OCR Text |
Show page two -- ssr- TIES PROVO POST MRS., GRACE BROWN T ff ff OF EUREKA DIED T Mrs. Grace Brown of Contemporary 'ir-- ; JUST THINK OF IT! For months past the press and the According to our contemporary, the county Kearns Democrats of the state have been howling commissioners have decided to purchase two new over the record made by Senator Smoot sprinklers to sprinkle the county roads from Pay lustily ' since he was( elected United States- senator from1 sou to Lehi. Thats certainly, going some for this Utah. Now the time has come when the senator' efficiency administration, but then perhaps the can show that record and 'go before the people ofjfwo Democro commissioners figure that the two the state with adear conscience and aslc for their, sprinklersan now cut but Lake View and s on that record, . anil maketherestofthecomityalright 6 precincts have' grov.;n some you know. Nearly 'twelve years ago Reed Smoot .was Tho o elected senator from Utah ,7 ENGLAND INVADES U. S. METAL MARKET. A letter has just been received by The Post i follow him and to ferret out every detailn his from George L. Blackwell Sons and Company of private life. When he went to the senate the. London offering to sell in the local market 411 attacks .made on him were of the mhst vicious, kinds' of metals used in the printing Lukiness. nautre, and even President SmiUwas called to The prices range from 50 to 75 per cent of the Washington with other Utahn? Older residents price charged by the American type foundries, of the state know what thatfight was. They also The freight rates would, of course, prohibit slup-- . know the outcome. Senator Smoot was not ping to Provo, but what about the shipments into thrown out of the Senate as Tom Kearns. and his states where there is water transportation! Wont coherts would havhad it, but remained. Then they be. getting it! They. certainly will and then came the real fight. .Utahs Senator stood at the what will betcome of the mines in Utah and other foot of the ladder and no ordinary effort would great lead producing states! Perhaps some of take him upthe rounds. Religious prejudice was our Provo lead miners will answer the questions bitterly against him and yet he plodded on and o "1 "Oo on. " . THE AUTO WITH THE INSANE DRIVER. It took years of unceasing toil in the part ot , Ever since the roads have been dry enough Senator Reed Smoot to reach the top of the sena- to make auto riding pleasant,, the insane drivers torial ladder,. but he reached it and today he have been having one long lease of fast driving on stands with the great men of that law making the roads of Utah County, and especially around bodf. He is known in Washington as the hardest Provo. This has been marked as one of the city working man in the. United States Senate. He is easy ones to get through on high speed and the known for his broad minded views on public ques- fiends at the wheel have been running through tions. Even the Democratic senators had to give the' city so often of late that they pay no more him credit for knowing more about the 'tariff attention to the city than they do to tho crossquestion in .all its details than : they themselves roads in the country. districts. 7 l- 7 . 7M 7 ; 7 knew.1 ' V 7 "f .:Last r Sunday capped the climax to speeding ' Charles' Morris, one of our Utah boys who has on the streets of the city. A carload of drunks spent years in Washington, has compiled a volume from somewhere up north came down Academy on the work accomplished by Senator Smoot in Avenue at forty miles an hour and kept going the United States Senate, and every loyal Utahn right on through town. Horses shied and people should he in possession of a copy before the fall ran to the right and left, for safety, but the finds 7 t' campaign. in tho car went straight But the greatest of all his deeds was to live a those in the track of. ahead, not caring whether their speeding car escaped life in Washington that would redeem Utah from or not. The Sunday episode was but one of many the stench left by the ignorant Irishman who tied perpetrated on the pubile this summer. Uah up to the Island of. Alasky and spoke people of Provo are wondering what , The eloquently on Philliponies before he his means to take to assure them sang safety on the city swan song and came back to Utahto continue his streets. The police officers have made no arrests, tirade against Utah and her people. and furthermore,' they seem to pay very little attention to the matter. .It is high time they showed some signs of life and TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY; put a stop to fast It was only last week President Wilson deliv- driving in the city. We have ordinances against such offenses as this and tlie ered his eloquent speech before certain people pay the offieditors ot cers for their enforcement. the country and told them that business was not ' at all as represented and that the ' 0 need country have no alarm for the future. The IT IS A STATE OF MIND. . president even lenched his fist when he told of the If are broke. . you outlook for business in the United States. Ilis If v. you are, thirsty. psycholori-'a- l depression was brought one stronger than If you are hungry. ever, for he evidently realized that there If. business slov's up. were litors ,n the crowd who were of the If your wages are cut. opinion that the Democratic- fallacies were If your factory is idle. ' roallv ' for the trouble.' ; If our exports decline. Isn t it strange!. Just twenty If our imports increase. years ago to fhe very day Grover Cleveland made a speech If Huerta fails to resign." and in language almost identical If you are out of a job. except for the If clothes high sounding phrases, told the are shabby. your . people of the UniteJ States the, If have the toothache. you Tlien catne If your children have no shoes. thrpauic"atid the lockouts. The omptv dinner 4 pail .ifjpurishcd untiPa Republican is patriotism questioned. congress tied the hands of the former Democratic If 3,000,000 men are out of work. and president be had to remain If the national debt ha? increased. ' quite passive until succeeded " : If y.MP motives are misunderstood.y the great McKinely, who soon restored confi-' If your salesmen cannot secure orders. business prosperity. ?e ?0Vernm,nt If beet sugar factories are forced to close. . V111 lut05 itself! Well just watch the signs of. the times. ' If business is halted by labor troubles, -' Mexicans continue to shoot each other, If foreign manufacturer get most Of the A leading citizen inquires, Why do we shirk business, unpleasant facts!. Because they are unpleasant If the farmers cannot sell their grain at (' profit. In gathering up his collection of relics in ' If your industrial output is reduced 50 per Madrid our Teddy neglected to annex the kin. cent. v 0 O 0 ' If, your company goes into the hands of a t Extra ! Extra The army is engaged in a If the railroads cannot' borrow money for desperate battle with mosquitoes in Vera Cruz. ' r --0 0 0 improvements. Manufacturers News. ' SENATOR SMOOTS RECORD. anti-Smo- ot - Vine-vote- U-ar- . 00 - . - - J ; V : - ! , 000 00 . i - - ' , very-same-th- ing. lf-yo- Without desiring to infringe on the good will of. our readers ve take this opportunity to defend Tbe Post against the continued malicious attacks' of our contemporary and to draw a few comparisons that may have escaped the public eye. As the Herald presumes to be the standard around which all other papers should flock for wisdom and new knowledge, we call attention to some of the rea classics from thoughts coined fpom his own brain. Here is a of columns of editorial the new thought appearing in the sample the Herald, and we would call for the English teachers of the city tn make note of the same for their own advancement: The scholar recognizes two great sources of knowledge in data to present to the public. The first is thoughts coined from his own brain, the second Vhere to find new knowledge, ..The Post i3 criticising this papers editorials and are trjdng to cast a reflection at their betters and we are willing to leave it. to thq people as to which paper has the stale, sterotyped editorial and which liaS ' : the real live snap of new thought. As to tho style of type used in the two papers we desire to say just a word. The editor of the Herald states that the Herald is set Now in 8 point type and The Post ia'10 point, and he further staes: To save the publet the people take their pencil and figure it out. difference in the space occupied lic the trouble of figuring out-thby the7two sizes of type used in the two papers, we have takfcA an article which appeared in the last issue of the Herald and set it identically as it ran in that paper and set it in the two sizes of type. There is no difference in the space used because the. Herald sets its type on a 10 point slug, which is the samp size as The Post uses. ' To the Heralds unsuspecting readers its story might get by all right, but to any oneLwho knows anything about type and the manner in which it is set, the difference is not so great as our friend up the street would represent. Following is an illustration which was taken . from the Herald : - e ; s of-Joh- Elder Frank Eastmond returned today from a two years mission to England., He reports 'much success among the elders who are laboringin England and the Brit.--is- h mission. A. 0. Smoot has shipped a . . The Provo Second ward are ea The Provo Second ward are enmon mondeavorlng to raise sufficient deavoring to ey to complete payments on thetr, ey,tq complete payments on their and to this new meeting house, and to : this new meeting house, end have arranged for a celebra-en- d have arranged for ft celebration to be given. at the ward house tion to be given at the ward'house 6n7Julyr 4tU.The public lSj Invited - pn JulyAth. The public is invited to bring their lunches and partake- to bring their lunches and partake of them , on the lawns. There is to of them on the lawns.; There is to be music and sports, and ice cream be musie and sports, and ice cream be served. In and lemonade will be served. In and lemonade will the evening a dance will be given, the evening a dance will be given. nt pedi- greed bull to Mrs. Ardell Allen, who lives at Wellington' and is stocking her farm With pure bred . , Jerseys. For attractive looking butter wrappers, call The1 Provo Post. Phone 13. ' Provo Commercial & Savings Bank PROVO CITY, UTAH. CAPITAL 1100,000 SURPLUS $50,000 . ' DIRECTORS: ;r SECOND WARD TO SECOND WARD TO CELEBRATE JULY FOURTH CELEBRATE JULY FOURTH raise-sufficie- Eureka died at. an early hour Monday morning in the Provo . General Hospital from Tetany. The woman was brought to Proyo about two weeks ago to undergo' an operation- and,' never recovered. , ; The deceased was the wife A. Brown, electrician at the Grand Central mine at Mammoth, afid'is1 survived by her husbam; and five children. She was 4T ,, years of age. . ' Reed Smoot, trealdeat. Or E. Loose,' L. Holbrook, IL R. Irvine, SrM W. L.' Bjersach' Geo. Taylor, 8r. Vlce-Prealdeu- L . ' Roger Farrer. ' Joe. T7 Farrer. Cashier Joa. A. Buttle,' Assistant Cashier. General Banking Bustneaa ' ' 'Transacted. U. ft. Depoaltory for Postal ftavlnga ! Another thing we feel justified in mentioning to our patrons is the manner in which we have been critidbmd by our .envious contemporary for using our pictorial news service. In the very issue in which the Herald criticises this paper for using this particular service appears a cut which The Post had published just sixteen days prior to that time. Perhaps the editor of the Herald is not to blame1 for condemning the use of an illustrated news service, especially when One knows the motive he has in so doing. The Post gets the same illustrated news1 service as the largest papers in the country, and it is! one of the best to be had. The cuts are not used merely as fillers, but for the educational vaue they contain. The Herald is great when it comes to boasting, and sometimes it gets by. very r?eely with a bluff, but we are reminded of Lincolns wise old sayingYou can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people ail of the time, but caijt fopl all of the people all of the time 7 s Done promptly The prompt laundry generally loea the most business. Most persons want their bundles right o .he minute promised. Demand Squires that such an ' srablish-nen- t be completely equipi! for Idick work. Ours is the best quipped lanndry in Crovu. It will do your work quickly and do t well. When it leaves tins laun-Irevery article intit is done as irdered. You can rely upnii that. Sir. Attorney: That brief or 4We do every washable garment transcript should be set in type as ad do it right. Wagons come gb prescribed by law. This office is all promptly, too. the only one in Utah County with theL correct type. We can do the Domestic 468 So. Academy Avenue work promutly and do it right. - ... Good printing with appropriate paper, and type that talks, is what you want. Our Job Department can deliver the goods. Call in. Phone 13. Post Publishing Co. j - y, Sham laundry .1 SATURDAY IS BUTTER WRAPPER Every Saturday we are going to give you a chance., to get your butter wrapperr at reduced prices I - - rffi ' ( ) oo O- . 00 ", , - r z ; '' 150 0 for A .25- - 1 , -- ' 000 00 - - 0- Corneljlhas received an anonymous gift ef $100,000. We are always getting left. ' ' AN EVIDENCE OF BRAINS. When a person reads his home paper, it is ' ' of brain?. fyidence, , The mediation 'puzzle at Niagara reminds ns-ohe 'When reads in advertisements the How old was Ann. home paper, it is evidence of more brains: ' V'V0 00- When he trades with the merchants who Th? eight Colombian senators who voted vertise in his home paper, it is an evidence ' against the proposed treaty with the United States greater brains must be chronic kickers. 7. 7- This is a community of brains. 1' ; ' . , . - - Smaller lots priced in proportion. Bring us your orders and save money. Bring or phone your orders to ; c... ' -- , Better, tadpole in O 0 .a whale in p., big city. tbe 0 -- o a country town than a ; , ' , 0 Growl, if you must growler. ' , 0- - but .f' , dont rush '"( Phone 13 n " |