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Show Remember that when ,you want something The Jour, nal want ads are always at your service to get It Journal want tFZ reasJt ttcii , LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY. UTAH. VOLUME XLVI. ID TIGHTEN THE THE 3 &Z2, - . , WEDNESDAY. MAY 30, 1923 NUMBER I29 PRESIDENT '1 TO cl. LITTLE T That Will Be Frances In His Memorial Day Next Move If the Ger- Address at Arlington mans Persist In Their Cemetery He Inveighs Obstructive Tactics Ii Against Avoiding Our the Ruhr, Says Premier; Duty to the Rest of the All Over the Civilized If the American1 If Gerthe Ruhr manys is to In prolonged into the winter France will begin considering njeans of appljing more pressure, it ise ann'oiind-by Piemier loincare. He thinks .Gormuiy will le unable to resist much longer, however. 30. resistance in d (By Associated Press) ESSEN, May 30. The strike of metal workers in the Ruhr, involving half a. million men, has ended, the men resuming their work.- - They were granted a fifty percent increase in pay, and refused a demand for a bonus of 150,000 marks each. Lone Missionary Refuses To Leave Dangerous Post Associated Press) SYDNEY, N. S. V., May 29. The story of the zeal of a lone missionary ot one of the uncivilized islands of the Solomon greup, who was rescued from but the hands of refused to be taken away from his chosen station, has just been brought to Sydney by an island the Men aboard schooner. schooner, nearing the island, saw a number of natives in war paint dancing around a blazing fire, according to their story. The captain, believing that some person might be in dangand sent er- armed the crew them ashore. They tired a volley over the heads of the natives who ran into the bush. The crew investigated a European-bui- lt house and found a white man inside, praying on his knees, lie said that he was a missionary and had been on the island for a year. Sickness had broken out among the naties and he had been blamed for the loss of life. The natives had into the sent their women-fol- k bush and .started a war dance. As that was a sign of future trouble, he had locked himself in the house. The missionary was importuned to abandon his idea of and staving among the liati'es, vesthe aboard come to invited sel for safety. He refused, and the ship sailed him at his lonely leaving away, and dangerous post. head-hunter- s, KILLS SELF IN mirVTVO rKIhllU J (Bv ; Press) May Asm-Hate- WASHINGTON, 30.-Pre- llarding, speaking at services in Arlington cemetery, where more than of the nations dead forever sleep, declared the United States had proven there could be less of armament, now should prove less of war. If we ever have the insanity to make a conflict among ourselves we shall deserve to 50,-00- 0 - 32,-00- never he. That can Searching our own soul, believing in our own good, we can see no cloud on the horizon. We are thinking no war for us anywhere. It is not enough to seek this assurance ourselves. We believe it a duty to use our influence to establish the ways of peace throughout the world. We can not guarantee peaceful adjustments of disputes but can aid in the establishment of agencies of peace. The president declared there was a world relationship which the United States could not, and would not chose to avoid, if it followed the spirit of its founders. The president paid tribute to all who tlied for the United States. He came to understand when he stood on Hoboken pier among 5,000 dead two years ago. A great sorrow gripped his heart. It must not be again. It must not be again God-give- , -- n CIVILIZE THEM (By Associated Preaa) , TIENSIN, May 36. Armed intervention by foreign powers to the bandits is favored by Major Roland U. Pring U. S. A., one of the captives. He expressed this opinion in a letter to the Associated Press. Civilize them wdth krags is my motto. I dont believe many need be so civilized to make little laundrymen out of the rest" He makes no complaint about his treatment. put-dow- n AMERICAN DEAD AT REST IN FRANCE Press) WASHINGTON, May 30. The appropriation of $30,000 of federal funds-ha- .-, been approved by Secretary Wallace, for the construction of six miles of highway in the Bull Lake sec- IN of the Kootenai National The new forest in Montana. read will shorten the distance between the two county seats of Troy, and Nixon by sixty tion- MEMPHIS, May 30. Peace prevails in the which burst into prominence when its stock after unparalleled fluctuations was ruled off the exchange a few' weeks ago and the shorts granted five days to make settlement wdth Clarence Saunders. All internal differences were adjusted last night. They w ill build a chain of w holesale houses in the west and south. Piggly-Wiggl- j (By Associated Press) NEW ORLEANS. May 30. Clara Phillips, due to leave here at' noon today for California, was to be told at 11 o'clock that STARVATION CURES . : ARE REPORTED ' CHICAGO. May 30. Tho death of a third patient after leaving a sanitarium at Lombard, HI- Was before the county , officers making an investigation into charges that two wo-men died of starvation cures. The authorities were toldElof the death of a boy last February,'-whlost 80 pounds in the three ' months before his death. y, t Search For American Women Who - Died Abroad During W ar 1 1 CHICAGO, May 30, To com- the record of American plete Trial Witness Describes women who died tn service over Hatfield Death Gamble seas in the late war, the nationuI Over-sea- s Womens Service . CHARLESTON, W. Va., May League will devote this I?ecor- 29. A coin was tossed to deterto a final effort Jto ation mine who should kill Anse Hat- obtain Day . J.he necessary data. field, Matewan hotel proprietor Names wo160 of star .geld and prominent figure in the Matewan disorders in 1920, accord- men, .obtained by- a careful searth A. of E. F. records, were ing to testimony today in the made the for public first, time federal court injunction hearing last Armistice league Work-em- - by the Mine United the against Dny. This was- - followed, by the . The story was told by Ike discovery that ajiumber of AmBrewster in describing the Mat- erican service women died and ewan street battle, when Albert w ere buried in foreign soil jribr Felts and six other Baldwin-Felt- s to Americas entry into the war.:. It 'is the names of these detectives were killed after . they had evicted striking miners rrien we hope now to said Miss Irene Givenwilson from the company houses. After Hatfield had testified be- Wahington D. C curator of the t fore a grand jdry investigating American Red Cross "museum r A who is in charge of thereseaffh. wotIc. We. know- that mans ireWster declared Amencin w omen, Volunteeml ejtsUieSn wh w'th. man? relief organizations and would kill Hatfield by tossing a semng in Russia, .Serbja, ranee and other countries "" from August 1, 1914 until yvV entered the war. These narae--j . The union will begin mtroduc- - are difficult to trace. ,' tion .of testimony Thursday j The .roll cf honor will be at the next overseas morning, court having adjourn-calle- d -- . field of croe, marking the grave, of American boy who fell while fighting in Franca. Memorial day will alway. be celebrated in the Belleau Wood cemetery .where the memory of the brave boys is kept greea with Doner, and (lag.. A FIRPO GETS A MEMORIAL DAY OFFER EXERCISES AT College pronounced the benediction. Following this the A. C. Glee The Star Spangled Club sang ie Banner, the "asun?. legions firing U .A. C. Glee Club, which was three fire() customary S(jUac followed by the invocation, of--j and the bugler sounded sajutes, fered by Rev. Hams Pillsbury. Then came another fine selec-- j taps Because of the weather and tion by the Glee Club . wet condition of the soil, not the Hon. J. A. Howell of Ogden de- - so n)Uch work as usual was a beautiful and earnest formed today on the graves of . of the origin relatives JV townspeople, but - . t Associated Press) Me 30. by-th- 4 r i Bv Y out- - FIGHTS EXTRADITION HAVANA, An OLYMPIA, May 30. , s break of sheep scab that may reach larger proportions than the, one of' four years agoisi , e feared department .of-agriculture as. the result of, in-spections in Benton county, where a band of one thousand sheep were found to be infected, (By AssocUted Proas) (By Associated Press) miles. HANDSOME PIGGLY-WIGGL- ' t Press By Associated '2 PEACE PREVAILS the courts had denied her a nev, trial. She will probably attempt to tight extraditii n from Louisiana. If she can obtain a at th last hour she UAMIL,S,"-VenUMD probably halt temporarily her trip to California. WASHINGTON, May 30. Jesse Smith, of Ohio, a personal friend of Attorney General HardDaugherty, and president shooting, by himself, killed ing, in Mr. Daugherty's apartments. The reason is unknow n. He was fifty one years old., v , ROAD EXPENDITURE : 'IS THREATENED HE SAYS WALLACE APPROVES CURA PHILLIPS EPIDEMIC OF SCAB WITHLRAGS, ! (Bv Associated i- (By AnoolitN Pmil (By Associated Press) INDIANAPOLIS, May 30. OMAHA, May 30. AmeriThe American Legiorpjjosts" in can Economic League, organized in Nebraska to many parts' of ; the world . are paying tribute to Hhe soldier : sponsof Henry Ford for. president, will boost the r dead today. From Argonne formanufacturer to the limit, est to the Pacific Coast legiop it was announced today by fnembers will gather in cemeterRoy Harrow, of Omaha, the ies, and ; conduct appropriate league president. services. In Europe, where 0 Americans are buried, reBy Associated Press) ' " presentatives of the sendee men DETROIT, May . 30. Tliri will visit eight cemeteries. Dearborn Ford - For - President club is readyrto go it alone in 1 (By Associated Press) Ameri- boosting Henry Ford for the r PARIS, May 30.-- The if the American eco- can Legion today was pledged presidency nomic league now in session in to keep alive the memory of the failed to assume the American soldier dead, and care Omaha, of the third . party leadership arid for their widows,' orphans, campaign for the Detroit manuin an address by Colonel Carle-to- n facturcr. never They received, McCulloch, of Indianapolis, assurance that Ford would at the sendees in Surenes ceme- any run. ' They point out, though, a where thousand American that he knows of tery the'club, and dead are buried. ha& never suggested its discontinuance. sident Memorial sacrifice. . . . PARIS, May Econ-Wor- ld -- World. Poincare. 1 Representatives' omic League Fails to of the American Or-- ; Take Lead Of Ford t ' ganization Are Hon- Campaign the Mich- oring Americas Dead iganders Will Go It Soldiers and Sailors. Alone, They Say. - F!j ! FORD CEMETERY T.uir j an Yngel I'irpo, ht Buenos i lfer of $250,000 from Associated Press) (1P abundant rain storm (By ' House Ayres promoters for a bout a. i ,jie Court Washington; uliquestj0nalile blessing to Ayres w M. 1;, m.n Ohio, May 30. Jesse Smith Buenos f s of the countyn(f ot ' m ' Sjnha- the Italian anip. was formei lv exalted rule) the community generally.it came o.nt l.niope. The iroi the Ohio Elks. an inconvenient time for the e Ulace folLvu ig ,aj of Memorial Day and celebration Religion. Reds Fight content. Young interfered with the parade that Uad jeen Planned. VLADIVOSTOK, May 30. CriTOlTIAkTII Nothing, however could damp- Oil the eve of Easter the Union memen the ardor of the American I,e- the of Young Communists, to NFARIWG FI gion. which, led by Commander bership of which is limited LLUdu 1'LxllUlUl $ Budge, marched to Third 18 under years boys and girls rethen took cars for the North, tirade agiunst a issued old, Associated Press) where, fortunately, Red cemetery; (By ot the ligion in the pages DUBUQUE, May 30. The 'the ladies of the Service Star of the sensational income gion and Auxiliary, had decorat- It was declared that religionx case against A. A. Cwrjed the graves of the heroic dead and effete sup-jtais but a worn-ou- t F .Cooper is in sight. A. and of (who had made the supreme enslavement erstition for the wo.lfimr classes and that 'outcome is being awaited, with nfice. With, the Legion, also throughout' the! went the .Scout band. Notwith-we while the others are at church. keen interest men are accused standing a drizzling The that country. will dance and make merry. the the government of of. program defrauding Christian prevailed The Young Mens Association Is being attacked by making erroneous income tax, oration Day exercises with Tor two substitutions, was car returns for years. abipg rimilar lines. i - - lAbt I Le-do- se -- nn per-livere- procury' or,v d , addi-ess- f the dw. .v ; ih,-wu,- idea behind it, the debt we owe Tan(f at some time during the day to those who have died that the' mos( of the srraves were deco- United States might live, and, with flowers the wider significance the day; ' had come to have as an universal ' rIAT FAI I A1IJC memorial day. He .spoke with fULLUiIU great feeling of the late war i which had added so much to our; PRIZE-FIGHT obligations to our hero dead, and! with much sympathy for the families who mourned, their de--j (By Associated JreM) parture in this righteous cause.' CHICAGO, May 30.A riot It was a warm and loyal tribute followed .Leonards knoe'-ou- t throughout and was greatly ap- - ov er Mitchell, when Richie predated by all who heard it. . Mitchell, a brother hit the re-Duringrthe services the bahd feree- and accused Leonard of inter- Police played a selection President E. fouling Pinky, Gi Peterson of the Agricultural vention was necessary. ,- jy , , - - j , u-- i -- ed over Memorial Day. ' . (mens reunion June ll: to jeVhetd here- ' t. V... Conad i produced 1, 1S0.98.V. s cf gMd last year, about Attachable to' light socke more than the pro- - n electrically; d mere than threc- - jr,,, oag beeir Invented to rotary 'l0Uf, Jrar, sandfourths of the total coming paper wved, jKiljsh stone or from Ontario. of i ounc-one-thir- scrub-surface- s - v' |