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Show THE HERALD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1922, The Herald Sport News Bonner. TAKE CAVEMEN C .Murdock, SECOND GAME FOR SALE, CHEAP Good Jersey .S-cow. Apply 729 N. 1st E. 6 FOR RENT Two large modern, furnished housekeeping rooms and sleeping porch, with or without rarage. 190 S. 5th W. Won. Lost. Pet. beaver and Reward. slipper. T . 0 2 p Giles, If Stand. How They American Pork black Heber LOST Lady's combination 959 N. 5th W. 8weat,-2f- r. FROM HE8ER S-- 3b,..,...... Fraughton, Jb .... Stanley, cf P. Murdock. ss, A., Murdock, 2b..... 1.000 .600 Result of the 8econd Game. American Fork 12, Heber 6. FOR SALE Kimball piano, half HEBER, Sept 4. The second price; also Aeolian player good condition. Terms to suit, N. F. championship game of the Central Music Co Utah league was taken here Fri Wilson, Consolidated Salt Lake. day by the Cavemen by the scpre FOR SALE Wicker baby carriage of 12 to 6, making two victories for ' American Fork and none for the 386 N. 4th E. Heber Eagles. Sherrell outclassed C. Murdock FOR RENT Two rooms for light in the heavy work of the game, al housekeeping. 130 W. 4th N. S- - lowing only eight safeties against Murdock's fourteen. Every Caveman but Sherrell connected for a FOR GOOD BARGAINS in real hit, two of them getting two hits estate see J. W. Johnson. Phone each, and two others getting three. 623. Birk was the heavy hitter of the day, connecting three times out of FOR SALE, CHEAP One sanitary five, two of them, being two- sanitary steel couch and two mat- baggerB. Bennett also got three 443 S. 3rd W. Phone hits at five times up. tresses. . For the Eagles, Sweat was the heavy hitter, batting .500. The feature of the game was the FOR RENT Furnished housekeep- remarkable fielding of Bennett, ing rooms; also board for stu- who has been utility man for the dents. 326 N. 4th E. Cavemen most of the season. Bennett took eight chances without an chalked against him Two of error 480 FOR RENT One apt, were and six assists. these N. 1st N $10 per month. Phone Errors were about even on both S-787-J-sides, the Eagles making only one more than the Cavemen. The next game will be played at FOR SALE Immediately. American Fork today. The bat8--4 brick house. 866 N. 1st E. teries for that game will be A. Murdock and Nelson for Heber, Garrick WANTED Domestic help. 381 E. and Barrett for American Fork. 42. Phone Center. The score: FORK. AMERICAN FOR SALE Claw bug, the finest AB. R. H. O. A. - In town. Come In and, look It over. 5 2 1 ss Holmstead, The price It right Wren Wilklns, Birk, lb 5 3 3 12 0 A4-W. Center 8L 5 2 2 4 1 Barrett, c 4 ;;..., I i S 1 4 1 4 1 3 4 1 1 0 0 4 3 1 3 0 101 1 0 2 0 S 3 0 2 0 0 2 0 Leading Twirler E. M. Garnett. The last set was one of the most bril liant exhibitions of tennis played in the lntermountaln region, accord lng to racquet enthusiastis who wit nessed Saturday's, matches. John Smith and Fred Dixon de feated Hunter Manson and T. Earl This too was Pardoe. a hard watch for the winners to carry off; they had to battle every step of the way through it. Smith and Dixon thus earned the Sun right to enter the day morning, against. Ned Garnett and Howard Robinson. Provo tennis stars twinkled bril tour liantly In the ney at Salt Lake Friday. Fred Dixon defeated George Tay lor in an "all Provo" match, Having done so much Buck Dixon came back against George Eccles, the last survivor of Logan tennis cracks, and won easily, John Smith and Fred Dixon, team ing for Provo in the doubles, de- feated S. B. Pyle and David Bar- Durrant, FOR SALE modern house, Snow, If two bathe, heating plant; lot 6x7 Binch, 3b rods; 313 E. 4th N. Phone 90. Larsen, rf tf FOR SALE FORO COUPE, practically new, equipped shock abThe sorber, cord tires; a bargain. A4-tf VVm. M. Roylance Co. Bennett, Sherrell, 2b p Furnished room. FOR RENT W. 1st S. WANTED Tailoring, 850. tf Dolly Bleak, Prop. cent Interest Phone 1 per 8 688. Ford wheels. FOR SALE Ford touring body, and bug body. Ahlander's, 5th S. and Univ. Ave. .A-U-.- Stude-bake- r FOR SALE, CHEAP truck, good condition. Nay-lor Auto Co. HEMSTITCHING and PICOT EDGE work done in the best manner on all kinds of material and household linens at reasonable prices. BUTTONHOLES made on silk shirts a specialty. All work guaranteed. SINGER SEWING MACHINE COMPANY, 97 North University Avenue. Phone 399. rf WE8TERN BUILDING AND LOAN makes easy installment loans. No waiting for your turn. See Provo Consolidated Real Estate. SALE Dressed chickens. spring cockerels. 33c lb.; old hens FOR Phone 2. 791-- team of horses, beet FOR SALE Overrack and a second-hanland touring car. 760 E. 5th S. A Phone 242-M- . S-- l 2 A wonderful chanee to get into. dairying and farmning. We will or trade our equity, bal. runs sell . .......... e n t.. ln-i- Call 2 5 0 1 1 0 . . . . AB. R. H. O. A. 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 7 1 it rm& m Joe Bush of the Yankees is th leading pitcher of' the major leagues. Below you see the way he holds the ball when he steps on the mound and lets it go like a treakjjf lightning. Dance ait the Mozart AND SATURDAY EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT You'll Like the Floor. BE THERE East SOME OF OUR REGULAR PRICES PORK BEEF Shoulder Pork Chops, 21 Round Steak, lb 23 Loin Pork Chops, lb...34 lb Steak, 26 23 Leg Roasts, lb Shoulder Roast, lb....20 Sirloin Steak, lb... ...24t Loin Roasts, lb 24) Chuck Steak, lb 18c 17) Pot Roast, lb Spare Ribs, lb 17c Fresh Side Pork, lb... 20 Home Rendered Lard, 15 Rump Roast, lb 18c Prime Rib Roast, lb.. 20c Sausage, lb VEAL Heel Boil, lb 17c Shoulder Veal Chops, 21 1 Brisket Boil, lb .8c Loin Veal Chops, lb. 24 Rib Boil, lb Shoulder Veal Roast. .20t 9 Loin Veal Roast, lb. ..24c Shank Boil, lb ," Leg Veal Roast, lb. ...24 ..10c Veal Stew, lb.. .10 .Suet., lb. Veal Shank, lb 8? Hamburger, lb 15t t Hindmarsh Company 464 West Center Street. THERE IS NOTHING UNDER THE SUN S-- FOR RENT Furnished rooms for downstairs. light housekeeping, that protects you more from the summer's troubles than ice. Be sure that clear crystal block is always reposing in the old ice box, safeguarding your health and comfort. ' S 55 W. 2nd N. HIGHEST rash prices paid for old hens and spring roosters Phone 242 J ... S-- FOR SALE Furniture, in good dition. 410 S. 3rd W. conS-- 6 PROVO ICE AND COLD STORAGE M. AYERS WELDING CO. Oxy- acetylene welding and cutting. We weld anything made of metal. Work guaranteed. First class service. 42 N. 4th W, Provo. Phone - ' Phone 508. tf 688-- J. WANTED Peach pickers; " ; housekeeper. Phone 785-R-- We Want Work! si FOR SALE Horse, harness and surrey, cheap. Apply 441 N. 5th t two-Inc- It Is emphasized that this preliminary examination is not for entry to the academy, but is for the pur pose of choosing the candidates to be nominated for entrance. After the nominations are made, the nominees will be instructed regarding the time and place to appear county inspector, for examination to the academy. fruitgrowers. S-- . To establish a name for Utah county peaches In the east, only peaches that can be classified under the United States certified grade No. 1 will be shipped from Utah county this season. This was the decision reached at a meeting of prominent fruit growers from Pleasant Grove, Provo Bench and Springville Saturday morning. No. 1 grade will include nothing smaller than a peach in perfect condition. E. E. Conklin, government specialist in grading and standardization of fruits, Heber C. Webb, state crops and pests inspector; C. J. Sorensen, county crops and pest in spector, and Helga Swenson, deputy '' We want work Is the slogan of large number of students whose faces are turned in the direction of the B. Y. V." said President F. S. Harris today. "A great many young men and younp women have some, funds but not enough to carry) a h met with the Rev. Branford Clare of New York from City has a motor chapel, which he preaches to crowds on the streets. The car, which repre--sent-s a miniature church, houses an organ, and its steeple folds down to allow the vehicle to ginto a garage. also 8-- 6 Use Herald Want Ads ent date. The union made Its plans without any precedents to go by, but it made them very well Indeed, and the celebration proved to be a gratiFirst there was a fying success. parade. Appropriate public speeches followed. Everybody was so well satisfied that the Central Union adopted resolutions, soon afterward, In favor of a similar celebration on the first Monday in September regularly every year. May 1 la Labor day In most Old World countries and in South America, but labor in the United States has stuck to the. choice originally made by the Central Union in New York, from that day to this. In 1884 the American Federation of Labor made the celebration its own and it became national. It had no legal standing, however, until 1887, when the various states, one after another, began to adopt it as a statutory holiday. They did not all name the first Monday in September, but most of them did, and in 1893 congress passed a bill making Labor day an occasion for the whole country to observe. offteSLof Marti Melons WATERMELONS AND CANTELOUPES The sweetest melons ever grown in Utah. CUCUMBERS 8. CABINET Labor has had its separate representation In the federal cabi net since 1913. The portfolio of commerce and labor had existed previously, but in that year the work of the department was divided, the country's purely commercial interests were assigned to- - the commerce secretary's care and the post of secretary of labor was created to assume direction of those pertaining distinctly to the wage workers of the land. It was a department established, enas Bet forth by congressional actment "to foster, promote and develop the welfare of the wage earners In the United States and to Improve their working conditions and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment." . The control of immigration and of Immigration the enforcement laws, the naturalization of foreigners transplanted in the country, the compilation of labor statistics and direction of the work of the children's bureau were among the administrative tasks placed within its Jurisdiction. Of course the extension of the department's "good offices," as adjudicator of or mediator In labor controversies Is an important detail among Its duties, and one which has occupied much of ' the secretary's time In the recent somewhat troublouB Industrial past. James John Davis his directed the. labor department's activities under the administration of President Harding. A native of Tredegar, South Wales, Davis came to the United States with his parents In 1S81, when only 8 years old. He was a, puddler's assistant in a Pittsburg steel mill at the age of 11 and a puddler himself when he was 16. He took pretty naturally to poll-tic- s several years before he had passed the thirtieth milestone on his way through life. He Is a man of wide interests today, yet at h ;art one of the workers themselves nnd still a member In good standing of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers of America, which he Joined while still carrying a dinner palL g 130 Attorney tor Administratrix. F1rF publication Sent t t last publication Oct T? 1922.) mIM in . Our ... ' ill H3 i:a ii Si Patrons are enthugias- - isipi 'tic ttbout the lit In the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, in and for Utah County, State of Utah. In the matter of the North Lake Shore Drainage District, Utah County, Hi ographa phot we have made for them ;" II per 11th North and 4th West or at three-mil- e post on Provo Bench. Phone onB I jS-- You, ii WALLACE! M. HALES, (Seal.) Fourth Judicial District Clerk, Court, Utah County, Utah. MARTIN M. LARSON, Evening Phone 530-- J. Attorney for Petitioner. (First- - publication Sept 4; last publication Sept. 18, 1922.) ROW! TRAINING SCHOOL OPENS. Y. U. training school begins the new year's work on SepThe B. tember 18, and not the earlier date previously given, is the announcement today of Director L. John JOE CLARK 782-J-- NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the District Court of Utah County f State of Utah. In the matter of the estate of Ed Steven Kim-beJr.. Deceased. r, WB 44 W. Center St. Over McCoard Shoe Store COME-S- And the Price of Coal Advances And a Coal Shortage Follows M Vou Can Do It Better MiGas and the Gas will be always ready, flow-in- g regularly from the gas works to your home. REPRESENTATIVE THE U. AND CAULIFLOWER it, LABOR 'S tT Utah, 0n before thai I0t& day of November perience and the eharacter-fonnlastress of recent year. It Is not quite the kind of a cele? ' bration that once it was. In the old days it had in It something more perhaps of the' exuberance of 21 of strength and energy and promise, but ot nothing like the sound, sober thourhtfulness, the pride of achievement, the confi- dence In itself that it represents in v this year 1922. J3tahv To All Persons Interested: Notice Is hereby given to all M ttorBeyMw, provo, Ijii Interested that the petition of ' the board of supervisors of North Lake Shore Draining District praying that the proceedings relating to the creation, organization and maintenance of said district, and other acts of the district in authorising m the issue and sale of f 16,000 ot the m bonds of said district may be judicially examined, approved and confirmed, was filed with the county clerk of Utah county on the 2nd m m day ot September 1922, and hearing thereon has been set. before the above entitled court at the county courthouse at Provo, Utah county. state of Utah, at S o'clock p. m. on trill be S3 the 26th day f September, 1923, delighted! and any person Interested in the ii:3 m organisation of said! district or in or the proceedings for the Issue workers' celebration of 40 sale of said bonds may demur, to or ago represented the high1 answer said petition as provided lh IE Belter. Make Your Ap- of American labor's youth. chapter 41 of the session laws of it represents maturity, ex Utah, 1919. pointment Today. Witness, the clerk of the said courtrwfth the seal thereof affixed, this 2nd day of September, 1923. Day Phone 853. (ireat Britain has 497,582 motor them through Hie school year," he vehicles. ontinueil. "and would like to come here if (hey could get some kind of The Automobile club of New York City has 27,000 members. employment to assist them." The president is in receipt of a ;ler from Norman I.ee of Hrigliam for students than does Provo, and president of Uox Klder stake, therefore captures young men and o the effect that Salt Iike offers women for the state university who more opportunities nf employment would otherwise come here. 780-R-- with WANTED Stenographer knowledge of bookkeeping. Apply in own handwriting, stating salary Baker & Baker, attorexpected. neys, Provo, Utah. -- (Sanscrit.) Th three Deaks of Mt. Nebo Hey, boys, any of you want to be have only been scaled by a few and a middy at Annapolis novpr from the south. Members of Want to sail the briny deep on the party who are fitted for strenuone of Uncle Sam's ous climbing will make the attempt to cross from the south to the Or skipping deneath the waves in north peak. This feature of the a sub? hik will be under the direction of If BO the guides and no one will be allowmatter the And you've got gray ed to attempt the trip except those In your skulls whose previous experience wouia You can have your wish If you warrant their crossing in safety. stand one of the three highest in Efforts are being made to nave examination to be held in this state movine nicture camera taken to Oct. 28. the toD and a record of the climb For further information write shown on the screen, Senator Reed Smoot, Washington, D. C, or ask Joshua Hodsen, Provo postoffice. CLASS ONLY FIRST There will be three vacancies in naval United States the academy, Annapolis, to be filled by appointReed Senator Smoot for enment of trance in 1923. For each of these three vacancies there will be nominated one principal and three alter 1923. Sherwood's Jazz Bandits the Music 6-- nates. The principals and alternates will be chosen by a competitive examin atlon, under the direction of the United States civil service commis sion, which will be given on Satur day October 28, 1922, in the post- office buildings at Salt Lake City, Ogden and Provo, Utah. All candidates are required to be citizens of the United States and esldenU of Utah, and must not be less than 16 years of age, nor more than 20 years of age on April 1, With You'll Like 6-- Want To Enter U. 5. Naval Academy? .15. PER CENT LOANS may be secured far any purpose on farm lands, irigated lands, to buy or build home, city or farm, under our first mortgage certificates. Bankers Reserve Deposit Company, Gas & Electric Iildg., Denver, Colo. 6 have you to offer. 113 5 You are losing money unless you trade with the Wasatch tf Produce. We deliver. 0 2 2 6 1 HEBER. LOST 30c lb. 0 1 umar -- 383 Clothes to press. City 337 W. Center. Phone MONEY TO LOAN on farms, 2 1 43 12 14 27 15 Totals AND PICOTING Montgomery, 230 W. Centet-- . Work done Nelson, c right Mr. A, F. Ritchie. HEMSTITCHING 1 1 4 5 5 5 comparable! The world heeds the can ot 6-- U 1 14-1- Labor Day was J observed offi 1882. clally for the first- - time In The celebration was decided on by the Central Lshor Union, in New York City. The first Monday in September seems to have been chosen because it was toward the end of the .summer that the idea was suggested, and that was the earliest conveni- "Awake! For morn into the bowl of night Has fjung the stone that puts the stars to flight!" Tha mmn sinks low in the west, and rosy dawn creeps in from the oaat The tons of the mountain ranges show a faint glow as the full glory of day breaks with the passing minutes, the hardly climber who fills; his lungs with the pure mountain air feels impelled to chant a salutation to the dawn "Look well to this day!" For it is life, the very life of life. In its brief course He all the verities and rette, Realities of our existence; Hunter Manson and T Earl Par The bliss of growth; doe, another Provo team, beat Beat The glory of action; Law and C. R. Johnson, of J. William Knight and Lynn Tay The splendor is beauty; but a dream, The For yesterday lor lost to Cy Gallagher and Earl And tomorrow is only a vision. years Pearce, But today well lived makes every spirits Yesterday a dream of happiness, Today and iMi-i- r tomorrow a vision of hope! Look well therefore to this day! 6-- 12 3 11-- 6-- S-- 4 1 2 6-- 6-- are rapidly heing completed for the. first moonlight trip to the top of iAt Nebo September 9 and 10. The trail Is in fine shape and easily followed all the jray. toJfle top. Party' will leave the ranger station In Salt Creek canyon Satd urday night, September 9, and pro-ceto timber line where a halt e will be called and a. campftre carried ouL- After a rest here and enjoyment of the magnificent view a leisurely climb will bring the party to the top In time to witness the sunrise, than which all "nature is no other spectacle-!i- f inter-mountai- n put-out- s 2 F semi-final- 8 4 By U D. PFOUTS. PAYSON, Sept. 4. Plans 8 6 S-- 6 cf ATTEMPTED i Fred Dixon was eliminated from on the Salt Lake Tennis club courts Saturday by theemi-flnal- . S-- 5 'v SHOW GOOD Snow,-Two-bas- tf I0 MT. NEBO TO BE t the MARTIN M. 8-- 8 835-W- IE II II IS J0 37 6 8 27 10 Totals Summary: Errors Birk 2, Saow P. Mur2, Larsen 2, Fraughton, dock 3, C. Murdock, Sweat Giles. Stolen bases Snow 2, Binch, Bennett. Sacrifice hits Durrant hits Birk 2, Barrett. Base on balls Off Sherrell 2. Left on bases American Fork 5. Heber 6. Base on errors American Fork Struck out By Mur6, Heber 4. dock 6, by Sherrell 4. Double play Sweat to Murdock to Fraughton Runs batted In Birk, Durrant 3, Bennett, Snow, Sweat 3. Umpires Scott and King. i America's 41st SOUTH CLIL1B UP 2 1 1 ..i - nresnnt .v.. ji ... ': i:.... :wui'.cremiors with Touchers to the undertime, - FOR Water Heating Bath and Bedroom Heating Canning Study Lighting The Gas Way is the Best Way , Phone 295 1 Oil I |