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Show THE PAGE TWCf JOURNAL BYr T'Hfc e PUBLISHED PUBLISHING tiO ENGLAND EApt. AND e every Tuesday, Entered at the it Logan, Utah, Thursday and Saturday, ' second-class matter, as EDITOR AUGUSTUS GORDON, EDITOR CITY F J. MARSHALL, Poht-Offie- SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier. 3 Months 90c , t JLMoatha. 12 Months By Mail -- the wife of his y outli and marry on who was his equal in tank, therefore fit to ' ' the mother of king. No matter what may be said in his favor because of his struggle against the arrangement, the fact remains that he consented; that he put away his morganatic wife' and married Princess Victoria May of Teck; and moreover, that his girl wife, broken heat ted, pined quickly away and died of consumption. The Deseret News, sugar coating the story twixt love "and duty, says, of his battle of end the "The struggle was that Prince George insisted that this double duty of hit toward the obligations he had already assum at to ed as a man on the one which fate had assigned him as the father of Englands future kings on the other, should both be acknowledged, distinct and equally recognized; which would seem to indicate that he proposed to live polygamously'' with the wife of his right hand in state, and with his left hand wife in secret. The News concluded its article with: Thi; is the slory of the romance of King George. It shows him in an altogether beautiful light, and it is quite possible that he will,. as king,, he different from the Georges that we know, of as puppets and tools of s'npiil cabinets. If thi i 'k a beautifully romantic story and a waft 3.50 75? $1.56 handr-and-th- TRI-WEEKL- Y tocraey imparted to church-governe- it schools d through the the older aristocracy-educatio- :I higher for the few in the walks of life. After our average boy gets he through the grammar school, if not before, stops school altogether at or before the age oft;; fourteen, lie goes on to the farm, into, the shop or to the office. The exceptional boy-f- ive out of every hundred goes through the high school. There he finds the same aristocracy of education. He gets- some Latin, Greek, more history and some more pure mathematics. Ilis education here is all a training for the college, arid if he is a little more exceptional one or two in a hundred become an ho gnn t.a college and studies-t- o mini-teor a a engineer, a doctor, a lawyer, Misses Summer DrcssesTor Little ; so-call- ed In Linens, Lawns Percales and Ginghams Fashionably Cut, Strongly Made , Good Lookers, Splendid Fitters, Cheaper than r , writer, is it the. But average boy with whom we $3.00 out of are concerned one of the ninety-fiv- e every hundred and he leaves school even before he has nished the secondary sclioyl. When not paid in advance, 50c per year Nut more than five per cent of the pupils who additional. enter the primary, grades in the United States avertising Rates Furnished on Application. ever go through Vgh reboot The boy who Verbecomes a farmer goes right from his schoolThe Atlanta Georgian says that the books to the seiious work of hi? life. School Irwle mont man who was mistaken for lias lmauF to him a lirttle general knowledge; Joe" has embarrassed his neighbors to such to education has meant the getting of culture. an extent that they are puzzled whether But he ha obtained nothing in his school that elect him to Congress or to expel him from wiH specifically fit him for the work he is to the church. do. The boy of the farm goes direct from his George its hero, excuse us. country school back to the farm with n An example of what united boosting will FranCAPITAL. CREATIVE specific pieparation for his work. He learns accomplish wav seen recently when San jVON. I of its l There is a very large school of pro- what he know's of the business of his life from cisco, upon the fourth anniversary fessed an economists claiming to helieve that his father, who learned it from his fatherland of $400,(100,000 fire, displayed to the gaze astonished work! thd devastated area, covered capital should always dictate the terms, wher- that all on the same farm. We need schools where the boys and girls with buildings larger, safer and better than ever it is employed. To sueli we commend who are to spend their lives on the farm can the following from the Rural "Weekly: ever. and When New York reporters asked James be taught the science of agricultural catchand A. while home be are the he to had Fatten, girls, Chicago gambler, if economy boys they The spotless town idea seems to earn a living and not 7 was clean- lost $1,000,000 in cotton, he said: forced while thev'are May Montana, In Butte, ing. Make it $2,000,000 if you want to; los- while their minds are eager to learn and open Everybody the motto, was, and day up 150 ing $2,000,000 in this sprt of fight is no more to impressions and teachings that determine, and it is said that before night Scrub, miles of streets and alleys had been cleaned to me than losing a dime would be to you habits of life and occupation. If we are to Bonfires were permitted on the Btreets fo' When a man has as much cotton coming and have scientific farmers we must train them " going as I have, he hasnt time to figure up literally make them out of the young people that day only. how every little fluctuation in the price af- of the nation just as we make our doctors and lawyers. In the rare communities where fects his profits. It isnt worth while. GIFT THE RICHEST. POVERTYS writes from Whats $1,000,000 to Patten! The market this has been done, notably Minnesota, AlaWoman Farmington, Conn., to the New York Ilerald goes up and Patten has made $1,000,000. It bama and California, the plan has met with a to pay; Will you allow me to enter, my goes down and Patten has lost $1,000000 marked degree of success. Biut these schools ' protest against the exploitation of great gifts But what- does- - it matter!. Lose or win, his are. dealing with twenty - thousand, .whereas of wealthy men as utterly unworthy of our own earnings are not involved. lie has ere they should be reaching millions. The way praise or attention! They give of their over- ated no wealth earned no money. The game has been pointed out. The kind of school has flow, denying themselves absolutely nothing, that he plays is the game of other peoples been wrought out. The thing needed now is to'Supply them in the needed number. The and are doing less than is their duty to do. money, ' has When farmer a wealth cases the In some conspicuous plants and sows and .problem is not alorie for the state; it is for the reaps and takes his products to market he nation as well. been gained by oppression and extortion. I know of a poor sick girl who has been contributes real wealth for the money that he Congress through its aid to state agricul-tuia- l receives in ITe return. colleges by land grants and 'direct apexchanges wheat and kept for three years by two poor girl friends of cloth-inand cotton know I them. and wool for between time coal pork and her propriation of money has decided that the dividing 6 and offices from groceries and farm machinery and Federal Government shall properly aid 'tiV the & girl who works cleaning problem of the oclock in the morning until 6 X) dock at night the necessaries ami 'comforts and little Inxur-i- solution of the his of existence. food wadi to is when He states cannot work out the her services a real producer. . and at night freely gives supply But the Pattens produce nothing. Where the question by themsplves. And the plan for nd iron for 'her frailer ssters family of six. others sow the next step agricultural and vocational after another still who, working they reap. I know What her matters schools has been carefully worked out by a it, Jim, if von lose? You in a faetory all day, gives the last half of nights to watching over an invalid drier may get it back on the next turn of the mar- trronp-o- f patriotic educators. The provisions of the bill are 'imple. It melancholia), to relieve the hard working ket. If the crash comes, the losses may be husband. I could pile up these unsung be- apportioned among your omUtois. If the provides for three kinds of schools and for branch experiment stations. It approand they mount much nearer crash fhould he sweeping and take on the nevolences heaven than those that conspicuously occupy .proportions of a panic. Morgan, with the priates for all thee purposes eleven million the center of the stage and receive the ful- I n ted States treasury at bis disposal, may be dollars annually. Upon the suggest:on of the some prase of men. Let in be spared as depended upon to jump into the breach and Secretary of Agriculture it has been provided in the bill that, in addition to the agricultural 'live the situation.- of the latter as possible. j Its a great game. Pipe up the colleges, the state normal schools shall be crew, and a bottle of rum. fitted out to educate teacher; for the proposed kESERTED HIS WIFE. .. am of are agricultural high schools. The ways kings peculiar; OR COMMON The "agicultural colleges, under the provi-s:on- s SENSE. acts that would be condemned in unmeasured CULTURE of thp Nelson act passed in 1907. get Saturday Evening Post appears f terms if performed by the ordinary individual a ofthoughtful a million Samuel article dollars a year for this purpose, and M. Evans uneem to become commendable when the by der the above caption. At the outset he calls the Davis bill gives another million for such fender is' a king. The ordinary man who desert i the wife attention to the presnt economic crisis, some teachers courses in the state normal schools. of his youth when she has been both true and of its causes and some of the remedies that Ths million dollar; annually becomes availhave been proposed. In agriculture the in- able July 1. of this year? and is to be used for congenial, and marries another woman, no ' crease in has not kept pace with the three years products matter what the inducement, receives no "preparation of teachers, beincrease in population. We need more and fore the funds of the high schools become mercy when his acts are under discussion. better farmers. We a are wasteful people in available. for teachers, of Nor have reasons of state' been acceptable the and home, to this continues should women cases. in all learn Countless remedy an excuse as couise. annually f domestic science. Vocational educaThe bill carries ten million dollars, half of and many men have traced the beginning of more'-otion should for the masses of the people be which i; for the city high schools and half for Napoleons downfall to his desertion of in begun all that early, of woman departments of indus-ti- y educating farm boys and girls. Agricultural that he might marry a . Josephine greater efficiency may be the rule. This is studies are not excluded from the city high rank. he says happens in the schools of the schools, but what of And yet in .some quarters King George they will naturally use most of : their money in preparing boys for the trades Sgland is being commended for having done country to answer .The and industries and in teaching girls the econothe any question affecting the same thing. of men ami ' how mies of the home. The five millions for the they carry As a youth he' served in the British navy occupations And while stationed at Malta fell in love with those occupation-- can be found only by city schools, as al o the money for the state frhat the to the normal schools, is to be allotted to the states question, happens and married morganatically a daughter of sweruig has What happened to the boys in in proportion to their population as shown by Admiral Seymour. The prospects of his suc- boys? I the uited States during the pa t forty years, the censusof this year, and provision Is made cession to the throne at that time appeared is and what happening every day right now? for the small states. The money ean be used remote. quarters it- was almost beThi? boy average old goes through the primary and only for distinctive vocational studies, arid lieved that his grandmother, good queen the or secondary grammar schools. He is the bill contemplates that separate schools, Victoria, would outlive the whole family, and were taught the Three Rs. a little history, Eng- or separate units in existing schools, shall pro. between the queen and himself there two apparently hardy lives, those of his father lish, and fnaybe some elementary physics. and vide coures of instruction that will specifically r , and elder brother, so the marriage was con- chemistry, but all this is not applied to any- fit the eitv boy for his vocation. sented to and during the continuance of the thing he will do when he leaves his books. He -- is taught-tha- t school isi for. the purpose relation' twr children were born-t- o him. Thirty or forty words of want advertising-to- day him is a of finish. for the It giving or 6ome other day soon will carry to purIlis elder brother died and his father sue. of Education you a genuine luck message. YOULL KNOW disseminating culture. ceeded to the throne, and he became direct pose has not from the. aris IT WHEN YOU SEE IT, TOO! yet he was As got entirely must such it heir. inssted away put Months 6 Months 12 Months 3 Thursday, June 2, 1910 JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH. You Can Make Them. James Quayle & Company J - A BRUSH ANY KIND OF WE HAV YOU WANT e-Ft-" TOOTH WALL BRUSH. BRUSH. NAIL PAINT BRUSH. BRUSH. , WHITE .WASH HAIR BRUSH. - BRUSH. S CLOTH VARNISH BRUSH. BRUSH. , v Brush Up and Come in. We give the best values in brushes at the best prices. RITER BROS. DRUG CO. -- , g , e William Edwards Furniture and Carpet House. jdi Yd-Ii- , - - ..... - , ' e JrGA7V. r'TAJr. , e r Splendid Building . Lota Along the Car Line Easy Terms. 4 Room House on 4th East $1500.00 4 Room House on oth Eat $2000.00 Elegant House on Center Street, easy terms Bonded Abstractors For Cache County. $300,000 to Loan on Improved Farms. . la-som- Main Street Beautiful Resident Locations o, in-th- j i $55 Daint Banquet now $38. $42 Paris Wonder now $32. Now is your time to secure a First Class Range at a very low Only a few This $65.00 Range now figure. of them left at going at $46.00 l'" V J; Envied WeMake Your Watch Run on Time - aernnte, all pivots timepiece to be valuable mu finely polished, all bearings are adjusted, on the bearings the balance revolves 432000 times daily astounding isn't it! No watch can run in dirty rancid oil, the friction of the delicate parts in their continuous' labor day and night, will soon ruin a watch, unless it is cleaned arid oiled by " A t-- be WENDELBOE CM. IT IT 'WE ANOt DO WELL W We have had 45 years practical experience. A A . r 9 t DO |