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Show ) THE PAYBQNUft PAYSON, Our Utah Weekly Industrial Review . i . Not even war could break the deadlock in Congress on water power legislation, and it may now be tighter than ever. Possibly not until the coal has been burned will Congress permit these other resources to be developed. Salt Lake Great Bend outs $40 ore in raise. Nov. 25. Ogden Amalgamat0 ed Sugar Co. to purchase tons sugar beets this year in Utah and Idaho. At $10.00-ton, farmers will receive $5,000,-00However, costs of raw materials and manufacturing items nearly equals gross revenue at federal price. Government officials say Utah shaVs must supply decreasing Woolen mills will now get oils within few yearswool for civilian uses. Salt Lake Utah Coppers production for third quarter totals Bumper crop of sugar beets harvested in Brigham City - re53,311,943 pounds. Moab Western Allies Oil & gion. Shipbuilding plants dischargGas Co. ready to spud in. ing poor workmen of work or Salt Lake Present production class. fight rate of copper to be maintained Ogden and Amalgamated Sugar and existing price wage Co. paying out $5,000QP0 for levels preserved. beets. Salt Lake Sale of bonds totalThe Pacific Northwest Loging $181,132 for road projects Bureau, at a meeting in gers approved. Seattle November 11, went on Alta Rich ore shown from record as to the Alta Consolidated is iron car- continuance beingof opposed governmental bonate. control over the logging industry Ogden Weber county farm- of Oregon and Washington. ers get approximately $600,000 Salt Lake North Buttes outfor beet crop. put past ''nine months, 14,627,515 Salt Lake Two red metal pounds copper; 650,018 ounces mills employing women satisfac- silver. torily. Salt Lake American zinc inSalt Lake New Cornelia de- creases profits for quarter endclares initial dividend of 25 ing September. cents per share. Tintic mines ship $480,000 Park City New mill of Silver worth of ore for weekKing Consolidated handling 150 Fort Douglas work on $500,-00tons ore daily. army hospital not to be Utahs October copper output-wa- abandoned, 'orders not cancelled. 19,000,000 lbs. votes additional , Tremonton Salt Lake Concern to build $40,000 to apply on new water new flour mill here; daily ca- system. pacity 2,000 barrels. , To cost Salt Lake Kennecott Coppers several hundred thousandOctober output 13,286,000 pounds Tintic Chief Consolidated in against 11,528,000 for Septemthird quarter earned more than ber. $119,000. An abundance of common laSalt Lake Six sugar compan- bor is; necessary for industries ies distribute $7,000,000 to beet and farmers to operate successfully and produce at reasonable growers in first payments. prices.. American Fork ships $61 ore.' North Ogden 'concrete Globe strikes big mill body. ; Ogden Open to Salt Lake Mason Valley Mines highway - completed. traffic byJanuary. show output of 18,000,000 lbs. Salt Lake man devises cheapannually. reduction - process ; to er . ore a is beet The sugar industry erect plant. great asset to farming and livePioclie Prime Consolidated stock industry and should receive state and national encour- ships 39 carloads ore for week. agement to protect it from com- . Salt Lake Inspirations Octoing foreign competition. ber copper output 8,125,000 Park City mines short of men. pounds. Impossible to secure adequate Mesa County, Colo., Mail, says and efficient working force, n the league about Salt Lake Cardiff opens new which there was such a hullaba-'oore body, sampling raised just before election, at $85 a ton. apparently is a flivver. Its candidates in that county received Tonopahs output for week but 799 votes, and at least 400 $145,894. of them svere cast by people Salt Lake votes $31,000 for outside the league. This shows two park sites. bow easily 400 good Americans Park City Silver King de- could be deceived into voting for veloping splendid ore bodies on a fraudlevels250 and 300 foot European sugar production Eureka Iron Blossom after decreases; tonnage 50. per cent less. ore on 2,200 level. a 0. - i . fa - 0 s - - - Non-Partisa- o lead-silv- er - Can Now Eat and Sleep in Comfort. lay as a dead weight on my stomach. I was very constipated and my com became dark, yellow and tnud If troubled with indigestion or plexion dy as I felt. Sleeplessness was add Tead what should you sleeplessness ed to my misery, and I would awake Miss Agnes Turner, Chicago, 111., has as tired as when I went to sleep. I to say: "Overwork, irregular meals heard of Chamberlains Tablets and and carelessness regarding the ordi- found such relief after taking them that I kept up the treatment for nary rules of health, gradually under- nearly two months. They cleansed mined it until last fall I became a my stomach, my system, invigorated wreck of my former self. I suffered and since that time I can eat" and from continual headache, was unable sleep in comfort. I am today entireto digest my food, which seemed to ly well." -- umnnmiinnmNmmmmmmnmnm HAVE YOU PURCHASED Your Winters Supply of DOA IL, We Carry the Following Famous Brands: King, Black Hawk, Panther, Hiawatha Place Your Order Now While You Can Get It Central Hardware & Lumber Co. isssssBimuiuimmimmiimnnumni ' OTg is Mr. Hoover s Message for Vi 500,-00- i An Engineers Prayer the World Relief Week t December 1, 1918. in full confidence I Again call upon the American people to set aside Sunday, December first and the week following, for the consideration of Americas opportunity for renewed service and sacrifice. Last summer when the military situation was acute we ' assured the interallied food conference in London that whatever the war food program of the allies required we were prepared to meet ; that the conference need not consider whether or not we had the supplies we were prepared to find tliem; we pledged ourselves by the voluntary economy of our people to have the reserves in food to supply all necessities. The ending of the war does not release us from the The same population pledge. must be fed and until another season has passed they cannot feed themselves. The change in the foreign situation necessarily alters the details of our food program, because the freeing of the seas from the submarine menace renders aecesible the wheat supplies of India,. Australia and the The total food deArgentine. mand upon the United States is not diminished, however. On the contrary it is Increased. In addition to the supplying of those to whom we are already pledged we now have the splendid opof portunity and obligation s meeting the needs of those of people in the hitherto occupied territories who are facing actual starvation. The people of Belgium, Northern France, Serbia, Rumania, Montegro, Poland, Russia and Armenia rely upon America for immediate aid. We must also participate in the preservation of the newly liberated nations in Austria ; nor can we ignore the effect on the future world developments of a famine condition among these other people whom ne have recently released from our enemies. All these considerations mean that upwards of two hundred milion people in addi . mil-ion- tion to those we already pleged to serve are now looking to us in their misery and famine. Our appeal today is therefore larger than the former appeal to the of our people. war conscience The new appeal is to the world which must be the conscience, guiding inspiration of our future program. The President of the United States has asked me to take charge for this government of this work ; to perfect and enlarge the arrangements for foodstuffs to the populations of and France now being released and to organize and determine the need of provision to the liberated people of, Southern Europe to prevent such debacle as has taken place in Russia. The determining factor for the success of such an enlarged appeal may be the vivid consciousness in every individual in each community of obligation and opIt is that common portunity. of obligation that we recognition wish to create. Such an intelliworld conscience in the gent American people must be the main dependence of the stricken countries of the world until normal conditions are once more restored. America by her participation in the war has accomplished her objectives of self defense and of vindicating the efficiency of a government in which the people and the people only are soverShe has established the eign. foundations of government by the people throughout the enemy countries, and this is the real bulwark of world peace. We have yet to build on, these foun No government nor nada t ions tion can stand if its people are We must do our part starving. if the world be not consumed in a liame of anarchy. The American people in this most critical period of their history have the opportunity to demonstrate not only their ability to assist in establishing peace on earth, but also their consecration self .denial to the qause of suf ering humanity. HERBERT HOOVER. Now I lay. me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my gun to kefep. Grant no other soldier take My socks or shoes before J wake. Lord please guard me m my slumber, Keep this cot upon its lumber; Let no pegs or guy ropes break And let this tent down fore I wake. Keep me safely in thy sight; Grant no fire calls sound at night; And in the morning let me wake Breathing scents of sirloin steak. God protect me in my dreams, Make it better than it seems; Grant the time may swiftly fly When I myself may rest on high. Deliver me from work and drills, When Im sick dont feed me pills, And should I hurt this hand of mine Dont daub it up with iodine. In a snowy feather bed Where I long to lay my head, Far away from all camp scenes And the smell of half baked beans. Bel-gin- m These Are the Days When the Man Who Forgot ' Take me back into the land Where I can walk without a band; Where no thrilling bugle blows, Where the women wash the clothes. God thou knowest all my woes, Feed me in my dying throes, Take me back Ill promise then Never to enlist again. FROM A ROOKEY. WEAK, weaey women PROBATE AND GUARDAINSHIP Learn the Cause of Dally Woes and NOTICES. End Them. When the back aches and throbs, Consult the County Clerk or the resWhen housework is torture, pective signers for further information. When night brings no rest 'nor ! sleep. When urinary disorders set in, NOTICE TO CREDITORS Women's lot is a weary one. Doans Kidney Pills are for weak Estate of ELLEN SENIOR, kidneys. Have proved their worth in Payson. Deceased. This is one Payson womans testiCreditors will present Claims mony. with vouchers to the undersignMrs. A. R. Potter, Depot St., says: Administrator of the Estate, "Not only myself, hnt others of the ed, of Ellen Senior, Deceased, at family, have used Doans Kidney Pills. I know from the good re- his residence in Payson, Utah sults Doans have given ns that they County, Utah, or to Booth & are a remedy of worth for kidney neakness. Sometimes my back has .Booth, Attorneys, Provo, on or been weak and lame and would ache before the 26th day of Decemdreadfully. My kidneys would be in- ber, 1918. active, too. I have procured Doans H. F. JOHNSON, Kidney Pills t the Huish Drug Co., Administrator. anj they hu'e always given me won- BOOTH & BOOTH, Attorneys. derful relief and have strengthened W.RR my kidneys. NOTICE TO CREDITORS I'rire !10c. at all dealers. Dont si:nply asl; for a kidney remedy get Do'ins Kidney Fills- - the same that In the matter of the estate of Mrs. Potto- - had. Co., Charles B. Perry, deceased : Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Feiter-Milbur- n Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersignNOTICE. ed at Payson, Utah, on or before March 25, 1918. I fun still in the market for RACHEL M. PERRY, adminispoultry and - veal. Will pay tratrix. By J. R. HAMILTON highest price. Phone 67, Span- R. A. PORTER, Attorney for AdFormer Advertising Manager of Wanamakere, Philadelphia ish Fork. PAUL KRUGER. 58tf ministratrix, Payson, Utah. First publication Nov. 21stf, W.RR Even the man who forgot to set the semaphore and killet Elec. 19th, 1818; A pedigree is alright, but even 1918. last publication a hundred people is seldom remembered by name. He simply a man with a family 'tree might passes out of the lives and the activities of men. branch out for himself. 3. Any men who are interestIt behooves us all to remdrnber. And memory? Memory W.8.B. ed eithr report or white the S. of all the faculties. is the shortest-liveEven the man who takes A. T. C. In some scientific tests made a few years ago it was fount Headquarters, Brigham as they come may win suchings Young Provo, Utah, University, minutes about reaches vision clearest its that memory twenty cess by selling them at a profit. for further information.' Ant dims. occurrence. on then the From after any pictnre what we hold so vividly in our minds years after an occurrence is not the memory but the imagination of it. Now hundreds of people are trying to impress some big idea Is Forgotten WAR d CoIvin& Reece Co. upon our fleeting memories every day. They are trying to tel us about their store, or their merchandise, or their advantages of some kind or other. They are trying to impress upon us the s or their money-saverThey are advantages of their are have. some of to we us to trying They luxury ought trying tell to give us a mental picture of some necessity. They are spending a great deal of money in doing this. Ant it seems only fair when they go to all this effort for our benefit that we should at least give them some small part of our active time-saver- . attention. The reason these people advertise again and again and again is because we will not compel our eyes to see what they have to say nor our minds to remember it. And so they are obliged to compel our memories for us. And so they do it in spite of us, because they have also learned that constant repetition is the greatest method of training the memory and instilling an important fact into our minds. But the point is that advertising is far more important even for us who buy than for those who sell. For advertising has come to signify an act and an emblem of good faith throughout all the channels of trade. And so those of us who have not learned to read the advertising and to remember its message are constantly being trickec in price and fooled in quality. We are the ones who lose out in the fight. We are the man at the semaphore. We who forget are forgotten. ; Let Us Hand You This Bag of Money s. (Copyrighted.) . It Represents the Big Saving in Fuel You Can Make With Coles Hoi .Blast in Your Hone OUR GUARANTEE of one third in t We guarantee a taring the aoe " "gSS fKil.orrk. Ye 2. We guarantee Cole. Hot Blaet to use less hard coal for beating a giren space than an y base burner made with same site fire pot. Weguarantee that the rooms can be heated from to one two hours each morning with the fuel put in tire store tba erening before, 4. We guarantee that the store will hold fire with soft coal or hard coal from Saturday erening to Mon-daWe guarantee a uniform beat day and night with 1 morning. oft coal, hard coal or lignite. Ws guarantee erery store to remain absolutely air tight as long as used. 7 W t fitiriatee the (eed door to ba imoko aod dust proofs guarantee tba draft to prevent . Tba abovo guarantee la made with the understanding that the atove be operated according to directiona. and connected up with a good flue. Colas Original llot Blast Mo. 116 . $ - |