evident to "Why, he'd got to thinking about see-saher; but it was Indefinable. They told It," she answered. her that, she ought to be ashamed A silence fell. Lulu sat looking out when wanted to give them all a EVERETT TRUE the street. By CONDO 'rent. papa toward She sat silent, frowning, "The only thing," she said, "as long as It happened. I kind of wish he "Look, mamma 1" cried Monona, hadn't told me till we got out to swiillflwmg a ihtrd or an egg at one Oregon." Ina saw Impulse. only the empty "Lulu !" said Ina. Ina began to plate. cry. "You poor thing!" she said. "Mamma's nice little glrir cried Her tears were a signal to Mrs. she. shining upon her child. Bett, who had been striving to underThe rules of the ordinary sports of stand all. Now she too wept, tossing the playgrounik scrupulously applied, up her hands and rocking her body. would have clarified the ethical atHer saucer and spoon clattered on mosphere of Mil little family. But her knee. there was no one to apply them. "He felt had, too." Lulu said. When DI and Momma- had been "He!" said Dwlght "He must Dwlght asked: have." i!KoU4lnif newHie bride "and "It's you," Ina sobbed. "It's yon. groom ?" ha IrrtiSrc. w ' "No. And. Dwlght, It's been a week My . sister! rWi', M since the last.". J never i 5TW--- thought of It making you both feel LlYll. II f TAt knew perfectly well that bad,, or I wouldn't have come home. they were In Savannah, Georgia, but Ink I knew," she added. "It'd make Dwlght fmrerl his pme. told him. "and retold fecj bad. I mean, it was his brother " bits that the letter had said. "Thunk goodness." Ina broke In, "t. 'dont umlutstaml," rite nd.ied, "Well, If It Alnt Miss Lulu Bsttl" "nobody need know about It" IW 1 "why they should go straight to Ore- I ..IlluwgHrded-heTi-withochange: Dwlght .C.ritl.lTivoluntarUy, ' L ' j here firsts "Oh, yes." she said In her monocried Dwlght Ina and hntnrded tone. "People will have to know." thafTfln probably Dwljtht Involuntarily, had. to get back, and shone pleasantly cried out something. 'I do not see the necessity." "How did you know?" Lulu asked. Dwlght's voice was on In the" reflected Importance of a edge. Then "Know! Know what?" brother filled with affairs. too he said "do not," always with "That it ain't Lulu Deacon. Hello, Dwlght betokening the finalities. I don't know what to make of Lulu's letters," Ina proceeded. "They're mamma." "Why, what would they think . She passed the others and kissed Lulu asked, troubled. ,h eo " "You haven't had but two, have her mother. "What difference does It make what ISar,". aald Mrs. Bett placidly. "Aid think?" jour they tvHCM IT ot course It's only t Just ate up the last spoonful o' That's eU, Lulu "Why." 'said slowly, "I been a month. But both letters have cream. shouldn't like you see they might-w- hy, Lulu Deacon!" "Ain't Ina'i voice been so Dwlght, I think we'll have to Ina was Bever really articulate. rose and swelled richly. "What you tell them." Whatever corner of her brain had the talking?" ' "You do! You think the disgrace "Didn't he write to your Lulu blood In It at the moment seemed to of blgnmy In this family Is something be operative, and she let the matter asked. "Not a word." Dwlght answered the whole town will have to know go at, that . this. "All we've had we had from you about?" think dont ; Itl fair to mamma-go- ing the last from Lulu looked at him with parted lips. ee Savannah, Georgia." y off that way. Leaving her own "Say," she said, "I never thought "Savannah, said Georgia." Lulu, about ppttif'. why, sht may never see ....... mm mms 21777 SWORN CIRCULATION -- . vji ""'s'6 1 l ox. EMERY (Continued from catcher and pitcher tion by the league trol, and if either, - II E T another foster-mothe- BAL hlrh-eeho- ol Provo Band -- '?r " il r wmm. elL'l-sald-L- ut 1 Jim. r Hope two TY. Ai Pose iyiu. Cut . t all-.w- "I . ; It belli' I L.JU i ti." This Story Continued In the Next Daily Herald of the TJ. s. fpfeJrJ iln sunervisor: Mr. Parkinson yesterds. Prof. E. ' L.Rnhart. . tu, i UiiQ Mr. Waugh's coming. ,.wi,, ,0 si got four and Aw WU S party of leading citizens tain climbers to acconuS government official orfTv, through the mounCains uii the five plai HEMSTITCHING AND flcJ ro-230 W. Center right Mrs. A. T. Ritchie, A j F Tl anil . Wli Ba: lim for bu' Jei 'ance i foi Ini and be to of li! cool Dl at ..44 .43 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 0 2 0 0 6 7 2 3 3 2 H 6' 1 0 1 0 li 1 1 5 P 8 i 0 0 3 3 8 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 33 2 7 24 8 1 AB. 3 3 3 3 4 3b PAI 3 4 2 ; 2 27 R. H. 0. .A. 0 0 1 1 1 6 1 4 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 9 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 1 3 With 01,8 3 5 27 SHERWOOD'S TUESDAY AND 11 SATURDAY Chicken and Trout ners, Boating, e 50 YELLOWS Finest Picnic Grounds in Utah. JAZZ BANDITS Score by Innings: Oil 000 0002 American Fork 200 000 lOx 3 Provo Summary. Errors Farmer, Birk. Two-bashits Hlllm&n, Wilson, Miller. Double plays Birk to Mor: gan, Barratt to Birk, Farmer to Raile to Wilson. Bases on balls-- Off Sherrill 5. Struck out By Sherrlll 5, by Miller 10. Hit by pitcher Raile.' Sutherland, Umpire Balloons. Din Fishing, and Bathing. CABINS FOR RENT Walnwright The Denver Rio Grande Wester! Railroad System &c Officer of the Receiver. WANTED Competent Workers ; To .Take the Places of Strikers STEADY JOBS Standard Wages as Prescribed by the United States Rail Road Labor Board WILL BE PAID, AS FOLLOWS: I-- ' Pert- will be Jn:Provo about make the climb up Mt and to hike through tie eS cordinit to Dana pi,i.!r'!' PROVO. Totals 'Hundreds of Free as put-upo- .. Raile, 2b Hillman, cf Wilson, lb Miller, p Sutherland, rf Bailey, c Page, If Schatz, ss Tues,Aug8 r w. -- p . Farmer, r, . 4 Binch, 3b Sherrlll, Beach - " 4 Totals dd'USs X Laursen, rf Geneva se er c.. 4 Birk, lb Holmstead, 2b Durrant, cf Snow, if Morgan,' ss DANCE lore-maki- SP AB. R. H. O. .A, Barratt; much-travel- ed . " keystone bag. Happy Holmstead was up, and Happy wanted a hit worse than a fish wants water. What Happy got was a lucky popup to the pitcher's right. It was a bad ball to get to, but Miller did it, and what's more, held on to the sphere, keeping Birk at first. Turrant, the heaviest slugger of the Cave City outfit, came up in the ninth. He poled the ball into the far left. It looked as though It was ticketed for two bases, but Bert Page got under it' and the heavy slugger returned to the bench. Snow and Morgan followed him, and the game was over. Friday the Timps go to Fork for a game, which promises to be as warm a contest as yesterday's affair was. Kinney will pitch for the Timps, and Shelley probably will do the mound duty for American, if he Is in condition. If he isn't Sherrell may try another game, for the Cave City has set out to beat the Timps out of the second half pennant. The score: AMERICAN FORK. w Wfirid - , first run with his. supers'" double. The fans pulled for another hit BALL HUlinan accommodates them with a bingle over second base. Schatz beat a rabbit coming in home, with Page One.) the winning run. The spectacular fielding stunt in an investigawas pulled off by Addle Miller In board of consixth frame. Birk had singled or both are the and was waiting- - for- a lift to the be exiled from guilty they should the Central Utah league. Now, getting back to the game: Conies the seventh inning. Every fan rises from force of habit. Every fan hopes like the deuce for one more run. Maxie Schatz walks to the plate. Sherrell hg$ trouble locating the plate, and" Maxie wisely waits him out, with a pass to first for his reward. Schatz and Farmer try the getting Schatz to second but sacrificing Freddie at first. Hillman walks to the plate. It was Hillman n ho pounded in the ! trl ' - 1922- - ' per hour, $5.60 for eight hours: BLACKSMITHS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours. BOILERMAKERS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours. ELECTRICIANS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours; PIPEFITTERS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours. TINNERS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours. fe SHEET METAL WORKERS 70 cents per hour, $5.60 for eight hours. CAR REPAIRERS 63 cents per hour, $5.04 for eight hours; COACH CLEANERS 34 cents to 37 cents per hour, $2.72 to $2.96 for eight hours; ROUNDHOUSE SERVICE MEN 35 cents to 38 cents per hour, $2.80 to $3.04 for eight MACHINISTS UUUl 70 cents s, MACHINISTS' HELPERS 51 cents to 59 27 cents to 51 cents per APPRENTICES G cents per hour, $4.08 to $4.72 for eight hours. hour, $2.16 to $4.08 for eight hours. i - i Differentials f three cents per hour over the foregoing rates aire paid to Mechanical Craftsmen on night shifts, and differentials of five cents to ten cents hour in excess of the foregoing rates are paid to highly skilled positions in the per Mechanical Crafts. Tn accordance with announcement by the United States , Labor July 3, old men remaining and new men accepting employment are within their Board, and are not rights strikebreakers. They have the moral and legal right to engage in railroad service and "uu 01 upanmem ana orancn oi me Government National State v. and .Municipal. - . jc Z. men who have remained in the employ of the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad,. and who are now taking service are not merely loyal to the compairvihey are proving their loyality to the public and the Government. They are not "sca- -, but they are at work under the protection of the Law and the Labor Board, and THIS COM- PANY INTENDS TO KEEP FAITH WITH THEM TO THE ENEL y APPLICANTS FOR WORK SHOULD APPLY AT THE OFFICE OF: t H. C. Stevens, 8hop Supt, Burnham Shops, Den. ver, Colo W. E. Hlofllnson, Foreman, Colorado Springs, Colo. Walter Roberts, Master Mechanic, Pueblo, Colo. Local Agent, Trinidad, Colo. Local Agent Florence, Colo. Local Agent, Canon City, Colo. E. G. Hssklns, Master Mechanlo, Salida, Colo.' Local Agent, Leadvllle, Colo. Local Agent, Aspen, Colo. Q. C Gates, Foreman, Montrose, Colo. ' Herman Welrlck, Foreman, Gunnls F. T. Owens Matter Mechanic, Grand Junction, Colo. Maker Mechanic, Alamosa, Colo. Local Agent, Durango, Colo. C. Carpenter, Superintendent, Rldgway, Colo. Local Agent Tsllurlde, Colo. Local Agent Santa Fa, New Mexico. D. Cunningham, Asst 8upt M. P., Salt Lake City, Utah. Local Agent, Pfeve, Utah. J. C Richmond, Foreman, Ogden, Utah. Local Agent, Price, Utah. E. C. Howerton, a a JOSEPH H. YOUNG, Receiver. Denver, Colorado July 22, 1922. The Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad System. - $ fI |