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Show r Jsssz sr THE- JOURNAL SPEND YOUR MONEY IN BEAUTIFUL VOLUME LIII. THIS LIFE SACRIFICES PAID CIRCULATION WAY OUT BULLETS . Ill ATTEMPT TO SAVE CHILD Flames Engulfed Crib A X) in Which Three Year , Old Boy Was Sleep ing Origin of Fire Woman Unknown Was Overcome. Brighton, Colo., Oct. 10 (APT A mother is dead today, her life sacrificed in an attempt to save her 3 year old child from flames which engulfed a crib in which he lay sleeping Mrs. Grover The woman, Quick, 35, and her son, bent, were apparently sleepmg alone in the farm house two miles east of here when the fire of unknown ongin, started. Investigating authorities reconstructing the- - scene, said Mrs. Quick noticed smoke m the bedroom where the child lay and rushed there to remove her son from the burning room. Beating out the fire in the childs garments, the woman laid the youngster on the floor in the room and the returned .to extinguish flames there. Her bums and smoke from the fire conquered her courage and she was overcome and fell ,in the bedroom. The fire spread to the room in which the child had been left and so both fell victims' to a blaze which was easily extinguished by motorists passing by. vVo November 5, To Be Swell Affair yd November 5 is the time and the Palais dOr the place for the annual pioneer ball which will be staged this yqar by the Cache Valley daughters of the pioneers. It will be a costume affair with the leading characters depicting tlje early settlers and founders of this valley. Mrs. J. C. Allen, Jr., has been selected chairman of the general committee to stage the ball She has selected a number, of assistants with others to be drafted to see that the affair is the same success that it has always been in the past. Mrs. T, B Farr of Southfield will be in charge of the grand march; $Jrs. Erroll Palmer is in charge of the f.1 nances; Mrs. H. E Hatch is the chairman of the customes committee and Mrs Gertrude B. Smith is the chairman of the advertising committee Board members and presidents of camps will form the reception committee. Prizes will be offered to the camp having the largest membership representation in Old time dances pis well as the modem dances will be featured with the regular Palais dOr orchestra supplying the ss cos-tum- e. sang, A. D Blanchard grave. William Sifiton Fired Three hots at His ife Neighbors Arrested Him had Mrs. Sutton Declined to Prosecute. Evanston Hi., Oct 10 (AP) Inasmuch as William Sutton failed to hit his wife with-anof the three shots he fired at her, Mrs. Sutton fails to see , anything to get excited about. Her first reaction was have him arrested for assault with with deadly weapon, assault intent to' kill and. attempted murder. Neighbors, much, anSutnoyed by the roar of th arrest-ted. ton shotgun, had him Police found shotgun slugs In the wall, but Mrs, herself was intact. Wen the case against Sutton was called before Magistrate Porter yesterday, Mrs. Sutton declined to prosecute. If her usband wanted to shoot at her, she said, that was Su-tto- from the departed They court seemingly very happy. The police kept the shotgun. - Attociatei Preaj Photo dedicated Johnny Knaplc, captain of Geneva college, is cared one of the countrys greatest halfbacks, kept in obscurity only because he is with, a small Holt, Lie Cruce I the republican nomine Mrs Juchau remembered the senator In New for United Statee Prophet Joseph Smith, sat on Mexico. He opposes Senator Sam his knee and bore her testimony many times to the di Bratton, democrat. VyVcWWc Sbbtiy AW Tite LM Ft &4 Library Obtains Of English - HauLng of sugar show Roy Thain had charge 1'ields to the of the animals that were sent , piles has begun. It Is hard to from Cache valley. realize that twelve months Mrs. William Homer received n, have passed since the work of a call from her aunt, Mrs. Idaho, delivering beets too ths piSfc- - Huxton of was in operation. , telLng hpr of, the death of her By, what we, can laarn the son, Mrs Homer has gone , to than Idaho, baying left Tuesday. crop. going;JoJettot Was anttepated. Wr,ilei; theax-piou- s ikJSpyepJ- Hyde, Park boy&are .made - the in Bensoh tbcptaftiHWetS. wf, ground quite soft, especially and Mrs. tv. G. Rtiese1 Were where there) has been the ne- dinner guests of Mr, and Mrs. cessary irrigation, yet it is Roland At. Reese of Logan helpful to the bents. If the Tuesday evening, the occasion weather clears and is favorab.e being the anniversary of Rofor the beet harvest thpre will lands birth. be many happy farmers. Joseph McCann of Preston Some of tho Benson animals was In Benson Tuesday as a took prizes at the annual state buyri of alfalfa seed. Benson beets from the - . THE WORM PROBLEM e While an examination of the intestines of fowls have died is the only way of making sure of existence of worms, poultrymen whose flocks thin, unthrifty, lame or paralyzed, big- - eaters poor layers, have pale combs and wattles, diarrhea, should suspect worms as thq cause. that the are and and Whats a Good Worm --Treatment? Several years ago, the Pratt Food Company began its study gf the worm problem and its search for a practical and effective treatment. At the outset, we determined that for any treatment to meet the ' average requirement it must be economical, safe, powerful, effective, easy to use and yet not throw the birds off of growth or laying. Pratts Poultry Worm Powder is the result of our study and meets every requirement which we set up. It Pays to Use Pratts iIV.V.V.V.V.V.V.W.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V, Little Johnny Jones Little Johnny Jones, the First National and Vitaphone film version of W. E. Nyman, Oct 13, R. F. D. 2, George M. Cohans famous musical comedy hit, Is now on the screen at You the Capitol Theatre. mustnt miss It! Despite the fact that this picture is based on a musica1 show and is full of song hits, it possesses a thrillingly dramatic plot and a love story that Is novel and appealing Eddie Buzzell, one of Broad ways favorite comedians, took time off from his New York shows to play the title role of John Quayle, Qct, 13 228 N. 2nd W. "Little Johnny Jones, the Yankee Doodle dandy. Alice as and Edna . heroine, Day, Murphy, as vamp, play opposite Donald Reed, Robert Edeson, Wheeler Oakman, Raymond Turner and other stage and 'creen favorites make up the support. , ing cast,, Director Mervyn teRoy showed a consciousness of the faults of many cinematized musical Little comedies In directing He leaned Johnny Jones. strongly away from these faults, giving the peture every asset that the film medium Is so 5,1 able to qupply in varied back- ground colorful settings, sweeping action, closeups of love scenes and emphatic drama, and physical thrills. 4 As-- a result "Little Tchnny Jones Is first, of all a Lully -- CONSIDER THE MEN -- screen offering, brimming with action that runs the emotional gamut from laughter to tears It is only secondly, but very Fifteen Shots effectively at that, musical. Of course snappy dialogue abounds And it all has the magic of the Fired At British true Cohan touch. Buzzell does most of the singPolice Sergeant ing, and various orchestras play. Chorus girls aplehty appear, as well as many other elements Bombay. India, Oct. 70 (AP) of New York, night life. Fifteen shots were fired early, Jerusalem (AF According to today at a motor car containing the British police sergeant, the mandatory governments Taylor, and. his wife. report to th,e League 0 Sergeant Taylor was hit in Nations, there were 165, OoO the hand and Mrs. Taylor in the Jews in Palestine at the end of thigh. The shots came from a 1929, against 56 000 In ' 1918 motor car atshort dstance away which escaped with its three occupants. Neither of the victims was seriously hurt. In some sections where poultry has been kept for many'yegrs, the most important problem that confronts poultrymen is that of intestinal worms. Obe'&s.the chief difficulties of treatment lies in the fact that there are hundreds of different kinds of worms found in poultry. The large, round worms and tape worms, are the ones most commonly found in the intestines and cause the greatest losses. school W. G. REESE, Correspondent Paper al WORMr FLOCKS NEVER PAY B. Century Old Copy While on Alumni business in Tremonton last summer Alden upon prevailed Lilly white . George Bradshaw, .Tremonton, to give to the college a copy of the Londerw- - Times'' H5 dated? years old Il'e paper, ' ly 2t 1815. ives then first pf-iaccount oj- the defeat? of the French forces under Ha, poieon at the Battle of Water oo ever published in England, Mr. Bradshaw obtained the pa per in England while on an L. D S. mission Sfie has many other 'relics o- - early days in Utah which he will give to the college on his- death. The paper will be put in a special exhibition case in the new library with, the name of the donor attached. 9ns Herbert DEPARTMENT BENSON - -- benedil-tio- n O My Father was pronounced by Henry Hanson. music. Signs of Worms df h, MODEST MAIDENS 5 and vinity of the porphcit Mormonism. Death came as a happy release as Mrs. Juchau bad beJuchau, Pioneer, come; ..deaf and blind and. very feeble in body. To Rest The family of Mrs. Olaf Dal-met and celebrated the Smithfleld Funeral servic- anniversary of her seventy-fiftbirthday A luncheon was es were held Wednesday for Mrs Elizabeth T. Juchau, a served during the afternoon m the and a p.easap evening slpent Smithfiad pioneer, Third ward chapel. Bishop at her homc Richard Roskeiley presided When Furst The choir sang, Senate Candidate the Glorious Light of Truth; invocation was offered by of Bishop J. W. - Whitehead Virginia, Idaho singing, Sweet is the Work, choir. W. Ncble, Eldeis Hamper Bishop Sylvester Low, James Thomley and Bishop Roskeiley spoke of the long lie of lived by Mrs. Juchau and of her years of service hs secretary of thq, Relief society. Bishop OCson of Virginia said she did not live in my ward very long but she did aU she could as a faithful Latter-da- y Saint. Special numbers were a solo A Perfect Day by Laveda Griifith with, Floyd Miles, at the piano. , , Mrs. Regenia Smith sang, There is a Land, with Mrs Hanson at the piano. The choir Mrs. Elizabeth Pioneer Ball S Of HII! TO EXCITE the 6fC . NUMBER 239. LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1930. SECOND SECTION. MOTHER V LARGEST AND HIGHEST, PRICES 2iET - CACHE VALLEY m ftIMimiM MfH't ifIMM 4 ifiyy YfjyLfjytryy?frr; ? irr. ? BEHIND THE BANK The increase thus amounted to 109,0O0, of which 76,000 are estimated to the Immigrants. During ths same period, the inJewish rural population A 20,00(1. governcreased by ment estimate puts the total population at the end of 1929 (exclusive of the -- country east 0O0. of the- Jordon) at 920, - Dublin (AP) At a recent here where labor congress delegates of 40untons represented I60, OoO members, it was decided to separate the strictly trades union affairs from politics by having a separate organization for each activity. Have BRIGHT, CHEERY, COLORFUL ROOMS . OFFICERS ( John H. Anderson rresideut I 8, Smart Viie President A. Kimiiu - Vice lres. ttml Cashier I West ei holm Asst. Cashier John E. (Jlsooii ,, ... ..Trust Officer to indoor life, 1 John H. Anderson CONDENSED Hausen STATEMENT OF CONDITION September 24, 1930. RESOURCES LIABILITIES i Loans add .. Overdiafts Banking Hcuse Furniture and Fixtures .. ItedemptUiu Fund Real Estate Bonds, Stx ks and L interior decoration, offers twelve beautiful new shades and tints. t Ask for color card." Logan Hardware Co. 5fKHi()0 9,637 37 U. S. Bonds, Cash and Due from Banks - 423,560 91 t - Stock- 100,00000 Capital 8tok Jf Surplus and Reserve for 84,514 60 interest and depret mtion - 100,000.00 Oiieulaliun . 1,642,608 01 -- .' Deposits - 84,00000 Bills, Payable 4,55817 71,543 !tt 22918 30 33 254 341 4,050 00 Total FINISH $1,436,509 56 - a Federal Reserve . . made especially for 8. Smart F. Ballif C, U. Spencer A Sonne H, John Qnujle 1). E. U f your furnishing GLOSS INTERIOR , ho-ha- ' , i ' The foundations of a bank are more than fnetal and money, glass and gold. They are human, too. The personnel of a Bank is the truest criterion of its merit , . . the surest basis of judgment. The officers of this Bank are alimenw watched the commercial development of Cache valley. . I men w ho are keenly alert to opportunities rv. who are ever ready to lend ' the helping hand to any project that bids fair to augmenf f urther the communitys prosperity,- THAT is why First National stands back of so many local business enterprises. THAT is why we will give close attention to your ideas on business development and expansion. s We ipvite you to come to the First National Bank, get acquainted with the genial officers and employees of this institution. They are here to aid you in your financial problems. Win ter Comes Walls, woodwork, floors ... In attractive.new colors . . . lend charm to and add cheeriness - -- Befo re DIRECTORS O. L. Peterson 1. 1. Stewart ..... y " Total $2,011,122.61 ...,$2,011,122 61 p qjK FIRST NATIONAL BANK LOGAN , ' S j UTAH Modern Banking afjis Best Logan, Utah A $ i f vl 4 |