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Show " : PAGE TWO attracting settlers quite as fast as had been expected. This is a disappointment to the region in which the reclamation wqrk is goingon, Clean Up the Bowel n and an injury to the railroads and to the country. Keep Them Clean since Horace has over half a THE PROVO POST Published Every TUESDAY. THURSDAY and SATURDAY At Nos. First West St, Provo. Utah 22-2- 4 By The POST PUBLISHING COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION M. a niCKS, Editor. filx months AOVANCt Three months ',...;. PRICBS .............J2.50 One year atthe fostofflee of Provo City Act of Congress, March 3, 1884. entered , IN 75 Cents as 25 second-class- , trans-Mississip- , IS SALT LAKE AWAKENING? , . There-seeto be the beginning-n- f an awakenitig"bf "bdifscience started in Salt Lake City, and this awakening may result in ultindate good for both Salt Lake and the entire state in time, should the ms T No saw edges . i , stipation. - . the Union, (Continued eagerly sought for. There are many remedies today that relieve, but do not" cure, Doans Kidney Pills have cured thousands. Here is proof : Reuben Marshall, First ward, The Spanish Fork, Utah, says: in statement I gave public praise of Doans Kidney Pills . in J907 still holds good. .1 am glad to again recommend them. Attacks of kidney complaint bothered me for a number of years and there was a persistent dull ache across the small of my back. The kidney secretions were shanty and painful in passage and gave proof that my kidneys were out of order. Doans Kidney Pills were finally recommended to me and I procured a box. I began their use and to my delight relief followed. Doans Kidney Pills acted directly on my kidneys and in a few days every symptom of kidney, complaint was relieved, I am certain that anyone who gives this remis edy a' fair trial cannot be otherwise than pleased with the re- sults. For sale by all dealers. Price Foster-Milbur- n 30 cents. Go., sole New York, Buffalo, agents for the United States. Remember the name Doans and take no other. 3 E old saying is The Sow an act and reap a habit. In the harvest time of life,-"y-ou will reap the consequences of the habits you arc? sowing with your acts today. Each unwise expen- From Page One.) reaching the Gulf 'of California through the Colorado river. To divert this water from the Colorado drainage basin and turn it into valley, the enormous Strawberry tunnel, nearly four miles long, has been bored through the Wasatch lnountams. Its cross section measures more than 60 square feet. . It is walled and buttressed with timber and lined with the-Uta- vince you not delay too long, -- DSSiftffl. Get our prices on Rough Dry Work - BUY t U ( laundered without rips or tears If not already a patron, a trial bundle will con- Hoover Bros . h cement. Local Representative Wanted Power Plant Built. Before construction could begin, thousands of square miles of Talley and mountain country were surveyed and mapped, and tunnel and canal lines marked out. A telephone line 38 miles long, extending from Spanish Fork to both portals of the tunnel was const meted, and a wagon road from Diamond Switch, the shipping point on the Denver & Rio Grande railroad, to both portals 32 miles long was made. Down in the fool hills a diversion dam was thrown across Spanish Fork, river and the waters turned into a power canal three and one-hamiles long, which dropped them through huge pipes on the big turbines 100 feet below. Power thus generated was transmitted electrically to the tunnel site, where it was used to turn the diamond drills in the rock, light the camps and run the heavy machinery. The surplus has been sold to towns in the val ley for municipal and commercial purposes. The camps are located a mile and a half above sea level, and during several months each winter have 'practically - been isolated from the world, the roads blocked by masses of snow and ice. For more than two years the work has gone on without ceasing, three shifts of men alternate during the 24 hours of the day and night Thousands of gallons of water poisonous gases and swelling ground have made the work difficult and dangerous. The - men fled. for their. lives on several oc- No canvassing or soliciting required. Good income assured. Ad- Home Made and Best Grade Realdress National ty Co., V. 1440 Marden building, Excelsior Roller Mills Washington, D. C. FOR SALE 8 room brick Phone 124 Provo, Utah house, bath, toilet, pantry, closets, sink, lavatory. Corner lot. 4x12, barn, chicken bouse, fruit. John E. Botf, 209 E. Fourth South, E Provo, Utah. SURREY FOR SALE-G- ood as Utah Timber & Coal Co. new, or will trade for young bug gy horse. 188 W. Third South. Castle Gate, Clear Creek, tf Hiawatha and King WANTED Strawberry pickers. Apply 542 W. Second South. -- lf COAL -- D 6-- FOR SALE Household furniture Lumber, Lath, Shingles for three or four rooms practically new. Cheap if taken PORTLAND CEMENT in a lot. 62 W. First North. 160 W. Fifth North. LOST Long Chamois glove. W. Dunn, J. Mgr. Return to this office. -- ' ... 6-- A sprained ankle may as a rule be cured in from three txy four days by applying Chamberlains Liniment and observing the directions with each bottle. For sale by all dealers. Your Negligee Farmers " . - - d. Provo Commercial - I Lingerie will convince ou. Dr. Miles Laxative Tablets are sold by ail druggists, at 25 cents a box containing 25 doses. If not -- found satisfactory after trial, return the box to your druggist and he will return your money. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. People with kidney ills want to border, Strawberry river, for cenbe cured. . When one suffers the turies bank full, perhaps, has run tortures of au aching back,' relief uselessly by,, its waters finally -- in Dress Shirts new remedy for this old complaint, and a great improvement over the cathartics you have been using in the past They taste like' candy and work dike a charm. A trial DEMAND diture helps to form the speuding habit, which entails worry, want, and suffering. Each deposit in this bank is a step toward the success habit, which brings independence, comfort and peace of mind. ' LINCOLN AND THE SPLIT OF 1860. Banking money is ' as easy as .. Says a syndicate article which is being published in many news spending when becomes a habit. casions. It was this complicated split which brought about' the Act wisely today and soon the acpapers: No'Lives Lost. . of election cumulation of money will lie secLincolnrrThe reference is to the,vsplit in the Demo-iati- c In 1910 the work of placing the concrete lining was begun and party in the Charleston Convention of 1860, and .the nomination of ond nature to you. since has been carried on sirnul-- , two tickets elsewhere, one headedby Douglas, the favorite of the The taneously with the excavation, of . Northern Democrats, and the other by Breckinridge thecandUate the heading. This required skillof the Southcim scction of thepartyn There was another ticket also Merchants Dank ful handling of men and material in the field ,that of an element calling themselves, the Constitu1 ional to avoid delay in either feature of PROVO, UTAH. Unionists, whose nominee was John Bell of Tennessee. Lincoln was (he work. Notwithstanding the D. J Dixon, Cashier. difficulties of the undertaking it the Republican candidate. .T. N. Taylor, President. Anyone anywhere can bank has been carried - to completion But Lincoln would have been eleeted even if the Charleston rup with us, by mail.without the loss of a single life.' ' lie carried all the free states except New ture had v Beyond the tunnel, in the shadJersey, in which there had been a fusion of the other candidate ow of the granite peak a groat against him, but he won four of that states seven electoral votes reservoir is being built. A retainTheTmly states which he would have lost had the Democrats been ing dam of rock, cement and steel is being built so deep that a six united were California and Oregon. If the seven electoral V'Ues of 6 he stil! would story building might be ' hidden have those two states were taken off Lincoln total beneath it. Fed by melting snows had 173 electoral votes, as compared with 130 for Douglas, Breekin-ridge'ai'i s6 behind-T- Tiis tbwntmwitl-TBank Bell in the aggregate, or a majority of 43. structure, covering 8.200 acres "It was riot by accident that the first Republican president i d vic- PROYtt CITY UTAH with 278,000 acre-feof water. tory was won. The Republican party had a majority in tin ,tatcs CAPITAL1 $100, 000 Thcie is no real mod of anyone which held the preponderance in the electoral vote. Lincoln icciv od Ifeipg ,tioubkd with constipation. . SURPLUS $40,000 trts-- in very hi tie support in the slave states, or only about 26,000 Chamberlain's Tubbts will cause an DIRECTORS: were east for himin. Missouri , the aggregate, and 17.000 of these agreeable moiement of the bowels P.erd President. Smoot, without any unpleasant effect ,GivC' But in almost all 4 he fne states he would have had ft lead even n C. E" Loose, thema trial. For sae by.ajl dealers. there had been a Coalition between his threo antagonists, Ilis majorWin. Knight, J. R L J. Holbrook, of ot the a was sentiment fair expression ity in llie electoral college f Anves, fjeo Taylor, Sr., Roger Far the American people of this day. Even as early as 52 years ago the rer. Republican party was a pretty vigorous organization. Jos T. Farier. .Cashier. located nt 42 East Third South, is' W A Punic-- , Assistant Cashier one of Salt Lakes most comforj-- ' TO ATTRACT WESTERN SETTLERS. ' alT hotels." Tt is clean and mod-K iis Hi.Miieas Ttuusactvd ern in every respect. Prices drei Offieijils of 'Western trunk railways and of the United States S. DEPOSITORY 'U. very reasonable and the treatment Reclamation Service have just met, in Chicago to plan methods where-- I WEDDING STOCK Tbe finest is .courteous. ProVo people a in will be Ti to settlement new the e should) y given West, object be bad anywhere St verv reoriabU impetus uilk - headquarters I Ameriis client, and it ought e supported by all public-strif- e prices Call apd see only the latejqv0 or three doors west of cans. It is known that the newly irrigated lands in the West are not weddirg cabinets. jal Theatre. d The proper stiffness but begnt proper curative measures. Dr. Miles' Laxative' Tablets area If Spanish Fork is Preparing for its GreatProvo, Like Every City and Town est Celebration. Receives It. in AIL THEY - Do on Collars es Coast. " ,r one-th- pi free-hom- awakening not be quelched in the begimung. After months of eon- -' tinned hammering against the unfair and unjust franchise submitted to the promoters of the infenxrban line, the newspapers of Salt Lake are beginnig to see that the outcome will be disastrous, but the board of commissioners in SaltLake persist in keeping the interurban line nut of that, city by the prohibitive clauses they have placed in the franchise. The Post has been fighting long and earnestly to get interest aroused in the interurban railroad, because it meansmore toward the growth a$d development of Utah County than any enterprise undertaken for many years, with the single exception of the Strawberry project. Upon two different occasions however, have the Salt Lake officials imposed impossible franchises, and now unless the change can be made no interurban road can possibly be built. The Deseret News is beginning to see that the continued arbitral attitude of the Salt Lake Board of Commissioners means trouble all around, and in Thursday evening g issue the following editorial api peared : A city ordinance granting to A. J. Evans, S. L. Chipman, Y. L. Hayes, J. B, Keeler, and others the right to construct and operate an electric road within the City limits, to connect with other cities to the south, was passed on April 11, last. But the applicants for the franT chise, we understand, have refused to accept it. Some of the conditions imposed by the ordinance, they claim are unacceptable, and the chief among these is the one that relates to the taxation. The ordinance stipulates that the road shall pay a yearly tax to Salt, Lake City of the gross income and revenue from all sources of said railroad from North Temple street in Salt Lake ' City to Payson, Utah County. This, it is claimed, is unreasonable and unjust. The parties who propose to huild the road are willing to pay a reasonable tax, but they can not agree to pay a tax to one ity on what they earn in another, and it is quite evident that if Provo, Payson and the other cities the proposed road will pass through should make a similar provision, these expenses would be ' prohibitive. We earnestly hope the Commissioners will reconsider this matter and meet the applicants for the franchise half way. It is true that valuable franchises should not be given away with lavish hand, as sometimes is done, but it is also true that an electric road connecting the southern eounties and its thriving settlements with the Capital would be of immense benefit, not only to this City but to the entire territory through which it would run, and the enterprise should be encouraged. Such a road, like all railroads, whether electric or steam, would help build up the country and trade all along the line. Salt Lake business would gain by it, and so would the business of every settlement from one terminus to the other. There are some conditions, in addition to the question of the tax, to which the applicants for the franchise object, but not quite so strongly. It is stipulated, for instance, that coal and freight cars must not come anyfurther than Fifth South. They suggest Third .South,' Fifth South, however, ought to be far enough within the City limits to suit every purpose. The ordinance, further, provides that the road shall not run trains containing more than two cars, This is thought to be objectionable on the ground that an excursion train of three, four, and fiv.e cars would then have to be run in sections from the City limits to the terminus- .- But-w- e presume some such condition ought to be imposed so as not to hold up the traffic on street crossings too long, . But, as we have said, these conditions are not considered essential. The chief point is the question of the tax, and we believe the Commissioners will deserve well of the public, if they fix this so as to make it possible for the applicants to accept the franchise. been-averte- Will result if your bundle of laundry is sent to us. J Cents matter according to month; SATISFACTION and Greeley century elapsed Something There are many remedies to he advised the young mah to go West. Shortly afterward a Republican had for constipation, bet the diffacts at iculty .is to procure s law which gave con- without Congress and president enacted a violence. A remedy thdt does not perform creteness to Greeleys counsel. The West became so attractive that what by forc accomthirteen states have been formed in it since that timeor as many As should be were in the whole country at the outset in Washingtons presidency. plished by persua- sion is )r. Miles Two of those, states have been created Tvithin the past few months, a Laxative Tablets. Alter using them, fact which ought to help the movement to bring more settlers into the Mr. N. A. Waddell, region. Oklahoma .increased 100 per cent iu the 3 i j Washington .St., Waco, Tex., past decade, and Washington 120 per cent, which shows that the b says: drift of population sunsetward is, in spots, still strong. all my q?4 iw' "'Almost Hr been life I bav til "Nev e rthele ssTh e W estf fa n ot get ti n g as many "people as were troubled with constipation, and have expected. The national irrigation law of 1902, which is effectively tried many remedies, all of which seemed to cause pain' without giving law of 1802, is costing the government much supplementing the relief. I finally tried Dr. Miles them exa vast sum, but the advantages which the reclaimed lands present are Laxative Tablets and found cellent. Their action Is pleasant and not availed of as rapidly as they should he. A few days ago an act mild, and their chocolate taste makes tltem easy o take. I am more than was passed liberalizing the homestead law of fifty years ago, and matglad to recommend them. Clean tip the bowels and keep ing it easier for the actual settler to get free lands. The railways them clean, is the advice of all besocieties should facts Western and the immigration place these physicians, because they realize the fore the country, especially in the congested centers of the Atlantic danger resulting from habitual confree-home- IL l.BOOne THE PROVO POST Sayings et Shirts . , look Better - when they are laundered by us ibai is possible when they are done up at home, or by hand. We make your shirts clean without We starch fading them, if colored. them to Just the proper stiffness ! Only the places where they ar design ed to be stiff. .I.And we iron mem so they fit. fee. and appear neat, comfortable and new We make the bosoms lie straigb and flat, with every plait iu place; gnd we shape the cuffs to tit your wrist and give them a finish and stiffnes equal to that of your collar. Send your negligee shirts with, yout other work, to the THE COOL LIGHT The Summer Light is the adza Lamp Its the Lamp that will give you the maximum illumination at the minimum cost Electric Light is by far the aol est of ALL light-i- t truly makes the best summer light. Winter or Summer, howekr, electricity holds for the home or business establishment the maximum numberof superior advin-tage- 1 Both Phones The- - rrrBTjwnrr Electric Company THE BEEBE LUMBER CO. have received their first shipment of Schutler Wagons Moline Plows, Deering Spring Tooth Harrows, Queen Anne Cultivators, Beet Cultivators, Deering Mowers, Harvey Bolster Springs. Single Sets Buggy Harness, Light and Heavy Work Harness, Horse Collars and a full line of Deering Matkine Extras. They invite the Public to call or write and get their prices. They can save you money on anything you may , require in their line. -- j Lhis.-a,ih- to-b- eir Colon-atyleE- r s. Provo Steam Laundry po YOU use it? 375 W. Center j TheTouraine Hotel! . f PHONES 104 apd 105. THE BUSY CORtJER , ft- ? . r Provo. |