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Show I THE PAGE TWO the Plano and the Milwaukee Harvester Machine, Co., in all representing 80 per cent of the business of the country. Other small ' concerns have since been swallowed. Subsequently another charter was taken out under the laws of Wisconsin. The Interthe national Harvester Cor of America,-unde- r laws of Wisconsin, has Cyrus II. McCohnick a3 president and Morgans man Perkins as director; Perkins is also director rf the New Jersey corporation. The New Jersey corporation is the manufacturing concern, while the other corporation is the sellingagent. '"'Prices are now uniform. There, is n competition. ' Prices have 'been advancing. Before being defeatedfor the senate Henry . 7 W, Ilansborougb of North Dakota said : At the time this monopoly was created the to a farmer in any average price of from of the $95 to $105. country was, part machine costs $145, That is Today the same not all.' The trust has obtained a control over binding twine, and over several manufactur-i- h g est abl is h men ts devoted to the making of gasoline engines, cream separators and manure spreaders. They have also secured a mo- THE JOUR NAL PUBLISHED BY-E-ARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING CO Entered at the Post-Offievery Tuesday, at and Logan, Utah, Saturday, Thursday matter. as second-clas- s ce AUGUSTUS GORDON, F. J. MARSHALL, - EDITOR CITY EDITOR SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By Carrier. Months Months Months .. Mail By ", . . . Months Months ,. Months . 7. . . . .77 . .7. . . , . " 3 ,6 12 3 6 12 90c $1.75 $3.50 75a self-bind- $L50 $3.00 When not paki in advance, 50c per year additional. Rates Furnished on Application Idvertising What the English Lords want is without, taxation. .In relation, to the $3,800 just paid for a small volume of Poes works, the thought occurs that Mr. Poe could have used the money, on many occasions. Wo are threatened- - with another epidemic of the Thaw troubles, just when we are getting ready to celebrate the season of peace on earth and good will to all men. The Polar Wave Ice and Fuel Company of St. Louis, has been declared a trust by the circuit court. A concern with a best seller or comic opera title like that ought to have had better luck. A Galveston, Texas, dispatch to the New "York World says : There will not he one White woman in either of the Texas state penitentiaries on Christmas, day. Mrs. Agnes Goode, who murdered her husband, is the only white woman in either of the state penitentiaries, and Governor Campbell has pardoned her, so that she will he set free on Christmas eve. Within the last few days five other women n prisoners have been pardoned on the of the pardon board, which also male prisoadvised the release of twenty-fiv- e ners, Mrs. Goode was sentenced to thirty-fiv- e years, and she has erved a small part of her term. The others' who were liberated were short term prisoners. The world will be none the better for keeping this unfortunate woman in prison for thirty-fiv- e years,' said Governor Campbell. recom--mendatio- stuck. is farmer The The Rural Weekly gives the . - . ' The public statement of a Lo' gan citizen is in itself strong proof fprLogan people, but confirmation strengthens the evi' dence. . . Here is a. Logan .citizen who testified years ago . that Doan's Kidney Pills relieved'sickkidneys and now states the cure was per--, manent. - Can prrf sufferer "from kidney ilj$ ask better proof t You ,can investigate. The ease is right , 7 ytl bome. . o James A. Park, 145 N. Firsts "Street, .West, Logan, Utah, says. -- . -- futility of the so once Indians, powerful, to create further trouble, the following little piece of history regarding a how race, is of infast-vanishin- g terest: ' S. S. Peters, a well known Omaha newspaper man. served as a regular soldier in the west during the days when Red Cloud and his fellow chiefs were giving the government so much trouble. He knew Red Cloud and had this to say of his record : Chief Red Cloud first became known as an important personage in Indian affairs in the summer of 1865, at which time he became substitute chief of the Brule-Siou- x tribe. His tribal territory extended .from the North Platte river to the Big-Homountains and west to the Black Hills. He whs known as a hostile, and caused continuous trouble by his forays against small militaryposts, stealing government live stock and attacking immigrant trains. He was the compatriot of such chiefs as Spotted Tail, Standing Elk, American Horse, Man Afraid of His Horses and Big Ribs. Early in 1866 Red Cloud deposed Big Ribs, his head chief, on account of age and extended his domain over the Ogallala Sioux, and represented practically all divisions of the Sioux tribe in the, treaty meeting held at Fort Laraime. The question at issue at this convention was the building of the Union Pacific railroad through the Sioux territory. Red Clouds followers of 5, 0(h) hostile Indians accompanied him to Laramie. It was agreed that the railroad should pass up the Platte Valley, but Red Cloud and his braves opposed the opening of the Bozeman trail, extending northwest from Laramie, which was the ideal hunting grounds of the Sioux. While the treaty meeting was in session two regiments of regulars arrived and 'without awaiting the result of the meeting, frecupied the'Bozeman trail: In defiance of Red Clouds remonstrance the expedition marched through the Sioux country.' .Red Cuold rose from the convention and. declaring the whites had betrayed him, said: you may -- - to publish by too frequenPpassages of the kidney secretions, especially at night. .This weakness was in evidence for a year or more and the various remedies I used failed to do me much good. When -I had- - the good fortune to read .about Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured a box at Riter Bros. Drug Co. and 7 commenced their use. They' actedj directly on my. kidneys and in a comparatively .short time the difficulties had corrected.' I would not .been , 0 ' think .of being without asupply -- placed on the Pine Ridge reservation, where he has remained ever since. Red Cloud was the last of the great Indian chieftains. He belonged to a class of aborigines which was never civilized.' He, fought his battles for principles which he believed to be righteous and always maintained, that Ms people had - been greatly wronged. -- NDUSTRIAL EDUCATION. There-ipressing meed for industrial schools in the United States, says an exchange. We have no apprentice system such as Europe has, and yet Europe has found that technical schools are needed to" supplement he practical work in shop and factory. The bulk of our mechanics and- - skilled workers the printing, trade being one of the notable exceptions learned their trades in the eld country. These workers have mastered their trades mastered them in an xacting ami thorough school." But they are passing away. The immigrants of today are wholly untrained in industrial life. They are peasants and when they are employed in mine a nd factory it is largely at the hardest kind- - of manual labor. Where the trained hand and the active mind are required they are deficient. ' Our industrial workers hereafter must be recruited from our own population. And the only way that it may be done thoroughly is by establishing industrial trade schools under the ' auspices of the state. This education should and must be thorough Our apprentice system has been largely a failure because the apprentices were not permitted or compelled to master their trades.Sogreat has been the demand for skilled mechanics that immediately an aprentice has attained a superficial knowledge of his trade 'he has been pressed into the ranks of the journeymen the men that have learned and mastered their trade in all its phases and details. 1 , J Tuesday, January 4, 1910. utah. The battleship Following are a few specifications the battleship To eveiy woman in our city : Not every: night, but often, you feel tired, worn out, as though you didnt have strength . to do another thing. Have you evpr stopped to think . What is the. cause? - You feel this way most when you have beet on your feet most, the days when you have stood or walked a good deal In nine cases out . responsible. Let us fit you in the Red Cross Shoe. It entirely prevents the burning, drawing and aching that stiff soles cause. It is wonderful how it saves your strength. Tanned by the special Red Cross process, the sole is flexible, it bends with your foot, relieves all the pressure on the delicate nerves and tendons, giving a feeling of freedom, ease and comfort found in no other shoe. Let us fit.vou. Utah, XndfrJbik I Get Style and Comfort Get Both ED. SELIGMANN Loraine Cottage Dinner Set Given Free of Thursday, Dinner Set with a $100.00 Cash Dinner Set with a $75.00 Cash. Dinner Set with a $50.00' Cach, Dinner Set with a .$25.00 Cash For the Month of December Only. Call 48 Piece 48 Piece 48 Piece 48 Piece Contract price, $3,946,000, and as much again added by the government in way of guns and armor and other equipment, making a to- tal of nearly $8,000,000. Contract awarded Nbv9, 1908, to the New York Shipbuilding Oo., Camden, N. J. Keel laid, March 15, 1909. Launched, Dee. 23, 1909. ,, Extreme length, 551 feet 6 inches! Extreme breadth, 88 feet 2 inches. Trial displacement, 21.855 tons. Propelling ifiachinery : Parsons, marine turbines, developing 28,000 horse power. Number of boilers, 12 ; type, B. & W. water tube. Speed 20 34 knots (a little less than 23 miles.) Main battery consisting of 10 guns, located in five armor-claturrets, and two submerged torpedo tubes.' Secondary battery, consisting of 16 guns, 10 smaller guns of and less used in saluting. Armor on the turrets ranging in thickness from 12 inches to 8 inches. Side belt ranges from 11 inches to 9 inches. This ship will be a flagship, having spaci ous quarters fitted for the admirals accommo' dations, and consisting jjtf One admiral, one, chptain, 28 ward room of12-inc- h d ficers, J8 junipr-'officer69 m'arines, 872 of crew 1,001 s, in the cents. Foster-Milbur- n Co., Buffalo, New 'York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doans ' and take no other. - ; meeting. Laun-dry,wj- " r 7 Furniture and Carpet House, Main Street, Logan JSZ OWN YOUR OWN HOME Fine Home on 6th East . . . $1200.00 Five Room House on 4th South ... ... 7! . $1600.00 Three Room House 2nd South $ 750.00 7 Six Room House North Main . $1500.00 BQNDED ABSTRACTORS FOR CACHE CO. American Surety Bonds Fire and Life Insurance. Homes in every part of the city you can pick the house and make your, own terms. , to Farm loan on $300u000.0(? property, with optional payment .,-- 7 ...... warrant officers, a total complement of JXHrAJV: . rlTTATT. C. M. HARRIS, President. O. P. THATCHER, Secy. ' -- WANT COLUMN LOST Dec. 26 one Scotch collie about 6 months old. Return pup to L. C. McAlister; Logan Post Office and be rewarded. - The annual stockholders meetll ing of the American Steam be held at their place of business Tuesday January, 11th at 7.30 p. m: The financial report of the company will 'be rendered and a Board of Directors "elected for the ensuing year and f such other business transacted ' as Purchase Purchase and $1.00 Purchase and $2,00 Purchase and $3.95 and See Them at WM. EDWARDS should properly come before the 5(1 OF STOCKHOLDERS 12 W, v ' house.. Forjsale by all dealers." Price MEETING- launched Dec. 23rd : of Doans Kidney Pills NOTICE ' " s , I LOU AN. UTAH -- the testimonial I gave in September, 1907, telling of my experience with Doan's Kidney Pills.: My back did not bother me much, but I was caused no endoKan-noyanc- e The' Proof Is In Logan Almost At Your Door, - . DAYS. OLD InINDIAN view of the absolute You may continue VERIFYJT. gh rn following details of the beneficent operations of the, implement trust and what it does to the farmer: Congress and the farmers of the eonntry' are learning every day a little more about that interesting organization known as the Ti ary ester trust. They are learning how it monopolizes' the manufacture and sale of all manner of agricultural instruments; and how its head1 and front is J. Pierpont Morgan operating through his handyman, George W. Perkins, with Cyrus II. McCormick as figurehead.- The latter is president. Sen. Stone of Missouri has made a couple of speeches lately on the subject of the harvester trust. The Arkansas authorities have taken measures to oust the trust from that state; and' the attorney general for Missouri has recently taken a trip to New York to take testimony jn regard to this alleged monopoly. Facts brought put up to this time indicate condition about like this. The trust was A organized under the name of the International Harvester Co. of New Jersey in 1902. The - , active promoter was George, W. Perkins of J. Pierpont Mforgan & Co. The merger resulted in. a combination of all the properties of the McCormick Harvester Machine Co., the Deer-i- n g Harvester Machine Co., with the Champion - Hans-borou- JOURNAL Y take my country, but I will mark every mile of your eoad frorq North, Platte to the Yellowstone with ,the dead bodies of your soldiers.' When the vdly chief ami his followers left Laramie they took the precaution to drive off several hundred cattle, horses and mules belonging to the government. He then organiz-e- d the Sioux forces over a wide territory and began a war which had its elimax in August, 1867, when, with his braves, he was given a crushing blow by the Eighteenth infantry, his followers lost confidence in their leader and Red Ooud was eornered in 1869: Hesvas er nopoly of the harness business, as well as other necessary articles that the farmers of the country must buy. - At this very hour, Mr. President, .this moin nopoly farming implements is taking a hand in the politics of the state of North Dakota. . It is laying its wires at this moment, through its trusted political agents, to secure and control the delegates who" 'will Represent that state in' the next Republican national con-- 1 vention. Not alone this, but the edict has gone forth from its monopoly that I am to be defeated for the United 'States senate' because I have the temerity to offer a resolution of Investigation'. - Since these words were spoken, Mr. has been returned to private life. Whether it was the harvester trust that did it is a question which cannot finally be settled at this time or in. this place. TRI-WEEKL- ""f " FOR LEASE FROM 160 to 800 acres of dry farm land for three od five years quarter mile from R. R. spur.' Call on M. L Hill 182 E. 3 So. Logan. : if Not, Consider These Bargains ' .' FINE EIGHT-ROO- house, on' lot rods, with bam Eastlst South' . Eight room house located on South Main .... Street .. ; Three room house on lot 6x9 rods located on West Center .... . . .... .... Good 4 room frame house & additions .on corner lot 4x9 rods 5th "West . , v . . 7 . . ! 2300.00 - 1500.00 7 i : - 1400.00 .. ' - 1500.00 : Call and See Us. . Prices are Right Terms Easy- r ,1 , -- Chances to find work for all who have ability and inclination are afforded by the want ad. 5x9 HATCH and - "I VVILDf' f |