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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH now wins, A Valuable Habit it that of being on time. It hat made reputation for thousands. A good watch costs very little, and every sensible person should own one. Buy yours now. Our reasonable priees eats the way. AVOIDED All BOYD PARK MAKERS OF JEWELRY MAIN STREET SALT I suffered Canton, Ohio. female trouble which cauoed England Must Dispose of More Than fOUNMOlfttt no LAKE CITY suffering, and tli doctors decides that I would to go. through u operation beforei could get well Haifa MillionHorses, BARGAINS BO CARS IN USED OldsmebUee splendid used Many N. Guaranteed Brat clast sy terms If wanted by Write for detailed list and descrip rtcnil$$250 to MOO. rannlnt condition-ead Auto Co. Salt of bj&segi Lydia E. Pinkhajft Which Bear Vegetable It relieved b Ml can do my house w?rkwTthoS afflictewithafeVmaleaKSntr tion. r RADIATORS like new. branches. Special Staff Correspondent (Copyright AOETYLINE WELDING in all its We save you time and money. In every town In Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and Nevada, to sell a household articla and up retailing at $1.75. Four dollars to any one who will per day guaranteed costs work. $1.00. Sample For information and sample, write WEBB JOHNSON CO. 56 P. O. Place Salt Lake City, Utah HFIP WANTFD If you want big- wages learn barber trade- Man; small towns peed barbers; good opportunities open lor men over draft age. Barbers in army have Get prepared good as officers commission. in few weeks. Call or write. Moler Barber 43 West S. Salt Lake City. St., Temple College, POETS GREAT John Greenteaf Whittier Has Written His Name Among the Immortals ef tha Earth. e John Greenleaf Whittier, one of $ia best loved and most famous of American poets, and. perhaps, the moat ardent abolitionist known to United States history, was born December 17 near Haverhill, Mass. He was apprenticed to journalism and became an editor at the early age of twenty-twHe held various editorial positions, and throughout his life devoted himself to the writing of both proserand poetry, o. ? . having no doubt a deep Inspiration In that he belonged to the same age that gave Emerson and Longfellow to America and Tennyson and the Brownings to England. With such as his contem-porariWhittier, being himself blessed witb natural talents, could do no less than what he did In literature. Whittier, however. Is better known to fame because of his poems. Hla prose Is not so exalted, though true. He wrote "My Psalm, Barclay of At SunUry, "Barbara Frletchle, down and various other wonderful He lived to be elghty-Iv- e poems. years old, dying peacefully September es 7, 1892. LABOR DRIVEN TO ITS LIMIT Hardest ef Hard Work Demanded ef Boatmen In the Early Days of the Country. . The high moral courage of the missionaries who strove to convert the Indians of the Canadian Northwest Is well Illustrated by the life of Father Lacombe, who dared to rebuke Chief Factor Rowan of the Hudson Bay company for heartlessness toward the , companys men. Katherine Hughes describes the Incident In her biography of Father Lacombe. The factor and the priest were Journeying to Edmonton In a kqel boat, towed by a company of cordeliers. Of the boatmans toll Father Lacombe has written: "Imagine, If you please, after resting a few hours oa the bare earth, to hear at 8 oclock the cry, Level Level Et puls, hurrah to pull and pull on the lines drawing the heavy boat up against the current, walking In the mud, the rocks, the swamp, along cliffs, and sometimes In water to their armpits and this under a burning sun or beating rain from early morning until darkness fell about oclock. Without having seen It one can form no Idea of the hardships, the cruel fatigues, of these boatmen." . 1 Youths Companion. Aid In Is a good practice for people Self-Mneter- y. It te make a practice of doing something every day for their development, that they dont want to do, and then t$ deny themselves every day something they want This should not be for n day, a week or a year, but a life work. In no other way can a man become master of himself. Dr. J. H. Teldea. mam m Prospects of Palestine. d Palestine has never had a boundary except the sea on Its west, but It Is understood to be about 10,000 mllea In extent Much of this area Is too dry and rocky for tillage; large parts srs too dry even for cattle r sheep. well-define- Over half a million heroes of the war, many of them gold stripe horses, are being given the only kind of honorable discharge a horse can receive : sold to English and other civilians to fill the pressing need In this countrys transport system. We thought, In America where thousands of these horses came from, that the British army horse led as precarious an existence as the machine gunners In the first line of trenches. During those first months of war, when British army agents were buying horses In the United States, there were many who honestly believed the American steeds would last about one week in that inferno of shell fire. You should see the American horses now being brought to England from France If you ever believed the life of a horse at the front was a hundred-to-onshot that death would come in the form of a Huu shell. By the hundred thousand these sleek, well kept, well fed quadrupeds are being auctioned off to eager buyers. Many were In France four years; many were wounded In action, but were carefully cared for by the army veterlnarles and bear today the honest scars of battle as the memento of the days when they helped win clviliza-- . tions war. One of the first lots sold went under the hammer at Wares Edgeware road repository, about the middle of December. Heres a horse that deserves the Victoria Cross the auctioneer shouted when the first horse, a black gelding, was trotted out. Hes got two wounds to his credit and Is still going strong. The gelding was sold for about $150 American money. Equine Losses Announced. Major General Sir W. H. Blrkbeck, director of remounts in the British army, has just announced the losses among the British war horses during the entire period of the war. During the last four months of 1914, General Blrkbeck declared, the armies In France lost 14 per cent of their horses, or about 8 per cent a month. That period Included the retreat from Mons, the first battle of the Marne, and the first battle of Ypres. In the following year the losses were fourteen and, a half per cent for the whole twelve months. In 1917 the losses rose to 28 per cent, 10 per cent f which took place during the last iree months of the year, the balance if the losses being chiefly owing to the heavy fighting at Vlmy Ridge, Passchendale, and the beginning of night bombing. ' During the last year of war comparatively few horses were lost : two and a half per cent being the official estimate. Among the British commer-qja- l firms something like 20 per cent of the horses a e always either sick or resting, as an annual average, while the official British army reports reveal the fact that in France, due to the careful attention of the veterlnarles, the usual average was a bit more than twelve per cent. Whether America can profitably follow the accepted British system of demobilizing army horses Is a grave question. With the present shortage In ships and the pressing needs 'of European peoples for foodstuffs, together with the mighty job of transporting General Pershings army home, It Is possible that some horses must needs be either left behind. or sacrificed, to add somewhat to the already staggering debt of war. The British people have been told that In all probability some thousands y of horses and mules in Egypt will have to be disposed of In one of three ways: repatriation, destruction, . or sale. Oppose 8hootlng of Animals. There Is a strong sentiment against shooting the faithful animals. And there are a number of practical obstacles to such a plan. The carcasses of $25,000,000 worth or horseflesh cannot be disposed of simply by signing an army order even though Egypt does Ilford wide wastes of uninhabited four-legge- d AGENTS WANTED WITH Vestem Newspaper Union) ONDON. H. & E. Radiator & Welding Co. 252 Ediaon Street, Salt Lake City. Utah RANKED Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Com! pound a tnal and it will do as much f them. Mrs. Marie Boyd, 1421 M SL, N. E., Canton, Ohio. Sometimes there are serious comfi. Cons where a hospital operation is the only alternative, but on the other hand eo many women have been cured by this famous rdotand herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, after doctors have said that an operation vat necessary every woman who wanti to avoid an operation should give it a fair trial before submitting to such a trying ordeal. If complications exist, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Maas,, for advice. The result of many yean experience is at your service. ALLEN BY LLOYD SEND DS YOUR FROZEN, LEAKY, DAMAGED We pay transportation one way. Returned far-awa- -- m totryitbeforesub. nutting to an opert in Battle. Lako City g pound, advised Wounds Received rifbt parties. lion. Used Car Dept.. Randall-Dod- boyd Sad Fact. Miss Mayme is such a sensible That is why none of the mea girl. are proposing to her. Clare pimples, headache, bad breath Jalap rolled Into pill called Doctor Fierces Pleasant May Apple, Aloe, Ati?ric3fi tosses ai dejnobtYizaiian daiiot Some teat" London. by taklaj a tiny Pel leu. gugu Adr, folks are born simple and others play the stock market. animal more than twelve years old will be offered. These steeds will go into a surplus that must be disposed of in Belgium and Northern France where the peasants are trying to repair war damages and get back to a peace footing, and where the cities are faced with the problem of settling back Into the pursuits of peace. There Is a wide variety of stock for the civilian buyer to choose from, varying from the heavy Percher-on- s to the light type useful for the ordinary wagon and including saddle horses and driving stock. In the first lots that have just been sold the Irish horses were prominent In breeding and hardness but were c rather excelled in size by the them. with classes graded Doubtless many of the American horses will be bought here for hunters. Army men speak highly of the American mule. On the battlefield the mule made good. But among the British horse owners there Is a grave of this Imported luxury. As a matter of fact the mule is the chief problem iu this side of demobll lzatlon. Nobody wants him for peace work. There are thousands of them in the army, trained to harness or saddle. Yet even the most optimistic army per: son here is wondering how on earth the government la going to enthuse the civilian buyer or. the subject. May Use Same as Food. While the war office is devoting a lot of thought to getting rid of surplus horses, the food controller, acting in dependently, has possibly suggested a kind of remedy horseflesh has just been put on the list of food stuffs the price of which Is controlled by gov ernment order. Owing to the Increased demand for horseflesh for human consumption, It has been found necessary to control the prices both to retailers and consum ers, the official order reads. The prices fixed are Interesting. The householder buying at retail will have to pay nd more than 31 cents a pound for the best cuts. The heart, liver and head meats .cuts, known here as the offal cuts (no Joke Intended), may be sold to retail trade at 16 cents a pound. Eating horseflesh Is merely a feature of the meat shortage England and all of Europe are now experiencing. Meat and butter are going to be hard to get here for the next year or so. That one fact Is the only point In the whole food problem on which the food ministry officials stand pat. Meat sellers may be able to dispose of Some of the horses, over the counter In pound lots, but what of the 10,000 i friendless mules here awaiting sale! No , deserts and plenty of vultures. Fundamentally, however, It Is the Britons sincere love for the horse that forbids adopting any ruthless expedient in reducing the Egyptian forces to a peace time footing. General Allenby, the British commander In the Near East, has cabled that every effort will be made to place all surplus horses In the hands of natives who will treat the animals well and Infinitely better than the peoples of many European nations. Naturally the horses will be returned to Industry at a slower rate than they were mobilized. When Sir J. Cowans came to the war office shortly after the British declared war on Germany, he had to obtain 135,000 horses in 14 days. His methods were successful. The horses were supplied by the business people of England and Included the best of Leicestershire. The Kitchener divisions, however, demanded the services of at least 700,000 horses. Then It was that the British horse buyer made hts appearance In force In the markets of America. At the same time buyers were busy in Spain, Argentina, China, Australia, Tunis, Algiers, and Somaliland. Confronting the authorities are a number of grave problems Just now. First of all there is an urgent need of disposing of all surplus army stock with the least possible delay. But there are too many horses. Only seventeen per cent of all army stock actually came from England. Manifestly It Is Impossible to return one hundred per cent to England and thereby glut the market and demoralize the present schedule of prices. So even though the horses are literally eating their heads off at great cost to the government the number of sales must be regulated to meet the actual demand. Also, the horse sales must be held in all sections of the country, and the quantities offered must conform to the needs of each community. a Month. Following this system as closely as they can, the army men hope to dispose of some 25,000 horses a month, 8ell 25,000 Feel Lame and Achy Colds and grip leave thousands with weak kidneys and aching backs. The kidneys have to do most of the work of fighting off any germ disease. The;irweaken slow up, and you feel dull, ritable, or nervous have headaches, dizziness, backache, sore joints and irregular kidney action. Then the kidneys need prompt help. Use Doani Kidney Pills. Thousands praise Doani for quick, satisfactory results. A Utah Cate W. W. Robinson, USOnrHehn TwQm First East, First North Simy neat Sts., American Fork, "I says; Utah, know Doans Kito be dney Pills Just what is claimed for them. For months last winter I was suffering with a steady ache and pains across my kidneys. The . . slightest move 1 i which caused any M strain on my back sent those pains through It. A druggist recommended Doan s Kidney Pills, so I tried them. Doans completely cured me of the attack. Get Doaae at Any Store, 60c a Bos ig ( DOANS FOSTER-MILBUR- KpaLS CO., BUFFALO. N.Y. N Trans-Atlanti- dls-trus- , t DONT FEAR THE FLU" It cant get you, if you use DR. Hlb LERS ESSENTIAL OIL TABLETS.all They quickly relieve coughs, colds, throat and lung troubles, reduce fever, are prevent attack U taken in time and free from drugs or opiates. A real which should be used in every home. Trial package of 2 tubes, $1.00. Full pack age, 10 tubes $5.00. Complete directions. Postpaid on receipt of price. FREDERICK HILLER, M. D. Suite 423 Consolidated Realty Bldg. Los Angeles, California . one breed tM in both bed and milk is the steert Shorthorn repeatedly broke records at the in arkets 1918, making the big eet record on the ope market of $20.50 per cwt And Shorthorn eoJ f.iiJuMigiitv-- J have milk records ever 17,000 lbs. per year. i(lAwimAw having ufre teak, qualltu and Qtifcl THE Short-bor- One Treatment vith Cuticura Dandruff ATI ClearsjaOlotmwta innbf! Soap Bmple each trm otmun Atoll!toH'etfotlo orodlooto FefteeteHasMocft,,, Irritating Coughs eooditioos of the threat withateitedree |