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Show t n Iji hi i 1 1 rt, e lu O 5 Cll. S Pit ij ha ,ua U THE PROVO POST lAGK FOUR THE PROVO POST Published - At Fourteenth Annual Art Institute Opened Hon. Every TUESDAY, THURSDAY and SATURDAY Nos. 224 First West St. Provo, Utah By The POST PUBLISHING COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION year , PRICES IN ADVANCE Three months 1.50One mouth H. G. HICKS, N.' C. RICKS, ffditor. Catered at the Postoffice of Provo City as Act of Congress, March 3. 1884. . second-clas- s Manager. matter according to BACK TO THE HOME. . , A new club formed by New York millionaire half or itS'princi pal object the discouragement of club life. Its members must agree to spend as many nights as possible atjiomer Granting That. some, eeway is presented in that as possible, yet must it be admitted that the basic idea is a good one. Just as the back to the land idea would in its broadest concept relieve.the congestion of the cities, l ves would be-- a HhackioJhfi home movement inthe toward some which evils of the greatest are to bfe step 'Correcting charged against the city by students of national morals. The city is a destroyer of .that old home spirit which once was counted the finest thing in hom e4s- - tod a yd i t- tie more than a common headquarters for the family. It is the plaee wliere'a majority of the members meet for meals and to sleep. For the greater part of the day and the night the home is all but unoccupied except by the servants, if it be one in which help is employed. That latchkey has become a necessity to every member, since it can no longer be told with certainty when the returning one will find another in the house. The wife and mother usually eats alone at luncheon, or the children may drop in from school ; all may gather at the dinner hour; breakfast will be straggled through one at a time. Night finds the house gain deserted for the theatre, the club, the social event. The boys have gone off to meet each his favorite gang, stand on street corners,-smokget into mischief or go ''to a show; the girls have slipped away to a show or to meet other girls or boys; the parents are pursuing diversion where it may be found. - Is it any wonder that children growing up to regard home merely as a place where free board and lodging is to be had when wanted -are loing their hold oh morals f Is it surprising that they are growing eareless of the cardinal principles ' of life, grow up with small regard for those precepts once taught in the family circles and ab orbed through home influence t There is no longer time for that. The American home was long the bulwark of character the inculca-to- r of morals, of right principles, of life thoughts and inspirations. The home is losing its hold upon the young; there is nothing as yet to take its place. The marriage bond is loosening because the home no longer cements. to the homes! Away from them lies old for within and young; their walls lie safety, decency danger and respect for the things worth living for. cities-thejnse- e, Get-bac- ONE LESSON OF THE WAR. "are-reliev- and-neve- r ou -- - Interest For keeping slender and supple a -simple home treatment costing noth- Is herewith. It lng gladly presented comes straight from a French actress who, though no' longer In her firsts youth. Is noted for her lithe and lovely., figure."" On waking, the lady makes It a prac-- , lice to drink a cup of chocolate and retd the morning paper In bed. Directly she has absorbed the contents of. both she tears the newspaper into tiny bits and scatters them over the flo lr Them before dressing,-sh- etrips "lightly about the' room picking up the pieces one at a time, bending and recovering herself for each scrap. The gymnastic is perfect for lines. Humming a cheerful tune the while lungs. bcgujlesAke.ltme and Just before going to bed at night she' successively edifies and beautifies herself after the same manner wlth the eyening peper. This eimple procedure imparts sprighllinees And charm to mind as well as shape. -- s, r our-hom- - MrsW, modern-bachel- or- Lifes TurningPoints. Impossible to make a distinction between the course of our lives h and the course of our thoughts. are subject to change, sudden and unexpected. There are turning points In our characters no less than In our career, and often the two are so closely related that they cannot be considered apart. It Is worth while sometimes to trace back to their source our Ideas and Impressions, onr new lines of thought. So much Ve owe to training, so much study and chosen companionship, so much, to the lessons and experiences of the life we are leading. But At you glance back you may see that what has most deeply moved you, what has most sharply deflected your way-- of regardlng"IIfe, was something entirely .unlooked for. Anna "Wood- - It -- is. But-bot- :y " ward. - . n state and its interest in art, Prof. Young told of how copies of paintings had been brought to Utah from Londpn as early as 1859. Those interested in art at that time gathered in the old social hall in SalULake City to discuss and criticise and to admire the works of the great artists. Music was furnished "by Professor M. S. Gudmundson and his string quartette, Prof. A. C. Lund and. Mrs. J. W. Stiehl. The exhibit will remain open until the 15th. of the month. The paint iugs entered are by the following artists Donald Beauregard The Mesa, The Old Home. G. Wesley Browning The Willows, Green Fields. II. L. A. Culmer Cloud Land. Evans Grain Stacks, Idlers') The White Cow (copy from Jules Dupre). John B. Fairbanks Autumn Oaks (copy after Geo. Inniss). J, Leo Fairbanks Feast in the House of Simon (copy after Sub ieyras). J. T. Harwood Old Apple Tree, Priscilla,' September Morning. John Hafen Sunrise on Mounl; Timpanogos, Quaking Aspens, T. Nagayama Winter. Geo, Ottinger Children of the Sun. , Lee Green Richards Portrait of Mrs. H J, Richards, Fields in Flanders (copy after J. C. Cazin) The Green Scarf. , Mary Teasdel French Peasan Knitting, Mother and Child, The STANDARD-SIZE-- - - GIRLS. Picture Book, There is a story of ayoungman who went to his friend atfd said Geo. II. Taggart Noonday I want to get married. What have you to advise t To which the Rest, Prayer. 'married man' replied T Get a girl of stock size; its cheaper to keep A. B. Wright Mrs. C Miss her in clothes. Thus writes IIelen.Louise Johnson in 4he su-- De 'R,rBIanche, 'Portrait (copy after Remcember Harpers Bazar, the Christmas number, of The Gospel o Young Man Miss D. brandt), the New Housekeeping. bliss Johnson continues: M. M. Young Blacksmiths, It is a good story and has its element of truth, but I wonder, The 'Mule Cdltr -- General Exhibition. he make a real, and honest, and eanvaaof.lhe G. - Wesley homes of the land, if the most common reply would not bet Get a Browning Afternoon River. Clouds, Ogden girl who knows how to do her part. And her part is invariably the Elsie E. Barrett Lemons, Rad- expending of the money earned, in the buying of food and clothes ishes, Shells, Shasta Daisies, Nas and other things, as well as the doing of those tasks which w e group turtiums, Onions,' Narcissus. under the almost obsolete term, of keeping house. o Marie Clark Yellow Roses, Lilies, Rose Study. The budget plan of housekeeping is explained by Miss Johnson Lillian B. Connelly Black When the young housekeeper told about in the October Bazar ex Beads, Spring Mornings. .plained the family situation of real poverty and deprivation on an O. D. Campbell The Walk, is income amounting to at least $3,500, we found that there trouble Maple IIillt The Desert Trail, in this keping house, and we saw an actual home in trouble. We be Edge of the Woods,' Temple Hill Leve that the trouble arises because many of the honsek opera have Lane. . Jos. A. F. Everett Noon, Black In the Deceju'ier Bazar not had opportunity to learn their part. Horses. Marsh Valley IIouse which show budgets for two large sections of the country are given Land, Crysanthemums. The Gospel of the New Housekeeping at a glance. E. II. Eastmond Still Life, Vase and Fan. Edwin Evans November MornA DUTY FOR TEE CITY. ing, (a) Shady Pool, (b) Harvest An unsigned yommumeation was received at this office yesterday Field in France. Pearl Framr- - Eening. Jordan a Provo citizen and scoring a local ei pany r.i Diirg written too much of the city street. The complaint iust, ; iiafeu Genoral Mcpinnes, it is not within the province of any company to use the treet as a Apple Blossoms (Indiana), JJay workshop. How ever, occasions arise which make it impossible for Stacks (Utah" County), Glimpse i nnaiwos to alviavs confine them work within their o n lines of, of a Wasatch Peak (Brighten); and the people should be patient to a reason'd)!'' extent, t llninir Afternoon, Sunset, The p'opety, on but , hen the useof the street becomes a nuisance the city off trials Roylanee. should take a hand i nthe matter and put a stop to it."' ' Samuel II. Jepperson Provo Edwin , D X ofa fact-reveali- Se-g- 51 -- r,a!!iTrra - edr ; BiLLS French Actress Let the World Into Little .Secret That Is of Some e - systemati.-Hlly-or-ganize- t With Catarrh - up-to-da- te .j. BETTER THAN DOCTORS Nose Stopped Up . - -- The Balkan war teaches us many lessons. To take these to heart commentators will hae to give up - the" impression which they have formed, while watching the conflict, that the tri umph of the allies is the success of suddenly inspired patriotism over "an army regular in its' organization and theoretically in sympathy with the modern military idea. Tothese observers it seems as if the armed men of the Balkan nations had sprung up in the night, and by the force and fury of their advance had overcome a system which he had been relied upon to defeat them.-Ttruth is quite the opposite. The armies of the allies are in every sense. of theterm armies: they are not crowds of armed men suddenly inspired to attack the Turks and operating tinder improvised leadership. The forces o' Bulgaria, Servia and Greece are quite as much the embodiments of scheme of military organization of nations as are the the defeated Turks, says the Boston Transcript. They bear no resemblance to the Minute Men of our Revolution, and Btill less to the Boers who so well held the power of Great Britain at bay. The lesson to be learned is that if a nation is to be ready to exert all its power in war, it must give years af ttaining to its fighting material in peaee In our remoteness from the old world we have not been called upon to maintain either a large standing army of large, reserves. For how much longer we shall enjoy this agree able imntunity no one can say, but certainly no nation of our size is so utterly unprepared for the advent of war. some-America- Fruit, Flow-ers- B. F, Larson Hobble Creek in t continued From Page One.) Winter, The Old Home, how miserable you are tiful homes, magnificent schools, Grove, (b) Geraniums. , No matter Hol- with catarrh or a cold, In the head, W. P. Midgley Twilight, ami stately churches We are not runa wealthy people, but perhaps ly Hocks, Evening, The- Blue nose stopped up, throat sore, eye In the dull cough, dry head, ning, pain nowhere in the world is wealth so Stream, Spring Waters, After the fever, foul breath, Elys Cream Balm evenly distributed, and most of Storm, Snow Storm. will give you Instant relief. our people are now able to pay T. Mukayama On the Jordan, It gets right at the root of- - the attention to the consistent develtrouble, cleanses, heals and strengthFreight Yardsj Landscape With ens the raw, sore membrane?, stops opment of the fine arts, and to enIn the Rear, Noon- the nasty discharge so that you are courage those who through their Mountains, not constantly, blowing the nose and native ability, and persistent work day, Early Spring, Over Salt Lake spitting. In a few minutes after aphave fitted themselves to call our Valley, Old Barn plied you can just feel it doing its attention to the beautiful and arJohn ILMoser Self Portrait, work of claring the head, the pain and the breathing totistic and teaehusthe high Hand Cart,Flight Into Egypt, soreness becomes natural and the stuffed up value that art holds to inspire us The Seine, France; West Mourn feeling is gone. This cleansing, healto noble thoughts and actions. ing, antiseptic Balm contains no merProvo is a city of beautiful tain (Logan),' Pioneers of 47, cury .cocaine or other harmful drugs. to apply, pleasant to use, homes, it is a center of education, French Laborers, Drawing From It is easy fads-to" and our people' are' justly prbud bf JfeTTImGaFasrSFEde- n:-' the worst cases. our schools and churches, and of T. Nagayama Autumn, Brook-et- , Never neglect a cold, and dont sufmiseries of catarrh nor disgust he eminence we have attained in Cows, Grey Morning, Farm fer thefriends --hawking, spitwith-yyour musical development. We are toal-Ear- ly Get a 50 cent Winter, Flag Day. breath. foul and ting now in great Lee Greene Riqhards The Mod- bottle of Elys Cream Balm from your ong the lines of the fine arts, to els Rest, Willows, Sunset Glow, druggist, and start the treatment at the end that all our people may be The Farm Pond, Asters and Ap-de- once. You will find that It will be the best Investment you ever made. (Adv) stimulated and inspired to make Gov. Win.' M. Spry, Dr. He-e- r HEDQUIST DRUG CO. Agent lie most of our natural advanRichards. John es tages by beautifying Mrs. Geo. L. Stewart LandModern Conditions. and public buildings, and parks scape With Trees, The Old Gate, at a dinner In Booth Tarklngton, with works of art that will yield Morning Sunlight, The Meadow the English miIndianapolis, praised constant pleasure and inspiration With Populars. ners for striking for a minimum wage to our people. The poor John II. Stansfield Among the of five shillings a day. My friends, as thechief execu- Quaking Asps. fellow, said Tarklngton, only avertive of this city, I extend to you Florence Ware The Study of a age five days work a week. Thus the minimum they demand is only 20 he hearty welcome of our peo- lead. ' shillings, or $0.25. I hope with all my W ple. Portrait of heart' they get It Mr. Tarklngton Prof. Levi Young of the Uni- "A.'Br'Wright Dot, Portrait of Clio, Por- paused to light one of his Egyptian versity of Utah delivered the trait of Mr. II. B. Smart, Willow cigarettes cigarettes as big as small ourteenth Annual address of the Trees, Clouds, The River Dam, cigars then he continued: Whats Jtah Art Institute. In his ad- Miss The- River Bank, El- the world coming tot They are reB.,' dress he took up the drift of the der Higbee, M(ss M., - Alice, ducing wages at such a rate that now nation to ward, commercialism and adays a girl can hardly hope to marry MissB., Study of unless shes got an income or a pro stated that he hoped to' see-- the ortrait of Paphne. fession, 1 heard a time come when tliereu7niibl ho Wrathail Study of a say th other day philosophically: greater development in art, mu- Girl in Grey. Oh, yes, marriage, no doubt, has Its sic, and literature, as these studies charms, but, as forme well. In these Photographs.. developed the- refined and "the Glsen and Hafen Study A., days of dear living, give me a job leautiful. In referring to the Study B. without a wife rather than a wife k ' South Meadow. Mary A. Larson (a)-Th- 75 Cents .25 Cents $2.50 U months T j 111 Larsen and Nygreen Study Study F. C.,' Study D. Study E. Your Gray Hairs -- Quickly Vanish A feeling of sadness accompanies the discovery of the first gray hairs which unfortunately are looked upon as heralds of advancing age. Gray hair, however handsome it may be, ld. We all make a person look-oknow the advantages of being young. Aside from the good impression a youthful appearance makes on others, simply knowing that you are "looking fit gives courage to undertake and accomplish things. So why suffer the handicap of looking old on account of gray hairs, when a simple remedy will give your hair youthful color and beauty in a few days timet Most people know that common garden sage acts as a color restorer and scalp tonic as well. Our grand mothers used a Sage Tea for keeping their hair dark, soft and luxuriant. In Wyeths Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy we have an ideal preparation of Sage, combined with Sulphur and other valuable remedies for dandruff, Itching scalp and thin, weak hair that is split at the ends or constantly coming out A few applications of this valuable remedy will bring back the color, and in a short time It will remove every trace of dandruff and greatly improve the growth and appearance of the hair. Get a,, fifty cent bottle from your druggist today, and notice the difference in your hair after a few dayB treatment. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the moneyWlll be refunded if the remedy is not exactly as represented. (Adv.) without a Job. - " His Good Nam. . William Dean Howells enjoys the public confidence in an unusual degree. It was doubtless on this account that s New York promoter recently offered Mr. Howells the presidency of s new mining company at a salary of $25,000 a year. But, sir,'!. Mr.. How-ell- s protested, "I know nothing about Oh, that makes mining or finance. no difference, the promoter replied. We wont expect you to do any work. We only want to use your name, you know. But Mr. Howells shook his head. "No,he said, "no, 1 must decline. If my name Is so well worth using. It must be equally well worth protecting. PAYS TRIBUTE TO ll b n, - DIARY: WANEADS Phone 513. for WANTED Good' girl housework. Wages, $5 a week. Apply 64 North 4th East. WANTED "Washing by the piece. Work guaranteed.- - Call Mrs. Sabey, 71 West Fifth North. d!2 FOR RENT Furnished rooms, modern; with or without board. 383 West First South. Phone 612. d!5 LOST Mans brown kid glove. d2 Return to this office. Cured of Liver Complaint. 1 was suffering with liver com Ilaint,"8aysIva Smith of Point Blank, Texas, and decided to try, a 25c box of .Chamberlain's Tablets, and am happy to say that I am conpletely cured and Can recommend them to every one." For sale by all dealers. Tim. M. Stick to the Boya While General Baden-Powewas la America he told Colonel Livingstone, the president of the American boy scouts, of his conference with King George. Naturally it was desired by his sovereign that he devote his life to ths army, but"when he had returned from the war, a hero Of the battlefield on the African veldt, he fflt that his real life must be devoted to the boy scout movement He so Informed ths king, but as a loyal subject he bowed as h said: "1 leave It to you, your "Ths majesty, what shall It be 7 army, replied the king. "Then I am to abandon the English boys. Who is going to taka up the task?" The king reflected a moment and then replied: Stick to the boys, Baden-Powel- l. Ia that moment by the wish and command .of his sovereign, the life work of Baden-Powel- l was determined, consecrated and confirmed. National Magazine. an the Trail When the Arizona bronco wishes to safs for you and himself, he 1b the safest thing In the world; bnd when he wishes to be unsafe, life is a merry chance. I went up and down trails In Arizona which were almost perpendicular, and rough and stone-strewtoo; but there was little danger, for the bronco has, not the "ten pound, but the "thousand pound" look! His nose Is to the ground, his eyes fash ened on the trail, his footstep the most beautifully careful thing the mind can conceive. One foot, placed before another eases, preserves the balanoe, adjusts the weight for another; and all this wonderful machinery of equipoise, stability and safety you feel working under you like a delicate machine. Yet this sage pioneer of the trail, with his meticulous care of you and himself, was just a wild Agents HEDQUIST DRUG CO. range-ponhunted down by a range rider, driven, coaxed or duped Into a corral, broken, saddled, bridled and ridden all In one hour wrenched out of his wildness, having his heart' broken, and made Into a slave while you would eat your breakfast.. He is not All Classified Advertisements a beauty; he is just,.a.mongrel; but his legs and his feet afe made of Iron bePaid for in Advance. and steely-an- d the work he-d-oes bver awful trails. In a rough and ragged WANTED TO RENT Good country, strewn with stones and flints and piano by the montff. Call 387 E week boulders and lava and scrub, after week, month after month t Fourth North. and year after year, would spoil the BOARD AND ROOMS $5.00 per legs of a thoroughbred in three days, Gilbert Parker in Metropolitan Magwek at Avenue Cafeteria. 503 N. azine. Academy Avenue. Judgs J. BRONCO Write? Glowingly Points Out Useful- f Little Arizona Animal- - na In Fly Johnson, In the court of appeals of Kansas City, said recently that if a man made drudge of his wife sh was entitled to s dlvoroe. "Theres a type of man that marries a woman cause he loves her, Judgs Johnson said the other evening at a banquet, "and then he proceeds to make her s slave. These honeyed words of love, followed by this slavery, call to my mind a little Kansas City glrL She stood before s window, watching s fly that buszod os th pane. Fly, she s&ld.Jdoes oo love heaven V And Impersonating the Insect, she answered the question with a whispered Ess., Tty, would oo like to go to heavenf A pause, and Then-Ba- ng! another whispered 'Ess. The poor fly was crushed os the pane, and the little girl said triumphantly: Now 'oos there!) - Voracious 8pecTe Ant of All Kinds that Evinces Fondness "for Sheet Lead." On th About noon It got too hot for anything and I took & well earned swim In a secluded creek, amid shoals of fish, large and small, who apparently resented my intrusion, from the way they came and stared at me. I found on emerging from the water that a host of blue brown ants had taken possession of my clothes, and when they were shaken out they revenged themselves by biting my bare ' feet In a way which was exceedingly painful. . , There are thousands of ants everywhere, says a writer In tlye GentlePainless Filling and Extraction Bad teeth are not alone a woman. Some of the anthills are three feet high and six feet across discomfort to you, they immedbut except for a sharp nip at the time, iately give a bad itapression. the ordinary ants bite Is not noticeYou cannot afford them. 4 able. But if a soldier ant or a bull ant or a green head (an ant about one and Nor can you afford the exa half Inches long, with a green travagance of eheapj unsatisbites you. It Is not to bo forgotten'head) befactory dentistry. You want what yau pay for, cause they take quite a big piece out. Then there are the white ants (not skilled, careful,' conscientious, really ants, but . termites), which professional service. cheerfully eat the Inside out of the That is extctly what I give. beams of the wooden houses, and reI make no charge for examina- cently hav? been the sheet lead eating t on the tion. Work guaranteed. top of the Sydney museum. The (City fathers thought this was going' a iiUe iar; so now the ants are pro-- t served tnside the museum with Bam- -' Over. Palace Drug Co. of the half consumed food as f plos ' Phone 637. warning to all who allow their appe-- , tltes to run away with them, s Pi , DENTAL SKILL Dr. Dougla GS i , H4 1 |