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Show PlfPIlV Mrs. Ella ttheeler Wilccx. t,nthr and poetess, died at her home. "The All Corners oftheEarth of the Pas Complete History Week Told in aragraptu Prepared foe the Buy Reader f Hit-terd- al, INTER MOUNTAIN. vetJames M. Smith, Canadian war in of murder found was guilty eran, ,1,'e serond degree for the killing at tattle last February of his girl wife, Helen. J. Vance Johnson, Bungalow." in Branford Conn.. October 30. Mrs. Wileox had been ill for some months, having had a nervous collapse while engaged in war relief work in England. John P. Charlton, piloting the air mail from Chalfont. Pa., drove a heavy fog and crashed to histhrough death into the side of Schooleys mountain near Dover, N. J. Clifford Imsdalil. 8 years old. and Elsie M.te, 14, were killed near Minn., and three persons were injured when an airplane struck a sleigh carrying a dozen children, as the aviator was endeavoring to make a landing. WASHINGTON. King Albert and President Wilson clasped hands on Thursday. The meeting at the president's bedside, brief as it was, proved the climax of the American visit of the Belgian monarch, who left for home immediately after visiting the president. With only the French capital delegate opposing the action, the International labor conference at Washington 'decided to admit representatives of Germany and Austria, immediately upon their arrival here, to full membership in the world labor organization. The order the old maximum coal prices of the fuel administration was completed Thursday at a conference of Dr. IL A. Garfield and railroad administration officials. Dr. Harry A. Garfield lias been recalled to his position as fuel administrator, in the government's fight against the coal strike. An investigation of the bank accounts of John D. Ryan, formerly director of aircraft production, is heing made in behalf of the congressional subcommittee which is investigating war expenditures for aviation, t The senate passed the prohibition enforcement act over the president's veto on October 28, and made immediately effective machinery for preventing sale of beverages containing more than one-hal- f of 1 per cent alcohol. FOREIGN. "Before we go, we shall close the gate behind us and make the whole world tremble," Nicoali Lenine, the Bolshevist premier, is quoted in a Re-vdispatch as saying in discussing the danger of Fetrograd being cap- prominent fanner Black-foo- t, f the Thomas district, near of accused in Jail, Idaho, is Leon Ileee killed and shot having Howard. 19 years of age. Hacked by the Chinese government, a hank capitalized at $10,000,000 now will (icing estalf shed in New York, establish branches in Vancouver, Seattle, Hash., San Francisco, Cal., and Montreal. Twenty children were left fatherless Ne-pwhen James Nelson of Terry and Mo.--s of Uintah, Wyo., were instantShort Line ly killed by an Oregon itain at a railroad crossing near Brig-haCity, Utah, the car in which they were riding being struck by the traiifc Whether James M. Smith, 44, returned Canadian soldier, became with the blood just while lighting in Flanders that he deliberately killed his girl wife, Helen, 20, shot lier mother, Mrs. Thomas' McMahon, and then tried to end his own life, will be decided in his trial at Seattle. The body of Frank M. Campbell, 21 years old, formerly a student at the AVashington State college, Pullman, Wash., was found on a street at Fort Collins. Colo., a bullet hole through his iieart. It is believed he was killed by robbers. C0MESTIC. The short workday and the "ever increasing wages demanded by industrial labor," were declared to be "allies of tiie profiteer in keeping up the high cost of living," in a resolution adopted by the Farmers' National congress at its concluding session at Hagerstown, Md. al mnm. wufttl -- . - UTAH BUDGET A town library is being started at Altonah as a result of the recent visit of Miss Mary E. Downey, state library organizer. Weekly crop reports sent out by the United States bureau of crop estimates note that fall seeding is in progress in Utah and that the crop is coming along nicely. Engineers are surveying the new Currant Creek Irrigation proposition. Wheu completed the project will bring 2500 additional acres under irrigation. Revenues of the state for 1919 from ad valorem taxatiou of general property will fall more than half a million short of that received from the same sources in 1918. Utah will be divided into nine zones for the forthcoming campaign for the collection of taxes, according to an announcement of the internal revenue collector for this district. The members of the G. A. R. and the Spanish-America- n war veterans will join with the veterans of the world war in the celebration of armistice day, November 11, at Ogden. It is announced that Salt Lake will become one of the landing stations in the new transcontinental air route which will be used next summer by passenger carrying airplanes. A deposit of ancient fossils which promises to rival the famous dinosaur quarry on the Green river near Jenson has been discovered in the Uintah basin, according to word received from My ton. Earl Spann, aged 19, who plead guilty to a charge of forgery commit ted at Ogden, has been sentenced to serve sixty days at hard labor. The boy raised a check from $18.20 to $80.20. In an altercation arising from a wage dispute involving $4, Tom Chris-to- , Greek proprietor of a lunch room in Salt Lake, was shot through the right leg by Nick Demas, a Greek dishwasher. The jury at Tooele in the Joe murder case returned a verdict of not guilty. Tomljanovich was charged with murdering Fraz Frako-vica cripple, near Tooele early on Tom-ljanovi- h, July 9, n drought-stricke- t jKi-ea- f n -. .i. i -- l-- RED last. When the annual rabbit drive starts in Utah this winter, there'll be more than the usual zest to it, for beside the excitement of the chase the skins of the animals bagged will have a fair market value. James Miller, Frank Devers and Frank Smith, who admitted the robbery of the Sprlngvllle bank, have each been sentenced to serve a term of from five years to life in the state prison. The robbery occurred October 8. Utah last week received the third largest inheritance tax ever paid by persons outside the state. The amount was $69,276. It came from the estate of John W. Sterling of New York and was a tax upon Union Pacific stock. About 1000 bushels of what is claimed to be the best wheat for seed purposes ever raised in Utah is being offered for sale by the city of Salt Lake. The wheat was raised last summer on the city farm on Ensign i FAIRYTALE r.t . CROSSBOtL AslI for HV "HILL'S CALL Membership Campaign Opens vember 2d, Closes 11th. No- CASCARAi-- l In Message Prepared Before Illness, Makes Appeal for Generous Response. RADIATORS. Tonight the story will be about neglected radiators,' said Daddy. "Pretty big words," said Nancy. "Don't you quite know what they meant" asked Nick. "I think I do, but they're so big I'd like to be sure I knew." "I'll explain." said Daddy. "A thing that is neglected Is a tiling that Is left alone and doesn't have any attention paid to it, and, of conrse, you know what radiators are? They're the pipes through which the heat comes. "Well, this is what they had to say to each other in a city apartment house: 44 1 do declare, said the dining-rooradiator, 'It is a shame the way we're not even thought of for many montus.' "'You're right,' said the drawing-rooradiator, 'you're absolutely right "Throughout this whole summer I've neer heard one of those creatures say a word of praise for us, and yet look how good we were to them all last winter. We gave them heat, and if it hadn't been for us they would have shivered awfully. " They would have caught colds and had chills and had a most dreadful time of it. But we saved thein from all of that. Then they can't even take the time or the trouble to say thank you, and when they're suffering with the heat In the summer they should think of us.' "'Perhaps that Isn't a time when we can really expect it of them,' said m the radiator. " 'Perhaps not, said the dining-rooradiator, 'and yet I don't see why not. They should say when they are so hot in the summer: "Well, summer heat Isn't like our good eld radiator heat in the winter. That just keeps us good and warm, but doesn't make us hang out on the Are escapes and out of the windows to get cool And we never feel we have to take swims after a day when the radiators have been working. Quite the right sort of heat comes from radiators. It makes us comfortable and keeps us from suffering with the cold. But it doesn't make us suffer with the heat the way this summer heat is doing." "Ts that what you expect they should say in the summer?' asked the drawing-rooradiator. " 'I think they might,' said the radiator, 'for we never make it so hot for them they have to fan themselves and all such things. We don't do anything of that sort. We just give them nice, comfortable heat drawing-roo- "We Gave Them Heat" and should It get a trifle too warm for them they can get cooled off so easily by turning us off and opening the window a little. They can't get cooled quickly like that In the summer time, but they don't seem to realize that.' "They really don't appreciate us, that's the truth,' said the drawing-roo- m radiator. " 'Of course they can get cooled off quickly in the winter time by the aid ;of old man winter and his friends. They're much better workers at that jort of thing than old man summer is. in fact, I don't believe summer Is any good for that,' said the dining-roo- radiator. "'Oh, well,' said the drawing-rooradiator, 'the time of the year Is com- ing when we will be busy. We'll laugh when we're being turned on an we'll gurgle with glee. "'We'll forget about the summer and the time that passed when we were neglected, for the winter is on our side of the game.' "'Then, too,' said the dining-rooradial jr. 'we shouldn't take too much praise for this ourselves, even If we could get It, for after all it's the furnace which is at the root of the whole thing, and it's the furnace man who helps, too. "'And there is the coal bin which does its part Still, let's not think of them, for we are the radiators, and while we may be neglected in the summer, what happy winters we do have with so much attention paid to as. "'Ah, so much attention paid to us in the winter, repeated the drawing-rooradiator, 'and the winter will not be long in coming now.' " m The Good Samaritan. A Sunday school teacher had been telling her class the story of the Good Samaritan. what the When stn'-- she asked them meant, a little boy said: "It xpeans that when I am in trouble Kiy neighbors must help me ou-tChristian Register. In Washington, D. C In a request to the people of the United States to generously respond to the Third Red Cross Roll Call the following message was dictated by President Wilson before his present Illness: As president f the United States and as president of the American Red Cross I recommend and urge a generous response to the Third Red Cross Roll Call, which opens on November the second with the observance of Red Cross Sunday and appropriately closes on November the eleventh, the first anniversary of the signing of the armistice. Twenty million adults Joined the Red Cross during the war, prompted by a patriotic desire to render service to their country and to the cause for which the United States was engaged in war. Our patriotism should stand the test of peace as well as the test of war, and it is an intelligently patriotic program which the Red Cross proposes, a continuance of service to our soldiers and sailors, who look to it for many things, and a transference to the problems of peace at home of the experience and methods which it acquired during the war. Stress on Membership. It Is on membership more than money contributions that the stress of the present campaign is laid, for the Red Cross seeks to associate the people in welfare work throughout the land, especially in those communities where neither official nor unofficial provision has been made for adequate public health and social service. It Is In the spirit of democracy that the people should undertake their own welfare activities, and the National Red Cross wisely intends to exert upon community action a stimulating and Influence and to place the energies of the organization behind all sound public health and welfare agencies. The American Red Cross does not purpose indefinite prolongation of its relief work abroad, a policy which would lay an unjust burden upon our own people and tend to undermine the of the peoples relieved, but there is a necessary work of completion to be performed before the American Red Cross can honorably withdraw from Europe. The congress of the United States has imposed upon the Red Cross a continuing responsi bility abroad by authorizing the secre tary of war to transfer to the American Red Cross such surplus army medical supplies and supplementary and dietary foodstuffs now in Europe as shatf not be required by the army, to be used by the Red Cross to relieve the distress which continues in certain countries of Europe as a result of the war. Program Deserves Support To finance these operations, to con clude work which was begun during the war, and to carry out some com paratively inexpensive constructive plans for assisting peoples in eastern Europe to develop their own welfare organizations, the American Red Cross requires, in addition to membership fees, a sum of money small In comparison with the gifts poured into its treasury by our generous people during the war. Both the greater enduring domestic program and the lesser temporary foreign program of the Red Cross deserve enthusiastic support, and I venture to hope that its peace-tim- e membership will exceed rather than fall below its impressive war membership. VVOODROW WILSON. It. flnl'riJ 4B MUK, IUI II, epatca Dour SI yer . W com in z nutrwtm rnp ia a oan. i il UI orcau op us M QUININE Standard cold remedy for 20 . bo with baa a Ke Mr. HUl'a pictures At AODrmg Storm lEARTBIM Caused by Acid-Stoma- ch blttar hcartbora. That belchln. Indirection, bloat aftar atln But thar dancer alfnala to warn you of awful troublaa tf not atoppad. Headache, blllouaneaa. rheumatlam. sciatica, that tired, llatiaaa feellni, lack of eneriy. dlsalneaa, Inaomnla, aren cancer and ulcera ot the lnteatlnea and many other allmanta ara traceabla to Thouaanda yea, million of people wha ought to bo wall and strong ara mar weakling! because of They really tarv In th mldat of plenty bacausa they do not get enough atrength and vitality from the food they eat. Take EATON1C and glr your stomach at ohanc to do It work right. Make It atronr. BATON1G eool. sweet and comfortable. brinca quick relief for heartburn, belching. Immiseries. and other stomach Indigestion proves digestion helps you get full strength from your food. Thoussnds say EATONIO ts the moat wonderful stomach remedy la the1 world. Brought them relief when every thing else failed. Our beat testimonial ts what EATONIO will do for you. So get a big (Oo bos of EATONIC today from your drugglat, use It Ave days If you'rs not pleased, return U and get your money back. aU ara eauaad by ara only Brat symptom ATONIC II CfPRjrODRAaD-STpMAC- p Just Shopping. "Your wife teems to be carrying on a voluminous correspondence." "Quite so." "What about?" "Oh, she's petting prices from hotels she has no idea of going to. Shopping by mall." "CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP" IS CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look self-relian- Averse to Borrowing Trouble. Jimmy has been rather unfortunate lately In the way of minor accidents, and his mother has grown quite cautious about his taking chances. One day he came In and wanted to ride his tricycle down to bis auntie's house. His mother hesitated before consent ing to his request, and Jimmy cut in with the comforting assurance, "Maybe there won't be a thing happen, mother, so don't make a worry for yourself till it does." Tk. FIVE MILLION PEOPLE USED IT LAST YEAR President Wilson, NEGLECTED n twenty-two-ye- - Mah-sud- . UTAH EVENING tured. Twelve thousand French families have applied for the grant of $5000 from the great fund established by Theodore Cognacq, the Frencli millionaire philanthropist, to assist families of nine children or more from the same parents. Airplane bombs are to be used s against the tribes of Waziris and in Afghanistan unless the tribesmen discontinue the continual attacks on British posts and convoys and the raids into British territory, in which they have been indulging during and since recent troubles with Afghanistan. Heavy pressure is being brought to bear by Syndicalist leaders on railway men in France to endeavor to induce them to join the movement for a revrights." November 7. Cov. Lynn O. Frazier has issued a olutionary general strike was The government given a vote of flat. proclamation ordering an extra sesInformation from those who have sion of the North Dakota legislature confidence in the British house of commons on its financial policy, by an kept tab on the receipts of grapes at to convene November 25. Ratification of the federal suffrage amend- overwhelming majority of 355. Price, is to the effect that 250 cars The ravages of the hook worm of the fruit have been received there ment, assistance for farmers and enactment of legislation among the gold miners in Colombia this season. As many as five to seven to carry out the state's industrial pro- are seriously interfering with the procars are standing on the siding at one duction of the precious metal, accord- time. gram are mentioned in the call. lan OTary, 78 years old, pedes- ing to Dr. O. T. Brosius, mine phy"Only two log schoolhouses are left in Uintah county and these are to be trian, departed a few days ago from sician. Governmental and municipal author replaced with modern structures in Chicago on a hike which he said would carry him into every state in the union ities and coal merchants virtually ad- the near future," says Prof. Mosiah mung on each of the governors. mit the impossibility of finding a rem- Hall, state high school Inspector, who which has arisen has just returned from a trip over the He said he would be gone two years, edy for the situation coal shortage. county. of the because in I'aris Blowing the door off the safety de Ratification of the peace treaty will J. A. McKay, station agent and teleposit box vault and breaking open the Lake individual deposit boxes, robbers made be completed on November 11, "armisgrapher at Milford for the Salt ' of the a haul of $35,000 in to look after the signed has tice deposit by resigned Route, day," bonds Libertyirom the stnte bank of Sherrard, 111. copy of the document in the foreign fortune which it is said has been left it is predicted by Brit- to him by an uncle in the east. The lohn Armstrong Chaloner, recently office at Paris, statesmen. victor in a estate is reported to be valued at ish to be fight decision of the about $375,000. declared sane in New York, is to go As a protest against ii the Unless some action is taken by the stage. He has announced that the government not to give them the "e is to appear in a will hold na federal government to declare Novemwomen French vote, pro Broadway "union ,n his own play, "Robbery tion elections on the same day as the ber 11, the day upon which the armisare tice was signed by the allies with Ger"dcr Law," written five years ago as male voters. If their candidates "woman's a will ot ins crusade for form many, a legal holiday, no such action lunacy law re- rejected they torm, will be taken by Harden Bennipn, secparliament" are With fourteen known dead and six marryFrench retary of state for Utah and acting Hundreds of girls to M. governor in the absence of Governor "r more missing, according Chinese laborers, only time can bring ing Pauis, minister of the interior, who is Bamberger. The Salt Lake City board of educaseas which bodily lifted the inaugurating a campaign against "the homes." tion has elected to test the order of rohy passenger steamer Muskegon, yellow peril invading French industrial commission that It pay the her preback to win l'""1 """ashed her to pieces on the piers England hopes Miss Rae E. Woodcock a total of the entrance of world to In the shipping dominant place Muskegon, Mich., i'urhor. steamships', which $258 as a result of an accident in the through Whittier school. Miss Woodcock, a to operf '"" h. Lewis, former economical more be will far president of teacher, was preparing a soup for a United Mine Workers of America. ate than coal burning vessels. science luncheon when she J" an inte 'view at Manitoba has suffered a loss of domestic Charleston, W. Va., scalded. was " mat internal politics In the about 2,800.000 bushels of potatoes, i i'mion is Delegates from Utah to attend the responsible for the strike frozen in the ground, which at market called by Governor Davis conference means a loss finer of ,he Soft coal minerg. prices, $1.25 a bushel, of Idaho to meet at Salt Lake City, I Hie first tierial derby around the of approximately $3,500,000. to al- November 21 and 22, to discuss the 'm f"r Prizes totalling $1,000,000 Taking as their motto, "Glorytwo so- storage of waters for the western J'heduh.d t0 start Ju,y 4 lg0( ftnd cohol, which fires our soul," states which are now being wasted by "r l,efwre January 3, 1921, cieties have been formed in France for running into the Pacific ocean, have to announcement made at Los the purpose of fighting "pussyfootingin been appointed by Governor Bamberngeies ,y Alan U. Hawley, president American prohibition propaganda" ger. f A Ue A, ff Club of America. France. William H. Larson, aged 30, was bride who was once near a member of A majority of those killed while at work at the Logan ,IP l'rm,us killed Russian women's "battal-- Kranoyitz, Silesia, when a passenger of dnaih" and sugar factory. Mr. Larson was washt xtrain collided with a freight train out the Brown centrifugal machine, he stoamer America with her hus- - took fire, were alcohol smugglers, fifty ing the hose he was using for the when to a Kentuckian. of the smugglers being burned it i purpose caught on a revolving shaft death. and he was drawn into the machinery. , ......... '''ols ;,t 1!,.,i 'w-irj, Official information received from j... ueciareu oeiore A case has just been reported from '"da Barluirn cinrntv taaKhura' Mexico City indicates that Carranza where two .boys hunthalf the subjects taught soldiers unquestionably were implicat- Uintah county j'l'iie that schools became deer separated, and one Jening never are used in ed in the kidnaping of William O. the waving of the underbrush ler f at mistook kins, the American consular agent 19 for the movements of a deer and shot Six persons wpro i..,oM who was abducted Oetot.cr with the result that his partner ' when Southern Pacific train, and released only after his friend in dropped dead with a bullet through his "I'lilmnml . , uebla had paid to the kutnapeis "cecseu near aciou, body. 000 in American gold. l our men held in connection with the alleged plot to , kidnap and hold for ransom Edsel Ford, son of Henry Ford, Detroit automobile manufacturer, were sentenced in police court at Toledo to three months in the city workhouse. The middleweight title changed hands Thursday, John Kllonis of Manchester, N. H., winning from Ira Bern of Salt Lake in straight falls at Boston. Magistrate Dale, sitting in a Brooklyn police court, suspended sentence on a man convicted of drunkenness on the ground that "a good many hypocrites in congress have created a condition whereby a good many Americans will be deprived of their personal . rKLHjKItbb, CASTL.E DAL Remove poison, at tongue! from stomach, liver and bowels. if " Accept "California" Syrup of Flg only look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child Is having the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bottle. Give It without fear. Mother I You must say "California. e-- Total Strangeir Tact How like a Chinese that woman is over there. Absolute Ditto Indeed? She Is my wife. T. S. Her ah feet are so delightfully small, y'know. If You Reed a Medicine You Should Hays tiia Bast Have yoa ever stopped to reason why; that so many products that are ex teniively advertised, all at once drop oat of tight and are soon forgotten? Hie reason is plain the article did not fulfill the promise! of the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almoit sells itself, u like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have bees Success. benefited, to those who are in need of it. Life is Indefinite a bundle of conA prominent druggist says "Take for tradictions. We men, with our ideas, example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root- , strive to give it a particular shape by preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for ia melting it into a particular mold into almost every case it shows excellent rethe definiteness of success. AH the sults, as many of my customers testify world conquerors, from Alexander No other kidney remedy has so large a down to the American millionaires sale." mold themselves into a sword or mint ' According to sworn statements and and thus find that distinct image of verified testimony of thousands who have themselves which is the source of their used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Roo- t is due to the fact, success. Rablndranath Tagore. so many people claim, that it fulfills alHer Wish. Wee Bessie on being told that she would have to eat condensed milk on her oatmeal exclaimed, "I wish that old condensed cow would die." Bos- ton Transcript Fertilizers In the Netherlands. One source of the demand for fertilizers In the Netherlands that one is apt to overlook is the fairly extensive reclamation of waste land. The process of dyking and draining that has won large sections of the country from the sea and its culmination in the project to drain the greater part of the Zulder Zee are well known. Then Get the Other Side. Success Is merely a matter of luck if you don't believe it ask any unsuccessful man. Boston Transcript H is most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Roo- t by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Adv. Mitey Fast. First Boarder Can you pass the cheese? Second Ditto How fast Is It going? ml imm i ua Bel ... iNignT Morning EVes KeeDbur Clean - Clear Healthy fcrtt for Fra tye Car Book Murloa Ca.Chiesgo.IUA |