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Show o0aoooooooo 1 f X-- r - year awant buveMhis . you may "Chance - wect; ad. this ! . 0-A- O J - OO0oeo xxvni. VOLUME 0 LOGAN CITY, UTAH, SAI BED AY, MAY 0 0OOOOOO0O content to you 0 0 0 00 keep on missing opportunities those in the adst re -- 0000O00O0 18, 1907. NUMBER 107. tHegraduatinq EXERCISES ARE WHOOPING THINGS UP - N Schools Turn Out City Another Batch of Committees Intend Graduates. Showing Everybody a Royal Time on the 22nd. r. more graduates of were given the Logan their certificates last night. The held in the closing exercises were atttabernacle and as usual were ended by a great throng. The and the list of program rendered below: graduates are given PART L Thirty one schools Ruby Wadman, FloydAdams, Edward Barrett, Guy .Benson, David Blanchard, Charles Goodwin, Oliver. Hanson, Wilford Hanson, Vaughn Haws, George Johnson, Albert Jones, Amos Jones, Clair Jones, Ward McAlister, Palmer, Foster Parry, James Thomas, Ford Yates. Er-ro- ll FOUR BIG NATIONS MAY BE EMBROILED. Rev. Martin Thom- Invocation as. Class. ting Maori King 8 Officers Accused of Kidnapping Chinese Coolies. Ford Yates. Salutatory Recitation' Wynona Barber. uet Agnes Tarbet and PART II. Violin Solo-Luc- itart, '06. ile . Chorus Class Address to al Palmer. Valedietory-r-Erro- ll Graduates Hon. Frank K. Nebeker. of Certificates McLaughlin. Orson Smith. Benediction Graduates. Wynona Barber, Edna Benson, Presentation Pres. W. AV. Evans, Kldora Phyllis Eurilla Johnson, Green-halg- h, Ethel Johnson, Agnes Machin, Armenia Maughan, Adeline McCausland, Nelson, Salome Smith, Speiermann, Agnes Tar- - Mamie Marietta MANY PEOPLE out to win, the beautiful prizes offered by the Auditorium management for the best skaters and best sustained characters at the skate carnival 20th. And Monday night. May there will be a great many people go out to see who gets them. A GREAT Will be THE PUBLIC. TO A general extended to invitation is hereby everybody to join Lo- its big celebration on May An elaborate program is gan in 22, 07. prepared, business will be nspended. and the day. given up being to sports. E. W. ROBINSON, J. BALLARD, ISAAC SMITH, II. G. IIAYBALL, Committee on Invitation. M. Training School Exercises. The closing exercises of the Training Schrool will be held of the B. .Y Col-ks- e on Thursday and Friday evenings, in May 'he college chapel. On Thursday evening the students will render 23-2- 4, charming little The Enchanted Wood. operetta, Un Friday evening the closing jrercises proper will be held, end M. J. Ballard of the College Alumni will deliver the address 10 graduates. Admission is free upon both and the public is cordial- ' 7 invited to attend. evenings : With Burglary. Judge Diehls court, Salt e, an aged man named Frank x was given a preliminary ,earmg on the charge of burglary Charged Tu the second degree. It was al-- d that he entered a room in e Montana rooming house and in the act of picking the fts of a man who was sleep-jl- n the place when arrested. ge Diehl ordered the man held nswer to the district court default of $400 bonds he 111 en j in custody by the San Diego, Cal., May 16. As a result of the charges 'made by Chinese Consul-GenerSun Sue San of Pee, Francisco, it is possible that international complications may follow involving China and the England, Russia, United States. The Chinese Ministers in Washington and Mexico City have been notified. The thousand Chinese on board the British steamer Maori King, which rushed into San Diego harbor Tuesday morning for help from the Government authorities to quell mutiny and riots, declare that they were kidnapped by Capt. W. J. Duncan, First Officer T. Vernon and a Chinese contractor named Lee Sun Sai from Vladivostok April 12. Ah Quinn, a millionaire merchant of this city, the Chinese Consul Lun Iling charges that the coolies were deliberately shanghaied and that they were to have been left at Hongkong, but that Capt. Duncan and Lee Sun Sai are in the employ of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, whict has a gang of 3,000 coolies now working across the- - line near Guaymas, Mex., and furnish contract labor. It is asserted the railroad pays the contractor fifty cents a head a day and that the Chinese are not paid at all and are driven like slaves. Conditions are revolting. Consul-GenerSun Sue Pee sher- - al Chinese charges that twenty-fiv- e thrown and to death shot were overboard on tbe high seas by the English officers and that frightful brutality was practised throughout the voyage. 7 more Chinese died yesterday as a result of the terrible mutiny and race war between them and 200 Russians, and the ship surgeon. Dr. Benzangre, a Russian, said that he expected ten mor to die at any time. Commissioner United . States North, of San Francisco, ordered inspectors 'here to investigate; but Duncan pulled up anchor at 5 oclock and left for Guaymas, defying United States inspectors and violating quarantine. Allen Hutch British inson is accused by the Chinese Consul of insulting them and evade warning Capt. Duncan to investigation by fleeing from the harbor. naval reserves un Twenty-five- , der Lieut. Donald Stewart are on board the Maori King. , Vice-Cons- ul ! MARVIN HUGHITT, RAILROAD PRESIDENT WHO St. Johns On Sunday morning there will of the Holy Communion at eleven oclock. Evenoclock ing Prayer will be at eight be a celebration and the Sunday School at ten.. Friends are cordially invited to ' be present. WAS ONCE A TELEGRAPHER. mi - A:no!ij the successful railroad presidents of the United States who do not get into the limelight which flickers from Wall street. la Marvin Ilughitt, head of the Chicago and Northwestern. Mr. Ilughitt has been president of that Important road for tweuty years. lie Is Just now In the public eye because he has visited ashlngton and had a talk with President Roosevelt on railroad matters. Mr. Ilughitt started as a telegrapher and gradually climbed to the top. II U a native of New York state, but has lived In (.Ut i.gj iuce 185U XV il. Latest News From Lewiston The First Northers got busy with a brush and bucket of paint on Thursday evening and after they got through their side of the town looked a good deal like they will after the ball game very blue. You may he interested in knowing too that the Center St. colors are crimson and white, and those of First North blue and white. The committee is endeavoring made. John R. Telford has just to match County Commissioner purchased the residence property of J. P. Jones for the sum of SUPPOSED PAUPER $1,600. A RICH WOMAN The schools close on the 31st, and a program will he given on Chicago, May 16. A dispatch the 29th to which the public is t6 the Tribune from St. Louis, invited. Mo., says : Mrs. Pope is very ill. The identify of a woman of 29 WILL DEMOCRAT years, who has been in the city PLUCK THE PLUM hospital here for several weeks regirtered as a pauper, has been established. She is i Mrs. Rose Cleveland, O., May 15. The rescinding of the call for the Re- Sheridan ofMontreal, Canada, and instead of being destitute has publican love feast at Columbus and the consequent failure of the money in the bank, is heir to an Taft and Foraker factions to get estate said to be worth $3,000,000 in England, is herself said ta.be together, has greatly encouraged Democratic leaders In Ohio. They of aristocratic blood, Mrs. Sheridan arrived in St. are of the opinion that they now several weeks ago, en route Louis electhave an excellent chance of from Hot Springs, Ark., to Mill-ering Senator Foraker s successor, Mass. She had been ill of of and cite the existing make-u- p brain fever. At the Union depot the legislature as proof. here. The present Ohio house consists she fainted, became delirious, and was sent to tbe hospital. It is the news that Ilayball ,,f s:xty-tw- o Republicans, When she regained consicous-nes- s to start up seven Democrats and two Brothers are intending she told of her sister, her & big mercantile business In their The senate has eighteen building, which is vacant at pres- Republicans, eighteen Democrats child and nurse, and claimed they ent. We all welcome them here. and. one independent, who is wrere at the depot.' The hospital attaches thought her remarks reEvery new business helps the classed as a Democrat. This gives ' ' the Republicans eighty votes, sulted from a diseased mind. town grow. Mrs. Sheridan will start for for the Property is on the move here against, seventy-eigh- t .Millery, Mass., tomorrow- She is almost every day some deal is Democrats and independents. The next senator will be elected the granddaughter of Sir AlexanBall of London, who PEACE MEETING. by the legislature chosen at the der John there are so died several years ago, leaving a next election,-anis one in A Peace meeting will be held many districts in which the vote large estate, of which she at 2 is close that it may safely be said of the heirs. the Tabernacle is in- that the Democrats have at least p. m., to which the public Hyrum Stake Conferences vited. Prof. Thatcher will have as fair a prospect of overcoming W)ard conferences of the Ily charge of the musical numbers, the present Republican lead as the the it. of slake for 1907 have been arhave rum increasing which will be rendered by Republicans Five of the present Republican ranged as follows: choir. In addition to this the renderbe will May 19 College, Mendon and representatives were ele'eted by following program ed : pluralities of less than 100. One Millville. a margin of three votes only ; had May 26 Mt. Sterling andPara-dise- . "peace poem, Julia Nibley. Prof. one was elected by four votes and Speech for the occasion one by twelve votes. The man elecJune 9 Hyrum First, Second Pick. Peace poem Esther Erickson, ted .by three voted tor himself and Third wards. June 16 Avon. jand he has three sons who voted for their father." June 30 Wellsville. LAND FOR SALE Democrats had Sessions will he held at 2 p. m. Three pluraliSealed bids will he received by of less than 100. In the sen- and 8 p. m. Record meeting at Wm. Greaves, 506 W 2 S. up to 12 ties the ate the Republicans have one mem 9 a. m. oclock noon May 22nd for chosen was by a pluraof land in her who Hyrum Stake Presidency. 4 purchase- of 57 acres 1 while the smallest of 20 fifty, lity West Field. Land is in two senDemocratic for LEKIS MAYOR HURT any 5 acre tracts. plurality acre, one 12 and one was twenty-twacator must Check for 10 per cent Thomas Webb, Mayor of Lehi, The Democratic leaders declare company bid. For particulars apthat any election giving plurali- was accidentally thrown in front ply to the undersigned. ties of 100 or less is anybodys of a heavily-loade- d wagon in Wm. GREAVES, fight when the next election Strawberry valley, and had. hla Logan, Utah. comes around legs badly laecrated. May 18, 07. 15. Our LEWISTON, May ward hed its conference last Sunday. All the organizations were reported as being in good condition, especially the Relief Society which had on hand 1,000 bushels of wheat, about $500 in mdse, and over $1,700 worth of property. This society is doing excellent work, having recently papered, carpeted, and curtained their building. The Wheeler School district was cut off from the Lewiston ward last Sunday, and H. II. Danieisen was chosen bishop. He is to select his own counselors. The Industrial Club met Tues- day night and discussed matters pertaining to the welfare of the town. Among the topics, were? water system, drainage, and railroad. We have the railroad company interested in us and have been surveying a line through . day.. The Riddle. Mr. George Riddle, brought here largely through the enterprise of Mr. N. R. Moore, furnished an hour and a half.of first class entertainment to a large audience at the B. Y. C. on Wednesday evening. The gentleman is a great reader. He is not possessed of the striking presence with which Mr. Clark charms one, but as a reader is probably fully equal to the latter. He has a splendid voice, flexible, smooth and under perfect control." His reading of Lucretzia .Borgia occupied the greater part of the evening. It was a finished yet natural effort and elicited warm approval. In closing he read a selection from Kate Douglas Wiggin, and gave a splendid illustration of perfect articulation in , reciting one of Southeys poems. 1 Burglary In Ogden. - In order to break into the Proudfit Co.'s store in Ogden, burglars first forced an entrance into an adjacent blacksmiths shop and obtained tools. Returning, they bfoke out a pane of glass, lowered a sash and sawed inch through a .three-quartsteel bar. Once inside the store they stole two hundred knives thirty razors and other' goods, amounting in the aggregate to er $200. : . ' j y, j ts. ROBBED THE MAILS Henry II. Miller was arrested by Sheriff Pace of Emery county and taken to Salt Lake, where he was taken before U. S. Commissioner Charles Baldwin, who committed him Ho jail in default of $1,000 bond, the charge being that at various and sundry times while in the employ of the R. G. W. Ry. Co. at Green River, he had robbed the mails thrown off at that station. It is claimed he has made confession of his guilt. HEROIC MOTERMAN. d j - - Church. Knowles and Jake Johnson for a 50 yard foot race. If it is successful this event will be boomed as one of the BIG things of the - z Orchestra. Cborus-Gradua- Will it be a success! Will it! Well I wonder! The committees are still reaching out for attractions for the big day and are corralling them so rapidly that it is certain there will not be a dull moment on the 22nd. That walking match promises to attract lots of attention. Oscar- Bjorkman, it is said has decided to enter this contest. He reached this decision after the appearance of a new daughter at his home. He says the walking match will put him in training for his nightly promen ade with the baby. bet," o. Chicago, Man 16. John Maloney, motorman on a westbound Chicago & Oak Park elevated train, proved himself a hero last night when, with his clothing4 a mass of flames, he remained at his post after the circuit breaker on the motor car set fire to the coach. nis pluck averted a possible panic. lie was severely burned and may not survive. Maloney escaped from the burning car by climbing out of a window to the front platform where the flames on his garments were extinguished by two men who wrapped him in an overcoat and rolled him on the platform. lie was removed to St. Anns hospital. The train at the time was filled with passengers. More than 50 women and girls, passengers in the rear cars, were unaware of their danger until they arrived at d avenue station. the Fifty-secon- |