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Show THE CACHE AMERICAN nd Friday by Newspaper, Published American PublUhlng Company, at 82 Wert Onus Street, Logan, Utah, Tudy Cch tba WILLIAM C. ENGLAND, JAMES W. ENGLAND DAVID W, FNr--r Afsin Entered Poit aa OfTtre Editor-Du- Managing -- al nrti Maaagef TAilot Mechanical Department 2, 1631, at tha at Logan, Utah, under the Act of March 2, 1867. Second-Cla- Matter, November Subscription rates: Outalds County, one year $2.00; Inaide Cache County, $1.80. Advertising rate made known upon application. TIIE VOTER AND THE riUMAKY 'You can stagnate and die la leas than a year. But if you saw wood aimers and have a gar Jen summer, arid atop a or king and take a rest every urne you feel tnea, )ou haie several years el u i,e, Blackhead lie told us that when ae acre AQl'lUTE CONTROLS now. PreBtart Cocci and one (Hi.!, pitaing traa berries with him is better than a cure. vention some we of and thought morning Edward Christiansen, It F D 1 totf JietU ol kic 0U Box 34. South Main. Logan Utah. V the In Cache In known alley. mu nay they used U have the FURNACE CLEANING, Repairing. old men mow the corner by hand Snkr Repairing and Serriea on the farina now the old men go Wangagtard Coal and Stoker Co to the doctor who tells them ail 131 107 South Main. Phona "Don i do nothing," aud they live Phllco practically loreier. On Cape Cod RADIO FOR SALE radio First cWu condition. anyway. Call collect Hyrum 02-Moat Cache Valley people have be the tie "Bleat prooably sung Allaifa in mat b.nds' or How gentle God's FOR SALE First crop the field. Phone 036JI, commands" which Is sung to the same tune ol Dennis, a tune which WANTED: A reliuble boy to dewas composed and named by Lowliver newspapers. Should be 12 ell Mason In the town of Dennis years or age or older. Apply at on Cape Cod a here they have Cache American office. union church whose minister is a graduate of Haverlord with must not think of this war or evwife from Bryn Mawr who prac- en the last war as a thing apart tices medicine while her husband They are all part of somthing preaches. Between them they should much greater which I will nevhave all the secrets of the town er live to see the end of and even locked In their breasts, for the you may not It is a part ol a town loves them as they are young revolution going on all over 'the and eager, sincere and hyperintel-lige- world in China, In India, in Rusand have ideas. sia, even In your country. For late frosts in early June have thousands of years the human race destroyed 40 percent of the cran- has been raising itself by Its bootberry crop on Cape Cod, but on straps and each time It raises it' the other hand the beach plums self a little higher. But the process have set a tremendous crop and is somtimes evil and bitter. they make jelly that you can t tell from choke cherry, newrea In CaLOGAN CANYON che and all Utah. But the most remark eLout the MAQNI7ICXNT AND RICH Illuminating cranberries was made to us by an octogenarian who had been in the Major Metal Minin; cranberry business over fifty years Company and had sold out, giving his A Cache County Enterprise get anyone to work for Office, 4$ West Center, Legaa you and ain't got time to watch 10 Democratic State SENATORS Favor Stanley N. CHILD, cab-lna- te J. altogether too apparent, since Utah Legisla tors cnarted the Primary Law, that citizens view this election as a preliminary event and consider the Novem her balloting as the Main Show. As a matter of fact, nothing could be so completely wrong. The truth is, that this Primary sifting does more to guarantee a substantially stronger ticket than wouK otherwise be possible. Then to. the decision as to who our public officials shall be rests in the hands of the voters The evils of party machines and convention stacking are largely done away with. Utahns get just about what they vote for. Both in the Primary and in the General Elections public opinion has the opportunity to set things right politically. The citizen who passes a Primary election off as too trivial to bother about, is doing nothing more or less than announcing that he is willing to take anything that comes indifference along and that he can justify himself in his down in November by pointing out that when the chips are he will be there. an Tuesday every registered voter in the State has enwith obligation, which he personally should discharge ticket the to as thusiasm, using his own best judgment he believes to be the stronger. To pass up the Primary means to pass up one of the em If you do. We are sure Miss. Wright has great privileges of American Citizenship. Louis Bromfield's latest story put The tabulated vote in previous Primary elections in What became of Anna Bolton., Into the library end hope all CaUtah presents rather a gloomy picture of democracy in che Is reading It, for It is a good on low is so far astoundingly action. The total vote cast, full of plotandhumanlty.lt story, both tickets. It will not be long at this rate until we will has a present day European backhave small minorities handling the state, county and city ground that will pleese all return- It has Friday. July 7. 1911 The Cache American, Logan, Cache County, Utah Pape Two Leon r as , DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE for GOVE nil OR nt CHILD RESPECTS THE LAW Cov. Maw flaunts the Supreme Court and efforts of the Legislature and Attorney General to enforce the law. . CHILD IS FORTHRIGHT AND HONEST His promises are fulfilled. He will not use public funds i or equipment In the conduct of a personcl campaigner to build a personal political machine. reas-on"Ou- n't Cache American By F. E- - A. (Continued from page One) among the legacy hunting, policy the playing college presidents ol answer ready. her had She country. President Havens Is above all an educator. He finds our students coming from country high schools, know no pride of family, have no conception of the classics and pos-6woefully little history. So he tries to have them given pride of family In their history classes and get classics in their literary and courses. Such Ideas vocabulary would not be out of place at dear old U. & A. C. end we wish that M President Peterson had spent his life fighting for them as well as for political influence. He would then have gained some reputation as an educator and possibly less tamoucous desuetude In his sixties. We say all this in order that our version of truth may, if not prevail, at least be known In Cache, but we know at any rate It will please Herschell Bullqn mightily. During June we spent a week on Cape Cod, in Dennis, a town once famous for its ship building and now abounding in valiant seventy year olds. The Deputy sheriff for the county, of course a Howes, told us about his uncles career. He went on a fishing scooner as cook .'at the age of nine. Two years later went on a foreign voyage and at PHONE 30 44 TAXI SOUTH MAIN TRADE MARK rf nlf ! with Ite far TWO eniai tM a Imhai an 0 awm m ,1 Malt P ' -t Paata DAM an. OXANO - ar am for STANLEY N. CHILD for Governor July II Vote mm "flu !. mea cmfaon a. iottaaMICHIGAN RAPIDS Paid Political Advertisement by item.. am tm imtwe 2, photo nlarfancirt can have confidence. Vote on the Democratic Ticket err THRIFTY the THESE DEMOCRATIC STATE SENATORS: Ira Huggins, Ogden James A. McMurrin, Logan Lynn S. Richards, Balt Lake Grant Macfarlane, Salt Lake J. Arthur Bailey, Balt Lake June Kendall, Nephl Abel 8. Rich, Brigham City Dexter Farr, Ogden Lynne Ashton, Vernal Alonzo F. Hopkin, Woodruff THE 0LP JUDGE 8AY S. ADAM S. BENNION a for U. S. Senate As a friend of Adam S. Bennion, assure him nomination Tuesday without necessity of a run-ofVote for him so that he can devote his full energy to his fight to hasten the day when the boys will be coming home and to moke sure they will come home to the America for which they are fighting. f. . VOTE TUESDAY FOR THE MAH WHO CAN WIN IN NOVEMBER ADAM S. BENNION Paid Political AdT.rtU.ment J,, Pen. s. MeCuIIotigk. Salt Lai. City DAN. DUNN Insulates Against Cold Heat Fire Sound 1 IU ? (either cent r eiei-f- O promptly receive TWO I I Luxurtene SmMe heentiful. weifht ewlerfememe mi Eaetmta Portrait peper. Sethlecn et er mower beck (narrate. The I hmite eo act am. cqamnted i- pends upon a sound State Government in which for Republican Candidate for U. S. Senate U. S. Rock Wool $1.00 VAlUt GUARANTIES nefatiee Ini lllm M Thrill? 0a M. de- people and Industry to aae how jobs can be added. Utah Industrial expansion VOTE TUESDAY Republican Candidate The men overseas dont mince any words about the way they want to find this country when they come marching home... do they, Judge? "They certainly dont. Herb... and they shouldnt. Theyre doing a masterful job fighting over there to protect our rights and they have good license to expect us to protect theirs back here at home. One thing theyre mighty clear on is their stand tm prohibition. "Their position on that subject was stated very emphatically in a poll taken recently among American service men in England by the British Institute of Public Opinion. When hundreds of men were asked point blank how they would vote on prohibition, 85 of them stated, in unmistakable terms, that they would vote against it. Theres no doubt about it. Herb... the men overseas dont want any action taken on that subject while . TUt theyre away. "And theyre 100 right, Judge, because I know how I felt when I came home after the last war only to learn that we had been over there fighting for so impractical a thing as Prohibition." ittitiumui iponsoiti by Conftttnct of Alcoholic Btrcraic Ir ' d;.'. . SECRET. OPERATtVE40 TM NOT SURE. BUT WE CAN'T TAKE A CHANCE WE'RE ONLY TWO MILES FROM U.S. ROCK WOOL COMPAFIY 118 a stake in this war. As a contractor end builder, he knows ed missionaries tho' the characters Boston Letter to WAR POST He is an overseas veteran of World War I. He has politics are all what "Nick Crooks ton We feel that the majority should rule, so Vote Next would call alkali end certainly not easy to "save". The best char17 was first mate. Such boys had acter by far In the book is the only two or three months schooling wife of the founder of all the and yet they learned navigation and Rltz Hotels. According to her one of the great qualities of the FrenIf you ch is that geography by experience. in the midst of confusAtlantic look on a chart of the ion and revolution and disaster you will find Hppogriph shoal namthey go right on making beautiful ed for one of his boats and dis- clothes and painting pictures and covered by him. He retired only out exquisite furniture. It turning to become an adjuster for Lloyds a sense of proportion and you gives with headquarters at St. Thomas. to steer by. (People are somthing His last voyage was at the age of bora and grow up and make troueighty up the Amazon for a firm. ble end kill each' other off, but the Another valiant septuagenarian effort you put Into a chair or table spent the winter in Flint, Mich., or a piece of music goes on for visiting his ninety year old sister. ever. Immortality is what you When he came back to Dennis he leave behind in aoomplishment, saw his doctor who said to him not Just what becomes of you. Tou CHILD WILL AID THE WAR, AND JOBS. NORTn MAIN ST. Logan, Utah ' f - a. .. J J W |