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Show PACT Tv70 WeJnusua.v, TTIS JOURNAL, LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY. UTAH February 6, 1520. THE JOURNAL " PUBLISHED BY RARLSENGLAND PUBLIS HING COMPANY GORDON AUGUSTUS Entered at to Post - i st Ottlcs every day la to week except . Logan. Utah, ss Second Class M&ttv ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION Member of Associated Press ntltted to ti ns for repnfcUc. The Associated Press la exclusive credited to It or not etherwia credited la tot Mon of all news newa local the therein. also publhhed paper and All right at rspuUUcutlon of special dispatcher herein era also, reserved. aha.., WHa. w..c .mrMW.iiutnmtMti xen. socyoQonaaoQaonca At Your Reiali Drag Store barometer readings Fair J Kaiq Chance , BlUP Sal ffew fm fetok fcuranM mad wousitfafr TU WiiiiauiidiiHsiJHeiiimiiisiiiiiijnii The above readings are taken front THUS JOURNAL'S barometer at 4:08 oclock each atternoon except Sunday, The yesterday"- reading each Monday refers to Saturday's reading. - PEACE HATH ITS VICTORIESiw - a upsaai'Mw iipainn is an X utterance of a sound philosopher that is often quoted. Throughout all recorded history great victorious generals have been landed to the skies in history, in sagas and martial songs; and yet the fame of the Prince of Peace and Savior of the world ' outshines and will outlast them all The terrifying results of the World War with its myriad of tragic deaths on the field of battle ; the number of human wrecks ' it has left; the woeful devastation wrought in France ; the vast wealth that was spent and the immense national debts that it created, have awakened the worlds proletariat to the necessity of finding a more sane way of setting international disputes; and this brings into world-wid- e prominence Secretary of State Kellogg and the peace pact that he succeeded in having passed, to which we have made frequent reference, in which the high contracting parties agree to renounce war as a means pf settling in ' ternational disputes. close administration of With the the present it is announced and return to his will Mr. from service retire that Kellogg public home in St. Paul, Minnesota, to live among his old friends, He will be welcomed there, and honored for hia accomplishments as a diplomatist and champion of peace and world brother-hood. He will lay down his task with the realization that the ' long years of his service to state and nation have been unselfishly and generously given, and that in the lengthening shadows of the ; afternoon he has been able to render to his' own country and tq the friendly nations of the world a really valuable service. Today, in every country, Mr. Kellogs name is identified with the constructive undertaking to outlaw war. He will not be remembered by so many as a member of the United States, Senate or as Ambassador to the Court of St, Jamess, in both of which offices he served with distinction, as by his later accomplishment as $ diplomatist of peace: Again it has been proved that opportunities for constructive and acceptable service come to those who are willing and ready to serve. They are not chosen by popular acclaim or prepared by jnethods of secret training in the craft of statesmanship. Until called to represent his .Government in litigation affecting an attempted railway merger in the West some twenty or more x years ago, Mr. Kellogg was not widely known outside Minnesota and Wisconsin, Afterward he was elected and served as Senator from Minnesota.' IfiS training in the sehool of diplomacy was no oore intensive than that received by hundreds of men with tvhjra, he 'associated for jrear. except, during .thg 'period pf, hia service as Ambassador iq London, put front his experience and as pbservatjon aS QEACE hath ita victories no less renowned than war " . t- - t , j V. Those who.emerga .thus and cKampibrr able, tq, offer. ' ,i :h been conspicuous human- qiWeiy Theii iqsigbt opportunists,tf. itarian undertaking are pot jnhst probe beneath the superficialities and discern deeper things. The proclamation which is designed to emancipate the world from war must await, it is true, the time foT its enunciation, just as that emancipating American slaves from bondage awaited the hour when it could be received and understood.But each, in its turn, required a leader and champion with the vision to discern the hour and the courage and statesmanship to formulate, and defend it, On Friday last a group of leaders in Congress including Mr. Leuli woman tat H. Co mmbr nt, 1 I h onljr Mexico I Nw of toftoliur Submarine Testa Made Yesterday Were Successful Hearing of Wool fuel fifcwl ce?Kbb w f BRAXi Beitabie Haj ii itest. Safest. PfcUGGim IV t rt ,59c S,U Urn, uMAUrtn .1. iuOmt rwur MwX , 'J' 1 S ETrtpl UriWtitoweBwtMw. . ifawi SbiiiM r Stabfy . 79c M . NmrdmmTmim ftwHto A 3 For 2Sc Rcxatfa Soap CMwn 39c i D . .49c ... MnUto,i-a- . . . ,49c . Wnpfid CciotI 14k 69c H U. Mdk CWrtU Bu- . , 69 . . 39c wn , 19c . 53c pJi 1- - CANDY STATIONERY t " BaHoeft Pmmd Paper mad koto fear Bon Vmad Eaamiapm KUmUOT4AUOTPik.M-OT- . ,93c UmlWSrfKHMMTto Rtoto ....... TSbmiot iUh CIiotmA Tariff Begins Today imiijM w at ... jWmrtlaadu , , , , 19 I to I yto 39c UMn n T Pte TOILET REQUISITES HOUSEHOLD NEEDS 98c UwMifSrtortoeto- - -- 49c . , S. CnO, Trwim Cu, . , .3 fa 25c Awtwl CoH Cm .39c mini CUrtr VotUotI . , , 2 HwmjCmwBvttwCrtlCrMW 39c , 59 &.UOT7. Wk Imr , 9 HmmrUluVcrtl , FUrtU,kl 19c to 39c Um Cmw Butter Skii Crtui tw, U4U,' WC r Latin KrtW rw (Continued From Page One) I. WJWM nynn..' water, he was confident those today from 79 and HQ feet also would prove satisfactory. If these later tests prove successful, he said, there wiU have 'been a protection against a1 catastrophe such as befell the S 4 December 17, 1937, when forty mep lpst thely lives. f. wrfecfc pram KiwM ..... W UotRo'S. E 39c . . ,25c . . . 29c 3fo10c 39c 29c Hr4 Catoy, Ik jrt y PURETEST AND REXALL PRODUCTS Continued from page one fywUrt IsHe AcU P..S.r, what Is known in the trade as 44rs. The rate would be a reduction of 7 cents a The lower pound. grades under 44s go- chiefly Into plushes and other upholstering POTOTMtStokaBBtorboMKIWOT- FOTtnt Clyc. - 4- -. wart Hurt PuratOTt IkOT. Clycaria Suppomtonm Pfltl iUutl ot Uwt( 12 While production In this country had increased -- 23" percent since 1922, when the present tariff law became effective. Hagenbarth said there was still a need for further production. Increasing population and rehabilitation of urope were cited as holding great future Pqpntotf CutinTabi, 6 tOV 15c 77e 19c 19c , 39c 19c 9c 23c ... BuaB CaUrrt JeDy tun Cot Solmt. .79c ,39c .15 uUieOTf.WUMtolrOT.ltu. urt Lu. iUpirU Cdd TW. 19 79 feunV-HnueawpS1-- - Retail AUaptU 16 oou . ' Kleczo Denial Crcmo The fetty eta af Sla&so wiH Lerp teeth white, year guwt breath sweet. totilhy tad Rijder Friw tto 19c you . . .19c 79c H-- R yu SALE PRICE . . assortment ef stvtet that w1t ef tha requirements enure famuy. e quality A ayJ aalufy the b4 Rafwtor THE DURING 26th THE BtRTKCAY iALS PXJCC . Keep Priae ISa tha ski to healthy ca- - MONTH BIRTHDAY OF H SALE FEBRUARY A , Y Delegates to Meeting E Continued from page One day would be agreeable to them as a meeting date at Santa Fe. The question of ratification of the Colorado river pact by Utah occupied the attention of that state's legislature yesterdays one of the developments being an announcement by Representative Louis J. Halter, chairman of the house special Boulder Dam ' committee, that; his eommjttee probably- wquld. report favorably soon on, two bins providing rattficatiDn jibe R . . . . Three States To Send by Utoh.of.tqa 3 Jonteel Soap i hrt caka at qsahty ia there freely. A , E Qnlity Taoii Enatcj . .59c I T BIRTHDAY hrtaalea. by. Representative Hull, Democrat, Tennessee, that the American Farm Bureau Federation had estimated that the fanners bad paid $31.000, OOQ of the increased clothing cost of $91,000.-00- 0 a year under the present rates or more than the total benefit received by the wool growers Hagenbarth said he did not bellevd was accurate, this estimate - - Rot. W.m, i, hateTr,MOTtoAvltor materials We Cordially Invite f I You f Eifea,Ers oriwi'? T f ata"cehgaat. i, f , ......... vQup Cisstcmcrs Come Back t j Whcreiit)out;0f A Trotsky Is Question -- - State Journal. f it mt AmmdmM nrM tor mmmj Anria Vice-Preside- nt President Coolidge has become and such, an ardent sportsman such an expert with the rifle, we should think the photothat graphers who accompany him on his hunting trips would be a little nervous after all the provocation they've given him. Ohio nbninf. parttmt m iinprnnlUil otto ; mmm , ..... rvtJi away HU WUkmwmm faan Cot Non Fm aft arm ftfaiftr tob to mrm U fa farr bmim yen kut totno to 26to prteto week! mbnrwi Wwr to Uui MennhamiiM mk pnamm mm toal you mma admm om mi yam fag jrrMimi, m4 Oodfar-to favtof pmmmr at TW hr second term. Continued Irom Page One movements had been kept secret, it was said, to avoid demonstrations. Dispatches from Constantinople, however, reiterated statements that no trace has been found there of the former Red leader. There was a report from Berlin that the Soviet government had asked the German government for a visa for Trotsky's passport, at was denied the Berbut this have Dawes, suggested that Secretary Kellogg should be awarded the Nobel prize for the outstanding contributionto lin Soviet embassy. world peace last year. ' Aviator A cablegram has been sept to the Nobel prize committee at Atlantic Dies In Berlin Oslo, Norwary, recommending Mr. Kellogg because of hia work in negotiating the treaty to renounce war.which has been popuDisease Berlin, Feb. 6 AP) has cut short a life which larly associated with his name. some of the Those who signed the cablegram in addition to Mr, Dawes reatfhamrlfs of war and avla-yea- rs were Vice President elect Curtis, Nicholas Longworth, speaker of the House, Senators Burton and Fess of Ohio, Shipstead and Schall of Minnesota, Walsh of Montana and Representative ' Newton Of Minnesota. to daamU VSHPA . ' h dmrtmm ma eppwtwly to w mad m wtmdm by lb bwebto mad lfwrtorwag bwiwitto I nlla-- i3 p The RexB Stores 26tl Year of Leadership Lp-D-y t Perfume Cia rNomel Bettln Daring February 1 his exile on the island of Wlerin-ge- n. tlon. Says New Device Baron Ehrenfried Gunther Von Assisted Hawks Huenefeld, one of the three men Of his literary works the who made the fust westward air based of drama, Hagen Tronje, passage of tha north Atlantic, on the Nibelungen legend, was Washington, Feb. 6 (AP) The died on the operating table at a Berlin sanatorium last night as most widely known. It was pro- new cowling developed by the national committee for aeronautics surgeons sought to remedy a duced In Bremen In 1927. was posstomach and intestinal ailment. Is as aviator he will be sible credited with making But it the record transcontinental His heart failed to withstand the which The remembered. flight flight of Captain Frank Hawks shock of the operation,' and Oscar E. Grubb, who landed Baron Von Huenefeld was only brought him prominence took at New York yesterday, in a telWith 38 years old, but he had an ad- place In April last year. received from the buildventurous career, of soldier, Ger- Captain Herman Koehl and Ma- egraph ers of Hawks' today by the man monarchist,, poet and dramJames Fitzmaurice of the committee at plane jor' field, Va. atist and aviator, i Saorstoft air corps sharing the The message,Langley from the Lockat-As Mastrlcht,! controls, the three In the plane heed aircraft corporation in BurHolland, he received the former Bremen flew from Baldonnel air bank, California, builders of the kaiser and crown prince when 'field, Dublin, to Greenly island, plane which flew from the Metrothey sought refuge , on Dutch Labrador, where they waited two politan airport at Los Angeles to soil, and he later spent several weeks in the ice and snow to be, Roosevelt field In 18 hours and with the crown prince in 'taken out. 21 minutes, 59 seconds, said the vice-cons- ul , I the cowling device increased speed of the ship by 20 miles per. hour. Officials of the national aeronautic association today declared that this, the first actual, test of tne device In extended- - flight, forecasts revolutionary devqiot)-mer.- ts m the industry. The device, developed by the committee at its laboratory at field during- - the past seveiai months, is a simple coverengine, ing for the which cuts down the resistence of the engine. -- Aair-cool- ed Black Arf Olio: ih la a West African word, uhlcli now Is translated to meaa sow eery or witchcraft. |