OCR Text |
Show J M A Vote For The Winners Means a Yots for Wilson and Marshall. VOLUME XXXIV. s iiiuiw silver-heade- - - AW1IYMI bive entertain ment: Tues-day-eveni- rf 1 Om---ah- P , -- -- ' ve -- Y 1- - oh - the Winning Your Vote For r mmm this is man golden THE MAGDALENE VERSUS THE LIBERTINE By James A. Lelshman. i Today is Registration Day, and if you desire to vote at the coming election, land are wise, , you will see that your name is on the list before nightfall. If you voted at the last election it wilj not be necessary for you to ' register of course, but still it is always a safe thing to do to see that your name is on the list. The'connty commissioners have made some changes in the list of registrars since the appointments were made and the revised list is given Jbelow ; Logan 1 Ellen Smith. Logan 2 Mrs. M. J. Burnham Logan 3 D, K. Hoopes Logan 4 Caroline Watterson Logan 5 Cyrus Jones 'Logan 6 Charles Peterson, Logan 7- Logan 8 n. J, Nelson Iogan 9 Mary II. Johnson Logan 10 Ann McCullock Korth Logan Sadie H. Nyman Hyde Park Reuben Perkes Smithfield 1 Yarda Gustave-so- n AGE IS AT I .The chronicles of ages. tell the tale IIow man at first in beatific mood day NUMBER 18. ' Disported oer fair Edens primal grail And by his "Maker reckoned very good, - ADDRESS BY J. B. CASE BEFORE NATIONAL - IRRI- - t 2 His consort though the weaker vessel stood On equal terms with claims divinely given, That man must not abuse nor yet intrude Nor rob her of the choicest gift of heaven. ' GATION CONGRESS , The Salt Lake City,' Oct. next decade will be thj farmers golden age, was the prediction of J, B. Case of Abilene, Kansas in his address today before the National Irrigation Congress.Mr, Case is of the Con- gress and former president of the In holy wedlock,! surely man must guard Her tenderly and make her path delight. His store and basket share, and, interlard With due esteem and make her burdens light. Vice-Preside- 4 . "Alasfdepravity-hashrought"distraugh- Trans-Mississip- pi n ' nt Commercial , conr gress and has for rorty years been identified with the farming and tears; business life of 'he Middle West, No greater wrong than that of evil wrought all lie outlined the present condition these years. And heaped upon the woman . of the yiestern farmer and saidi 5 ,The closing half ot the 19th When woman falls by mans seductive wiles, witnessed in this cmntry the as century thereafter known Shes Magdalene; the worlds greatest expansion of Then ndirnn pointsJlJ..pQi1iani-SCnrnfulSPlil&- . gtTruilufal " tTritory.' StCilJliy" While oft oblivious oFthF 6 ' population moved toward the set. ting sun and foot by iou1, the Thou shalt not, sounded from bold Sinais wilderness was conquered. The crest American farmer, unwillpioneer Was meant for man as well as Magdalene; 25 an acre for to $1 even pay ing should not invest, "'he poison in her cup his land, exerted his political inBut larger quotient given the Libertine. fluence and under the homestead 7 . Smithfield 2 Martha Black-hurs- t. s act land was made free. The shame of harlotry in bitter shapes : - Then came the era of railroad Richmond 1 W. K. Burnham Issharpened in the soul if Magdalene . The opportunity extension. to When conscious that her paramour escapes Richmond 2 George O. "Webb rail and obtain a emigrate by The contumely due the Libertine Coveville J. C. Allen fof nothing coaxed farmers farm Mt. Home John I. Biggs ,8 farther into the West. At the end False sentiment has built a gilded throne Lewiston Christen Jacobsen of the Civil War hundreds of out of a made And Magdalene culpurit Wheeler; Mrs. H. C. Kent' thousands of nen who had been to efforts atone her earnest Despite Stephensen Mrs. T. S. Karren taught to take care of themselves For sin induced by a vile Libertine Cornish A. J. Done away from homewere Released 9 ; --..Thenton , JamesBriggs and they joined the caravans mov Stem justice wont approve of injuriesldoneT Newton John Larsen ing toward the open plain. In Nor will it spare or screen the Libertine. Clarkston Mrs. Jos. Godfrey Iowa the number of farms doubl, Petersboro 1 James CunningMercy should hover round the injured one, ed between I860 and 1870. That one, the sinned against, the Magdalene. ham j In the next decade the rush of ' 10 Petersboro 2 W. n. Griffin Jr. was toward the prairies settlers ' No captious logic warrants an excuse, , , Benson Mrs. II. W. Ballard Kansas and Nebraska, a rich of, In either of them in their fallen state?, Riverside Mrs. Maggie Reese . ' domain occupied by Indians and But rated as their several powers conduce Mendon Mrs. Wm. I. Sorenbuffalo. In ten years d the C In like proportion man Jrshould bear the weight sen. of this great territaory was Wellsville 1 Brigham Maughan J cut up into farms. During this perThe Master drew the line and set the pace. Wellsyille 2 James R. Cooper iod the addition tp the farm area Of retribution for a penal sin, College Whiter Jensen I of the United States was equal Forgivenness followed sorrow with embrace, Hyrum 2 Mads Rasmussen of to France. the entire acreage And Mercy white winged spared the Magdalene. Ilyrpm 1 Jos, C. Anlerson 1880 to 18!K) the stream From 12 Paradise Jos Norris of, settlers flowed out into the 1 Avon-M- rs. a from Full judgment V, C. Davis psychic point of view, . Northwest, the great Red River As man has greater powers in this estate, Milliville Estella Johnson the marvelous hard wheat Valley, The greater sinner is between the two,-AnProvidence Josephine Jensen of the Dakota, and on country calls for condemnation adequate. Mt. Sterling John Redford. the across range to the Pacific ' IB ' Northwest. With the settlement The tyranny of ages left a taint, of Oklahoma the principal wave FOLKS That smirched the record of the Libertine, of settlement ran toward the far In which is found slight succor of complaint, ' north. , Of innocence betrayed and hence the Magdalene. -- The dead line of4he high :; 14. WILLJNTEBTAIN was border that plains. Beyond The last analysis of things will show , new system of farma necessary IIow much mankind have wandered from the line Smithfield, Oct 7. Mayor Men ing in order that the tiller of the Of truth and virtue, bringing grief and woe, rill and aids are making preparasoil might make a living. Since . And Mercy after penance is benighn, tions for the advent 6f the street then, though additions to the to15 car into onr city." More elaborate farm area 'have shown great tal Who then shall dare to quench the smoking preparations , would have been advancement the cultivated acrev flax, made had we known definitely . . age has increased slowlv, Take heed the measure you would thus impart, when the work could have teen Marvelous Expansion of Farms. " The same shall be returned, a weighty tax. ' finished. 'In the twenty years following And peradventure change your calloused hear! f Today the time of completion 1870 the wild land turned into wag set as Thrrsdiy so our Mayor d farms was greater than the immediately set to work to make area of Germany. Great the necessary arrangements. On Britain, Belgium, - and Denmark. fatally unless the heart muscles couragement and handed her a This Thursday evening at 7 p. m, a expansion was made possible greenback. will be carried out, refresh- are givei absolute rest. our railroads, new machinery, The woman was Mrs. Ellen by The vice president returned to ments will be served and the evennew of Farming and processes ing" wilFconelude with a 'dance. hiirhome here yesterday from a Hunter. She said she was about of the pioneer. Never Committees on reception, finance, month 8 stay at Grove Beach, to sail with her children for before was such an agricultural . refreshments, program have been Conn. No callers have been per- Scotland. annexed the to Worlds empire x named and all will woru with a mitted to see him, except Elibu in so short a period. market in who LOWERED INTO town arrived WELL, yesterzeal and make "the day one f the Root, The farther West.all that great SAVES MOTHER CHILD a for conference. short day for our citv. days inltermountain region where naI have ordered him to have noovercome has been ture by the inElsinore, Utah. Oct. 4. Tied Mr and Mrs. James Forster thing to do with politics or politi and it with a rope and lowered into a genuity of man, has grown up are rejoiefng over the arrival of cians. said Dr. Peck, feet deep, Mrs. since 1890. Orange groves in the will be a long time before he is well thirty-fiv- e affine baby, Southwest, cattle ranches in the 1 Thomas Shaw, a few days able to take up active work. ago, semiarid regions and farm lands .JMrs.- - Ivan Neilson is, reported think he will gradually, improve, rescued her baby girl of ten under irrigation have been given but it will be a slow, process. months from drowning. The moth- to ' ,. as bein quite ill. our agricultural possessions. ' ' er had been badly bruised and lost i, areaconu-binecultivated But its all a few teeth In a Runaway, but the Mrs. Sylvister Low is visiting COL. ROOSEVELT GIVES less than ten per cent is MONEY TO WIDOW child was not injured. her sistepat Spanish Fork." more than farm lands in Kansas Mr. and Mrs. Shaw were driv. irrigation ,and dry 'New .York, ct, 5. Col. Theo- ing into their yard. The .horse alone. Though have made much great Bishop Winn and wife. Bishop farming Miles, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester dore Roosevelt arrived here at took fright at a herd of pigs, headway in these eleven states 7 :30, a. m. from W ashington, reared and jerked the buggy and Low, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ran-daland territories the acreage of ache testified yesterday be- then ran away. Father and mowhere tilled soil is small in comMary Griffith, Mae Cantwell, fore the senate investigating com- ther were hurled out, the baby tually with the Richard Roskelley, Maggie mighty Mississparison all took advantage of the mittee regarding contributions to falling from her arms into the ippi valley. campaign fund of well, which contained fifteen feet Farms Grow Elowly, conference rates and visited Salt the Republican ' 1904. of water. Lake the past week. Future additions will be made to Col. Roosevelt Oblivious to her injuries, Mrs. to the farm intended "A territory of the Unispend a short time at his editorial Shaw ran to the well and saw the ted States but the period of noSUFFERS FROM office, and leave at noon for Oys- child struggling in the water. Her table expansion has passed. In the HEART TROUBLE ter , husband quickly looped a rope eastern Bay. states the farm acreage While passing through the Pen- around her waist and she descend- is declining; in the great Utica, N. Y., Oct. 5 nsylvania railroad station to his ed rapidly. The little one was Sh ermairprtbecam cknowfl a u to m obil e C61ZE oo sev el tsa w"a tran gle T'wl eio ft e :c ati gh f maximum.- - In1850l4he number of is ill acand has of her. woman carrying a bab? and seriously today, farms in this country was one and been forbidden to take any part companied by five other children, The mother was drawn up and a one-hamillion; now it is six in the political campaign.. He is all under 10 years old. ne stop-pe- physician summoned . The baby and million. In 1850 to question her and when he did not require his attention. Her there was a farm for suffering from an affection of the every sixheart which, according to his phy- learned that she was a widow and head was scratched, hut that was teen persons; tKlre is one today sician. Dr. E. n. Peck, may de- the sole support of her. six small all. Mrs. Shaw has fully recover- ( Continued on Page Six) velop arute dilation and result children he gave her a word of en ed. Rehe?t-MT-Snat- And filled the earth well nigh with blood and te 1 . - -- a; . - , one-thir- U & k , - SHED com-bine- POLICE THINK THEY The Hyrum steam thresher pull' HAVE BOLD BURGLAR ed into our city from Mt. Sterling on Friday last, where they have Salt Lake, Oct. 7. A $200 unset been busy for a long time. They -- diamond report - threshing -- 25.000 bushels dropped W. C- - Zeeses hand at the police per week. No doubt they will be station yesterday, Zeese was delayed a few days on account of searching a man thought to be W. the recent storm, also some' reM. Ross, alias Moore, former con- pairs are to he made on the mavict, accused of several recent bur- chine. glaries. The police think that this A nice program was rendered arrest will result in the disposing of several important theft cases. bythe Primary Association in the The diamond was in the sweat-han- d three wards of Hyrum last SunIts day evening Sept. 30, consisting of the prisoners hai. was entirely unexpect- of songs, speeches.recitations mus discovery ed. Only the man under arrest icetcf The people of the wards turned out in great numbers to was unmoved. ' Patrolman H. A. Olsen caught hear them. , hold of the 'man in front of the Another of our young men, NorLiberty theater in State street and man Salverseni recently received him to police headquarters. took ne will Olsen said he' recognized his pris- a letter from Box B. oner as Ross. Olsen was a, guard leave for a mission to Europe in at the penitentiary three years the near future. Success to him. while Ross was serving ten years. CAR KILLS EUREKA MINER. - Ross is said to hdte been imprisoned five years in Denver, too. , Salt Lake, Oct. 7. Steve War. The prisoners room was search- - varvas. a miner at Eureka, was in- ed after the arrest. .The police stantly killed Saturday while at ' say they found a $200 diamond work. He was down at the 200-folevel of the mine when he ring belonging to C. Cramer, 210 South Third East street,-ana looked up the shaft as the car decold Watch and fob belonging to scended. Before he could draw 4 D. R. Wilson, city court clerk, back the bottom of the cage :wbatqst;b is jewejry about" three struck" him. fra during- - hrrsknll weeks ago at. the same address, Death was instantaneous. where a burglar compelled one of The body was brought to Salt the occupants to cover his head Lake yesterday. Funeral services in bed and locked him in the will be held at 9 oclock this roomroom, "It was also said property ing in the loeal Grpek church. belonging to Major Richard W. Yarvarvas was 25 years of age Young, 205 First avenue," was and unmarried. s into-Detecti- To Be LOGAN CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1912. found in the rearof 520. East Fourth South street by E. J. Vincent. Thisrintluded a d umbrella, an overcoat, a valuGIVEN A BIG able Caesar Augustus coin, several pieces of silverware which J were part of the major W and Mrs. Youngs wedding presents, A watch belonging fo'W. II. Bintz Gover- was also in the polices collection 5, Oct. Neb., Lincoln, Detective George Cleveland and nor Wilsons reception in Lincoln en- Bert- Seager occupied almost the of in point surpased tonight thusiasm Anything he has yet ex- whole of Saturday night looking perienced in the campaign. Wil- for Ross. Efforts fpr further liam Jennings Bryan, who met the identification will be made, presidential candidate at the train, said: (IWb could not ask 11. 1. you to make a complete tour of Nebraska, so we have brought Nebraska to you., Bryan and his friends had actually fulfilled this declaration by bringing ten special trains filled with voterFfronTy arionrartrot the state. The population of LinIlyrum, Oct. 7. The young coln is 60.0C0, but it is no stretch Mens" Mutual Improvement Asof the truth to say that fully that sociation of Ilyrum Second ward number ol persons were in the ghve their sociable on Tuesday streets of Lincoln when Governor evening, October 1st, ifi their Wilson, with Colonel Bryan by his ward meeting house preparatory :side7xW uptbe minTtreeTTn to commencing their season's . ' an automobile. work, which will commence The rheeting between Governor Oct. 8th. The hall Wilson' Aid Mr. Bryan, whom he was nicely decorated, and large had not seen since the' Baltimore tables $ere loaded with all kinds convention, was hearty. Mr. Bry-a- n of fruit, which was" a beautiful was at the platform of Gover- sight to behold and was partaken nor Wilsons private car when it of with a relish by all present, aftdrew into the station. The gover- er which a nicely arranged pronor stepped to the ground and Mr. gram was rendered and all seemed - Bryan caught him by the hand. to enjoy themselves and no doubt Welcome-- , welcome, welcome, will have a tendency to bring more belaid.. of the Mutual workers out to their Hello, Mri Bryan, said the meetings this winter, , ' I thank you, .governor ' And heie the conversation was Work commenced on remodelof the ; broken off by the rush ing and making some changes in crowd, wich- - closed in about the the Second ward meeting house """two" statesmen and carried- - them last weekend will "make it more off their feet, to the waiting auto- - convenient for the Stand and mem' ' - mobile. bers of the choir, as! there is not in the afternoon, the sufficient room. , jAt Omaha, , candidate was greeted with wonderful enthusiasm. We are pleased to announce The most effective address to- that Chas. Shaw and his son Donday was line not on the program- ald of Ilyrum Second ward, who a me.. It was delivered to the have been quite fjck with the Commercial club, fvhere the phoid fever for some time, are tjj on " candidate was entertained at lun- the improve. There is also one cheon. ' , case of, scarlet feveij in Ilyrum The governor told the business Second ward, whieh is also on the " men that , business conditions improve. have got to change, and if they do not change with your assisThe business houses of our city tance. you are responsible for the seem to be doing a good business, injury to "business that wilj fol- also the railroad station at Hy-ru' low. as sgveral cars of grain were Before leaving Omaha, the gov- shipped last Week from our. depot. ernor addressed the Womens Democratic club, ne told the woThe sugar beet digging has also man that the strength of the na- commenced. One of our farmers tion consists an the hope of the reports it was impossible for him -- next gen er at ion Th e wo m en, h e follow his beets as the land was said, would bave more to do with so dry. He was obliged do water influencing the next generation his ground before plowing, than the men. The candidate was then rushed to Creighton tiniver-- , A, fine daughter was born to sity, where he addressed 1000 stu- Mrs. Lucille Jensen McBeth . on dents:.. . , ; Friday morning. Mrs. McBeth is , On the trip from Omara to Linstopping with her mother. Mrs. coln, stops were made at several Christensen, at the Hyrum Pioneer small towns, but the governor was hotel. Mother and babe doing ' resting for his night effort? .and well and the great grand father, " could not be 'disturbed.' 0. H. Hansen "is all smiles Vliimuuw J f " Side Cast Wilson ot d . pro-gra- the-enterp- rise , red-lett- er -- d l, Ris-kelle- y Missis-slppLyalley- Vice-President lf d Jt hatmcbLitL rs one-thir- d |