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Show r i i THE JOURNAL, IKIAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH PACE TWO Plunge S ICloseup of Wife of G. O. P. Vice . . Presidential Nominee Friday, July 18, jj Into :: Matrimony does 4 glass of cold water sweat? By CLARA DELAF1ELO . 112. Wntiri Vfti ) it OTHER, I cant, I Just canX" .VI Cant what, my precious 1 mttrry W Rf tomorrow. , But, Lett ire, darling, whats hap. pencil? Have )uu tw quarreled?" so dreadful. I'm not No, only-lt'- s sure that. I love lino, and Oli, I Just r ept caut If "But, Lctflce listen, darling. out now, with everything set, and the gueste and the presents oil, the scandal would be terrible. Lett ice, surely, surely you're not going to bring tlda disgrace upon ua 11 Mother Lett Ire looked at bar Do you waat me to tragically. marry a man I don't love. Just because of what people will say?' Oli, Lettice, you make me so unhappy? What will your father say? Are you sure you don't care for him?" dun'r kmvr. I thought ! loved him." Suddenly LettUe broke Into hysterical 'weeping. "Oh. mother, I dont know what te do. Advise me! Did you feel this wty before you war- rled father?" i I " Her mother was bewil dered. - She had never put that question t6 herself before. Lettice, my little girl. If you really feel you don't love Will 1 wont try to force you laid It We'll bear our iliiiie. 1 "No, Ill marry him," , Iw you care, Lettice? Do )reu care?" ' "I I think yea. I do. Of raurs I do. I waa just unnerved. I I leva hi ml mother." The juether gated fondly after her daughter as site went upstairs t bfd. She was not quite so alarmed as she had seemed to be. you back -- 1 ETERNAL LITE: Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with nil thy heart, nnd with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind: and thy neighbor as thyself. This do, and thou shalt live. Luke 10:27, 28. Mav the love of God be shed abroad in our hearts PRAYER II Most Holy One, we thank Thee for the knowledge that all things were made by Thee, but above all we rejoice thou art our only Redeemer, and that in Thee all things are for us PRAYER: recreated anew'. . . , , SELF SERVICE Kingdom of Heaven is within you. For that matter, the of earth is within you also. If for any reason you begin the day .with the conviction that everything is rotten, and this conviction is advertised by the expression your face wears, the members of your family and the persorts with Whom you do business will greet you with countenances as cheerless as your own and thus intensify your woe. The big idea is to smile. To a man with a grouch this will seem an absurd idea, but even a man with a grouch will strain a point to increase the dividends. THE WclLil-a and- amilG.pai-s.,aJ-pran-t aprof itis much'to' tede i. A do up ef M re.' Charles C, Dowels Thl Informal the wife of the Republican nominee for vice president U the photo of her. Ejf.LjfcR.-Sl?- c( latest , LUJMFJUJgfJBS- Today s Events sired, how can one smile if there is nothing to smile about? The process is simple. The muscles used in producing a smile are They are under complete control. One may smile at will. It is a simple art long since mastered by every lady who.has good teeth. ' Once the smile is produced and the face relieved of its gloom all persons out in front are affected by the change. They fprget their troubles ; they greet you as a friend i thejLsmile in return and willingly sign on the dotted line. In story books one reads of smiles that are sardonic, cruel, wistful ; but these are imaginary smiles. When the proper muscles have done their work and the face is adorned with a smile, the transformation expresses pleasure. The smile may be inspired by the antics of a clown, by a feeling of kindness, by a sense of by pleasures now available or in prospect, or desire to win the hearts of ones fellows and thus by a get a profit ,In any case the smile is the same. Is one justified in faking a smile? Well, consider the gorilla. Whether or not he and man are related, the two have traits in common. When the gorilla would fight, he beats his chest to work up a rage. The motion used to express an emotion may be affected, but the practice of the motion produces the emotion. The artificial smile that fools the passer-b- y begins in a little while to fool the man who produces it. He forget that the world is rotten and himself friendless. He has become the fortunate victim of his own hypocrisy, Try this on your piano. Baltimore Sun. -- well-bein- g, Italy today . will commorate the 550th anniversary of the death of her great poet, Petr arch. The anniversary of the death of Benito Juarez, theMexican patriot, will be observed in the southern republic today. After . a long and brilliant career in JheJU-.- S, ,Army,Maj' d Gen. Charles II. Muir, in of the Third Army Corps, will be retired today for age-A sale of the pictures belongto the Princess Royal, ing among them being several old masters, will take place today at Christies auction rooms in Lon- v com-man- , 1 1899-Hor- atio cold-blood- 4 Bona-parti- to-da- H ILEA THE -- Latin-America- f i I I 3 worn-out- aer-iou- ( i hs " ms i $ !. t In his bachelor rooms W1H Scrlven sat looking over a pile ef rubbish that he was destroying prior to his msr- riage. There were Amy's letters. How iJ loved 'each' other? Atsiy "srtd waa dead,' and only romance that But, tlie lingering echoes of it remained to haunt the corridors of memory. Rut there was Hove, This was all that was lqft of Rose, this photograph which he tore resolutely la two. Rose and h had had a desperate afTa!rr It had lasted nearly a year. And pew 'he-tia- Died in London, Dec. 24, 1863, 1866 The Italian fleet began an attack on the island of Lissa. belonging to the Austrian province of Dalmatia. 1872 Benito Juarez, Mexican president and patriot, died in the city of Mexico. Bom March 21, 1806- 1894 Mgr. Satolli affirmed a decision excluding liquor dealers from membership in any Roman Catholic society., , , Alger, Jr writer of popular books for boys died at Natic, Mass. Born at Chelsea, Mass,, Jaa 13. 1834. don . 1921 The McMillan expediThe first international meet- tion sailed from Boothbay, ing for the study of Industrial Maine, for the Arctic. hygiene is to be opened in GenONE YEAR AGO TODAY eva today in response to a call President Harding and party issued by the International returned to Seward, Alaska, Labor Office. preparatory - to beginning the cam- homeward Plans for a world-wid- e trip. TODAYS BIRTHDAYS paign for prohibition are to be conference drawn at a three-da-y Prince Victor Napoleon, of The World League Against pretender to the throne Alcoholism, to be opened today of France, lom 62 years ago y at Winona Lake, Ind. The progressive candidate for Maj Gen Charles H. Muir, U. Vice President, running mate S. A., who has reached the age for senator IaFollette.-- expect for sta tutwy - ret i reraen t. born ENGLIS I toI) IXG TRADE LANG UAGE ed to be picked at Washington at Erie, Mich., 64 yets-ag- o bulk of the worlds banking trading and industrial new national when the day. today, Dr. Samuel W. Stratton, presiis now printed in English, or American. Our film committee of fifty of the contitles alone are flowing even England with Americanisms' ference for Progressive Political dent of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, born at Litchhideous though they are to jurists there. Even in faraway Aus- action meets for that purpose. IN THE DAYS NEWS field. 111.. 63 years ago today. tralia, says a native of that land in a glossary of Australian II. Rose Pastor Stokes, poted as General Charles Major slang, you meet your old Yankee friends to bluff, to break away Muir, who mtM on the mired an advocate 6f Socialism, bom to chase yourself, going strong, to chip in, to sign on the dotted list today for age. lea es behind in Russia, 45 years ago today, him a long recojd of brilliant line, and to chew the rag. and efficient service m the UniIndeed, says II. L. Mencken in his American Language, 1ivv iou to Does Your Back Ache? States ted the whole Pacific tends to become American rather .than Eng- the outbreakArmy. of the World War. lish. in which he held important com- find Hark Brin Suffering to Many loitaa Koike. , By our help more than 1,000,000 Filipinos now know some- mands, he had made a name for U that dull,, constant , backache himself in Cuban the of campaign thing English. Spanish is dying out in our own southwest, old and miserable? Doc you making in and in the fighting the Philip- your back throb and promises to meet with severe competition even In some of and ache until It pines. Still earlier he had seen seems you pint cant keep going? Do the newer parts of n said Mencken. active service at the time of the suffer headaches, diy spells There is scarcely a merchant ship captain of whatever na- Indian outbreak at Pine Ridge. you and urinary disorders; feel urea, ? Then look to tionality who does not find some acquaintance with English He also fought with the Allied tired and a mean may Delay kide3. your necessary, and it has become, in debased form, the lingua franca troops in the suppression of the Use Doans alckneea! kidney Boxer rebellion in China. Gen. of Oceania and the Far East generally, says one writer. Pjlla a stimulant diuretic, to the Muir is a native of Michigan and kldneyg. Doans nre recommended It has been estimated that three-fourtof all the Nvorlds a f , graduate of West Point. In his by Logan folks. mail is now addressed in English ; metre than half of all the news- early John IUnblett. 10 E. Second St., military career he was A cold settled Logan, says: papers are printed in it ; and in another 75 or 80 years more than famous as a rifle shot, and w'as North, In h iv jtldneya. Intense ruing darted considered bv many as the'best acroas my kidneys aud I couldn't "tr it. The Nations Euiinessr all around rifle shot in the world have suffered more bad someone run His accuracy with the rifle play- a eword through me. My back was LIVING OFF GOVERNMENT ed him good service during the nearly doubled up and J was unable with ease. I had no Cuban war, when he kept a sec- to get around authority on the subject says there are 2,700,000 control over the kidney secretions on the payrolls of the federal and local governments and tion of Spanish artillery out of and had to get up through the night 700,000 former employes drawing pensions 3,400,000 persons action by the deadly use of his to pass them. 1 purchased Doans rifle. Recently Gen. Muir has Pills, at Riter Bros. Drug Co., and who are being provided by government with their living. been in command of the Third they cured me completely There are 41 to 42 million persons in the United States "gain- i firm A Dont JYice 80c, at all dealers. pQ ask for a kidney remedy fully employed so that, every 12 citizens are supporting one in TODAYS ANNIVERSARIES simply get Doans Pills the same that Mr. . 1374 Petrarch, the famous Pimblett had. office. Co., adv. Italian poet died near Padua. Mfrs., Buffalo, N. V. - . The amount paid for services by government federal, state ... o nd local represented 6 yt percent of the national income in Born July 20, 1304- slow 1775 Fort Johnson, on the Measurements of sliding 1922., , f Cape Fear River, was destroyed movements of the earth are This sum was nearly one-ha-lf that paid out fn wages by all by a party of American militia- measured by photographing men under Col- Ashe stars through a slender tube manufacturing plants in this country in 1921. 1811 W i 1 1 i a m Makepeace invented for the purpose and This sum represents an average of $91 payment by each Thackeray, famous English comparing the pictures with' person over ten years old engaged irt a gainful occupation. novelist, born at Calcutta, India. those taken at other times. - - s, , Education And Taxation Have Won Interpretation In Last Few Months, He Saya 1 by the Holy Spirit w ho is given unto us, THE ONLY CREATOR: In the beginning was the World, and the World was with Cod, and the World was Cod. All things were made by him; and without him was,nqt anything made that t Delivers His Last Lee ture Before Students Wednesday Morning At Eleven In General Assembly bmron-peoplr'Wttt- AN Foster-Milbur- , -- ' - st thfse fragment In the waste-bankeIld he love lattice as he had loved Roe and Amy? in a different way, a quieter way, perhapa. lia loved her, t! but A sudden terror came aver him at the thought of this approaching ent of hi liberty. An Instinct to make a wild bolt for freedom. T pack his bag and disappear forever from tb sight of all who had known him. A . hurried not to Lattice But he pictured her look when the And she opened it In the morning. loved him aol No, a man couldnt do that He must sacrifice bin life te play the part of n gentleman. But didnt he loro her? He did. Dear little Lettice I What a fool ho had been, letting the memory of tboao past affair sweep him away. It wasnt aa if he cared for either Bose or Amy now. Jt waa he knew It waa It waa the possibility ef some future Ron or Amy appearing on the scene! - Resolutely he undressed and went . to bed. ) . o o Dr. A. E. Wiftshlp. delivered the last of his lectures Wednesday morning. His lectures have been Inspirational and in each he ha3 given ns a message and this last was a Biting climax to the aeries. He said, 'Ag we have bad revelation in other tines In the last few years we have an opportunity for revelation in education. Science has done more tists have done in all the ages before. We have no Idea of what education really is because we confuse it with scholarship and education and scholarship are very distinct. Educa-tlo- n Is learning to learn. Srhnlar- ship is learning what the other fellow has already learned, I will give you a few things to thlnlr about atartlngwrih-th- e Jdea that education and scholarship are different Timber Is education, lumber Is scholarship. You can make lumber out of timber but you can't make timber out of lumber. Education is the fountain, scholarship is a"fouTidatfon. Edticatlfiii'fiffrd8' bT scholarship. We should be willing to receive new Ideas, do have faith in the future. Anyone is a chump who talks against things coming so fast and furloustyr9 " Education and taxation have an entirely new Interpretation ' within the last few months. Taxea are A 43,600,000 Judged by school waslbuild in Omaha without a cost of five ceitto the people of g Omaha. A of the tuition of 8800 students for onehundred years was taken and the school was d built on that education la never and expense hut Is always an Invertment. Education is an insurance; Insurance is the only business that hasnt stumped In the last eight years. ''The test of it is the number of asylums, prisons, poor-housetc. People should reallte that education is Insurance to the taxpayer. It paya the tax payer to put more into public education. And it ip our duty to make the public see that money in . education pays." a W K V b t pro-ratrn- g. pro-ratin- Pro-rate- ' r Morning. Sunshine, Church. Tht organ pealed the Wedding March. Lettice beside him, radiant under her aril. hand la hla. The touch of her-Ut- tlq Entering tb Signing the registry. care Bice and old shoes that knocked hi hat crooked on bis head. Then they were nlono and driving for'the station. And of the Interval at tli bride's "house while ah changed bar w eddlng dresa be remembered nothing. Alone a lobe la the train, oblivious of the curious looks of the passen- Advertising Makes : Free Press, States . Advocate of Peace t By Associated . ways been sure?" speaker said, free from the con"Alwavs, from the first moment we trol of special interests, will met," Will answered, snuggling his be responsible for the peace of arm around his little bride Lettice the world. Big advertising, ll leaned back ecstatically against him. was contended, tends to make And both w ere sure Cotton is the Dr. JekyU end Mr. Hyde of war. In high explosive It propel the bullet that wounds the sl- flirt. As gagre tnd.borlMtnt-Uc- n It dresses and binds the waund It made. - Germany felt the need of cotton for both uses during the and' tufnfd to wood tor the substitute..' Wbd cellulose was used. In the making if explosives, and a purified wood fiber replaced absorbent cotton for many ' hospital uses. Nor do the functions of this cotton substitute cease with wounding and healing.. In Germany they are uslag It fdr lamp wicks, for inner solos of shoes, for packing and Insulating and for filters. the press independent and thus the editor to go straight seaich far fatts and enable in his truth. The cost of publishing the mo- - . N Tr to condense omtlie of teaspoonfuls of glut, Epsonj Salt In "a glass ofwaier mornings work wonders i!e body intprna,1 in k.-- . fr-i-- li p .mil I'uretest Epsom Salt (imkl empt lea the bile ducts of mj secretions "a lid eieaiijia't tern thoroughly. ScienufieaU purified, it also ia easy to take - One of 260 Pureteat prepara tions for health and bEienc Eery Item the best that skill - and care can produce. Riter Bros. Dmg Co Drug Stan 7719 ,OXE IX TEX Neglecting a little wound, cut or alir&v iod of the iiesh may ia nine eases out of ten cause no preat suffering or inconvenience, but it u the one case in ten that causes blood poisoning, lockjaw or a chronic festering sore. The cheape-- t, safest and best coulee is to disinfect the wound- with' Hnmd Borosoue rml apply the iiorozone rowdef W Complete the healing process. Price (liquid) 30c, 60c nd $1.20. Iowdcr 30c and 60c. Sold by CITY DRUG COMPANY the ling run, he warned, there is no lingte factoi- - more threat-enin- g to world peate than a press controlled by special ts. Big advertising, ihe speaker Said; mfghf Bofalways overcome-thinfluence of "special interests on the press; and on occasions and over short periods of time, big advertising itself might attempt to control newspaper policy. V.'But in the lonjf run big ads candie paid for inly by big sales, it was pointed out. Ani big sales will not , come unless readers have confidence that thr paper can be retied on for its .news and editorials. not an n Big advertising cmic waste, the speak rn-tinueIt is a social serviceIt is more than that. It ia the ba-sis of a press that is financially free. It is the fundamental factor upon v?hich depends the ability of the press to furnish facts disinterestedly, and thus promote the cutlook for world ec-o- d. x -- . Press) LONDON, July 15 A free press and international peace as a result of ad vet Using were urfi:-f- d gers, today by Edward A. Filene "Will, dear, tell, me you lovo am." of Boston, prominent peace adfOf course I lovo yon." I,at night I I wasnt. sure I al- vocate, in an address delivered most wanted to break It off unless before the JnternaUon&l advei-tisin- jr youd told me " convention of the AssociWhy, Lettice U Dont you care!" ated clubs of the Advertising love with care. I I Of course you World. all nay heart, Will deaf. Only I wasn't sore. Tell me, hare you alNewspapers everywhere, the Wood Wound and Htalt Iw'enuse the cold vutcr moi the surrounding air. dna tin cause the water vapoi in the air plaincd, far exceeds the returns ifrom circulation, or the price paid by readers and subscribers. Six million dollars a year more than a million pounds has become a verey oi dinary fi- gure, he eaid, for producing a great daily in our large c:ties. It is Hear, . therefore,, he continued, thati the press is under an necessity of meeting competition by enormously expanding the sources of its revenues. Addition al revenues are obtained by Electrical Home An English power plant haa' built 71 free press, he explained, prinhomes tor ita employee that are cipally by means of advertising hyated and lighted by electricity and Those newspapers that are not .completely equipped with electrical free, he declared, may obhousekeeping appliance. tain their additional revenues from special interests. 'In ever-increasi- ng J ) pcace.rr 7 The dependence of the press and advertis ng. it was stated, and the consequent dependence of world peace, in so far as it i affected by the modern press, happen both to be in accord with the basic changes . now under way in production and distri- . bution. In most oiuntriea of the world, declared Mr. Filene. - Truts, and - horizontal. al which exist and are coming to the front, are in line with the best interests cf social progress even though at this pioneer stage they have all the faults of The speaker expioneering. plained that mass production and mass distribution were inesellvitably dependent on mass ing and that the entire program was dependent on big advertising. The speaker pointed out that advertising in the United States both-vertic- -- - in 1923 retrhed .the amazing figure of $628,000,000. Adverting in the daily press has grown,' by, leaps and bounds is fr?rj ing will grow at an incrtarwH pace as we go on to meet the, future. .... 3 , - - - Planned six years ago, extensive hydroelectric developments will be undertaken soon in th r Lcchaber district of Scotland for the manufacture of alum-- 1 t inum and other industrial power purposes. t 4 ,n Over 428,000 demonstrations of new or improved farm and home practices were made 1923 by farm boys and girls m the United States under official! .. auspices...... p ' |