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Show KAISER'S PEACE OFFER IS SPURWED People Of Utah Should Look On Same A A Trick To Defeat" The Fourth Liberty Loan Driye Press Of The Nation Spurn Such A Proposal As Another Of Hun3 Attempts; To Play For Time And Stop The Terrible Onslaught Of ; Our Troops. Every American Is Urged To Buy More, Liberty Bonds As An Answer To The Brother Of Lucifer. " Few thinking people but feel assured that the proposals for peace at this time is for the effect same will have on the Fourth Liberty Bond drive. . The state and the na-tion feel that such is the motive which prompts the Emperor of Germany to gamble on this last trick as a means of staying the terrible onslaught of the allied forces on every front in Europe. America should not allow her-self to be tricked in such a man-ner and it is believed that little heed will be given by the bond buyers to this latest move on the part of this brother of Lucifer to nullify the great. work which has already begun here in this country and which is being car-ried out so successfully by our troops over there. Our boys have set Berlin as their goal and to check them short of that end would forever make them feel like cowards and that their mis-sion was a failure. Let us rally as Americans and demand that no peace negotia-tions be considered until the Huns are driven back onto their own soil and only then unless we have positive assurances that the "German System" is forever ' i crushed and that Belgium and the other countries which have been outraged shall be reim-bursed in a monetary way at least for the terrible los3 and bloodshed which has been in-flicted by the Huns. Every American should double his efforts to put over the Fourth (Loan this week as a counter thrust at this mockery of peace talk on the part of the kaiser. America Bhould catch up the song of the Civil War period and sing, "We Will IHang Maxmillian On ' a Sour Apple Tree As We Go March-ing On." President Wilson has Bet us a no-ble example in reply to the 'Emper-or's peace proposals. He purchased $20,000 more in (Liberty Bonds on the Installment plan. (Let each of us and those who have not done their share, follow his example and then we will have these bonds sold. Utan Is still $6,000,000 behind her quota. Utah county is just a little more than half through with her allotment What will you dq to help. The press of the United States 1b unanimous for "unconditional surren-der" of the central powers. Editorial comment of many of the leading news papers follows: New York Tribune: We have laid down one condition of war one only and that is to use force, force to the utmost.force without stint or limit until we shall have destroyed forever in this world the indecent, intolerable, criminal thing that now holds out its dripping hands. - '' s ' , ' iT-'t-,,', """l NTct Contents 15fluidDraete nf'MjCV t 1ft ji . tB?. . ; For Infanta and Children. $1LSS Genuine Castoria Ml AlW3 A 1$ iiteSftSlSSjs Signature If, If neither Opian.tophlnewr , V IT Li I hlineral.NoTNAHCOTic Ul ftLMl .'S JwmpBtSJ V 1 Y . fife T". ' V II I II HI :SX . j U V VV AhclpfulRcmedyfcf t M .1 I! CP Iresirtlin'S Vji -- Q T 11 V B T I ;! Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. th( ontuii mmmmt. new von errr. ' ' ., , r 'v he Kemedy $or IFir6sPdiini5oigs " H no more barefoot trips to the basement J no more dressing in an ice cold room J: no more big fuel bills to pay I . no more fires to build. - i Simply roll out of bed and dress in ! your rooms made warm and cheerful by the even day and night heat of I Cole s Original lot Blast DURNS CHEAPEST COAL CLEAN AND BRIGHT. USES ANY FUEL If last winters fuel bill was hard to pay what will it be this year with fuel higher than ever. Now is the time to stop "X", wasted If you want a small fuel bill this Winter, you need' this remarkable fuel-savi- ng heater. Act today. ' ; " , " No. 113 Siiighatn Livery Auto ; Stage Line h Leaves for Highland Boy 9:30 a.m. Leaves for Copperfield 10:30 a.m. - "11:30 a.m. ',.,. u 12:30 p.m. ' . - . . - .1:1?IS 4:30 p.m. ' - " - 7:30 p.m. ' " "V" 6:30 p m- - , " " " r ':30.P.m, H " " r - 8:80 P-- . i "l ' - ; 11:30 p.m. - " 10:30 pm- - Leaves Copperfield 1U: 60 a.m. Arrive in fcingham 11:00 a.m. " 12:50 p.m. " " " 1:00 p.m.' " , 2.50 p.m. - - " 3:00p.m. 50 " - " . ; pm. 6:00 p.m. F. : ' . :50pm. ; " . , " " 7:00p.m. 8:50 p.m. , - 9:00 pm. " " 10:50 p.tn. " " 11:00 p.m. Lea-ves High-land Boy 9:50 a.m. Arrives at Bingham 10:00 am. " 1:1:50 a.m. ' - " 12:00 m. " 1:50 p.m. 8:00 p.m. , " x" - " 3:50 p.m. .- .- , " " 4:00 p.m. " " ' " 6:50 p.m. " - :00 p.m. " " 7:50 p.m. " - g:00 p.m. ". " " " 9:50 p.m. " - 10:00 p.m. '' " 11:50 p.m. " " 12:00 p.m. Theso Stages arrive at the corner of .Main anJ Carr Fork in time to make connections with the Stage Ones for Salt Lake City. We also have extra Cars for special trips. Cars for hire. We will call at any part of the canyon for passengers. Phone 19. After September 1 vm , will have a garage for storing cars in connection with the livery. , r-- ... OXFORD (Formerly Budweiser) Pocket Billiards - Vr First Class Cafe, Modern Rooms in Connection. . Tobaccos, Cigars, Drinks, 499 MAIN STREET . i J. W. MATTHEWS, Manager. 1 ! j SPRINGTEXii the underwear fJj.'.M. f I !' with million little springs in its yfETZwfigy V3-- j J j! fabric which "givt and take" 'undewAvear I ! with every movement of the T r I ! body, and preserve the chape of I !; the garment despite long wear J ,"'(. and hard wishing. VH" ' i ; It it the yesr-srou- underwear, light, If "..', 1- - 1 medium or heavy weight, u you like. " ) y j! "Remember to Buy It - T ' I YeVU Forget You Hv It On" 1 JT---- UTICA KNITTING CO, Makers "'vC 'YV !j Silas Roan: 350 Broadway, Nv Yerk Wl s: - s Wivi"r I ... hi" 1 T mtll X.J McCALL Vj.CSf''. PATTERNS I yP SEL There are two kinds of JLh CharmCharm of per-St- 2l fJn sonality and Charm of tvMV 5r3lA' ress Onewomanma v'JfWjV 'thousand looks well- - wrfftW Wj dressed no matter what , pjl y yM she wears wtheap- - 'In! I i I pearance of the nine Ulf undred an ninety- - ' ' P V !1 'J''' vl'i I ) nine depends upon just &::ZL: t ll 1 one thing--the proper 'PVVl' 4 Selection of Clothes. V HW'jm The name McCALL A fem upon any desijrn is the L,::V.'", ffK'f mi equivalent K.'-'- V. VfJ 1 oil Silver. ('.:." 'i'l W McCall Patterns - tnH4 OCTOBER 1 ' Vil HJ4T M Jf "k"t ''''"t, f THE McCALL COMPANY' Ct WrB Mil Nw Yojt San Frencieco Atlanta Chxego Bo.ton Toronto 7-- : ii , : r,Can't sleep! Can't eatl Can't even digest what little you do eat! EI 1 . ; One or two dvtes 11 llfiW--v ARMY & NAVY VJJl DYSPEPSIA TABLETS I wilt make you feel ten year younger. Best B known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach h BB" and Dyspepsia. R 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or R sent to any address postpaid by the 2 U.S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. I! -- -T Bingham People Stop at THE BEST LITTLE HOTEL IN SALT LAKE The New Salt Lake 372 South Main Street. Just South of Post Office. 50 ROOMS Telephone, Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in B Every Room. Accommodations with Private Bath if desired fj I Rates 73c to $2.00 per day. No higher. i j Special by Week or Month. Q Centrally Located. All Depot Cars Pass the Door. 1 BRITISH OFFICER DESCRIBES WAR COITUS : Captain Frank Edwards Urges America To Get Into This Conflict And Make A Real Sacrifice. Despite the fact that the weather was bad last Thursday evening the Stake Tabernacle was filled to hear Captain Frank Edwards of Great Brit-ain, who delivered a most stirring ad-dress. His appeal was keen and far reaching. He opened his address by stating that "The American nation is as great in generosity as in any other way and your welcome here tonight is not to me personally, but rather for the men who sleep in France. Re-gardless of how great has been your sacrifice it is nothing compared with the people of Belgium, France, Italy, and Great Britain. I am here tonight because your government sent for a number of British officers to tell the story of what is happening at the front. I enlisted as a private and worked my way up because I do not want to ask a man to do anything which I have not already done. We are all dreaming of victory, but it will como only through struggle and sacrifice. "The American boys have brought the end nea.fr than experts expected at this time, but don't be over confi-dent, the" war is not over yet High authorities tell us that the end is nearing, but that Germany will yet put up an awful struggle before she quits. (Many gallant young men must go down before victory is won. Amer-ica has nearly two million of the fin-est young men that were ever born, over there, and some of them are not coming home. They will never reap the fruits of their sacrifice. Others will. You must back up these boys. You people of America have not learn-ed the full fruits of sacrifice. When your boys march away you sing and shout, but in England when they go away no bands pluy, no one sings, no shouting. They march away to die. "I hardly ever sit down to a meal here in America but I feel sorry to see the waste. I am given more meat for one meal than my wife and chil-dren got In a week. In England every business man is constable four nights in the week because all the policemen have gone to war. The 31st Batallion is called the bankers battalion e It has 1000 bankers. ' In Eng-glan- d you never see a motor car, the government has commandered all the gasoline. England haH sent out armies to seventeen different fronts. Eng-land has eight and a half million men In the service. One man In every three males are fighting. Where you have a service star we have a gold utar. The men and women of Eng-land were never more determined to figlit thi thing through. There lias been some propaganda that IlugluaJ was not doing her part. This .' ; fr! f You nnmt remember that 78 per c"t of our original force lias been lost in buttle. In l!M7 more than 8imj.oo British went down in battle. My friends In order to keep your "I!om' Fires Burning." t!i mothers and ebiliii'ii of another country have Rone down. Let tne Iktp flint hundred of thousands of littli; cliil-dr'T- i in Fnui'-- would have perHed ' :.d it nt been for the mlnlhtry of, the American Red Cross. Mothers and fathers write to your boys often they are better fighters if they hear from you and know that everything is all right at home. Don't write about the war. "I have seen 100,000 bodies of dead Frenchmen lying on No Man's Land , ut one time. Who will compensate r.un, rranco. No! She Is too poor' rr-lr.r- d. No! She Is too deeply in 'debt. America. No! She Is not re-- 1 sponsible, (iermany must pay for this terrible loss. The women in England are working j everywhere to fill the places of men so that they can go to the front. More than i,ooo,0(io women are work-- ; ing In factories nml fen thousand are! working behind the lines in France, in order that more men may go info tthe front line trewhes. j STAGE TURNS OVER ARB IW III RJVER . Duchesne-Prov- o Stage Turns .Over Intp Provo RiverBut No One Was Drowned Saturday afternoon, about 6 o'clock as the Duchesne-Prov- o auto stage was coming down Provo canyon on the ( North Fork dugway about 12 miles from Provo, the front spring of the car broke, with the result that the car ran over the edge of the road and tumbled about twelve feet into the river turning over completely in the descent Henry Bottom, who was driving, and a passenger, Mrs. Mabel 'Baysing-er- ; both of Duchesne, remained In the car which landed in about three feet of water right side up. The occu-pants got out with their effects and came down in a car which was com-ing towards iProvo a short distance behind the stage. They went to the Hotel Lamar where it was found that Mrs. Baysinger had received alight bruises on her limbs, and Mr. Bottom had escaped with even less injury. About 8 o'clock In the evening a report came to Sheriff Henry East that some people had been drowned in the river and he Immediately went to the canyon on an Investigating trip. There he found a large num-ber of campers from W'ildwood and other places in the canyon searching for the bodies below the place of the accident, and it was several hours be-fore the sheriff could be located by phone messages sent to the canyon (after it was learned that Mr. liottom and Mrs. 'Baysinger were in Provo) and informed that no one was drown-ed. The car In the river and a handker-chief on the bank led to the supposi-tion that the passengers had been drowned and caused the call to be sent to the sheriff and the search by people in the canyon. Picking Pins crom Throat The swiftness nnu' etise with which a doctor enn remove a bone, a iin or other object from the windpipe, esopf. ogus or even hmg Is often astonishing. This is when ho uses one of the tubes that enable him to look right down Into the organ, see the foreign ohloct Illuminated by an electric lamp and in-sert a dellcnie forceps with which to seize it and draw it out. Without the nse of an endoscope there la much dan-ger of injuring the tissues by blind feeling for the offending object. U. S. RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION First. Wherever street or road con-struction and other public improve-ments are contemplated by the auth-orities In any state, county, district or municipality, for which a portion of the cost in an amount exceeding five hundred dollars ($.'00.oi) Is to be charged against any railroad un-der Federal control, the authorities are requested to take the matter up with the Federal management of the road directly interested and secure the coiicirreiiee ;f the Railroad it) advance. K" oi'.d. In tii1' etit this is tint' done, the Director General will re-serve the right to decide whether or not he will participate In the pay-ment. Third. It Is not the attitude of the Director General to oppose construc-tion of this character which is meri-torious and essential. The Director General feels, however, that In the present stress as to the essential la-bor and material supply all work of this kind which can be postponed without Injury should not be under-taken, aiel the railroad should nut be expected to partieipa'" In the pav-iien- t unless the expenditure is s iM W. G. Me IMK), Director General of T'af'-- o ' : |