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Show t r"n U.i THE r r lllL.tJi.J OliilL COLDS COMEiIE Jan. 31. The Quarter' ly conference of the Ilyrum Stake was held in the Third ward meeting h me at Ilyrum on Saturday and Sunday. Jan. 27 and 28. There were on the stand the ITyrum, Stake Presidency, Bishops. High Robert Couneilmen, Patriarch Jos. Baxter, Apostle Richards, W. MeMurrin, the visiting brethren from Salt .Lake City, Four interesting meetings were held, the house being well filled at all meetings, especially on Saturday afternoon and on Sunday, the weather being ideal. A good spirit prevailed. Stake Prest. W. C. Parkinson presided at all meet-"- " Meeting opened on Satur- day morning at 11 oclock by Ilyrum Second ward choir and congregation singing We Thank Thre"Oh""LtodFoT--a- Pltophot-- . r Prayer was offered by Wm, Parley of Wellsville. After singing Pr extr Parkinsorra rose and in a de a brief report of the Ilyrum Stake and the conditions. that bad existed in lire Ilyrum Stake in the year 1911. Mentioned the popu-latiowhich was 5.621, which had increased a little, although a little less than when the Stake was first organized. Also, the tithes and fast offerings had increased the pad year. There had been 47 deaths, mostly of aged people; 187 births, 57 missionaries are out in the different nations of the earth preaching the gospel. Home missionaries are also visiting the homes of the people in the Ilyrum Stake at present. Bishop Gunnell was the next speaker, and made a brief report of'th$WeIIvriIlewd.-Afte- r singing by the choir. Brother Watkins,' a( member of the IEgh Council of Jhe Stake, who has charge oriffehdfnOnlssfonaries. ""reported the work - the --brethren were doing in visiting from house to bouse in the Stake at present and the good that was being done by these brethren. , ' Apostle Richards was the next speaker. Was happy to meet with the Saints at this conference; was pleased with the reports given by the Stake President at this meeting; recommend-- " ed where-i- t was possihlefor the people in the different wards to establish good ..water' systems. After singing an ahthera and benediction by Counselor Wra. H. Maughan, the conference adjourned until 2 p. m. when meeting opened by choir and congregation singing the hymn, Come Listen to a Prophets Voice; prayer by Anthon Anderson ; singing. Counselor A.M. Israel- sen, spoke a short time in refer cnee to the life and missiorfof the Prophet Joseph Smith. J T. Jensen reported the condition rof the High Priests of the Stake The 62ud Quorum of Seventies was next reported by A, B. Wilson,' of the.' Old Folks parties held in the stake. ' Reports were also made by the brethren who preside over differ- ent quorums. Brother McMnrrin spoke very interestingly for some length of time, giving good counsel -- and good advice to the .Seventies. Complemented the Second-wa- rd choir oh their beautiful 'singing it this conference; referred to the mission and life of the Prophet Joseph Smith. After singing an nl wh(V"Tdsci"-nT8denrtentio- n anthem and berediction by Elder Brenehley, the conference' closed until Sunday morning at 10 oclock, when meeting opened by the choir and congregation singPraise To The ing Jhe hymn, Man; prayer by Lloyd Price; singing. After administering the sacrament, and the choltrsinging a beautiful anthem, Counselor W. II. Maughan spoke aJ short time. Referred to the remarks made by the visiting brethren on- Saturday and the words of inspiration that flowed from the lives and the good counsel they gave. Brothers Smith' and Hancock, recently returned missionaries from Great Britain, reported their labors. Apostle Richards spoke for some length of time. lie rejoiced in the spirit that prevailed at the conference; referred to the remarks of our young missionaries who had recently returned from foreign missions; Spoke of the life of our Saviour and Ilis mission upon, the earth. After singing an anthem, benediction w as oflred-by-Patri- a r eh Robcrt Baxter, " Afternoon meeting opened by un stffgm g 1 hr by mn- - Oh ye-tains High; Bro. by prayer Counselor Leishmen; singing, Wt II. Maughan then presented the names of the church officers, general and local,whieh were with the uplifted hand of all present. After the singing of an anthem Elder MeMurrin addressed the Saints for some length of time, praised them for their large attendance at the conference; also praised the choir for their beautiful singing and the music they had given us;"said that musie went a long way iu preaching the gospel; referred to the drunkenness and immorality that is being practiced ii the Stakes of Zion at the present time, A p o st teR i eh a rd erred fa the remarks made by. Elder Me Murrin, and said we should not neglget to preach the pospel to our fellowmen aM'wafnJheRrlg Both before and after-Infectio- us We have Disinfectants of all kinds put up in Diseases. handy packages at a small eo8t, which willenableyou -- to disinfect without danger or iu- -, convenience. Our salesmen" will take pleasure in advising you how to use them. RSTER BROS. DRUG CO. the South Pole With Aid of Dogs and Motor Sled Seeking - -- - Mo su.s-tain- sref flee fromtheiwsinsreneouraged the ward teachers to do duty and visit the homes Saints, also those who did not belong to the Church. Counseled the Saints to read the Scriptures, Prest. Parkinson made a few remarks, and conference dosed by the choir singing an anthem, and benediction by George D. Spence, u The, Young Mens and,' Ladies Mutnals-- nf the$take.met--:-rcom--Iojntl- Sunday evening, where a very interesting program was rendered, the - different- - wards taking part therein. Also Elder MeMurrin spoke on the work of the Mutual Improvement Associations and the good they were accomplishing in the Church ; referred to the subject of marriage. A few remarks were made by Apostle Richards, who aslo spoke on - thesub ject, of marriage jand encouraged the young to not neglect this sacred covenant, as it was a commandment given by our Heavenly Father, Meeting closed after singing an anthem and . benedict ioiTby Sirs. Cutler. The Ilyrum Industrial CluF gave a free dance in the Ilyrum dance pavilion on -- Tuesday' night, which proved to be a grand success; the building being crowded to its utmost capacity. An interesting program was rendered dur ing the evening; songs, speeches, quartets, ete, and a grand march by all the members of the club and thoseT who" wished to join, after which all bad their pictures taken by two traveling proton graphers. Midgley and Jensons Picture Show given on Tuesday night was utmost capacity, crowded to-i- ts there not being standing room in the building, everybody being anxious to see the pictures of Ilyrum buildings, school children, old people, etc., that were shown on the canvas. These pictures were recently taken by two traveling. photographers who hive their gallery west of the Train Crew Arrested. Charles F. Froun, conductor, and M. Thomas and Frank E. Conshafter, hrakemen on an 0. S. L.,freight train, have been arrested and held under the wjiite slave act. Last week four girls Industrial escaped from-iheStat- School by American Pres Photo Association. I that Peary has planted the American e ;aridrtwb"of them,--Clar- a Biddle17 years old, and Leonora Murdock; 17, allege that the railroad men took them all to Pocatello, and later back to Salt Lake, where they were taken to bouses of questionable reputation. The be charged both with transporting girls from Utah to Idaho for immoral purposes, and also from Idaho to Utah with the saaie intent. men-wi- ll J ' the top of the world, Interest to polar exploration centers about the antarctic, where the British expedition under Captain Robert F. Scott, which started from New Zealand to November, 1910, has probably by this time succeeded in its dash for the south pole or has given up the attempt for this season it was the hope of the leader that he and his party would spend Christmas at the pole, for he thought his best chance of reaching ft would be about Lee. ?2, when the sun was highest to the southern hemisphere. For land transport the members of the party depended upon the dogs (which are shown in our illustration as they appeared on the Terra Nova,, in which the explorers Railed), and. In case the dogs should die or bae to le killed for food, upon the motorsled which la shown In the upper pictura - OVV STRIKERS City of flag on AND MUKDEN POUCZTARE MILITIA CLASH . RAIDING MANY HOMES Lawrence, Masses In Controlof ' Mili-'-- their 7 Complete " Authorities. tary of the , Post-offic- e. DISINFECT YOUR HOMES Thursday, February 1, 1912 JC:,.r.NAL, LC3AIT, UTAH .TT.I-T7Z1ZL- . , Lawrence, Mass., Jan. 30. In a clash between 200 striking textile workers and a squad of militia here today, John Ramy, a Syrian, was stabbed in the chest by a bayonet and perhaps fatally wounded. , , - No repetitions of , yesterpajjs riotingoeeur r eff Aod a ywh en the various textile mills opened .their, gates. ' The whole city was under control of the militia and picketing near the mill district was stopped by the soldiers. There appeared to be a slight increase in the number of mill employees uho went to work as compared with yesterday. In the Plains district, when a body of' Syrians attempted to formT a parade "about the - time the mills were opening the militia forced them to disperse at the point of bayonets.- - Several strikers are said to have been hurt. In the vicinity of the Arlington mills' a c rowiT of'"strike sympa- thizers attempted to cripple the electric car - service by cutting trolley wires. On Essex street, the scene of most of yesterdays riotinsr, all was quiet during the hours pre- Tek m gr 'J a n r 30. The police of Mukden are sympathetically-xaid-inthe homes of prominent men suspected of being in sympathy with the revolutionary party, assassinating them and carrying off their wives and daughters, according to a letter from a missionary in that city received here today. Consular reports confirm the aeounts of scores of murders ' ' nightly. ' " The defter missionary continues: Whole armies of mounted robbers are holding up and plundering travelers along the roads leading into Ilarbin. These brigands hold the rich for ransom, which has to be paid either in gems, ammunition or in money. They torture and kill their victims if the ransom is not The forthcoming. lawabiding Chinese of the vicinity are prayintervention of the ings for-thJapanese' in'southern Manchuria and of the Russians in the north, Gen. Chao Erh Fong, the viceroy of the province of Sze Chuan, who was decapitated by the revo 4utionist&at-ChenTn in Decem- g her, was the brother of GenTChao Erh ILun, the viceroy of Manchuria. The latter is evidently determined not to share his brothers fate, and perhaps is also vengeance for his brother. Gen. Chao Erh, Ilsun is the only vigorous opponent' of republicanism among the remaining' viceroys. He has adopted the method of employing hundreds "of ajpoKce force and is the assassinations And other crimes committed by these v. desperate bands. g ofhe -- e ex-acti- ICELAND IN SUMMER.- MANY OF MNAMARAS CHECKBOOKS DESTROYED - When ths Sheen of Sunset Greets th Golden Glow of Sunrioo. Indianapolis, Jan. 29. Many Iceland! The name Itself Is a barrier to tourist travel. But let the tourist cheekbooks, showing to whom J. Ignore prejudice and embark at Copen- J. McNamara pa.id money to carhagen or Leith and be will find a de- ry on dynamiting from December lightful voyage over a smiling summer 1909, to his arrest last April, it sea If he should go fluring June, July was learned today, have been be harflly-fmorofApgnsfc-HBe-wJ. or at leasfjmt J beyonebr than two days out of sight of land the farreaebing rockbound coast of reach of the federal grand jury Scotland or the snow crowned peaks of which is investigating the dynaIceland but the- - journey across wlU mite conspiracy. de-stro- occupyabout..fourrday9.,ForhIs bri-gands- js for iLeQ.AIRappaport, amusement the dolphins' will tumble, the International Association wlU the whales wUl spout, the seal swim and the sea birds will fly, and Bridge and Iron Workers,, Was there will be glorious sunrises and sun- able to tell the jury the where sets, with hardly more than two hours abouts of only a part of the ac- of night intervening; When he finally counts. District Attorney Charles reaches Iceland he will see the snn set W. Miller insisted the" evidence about 11:40 oclock and rise again was in advance of the McNamarshortly after 12 oclock, the golden as arrest. glow of the sunset mingling with the golden glow of the sunrise. People - usually become really All these delights cannot be assured , the mter traveler to lceland. In fact, he will be obliged to keep' his lamp burning until 10:30 to tbn morning and then light it again at 2 oclock to the afternoon. Mrs. W. F. Crafts In :o A coun?:el -- interested in a store first through the stores ads. Every good ad s makes New and renews the interest of old ones. Store-friend- - . 4 ' Christian Herald. Of every one hundred of tovisit days shoppers, setenty-fiv- e VOLCANIC MONUMENT. the stores whose ads have made the strongest purse-appeto Old Balsncing Rock Nose them. al Portland, Or. One of the most remarkable' rocks In the world Is that known as the balancing roek2!whlchstands on the bank of the Willamette river a short distance above the city of Portland, Ore.- - Rising from a broad base is a small column roughly round in shape. Just above this Is a huge mass of rock bearing a tree, on the summit, the total helght-oflrocand columnbelng about k a hundred feet Although a great deal larger and heavier than the pillar on which It stands, the big rock is very accurately balanced. For how many centuries this odd freak has stood not even the wisest scientists are able to determine, but It has evidently been there for a very long period. The entire rock Is of a volcanic nature, and the most singular thing about it Is the faet that the knob and pillar are entirely disjointed from one another. .Wind and weather no doubt are slowly wearing the balancing rock away, but the process is so Imperceptible that, fallings some unforeseen catastrophe, the monument wlU probably endure for many eenturies. Wide World Magazine. , ceding the opening of the mills. The cars "which ordinarily carry the workers to the various textile establishments were .practically deserted. A ' Todav thircrty-waas near un der martial law as it is possible under the Massachusetts statutes. Col. Sweetser has under his command nearly two full regiments of soldiers.' totaling 1.200 men. -- KING AND QUEEN ARRIVE AT GIBRALTAR . Col. Sweetser said the position of the militia was no longer that Making Up an Actor. 30. Gibraltar. Jan. of waiting fqr trouble to develop, King In up an amateur actor making but that the soldiers were looking George and Queen Mary arrived should remember that as little paint as here today on board the steamer possible should be used, for trouble. for, while it is Medina, which is, bringing them easy to disguise by a thick' mask of back to England from India, pigment, the heavier the makeup the NOTICE OF SALE where the king and queen were more difficult It is to convey sensitive emotional variations by the changing crowned emperor and empress. State of Utah. , , , ' The Medinas flag was floating expression of the face. If It Is possiCity of Lewiston. ble to arrange ones own hair in a way folat half mast a& the jvesseL entered suitable I have in my' possession the to the character so much the lowing described animals lawfully the port, on account of the death better, for, though it may In no way in seem more real than a wtg, It will impounded, which,- - if -- not - claim- of the duke of Fife.- yesterday, -ed and taken away, will be sold Egypt. "The "program arranged prove Infinitely more comfortable. actor looks as much like the at public auction to the highest for the reception of the monarchs Whenasthe he part without the aid been has cash bidder, at Estray. Pound in greatly curtailed owing of artificialpossibly can he disguise begins to apply to visitors in 7th on Jhe royal" this city, being Wednesday, the nose paste, paint and powder, obliterfor the kings brother-in-law- . day of February, 1912 at the hour mourning ating one characteristic and accentuat' The . of 1 oclock. Spanish fleet lying ing another, painting the eyebrows out off Algeeiras and the British fleet and redrawing them, . Description of .Animals. changing the colS Gibraltar sighted the or of the skin, putting shadows around Jlayi horse coining years old anehored atshe entered the har- - the --eyes and slnlster llnes running wei ghing about '.6tKIponnds.Xo Medinaas AMoorish delegation will from the nostrils. - He adds a roughly bor: brands visible.'- -r shaped beard or- mustache of crape be Black ware colt coming two presented to the king during hair If the character demands it. his stav'here. years old .Branded on right Harpers Weekly. shoulder 7H combined. WeighWhen you pay a dollar more ing about 700 pounds. If any amount of good Said animals were impounded than you need to pay for some-tbinin saidJityoiTthe'24th daypbf simplybecanse you do not pays, at any time, - read the ads, youre not showing then adequate n Januarv IIYRUM ALLER, very much business- ability do aU the.,titneJ! will ingly well. City Poundkeeper. you think. s ye 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Oesicns Copyrights &a Anrone ..tMlrig A iketi-l- i and ttaacrlptlnn sy enicklr aiwuin our opinion fro whether ao IhTeminn teprobablf patenteble. Coniniunlr. tiona atrictljr confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents aent free. Oldest agency for securing petenta. Patents taken throuch Munn & Co. recelra gpeeiof notice, wit honk chars e. In tbs Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated elr. weekly. Larvest oniatkm of any aoientifio Journal, 1 eruis, fd a year; four months Bold by all nawaricalers. MUNN & C0.361Bro.dw, New York Brandt Omoe. OS St, Washington. D. C. r j -- , ' g. 19-12- . store-advertisi- nstore-advertisi- t - - ! 07 CONCENTRATION - PURPOSE ' has'Tnade'inany a poor man rich when that purpose was to save money. Begin at once is the only way. The doors of the Cache Valley bank are open to you. Your savings will be faithfully cared for,- interest computed quarterly and Added, to your principal. Time OT,dyour own efforts will increase" your " spall capital until the opportunity comes when its use should make you independent. . - Cache Valley Banking Company. LOGAN. UTAH. a |