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Show I I THE JOURNAL. LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY. PAGE SIX Monday, May 21, 1928. UTAH. Colonial South Still Lives In Charteston River Heights River Heights, May 21. the Graduating exercisea-fo- r River Heights eighth grade were held Wednesday, May 16. Song Only A Dream of Summer, Mr. , Pulsiphers students. Prayer, Walter Scholes. Song' Robin Red .Breast, first and Growth And second grades. Welcome adGreat Naomi Anderson; piano Made In dress, Progress selection, Gladys Humpherys. Agricultural ; Indus-- . Song May Queen, third, tries Mayor Hancey fourth and fifth grades under Radah Frank, Valedictory And 0. G. Cardon Miss by" Thomas Chipman. - The Bee was sung by sixth, sevTalk. . enth, and eighth grades under May 1, 1921, Hyde Park pro- L. G. Pulsipher. Happy June duced 7500 pounds of milk Dgys sung by first and secdaily. May 1 this year Hyde ond grades under Miss Mary Park produced rore than 9,000 Kendrick. Mr. Hammond of pounds of milk in one day, said Providence the cerMayor Henry Hancey at the tificates topresented the graduates. goodwill meeting sponsored by the Logan chamber ' of com- Bramwell Peck of Logan delivmerce in Hyde ' Park - Sunday ered. an address to the graduatevening. Mayor Hancey, who es which was both interesting Sweet - Sumrepresented llyde Park at j the and i instructive. meeting, further stated that mer, Days sung by; sixth; sevfifteen months ago there were enth land eighth grade girls. no large poultry flotkS in Hyde Oscar Rice. The Park, Today there! are more Benediction,were Ph6ebe Riche-so: graduates; than twenty,' of j these large Gladys Humpherys; Naomi houses being constructed. ForWindsor Rice, ThomAnderson, used to raise from merly they forty to fifty bushel of grain as Chipman, Eldon Jensen. The per acre. Now it is not: uncom; River Heights school is now mon to raise from eighty to out, having completed a year of ninety per acre. It has not Been good work. We are glad to state to increase tlfe area of that our beloved Kissible principal and but by better farm- teacher, L, G. and Pulsipher, been have ing methods, they able to increase the! produc- Miss Radah Frank and Miss retion and quality. Hyde Park Mary Kendrick, teachers, has rich farming lands includ- main with us next school year. Mrs. Clark of Morgan, and ing irrigated and dry farms. It has always been noted for its her son Jessie Clark and wife fine draft horses-- S of Provo have been visiting ; ; Mayor Hancey praised 'itne With Mr, and Mrs. John Wood. early pioneers n llyde Park Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Rider who built bo well ana left such motored to y Salt Lake City a heritage to the' present genMay 13 and returned Wed eration. lie called attention to the high type-opeople and nesday, May 16. Olsonmentioned many prominent fnen Miss Anna spent in schools, colleges and other .Thursday at Salt. Lake City. sciences as well as! in; business Miss Catherine Decker of life now living elsewhere, whd Snowflake, Arizona, and who had received their early train recently returned from the ing in Hyde Tark.1 He gaVe a Northwestern' States' mission number of - local examples of spent this" week as the guest of where the people of Hyae Park Misd Esther Plsdni had cooperated for civic imMr. and Mrs. Harry of A Clyde number provements. blocks of sidewalk pavement is of California who have been being put in and improvements visiting with Mr. and .Mrs. have been made at the ceme- Karl A. Kowallis has returned tery, and on the streets. Hyde to their home-- ,. Park has just paid off its bond The Mothers day program indebtedness for its water which was given Sunday morn works and has one of the best water systems of any of the ing was very good. Reading. settlements in the valley. They Esther Olson; piano selection, have electric lights, telephone Tyra Wilson; talk, Lyle Wood; service and all the advantages song, I Know a Name Pri of a suburban community. mary and Kindergarten de O. G. Cardon, speaker for the partments. All mothers present Logan chamber of commerce, were presented with booklets. showed how we were interdependent on each other and that we live in Cache valley. the farmers problems were the The Imperial Glee club, unproblems of the business men der the direction of Professor and everybody else. The busi- A. J. Sonthwick, was present ness men are interested in bet- and renndered the musical selter crops, flocks and herds in ections for the evening. These Cache valley and desire to see were very highly appreciated. crops with good prices. The meeting house was well food Cardon stressted the im filled including a number of portance of better quality in; people from Logan. Bishop J. W. Seamons of products and showed how it brings better prices: The dairy Hyde Park had charge of the industry amounts to more than meeting and expressed the apa million and a half annually preciation of the community for the meeting with the Lofor Cache county. In speaking of Cache valley, gan chamber of commerce. Mr. Cardon showed that it has For its size, it is doubtful if all the standards for content- there is another settlement in ed homes. We are secure from the country with a finer and and earth more impressive civic center famines, floods quakes. We have contact with than Hyde Park has. They have modern conveniences with all a beautiful church buiding, surthe settlements of the valley rounded by groups of flowers, and other parts of the state shrubs and lawn. The officers and goodwill such as our good highways, railways, telephone lines, tele- commitee of the chamber of graph lines and it will not be commerce appreciated the prelong until aviation will be here, sence of the Logan people at as another form of contact. We the meeting. Also the fine turn have good churches and schools out on the part of the Hyde and amusement hal's to form Park people and the splendid social contact. As for beauty, spirit of welcome and apprecia there is only one Cache valley tion exhibited. as people who leave here and A psychologist advises married go away always admit. At this time of the year, it stands out men never to talk business with in bold relief as a beautiful their wives. This would be exgreen carpet and with our beau- tremely good advice, the Cynical tiful mountains, cold streams, Bachelor avers, to give to unmargood highways, rich farming ried men as a means of averting lands and many other advantag the necessity for such advice lat- es, we should all be proud that er. j D O II G fc B ROTH ER.S IT HIDE X '.U rff X , How do YOU test a motor car? s n, - Is speed the first test you apply to a motor car? . . , Then drive The Victory Six, for no car in its class is so fast. - f - Sun-dh- f - ( 1 1 ; M the rich past of Charleston, S. C., once a rival of New York. Around the old city market (Left) vegetable venders like the fellow at the right still market their produce, and a groundnut cake maumer (left) vends her delicacies. Even a chimneysweep days.. Charleston . college (inset) is a reminder of (lower right) has matriculated 143 freshman classes. i; , TREE Carrots, green corn, turnips, when the British general occu And then the pied the town as his headquarters., okra, tomatoes! Fort Sumter, where the first shot e, sum total of all thp of the Civil war was fired, stands bunch! Soup, in the harbor. The old market still has Its But the chimney ' sweeps .have stalls, with negroes sitting .behind given way to radiators, and gone Northerners who are all but one of the groundnut their produce. No longer does come in from the Clyde docks cake maumers. Ro-rbribe them to talk their native the shrill negro accents announce gullah, which to the uninitiated in flat that, another Charlestons chimney is virtually a trange tongue. ! The powder magazine, a relic of has been swept' clean by the inOn only one corner colonial days, its disuse ordered as side route. is there a ground, cake .manumerT' early as 1170 because it was obso. other places would call her A pq; lete, still stands! St. Michael's nut cake mammy, and she r.nds a is in. 1761, church, opened copy business dull. s, Lonof St. The chimney sweeps familiar in St. Phillips represents the don. first establishment of the Church other days were litUfe negro boys, of England in the province . of dressed in rags and tatters, who The only French Hug- went from hoose to house. Carolina. A uenot church in America, a struc- city ordinace still requires rest ture of rare architectural beauty,' dents to have their chimneys is here. cleaned every month or be fined, t Pringle House, a perfect type of but in this modern day the law colonial architecture, bears on one is a dead letter. One lone of the mantlepieces a sketch , mercialized sweep re drawn by one of Cornwallis staff mains. '04 stock-in-trad- Ask Montana, ...More rado, Pennsylvania! ' Colo- - , I per pound is the answer. A body with only 8 major . parts of o! i hill climber? yet sturdierl -. it S '. Dash over raR. t smooth traveller? 1 over old cobble pavements and youll marvel! For The Victory Six is different. No body sills no body overhang t chassis the full width of , the body a lower center of gravity. Sidesway, bouncing, rear wheel chatter magically absent, road tracks ! I , Martins-in-the-field- power lighter by 175 pounds ... Head room equal to any xrmy? superior to most in its class. Wider seats leg room. Big! . 'more " And a beauty! Rakish and trim in line, richly upholstered, beautifully lacquered at smart hues tomorrow's style with Dodge dependability. com-chimn- ey , brought out an interesting phase f of the trend of the times-- witness A car that you should try oat now asked permission to expiain his 4 yourself at the wheeL activities for the information of the press. Nowadays tlere is a Sedan, $ 1095 ; DeLuxe real contest for newspaper space Coupe, 1045 ; ! Written For The Journal by National Editorial Association- - as each side attempts to grab the DeLuxe 1170 ; Coupe, $1170 Sedan, honors. Legislators prepare press o. b. Detroit, statements before public speeches Sport Sedan, $1295 or in any matter where the opWashington, May 18 Opinion i tired legislators - and demanded position might score more heavily prevails in political circles here that they report for duty. That is in newspaper accounts. That is that preconvention campaigns for one of the reasons why filibusters one reason why trained writers Tune in for. Dodge Brothers' Presidential nomination are night sessions are deplored are popular as aides to men high Radio Program every Thursday ed this year almost solely upon in Congress. rin public office. An unmistakable sign of ap8 to 8:30 ( Pacific time ) personalities rather than issues-WheNight men, and not Issues, are at proaching elections is the gener- ONE YEAR SINCE NBC Pacific Coast Network stake bitterness is bound to de- ous attitude of Congress toward LINDBERGH FLEW velop. This is evident from the the government employees. ApOVER ATLANTIC back-was- h , of the Senatorial quiz proximately 150.000 workers will administered to Herbert Hoover be benefited by the enactment of Continued from page one last week. The story is circulated the Welch bill carrying increases in the underground political chan- amounting to $18,000,0"UO. annually of humor, his smile and' his gennels of the Capitol that the em- A bill sponsored by Senator La eral appearance that the ! thought ployment of a special committee Foilette has passed the Senate then iirst occurred to me to ask 68 West .Center Logan, Utah of Senators was a deal among the giving the hundreds of thousands him to become my guest at the other Republican candidates aim-o- f postal workers a half day on Embassy. 1 knew tnat arrangeis ed directly at Mr. Hoover. It Saturday all the year instead of ments had been made by the known that Vice President Dawes; only during the summer months-i- Aeronautical Committee to 1 ALSO THE STANDARD SIX ttPS TO (970 AND THE SENIOR SPt SU99 TO S7W blamed fori There is another bill which passed him in charge of arrival, for take freely criticized and this the existence of this investigating; the Senate giving those in the no 6ensc a government prior to the convention tal service an increase of 10 per waf. the claims cent for night work. There are not there. but the Committee was field on account of the traffic jam sweep over the world. Not until that The Hoover camp m measures which have passed Vice President expected to bene-(othtook him by the and had returned to the Embassy, the next morning, when 1 saw the fit by the inquiry of the specialist this session designed to increase handimmediately and said: "My boy, come where he arrived simultaneously newspapers, did I begin to realize Senate committee because ne. is the salaries of government wor-th- e with me; 1 am going to take you with Lindbergh ahd the French the magnitude of this event. Then best known of the "darn kers- - The legislator can well home and look after His " It is predicted that tho ford to open up the officers, and he took them in the thought came to' me of the purse strings. face lighted up and he you." Are said; will be convention is it the taxpayer who you? Then I will be significance of it gli, also of my Republican (because ready in a lev, charge. act of marked by wrangling and heated (has to pay the bill in higher him to the Embassy as soon soon arrived as minutes, e after, and the which taking I fix Vie I before a candidate is rales and personal taxes, placed the United really windows of for these newspapermen who had learned States Government sen. The Democrats, too, have behind film-FroImpartial wage studies show Frenchmen willmynotship, their family troubles, and the, that the government workers have do it. Before I couldknow hov to of his whereabouts in the mean- that moment on it was my restram him time, 4 were gathered at the Em- earnest endeavor and of ail my Houston convention will be any- the advantage over those in pri- and whilst my son and daughter-in-la- bassy By that time Lindbergh had staff that there should be nothing thing except a ratification meet- vate industry because they are were telephoning to the had an opportunity to get some- to cause regret for this action, or ing. always assured of their jobs and The night sessions which hate are not affected by industrial de- Embassy in order to ny.ke ready thing to eat, take a bath and was to mar the lads perfect accomto receive him, he dasied out dressed in a pair of my pyjamas plishment. been inaugurated by the Senite pression which causes lay offs As he did not immediately return and are designed to clear up the eal among private citizens. Aside Too much has been mace of my dressing gown and slippers, realized I that he 'Was again lost. wreathed endar before adjournment. It has from having an average salary He . in smiles, and was the part- - in Lindberghs success after evidently was' unable to make happiest .youth I have seen in nis arrival. Of course, the fact not been determined whether Con- far in excess of the income of an' gress will adjourn on May 26 or average working man, government known to the men who went with many a day, I am of the impres-iio- n that the prestige of the United June 6. The House will hold night employees have what amounts to him, who did not speak English that he will always look back States government i3 behind any sessions shortly in order to wind a two months vacation as against his intention- to return 'to us. They upon this precise moment as one man is a factor of tremendous on heard t'.ie word Embassy of the best moments of his life. up its affairs The filibusters are thC two weeks vacation given by importance. But I would like all started - immediately for the I told him that the newspaper- to J expected momentarily to complet- private industry to the salaried know that feat men were all downstairs eager to would have been Lindberghs ely tie up all legislative machinery. worker. This is covered bv a pro-- Embassylittle more than ha sooivtis I realized the situa-annu- write the story of his arrival. He a great athletic feat had he not Night sessions of Congress have vision which allows thirty days! a tendency to wreck social life in leave and thirty days sick tione I my son and my daugh said he would willingly receive been precisely what he is. And it w, Mrs. Vincent As tor and them, and they all came up to is a satisfaction to know that Washington, Not even the United j leave When the average workman are free from calls gets sick he is docked or loses a Mrs. tlarence Hay, of our party, his bedroom, and listened to the after one States Senators year of adulation by the by the truant officer. Whenevei days nay. The government is far StRrt for the Embassy. I, together modest recital of the thrilling story whole world and of constant enon is ol made the floor more liberal. One of the chief at- r.ith the officer from the Elysee. of his great adventure. His con-qne-t deavor a real continuation of his g demand for a the Senate quorum and the tractions of a government job arfe went to the hangar .where the of his Paris and his triuip-ph- European flight this young man absentees are noted, the Senate he short hours, approximately six ship had been taken in search of progress to Belgium and Eng- goes on winning respect and esan order calling hours a day. That explains the him, but did not find him. I real- land and his return to America all teem not only by his prowess as frequently adopts the long waiting list of applicants de- ized that he must have upon the Sergeant the world now knows. an aviator, but. above all, by the ' Senate police officer, to bring vhe sirous of getting on thq govern- to the Embassy, and soproceeded I drove As conscious as we were of the force of his fine character. He still . truants into the Senate Chamber. ment payrolls there at once. Fortunately fame that had come so suddenly remains, after the lapse of a year, Last year during the filibuster on An Incident during hearing beof the to this daring youth, 1 believe that a gallant flyer and an admirable Miller, a Boulder Dam, police officers of the fore the Federal Trade Commis- - Embassy and my secretary private secretary none of us foresaw the wave of example of American1 idealism, Senate invaded the Ded rooms of sion regarding the public utilities had not been able to reach the universal homage rthat was to character and conduct. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER f f 4-d-oor 4-p- f Frank W. Blair Co. ---1' ! pos-debat- cho-jtag- k Vn , m3. V,. h'i al al TEA JAPAN- - Are you interested in economy? , , 21 'miles per gallon at 25 miles per hour is average gas consumption for this famous Six. pre-radiat- or ter-ln-J- r p. - DYMENT i Is acceleration a major consideration? . , 1 5 to 25 miles in 7Vi seconds 10 to 45 miles in 13 seconds tell the unparalleled story J of Victory pick-u- Picturesque characters and historic buildings help keep vivid Charleston, S. C. (AP) Picturesque old Charleston, stronghold still of Southern aristocracy, clings to he beauty of ancient buildings, types and traditions. In the early days wealthy rice planters and qther plantation owners had their vast farms in the adjoining territory and lived hi Charleston. Like New Orleans the town was the goal of many Frenchmen. It became one of the leading social and cultural centers of the South. At one tune it was larger than New. York city. Time, of course, has brought many changes, but the city still is noted for its social and cultural advantages. Many of the old buildings , are standing, and one finds quaint types of past dkys. The sea a grass basket weavers ply their trade, and their products are shipped ,,, throughout .the The baskets are made country. from marsh grass, woven with palmetto strips, for every conceivable use to which a basket can be putt Shine em up, boss? the cry ol negro bootblacks, reaches students at Charleston College, which last fall matriculated its one hundred and forty-thir- d freshman class. The vegetable hawkers still bilance their overflowing trays upon bandaged heads while they call their wares. at-Ar- - -- |