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Show THG LOGftN NATION A XK HXMI-WXLKL- Y HIAPKil. FCBL1BHED TC1UDAV8 USD FUIDAYS, AT LOQAN. A- CACHE COUNTY. X. Rosenbach, - CMcturnov UTAH. - Editob, , rath: On Yuar 12.50 Bin Mouth Thine Mouth CaiXU It mark a new era in the country's industrial condition ?. Abuuduut and convenient water power will become a certain and important factor in the growth of groat cities. For a city situated as is Logan, where oar water supply for running all kinds of machinery is practically unlimited and unusua great ally euey of mcitc-sand prosperous future awaits us. There is more than enough water (tower in Logan river lo t apply all the manufacturing for Utah aud all surrounding StatesIu fiu--l there are few if any places iu the world where water power cau bo Itai more cheaply uud than here. The conveniently ia of water that the same it lieauty can boused dozens of times, the fall of the river lieing siu-l- i us will warrant it. A grand scheme would be to sufficient generate electricity fioiu this river to light up every city in Cache valley and furnish jM.wer for sii electric railroad from the lb I depot up au-through the city, to the .giiciil-turu- l College ami all surrounding act t lenient in the valley, if that was done it would he woitli thousands of dollars to this city every month aud make the entire vail ; aiuiiist the smue as one large city It would be a grard thing indeed! Who knows but what it will sonic day be done, aud prolmbly in the ucar future? Tim electrical age is upon na and we may look lor soiitn wonderfnl aeeiiiuplir.lim.ii!!-througits agency, for It is bv f.n the most powerful of all natures works will 1.25 .75 - A ATt'XfS FUJtVLS. two since tha electrical age was fully inaiiguratial.stid the new motive power seems destiued to future development tlmt will re volutinuize human industry and make the mechanical wonders of tho past insignificant with those which are soon to come. Electricity is to bo tha great wonderworker of the immediate future, . de lares tha Minneapolis is only beginning to lie ac qu.'iinled with ita powers and possibilities, but the practical da Yflcpment aud utilization of its f oi res promises to heroine Ilia in st ioteut fuctor of the imrhati-ica- ! future. A great engineer has aa:d that the euiidition whirh will dctrruiiue the relative expansion of towns and cities iu the next decade is the presence of w ater power. The w hole problem of electricity is one of elieup genemtioii. Any city or towu of this country which lias u waterfall withiu auuvailabla distance, has, so to speak, a gold mineWater (aiwer matins tha minimum of cheapness in tha generation of electricity." By tha practical utilization of water power, which has hitherto electricity, an . little more tliau a swift ssenger for man. will laicorne his moat useful servant in all It 'Oinels f human industry. ill light and lmt hij houses, turn his factory w herds, and him swiftly from placo to place- Its possibilities seem illimitable. To those who gaz? upon Niagara for the first time, the sense of beauty and sublimity makes strongest nppenl. Later reflection tarns the mind to a consideration of the wonderful power of natural forces hern exhibited, and to the possibilities of practical application in human industry. Niagara has thus its practical as well as its aesthetic uspect, and, in this double nature, it well typified the spirit of modern progress- The attempt to make practical application of Niagaras great mechaui-ca- l power has recently been inaugurated, and the great work which has been under construction for several years is now nearing completion. By the expenditure of from $3,000,000 to $4,000,-OU-.- i, water is taken by causI from N river, more than a mile al oo the falls, aud by means of a givat tunnel which opens into the river gorge below the Falls, the stream from he canid passes below, after developing power by menus of turbine wheels. With the present inipiovcmruts 100,000 ltoi m power inuy be ami this umy lo increased to almost any exteut if needed. ) Niagara represents nearly horse power, or more thau enough thau enough to run all the machinery iu the United States. The loss to the Falls by the withdrawal of the amount .likely lo 1h taken will have no perceptible eflWl n the great cataract. It is believed that elieap fdcctrical powircauhe conveyed to cities within 100 miles or more, as 1ms Ii-i- i shown by sueecsaful eiteri liu-nin Get many, Impioveil tiHUMiiission is likely to make possible the use of power from Niagara over a very large portion of the country. Should tlm development aud distribution of Xiaguras power be attended by the success anticipated by its most enthusiastic iupportcis, the work inaugurated lias been less than m Pro-jrem- M-.- . - trsn-spo- it - - 1 0,000-OtK- t ' WILL A UV ASM UHtiTLY. supreme interest Is the progress By tha waywhat is democracy, aud prosperity of Utah the land anyhow? which they love as Germans love: the Fatherland. Utah will be an i Aa sum r have liwu expected American state, and, in time, one The Nation was correct in the of the foremost of American states. petition it Uxjk on tbe statehood One bar of her progress fell when uelebration, in asserting that the the practice of polygamy was dis- committee did not trait upon Hon. continued and the church party Moses Thatcher and request him dissolved. The other bera fall with to apeak. ith--r or after it the ehatteriug of Territoi ialbonds. was decided ti, nnko the celebraHie future of the most beauti- tion At one time ful stute between tbe Rockies aud Mr. Joseph Kimball spoke to him, the Sierras looks as bright aa one but not as a committee, and our of her own morning skies. con leiupoi ary a by epccial request of thu committee Tuekb has been much com- is, like moat of the statement! plaint of late from bnsinesa men which it make iu nearly every and otheru, an account of the long inane, utterly devoid of truth. The delay iu the arrival of nearly all Nation is fully vindicated, while the mail which cornea to tliisl our contemporary, hr usual, comes valley. All of the north and east out second lath and (ant of the south and west That GKKAT htatebiuau, Abraunit is due to arrive iu this city at fi o'clock iu the morniug, '.hough ham Uiucoln (incc guve utterance every day last week it arrived to the following words, which be! ween 9 a. m. and if p. m. This should b inKtillmi into every Let reverance of law be makes it very ineonven ieut for heart: i mi business men as it throws breathed by every mother to the 24 hours behind in nearly lisping babe tLat prattles nu tier all their eorrespoudeuce as (lie lap; lei it be taught id the school, ; let it lie great bulk of the mail arrives on seminaries and written in books We understand the ii.it train. priineru, of this delay in generally aud almanacs; let it be preached rema-i- i mined by the local train wailing frum the halls, and enforced in it Cliche Junction for the through the courts of justice; in abort, let fn igld fioiu the south, which ia it become tbe political religion of d.ie to arrive about 5 a. in- - but the Nation. couien straggling iu at all hours The Ogdls I vm is meeting f ihe day. This through train with more succi-ethau lias any iu all Ihe freight and if other started there for years, lie local hum did not wait for pa(er and lie ure would moi c ihe height (hey delayed ninny. Thu Fret, not is for twenty fonr hours; aa it the though very large, is nu excellent iuid is del iyed as above stated.So it paper and should bo highly of is n cane of six ola and half a appreciated and generously supdoz-of the oilier. TlIE NATION ported by tbe citizens of Ogdeb. if our business men were Bucccbs to the Frtu. It looks as united on this matter they could though it lias come to stayhave Ihe mail arrive on time or as 1.N SPEAKINa of the rockiest of is done now, wait for ihe freight, the Siher Hammer the ginn's as they preferred. Which is your to stick betsays prinyour political preference gentlemen, iu case and don't the ciples plead baby ter train service cannot ba secured, sentence act. That have must which ia doubtful at present? been written thoughtlessly, beThe Nation would suggest to cause democrats can't slick to tin City Council that it would be their principles without playiug a very good thing for them to the baby act. grunt Prof- Pauls request for a The conflict how on seems to $25 advertisement for a pamphlet which he is getting out, showing bu whether men or money will run up the advantages of Logan City this great government of the as an educational city, and of the United States. Democracy is in Agricultural College in particular ilia saddle and it seems as if It money is doing most of the talkas an tducaliotial institution. in the form of a ing. is by no donation or a gift, fur tbo city will After a bitter fight the demothe full amount and more in Wyoming have made up crats in advertising. Every student their State ticket. It is a genuine who comes to this city lo attend democratic ticket, that ia, doesn't school is a help to the city, aud suit anyone. They will be overall legitimate means should be I'Mtl to induce them to coins. whelmingly defeated. J his is ouh of the best methods Gkuveh Cleveland ami Govand we hope the City Conned Waite are now quite freernor will look at it in its proper light. mentioned quently together. of Neither alniuld feel them onu IiowI and baby Thk democratic could neither complimented Constituyet act for a tional convention is boing poked well feel insulted. fun at all over the surrounding The dk h ematic party con iMuntry. Everyone knows it ia to get sicker and sicker, ft dunes ouly foi the sole reason that they will soon lc so sick it will lw-- imIm will their patty greatly it to get any aicker in the miuonty iu that conven- possible for it and will Lava to dry up aitnply tion that they desire to make it blow aud away. In commenting on it the ltexburg Silver Hammer Will some denmciatic friend sav a: kindly iufoini us how the senator The font datiim o! th territory wii home who votes h r a duty on coal and wViid y Iniil in the piiuriple of vote ugaiust M.it constitutional iron uni cuusiaU-uilher from tuut a duty on wool and lumber? We bo tele. will tei niire.ition r bonier a of voters withi'i for a reply. home non-partisa- asfu-itio- ii tl-e- colli-gm- Hn-llin- g I a - The Irrigation Ajr, published it Chicago, and one of the leading periodicals of tb United State paid the following eloquent tubut to the proapeots and possibilities of Utah under statehood: Amid the gloom of tha ineruor able month- - of July, 1394, oue bright stai shone out suddenly and resplendent It was the utar of the new state of Utah! The bill providing for its admissioij finally pasawi the House July 12th, and the president affixed his signature a few daya later. Aud so the greatest of all the territories becomes a American commonwealth. The event is exto western tremely gratifyiug mure volei means because it men, iu Ikith branches of Congress foi thuae policies which western men believe necessary iu the realization of national destiny, 'i In meanest critic of western instilu tioi.s lias never denied that Utuh has the population, wealth and potentialities of growth essential to statehood. Tha admission 1iab been opposed only on the ground that the prependernnen of Mormon voters would render the state practically subservient to the church. There are those, not only in the east but iu Utuh herself, who harbor this fear iu all sincerity today. The writer does not. Doubtless Mormons will fill the greater share of offices, and wield the larger degree of influence, precisely the same as would be done by Methodists or Baptists if they held the nuineii-ra- l strength iu Utah that the Mormons hold- But that the majority of Mormons will regard citizenship ua merely a new jmwer to be placed at the disMwal of their church, we emphatically refuse lo believe. Such might have teen the cane if statehood lmd lieoii conferred fifteen or twenty yuis At that time the whole ago. Mormon Imdy stood upon the defensive; seeking to protect n institution" against 'peculiar which they siucerely persecution. But that eeuliar institution has msael away. A new generation has grown up. Their interests are similar to those of the pauplu of Colorado on the east anil California on the west. These interests will cause them to divide between tlie great political pal tie- - Their full-fledg- ed - Refublicaks, bi:c that you are properly registered. still Desk-chat- CLEVELAND contiuue t diaag: ScvrfiAL Idaho and Mcatatm papers which Lave heretofore been strongly democratic are now eith'-- i gnin; Republican, Popiilist o; . They are beginning to realize that no aalvaMon Weatern country can (.sih!y coma from the (lenuxinti-- ; party. Their decision is a just one ami their action is coiumeyJuble. iiniei.-endeut- The Ismax Nation is mi mIHP- d good eschanu anil we would like to otteiier. A e cy raai'h liiis. in every thre i waks. S.ilina ipftmw - V- .if. - ibt- - li-- a ivisii l:cii v ill tle . puii.-M- iriin-iili- - il tl w ur lli.-- i ilfinncrut ilee- -i liifijuui'O the deinre cruls yield hi ibis world' howls a WtiAr AN deniociatic contemporary. So does the in this yield nu inti il.-t- il world. .ivl: l.v no iiicnii fnmi tile wiuth uf Hie triii i in i, It i 'li man Imis amt not the ith1 hr lillONLU to fi'llow. I'rnHVll, I ria.) in-c- e is nothing better than a Cleveland; Nothing quits so Good. It is the Bicycle which lias stood the Test iu Utah and at this writing, there are three times as many Clcvc-lauWheels rode in Suit Lake City as all the other makes The Nation leaves this uffice for your address twice each week and if it dues not reach you, dear brother, is no fault of ours. Prre Iwddy somo of the postal clerks along the mad swip- it as they are fond of getting good reading matter occasionally. We'll investigate, and ou receipt of particulars you collect. d com-biiiiu- WHas"CLEVELAND Btorm. taken Utah - I'levfi.asd is Iwing ns a hyqwn'rite owu party, his of men by many But when Uf course lint. ha is nothing indicuts actions iiis practically the entire (tarty fails more or leas. and refuses to abide by its pledges, what then? Besides, then is , $100. 115. 9 Rond Wheel 9 -- With Wood Kims 8125. 1 125. 8 Load Rarer 8 With Wiaidliims JIM. 11- -1 noil aud Abmiinum Rims, Narrow Tread, the Finest Wheel in the Wurld $150. The Lady $125. No. JotM-pA. Anderson lmn opened a ShoeHhop and i uvi tea the public to coiue nnd get their sluss re pitire;! and tiiiuie, elu aplv. 7 - nnd on time promised. Give him n cull. Main Street, two blocks north of Z. C. M. I. d The I.Hily weighs 241 lbs. stripjad. Has Wood and Kirns and is the only Ladies wheel used in Utnh,ou which Alatnimnn nms have liecu made. Send for our U4 (tge Catalogue of Joseph W. Thatcher, D. D. S. liiej vie Lamps, Bells, and all Supplies. Agents for Smith writer. Iocal Agents ure: E. R. Miles, Jr., Smithfield Premier T X. Iloscubauin, Is 'gun, UtaL. A. Utah, Done in all of Pii-yele- Dentistry its Branches. Office over P. S. Store, Main St. U- - O- - - Ixtgan, Utah. inn bull rsrnol write Km lye. Msny u Sverehre, CirruUn, I.rlim nr Ankle for the erm. Tfcey emotarn to Co till work. 1 write Noted Mcc.Trbchr,,, Student uiiii Ruelnem Houet fifteen y,urn Mriteliw over y id Ncw?.nmi. nl Hugaeior Can do Anything pot-Iwith Pen or Rriioi, Typewriter. All work Our Repair Shops can Rejinir Anything. SALT LAKE CYCLE CO., cc-li- 219-22- 1 WASATClf BLOCK. MAIN STREET, Mfkiy vec. JOSEPH proml-lilill- confidentuL Hasti. JOEL SHOMAKKR. Utah. lsA A.GH;iNriST.e WE 3IL1T ElffiVKOHV IT OCR S!I9I'. located at the old U. it i "nen we Would lie Pleased to Have His O. Foundry. Old Friends TayHim a Visit- generally a Hiisfantorv meeting, - tnndi-- r -- TENDER MEA- T- loourcunUmers; the F:eJi.-,-, Rwroiit and lurmit lo lie had. Our Multou in void aa M rrrox, nut ae Sprina Lamb,. t mu Prepared tod) lire on all kinds of Machinery, Eugius R ip Farm Machinerv and Mill W.irk. The Lamb Costs More and we nharg mine arniniinvly. with FWf. Cli.iicu Cuts uie sold ae such. No liis; No y isr.'p. reMiitalkme, Tin-ear- They Lose Custom! never gain it. our Meat. . Wo iinly Oi'AhASiM: In this way we - vite ererybudy to come ami aoe ua bt i- i Your Favorite ' LdiiiK Iitiii!!ilbii Tlio And Paper Family Paper OF THE UNITED STATES Union Market, The J. O. KNOWLES. PROP. Third Street, - - - - Logan Logan Nation P!UCjEAi)$A8!Ci Whuln.tlf and Ketiil Dnlfru in ,C!ivu ell tin Prime Beef. Hatton, Pork, Lamb of i .own tini-a- l j r m y n-- )' Hunk Yom licklcd Corned etc. G.t .iv' ami Joid-trin Season. Sausages i'lVeL Every Morning. Vtal, lJitf, SKlOMi roundly Tn-ijTie- , etc-- , Wni:!.! i.llu-- Mill t'lati. ii ri r r uii.I an imit'h Xa it;1 Ic !ikiTiii!il'! without it. C. otreet. V XKW YORK TitlKUNK WKI-3KL- y 1.1. III ia N m ion 4i. iil lt aim tlu th va M.t yii.tT..l i.sunorthcriiit.d1 . Iu.!'.- - !: ; ;ilhv11. IL hnhj hT Id fkv.i, i.mtu ," ui..l iai tVu.-c- Ftl Kt.,J i i: ii.! u Is In I A' l LiilO" t' !.;. i i'ii tit tine 11 i I .1 hi n !? Litij-lil-it. t:il f.i ctuij :ii. ms .:.,! In id ini it (I j ii ua ul tu.N lit ulnt. li. ..r ki i i v. li- p.i.ii .1 liUtliomv I1.4 siijwiiv! in Hi iNdmtf jib'i.ii kOi'HV ,i. II J vi rM piltiHi! TAriit, It pit in I! '! ouif r f ft ,i. rh rl Hit 1. 1. r( mi. FOR ONLY V2.BO Wcndelboi', L 4 Th Only If THE democratic party ever W ATCHHAK Kit IN LuilAX-- t scarcely any resemblance dul a single thing exactly as it tin' democratic party during the should done wid Ilka have Clocks, tune of Jefferson and now. In! to hear of Wtcbes, Jewelry, i. the case of democrats refusing to tP Silverware. It hekrh to he mucu easier for submit to their party's tyranny, is the it fur such it really ia, party j people to folluWg'aJpoor exampls fliird Street N .it dour Tithing Clico. and not tlw man who is wrung than a good one. u !. by lJUCLS: i:v siiok suor. Win, Reading, Prop. -i 'diifflV. ' 'tmmmW1' m BICYCLES. ! n: ut.i.lR l.y t .i;l -- I of . Anj tiling else imliiMiy for Aineik-nwould lmn dial uul le embodying sentiments of 1'Uh jS'Ciple. PhT.-H'i- b. L. 'THK LADY CL LA ELAND. u. '' r - . -- 1rrm. uu-au-s iidii.-itry,- Trvi Salt Lake Cycle Company. AiVIVTB - uou-purtixa- u P. A. Enter., Secy, and Os TAB Gbomieii.TVm. Some ieofit, bem to be happy sis making only when tl-unhappy. Yi' wr.iii hr I.piii Widl,- - Furnish Ihith M.t) biiiiri :i 1. v 'lib1. nl.-,t:.- . ja r vnr t .. I:ihts For S2.50 Auitii vi, nil Hi Jrri iu THE LOGAN NATION. , |