Show r - trhe 43alt 1913 11 February I C WPA Writers Find Ne-Provost Data L: " ' a' ! By Eva E Hollis ) The 'Utah NI P A writers' program completed its work with the publication cf "Provo: Pioreer Mormon City" (Binfords and Mort Portland Ore) a fine companion volurne to the "Utah Guide" compiled by the same pro:ect in 1911 While the center cf reference is always Provo there are so many stra4ricis of incidental history and related slibjects explored that the book as restricted in scope as the title might indicate Perhaps the most important chapter from the viewpoint of the general reader is that on Etienne Provost the Frenchman for whom the city i5 named A gr-rdeal of new information was unearthed by Dale Morgan Grace Vinklernan and their coI llatorators‘ regarding the role Provost played in the exploration of the Western Itockies To h:rn and not Jim Bridger may go the credit for discovering the Great Salt lake At any rate here Provost long legendary becomes an historical figure with verifiablel exploits It was toward the close of the 1S20'5 that the Utah Lake region was first visited by Provost Ashley Bridger and others (some 50 years after Escalantel bi!t the beginnings of a settlement date from 1C19 and the Utah Mission" which erected a fort east of Utah lake and eyp:ored the val:ey with a view to its use as a stock range The Battle Creek Indian war the famous "exodus" from Salt Lake City before Johnson's army with the growth of a community from a handful of huts to the present flourishing city all are recorded Many excellent illustrations and a useful index make this the definitive work on Provo: but more than that it is a full d7currientation of one segment of western history—G S rt ' lonreed Lauritzen Utah author of "rlfrou's in the Sun" not'el of southern Utah background t i ' I e 'i 1 4-4- ' '' ':'i yr ' ' ' ' ' '" - ''' 7 ' !: ' :::::::' : '' ' 2 ' ri '" ' -- '' i i - '' nr-- - - ?:!! 4 e 44 ! - t :'4 '''''''''''''' :: W: : " --- : -o ' Y q" '''''''- - "'4 ' 't cr- - '''''?ek!"3"' :i :SSA1' :g 'i I ' : 4 e ::: z: ' ' : :: ''' ' - ' -' '''''' ''"" - - ' ''':" ''!" - ''" t' - - :: " ‘:':--"-- - - : ''''' 64:"' ''' ' :' ' -- -- s :: - '''''' :'':'' -'- - : 1 : '14 ':-- - ' :' '' l::' : - - : ' ''''' ''' ':'7-:'- : ' ' 7 :: ' s::: - 1 i 47 ' ::' 1 1 - -- '''"4-4--""'-"'''''4-1-- ' --- - -- ':: - ' :: : 1 ' '" : 4 t J 7: s : I '''2 g : is — z : I Aitdilk-5W- Lauritzen from McKendriclh - '"' ' yol 9' S Don't !et shoe rationing worry you! Let us show you how you can still have a smart stylish shoe wardrobe for all the family McKendrick shoes are first in styling but more important they have the inbuilt quality that gives you wear and wear and wear You'll find dress-up- ! every type every style for street sports and - i - ' !' '': 1:1 - ' V-Oie- 1 : '''t ' '1 :ks :IN 't''f 1 - ' e Black or Brown Polished Calf Pump t Smart and 5 for kiny 3carcrcbe r-- -4 S 1I it doesn't lock it t7ut Erest 'titlt t y throuhout 050 N t - t - 41 1 I This smart sandal For extra special dress-u- p has months of extra wear built into it $795 E:ue hack or brown - 1 -- ''''''''' '''4 I S 11 FOOTREST SHOES NN FOUR-SPO- " ' A— B4 Casistoo &boorts the aback& 2— New Roiled tarot ao Song Etoolaat '!! aide kolsoaes siva poem boa 8t I - ': : i $ w ' 7 95 - 't Mk INTO inmik by 1 il I! - -- N iJ "The House A Vo 111 i1!1 ii ilm'i 1! I : ii 'Ili THE WHOLE by Helen Howe low rt ''0 - Quality" c Put !er froiiins 121 fro c t S that will charm you ' when you Ilrl and Your W II ill g rayon With and '' I 'Wk:sk I - - " 3 24 South Main q 0 1 xV 7) ( 1 1 " ti &X 1jit A $ - -- t ( — - ''' 40ti - ':y 1 lf l i ' 4 cce3 4 I I k 5r 7 1 II tt - 11110)1! t4 r E I I HI I - s 4 " ' s0 44 — !11!!:!L! '1 ' 1iIty4'1lc 71 lhiLli!Ili11h11:!111J1111!Iih!IL1111111111I1111' I :i' - l'''ll'Ilit''llir !1111! ' i 11 T t kis 0- " ? t '614 "4it?-Z- e hti StPigyr comp Iteh) t ri I in ES Ell) C 0N Y et'r A-- - ' p I ena t"'!' Outstanding New ' t -- 'iiilit C? ( 'I sA g(LAs 4 ( : --- " :- 4"'""Af: 114 7)i ik'' z - I -- - )-- I 7- ''' - c ' 1 : u505-3'- 17 390 - eti ''Y f' - -- ''' ' i ' t - r k 11 't 11 f V- ''' - ' 4 4 -:v 11 4' 4 - j s44- 1v L --1 I World Almanac 85c CHANGE 79th Year Hours - 1 t- I 1 ::': 'i' - !!!! i L'I ' ' HIJI f :' t !Will' t! i! - o 00kr J0 t ' 1' 11'H11111'litl! — t t t 'i !I ill!l'i 111i ill l' !rid: ' t !I t : ' ' t t 4 I ' S t $ ' 0040L !' l'Oill LI 'l 1:11'111"'''' 4 i::-7- " 1 cA v:14( 1 1 rte 10N't 4° c:'11k I k C ' irce Vb ‘et20c0 i'l'!' - c) - t ' 1 ''I'l hi L T11!1!' 11! ki --i - i - --- -: I ' c - !i1J1111111: - - - - :— - ':':' iiLIill000AAi -- - -- t t -- k' - i I "- - ::' - o o o :::' ffl t o - :ii4172 It 11 11 ill to 6 7 11Stallkec: it1D0SlineellTnitItaattSri:i1T11711:laaSSVt:e1110:: IT AT 10 1 1 nnointment ' l'il Lined vi- - ' t LI tooks—ThIrd Floor gaily ht Books for 1943 t al( e you :T: r dress' shirtwaist tical details slenderizing love its' and feel of it the just-rig- nd 2 50 :1 every throu g h this pracchoose pacUed (lay ou'll ' Baldwin will that i Navy Boys v Adventures South Through South Richardcon 350 America Here Is Alaska Evelin Seianson 250 Rubinstein's Chess Masterpieces 100 Games 250 Washington USA Faith you're- I a froelt looUing for 1 0t t 2 75 Divine The Knapsack Book ifurnofous for the Service Marl Sailors n Boots A'er Gard for 1105013 - ' w Neut(' Dstiny of Men Reinhold Neibuhr 275 Th Greatest Stories of All Time Teer of To!es! W Somerset 249 Maui3ham Th Germnt of God John C Merriam 200 Firedraltc Th Destroyer Who Wouldn't Giv Up A D f t filirtr I ' f f ID) the World Asia Treasury of the -- ' t t TERING of r Th - I il: - 4 L ) : - speaking t:::'jrkv 141:Inirrnri 11 7 f - I St! t14 " 1 '''-- I r 4 i '13 -: 7 ' II lt) :i''' li - AA : t tl '' - - 'N t lap Li - ': Pennoys Third Floor ":::!:: rter A - - ' : t i II It 1 ''411 e - : i N 2 - : Y14 ' - - - 1 1!111f'rt:!1:!f1Ii'1!!:!!!!'1!':'1!'!"'"!1'11!'ll'In:!!!!1:111'111'111:111'1"'''" l iVnI lNI21) drieJ i- - "" iI : t11 n - Sop ol ' 0r skirt for your date dress! Margaret da tne—Tamtin y Gold —Nnhnile'a Vineyard Etheiii—itelia for the tel' tilinitn –"Pays litcall Siller —Echo at a Bomb Sullivan—Tian-1Cann to Ville Niarle Ttinh4—All-ArnericaVenning —Murder Through the Looking Gla!4s Verissinto—Cromeroads 1E550 Niebuhr ' " 1 tj ') - i i under ails- - A II l by Reinhold r mof—: 5-- blouse peg-to- p -' :4 — or '1 ft 0" A 1 1( '- "- 1 - I: 't' ' e--- i 44 ''' - -— 1 i - ' -'4- 0 1 "saw- - 1' - ' -- ' o I i :L5 1 1 DTERSETINNIATCO'RFEMAN i-- 1- - N t jerseys draped 1 o P 111-11- '1'(::it--rV--' - - - I a 1A4r‘- ': ' I friends when You wear them! ITN- rety and soft textured as a spring crocus! Cl200Se one of these dashin il - t ' ' ‘'''i ' : see thern - 11I - t "Itib: r 44 zt I S250 Biddle :: i ( 4: IC ::'nehanting II i and a piano quartet will Lewis Farr are soloists Eye natt Intim iik N4-11 aritA El 'II- I 111 A n1rlean Wooden Ware rould - k:Ary II a rmer ar 1iendr4on -- Teat t tKook of the Principles and Practice of Nursing ed—Elementary Foundry Hartley Teerinology at War ltmingwav--M- en nom Shel and Tirnher Structurca Ii torrt Ulf) - Out itne Gr of PolitiCal ogrpny McFarland — Ship's ititsinese M Ann— Turning Point Richardson— MiVrtiture South Seliwartz—Mernoirs of Sly People of Flignt Shiella—Prnciples Strasser & stern—Flight From Terror Untermeyer ed—Treasury of Great Prrns Wilder—Out of the Blue Zirn—Submarines Fiction 3900 MR JUSTICE by Francis -- f A If J''' t I r be presented p m in the ballroom the Training —The Lost Pesee — 11brson I'vri'8 SHORT STORIES FROM 15 THE NEW YORKER Q - HEART - 4 A': 4 1 i f Ill" t )4 fr''t' n il sAvii I1 iI e 7 1111:16 7ti' ) ‘ i' - 7"-- in -- P worsen FIRING : LE Z90 iitlh II win rim - Electrical Funda mentals troruza-laniI I S250 r t Albert - ' i i 111111h il the Eighteenth first program series of University of Utah's Sunday afternoon "At Home" Sun-M- A thr11 $200 A 'Art - FS H1111:1111 I COMITIIIMC:141"11 squAD by Frederick Hazijit Brennan I of TO MEMO k" -- K endrick's 1I !l miNceilaneou aRa0m0eTsSstreetS275 41 Ill Mc 11'1liiIIIII ilit The following books will be added to the public library Monday: VALLEY TILE John a -- With Dr' Llewellyn R McKay as chairman for the occasion - Timely Selections for Your Enjoyment 0 - 111 II Sunday Opens T' Concerts be Serenad Les Predidem At Public Library falo New York Cincinnati Little Rock Ark Dallas Texas Los Angeles and other California cities TAbPv " I 1111iIii !1! NeW I3ooks Added Ills itinerary will take the organist to Toronto Canada Buf- Hersey c7 1:3 '3: Ili transcendental order" Assisting will Cornwall pianist A male ensemble be featured and June R Hickman Alexander Schreiner tabernacle organist is leaving Thursday on a national concert tour under direction of Bernard R La Berge New York manager' First of his organ concerts will be given under auspices of Teachers college Omaha Neb to be followed by a concert at University of Minnesota Minn ri' i0 JERASE li - r-- l i Tribune: "Mr Schmitz's pianism is and always has been of a tor - National Key Greek Nationai Anthem In Bohemia Ha dIF overture Symphony No 5 in C minor Hettitoyeet op 67 eon brio Allegro Andante con mote Scherzo Finale IN'TERMIF4SION Three American Indian Melodieei Transtribed by Helen Hdbers Mediterranean Psahoa-Vrtc:le- n A Us TEL ll 11 l Ill 11 Lill McCune School of Music and Art on Thursday at S p in Ile will play excerpts and selections from the music of J S Bach Probably no composer's music has been so universally practiced by students as has that of this great' master' Mr Schmitz is acknowledged to be one of the great interpreters of Bach music Virgil Thompson 4 - "Mediterranean Serenade—will ic ' comFamous Foot Rest shoe? with built-i- n "four-spot- " will givIe Ties and pumps and spectators that fort have now must and wear the you you smartness it !Willi escchinniliglaure't:11::!'t11111 e'-'- - IC— Metatarsal Cookies snit Slake roar step Light &ad buoy-sit- - - COMFORT T 1 & have first performance here program follows: Complete Anthem Star-Spangl- ed Pan-Hellen- : --- 1: lijlililili'llIl Il Hill alwl I I interna- stdg -'' lilllITIPIIiIrli 101Hill SChMAZ Win GlVe Seminar pianist - by Mr Vtionides—"Three American Indian Melodies" arid the first time a Salt Lake City audience will hear an orchestral version of the Greek national anthem to follow performance of "The Banner" religious and civic organizations are taking active part in making this program a significant occasion American music also will have Boha prominent role--"Iemia" the irresistible overture written by Henry Hadley of grateful memory selected to open the program Two works pices of the management Doug- las O Woodruff manager The program is to be given by the university men's glee club Professor Thomas Giles direc- Wide Tour Set By Schreiner -4- 4- :: Open Mondays Until 9 p m t -l- I Sgtiii:::inea'anhisiniYislispecionnTd - - ' ' day at beauty c - 4 Smart New "Tweedie" Sandall t i per- - e r-'- "r7--1- il i presents suasively and the youth a figure fully realized Fine First Book It iis not ao with all his characters and such an incident as Sigor's impulsive abduction of the mischievous Lesia is less than convincing But he tells a moving significant story and Sigorls battle with the eagle and his adventure with the Colorado make exciting pages "Arrows Into the Sun" is an exceptionally fine first novel which also carries assurance that its author will do even better things Jonreed Lauritzen grew up in the shadows of the Vermillion cliffs on wild remote plateaus between Utah's border and the ' ' -t'-Grand C2nyon on and ily sheep cattle open range: and the region's wild beauty put its mark on him His life has been varied grim tragic sometimes squalid wearily monotonous: but his early desire to exnre- t 1:1 zr" en(1 never left him This book is the achievement of that "to mirror as vvell asaspiration I can the exalting of my country" Your Ration! i I 4 r N:- m - - 1 1I 'r i 1 - -- - ' 4A44' A' "07: 4: r'I'!' r:41:ti: " ' ' er thlasi! ' :' ' f 4 1"k' e 4' i ::: ' 1' 7' ' ''':' - vr-I 'i 473')eeil :''-i' ' '4 ' ' :: - 't' ' ' l v'' ' V! '- -4 ' ' i s'i - '''' L4 ' :::4 ''''' - ' '''''''' : '1:' ''i:: A A- '' - e''!to- - '' ' 4' ''' - - ' ":ky' ''' ''' t- 4 - ''''t' : 44: A l'AZ 'r''' :2 :'''' ' " ' 1:'- 2 rt- - Aee - -A-' A''i ' :14't4' '''''''Eq's''''- 4' ''''4'iq ' ' Beginning Is Grief Sigor was a boy of le) out with the sheep when a band of Ute- r struck the Na'- ajo camp and his mother Nijoni the Beautiful was among the slain After "there was no tea- son to live W'ithout Nijoni there was nothing" Then his father had come and taken him away to find if there might be happi- ness for the boy in the white l man Dennis Julian phil- who has learned the osopher l way of being alone standing between two worlds accepting the good in each knows the Navajo life is finished with the white man's trail spreading over the west Sigor's first encounter with white men's civilization in the posse led by brutal Captain Dru- ''' Ban is not propitious but in a little Mormon village of the Vir- gin river region he finds friend- ship in the brash youth Cory and the girl Hallie kind and lovely But Sigor cannot under- stand the emotion Hallie rouses nor that the girl too may be ory of her IIncreases the warfare within him rising to wreck a very real chance of happiness that promised An alien among the whites neither can Sigor find peace with his Dine people feeling only dis- gust with himself when lest they term him coward he joins a raiding party against the Utes though this raid brings him the Girl with whom he feels a sense of completeness Nor is there contentment with his father 'in the solitude of the canyon This conflict of blood within Sigor - 8' i'!- ''' P:A- 17 711r ' ' ' 'ti :4 i k '"' - - : 4 ' ' ' vinaquint" ' Cf'-'' j- k :ii142--! r ' : ''--'-'- ?14CI'''''-'''' - '':' '''' '' i: :' - - '''' lr ' Ai' f' : - -- -- - - '':- '''' i ' -“- ISI---- p"' I '" : ' f- -- " - -- -- 501- ' - é 'II - - I -"- $ '4-$ s - "- - pianist-composwho added to his popularity with Utah music lovers with his appearance with the great violinist Joseph Szigeth during the week is to appear in concert with the Brigham Young university orchestra on February 25 He has previously played as guest soloist with the orchestra and was visduring iting artist and instructor annual the third and fourth B Y U music festivals In 1941 and 1942 The Hungarian pianist a native of Budapest is just completing" a highly successful concert tour of the southwest winning enthusiastic notices Professor LeRoy J Robertson will direct the B Y U orchestra at Mr Foldes' appearance I Ile has been a member of Ithe university faculty since ta21 and the orchestra under his direction IlaN W011 11111Ch 8CCI:1 IIIII comparing favorably it is said with any university orchestra of the country ed will to - i r ': - fi 4 - ' ' ' - ' r ' ' '''' tr-- -- ' i ''' ! ' ' ' Of popular nature and timeliness will be the program which has been arranged for presentation by the 1rtah State Symphony orchestra at Kingsbury hall Tuesday at 8:30 p m under direction of the noted Cretan conductor Christos Vrionides Dedicated to the heroic Greek nation the Beethoven Fifth Symphony known as the "Victory Symphony" has been chosen to prophesy the ultimate triumph of the United Nations For PROVO — Andor Fo Ides not- I !W5e9: z 1 f kt dealt with the early conflict between white man and Indian we know of none who has written with more insight into the problems of the man in whom Indian blood mixes with the white creating a divided allegiance than - : - Mr Lauritzen has done in his story of Sigor born of a white father a mother part Spanish Navajo Certainly there is part none who has so steeped himself in the beauty and grandeur of the country which is his locale This background of Sigor's story a strange land of great gorges Painted Desert mighty cliffs the land where Utah and Arizona meet is brushed in with a power and vividness that bespeak Mr Lauritzen's intimacy with it His lines bring up the picture: "The sheer red walls of the Vermillions followed them for some miles and then withdrew and the shafts of the Tumurru sprung up from their talus and stood like ready warriors in closed rank their feet in the green cottonwoods of the No- died but in the rhythmic beauty of its Nvri t ng in descriptive passages of sheer poetry Of the few novelists who have "Arrows Into the Sun" (Alfred A Knopf New York by Jon reed Lauritzen discloses a new Utah talent a distinctive talent that will—of this one is sure—reflect much credit on the state The book 's distinction lies not only in the understanding with which its matter the struggle of- a youths part Navajo part white is han- -' -- : Literary Editor - Orchestra Concert Symbolic of Times Foldes Plays At Provo On Feb 25 Significant Novel in Sensitive Prose Marks Utahn's Literarv Debut Zrribttne SuiTity Morning ' - : - |