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Show S. w. ft M trAtJiS Vwu rrtr-- VftiS JOURNAL, LOGaN 4 iinsn CROSS-WOR- THE JOURNAL PUBLISHED cm, CaCHE PUZZLE STORY D ON THE PKS Tuoadav, November 3, 1925. COUNTY, UTAH .. OP THE NII.E BY EARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY To Schilling Coffee Drinkeri AUGUSTUS GORDON Entered tt the post Office every day in the week, except at Logan, Utah, aa Second Class Matter. Sunday, SUBSCRIPTION RATE BT MAIL, ipER MONTH, to Advance BT CARRIER, PER MONTH, la Advance.. A Discount of 11.00 Ter Tear Will te Given for Advanoe a Pull 'Tear. Payment We kept faith with you "during the recent trying times in the coffee market. The quality of SCHILLIN 0e .TOC . J- - - MEMBER OF Assort ATED PRESS Associated Press ia exclusively entitled to the ate for repnhll-aatlo- n of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In thia paper and also the local news publish d therein. All right of republication of special dispatches herein are also -- Tie reserved. ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED Biking ON APPLICATION Coffee never has wavered. Powder Extracts PLEASURE a Coffee most people seek is pleasure not work. And in the they (renorally derive more fun than ia :ts actual realization. Pleasures differ just as all human tastea-d- o, A man with a wide expanse of brow can live happily all his life on liteiature, music and art, but the ordinary human wants a little fun now and then. There are several varieties of pleasure, and most of them are harder on the system than work. If men had to walk in the hot sun all day pursuing the elusive golf ball, the industrial would look into their ease. A man will spend valuable time and a larae sum of money trying to shin tip a mountain peak several thousand feet high because he thinks it js pleasure. But if the elevator Iwoke and he had to walk several flights of stairs, he would raise a ten ible WHAT corn-missio- n . fuss. Pleasure is anvthing you dont have to do. Baseball is the greatest sport in the world until you get good enough to dfaw a salary for playing, and then it is work. Driving an antomobile is pleasure and some spend a nice pile of money each year for the privilege, but any taxi driver will tell 5ou his job is one of the worst in the world. Some men find pleasure in a quiet game of checkers and others in reading the newest look on science. Other men can not enjoy themselves unless they have money on a game of chance and others think it is sport to watch two big huskies beat each others faces into a hamburg steak; Some men get their fun trying to swim the English channel and others by batting an d innocent looking rubber ball back and iforth over a net. Mens tastes, in pleasure have largely determined the progress of the world. War waS once a leading amusement and watching Christian martyrs devoured by wild beasts was regarded as a noble pastime. - We are a bit more particular now about our amusements, but high salaried movie actors still amuse us with stories that" never happened and probablv never will, and when a funmaker turns a gasoline tank into a 601horsepower car and goes like a juggernaut through a town at a mile a minute, no one has the heart to lynch him because it is his pleasure, When we can get our pleasure out of driving rascals out of office, swatting the law breakers and inflicting awful surprises on the suffering in the shape of good fellowship, you ,may be assured that the millennium has arrived. Coffee tinre-yo- u . Have jou ever seen a doubt you have, , have. And exhibition at the 1 Schilling Cottee is the best coffee you caa buy, for there is one Zoo. 4,16 is a very ugly- - fellow and he has a great big mouth. I hope the little fellow in this picture does not come certainly too near the monster attempt 2 ride on his back. lie looks like an Egyptian 7 least thats the way Egyptians walk. He has a band around his Answer To Last Puzzl 0 1- -2 your grocer 2 7 (do), 3 (use). 14 12-1- 3 Copyright, 1925, by The International Syndicate ill return your money instantly ana gladly. You 7-- 234 5 (duck). 6,7 8 9 (most), 149 (act), 1013 (no). Any rdo not think that keep the coffee. (toe), ' rv Bakings leavened with Calumet taste betters look better, are better; possess purity and wholesomeness essential to health building foods. cloth-covere- THE WORLD'S GREATEST BEST ifror SALES ata TIMES THOSS OP ANY CTFEH BRAND FARM CONDITIONS BETTER section of this nation is so completely devoted to agriculture wrest of the Missouri and north of San ' Francisco. Reports from banks that make a specialty of loaning on farming lands show that farming industry is more stabilized and on a better business basis than since the war. There is more inquiry for land and that is surely a healthful' sign, and agriculture is coming back with a mighty swing of the pendulum in favor of the farmer. Ei Improved conditions are due to improved prices of farm products ana that is helping business in all lines, but farmers .like many other classes, have been Jiving up to if not beyond then J incomes in too many cases. With ready; money in their pockets they are one of the shining marks for.the get rich ouick operator. It is important, if they wish to protect iKeiF profits this year, that before they invest in Questionable undertakings they investigate thoroughly through their blank op other reliable agency. ' -- The.native Esquimaux broadcast their own form of jazz music from the coast of Greenland and it sent a chill up the back of some of our red hot radio fans. , One thing that is absolutely impervious to drouth, weevil, blight or worm is Americas nut crop. Arkansas Gazette. Traffic will prove a great aid to evolution. Only the quick thinkers will eventually survive! San Fran isco Chronicle. The agent drives it five miles farther and its a its a new car; you drive used car. Elm Oty Clarion.- - 500 miles and it er Eat regular meals see hew good itfeels Dont nibble between President C. also. knew M, G'hristen-e- n and tore record of the gbod chaiacter i.fBr other Olsen and of thp Olsen family as'a whole. Sister Nancy Wahlen of liyruni sang very rweetly, My Father Knows,' Elder John Schenk spqke of his with the long acquaintance Lve for them. h s and of family II. Olsen was the . Joseph Jtishop sen pr: Said that hrd diarge with his f rst coun- - iwncluding rpea' much all ate very elor John Schenk conducting had been paid and in beIhat the meeting. There was a very half of the family thanked all large and sympathetic audience who had assisted them in any I, resent. All the members of Shall The choir- - sang, the I .cyan stake presidency way. The MeeriBevond We . sev-v ere present as v ere alsoBenediction by President A. E. oral High Councilmen and Bish- Anderson. ops of both the Logan and The floral offerings were pro Cache Stakes. The services were beautiful. There fuse opened by the choir, under was and very an unusually long Hue of the direction of chorister E., II. reBench, singng "CLme, Come Ye automobiles following tha to mains the cemetery Logan Saints. Invocation wa;r offered C. W. where the grave was dedicated by High Councilman Dunn .Former Bishop Cr O. by John II. Schenk of the LoDunn felt honored in being gan 'Stake High Giunc I.' OBITUARY . called to speak .at this rime as Christian Lorenzo ODen seche 'had known Brother Olsen and all of his g:od family for ond son' of the late Patriarch many years, and knew them to James Olsen and Maria Peterbe good, honorable- honest and son Olsen, was born February 28th, 3864 at EBrgham City, upright people. Elder. Frank II. Baugh, Sr. Utah. His early boyho d davs sang with much feeling, Jesus I w'ere spent there and in 188(3 the, came with his fathers fam-l- y is Calling," to Cache Valley where they President O. H. Budge spoke with much sympathy of his settled on what was then knovn iriendvship and respect for this as the Chinch Farm. He jietp-e- d to build up .that locality ga d family. Utah Councilman N. A. Larsen as a former resi- always fcein(-- public spirited and dent of College ward, 3aid his did his full share in building life had f:een made better, by reads, bridges and all other publives of such men as Brother 01- - ic improvements. On January P-ver. - - - meals and spoil your real appetite. Take a bite of WRlGLtYS let its friendly, satisfying flavor ailay the false craving, and get you ready Biack-Smit- sen. The man who is trying to pleas all of the people all of he time doesnt knowr what a big job he, has mapped out for himself. Asch-bak- - RECKLESS DRIVERS - 1889 9. - and careless driver, and not tlie THATthsuegligeni for the toll of death at railroad crossings, Is the finding of S. T. Bledsoe, general counsel of the Santa Fe, who hasps his conclusions upon exhaustive reports gathered from eery possible angle. , were killed It is shown that in a year 2268 and 6314 were injured. Automobiles were involved in 84 per cent of .these accidents. That the railroads are spending immense sums to protect life and property is shown by the fact that nearly 1,000 railway highway crossings were removed in 1923, although at the same time 2500 were installed, largely in obedience to public authority. The removal of the grade crossings in the one yeaV, the official states, cost the railroads $75,000,000. In a startling statement. Counsel Bledsoe says it would cost almost as much to remove all the grade crossings on railroads in this country as it cost to build . the lines. Railroad crossings having the greatest traffic density are protected by crossing signs, bells, gates, flagmen and by the of locomotive bell and sounding of whistles. ringing ' A railroad track and a railroad crossing are danger signals, says the statement. One New England railroad having only 230 crossing gates had 390 such gates demolished by automobiles crashing through them In front of approaching trains, in 1923. One Ohio railroad had twenty collisions between its trains and autos in one year,' where the crossings were protected by bells I that in each case were ringing." . tinmmnmnin!iiimiimniimiiiiiumnnmmi te married Lena who has been a very loving and devoted wife. There has teen born to this worthy couple 11 children 7 boys and 4 girls, all of whom survive, except the eldest boy who died in infancy. He was active in both c vil and ecclesu, tieal affans, having acted as school trustee, Road Supervisor and President ,o tbe Ij gan Riter and Forx Irrigation Co. and in a religious capacity, as Sunday School Supt. and in various V ard offices In his passing the county has kit one of its most usqful and wtrthy c tizens. NO as the region for a good meaL Z - . ' , Aid digestion and cleanse teeth' wlth Literary Gub at Hyrum Given Thrills at Halloween Party IIYRUM, Nov. 3. The Lad- Literary club gave a Halloween party Saturday night at the home of Mrs. J. B. Baxter. The guests entered the house through the attic and experienced many thrills before reachies ing the reception room. Special were: Games played, by the guests, songs and dances by the Misses Nellie Carlson, Lila Nielsen and Dorothy Jorgensen ; readings by Miss La Vaun Norman of Logan, and W. D. Porter. Following the program a luncheon was served, after which the party joined the Halloween dance given at the Elite Hall The following guests were present : Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Bax-ter, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Warr, Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Worley, Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Carlson, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Clawson, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Ilagvey Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Baxter, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Wilson, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Andher, Mr. and Mrs. L. ML Eliason, Mrs. J.W. Wright Mrs. Charlotte Allen, Mr. and Mrs. L R. Adams, Mr and Mrs. C. L. Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Leo C. Nielsen and Mr, and Mrs. W D. features of the evening help-your-se- lf : Porter. ! too wooden and tea FcrmaTliaa been president of the University of Virginia for more than 20 bears and is" locked upon as one , of .the most noted educators in ' Wisconsin Cows the South. Fop upwards of fifty years- his life has been a busy HYRUM, Nov. 3. The dairy- one, in which he has achieved men of Hyrum .are working much. He was ljorn in the South and graduated at the University, hard to help maintain the rcl of North Carolina. As a student that Cache Valley has he won distinction in many dewon due to her excellent dairy and upon the comherds" by importing srme of partments, of his education he bepletion the best cows that can be found gan to teach, first as superinten-- . in the West. Hugh Foster- - is dent of the city schools of Golds- now . in Atk nsorv Wisconsin, i boro, N. C. As president of the d of pureselecting a University of . Virginia . he has bred Ilolsteins to te distributed duplicated the Success which he ih this city and its environs. Mr, in the had Fester recently shipped a car samepreviously atachieved coltwo other position load cf f rst class dairy stock Of North the University leges, frpm Seattle- - Washington. University-DrCarolina and Alderman has been a volumIN THE DAYS NEWS . Dr. Edwin A- Alderman, who inous writer,, while his reputdeclares that entrance require- ation as an orator is scarcely ments in American colleges are second to that of any American. Hyrum Man to , Build Herd With ! -- ! - -- car-lcs- . - - |