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Show EMERY COUNTY PRQGRKSS CASTLE DALE. UTAH fttHy nealtn laiks Ol fSjhc Snakes Remedy Often Cure Many Disease Out of America nii nnnni fl jl Single 15 BEING ADJUSTED MOTT. M. D. BT TALENTINE :.nnrh1 to rive a lint- nl aJaHK-fft it.1 .Jtuai diseases luo iuuuw uiuigcsuuu. J... whole column in this newspa- fTwosld be required to print them all t to keep alive to supply blood and It ILk aid bone and muscle nd train. food is not di-- to .see. .that if your 1 41.. Jl;fed and taiten uj vj uc unm DIRECTOR GENERAL HINES IS OPTIMISTIC FOLLOWING CON. FERENCE WITH GLASS. f Issue of Warrants Suggested to Raise Funds Needed as Result of the Failure of Congress to Pass Bill f Appropriating $750,000,000. Washington, u ANARCHIST PLOT of no advice better than this: home treatment today with thia t Cud vegetable medicine. It will show in better than I can tell yon what it will Si When taking Golden Medical Dis-lrer- y, 1 bo rest assured of one very it contains neither alco--f There is nothing in it fat rtandard roots and herb') that possess tmtive properties of a hirfh order. A fen medicine is the only kind you can yon can iporUat thing si dot opiates. 's'ord to take. v No Hope. fair young thing who I The 10 OVERTHROW OF THE REPUBLIC THROUGH BLOODY REVOLU-TIOPLANNED BY REDS. DRAFT WILL BE READY BY END OF MONTH, DECLARES BRITISH PREMIER. Establishment of Bolshevist Govern ment is Object of I. W. W., Socialists and Radical Anarchists, Declares Solicitor Lamar. When Germans Are Summoned to Paris, They Will be Invited to Sign the Treaty Without Any Discussion. was enterreturned soldiers at tea she'd give a little lesson Mail matter sWzpd Waxliinctoii. since the signing of th armistice has In manners to one doughboy , who disclosed that the I. W. W.. anarchists his tea into his saucer before radical socialists and others are "tier it. rccting an amalgamation, ' which has inured really not so very hot," she told for its object the overthrow of the "You eou'd American through government condescendingly. it out' of your cup." "bloody revolution" and the establish It ain't the heat, miss," he replied ; nient of u I'olshevik republic, accord !I use the cup, the spoon gets in m ing to a memorandum sent to the sen ate propaganda committee by Solicitor Lamar of the postoffice department The memorandum was made public Monday by the committee, and Chair FRANTIC WITH man Overman said It would be read Into the record. Loc Suffering From Kidney Trouble Declaring that in Bolshevism the Rare Than Words Cai Describe. radical elements of the country had for the first time "found a common Doan's Brought Bealth cause upon which they can unite," and Happiness. Mr. Lamar said his information showMrs. Anna Thorson, 290 South St., ed that propaganda against the gov- Stamford, Conn., says: "I hadn't any was being conducted with. more 'rtmient than after a and child, strength and that the magni steeping my back hurt me more and great regularity more. My headaches were so bad it measured be could tude by the bold seemed as though my found in statements" skull were and 'outspoken being torn into shreds and I the literature. Accompanying his would lose finally memorandum were several hundred track of everything excerpts from mail matter showing f& be in a stupor or honrs. These I felt I the trend of the propaganda. d to keep jjoing or later. made be will public m my mind and I Particular reference was mane ny apt TO often when T trembled iho solicitor to the activity of the all over vita weakness. dissatisfied foreign element of the My feet were swollen and 1. w . country, but he said perhaps the bone in mv ms- tne m most active way seemed to ache. W. the was Mn.Thonoa because l fingers got almost as rigid as lemination of the propaganda wood and the knuckles f "hna lit its command a large f?eld TV, a a: . ck:ici-iuiiwere l force known as recruiting agents, w. colored, .iicj scanty and I suffered more thanterribly nirents. etc., who work un words describe. ot the I finally began using ceasingly in the furtherance Jw'i Kidney PUU and I believe 'cause.' my heart that they kept me Wtof thl imit 11 -- -J T . eoinff thrOliah mnu.Ii n.in rt mva Champ Denies Statement. i AHont-(Ja ChaniD Clark, former n.T'i- Doon't saved my life." V th hmise of renresenta- out a in signed statement given BJ2NJAMDI-Mtires, AYRES, naa ever aiu n.c he that denied Public here, Notary . m no , chance to GrirW...,ft jt. league of nations had be ratified by the senate. ing 6ome I jie thought i-- PAIN J?. DOAN'S IggTCR MILBURn CQ -- S. BUFFALO. N.T. LIEUT. FRED A. TILLMAN CONGRESSMAN 1 Taggart, M. C, from Kansas, Declares " EATONIG Best for Indigestion Ha Ever Used. f a; if; STOMACH REUEF f -- I L, US QUICKLY J & - ' i J Io the cast Joseph grestman ( ta the 2nd its. 1 trlct. Knwa City, Kans., fcv lecl(i(l that a trial ot the ff would tor- iinul In the ltaolf. moat conclnslT knii hiTTT decision do und tells OB. he what "Ob. ' I ' i I I 8 I ' ryf fix , -- ,V; i t oLt ll will coBTtnea the best remedy lndleaUon. KATiJNIO n ,B""'focn tret triid tot 4. . JTM r?h WS ,',t of "EATON-10- " Taggart. Con- - i im - - ' ' S1IL era M.M..m 1AUUAH1, 1W,- tK"a " v VS mvh - Is caaed by ttw the excess acidity aM tronbi ;""r's"hat son of Lieut. Fred A. Tillman, Tillman of Arkjj 'knon returned to Washington you like and digest keep the stomacli ft? atsii1 .i0'0"Wi 41tL Prtct health. KATONTO takes tip tha !?re,: .' with "7 it 7 ffi . ic- vaiw m cesi or iwo Get a h hnm ran t,wl. oi v I aspect rn fnllr, i?m. K- " " Aav - . UKMln a o Al. St'PPiV VaSlIleJ' I Pound; formnla M less rujg fiaiat lioais FAVORS COVENANT. confer- whole-heartedl- y will be solved. The chief subject of discussion at Wednesday's conference of the director general, the secretary at the treasury and the war finance corporation directors was the issue of warrants that Mr. Hlnes tentatively suggested as one method of solving the problem. It Is understood that the discussion developed no legal objections to the proposed warrants and that this plan will be carried through. Mr. Ilines made It clear that It was not intended that the warrants should be negotiable. The understanding is that they will amount to little more, than acknowledgments of the government's indebtedness to the railroads. Such documents In the hands of the railroads, however, will strengthen their credit, it Is believed, to the extent that most of them will be able to obtain private loans sufficient to tide the over the present difficulty. LOAN DRIVE WILL OPEN APRIL 21 Five Billion Dollars the Minimum to be Raised by Government The Victory Liberty Washington.5 loan campaign will open Monday, April 21, and close three weeks later, Saturday, May 10. Secretary Glass has announced the dates, together with the fact that short-ternotes maturing In not over five years would be Issued instead of longer-terbonds. The amount of notes to be offered was not disclosed, but it has been generally understood that the loan would be foca. minimum of $3,000,000,000, with the treasury reserving the right to accept all oversubscriptions. Mr. Glass said the interest rate on the notes and theamounts to be exempted from taxation would not be determined until a week or two before the campaign, as they would be based upon financial conditions at that time. Raid on Radicals. New York. Police, secret service men and Immigration officials raided a building in East Fifteenth street early Wednesday morning and arrested 108 men and two women. All of them are supposed to be radicals. SIR HORACE PLUNKETT But Suggests Some Amendments That Would Preserve Monroe Doctrine. William Jennings wnshinirton. March Bryan issued a statement here 10, indorsing the league of nations, but 1 suggesting amendments to the constitution which, among other things would preserve specifically the ' v- pro-t(m- doctrine, enlarge tne propor- V ' ) ' " "Hi I ; BOYDPARK guliM 8vle Cro. ; Human Flesh Sold to Starving People of Revolution Torn Country. tt'anhinirton. Chaotic conditions in Russia, particularly in Petrograd and reMoscow, were described In reports The state department. ceived by the had been depths to which the country ..1 ,1 n (Tuft Jw Rolsheviki rule was said by jriuubvi the advices to be indicated In a report from Moscow saying that human flesh sold to the famine-smcKe- n jofi who population by Chinese soldiers, later were arresieu. i J: w CITY SEKD IIS YOUR FROZEN, LEAKY, DAMAGED We psy transportation on way. Returned RADIATORS like Dev. brancne. H.& E, 252 AC STY LINK WtCLDINO io ail IM We save 70a time and money. Radiator & Welding Co. Edleoa Street. Slt Lake City, Utah USE OF PHONETIC SPELLING Reasons Advanced Why It Would Be Well if Its Study Should Be Made Mere General. Phonetics la Its broadest sense Is study of the whole range of sounds, articulate, musical and otherwise. ' In Its restricted sense It Is confined to articulate sounds of human speech. Even In this restricted sense it Is still broad enough to Include the subject of the acoustic or mechanical side and the anthropological or philological aide. It may discuss simply the speech vibrations that cause any par tlcular sensations on the human ears, or it may include an investigation of the manner and causes of the changes the articulate sounds of a language . ' andergo as it develops. The study of phonetics Is widely advocated by' philologists and by many of the most thoughtful teadiers for three reasons: (1) That persons may speak their mother tongue correctly through thus ' learning to know the proper valuation of its sounds; (2) that they may learn successfully the pronunciation of other languages, to which a knowledge of their own is the best introduction; (3) . that those who wish to study philology may have a key to that' solencei And the sounds of oar lanr suage cannot be successfully studied or explained without some use of pho netlc spelling. Hundreds of phenetlc alphabets have been proposed, but the only one that has made progress and bids fair to become general (naturally wun some modifications) is that on the Association Internationale Phone-- ) tlque. This alphabet fook form b&j tween 1885 and 1888 la proposals made)' by Paul Edouard Passy, a noted! French phonetician. BIRD !G WORTH PRESERVING Writer Deplores the Threatened Ex. tlnctlon of the Beautiful and Useful Upland Plover. Die upland plover, one of the most beneficial birds of all the winged host that once abounded la North America, t has been bunted and shot te the verge of extermination, says Dumb Animals. With .the passing of the passenger pigeons, which even now se many ; friends of all birds find it hard to be-- 1 lieve and of which a great many are not convinced, the plovers were marked for wholesale destruction. They were candidates for oblivion along with more than a score of other useful and beautiful species that could be ill spared from our vast and valuable native fauna. There is a ray of hope that these birds may not be pursued to complete annihilation. The federal law for the protection of migratory birds makes It i possible for the plover species to rehabilitate Itself, provided the cleared season to continue throughout the year. The upland plover is a mi-- 1 gratory bird and an insectivorous bird. Its food consists of 97 per cent of ahl- -' mal forms which are chiefly the worst enemies to agriculture. The federal ' law fixes a closed season on migratory Insectivorous birds to continue throughout the year with the exception of the bobolink or rlcebird, but under the law the plover Is classed as a migratory game bird and so its fate is precarious. These birds should not be i Shooting Into Space. The question of whether it would, ever be possible to shoot a projectile Into space, that is to say entirely off the earth, has long been the subject ef drscusslon. In a detailed scientific paper on the German gun which bombarded Paris last spring, Major J. Maltland-Addlsowriting la tbe tarsal ef the Royal Artillery, says the requisite velocity of such gnn Is not so very much higher than what has already been achieved ; viz., a muzzle velocity of a mile per second. When we are able to Increase this to five miles per second, the projectile. tt fired at a suitable angle, will travel around the earth as a grazing sateFlIte,i completing its orbit between 17 and 18;! times dally. With a velocity of about! eewea mttes a second, it will move off; t1 tpace, never to return. V xf? waJL m "tw -- .i 0 m" n, I I!iKim J Latest photograph of Sir Horace Plunkett, who has come to the United States to influence public opinion to; Honor licenses show that Cight bring about a settlement of the Irish Two of the question before the peaco conference! changed from dry to wet ana imve ends. He believes that the war wllf xungiiam, towns, weymoutn more than bring Ireland and England closer to-- j for been no license places getter. quarter Tf a century. Column. LAKE long-range- d hn Dry Towns Join Wet Returns from eleven towns Tinaton imtwi Tuesday on the question of SUI KM MAM SIIU-- shot RUSSIANS TURN CANNIBALS. and against His propositions. mini 1 onto to conTietlon, but befo.e he casts his vote on any measure he Insists upon eridenc that, oo Its own welfht. carries con. VlCtli. BRYAN Following n ence on March 12, with Secretary of Treasury Glass and officials of the war finance con'oratlon. Director General of Itallrouds Hiues expressed confidence that the situation confronting the railroad administration through the failure of congress to pass the 7."iO,(Ki0.(H)0 appropriation bill will' be .satisfactorily adjusted. The director general was optimistic, lie said he would have a definite plan to propose to the railroad executives within a week or ten days. The spirit of adulteration shown by the railroad men in the conference of the previous day leads him to believe they will enter Into the plan and the administration's financial difficulties tionate voiinsr power of the United stntes end make it clear that each member nation might decide for itself hether it would support decrees of the league's general council. arpuienu (or diriment ' London. Premier Lloyd George and Foreign Secretary Ihilfour have sent word to their colleagues here that the peace conference has nearly completed its work, the Evening News says it understands. The draft of the peace treaty already has been finished and will be signed before the end of March. When the Germans are summoned to Paris, the News adds, Hie treaty will be read to them and they will be invited to sign it. There will be no discussion with u view to alterations of the principal articles of the treaty. If it is thought necessary, questions involving the adjustment of details will be referred to a special commission. The decisions of the various boundary commissions of the peace conference are being framed in accordance with the Instructions of the supreme council for speedy action by the conference and it is expected that all the reports will he completed by the end of the week. The commissions have been told that when they could not agree they should, submit the reports of various viewpoints, leaving it to the council to make a decision. The American members, it is re ported, have been coldly judicial and without favoritism, thereby incurring criticisms from partisan claimants almost daily. The decision of the council to limit Germany to n volunteer twelve-yea- r army Is regarded by the Americans as likely to lead to consideration by the League of Nations, when t takes up the subject of the limitations of arma ments, of the policy of a general pro hibition of conscription armies in all nations. This Is on the theory that the great expense of regular long- term armies will be such as to automatically keep down militarism. Monroe A congreaamaa hears many t TREATY OF PEACE TO SEIZE GOVERNMENT BE SIGHED III APRIL inife. 1 Each day you will find sontetbiag different in ear cases. New gift small cost high suggestions Tallies. Comet in, often. MAKERS OF JEWELRY ' SJ distributed where it is needed, a Dys-tnt- a of some sort is sure to come. common symptom, and so are jttr (osipl'tint. loss of flesh, nervousness, Id memory, dizziness, sleeplessness, no Wite. Many times, when neglected, in jeikrn results in coughs, throat diseases, tttrrh, bronchitis and even more danger-l- a thinps. And all these disorders arise &m the food is not properly digested '4. the elomacn. is piam even to a TaM that relief and cure are to be had Mr by setting up a healthy condition in i rtomach. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N, number ?' ianv years ago combined f Tegetable growths into a temperance and called it ljiedy for indigestion, Jjjden Medical Discovery. It is probably ia most efficacious discovery ever made fn medicine, for the list of people all over world who have had their countless ills ircwne by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical makes an amazing total of thou- - Something New t , , |