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Show 161 tO Suijd SH1UI (00135 Xjojoacuag LOCAL GRADE GRADUATES FAR EXCEEDED HIGH SCHOOL CLASS All Local Children Took Seventh, Eighth Years At Whittier Now York Dental parlors in PainOgdon was advertising less Extraction 25 cents, Gold Crowns, 22 k, $3.50, Set of Teeth work So.OO, all guaranteed. The preceding Sunday had been Peace day in the United States, and an editorial pointed with horror to the fact that investigation had revealed that the ten leading nations of the earth were spending one billion, 750 million dollars every year for armies and navies, but that the United States alone was spending 84 million more than that for liquor. An M. I. A. excursion to Salt Lake over the Oregon Short Line and the Firemen's excursion to Lagoon were being advertised, and a lyeeum lecturer had sounded the clarion call for more and better recreation for youth possibly one of the early addresses advocaapting the presently-accepteproach to the problem of juvenile delinquency. It was May of 1913. There never had been a World War, either I" or 11, and a cleareyed group of 71 youngsters was graduating from Whittier school, the elementary school in Brigham City. The world, as it nearly always is for young graduates, was their d upper-divisio- n oyster. The Thursday, May 29, issue of the Box Elder Journal carried the list of graduates from the countys schools. Box Elders eighth grade graduation exercises were held last Saturday night in the tabernacle when 278 students re certificates entitling them to admission to the high school next year, the story began. The program for the exercises was as follows: Chorus, Whittier class of 1913; invocation. Rev. Thomas piano solo, Romina Johnson, Geneva; veledictory, by students of Riverside school; address, Prof. C. W. Porter, Logan; baritone solo, Victor E. Madsen; presentation of certificates, President T. F. Coombs; tenor solo. Dr. R. T. Willey; benediction, Rev. Thomas Manwar-ing- . ceived Man-ivarin- It was further related that after the commencement exercises, the graduates were the guests of the senior class of the Box Elder high school in the high school gymnasium at a dancing party. Graduates were listed from Brigham City, Beaver Dam, Bear joijjhm JLI'D woiBug fQ sse $Lucile Jensen, Violet Wixom, Henry Bott, Deimar Tingey, Oswald Anderson, Franklin Leroy Bert Davis, Freeman, Eiiiot Doane, Jaimes Fishburn, William Lamont Glover, Herman Kotter, Luella Burt, Samona Nelson, Horten.se Malm rose, Mary L. Wagstaff, Hope Caldwell, Lilly Fredrickson, Ruth Davis, Myrtle Dunn, Hannah Dorathy Jeppson, Lavon Laticia Reay, Olsen, Grace Hess, Foster Simonsen, Johnny Burt, Spencer A. Ham-sen- , Willie Ingham, Joseph V. Hansen, Cjril D. Jenkins, Zenos W. Earl, Guy F. Richardson, Fay Snow, Clara Lillywhite, Virginia Clara Christensen, Thompson, Mabel Pett, Secelia Bott, Annora Morrison, Verda Hansen, Sarah Boden, Miriam Evans, Vida Adams, Alice Reeder, Inez Jenkins, Gertrude L. Funk, Grace Davis, Myrtle Young and Bertha Holton. A. M. Hansen was principal of the school. The preceding weeks paper listed the high school graduates, only 28 in number. They were: W. L. Anderson, Lawrence Young, Hazel Barker, Logan Becksted, Harry Drew, Evelyn River City, Bothweli, Collin-sto- Holmes, Horace Ensign, Rosetta Hailing, Bertha Hailing? Amos Corinne, Clear Creek, Etna, North El wood. South El wood. Hatch, Homer Holmgren, Vern-elt- a Hunsaker, Velda Hunsa-ker- , Fielding, Grouse Creek, East Colman Hunsaker, Anna Garland, Howell, Honeyville, Earl Knudson, Eli Lee, Lake Side, Mantua, Portage, Jensen, N. Lee, Ellen Madsen, Park Valley, Plymouth, River- William Marco Madsen, Gertrude Murside, Rosetta, Snowvilie, phy, Lowell Morten sen, BernThather, Union and ard Nellie Poulsen, Nichols, Willard schools. Graduates from Brigham City Fern Pett, Edna Stohl, Laveta Wallace and Kathleen Wight, were listed as follows: Alda Crawford, Verna Hansen, Alice L. Eddy, Lilly May More peas are canned and Rees, Arthur J. Truelson, Orval more hemp raised in Wisconsin E. Sackett, Heber D. Sheffield, Marvin Rasmussen, Delbert F. than in any other state in the Olsen, Sidney W. Elswood, Oral union. R. Mathias, Rulon W. Jeppeson, Hyrum W. Facer, Eugene F, Wright, Ephraim L. Josephsen. Eddie M. Gleason, Fenton C. Rohwer, May Christensen, Mildred Smith, Guinivere Kotter, Leah Stratton, Lily Knudson, Buiienpojc) puy sjoipoa Centennial Peach Days Edition Box Elder NEWS-JOURNA- L September 3. 1917 David L. and forsail, and you have a boat of the Cambria type. Among the relics of the Utah Davis state capitol are the motor and anchor of the Cambria II, first motor on the Great Salt Lake. This six horsepower naptha engine was the first gasoline engine brought to Utah. It was brought by Captain David L. Hazel Davis, daughter of Da- Davis for his good ship Camrbia vid L. Davis, pioneer of 1864 to II and was used to sail the Great Salt Lake. The boat, a Willard. catamaran style with two keels, David L. Davis was known had a breadth of beam 11 feet, as a cruiser and navigator of length 12 feet and drew 18 the Great Salt Lake. His boats, inches of water. The craft yawl Cambria I, II and III and the rigged with a main and mizzen Esther, carried many notables mast, was built of oak and Orein their day over the lake. He gon fir. Every nail in the hull was considered the best inform- was galvanized and the proed of his time on the navigable peller blades and shaft were powers of Utahs inland set, as bronzed. The ship was built by he sailed it continuously for j Captain Davis, pioneer of 1864 and his sons Dewey and Douris. over sixty years. It was used for pleasure parRichard W. Young wrote in ties with many prominent peothe Contributor of October, 1887 as guests. Captain Davis of having taken a trip with Cap- ple built boats for a hobby and tain David L, Davis on his boat made six or eight rowboats. The e h which described anchor used was Cambria, a patent shankas a double keeled vessel and less anchor. it appears from certain newsGreat Salt Lake as compared paper statements that this boat was the first of its class built with other lakes of similar size in America. It is described as has been sailed by few large boats. All boats ride high in its follows: dense waters. Though calm in Take a boat of ordinary fair weather a sudden storm shape and divide it lengthwise. can quickly transform the lake Make the two halves watertight, into a surging mass of heavy place them four or five feet wild waves. a build deck from side to apart, side and steer to stem, step the mast in the ordinary way and Rays of Ted light have the rig up two rudders worked by longest wave length of the cola single tiller, attach a bow- ors in the visible spectrum. Viosprit and use main sail, top sail let has the smallest. Was Sailor On Great Salt Lake ! ENROLL NOW 3 in ffOVVEftSJii LAURA'S better E Educational Theres nothing that pleasa woman like flowers. 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