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Show fnC TwO THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY. CACHE COUNTY, AT GRAVE OF HIS SOLDIER BROTHER Tuesday, May So, UTAH iSSJTT 7, IN FRANCE 'TheSomme Gomesln PUBLISHED BT KARL AND ENGLAND PlliUSHIXa COMPANY Cnterod at' tha Poet Offle Krery at Logan. Utah, at py in tha Weak, Except Sunday, r. - Second CUaa Matter. hL BSCKIFTlOJi RATK BT MAIL, PER MONTH, la Advance BT CARRIER, PER MONTH, la Advance.. A Discount of f l.fifi Per Year Will Be Given lor Advance Payments for a Pull Tear. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PKEtiS t The Associated Press is exclusively entitled te the nee tor republic tloa ol aU news dispatches credited to it or aot otherwise credited In this paper and also the local newa published herein. , AU rlfht of republicatlon of special dispatches herein are also reserved ; Furnished on Appllcatio . Rates Advertising V W GIGANTIC PLOT UNCOVERED by means of finger prints' of 49 "men with in the registry division of the New York is to the methods employed by that class of a tribute office post in the cap of the investigating officials. well a as feather as gentry The discovery of this state of affairs came through the arrest several days ago of a number of post office employees who had entered Into a conspiracy with men on the outside to rob the registry division of the postoffice of large sums of money Incidentally, it is said to have cleared up postal robberies extending over a period of something like $2,000,000. Needless to sky, all men with criminal records employed in the postoffice have been dropped from the service, and steps have been taken to see that no more such characters are permitted to enter the government employ. DETECTION . It is a sad commentary on our civilization to be forced to admit that men of the highest intelligence are engaged in criminal practices in this country. Those" dropped "from Uncle Sams payroll In New York confessed that they entered the registry division of the postoffice for the express purpose of iwing the mailit.- The examination required to enter this branch of the service, stamps them as men of more than ordinary intelligence, and had they not been detected when they were, a gigantic robbery which they; were jphmning when discovered would have been accomplished.' Of course, not all of those en gaged in The conspiracy were, on the insid&, As a matter of fact, the directing genius, no doubt, had no connection whatever with the postoffice, but he had his agents there, who kept him posted on just what the developments were. In this way the gang had learned the most opportune time to accomplish their purpose and were all ready for the master stroke when a shrewd piece of detective work unfolded the whole scheme,; t' It is to be hoped that employers gencrally will profit by the ' experience of Uncle Sam. Men placed in trusted 'positions should be known for their integrity before employers assume the risk. So also with those elected to public office. They should be mei) who have been thoroughly tested, who have been weighed in the balances and founffirtotWantlngr"Men"with pH8on records who are trying to go straight should be given every encouragement and help, but they should not be placed in positions . where temptation will play constantly on their weaknesses. Of course, some of the men with clear records sometimes are tempted, but this is the exception rather than the rule and, affording as it does a minimum of risk, the safer course should be followed in male lay selections for responsible positions. Deseret News. . , . - - , THE DIFFERENCE , r PARMER can work ten hours a day on a piece of land and A make ' a bare living. Another fanner can work eight hours a day on the same land and bank a good profit each year. Theres a reason. The successful man studies conditions and "analyzes suggestions and makes improvements as rapidly as it is possible for him to do so. His returns are in proportion to the activity of his - ? - The other man is slow to change, lie doesnt new fangled notions. What was good enough good enough for him.- And thats aU he' gets. When put to practical use brains become a When merely carried around in a skull they are ' a burden. take any stock in for his father is - " - asset. little better than valuable , , A turtle lives four or five hundred years,, but who in blazes wants to be a turtle. What has he got to live for, anyhow. Now they have some sort of dope to make people live 150 years, but we have some doubts as to whether we want to hang around here that long or not. Life gets to be pretty much of a chestnut after one gets so old he. cant chew anything but the rag. ' Established port of New lust at (unset March M. lldl, the (rwanporl Sonus slipped Intoto tbo action with tbo. York hearing a previous rorao of hero dead I.O mea who-CeiGermane. Nett day the worlt or removing tharsskem was begun, and the twdieIn In trance, ranged rrw after.row who died Bgiilin of three LO American t tha Army coffin draped with the Stare and Stripe. were paid military honor brief military aervtce for the dead woo. Transport Service pier, hi Hoboken. Tue liu rtrrlBd through with Major General O Rynn and hln full ntuff and piayrrn were offered by elrrgymen of all faiths. Each of the bodle yys of eecort of I he home of relative under to men-weent aa latef them were New York kxt-.ePeter Vgcmrd of honor. Above Is pictured the pier ervlce. taken whll was r division, speaking. overeeee chaplain of the Hoey one-ti- A vlewof an America camalary in Franca showing Corporal Harry McLaughlin of lha Ona Hundred and of New York) at the grata of hi brother Daniel, who died of wound reinfantry (old- Sixty-nint- h ceived at Ckataao Thierry. ALL the grave of oar fallen heroe or marLcA wtth crditting the name of the daad soldier, hi regiment, and tha data of hia death. Siltf-Ml- k ' - - f the arrival of j most careful attention. The ancient It Ice wrote a; trees are given every protection-- to His offer was accepted. He had an stone Marie, or city hall. Elglity-twem for the New York Trite preserve them. In all, It Is just such BRAVE HEARTS almost uncanny sense of direction, and buildings are to lie restored, a well splendid utic. f which these two verses were a trllxtie a the nation's heroes tie- as. a group of small farms on the hillDo one in the compiiny possessed a betscrv part : ter knowledge of wood lore. All .his side. 'The', French government has Sam day, they said, when war I summer had been, spent in the open. promised to have all roads put Into (Mitstmullug sputa In the cemetery THAT LIE IN THE dona- ew 4 of earlier- days jCowhfiotf as tlndrvontriiwtiotL amt It aJptti. Tlnr TetitplP lif And we have wandered back; Fame Itcars the tut lues f thu great had devehted qimllricw that now slraxl , will be guarded by our boys who He When w have earned our share of KeHcrnis of the liilun side In tlie CivIl j silent In the little .greeieand-whllhim In steud. The pluytlmc fun ar. Frufa the rustic bencltea of tlife ' BELLEAUWOOD the childgood hud become the portuiiitj j cemetery Just across the way. r Beyond th last attack, ' Horn temple may be had a must wonderful Must B Rebuilt. of, the tuan. A we swing dawn th Avenue view capital rlty. The monuCfceplng cautiously through the tin- j In time nature will restore to France Soma day, amid th din, ment to the Cuufederate soldiers who j her trees and flowered loveliness, ' hut of shelter reached he the , They alaap the woods, only to find that lie had neither time nor. nature can rebuild Wll tsk our olsoe back horns with fell in the great war la. an impnsing . But cannpt dig. shaft. Massive columns and beautiful you" , atnnilded on quarry and u camp of shattered homes. Those of us wlto For sow tha world lo all thalr awn, And now th Comma come In. lnuusuleuma hare been erected to tha our brava havo ptore titan sixty Gentian soldiers, have not been Intimately touched by And, lod by thought memory of sotue dlMlngulshctl army the horrors of war or the cruelty of :v. aown Trembling with excitement, he rusla-mere Taps sound abov their amt navy officers, whll: other ara be shouted, suddl-Surrender! overwhelming separation from One forward. Till- - Might ha bowod nor could marked only with the greatest slut-pl- li T6 whole America n army la behind those we love can sonly approximate Anddrsama. Withstand tho forco that atood with its ancient glow The poult of tip unknown lit sadness ily. Uvea the the lm-of those almut the. tne! Nurjarlsed, bewildered, Soeuraand Baft, God wrought e gleams. dead, in wldeh the lushes qf 2,111 unus who have not been ao, fortunate. Once more the flaming marched out, under cover of the holdThrough atormy timao they fought But thay will naver know. identified soldlera were rgatliered, la up, and wer Itrought prisoners Into Many a mother's heart Is buried and And now they Ho Back with their lave of youth and Ilf. a particular 'meivu m Meamrtal day. her enthusiasm deadened. is It Une. the American the of otic only majors ; In alecp.. The anchor and mast of, the battle- in the Second division wrote In June, through soiiie practical memorial that , Lost dream of play and sport. Far from th plain of ship Maine serve as mute reminders Interest recan her be rottsed of and 1918, the action of in this death J Alloa Alio i Lna Boche r cried strife ; of the tragic deal It of hundreds of murine: He was killed in the. Hots awakened. tha French territoiiala streaming ha-Their brave men. ship has oom to port The honor Add of at Bellenn will a be de Belleau by shell near where uiy through the Second division of tire Memorial day this yesr sees many rbmmnnd post was, shortly after the iienuanent cemetery, Amerli-osnoy. wlilcb bud Just in Arlington that were not there wliere a shining forest of graves w ho had his bringing out, captain ! forward Id support and relief. Fly a crosses year ago. Of the tltoiisands who fell will stand as over sentinels In wounded makwe were an attack HONOR THE DEAD Fly I Tho Hud P they shouted. u foreign soil during the World war mortal 6.UUU the remalus of out The of before he Into a went ing, day Retreat, h 11 I We have Just come. Intiny tuive'Tmrnd tlulr lastresting oUT OtT Gcrnians hoyT"TheorintxallonforthIma. Let the Boche retreat railed back qttnrry and briiught mortal to our dead baa Its. headquarteplace la this hallowed spnf. And no as an Such prisoners, me rl an officer of tho A ran force at he ARLINGTON eottkl he desired AT r-in - with-- - Marshal greater distim-tltact ttsotf. sfieaks Washington, for and hit men rushed forward. than to lie atmstg the uatluiis heroes Foch chairman W. i John France, was fnen this these for, by 'It spirit It was May In France, 1918, records In this sacred Valhnlla, v. fought, and because of tills spirit these Weeks, honorary president. The presClara Whiteside in the Philadelphia Is ident Mrs. Carroll James men won. U was a dearly taaigtit Fraser, s Memorial Services Ledger. The French line from the : German vice president of the Navy League of Impressive to Reims paralleled in a general victory, but it spipis-United the Vice States, and President in the Greatest National never the and ohjectlve, enemy again way the line of tho ancient road, won victory nr funde another drive. Cootidge as a member of the national hi -v fhemtn des lHitnes, and the French ... committee. Mrs. Chailes Lea Is chalr-nmCemetery. . Many StaW Share Glory, defense' were sw strung that the warfor Mre. Theodore ; Pennsylvania v In tile little worn gallant French armies were using cemetery on the western W. Reath, acting chairman; Gen. W, middle-agemen known as territorials edge of Belleau woods, there Is hardly T. Waller, executive secretary; Mrs. WHOLE NATION PAYS TRIBUTE a In state not Unton the to hold this part of the line, perhaps represented. Helen Foster, secretary. because of tills, and also to mako an There are 200 ahitte from MassachuHow Our Boys Wsnt Into Action. setts. Belleau woods. Just alwvve the effort to split' the French and English Mrs. Ueatb revisited France last America's Foremost Men Render Homarmies, the German made a great at- village of Belleau, w here the German summer and went over all the ground age ta tha Thousand of Heroic tack on this sector at the end of Slay, sheltered tlielr guns. Is now palled In the Dead Who Ar There Bleepneighborhood of Belleau. At Wotsl the Marine of the fltre Brigade." In and days had driven back the Les More farm she, made the aconce-was ing Their Long Sleep. what and wooded hill French to open country, following the lovely quaintance of a young Frenchman who great half ctrcla of tlie Marne, which is now a rooky devastation ; Its crown hud been severely wounded at the ButAmong tha humltrd of services f mi t ipes green now row of tooththe Hermans crossed at Dormans on tle of the Marne. He had witnessed tlrnt take place Memorial day throughthe east side of the salient at Chateau picks" standing naked to the sky. In Washington, in June, 1921, the the advaneesof the American troops," out the laud in honor of the suidler , ; Tlilerry and nt Belteau, said Mrs. Iteath, and his account was --dead who have fought their last batThere wero no trenches and no pisn of the Bellean Wood Memorial so graphic and bore such testimony t tle and gone to tlielr reward, probably association to rebuild town the of fortification ao far back from the the truthfulness of the American coi none is more largely t tended, nud was by popular subscription fighting front, and the war was agalu rpsjsmdents who hnd covered the ad- certainly none includes a greater numThe Belleau Wmsls in Ilia open, .Foreseeing the purpose launched. vance of the American army In 1918 ber of --uteu of national -- thinks it bet ter to association prominence. of the German onuy to enter a wedge and deorrfbed the troop In action at Than that in the magnificent amphi" reliulld I IJttle green tent where the so: jlera between the silted armies. Marshal I feel that I should. tell it to theater in Arlington National ceme"e . A sleep. Foch selected American troops tu stop And as the sunlieam play, and th women he a house that haa echoed a babya told it to me. you tery, on the Virginia heights across this advance, which at Lea Meres weep. ; Those men were magnificent, e laugh and held up its stumbling from the Washof Iotomac the Ar covered with (tower today; city fumi and at Chnteau Thierry hnd ! They had taken off their fact" . And between the tanta walk the weary eopta ington. reached the nearest point to Paris 37 ' and had pinned to thelf shirts a popfew, This year will be the miles since tha previous advance In better to put a Who wer young and stalwart In sixty-twAs rushed forward they celebration of Memorial day in Arpy. they ' 10U v Homss loving - wooden arms yelled; and, tuadume,' as they fired When they Went to th war awmy. lington. Gen. John A. Logan, while Harolam Commonplace. around a man and hi wife the' Germans went hiplty bop! hlpitj couitnauder In etilef of tlie Grand Tha Second American division had hop. Tills was the only English word Artny of the Kbimhllc in 1808, with a Th little green tent ar built of nod, I Just taken that part of the line In the than to erect a shaft of marlde cold thut Frenchman knew, but it was the handful of hia fellows assembled there And they are not long, and they ar no I Dorbroad. while .' to the at at Belleau, it neighborhood sky in memory of our dead. most But the soldiers have lots of room; mans and Chateau Thierry tha First The national committee hopes to raise ever expressive English word I have on May 30, and before the historic g heard. seem Incredible Custls-LeIt does th And coildutled od la s the of innnslim he the land part and Third were holding back the Hun. Fk 0,000 and with this money rebuild saved. I that ourboya should have been so memorial service. At that time thera j...: Rock and era cs hid the enemy's ma- the little town of Bellean shattered by the dag of th enemy darkly waved, careless .with their Uvea," continued were but few graven within the estate, When The symbol of dole and. doom. chine guns, hut In tha early part of our boys In their advance on Belleuu Mr. Heath, but I have no reason to where today more than 27,990 heroes the engagement the French were vir- wood. ... ...... dtubt the truth of the man's word, have been gathered for tlielr last long The little green tent Is a thing divined without The plan Is to rebuild thp village as tually artillery protection and The little green tent la country shrine. ; especially as It corroborated the ac- sleep, , were fighting a hand Where patriots kneel and pray, . action to It was; with the addition of a better count of our own 5 at memorial service correspondents The at Arlington And the brave men left, ne eld. so few,' top tha German until help could church, school, and with an time." the adequate Were Is With and eixty-twib but young atulwart in profoundly Impressive. Come, - In the fighting of May and water supply ; the supervision will he Thl( tyemorlal at BdleauU t be few exeerttH in all the year these . When they-- , went to the war away. " aarly Joner IMS, the1 American troop tar the balids of CuL ClnirieH il. Foritei established to those boys our Walt Mason In th St. Louis Globe- -' boys; annual memorials have been Iteld, tlie were wtthout supports and reserve, director of the Veterans Democrat. bureau, who to their Idealism ; to their heroism that President of the United States has but the individual Initiative was re- served in the A. E. and who Is a brooked no .F, barrier. It la to be a me- been in attendance; surrounded sby mark aide. Heroism yrai commonnoted engineer. In civil life. Every morial that will give to the people of members of his cabinet and other high n. place of tha American soldier In cent raised will go Into the rebuilding tills jiart of France a practical expres- government officials, ambassadors ami , V, memorial, as the organizing expense sion of the good-wil- l of the American Oliver representatives of foreign coun, "W need supplies, gas mask. WhoU tre being borne by a small group of people as well as a national tribute ta tries, and a vast assemblage of tlte volunteer?" contributors. The names and adthe men whose shall be where citizen of Washington and visitors Til fioT promptly answered a dresses of every contributor will be the heroes are" souls and whose memory to th city. young sergeant of the marines. f arcblves-oin the the rebuilt preserved shall shine like the morning Mar. Homage ef, Franc Aetured. ; The new amphitheater, naed for the memorial service first time In 1929, Is - Frarteea beautiful and sincere tri, strucan imposing Roman and Gothic ntejm Memorial day hist year jaAmlr BELLEAU WOODS AND GRAVES OF MARINES WHO FELL THERE ture of glisteuiug white marble, erected leas soldier dead hr calculated bring by the national government at the sug- solace to those who have elect fo of tlie let tlielr .Grand the dear one of Army gestion remain in the Iq'gd' ftw- where to u in rtvveg which as fell. fitting place Republic they They trusted tlit France would not forget, and Franca assemble', for the annual memorial There are seats forv 5,00 spectators ha not forgotten. For them Maraligl 1 Pelaln n words ciirry a iqieclal meanand standing room for 4,000-mowith phices on tlie platform for ahout ing, May those 'famine, he said, whose tears are the. more bitter for rasi of the more distinguished guests. The President tsnnlly delivers a brief not having near them the glorious of tlielr children know of the eulogistic address. . Under tlie blue veneration with which we FreUch dome of heaven a a canopy the assembled throng unites In tribute to guard these sacred guests and of th the memory of those who died that tlie h.Miiake ninth we pay to tlielr glorloui .. nation might be preserved and liberty memory." . not perish from the earth. THEIR LAST THOUGHT Arlington Nutlunnl cemetery Is a Bitlqiie and fitting ntemorliii (o the No other dead of a gmit nation. "Oh, de not think mo dead whan I Baneatt a bit af earth shall lio; country haa a memorial ef a like nature. Embracing more than 400 acres, ' i' . the government has spared no effort . w . thrilled with all that Daath or expense to make it attractive. Tlie may giva, . Fart of the caiMtory at Batloaa Wood (oow tbo Wood of tba AoAricoa Marines) hewing the grav lawns and shrubbery were laid out ty I ahall Its down to root and llv. . , ! the marine ef I force who gave ef their bvea In tha bettla af Bdlkao Wood. Fnen On tho occasion of the Simtnte, Grautland o ; V- -- these-phtytlm- hitve-peC- tnl e I of-th- - , eky-Iln- gun-swe- Alsne-Mani- Is-e- n e snow-whit- e 1 single-hande- j Sol-son- little Green Tents d - ; n a d ; Bel-iou- u . I 4 fifty-fourt- h o. . . 1 . e d ac-Uo- : shoot wta safety. Protect Year Valuables -- Place your valuables where they will be per new safety fectly safe in one. r boxes. . . -- eposit of-ou- .: Our safety deposit vault the only ex . elusive safety deposit vault in northern Utah, is strictly modern and offers complete r fire and burglar protection. , . f ' ' ' V ' ;Vt. rVja.yfk re, 'll IB . The rentals arc absurdly low as low ss $2 .00 a year. . r ; A J . - 1ATCHERDAHK- - . landscape oV v- - W.-- Wkf i r a i t1 expert and. receive th TbaiUeaeC bf tee Vat n- I |