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Show PA- C- - THE PROVO HERALD TWO n n a a - Herald Editorials o- - $ O' . Senator Lallollette, the progressive candidate ler- president on The Republican ticket at the Chicago Conven- T Doinoltjoi naif, Doing It DO IN G WHAT? tionn, had the following to say concerning W J. Bryan .CoL.Qfisevelt in his weekly magazine "Brvan ai Baltimore, foreebifiall chances of his own :- v liiej Ti'artv from - - thpir Hnminatinn. r -. v uuu Miv VI ,icfe fM uolj . w rcrtiA ' of the most procarrying" the convention for the adoption grcssive Democratic platform yet offered and the towering jigure of moral power and patfietic UeVotion to civic rights eousness. "Roosevelt at Chicago, backed by money derived by-stock watering Operations of the steel trust and the har- ' vester trust, organizing what are now .confessedlQ, have v. 1 4 M fr 1 -- & order to control the Republican convention and secure his own nomination, refusing the aid in making "a progressive platform, bound to have the nomination or destroy the ' Republican party, was a most striking example of rnisdir- ected power and unworthy ambition. "Roosevelt had as great an opportunity to serve the progressivecause at Chicago as Bryan at Uatimore. But Roosevelt was serving the man, not cause, He wanted nomination. And yet he did not have .one thing-he- . to nominate himself upon any honest basis. enough votes did have enough delegates in that convention ultima-- ' He ' telysto have nominated a real progressive and adopted a strong progressive platform. lie could even have nom- inated : Hadleyon such a platfonn;and progressive. Repub- Jicans couid have supported Hadley in much the same spirit as hundreds of thousands of them, will now suooOrt Wilson. Both appear toTeenoT7hTgTi ideals, whose records, , though short, give promises. "But Roqsevelt would not consider Hadley, He would 'have no one but himself. At the first suggestion of Hadley he ordered the third party maneuvers, lest he lose his lowers. If ht had the evidence to prove that Taft could not be nominated why did he not direct his lieutenants to present that evidence to the national committee and then to the convention and to the country so clearly that the conven-tio- n would not have dared to nominate Taft, and that Taft could not , in honor, have accepted he nomination, if made? "The reason is obious. An analysis of the testimony will, P anrxonvinced, "show that neither Taft nor Roosevelt had a majority of honestly or regularly elected tdelegaTes7i; This, the managers on both sides well understood. Bath candidates were trying to seat a sufficient number of fraudulently credentialed delegates, added to those regularly chosen-tsupport him, tp secure control of the convention and to "steam roll" the nomination. It was a proceed- - . ing with which eacji was aquainted and each had sanctioned ' ' in prior conventions. . :.vi. , : 72wThi8: explains the extraordinary conduct of .Roosevelt" lie could not enter" upon" any such ' an analysis of the evidence as would prove Taft's regulary. elected "eltgates in" the minority without inevitably subjecting his own spur-ousl- y credentialed delegates to an .examination-s- o critical las would expose the falsity of his own contention that he had an, honestly elected majority of delegates. He there-- j fore deliberately' chose to claim everything, to cry fraud, to bully the national committee and the convention and having created a condition which would make impossible a calm investigation of cases upon merit, carry the convent . : T-.tKmy storm, , n 1 1 IlZf . l II im; b 'm III l.TliLllL-V- I v ft ' MEN'S SUITS. $25,00 quality for $16-9$20 and $22.50 quality for 7--- C t ' ' $1495 Up to $15 quality for ; 4 4 - $990 BOY'S SUITS. $2.50 to $3.75 quality for., $198 - $4.50 and $5.00 quality for- $2-9- LADIES' DRESSES. Newest styles, dainty 0 . k 1 Real Bargain Giving, Money Saving Sale. " x ii r 5 . A n 1 1 Stocking up on, Clothing, Shoes, Underwear, etc. In fact everything to wear for men, women and children, as well as Dry Goods and Notions at the Mid'Summer Clearance Sale.. The 4 ' r -- - iere4ravifafnmany omina'riOTrrTOaTshafntraH-his -- id- - n ri 11 mwm - C BRYAN AND ROOSEVELT. m . med, $2.98 fo'$2S trim- - Off 1- -3 WHITE DRESSES. TTot slightly soiled, $4.90 to $12 ;,;;, .l-- 2 Off SEPARATE SKIRTS. 1 lot of about 18, $5.50 to $8.50........... ... l Off r . 4 "n FLAXONS-thnew summer goods, cord stripes and patterns a SHEETING, very heavy, bleached, 4 SHEETING, very heavy) unbleached, 4 1 PRINTS, American brand, staple qualities, permanent colors GINGHAM, best quality apron ginghams, colors guaranteed ill T n r 23 .... . 9-- Will pay you to investigate. - :. : 9-- And hundreds of other bargains. gain Store. 2c :. -- P0 !J yard yard yard &-4yard'' We will prove to you it pays to buy at Provo's Real Bar- : $ -- 3 -- 3 calfMe C u r 9 o n mi CopyrigJtt Hart Schaffncr & Mara Hi - r.3 0" " ! . - I & V ' A QUITE LIKELY. . ' Travelers to Colorado and the East , ' t:r :i.Ji': Should select a route famed for its Scenic Attractions and Superior ' Train Service. . f SOCIAL WRECKS AT UNIVERSITIES ' The ultimate purpose for which our colleges and uni- vTersities are founded men for their greatest work in life. Their pnfy reason for ' existence is the education that they give and the sharpen- ingof the intellect by competition at the very time that the characters in its most moldable state. But for years tehre has been. growing within the colleges themselves a microbe !hatWiirsooner or lateFTTesfrov the institution if it is not killed. JQwen l Johnson in a recent story called attpntion toJhe growth of society life in college? and his comment is true of almost all educational institutions; He showed how the younger generation truckle and fawn, or. work beyond their powers to gain recognitionan.d entrance into the exclusive organizations that rule the student body. The main ele- ment of college and, forming intellect and character for the bigger work of the world is lost,- o at - least is made secondary to the ambition for sucess in, what should be be a secondary activity. What Johnson wrote was fiction, but a student afew days ago called sharp attention to.the.fataLwork: oLlhe secret; j"" and social societies.' Eleven men tf 4 glee club were com pelled to go to sanitariums To recuperate after tour. One of the most proniishicmen of the class had tO resign his "society" posts and leave college for a while in" Ir: order to regain health lost.1 , , be should of the work the themselves" students to ,.JIt' cujethis evil in their college life. ? Greek letter : societies, glee cfubs, athltic clubs and "proms' areall very well, but whenjnen in the making wreck their health and shatter their careers in order to shine socially, then it t would be better to abolislftVe mall and return to first principles in ; order to make a new start. '' -- ! .: . It has long been suspected that Dr: Wiley has a hankering io be an editor. - Now he is onei or at leasts sort, of a contributing editor for a housewife's publication in which he will tell how to make digestible, piecrust (let us hope), and what time of the, moon to pluck dandelion greens. 7when..to open sarsaparilla, beer, and how to prepare, a lob- v ter salad innocent of nightmare frenzies.' The doctor will alSO Continue to iic Vlf nrMrh ttl rnnstant fmit .vaa.. MV Vijll II Ul at a healthful diet. No bceter thing was ever done ' bvDr. - :: ', answer." Several tried , nnBUccessfuly until Thought Hubby was Mean. one boy asked him: "Please, sir, 11 'Society Dame Oh, doctor, I'm sc you stood up to your neck in soft mud sorely troubled with ennui! , Doctor H'ml Why don't you Inter and I threw a stone at "your head would you duck?" est yourself in finding out how the The question remained unanswered other half lives! Ideas. Society Dame Gracious! Whyt I'm not looking for a divorce. Judge, His Training. ' .laapproprlatei ' '. "Well, boy, what do you knowT Can "Why do you hare minor keys in fou write a business letter! Can you do sums!"" this military music?" . . , ."riease, slrAsald the applicant oi ."Why not?" a Job, we didn't go In very much foi "If It is an army ; march, it ought those studies at our school. But I'm to be all in major keys." One on or clay modeling." iLECTRiC LIGHT - . 4- - THE REAL SI5N .' Is the Electric sign , ' ' " 1 . ex-act- PFtsident Taft didn't hcsitate a minute in. vetoing the .bill which' would have legislated out of office the favorite and rough-ridin- g Colonel of Roosevelt's regiment. cases naa been reversed what would Roosevelt have done? 4 4 4 4 ov 4 .In wilch to store the crop of dollars "which you sow with labor And ' reap with hope. Feed your bank account now and 'It will fe'ed you .when the wlnterof Jlfe sets in. As your bank account grows, toil and' . sacrifice will be "rewarded with ease and cleasure.' Deny yourself, in small tfflnga and later you can gratify big ambitions. Great things are ' possible to the man who has" money in the bank.- -: " ' Make a deposit today. . the rest W. H. , .. ; " : ' If-th- IN I PAYS TO ADVERTISB " i1 THE HERALD. , This Bank is a Safe Grainery ' phone iw. We will do '. Ray A Co. Academv. r - . .6 Morth Fores of Habit. hear that has been apMaude We had private .theatrlcali pointed a judge." That will never do." last evening. ' Theyent off first rate, "Why nott "All his previous Influences will Inonly the folks would laugh in the " duce him to favor the recall," , wrong place. ; Uncle Henry There ia no such thing, Maude, as laughing In th Astonishing. wrong place at private theatricals.' . "James, I .wonder how you can sit there and look me in the face!" "So do I, dear; but It's surprising MONEY TO LOAN. . , what a really bold, brave, reckless bud want to borow' money on man can do." P.-- l 1 ' If you t, tarminf land or city property, tele All Funny. attrac-tiv- e both day and .jTfght. v It draws the people tayour window at night and they locate your place, of business by that same sign the nexi ,, dayTRY ! IT. Designs and quotation! promptly submitted. THE ELECTRIC CO. . - ' - - " bead-wor- Wiley than to tell the public that.it oitght to eat an'orSngV cvety..jro'cjbeiQre breakfast; apd if not an orange then an apple. "It wiM save doctor's bills,'' said ,th? doctor; but this was not disloyality, he is"a doctor of philosophy, not of ' medicine, neither of divinity . Hail Dr. Wiley, exponent " " pf the fruit diet! . . t i . ; g- .V . - - f 8nd fu" Particulars will be cheerfully furnished on appH cation to any Rio Grande Agenu I. A. BENTON, Gen. WM. MITCHELL, Agt Pass. Dept. Agent Salt Lake City. Utah & E. EGGERTSON, Ticket Agent.. FR General .Passenger. AgeMv WADLEI6H,; ' Denver, Colorado. 1. ..F?r . , DR. WILEY AN EDITOR. Superb Dining Car Service working-overtime- , : these 'flowers to Miss "I bought this estate for a song." Bertie Bohoo, room 12," . : "Do you mean that you gave youi "My, sir, you're the fourth gentle- notes for it!" man wot's sent her flowers today." "What's thatT What the deuce! A Vernal Lay. Who sent the others?" Love doth make the whole world dizzy, names. "Oh, they didn't send any Love doth weave the poet's rhyme; They all said, 'Shell know where they 'Iong In spring Pan Cupid's busy ! ' V come from."' Booth, Jie's - "Well, here, take my card, and tell her these are from the same one who ' l) ; An Expensive Tendency. lent the other three boxes."5-TnB- lta. "They have a great many- - holiday! in European countries , thestatesman, -- 'but. - Earned It" r "yes.' replied. At a country school In the Midlands If we manage to put all the reforms the head maBter said: "Now boys, 1 suggested Into practice we will have ai will give a penny to the first lad who many election days as they have holi-- can ask me a question which I cannot days." - 1 Special Low Round Trip Fares to Pueblo. Colorado Springs. Denver and principal eastern points on sal May 18, 25 and 31, June V8, 8, 12, 15. 20, 22and 29, July 3, 12 and 30, August 10, 23 and 31, and September 4 and 6, 1912. Through Standard and Tourist Sleeping Cars dally to Denver, Kansas City, St Louis, Omaha and Chicago. !"M 1 A Winner. "Boyr-ta- k tion . This Route offers the "Baek East" Travelers more varied scenic attractions, that can be seen from, the car windows without extra expense for side trips, than any other line. Every Mile a Picture ; life-educa- The Denver & Rio Grande --The 25c e n Ic Llne of the World l . t )SX . A Different Thing. n "Whom Is that pretty young widow mourning for?" ; ; "I am sure I have no Idea." ' 'She is wearing very deep black." ' "Oh, that's for her old husband." ' .;' : Farmers TslO1' H' 6c Tayl0R' Merchants Bank. J- - D. DIXON, Cashier. ri K |