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Show TnS JOURNAL, PAGE Tv?0 LOGAN ' CiiT, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH AlQlKldV, AldlcH 74.- - i'j- - t TALK THEJOURNAL TODAYS ' PURLI.SIIKD BY AUGUSTUS of YOU CAN GORDON . r SECRETARY DAVIS EXPLAINS NEED FOR TIGHT CHECK ON FLOW OF IMMIGRANTS i BETWEEN" now and June 30 congress must decide one of the most momentous questions which ever faced the Atneriean ptxple.. Upon that date expires the immigration law, which limits the -- SunlieIals-enteringrtiirUnited' States in a fiscal Year to 3v ' cent of the! foreign-bor- n per persons of such .,7. nationality in the United States as shew n by the ' census of 1910. ' H that body fails to the present act or does' not pass a new Taw making some such numerical restriction of aliens entering the United Spates, then the flood gates Will be open and there will be the greatest inundarion of UP Train lo the Little Things t"" 4 s - . TRUST IN THE LORD, and do good; so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily thou shalt be fed. Delight thjself also in the Lord; and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart. Psalm 37:3, 4. Matt. 27:26-3How Was Jesus ciucified? THE RIGHTEOUS shall inherit the land, and dwell therein for ever. The law of his God is in his heait; none of his steps shaR slide. Psalm 37:29,31. Exodus 20:16. Which is' the Ninth Commandment? 8. ; re-ena- ct , THE WHITE HOUSE AND PALM BEACH i as great in, its intensity as tile shock felt by the ALMOST at the revelation of the. Doheny-Sincla- ir loans., to-former Secretary Fall in the naval oil sCandalJihs been the shock the "experienced at Ihe disclosures YnadiTTn close and numerous connections betvveem thOVhite House and u i Palm Beach at which latter place Edward B. McLean has been I spending most of the winter months. Mr. McLean, publisher of the Washington Post and Cincinnati Enquirer, which are recognized as the official mouthpieces of the Republican National Administration, was also the social Centenary of the birth of artiterof.rthe adtoimstratiomrto... which- - he played Riehtrd IL Clai k, distinguished many occasioins. That the White' House employes as well as Georgia jurist, W. Mellon, secretary members of his staff, retainers and satraps regarded him as an! Andi-ein the Coolidge the of the treasury is shown national administration part Republican integral enteIS UPn 1S by the numerous messages, some of which were in the secret j yothear code of the .Department of Justice, keeping him informed of de- 1 . Gov. McRae has called an ex-.f the of the Scandal velopments pi , investigation andn!m thpUra0rdinary session" of the Ar- movements of persons connected therewith A5! j, kansa? legislature to meet today to amfifd The jj&re, tax laws. . most of 'these' telegrams aye j interesting apd important consistory is.rtobe .. .those- - that, show...a- - direct. connection-- ' between the- - Palm Beach abode of McLean apd the White House, . One of .these telegrams i ' ation of the two new American ; , . had reference to the installation of a private wire between Palm lcardmab. Archbishop . Hays of Beach and Washington, 'so that 'Mr.1 Me1 Lean' CQuM.Vhave easy j New' York andArchbishop Mun- and quick, access to the White Houes,. An explanation has Been Commis--sio- n given of this telegram saying that the sender had misunderstood reof Nations of the League "the conversation upon which the telegram was based The public to convenes Paris at today V ' will accept this perhaps. f I . , 'definite convention for a draft Other telegrams, however, do nof admit of-- J such ready ex the control of the international planation. One of these concerns the employment of one Smith-- 1 traffic to arms, ers, the official White House telegrapher, to operate the McLean Trial is scheduled to begin in V. is another from New York today in the case of E. private wire; Stalling, a secret service man on duty at the White House' wiring to Mr. McLean. the Mrs., Myrtle Howman Hayes, taS of a man h5'is said to be omployid'to guard the U P children. Another is from H. E. McKenna," chief Schwab lost4325,000 by manipC. Bascom, Private Secretaiy to the President. n ulation of Notifying forged notes. that Mr. Slemp is leaving that night for Talm Beach. Still IN THE DAYS NEWS another from Ira E. Bennett, an editorial writer on the Washing-toGeneral Nelson Monroe,, who Post,, to potify Air. McLean that he has seen, the Principal today enters upon his one hun- and that there would be" no rocking of the boat, nor any Cabin- dredth year, is a nephew of Monroe and a et, resignation." Mr. Bennett named" Senator Curtis, the Republi- President James veteran of two distinguished can whip," as "Principal, which Senator Curtis indignantly wars. He is a native of Boston denied. and received his education in the a 4 Then there is the visit of Secretary Slemp to Palm Beach!, public schools of that city and hia meetings with McLean and Fall, and the fact that he was at the University of Pennsylvancorresponding during this time with the White .House. Accord- ia. While he was in college in the trouble broke out in Mexing to McLean, Slemp went to Palm Beach oh McLeans invita-- frties ico and he left the college to en- Gon, but Slemp testified he only met McLean accidentally and ter the service as a private. Durcausually. ing the heigh1 of the gold fever, There could have been no more startling climax to this situa- seventy-fiv- e years ago. General tion than the messages of President Coolidge himself to McLean. Monroe was sent out West to Golden Gate atSan :Y They show that McLean is still consulted in District of Columbia guard the Dorn Fratieisco pirates and affairs. They show that McLeans conflicting stories ofl the who at that time were thieves, loan" to Rail had not made bim persona at the White numerous and most dangerous. House, because one of the messages was sent after McLean had He saw service throughout J,he told Senator Walsh the of giving three checks to Fall, Civil War, with various Pennsywhich he could not produce, nor even the stubs. They show lvania regiments and took part His further that McLean's social connection with the White House in many nnportant. battles. war record was a remarkable occupants remains unbroken. They account in part for the sub- one, and it wa during the Civil serviency of White Houde employees to McLean's interests. They War that he rose to the rank of were the links that completed the chain betw een the White House general. Fortnany years General Monroe bas'resided in Arlington and Palm Beach. Heights, Mass., where he was achvely engaged in business until his 95th year. TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES i J 1 j ) j I o;, j ; f . - door-Keeper"f- Me-Lea- p' , , - . K -- famous Englis'h poet, died in Bopi June 10, 1832r x'' 1921 Mrs. Ralph Smith, of British Columbia, became the first woman to hold a Canadian cabinet positionwere killed in a mine explosion near Trinidad, London - 1922-i-Eighte- en Colo. ONE YEAR AGO TODAY r German" movement' closed frontiers betweeri Piussia. Bav-ari- a tnd "Saxony frustrate nationalist plots. TODAYS BIRTHDAYS , " Andrew W. Mellon,' secretary of the Treasury in t'he Coohdge cabinet, - burn 69 years ago to--- -- t A. James R. Howard the low a farmer who founded the American Farm Bureau 'Federation Bom in Marshall county, Iowa 51 years ago today. . William Mather Lewis, president of Geoi ge Washington barn .atHowelL--MichC46 years ago today. Garrett - P. Serviss, popuLvr astronomer, who declares thtt America, leads the World in the advancement of astronomy, bom at. Sharon Springs, , N. Y.t .73 years ago today. . " Uni--vers- l'y , non-gra- ta Roswell Miller only child ofrthe late : Andrew .Carnegie, bom at Pittsburgh. 27 years ago Mrs-- " today. At the University of Calif ornia more, than 500 men are enrolled for boxing and about an equal number in swimmings , Frank Goddard and Jack Stan uoliceman, are ley, an to box March 24 for..the English champion -n heavy-weigh- t.' ship Finnish Lapland has obtained year around automobile postal service by using a form of caterpillar tread in winter. Influenza and as a Preventive Take Laxativo 1788 cele- mr almost ONE SATIN SKIRT make a summer wardrobe provided enough Racquets go ' "Ith It, tor these dlspossessors ot the old time ahlrtwalst have as many inodes as there are moods. The eports affair with high collar and pointed sleeves Is at printed rough weave crepe, garnet on cream. The embroidered satin affair with Its fringed shawl Is charming for evening wear. The shawl is kept In place by a stitch or two at the neckline. $ worker, born near London. Died Oct. 3, 1896- 1 8821 1 e n r y Wadsworth Longfellow, the poet, died at Cambiidge Mass. Eom at Portland, Maine, Feb. 27. 1707.' - Francis H. Pierpoint, first governor of West Virginia, died at Pittsburgh. Bom in Monongaheta county. Va., Jan. 1899 25, 1814. 1904 Sir Edwin Arnold, 'he 22 Tli-f-bi bidding sign sign, NI 1 Tres- - "SopIIsmcnWnew-rttacar- Quinine tablets , 4Xi The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet The box bears this sifinature (o.sfc frcrzrZ Price 30c, y h 1 reniowedliy piflley Tor such lines. With the High Schoo- l- Classics I, By MARGARET BOYD h , ( bj Margaret Hold.) With the life of a generous monarch . , . perished all the projects which his ambition and, his , geherosity ..bad , formed. Ivanhoe. Hugo i r ' of leaders of men that while themselves advancing, 'i they cailsd their Satellites to progress, aat it Is an entire solar s vs tew tuoUng ' . M u Our familiar solar system Is made tip nlthe sup Anil Its satellites, the stars and phtneK Some of the planets have s.-- ! satellites of tlieir own; hut the entire system Is dependent upon the sun. which, w e are told, ',1s Itself dependent upon a greater sun ia outer spaces. Ours Is not' the ply solar system; there are neighboring ones all around - v , V If our sun should be suddenly destroyed, there would he a period of chaos. When oMer emerged again from chaos, there would be a new center of our solar system and a rearrangement of the stars and planets! So It was when Richard died. All the group that he had gathered about him was thrown Into chaos. From this Chaos emerged a new governing group, with a new king for Its center., , With Richard perished all the prop ects whRh his ambition and Ms generosity had formed both projects (or the good of the country anil projects for the advancement and happiness of his favorite knights. Herein lies the bitterness of death, that a man cannot hope to have hia plans and projects carried out by his successor. Each man has his own Interests, Ms own satellite or satellites, and bis own way of doing things. Try as hard as he may, he cannot do a piece of work In the exact manner and spirit of bis predecessor. Nor can he often accomplish work with the same corps of people that his jiredecessor found serviceable. The commonly heard statement that some one can always be found to take one s place Is rarely true of leaders. No one could take Richard's place af.er his deatlu Another became king. It is true, and the i ountry continued its existence ; hut the destiny of the country, and especially the destiny of Richards knights, was inevitably changed . by li.s death. SI I'JIMI'f.'linHl'W ttifimrttsii i nnmim Its Confidence Mr. Advertiser -- Maryland surrendered their pow er to the governor. . 1725 Thomas Cushing, Revolutionary patriot and governor of Massachusetts, bom in Boston. Died there, February 28. Morris, BOSTONr- - M it. For Golds, bill-whic- 1 -- 1658The Puritan party in 1834-7-Willia- r . sty brated English poet and art -- ( , u " the-fisc- al Todays Events the-host-o- that-neurty- T-ac-t Z -- foreigners, through the portals of our, immlgra-- ,. tion receiving stations which this or any other na-- . tlon has ever knowij, for there are literally millions of aliens in. Europe and the Near East eager-- 4 ly and anxiously waiting for an opportunity tOj migrate to this country," James J. Davis secretary , of labor, said in a recent interview. Generally speaking, then, the only checks upon inlimited im-- J migration will be the laws excluding the Chinese and Afiiatics living within the jiarred. zone, the acta excluding thelmportation of women for Immoral purposes, and hairing idiots and other mentally deficient and likely tq become public charges ; criminals, PQlygamistS, contract laborers anarchists, diseased; the under-- 1 standings ith the Japanese government whereby laborers will be1 to the United States, discouraged from emigrating from-Japa-n and people unable to pass a literacy-test- , reading understandingly j about '46 words in some language selected by the immigrant) The a million aliens came into the United! States in' ye'arT921 shows how inadequate such restrlc-- ! of aliens who desired to get Into' trons'arejlu' limiting Ihe number i ' ' this country. .T.,, , . What such a tide of unlimited immigiation would do to American ideas and ideals, customs, manners, government, economics, i business, labor, art, religion and education is a matter of debate, j Whether such .vast throngs could be assimilated and American- ized or would1 CvehtnaHy submerge and absorb the American people," as the old Roman civilization was completely submerged by . , the hordes which once migrated into that fair land for peaceful 1,1)1 s t.13. and purposes," is also a matter for much argument. Nevertheless, the ' trespassing, 'fbc fact remains thatrthe United"States"did norassimilato of Amerr-- owner canize many millions of' the 35,000,000 who have come yyithin him meets yon half way, Gh e a square deal. Prevent finour bordeis since the year 1920. est Go around cultivated fires. As a naturalized immigrant, who came over in the sterraga fields. Protect fences and stop with my mother and five other children more than 42 years ago, falls. some Leave, game to I can look at this pioblem through the eyes of the immigrant as seed. " well as with the eyes of a patriotic American who has a deep inThe Masachusetts Fish and terest in the future of our common country, Game Tam- for ah immigration policyrtndy American, drawn by new association devised tin sign as a result of the indigAmericans, administered by Americans, for the benefit of America qf today and in the jfuture. I would not as some people advo- nation aroused among sport rap idt y 'tile r eas i n k cate, low er the Bars' and return to the former unrestricted im- mentratrtlre area of land, an, the "posted I would increase the restrictions. I would bar migration. Indeed, farmers the depreda at of anger I every individual wlro is physically, mentally or morally unsound Hun ot whose political 'or economic views constitute a menace to free pamd of sportsman fhe aasoda ihsfltutionB.of any.kind.T. tion hasTound, and it has gained their fsvar hy promising support ,t IS rt Ivy,' which so foten'mehns a passing will' permit farmcis armers of Bay , disappointment to the hunter to shoot ifartridges out of seaor fisherman, is being replaced son when the birds are found in many localities' in Masschu-sett- s causing heavy orchard damage Slate Unbend To; by a posted notice which by eating the fruit buds. indicates that the farmer an Hunters ward The the sportsman are meeting each Dust that may collect ,on a ' (By Associated Press I f other half" way. .clothes line is a ueiv I - r , ! ----- tiDiri.Y'fiinrtne. And I have thought of this whenever I have glanced upon a fine work of art, or listened to bn accomplished aetcr, or watched of the musician as they played upon the , , keys or strings of his instrument. 1 watched a flutist in a very fine orchestra the other evening, and it was wonderful the way he got his sweet tones and always in harmony. I thought thep of the mony years and years of prattiee upon simple scales and then the more dJfr--cu- lt ones until it became secons nature for him to express his soul in the very breath he breathed into the mouth piece. Train to the little things then any "big thing Is possible! I have seen moie people become huge failures because they wanted to get 'into something big right off, than from anything else. . Study into tha success of any very successful man of woman and you will find that playing and training to the little ; tfhngs brought it about. . Train to the little things until they fairly leap at your com- mands. Then the big things will walk light up to you and you will not be afraid to tackle them and become master over them. , , In nature we find the story of natural success. The Creator frst put the little fellows Into His world, then He raised that line of creation, until He was ready to breathe ho breath of life into His highest form of creation man himself ' grOat thinker and doer of big thingsknows his own strength, for he has tested it in ajhousqndways, a thousand times, until he finds himself sure,1" I. Despise no small task. Train to it , , the-filler- MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associhfed Press is exclusively entitled tS the use for republicatlou of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited ip this paper and also the local news published herein. All right of republloation of special dispatches herpin are also reserved. ON APPLICATION , When I was a very small boy I first read that maxim which is go familiar to all, Trifles make perfection but perfec- - -- - ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ADAMS-Autho- TAKE IT, Editor Entered at the Tost tofflte every d,iy In the i. week, except Sunday, at Logan, Utah, aa Second Class Matter. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATE , 80e' BY MAIL,-TE- R MOKTH.nr Advance; -- 70c BY CARRIER, PER MONTH, in Advance.. A Discount of $.1 00 Per Year Will Be Given for Advance payments for a Full "Year. 0 15EORGE MATTHEW Dy COMPANY EARL AND ENGLAND FURBISHING f . ? The confidence that the people of Logan feel in The Journal which makes advertisresults. ing bring They have learned from experience that every item of news, every bit of advertising which we accept, has been . the jsubject,of careful scrutiny bn our part. It must pass our tost of reliability and honesty before we will accept it. In other words, our acceptance of any advertisement is a guarantee of its worthiness. We welcome you to our columns if your product is honest, if it has real merit, and if you are a reliable concern. Your advertising will produce because it reaches people who have confidence in us, and, through us, in you and your products. Advertise in The Journal. It pays. I |