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Show HIE SPANISH FORK PRESS ANDREW JENSEN, SPANISH FORK UTAH IN THE PUBLIC EYE Publisher UTAH STATU NKW8 Fall iJtktt to the Nevada state lino. The Volunteers of America are rn figured FTKIt we liute invest ijnifwl all llm fat ti which relate to the to ihIho sufficient fund to conservation of the roil, Iho im reuse or iIixiviim; of its fc establish ft bospltul In Halt lxike we must nroe llmt for (lie sake of the public pmul we City. ahoulil have an eilucatcl man on every farm. Agricultural Halt Luke CHy la to huvo another ed unit ion is the only solution' to the development ami confieri Ion, on December 2, when 11 va member of the school hoard will h It linn doubled the proservation of agricultural resources. elected. licit doubled the profit on individual thnn more and duction in rl Two hundred and elghty-onH has at the same time not only conserved but in oners are now confined In the Utah jyWIRl lute prison, the hltth water ma-- k In creased the natural fertility of the land. It has taught ua the hlatory of the Institution. to protect the timls-- on the waler sheds and to plant timber , With ft very good attendance and on new lands. It lm luriied desert wastes into gardens and orchards. It Iota of enthusiasm, the annual conference of the Woman's Missionary union lias inspired the farmer with new ambition and a new mol if for progress. vraa held In Salt City laat week. It 1ms changed the old social order and brought in a new and u better There will bo no coal famine , In of rural life. Why, then, should not agricultural education be Utah this winter, In the opinion of conception Pel-tiin rural communities? universal K. made Slate Coal Mine Inspector J. short-ag- e aerloua no will he and there The federal government Jms done much to foster this education by the of cura. endowment of land grant colleges and by direct appropriation. Many Governor Cutler laat week appoints those in been such and have in liberal of states their education, ansupport ed ten deelgalea to the eleventh 1ms been Atuerlrun most education such and where Mining slates loealitiog nual session of the generously foscongress, to he held ftt Pittsburg, Pa., tered there is to-dnot only greater intelligence and care for our natural 2, 3, 4 and 5. and resources rural our institutions, but there is a higher conception of One of the freak election beta In the of waa the antlafied day obligations citizenship. Salt Lake City after election by one tnan pulling a You can not enforce the laws which protect the mine and forest and cart through the atreeta on which waj stream without an intelligent conception of the general good which is seated hla aucceaaful opponent. such flow to administration. from A general walkout of 150 engineerof is alive to all the questions which a fleet the farmer The educated at the atudcnta University ing Utah waa barely averted laat week of rural progress. In the cultivation of the land lie has great problem when one of the atudenta waa temlabor and science to multiply the fruits of toil, lie enters into porarily auapended for giving a fellow yoked the life of the country and carries the burden of its social and political student ft gratuitous hair cut. Wbllo Buttering from ft apell of melinstitutions. lie is responsible for its progress and for its perpetuity. ancholia, to which she waa frequently Educate the man who lives upon the farm and the evils we have discussed subject, Mrs. Perth Wall, 21 years of age, made an Unsuccessful at- relating to land and forest and stream will speedily be corrected. Neglect tempt to commit autclde at Ogden by the cause of agricultural eduswallowing six largo antiseptic tabcation, and legislation will Inlets. if not impossible. The use of drinking cups has been ineflk-ien- t abolished In all of the Ogden schools. Instead upturned spigots have been al Installed by which pupils may slake The present tremendous their thirst, thereby preventing the movement imports intellectual suicide. danger of spileadlng lnftlous dis"N Practical godliness, the life of selfishness eases. subeen had who M. or Peck, George superficiality, is not new. Every age has perintending the tin roofing of ft buildbeen burdened by the multitude who seem ing in Salt Lake City, attempted to not to know or care if they hare a spiritual reach the street by sliding down ft he and broke nature or possibility. But to-dthis takes when the rope rope, fell distance of 45 feet, being in definite both through teaching, shape fatally Injured. of the and profound scholarly philosophy That the people of Davis county are thinkers, as Haeckle and MetchnikofT and thoroughly alive to the advantages of good roads Is apparent from the manMarx, and in the vigorous propaganda of ner In which they are carrying out materialistic socialism, which wipes God the work of Improvement on the highand the soul life off the board as negligible way through that county between and Salt Lake City. factors. Eire of unknown origin destroyed The of social battleground progress is now, a9 always, the human the immense mill and warehouse of the Inland Crystal Salt company at heart. This ia the citadel to which advancing intelligence has driven the Saltalr beach on October 5, reeultlng demons of greed and tyranny, cruelty and passion. Until that is mastered, In a loss of $125,000 to buildings, ma- civilization is at the same peril which has overthrown the greatest nation The company chinery and contents. in the carried $5,500 Insurance. past. For that mastery the soul life must furnish weapons and made methods. Great preparations are being by the Utah State Poultry association Three fallacies mark the faulty thinking which so afflicts us now. for the poultry show to be held In Better condition will make better men. Is it true? Religion has alway Salt Lake City, January 25 to 30. The unite will owners of fancy pigeons urged that better men will make better conditions; and that unless men with the poultry men to make an esare better in heart improved conditions are not a lasting benefit. If pecially fine showing In January. James llorpole, who died recently as you better conditions, you cad carry along a commensurate culture of at Castleton, Grand county, waa born the soul life, a deepening love and reverence, shown in honor and justice In Ohio, November 1, 1S01, and lacked and kindness, then progress is secure. but one day of reaching the age of 107 But that is not the logic. This is the argument: Because, when a years. He was one of the pioneers, and was widely known and beloved small percentage of a nation become rich and powerful they become wasteby ranchers, farmers and miners. ful and oppressive and debauch the nation, therefore, if all the people Two fires, which broke out In the became rich and powerful they would not fall into these snares. business section of Ogden In the early hours of Friday morning, November Again, it is assumed that because religion, especially Christianity, 6. kept the fire laddies from both stahas thus far been coincident with great social evils, therefore these evil tions busy for several hours, and entailed an aggregate loss of $1,500, are the fruit of religion and indorsed by it. When we reply that religion, most of which Is covered by Insurlike law and science, has been the struggle of the soul life for mastery, ance. then we are told that because religion has thus far failed of complete The descendants of the late John success it should le thrown overboard. Taylor, president of the Mormon at the reunion a held Thus church, family humanity is to cut off itS wings, blind its eyes and deafen its Granite stake tabernacle last week. ears to all the appals of its higher nature, and then expect to escape the the occasion being the centenary of Mr. Taylors birth. John Tayor was pit in which the glorious civilizations the thliM president of the Mormon of long ago were plunged when they church. God. forgot Mrs. Emily Warford. whose husband Is engaged in th ecenient business In Halt Lake and Ogden, was run down Needed is the appeal for righteousness by a passenger train at Phlllpsburg, in our old 'won generation and our land for busiN. J and killed. Her of ahead run having escaped Injury, ness honor and plain, straightforward honIm mother when the crossing was In the business and in the working esty. reached. world we need a higher and surer standard of the Utah Final organization branch of the American Mining conof integrity. There are evils in the world gress was perfected at a meeting whereer we turn the slums and the povheld In Salt Lake City last week, when officers for the Utah branch, erty the vice and the immorality of the Including president, three cities the wrongs and abuses of the weak secretary and treasury, were A deavorlng r t, ay anti-spiritu- J ay Og-di.-- n selected.- The supreme court has held valid the stamp tax which the state, through legislative act of last on all corporations other than charitable, religious. or Irrigation companies, where the incorporators are the sole beneficiaries. John Moulton Hawkins, well known In Salt Lake City, which had been his home for many years, committed suicide nt Mill Creek by placing the muz zle of a shotgun in his mouth and pushing the trigger with a crutch 't he unfortunate mans lower Jaw wn blown entirely off. When the veterans of the civil war from all over the country nssembb In Salt Lake City next year in theii annual encampment they will be pro sented by the school children of thi city with a magnificent token of rev year. Imposed erence the hugest handmade Amir lean flag In the world. .in and the helpless, the dependent and the criminal throughout the states, and the injustice and the oppression manifest in the life of the nation. What constitutes right living? Not speaking much and beautifully of tho right; not praying at length or loudly; giving nothing or little to the cause of charity; not doing nothing or little in the service of mankind; not unwillingness to give and do and -- serve. Right living means duty to God and duty to neighbor. Righteousness is not an empty word. Right living means life that is right with God. If mana life be right with God man must be loving and just and merciful. Our life is not right unless we stand for the good and against the evil unless the cause of good and the right and the poor become vital to us all unless each one of us becomes a voice and a force for righteousness in he individual life and in the life of the family, and through the individual and the family the righteousness and the justice of the city and the state and the nation. ' , oil disclosures the Pennsylvania rcmgresH-ma- n In the went Standard name figured whose will not be ho Oil disclosures of W. It. llearst. revelation the unpleasant affected by directly man as the Ohio statesman, for the Keystone a couple of congress from retired voluntarily years ugo and has not nought political preferment slnre. While he was in the house he shot up Into the limelight for a moa ment, but upon the whole was considered faithful If not a brilliant representative of his district. At one time he made an attack upon the president from the floor of the house which attracted considerable attention, and at the time of the postofflee scandals some unpleasant attention wua attracted to Sibley by the discovery that a company In which he waa heavily Interto the postofflee do- ested had an Important contract for furnishing supplies joe.h EXPERIMENT WITH CLEVri POLICEMEN SUCCESSFUL Dscrsase of C. Hlbley. PHI' 5 p,P c,t , Under Plan Tried by Cht Kohler Bated on Com. v Beni, , Cleveland, After more months trial of the i...w qJ!" policy of making arrest c, Chief of Police T It unqualifiedly a aueeei Ingly has given the pnlirem-- "wrd greater power of discretion. J berof arrests months of thl J In Cleveland J year ha. h,mn crenso of more than 5 cent tho same period last yea! the same time, no greater mm,!; serious crimes than usual hay, L reported, despite he large W first offenders allowed to co , ,JV OM srrested. Chief Holder years ago in New York, and after teachinga school, that there However. are still too many paying road he struck on the and goods selling merchandising farming, medium and he Is urging that further tire u lead as an oil producer and amassed considerable wealth through the In keeping the exercised of a signal oil. r He went Into politico while still comparatively young, and was elected follow ,5ther I'rarlo i same course. a Democrat In those days, waa He 29. of at the age of Pa., Franklin, mayor Golden The Rule policy, which Chj.i and It was that party which sent hint to congress In 1892. He was one of the Kohler put into effect last underwent a pronounced convictions his hut jMttl silver boomers, free original reversed himself and provided that policemen should change later on. for In 1900, wbllo still In congress, he to lodgment and common sense la dm! became a Itopubllcan. A little Incident like that did not, however, appear conto Ing With offenses which are mern, . elected be to continued he for his hla constltuercy, affect grasp upon violation of city ordinances and L gress by bis new partisans. Ishable by a small fine. They w and Various dairymens in agricultural cattle breeding, He has been active to take Into consideration th la told took also organizations, and It appears from the recent revelations that he tent to violate a law or an ordinal Standard of the In affairs the mere Interest a than passing something more and also the question of mallrlouiww Oil Company. on the part of the offender. Tin were instructed to warn a druaire man and send him home, rather tim drag him to Jail on hla flrit offn that two men fighting, if for th, Ollie M. James, congressman from the First and first time, should be separated. m succeed Kentucky district, will undoubtedly soned with, and not arrested. Old of Senator Thomas II. Paynter if a Democratic those Intentionally violate legislature Is elected In that state. Here la the fenders, the law, or those committing Demoft prominent interesting pen picture be as severely dealt with v cratic paper paints of him: A record la kept of the cu He stands six feet four Inches in a pair of ever. of all persons released or err. No. 11 shoes that are filled completely by a pair of cld fashioned feet, shaped In the rows of the warned. The object of the new plan wu te corn-fielto tread the paths that lead to future dispose of trivial mlsdemeanon witgreat ness. hout arrest and prevent the bumllUbci He has size without symmetry, sort of thrown together carelessly as if nature In a and disgrace of persons who throoxh. convulsive mood had done a big thoughtlessness, passion or temper or In a spirit of frolic or mischievouson-violatething and did not have time to carve It Into the law. Likewise, It It Is A an the shapeliness of Apollo Belvldere. party of Llliputlans could dance a minuet on his broad back. No Kentucky thoroughbred is wider through the heart than he. His eyes have caught and held 4 little blue of the sky with a little gray of the autumn fields. There Is an expression of frankness and guile that at once assures an acquaintance that there Is nothing to fear. His nose is only fairly good, not big enough, but Intrusive enough for bis broad facial background. Kindliness and good humor break in concentric circles about the mouth, whose dominant quality is gentleness, even weakness. One looks in vain for the sweep of jaw like a scimitar in full awing, bidding defiance to all comers. His chin should be a challenge Instead of a compromise. Here is the keynote to Mr. James' whole character: a lack of masterfulness that may affect his career seriously if he does not overcome it James is not the ordinary southern orator, smothering his audiences in flowers of rhetoric and blowing bubbles of wit and fancy just to amuse the crowd. His speeches are models of clear-cut- , vigorous English, and his sentences have, when necessary, the cutting power of a whip of scorpions. Whether In congress measuring merits with the Republican leaders on great national questions, before a chancellor arguing an intricate question of law, facing a jury in whose hands the life or property of his client Is held or on the hustings with thousands of Democrats anxious to hear the word proclaimed, he is equully effective, his presence magnetic, his manner engaging and his resonant voice a never ending delight. He Is Big Ollie to his Intimates and Plain Ollie to every one else. He Is easy to get acquainted with. There are no frills about him, no affectation and a wholesome welcoming at mosphere surrounds him.' Sibley was born 57 MAY U Ni GET SENATE TOGA 8Ul I d d good-humore- d HONORED BY FRENCH ACADEMY Louis Frechette, the bard of French Canada, has een named as laureate of the French academy. While a most unusual honor, particularly since Its recipient is a resident of this continent, U adds nothing to the distinction that la universally accorded Dr. Frechette as the last of that brilliant group of poets and novelists who have ir.ade French Canada and the simple life of the habitant known to the world. Of this group, Frechette and Drummond were undoubtedly the leaders, although Gaspe with his Les Anciena Canadlens, Mannette and Routhier have all made enviable names In the world's literature. Dr. Frechette was born In Quebec a half century ago, and was originally Intended for the law. He abandoned that dry profession, however, and after a five years residence in Chicago he returned to Quebec and plunged into polities. For a few years he was a member of the Dominion but parliament, politics, too, failed to. hold his fancy, and went over to Mon-treand to literature. A legislative clerkship furnished him with a modest livelihood until the quaint charm and the charming revelations of life in French Canada made hint Independent. The place he In the field of literature Is peculiarly his own, and the habitant couldoccupies have no more eentlv sympathetic chronicler. Honors have come to the poet from many countries before this later tribute of the academy. He was elected a knight of the French Legion of Honor of hU book8 were crowned by the Immortals. hVear: a8 when. Ie has many high orders and decorations by the rulers of Great Bri aln ant other countries, and he Is accounted a member of many learned societies. He was lately president of the Royal Society of Canada. AUTHOR IN POLITICS Kdward W. Townsend Is another literary man who has broken Into political life recently. He has been nominated for Democrats of one of the New congress by the Jersey districts. The Seventh New Jersey district, which will 0t h,S P"tlcal been epresented In congress by a Republican for tho last l. years, but It Is a close district and Townsend win only have a of a few majority hundred voteB to overcome. ,tbeaveraf?e re&der Townsend is reniem-bore- d chiefly as the creator of that slangHy Interesting young gentleman, ChlmmlJ Fadden, whose self-toladventures and ex! perlences made Interesting a dozen yea s ag0. He ali0 wrote threading -- raXoA.". tended to prevent the humiliation d disgrace of near relatives of tuck that too, was fenders. It thought, would lessen the work of the p of tl department and the attaches police courts. How well the plan has succeeded reducing the number of arretU shown in the following table, the period from the time It put Into effect to September 1: ARRESTS IN Junimry February Marrh April May June July Aukuat u i' ARUKSTS IN 2.1'A January 2.2.' 7 February 2.711 Mareh 2.424 April . 2.721 Mav .. 2.f"3 June i HU .. - July Auauat made at the was The assertion Rule policy Golden the that 2.WO J.tCO t mi ack Hei K J power Jj dangerous discretionary This hat hands or the police. true. In hls bulletin Ml on July 1 Chief Kohler police depart? this The members of even have accomplished results c In this yond my expectations senae policy, which must be F t to you as well as !11V8P)fi ccmroun sure It Is to the general, With your long and varied wey that In police matters, I know The competent to Judge. months have Bhown that yo ment ia good, and you bav jrtat Ills t re iejr 'ourgi In i n 0UB. Ca N 11 r Jim 'elt here W plished the results expected instructions. our first rmu The police themsolves cl hearty In are terested In aud of with the new plan. Some JudK that they tried to cxerclso ,' In making arrests tor tt,(il Aid mo der tho old regime, bnt n Wece r. p own responsibility, while In supported by official dr no person Is arrested for on hls fi't Offense unless or sary for t Is protection or o mother, tectlon t and turblng thi peace city. Wes t m 'arid ired M c . No . jcatle0 Bcrt! t (M pro S w tbbon d; JJ fl t fe ;te. SlLlT? I mled A Matter of TemP, lived much of hls life In San Francisco, where he l as s writer and where he first made a reparation Pretty and talented a an Zhor of h neW8,a"er pl'm not articles and humorous hits that were widely Quickly does d copied and qtloted ' vorite I thought Bheturned years past he has worked on the New York For,80 v home In the pretty town of Montclair, N. J.. within Why Is it sha hasnt renrt? ? ,nde h, 8 I guess It is beca olJ. The present Is his first serious venture into easv Amciic polities. Baltimore one. in The, 'lilt tj Of l!)t . i to lulr , pi j 'tleu tic,. |