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Show r I ( i Ik emtier Saturday. f 5, 1925. TTTE CITY, JOURNAL,-LOGA- N CACHE COUNTY. Ivanhoe, by Sir Walter Scott. GIFTS FOR CHILDREN'S BOOK Story of chivalry Crowell, 42.50. in the times of Rhhzrit l'. PAGE ELEVEN UTAH LEWISTON Jan of the Windmill, by Mrs. Julia Horatia Ewing, SHELVES Hareouht, $2.00. j j ' LEWISTON j English Rtory of a boy brought up av a in I II rs son lm beer me a die Dec At I the Sunday night cervices in the tlnguished painter. First ward. Mis. Annie Oi chard Jim Davis, by John Masefield. Stokes, $1.60; Cresset, $1.00. en interesting talk on the' .gave Adventures of an English hoy who is raptured and carried off bv smug Chi istmas veal sale.' j glers. Monday Evening in the Lewis Kidnapped, by Robert Louis Stevenson: illustrated by X. c. ton opera house. of l.eai-tu- ii Wyeth. Scribner, $3.50. Fir.--t Will'd Relief the Adventures of David Balfour. Society tiitei tamed with aWicia! and (idint. Ice crepni and'eake Lance of Kanana, by II. W. French. - Lothrop, $1.25. were seived. of tale Bedouin a Hero boy who gave his life to save the Arabians from s I Continued from page' nine) Uncle Remus; His Songs and His Sayings, by Joel Chandler Harris. Appleton, $2.00. 0 The Water-Babie- s, Wilcox Smith. by Charles Kingsley; Dodd, $1.50. Thf-sistei- illustrated by Jessie The same; with illustrations in color by Warwick Goble. Macmillan, $2.50. the hand A fa if y tale for a Jam! baby, containing the history of the great and tornotis nation ot the Daa and the account of the wonderful things which Tom saw on his journey to the (The Land We Live In, by O. W. Price. you-like- What Happened to The boys book of conservation. from photographs. by Dikken Zwilgmeyer. Inger-Johann- e, Lothrop, $1.75. Amusing account of the mischievous pranks of a young Norwegian to Whom queer things are always happening. Men of Iron, by Howard Pyle. Oregon Trail, by Francis Packman ington. Little, $3.00. f Houghton Revell, $1.75. Boys Home Bookof Science and Construction, by A. P. Morgan. Lothrop, $2.50. The Boys King Arthur, by Sir Thomas Malory; illustrated by N. C. Wyeth. Scribner, $3.50. TreatetU of the birth, life and acts of the said King Arthur and of his neble knights of the Round Table, their marvellous conquests and adren- tures and the achieving of the Sangreul. What Goes on Around Us. Boys Book of Firemen, by Crump. Dodd, Mead and Co. Oyra-foa- or less. lt washc a tub of clothe j to 7 minute and to wrist-band-s, thoroughly that even cuffs and collars dont require handrubbingl in 2 9 j or a warm heart and a largish size Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Orchard and daughter Eva and Mrs. Ed-- . i'a C.U'Aavenson motored to Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fate Smith mo in Lo-'ga- Two Years Before the Mast, by Richard Henry Dana. Houghton ,$2,757 Industries of Today, by Lane. Ginn and Co. This account of the author's voyage around Cape Horn In come ji sea classic. Illustrations in color b E bojd Smith. Boys Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Helen Nicolay. Century, $1.'.5. Boys Life of Theodore Roosevelt, by Hermann Hagedorn. Harper, $1.75. n Mr. and Mrs. Last and family spent last Thursday at Garland Wind in the Willows, by Kenneth Grahame. Scribner, $3.00 with their jon Charles Last. Mr. M. J. Sw inyard, returned and $1.75. to Rexburg, Idaho Sunday after Whimsical animal story. spending part of the week with his family at Lewiston. MAGAZINES Mr. and Mrs. Mac Arthur of Child Life. Rand McNally, $3.00 per year. San Francisco were guests of One of the attractive features is the section devoted to the childrens Mr. and Mrs. Fate Smith Satur own productions: stones, poems or letters. Any child leading the magazine , day. is encouraged to send his contribution. Mi. and Mrs. E. J. Watkins of The Junior Home Magazine for little folks, $2.50. Ogden were guests of Mr. and Mis. M. H Stocks Sunday. Mrs. Eva Parkinson spent Youths Home Companion. A good choice if only one magazine can be taken in tlie home Something Tuesday at Logan on business. suited to all ages. Mrs. Asa Chenney was a Lovisitor Tuesday. gan John Martins Book. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blair and A high class magazine for children under ten years of age High in family of Ogden spent the week ethical and religious values, and abounds in humor. end with Mrs. Libby Lewis. St. Nicholas. They returned home Saturday. An excellent magazine for older children, 8 to loth grade, Can be redd Mrs. Jeane Lewis of Ixgan to children much younger. spent Wednesday and Thursday at Lewiston guest of Mrs. Libby Popular Mechanics. 18.14 his be I , Doubleday, $1.90. Harvey Cheyue, ; oung, rich and spoiled, falls overboard from an Atlantic by fishermen bound for a seasons catch off the coast of Newfoundland and has to work out his passage. liner, is picked up Jacobs, $2.25. Dickens hitubelf said, "I have in my heart of hearts a favorite child and his name is Dav id Copperfield." I Don Quixote, by Cervantes; retold by Judge Parry; illustrated by Walter Crane. Lane, $2.50. Amusing adventures of a Spanish knight-erran- t. English Literature for Boys and Girls, by Henrietta E. Marshall illustrated with drawings in color by John R. Skeltofi. Stokes, $5.00. ; Shows how- - "from a rough foundation of minstrel tnics and monkish ItaB slowly riseu to be a glorious; legend the great palace of our literature " house of song." , George Washington, by Horace Elisha Scudder. Houghton, $0.56. One of the best Q Golden lives of Washington. e Numbers; compiled by Kate Douglas Wiggin and Nora A. Smith, Doubleday, $1.75. The noems' are selected from the standpoint of older boys and girls and afe ar ranged under Interesting headings, such as' sports and pastimes," story poems. Gods Troubadour, by Sophie Jewett. Crowell, $2.00. The story of Sf. Francis of Assisi. Gullivers Travels, by Dean Swift ; edited by Padraic Colura. Macmillan, $2.50. Includes all four voyages, and white. IJ plates. In color aBd other pictures In black Hero Tales from American History, by Henry Cabot Lodge and Theodore Roosevelt. Century, $1.90. How to Know the Wild Flowers, by Mrs. William Starr Dana. Scribner, $3.00. Th flower are arranged according to color and there are brief description of oyer 400 varieties. Strong appeal for boys of a mechanical Lewds. , turn of mind. BOOKS THAT SHOULD INTEREST PARENTS, WHO ARE CONFRONTED WITH THE PROBLEM OF CHILD TRAINING Mothers and Children, by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. Henry Holt Co. When Children Err, by Elizabeth Harrison. Macmillan Your Child Today and Tomorrow. Gruenberg. ' Co. Beginning the Childs Education, by Ella Frances Lunch. Hafper Bros. Expert personal advice on the training and preliminary education of children before they are old enough to become a pdrt of the American g liool system. The Child, His Nature, and Needs. A contribution of The Children Foundation. The Normal Child and Primary Education by Arnold- - Gessell. Ginn and Co. . j V Years and year in. advance of all other washers in design, constructicn tr.d washing method. lv adjusted I to yuur height. 7 Clothes can lie putm cc taken out v i th the w.ashjr running. I gTub cleans For fine linen, filmy . it-- undergarment, sheer self. blouse and hose, it is safer than even hand methods. metal 9 All wringer. Self adjusting. No other gift will bring your wife or mother such d helpfulness. tension release. Reasons for World Leadership much-neede- i The Treasure of the Isle of Mist, by W. W. Tarn. Putnam, $1.90. Ginn and Co. j Outstanding. Maytag Features j athes faster. ashes cleaner. 3 longest hourly capaut) in the world 4 Must compact washer niavle taktu, floor spate oulv 25 inches square. 5 Catt aluminum c a n t tub warp, rot, awell, split o( corrode. 1 J I Fanciful story of a young girl with shoes " m Washer in 60 minute j Corsica. Mead and Co. Dodd, Mead and Co. David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens, clo.he that ordinarily tike from two to four hour to wash, la disposed of by the Maytag ed. Mr. and Mrs. John Hawks Wood entertained last Thursday in honor of her Sister Mrs. j White and family - of Sanford Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens ; pictures by Harvey Colorado, and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Nielsen and family. Dunn. Cosmopolitan Book Corporation, $3.50. Mrs. Carrie 1 evitt and son Story of the French revolution and the Reign of Terror. Earl of California spent SaturTom Brown's School-Day- s, by Thomas Hughes; with illustraday at Logan. tions by Hugh Thomson. Phillips, $2.50. Bar-ibMr. and Mis. Langton Other good editions are published bj Ginn, $0 98; Macmillan, $2 00; and week end at Salt the spent , Harper, $1 "5. Lake last week. The Misses Marrie and Inez The Travels'and Adventures of Raphael Pumpelly. Holt, $1.75. Danielsen were guests of Mrs. As a mining engineer, a geologist and an explorer, the author had numerous adventures in Arizona, Japan, China, Siberia and the mountains of Olive Harris at Richmond last Story of My Boyhood and Youth, by John Muiiv Houghton, $3.25. Account of pioneer life in Wisconsin Book of the Stars for Young People, by William Tyler Olcott. Putnam, $3.00. Captains Courageous, by Rudyard Kipling. Houghton, $2.25. Other editions are published at $0 80; $1.10 and $165. Tells of the author's own boy life in a New England soaioaat town. and miniatures. Triumphs of Science, by Lane. Two legends of the Hudson valley, the one of the man who slept for 20 years; the other of the specter which appeared to the schoolmaster, Irbabod Crane B. Frost. of the world's famous explorers with reproductions' maps and curious illustrations from old woodcuts, drawings Boys Book of Railroads, by Crump. Little, $2.00. of oHed A huge mas j Story of a Bad Boy, by Thomas Bailed Aldiich; illustrated by A. Fascinating account - Rem- Rip Van Winkle, and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, by Washington Irving; illustrated by George Boughton. Macmillan, $2.40. Doubleday, $4.00. Dodd, Frederic Romantic story of southern California, the heroine being a beiutiful girl brought up on a Spanish ranch and the hero one of the Mission Indians Macmillan, $2.40. Boys Book of Policemen, by Crump. bv Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, by Mark Twain. . Marper, $2.50. Ramona, by Mrs. Helen Hunt Jackson. A Book of Discovery, by Margaret B. Synge. Putnam, $5.00. Books of illustrated .Tw ain. Harper, $2.25. Tom Canty and the boy king, Edward VI, exchange dothes and places and both have strange and exciting adventures Gives an introductory acquaintance with 150 birds commonly found in the gardens, meadows and woods 50 colored plates . of primitive ; The Prince and the Pauper, by Mark Contains legends, traditions, and fairy tales which time has woven around the ruins of the beautiful Moorish palace Illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Bird Neighbors, by Neltje Blanchan. j -- Romantic story of the peasant maid of Dommny. BOOKS FOR OLDER BOYS AND GIRLS The Alhambra, by Washington Irving. known llNc of ; Dcsiribes lAirknun's travels in 1846 with a company of Sioux Indians Atlantic Monthly Press. fisher lad. Harper, $2.00. Mystery Tales for Boys and Girls; compiled by Elva S. Smith. Lothrop, $2.00. Said to be the best story of a boy under 10 ever written. Story of a Newfoundland (ifhceis i Double- Johnny Blossom. Zwilgmeyer. Adventures of Billy Topsail, by Norman Duncan. Siakv Pie-do- Story of a mischievous boy who is rlinnged intoan elf anil who takes wonderful journeys on the back of a wild goose. Readable and Attractive Collection of Norse Myths. Mifflin Co., $1.50. Andewvi mid Mrs. skd$ ewt i The Mutineers, by Charles B. Hawes, Atlantic Monthly Press, $2.00. A story of sei adventure In the days of the dipper slaps Tales of fair ladies and distressed damsels and of knights who fight dragons and rescue the unfortunate. Delightful pictures. Beaston. K Bovd Smith. Times of Henry IV of England. Tlis boy hero serves as page and squire, is created a knight by the king, and finally vindicates his father's honor 9 , B. lures bj V Wonder Book of Old Romance, by F. J. Harvey Darton. Stokes, $2.50. Firelight Fairy Book. H. Good pii A romance of Exmoor, telling of the savage deeds of the outlaw Doones in the depth of Bngworthy Forest, the lieauty of the hapless maid brought the up in the midst of them, plain John Rldds Herculean power, and . Preface. exploits of Tom Faggus of the separate volumes are published by Houghton. , Wonderful Adventures of Nils, by Selma Lagerlof. day, $1.75 and $1.90. , Lorna Doone, by R. D. Blackmore. Jacobs, $2.25. The same; illustrated by E. P. Abbott and H. A. Knipe. Jacobs, $1.50. . Contains many Ixviut 'fill illustrations Story, of the French and Indian war. girt Mis. thicks, Relief visited her Ihe Shortest s the Society of Richmond, the Relief Society meet-- ! 'inn it Lewiston, Monthly eve- ' ning. Mrs. Anderson gave a good talk oil the line of vvoik m the teachers and if put in practice, will he very helpful. Mis. Willard Hendricks enter-- t tained at her home last Thursday. Mr. E. Allied and family of I ogan. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wood and famdv Mr. and Mrs isicemaker and family cf Amal- ea. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Allred' Mr. anti uni family of Mi s R. Allred and fam lv of, Ticnon Miss Ethel Allied anil Mr. Stevens of Burley. Idaho and Mr. and Mrs Albert U.vbo and family. Mrs. Eva Parkinson entertain1 i ed the Ladies Ait and l.iteiarv club at her home Thursday af-- 1 ternoon Dec. 3, the afternoon was spint in games. Luncheon was seive'd to Mis. llealey, Mrs. Millie Van Orden, Mis. Effie Yillett. Mrs. Gertrude Rawlins, Mrs. Mvrtle Pond. Mrs. Ada Van Orden, Mrs. Oretta Barber. Mrs. Ida Roger, Mrs. Chole Pond Mrs. Marie Bernhisel. M.rs. Nor. Ima Stoddard, Mrs. Edna (Jus-- I tavensen anti Eva IVrkinsort Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hendricks entertained last Fiidav evening at their borne. Mr. and Mrs. It. II. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. I)cw Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Dopp and Mr. and Mrs. David Hendricks. The evening , was snent in playing games. In conclusion refreshments were serv- Small, $1.75. i Last of the Mohicans, by James Fenimore Copper. Ilolt, $1.90. Wonder Book, and Tanglewood Tales, by Nathaniel Hawthorne; with pictures by Maxfield Parrish. Duffield, $3.50. Good editions of th'eir enemies Give Among the Logan visitors Saturday were Mr. Wm Blair and family. Mis. Anna Orchard, Mrs. Ida Rogers and Carlyle and Roma Rogers. Mr. and Mrs. Dannielson spent last Thursday at Ogden. Miss Ethel Kent returned to Deiry Creek Sunday where she is teaching school, after spending the week end at Lewiston with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Kent. Miss Dorthy Dopp of Logan was the guest of Eva Orchard Sunday. Mrs. Maggie Butters left for California where she will visit-he- r sister Mrs. Leonard Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Van Orden J.L. Montrose 14 North Main. Company Phone 999 8 SALE OF DELINQUENT STOCK The West Cuibc Irrigation (uuipnnj, principal place of business, Trenton. Cat ht Oiiunty, I tab There are delinquent on the following deK rllied stock on account of assessment leviod Oi tuber 7. 1925, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respoitne shire holders as follows; No. Certificate No. flhares Name 1018 40. E i) Hogan (Stale of It.ili) 5 8 .917 . Frank Shuves (C Jonkn) ' 12. 987 (. II Kofoed 1047 Thoa la'ishm.1 n 113 85 37 95 10t4 E E Burgl. (M H Munson) 4.50 . 1030 15 Aaron Rigby 6 00 2. 1018 CIibs Rigl'V 61.60 20 49 950.000, 972.98 1 Jos Smith 234.00 78 986 K H Smith. 249.10 83 03 1077 S A Whitney (F C 1, A Ami In an oi dance with law and an order of the Hoard of Director of said company made on the 7th d ty of October, 1925, no many shares of each will be sold at the office of West pine of .said stoi k as may lie noi Cache Irrigation Company, at Trenton. Cache County. Itah, on the 19th day of December, 1925. at the hour of 2 oclor k p m. of said (lay, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and exT. N. JIDAH, Secretary-Treasurepense of sale West Cache Irrigation Company. Trenton, Cache County, Utah. 'u 1 ess-ar- y r. A quaint marriage custom pre vails among the native tribes on the Benui river, in Central AfricaWhen arnan-marrie- s his sister goes through a wedd-inceremony with the brides brother. If there is no sister the bridegroom has to enter into an agreement with his brother-in-lato work for him for a period of three years, this being the standard value of a sister. Seve Donogl ue, the premier Fnglish jockev, is to become an actor i lithe films. lie has signal a contract to appear in a series of pictures of racing life and and family motored to' Rich-- ! mond Sunday. Mrs Norte Rievcs spent Ahe week end at Lewiston, with her mother. - g Idaho, Mr. George Brower of Callas. Washington and Mr. E. Bell of Richmond were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fate Smith w Sunday. Mr. Alma Johnson and daughter Alice of Logan were guests of I)r. and Mrs. W. B. Parkinson Sunday. Mr .and Mrs. John Hawksvvood motored to Logan Wednesday. Miss Minnie Smith of Salt renance. Lake was called to Liwiston on account of the illness of her little nephew, Jack Smith. Mr. and .Mrs. Thomas of Preston were Lewiston visitors Mon. day and Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Neilsen motored to Logan on Sunday evening. Mr. Asa Chenney spent Wed- 01Te are ijfah to amtointc nesday afternoon at Irfigan om that our rarb business. For Christmas are unfit on ' NOTICE display, The annuol stockholders meet- (And fttere happy to tell you fitere proud ing of the Logan North West Field Irrigation Co., will be held (Of the sho firing in efierg ftiay; Monday, Dec. 7th at 2 p pi. in Jflell sag no more Ijere, tut " the Thrd Ward meeting house, rorae in please do, the purree of said meeting is utb the rards ftiill speak for to hear the financial reroit of the secretary and treasurer for iljcmsrlfies to you! the year 1925, and to transact such other bus'ness s may properly come before the stockholders, . signed Wm. Evans, Sec. & Treas. (Advertisement,) Aslt to see our Christmas Card samples Cattle were first brought to America on Columbus his by AT THE JOURNAL second voyrge, in 1493. (lluletide I o |