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Show February 13, 1919. THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNT?, IjTAfl. OLD AGE STARTS riRTlli 'CONFESSES , ECCLES BLACKNLA1L IN; iRCTIC Vcfoaec kart that old art begin with weakened kidney and digestive organa. This being treC it ia easy to believe that by keeping the kidneys and digestive organa cleansed and In proper working order old age ran Jje deferred and and enable the organa to throw off Ms poison which eauso prematura old age. New Ufa and strength increas as yon coutinus the treatment. When completely restored' eoutlnue taking a capsule or two each day.' GOLD MED-I liaariem Oil Capsules will keep you in health and vigor and prevent a return of the disease. Do sot wait until old ago or dlaeaee have settled down for good. At the first sign that your kidneya are not working properly, go to yonr druggist and get a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsule. Money refunded if they do not help you. Three sites but remember to sak for the original Imported GOLD MEDAL brand, ' la seated puck- - AMERICAN FORCES! IN IRfHERN RUSSIA, Dcc.1 NOW- - CLEARED ' ' -- UP London Jan. 26, 'Yei v i'resoiIeace of The Associated) . 12. In , Press 7or over 200 year GOLD MEDAL ne night spent' in field Haarlem Oil has boon relisting tbs American ..ttf aknesitea and disability due t 9 advane-i-years.1 It la a standard ri-- . Emtsa sentence the ia holding life borne his cpr.fnar remedy andneeds bo introduetkra. in lessening GOLD MEDAL Ilaarlem Oil ia inclosed near Radish (since a In actu-jvand drantj atate tasteless capsidea contain penitentiary, odorless, ,Va old mytery i -i -- A WrlTET1 - g old-tlbi- s cr or 1, by remorsebecause hioVife and million 4rt ) of Martin f yestcrdaf confessed that ."WMoph Jieniy lag about 5 drop each. Take theta as you would a pill, with a swallow of The oti stimu.ates the kidney thaMB- - Iba troops faced in .water. n Mt-- !?? ficl.i blackmail-I- f REALIZES j ut d- 7no:orir6Fat2rkAdmtssionaFp-Thtfwcoldwin- ail of the tlackmailing through the chinks in the logs, connected letters, except one, the used prosecution and by with in 1914 in eajdy,. wrapped in all the in the trials at Ogden ; were! blankets and .overcoats they fetters These 1915; and at- - ' v (bidjet . used by Martpn (various ' itihe anLvfd.banka.ol. the n.idong secure money. tempt to t d Emtsa a river. Bristol, j Dee, uables from the Wallin, Oliver and'Eccles red yrxtb' from' the Bolshevist ''linen American outposts patrol s families in Ogden, tharhW. hefrT'ootiIalhe froz SincetFeiime that en state brush, rwsyiUM ground in t! prisband was taken to the Martin Mrs. im,.Lvjuild fires U'Y of on in April, ' . has had to provide for herself snipa-itoldest the IzS)r7.-- t zz, went the 'field and three daughters hut of which as 12 yearA of age. She telephone ,j .'healquA tu. in machine-Tlc wdrly called ha been employed, it is said, officer. From the con- a store in Ogden at a .salary of grim to. it appeared that .the struggle .month.' a 'versatin, ,Her $35 believed toiwgter 'm the cooling chambers1 is a home' "provide the iemma-gee- s have preyed upon- Martins paihd (tlm sold-- and to have caused him to take piers pt'name for mach; e the front line had froz-ja- t action he. did in the hopergung) that.it might lessen the time he would have to serve so that he coKol 'Qt' glycerine handy, rum could aga.ih Aid her. ; The confession made, Martin! s had been' mixed as an ith the wter in the peace of mind was disturbed by jng flu but one thing, namely, that. Mrs. Itooling'Chambers. The officer Martih'has nflways beReved hlni ggjj he woul 3send 'doWp some innocent of the crime of which find Six months thatevpry gun in the place was he was convicted.' ago Martin made, an ineffectual jn We'laVnpfix, :A long row of ' attempt to secure s parole. j thlfj wa3fcrbuiht Inside the hut The arrest and conviction - bf pndtat'ked' near the stove to '"Jlartin af ollowed the receipt of"4 tha o((t, aeries of threatening letters' re- mac- 19; , ' To what dire1 need did our 'afct of necessity' im invading Belgium bring us? Those miliary ways of thinking also so-call- ed . ties think Germany has sought more material to give necessary arament to 3,000,000 men. German, demobilization is a condition to our demobilization, and, therefore, disbandment Is impossible so long as Germany does not continue to demobilize. Allied military authorities consider the. time has 'arrived for Germany to give up her military strength that she be brought Ao such a condition that she cannot resist the conditions of peaces now being prepared. The aliieep theory always ' has been that we shall frame condl tiens which Germany will have to accept, and that there is noth ing to dljcuss,' except as regards . y j I j , i- -1 er ; n by-th- C .- i - - w , r n thatchercoalco. . -- -- a- - j k . short-sighte- z- os r 1 . C a NOTICE - ie-th- en tii.'toito.ii A 1. bear the principajjblame for the prolongation of the war. It Is impossible to conceive that Vt, several turning points during the last few years, ; could not ha c had .an undoubted ' honorable peace if we, instead of making general proffers had suggested honestly and 'concretely the individual solutionswhich, in the Wilson sefiser; wbufft have ppt out the old fires in Europe. The mili-tsr,jv giis people and the military way of thinking however, woul d not adn it of sqch a tiqely and concession. That Js all details! ; T as cTear" is the sun howr trying to keep up her military - Hereafter,, ordered the JyWhy not therefore admit this so that she can sent a celved by Ogden families jn the hine-gun strength officer, Jsleep with undeniable German national - to the peace fall of 1913, and which , culmina- the- - giuSs. W delegatecongress rap them utr in the HnTFsIb'nlhstead 6ITrying to for a discusthoroiighly military ted early bn the morning of No- - same 13'ankets with j'ourselves. male is appear as though all sion on the imconditions vember 2, 1913 ,in the dynamu-- i peace Meanwhile, someone filled up wero guilty and as though new the French this On of of home point the ing posed. LeRoy R.Lj)3 stoye to hasten the thawing witr. esses still were necessary to National Socialist Eccle.--, 2535 Eccles avenue, Ogparty and its ouT process of the . r.t the truth? gim nearbj j Every people extreme left w ing are strongly den. A week later David Ed- The hu$$ot so hot, that an' off through its hard moral cri-c- Opposed to anything being done vards, a Pinkerton detective, nervous-turtied and tossed i sis tf life; curs was the belief in to save Germany from the cob was shot in a futile "attempt to sleep. Then a soldier the ..vord since l8C6that cam hg of defeat In this matEdcapture the blackmailer; : rushedvirt to' shout that the hut not Ijo wiped out, and if we ad- sequences French ter the Ec bad-egovernment will wards, disguised set on fire - from-t- h? ourselves and the world to it mit entire-natio- n. e be had-beclee, who called upon to supported That VSeStedchimmyV weniveamdrarguarahtee ,, deliver $1000, went to a lonely .AS Qrned out in the snow to we have thoroughly cleansed The correspondent says he has on - West ; t Seventeenth empty canteens . spot a way of thinking of elves the our; only been informed by a competent street near the Oregon- Sliofrt at on the that prevailed during the past hand Line railroad tracks in Ogdeci British authority that Marshal deer des. fire. roofojettinguishlhe Foch made a declaration of a with the determination to get inthe back went offiers Then le .who has done his fellow somewhat serious character at a the bandits. He was fully armed, to the hut to shiver, for in savbut before he wase mer. a grave wrong is expected meeting of the. supreme war word a given ing the hut, the fire in the stove -of civilized society tu admit, to council. r by fired was upon had been warning he extinguished. voHe feels, his authority js to the be s with shotguns and penalty ;rry, riddled pay fairly with the steel.- ball bearings luntarily jfandf likewise from a 'quoted as saying, that the GerCtierward recovered. wards because of mans are beginning to - forget which the shells' contained. Ed- Marrtff was arrested in Ogden gre:.tpeoplowhic the desperate confusion of its they are beaten. They are apt to on Deqgjnber 4, 1913, .and, folleading classes bears the- chief forget Vfe life in a state of war. low ingfvgbitterly contested trial blame for a world' catastrophe, They hatve been slow in handing which began on March 17, 1911, tlf0UP0 rj demand ismade with equal over transports and other things. was found guilty to a charge of right before this people can be They are causing a great deal of robbery,; for which he was sent- accepted again in the community difficulty. enced to life Imprisonment. Dur- of c'.;nfidcnce of other We ard demobilizing fast; peoples. ing the", progress of the trial ntt continuing to do In the midst of a collossal they ere much credence was placed in the There is danger of mobilize, testimony of Theodore Kytka, a breakdown only complete truth Germany saying, 'we do not care gain the right San Francisco handwriting ex- -, can save. Wc-caof to make a moral appeal only in anything about your league arid pert Kytka died in San our we have, got nations, the degree in which we are about two weeks ago. a, change, takes Unless : troops.. in 3 going - into place we might be faced with a court Question is asked what has situation in which Germany, as the young man who used Forester brought regardaThe number of men in Professor to with beating heart those down the wrath of his colleagues the, field, wall have three men Kag and Standard Coal mujlt-vfush- y valentines to his The war himself Jn the allies two, early upon besfli rl ? Wei 1, in these days he by publishing in Swiss newspap- against The question of demobilizafindiUhg telephone a much less ers sharp criticisms of Germany. tion ha A bden taken up by the bimjig method of flirtation. All the Owing to his personal popularity supreme war council. ExcIusiveAgents with the students of the Munich technical advisers have certainCJiLCtlESTEnSPiLLS university the authorities per- ly been in tavor of taking what LOGAN mitted him to retain his position additional jneasures may be necfar 4 4 tMaW, la k.4 i 4 14 irfi,.ttcVy lilt Office, 155 So, Mam St. .V in that Institution, despit e pro- essary to prevent any danger to bom, atoinl Wdi l - atWa. a, af;a, Tafc kfwW. A'it--t IlH'I't tests by other members of the the allies or their positions or Phones. 16 and 76. M BKM MAa wntanatM.9Wl,ltaiil4iUI facvlty! . 1 any dangej of their not being tr as-LeR- oy czzz kn". GIVING CONCERN - ly-i- n advt. e- T anti-free- ( - e, . , ii ''b: -- - e - 9 . - und-Boyl- I,- . 32-E-. be wrote ice-p- c ; ; LONDON, Feb. Tl. British Ve IAUi?rlyr Bonds. H. A. PedThe r.ev.'spapera of all opinions are ersen Aby Co. , puiely military way. of th$king devoting serious attention to the Dresumsk lng M rs. Pearl Pools, whichplungd us senselessely attitudq adopted by the German 3S5 West 1st North. Phone 29W. into this war, says Professor F. government toward armistice WANTED A furnished good V. Foerster, Munich University conditions. i ; house, 3 to 5 rooms . Phone 43. j The Daily Newss Paris cor- professor and now Bavarian sends a dispatch TfREENTiK)iris(oriiit'ht Minister in Switzerland respondent had, Center. in housekeeping. as consequence, also a method from "authoritive sources FOR UK.VT llullfllitg at .4 E. of conducting the war which wheh he says his Informant told was bound to end in a German him he had reason to believe Ger- Center it,. Building will ho repaired to suit renter. Call 560R1. . T to demany is not continuing catastrophe,. ' mobilize. Apartments To Rent 3 or 6 rooms With a blindness bordering or unfurnished.- - PhJrae She has now concentrated Furnished 440. on Insanity we called all the UAUTL LmslNGfcR more ths a eighteen divisions 8X)R SALE Holstein milk cow necessities y With mcring the Salt Lake ThTatre military under Yn Hindeqfcurg on the and helfera. E. C. Van . Ufden. Stock which, step by step, were sute io at the Lyric TMatre, Co, western front, the correspond- - Iwlston Utah. call the whole world Into aims and Friday Saturday,- - February or says. We also have the best.. WANTED TO ttllV-Y- mmy to titli and against isthr reasons to believe.. Germany calves tor raising on farm heifbe evident that oirr disdain df ail E NOTR TO WATER USERS Vesping her troops under arms ers preferred. Bell Bros. political and moral scruples was on the pretext of economic neState Engineer's Office.-- . Salt Lake d a t t calculation, even Tounf thorobred Flemish Giant City, Utah, Jan. 29, 1919.x cessity. I Some military authori- rablta for sale at 68 Notice Is hereby given thst Joseph from a military standpoint. East 2 ml Feb. MUNICH, g i TRUTH (By Associated Dress) . te B, HUNS ATTITUDE liblltl ILjHllTi m V I a -- 12- - BAVARIAN TEACHER - - " Ktr, headpuacera were in the t WnyLCiEli log cabin. In con was he wchane of which cW with a roof of the spring of 1914..' i made boihj and heatt by Theconfeio waa wade rioe. Outsdt, in the for- Mrs. of Mr. and the presence Ecc-jtftroops, sheltered only by Ralph Bristol," Mrs. LeRoy leaff-to'R-., of boughs, shivered of Porter B. Wallin, hi the snow: I'res sroind camp neden E. 0. Leatherwood of r were a few cots, a this city find officials of the pem-hWanted! Uh3ableanda lield ttle- tentiarjr -- includingGeorg Storrs. mfwfls auiity-of 200 acres' well improved land, good buildings, blacksmith shop, well, fenced, 140 acres broke, good road, school, church, near railroad, a dandy' farm, price $5000. With machinery, $3000 down. Terms on ance- - - W iH exchange- - for- - srnr.ll irrigated farm in Utah. Owner getting old, is alone and wants small place. Fred E. Logue, Realtor, Bancroft, Idaho. Phone dry-far- t five YEAR For Sale or Exchange WITH YOUR KIDNEYS RUSSIA PAGE THREE North. LOST 2 red helfera II month old. Branded BcK on right Jaw, Labeled In right oar. J. C. Kent, Mlll-vlll- e. ' 85.00 reward. FDR SALE t'HKAI 3 room home. Toilet and water Ja house. Corner lot close In. JnijuTre J, L. Johnson, 102 W'est 1st North. 1 FOR SALEVlolin 850.00. Good bargain. E flat upright alto. Jaubert ' good as new. Call at this office. FOR SALE OR TRADE A 30 acre dry farm 1 miles south of Wes1? acres In tall wheat. ton, Idaho. 12 acrea alfalfa. . Fenced- end-frefrom - encumbrances. Reasonable ' , terms, - ; e : FOR SALK CHEAP Roan Durham (registered) bull, three years old, Imported from Nebraska. Write Johnson, whose potofflceddress Is Logan. Utabhaa mude 'appllotlon In accordance with the requirements of the Compiled Laws of Utah, 1901, ,a .ain.eaie4J3LlhaTleaslop laws of Uta.rl a Q 911 1 U and. 19 15, to- - apof a propriate second-foof water from anuaaam-e- d spring tn Cache ' County- - Sald spring Is situated at a point' which lira 929.67 ft. south and 179.25 ft. west from the northwest corner of Section 14,' Township IS North, Range 1 East, Balt Lake Base and Meridian. The water will be diverted t the spring and conveyed by mean af a' pipe line for a distance of 2390 ,'t. and there neM from Jumijy 1 to December 31, inclusive, of each year, for domestic purposes. This application la designated In the State Engineers office as No. 1918. All protest against the grhntlng of said application, stating th ot by vlt In Of Stockholders Meeting Of Knitting Woilis 1 Cnclie Zrrttr Corporation) ' is hcrtdjy givcir by thc " officers undeTslgned of Cache Knitting Works, a Corporation, that there will bs an. annual meeting of the Stockholders of Baid Corporation heluTit its re-- " gular place of business, 39 West. 1st North .Str Logan City r Cache -county, Utah, oh the third Monday in February, 1919, at the hour of 2 oclock p .m, on said day4 for the purpose of amending and changing the provisions of Article Nine of the Articles of Incorporation of said Corpor ation, so that the said Article Nine when so amended and changed will change the time for holding the annual Stockholders ; meetings of said Corporation from the third Mon lay in February of each, year, ns at present provided therein, to the third Monday in January of the year, 1920, and on the third Monday In January of each succeeding year thereafter. That such other business of the said Corporation as may properly come before said annual mectipg r.ill tfao be transacted. Dated this 25th day of Jami' ' , nry, 1919. -- . -- OSCAR BORKMAN, President. - - MAMIE NELSON, - Advt; duplicate, accompanied with a fee pf , and (lied In this r office wltMit tbfrty tSO) IF Uie pubUtifttioic of this notice, 82-59- ablo to di:tate what peace terms - " " day-afte- thoy please.'' The correspondent in Paris of Q. r. hlcGONAGLE, the aiiy Mail credits Marshal State Engineer, Date of first pnbllcatlon Feb. 7, Foch as having naid to the su1919. Date of completion of publicathat there tion preme March 19, 1919. Advt, , were many instances of GerNOTICE Kill I'l IiLlCATIOX manys failure to comply with in armistice the terms, notably Department of Uhe InterlorL U. ft. the handing over of artillery, !,nod Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, submarines -- And agricultural February 5, 1919. - NOTICE lft Jiertby given that machinery. Petersen, Jr-- , of Ifyrum, Utah, As evidence of the German who, on May 27, 1911, made Homespirit, the correspondent con- stead Entry, Serial No. 07286, for tinued, Marshal Foch mention- SEJrJRWlj, SWlSElp Rertlorl Id; togan IlideJi:n!i Co. . war-coun- cil , PROn ATE .AND ed an occasion when he summoned a German commission to meet him and they failed to appear at the time and place indicated. Itwas only aftcr strong pressure on his partj thatthe meeting took place. 4 According to Marshal Foche estimate the Germans are now capable of placing an tlrm)iTof 3,000,000 in the field1 inCfcvo month time." The correspondent addsr' It Is desired to make a renewal of th ewar impossible under th conditions! to be laid down February 17. The terms suggested include the handlngover of the whole of the German artillery ; f the compulsory reduction GcrroMJ for visions with machine-gun- s the Internal policing of the empire; and occupation by the allies of the Ruhr district, which Includes Essen - "During an important debate on these proposals the further suggeslion was made that in view of Germanys attitude the allies should also revert to the initiaT demand for the bunding over of transport," which "was modified on account of Germanys plea of impossibility. ur. t Consult County (Irak ltwprUve Signer - or th Jor t Furjfirr InrrmntLen at Seetlon 15, Township 19 Necth, Range 3 East, Balt Lake Meridian, has filed notice Of Intention to NNEI,, GUARDIANSHIP NOTICE -- Fr-nr- -- Highest Price Paid for HIDES, FUR AND JUNK , t Phone C2. lAJgan, Utah. . f v- - I R Plutrli-- Court of th First Judicial Dtotrlct of. the State of ....Utah, 4 mm) for tii County of Cat li, Ktat of Utah. t NOTK K t T(7cRElmRS ' In th District Court of The First District of Tii Klat of Utah, n,ake proof, to establish in ami For Tii County of Corhe. claim to the land above described, beIn th matter of tliC EKtale oU' fore the Register andTloeclver, U. S. five-ye- , ar . Land Office, at Salt Lake City, Utah, Amos Clark, Deceased. Creditor wlIJ present claim with on the Iflth day of March, 1919. to th undersigned at (heir voucher P. ns witnesses: names Claimant . L. Anderson, C. F. Olsen, Henfy H. residence in, Newton, '- -r -- Ca1i-County- Peterson, John McBride, all of Jly-ru- Utah, on or before the lAtb. day of April, A. D. 1919. Data.of first pub-- 1 Utah. , y Ural Inn February 19, 1919. GOULD K nLAKELT, L. GEORG KCrlARKE, ' Register. ' SUMMONS Exeeutors of the last Will and Testament of Amo Clarke, Deceased. In the DiMtrtrt Court of lit First Jn. ASA BlLLEN, Attorney for Exe' ilitcl RMrkt Of the State of Ulnli cutor. 4X1 In ami foe The County of Cache. t Grace L. Hall, Plaintiff y. i NOTICE TO t llKDI fORS Thomas J. Hall, Defendant; r . Utah to the said DeThe State-o- f In the Matter Jif ' , - II. BltOUGII fendant - Deeeased. You ate hereby summoned !to Creditor w 111 ... preacut claim within.. tweyAay-'-ftii--thwith, vonehcr. to the I'nderilened at,, servTce of this" ra ni monslipbiryourif laigan, Utah, on or before the 20th served within th county In which day of March, 1919. MARTHA BROUGH, this action 1 brought, otherwise Administratrix. and within thirty days after service, WALTERS A HARRIS, defend the shore entitled action: advt. Attorneys. and In ease of your failure s to do, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Judgment will b rendered against you according to tbrdemiHd of the Estate of Lina Worley, Deeeased. complaint, which has been filed with Creditor will present claims, the crerk of said court and which with voucher attached, to the said action Is being brought to ob- undersigned at his restdeneo at tain a decree of divorce dissolving No. 338 West 1st 8outh Street, ran, Utah, on hr before - the 18th the bonds of matrimony between you day of March, A, D, 1919, Date of and-tbplaintiff.- first publication Jan. 15tli,A9l9. ' . WILLIAM WORLEY, I. w: GARDNER, v Attorney for Plaintiff. Administrator, Attorney. Poet Office Address, Logan, Utah. Nebeker, Tbatiher ABowen r Ahe.Eida-of-WILLIA- e ' , e I. |