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Show Thursday, January 13, TIIE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH PAGE TWO THE JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY EARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING auaTng The of the EDITOR Offica Every Day In the Week. At Logan As Second Claw Matter. entered At the Poat eanday. Except 1LLVI.1 JO 1 1 SUBSCRIPTION RAZS. O up the pole be ran aud was mko altting on the weathercock's head. By the time he had reached this . high place Mr. Tom Cut had readied the top of the barn, and there he stood looking up at poor Mr. Mouse,, who now must stay. where he was or come' down for Two i catch. You certainly are a good climber, said Toin, swinging his tail back and forth. Let me see if you can run down as t ns you went up." Boor Mr. Mouse knew he was In a very tight place, hut he decided he would tietter stay where he was and see if Mr, Tone would get tiled of wait- Ing and go away. Pretty soon tiie wTnd begirt! to swing tlie weathereock and Mr. Mouse clung on for dear life, while Mr. Torn Cat, with his head tilted backward, looked steadily at him, thinking every minute Mr. Mouse would be in Ids paws. But the wind was changeable that day, and u'round swung the weathercock so fust that Tom Cat grew dtoy watching it, und before he MIL CAT and sioming Sir. Torn Cat was miming through the Imrnyard 8T MAIL, PER MONTH, In Advance 8T CARRIER, PER MONTH, In Advance ... twhen he hupoened to look fh top Of A Discount ol 11.00 Per .Year Will Be Given For Advanoe , the hum, -- and .there sat Mr. Mouse Payments for a Full. Year. looking clown at him. -Oh. dear me, Sir. Moum,". said Sir. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PREgS t rhe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tne aae for MpnoUsation Tom, how you1 frighten me. You Come down, 4 all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited la tnie should not be upo high. or you may fall and 1 killed." japer and also the lacol new published herein, herels are a-of xepublicatloB of special dispatches Sir. Mouse knew 'full .wed I that Mr. ill right advertising Rates Furnished on Application Tom was only concerned about him bc anse he w as out of Ms reach, so he replied ; I him a better climber Ilian fygjjjnv Iwud Mlftiw. "You ecmkl--nrt- t0 tl,e toP orHl' bai1TWith-passagthe State ev:D clinb has drafted a Hill for rea,h the osteopath afHVi wMI x AN or Wearing Of 0f the weathercock s head anti legislature, prohibiting thfe manufacture, gale n he harmed. shoes with heels more than an inch and a half in height ; and the vou ,,,av right qahl strenuous conduct a to State Osteopathic Association is going Tom, kmmtiig he could not reach Mr. aimed at Moifse, fur hv the time he reached the to, Secure its passage. , The bill is evidently 1 "XK . ae FREAK LEGISLATION e 'hv tp campaign fa-t- high-heele- d high-heel- d, ed 111 -- 1 tth isthe MAY CURE WHITE PLAGUE OLLOWING i3 a brief description of a method" of overcoming the effects of poison gas, such as was used by the Germans, which would seem to point the way to cure by the method of inhalation the most logical and direct way, from the obvious viewpoint of those dread diseases which exact such heavy toll, tuberculosis and asthma ; in fact, all diseases of the lungs and bronchialTtibesi It w5sTOTn piled byThe' Literary DigesirancHs' as follows : A hair of the log that bit them is administered to patients suffering from the poison gases of the war, by Dr. Arnold, a Paris physician, who treats them with antitoxic gas in his clinic at Auteuil, in that city. A hint of the treatment has already been given in this department, and we now present further details, accompanied by pictures, from an article in The Illustrated London News. Describing his method of treatment for gassed e men, Dr. Arnold says, as quoted of The correspondent News, Mr. by-th- Peytavi-Faugere- It Copyriglit 1920 Hart Schaffner & Marx WHAT IS A FAIR PRICE NOW FOR GOOD CLOTHES? fbere are so .many reasons given for various tlothing sales that most men arent exactly sure w h.it a fair price should be. We say it should be based on present replacement prices, regardless of what we paid. Arent we right about it? The Lowest Price in T oivn for Qualitv Clothes Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats, worth $50, $60, $65; weTre selling for Price Prices have come down since we bought. Well take our loss and sell these clothes at the new figures, Considering the quality, our prices are the lowest in town. If The you aren't satisfied, money back MENS The home of Shop .j-- s: is Reductions of 25 co to 50 UTAH o on all Furnishings Pines A New Romance of the ' Storm Country By GRACE MILLER WHITE Copyright hv the H. K- - Fly Company. CHAPTER -XIII. - Electric lamps have been mightily improved in TmTlast few' years. Modern illumination is softer, more gldvnng, steadier, less stiainnig to e es and "less t rv toher-fllseontent-t- Philip. greater home, comfort, see that your sockets are kept filled with Fdi'-oMazda Lamps. Your lighting will then le complete. n Ee 09 the lookout for our boy solicitors his answer. Whntre you talking about? demanded Reggie, turning eyes on his mother. - Your Cousin John Insists on keepn ing tiie daughter of a man named in the house here when her father wants her home, she replied. Reggie's face grew a pi i sty gray. he repeated mechanically. I didnt know we had any such girl -- pe-vo- IH-vo- here !, Shes always romnrkpfl with' Cousin Paul, with a sidelong Kntherlne. It does seem satthough, to know who she is, Mother says she comes of common glance at rhillp. isfying, stock. MneCauleys face grew dark, and Pendlehaven cast a glance of anger at his young cousin. Both Kathle and , I, began Mrs. Curtis. "Why, Reggie, my darling, I never saw you look so sick In my life! Aw, cut It! growled the boy, unTell me what became of steadily. the girls father. He's going to jail for a nice long It rest, Interjected Pendlehaven. mixeti-n- p eems-he-wae te a theft in Syracuse." Reginald got up from the table. I dont want anything more to eat, he growled, as his mother started to remonstrate with him. Im going to bed. When he got upstairs he looked at himself in the glass. How white and thin he had grown I He looked as If be had died and was trying to come to life again. He was frightened almost out of his wits too. Then Devon really was in the house. It Tiftdqt been her ghost that had thrown him bodily from the window sill hfter all. Uriah, knowing that, had come and made a demand for his daughter and had been arrested. Perhaps he would be arrested also, and for a crime worse than stealing. Had the girl mentioned the fact of his trying to poison Paul Pendlehaven? If she hadnt, would she? When Mrs. Curtis came in to ask how he felt, he s crumpled in a big chair, shaking as If he had been attacked with ague. Ton-nlb- el gas-produci- es pletely cured. . . One can only hope that his system, equally ment she stood staring at him. Then her mother-hearelaxed, and she applicable to tuberculosis, will come increasingly into common sank beside his chair. use. Darling," she crooned, darling rt AntT we were told that prohibition would keep immigration from our shores, and now Congress has to legislate to keep the whole bloomin world from coming over. As an expert liar the boozer is in a class by himself. In the interests of better eye health and Sarah thinks, went on the docthat we should have tamely tor, given her up without a word to to that brute! I cant see how you can keep a man's child from him, Cousin John, excused Mrs, Curtis, a dull red high cheekbone. mounting Pendlehaven laughed. She wouldnt have been much use to him in prison, my dear Sarah, was very simple. Having proved the failure of remedies conveyed by way of the blood, I had recourse to a system of inhalation, that is, the penetration of the bronchial system with a vaporized bacteria-killin- g medicament. But the gas thus be must with a certain pressure, in order to vaporized applied penetrate and impregnate those parts of the lungs affected by poisonous gas. In short, these gases are of balsamic bactericide composition. Brought to a high temperature in the machines 'My goodness, Reggie, you look' shown in one of the photographs, the balsamic produets for saturating the lungs become volatile and mix with steam, by means of which they are carried into the system. Thus, where poison-ga- s has ravaged the tissues, antitoxic gas is infused, and spreads slowly over the wounds and' heals them. In short, one adopts the German method, but this time in order to cure its tenable, had a srrrgte"raseof"gassing that has resisted the treatment. Out of a hundred patients I have cured a hundred. From the apparatus the gas is conveyed by pipes to the room where the patients are treated, and they inhale it from a tube protruding through a partition wall. While they are doing so, one of the medical staff listens to the action of the lungs, with his ear against the patients back, and is thus able to gage the progress of recovery. Mr. Peytavi-Faugerwrites further to The News: The attention of the French public has been more and more attracted by the fine humanitarian work undertaken by Dr. Arnold, whose clinic is situated in the Rue Erlanger: "Moved with pity for the soldiers gassed in the war, who, for want of adequate treatment, died by hundreds every day, he sought a remedy for "My Goodnaaca, Reggie, You Look Awful." those unfortunate men who still clung to life, to enable them to she resources said, coming to his side. awful, recover health and vigor. Relying entirely on his own Tell me, child, whats the matter? necessarily very limited when one remembers that there are still Theres matter enough," faltered nearly1 200,000 gassed men in France Dr. Arnold applies his the boy. If you dont want me armethods with most consoling results. There is not a single rested like that man today, then give me some money to get out with. gassed man who has entered his doors that has not left them comHe dropped his head, and for a mo- Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes LOGAN Sheltering .Good for Evil. That night for dinner,, five people sat about the Pendlehaven table. Reggie, pale and miserable looking, sat next to his mother, and Philip Mac. Chiiley was opposite Doctor John. Kaiherlne, silent and morose, was at her own place. She had heard her mother's version of the afternoon's happening in amazement and anger, hH' andtr only added the barn to hear Cousin John tell Uie tale to shoes worn by almost all ladies who follow the narrow-toeprevailing fashions in footwear. True, the and necessarily 'luimM no on foot, worn be to fit hiiewwhurll shoe, balance and tumbled off which the ills for wtrer must accompanied by many physical the ground. have would never in fact be abolished; pay. in suffering, should Of course he lauded on his feet, tbits alvra ys do: And when he had been wom had. hn ladie3Dosses selTTTior e common setm-a- nd s dicgathered Ids senses he looked up at regard for health and comfort, than devotion to fashion the weathercock, but Mr. Mouse had education tates; but the campaign against it should be one of gone.', Mr Mouse was safe on the top of not legislation ; for if we once begin to legislate against barn and was just running into a the fashions harmful follies, where will the end be. If we can by law hole In the roof, but he stopped to call to Mr. Tom Cut: It Is on wind, prescribe the style of shoes to be worn, for the physical benefit you know, that blows no oue any more still crying practices against of the female of the species, good, and I happened tills time to get the laws of health, to gay nothirtg of modesty , could immediately top of the barn Mr. Mouse would be tiie good. You waif until I meet you on the be found in the abbreviated, pillow case skirts, gossamer stockand it will matter very little ground, ings and low necked dresses to which they are also addicted ; and which way the., wind blows, that day, once started no Dne knows where this class of legislation would promise you, replied Mr. Tom, lickhis month at the thought of the rests ing which base our jrreateest government end.The upon dinner he had lost. of the individual of others; the consistent rights liberty (Copyright ) and upon this foundation drere is no room for freak legislation seeking to regulate the habits and customs of the neighbors, so long as they do not infringe upon the liberty or rights of their legislation and in a general way we already have several times the neighbors. Blue laws of any kind have no place in American number of laws and ordinances we need, with .scarcely a pretense of enforcing many of them. It is indeed, practically Impossible to enforce laws that have not back of them the united support of society at large. the - Shadow COM FA STY.' GORDON 1921. boy. 0 to your Cousin John and him alL about It He will forgive and help you" The boy bounded up, maddened yond endurance. . Great God." he crledj. "hed tell yoa beg box me up for ten years! No, no, you've got to help me get away from Ithaca. I must hare money ! Walt," said Mrs. Curtis, and she hurried from the room. When she appeared before Doctor John In his office, he .arose hastily. " "Whats the matter, Sajh? he asked. John, she entreated, forgetting to raise her handkerchief to wipe aifdy her tears, T must have some money tonight. A lot of It! For Reggie? boomed forth as if she had at last readied a ewe elusion, she went to the servants quarters. There she sent the maid to ask Tonnlbel to come out to Doctor conservatory for a minute. Tony silently stared at tiie white woman when they ettme face to face. Mrs. Curtis sw allowed her pride, gulping at the lumps that rose In her Pauls throat. Im sorry about this nfterm "a, Miss Devon, she SoJJ. I i cully dnl.it urn, ei stand Tonninei thougl i a that r. uoi , Mrs. w.,!'fi liji o gotten re"Yes, hes sick, and I want to send ligion; nothing but k softening of him away, John. Ohl You cant re- heart could account for the apology. "Never .mind, she choked. Im fuse me this, you simply cant awfully sorry about my daddv, hut if Going away doesnt seem to help he will be bad, then I suppose be your son any? as I seey .answered the must go to jail." home. doctor, better' stay might Th Is statement renewed the dread Wait tCLT teii yo'ii wnreTtrtHgTtSarali;-wit- h In Mrs. Curtis heart about her'som he went on a waveof his h:tn? Could you take a 'message to my , to stop her plea, rubi nB cousln Paul for me? You she ventured. that boy. of the time xVVhat Is It? asked Tonnlbel, you dont know where he Is, and he thickly. drinks like a fish. , . Mrs. Curtis exMy son Is 111 The woman knew what her cousin plained tearfully, and he must go said was true; but the money she had away. I haveVt any money, but If to haie. Yet she dared not confess Paul knew aboutMt: hed help me. what made it necessary. Will you ask him? But this time, John, she wept Tony thought a minuted brokenly, "hell go to a place I send -- Not tonight! she replled. Mohbe him. Hes promised he would. John, Doctor John X:-- must help me. No, he hates my son, the other, endlehayen sat down and took up cried passionately. Oh, you mustnt boot; Jiq had been .reading. say anything to him about ft. 9 I t infuse , t hand out any more Devon was Tomribel awfully mkift foy .that. boy: said he. Let tempted to refuse the haughty woman how see and K,ln lmd pulK, her around by the theres f 6flir only tl)nt afternoon. But she reMifKsiJt:- -. . . No. mw,;bf our 'befeglng me, I fefuse membered Philip, remembered his love ffir her. and relented. fled away .almost dls- kt Come along back tomorrow mornR cted. flhuld kee her son ing, and mebbe I can get you some, ml en to prison like Devon had been slie answered, walking away. Then fkqt afterrfoon. It would kill her. And over her shoulder she flung back, "Ill ibw could she face' him without a try, anyhow. inehns to help him escape If she With this last statement Mrs. Cnr-ti- s rould only gain admission to Cousin had to be satisfied. Reggie sufPaul He had always been the more fered dreadfully the night through, tender hearted of the two. his mother sitting at his bedside, For a while she walked up and Tony Devon also had been awake down her room, wringing her hands. most of the night. In the morning She was In a state of terrible antlety after she set about gatherbreakfast, when Katherine came In. ing courage to approach Doctor Paul. Hes got to go, repeated Mrs. CurWith r.nssle Piglet In her arms, sba tis, after she had told the whole story sat down beside htin, and now the to her daughter. He says hell be minute was there to speak, Tony arrested If he doesnt and has made didnt know how to begin. But to me promise nottjvAell John. jQb, If I gin meant to'rgiUj Tbny had learned, could only get to Paul." so ahd "blurted : "No one but that girl Is allowed Your cousin, Mrs. Curtis, Is kind near him, flashed back Katherine.' of pretty, aint she? By Johns orders, supplemented She would be if she didnt ery so Mrs. Curtis. much," responded Doctor Pant. Katherines Up curled. This gave Tony the ojiening she .Then why not appeal to her, wanted. mamma? Perhaps shed reach the Her boys awful sick, so she says," ears of his majesty, the Lord Al- she broke out, thats why she cries. mighty," said she. If he dont go away, hell die, mebbe. Oh, Kathle, don't be horrid," The lovely gray eyea grew darker sobbed her mother.. You know very as they searched bis, and Doctor Paut well I couldn't ask him through her. leaned over and looked keenly at her. Then what wllL yon do? demandDid Cousin Sarah ask you to come ed the girl. You say Cousin John wont help Rege, and you refuse to to me, little girl? he questioned m a ask the girl to ask Cousin Paul. Then kindly tone. what will you do? Tonnlbel nodded. use You ask her, Kathle," said Mrs. She says Doctor John dont Curtis, In coaxing tones. her boy, and mebbe youd help her, Kntherlne tossed her head. said the gtrl, blushing. Youve got a nerve to send me to The man considered the red face her for anything," she shot back. I moment me will not! Would It please you to have Sirs. Curtis came forward with hetp her and him?" he then queri trembling footsteps. I should think youd be the last perNot for your brother's sake? Oh, son to ask that My brother totdro Kathle, do! . shes always very unkind to you. So No, I wont, said the glrL She dont know any better, Just dont ask me. Reggies rot my Sliea never Jearuefl plied Tony. son, and I havent any sympathy lor what lovin' awful hard meus. VJ him." With that she made for the mebbe she'a so worried over her oQJ one. door and aa gone. she's got to be horrid to some e. For over an bouf the anguished , mother wajked u and down. Then (To Be Continued) 1 gj-.1- ae Three-quarte- rs . -- ni 1 hi-- - -- ' ' ' - i |