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Show THE JOURNAL, PAGE TWO I on AN riTY, PAr he fOUNTY, 'HE ESOSE i5?SSl ITT AIT. 0. TO BE ADAM $ f COLONEL GILFEATHER By W. Ai, LVerlun PUBLISHED BY & ENGLAND PUBLISHING fHE EARL COMPANY BYSORRfR: Sareht tlrnwrn$ does Hot Lnoto that fhiVte File' mote, h urge, iW.o hhnded hm ho Hpfifi ttitft ii.m timing n nutr.ni treatment, end Rase LowiM.nc, the ifi tl he loves bvt hue ueitr seen, are the It is person feared the knowledge would he too much of 4 shark to him flatus wtually is not to bhime, having been defamed hit Lester Ui con, frtnnnocka half-- bi other, uhile drunk. Lester, determined to inn llalhe, threatens to tell (iraunoek ths secret unless she mnmrs him Airs Bartholomew, an e ventno old woman, has told Uallie her real name is Conaldine and that hur father tea Clem Conn Id me , susHolhe disjp-lea- rs pected murderer, and Lester hires a pmafo detective to help find her. Gran-noc- k t in Baltimore for further eve treatment. In hew York another Rose Conaldine alscr is told her father teas the suspected murderer, and that she is heiress to n $50,600 a year income. Fitle meets Lester by chance and falls t love ititl 1 hint. Then Mr. Perie, tt lawyer and Her guardian, tells Rose he has found she has no right to the fortune because she is the daughter of Clem C onahltne by a woman other than hie tnfe. Entered at the INwt Office every day in the week except Banday t Logan, Ltali, as Second Class Matter. ' jLUVEJiTlSl.su RATES KUUM8I1KD ON APPLICATION hIBMKimo.N KATES fait! in advance month- - . S8c -- 12.09 - 5e By rnail, per d, Ky mail, two years per month- iJWivered, two years advanre.. advance-Oelivere- "t 44.50 Member of Associated Press This Associated Press la exclusively entitled to ths aae tor repab-cation of ail newa dispatches credited to it cr not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local newa published therein, AU right of republication of special dispatches tberela are also reserved. . BAROMETER Rain ' Fab tgP Z9IilllIlli2!!:j3;i!4!567t8j9H80 , ' The 9 READINGS Change Today Yesterday are taken from THE JOURNALS barometer at Above readings o'clock each afternoon except Sunday. Monday refers to Saturday s reading. The Chapter 25 ESCAPE said Mr. Perie. - yesterday" reading- each A WAY OF :yf:position Your is a most unenviable ROOT ne. So, to a minor extent, is mine. I can only trust that you have PAUL, in a famous passage in the first epistle to made no eeriotts inroads upon that Timothy, said, The love of money is the root of all check. The room wae spinning around evil. An elderly citizen, bred in habits of old time Rose round and round. industry, recently remarked that the love of idleness is the 'Tve spent nearly all of It, she principal root of evil. These two suggestions account for the panted. major" part of our crime. Tm sorry to hear it. The crooked element start in their evil ways, first, be"Are yon telling me that that cause they want money, thus verifying the saying of St. my mother was this Mrs. Muir?" I fear that 1 cannot assure you second, because they are not willing to engage in even of that" to in labpfius effort obtain it, which they verify the saying "But but that of our old friend. They w ant what they want now, and will Im not not you say definitely not w ait. Most definitely you are not." , But all this about ages and years Thg lavish opportunities for entertainment of ths present time have a wonderful temptation over youth. They en- and things Rose heard her voice to hysteria and tried to joy swift and smooth running automobiles, free travel about rising steady it all this about me being the country and elsewhere, lavish eating in the best hotels twenty-one- , when 1 ought to be and restaurants, costly shows, sports, dancing places, swell twenty-threyou knew It from the first, didnt you? You were told clothes,. etc. you took me from the They get a wonderful thrill out of spending money freely. my age when No one ever deceived It gives them enormous pleasure to pull good sized wads out orphanage? of their pockets, and spend them on their girl friends. They you?" "No. No. No. That Is not the .must have money now, and they cant wait. So when some point, my poor Rose. (Muirs child, smart crook offers to instruct them in the ways of crime in by the way, was christened Gladysl. aanA-tdk-iham- .1 Jfli u hnz. feaay .lt is-- to Ills onlv lately th a t a reliable account o( CoiialrilnV a life has come" fookkbe police, they fall for that fool talk. Into my heads." I'Jlie .community needs to put better ideals in these silly "But you were investigating for months and months, shrilled Rose. youth. Sports are one thing that does it. The boy who last Octoskillful in any good sport find3 plenty of thrills withWhy, 1 was twenty-or- a out "spending much money. Interest in good books is a won- ber and its only couple of weeks aald that my Identity ago that derful way to do it. The heart of youth can be shown the had beenyoubeen satisfactorily estrue! way to look at money, if the community makes a real tablished and by that time I'd lot effort to do it. . so sick of waiting and not knowing the first thing about who I was that THE OF EVIL ... ST. PaulAnd e hcig-Asgiaia- vp,,-fo- r es I""That yon r tv "I went to a private detective," said Rose furiously, '"and asked him people feel that the world has made very poor to find out all about me." "I am afraid, said Mr. Eerie graveSOME in the 12 yeafs since the original Armistice ly, that that will te looked upon as " 5 day, in recovering from the results of the war. They a proof that you could not have are impressed by the still existing suspicions, jealousies, and had a genuine belief In being Rose hostilities of the countries that were then fighting each Conaldine. "Looked upon by who?" otget. By the law, said Mr. Perie! 'there is one thing, however, that no longer, exists, and Rose stared at him. of several the despotic bower arbitrary monarchs, But but but I didnt know I whcHbelieved in war 'as a means by which nations become hadn't a right to the money! It gneal and prosperous. The power of those monarchs was a isnt as though Id stolen it! It was you made the mistake It was terribly dangerous force. We have gotten rid of it. I In our own country in those 12 years, our people co- you gave it to me! All that would have to be operate better in community movements. They learned in proved, said Mr. Perie. And in the war experience that you accomplish by any case, whether you are held to Also, labor and capital do not Tight each other as of yore. be an Innocent party or not, every penny that you have spent will have Thai alone spells real progress. to be refunded." 1 cant understand it even yet! Some of Roses native wit was beginning to return to ber. How did you ever come to mistake me for for Rose Conaldfne? jpPORTS from the colleges indicate that more students I gee that I must explain It In have been received this fall than ever before. Business greater detail. . . . When Clement depression has not kept the boys and girls away, which Conaldine deserted his wife and is $rfe more thing that will make many people feel that these child he left them, as 1 have told His wife, came to you, penniless. adverse conditions have been greatly exaggerated. New York and consulted us. We Whether it is advisable for all this great number of boys did not then know where Conaldine and jgirls to spend a precious period of four years in these bad gone with the woman Muir. The one small service we were prolonged courses of study, is a subject much discussed by educators. But one thing is sure, that these young people ablo to render his wife was to rewiH lall get a benefit from these courses, if they.make the lieve her of a certain embarrassment. You will remember that one best 5)f these years of opportunity. of Conaldines irventlons met with 'Spme of these young folks will acquire idle ahd loafing a wide demand. This ah design habits. If the result of their contact with the campus was Just beglnnlug to be taken up atmosphhere, is that thev cant begin at the bottom of the by ah manufacturers of hardwas findindustrial ladder and work their way up by patient endeavor, ware and Mrs. Conaldine ing it more and more humiliating to the prospective benefits of their study seem very doubtful have to confess to these men that she could not even forward their letters to her husband, as she .GOVERNOR-ELEC- T lacked his address. We were able to take this correspondence entirely out of her hands with the result fyORKOF 12 YEARS this 5 CROWDED COLLEGES F) WITH FAMILY S 'i it A-t- rip , h s I u ' ' 4 v f r Do diseases, like certain ani- mals, ever extinct? In the case of those caused by germs extinction ought to be a possibility. Known history however, does not contain the comrecord of any disease pletely wiped out the world over. becom!el : But then the scientific understanding of disease is a relatively recent achievement and r possibly, with further study the Dodo bird of medcene may yet be discovered. If no extinct disiase is now i known, we do at least know a W A number of diseases which formerly were very wide and which today are ether Au.amtrd Frrt Phut. more conbin-- d in their spread of Oregon and hi famJuliu L. Meier, Independent, governor-elec- t or are much milder in their ily. Left to right, rear: Mr. Frederick M. Qana of San Franeico, Miiis L. Jr., and Mra. Joseph Ehrman II of San Francisco, (front) thg effects. successful candidate and Mr. Miner, Leprosy was onte very w:de j h) K'j r x -- d ... j tlut. v.hen this ilmiie bcan to sell in large qtuntfties, e the Him o Perie and vere made trustees of the fortune." But then how in the. world yon must have knoan who was going to get "One moment! While the were making bo more than their preliminary Inquiries, Conakllno with whom we had been trying to get into contact, suddenly flashed Into prominence. He was wanted for the muider of Halt. He disappeared. Time passed. money that began to accumulate tor the wanted man was held in trust far his wife and daughter, who meanwhile also had disappeared." "But 1 still don't see "One moment more.' We failed to lind Conaldine's Wife and child. Then, one day, eight' years after Conaldines disappearance, we received this. He drew from bis pocket a cheap, soiled envelope, containing a cheap soiled piece of notepaper. On it. an unaccustomed hand had written a message In pencil. 1 see there's a lot of my new being sold for high prices it you want to see justice done theres my kiddle In the Sarah Sidley Home her mothera dead and buried but youll find the kid easy enough if you ask for the one that was In the Lettington train crash with her mother. Ite a risk me writing to you but Id like that kid to have something she was a pretty kid with blue eyes though 1 dont put her above Rose turned the sheet. There was nothing. Then she noticed that the edge of the paper was jagged, as though the other half of the sheet had been torn away. It came to us In that condition, explained Mr. Perie, retrieving It. I was, most unfortunately, away on business and the matter was taken up by Mr. Kevern. Ha made perfunctory inquiries, assuming blindly that Conaldine, In this scrap of a letter, referred to his legal wife and her child, Rose. Mr. Kevern asked me, on my return, to take you from the Home and have you educated; and even when It became necessary, on your coming of age, to' produce proofs of your fleutity and so on, it did not bccur to me that he very fact that you were made It Impossible just twenty-on- e that you should be Conaldines child by his wife. Rose forced her dry lips to frame A question. What am I to dor There is a way out, he said. She was trembling violently. It la this Conaldines heiress has never been found. There does not appear to me to be any sieass of finding her." You mean hat she neednt know. If I keep this money she neednt know?" I do not see that she can ever possibly know." Roses face twitched. She understood him well enongli. You are, you say, heavily la debt to the Conaldine fortune. It would mean years of slavery one can call it little else If you were forced ts pay the debt. By the means I have in mind we should not be defrauding anyone known to us We? repeated Rose. J have no doubt. cooed Mr. Perie, that If you decide that your moral judgment allows you to remain In possession of the ah Identity of Rose Conaldine, you would agree to refund me the heavy expenditure of your early years. It!" fore. Theres no credit due the who 'tells an old wheeze that you've heard before On the other hand manufacturers and dealers are always glad to hear that people have heard of their goods before. If they would stay In business they must never tire of telling the story over and over about the goods they have man fnaAi-faeture- ' left-han- d I How much is I should say that? and Mr. Perles tones became almost Incredibly mfisical I should say that twenty thousand a year for shall we say, twelve years? would cover It. Does that policy commend Itself to you. Rose?" Yes, she answered. She bad not meant to agree. Not, at any rate, without argument, for she knew well enough that this sleek man was a swindler and a liar and s fraud. And then, as Inexplicably as she had said yes, she was now saying other things. "Ill hang on to the money and HI But dont give you your share. think I dont see you for what you are. You dirty, rat you dirty, dirty (Copyught, 103$, by ftny Ticker,) d rat" Where l the rightful heiretc tft the Conaldine fortune? Read tomorrow' chapter. - 65 YOO HAY OLD EUOUG-- To VOTE:. coLok)5L, BoT MdoQ.5 Likt 6AB5 HoTHEe WHU A VOMAW is covcEkveo-- 1 Kuew A WOODS THAT WOHAlj WAS A CHAPAcYBr?, THE HOMEpr I SAW HER AUD I ToLO VOO To WAY OUT TOR HEf? suspicious to sell. The goods In Everton & Sons store are not unheard of goods, you find them ad- National vertised in the magazines. They covor page after page in every big magazine. They are advertised in the farm papers, in the state papers and the local papers. We believe no local store ? can boast of carrying jmore s These lines. advertised goods must be good, they must please people or the makers could not afford to advertise them so freely. Youll be pleased with the goods vou buy from Everton & Sons Co. RELIEF SOCIETY AID Relief Society aid of and Cache stakes, are anxious to assist the worthy The Logan possible needy in every way this winter. Word has come in that many are willing to contribute articles of clothing and household effects, old furniture, and foods if they could be called for or a place of delivery designated, so we annonuce to the general public, merchants, and individual families that we are making an effort to collect useful articles for this cause. If you will kindly notify us of anything you may have arrangements will be made to collect them. We will appreciate your cooperation, in rendering this kind of service in this good -- cause. Bessie G. phone 1076-W- A NB7 GARBO TALKIE GETS HAND The combination of Greta Garbo as star and Clarence Brown as director seems to be one of the few on the screen endowed with the ability to satisfy box office requirements without sacrificing artistic standards. This fact was again made strikingly apparent last night at the Capitol Theatre where Miss Garbos second picture, Romance, was given an enthusiastic reception. , In providing the Swedish actress with the Edward Shel-- . don play for her second dialogue appearance, did so advisedly since it serves as an abrupt about- - passenger bus powered by engine is being teu-e- d In England. -- TuOS., Today, Ballard, president Laura A. Wat- Garbo to the glamorous type of role for which she is so ' kins, Social Serviec Aid, phone famous . , 658. Now that it is no longer a novelty to hear the star s ,v; Cache Stake Relief Society: '' Lula Y. Smith, president, phone voice, her proficiency as an actress becomes all the more'lppf Social marked, particularly in the intensely dramatic scenes in 198; Acelia T. Olsen, Service Aid, phone 894-3t which she sends her clergyman lover back to his church in Mv tfiat she would be an obstacle in the path of fruits and vegetables, and to the knowledge ' career. his morb active outdoor lll'e. Lo Garbo as a opera primadonna, Edwin D. Wiser, Nov. 12, and behold, chlorsls has all but f disappeared. Lewiston in the charming period costumes of the New York j At the same time' the aver1865 looks more fascinating than ever while the backof age young person has grown taller and heavier and less sub- ground presents picturesque scenes of aristocratic Washingand to ton Square and the homes of the four hundred. A. O. Shelject to tuberculosis, other Infectious diseases. ton, Nov. 12, 393 E 4 N. for burglars with a moving van and a hot stove turned cool. Daughter Follows ; ,' - Wed., - ' . '' Mother Iii Death Woman Slays Wolf Within 2 Weeks Mrs. Eva Weaver Steele, wife Norman Steele, died at Whitney, on Sunday at 1:20 p. m. just a week to tits day of her mothers funeral serbeen vices. Mrs. Steele had her making her home with parents, and she and her mother had always been close companions. Mrs Steele suffered heart trouble for years and then the shock of the sudden death of her mother, Mrs. Gilbert Weaver, made her conettion more critical. She was stricken Saturday morning and died at 1:20 p. m. Sunday. Funeral services will be held in the Whitney ward chapel Wednesday, Nov. I2!h. Surviving are her husband. Norman Steele, her father, Gilbert Weaver and the following brothers and sisters: Gilbert D. Weaver, Whitney; Mrs. Jennie Salt Lake City; Mrs. Holt, Pearl Gayman and Syllvan Earl and Bald G. WeavUr, all of Preston; Mrs. Allabell w. Hull, Whtney; Mrs. Tyra Bel-na- p, Boise, Idahs; Claire Weaver Sterling Colorado; Vivian, Weaver, Lewiston; Miss Lillian Weaver of tha Melody Weav. er Trio and Gerald Weaver of Salt Lake City. of With Swing Of Axe Sault Ste Marie, Ont., Nov 10 Mrs. A. E. Gagnon has killed a wolf with an axe. The howling pf a wolf caught in a snare prevented Frank Aelicks, an aged bachelor, from sleeping, so he went to the home of W. Massey, who had set the snare. were Massey and his son away, but Mrs. Gagnon, his daughter, volunteered to stop the howling. She toe an axe a and Aelicks followed with lantern. , , A mile away they found a large brush wolf in the snare trying to work itself free. Unable to get behind the animal for fear of loosening the trap, k Mrs. Gagnon made a frontal and as the wolf made a lep at her, she slew it with a swing of the axe. fP QEIA CACBO ana LEWS STONE wRQVANCE Hot Stove And House Furnishings Stolen , Hammond, Ind., Nov. 10 (IP) It was a warm day yesterday, but it cooled off during the night while Mr. and Mrs. Chester Malloy Were taking in a c cinema. Malloy didnt worry Italy has & net work of 7500 about that as he recalled that he had banked the fire In the miles of regular air lines. living room stove before leaving. Its a good thing, he said returning home, that we left w jm. Checked without a fire. But when he entered dosing. Rub on the living room the hot stove was gone. So, too, were ail the rest of their household furnHolland, Mich . will liava 1,000 ishings. The police today were looking OVER W MHL10H JABS USED YEARLY 000 tulips In bloom, Its residents hope, at next years annual tulip festival. During I ho last three yrars the town has imported 2,250 000 bulbs. at-tai- Childrens Colds VJSs Newly renovated Throne-o- nt 400 ear garage. The meeting place of Utah people. W. W. Whitecotton, owner, Frank Wlshon, managri, Jk V.Y.V.VAAV.VWWAWmW.'AW.VW.VAW.V.VAtV.VJ V 4 lie'll;; i '1 Si h What ever trouble Adam had No man in days of yore. Could say when he had told a joke Ive heard that one be- the London, Ohio, claims worlds youngest butcher. Junior seven and an ex-spread and the bibhcal and la- a"d dressing ihe ter day restrictions placed on1Pert'.ai' thoso affected bear witness to Pultry ln Lis" fathers snap. "r the dread with which the diTennessee led all southern sease was once regarded. Now leprosy is rare in Europe states in number of spindle and probably milder in foim hours during September, with each spindle operated runring where it does exist. hours. Great Hi a tain has 295 prionce was very common, and vately owned airplanes now almost extinct, Is chlorsls. A generation ago, this disease Tractor won a plowing conwas Very fashionable amorg test from horse drawn plows between the young ladres. Those Iowa but lost in Illinois. in twenfourteen and the ages of anwould of a suffer type ty emia and general debllPy. which would give them a mote spiritUD if Aak jam Drurfi ual look and a green tinged fcf, Ckl rtatW Diaaead I B4 tad Bm4 FUI skin. Ini with Blu bexas. Rlbto T V That was In the dav? of long skirts and sunshades. Since then BRASD FlLL.far4 however, the younger generaf Best Sate. BHUM.fiYOTWl&U SOU If IftUGGlSTS tion has taken to istz Saleable Used Oeodsf WANTED IPFOUR-EXCHAMCE-DE- Goods offered for sale in this department Many, are like new. We pay best prices repaired. PT. are refinished Furniture, Stoves, Guns, Etc. SSM r.V.V.V.V.V.V.VV.VAWiV.V,V.VAWAW.Y.V,V.VAV.VAVA'.V,V.V.V,V,V.O and ; jl I O |