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Show jn Monday, May 12, 1924. THE JOURNAL, Windbreaks Give PITCHING HOLDS NO CHARMS FOR SOX OUTFIELDER Protection, Make Farm Pleasant -- Mrs. Jesse Earl will return home this evening from Salt5 Lake, where she went to attend the funeral of lift, cousin. Mr. Mark 'Brow n. of the American Legions fife, drum and bugle, corps: lootiirgrtikTiTTi rmtlfcmiloi-- 1 lars in their new uniforms, had a group picture taken yesterday,! which our readers wiil see short-- 1 ly in The Journal. Members gg , , ground, delaying the germination of seed and indicating serious possibilties unless the longed for rain arrives shortly. to Logan canyon a finely graded road has been, completed to the Girls Camp, and that much work has been performed on roads and' paths in the canyon park and on rTVLsitors Whether the total effect bad however, depends upon whether the benefits derived from its influence on wind movement, temperature, and evaporation are greater or less than the injury resulting from the sapping and shading of the ground near by. To determine the total effect, crop measurements have, been made by the United States De-- s partmint of Agriculture in Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and Minnesota. Average rather than 3 Jleight-measureme- -- nts showed-the-plan- ts 1-- CONFUSION IN RETAILING John, said the affectionate before you come home tonight, will you stop at the wife, drug store and get me one of those electric flat irons they advertise for $3.98 and a pound of tea . - the loving - hus- Yes, said band, and when I go out to get my luncheon in the cigar store, Ill buy you a nice box - - - . of candy, At how many kinds of, stores can you buy a safety razbr? Hardware s topes, drug stores, cigqr stores, stores that deal in -- mens clothing, department stores, sporting goods stores, occasionally in stores that began bv selling candy and later carried tobacco. They can be Rouses bought from mail-ordand and there mav be , These instances could be multiplied' rhdefinitely to' show the increase in diversification that has come over retailing in the last few years in this country. Take a list probably incomplete of stores in which food is sold: i Grocery stores, fish markets, confectionery stores, bakeries, er direct-by-ma- il, others.'" dairy stores, drug stores, fruit stores, "butcher shops, delicatessen shoos, general stores, department stores, restaurants, yesterday Fifth West and First North streets in which one of the cars was rallied badly badly damaged. A complaint was entered and the responsibility, if any, will be fixed at a hearing in the city court, probably tomorrow. Bib Falk. Manager Chance of the Whit Sox and his aides had an idea early this spring that Bib Falk, busy outfielder, could bolster the Sox pitch ing staff. Falk was originally a southpaw fiinger. But when Falk wa asked to tune up his soup bon he said, Pardon me, but I must decline the opportunity." Said further hed take his bat and glove and go home if the Sox bosses wr in earnest. And that was that. mer rather than, as in the comparatively recent past, the customer sought the merchandise. The Nations Business. In the city court this morning three young men who started to fight in a local cafe and continued it on the street after ' being driven out at an early hour on Sunday morning, appear ed in the city court, where - ALL THIS WEEK Royal Society. 22x44 inih Lavender or Gold Border Fine Nainsook and Mull Corset Covers Long Sleeies Lace Trimmed Judge Rullen fined the chief aggressor $25, and the other two $10 each. Letters received by several parties in town, from Lowe Bros, of Dayton, Ohio, congratulate the city upon the .wonderful summer school to be held here, Watt 5-- 50 yards12 for yards Berkeley yards ed 5,-P- 80 17-1- 8, NO. 60 yards $1.00 for $1.00 3 ' Japanese All Silk Pongee Ex. Standard 14 Mme Weight All New . Everyone says these are the most beautiful Voiles they have ever seen. Genuine Roubarx Wednesday only. $1.00 Yard $1.00 Bottany Wool, Challies . Gray andBIue Theriots. Colors Guaranteed In light and dark, floral and dot designs. New Wednesday only. $1.00 $1.00 (i Spring-Pattern- 39 inch Voiles STAMPED Muslin Gowns Six Designs $1,00- s. Polly Prim to 12 1. All New Patterns ' ' 2 yards $1.06 i1, Limited v - Jerz White and Pink. Blouses & Lingerie use. Per yard 40 in. Silk Chiffons 15 Staple Colors. Regular $1.69 to $2.00 On the Silk Table $1.00 $1.00 , yards to a Customer 6 45 inch Pequot and old Tyme Pillow Cases $1.00 pair 42 inch Salisbury . and Pepperell Pillow Tubing $1.00, 3 and $1.10 Fine Imported Voiles Ratine yards ' 1 $1.00 . Limited 6 yards to a Customer" ' ' $1.25 Yard Wide Liberty Muslin 7 yards $1.00 to And Eponge $1.00 $1.00 2 copies $1.00 Royal Society $1.00 Set 36 Inch Silk La to a Natural Color All New Spring for Special Lot 75c Popular. Fiction to a Customer 1 For Boys- Pink and Blueborders. neatly packed in beautiful Gift boxes. 2 Towels and one Wash Cloth $1.00 yarls Long Sleeve. Lace Trimmed. Solid Tans, Guest Sets Double Strio Blue Border 8 ;jor$et Covers Shirts or Blouses Turknit Cotton Toweling Limited 8 Fine Silk Mull Tom Iawger Wash Cloths 7 for 4 Limited Turknit $1.00 19 inch Unbleached Wonderful Value 1 Heavy Nainsook 3 $1.00 Heavy Turknit Turkish Towels $1.00 pair Fruit of The Soom Muslin 11-ho- ur half-bak- 221 $1.00 Customer 4 ' k 25 Dozen Turk Towels yards to a Limited -- -- Extra Heavy Double Terry $1.00 Hope Muslin 6 A, BlackitndCoIors Printed Voilse First Quality and Standard also upon the coming Centennial Celebration with its attendant -- $1.00 Tungsten Electric Globes , whisker and sunbonnet features The letter states: .You certainly have cause to be proud of A DANGEROUS- - ASSERTION your home town. and they know, because they have passed The food value of pies is not through a much similar experiT7Tr.T worth the time spent In their ence. making, says the Farm ExtenRev. Harris Pillsbury left at sion Service of New Hampshire 3:30 this afternoon to attend a to the farm w omen of the state. national assembly of the PresbyThe extension workers, seek to, terian church to be held at reduce the burdens of farm life. Grand Rapids, Michigan, at They find that the average farm which approximately a thousand woman in New Hampshire la- delegates vvi! be present and bors nearly 4,000 hours an continue in .session for several day, including Sundays lays. During the convention he and holidays. That conclusion will send us copies of a local was based on charts kept by re- paper to keep us informed. focal news wul be found dispresentative farmers wives. By all means let the women tributed through several ages. of have a taste of leisure. But w ho tms issue. ever rated a pie for its food value? Pies are national instiThe fire department was sum tutions. They have become big moned on Saturday afternoon business, and are now featured to a fire in the barn of Orson by some bakers. Pies get down Bailey in the West Field, atto our very beginnings the tributed to children and matchmud pie of childhood is close to es. The fireman arrived quickly our organic dust. And what an and extinguished the fire with essence of cheer is the pastry of chemicals. Damage would probmincemeat at Christmas. ably not exceed ' ten dollars. testThe of firemen were called out with the heresy Away ing the value of pies with time. again today to extinguish a Their importance is not so mea- brush fire on the hillside just sured." We live and die in the south and west of the Central character of pics pretentious, Mills; Boys and matches are held pastries of uncer- responsible in this caso, also. Is your 'property insured? tain filling to become no more Phone Hatch at 980; 15 Comhavof with than dirt pies, hope Adv. mercial Block. reor crust raised our upper ing Busmembered. The Nations iness. ph page ten appears a full page display from the Golden Rule store in which appears OUR HOT EARTH z scores of $1.00 bargains that Service) (Science One of the deepest holes in are to be had by the Wednesthe earth is a boring made in day shoppers who come to Lothe hopes of striking oil near gan to do their shopping. In Carnavon, South Africa. It was fact every page in this issue is filled with advertising from our carried down to a depth of feet below the surface of merchants who are trying to the land which itsjelf was some make Wednesday of this week a 3200 feet above the sea. Water day long to be remembered by now stands in the hole to within those who take advantage of the 32 feet of the surface but ther- opportunities offered. mometers have been lowered, to Members of the Sportsmens' 4912 feet and temperatures observed.' At the lowest level the Associations of the stat-- ' will temperature is 157 degrees Fah-- , hold their first annual sportsrenhit, or as high as that of mens outing at Geneva, on Utah scalding water. At 55 feet Lake on Saturday and Sunday under direcdepth the temperature is 73 de- nex,t; May association of the sportsmens Fahrenheit throughout grees Lake and Salt tions of Utah, the year. .Above that level hundred counties. Weber Fivsj due to difference some there is the seasons. The rate of in- dollars will be offered in prizes crease of temperature, declines in outdoor sports. There will be a3"the"depth increased. inthe danei ng,-- - boating, a barbecue, castdeepest .hole in the earth, the fishing, trap shooting, fly A events. athletic and Brain good mine ing San Juan Del Ray .Cache! of .the members 117 is rock many temperature zil, the Prttec-helndegrees at a depth of 6726 feet County Fish and Game announeed Rtion have itive Assoc, surface. the for Novelty Bags Here jou will find (If You 'Com): Earl ) a Most Wonderful Collection of 10 inch Printed Silk and Cotton Ini- ported Crepes, all New Patterns. 10 inch Silk Chiffons . 30 inch La .lerz 30 inch himona Silks All Silk Pongees Man of those vou would not expect to buy regularl) for less than $2.00 ard. YOUR CHOK E Art The I .UU Yard WEDNESDAY COME EARLY $1.00 4 One Beaded A Dollar Silk Table Turkish Towel - , stores, This is only a beginning, but it is sufficient to show the growing confusion. Its significance probably is that the merchandise1 is seeking the eusto- collision afternoon at grow n. amounted to about 10 bushels ijer acre where the protection and gradually was complete, giew less as the distance from The the windbreak increased total gain was about equal to the amount of grain which could have been grown on the shaded ground near the JtreeS. The corn crops showed' more consistent and mark edbenefits from protection than any others. on one to be field 4 2 feet high in the first 18 rows next to the windbreak, w nile beyond this protected zone the height was only 2 2 feet. The field showed a production of 51) bushels per acre in the protected zone and only41bushels in the exposed part. With ordinary field crops the farmer may count on a benefit front windbreak protection which will make the loss of the area occupied by tfhe trees negligible. Under middle western conditions a windbreak whose width does not exceed two or tlut-- times its height will more than pav for itself regardless of the timber which may be (produced. Remember Our May Sale of Coats, Suits, Millinery re-th- An automobile . ri sufficient to offset fully the effects of shading the sapping. In a wheat field protected by a the dense windbreak gain C o. As Usual Shamhart-Christianse- n Offers New Desirable and Seasonable Merchandise for Dollar. Day. We Mention Just a Few. This Biff Store Will Be Filled with Special Offerings for this Annual Kvent. fish pqnds. were conditions exceptional measured, the object being to discover the effeclrof those influences which are continuous and effect every annual crop -- ' Reports from various pails of the county continue to anive relative to the dryness of the crop. Measurements made in fields of small grain indicate that the crop gain in the protected zone, PAGE FIVE . LOCAL NEWS vC Windbreaks are, in more ways than dne a farm asset and every v farm should have its ind break. ; the.soU Thev tencLtoprevent -and1 out quickly drying from from orchards protect they mechanical injury by the wind. A belt of trees by the farm build-- , ings protects them from ex? trenie winter cold and summer heat, and makes the farm a pleasanter place "in which to live. The w indbreaks may iQffirbe a soiuee of wood supply for use on the farm or for sale. The effect of a windbreak may not always be beneficial to a crop near by, depending upon the LOGAN CITY,. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH Limited II yards Customer Patterns Imported 40 inch to run along beside the soldiers intention of attending, r BILLY WHISKERS on a dog trot. leaving Friday afternoon and re''Y turning Sunday.. Tramp, Hump-la- , tramp tramp . Mother! Mother! Do look what is coming! drum. Tramp, trump-lcalled, her Six boys will come before Ju beat the wont the feet of daughter in an excited voice, tramp! ramp veivlj Judge L. E. Nelson this solders as they inarched in and she began clapping her afternoon for breaking into the the lime to the music of the miltary Boy Scout Camp and into He band at the head of a company George Q, Rich camp. of soldiers out on dress parade A large number at,leaded and up one street and down another enjoyed Mothers Day serv.ces of a snail town close to one of in the first ward last even: rig, the Unted Slates military trainfeatures of which were : A violin on the Atlantic seasolo Songs My Moth:r Taught ing camps board. Me by Mrs. Phyllis Spicker, Hark! I hear music! said a vocal solo, '"Mother Composed little girl to her mother as she by Mrs. Spicker, by Mrs. Ney her dishcloth andjan to Neen Farrell Hamilton; address, dropped window. the front Sticking her Dr. Frank L. West, vocal duet. head from the window until she.; Calm as the Night, by Mr. was near failing out. biliously Alf Farrell and Mrs. Hamilton. she saw coming down the street Quartette by th; winning male 0 company of soldiers, eight quartet of the Cache Stake abreast, wfh flags and banners Your Mother is' Praying for flying, drum's- beating and You. their a, 1 ; a others Were barefooted ; still ofhers had on their fathers or grandfathers old military coats that dragged "at their heels. . Some wore old slouch hats ten. sizes too large for them that came over their ears and rested on every on their shoulders-Bface shown 'the undaunted, in.. dependent spirit of the American. Of such stuff were the fathers of America made when they left the plow, shoeless and hatless, to follow the cannon to fight for freedom, just as these boys today had left their play to follow the soldiers. ut free-born- The game between the Ilai-for- t Dark Blues and the Whites. played at ChiJune 19, 1875, ,wu lie cago, most remarkatle wiofassional baseball game played up uo tha time. It w is ihe first tiinpron record tfiai innings pUy on each side i .ul been eon plowed with' i, u bting made. Crd-cag- o j J - them. crowds of Oh. mother dear, hurry, hurThe Journal today carries the ry! The soldiers are coming! Do advertising of our local mer- stop looking for your red flannel chants for Dollar Day which is pettcoat and blue apron. Ill help hands and laughing with the raise one million pldl to be held on Wednesday of this you hunt for them after 'crowd. dollars for tne creation of an in week, and in these ads. will he soldiers have passe,'. What can 'they see to laugh"! tereational fellowship fund will found hundreds of bargains of reached the in a company of solideis pre-- 1 be discussed by the International the at mother When e every day necessities. The peo- window, she saw not only the paring to march otf to war,? F ederatiorr of University con-w'men international come the have at of herself. .the to ple country lookng soldiers marching bvjthemother thought to know that when the Logan their offeers in command, But returning to the w indow she merchants put on a Dollar Day but people at every window and saw what was causing the that many bargains in season- on every doorstep oir both sides 'amusement of the crowd, for fhe centenary of the death of able merchandise are to be had cf the street watching them go 'directly in front of her house fane marchwhile Taylor, author of Twinkle. make it of the worth that going' by, to say nothing raga wcre about twenty boys to town to get. the j ing to the time of a toy drum Twinkle Little Star, has been muffin boys wpiking-besid- e whistles, , Wooden coniinerated witha special servsoldiers, trying to keep in step and penny use. to their ice in toe village church in Essex no. were wife it his But because wa.i them. swords with Despondent insisted on having bar hair bob- Timer short legs could not take (sides and they carried pea rifl-th- e England, where her father was eailv fjart of the bed, a school teacher rear Tiffin, long, swinging strides, soes over their shoulders! Some minister in the last century C.. ended his life with poison. they gave up and w vrp satisfied had in Bo Scout imifouns. people-watchi- ng ... I , v ' A Mo-fin- j th - i- - j ; I t- |