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Show PUBLISHED THS THE HOME TOWN PAPER THE JOURNAL . tnuisday TE2 JOURNAL, LOGAN. CACHE COUNT!, tTTAB PAGE TWO eastern manufacturer cancelled a national advertising to place his copy in the local newspapers of his ANcampaign BY territory.JIis sales increased. The reason : Every advertisement was read by more people. Why? Because the home paper is not scanned hurriedly and thrown away. It is read Batata At th Poet Office every day In the week except Ban day town and by every member of the family. It is news, about at Logan, Utah, a Becoud Claaa Batter, vour neighbors. ' If the fact that you went to Salt Lake City on business is news, KATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION ADVERTISING i fcl BSt RIPTION KATES 'why isnt it news to tell people that you brought back some barPaid in advance gains in dresses, or shoes or furniture? Our business is to tell 25c By mail, per month .... people about you. Your business is to tell people about your 42.00 By mail, per year 45c ' store. If you dont, people forget you even though they know you Delivered, per month . $4.50 Delivered, per year-are in business here. Paved roads, automobiles, radio, are taking your customers in-- 1 Member of Associated Press cities to buy, where they are reminded of good values and to the The Associated Preea la exclusively entitled to the nae for repnbllcatlon of all newa dispatches credited to it or not otberwiao credited In this paper good merchandise. They may know you carry the same goods, but and also the local newa published therein. they are not reminded of it. All right of republics tion of apeclal dlspatchea therein are alao reserved. Merchants in other larger communities are getting millions of dollars of business from out of town buyers yearly. Keep that money in your own pockets. An advertisement in your papsr ' will help you do it. Rain Fair Change , EARL&ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY tTKOPBli: M frump if Eitii H Quart to toauii, who Ik mner gainp portal ttiffujf, Ar Fhtl Jfartm, tout f ray .r- - K, if Imyr.tmed bp tktof incTp gang. kh ttmgt Marttn'p guard Batty ! hint let K Lai her toBo, fidcf her. J. frantic at il tk dark n.tmand roomf in t bout flnallii terrain Martin. bound cand gaaytA. reit VfKen Betty turprteep them Their eeeap frrm a htiinoV. f.ac. ,j eit eft I U oonctwre a pica. Enid tat nt Betty while Phil irtcak up and hiock him out. Ttco eet ftrre summoned bp Batty err re amd Said and Martin tea in the jengeteret ear amid kail of b.i.ltt. t re-re- kr llf )rr j , nr A NAME DEFILED BAROMETER READINGS 7NID MW knew how they eladed their prsner. hr text on- - Third r.ue ktoah from where they hsd flwtolontJ the gangster car ebe aten'p1&ted hrr present prediee-tnre- t. It esemed almost aa difficult ?o-Da- 29!!l2i34!56i7i89il30 Yesterday barometer at reading each a 7 r ;! 4 4 ( " t j I By MAR! m,faWLQ HEAtTB MORE BUTTER IN CACHE HOMES CAMPAIGN is now on in Cache valley to promote a greater consumption of butter on the part of Cache families. DairyROMANCE OF THE BODY ing has for a number of years taken a top rank, along with - the growing of sugar beets, as a leading industry of thiasectio rhatislho living Farmers in recent months have complained of the low price and animals composed of? 'received for their buttorfat, owing to what seems to be an over These questions have puzzled the mind of man for countless supply and production of butter. centuries, and from time to time a variety of answers were given, The ancients believed that the human body Investigations recently carried on by the dairy officials of the U. S. A. C., committee members of the Logan chamber of comwas composed of four elements, earth, fire, water and air. Health was dependent upon the proper merce, and other interested groups, have shown that Cache valley residents could greatly lessen this over supply and production of balance and proportion of these elements. Disbutter by the consumption of more on the family table. The use of ease resulted from a disruption of this balance. But all of their conjectures were based upon fancy butter substitutes has gained such proportion in Cache and other and illusion. parts of Utah that one law taxing oleomargerine has been passed and at least one other bill was introduced in the special session of No definite knowledge could have been the Utah legislature which has just come to a close. secured concerning the constitution and the comSupport of local industries, like charity; begins and is most position of human, animal and vegetable bodies effective at home. One investigator of the butter situation was until the discovery and perfection of the micropresent at a banquet in Denver recently when a well informed scope and the development of the modern science over supply of butter in the of chemistry. speaker declared that the United States would he consumed Within twelve days if each perThe microscope was in vented in the seven son In the country would consume a small extra square of butter teenth century .At first it was merelya"scientlflc toy to be used three limes' adayT more bYcurTo uF'dIIettantesT!aterrtt,wa5Rpptiedto Dairyingand phases in Cache valley have growa to krge.proportiyii3'in,.jecent "years, and in order to maintain the Robert IIooket an erratic genius who touched on many scien standard of high production promoting prosperity to the farmers tific fields' but exploited 'none to perfection, was the first to obengaged in the industry, there Is need for more home support and serve what today is recognized as the biologic cell. cooperation on the part of every organization and citizen in the Studying a thin Shaving of cork under hi- s- microscope, he structures. valley. Increased home consumption ef butter is the first great noticed that it was made up of many little cube-lik- e .. ,, ,, ... , .remedy, Because, these structure? .were approximately sguare- phaped jie called them cells. The name has persevered. A -- 7 ? t so-call-ed -- t l- v s 7 iP ..... r..t --t COLORADO TO ANNEX UINTAH? all known living to obtain trade relations with either Salt Lake City we find the inhabitants of Uintah Basin ready to dicker with either of these larger communities in order to get their farm and mining products to a market. Now for over a week this section of the world has been isolated. Not even the rural free delivery has been able to get through. This country raises wheat, cattle, farm and dairyy products besides having much coal land to develop. Lacking in highways the twenty thousand people of this region have time realizing anything on the fruits of their labor. Some years ago Vernal created interest in this neck o the woods when a y bank building was to be erected there. Every brick was Promises of roads have been forthcoming mailed parcel-pos- t. ever since. ; A group of Denver business men are endeavoring to obtain a certificate of necessity to allow the completion of the Denver and Salt Lake Railroad from Denver to Roosevelt to tap the wealth of this country. One could argue that the road should go right through to Salt Lake City but that is'not likely to happen since the Denver people want this trade for themselves. This would certainly be progress for the Uintah inhabitants. If the business men of Salt Lake City get behind a paved high way they can beat the Denver idea to smithereens and open the new trade territory for less money and in far less time than a railroad could be constructed. There ar? so many reasons why a railroad may not be built, even with the advantage of only a short trip from Craig, Colorado, and yet it might be done, established the fact that, structurally, composed of one or many of these units called cells things are a-h- two-stor- ' Sfcpai-ent- s - TO PUNISHMENT By A'ice Judson Peale Of ail refinements of cruely perpetrated under the righteous name of discipline, none i worse than the torture inflicted uoon the child made to wait for his -- you and I wont ever now. With the leads Tt got to night, that house, . Skinny. Batty Rose, and other things they said. Ill have the Big Shot trapped in abort order; ! , . and when 1 do say, do you know j what happened 1 6 day? Was It the Jolting of the taxi? Her head seemed suddenly to be , spinning around, a strange numb-ness to be settling upon her. She thought that she said "No but abe wes not sure. Well, Til tell yon! Shive Franks wife came to see me. There was a lot: Shive Frank knew about the Big Shot that he bad never told me being afraid to tell. -He hated the Big Shot far mere even than had imagined, and, cunningly planned to have his full revenge even If it wasnt . unUl . after be wae dead! He put down paper a record of the major crimes In which he and the Big Shot had been engaged together when the latter was known as Hal Some time ago Frank Varney. wife discovered this. She told me she was scared" stiff! Too probably didnt bear about it np in Winnipeg, but a number of years ago there was a particularly brutal murder of a man named lonvers, a bootlegging affair, over , on Long .Island, that is a mystery, to this day. -, - punishment. Linas mother used to make her go and wait In her roomnor half an hour or more until she came up to administer the whipping. The agony of that susnense did more to create an abiding resentment than the punishment itself, harsh and often undeserved as it was. There was something exquisitely humiliating about being made to wait obediently for the executioner. The child could not fail to sense behind such treatment the fact that her mother enjoyed the - punishment she inflicted, that it was In some obscure way not a disciplinary measure but an expression of hate. Of course, the parent' who enjoys punishing his child is proably not aware that he does so and Is himself reacting unconsciously to emotional drives that hark back to his own childhood. It is only when Inflicting penalties of excesssive harshness and adding to them such cruelty as making the child wait submissively for his punishment that the objective picture of his own actions should tell him that he is not disciplining his child but Indulging In emotional satisfactions of his ownr Effective punishment is just and swift. Above all there must be about it no suggestion that the person who inflicts it derives from it any Aside pleasure or satisfaction. from the far reaching bad effects of parental cruelty in later life the Immediate result in terms of daily discipline is to make for callousness and or subterfuge and secrecy. 1 , I. S - . Mfiiwimto tow -- "here had been the problem of heepiog Enid out of the newspaper story Phil had confidently urged that to m She had conceived a plan and the driver only awaited Phil dreaded the ride with Phil It rvmt only that she could explain orthing It was to tie a parting. Her mind was mado np. She was afraid hut glad, she had to confess, Shat he, too, cared. She could not e blind to that. He had shown !t many times tonight in hi wwrda, his voice, in his manner and Me way he touched her hand. Presently- - Phil Martin emerged frwn the ore. He paused at the dlde of tho cab wih the obvious titoaon of giving d reel Ions to a driver, was steady, almost wMual as she forestalled him. - Tve told him where to go, 1A WITS IfGHTs (By The Assodatcd Press) San I rancisro J.'ick Siewart, Ran Francisco, Detroit George Trafton, knocked out Ilarvey Slarr, - an right! he sa'd easily: Johvsrs murder was unsolved kta to tho driver, as he stepped' U.a cab: Let'er go, son! This was bne of the things Shive The tart started forward. "Well, had recorded in detail. He took rvo got that lixsd up! ho part in the crime hlmscif, and was it was this same buoyantly, And now teij equally guiliy-r-hu- t u ail about it. Unit!. Tiicre Is so llrl Varnay, the Big Shot, who !ioe lire a taxicab for confidences, actually eommiltid the murder. Shlvta wifa loved him in honest "jafa why thy ail rattle sos the fashioa at least, she says so, end drive, cxn't Lear! "No, she sal,!. Id rvUer hear I boilevd her.- i.e I laid, she was year story first. Toll me Low tbay badly frightened when she found out whht SlilVe had done and go you into that house. a Itttic ruafally. begged him to destroy the papers. It was U 6ia hi siia. The He .wouldnt listen to her. Oldsat thore K Matches! I told finaliy they compromised. Shive house I'd Jail $ad was to seal up .the papers eqd jo thar m a saacx i .te Lwfitssfs spaghetti put them Into safe keeping somea poi'.c llsotsnaat trUnd where. This. he did. Ho had in pfrv of min whos .ust rbost ktoO old cron? tamed Schnaffnor, A pXKahr.iker on the tower East Side. gsitiug b' hands oa thy 3-rj Start r I if ' feet, thft'e fin' got Krh.iafTnor to put the V.v Ie Rnl. without wed been talking abort wa. Jn fc8 Were tnere beliuv hie jrtwabreser friend. what 1 l.f Mm I etvtfcl t contained, got Schnaff-ua- r re I? pTv.iiiie that it wcmldnt be !w ir.vyf invlt-ret. A a& :a tug rp ro:u behind, naked opined. while he, Shive, was alive. - pleasantly wi ugh for a match 'Recently after ho found out that fcar.if J el;n my box and he I was alter the Big Shot, be atnue-- r.e eee over the head with changed trfose instruction. He told elatLet. t 'hen 1 got m sense both his wife and Schnaffner that ca t r lying up t.vr an the if anything happened to him the ooi ef Hut poem, nicely toped and packet was to be delivered to me. YoiiCAii-see- why ot course IIe PROGRESS OF DIGEST POLL PROHIBITION TO BE BROADCAST Continued from Page One time for stations in the central In and mountain time xcMcs this program Floyd Gibbons, the Headline Hunter, will handle-th- e poll the news events in the same maimer as Barry. The plan of the Literary Digest poll Is to send ballots to 20,000.000 representative Americans by mail in order to determine whether public sentiment is for continual-ice and strict enforcement of the prohibition amendment and the volstead law; whether modification In favor of light wines and beers is desired, or whether a repeal of the Eighteenth amendment is favored. The poll will be bandied In the same manner as similar polls conducted by, the magazine to determine the outcome of presidential Is broadcast The elections. plahned, it was. explained to enlighten listeners on Its plans and tio'-.,Adk- t '. i- foraajulint "Thy V rs -- ts Jr Tij lt. -- ba ut !:st, YOUR INCOME TAX NUMBER TWENTY-ON- !? E sale of a single piece of Income includes gains realized sales a well as from engaged in buying and person as by property toss or resulting from the selling as a business. Ordinarily, gain sale of property acquired by purchase after February 28, 1913 the first income tax law applying to individuals became effective March 1, 1913 is the difference between the cost and the selling price. The gain is income for the year in which received, and can not hG prorated through a number of years. For .example, a bought in 1926 a pieco of real 'ertata forJ5jQQ0wMch he sold in 1929 for $7,000. The $2,000 profit is taxable income for the year 1929. Trofit accrued on individual income before March 1, 1913, is not taxable, even though it was not realized until after that date. The reason is thattfie constitutional amendment authorizing congress to tax the income of individuals did not become effective until March 1, 1913. The revenue act provides that the basis fot determining the gain or loss from the Sale or other disposition of property acquired by purchase before March 1, 1913, shall be the cost of such prpp-ert- y or the fair market value as of March 1, 1913, whichever is by-th- e tax-pav- er . OF .TUINKS -- . Words are feeble things with which to express the deeper sentiments of the heart; but we desire to let the many kind friends who aided and;comfortc.(l us dur-- r, ing the illness and following the betoved-wieancL. death mother; those who officiated at and attended the funeral, and those who sent such beautiful floral tokens, that we deeply appreciated their kindrji sympathy, which helped to mitigate our sore distress. May they be rewarded in kind in the hour of sorrow, is the sincere desire of Mr. H. O. liyball and daughter Ruth. - F"? V&ij ryS Night and Morning to keep 503 V i CARD them Clean, Clear and Healthy greater. For example, a taxpayer bought in 1910 property for Write for Free Eye Care which lie paid $10,000. The value on March 1, 1913, was $12,000. or Eye Beauty Book He sold it in 1929 for $14,000. The March 1, 1913 value being M m Ca. DejC H. S, I. Oh St CKini greater than the cost of the property, the taxable gain is figured on that basis, and amounts to $2,000. A taxpayer bought in 1910 property for which he paid $5,000. Its value on March 1, 1913, was $5,500, and in 1929 he sold it for ; NORMAN TORP TRANSFER $4,000. In this example the taxpayer bases his loss on the March 1, 1913, value, which was greater than the cost, and the deduct- CALL - - 1 s Barrys, talks. ; ible loss is $1,500. ' . KGO NBC system station); Oakland; KHQ Spokane; KOMO and Seattle; WOW Portland KECA LosAnge-lewill release ! ' t. purposes. would Lave fin executor, aa it were, Ibought .Il''Vthosgfi'foTveFjrdifierent reA h wat on kon and -- 1 yet ace-- w ihtm a-- r Thats hvw I IocdJ seeing the Big Shot pat away. . -r.- -t-i 1hu a rto 1 T ha hlr vrifr told ftory irwjhciei n- r r..i,; J. rr'e thls'afternocn. HVo went dowi j dp the wiajjp, - ? -- i J were ualj tw L Schnaffner place together hut,, O? Uiem rt .hi-- , tin Thu other Frhnaffner Is away until the end frl.ow , ffcf? to the ns,i r pt the week, and of course they j . T . oi.y. - TT- id a lot. ...... ...... wac:CBt, bmr over the packet. But "1 lildn ! vec either of ibro rr three days do not count j Whe-eofe-it-u w te Uat dui lr mitxhiv --A a ;'.c hr.:: and yapped-b- rt Uriv'toi him oehirtd the bare wsH have; Vi ped too much for their own the iiouds on him for Jobs We didst cvoJ. I heard m Cr ?w4 thinis! know about before, and for one oC . I euw nearer toweling the them at that Jonrers killing, i flu Sboi to night thee t have yet? that wit! send lira to the chair. To t ' uudoreUfid what &R Ibis meSaA she raid a iiitl tatntly. aa! he said, leeching dont four ; Oh, Hs was tnikir.g nbcut Roy. Sn jTiir.lv asaoi. "That's what It waa all rtout. In seme way or ether fought frantically for he Big 3not bad got wind of what He was talking about Roy. The was going on between Shire Frank chair! He had said that from what ' ( '.nj me. Oue of the things I ore he had learned and heard Ratty bay wart that the Rig he wosld soon here the Big Shot : flhot was coming down there to trapped. For Roy's sake she must have a little seance with me and find out exactly what be meant td , aump me off. Pleasant! Not exact- do. ly the way Td figured I'd end np Copyright, Prank to Paekardf atlh the Big Shot! Enldt predlcimtnt take en e But never mind aboat that; I lnfileane In tomorrow didn'Leni up that way, thanks to mw InotaUmOnt. ed -- -- gi j'. fhieago, Detroit, troit, (10). Hu-sm- tlrt -- r Phoenix, Aril. Battling Siki, outpointed Leonard Bennett, De- Cits, pi Ilono-lutn- (3). she .iW. S-a.- 7d Alex Kowe, stopped (5) ; Benny tiattnp, M. Paid,-- ot pointed Johnny O'Donnrli, Denver (6). f RESTLESS , she had been captured. r Phn had been surprised at her ridtculous but perfect disguise. There had been qnestions but the had temporarily traded satisfying them because of the more pressing problems of the moment He had b--3 intent on giving the Story to hid paper and she presumed tome :.,in ? the Herald Star was now tehhig notes as Phil phoned from the nearby store. kd suggested driving to the pcjlcs station but Enids dismay neb .otorlety would spoil her plana he4 caused him to change his eitrA He would phone them GRAHAM BONNER million representative Americans are being asked TWENTY they favor the strict enforcement of the pro- -' EXPLORING THE OCEAN i hibition law contained in the eighteenth amendment popuThe Little Black Clock and John and Peggy were actually out larly known as the Volstead law, or whether they wish it modified on the ocean and yet they were on a landing place ! permitting light wanes and beer, or favor abolishment of the law The Little Black Clock said he had not turned ther'time ahead altogether. This poll is being undertaken by the Literary Digest so very fdr, but of course he had turned it ahead! n which has been read with avid interest all over the United States I certainly" would say so, w John agreed, and during those feverish days that precede every national presidential Peggy felt that he had turned the time ahead a election when the Digest takes a straw presidential vote. great deal. They started to explore. They saw the Ballots are being mailed from the Literary Digest to repreplace where their plane was put. It was a huge sentative Americans whose vote will count along with the rest of hangar and there were other planes there, too. No one seemed to think it was unusual in the least the twenty million. Its called a seadrome, the Little Black Clock This poll of prohibition which The Digest plans to carry on said, and how that we have seen the hangar we should show some interesting" results regarding popular sentimust explore some more, ment on this much mooted question. The Little Black Clock said he had only turned the time ahead a few years, and yet he.to1dJ.hem FT'4 "NEC" there were a number of these seadromes where speakers are telling radio devotees of the progress of the balloting planesTflying across' the ocean,"c6uId stop if they on prohibition. wished. Legislative bodies, civic, county, state and national, social and They kept seeing planes starting off from there, and others church organizations, commercial bodies, and many thousands of were landing. They found radio stations and places where people American citizens have been voicing their sentiments regarding told what the weather .was going to be like; and boats stopped prohibition but the question has never been put before the from time to time with food and other things needed at the people of the United States in a real and personal sort of way as seadrome. The Digest now proposes to see it. It was the most enormous place, and though the ocean was all around Ahem it made Peggy feel as though she had landedon one" Teader who' of twenThe Journal of these receives Every ty million ballots should promptly register his vote one way or an island where they just didnt happen to be any trees or garanother on the prohibition question. The outcome of the polling is dens or land scenery. As they walked along it was marvelous to feel how steady it going to be interesting, indeed, and it may assume gigantic imwas. John never felt sick when he was on a boat, but sometimes in course the future national of the United portance determining States on this Peggy did. But here she didnt feel any motion at all. question. Its just going to be the most unreal world, she said, "with Judicious voting or the part of those who have been thinking like this on the ocean. things seriously about the problem is the only way to determine this Come along, said the Clock. We still havent finished ex great national issue that was of considerable importance, even if ploring. We must go to the hotel and have something to eat. secondarily so, in the last presidential election -e T-- fp - POLLING PROHIBITION m a-- ch -- The above readlnga are taken from THIS JOURNALS 1:00 oclock each afternoon except Sunday. The yesterday Monday refer to Batnrdays reading. A L. PACKARD 27. 1:3.Q. lb, Turns BIG SHOT' k FRANK ,f t li uai'v |