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Show novo Tin: ' !.- - r'-JHEr.: r- - ... HCUA. O HERALD'S: -- EDITORIAL.RAGE '....;') " , r .' THE PROVO HERALD -- x r - .." news to carry the Issue under their state title. ing enough The publication is known in Michigan as the Michigan. Issue, and if ' there is not already one sent a Utah date linei there will be Consolidation. of The; Provo Herald (Daily), and Ihtermountain before the ..... coming prohibition campaign has progressed very far. ..." Herald (Weekly.) '. The February number of the American Issue is so crowded with ' PUBLISHED BY HERALD PUBLISHING CO." the , a d y gVjJ sera snts. jof iakjjs, that;the papriske-ihfkrtl-p- r Editor " ; , 0. C SOOTS' - , . min ' Center Street Provo, Utah books stock that us Utahans come, not i to ing prospectus infrequently ' .Mast of the advertisements, are calculated to catch those looking for BothThones Entered in the Postofficc at Provo, UtzW,- as second-clas- s mail work, and the graft is therefore the most disreputable, as it 'preys .. .r ,1 f f. . . I t f f . - J f.1 Tf neauiines , 1911. "niattecrjahttarjr-4uK)ii muse icaM uuic iu auuru n. oi mis nujjiDerart jne quite in keeping withvthe general matter it publishes very alluring 7 v- to Jhe uninitiated. j r..",; YOU WILL NEVER BE SORRY .' Here are a few specimens taken at random: " 1500 to $2000 --JL aJ.; ,v : To a sorrowing friend who had recently been bereaved, a Provo citizen addressed the following sensible ad The Herald ileems ' ' " : of i worthy reproduction : . COMMON SENSE IN "LetrnicteJl you, when a person is dead, THIS ADVICE it does no good for the jiving Jo fret. . T!!!!!ZI!!II Mourning does, the dead no good, and only works; a hardship on the living. Live-fo- r yourself and let the future, whatever, it may be, take care of itself. Whatever you may ,k or think will notjrgkire the dead to life,, and the best you "can o is to treasure a memory,forget the past as soon SS you ean, and live for the futureind alt the happiness" out of life there is in it: get Think "of the pgt, asonly.-- dream, and .let its,mistakes and follies be -yctduvn arlcssons in the school of experience. Sometimes these" a nessons are paid tor most dearly, but they can always be. a guide to certai ,Jldi.u uii.idjia.jndii, a year lor luumng wise ano our happiness. fI am not "preaching" to you ; I am telling you what These" are fair samples of the I believe to be facts. .' . . Cheer tlrting nothing;" "agents read this and happiness here and NOW . ... . r . li f headlines. , ". ... ... wnTcirTTvTN v 'vv any w.iife MjHr(mtt-mrt- Ti jvw,rjiij then there" are ihe "free"" offers to tempt the gullible. One ad thing absolutely definite." . .. ; . . vertiser offers "a stem wind watch free," while another, with more than the usual share of fakirs gall, announces that "one agent made The deadlock over the United States senatorship in the Colorado SLf,24S in 110 days another "made $3000 in nine months;" "Si 1,500 made in three years by one manager, and $7000 in one year egislature, which lias now lasted more than'three months.; is- another by another' A "wonderful bath apparatus is, offered free," four rings! evidence' of the importance of electingSenators by popular vote.tif are.. that .thrteglslarurewiinrdjdu'rn- soon m'ay be had for the mere asking, and $20 a" day" is" at: hand for any the people. a without ejecting successor' to Senaior Charles J. Hughes jr. one to try his luck selling scrubbing machines at so moth per scrub. and representatives of spec-t'a- interests care nothing-abou- t the The housewife is told thatj with an advertised washing machine, a Colorador-thethe w.ll.ot one ir is concern thei .in to seat "tuLful can be washed in six minutesf but theadvertiser people a last resort, refrains from mentioning the "dimensions of the "tub" The woman "friend" in the United States Senate. Perhaps,-a- s who wantsto earn money easy is told" that "a woman "can earn $5000 Iorimer plan will be adopted. a year at home," after she has availed herself of an advertising' offer. The man who longs for a rifle may have one free, a piano will be The Strawberry yETTey Water Uscrs' Association di(lthe right shipped free a vtolin sent free, and even a moving picture outfit is laliifi' n voting to increase its caprtar stock in order to complete this "attTeady to be shipped free to the sucker who will bite afthe adver- - great irrigation Opposition government pr0ject undertaken " tisments. to this course ws to) small to be seriously considered. The fact An industrious financier is growing trees for J.elei that the reclamation service thought well enoughof the project to is Ihe assistance of a few good otter graph poles, and all . that h or the total fund available for its corpple- morehan poles to Tio'n whjen" t"here "are more, .than a score of tHer similar projects vurjrswhgvvi!l jnvestin.lhe. CJitcrprjsfi.ancLwaitior-th- e ....... free Postal clerks are wanted, with .vacations assured, and under-wagrow! and needing money speaks vol mes- tor the merits ol thesucltef s are requested toTondly write the'advertiser and name the the . enterprise.. position he wants, and it will come to hiiii in the sweet bye and bye.'" A fake medicine, is advertised guaranteed in its testimonials to iLihe-ilexican ji.bels continue tht degrading tactic pursued.at- curejiaralysjsJPrighl's jdiseascppendicitii; piicuinQnia and all-tlafter they had capturd the town, the outcome oi th,e other diseases to .which fjesh is heir, and agents are told that jsht Agua I'nt, , In this case they man" made $21,500 in three years," while another fellow, "whoCared revolution will be their crushing defeat.in of the border all drink found bad the'saloons the to whisky ' J city, .'and after .twenty-fou- r rjoufs of pillage, plunder, and drunken selling the fake nostrum. d federals who refor the an were mark orgie; they easy Some7 The convention somewhat recently held in Maine in the interes: captured the town. dispatches say the rebels ran out of amforced to. abandon their position, but and were therefore munition eraln of an the newspaper of clean journalism marks the beginning" .such other 'accounts would7 indicate the cause of their deieat was too , the extmctioavvithin-,the-.-nextdecade.-of world.' much booze. Issue American hypocritical sheets as the (SEMI-WEEKLY) out-und- . ". . " " ; ' - : -A ; ; . .For "being courteous to all. . ... thdseround-you:wliV"are,.,airve,.''an- -- .'" - - - " -- "-"- For. asking pardon when in error. - For .stopping your- ears to gossip. For being honest in business dealings; For giving an unfortunate person a lift For promptness, in keeping your promises, For putting the best meaning on the acts of others. : - Pbli-'icia- ns l There is one really ideal daily newspaper in America, and that is the Christian Science Monitor, published at Boston, Mass. The -- Monitor doesn't claim to be--a reform CLEAN AND UNCLEAN paper"; in the sense that iprdvocates JOURNALISM.. any prevailing ' custom, but it does claim to be, and is. a clean newspaperdevoid of sensationalism, crime, calamity, slander, and fake advertisements'. ' Ttiat the policy of pure, truthful journalism; as advocated by the Monitor" has met with almost unanimous approval is attested by the fact that althougVttariiaperas 'established "by the rjiristian" Science Publishing-Societ- y lessthan ihree years ago, it now has tWe largest .circulation of any daily published in America, and is read in the .".1? .that wfittorintcan every country on thJ?5-llof "be found Tji the columns of the Monitor; the kind-of- . news that tends to. the progress and betterment of mankind. . ," In sharp contrast to the Monitor is the "reform" paper, known as the American Issue, the official organ of the n League. Indications, are that fakirs and grafters that are now infesting the country also made this paper theirofficial organ, and it would be hard to estimate the amount of money gathered irfrom the unsophisticated and unwary through the advertising pages of the American Issue. The paper is published in Ohio, the various states, serid-- - -- " , . For being generous to , h " bait-catchi- For hearing before judging. For thinking before speaking. V For standirig by your principles. ! ,1- - vice,-whic- -- H..w,llffnoDi, For doing your level best.. For being kind to the poor. ' u. .r ; . 4-.'- - by-th- " .;. e ? ck he-nee- one-tent- -- -- y - , iJ proceeded Anti-Saloo- level-heade- that-means- : -- Bond 'Election JtNO .W0PEJWTHEvVORtD''----j- . ..Tuesday. nIectIon wa hetd by the tax payers of $25,000 as a bonded inAn unknownpoet has dedicated the1 debtedness to pay off money that had following sadand mourmul hymn tot "5!"!dd?st rd' An' this" town's dyin', an' the next - town's dead, , hope in the world, believers! .. . ... .. 7., .. BUU w ' . 1 .lu . , An I bain t got wings fer. to soar - No been borrowed to complete the water Trovo's Pessimistic People." - It is Asystem; Also allowing a part of this 1 Recommended to the' calam- - f. amount for contingent ' expenses. kspecially now who are howlers, bewailing About six to one,ths voters were In ity ; tavor of bonding. - The vote cast wa the alleged loss of the cruit crop; ' An' no one jines when my- 133 for; water bonds, 20 against, 133 ; v ' gone with the gold-- ; ."for contingent expenses, 20 against, The, andslide's raise; .. mil,- mine An' this town's burnin'f and the with six spoiled ballots. Lent Banner. broke up tho; 7 next will blaze VC. : '.moon.iMne, still,' " : f " ' .rn ' No tne Want nope Mothers Dress ' Reform':' ' y Anr: this town's ruint. an' .the . n.e-Reform in dress for school children: tewn's "dry," . Thf frost It rum an' u.o hnrtif mnph -- 1 DEVELOPMENT NOTES AN 0 Is the purpose - of a meeting of AIT COMMENT So, piss i out when the folk; cunu-- f ccal;" bv moth era, .which was held at the Bryant We an" prayed with body Condition of the Fruit hill, a banker and business iuan. It plan inbecause it will No hone fn" thf. worldv believers! i school vesterdav afternoon. Thean "Will R. James be alleged that Mr. RocTf hill xtinU cre?b taiation That U will increase mothers, decarine the rnthles of irsas The sun don't rise in the-- same o'd Stewart of Royhaa sysitit i)t?t didn't freeze up tight an ' . j teraatically investigated the" "damage" a Dul!tIinS ia which a "blind pig" is thr axes there can be no denying, detrimental to the moral, physical and place, . fast . ,s all th.at ,he An' tlnMtluSy but t must be remembered thatmoon ain't sfrowin of it to the fruit crou by tli three- ntehts mental weli'aj-- of the girl studWits in the VviJ ture he, took by. the next cold ' " m me ousiness. a imprvements cost money. The elec' j blast- public schools appointed a com-trifriendly face; of heavy frost which occurred- - last- juieicsieu Among the men against whom firti- and. pure water .supply COPt ' mitte to draw rsolutio6 speciiyiug Art' light are- t'i'!-"No" hope "In the tbrli, heljiSvers! jt"i ne nas rejuiifd The conclu- - o in:, ennrgf s Have been lodged npn more han the o'd ta'.low dip and the a more or ies3 unitorm 4ress lor Blon that t nf TTtnn hna hn.u following: Fred Dart, former cliV mnr well, but who is there, after- annual graduation exercises, enough left to assure a good crop 0f BDa,; Neii Kahle, former justice of the realising the benefits of electricity ' The- following resolution drafted 'by ...... m u.w . u uiu in. . iiaie, and. Iure water, who would want to the mothers, will be 'preschted to tht' vuuut., "?ctrlc'an;--TOf J220 apricot buds examined, 960 cty .U.ones,-Btockreturn . to tne oia memoas Decause hoard nf eiliwatinnflt fta tpiIsv were found to be frozen and 260 saved. man; Frank Thomas, government they aire cheaper, ' meeting: These ,and the others ' ' That is .a ratio of more than one in "tester. Better highways for Sevier can . . 'l W6r the mothers cf 'm 'VhereaB, every five apricot buds saved, or a "?atnst whom charges were . lodged never be obtained by the present reve- - pils of eighth gradeaudhighschooi must- be some "other classes of the number', laree enoitnh- - to' nromisa a were arraigrjedbefore : W. B. Frost Bryant school, believing this evesjng and justice of fairiy good Crop Gi tuai fauj irun that inappropriate ant' extravagant In the peach test, it was found that released upon their own recognizance ing offers the easiest remedy with dress of girls" attending school is as w per ceni oi tne ouas were un- uuiu .Apru. is, wnen a nearing wur he chance Ifor future generations to- pay evil fraught cwith ; danger to their naa. iriDune. harmed. ... Some authorities hold that for the benefit of good roads,, which physical mental and moral welfare, where one bud in five is saved, a good the present generatibn guilds. Rich and .that the custom of wearing too ' Conscience Stricken Man field Rekper. crop is assured. If that holds true in costly dresses. at graduation time lays this instance, then the peach crop is Because he beat "the 'Oregon Short a heavy burden on' many who; cn ill " '' not only unimpaired, but benefited, by Don't Neglect the "Spuci" afford to bear It; therefore, be It the frost, as the thinning out is none Every! report makes the fruit pros "Resolved, That the board of educatoo severe to allow ef large, well ma- cents' worth of car fare several years tion be requested to take some action forlthe more assur pect present year tured beautiful, Juicy peaches, ' ' as ago, the conscience of a former Og ing and more encouraging. The peach on the matter to the end that: this region produced last season. den man has so smitten him' that he in school be dress while "First, from simplicity is far crop, damaged being There-a- re orchardlsts who didvnot has written a letter to iwe will harvest ; a urged; second, that decollete gowns BA, Shewe, "wiped 4uL" and EUludee who .claJm thev navml aa lar& be at school parties; third, a percentage as those'wbo used the city passenger and ticket agent of the larger bumper of cars and apples than thatprohibited outfits for the cost of artificial heat With the thermometer road, asking that he may be allowed we ever pid in our history, as a fruit June, 1911, in- - graduating all classes of grade ten to twelv degrees below freezing, to "compensafe the corporatfon for its producing aecttonhe Orand Valley schools and l!or a; crop .well in excess ol high schools be limited to . "-the wonder is that any of the orchards loss. : ".";-.'- is3000good ':" carloads this yeah which means --a reasonable amount"' escaped complete crop destruction.--OgdeThe committee appointed to select. 3 Ticket Agent Shewe has declined better thin" $2,500,000 "foriruTOuonS Standard. . to make public the name of the reThevaJue of the diversified crops standard-- of "dress for graduation remorseful patron, but states that the whfch'wiil be raised inLthe valley this ported the following suggestiona-ato Composition and Art Culture writer of the conscience letter moved year, while uncertalnl ; will be far what should be "worn by girl gradu- We hold it to be . fact some years ago from Ogden to 01ym; greater "than the amount ever raised ates: ., that no school Is doing its duty when Pia, wasn., "'VI' "A baby waist, elbow' sleeves, Dutch irom on before. Over Mesa hun the Orchard episMf which.city it trains not its pupils in the art of wag mailed. Part of 11 J . Thfe new Spring: Styles jest ' lace at insertions neck and collar, of cantaacres of the dreds reads: and letter potatoes composition, and voice culture in the some m skirt neither on are "train loupes years ago I eot being put in bn virgin land. sleeves, Jong straight way of public speaking and reading, at received are bourid to rheet with an : Nyassa, Ore., and rode to Weiser, With the increased acreage in canta- gathered - nor pleated, - plain : hem thse very requirements are to he met IdavThe around all to the bottom conductof be.of so Clifton me overlooked and wash the district loupes iq" at the close of the school, and in- I idd not enthusiastic reception. They're in a .' pay my fare. If you will throughout the valley I generally- we material to cost, not: - morethaa.-i'svariably on entering higher courses ten me what T cents class the fare Jr I will pay It" ought to Iraise double our last year's per yard. of training than our public school, and by themselves, so far v ahead writer does not explain wheth- output of melons. t "There should .be no sashes, no it is unjust to make such a demand, er The hft has discovered a cheap method whits hair ribbons, no bandages about past season's successes as to and neglect the training 'for It until the head.1 Black shoesreither xfordr radium, whether he 1000 cars of "potatoes. . I , t58 eleventh hour. The demand is all ofmannfacturing i.eliminate comparison. Finished ex- has been attending a revival meeting, During the last month a number of or. slippers, and - black - stockings rlgM but the neglecting of early train- or whether the should worn." News. be Ceseret cars came those of back damp Gar atmosphere through ing for it is absolutely wrong. It amples of - the best shoemaking, has .afflicted him 'With a field to Gand Junction. '.Through the ,' should begin in the lowest grade by Washington ' moral : : . correct , in What may have courtesy of Mr. Vickery of. the ColoThe Sound Sleep oft Good Health" ..detaiL t : Stylich ":. every ading the child to express in ita own prompted the letter will not - be in- rado Midland we can put the- potato Can not be over. estimated and any a description of what it sees, and comfortable : to jSuage vestigated by Mr. Shewe, who expects export crop; of Mesa county; last year ailment that prevents 4t la a menace degree- .- On ; s:r,1 continued in every ' department, to forward the penitent paper to the at close to 80 cars. Garfield county to health. J, L. Southers, Eau Claire. UJ most tKoroughly drilled through ganeraj - sale passenger .Agent of the road. Yourjrpection is meet shipped about 920 more cars of the Wls.pBayi : Ml have been unablfrto the fit Standard. Ogden -humble we but Vt:.'.:n. Fork jnrofitable spud''than sleep jsoundly nights, .because of pains ' V cordially invited. :.' ..' did. .. acrosa my back and soreness of my ' Eondiftg for Roada .' This looks aa poor" policy' to the kidneys. My appetite was, very poor Tanker Arrested in Gambling Raid CP in Cache valley an election will News. The Grand Valley can pro and my . general condition was , much as a result or tne. moral wave ;be heliT May 6 to determine' the duce as quesa good potato- as Garfield run down, T have been taking Foley '." ich 13 just now at high t;de ia Span- - tion of. bonding the county for $150,000 county ever did. We will match the Kidney- Pills but a short time and now i lorK, iw.nty rfbi.Imte of the city to be expended on county DeBeque product with Carbondale any sleep aa sound as a rock, my general 1 fa rrrirUd t vy pa charges of The people there will, more highways than like day. The ranchmen of the GrandJVal- condition-t- o" . greatly huoved,an4-- 4 Anion - tteiuea arrested ly; vote for the bmd3. because good thos who have been know that Foley Kidney Pills have '' ; j TromraeatTCHl- rii3rarra tecegsity and the bonding nipped will be very cured me" by the late ' V. ? .'.y. t plaa gives future generations a chance wtsto investigatefreeze, S the potato situa1 y City tar- t3 ray for a legacy of good roads. i tion.. If Grand the ValW shipped out it Its advertising, space In The Provo , f were : . The lUeaper - suggests - that - Sevier 1000 cars of potatoes Fhould fall In line and bond a HnnV krtwr.t ...... i ithis fall many terald to the one best buy la Utah 'lie coucty ' 5. B, Work- ror roans. Mme opposition to this Grand Junction (Colo.) vfd"-::..Pally Now. 1 'WlTlty. " I . hyn4 - - - . world,-believer- s! t DED1T0RI ', 1 - f:!,ftn?. e i " Vat--.tai- s wctjh.,-pn- a e - thia-nar- - - a-- ; , . nues.-YTher- . Subscribe ior The Herald. $1.50 year nt ' .'"' - e ' y v the-peac- -- - - ? V . ; "" . - n. " s self-evide- nt : -- . : ; . . - . 1 -- -- " -- - . , . -- brain-stor- 1 -- a . toiay.' -- - - " 1 '. " .".;-- " . . . '. See Window Display - - VfOTT T rl -- - leyr-BBpeci- ------ - i ; , f r- - . -- r:tl l tVrvrv 9. --- - t- |