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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH UTAH BUDGET Christian Hanson, who sporting good establishment SoJon for yours, died July 4. Wllllum Olson was seriously Injured trom the roof of a 8ugnr hen he on which he was working at Hun factory Cornish. 14, was run Otto Youngberg, aged car in street a killed by and down struck 4, by on being Luke July Salt his bicycle. the car while riding on road Utah has spent $2,932,410.09 of the ortime the from improvement commisroad ganization of the state in 190!) to May 31 of this year. sion records of previous 164 cases by nearly 50 per cent, treated during June, 1917, at the Breaking all years were Emergency Trained animals of the French army discover the wounded and evens capture German dogs as prisoners :: Many ofthem have been given Dont take chances Use this year J great military honors hospital in Salt Lake City. IIIS strange war has fortified and enriched immeasBert Turner, who is in charge of the work urably the beafitiful pact of predatory animal extermination necin San Juan county, has found it friendship concluded ages ago between man and the essary to employ two assistants to aid him iu the work. dpg and has conferred upon the venerable and sinister One of the features of .the Inclepend-ene- e was Lake at Salt celebration phrase let loose the dogs day of war a new and softened the collision of two large engines, a ' to witmeaning. large crowd of people paying The a of are the French dogs ness the spectacle. army to force be a reckoned are been with. has road state They supervisor The Montl-cell- o in the really between necessary on roads army the cog big working They have distinguished and Verdure repairing them so machine. "themselves in Argonne, on the Somme, condition for in will be good that they on the Yser, in the Vosges. They have the heavy summer travel. contributed appreciably to divers local James W. Jones, in charge of sugar successes. They have saved the lives fedbeet investigation locally for the of thousands of. soldiers by their intelnow Utah eral government, says that ligence and devotion, by-- their courage Is recognized as the third largest beet and address. They have given their sugar producing state ln.the Union: limbs, they have glyen their health, The first silo in Iron county has just they have given their lives., They been completed by Charles Bryant of have been cited on rosters of their the Branch The Cedar City. Agricultural companies, their battalions, their regicollege Is also erecting ,n silo, and ments. They have been decorated. likemany others are planning to do Their virtues have been celebrated by wise. the cinema, by the newspapers and ilMrs. Edwin F. Holmes, known lustrated magazines and by the novel. throughout the United States as the Festivals have been held for the beneSilver Queen, practically lias de- fit of their hospitals and convalescent cided to use Utah stone in the maghomes. Their delegates were enthunificent villa which she is to erect near siastically cheered at the Palace of ' ' Los Angeles. the Trocadero by an audience of over Two former Salt Lakers, Mr. and 6,000 persons (Including many wounded soldiers fromthe military hospitals) Mrs. Hyrum E. Davies, and their on the occasion of the last annual son were drowned In the near Idaho, Rupert, meeting of the S. P. A.(Societe Protec-tric- e project canal des Anlmaux, corresponding to when their automobile plunged over our S.. P. C. A.). And a committee has un embankment. Mrs. Bessie Vanderschuit was held been formed (at the instigation of d their comrade-in-arfor not guilty of the murder of her husthe erection a monument of in a their Baren y 'Vanderschuit, band, jury honor. at Price. Vanderschuit was shot durSaviors of the Wounded. ing a struggle with his wife over the possession of a revolver. At the moment of the mobilization, Latest discoveries in the science of 150 dogs, specially trained to rescue embalming, sanitation and disinfection the wounded, were put at the disposiwill be explained in Ogden, July 26, tion of the sanitary department of the 28, at a summer school to be conArmy of the Societe Nationale du ducted under the auspices of the Utah Chien Sanitaire. After, a short stay at Funeral Directors association. Longchamp, they were sent to the Following a trip to Salt Lake, durfront, where they conducted theming which each brought new clothing, selves, on the whole, exceedingly well. Mrs. Lena Van Kornen, aged 25, and Pic was brought down by a German Frank Delaney, aged 35, were arrested bullet in Argonne. Toby," alias at Ogden and charged with the theft Crapouillot, died from a shell wound of $105 and a gold watch from Frank received at Kaiser, and Francois-Josep- h Agaard. Kronprinz names given In derision, because of The Utah State highway commission fancied resemblance to the sovereigns will spend $55,000 on the road between of the adversaries served zealously Garden City, on the Bear lake shore, and fell upon the field of honor. to Logan this season, and this was alIn 1915, mainly on the initiative of mountain a considered ready good righway and noted for beautiful the S. P. A. and the scenery, league, some three hun Jred more thorIt is probable that private detectives oughly trained dogs were turned over to the sanitary department, and now will be employed to ferret out a prob able plot of dynamiting or the use of not hundreds but thousands are sucsome other explosive in an alleged coring the wounded between Nieuport Prince, a superb Alsawrecking of the Mammoth dam, which and Alsace. caused the washing out of he D. & tian wolf, the first dog to have his coat R. G. tracks. dyed in the Interests of Invisibility, Before the largest gathering that amf still in the service, saved five ever assembled in Liberty park, Salt wounded men in a single day at iPax, blind and paralyzed and Lake, during its more than thirty-fiv- e In due form because of Invalided years as a public park, eighteen new Infirmities contracted In the servthese cititzens, representing eight European ice, has the rescue of more than two countries, received: .their final citizen hundred wounded to his credit. On ship papers on July 4. the other Hand, Cadet, efficient singThe Utah Canners association, ly, but too for team work, comprising the factories of Utah which has developed a specialty altogether pack food products and which are his own, that of gathering in the about thirty-tw- o in number, is of the dogs of the enemy. When Cadet opinion that the labor situation this he Boche a pounces upon dog, spies packing season is going to be the hardhim, masters him, grips him by the est problem which it will haveto meet, ear and brings him to the trench as The traffic service bureau of Utah, prisoner. representing the Cameron Coal com The sanitary dog scours the battlepany, the Independent Coal & Coke field in quest of the wounded.: When company, the Spring Canyon Coal he discovers a suffering soldier he Company and the Standard Coal comfalls back on the brancardier to pany, lms filed, an application .with whom he is attached and makes plain the state public utilities commission his attitude that his services, are for a reduction of 25 cents per ton in by needed. At the outset he was taught coal rates. to fetch to the brancardier a kepi or a A. T. Wallace of the Millard county handkerchief. But the handkerchief of farm bureau, is making a canvass of the soldier Is very apt to be in a Utah county to secure boys for work pocket and he may n the beet fields of Millard. He have lost his kepi. Furthermore the that there are still 10,000 acres, kepi has been replaced largely by the f beets that need thinning and that heavy helmet, and It Is next to Imposthe farmers can use more than 100 men sible for a dog td remove the latter, and boys to good advantage. as when it Is held ofi by a" So become It is. has almost It always conAssuming that the present crop ditions, continue favorable throughout, customary to have the dog fetch any the harvest season, more than 100,000 object whatever (pipe, handkerchief, cases of Utah tomatoes will beturned helmet, briquet, tobacco pouch, carover to the government for army and, tridge box, bit of uniform), save a navy use urlng the coming winter. bandage, which he Is taught to scrupuWhen F. Bennett attempted to rob lously respect. a bank at Salt Lake, he entered n class Surprising Canine Versatility. by himself as the meanest of bank robThe sanitary dogs, having been bers. He tried to. get away with the (first in the field,, thanks to the antebrass nameplate of the cashiers cage. bellum preparedness efforts of the So RED RUBBERS They Fit Alt Standard Jan Experts teaching cold pack canning uie GOOD LUCK rubbeis became they wont blow-o- ut nor harden, shrink or crack after during sterilization the far is sealed.- - Send 2c stamp for new book on preserving or 10c in stamps for I doz. rings if your dealer cannot supply you. Addrmaa Dapt . S4 BOSTON WOVEN BOSE St RUBBER CO. Cambridge, Mass. '' NICKELS SAVING AND DIMES - ' Mhi-ldo- ka two-foote- ms) - - 27-an- , Auti-Viviseetl- , Vau-quol- s. tightly-buttone- d re-or- ts chin-stra- ' p, Small Coins Declared Due to Widely Adopted Prac- -' Shortage in . ciete Nationale du Chien Sanitaire, and having long been the most numer-ou- s have naturally attracted, the most s attention ; but all the are not rescuers of the wounded. Latterly, a goodly number have been trained for fuhctions which bring them Into closer relations with the actual combatants than with the disabled, and a special canine military service has been organized by ministerial decree. Dogs now serve as sentinels, as scouts, as dispatch bearers, and as revictual" lers. They are taught to wait patiently In solitary spots; to pay no attention to the most deafening' detonations; to wear a to growl (without barking) at the slightest suspicious approach; to move back and forth between widely separated points without being tempted by Irrelevant appeals en route or being disconcerted by the obliteration of landmarks due to the tramping or churning of the earth. I use only Fren$i dogs, says a specialist,' "for a very simple reason that renders all other reasons superflous, namely, that they are the best shepherd dogs of La Beauce and of the Pyrenees, enterprising and hardy, excellent . pupils on condition that you specialize them, that you demand of them only what they have to give, that you do not exact from them, as from the modern-stylladles maid, housekeeping, sewing, Ironing, and the giving of . English lessons. The efficiency of the war dog depends upon two things, obedience and scent. Do not expect from the human best dog miracles of Intuition. If you do, you will be deceived. Refuse to believe that a war dog will learn to send telephone messages by growling before" a telephone (as has been reported and even printed), or that he will run to ring, the alarm bell at the approach of asphyxiating gas. Sentinels. .four-foote- d poi-lu- . - , gas-mas- . dog-traini- e piano-playin- well-nig- h Four-Foote- d ' FIdele," a big yellow mastiff, who mounted guard regularly before the porthole of a trench on the Yser, was shot in the head. He was evacuated to a dog hospital. The surgeons succeeded in extracting the bullet (which his master now wears as. a charm on and, after a proper his period of convalescence, he joyously resumed his service at the front. th regiLion, 'sentinel. with the ment of Colonial infantry, signalled the proximity, of a strong German patrol whose mission It was to capture a post some two hundred yards In advance of the French lines. His alarm permitted the opening of a deadly Infantry and artillery fire which repulsed and decimated the patrol. Several prisoners were taken, who declared that they would certainly have succeeded In their enterprise had It not been for the warning given by the watch-chain- ), -- dog. The Official Bulletin of July 19, 1916, An attack contained this sentence: directed by the enemy upon our outposts in the region of' Raschendael (Belgium) was checked by our fire. The failure of this raid was due to a dog named Fox. He was placed upon the roll of honor of his regiment with this mention: Fox, Serle F4, matricule 221 of the Kennel A, foiled an attempt of the trenches. Germans to raid our first-lin- e Profiting by a dark night and a gale of wind, the enemy, had succeeded in barriers approaching our barbed-wir- e without being seen. or heard by the sentinels. The dog Fox of the Nineteenth company of the th regiment of Infantry, who was mounting guard at the extremity of the trench, alarmed tne post twice and permitted us to receive the enemy with a shower of grenades. Thanks to Foj?s alarm, the surprise' resulted in a complete fiasco. Loustlc" - had no sooner - familiarized himself with the trenches ofthe th infantry than he made a discovery of the first importance. While on watch duty with his master he suddenly obliqued tothe right and gav6 unmistakable signs of perturbation. Theres something over yonder, said the master to his comrades. Nonsense! Your pups dreaming. But I tell you that. If none, of our men are over there at the right, there are Boches there The dog. is led in the opposite direction to test him. He runs back to his point of observation and continues to manifest the same disquieting symptoms. It may be that he smells a Boche outpost, observed his master. The men, impressed at last, communicate the observation to the officer in command. X says that his dog Loustic has discovered a Boche outpost." The one we are after ? ? ' Yes. ! That would be extraordinary indeed. The captain is skeptical; nevertheless he orders several rockets to be set off. And there, sure enough, in the direction thfr dog so obstinately Indicated,-pop up the heads of three superb Boches, who fancied themselves secure against discovery. That passes me, murmured the In 20 minutes this cur has chptain. discovered a post we have been hunting two months for. d Scouts. In a northern sector, between the French "and German trenches, fully 200 yards from the former and not more than 20 yards from the latter, was a farmhouse which was suspected of concealing machine guns and an observation post, despite the fact that no signs of life were visible. The poilus In one of the French trenches lay their heads together: Its absolutely necessary to know what there is in that house. Youre right. But Its no easy matter. We shall surely be shot If we go near It. But If It Is empty? That would be a lark. Well find out. Well take Taplllon along with ' us. And one dark night four men, ' accompanied- by Papillon, set forth, They advanced by bounds, with infinite prehalts becaution, making tween the bounds and unrolling a telephone wire as they progressed. When they were close to the house, they haltof an hour, in ed for order to give Papillon time to familiarize himself with the premises and to reconnoiter them thoroughly. He displayed no signs of agitation save when he was turned toward the trenches of the enemy. The house was The party entered certainly empty. and made a thorough Inspection. They returned under Papillons guidance several times, making daylight observations which rendered possible a successful attack. And Papillon was cited on the roll of honor of the Four-Foote- -- ten-minu- te three-quarte- rs bat-talio- tice of Thrift. -- Shortage of small coins, complained banks, may be due partly to the practice of saving buffalo nickels and the new dimes, bankers say, according to the Minneapolis Journal. Many persons have formed the habit of putting away the buffalo coins or the new ten-cepieces on the theory that the saver can accumulate considerable sums In this way and yet do It so gradually that "he never misses It." The shortage of nickels and dimes probably is due in part to this practice. There Is, however, an even more stringent shortage of pennies, which has been felt for the last six months. Bankers said the penny famine probably was due to recently Instilled thrift among children. Pennies given them by parents, coins that formerly went back Into circulation as quickly as little feet could flutter to the corner candy store, now find their way Into the toy bank. of by . welb-establish- nt . Nothing to Run Into- - When I was in the railroad business, said Chauncpy M. Depew once, the president of a small line waited on me to request an exchange of I Interrogated him, and proudly: On our line, sir, not only has a collision never occurred, but on oui line a collision would be Impossible. Impossible? said I. Oh, come I know that the latest automatic safecour-tesie- hi-sai- ty devices are excellent things. Bui Impossible is a large word. Its literally true with us, sir,' hi replied. How can It be? said I. Why, said he, 'we own train. Railway Empoyees zlne. only- - oni Maga More War Knowledge. patriotic young woman who hai been taking the war situation seriously since the advent of the United States into the fray, remarked the other evening after a careful perusal ol the paper that she could not understand how the German junk dealerl had so much Influence In determining the course of the war on the part ol Prussia. Investigation disclosed the fact thal she had been studying an article dealing with the fttitude pf the "Junkers, or the party Of ffie landed aristocracj In Prussia. Indianapolis News. A ' Further Uses for Aluminum. Aluminum Is now being substituted in place of wood in the manufacture of autPmobile bodies. Large sections of aluminum castings are now used In making touring cars and the Inclosed bodies of certain other motor cars, a use which was not practlcabli ten years ago. Cast aluminum is alsc used for making automobile dashes Bodies made of It are lighter that those'made of ether sheet metal, and have a rigid surface that will not deni . easily In case of accident. The aluminum surface retains paint well, and the Increased rigidity makes the cai more durable: Liberty is beyond all price. n. In the Vosges the scouting dogs have been particularly useful In detecting the civilian traitors who are In the habit of observing the movements of the troops from' behind the forest trees.. The scout Nestor, numerous services of this sort In the region, also distinguished himself particularly at Band-kop- f by falling back upon a patrol, in advance of which he was rtfeonnoiter-ln- g and announcing In unmistakable language a totally unsuspected menace of the enemy. Boston Transcript. d spy-infect- besid- es-rendering 1 Yi V' ifUVr Hits l ifiursfafo |