OCR Text |
Show If it were impossible jto make mistakes in buying, then there would really be no tion in this city. But store competition makes it sure that there is always a Best and a best time to buy a thing. A woman does not lose inter- est in a store until that store loses interest in her until it stops sending to her its regular store news, through its advertising sace in this newspaper. store-Compe- ti -- I j LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1914. VOLUME XXXV. a great burst of applause when the announcement was made, and the graduating class arose in a body in recognition of the president being one of its mem- In Hi NUMBER 121. Photos of Uncle Sams Soldiers In Action In Mexican ands DEMOCRATIC bers. President Widtsoe was so overcome by his emotions that it was with difficulty that he made his acknowledgement of the honor conferred upon him. TO THE STATE CONVENE He expressed his gratitude DELIVERED AT CLASS GRADUATION EXERCISES however i wTords choice a few TION ARE SELECTED AT in C. AT A. AT THE COLLEGE ARE MASS PRIMARY. and then the benediction was ATTENDED. WELL f At the regular clas exercises pronounced by Dr. Thomas. The mass held of the A. C. held on Monday By primary The graduation- exercises or the Logan Democrats on Monthe excellent evening following commencement services regular 1 day evening was attended by a paper was read by M. Ivan of the Agricultural College, number of local party goodly one of the Hobson, and graduates: were held on Tuesday men and a pretty good party When Col. Roosevelt came there was another large throng he En- gspirit prevailed. Charles ft African j a ngle,--h fifesenrtOake--pa-TandwarTelectedas-chairm- an at to and the stopped Naples; in them. There was a large and W. K. Burnham as secreThe greatest holiday of all students of the university company of distinguished visit- the so in save Christmas, tary of the primary. Before the he said: year, there, Young gentleors including the Governor of selection of delegates began kiddies are the men as concerned, Be far imavoid practical the state, William Spry, State occurred Mr. J. H. Wilson offered a recir the when You ideals. will never yesterday practical Public of Superintendent Sells-Flot- o solution favoring fusion and town. The to came cus unless forward big -get your ideals Matheson, Secretary the delegates elected and the in were shows are pledging of atte city d, being capable of State Mattson, the members vote and work for it . The to in the and we in are this world foi county the youngster every trustees and of the board of who could get here, was on the purpose of getting forward. primary thought it best not to many others. instruct the be so to time in as One of street delegation but the educabig things Prof. Willard Langton of the for theearly the resolution show after it street The tion does a man for passed or woman, parade. Cooper Institute, New York, was a good been amended so that it had is to the to and birth an grownor one, ideal; delivered the address to the endorsed fusion or simply found much to admire in the if the ideal be there, to raise it graduates, and he made a most ups combination with the Progresto are a with of horses that beautiful higher plane accomplishscholarly talk, one more appre- the show. sives. ment. In are is he in en an college, splendid They ciated perhaps by the members are well vironment which deals with After the delegates had been of the graduating class than by creatures and evidently a resolution was preHe learns elected, what the perfections. the average auditor. He con- cared for. ideal A. E. Cranney, which circonditions sented at for the by The plant performance tended for the living of life in endorsed the one what the was a cus growth candidacy of J. H. are; good perfect very proper 4a big way, and indicated the soil for States senatUnited consists Jr old what all the were Moyle There indeed. of; society essentials of such living. was should and it what ones in or, new some that passed unanibe; perfectism t W vS" President Stohl of the Board features and imTv Both resolutions are character most and Buffalo mously. old and means; . young. of Trustees and President Wid- - delighted as is the list of is he with below, portant i printed Bill his and mingling appeared contingent tsoe of the faculty, both made A. Mr. V. Thurman conother who students are The delegates: aftershow. in I: w reports that were most pleas- showthewas big Democrat was cerned the same with there factors there one and representing clean a Xs, TT ,y. ing for they showed the big were no of addressed the and hold and view n his pripresent perfection, hangers-odisorderly school to be forging ahead, the in the interest of that He in reads durpoint. made mary arrests were perfection no and past year having been the most his text books, thinks perfecpaper. Many of those present its in Photo copyright. 1914. by American Press Association. history. ing the day. prosperous class in tion subscribed for the new organ and the room, President Stohl said the work sees perfection in that inof the party. of United the Mexico of In soldiers are States the WOMEN STARVING operations of the College is now better definable calls he In the sandy plains near Vers Crus, where the native fedconducted Resolution. something DEPART TO ALLOWED organized than' ever before and erate have been threatening the United States forces. The' send Is his ideaL MAZATLAN the splendid FROM efAppreciating more is its administration hot and, blown by the winds, Is choking to our men, 'nL In the It is not what should our has shown in he that courage fective. The branch A. C. at On board U. S. S. California, ideal consist of, that concerns rainy season the sand tarns Into mud that In many Instances Is Jtnee ' Democratic the parsucCedar enjoyed the most illustration shows a detachment of United States soldiers advancing np a defending Mexico, June 9 (By us most, but rather, the quesMazatlan, in even the and its bolides ty, the cessful year in its career, sandy hill (at top) and (at the bottom) a group of Uncle Sams fighters emergwireless to San Diego, Cal.) tion, How will our ideals fit in- ing and of conclaves its enemies, one from extension work of the College Moved tunBel to trenches and entering another. By means of leading by the plea of 200 starv- to practical life? recognizing in Hon. John H. these tunnel they avoid flying Mexican bullets while entering the trenches. had made wonderful progress him who women besought ing a man of strength, sterlEduArnold Mathew Moyle also and the plans for its says: to end the sufferings of the cated character and such attain-jmer- tts is governed by mankind er growth and development are ing populace by surrendering the as admirably equip him?, being perfected. President Wid-tso- e city, the military governor of two passions;' one, the passion LICENSES fill office of United States to the for said the courses given at Mazatlan issued an order topure knowledge, , the other, Democrats of LoSenator exthe of the for service are the College being passion undergoing all day permitting or doing good. Someone has its hammer out gan City in convention assemRobert E. Christoff erson and amination and they will be advacate to who their desire express theirs justed to supply the demands dwellings and enter the lines of But the graduate 'tends to Vilate Follett, both of Hyde for the Short Line, for Logan is bled, do herebyhim as the party for educational to his attitude of Utah in an way, serve, Park. constitutionalist being flooded with postcards preference army forget States United for candidate when entering practical life befor the mission of the College the Andrew J. Sorenson of Banthe cause here he finds no has been Senator in the coming election. is to render service to the state which for months. besieging ideal. croft, Idaho and Sarah H. which contain these figures. Dividend Payments of the Resolution. The soil is not fertile, society is Welch of Logan. through the men and women ports As the city of Mazatian has com-1 Line. He out. Short sends surthe that it Oregon the fact that onunorganized, people Recognizing E. Marvin of Clark been for some weeks in Georgelack him ambition; rounding the progressive' town ly by uniting and Alice of food and its tthe for 1906 Paris, Budge at ?heae straits from school in which he Idaho. forces in Utah can we hope high first have 1907 the teaches has poor system, or its college Und called attention to sympathies the state of political gang--ste- rs 1908 Edward P. Talbott and Alice stroS'y the fte made this year by the trustees are fossilized; politics who .have administered' 1909 both of Winder, Ida. students. There will be a set of are corrupts religion has its Taylor affairs largely for privapublic Alma Leonhardt of Provi1910 chimes installed in the big towte-gain weaknesses; even his parents dence and Melva R. Shaffer of andwhohave' denied' 68.68 1911 er, the gift of one class and a are faulty ; and the whole Millville. the the relief they have? people 10 1912 fine silo is being built by anworld seems degenerate. and the laws they have sought 10 Ernest Johnson of Richmond '1913 other class of the college. He asked for; we the (Democrats Those ideals he has nursed and alluded to the extension work Ruby Petersen of FrankThese figures represent their of Logan City in convention asthrough six or seven years of lin. round-u- p at the that asserting dividend for the per- sembled, do most heartily enof what them? Are study they Cedar last, winter was the Heber Johnson of Arimo, iod shown,payments and may be verified dorse the policy of combining to be cast aside; is his educagreatest gathering of the kind tion of rto value? Must he begin Idaho and Edna Shepard of by Government Reports. Over with the Utah Progressives in in the world. . Do you know of any selecting the state officers to be 355 brack wherp he was before en- Logan. D. Edward Petersen of Lund. business in the State of Utah voted for at the approaching very Supt. Matheson spoke and before tering college seeing Idaho and Sarah M. election ; and we pledge the delbriefly but in a very ' happy Bybee of with so favorable a record? that Is imaginary perfection? vein. There is one thing that named at this convenLewiston. egates Do an he to be on the same level as the increase in you think can he said of the new state Lewisto work and vote to . that Smith A. of tion rates Joseph needed? can who farmer neither read Freight end in the convention to be held superintendent he has excelnor Must he make poli- ton and Ada Merrill of Logan. write? in lent judgment making in Satl Lake' City on June 11 Leonard Cooper of Logan WOMAN SUFFRAGE tics more corrupt, or be one to and speeches, always refraining Florence of Christensen make the system of his high PROPOSED FOR DENMARK 1914. from tiring people when there North The Delegates. Logan. school poorer? He has is a long program. William Doutre and Edith 9. June Enact Copenhagen, 1. H. Wilson, T. H. No John these Ideals should Davidson both of spoken here several times of Logan. ment of woman in suffrage same maintain the Humphreys. lofty posilate and every address has been tion they have always held. If andPeter H. Jensen of Pocatello Denmark and abolition of all 2. Joseph Davidson, P. M. a model one. Alice E. King of Logan. property qualifications for elec- Neilsen. the college graduate be a man Governor Spry made a few tors of members of the upper of 3. Charles England. quick perceptions, broad felicitous remarks in closing house is proposed by a constituwide reaffinities, sympathies, 4. William Evans, Jr., J". P. the services. A paper on f STEVENSEN VERY ILL tional amendment bill which sponsive but independent Morrell. Tomorrow read by Mr. passed the lower house of the but deferential; loving liam Baker, was one of the 5. H. G. Hayball, A. E. Cran-ne- y. 9. Adlai E. Danish parliament today. June Chicago, truth and candor, but also modbest productions of its kind, vice the of Stevenson, president The bill takes from the eration and proportion, cour- United rendered at the college in a States under President crown its presentaway 6. J. M. Blair. to nombut ; not finished right ageous gentle long time. It, was splendidly criti- inate 12 members out of the 66 CldTeland been who has 7. Ed. Hansen, Weston Verbut perfecting if he be all voiced and was plain and pracill some days was for cally non. house the and of composing upper these, instead forsaking his tical yet filled with sound 8. William Edwards. will place himself on weaker today. The, continued withdraws the special privihe ideals, ocmusic The for the thought. heat apparently affected him leges which the a with remaining the by lowest his of 9. F. J. Marshall, J. A. plane casion consisted of three adversely and his physicians 54 members of the legislative surroundings, acknowledging were orchestral selections that little hope. body are elected. and gave disqualifications of exceptional merit, and the 10. George D. McCulloch. announce-- their His 80 years and a nervous t uuc jiv vmviai them When the bill was sent to the toward his redition of three aongsby ment of.the decision oftheat- - ffIsf higher breakdown, which he suffered At large, S. J. Jeppesen. us e today, the ConserMiss Nora Eliason. These songs torney general was made it was months six on the death of upper-hoago He will not scorn politics be- his vatives acted in accordance IXLOW BEGINS LIFE IN' PRISON were taken from a cycle of five, understood in circles close to wife told against him. with their decision of June 8, written by Mrs. George W. the President that his recom- cause of its corruption, but will sink himself in and odious absented themselves from its Caleb A. Inlow, murderer of Thatcher. They were beautiful- mendations were unfavorable THE BEAR TO RESCUE and mire raise The coalition of Sohouse. the of means it by and well received. to the appeal. It was said Mr. ly sung CREW KARLUK E. White, was taken to Thomas effort to a higher, cialists, Radicals and ModerPresident Widtsoe conferred McReynolds took the ground consistent in favor of the bill was not the state prison this afternoon. the degreekxand Governor Spry that there was no good reason cleaner atmosphere. If politics Washington, June 9. The ates more had to carry the measure At noon today Judge M. L. Ritsufficient cultivated men in its American revenue cutter Bear presented eachxgraduate with for interference by the Presi- ranks the corruptness would has been ordered to proceed as no vote of the upper cham- chie, of the Third district court, his or her diploma. When the dent. It was regarded as probfrom St. Michaels, Alaska, to ber is considered valid unless made on order committing Inservices had been completed as able that the President would disappear. Some memBecause 66 members low to the state prison to begin of the far as the program indicated at approve the findings of the atWrangel Island for the purpose more than half the of his life sentence. The remittitur bers a denominareligious participate. of rescuing 15 members of the least. President Stohl arose, and torney general. are the supreme court was detion from announced after a brief but splendid eulo-g- y The convicted men are under one of unfaithful, or because crew of the Canadian steamer Premier Zahle to the clerk of the Third livered its adis at would principles fault, Karluk of the Steffanssen artic that the government of President Widtsoe, suKinstructions to surrender ut court yesterday -- truly educated man the district docs dissolve the to upvise the king at Fort Leaven- not cast it aside as prised the latter by conferring expedition, who are jnarooned could the sheriff worthless, on that island. Capt. Bartlett of per house in order that a new; upon him the degree of Doctor worth, Kan., or to the United Inlow to the state prison elected of Laws, as a recognition of the States marshal at Indianapolis but enthused with its good the Karluk is at St. Michaels chamber, might be work that he has done and is on Junefi, to begin serving qualities and strives to remedy and will accompany the Bear on which might act constitutional- until the district court had made the order of commitment ly. its rescue expedition. . ' doing for the state. There was' their sentences, (Continued on page eight) AT I). A C. EX-ERCIS- - I RCUS out-of-t- on - re - f SS& .1. IIIWI X , . deep-The- IMGE 111? -- non-combata- . desper-jnthatgrovrinjT- up to-ri- -- - -- self-relia- nt Mc-Mur- rin. w 0 -- - ' them-feelveseith- ef after-noonrb- not-rem- -- - ove d |