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Show i THE QRANTSVILLE IN WE Id What Makes You Buy Theft I3 nothing quite so nffirt Ito as reliable merchandise. Wo have built and our reputatioa with rellnblo goods --- GOES INTO EFFECT 11 Prices honestly modest. BY MAKERS OF JEWELRY SAIT LAKE CITY Trading With the Allies Enemies or the Lattera Friends to Be Under Supervision of Newly ated Board. Cre- Broad war powers Washington. conferred upon the president by the trading with the enemy net were put Into operation under an executive order, Issued October 14, delegating the ' bow open for SO dan. Only (Sort time required Toole fumiahea end commliiion paid while learn-tof- . Call or write Holer Baber School, IS Com BMrcial Ht.. Salt Lake Oitr, Dtah. STRONGHOLD OF THE BEAVER Largest Colony In Existence Making a Last Stand, in Fastnesses of Southern Rockies. Par up In the fastnesses of the southern Rockies, hidden In one at the most Inaccessible nooks that remain In this country today, what Is probably the largest existing colony of bear- I authority under the law to various government departments and to a newly created war trade board. This board Is composed of the members of the exports administrative hoard, which It will replace, with the addition of a representative of the treasury department. It wjjl continue to license exports and will exercise a similar control over Imports us soon as the president proclaims, under authority of the trading'wlth the enemy act, the articles to be so restricted. Trading or commercial dealings of any nature with any enemy company or agent in this country or abroad Is forbidden, except under license of the war trade board, which also Is authorized to license enemy or ally of enemy" comimnles doing business in the United States, excepting Insurance compunles, whose supervision Is Entrusted to the treasury. Secretary McAdoo Is vested by the president with and is exiected to turn over to the federal reserve board the executive administration of any investigation, regulation or prohibition of any transaction In foreign exchunge, export or earmarking of gold or silver coin, or bullion or currency, transfers of credit In any form (other than credits relating solely to transactions to be executed wholly within the United States) and transfers of evidences of indebtedness or of the ownership of property between the United Stutes and any foreign country or between the residents of nny one nr more foreign countries, by any ierson within the United States." The reserve board already exercises virtual control over gold and silver exports. The secretary of the treasury's vested authority to prevent transmission of Information to an enemy either to nr from the United Stutes will be exercised by the secret sendee. WILL CARE FOR OUR OWN. Government Insurance Policy for Its ' Soldiers and 8ailora. Insurof the Washington. Samples ance policy which the government will write for its soldiers and sailors were made public October 14 by the war risk insurance bureau of the treasury department. Details of the policy disclose tlmt risks will be written upon the lives of men and women between the uges of 15 and 65 in all brunches of the army, navy, marine corps, coast guurd, navul reserve, national nuvnl volunteers, nurses and any oilier branches of the United States service serving with the unny and navy. Announcement wus nude also that rates ut ages higher or lower will be given - enemy-owne- . nt beet-sug- I before In addressing Henriette, or any not altogether easy. You see, we lawyers don't go about things In Just that trade directly or Indirectly with an enemy or ally of enemy. Only with consent of the board may agents of enemy companies do business In the United States after November 5. Enemy companies also nwy not chunge the names they used at the beginning of the war without speciul license. er, has established itself for a last stand. The bearer was once one of the most abundant of our American animals, but the eaae with which he was trapped and the value of his fur soon drore Censorship Board. him far on the road to extinction. Soon Censorship of mails, cables, radio only the most stringent of protectire and telegraph messages passing out of legislation was able to save him, but the United States is placed in the now he seems to be coming back," hands of a censorship board consistand wherever he flpda a favorable lo- ing of representatives of the war, navy cation he Increases rapidly. und postofflce departments, the war There Is no better place In the world trade board and of George Creel, chairto study the interesting habits of this man of the committee on public InuNin request . little animal than In that little hidden formation. Iremlums, computed on a monthly the Is To the treasury mountain valley Just south of the Colassigned orado line which the Mexicans have regulation of transactions In foreign lmsls, vary between 63 cents per $1000 15 to $3.2.') per thousand at age christened Lagunltas" and the Ameriexchange and exportation of gold or at age cana call Beaver Lakes. The valley silver coin under license, and enforce- 65. Between 21 and 31 years, the folwillbe .nestles against the very backbone of ment of the law's provision against lowing monthly premiums the continental divide, 10,000 feet transmission to the enemy of Informa- charged per $1000 of insurance (the fcbove sea level, and from every side tion by any other means tliun regular limit being $10,000) : to 23, Inclusive, 65 Twenty-on- e It Is approachable only .y long and malls. The treasury also is authorized 24 to 66 cents; 26 and 27, 25, cents; toilsome forest travel, except In winto license insurance or reinsurance ter, when It Is not approachable at all. companies of the enemy or ally of the 67 centa; 28, 68 cents; 29 and 30, 09 The hollow In the mountains crest Is enemy doing business with the United cents; 31, 70 cents. dotted with Irregular rows and miniaDuring periods of total disability, States. d the insurance will lie paid, not In one ture ranges of hills, two and three Regulation of the use of hundred feet high, that make up a or controlled patents for the lump sum, but monthly for twenty most bewildering topography. war, and of the granting or publica- years, should the disability continue In among these hills the beaver have tion of patents containing informa- for that period Sould death occur bebuilt them a city. The landscape la tion valuable to the enemy, is given to fore twenty years, the remainder of the policy will be paid at once to the Ideal for the building of their dams, the federal trade commission. At the age of 25, the and by throwing barriers of stick and beneficiary. Foreign Ldhguage Papers. mud front hillside to hillside they have The postmaster general ls.entrusted nionthy installment for the twenty-yea- r created a dozen big lakes, some of with supervision over and licensing of period would be $5.75 per $1000 them half a mile long. Along the foreign language newspapers. In anti- of Insurance. Provision is made for family allowshores of these lakes are built the cipation of this authority Postmaster beavers lodges. There are probably a General Burleson has been receiving ances, for wounded and cripples, for thousand beaver in this community, applications for licenses and began compensation in case of deuth or inreigning in undisputed supremacy over issuing them before Tuesday, October jury without cost and for insurance ut their mountain domain. They are shy 10, the date the provision of the very small cost. In cases of partial disability the brutes, but very early In the morning hiw All such became effective. and Just at sunset you can often surpapers, except those granted licenses, amount of compensation Is determined prise them cutting the quaking aspen are under penalty to file with by a schedule to be based upon the exon the bank with their chisel teeth or theirrequired local postmasters before publi- tent of the impairment of earning caplastering away Industriously at one cation thorough translations of all pacity. Total disability payments are of their elaborate dams. mutter relating to the United States to be Increased above the figures government or the government of any named in the policy where the Insured The Power of Sincerity. other nation at war. The same sec- has dependencies. Where the injury or disease Is Though a man must be sincere In tion of the law makes it unlawful to order to be great, he need not be drculute In anymanner matter .made caused by the wilful misconduct of the man," the policy reads, compensation great In order to be Sincere. What- unmalluble by the espionage act ever may be the size of our brain, the The presidents order defines the will not he paid. the talents of powers of the alien property custodian Tli policies will he Issued in mulstrength of our pow any kind with which we are gifted, to act us trustee fpr all enemy prop- tiples of $500, no policy, however, to sincerity of heart; or belief, or life is erty within the United States or to be less than $1000. possible to us alL It Is of itself a Issue licenses exempting enemy comFIENDISH CRIMES OF TURKS. kind of greatness which. In spite of panies from his supervision. An apmany other drawbacks, will make It- pointment for this position will be self felt The honest, upright man, made soon. Children Buried Alive in Trenchee who lives openly, fearlessly, and With Bodies of Murdered Mothers. The secretary of state Is empowered truly, professing only what he feels, to license the transportation of enNew York. Burial alive of liubies In upholding only what he believes In, emies to or from the United States trenches with the bodies of tbeir mothpretending nothing, disguising nothing, through the existing passport means. ers, who had been slaughtered or alno one, claims uncondeceiving The secretary of commerce will re- lowed to perish front exposure, was sciously a respect and honor that we tain Ills present authority to review practiced by the Turks In their work cannot give to any degree of power of customs collectors re- of exterminating the Armenians, It was or ability wielded with duplicity or the decisions to vessels declared here by the Rev. Henry H. clearances If we could correctly di- fusing in vlolutlon of the carrying cunning. IMggs. missionary of the American trading cargoes vide the world Into the sincere and for foreign lKiurd of commissioners act. the with enemy the Insincere, we should have a much Chairman. missions to Harput, Turkey, who reMcCormick Vance we truer estimate of real worth than The new wur trade board is to con- cently came back to tills country. A generally obtain. It la the fashion to sist of Vance C. McCormick, chairman, trench was dug beside a camp of Argauge people by what they believe, of state; menian women, be said, and ns they rather than how they believe It. Yet, representing Ithe secretary met death the survivors were forced to Alonzo representing Taylor, I)r. Important ns is the former, the latter Thomas ofa drag their bodies to it and bury them. the secretary griculture; la much more so. Exchange. The gendarmes said they could not D. Jones, representing the secretary of commerce ; Beaver White, representing take care of the. babies that were left Lucid Explanation. Frank G. Mun- behind, so many of those were buried Theodore had learned from his play- the food administrator; shipping board, with tlielr mothers, Dr. Riggs said. mates that the Murphy family had ten son, representing the.of the secretary and a representative children, each being two years older of Utahns Offer Their Services. the treasury yet to be named. All know You the than the one before, are Ten thousand farmrepresentative the but Washington. treasury Murphies; well they got ten shllren. now members adminthe State Farm the of exports ers, by represented each older than Each kids two years whose work hereafter Bureau of Utah, telegraphed assuristrative board, ages. go by other; they will be done by the bureau of exports ance of their support In food conservation to the food administrator, of the war trade board. Business Proposition. of the present exports through W. W. Armstrong, federal name The ; A little lad came in the grocery store council is changed to war trade coun- food administrator of Utah, promised head of lettuce. The for. a factories to the This body will act In an advisory to supply clerk was removing the withered cil and to the limit of their capacity next year and to the president capacity ten coat leaves and told the boy they assured him that through their efwar trade hoard. cents, whereupon ha remarked, Can't In the forts their state has a surplus this vests order The presidents leaves and make it jam. take off a few war trade board power to license year of 100.000 tons. five ceatet flve-ce- UTAH. way. Henriette snorted an expostulation that Indicated contempt for lawyers In general, and Randolph's mind went back to the main consideration. If you're not busy tonight, let's go investigate that Tllden mansion. If you start right away you can get the keys from Mr. Tllden and be back by seven.1 Randolph had risen from his chair; almost eager to be gone, since It was the prerequisite of a solitary ramble through the old house with Henriette.' Surely If he could not manuge a proposal under such favorable he never would be able to do McAdoos Duties. NEW WAR BOARD CREATED ORDER OF PRESIDENT WILSON. BOYD PARK HO MAIN STREET NEWS, GRANTSVILLE, ar (Copyright, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) circum-stanc- 1917, es It was not until Randolph Yardley so. He was Just at the door, willing; had definitely made up his mind to proevepose to Henriette that he secretly en- with the bright prospects for the before to with him, ning vividly was depart tertained the wish that Henriette the kind of suffragist that felt It to be womans privilege to do the proposing as well as the voting. Henriette was a suffragist, of course, but she wasnt that particular kind of suffragist. Randolph had heard her say so. After she had managed to bring the conversation up to the delicate question of proposing Randolph might easily have done the rest. But Randolph didnt realize how easy this would have been till he wrr alone the evenlng after the discussion. The Saturday afternoon after he had definitely decided to propose he unfortunately did not find Henriette alone. His rival In her attention was the old Saunders, known more as familiarly Sandy though any reference that that name might once have borne to his hair and complexion had ceased to be apparent for Sandy was toothless and his sparse hair was white surely not a very formidable rival But any third person Is a rival when a man wants to propose, and when Randolph entered her bungalow living room Henriette was kneeling on the floor before a packing case with Sandy at the opposite end. So sorry, Randolph, she said with a smile so preoccupied that It was worse than no smile at all ; you'll just have to excuse me while I go on with this case. Theyre things for the suffrage bazaar. It's to he In a week and Ive had to take the chairmanship the last thing. During all the call that afternoon Randolph never once found a turn In the road from'whlch he might have directed his own remarks toward a proposal. The case was soon packed and Sandy shuffled away with It, but Henrietta's thoughts were still engrossed with the bazaar. And Imagine suddenly skipping from remarks on the fish pond at a suffrage bazaar or fancy tables and lemonade booths to proposals! Perhaps It was not to be wondered, then, that when Henriette suddenly asked Randolph to promise to do a certain favor and to promise before she had told him what It was, he held up his large muscullne hand and swore rather foolishly to do anything in God's world that she wanted him to. What she wanted him to do was to get Mr. Tlldcn to let the suffragists borrow what was known as the Tllden mansion, then unoccupied, for their bazaar. Til do what I can, Henriette, Randolph said solemnly, hut It may be very embarrassing for me and for him. You see, he la a client of mine Randolph had not been practicing law so long that he. did not use this phrasing with some degree of and there Is a lawsuit now going on over that house. You see, a year ago, after the Tlldens had been out of the house tot a year, It was leased by .Mr. Bamberger, the brewer. Loads ot money, you know, and could perfectly well have paid the rent even though he did decide not to live In the house. Now Tllden Is suing Hamberger for the rent and Hamberger makes the claim that the house could never be heated. We tried to settle It out of court; but we couldn't. Yon wouldn't understand the technicalities, so I shant bore you with them. But the ease Is coining up and Pm particularly anxious not to lose out Randolph lowered his voice and discussed the case In a vay that was not entirely professional, ihe fact seems to be that the heating system of the house was all wrong, and you see how It would Injure me and Tlldcn If some 500 or GOO of the most prominent women In town were to go there on a nice cool day, as it Is quite likely to be In a weeks time, and find out what a hornlike place It Is. So, you see, you will be working against my Interests If you urge It Still, I have promised. But suppose all those 500 people went there and roasted almost to death? Suppose the temperature there went up to 80 or 90 opd all the windows had to be opened would that help your case? Randolphs eyes showed keen Interest and for one fleeting moment he forgot that his sole Interest in life for the time being was to propose to Why, certainly, that would win the case for me. But I dont suppose you have taken a good look at the furnace, or that Mr. Tllden has, either," Henriette scolded. I cap say that we have, little girl.." Randolph had never used those words -' k, Hen-rietf- e. scarcely a word of farewell. Ill get Sandy to go along with us, came Henrietta's cheerful contralto. He knows more about furnaces and things than any man we ever had and you might buy some candles on your way, for the light will be all turn ed off, I suppose. Randolph's roseate dreams had fad efi away. Even an empty house didnt offer favorable background If the ubiquitous Sandy were to be the third party still. The trip was taken to the Tllden mansion that night In Henrietta's little roadster, with Henriette at the wheels Randolph at her side and the weazened! Sandy sitting at Randolph's feet with his own rough-shofeet protruding to the running hoard, and In the same guise they returned. The hour spent at the mansion was one in which Sandy was master of ceremonies and Randolph fonnd himself chiefly useful In holding lighted candles for the old man or hoisting his light but agile body tfli peer at pipes and drafts In the rusty, heating system that ramj bled over a good share of the cellar of the old house. The pipes that conveyed the hot air from the furnace to the upper regions of the house were rusty, but not so much so that drafts In the three main; channels for the hot air could not bei opened when Sandy applied the sturdy muscles of his .thumb and forefinger to that task. Now she'll work, Sandy had re- marked by way of announcing his triIf yousll order a couple o tom umph. of chestnut coal and a bit of kindlin' 1 think I can have enough heat in the old place to make your Ice cream sell Ilka hot cakes In Feb'rary. d dust-covere- d The day eame, and the Ice cream did sell like hot cakes, and even after the lemonade had been so diluted that lb was almost Innocent of any Intimacy with the citrus fruit for which It wasj named. It sold In such abundance that! the proceeds of that table were flvej times what one would have expected! from lemonade. Windows were opened! and those who came to buy made fans of sheets of paper they could find. Itj was a sharp, cold day for autumn and so there was no very great Irritation lnj the voices of complaint that were raised against the excessive heat AC any rate every one who attended thej hazaar was strongly impressed with the fact that the Tllden house was endowed with a phenomenal heating apparatus, and scarce a person in town failed to hear something about the excessive heat that had prevailed In tha old mansion during the two days and1 two nights of the suffrage bazaar. A few days after the bazaar Hen-- , riette Beauchamp announced her en-gugeinent to Randolph Yardley, and: those who knew Henriette as well sa those who knew her only for the reputation she bore ns an young suffragist explained the fact that the engagement occurred just when It did in this vise : Ilepriette had set her cap for Randolph ; yes, that Is just what they said, and no doubt Randolph had taken a fancy to Henrietta, lint Randolph was not the kind of young man who would ask a girl to marry him unless he had some Idea of how he was going to sup-port her. Henriette knew this, and. If the truth must be told, Heuriette had the making of the better lawyer of the two. She knew that Mr. Tllden had put a little work In the young lawyers way and she knew about that case against the brewer, Umiberger. So she worked out the whole scheme, planned the suffrage bazaar and everything and got that man Sandy to make the fire that could prove the house 4 ? could be hented. And, of course, Bam- berger's lawyer saw there was no use continuing the suit, and the affair was settled at once. No one cared, for no one had any great love for the brewer. The result was that Tllden gave the young lawyer a fee amounting to half the years rent that he had recovered and for that mansion the rent was a enormous. More than that, Tllden put all his legal work Into the hands of the young lawyer. His future was assured and well, after that, how could Mr. Yardley do otherwise than he dldl Complimenting Father. Charles received a wagon on Ml birthday and promptly broke a wheel His father soon mended It Papa, hi said, "you are smarter than you look." |