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Show THE THE MONT TIMES. AMERICAN L0VEMAKING At Published Every Thursday Tremonton, Utah. Entered as Matter April. Mti nd class 1904. at the P st at Tremonton, t congress of ffic Utah, under the act March 3rd, 179. flu iter! ptinjt rates. I STIRRED UP THINGS IN CUBA H.CapwU. Edll rami Manager. Win. "TVe'n been behind HAS Old Folks Are Firmly of Opi nion That the Methods Are Shocking, the Younger People Seem to Think They Are an Improve- way, to be recognized as human beings worthy of trust, as women of judgment and .75 Six mouths in advance common sense. They object to being II .50 One year lot in advance hidden away and kept centuries behind the times. Bold American Sets New Style. An audacious Yankee, college bred, H. L. TUCKER, tall, determined, In white flannels from head to foot a Contractor and Builder, dashing figure lifted his hat to a dark eyed Cuban girl as he passed her TREMONTON, UTAH. on the plaza in Havana. She smiled Plans Furnished and lEstimates Made back at him. lie stood still and outYour patronage m all kinds of work. stretched his hand. She came up to solicited. him and took it. A motor ride and an and now all engagement followed Cuba Is discussing the scandal, not beB. C. CALL, Lawyer, cause it wasn't a good match, but County Attorney. because the Cuban girl violated the Practices in all the Courts. most sacred and ancient customs of : Covxt Boom, Owru her country by flirting with a stranger Jiiilmni, Utah. on the public street, by motoring with P. O. Hox 972 Dotl Phones. him without a chaperon, and because the Yankee, instead of doing as Cuban lovers do, openly disregarded the tra- NEBEKER, HART & NEBEKER ditions and scored the marriage cus toms of the island. But for his hurried departure with Lawyers his dark skinned bride on a honeySuite I aud ! Commercial Mock moon trip to New York the Yankee Logan l.'tah. lover would have paid the penalty for Phono 70. P.O. Uox M hi It's the folly and his audacity. paternal bullet that makes Cupid toe ho mark in Cuba and protects the S. F. CHRISTENSEN sacred Institutions of the little republic the home and marriage. Scientific Optician Cnake By the time the audacious Yankee KYK.s FREE and his bride reached New York the Ancient Spanish Etiquette. You will laugh at the thought of father had relented, but ever since With L.C. Christenscn and Sons ideas so absurd and prudish, but down that day all Cuba has been discussing Brighain t 'it , I tali 'In Cuba the thought of a mother's the American invasion of their custom. daughter going to the opera unchap-eroneGeneral Real Estate Business. sitting over a glass of ice Say Americanization Goes Too Far. soda with her lover, going for It has become a national problem Choice Improved Farms in creani a car ride with her affianced husband, In Cuba and it soon may become a Bear Kivr Valley a specialty, automobiling with him, boating with national issue, to be inscribed in the him in the moonlight, daring to let platforms of the two leading political Easy tortus. Call on him hold her hand, bold enough to parties, to be settled at the polls on J. V. K ERBY, permit htm to steal a kiss, and so elf?on day. The Cubans of all classes destitute of good manners as to tip ar crying out that the AmericanizaCorinno, I It&h. his hat to her on a public plaza, is tion of the island has gone too far. who enough to make a Cuban father's hair Th retiring, modest senorita Job Printing for Every turn white. frefti time immemorial has been courtAll these questions of propriety ed fs she pressed her face against body. have been settled in America, and the tl Iron gratings of her barred win-riV- , with the face of the watchful Why not have some letter heads and chaperon has lost her Job. Down in Cuba they have been settled, too, for dinna beside hers, must not be envelopes printed with your name, business and address in (hem for the use of centuries, but now that the Americans wrfed and won on the streets or in yourself and family? We can furnish have brought American customs to tbf plaza. The doors to her house them at rery little more than the blank the island the pretty Cuban maids are must be kept shut against the suitor clamoring for another kind of a set- until the day of her marriage. She ones would cost and tliev look rnuih nictlement. They want to abolish the miMt not permit even the tips of her er. Call in when in town and let us duenna and the barred window they fingeVs to be soiled by the touch of eli.'W you samples and tell yen the cost. want to make love in the American her Romeo's hand until the gold ring Tun Times, way. And the fathers and mothers has bmin given and taken, and all the Tremonton. Utah. oi Cuba, still clinging to the old tra- vowm have been murmured. customs, Thee are the cries that are being All the News every day for 5()c ditions and the time-worhave risen up to oppose them. raised by the mothers and fathers of a month The Inteniiountaiii ReCuba, and the pretty senoritas are Family Controversy. AdIt is a controversy between parents mutteilng complainingly, for already publican. Subscribe shocked by the advanced American they have grown to like the American Salt West 208 South dress, Temple, methods of making love and the way. It's less trouble and the love Lake. daughters of Cuba who have tried the story noves more rapidly to the American way and like it. The par- "finis." There are not the long, agonGet Your Printing Done at ents have delivered their ultimatum. izing ours behind the barred winThe Times Office, Tremonton. They have told their blushing daugh- dows vith the face of the watchful, ters that they will be disowned and critic! duenna there, too. There is disinherited if they stoop to con- - real iomance in the American way, $1.25 Havana, Cuba. Think of taking your fiancee to ihe 0era without a rhapwow' ''an you imagine anything worse? To invile her to have an iee cream oda could anything be more ini proper? Can you conceive of any man invltlnK the girl who ha-- s piciiiiise.l to be hla wife to go for a (car ride with him without asking mother to go, too? Can the human imagination comprehend anything so daring as an automobile ride without a chaperon? Could anything be more shocking than a boat ride in the moonlight, alone with the woman you love? Doesn't It make your blood run cold when you picture your daughter sitting on a bench in the park with her hand nestling in the hand of the man she has promised to marry? Wouldn't you kill your future son-ilaw if you caught him kissing your daughter before the church had made her his wife? And what would you do if he had the audacity to smile at her as be passed her on the street, if good man-iierwere so totally lacking in his makeup that he stopped to chat with her on the public corner, if he were so badly bred that he knew no better than to meet her anywhere without hellographing for the chaperon to a double-quicmarch to her com ted in the American I , tlmei." the weild is allowed some liberty except 'he girls of Turkey, perhaps, and you wouldn't want us to be like the Turkish maidens, would you as But Ignorant , as unsophisticated, as ment Over the Customs of the Past. -- nimmt Onu rear in the '.hey protest to their indignant moth-- j era and irate fathers. "Eveiy girl in of the girls against their parents began when the Yankee was forbidden to woo them in the Yankee way; it grew into a revolution when the good mothers and fathers of Cuba attempted to put an end to the girls' glee clubs. Just what it is now is Indescribable since basket! ail was introduced in one of the Americanized American schools, since the athletic on the girl made her appearance Island and tantalized the senoritas by F. C. U. FARMERS' CASH UNION. Trade Mark.) The rebellion winning soft glances from the senors; since American candy stores and ice cream soda parlors began to dot the Havana streets and plazas. The senoritas say they like the American way. They have pleaded; they have protested: they have threatened, but to all their pleadings, protestations, and :lireats their fathers have made a determined answer "No!" Se: oritas Like the American Way. But in spite of the resolute "No," a few glee clubs have survived, and in certa ii liberal schools new ones are Basketball has being organized. spread from the one Americanized school to others, and so have the other fads" of the American school. Girls are being taught the same sub- - BUY A LUMBER WAGON NOW We Have Them At Right Prices. FARMERS' CASH UNION, dayid Holmgren, mgr. Tremonton, Utahj Kent's New Livery. cAt rear of Hotel Kent, UTAH TREMONTON, s NEW HORSES, NEW HARNESS, NEW CARRIAGES, Everything First Class and Up to Date. Reasonable Charges. I Samuel Kent, - cJManager. . d, , to-da- y. PINEULES 30 DAYS' TREATMENT FOR $1.00 Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. FOR ALL KIDNEY BLADDER RHEUMATISM TROUBLE, AND LUMBAGO at bed time relieves the most severe case before morning. A dose j5Jw usu-all- y BACKACHE PINEULE MEDICINE CHICAGO. For Sals By CO. A. U. S. Tremont Mercantile ikMMdi , "jMSIli SO Co TARS' Y Tnflr)E MARKS Designs r l rhnrlr . on I'atenU HANOBOOK l1ont enry for iwurlntf patents. I'ntfi.m tukiMi tnrOQffh Mm u A Co. rocoUw M limit chnruo, In the tptcMl Mill $ phi free. ri hn1(nni lr M nt o1 weeklr. eatiitlnn "f any aoHantiBo Journal. by n;l ipur: four tnontM, 11. !.nriril rlr- - Ternm. IS a s - New York MUNN &Co.ae,B'Mrsm-(im- e. i!36 V St, Wiwhllialoli. l. t- - BS2rafc.'V- II IB ft THwDE-MAHK- Book on . ilffiSK njh,,l ,; In wlIu r FR r C E u.v rrpnrt SUN litikle I I Sevnnth Strsnt, I WASHINGTON, D. C. I SOS-BO- S FOR WALL PAPER, Sign and Carriage Painting Neatly Done. Will Met t Prices on First Class Work. Tremonton, - Utah. - - You Can Get Concrete Building Blocks in any quantity and for any kind of building by calling on A. B. MANAUSA, Manufacturer, Garland, Utah. PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION. FAMILY LIQUOR STORE, G. A. Woodward, Proprietor, UTAH. CORINNE, We keep the Choicest Wines, Liquors, Tobacco and Cigars. Tremonton Horse Breeders' Association. Perjury and Hypocrisy. Everyone familiar with the law courts knows bow easily witnesses swear that which is false, and how rare it Is for any notice whatever to be taken of the palpable perjury which goeB on day by day. Yet English peothe girlish hearts cry out, n mance ple are resentful when foreigners insuch as the warm hearts of the sinuate that hypocrisy is prevalent senoritas never knew before. among them. London Medical Pupils In Girls' School Rebel. In the girls' schools In Cuba glee clubs have been organized am! banjo Lucky Man! "Luckiest man I ever knew everyand mandolin and guitar clubs, and the parents are up In ann. "Our thing succeeded with him. He had senoritas have no business to bo seen only to say what lie wanted and he got In public," they moan. "Their place It Why, confound it, I was walking Is In the home are They getting tOO with him one day the very last day independent They are getilng too of his life and he said to me, 'When much like the 'new woman.'" And I die I want to die suddenly.' Oot run j to this outcry the Cuban mi lens are over that very night Ever see such luck?" beginning to laugh scornfully. j4CVB42VMZJT or TQDJ' '' PATENTS ' I lentMlHT. B PASSING RCrCRCNCCS IB '.v pn.ii PA Y, THAT HEADQUARTERS inm-my- Scientific American. A ui jects in many of the schools that the Motor cars, driven boys are taught. by Yankees, still spin along the avenues. Yankees still make love to the Cuban senoritas whenever they get a good chance, and the senoritas shyly return their glances if they are sure that papa or mamma or the duenna isn't looking. And of course they still sit behind their barred windows and listen to the poetry and song and the protestations of love of the Cuban suitors, and the duennas sit behind the same bars and listen with them. But it is no longer their way the senoritas like the other way and many a handsome senor has lost the hand of his loved one because he was not bold enough or brave enough to run the risk of a parental bullet to satisfy bis senorita's whim for American made love. The s titor who expects to win the hand cf the fairest of Cuba's fair in these dys of open rebellion against parental authority must be brave and bold enough to meet his lady fair in the plazss, to lift his hat to her as he passes her 1$ the streets, to smile upon her whenever he meets her just as if she had no father's temper and pistol to protect her. Where it will end the triangular struggle between the parents, the senoritas, and the American ways no one is ready to predict, but it is a safe bet that the struggle has only just begun, for already there are signs in Cuba, in the progressive schools built by American enterprise and capital, of the approaching introduction of coeducation. And that, as everybody in Cuba knows, will be the last, straw. It will become a question of obedience or of open rebellion against parental authority, and will the senoritas win or will the palm of victory fall to the solicitous mothers and fathers of Cuba who are clinging so technically to the old traditions and customs? It will take an election to settle the question, say the wisest of the Cubans. Imagine an election, a national election, to decide how girls shall make love! In Church. Sweetly was at church with her little daughter .Margaret, (aged six), and was vainly endeavoring to find a suitable seat. She walked up one aisle and down another; all to no purpose. An obliging usher came forward to offer his services. Little Margaret (who was used to shopping) caught sight of him first. Turning to her mother she exclaimed in an , audible whisper. "It's all right, here's the floorwalker ." CXI'I KU.NCE rnBvnir.uTfl A FKfl ' H'Hl lltWTl H Mill rjitti ktr HJi((riNiti our opinion fret whether an m i ftnieiitithlfl. Invention la BPtHllIlK itniHutrictlyr-mtWeiitliil- House Painting and Decorating, Mrs. Wr Mr A TlTMIlfl George Meldrum, (liter (he American wooer. They have told them they must continue to make love from behind the bars of their queer windows with a duenna within earshot. They have forbidden them to smile as they pass their suitors on the plazas, they have ordered them to cling to the old Cuban cus loms that are so distasteful to them And the girls of Cuba aie on the point of rising in rebellion against their parents. They say they don't care If Kiev are disinherited, thnt they'll marry men who are able to support them. They say they are bound to be BREED TO THE BEST. MOINEAU The Old Reliable No. 44324, An Imported I'reiu h I'ereheron, Wtifht 281)0, is at ( barles Sehmuts's plscr, 2H miles west of Tremonton, fur the season of 1007 Term of service tlO for single service, or 20 when the i urc h kaowa to be In foal. |