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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH His Tips. liked a little bit on," Little Young he had not the skill, unfortunately .nt it was only the luck, to or perhaps DIRE SOB winners. looking through his racing paper morning he saw a tipsters adverti- pick On one SPECIAL RUSH SERVICE secured it mention this paper when writing firms Below. sement. sure things for 5. He purchased a money order for the and wrote off jegiired amount, to the address in the ad- - GIVE suggests THAT GIFT YOU MUST sold are by us. Just giftts that last,"which Reasonable prices ease the the dependable. way. Two BOYD PARK stre-ht- way rerns'-iuen- t. was a smarter But the advertiser reman than Little, for in reply Little eved the following note : Pear Sir As advertised, my sure : things are Loose Button Sure to come off. Dirty Carpet Wants some beat- JEWELERS BOYD PARK BLDG engraved wedding stationery Cards. Invitations Calling naa Announcements Your printer is our representative and complete samples and prices Co. tog. Jennin TVhais Well? 166 MAIN STREET Fans Don't Mind. this I hear? tschall Engraving gs-G- OLDSMOBILE Dealers wanted in Utah. Idaho, pre. ming. Liberal commission-wdlsendresentative on request. A. E. TOURSbUN. veteran plainsman says these cowboys dont even know how a horse correctly. :o ride That wont make any difference to ie average movie fan who never sees A niGtvihutnr. aovie horseback unless he happa mounted policeman or grand marshal of a street pa on ens to be . man jie .ude. Off there Island Reclaimed by Ocean. the northwest coast of Australia used to be a beautiful island 13 lTdTsTbusiness college. branches. But it gradually sank until it disappeared entirely, and at the latest reports of sounding, It was found to be 50 feet below the surface of the water. School of Efficiency. All commercial Catalog free. 60 N. Main St., Salt Lake City long. miles a Clear Sweet Skin touch pimples, redness,' roughness or itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap hot water. Rinse, dry gently and dust on a little Cuticura Talcum to leave a fascinating fragrance on skin. Everywhere 25c each. Advertisement. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS HE World war Is not yet over In the sense that the delving of the historian is ever bringing To Have a blessing that, too, flows Mercy from a sense of our own shortcomins gs. habit is bad for both and physical health. Dont The worry mental rorry. to think of it, about all there a man is the goodness In his Come of is heart. . . . JPOULTRYAffDEGGS POULTRY BOUGHT. For best results ship poultry, eggs and game to Fulton Mkt. Correct weight, prompt returns. Write for prices. : out details new and Ultimately, of teresting. course, full justice will be done to all phases of the great conflict ; at present we are too close to it for clear perspec 7 tive. One of the outstanding features of the World war was the part played by the American Indian. From one point of view there was no particular reason why the Indian should be eager to fight for the American On the other hand, the government. American Indian, by nature and training is a fighting man. The pursuits e of the Indian were war and the chase; the squaws did the work. And the white American, In his march across the ontlnent, found In the American Indian the best natural able places. When we forded one of fighter the world has ever known. the streams the water ran Into the enAnyway, the Indian volunteered with enthusiasm for the' World war. The gine of the car. At Little River we tribes sent over 17,000 braves to fight had to be ferried across in an ferryboat. The hill was so for the Stars and Stripes. They made on the opposite shore that the good soldiers, more than 150 were dec- steep men to had out and push the car get orated for acts of conspicuous valor the embankment. After up muddy In action. 33 miles we found that the traveling i, now It appears that Joseph Oklahombi was not at home. He was, Choca twenty-six- , taw who lives near Wright City in however, only a mile away at his McCurtain county, Oklahoma, is a war uncles farm, where he was helping to hero second only to Sergeant Alvin (plant grain. Sol Joel, the Interpreter, volunteered York of Tennessee. He was a private In Company D, One Hundred to walk through the woods to the farm, get Oklahombi, and return with and Forty-firs- t infantry, Thirty-sixthim to his home. After a time they division, A. E. F. So far, however, his came up smiling. The object of our valor has not been recognized by the had been explained and Oklatrip United States government hombi was willing for me to take his Oklahombl was awarded recognipicture in his uniform, and one of his tion by General Petain of the French home. And he was willing that his Croix army. He wears the French Croix de de Guerre, his trench hat, and some of Guerre. His citation says: his other cherished relics should be Under a violent barrage he dashed placed in the State Historical muto the attack of the enemy position, seum." covering 200 yards, through barbed Oklahombi (said to mean He rushed on wire entanglements. Is twenty-siyears old. He machine gun nests, capturing 171 pris- Is a tall, brawny fellofr, typical of his oners. He stormed a strongly held race. He returned, as he went to position corftaining a number of trench the army, a perfect specimen of manmortars, turned the captured guns on hood, having most miraculously esthe enemy, and held said position for caped shot and shell. four days In spite of a constant barHe speaks English, but not very rage of large projectiles and gas well. What he did over there Is one shells. He crossed land of the last things he wants to talk many times to get information con- about. When questioned about his cerning his wounded comrades. experiences, his replies are invariably It Is said that several futile at- In as short sentences as possible. tempts to secure a photograph of OklaHis Idea of settling the war was hombl In uniform have been made by to annihilate the Germans as soon as the War department through Gabe E. possible. , Parker, commissioner of the Five CivWhen asked what he thought about Then Czarina C. Con-la- n the army he said: Too much salute, ilized tribes. of Oklahoma City, with all the not nough shoot. pride and admiration another Indian When urged to tell something of has for a tribesman who has done dar- his encounter with the Germans, the ing deeds, decided that his portrait reply was I sure give em hell I and some of his history should be preOklahombis comrades grew to exserved for Oklahomas records. She pect him to kill every foeman In says of her trip: One day he brought a very sight. Going to Idabel I found the sec- large prisoner Into camp. Being asked retary of the chamber Of commerce how It happened he said : Well, I can getting out a pamphlet on the re- take him back and kill him." This sources of McCurtain county, Its In- was told to the Interpreter In his own teresting people and places. I told language, and was the only Incident him by all means he should give some that was gof out of him. He was raised In the mountainous space to Oklahombl. All this sounded very well to him, but he could not part of the state, which Is conceded speak the Choctaw language, and be- to be the most beautiful section of sides Oklahombis home was 35 miles Oklahoma. Here In his youth the clear away over rough roads and across two streams that flowed through the streams.. I told him I would get an Kiamitla mountains were well filled and the photographer. with fish, and wild game roamed Interpreter, When we were ready to be off, the through the forests. Such an environment was more apfour men, Including the driver, said they wanted me to know what to ex- pealing to him than the school room pect, for the roads were the worst In consequently he has a very limited edthat part of the country. They were ucation. The only training he has was acquired flt short Intervals in 61d right We had to go over almost impass Armstrong academy near Caddo. in- DROUGHT INTO HOME Lydia E. Pinkhams Veget- able Compound, Restoring Mrs. Benz to Health Okla-homb- full-blood- Pa. I am writing to tell Altoona, fou what Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound has done for me. We have had six children die almost at birth. From one hour to nineteen days is all they have lived. As I was going to have another, I took a dozen bottles of your Vegetable Com- pound and I can say that it is the great- - est medicine on or t113 baby is now four months baby you would not sending you a picture of ff .Everybody says, That is some 7thy looking baby. You have my consent to show this letter. Mrs (J. w. Benz, 131 3rd Ave., Altoona, Pa. No woman can realize the joy and ipppiness this healthy babe Drought the home of Mrs. Benz, unless they we had a like experienoe. Jvery woman who suffers from any 5m,ent3 Peculiar to her sex, as indica-j hy backaches, headaches, bearing-tnirregularities, nervousness should not rest until jth blues and a healthier "ant. I am Mu H PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Removes Restores Color and Baaoty to Gray and Faded Hail 60c. and $1.00 at Druggists. HtseoiChemJWSSiSjEfiSSSSlSli . INDERCORNS Remorse Corns, U ensures eomfortto the pain, Mo. by mall or at Drug arks, Patchogne, M. X. Agents, 200 A j. Profit Wonderful Native Herb Laxative Tablet nat'onal reputation for quick rePeati8 qualities. yte at once for our proposition. 8ema Wri?8 , fw. Ul 1422, St. Louis, Mo TREATED ONE WEEK FREE Ejav.. Short breathing; relieved in a few hours; . swelling reduced in a the liver, kidneys, stomach Purhies the blood, strengthens the Writ, for Fret Trial Tnatmmt. REMEDY CO, Dept S.O, ATLANTA, 6A E. Coleman LATENTS Wstioo Patent Lawyer, Washington pteiresi m D. O. Advice and book free Highest references. Beetservleea h Man-Kille- r) x No-Ma- 1 1 cure your motor troubles. Gill Piston Ring Co.. IS East Fourth South Piston Rings t&. ELASTIC STOCKING MFRS. Manufacturers abdominal. Maternity supporters Truss fitters. S. H. Bowmar Co., Brooks Arcada Accordian, Side, Box Pleating, Hemstitching, Buttons, Bnholes. Kid Corset Parlor, 40 E. By. TIKIS REPAIRING VULCANIZING & RETREADING. Quality and service. Standard Tire Works, 361 So. State. ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS CARDS From your local printer. He can furnish Service and Quality. old-tim- QY By PIANOS. Players, Everything Phonographs on very easy terms. Music Co. known in music. Write Daynes-Beeb- e He married a Choctaw girl before he enlisted In the army. When he went over seas he left his wife and a baby girl a few months full-blood- old. After he was mustered out it Is no wonder he chose to go back to the beautiful eld Indian settlement where he was wont to hunt and fish when a A little cottage has been built boy. on a small tract of land which he owns and is cultivating. Near the mortar. back door stands the And now that the strife and turmoil is over, writes Czarina Conlan, it is natural that he should want to return to the heart of nature, where he can look out In the cool of the evening and see the lengthening shadows of the old oak trees trees that were old before his ancestors made the trail of tears when they came to the Indian territory in 1832. Perhaps Oklahombl will get full recognition for his exploits in The History of the American Indian In the World War, which Is being written by Dr. Joseph K. Dixon, the leader of the Rodman Wanamaker historical expeditions to the North American Indians, in the course of which he visited every reservation in the country. He is the author of The Vanishing Race," and the secretary of the National American Indian Memorial association. Between February, 1919, and February, 1920, he visited systematically all the camps and military hospitals on the Atlantic seaboard. Interviewing officers and privates, studying, interrogating and photographing Indian soldiers who had returned, either sound or wounded, from overseas. And now,- as his final act of preparation for his historical work, Doctor Dixon has returned from an intimate four months study of the entire western battlefronts of Belgium and France, In which he covered more than 3,500 miles of travel and took more Before he than 1,100 photographs. been supplied by Genstarted eral Pershing with a large map, which showed that American Indians had fought in every one of the twenty-eigh- t main battle sectors from the North sea to the Alps. yOklahombl, It Is reported, will be; featured by Doctor Dixon in his book. Another of his Indian war heroes Is Corporal Walter S. Sevalla, a Chippewa Indian of the Seventh engineers, Fifth division, upon whose breast Marshal Petain himself pinned the Croix de Guerre. Sevalla swam the Meuse, carrying a cable for a pontoon, under heavy machine gun fire. Later in the day he was severely wounded while repeating the same feat In the swimming of the broad and swiftly flowing Est canal, which parallels the Metises near Breulllea. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE. Qualify as barber in few weeks. 43 S. West Temple Street. We are manufacturers of Bank, Office and Art in Fixtures is out Store Fixtures. Salt Lake Cabinet & Fixture Co. Business." BEAUTY PARLORS CURLS, SWITCHES. Transformations from up. Only human hair used. Fast prepaid mail service. Walkers (Dept.) Beauty Parlor. $1-9- 8 INFORMATION DEPARTMENT la . - he-ha- Commercial inquiries answered and information gladly furnished without cost. Address any firm above. Miner's Cradle. The cradle is a simple appliance for treating pay dirt, earth and It congravel containing on a mounted sists essentially of box, rockers, and provided with a perforated bottom of sheet iron in which the pay dirt Is placed. Water la poured on the dirt, and the rocking motion Imparted to the cradle causes the finer particles to pass through the perforated bottom onto a canvas Bcreen, and thence to the base of the accumucradle, where the gold-dulates on tranverse bars of wood called gold-dus- t. st riffles. t Valuable Life-Savi- Device. invention is the buoy. Its inventor sought to devise some means of getting a line from ship to shore, and the buoy was the result When released from the ship, If the wind is In the right direction. It blows steadily toward the shore, the line unwinding behind it as it goes, until finally, the buoy Is dragged out of the surf with the line Intact In addition to Its use In this manner, it is available for all the regular purposes of the ordinary buor A useful line-carryin- line-carryi- g |