OCR Text |
Show THE FEO Vjl-SIERAL- TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 28, 1911. D; A - I LONGENECKER rLEHI, IN wiVV:''"':ivr'v';; T H V Tuesday'- - a.Ji Wednesday, No-- s vember and 29. ' "THE INDIAN FLUTE" .Vita Masterpiece ' "THE EXPRESS ENVELOPE" Railroad Story, "THE VILLAGE HERO" a.5 - "" " Carnations 70 cents per Floral Co., Phone 332. j - "PAT HE WEEKLY" Illustrated. THE TORFROM ;!SAVED RENTS" Railroad Story. "HIS STUBBORN WAY" The- - News The shaft at the Crown Point is now in a depth of 48Q feet and it is expected, that' another week's work .will take It to the 500 where drifting will be started if the indications :' are considered favorable, .t ; Lubin Comedyv " . li you buy, yoar turkey cranberries and mincemeat at The .'Speckart Co., yovt can be .assured of .a ;fine Thanksgiving dinner for nominal cost. Matinee at Both Theaters "fhanlgivinfl--2:3- 0 to 5 p. on hi. -- DANES BECOME BOOSTERS. ' committee of ., representative ; .A 'jDanes of., San Francisco have issued 2 atampfor the purpose "df securing these-animals- Provo . - THE GREATEST MUSICAL . SINCE. COMEDY., SUCCESS WIS "FLORODORAf"" , , fo) PREACH ON PEACE." Elders Joseph A. Buttle and Charles Schwencke spoke in the afternoon on tabernacle Sunday "Peace and Arbitration." , Appropriate, vocal selections - were rendered " 7hy the choir. j - is the place TheSpeckart to buy Turkeys, Ducks, Geese Co. and Chickens all of the. highest ' ' quality, il s Wood's Tamales best. Ask for them. - , THANKSGIVING AT THE ELLEN. Th' emanagemeat of the Rex- - and Eilen theaters jve arranged a matinee at. both theaters on Thanksgiy-- . . ing day from; 2:30 tojoclock.: Sp- -' clal leatures,. will be.. seen at both houses. For "tonight and Wednesday a 'night 'Vitagraph masterpiece, "The Indian Flute" will be the feature. "The Indian' Flute.' is a picturesque and . poetical ' portrayar of an- - Indian romance as beautifully told in its ems of natural scenety as Hiawatha," or "Minnehaha." The" grace of "Awanta," sthe Indian princess, and' the and statellnesa .oftlWlld' LFox," the lovelorn Indian brave, takes vone back to the days of the S'ayer" and "The Last of the Mohl--cans." There also is another good feature the Ellen, a KatenVf flljn, a thrilling "'The Express Envelope. Also two others. An.railroad story. . lithe-rBoniEne- . at -- other Pathe .Weekly, a current "ne wspaper of recent events, wilfbe shdwn at the Rex. tonight and Wednesday ' MM: - .Clark, Joseph. . "Evans, Robert: Hayes, Isaac. (2;). -- f , fellow-workme- , cost to '. by Harry B. and Rob't B. Smith. Musfcby ' R6berrH66d"B6wers." "Direct from the - v.-- . GLOQE THEATER, N. Y. - senior warden. 4 . W. J. Moore, of Sa Lake -- City, grand scribe. f Mudge. of Salt Lake QJty, grand Junior warden. .A. N.'' Fishburn, of Brigham City, . grand, treasurer. .. L.-1- .' "THE HOME OF , Jjy Ship'mepts of ore' from the Tintic1 district In 1911, covering, not quite ' SPEGIA L nine months, reaches the total of 7,315 carloads. Estimating tne next five weeks at 160 a week, it will The cause of thch.ojr special. be bring, the year's totals 40 8,115. At was the 50 tons tolthe car, this amounts to ing Tlelayed Saturday night wreck at Thistle of the engine of 405,750 tons. It 20 a ton, the out-pDenver & 'Rio Grande No. 2 of Tintic fosthe year reaches the and the engine helper, which sum of 18,115,000. was being brought on itbe main Dividends for the. year to date a hostler at Thistle prehave amounted , to $1,334,000, which track byto helping the train. paratory has been distributed by seven riiines, Thfr helperhad -j- ust- reaehed" the the CenjennJarEureka main' line when the train rounded a Iron Blossom,-- . Opohongo, Gemini, curve here, crashing into the Sioux Consolidated "and Uncle Sam. sharp Both locomotives were deengine. Dividends to date from the district railed and a lady on Hie train was . are 2U70,000. injured. New engines were brought to carry the train, to its destination. Tho" cnir spgpinl roas delayed by I some two or three thi3 accident hours. east-boun- . BIOS 0 THE-TUDEN- casr'theTOltedtates'- - -- -- Ger-manj- v Tt y own-working- The thimble was at Cm worn on the thumb, and for that reason was called - a thumb 'bell, which later be--, came thumble and finally thimble. It waa' Invented by the Dutch, and brought to England m 1695. . The first thlmb'le were made of iron or brass; later came those of stiver, gold, steel, horn. Ivory, peart and glass. - The Chinese make beautiful pearL wlthgold binding and ends. One of the most gorgeous thimbles ever seen was a bridal gift from the king of Siam to tons queen; It was made of gold, shaped like a' lotua bud. and was thickly studded with dla monds, arranged so as to spell the queen's name. ' A Thinking Part . The boss was brusque and the timid stenographer had herevedge by nicknaming him Mr--. Legree;x The appellation "took" and Hnally reached the boss. The stenographer fled, but the name remained. AnotheV stenographer tame with imperious ways and changed the tone of the office, but a salesman fresh from a trip knew nothing of the change. ""Hello,1 Mr. Legree," was his greeting to the' s.' - f . saw-the- boss. "Young man.' said- - the, chief meekly, "roles In this company have been reassigned. - I now play the part of the cake of . ice' on which Eliza walks." Success Magazine." - . " ' It " fnjnu7rr?rnai mum mar m : m mm m AA7 2 Guaranteed Bates. W. LOST. LOSTWhite linen lunch cloth on Third East, between 2d and 4th North, - -- or 4th North, between 1st and Finder please call 42 IX. 3d It pays the best, for Wood's Tama! ps. Ask y to-bu- . , Chrysanthemums, all kinds at Phone 332, Provo Floral Co. - " ' . p. & R. G. Excursion. For the Utah State Teaohers association meeting to be . held at Salt Lake City, November 27, 28 and 29, & Rio Grande will sell round-tri- p tickets to Salt Lake City and return at the rate of one single fare fot the round, trip. Tickets td be sold --November 2$, 27jT:28 and 29, good returning' until December 4 the ' Denver .j Ask for Wood's Tamales. vvays the best. A WANT-A- D Al- - " IN THE HER-AL- D WILL. RENT A ROOM. ; Got What He. Went After. A committee from the legislature was visiting the rBtate university. They were Invited to take supper- at . the students' club, where most of the poor young fellows' who had to work their "way got board at cost After supper the students called on the Visitors for speeches. One member from a remote county, .who. had made his reputation by "bein' a good talker," grew very eloquent' In his encouragement to the boys to go on, in spite of all difficulties. "I know what It is, ' boys," he sid, emphatically. "I had to dig' for. my own 'education, but I shore got her Youth's Companion. Paltems Ask. for Particulars V East It - . aw rpirrirprp - - East J. SiErll)resFalterns ' 36. Wool Dress he-wil- . house, modern. South Fourth M'on- - day" evening of Andreas Alonzo,v ranches, ' Raymond Treece, 10 years old, who. has admitted that he Intentionally "shot Alorizi while out hunting eight days ago, was formally charged today with murder.. Because of the hoy's" l be turned over to the age court Juvenile ', ';" t'" v' 4j Young Treece and a compan" Ion- - could. It nd no' game, so they resorted to shooting at cows and When horses .for amusement h;e saw Alonzo "driving near San'--ger, with his wife, he remarked jthat' as .he - could ,; not hit any birds,-h';wouW'jee:;:Ify'h.ej'c6uWj' hit a man. He then took dellber- ate aim aV Alonzo nd , fired. In- ' .XJ fllcting a fatal wound. e bushel, Robert gallon. -- w- BOY AGED 10 SLAYS CALIFORNIA RANCHER a FOR RENT 231 ; About Thbnb' i. . . 50c Apples FOR RENT. d - DRA60H n, Ft)R SALE. FOR SALE sweet cider Birkin. C com-misiion- ADS F - III dr --n U ut '' As a result of the death SHOES" . , The total; cqal prpductjpn of the world in 1910 .was approximately 1,300,000,000. short tons, of which the IMMENSE COMPANY, 24 MU-- : United States contributed, about 39 SICAL NUMBERS, WONDER- per cent. This country ahaa far out- -' FUL PARISIAN COSTUMES. all others, and in 1910, acstripped CHORUS ' AND STUNNING, to the United States geolocording BALLET-SCENINOVELTIES Great gical survey, - If exceeded ORE IH Britain, which ranks second. By ove? tons. Great Britain's 200,000,000 In GLIDE,?i 1910 was less than 60 production cent of of the United States, that per Dragon Consolidated baa "been stimarid Germany's waa less than half. ulated on the market today by the rePRICES 50c TO $2.00 The iricrease-i- n ooth of these coun port that the Iron Blossom vein is Sale Dec. 4. tries in 1910 over 1909 was cbm- - within about 20 feet of the former rparatitelynBMall,w'hereas"nhein- - property on the 600 level. Every inwas' dication points to the continuance of TO INSPECT QUARRIE8. nearly equal to the entire produc- the vejnJnJoJhj3j5ragwip -Arrangement rare being . made by tion of France and was more than as the ore Is highly mlnera'lzed, the total production-- , of any foreign stoxkfhe3)raLOl3onsldered the. members otlha tltalL caltol commismore valuable., r country except Great Britain. sion for two or three trips to quarIs our intention;' said J. Wfl-- ; and France, ries in the vicinity of Salt Lake, where liam Knight, "t6 work the Dragon bulding material might be secured for SALE OF STATE tANDS. through the Blossom workings until use in the construction of .the capitol W.- - H. Tharn, of the stat board of we can ascertain the extent-o- f the it- r land commissioners, is preparing lor pre body. If the body provea-tcLbuilding.; b tlje sale of 80,000 acres o grazing large enoughs we wfll probably "start EXPERIENCE ON COLORADO. lands in Box Elder county December- - L the Dragon but on Its : Joseph Smithr a prospector and He will conduct the sale. The land It is only a matter of a fe- days trapper, who was ,lost for a time in lies in various parts of the county untl the Dragon line will be encounCataract canyon, arrived at Hite, and at present is being listed and par- tered. This accounts for the raise in celed so It may be auctioned without the stock. Utah, with his boat, afterharrowing contusion. It,. is. expected there will Smith reportshaving be experiences. a, lively demand for the landj as !Tv Reward of Merit' experienced a hard time, in theHurbu-leh- t some of" it is good for dry farming It was a ratny Sunday morning, and --waters- of thtfColorado river purposes,, though most of it Is merely as Pastor Goodman looked over his re were just congregation he above Hits. He, lined his boat down good grazing land." seventeen persons present ; Pastor lTthe7 rapids, but curied hl$ bedding Goodman, beln a wise man. did not 7 ' and supplies overland, often having to SANTA CLAUS LETTERS, scold them on account of their being Clove Postmaster is already receivclimb five and'six hundred feet up in so few In number. He gave them, the iha clifts. His hoat ' v. as a very- - poor ing manyletters? from little, folks ad- best sermon he had. In his barrel. fias been to Santa Claus. one, but he lost nothing- - except one of dressed; a to sjnd these 'to the dead lethis oars. "Smith will stay 'at Hite a ruling " ter butr this has been changed office, arid so or then "go day. resting up the and postmaster now hold3 "them down the rver, en route to Lees Ferry, and. tJtfi best d.lsposltk)n of makes . Ariz. , " '." . them he can. A AND UP. GOOD Bros-- DELAYS CHOIR t ifr . ' - . WRECK AT THISTLE . BILLION TONS YEARLY Austria-Hungar- ;. - C WORLD'S" COAL" OUTPUT " you. should be pleased to show you ti e best Men's Shoes for the price in' JiLJahnsionotJaTlCityr-gran-"high priest " Provo. Joseph Hughes, of Stockton, jrand PRICES $2,00 & -- of skilled designing and labor, and no shoes cun give greater return fpr tjhlr YVe d ofoF-'lllTI- .. - : - greatest possible SATISFACTION. No shoes have a iiner artistic touch "The Home of Good Shoes" , - .T patriarch. The strength of . Our Men's Shoe3 is In their material ability to give the ' - T-j- officers and the installation of grand encampment officers for the ensuing year. Two meetings were held in the Odd Fellows hall on Academy ave-nu- t; one in' the forenoon and one in the afternoon, and durng the noon recess a banquet was served at the hall. ' The grand officers elected and who were installed today are as follows: ' J. C. Smith, of Salt Lake City, grand r W. p. . Passey & Co., Geo. Stubbs, John V. ... Sumner, Thomas." Sworez, Rafael. "Van Wagenen, Mr. If not called far in two weeks they, will be sent to the dead letter office.' JAMES CLOVE,. P. M. night, and- - there also la a" raLroad '. story at the Ret, "Saved- From the BOY SCOUTS. of The the. first Boy Scouts A good "'ilia meeting Torrents.' comedy, Stubborn Way,"' and jt&" others are for ihe winter season wllL be held at the Central school on Friday evening, V billed. December 1, at 7:30 p. m. " Meeting - will be held jntheasemblyroom.un: HURTMN CAVE1N. James Dugdale, a young TroVo-manthe supervision of the scout was burled in a cavein at a gravel pit and those j, All 'scouts In Provo canyon yesterday afternoon. the troop a requested join -A were tenderfoot to dlgbe class, will .with .He present comcommencehis as well the as a over when started be gravel pit, ging panions saw him fall under earth and ment of advanced, work,; Advanced " rock! After digging an hour they. fin' first: aid,L wigwam signalling and map . ally unearthed him. ; He was uncon-- drawing will be the advanced, work. " cious when. found, but was revived Boys from .12 to 48 "years of age Inand brought to bJshome here. ' , vited , to' " jou .the new . troops to be ' formed.',,,'' " .'v r SMALL FIRE. . A small fire In the warehouse of the RIO GRANDE EXCURSIQN RATES. Utah Wholesale Grocery company at ; Account Thanksgiving Day the DenFourth West and Sixth South streets, ver & Rio Grande will make a rate resulted la $30 damages, to the place of one "Bmgle lare' for the round trip yesterday morning, t The fire deparj- between all stations von the Denver m'e'nt made & Quick run to 'the", scene & Rid Grands in"TJtah7 "wltSa7mnl-m'ufare M!5 centa.f' Tickets on of the, fire, Which had been extinguished ly employes before its anivaL The sale; November 9tb and - 30jth,lgodd f .ra cf the Cre is unknown. returning unfitDecember 4th. . ' Fellows were here today to attend the grand encampment convention of that order, held ' to canvaa.8 the returns on the election, hear ,th.e innual reports of . Hawkins, . ? . - -- THE IS CRUSHED Have you tried Wood's Tamales fore he was led into the cham- ber Friday morning, read the service. Tq guard against, dos- sible annoyance theexact hour of the funeral was kept secret until midnight, and there were no crowds; The aged father's grief was intense. , A florist's wagon entered the cemetery gate Just after day- light and today the mound of earth was hidden beneath flow- .. ets. After It became known today that the .funeral had been held a tremendous crowd visited the cemetery. Rouble ropes were tied around the grayed keep the crowds back. . Odd -- 26, 1911: Ladies. Anderson, Mrs. Esther..' Carter, Mrs,- - Wm. Clements, Miss Barbara. Johnson, Miss Agnes (2). .Nelson, Miss Anna. . J Sharp, Mrs. Annie. Miss Reva. Vincent, Williamson, Lulu. Gentlemen Britz, Joe. ' ' Present 1 About oneTiiuhdred South RicRmond. - Rev. John Fix;'.A who prayed with Beatty just J?.g; ; JOHN C. FISHER v -- ADVERTISED LETTERS. Remaining in Provo Post Office 4 th November '. Saturday afternoon a v young man - named Schofield had one of. his feet badly crashed while helping Serenus 'Gardner bale bay at Spanish Fork. The " inj ured man "was hurriedly taken to the office of Dr.. "Warner who dressed the Injured foot and Mr! Schofield is feeling--, as well "as unden the clr-- . couldwbe expected umstances. December VVednssday, . - ' FOOT Opera House X:v 4 vA his of wife whom the By grave jhe murdered July 18, the boy of 4 -- .. funds for "a Panama exposition display; The stamp is to be sold dll oyer the United States at one cent each. They are to be placed on .the reverse side of letters and packages, and. they, will at the same "time be a means of advertising the exposition. ,The DanlshJJoosters . cjub of Utah has the distribution in hand' for Provb people may secure Utah. stamps from the Provo representative 'Of the club, Daniel P. Thuesen. of this city. ... - - ; REX ) r -- G our- Henry Clay Ueattyr4r-wa- s led in Wauiry cemetery shortly after 'sunrise yesterday. There was a. brief service at the resi- dence," attended only by' members of the family, and by eight friends who served as pallbearers, and then the 'procession moved streets of he .silent through . , Provo doz. , " BlflgrapS Comedy. 'M.UCKY HORSESHOE; Bfograph Comedy. ' . CRQW.N POINT TO DRIFT. : West-fintie- - Tjie Utah Con. mine which has been closed is in temporarily A new again. campaign operation of work has heeh outlined for the mine and a good lowing is' ex: ' pected. Jtf whoowns a ranch Lin; the ne'giborhood of - Cow Hlollow, was- in ' Eureka the other day to visit his family and "says that t the mountain lions are liable to exterminate the game in that section as well "as . injure the horsr and cattle industry. - The Situation is growing., .worse'' all the time and ;he farmers and ranchers of the Wes.t Tintic section have joined together in ofiering a special bounty for the killing of mountain lions. The lions 'are especially bad in the destruction of deer "and have killed off overdone half of this year's fwns according to the statement of a well known cattle man of that Mr. n"ilsonvfiays that the Section. beasts make 'short work of calves and coltsan that the ranchers of eVst, Tintic. believe that the"!Xtate officials should try to bring about ar. increase in the bounty which is offered for the killing of ' EARLY-MORNIN- FUNERAL FOR BEATTY ' r PITT HV VAN W. A. Wilson, - 28 CON. CLOSED. '. I V ELLEN . UTAH EiT R E S E r Rev. G. V. Longenecker was at Lehl Sunday where ha gave the ad-- '. dress at the; Thanksgiving' services held at the New West school house. JDp;i MDUHTAIfi ' A A A' |