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Show Lnuci 'i Vr vi 'xnU JvUvu, rt L, DoGaiJ Li r.ocertcdvp of ever debasing IttCif aid her by uii.g hi-- , own weapon-, a'amst 1110131 Bessie had THE JOURNAL " EARL& ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY , ed Editor AUGUSTUS GORDON i . Entered at tlie Tost Office every day In the week except at Lognn, Utah, aa Second Class Matter. fit MAIL. Sunday, Subscription Rate In Advance . , MONTH, In Advance PER MONTF, W) BY CARRIER, PER A Discount of $1.00 Peg Year will be Given for. Advance Payment for a Full Year. ADTERTISIXG RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION c 70c l , Member of Associated Press I The Aaaoelnted Preaa la excldalvely entitled to thfe nae for repuhllca-tlo- n of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and aWu the local news published therein All right of republiiation of special dispatches herein are also reserved. 29l213!45!jG;i!i7iJ8!9!30 Yesteray barometer at reading each are taken from TUB JOURNALS The above reading The yesterday Uncle Sams Fur Seals 1921'. leave Southern Waters To Summer In Alaska l either accidental injury, or It is Ann never minimized Qrac-- 't AW)ID SURGERY": 1 Lave Just finished reading an due to attractiveness She always conced-- 1 Ignorance, carelessness or d her beauty, to others as well article on surgery that was writ-a- s laziness. to herself She admired her ten by a physician and surgeon comes first because taste in dress; granted that she who quit using the surgery part weIgnorance don t know what to eat, how was a gay companion But was of his wonderful, education. He much or how. often in order to that all there was In life Did tnat was successfufl beyond the aver- - keep us in perfect health. Careexcuse a man for forgetting his He was a genius, a thinker, lessness comes when we do know vows, Were men, rs Nora had age. a large practice. He and are' careless about our hab- an(j jje said, not fair '? get a fee ofi in elimination Then comes I One thing about Grace Ann!could charge ness about that same Quest. an nevc--r understand. Had the ve kundred wou ,jars, ,r wor hat tuke less than of elimination We would rather giU no pride0 She had shown her Is the sum and take a dose of pills, pay the an Here hour. half she did amt want d to inc" visit her; her so -- gaily, carelessly, substance of the article which he ( tor for another and stronger Giace in traded upon her She ie-- ! wrote ,dose, than to make a personal mamed to meals umnvhvd mu et "Parents are easily alarmed effort to fmd out what to do and or how to do it. by Dick, laughed at Ann when the; over any condition of pain didn't talk, calling her a Pm - swelling, about a - childs head, I don't know whether yrui and telling hgr no wonder ears, throat, nose, and mouth, and .case is due to tagi injury, ignorance, Dick sot blue living with a saint. away ln their alarm, they carelessness, or laziness, but I am Jiat he wasnt the sort of man nght children to doctors, and doc- quite certain you dor t need who cared for angels, that she of surgical tors think right-awa- y and therefore I am always should have married Iluy'i Nor operations, and operations follow ready to help you. ton, and so on a instances. All readers of this paper are at Ann readied that la great many Gradually The parents are nervous, half liberty to write for information Grace was bringing Hiatus name into the conversation puipitf'v. ill, so are their children, and the upon any subject pertaining to That she was trying tQ make Du kT lack of patience among parents, health. Address all communicathink she. Ann. cared for h,m and their urge to do something, tions to Dr. David H. Reeder, 3101 Did she hope Dick would beke'e'is met by the doctor with simi- - A Mam Street. Kansas. City, Mo, an- lar Ann capable of encouraging impatience, Aft'd off the child giving full name and address and ti her man. and so give n'm to is taken the hospital for oper- at least 6 cents postage. ' ' to perhaps break up hi", nome ation CLUB NOTES VA'h this In her mind. Ai.it if All the time, or rarely, manner with Hueh became strainDear Doctor: Please caution a an is good ever, operation thing ed. noticeable because unusti.il for jn nearly your readers against the eating tfle patient. She had felt so at ease with Hugh,' be re-ti- of prunes that are not thoroughinstance there had felt he understood the situa-- ! every ly cleansed They need several currence of the trouble In the as regai ded Grace, end had to helo her Bn" row -- he j tient. An operation is a beginning washings in warm water to rernud'-einto heisT. was roldly of a senes 'of operations, gener-orJi- te move not only the soil, but the , , lye that is used in their prepara- as slw was c. 3vrvor.e. and ally. tion. I have seen not only them ceased to around in a is visiting it Hugh, hurt, pity jab thinkmg he wasnt wel the nose or throat, a shame to dren, but grown people eat large coir e. winch out tonsils 1and tear out quantities of uncooked and unWhat could she do? and sheer wickedness to washed prunes. Could they see the adenoids, It. seemed to Ann she had ri ne muti!a.e the bones of the nose process of preparing them for all possible to break up .he mti por a pure blood wU1 perform all market they would not do so ! Answer: The above is a most i anfnc .my the operating safely if giver time excellent ever time she": and helpful suggestion, a pure blood is the free gift quane-.an- d Dick it thing concerning who read it ivaRged, j of nature to those who feed on and I trust that all led with her, said she groand to forth Any expressions of t leafy vegetables and ripe fruit may tell others. Also if your is a kindly man, tell him to cer of of natures or drink who and of his accept actions, disapproval suggest It to others. He can do it Grcc. drove him further frbrt cool water I can well remember when without giving offense or hurting her Yet at times he would be his old loving self, seeming to forget every patient was first examined his trade by saying what is true that the prunes are better and there ever had been a disagree- to see if it would not be best to ment between them, or that he first operate and while the pa- more healthful ife well washed In had given any cause for Ann s tient was in the hospital, investi- warm water before being cooked. ail other possible causes for' My way of preparing prunes is to Then Ann would take heart and gate wash them thoroughly and put ailment. the meet him more than half way. now I have them in tepid water to soak? over For years, many of all to thoughts put striving way. First, night, then cook slowly for severGrace aside, and to win him back proceeded the other remove cause it and al hours. But little, if any sugar and find the She love of her by the strength for is needed if cooked in this way, need no will be there then and his advice, spent had taken more for her clothes, and took surgery .When the cause is remov- as the natural sugar in the fruit more time to make herself attrac- ed, nature does the curing, and is developed and they are' touch tive. aided and abetted by Nora the cause is, in most all cases. finer flavored. That's right, Mrs Belden, make s; yourself, pretty. Nora o.U when quorum; talk by Virgil Ann mentioned she was taking the priests were reprThere NIBLEY too much time fussing - esented by Alexander Yeates aint anyone around here as pretty as you when you takes time to fix and Newel Eliason who each Nibley, May 19. Splendid yourself up ' thehrtake priettwdom-a- u So Ann 'quieted her conscience programs were given in . , i L---. )? r y' y ' v n J ld doc-tol- & M 't LV. V 7 5 VV' I ,An- - e ,N Tjf amateur gardener is at it again more filled with hope a golfer with a new set of clubs. And with more reason. The gardener deals with a variable number of certainties, the golfer with none. At the very worst the baffled gardener fan purchase plants, but the golfer, poor wretch, can buy only more new balls to lose. Even the causual observer can not escape the great movement which marks garden after garden along the residential streets of the city ifnd its suburbs. Optimism is bringing home paockets of packages, enough frequently to of a Agriculture experiment station; many of plant Department will seeds never the get planted, but some of them will, and there will be blooms and vast pride and satisfaction to ease those backaches and callouses which inevitably bruise the tender frames of occasional laborers. The amateur gardener knows what is In store for him. He regards the lawnpatches hopefully, confident the bare patches will fill up when the sun gets in its work. Down in his heart he knows full well that even at this minute ten thousand ants, lurking happily below, are planning a summer campaign which will demand his utmost energy and craft and Ieav6 him, at the end, exhausted if not overwhelmingly defeated. s "He finds his rose bushes are alive and contemplates happily the blooms from them that will decorate the table. There will be, also, he knows, the confounded aphis, if not worse. The solitary apple tree, he notes, is struggling to release, a sign of life, which cheers him even if he cannot forget how something ale off every leaf last summer. At the least, he meditates consolingly, the ramblers will not fail him; and they never, never do. our,of o, to ward Sunday in honor of the It is the annual epic of work and hope and battle and reward, believing it not wrong if it helped motheis of the ward. (meeting was conducted by Li- Dick and belongs to all races and all times. Nothing has changed ex- her tod holdtired The following program was dell Larson, of her in a week He be if he were shut up alone with given Sunday morning in place' cept, perhaps that there are more ants. Detroit News. Xhe schools held their closing the regular claw work with Wrdses" Wednesday ""ewiing haTLnconfmed tothel? oace P. E. Anderson, wgen a splendid program was bouse a few days with a hard cold , twro minute talks om rendered by the different grad-ieden-is presiding: cares for what She onlv her She likes to show hc-- po- mot her by Donna Chugg and es jyjss Thurbec and some of A wer over men. Lloyd Anderson; song, I Knowai. nifnils dance review 41 . . uL. J I & kx&: ex-iu- sp I vl rr THE h rt I, sun-ger- To-Day- -- 8 KX1 o'clock each afternoon except Sunday. Monday refer to Saturday's reading. Monday, 31av 21, Edited by DR. DAVID H. REEDER, Kansas City Mo. , Change f EFGr3 UlTfiri. i BAROMETER READINGS Rain k another Jmi, Home Health Club i PUBLISHED BY (JACrUS Gu jTm -i once advised Grace had tw'fted he, that if uRe eouldn t hold Dick stK A'H-- at Jauit w&i ihe t?irl r,?hf Had she really failed him. a wife" that he so readily turn-to if, ,'3 pa-tri- ed chil-ofte- sod-turn-I- gaily-color- n. J ed si - j i .L,, 7 i. Pampeied vacationers are the $30,000,000 verth of eals of which the U. S. Government is guardan. On their Spring jaunt to Alaskan waters they are piotectcd from whoesale slaughter, and in 17 years they have increased from 250,000 to some 800,-- , one 0C0. A herd of the valuable animals is shown above. Below of the federal vessels which guards the migrants. i- Seattle, Wash. (AP) Under the es of Alaska British Columbn unceasing vigilance of the coast and the UnUcd States are allowed These slaveys guard and the federal bureau of to kill seals lisheries. Uncle Sams wards of must be made at least tnrte n;is the Pacific more than 800,000 fur from shore with tne use of puniseals are bound for their Alask- tive weapons and boats an breeding grounds only" a few thousand ai ' From early spring until June the killed each year by Indians Uu valuable mammals lives are pro- tvpe of sealng has impeded tN' tected as they migrate along tne increase of seals Pacific coast from southern CaliMere tnan of t'"r fornia latitudes to the Pribilof is- killed bv Indians are- - femac Alasof 300 west miles the lands, .which svam closer ta shore and kan mainland in the Bering sea are easier to catch. Coast tmrl By interiational "agreement ..only and fisheries vessels guard anunrt Indians are permitted to 'Kill the we of guns and pd.vcr boats b seals as they travel northward Indians. in numWith seals inereas-nConstant watchfulness to prevent pelagic sealing resulted in an ber the Lttle Pnbilofs have becIncrease in the number of seals in ome more than ever Uncle the herd to 808,870 in 1927. When Sam s "treasure isands St the killing of seals on the iiign Paul and St. George islands, the seas was prohibited by treaty in largest of the five, are the sum1911 the herd numbered only mer homes of the seals and o 1 250,000 and was rapidly nearing them are located the rookeries or extinction Before the start of breeding grounds Although or 7 pelagic sealing during the latter a few square miles in area vuh part of the eighteenth century, a fraction of the area ,f A!n the total was more than 5 000,000 slrnds have ictmncJ 0 i1 r of fisheries United States more than $15,000-00- 0 With the bureau -in revenue as compered wdn killing only part of the tree-ye- n old males the number is again the Alaska purchase price 0? neanng the million mark. Under $7 r, oo.oco the young control d government The 22 131 skns pelted in 192G r -, male seals are killed at the breedi- were sold bv the bureau of fishng grounds on the Pribilof in- eries at auction foj $745 410 The In 1927 the government 1927 shins will be auctioned this lands could anTOr took 20,942 seals, leaving enough year by vvi'h each fur selling for 1 d r to assure the herd s an average of '35 to $43. the 1' seat . A dicing class will be consequential. Dick And she knew Young seals are killed Amenern herd at its present sire l Af? .organized, yith Uefesons begfn-th- growth. Dick believed Grace Ibved hint (talks by Foiley Yeates because ef their finer wade of fur is valued at approximately $30 Helen njaK. next wqelL. i Eliason ; . story, she had told him so Ann did ton the abongin- - 000,000 , t , not doubt. Dick was easily flatter-- ; Yeates; ( solo, :: Violet Larson ;; the During migrations fino 'arrived during L and go believe her. ed: he would Violet pv ,n,week at the home of Mr. and of his wav to make her for- - po CAR& Of THANKS recitation by ,, iola An-- Mrs. Caros Egan mve him for bemg married. With heai Moth-; ladies chorus appreciation Dick believed j Israel Yeates left Thursday1 put that ,we wish to cvpicsi ourfthanks thing like this in words He was ers Love by Elizabeth Morgan f0r clear Cieek to biW home and gratitude for the many e- . - icautiful little his daughter' Myrtle, who has Y ellsvilie, hif acfionT nraved ?nd, ,cmPanyMay 21 The of love and sympathy to re the iflteTnvlutioS to Grace to given teaching there durmg the fant child of Mr. and Mis. Al- - manifested from the by our friends lur-vi- n .fhers Sunday school season, schoolpast ma'n with them over ruling Anns our of bcieavement and sad diswere ring Central, and Lechtenberg to his superintendency Mrs. Delila ''Rpueche, wenf to Grace, wishes, his deferring 0f!s 0t n kind and tnbuted by Mae Rasmussen, Kavsville obedience to her demands attend Idaho and a grandchild of ST-SSt,fatil'-- r h. ley L. Lloyd died at their hcme;orlh' let us sPe'iaby The Melvin of Smith remains 'wi '! pneumonia. r u kop, the Hotel Eccles man hves, M, own. mine. nd Jart'. But! to Wellsville been Jembdeling John were brought j16 following progiam Ann said aloud to herself at sicians, trendered the find that way she could not MRindlisbackers home at Amalga where they were buried those v. ho sent, floial nwghbws, Grace Intrigues .meeting: talk on (Tomerrow mothThe afternoon. Tuesday v ho m any Ann:, Parents.) adu- - er came with the baby to at- - 0 jton Eliason; mixed . i usristed in lola Anderson and company ; j ates from South Cache tend held setvice the luneral ujmg to make high It has been estimated that this tgjjj by Bishop Eugene John-- , this venr Vriolpt T .nr son and here recently at the cemetery!?111' Gulden lighter oy their un- rets of kmdnef-- and love. . 2e Plano solo, Violet Larson. Luella Shaffer. Marvin Yeates for her. mother, Mis. farley.i 'urmg lion years longer. A lot of o'ung and Prokram . Sunday l CT and Lloy-evening, an(j Ait on Eliason are graduat-the baby caught a hiHrs; p!1Tn , people will take this as a logical; was run ' cold which i 8lven m commemoration of Cr excuse for not trying to make any- resulted in pncu-'- p the II, A. C. IL'liri'ei1 the restoration of 'the Aaronic moma causing her death. thing of their lives. -.- ... Lditn II. ,Mr3. Thrme'sen, The best thing to take spots priesthood, the following taking t a ioVe song to a woman,1 out of carpets is a good strong part: talks by Omer Chugg and andsing shell invite everybody present' Popularity: The transient re- -; Sometimes floating bonds kep i husband. Austin Morgan of the deacons to Join in the chorus. ward for subservience. ta business above water. two-th'r- ds Gib-bon- g i PURITAN WIFE r. - A By JANE PHELPS t. ' Purnndied Exclusively by Georg p Matthew Adams Service ; 5,'1, f! 8 West foth Street New Yoik ; ! , , 4 SYNOPSIS OP PREVIOUS CHAPTERS Ann Peabody, a New England girl, marries Dick Belderr. a California rancher. Ann is a bit puri tanical, while Dick is otten gay and irresponsible. Ann strives to be all she can to Dick, but (iTace Edmunds, a San Francisco girl, visiting her cousin, Ned Prentice, , that Dick had ceased to love her Notml ' Par-(SU(W- en u.se5crnh', r,u,rLS,Po"naJ;hufg- W1 quartet.ftwo Wonderful Cream For Dry Skins new marvelous Cleansing Cream is on the market, containing Cocoa Butter. It melts right Into the skin, cleaning every pore of grime and dirt, and will not stretch the skin or make It sagm simply marvelous gy, it complexions. youthful keeping A Ask for MELLO-GLCream with Cocoa O, the Butter. Advertisement But JThihkof 'theHat W : 'i - r; riSEEWHiLLIKERS. VlHERESMYHAiT? ft Ort.GOSH!! COVID GET I RID OF THE BLAMED THING DO VV Va OVLDsfT MAFIA WEAtt 1 At'VMoRE 115 'Mi 'ft ot ' m 1 m new Will aot grpw hair. Riter Bros. Drug K 1' jg SlMCE MOM 8ouCHT OLE HAT AM MADE ME . I GOTTA GO BY MYSELF VutAR I AIL THE TIME BECAUSE THE KIDS All ME S'SSY AM' ViOWT PLAY WITH I GEE, hl!sd m.L lM, 12 Tma CAll ME Jis any-,t!ers- TUBBY CHAPTER lxyii. Ann was becoming completely disheartened, so fepiful was she three-year-o- at , W makes life hard for Ann at times because of her flirtations with Dick. Grace has made pretence to take poison; has also tried td attract little Jack. After she becomes a moving picture actress she seems to fascinate Dick still more Then her parents die and she comes to stay with the Prcntlcs indefinitely. Grace criticises Ann's clothes, Dick agrees with Grace. Hugh Norton gives a party. Grace and Dick leave for a motor ride, and Dick kisses Grace on his re- turn. Ann sees. Hugh Norton trier think She had given herself wholly to to make Ann forget Graee. Ann and Dick quarrel. Ann begs Grace her husband Her pure love couid to keep away from Dick. Then everything is forgotten save the fact that little Jack is ill. Grace spoils ann s FRIENDSHIP fyed "It ( to be happy with her. There must have been a strain not all Puritan in Ann. for often site would rather divorce Dick tc make him happy than to have him stay with her and Jack simply felt it a duty Ever since she had made he: appeal to Grace to keep away from Dick, and it had been refus ed, Ann had not had a really hap py moment. It had been a terribly hard thing for her to do and only the exigencies of life made it possible- Then little Jack's illness had taken all her time, all her attention, all her strength. But now that he was better, almost well again, and Grace kept uo her intimacy with Dick. Ann felt there soon would be, a crisis What how it would all end, she dared not -, . vt"'. |