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Show . Pag two I. THE JOURNAL, LOGAN HTY, C A CITE fOLTNTY, tTATl THE JOURNAL TODAYS TALK By PUBLISHED BY KARL AND ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY AUGUSTUS GORDON, ..Editor SUBSCRIPTION HATH . MAIL, PER MONTH, !n Advance BY CARRIER, PER MONTH, in ' Advance ...... BY ... J .... ... - . , TAKE Author of "V6U CAN, Entered at the Poet Office every day in the week, except at Logan, Utah, aa Second Class Matter. - Sunday, ... 60c 70c Diaconnt of 11.00 Per Year Witt Be Glten (or Advance Payments for a Pali Year. - . MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRESS ' The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repnbltcation of all newt dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local newt published herein. All right of republication of special dispatches herein tr also reserved. ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION . A BEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS . TheGiver itf . UR" , CANADIAN CLAtMS CURE FOR DREAD MOUTH DISEASE - , - the place where I live there is a spring. Day and has been night, year in and year out, for years this spring homes about were before there Long continuously., running it, people came from afar to quench their thirst with its cool ' flow. , . The springs waters are pure and health giving, for nothing is allowed to accumulate in the waters. Sieved through rocks and gravel for miles and miles, all 'impurities are washed away before its sparkling waters are offered to whomsoever may take a di ink. About a mile from this spring is a pond. It is still and stagnant. If you were to drink from it, you might die from its accumulated poisons. It gives nothing. But the little spring is always giving, giving, giving. And always it is made and kept clean by moving, moving, moving. Keep your heart like the little spring. Keep the kind and thoughtful deeds flowing all the time. Keep renewing your efforts to help and to render sevice wherever you may. . If troubles. come, if discouragements creep in, let them flow away. Never get a stagnant heart. Harbor nothing that makes you ashamed or unhappy. And when gladness comes to you, give it away. Then other happiness will come and you can gvie it away, also, The only satisfactory life is the one that is continually giving away and renewing itself. The Spring is the giver and it passes on its gifts. The pool gives nothing and poisons even that which Be like the spring! i DEIIIND . -- HE THAT PASSETH RY, AND MEDDLETH WITH STRIPE BELONGING NOT TO HIM. IS LIKE ONE THAT TAKETH A DOG BY THE EARS. Proverbs 26:17. Vhal did Ihe centui ion at Caoernaum say to Jesus, and what answer did Jesus given him? Matt. 8:5-1jT REMOVE FAR FROOM ME vanity and lies: giv1ne neither poverty nor riches: feed me with food convenient for me Proverbs 30:8. Isa. 40:31. To whom is strength 'promised? 3. OUR LANGUAGE to the popular view, the dictionaries are not made by us. . The managing editor of a well known dictionary explains that the dictionary-maker- s job is like that of the housekeeper never ending. From morning sunrise to the dawn of the next day, words pour in upon him, this dictionary editor says, and have to be identified, sorted, dusted and classified, just exactly the ame aS plates and dishes on a shelf or other knieknacks in the home. When most of us think of a dictionary we thing of something origihal, something that bears the badge of authority never, something that originated with those whom it is expected to CONTRARY a A Efficient , . BY A.KipKmaq, benefit prim-minde- Apple-Orange-Pea- ch ' Apple-Orange-Pea- ch pp-pl- ever-changi- ly, till thickened. Cool and pour over the salad. ' s Veal Croquettes: (Use the cold, leftover veal from Sundays dinher stew.) Mix together two cups of chopped cooked veal, a pinch eaChjOf salt and pepper, lf teaspoon of onion juice, k one and of a. cup of sweet milk warmed table and thickened with one ' spoon Of flour then seasoned with a pinch of salt and teaspoon of butter Form this mixture into small croquettes, dip each little dike Into raw, slightly-beaten egg, then into- fine bread crumbs, and lower into deep, hot fat td fry a golden brown. Drain a moment on crumpled brown paper before serving. Scotch Casserole of Lamb r Buy from your butcher one and lf pounds of lamb from the forequarter. Remove fat Weces (Or h and cut in hive the butcher cuwit up for yqu). Spar.thpse'nHces in .;a frying pan, in beer drippings, then transfer them to a Casserole dish. Add one-ha-lf cup each of diced carrots, turnips and onions, and one cup of tomatoes which have been cooked until just soft enough to press sieve. through a Now also add to the casserole two heaping tablespoons of uncooked rolled oats, one teaspoon lf of salt, teaspoon of kitchen bouquet and three cups of boiling water; coyes the dish and let cook in $ moderate oven for from two to three - hours. Just before serving add one cup of hot, cooked peas. one-ha- three-fourt- egg-yol- hs t - 1 these three fruits together, sprinkle well with lemon juice N these days of sneering at men who have.fttada a suCeess sugar, and serve on crisp pf and, icttUce leaves with a dab of ill BusiCalled Big ihdustry or branch of h unfan feervide uhtil is Mayonnaise dressing omthp side ' ness, the question arises, What is Business? . of plates. .This recipe contriTo begin with the management bf a household is business, buted by Mrs. Er B.) lf and a business at which thousands of, women succeed, where men Kidney Bean Salad : Soak ' fail with the same problems to meet. pound of kidney beans overThe care with which & woman buys all her supplies and the night and in the morning drain, with boiling salted water, manner in which she employs labor and makes both ends meet to cover and let simmer for three hours. keep withih her income i3 remarkably good business. Drain again, cool, then chop the It has given occasion for the saying that has become a world three sweet pickles, five stuffed proverb, that a woman can make a dollar go farther than a man, olives and one egg. Cover with the following dress: a criticism of a great deal of public business. It is a fact that in the management of farms and lines of busi- ing: Dressing for Kidney Bean ness in which so many men fail, they have not followed the same Salad: Put into the top of a careful methods of , women in the household. double boiler cup of Good business .means no unnecessary expenditure,, not having sweet milk, one egg, two employed on a job that can be handled by one, or a pinch of salt, and one tablehaving persons for several different jobs that could be handled by spoon of vinegar. Drop in a TomoiTow Knitting a Childs piece of butter the size of a walone person. and cook, stirring constant Bathing Suit. nut, The application of these simple principles, which are used by almost any woman in the larid in the management of her household. would put most corporations on a paying basis and would make local and federal government less of a failure than they one-ha- WHAT IS BUSINESS?. one-inc- one-ha- wide-mesh- hard-cook- ed ed one-ha- one-ha- lf well-beat- en s pei-son- - Today's Events are. MAGNITUDE OP ELECTRIC INDUSTRY Today will be observed as World Good Will Day in the schools of many lands. The Rt. Rev. Richard II. Nelson, Episcopal bishop of Albany, N. Y., today celebrates his 20th anniversary in the episcopate. Osteopaths from all over America are to gather at Kirks-villMo.- today for a celebration of the golden jubilee of their school of medicine. Vermont Bapatists are to cele- remarkable increase in use of electricity in recent Vears shown in national survey of' light and power industry made at end of 1923. According to figures compiled there are now: 9,689,600 homes having central station electric service 1,896,000 stores and of fices using electricity from central stations: 49,500 industrial establishments using electricity from central stations; 5,600 electrical central station companies supplying current for light and power; 110 holding companies that own and operate groups of central stations; 44 state public utility sendee commissions regulating and suppervising the service; 1,500 exclusive electrical brate the eentennary of their specialty stores; 12,000 electrical contractor-dealerstate convention at a three-da- y gathering to be opened to day in The time has arrived in Logan when all public grounds as the First Baptist Church, Burlwell as private .gardens that can be watered from the canals, ington. . The Belgian Minister of ScierU should be so irrigated, leaving the supply of city water for culin- ces and Arts is to preside iver ary use and lawn sprinkling, and to maintain the normal pressure teremoney" in Brussels today in the pipes for fire protection. The situation will not be relieved by the proposed additional sendee required to supply the miles of piping and sprinkling system now being installed on the Temple THE e; - s. block. , y by Secretary of War Weeks to be delivered before the Unitarian Laymehs League in Boston today. ' The writer Is in receipt of a communication from Carl R. Maitusen of Price, Utah, chairman of the Republican State 4Cbmmittee in which he says, When the Central Committee meets, Logans invitation to hold the Republican State Convention there will have the consideration of the committee. All are of Logans hospitality aiid ability to care for the convention. Personally' I should like to come to you. aare Dr. Harold Keith Box. Dr. Harold Keith ., Box, young Canadian dental scientist of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto University, has announced the discovery of a cure of pyorrhoea, the dreaded gum disea which eaases loss of all the teeth eventually. Dr. Boxs theory is that the cause of the disease is a new germ condition" called Rarefying Pericementitis Fibra, originating in the tooth socket membrane: One must give President iTftis is the week the party primaries and county convention are to be hblj and Democrats are urged to turn out and Me that proper organizations are in. stalled in every voting district of Cache. The Logan city primary will be held in the county courthouse on Thursday evening at eight oclock. The county will meet at the same' place at two oclock on Satur- day. . Cool-idg- e credit for having the cour- J. MARSHALL Former Congressman Milton H. Welling will deliver an address at the convention on Satur. day, his acceptance of the invitation of the county committee having been received a two ago. age of his convictions. In his first message to congress he denounced the soldiers bonus. When the bill passed the house and the senate with majorities that looks as If the bill will pass the President took over his veto, yet he tacks his the American Legion veto to the document. He gives vetoed the bonus bill passed by years he has been the executive good reason's for so doing. the House and Senate recently. head of' the great Northern He not only vetoed the measure Railway, the great highway Referring xto the investiga- but also indulged in some strong across the Northwest which was tions at Washington. N. A. language in discussing the mo. financed and built by his father, has the following to say: lives behind, it. He makes a Hill. The the laje James J. son, I am convinced that every true fervent plea of economy saying who Was born in St. Paul, was sick as I am of the treasury cannot stand the as is Republican sent East to Yale to be educated, the treachery which masqueer-ade- s strain that this law would put was graduated with the class of in our uniform to be better on it. W. G. McAdoo has said 93, and then returned to the able to us in the back, and several times that the bonus can Northwest to learn the railroad feels as stab I do that we' shall be be paid and not a cent added to business from the ground up. better armed to meet the enemys present taxes and there is no one When this had been accomplish- attack when we have purged in America who will contend ed he was put on the directorourself of all the foes within and ate, and then, in 1907, was made have everywhere put only real that Mr. McAdoois not quite as well qualified to discuss that president to succeed his father. Republicans on guard. matter as President Coolidge. Like his father, Mr. Hill has I do not ignore the fact that The President says the Ameridone much to encourage civic we have had one or two un can people as whole are orposed and economic improvement of worthy men whose unworthiness to the bonus and the Legion the stages through which his has been exposed. But let me declares that is not true. The railway extends. In men in pub- coming election will, give the that 'say with the Department of the In- lic life aredishonest far Legion rare exceptions opportunity to demterior at Washington, he has rather than ih and onstrate whether or not' it is in lift private been a large factor in developing is true no matter what the earnest in this matter, for a the national park system of the that which holds power. Those united opposition to Coolidge, Northwest. Throughout his party us cast into the will swamp him. let exceptions career he has attended' definite- outer darkness in which ' they bely txf the business of running a long. The other day the telegraph railway and has left out Wal Let us punish every act of contained a synopsis Street and all speculative phases dispatches wrong doing, no matter who be of an address delivered at a big of railroading. and hurt. That is the attitude TODAYS ANNIVERSARIES purpose of our President whom manufacturers convention held 1824 U. S. House of Repre- the people trust. It is the atti in the east in which the speaker sentatives passeed a tariff bill tude and purpose of every Re- poihted out that while farmers in Canada, Australia and Argenimposing an average rate of duty publican worthy the name tine have been buying large of 37 per cent on imports. of American farm 1833 quantities Josiah S. Johnston, who Observes the Buffalo Comwas Henry Clays second in the mercial: The rising tide in the machinery and- implements, our own tillers of the soil 'have been duel with John Randolph, died Republican ranks for President able to in Louisiana. Born at Salisbury, buy but Very little, their is one of the impressCoolidge trade showing a great falling off. Conn., Nov. 24; 1784. , ive features of this present poliwill disclose the Investigation 1840 -- jphn tinned Adair, tical Mr. .Coolidge is fact those that foreign fanners States senator and governor of strongcampaign in the conservative .East have been this machinery died. buying Born in Chester and strong in the progressive Kentucky, for than the considerable less , county, S. C., in 1759. West. The farmers of the North- American can farmer get it for 1849 Residents of the Cape west are as strong for the Presiadministra and while the present atof Good Hope defeated; the dent as those of his own New tion tariff tempt to make their country' a England. He is not so string in and is whooping up the trade discouragihg thereby penal colony.. Wisconsin, because Wisconsin with other nations that would in1909 Henry H. Rogers, has deserted Republican princip- ure to the benefit of the Ameriof the Standard Oil les and is therefore not Republi- can farmer these same nations Company, died in New York, the establishment are Born at Fairhaven Mass., Jan 29 can, no matter what the LaFol-lett- e of promoting farm great projects whose pro element calls itself. What 1840. are td come into ducts bound the nation likes about the Presi1912 The with the yields of competition Texas was lanuched at Newport dent is that he goes about his our farms. And they are using duties with a full sense of the our American made faint machNews. 1920 Clash of deputies and obligation he owes the people inery, bought 4 at better prices coal strike agitators at Matewan, and, tries to do what is right. than we can get it for, to do it. And the man who .tries - tp do W. Va resulted in nine killed. The present administration 1921 Edward D. White, chief what is right wiil never go . (Continued on page four) Justices of the United State, died wrong. in Washington, D. C. Born in the Parish of La Fourche, Louisiana, in 1845. ONE YEAR AGO TODAY Federation Bank opened by organization labor in New York. Two U. S. army airmen killed in plane fall at San Antonio. TODAYS BIRTHDAYS . Els-beh- g, ousekee. Laura But when we consider the origin of some of tjie most recent TOMORROWS MENU Breakfast words how itt use, we find that the dictionary maker tells us someCereal Cooked with Dates thing that We already know. Poached eggs Coffee The late president Harding did not go to the' dictionary for Toast normalcy. It Was a word of his own making and it was so exLuncheon Wholewheat Griddlecakes pressive and so useful that popular usage soon fixed it in the " 1 minds of the people as a standard word. Maple Sirup . When Grover Cleveland dug up desuetude, using innocu-- . Cocoa Preserves Cookies Dinner d students. "Desbus in front of it he started the Coined Beaf uetude? had been sleeping for years, but it suddenly took on new Potatoes Cabbage life after the president of the United States dignified it by Pickles using it. Salad So new words are born over night and old ones are given the Chocolate Pudding Coffee spark of life through usage by men itt public life. is should natural and that our It that our language change. . DISHES IN THIS WEEKS speech should move constantly. It would be unnatural fpr a people MENU with vim, enthusiasm and energy, such as characterizes AmeriSalad ; cans, to be satisfied with an unchanging language. Pare and core one large red t. We need expressive words and the constant searching for them then dice. Peel two oranges minds is certain to be productive of a flexible language and cut In small pieces. Also cut alert by needs. that will suit our up six canned peaches .drained Now mix from their sirup) By F. By J. C. ALLEN, JR. v - , vice-preside- nt super-dreadnoug- ht Lady Astor, the American-bor- n prolong the supply of woman member of the natural gas for use in homes is British parliament, born at Danto be one of the major problems Va., 45 years ago today. to be considered at the 19th an- ville, John W. Garrett, former Uninual convention of the National minister to the NethGas Association of America, ted States born jn Baltimore, 52 erlands, at Cleveland opening today. today. Taxation, immigration, rail- years ago Edwin D. Mouzon, cf Bishop roads, conservation, the legisla- the Methodist Church. Episcopal, tive outlook, and the true busiat born S. South, Spartanburg, ness situation in Soviet Russia 55 years ago today. . are to be among the topics at the C.,Carl E. Akeley, noted as sculp29th annual convention of the National Association of Manu- tor, naturalist and African exborn in Orleans county, facturers, which opens in New plorer, N. Y., 60 years ago today. York today. Harry M. Wtirzbach, repreof the Fourteenth Texsentative IN THE DAYS NEW3 Louis W. Hill, yho 'has an- as district born at San Antonin, 50 years ago today. nounced his intention of retiring from octive business affairs Tadpoles will not develop into at an early date, is fifty-tw- o frogs uhles they get some fi oil years old today. For a number of containing iodine. Daily Fashion Hints How to , H'rr'n- - V!'PV II.iTS FOR SPRING cling to the, dose shape though k eery stunning black and red hat there are hints that later the will displays a new way of arranging Below blossom into wider affairs With the popular side ribbons. the coming of real snmmer. The black satin, black net and a strand and rose crowned hat is of soft tan of wired atraw create a mllsn straw with gold and old rose practical hat to . wear with the and green for trimming. Opposite tailleur. Srtt |