OCR Text |
Show 00000000000 I i 2 ; may se9d you Chance -a buyer this year- want 00OOO00OO00 Are you content to keep 0 7 0 J 0d,thiawekf 000OOOOO0O0 xxvm. volume LOGAN CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, beautiful EXERCISES f n y.X. Closes cessful Year in Suc- 'r Ap- M 'V ft 1 ) t 4 - i - f j An b. Y. College commencemost beautiment was one of the in its history. ful and impressive the chapel to 1 throng that filled the exercises the doors attended The which were unusually fine. were very good, the papers read addresses rich in advice, and the music good, the, singing of the choir attracting much favorable When t . : 5 V v... it comes to striking T I -- t i i I I ! i,L Vocal Solo (a) Till Death Sweetheart Miss. My (b) Carrie Thomas. Paper. Pathos in Literature Jliss M. MeCarrey. ' Paper, The Growth of the Humanitarian Feeling Parley Peterson.-Quarte- I A V f '' Prayer. E. I i 9 College Choir. umph u please, Personal experience is an eduif it comes fo cator, but sympathy enables one that, to learn from the experiences of not been have my helps May others. And yet there are per- Nay even my sins, " BRIGHAM YOUNG COLLEGE GRADUATES IN COLLEGE COURSE. (a) Alma Mater (b) W. 3. RobinsWouldnt You MAY McCARIlEY. JOSEPH A. GEDDES. t Miss E. D. . Mann, PARLEY E. PETERSON. 'Carrie on, , Thomas and Miss Edna Daniels. Freedom Jos. A. John Roland Paper, made and charity President B. II. Robe were determining Clark, Orville L. ftddes. Lee, Martha Wright Smith, Al- a brief talk, relating some humor- factors in salvation rather than Address. Dr. Fred J. Pack. Albert ous experiences in the life of membership in any sect. David bert Thomas, of Degrees Hon. , Conferring A audience heard Thomas W. President Thomas II. Maughan. Anthem, Praise ye the Lord m College Choir. Bened iet ion. Jones, Banks, Esrom Richards, Scarborough, Evans, George Lil j Jr., Williagi jenquist. DOMESTIC SCIENCE. The Afternoon. Zeeta Curtis, Odessie Lapreal afternoon the features Hendricks, Dagmar L. Mouritsen, was the address of Pres. B. II. Louise Thatcher. Roberts. It was a gem of its kind DOMESTIC ARTS. too. Its central thought was that there is no true education without Sarah G. Darley. the and that its at religion base, AGRICULTURE. duty of every scholar is to locate himself, to learn of his position Orson Uv llyer, Alma Lowell here, for wliat purpose he lives Merrill. and whether he will go, to get ENGLISH. anchored to the rock of truth beDavid S. Cook. fore proceeding along any line of studs GENERAL HIGH SCHOOL. Mormonism is in 'the van of Lavinia Maughan, John Rayeducational development, and the world is hut catching up to it, in mond Maughau. adopting the educational theories KINDERGARTEN NORMAL. and forth put by Brigham Young Ella Irene Vera Cranney, others of our leaders. Harriet E. Johnson. , Mormonism is eternal, and if it Campbell. ever really lays hold upon a man, NURSE TRAINING. it will ultimately save him. He Mildred F. Maughan,' Aurelia may desert it here but in the eterMartineau. nal worlds to come, if not here, it w ill VOCAL MUSIC. assert itself and bring him At the . the program follows Anthcin, All Nature Fills The Earth" College Choir. Wnl Solo Miss Ruby Geddes. Alma Lowell Mer Ruby Geddes. SHORT KINDERGARTEN NORMAL. Edna Baker. fill. THE ALUMNI BANQUET. Duet Prof. Mann - and Linford. The banquet and hall of the Anthem, Song of College Alumni Society, was a brilliant Days College Choir. social function, being attended by a splendid company of guests. THE GRADUATES. The banquet itself was an epicurTS WITH DEGREE, A. B. ean gem. Dr. George Thomas was lay MeCarrey, Parley E.Peter-Josep- h the toastmaster. 'The toasts given follow. A. Geddes. Our Alma Mater D. S. Cook, NORMAL. Piat i faster1 -- Priscilla Allen, Esther V. James B. Jones, Mary Ann. Nielson, Richard Franklin ,sbumway, Kate Viva Cranney, Rut)y Geddes, Esther Kelsey, William R. Nish, Nora Sonne. BUSINESS. Lawrence Bailey, Asa Rullen , - very large Brigham 'Tgung.' The ball was an entire success. the sermon, and. the closest atten- tion was given the speaker. rendered several The choir REV. GOSHENS SER- beautiful selections during the services. President J. E. Cardon offered MON. the opening prayer and the beneThe baccalaureate sermon at diction was pronounced by Rev. the A. C., preached by Rev. Gosh- Day. en, was one of the finest things of its kind ever heard in Logan. It Well was an eloquent, finished effort, broad as the universe in You. and replete with the most beautiful sentiment. Many Mr. George Daines, the well saw in the sermon a tribute to President W. J. Kerr, for the known Hyde Park pedagogue was chief burden of the eloquent di n town yesterday, wearing a vines talk was the glorification smile the brightness of which of the man who thinks for him- would make one sneeze, and a self, and having reached a con- look of pride that would squelch scientious conclusion, has the most anyone. George has been courage to put into effect its pur- doing things and his pride and ' - " happiness are perhaps justifiable. poses. Mr. Goshen took his text from Something over three years ago the first verse of the 18th chapter his wife presented him with twin of St. John, where in speaking of boys, and a day or two ago she Jesus, it says he went forth with became the mother of a fine pair of girls, to the utter demoralizahis disciples over the brook into tion of George, who insists that where was a garden the which he entered, and his he is now in a class by himself, Christ, he said, knew ami will break the worlds record disciples. that when He stepped across that while he is yet young. He is brook, abuse, calumny and death thinking of having a rechristenawaited Him, while if He recant- ing for the two boys, as he wants ed and went back to the world it to name one of them Pete and the meant ease and worldly praise other Repeat, while the girls will for Him, but He, without hesita- be named Kate and Duplicate. tion chose the right, and left an example for the ages to come. The individual there At To every comes a time when he stands by College. the brook .Cedron, and must The course. choose his lifes deThe regular commencement power to choose the right, in of the marks the exercises fiance of all adversity, Agricultural Conot llege, occurs today, beginning at truly great man. .Life was another and 10 a. m. State Supt of Public InChrist for one thing The me. and struction A. C. Nelson will deliver thing for you speaker inveighed against the the address1' to the graduates. The Alumni banquet and ball sentiment which is so narrow as to exclude any human being from are to be held this evening. The Gods love and, mercy. Gods banquet will begin at 6 oclock inlove and, kindness, he believed to stead of at 6:30, as originally anbe as wide as the universe, atfd nounced, and the ball will com-q that truthfulness, honestv, love. 1 . back to (lod. The rest of Er-lcbso- n, hinderances. sons who pray, Banish sorrow If I saved my body from the from the earth. God pity the flames, earth should the capacity or intViat once I burned my clination for sorrow be banished. Because hand; Then, jndeed, let all the cities fall Or kept myself from a greater sin as did Sodom and Gomorrah, for By doing a less you will un- righteousness is no more. ; derstand; Among those who advise us to It was belter I suffered a little read, read good books, are those who limit good books to cheerful pain. Better I sinned for a little, time; books. A child, they say, has If the smarting warned me back enough sorrow of its own. A mothfrom death ; er is not worthy of the name who And the sting of sin withheld makes her child unhappy. Even from crime. if true, does the reading of the So let my past stand, just as it pathetic inake him unhappy! Since benevolent actions are the stands, as I And let know, may result of pity, there is more likely to' be delight accompanying the old; grow life-foand I am what I am, my reading of the pathetic story. Real me pathos is the greatest source of i not had I or it Is best humanitarian impulses and binds been, hold. v men together by a sense of univer- PIIEBE CARY. sal brotherhood. Is the child less A happy because of the development This is the conclusion of a wo- in his life of tenderness and comman who has met life, met life passion! when you read to him and with'it met at least her share Fields poem, Little Boy Blue, of sorrow and disappointment, do ntt his eyes reflect a tender and yet she can say light! It was better I suffered a little "And as he was dreaming an pain, Better I sinned for a little time ; angels song; If the smarting warned me back Awakened our Little Boy Blue; Oh the years are many, the years from death, are long;. And the' sting of sin withheld from crime. But the little toy friends are . t W, Dissertation Written For I said, if I might go back again and cringe from Insult and asperTo the very hour and place of sion; to see the maniac in hiB my birth ; ravings, or the idiot with his have life whatever I blank expression and idiotic grin; Might my to see all these things brings sorchose; And live in any part of the row to the heart, but with it earth ; a prayer to God for his compasPut perfect sunshine into my sky, sion and protection. It is, as MoulBanish the shadow of soriow ton says, the pathos that unlocks and doubt; the sympathy of the spectator and Have all my happiness mutliplied; sheds a beauty over suffering itAnd all of my sufferings sfriek self. Even in the case of the death ' en out; , , of a little child, the experience is Yes, I said, if a miracle such as not meaningless. .There is a certhiB, tain beauty as we contemplate Could he wrought for me at my the child life consummated in its own simplicity, before the weight bidding, still I would choose to have my past of coming maturity has effected a as it is, single ligament of childhoods - And let at future will, cbme own special grace. Nemesis has my past is mine and I take it all; no application, but there is room Its weakness its folly, if you for pathos. I v 1 LITERATURE I ty!, t the popular taste in music. Prof. Robinsons singers excel. The program rendered at the morning meeting follows: Anthem, With songs of Tri- IN Crimson by Miss May McCarry lTlie notice. 0 00000000000 Appreciative I propriate Style - 0 rr PATHOS V ' those in the ads! NUMBER 111 -- - 0 on missing opportunities- - 1907. f g, 0 0 07. A Strong College DepartA. E. Bowen. ment, Roy Our New Members. Lindsay. Mrs. E. D. Mann rendered a violin solo, and Mr. M. J. Ballard -- Pretty Thank Ce-dro- n, Ty Agricultural n f- sansr. r . true. She had suffered' and learned Ay, faithful to Little Boy Blue the value of sorrow to cleanse they stand. and purify the soul. As the rain Each in the same old place, with its mournful drizzle leaves Awaiting .the touch of a little the world brighter and purer, so hand, the pathos of our lives if met by And the smile of a little face. a sturdy will, leaves a tenderness, a nobleness, in our characters. Through suffering alonYcan courage, endurance, and devotion be acquired. Pathos touches the heart strings and makes hem more responsive to all the nobler emotions. When unadulterated by self-pitor revenge it is one of the special heritages of God to man. An animal may sense the grosser bodily pains, but man alone is capable of experiencing the repentant sorrow of the soul. ; Of even greater benefit is that sympathetic pathos brought into our lives because of the innocent suffering, of others. It touches our tenderest emotions without. arousTo see the wife of a ing self-pitdrunkard struggling op with loving devotion against the bonds of suffering, disgrace, and despair; y y. Fa F V. A Crt fA 1 fr t'-- Are there no signs of th$ firm resolve and simple faith of Chad after fa child reads of the little waif, who, as he puts the final touches upon the newly-mad- e graves of all the friends he had on earth, excepting Jack, kneels, before he leaves the home he lov,es and prpys : God, I haint nuthin but a boy but I got to ack like a man now. , I dont believe you keer much and seems like I bring everybody bad luck; and Im goin to live up hyeh jn the mountains just as long as I can. I dont want you to think Im cause I haint. Only hit does seem sort o curious' that youd let me he down hyeh with me a keering for nobody and nobody' keerin for me. But thy ways :r it. 7 r , , . com-plaini- , y n, |