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Show t' PAGE roua YHB JOURNAL, Saturday, October 28, 1922. CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH LOGAN fore I deeply mourn the loss, forj'goin on and there ought. to be 'No, objected the other. 'he "a one of my best friends. some excitement, because they Lets go to Ireland. They got ' 1 A. J. HANSEN. one army there per capital 1. got three armies. H. Lawrence Smith : i - Uki drsumof big rouch about bikc down to ii.9saiit J VUMPIN YIMINY! Ole Oleren had been working :as an engine wiper and his bossj iu thrifty man, had been coaching, P emotion to fi&man death il111 such advice as: of Lawience Smith. Logan has with "Now Ole, dont waste a drop ?fJ J 05J And j who a InCHMOXD; ycrjng men To thereof . us On waf.te Forward either te Arises Pass the d(m Executed By Dispute ! the daily aided contest .here yesterday t hats getting expensive, oo. !ufe-k- new. can .Teams j the Lawrence, Loganites That Ties Up Game--Bot- h North hirt Bhut out tbe South With these facts of economy tamt like a thimdrtboL ir Con- - cache hih by a 25 0 8ore Fight Hard And Even Referee Peterson pounded thoroughly in his head j tltar sky. Overwhelmed " Ole went up to be questioned on thouKh the. South Cache Rules And Reverses Decision. . ..h eievenj gcnow, we humbly resign The eligibility a- - fireman " . fought stiffly, they were no match! selves with the n was; of ward I.efereo The altered decision, their opponents. They made first pass to Johnson, quarterback,-tenl-jlaf!t Query propounded the . re on full' . "Sl.pFe..v SoribLso sJdd .7nd 7tu me Stubby Peterson to award Coach who ran forty yards with You a track sin,e yards; of promise ohTTt was pitiful. ;,nei'on Hums Crookston s B. Y. C. Crijusons ference for a touchdown. is. around a curve and see rushing he it wwi seems that It was Johnson's on a forward pass, A touchdown impossible touchdown toward you an express. What gone. Only yesterday we met would you do? Bergeson to Johnson, after Peter- - which was the cause fur the dispute.. was the most, consistent Traveler saw his genial smile, and To which Ole son had ruled the pass illegal, fol- - ITmpire Peterson declared Berg- - sprinter for the winners. He made him, replied: heard his .voice. Today' that the dam, oil can: I However, the iongeat run, of the daj, about J lowed by Johnson's forty yard run raon.s pass incomplete. grab mile iias yyji 8Uilea I yards, and could always1 vanished, and our friend lives grab the dam, wasteland for a touchdown sent the local after looking np the rules. Refereei thirty-fiv- e I oierson changed his decision and be . . to on make 8 depended yumpl tie with church school into a necessary bn!y in our memory. But the an aggregation of the B. Y. univer-sit- y awarded the touchdown making the ryardage to5 gi,ve his team first down. of him is cnirs tokeep, mehiory core WHITE SUPREMACY When the final whistle The lie t score' at end of the was first of Proro. The game played blew the Crimsons were successful-!- - half stood 19 to (1, seven of ' those we shall cherish it and place it were a couple of They before a large crowd of students and in our inmost sanctuary. ly forward which those executing passes, in but had teen out of. made the first on points being Crimson Logan football fans Lawrence Smith was far above the army so long that they had Field yesterday afternoon. Both had they begun a few minutes earl- - quarter There was no scoring in the many forgotten the discomforts of! teams showed some classy football ier might have resulted in another third quarter arn six points were the crdjiiary, mortalsnn made In the last. - Those making things. He was an excellent stu- hikeing, fighting and freezing j at times throughout the game J and touchdown. For the locals Wlilmore at end. touchdowns were Rlrie, m; l.arso.i, dent, an ardent rtader. anil h? and were close rivals In ground gaining. starving and all the rest of! kntw that a euccessf j1 life is it, and remembered only the The Proro line outweighed the locals Forsgreen at Tackle, and Johnson N. Thomson and Traveler, th were the best bets. ter making the only not .measured in stocks and good times and the ll by an average of fifteen pounds. The quarterback Partridge, Fuller, and Bird were touchdown. bonds. He was upright and bene existence. Civilian life had be-- i boys from the rival church school, the mainstays for the B, Y. U. volent, a true friend, a dutiful come so monotonous that they gave a crimsons a real battle; one The (Crtmson. cheering was a fea-- i A mulberry tree, still growing son, and his soul was. kindled decided of the best that has been played in something had to be ture of the game. Throughout the,' in the i of London and bear- with love for the beautiful. Logan so far this season. done about it. City contest the B. Y. C. rooters kept up; Such a man was Lawrence ing a crop of fruit, is said to Lets beat it for China, sugY. C. SCOPES K.WtLY . a deafening roar. , back to before 1666. date .1 knew him, and there gested one. Theres a good waf Smith. ktekoff The Crimsons won the and B. Y. 17. received and advanced the and lie rr Thrcugh the untimtiy dreamy" . fr j i One Night Only, Wednesday, Nov. 1st, 8:15 p. m. 1 thJr-beJO- nd ts j ; grief-stricke- , r , - - 1 ' , j -- 13-1- - ' 13-1- 3. . : r v ; ' " V' free-for-a- i . r 'V ' j j . ' a v 1 ,. k ! , - ball to their own forty .. yard line. Two line bucks netted Irovo two ' first' downs In rapid successioB.' The ' Crookstonities h( td 00 plus tax. On Sale Tuesday J ; : . mid-fiel- NOVEMBER OFFER d, BEAUTIFUL FRAMED PORTRAIT 8 x 10 GIVEN TO PHOTOGRAPH CUSTOMERS DURING MONTH OF NOVEMBER BY- :- . : line-buc- Electric Photo Shbp PHOTOGRAPHS-r-TH- the Crimson - DONT PUT IT OFF UNTIL THE i - LAST DAY, BUT PHONE FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAy. COME NOW , . , i .The Crookstomtes made little head-- ( way and the oval went .over to B. Y- !' took the ball straight dowq the field, a forward pass net- tittJk tWenty-fiv- e yards. IJne bucks . sent the plRskld over tlie goal line, Bird, B..Y'r U. halfback making the score. The Crimsons blocked the and Blue drop kick for the! , White . goal. ' Throughout the remainder of the quarter the bail was - kept shifting tip and down the field. During the first half Wllmore replaced Davld-- : son at end for the Crimsons, David son faking Maughau's position at! left half. B. Y. C. fumbled the ball soon ; after play was resumed in the third period. Provo recovered and ad- . vanced the ball to the Crimson foty-- J five yard Une and lost fhe ball on downs.-- After a series of plays In which the ball was kept shifting up apd down the field, the B. Y. 17. sent v the'ball on end runs to the Crimson four yard line when the whistle - : -- yaMline, thirty-on- e ; ; . If you will not put off till December what you can do today, . : you will be rewarded, for the extra effort. Every year in December we are compelled to 'turn away customers,, simply because so many come in all at once for !;, Jheir. Xmas photos. u This year all customers ordering one or jnore dozen of our $8.00 or $10.00 portraits will receive a large framed portrait 8 x 10 Free of all cost. These large pictures are beautiful from . every standpoint and sell for $5.00 each. We have the newest styles at reasonable prices. - 4 exclusive E XMAS GIFT . j? 50r75-$- l. 10 A: Mr and the white and blue Provoana lost the bail on dowhs on B. Y. (Jm. ' 'v forty five yard line, With the ball In. the . locals advanced to II. Y. U's twenty line. A forward pass Bergetion j. yard to Wlllinore netted twelve yards and first down on B. Y. IPs eight yard ' . line. Bergeson and Johnson, Crim- son fullback and quarterback, brought the ball to the t yard line on a and Johnson carried r : the oval over the goal' line on an-- y v other buck. Johnson missed goal. B. Y, V- - kicked ort o Johaaon. . , who returned the ball ten yards. The Provoans were . penalised ten , yardsTfor fouling, and thd B: Y. C. ( lost the bail on .downs ( when fhe. i period end4, r 7 The White and. Blue advanced the ball six, yards toward 'the Crimson , r v goal. AvBeries of line' bucks, cross shift formations and forward passes enabled B. Y. U. to reach the Crlm- .. .. i, son forty-fiv- e yard Une on the fourth down, The Twltchelf aggregation .made fourteen yards i from an end . 'tun and lost the bail on downs' on ... Tickets Electric Photo Shop LOGAN, UTAH 45i2 N, MAIN PHONE 776-- J SELL YOUR CREAM TO . The DAIRY Shop NORTH MAIN WE PAY HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR . "blew. , v . , . CREAM. We Also Buy Fresh Eggs. Bring Your Cream to town with you when you come and Give us a Trial. We Pay Cash as Soon as we Receive the Cream. . , - after a buck had failed to gain head- v'way for'B. Y, f. took the oval for Vyn. T. Us second touchdown. Part-ridge kicked goal. ( ' The Crimsons took the ball down "the field for jsmall gains, and B..Y. were penalised thirty yards for the ball to tbe 4 ' , plugging, bringing yard line. Berg-- . ,1. Crimson forty-riv- e on. Crimson fullback was caught by a B. Y. V. player and threw tor- t- A double forward pass, ,'Vp-vfln- ' C y I, . . - r. J j " REAL HEAD HUNTING CANNIBAL8' wmt 'the aamdateaf Martin the South Seas' for Asso Johnnon, who photographed "Head Hunter-o- f elated Exhibitors: Often daring death, the intrepid Cameraman even inter in scenes film and the uncivilized stretches types rupted cannibal feasts to of the New Hebrides. Mrs. Johnson is shown chatting with Napapato, a chieftain, on the Johnson yachC At the Ieft,"Johnson himself is shown with two cannibals Above I a closeup of two members 'of an expedition going to another island to slay ft few natives and return with their beads as 'trophies . ' PHONE 137 n H The DAIRY Shop H. E. BINGHAM, Manager : yy LOGAN HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM .,k : J 11 Good' 'Mustc-.-A- II are ; If! 30)at 8:15 oclock If you believe in maintaining and Building up Utahs Industries, vote for Ernest Bamberger Leatherwood for Representatives in Congress. . Vote the Republican Ticket Straight, and give us invited-- , Crn .B: Colton and E 0. j (Monday Night, Oct. : Congress- - for Senator and a FOUR HORSE raid political AdrerUsement I |