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Show TUAB OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. WILSON GIN IS IDE Tleeg. Building Inspector I. II. Grace. Chief of Firo Department N. A. Keilson. Superintendent of Water Works A. 3. Cowers. Members of Board of Health Dr. T. D. llees. Alonzo InRram. Wm. G. Orme. Sexton C. E. Rigler. LEVAN TOWN. Board of Trustees Alma Trustees M. W. Mangelson. S. P. Taylor. Alex Peterson, George Ncllson Marshal Neils Mortenson. Justice of the Peace Neils Sehow Health Officer Henry llawdrlckson. Juab District Board of Education , I. H. Grace, President; Ixrenzo Vice President; A. P. Paxman, Clerk; J. H. Lunt, Treasurer and Jo seph Newton. Man-fselson- EAST COUNTY OFFI- - PRECINCT CERS. Mont. Justice D. O. Young. Health Officer N. W. EllerUoa. Nephi. Justice J. R. Black. Constable 11. T. Knowles. .Health Officer Dr. T. D. Reel. Levan. Justice E. W. Peterson. Conatablu Richard Iverson. Rible at the ' passage reading, "The Lord Is our refuge; a very present help In time of trouble." Modern Woodmen of America No. evening at Woodman hall. Visiting Woodmen welcomed CHARLES STEPHENSON. Consul. J. II. LATIMER, Clerk. 10.700, meets every Tuesday I. O. O. F. No. 16 meets every evening In I. O. O. F. hall. Sat-wrda- y Vis-ltl- brother cordially invited to tend. HERBERT RORERTS. N. O. JOHN S. COOPER. Secretary. n at- SAINTS' MEETINGS. LATTER-DA- Sunday School. 10:30, South ward at H;ph School building; Nephl ward at Tabernacle; North ward at meet- ing house. M. I. A. Sunday, 7 p. m. South Ward llirh School building; Nephl ward at Tabernacle; North ward at house. meeting Primary South ward every Toes-da- y at Tsbernacle; Nephl every Friday at Tabernacle; North ward at meeting house every Friday. PrWthood meeting every Monday evening at the Tabernacle and North and South ward hnunes. Relief Society South ward first and third Thursday In each month at 2 p. m. Nepht ward first and third Wedneday in each month. North ward first and third Thursday In each month, at respective meeting housea. g o . PRESBYTERIAN-CHURCH- Sunday school ror Sale &7a at 10:30. QUR TIME, knowledge and experience in tie printiof cosiness. rm are in reej of something in ihn I,ne far Trliw rr it' d thf oah. DONT BORROW The Time from your neighbor when you can get il for less than Three Cents Per Week Vice Preld"n Msr-hii- l rushed up snd book his hand A roar went up from the crowd, but subsided Immediately, as of ihe president S'rpH'd to the die platform and raipel aloft his !i nd. and began his IriAucural fd ' dresp. fr-r- Mat, a4 er4 tataa,I rHa tton.altaUy v Owa stm ant, Urk soit aa as east a asmrt hotw. rhaaa 22. - d FORREST HOTEL Headquarter e Chief Justice White administered the oath and was the first to extend the bis congratulations. Wringing president's hands, the chief Justice looked fervently Into his face for a moment and said brokenly: "Mr. President, I am very, very happy." Members of the cabinet then crowd-aof regard. up with expressions a Mr. Wilkon received them with smile and then turned back to his Jek to complete his Interrupted taik. not did Vice president Marshall take the oath on March 4. He was sworn In for his second term on March 6 at the special session of the new senate with the usual Inauguration ceremony. Hundreds turned out to see the suffrage demonstration at the White House, but few bad a peep at the much acetic Passing the pres-Ident's Sftom at the capitol Just at noon a handful of sightseers found the door open and caught a glimpue of the president himself within. Then they saw hlni rise and greet a large, distinguished featured man, who bad rome down the corridor a few minutes before and hesitated at the entrance like an utter stranger approaching the prewnee of the chief executive. , I, i .,..1,It wss the chief Justice, and the little group of visitors were treated Chief Justice White In the spectacle of a president taking bis oath of office. bury of 1 'aware and delivered, his Accompanied by Mrs. Wilson and naucuml address. Vice President Marshall then administered the oatb to the senators- elect. At 12:42 the sun broke through the clouds and at Its appesrance the crowd cheered wildly. The president took off h hat and waved It in The crod became Impati ent. One voice yelled ou: "Hurry u. Woodrow;ffillo-d-why, wait?" and a gen-ra- l in taueh which Die preaid'nt Joined. At 12:4 the president stepped to t!ie front of the stand and Chief Justice Wliite joined him. Ui a voire plainly audible across the plar.a tbe hif eiecutlve repoa'ed the words of ho oath aft-- r tbe chief Juitlce snd at fii'fr conclusion kl'od the proffered II Me "with !cp f error. ' lnim"(',;ti-",aft r t!i prexjdent DON'T FORGET THIS Vrw Vance C. McCormlck, who managed the president's campaign for Hon, President Wilson had come tc the capitol two hours before he took the oath, to clear up odds and endt of the eexcutive business passed on to him by the expiring congress. Secretary Tumulty and most of the cabinet members had gathered in tht room while the president worked. As ho took the- - oath, Mrs. Wilson stood near him, drenised In mourning of the recent death of her sister. Facing, to use his own words, not retrospect but the thought and purposes of the present and the immediate future. President Woodrow Wilson on March 6 subscribed in public to the oath as hit) own successor. Not since Abraham Lincoln kissed the Ilible In subscribing to the same solemn obligation has a president been inducted Into office under such extreme tension In national affairs as prevailed Monday.President Wilson never looked better than at the moment of his public He seemed to have Inauguration. shaken off the air of worry and which hus marked him during the lam few moiueutoua weeks. IVotn the moment that he entered the open carriage, drawn by four beautiful thoroughbreds, to proceeds to the capltol to subscribe to the outi, until he returned to the White House, he was Hmlling. All along the route of the parade he and Mrs. Wilson bowed to a crowd that acclaimed then) and was plainly in sympathy with the doctrines for which lit, stands. Members of the cabinet were on hand In the president's room when he reached there. All shook hands with him and congratulated him on the fact that the "Wilaon luck" once pjsain had prevailed, aud that whereas curly In the day It had looked as It the enlire program was to bo spoiled by rain, the skies hud cleared and the sun was shining brightly. The president, in gay spirits, accepted this as an omen for the future. At 11:50 the senate had assembled and the members of the house entered the chamber In a body, headed by Sergeant at Arms Gordon. Five minutes Inter Mrs. Wilson left the president's office and was escorted to the seats reserved for her in the president's gallery. Af 12 o'clock, when the senate was called to order, every seat was filled and even standing room had been exhausted. Vociferous applause greeted the president as be entered the senate chamber at noon. Vice President Marshall, entering a moment later, was given an almost equally cordial reception. Rev. Forest J. Prettyman, the senate chaplain, delivered the opening prayer. Vice President Marshall was then sworn In by President Pro Tem Sauls- re-el- e District. District Judge, Firth Judicial )oBliua Ureenwood. PRESIDENT Attorney Oris Murdook. L W. Cook. titeiuixraphur Slate Seuator Dan Stevens. State Representative Orson Cazler. U. S. Expert In Charge Experiment CHIEF EXECUTIVE INDUCTED INStation Mr. Jones! TO OFFICE FOR SECOND TERM County. WITH DUE CEREMONY. ' County Commissioners J. W. Whit-WorOscar Andrim, P. J. Conner. County Clerk Will L. Hoyt Takes Oath at Capitol In Presence of .Recorder Thomas Bailey. Members of Cabinet, Public InTreasurer T. 1L O. I'arkes. auguration Being Held the Assessor Charles Haynes. Following Day. Attorney W. A. C. Surveyor V. E. Eklofl. . Sheriff Dan Martin. Washington. President Wilson took Superintendent of County Infirmary the oath of office for his second term Thomas Vlckers. at noon on March 4, In his room at the capltol, the formal Inauguration EAST COUNTY MUNICIPAL OF- ceremonies being held on March 5. FICERS. Before a desk piled with executive business laid before him in the clos NEPHI CITY OFFICERS. ing hours of congress, and surrounded by members of his official family, the president reaffirmed with upliftMayor Alma Hague. A. II. Councilman Belllston, ed hand and grave features his promThomas Bailey, James Garrett, Jr., ise to uphold the constitution In whatMark Blgler, George O. Ostler. ever crisis may confront the nation In Recorder A. V. Gadd. the niomentouR four years before It. Treasurer J. H. Latimer. After he bad .repeated solemnly the Attorney T. H. Burton. oath taken first by Washington a cenMarshal Samuel Linton, Jr. tury and a quarter ago he kissed the Justice of the 1'eace Win. Stout. Street Supervisor Jas. II. Riches. Quarautiue Physician Dr. T. D. TYesident Dalhy. COUNTY TIMES. NEPHI, UTAH Suffocated in Dam Chamber. Knrle, N M. The bodies of V. O Pakrwk. cl.lef electrician, and H. K. a surveyor, were found In an chamber of the Ktephant air pHtte dam near b'-rMonday. They were soffofated. P. O. Employee Steals tTO.OOO. Hillings. Mont. M. B. Predwell. an mplnyee of the Hillings posforflre, anhas admitted, postofflce insix-ctornounce, that he stole a mail package containing $10,000 In currency consigned to a local bank. Potato Shortage in England. Oindon. Captain Pafmrst the" food cot.'rolier" spokesman In th boue of commons. prdirted tn rep;y to jT)')ri. that everyone would have to ft nitlieut rwatoen hi the late pnr.g and early summer. Charged With Desecrating Flag. !to?ton Herman von Hagen. charged with dewrsting tb American flag, wag held In V'0 ball, tt ts alleged he osed a small flag to wipe grease spots from tbe work bncJ here he was cmploved. Itd. iase g WILSON'S PLEA FOR A UNITED AIV1ERIGA . PRESIDENT SOLEMNLY RENEWS HIS COVENANT IN INAUGURAL ADDRESS. Deep Wrongs Inflicted Upon United States Pictured and Hint Given That Country May be Forced Into War. have Just passed have made us citizens of the world. There can be no turning back. Our own fortunes as a nation are Involved, whether we would have it so or not. And yet we are not the- - less Americans on that account. We shall be the more American If we but remain true to the principles in which we have been bred. They are' not the principles of a provWe ince or of a single coiulnent. have known and boasted all along (hat they were the principles of a liberated mankind. Things This Nation Stands For. These, therefore, are the things we shall stand for, whether in war or in peace: That all nations are equally interested in the peace of the world and In the political stability of free peoples and equally responsible for their maintenance: That the essential principle of peace is the mutual equality of nations in all matters of right or privilege: That peace cannot securely or Justly rest upon an armed balance of power: That governments derive all their Just powers from the consent of the governed and that no other powers should be supported by the common thought, purpose or power of the family of nations. That the seas should be equally free and safe for the use of all peoples, under rules set up by common agreement and consent and that, so far as practicable, they should be accessible to all upon equal terms; That national armaments should be limited to the necessities of national order and domestic safety; That the community of Interest and of power upon which pence must henceforth depend Imposes upon each nation the duty of seeing to it that ail Influences proceeding from Its own citizens meant to encourage or assist revolution In other states should be Bternly and effectually suppressed and prevented. I need not argue these principles to you, my fellow countrymen; they are your own. part and parcel of your own thinking and your own motive in affairs. They spring up native amongst us. I'pon this platform of purpose and of action we can stand together. People Must Stand Together. And It Is Imperative that we should Btand together. We are being forged Into a new unity amdist the fires that now blaze throughout the world. In their ardent heat we shall. In God's providence, let us hope, be purged of faction and division, purified of the errant humors of party and of private Interest and shall stand forth In the days to come with a new dignity of national pride and spirit. Let each man see to it that the dedication is In his own heart, the high purpose of the nation In his own mind, ruler of his own will and desire. I stand here and have taken the high and solemn oath to which you have been audience because the people of the United States have chosen me for this august delegation of power and have by their gracious Judgment named me their leader In affairs. I know now what the task means. I realize to the full the reI which It Involves. sponsibility pray Qod I may be given the wisdom and the prudence to do my duty In the true spirit of this great people. I am their servant and can succeed only as they sustain and guide me by tl'ejr confidence and their counsel. The thing 1 shall count upon, the thing without which neither counsel nor action will avail. Is the unity of America an America united In feeling. In purpose and In vision of duty, of opportunity and of service. We are to beware of all men who would turn the tasks and the necessities of the nation to their own private profit or use them for the building up of private power; beware that no faction or disloyal Intrigue treak the harmony or e'mbarrass tbe spirit of our people; beware that our government be kopt pure and Incorrupt In all Its parts. Vnlted alike In the conception of oor duty and In the high resolve to perform It in the face of all men. let us dedicate ourselves to the great task to which we must set our hand. For myself I urge your tolerance, your countenance and your united aid. The shadows that now lie dark upon our path will soon be dispelled and we shall walk with the light all about us ff we be but true to ourselves to ourselves as we have wished to be known In, the rontre1s of the world and In the fhottght of all those who love liberty and Justice and the right exalted. Washington. President Wilson's Inaugural addresH was as follows: My fellow citizens: The four years which have elapsed since last I stood In this place have been crowded with counsel and action of the most vital Interest and consequences. Perhaps no equal period In our history has been so fruitful of lmiortant reforms in our economic and Industrial life or so full of Bigniflcant changes In the spirit and purpose of our political action. We have sought very thoughtfully to set our house In, order, correct tbe grosser errors and abuses of our industrial life, liberate and quicken the processes of our national genius asd energy and lift our politics to a broader view of the people's essential Interests. It Is a record of singular varHut I iety and singulur distinction. shall not attempt to review It. It speaks for itself and will be of Increasing influence as tbe years go by. This Is not the time for retrospect. It is time, rather, to speak our thoughts and purposes concerning the present and the immediate future. New Problems Confronting World. Although we have centered counsel and action with such unusual concentration and success upon the great problems of domestic legislation to which we addressed ourselves four years ago, other matters have more and more forced themeslves upon our attention, matters lying outside our own life as a nation and over which we had no control, but which, despite our wish to keep free of them, have drawn us more and more irresistibly into their own current and Influence. It has been Impossible to avoid them. They have affected the life of the whole world. They have shaken men everywhere with a passion and an apprehension they never knew before. It has been hard to preserve calm counsel while the thought of our own people swayed this way and that under their Influence. We are a composite and cosmopolitan people. We are of the blood of all the nations that are at war. The currents of our thoughts as well as the currents of our trade run quick at all seasons back and forth between us and them. The war inevitably set Its mark from the first alike upon our minds, our industries, our commerce, our politics snd our social action. To be Indifferent to tt or independent of It was out of the question. Injuries Become Intolerable. And yet, all the while we have been conscious that we were not part of it. In that consciousness, despite many divisions, we have drawn closer We have been deeply together. wronged upon the seas, but we have not wished to wrong or Injure In return; have retained throughout the consciousness of standing In some sort apart. Intent upon an Interest hat transcended the Immediate issues' of the war Itself. As some of the done us have become intolerable we have still been clear that we wished nothing for ourselves that we were not ready to demand for all mankind fair dealing, Justice, the freedom to live and be at ease against organized wrong. It Is In this spirit and wHh this thought that we have grown more and more aware, more and more certain that tbe part we wished to play was Ihe part tf thoe who mean to vindicate and fortify peace. We have been obliged to arm ourselves to make good our claim to a certain minimum of right and of freedom of action. We stand firm In arihed neutrality since it seems that In no other way we can demonstrate what tt Is we Insist upon and cannot forego. We may even be drawn on. by circumstances, not by our own purpose or desire, to a more active assertion of our rights is we see them and a more immediate association with the great struggle Itself. Hut nothing will alter our or our purpose. They are too FIRST DUTY TO BE PATRIOT. thought -lear to be obscured. They are too ieeply rooted In, the principles of our Washington. March S Vice PresiWe denational life to be altered. Inausire neither conquest nor advantage. dent Marshall made his sernnd We wish nothing that can be had only gural addrest before the senate tot the cost Of another people. We day a statement of bis creed of cithave always profeed unselfish pur- izenship under a government for pose and we covet the opportunity to which, be said, "t ought to be willprove that oor professions are sin- ing to live or to die, ns God decrees, cere. that It may not perish off the earth United States No Longer Provincial. throueh treachery within or through There are many things still to do assault from without" He said In t home to clarify our otn politics part : and give new vltaliiy to the Industrial "t have faith that this government processed of cor own life and we of ours was divinely ordained to dU hall do thf m s time and opportunfty rlose whether men sr by nature fit t ert-p- ; hut we realize that t':e fer self gov rnment. to lafh Jew nd l hin rs that remain to be done must Greek, bondman and fre alike the e r be done with t!ie ho!e world for isentlal equality of all men before st.-and In with the :!aw and to be tender and true to wide snd universal forces of mankind Imsnfty everywhere snd tinder aU ci-- I nd we are making our spirits ready rum stances; to reveal that service Is for those thinr. They will follow ithe highest reward cf life. I cannot in tbe immediate wake of the war It- jbeileve otherwise when I rad the If and wi'l set civilization tip again. words and recall the srrifce of the We are provincials no longer. The fathers. If ours Is not the golden rn' wrought 'ragical events of th thirty months govt rnment, then Washington of vital turmoil through which we and Lincoln died In vain. THE Palace Barber Shop Everything Naw and First Class Work Courteous Treatment to all Up-to-d- Sho shin stand and bath tub In connection Aieat for SALT LAKE STEAM TROY LAUNDRY ROBERT LOMAX. Proprietor Lawrence A. Miner; ATTORNEY AT LAW Notary Public Tong War en Coast. San Francisco Five Chines were killed outright, two fatally Injured and three were wounded In tong wars which were waged almost slmultane-ruslMonday In San Francisco, Oak-and- , Stockton and San Jose. Will Adopt Belgian Children. New Tork. After listening to an addresa by Theodore Roosevelt the citizens of Oyster Ray at a tnas meeting Monday flight decided to S.400 "adopt" a Belgian village children. Women Training lot We. New Tork The Na'ional Iavne for Women's Service has begun classes In wireless telegraphy, motor driving snd canteen cooking Several bundred women In this tlty bsve registered for trslnitg. Lives Spared by Kaiser. Berlin. Kmperor William has commuted to Imprisonment tbe sentence of death t ronounced by a n!d court-martiupon Madeleine Doutr Uzne. r accomplice, s Belgian woman, and Henry Payne. y . Bid. Venice NEPHI, UTAH h, Mcknight j. COUNTY ATTORNEY ATTORNEY AT LAW IN COURT HO'JSE orricc NEPHI. VTAH Dr. A. BOOTH- . DENTIST - - Office Roeihs Nos. 6 and 7, Venice Theatre Huildlngv. Phone No. 123-- J ' 71 Romomber That every added subscriber helps to Bake this paper better for everybody Ostler & Allen Manufacture that Hand-mad- ever-lasti- Harness e 8t'lim rrplm1 cnol an ne HrUllrn Hni.... K. nj roan and Old H l,!!.-- .. NJodlKilirt. City Meat Co. CEORCE GARRETT. Propiietor All Kinds of Home Cured and Fresh Meats Kept in Refrigerator up-to-d- being- run on cash lais, enables us to sell at very reasonable prices. Courteous Treatment to all Uumn? - Dr. J. G. IRONS VETERINARIAN NEPHI :: :: UTAH Graduate Veterinary CoIIeje University of Pennsylvania t7 PHONE Diseases of domestic animals treated City Barber Shop oocarsmo) and nT A. NIELS rmoilet'ir nuiATMCKT CLASS WO VN. Two DnoiS Smith orLunls' Ilanrjary Livery and Feed Stable Bus Meets All Trains. Ooe4 Livery Kit. aaa Express tay Wagons. Afsl for CoaL Theme D. CrOLDSBHOVGH. 11 Ia Ko. 41 1 FnifiiHuf Dr. Charles Dunn DENTIST rhnr No. 3 l'! offi.a niJjf. Nephi Thos. H. Burton Attorney at Law Pobl.c r-a- - Main Streofc Winn Buildinif O ' in IVwirns -- 1 and Notary 2 fHtVr He Builds Wisely Who Builds Well" TO BUILD WELL USE Nephi Piaster H&s No 1 The Largest od Purest natural deposit of Gypsum in the World. 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