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Show 4 A. Cwl i PAGE. TWO' w- 4 AY,' 3 ft 1 THE PROVO POST f - y r L '$ - J It Would surprise Chamberlains Cough Rented v you to know of the done is that by. being great has won its great reputation an .1 . ing force is similarly equipped it is practically helpless ata range 'of Chamberlain Tablets Darius Dow-ne- extensive sale by its, remarkable two or three itTiTinvivIiH-fi'iPublished Every TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY beyond the range of rifle fire. The lines of Newberg Junction, N. B., , cures of Hty ghs,-- colds, and croup. cannon mji be( broken before an writes, My wie faas beit using At '.To3. oflau enemy deficient in rapid-fir- e First West St Provo', Utah v. St. -i j . Tablets and? finds them very It can berflj4df!3ppn. - Try -' latest nrr',7-r; effect ite repiy tan- bemiadey and tliix-i-4 s w. hht hajipned in the Rofd.-b"Thll By The f . dealers. vi J . d, i of good." efit:tual doing . batile in Noftbeyn, Mfexieo. y. with your have If any you trouble "field guns of the German Army stomach or bowels lit was stated last week that the give them a trial. matter how hard your Bead ache. will be increased by 240 this year, which is one of Jhe indications of For sale by all dealers. n Pill will help you. Dr. Mile SUBSCRIPTION PRICES IN ADVANCE the present military tendencies. The United States regulars include 5 Centa . . . 12 six regimeiiTsTifticidartillery ivitlr56f)8of fleers andmen-an- d H. C. HICKS, Editor. N. C. IlICKS, Manager. artillery organization of 19,222. It is understood that the marksman25 Cents Six months 1.50One month in this branch of the service is exceptionally efficient. 'Some matter according to ship 'Entered at the Postoffice' of Provo City as second-clas' Act of Congress, March. 3, 1S84. rapid fire cannon are so light that they eati be carried by aeroplane. Field battery developments are" unusually interesting at this tj me THE PROVO POST er(.lMtteiis of the . lalHiAproVed light mttern. Unless an oppos- good y, 22-2- 4 jj,, s rr" .f COMpANY. -- POST PUBLISHlNCr Chani-brlaiu- 8 kJr-io- & - t-- " y ts V. Anti-Plai- -- s r Post subscribers are requested to notify this office promptly whenever the paper is not received. Residence carriers are supposed to notify the subscribers by blowing a whistle upon their arrival with tbe paper, iiease help us to see that this tule is enforced by report-4o. oRthe part of t SECRETARY g r: tjui-carri- er which Ijurley A. Baker, of Westerville, O.: secretary --ofleague, denied theTdilirges Accused in.M. E. Conference of inadeagainst him." In elections today, S. Karl TayTrying to Destroy Church lor, W. F. Oldham,- Indiana, and A PROSPEROUS OUTLOOK. ' 'ThO' t't.i ff bC)TnitVf -f x p i ri I'ltiv-Imt hat r one of make best beets and While theirnost sugar dependable crops. -.good iun bad are never other than relative terms when applied worst being always approaching good durirrigated lands,-th- e ing the past year or two. The outlook this season is for a better beet crop a ml aLirgur.acrea ge than has been planted for. sometime. Beet making will lie flowing iir a heavy. late hr the fall and winter, adding hundreds of Thousands to feea rlierfi a r ve StTPop s'find rounding out the season of traihvnot only for Utah county, Imt for the entire .state, in good shape. ' ' Since all frost scares have gone, the outlook for the fruit crop from parly in the summer until late in the fall is good, and go a long waytoward reviving business all along the line. From the first picking ou, as crop after crop matures,'-UtaCounty and the state will move forward at a rate unparalleled in our commercial history. From fruit- picking lo the end osuga.rniaking season there will be an abundance of work for the "unskilled and unclassified laborers in the state. All summer campaigners will have t heir hands full In the orchards and fields, and our beet fields and orchards should furnish the school boys with all the outside employment they can take care of from mow until school opens in the fall- - In (he face of such coming prosperity, none should be talking hard times, rather the caHTs to ire iipaiid meeting the changing tide s half way. Good prospects are in store for the farmers. The it of 4he state will riweivaauiiiipeLvUiu: ihI e a liuany s t r i es J n t o being. Now is i hrough ii the time for us to shape our summer and fall working campaigns, in ' order that We might get the proper results. Other years w ehave had drawbacks, but this year there seems to b nothing in tin way of 1 to-on- .Temperance 1 h . - busi--nes- junw-iniL- A PLAIN STATEMENT AND A PROMISE THE NEW HOMESTEAD LAW. . Since the house and senate conference committees have agreed oif the provisions of the proposed new homestead law, it is probable that measure will soon receive the approval of congress ami, later, 2 that Of the president. The conference agreement adheres closely to the provisions f the bill which was under discussion some two months ago., Three years instead of five will suffice for residence in order to obtain a patent; an absence of five months in each year after establishing a resiIn addition there are prodence will he permitted the homesteader. visions iu regard to the amount of land which the entryman must place under cultivation before be will be able to perfect his title. (aider this law theaequisitioa of homesteads oil the public lands will be made much-easithan it is now. This- -is what is needed. Owned by the government, the land whieh may be taken up as homesteads is not a source of national strength. Its value to the country The sooner it , comes fronTTts occupation by the people. occupied the better. The people who vyould take up this land and make'lhTmes in the Far West should he encouraged to come. This is th design of the new bill. It ought to become a law. Opposition to it is based ujvon ignorance of the needs of the West and .the relation between the public lands and the welfare of the country as a whole. The attractions of Canada to American homeseekersiwill be offset in a larg degree by the increased opportunities in the Far Western states when this bill goes into effect. Americans w mid rather make homes in their own country than remove to Canada w hen the opportunities are as great in the United States as they are in the Dominion. z- er - I CHANGING THE CONSTITUTION. Already some of the reformers are giving names to the new pro' positions aDer the countrys organic law. The suggested incom tax grant of power to UoTigress. which was submitted to the states in 1909, the sixteenth amendment to the const it tUijmaJj hough Jdte ' assenrof several more states is needed to ratify it. The popular elec thm of senators is to he the seventeenth amendment, and the redric-ijoof a president's service to one term of six years is to he the edht-eentAll of whieh is based on the assumption that thse proposMhms will run the gauntlet ofdoiigress and the legislatures. This would he quicker woik m the way of altering the con-tit- u lion than the country has recently seen. except under the stress f the civil war. The first ten amendments In 'the constitution were Mimut--teto the states by the First Congress, and Were proclaimed in "wee term Tbe .i 17)1. in The middle of Washingtons first - amendment was ratified during this see mu I terjm in lT94.aml.the Twelfth amendment, to ward off the danger of tievotes. smdi a- - that between .Jefferson and Durr in DOM,' went into operation in !S01.' s of a entury then elapsed before any further e! edges The three civil war amendments vvepe made in the constitution. - -- n h. d eh'-riit- -- ll Two-third- i - ijh '"trBw 1 i tium, w, a Hut we live in a speedier age than divl the people ot tii!, or hvimlred years ago. Men read more, talk mo ye, ami perhaps thank oldc- - di;s. more, or imagine Jjiey think more, than they did in tlje into tlm The eoustit ut iens if the ievver states- incorporate' ys testrie-lioearlier the times, whele insteailif, legislation, themselves to broad general principles, which could be m nle cpof tbe peepie- si.ek A g n - -- 'nin.sy-eboiu- plb-able 0c theirvp-resental- i es. (liey wa:it to get i afej-cpaii- a v Vv IMPROVED FIELD ARTILLERY. ; Iresident Madero in his army operations appeals to have ended ihe'rebel auny in Alov ptovutiog UiAlielLwiik uoi-tb-tiy- - .Excursion. to Provo, May 31st. does not require laws to make OneT farefor round trip1 or keep it so. Salt Lake Route. Return Just what constitutes an Mime 1st.- honest man or an honest cor- - ' poration is ipore dr tess 'a matter of varying opinion, tut it is generally conceded that a man who treats his neighbor fairly, taking no undue advantage, asking no excess of profit nor misrepre- seating the goods he has to the best "goods he can produce with a fair margain of profit to himself -- is honest. Now a corporation is no 1 more and no less than a man doing business on a large scale; and. if, a corporation can answer that definition, then we ought to concede . that it is an honest corporation. Such a corporation doesnt need laws or coercion to make it honest or to keep it so. And with all due regard to skeptics, that is the kind of a corporation The Mountain States Telephone and .Telegraph Company tries to be claims to be. It is now giving tbe best - service it.can produce at- a fair margin of profity asking -no excess of interest on the money actually invested. (It has no bonds and no watered stock.) Now, without coercion ' and without demand of law it makes this promise that its rates shall always be as low as possible consistent ' with good service, If the rates shall at any time pro- duce an excess of profit they will be reduced to such a figure as to return only a fair sell--selli- out-ge- n Fully Equipped with tlie Best Made Tires, Top, Windshield, Speedometer, Electric and Gas Lights. Everything ready for running. The Ford is sold on its Merit, not by knocking other makes. ' v , write or phone for demonstration prparticulars to C. R7ST ARK, County Agent Frank Ramsey Garage THE THE HOME OF FORD 155 North Academy Avenue PROVO, UTAH. Phone 51. m of the m A KiJ Tuesday, May 28 PROVO OPERA HOUSE S' For this final production Prof. Lund has enlarged the Orchestra and has secured the -- 1 services of Prof. Kellersberger on the Oboe on the Flute. and-AVillard;Flash- rat4-ifltcre$- t oft the-mone- r y man actually invested. Keep this mind; it is true, and- a proifiise from an honest in- - - Did you know that the Mountain States Telephone ' Cornpany-ha- s n ; t ( The Seasons lest Prodaction u actually invested in property J $1.15 fer every $1.00 capital it p.jaJntercstf.J 'i our1 rates pay interest oh the $1.00, not the $1x15 . j Prices: $125, $1, 75c, 5)c and 25c 1 fSE HGGNTAGI STATES . niECRATH TFjEPliOfOK) CfMt j!L Uk t -- r -- - ALL MAKES ARE GOOD. BUT THE FORD IS BEST. Costs Less to Buy, and to Keep Up than the Other Makes. Call, Write, or Phone for Demonstration or Particulars to ng - nt entire machinery of govcinmeiit. Distrusting llmjyliolr powerduto thmr own ha mis wmilil the transform fiptm repnhlie into a democracy.' t'oiis-iThey amL hi.le you wait. i y rtshapel jo graso Tickets on sale May 5, .returning May 2(ith. Ask for tiek-- ; els via 'SALT LAKE ROUTE. -- -h- onest-corporation Commercial or Torpedo Roadster 3780 3680 n ROUTE. , M-J- - a.s-'i- Ex-cunio- An honesf man doesnt need laws to make him honest or to keep him so. An Five Passenger Touring Car . . . Call, Salt Lake City. Mav 25th. rates yia SALT LAKE V . -- iuut-eu- m ill bumper crops and great prosperity. TftE CAR THAT GOES ANY PLACE, ANY TIME. SEE THE FORD CLIMB HILLS THE OTHERS CANT. ALL ROADS ARE GOOD R0AI)S( FOR THE FORD. THERES A REASON, COME IN AND LEARN IT, . to-jiro- 11 -- Society; ferenee, were, elected correspond.25. I ing secretaries of the board of MINNKA POLLS, May o hat the fotAign missionsWith the elee-tiwho is a misnof Dr, Oldham, movement to change Abe headsionary bishop, another election quarters tit the t'hurch tempersiicitjjyji missionary bishop - probably society-froChicago to Topeka, vvilLJie necessary. . V Kvelaml, jiresident of the KaiT7is1rrtlieiDterest of thr Antr-T- seminary at. Williamsport, Saloon league.. 1 am prepared tol'ii-el a., . today was chosen missionary i,ply a adiwacto lo hi'uii prmvjt Aia. harm to the church temperance society." The head of the Anti- ANNOUNCEMENT Saloon league, I am prepared to prove, said this society must get In order to accommodate . the off the earth. With t hcs words Dr. Samuel large number of beginners who are 'applying for instruction, I will Dickie, president of Albion colTTTTfovv give instruction in classes to lege of Albion, Miehlr created lessetfkatiti in the general confer- beginners" as well as private Insons to advanced students. ence. of the Methodist Episcopal chnrch during the dismission of struction on band and orchestral the report of the church commi- instruments. and Mandolin, es- Iiaijp, Violin ttee wr temperance ' ' peelallvr Dr. Dickies ..amendment to the ISAM JEPPERSON committee reporrihat Chicago be Studio over Blakes Music Store ibstituted for Topeka was after a long debate, ini HIGH SCOOL TRACKTIiIEET r dhr-seftson-- ft ATTACKED - M -- LEAGUE 7 ANTI-SALOO- nr 1 , |