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Show LOGAN CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1909. BOMB BEAT TIORJSIIEIIS ;he there recently. It seems have taken that the Londoners e die game of baseball and ha baseball up league that plays regularly. eldersTof the London 'Among the conference there" are "some pretty ball players and' so when -- attend condie boys were in to the consent secured ference they to of the conference president or rath- XZttWiOSX Succeeding to the position of on the death of nder-in-chief W. :Ai commaWil-mo- n . Born 64 Blackrqar, in years Md. Was ago Hagerstown, aclearning the printing business in Balticame off on more when the civil war broke out; cepted and the game Mor- enlisted at the age of 17 years in the teams own ground. The Company H, of the Sixth Maryland mons trimmed the Britishers by a volunteer infantry, one of Foxs fightKid- ing 300; served through the war in Scotty score of 14 to 0. the Third and Sixth army corps. Was man who was the premier twirler wounded three times, disabled for of the B. Y. C. team a couple of life; six months a prisoner of war in for the Salisbury. N. C., and Libby prison, years ago did the pitching Richmond. After the close of the war, Utah boys and he had the English vihile still on crutches, he took a men at his mercy all the time. leading part in organizing the Boys in Blue in Maryland, which organizaYoung Worley will he remembertion was subsequently merged into the ed by the local fans as something Grand Army of the Republic, in which of a ball player himself, and he he has been active ever since its organization, being paat commander of was in the game of course. Post No. 1, having previously filled all 4 of the subordinate offices; was unanimously elected department commandPETROSINI MURDER er in 1900, senior CLUE DISCOVERED at Boston in 1904, succeeding Comrade Blackmar as commander-in-chief- ; presided over the great Thirty-nint- h Washington. Aug. 7. The reannual encampment at Denver, inspectors Col. In 1905 port of the postoffice the arrested and trailed who' Ohio Italian Black llanders in submitted to Postmaster General oluminous as to the of this society for operations 'blackmail throughout Ohio. Much of the evidence gathered is withheld for use at the trial in De- 1905. NIELS ELIARSON Hitchcock is cember. While claim the inspectors do not they have found the as- sassins of Police Lieutenant Pe-trosi- who was killed in Paler- Italy, they mo, have unearthed, however, the interesting that Charley Vieario, allies fact Oollo-ger- o tember 14, 1909. This is thedate on whit'h the Agricultural College of Utah, at Logan, will begin itsYvventieth year of service. The College has done more than any other one thing in the Wot to raise the standard of the farm, the home, and the shojv. It has sptin-klethe iutermountam country with alert, well trained business men who are coming to lead the commercial activities of the State and region. It has brought new inspiration and new enthusiasm to the faim. It has dignified farm labor by making it a distinct profession. It has revealed to the tired house-wif- e new methods the science of the home. It has helped! make housekeeping a nobler and more intellectual calling. It is furnishing the West with teachers in Agriculture, Domestic Science and Arts, Mechanic 'Arts, and Commerce, as well as in more general lines. It has turned out hundreds of trained carpenters, blacksmiths, cabinet makers, and mach inists, wiho have done a big share towaid building up the country.. The College boasts the most sue ceNsful graduates of any similar institution iu the country. This argument is invincible; no graduate of the Agricultural College of Utah is without profitable and responsible employment. The secret is in the course of study which h practical and at the same time liberal and in the diligence with which, the work is done. LAIDTO REST Next year sees important chanThe funeral services over bhe ges in this great College of the remains of the late Niels Eliarson People pan enlarged and) strength ened faculty; new and more comwere held in tire Second ward a new womans meeting house at Ilyrum on Spfa-dd- y plete equipment; a enthusiasm new afternoon. They were well building, and attended the ward folk uniting for the Twentieth Century Education. Yroung men and women in paying a last tribute to a man' who wish a training which and neighbor they7 had known so fit them for success in life would long and so favorably. The re were dio well to investigate the work 6f a great many friends present The the College. from towns outside of wt-11 and Augustina Marfisi, 'who Paleinio when LieutenLogan. ant lYtrosmi was murdered, re- Second ward choir furnished the turned here afterwards. It is music for the occasioirpbeing as- CASE OF PLAGUE were in that tiny know who killed sisted by Mr.J. W. Nielsen of this and have been sending over city who rendered a solo in the money for the defense of the ass- Danish tongue. assins. Those who delivered addresses One of the inspectors said that were Elders Ernest Mohr and. N. when these two men were arrest-s- d P. E. Nielsen of this city, Marihus a letter was found written Petersen of Newton, ITans Sorenby one of them which referred in? sen of College, Dr. Cutler, A. M. a graphic manner to a street Israelsen and Bishop A. A. Allen scene in Italy that might easily of Ilyrum. A long procession folhave been the one in which Lieut- lowed the remains to their last enant Pctrosini was killed. In-i- t resting place. The grave was deis said that $1,980 m dicated by A. M. Israelsen. money orders which were sent to Italy by Salvatore Lima andhis FOR SALE IdealVacuum cleanather. who have been arrested, er & Bicycle 42 S. Main St. were sent to the wife or sister of tonio Lima to be e used) in of men charged with the RUSSELL A. ALGER. Assassinations. The inspectors discovered that more has been raised! since e mn in thieountry were ar- V i led to be used for their 'A IN CALIFORNIA said him de-ns- al-ha- de-tens- Sacramento, Cal., Aug. 7. Tire discovery a few days ago of an of bubonic authenticated, plague in Sunola, Alameda county, 'has inspired the state board of health to renewed- activity in the campaign against the ground squirrel in that and adjacent counties. At a meeting today it tfas decided to prosecute tbe work with more vigor than heretofore in an effioit to exterminate these infection-e rodents.- carrying - Joseph Mendoza, the youth who is ill with tbe plague in tbe Alasupposed to the disease inor "handling through eating fected squirrels billed, by him on a 'hunting trip last week. meda hospital, is have contracted7 e. k LIGHTNING KILLS TEAM; DRIVER IS STUNNED , Don JAIME PLANS TO ISSUE A STATEMENT Cerbrre. France, Aug. 7. usl Baders will hold a . ' jt vv , ' 4 ' , if fh t The meet-- g shortly at a Drench frontier jTn,'td decide upon their atti-- e view of recent events, it Sa' aa 0(Iay- Inder, tl - erstood, Don faring t his Afterwards, it is Jaime, .the Span will issue a manifes that he has at the Elected command&r-in-chle- f profit by the misfortune Twenty-thirNational encampment, country, but that. -- if ' the held at Milwaukee, Wis., August 28, no-mte- m d ent government is 1889. He was born in Ohio; powerless 30,, to Michigan; rose to the rank sa'e the honor of the nation, he of brigadier general during the war; act. The Carlists claim that governor of Michigan; secretary of war d nh a P0S1fien to arm a,nd under President McKinley; United States senator from Michigan. Died in the field 100,000 a.re n quickly at his home in Detroit, Mich., January Edvvardsville, III., Aug. 7. Joseph. Bohlen, living at Carpenter, a small station on the Wabash railroad', was driving a four-hors- e team to a gang plow when1 a storm came up yesterday. Lightning struck the outfit, dropping all of the horses . in their tracks. Three of them were killed instantly, but the fourth"" Tevived. Bohlen stood still, stunned, with the reins around his neck, blinded by the glare, but unhurt ne was aroused from his trance by a stinging sensation and, found his clothing on fire. He had matches, in several pockets, and all had been lighted hy the elec- - G. BURTON, RICHMOND AFFAIRS STATE .Wreck on Lagoon Road By reason of the breaking d good challenge the local teams, er one of them, to a game. The challenge was gladly OFJUR Has the most Successful Body of Graduates in the West. Sep- 1L CHARLES SOME OF TUE NEWS COLLEOEOF-UT-AB Corley, a son of of this city, Councilman Worley as a nire is at present laboring the London, England, sionary in Writing borne he Conference. of teUa of an interesting game Ekkr Wm. agricultural NUMBER 152. DURING A WEEK' RICHMOND, Aug. 9. Base ball re over here for a vvhile.Haid an axle under the tender of the work has begun. Threshing, and loeoniotno on the Salt Lake & cutting grain has started in earnOgden railway on the way from est. The crops are good and the Salt Lake to Lagoon, the train farmers are rejoiemg. was wrecked and two trainmen Mrs. C. Z. Ilafris is and five passengers were injured, very ill at this with writing but none fatally. erysipelas G. Betty7 1ms jukt returned from Gen Nevius Arrives: the jair at Seattle. Gen. Henry M. Nevius;" ComThe writer received ' a card mander in Chief of the Grand from Mrs. Parson stating that she Army of .the Republic, arrived m and the Misses Etta Merrill, EdSalt Lake to preside over the anith Hendricks and Med a Swend-- ,, nual reunion o fthiut body to be sen were at Portland and held in S.iltLake driving this week having Charles G. Burton was born at a time. good jolly on Saturday reand 1846." Cleveland. 4. evening, O, April During Jjcw is Petty has been ceived a - royal1" welcome. working lie his Infancy his parents, Leonard Burton and Laura ( Wilson lJBurtQiure in Logan a week, thinks that 20,000 veterans will moved to Warren, O., where he spent Our baseball team has gone on he in attendance, and fully his boyhood days. a trip to Pocatello, St. Anthony visitors altogether. This bids On September 7, 1861, he enlisted in the Nineteenth .Ohio volunteer in- and several other fair to be tbe biggest week places to play fantry for three years, or during the ball. The Richmond1 Balt Lakes history. ballplayers war. His regiment was first assigned t have to in certainly7 southern Kentucky along played good ball Butchers Getting Theirs duty the Cumberland river, and afterward this year, and the people have Following their failure to sit to Crittendens division of Buells Ye them, supported can say this and take notice of previous army. Three days after his sixteenth up that nmoh, wo wish the them success subject of this sketch warmings, eight Ogden butchers birthday participated with his regiment in the in t.heir trip and hope they will were arrested yesterday morning battle xf Shiloh or Pittsburg Lai ling. nest year. charged w7ith selling decayed Subsequently he was engaged In the play again Vivian In that resulted the capture Tfppitts fell and broke meats and using various preserva campaign ot Corinth, Miss., and the forward her arm Sunday. tives contrary to law. The State movement of the army of the Ohio Fred Rainey has gone back to dairy and food commissioners towards Chatville, Tenn., October 29, 1862. work, leaving his new son to take are determined that the laws At the Forty-firs- t National encamp- care of the family. sih all be obeyed. ment at Saratoga Springs, N. Y Ernest Christensen has been Wants, a Big Plaster Judge Burton was elected commander-in-chlehome on a visit, having been ab- of the Grand Army of the ReMae Bailon of Salt Lake has and served such as tbe public until sent emt-ieworking as foreman for W. suit against Henry L. election of his successor, Judge Uenfy S. I feqdlricks over a year. He re-- , Faiker for breach of promise. She M. Nevins, at Toledo, O, September to work Monday. turned 1908. 3, hhinksfFlO.OiA.') will make a plaster Miss Edith Hendricks and Prislarge enough to cover the wound cilla Allen were released from the in her heart. Y. L. M. I. A. association DEATH OF FINE JAPS HELD DP, Sunday on account of not being here to' Salt Lake, Aug. 8. Their faces attend to and heads cut and bruised, two YOUNG LADY and Mrs. meetings tin's winter; Lila Webb and Ililma n Japanese called at police Wright were sustained in their shortly after midnight an At hour on places. early Saturday and said they had been held up there passed away at the Elder Wiser of Lewiston. Allen morning a of by pair highwaymen. They home of her parents in the Sec of Cove, Allen of Arizona and gave their names as M. Mijangavv ond ward, Miss Louisa EthelShel-totii- , Bishop T. II, Merrill addressed ami T. Vishioka. The latter rebeloved daughter of Mr. the Saints Sunday, ceived a deep scalp wound which ' Frank Shelton, after a protracted Tithing, Temple work, and may develop a fracture. Both were affection of the the evils of liquor and tobacco removed to the L. D.'S. hospital illness heart, and dropsy. were their subjects. According to their story, they The JhcDonald and Erickson have ' was nineteen young lady were standing in the vicinity of affeceach purchased fine rubber tired the Japanese headquaiters at years old, was of a mild, tionate runabouts. and a was disposition Foui th West and North Temple, favorite in a of circle Henry Christoffersons beautiful large when the pair of highwaymen friends. She is remembered as a new home is nearly completed1. approached and 'without warning Metta Ghristofferson is very struck both over the bead with a diligent pupil while in the public ill will be missed by her with typhoid fever. schools, and piece of .steam hose. After they and' friends A. A. Thomas went to m the Mis. fell to tbe sidewalk the thugs riflschool L. Y. M. I. and Lake Salt A. Sunday morning, to ed their pockets but failed to find Sunday' in both of which she was active visit her mother, any money, they say. They gave and faithful.r Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Curtis has the police a description of the Funeral services, to which friends just returned from Salt Lake, highwaymen. of the family are invited', will be where they have been to visit relRobs Even Veterans held in the eScondi ward meeting atives. S. Wise, a G. A. R. veteran house on Thursday at 2 oclock The pioneer relic house is now from Oklahoma, reported to the p. m. completed and is a very unique sheriff's office Friday afternoon old fashioned building, and a that he had been robbed of his v ICE CREAM AT HOME credit to those who have prompocketbook, containing $50, three it. oted) Brought to your door any time. New7 York drafts for $50 each Tis said that wedding bells Stop the wagon and give your and a railroad ticket from Salt order. Murdock. will soon be ringing for some of, . Lake to Sam Francisco and return our girls, Marian is extremely to his home, at Saltair. Later in busy' this summer; must be some THOMAS J. STEWART. the evening he found his pocket-boo- k ' thing doing. thrown, behind the door of Miss Jennie Merrill and Nathhis room. The money was missan Tillman were married last ing, hut the ticket and the drafts f tA T' Wednesday. ;' were in the book. Mrs. II. Buhen Jr., is here visFobber Foils Woman Young iting her mother. Miss Grace E. Frost, principal A number of our town people . of the Bryant school in. Salt Lake, are going on tbe G.'A. R. reunion. had am encounter with a footpad The choir gave a surprise on im the which on Saturday evening their leader Thursday evening. thief came off second best. ApThere was a large crowd out and for made a grab all spent a veTy pleasant evening proaching her he her handbag, to which she held singing, making speeches, etc. Rethe until back and freshments were served. firmly fought fled. thief Tbe infant child 'of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Larson from Cove was Robbed in Saloon. buried here last week. .It was Salt Lake, Aug, ! C. R. Can-le- e three years old. Heart failure of Fairfield, Iowa, called at and stomach trouble was the"" tbe police station Friday morning cause of death. and complained that he had been the at commander Elected Fishing ,is a very popular sport robbed in the Cheyenne saloon of thirty-sixtnational encampment,! held here just, now. $20. He stated thiat he went into at Washington, D. C., October 9, 10, I 1902. the lavatory and was followed Born 11, 1848. Enlisted RUBE September THE TAILOR Clothes by two men. One man got his arm at 16 years of age. In the One HunCleaned, pressed and repaired-- , regiment, around his neck and held him. dred and : Volunteer Infantry; Ladies work a speciality. Work while the other man went through Pennsylvania mustered out June 20, 1865. Joined called foT and delivered 22 W.lst his pockets. He was unable to Zook Post No 11, Norristown, Pa., In of 75,-00- 0 7 f d head-quarter- - oan fellow-studen- ts . i-.r ef h Thirty-eight- h |