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Howell was a key figure in establishing the Logan Publishing Company, which purchased the Republican in 1903. Howell used the Republican to promote his campaigns for U.S House of Representatives until his death in 1917.
Stock certificate for the Republican Publishing Company, 1915. This business was responsible for publishing the Logan Republican.
Reed Bullen and his father Herschel in KVNU studio control room, 1948.
Reed Bullen interviewing man during "Man on the Street" program outside of S.E. Needham Jewelers in downtown Logan.
KVNU radio tower, located at 1393 North Main Street in Logan, c. 1945.
This photocopy of the original is one of the few sources of the Northern Light, Cache Valley's first newspaper, leftover from it's short existence in 1879. The newspaper, was first printed in May of 1879 and went out of business a few months later.…
This 1918 street scene shows the offices of the Logan Republican, located at 28 East Center Street in downtown Logan. The building can be seen just to the right of American Steam Laundry.
Herschel Bullen, Sr. settled in Richmond, Cache County, Utah in 1860 with his mother and two brothers. Herschel, Sr. was a railroad contractor and proprietor of several agricultural interests.
Among the station’s live broadcasts was a show called “Music with Our Neighbors” in which Dr. Roy Harris, his wife Johana, and their friends discussed music and performed for a regional audience.
Book cover, inscription, and title pages of Call of the Wild by Jack London and illustrated by Philip R. Goodwin and Charles Livingston Bull and decorated by Charles Edward Hooper. Published by 1903 in Macmillan Company, this book is a first edition…
Portrait of Anna Strunsky. Photo courtesy of the Huntington Library, San Marion, California.
Letter from an unidentified person to Jack London, dated August 2.
Letter from an unidentified person to Jack London, dated July 6, 1906.
Letter to Jack London from an unidentified correspondent, dated November 9, 1915. Correspondent possibly named Wilson.
Letter to Jack London from an unidentified correspondent, dated November 16, 1913
Letter to Jack London from an unidentified correspondent, dated November 27. Year not identified.
Letter from Dottie to Jack London, dated January 29, 1914.
Unsigned letter to Jack London, dated January 23, 1915, regarding dramatization rights for John Barleycorn.