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Show Poor copys The South Cache Citizen BY About ifour J. A. WA1ILEN Published at Hyrum, Utah Entered at Hyrum, Utah as second class mail matter, under the Act of March 8, 1897. REVIEW i IF YOU WERE EDITOR? If you were the editor would you always tell truth ? When the homely daughter of an old subscriber mar- ries a worthless skunk of a fellow, would you praise her beauty and sterling worth and congratulate her on secur- ing a popular young man for a husband, or would you tell the truth ? When some miserly old citizen who 1.3s denied his family for years and pinched his dollars until the eagles screamed, finally passes in his checks, would you refer to him as a respected pioneer, or woud you tell the truth? When some home talent entertainment raps your nerves to the point of break down, would you say that it was delightful and every body acquitted themselves with credit or would you tell the truth ? When some hypocritical sinner who used the church as a cloak for his general cussedness, gets active in some reform movement, would you praise the effort of this public spirited reformer, or would you tell the truth? The new father gets fulern a tick to celebrate the event; would you say he was overcome with joy or would you tell the truth? Seriously speaking, we believe that the vast majority of newspapers strive consistently to tell the truth in large matters, but there certainly are a good many times in which truth and diplomacy fail to work hand in hand. The newspapers, like the individual, would have but a few friends if it always told the truth Kansas City Journal Post. EVENTUALLY WHY NOT NOW? S Shodlu ;Hiipg8tYou The Track Runs On , of the way to the end will advance but little. Most of the- - time we must be stepping out into the dark The man who is honest simply because he knows that honesty is the best policy, and is honest only so long as it seems the best policy has a poor quality of honesty; for only that honesty is the best policy which is honest in the dark as well as in the light;-- only that man deserves to be called honest who is willing to follow the path ef hon esty even when it seems to lead into the abyss. None of us can see more than a little way most of the time. Fortunate we are if, now and then, we reach some height where the great view unfolds. And if afterwards, the darkness seems to close in, we can say to ourselves: The track runs on. Out in the country the other day I stood on the hilltop and saw the railway track, like a silver ribbon, running away into the distance. The sun was shining brightly. I by John Joseph Gaines, M. D could perceive a train many miles the away. At night I stood upon YOUR KNEES, could see the track that permits free play for private same hill and only for a little distance; beyond A perfect knee is a d (initiative and enterprise. that it was swallowed up in the hinge, with its track the that know I But shadows. is Utah fourth state in wool pro absorbers, its firm connect runs on. jduction, this years clip being and its smooth, bands, life in moments more There are high pounds, 2,000,000 reach of see bearings." far the And, the knee-j- t can we when than last year. is a mighty ugly proposition nsj righteousness. And there is many Richmond Emmett Mining Co., a dark hour when doubt and unit is injured or diseased. j opens vein with Knee injuries are very ore up faith settle down all around us. comncj to 80 per cent lead. Indeed our moments of vision and even slight injury may real; after few. Day in serious damage. Ovcr-us- c Utah grows 540 acres of beans are comparatively the do to is can we all keep j day heavy patients may result in canning, this year, 90 acres revelations of those moments in (for I more than in 1925. eased cartilages and roughened our memory and plod on through v 44 friction-surfacHundred Letters a of One which will tele Hyrum New bean cannery of the fog and obscurity, trusting months to or to cure, even j to than faith more years sight. (Morgan Company is important be We cannot abide on the peaks. cure The cartilages Bub. The South Co., possible. Jersey industry. Most of our journey is through are often crowded out of place by Pitman, New Jersey. Eureka Chief consolidated Min the valley. July 19th, 1926, pressure or strain, requiring suThe merchant at his desk must Autocaster Service, ing Company pays 10 cent dividend rgical removal before relief may be of $114,156.40. keep in mind his larger plans even New York City. had. T" ;? would deny them. Gentlemen: Eureka North beck shaft reach when details Even the knee-ca- p invol-ebe reckdead may on sailor must The go Just a word to compliment es near 1,000 level, with good ore in inflammations about t!,s when there are no stars by you upon the Dr. Frank Crane oning New shift will pros- prospects. joint; the Synovial Membrane" which he can set his course. But editorials and news features which lines the joint, and, when inflau-ed- , pect on 400 level. he knows the stars are still there. you have announced that you will becomes synovitis, a mod Even in love we come all too send us from week to week from painful condition, Eureka Much mine work being and one always done in North Tintic section, with rarely to the mountains of trans- now on. hard to cure. It is a serious when the synovial fluid escapee figuration and most of the time we good prospects being developed. If all of this series of articles must trudge grimly forward with measures up to the first ones which from its natural situation, and Eureka City buys new truck, hope, believing what we have once in a bag-Uk- e cavity, . you have sent us, we shall certainfor street department use. quiring tapping sometimes for rseen and hoping for what we shall ly be glad to use them. elief of the severe pain. Very truly yours, Utah sugar beet crop promises see again. Volumes could be written on tbe Underneath the crowding eviden- (signed) E. A. Pettit, Pres. knee-joiwell, with fair prices and excellent and its diseases. I ces of the power of evil every man yield. would like my readers to reman-be- r (must believe in those eternal and these points: Utahs taxable wealth has m far more potent cosmic laws of INSIDE INFORMATION That all knee affections are (1) . (creased nearly $30,000,000 since good. serious, or capable of becoming so. Did you once glimpse a great last year. (2) That rest and heat are and beautiful love burning like a Salt Lake City National ram shekinah ? Serve all lamb dishes piping hot among the first things thought of in successful treatment (sale at Union Stock Yards, Aug, However gross may be the pre- on hot plates, because many peo(3) That massage in any form 30 to Sept 1, will bring 2,000 blood sent darkness you must believe ple object to the texture of the fat may be positively injurious. ed entries from National Wool that the fire still bums. The track that has hardened as it has cooled. (4) That a skilled physician growers breeders. Tart jellies and tasty sauces also and surgeon should be consulted oi runs on. cut the fat and tone down the the appearance of The soul that will not go forParowan Gates and other suppli-'- s flavor of the meat. can he ward see pronounced until Next Week Best step every .ordered, for $10,000 Yankee Meadow irrigation dam. Utah produced $82,000,000 in Hyrum Bean crop here will tax NEW CATTLE SHEDS AT FAIR GROUNDS metals, last year. Advertise in the Citizen. oca! labor, to pick in time for best : t ", canning. With the auto entrance at the ?aiow.n Equipment arrives, Cache County Fair grounds placed ne.v cooperative cheese fac-cr- in line with the new extension of Fifth West, made necessary by the Fair association including the pieOf a'l the cattle in Sumit Coun-V- - ce of vacant property adjoining the only 1 1 per cent show tuber-ulgrounds for the new cattle sheds, leaeiion. all the exhibits will be east of the entrance. The pens for' the swine Ecai harvest employ- -' and sheep will be placed in the New Brake Reliner Just to better Serve our trade 20 niekeis for every three ac- -; shed formerly used for horses. until frost comes. This will then bring all the liveOxyde Acetaline Welding Outfit So call in. stock under shelter, and more toM.l.aid Ccuny has had more With the new sheds, there ioma! flings in a month, than gether. should be ample room for all the ten years previously. 'r cattle and horses. Construction new sheds and repairs on Marti State distributes 50 ring on the lecked pheasants, for game pro- - the old ones and other changes are being made now so all will be in pagation. readiness for the Fair to open SepAgent for Willys Overland Cars Ogden Utah Contraction Com- - tember 28. The fair goes rain or will be no opportunpany here, will build $200,000 pow-- t shine. There HYRUM ity for postponment as the State dam at Guernsey. UTAH, Fair commences Oct. 2nd. Ivaysville A. T. Smith cannery, (recently burned, will be rebuilt at This year the United States will once. reduce its war debts $850,000,000, Fire prevention will be brought and that before the bonds fall due. dramatically to the attention of If local governments would hold down the bonded debts as the fed(millions of Americans in a time, when The eral government is doing with the Fire Brigade will be released in national debt, we could look on the the leading motion picture thea- - tax situation with a more comTO INSPECT OUR LINE OF ters of the world. placent eye. We are a prosperous nation, be- -j cause our country has great natural resources, a wonderful financial and industrial organization to make the best use of resources and j labor, and a system of government 00 lead-copp- er wcnderiuT-constructe- es lo-(c- al ! I mat-t- nt Democratic political developments 'indicate that the movement to abolish the two-thirrule in the nomination of candidates in national conventions has been blocked. Despite determined statements of Democratic leaders from the East and North that the system should be eliminated, word seeps out of Washington that the solid South is point blank against the plan. , The opposition has developed into such proportions, it ' is said that the Democratic national committee, which had planned to meet next December to kill the rule, has decided to abandon its proposal for a chn-'g-- '. Instead, the convention. question probably will be put up to tl. The two-thirrule should be killed by all means. It A1 foris contrary to all the true spirit of democ.",-wardlooking Democrats should insist that it be abolished. Unless a change comes, we can expect another farcical ds 1 nominating marathon. y -r tt ta RURAL AMERICA IS NOT LOSING GROUND TO THE CITIES - R C. B. R Scott of the National Safety council I is authoiity for the statement that ten lives are lost in America every hour through accidents. These accidents cost the United States annually $5,000,000,000, killing 85,- 000 men, women and children, and injuring between and 10,000,000 persons. Every accident, it is declared is due to a certain definite, specific cause, such as carelessness, recklessness, thoughtlessness, ignorance, par elimination of which would result in alsimoniousness most a 100 per cent reduction jn fatalities and injuries. Automobiles in the states today kill about as many persons as snakes do in India. Street cars in this country cause the deaths of about as many people as wild animals kill in India. Last year 21,000 boys and girls less than 15 years of age met accidental deaths. Of this number, about 7000 youngsters were killed on our streets and highways. The report goes on to say that America is the most reckless nation in the world! Our total accidental fatality rate is more than twice as great as inEngland and Whales and nearly 50 per cent greater than in Canada, which is next on the list. Not only do we exceed all other countries for which records are available in automobile fatalities, owing to our much higher automobile registration per capita, but we like wise exceed them in the death rate from such other common causes. R R R THE LARGEST pea cannery in the world is located at Smithfield, Utah, with nine complete lines of filling and closing machines, having a daily capacity of 20,000 cases when running at full blast , R R R LOGAN CANYON is nearly as deep as the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, and nearly as wide, running for forty miles through huge blocks of rock Just Installed Claude Jensen Motor Co. ACCIDENTS IN U. S. President y. ar Figures compiled by the institute of Social and Religious Research show that 4,G20,055 people became city folk- between 1900 and 1920, not because they removed to cities, but only because the places in which they lived their home towns had grown sufficiently to be lifted from the rural into the urban class. During these years the incorporated villages in the United States increased 41 per cent both in number and in population. During the same period, the population of the United States as a whole increased 39 per cent, R knee-sympto- -- Now is the Time 1925 figures show that New of (York State produced the electricity, and of the manufactured gas of the United States. one-six- th INSIDE one-four- th Of the $75,000,000 used in newspaper advertising of goods in 1925 nearly one third was paid by producers of goods which are distribut ed throughout the nation. INFORMATION Turn cakes upside down when they are taken from the oven and allow them to cool partially. .Remove from the pan before the cake reaches room temperature or has a chance to sweat. Quality Merchandise At Our Usual Low Prices The Beautiful COLONIAL CLOCK ON DISPLAY WE CATER TO PICNICS AND BIG. OUTFITS No need going elsewhere for your Bill for the Camp LET US HELP YOU . Bradley Market Phone 22 Hyrum, Utah ABSOLUTELY FREE With each 75c cash Purchase at our store we will give our customers, entirely without charge, one Special Clock Dial. . When all of the Dials have been given out, a Clock which is on display will be wound and placed in our window. When the Clock, after running for a number of days runs down, the party holding the Dial identically corresponding to the time of the stopped clock, will receive, absolutely free of charge, this Beautiful Colonial Timepiece. ONE DIAL GIVEN WITH EACH 75c CASH .SALE OR $1.50 CREDIT PAYMENT ALLEN MERC. CO. r J f- n |