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Show Lzv2i' County Weekly Precs C-t- at irU d f sou;:rr. OXCE A r ... TL'er''- -' cost of living has been accomptiniiel nt world emergency where destruc- iion ba been wrought for period of years there is no other sdlutlon to the problem of reducing cost of living. It will remain high until in creased production provides the equ al of what has been destroyed. To do that more hours, and not less hours; more energy and not less energy must be put into everything one is capable of doing. -- a man is you are viewing, any work If with pleasure Wafting,' - ; t- - rt If you like him or you love him, tell him now; Do not withhold your approbation 'till the parson' makes oration. And he lies with snowy lilies o'er his brow ; For no matter how you shout it, he won't really care about ' it, He won't know how margt teardrops you have shed J ? ; ' If you, think some, praise is due him, How's the time to slip it to him, . For he cannot read his tombstone when lie's dead. Tor soldlerln' is oldlerin' A tura y can't resets : An the army is thepuddln', Though we often will insist That it frets y'. " But tt gets y .Hell! t . guess 111 reenllstl " - ' : . - , " . - More than ,fame and more than money, ..Is the comment kind and sunny, ' carried out of France something like a million head of horned cattle, of' which more than half were milking cows. The effect of .this wholesaJl theft was not merely, the impoverish ment of large numbers of people; It was reflected in malnutrition and death of many thousands of Trench children dependent; upon cows milk. The peace conference Imposed on the Germans an obligation to return cows, or about one for every 18 stolen.. Now the Germans set up a plea that to return these animals will Impose upon the children of their country a cruel hardship; and the BrlUBh authorities who have the matter Immediately In hand have shown a tender leniency .in the matter ot enforcing the treaty requirementsj A French official Is Quoted as declar ing the German plea Invalid in respect with the fact h&t the vast majority of children in Northenr France do not even yet taste fresh milk once a week. Here and there, he savs. "one finds a milch cow that has been sent to us from America or England but the principall sustenance of the thousands of children is condensed mOk, Even that is by no means always obtainable. Thousands of nslr oners, too, who have come back from the horrors of German prisons, nothing but skin and bones have died through want of pnjlk fend other nourishing foods which are indispensable Jo Jhem to regain tb'" - -ffth. In both amrica and England, , J -- - MEXICO -- braver - - "There Is at present but one sura .. . . that . will be permanent the treatment which gare'. Now Mexico, Utah and California a go?ern-mewhich has allowed them to develop and become respectable mem bers of society. Had the present policy, .or lack of policy been used in 1845 and con tinued up to this time, who is there to say that the states named above would not now be and the homes of outlaws. Was it hot a. blessing, that they were annexed to the United States and would It not have been a blessing If more had been annexed at the same time. . and hope, and courage to the end. your praise, bestow it, If like let him know it ; him ; you Let the word of true encouragement be said" Do not wait 'till life is over and he's underneath the 'clover Fcr he cannot read his tombstone when he's dead. Giveajfoar; If he earns t i ! !! c- W e Have Them To Sell a I t ) f i i m We have a good Machine - i!. Shop and Good Mechanics : V 1 fi i 90-0- 00 And the hearty, warm approval of a friend; treatment for the Mexican question, For it' gives to life a savor, makes you richer, stronger, that Is one that will effect a cure "- "f m A -) f; TELL HIM NOW -- - 3 h , -- f yt- I Tor soldlerln is soldlerin' We know it derilUh well An' the army is the puddln',-Thougwo often say it's hell; The farmer depends on industry. An it frets ' the store keeper depends on industry But it ets y'l " the dsy laborer depends on industry, Why y can't exactly telL the doctor, lawyer and capitalist depend on industry for their living. When 1 gets to b a, "clTie"-Then why not all get on common suppooe.that I'll be glad. ground and stand for the principles Though the barracks is the nearest and conditions which will most enTo a home 1 Bret had. courage Industrial development. An' the boys'll go to Mexico A JUST DEMAND TAurals a pot of fun; An' I'll bo In an office. Count I wish I wasn't donel During the war the German armies . Friday, -" w- J have been a reg'lw. tollier. Seten roamlii years, py friend, Karl 5. Carkcn, Editor An. I sever chaaed a Creaoer, An' I oerer went to France, fnltSoi fa Earer City. Utah, as Second Class Mail Matter Nerer been a corporal, , And my hitch is nigh to end. Subscription $2.03 Per Year ut I hates to peel the legglns c3 An shed my khaki pants. I December 5th, 1919 r-- -- Art-lon- a, nt -- semi-civilis- BELL' YOUR HAMMER AND BUY A HORN ed We Sell Accessories Utah Transportation Co 11 MILFORD, UTAH 1 1 llatU. ,The continuous knocking that certain writers in . the ssa-VsSalt Lake papers are giving the Arrowhead trail is beginning to bear fruit as it is uniting the towns in the SouJudging by articles which hare 1 thwestern part of the state in a determined effort to see appeared recently In Salt Lake pa is built and built of concrete pers, there is an effort being mads that the Arrowhead trail ' -', and built at once. v':7 to' detract from the importance of roads which do not directly bene The sooner the Salt Lake papers realize that the coun- all fit that city, an attitude which is very RFrAIKF:11 ,s M0RE P EKETRATIfiG ( AT DRMCIST try between St. George and Salt Lake City has a mind of deeply resented by people In this part Ul.UIUJI.WiD RELIEVES QUICKERl25501M2g its own, and is not afraid to speak its mmd the sooner of. the state. , As one of our promi hlkiH. OWKN GUOVKU, Agent thev realize that the Arrowhead trail is the natural route nent business men said recently, If not car to" help us : Catarrh Cannot Be for that prosperous strip of territory,' which includes all Salt Lake doesshould Cured I am 'afraid, you have heard somuch Miss Vera Hansen is visiting Miss we break our develop,' why TjOCAL APPLICATION S, as they Clestla ine towns on tne west slope or the mountains and must be necks over the slogan, 'Buy in Salt with about our ruined houses you hare cannot reach the seat of th OIimm, Hyatt in Parowan. Catarrh la a local disease, rreatlr actired them. of I got believe the sooner the ..,: V' improved; they realize that the Arrowhead Lake" by constitutional conditions, and ordsr to cure It you mutt take an tual physical misery of our people Miss Clara Jones of Los Angeles, trail is the best and shortest route to Southern California, All Salt Lake appears to care about in Internal rsmsdy. Hall's Catarrh Medi- In to and shel food, cousin Is Is cine regard to and taken clothing limacta the tourist thru Internally pf Mrs.' Ray Barton, Mrsv within, their gel Nevada and Arizona, Zion Canon, Grand Canon and hunblood en the mucous surfaces of the ter now that bad weather Edgar White, Mrs, Lottie Pearce and especially fleece them and let them go. tiia its and trstsni. Ball's Catarrh Madlcine was dreds of other points of interest; the sooner they realize Southw stern Utah Is has come, is far worse than is gener Miss Cells Jones,- who ' has been by one of tb bast growing lafTtbe4 Is this country for years. Itphysicians that this road is, to be built, and soon; just that much proposition. It is' now on the highrealised by the happy people of spending some little time In New '' ally some of of the boat tonics known, some of the boat blood unlnvaded America. The fact that York City, finished her nurses train- - ' ' Quicker will the state and Salt Lake be develoned We way to prosperity and It is not only eomblnod with The porfoct eombtnatlon of tttriasrs. can there a be e la Hall's Catarrh single person to lend ing. course,' and arrived tn Beav'er, ncntxare one persimmon how quickly the road from Salt asking that which belongs to It is what produces such wonderful an ear to the plea that It is their du Wednesday of last week, and spent"' tn catarrhal eondiUons Band for Lake, to SanFrancisco is built, but we want the knocking 'good roads",and good roads it will rwraits u fro. ty to preserve the lives ot the have in spite of the atUtude of Salt tflettnKf!tls, Thanksgiving day with' her cousins. " ' CHKrfET A CO.; Propa, Toledo, a ci me Arrowneaa trail to stop., we would suggest that Lake and the Utah State Automobile r.Alli. Druf1its. our of enemies at the expense of She left Mondsy afternoon for her Wc Hall's family Pills for eonstlsatioa, . Trench children seems Incredible.." the motto: ''Sell Your Hammer and Buy a Horn," be association. home" in Los Angeles, ' California! a ' . ' . . in If Lake. do the atUtude of Mr. RisheO in It would more good than all the adopted Salt, SilSSSSSSSSMlMM.MW. the Tribune Is the atUtude of the tdvertisbg, campaigns ever put out by the Utah facturers1 Association, entitled, "Buy UtahMade Goods." paper , and reflects the sentiment in tnai city, tne sooner we of the South- , y I X :. a - cora-poa- i. . ad Hadl-eio- . ' child-re- .. "v -.L west find It out. the better. . ' PLAYING SA Tho president in his message to congress made nd of the League' of Nations, no mention M the Mexican situation, and only, promised to think about the rail-reaQuestion iatcr .Perhana he rrmsirWs trm Tima cm, issue, and the Mexican problem may 'need a dose of "How ha kontua nnf nf mar" onA iVtk ooilw.v.i d 13 top hot to handje just before a presidential campaign. J ; - " ' EDITORIAL NOTES " ' Beaver County News .'WAGES IN JAPAX - u Consideration ot wages paid In Japan demonstrate why - Japanese are anxious to emigrate to this coun try, and likewise why the people of the Pacific coast states, where the influx of Japanese has been the great est; are lnsistant that exclusion laws against Nipponese be enforced, The American consul at Tokkalcht, Japan, under date of April . 17UU. has furnished through the state department a table 'of wages prevailing In various occupations In Japan. The official data thus supplied shows that a blacksmith In Japan receives a wage of SO cents a day, while a bricklayer gets 15 cental la Utah bricklayers have been paid as high as 111 a day, and the average wage is -- A sxeetly.faspired development of the time.is a "move-jnen- t" to free one of the McNamara brothers under the parole system All that McNamara did was to blow up r wis jimes omce some seven or eight years men at work thereii'Mentally, kill twenty-tw- o n.- It appears to have- been ' a trivial matterT Further irAor more.i MtNamara'fi virtfm Viorl Japanese , laborer receives 18c uu wt uugut ItUCU UUUJ1 a day and a confectioner gets 5.(? themselves, since; forsooth, they were earning their liv- - a month, with board. A painter is 6 um uic tsuppuri oi tneir iamines in defiance of the or- paid 40 cents a day, a plasterer 49e ders, pf organized labor. What right had they to work and and a printer II cents. A man ser... a live. -vant receives 11.14 a month and a ! innrrvrmonf avi fkn Mic miI uiC3 uii iL. me union ana oi me 7 ' of Uie walking delegate? In "removing" these re- woman servant $1.54, board being Included in both instances. ' ' calcitrants the McNamara.q uvro mopalv oonnnm u Other occupations are similarly pose of an organization whose mission it is to rewsrded. We can't blame the Jap safeguard Illfi interest, tna linrirk nnA U J! 1.1 mt anese, therefore for wantinr tn out of their native hut do method of the Times assassination was in keeping with we want this cheap country, labnor In Am. its noble motive. Explosives were placed and fuses laid erica t We think not. and the thing touched off from a safe distance with S a neatness unparalleled in a job of such MORE PRODUCTION NEEDED au means,, let McNamara be restored to magnitude. By libertv to the Bute Board of enjoyment or the distinction which his high deed merits. The Kansas talroe am Hand- irr.' iooKers-o-n oi ' cated bf the Manufacturer ever sinand of murder r;:;T is the order of the day wherever there is a ce the era of high prleee obUined, demonstration, there is need of "direct actionists." wai is more hours, more production. The Kansas Bute Board has now Mrve th good cause, so by Issued a challenge to both let us havemy"ot McNamara on the job again and labor to stand together with ag- 7 ruiia fir; - -1. ... j!L .:-- - VifT-TIZT.'T"- .',41 ' ' , - I , x t .i. !.... 1 - vp.v. ....... or-der- s. : use about it, or makirig NOminor arguing keyt If you've got the Ji.- -. v .S hJ? Agrl-tukur- t.uers " pat-riwt- ic o - Tho total railroad defidte under government control tvV on:o e. to make your taxes go up. riculture upon a platform of nufn. Americanism and increased produc tion until a normal surely of a ducts necessary to American indostn-a- l u cress and redaction of the hits or jimmy-pip- e V. in a rette makin's notion cornered in your smokeappetite, slip it a few liberal loads of Prince Albert! Boiled down to regular old . - chin-mus- ic between-us-man-tal- , ' k. Prince Albert kicks tho "pip" right out of a pipe! into 1T the Puts pipe pleasure joy'us class! the .Makea dgarette. rolling b so toppiest of sportsV .-A. fragrant, so fascinating in flavor, so refreshing! "Prince' Albert can't bite your tongue or parch your throat! You go as far as you like according to your smoke spirit! Our exclusive patented process cuts out bite and -P- . parch! '. r4 rJ W J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Wiiuton-SaJe- m, . . tint, Asdmsomm pomnj and Toppy sort, tidy tin humidor onrf clotty, practical pound trytatffati humidor with $ moitUnar lop that kttpt thm rvOrco In sac ptrftci conditio. Kalf-pow- 'i ' N, C. -- . 1.- - " ' r ' |