OCR Text |
Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, vming men ,inl wonii u who arc loyal-!- j tn am! to all she stands fm. t'naiis,- - site s tlicirs and they love i'ln.ily she lias siuiviilcil. No ti'Uibt ihiTc Merc ilnisc who sneered v. Iumi Wi-sler n.ild in defense of Ii.irtinni!!!i "She is a little college, hut i licit- are Mime of us who low her." Tln-ruiv many who will sneer now at thought of student love for that "laigan iliage school of idows in.l i i in tint down deep in their limns they envy such love, and hope hy i.M'.iiain to instill it In their local pet. "A. V. students know how to win and how to lose, and always hang together to the finish." has lieen said so often th.it It has necoine prove! hi. The "loyal titiO." who traveled down to the fontbal game lit November. in the face of almost certain defeat. and a (forded so much Joy to the islets of the ('hronicle. indicated more clearly tliini words the "stand pat spirit of the institution. It was the same spirit hack of the student on the 11th. If this were a poor, dci iiying apology for a I'ollege, wuh a straggling, listless student body, there would he some tvasoti for striking it out of existence: hut to deprive a loyal, vigorous student body summarily of their college home would lie an edllcatiini.il crime no true college man would ever dale to sanction. lint they could simply transfer their a I login nee to the university. Oh. yes! They are intimity yearning for the opportunity. Like tin little maid in Little Citizens." they "have over her all tlie time those kindly feelings. There is no need to conceal the matter. The feeling among Agricultural college students toward tlie university is pretty tense Just nt this moment. The university rnnnot understand this and professes to Ik greatly grieved ami hurt nt it. Rut until the college is conceded its proper place, a rank equal to thnt of the university, and there is an end to this exasperating see-saof snobbish Insult and pats ronizing condescension: until It made manifest thnt the university Is not aiding nnd nbettlng an educational assassination, this feeling is bound to continue. Even If there were no such a rndicnl change of instructors, conditions nnd environment would be detrimental to nny body of undergraduates. It is all right for a graduate student to change his residence and profit by the methods and facilities of several institutions. Ilut his real college life is behind hint and he is now It takes a novice in the workshop. about n year to grow Into the atmosphere of a imrtlcular i'ollege, but once In he craves and deserves to enjoy an unbroken experience of Its opportuniIndividual circumstances throw ties. obstacles enough In the way of Utah students. It Is hard to Justify the state In placing more there. There Is a general brenxnig of obligations Involved In the merger that waa contemplated. The Agricultural college has been in existence for fif- MONDAY, APRIL PAGE THREE. 17, 1905. UNION DEPOT TIME CARD. li-- the educational side of the college controversy Lire. Logan. Utah.) whole campaign fllughau 'vaKeJ vigorously to ! lat baa In the college Agricultural rl the one of line Utah, mlveralty , nzht ha been largely disregarded that line la one prangdy enough, aome people, unthinking to ckk'h, be the to aurface the on appear all-"- eal of consideration important on the bearing of the merger Rational Interest- - of the two insti-Ufoconcerned, and of the state. Swone great argument, that haa been Jutted before legislators and general The state la Mic baa been money. 'meed for money. The colleges, the Agricultural college, are JJ2L too much money. The merger tenable us to aave money. We the money. So ran the impna-"of those broad-.T- . argumenta philanthropists who have been of Utahs best p.r t0 take the life institution of higher learning. know how informed Tbae best rwnoved these were from the real .Lenient employed in the conflict. know that Just so truly aa the cultural college was given to Lo-,- n the beginning, because it was JlLted to He small potatoes and potatoes; it Is desired In Salt because it la growing all the ind becoming continually more lertkrLuckily for the opponents Agricultural college, both asked for large approprla- gtuiient the ns Lj - this year; and the dollar-mar- k on the o immediately embroidered be- the and standards fight nrslty course there were some staters advanced and more or less that might connect slightly the educational side of the The merger was to settle ill conflict between the colleges, and fttlr work would no longer be Interred with nor their ideals corrupted The mergV such unseemly hostility. er would result in such a saving or that aforesaid money that greatly facilities would be provided for all lines of study. An Implied argument, never definitely expressed except to rival preparatory schools, was that there would incidentally be far fewer students educated at state exIt was pense to enjoy these facilities. further alleged, with a great flourish g statistical trumpets, that this merger was most emphatically in line rith modern department store meth-- k itth There Is of course some truth in all dm arguments from our educational If the Agricultural lUknthroplata. ly should be definitely and made a part of the State afrralty and located at Balt Lake, It mid probably put a stop to the table per-awnt- con-ttver- at least until tome future inn of the school of agriculture Sould rise In righteous indignation ind presume to object to the domlna-io- n of the School of Mines. Rut if Mnatltutlona amendments can be made in one direction there is no reason why they cannot In anial other. . Is Moreover, while everybody grant that these biennial contdo not ests, however exhilarating, s, rondure to steady educational there are a few who think that Ins radical measures might secure an equally good result. There Is a possibility that the general public does not know who forced the lighting at this time, or for that itter, who has been forcing It all The Agricultural college has dng. hen struggling for life in this for life and the maintenance (the position she has held consist-l- y since her organisation. Neither nan nor an Institution knowingly rvinitates a combat In which there Is Mng to wain and everything to lose. Hwe all you hear around the capital mdy to pro-pet- con-nover- ay I fc you will soon he convinced that university Is a most oppressed and creature. The Agricul-kheartless and greedy the selfish personal am- al college, W moved by How Is Your Heart? I too slow, tofast, or does it skip a beat? Do you have shortness of weak or hungry spells, hinting, smothering or choking your pulse weak, Pdls, palpitation, fluttering, Pans around the heart, in side nd shoulder; or hurt when on left " you haveside? of these any ymptoms your heart is weak ? diseased, and cannot get Jter without assistance. Dr. Miles Heart Cure lengthens weak hearts, and Stely ever fails to cure heart sc. Try. it, and see how you Will find relief. v'nt My b.. hiiii jAbout January 1st. IMS. I took and dropsy, iK ii weakness tokl br ?' worse. I was case J Physician that my ? and T neighbors m My P to die. swollen to one- third ter h.r5er .Jhnn normal slse, and around my heart. for it there months I had to sit Wmit TUt Inhcd to keep from emotii-KileTrJ?.nt-f- op five bottles of Lr. end by the time I hd all I was entirely Hi4 ,n, them tetter than I have for twraty V..T! nt I am tMi to di y klnai" Jl Th ontol.lmymefarm. ifV.yft MdBt brrrh?ltlp!"n that Miles Heart Cure IwouWT" t"r niw be h my grave. CLRD. Wllmore, Ky. a, J?Ur druonbS Hart Cura Is sold by ht tlritSSJ.V who whl guarantee that " wiin Jfftl will benefit. If It falls yup money. Un we w I. Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind bltion of :i ulimi, isii;,nui. 1ms system:, tidily lieiie-a- of study as well as apprupriaiioiis fnim her charitable rival, until now site threatens to imnimize all I lie funds of the Tommy-rot- ! Ihl you eve, Umk at the facts in the mutter? The Agricultural college now offers five distinct courses of study. A feu years ago, before the university began offering them, they were distinctive us well. They are agricultural. domestic science and arts, commerce. civil engineering, and mechanical engineering. These same courses are given in every agricultural college but one in the United States, and have been given in the A. C. of Utah as degree courses since 1X90, the time of the In 1903 the university organization. established courses In mechanical engineering and civil engineering, and in 19.4 a department of finance and commerce. every subject of which hHd been given for years in the commercial course of the Agricultural college. General subjects must of course be given in both institutions in order to education and provide a are not expensive, anyhow. It Is on this evidence, if you please, that the university charges the iollvge with gross and malicious duplication of studies. In other words, no matter how long tile Agricultural college has been giving a particular course nnd has recognized It ns within her own distinctive province, ns soon as the university sees fit to establish a parallel course, the Agricultural college becomes guilty of duplicating work. The immense saving of money was to result In greatly increased facilities for all lines of study. Rut nobody has yet established the statement that there would be an enormous saving of money. The university people, either expecting to manipulate immense clnsses with underpaid instructors, or figuring on turning loose the great majority of A. C. students free from state responsibility, have come out with great, sweeping statements about saving 1300,000 a year. To meet these well-round- ed President Kerr's report contains a careful estimate, based directly on tables agreed to by both Institutions, and showing that, considering the forfeiture of a 3350.000 piece of property, there will still be practically no saving at nil. Somebody must be badly at sea In this matter; and even If President Kingsbury offers no reasonable arguments, and does not write his own speeches or prepare his own reports. It Is not compulsory that we should give more credence to his beliefs than to others. Economy Is a benutlful word to catch the populace, but what a multitude of crimes have been committed in its name! The Idealists of the university are also going to Increase efficiency by getting Into line with modern methods. Well, the department store is a great Institution, and has done much to not Might cheapen commodities. there be some danger that the same piethods, applied to colleges, would tend In more ways than one to cheapen education? You go to the great department store when price la Important and quality a secondary consideration. When you want the beat, sold and guaranteed by an expeft specialist. you generally drop Into an exclusive store. Moreover, it Is Just possible that education is not quite so material aa calico and salt, and there are some distinct lines of study that do not well harmanlze. A great deal has been made of the fact that there are eighteen state universities which absorb the work of the Unfortunately Agricultural college. for auch argument, there la an agricultural college in every state of the Union, and the recognition and appreciation of this type of Institution, with Its distinctive field and unique individuality. Is spreading rapidly all over the land. It is high time our Mends of the university were shaking off the stolid bigotry engendered by generations of stall-fe- d pedagogy and opening their eyes to present day tendenThere seem, in fact, to be cies. two classes of our enemies. One realizes the rapidly growing importance of the Aricultural college. Us superior drawing power with the mass of Utah students, and the corresponding superiority of Its results. The desire Is, by grafting, to Import new vitality to branches springthe old ing from among the sagebrush onis the so The other class east bench. blinded by prejudice and by the contemptuous superiority assumed by the university people, as to give the village school of Logan" only such recognition as Is accorded to an Interloper, striving to m the affecthe university supplant tion of the state. It is the Agricultural college that is making a splendid reputation for Utah among the educational Interests of the country, and Its success should be a matter of genuine pride and congratulation among nil worthy citlxens, rather than the envy and source of contemptible - moss-grow- n, long-existi- Ill-br- ed crlmlnnl hostility. After all. the coalition idea is nothing but a theory, one that will he found very difficult to put tn practice. There ought to be more In education than the equipping of laboratories, the Installing of machinery, and the corCollege life ralling of sludents. Is a very more this mean to ought daring and orthodox statement! than the mere learning of a trade, providing the means of earning bread and butter. Men old enough to know will tell you thnt half the benefit and nearly nil the joy and sweetness of college life lies in the creation of worthy strong, manly friendships, ldenls. and unswerving loyalty to the foster mother at whose feet you kneel. Mawkish sentiment, do you say? Yes; hut Cod pity the generation that would exclude nil sentiment from the world. For years and years the Agricultural college has lieen striving to assume In the eyes of the public a distinct Individuality. to establish ideals and traditions. and to gather within her halls TREE is decking itKplf in new Spring raiment. Why shuultl not vou come fortli in New Attire? Kvcrv garment in our store is a fresh temptation. Tailored carefully according to the 11105 dictates dein-nhsiruti- on teen years under the sanction and that patronage of the state, and during time haa turned out eighty-ai- x degree graduates and almost as many with certificates. Where shall these people now turn for alma mater? To whom shall they look for the assistance and inspiration that a man Is, likely to want so often from his college? There la a slight obligation to members of the faculty, who have been giving to the college their most devoted efforts, only to find their positions suddenly wrested rroin them. There is a decided obligation to Logan City and Cache vaney, however paltry and benighted they may seem to their city neighbors. It may be true that this region received the college in the first place because nobody else wanted It. Rut they received It short-cour- se and are being closed out ut about 50 Pet. Discount Putnam Clothing jnw naty V you daal lilw Memories. The carriers clink of s golden toy On the rim of a crystal rare. And Midas, the weary, is lost in dreams In the depths of his easy chair; Depart. S:tSi Fas. Mail Overland Limited for No. 6. No. S. Omaha, Council Bluffs, Kansas City Denver, 3:00 p.m. and East, dally Atlantic Express for No. 4. Denver, Omaha, Council Bluffs, Kansas City and all Points East, daily... 7:21 pJM. Arriva. No. I. California Express from Council Bluffs, Omaha, Denver, Kansas City and East, dally... 3:45 ojii. Limited No. 1. Overland from Omaha, Council Kansas City, Bluffs, Denver, and all Polnta 3:30 p.m. East, dally 3:00 pan. No. 9. Fast Mall House GOULFIELD GROUP SOLD FOR $12,000 OtiI.liKlKI.il, New, April 17. An important mining deal has just been consummated here by V. it. Leonard, who purchased for tlie United Bullfrog Mines eoniKiny the (.'omstoi k, Hillside, Washington, Mayor mid Ttuiopah claims, located about two miles northeast of i he Montgomery property and a mile above the new town of Crystal Springs. The consideration was 31!.-00- 0. Assays made on ore taken from this group run from 34.60 to 325 In Active development gold per ton. work has already commenced on the property. The officers of the company are Janies K. Mitchell, former manager of the January mine at Goldfield, president; John W. Henney of the Ilenney Buggy company, Freeport. 111., and Volney R Leonard sec- NORTH OF OGDEN. If your eyes pain WEAR RUSHMER'8 GLASSES. If you can't see far PHI WEAR RUSHMERS ' retary. PALATIAL GAMBLING RESORT AWAITS ELECTION'S RESULT RKNii, Nev., April 17. Upon the result of the city election depend the fate of one of the largest gambling houses ever planned for the Pacific coast. A firm of Portland capitalists, with a bank roll anld to reach Into six figures, has secured nn option on the DPhn building on Center street, nnd plans have been drawn and the contract let for the fitting up of one of the most palatial resorts ever seen In this section. A magnificent bar has been ordered, unil all needed To Insure the enterprise Is a favorable vote against the Initiative and referendum ordinances placing a high license upon gaming and prohibiting the conduct of saloons In a gambling house. If the new Monte Curio is opened, it will cater to the wealthy gamblers and mining men. The playing limit will be the styHght. FLANIGAN MAY CONTEST FOR NEWLAND'S SEAT RENO, Nev April 8. It ia current ly reported In Republican circles that P. L. Flanigan, national committee man from Nevada, one of the wealth! cat land owners and business men of this place, will be a candidate for the United States senate four years pence. The state Is now counted as reliably Republican, and the defeat of Francis G. Xewlands is freely predicted, If he Forgot are the wealth and the dreary again leads the Democratic forces as iminp a candidate for the office. He hath tarnished his soul to gain. If you can't see well to read GLASSES Uroperly ground and made to order at 2412 Washington Avenue. 1:25 12:05 pan. Ex- Cache Valley press, dally No. 11. 7:15 pjn. Arriva. Fast Portland dally Mall and so. from Butts 7:00 a.m. Cache Valley Ex10:35 a.m. press, dally No. 10. Pocatello and Idaho Falla Express, dally 5:00p.m. No. 12. .... 60UTH OF OGDEN. Depart. Portland, Butte and Pocatello for Salt Lake No. 3. Riverdale'or Phoenix Flour -- City, dally No, 4. Local to Salt Lake City, dally to No. 13. Cache Valley Salt Lake City for No. 3. Limited SaP, Lake, Provo, Nephl and Juab, dally No, 10. Portland, Idaho Falla and to Salt Pocatello, Lake City, dally Arrive. No. 0. Butte and Pocatello Express from Salt Lake City and Intermediate Points dally A PLEASED HUSBAND makes a contented woman. Hint to the wife: Use RIVERDALE or PHOENIX flour In biscuit baking and aee a serene smile creep over the physiognomy of your spouse. RIVERDALE or PHOENIX flour la an all right flour for all aorta of baking bread, biscuit, cake, pie, pastry, dumpling or pot pie. Try it once youll use It alway. 7:35 a.m. 8:15 a.m. 10:50 a.m. 3:40 p.m. 0:30 pan. 12:50 a.m. Atlantic Express from Salt Lake City and Intermediate Point 8:05 a.m. dally No. 7. Pocatello. Idaho Falls, Portland Express from Salt Lake City, dally.. 11 :25a.m. No. 1. Fast MaU from Salt 2:45 p.m. Lake City, dally No. S. Cacht Valley Exfrom Salt Lake City, Provo, Nephl and 0:56 Juab, dally No. 11. press 1 MADE BY OGDEN MILLING & ELEVATOR COMPANY Allen Transfer Co. Albern Allen, Mgr. , Phone 22. 412 25th Street Through Service stTlouis AND THE EAST VIA IBS Depart RAILWAY bbsmbbi SCENIC THROUGH COLORADO FERTILE KANSAS and MISSOURI PULLM AN SLEEPING J CARS. OBSERVATION DINING CARS. Electric Lights, electric Fans. cars Reclining - .ISZSTtchair --- V day CoacHta. Up-to-d- Fir Berths, Tickets. Friden, f!e., ailrus and Intermediate Polnta 9:00 a.m. dally No. 3. Atlantic Limited for Salt Lake City, Provo, Leadvllle, Pueblo, Denver and all Polnta Eaat, 2:15 p.m. dally No. 4. Atlantic Express for Salt Lake City, Pueblo, Denver and all Points 7:00 paw. East, dally Arrive. No. 3. Pacific Express from Denver, Pueblo, Provo, Salt Lake City and all 12:35 a.m. points east, dally No. S. Pacific Limited from Salt Lake City, Provo, Denver and all Points 11:30 aon. Eajlt No. L Pacific Mall from Denver, Pueblo, Leadvllle, Salt Lako City and all Polnta East, dally... 2:40 pjn. No. 11. Local from Sanpete 7:00 Valley NMBR MB flORBT END, MB' pn. SOUTHERN PACIFIC No. 8. Depart. Pacific Express for San Francisco and In-- termedlate points, daily. 4:30 a.m. No. 5. Pacific Express 'h rough to San Francis11: 55 a.ivi. co, dally No. 1. Overland Limited.. 3:55p.m. No. 80S. Mixed Train, Ogden to Montello,Corinne and Kelton, daily ex8:15 a.m. cept Sunday Arrive. No. 6. Atlantic Express from San Francisco, 7:10 slain. dally No. 3. Overland Limited... 2:35p.m. No. 4. Atlantic Express from San Francisco and Intermediate polnta ly ......i .... M. C. TOWN ( Atlantic Mall for Salt Lake City, Provo, and all Points East.... 7:46 aon. No. 13. To Salt Lake City No. 5. Missouri Pacific Foi gotten the tang of the Lead sea fruit And the haunting remorse and pain. Astonishing Incident. For he's back by the brook where the It was. to all her friends, an astonaiders toss Their blossoms like creamy foam. ishing Incident, that Mrs. I. B. Hunt Ami he and Rover, the dear old dug! of Lime Ridge, WIs., was cured of her Are bringing the cattle home. she "Doctors. dreadful aicknesa. And softer tlie path to hia little feet Than fabric of eastern looms, had given me up; friends were writes, As down the lane In the aunset light ready to bid me the last farewell; He wadea through the clover blooms. clouds of despair darkened my horizon The bees going home from the buckwheat and I was a wreck on the shores of fields, despondency, when I began to take All laden with treasure rare. Electric Ritters, for my frightful stomDrone by In s shower of swallow notes That urlp through the golden mi; ach and liver complaint. To the asOld Hess, with n nip at s clovei head. tonishment of all, I was nenefited at ot II. Just tinkles her sweet-tone- d now completely and And tender the lure In hia mother's face once and am Aa she waits by the mossy well. miraculously restored to health. At Ah, forty years bevo- tne linwers bloomed Ogden druggists; price 50c; guaran And died o'er that rnuil T'a breast teed. Since down the path fiir.ged with marigolds THE NEW TRADE MARK. His idol whs borne to rest. Old Rover him slept "neath the orchard grass A copy of the new law of trade "Yes, dear. I was dreaming, quite; It's time you were donning that Paris marks will be sent free to any one Ingown terested In trade mark protection, by For the embassy ball C. A. Rnnw A Co., opposite pntent ofMary K Klllilee. fice. Washington, D. C. Express, dally No. 7. Fast Mail for Pocatello, Idaho Falls and Portland, dally NoT 3. GLASSES .1 Depart. i. Pocatello and Butte No. vice-preside- TEA Your gractr mum Schilling' hu. lamc Fashion, of with the promise of permanence; they have rallied nobly to itb support and SMUGGLING CHINESE INTO NEVADA STATE found pride In its successes; they have laid their plans and made their CARSON, Nev., April 17. The fedInvestments with the understanding be would hill on the the that college eral authorities believe that a gang of allowed to profit by its own sucthe Chinese ex cesses and continue to draw to it those smugglers, violating Nevada the are elusion making laws, who appreciate the benefits of college for Celestials Importa ground dumping life outside city. Within ed from Mexico- or Canada. Now that the campaign of exterm! nation has ended in defeat, and the the last few weeks nearly a dozen ar open bitterness has for a time sub rests have been made, and two officers sided, it Is not our Invention to arouse have been sent here to look over the needless strife. Rtudent Life has heretofore refrained from expressions state with a view of seizing all unChinese and deporting of onep hostility. But we desire now, registered once for all. to denounce the proceed them.. The two officers, T. J. Longley and ings of the university faction in the late legislature as an unjust, dishon- Thomas McCabe of Bait Lake, ar orable and apparently malicious at- rived In Nevada last week, and since tack on one of the strongest Institu- have been working at Elko, Tuscarora, Reno and Carson. tions of the commonwealth. Many suspected Chinese have been brought to this place for trial, and It Is said that many arrests will follow after the officers have made a trip to the southern part When we say "we, we of the state, where many Orientals have recently gone. mean your grocer. He's we and were he. Money back does it. Pici OR' a 1 w I Every ic-r- . dal- No. 304. Mixed Train from Montello via Corinne and Kelton, dally except Sunday 5:10p.m. 3:50 p.m. |