OCR Text |
Show BOX left alone to carry on the instruction appropriate to each. People generally do not like to disturb established conditions if there is no sufficient reason far doing so. and so the advocates of separate maintenance argued that if these two institutions were going to be they should remain as they were. Mr. Ricks: (Vol. II Proceedings,) "Tije Agricultural College received from Congress twenty thousand or Of The to Investigate ion Duplication Col-- o in the Agricultural ork The mothers of croupy children will be delighted to know that this dread disease can be prevented and all danger and anxiety avoided. This fact has been abundantly proven in many thousands of cases and may be relied upon with the utmost confidence. It is only necessary to give Utah and the University Utah. 1906 last issue.) (Continued from said: (pages 120-133lessor Kerr "There is not the 1146. which will enable us i Utah S) Jit institution of without the aid of even one jaintam learning our State, wealthv of ;ier and we can-- : the wealthy men of We that star-- ! m put their money into we should, : but lnstiiutions we should efforts, our pirate one on site, ihese institutions means there whatever available used to the be can the State and the advantage possible V men of the State can be ini' 'to put their money into the to .rations to endow chairs, to erect laboratories, institution in to assist the for higher educational Gentlemen of the Committee, Ration confronting us is this: willing now to take hold of or duestion now and settle it, want to perpetuate' the wrong of bas been done the people the to legislature, leaving it after year, to fight the old and over again, while the o are being drained in an maintain the institutions? e want an institution of higher I believe the in Utah? ning of the people of Utah bears lh er ef-t- ,le try the claim in out that we do. If there is but one honorable before us, and that is to take do, so this question, unite these place them upon one site, thereby lay the foundation for institution in Utah which will be i of the people and to which and daughters willgo for sons preparing themselves of life. Are we not the battle 'Are we not capable of pate? of purpose iiipllng with these problems as well the legislature? Settle it the Constitution, and it is set-fall time, and remember, gen-:of the committee, that this is uestion which not only interests to oday, not only is of interest people for the next year or two, hkh is of interest to the people of concern to them throughout time. Let us take hold of the :ion and settle it: and instead of Dating our energies by jttempt-t- o maintain schools of higher aing In different parts of the t, thereby deriving the State of rill be or m institution of really let us unite our higher edu-i- n educational 'utions. Let us place them upon site and fix' them there so that :e legislation may mot interfere : the foundation work upon which build and which will enable develop and build up in Utah tern of education that will be a to the State. heusands of dollars have been 'nded in the University for ap-i- n t these laboratories; thou-S- s of dollars have been expended Agricultural College in the Meat of the same laborayaries. department of mathematics, years ag. I expended about dollars for niathemati-Model- s and instruments. In the oltural College, for the same the same models and instru- ou!d be to the required at another of fifteen Territory re Mtais. And yei, gentle-- f the committee, the student r doing ipigijer educational Territory would net only leen hundred dollars worth of atU3 t0 assist them in their "t'eveas, if the institutions Unhed and placed upon one site, tiding- just one half the means s,luents doing this work ate the same facilities that uld have e for double the whp'e the institutions are amed on separate sites. In the is provided that the 5'S Art cl0l must be connected c I nlveisit v. if we maintain ex-"r- Minister Recommends C!ain's--Cough i.v Eercedy- - in 'lr home for seven years, a'ways pioved to be a ve have found that moie tlian the nianufac-,0ra- i i,.!0 yr ft. It is especially 'r0uP and whooping cough, T- JAMES A. LEWIS, , laca, Minn., M. E. Church. eiTin s Cough Remedy t f1 Eddy Drug store. 33 y. ' , inter-mounta- For sale at the Eddy Drug Store. of prfde these institutions as separate institutions, we shall have to spend in years to come hundreds of thousands of dollars of money of the people in equipping these workshops, machine shops, and laborator, ies, because the work of mining engineering cannot be done without the facilities that are required in the work of mechanical and electrical engineeiing, which, in accordance with the laws creating the Agricultural College, must be maintained in that institution. Then, hence, in that one respect alone there would result in years to come a saving of hunuteds of thousands of dollars tu the people of Utah. hard-earne- dollars d also. Undoubtedly i the advocates of the ( a. solution are the following: EDWARD Cost Per Ckpita. Following are Iesrers from President Kingsbury and! President Kerr on this subject: "In accordance miff the request from the Commission les peering cost per capita of students attemiiug the B, KIRK, FARM LOANS, OGDEN, UTAH, Bel) Phones. I nivorsiiy and rEne number of preparatory students entering the college courses. I submit to you the Appropmuiou from the Slat for the two jears beginning July t, 1903, to July 1. 1907. for general maintenance. including salaries, fuel, stationery, printing insurance, light, I am desirous of closing out all my Latins,. Misses and Childrens Coats aad will give 25 PER CENT OFF water-taxe- orier to move them quickly they are all marked in plain figone price to all. I have; lets of other bargains which are in Total from the State for these purposes $1SS,7S0 (The inteiest from the land fund may be from one to four thousand dollars more than calculated.) Arts and Science School. Appropriation for books, books and magazines, apparatus, etc., for the departments of English, Geology, Mineralogy, Latin and Greek, History, Economics, Sociology, Phvsi- cal Culture, Chemistry, Philosophy, Art, Mathematics, Finance, Law, Biology and library $ !4,t40 School of Mines. ' Appropriates for apparatus, books, magazines, machinery 26,223 Normal School. Supplies, books, etc 2,000 FOR EGGS AND 22 CENTS IN CASH. FOR CHICKENS I WILL ALLOW 25 CENTS FOR SPRING CHICKENS AND 271a FOR OLD CHICKENS. PLENTY OF HOME GROWN ONIONS AT , li4c. 3 Youis for a Square Deal. ! Alma Nelson, Bear River City, Utah. Harness CLASS j Kindergarten. Salaries and supplies 5,600 Domestic Science and Arts. Salaries and Supplies 7,500 and Saddlery. Total Appropriation for buildings and grounds TENTS AND WAGON COVERS. FIRST repairs, jani- . I WILL PAY 24 CENTS IN TRADE 4 s, torial services and supplies $148,780 CblViiIated interest on the Uaod fund for two .tears 40,000 ures aad worth your while to look at. in Now the question is, can we afford in this convention to grapple with the question and finally settle It? I tell you, gentlemen of the convention who have been workingso hard to keep down expenses of the State, that which will result in an annual saving of thousands of dollars of the peoples money is worthy of our consideration, and it is not a question that should not be handled' by this convention. It is a question, I venture to predict again, that will result according to our action in our having no institution of higher learning in Utah or our attempting to maintain the institutions apart, and if we do that, and tax the people sufficiently to maintain these institutions, as separate institutions, we will fasten a millstone about the necks of the people that will drag them down to Can we afford to do bankruptcy. , it? I say, gentlemen of the, conven- sacrificed. Eleven years have elapsed since and us this take let question tion, these argumehts for and against the consider it upon its merits. of these two schools consolidation The attitude taken by those who were made in the Constitutional Conopposed these views was that though This would seem ample vention. the expense of separate maintenance might be greater, yet the advantages Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that accruing therefioai would offset tjiis Contain Mercury, extra expense. Nor was it admitted as mercury will surely destroy the that there would be a material insense of smell and completely decrease in the burden on the State in whole system when enterthe conducting the two institutions sep- range it through the mucous surfaces. The argument was that ing arately. should never be used articles Such both schools would be practically on from reputaprescriptions except if they were simply ble physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you Made Happy for Life. Great happiness came into the home can possibly derive from them. Hall's of S. C. Biair, school supei intendent, Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. ,T. at St. Albans, W. Va when his little Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains daughter was restored from the no mercury, and is taken internally, He dreadful complaint he names. acting directly upon the blood and St. had little mucous surfaces of the system. In daughter "My says: Vitus' Dance, which jielded to no buying Halls Catarrh Cure be sure treatment but grew steadily worse you get the genuine. It is taken inuntil as a last resort we tried Electric ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio, Bitters; and I rejoice to say. three by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials bottles effected a complete cure. free. Sold by Druggists. Price 75c. comQuick, sure cure for nervous per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills female for constipation. , debility, general plaints, weaknesses, impoverished blood and Laxative Honey and Tar malaria. Guaranteed by the Eddy Kennedys Tares all Coughs, and expels Colds from 50c. tt cystem by Gently moving the froweio drug store. Price t at such in arriving this theory herein set forth, were pleading a cause of which they semmed fully convinced, but the lapse of ten years or more has completely demonstrated the fallacy of the theory, as at each succeeding appropriations legislature greater have been asked for by the respective colleges, until at the last session no less a sum than $577,571.00 was asked for being $295,431.00 for the of for $282,140.00 Utah, University the Agricultural College. These respective amounts, it must be understood, are independent of all other sources of revenue to the Institutions. Does this seem to support the, theory set forth in the foregoing excerpt? When the vote was taken, many who believed in combination voted against it for reasons which, at the time, they undoubtedly thought good A deliberate body and sufficient. with nothing to consider but this one question should not, it would seem, be long in settling It in the right way, but when men have to give most of their attention to things that are closer to them in Interest, a really great question may be neglected, and , FAGEIHRSE. 2465 Washington thousand altogether seventy-thre- e dollars a year, a fund entirely adequate to pay all the expenses of that institution and make, it and put it upon a level and in fact somewhat in excess of any of the institutions of this entire country. I believe, sir, that the fund that the University of Utah will receive from the sale of its lands, which undoubtedly will be reserved that a fuad will be produced or obtainable, which will be able tojnain-tai- n that institution that is, especially the university part of it, which 1 understand at the present tim has only thirty-on- e students, and at least the fund of fifty thousand dollars a year ought to go to maintain the thirty-on- e students of the higher education that has been spoken about by the gentleman from Cache, for many years to come. The State Normal School and the School of Mines have each an endowment of their own, which will maintain them without any help from the territorial treasury, and I believe, sir, that It will be good policy on the part of this convention to locate permanently I do believe, sir, that they ought to be located permanently, so that this fight and this uncertainty may be settled, but I believe, sir, they ought to be located permanently and maintained separately, and I believe that this growing State will yet be able to maintain two institutions, one of' the higher learning, where our sons and daughters can receive a classic education, If they desire, and one independent and separate, where they can receive a college education and an industrial education as soon as the child becomes hoarse or- - even after the croupy cough has appeared and all symptoms cf the disease will quickly disThat remedy is appear. also a certain cure for croup. It has been in general use for many years and has never been knowtt to fail . It is the sole reliance with many thousands of mothers and never disappoints them. It contains no opium or oher harmful substance and may be given as confidently to a baby as to ar adult. It should be kept at hand ready for instant use as soon as the first indications of croup appear, otherwise the child may succumb before medicine can be procured or a physician summoned. re thousand 29, 1906. time to fully demonstrate all quesBut the tions pertaining thereto. and at each stiJF is on, controversy the wages fight succeeding legisiirnrre even more fierce! j. It was with a view of obtaining, if possible, a satisfactory solution of this difficulty that this Commission! was appointed, and among the questions to be answered ear, and in two or three years it w'ill have reached twenty-fiv- e thousand dollars a year. They received from other sources several thousand dollars a year which would aggregate Cough Remedy var-wa- bat-ov- twenty-on- e Chamberlains pur-librari- ELDER NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER $ 53,465 $ 56,733 Total appropriations and int. from land fund $301,000 (To be continued.) REPAIRING DONE PROMPTLY. A Nice lot of Horse Blankets at prices to Suit your purse For years I starved, then I bought cent bottle of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, and what that bottle benefltted me all the gold In Georgia could not buy. I kept on taking it and in two months I went back to my work as machinist. In three months I was BRIGHAM CITY, UTAH. as well and hearty as I ever was. I still use A little occasionally as I find U a fine blood purifier and a good 13 , u tonic. May you live long and pros(5 C. N. Cornell, Rodiug, Gq,, to per. & Aug. 2"J 1906. Kodol is sold here by the Brigham City Pharmacy. a 50 Frank Bowring No. 13 West, Forest Street. 59 5 ft if $?i California Reduction Sale Best REACHED K i? : ON ALL : BLANKETS, DRY GOODS, LADIES SKIRTS, AND UNDERWEAR. VIA THE NEW ' Is s AND POPULAR I MENS, LADIES WINTER RATES. Shortest tuid best line to Bullfrog And Nevadas Mineral Belt via the Las Vegas 3K v AND CHILDRENS A. Ask & Tonopah R. R. ! 10 tI ? & Off. High Grade Pure Malt Vinegar and White Wine Vinegar. j Yours to please, - the Agent but specify San Pedro. Los Angeles Per Cent SHOES, Edu. Salt Lake, L. Hansen 5th South, Main Street, Brigham. J. H. BURTNER, D. P. A. g SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Irl 5 J.t a vs MONUMENTS? Order NOW TO INSURE DELIVERY FOR ecoration ay15 LOOK AHEAD Some and prepare for the future! dewith may eyes trouble your slight negif ti's serious ailment into velop lected, but Carefully Fitted Eye-Glass- may entirely cure the trouble Out specialty is testing eves and fitting them with lenses suited to their special needs. Charges very moderate. S. F. Christensen, JOHN H BOTT & Sons. EYE SPECIALIST, With L. C. Christensen & Sons. |