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Show THE PROVO HERALD Consolidation, of THE PROVO ' ; H ERALD (Dally) - THE and ' a'a a a aaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaAAAAAA IliiAiAAlAAAAAAAiAAAAA Announces INT,ER- - 4 PUBLISHED BY THE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY ' ' - LARSON., OWNERS. Center Street. BOTH PHONES.. '; Prove, Utah - Entered Ms ee'eutitf class mail matter June 4, 191T;-atiie- ' of March 3, 1879. Postoffice, Provo, Utah, imdey - . ...BAKER . . &. MISSANM t thest X A Convention which is di'dared 19 have been the best that ha ever been heM in the enmn came to a cluse l;it nigh 'd Tire T7tah Is now an County Development league organize I!4v .. NOW FOR cuiiij4fflBiiulijf'b(ly. ATost every tovvnr in" tire T THE WORK county was represented Hy. men vho jnean "b.n.sine'ss. There, '.Was a spirit ot unity Every 'representative believed in the" work of "united bMstingr which had its birth yesterday."" The (Jficer?;.,..eJected are" "live .wires." in most every c,ase may They come from. all. parts of the county-anrepresentative men. - Another feature Vf the nTeetings held was the lack of sectionalism. W'hile the representatives yesterday from the different towns were' full of praise fur their respective towns and cities, they were first considering the welfare uf the entire coupty. The convention was a success so far as yesterday's affairs were concerned, and it is now up to the officers of the league to make it the strongest boosting organization in Utah. . Only-onlittle complaint is to be made. and that is abemri'rovo from this city. people. There should have keen a better turn-ou- t the Business men missed an opportunity-o- f doing county some ' .. .good. ... tfi... c . o -.- f I It U . DAY I i t-a- ' " - i . Z - .. -j - T : ' . ' "L, i . - of Chas. autKester's-Tramattzati- ori T . lance Major 1 of7 . - Qdthiii - "an'd-enthusi- ani. t- - Fletcher & W Thomas ARE GOING TO SELL THEM AT THE r t FOL- Lot No. All high priced '"1 Lot No. 2 . suits go . 1675 a All $18.00 and $20 Suits go at Lot No. 3 All $15.00 and $16.50 Suits go PLANTS. ..$13.75 at $9.75 Provo Floral Company DON'T LET THIS OPPORTUNITY PASS OF GET TING A -- your Opportunity. By and by we shall acknowledge this fact of biology. We shall tlaim4hat men really are born free and equal. .We shall justify the .Declaration. .Meanwhile questions of precedent and. honors and earthly advantage, with all the social unrest, are of small account, It is in you. 7 15 you, --boy.:V.YoUFduty is tor wake up. Hi Hopes the - " r- Boy WIH Turn Out to Be Good Judge of Men, When Hie Turn Comes. Steveyfniy boy," said UncleHIram his Jbopeful lifphew, "I turn out that you are a good Judge of men, fo.r by virtue of that quality a man 1b able In effect to multiply bis own power. "It Is a common, thing to hear - people eay rthat the more pay a man gets the less work be does, and as to the doing of actual labor this may be true;- somebody else saws the wood while he sits by the fire. "As a matter of fact there are plcn 1 to bope-4t-wtl- - -- . - ty of men hlfib up who si III work hard, and all of them certainly worked htrd when they-we- re younger. and If they are doing less actual labor now It Is because tbey are good Judges of men. able to pick out for the bus! ness under their direction Just the right men to do the worfcjind.- carry . It forward 'successfully. 1 ' - "Really U is In the exercise of this gift that we find the greatest value In a manager; it Is Just this that makes him worth his high pay. We. want-hito sit around and take things easy and grwthjmself time to think and keep .his' head clear. .We don't .want him to fet out and chop down trees; we want him to be able to select men who can do that work to .the greatest advantage and with the - greatest economy. An 4ntrestlng account xt Ihe-rst-ti- V - "Some of nr know men on sight and some don't I hoprSteveyi that you will turn out to be a good Judge ". of men." Is given for anTTricldent which began the friendship that existed between John Bright and King Edward VII. The. story was told by Mr. Bright In the hearing of Mr. Conn ah, a merchant In Manchester. .Afr. Bright, it seems, had, at a meeting in St. James hall, rebuked those people who were criticising Queen Victoria for her rare appearances at public functions after 'he passing away of the prince consort. Oh the following morning the h private secretary of King Edward (then Prince of Wales) called upon Mrj Briglit with a special request from 'he prince to call upon him at house. Mr. Bright at first demurred, but yielding to the pleading of the messenger, he went, andi.he wfls recfijejd. . in st f rieniHT-Tanne- r by the prince and Introduced to the family circle. The prince took Mr. Bright aside and as a son thanked him for his tindly words on behalf of the mourning queen, and asked to be "granted the privilege" of being counted among. the tribune's friends "Whatever may be my personal opinion of kings and princes," Bright said, concludlug his narration, of the, incident, "th man before me was a son making an ttppeal on .behalf of his mothtivand I could not, resiBtj It We shook hands," and have b,een close Marl-b?Tcug- h the--mo- friends ever since'" ence Monitor. y' Christian Sci- ' Clothiers and Haberdashers MADAME "SANS-GENE- " KEEP Story of Adventurous Career of Marie Therese Flgueur In tho French . Army. Everyone knows the washerwoman familiar with JJapoleon Sardou's play, "Madame but the real who lived at that time was a "drngoon in one of the great CorsIcan'B armies and spent twenty years In camps and barracks, in campaigns and battles over Europe. In the'Musee de In Paris a special case has Just been Installed inside which stands her equestrian statue. Her real name was Marie Therese Flgueur and she was born In Bur gundy In 1774. When nineteen, at the end of the reign of terror, she enrolled in a cavalry regiment commanded' by one of her uncles and soon acquired the nickname of "Suns-Gen. who was so in VIctbrien Sans-Gene- "Sans-Gene- ," L -- fought in Germany with the French and Batavlan armies, took part charged at Hohenlinden, In the siege of Toulon, was in the Italian, Spanish and Austrian campaigns and and in Russia. During the Hundred Days the emperor conferred the Legion of Honor upon her and she charged at Waterloo for the last time. ' With, the Restoration she left the army to get married. Sue was then thirty-ninIn the course of her marMme. Sans-Gen- e fought-at.Austrll- . e. tial career had Ave horses shot under her and was wounded eight times in different engagements. She died in hospital in 1861. Sans-Gen- e . excess , ur ' . ' ;' ""' "2 .;,; V... ' V rtT- i- y .J--l,- Play with 1,000 Laughs A ' -- "',..- n .Z "r - " "THE CHORUS LADY." SPARKLING, HILAR COMEDY SUCCES. Company of clever comedians, including " X PRICES 50c to $1.50. SEAT SALE 10 A. M. t WEDNESDAY " Ral-a- Bal-aac- " ELECTRIC POWER FROM WIND Economical LigKtlng Plants Can Based on It, With Gasoline Motors to Help. DEEP' MYSTERY OF Ba THE. LAW Man Who Won't Support Family la Imprisoned and Wife Really Pays Penalty. V There has never been a time when the forces of nature were subjected Mysteries, far beyond the compreto such searching scrutiny to deter- hension of the average mortal, are mine their availability for constantly revealed In the law and its ' of mechanical power as they administration The other day a woman appeared In a receive at present. This arises mainBoston court and complained to the ly from the" progressive use of elecJudge that her husband refused to tricity. Among other things it Is believed support their tv0 small children. She that the wind can be utilized to a far could get along without him, she said, greater extent than in tin past, espe- but she demanded that he be comcially for electrical lighting. With this pelled to go to work and help'support object In view the average state of his" offspring" Her" stGry waa .the wind has been Investigated In Eng- rated by witnesses. So the Judge found the man guilty land. It is found that foi approximately half the time the mean wind and sentenced him to one year in the velocity is ten miles an hour, and for house of correction. Here was what seems on the sur about of the time fifteen miles'; In the winter the average Is face to be an easy problem. A husThe great difficulty arises band and father, either through disinThe tombs of public men find women higher." froni the calm" periods, which may clination or through Inability to find tire- yearly the object of special demlast days, or even a week, but it has work, Is brought' into court on a onstrations. been shown that economical In order to lighting charge of Heine's tomb Is perhaps one of the most favored by foreigners, but that plants can be based upon wind power relieve the situation, he is sent to the'" by providing gasoline motors to take house of correction where hevrtllbe "Dame-aof the original UP. the work whenever the wind fails. kept at work." "That he la not able araellas'i-l- 8 the best cared forns to send his pay envelopenome to his every day In the year It is visited and family every Saturday nightbecause- - -twomcarefully dusted by a By His Own' Confession. Is no pay envelope In, such an with dyed yellow hair and thread When Joseph F. Johnson arrived in here cases Is,' In tba eye of the 'law, a gloves, who enters freely into converWashington as a member of the Unit- minor .circumstanced Themaln thing' sation with all visitors and' loves to ed States senate from the glorious seems to be that the man has' been ' relate the history of this "Margueand gallant State of Alabama, pays rite." Paris Correspondence- London The Popular Magazine, Senator Bur guilty of an offense-- ' and that he is ' Is punished, jBut punished for it Evening Standard. ft great rows, of Michigan,-toofancy it is his' wlf ind his two helpless . to him. One day in the cloak-rooBurrows turned to another senator cniidren who pay the penaltv. The law mav h Iratilnnt hn if k and said: . ' . no' sense of humor. "Yqu have been "DuPont, stand up. I want you to found Ancient' Roman Long Branch. guilty of "not 84pporting your The sea coast of Laurentum may meet Johnston, of Alabama." children." It "and therefore I The man from Delaware-rosto his will send you says, have been in favor with the fashion' " ' where you cannot supfeet. , able and the wealthy for a brief port them." "DuPont."1 Bald Johnston, taking the space of time under Augustus and his Immediate successors, but was given proffered hand, ."I believe .you're the Came Back for His Moneytup pulte soon to parvenuea and mer- infernal Yankee who shot me at CeSixteen years ago a worker at x. chants and retired officers, and the dar Creek." Messrs. Singers' machine works at "Well, well!" commented the Dela- Kilbowle, same set of noisy people who haunt at Drfmbartonshlre, left,Jthe the present day the popular, watering ware senator .somewhat." puzzled. firm's employment omitting to tak "What-makeyou think so?" x the with him 14s. 7d.. wages du& Ha places of the world. 'T see )tf the.' two pages of your Bpent four years in England,-ananalogy more atrlkhg, an inscription afterhas been found at La Capocotta sing- biography j in the Congressional wards 1 Joined the- - army, serving a of explained Johnston. M;hat you "years; ing the praises wealthy Jew, and mostly abroad. A .few days ago revealing the fact that a synagogue commanded practically every regi- - the man, whose name is Calligan, call-e,had been built at. Ostla forlheuse' qf again; at kllbowte and claimed hla Some .'Infernal' Yankthe: Semitic'.. "viUegglantr'- on the Crvll-- war. money, established his rightjto lt, and neighboring coast jhot rae. and't think it was yo'u, v:: v lot tt Tha Scotsman. ;.. much-harasse- i- - d ceme-tejif- s , one-thir- d non-suppo- rt ; ux -- half-cras- y .. .. i t - k f e t , , " s- . Direc-tory- y' " It d 1 - .' ': ' " to TO McMILLAN AND DOROTHY GREY. GREEN t The chapel tomb of Honore de Pere la Chaise was visited this afternoon by a group of admirers who make a yearly pilgrimage to the spot on August 18. There "friends of keep the novelist's memory green In an essentially Parisian manner, leaving cards and bead wreaths on the tomb and delivering speeches and .eulogies .that are liBtened to reverently by a fajr audience - During August innumerable Amer-- . ican tourists visit the different of the city, and many happened to be at Pere la Chaise this afternoon at the time of the little ceremony. The French themselves have a veritable cult for ancestors that must be second oniy to that of the JapaneseT and on every fete day anniversary or holiday they "precipitate themselves" (to use their own expressive word) to the cemeteries, leaving always some mark ot their presence In the shape of a bouquet, large or small. ."v,-.....r- ' ,. N oto r I o u s. " L'Ar-me- e THEIR MEMORY Frenchmen Delight In Pilgrimages the Tombs of the Great or . s :t of THE BRIGHT, BREEZY, SCINTILLATING, DON - y James Forbes, Author I0US," HUMOROUS REAL CROWDS ELIMG SALESMAN. By i THE FOLLOW THE !; : Artificial Spongs. ' The Figure of the Law. . An artificial sponge, the outcome of Sleep the Fountain of Youth. A husky New York gangster permitAny number pPwomen who are cut- German ingenuity is now to be had, himself to be , arrested In the ted Into to Scientific allowance their the American. according ting ruthlessly to swell the cash drawer, of the beauty The process of making" it ". consists course of a street fight by a policeman. parlors could solve the' riddle of ap principally" in the action of tino When the ward leader had balled him peartng fresh and animated it they chloride on pure cellulose. This re- out, his friends made merry at his exwould but make a pracUceof taking sults. in a pasty, viscous mass, which pense. "To be done up by one cop l" la mixed with coarsely grained rock was the comment "You could 'a the proper amount of sleep. eaten him. up wid one bite." The value of sleep as a restorative salt. "Yes, an' I could a laid htm out wld Placed In a press mold armed with and a a fountain of youth. Is unbelievable 'ufilll one has bathed regular- pins the mass Is pierced through and one blow," was the answer. "Say, eveV-bn.dly therein, It almost seems magic In through until It appears traversed by young feller was you : island?" Its effect and many a woman who-haa multitude of tiny canals, Jike the j';";",: "Just as a friend; never under de 'discovered the secret is the en'vy and pores of a natural sponge. The of salts is kubsequenUy removed curtain for keeps.' admiration, of her beauty parlor .. friends." , by prolonged washing in a weak al- -- "Then shut down bn your w:orks. - Eight hours for work, coholic solution. -- .The artificial sponge Let me tell you, when a top comes for hours eight swells and for old Is rule. up ith water but "hardens on armeT wid a club I don t see him. I sleep eight play the Up to now', no one has Improved on drying, Just like its prototype; It Is see de bloke on.de bench. The, island. this proportionr: If you care more for aid to be eminently adapted for fil- That cell ills club looks to me like the preservation of your youth and tering water for. sanitary or industrial all these; and I throw up my hands, and It can be employed: for' all And 'so will J'ouse, if 'you are- - wise attractiveness than pleasure take tot less than the allotted eight the purposes that are usually assign- guyv'- A cop is a policeman; he ain't ". a man. SeeT" i v ',' hours of fileep-frored to the genuine article. the 24. . .; of-yo- WANT TO LAUGH 7 KING Merchant Told of the Strong Attach-- " ment of King Edward for John Bright. v "' i IP YOU Thomas COMPANY v A if WE FURNISH THE MAN. Fletcher ? Wednesday, 3E December 8 1 Provo Opera Hoose X iThat FRIEND OF xx.r: GUARANTEED IN EVERY RESPECT. ARE PHONE 332. MON- THE FAMOUS" CLOTHNI.G LINE. SUITS THAT BRANDIGEE KINCAID n UNCLE HIRAM TO HIS NEPHEW WEST FIRST SOUTH. HIGH GRADE - WAS THE 160 EY, FOR REMEMBER WE SELL NOTHING BUT - x SUIT FOR LITTLE V The Old Reliable - FIRST-CLAS- S - ?- - er-dozen - , Friday Night, December 8th Carnations, 70 .. ,T. ...... 75"" Narcissus, per dozen ' . . t lirvs'anthemums, per dozen . . $1.00 to $2.50 Bulbs, Narcissus, Hyacinths, Calla Lillies, Chinese Lily, and Cyclamen blossoming Pot Plants, Ferns, Roses, Palms, Carnations, Geraniums ; in fact, all flowering plants at the cheapest price WE GUARANTEE OUR LOWING EXTREME LOW PRICES: tdle hours' the criminal recruiting office- movels, Sometimes the social uplifter moves among these ;. young men, too. Generally he does not get hold of fhem.; Would you, Mr. Social Uplifter, like to do something that is worth while? Ask the laborer on your, grounds to come into your library, and - there tell him Abraham Lincoln's story. It is a startling fact that the young fellow never heard how Lincoln learned to read. The tragedy of history, for centuries, was 'that men never, discerned thlt they could be tree. Then the: began to awake, as Russiaand ...now..China.areawalirnitig... It'. is tragic even now, our deuce ignorance of the well-nig- h equal mental power of all men," except the diseased and insane. It-i- s the awakening alone that is needed. Rarely can a mind be awakened past twenty-fiv- e years of age. l!ut up to that time, rare is the brain that cannot be startled into such activity as would result if' you flung its owner into a new world. Ityyould.be as it a' star. you kicked him off tlnVdull old planetrand he had landed-oI is all that happened when the. lection hand got his job and went on up to be president of the railroad. The crudest bondage of the world is this falsehood about a vast difference, in gift of the powers of mind, between men. You are as "smart" as your brother, the family's pride, if you will awake. You. were, born with a veil over your eyes. Snatch it away. See BOYS & " CHRISTMAS HOLLEY . THE Provo City. in theater-gcer- s ' S men who have no special trade, and only muscles and eight or ten hour's, to sell for their living. When off duty or out of work, you may see ihese men .in AWAKEN. groups, talking small talk And in these groups, at 5 T speciar offering: to the As a ATURDAY, DECEMBER ,9th, AND LASTING ONE WEEK, A CLEAN SWEEP OF OUR ENTIRE LINE OF MEN'S SUITS. OUR STOCK IS NEW AND SOME VERY BEAUWE TIFUL PATTERNS TO SELECT FROM. - ?v X X I There' are many young X -- t t ..:.:.. ? When Knighthooll : : at be-ternk- . - chivalry. ; ' - - '''? ' - X '; " .: ...if ' 3- -1 |