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Show THE PAGE TWO HERALD-JOURNA- Proelai'n n Herald-Journ- 1 9 S 2, HE GETS TOO HUNGRY UF.I IIUi; The TUESDAY, MAY LOGAN, UTAH, L, 3. SIDEGLANCES THE OLD al 4 FIVE TEAKS AGO April 30, 1328- - Hyrum was the dryest spot in the United States Sunday, the water mam having burst in the canyon e WORLD PARLEY MAY TURN TIDE valley is about to erect and shipping an egg grading plant of its own, H A Campbell, V of the Cache alley president association rePoultry Producers Lake a to Salt ported after tr'p F: a statement declaring that restoration of the Ilohenzollerns is the crowning goal of a reconstructed Germany. Tie all of these dispatches together and you have as gloomy a picture as any Jeremiah would care to look upon. Then, to make the bill complete, lump in with them the innumerable stories testifying to economic breakdown in this country the stories of cities that cannot pay their school teachers, their firemen and their policemen, the stories of wage scales and the like. mounting breadlines, of sweat-sho- p What you get, beyond argument, is a picture of a world in turmoil and distress. One hope is that the London conference can straighten out world difficulties and get us back on the right path again. MANS INHUMANITY TO MAN vFrom the Commonweal) I f ft opened activities the Logan Rotary R Owen as chau-maweek of t , ' ) U . r VjEt u Woikmen on the Logan canyon loud blasted a stump out of Stcammil! Flat, the stump flying into the air and severing the city light wires fix n thfc hydro-electplant. t33 oy. v 01ctue Humor 1923 - Mayor John A members of the city commission and the advisory committee of the chamber of comc merce visited the plant in Logan canyon to determine the exact physical condition of the plant. May Hans Valley Pioneer, Wrote Very Interesting Diary F. Hansen, Cache SfRVK t - 0 r. PAT OFF dont pay am aU.'iition to Jlaivin! He just playing contract." HILL BILLY hydro-electri- YEARS AGO Logan Construction company, the ultimate purpose of which is to build an interurban line from Ogden to with Preston, was incorporated P A. Wells of Omaha as president are Other incorporators George H Blood, E. L. Blood, YV. Crockett and RobPreston; B ert Murdock Logan. 29, 1913-Th- e g One of the most of the stories brought Sufferings of Handcart Pioneers; Raising forth by the degression was printed in a New York newsFour Hundred Men; Immigrant Supply to the with last week details that seem paper preclude possibility that it had not been carefully investigated. Stations in the Desert. and automobile There have been cases of hungry children, of helpless Logan city and county school horns. boards have decided to take the elderly women, of men falling down starving in the street; OGDEN OGDEN CITY, the I3th of April, CITY, November 2. question of whether the county 1857 YVe have had a good conferbut this story of the careless heartlessness of the fortucan arbitrarily fix the school And the cronomie conference 1H56 The weather has been cold ence, so never have that T good and the chivalry and delicate gratitude of the hope- will go down in history as a fail- and snow has begun to come in nate, levy. Presit a one. belter I have worked experienced ure because this country's rep- the mountains less and dispossessed, deserves to rank with any of them. Smithfield was the only town in failed to insist on a most of the time on the tabernacle. dent Brigham Young spoke Sevresentatives sanian of a order Catholic nuns who conduct Cache county able to muster enBriefly, The 27th of October I got mar- eral complete embargo on the imporbusiness matters ough names on a petition to vote tarium near New York, have given harborage, in one cor- tation of chop suey. ried to Anne Marie Sorensen from were important laid before the people. for recall of the prohibition law. She came ner of their property, to penniless vagrants; these men, Slegtl.se m Denmark One was that we were to arrange here the last part of October this who are fed at the convent kitchen, and do odd jobs when May 1. 1913 The Brigham for stations in the desert from comt in the second year baseball team and any present themselves, have built their own shacks, and pany, and manv more are on their fifty to sixty English miles apart Coaclf JosepBh R Jensen returned This Is Asbestos J. Glotz, North' way now. maintained themselves quietly and harmlessly. I have sold my oxen v. here groceries and merchandise from Provo where defeated 'for $78 m piovisions and merchan- can be sent and travelers can get the Brigham Young they It is the express testimony of the chief of police of the L u" dh'fL bv university dise it there, and get it Very cheap, a score of 5 to 2. locality, and of the superior of the convent, that they have gained nation LITE THROUGH Thereafter he spoke and encourbeen orderly and given no trouble. wide fame thru Lewis Edwards, on behalf of th HARO WINTER aged the people to gather all the to However, there is a fashionable golf course across the his efforts could. President Kim- - Logan military band, asked the stores thev CITY1. Dec. 3. 1356 YVe OGDEN cushis please that for three city for a donation of $200 to buy have had a har'd winter and the hall prophesied road, and its frequenters, as well as some of the landed tomers. Mr. Glotz snow is steadily coming Most of years we should have an overflow, uniforms The matter was turner was or the the first honor to human all, of the gentry countryside (not or an abundance, and thereafter over to Mayor H G Haybali for t the man In America companies have araction. nature) objected, in terms the intelligent reader can shape to rived, although with lots of hard- for seven years there would be train his hens for himself, to the public menace" which the poor wretches to lay eggs with the date stumped ship I have never heard of such hunger, and everyone should be THIRTY YEARS AGO on either end. trials as they went through to get prepared for seven years. represented. May 1, 1903 -- Plans for a comto heie SEEN FAMINE these mountains The A signed petition was sent to the superior, who read it mercial club in Logan are being Thousands of young men arc presidency called upon the people BY LEADERS outlined with most of the leadto the men with the explanation that it must be referred need said that the enlisting in Mr Roosevelt's forest to help the companies in. They Brigham ing business men participating to the archbishop; she herself, she told them, wished them conservation army, and Li'l Uoe went out with their horses and v ould be so great that people Among the organizers are Mayor is as ever, already wagons to stay. That afternoon, they fired their little hovels and Gee, patriotic Among them was my would flock here and say "take my Lorenzo Hansen, B. F. Riter, W brother Peter The poor people clothing, my gold and my silver B Preston, Jr., Joseph Morrell starting to save tinfoil. quietly departed. were so done up by hardship and for a meal," and that would Moses Thatcher, Sr. and Jr., A. H MARCH OF TIME cold and They would not embarrass the friend who had treated that out of six come here with a park they under one Thompson, Robert Murdock, J. W tree hundred, hunger two hundred of them arm and a child under them so kindly by remaining; their thanks, and their good- - Under the spreading chestnut the other Crawford. H Bullen, Jr., Melvin are few. died, and most of them that are The blacksmith And it was also said that J Ballard. J. E. Cardon and H bye, were told in the smoke from the ruins of their poor, For most of them shops are food stands left are crippled with frozen) arm we should work on the temple and G Haybali. now offending shelters. This was on Good Friday. hands and feet. finish this as soon as possible. Entitled Let those of us who sometimes feel that hardship is s turning our people everywhere into professional panhandOGDEN CITY, March 1, lW- If half the world doesn't know OGDEN CITY, the Second of lers, ponder this beautiful lesson of gratitude, and ask our- how the other half lives, it isn t It will soon now be five years May, H57 -- On the 23rd day of ... , means. Capable of be- I of Denleft want since for homeland. my trying selves if perhaps charity must be perfect in April, I became 2 year old. In to elicit taken apart; applied to spirit I lef- - there the past month I have worked ing birthland rmrk, my a lofty response instead of a mean and calculating one. models made of dethe 4th of March, 1852, and the pretty near all the time In the anatomical tachable pieces, so that the inA Bl I.I.-Let those of us who commit the sin of Danish name us so dear to me Ogden desti-tut- e to have I and canvon, the ternal structure as well as the AARN now that I will never forget it work out $75.00 for the marks of their destitution, in hating external form, may be shown; Hamlets words Many times when I think snout C. H Go pray," and .resldenl A torn Brigham hence, fragmental. K. I PAVY Tt I KET, it I miss my friends and my more have trav- rnft as the on o. turn of a pastry a pudding. Must looks have tkur soup tuo thin; the" do not know the ,u t of flavoring; greasy water with ,i sick carrot slowly g. ping its puny life away defines tin average soup One of the i anilicst inventions l, the package ol soup elements that most grocers handle In this peek ige aie three sorts of bean-- , two i,t peas, rice, macaioni, celery step and what not, you simmer till with a bit of boiling beef ntm when it is about done add a i tuple sliced onions and a few brown beans and you have a filling dish at the cost of a couple r.ots a head a meal. Baked brown beans with back b.uon and com pone is another lovely meal that might run you (!n,e to four tents a meal, but o tasionally a fellow gels rceklcsi and throws ins money all about. i ur ONIONS FOR M ITER all you noble a new wav to prepare this most noble fiuit Get a soupbom and simmer th;n for hours until you have a run bioth; season to taste and then drop m half i dozen peek d wholt onions and stew tnem until thiv are soft but not mushy A plate ot these hot onions, each anointed with a dab of butW, is about a. succulent a dish as 1 nave mot. Every yeai I onsume tever potatoes, but I go for onions m a laigc way If you ab.de by your-sel- t, garlic is a swell, elegant des sert, garlic tones up the system, the garlic and cheese cateis have wonderful vitality and amazing complexions: as a regul ir dul. cheese, black hi cad fiom whole gi.ons, light wine ami garlic, plus lanania is popularizing the some lentils and blown beans nod American waffle. brown rice, is hard to beat Both out here m the shack and 's in town, soups eai h yen- e.itei present population is more into the menu The wife has ''Unnoted at 127.000.00!) devised a couple down soups tbit are and Egyptians knew how to udd satisfying, enjoyable to metals in the year 4000 cheap The preparation of a good scup is as much a piece of eoak- - B C. Gather around, onion caters Here TYYENTY Section 3 MCA 1, Cioikott, April BV Oh, ri , I i base-hul- hand-car- ! A' TEN TEARS AGO l April 3i), 1923 Scheduled games between the Rotary Kiwami and Elks clubs a.id Amer-an Legion were postponed on account of ram hand-car- trr 'i . three-ton- e i rVt ?' ' A torjoer's jury report that Cora Hansen. College ward girl who was killed by a car on the state highway Sunday came by her death as the result of being struck by .an automobile driven by sortie person or persons unknow n. Howdy, folks! This department Is heartily in nwnrtl with President Roosevelt's decision to control production. Especially If he controls the production of ukeleles, musical sans heart-breakin- ) 3 May 1, 1928 - W J Funk, road that toe supervisor, announced Logan canyon road will probably be opened about May 15, several weeks earlier than heretofore. Lm-der- i U,i VrT w i. observance Boys' Week with a full sponsored by club with E planned day-by-d- ? f ' J Ca-h- e coming London conference on economic polities and disarmament, he has only to read If news (ILspatches in the daily papers. the these do not convince him he is beyond persuasion. Currently, wp hate a cable from Paris remarking that a spy scare like the one that swept Europe just before the World W ar is gripping France, Germany and Italy. I1 ranee has been rounding up spies along her German and Italian Germany has been swooping down on seciet French agents. Italy has been doing the same. With each arrest, suspicion and fear increase in each country. Simultaneously, another cable from Paris reports that the United States and the principal European governments have lost all hope of immediate progress in disarmament, and adds that the situation will not grow easier until the w oi political tension lessens." On the heels ol this, Chancellor Hitler declares in Berlin that Germany can no longer be treated as a power of the second rank she must be recognized as an equal partner; and the National Alliance of German Army Officers issues i Clark ge I Liberty thru all the land." ' Western M(,ber United Press, NEA Service, The Liberand The Scripps League of Newspapers. Features Bell. ty If anyone doubts the supreme importance of the forthinternational finances and t By-Geor- f TIMER RECALL- S- Published every weekday afternoon by the Cache Valley Newspaper Co., at 75 West Center street, Logan, Utah. Telephone 50. Price 5 cents a copy By mail, in Cache Valley, $2 50 a year; outside Cache Valley, $5 00 a year. By carrier, 40 cents a month, $3 50 a year. matter at the postoffice Entered as second-clas- s t Ij0gan utuh, under the act of congress, March I t . . . -- , Ru-sia- GRAND THEATRE Last Time Today A Big Special Feature See It! ' . t TALKIE TRIPS B.AR-B-- . the bane of Arnold Angell of Ashton. Two days in succession his was automobile stalled by acorns had hidden in his carshot down on buretor. arei i 1 SITTING ATOP THE WORLD WITH JIM MARSHALL, Most of the west's recent murderers seem to have been getting what is humorously called "life" in most western states this averages out at seven years in prison Seeing that a man can get 10 or 20 years for comparatively minor crimes this appears to be a bit unfair especially as some of the muiderers after they are released just go back to plain and fancy killing as a children ruthlessly city streets by gangsters or the callous slaying of people for defending their homes against armed robbers heartthe yet we lump broken wife together with the gunman and charge each with the same offense demanding in each case the same penalty luckity juries nearly always bore through to the truth. Of all crimes murder runs the gamut between highest virtue and and deepest vice some murders obviously call for the presentation of a medal to the killer together with an Illuminated address of thanks from the citizenry. while others seem to deserve man the harshest punishments can devise that is, admitting that punishment does any good which has always appeared to us a bit doubtful be - - k - The husband who has ruined his wife's life by nagging or by studied unfaithfulness the husband who has made his wifes life a nightmare of agony . . . who can blame the woman for ending her destroyer's mean existence with one swift shot? and who are we to judge was just what the provocation or juRt what tiny nerve cord wife's brain? snapped in the the law would give her nothing-save a divorce and in her own mind she may have felt completely justified That is one sort of murder and another is the cold, deliberate killing of innocents such as Murder to us seems never to justified but then we have never been completely exasperated at anyone Doubtless -- some killers are convinced they have committed worthy deeds and are a bit puz zled at the lack of general applause on the whole probably the penalty for murde- r- in this country -- is too light and human life too cheap and punishment too uncertain AND LISTEN: curious One thing is that during a murder trial there is usually great insistence on the rights of the murderer- but you hardly ever hear anything about the rights of the victim. - Todays Oddity Two important hapthings pened when an emergency ampu tation was performed on Joseph Graf, 7, of Vienna on a street car. First, the boy's life was saved, and second, a surgical record was established. The Graf boy was run over by a streetcar in a suburb and his left leg crashed below the knee. The youth was placed on a stretcher by the conductor and rushed toward the hospital in an express car, and many YY'here It came from: brothers and sisters so that my imbnll north to here and further on, Greek. Klastos, broken, from heart swells within me. but every- eled and maybe they will not be back to break thing .serves them well who serve for five Pronounced: Klastilj. .' or six weks. - t the Lord The snow is nearly all gone and we have mild, pleas-m- t weather and the people have begun to plow My luck has been I have been in the good city for a load of pottery and pretty near sold it all ' Painful-black and blue spots PicsidmN Brigham Young and appearing overnight on the shins Hebcr C, Kimball have decided to new disease a is comparatively which affects husbands who for- go north and they will take with hem four hundred men, Nobody get what is trumps. knows what for LI-- l I.I-R! R! t A doggone little fibiver Is rural Anne McTrue; She says: "By heck, I never neck Like city flappers do! United State- - farmeis may have " tough time of it, what with the HOMER BREWS ick of finance predatory DIARY troubles, the trespasses (in ome th of black bear and plaves) Thys evening, with Dame Brew, but consider the plight to driving afar into the eountrie, what-not- , the firmer of British East Afriand anon do stop at a roadside of tavern for a noggin of ale ami a ca fried leg of fowle, ami to watchFarmers m this area are bothing the young folks dancing in ered with buffalo, lions, tigers, the modern manner, which I do leopaids, hippopotamuses, zebras, deem vastly awkward and sdln. giraffes and elephants, and each but Dame Brew doth snap: YYhat has its own favorite method of do you know about dancing, zany ? destruction, no two of them alike. The only dances you rememlier Moreover all laws become i are the polka and the mazurka. reasingly xtnngcnt for the aniwhich do be a blanke fib, for mals' and not the farmers' proLord! I do remember dancing in tection As a result, the beasts 1914, the Turkey Trot, and mighty are becoming so bold they are a gracefully, too! s to the progress menace serious farm uviluation tf waltz a profesmoonlight Play Probably the worst pest is the sor. In Uganda alone, there elephant ore some 2n,0on of them, organized the Y'ienna ambu- into colonies, wmch occasionally go However, lance corps had been warned by thtough farms, leaving them lookDr. Rechi drove ing worse than the wake of a and telephone as full speed in his auto to meet flood the train. The farmers are raising strenDr. Rechi met it in the suburb uous and strident objections and realizing that not a moment t, was to be perfoimed his The estate of George VY'ashmg-cat his death was valued at operation right at the spot with assist-ants makeshift instrument and 5 ,,310.000 who never before had helped in a surgical operation. Modern Little Girl (uisturbed at The boy then was taken in an her prayers bv a scratching at the ambulance to a Y'ienna hospital B"reen door): "Oh Lord, please He has been announced cut of stand by a moment while I let She cat out " danger. The Klao, squirrels NATURELAND I ani-.n- . TA Capitol Theatre May 3, 4. Wednesday, Thursday 5 Acts Vaudeville t . , I t K .x fc . at O'CONNOR FAMILY : DANCING - COMEDY " CHATTER in-- lo-- m Gfifl EYERS AND GRETA . NOVELTY WIRE ACT ALSO SCREEN SNAPSHOTS and CARTOON n AND PARAMOUNT NEWS Vaudeville Shows at 4:15, 7:15, 9:30. " Admission '40c Children 25c f " 1C " At The GRAND TOMORROW A Paramount Feature Production STRICTLY PERSONAL With Marjorie Kambeau and Eddie Quillan And Dorothy Jordan. |