OCR Text |
Show PAGE SIX TIIE JOURNAl , LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH. WHAT AMERICAS ANSWER RANGE RIGHTS Serbian Masons Send JOE LEES DEATH Appeal To Americans MEANS TOLD BY COMRADE The Supreme Council of ScotAmericas Answer, the - U. S. Official War Picture issued tish, Rite Masons for Serbia has by the Division of Film, of the just sent an unusual document Informa- to all the Masonic councilsand Committee ledges in this country. Its publition, is not the ordinary film play .It is a chap- cation is called forth by the facf ter of .the great drama of the that pacifism has long been a war, registered by U. S. Signal part of the Masonic creed and Masons may be disposed to conCorps photographers, by direction of General John J. sider seriously the peace proposals which will be forthcoming Pershing. It is purely a GovernIn ment' enterprise. No individual from the Central Powers. iew of German the aggression the in has any profit interest The picture has which brought on the World production. been made and it is presented War, the Serbian Masons want not it clearly understood that they for public consideration, to make money although it are net pacifists. At least, they must necessarily produce a rev- make plain their conviction that enue in order to met the expens- an immediate and premature es involved but to peace. caimoLmeet ln any way show the millions of contribut- the earnest desire of true Maors to the several Liberty Loans, sonry. the purchasers of Thrift and Following this statement 13 a and War Stamps, Taxpayers, summary in outline of the fiirat-i- c on-Pub- lic f The cattle and sheep men of Cache valley, who enjoy the benefit of permits to range their cattle or sheep on the Cache National Forest; and who' have never yet taken their reasonable share of liberty Bonds were warned the first of the week to get in out of the wet. The Chief Forester at Washington, D. C., has just communicated the information that preference to ranging priviliges on National Forests will be given -- to persona who-a- re supporting their government by taking their just proportion of Liberty Bonds and other war subscrip- -' tions. It is evident that there are some cattle and sheep men in Cache, county who have greatly benefited by their permits ' to range cattle and sheep on the Cache National Forest, but who think they are going to cover up their unpatriotic, small dispositions, which have existed from the very beginning of the war, as shown by their records, by purchasing from fifty to five hundred dollars In bonds when they should take from one thousand to five thousand dollars worthy These men must be handled. And it is up to the city and the county councils of defense to see to it that they are properly reported tSo'5 tfe have 'them 4xc use and benefits xrfpthiovern-- , ' ' ' ment domain. ' Persons who refuse to support their government in times oS need must not be given direct benefit of its privileges. 4 Army Cars, Ready Boxed;TM3f' ! Truck To toast Motor car manufacturers of Detroit 'and the United States in a huge army, are conservation movement by boxing motor cars at Detroit, ready for overseas shipment, and hauling them on motor trucks to the seaboard. Thousands of motor cars and trucks are being sent to France for the fumys, use. Officers are being provided with cars for use back of, the lines. Trucks haul foqd, supplies, ammunition, men freight-ca- r everything that is to bA moved back of the battle lines and . almost up to the actual fighting front. "Since the middle of last win-- . . ter, long trains of thesfc vehicles have been moving from Detroit to Atlantic seaports on their own wheels and under their own Thousands of freight power. cars have been released for the v press-pgent- ed -- . in-ord- er . and those who have so generously givri in other, ways for the needs of the war, just how the .great sums have been expended and what, in a physical way, in been accomplished has France during the first year of Americas participation in the struggle for Democracy. It shows the wonderful dock Somewhere in France, built on swamp land by American soldiers, and now v being used to expedite' the landing of our troops and the handling of the stupendous volume of supplies with which the sea fronn the United States 'to the coast of France is being bridged; it shows one pf the mamoth established di Abe bnea a great plant with a capacity for 10,000,000 pounds of meat, and capacity of producing a million pounds of ice daily. It shows the assembling of American locomotives by our soldiers mechanics; the the building of railways, the leveling of French forests to Austria-Hungar- y, and old shoes salvage department; the sanitation of the soldiers uniforms the endless by machinery; used to trucks stream of the to fronte th transport supplies of acres the comouflaged guns, ammunition, shells and other the American Aero Squadron, and, finally, the actual fighting, in which American soldiers have brought undying fame upon themselves atid their country. A VAPOR THAT WINS ' sea-eoa-st ed -- - ovenIf to fail to win this war what: would Think this thought twice have heard of German culture. Heard how noble is the foe, Bang in front of human nature He himself has told us so; Yet. I say ho made. an wrror, All too cocksur? was his crow. And it's up to mo to tell you What Ive seefl and what I Know. I LIBERTY BONDS This is not only a war for Democracy and Liberty, our heads popped up to twig him, So the'" snipers did begin; Someone said to let him perish As but a war of Germany menaces our rights, our our homes, and our means of livelihood. self-defens- a stray shot was nosm; Up then stands Joe Lee, my comrade He to me was like a twin Can'( stand this, said Joe, at no Trice, So Im olng to fetch him iu, By self-respec- took the w& t, of defense ready to his hand. These weapons are Liberty Bonds. We cannot all fight with guns and bayonets but we can all fight with Liberty Bonds. Buy J one has. But how many more will you buy? The success of the Fourth Loan and of the war itself depends on your Gcr- - man, him in a safety spot. a Put bandage round his shoulder. More than 3,000,000 tons of Which was where he had been shot; shipping have been built in U. Someone called our Joe a lrtsro. S. shipyards as part of our anBut he bade us stew that rot to business. swer to Germanys plan to wipe And attend more strict foemans fire was hot. the For tout merchant marine of her it. enemiei, according to report, of So we wired In to return Tried to let them have hat-h- o Emergency. Fleet Corporation As they started baking for It, Felt we must put up a show; for business to August 3st. All foTgot about that Gevman, On August 1st there were 171 Him that Joe saved, laying low, behind shipyards at work, of which 76 Till a chum, whod glanced him, were steel, 85 wood, 2 composite Shrieked In horror Look out, Joe!" and 7 concrete. time for looking, A, total of 5,819,081 tons , is LOrd I There wasnt . Joe. he had no chance, not ho. ndw afloat under; the control of For the- napicless brute bad marked him , the shipping board. Down for death by treachery; The fleet corporation proSquatting up, he gripped his rifle, Rested It upon his knee, gram calls for a merchant marIn diabolic murder. Andr ine of 2,651 ships, of a total Thru the brain shot poor Joe Lee. ABUSE OF DIRECT ' LEGISLATION Shot and slew the man, his savior. Shot and killed him from behind, For a bullet was the. only Gratitude the scum could hnd; Couldn't even shoot another kind jjust sort out from human That one life that should be sacred To a dog with half a mind! Well, the scoundrel didnt livemolong. And his crime appears to Just about the foulest .action Done by even Germany; If you hear Ihcmjirate of culture In the long years yet to be, Tell this tale, as true as Gospel, Of 'the death of poor Joe Lee. . ' 1 . A Farm Made To Pay answer to that question. In Oregon, the home of the Initiative and Referendum, only six measures are to pe - four-hors- voted on in November. :k Several are bills that the legislature shoved over to the people as a means of escaping responsibility. Two are fish bills of local import, that the whole state vote to pass on at great trouble and expense. Two are ' priva te !!revenge bill that simply embody the de- sire of two individuals to punish opponents. ; voted on J.9 in , Oregon 1908, on 32 in 1910, 35 in 1912, 3 in 1914 and only 19 in 1916. The abuse of the system the slow ly dying. Expenses of operating1 the farm, but not the interest on the capital. were deducted frorii the income before the foreman his percentage. The owners yielded to 'the plan when dolthey found that for every lar the foreman, got under such an arrangement they would receive nine. deliver the goods. Some one wants to hear from the slacker that tried to court the girls Well, last heard from he hadacquired several dainty little mittens, 'While the girls .were looking for some one armed or one eyed man. x ad two-hor- se ed r ' Go to your bank and Buy all the bonds you can. Buy more tfian you ever thought make your arrangements. you could buy. Buy "ill f bz to Your Utmost Ji ' , IfJl. If f V I ni rG i 'U This Space Contributed to Winning the War By SPANDE FURNITURE CO. The germs, he said, will carry through the air with drops of Influenza Known In ' Science Since 16 ISALT LAKE, Oct. 16. New dinary While ad-dre- ss Life 1 t iAse DULUTH, Minn., Oct. 16. Five trains, loaded with rescuers and firefighters, with full heads of steam in their engines, were standing in the outskirts of Duluth tonight, awaiting word of the progress made againstfordst fires which broke out afresh in this district late - today. sixtyt, miles south west of here, were thpeatqied wjth destruction by fire, a change - of wifid having given the flames a new lease of life. In addition to the towns mentioned, Wiahkon and Pillager, Minn., were said to be thieatened by peat fires, but So far as it is known their danger is not great. Reports from the burned area tonight were to the effect that the bodies have been recovered, with much of the devastated section still to be explored . north-boun- - Iond of tavera. Why, confound It! returned the impatient drummer. Your porter said the station a Rent told him It was ten minutes late. Yes, but you know hid Henry Is so deaf that he hears only about a quarter of what, la said to him. the-Tetu- -- . , , Advicesj 'stated that McGrath, White- Pine and Salona, Minn., ht - rr--1 the bacteria. .The expulsions of air during the Spanish influenza is tint new, arid as far back as 1640 was a ordinary conversation, said the not strong enough to recognized, specific disease. Dr, doctor, are Li L. Daines, state bacteriolo- carry the germs to a greater distance than one foot from the gist, who recently returned Horn a studf of the disease at speaker, and the maximum danthe Rockefeller institute, de- ger zone during loud talking is not more than four feet. In orclared last night during an dinary coughing or sneezing the before the Salt La jee Counbe carried ten feet, germs may ty Dental association 'that' Very which considered is the maxilittle is known of its origin. Ha conmum zon.e. Persons danger said that it is mysterious and he the are stantly talking, sid, spooky, and that it has' menace. greatest epidemic in the United States since 1889. As a preventive against the for perSpanish influenza is the most cbntagion, particularly sons influenza Spanish attending contagious disease known, said j)r Daines ; travels westward sufferers, Dr. Daines suggested around Hie world and is now the use of masks made of three thicknesses of butter cloth. He pandemic as well as epidemic. said that experiments made at Those who suffered from the disthe Rockefeller institute had ease during the last epidemic, proved ordinary gauze masks, twenty-eigyears ago, are im- even ten of thicknesses of gauze, mune to the extent of from-3to be worthless. absolutely to 60 or 70 per cent, and during Masks made butter cloth, qf the present epidemic, he said, prevent howeverrb.esaid,will are few who are more than 30 years of age who will be at- escape of influenza germs even during the most Berious fits of tacked by it. or sneezing. He sugcoughing The virulence of the disease use of the butter the gested increases, said Dr. Daines, as it cloth both masks for the pafrom one person to passes tients for nurses. and the another, and with each transmission it reaches the most seriHfa Handicap. ous stage in a shorter space of The train is forty min- time It rpqchpg its maximum Utes late, Mr. I Sf Hors., said the land- growthordevelopmentin fro:im four to six weeks. It first appeared in Spain in May of the present year, spread through1 all of Europe arid then crossed to the United States. The first appearance of the disease in the United States was at the Boston naval hospital at Chelsea, Mass., on August- 28, and in two weeks time had spread to 2000 victims. There is no known vaccine with which to combat the disease, said Dr. Daines, and there is no dependable prophylactic. 1 Forest Fires In not-bee- farm For ten years to failed in central Michigan inpay interest on the capital, owner vested. On year after the had been inducted to make certain radical changes the farm paid all expenses of 'operation and returned them- 5- per cent on an investment of $60,000. These changes were e Substitution of for machinery; un-j- -f s the in cows dairy profitabe herd ; adoption of the, silo plan ; allowance to the foremafi, in addition to his salary, of 10 per cent of the net income from the farm. - to Your Utmost Of course you have bought Liberty Bonds. Every -- Laid deadweight tonnage of 6,003,-50There remains to be built, exclusive of what has been launched in September, tons. The fleet corporation also is building a mosquito fleet of tugs fighters and barges totalling fifty thousand tons. The successful operation of this great fleet and maintenance of the shipbuilding industry after the war will depend largely on our nations policy toward' our American ship owners and their protection from foreign competition. This question is already receiving serious consideration. e. Every citizen every business man has weapons back; Joes arms my business? happen DefendYourselfWith prcim-R,-And, crick-crac- k, Our Merchant Marine we should of France and Belgium? What will be left of business here, if we fail to crush the sinister power of Prussian militarism? How much would you nave left after paying the taxes pd levies imposed by a victoribus Germany? It was when within the trenches We were wearing strength away, All the night the guns were grow ling And they woke, up with the day; O'erThe plaiinire 'dawirwatj as blackness turned to grey, We could see, out in the open Whefe a wounded German lay. From O What is left of business in the invaded districts slack, Where his uniform live in. A peace which makes Hauls him, lifts him, kind and tenpossible a continuation of such der, While the bullets fly ' depredatory dealings is no Staggers with him to the trenches How we watched that journey peace at all, but slavery. by advertising department) sighed his Times-Despatc- h. , Faddists, constitution chargrelief and tnothmed for her to arise. ers, and political busybodiesput The woman pulled hersetf together, Some of''The$e . people , who the looked Into a mirror, and then again people to great expense and seated herself tn th chntr. growl about late trains, can trouble and nearly everything 1 am all through with your teeth," solve the difficulty by staying proposed is voted down. the dentist said. ail-roI know,, the woman answered, at home and leaving t ther free to get supplies tj the blit arent yon going to fix .tip my Try & Journal want add they hairT l'oungstown Telegram. soldiers on v as one of thejcrack football players nFIhe U. A. C., now serving his country in France,- recently received the following poem written by him, descriptive of an incident illustrative of German ingratitude and an eye witness. Joe--bdu- g 23 in a wonderful How Much Would the KAISER Tax Your Business? s, argues that nothing but a comgo the rifles; Out cjawls plete cessation of these practiOu goes Joe iu wriggly track. ces will make the world safe to Thirty yards, then grabs the German was 1. - tii; Al-dou- . Beef steak smothered in ontransportation of other army, ions is a part of the Joill of fare civilian goods. Further release served. up to American ...soldi of freight cars has been made in France. It may be merely inby the custom of boxing motor cidental .to a modern army cuicars, ready for shipment to sine, but suspicion grows that It France, and hauling them .from is carefully camouflaged mili, Detroit to the on the tary strategy. Think for a motrucks. Hundreds of Dodge ment of the shock it must be to Brothers cars have been shipped the morale of a German soldier in this manner, billed direct who is more than the odor of steak and oiu army in France. ions is . wafted across to his : f trench .and invades his olfactorthe Dentists troubles. ies. It is no wonder that they are throwing down their arms, The dentist has his troubles. After working on a woman who had throwing up their hands, lustily an extravagant coiffure to Impede his yelling Kamerad! and surrenprogress and handicap his manipula-tions, lr. Iullem (right name withheld dering in droves. Richmond r international policies sanctioned by Germany, Turkey, and Bulgaria before and since the opening of the war. The Supreme Council Themother ofrTorifey - pecrneeded timber; the buildand the in order to dam ing of a great to create a reservidr supply one of the largest hospitals with water; it shows how American soldiers line in camp and on the fighting lines; - what they eat, how the daily tons upon tons of bread is made, how the worn clothing Is renovated and repaired by French women in the service of the American army; the utilization of old hats half-starv- Wednesday, October 16, 1018. Officials continued to estimate the number of dead at close-t- 1000.- - Coincident with the , annourice-me- nt that state officials will hold a rehabilitation conference tomorrow at scores of refugees, who have been d here, started back for their; homes. Nearly all expressed the intention of rebuilding quar-terre- s their farmsteads. The first steps to be taken, it was said, will ba to provide funds, under a repent A Parting Shot. to the state constitutioiff. Will Itlukem had Just popped amendment the question to Miss Elderleigh, the n-permitting ''loaning' of lady-o- f hia choice. state trust funds to fanners for I am sorry, she answered resoluteIm sure long terms. Already local deally, T. cannot marry you. ers are receiving large orders you never sow any encouragement written on my fact. for lumber and other building , Ah, true ! sighed the rejected one, I suppose It was because of my In- material to be used In the work of rehabilitation. ability to read between the lines. (J |