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Show V THE' Tuesday, May 5, 1914. Pearl of Great Price the explanain the 'word of QUARTERLY Mioses who said he saw God, not 'with his natural eyes but by the aid of the spirit. That is the way the Prophet Joseph saw God. It is within the power of every (Continued from pas? one) Latter-da- y Saint who lives his movement he said that in Salt religion to comprehend the Lord Lakp Gjty, the committees 4n even as the Prophet Joseph comcharge, or rather the him.., members of these commit- prehended In other words we may develop tees were amazed to note how eas- that finer and better sight that ily the Mormon church organiza- w'll enable us to see God at some tion could reach the people. Some time. The Prophet Joseph had of the more that sight developed to a great plainly on the eff- degree here and he saw God the and Father and 'Ilis Son icacy of our organization, Joseph was said they understood better than a choice seer. lie was enabled by ever before why the Mormon the power of God to see back up church succeeds in all its enter- the stream of tinre and to tell us prises. of things' that had occurred and The world wonders at our uni-- f look ahead and see what was to ty, at our power not knowing come. There are many instances that our organiaztion, was given j0f tha'use of this remarakble vis-t- o us by the Almighty. 'We could ion that he possesed. Th choir sang when Elder not have attained the success we enjoy without llis help. The work Whitney closed and Elder R. 0. of revelation is the foundation Larsen offered the benediction. of the church, and hence its At the evening meeting there strength. Never in the history of ' were addresses by Elder Ezra the world has the organization of Ricks who . recently returned the church of God been as com- from a mission to New Zealand, plete as it is at the present time. Elder Fred J. Kloepfer who came home a short time ago Apostle Whitney The from Chicago where he filled a He said in substance: Elder J. E. JIickman. scriptures say it was amarvel- - mission ous work that should usher m Pres. Joseph Quinney Jr., and the last dispensation. Some peo- Apostle Whitney. 4 ple repudiate the marvelous DELAYS DANGEROUS. ARE Saints do.- - The gome Latter-da- y mircacul-ous world teaches that the is not worthy of our attenNearly four months have tion. passed since the currency bill became law, and it is not yet in They say that Christ did not The federal reserve operation. did he walk upon the water, that not raise the dead and so on. Yet board which is to administer not appointed. we have been told that this Lat the new system is shall President the When, ted day work should1 be a marvel- made his selections for thishave ous work and a wonder. body and they have Men are but children of a lar- been confirmed by the senate ger growth knd standing alone? the members must inevitably without the aid of God, they take some time to familiarize reach the erroneous conclusions themselves with the machinery attained by children. The power they must Under operate. of God ' is greater than that of these circumstances, with delay man. Some there arc who deny in setting the new system gothis, yet how foolish and short- ing impending. Congress will sighted we are. consult the financial convenHas God kept His promise that ience of the nation by leaving in ushering Ilis latter day work. the reserve districts as the orcommittee defined He would confound the wisdom ganizing of the wise, and cause to be hid them. If Congress opens the the understanding of the prudent door to conflicting local interThe speaker recalled in most ests, no one can foretell when graphic manner the incidents the struggle will end, or what connected with the restoration of compromise may be the result. the gospel, through the Prophet The compromise might be in spots, as illogical as the plan so Joseph Smith. criticised. The new sys- much that The grandest must start some time, and to" came Joseph Smith, was the Jem will be all the later if start the Who is one. God, silent, unspoken now with interferes how is He constituted? The revel- congress comof the work the organizing ation given to the Prophet answBoston mittee. Transcript. ered that question fully. He said that two personages appeared to PLACING THE BLAME FOR LUDLOW BATTLE him, in the form of men and that This is one said of the other. Denver, May 2. Absolute remy Beloved Son, hear Him. For sponsibility for the fatal battle us who believe in the doctrines of of Ludlow, Monday, April 20, Mormonism that is sufficient an- was placed upon the Greeks of swer as to the personality of God. the strikers colony at Ludlow Many people are coming to be- by the military board consisting lieve that the Prophet Joseph of Judge Advocate Major E. J. was at least sincere, and one Boughton, Captains W.C. Banks learned gentleman generously ad and Philip S. Vancise of the Colmits that Joseph Smith saw the orado national guard. vision of the Father and the Son, This commission was appointor at least thought he saw it, but ed April 25 by Adjut. General explains that it was during an Chase, with instructions to reepileptic fit. Is not that the most port on all the incidents of, the striking fulfillment of Isaiahs battle, preceding and subseprophecy that the wisdom of the quent, and to make such report without malice or favor. wise should perish, when the wonThe board .found that the rederful results achieved by the cause-omote attributed all and church of God this, as well as all other battles,' lies with the to an epileptic fit T God is not a myth. His body coal operators, who established and that of His Son are just as in an American industrial coma numerous class of igtangible as ours.The Holy Ghost, munity lawless and savage norant, the third member of the great The peasantry. First Presidency in heaven, is a cause was the presunderlying tocreature of spirit. The. world near Ludlow, in daily conday has lost the key of interpre- ence, of three discordant eletact, tation, and it quotes to us that ments strikers, soldiers and passage of scripture which says mine all armed and guards that no man has seen God. In the an increasing- deadly fostering hatred, which sooner or later was bound to find some such immediate The expression. TRI-WEEKL- JCJRNAL, Y LOGAN, UTAH. PAGE THREE T NEGLECT tion is given YOUR STOMACH ; non-mormo- broad-minde- n d j j - -- f south-Europe- The Jester . Trotting Record 2.174 an cause of the battle was an attack upon the soldiers by the Greek inhabitants of thg tent colony, who misinterpreted a movement of troops on a neighboring hill. BOMB-MAKI- WILL MAKE THE SEASON AT Thatcher Livery Barn FOR TERMS AND , PARTICULARS, ADDRESS THATCHER Livery & Transfer Co . Logan . N GPLANT Calcutta, A complete plant for the making of bombs has been found here and the police believe they have discovered a band of Hindoos Organized for the wholesale murder of white persons. I Among the papers found in the Rendezvous of the band was a llindustanee pamphlet dealing with the use of poison for political The purposes. It is known as Liberty Leaflet, and vith it was a letter bearing the monogram of the' University of California. The pamphlet advocates a general massacre of Europeans, particularly Englishmen. ' Two arrests have been made. - Sure, 5afe and Effective Indigestion Belief UseMi-o-n- a you are not able to digest your food ; if you lack an appetite; if your stomach is sour, gassy, upset; your tongue coated if jour head aches and you are di.y; if you have heartburn and pains in your colon or bowels, why suffer needlessly? now today from Riter , Buy Bros. a Drug Co. fifty a cent box of Stomach Tablets. Toke them regularly and bow quickly you get relief. jU APRIL SALE Continued For Two Weeks Mi-o-n- There is no more effective remedy for stomach ills than It strengthens and builds up surely-- 20 PER CENT OFF Mi-o-n- a. 20 Our Line of Dress Goods is complete and we are offering a Twenty Per Cent Discount on the following Weaves: and safely the digestive organs, soothes, the irritated membrane and increases the flow of the digestive juices. Your whole' system is benefited and you beeome well and strong. is different from other digestive remedies. Money back is not satisfied. Advt. Mi-o-n- 0 Poplins Plain and. Striped, Eponges, Brocades, Sponge Cloth Epingle, Crepes, Poplin Mirande, Canton Crepes, Charmeuse, Otterman, Voiles, Ratine, Mattassu, Batiste Tussah, Suitings and Perfect Cloth. a AN ENTIRE NEW LINE OF CURTAI- N- SCRIMS; Latest Patterns and Designs at. 15 PER C ENT DISCOUNT A-Line of Embroideries in all Widths and Qualitiesrat DYNAMITE AT PANAMA Big HALF PRICE. Some Accidents That Have Occur red During the Use of More Than 20,000,000, Pounds of One Lot Skirt Width Embroidery in Voil, Rice Crepe and Linweave Weaves. Values from $4.00 to $7.00 per yard. .1 Sale Price Per Yard $2.00 High Explosives. When' one learns that a pound of dynamite has been used for every two cubic yards of material removed from the Panama TEN PER CENT OFF on All Styles and Makes of Corsets. A Big Line of Laces, 10c and 15c Per yard.. sSale Price5d Ladies Spring Suits Half Price canal and compares that with the than cubic 200,000,000 one of excavation, yards gets an idea of the part played by high explosives in the attack on the isthmus. Like the Pilgrims in the Indian wars, Col. Geotbals men have had to put their trust in more Providence but keep their powder dry. Dynamite has been mans most useful slave in this work, but like all slaves, it now and then' rises in fierce and murderous revolt. Though during the past three and years, in work the writers eharge, under over writes Col. Gaillard, pounds of dynamite were used in blasting. But eight men have been killed, three of whom failed to go a safe distance and were" killed by flying stones, and two by miscounting the number of shots which had gone off in a ,dobe group, and approaching the group before the last shot had exploded. Prior to Col. Gaillard s time, however, here was one great explosion, when 44,000 pounds of dynamite were touched off accidental' no one yet knows how. men were killed and Twenty-si- x a host wounded. One day at Matachin an engineer with whom I was talking called a Spaniard and sent him off on an errand. I noticed1 the man walked queerly and commented on it. Its .a wonder that said my fellow walks at all, friend, with a laugh. He was sitting on a ledge once when a blast below went off prematurely and Miguel, with three or four other men, and a few tons of rock, dirt and other debris, went up into the air. 116 was literally blown at least 80 feet high, the other men were killed, but we found signs of life in him and shipped him to the hospital, where he stayed nearly eight months. Id hesitate to tell you how many bones were broken, but I think the spine was the only one not fractured and that was dislocated His job is safe for the rest of his life. He loves to tell about it. Wait till he gets hack and Ill ask him. returned, Presently, Maguel sideways, like a crab, hut with ' Tell the agility all the same. gentleman how it feels to be blown up, said the enigieer. Caramba! I seet on ze aidge of ze cut, smoke my pipe, watch ze work when Boom I fly up in air, up, up! I stop. It seem I stop long time. I se ozzair sings fly tip past me. I start down I breathe smoke, sand, Bangl I hit ground. When I wake I in bed at hospital. Cant move. Same as dead! Maguel never fails to lay stress on the time he stopped before beginning his descent, com ments my friend, and on the calmness with which he viewed the prospect.particularly the other things going np. His chief sorrow is that no moving picture man took the incident. Incidents of heroic are not unknown among the dynamite handlers. Here is the story of Angel Alvarez, an, humble worker on the hig job: He was one-quart- One Lot Ladies Suits $5.00 . One Lot Ladies Skirts at Half Price Ladies Skirts, a New Line at.:..25 Per Cent Discount Fifteen Per 'Cent Discount on Ladies Waists and Kimonas. f Twenty Per Cent Discount on Muslin Underwear. MILLINERY SPECIAL Tremendous Bargains in Trimmed Hats. One Lot of Trimmed Hats, Values from $5.00 to $7.00. Your Choice for.... $3.75 One Lot Ladies and Childrens Hats at..., 50 One Lot of Ladies and Childrens Hats at 25 er 0; 1 self-sacrifi- getting readj a surfaee blast of dynamite and all around him men were working in calm asurance that he would notify them before the explosion. Happening to glance up he saw a great boulder just starting to slipdown the cut into the pit where he stood with two open boxes of dynamite. He knew that disaster impended. He could have jumped from the pit and run. saving himself but sacrificing his comrades. Instead he shouted a frantic warning, and seizing the two boxes of dynamite thrust them aside out of the way of the falling boulder. There was no hope for him. The rock would have crushed him in any event. But one stick of dynatnite fell from one of the boxes and was exploded though the colossal explosion that might have occurred was averted.They thought that Alvarez was broken to bits when they gathered him up, hut the surgeons patched him up.and made a kind of a man out of him. Not very shapely or vigorous is Angel Alvarez now, but in a sense he carries the , lives of 20 men he saved in that moment of swift decision. PRISONERS OF WAR. Our papers are full nowadays of battles in Mexico, and of Villa and Carranza shooting their unarmed prisoners. It all reminds me vividly of our civil war days, by contrast, and what we did with our prisoners then. The first rebel prisoners I saw were just this side of Williamsburg, Va., in 1862. As I was riding up the road there one bright May morning I met a column of Confederates marching down, several hundreds of them, guarded by union soldiers The road was lined with our soldiers, both sides, standing at ease, watching the rebels as they filed by, and as they came opposite to where I sat on horseback one of ofir men far forgot himself as' to shout out: Hello, Johnnie.s you damned rebels! You ought Inall to be shot or hanged! a flash as a stantly quick young officer stepped out of our ranks,, and, smiting him on the mouth, with a hard blow, shout so -- ed out, Hush, you damned coward! Dont you know those fellows are now unarmed prisoners of war? And how dare you insult them, or be disrespectful to them! And thereupon our unfortunate soldier slunk back into the ranks, while all up and down the pike our soldiers clapped and applauded the chivalrous officer. .The next we knew much about prisoners of war was at Appomattox, Va., April 9, 1865. Of co urse, we had seen many meanwhile, but General Lee surrendered that day and reported his men out of rations and How many men have hungry. you?- inquired Grant. Oh, Lee replied, I dont know exactly. There has been a good deal of fighting and straggling recently, and I have had no morning reports for two or three days. But I suppose about 25,000. Instantly Grant called' to his chief of staff : General Rawlins, send 30,000 rations for three days into General Lees lines. His men must not go hungry while they ai;e our guests here! And that is how our uhion generals treated their prisoners of war during our great Civil war. AnJ yet now, in this twentieth century, these miserable Mexicans shoot their unarmed prisoners like dogs, as the cruel and savage Greeks did three thousand years ago, in the days of Philip and Alexander, and we have no official American voice raised against these whole sale and repeated massacres and murders! Only last even-- , ings papers report that they shot 500 prisoners after the taking of Torreon. What would George Washington and Ulysses - S. Grant do if they were here,, and cannot President Wilson do. something to stop these un- speakable outrages and wholesale atrocities? Why can he not at least issue a proclamation against them, and warn all Mexican officials that the United States and the civilized. , world will hold them personally responsible for them sooner or later? This might not be. watchful waiting but it would be in the interests of civilization and Christianity, and is it . not high time President Wilson waked up to this horrible busi- - ' ness and our responsibility for the same? Communication to N. Y. Tribune.- - - 1 A Chicago . physician has discovered a process of transferring glands of the dead to live people and believes in this way wonderful cukes can be effected by exchanging diseased glands for healthy. oneV We now feee where a lot of peqple whom we have though ought to be planted long ago are going to become suddenly useful. Their glands are in a most favorable condition for this kind of an operation for their present owners have never moved fast enough to catch anything. The person with good eyesight never sies the small, nasty things that are done to bother him. There are those who continue to harp that women can never learn poiltics and will hever know how to vote intelligently. We to wa gem few annual subscriptions to this great family journal that they will learn one and know the other just as soon as the men will. ng THE TIN SHOP There is more satisfaction impending a dollar that will bring results than ten dollars thrown away. 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