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Show JUAB COUNTY TIMES, NEPHI. UTAH i THE Palace Barber Shop WILSON STANDS Winn Huildinjr Main Street and New everything Firat Claas Work Courteoua Traatmant to all BEHIND Up-to-d- hoa ihin tand and bath tub In eonneetlos. AGENT FOR PROVO STEAM LAUNDRY ROBERT LOMAX, Proprietoi MARSHALL Choice of Progressives PRESIDENT ADVISED DELEGATES OF HIS CHOICE FOR RUNEx-Presid- NING MATE. 1 Lawrence A. Miner ATTORNEY AT LAW Notary Public Venice Bid. NEPHI, UTAH of Third Party. for Secretary Baker Glvea tial Boomleta Setback When He Mkea Known Wlthea of President Regarding Marehall. Vlce-Preside- St. h, Mcknight orncE Dr. John M. Parker Vice-Preside- Louis. That President Wilson is thoroughly satisfied, with Thomas R. Marshall as and de sired his reuomtnation was made' evi dent on Tuesday when Secretary COUNTY ATTORNEY Newton D. Baker, the president's ATTORNEY AT LAW personal representative, arrived here bearing the president's draft of the IN COURT HOUSE platform. NEPHI, VTAH There had been several prominent Democrats who had enjoyed tond hopes of being chosen to make the . race with President Wilson, the re port having been circulated that DENTIST Marshall would be thrown Office norms No. 6 and 7, Venice In the discard when it came noml-latin- g Theatre Building. time. rePhone No. 123-- J These various Utile boomlets ceived a serious setback, however, upon the arrival of Secretary Baker, I CO TO THKI who made it known to all who cared MODERN BARBER SHOP to listen, that President 'Wilson desired the distinguished gentleman Far PI rat Claaa Ward from Indiana to again go before the W make a fpcrlnlty of Electric Scalp and Faea people of the nation as a candidate MAH8AOK 8ath and Shoe Khlnlnf Btaod lo Conneetioa for booms and boom-lets- , alehalor Bros., Pre pa. Venice Theatre Bid. around which most of the p reconvention fights have centered, wilted away under influence of the personal message from the White House. Manufacture that ever-lastiSecretary Baker also effectively disHand-mad- e boom Harness posed of the (n his own behalf, which had attained Old Harness and Saddle repaired rood a nei prominence In the belief In some quarIealln Uimta, Saddle. Hrtdlea and ters that Mr. Marshall lacked genNarajo Blank ela. uine administration support. "The president Is for the renonilna-'.Ioof Marshall," was the emphatic statement from Secretary Baker upon his arrival with the GEORGE GARRETT. Proprictac platform draft substantially complete and written largely. It not wholly by All Kinds of Home Cured he president himself. "So far as I know," Mr. Baker anand Fresh Meats nounced, "the president baa not any other nonmlnee. Aa to tba Refrigerator Kept in movement started In my behalf, I am Business being; run on cash basis, for Mr. Marshall. I am here aa a enables ua to well at very lelegate from Ohio. 1 ran In a popureasonable price. lar primary pledged to support Mr. Marshall and obviously could not alCourteoua Treatment to all low myself to be considered-- " "The president's own" draft of the lattorm a single copy waa delivered by Mr. Baker to Senator Stone f Missouri, chairman of the reactions committee. Little change In t Is anticipated and Mr. Baker said be came here aa the means of VETERINARIAN between the) committee, .lie convention and the president. Mr. NEPHI :: :: UTAH Wilson wrote his draft after freouent ?onsultatlon with leaders at Washington, and Is said to have typewrit-eGraduate Veterinary College it bimaelf and sent the only copy o SL Louis by Secretary Baker. University of Pennsylvania The platform dwells principally "on ieace, preparedness for peace and PHONK 117 prosperity." Tha principal planks deal with the Diseases of domestic animals treated tdmlnlslratlon's trials and achievements In ' handling International and Mexican affairs, Its rapid and deliber-U- e steps toward "prepareOnexa for OODBTBOVa TBSUTKBWT AND lea re" and the administration's recTOUT CLASS W9 ord of economic and industrial legislation contributing to general prosA. NIELSON. Proprietor perity. Two Doora South of Lunts' miarmac Despite agitation by s"me Imo-rratlleaders. President Wilson Insertion of a prank critiLivery and Feed cizing nomination of a supreme court a lust Ice for president or favoring ua Meata All Traloa. :onnUtullonal amendment prohibiting Ba4 Jo Ispeeee lustlces from seeking other public Llarr Riga. Drey Wagon a. federal offices. The president desired adoption of a AroU lor Coal Phono Ua. No. aa-fplatform so progressive that it will M D.OOLPSBsTOVGH. rraarlaaaa appeal to and attract members of the an Progressive party, hut without open, direct Invitation to the Progressives to swing their strength to the Democratic ticket Secretary Baker also brought Information the aggressive regarding campaign planned In behalf of Mr. Phone No. 3 IV .tom.a BUf. Wilson. Spell binding will be IU principal feature, the country to be covered by prominent Democratic ora lore. Vice President Marshall, Hecre-"ar- j VV. Baker, Secretary Ijine and Senator James of Kentucky, scheduled Optometrist & Jeweler lor permanent convenllo t rhalrroan. nd Representative Claw) Kitchln of Located With Nephi Drug Co. North Carolina, Iemocratlc leader of Eyes Tested and Classes Fitted the house, will be the orators, most relied upon. Other prominent camWatches and Spectacles Repaired paigners. It Is expected, will be SenIewls, Mollis, Keed and Owen - THE PLACE WITH A GUARANTEE ators with an array of others from boti senste and house. j, Will be Standard Bearer ent A. BOOTH Vice-Preside- nt. Chicago, June 10. In the closing hours of a four-dasession, Theodore Roosevelt was nominated for president by the Progressive national convention, the colonel being chosen without opposition. John M. Parker, of Louisiana, was the unanimous choice of tha convention for But It Is by no means certain that Colonel Roosevelt will make the race for the presidency on the Progressive ticket. Three minutes before the convention adjourned until another time. y rule which permits the national committee to fill vacancies on the ticket. There was a chorus of "noes" from over the hall, but It was lost In the explanations of those who stood upon the platform that this was but a perfunctory thing done at ail national conventions to provide for "death or other casualties." It was adopted then Immediately. The communication from Oyster Bay, known to all leaders for at least an hour it waa presented, was read to the convention In a moment of tense, The dramatic silence. Have You a Little Singer in Your Home a little boy or girl who hums or sings at play? A child with a natural gift for MUSIC perhaps a GREAT gift? Then take care not to SPOIL his or her chances of becoming a great musician. Have in your home a piano whose TONE IS TRUE one that will train the child correctly. be-for- Hallet & Davis Pianos have a reputation of three-quarte- aaaSSaSanBatanaMb of a century for Purity of Tone and Perfect Construction. The great musicians Liszt, Strauss and a host of others have praised it. Buy no piano until you have investigated the fa.'et & Vais. Resonable in price and delivered in your home wherever you are on convenient terms. -- t. Ostler & Allen Write for beautiful FREE ng City Meat Co. Vice-Preside- rs J ( ii 1 7 " ; fc,-- ' ) .. X v --JS v. , , ..... ZzStel&zS -- 1 Catalog-t- o " TP'-- "OLDEB THAN THE STATE Or UTAH" HAD EVERYTHING IN ORDER WEAR UNIFORMS OF PAPER d up-to-d- Dr. J. G. IRONS I n n City Barber Shop d Stable t. Dr. Charles Dunn jP ENTIST Nephi LEWIS W. "H Builds Wisely Who Build. Weir TO BUILD WELL USE Ncphi Plaster Has No Equal 1 The Largest aod Purest natural deposit of Gypsum in the World. Nephi totta & Mfg. Co. Crated Creek Runs Amuck. acliondon. Berllnn newspapers, cording to a Berne dispatch to tha Morning Post, state that the British Hampshire was sank by a Oerman submarine. Letcher la Promoted. Marion Letcher, forWashington mer consul at Chihuahua, Mexico, has been made acting chief of the sUte foreign lraie advisory department bureau, succeeding CharPw A. Holder, who resigned. Diplomats Need Mere Money. Washington. Secretary tensing baa asked for i'aM-- t tot support allowances to diplomatic at foreign capitals, explaining that Increased rot of living makes this necessary. c"r' "Good aermons" for hla funeral at a aermon were ordered by H. 8. Moyer, who died here on January 21, and whoae will was filed for probate the other day, a Reading (Pa) correspondent of the New York Herald writes. All the provisions In the will were carried out to the letter Mr. Moyer left a large estate and he made eleven amall bequests to churches, colleges, orphanages and cemetery companies. He named the kind of coffin be wanted and the text of hi funeral aermon. The hymns were specified. One waa "My Faith Looks Up to Thee." Two clergymen were named. In caae one became 111 or refused to preach the aermon for 12.50 a substitute wa provided. Mr. Moyer named hla pallbearers and the undertaker and directed that hla body should be kept for six days, to make sur that he waa dead, before burial. $2.60 to-b- c Conscious of Approaching Dsath Man Selected HI Pallbearer and Officiating Clergyman. Chairman Raymond Robins read to gavel fell with a last hang, almost ai them a brief message from Oyster it was finished. Bay In which Mr. Roosevelt declined o accept the nomination at this time. Out of Politics. Says Colonel. thousands In the vast '( of thesorr Oyster Bay. N. Y. fV'ben Colonel of whom bad seen Roosevelt summoned the newspaper auditorium, the colonel named In an even wilder correspondents to Sagamore Hill at ( bunt of enthusiasm four, years ago, o'clock Saturday night he told them he realised when Robins rapped his had tentatively refused the Progresgavel at 4: St and declared the con- siva nomination for tha presidency, vention adjourned sine die, that la a and that ha bad nothing to add to few hours, or a few weeks, they what he had said In bla telegram to might be a party without the on the convention at Chicago In regard leader to whom they bad come to to his present position. Chicago lo give the pledge of loyalty II told something, however, of the and faith. steps which led up to hi messsga The significance of Colonel Roose- earlier In the dsy suggesting that Revelt's message with Its ananuncement publican and Progressives unite on that If tha Progressive national com Senstor Cabot Lodge a a comprotnit'e found tba subsequent state- mise candidate. At 4 o'clock Saturments of Charles Rvans Hughes, the day morning, ho said on Republican Republican standard bearer, to Its lik- and two Progressive conferee on the of tha Pro- Joint conference ing, his committee called gressiva nomination should stand as him over tb long distance telephone bla last word, waa lot la that tired to explain the situation as It then throng, worn out by its own enthu- stood. siasm, by long delays over peace parColonel Roosevelt Informed them at leys with the Republicans sad by the that time that he Intended to suggest discussion of a platform on which H the Joint nomination of Senator must go Into the fi;d. if at all, Lodge. AM three conferee, he aaid, rgalnst both the forres of Democracy seemed at that time to be agreed that and Republicanism. such a step would be satisfactory. He None of the feeling that some of declined to name the them later betrayed whea they had member of the committee, Republican ether than opportanity to digent the eoSonel'e to asy be had been a supporter of Jusstatement, had time to flare out when tice Hughes. Ibe gavel fell. Tbey trooped out Into On Sunday Theodore Roosevelt Chicago's streeta for home, while the that he was "out of politics." band played faintly and the flags that "I want to tell yo newspaper men," had flaunted so proudly through all he said, "trwt hi of no nose for you the stormy sessions were folded and to com t.a here to see me. 1 will the banners pat away. have nothing to say. 1 will ansnwer Before they left the sail the dele- no questions. So please don't ask gates remembered one of the essen- me to. 1 am out of politics." tials of a campaign, in response to If the former president ha any the spnr of the leaders they promised plans for the Immediate future other more than tfl.ooo to csrry on the than to continue his literary work, fight It wss pledged la enthusiasm, he haa not made them public. and the contributions tumbled In alColonel Roosevelt attended church most as fast as they could be re- services In the vitiate Sunday aftercorded noon with Mr. Roosevelt, but reTha only protest of the day csme a mained In seclusion at Sagamore Hill few minutes before the leaders real the rest of the day. The telegraph from the Colonel wires Saturday night and Sunday annoancemetit Roosevelt when William Fllnn of brought a flood of message to Cot I ittbi'g proposed the aloptioa of a tonel Roosevelt. WU-lla- Japanese and Ruaalan Soldier Find the Material Warm and Ssrvlca-ablbut It Can't Be Waahed. a, Both Japaneee and Russian aoldler are wearing paper clothe. "Kami-ko,- " aa paper clothing la called In Japan, Is made of the real Japaneae paper manufactured from mulberry bark. The paper ha little "size" la It, and, though soft and warm, a thla layer of allk wadding I placed between two sheets of the paper, and the whole Is quilted. Japaut-a- a aoldler realized the value of thla kind of clothing when they had to weather a Siberian winter, but It only drawback la that It I not washable. A company In Yokahoma la supply ing large quantities of paper shirts to the Russian army. They state, says the American consul general at Yoko hama, that paper clothes are exten sively manufactured In Japan. Tb garment aold by the firm la made to bold buttons sewed on In the ordinary way, and appeara to be very serviceable. t Rupert Brooke. Rupert Brooke I aaw but once, but I recall him well bis fair hair, rather longer than that of other men. hi collar rather lower, hla attlrt rather more negligee altting with hla blu eye and spiritual face In the window of a room overlooking the river at Chelsea, reading to a little Bohemian gathering a paper on what appeared to him the most urgent of aortal reforms the guaranteeing by the state 00 a year to every of a pension of minor poet He was something more than a mere poetaster himself, though, apart from hi personal beauty which gave him an unfair advantage for long be by no meana outshone his mult It Vinous rivals. Men and women stllKro In hi face the poet of their d --earns, read hi verse In th light of tbst vision glorious, and trumpeted Chipmunk I a Hermit Evidently the chipmunk ha no part' him aa the master he wsa not Th wsr touched htm to immortal-It- y her and will spend the winter In his Alfred Olllvant In th Atlantic subterranean retreat alone. I think thla le an established chipmunk cus Monthly. tom, rendered necessary. It may be, Hammurabi' Law. by the scant supply of air In such close quarters, three feet underground, and Hammurabi, who waa a king of Chal-de-a maybe ander three or more feet of and whose code about 21SS B. how in addition. At any rate, the of law I the oldest existing legal chipmunk, male and female, la a her record of humanity, waa not such a or back number mlt and there ia no alt, even though the true sociability among them. They supreme court of Missouri haa Just are wonderfully provident and Indus set aalde one of hla precepts. Accordtrious, beginning to store up their win ing to this precept the eon of an adoptter food In midsummer, or as early as ed son, th latter dying before hi the farmer doe his John Burroughs adoptive parent, doe not become the la Harper Magazine. legal heir to the parent' estate. Th upreve bench of the "Show Me" state Must Be Well Fed. could not see the matter In thla light The phrase 'The shortest road to Yet the principle that a legacy which a man' heart I through hi stomach" the legatee did act live to receive reI by no mean a modern saying. It verts to the estate of the testator la haa been true throughout the history recognised la modern law, t'nles of mankind, and although Intended to the surviving heir of tb legatee are no la In reflection descendants, related In blood to tL be a Jcke, It reality A man with a poor on masculinity. testator, tbey cannot Inherit Hamly fed stomach can rarely be found to murabi' taw may not be good law la have a disposition Inclined even to Missouri, but It would be recognise kind thoughts, much less to love. a such almost everywhere else. Ph adelfhU Record Furniture Palish. An excellent furniture polish If Proper Restriction, nade by mixing together equal parts Put this restriction upon our pleaif boiled linseed oil, vinegar and sure: Be cautious that they Injure no aethylated spirits. being which haa life. Zlmmermaaa. wall Put A man who kept a roadhous In Rhode Island wa called upon to tea-tlfIn a cult a to the number of cubic yarda handled In aome rock removing and Oiling In of lot In the vicinity. Naturally enough he ahowed very little knowledge of the matter, hla Idea of a cubic yard being ao Indefinite that It waa suspected he hardly comprehended the term. In order to facilitate bis understanding the Judge aald: "Listen, witness! Asaume thla Inkstand to be three feet acroaa tha top this way and three feet that way and three feet la height, what abould you call "Well, your honor," aald the witness, without hesitation, "1 abould aay It waa 80ME Inkstand " itr ore-recog- nized C ftr |