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Show PAGE SIX OJ JOURNAL, LOGAN UTAH CACHE COUNTY, CITT, iMother Bear Tolls Bell Set as Noise Trap, While Her Cubs Dance FATHERS DAY POEM READ AT ' ! GLACIER ' EARK, - Mont., A black bear had July been 2 stealing butter from a cold water spring at the Waterton Lake chalets where a large construction gang is at work building the new Prince of Wales hotel. One of the cooks, to pre- -' MEET LEWISTON i July' 4.-- The LEWISTON, poem was following splendid and given Jby Mrs. composed Zaloma B. Stowell at the Fathers Day meeting held in the First ward. Several requests Lave been made that it he pub- vent fuither thefts, hung a cow hed in such a waythat it would ring when the ,beat approached the spot to repeat the raid. . Early the following morning continuous clattering of the bell caused the cook to make a hurried investigation. IIe found a big mother bear on her haunches gleefully swatting the swaying bell with her forepaws forthe edification of two cubs that were dancing briskly to the music. y But the butter was gone. lished go that those that, were unable to hear it might read it. , J . ATHiaiV gome are blessed with Fathers and with lo ing Mothers too. Borne are left with just a Father to tell you everything to do. When ray eyes were first opened in this world so large and wide I had just a loving father in whom ' I could confide. His heart and baqds were full know for we weie suth a bothei And be stood at the head of eight and took the place of Mother ps well as Father. He taught me cverj thing of whici girls had to do scrubbing the Sewing, darning, General view of historic Chris church in Alexandria, Va., and the churchyard where many notable figures of washing and cooking too. times lie burled. On the left is the rectory which through the years has been occupied by many Revolutionary The best of all to me was when In famous Episcopal clergymen. The church was completed In 1773. Washington and RobertE. Lee were among its the field he went worshiper, and Washington's funeral services were held her In 1799. In the ehurchyardard buried contemporaries And I could follow after him until and friends of Washington, including several who acted as pallbearers at his funeralThe church has a number the day was spent. of relic of Washingtons time. Night time and the chores done Oh I recall again How he told us Indian stories and how he crossed the plains. and-JoWoman I have often wondered as 1 sat in Wednesday for a trip through Marler.Alice Wheeler Nasolemn thought Kent. Idaho and the Yellowstone Swans Why so much praise to Motherland tional Elna and Sister Grace Park. the Father still forgot. A father should always, so tho scrlp- Kent are visiting, with their . SYLVAN LAKE, S. D-Mr, and Mrs. J. II. Stocks tures said A Mrs. Verna Payne in Og- If President dinner at Sunday. sister, at In Jhe family circle stand firmly Coolidge cares to J the head. , bowl of red roses formed the den. western wolves hear tale of a The hard knocks come to him. Mr. LeRoy Westover and and bobcats centerpiece for the table. Covhig summer He must cam our daily bread. during For no matter how large the family ers were laid for the' following Miss Vera Anderson were mar- vacation, Mrs. Myra K. Peters, ried in the Salt Lake temple last they ail must he clothed and of Sylvan Lake inn, in guests: Dr. and Mrs. W, B. Wednesday. Mr. Westover re- keeper . fed. Black the Hills, can tell him Of course as time glides swiftly by Jones of Logan. Mr. and Mrs. turned from the New Zealand one. In everything there is a change, Ether TelfortI of Logan, and mission last summer and is very Mrs. Peters has two pet And thpy sometimes in their dally active in church affairs in the swans at the inn, a few miles routine step a little out of Mr. and Mrs. George Villett. Mr. and Mrj. Thomas Bum- Third ward. Mrs. Westover is fro mthe range. presidents vacation And so the fathers of olden days. mers of Tremonton Sun- a charming English girl whe home. spent One winter evening, ; so as heaven true . just Zeawhen the lake was frozen over Are standing just ahead 1 think of day in Lewiston visiting with arrived here from New land ijbout two week3 ago. Their but the ice offshore was fragile, our 1927. Air. and Mrs. Joseph Leavitt. Time is Just a little faster. and Mrs. E. J, Watkins, friends wish them much happi- the swims escaped from their Mr, Fathers money I'm sure won't last. VTr. and Mrs. Ed. Watkins of ness. . pen and waddled far out ontq So he too steps out for the fun and r ) -- Dakota y Giant Coffee Pot , N. C.July Standing at a busy corner as one of the landmarks of old Salem, is a gigantic tin cofi J --i1 .of t- -, . : i it ti fee pot, capable if filled of i Design ot (t)i shrine set up tn the Library, bf Congress to kel'd the ortglnal 'pi probobly half the citys gopument pf the Constitution f the United, States.ahd the Peclaratfont )ndepndf nob with thb original. signature of ihe iigneraj vTho ehHne J placef present popuation with its t entrance to th v WINSTON-SALEM- 3. Joke n s. r The rest of the program foi the Father,1 Day meeting was follows: talk, Annie Orchard; duet. Lorn? ar.d Alice Hendricks; readings by Velda Parkinson; vocal so?o ty Ilazeti presort Bright. Eachnather was presented with a lieautiful card by Belle Kemp chairmen of the program committee Monday night the city coun cil met to receive bids for the construction of our new va'er system that is going to be this summer. At the meeting it was decided to p the receiving of the bids until another meeting which Will be held July 18th. A number of r out of town representatives of different pipe concerns .were present. Mr. Foikner and Williams of the Folkner and William t company of Woods Cross and Mr. T. II. Humphrevs were in Lewiston for several days in the interest of the new water svstem. M, E- - Kent, Alma Smith and T. S. Karren motored to San Pete county, Utah, Satui day in the interest of the city ed st-po- Mr. end Mr?. Saul E. Hyer and children are visiting in Grover. Wyoming with Mr. and Mr t Raich Hyer. M. E. Kent and family left (A5) - Wolves ! ;na-tution- a! dlrocttyabov blend. son-cerni- -- et - - ; r ( f i -- i ! r. - L . ( - tho-San- t t WASHINGTON, July weeks. Mrs. Adelaid Peterson Wimbledon Courts Free waves whenever make and children of Compton, Calif ' Leather Jackets Radio two of blades where grow barley fornia, Mrs. R. 0. McRibben and before, declare plant Mr- Robe it Ik Sant of Salt WIMBLEDON. Eng., July 2. vsinloriJrnf the I . S.I)e Lake, Mrs. Alice Sant and son P) nff,v,,,L-- r ik ailit.u, M f Beach California. Mi. land and Kmer Sant and Jlr.!mch .satisfaction ocer .the n.Ttem to Fossil Pits To 0 - Be Public Park (Bv Science Service) ANGELES, July . Uy Kt LOS will soon TdSalV dinner Sunday in honor of herlpionship matches are plaed. avinvhaTliarp ueala: Yellow ho.,e 'Leather jackets" are ciestruc Si ?he riialokirf at Ariin"i ,.oS formed the table decorations. tive bugs that lay eggs under ton grew so high that it overCovers were laid for twelve. (the gras.? during August. The men walking through it, Miss Eidell , Hyer - leftnext spring the grass turns topped due to the influence of the radio Sunday for Tacoma wheie she! yellow. When dug up it reveals w aves will visit for two weeks With a mass of grubs busily eating Many researches have .been i e - to the fornia spent the past week heie stroj ed. 'and the fHend- k - VN - bare patches ha vf afvs'ay een lithe' Tnwm elusive of distinctly negathe. sabre-toothe- and'fr,! , Americans In bxford tZ the entm Refieshments 0XFftRhD July 4 rlkin PiaeS f Srifbul on- romp on the here, untold ages ago, the ferocious sabre-toot- h tiger tore at the vitals 'of prehistoric maminothsb'w(hen'. the famous La fossil pits ki "Los- Angeles are turned into a public park. Plans are completed and work soon to be started on this tract, wit hthe object of preserving as much as possible the natural landscaping of the site. These pits are the richest in fossils of any locality in the country. Already thousands of fossils of d tigers, giant ground sloths, giant wolves, mammoths, mastodons, lions, camels, peccaries, tapirs and birds have been recovered. Concrete replicas are to be made of soipe of the more familiar speties and set up in the 1 pai k. w II. G. Bullard, chairman of the Federal Radio Commission. Ad- - h if 'f ih11 .waves. lthe Oxford Unnersitl tennis possible influence serve.l no One Americans. is are' Mr. Boyd Recnoldsof Ashton,!; Jj 01mtead of Alhambra, 'aI .atever. In the expep-da- v Idaho, spent- Sunday and of th plant physiologists in Lev iston as the guest of California, fonneg niver?ity invented by an Lp1omp int-lfpf California star. The other is' t!ierf "ere 9 ays 'control Englishman to be fastened inside Mr, and Mrs. S. F- Wiser. Ute or closed object- are expanded by firof Rluladel- - Ilan- - which The Beehive girls of cartridges they contain with Thiid ward' attended the Bee- - Phia, former captain-b- f tennis' no difference from the ones ex- ing hammer 'blows j hive graduation exercises held'at the University of Femmi-- 1 Pspd to the electrical waves. A i cording to a scientist Who has at Rictunond Thursday' even- - ivania. The men are lepresent-- ! made accurate studies of athletes a Mho runs 100 ir states . as Rhodgs' ac(l8 ln. ing. Three of the Thiid wardjing ' but ne horsepower u.ak-- s TnlUT dut g.ria webe ruaUuUd; Alaha scholars at Oxford. , n' gasulmt, iiomnlUmatic. 4 v tainment. in-te- of Honor. n such"-"cont- rols , j Jnts - - theivv-Lingellwc- , A - he diu . -- 111 , v . . i - , d pre-pane- d - . , . Altar of Freedom. 'fhe shrine Lx built hkq nn, altar-pieo- , e with the Declaration ip a with briny bronze doors, if Inked on each side by an American' tkjgie. Below It in a mitcli larger case li the Constitution. Two layers of a film heasy date pieparfil gelatin between them, coser tlie two doiunieuls, and new trnlize the harmful elTcits of thp ( nnir-riift- ( glas-vwlt- IlgiS?, so that they will Dot r tSkeft- a J"'' v- .'Fp - , - j' v m . , y ' over tn fitnj. and Islef wers ' J, t v, -- ban,-Ip. . come. ) i ; After nearly a tentury and a half the Declaration of Independence rests fo.-- the first time ln a permanent shilne under the golden dome of he Library of Congress at Washington. Yehowed with age, and with the signatures slowly fading, the parchment cn hfch the Declaration Is written has been .kept for the last 30 years Ira ked away In the Department of State. Very few people had ever seen It or kivpiv what hrtd become It' But it was Impossible that this, the most precious document in American history, should lie allowed to fade Into oklixiop, and at last steps were tnkn to gratify the wish of patriotic Amer-tcjtuto see the original fundamental document on w blclt their independence rests. A handsome mmble shrine was lVr jt la tire I.ihrary of (lose to jthe national capltol, guarded In, every possible way fyomi further deterioration, it can be spn by ftttnre generations for n bobcats-Wheneve- library.; . $ le-isto- " " - ng tion. The pot was erected in 1858 by Julius Mickey, finsirith of the little Morvian coloney cf Salem, the first man ever to sell cooking stoves in this part of the Carolir.as. One story has it that it was built to shelter soldiers during the Civil war. A trap doer in its bottom lends color to this opinion, and ready access to small boys who have climed in it to startle with strange noises elderly ladien and gentlemen on their way to church. - ILm-i-po- the - Many fantastic stories the coffee pots orgin have surrounded it with a mysterious glamor. But its chief claim to fame lied in the fact it was perhaps, the first piece of Independence direct advertising in this sec , Given Now Place the thin ice. Mrs. Peters, alon Ogden and Mr. and Mrs. Biair Watkins of Los Angeles Cal- What Makes Modern at the hostelry, could not ifornia spent Sunday afternoon Sky-Rock- et Go Up coax them in. She dared not here as the guests of Mr, and go after them lest she break Mrs. J. II. Stocks. , through the ice. WASHINGTON, July 4 SS : In the i'lkky hills encircling Merle,1 SauLs and Ira i Hyer IIow does the go the lake, wolves and bobcats were in Malad last Friday on up and scatter its stars? Peo- caught- th& scent of the birds. business. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Boyce' of ple in China and India .knew Rovenous from Jack of fon ago. In the 16th, 17th anfl they moved in the dark toCarey, Idoho are vi ating with long 18th centuries Italian fetes ward the lake shore. Anticipat- Scions Break Even Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Iliight. with fireworks. were held in Cahokia Politics ing the invasion, Mrs. Peters Mr. and Mrs James Tagarm't The of the rocket iS a had built a big bonfire on the body and daughters Blanche and Vela strong bank. CAH0K1A, 111. June 2. (P- ima, Mr. Fred Taggart and Mr. hollow tube Awith plug holding, a "Throughout the night, she More than two cepturie after Mark Taggart motored to Og- pointed cap. den Thursday to attend a fun- smaller tube fits into the bot- - relates, J, could hear the pro-- , the founding oi Cahokia. first tom containing the powder longed howl or the wolves and white settlement west of the eral. which shoots it off. Lighting the fearsome screeching of the Alleghenies, political Pvaliy, has Mr. Burtfkp Mrrrist.n cf the fuse starts the flame up- -; they screech broken out between he descend. and MissSrace I jelled and beat a stick on ants of French founders and ed When toward this ward powder. Salt left for Mombty Iopan al-i newcomers to the village. Lake 'tnro they v ohRrn arrive the exploding powder blows' the boathouse. They came most to lake but never the odge out through the narrow open- Cahokia was i,ncoj porated in Mrs. Clacton Hogan, flrsMjJ mkr it does so with great force, ventured onti the ice. At dawn dpid and at the Gift elect ion slun away. two partie t made up of res don Rue Poiilsen, M Afton PunikThe "kick of the dischaige they 1jUl cen davbrea and Miss Lillian Hogan were Rnes the l octet upward. The IYench lineenge, and the m- M'lnf n llume a dependent supper guests tf Jits. Dorothy backward streaming paitv, .comprising Baer last Wednesday earning forms lKMail.- Just as tin1 pro-M- for another night she kept her A u on.er igil, without sleep, guarding1 lx comes t- and Mi s.0. A Hogan and pe!lm When the cotes were cmrted aHcpge r pets a"a,nbt l!'e' Piejmg; Muiiol lashes the daughter fifosj Sauw of spent lad through u asts. On second day the rhe tiny hoc at trnctop, setting swans ot the and George Lwbcn- unlay in Bogan. fatheis, shuffc-and hungry Mr. and Mr?, II. Ezra Hatch off the powder wdiieTK. seattei s Iiofer his opponent had 19 ot- ashore into their pen reunattended and the" rnctallic fine Lundy ignites Joseph and I.ucien Sauget and ion held at Cifton, Idaho last fragments that became star 'Louis Re had 50 votes each Saturdaj. The following rela- The purpose of the stick on the'Jtadio No Fertilizer, for trustee. The Sauget won tives of Mis. Hatch who came rocket is to guide it in a lXv the dra for trusteeships and Indieate Experiments to attend the reunion have been Ins the presidency. straight line: house guests at the Hatch home Science Sen ice) (By'' at different times the past two 1. sky-rock- i , up-plyi- , And In a few .days they are all dead broke, have had a good time and lint they , ' don't care for the squabble. This is the fathers of the ;2? model. In eveby thing there Is good and bad, And each thinks ours the best Father a child ever had And so it should be, we" behold in him fevery test Not at his worst but at his, very best. Ho comm home to us day by day. Clean asthe morning he went away. So we are proud when - his life's Work here is dohe To have men know that we are his sons. in all its puvlty is for The our Mother's dear But the rose Jn its rarest beauty is for our Father's here. One without the other I'm sure you will agree Hoes not make our home complete as you can plainly see. Honor those gray hairs whiih change rapidly to. white. Let the snow white gloiy fascinate you. It is only Just and rigid That white hair Is the badge of mt Fathers struggle for ns all. He has suffered much, home prha-tlonwe must all recall. Fpeak a word for Father-Deaold patient Fuilier Working with his heart ami hands to make our troubles iew In your love for Mother don't forgot the other But whisper just a word for Father too. Our fathers to whom we owe the most Never remind us of our debt. They send no bills And they" demand no settlement. - Citys First Sign Saved From Jpnt the Monday, July' 4, :1 92T. - bfeck sto ITiiladPlphla. t Thep, when it'.wis decided to build the national capital at 'Washington, th4 Declaration was taken to the city and kept there In various places while the state buildings were constructed, i In 1814, It barely escaped destruction by the British, who after the battle of Bliulens.biirg advanced nn Washington and burned fhe( capitol, the White House, and otiif--r government building. But fortunately Secretary of State Monroe realized iri'time that the British wduld take the .city, and gave orders that the most Important documents In his charge 'aheuld-- j removed as quickly as possible?, The Declaration' was 'packed fn a wagon and taken with other document 4. up to Leesburg, Va.t Where it was hidden in a barn till the British had gohe and the danger was past. Faded, but Legible. Back again came the Declaration to Washington, where )t gtajed till it was taken to Philadelphia for a" time for the ' Centennial .exposition,- - m he meantime, as might be expected, the fragile pnrebment had suffered quite a little damage from frequent handling, and its many, generally hurried; moves from one place to another. So bad did its condition finally become that It was feared It would fall to pieces altogether, and It was withdrawn frtfln the public lew and locked up in a steel safe In the State department. Now once more, faded, but still legible, it has been brought out, and there In Its permanent resting place tills small piece of parchment will stand as nn enduring monument to remind the thousands who pass before it of the great principles of American liberty for which their fathers fought . and died. fade firtlier. The smalt piece of parclitnent on Declaration is w ritten has hqd a lirbst thrilijng history, for the fate tif the Shatter of liberty was cjosely connected with the 'vicissitudes df ihe eqfly days of tlie young WliliW the ' ft few months Of its signing in Y'iiiladelphla its travels began, for by; December news came that Washington had been forced back over the Delaware, and congress lost no time Irt moMng to Baltimore, taking the parchment w tth It. jWlien the tide of war swept the British back, congress returned to Philadelphia, only to leme again six months later, when General Howe advanced on that frv The Declaration was then housed for a time ln Lancaster, Pa , and later iii the at Toric, where It stayed till it vat brought ba. k to Philadelphia. Two dais later, With the British snd lilie.ty assured, .there took e place ihe first eelemauon of wild scenes of juhlla-tlday, a.m loud cheeis fortlie Perpetual arnj i iidltturnea Inuependence of tha L litleos .slaiPs of Amei i, a.' rgm Forced to Move. Fi r a time i he dt.oim.m.t stayed in i'nl.i.l, jjiina, out la lt-- 3 it tagen m an mie. journey, tluj time to a.ivi a Sintoge iihicet,t x rea-rn- i. mg to inv i ...sfutti of tne For fetierati.M., , oiigie,.- - w ,is unable io i u.e.t tixes, hi 1 uhl iiot rai-money to j ay Sue arm.,, wi.uh finally took iuhtt-r- s into Its own hanvls. a small bo,i, pf s oilers marened to Phtlaoel-ptii- i and uentaodej their arrears of pa. at the point of tha hajonet, and coufciess, v, i,j, a had Suecesfuily defied Tire powerful British empire new decided that discretion was the l.ettef A memorial to American of valor, and heat a hasty retreat. freedom, They moved later to Annapolis then the Bunker Hill moiwmeht, dedicated back to Tfentdn, N. r nn(, J,n(lMy efghty-fouyear', aflo, stands In . fraitsferrtid the seat of goicrp merit to Charlestown, Mata, a permanent Ysirk city! of Njw peace bated on equality and ; . Wlien George Washington berime justice. Boston celebrated thb President, the jit ate of the battle of Bunkar Hill were With patriotic exercises. , within conrt-lif'U.-.- e Inde-penc- fr 1 e prt , seequi-centennl- a 1 af |