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Show GREEN RIVER DfePATOH, GREEN A Valuable Habit Is that of being on time. It has made reputation for thousands. A good watch costs very little, and every sensible person should owii one. Buy yours now. Our reasonable prices ease the way. RIVER, UTAH MOUNTAIN PEACE CONFERENCE APPROVES LEAGUE OF NATIONS . Delegates From Utah, Idaho' and Wyoming Back of Plan for World Peace. BOYD PARK MAKERS OF JEWELRY HO MAM STALET SAIT LAKE CITY BARGAINS IN USED CARS MM IS donb-U- M cm-Bal- eU w OUwHa, Ho. flat dao Gouiium htm I mnl w In taulbS lie Mi WOOL mSilM aula tr tawls-Soa-. risk! oanlML WiIm UnACbi DtfU Randall Dodd Asto Co, sot Law Cl IS YOBR FROZEI, LEARY, BAMA6ED RADIATORS SERB Former - President Taft and Other Speaker of International Fame Address Mountain Congress of League to Enforce Peace. Wa pay transportation one way. Beta rued like new. AOETYUNE WELDING hi all Its branches. We save yon time and money. H. ft E. Radiator & Weldiag Co. Salt Luke City. The Mountain congress of the League to Enforce Peace, held in this city February 21 and 22, brought together probably the greatest galaxy of celebrities the people of the Inlerniountaiu section liuve had the pleasure of entertaining In Lhe pant decade. Representative citizens from every section of the Intermountnln country had journeyed to Balt Lake to take MR Edieoa Street. Salt Laka City, Utah RODS GIVE NO PROTECTION French Vine Growers Find Thsy De- devices. MAKE USE OF WASTE HEAT Councilors of Reykjavik,- Iceland, Apply System That Reduces the Taxation of the Citizens. . - The city council of Reykjavik, Iceland, has now begun the baking of tiread In a special bakery In connection with the gas works, where modern machinery has been Installed In a special building. The result was excellent, In that the waste heat from the gns works Is being used In s practicable and profitable manner, and In the course of a short time all the black bread which may be needed will be baked In the new bread factory. The Idea was thnt of a yonng student there, and It Is considered one of the beat means of saving coal, time loaves have and money. Three-poun- d been completely baked In three hours n considerable numbers. Think of Yourself. Ton cannot reach a high degree of success In anything without making enemies. . Perhaps your lack of success has been caused by this very feeling that yon desire to make and retain yonr Vends. Yon might have Improved yonr position many times, but yon feared the 111 feeling engendered In certain circles with yonr advancement There are times Id the lives of all men when they must each choose between what la for their own best Interest and their friends, and this does sot mean that it la a case of taking disadvantage of frknji-ner- ely them. pleasing Perhaps It is a' principle of business Involved perfectly honest and honorable, and to your financial credit but what would your friends tbink If you .took the decisive- - step? Day of Quill Pen Gone. Trite as true Is It to say that times chauge and the manners with them. Although the habit of carrying the pen behind the ear has not altogether disappeared In this day of the fountain pen, 'typewriter machine and other similar devices, the quill pen, so far as the present generation goes. Is now more of an adjunct of romance, stage settings and motion pictures. The fountain pen .does not lend much artistic atmosphere to such ss these. Watch for Alrquakea. . An English astronomer of prominence hns advanced the theory that there are nlrqnnkes. entirely independent of earthquakes, that are caused by the explosion of meteors In the atmosphere. . : Strength of Bone and Oak. 'A very small hone, only one square millimeter DIM square inch In dl- -. a meter, will hold SS pounds In suspension without breaking, while a piece of the heat oak of the same thickness will bold up only 22 pounds. . - WILLIAM H. TAFT In the conference, and to listen to addresses by speakers of international fame. Similar meeting have been held In eight other of the larger cities of the country, which have been addressed by former President William Howard Taft and otliey distinguished citizens of the United Statea, blit none of the meetings were more enthusiastic than those held at Balt Lake. Mr. Taft formed the longue to enforce peace In 1914,- and Is president of the league. He sees no good reason why a question of sueli supreme Importance to the whole world should he made the football of partisan politics, and he does not believe thnt those who do with President Wilson are Justified In advocating the defeat of the covenant which holds out the hope of peace. Mr. Taft was, of course, the principal speaker at the conference, some of the speakers of national fame who addressed the congress being A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard university ; George Grafton. Wilson, professor of International law at Harvard ; Dr. Henry Van Dyke, former minister to The Netherlands; Mrs. Phillip North Moore, President of the National Council of Women; Henry Morgeutlian, former ambassador to Turkey; Dr. Charles R. Brown, Tale university ; Edward A. Filcne, director chamber of commerce, U. 8. A.; Captain Thomas Chamberlain. Frank P. Walsh, former Joint chairman of the war labor board, was detained In San Francisco and was therefore unable to address the congress. Former Governor John C. Cutler presided at the opening session of the congress at the tabernacle, which was packed to the doors. Among the prominent Utahns on the program were former Governor William Spry, President Huber J. Grant, head of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints ; Rev. George E. Davies, pastor of the First Presbyterian church ; Dr. J. A. Widtsoe, president of the University of Utah; B. H. Roberts, former chaplain of the 145th Held artillery; J. Will Knight, member of the state senate ; Professor Levi Edgar Young of the University of Utah, and A. E. Harvey, secretary of the Utah 8tate Federation of Labor. At the opening session .of the congress at the tabernacle, Friday evening, Dr. Henry Van Dyke, former minister to The Netherlands, author, icholnr and more lately chaplain and Ileutennnt commander in the United States navy, voiced vigorous imnroi-- pint - en-to- ur not-agr- y league of nations were making to educate the people regarding the covenants of the union. Dr. Henry Van Dyke, former minister to the Netherlands, followed Mr. Taft with an address in which he declared victory in the war must be made practical v by a league of nations. session of the congress The culminated In a mass meeting at the Tabernacle, Saturday night, presided over by President Heber J. Grant, and attended by over 10,000 people, at which former President Taft was the principal speaker. Mr. Taft declared unequivocally In favor of the league of nutlons, and was strong In his denunciation of the senators who have offered opposition to the league, i The former chief 'executive confined his address largely to an' explanation of the various tenets of the proposal us drafted hi Paris and ro uu expression of the results of the entrance of the United States as a member of the union of nations. lie declared thnt the formation of the league .meant open diplomacy" with everything in International relations open and with the "cards face up upon the table. ,. Mr. Taft closed his address with a stirring appeal to the women to support the league of nations. Preceding Mr. i'nft, A. E. Harvey, secretary of the Utah State Federation of Labor, in an able address declared that there ought to be a voluntary union of nations, a league of nations to adjust disputes and difficulties and to facilitate the world's 'progress in accord with the highest principles. Following the address by former two-day- 's URIC ACID IN THE SYSTEM BY LEE H. SMITH, M. D. Uric acid Is now generally recognized as the cause of more diseases wus heretofore believed. When the American Smelting A Refining than are out of order uric add the kidneys company" chain of smelters, was an- accumulates within the body In nounced last week. disordered kidneys The South Ilecla now hns 11 to 15 teams do not filter the poisons out of th regulHriy on the joh of blood, as they ought to do, and so th beThe teams are finding gissl minis remain in the blood and float poisons tween the mine at Alts and the railaround uutil they find a place to road terminus ut Wusutcli. Th lodge, In form of urnte salt Drilling Is going steadily ahead at Is that you may rememlier to thing the Virgin Dome Oil company's well In any part of the on Purgatory lint, near St. George, have rheumatism have you may pains anywhere body Utah. The drillers are still In the hard your back may ache. and your head which prevents rapid formation, may be dizzy- - but the trouble Is not progress. where the pain appears. Black Metals Mine? coiniiuny people The trouble is in the kidneys, and huve lined up tlielr affairs to snch a what if the first thing to do? You must degree that shipments of ore. at the get that exce uric acid out of your sysrate of fifty tons a day will be the tem, which can be done by taking Anuria order in the near future from tlie Tablets, the splendid remedy whirh Dr. property In lhe Jack Rahlilt district, Pierce, of Buffalo, X. Y., has put on sale stores at a low price. Anurie in northwest of Pioche, Nevada. double strength), when Tablets During two days of last week the taken into(made the system as medicine, have Its tramway going the kept power of dissolving the uric so steadily that In that period It suc- raid peculiar deposited there. Drop a bit of sugar ceeded in transporting frotnUie mine or aalt into hot water, and it will diaap-pea- r. In east Alta to Tanners Flut a total In precisely Lhe same way do these of 240 buckets of ore. The buckets Anurie Tablets dissolve uric acid. Of coutaiu about 700 pounds each. course, after ridding the citem of uric ore liuve acid, it may return again uJa you eat Bunches of good lead-silvfoods end live the JllJt kind of been encountered In the new work the right Dr. Pierce will idviseyou fully life, but which is being carried oil along the on food snd correct living if you proper from down sent was new incline which write and aak him. He makee no dkurg level of the for such advice. Take Anurie Tablets tothe 1700 to the 1800-foOntario-Silve- r at Park City. Tlie mam day, by all means, and get that uric acid work hns been on the 10UO and 1700 out of your system. Dont, dont, don't, t levels. put the matter off. Mining engineers of the United The Pessimists Dread. Stutes and Cana (hi railed up their Hes un awful iiessIuiisL sleeves and sat together at a meeting 'What's the mutter now? at New York on February IS, to urge "Growling alwiut tlie pleasant wina uniform mining law for the continent ter we are having. of North America. The occasion was "Wlint does he see In this winter to the 119th meeting of the Ann.Tlcun find fault with? Institute of Mining Englmers. lie can't help worrying about Says emThe Ontario at lurk City Is now the price of ice Is going to he wliat to next summer." ploying a force of seventy-fiv- e shipping eighty men. The weekly records from enmp credit the Ontario Cuticura Soothes Baby Rathe with recent shipments nt the rate of That itch and burn with hot baths tons 1310 for the or about 650 tons, of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle two first weeks In February. The anointings of Cuticura Ointment January output totaled 2779 tons. Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espeSomewhat of a surprise was sprung cially If a little of the fragrant Cution stockholders of the old Mammoth cura Talcum Is dusted on at the finish. 25c each everywhere. Adv. Mining conipuny when they were notified of an assessment of 5 cents a The Idea. share. This Is assessment No. 2 of tlie I conduct iny piano business on famous old Tintlc mine, which, has produced many millions' worth of ore and strictly Christian principles. How do you mean? distributed $2,800,000 in dividends. My stock is both upright aul Conditions at the Wooillawn Mining companys property In Big Cottonwood square. canyon are held to he Ideal for tlie one of the oldest of Tlie cucumber making of n real mine, accortwngjto F. cnltlvated vegetables. It has been culof. the V. Bodflsh, general manager Alta Tunnel k Transportation com- tivated in India for 3,000 years. pany, who Is Just down from his own property tluit Is a .neighbor of the er DR. HENRY VAN DYKE President Taft at the Tabenmelc Saturday night, nine thousand delegates from Utah, Idaho and Wyoming voted to adopt a resolution expressing their conviction that the League of Nations was the means qf guaranteeing that peace, liberty and Justice will be established and maintained on uu endurt.'vs foundation. Wo need to apply the principles of personal and dnmesLlc i'mnileltul und national morality more widely, declared Dean (liaries R, of Yule University at the Saturday morning session In the Assembly hall. Other speakers at the morning session were tin. Ildllp North Moore, president of fie Nalional Connell of Women of the United Stall's, Professor Levi Edgar Young of the University of Utah and Brigham II. Roberts, chaplain of the 145th Utah field urtlllcry. At the Saturday afternoon session ut the Tabernacle, Dr. A. Lawreuee Lowell, pres dent of the lJnrvard uni' versity, presided. The oilier speakers were Captain Thomas G. Chamberlain, Henry .Morgentlmu, former United Slates ambassador to Turkey, and Edward A. Fllene, director of the United States chandler of commerce. "The soldier fought to make the wotfd Sife fur democracy, and he is going to fight to' keep It safe, said CuptaJn Chamberlain. Former Ambussador Morgenlhan made a strong appeal for the Bupport of tlie American people to he placed nations squarely behind the leugue-oplan. Answering critics of the league of nutlons plan. Dr. Lowell declured thut no longer was It possible "for us to wrap ourselves in a cloak of glorious Isolation. We cannot avoid our responsibility as a greut nation. Business men, Mr. Filcne said, realized the great need of a league of nations, and did not look upon It us an utopian thing. In their practical vision, he said, they strongly favored the formation of such a league to malntuin world security. Sirs, rblllp North Moore, president of the National Council of Women, who was one of the speakers at the Mountain Congress, was the guest of honor at a luncheon Snturdny, attended by representative women of Utah, Idaho and Wyoming. Preceding .liie luncheon, Dr. diaries R. Brown, denn of the School of Religion nt Yale university made a short address. Mrs. Moore, in an address following the luncheon, told of the aims of the league and extolled the war work of the women of the nation. Mrs. Moore said It was her privilege to present the team work of the women of the country during the period of the war and that she knew they were rendy to bear a larger si in re of responsibility In the new readjustment of life and principles for which the league of nations stood. The celebration of Washington's birthday anniversary In Salt Lake will live In the annals of Spirit of Liberty chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. The members of the chapter and their guests were accorded the privilege of hearing Dr. Henry Vun Dyke, former minister to the Netherlands, in an address following a luncheon at the Hotel Utah. .Si-ow- n f A. E. HARVEY Casualties In American coal mines la 1918, reported Monday to Secretary Lane by 'the bureau of mines. Included 2575 men killed. A reduction In wages for employees of the El Paso smelling works, one of the-dru- g cuiK-ludln- g or Weekly Health Talks suiter-abundanc- e. y rive No Benefit From Metal Rods They Erected. g The region of the Gironde, In France, has been quite extensively equipped In recent years with tall metal rods, similar to light fling rods, known as psragreles or 'electric Niagaras, and alleged to at ford protection from hailstorms. A careful study of the functioning of these rods has recently been published ty M. E. Courty of the University of Bordeaux. The statistics presented ahow that numerous hailstorms have occurred In the vicinity of nearly all the rods. Moreover, according to M. Courty, there has been no obvious hnnge In the character of these storms since the erection of the rods. His article points out some of the principal reasons for the erroneous inclusions that others have drawn In favor of them; for example, the fact that, normally, only one thunderstorm f n five Is attended by hall; that the area over which hall falls Is. normally very small In comparison with that covered by. the thunderstorm, and hall tends to occur In scattered patches or narrow bands; and, lastly, that a district In which hall has fallen for two or three years In succession often remains free from hall for years, regardless of rl nstallatlon of of the proposed league of nations as espoused by President Wilson. Demands for reparation on the part of Germany were expressed by Dr. Van Dyke, who also expressed sentiments .against further warfare on the part of the nations. Dr. Van Dyke not only strenuously voiced approbation of President Wilsons participation in the Paris peace conference mid his labors In behalf of the league of nations, but he referred In a complimentary manner to the part former President Taft Is playing In efforts to promote the proposed league. He was most emphatic In his declaration that the league aa proposed does not interfere with this or any other country's domestic affairs. I ho;e no Billy ass keeps us out of the league of nut Ions, declared Dr. Van Dyke In his references to the opposing congressmen and others. Professor Grafton Wilson took occasion to berate the senators who are opposing the' promised league of nations, though none were mentioned by name. Professor Wilson, during the course of a most able address, presented arguments aiming to show thut the Monroe doctrine was not endangered by the proposed league, and that the objections brought forward by the opponents of the plan were untenable. John C. Cutler, chairman of the Mountain congress for a league of nations, made a strong appeal for permanent paee and declared the league as fostered by President Wilson was the means to such an end. State Senator J. Will Knight, representing the associated Industries of the lntermountaln country, pledged the support of tlint organization to the proposed league. President John A. Wldstoe of the University of Utah appealed for tin league on hehnlf of lhe fanners A Utah and the other mountain states. Former President Taft was the guest of honor at a dinner given at the lintel Utah Saturday, over 5U0 . prominent citizens being present. Following the laiuquet, former Jovernor Cutler made n short address, being followed - by Governor Bamberger, who- - Introduced Sir. Taft. The former president in ojienlng his dinner speech referred laughingly to his peculiar pleasure" In being in Utah and of the supisirt given him In 1912 by Jhe state. He then told of his mission In Suit Lake and of the efforts he and the other speakers in the 'Interest of the proposed AROUND THE MINES PHYSICIAN WAS IN Woodlawns. Announcement was made last week SERIOUS CONDITION by S. II. Uuffaker, secretary of tlie Sunset Mining company, operating at Dr. Farnsworth Gives Doan's eudore. Idaiio, ...nt the first car of concentrates thnt lias been sent down Credit for His Wondersince the new mill was put Into comful Recovery. mission brought approximately $1100. Dr. T. G. Farnsworth, 78 8. KanaInis was a small car, containing only wha St., Buckhannon, W. Va., retired tons. thirty-fou- r physician of over forty years' experin the of Officials ence, Congressman. Health Officer, Mines company are much gratified Mayor and praises Doan's Kidney Pills. Here is over the assay returns from recent Dr. Farnsworths experience as he tells samplings of the ore disclosures in the it: It was just a few yean after my miles retiring from practicworkings in the property a few ing medicine that I southwest from Milford, Utah, nnd found 1 wsa afflicted near the old Moscow and Red Warwith severe disorder The ore ranged gross rior mines. of the kidneys snd bladder. I grew etead-il- y from $30 to $100 to the ton. worse, snd no Kennecott Copper company, accordI wai unable to affairs with conversant Interests get around at all. The ing to kidney secretions were of the corporation, will borrow retarded and so pain for one year nt 6 per cent. It ful in pausing I would made will he loan the Is believed that cry on in misery. I in a frightful con- by Hie same bankers who furnished dition. After I had lost hope in other the corporation $10,000,000 in tne early remedies, Doan's Kidney Pills were part of 1616 to pay for something like hrnught to my attention and I tried them. I soon noticed a change for the 200,000 shares of Utah Copper stock. better. I used several boxes and they The second oil well drilled on the cured me completely. Never in my property of the National Gas & Oil practice did I know a remedy that west of would what Doans Brigham accomplish company's holdings Kidney Pills did, and T give them my heartiCity, Utah, hns struck a flow of gas est endorsement. ut a depth of 200 feet. A pressure of Gat Doans at Any Stars. SOe a Bos seventy pound has developed. The on this sunk was first well property on January 30; when gas was found at CO BUFFALO. N. Y. a depth of 230 feet, with a pressure of thirty-fiv- e pounds. ' CUT OUT to advices from New DONT According York, at the meeting of the American AShoe Boil, Capped Institute of Mining Engineer, moving Hock or Bursitis ' pictures showing operations of New FOR (.ornclla ining corporation, Utah comNevada Co;per Mining company, pany; milling operations of the Utah Mining company nnd smelting n" ''ra- will reduce them and leave no blemishes, tions of the Gurftld Smelting comlameness promptly. Does not blisStops . pany were shown. ter or remove the hair, and horse can be Old Emma and Emma Consoliworked. $3. 50 sbottle delivered. iMkllfttk ABSORBING JR., tar anakM. Ac aatterSt dated stockholders are in receipt of bf Soita. Inin Smo. SodUm ViritwcVrim. official notice from F. B. Cook, vice Batam Price ll.2St boWlr Gt 4nf Alley Fml mud Ifciiinttltom. Staff fcRvcitl WiU leU jo man if roa wrta president of the Colombia Trust relative to the proposed consoli- W. F.YOUNB. P.D. F.,111 Trash It. Seri ntfslt. Mss. dation of the Important Alta interests. The notice says all the Emma Con. assets have been taken over and that THE oosinbreed to the reorganization, transferred both beef Short-heIs milk the and which has not yet been named. Bhortliorn steers One carload of what Is called the the broke repeatedly records at the market in semlsulpblde" ores of the Alta Con1918, making the highsolidated was put through the sampler est teecrd on the ope the juist Seek, and showed gross vnlues market of 890 JSO percwL And Shorthorn eows of about $45 a ton. This carload have milk records of amounted to 38 dry tons, and Is expect- over 17,000 lbs. par year. fltriifraai lies ed to bring In well over $1000. scab, aasif Slid sol h.vln comes the enFrom the couraging new from Manager Dave e Sooths the Irritation and you relievo fha Scott thnt small pockets of Do both quickly and effectively distress. Is ore In found the drift copper being dependable remedy-- by M""g promptly Hnd In water coming from the shaft, at the face Indicating thnt the 'contact is Doing reached, says the InrK City (Utah Record. Mllford-Magnoll- y me-lun- $12,-000,0- ; . rsrt DOANS FOSTER-MILBUR- cora-imn- y, tfoifi Beef and Milk Bronchial T roubles Iowa-Copp- high-grad- ' MRS. PHILIP NORTH MOORBL - |