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Show Thursday, June 30, 1910. ..TTTt PAGE TWO THE JOURNAL PUBLISHED BY EARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING CO Entered j at the PosVOffice every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, at Logan, Utah, matter. as second-clas- s AUGUSTUS GORDON, . F. J. MARSHALL, ... EDITOR CITY EDITOR . SUBSCRIPTION RATES. for work which will arbitrators who Jiad been ehosen in one case cents. have been nominated to decide, other affairs, return him in value but seventy-fiv- e Of course n3 one wishes for a retnrri of certainly the most cbnvihcing evidence, I the ..days when one hundred dollars a year think, that nations have been contented with and found, was considered fair wages for the yvork that has been done here. Matters of great importance have bui a Willing worker; but it is indisputable that those days uroduced many great man who adjusted in these modest provisional rooms, delicate prose from Such humble conditions. In those some of them involving the most' and national' within pride, the last questions of sovereignty and .later' times; in fact, until few years, the boy or Lung n.an wording in all implicating intricate problems of interu.i-tiona- l id not expeetTo receive the law. , any capacity-dhis particular calling, But, 'perhaps, never till now has there .highest 'wages 'paid-ibut sought" first to qualify himself to earn been intrusted to an arbitral tribunal a ques them. lie expected and was content to ad- tion of such gravity and of so complex a navance gradually; amt when thoroughly com- ture as in the present case" of almost secular petent the wage question settled itself. If standing. Many of the documents in this to pay a man a dollar -- n By Carrier. 3 3 12 7 Months, Months Months , . .7 . . 90c .t r. . r. . .... .. $1-7- 5 $3.50 7777177777777; his employer was not properly appreciative ease are prior to the independence of the t,f his efforts, as shown by his pay envelope United. States of America; some of them go By Mail 75e more remunerative positions were' always opvi as far back as the seventeenth century. Up3 Months He develop'd Ins powers until ho ward from 1818, during more than ninety $150 to, him. 6 Months for industry, capability years, the questions implicated in the present . $3.00 acquired a reputation 7 12 Months . . i and dependability, and his success was as- arbitration have been the subject bf almost sured. Both then and now, such a young man uninterrupted diplomatic correspondence and When not paid in advance, 50c per year whether in the office, store or workshop, was transaction, and more than once they have additional. and is always in demand. Now, as then; he brought the two great seafaring nations of was the last to be discharged during dull Europe and America to the verge of the ex- - ....... xav erLsin gRates-Furnished.- WEEK ONLY SPECIALS Special 45c Britany Linen. Sales- - 25c Lawns 30 18$ Special.. 45c Opera Chiffoo ial Spec- 30 $3.50 and $4.(0 .Ladies pumps $2.75 All Silks and LaWns 20 discounts- See our Bargain ble of Remnants ta- All Pla-Ma- te specials Ladies $3.00 pamps$2.25 pumps$2.00 All Lace Oxfords $2.50 - t to '$4.00 to go for ... $.200 andfYonth $2.30no77Tj Boys $2.00 $2.75 All Men's $4.00 Oxfords to $3.00 gp at Misses $2.25 to go :, $175 for Misses $2.00 to ?o $1.50 for $1.75 $2.00 to go for $1.25 of Ties and Sandals 20 James Quayle & Co. wh on.Ap plication. - v ' is realized that the get they mil roved. in succeed ,1 aviators do it now The daring jsoaring there stay there boy; the is it but only do it right, bov, is a scarce article and or. above the high prices tf beef, between meals. almost beyond price. The Park Record has this to s ay of t h e Dependa ble Boy. of number Work makes men. Luck usually fads. It is gratifying .to learn from a sources that Cache countys famous dry farm Pluck nearly, always wins. To succeed jn grain yield will not be so small as was feared anything one must overcome obstacles. Force From different parts of the county samples and fiber are built by hardships. Grit is as rf good, plump vigorous win at, promising necessary in the making of a man as gumption. a good harvest, are being brought in daily Hardships are met always handicaps. Often While this years crop will fall away behind tliey are helps. You will understand this betthat of some years we have known, it will ter in twenty years. Meanwhile permit one be much larger than We dared hope for a who has lived that twenty years and more to iew weeks ago. Cool r..ght$ of late have help- advise you in this. Hang onto your job until ed materially. you are sure of a better one. Dependable boys are in demand. And no boy can be deNo matter how hard hq. may try, Teddy pended upon who does not finish the task he aide-or- . in the other the one take to sets his hand to do. However disagreeabl ' is bound battle dow being waged between the regular our work, do it thoroughly. Do it better And .insurgent Republicans. Neither side is than the average boy will do it. In that way willing for him to remain astride the fence you will come to be known as a dependable It places him in an embarrassing position. boy. He stood sponsor for Taft, who endorses and And mind you this: Mien everywhere same the At are looking for capable, honest, gritty, deis endorsed by the regulars. time the insurgents endorse Pinchot and his pendable boys. The sooner you let people Administration of government reserves, also know that you are that kind jof a boy,. Jhe the reform policies," Including' tariff reduction sooner you will get a better job. And dont And the curbing of the power of the trusts, be in a hurry to' give up the work "jPu althat Roosevelt advocated and announced that ready have. Be sure something better is of"Taft would stand for. Truly, Teddy is in the fered. Wait awhile. Do your work swells dickens of a fix and will catch it either way Promotion will come. And. do not envy the be jumps. boy who has an easy time. You would much better pity him. He has a good time now, but FIGHTS AND FIGHTERS. some day he must make good. With his PRIZE The editor of the Salt Lake Telegram flabby muscles and his easy habits and his expressed' a very, general opinion of prize many wants, he stands a far poorer chance than you. Remember above all, .young fellow, fights and fighters when he wrote this: And So the big fight is going to Reno. you are making a man of yourself. in the same paper is a dispatch that, Cans is in the last stages of consumption and a pitiful court of peace. Universal peace through the medium of object to look upon. to one of the fightinternational Now, objections prize arbitration, has been the dream ing by the good is that men are sometimes of peace lovers; and ten years ago a beginkilled in the brutal matches. The case of ning was made in the first assembly of the Cans shows that thats not so bad. .lie had Hague. It is true that, so far the decrees of bis chest all betaen to pieces over and over this court, which is largely of an experimental Again, and he said it did not hurt him at all; nature, have not. been binding; true, also, that l ut, after awhile insidious disease got to those its existence has had no effect in reducing bruised lungs, and now they tell us that he U arm es, navies, or the construction iff means a pitiful object to see.- IIow much better it o offense ami defense among thejarger na-- , Would have been If he could only have been tions of the world; and yet the Court of leace killed in the ring, so that all the sports, has been wonderfully effective, a may he through all the ages to coiicould tell what gleaned from the sentences below quoted from a game fighter he was, and never more game the speech deliverd at the opuing of the iceent than In the momeut that he was killed. PrDe ses ion by Prof. Heinrich Ijunnosch of Vienna. fighting is a brutal thing. Its effect upon the Admitting these successes, does it not seem voung of the land we cannot estimate; but if highly probable that within another decade we watch around the back yards we will see the Court will be given greater pov. TsTTven mall boys, calling themselves respectively to final authority, all nations lieing pledged Jeffries and Johnson, pummeling each other. to seek its arbitrament and sustain its decWe cannot estimate because the germ of these ision. Following are the extracts referred to: Ten years have . elapsed since the prize fights set in motion in the - hearts of court of international arbitration has thoughtless and foolish people cannot be esbeen the But for established timated, fighters themselves, by the first conference' of met under the reign of a there should not be any great sympathy, and peace which-h- as if by a .lucky stroke Jeffries should give the glorious and well beloved queen in this colored gentlemaif a fatal blow, and then charming town. In those few real's already this novel he stepped back should fall and the back of has done a great deal off good all his head should land on a post and break his skull and kill him there would be no occasion over the world. It has shown that, instead of for tears. The world could say that they were appealing to brute forge, with all its casualLoth game fighters and died at their posts, and ties. enmities and injustices, difference . important differences between mighty states, it would be all right. may be adjusted according to the laws of BOYS. equity, justice and humanity. Tribunals instituted in virtue of the conA very , generally prevalent trouble vention men of 1899 and 1907 have decided dis nnd of who boys today among the young are just starting out in life, is that by' far putes touching all four continents, divided m too many of them, with no special training in various realms, differences which have arisen any calling, and some of them with no great in the north of Europe, in northern and amount of industry, expect to step into ready southern America,- in Japan, in Arabia, and made positions to which good .salaries, and in Mlorocco. The. greatest powers of the world have not too much work are attached. Naturally such boys and young men get their bumps submitted by their free will to this court and and:, get them hard- - In the first place they nations of minor forces have found their profind it difficult to obtain work at the wages tection before it. d Governments whieh- once had appealed to they ask, and then, if they do succeed at last they dont hold the job long because they this high court have intrusted it a second and cant make good. No employer is going a third time with a decision of their conflicts, The - pei-mane- nt -- OUR - - And now these two nations, to which the worl1 is indebted for so much of its progress in every sphere of human thought and action have' agreed to submit their long standing conflict Jo thearbitration ofJhis tribunal. In doing so they have expressed their full confidence in this peaceful mode of, revolving international differences, which the first conference of 1889 has recognized as the .mo.st efficacious and at the same time the most equitable method of deciding controversies which have not beer settled by diplomatic means..,. A line of Porlor Suits from $25.00 to $75 Set. Fancy Rockers and Chairs, -- Buffets 1 HE AUTOMOBILE MENACE. When referring to the growing and China Closets in dan- ger to the pedestrian upon city streets from the number of motor vehicles, The Journal has always maintained that the primary right of way rests with the man who walks. That the danger is a real and growing one, and that our views as to right of way were correct are both confirmed by the following from the Salt Lake Tribune: To turn again to the eternal ' question: What shall we do to be saved from the the motorcyclist. themessenger menace, the delivery boy on the bicycle, and the other vehicular dangeis which daily threaten thp lives and limbi of the community? This is of toll question Perhaps that human life due to recklessness of driving through the streets of the city in the past year will amount to some eight or ten; as to accident i without fatal result they are innumerable. And yet nothing is done to prevent a cnee of these fatalities and accidents. 'I lie pedestrian, who has the absolute right has no by common law to the rights. All the rights belong to the man in or on the vehicle no matter w'hat its form- - -and if the pedestrian erosses the street in safely he should thank the gods for the guidance and direction. alt Lake City lays claim to a certain amount of metropolitanism. It can never he a metropolis as long as it remains provincial; and its provincialism is amply evident in the conduct and irregularity of its vehicular traffic. Who, in a real city, ever saw a messenger hoy careering down the main street at a pace of twenty miles an hour, whittling to men ard women a warning to clea- - the path for him t v Men and women being merely dogs in the ee df the young wretch? Mho. in a leal i.y. eer saw a driver of an auto cross the i teiMTtion of the main th loughfare of that at inV an hour J?y twenjfv or Menty-fh- e itlirk regaroless of the rich!'- of the pedes-."eThe same remarks apoy, in general to 'l chieulai traffic. Not in one instance out ever-increasin- JUST ARRIVE all Finishes. g an-tois- William Edwards t. Beautiful Resident Locations Splendid Building Lots Along, the Car Line Easy Terms. 4 Room House on 4th East . . i 1500.00 4 Room House on 5th Ea . . ... $2000.00 House on Center Elegant Street, easy Abstractors For Cache County. $300,000 to Loan on Imp'oved Farms. ever-recurrin- right-of-wa- u. ..... J term-Bond- ed y, - hit ml rod does Main Street Furniture and Carpet House. ,,,, wl., n gnm WeMake Your Watch Run on Time timepiece to be valuable mu t he aeeurate, all pivots are finely polished, all hearings are adjuJed. on the hearings the balance revolves 432000 times daily astounding isnt it? No watch can run in dirty rancid oil. the friction of the delicate parts in their continuous labor day and night, will soon ruin a watch, unless it is cleaned and oiled by A C. M. WENDELBOE DO has to wade reeei e any eon ideration. It is no use to say there is no law. because the is g.ven the pedestrian by common law. The quicker the law is enforced better it will be for the community, because it is no use locking the stable when the horse has gone. The interpretation of this Id saying is easy. In Great Britain a law has been enacted that when a prson driving an auto kills any-tna charge of n i a nsl a n g h t e f s t a n d s a gains t' h m or her. It become a may charge of murder: but the .minor charge is ine capable. No one under the age of 21 years is permitted to drive an auto; every driver must have a license and this license cannot be obtained before-thapplicant has undergone a rigid examination by a committee of expetts as to his ability to operate and control a machine. A law s'milar in some rerpeets, it is underis in force in New York state. stood, Of course, jt should be unnecessary to reiterate the dangerous conditions existing here, but it seem the necessity exists. It is high t me that Salt Lake authorities dropped the small things and turned their attention to the matters which mean. the killing, maimiDg and mutilating of the citizens. WE right-of-wa- y ( IT AND We have had 45 years DO IT WELL practical experience. Thatcher Music Co. 39 South Main Street Logan e. Sell Julius Bauer, Poole and Schiller Pianos, For Cash or on Installments e - In Used Pianos We also have some splendid Bargains from $1 00.00 up including several Steinway and Miller Pianos Thatcher- - Music Co. g. ji |