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SUiNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 15. 1920. THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER 7 ' " I
I CttfCSaAp.: ig
I ABSOLUTE TEAMWORK BE- ra XJj
Itween YOUR DOCTOR AND fC ufc-O
DRUGGIST WIN 7 T A vV"
(When your doctor write a pre- ! l l
scnptlon It means that his ' J L.
knowledge has prompted him to B., M
prescribe certain drugs In cer- Sk"M
lain definite proportions A drug
gist who follows his orders to q
the minutest detail Is the one JflP mj
who helps him vln. That's wh Jf, V,
we leave all tlie diagnosis and jmf
prescription to the doctor. Then uSu.
we follow his orders EXACTLY
"Always Ready" Home Remedies
Below is a partial list of the big line of home remedies we
carry . They are all of a handy " character and things
which every home should have.
11 3 safe to buy a11 home
IP fi P f I remedies at Culley's.
j If U 9 CASTOR OIL 25c
' At Half Price
BORIC ACID 10c
I gOuy eggs now and pre CPGOM SALTS . 10c
serve them with the aid of x
I water glass and then when CREAM TARTAR 10c
prices go up you still have puiiid 10c
fresh eggs ct the old low SULPHUR iuc
cost Our water glass ic ROCHELLE SALT 10c
an exceptionally good qual- SPIRIT CAMPHOR ... 25c
ity, very clean, simple and
easy to use and will thor ESS PEPPERMINT .... 25c
lip oughly preserve eggs for CAMPHORATED OIL ... 25c
j J",U.T,,B 35C SPIRIT NITRE 25
I mmm r IODINE 15c
Jl The Home Manicure Outtfl
So small and so dainty are f n W" I j
many of the manicure arti- vllllCy S 1111115
No few words adequately
fl Cles WC GCll that a really COm- describe our ouper-abillty
j in developing and printing
M plete Outfit COUld be put into Brmg this work to us and
yS a lady's handbag or in a coat I a big cummer consign-
I I merit cf new model bath
I pocket Scissors, files, CUti- 1 mg caps. Prettier than
j I the old ones, and the new-
I cle knives, clippers, nail Pes; styles out.
rou?c( polishes, buffers, 25c to $1.5l
i ill Coda Phosphate maKco a j
brushes, CiiamOZS, creams pleasing, fizzy drink anrl I
, keips down the heat of M Q
you can get them all at Cul- the blood. nr I I
I lev's Pcr box ... i DC I
i 8 "ry our t0llct cream I 0
Complete manicure outfits in keeps the skin In perfect!
I attract,, , corners, if you gSST Cft"
j wish them. Cream OVfV H a
PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS
2479 Wash.ngton Avenue Ogden
Road Celebration
I Set for Wednesday
I
Joint Committee on Arrangements Prepares Elaborate Pro
gram for Event to Signalize Completion of Ogden
Salt Lake Concrete Highway
injn The biggest Joint celebration In the
BH history of Weber. Salt Lake and Davis
jrjjJ counties will be held at Lagoon. Aug-
HH ust IS, when tho completion of the
concrete highway between Salt Lake
ggSSH and Ogden will be duly observed, If
the Joint committee on arrangements
LH is successful.
D One of the lending features of tho
Hk. celebration will ! the double parade,
which will leave Ogden and Salt Lake
respectively at 1 o'clock sharp, meet-j
Ksjj cn ri bon will marl; the completed
Junction of the road
Or Former Governor William Spry, un-
Wrfk der whom the work war started, and,
L?M Governor Simon Bamberger. In whose,
Hfl administration It in being completed j
E5fl will serve the ribbon, officially open-;
flfcjM lug the 1.. 1: il. "
Htretch of concrete highway between
the Mississippi river and the Pacific
S,AW ? BIAY0RS TO TAKT PAlEtT.
Jm Mayor Frank Francis of Ogden and
. Mayor Neslln of Salt Lake have both
JB been requested to take part in the cele-
Efl ; brntlon and to declaro next Wednes-
; day a half holiday In order that every-
J . one in the three counties may be free
to participate in the gala celebration.
The Lagoon resoit will be the con-;
IXa Ur r ""' I' sli. i-.i -h. following
I P. F. E. CHIEF
i OGDEN VISITOR
William C. Phillips Says Rail
roads Have Trouble Handl
ing Fruit Shipments
William C. rhilllps. general man
fl nger of the ice plant department of
the Pacific Fruit Express compan
I with headquarters at San Irancisco
I departed from Ogden yesterday for
I points in the cast on business for his
I concern.
I While In Ogden Mr. rhilllps elated
I that his company had almost doubled
business of last season and that Iho
fruit crop in California and oth r coast
points Is so heavy this year that the
railroads are having a difficult time to
handle the shipments. In t'gden alone
more than 0 cars of ice are used daily
for n fiiseratlng fruit cars en route
Fur th- part ten days more than
j Look for the Pioneer Paint and
Mfgf. Co. ac on Page 2.
and Ogden motorists meet at the glv
! en point A triumphal gateway has
j been erected In honor of the occasion.
ithrouiTh which the paraders will pass
into the grounds.
Addresses by members of the pion
eers who came to L'tah in 1848. to
gether with addreadea by Governor
nibi rper. ex-Governor Spry. James
j Uevlne of Ogden uic.l other speakers.
Will be made nt the LugOOO race track.
Two survivors, who Helped blaze the
trail In the days of tho Indian, will
be featured on the program
RACE ON CAY1 M S.
It Is expected that gruulsons of
some of tho famous puny express
riders will probably be pitted against
one another in races on western cav
usos, and more than a scoi f of 1'tali
Indian's will take part In the sport
program
Automobile races and motorcycle
races will also be featured. It Is said
Motor riders v-tll be on hand to thrill
tho fans, one of the events to bo a
handicap affair in which an ox team
Will travel one mile wnile a motor
rider attempts to travel :'5 miles. Other
Interesting events for the sport card
are being completed. Officials of the
Weber club of Ogden, city and county
officials and hundreds of Ogdeniles
are expected to Join in the celebration
which will officially open the Ogden
Salt Lake hlcha
,350 cars of fruit has been arriving
from cunsi points en route eaat
Vast Improvements are being plan
ned by the Pacific Fruit Express com
jpany for several cities In their terri
tory according to Mr. Phillips the de
i " '" I"' reli usi .1 to the pub'lc within
the next few weeks.
B. P. R. to Get 30
More Motorcycles
Thirty motorcycles for uic In road
work in Utah, Idaho and Nevada b
th u. s. bureau of public roads, have
arrive. 1 in Ogden from the east and
Will bi- put Into immediate use ac
coidlng to 13. J. Finch, district 'engi
neer. '
j Tho weekly meeting of the state
rr.ud commission scheduled for Salt
Uiko next Tuesday will be attended
bj Mr Pinch The Ogden canyon pav
Ir g work, which was recently let to
the Moran Paving company, will bo
discussed. It is said This "work. It is j
stated, will start about September 6
and will be rushed to completion, the
contract calling for the work to be
(completed within COO working days.
oo
FARMERS:
I he Holley Milling Co. pays
highest prices for wheat and
give best flour on grist, see us
before you trade. 1430 Wash
ington Ave., Ogden or River
dale. 4365
'SCOUTS Ell
TRIPJTO PM
I Tour of Yellowstone Without
Accident; Camp in South
Fork Planned
After spending two weeks In Yel
lowstone national park. Ogden Hoy
Scouts returned to nKiion last Friday
Mated over their trip, the experience
and the wonder working of nature, as
shown in the park s geysers and scenic
formatlonr Lnterir.g the western en
trance of the park on July 20 the
boys, in company with adults, hiked
more than Ijo miles, visiting all of
tho principal places of Interest and
camping over nlsht at tho end of each
day's hike Thirty-five miles of the
distance was made on train.
o ILLNFW
There was no illness to mar the trip,
the part of hi scouts and officials
muking the tour without accident The
giant two-ton truck which carried the
equipment tor the trip returned to
Ogden yesterday encountering little
difficulty uijc to Lad road conditions
In Id'iliu. The truck was in charge
ut David Steele. Nine scouts made
frc trip with the truck, together with
:S. Telford, driver, nntl Mr and Mrs.
Frank Baer, cooks.
TAKI, MOVIES.
Photographer George Oushon took
more than 4,oo0 leet of movie film of
the trip, all ot wnich will be shown
at a local theatre in the n-;ai future.
The plans for tho outing of the
sctuts pluniicd for South Fork Will
Ut worked out and It Is probable that
ti c outing will take place during the
o-mhig wtek and the following week,
the sout board will meet Monday to
niaae final plans for the outing,
which vill feature athletics, scout
work, hiking and other phases of
scouting, 'len army tents havo been
purchased for use at tho summer
ci mp
rl liSOWLL OF HIKERS.
The following scouts made tho trip
to Yellowstone:
Troop 16 Clifford Hupeaker, Wil
liam T. liurton. Harold Farley. Heber
Jacobs. Phillip King. PediqO Voll,
Vera Arbon, xteimen Mclirlde. Ralph
Wheelwright, Lisle Stewart, Lawrence
Praniweli, tiilbcit Heck, Spencer lien
r.ett, Kuion sievenson. Klgby Jacobs,
Kobert Burton. Charles Taylor
Troop 3 Robert Brunzeli, Blwood
Llpplncott, Lewis Miller, J M . Boyd.
Miiton Kieines, Jack .May, George
Uuddurd, Charles Muiphy, Marcus
Malison.
Troop 13 Wallace Grccnwell,
George Booth. Gene Grecnwell.
Tiuop 4 Franklin OSgOOd.
Troup 39 tSall Lakc Donald
Gates.
Tioop IS Clyde Barton.
Troop 18 (.b'ait Lvike) Kenneth
l L rning.
1'iuujj 21 Wlllaid Scowcroft and
L la. cute Clarke.
lioup 3 Ren Wright.
Troop 89 Ailyn Jaciv&un. Bert Up
ton, George James, John James, Leon
ard bleiinlc. Casper Woods Elton
Hussey, Carman Anderson, Leroy Wll-Ic-tt.
Alfred Adams, John Hussey, Al
len Hampton, Lugene Stone, Haiold
Cronipton, Charles Crompton. Ken
neth Canfleld, Clifton Canlleld, Theo
ioie Banfleld, l-'loyd Pace, Kay Ad
ams, Cornelius Lee, Leuler Kuse, Al
ton Wansgard, uwen Wausgurd, Glen I
Keeder, Arthur Griffith, Thomas
V barton. Harris Kidgcs. Buster Good
liiunson, Eddie urcm, Sherman est.
Charles Stevenson, Harold Carlson.
Oi 1 1C1 Its. t).N 1KIP.
Tho following scuut officials and associate-
members also made the trip:
tuout Executive G. A. Goatcs, Dr.
Charles G. Plummer, David F. Steele,
Wiliord O. Kidges. T. B, Wheel
wright, Joseph Evans. Ben oppman,
George VV Goshen, George Bergstrom,
Liclbeit Foulger, Herman Koldewyn,
l.'uii Winn. Frank Baer. Mary Baer.
S Telford. . an Wyke, na.ionul park
servil , official Associated Press re
porter; Horace B. Albright, superin
tendent of park, Mrs. Theroii Was30n,
park geologist, and A Lindsay, as-
slstant superintendent.
i,VHaT IS LIFE WITHOUT
i Hispira? ij
Were you ever hungrj- for news?
Not special news of your own par
liCular loved ones, your own soldier
boy. your own home folk, but Just
IEWS, tho world's newo? It's an
,:v. ful hunger.
Captains of Industrv somelimes
take a vacation from their strenu
ous business life by going off on
their private yachts or to their hunt
ing lodges in the Canadian wilds
ami di liberate! forgetting about the
world, while leaving the world in Ig
norance of their whereabouts. That,
naturally, is t very good kind of
i a 1 1 ion for a captain of industry
But the rest of us, simple, com
mou mortals are more depeudent up
on new than we often realize. Not
necessarily the news of the news
paper bul at least the gossip of the
neighborhood, and the rumors, in
teresting. iraKic or scandalous, that
n LCD us from other neighborhoods.
The village gossip nnd the penny
newspaper are Important factors in
human life In civilized countries.
They keep alive our Interest in other
people, and to that extent keep us
from concentrating our attention
Bolel upon ourselves. Een a mor
bid interest in a divorce scandal half
way across the continent is more
wholesome mental stimulus than a
morbid ipteresl in outsehes alone
Sclf-consclousness soon becomes
brooding, brooding leads to nerves,
iirnpei-;, and often insanity
One of the most acute miseries of
the soldier's life is not fear for his
personal safety, but the lack of news
from home.
In far-off mission fields, in newly
opened countries, explorers, pioneers,
travelers all feel keenly the lack of
news They may bo living under the
most exciting and unusual condi
tion", they may be seeing beautiful
scenery and having high adventures,
but still, if th j are normal human
beings, they will constantly be ask
ing themselves the question, "'I won
der what they're doinp- at home now '"
it is said that the first copies of
the first newspaper published in
Dawson City m the Klondike wero
auctioned off for fabulous prices,
sometimes even a bag of gold dust
so news hungry wero the miners and
adventurers who had bo long been
without news of tho outside world
Like our own soldiers in the tranche
of Northern France, they thrilled at
accounts of months old news, and
H JBBB dm lH ffi ft
EBMKaffk AHBHBHLV productions.
a I he Coolest Place in Utah M Y mack sennett and
aW O ' '- CHRISTIE COMEDIES
B g 17 BEG1NS TONIGHT AT 5 P. M. H i
I j ,fHPLi7 J T Stow based on the Posm cby
I J
I Dr. Meredith Served Humanityand I ' I
I Neglected His Wife I I I
THERE ARE ALWAYS SCOUNDRELS LYING IN WAIT FOR SUCH A WIFE. MRS. MEREDITH f
MET HER VILLAIN. HOW DID SHE FARE WITH HIM? j;
I "The Law of the Yukon" I 1 1
TELLS MANY STARTLING THINGS ABOUT LIFE IN THE YUKON; IT PAINTS THE GOOD AT
ITS BEST WHICH EXISTENCE IN THE NORTH WOODS UNERRINGLY BRINGS OUT AND
EXPOSES THE BAD WITH GRIM REALISM. THE DEPICTIONS ARE FEARLESS THEREFORE i
tvi MIGHTY ENTERTAINING. A SCREEN CLASSIC TO BE DISCUSSED AND REMEMBERED. I
1 Special Added Attraction I
I "THE CHICKEN CHASERS" I I
I TWO SPECIAL ORGAN SELECTIONS, "I KNOWWHY I LOVE YOU," AND THE ANSWER SONG, 9 I
No Advance In Prices schedule
I 10c - 20c - 30c ,n-T I I
5:00, 7:00, 9:00 p. m. I
bartered their deareat pocket pos
B l Mons for copies of old newspapers
from home, old magazines, old pic
ture supplements.
The opening of the first newspa
per in Gold City in the Yukon Valley
18 one of the many dramatic episodes
In "The Law of the Yukon," a May
flower Photoplay, shown at the Al
b&mbra theatre beginning tonight at
m. Director Charles Miller sas
this ia the neatest picture of his
career, and Realart Pictures Cor
poration promises it to be one of the
'most grlpplnc drama ever released
by them Don'i fail to see it.
j FOR GRAIN AND POTATO
BAGS, SEE
I FARRELL & JACKSON
j 2202 Washington Avenue
Phone 509
R. R. Rates to Be
Raised Next Week
The passenger and freight lncn
Which are scheduled to take effect
i throughout tho United States. August
SC and 25, will total from 20 to per
CCht, according to local railroad of fl-j
clala. Freight consigned from any'
'eastern firm on or before August 25
will bo shipped through to lt3 destin
ation at the old rate, it Is said Several
'local merchants have ordered goods'
from eastern concerns and with this
ruling In effect they havo asked for
action on their good9
While It Is understood that rates on
'al' lines will be increased August 26
no information as to the amount of In
crease or as to the system which will;
I ie used nave been received at local I
Iri-tlroad headquarters Th railroads
throughout the country havo asked
for n rate of 3.6 cents per mile, many
states already having granted the in
crease. The public utilities commission of
L'tah at Its meeting last Thursday did
not reach a decision on the matter, but
will make the decision the coming
week, it Is said. The railroads of Utab
at the hearing last week were repre
sented by H. A. Scandrett. commerce
and valuation council for tho L'uion
Pacific lines with hcadquurters at
Omaha.
oo
Scowcroft to Hold
Outing on August 26
The annual outing of the John Scow
croft and Sons' company emploses will
be held at Lorln l'"arr par k on the af
ternoon and ovpninKr of Thursday,
L
I August 26. The afternoon will bo dc
I voted to athletic stunts, followed by
dancing in the evening. Communis
slr.glmr will :iIho ho featured.
The committees in charge of the
program Include;
Sports otto Meckes, Frank Rose..
Eru Wilson. J Fletcher Scowcroft.
Lata' Mrs Hazol Carson. Kath
erlhe hn. Martina Shiels, Margaret
Oolch. Florence Combe, Clara Balls
RiC hardson.
Dance Alvtn Mortenscn and Walter
Stephens.
' ilooze ' Joseph Scowcroft. L. H.
ferry, iitto .Meckes. Vein Allen and
A l m Mortenscn.
Judges Vein Allen and Orlof Fair.
Danco judges not selected as yet
Singing Walter Stephens, Leslio
Baville Martina Shiels. Mrs. Hazel
j Carson.
r i izes Joseph Scowcroft. Wlllard
Scowcroft ind Heber Ucowcpft
Publicity Vern Allen, E. 3?. Spen
cc, W. 11. Gormloy
oo
Wanted A Salesman. Kead "Mary's
I Man Wins." page 4 443T
I