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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAY SOX, UTAH Proclamation Reliable Goods States BOYD PARK IfiO? MAKERS OF JEWELRY !IMtr 166 MUN BARGAINS 0 srend tionalrutin jig LAKE SALT IN USED CITY CARS Oldsmob'les. NaOua'anteed hrst clan INi c ndi'cn-ea- sy term if wanted by tight patties. Write lor detailed hat and desctije non I ed Randall-Dud- used to $M0 C d at Dept . Auto Co., Sail Lake Cltr EXPERT KODAK Finishing Have our photographers do your C JI Ninth Warn timshmg Box 791. JHilpi CpC bait Lake City 144 Films Cameras the Pres- ident of the United What maLen you boy? A clever tongue, a facile pen. and the gift of persuasion may ail be accomplishments of a good sales man. Bui there U nothing quite so effective as reliable merchandise. We haie built and maintained our reputation with reliable goods Our modl priit make buying easy. FOUNIKD by Sullies II Cl If big wagesleam p UANTPH yh want tiHni kU burlier trade- - Many small owns need barbers; good opportunities open for men over draft age. Barbers m army have Get prepared frond as oihrers commiion week. Cal or write. Moler Barber 4 . West Temple St., bait Lake City. College, CHURCHES NOT HARD TO FILL Religiois Edifices in England Where the Congregations Are of Necessity Rather Small. one-liui- of America, livery day the great pnmipies for whleh we are lighting lake tu-sl- i hold upon our thought and purpose and make It dealer tl.ul the end muM be ami what we must do to aelutwe it. We now know more certamlt than we eer knew before wh) free men brought the great nation and government we love inlo exhieliee, because it grows dearer and dearer vvliat supreme set vice U is lo be Amcr a' privilege to render to the world, 'lbe unniver.surj of ihe discovery of America must therefore itave for us m ibis fateful year a peculiar and thrilling significance. We should make it a day of ardent rededieatiou to the ideals upon which our government is founded and by wliK'li our present heroic tasks are inspired. Now, therefore, I, Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States of America, do appoint Saturday, the li day of October, 1918, as Liberty dn.v. Oil that day I request tiie citizens of every community of the United Slates, city, town und country side, to celebrate the discovery of our country in order to stimulate a generous response to tiie Fourth Liberty Loan, (oiniuem-orativ- e addresses, pageants, harvest home festivals, or oilier deimuisua-tion- s should be arranged for in every neighborhood under tiie .general direction of the secretary of the treasury und the immediate direction of the Liberty Loan committee, in with the United Slates bureau of education and the public school authorities. Let tiie people's response to tiie Fourth Liberty Loan express the measure of their devotion to tiie ideals which have guided the country from its discovery until now, und of their determined purpose to defend them and guarantee their triumph. For the purpose of participating in Liberty day celebrations all employees of tiie federal government throughout the country whose services can he spared may he excused on Saturday, the 12tli day of October, for the entire day. In witness w Hereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to he affixed. Done in tiie District of Columbia this 19th day of September in the year of Our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Eighteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the One Hundred and Forty-thirl'-t- There nre many ehurehes that attract attention by their size and grandeur. There are a few that nre remarkable hy reason of their smallness and simplicity. One of these Is at Lulling ton, Sussex, Kngland. It Is a primitive and quaint stone building i;h a roof of rod tiles and a tiny weatherboarded turret at its west end. This miniature church is only 10 feet square. Its pulpit is a pew with paneled sides and door and the furniture is of the plainest. Five nurrow, dianinml-pane- d windows give light to the interior. When the church is full 30 persons are gathered together. Only a little larger Is the meeting house at Crnwshawbooth, a village near F.urnley, It is known as the Friends meeting house and Is covered with Ivy and surrounded by a burial ground. Inside may be seen half a dozen oak benches that could, If necessary, accommodate 60 persons. The attendance is rarely more than six. Somewhat smaller than this chapel WOODROW WILSON. Is one that has been called the shrine : the President By of Quakerism. It Is In the hamlet of ROBERT LANSING. In Thither Jordans, Buckinghamshire. Secretary of State. In June of each year come Quakers from all parts, for here lie the remains of William Penn. If this were not REVEALS FOES DIRE STRAITS enough to make the place Interesting, it has the further attraction of be- German Poster Reproduced by Bureau of Publicity Proof of Shattered ing the neighborhood In which Milton lived after writing Paradise Lost, a Morale of Enemy. cottage in the vicinity affording him a A poster recently issued by the Imresting place. perial German government in an effort EVIDENCE OF LITTLE WORTH to belittle the participation of America in the war and thus strengthen the morale of her people form the text ,jf Illegibility of Shakespeares Signature one of the most striking pieces of literaDoes Not Prove He Did Not ture that the bureau of publicity of Write the Immortal Plays. , the war loan organization has prepared for use in the forthcoming Fourth LibSome years ago, when the Shakes- erty loan. peare controversy was at its height, The center of the poster is devoted one of the contentions of the party to a drawing showing New York city who declared that the bard not only on one side of the Atlantic and a trehad not written the Immortal plays mendous explosion on tiie other side, but could not even write his own probably somewhere in France. Two name, gave as evidence the existing sinking vessels are shown in the lane signatures that are of undoubted au- of travel between New York and thenticity. France, while in the offing are two On the same grounds It might be securely afloat. Opportunity ! is the catch-lin- e argued that Richard III was unable for the German to write, if one decided the matter for this section of the poster. from the signature to a treaty of The lane of travel in which the boats peace with Francis, Duke of Brittany, are sinking bears this inscription: which is reproduced In a London deaAmerica Europe. Distance 200 times lers catalogue just received. greater than from England to France In a corner of this secIt Is a mystery how the cataloguer mainland. managed to make Richard Rex" out tion of the poster are shown the names of the shaky scribble which Is there of Serbia, Montenegro, Italy. Russia and Belgium. They are reprodneed. It would be quite as likely to stand for Will Shakespeare, were lined up In the order named unijer anIt not that the smaller word stands other exploding figure representative of the EuropOen war, and the names second and the longer one first. of all tiie countries except Italy are crossed out, indicating that they have Hypodermic Syringe In Crime. Du Ohailion, who Invented the hy- been eliminated from the struggle hy podermic syringe, seems to have been the Iluns. The title of the poster is Cun a sort of Fagin. lie established in Paris a school of crime from which Americas Entry Make a decision of the War? Integral sections of It attempt cuch youngsters as Charley Bates and the Artful Dodger graduated. to convince the render that Americas army cannot take tiie place of RusStimulated by an Injection of morforces; that the Unitphine or some other drug, they went sias withdrawn out to do great deeds In the criminal ed States- cannot build enough ships line. When the school was raided to have any effect on tiie resut of the will destroy the principal escaped, but evidence war, and that the was found to show his part In soma virtually all the ships that America can build when those ships atPhysicians attached daring crimes. to the criminal bureau'saw the great tempt to cross the ocean. Two millions of the booklets have advantage of the hypodermic syringe, and it has ever since been a recog- been printed and will lie distributed in various parts of the country, parnized agency In medical practice. ticularly in theaters where Liberty Loan speakers take the book as their Quit Your Spattering. text. To prevent an automobile spatterEvery effort is made in the wording ing mud upon pedestrians there has and the illustrations of tiie poster to been invented a flexible metal ring to minimize aud ridicule the efforts of the be attached close to a tire. United States in the war. A striking example of this Is found in the figure of Uncle Sam, wlm is pictured as a How Old Is an Angel of Mercy? The secretary of war, having in cadaverous individual who wears an mind all that he had heard about the American flag with nine shirs and five stripes around his plug hat and smokes transcendental brow stroking and pilcob pipe. He also aplow smoothing funetions of the ladies, a to be spats or dancing wearing pears wrote to General Pershing, propoundrumps. is IIow an old the angel ing question: The enormous figure of a Russian At least, so says Mew of.imrcy? on the poster York Medical Journal, which further- soldier is the first object vvilh more reports and comments upon the to Strike the eve. He stands indicaovercoat in his hands pockets, fact that General Pershing replied, fact that lie Is through twenty the or over, so that now tive of the him stands Uncle Sam Beside fighting. In there is a rule preventing girls to their most angelic age from becoming holding a small figure, designed in States United army, the represent angels of mercy in France. or d. . Rnu-mani- a, d his right hand. In his left hand Uncle Sam carries a banner wliiili bears the America threatens to inscription, f send transport of milium men. But it ca'iimt ship them! Ibdow I nolo Sam are these wonD: It ll impossible for America to train aid tit out in lime tor tin- European war u suitable and suliuiciitly large army .rid provide il wiili the necessary re-- t nfoi cements. 'J'lie eatcliline of this section of the poster is Russia's army oi millions could not down Germany, and on the skirt of the Russian soldiers overcoat are printid these wolds: ''Russia used up altogether fifteen minion men in vain! On the opposite side of the poster Is tins eatcliline: "Enghiud's sea power und Englands merchant marine have Below this not decided the war! line uppeurx a huge figure intended to represent the English shipping facilities at the outbreak of the war, which bears these words: England went into the war with twenty million gross registered tons of freight space. Alongside tills figure of a ship is a drawing designed to show Uncle Sam carrjing the United States tonnage under liis left arm. The caption above Uncle Sam reads: "Cun America reOn the ship place England on sea? which Uncle Sum carries is printed this inscription: Three million gross registry tons and below that Is another inscription which xus: At the beginning of the war America had only a tonnage of three million gross registered tons. Commenting on these statements, the poster further declares America cannot increase her gross registered tons for 1918 by more Ilian two to two and a half million tons. sink twice as quickly as Our England and America can build! The answer of the publicity bureau to the two sectious of tiie poster referring to the transportation of men and tiie building of ships foilovvs: At the moment the bulletin boards of Germany scoffed tiie possibility of America sending a force to France, there were already more than a million lighting men overseas, and transports, walled about by tiie American navy defying the cowardly submarines, were bearing every month hundreds of thousands more. Tiie gauge is set ami the summer of 1919 vviH see 4.000,000 fighting American men in France. Nor will there be a lack of ships to transport and sustain them. The Liberty Bond buyer is fast giving to America a merchant marine that will be the peer of any In the world. America launched in July alone 03 5, Oil tons. Losses to allied and neutral shipping combined, froiff every cause, for the last six months, amounted to 2,089,393 tons. The distance from New York to England, the Boclie points out, comments the bureau of publicity publication, is two hundred times greater than that from England to France, from which he spells Opportunity for the German Iitiful is this boast In face of the facts. Instead of the blug an unconquerable engine of war, as the Hun confidently expected, It has become tiie slinking foe of fishing smacks and other Isolated craft. The vast army of Liberty Bond buyers, thirty millions strong, has built an unbroken bridge over the Atlantic ocean into the heart of the Across this enemys strongholds. bridge there are streaming our millions of fighting men, as good as the world has ever known, munitions and equipment that have been wrought by those back home, whose determination is that the American fighting man shall lack nothing that he needs. As a slap at the French, the German propagandists have reproduced a French poster which pleads with French people to eat less in order that tiie United Sjtutes may send over more man power. The French poster pointed out that if every person in France would .save a hundred grams of food a day that the American reinforcements could, he increased a division a month. The French catch-lin- e on this poster was "Does France want wheat or men? and tiie German poster remarks Also the allies nre now beginning to have tlieir doubts I In a further effort to convince the German people that It will be Impossible for the United States to transport troops to France, the German section of the poster says that ten tons of freight space are required for every soldier in crossing the water. Tiie truth Is that a soldier requires this amount of less than one-hal- f space. Summing up all the falsehoods which the German poster contains, the bookThe War Lord of Ger let says: many may have the futile hnjte that his people will devour In the place of food, such statements as the foregoing. Falsehoods, however are poor substitutes and are likely to aggravate rather than appease when the deluded people of Germany learn that every requirement of the American soldier will be met by his patriotic and unqualified support hack home. If a single soldier required ten tons of freigiit spnee, It would be given him But the truth Is he requires less than one-hal- f of that. As for Germanys statement that even if the United States built from two and a half million gross registered tons In 1918. It would not mean deliverance for tiie allies, no further comment Is needed than that by July mark of this year the 2.000,000-tohas been passed. If further refu-tali- n of the Hun boast of his prowess were needed. It might l,e stated that less than f00 American soldiers have lost their live In the atpresent war as a result of - back-hande- d n tacks Ios,ng the booklet Is this striking quotath n from Secretary McAdoo: The Fourth Liberty loan Is the barrage which will precede the victorious thrust of our array. POOR MATERIAL FOR WARMTH Mother EvidenVy Did Not Entirely Approve Apparel Which Adorned Her Daughter. were They cro-si- ng si reef at Meridian, after f tew nights ago, and ir Washington the theater, seemed that Hioilicr and daiigliier were mu perfect- agreed on the nature of daughter's ippniel. At theater time the weather was hnhiij, lml when tliej came out. It had been raining and though there was m Giow or at the moment there was mmh wind, and daughter's filmy white sill, skirt was blowing about in ilangi rotts fashion as she stepped off the curb. Site stopped repeatedly and pulled tiie skirt down, then fairly ran to the shelter of t lit- - Meieli.'iitts' Bank building, leaving mother, who was a Bit plump, to roll along as best she could. Why didnt you wait for me?" demanded mother, on reueiting the girl. Well! was the retort, "my ears are not cold. I wasn't going to poke along there ami let my skirt get up around my ears, was I? If y ears were cold, said mother, sunejitig the filmy skirts I'd hate to trv to get them warm with all you have on." Indianapolis News. Lives 200 Years !i For more than 200 years. Haarlem Oil, the fatnuus national remedy of Holland, has been recognized as an infallible relief from ail foims of kidney and bladder disorders. Its very age is proof that it must have unusual merit. If ou are troubled with paina or aches in the back, feel tired in tiie morning, headaches, indigestion, insomnia, painful or too iiequent passage of urine, irritation or slone in tiie bladder, vou will almost certainly find relief in Gold) MKDAL liaailcin Oil Capsules. This is the good old remedy that lias stood tiie test lor hundreds of tears, prepared in the proper quantity and convenient form to take. It is imported direct from Holland laboratories, and you can get it at any It is a standard, old time drug store. home remedy and needs no introduction. Each capsule contains one dose of live drops and is pleasant and easy to take. They will quickly relieve those stiffened joints, that backache, rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, gall stones, gravel, brick dust, etc. Your money promptly refunded if they do not relieve you. Rut be sure to got the genuine GOLD MEDAL brand. In boxes, three sizes. Adv. We will win this war Nothing else really matters until we do I Cheaper Than He Thought. unmarWhen a happy and care-freried man decides to go over the top. his married friends cluck dlsrourag-Ingly- , talk meltingiy of the price of Ice, heatedly of the cost of coal and with consuming anger of the flight of food charges. When Green was preparing to justify his name, as his associates said, he heard much about ever (lowing hills, rushing gas costs and pressing laundry bills, to say nothing of relentless rent. But Green was an optimist. He did it yesterday. When lie appeared at the office today a scant twelve hours following the ceremony, he asserted with conviction: "Ray, I cant see that marriage Is so expensive. The Flavor Lasts e all-fire- d Breaking It Gently. Askern Wheres tiie rich heiress youre engaged to? Telium You see that lovely girl In pink at the other side of the room? Askem Yes; I say, old mail, what Improved Tastes. a superb Then we're engaged? Telluin Well, It Isn't she. It's that Of course. grand old ruin In yellow sitting next And am I the first girl you have to her. ever loved? No, dear, hut Im harder to suit now than I use to he." Louisville Fervent Wish. In Gamp Custer recently a young Courier-Journanewly-fledgeprivate soldier with a Mahogany, oak and ebony are nil considerably discolored eye and blood dripping from Ids nose looked up at a heavier than water and consequently compassionate friend and expressed sink. the fervent wish that those who were Is the greutest of vicpromoting boxing would never get it status. Ilato. tories. the to general .up Water, Mind You. Rqnabbs They say that three-fourth- s of the earth's surface Is covered with water. . Rquilihs Well, that'8 a fine record compared with those of our bathing-beac- h girls. l. d st lm Signs of It. The chestnut crop Is going to be Yon can tell that by good this year. the fish stories. Dont worry; It wont last nothing does. aiy ATTEMTIOM! Sick Women To do your duty during these trying times your health should be your first consideration. These two women tell how they found health. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegnellam. Pa. etable Compound for female troubles and a I felt all run down and was very weak. I had been treated by a physician without results, bo decided to give Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound a trial, and felt better right away. I am keeping house since last April and doing all my housework, where before e I was unable to do any work. Lydia E. Pinkhams Compound Is certainly the best medicine a woman can take when in this condition. I give you permission to publish this letter. Mrs. E. II. Ceitscling, IL No. 1, Hellam, Pa. Lowell, Mich. "I suffered from cramps and dragging down pains, was irregular and had female weakness and displacement. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound which gave me relief at once and restored my health. I should like to recommend Lydia E. Pinkhams remedies to all suffering women who are troubled in a similar way. Mrs.ELisEllEii,ILNo.6,Box83,Lowll,Mich. Vege-tabl- Why Not Try EYDIA E. PINKHAMS VEGETABLE COMPOUND LYDIA MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASS. is |