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Show 1 t t t VT . w rTTT,;;Pl t WV y PAGE TWO TR2 JOURNAL, THE JOURNAL 4' at the JEntend. company publishing the week Pont Office every day In tab, as Second Class Hatter. Logan, I at RATES ADVERTISING except Sunday SUBSCRIPTION RATES Paid in advance By snarl, per ssmlh Ity mail, per year IeHvered, per month Delivered, per year SYNOPSIS A cast of mistaken identity or (A fttnoceuf victim of the duplicity of criminals T is the question confronting hnid Howard ascertaining the truth about the identity of the Bifr Shot, master criminal of New York whom she believes is her missing brother A guest in the litg Shots home after her experiences that label her as the mrl bandit she claims the il ip Shot ae her missing H fcctft he dentes tt, hnul brother questions him end teams he came back from the tour, with no memory of the past. She suspects he is the tictim of the duplicity of the hancs ttho claim him as their eon to pierce the mysteiy and also to protect the mrm shs laves Phi! Martin, a i'H'ajrtprrmau, who is trailing the IUg Shot from the latter's vcti. fjertnre She overhears Mrs Kane and a man talking and learns the ON APPLICATION FURNISHED 25e -$2.00 -- - . 45e -- $1.50 Member of Associated Press Tbe AaaorlAted Press is exclusively entitled to tbe nae for republics tloa of all news dlspatcbee credited to It or not otherwise credited la this paper and alao the local newa published therein. AD right of lepublleation of special dlspatcbee therein are alao reserved. BAROMETER N Rain Change READINGS yang Fair ?o-D- ay lHiiniiMnsiirKiiiiGiiiisiniTirnsniiaiinso Yesterday The above readings are taken from THE JOURNALS .00 oclock each afternoon except Sunday. Tho yesterday Monday refers to Saturdays reading. f barometer at reading each BUILDING UP LOGAN AND CACHE got And I guess you dont need to be told how to put it across, either, do you, so that Norry won't get next?" Enid shivered as she passed her band across her eyes as she listened to them discuss her end. I get you!" said Izzy Myers, delivering his verdict with an unpleasant smile. "Leave it to me. I dont know what kind of aa accident itll be, but I'll fix it eo's Nor-ry- ll never tumble. Forget her then until you read about It in the pa- - i i! i Chapter 15 BEHIND THE CURTAIN CAUTIOUSLY Enid opened the door ot her bedroom, inch 6y inch, and quietly stepped out Into the dim) lighted halL She peered down the hall toward the front of the house. There was a door which was closed and nearer her was another, wide open and sp h I;! r i as-wel- 8ystem-Adequate.pub- n en-Jo- -- 1 u ? GOVERNOR DERNS FAIRNESS - ... - w N stating his views Tuesday, at the request of the state senate, in regard to the scope and power of the state legislature to consider at the special tax session the question of taxation of mines, Governor Dem sounded a keynote of fairness. His message " was succTnt ancf phrased tff simple atid dear-terms;r v - r a ' f 1ft- Relative to the mines tax matter the governor said! ' It would be impossible to overstate the importance of mining to Utah, not merely on account of the taxes paid by the mines, but also on account of the general prosperity - produced by mining operations. Mines, like every other form "of property, should pay their fair share of taxes, no more and no less. I am sure you will be guided by this concept in your consideration of this very important phase of the tax problem. CovernbTTJernMs Shown thir thatwillbe just, adequate and equally fair to all taxable property interests both tangible and intangible. The thief xecuttvrhas, in thirmost recent message, as-- i nr the first one at the outset of the special legislative tax session, impressed upon the state lawmakers the need of proceeding slowly and with care in working out proposals for a suitable tax program to serve as the basis of amendments that may be made to Article XIII of the state constitution which relates to taxation. - -- With Governor Uerus message sounding the keynote of fairness in regard to the consideration of the mines" tax " question which both houses of the legislature are to begin considering today, a careful study of the matter should be made, and "ultimately, if the special session succeeds before adjournment in framing a suitable amendment relative to mine and other forms of. taxation within the state, it should by all means embody the element of fairness sounded as a keynote in the governors most recent : message. YOUR INCOME TAX I - - NUMBER FOURTEEN ' To obtain a deduction for traveling expenses, which form an Important item in the returns of many taxpayers, certain regula-,b- e - tions must be observed, The taxpayer is required to attachlo his return a statement showing the nature of business in which engaged, number of days away from home during taxable year on account of business, total amount of expenses incidental to meals ahd lodging while absent from home on business, and total luke-war- ed think after last night! Twisty Morgan's crowd, of course! They plugged him in the back room of French Charlie's about half an hour . ago.? , Mrs. Kane drew in her breath sharply. "I dont like that!" she said. "That means trouble." "Youve said a mouthful!" he snarled. Theres going to be a lot of hearses gamming up the traffic for this, blast em!" I dont like it, I tell you? This will only end up in us or them getting wiped out." Yeh!" growled Izzy Myers. "That's what I said! Thats what were going to do to em wipe em - v . Wifts rf - him-.wU- stamped her foot. Youre fools?".zhe flung out furiKane This gang-wously. "All of you! stuff Is mad! And what about v tbfs newspaper man? Butting in there, too, are you? Asking for more trouble! My God the newspapers! What about this fellow Martin?" i "Hes tied up and gagged down in the 'bird cage on Eighty-thirstreet, and Batty Rose Is looking after him." ar caret? ...dont .mean. ..that near Avenue A?" . Mrs. Kanes voice rose accusingly, You-- same . Enid vtood Listening Intently. 4 parently dark as do gleam ol light came from it. Again ate beard tho sound of voices and concluded that they came from the further room but at tbe same time seemed to reach her through the open door. Suspecting that they were rooms, Enid stealthily made her way to the open doorway. Light filtered into the darkened room through portieres that separated theA we. Standing well hack, herself secure from observation, she- - could not only hear distinctly but, where the hangings fell a little apart, could ace into the room beyond. That was why the Izzy Myers! mans voice bad sounded familiar. He had flung himself into a chair and was twisting a cigar around in i his mouth. He looked flushed, ted. and ugly. She could not see Mrs. Kane so well but she caught a glimpse of angry black eyes and a clenched hand. It was Mrs. Kane who was talking, aod there was no mistaking the passion in the womans voice: . . . . No, of course he dont believe her, but be dont think shes nutty or anything like that. He thinks, ahe's straight and that she teti.fswhhrjhe'ysr-a-rrdtha- t he looks like her brother; but. being only a kid when she saw him lost, he thinks her mistake is natural enough. Sure! grunted Izzy Myers. Wel!.,thais Ml there ls.tq 1 aint g - old place ' cballenglngly. "Yes, thats what I do mean and dont fly off the handle again if you can help It!" Izzy Myers laughed shortly. "What you need tonight is a dose of soothing syrepf I know all about not being abli to get by with a To Let alga forever, and that wed decided onr time was up there, and that wed make a shift at once; but it aint so easy to find the right place, and it aint aa easy to fix np the deal, either. " We aint Enid heard no mere. Swiftly, silently, she gained the hall, ea- - ' . fv how-do-you-- fl O v AT A TIME . HILLS BROS ex-c- HEALTH VITAL STATISTICS J Statisticians are odd scientists. in averages. Rates, interest figures. They have a consuming comProbabilities and the like are their meat. They are fond of Mr. how Averageman long charts showing posing may. expect to live or what chances, he takes .. traf f ic.' . Odd though they seem to the man m the they Are useful both to science and society. crossing j it? said Mrs. Kane No; it isnt! It wont end there! savagely. Shes dangerous! Tm afraid other afraid- of her bscsuse-T- know she's straight. She's going to cling to Norry like a leech on that brother stuff, and whats going to happen, with Norry letting TieF hang around him if onr honest little Sunday-achoo- l miss gets to know too much? Im asking you, whats going to happen then to you and me and all the rest of us? Til tell you! Sing Sing! Shes going to split because her baby conscience wouldn't let her do anything else! Does that register? Well, Izzy Myers scowled. -- h out-of-doo- rs d l. lic - j Maloch oil? Izzy Myers burst Into a torrent of fervent blasphemy. "Who dyou Mrs. Never, oh, never let your hands look old! says lovely Juliette ME Compton, who believes that too many women concentrate on keepW ing their face young and let their hands give them away, AMUSING face LITTLE BROTHER The hands should be just as carefully dealt with as the By Alice Jadson Peale with Betty and neck, advises the actress who is Peter came to the the allCompson and George Barraud m Woman to Woman, 77" kitchen door, hoarse and red In ; at the Capitol the face from playing baseball all picture showing Thursday talking Tiffany-Stah- l morning in the street with the Theatre. lived next door. He t She advises that, if they are inclined to look dry and wrinkled olive oil. warm with be oacsSd should massaged every night couw go they play someSmore Rub upward from the tips of the fingers to the wnsts. tv arm in the sunny back yard his olive oil or cocoa butter is also very good for the finger nails. I little brother was playing in the His mother looked at never use liquid polish, Miss Comjjtoa says, as I think it ruins sand P1uml of be,peUr bands course, should, The nails. the naturaj gloss of the He was much too hot and thoroughly cleansed before applying any oil. They should be too tired to play any more washed with eastile or any pure soap and then rubbed with a cut ball. Pete, I wish you would do lerqon. me. I have to run m water every morning something for store Lemon juiee in a glass of and down to the some before breakfast is Miss Comptons prescription for the com- things for dinner, and I get wish you would take care of Jimmy while plexion and general healths The use of too many creams and skin lotions is unwise- for a Im gone. You could show him how to make those sand young person, cautions the ajtress, who is the original Harrjson cakes with all the lovely decorations imbut be ttye life these necessary, Fisher girl. In later may that you used. to make for me portant thing for youth is clean pores. I think this can be last year." method of pure soap and Oh, all right. Ill amuse him. accomplished best by the Mother came back to find two water. I use ice twice a day on my face and neck. happy children playing in. Woman to Woman is Miss Comptons first talking picture in quiet, the sand. When she ealled them America. She is usually believed to be an English girl because for lunch they came with the reher spurs as Albert Kirby, Feb. 21, Hyde Park, an actress were luctance of children who are won on the English stage and screen, but she was born in Colum- deeply engrossed in play. The child whose vigor bus, Ga., and started her career in this country, first as A. P. and ability causes superior him to play musical in and model then a W. 2 comedy. S., Jenkins, Feb. 21, 52 with those who are older than himself may often be drawn back to activities which are less strenuous and less likely to be than this play with older children. An appeal to his cooperation In child will amusing a younger v-- Kt work where direct interference would fall. Peter, for instance, .really liked to play in the sand wpile, but he never would have admitted It. When a clever mother provld-e- d By MARI GRAHAM BONNER un excuee which in.-nway detracted from his feel' THE HORSES STORY ing of manliness, he was free to T've turned the time ahead a little bit, the Little Black Clock enjoy play that he had not really outgrown. said, and we're going this evening to call on a horse.summer time He lives in an old barn in the country. In the almost all the time. he lives off. We will be able to be must we Come, understand him because I have enough magic for that. Besides 1 1 have good news for you! What is it? asked John and Peggy. I was sent an extra supply of magic the other able to turn the time day, so not only will I be "but-w- e will b- e- able to forward and backward travel greater distances more quickly, than ever, and we will be able to understand all kinds of speech Great ! shouted John, and Peggy thought so . too. - They arrived at the barn, and there was .the horse Waiting fir them. , Tit most luscious the horse began, after ckocolatt PIT tell you why I wanted visitors, creams J. X art dipped by loud he had neighed politely first of all by way of a Even in your In the old days I was so much more popular. so nothing com- day I was fairly popular Of course not so much old to the days. .... really pared Th cxakdest coffee ever Then horses were paid such compliments, whenever childH ilia Broa. Coffee hat a of playflavor fount) in no other coffee ren played they had a3 one of their favorite games, that a make and because ia it roasted they by the ing horse, but now they play theyre engines patented, continuous procest lot- of noise and go suffling their feet over the ground. Controlled a Roasting few pounds at a time. Every I like to play horse, Peggy said, ancLthe horse felt so much berry is roasted evenly. better hearing that. Then they gave him some delicious hay and took a little ride, and sat upon his back. Fresh from the original vacuum He was so much, much happier than when they had first Pack. Easily opened with the key . arrived and the children were so glad that the Little Black Clock had taken them to see him. (Tomorrow Playing Oxen) bfeysw Yes, but you didn't tell me anything else about it. Who bumped 0UI! MIS KEN! I ' paper bird!" 9 h ! Now Ive got to find the. Big 1 told Shot," Myers continued. you. didn't I, that Maiochs got the spot, and that weve got that news- - Martin. 19, 1930. Six-year-- 1 . pers." EEWif i I. - PACKARD it? any, communities have ever been so progressive that couldnt be just a bit more so with profit. Logan and Cache Valley have forged ahead in many ways during the years that have come and gone since the pioneers pushed into the valley to begin the work of settlement and colonization. Through the work of the pioneers, with the constant addition of new inhabitants from other parts of the United States as well as from sections of Europe, a rich .agricultural field has been built up in Cache Valley that has with the years become the great pride of Utah. The growing of crops such asincreasingly alfalfa and grain and especially sugar beetsTnnd the growtlr in recent years of dairying have made for this section of northern Utah prosperity in great measure. When the cultivation of the land a few years back demonstrated the suitability of Cache acreage for pea growing, a factory sprang up in Smithfield that has been turning out each year an increased output of choice canned peas that have become noted far and wide for the excellence of taste and quality. Another factory is soon to be constructed. F Some of the pioneers who located in Logan were quick to see Jthe great resource that is in the abundance of water power, another form oi liquid gold, so to speak, that pours down from the mountains along the beds of Cache Valley streams. This water power harnessed into electrical energy became a source of power Supply for a knitting industry that has been worth much to Logan and Cache Valley from year to year. This electrical energy is made to work in a multiplicity of other ways . a , Another phase of the growth of Logan hqs been the educational schools, eff iqientlyoperated, are keeping abreast of the times. Worthwhile collegiate training of both An undergraduate and graduate character is to be had, find at least pne, and at one time two, of the schools fostered by church denominations functions here. Periodic progression in any community is not all that the citizenship should strive for, but rather the progression should be continuous and constant. 1 In order that Cache Valley, with Logan as the center, may jr a continuous and steady progression there Js need for more encouragement of new industries to enter this section. Population makes for growth, but it will not come very fast unless the door of opportunity for progress on all lines, social, educational and economic, is kept open all the time. Organizations such as the Lions, Kiwanis, Rotary, the chambers of commerce, farm bureaus, and their auxiliaries, and other dubs and groups need to continue their ' purposeful encouragement of new things for Cache Valley, and in this phase of their ... work they should receive the support of the inhabitants of each community in the valley to the" fullest extent. Weaiiebdu, FoLuiai-- LOGAN. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH LOVELY JULIETTE; Ay FRANK MMfyi I TTTyTTTT y? TP?TTfTrH?fHfy yyr Tffi PUBLISHED BY EABL&ENGLAND v Thyr mad, raipsd r trwa room, and ekwed-tbdoor. He was alive! Pbll was And she knew where he alive! was, II e was alive aHveallre but there was no time to lose! Her handbag the unloaded automatic! She would need that, and it would not always be unloaded. She crossed the room la the darkness, secured the handbag, and, going then to, the window, began to teretl-tm- raise a - To Let on Eighty-thirstreet near Av&me A. Pray God there was not more than one vawhat's the answer?" cant house in that Vicinity! Get rid of her! snapped Mrs. The window was np now. She Kane. swung herself quickly ever the sill Well, why dont yon go ahead to the ground and the, next instant and do it, then? You've got her was running across the yard toward handy enough here, aint you?!! tho gate that opened on the lane. "I cant do It while shes tn this (Cbpyrtpht, Frank L. Packard) house, you fool!" retorted Mrs. once leaves Kane. "But she this Lev cans to Enid. Spurred by house the less time thats lost the Martins predicament she braves better. I guess its up to yon, isnt naw perils, tomorrow. A 'boose a Same Price for over 38 years. 25 ounces Pure for 25 Economical Efficient MILLIONS of pounds USED BT OUB GOVERNMENT hke-questk- d ' Wouldn't It Look Awful? A certain nolile woman Is considerably alarmed hy the prevalence of barslara In thin part of town, especially dreading tho srny the vnltie of her jewels would look in the paper. Ohio Stale Journal. amoihit of other expenses incidental to travel and claimed as de- auction. Among the other expenses are tips, which are held to . R . a part of traveling expenses,-providethey are reasonable in N . . amount. Traveling expenses are deductibe only when the trip is n..T on business. They are limited to such expefises t feasonabfe1pra!ge g)me 0neL Wiio qnit and necessary in the conduct of the business and directly attribut- - g0od as you are at your specialty, niw able to it. Examples are payment for the useof a sample room or less it is to criticize some one a ho to a iitiiu the hire of vehicles in visiting customers. d as-a- MILLIONS ! . To begin with, they are the accountants and bookkeepers of life. They note our coming and ijotawosTcf going. They post our illnesses and our cripplings, and they credit ua wRh our progresses. at what It is by virtue of their calculations that we Rriow disof certain the we up flaring expect of the may months year will affliction the economic or group eases, and what sex, age, . strike most. . What chances-osurviving does the pneumonia sufferer stand, with the chifd afflicted with diptheria, the workingman down we may answer - with, ail tuberculosis T stichrand average degree of certainty, thanks to statisticians. The hospital executive, the public health official, the charity beworker, and scores of other workers in the health field are holden to the statistician for information which helps them perform their tasks more efficiently and more fittingly. And in the end the public profits. f Urn Made Good with street, From their heights they can see trends of movement are beyond the ken of those whose noses, so to say, tbe ai grindstone. And their observations prove useful to us m handling intelligently many of the, affairs of the . COFFEE 01930 re Sn-- lit-ue- ... NEW PALACE ; CHOP SUEY AND NOODLE PARLOR 22 W. 1st No. - New Japanese Management Completely Renovated We serve Fresh, hand made Noodles Open 2 p. m, to 1 a. m. o |