Show THE ENCAMPMENT NEWS editorial good bye friends friends We have been very glad of this opportunito you for ty to play the host Good bye these few days We hope that you have enjoyed yourselves feel thoroughly and that yoju oui yourselves well paid for visit to the U A C The Farmers’ Encampment has become an established event in Utah We believe that the second annual gathering has been more successful than was the first And we hope to make the With your third even better help we can do this We hope to see you often on the campus of the College Visit us whenever the opportunity presents itself You will always be wel- Remember that this is your school run to meet your needs And by all means visit with us again at the Third Annual Encampment Good bye A pleasant trip home come o “IF I MAY CALL YOU FRIEND’ Not long ago we read a poem by that prince of sporting writers Grantland Rice which is so pood that we cannot keep it to ourselves Most of us in the business world have difficult g problems to solve some time or other We arc apt to think that we are badly treat- cd It may be that trouble is just what we need to develop us The strong trees are those that have had to resist the storms not those that grow in the sheltered valleys Likewise the strong heart-breakin- w July who men and women are those have had to fight hard against ndvcrse circumstances With Grantland Rice therefore we say to you: "wish If I mav call you friend I you this — No gentle destiny throughout the years No soft content or ease or unearned bliss Bereft of heartaches where no sorrow nears But rather rugged trouble for a mate To mold your soul against the coming blight To train you for the ruthless whip of fate And build your heart up for the bitter fight 29 1922 FARM SOURCE OF MANHOnn SAYS PRES GRANT (Con) Board of Trustees of the Utah Agricultural College talked to the members of the Encampment from the view point of a practical farmer He mentioned the evolution of education comparing the farmer of today with that 0f feudal daysv pointing out how men had gradually come to realize how vital a study of the soil and a knowledge of its intelligent cultivation is Dr Curti ss Dean and Director Division of Agriculture Iowa State College expressed his approval of the persistent desire of the farmers of Utah for education demonstrated by the large and interested attendance at the E- If I mav call vou friend I wish ncampment you more — A rare philosiphv no man may fake To put the game itself beyond the score And take the tide of life as it mav break To know the strugle that a man should know Before he comes through with the winning hit Dr Waters Editor of the Kansas City Star commented upon the deep religious sentiment running through the meetings and present among the people which is so necessary to the preservIn ration of our civilization eviewing the agricultural outlook he stated that the population of the world is increasing at the rate of fifteen millions of people a- And though you slip before the but that agriculture is not nearly keeping pace with this increase f0 charging foe To love the game too well to ever quit nnually o Eboys of the ncampment went up Logan Canyon hatctoday to see the state fish the naturhery the girls camp and in al bridge L F Nnfier was Sixty-eig- ht If I mav call vou friend I wish this too As you grope blindly out the narrow beat That you may have one e old-tim- dream come true Which is one more than most men ever meet That you will hold this as a worthy prize For all the traps with which the course was lined The boys made the in two college trucks charge trip Not scorning it with too ambiti ous eves That look for something you can never find |