Show Monday Morning- - -- The Herald-Republica- Pedigreed Pets PROHIBITION TO Are on Parade at Stock Show REDUCE PRISON S W ECCLES OF SMELTER FIRM DIES IN SOUTH Persian poultry PIGS pheasants and pet stock of all kinds Railroad LIVED IN SALT LAKE FOR LENGTHY PERIOD Held Important Positions With Many Railways Here and Elsewhere ing $1574 IN ht W Eccles vice president of the American Smelting Refining & Mining company who was largely Instrumental In the colonization of northern Utah and Idaho along the Oregon Short Line died yesterday after reorganization to mesat St Its Fla according Augustine in Salt Lake yesterday sages received Until 1101 when he became traffic manager for the American Smelting & company with headquarters Refining In New York Mr Cedes had made Salt lie Lake his home for many years was known as one of the "llvest wires' in the of railroading in Utah and In history addition to his particular calling he found time for civic Interests and club life Wm (I S L Traffic Manager The zenith of the railroad career of Mr Eccles in Utah came when re-he served as traffic manager on the Oregon Short Line's general organized board which included W H Bancroft as general manager: E E Calvin now of the Union Pacific president D E as general superintendent andsystem passenger agent Burley general In addition to being vice president of & the American Smelting Refining was presiMining company Mr Kccles dent of the Copper Ftiver A Northwestern railway the Mexican Union railthe Nevada Northern railway and way a number of other roads Mr Kccles was made general freight and passenger agent of the Denver & Kio Grande Western railroad with in 1884 in Salt Lake headquarters Previous to that time he was division of the Union Pacific superintendent manaeer of the Denrailroad general ver At New Orleans railroad and genUtah of the Denver & eral sgent for Rio Grande Western Ilell Responsible Office From September 1X86 to October 1SS7 Mr Kccles served as v estern for the Union Pacific agent freight railroad with headquarters in San Francisco and then lie became general of the southern Pacific company agent lie KIthen maintained his headquarters Paso Tex He was at and passenger agent general for the freight Mexican International 1 railroad from 1S89 and genMay 1888 to January eral freight agent of the Union Pacific with at San Francisco when he became until headquarters January 1891 and passenger agent of general freight the mountain division of the same railroad resuming his residence in Salt Lake Mr Kccles was advanced to assistant the Union Pageneral agent 14of 1897 from March cific andfreight to Febru15 19U1 he served as general trafary fic manager for the Short Line as traffic manaand from 1301 to 1904Oregon ger for the American Smelting & Refining company SUCKERS TEMPT LAWYERS BELIEF Big Fees Said to Have Been Offered For Advice as to Loopholes That recipient of draft naire have been approachingquestionlawyer in Salt Lake with offer of substantial fees if a loophole could tie found that would enable them to escape the draft is the word that has reached member? of the legal advisory boards in the state capitoi Neither the member of the board nor the office of the attorney general have received any definite information on rue subject but somehow the rumors have been bandied about In both quarters too much confidence in Salt Lake to believe they would attorneys in any such undertaking was expressed ami Attorney General Dan B Shields promised drastic action against any attorney who should do so en-Ka- ce - Hasty Roses May Perish Advices Given the thermometer around to fifty in the daytime below not much at night even the rosea andfreezing shrubs have lost track of the season acto Emil Hansen superincording tendent of grounds and greenhouses Utah Agricultural college have begun to bud and unless They care Is taicen will be damaged when freezing weather comes As first methods Hansen advisessafety that low growing rose bushes and shrubs be protected by them In addition to this banking he urges householders to tie the branches together and wrap them with burlap or other suitable material Climbing roses should be loosened from walls laid on the ground and covered Where the buds have advanced too far the entire plant may be killer! by the first frost unless protected WITH and REAL CHRISTIAN IS NOT A MOLLYCODDLE MINISTER ASSERTS i that a certain Salt Lake Hearing did not want her boy to be mother a Christian man Ir George Ewing Davies pastor of the First Preschurch asked her why byterian In his sermon yesterday he tells her reason “Christiansy the woman said lackadaisical “are goody-goodI myself and namby-pamb- y sissy men who are a little devilish' like Rev Davies said “Other names But “are too people" quick to call is not a mollythe real Christian coddle 'but a man of flesh and blood He is made out of ordinary mud He lives under the impelling powers of tothe efforts to realize the ideal reproduce the life of Christ and to give himself in loving service for others" D ARCING AND CABARET ARE SCHEDULED FOR ELKS NEW' YEAR'S EVE Elks and their families will see the the old year out and welcome new year with a party and entertainment including dancing cabaret features and card games at the Elks’ club tonight K H Miller F P Nelson J Edward Swift and Leo E Butler are the members of the entertainment committee Special music has been and acts from the engaged Wilkes theand cabaret proatres will be on thePantages gram The feature of the evening Is a which being kept a surprisesecret strict served A midnight banquet will be Or-phe- um 1 WORKERS OF PAPER HOUSE ARE FETED Employes of the Lambert Paper comentertained last Saturday pany wereWilliam G Lambert sales by night TWO NEGRESSES ARE of the corporation at a banmanager and dance given In the offices of quet “W First South the plant at 100 5 HELD AS HOLD-UP- S were present street Over guests It was the fourth annual affair of the he was being robbed by kind Thinking two feminine bandits with black mask J J Kumerales of Magna promptly threw up his hands and turned over his month's earnings to the two women in I’osiof f ice place Saturday night Me found on looking closer that the women were negresses He hurried to police headquarters C and reported his loss Detectives Patten and ltoy Larsen captured two a chase in which negresses after Patrolmen Le Roy Dean and T R The women were joined Golightly booked as Squab MBler and Emma The “Squab" is said to have Booze Seized in Prohibition Woods confessed 141-14- WE HAVE AN EXCELLENT LINE OF NEW YEAR'S CARDS SWI&Kf SCHOOL union BOOK STORE AA Cast on SaTTfemple Thousands of gallons of Intoxicants forming a heterogenous array of colors classes and packages will soon be delivered to the federal government by local authorities at a price fixed by the federal authorities An inventory is now being taken The liquor is held by local authorities Into whose hands it came through the operation of forays on caches and by divers other methods made necessary through the prohibition law Some of it was found In hotels rooming houses' out of the way residences shops cellars barns garages and even burled In flower and vegetable gardens An inventory of confiscated liquor held by civil authorities Is being made by officials of the state prohibition department and when It is completed will reveal the presence in this dry state of sufficient wines whisky alcohol and beer to stock a big wholesale house The stuff is held in bond at various places throughout the state awaiting the call of higher authorities By far the greater proportion of the confiscated stock is In possession of Salt Lake officials In the past two months fourteen arrests for violation of the prohibition law have been jtffected by authorities outside of Salt Lake according to reports received by officials of the prohibition bureau Ogden and Wendover December 31 1917 4 SL 4 4 POISON TAKEN 4 4 BY MISTAKE IS Loses Arm Lodgings May Face Two Other Charges POLICE CHARGE MAN HAD GUN AND DRUGS Wallace Dies After Swallowing Deadly Acid to Aid Cold BY CLARENCE RIGDON cut off between the rightandarmelbow mute evidence wrist of deliberate butchery done Pri-in German hospital prison vate Canadian N Gerow Hugh recovwell and army happily of ered from the effects being the has “come back” from was "gassed" death the enemy thought surely his to give the story of his experiences from the battle of St Julian February 1915 to the Somme 1917 He is now in Salt Lake “I thought I was going to die sure” Private Gerow “and when I got says to England the English surgeons also to die The GerI was thought man doctors ingoing the prison hospital at the old monastary at Westphalia were1 sure of it But I'm not dead yet have gained twenty-si- x pounds recently despite it all “I'm pretty lucky at that They got me at the battle of the Somme May 5 We had l£en fighting since February 17 and when I woke up in the prison I found that 1 had been there hospital two days unconscious and they had aim off Think it wasn't IS j Authorities Believe Captive Has Knowledge of Teuton Activities Here What the local police declare may be one of the most Important arrests In several months was made yesterday when Patrolmen C A Carlborg and EXPLOSION PROBE Miss Helen of Vile Hospitals i - pro-Germ- an IS UNDER WAY toi s RAILROAD HEADS CONFER TODAY chopped my Look! No doctor would do chopped? a job like that I had a slight wound on my hand that was all Gas Usually Is Fatal “But I was pretty well done up beside on account of the gas The fellows don't live long when the get a dose of that Six minutes usually some of them nine minutes and then I was pretty sick and they turn black didn't better very fast They kept get me In the hospital four months three 1 was and then weeks and three days disabled never to be able exchanged to fight against Germany in any way1 But since then again they thought have helped $265000 for the Red get Cross “Treatment In the prison hospital? Well I didn't care much what the treatment was There weren't any nurses The old there: that Is regular nurseswere the monks of the monastary nurs’es working under German army doctors: I'll tell you what the food was One pint of sllmey soup one one pint of pound of black bread and Imitation coffee (made out of parched every Tuesdays the soup had rye) meat in It day and every second day we a potato The main about got bill stunk of fare was the soupthing It the I don't know whether it was any good or not or what it was made of but it had a good strong smell and was aw- ful hard to take" Enlisted Among First Private Gerow was in Richmond Va 14 when the war broke out August en1914 he went to New York and listed in the Canadian service and was sent to Toronto Shortly after he was transferred to the Fourth Canadian trainbattalion and sent to France forCanadthe first ing Going overhe with was in training camp ian contingent 1915 when in England until February the troops he was with were ordered to France He was a bomber and saw his first action at St Julian February 22 1915 Wounded two days later he considered himself in great luck for of the 1100 Canadians of the Fourth battalion at St Julian only about 350 were left after the battle Then came Langemarck and all these battles the troops faced through the German gas attacks without masks EFFORTS TO SUMMON DOCTORS ARE FUTILE Young Woman Expires at Emergency Hospital in Presence of Mother PRIVATE HUGH X GEROW “We used to tear off our shirt tails and dampen them to breathe through’ explains Private Gerow Bombs Were Home-ma“Hand grenades weren’t a regular till weapon either at the first Lp have any idea ”of that time we didn’t of Ihe different ways t were there to fight andfighting that was we made all our own bombs first to out of jam tins In France we wentnow school to learn how to fix themset the much powder to usd’ and how to The worst thing about theset fuses bombs was the fact that they wouldn explode when we wanted them always to and the Germans picked them up back at lots of times and threw them we'd us before they went off and get dosed with our own medicine” Gerow salient Private In the Y was In the pres battles of Festubert Hill 60 Armenleres Plaegsteert 1915 at Zille-beeand St JulianX 1916 April 24 at the Somme and June He has come to Utah to May 1917 get over the effects of the poisonous de all-A- Cav-Inc- hy ke gas ns a m to pray for a victory Being drafted over the Hun — that is the prospect faced by Salt Lake Catholics unless volunteer in sufficient’ numbers they Announcement to that effect was made by the lit Rev Joseph S yesterday C M D D bishop of the diocese Glass of Salt Lake Bishop Glass Issued the SIX ALASKANS 11K I II who would for communicants — 30 Nome Alaska Dec Earl Rogers call one mass week to attend volunteer editor of the Nome Industrial Worker day during each week of the acurrent the editorial board and five members of is to pray for peace with victory owned by a mi- month of the paper which American arms ners union were arrested today for al- to Each volunteer was asked to hand In which it is his name leged seditious articles with a statement as to the in Worker the on which he will charged appeared day of the week In making the assist at the mass announcement the bishop said that unless sufficient volunteers were received to assure a good attendance at y mass a draft would be every week-daresorted to The response to the ap such however that indicapeal was a will not be necesare tions that draft sary Glass declared that the power as a factor in winning the of Bishop prayer arid he war cannot be overestimated that Catholics in expressed tothe belieftheir addition young men for giving service buying Liberty bonds supportCross practicing rigid ing the Red and conversation serving the government in all other possible ways should enbe willing to make the sacrifice tailed by attendance at one --week-day mass to pray for victory those who attend the Naturallymasses week-da- y will not be absolved from attendance at Sunday masses While members of the state fair hoard under a agreement to remain silent refuse to comment has arisen as to what acspeculation upon the protion that body will take to retrench by Ensign posal of Horace combining the offices of secretary ana self-impos- ed appointment Ensign Earl Jay Glade the publicity manager to fill both positions Since then friends of Mr Ensign have urged him not to resign Shortly before the recent meeting Mr Ensign said he had not presented his resignation It is believed that some board members favor the combining of the secretaryship and managership and the retention of Mr Ensign as well A definite settlement of the matter will be effected it is expected at a forthcoming meeting of the board Your clothes Your time Your energy Your money With an Electric Washing Machine This labor saving electric appliance may he purchased on small monthly payments if yon wish Utah Power & Light Co Efficient Public Service Keams Bldg Main 500 r S CONCILIA TOR LEAVES William tl strike conciliator for WilliamRogers B Wilson secretary of labor who came to Salt Lake when a committee of vigilantes ordered four union leaders from Bingham a general strike ofnearly copprecipitating per miners left yesterdav for Oranre Tex where he will endeavor to settle labor difficulties in a shipyard ROY THIEVES WRECK AUTO David Westoby 750 Glendale street at reported mthe loss of his automobile 855 p yesterday Half an hour Inter the car was found wrecked near Murray Four boys who were riding in it escaped “Over the service and quality at Arrow Tress top" W Second South —Advt 62-64-- 66 i ELECTS TODAY Commission Will Choose Officers and Consider New Contracts Also m Selection of a and secre- text book commisfor the statepresident tary sion will be among the important matters before the meeting of the comThe board will mission at noon today also consider preliminaries of making a contract for text books By the provisions of the state law mustbe made during arrangements of this yea for deciding what January text books shall be used in country school districts for the coming five-yeperiod 7 the board will convene January to receive and consider bids again' The award will be made within thirty after that date Salt Lake Ogden days Provo Murray and Logan are not included in this text book order as these are classified as independent districts They adopted text books pne year ago ar 0 K Solon Spiro president of the Silver Consolidated Mining company King who returned yesterday from New York where he has devoted several that weeks to personal business says in taking the action of the over the controlgovernment of railroads gives promise of constructive developments “Whether the government will discontinue the operation of the railroads after the war remains to be seen" said that the Spiro “It is a fact however made inaction of the government has vestments in the railroads more secure “There is reason to believe that the executive councils of all railroads drew of relief when the government sighs took this step” said that the fixing of a- price onSpiro silver which is to be made at Washis destined to become as favorington able as the action of the government in taking over the railroads He preafter the war the nations dicted that on the standardization of will unite silver - in warfare has changed Artillery since the present war began from a branch of the service which fought in the open to a highly specialized aid to the infantry troops which is governed accordby prearranged largely to Maj E Le Roy plans Bourne One ing Hundred and Forty-fift- h artillery who leaves to rejoin his regiment tomorrow Major Bourne is the first specialist to the in artillery warfare to return One Hundred and Forty-fift- h artillery after attending the school of fire at Fort Sill Okla J H Ward of the same regiment Capt arrived at the school for a ten weeks’ course as Major Bourne was leaving The school of fire Is the largest camp in the United States for training officers who are studying to become in branches of military pracspecialists officers in tice There are about 1200 in the different classes The attendance courses are similar to high school work in military tactics according to Major Bourne and are needed now on account of the great changes in methods of warfare ADVANCE SALE FOR OPERA OPENS TODAY PASTOR PREDICTS LASTING PEACE ARCHIBALD RESUMES The advance seat sale of the Lucy POST OF INSPECTOR Gates Grand Opera company begins this war is When morning at the Salt Lake theatre box office the performances to take place three nights starting next Thursday appears tonight evening The company at Logan playing a New Year’s en-' gagement at Ogden tomorrow night PRESBYTERIANS TO MEET The' regular monthly meeting of the teachers and workers of the First held In Sunday school6 willm beWednesat p the church parlors dinner willbe served day A hum NEW S L ISOLATION HOSPITAL IS READY IS Conserve — TEXTBOOKBOARD Definite Settlement of Secret- Solon Spiro on Return From Washington Confer- MAJ BOURNE FINISHES Riddle ary-Publicist IN GUNNERY SCHOOL ence Is Optimistic Believed Near Fres-bvtori- 40-ce- nt also Isolation of and infectious diseases bycontagious units soon will be undertaken at the new isolation hospital constructed at a cost of $25000 under the direction of Dr T J Howells county physician' The new hospital formally was accepted Saturday by the board of county commissioners It is one of the most completely equipped In the country MOVE IS SILENT ON JOB FOR VICTORY PRAYERS publicity manager As first outlined this plan was understood to mean the resignation of of Mr and the Camp Funston Kan Dec 30 — Word has been received here that Major General Leonard Wood commander of the 89th division had arrived safely in France with his chief of staff Lieutenant Colonel C E Kllbourn They went there to study field conditions each report five apprehensions while Delta had two and Murray and Price each one Most of the arrests in Ogden were for Intoxication the others being for having Intoxicating liquor in possession THINKS SILVER FAIR DIRECTORS a carbolic acid preparation forMistaking medicine Miss Helen Walcough lace 17 daughter of Mr and Mrs W C Wallace 327 Eighth East street for the John Elliott Clark stenographer company was fatally poisoned at her home yesterday She died In the emergency hospital In good spirits Miss Wallace went to her room that she would take saying for the troublesome something Soon after members of the familycough were startled by a scream Her sister Mrs Grace Wallace Peterson rushed to ler room and found her unconscious While some made efforts to apply an antidote others telephoned to a number of physicians in the neighborhood but failed to find them at home Finally they calledanytheof emergency hospital ambulance D O Johnson interne at the emergency hosfound the girl beyond medical pital relief After a convulsion she died Wallace her brother left France on Christmas day111after beforReginald Memin at Rockford ing bers of training the family said they could think of no reason for attributing her death to anything but an accident W C Wallace the father is affiliated with the Twin Falls (Ida) office of the Consolidated Wagon & Machine He was reached telecompany After conferring with by the Rev graph Paul’s H J Dennis rector of St church members of the family concluded to withhold for the present news of the death from Reginald the brother who soon will be in France Mrs Wallace accompanied her daughter to the emergency hospital Upon being informed of the girl's death she collapsed Regains Health Here He has succeeded in his fight against the grim reaper this German agent ofman fit exlie's a strong well sleeve todaytells the that cept for the empty of wartime surgery story And that is the story of Private Gerow bomber except that he has written a story that he calls “Back to doctors Billets" to show the German a man down ro-by that they can’t keep a off hie right arm and cutting for mance that starts all overcom things the man they couldn’t put out of mission For in the meantime Marian McKee daughter of Senator and Mrs W L McKee of L&wrenceburg Ky came to Ogden Miss McKee and Hugh Gerow “used to go to school together’ The end of this story is that they were married in Ogden recently sales-manag- er GEN WOOD ARRIVES SAFELY IN FRANCE ! FATAL TO GIRL Private Hugh N Gerow Here Prisoner Taken in Salt Lake to Regain Health Tells James Williams took into custody Carl Vogt in a rooming house at E Fourth South and South State streets yesterThe man is being held day morning at the police station until his case is investigated by the United States government Although Vogt is being held by the police for the government in the belief that he may be able to tell considerable of German spy activities it tig said by the local authorities that two charges may be made against him if he can convince governmental that he agents Is innocent of connections The police declare he had a 38 caliber automatic revolver under his pillow when arrested and that his personal considerable belongings of contained drugs quantities prohibited The police found $1574 In cash in and some valuable Vogt's possession He also had a money hag jewelry Mexiwhich apparently helonged can bank He was clad in kbakl trousers and wore a mackinaw The Hercules General Superin-Investigate- officers who arrested the man evidentcharhim as a regarded Mill ly tendent as they entered desperate acter his room with drawn revolvers after knocking for adDisaster at Bacchus A card mittance the name of Carl Vogt in scriptbearing was found in his clothing Unless charges are preferred against A S Elch of California general suthe government investigators Vogt he willby be charged with carrying conperintendent of the Hercules Powder cealed drugs company opened an Investigation yes- in his weapons and with having possession according to the poterday into the explosion which Sat- lice urday afternoon wrecked the press mill of the company’s plant at Bacchus killing Elmer Hunter James Hanson and Prank Ellis KIcli had just completed an inspection of the plant and was preparing to leave for Hercules Cal when the explosion came while lie was a spectator the investigation will conAlthough sume several days he reported last to he had found night that local ofthe original view ofnothing change the ex- Executives Meet at Capitol ficials of the company that resulted from causes common to plosion a powder mill Today to Discuss Work The body of Hanson will be takenser-to Fountain Green today for funeral Under U S Control vices which will take place Friday made to by arrangements according his relatives who came to Salt Lake Ellis will The funeral for last night In pursuance with orders received by from the Masonic temple local take2 place official operating heads railway m under at p Wednesday auspices of lines runthe various transportation M & A of Wasatch lodge F meet will Salt at disthe into Lake ning William Ellis San Francisco corn-pa- state capitoi today at 10 a m to for the Hercules I’owder tele- cuss the various phases of railroad opbrother of Frank Ellis and traffic under the new govthat he was on his eration yesterday graphed ernment control The meeting was to the Lake Salt that way advising called bv Julian Bamberger president Masons take charge of the funeral of the Bamberger lines acting under services Complete arrangements for instructions from Fairfax Harrison the Hunter third of Elmer the funeral head committee of the of the electric were not made transportation war board victim of the explosion yesterday The railroad officials will discuss for with the govplans ernment officials in the use of common ONLY ONE DELIVERY terminals and parallel lines and other details for the working out of it sysYEAR NEW OF MAIL tem whereby the most convenient and 'routes can be used for all expeditious One delivery of mail will he made in traffic The local railway men have the business district on New Year's declared their intention of doing everyto the schedule arranged thing possible to assist the governday accordingNoble Warrum postmasment in its control and operation of the by yesterday deter At the postoffice the general box traffic systems and post parcels livery registry windows will he open from 9 until 11 a m The Murray and Sugarhouse will be open from 9 until GLASS MAY DRAFT ARMY branches 11 Confiscated Liquor Listed Before Sale to Uncle Sam Raids Will Be Sold to U S Government 4 in Man Now CASH Yarw-couv- er S 4 4 ARRESTED WITH ROSTER BELIEF -- German Doctors Maim Captive ISPY SUSPECT IS sizes and will have their day whenpedigree the Utah Pet Stock association opens the doors of the show today at 37 W Secondbeginning South street Warden Storrs Already Sees Kntries listed yesterday showed that this year's show will have the Decrease in Number of of pigeons ever on largest number In C ChamJ display of Salt Lake Newcomers berlain has entered Magna eighty-fou- r C J Dietz thirty-thre- e N J Thomas thirty-on- e G II Bachman twenty-on- e and J H Under the dry regime It is predicted twenty are Armstrong entries at the state prison will deinmates also Poultry heavy Island one hundred Rhode with crease materially Statistics at the Reds and eighty White Leghorns in already are beginning to competition George Relf has en- - ' penitentiary Warden in crime a Indicate slump tered twenty chickens Thomas Sudden fifteen W O Ramshaw Storrs feels convinced that the George four guinea hens fifty and alsowill falling off of prisonersin inthethe Utah More come from Inpoultry Canyon will equal that bastile diana and rabbits from Colorado went Colorado after and the coast dry City prison Both the Utah Pipeon club and 1 1916 to January 1 From August the Utah Rabbit club are 1917 when more liquor was dispensed In the pet stock show this 31 in William Utah than during any previous Coats of year B C- - will be on hand to convicts a total of forty-eigperiod the poultry and pets C J But state the were received at judge prison 1 1917 when Utah went Dietz will Judge pigeons The Pafrom August e new thirty-nincific Coast Jacobin Pigeon club only dry to date have entries listed The show will been received More have prisoners be In charge of Harlow R Grow were comthan half of their crimes was in the wet J II Armstrong secrestill Utah when mitted president column tary and V L Plngree vice the first year that Colorado During was In the dry column the population of the Colorado state prisonIs decreased by more than 100 and It the reported second the decrease during that may be nearlyof as great year social conditions After a study the dry period Warden Storrs during has expressed the view that the decrease In the number of inmates at the state prison gives promise of being marked Was Leader in Developing Territory Along O S L Salt Lake City Utah n In Which Class Are You? can spend Any one most money comcan earn it: butpeople few know paratively how to save Are you among those are who saving? money regularly and depositing It at 4 this Interest in strong institution? nowSaving ismoney the most adays you important to duty have perform both to yourself and to your country Salt lake Security ©Trust Company 3Z Up MnaWas1866 I S3 un the will end of the day but not the greatEuropean question what will be the condition ofto the the it ends people when H X Wllllan cording of the Rev J pastor churcl in his Sunday First Methodist sermon morning “When peace Is declared” he said “it must not be a patched up truce but a permanent peace It' is a matter of to' watch the great ofencouragement circle peace gradually widening Nations are now' regarding each other with a different National patriotism is being feeling by inter-is supplanted nationalism! A broader feeling the world is begrowing to Most ofother men as brothginning regard ers Doubtless by the time the war is over the whole world will be ready to the universal motto ‘Bear ye one adopt another’s burdens How different this is from the ‘kultur’ of Germany the ambitions of the kaiser” 1918 A DOOR TO NEW LIFE PARSONS SAYS In his sermon Sunday evening at church the Rev Phillips Peter ACongregational Simpkin talked on the need for every American' to enter the New Year with resolutions clear and deep “God sets before us an open door” he said “It is a door where and sacrifice will be the portionchivalry of our We shall fail unless our citizenship resolution beds as deep and soars as which God has given us to high asasthat sense of the goal and the heritage mankind “Let us and trust that He may be beside pray us as we walk through the open door of 1918 to go out and serve the wrorld and the age In sacrificial self-forgettin- B Archibald inspec- division headquarters Archibald received a temporary leave of absence when he entered the officers' reserve training camp at the Presidio Cal in October He was a candidate for captain but failed to be commissioned when he was physically disqualified Join the Smile Family! Would you feed your children A horrible decayed food? thought Isn’t it? Then why let them masticate their food with teeth? Are you guilty decayed of any lesser crime in so doing? Tkere'a Dentist In Ton Town Joat North of Postoffleo Dr D W Thomas g” SOCIALIST LAUDS CONSERVATION of a “Conservation” twas the lecture given last night at subject the People’s hall by H F Knowles 350 N Ninth West this He sketched the Hoover plan city of conservation and said that it ia merely the plan of procedure of urged for years by the Socialists He spoke this under the aus country of the Socialists of Salt Lake of pices which he la a member mineral torGeorge of the Salt Lake 'field division of the general United States land office has resumed his duties at the local NEW METHOD DENTISTS $67-1- 1 Amcrt Bldg Was 3393 |