OCR Text |
Show THE PROVO POST MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1923 THE PROVO PdST HUSBAND COST PRETTY Provo's Popular Newspaper Published Monday, Wednesday ,aad Friday by v MUSICIAN' $100,000 THE POST PUBLISHING COMPANY Phone 13 Entered at the Postoffice at Provo, Utah, as Second-clas- s 125 West Center St. T LAWYERS MORGAN, COLEMAN AND STRAW, CONFECTIONARY J C. O. CHASE, A. C. RANDE, Mgrs. Art, a career and $100,000 held no charms for Josephine Kryl when love I NEPHI C. HICKS Editor and Manager came Into her life and as a result she gave np both and ran away with Paul I Terms to Subscribers : Taylor White, a mtfsician of Boston, 1 By carrier, per month to get married the other day, Six years ago her father, Bohumir By mall In Utah, Idaho, Nevada, andWyoming (In advance), per year 2.40 i 3.00 Kryl, famous Bohemian bandmaster, All other states cornetist and financier, of Chicago, PLANT. ORGANIZATION, COOPERATION-STEE- L spoke to Josephine and her sister, Matter. . j Wants the Steel Plant to Come to ,, . Wants the Steel Plant to Come' to i 1 - ! UTAH COUNTY ! UTAH COUNTY 1 : -- Marie: t , Organization, cooperation organized cooperation this is Take your choice, my what counts in this world of competition. (No one fears unorgan- money or marriage! Dont daughters, marry unized opposition and no one profits from unorganized cooperation. til you are 30 years old and Ill give The man who destructively went thrpugh a field, swatting you $100,000 each. Marry before e that and you won't get a every living thing that came near him, shied around a tree con- cent." taining a hornet's nest." Why dont you swat ijt ? called a friend. Those are not exactly his words, Nothin doing, theyre organized, came the quick reply. but that was the proposition. Now A visitor at the State Mental hospital found his friend, an its gone sky high. Josephine elopes Marie says she did the right employee, alone in a field with fifty patients at work. The follow- and She is to be found today in a thing. ing conversation ensued : Have you a gun ? from the stranger. little flat in Fenway, Boston, putterNo! I can tfhip any one of them. ing around a tiny kitchen and No. Arent you afraid? preOh, crazy paring meals for her musician husMaybe so, but supposin theyd organize against you. band. people dont organize! The story of her turning down the Provo might have some- of that class that doesnt organize, $100,000 and her musical career is an interesting one. but, thank goodness, they are not free to move about in society. The spirit of cooperation organized cooperation that puts MET IN A STUDIO began something like six ye,rs things over is manifest in individuals, firms, and civic organiza- agoIt when Josephine and Marie were sante will that tions. And it is a good omen. It is that bring spirit 16 18 and years old, respectively t the steel plant to Provo. Early in their lives Bohumir directed Thfe voluntary offer of the Provo banql boys to play, free of their attention to music, so by that time Josephine was an accomplished charge, at any function for the purpose of helping buy the steel violinist and Marie was showing un : plant-sitis highly typical of the spirit of cooperation. usual talent on the piano. The voluntary services of the membership council of the Bohumir dreamed of great futures Chamber of Commerce in bringing the1 business men in for dis- for his two daughters, of study abroad and a concert? tour of the cussion also typify the same spirit. world. Then he thought of the pos The pledge of the Rotary and Kiwams, the Elks and the sibility of marriage and decided to Odd Fellows clubs to actively support the plant-sit- e committee, provide against it. He made the breathes of that spirit. proposition .offering the $100,000 to The subscribed ads by local business men appearing in todays each of the girls if they would stay single until they were 30. It looked Post are reflections of organized cooperation. to the daughters. Neither pretty The statement of Professor Pardoe that although the steel one wasgood in men. They acinterested plant would probably not benefit him in the least, yet90he-- would cepted. Plans were made for the furtherbe a scab not to support an industry that would benefit per cent ance of their musical careers. Bohu of the citizens of his town, is a commendable expression of that mir decided to send Josephine to desirable spirit. J under Eugene Ysaye, Belgian And because of the organized cooperation the steel plant will study violinist and director of the Cincin be brought to Provo. The history of industry, society, or commu- nati orchestra. His selection was one of the vanities bears out this fact. of fate which no one underThere is no doubt that the cooperative effort of so many or- garies stands. It so happened that 2000 miles ganizations, towns and states greatly influenced the tentative setP. controversy. away some one else was doing some tlement of the U. P.-selecting. It was Paul Taylor White, Cooperation invited prosperity to most industrial centers. out of Boston. And cooperation made active the talk of great things about a violinist e met at The two road. the for and loop help government studio. brought Timpanogos Ysayes They were attracted. In big things, in little things, in propaganda, in execution, in Long walks followed. Protestations love were made and an engagebuying, in selling, in short in everything, successes attendant of ment ring followed that. upon organized cooperation. MARIE TO GET $200,000 As Provo citizens anxious for the expansion of our city, we Father Kryl was not wholly unare joining hands to bring here one of the greatest industries in aware of his daughters divided interest. He pointed out the folly of the west. allowing love to interrupt an artistic THE STEEL PLANT FOR PROVO is DUR motto. career. But of course, he never sus: dog-gon- -- STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - -- Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. - UNIVERSITY MARKET FLETCHER & THOMAS f EUGENE FLETCHER, Mgr. Wants the Steel Plant to Come to Wants the Steel Plant to Come to ; e, UTAH COUNTY UTAH COUNTY ; , j VVe have subscribed our quota to the $150,000 to bring it here. -- We haye subscribed our quota to STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - -- the $150,000 to bring it here. STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. Tabernacle Come to the Mass Meeting in the i MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. BUCKLEY & HAWS, PLUMBERS SANITARY MEAT MARKET. . ! S. pupils-to-b- j Wants the Steel Plant to Come to UTAH COUNTY pected that Josephine would get her- self engaged. The $100,000 prevent- that, he thought: "weddiiTdate AtwicoP on (jed theof tne proposition from father the vows were made. went to Chicago. Josephine un- der pretext of going to a dentist met among1 pedestrians due to traffic violations Has continued him mjuries at- the station and they were to increase. There is a line of appeal to the sane and cautious driver and Siand osphrwasTheVife oa pedestrian and we wonder if perhaps many would not favor the .'faculty member of the New England adoption of such a plan locally. There is something about a night conservatory of music in Boston, or a week or two weeks in jail that drives hofne the violation of Bhu"ljF Krytas0.f?gQryAcdfrnm law with more reality than parting with a fewjsuperflous shekels, him ButheTs working in her little At any rate the results in Los Angeles substantiate such argument, flat and practicing and intends to Almost 300 jail sentences were meted out by Judge Chambers show t- father that she can have a ca- - FRANK SPECKART, President Wants the Steel Plant to Come to We have icribed -- quoi t UTAH COUNTY the $150,000 to brings it here We have subscribed our quota to the $150,000 to bring STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - STEEL MEETING TONIGHT it here. 1 , - j ! . and his associates before automobile traffic violators were . .. . , vinced that he was really in earnest. he harfnSele Wnte'tor her He Of this number, more than twenty offenders spent Thanksgiv- - gets Josephines extra 100,000 it she itlg day in jail. (doesnt marry until she is 30. But That the plan adopted by Judge Chambersjwas fully justified she says Josephine did just right to m.arry Paul an,d u.may be that B?b" and necessary was shown by official records kf the city traffic mir wont get to give away any of his bureau. During the first five days of November there were 681 accumulated wealth. smashups in the streets of Los Angeles and 999 persons were in-- 1 jured, several fatally. Forty-fou- r persons werje injured in forty- - From. NeWSie to three accidents over the week-enTwo hundred and seventy-si- x United States Senator accidents in a single day during the five-da- y pe iod were officially reported. the l7th Ugaration of the sys- - poS'unUeTIta.ef senIxoS tem ?ATbert6' of fines, only 118 aqcidents and the in- - Michigan, was born in Chatham, On- jury of eighteen pedestrians were reported, On that tario, 50 years ago. Reputed to have of many millions, he startthree traffic cases were before the court. One man drew fivedays a fortune in jail, another one day, and when the third violator failed to ap- ed his career as a newsie on a passenger train. In 1903 he became aspear a bench warrant was issued for his arrest. sociated with Ford as book Under the system of straight fines traffic statistics show that keeper. When Henry he severed his connec arrests for speeding in Los Angeles have been ikteadily increasing tion with the company in 19i5 he president and treasurer, for more than two years, and the record of pedestrians injured dur- wasMr.vice Couzens first public office was showed that a very heavy increase. period ing that of police commissioner, to which During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1922, there were 8066 he was appointed in 1916. He was arrests for speeding and a total of 4501 miscellaneous arrests first elected mayor of Detroit in 1918, his last year was by During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1921, a total of 24,412 and the votes, 30,000 largest majority pedestrians were injured. This number had increased to 35,290 at ever given a mayoralty candidate the end of the following fiscal year, and for the twelve months end- there. ing November 30 of 1922 the total number of had mounted forA proposal sponsored by the mayor the purchase of the Detroit United to 40,817. The record for October alone was injured 4079 and 4174 were lost by a few votes in Railway 9Yemer Vehicular fatalities often exceeded thirty in 1.9 1 9. Helines then obtained authority of a Single montn. the voters to build a municipal sys- Reckless driving must stop, declared Judge Chambers at the tem, and after this was well under the purchase of the opening of the court on the fifth day of his campaign. If these way negotiated owned and consoliprivately do not terms diminish the number of traffic law violators and dated it with thesystem jail new city lines. eventually curb speeding on city streets I will increase the period The consolidation went into effect of imprisonment to a point where the desired effect will be in May, 1922, and Detroit became the Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. - con-!re- e, 1 d. CHAS. H. WARD, GENERAL CONTRACTOR j Wants the Steel Plant to Come to dafter on THE HEBER TRAIN By Alf Osmond to a like word or two about the Heber Id besay cause the critics, not a few, have given me a pain. Train, They say it runs so bloomin slow, that they would ruther walk but they say it jumps the track and spills the people and tries to use our Brother Mack to feed some rainbowout, trout. But Harry Sharp and- Brother Young and Peters husky son had orto have their praises sung for all that they have done. Youll wander far to find a star that shines with brighter light than him who runs the Heber carthe darkest kind of night It keeps me diggin purty hard to pay my Wildwood fare, but I enjoy each foot and yard of travel up to there. Yes, I seem young and silly to you fellers what complain but may Im not a Weary Willie that dislikes the Heber Train. - largest city operating its own traction Mr. Couzens won the reputation of a free giver through numerous gifts to the citys institutions. The community fund receives from him annually $100,000. He has established numerous homes and settlement houses. His largest gift was early this year, when he pledged $5,000,-00- 0 to a childrens hospital, which is to treat crippled children from all parts of the state without cost. system. The Nobel peace prize has been awarded Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, noted Norwegian explorer. He was prominent in Russian relief work during the famine of 1921. Dr. Nansen is professor of oceanography at- Christiania university. He has announced that he will devote the money awarded him in fostering his International task of promoting a brotherhood of - WOOD-CLIFTONC- Wants the Steel Plant to Come to UTAH COUNTY UTAH COUNTY -- STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- -- Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. LARKIN-GOAT- ES MORTUARY OB. C. H. CARROLL Wants the Steel Plant to Come to Wants the Steel Plant to Come to UTAH COUNTY : -- STEEL MEETING TONIGHT Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. GEORGE W. GOATES, Mgr. We have subscribed our quota to O. the $150,000 to bring it here. UTAH COUNTY STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- -- Come to the Mass Meeting in the Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7:30 P. M. STEEL MEETING TONIGHT- - Come to the Mass Meeting inthe Tabernacle MONDAY, JANUARY 22, AT 7: - 30 nations. A, . , P.M. |