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Show THE PRESS-BULLETI- ,..... , i ' A - JUDGE CITIES BY POLICEMEN Character of Guardlana of Peaca Serve at Criterion for Municipal Ities, Says Writer. It used to be said that each coun-try could be known by the Jews who lived within Its borders. In the same way every city can be Judged by the character of Its policemen, writes Hen-drl- k Wlllen van Loon, In Century Mag-azine. ' In Chrlstlanla the policeman Is a mild And amiable citizen in a rather shiny coat, and none too neat, who stands In the middle of the roadway and tries to maintain some semblance ; of order In the democratic muddle of the city's traffic. In Stockholm the policeman is a walking arsenal, with sword and pis-tol and a brass helmet, and the ar-rest of a disorderly person becomes an act of state. There the policeman represents the high authority of a proud country. He fulfills his duty with a stern severity. lie Is the sym-bol of law and established order. Let no one touch these fundaments of a d commonweulth. In Copenhagen the policeman is neither the happy-go-luck- y citizen who patrols the streets of Norway nor la he a creature of resplendent glory like his collengue in Sweden. He strikes a hnppy medium, in this he is an ex-- ; cellent representative of--a land where the art of sensible and peaceful living seems to have been brought to Its high-est perfection. If only the chauffeurs of the Danish capital would learn how to drive their cars we should not have a single complulnt to make against a country where everybody seems well fed, where beggars are us scarce as very rich people and where the wom-en ilve up to the best traditions of the charming china which Is maje In the royal residence of Denmark. GERMANYNEARTilL END IS ASSERTION - Kalaer's Dentist Saya Army Is Well 'V Cared For, People In Utter Misery. ' ' "The German soldier looks fine, but everything else in Germany looks like " the devil.'" . Or. William Law, of Flint, Michigan, the kaiser's ' personal dentist,' made , , , this summary of conditions In the German empire. He has Just return ed from Berlin, where he praotlced for '" , thirteen years. "The people cry for peace and the , leaders of the military dynasty say, We've offered peace to the entente and they refuse it,' and so the people go blindly, patiently on," he said. ; "I think the people of Germany can fight for another year, but there is s much distress. 'When a person hasn't shoes he goes barefoot or has wooden I soles put on the old ones. (Most of the people go without. "The military party will die fight-ing, whether killed by the allies or their own people in an uprising after Germany has been crushed. The win- - ning of the war for the allies depends upon how big a fleet of airplanes America can Bend to France," . I ... ' TME STATE BASKET BALL1DURN-fiMEN- T WILL OPEN IN FROVO ' " I Li ylrat Game of the Season Will Be at $ . the 8. Y. U. on January a , Twenty-fifth- . (Basketball will begin in the Utah i colleges on January 26, when the B. j . Y. U. and the B. Y. C. will play at J Provo. and the first game for the Unl-- J versity of Utah will come the follow- - - ; ing night, when the B. Y. C. plays the i Crimson in Salt Lake. The schedule, ' , ' which was drawn up by the coaches af the four schools, further provides i jpjt the season will run until March Tth. A decldely important matter came before the faculty representatives when the question of eligiblity arose, and the stand which was taken may result in placing all the Utah colleges ' t on the same eligibility footing. The faculty representatives voted that no Bchool should henceforth play any man except a college stu-dent. At the request of Coach Eugene ', Roberts of the ii. Y. U., they decided to reconsider the matter this morning, in order to allow Roberts to present his arguments. For many years there ' ;"v has beenTin effort to force the dis- - ir continuance of the custom of playing high school boys gn college teams In this state, both the University ofl Utah and the Utah A. C. having al-ready made the change. It Is pointed out that 4he B. Y. U. would have to live up to this condition, anyway, if its petition to the Rocky (Mountain . conference should receive favorable action January 12. , , No plans were made for track and " baseball, but the sentiment was that these sports should be continued. In harmony wfth the request of Secre-tary of War Baker, that the pay of ; officials be cut down during the war, 4 ' the pay. of referees and umpires at 1 intercollegiate games will be reduced this year. I The basketball schedule follows: 1 January 25-- d3. Y. C. and B. Y. U. at i Provo. 1 '' January 26 B. Y. C. and U. of U. at ', Salt Lake. , February 2 A. C and U. of U. at i Salt iLake. j February 9 U. of U. and IB. Y. U. ; at Provo 5 February 15-- B. Y. U. and B. Y. C. ft - at Logan. February 16 B. Y. U. and A. C. at V Logan. t February 22 B. Y. C. and A. C. at i Logan. I February 23 B. Y. U. and U. of U. Salt Lake. fatMarch 2 A. C. and B. Y. U. at Fro t vo. .March 8 U. of U. and B. Y. C. at t iXgan. J ,'jh March 9 U. of U. and A. C. at Lo--' j , gan. - ' General Merchandise and Miners Supplies Upper Bingham Store Upper Bingham Market Highland Store Boston Store J Glass of Hot Water Before Breakfast a Splendid Habit . Open sluices of the system each morning and wash away the I poisonous, stagnant matter.' I ' I Those of us who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when we arise; splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, . foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, lame hack, can, Instead, ' ' both look and feel as fresh as a daisy I always by washing the poisons and . toxini from the body with Dhosnhated hot water each morning. , We should drink, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a ul of limestone phosphate in it to flush from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels tha previous day's Indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleans-ing, sweetening and pur'fylng the entire alimentary tract before putting more food into the stomach. The action of limestone phosphate and hot water on an empty stomach is wonderfully Invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast and It is said to be but a little while until the roses begin to appear In tha cheeks. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will cost very little at tba drug store, but is sufficient to make anyone who is bothered with bilious-ness, constipation, stomach trouble or rheumatism a real enthusiast on tha subject of Internal sanitation, Try it and you are assured that you will look better and feel better In every way shortlv America's Food Waste. The Amerlcap people waste more than f 1,000,000,000 worth of food each year. f STOP CATARRH! OPEN ' I NOSTRILS AND HEAD A -- I Says Cream Applied in Nostrils X j Relieves Head-Cold- s at Once. j ' " .....-.""- " -- """' , If your nostrils are clOcged ami yom ' head is otulTed and you can't breath' 'reely Wnne of a cold or catarrh, jus rn-- t a fiiiall bottle of Ely'i Cream Halt: at an? drug itore. Apply a little o tlila fragrant, nntiw-pti- c cream mt votir noHtrils and It it pcnelrat i through pvrv nir of your lw gn.t!iiii2 and' Win;! tiiu inflamed. W" , j K-- niwms membrane and you get 1 stnrit nlii'f. , Ah! W i2M it M. Your n trim are open, your head is eWr, n-avS9 mora hawking, snuffling, blowing; ii' mora headache, dryness or strugg ing for breath. Ely's Cream Halm is just what ulTerers from bead colds ud tarrh need. It's a deilghU Refreshing S8t Gratifying nNMB fflj. Foaming T )) jjYJ(T Satisfying fsA H 11 M JJ fi Exhilarating yfJ- - VT 11 Non-Intoxicati-ng 2g332MjI rfki -- The Pure f0 everaSe serve J H b iff . SbeMtwlinetehenhome-w- ith meals or 'ffi0t meals. S ML Becker Manufacturing A 5sg$- - Mr ' ORDER FROM 1JECKER MFG. CO., BINGHAM - - - ii i ii i. PIOER PRINTER DIED MONDAY Andrew Jensen, a printer and news-paper man, died this morning from a complication of ailments from which he has suffered for years. , Mr. .Jen-sen was DO years of age, a native of Denmark, and came to Utah with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Niels Jensen, in 1880. He is survived by his wife, five daughters and four sons, his aged mother, five slBters and four brothers. Mr. Jensen published the Spanish Fork Press for nine years and later " ' the Piute Chieftian at iMarysvale. The deceased was a man of genial person- - ality and was respected and esteem-ed by his circle of acquaintances. Funeral services win be held Wed-nesday at 1 o'clock In the Sixth ward meeting house. - The remains may be viewed from 10 to 2:30 Wednesday at tire home, 639 South Third West street. ' RULERS WHO GAVE UP CROWN Diocletian Relinquished Scepter to Raise Cabbages at Salona, While Charles V Turned Gardener. It was Diocletian who quit dominion to raise cabbages at Sulona, and who refused to die lord of the world, re-lnt-a historian. He was happier farming, he told the envoys of his friends. Charles V, Roman emperor and king of Spain, likewise laid down his scepter and turned gardener be- - fore he died. Philip V of Spain ab-dicated in favor of his son, but re-sumed the orown. Amurath, sultan of the Ottoman Turks, was luckier. He abdicated In favor of his son, but re-sumed the throne in a moment of na-tional peril. Then he abdicated again. A second time a national crlsl3 called him from retirement, but he hnd tasted the pleasures of private life, ar.-- i he hastened to return to them. He was a great king, the greatest ruler of his generation, and the most capable commander. Ills arms were Invincible on two continents, his terrl-- I torles Inviolate, but he preferred the quiet of his palace of Adrlanople, the conversation of poets and philoso-phers, and the theological arguments of the wise men of Islam to the coun-sels of his statesmen. He died peace-fully In his bed, praising the peace he had come to know, and his son, the second Mohammed of the' Ottomnn line, won a more lasting reputation by the destruction of the Byzantine em-pire. How It Generally Works, After saying. "I don't want to find fault," the average man preds a flaw. , . ... I -- N' THE LIFE OF THE TOWN i ' j. This busy gent Is a Booster and tht "' Life of the Town. Without him and a few others, the Old Burg would be aa ' Dead as a Doornail. He's Jerry on the .; Job for the Public Good and his name Iliads every Subscription paper to 4 , , v Raise Money for anything. We couldn't ! do without him. Long may he Wave I Condition of Life. It !s true that air and moisture con dltlons are necessary conditions which make possible soil "life but they do not constitute life. We have seen a previous article state that warmth li a cardinal point of life action. When we speak of life in a soil we must con-template active life represented by pome kind of growth or development and a dead soli Is characterized by inactivity or inaction. BXU. M 101 Bt ALLOWED 10 PLAY HIGH SCHOOL BASKET BALL MEN . The dispute which? arose In the meeting of the representatives of the rtate colleges Thursday afternoon still remains unsettled as a result of a fur-ther confab Saturday morning. The point at issue Is the playing of ed up to by the other teams of the state. The matter has been agitated by mail, during the past year, however, as several of the coaches and faculty men were not pleased at the decision. They declare that in this way the B, Y. U. has had adequate warning that the matter was to come up again and should have prepared before now for its appearance. Coach Joe Jensen of the A. C. points out the B. Y. U. has a great advantage over the other colleges In that basket-ball Is the chief attraction, while the A. C and Utah spend their major ef-forts on football. The church school takes up the hoop game the first thing in the fall and when the season rolls around Its team is advanced pretty far along when the other teams are just starting the grind. The iB. Y. U. has taken most of the state basketball championships In the history of the sport In Utah for this very reason, Jensen argues. The Rocky Mountain conference meeting scheduled for January .12 may help to clear up the rumpus because Coach Roberts' team will be compelled to ob-serve the same rule as the other in-stitutions if they desire R M. stand-ing. iHerald-Republlca-fourth- yea- r high school men by the B. Y. U. In Thursday's conference it was decided to force the Provo school to live up to the Rocky Mountain con-ference eligibility standards. Further debate on the subject served only to gain one more faculty vote for the B. Y. U., leaving the vote two for and two against the rule formulated Thursday. The schedule will be play-ed through, and as the matter stands now the 13. Y. U. will have to play strictly eligible men. The question of eligibility at the B. Y. U. is a long, standing one. Coach Eugene Roberts Insists that the col-lege attendance Is only about 250, most of It girls, including the high school section, and that it is absolute-ly necessary for him to use all the boys to make any showing at all. At last year's schedule meeting two years' time was officially granted the institution to readjust its athletic teams to conform to the standard llv- - Tobacco Impoverishes Soil. It has been calculated that a ton of tobacco vlthdraws more than a hun-dredweight of mineral conracuents from an acre of land. This would op pear to be an astounding waste of ma terial, which must be of enormous value to the soil, conrlderlng that 75 per cent consists of calcium and potas-sium salts and 15 per cent of mag-nesium and sodium salts, Including nearly 5 per cent of the essential con-stituent to all plants phosphoric acll - ' - - .... Chinese Postal Service. Originally stnrted by Sir Rober Hart es the customs postal service, th Chinese postal service has grown t olg proportions. The Chinese ar (jreat letter writers, and somethlni over 850000,000 Ivtters were carrte by the Chinese posts In one yar. I' Is the most extensive and the cheape postal system in the world. The Chi ese post will carry a letter to any par of China for about a cent aa4 half, whether it is sent by rail, bone, or foot-courie- r. Not Altogether Good. Marlon's aunt vas a visitor at her noine and Marion was a much admired and petted little girl. In a burst of affection her aunt said one day, "Ma-rlon, you're such a good little girl." But the sturdy youngster replied, "Sometimes I am and sometimes I don't," French Read In South America. Throughout South America Frencl is almost unl . ersally read ; editions of the classics are in most homes, and book stores are filled with fnodern French writers of prose or verse, both In translation and In the original. 1 tie Disadvantages of Wealth. Somebody figures that to count $1,000, JOO.000 would require 102 years of steady work nt the rate of eight hours s day every working day. You can se Jrom this how endarr8Ked you would oe If you had 11.00. .000,000. You wouldn't even have time to count It. Boston Globe. w THINGS 1 i.AT NEVER HAPPEN (ort nks jcmkins i trtiwcj Jywi I dojtV your child is THL rUHlNK 50 -- jouj I Imhdsomcm child i) cniLD tsMucnv I , Acquitted. I When a young man eloped with a j FprlnfteM '' nt jet of age, the fa- - I ther of tlin young woman caused his 1 nrrcnt !ii ilnn'g'' of dlHturblng the 1 pence. When In court it was shown f that faiher vas asleep when the elope-me-occurred and Hint lie did not waken for some time afterward, the young man wus acquitted. Kansas !: City Times. . ' .)' 6 I - |