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Show THE Perfect Diamonds There are no better Diamonds than those we offer you. They are made right, look right, and are sold Diamonds have been "goright. ing up" for years. Lucky is the man who owns one. Our prices make buying easy. ' BOYD PARK FOUNDED MAIN STRiF.r BARGAINS SALT IAKE IN USED CITY CARS tplendld used cars Bulcks, Oldsmobiles, to $800. Guaranteed first class terms if wanted br running conditioneasy right parties. Write for detailed list and description. Used Car Dept., Randall-Dod- d Auto Co., Salt Lake Cftr 50 MEN ANn WOMEN. Now Is the time to learn tbe barter trade. Bar-bers in greatdemand. Special ruts now open for 30 days. Only short time required. Tools furnished and mm mission paid while learning. Call or write Molcr Baher Scttool, 13 Conv mercral St.. Salt Lake City. Utah. WAKTFD IS THIS "YOUNG MAN'S AGE?" Golden Period of Achievement Come When Man Is Well Past Forty Years of Age, It Is Claimed. "Our times are frequently called the the young men. "But when one 'looks back to the revolutionary era of our country, from 1775 to 1S25, and considers the striking youthfulness of the leaders of America the appellation does not appear exactly to fit," said a New York man In a recent Interview. "Nor do the men now In their twenties and thirties push the men of the forties and fifties hard enough to prove that this is the young man's age. Unless men of forty are considered young, this scarcely is a young man's age. "The youngsters tinder thirty receive an undue degree of attention from the professions and business. A notion prevails that the latest graduate from college, technical school or university Is more desirable than the man who courses in life's has had college of experience. Best sellers, movies and magazine articles about business foster the notion. Consequently, a distressingly large Dumber to thirty exof men rma twenty-fiv- e pect to be the bosses of big businesses or corresponding professions or technical vocations by the time they are iege of post-gradua- thirty-fiv- e. "Many will, if they work hard and prove to possess capacity, occupy positions of responsibility. But scarcely The golden age of at thirty-fivachievement really comes In most cases 15 years later. In fact, the present age Is the age of the mature man. In literature the success today is not the man of thirty. Irvin Cobb would almost universally be considered a success in literature, but Cobb is forty-on- e and has not reached the fullness of his. power. George Ade Is fifty-onFrank Cobb, a Tarklngton forty-eighchief writer of editorial, forty-eigh- t. The success achieved through development of talent, hard work and sacri-Bc- o U reserved for the mature." e. e, t, Good Night. There are two brothers In Indianapolis whose names are not John and Richard Jones, but might be. Richard owns a grocery store and his telephone listing follows directly under the listing of John's residence. This conversation took place the other day between Mrs. John Jones and a voice on the wire: "Hello, is this Jones' T Xes." "Have you got any soap?' "Why, yes, I guess Tve got a little. Why?" "Why, I want to buy some. What do you think?" "I've only got one cake. Who la this, anyway?" "Isn't this Jones' grocery?" "No." "Good night I" Indianapolis News. New Use for Motorcycles. That new uses for motorcycles are till being discovered Is shown by the fact that a Californlan with a big lawn to care for drives his mower with the aid of his powered cycle. After several unsuccessful attempts he devised satisfactory means of attaching the grass cutter to the front forks of his machine, and now he asserts that he can trim the lawn In about the time formerly required. The only consideration that limits bis speed apparently Is the fact that the mower must be oiled frequently. Popular Mechanics Magazine. one-tent- h ' That War Easy. boy was sent ' y his mother to the grocery with Just enough change Seeing some to pay for her order. A little candy in the showcase, he ordered what he wanted of It and started out. When the clerk called him back, saying. "Here, yon forgot to pay for the enndy," he stopped, looked at the clerk, then nt his sack of candy, and coolly said, "Oh, make a check for that." File 6ap Milk Supply. Comes fly time with horse files, deer fltes, hot flies, horn flies, stable files and oil the other files uniting to make life miserable for cows and to cause larg decrease In the milk flow. The sustained production of milk Is to depend largely on the comfort and contentment of the dairy cow. Files not only cause direct loss of blood and poisoning from their bites, but also leeep stock from feeding propcauss erly. The loss of milk from this Is one of the serious problems that (aces the dairy farmer. well-know- n NEPHI, UTAH. S, IN BED FOR WEEKS woY we flOOTG -I- N KM Nr. Smith Was in a Bad Way, this weakened ray kidneyj. At first 1 only suffered from a Blight backachi;, but almost before I kne-- f it, I was all bent over lite a man a hundred yean Dean Shailer Mathews' of Chicago University shows hozo the Kaiser and his militarist gang pounced on democratic zvorld like a zvolf pack old. Besides being an author, editor, clergyman, and educiiur. uu..-- . Mathews is a member of the National Security league's committee organized to spread throughout the United States information on the causes The committee was formed because of a prevof our war with alent belief that Germany. with the extent of our many Americans were unfamiliar war could not be avoided. Doctor grievances and the reasons why Mathews is known as a student of. international politics. In 1915 he and Dr. S. L. Gulick went to Japan as representatives of the churches of the United States. (From New York Times Magazine.) 4 AMERICA needs to be told why it Is at war, its ignorance is to its credit. A nation that has tried to live like a gentleman among nations has naturally found it difficult to believe that all nations are not moved by respect for the customs and the laws which codify gentlemanly relations between nations. We have at times overpraised our virtues and purposes, and in consequence for the last generation wfe have listened with a rather amused tolerance to successive proclamations of the kaiser and the laudation of Germany by subsidized mouthpieces. After war broke out in 1914 for two years we struggled to treat Germany and its agents as we expected other nations to treat ourselves. Our attitude might have characterized the Good Samaritan if lie had come upon the robbers holding up the traveler, and schooled himself to believe that the whole affair was exaggerated. AVe simply could not realize the German attitude of mind. Accustomed as many of us had been to interpret the finer ideal life of Germany, we could not believe that men like Eucken, Harnnck, Herrmann, and Diessmann could freely and without reserve lend themselves to the defense of that which was unworthy of their words as we iarl understood thein. Against our will we havt been disillusioned. We have not gone Into war, we have had war thrust upon us. A chain of circumstances over which we have had no control has brought home to the Americans, anxious to maintain their Is built from the aith in Germany, the conviction that America's Baltic to the Persian gulf. toreat Britain sovereignty was being outraged. Its people killed, was.jnaligned and threatened with destruction. its inner peace deliberately attacked, and its instiSouth America was In part colonized by Germans, and the Monroe doctrine was tutions, founded in sacrifice and offered to the repeatedly threatened. world, not only despised but in danger of destrucThe highest authorities in Japan have repeattion. edly said that German intrigues were endeavorGermany has forced America, as It has forced ing to bring about misunderstanding, if not war, almost the entire world, to defend itself by arms. between Japan and the United States. Nobody but those suffering from myopic idealism As far back as 1903 representative Germans sympathies can see anything else. Some of fls frankly said that Germany would have to fight have., suffered when the scales have fallen cut America because It was Germany's commercial away by facts. At last we see clearly. We have rival. In Samoa and the Philippines German innot been drawn Into the war by capitalism, or by terference twice at least brought us to the verge commercialism, or by national policy. For months of war. Had It not been for Great Britain, which we have been living in a state of war, deliberately has always recognized American policy In the planned by a nation whose leaders for ten years Western Hemisphere and submitted disputes to have been preparing some day to fight America arbitration, German arrogance r.nd ambition and who have counted our good nature as cowwould have years ago brought on the crisis. ardice, our unpreparedness as a lack of national With the commercial expansion of European nations, the United States has no quarrel. If. Here are the facts : however, such expansion Is based, guarded, and We are fighting this war. In the first place, beenforced by the threat of war, the United States cause Germany made war upon us. can see the machinations of men who are dlslr-ou- s For years she has sought to build up in Amerof e:.anslon at the expense of the rights of ica a community more loyal to herself than to the other nations. United States. Money has been lavishly spent In Since the outbreak of the European war, the Germanistic societies, alliances, and associations ruthlessness of this German hostility to other nato win the admiration and loyalty of American tions, and particularly to those that have regard citizens. Our universities have bgen flattered, for International law and really representative our professors have been honored for this reagovernment, is apparent. We have seen treaties son. Praise of the kaiser has been inserted even disregarded whenever they stood In the way of in the spelling books of our public school system. German militaristic plans. We have seen conSpies have been everywhere. quered states treated with a brutality worthy of When the war came in 1914 German officials, Assyria We have seen a policy of terrorism apmany of them In high diplomatic positions, treatplied systematically in the abuse of prisoners, the ed the United States, a neutral nation, as if It massacring and deportation of civilian populawere an enemy. publications were tions, the Indescribable abuse of women and chilfounded and subsidized, strikes were organized, the destruction of noblest works of art, the dren, were blown up, plots manufacturing plants devastation of abandoned regions, the wholesale against nations with whom we had treaty relaexecution of Poles, Bohemians, and Serbians; the tions were formed within our borders, bombs Incitement of Mohammedans to a holy war, and were placed on ships In our ports. Hatred of the permission of an attempted extermination of America was systematically disseminated through the Christian people of Armenia. Germany and efforts were made to Involve us In We have seen hospital ships sunk, unfortified trouble with Japan and Mexico. towns bombed and bombarded. We have seen a In reply to our repented protests against these medal struck In honor of the sinking of the and other acts of Germany, to be mentioned presUp to the date In which we finally recogently, we have received promises and explananized that Germany was waging wnr upon us we tions which were little less than Insults. The hnd seen 220 American citizens, among them many treaty that hnd existed almost the entire life of women and children, killed by Oermnn submathe American republic was set at naught and rines. Altogether, on the first of April, 1917. we efforts were made to coerce us Into favorable modifications of its terms. The right of trade with belligerents, which Germany ha always claimed, even to the benefit of our enemy In the war with Spain, and which nt Germany's own Insistence Is universally recognized in International law, was treated as the violation of our neutrality and alliance with her snemles. And, finally, the proclamation of UnreImports nt eggs products this year have amountstricted destruction of neutral ships upon the ed to about 10,000.(X)0 pounds, valued on the averhigh seas was a notification to the United States age nt about 15 cents a pound. These products that it was no longer a sovereign people, but are Imported chiefly from Japan and China and that if It would sail the seas In safety It must include eggs that have been dried, frozen or powconform to conditions set by a power that defied dered. They are used In this country principally international law, humanity, and elemental morbakers In the kinds of of "I began to grow worse as the days passed and finally I had to take to Mr. Smith, my bed where I remained for weeks. My head pained terribly and my back just throbbed. I was always dizzy and it seemed as if everything was whirling. Little black specks came before my eyes and I also suffered from painful and scanty passages of the kidney secretions. Everything seemed dark and dreary. "Doan's Kidney PillB completely cured me and I am enjoying the best of health now." "Sworn to before me." B. M. Jghnson, Justice Peace. On March 19, 1017, Mr. Smith added: "I will never ferret what Doan's have done for me. Whenever I catch cold on my kidneys, I can depend on Doan's to fix me up all right." Get Doan's at Any Stave, 60e a Box MM? iff -- . n Lust-tanl- DRIED EGGS TO U. S. FROM CHINA s, Ilohen-sollern- Alsace-Lorrnln- sub-rie- nt various manufacture by pnstry. The consumption of Asiatic egg products In this country has greatly Increased in recent years, and therefore the conditions under which they are prepared become of greater Interest to the public. The operation of a model plant at Shanghai is described as follows: "The eggs are received at the door of the factory In baskets containing approximately 1,000 eggs, nnd ns the factory offers better prices for choice eggs It Is securing the highest class of egg produced within a circle of probnbly a radius. The eggs arc brought Into the examining room, where the contents of the baskets are gone over and nit cracked or otherwise damaged eggs are separated. The tags are then candled by Chinese, who pass them before the rnndling lamps at the rate of 600 nn hour. The handling rooms are kept In a temperature not exceeding 50 degrees Fahrenheit, the range of temperature In the building, used both for freezing and for drying eggs, being from zero to upward of 100 degrees Fahrenheit In the freezing and drying rooms, respectively. "From the candling rooms the fresh eggs with unbroken shells nre tnken to the breaking room, which In point of sanitary appliances und attention to details of personal hygiene scnrcely Is surpassed by the operating room of a hospital. In fact, the general effect of the room, nslde from its hoslow temperature. Is that of a d nnd aproned pital, but with ten nurses where the ordinary hospital would have but one. The factory now employs 109 girls, each of whom Is expected to break and separate from 1,500 100-mil- e well-ordere- d white-cappe- DOAN'SCO- FGSTER-MILBUR- HAY kp fifiV" BUFFALO. N.Y. REMEDY FOR A GUARANTEED FEVER-ASTH- MA Tonr VOIET wim. BB ki(FITMBD br vonrdruirtrlii without any question if this remedy does not benefit every case of Asthma, Bronchial Asthma and the Hay Fever. No Asthmaticaymptoms matter bow violent theaccompanying attacks or obstinate the case DR. R. SCKIFFMANK'S 'tyv, VtswT self-respe- ality. In the second place we are defending ourselves against Germnny because the German state lias entered upon a program which means the destruction of democratic Institutions. The PruMslnnizatlon of Germany means that the policy of Prussia to carry on economic and political expansion by war Is to be extended throughout the entire world. We recognize that there were once, and we dare believe even now that there arc, two one liberal and the other nn autocracy based on militarism. The struggle between these two forces since 1815 hns been n steady subjugation of liberalism In Prussia and Hit! other German states to the will of a Prussian feudal nobility. Representative and responsible government In any true sense of the word lias been Educafought by Prusslnn lenders relentlessly. tion has been mnde ft creature of autocracy nnd a source of International hatred. The same fute tins met every land Prussianlsm has touched. Austria was beaten Into submission In 1800, mid all the other German states were s tunde practically subject to the will of the between that date and 1S70. France whs robbed and humUlntod. The I'.alknn states were kept in perennial war In the Interests of German treatexpansion. Roliemln and Poland have been ed with the same disregard of popular rightsvns-s-as Turkey hern me a has been c mllltnrlstlc.nntl-.JemocratiA great of the kaiser. southern like state Grrtnany to Prussia, has been started and oil but . But Doan's Restored Him to the Best of Health. In April, 1916, Louis Smith, 90 New St.. Hackensack, N. J., said: "Worls fail to describe the misery I endured from kidney complaint. In my work I have to do a lot of heavy lifting and Iflftt MAKERS OF JEWELRY K TIMES-NEW- fl STHMADOH AND ASTHMADOR CIGARETTES every cast positively gives INSTANT RBLIBF in who II m had seen no fewer than GC8 neutral ships sunk by submarine warfare. We saw Germany precipitating this world war. In which she has used poison and fire, as a part of her official policy at a moment when In the opinion of her leaders she judged the rest of the world to be unready to defend Itself against an attack for which Germany had been preparing for 40 years. The plain catalogue of facts makes It plain why America Is fighting to defend Itself and democracy. We have entered the war primarily In To have done anything less would have been to surrender our sovereignty and to hate waited passively until the German program had been so far carried out and the truly modern nations of Europe so weakened that we in our unpreparedness would have been forced to fight a rapacious, conscienceless military autocracy, whose ends in war are avowedly indemnities, aggrandizement, and the control of the world. Our alignment Inevitably was with and for democracy. An epoch of civilization hangs in the balance. Not to have with a world that Is endeavoring to protect Itself and Its future from Germany with Its militaristic autocracy, Its terrorism, and its disregard of international law, that noblest product of civilization, would have been a bid for suicide. We do not fight for aggrandizement, or Indemnity, or the forcible Imposition of our Institutions upon any country; we fight for We do not fight to further British ambitions or French schemes of colonization. We are fighting for the Institutions which with varying degrees have spread from America all over the world except Germany, Austria-HungarTurkey, and Bulgaria. Our success will make It possible, we believe, not only for our children and our children's chlV dren to enjoy pence, but for German liberalism to master the forces which for nearly a century have been Its oppressor. The American Revolution preserved in America and In England the liberty that goes with Independence. Our Civil war assured the future of democratic institutions In our united nation. The present war Is not born of our Independence, but of our interdependence among those nations who have dedicated themselves to the task of seeing that government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth. e. ' to 2,000 eggs a day of 12 hours. Owing to the factory paying higher wages than other similar plants and working only six days a week Instead of seven, which Is the rule of the cotton mills and silk filatures of Shanghai, It ran pick and choose In its labor, so that the type of girl employed In the room Is far above the standard of any other Chinese factory, nnd a composite picture of them all probably would come nearer the Chinese Idea of feminine beauty than any other 100 girls that can be found In Shanghai. As the workers enter In the morning they are dressed In freshly sterilized clothing furnished by the factory, and after their nails are manicured they are allowed to proceed to the workroom. The breaking room Is solid concrete and Is sterilized each day as carefully as the operating room of a hospital. The girls are seated on metal stools at low sine tables. Before each of them Is a curious appliance which mechanically separates the white of the egg from the yolk. The girl takes an egg, from the can. Into which they have been counted by the candlers, nnd with the right hand crocks It on the bar of the separating machine. The breaking Is then finished by a dexterous move ment of the fingers, which permits the egg to drop Into a shallow cup, where the yolk Is caught and the white allowed to druin off the sides. The dr ing room Is described as embodying all the latest features In the sanitary handling of this product. The air used In the drying process Is thoroughly filtered, being forced through the drying apparatus under heavy steam pressure. The egg yolks or whites come out of the dryer in Hakes, which are allowed to cool to a temperature slightly above the freezing Hint. Then the product goes to the pncklng room, where It Is placed In boxes lined with waxed paper, which are stenciled and mnde ready for shipment. tor the freezing of eggs the separation nnd straining are cnrrled out Just as for the manufac ture of dry yolks, only after the straining the large enns are tnken to the freezing chambers. Here the temperature Is kept close to eero, Fahrenheit and the separate whites nnd yolks are poured Into cans standing on racks that line the wt.'Js of the freezing chamber. and has permanently cured thousands had been considered Incurable, after having tried every other means of relief in vain. Asthmatics should avail themselves of this eu&rantee offer thrnnch thntrown druggist. Buy a package and present this .uuuuutuieiib iaj juur uruKgiaw tun wtu un fcuo sole judge as to whether you are benefitted and the will give you back your money if you are druggist not. We do not know of any fairer proposition 6 which we could make. R. Schiffmann Co., Proprietors. St. Paul, Minn. U. S. Government reports show that 80 of all diseases treated with Radium were either cured or greatly benefited. Pad positively brings your The Radio-Activ- e circulation back to normal by driving impurities Most diseases being caused by from the system poor circulation. Many testimonials from patients who have suffered with Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Insomnia. Diseases of the Nerves, Stomach, Bowels, Heart. Lungs, bladder. Kidneys. Liver and Female Corn, plaints. We stand back of every appliance sold, no matter what your ailment. Endorsed by physicians. Write today. RADIUM APPLIANCE COMPANY 347 Bradbury Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. ArkLEr'S A hair balsam tolls, preparation of merits Bslps to eradloate dandruff. For Restoring CoUr and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. Wo. UNCLE and $1.00 at Dmccf. VERSION JOE'S TRUE Retells Green Congressman Corn Story Which He Declares Is Thirty Years Old. Veteran ,,. "Uncle Joe," said a new member of the house to Representative Cannon of Illinois, "I heard a good story about you and green corn." "Great guns, man, that story Is ttllrty years old," said Mr. Cannon. "Well, I am a new congressman and I fell for It." "If you are going to tell Jt again," went on Mr. 'Cannon, "let me tell it to you right. I have seen more versions of I than there are silk threads In a corn tassel. It's true, all right "It happened at the old Wlllard hotel when It used to be run on ths American 'plan, with three meals a day. I am a light eater, but I am powerfully fond of green corn. One day I had a neighbor on from Danville, who took dinner with me. I had three orders of green corn. "'Joe,' says he to me, 'how much board do you pay at this tavern?' I told him. He looked at the stack of corncobs, ruminated a moment, and then remarked: 'Don't you think it would be chenper for you to board at a livery stabler" Something Lacking. time Louis was hearing For the first the story. It was very dramatically related by a patriotic aunt, but Louis was not so deeply Impressed as he might have been. When the ellmaz was reached and George Washington said, "I cannot tell a He," Louis displayed his first glimmer of enthusiasm. "Couldn't he?" he asked. "What was the matter with him?" Philadelphia Star. . Must Have Been Somewhere. Mother That hole was not In year glove this morning, Molly. Molly Where was It thenT POST T0ASTIES are bully . good for ' meal anyfor all I-a- and the family h; |