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Show THE JORDAN JOURNAL: MntVALE, UTAH --- rNe~s Notes I PEACE PREVAILS ~ I From~I/Partoof UTAH FRANCE cIVES HER AS MINERS ~UIT APPROVAL PLAN ~ II ~Ji~fi!!Ji~ll!!le!le!.'i!!Ji~Ji;)fi;Jf'ilfi;Jjj;lfi;J~If.l Ogden.-Movement of grain, prin· cipally wheat, from Idaho points and other sections through Ogden, is much heavier than usua!1 according to E. R. Alton, president of the 02'· ~en Grain exchange. According t-o m!ormation received by Mr. Alton from railroad officials approximately 1000 carloads more ha.-e passed thru Ogden to date than had passed thru at the corresponding date of last year. It is estimated that this is 1,· 600,000 bushels ahead or last year. Salt Lake City.-Butler B. Ramey, proprietor of the Semloh hotel and well known hotel man, died at a local hospital following a brief and sudden illness. Fo;· more than twenty years he was connected with a number of hotels of Salt Lake. s It L k . . a a e C1ty.-Sa!t Lake C1ty has been chosen the p!~ce for the holding of the 1926 conventwn of the National Lea~ue of District Postmasters, accordmg to a telegram received by Mayor C. Clarence Neslen • fron1 Rohn A. Israelson, postmaster at Hyrum, Utah, and president of the Utah organizatlon of postma t s ers. Milford.-Discovery of a large body of lead ore in the Moscow Silver mines company property promises to put this mine, situated in the Star district twelve miles from Milford, again in the steady l!roduction class. For over two years the company has been working diligently to find the ore bodies which in the upper levels have produced several millions. AJ. though several times during this period the company has opened up daposits of considerable productivity probably at no time has the outlook been as good as It is at present. I m ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOU• SAND ANTHRACITE MINERS WALK OUT ENGLAND'S OFFER IS ACCEPTED BY FRENCH CABINET; AMER· ICA IS NEXT Strike Js Expected To Last For Months; MiJiions Of Tons Of Coal ls Stored And Shortage II Not Expected Finance Minister Callaux Will Leave For The United States On September S>xteenth To Dis· CUI& Plans Paris.-The French cabinet approves in principle the British tentative offer of a settlement of France's more than $3,000,000,000 debt on the basis of sixty-two aimuities of $62,· 500,000. The decision was reached by a session of the cabinet members, which praised Finance Minister Caillaux's accomplishment in obtaining a twothirds reduction of the debt. Simultaneously the cabinet expressed the hope that America will show equal generosity. Meantime warnings of America against sabotage of the Dawes plan through too rigorous debt demands on F'ran~:e were launched here. Much stress is naturally here upon obtaining from Washington conditions which will match England's since England's offer is only Yalid if the United States grants like terms. Finance Minister Caillaux now plans to sail alone for the United States un September 16th. His program calls fer direct negotiations in Washington to establish the principles to be apAlthough the strike order was plied to the French debt settlement, scheduled to go into effect at mid- after which the French debt commisnight, practically all the miners quit sion would work out with the Ameron Saturday. They 8'-..aged big pic- ican debt funding group the detaibo nics on Sunday and like boys who cut of the plan. the last day at school did not go back to work. Rio Grande Main Line Damaged Salt I..ake City.-Approximately Ten thou:;-and railroad men will be 600,000 acres of land will be survey- thrown into idleness by the strike. Salt Lake Clty.- Damage amounted this year in Utah, according to G. These and the miners have 500,000 ing to more than $150,000 was caused D. Kirkpatrick, assistant federal su· persons dependent on them for bread. along the m<l.ln line of the Denver & penlsor of surveys. The supervisor No <lisorders are anticipated in the Rio Grande Western railroad when based his estimate on the appropria· strike zone, at least not for some flood waters rushed down Sunnyside tion of $63,660 made for this purpose time. as the operators say they do not wash between Verde and Ceader, 160 by the interior department. This is miles east of Salt Lake on August 27, intend to import strikebreakers. only about half the acreage surveyed according to an announcement made Both the operators and the union in 1923, due to a cut in the appropria· by J. D. Stack, general superintend· tlon. Mr. Kirkpatrick estimated that officials declared that they will not ent of the western division or the there are between 12,000,00 and 13,. yield and a long drawn-out struggle road. Nine bridges on the main line 000,000 acres still unsuneyed within is anticipated. and two on the Sunnyside branch Miners throughout the strike zone were washed out when the torrent the state. are in a holiday mood. They have Logan.-Walter Hall, former West money ahead and intend to have a rushed down the wash. More than athlete and University or Utah foot- good time at the movies and at au- one-half mile of track was washed ball players, will coach freshman tumn picnics. Many of their v.--ives away and the track covered with debris for four miles. Telephone and football and basketball at the Utah and daughters have signed up on telegraph poles for several miles Agricultural college next year, accord farms to bring in the autumn havest. were almost destroyed. There were ing to word given out by Coach E. L. three freight t.!'ains in the vicinity of Romney of the Logan college. Washington - Officials of the the flood while the storm was raging Kaysville.-The Kaysville Canning United Mine Worker;; of America but only one was damaged when six corporation opened its tomato cam· have assured Secretary Davis that cars were washed into the rushing raign last week. Within the next every effort will be made to protect water. The trains, which were en ten days the crop will be nearing property and lives at the mines dur- route between Salt Lake and Denver peak production and the canning fac- ing the suspension of work in the and Denver and Salt Lake, were ortories of Davis county will be busy anthracite coal fields. The labor sec- dered to stop and were routed over places. The quality of tomatoes this retary, who has been keeping in close the Union Pacific system through year is very high and the yield prom· touch with developments in the an- Wyoming. lses to be enormous. thracite :;oituation, previously had exMarine Given Two Year Term Monticello.-The state road com· pressed concern over the possibility mission has accepted the five-mile that the mine properties might not Washington.- Private George E. ttretch of road between LaSal Junc- have adequate care during the sus- Beam, a member of the marine guard tion and Big Wash. The commission pension of work. of the ?ummer White House in pronounced it one of the best pieces Swampscucl, has been sentenced to of road in the state. Two of the ce· ihree Brothers Marry Three Sisters two years in the naval pri~on at ment heads over culverts were not up Los Ange!es.-There are no more Portsmouth, N. II., and to dishonorto standard and the commission ask· Mandelbaum girls left for the Krauth able discharge. He pleaded guilty of ed that these be remade. The road boys to marry, and if there were, charges im·oJving conduct to the preis now open for traffic. This stretch there would be no more Krauth boys judice o~ good order and discipline, shortens the trip from Moab to Mon-lleft to marry them. The last of the being absent without leave for !ourticello about two miles and one of the Krauth boys married the last of the teen hours, slander, including reworst bits of road on the whole journ· Mandelbaum girls here and has gone marks derogatory to the service, ey Is done away with. to San Francisco with his bride, the breaking arrest and refusing to bathe former Helen Mandelbaum. Helen's when under arrest. Salt Lake City.-A channel 800 feet sister, Nettie became Mrs. Henry long, twenty-eight feed wide and four Krauth eleren years ago and more Belgian Delegates Mum On Debt Deal teet in depth was literally blown into recently her sister Ethel became Mrs. Cherbourg, France.-The Belgian the bed of Utah Jake, when a charge Vlctor Krauth. So when Julius mar- debt commission, returning from of 2000 sticks of dynamite was set ried Helen, the Krauths and the off at the mouth of the waterway con- Mandelbaums sighed a sigh of satls· Washington on their arrival on the necting the Jake with the city's pump- !action and remarked among them-' liner Majestic refused to discuss the negotiations at Washington which reing station. Tons of mud, water and selres: "Well, that's that." sulted In an agreement for the fundl!and were raised by the explosion to ing of Belgium's debt to the United a height of 200 feet into the air and Col. Mitchell Has Close Call States. The Belgian delegates said deposited on the shores along the San Anlnnio, Texas-Remarkable they had promised Secretary of the sides of the waterway. Three of the flying judgment and cool-headedness Treasury Mellon to observe the strictgiant pumps were started immediate· saved the life of Colonel WHliam F. est secrecy in regard to the recent ly to draw the Jake water through Mitchell when an airplane which he negotiations. the new made channel and scour it out to make a free feed channel for was piloting crashed. The chief of the Eighth corps air forces was unSeat Contest Up To Senate the pumps. scathed in the accident, which resultl'd Washington, D. C.-Whether Smith Ogden.-The city commissioners in a complete wreck of his plane. The W. Brookhart, Republican, or Daniel have taken steps to curb high prices aooident oceured whi}e Colonel MitSteck, Democrat, Is to occupy hereaf· tor refreshments sold at concessions chell was taking off from the old ter the senate seat from Iowa, new ot two circuses which will show In ~mount station and in full view of held by the former, will hinge upon Ogden soon. It is expected that City the entire stat\' of the Eighth oorps the verdict pronounced by the senate Recorder J. Herman Knauss, Jr., will area, present to inspect the field for itself on the validity of more than demand an agreement that nominal aviation possibilities. 7500 ballots which have been challengprices will be charged bt!fore a licened and laid aside during the recount ae is granted the show owners. Bandits Bl~w Vault here. Ch!cago.-ll'he post office safe at Bountiful-Twelve persons were In· tred and several others badly shak· New L!bson, Wis •. was blown open Trolley Pay Car Is Held Up n up when the southbound Bamber· and the railway statlon at Quinneseo, Phlladelllhia.-Seven men held up rer Electric passenger train on which Mich., held up and robbed and sever- a Philadelphia Rapid Transit comthey were riding crashed Into the al pouches of mail and government pany car at Sixth and Wlllow streets rear end of a freight train just south money stolen, according to reports of and escaped with $9100 after a pistol the post office inspectors here. No tight with the crew. The car containI)( Bountiful estimate of the loss was ava!Jable. ed a payroll totaling $80,000. Salt Lake City.-It is estimated there are 427,508 American-born in· Bostwick Will Be Fleet Chief Missing Mail Pouch Found habitants of Utah in 1925, compared Washington.-Rear Admiral Lucius Chicago-Excitement caused by tho with 388,644 in 1920. or these, 345,. A. Bostwick, chief of staff of the bat- mysterious disapearanoe of a pouch 407 are natives of Utah, comparee tle fleet, has been appointed chief of with 314,006 in 1920. Of natives of of air mall between Chicago and San other states residing; in Utah In 1925, eta!! of the United States fleet, ef· Francisco was dk:pelled when the sack It Is estimated there are 82,101. The f.ectlve after the return of the fleet turned up at Salt Lake Gity, Utah. largest migration is from Idaho, 9156, from New Zealand. He 11ucaeeds Rear Postal clerks believed to have been compared with 8324 in 1920. Califor· Admiral William C. Cole, who ls to inTolved In what appeared to be a nians number 2949, Coloradoans 6953. become commandant of the Norfolk plot to rifle the air mails were exonlllinoisans 5847, Iowans 4783, Kan· navy yard•. Captain George F. Neal, ans 3190, Ohioans 3990, Pennsylvan- now at the naval academy, was ap- erated by Postal Inspector K. D. Aid· Ian• lmZ8, and nativea of WyomLJ.I.I pointed assistant Qb.ief of start of the ridga, who announced the missing pouch had been addressed to Salt 16U ~ttle fl~ Lake City Instead· or San Franolsco. Philadelphia-The hard coal sus· pensions, involving a walkout of Hi8,00~ ~ine workers, went into effect at m1dmght, August 31st, a& scheduled. It is reported pea~eable and, so far as can be learned, virtually 100 per cent complete. The assignment of the 10,000 :maintena11ce men who return to the pits by mutual· arrangement to man pumps and attend to the general upkeep during the suspension, ·as reported as having gone through 1 without a hitch. The first of the furee full shifts insisted upon by the union went down the &-hafts in time · · · commg · to relieve the mght shift out. . · . The. umon made good 1ts ~:ssurance tt would not resort to IHcket· · d , wou ld b e mg, w h'tc h , 1't exp1ame unnecessary in view of the effectiveness of the tieup. The closing night of. the eld contract was celebrated as a festival in many of the mining towns. Coal trains continue to shuttle back and forth, loaded trains• creaking past retUJning strings of "empties." R_eeve_------110 0.__1 _ _ Our_Pet riR~T YEAR ~f-10 iH,i,T M,._'t or D~WE~ PlAN E~!DS WO~Dt:R ~e GOVERNMENT MAPS FIGHT ON TRUSTS; GERMANY STILL WEAK BUT IMPROVING I. 1 Watch Your Kidneys! Your health depends upon your kidneys. 'Vhen your kidneys are inactive, blood and nerve" are poiBoned and many mysterious ills re~ult. You feel dull and drowsy; get up often at night and s er annoying kidney irregularities. Your back aches; you have headaches and dizzy Bpells; your nerves are constantly on edge and. you are alway• tired. If your kidneys are sluggish, help them with Doan'l Pills. Doan'l act on the kirlneys only. Are recommen the world over. ..hk vour neighbOr I A Utah Case Many Measur$ Are Announced f .. •. Coming Year In Effort To Roduce Prices; Plan Is Galled F r a n k Beck• stead, blackamllh~ Utah Ave. Cor. Main St., Payson, Qtah, says: "My kidneys were weak and a o t e d too Suc~ssful I I.. I Berlin.-The enrl of the first yeaJ und.er the Dawes plan finds Germany with dark clouds hanging over the immediate business future, but still 1 immeasurably better off than she wa~ 1 before the plant went into effect. The economic structure creaks and sometimes breaks, thereby causing ~ I I I -~:.===============:;:==========~=~~~~ suffering many, but this i~ due to to amputation of agony artificial growths and deformaties produced by the war inflation. The economic body itself is fundamentally sound and WilliAM H. ~PAY ELLINGSON GIRl GIVE~ HIS VIEW~ lJro [ClJ TO PR leilUnN Ifs~~L~1~~~~:~m!~~~~~~;~~~~Lh~~i:T:~: economic strength. Reconstruetion has already been started by the dissolution of un· healthy organizations such as the Stinnes conc·ern. The modernization of industrial equipment and business methods has been given a new impetus by the government war against the trusts, who, under th~ stress of the times, escaped government supervision and relap~;ed into all those practices that caused the American people to rise against the trusts twenty years ago. U.S. LAND COMMISSIONER TALKS FROM ONE TO TEN YEARS IS SEN· ON HEAVY BURDENS OF TENCE PRONOUNCED ON RECLAMATION GIRL MATRICIDE Danger Of Change Is Presented at Refuses To Answer Questions Usual· Luncheon Speech In Honor of ly Asked At Time of Sentence; Visitor While In Salt Lake Balks When Photographers City Appear On Scene Salt Lake-The death of reclamation will be sounded if public domain is turned over to the states as advocated by some as a remedy of present national regulations, declarei United States Land Commissioner William Spry in a talk at the dinner tendered by the public lands committee of the chamber of commerce. The states are not able to support individual reclamation projects, w!1ich would be the case if the public domain is relinquished to the state, in the opinion of the commissioner. Mr. Spry pointed out tha-t of the $155,000,000 spent on reclamation, $135,000,000 had been from federal land office funds, and he advis·ed westerners to be cautious not to burden themselves with something they might not be able to take care of. Senator R. N. Stanfield, chairman of the senate committee attributed the brcRkdown in the agricultural ~nCltstry to artificial interference. He swd that if the popu:ation of the country continued to increase, that by 1950, millions of acres of new land will have to be cultivated in the west. He streS'sed the need of beginning cultivation as early as possible. The west was urged not to let down in its reclamation, Senator Tasker L. Oddie, a member of the committee, also sounded a warning against any effort to abandon new reclamation efforts. Charging the west has been exploited for the benefit of the east, Frank J, Hagenbarth, president of the National Woolgrowers' association, assailed the pre8ent public lands system. Pointing to the placing of wool, meat and agricultural items on the tariff free list as a hard blow to the west and at the same time giving the east a decided advantage, Mr. Hagenbarth added that the states should receive 100 per cent of the receipts of public lands instead of 25 per cent as prevails. Hailstones Kill Two Belgrade.-Giant hailstones killed two persons and injured sixty others in the town of Starisivath during a cyclone. The wind devastated the Banat, uprooting trees and cutting off communications. During the day another storm of extreme violence ravaged a part or Bosina. Would Broadcast Voice Of Dead London.-Volces of the dead are to be heard throughout England if plans or the British broadcasting companies are carried out. Through cooperation with talking machine companies, the voices of Theodore Roosevelt, Adelina Patti, the singer; Sir Deerbohm-Tree, the actor, and other prominent personages, long dead, will be transmitted through the ether to be heard by the present generation. The records have been st:ored many years and there is some question as to whether they will broadcast satisfactor!ly. There are many records of prominent persons In the British museum and one company possesses one of Queen VIctoria. It Is not proposed to try to broadcast the queen's voice, and it is doubtful whether tbil museum authorities wlll allow any of their stock to be used. Arctic Airplane Cover Many Miles Washington-A complete resume of the flying operations of the navy airplanes with the MacMillan Artie expedition was received here from Lieutenant Commander Byrd, by radio, in response to a request from the National Geographic society. The dis,patch shows that the three planes flew an aggregate of 6066 miles and saw an area nearly as large as the state of Maine. Only one forced landing was neceasa7.7 durinji ali the flights. San Francisco, Cal. -Dorothy ha..d a. through back th ~~~§~~~enesa u~••v~u I my work and sharp s trequently box ot Doan's me." DOAN'Sp~~~ STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Poster-Milburn Co., Mfs. Chem., Bullalo, N.Y. "Flapper" Always With U• the child wife, as Dicken• her, was a t1apper. She wa1 inexprf's,.ihl)' !<ill~·. but was nil Davl<1 C<>pp!>rfield's frmry painted her until hi' tried to rna ke a housPkeeper of her. Let us not he too hard on the flap.. per. nsl'f't·tln~t that she is a recent an~ highly undesirable kind of girl. There hfl,·p heen flappers throughout all the ml::hty ages of the ever-spinning :rlohe, and wlll he until the globe loop1 It~ final loop.-Tiook :"'otf.'s. Dol'!l, d~w El-l The government has announced the following measures in an effort to l~gson, 17-year-old matricide was lower prices: sentenced to state's prison foe from · · First--A war on pr i ce raJsmg one to ten years. agreements, clauses and contracts Standing before Judge Harold and the passage of new laws if neces· Louderback, Dorothy tossed back her sary. head and looked at the court in a Second-Government action against saucy manner as the words "for the "bidding rings" which prevent free ,term prescribed by law" were pro· competition. nounced. Third-Laws abolishing "business The former "jazz girl" appeared to I supervision," a modified sort of bank· enabling unhealthy concerns gree t th e sen t ence WI'th e agerness i truptcy h bearing out her oft-proclaimed desiie oF angthonU. f h bl. f d t our - se o t e pu 1c un s o "to get it over with." force down the bank interest rate. Preceding the sentence Attorney The reichsbank has announced the Walter McGovern, defense counsel, abolition of the clearing house chargaddressed the court, stating that no es for the same purpose. appeal or new trial was desired and The government claims that the intimating that the girl's . attorneys campai!("D. has already begun to be and father had been forced by her 1 felt and points to last week's drop insistence to not attempt to delay In the wholesale index from 131 6-10 sentence. 1 to 127 3-10, food products dropping McGovern also said Dorothy did not !'rom 129 8-10 to 123 2-10. The latter wish to answer any of the usual w·as largely due to the short-tima questions put to a prisoner before credits, which forces the farmer to sentence is pronounced. Judge Lou-~ sell as soon as possible. derback ordered the girl on ths The drop in the high cost of living, stand. if continued, is expected to have a "Is it true you do not wish to ans- soothing effPct on the general wave wer any of the routine questions?" of wage raise demands and strike the court asked. 1 threats, the most serious of which is "Yes I don't desire to answer still that of the rail workers. them,"' Dorothy replied, tossing her The con~roversy in tho build in; In· head and chewing vigorously on her dustry wh1ch threatened to throw out gum. of work more than 2 000 000 persons, Attorney McGovern asked and re- was settled at the. elE,.:enth hour and ceived a five days' s~ay of execution, it was hoped that 1t Will be a precedbut did not state why it was desired. r~ent for other settlements. As she left the courtroom to go I The official unemployment fig-ures back to her cell a photographer step· have risen from 137,000 to 208 000ped in front of Dorothy and snapped of 5 1-2 per cent-in the first half of a picture. 1 August, but the actual number is "Oh, my God," the girl exclaimed, much greater. While the trade hal"that picture stuff again. I don't ance for July showed a deficit of want it." , 41:!,000.000 marks, compal'ed with Then she went on, tipping her nose 3h2l,OOO,OOO in Ju?e, thiA ~~s due to 1 to the photographers and curious t e rush to buy m the fm e1gn mark· I ets before the new tariff went into crowd 1n th e h a 11 way. . f effect. Both imports and exports Sentence of "that Ellingson g1rl" h . ·r . , f. . 'd s ow a nse. ends Cal 1 orma s 1rst matnc1 e case P . G k kl and one of the most unusual trials remler ra s announces that in the state's history. Poland will resume negotiations for a trade treaty with Germany on Sep· Mrs. Anna Ellingson, Dorothy's mo- tember 15 and the nationalist press ther, was shot last winter during an is already shouting over the victory argument with her headstrong off- In the German-Polish trade war. spring. Dorothy was located in a The stock exchange, which apparcheap ~ooming house and confessed ently hit the bottom went up con· the murder. siderab!y last week. The eastern fair Despite the confession, she was ad- at Koenigsberg revealed an Increasjudged insane at her first trial and ing business with Russia. The curcommitted to Napa state asylum. A!· rent year brought 57,000,000 rouble~ ter a month there she was declared in orders as against 25,000,000 last sane and returned to San Francisco year and 12,000,000 in the year be.or trial. fore. The long hearing ended when a The reichsbank statement showed jury found the girl guilty of man· a further drop in note circulation by slaughter. 143,000,000 marks, as a result of which not covering went up from 62 to more than 65 per cent. London Conductor Strike Over Dog London.-Because the conductor of one of tl:.e ' East Surrey Traction comFlier Breaks All Speed Records pany's buses refused to carry a dog Le Bourget.-The French aviator, belonging to a woman passenger, the Ferdiand Lasne broke the world's company's rural service Is tied up by speed record, for 1000 kilometers a strike o! 600 conductors and drivers. I (6:!1.37 miles), flying the distance in The other men went out in sympathy four hours, one wJnute, ten seconds, when the offending conductor was a speed of 248.7 kilometers (154.4 dismissed. He told company officials miles) an hour. The former record he objected to admitting the dog was held by the French aviator, Dore, to his bus because it was apt to a 221.775 kilomeers (137.7 miles) an spread disease. hour. Say "Bayer"- Insist! ~...v:fer Accept only~ • t._)"'f' Bayer packa!Jt which contains proven directions Hand:v "Baver'' boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles· of 24 and 100-Druggista A.~}ltrfn ts the trnl1e mark of Bayf!r MatlU- tacture or Mono~cetlcaclde•ter I ~ Jewish Congress Has Confidence Vienna. -The Palestine policy ot Herr Weizmann, president of the Zionist congress, received a vote of confidence by the Jewish congress, 217 to 15, with eighty abstaining. The resolution of confidence framed in· eludes the statement that earlier voting was not considered by the congreas as sufficient to cause the reslgnation of the executive oommittee. Af· ter the vote, Herr Weizmann agreed to continue a president of the e.xecutln committee. 'Don't the trouble by using esi ol I 1 1 or Sallcyl!C1LW scratch that rashits dangerous! Stop the itching and clear away I Budget Paring Is Considered Washington.-Budget paring and its possible requirements as to a curtailed program is en;-aging the study of naval heads as well as the war department. Acting at the request of the budget bureau to reduce its program for the fiscal year 1927, the Tlavy department had slashed its or· tp;inal estimates by more than $40,· 000,000 by arranging to curtail act!vities all along the line and perhaps abando• a numb& of eastern shore Headache Lumbago Rheumatism For Colds Pain Neuralgia He Owes His 40 Years of Constant Good Health to Beecham's Pills "I am 57 years old and commenced to be troubled with constipation vot.en I was sixteen. "In 1884 I started taking Beech· am's Pills other remedies havir. failed. I have not had a sick de in all the 40 years." F. LOUIS LOEFFLEF Rocheste N. \ For FREE SAMPLE-write B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, N ...... York Buy from your drua;gi$t In .liS and slo bozo For constipation, biliousneu, sick headaches and otfr~r digestive ailments talu • Beecham's Pille ~v ~·;.·o;,(i~ --~.' - 1 ·' Boschee's. Syrlli jot' Coughs .and Lung Troub1et " Successful for 69 7ear& SOc anrl 90c bottl.... - ALL DRUGGISTS FOR OVER zoo YEAI\fJ haarlern ~~u has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. correct internal troubles, stimulate vital or~:ans. Three sizes. AU drug~sts. Insist on the original ~:enuine GoLD MIW.u.. Jr)urida.-n,., lab1t:' tntorma.tlon o.bout sotiR, cllma.tf>. rt.grll"ultur"" udT~&.nt.&./;os.u;;~:.tunttles. Arf"ans:M b7 OOUD,ties • • ,.,...t tOo, ~., l ,n.. TrJ~ ... Bldl'.;r-. . W. N. u, Salt Lake City, No. 36--1926. |