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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH Speak to Women HEW CHINESE OVERTHROW OF RADICALS CANTONESE ARMY ONE MOVE CONTEMPLATED IN Dwn Con- a thousand deaths with backache and paina In my limbi until I began taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I highly recommend this medicine for any young mothe'-to-bI know the Favorite Prescription will give relief when others have failed. Mrs. Ivan 8. Larsen, e. forces are contained In recent patches from Shanghai and elsewhere reaching Washington. The reports have to do, to a large extent, with unconfirmed rumors in Shanghai as to intentions of various Chinese'" generals. They present the 734 23rd SL All dealers. s Flat-bus- l)N-D- FRFB HOMES AND FARMS TOR MEMBERS, Jf you desfie A HOME writ for Fro Literature We OWN th LAND WORLD WELFARE UNION. Johnstown FlorMa Throat Kai-She- tickle, sore throat, o huskiness and similar troubles quickly relieved with .Panama Canal Under "Guard" Panama Defense units have taken up positions at strategic points along the canal to prevent the landing of the enemy, and the air patrol has sighted the first vessels of the attacking" war battle fleet. Thus the game by United States war forces will soon be under way. Among the preparations taken by the defenders" Is the camouflaging of all positions so as to interfere with airplane observations. The military attaches of France, Spain and Italy arrived here from Washington especially to observe the war game between the Panama defenders and the attacking battle fleet. . German-U- . Ladens Foresight Whats the matter, father? smile. Drink Water to Help Wash Out Kidney Poison S. If Your United States, Interrupted since the World war, Is to be restored by the By ELMO SCOTT WATSON UK dog may be our most faithful friend, but even he can never illspliice In the nffeetion of mankind that noblest of ull animals, the horse. About every so often some prophet arises to declare gloomily that the motor uge Is about to mark the passing for all time of faithful Old .Dobbin. Hut strnngely enough Old Dobbin refuses to he doomed. He keeps right on plodding along as he has for centuries, proving himself lndispcnsuble In a host of ways and refusing to allow any contraption by its popping, smoking niutticylln-deresalvos to frighten him away from Ids place hosldo man In getting the worlds woik done. The horse Is not losing ground to the gasoline engine, lie Is more than holding Ids own. No less an authority than Wayne Dinsmore, secretary of the Ilorse Association of America, pointed out at the annual meeting of that organization that at the lose of isc.ti there lud been four outstanding accomplishments of the year as regards the horse. These were an Increase In breeding of horses and mules In those states having the best type of foundation stock, an Improvement In the attitude of city users toward vehicles, a mark imI improvement in the position of farmers toward the use of horses and mules and a rapid gain In the numbers of horses for polo, general Marengo, the white horse which Napoleon rode at the battle of Waterloo, and Copenhagen, the handsome chestnut steed which bore upon Its back on that momentous day the victor, duke of d mnn-mnd- Wellington d exhibition nnd commercial purposes. Is the opinion of another expert J. O. Williams, chief horse hushandrynmn for the United States Department of Agriculture. He says: "Many signs Indicate that the horse as an Institution Is no longer on the down grade In tills country The best one of these signs is the growing u- -e of the horse for riding not riding to get somewhere, us in former times, hip for sheer pleasure and esthetic and physical henetlt. Five years ago an estimate of 100,000 horses maintained m this country for pleasure riding nlonc would have been a liberal one. At present it Is conservative to say that 500,000 horses are kept solely for that purpose. And the number is increasing raivld-!- y with the result that the breeding of good horses has been stimulated. In fact a serious shortage of horses probably Impends. In n year or two horses imty he riding a boom as striking us the recession which for a time seemed almost to threaten the continued existence of trained horses on a large scale in this country." Quite aside from the economic factors which might save Old Dobbin from extinction, there is the matter of sentiment which undoubtedly will stave off Impending doom for many, many years. In fact, man's sentimental attachment for his horse has alwnys been second only to his attachment for members of his family or some other human being and no other animal, with the possible exception of the dog, can claim such a strong bond of affection. To the white man, the custom among many Indian tribes of slaying a dead warriors favorite horse on ids fcrave, may have seemed a hit queer. Yet the following news story which went out over the wires only last December indicates that red man and white are brothers under the skin where a horse Is concerned : riding, Here The Palle. Ore The strong friendship of a man for his horse, developed through r score of years In a lonely homestenJ In the Mosler hills, has ended In death for P. J. Fredertckson and Polly, year-old hts twenty-tw- o companion. Fredertckson died first, and his Inst request was that four of his as posneighbors dispatch Polly as humanely sible He did not want the animal to fall Into lesa The of hands than four rifles hi. reports klrd'y echoed through the Mcsler hills Friday and ksul been son's fulfilled lost Accorfr- wilt, Frederick Instrument, though glori- America, too, has Its roll of honor of horses who have played a distinguished part In making history. Although history has not preserved the name of the "steed flying fearless nnd fleet" one night some hundred nnd fifty years ago, no one ever thinks of Fsul Revere without thinking of the horse which bore him when "the fate of a nation was riding that night." Then there was the- - horse hero of another famous ride. Remember: e n God's humbler meaner clay, should shure the glory of that ous day." , c&pr. xz'o&rfis ,'Ccpmiic&uJ , D.FSarry lng to the ranchers w request, Fredertckson colthood. The man's said, was to feed 'partner." their neighbor'! had raised the animal from last act before he died, they and bed down hla equine ho carried out Out In Hawaii near an army post a veteran of more than thirty years of active service Is browsing in u pleasant pasture, secure perhaps hi the knowledge that the pence and comfort due an old soldier Is to be his until his death. Ills name Is "Whiskers" and he was Just a troop horse In Unde Sam's cavalty, but he Is typical of a long list of these faithful mounts for whom the troopers themselves linve decreed a peaceful old age and for whom the troopers are willing to dig deep In their pockets to assure It. Hut lest yon think that It Is only the soldier who thus rewards the comrade of his battle days, read Ibis Item which appeared In the newspapers the other day: four-foote- Pueblo Colo d A "preen press" pension hee been 13 horses which have drawn laundry heie for ninny year's They were retired In wagons favor of motorized equipment The owners decided the steeds had served tneir time In the harness and placed them In a laige pasture. swardtd to Go down Into Kentucky and visit some of the farms in the Him Grass country, famous for Its thoroughbreds, where you can see the ease and luxury to which some of the kings and queetis of the turf have been retired when their racing days were over. Visit Faraway farm lu Fayette county, owned by Elizabeth Dningertleld, and see the royal state In which Man O War, called by experts the greatest race home of all time, lives. Or visit the great Hamburg Place farm on the Winchester pike near Lexington the property of John E. Madden, where they will show yon The nesting Place of Celebrities," where lies Nancy Hanks, 2:04 worlds chnmplon trotter fiom 1S02 to lSOt; Major Delniur, Hamburg Helle, There also He the 2:01, and Silicon. thoroughbreds Ida Pickwick, known as the "Queen of the West; Ogden, Plaudit, Star Shoot, for five consecutive years the running world's leading sire; the "lllnck Whirlwind Imp. credited with having won CO races, thus earning the title "Queen of the East," and Lady Sterling, famous as the dam of Sir Barton and Sir Martin. Thus does mau honor and cherish his friend, the horse, even In death. In fact the honor roll of horses who deserve to be remembered by nmn Is a long one and many of them are world famous. There was Bucephalus, the famons charger and companion of the great Alexander, who conquered the world Rtid then alghei far aiore worlds to conquer. There was Hurrah' Hurrah for Sheridan! Hurrah' Hurrah for horse and man! And when their statue are placed on high. Under the dome of the Union sky. The American soldiers Temple of Fame, There, wtth the glorious general's name, Be It said, In letters both hold and bright; "Hera la the steed that saved the day By canytng Sheridan Into the tight, , From Winchester twenty mllea away!" opening of thq new Emden-Azore- s cable, which connects with the Azores-NeYork line. An exchange of greetings between President Coolldge and President Von Hihdenburg will mark the formal ojtetffug of the new line for commercial use, which Is scheduled for 5 p. m. Later messages will be exchanged between General Managers Kent Cooper of the Associated Pres3 and Mantler of the Wolff bureau of Berlin. Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers You, Begin Taking Salts When your kidneys hurt and your back feel3 sore dont get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs Ja excite the kidneys . and Irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys- cl e tin like you keep yopr bowels clccjn,- by flashing' them with a - mHd, harmless salts which helps to remove the bodys waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it SOD. grains- - of acid and waste, sov we can readily understand the vital iinpor- -' tance of keeping the kidneys active. . Drink lots of good water you cant . drink too much ; also get from any pharmacist nbcut four ounces ofJad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the add of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years: to help clean, and stimulate clogged kidneys; also, to neutralize the acids in the system so they are nb longer a source of Irritation, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts Is inexpensive, cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent llthla-wate- r drink, which everyone should take now and then to help keep their kidneys clean and active. Try. this : also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you, will wonder' wliat became fit your kidney trouble, aiYt. backache. jirl-fio- Lltte Hops for Colton Road Bill In the pressure of recWasliington ognition, Representative Colton had no opportunity to call up- - tha Oddie-Col-toroad bill, which would permit the federal government to advance the full cost of interstate highways, where the state are unable to contribute towaid the cost of projects running through n sparselysettleil areas. Failure to get action will probably put the bill over to the next congress. Tonopah Afire Over Gold Find Tonopah, Nev. Nearly 100 automobiles stood- - ready here for a stampede to a new district yielding what- - prospectors said was the richest, quartz ever seen in southern Nevedat Two boys arrived here with two sacks filled with the quartz. Assays of the ore made gave rotuinte of $78,000 a ton . . g the poets words were not Colton-OddiRoad Bill Is Considered Unfortunately one American out If doubtful It Is for rroplietlc Washington Representative Colton of ten can tell you the name of Sheridan's mount was assured by the speaker that he on that historic day In October, 1SC4. (Inciwill be recognized to call up for condentally, the writer of this article had to senrch sideration in the house the Oddie-Col-to- a through half a dozen volumes before discovering highway bill passed by the senate It.) The steed as black as the steeds of night authorzing the federal government to bore the name of Rlen.l. lie had been presented to advance up to the full cost certain imSheridan by Capfhln Cnnq hell of the Second portant interstate highways where the Michigan cavalry, had carried the general through states are unable to meet their propornearly all the battles from the Rapldan to Peters- tionate share of the cost as established I burg and had several times con vvonnded. He was by the federal highway act. The bill a powerful animal, so nimble of foot that It was is designed to hasten the completion said he could walk five miles an hour. Not only of Important highways in sparsely has Rtenzl's name been forgotten, hut after he settled sections of the west and would died he was sadly neglected. The stuffed body of particularly aid Colorado, Arizona and the hlnek charger several years ago vns found Nevada. ahandoned in a shed at Governor's Island, New America Behind in Aviation , York. In a rather delapldated condition, hut It has since been restored nnd. hearing the original saddle Chicago The thing about America and bridle which RIen1 wore thnt historic day. It that particularly impresses Prince Wilnow stands In the National museum In Wash- liam of Sweden, he said Monday upon ington. arriving from Detroit, on his middle-westerA Civil war charger that Is even more famous tour, is the tardy developthan Rlcnzl was General Lee's Traveler, the ment of commercial aviation, as comstocky little gray which bore Its master safely pared with European air progress. The through nil the bloody conflict from 1(72 to the long Jumps between cities on the end of the war and then, became his dally com- American continent would naturally panion until death fin Ally claimed the great seem to make time saving here more leader. At his masters funeral the horse was important than in Europe, Prince WilOver there we feel as safe placed close to the hearse and It Is said that when liam said. the coffin was carried out from the church climbing into our airplane as boardipg Traveler put his nose on It and whinnied Inquir- a train. he added, and the percentingly. Traveler survived General Lee two years. age of accidents is vertually the same. HU skeleton Is now preserved In lAxlngton, Va. Kanof museum the of In the Dyehe University sas Is preserved the mounted skin of another fa- Ruthenberg Bolshevik Comrades Say mous horse. He is Comanche, the ola.vhnnk sorrel Chicago Comrade Ruthenberg wan ridden by Capt. Miles Keogh In the fatal battle a bolshevik." Thus a statement from of the Little Big Horn, where General Custers the workers (communist) party headSeventh cavalry was nearly wiped out by the quarters characterized their leader Sioux and Cheyennes. Comanche, bleeding from Charles E. Ruthenberg, executive sec seven wounds and barely able to stagger about, retary of the party, who died of periwas the only living thing found on that awful tonitis. The statement recited his con field a few days after the bnttie when General nection with the founding of the com Terrys relief column approached. He was ten- munist party, succeeded by the work derly enred for and wherever the Seventh cavalry ers party of America, after his laft went thereafter Comunebe went with It, but no wing radicalism led h!m4o break with man ever sat on his back again. Comanche died the socialist party. In which he was at a ripe old age while the regiment was stationed a leader of the antiwar movement ol 1917. at Fort Riley. Regret- ting those cigars you threw, away New Years? "A little, he confessed. v Youll find them on the top shelf of the linen closet, said mother with a y Cables Resumed Emden, Germany Direct cable communication between Germany and the GjrZX4Z- TZ&lOZ'G' OjU) 2L4ZD7' h AC.FNT8 WANTED to sol! SS U WAMIINU EOWDER.EfljU tain tlfi rtJ'lv. Free Earn plea. Write HLBLEoS MFvJ, CO.' ft. Marks Place. New York City. Wu-Pel-F- u army-nav- Tablets or liquid. WANTED EOTS IN BROOKI.I N. KV OKK. Owner. contract hol1i-reeiul full particulars. GBO. E. JANTZER. 13: Avenue. Brooklyn, New York. possibiffty, however, of a new military alliance between disaffected commanders of the defeated army of Sun Cliuah-Kang- , the forces of Marshal in Honan province and the Cantonese war lord, (Jhung in opposition to tlm northern group headed by Chaug-TsLin, Manchurian dictator, ind vvliic! Includes Chang Tsun-Chanwhose troops have now taken over the Shanghai area. -- lib. Buffered Coalition Would Include Southern tingents Against the Manchurian dis- horse-draw- w I took: disturbances. a bottle of Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription and In It I found so much reller:that I took another bottle and after that I had me t. further trouble. "After I married j Indications that the Washington Chinese political pot is bubbling with activity and may come to a boil in a Jew alignment of the rival military four-foote- It teems as though been bothered and during my ex pectant period t of fa Hall functional C Eo.uine Herpes of War and Peace Have Their ' Ogden, Utah I had always e One on Mother "Do go to sleep, iHirothy, urgi her mother, who wanted to read. Re member, theies an angel watchim over you. Oh, mother, nren't you conceited ! Boston Transcript DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN Taka Tablets Without Fear If Yo See the ty "Bayer Cross." Warning ! Unless you see the name "Bayer on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bajer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 2G years. Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous. AJv n No Doubt About It Frances Are you sure he love you, and you alone?" Gladys "0 yes: more then than at any otbe time." Sure Relief 6 I Eell-an- s Hot water Sure Relief M SUL"' f w. N. U-- , Salt Lake City, No. 10-19- 27. |