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Show Thursday, Mav suc-- i of thrift an a lieiinilr , in the cuiuu-- i Uou lictiijrcn the brown ImlU ainl the beautiful dowers of There is 3 Japanese proverb which expresses a drp truth ia jll following wiriK; "hucuis SIPSKRIPTION RATE are tlu beautiful and : T VAIL PE MONTH. In Advance 0e' ' flow1-happtnrte front the that In Advance MONTH. PER spring CABHJEtt, y .TQc Per Year Will Be Given for AdVnee A Discount of $1.9 Pirown bulb of. thrift and -- a u i ka!J Iluit til e Payments for a Fall fear. J on words, printed MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PR IM pitblerv, are ( entitled to the nsa for rapahllcatlon Te Aieoelated Frees in exclusively of all finye dispatches treditdd to it or not other else credited I4 thin paper phivtd in nu-iand also the local news published herein. trtN of the Liam! All right of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved injure ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APP1.ICATON merkan at the inters - , , Pont Office Every Day In the Week, Logan, I'ntah, a Second Clata Matter. at practice- except Bandar - ju- -t tlit a-- lib. 1 To maintain that one can go through lift vt ith absolute disi'e gard fur the tunila -- Mp,) thrift .MONEY-MANK- IND 'HE love Money is a So is motherhood tq certain ! susm-titm- the jn t " of on : lo tlu live only ut't e. ' u hr. "it c to idullt (irednti tu Uxmghti most dci have the wrong tt.iiu of lint are not thu.h'iig ot beautiful llowcr ot 'iim" hajijniie'S, Inti .in thiuliiof tin: plain iuih' - ncicsiry U'i I I i)ui.d -- iiulmdu.il's Cunditu one'-- , Big-Six- Big-Si- x r , Big-Si- - le-r- , Btg-Si- x Big-Si- x 126-inc- , 4f-inc- h h Big-Si- x e mgi--niet- f . Efficient , Two extra wheU complete with tires, tubes nd tire covers. Trunk and dual-proo- f cover. Nickel plated bumper front and retr. One ram wvxUhteld Automatic wind proof piece lucid cleaner and gbraproof viaof. Courtesy Dame, distributing the gathers mound the frame to suit your own taste. Then sew it fast, and cover the raw edges with gilt braid which measures alsmt inch in width. The next .step is lining the shade. The bn-- ; ing is put on plain not gather-- 1 ed. Cut it in small sections the same size as the space between the lengthwise wires sew the ! one-ha- ! j : lamp Tfnntu!tght with langextroiioncord. Ccmbmptioa top and tail light Quick action cowl ventilator Eight day clock. Aluminum bound running boards with corrugated rubber matt and itrp pad Aluminum kick platca. ' j Tvaii LOGAN. GR M9t fosi Convttumm WEST CENTER 5555 I UTAH wiim . j iv ! , I fo H. F. MITCHELL iCOMPANY lf - j T U D E At K B Resident Enrollment Steel Supplants Flint In Grinding Of Rocks Is 1732 At U. A. C. p I yelloy-and-lavpn-d- 1922-192- :! j rep-jemo- r - 1 ryilj rUiuiliL " 1 er four-post- ut er K.-- ! j 1' his-;Mi- ss 50,-000,0- - ' drop-ligh- U t Pl 1 shade-coverin- 'Tbtr" rdwwhfdrarryotrf .. J has been reduced to a science, but it is artist rich. mak-assag- q ( R ETSENATORSHIP s i hw A The total resident enrollment' CHICAGO, May 16 Just as iron gaie way to steel a decade at the Utah Agricultural College (Bv Agtioriuted Press) is 1732, according ago, now flint bows to the super-- 1 for DENVER, May 16 Every thiof and to an analysis of registration! competitor umty indication ta the state house desteps gracefully out. just made by Abby Groesbeck,' noted the appointment of Alva Importation of Hint pebbles assistant registrar. This total' from Frarce and Denmark for which represents the ilargest , B. Adams, Democrat as United States senator to succeed Senator use in industries dependent on tal resident registration which Nltholson. The secretary to Gov- fine grinding of rock, has practthe college has seen, also Smith announced the ap-ically been abandoned, due to resents the largest total graduate; pointment would-ti- e made this the development of steel balLs a,lt collegiate enrollment. The, afternoon hr tomorrow. for this purposeaccirdmgto i the Structural Materials pke. graduate department shows ai seasch Laboratories of Iwis In- - registration of 93, three times rfllJTAIME atitute here. Some ears ago ithe total collegiate enrollment of1 X All col-l . there was a heavy demand for!wny years aK while the INDICTED AGAIN the flint stones, the bulk of legiate enrollment numbers 769 for the three w inter quarters and which was obtained abroad. These flint, pebbles, accord- an estimated 350 for the summer Hy Associated Press) were quarter. ing to the announcement, NEW YORK, May 16Evan In addition to the 1732 in resused in thecement industry in the flier grinding operations, idence, there were 759 registered i'Tows Fontaine, dancer, and mother, Floreiwe A. Fon-ar- e where limestone, shale and clay in correspondence and extension reduced to fine powder. Pre- - classes and 1764 enrolled in short iane was reindicted today by vVi n r ic the Rockland county grand jury .i..no hv a'mijrstis and con ventioiis. liminow The institution will also grad-lfoPerjury in conection with Fontaines million dollar uate the largest class in its tory this spring. Already I07 ,,reac'h f promise sufU against used. Long c finders, known as have tieen passed upon for the ('ornt'lius Vanderbilt Whitney, hall or tube null, are half filled bachelors degree and several oth-- i with steel balls, and when the er applicants for graduation arei raw materials are put in, the to acted upon this week There, cylinder is revolved. The balls lare 12 applicants for the mas-- 1 climb the side of the cylinder fer 's degree, which will bring the' and fall back on the raw mater-- ; probable toU1 to about graduates tal, pounding and rubbing it to' j25, powder. Some of the smaller pia-- j ' chines witTcontain 10 or 11 tons . n of balls, while the largest ones LLUB FROM By Associated Press) need 34 to '88 tons. So'thorough LONDON, May 16. All fears is the operation of the tube j that labor may have bad conmills that the rock powder pro-- , cerning a possible break with the duced is finer than flour, and Soviet were allayed today, when will pass through a sieve finer; y Ronald ONiell, than silk. Similar machines are of foreign affairs informed the, used in grinding the glass-har- d . , house that no break is pending ,, , cement,! ,,ne cnureAgricuitural club (Though the Russian reply is un- to finished clinker school which must pass an equally fine . ,,e fear River . . high satisfactory, great Britain has sieve test. n0 hought of making it, a casus ino'f15101in t Although some of the Califor- lams, nia miiis still Aise flint pebbles-whic- visited the Utah Agricultural .. are found in that state? College yesterday on its annual: inspection of the U, A, C. Cadet V--- Batallion and then had lunch in the majority of the plants use Ag. Club trip. steel balls, from VfI of an inch to The party arrived at 10 oclock the college cafeteria. five inshes in diameter. Last j this morning and was shown Following lunch, the club, accan bit tlw corn rifbt oil tha toe or foot, with tons the and farm well over 33,000,000 ;over college campus companied by guides from the year It tula talbnmt, the (am ewpla and cut along strip of silk theytnurra. raw materials and 20,000,000 by Dr. W. E. Carroll and Profes-- t college, visited several-da- iry Milieu use it Money bark auarMtea. of but a n8e eyerywhoa. B Lw rente the same width. Gather this OlCoeta tons of clinker were pulverized sors George B. Caine and Henry farms in Cache Valley and Ux, Mh , ChKup. SoM at Uue city by bottom and and Bros. Rltar top R. After this, theylspected various manufacturing pin A, Drug Co., by the cement industry in maMcIntyre ft strip ' witnessed the annual military jestablishments. the gathered piecq onto the' In, chines of this tye. B-- v m KarKrnein j deny the fact. It is evident that there is no single thing in the world so futile! , pnd unreasqnable as envy of the rich. There are people who can-- ! 'not hear the pame of Rockefeller without frothing at the mouth. To see his picture in a publication of any kind drives them frantic. That anyone should attribute to him any virtue whatsoever is akin1 'sections together and put braid t fo lunacy.' Any waiter that should attempt to portray him except over the seams, as well as at t as an opppreasor of the poor deserves deportation or decapitation. the extreme top and extreme ' Yet the pian has given jnore to the poor than anyone else in all, bottom of the lining. Your shade ' ' v is now finished unless you history. He has created wealth that never before existed, and, ' wish to add a twinch-dee- p , 1 then deliberately he has given iUaway. gilt or silk fringe at the bottom, to That there should be persons so narrow of mind and hard of t make it still prettier. heart, persons so small, so mean, so utterly contemptible, m filled Tomorrow Collecting .with enyy, hatred and malice, as to vent their spleen and their drop- - Canning Equipment venom upon a map w hose only fault is that he has beep industrious, lights in the living room and efficient and thrifty while they, on the other hand, have been dinning room must be more or Homestead of . lazy vtneffeieRt and shiftless that, there should be such people is less formal in design, and dig Annie Laurie To Pass nified in color, to be in good ' not 4m$iiPf, for they hVe existed Bine beginpjng of orea- - taste. But the bedroom lamp Under The Gavel tioniddtney will continue to exist; eVeft pmong country editors, shade that is a different mat: to the shame and 16 degradation of humanity, until (he crack of doom. ter! The bedroom lamp shade; EDINBURGH, May fnay be as frilly as frivolous Annie Lauries home is to ' Country Edjtor. as colorful as you please. ' ' at aucction. The modest I recently helped a friend to'dxAellingr wh ch is located near THE TOW.N KNOCKER make one for her bedroom-anEdinburgh has been in the I am going to tell you about ifa !-r- of a place. hands of th; family of the wom-He- r yfrjpIIS ojie heard a fellow make such a remark about a neighhas a color scheme of i8n around whom the fainuus lavender and yellow (as this ballad was written for many boring town knd a fairly good town at that. this room gets very little sun- - Igenqiations, but financial need Investigation disclosed a few interesting facta. the yellow note tn the el- - compels them to dispose of it. shine, t .The man was a chronic kicker. or scheme brightens tt wonder-- 1 A relic of Annit, i.anis Jle was a confirmed loafer, fully). Its walls are covered with aste is still preserved in the light yellow oatmeal paper (un- beaufful Georgian garden in - lie w an inordinate figured), and the rear of the house. Annie He consitlerc hruily one side of a question. floral cretonne is used as Laurie died in 1761 at the are He was intolerant of opinions that were at variance jth few overdrapes at the windows. of 79, and she ks buried in the own. ; , , The old graveyard at Crairiarroc.'. I Like the recruit in the parade, everjljody but him was out of bed has an unbleached muslin ' I el spread on it with a floral design Over 50,000 bales of 'cotton atop. in the center consisting of pieces Some day he will be gone,-btown the will still hethere. of lavender and - yellow cham-bra- y were required to weave the cloth needed to replace the He will not be missed, lecause he never does anything worth linen appliqued onto the sacks " candlestick A with lost or portland incement muslin. r rctnenbering. glass this country destroyed a lavender candle stands on the last Ours is a good town. v year. chiffonier. A yellow pottery pin Matter weighing one pound tray makes a pretty flash of coli CRITIC OR KICKER or among the silver toilet arti- on the moons surface if trans-fe- i red to the earth would weigh y qpiIEREJ are two classes of peopla in this country who are cn-- cles on the dressing table. x And 1 stantiy in the public mind constructive critics and destruc--- y on the floor lie lavender and six pounds. gray braided rag rugs. f tive kkkers. I have decribed this color The constructive critic is a person vhQ looks always to the . scheme for the purpose of showwelfare of his country, or to that of his state, or community, He ing why we chose lavender and analyzes questions of import to the people with a faf and just yellow for the shade of the bedt. I happened to mind, separates the good from the bad, and Beeks to advance the side China silk some lavender to haye .interests of the one and retard those of the other, To aecom. which would do for the shirred ; piiah this end if often becomes necessary for hb to point out to oqter covering of the shade, and others thosealicnt features which to him appear to he fo (he best my frjend had some yellow interest of the people, and, to expose nd oppose that which is crepe de Chine which was just . inimical to the public weal the right thing for the lining of Gtts-Tames , A kicker is one who does not analyze his subject, who voices the shade. We bought a wire his objection hastily and without proper investigation who often frame and covered it as follows: the Wildes Com To Cover a wire Lamp Frame : opposes a proposition simply because some pther person or persons favor it, and who is invariably found op thc negative side of ques- Wind every inch of the wire You Can Thom Right OS tions that come up for public discission. He is a man, who never with gotten binding tape; this N Batter bom lonf youv tad your corn. eett. r a or giyes a good foundation to sew bow b4 tbey Buy by. whether her "fcete-Ileads and will not follow. h whet yeu lave tt3. bd onto. g the wiS end (on peua at once, and waddy JW 1 x Big-Si- -- unit I'm Big-Six- -- 1 eu llie .ri i The public paid more than forty five million dollars for new Studebaker automobiles in 1922, buying more of this model than of any other car selling in the same price field . In the entire world there were only eleven other automobile manufacturers whose total sale of all models equaled the sale of Studebaker for 1922, and no other manufacturer sold as many cars of the , Studebaker builds the Speciclass. In addition to the al-Six and the Light Six in large volume. sales showed an increase For the first quarter of 1923, of 70 per cent over the same period of 1922, evidencing the growing popularity is the result of popularity of this model. superiority. Materials and workmanship are unexcelled in any car at x price. any price, and unequaled in any car at the With its long wheel base, big tires, heavy frame, scientifically distributed load, long Studebaker-madsprings, the Speedster rides more comfortably than most cars selling at much more money. Its 37s x 5 motor delivers a world of power, plenty of speed and a quickness of getaway hard to equal. The price is the result of quantity production. The name STUDEBAKER is assurance of quality. It has stood for high grade transportation for seventy-on- e years. Big-Si- x nine Many a one has died loaded down with judgments, who had climbed to the cool mountain tops of eternal peace. And there are occupations, sometimes those of the greatest spiritual values, in whiefi potuty plays a very minor port perhaps, even none at all. Nevertheless, as a general rule, money (the way it is earned and1 the Wpy it is used) is (he measure of a mans worth. No one, even .If he deny its propriety, can live in this world with open eyes and . $45, 000, 000 Worth of Studebaker Big'Sixes in 19 22 j ? wth, , j ... , How, let no one construe what we have said to mean that the possession of money js the standard of value to measure a man's , ; i i'eet 1 ! as ) Tlio-- e which is rogrts int.u MHundititt" oik - time. u.ciN, . v.'d health. thiiiK'ujr m of tin jiu-ii- .t mumert with tint f'l.oi or n nutation for (be hal tan Ui r iear. ai j laitiu m not fad lo lira ; uplujijn tl.t end I nlr-- ' tlu 'lo uoiif tour uc- u .fid h.iimi - ,ir rotiltd in r , ft the jilaro brown bf!b- - ot o du day of tlu .r . ln'1114' , tiling .u d ciruim-l.inc- e doe-aUit- hujijitu j ge-tiu- 0 li Um otu stives the eood things tlut life ha-- in otit r' or "let the fttlifre i..kt i.tri ot it .sell it worry j 4 .be con- - thrnc and dot trine an would bt tilt wig- n tlut the Hotter could toe an i grow witnuut iht bulb. Utrre arc varv mg 'Undaiil- - of t !i r f t . .wording f J himself, , ex t 1 '- nuht .of hears - c u tint C - -- hauls. and plain hrouti bulbs, without thought of beautiful ioli-ijTit th.u e t m e I ne ft otu them of money is the root of all evil." curse, sftys an old proverb. vfinrehr So is love when it is deprived, " Altogether, humanity is better off because of money. Money In the long run, in the end, in the final accounting, money, that thing which seems to carry- the sign, the seal,' the stamp, the certificate of human misery money (at the expiration of the contract, when all is said and done), is the measure of a man's worth physical, moral, mental, spiritual. A mans worth! Oh, yes, we know what you are going to say. A man nmy laugh at virtue and honor and piety ; he may grind his heels into the sup-plications of the poor. Trickery and deceit may be the tools with he carves a shallow success. He may fool himself into the belief that he has bamboozled the world, that he has jockeyed with the fates and won, that he has circumvented the decrees of the imperishable empire of the truth, hat he has escaped a retrifcbtion that is as certain and dicisive ns the fire that knows no quenching the hell of an insufferable remorse. But he has staked his all and lost; for money is, indeed, a curse to him! Inthe final accounting it has measured his worth and he has fooled no one not even - in terjiif. and jiriulent liking f air apt to th.nk ol rightful mcnt-i- b y , 1, Illtl t under-secretar- An' ! 1 I H |