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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH jvou are invited to visit our factory, the wonderful skill orkers in platinum, gold Particular people are Our Jierei you will be. the ease way. prices ee ; of our and sll-pleased modes The Many Mysteries of Nature OF UtlCOLIi SALT We Pay Cash for Liberty Bonds New York Quotation. us to Send bonds by registered mail and we remit to you same day. Receipts for partly paid bonds also bought. Standard Bond & Investment Co. 305 S. Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah Lincoln story Is a parable, pointing always pnthway leading to Leader. right reasou and righteous In D. writes the Smith Judgment, Fry Philadelphia Ledgei. Senator Shelby M. Cullom of Illinois, Constant Perusal of Worlds Finwhose young manhood was enlightened est Literature Gave Him and elevated by the friendship of Lincoln, and was In his later years an His Command of Lanenlightening and elevating Influence upon the young manhood of the writer, guage. narrated an experience which has never been In print. It seems to have been lost in the mass and maze of Lincolns Great Heart and Wonderful stories concerning that wonderful Shrewdness Shown In His Pardon nobleman who lived and died among of Deserting Soldier Daredevil Acts of Raider EVERY when the cablne was In session, Mr. Lincoln would quote pnge after page of Shakespeare, until the scholarly Seward, himself well known for his admiration of and knowledge of the writings of the Immortal William, unable to control his admiration, would turn to the president and say: Mr. President, our understanding has been that you have never gone to school, and yet you quote Shakespeare as I do not, and I am regarded somewhat as a Shakespearean scholar.' Bunyans Pilgrims Progress was another book that he read. Feed a growing mind upon the English of . Mor-ga- n Won Admiration. Oldsmoblln, N. iplendld used Guaranteed flrat claw 0 lo 800. condition-ea- sy lerms If wanted br running descrip--liotight patties. Write lor detailed list and . Used Car Dept.. Randall-Dod- d Auto Co., gait Lak CItr 50 Iionl.--$25- SEND US YOUR FROZEN, DAMAGED LEAKY, RADIATORS e, We pay transportation one way. Returned like new. AOETYLINE WELDING in all it branches. We save you time and money, H. & E. Radiator & Welding Co. 252 Edison Street, Salt Lake City, Utah Why Should P UfAHTFtl II you want big wages learn barber trade- Many small jdLLr IfHil I towns need barbers; good opportunities open lor men over draft age. Barbers in army have Get prepared good as officers commission. m few weeks. Call or write. Moler Barber 43 Salt S. Lake Oity. West St., Temple College, 1FI til , Upper Burma. The worlds ruby center Is Mogok, In topper Burma, some 70 miles north of Here are the great ruby most valuable says the London Weekly Telegraph. Indeed, not only "does this country produce the finest of these covete.il gems, but they are recovered In such quantities as to enable her to dominate the market Few are aware that, weight for weight, a ruby Is more valuable than a diamond. It Is estimated that one the color of pigeons blood, weighing five carats, will sell for ten times the value of a diamond of the same weight. Furthermore, the price Increases with the size of the stone. As the "byon, or earth containing the coveted gems, Is taken from the ground It is placed In a great revolving tub. Here It Is screened and all loose earth removed by water. The residue Is then tipped on the sorting table. A white overseer carefully examines the pile, selecting the true gems from the worthless debris. If hes lucky he may at one sorting find gems worth many thousands of dollars, while on the oth-- r hand the yield may be but a hundred dollars or two; The yearly output of rubles from these mines totals about $400,000. Mandalay. as serious-minde- Precious Salt. as radium" Is a radium salt, usually either radium bromide or radium chloride, sometimes radium sulphate. Tiny grains of these salts are extremely precious and are usually sealed up In little glass the physician was very great. He removed his boots from his feet and cut out a square of his valuable carpet He had boots and carpet burned, and out of the asnes refined the original radium salt Balsam Gum. The gum of the balsam fir, Abies bakamea. Is known commercially as Canada balsam, and Is largely used In the manufacture of optical Instruments and In various other ways about scientific laboratories. There Is a con- stant market for It the price varying ith the quality and the supply. Some time ago a fair quality was worth 20 cents per pound. Rare Visiters Recorded. Tbe appearance of snowy owls, a re occurrence, is reported. These beautiful birds come from the Arctic regions. Only four previous visitations have been recorded In the Ornithological history of the countrx. care-wor- n d, - What Is known bulbs. The radium in one of the first bulbs that were received in London 'had a curious history. A physician in Portland place was applying the bulb to a patient when he accidentally let It fall, and a moment after crushed It under bis foot. The value of the radium to Be mortal men In our own land, "with malice toward none and with charity for all. Senator Trumbull accompanied me to the White House one afternoon, said Senator Cullom. Dark clouds were hovering over the horizon. Disasters and defeats developed discouragements day after day. Over the minds of statesmen at the capital apprehension brooded from the rising of the sun to the going down of the same. .With the purpose of encouraging the president who received us, Senator Trumbull cheerfully greeted President Lincoln, saying: Mr. President, I hope that you are looking on the bright side of affairs. On Capitol hill we all wonder that you can do so well in these trying times, especially as you have no precedent to guide you in anything, judicial, civil ' or military. Source of His Precedents. "Heartily grasping the hand of Senator Trumbull, and also clasping mine, Abraham Lincoln looked straight into tbe eyes of the senator and squarely turned toward me, and I saw upon the face of that grand man a smile of contentment, peace and hope, such as few men ever saw; and Lincoln thrilled me with his manner and his words. Even now the memory of his words, his wonderful smile, his confident manner thrills me. He very earnestly ' said : i Thank you, Senator Trumbull, for every word of encouragement But, please tell the boys on Capitol hill that I have precedents for everything. Tell them all that I shall commit no dangerous error; that I shall not blunder, because I have. precedents, and I carefully follow them. I get my precedents, Trumbull, by my bedside at night. - I get them while I am on my knees. I seek my precedents then and there; and they come. to me from ths source of all wlsdcm. I have always felt and believed that I saw and heard Abraham Lincoln In one of his greatest moments, when his spirit was In touch wjth the Great Spirit that sent Rim to us. Center of Worlds Store of Precieue Stones It Known to Be Located Wines, one fmonopolies, the Spirit of Mortal Proud?" - EARTHS RICHEST RUBY MINES In fore that mother-in-labegan to talk and weep. I did not look at her u second tiiae, nor pay any heed to what she was saying. The pardon was is sued, In my mind, ns soon ns I looked at that poor, frail, tearless Madonna, the girl who would soon be a widow but for me. I led her to a seat, wrote and placed the pardon In her hands. but the tears that I bade her good-by- , fell on my hand were from the .eyes whose grief had been of the child-wifso deep that she had been tearless until she held that pardon. Lincolns Chief Purpose. Even so strong and patriotic a man as Horace Greeley published an open letter to Lincoln, In 1803, calling the president an opportunist and denouncing his policies. In his reply Mr. Lincoln plainly stated that he did not want to be known In history as The Emancipator, but that his chief purHere pose was to save the Union. are his sincere words: My paramount object is to save the Union, and not either to save or destroy slavery. If, I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it. If I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do It. I am ready to accept any new views as soon as they are proved to w CARS BARGAINS IN USED BY L. W. BOWER, M. D. You can take an onion seed and a pansy eed, and plant them side by side in the aame spot of ground. In one case, you get an onion, with its peculiarly strong odor, and in the other you get a flower of I rare beauty. You can plant a poppy, seed and get opium (a dangerous, drug), or you can plant a rhubarb seed and get something that helps constipation. No scientist, living or dead, can explain these mysteries of Nature. Behind the invisible life germ in each seed is hidden the deep secret that nobody understands. Everything growing out of the ground seems intended for some use in establishing natural conditions. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., long since found out what is naturally best for womens diseases. He learned it all through treating thousands of cases. The result of his studies was a medicine called Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription. This medicine is made of vegetable growths that nature surely intended for backache, headache, weakening drains, bearing-dowpains, periodical irregularities, pelvic inflammations, and for the many disorders common to women in all ages of life. Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription is made of ladys slipper root, black cohosh root, unicorn root, blue cohosh root and Oregon grape root. Women who take this stand-- . ard remedy know that in Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription they are getting & safe womans tonic so good that druggists everywhere sell it. Favorite Prescription should have the full confidence of every woman in America because it contains no alcohol and no narcotic. Dr. Pierce knew, when he first made this standard medicine, that whisky and morphine are injurious, and so he has always kept them out of his remedies. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. of tablets. , , Lyman TrumbulPs Sponta neous Tribute to His FOUNDED makers of jewelry LAKE CITT MAIN STREET i TALES TOLD r. BOYD PARK KJO Weekly Health Talks SOr.lEllEVAtIDOLD When in Salt Lake be true views. ; Well, by the course which he pursued the Union was saved, and today The Girl Who Would Soon Widow But for Me." Be a It Is the Gibraltar of the democracy of the world. - Great as was the cause of emancipation for the enslaved people, greater was the cause of saving this Union and making It the great nation that It Is today, one and inseparable." -- ' One Paramount Object: "To Save the Union " STANTON came to SECRETARY House one afternoon President Lincoln had soldier sentenced to be tion. Stanton said : That mother-in-layou this morning was w a pardon which Issued for a shot for deser' . who came to only shedding tears. She doesnt care for Im told that she merely came as a matter of duty, becrocodile that son-in-la- cause she bad opposed the marriage of her daughter to that man, and to refuse to plead br his life would bavo been almost unpardonable. But she didnt care tor the pardon, and- - didnt expect It." All of that was very clear to me, Stanton, was the reply of the wonderful Lincoln. I only looked at her once, and then patiently listened to her. I had made up my mind to lane the pardon be- - His Superb Command of English Language DDRESSING the house of reo- resentatives of the American A A. congress on a special occasion, Representative Fess said : Who is this man, that he could thus speak and write? Born in a hut In Kentucky, at the age of seven he accompanied his parents and sister into Indiana, where they lived one winter In- an open camp with but three sides to It And yet without having gone to school more than six months all told,' according to his own statement, here is a man, thus starting with no convenience, who has reached a plane, an ability to speak the English language not reached by any of the scholars of his day. Where is the secret? I think that tt might be found In the sort of books he read. The one book with which he was quite familiar was King James version of the Bible, I once heard Parks Cadman, pastor of the greatest Congregational church In the world, say that Abraham Lincolns verbal knowledge of the Bible was not equaled by the theologians. I would not say that upon my own authority, but cite tt upon his authority. He knew Shakespeare, and in the darkest hours of the life of the nation, In the midst of great depression, often A A - . habit-formin- g n Wise Pat! Pat was simply a laborer, nothing Blessed With Poverty to Compel Hla more, nothing less, but naturally ha Best Efforts. these texts and you will have a choice of English. The scholarly congressman also said: I concede the speeches before mentioned as a high rank of expression, but I think that the mark was reached when, looking back over four years of awful war, he said : Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes his aid against the other. The prayers of both could not be answered. That of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has his own purposes. Blessed With Adversity. Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that It continue until all the wealth piled up by the bondmans two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn by the lash shall be paid by another drawn by the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether. From the cradle to the grave Abraham Lincoln was blessed with adversity and misfortune sufficient to constantly compel his best efforts at all times. That he was not only blessed with sufficient poverty to compel his best efforts, but that he was also cheerful and content with his lot, is well illustrated by an Incident of his career which was narrated to the writer by the sometime famous parliamentarian, Congressman William M. Springer of 111. ; one who was for Springfield, many years a leader of thought and discussion in the procedures of the house of representatives of the national congress. high-wat- er was witty. While on a certain Job one day he noticed his foreman standing idly by seemingly lost in thought, and, as Tat didnt relish the idea of doing all the work himself, he remarked: Anything wrong, sir? No, replied the foreman, I was just thinking, you know, Pat, one man scheming is as good as two working. Then, sir, responded Pat, "that being the case, I suggest that we both scheme; that will be as good as four good-naturedl- y, working. An , Attack of Influenza Often Leaves Kidneys in Weakened Condition Doctors in all parts of the country have been kept busy with the epidemic of influenza which has visited so many homes. The symptoms of this disease are very distressing and leave the system in a run Almost every victim down condition. of lame back and urinary complains troubles which should not be neglected, as these danger signals often lead to kidney troubles. - Druggists dangerous report a large sale on Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Roo- t which so. many people say soon heals and strengthens the kidneys after an attack of grip. Swamp-Roo- t, being an herbal compound, has a gentle healing effect on the kidneys, which is almost immediately noticed in most cases by those who try it. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., offer to send on a sample size bottle of Swamp-Roo- t, receipt of ten cents, to every sufferer who requests it. A trial will convince any one who may be in need of it. Regular medium and large size bottles, for sale at all druggists. Be sure to mention this paper. Adv. He Knew Men. Benham We toasted the laUies at the banquet. Dunham To a frazzle, I suppose? Lincoln the Christian. There were many who tried to make political capital out of Lincolns reKeep your liver active, year bowels clean by ligious beliefs or the alleged lack of taking Dr. Pierce e Pleasant Pellets and youll On one beliefs. keep such an occasion healthy, wealthy and wise. Adv. any Illinois clergyman asked the president Hypocrites pray cream and Uve If he was a Christian. The reply is as full of pathos as are so many of skimmed milk. Lincolns sayings full of humor: When I left Springfield I asked the people to pray for me; I was not a ' Christian. When I buried my son, the i severest trial of my life, I was not a Christian. But when I went to Gdf tysburg and saw the graves of thousands of our soldiers I then and there consecrattd myself to Christ I -- do j love Jesus. , Look out for Spanish Influenza. At the first sign of a cold take In a Predicament The usual droves of office seekers beset Mr. Lincoln after his first inauguration. He was fairly besieged by them, and at the same time important news came hourly from the South. He had no time to give to yet he realized that he must give attention to his appointments or the administration would suffer. Speaking, of the situation to a friend, he said: I am like a man so busy letting . rooms In one end of his house that he cannot stop to put out a fire that is burning in other. pol-ltic-s, Teach economy. That Is one of the first and highest virtues. It begins with saving money." Abraham CASCARA Standard cold remedy for 20 year la tablet break up a cold sure, no opiate grip la 3 daya. Monty Emaafo, relieve, The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. HiUa picture. At AU Drug Store. . |