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Show page six 'i mi TBS JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH TEI-WEEK- Tuesday, February 1, 1910. thrill to the terrors of the Paris- MILLVILLE ENJOYS ians tonight. f Death and the passion of death MANYPARTIES is everywhere; the possibility of fire, which might wipe out prac-29. This Jan. MILLVILLE,' tically the entire city, is now at enits height. With the streets floodweek appears to be a week of joyment and gathering in soci- ed it would have been comparaables as on Tuesday, the 25th.The tively easy to fight fire, but as the officers of our Sabbath School ar- waters fall, the great mains whieh ranged a grand surprise on our 'are constructed in eighteen-foo- t Sunday School Superintendent. conduits beneath the streets crumThe met at the meeting house at ple up and the streets cave in in g" with it absolutelyim-possibl- e the w e ek ly b o a to war against a conflag- their partners and baskets of picnic to the number of about forty ration. The primitive system of and had a jolly good time and pre carrying water ini buckets would senteddheir Superintendent with be the only organized means of a bound volume of The Life of stamping out a, blaze. rd-4ue- Sale of c: et Pres. Wilford Wbodruf as a token of their good feeling towards him. On the 26th The stockholders of the waterworks company gave a grand banquet in our lialL Our hall war well filled with them and their families oif that occasion' and they certainly, had a real good time. Mr, Martin Olson was the chairman- of the committee that conducted the arrangements. A nice program was carried out which had bee.n previously prepared for the occasion, Then followed a grand feast of tire good things. Two long tables the e hall contained many length of the good things of the earth of which all both young and old partook to their full satisfaction, after whieh the tables were removed and some basketball games were played to the amusement of many. As they have screens prepared to protect the windows, the hall is frequently used for that kind of amusement by the pupils of our district schools. Announcements are out for a grand character ball on the evening of the 28th given by the orchestra. Four cash prizes are to be given for the best characters. It would be unfair to that at the banquet Mr. Alma Mathews arid his wife from providence were present,.- - from whom the company purchased the spring of wafer from which our water supply flows, and apparently enjoyed themselves much with .their associates, t Underwear With misery, suffering, looting, AND lawle-snes- s, bloodshed, violence, death, starvation), fear and .torture on every side, people have not turned to the amazing financial oss wh ich will result from this i Infants' 1 Railroad, mail 'and telegraph communications are crippled. Industries are compelled to he idle. Cable companies are hindered in their operations. The- streets are full of ruins.' As the waters go down over an area of nearly ten miles, a bedof slime is left, and even the army of workmen who are employed1 by the city are totally, unable to cope with conditions as- they arise. The industrial . and financial machinery of the entire nation is disorganized. But without going into consideration of the general conditions, the status of Paris to' ; r night is 'heartrending.' Three dead bodies were found floating in the old Latin Quarter late tonight. .Two had evidently fallen victims of the apaches. Their bodies were pierced with stab wounds and their clothing rifled. The third was evidently a naember of the apaches himself. Ills wrists were circled by a peculiar bracelet containing long jagged spurs which could be used as a weaporf in an emergency. The apache driven from their haunts along the Seine embankment, now overrun the city. The fear of the people lies first in its dread-o- f fire, which would demolish the remainder of the city not already POOR, DEVASTATED wiped out by floods, and secondly CITY OF PARIS in the reign of lawlessness initiated by the apaches. . Damage 4,300,000.000 francs. These picturesque criminals, Lives lost, 100. taking advantage of the dark conditions of the city, have broken Area of 'inundated region, 9 miles. into numberless stores and resisquare dences Emboldened by wine Maximum height of Seine, 30 stolen from cafes and looted feet 11 inches. homes, they are continuing their . Sewer flooded "or burst bywa-fers- quarrels and feuds while despair 900 miles. and deth is rampant around them. Wornt flood since 1658. Persons homeless, penniless.. or CARD OF THANKS otherwise affected, 100,000. Refugees who fled into city .975. The family of the late Mrs. Americans in Paris, 30.000. Sarah Foster Blair desire to exRelief funds contributed, tend their thanks to all those who francos. assisted them by word or deed in .River falling now. their recent bereavement.They ap iNew perils are fire, apaches and done, very preciate all ' V- pestilence. much and in particular want to - IParis. ' Jan.--2New. elements thaDk the bishopric and the choir of terror surpassing even the hor- of the Fourth ward for their rors of flood entered the black region of fear in Paris tonight wjtlrthe sudden" collating of POULTRYMEN ATTENTION -"bAildings as the waters of the - Go to Isaac Smith and Co., for Sin fell, and as' the- - realization your eorn, oats, 'wheat. chicken was fully borne In upon. the peo- feed, grit, oyster 'shell, poultry ple that they are at the mercy of remedies sprays etc., also for, the fire, 'should a conflagration break' Reliable Poultry Journal the' best out iri the devastated zone. As the poultry paper published. . swollen torrent of the Seine re- ceded gradually tonight the law- DUTCH ARE MOVED TO MAKE FERVENT PRAYERS less apaches took advantage of r t the darkness and came to. The Hague, Jan. 29. Au interlooting. The gendarmes, armed with carbines and pistols, esting event expected to occur in tjere instructed to shoot down all the royal household moves all ' peters on right. But the'- apaches Netherlands to ptay. Should weie nqt only armed and return-- , Queen Wtlhelmina give birth to a ed the fire.but many of them wore son, the Dutch cup of joy would - coals of mail beneath iheir clothoutflow, especially as it is now known that Prince Ilenry of The ing. The terrible flood began sub- Netherlands, the queens consort, siding this morning, and as the is not the harsh husband gossip ' day advanced the water fell more has made him. the Wth of the little rwiftlr. But as the flood receded Since conditions .became more appalling Princess Juliana the prince has atnl new dangers- - aro'-hourly. been gaining in popularity. The Tf re is, no disaster known to hu- queen r evident' fondness for .her man knowledge that could add a husband contributes to this, fof n t '1 Wear.. - - of-th- - omit-statin- , -- fchat-wa- sf 9. kind-lyjH'l- p, , fc eontin-sftMhe- ir REPRESENTATIVE VICTOR' MURDOCK, , ! ' 6 i tv .' j INSURGENT LEADER. Representative Victor Murdock of Kansas declared war upon Speaker Cannon liefore tiie opening of tile present session of congress and baa consistently kept up bis tight H was the Kansas member who called the insurgent Republican representatives tnto caucus before the opening of the session to out-bn- e a tight against the speaker. Mr. Murdock is regarded as a comer in national politics. He Is ODe of the most forceful speakers in congress and stands for wbui is termed the new idea in the management of national affairs. He l also a writer and lecturer of rare ability. . - Starts Wednesday February 2nd, the Dutch, people love Will this country, fearing they would She manifested her fondness in'bcecmg charges, an unusual way' when the SocialWoman Fatally Stabbed ists voted against the proposed Modesto, Cal., Jan, 29. Mrs, incpntf for Prince Ilenry. .She was so angry that she declared Guy Kilhurn, wife of a wealthy she would reject any allowance rancher was stabbed to death tofrom the people until it was vot- -' day by her Chinese cook, who beIn the ed unanimously. She has kept came suddenly. , insane. her word, and the prince, who has struggle over the knife the cook a private fortune of his own. re- was cut so severely that he mad ceives nothing from the people of die, also. Iloland. PROVEN ECZEMA CURE KEEPING WHEREABOUTS OF DR. COOK SECRET Many eczema sufferers have failed so utterly with salves and discoveries New ork, Jan., 29, Dy, Freder- other that even ick A. Cooks broether William the assurance of the best physiA Cook," who keeps a dairy at cian or druggist cannot induce 74 Bedford avenue, Brooklyn, them to invest .another dollar in was reading a letter from thelix-plore- r any remedy. , when a Publishers Pres It is to these discouraged sufcalled ferers in particular tMl'We now representative today. at only 25 cents, a trial offer, ' It is merely a brotherly misof the accepted slnndaiu bottle sive, he said; one of three that I have received in as many eczema remedy, a simple wash of oil of wintergreen, thymol and weeks. Dr. Cook is in Europe, but I do not car to say where. glycerine, as compounded in D. JD. D. Prescription. Mrs. Cook is with him. which Hundreds of cures have condisproves the assertion of false friends that she had deserted vinced us &nd we know 011 pan him. Nor have they deserted prove instantly with the first appit takes away ' the their children; the 4wo girls are lication-that not with them, however, buHare itch at once. 4 Riter Bros. Drug Co. being educated at the Hamilton institute at West Eighty-firs- t - The peculiar properties of street, Manhattan Dr. Cook says nothing 'in his Chamberlains Cough Remedy letters about preparing a detailed have been thoroughly tested duraccount of his trip to the north ing epidemics of influenza, and pole for the Copenhagen authori- vhen it was taken in time we ties I am confident that he will have not heard of a single case come out all right in the end, of pneumonia. however. The 1910 Buying chances are getting under way. The store a Is SHOOTS HER HUSBAND offers are IN DEFENSE OF CHILD are 1910 store ads.-Lt- he 1910 offers, and are worthy .if Missoula, Mont., Jan. 30. Jack yout attention.-- ' Lashell, a wealthy resident of died today from the effects Japanese Substitute lot1 Cows Milk. The Jaglhnese have discovered a of a rifle wound in the forehead, very cbeijrp and good substitute for the inflicted, it is said by his wife milch cpw In the form of a tiny bean. last night in a quarrel. Aecord-n- g The Jujce extracted by a special proto witnesses, Lashell went cess from the. bean !s said to be an txcement vegetable milk, the properties home intozicated and attacked of which render It highly suitable for his wife with an ax,- - and also usy in tropical countries. preparation is obtained from tried to kill his six year old boy jTheSoja bean, a member of the ttye for a minor offense, Mrs. Lashell family of plants, and a very pop-laarticle of food among the poorer in defending the child, is said to of Chinese and Japanese. In classes haveMieaten her husband on the making the vegetable milk the beans head with a bottle before shooting are first of all softened by soaking and him. No arrests have been made. are then pressed and boiled in water. -- Lo-thro- p, A T THE H. G. Hayhall Mere. Gos. Store I price of a weekly, THE THRICE-A-WEE- K WORLDS regular subscription price is only $1.00 per year, and this pays for 156 papers, We offer, this unequalled newspaper Have been made and sold since and THE JOURNAL together for the first one was manufactured in one year for $3.75 by mail $4.25 1854. Some of the very first ones by carrier. , are still in use throughout the world, a few of them having been WANT COLUMN carted across the plains to where they are still satisfying the musical demands of th- FOR SALE Beautiful home, a. eir proud owners. corner lot, consisting of good Whether new or old, Gabler warm frame house, good barn, pianos have a never failing sweet- good cemented cellar, modern ness in their tone and a wonder- poultry house, many big fruit ful wearing capacity. trees. Very cheap. Adam Gneit-inThe reason : Gabler pianos have Logan 792 North, 7 East. been made for' three generations by one family of artisans. C - HARRIS MUSIC CO. Oldest music firm in the state.. Neb-brask- a, g, -- Andersen Fuel Company - Chamberlains Cough Remedy use never disappoints those-whit for obstinate coughs, colds Begs to inform everybody,evry irritations of the throat and lungs that it hag already comIt stands unrivalled as a remedy where, for all throat and lung dis- menced its long life of usefulness in the coal and wood service. 2 ease. 1 o KThe" ' ' prudent gift-buy- Coal for everyone. Both far and near is er watching the ads., nowadays and making some purchases be" times! THE THRICE-A-WEE- COAL COAL COAL WORLD K Without a Rival in its Feld The Largest, . Cheapest and Best Newspaper Published-- ' at The Price Read in Every English-SpeakinCountry. . g It has invariably been the great Come one, Cornwall Come early.. - edieffort of the That Good Cod" , New tion of the .York World to publish the jmws impartially in "2 Bloeks South from Depot. order that it may he an accurate Phones. Ind. 138 D. Bell 363 B. reporter of what h5s happened. It PROMPT DELIVERY tells the truth, irrespective of , The resultant liquid is exactly similar to cows milk in appearance, but is en- party, and for that reason it has 3 tirely different in its composition. This achieved a position with the pub- C ISoja bean milk contains 92.5 per cent, lic of its unique among papers 'water, 3.02 .per cent protein, 2 13 per ' ' class. 1.88 Q.03 cent fat 'cent, fiber, per per substances and The subscription season is now cent, 0.11 per cent ash. Some sugar and a hand and this is the best offer at little phasphate of potassium are added la order to prevent the elimina- that will he made to you. H tion, of the albumen, and then the mixIf you' want the news as it real. NOTARY till a substance ture Is is, subscribe to the Thrice-a-Wee- k ? PUBLIC J like condensed milk is obtained. This ly; .edition of the New York "condensed vegetable milk is of a yellowish color and has a Very pleas- World, which comes to you every ant taste, hardly to be distinguished other day except Sunday, and .is from that of real cows milk. . Journal Office, Logaa tus praeticallj a dally v at the Thrice-a-Wee- k r . Prefers Starvation. Galveston, Jan. 29. Evidently preferring starvation rather than return to their native country, 22 Bulgarians held for deportation are refusing food to carry out the! threat that they-woul- die rather than "return home. Efforts of of fleers, to force them to eat provedi unavailing. The government refused the immigrants a home in - Andersen Fuel Co. legu-inou- s 1 e ( , Chas. England boiled-down , |