OCR Text |
Show ) PAGE TEN The : . LOGAN JOURNAL, Journals tion, Weekly at the same time people . to subscribe "to its week- made. of ly magazine. It publishes question, WTio are the six most beautiful women- of Ger (Continued from page Seven) All persons' are urged rue many? dedication of the lane as cast their vote on this ques- .'tU the n.ie Mallet Stevens, tion and are advised to look up the architect who built the the entries as they appear in homes. the periodical The new houses, only a dozen Candidates are informed that of them, are in Passy, the good the full name and address of residential quarter. They stand would-b- e movie actress out like likhthouses among the every will be added in a special outchateau-lik- e ancient, classic line for each picture published homes of the rich and 'aristo- in the magazine. The circular cratic around them. the magazine will prove a says The young art world here is valuable reference sheet and excjted . in its praise. Some of study for the film trade.. the.mdre conservative lament the era of geometry in art but Weeks Vacation are not surprised that people Costs 36 Cents , or irERnNr AiIgT3- - (P)-- For the buy places. Cubes are the keynote of the houses. Thej are built of reinforced concrete, lined with tile. Parts of the second and third stories are set back in terraces. The lmes are broken by balconies, covered recesses and windows of unusual , hollow cents a week even the poorest of Berlin children can enjoy a vacation in one of the numerous forests aroud Berlin. The city has set aside a large number of vacation recreation grounds in the woods near the city! Every 36 -- so-call- morning at the children assemble the school nearest their home and are taken to the recreation grounds by .rail, elevated or street car. They are Ninety furnished cocoa or soup on ar- French IJaby Band Wins High Praise PARIS, Aug. 13 (IP) orphans form a brass band that has won much praise at many public ceremonies. The children, some of them rival, lunch at boon and coffee and cake in the afternoon.. The weekly fee includes, car far) and, meals. , no bigger than the horns they If two children from the blow, are from five to ten years same the second family attend, in is , old. They have been trained charged half price. Additioi)-h- i Orthe Saint iGedrges-de-Lill- e Id re n are accepted free. phanage by good conductors. .Dressed inwhite, with assist- Der Mpntag Publishes ants to hold the drums . and Historical Odds and Ends straps to help support the largA BERLIN, Aug. 13 (IP) er instruments, the. band is a list of historical news items feature wherever itgoes. They published by Der Mon tag won much credit , when they states: . , , ,, , , t played : before ' a1' 'musician' That is late as 1739 a 'sleight-of-han- d ,, meeting, i artist was put, on the uW rack in' Poland until heT 'c6 Diagnose Disease i fessed to witchcraft. From Drop of Blood ' in That 1799, t complaining It-iPARIS, Aug.1 13 (P) said to be possible to diagndse against the government1 was in Denmark with two ceitain diseases l)yj examining, a punished weeks on A diet of bread ip jail drop of blood serum from, the and water. . e patient. .That, whep a Colonel Schu!Sufc'h is the contention of macher offered the first coal Doctors Douris and Mondain for sale he was threatened with as set forth in a paper which arrest for . i 5 , Economical Transportation the skins in all Policeman Becomes Scenario Writer - , 4 . BERLIN, Aug. 13 (IP) Police Inspector. Ernst Engelbrecht has tendered his resignation to the Beilin1 chief of police to become a scenario writer. Some time ago Inspector Engelbrecht attracted considerable attention with a number Oneof the foremost Consistent Progress of Ger- man filnf producing companies engaged him as playwright.Berliners Object To Horseman's Spurring BERLIN, Aug. 13 (A3) A Bedouin horseman at the Berlin Zoological Garden caused a public demonstration recently. He dug his spurs so deeply into his steed that the animal dripped with blood. t A storm of . protests was hurled at the rider. The performance terminated abruptly in a pandemonium of shril which in German whistling is always a sign of the severes disapproval. The Battle Creek Massacre GENERAL MOTORS 4 5 vj s . i j Professor dAmwival read to French Academy of Sciences, f A drop of serum from which the ted corpuscles have been temoved by centrifugal; action is placed upon glass and evaporated by uniform application of a heat of 40 'degrees Centigrade. This causes different patterns to appear, according to fhe nature of the serum. It is from these patterns that Drs. Douris and Mondain believe that .they can tell the nature of the disease from which the patient is suffering. A normal serum gives an image recalling the section of a lemon. In the case of a cancerous subject the pattern is irregular, leading the discoverers to draw a parallel withthe cellular anarchy which characterizes cancer, and permitting, they believe, the diagnosis of a cancer- ous state before the growth has developed. having fraudulently attempted to sell black stones for fuel He managed to escape by the skin of his teeth. That the executioner of the last Prince-Bisho- p of Bamberg prided himself on having exe- cuted 1,600 individuals. The cutioner died in 1805. Vacations Bring dlush of Air Traffic, exe- School 4 . (Continued Fort. The next morning about 2 the soldiers left for,- the Indian Camp on Bear River, Jim Henry and I followed the bag gage wagon all the way t the scen6 of battle, we arrived there about nine oclock, just as the sun was throwing its first faint rays upon cold white mother nature, the air was crisp and clear. The voice could be heard plainly a great distance, A 8 the soldiers came in sight of the Indians, Chief Bear Hunter, .swinging, his Buffalo robe m the air shouted, Come on you California ? Were ready .. for as , sea-coa- st pell-me- ' Roe-Ki- d ;i - Tm re-u)o- p has profited greatly from its 0al i , If otoia Privbf Cnanl prbto a bait of ltU ana. Tto oanro tract b rria eromf bfth aafa of aoory typa liotoa eoainto otrmicht-a- ar toaefc. to fieep rutted bay taaos. TWi an bib that ran-- b mmttrnmt bam a bight ftaefebatha to Floob at Chrmbt wa era aafor oeatoaat tab at tha Pmotog Grvaad friraa aaf ay eight eade enry ceecbrabb eiedidea of of bof 14. oJ WIWi VbB4l , . close association with the General Motors Corporation the worlds greatest pro ducerofabomotiveproductst The General Motors Re search Laboratories, under the direction of the' most famous scientific staff in the the General Motors engin eering staff . the vast General Motor! resources all have been constantly utilized in making Chevrolet the worlds finest d automobile! , low-price- r? unvuig, regaruiess oi when you expeetto purchase your next car come to our showroom and see today's Chevrolet! TWELVE GREAT FACTORIES 595 The COACH ThtTonriag et RoacUccc Th Choi lb, l aan aro auoofictmod la It gnat factor, bo. boated at biatogn otnyptag'fcoma throughout tha ematry. Eoory faetoiy b oqmyind with tha tout adraaood toodura auduaory known to antf-- I artery Bamdactamig Coupe The 4Doo Sedan $2? d $TQtf s sffi.vns, 2ka,o .745 urt..780 Track p , ! o wrmbrlorChoorobt'oioMairalato. Tho automotive industry -t-he General Motor. Fro ing Ground, the greatest out- - , door telfinf fcY very angry and he. rushed his dow-ll cavelry the hill and hcrorts the river. The fight began. The Golonel discovered his mistake when he saw many of his men killed by the Indians he orderal his Cavalry back. The Company was then divided and sent down upon the Indians from two different directions, the soldiers on foot were ordered to cross the river when the Cavalry were in position north and east of the Indians. The Colonel commanded, Kill every thing. Nits make lice, The fight began again in earnest. The soldiers tised their bayonets the Indians swung tomahawks. The soldiers who crossed the fiver were forced to fight in their wet clothes. Many fell and were frozen to death. Wm Hull says The scene was terrible when the hand to hand fighting began, in the midst of the fight, we saw seven young bucks, each take one of the Soldiers, horses (The soldiers having .been killed by the, first volley I .and gallop away toward the north-eas- t. The fight lasted one hour. It was found that more soldiers had been frozen than had been killed in to-dea- I a modern automobile for transportation needs. In .carrying out this policy of consistent betterment, the Chevrolet Motor Company erfoobottott hi to wsri4. Unimn tho not m4 oacfcnarue (onlitloo at the rfuiin-No- a, Chonobt amyeye, to too Mbit tatoat, thooo tooaabolartat adraatacM a foot that b tortoly PROVING GROUND Today' Chevrolet embodies in 5a.litT reChevrolet suit of 14 years of consistent you. This threat made the Colonel i Luft-Hans- l o clock w i onroto from page Seven) BERLIN, Aug. l3, (ff) More than 2,000 airplanes started from or landed at the Tempel-ho- f flying field in June. They carried 5,354 ' passengers and more than 87 torts of baggage and freight, besides tons of More than 45,000 newspapers. persons visited the airport during the month. School vacations began July 1. On that day andtthe two following almost every place' in the air fleet was sold but. vas especially Traffic heavy on the lines to the and the spas. This service Father of Wireless las been extended so that a Paid $73 a Month great number of resorts on the PARIS, Aug. 13 (IP) Edou- North Sea and on the Baltic Can the fight, v , , ard Branly is cited by news- now be reached direct Front Our position by the bagby air -papers as typifying the strug- also many resorts in the Ries-- ! gage wagon it appeared that the Indians had been entirely angle of French scientists to work engebirge, the Harz, Thuringia nihilated. under miserable conditions. and in the Black Forest. The soldiers Branly is inventor of .the returned to Coats Raise Franklin a bout seven oclock . France calls him the Storm of Protest father of the wireless. that evening. The people of BERLIN, Aug. 13 (IP) Roe-ci- d Franklin under the direction of Branly has as his only assistant in a ramshackle laboracoats, advertised by several Bishop Preston Thomas pretory, an aged woman who firms as the latest thing in pared places to make the solekes out a living by doing extra womens fashions, have stirred diers comfortable for the night. Straw was hauled to the meethours of housework in other up a hornets nest. homes. This maid of aH work, is Parliamentarians, hunters, ing house, beds were made and now the scientists Labora- sportsmen and numerous nature fires were built. Some of the tory Chief. She was intelligent lovers have joined in protest soldiers were given beds in the and the professor trained her against stlch a gross nuisance, houses of the people, in fact, a in his work. condemning young deer only a united effort was made to adFor 50 years Branly has few weeks old to brutal 'slaugh- minister comfort to the weary, worked under these conditions ter to satisfy the passing. whim wounded fighters. No charge, whatever was made for the serdrawing a salary of about $75 of certain women. It is alleged that if the fad vice rendered by (he Franklin a month Ss professor and suppeople to the soldiers. The next porting his family by occasion- becomes popular it will menace morning sleighs and teams were al piactice as a physician. all German game preserves, provided to help take the SolThese facts are, told by French for he conservation of which diers baik to Camp Douglas papers as illustrating the need so much is being done, since it (South of Salt Lake City Utah) to pay well men who give, their will mean the wholesale butch- At the same ery and ultimate extinction of as called Wmtime Bishop lives to science. , Head (Captain of all young tleei. Wm. Nelson and Wm. Militia) Tageblatt Deplores Jnspired by the German As- Hull to go to the sceneof battle sociation for the Preservation to Beauty Contents ascertain if any of (he Indians BERLIN,Aug. 13 (4J- )- Beauty of Game and the German Chamstill alive. contests are desciibed as a ber of Huntsmen, all parties of were Mr. Hull describles it as foL nuisance by the Berliner Tage- the Reichstag, with the excep- lows: We drove our sleigh as blatt. tion of the communists, passed far as the arid rode our river The Tageblatt tall! alien demanding 'fi the river. The thatjhorses through tioij to a Berlin publishing, Reithrtg adpt measures first sight to greet us was an house whieh in a circular the manufacture, 'oldlndian walking with arms announced a Vuty Lun.peti !W.erti.nig and .Hlr of all fol.VI, slow lj amongst the dead, ( , 1 Tht ClfmM Utter Cam paay b a udt at Gfaml Motors Gwvnma treatmt uitomo-ttr- ; ! jo - in Chevrolet History The vast resources of General Motors and the tremen dous manufacturing facilities of Chevrolet have made possible this I amazing quality. ; ;; Proved Design - have resulted in the most - 1 f l serial novels in a radio periodical. Saturday, August 13, 1927. ' CACHE COUNTY, UTAH wearing, apparel roe-ki- d the German ' federated, states - Features From Europe rushed to rent of asking articles CITY, $OQf-(Ouu- su Only) lTon Truck $J,QC I (CVuUfuOniy) A II pTioee f. . b Flint, Mickigaa Check Ckevniet XkUvro4 PHom They Indade thm lew I cad ostnondliog financing charfan vaiiahio. i. uKrt Ji CACHE AUTO COMPANY ; 30 South Main QUALITY n. house-keeper- ' t f LOW AT his head bowed in grief, lament- BABSON BELIEVES ing the dead, he didnt speak to MILWAUKEE ROAD us and soon left . toward the WILL BE PROSPEROUS north. Never will I forget the (Continued from page Seven) scent, dead bodies everywhere, M I counted them, eighjt deep in gpoksne. Power .is purchased one places and in seve al places from the Montana Power Com-- ; they were three to five1 wcp.,mny for the eastern end, and Alim all we counted; nearly1, from the,,Washington Power four hundred, two thirds! of thiri Company for the,' western end, number being women and'cTiJf-dre- Direct Current mbtors are used Several women were' cut and 'these serve as brakes when exposing unborn babies. Wq the; train goes down inclines. By found two Indian women alive' this process of braking the elecwhose thighs had been broken tric locomotives generate about by the bullets. Two little ' boys 10 percent of the current conand one little girl was badly sumed. I rode across the Conwounded (Having eight flesh tinental Divide in one of these wounds in her body) they were mammoth electric locomotives very willing to go with us, wc costing over $200,000 each or took them on our horses to the about four times the cost of a sleigh and made them as com- modern steam locomotive. While fortable as possible. in the cab I could not help being When we arrived at Franklin, impressed with the ease of conNathan Packer, with the help of trol, the freedom from jar and others set the broken bones of the many other advantages of the Indian women. The squaws electric power especially if used were taken care of by the pople in a country which suffers little and afterwards thfy joined a from snow and winter. Moretribe of Indians that came ta over, I believe that the roller Franklin from Bear Lake They bearings are useful in eliminatboys were given good homes and ing stopping and starting jars the wounded little girl was with a steam locomotive. . nursed back to life and health by As to whether , or not the Mary Benson Hull, a good nurse. electrification of railroads, exThis Indian girl grew up as a cept on lines with a denne trafmember of the Hull household fic, is economical, I am not pra and married a while man from pared to say. The general imOgden. She has reared a family pression is that the copper interof boys and girls. Her giris are ests, who had a large ownership s, splendid clean, in the property at the time of neat and thrifty girls. The the extension, hoped to make a youngest daughter is a graduate demonstration by the Milwaukee nurse of the Dee Hospital ,at Road which' would force all present she is in charge of a transcontinental lines to electrilarge Hospital in Nevada. , fy likewise over the mountains. It is claimed that there were This has not come to pass as other survivors from the battle, the oil locomotive is at present but these five were all who, vey economical. Furthermore, were brought' to Franklin by road maintenance costs are con- Wm Hull and his two siderably increased by the over-- ! head electrical construction1 . Logan, Utah Vo COST, which also disfigures the scenic view from the observation cars. There is no doubt but that if the extension were to be made today by. men not interested in any othey line of business, this electrification would be omitted. With this .electrical work already installed, however, it is probably the most economical method of operation. I should not be surprised to see the gap of 194 miles electrified with some of the reorganization money. Cer- thus conditions are generally satisfactory. The road now has excellent equipment on its best trains and as soon as it omits carrying tourist sleepers and day coaches on theses trains, and cuts out certain unnecessary stops, it can give the best service between Chicago and the Coast of any of the lines except the Union Pacific. Of course during a railroad above normal, trans-continent- al receivership, discipline neces- tainly the present management sarily becomes lax and emis wise in advertising, this ployees lose iheir interest not unique feature. knowing what is going .to hapOutlook For Property pen. This is evident in many It is difficult now to say just ways. For instance, although on when the Milwaukee will come a train with marvelous equipback, but it is sure to come back ment, our Pullman had no water some day. At the moment the in the morning when the passituation largely depends upon sengers wanted to shave and what Washington does in con- prepare for the day. As soon as nection with the money which the receivership ends, such the Milwaukee owes the Gov- things will never happen. A new ernment and the freight rates life wilHhen possess all. I saw a which it is allowed to charge. ticket, agent smoking cigarettes With a 4 2 percent interest while selling tickets, but these rate on the Govemment loan and same things occurred - on the fair freight rates, interest could Union Pacific and Atchison be paid on the income (or when they were in receivership. adjustment bonds) after Then even their the new company (The Chicago, seemed indifferent toemployees the real Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific) interests of their company. Of assumes control next January. course, this will be all The crop situation whicR I will as soon as the Interstatechanged Comrefer to in detail pext week is merce Commission approves the better in the Milwaukee terri- Reorganization Plan, and the tory than it has been for years. new company assumes control. Alaska iiLslowly coming back, The receiver is doing the best not only as a summer play- he can under present conditions. ground, but with great potential When this change1 does take timber and mineral resources. place and conditions are once Business with the Orient jwill more settled. I believe the new revive as son as the Chinese Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul Revolution subsides and the and Pacific will slowly but Japanese business depression is steadily come back to its formover. Moreover, an increase in er position as one of the very the price of copper would help best railroads in America. increase .business. The pabson-iha- (Coypright now registers 7 per cent Financial Boreal) 1-- so-call- ed rt 1927-Publi- shers it v |