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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH For Eighteen Years IB 5h Has Found the Same Medicine Good. The Story in Her Own Words. The experience of Mrs. David Horn of Route No. 1. Irwlnton, Wilkinson Peruna Co., Gn., is not exceptional. has been an accepted standard house hold, ready to take remedy, for forty-fiv- e years. Mrs. Horn writes under date of July I have been using your 80, 1918: medicine for eighteen years. I think it one of the best tonics I ever used. I owe my life to the use of it. I recommend it to all sick people. Peruna cured me of stomach trouble. For coughs, colds, effects of the grip aud influenza, catarrh and catarrhal conditions of every description, Peruna Thousands have is recommended. been helped or are able to attribute a full and complete recovery from some terrible affliction to Peruna. Try Peruna first. In tablet or liquid form. Sold every, fEKIII' OF A CONDENSED FORM RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT EVENTS TOLD IN BRIEFEST MANNER POSSIBLE. forty-thre- Happenings That Are Making History Information Gathered from All Quarters of the Globe and Given In a Few Lines. INTERMOJNTAIN. Bucked by lntennountain capital and business meu of standing, the Devils Slide cement plant at Devils Slide, Utah, is to be converted into one of where. the biggest potash manufacturing establishments in the United States. It. B. Ilale of San Francisco has been named chairman of the campaign which the Ited Cross will conduct in CaliRisky. How do you think the boys will fornia, Arizona and Nevada during the act when they come home from the week of December 16 for new members. A heavy snowfall at Corona, Colo., war? i All right, but now that youve asked on the Continental divide, followed by me I fancy I shant care about riding a fire in the town, resulted in the stopwith the chauffeur who has been ac- ping of traffic on the Moffat railroad. customed to driving one of those The seizure of five trunks, containtanks. ing heavy shipments of whisky and other intoxicating liquors, last week at Ogden promises to bring to light a Don't Worry About Pimples. On rising and retiring gently smear well organized gang of bootleggers the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash which, since the first of the year, is off the Ointment in five minutes with believed to have shipped thousands of Cuticura Soap and hot water. For dollars worth of liquors, as baggage, free samples address, Cuticura, Dept. from San Francisco to Salt Lake and At druggists and by mall. Ogden. X, Boston. Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Adv. Fred W. Berger, 60 years old, candidate on the Democratic ticket for The real reason for the failure is state representative, was shot at Berusually that the hasnt tried hard ger, Idaho, by Frank Dolan, his tenenough. ant, and is in a precarious condition. The shooting grew out of a quarrel over the turning of weeds on the Berger farm. J. W. and W. A. Alexander, brothers, who had left Duchesne, Utah, for "Every Step a Torture, Says the railroad with a shipment of cattle, were found dead in a tent after some Mrs. Whitenack But of the stock had wandered into a Doan's Cured Her nearby town. Both had died from in' fluenza. Suffered Terribly! Mrs. Florence Whitenack, 84 Armstrong Ave., Jersey City, N. J., says: I suffered with rheumatism for six or seven years. My limbs and joints were so stiff and swollen, I could walk only with difficulty and the pains in my hips were so severe, I could hardly bear them. Every step I took was torture. My feet and limbs were swollen and so sore, I could hardly hear my weight on them. During the night I would lie awake for hours and become so nervous, I would have to get up. Dizziness Mn came over me suddenly and my sight blurred. I was never free from the miserable backaches and rheumatic pains. I used different remedies, but I didnt get any better. Then I com- DOMESTIC. to use Doans Kidney Pills. The swellings began to leave right away and I continued to use them. The pains and aches left my back and hips and I am cured of the rheumatism and all signs of kidney trouble. Sworn to before KING SEIDEL, Notary Public. Get Doan's at Anv Store, 60e a Boot ROBERT DOAN'S CO FOSTER-MILBUR- SSUST BUFFALO. N. Y. Spanish Influenza can be prevented easier than it can be cured. At the first sign of a shiver or sneeze, take CASCARA x j$ QUININE Standard cold remedy for 20 years In tablet ,ure no opiates breaks up a cold relieves grip in 3 days. Money ill , if.1 Cails- - The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. Hills picture. At All Drug Stores. inS'T98 reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Sof' ll Bunches; Heals Boils, Poll Evil, Quittor, Fistula and infected sores quickly will n k? j as it is a positive antiseptic and germicide. Pleasant to oiei does not blister or remors the hiir, and yon can work ibc horn. 2. 50 per bottle, delivered Book 7 R free. AoSORBFNE, JR.,the sitlteptic liniment for mankind, Painful. Swollen Veini. Weni. Strains. Bruitcsi "mi M pain and inflammation. Price C1.25 per bottle M delivered. Will tell you more U you write. ?,! . Trial for 10c in itampi. iii, YOUNG.Bottle P.D. F., SIOTemple St., Springfield, Miss Baby Colds treatment with a remedy that Eons no opiates. Pisos is mild but effect jjns e; pleasant to take. Ask your druggist for Jjjjluire IPD More than a hundred met death at r New York when a train runat in a tunnel high speed ning jumped the track on a curve and struck the sidewall with such terrific force that the first car was demolished and the until they were others buckled jammed against the roof of the tunnel. Public ownership of street railways as a solution of present unprecedented conditions was advocated before the American Electric Railway association meeting at New York by Richard McCulloch, president of the United Railways company of St. Louis. As a result of a controversy between authorities at Lancaster, Pa., and the acting state health commissioner over tiie refusal to obey an order keeping the saloons closed because of the influenza epidemic, the commissioner declared that city to be under quarantine. Declaring that the action of Fuel Administrator Garfield in refusing to permit the bituminous coal miners of the country to have an increase in wages is arbitrary, autocratic and unfair, the United Mine Workers of America have appealed to President Wilson from the fuel administrator. fare is Claiming that an meet inedeased to the wages necessary granted their employes by the war labor board, the Kansas City Railways company has asked the federal court for relief. Total subscriptions in the army to the fourth Liberty loan was $75,540,550, the war department announced Friday, complete reports having been received from all forces abroad as well as those in the United States. Elimination of German control over the Hawaiian sugar industry by the purchase by, Americans of the powerful Hackfield company, is announced by A. Mitchell Palmer, alien property custodian. Various aspects of Americas foreign trade after the war, including questions of financing our foreign operations, educating our representatives for foreign trade service, foreign advertising, patents and trademarks, were discussed at New York at the opening of a two-daconvention arranged by the American Manufacturers Export association and attended by bankers, men manufacturers and advertising from all parts of the country. An engineer training camp with accommodations for 16,000 men is to be built at Fort Leavenworth, Kann. The war department announces' that work will begin at once and will represent an estimated cost of $5,000,000. One policeman was killed and six sailors were dangerously wounded at Norfolk, Va., In a street riot which resulted from efforts of policemen to arrest a number of sailors on charges of disorderly conduct. five-ca- ' menced of the American Demobilization force In France will require a period of two years after peace is declared, according to a statement made at New York by Gen. T. Coleman Du Pont, just back from a two months visit to the western front. An average wage increase of $1 a day has been granted anthracite coal miners by Fuel Administrator Garfield, effective November 1. in some instances the" increase is belov this figure and in others far above it. The $1 average Is described as very general. e Three hundred and persons, most of them outbound Alaskans and residents of the Yukon territory, lost their lives when the Canadian Pacific Steamship company's passenger steamer Princess Sophia was battered by storms, dropped to the bottom of Lynn canal, an arm of the Inside Passage not far south of Skag-waAlaska. WASHINGTON. Three and a half million tons of coal have been saved in the past six months by industrial plants which have adopted the conservation recommendations of the fuel administration. Orders for 3,000,000,000 cigarets, enough to provide two smokes for every person in the world, have been placed by the war department to supply American soldiers for the balance of the year. Prosecution of the three army officers held by Charles E. Hughes in his report on the aircraft investigation to be guilty of dealing with corporations in which they were financially interested is to be started without delay. Announcement from London that an armistice with Turkey, which permits passage of allied warships through the Dardanelles, already is in operation led naval officers at Washington to believe that an allied fleet, if it has not already started soon will pas through to the Black sea to attack the German naval forces there. The sugar allowance of two pounds monthly a person for householders has been increased to three pounds monthly by Food Administrator Hoover, effective at once. The sugar regulations also are revised to permit the purchase of the entire months supply for a family at one time. FOREIGN. It is officially admitted in the German capital, according to a dispatch from Berlin to the Exchange Telegraph company by way of Amsterdam, that serious damage has been done to tiie city of Heidelberg, in Baden, by the allied air raid. There were some casualties. ;; A Tampico, Mex.; dispatch says the ihfluenza epidemic there Is the worst scourge that has eyer visited the city, nearly 100 death occurring daily. Mexican federal troops were defeated by a superior force of Villa followers forty miles south of the border, according to a report brought to Ojinaga by a runner sent out by the federal commander. An armistice between Turkey and the entente powers was signed October 30. It became operative at noon October 31. This means that nearly two million Turks are out of the war, and a new avenue of attack upon Germany is opened up. An Austrian deputation has been permitted to cross the fighting line for preliminary pourparlers with the Italian commander, according to the official announcement at Vienna. The German empress is very ill and weak, according to a Berne dispatch to the Petit Journal. It is said that she is haunted by the memory of the Russian revolution and insists upon abdi1 cation of the emperor. That immediate release of all British prisoners will be insisted on by the government as part of armistice terms is expected at London. Lokal The Berlin Anzeiger announces that former Chancellor Dr. von Bethmann Hollweg will be arraigned before a parliamentary commission acting as a high tribunal to explain why President Wilsons peace mediation offer in 1916 failed. The Bolshevik! have decided to hold a Bartholomew night on November 10, when all members of the upper classes will be killed, according to An indescribable Russian advices. panic reigns at Ietrograd. . Some conception of what Australia has done in the war and of the losses sustained by the commonwealth can be gained from figures which have just been issued officially. Out of a population of 5,000,000, Australia has sent abroad 336,000 men. The total casualties numbered 290,191, including 54,431 dead. Recruiting in Australia is now at the rate of 4240 a month. As part of the terms of an armistice, the London Evening News says it understands the allied nations will insist upon the surrender of the German fleet, including all the German submarines, and upon the occupation by allied forces of all the fortified towns on the Rhine. In recognition of his services to the allied cuuse and as a mark of respect and honor the municipal government of Lisbon has voted unanimously to hame one of the citys most prominent highways after President Wilson. 1 y prepare-for-after-the-w- s y, THE BEE HIVE STATE There have been 2588 cases of Spanish influenza in Salt Lake to date, with 141 deatiis. A charge of having Issued fictitious checks is made against Roy Churchill, who was arrested by the officials of Reno, Nev October 28, und is wanted In Salt Lake. The monthly report of Joseph Rirle, state auditor, shows that the disbursements of tiie ' state for October are f $587,612.45, of which almost is represented in outlay for state road work, Local musicians have offered to render their services free of charge at all military funerals to he held In Salt Lake, according to resolutions passed by the Salt Lake Bederation of Musicians. Cnpt. F. L. Fink, Fort Douglas quartermaster, paid out $32,000 in government salaries at tiie fort on October 31. Of tlmt sum $25,000 was paid to Officers alone, a circumstance that has never occurred before at tiie post. Outlying counties in the state will be counted upon for an enthusiastic effort during the coming United War Work campaign, which begins November 11, according to reports being received by tiie state campaign manager. Lieut. Edward Conroy, who went through tiie first engagements with the Americans against tiie Germans, and who was decorated by tiie French government with the croix de guerre, lias arrived in Ogden, his home, on, a short furlough. A protest, signed by numerous residents along the Bamberger railroad between Salt Lake and Ogden, was entered at the hearing of the Bamberger petition for an increase in passenger and freight rates before the public utilities commission. Hysteria has handicapped greatly the work of those who are combating the influenza, says Dr. Paul. It is that which the public should a'oid. Yet brazen lack of precaution aas contributed just as much to tLe serious- Diamonds You will find no better diamonds than those we offer you. They are made right, look right and are sold right. Diamonds are becoming more valuable each year. Our prices are modest. BOYD PARK FOUNDED 1602 MAKERS OF JEWELRY. one-hal- K6 SALT LAKE CITY MAIN STREET BARGAINS IN USED CARS SO splendid Oldsmobllw, used Guaranteed first class $250 lo SHOO. condition-ea- sy terms If wanted by tunnin right parties. Write for detailed list and description, Used Car Dept., RandaU-Dod- d Auto Co., Salt Lake City EXPERT KODAK Finishing Have our professional photographers do youn finishing. g HIPLERS 144 South Mal! Salt Lake City Cameras Films Supplies uri big wages learn p WANTFI) If you want barber trade. Many small! towns need barbera; good opportunities open for men over draft age. Barbers in army havsj Get prepared good as officers commission. in few weeks. Call or write. Moler Barber College, 43 S. West Temple 8t., Balt Lake City. , ness of the situation." About $500 a day is being earned by Salt Lake lads of the boys working reserve, who are busy in beet fields and orchards, according to JChallen Smith, head of the reserve. More than 100 Salt Lake boys are employed by the farmers of the state. Recent cold weather has driven range stock to seek the low valleys, according to J. Cecil Alter, local weather man. The frosts om. the mountains have killed all vegetation, thereby making it impossible for cattle to live only in the valleys. The executive officer of the state council of defense and the chairman r construction, have supervising been asked to be present at a conferNovember 11, ence in Washington r conWhen matters concerning struction will be considered. Andrew J. Stewart, pioneer surveyor, 72 years of age, died on a Denver & Rio Grande train, about twenty minutes out of Salt Lake, en route to Provo from a Salt Lake hospital, where he had undergone an operation. Mr. Stewart came to Utah in 1850. Forty Chi Omega girls of the University of Utah are now spending their time making face masks from gauze furnished by the Red Cross. In less than a week they have made 1800 masks, which helped to relieve the increasing demand on the Red Cross. In a letter sent to school superintendents of the state, Dr. E. G. Gow-ansuperintendent of public instruction, urges that the work of the Child Welfare organization be taken up at once, and that sortie one be employed who can devote his entire time to the work of health supervision. Gust Katsohorakis, a Greek, was fined $50 by the food administration last week. He was charged with making false affidavits in order .to receive a larger sugar allowance. The Greek had been getting ten pounds of sugar each month and was staying by himself at Winter , Quarters. Becoming despondent and lonely after the suicide of one son, in Buffalo, a drafting of her two reN. Y., and maining boys, Mrs. Sarah Lanno, 53 years of age, widow of John C. Lanno, a Spanish war veteran, of Buffalo, New York, attempted suicide while sovisiting Salt Lake by drinking a lution of lye and water.- It is believed she will recover. Farmers of Utah county are protesting against tiie prices proposed for Sugar beet pulp by the I company, and say they will cancel their orders for feeder steers, and silo the beet tops for stock they expect to hold over. Auto mechanics (rill be called to the student army training corps, Utah Agricultural college, Logan, every month, it is predicted. It is also believed there will be monthly calls for chauffeurs, radio operators, telephone electricians, machinists, blacksmiths, horseshoers, surveyors, topographical draftsmen, concrete workers and non-wa- non-wa- s, - tnh-Idal- io GLOOMY OLD FRONT PARLOR' Furnishings Served td Remind Beholdere of Particularly Solemn Mortuary Chapels. Mid-Victori- The mansard sheltered the accumulations of two or more Garland households of tastes. It was a debauch of black walnut and haircloth In a twilight of heavy lambrequins and large figured wall paper. Never In all my twenty-tw- o years had I beheld so tables gathered under many marble-toa single roof. There were three In the parlor alone. One bore a Rogers group Coming to the Parson, it was called; another a stereoscope with views of the Yosemite and the centennial of 1876;. the third served as pedestal for a case of pallid wax flow-pr- s. On the walls hung oils of mountain scenery which It would have crazed a geologist to classify. The sitting room across the wide hall was even worse. It was bullied by the ugly bulk of a secretary with vicious rams heads carved on its lower doors. Second in massive gloom was a black marble mantleplece crowned by a black marble clock with a limping tick and an asthmatic chime. Tables filled .the spaces unclaimed by haircloth sofas and chairs, and a whatnot bestrode a corner. I was now prepared to find The Maldens Prayer, and I did, poor maiden, neatly done in best female academy style. There was also a bronze plaque of Washington Crossing the Delaware.' It was a bad crossing. .None of the pictures were inspiring, but one at least was appropriate. It portrayed the youthful Victoria in her nightie receiving the news that she was now queen of Great Britain, defender of the faith and high sponsor for art. Womans Home Companion. mid-Victori- p Partners In Joys and Sorrows. A writer says in the American Magazine; It is a good phrase we have for describing women, partners of our Joys and sorrows. I know not how It may be with other men, but It Is thus with me ; In the regular routine of life, when nothing much is happening, when the days go by one after the other filled with their monotonous rounds of duties, I can, if necessary, exist for long periods without the company of women. In such days and weeks they are sometimes, to be sure, a pleasing distraction ; but they are not fbod and drink and shelter. I can, if need be, survive. But let success break through the monotony of the daily grind; and I must have a woman to share it ; half Its sweetness is lost otherwise. And failure without their chatter and unquenchable optimism is utterly intolerable. I say I know not how it may be with other men, but it Is thus with me. God-give- n Ail Sailors Superstitious. All sailors are superstitious, but none is so completely under this influence as the old deep-se- a fisherman. He puts the deepest faith in signs' and omens of all kinds. Nothing would Induce a skipper of the old school to sail on Friday. One intrepid unbeliever who dared to leave the docks at Grimsby, England, on a Good Friday was hooted through the lock gates by the scandalized populace. In spite of thus challenging the fates, however, he returned safely with ship and crew. Superstitions of Seamen. If a man is ill at sea, his most critical time is when land is first sighted. If he survive an hour after the sight- ing of land he will recover. On some trawlers whistling is forbidden it scares away the fish. Other skippers believe that to wash your face In the middle of a trip will break a spell of calm weather. |