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Show 'PAGE TWO" , THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY,, UTAH Bills Island Too Small, - THE JOURNAL EARL AUGUSTUS 1 PUBLISHED BY PUBLISHING COMPANY Editor , Entered at the Post Office every 'day in Lite week, at Logan, Utah, as Second Class Matter. except SUBSCRIPTION RITE BY MAIL, PER MONTH, in Advance 7. .... ISY CARRIER, PER MONTH, in Advance A Discount of 11.00 Per Year Will Be Given for Advance 7 -- Payments for a Full Yearr It , by Marsaret Filled with water from fyanhoe. Irg etream In earlier days houses r- u Sunday, .X near aireams 60c . it is borne in upon the minds of many throughiful students of general conditions throughout the United States, that the trend of our present system of education leads entirely too far from productive labftr, which, among Americans formerly among the hardest and best of workers and priding themeslves on their working and productive ability has come to be regarded as a as degrading. proof of lack of brains and ability ; hence in The general tendency is to dodge manual labor1 of any kind and - seek what are called the white collar jobs; the result being that there are several men on the waiting list lor every clerical or political position within the white collar category, and the professions are overcrowded, frequently by those who have no natural aptitude for them. U. S. Secretary of Labor James J. Davis notes this condition ABOVE: BIRD S EYE VIEW OF ELLIS ISLANDf INSET2 COMMISSIONER. HENRY, H., CURRAN. in a recent report, and regards the almost universal objection to j NEW YORK Ellis t Island. metes' ef tht. worlds homeless working with the hands in productive occupations and trades, as and oppressed, must be enlarged to handle lbs gresfe tide ol fan a national menace; for it has been known since the beginning migrant Traffic, according to Henry H. Curran, .Commissioner. of he remarked that brains w ithout brawn cannot make and .Immigration-- at the Island, who has asked jmr appropriation I of $2,541,020 of Congress to enlarge and improve the plant. hnd again j .maintain a great people. History has' proved.-agaiisland must be extended by sea wall and- fill, to make roes that a nation, of thinkers alone cannot 8urvive..The thinkers r for aThe tbs immigrants to promenade daiiyV says Curran, la A it is they cannot leave the buildings, .We are much too cramped to give must be balanced by the doers. decent care to the thousands we must house daily ' As the best available concrete example he cites the' fate of the I African Republic of Liberia whose pioneers were American Ne-- 1 groes who had served during the Civil War. At the outset they, had wonderful success in developing the country and acquiring material wealth, for the thing they knew best was how to work with tlreir hands. But .with ease and comfort they established j One hundred years ago today been an examiner in economics, schools and. academic education, with the hope that as a result as born Stonewall Jackson, political science and statistics of education their children might be delivered from manual labor, C for the. great 'universities oi They- are pThere are lawyers, preachers, traders, clerks and poli- - mender Cambridge, London and Glas ticians, thicker than trees in a wood; but so few working men off-- ', l J; nt tw.a, gow any kind that the country is rapidly declining toward utter ruirt. j to piJhiStfon i$ to be TODAYS ANNIVERSARIES 1824 Thomas J. (Stonewall) Now, while America-i- s not Liberia, Mr. Davis thinks it can learn (held in Washington" today und- a much needed lesson from that countrys fate. He remarks that er the auspices of the Assouat ion Jackson, the great Confederwe are turning out ninety percent of our youth equipped for Against the Prohibition Amcnd- - ate commander, born at Clarksburg, Va. Died at Quincys the white collar occupations, vhich can provide jobs for went, Station, Va., May 10 1865. ' called President has Coolidge only ten per cent of them. Mr. Davis says further; It.has taken 1849 The Austrians were d!s- - defeated in Transylvania by the generations of struggle, marked at times with bloodshed, to Todivto tablish the freedom of labor. .Today, we face the necessity of cus3 how new economics can be Polish General Joseph Bern. 197 4 ddorrisonuR. Waite of .Effected.! during tiia comi ng fisestablishing the dignity of.labor in the mjndsjpfjnankind Ohio was appointed Chief Jus! cal year. , tice' of the United States, Every year some 2,000,000 of opr boys and girls leave our New York State program of A 1884- -- National house of reschools to take their places in our economic life. Thedast census for women in indust- presentatives voted to legislation the disclosed fewer than 150,000 apprentices who were at work gainry is to be shaped at a two day Iron Clad law of the apeal il wav :i so to our skilled a vital crafts which are ing knowledge of the conference which has bevm callperiod. economic progress. If the apprenticeship system was at work, as ed to meet today at Syracuse. 1893 Carl isle - ot John in past generations, we- would find some seven or Reduction of "construction Kentucky resigned V.s seat in .it eight millions of our youth learning the trades. But the 'vast costs is to be sought by thou- the United States senate. sands of contractors who Mil! 1914 Donald Alexander majority leaving school find themselves thrown out into .the meet in the Smih (Lord Strathcona), one for. Chicago today world without adequate training for earning a livelihood. They fifth annual convention of the of the builders of Canada, died are forced to pick up an occupation wherever they may find it. Assoqated General Contractors in Lodon. Borfi - In Scotland, Some succeed, but far too many fail through no fault of their of America July 14 1820, 1919 Great strike of nietol Transportation and Immigraown, and are doomed to a lifetime of drudgery at arToccupation be will tion the sub tied trades principal .up shipbuilding infor which they are in no way fittedjects discussed, at the first an- dustry ina Washington S.afe.-1920 North Industry and the community, as well as the .individual, pay nual conference oR-iFor the untrainedVor- - Cem raj Division of the ham bur of the Communist part wpre inof Commerce of the United dicted in Chicago atway . States, ONEYEAR AGQ TODAY seeking in vaimfor the square" hole into which to fit itself, He day.-- ropcning'iirChicago tir Berlin put a ban on F vich is the vital factor in that incubus of industry, labor turnover. It The League of National Nav- plays and sport'ng news. has been estimated that the industries of the United States lose al Commisa'on has called a con-- , A strike was declaied bv the annually two hundred millions of dollars by reason of labor turn- furence for today in Geneva tc over, and that the average cost to the employer of hiring men to discuss means of enlarging the" scope of the Washington haval fill the places of those who quit their employment is $50. armaments limitation pacts to now in America than include the smaller sea powers There, isaJarger at any previous time in history, but the Secretary does not be- of the world. 9 lieve it is too large. What he does believfc is that too many of representatives of California and British Columbia the college men will flock to offices and white-colljobs and Oregon to confer in San Fra.icmco are leave the work of the country to somebody else. Every business Fortify the system against today on plans for starting the Cokis, Grip and Influenza L in the country is dependent upon manual labor somewhere along first comprehensive survey of by taking its line of production. Regardless of what line of Work a man of the Asiatic element ever atgoes into, he eventually will get to the top if he has the brains tempted on th Pacific coast IN THE DAYS NEWS . ' and training necessary. The carpenter will become a contractor, Through still in hiss early for the railroad man v ill become first a district superintendent and tiesSir Laxative Josiah C. Stamp, one of ' Britains representatives eventually a general manager, he believes. qn the But what is needed is an increased number of men to start commission of experts appointat the bottom, to work to the fullest extent of their ability and ed to determine to what extent Germany is able to meet the Alrise to the top. In this way they will know vastly more about lied claims, for reparations, has their line of buriness than the college man who tackles a r had a carter marked by a long . series of brilliant successes and job. ,r The American young man doesnt want to resort to manual important positions. In Engtablets he is recocgnized.as a leadlabor. Somebody must do the work, the greater part of our im- land ing authority on economics and migrants are both willing and able workers. statistics. For three yeafs. unwhich destroy germs, act as a Mr. Davis might have added that this is one of the great rea- til he resigned in 1919. he was "tonic laxative, and keep the sysassistant to the Beard tem in rond'tion to throw off sons why the. industrious, hard working immigrant so often be- of Inland secretary all attacks of Colds. Grip and Revenue, aruLinJlni comes, prosperous,- while- rg Influenza. faiHn lifer though capacity was ch'ef adviser to the having had better opportunities. The box bears this signature Chancellor of the Exchequer . , the pw-e-r behind the holder .of America is now dry twelve miles out and wet twelve miles in. the national purse. Sir Josiah' entered the British civil' service Rochester Tiities-UnioPrice 30c. in 1896, and for some years has IT nse f , of-tim- e, n - -- , Todays Events j so-call- - rjt has-bee- G. n -- . Fishing for minnows with a bit of cord and bent pin Is far from being despicable sport, even though one never lands a nilnuow. Fishing for crawfish with a piece of cord and a pehble for a sinker Is even more exfor the dextrous citing, however, can often manage to land the crawfish. The greatest of all sports, though. Is catch crawfish by hand. To find them yoif must turn o er tlie stones in the bottom of the stream When yod lift atone the mud of ti?e stream bottom is stirred up enough to cloud the water. Small hoys usimlly plunge their hands right Into the muddy water and grab for whatever may hare been under the atone. . The most small stream's denizens I the hellgra mltec It is truly ferocious looking and only th value set on It as a bait for bass fishing would lead the average child to Interfere with It. The salamanders, red and grav, that are to be found wherever a hit of bniSb and leaves cheek the strenmseurrent, ook dangerous to the city bred," but the country child knows they are harm Iesg.7 All sorts of other life Is to be found In a 8tream polliwogs and tadpoles, wlggletails and water beetles, snails and wee clams, and even leeches and water snakes. The child who has a stream to play In will learn more of water life In a season than the schools pan ever teach him, and those- who do not live near streams should try to i spend their vacations near them. anybody could explain to him why the owner of the railroad was berated for bu lding, own-- i m& and operating: that piece of property and praised for getting rih from the business block that cost him but $20,000. Tlvrty-eight-leade- rs - 7-- 1 :" ' college-attendan- - ce ar - white-.colla- v - - -- many-American- s n. A fiBromo Quinine 4 j - that,wheRia.hia-.pTeKe.nce.-f5omci- i body had been heard to refer to the intelligent public the man, had laughed derisively and after the manner of one who had heard somebody -- say something that was excruciatingly funny. ; , ! - Thete is Colota. no color at all in Mineral Oil Russian Tj pe contains all elements ms s sary. for complete intestinal lubrication. Iurete-- t Mineral Oil is puiclj mechanical in action, and tlien-for- e free from the objectionabh features of many cathartics it is easy to take. One of 200 Puretest preparations. Every item the best that skill and conscience can prod me andjt Riter Bros. Drug The $GaZlPrag Co. Store Prize mice, as carefully bred as any other livestock, bring large prices and are of many different colors-., 5,106German -- ' - Soldiers (By Associated Press) Jan. 21 Official - - BERLIN, war records of Germany that German 5,106 show soldiers killed themselves during the world war. Nineteen sojldiers. convicted by court martial of low crimes were executed and 249 men were reported murdered by comrades. -- - TODAYS BIRIIIlAYS coal miners of the Ruhr, R. Beecher Iloweil, Uultid States senator from NebraV-ca- , born at Adrian, Mich , 30 years ago today - Rt. Rev. Frank W. STrrott, the new coadjutor bishop of the Episcopal Miaceseof .Beth ithem. Pa., born 39 at Midd!e;.ort, N. ,Y., years ago today. Frederxk Madison mitli, president of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, bom at Plan--)- , 111., 50 years ago odavr Edward Mallinckrodt, tie St, Louis manufacturer Who has :t given Harvard $500,000 f new chemicail laboratory, born in St. Louis, 79 years ago today. Zelda Sears, who has attained success as a playwright" boin former at Brockway, Mich today. , 51 years The Right of Way- - ago a HP HERES no office boy to stop you when T PARABLE The you solicit orders by telephone. is never a too has to never buyer busy talk; ' previous appointment j sever fails to give you-hiattention. -- a f - - he , ' AiN j And after he had asked the question no man answered, but Because pure sunlight contains publicly he was branded as a all the colors in exlHonce, In pasfool and one without sense., sing through rain dr op 8, as Furthermore- it was pointed out through prisms, the suas - ia It Is surpriiilns..huw-xuttiu--thln- ga live in even a small brook. Thera are the caddis flies, for example, with their amazing houses with the wonderful netting over the entrance. rainbow? G Fmaiivitcame eccentric man wluu one of the. cities asked lived in 8 1 ream at. --WIIIT&OLLARJGBS , in tlie (jS - queer and is-n- HE THAT KEEPETH HIS MOUTH KEEPETH HIS LIFE, RUT HE THAT OPENETH WIDE HIS LIPS SHALL HAVE DE36:7-9- - In or fortunate enouli io Save aiirini's and clear M minis ouUieir land were compelled to dig wells j bat thole who had springs rarely Uotliered about wells. Whatever tlie respect! se'.iherir of streauik jod wejls as sourepof water for wasblhg anddooking and tbe tike, there question as-- . to whicli is the more satisfactory to. children. Every normal child longs 'to piny in water, and a tubful of water drawn from a welt Is a poor substitute for a stream with minnows and crawfish and other living thins In It. To'those who did not spend a large part of their childhood playing in - Psalm i i MEMBER OF ASSOfTAYED PRESS The Associated Tress is exclusively entitled to the use for repnbllcatlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this , paper and also the focal news published herein. Ail right of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved, ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION" STRUCTION. Prov. 13:3. , Where do we find the fountain .of life? zuh'tre-eirtH;lU- colors Vhy js 70c . I Jernment did take over the mans) railroad and tdid manage the property, after a manner to make it more expensive tp those i who used it and of less value to jlhe communities it served Ihanj it had been when it was con-- i trolled absolutely by its owner. ,j a neighbor- a consequence of this bath; owner of the road and the: r er built lcommunities served by it suffer- - j j Explains Curran, Asking $2,500,000 To Enlarge A YD ENGLAND GORDON Monday, January thice there was a man who bought a block In a city and paid - for it $20, 000. As it Increased in value he advanced his rents. At last he was getting returns ' from the property based on a valuation of $200,000 and his Tieighbors called him a good citizen and nobody proposed to take from him either his property or his returns from the same, neither did any rtian say that a law should be passed to give the control of his block to a group of politicians. He stood high in the esteem of his community. His fellow men paid a , You have the right of way to his desk, his ear and his undivided interest. When the telephone instrument on your desk la in effect a semaphore giving you the right of way to speed your message to the buyers mind, why not take full advantaga of it and let a competitor use tht . old fashioned way if hs chooses to do so? Soma of the greatest businesses in America today have greatly cut the coat of telling by wide use of Long Distance. him homage.' Now it so happened that the same man built a railroad that ran from , his home town to another city in an adjoining slate. The property cost him a million dollars hnd yielded no return in net earnings for a period of years, although it greatly helped both cities and all their inhabitants. At last it began to pay modestly. At once the inhabitants of the cities connected by the railroad petitioned the Government to pass a law giving the politicians the right to arbitrarily control the management of the railroad. At the same time they began to berate the owner, and called him an enemy of society. The result was that the Gov- - : r Bell System Om - hlfar Om SfMni rilvtntl Mrrkt ill Vlrrrtrt Tnurl n.tt.r Itnln SO The Mountain States Telephone and -- Telegraph Co. t Cik i |