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Show ZEepublieis-5(- "Truth in advertising is being preached as a creed for merchants every where. Our worthwhile merchants have practiced this creed for so long a time that it seems funny to them to hear of it as a preachment. The store with which you consider yourself most familiar may have, today, a complete surprise for you In its advertising. In fact, readers of store "ads know that they always find news in the store announcements 7 J-- VOLUME XXXVII. ,JIBl WEDDING BEILS .t , IN HYDE ii c' If "Vs. .The O. L. and I. celebration held in this city yesterday was one of the really big .events of 1 that kind as far as Logan is concerned and the various comBoosters-Clu- v - I NOTES FOR FABtlERS run --entitled to- - congrattdatlbfeTfSFj PA! HELD IN MENDON MATHEMATICS HAVE TERROR FOR HIM. Herman. Christensen, a man known in this section,, generally Oct. 20. They are" now at home committed suicide yesterday in their bungalow recently purhimself. by morning hanging Daines. chased from Clyde His lifeless discoverwas body Agnes Purser, oldest daughter of John Purser was married ed in an old outhouse near the yeslast week to Mr. . Chapman of Central Mills, about 10:30 Brit-zellOscar i, by .jnorning terday Preston. at man a employed young Silvin Peterson has been suc- the Mills. Mr. Britzelli cessful in winning Miss Edna wentCentral to the building beoat Rogers, of Benson ward, they tween seven and eight oclock being married- Wednesday. Oct but found 27 in the Salt Lake Temple. yesterday morning 10:30 ManAbout it occupied. Silvin has . been engaged as ager Kearl of the mill went out Coach of the Y. M. C. A. at there and finding the place still Oregon, where he is to occupied called attention to the take up his work No. 1, fact. Mr. Britzelli at once in- Announcement - J La-TJran- fhaFnexf weSOIrXesfer Tforse He oc- at once notified - -- -- ' . - - - - 5 few'fe-...'SClicitou- s -- -- ATMER - I 1 1 . d, - syste-mtaicall- y. ot 8 00 thajmmerals The winter courses at the is to be best man in a marriage Marshal Petersen who took the casion. The event brought out a State Agricultural College in ceremony where - the principal body down and had it takes to host of people from Cache Tal-- r Logan begin on November 16th lady is Miss Tessie Cook. Here the undertaking parlors. ley while hundreds- - of our and offer practical work in the is wishing them all a successful left Ogden 'frehcS "offrom Box Elder and study of soils, poultry keeping, journey in their1 venturesome theMr, Christensenand intended before, night Weber counties turned put to fruit growing, stock judging, bark. to work at the Central going make the day one to be remem- -' farm accounting, gasoline enMiss Florence Follett, who Mills at once. He was an expert bered. Then there was the big a badly broken15' leg sustained and had worked at gines and shop work In forging excursion promoted by the Salt or carpentry. These courses are Saturday night experiences con- millwright over mills all this section of Lake Manufacturers- Associa- - of great present importance to siderable pain and unrest." what Just country. impelled him tion which brought more hun- - the man on the farm, they last - lone Hurren is taking the to take his own life is not dreds to the city, Aijd all who only four months, and they may place of school teacher made known. He was Jbetween fifty . and be used to couUf toward a de- vacant by Miss Richards resignin- and -came were in merry-moo- d sixty years of age and is ideal of survived and account of the g-on was death the day happy, by a wife and family. ' ' there was nothing-t- o mar the gree. her father. . ' fairs Most of the children are grown few a to county Visits perfect pleasure of the occasion. and the State fair would lead We' were disappointed in the however. to Hie crowds came in early and that a great many fact that our band was unable The deceased was a good "with the bands, so that before one.to believe celein interurban the take not da cattle part of man and good mechanic breeders hearted dairy - fen oclock the air was tingling of having bration this was due to the fact but an unfortunate taste for value the appreciate 'with' melody. Every car that j cows they show fresh - in that part of our boys are engag- liquor had handicapped him for ! rolled in on the interurban dis-- i the milk. A walk along the lines of ed at different stations weighing many years. The blow to his unable to be exgorged throngs that soon filled cattle show a many beets and were r good wife is a severe one as her I the streets and the tabernacle dairycows.Of course, itgreat cused. too late is mother died but a few days ago, I ; sqaure. There was a splendid dry Beet digging is progressing is to be buried today, in fact, to remedy this condition, for the audience present when Senator show is past,, but- it 'is about rapidly and by the end of the this second trial is all she Funk called the outdoor, gathe- in and few be will left there week so that to can bar. time begin thinking more foring to order. He made a this the matbeing no j, ' 'ground, for be will fresh, Funeral services' will be held remarks and then intro-duce- d they and tunate than some years when we in the . Lindquis-t- undertaking a how is, ter expert judge Mayor P A. Thatcher how-f-air -he. tries to be, he is have dug them in the much the parlor Friday at 2 .oclock. who delivered the address of found to favor a large, full, fine Mr. Samuel Burgess is welcome. It was a very neat and , . business end proud owner of an Overland is the this , . satisfactory speech that Mr. DMI cow. To have such recently purchased.He now com- DIED ,, Thatcher made. Chairmah Facer a and with bines business pleasure is him' before thing tangibly of the board' of county commis- easier than to guess what a dry finds them congenial he and introduced was sioners , Mr. Joseph Waite and Sons . Mr. Hans P. Peterson, a udder will be. Of course, gentleman widely known and too made a very nice little cows this is not always possible be- loaded a car of wheat from their highly of effort respected in many parts the seconding speech cause cows sometimes miss in dry farm Saturday last. Cache of county, died at the , Mayor Thatcher. A good representation of Sunan end well is but it breeding, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cunof borne The .Boosters Quartette en- - worth day School officers and teachers to. working of Beaver Dam on livened matters a little by a attended union meeting in Lo- ningham Poultry of d Fattening twenty-thirselecOctober couple of well rendered farm chickens carry suf- - j Few illness an after disease, ManBrights Assistant received tions and then Elder James Balls ficient flesh to bring top market of five weeks. He left a wife and ager Rob Anderson - made a prices. Exercise and fat do not notice from Box B. that his ser- - seven children. Six of his chilcharacteristically humorous 'SSS dren preceded him. together. Before marketing, i Western dress in which he called atten- go rth should chickens free range He wag bom at Sj eland, Dention to the wonderful progress and fed a special fatten- - mission October 10. penned Oresix years mark, and was sixty-seve- n made during the past A. L. Waite of LaGrande years for at least two weeks ration ing efold at the time of his death. He of the who in Logan, as the result been has parvisiting gon before going on the market. ents and friends here for the was but seven years of age when forts of the late David Eccles. fattening ration suggested past 10 days has returned home, the family emigrated and, With j Mr. M. S. Browning of Ogden The followed Mr. Anderson and his is c?mVs He is considering the purchasing his parents, crossed the plains oats and meal shorts ground talk was complimentary of the of a farm in good old Cache and in Capt. Wm. G. Willies handWet sifted hulls the out.) (with Ec Mr. of company. The familys first people of Cache and returning here tcf make his home cart skim with down mixture home was in the southern part Qus H. W. in tendered hive Wattis, cles The Bee particular. girls .feed the Mrs. Evan Christensen a fare- of the state." Later Mr PeterPresident of the Weber - Club jI milk or butter milk and as. mucl. as well party last week at her home son lived in Brigham, Logan, was very congratulatory in the pennedwillcllccen, eat without wasting. She with her husband are soon Paradise, and finally in Beaver remarks he made and he receiv- they or five to move to Grace, Idaho. ' ' Dam. four sell for hens Fatted ed a hearty welcome from the free The " I than a more cents on pound Iydey chapter- - of the - Funeral services were held throng. Mr. David C. Eccles, son " In hens .Theliifferehce a and the had 25th range large was very Eccles held David of the Pioneers of the late is less for the Doughters then introduced and he spoke cost of feeding but the extra their .opening fall meeting at the attendance. Following were the free range hens, home of Mrs. Hattie Lee last speakers: Elders James Olsen briefly, telling of the pride he hens fatted the .plus of weight week. Their meetings had been of Brigham,, Chas. TwitchellMa-la-of felt in seeing his fathers pet the difference in pound per price James, discontinued during the summer Beaver Dam, John ' project completed so quicklyincreasthe on f of profit F. John big pays manCunningham now the "for but are and in such a satisfactory resuming ed cost of fattening. servithe Dam. Beaver will During . that winter. it ner. He predicted Save Money. Our mighty nimrods returned ces Mks. Alma Olsen pang a unite the people of Cache and from the hills having one deer to solo, and Bishop Olsen of ColFattening Poultry. surrounding counties in bonds Condition Show In Cows their credit and from- reports lege ward pronounced the benethat cannot be broken. That Show diction. ' are conditions In what and your their success is general concluded the gathering and rake binder, plow? the once mower, the crowd at sought YOUTHFUL ROBBER Do not wait until" you want to TWO UNMASKED MEN barbecue stand. BANK out. A ROB TEXAS QUICKLY CAPTURED During - The barbecue was perhaps use them to find when or months you the winter the best one ever served here, have El Paso, Tex., Oct 26. to spare, overahul all . Mable Falls, Tex., Oct. 26. time and well cooked, was meat the Two unmasked late men Howard today Main, 18, who is said to the for coming cleanly served. It was tasty too. your machinery held and robbed the First have up Go about it disappeared from Los AnWhile the people munched their years work. bank National of here exapproxiwhat Determine geles several days ago with '$4, sandwiches the crowds continuafter 000 in gold, was arrested here $2,000, mately them. fatally and are necessary get ed to pour in and finally the tras H. Robert wounding after he had deposited $3, to Heintz, use are today When ready you Manufacturers excursion from The robbers will-n036.75 in the First National escapbookkeeper. to have time them you Salt Lake rolled in. The Salt do the toward ed bank Colorado., river, of El Paso. Main the police repair work. The result is Lakers made quite an imposing a half dozen admitted the money belongpursued by to work posses. say, that you will attempt demonstration, after' they got with was Heintz shot the National ed to Commercial the through them another year. Many off the train, parading the unabdomen and the left Los bank of shoulder, where, awaitare Angeles, surprises streets with a fine band at their expensive Parts two had and was will give away employed fingers shot from til October 23, he head. The principal streets of ing you. oth- his right hand when he at- as messenger. He gave an orwith bolts ' without warning, the city soon became congested er will be lost for the want tempted to reach a pistol under der for the money to be turned ' !( and by three oclock It was all of parts a few minutes attention with his desk. Thfe robbers then forc- over to the Los Angeles bank. one could do to wriggle along Main told the police he arrivwrench. a Every minute you ed Walter Page, assistant cashthe street or across the square. lose means money to the took ed in El Paso Saturday mornopen safe, and to you. Why ier, Scores of the most prominent not all the in currency sight. ing and crossed at once to Juarthis condition for business men of. the state mixed nextremedy As the bandits fled to the ez, Mexico, where he said he year. with local citizens and learned street they encountered a crowd spent several hundred dollars. and all they could about Logan well attracted by the shooting, but Main waived extradition, and R. the W. Ruddock, Mr, Z Cache Valley. That Manufac- - known hat man was in Logan charged through them and es- started tonight for Los Angeles in wood3 the near caped by. ' in custody of an officer. yesterday. (Contlnued cn page eight) the splendid success of the1 NO W. N. Thomas, one of the pio- -' neer residents of Logan,. is the guest of Postmaster Noble War-ru- m today, he having come to Salt Lake to see the fair. Thomas is one of the mathematical sharks- of the country and by mental processes has de ; veloped a hundred or more short cuts to correct answers in mathematics .His latest achievement is the ! copmletion of a square of 1600 figures, in forty horizontal lines and forty vertical lines, using - 1 are b 'xfBEW MAN LOGAN Hyde Park, Oct 27. The marriage fever seems to have hit us just now. The first to take down being Clarence Hurren and Carrie Follett, who were married in the Salt Lake Temple Proves to Be a Splendid Success Thousands Attend The , Doings mittees of the NUMBER 25. LOGAN CITY, CACHE, COUNTY, UTAH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1915; MEN, i - Hyrum T. Richards Mendon, Oct. 21. Funeral services were held for Hyrum T. Richards in the Mendon ward house Thursday at eleven a. m. A host of relatives and friends assembled to pay a tribute of respect to the departed. They filled the auditorium. The services were presided over by Bishop W, D. Bird. The ward choir sang, "Oh, Grave Where is Opening prayer Thy Victory. was offered by. Elder Joseph T. Wood ; choir sang, "I Need Thee Every Hour. The speakers without repetitions.. Each line, whether added horizontally, ver- tically or diagonally, makes the same total 32,020. .The-grantotal of the numerals is 1,280, 800. Thomas left school when he was nine years old and has studied mathematics for amused ment. How clock many times does a strike in twelve hours? he askedand when the person questioned began a mental addition of the digits he protested. No, thats not the way. Add the extremes and multiply by the mean.' The sum of the extremes is 13 and the mean is 6. Thirteen times six is 78, Thomas says that short cut will work correctly on any similar problem in addition. Suppose you try it. Herald were Bishop Joseph N. , Sorenson of Naf, Idaho ; Elder Hans P. Larsen, Bishop "Blond- of Kaysville, Hon. Joseph Howell, Mr. H. E. Hatch, Prest. Ballif of Cache Stake, Bishop J. H. An- Republican, derson of Logan, Eddis Watkins and Bishop" Bird. Mr. C. C. Wat- T. 11. CUTLER kins gave a Vocal solo. Louie and Gladys Hughes pang a duet. The musical numbers were fine inAS deed and fitted perfectly' with the services. The speakers were - Ml directed by the spirit of truth in their remarks and gave to the departed his just dues, recounting his lifes work. True, Brother Richards did not live to a ripe old age, being in his 67th year; yet he was a toiler and had in the years allotted him to live, if hours of labor were to be counted, lived as long as any person. ' The deceased was not a man to favor himself or economize his strength, but worked on, in season and out of season, until his end wras a general breakdown. He was not a man who sought the high places in the synagogue, but was very reserved and unpretentious. In his own quiet way he followed his chosen profession . and seldom failed in keeping his appointments. Many of the speakers had dealings with him in a business way for many years and they testified that his promises were good, because he kept them ; that he never tried to ' and in his busirules these ness dealings through life, he had built up a reputation for honest and fair dealing that was known throughout the state. Brother Richards was a kind, affectionate father, a good provider to his family. He strove to educate his children. He ' kept his son in the missionary field and was much interested in his progress there. So we might go on with many columns of history of this mans work in life. He was a believer in the gospel as taught by " the Latter-da-y Saints. He held the position of High Priest in his church and during his last illness received much comfort from the visits of the Elders Our immunity will miss this good. man. He has been helpful to many in a financial way by loaning money and trusting goods until such time as they were able to repay. The poor were relieved when in need, and thus in this way he has fulfilled the injunction of the Master and will have claim upon the evade-anrobligati- by-follow- ing For twenty years or mons T. Cutler has been identified with the threatical fraternity of the state; for a number of years he was the head of the Logan Dramatic company having as his supporters such well known theaspians as J. P. Smith, Miss Clara Kenyon, Lt. Styer and wife, J. M. Wilson and others, it is with pleasure no doubt the lovers of the drama will recall those good old days. His ability as an actor found him a place in the great Corian-to- n production as the father Alma of the piece; later by permission af the Author he condensed the play so it could be produced with a less number of H. people, he headed this new production assuming the role of Corianton himself, playing ; it through many states with considerable success. After a - retirement of ten years from the ; stage during which period he became merchant and general promoter in the town of Trenton business activity however has not lessened his love for the art; since his retirement from business he has been engaged during the past year as Dramatic instructor-i- n the Mutual Improvement Association of Hyrum and Cache stakes having produced with local talent a number of the latest Dramatic productions in Wells-vill- e, Hyrum, Millville, Logan and other towns ; the desire to preesnt to his students and the public in general the best and lahe has entest in best the professional .very gaged people selecting the same from three professional companies. His first offering in Logan will be the Dramatization of the well known novel The Spendthrift the-dram- a this piece will be given at the Nibley Hall Monday evening November 1st., with the full cast, and we have no doubt that Mr. Cutler will receive a favorable support in his home town. - FATHER & FIVE CHipnEEV SHOT Rockville, InJ.,Oct. 23. J Saunders, 40 years old, and his five ranging in r, e The choir sang an athem En- from children, : 5 to 15 years, ni t . u Z . ter Ye In At The straight ! 2 wei-nc- h, bullet from i Cate. Benediction by Joseph Ellison, a cord rrir.-- i H J t (Continued cn pi;e five) today charged w i;h tl blesisng works. promised for such f . id |