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Show : 7; i-. . 1 . ' . i . - . t - . - . , ..!-. f -J, . - M 1,.:. - .'-" '-"VT. '- ' - rC. ' "3 "? S' " " 8 i - I r A . A A A A A A A A A -. V - BUSINESS PROGRESSION IS EXPANSION ANp ACTIVITY In this city, these (lays, .we see faces ifaat are.strange," faces that are not familiar .in our town. ' : ." : Feoilelmm distant parts-of the county, f.om other towns, and iiltlpe' sf.mMit'nr. snmp-far drive in to inspect and ascer- tain per'sor.-'?-- the worth and reliability' of" V nledges that are"mad"e f "' 1 - . r s i.r - - ---- -V-- " ' - '. J, n j3itF 4Tr"i rirf" -l iron tune to time to tfie pumic, oy means oi extciiMvc auvu u-u, j by poster notices, arid in -the local papers. ; : . . . Generally those strangers are heav-ybuyersraTid- renim; drome -ward well satisfied with-the, -results .of "their long trip. .. " ' Thjs.is the finest and highest recommendation that can he given -to our business men and"sho"uIdFttTrsburce of -their -keenest pride and gratification. - . I,t prdves that they have hacked up their promjs.es, and redeemed their pledges', and that they were, able to, as they imped, meet .the -expectations nf those -"who "respond" to llietr ifivitatfons," and took, them at their word. --; ' ":r . - . It proves. further, "that1 these niessagrto the -jViHlie, Jn one form .Or' nCTher, ncwpap'er'-aa" ' bi-ipocialiy are bringing them the lioned for results, in the form of increased popularity; increased iium- 'lIJl WORTH WHILE? Is is vc-tll' .-While taatVwetjQstle a brdthef" Bearing; his ad,pn. the rough road of Hfe? i Is it worth SJ;hlle we'jeer at -each. crther- -T&fMacRTiess 1$ heart? that we warto the knife? Godjty.Us.airinur.j4tiul-trife God pity--us all jn'ur pitiful fight. . - ? God pardon us all forjtbjUMiunh we ieelJ 4 ber. of customers'and increased business. ..' If it were nut so, why then those many strange faces in our .... , 1 .- , .1 . 1 z town these days..' Why then tne rusn 01 ousiness inese ua5-TTryHehToTTel ness here. - .. . JJere and there in li icaUuc,?.!!0- h'ttk itiisc rlx ""h'usines's men who have not yet learned the great lesson of busine-s progressionbut generally they lean against deserted counters and sooner or later ..go"la the walk- - -- ; ; Business progression these days is. activity expansion. 'The - business man must peak to ilic pcBpie or ther wilk'hot speak" foliim. lie owes it to the people, and the people are entitled to: know what he has to offer them; if he will v '"" in touch with them, and keep them enlightened regarding his business, tiiey will reciprocate recip-rocate his . -b'!'' " -TK-v will not-kcejy hi toitHr M--ti Mm and he doe not-deserve it. . . The new and just demand of the people, to be recognized by the business man.-and to be informed from .time to tinre regflrding his activities constitutes the most desirable, the most legitimate kind of advertising. ' It is directly in opposition to "trick ' ah'T wTU-cat ia'ivertising. hash the usefultif-- -"-d brawn of sincerity ! stability in sound reason, in justice. ?rd in good business nj-ir'-inte. When a fellow goes down ; poor heartbroken brother" Pierced to the h'oart, words are keener, than steel-And steel-And mightier, farr for . woe"and for w-eal I' "Were jt not well in,thjs brtefjittle' journey, "On over the istmnts, down into the tide, - ; We give hfm .1 fish, Instead of. a serpent, : --' - Ere folding tnel hands to oe an'l abide For ever and aye ;-,i'i dust 'at his' side? . V- " ' , ' , " ' ' ' ' - Look at the roses saluting each other, ' "o Look at the herds ifll at peace on the plain- "lin, -and man only, liwkcs w ar -iis brother, And dotes in his hbart on his peril and pain jr.Shd'-fe'tcy7jia'l go duwn (!! the plain. -. :4 NEW STEPS IN MANUAL-TRAINING. '. . To finish high school "at the end of a 'four-years' course with riot r-nly. a well balanced education in the ordinary branches, but. with a. I:&de learned so thoro-ighry as to make the y6ung graduate ready and tn to tak-ittip as a "callinis'the neojortunityL.thatL.'is being of- : f'ed pt a few of-the progressix'e cities of Am ericT England and Ger- -wanyto the boys and girls i.the-&$jobisv-ThO by lOAOUIX MILLER. LOGArS'SEfES'TEEM: I 1 .THEJN DEPENDENT FARMER. "' Tarrning-i a business. No longer can it be said that the farmer is the unfortunate, in fact he is the king. The price which he i getting get-ting for his-stutTs makes him the independent man. I logs, chickens, eggs, beef and all products are demanding a good prk'e. - While "it mav be necessary for the farmer to work hard, he is nevertheless the most independent of all. It is interesting to read the following narrative nar-rative concerning David Rankin, written by one who knows him: "Sixty years ago a r Indiana fanner boy was married. After the ceremony was over he turned to the parson and said'r"IIere is vc dollars. It is every rent in the world I have, lake it all I want is an even start in the yurM!M - - A few weeks ago I stood on the biggest fannrin the world and let my eve lose itseH in the distance of a six thousand acre cornfield. it is rather unusual for'ja, city like Logan to assume the attitud'e that her moral envirOnments'are tar superior to the .of a sister city. J.ogaii has been jealous ever since the Mormon church authorities authori-ties '.established the church school college courses in I'rovo. This action' has a tendency to decrease the enrollment of the Logan II: V. College from 850 "to 450 students, and" while' the city has a perfect right to endeavor to", get these s'tin'.cnts back, it is hardly proper for the citizens to assume such a.holy attitude. The figures given in the iast isue of the IIFlALD yhnv that theu'are more arrests for crime in the Cache -Capital than there are I'rovo. notwithstanding the fact thai IVovo has two transconti nental railroads with fourteen passenger trains daily and a great amount of freight traffic. . .. , " The moral environments of I'mvo are just as goild as those of the bragging city on the north. If the Booster club of Logan had jaken the trouble to investigate the conditions, they would not have displaced Vhe ignorance of even-suggesting that the morals of Logan Citv were better. than those of Provo. "There is but a meagre chance c.l the church college courses ever being taken from -this city. All ;'h- ".nthience that Logan could bring forth would not change the ac-'pH ac-'pH already taken bv the church board of'education. Logan belit- in entire!- new plan of work andSfiidy alteration, which carries the manual training ideaand the industrial school idea farther than they have, ever 'been developed, with far .less expense and with far greater- t reliefitTta-th"e"'student and to the commtinitv reherallv tlTnn nnv ' other method yet devised. , . .. - x : 1 - The criticism that our high schools arevonly for the boys and '"" girls who can afford "and who expect to attend college is not unfc;intd-ed. unfc;intd-ed. It is -really a serious arrangement of .the present system of edu- - -cation "'ifnliese mstTtutions which" are, in 'many respects the pride of our-land.; 'That jligykLJiPt give sufficient ; practical training, suffi- " cientlr broad education to meet the greatest needs of the nine out o most of hetensTjf oiir-childreiK is the allegation, which seems to have only too much substantiation. It is a well-known fact that of the large number of boys and girls w ho enter our schools,. Only a very Siri.tll prrnr.rtir,n in J-d finish' ihe fniAr-fst:"'lfAiLAhnr -tghly-TyT-?plFetr;'by teachers everywhere that an incomplete high " school course is at least open to question as to the value it gives to' jcMfdxenh'a-fflHtorrwhtTfe . training; in Jhe school- itself is only a partial solution of the 'problem and is a source of great added expense w herever it has been installed in connection with the -school system. There are those who have ' doubted the value of its results. But., without enteringint an argn mentTjtrthis7K.intr"tTiepromoters of the new system show such pro- ; gress and such results that they ar convinced that their, plan is 'far superior to the older one. . ; - hcm-lf by claiming to be wholly righteous. IN THE PEACEFUL VALLEYS OF THE MOUNTAINS. There is great satisfaction in living in the peaceful valleys of the mountains, when otve reads of some of the actions of people in the other parts of this country. Thursday night, in a little town in Illinois Illi-nois a negro was brutally murdered bv a mob. The mob wa made The undulating corn ridinir un the slope of a hill and droppim: soft I v over made me think of some placid green, sea, Tuniiiig-tu David "P of. men and many women and the dispatches say that the women Rankin I I'H.ked at him and marvele.l at the romance of a mere ' P"11e! the r. pe which huiig the prwr brv mju- broke and the arnur . . -i m4 was enraged that the body of the negro wa- riddled with ' 'Uow did vo ,l it?" I a-ked of the world's m-.t exUiivc ! bullet, and then taken to an empty lot - - Th.n. a horri ble act 01 the procedure was the cutting f "- -,' - .eart as .u- venirs. Tu -.-dings ..f the man for hi ,:f- '' - avail. ' The angrv ' ' the mb must be sa!i- r: !. The 'negro had ravi-hol and murdered a young wmian "t the an nun w!,.. h:.e finer fann. but thuv. have brought the ni..nev to! A dnMardiy crime. An tmhuman action, iv.-xmr tnc pe-.- tlfe farm. Jvrv avr- m avtd Hankin's farms in .trhN.. . -iiuu . ! f jMifled in killing the negro und-T t! r end,- t;.r; ,,r, J'-,, -I .1..'t rn,.. ,hP,-n, t,..r ivtnrr raftb"-." In-1 ' ' 'itVuMl!t to iv. "IlldgC not. lc-t thee be ju lg-l. explained simply. "1 farm." "In the mi-Ut ! th- -jrcat Mi .un-ll!mi.-l"wa corn -! ar- farmer. "Marly and laU-," he answered, smiling. 1-1. - ..!.. : ,1 . 1.1 .. t,. ,,t n lure ui Muni 1 1 1 vii in -im n' ..M ni'-i i.iu'i in. in j D.tid Rankin, of T.trki". Mis-uri. but they are not farmer. There j re land than WHAT MAKES "TIRED" LAND. What makes the land tired? '--; Farmer Jones is worried. 1 lis fields are not nearly so productive, a they ued to be. His corn dues not yield so many bushels to the acre, and even the.potatoes show lessened crops. This sort of thing tells on thebank account. Farmer Jones judges, from all he can leafni, that the soil is becoming exhausted in other words, that so much of the plant food 't originally contained has been taken out of it by oft-repeated cropping that .'is in a measure used up. To resupply.it w ith .plant food, he buys and contributes to the land quantities of expensive fertilizers. They fail to produce the hoped-for result, and then-the unhappy farmer comes-to the melancholy melan-choly conclusion that his acres are "worn out" that is to say, rendered ren-dered incaible for the future of yielding profitable returns. And yet there is" nothing really the matter with these farms at all events nothing that ought to be very difficult to remedy. Their soil is just as good, and capable of as abifndant a fruitfuTness, as it ever was save for th fact that, through lack of-proper r.e and treatment, treat-ment, chemical substances of a'poisonou nature have accumulated in it. It is these-substances that render the land unproductive. - The discovery of these "soil tnxins,"s they are called represents, repre-sents, one of the newest and most important additions to scientific knowledge in relation to agriculture. It has already gone far enough to enable the experts of the government Bure'u-of Soils to point to certain definite chemical compounds, represented by actual samples contained in litfV bottle, as the toxins in pieii-n. These substancesnot substan-cesnot a!' H:i-Ti have been ioated as yet. lnnvevrr are known positively and le'-nd question to be th - h that cause "soil fatigue." - - BETTER NEWSPAPERS. BETTER TOWNS. It again bring the thought that this is a pretty g-- ! pb'V live The wrt trouble wc have is not vcrv bad. We l:ve in a Attention ha recently been called to a number ofverv j'rly edited newspaper in I'tah. The typographical nuk'-up of the-e new -paper i unifurm withlhc editing. If the bu-ine-s men of the town in which the-e i.ipers are puh-lih'd.-Wnew the harm -tuh new -paper- are doing f.,r the rcpectie j niMi-iriitir. it i--tie to -ny that they would either get together 1 ,t!d h.ne a ltt! r paper published or tlu-y would with-lraw their bu-i- hi- farm-. Cattle and f rn --t!ic product at one hundred dollar- an acre run! up. David Rankin ha acri- of'-ui h I ti I 'de 'ott l t-- rai-ing corn and ieedit'g cattle. "Ahlioi!--!) eiglitxffitr mk old. Di; ! R.mkm i-'jigla of tep. i quick of mo ei-M-nt. and en joy- -i-.l bea'h ! evi de'nr that hi-i regular life ntid "i ' rati- !hm.: i- the expl.-inyi"" In a" !t; w-.fki be i ov-tennitii n?d run- hi 'nany are- - ' '"-- u'..ir. !".irmi--g ; tu him ?. 1 l.-'mf' an-1 n -t mrrelv a wav -f. eking oi:t-i f"!on,t " '.Ji-.ob.'i leiofd r ner expect Land o nl! -ide- !5- j peaceful alley. The people are law eluding. Crimes are few and i f (l!M.n,.j, ,,,.; 1 the p;:per r-.n 1 thereby k ii! le thi'ig" which cat a smear i: ,,ioi.he law take it- c--ur-e. Wc .should be happy in the peaceful alley- ir tow n. A b wrt In r "re-t titatn e ot anv t- t the mountain. j'v.ith the Community which -ider the town a dead one. un-hy. ncwsp.ip4 r i certainly an.un-.n. an.un-.n. People who are not acquainted paper repreent immediately o-n- l".ighty--iv ki!!ed and l nyittre ! i- tht au: Chicago thi year, up to a week ago Chicago. ca reach 2.tV'f) in population at that rate Mapu ton man ha-' ma le it hi tni--i-'n to endeav. -r t-. get hi j ( the other hand, the g--! : . niidi-lud bv a well printed. . . ... . . r . , ' I "I- If I - ... ... ... nd to eliminate the heel iroju ttuir ianu. in n t- pr- j rarettidy e-!:te-I new -pnpt r- ra?i har-l.v le estimated. Thcv arc a 1 to be ma-le law at the next Iegs-!ature. I he a!o!i-h!in nt , fav.rable r i.re-ennttvr w-h r t r tin v g.j Tbe-e iiatK-r not .nlv ,r..!. ii- wee-!- fr 1:1 the farm land- oi the -tate i- indeed a g-- ! . jra,j ; eot.Je t p .m the utid- to l.,-o?ne intere-ted in a ronttminitv. a--. 'a.d -It- t-ld hae the -upport of the firmer and land owner- j ,t!t they apm-e the intcrc-t of h--me people. Thi'w.k should be ', Jultir land better crop, and letter aic price. t irmt r !r p- -t d a b .1" . .1 I: K'-i:t v. oi ii.. i 1,1 rt.t ,!-ir- t it! d ! ju-t kill cne particular eUplwint! But he w it's I ait Ira '.mg.jt. A Yirgtr:a woman -'K-d !h r hu-bai! ' !--r divorce 'n t!u gr ' that he K-tt-pd her t . much with kii. An Indiana woman ran aav fp.m 5r hu-band 1k, mu-c he wouldn't ki her. You c:m peerttl! alf'it the-e w- nun. Manila j-apir.. ay tlsat Manila is to haxe one of the tru-t h- tels m the l rient A th.otongh'.v American hotel in Manila, with ladr -ne ! r bil'.lsj-y and pulaiaric (" r waiter .hotild a firt-rate bu-incs. appreciated a much a- the jM-.r jajK-r hou!4 be condemned. There j, n gil rea-.-i why a pr ncpaper -h.ould be published in I "tab. There arc many g ! rea-on why g'-I papers should be di-tributc-l. . h el pie mi A.'.miral Schley., who ay be i 70. and hope to live to lifcmnr couM hatrn the reali. at ion of hi curious ambition by trv- the prohibition whi-kcy now Wing tu.Id. Remember and Don't Forget TThat The m M.Roy la nceC Want All The First Class Potatoes, Cabbage, Onions, fruits and Produce you have. Don't let it go to waste. Bring it to us. We pay highest CASH PRICES. DON'T BRING ANY WORMY FRUIT IT IS AGAINST THE LAW Office and warehouse near Salt Lake Route Depot |