OCR Text |
Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, IIYRUM, UTAH - .i.3? - M" " '- -- A flCTIjJ CTIH 1 y- - - - -t- o if nil j insrn need of making- ever)' dollar as no doubt have far as possible, you already started the cash and carry habit. And if you have not, now is the.Iirpe to startbefore you have spent it all on High Prices. No If'yourarefeeling the g-- re you buy your groceries and meat, you will have to pay cash forthem in the end. So why pay more just for the privilege of paying it once a month. .Cpme with your next order and you will be surprised at the saving youwill make.! Remember the special price savings every Wednesday and.Saturday morning before noon. Few of Our Regular Price Savings Nuts and Popcorn There is nothing better for a nice quite evening at home or a party some nice fresh nuts and popcorn. Fresh Hard Shell 45c Walnuts, 2 lbs for 45c Fresh Soft Shell ;... 75c Walnuts, 2 lbs for 30c Fresh Brazil Nuts 49c 2 lbs for 30c Filbert Nuts 45c 2 lbs for 30c Fresh Almond Nuts 45c 2 lbs for 25c Fresh Roasted Peauuts 33c 2 lbs for 10 lbs. Fresh Eastern 59c Iopcorn 5 lbs. Fresh Eastern 33c Popcorn 30c Hams, Bacon 45c Sugar Cured Hams lb 27c 30c Breakfast Bacon, lb.... 25c 20c Dry Salt Pork lb lGc Lard . Cereals Our cereals arc always fresh. 9 lb. Sack Rolled . (JOc 49c Oats 35c 9 lbs. Sack Corn- 30c meal 40c 9 lb. Sack Graham 35c Flour 50c 9 lb. Sack Germade.... 37c 35c Package Rolled 30c Oats 40c Package Carnation 35c Wheat Flakes 35c 20c Puffed Rice, 2 for 15c 20c Puffed Wheat 15c 20c Shredded Wheat 20c Large Size Cornflakes Large Size Post Toasties.... 20c Pure Lard $1.53 $1.75 $1.00 5 lbs. Pure Lard.. 80c 35c 50c 2 lbs. Pure Lard 10 lbs. Soaps and Washing Powders Case Crystal White $5.15 Soap 10 bars Crystal White 35c Soap 1 Case A. B. Naptha $5.05 Soap 10 Bars A. B. Naptha 59c Soap 1 Case P. and G. White $0.15 Naptha Soap 10 Bars P. and G. White 65c Naptha Soap 12 Bars Creme Oil 85c Soap 4 Bars Creme Oil 30c Soap 25c 3 Bars Peter Pan Soap 10c Lava Soap 29c 35c Large Gold Dust 25c 30c Large Sea Foam 8c Small Sea Foam, 5 for 25e 35c Star Naptha 29c 45c Borax Soap Chips 39c 15c Old Dutch Cleanser, 35c 3 for 1 Meat Market at North Main Street WE CLOSE SATURDAYS AT EIGHT OCLOCK P. M. 9 m and In line with action the third hy na- lODEgjJplgACIBp The Story of a London School Boy .Who Stumbled Upon the Secret of Making Dyes from Coal Tar tional convention of the American Legion at Kansas, City recently, the Department of Utah, American Legion, has indorsed tlie annual Christmas seal sale of the National Tuberculosis association and the Utah Public Health associatior ji Utah. Commander B. W Black of the Department of Utah has sent out letters to every post in the state calling ' attention to the health work, especially the tuberculosis work, being done among men by the Utah Public Health association and urging them to support the Utah health organization in its campaign for funds with which to carry on its work' in Utah during the coming year. c The letter which has been sent out by Commander Black is as follows: To All Post Commanders Department of Utah : Your attention is invited to the resolution given below. It is the desire of the department that you and the local post do all that you can to assist the Utah Public Health Association in this great work. The Utah Public Health Association is affiliated with the National Tuberculosis Association and they have been and are now doing a work which Is Indispensible. The Utah Public Health Association, in cooperation with the U. S. Public Health Service is now engaged in a tuberculosis survey of the state and among the personnel of the traveling cffnic engaged in this work is one specialist who is giving his special atmen. tention to The resolution as passed by our Third Annual Convention is as follows : THE BY PASSED AMERICAN LEGION RESOLUTION, -- At the Third National Convention, Kansas City, October 31st to November 2ml, '1921 AYIIEREAS, the prevalence of tuberculosis among exservice fiien has created of problem of most serious proportions, both', to the goverriTfient and to the American Legion ; and WHEREAS, the National Tuberculosis Association has been generous in its continous cooperation with the American Legion and the federal agencies that have been trying to solve this problem and to provide proper care for tuberculosis men; and WHEREAS, The state and local tuberculosis associations have constantly supported the efforts of the American Legion in securing adequate care for men and are still continuing with their educational . and organization campaigns to reduce the incidence men ; of tuberculosis among EE IT RESOLVED, That the American Legion pledges its unqualified support to the National Tuberculosis Association and its affiliated state and local associations in the fight against tuberculosis which they are carrying on, and we urge all local posts of the Arnex-icaLegion to cooperate with local and state tuberculosis associations in their several campaigns for the prevention of tuberculosis and especiallly in the Fourteenth A&aual Christmas Seal Sale. , (Told in Eight Sketches) By JOHN RAYMOND No. II POETS OF SCIENCE William Henry Perkin was an odd sort of a youngster.' When he was 13 years old and a student in the City of London School he heard of a series of lectures on chemistry during the noon recess. Young William Henry decided that the lectures would be of more (value to him than his lunches, so he took in the lectures. Apparently the 'lectures made a decided impression upon the boy. Two years later he entered the laboratory of a chemist named Hofman in the' Royal College of London and by the time he was 17, had started upon his career as a researcher. Perkin decided that his mission in life was to isolate phenenthrene from coal tar and prepare artificial quinine. In order to speed the day when his task would be done he set up a private laboratory and worked overtime. While at work in this laboratory in the spring of 1856, he found in his test tube, while oxidizing some aniline oil, a black, sticky mass instead of clear crystals. He attempted to wash it out with alcohol when, to his surprise, he produced a wonderful purple solution mauve, the first of the aniline dyes. Ten years later Perkin achieved his greatest triumph when he produced alizarin, or Turkey red, formerly made only from the root of the madder. Years later the British government knighted the man who first discovered the vast possibilities contained with coal tar but gave him little finanIt cial support or encouragement. was left to German researchers to build up the industry and finally to obtain a strangle hold upon the trade a hold so firm that in 1914, the Kaiser was convinced that, with the aid of his chemists, he was in a position to conquer the world. Creative chemists the successors of Perkin lately have been called the Poets of Science because their imagination has found in coal tar the fra- - grance of the rose, the explosive that wounds and the medicine that heals, the bitterness of hemlock and the sweetness of honey. In a recent address in Edinburgh the of the president Chemical Section of the British Association for the of Advancement Science, urging the correlation of scholastic knowledge with the experiences and contacts of daily life, said: The quivering glint of massed bluebells in broken sunshine, the joyous radiance of young beech leaves against the stately cedar, the perfume of the hawthorne in the twilight, the florid majesty of rhododendron, the fragrant simplicity of lilac, pcriodically'gladden the most careless heart and the least reverent spirit; but to the chemist they breathe an added message, the assurance that a new season of refreshment has dawned upon the world, and that those delicate syntheses, into the mystery of which it is his happy privilege to penetrate, once again are working their inimitable miracles in the laboratory of the human organism. Poetry, indeed! But chemists are practical poets. They produce the materials a nation must have if it hopes to live and compete with other nations. Few nations realized this truth, however, until the World War offered convincing proof by opening 100 percent explosive and closing 55 percent chemical. That opened their eyes, but unfortunately, Germany had a fifty year start and took the trouble to protect the advantage. On January 1, 1916, seven leading dye companies of Germany formed a dye trust to last fifty years with the idea of controlling the chemical business of the world. During this period they will maintain uniform prices, wages and hours of labor, and exchange patents and trade secrets. They will divide the foreign business on an even basis and share the profits. (Released by The Institute of American Business, New York) ce TWO LOGAN STORES Opposite Postoffice SALE Will Help Fight Tuber. culo3is in the State of Utah - mat-terlwhe- P THEJBL Oppositelnterurban Depot, Logan ce a Build That Extra Room Now YOUR old room that had a past now has a future. Change it now from a dusty, mysterious catchall into a sung winter play room, a bright bedroom nr either of them, while the present price of lumber is within, your reach. This can be done at surprisingly low cost without litter or muss. CALL ON Smith Bros. Lumber Co. PHONE 19 HYRUM, UTAH Are you sure your childrens Eyes are Right? Remember that poor eyesight means poor concentration andwill retard the youngsters progress. Many a child considered dull or lazy in school and music studies has simply been suffering from defective vision. Have an examination made and KNOW. DR. F. B. PARKINSON Logan, Utah. - - OPTOMETRIST L. ....d and Failure. said an editor, at a dinner party in London. What a big head hes got, to be sure! Sir James, I said nervously, toying with the stem of my wine glass, suppose, Sir James, that some of your plays do better than others? They are not all successes, I imagine? Barrie leaned his big head on its little thin neck toward me. IBs saucerlike eyes twinkled. Nd, he said, some Peter out and some Pan out. " I met Barrie, The Long and Short of It. Frank, observed the wife, you were talking in your sleep last night, and you frequently spoke in terms of endearment of a certain Euphemia Who is Euphemia? Why, my dear, that was my sisters name. Frank! Your sisters name was Mary I Yes, dear, but we called her Euphemia for short. SL Church Dance Room. They were showing the visitor over the new church. This is the bawl room, said one. The visitors eyes opened in amazement. Why certainly they - dont have a ballroom in a ciiurch, do they? Yes; It is where' they take tfc . babies when they cry. Fsiua BOSTONIANS Famous Shoes for Men Now on Display $5.00 $7.00 $10.00 j Thatcher Clothing Co. LOGAN UTAH ' |