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Show H V. 8. CIVIL 8ERVICI2 , ; EXAMINATIONS H- . ft & Tho United States Civil Sorvlco Hf iffe- Commission announces tho examlna- Hj H'. lon of Forest and Field Clerk, to 1- ike held at an early date. Application blanks and further information may ! obtained from the local secretary, .Heard of Civil Service Examiners, at H1CF :4be post office in this city. HHK J. M. ZUNDELL, H?! c Local Secretary. i ,f Hftf I CLASSIFIED El J ADVERTISING Bmv & H OTOR TItADK 200 acre farm part- Hiflk ' 'Qy watered, will take Logan property HtK' ,ilB exchange and balance on easy HHfv Merms. Can be farmed this spring. KbWv VWrly well Improved and Is a real HflK argaln to the right party. Inquire HSF "W. H. McMahin. n7 MONEY TO LOAN One hundred BRf.' titty thousand dollars on farm HRt aad city property. H. A, Pederton C - O. tf Hwrc tmoR BALK Team ol brown mares Hlf) ? jean old, well matched, weight H'j '1300 pounds. Inquire at this office. JJ:" 1-10 H) IlED CROSS SEWING MADE EASY Hftf, .'Second hand aewlng machines for BB1 Hoale,'3 and up, 61 West First South. M; IM lPbone S9--W. tf Vt: iFORRENT 6-room modern house H' " rtdose In. Call 622-J-2. tf. Hh' tLOST A. skid chain for a Ford H, .j car, between Paradise and Logan. mt & I Vindor please notify R. D. Ollno. Hi ft I XPhone 469-W. tf ;1 ! S Jonathan apples for sale. Call J -3is- Adr. tf Mi ft J ; ft- S 'LOST Chock book with monoy K I A -and A. C. Student Dody ticket In Bk fyi rSbamhart Christiansen Store. Find- M; 5' 8 r can return sanio to Logan Repub- Hi L J 'ilean. Adr. tf t ) I For Sale 25 acres first class land n ft 'J -at Lewlston, fair Improvements. O. E. H'tfJ 'Gregory. Adr. tf. 4'f H'r Iftl FOR SALE 14 hoad of good j I'S 'liorses, 2 cows, small pigs, 140 'acres H1 1 of dry farm at Downey, Idaho; 80 'fS' .acres west of Preston; 47 acres of M jX Jbeet and grain land at Lewlston; and 1 ,d senoral farm Implements. Inquire of Hf 11. O. Hatch, Lewlston, Utah. Phone A i 26-J-l. 2-5 If1 Mm I DR. E. J. MERRILL , fcs I! OSTEOPATH HI ; I 127 East Third r.rth B fl Phono SiV Hwl Treatment -By Appointment ! Sacred Reveries One of tho most sacred things In life is the little band of gold which signifies marriage. To the bride It Is the key to all happiness In tho world her constant con-stant companion through life. It stands an over present reminder of beautiful and sacred pledges loro, devotion, affection, companionship, loyalty, honor, faith, trust. According to a very pretty ancient an-cient custom, which Is almost universally uni-versally respected to our present day this symbol of oxalted Ideals must never bo removed from tho finger, lost pledges be broken. Only after life's tide has ebbed away, the ring, for tho first time, Is tenderly romoved passing to the second generation, sacred for Its associations, as-sociations, cherished for its memories. mem-ories. Purchased but onco In a llfo time, worn "continuously frtfm altar to gravo, emblematic of tho Creator's NOTICE Notice Is here by given that the annual stockholders meeting of the Utah-Idaho Hospital will be held on Tuesday, the 20 th day of January, 1918 at 2 p. m. at the hospital building build-ing for the purpos(T"xf transacting such business as may properly como before the meeting. ANTHON ANDERSON, President ' JOHN H. KEMP, Secretary. Adr. 1-29 Chocolate Flavor Leads Them All Hare you erer watched what people order at a soda fountain? It you have you've probably seen what a farorlte chocolate Is. Louis K. Liggett, Lig-gett, tho groat drug storo man, has written an article in the American Magazlno in which he says: "Similarly, we know what kind of candy people prefer, how much more popular Is chocolate with nuts in It than ordinary caramels, and all such things as that, because we make a big effort to find out. We know that chocolate sirup Is the flavor most sought at the soda fountain; but we go farther and aim to know exactly what particular kind of chocolate great commandment love, attached with more sentiment than all other possessions of life combined, this ring deserves careful, thoughtful consideration. Tho seamless wedding ring, made from gold so thoroughly wrought as to make the metal resist wear, will AMERICAN SUPREMACY' save the disappointment in after years of being obliged to remove the ring for repairs. This type of ring has no soldered Joint to discolor or break. The gold so treated saves the necessity of additional ad-ditional metal being added .to build up a worn out ring. The wedding ring once altered Is not the original ring select yours so that 'old age can reflect with unstinted un-stinted satisfaction. Tho following jewelers can supply you with diamonds: S. E. Needham Jewclery Co. Cardon's Jewelery Co. Wondelboo Jewclery Co. flavor will give the most general satisfaction. sat-isfaction. - "There Is no deep psychology about tho Idea of finding out what people like. It is Just plain common sense. Yet it is a comparative novelty. Tho tendency has been to proceed along lines of haphazard guesswork. If I were conducting a newspaper, or a magazine, or motion picture theater, or any kind of store, I should spare no reasonable expense to ascertain Just what my customers thought of the stuff I was offcrlug, which things they liked best, I would aim to know, not only in a general way but with precision. Think, for example, what an advantage an editor has over his competitors it he knows exactly ex-actly what his readers like, what percentage care for a certain kind of news, or a certain department In the paper, and his competitor Is merely guessing at it." S11KB1111iVMbW-'" " BllBw JsSsTsSSSSSSSSSSHBk. BSSBSIk Bill TVWBllllllllllllllllllllllllllK:VlJt9PlnBBllllllBli2Bllllr IBiABlllllHBllllllllllllllllllKP"BlV HbiiiiHsbiiiiiiiiiiiiiHbII:' 'm H" IImWPJIHj sH !JbiH II UsvrO Vm 9i vk' sHv BM'SJSJBJRzr"1 ?U "- t g YrBBfcSBlaBBBM HnVnt i.HslllllH sH ' Am r- J l vs J J i BllllllllllllBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl BBBh 'A WBBBBeWx S V 3 $'l',Ytl lBBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSl HtmHsstmIiiB 'i5 H' H HMHIPi'jf wk Uk C&'"H ssl"'isiBBiBnsiH'' 'J-uUwabiI'Jbiiiiiib ifsiiB sB irSlsBiiiSHBliMtkiBiiiiim' "' 'sH BlllllH Jl rBOBHBBBBBsBSBBBlSlllllBlK'jr-' ' i ?5 T JSllllllllllllllllllllV BlllllH siM fdhBMMsMBBa.4'.s.'gyy? gyssssssssssssV.. -? b ' H HfHHHHIilBHBiiHK" w H t The Vengeance and the Woman, Wed. & Thursi At The Lyric Theatre No Internal medicine will euro eczema. Only by tho application of-CRANOLENE, the great external ex-ternal remedy, can the eczema mlcrobo be destroyed. Prove this statement for yourself at our exponse. Write for free test treatment; address Mills Chomlcal Co., Dopt. D., Olrard, Kas. "Sleeps Like a Plow Boy" "I suffered for 20 years with eczoina In its worst form. .Affected .Af-fected all over the body. CRAN-OLENE CRAN-OLENE left me as fine as white silk, and I sleep like a plow boy." J. McCracken, Johnson City, Tcnn. (Written two yoars after using CRANOLENE.) At all drug stores, 25c, ,$1 and 12.50. For sale by RITER DROS DRUG CO. J Money roturned It not satisfied The Cause Of Disease The Chiropractor adjusts the cause of disease and lets nature cure. It makes no difference what part of . the human organism is affected, lack of nerve function is causing the condition, and thew JL lat;k of proper nerve nourishment is brought about r '. by an impinged condition of the nerves at one or another or several" of the vertebrae. No ''dope" is f going to put new life into these nerves; it may deaden pain temporarily, causing a relieved condition con-dition for a time, but just so long as the pressure exists on the nerves radiating from the spine, just so long will there be trouble. .Take a hose and turn on the water and the flow is all right until . you put a pressure on it, and it then slacks up or stops altogether, according to the pressure. So it is with the nerves. For a long time Chiropractic, as is every new thought, was looked upon with skepticism, doubt, and as a humbug. Today, those who investigate find that it is the only science of healing giving, direct and positive results. Statistics show that; results are obtained in about ninety per cent of cases. And what is more, practically all of the, cases the Chiropractor gets are chronic cases of people who found they could not get well from I other methods, and tried Chiropractic as a last' 1 resort. , ; I G. B. ROSE, D. C. Ph. C. House Calls by Appointment Thatcher Bldg. Suits 8-9-10-11 Phone 138 J Did You Ever Stop to Think How Much You Owe to ; ? 1 Advertising? f Advertise In The Logan Republican It pays because be-cause it reaches the people. ' One hundred million people owe tho most of their comforts, their luxuries, luxur-ies, their degree of prosperity, and many ot them even their lives to advertising, and yet few of us even stop to think of It except as a necessary nec-essary evil. When we rise In the morning we put on an advertised stocking that saves us hours of weary labor. We touch a match to an advertised gas stove and save another half hour. We put on an advertised toaster and save our tempers and our digestion. We dress in advertised clothes (advertised (ad-vertised by the maker or the seller), and from then until tho time wo go to sleep again on an advertised bed, we are dealing with and living in touch with publicity throughout the livelong day. We use it as our guarantee of quality or price, or good faith on the part of the seller. We act on it with full faith and wo accopt It im- plicitly at all times. We sometimes I doubt the absolute veracity of what it claims, but we never doubt tho i dead certainty of the man who signs . ) his name to It, either to make good, j what he claims or cheerfully to give ' us back our cash. ' They say this Is a day when no man can succeed without advertising ( but It Is even more than that. It Is ! a day when no family can succeed without reading the advertising. C If most people were as impervious v to advertising as they think they are,' x- they would be twenty-five years be- ) hind the times in everything they , do. 1 The time has come when advertls- ' ing has got to be treated as news, i read as news and acted upon aa ' news. " j Tho people who do not read ad- ' vertlsLng, like the people who do ' not uso advertising are getting far- ' ther and farther behind in the race ' every year. |