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Show VVetiner-ild- . . Hpni jy 2.4- y, - tiiia voOiviiAi'XiuuM Ci 1 1 Mrs, Frances Allgood CLEM UP, PJlilT UP AND KEEP IT 1 Ctunu CuOii i l , FUNERAL I FOR UP, IS THE CJ'iiPAIGII SLOGflll j PAGE THREE T1 x. SERVICES MRS.-MITCHELL THURSDAY The Block And Ward Captains Will Be On The Job All Summer To See That Logan Is Spotless! TownDuring- - The Big- - Summer- - SchooLandl Services To Be Hell In Seventh Ward Interment To Be in City Cemetery, Salt Lake A Few Events of a I wig And Honorable Life 7: Centennial Funeral servuis tor the late HE GENERAL COMMITTEE for the Clean-u- p in Logan Mrs. s Are How Your met Margaret T li o m p s' o n at the Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday and City Appetite. aid in dead earned tor the most thorough cleaning Logan City l You Nervous? Sleepless? MBcneH will bo held- - m the .Seventh ward erupt on Inurs has ever had. It is not to be just on annual bath or a seven day But it fs to be continuous. Con-- j jdav at 2 oclock p m. The re- spasm called a clean-u- p j mains will then be taken to Salt Dr. Lake Salt Pierces Uuh Citv, tinuous effort makes toiuinuous cleanliness and continued health. Lake where tnends of the The commumt) cannot be cleaned-u- p in a week but it is good1 t ie family may view them at the advertising to start the campaign off with a Cleanup Week and weak, nervous ami exhausted con- anH pey residence - of Mrs. L. G. Burton this Will commence Oil rntwhiv. April ptthv hpn Nu rnber 7. 252 Thu t eeiilli A East, . will be made in alhihrch ir froth one until two o'clock on More than one hundred and thht block captains and some Interment Friday afternoon. good captains foi iwehe waids have been appointed to make inin in the will be the family plot of all the blocks in the city and urge the people to get spections whore her huscemetery, city dean-up- . once at and General the the busy slogan adopted by band, the late Mr F. A. Mitchell, Committee is Pamt-up- , (Jean-u- p and Keep it Up. Until April and others members of the fami28th Logan City will haul away all lef use.' placed at the curbs iiyf ly are interred boxes which are not heavier than receptacles, such as sacks OBITUARY . two men can put on the truck. Any loose refuse such as ashes, w tit Mrs.AlitpheU.jyau a Jaugh ter . brief of Ralph Thompson and Ann So dont place any rubbish' at the curb because the city will Pierce, President Invalids Hotel in not haul it away. It must be sacked or placed in receptacles. Bently Thompson, and was born Buffalo, N, Y, block All the January 31, 1840, at Al&tane-mocand ward captains have been appointed for one " Cumberland, England. year and they are to be ever watchful and responsible for the Grim Paris Prison While but a year old she was cleanly condition of their blocks. Where the tenants will clean-ubrought to the United States by so much the better; but where not, the Jandlord will be held reMuseum To her parents and they were livBecome sponsible Where the block and ward captains cannot get action, ing in Nauvoo, ILL, at the time the Committee be and if such cases will reported to the General of the marterdom of the Prophet the with a' time will real Ancient landlords don't clean-uof have Justice warm they Joseph Smith.. Her mother died General Committee. In fact Chief Rapp, the chairman may even in 1848, and at St. Louis.-Mo- ., resort to the fire hose and all the fire department. 7 came to old Utah reach-methe Tha 9. family PARIS, to " The Committee realizes that much depends on publicity Apr. in Lake the tall of 1849, Salt vailing the erdate public sentiment. They have therefore appointed Mr. Wes- Conciergerie, was Lake nude the family Salt on Island of the the City ton Vernon Jr. to look after the supplying of suitable slides on prison Mrs. Mitchell where will of in home, lei the heart Paris, clean-ufor w to p shows be ork run in the picture the every night into a Museum of 'ed most of her life. She became the entire season. Supt. Orson Ryan will do most effective work where child- the wife of Frederick A. H- F and Justice Police, so be impressed that they through the schools. The children will ren of the primary and hign Mitchqll em, November 15, 1855. are sure to stimulate their parents.husband come to study the! Soon afterward schools, may M. L. A special committee consisting of Mr. Lyman Hyde, his to mission went on first methods of of evolution the Jenson and Edgar Everton have been appointed to be responsible remained she while and Hawaii, crime administering infor the cleanly condition of the business sections. They will home, working' faithfully three through th? ages." spect the rear of the business blocks and see that tjiey are kept justice sombre walls of the pri- years as a counselor to - Mrs The clean and sanitary. Also the tie yrds. with its dark dungeons, still Rachel' Grant, mother, of PresiThe Logan Business and Professional Womens club have been son. all the instruments cf dent Heber J. Grant, then prescontain asked to take the lead in organizing the various womens Clubs torture in use during feudal ident of the.. Thirteenth ward over the clean-umovement and put p of the city to assist in the times to extrat confessions from Relief Society. The duties of the flower idea. The plan is to specialize on four or five varieties of men charged with crimes or misraising a large, Lundy took Her in flowers that will bloom during June and July so Logan will be demeanors. Documents show- out of public life for a number full bloom when many people will be here. and of years. In 1873 she 'accompaniing the plots, counter-plotAs Main and Center Streets- - are two of the most important intrigues of the Renaissance, ed her husband and family to in the city, the paiking will receive particular attention. This and the uprising and violence of Hawaii on his. second mission, particular project has been referred to the American Legion. the nation during the Revolu- remaining mdrp than two years. They will organize and visit the property owners along these tion have been preserved in its Early in the nineties, the fam- ily moved to Logan, where Mrs.. streets and do all they can to see that more parking is put in and cellars. " - all w'eeds are kept down. in introducedbeen bill has Mitchell resided the rest of tier A Mr. Cecil Christensen and Millard Cluff who represent the M. the Chamber of Deputies bv M. life. For more than thirty years Men have been asked to take over the up town camp ground pro- Pqtitjean, requesting the gov- fhe had been a worker in the Lothe camp ernment, in (view of .the great gan Temple. Her, husband died Scandinavian Youth Is ject and see that it is cleaned up. The location for men are a nuit crime , wave now- - sweeping in July, 1923.t All business soon. the decided be f very ground may that a camp ground out of the city is of no value to Logan and a France, murders, acts of violence Mrs- Mitchell was the mother Described As a Hard most aggressive effort will be made to get an up to date camp and thefts, to gather these hist- of twelve children, ten of whom ground close in the city. Tourists would always find it a pleasure orical relics into a museum, so survive, her as. as follows : Mrs towalk along, main streets and patronize the shows and other .ag to instill into the minds of Margaret ,A. Caine, Mrs. Ella M. Working Student a salubrious fear and hor- Burton,Mrs,E. Laura McMaster forms of amusements; youth Mrs. May M. Blackhurst, all yof Following are the ward and block, captains who have been ror of crime. (By Associated Press) Paint-u- p and 'Keep 'It 'All th political upheavals and Salt Lake; Miss Ida R. Mitchell appointed for the year for the Clean-uEVANSTON, HI., April- 9. thouof the last and H. Frank Mitchell of Logan Students from Scandinavian religious wars Up Campaign. have contributed to AVard Captains P. Pulley, Collins sand years of and ; left their, Ralph T. Mitchell. of Ogden; countries - are fundamentally SkanchyE. Mitchell-- ofiSalt the hfetary. First ward, N. V." MerkTey ; Cannon, Richard Smith, E. J. mark upon the old L'tison.jOrig- Milton R., Mitchell and ,jLakej more"- - sturdily religious- - than EdgarlB. American students, in the belief - Sedond wardEzra Cooley ; Third Murphy, Gottlieb Smith, John inally it formed k part of the Mitchell Ijogan. She Had of the Rev. Qttman ;bfL W. A. John Gunnerson, Firing, presiRut, of the kings of France. It thirty-tw- o ward, Mose Olson,' Fourth ward, grandchildren and dent of the Norwegian-Danish Schaub,1 John' Eugene Ensign, and rebuilt by Saint Loui3, , Robert Smith; Fifth ward, L, 0. eighteen BlatFred here Groll, 0.,WV Cooley; .Seminary became a prison under Charles Her twin sister Sirs. Ann Godbe Theological Skanchy; Sixth ward Stephen: ter, Floyd; Adame, Parley Johnobservation of after many years V, who is 1391 placed there of Los Angeles-- 'and another students from these countries. Hailstone ; Seventh ward, John son,,, F.i 7 Kennard,. Qeorge num'j; a certain chains and Salt J, ' Fry .Eighth ward,, Victor Mickelseiv John C.- Larson II. ironsof citizens of Nevers an 1 the sister, fill's. Alice Snqrr of They- - belong to a more conber also survive her, ' Lake, Lihdblad;: Ninth ward, L. Th W; Hovey, 1 the servative race, although I do not. j. had raise who P.lNilesen, Hansen j. Tenth; ward, Otto Bailey, Warren Schow, William Nivernais, of rebellion meanthat Cartouche and they are narrow stndard , against slay Louis VX; ; in minded their Lyndberg; Eleventh ward, 0. A. B. were Ifa beliefs, Presifamous the lYeates, highwayman, : Jiispulev GArft; Twelfth ward, J. W. Lin-- Cole, N. P. Anderson, L. E Nel- ; In the fifteenth , century .Ihc guests of the prison under the dent Firing states. They are ' ford. eager' and quick to learn. I find of Armagnac, 'Grand last of the Bourbons, son, Thomas RoSe, IL.R. Wes- Count Block Captains more that one year's study of English William During the Revolution Constable of Franoe. six hi Shoos ton, Charles Jenkins, A. G. Olofson,' II. P. Bair, Watson, 0. P, Satterthwaite, F. several . enables them to speak it remark- were packthan 1,20Q of prisoners parliament jnembsrs Benwhen-the Our method of conP. Hepry lJohn Holmgren," W. Richards, Michael Johnson, and a number of womens ar.d ed hi the building son, E. W. Watson, Nels Carl- George Curtis, James Anderson, children, were massacred there mob broke down the doors, and ducting classes would perhaps son, William Andrews, Jesse S. E. Needham, John Rosza, W. without mercy by the populance. massacred the majority of them. confuse most students, for; tve Earl, Dr. E. I. Stewart, John K. Burnham," P. M. Neilsen, , Count Louis- de Berouin,- a It later became known a3 the have to teach' English to --our and , Norfor. lha guillo- foreign students Crawford, Leo Kimball, Joseph Frank Baugh, II. Reuben Peder- nobelman from Picardy, was waiting room; " - W. - students. to R. American Andrews, of wegian tine. C. order F, Squires, burned alive thereby John Yeates, George ' Chris. Johnson," Closes - Olson; son, not so (difficult, for ' But Madame is v:it Marie Antoinette,I: Victor Vanez Francis Wilson, Jenson," Chris. Larson, Frank Ewer, Borkman, Chris. Jacobsen, Heb-e-r Catherine de Medicis had Elizabeth, the sister, of Louis only the most deserving Students are allowed to stay. Jesse Rich, John Cowley, George Count Montgomery put to death XVI, and Robespierre, awaited James. . L. P. E. W. their tralg in the Concie-ger- 'e Thain, W. Squires, within the prison walls. The aspect of the buildmg is An exhibition having as one Lewis, HowRavaillac, the assassin of HenPeterson, Thomas The first National Chemical ' ard Wilmore, Job Rowland, Equipment Exposition is to held ry IV, was tortured nad quarter forbidding, three' high tower of its objects the improvement Richard Yeates, James 'Soren- in Providence, R. I., next year, ed in the yard, which now serves J commanding the entire Is'and. of the dairy industry in Italy the' In the largest tower is faun j the is to be. held at Milan this month son, Herman Kowallis, Henry in conjunction with the meeting as a stable for the horses of I "hall of tortures, so often- - des- - in connection with the Milan Josmounted of William Parisian Evans, police.' of the American Institute Blanchard, ' writers. Fair. to cribed who by attempted G, Smith, Damiens, Chemical George Engineers. eph Morrell, John H. Taylor, Ralph Smith, By Chart Sughroe 1 , tmnmm.-pineiit- he-.- gg s - jil Trau-leavesre- - r, p, p j - di j - s - i Cupples Cords HfBS - i Nor Skid Sure-Gr- ip Live Rubber Handllade p, - . , - Extra Heav- y- Extra Stroiigi - , f pa-lae- cs ! s .vk , Ask1 For Our New Prices , ? - 8 Cl-W- . t- - Lowest' Quality Tire Cost - Evans,-Eugen- e y'",, Cache Valley Commission Co. Cupples Cords Tough ! asa Rhinb ; a ably-wel- - - - - - 1 C. Joseph McMurrin, Neeley C. 0. C. 0. Waym&n, Peterson, Wayman, W. R. Dahle, Wesley PetHaws, William Athay, C. 0. Bernt-soerson, Ola Sonne, Albert E. T. Young, C. T, Barrett, E. J. Allen, Jesse Clark, N. J. DeSanders, John 0. Peterson, James McMurrin, George Torge-soJohn A, Crockett, Joseph M. Anderson, Joseph Anderson, -. C, W. Hansen, Einer Young, HyAlNelson, E. rum Johnson, II. fred Erickson, George W. Rose, Ezra Eames, A. O Shelton, Chas. McNiel, John P. Cardon, Harold Cederlund, Isaac Smith, Goodsell, Byron Alder, Charles Mc- William McCulloch, William H. WilUam Niel, Carl Friedli, C. McNiel, Jesse Murphy, Charles latt, Oliver, MICKIE, THE PRINTERS DEVIL n, n, - . i I TZ - . r showed that cotton could - be grown in Kenya far more. extensively thap it had, been! and it is the kind of cotton that "is particularly suitable to the Lanca. If we can grow (By Ausoclated Press) shire, trade. LONDON, April, 8. The in- cotton within the Empire ,ciie tention of the government to said, "it is our obvious duty to foster cotton production in do so. Kenya, Africa, has been indicated by Colonial Secretary J. II. The iron ore deposits of News. Thomas in the House of foundland are said t'o be the most All the evidence, he said, extensive in the world. ; England Seeks - Colton Fields . !( Com-mon- Sure , Mom Knows |