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Show Says," and the Delegates Act Accordingly, BY SAMUEL G. BLYTHE Denver, July 6.-One of the boasts of Denver is high in the air, the position of at this that It Leader, Denver mingled the hoarse huzzas observations such chokes." You where gates, Get seems Do Not the are a while few rancous 1ope he "W Want a with al- most any set of delegates and you will find they intend to vote for Bryan because they think the people want him, not because they want him themselves. If some genius would come along with a scheme that would let a lot of these delegates in on a method whereby they could vote against Bee 1 and escape being burned in effig when they got back home, these aie: gates would march boldly to the front and cast ballots genius Bryan inated lessly their free and untrammeled for other persons, No such has appeared. Whereupon, Mr. bids fair to be nominated, nomby men who are standing list- around the Brown Palace hotel and discussing such important political topics as ‘Who was this here Brown who built this hotel?" and "Kin you take as many drinks out here as you kin at home?' Mass Mecting Monday. e Amalgamated Protection Asso- dfulon' of Vice Presidential Candidates mptalye ed many accessions today. It is roposed to hire he Raatroriaen for a mass meeting on Monday night for there is no om in any of ‘the local hotels large enough to hold the full membership of the organization, Fresh enthusiasm was roused when Sanatace Bryan, brother of the peer- ppeared and announced that no aceite eatin will be taken on the vice presidency until the platform has been agreed upon, Of course, the plat- form has coln, but been agreed Mr. platform has been Bryan upon at meant Lin- until the as agreed upon at Lincoln presented to the resolutions committee with a brief note of the first page reading: adopt at once. agreed upon the at TJ i, B.": the top ‘Please and -duly This gives the a eae association a full swing for three more days, and all the members working cease- Colonel J. Hamilton Lewis of general all- around. candidate for anything else that may be open, either in Denver or in Illinois, sought ito asperse the motives of some of his colleagues In the race today by saying, "Many a man gets himself mentioned for vice president here, so he can £0 and This was run for not nice the of inasmuch as he may the legislature himself legislature." Colonel Ham, want to go to if nothing bet- ter offers. Object of fine Mr. albeit of Charles much Curiosity, Bryan curiosity. example of Mr. a was an Bryan loving object relative, he suffers from a congestion (Continued on Page Six.) of Daniels' Daily Talk-No. 51. South STORE only Mam Street MEANS-NOT AN END are in yogue today, DANIELS, . The Tailor, 57 West - Second OTe ' ; South. =v There Was a large attendance at the service, From the text, "The Sabbath was made for man, and a man for the Sabbath," Mark 2:27, aden said par "The Bible was made for man, not man for the Bible. It is a means, not an end. Its value as a means of makIng good men is its chief value. Its adaptation to the needs of the human heart makes its teaching worthy of all acceptance. So the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sab- not an end, The ehlief end of man is not to keep the Sabbath hely; the chief end of the Sabbath is to make or keep the man holy. Tne Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath "As the Sabbath was made for man, it fits his needs as a key fits a lock, Hielps Physical Man, "It fits man's physical nature. It mitigates the monotony of unremitting toil, and unbinds for at least one day n seven, the workingman's burdens. It says to those who are physically weary and heavy laden, ‘Come unto me and I will give you rest.' It is a necessary supplement to tne rest which s offered the race at night. Rest awake is quite as essential to the normal man as rest aslee "It fits man's intellectual nature, The man who drops the main business of his mind on Sunday takes it up on Monday with new vigor of will and clearness of vision. For he whose mind is for six days of the week tethered to his plans needs Sabbath rest quite much as the man whose body is tethered to his tasks. The man who ever lets his business with his mind will lose his mental alertness as surely as the man who never lets go of his pick or his plane will lose his bodily elasticity. The Sabbath fits the mind's demands for rest, recuperation and change It fits man's social and moral nature: I combine the two. No man is truly moral who is not social, and no man is wholesomely social who \s not moral, Self-sacrifice is social; selfishness is unsocial. Tae Sabbath fits man's social nature as the home tits the affections. It glves the father who for six days in the week leaves his home early in the morning and returns late at night, a bit of daylight with his cafl- was ~ ~ and Religion, Abuse of Sabbath. "The abuse of this day> like the abuse of any good thing, turns good to evil. If Sunday is not the best day of the week, it is apt to be the worst day. The laborer who abuses Sunday is less fit for work on Monday than on any other day of the week. man of pleasure makes Sunday a day e s 1 O f special carnival; he does his worst instead . to of made his for many -a man animalism on rc] a, few best his sinks the on the day lau nH betterment. into the stough day which was and decided situation retain to probably shall EX Smails I the buy not property more,' said Neb., yes- Fremont, of have in Salt Lake the first years ago," said. Mr. + -¢ in-law, was ‘ 420, a Stimpson John H, Mr of this in the center at the south. into Stimpson 1 rear with Mr. track, clear of eat Grit-, Main Street | on e} when the --~ ~~ - 124 124 wa brother- mall struck it squarely A. Stimpson was the air, but Mr. of the ine occasion. Stimps restaurant small son in his arms. automobile wa going north Mast street and had reached eastbound car center John the runabout A. eit Stimpson for an 1 Uni Ford by while fifth's The Tenth N into goods t Fi eon driven the l id, I in and see us before. you attempt to purchase elseWE DO NOT HAVE AN where, then we know you'll buy. The public knows THAT ANNUAL SALE EVERY MONTH and Buy a Lot of Cheap ' ¢ J of Beside Ben 1 ident Tenth Griffith t j in the thrown) tracks | Griffith was caught in ti » Wreck] autemoblle and dragge d under | platform. ¢ th mK ear. ] with tl child, was air, but held the child two struck the front] here Stimyry 1 I ling y¥é ( ; time : of not at his best in Zion, Fremont is represented by business and professional men In Salt Lake, and jit is a pleasure to know that, they ar: doing well here. Judge. Frick, justice of the supreme court, was a practiclig attorney in I'remont for many years ConsoliJohn Dern, president of the dated Mereur Mining company, was focmerly of our city also, } general agent In tne passenger department of the Rio Grande, came from Fremont, where he was ticket agent for the Union Pacific. FE. H. Airis af this city also came from our town," Concerning conditions in Nebraska, Mr. Smalls said "Prospects are fine Bumper crops are expected and. the farmers are generally optimistic Business in all lines is good Being in a section that is almost entirely agricultural, we do not feel the effect of money flurries as the people in larger centers do In the recent panic we were scarcely disturbed at all Ve had plenty of money and did not find it necessary to issue scrip, as many banks did." Sti son recelyed L Main Street _ Met Se . "te Ee is HED Le Te Se ae CONFIDENCE COUNTS Why, of course, that is the secret of our success. When we : have a Shoe Sale the public knows theyare going to get their money's worth when they come to 124 Main St. baa head and left leg the cut] cut on his necessitating several] on the hear Griffith although. bac dl: stitches. Mr bruised under the fender, ese rious Injury Ben JI See son and the child es-| eaped with a Ww eee \ll were] taken into hd Hioly Cro hospital where their woutidl were dressed ocoupants. of the According to the automobile, Motorman Haney was not at his post, but was engaged_-in fasts | ing the form says gate at the side of the plat-| This is denied by Han that the automobile att tracks immedlately in The repair runabout was wrecked. OLICITORS WANTE thauke tween 19 Republican" and 12 a. m I; , Gs QUEEN OF PrLL NUT "What use shall we make of our Sabbaths? We must, as far as may be, consistent with the demands of necessity and mercy, make them days of rest. 3usiness should cease and work should stop. The value of such a day of rest is so conspicuouss that many of the wisest, freest and most Industrloug nations on the face of the earth guard the Sabbath with laws and penalties; our own fs one of them. As one has said: "If we except the family and civil government, no cther institution is so conspicuously distinctive of Christian citizenship as the weekly rest day." God forbid that our civilization should ever lose this feature of conspicuity, We should guard this feature of our national life with watebful jealousy. As laws against Sabbathbreaking will not execute themselves any more than laws against murder or theft or perjury, we should see that our Sabbath laws are executed, As men are protected from being compelled to work more than eight hours for a day, so they should be forbidden to work more than six days for a week, All laws benaring on Sunday labor should be enforced. If we cannot have prohibition on seven days of there is only the more reathe week, son why we should have it on the Sabbath Yet the best day in the week somtimes seems to be the hardest day on which to enforee sobriety Promotes Good Morals. "We must make our Sundays. promote good morals, We have a perfect right to interfere with all such violations of the Sabbath as tend to demoralize the community. When Sunday excursions and Sunday amusements become a moral nuisance in the community, it is our right and duty to see that the nuisance Is abated, On Sundays as on other days, we see that our Jaws make It hard to do wrong and easy to do right When the devil tries to exploit in his own interest the day of rest, worth sO much value, to are A man bound Day we to of who know its interfere lLospiration But we must go deeper than law in commending the Sabbath. We must make our day of rest a day of inspiration. Living patriotism must give value to our national holidays; living piety gives value to our legal holy days, The best use you can make of Sunday is to keep it so full of all that inspires courage, kindles hope and begets charity, that man will thank God for it as the thirsty traveler thanks God for the living fountain, or the we ary workingman thanks God for a rest FLEES FROM HEAT ON AN EXPENSIVE TRAIN Newport, :R.. I... July. .5.-John S&S, Phipps, son of the steel king, came to Newport yesterday from New York to escape the severe heat. He came in a speciai train that cost $900 and Iinecluded parlor, dining, observation and baggage cars. With Mr. Phipps were his wife and his children, with nurses, their special brand of milk and many pieces of baggage When they arrived they found the thermometer 90 degrees 2B oe Shade, the hottest day in three yea Dont OUTH All Work Positively Guaranteed. ell, 1126-X; Independent, 1126 the Mistak Ladies' $5.00 ONE DOLLAR. YOU COULD front | \ i $4.00 and Patent Leather and Vici Blucher, $3.65 $3.65 $2.95 lace and button, the pair | lee be- Ladies' value Oxfords, Ladies' values Tans Patent Kid, and Black Vici hand-turned, and Calf, $3.50 $5.00 and $4.06 We have a long line of Men's and Boys' Shoes at Low Pri ces consistent quality. THERE ARE TOO MANY KINDS TO MENTION SG, GANDIES with the IMITATED EVERYWHERE. COME THE AND SEE OUR BARGAIN SALE AND COUNTERS WILL COMMENCE MOND AM CONTINUE THE WEEK. The QUALITY of INDEPENDENCE 4 Per Cent CAPITAL, Surplus, Interest , | | ! | Paid ‘ 4 That boy is on the right road to independence = ane success who saves a portion of each dollar he earns and deposits it in the bank each week. He is looking ahead for the future and building the strongest proteection for old age Your account is cordially invited by the Commercial National bank, vee. | a 6 |All the News $200,000.00 for 50c a Month $50,000.00 HA MILTON' -2 OFF SALE SUITS GOWNS Handsome Tailor-made in Silks, Cloth, Linens Mulls. Suits and . ' Dinner Gowns, . : I ancy % OFF Coats and Traveling Wraps Silks, Cravenettes Linen Embroidered Coats- and Faney C ay All Mull, and ¥%, OFF ALL ; Evening Gowns, Frocks, PATTERN AND EL STREET MOD. HATS 4% OFF % OFF WAISTS Neckwear and Imported Silk Waists, Embroidered . Handkerchief French Batistes- Linens Novelties % OFF 4% OFF All Walking Skirts, Silk Petticoats and Hosiery MAIN Honest Work - Honest Prices ce are going to give you TWO SILVER DOLLARS for GIVE YOU MORE FOR YOUR MONEY THAN EXPECT ELSEWHERE UNION DENTAL CO. Painless Extraction of Tecth or No Pay. Ma To think that we BUT WE WILL who beyond office CHOG-NUT ROLLS No. in his relations with his associate Tle frivols, oats, swears, drinks, gambles, dissipates hie on this day than he does in his work days. Judging by his conduct, ne might suppose instead ef heing ‘thet the Sabbath made for man, was made for the devil. Must Be Day of Rest. set apart to help him rise into fellowship with his neighbors and God. Such a man finds his worst instead of his best companionship on Sunday, and shows at his worst the Ogden G. Mid I esterd when and. 1.8 col Phe crashed at t omob ¢ eet line,. Lake « Come We are in the right mood.. red IT one corner uth owned Salt Nebraskans It fits man's moral and religious nature; I link morality and _ = religion, What benefits one morally. benefits him religiously, and all that has religious value has moral worth. The man who thinks he can be moral without being religious is as much mistaken as he who thinks he can be religious withReligion is tne Godward side of morality; morality tae manward side of religion, The moral and religious value of the Sabbath can hardly be doubted. It is not only a day of social good fellowship. but a day of moral and religious instruction and insplration-a day when we each may say to a brother, ‘Be of good courage'; a day when our aspirations are rekindled and our nobler affections reawakened; a day when ‘we rally the good in the deptiha of ourselves,' recognize the good in the lives of our neighbors and together with them throw open our souls to the good there is above us, It is our special day at home for goodness and God, I represent the new idea. I will make a fine, perfect fitting business suit, of choice woolen, at $30.00, Mr. High Price Tailor would ask $45 for the sume thing and never bat an eye, ley City Prospects never were brighter, from what I can learn, and doubtless a property taining his holdings I nave eally decided to hold that which L am Interested In, and shall probably buy more before returning hon Rev. W. M. Paden in his sermon last evening dealt with fa? sanctity, its abuses, pointed out Seuntil lft: under wrong usage, of the day turning good into evil and its blessing when treated as it was intended it should be It was made for man, not man for the Sabbath was the doctrine which Dr. Paden kept ever before his hearers, ae it was this that he took for his It is a means, but W over "Il. was about 15 Possibility of Turning Good Into Evil Is Strongly Em- bath. in pronerties Rev. Dr. Paden Points Out That Day Was Made for Man. IS thi known | the | 1 nf old r-a has Former terday Mr. Smails is cashier of. the Parmers and Me rehants' Ratinnal bank of Fremont, and is in. Salt Lake for 1 short. stay His statenyent i a pleasing Indication of how the security 4 property is. regarded by business men who investigate ft Mr. Smails is directly interested in Salt Lake realty, being the owner of property on State street ind some acreage in Oakley addition. His trip to this city combines pleasure with the business ot looking after tae wel- USES AND ABUSES OF THE SABBATH Mornlity ago I came looked days in the week must deal with those children alone, a day of divided burdens and home companionship. It gives us all a day for soclal fellowship and leisurely acquaintance. t is a noliday for the home and festival for the affections-the day on which our Heavenly Father keeps open house. The spirit of modern business is volume, and a small rmiargin of profit. High priced tailors are of the old school. The same swell prices charged years Siler tyFinds "When phasized, basis yea proprietor DRUG Bryan. confidential ARS This The Pure Drug Dispensary Ue- 114 J lives PROPERTY days ago J] half intended to sell the property I-own here, but after having to with MORE Fellow-Townsman in mile see, this is another instance the ‘politicians, that is, the deleare here to vote with wild acthey do not want, on VY proud is a BUY street prices. but when we consider the antl-Bryan men convention, Kind MAY Refreshing ana Invigorating Soda Water At Our Fountain. be {In a deep depression below sea level, for the anti-Bryan men are seven miles up in the air and getting nearer the milky way every minute More than this, they are all spradled out In the blue empyrean, with their ballast gone, their drag-ropes fouled and not a parachute at hand with which to make a seemly drop. When they last oe just beneath the forelegs of Ursa Major they came to the decision that there are but two ways to defeat Bryan to wit: (a) By a miracle and (b) by two miracles. Inasmuch as there isn't even 4a prentice mr acle worker in the anti-Bryan forces it seemed reasonably certain tonight that the inevitable will. be projected on the sereen along about Thursday of thi week, when a large number of madly enthusiastic delegates will take chances on their hearts rub-a-dubbing too fast in these altitudes and will give the peerless leader another chance Lo prove whether his label describes the goods or should again be changed to that melancholy designation, the Cheer- less able "Bill ex- TNOW! 216 SOUTH MAIN ST. ONE-HALF OFF acm Avers, fact, would 1908. WECANT Three Men and Child Narrowly to Escape With Their Lives. Looks Pretty Good Banker From Fremont, Nebraska. 6, a Na ata Charles in you Zion arti- 5 Brother toilet JULY a pect to find in an up-todate drug store, at reason- - MONDAY, PE a "PLEASE W. J. B." UTAH, an room cles-perfumes, ADOPT, CITY, | fresh-sick everything LAKE _-' Bryan Will Do as He Pleases With "‘Antis'' When Time Comes. necessities SALT | j Always REPUBLICAN, WON'T SELL SALT STREET CAR STRIKES LAKE HOLDINGS GOING AUTOMOBILE HAS CONVENTION Pure SEWED IN A SACK Drugs - INTER-MOUNTAIN | | THE 2 |