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Show THE CABOTS sion of land. DISCOVERY B. Gregory. By Rev. Thomas S. sen- According to the very sible rule that you must catch vour rabbit before you can cook it, it seems but fair that in telling the story of the men who made America the firet to the place should be given rnan who discovered America and took out the patent on it. As John Fiske has said, it would be ridiculous to compare it in the name d, Cabots achievement with that of Columbus, who sowed the Darkway aross the Sea of same it the at time, but ness, is well to remember that it was side i tyrant Cahot who, since the days of one on the other in intellecand set r.y foot upfirst the Vikings, and moral turpidry-ron the continent of North Am- tual tude. erica. discovery The man whose . It was June 24, 1497 417 effectuated to deserves this Cabot John years ago that makers the first stand amopg was granted the first glimpse of America. that a white man had ever had 1 Continental of of the shores VALEDICTORY ed ot America. It was about 5 oclock in the morningr and there before . the great captains gaze lay the rocky coast of Labrador, its d stunted firs and old by boulders touched into the sun gods smile. The commander upon landing planted a banner and took possession of the region in the name of the English sovengn, under whose authority he had the discovery, after made which he returned to England, where he was received with high honors, dressed in silk and Great given the title of the Admiral. Cabot made his memorable voyage in a single vessel named the Mathew with a crew of but eighteen men. It was a cuick trip. Setting out from Bristol early in May, he made the great discovery and was back again in Bristol by the end moss-covere- of July, having made the round trip in something less than two months. The following year (1498) Sebastian Cabot, Johns son, set sail from Bristol in six ships, discovered Newfoundland, sailed along the coast for a long distance, probably as far south as the present city of Charlestown, S. C., and, having taken possession of it all in the name of the king of England, returned to the old world, married a rich Spanish woman and settled down for the solid enjoyment of his fame and fortune. After his marriage we hear but little more of him. He seems to have dropped at once into Innocuous desuetude and almost total eclipse. John Cabot, the first white man since Lief Ericson to set eye or foot upon the North American continent, was born, like Columbus, in Genoa, Italy. We know but little of him, but that little is quite complimentary to him. He seems to have been scrupulously truthful. Upon his Y JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH. PAGE THREE of Eng- scholar. - He is called a great philosopher but in truth he was From that immense vantage-groungiven her by Cabot, England never for a moment receded. Against all comers Spaniard, Portuguese, French and every other breed of men the English fought tooth and nail for the rights which came to them through the great admiral. America became English ; that is to, say, was decreed by destiny to become the home of the civilization that rests on the principles of freedom and progress, intelligence and manhood, rather than upon the paternalism which ends on the high-hand- TRI-WEEKL- (Continued from page one) secret intents. And beloved tea- chers always think kindly of us We want you to be our friends In our memories we will ever hold you dear find revere the noble example you have set. Fellow students, we leave you to defend, strengthen, and uplift the honor o f our dear Lowell School. The places we now oc- cupy will soon be filled by you. Have noble aims and work hard ; for before you realize it, the end of these happy days will come. Classmates, within, us are surging emotions which we cannot explain or subdue. They represent a thankfulness to, and an appreciation - jof , our beloved ones, and a love for each other. For years we have labored side by side, ever cultivating the true and sacred bonds of friendship, and learning to love our neighbors as ourselves. Though we have made a success of our childhood life, let this not be the only reward we seek to gain. No doubt some of us will be satisfied with these efforts, but the majority of us want more knowledge and wisdom. We are not satisfied with what little we know, and we will struggle hard a greater statesman than phil- osopher and on a thousand occasions he 'made clear that he possessed all the elements of a great soldier. No danger could appal him, no hardship could bring a complaint from his lips though he would grow pale when it thundered. He must have been the most magnetic of men for one of hi.? devoted followers kept his vigil by his grave for five years after the great man died. His teachings .were good but they were all for men. He had no reverence for women. Still his great work through life was to elevate his fellow men and to make the burdens upon the poor less hard to bear. He had great faith in himself and in answer to a question said: What the superior man seeks is within himself, what the small man seeks is in others. His resolute soul asked no odds. To study his character ought to cause man to revere Christianity more and more. There was no softening influence to humanize his life. If he had any opinion regard ing a future life he never ex pressed it. He was absorbed with the present only. He believed in justice but never dreamed of obtaining it through any other means that superior intelligence and force. There was little of pity or compassion in his nature, indeed despite his masterful mind he was an out and out heathen. He could grasp anything m government or business, he exulted in so much of science as had in his day come to the world, but all the splendors of creation and the fitting of this world to be a habitation for man never caused him to strain his eyes upward to see if he might not find a beneficent Tee Up! Smoke Up! AS satisfying as the sounding smack of the relish of perfect drive, is the open-ai- r the perfect smoke Tuxedo. Both go together, too. When you grab your bag and start for the links, grab up your tin of Tuxedo and take it along. Follow through the snappy afternoon 7Wo with Tuxedo. Put Tuxedo in your pipe and keen crjoyment than, you will put the best, And at the nineteenth hole rest up and relax with a good, solid smoke of Tuxedo. Thats the advice of good .golfers everywhere. ns VittilT pmcMa mo any-thought- The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette Its worth .yopT' while to try Tuxedo. if Especially a sensitive tongue prevents pipe ALEX CAMPBELL Country Club, Brookline, Mass, am always glad to speak a word good for . Tuxedo, tobacco.- ,, - soothing flavor makes it the choice " cause. Hence his life, marvelous as it was, was really a life spent in the twilight for the splendALEX ROSS ors around him he never stopNational Open Champion 1907, aaya: ped to investigate, nor sought Tuxedo , cool and mild, is esto find a reason for them. He sentially the smoke that satisfies. watched the seasons advance Many of my fellow golfers agree and recede. He saw the earth with me in giving preference to after it had borne a harvest " . Tuxedo grow cold and still and the winding sheet of the snows drawn over it; then after a space he saw the sun that hac wandered away ' return anc send its beams to melt the snows; saw the earth revive UNSAFE FOR MOYER TO RETURN TO BUTTE and put on its spring garniture of leaves and flowers and bring Butte, Mont., June 25. The forth another harvest; but was never stirred by a thought that announcement in Helena last this might be typical of mans night of Charles II. Moyer, president of the Western Fed life, death and resurrection. He watched the stars in their eration of Miners that he inprocessions but never sought tended to return to Butte causto learn by what divine power ed a sensation here today when they moved, year after year citizens read the interview. with no jar in their stately Men connected with the proposed vigilantes only said that if rounds. He saw the grain that was Mr. Moyer should return to sown apparently decay, but a Butte without protection that little later spring into life, that his life would be in danger. man and, bird and beast might They declared that if Mr. be fed, but never thought that Moyer apeared here or attemptit must have been a merciful ed to assert the jurisdiction of mind the Western . Federation of as well as that planned the miracles that Miners that certain men- - conwere being performed around nected with the insurgents of ' the old union would again rehim. to gain another, graduation, a higher honor, which we see four years hence. In our undertakings we must never fail to consider others and remember the Golden Rule which says, do unto others as you would have others do unto you. We must keep our ideals high, our characters strong, for though we are young we must prepare ourselves for the temptations that will come to us, and defeat them, so that in our old age we will have no regrets for our past lives. We must be noble, courageous kind and true to all our fellow beings and in all our undertaking. So with the hope that our every effort may be browned with happiness and success we return from the discovery of now, for the present say, Farethe bleak and inhospitable Lab- well. . radorian coast, for example, he absolutely refused to go into THE GREAT CONFUCIUS the Arabain Nights or Munchausen business. Suppose we deviate for once ascend Mount and this , week consider one of He did not discover- - the the or McKinley very old masters. Yester north pole. He saw no Indian day was the anniversary of the So as the story of his life sort to armed resistance. Kings or other strange and birth of Confucius. wonderful human beings; he comes down to us we can the President Michael McDonald Had he taken a Rip Van ran up against no mines of gold Winkle sleep and wakened yes- better realize that until the said that he intended to rid the or gems, or groves of precious terday he would have been world was softened and exalted new independent union of the aromatic woods. He saw 'little twenty-fou- r hundred and fifty-fiv- e by Christanity man and nations miners of the Industrial Workbut rocks and a few dwarf of age. He lived on no matter how enlightened they ers of the World. rThe years trees and shrubs. became were still of the earth, earth seventy-thre-e secretary and treayears. d But in spite of his surer of new union are acgrossly the earthly. It must have taken pretty Even the nations that be- knowledged to be members of integrity of statement, the much of a man, in that obscure commander came very near getlieved in gods or in the one the Industrial Workers of the age, to so impress himself upon ' ting himself into the Bristol the world, that history em- God, were hard, cold and with World. Ananias club. He told them balmed him and has saved him them might made right. It was . The names of 860 out of the how his vessel had literally from so in Assyria, in Persia, in 9000 metal miners of Butte forgetfulness through all through the succeeding ploughed its way Egypt, in Greece and tRome, were on the books of the new centuries. shoals of codfish off the Grand What he taught would not be and when the Master came independent union, organized to and wonderful banks of Newfoundland, combat the "Western Federa- but preaching peace and good will, if advanced the story came pretty near be- where did he obtain thenow, they but followed a natural in- tion of Miners, when the roster inspiring his finish. One of the scribes ation, with his surroundings, to stinct when they crucified Him was reopened for signatures toof the day informs us that make a code like this? and with fire and torture pur- day. President McDonald said Master John, being poor and When he was born his coun- sued His followers to the death, he was pleased with the mana foreigner, would have been was in a state not unlike until the effluence of the light ner in, which the miners were set down as a liar had not his try that of Mexico today. , There from the cross began to melt joining the new union. crew, who were mostly Bristol was fighting everywhere and the ice in the hearts of men and A heavy rain last evening men confirmed everything he them compassion and caused the land was given over to tur- to teach Goodwins many to leave the said about the codfish. Weekly. mercy. streets early, but before the violence and frequent bulence, . The polotical significance of assassinations. It was just The sun shines downpour began the street in Cabots discovery will appear when an ancient fuedal system for all it is front of the Miners hall, which at a glance. was about to give away to a your own fault if a cloudy coun- was wrecked dynamite TuesRemember, first of all, that monarchy, and every chief was tenance keeps its rays from day night wasbycrowded. Cabot was the first to discover either for power and reaching the cockles of your Citizens who are urging the and set foot upon the mainland seeking or to save his , own life. heart. organization of vigilanites for plunder of America, and bear in mind, The Confucius the state purpose of protecting of. China day in the second place, that, havhomes and other property their 44444 44 was a small country about the ing discovered and landed upon size of our state of Texas. All are to meet this afscheduled the mainland, he took posses- - accounts E. Confucious DR. J. MERRILL ternoon. agree that . OSTEOPATH. was of the best stock of the ofOffice rooms 1, 2, and 3. HELD FOR " land. His father was a high Howell-Cardo- n soldier but he GRAND LARCENY and ficer Building. great DR. S. B. THATCHER and the fortune Phone no son 487J. his left DENTIST. f Salt Lake, June 25. Pete Diseases Successful- boy had to carve out his own Rooms Treated Block. the 4. Without said to be the man 2. 3. Arlmo Bocci, ly f 172 North Main Street. a child - a but Use of when known as Little Bqccl, wantwas He Office Honrs: 8 to 12 1 to 8 ed in San Francisco for swindlpassionate lover of knowledge Phone: 421 W. f a to be means and Joe Grasi, said to be a and every 4444444444444444 ing, sought 4 . , -- vice-preside- rock-ribbe- , 44444444 smoking. Tuxedo positively cannot bite not even if Pipeful after pipeful, as many W as you can crowd into a day or a week. Tuxedo is made of only the finest, choicest, selected leaves of perfectly aged Burley tobacco. It is made by the original Tuxedo Processwhich removes xlr every trace of bite and sting and develops all the wonderful mildness, fragrance and flavor of the Burley Leaf in a way that no other brand of tobacco has ever successfully imitated. nt, " YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Famous green tin with fold let---1 A tering, curved to fit the pocket A UC Convenient pouch, inner- - lined C with moisture-proo- f . OC paper In Clast Humidors SOc and 90c THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY AUTOMOBILE TIRES AT FACTORY PRICES confidence man, wanted in New York, were arrested' yesterday afternoon near Pioneer park by Detectives Zeese and Leichter and are held on charges of Little Bocci grand larceny. is said to have acquired the sobriquet through being the younger and smaller brother of an Italian known as Big Bocci formerly a New York detective, but now alleged to be engaged in the gentile art of buncoing unsuspecting per- 28x3 30x3 30x3 32x3 34x3 32x4 33X4 34x4 36x4 35x4 36x4 y2 37x4 37x5 sons. 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This .land lies well, said the visitor. Yes, but you ought to hear the real estate agents, said the victim. Livingston Lance. ' - - 4 Grim Humor. Aged Unde Ive insured my life for $5,000 in your favor. What else can I do for you? Nephew Nothing on earth, uncle. FOR YOUR DEN Beautiful College Pennants. Yale end Harvard, aech 9 in. x 24 In. Princeton, Cornell, Michigan Each 7 in. x 21 in. All best Quality felt with felt heading, streamers, letters and mascot executed in proper colors. This splendid assortment sent postpaid for 60 cents and 6 stamps to pay postage.- - Send now. HOWARD SPECIALTY COMPANY Dayton, Ohio. Elna Jeppson Anderson, Plaintiff vs . Carl E. Anderson, Defendant, The State of Utah, to the said defendant: are hereby summoned to ap.Yon , pear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you if served within the county in whieh this action is brought otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, Judgment will be rendered against yon according to the demand of the complaint which within ten days after service of this summons upon yon will be filed with the elerk of the said court. This action is brought to obtain a decree of said District Court dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and dev fendant. Date of First publication, June 23, - - D. 1914. GEORGE Q. RICH. P. O. Plaintiffs Attorney. Address: Logan City, Utah. |