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Show FRIDAY, THE BOX ELDER NEWS, PAGE SIX MANTUA MUTUAL GIRLS ENJDYED Damsels Away . been asked to report the the Mantua Mutual girls of activities while at Beylmia. In the beginning man created Beyl-mi- a the floors, the rafters, the steps All in all Beylmia was created by him, Then on the sixth day came women to cleanse and decorate the home and man not being able to compete with women in mens atire, made a hasty exit. Then on this seventh day, beginsuns ning July 25, women rested. Four seventh the day. rose before With no men around to appreciate the slim figures diets were forgotten, and encouraged by the tasty dishes Mrs. Keller directed the Bridgets to prepare, all ate long and heartily until the food grew low in the larder. The foresters had gathered all the wooc the countryside round. , From the kitchen, where the haron mony sixtette were practicing up fortune hunting in a dish pan, in hopes of securing a position in some little bungalow built for two, issued harmThis industrious little ony indeed. one group were killing two birds with and water while dirty grew stone, dishes clean they created a work of wonder, an original song to the home. Then when the first run had disappeared before the fire place, the story teller silhouetted at the side of the low fire, such weird tales were related that flesh began to creep and the shrill screams and low moans from white robed figures without broke our taunt never. ifroadway (Edna) of the harmony sextette slept out on the porch at peace without mosquitoes. Elaine and Melody spent a short time on the porch and then moved to the protected side of the screen. With the rising of the second sun four of us blazed the trail. The rest followed by signs of weeds, rocks and twigs which were left by us. $o well could they read them that the blazers could hurry none too fast to keep out of sight. That night the harmony sextette who had been promoted to Bridgets cut and spread slices of bread and served the multitude with weenies and marshmallows which were roasted over a glowing fire. Many feet felt hurt I have after the vigorous dancing which followed and to give them a rest we sang our favorite songs and went up the stairs. Early in the morning, twenty long legged mountaineers traveled far up the mountain, merrily, puffingly, and breathlessly, urged on by the fact that breakfast came to only those who endured to the end. Never have angels on horseback been so tempting nor have girls been hungrier than we were. We rested and drank cool water. We were enjoying ourselves when to our extreme terror we discovered a snake in our very midst, a very terrible looking creature, and a stranger to us all. We made speed to leave the scene of his destruction. Wickedness (nteted into the camp in the form of Broadway and Melody, At night alias Edna and Dorothy. while few slept and many didnt dare for fear of the deadly toe hold o: Nellick, the two evil ones crept abroac with no respect of persons Even Mrs. Erickson fell prey to those night creatures. So to give yent to energy, fifteen minutes of vigorous play was indulged in after which laughter gave way to snores. Two serpents in the forms of Ralph and Clark came and lured two fair descendants of Eve away from our merry throng. And verily all those who misbehaved were called upon to pray, but of the thirty girls at the home only three were punished so the innocent of us were not wholly robbed of this privilege. Sunday was hurry and scurry. Everyone willingly helped with all the finishing jobs. At two oclock we welcomed eighteen mothers and four fathers to the home. In teir honor we gave the following program: Qh Ye Mountains High; Song, prayer, Miss Barbara Rasmussen; song, How Do You Do Everybody; welcome to the mothers, by our home mothers, Mrs. Erickson; song to Beylmia, Harmony Sextette; reading, Miss Wanda Jeppson; dramatization of Life Scenes of the Love Song; singing of cheer songs to our home mother, Mrs. Erickson and our Kitchen Mother, Mrs Keller; The Grindstone That Was Left Over, by the Leftover gang; Cheer songs, Camp Leaders Misses Fern Jensen and Peggy Turner; and to our Mutual President Mrs. Lulls Jeppsen. address from the mothers, by Mrs. Lulls Jeppsen; We sang Stand Up to several of the visitors and our Get-t-a Wiggle on, Dont Sit There With a Giggle On, brought ready response. We served a luncheon to sixty people. When everything was cleared away we traveled over the Winding Trail to Home, Sweet Home. One of the Crowd. Y M CEMENT MILLS YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN WHO MAKE RECORD THINK CLEARLY THE GREATEST LIFE AT BEYLMIA Two Serpents Appeared And Lured Two Fair SEMI-WEEKL- DEMAND OE AMERICAN BUSINESS Bankers Association President Gives the Five Essentials of Sound Thinking in Business Greater Opportunity Than Ever Before for Young People With Educational Training and Power to Analyze Problems. By CRAIG B. HAZLEWOOD President Amorlcan Banker Association ago Michael Pupin, a shepherd boy, ONLY half ahiscentury the fields of Serbia. flocks by night among Thieves often lurked in the bordering cornfields awaiting an opportunity to make off with a part of the herd. Serbian boys were taught a method of signalling one another for warning and help. Each carried a knife with a long wooden handle which he would thrust deep into the ground and in case cattle thieves approached he would strike the wooden handle. The sound would be transmitted through the ground to other boys some distance away who could hear and interpret the message. Why is it, Pupin asked his mother, that we can signal this way? Why is it the sound can be heard through the ground, but not through the air? Why is it the signals can be heard 'in the pasture land so much better than in the plowed fields? The boys mother could not answer his questions, nor could the village teacher. However, having an eager mind and great determination, the boy decided to go to America, where he might win an education and find out the answers to these and other perplexing questions. Hundreds of other boys under the same circumstances and with the same set of conditions merely accepted these things without once questioning them Just because they had always done them that way. The Land of Education and 8uccesa So a penniless Immigrant boy from Serbia at the age of fifteen landed In New York In 1874 and, years later, having worked his way through Co- Business Requires an Open Mind Second, among the essentials for sound thinking I would write down an open mind. We have mentioned freeing our minds from the influence of tradition. .Let us think also without prejudice of personal feelings, deLet us seek sires or consequence. only the truth. Mere surface reasonlumbia University, concentrated the ing must be discounted. Old "cants" wonder and simplicity of his mind and "donts must he thrown Into the discard. A man who has an open upon the problem of sound, which will do a great many things bemind had puzzled him as a shepherd boy. ha doesnt know they cant be cause he of what results The bis thinking dons. has accomplished for the long disthinkThe to tance telephone and for radio communication by his Inventions are known If during the past the world over. twenty-twyears this company had been compelled to do without one In ventlon of Michael Pupin, an official of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company once said, and yet give the same service it Is giving today it would have had to spend at least $100,000,000 more than It has exo pended. These inventions. In which millions of dollars of oapltal have been invest ed, were the result of the thinking of a mere country lad who had the sim pliclty to wonder, the determination to know and the power to apply what he learned. Stimulating the imagination and thinking la the greatest purpose of education. What American business .needs more than anything else is yonng men and women to think individuals who are not mentally anchored to tradition, who do not merely appropriate other peoples ideas, but who are hard, purposeful thinkers, Independent and unprejudiced, with the ability to concentrate and strike straight for the heart of a problem. Business Needs folk Who Think ' America has astounded the world by its readiness In casting aside traditional viewpoints, disregarding traditional difficulties and pioneering new shortcut formulas in the realm of business. Business is undergoing epochal changes. Business problems are crowding in ipon ns so rapidly that the executive knows not where to look for adequate help or relief. With the enormous Increase in size and intricacy of business affairs the problems have become so complicated and the mass of information necessary to their solution so great that the days are not long The demand for managerial enough. nd executive ability Is rushing ahead the opportunity for young men and women who have the professional training and who develop genuine thinking power is greater than ever. All business feels the same crying need for the men who see clearly and think conclusively. Wherever we look manufacturing, wholesaling, retailing. banking, financing new forces sra at work. Vast movements are under way and executives are seeking light upon perplexing problems dally. Let us consider briefly the five essentials of a sound thinker. If I were looking for a young man of exceptional promise I should hope, first, to find In him the simplicity to wonder. Every great advancement in. business has been made by men who dared to n wonder, who had the courage to Ire Into present procedure and who had the audacity to ask whether something that had bean done a certain way for a long time might not be I dreamed last night that a wrong. Although the history of Amerburglar stole our new golden clock. icas progress from its very discovery When I woke up I looked to see 'o the present time has shown the If it was still there." value of an Inquiring mind, there Is "Was it gone? still an Inevitable tendency In most men to accept in a docile manner the "No, but it was going. 4 plnions, methods, supposed facts, Always use the correct needles for Procedures and processes of the past your make of sewing machine, and With due reverence to .the effort, the keep a supply on ban dto fit the spirit, the accomplishments of the past, let us make It our rule that evsizes of thread you expect to use. mm erything be looked at with the clear SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NEWS questioning mind of the scientist in-i- third essential sound ing is knowledge a thorough, comprehensive understanding of all the factors Involved in a problem. It has been said that most problems answer themselves when tha facts have been gathered. A well known student and teacher of buelness describes the method of attacking a problem as tear lng It down, reassembling the problem and drawing Accidents Reduced 24 Per Cent; June Low With Forty Mishaps. now on display at accident prevention record, according to an announcement made today by the Portland Cement Assn. R is notable, says the report closnation-wid- e June noing the annual i industry, the of accident campaign that the corresponding gross total accidents for June, 1928, was about fifty, with but 153 mills participating ia the drive, whereas 159 plants reported In the 1929 campaign. Accident totals during the first six months of the last five years show 1,295 in 1925 as compared with 344 of this year, a reduction in accidents of 73 per cent. During June of this year 136 mills, or 85 per cent of those enrolled, completed the month without accident. Seventeen plants reported one accident. June of 1928 saw 136 mills complete the period without accident and twenty-on- e plants completed with but one mishap. June of last year reached a low water mark in fatalities with but one reported whereas four have been recorded for June of this year. During the just closed June campaign, three times as many accidents occurred in quarries as in any other department Twelve of these quarry accidents were reported. o jplHLCE Reductions tap to $20 EFFECTIVE AUGUST Imagine! A President Eight Sedan offered at $1735 President at 1995) f A CommandJ Sedan only 1475! A Commander Six Sedas J Eight low as 1325! A Dictator Eight Sedan, latest creatfo a er seven-passeng- of Studebaker engineering genius, 1235! A Dictate Six Sedan (better than those which sold in enoraot volume at 1345) now priced at 1095! If you don; want to wait for delivery, get your order in mu; Rud Victor Motor Comps K4 mill-rac- e. smart gmiMIMIKIEfj1 CHICAGO.' With lot time accidents cut 24.3 per cent during the first half of the year and but forty cemishaps reported for June, the new a ment industry again sets up There was an air of unrest in the Jones wanted cosy little sitting-rooto read the evening paper, but Mrs. Jones preferred to talk. H stood it for some time. Then he threw the paper angrily to the floor, and faced his wife. t Look here!" he snapped, Whenever Im at home, youre either hammering away at the piano, or else your tongue runs on like a It wasnt so before we were married. You were quiet enough then. Of course, I was," retorted Mrs. Jones, preparing for the fray. Before we were married, you were always holding my hands and I couldnt play, and you kept my lips so busy that I couldnt talk." AUGUST 25 - South Main - Phone Chocolate that appears white on the outside has been kept in an place, so that some of the Cat has melted and come to the surface. It is not injured for use. over-war- m fo-- t A wire basket is a good accessory to have in canning tomatoels or peaches. As these fruits must be scalded to get the skins off, use the wire basket to lower the material into boiling water and out again. 40 - - Brigham Eggs are scarce on nu during the fall and winte the chickens do not get a teln for rapid growth summer. An egg, aside shell, contains 13.4 per cet while poultry flesh contain; cent protein. A mixture j wheat, and other grains cor about 10 per cent proteiu be supplemented with 1 containing the d: 1 high-protei- i: - OUR ADS BRING RE the conclusion. There can be nothing but guess work or Intuition unless tha unknown quantities are discovered. As a fourth essential sound thinking requires the capacity to generalize. How often we have seen men sweating and confused before a mass of details which they were utterly unable to classify and crystallize. We have the problem of sorting out the relevant attaining a perspective and reaching a conclusion that can be defended against any attack. To cer tain minds this procedure comes naturally; to others training in the solution of complicated problems points the way out The Tims for Action Fifth among the essentials of sound thinking is the power to apply. A few Individuals have minds that travel at random or In circles. Some have minds that even refuse to budge. But there are still others who naturally or through training havs minds that can be directed straight through to the practical application of their thoughts. They refuse to compromise or to be thwarted In purpose before definite application of their Ideas has been Remember The Copy Of Agreement The Overland Lumber Company, Brigham City, Utah, desirous of helping to promote the Club worK; also of promoting the sugar beet and dairy industries in Box Elder County, agrees to appropriate FIFTY DOLLARS ($50.00) CASH to be distributed to the boys in these two fields of club worK by the County Agricultural Agent, R. H. Stewart, as follows: 4-- H For Best Beet Project achieved. It la possible, I believe, for young people to train themselves to an Inquisitive attitude, an open mind and First Prize SCHOOL SAVINGS BANKING MOVEMENT REACHES IMPRESSIVE PROPORTIONS Almost 14,000 of America's schools now hare school savings banking plans in operation, and about four million pupils are learning systematic savings through this type of thrift with deposits in excess of $26,000,000, recent reports of the American Bank- ers Associations Savings Bank Dirl-skshow. The schools Included In the reports are attended by 4,609,825 pupils, of whom 1,980,237 are participants In the school savings banking plans as depositors. During the year these pupils received interest in the amount of $947,610 on their deposits. The reports gathered by the association also show that there are 38 cities In the United States In which a full 100 per cent of the grammar school enrollment is participating in school savings hanking. The figures covering high schools show that In 47 cities 100 per cent of the attendance In this class are school savers. n $12.50 7.50 5.00 Second Prize Third Prize the ability to classify and Interpret material step by step from the beginning of a problem to Its final solution and application. Here, then, Is the thought I would leave the paramount need of business is sound thinking. Some may think I have overstated the case, have set too high a standard. They may feel that they are merely cogs in a machine. That too, Is a part of the problem. The only way to solve that Is to find time and place in the day's work for thinking. For Best Dairy Heijl First Prize Second Prize Third Prize The boys who are joining the clubs and giving time and to the worK, will undoubtedly find it energy interesting and profitable. County Agricultural Agent Stewart is to be commended for his Club work. We gladly place $50.00 in cash at Mr. Stewarts disposal, as evidence of our endorsement and an added incentive to the boys. 4-- H 31 TT9FMT?w MAnJ!S AG0 WE PUBLISHED THE ABOVE IN THE BANK AWAITING YOU. COUNTY TELLS US THAT the CONTEST IS GOING TO BE CLOSEWART WTNAYnnTEJrW0RK-- A THE PRIZES. COME ON, FELLOWS BOYS CAN DO. LITTLE EXTRA CARE NOW MAY SHOW EM WHAT BOX ELDER COUNTY 1WW!L oeo INOORORAT rri ii a o A. L. DUNCAN, Manager - D tMT a n d - - Aaaociat BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH |