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Show PUTOINGIACROSS THE JOURNAL tLHI.INHKD BY EARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY AUGUSTUS GORDON.. stind " at ' Friday, July 22, 1921. THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH PAGE TWO tha Poat -- Ti BiMl'9 PiMi WIH.L tPfMO OCHL WAPTUM If ICMH OtT Yrt Wi rw To on U. r Famous Inventor Says Bike Racing Made Him Hardy Enough To Stand Edison s Work Pace .EDITOR Offlea Every Day la th Weak, Second Cl au M attar. at Logan aa leapt Baaday, best location for wife th 1 spend the spring time doping oul very BUHHI'JUPTION RATE 1 T RAIL. PER MONTH. la Advance tnd to Istei Lie lo spend a short vacation, 1 walch tlie ads Of shore S0o . , BT CARRIER, PER MONTH. Ia Advance.. then boot the ctlm of some old 70 vsoils, for they are mort appealing, 4 Dlacouat of ! l ot Par Tear .Will Be Glvaa Por Advanoe double its know dealing.) But wide falls for all ! say, and arm. (I Payment Por a Pall Tear. I lien the luq commences: She Pells me what a stingy mutt am to save toned are moil who rates MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRKM boost some roost, to high Kpenwj. She starts Ive it pleases me. and tha! the place is charming. I Tie Associated PTesa la exclusively entitled to tha use for repablleatloa but agree ilarming. Sre of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited la this kno-it. how ta and win for just many years, ?Uyed the game paper and also the local news published herein. bh riflate and f d tntstd ns designed, 4et - AU right of repujilicatttin- of special fftsp&tcBe herein r also reserved. ' decides .he ocean ah will tuild both Ira.n and tnusclc. I m aduTiant Advertising Rates Purnlshed on Application. I've seen the tussle. And so. for let her N. Casson, London correspondent of the Wall Street - figure in English society and at times has actively interested herself in politics. The duke has a town house in Gros-v- i nor Square and several counof these try estates, but outside yjjosst.sion the famil- fortunes are at a low ebb. With high 4 i tle a nd ii I Ue monty the Duke laud Duchtss have been consider L-ir-.g writes: "Many Englishmen do not forget that several of the.Southern States still owe Great Britain 1200,000,000 and have refused would be regarded as a very gracious and timely , payment; and act if this old debt were remembered and set down to the credit of Great Britain. (On account of American loans tp it 1 England in the late war). , -And" many" Americans' do nor forget7eiiher," that"' the two hundred millions above referred to were loaned by ngland to the Southern Confederacy during our civil war, ia hopes .that it would succeed in breaking up the Union." The difference between that and what England owes us is that the latter sum, four thousand millionswas- advanced, to them by us to help preserve the British Empire and keep it from ruin and collapse. And up Locate they havenot paid a cent ofinterest on Jt, much -l- ess principal and tfratalone amounts" to half a million dollars a day. It is said that the British eannot see a joke until the middle of next week, and it looks to us as though they couldnt see the difference between their own treachery back in 1861 and the patriotism of the United States in s Htrtehtsortv gimvrsr" l(w l'omtur ami iinei.iia lr4hrfC-filffsrrwrtt'evfr't- Kilt-oi- William K. Vanderbilt died in Paris. Re Fourn&t pie-idc- 1 -- I j work-er- j i o , . 1 ti- z 4 !' a take or pie of rwAies What - ldren at Rut-l- n pffAjia.-,-went t and fcilit jier iihA hjfT letter go the- will had lu(iuVrttvf Rv NothlWA'XV'i . 1 , SitinU - MW 7 They notebetfx y and made those that were;t6 .d areon pkcOhnf,A ylnddv the-Cf- e : sffojg wllluig an well trained hthjfy heyfpd wild flfted, the logs together.- - .Alexander ferguson lined the Breplaee with a curious mortar made of clay In which he mixed gran for a binder. This mortar be rolled Into layer called "cat a each eight Inches loug end three Inches thick. Then he laid them against the place wltb-- e logs end held Ihew-l- a The first woven network of stock fire a alow one baked the clay Into ahealh inside the rigid stone-Ulogs and presently the atlcka were burned away. The women had cooked the meats by an open fire a ml spread the dinner on a table of rough hoards resting on poles set In crotches. At noon ona of them sounded a conch shell. Then with shouts of Joy tha men hurried to tha fireside end for a moment there was a great spluttering Before they over tlia wash basins. ate, every man except Abe and Samson took a pull at the Jug long or Short" to quota a phrase of the time. t k It was a cheerful Company that tat dawn upon the grass around th table with loaded piatea. Their food had Its extra seasoning of merry Jests sml Sarah was a little loud, laughter. shocked at the forthright directness of their eating, no knives or forks or napkins being needed in that process. Having eaten, washed god packed away their dishes th women went home at two. Before thy bad goue ear caught a fnuai Samson' hope?, feet. In the distance. AioL'uS fellows from the Grove when they got merry were looking always for a chance to get mad at some man and tarn, blm, Into a plaything. A chance had come to get mad and they were going to mukerthe most of It. They began to growl with resentment Soma were wigging their leader, Jack Armstrong, to fight Abe. -- Otie of them Tsntd"fitsBorseina brought a bottle from his saddle hag. It began passing from mouth to mouth. Jack Armstrong got the bottle before It was half emptied, drained It and flung it high in the air. Another called him A hog and grappled him around the waist and there was a desperate struggle which ended quickly. Armstrong got a hold on the neck of his assailant ami Choked him until he let go. This was not enough for the sturdy bully of Ciarya Grove. He seised his follower and flung him so roughly on the ground that the latter lay for a moment stunned. Armstrong had got his blood warm mod was now ready for action. With a wild whoop he threw. off his coat, unbuttoned his right shirtsleeve tnd rolled it to tlie shoulder and declared ia a loud voice, as be swnng his arm la th air, that he could "out jump, out hop, out run, throw down, drag out an lick any man ' In New Salem.!! ' In a letter to hit father 8amMa f writes : ; Al was working at my elbow. I saw him drop bis hammer and get up 'Ll 51?lrt fT tilt ladder. J kpew - j - .States nayy. bom at Charlotte N. C. 54 years ago today. former Joseph L. Bristow, United States senator from Kan -- sas, born in Woolf county Ky., 0 years ajfo today. Thomas E. Wilucn cne of the foremost in the American jacking industry, bom at London, Out., 53 years ago today. who Evelyn Briggs Bald wit 'od several expeditions to the Arctic region, Lent at Spring-fielMo., 59 years ago today. George Gibson, manager of the Pittsburgh National league baseball club, bom at London, OnL, 41 years ago tqday. d, friends of "America "stamilug together did the thousand a ot friends ' Thebe." It's a great thought," said Aba. "No man can estimate the alse of that mighty phalanx of friendship all trained in one school, Kelso went on. "Two yesrs ago the Encyclopedia Britannic figured that the population ot the United States In 1903 would ha au said: " 'Jack, you aint half so had or half socordy as ye tliluk ye ore. You say you cuu throw down any man here. I reckon 111 have to show ye that youre mistaken. I'll raxxle with ye. We're friends an we wont talk about lickin each other. Le's have a friendly rassle.' "In a second the two men were locked together. Armstrong had lunged at Abe with a yell. There was tut friendship Id the nay he took hold. He was going to do all the duinage he could. In any way he could. Half drunk. Jack is a man who would bite your ear off. It was no rustle; It was Abe moved Mke lightning. a figllt. He acted awful limiter an well greased. In a second he had got hold of the feller's neck with his big right hand and hooked Ids left Into the cloth on his hip. In that way he held him off and shook him as you've seen our dog shake a woodchuck. Abe's blood waa hot. If the whole crowd had piled on him I guess he would have come out all right, for when he's ro'used theres' soiwthlng In Abe more then bones and muscles. I suppose Its whst I feel when he speaks a piece. It's a kind of lightning. I guess it's what our minister used to call the' power of the spirit. "A friend of the bully jumped in and trie, I to trip Ate. . Harry Needle stood beside me. Before I could move he dashed forward and bit that feller In the tulddle of his furehead and knocked him flat. Harry bad hit Bap McNoll, the cock fighter. I got up next to the kettle then and took the acum off It. Fetched one of them devils a slap with the side of niy hand that took the skin off his face and rolled him over 4 and over. When I looked agalu Armstrong was going limp. His mouth wss open end bis tongue aut. With ona hand fastened to hla right leg and the other on the nape of Ida neck Abe lifted him at ariu'i length and gava him a toae ha the lr Armstrong fell . about ten feet from where Abe stood And lay there for a minute. The fight waa all out of him and h was kind of dated and sick. Abe stood up like a giant sod his face looked awful Solemn. Boys, if there's any mors a you that want trouble ypu can have. some off the saniA piece,' he said. They hung their heads and not one of them made a move or said a word. , Rear Admiral Edward R. Stitt eurgeon general of the - United ct something was going to haivii and I followed him. In a minute everyone was off the roof and out of the building. I guess they knew what was The big lad stood there coming. swinging his arm and yelling like au Injun. It was a hig tinu and muscled and corded up some, but I guess if I'd shoved the calico off mine and held It up he'd a pulled down hU sleeve. I didn't know just how good a man A he was ami I was kind o' scalrt for a minute. I never found it so hard work to do nothin as I did then. Hon-- cut, my hands kind o' ached. 1 wanted to go an' cuff tlist fellers ears an' grab hold o' him an' toss him over the ridge pole. Jilt went right up to him Senator Harding accepted the presidential nomina-lion- . publican " Todays Birthdays p .XLfioon-declaretLso- Ambassador Harvey declared in his speeeh in England that the only reason we went into the war was self protection, and that our soldiers did not cross the aeas to make the world safe for democracy, but largely because they were drafted and had to, or words to that effect. If Colonel Harvey is correctly in his speech, then all we have to say is that he is a quoted pale blue ass and seventeen different kinds of a liar. He and Sims oughi to put padlocks on their rapid fife mouths. ' ' One Year Ago Today. ir. IRVING BACHELLER I age. tue-th- WHEN a batch of Pilgrims arrived at Salem from England they women were witches, and proceeded to bunLihemior ao beingTheyhave been blamdfor this ever In it (irrectlon he n cloud of dust since, but the sentence should be modified to include only the m l lie roHif and a band of hornemen Idlng towanl them at full apeed. Abe burning, and not in finding that woman is a witch, for that is to him and said: what she is, always has been and always will be. Arent all we with them, arilved on the tage that vama I see the hovtrom He wax drestted In a new evening. flary'a Grove male bipeds bewitched by Jbe right down to this day? We butternut feuit and clean linen and" Hr coming. If they get mean, let me deal with 'em. It's my responsibility certainly are, unless there is something the matter with us. It Is interesting to read the divorce proceedings in the papers from I wouldn't wonder If they had of OITut's whisky with them. day to day, just to note what idiots some people can be when The boja arrived in a vlotid of they try hard, Wejioteone prominent trial now going on in dust and a chorus of Indlun whoops which the man claims he married thq woman because he was and dismounted and hobbled their horses. They mine toward the i hypnotized by her into so doing. The opposing counsel declares led by burly Jack Armstrong, u this to be Impossible, but he is entirely wrong. It is not only on Ids tongue he told of his adventures . black smith of ttr ' on the long shore toad to Michigan. about twenty-twpossible but a fact, and it has happened to all the rest of us, with broad, heavy shoulders, whose name has gone Into from which we have never, waked up yet and dont want to. Eve history. They had been drinking some Adam and made him cast away the empire .of the hypnotized hut no one of them was In the least earth for a scrubby apple, and ever since her fair daughters have degiee off his halame. They gi ultted around the Jug for a moment In perbeen emulating that example. We are not blaming or censuring fect good nature and then A he nnd but them, only stating facts very delicious facts, at that. That Mrs, Waddell provided them with the Are but al(l Into the sadly nothing lawyer who claims woman cannot hypnotize man ought to go to He row presently, excused himself best remnants of tlie dinner. They were rather noisy, them they went night school she can hypnotize anything that wears pants, from and went away, up on theiKif to help w Ith tlie rafters new wer hou,,e the prince at his gilded poker game to the peasant picking bugs) Th ,0 for th and the cluphoarding. They worked "ell a few minutes and suddenly they from the potato plants, as Solomon himself could testify if he eame sera milling fy.wn for another could come back, or any and all of the multitudinous husbands of pull at the Jug. They were out for a Lukln h"1 brousht Lilliin Russell. Being hypnotized by a woman - is like taking - ron nd Peter and 'Alie knew It and knewfurt spree DrA'wtnitiraniaah fcnd xome ri er that they had reached the limit ether from a dentist one fights a minute and then feel himself from Beards! own In a smallclapboards flatboat. of discretion. going up, up, up, around and around, and in another minute he Then fame the daj. of the raising a lloys.' thbre Are ladies ke and jWinrn day, early tA September. doesnt know whether he is going up or down or around, and Afi th apta fiitm ,tb tillage utiq the doesnt care a derm ulakk a neat--ftirhia.iUttiered, tS h6me,'firl tlWn'tveK iolltefs, $aeV5 atnft Rlltkwent ,oit !fir a baht '.TU FARM LIFE LOOKING UP ywting tvyelettf-g1 NOTED writer declares that in time the lonesomeness of farm life will be done away with, and that tilling the soil will . Ir 1 1 1 A STORY or m OTILDnay DEHOCESCT jiopular vocation. Jie might have said that some of the lonesomeness has already been banished, and that the remainder is rapidly disappearing. The automobile has done it. There is no need for the farmer or his family or his help to ' ' feel lonesome these days. Distance no longer exists for him. With his car he can be in town at any time within a few minutes. He can visit his neighbors for miles around any evening after supper, while attendance at church on Sunday and social gatherings at other times require but little" more effort than is consumed in walking around a city block. His life in many ways is preferable to that of the qjty dweller. His health is enhanced by the sunshine and the pure country air that lie breathes. His life is pot menaced by the constant stream of cars driven by reckless motorists, as ia the case in most cities. His children grow to maturity in the purity of contact with nature, instead of being surrounded by the questionable environment of more congested centers, where there is little opportunity to sift the good from the bad. IIe Is free to go and come as he desires and is not hedged around with the myriads of restrictions and laws of the city man. Tilling the soil is popular now. It will become more so as time goes on and the beauties and advantages of nature are better known and understood by those who now live by a clock and the factory thistle. iht a gh WOMAN IS A WITCH f ami finance wurih- seieiimt, Iam, nude while dcMm from hi uiiuts hiuoeit phu.ally ruggctM-fnuuUi ainp th Hmltliiig VI work hours olpii in one w.tk a uta hi on Mkit tht he was chief my tiler r for Ihi.tnas A i. ah!' tfi vrW Ua ami myht at the sule l)r. lut. hi.oii m IH'OO laid hwn wh.it ot I ui 4,n ,ahut ivlutUNtion ami to wa tlitn a bike record c South w.Ui tie tiiat li.;ree ot aha th.ough-- i two mututejii!l1taiidioe lull hy Ire JLaiiMt m the- - hui!e.-raunjf, onTli lor the mi Ur. fem etc, he 1 have hrtn m vtrut athletic train- liulitged swiiim.m. ui r , hiN uth. all m Inc. and tliat i, why-- 4 am ing Dr. i f;Ht htson rscti now .how Jin-fo- ur able- - to arise now-ir o itj oclock in sons some fancy hack somersault the morning and work straight diving and can rule his prir juinfnr, the thrimgh day until 1'jO oclock the Ren,"- - with bur-- . men. H nct morning explained the iine.ror furce h.rn-rl- f to setting-uexercise of the Acousticon for the deaf and the every morning going through this Klaxon Horn, who hat jm.t dai'v while his bath tub of an orgai uation lormrJ slowly iirogr,iin Tills! in Yorl to nusx the inventive 'f exeru-a- rtery morning while intelligences of tlie world for gri up waitii-for the hath tub to fill, he action in quuk and elhck-n- t drveloo.1 "i'ce had a sma'I feed epiai inent-an- d mat Wrung of worthy inven-- pips to the tub. installed years eo. . I1'1,1 mact because wlnie I'm waiti. ; IO,"f' . association with Hudson Ma.in I have the time to gu the n.omn.g ilitUTUl lutlkUy kuuV-ft hf- I - tKcd.ll (n j life, throughS3 One of happiest couples of the peer- yet tlu.y are known fuah-- V"KjU'i cli 1916-17-1- 8. "become a - for 'yachting, but caring litlfc public life. The Duchtss on the other hand, has tHn a prqmin-n- t wm end Part to rar.t, but jean. I ve soothed my acmes vdtn at .he beaches. disportmt;' jje:ns this slufi for beauty cur' es displayed upon the peaches, s've pulled I the Kbt tns L can and th'iig across told daring Mven years, vuth. hat v, wearing? they're lh,s j ear, t!,e AN IRONCLAD BRITISH NERVE HERBERT In The Days News who The Duke- of Somerset tlcLi atts his 75th birthday anniversary today, is the second - of pter of the realm, the DukeNorfolk alone ranking before him. The Somerset title dates bac k to the year 1547. The pres-u- iDuke succeeded his father In 1877 in the titles in 1894. he was married ,t Miss Susan MacKinnon, the daughter of a 1 hfe Duke is a man Canadian. fond of b;t taslos, ;ju -- 'and devoted to i -fa -- E MM, ooo.ooo people, and In 1908, Wealth, power, science, literature, all follow In the train of light and nmnlMTs. The cause which moved the sceptre of clvlllsstlon ' from tb Euphrates to western Europe will car-rit fromjha latter tQ the n4w world." They say that elsctriclty and tha development of tha staam angina art going to make all men think alike," said Abe. If that's ao democracy Knd liberty will spread over tlie earth. 1 ret kon w are near tb greatest year in history. It is a privilege to .b alive." And young." Doctor Allen added. What a God's biassed "Young thing Is that !" said. Kelso. "Aba, have je teamed The Cotter's Saturday t" j Night' Not yet. It' a heavy hog to hold, but I'll get a grip on an ear add hind leg and lift it out o' the pea before long. You aee." -Don't fail to do that It will be a help aod Joy to yo." "Old Klrkham la a hard masttr, said Abe. I hear hi bell ringing every time I get a minutes leisure. I'm nigh through with him. Now I want to study rhetoric. y When Hes Reused There Some- thing in Abe." i j frduEIe but hot "again "were They "tii Imperil the foundations of law and order In the little community of New Salem. As they were starting away Bap McNoll turned to Harry Neelies and shouted: "Ml git even with you son of a dog," yet you That is not exactly wliat he said but R la near enough. slab-side- d CHAPTER V. tha Character ef Blm Kalaa Out In a Strang Adec.ntura That Bsgina th Weaving of a Long Thrtad of Romance. In Which Flash The shell of the cabin was finished that day. Its puncheon floor was In place but Its upper floor was to be laid when the boards were ready. It two doors were-ye- t to be made and bung. Its five windows to be fitted and made fast, Ita walls to be chinked with Samson and Harry clay mortar. stayed that evening after the rest were gone, smoothing the puncheon floor. They made a few naila at the forge after supper and went over to Abe' store about nine. Two of the Clary' Grove gang who had tarried In the village sat In th gloom of Ita little veranda apparently asleep. .Doctor Alien, Jack Kelso, Alexander Ferguson, and Martin Waddell were sit- 1 "Only schoolmaster study rhetoric." Kelso declared. A real poet or a real orator Is born with all the rhetoric be need. Rhetoric 1 a steed for a light load under the saddle, hut he'ajtoe Warm blooded for fh harness. H waa for the day of th plumed knight not for the times. No mas ot sense would us a prancing bora on a plow or a stone boat A good plow horse is a beautiful thing. The play of his muscles, the power of his atrid are poetry to me, hut when ha trie to put on style h la ridiculous. That suggests what rhetoric Is apt to do to intellect. If yonT ting by 'its flreshle while Abe eat on the untrained the eonnter with bis legs hanging off. anything to say or writ, bead straight Im aorry w had to have trouble." across the field and keep-yoay on Samson remarked. It's the only spot the furrow." In the last diary of Samson Henry on the day. Ill never forget the kindness of the people of New Salem." Trajlor Is this entry t I went to Gettysburg with th PresThe raising bee Is a most significant thing," said Kelso. Democracy ident today and sat near blm when he tends to universal friendship each spoke.1 Mr. .Everett addressed th works for the crowd and the crowd for crowd for an hour or to. A Kelso Abe went to Armstrong and blp4 each, and there are no favorites. Ev- would say He rode the prancing steed ery community Is like the thousand of Rhetoric. ' ' My old friend wsat him up. friends ef Thebes. Moat of Itk unit straight across the field When bt 'Jack, I'm sorry that I had to hurt stand togetiier for the common good-f- ew finished, the field, plowed and haryou,' he aald. 'You get on t your Justice, law and bonne. The rowed and fertilised by war, bad been horse and go home.' schools are spinning- - strand of de- sowed for all time. Tha spring's work , 'Abe, you're a better man thaiyue, out of alt this European wool. was don and wet) dona.". mocracy said th bully, aa h offered hi hand At a quarter of ten the doctor rasa Railroad are to pick them up and to Aha. Ill do anything you ay. weave them Into one great fabric. By and said; . So tb Clary's Grave gaqg conand tyy we shall see thq tea millioo quered. They were to mak more (To Bo Contikuad) -- |