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Show t 33: SIRALB VOL. XXVI. NO, 1521 PROVO,UTAH, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1912 . using The Herald as an advertising medium; you are to speak to more, than - able five thousand readers every ESTABLISHED . TUeHeral- d- adverj issue tisers get results because the readers get all the local news.' 1885. ABRAHAM LINCOLN THE IN GRIPJNTE RURBAN OF The Provo-Sa- Ute Indians, but was for settlement mr 1905 thousand homesteaders and have tried to make their home there. The valley is sev- enty miles wide by one hundred and twenty miles long and its rich alia vial soils can" easily provide homes for .The government's estimate 150,000. ores of the value of the Is 47,000,000,000. this basin .. i. it nuu su ui.i. it wouia seem as a yauej so resources with and in natural domain many settlers already in .its should be entitled to and could easily get a railroad. But this supposition is wrong. We live in a peculiar age We and under peculiar "Conditions. call ourselves free, but we are not "We are slaves, slaves to a free. .hoard of petty despots, lords, rich home : -- hydro-carbo- n .j Lakeln-terurba- n lt IURMSDEF I OCRATIG I FORT DUCHESNE IS , HEWHEftDOUHBTERS Held Meeting Today a meeting of the SalakCUy his-city nd.Utahrailwayiild-IAt L With this Usue the Herald becomes a DetfioeraUe paper. Its leading edi torials-wlbe written by Sam II. Wood, formerly editor of the National Democrat magazine. It will not b$ a blackmaiier or will but endeavor by clean cut paper, truthful, fearless editorials to lead . the Democratic party of this state to ' a higher and better position. . . at 0nCeSchool ll " -t- today A special committee consisting . R, of A. J.. Evans, J. S. McBeth,-DB. and J. Geo. Beebe, to the Keeler was appointed-tad- ' apply commission of Salt Lake City for a To be Enlarged Final Leave Taking Feb. 25 and 28. muck-rake- The final chapter concerning Fort Duchesne as an army post has been charter and that committee is to take written. It is that Captain R. M -action at an early date. now in Nolan, charge, dispose of Asnratice was ertven the Herald s road mean U - my goods and chattals thafwprojectors-orthltouslnessand willushoritratzan. malhThIahlLIeTprepared to dispatch the few remaining soldiers to join early date. yet-re- It . ouuiiulttpa and namman 6.eus vat. Idaho, about February 25, Captain .New York, Feb. 11 The mystery follow not later than Februwhich for ten weeks has been caus lan to anxiety and occasionally symp- ary 28. Fort Duchesne will be left r 1 if Fort-Duches- ne - e J.P. be-and- - TIRES tha-Mo- . ESS KING OF THE AMERICAN FINAN-CIApie must wait took him up the steep pathwas and Denver and Rio Grande railroads, It was not always thus: Time WORLD BELIEVES TIME fame. - But with his greatto unway railroad a This Moffat road vas when the poor Union Pacific great came greater re- er attainments, ASIDE COME LAY TO HAS and across is be the was said to the plains building high deriving. It sponsibihties, greater cares, and est and best built railroad in the struggling to keep Itself alive. Its cry HIS BURDEN. troubles The stern exand was Den Moffat of greater heard The late for by Congress wod. help Javid -periences of his youth and early ter - spent his life in - endeavoring to that body p romptlyTesponded by8" a broken suing bonds for its jelief . and then "build ff and then . died New York, Feb. 11. J Plerpont manhood schooled him for the heart because hewlth his twenty mil the patriotic people of America, bank- Morgan, czar of American finance, has trials, that he was later called to I endure. Uons capital was not allowed to ers, business men, farmers and widows retired from active business life. It was no easy task for Lincoln complete it, and his fate is. only the bought those bonds and bought stocks P. Mor- to climb the steep" path to ultiof J. interests The business and emptied their stockings of coin , fate of the enterprising in order that the great Union Pacific gan & Co., are now in the . hands of mate' success, but he kept trying. Clark of the San Pedro Tallroad. cut-ofa as short road a railroad might be completed and to$ty his younger partners."' Mr." Morgan It- was his misfortune, or perhaps The Moffat himYKrate to Salt Lake Citr, through the that giant foaa in Its selfish ahd' arro- himself is no longer at the helm, nor good fortune, always ifjfind of a multitude treat Uintah Basin. H built through gant way stands across the path of a does he intend to resume that post self beset with was he At cares. vigevery step mat Dasm it wouia enorten me ais railroad, which is badly. needed and when he returns from he met many Egypt and ' opposed peoaid American Lake would orously Denver 150,000 Salt tance and which between ' He has definitely laid .aside the bur- temporary defeats. But this made comfortable y and consequently between the Atlan-f- " ple to establish happy " dens and cares which he has borne for him all the more valuable to the Ucand Pacific too miles, but this homes. " nation. to Oh! that the people would come Shortening of the distance would hurt fifty years, and has decided to act With his beloved country rent v the Union Pacific railroad, so the edict the front again as they did In the hereafter only in an "advisory capaciwith prospects of a re- was and asunder, sixties bull take the sent forth by the late Harriman by the horns ty" in the affairs of his firm. union extremely .. unfavorable, that David : Moffat and his - Denver build this roa4. Not until today did it become States the of United not Cen of to were have the If the people any known that Mr; Morgan, Just prior, to t road tralTHeseryerpIe" In New York city would stop- putting: thel r tnoneyj nto M8 departure for EgyptpnJPecemberi vt-- thesameef fect The--f 29, called a conference of his partners ' on the Denver and Rio Grande so that months and put it into the stock and and . acquainted them with nia Intenroad did what it could as second, fid bonds of this great road, they would tion to retire from active business " " dler to, keep the Moffat road out o; not only make a good Investment, but affairs. The partners hadkept the the great money Jack pot. Of course they would render a rebuke to the secret with care. . - ' the: great Standard Oil company and money king, Which they will not forWr. Morgan on that occasion made Pierpont Morgan, who had stock' in get for many a day. the dramatic assertion that his entire The people of the Uintah basin personal fortune was at the service theseroads did their part to thwar Charles Moore, a well known reslrj through of the firm and would j;emaln-o-J- n the enterprising builder-o- f this great will gladly give a right-of-wadent of this city died at the home of thebftefa free ' and t road and his lffetlme.'N'o 'one outside o( Mr. his sister,. Mrs. Sidney Russell early DroKeainearL Denause -- ne. icimu .mv va'uable assett of the - stockholders. Morgan and a few of his most-int- i eel? a slaveln a supposed ly free coun If the road could, be built by cash mate associates knows how. great than Sunday morning of Brlght's disease try "an4 could not finisbie vfork to from popular subscriptions the old fortune Is. lL,ls etsimated to be at which he contracted about five months had devoted hjvife and styled contract system of graft . and least $300,000,000. whichhe ago." ", Thp deceased was thirty-thre- e fortunes; ),; ye gods, how 16rigs shall bond sales Could be eliminated and years of ago. and is survived by hia j A PIONEER CALLED. per'cent saved in its conthis thing, continue. Weary with their twenty-fiv- e widow, his mother, Mrs. A. M. Moore,' - six long years of waiting fifteen ;thou- - structions.'' Mr3. ArvlTla Pratt Perry," 78 years two sisters, Mrs. Sidney Russell of! citizen's! take ' these sand people in this great Uintah basin " American of! ' .'morn their dead leader and one hun- - thoughts close. to your heart.! ponder of age diejl at. the", ramily home Ju this' city and Mrs. Charles Howarth a Fred brother, dred thousand more people, w ho would them over as loyal, patriotic American the Third Ward last night of Brigfit's Salt Lake City and Moore-6tthfrcl' v- ' to Utah disease .cama. Pratt to Col and Mrs. the basin write. are Into move Denver, the kept clUjtens like, to - The funeral . services will be' held reout of their Just free right by the orado, and the Provo, and Salt Lake from' Pennsylvania in 1852 and . the at . 1 2 i30 o'clock--frotomorrow Two clubs and tell. them sided fuPrbvoTf or many years.fi'money'f;rust.. oT America Butf you City CommercialAmerican ' r hohse. of Tana meeting"Wilford Thlrd.Ward : citizens you Sons, Frank Perry, that. as loyal t there some other d and' defy Provo,T and one. daughter,Mrs."7May ""The temalns may be? Slewed at the TaHroaft that dare take up win help ta build this-roa"Gra'nd Junction survive her. residence at Sidney Russell, 94 North this Iworlc in conjunction: with roads the great money kings, which have so Edlns of Funeral over the arrangements have; not jet Fourth West street from 10'to'12 people; already built?- No, there is no one long reigned supreme ' ' ' ' " V .'v '. o'clock. been .. , made. . Unite of ; dStates. the Clark that dares to do jU gtpn - of of f, ILtKII (ffil ead-would-i- ta Died AprV 15 J65 Extreme' Cold in East. Washington, Feb. 11.' The most severe and protracted cold spell of many years probably will be broken this week- and the unusual winter, which partly has paralyzed transportation on land and sea, taken many lives, and caused untold suffering in all parts of the country, will give way to' more esasonable temperatures. The steamer Calabia of the Anchor ten da"---1 lip,JA-j0wr,YGrreached Boston late today, short of fuel and after one of the stormiest passages on record. The Calabria left onJannary-2- 0 wlth"20Opas sengers on board. . . bea ' . : ty. - -- :. '' , ; - opponents in the north-a- s well as the south-Li- ncolir found iiimself - president of the United States. Then came the .terrible f raticide. Foru mil lions of men who should be bro thers fighting in the most terri , ble ciyi lwar that was ever fought he foreign xorai?Jicatjps.,ci gra hafure,ibusands of human beings held in' bondage by their fellowmen these were some cf the conditionsfaced-byLincdmpaTerThe exigenciesof war gave Lin- coin more power than a monarch, In New York City zero was reportyet he exercised it with the ut ed atTayllght, but there has been all most wisdom and restraint. Then day moderation with prospects of warwhen his efforts had been reward- mer weather for several days. Albany ed with the greatest triumphs; reported 10 below, with the cold inwhen peace at last had come and tense in other sections upstate. The Lincoln had welcomed the SecJ atire -eastr4be Blddle Atlantle-state- scessionists back to the union as a and the south felt the effects of the father would welcome a prodigal icy blasts, frosts being reported as far son, he gave up his life a martyr. south as New Orleans. It is probably well for the coun-tr- y There has been great suffering in Lincoln waTXTnarty r. His New York City the past few days on assassination brought home to account of the cold and the hospitals the nation the .knowledge of the were severely taxed to properly handle to exposure. great service he had rendered it His work was over and he had been called. By his death just PRICESS AND ELLEN PROGRAMS at the climax of his great career there" is" left to the nation the ""The plane cohfesreohducted" "by' the" 'greatest example of patriotic "de- management of the Ellen and Princess votion any country ha3 ever had. theatres is steadily growing and the t From his backwoods cabin to the contestants are becoming more and close of his career Lincoln was more Interested In the race for the engaged in constant warfare, of beautiful piano. An interesting drama, one kind or another, but when he "A JJlrllsh Impulse" is one of tho: ... wss"Ca1tel to his great "reward fcy best films on the program at the Prin Providence he bore the olvie cess and there is & good photoplay, ' branch" of peaces 'Twould seem "Buckskin Jack, The Earl of that., it were divine intervention Buckskin Jack of Colorado, disthat gave us Lincoln and trained covers that he Is the long missing earr him fpr the task that awaited him, Glenmore andvislts his ancestral the task of preserving the union home, meeting his two charming and of striking the shackles from wards. Played in beautiful scenery, the slaves. Who shall say that he it is a delightful mixture of comedy ' was not in truth a man ol destiny ? and drama. ThereMs a Biograph com- - " with many st mo ; - . j- . ' , . , x - . - . . - Glen-mor- e. f - 111 P novo y -- , A MAN OF DESTINY - this-wilH- its the speaking organ of the official committee. Mr. L H. Masters of Bingham will 4)ehuslness manager. The movement means rauctt i t this state. toms of consternation among men pro a4iedea " No- ing i!AsSoTLf. will be owned by a stock compafiy. eoropoHed --of wominentaod loyal : and Democrats throughotrttbe-tate be thrown will columns its open to -j -- iwrs. bull-dozin- g r, , r- to the charge of one army engineer minent for their great financial trans- pending the. Executive order that shall actions on Wall Street in. New York out the name from the current nd nn lASelle street in Chicago. the wipe Born February K, t rn the stwd as to toe mystery in for the rapid decrease in the selling price of. In an Interview especially great in thai .strange spell, a name." Union Pacific stock, has been solved. Express, - Captain Nolan said offlcl- Napoleon of Finance, King of Wall Mrs. E. H. Harriman, widow of the ally that Fort Duchesne would be .Street, Capitalist, etc., and we are en not earing to be ac- turned over to the Interior- - depart slaved by the Central Reserve bank railroad wizzard, affairs of the Union ment. But while this order from the the in tive longer lng system which drifts everything In has been selling her stock. president was pending the Fort would Today the nation celebrates to Wall street. The bank depositor Pacific, with the be used by the acting agent In charge the And all. one hundred and - third sold had Jt She In Utah deposits his money in his loHe also gave out anniversary K-- Indian affairs. of the birth of she been so has obtained buying money cal bank, that bank loans a part of it Wblterocks agency a rugged backwoodsman. "Volthat bonds. Pacific Union definitely out locally and deposits the rest of would be abandoned at once so far as umes have been written in. eulogy it In some Central Reserve bank in Hill to Tesify. the. officials' are concerned. These of Abraham Lincoln and his life some big western city. This bank diimme has been made the inspiration oT the of are to move-- to chairman James J. Hill, handles the money in the same way Whiteschool at Indian rail The Northern Great the frectorate'of thousands of rugged young Amer- diately aH4eTosltspaTtifTnsome Central road, will be the star witness tomor rock will not he disturbed but as stat- J resideni;vilj jeans. The matxre Y Reserve bank farther east and this before the Stanley commitfcr Wi "Express some ttorago, the ever livcrHn those who are ever row final the same until bank does the Is about scope and efficiency of the school are striving to follow his noble exmecc'a is Wall street. Here the great sugar trust Inquiry committee to be increased. on work. Its to report ample. JPierpont Morgan, the Standard Oil Vernal Express. Untutored and alone, with xmly : company and "a few other ?reat trust is not looking for any more railroads the memory of his noble mother presidents divide the spoils and the to conquer. Jim Hill, if he saw a to him, Abraham Lincoln , othinspire. smaller fry are left out in the cold chance to run the gauntlet before a trod path from Ins. log stony sees he weary world 'to beg fo.rthe crumbs ers could check him might, t)ut in backwools to the the cabin Jack table. no chance. The Central Reserve which fall from the rich man's And when'he arHouse. White full with to so I as used not was A few days ago Pot is it talking mansion he executive rived at the F a Denver man and he told me that at it Is watched too close now for any j inlife his troubles that found The Mormon a meeting of railroad men recently piratical movement. ust over of stead, J)eing JiatLjonlyJ of - might church with, 4 held, In Denveythe-staitu- s tbegun. fat railroad had been definitely set build a line in from Salt LaKe to re rr Lincoln was probably never tied, that it would not be completed lieve the situation, but the Mormon of the easy xoad. He chafed fond and that the territory belonging to church is not looking for trouble and the monotony of clerking under - that railroad had been divided up be so these, weary, patient, suffering peo. I . Railway Co. The Uintah Basin is a rich fertile valley, lying between "the Uintah and Wasatchrangr of .mountains Jnorttr easteraUtah. It waiionnerly-th- e -.-.- in CHER ES FOR T of the "thrown open and twelve- filed on land VJHE HERALD edy, "Who Got the Reward," and "A jQkeonjAekexalso.A-Blogr- i DEVELOP BALLftRD ' yy-- film. - v-:- Military or War Dramas always appeal to the' patriotic person and "The Youpger Brother," at the Ellenjtomor-roand Wednesday nights Is ah unusually interesting one. There Is 0 a drama, "Paid Back" the intense dramatic recital o a modern newspaper scoop,' founded upon real incidents In the life of one ur great politl-j jacto"Ti 'There, are two good comedies, "Broncho, Bill's "idventure," and "Mr, Sims serves on the Jury.". w MINES .""' al-8- The famous Book Cliff-cobeds, known throughout the Country for the great amount of coal they contain, will likely be developed very shortly on an al The American Fuel company, Incorporated, under the laws of the state of Utah for H.000,000 with shares at a par value of S2.50' each, extensive scale. projecting the development of its holdings which; include the Ballard coal mines aboye Thompson. Railroad to Mines.. A railjoad will beibuilt trom thdnip; sons .to BallSrd, eight 'and. f miles away, to facilitate the handling of the wal to the mala line" of the Deader & .Bio T3fandeZl The"road will be built by the ' Thompsons-Baliar- d Railway company , a corporatioti sepa- Is '.one-hal- " of-o- I -- rate from the fuel company. . ; Will Sell Bonds. . - . -- ; , The capital necessary to equip the mines and buildingthr "railroad vrill ;r be raised by ..the. eale. of bonds, and ,; : prolnlnent business men throughout' the state, have already subscribed for S a large, ambuht of theToiids. The suc-cess the companies have met with already considered a guarantee that IbV; full "issue' of 7the' bonds will soon 9 Ukela-up.iur'rrrv--:' ' . - , Qrand Valley Times. ..' ... -V |