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Show p--' Poor 'copys THE iE.'zD JOHN A.1SRAELSEN Ph.72 P.O.Box 208 UTAH HYHUM, VO-- - HYR0IV1, CACHE ! CO., liTAfl, FRIDAY JULY 0, 1923 HELPFUL HINTS FOR? HIKING hvffHwAv -- it if-y- nyiiffl M M- ! 17. Utah. Music and Art. 20. Sea Gulls. 21. Silver Greys. ' 22. Scout Troops. 23. Logan Stake Primary. 24. Battery F. 25. Decorated Bicycles. 26. Fire Department. and miscellaneous 27. Business - ' floats. 28. Comic stunts. Each ward is organized to represent in the parade the subject assigned to them. With this lineup the procession will be a long one and well worth seeing. Moses Thatcher for the a. m. reports that it will be a short- - one with a spicy Mr. J- - E. Hickman will program. deliver the address and the Imperial Gleel Club will furnish the main musical selections. The Silver Greys will give one selection. Chairman meeting at 10:45 Mrs. Norman J. Allen the very popular singer at the Dansante will sing foi the races at the Fair Grounds for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration with the Logan Concert Band as accompainiment. This should add much to the musical part of the proSome special popular numbers gram. will be provided. The Ogden Gunners are improving rapidly and with the Collegians strengthening their weak places, the teams should be weel matched for the games here for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration. It will be a day when fans from all over the valley1! will be in to see this class of ball. The Logan Baseball Club management will give special attention to advertising the games and see that the crowd is properly handled. As there will be no celebration in Ogden, a good many fans from there will be present to see the game. Thursday, Director A. N. Sorenson for the Parade for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration will be able to announce the tenative lineup for the parade. He has a good many features and is sure the parade will be a creditable one. The shooting exhibition by Battery F north of the O. S. L. Depot for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration should be an interesting event. The be placed about 3,000 targets will yards away and shrapnel will be used so there will be no danger whatever from shell fire. This event will take place at noon. Before the exhibition Captain Thomas will explain the project and the line o attack. '".The Battery will also fire the morning salutes, and from an important section in the parade. Tuesday Messrs Merrill of Trenton Tripp of Richmond called at the Chamber of Commerce to learn more of the details of the championship horse shoe pitching contest to take and - EH FT ?oi- c infill KILLED This TRAFFIC Amble on the RISIHT Side of the concrete Qont your BACK to 1)4? TRAFFIC quiila Raymond, forty-tw- o years of age of Siuithficld, a carpenter enwork at the gaged in construction Cutler dam project of the Utah Power and Light Co., in Bear River canyon was instantly killed Wednesday afternoon, when he was run over by an O. S. Li train south bound. At a point about two miles below Cache Junction is a field at which employes park their cars. Approaching this, Raymond and three fellow workers stopped their car and Raymond alighted to cross the railway track and open the gate into the parking field. By some trick of adverse fate, neither Ray- mond or bis companions noted the.,' approach of the train which struck Raymond, severing both legs, an arm, and killing him instantly. The catastrophe was so evidently accidental that no inquest will be held. Mr. Raymond was unmarried and a brother of former County School SuperintendFuneral services ent W. G. Raymond. will be held at Smithfield Friday, wit- - IT'S HARD ON THE FENDERS !. BOY SERIOUSLY heats of the harness races so there ANNOUNCEMENT will be no waits. Joe Perkins of Preston has always taken much inIn order to get established terest in running horses and has owned a number. Recently he purchased a and have time to put our busthoroughbred and had an opportunity iness on a firm business basis to try it out for the Fourth of July and produce a better paper the Celebration at Preston. He won over x fthe Herald have management Griffits docs not feel George Griffits. just right and is keen to go against decided to publish only once a Perkins for the Twenty Fourth in week. With the Reese horse and the Logan. This however is only temprunners owned, by the Woods boys of unless it proves to be a orary of Logan, Trenton and Ronncberg for arrangement the running races are sure to be good satisfactory our readers, advertisers and all ones. De-Wi- will be made. the day and evening With the Collegians and the Ogden From daylight until midnight there Gunners strengthening their weak will be continous action. places, the baseball game is sure to be one of the best contests of the year. FIRST LECTURE OF SERIES Due to a double header that day with GIVEN BY DR. BRYAN one game in Ogden and one in Logan, the Logan game will no doubt be played at 4 p. m. Later a definite LOGAN, July 6. Declaring that announcement will be made. are those who the well-endoy- The promoters for the athletic devote themselves consistently and events report the participants all sign- persistently to the things in life ed up and assures the Committee it is that are worthwhile, Dr. E. B. one of the best cards ever arranged Bryan, president of the Ohio unifor Logan. Jack Tailor one of the versity, opened a series of lectures contenders for the heavyweight class at the Utah Agricultural college of Canada will meet George Nelson national summer school this mornone of the contenders for the heavying. weight class in the Intermountain The title of President Bryans states. "Two real good boxing bouts 'have been signed for preliminaries to address was The Gospel of Work, and he pointed out that work has the main event. a high moral and spirtual value. President Bryan will deliver Battery F. have all the equipment and supplies for firing the morning eight lectures this week on the salutes and giving the shooting demgeneral subjects of a better breed onstration north of the O. S. L. of people and a better world for Depot at 12 oclock. This is the first them to live in. time any such demonstration has ever been given .here and it should attract considerable interest. The Battery will SCANDINAVIAN CON. form an important section of the parSET FOR JULY 18TH Manager George Dunbar for the Horse races reports an exceptional lineup for this time of the year and he is negotiating for entertainment features to take - place between the BURNED IN GASOLINE EXPLOSION A fine assortment of fireworks has Tillie Olson is another one who has been ordered by the Committee and seen , the mate to the large German these are sure to be an attraction esBrown trout caught in 1924 by Mr. pecially to the children. Crimson field W. W. Smart. This big fish is lo- offers the best, place for the exhibicated in the upper part of the City tion. Dam and the lower part of the tt Chairman H. C. Maugban suggests meadows. He still refuse to be A stranger in town the that every business house be decorated tempted. other day who had heard of the big for the celebration . This will add fish says he will get him with a live much to the street! decorations. Very shortly an announcement of minnow. There are many who have the entire program with details for tried to catch the fish. - E ivi - . for the Manager George Dunbar horse face?" for the Twenty rourfh of July Celebration is scouting around for some entertainment between heats. of wild outlaw Recently a number horses were shipped into the county to be broken for saddle horses. The ones best' qualified and available for such work was of course Less Jessop of Millville. Nine head including some wild ones from the Beckwith Ranch in Wyoming were turned to Three of these owend by JesJessop. sop and some others may be ridden during the races for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration. These horses are sure to give some excitement for the Twenty Fourth for those who attend the' races. Mr. James Hancsn will arrive shortly with three head of harness hores from Salt Lake City so with these and the many others now stationed at the grounds, there will be no trouble in making up two fast harness races in addition to some running races. ade. LV&35v.ucHii:e Mak- place on the tabernacle square on the Twenty Fourth of July. This will be one of the events of the day and should attrace spectators and horse shoe pitching fans from all over the The contest is for the chamvalley. pionship of the valley and the winners will be matched against a team from Box Elder County at the Cache County Fair in September. The lineup at present is Merrill" and Tripp with Art Seamons from Hyde Park as a substitute against Gibbons and Gibbons and Wayman of Logan. Wayman have not chosen their substitute but will do so in a few days. A silver loving cup offered by the Utah Farmer will be the prize.. This must be won two times by the same team before it becomes the permanent property of the team. Coaches J. R. Jenson and Butch Knowles will have charge of the contest as well as the childrens sports and the play ground equipment. Bee Hive. PMJE -- 4 SHELI Dy A. D. CHAPiM TlkV - Entire Valley to Cooperate in ing This a Mammoth Celebration The committees for the Twenty Fourth of July Celebration met at the Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday evening and gave progress . reports.. Director A. N. Sorenson for the Parade reported the following features . , of the parade. 1. Flag Bearers. 2. Marshall of the Day, Sheriff Miles Peterson. ' 3. Indians. 4. Trappers. , 5. Logan Band. 6. Mormon Batallion, 7. The Desert. 8. The1 Early Pioneers. 9. Pioneer Wagons. 10. .Typical Mormon Float. ' Stage Coach. Hand Carts. Agriculture. Earl School. Manufacturing. American Legion Drum Corps. t, AMD - , I1 FARM BUREAU DIRECTORS TO DISCUSS ENCAMPMENT of LOGAN, July 6. Directors the Cache county farm bureau will meet at the county court house in Logan Saturday afternoon at 2 oclock for the purpose of considering a number of problems relative to the big farmers encampment which will be held at the Utah Agricultural college this month. At the encampment several officoncerned. cers of the American Farm Bureau The Editor. federation will be present and the bureau directors will oiscuss farm THREE ARRAINGMENTS An methods of entertaining them. MADE IN CITY COURT American farm bureau leadership school, which may be held during the encampment, will be talked LOGAN, July 6. Robert Reese over in addition to other matters. pleaded not guilty to two charges in the city court today one for resisting an officer and another SUE TO QUIET TITLE for being intoxicated. He was released under bonds of $25 and $50 and his trial was set for Friday. LOGAN, July 6. Edward PitIn the case of the State of Utah cher, Joseph Hammond and W. P. against George and T. A. Hillyard Worthen filed a comp 'amt in the on a charge of larceny of water district court here today challengfrom the Smithfield West Bench ing the title of R. W. Jones, Ames Irrigation company, the defend- P. Jones and John Doe Murphey ants pleaded not guilty before City held to certain mining property located about eight miles east of , Judge G. D. Preston. The plaintiffs ask in George W. Thain forfeited $2.50 Smithfield. in the city court for parking on the complaint that their title to the sidewalk on First West be- the land in question be established. tween Center and First South St A forfeiture of $1 is also recorded in the city court. The money came PRIMARY ENTERTAINS from the pocket of Miles Nielsen FOR THEIR MOTHERS for parking in the middle of the street and blocking traffic. The PROVIDENCE, July 7.-second grade primary class entertained their mothers on SaturNEWLY WEDS TAKE day afternoon at the heme of Miss Lucille Allen. A nice program YELLOWSTONE was given by the children. Light HONEY MOON refreshments were served. PROVIDENCE. July 6. Thursday morning Mr. and Mrs. Carl 0. Felix of Logan left on a ten day trip through the Yellowstone Park. The marriage of Claris Fuhriman charming daughter of Joseph Fuhriman to Carl O. Felix of LoScandinavian conference will be gan was solemnized in the Logan held in Logan Sunday July 18. Temple, Wednesday June 80. A Meetings at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. wedding supper was given in the in the tabernacle. All Scandinnav-ian- s evening for the families at 'the home of the bride. invited. PROVIDENCE, July 7. A sad accident occured at Ridgdale, Ida., when the old son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Fuhriman was severely burned with gasoline. While some of the men were starting the gasoline engine for the ,water pump the gasoline got fire. Mr. Fuhriman and Mr. Alder ran out of the building and Mr. Chugg who held the gas can in an effort to save the building and himself threw the can thro the door not knowing the child was any where around and some of it struck his legs so he got fire and is in Mal-a- d in a hospital in a very serious condition. Mr. Chugg suffered some burnes on his hands. These men are all from nor town and were out there for their summer work. The sympathy from our community goes out to Mr. and Mrs. Fuhriman in this sad affair and this being their only child we all hope for the best. DOPE IS THAT 3 DEMOCRATS WILL STUMP ON COSTS ReWASHINGTON, July 6. publican campaign expenditures will be one of the central planks in the Democratic platform in this years political campaign, Representative Oldfield of Arkansas, chairman of the Democratic congressional campaign committee, said today. His party will launch its battle towards the heart of the evil, Oldfield said, by electing at least ten representatives to congress from Pennsylvania. r- I NEW FARM LOAN MEMBER NAMED WASHINGTON, July 6. President Cooledge today named Albert C. Williams of Texas as head of the farm loan bureau to REMODLING PROVIDENCE succeed Robert A. Cooper, who reSCHOOL IS UNDER WAY signed, effective immediately. Mr Cooper will remain as a member Providence, July 7.- - Work is of the board. under way for the remodeling of our school house. A central stairMrs. Tom Edwards and small son way takes the place of the wind- left Monday for McCammon, Idaho, one was a menace in that ing "'here she will join her husband and case of fire and two new class later in the week they will return to rooms are being made. their home in Kansas. . |