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Show , IBoundTigh - SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH Ml Ji . Sooth Cache Courier Wanted A Husband Published Every Friday at Hyrum Well Armed! Harry Lauder is being serious these days. The famous sr demands of wa ,urj(4 subordinating his comedy to the his work for his Injured Soldiers fund and the Y. M. C. A.. Laud AloBi!K an earnest appeal to Americans to prepare for the next Liberty f,r ""'tt subscription Is the theme of Lauders message. Here Is what hp01"1, Liberty Is the dearest word In any language, it Is Germans are fighting to take away. It is the one big thin vP X , Utah. J. A. WAHLEN, Is Wanted, by women of all ages and all ranks, by beautiful women, pure women, noble women, in every state, county, city and village in America, a husband. Wanted, a husband who will not treat his wife as an inferior, who can respect a womans opinions. Wanted, a husband who will not dominerr over his home, who will not stifle a wifes ambitions, who will not limit her life to the rearing of children and the four walls of the home. Wanted, a husband who wants a home, who willl not neglect it, who will .assume his share of the responsibility, who will not look on his home as a comfortable boarding house. Wanted, a husband who can eat a simple meal without complaining, who can tend a furnace or mow a lawn, who can make a cup of coffee or sew on a button without feeling abused, who can appreciate the Publisher, A BETTER CITIZEN A Liberty Bond owner is a better citizen, because he has a direct interest in our government. He will be more conservative and not so ready to listen to the agitator. As a bondholder of the greatest nation in the world today lie will take an interest in advocating sound and conservative policies for the upbuilding of his country. It is every persons duty as a patriotic American to own Liberty Bonds, to help the boys who are really making the great sacrifice. The 18 111,118 ' ' 801,85 BOOKS FOR SOLDIERS If you are sending books to soldiers try to choose works that you would read yourself, Suppose you were caught in a barn in the rain would you read Postal and Telegraph Code of the Argentine RepubAnnual Reports of Episcopal lic, Ear and Throat Hospital (twenty years old), Annual Reports of the Bureau of Ethnology, the Elsie books or a file of The Undertakers Yet all of these books Review? have been sent to the library at Camp Meade. They are not occupy-in- y prominent places on the shelves there. The Ethnologic report might have something in it which would aid the Hun, and the Undertakers Review shoud be full of helpful suggestions as to his final disposition, and undoubtedly dwells on the best methods of laying out, but it is hardly a cheerful book for round-th- e campfire reading. Nobody would get the Happy Habit from its pages hn'.-- . 0111 When company comes there is no time to waste no chances to be taken so mother sees that there is always a can of Plaii and looks. Then, too, her reputation as a cook must and she be upheld stakes it on Calumet every time. She knows it will not disappoint her. SAVE AND LEARN Order a can 'and have the company kind of bakings every day. Calumet contains only such ingredients as have been approved o facia!!? by the U. S. Food Authorities. marriage vows without regret. Wanted, a husband who can trust his wife with her share of the income, who does not need to be. begged for money. You save vdjta you bw, y You save wli. v:e jaa Young man, if you want' to be-come a leader in the worlds affairs, save a part of the salary you now earn, it. it. v ALLIED FOOD SHIPMENTS REACH LARGE TOTAL. A general idea of the quantity of food sent toC European allies by the United States from July 1. 1914. to January 1, 1918, is given by figures just announced by the U. S. Food In that period the United States lias furnished complete yearIn ly rations for 57,100,933 people. keep your burn their addition there was enough extra protein to supply this portion of the diet for 22.194,570 additional men. The total export of wheat and wheat Hour to the three principal allies is equivalent to about 384,000.000 bushels. Fork exports for the 3 years ed to almost 2,000,000,000 po' ports of fresh beef totaled pounds. The amount of food exported to Russia Is negligible compared with that sent to the western allies. so that you may have funds on hand grasp business opportunity when , .in it HYRUM STATE banI SSJS ire d Small in Size On A war-wear- va ite y a. But Big in Capacity v us. You Americans have the men, the skill, and the material to save the allied cause. SIR JOSEPH MACLAY. British Shipping Controller. A AA Notice! All Stock will be empounded found on the streets after April 15th. Ad. ' ( By Order of City Council. The Persian Stallion We have for sale a very choice 40 acres of land, all seeded with ILES alfalfa, with paid up water right. This land lays 3i miles from the town of Weiser, Idaho, and can be bought for $6,000, $1,500 to $2000 been imported from France by A. B. Alvord of Greeley, Iowa, is now owned by Robt. Baxter, of this city, and will stand at his barn in Hyrum and at his farm in Mt. Sterling during the season. The animal is a beautiful brown and weighs about 2000 lbs. Terms: $5.00 and $8.00. v to comes your way. your side are boundless supplies of men, food, and material; on this side a boundless demand for their help. j. Our men are and their nerves have been strained by more than three years of k hhrd, relentless toil. Our position is critical, par- A ticularly until the next harvest, bpt the United States can save k for down, the balance to be arranged for. Write Idaho Immigration Co., accounts may, be settled at any Weiser, Idaho. We also have anything in land time at the residenceof Charlote Treasurer. Adv. you want. Allen, City Adv. your eyes on the future and study business. Men who make good the midnight oil at home with books and plans. Put Your Savings in Our Care ONLY AMERICA CAN HELP. a. The City Treasurer will be at the Electric Light office in the Bank building, every Tuesday and Friday from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m,, after April 15th. But all Iwa BAKING POWDER on hand. Cakes, pies, doughnuts, muffins and all good things to eat must be dressed up in their best taste and his Notice! feel I Lydi ound CALUMET work, the worry, the care of a home. Wanted, a husband whose chief recreation is not baseball, bowling, midnight poker, cabarets and burlesque shows; whose club is not a saloon; whose life may be an example to his children. W anted, a husband who can keep Wanted, a husband who will not attempt to satisfy a womens life with money, who prefers privation with love to luxury with indefference. Wanted, a husband who will not imit his life to the grind of business, who loves good literature, music and drama, and who knows the need of culture refinment as well an business success. Wanted, a husband who can win TAMARO. ILLINOIS. SCORE success and not become an egotist, ONE who can meet defeat and not be poured. In the state of Colorado the partWanted, a husband who can love ies that are entitled to make nomin- his wife when she has lost her beauty, ations at the primary election elect who can listen to her worries witha committeeman and a committee-woma- n out being annoyed, who can sha're in each precinct in the state her cares without ridicule. at that time. This means that the Wanted, a husband worthy of reDemocratic 'and Republican parties spect and a womens love. have each over 1,800 committeewo-me- n Men who can meet these wants in that state, and it is the only will find millions of noble women in one among the states where women America ready to trust their lives have the full suffrage that is com- to their keeping, able to make them pletely organized on a fifty-fift- y happier than they have ever been in basis for women and'Vnen. their bachelor days, and ready to gq However, the little town of Tam-aro- down on their knees and pray God 111., has a distinction that is for the privilege of providing therq all its own. Recently they elected a with a home. committeewomen .there, and now Milwaukee Journal , Tamaroa precinct has a letterheac of its own, with Democratic Com mittee at the top and the names of Mrs. Peterson: With shoes at the present the Committeemen, H. B. Haines and I. W. Terry at the left and the prices it sure pays to buy. the Z name of Mrs. Cicero Barber, Com C. M. I. Shoes. mitteewoman, opposite. It is no an Mrs. Jones: I agree, but where do common thing for women to have their names on letterheads of politi- get them? cal organizations, 'ranging from Mrs. Peterson: Why my friend, at the Ras county committees up, but it is a mussen Br?aar, Logan. They safe bet that this is the first time me a full line of them showed lone precinct has taken the the other day; they are especial trouble to announce its political leaders to the world in this fashion. ly strong on boys and girls shoes It shows that women are taking I actually saw fifteen differen their political responsibilities serious- styles there of childrens shoes. ly, and as Illinois women only have partial suffrage it is all the ,more Choice Land Sale: significant. ( - . Manufacturer. to keep. oWenHisty I What have you done to help win the war? What are v 0u do'ns J preserve liberty? I Every Sunday 500,000 Germans in the United States are the of of you the United sS pulling trigger: they talking "V are you doing to do about them? Right now our answer must be BUY LIBERTY BONDS' u- I given that answer once, twice already. But we inusr make it again as need Is. We must turn our dollars into silver msiirt!11' the way we can become shareholders in the Bank of Munnum 1 U'lfw is to provide the wherewithal, since we cant do what the W ' are doing. Back in France I saw battalions of young fighters marchin I chanting a song any old song right into the mouth of death where they wrere going. They were fighting to save LIBERTY P l'5il 'h are calling on you to help them, you back here. Our part is easy compared with theirs but It is OUR must b& done. Put your money into liberty supports, s;,., ppT uviucia m u u uuun i a ucuuv, which' has recently 1 The New Junior Ideal Separator 20 x 36 lives u.' h tie naiw reputation that goes with all separators that, carry the t Instead of being just a Rumely Ideal. chine to Meet the needs of a small tresher. it has been make-shil- lar?e signed and constructed along the same lines as the Ideals and the man who buy sone can count on the long n' ing Rumely Ideal to give satisfaction. 20 x ' Comparatively little power is required to run the Ideal Any tractor capable of successfully pulling three and w11 can easily handle it fully equipped with stacker. self-feed- ' J. E. CHRISTENSEN, Local Agent, Hyrum, for the Rumely Thresher La Porte, Ind. Co. |