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Show YAS3 TWO THE JOURNAL, LOGAN THE JOURNAL I11L iilHtu i I)tin4 PUBLISHED by AHD IKQUiKD PUBLISHING Tokyo, Japan, Which Was Laid in Ruins . ff ? S & 1 y Mr MEMBER op .10 -- Cavitol Theatre T' S' 70c J "aw. wee? t 4 f - SUBSCRIPTION RATE 8T MAIL, PER MONTH, In Advance BY CARRIER. PER MONTH, la Advance A Discount oI ft 00 Per Year Will Be Olven for Advance Payments (or n Full Year. a .Monday, October ,l$t 10- a ' Sunday Except -- ' .Editor at tha Port Older Every Day In the We at Logan, Utah, aa Second Class Matter. , r COMPANY, If ' 4r- - If y tfStF--r-. 11)25. Wedneay, boptembtr 26, CACHE COUNTY,' UTAH r ordoa ' CITi, JT -- tv, r3 p 'e f v . M Yj Phi7 If ASSOCIATED PRIMS The Arsoclsted Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor oYrll news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited rspubltcatlon in this paper and also the local news published herein. , . Ail right of republicgtlon ef special dispatches herein are also reserved ' ADYBRTI8INQ BATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION te fr-- n ITT , HOW TO GET ON: Ask, and H shall be given you; Seek, and ye shall find.Matthew 7:7.. What things me better than gold and silver? Prov. 16:16, ' HJW TO GAIN ALL Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness; and aU these things shall be added unto you Matt. 6:33. , What is the promise if we fear or revere the Lord? Prov, 19:23. f fi rM -- - HERO WELCOMED HOME A ' ; great change seems to ha ve overtaken the world in the 6aNB gen- eral conception of human values, .even here in Utah, as was well illustrated sn the reception accorded Jack 'Dempsey in Salt Lake. The President of the United States, or General Pershing returning from the world war, could scarcely have received greater honor than did Dempsey, the pilze fighter; and certainly no great ecclesiastical dignitary, - poet, artist or literary (genius would have been accorded such a reception. The air seemed filled wth the sentiment, "see, the conquering hero comes;' and well may the object of all this adulation have thought, the king has " ) comq into his lawful heritage. The Salt Lake Telegram said of the reception; Jack Dempsey, the Jung of fistiana is home. And to the worlds heavyweight boxing champion it was home. For the first time since he first tarred the pugilistic "scepter he was enthusiastically greeted received with the sort of civic spirit that would urge arty champion to have a' pride in the city in which he got his start. From the minute he alighted at the Union Pacific station he felt that the people of Salt Lake had extended their hands in welcome. Thousands gathered at the station jind gave him an immense ovation as he stepped from his Pullman to receive the cordial congratulations from Mayor Clarence C, Neslen, Probably Dempsey was as surprised at $he spirit shown as he was w'th Jhe ease with which he sunk the Argentinian giant to .the canvas barely more, than a week ago. Not only. was Demp sey greeted royally at the station, hut cheering throngs filled the streets from Third West on Smith Temple to Main street and waved him a cordial welcome, ; On his arrival he was greeted by Thomas Kearns,' Ruel Halloran and Mayor Neslen and escorted td a waiting car where he found his mother waiting him. J Nor was this all The account says further: Final plans for the .entertainment of Jack Dempsey at a luncheon at the chamber of commerce at 12:15 oclock Wednesday Were completed Saturday, according to an announcement made by Phil Purcell, Chairman of the chambers athletic committee.' At the honor luncheon, ehamWr members only will be admitted as there is room for but 400 guests in the dining room, where the, fete will take place. H, E. Crockett,' ..secretary of statef fill give the principal address of, Welcome for the state, while1 Miyoif C. L,Nesleq Will 6peak,m,behalf of the city; Geo. Keif will preside at the luncheon. T t , In ancient Rome the - victorious 'gladiator'" was sometimes showered with eesterces, but he was not given the place of honor in a triumphal procession, it the Emperors table, - or recognized socially ; and until quite' recently 4the 'was considered as belonging to the under world. Lake the gladiator of old, he might be patted on the back by men who shamefacedly attended prize fights, and laid bets .upon Itfm, but would not be introduced in- the family, or scarcely recogniz' ed on the street Yerily times have changed, especially" ip Utah, It would take a powerful imagination to conceive such an event as the Dempsey ovation during the life of President Brigham Young and when Feramorz Little was Mayor of Salt Lake. Gladys Nagle, i u j ' In Dinuba, where the populajufct as young as I used to tion is 8400, there are 394 lighthe, and it all due to gland pills Hire I am 72, and I (eel Just as ing units, , using 400 and 250 spry and full of vim and pep as If candlepow'er lamps. Merced, I were only 30 or 40. thousands of which through Thl testimony to the Virtue of on their gland treatment was voiced recent- tourists pass yearly ly by Robert George Lams, a re- way to Yosemite National Park tired London stock broker, during nearby, has a population of a short visit to this country. about 4000, and 465 lighting t was In the Kingston hospital in which 250 candlejiower In London when I first tried the tab- - tlqits lets, said Mr; Law. After i had Mazda lamps are burned. In taken the fifteenth tablet I lett the , Mandaii, the population is 4600 and the number of units, 447, the Mazda lamps bing,'f 250 and 100 candlepower. Beyond any question, Grosse ini " -- -- n S. jn,in fPee, y , -- T 1 -- -- -- -- - ar , er er , . - i 1 ; thef mi t&OTJt x ? 1 r evenly-lighte- day-tim- 'hem-Itltchl- -- X Babies Splendid bodies, high spirits, many-studde- -- " Quick wits, . rosy cheeks, r are the resuU of right food '3otdmS . Point rark is apparently the best lighted town of its sze in the United States. It should be stated, however, that. this village belongs in that class of small towns which is made up of Weathy suburban communities close by metropolitan centers, the metropolis in this case being - Detroit. For this reason Grosse Point Park, has tP greater purchasing power than many other small towns, some of them not as small as Grosse Point Park. The others iff the list of fifteen small towns which shine as the most brilliant stars in Cocoronet d lumbias , are as follows: Hillsborough, N, D., population 1327, with 82 street lighting units, One to every 16 persons;. Concord Gal., population 900, 'with, 28 units, one to every 32 persons; Madison, S. D., population 5050, with 150 units, one to every '33 persons; Sullivan, Ind population 5,000, with 124 units one to every 40 persons; Hutchinson, Minn.,' population 3472, with 102 units, ne to every 34 persons; Ennis, Tex, population 1500, wjth 48 units, one to every 81 persons ; Hayward, Cal., population 3500, with 62 units, one, to every 56 persons; Bryan, Texas population 3000, with 550 units, one t every 60 persons;. Brash, Col., population 5,000, with 70 units, one to every, 71 persons; and Pacific Grove, Cal., Iopulation 3000, with 36 units, one to every 83 persons. v Several of these places are white way twns, literally pudged by the lighting capacity of their street lamps. Madison, S. D., uses Mazda lamps of 1,000 candlepower ; Pacific Grove, Cab, has 600 candlepower lamps; and Hutchinson, Minn., and Hillsboro,, N. D., both use lamps of 400 candlepower. T Perfect , "Im -- -- Gland Treatment, Rejuvenates Broker - i -v , Toddy's Events ' Jere Deianey and Mary O'Moore in The Smart Musical Comely Irene coming to. The Capitol Theatre on Monday Oct, 1, Centenary of the birth of 1921 President ' HardingS William Henry, Wilburn, the Conference on unimployment op Wind chaplain cf the. United ened in Washington. t ONE YEAR AGO TADAY States senate, Today, is Argonne Day the in Martial law was proclaimed Athens, Greece. anniveisary of the jumoff in the great Argonne offensive by Senator J, S. Frelinihuysen ' was renominated in the New the American army. Pai is, Tennessee,' today be- - Jersey primaries. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS gins a today celebration in honChristian. Jhe reigning so or of tha hundredth anniversary ereign of Denmarm, born in Cop of its settlement. 53 years agd today, Results of a prolonged nation enhagen, Sir Eric Geddes, British stai of 1h6 cooi er m atiie farm nmi heting problem;? United States, ?. will be presented at today's lndl3 4g Year to sion of the American1 Bankers Association convention at AtlanDr. Arthur S. Mackenzie, for tic City. ' ' may years president of DalhOus-i- e Demo-ratio The New York State University, born at Pictou, in New committee N. S.; 58 years ago today. York City today to adort a platEleanor Gates, popular novel Main street, form and decide on the question "despite a wide of fusion-o- n a candidate for as ist and playwright, t born at spread impression, is not so sunk Minn., 49 years 'agfiJJp tprovinckl'sm!''and - stagnant sociate judge of the court of apideas as is 'imagined.. Instead it peals. Antonio" Moreno,, prominent is shining up to the metro Cooperative marketing of feed as a film star born in Madrid, litan centers,, and now and then er cattle direct from growers In 35 years ago today. Colorado to feeders m Iowa, Spam, even outshining them. with a view to eliminating all New Yorks most famous stoenyards commissions, yard- PROGESSMA DE IN street in the world finds itself age and feeding charges, will be duplicated, not on a small scale undertaken at a sale to be held in actual reproduction in probut LIGHTING STREETS - . todayat Atlantic, Iowa, to the size of the comportion ' IN THE DAYS NEWS , in a growing concerned, munity John O. Walton, whose vigor- - No one can number of small towns, as the any longer ' point ous opposition t the, Ku Klu a scornful finger at the (old latter usually speak of their iland its ways has made him fashioned oi; tmProgressjve luminated Main street as : a outstanding figure; m the days spirif in fhe.- '.American 'small white way. At the present ijmvg, ig Serving the 'first1 jeat town, at least as regards its rate, Broadw'ay will eventually of hig four-yeterm in the gov- street, become more dr less of a contini Small towns lighting, ernorship of Oklahoma. Gov-- many parts of4,he United Statesin uation across the cuntry. ernor Walton is an Indianian by are towns that birth, and of Southern Quaker awake,showing not onls wide- areAmong the small well extremely broadly admittedly discriminating stock on his fathers side. His in the four attitude of are there lighted, advancement, .but was boyhood passed in Fort are shwing it with' good iest which seem to lead them Smith, Arkansas, io which place they Park, Mich,, wuth 450 units of he had removed with his parents taste. in a populaThis has been revealed just by 1,000 candle-powat an early age. Equipped with a canvass made street by light- tion of 900, or one to every two a high school education he started on his career as a locomotiv e ing specialists of the General inhabitants; Dinuba and Merced, ftfeman, later becoming engireep Electric company. This canvass,' Cal., each of which have one With money saved from his among other interesting things, unit to every eight or nine perout that in fifteen sons; and Mandan, N. D,, which earnings he took a course in en- brought of five thousand popula- has a unit to every ten persons. towns, at Louis the St. school gineering and then settled in , Oklahoma tion or less, the average per City, where he attained marked capita number ef street lights is success as head cf an an en3ine"f one to every 34 persons, Ih several of these towns the History will doubtless make it plain that the Ruhr invasion mg and construction company. per After a capita number of lights was residence of only two Was preceded by the Ruhr evasion. Boston Herald. years in his new1 home he was found to be very much lower elected mayoncf Oklahoma City, as low as nine or ten. And in : i DESIGN, FOR A CHEMISE His suceess as a municipal exe- seeraJ them, also, lights of . 400 600 and even 1,000 candle- led to cutive his nomination and - psssai i i,i l ; i n run :si ixinmma subsequent election to the gov- power are in use, giving a bril' ernorship on a fusion ticket, liant illumination. There ia a town itv Colorado, ) . arm iug-asuppe rled. by - a&Tnnnrnnnii' which has a population of 15,000, nmaimr laboring elementss TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES of which the street . lighting 1800 The royal palace and specialties - are particularly muKirup several other building in Con- proud, for they declare that this stantinople were dest roved by town ha3 put in a big city in- Hows Your Blood? J, an eartbquate. stallation, with beautiful .and nzsxnnnJES Do You Need a Tonic? d 1811 Siefhen B. streets as result Elkins, all In the places canvassed, cabinet officer and United StatHelens, Mont Dr. Pierce Cold-- in Medical Discovery ha no equal es the deinstallations senator from West ZQxmzs comprise Virginia a a blood tonic or a at liver and born in Perry County," Ohio. corative, artistic standards, and stomach medicine. I was in very Died ia Washington, D. C Jan- they have eliminated the un- bad physical condition, due to having This design which combines 1 liter trouble and gastric stomach consightliness of overhead wires. uary 4, 1911, atip stitch had hemstitching, dition. My food did not digest 1848 Louis is this It trend asserted 'took that Napoleon a root chemise. o( decorates the properly would ferment, and gas his seat in in towns small the French their of National would form, giving me great distress. lighting Cat a chemise with a straight streets with brilliance and do- I also suffered with severe Assembly. bilious top, and transfer the design given 1873 Klara Mnndt, a popu- ing it with installations which headache and. my blood wa in aa here tp the (root, placing it three impoverished, state. By the use of lar German historical novelist, are attractive in the times, at shown In the sketch. e is the Golden Medical Discovery wa The line tor the , hemstitching died. Born January 2, 1814. has of all these condition which relieved It causeql steadily spreading. 'not be tracel. Pull Ihould 1891 The formal oimning ot illuminating engineers to ex- had caused me so much trouble and thread and work doable the Orrmgton Bunt library at press their belief that small distress. My liver became active, my a indicated. Work a food well, tny blood wa Northwestern University,. towns generally are emulating good digested and I felt like a new man, buttonhole atitch at the end ot 1898 International Peace the big pities in the matter of Jostph A. Widmer, 307 Hobatfe St the hemstitched lines-- 1 Make the Obtain the Discovery in tablet or Congress met at Turin, Italy. street lighting, and in some casblack portion of the design solid sst drupci 1 J91( The price pf flour m es are actually surpassing the tatia atitch, with the center to Dr, Pierces Chicago reached the highest lev- j cities in the volume of illumina-jtio- n el the floer an open eyelet. 'h and el sifipe the civi war free for Write medical which they have achieved. advise, prize-fight- .gSL BRAND MOKbEtSED Ul H'HJCJ PROBATE AND GUARDIAN snip NOTICE OOKTSULT COUNTY CLERK xil THE SIGNERS FOB FURTHER INFORMATION. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT. RESPECTIVE -- STATE QF UTAH, IN AND FOB THE COUNTY OF cache. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Ell J. Bell, Deceased. Creditor will present claim with vouchers to the undersigned at her residence In Logan City Oacbe County, Utah, on or before the Jet day of November, 1923. ELIZABETH J.-- BELL, Executrl Date of first publication Aug. 38, 1923. Date of last publication, Sept 28, 1923. GEORGE AdT, Q. RICH, Attorney. NOTICE TO CREDITORS la the matter of the estate of James Fife, deceased. Creditors will present claims with - vouchers to the undersigned at bis residence in Providence, Cache County, Utah, on or before the 22nd t day of November, 1923 LEWIS FIFE, Administrator ot said estate L. E NELSON, Attorney. Adv. ALIAS- SUMMONS In -- the District Court of the First Judicial District of 'the State of Utah, In anti for the County of Cache, - SUMMONS Susie Mortoh Sargent, Plaintiff vs, Ralph H. Sargent, Defendant. The state of Utah to the salt! defendant : You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty day after service of this summon upon you, if served within the county in which this action 1 brought, otherwise within thirty day after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you. according to the demand of the BUT SURELY IT WASNT complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court. This action is brought to recover a judgment The kindergarten had been dissolving the bonds of matrimony week its all wind heretofore existing between you and studying the power, effects, etc. until the the plaintHT. JESSE p, RICH, Attorney for subject had been pretty well exv ' Plaintiff. . hausted. Post Office Address, Arlma Bldg., To stimulate interest, the Logan, Utah. Adv. teacher said, in her most enthuNOTICE TO CREDITORS siastic manner: 'Children, we were going to Baton Rouge to witness the football game yesterday. As the tram approached one of the stations something same! softly and kissed me on the cheek. .What do you think it was? ' A Pfetty girl in the rear shouted: I know I It w'as the conductor, because when to took my ticket, he told me I was a Very pretty girl and kissed me, too. Estate of Peter E, Lundptrotn, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at the store of Lundstrom Furniture and Carpet Company, No. 45 West Center Street, In Logan City in Cache County, State or Utah, on or before the 15th day of November A. D. 1923. Date of first publication September 12th A. D. 1923. A.'O. LUNDSTROM and JOHN A. CARLSON, W. W. executors, MAUGHAN, Attorney, , AdT. , |