OCR Text |
Show STEEL DAY EDITION. THE PROVO HERALD PAGE FOUB. do faithful men wbo?e dally trudging! safe spot trom which to force a form the backbone of General Butlock or break dowa a cat. Tht ler'a program yon ihould go dowa underworld toon learned that there he corridor to the office of Superinwaa bo telling wbea a beam of tendent of Police William B. Milla. light followed by a flash of Are and Mills has been on the force for a serious load pellet, would pot an rears and baa always been one of eternal end to the criminal's mid- Its outstanding figures. A Ci-and a Flashlight night eaterprlses. Naturally the erooka songht, and are eeeking. "Tbers are seven pieces of equipnew territory. Too much "p'tlless ment the patro'men carry with them on aerr.ee In the present publicity" (or them, tbank you! clean-udrive,? aayt SuperintendButler's Day Spectacular Everything la "rath" about the ent Mills. "Thev are a blackjack, director. Hla ontrancea and oxlta handcuffs, a pad of paper and a are spectacular and dramatic Now pencil, a Ave cent place (for a ka appoara la a barroom and bar- phono call to the station bouse tenders tremble. Again ho atteftdi when necessary) and a gun and courtroom aid watches tht Balsa- - flashlight contra (or thugs to luVk 'b; p ' " li!!: .. HV 7 Y iWflMsX "Whoa the patrolmen are on th hunt (or criminals at a ght two o? these objects arc In their haadf constantly, la their right bands, or where they can be drawn in a Cash, are their guna. In their left hands are their flashlights. The burglar has bis dark lantern and the policeman bad only h'.a wits. Nine times ont of en the offlcer had to manoeuvre in the dark, at the mercy of a finish ing blow from an nnseen htnd. The The tables are turned now. burglar or law breaker la In the spotlight from the moment wo flal traces of bis work. " J. ww Uime old-tim- e lights ire one of the most valnaoi ejpvas o bare la th present drive. Some think they are as as a gut--" The writer visited a couple of the formerly most trimo-riddo- a of the city. In that section Just oast of "Hell's Half Acre." near the location of the notorious fifth Ward murder. wa.i (ound a member of Butler'a troop of shock fighters who are transferred about tho city to .spots where the need seem? dla-r'.c- ts greatest 8potllght Lands Murdsror "There waa a murderer from an other city killed a man here a little Most Valuable Weapon while ago." ho said. "We chased of find trace the "It la easier to over hla work. A Bash will abow a jim- him down a number of alleys, mied window, a broken gate, or an a roof and Into a certain house him go Into tho house and open cellar door as plainly at night Wo aaw aeo him come out Wf we didnt seen could bo by daylight ai they or And couldn't aBy passage-way- s Onr orders now aro to flash spotAfter a thorough lights whenever or wherever there sub cellars is the slightest possibility of a search It seemed the 'jiurdsrer had The vanished. ... criminal's being' at work. "Onr laahllgBts oangbt him for as wo were about to svs up!" Tho pairelmaa 3Blalaod. ft was - of early mrnlng and a (ew rays csllsr in the mse twilight Uul where tb search ended. The policeman a Brat thought tho light tB strong enough to spot anyone examined every They hiding. crevice of the cellar. They prodded with their night sticks Into pile of t ii trash. Including s pile clothes in a small apace aader tho cellar atepa. No result Shows Up Hiding Place : As a final precaution a spotlight was turned on tho more obscure corners. Th radiance on th supposed bundls of old clothes under th gups revealed th latter a .ha missing criminal! la ths old Tenderloin, vttfc lta Chinatown. rU Bouse of a Hundred Rooms, lta tunnels and yoa find a district where patrehnen speak with fervor jtt th userulaess of their secondary weapon, the flashlight -For Way That Are DarH" "Jest the other might we had a little raid la Chinatown," sail th sergeaat "We (ound sverythimf in snb-eellar-a, ' Armed with Gun and Flashlight General Butler's Police Have Crooks on Run ed and been roundly told their places. Easy going patrolmen hav (ound themselves minus Jobs. A in la mm umum boss, between sunset and galvanic shock has gone through the entire 4,200 members of th snarls. That la why the Mtloo of Pbila- - fore. Shoot to Kill dalDbJa. under tho energetic direc At the same time there has been Ooaoral Bmodlof Daxlagton tion -Batter, are twimkluc through the an exhibition et efficiency such as aDes and dark places of their city the (orce haa given on (ow occanowlrfata. with a flashlight In sions since William Penn landed on on hand aad a gua within easy tho bank of the Delaware. Bandit react, of tho other. Tho sew Di chasing automobiles have been et Public Safety, who. at the fitted up and multiplied. Marine rareoot at Mayor Koariok, has been Corpa discipline has been reborn In gives leave of absence trom the a city's corps of crime fighters. atartne Corps to "clean up Phila- Guardians of law and order hav delphia," has determined that had their attention called toto their nse m I W' aotthor poUticlans aor erooka shall guns and have been told accuing touches being put to one of hi. Iseep aaythiag dark" wtoile ho is them with promtness and He is often abroad at night, Jobs. racy. oatfcatjofc. sees On night two citizens were and, like Haroun al Raachld, Criminals Loovina the often by many things, strange and killed immediately by thugs BvU doors are learning to tear aid of a police flashlight deand General Butler, slid-m- c exasperated oomo that bosons of Best Qm He is en tho front pages of the of hsto their hiding place. The termined, decreed the presence In nearly every day, and newspapers the of patrolmen platoons Hdtt comes both fltvatlvoly and heavy the reporters keep a constant guard on. Th from streets midnight actaalr. Crtminal aro leaving 1b to on hla movements, standing near called attention had their cops pas-tardarker aad drove for other and were his office door as though they were The courts are having loss their flashlights this time, were to ob "death watch." Th popular Bandits to ns them. told to So than for many months. Is they ar on the death at City Hall bo spotted. The streets were to be feeling PoIUa watch of general crime In Philadelsafe made (or democracy. slscs of boohlvo ha beea a activity phia. Fire-flBrigade In Action tho leaeml arrived. Police Mills on tho Job The officers took the new director who had countenanced " But if you want mors Insight crime and vice have boon demoted. at his word. They had to. The fire-flbrigade went Into action. into tho ordinary routine of the Diligent sergeanU have bona promoted. Politicians hav got eictt- - They saw that there were no dark force the activities of the 4.200 . . m . :m m m,. sur-ac- e chapter No. S was constituted In erd and protruding from the ard ; John Westphal, tyler. and edges of the strata the bones Several of the members have in 1897. Beginning with bat four memIt has slowly grown until now and skeletons of monsters lying the past held office In the grand bers numbers 119. The present worthy where they were burled millions of it Wm. At the present lodge of Utah. L. W. Mrs. matron is Whittemore, years ago in deposits of mud and F. Bulkley Is the grand chaplain. Ward is worthy pa sand which are now mere strata be- In May, 1906, a dispensation was and Charles tron; Mrs. Alva Nelson, associate thousands of feet of other granted for the forming of Provo matron; Mrs. C. A. Chamberlain, neath beds which the mountains and chapter Royal Arch Masons. Its conductress; Mrs. H. F. Cannon, mesasfrom of the region have been early days were like those of Story associate conductress. The object carved. Such a project Is contem lodge, times of stress and difficulty, of the Order of the Eastern Star is plated In a bill which Congressman but the lodge had paved the way, to provide for the wives, mothers, Colton of Utah has introduced in eliminating many of the greater dif sisters of Masons the ficulties. It too has grown till now sa me and daughters for fraternal the present congress. opportunity The quarry is on top of a sharp It numbers over 145 members. A fellowship and the practices of the ridge between two gulches. Accordhad members Its of have number first the at In January, 1872, virtues of charity and benevo- ing to the theory advanced by most chapter positions, Sam H. great lence that Is provided their hus- scientists who have visited the re meeting of the grand lodge, F. A grand Goodwin having been the grand bands, sons and brothers in and gion, many dinosaurs and other pre A. M. of Utah, a dispensation to high priest of the grand chapter, historic animals must have floated found a lodge in Provo was granted R. A. M. of Utah. Wm. F. Bulkley through Masonry. down some ancient river, from a to Ira Martin Swart and others. is now the grand Royal Arch capsource unknown, and become imThe early days were days of trials tain and the grand correspondent bedded in a sandbar. They lay for and difficulties. Hardly more In Provo chapter is now under the countless years, until they were covnumber than enough to form a efficient leadership of Arthur ered to great depth in the mud and quorum nearly every member had Craven, excellent high priest; Chas. sand. Then came an upheaval to be present at every meting. Sam Chamberlain, king; Herman Grimm, which forced the fossil bed to an upus soon caiied to scribe; Alva Nelson, treasurer; uel Paul, who right plane, where it outcrops on Salt Lake City, where he still Uvea, Chas. Funk, secretary. the mountain tops. Ivanboe Commandery, Knights often rode horseback to Provo in From the quarry at the top of WASHINGTON, June 7. In no order that tVre might be enough Templar, was constituted in May, Dinosaur peak and from the peaks on 1921. founda the hold a to Gradu world of the has Building past other part there meeting. present near by the view is of and ridges Provo laid one and tions hall order the and found such of a been by Story lodge grew deposit ally to the lover of the much Interest labors been Its to to hud be have found easier, another after dlnosaurlan and other prehistoric chapter accommodate the growing lodge. It now has 97 members. Two of Its reptilian skeletons as have been picturesque. The rock formations, Three of the charter members are three past commanders still live In taken from lands embraced in the upended, aggregating about three still alive: Ira M. Swartz, who now Provo H. G. Blumenthal and Wm. T'lnosaur National monutn-u- t in miles in thickness and representing lives in the northwest and is still F. Bulkley. The present officers northeastern Utah, it is pointed out deposits of millions of years, lie a member of Story lodge of Provo; are Lee L. Baker, eminent com- by a bulletin of the department of open to view, stratum on stratum of various colors and shades. High, is Samuel Paul, a past grand master mander; Arthur Craven, generalis I be interior. of the grand lodge of Utah, still an simo; Roy E. Knapp, captain gen Professor Earl B. Douglass of the rugged Inhills, deep gulches, sharp the distance a picturesque active member of the grand lodge, eral; E. O. Moe, senior warden; C. Carnegie museum at Pittsburg is ridges, now living in Salt Lake and holding A. Pierson, Junior warden; Wm. F, credited with the discovery of this river valley, rolling plains, bad and many other physical feamembership there, and Robert Bee, Bulkley, prelate; Alva Nelson, most remarkable fossil field In 1909, lands add to the worthwhileness of who still resides in Provo. treasurer; II. G. Blumenthal, secre and since that date until 1923 the tures scene. the 8 For many years the home of tary. museum been has at work Carnegie The Dinosaur monument Is easily Story lodge called Story after the At the present time Provo is uncovering its fossil remains. Last reached by private automobile from officer of the law of that name rounding out the line of York Rite year the Smithsonian Institution who was killed in the early days In Masonry by starting a council of and the University of Utah con- Jensen, Utah, on the Victory high IX Utah in the discbarge of his duty R. & S. Masons. A dispensation was tinued quarrying work, obtaining way between Denver, Colo., and Salt Lake City. It is only a short had its home in the Knight block granted a year ago for the forming excellent material side "f six miles to the monuon the corner of Center and Uni of this body which is now working Perhaps the most remarkable ment trip The town of Vernal Is lo- 1 versity streets. It was there that under the general grand council of prize secured was the complete much of its growth was made. In the United States along with its skeleton of the largest brontosaurus cated tv elve miles west. The near est rail approach is Watson, Utah, 1921 the lodge purchased the prop- sister council U. D. of Ogden. As known to science "the Brontosaure erty of the Baptist church on N. there is at the present only one us Louisae," as it has been chris- on the Uintah railroad, a narrow-gaugline connecting at Mack, First East and remodeling or re- chartered council, the one in Salt tened, in honor of Mrs. Andrew Carbuilding the whole building made Lake City, in Utah and no state can negie. It is 100 feet long and 20 Colo., with the main line of the Den IS for itself one of the fiuest lodge have Us own grand council till there feet high, and stands In the Hall of ver A Rio Grande Mtci. It is 54 Domes in the state. are at least three subordinate Vertebrate Paleontology In Pitts- miles by "auto from wTHeun to Story lodge always has been ac bodies, it is hoped that this fall burg. Probably in life it weighed Vernal. tive in creating new members but when the general grand council 20 tons. Compared with such an UTAH FARM BUREAU has been of slow growth for the meets, Provo council and, Ogden animal the largest elephant would The home and community section 1 shifting population of Provo con- council may gain their charters, be as a dog to a horse. tinually took men from here to making it possible for Utah to have more than 400,000 of the Utah State Farm bureau was Altogether other centers. There are now 212 its own grand body. The Provo pounds of material, including bones organized in January, 1921, but did members. council U. D. has now 28 members and matrix, have been taken from not function largely until after the state convention of January, 1923, The living past masters who still and is planning several classes the quarry, and many hold their membership here all but shortly. The officers under dis some of which are all but skeletons, by which time there were twelve complete, two still living in Provo It closed its IS are Ira pensation are Wm. F. Bulkley, illus- have been secured. There has been organized counties. M. Swartz, Robert Bee, D. L. Cook, trious master; W. L. Whittemore, very little duplication, with the re- first year of activity with sixteen IS 8 Henry G. Blumenthal, D. R. Beebe, deputy master; H. G. Blumenthal, sult that many strange and gigantic counties organized. A. F. Palm, E. O. Moe, Besides building an identity In Wm. F. principal conductor of work; H. F. animals that inhabited the earth in the major Bulkley, W. L. Whittemore, Roy K. Cannon, captain of guard; Lee L. the dim past have been made the state organization, Knapp and Charles A. Pierson. project has been the statewide Baker, conductor of council; Chas. known. Clean-Hom- e Clean-TowAt the present J. P. Woods is Ward, steward: John WestphaL It is hoped that a skeleton campaign be master; F. W. Foster, senior war- sentinel; Arthur Craven, secretary. worsea out in reller, protectedmay which was carried on in from Herman den; Grimm, Junior warThe Order of the Eastern Star is the elements and left In for tion with the Salt Lake Chamber 8 den; Alva Nelson, treasurer; N. H. not strictly a Masonic body, yet it the enlightenment and position entertain- of Commerce, the extension service Nelson, secretary; Chas. McCoard, is allied to them as its members are ment of the One of the Utah Agricultural college, general public. chaplain; B. H. Bower, senior the wives, mothers, sisters and can conceive of no more impressive the state board of health, and the deacon: A. F. HimrWnn i,,i daughters of Masons and men who and instructive project than to per- various business and other voluneacon; K. W. Scherer, Junior stew are Blue lodge members. Valley mit the visitor to see which work for partly uneov- - tary organizations the general welfare. I'U I laologiata say, aro eommlt- v. - ' 1 a. 1 1 I V. i mm. ' n DIRECTS DRIVE ON CRIME General Smedlsy D. Butler (left), Director of Public Safety Is) Philadelphia, and William B. Mills (right), Superintendent of Polio. tho place dark. The Chinamen had taken all the electric light globes trom their sockets. Wo would bare failed completely without oar 13 til flashlights. "You have to move fast np there, and see where you are going," he said. "They have heavy wooden doors along th tunnels and hallIt takes (orever to beat ways. them dowa when they are once closed." Tho present day Incident of a day's, or night's work, la a crime drive brought np pictures ot the old melodrama, in which, at tho crucial moment in the poker game, when the nasty word had been said, somebody shot out the oil lamps and in tho resulting NIBl'lllllll'l KB e. harartrs e reigned. There Is no shooting ont of lights bow. At least 1b Philadelphia criminals are In the spotlight to sta- y- unless they lcav town. T They're leaving! gloom-carnag- d y lien-tenan- ts y Masonic Lodge in Provo faMie Comply I 870 South 4th West. Salt Lake City Utah FOSSIL FIELD OF UTAHISFMIOUS i ' . w. . r . : ..vi' - ' . 1 II .rsCltaP"1 I If 171 x A if STEEL CASTINGS n ! 1 GREY IRON j-oi-utuio BRASS MACHINE SHOP PATTERN SHOP i ui m&iicu uu receipt or Ltiue rrims ana opeclTlCallons a |