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!i j THE OGDEN STANDARD: OGDEN, UTAH, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1 9 1 S. ' f 8 "I'VE NEVER SEEN 1 ITS EQUAL" SAYS I MS OGDEN MAN l I 'Tanlac Has Made Me Feel H I Like a New Man," Says H C. H. Scofield. MM "'This Tanlac lias made me feel like Ul a new man," said C. H. Scofield, who MM holds a responsible position with the Ilffl George A. Lowe Hardware company, IB and lives at 1-17 Twenty-second strcot, Q recently. mm "For five years or more, Mr. Sco- M field continued, "I have been almost a llH constant sufferer from stomach trou- JM blc and other complications and my fffl condition had become alarming. Noth'- W Sng I would eat seemed to agree with W me. Soon after meals I would become H nauseated and had gotten to where I II could hardly retain any breakast at II all. I was very nervous and irritable II and felt weak and tired all the time. II My kidneys were all out of order II worried me continually and I was un II easy about that. 1 lost flesh rapidly II during the past summer and got down II to where it was an effort .for me to H do my work. In fact, I was all down H and out and felt that I must gel somc vM thing to helpme or r would liave to H give up my job. IS "Well, I just want to say I have nev- 1 R er found the equal of Tanlac. Soon afl- i er I began taking it I began to stralghl- I en right up and while I have hardly I E finished my second bottle I'm already 1. feeling like a different man. I can eat 1 three hearty meals a day now, break- fast is one of my best, and never have B any trouble afterwards. My nerves ML are in fine shape and since my suf- j a fering is over I'm not irritable and fractious any more. My kidneys nev- I I er bother me now and I simply feel , like I have a new lease on life. My 1 1 little daughter is also taking Tanlac 9 M now for some derangement of her kid 1 1 neys. . She's just doing ttne and we 1 1 think Tanlac Is just the right mcdl- cinq to put anybody in good health." II A dull, dragging feeling of the body, IB a sluggish mind and dull memory, de II prossion of spirits, nervousness, irri H 1 lability, stomach trouble, indigestion, W i kidney derangements, weak back, IJ headaches and a run-down condition l are among the numerous symptoms of Bflf a condition from which a surprisingly large number of American people suf- H fer. Experience has taught that 90 I per cont of all chronic ill health is I ; caused by poor digestion and non-as- I ! simulation of the food, -which produces I catarrhal inflammation of the mucous I membrane. m Tanlac benefited Mr. Schofield and his little daughter because it contains I certain medicinal properties which i combat these very troubles. Thou B ' sands are now using the medicine In II all sections of the "United States and W Canada and In each case the prepara I tion is accomplishing surprising re I ; sultsynScqres of testimonials arc re ji ceived dally from men and women of I who feel gratified aB the result of V unquestioned honesty and integrity I having found such a source of relief, n Tanlac is sold in Ogden by A. R. IB Mclntyre. Advertisement. J . TURKS TO BUILO A II BRIDGE TO EUROPE II ' AMSTERDAM, Feb. 4. The Turk jw ish government .according to a Con jjl stantlnople dispatch to the Vossicho III 1 Zeitung of Berlin, has introduced a bill IIQ in parliament asking for an appropria- ffl I tion to investigate the feasibility of jjy ! the construction of a bridge and tun- SJ ! nel connecting Europe with Asia. 5 There are two straits separating ill I Europe from Asia Minor which might I II I be used in a bridge or tunnel project. Jjn They are the Bosphorus at the en- f Dm I trance to the Black, aea and the Dar- JJII dandles, at the entrance to the Medi- fj terranean. At is narrowest point the jffl Bosphorus is 1S0O feet wide, while the minimum width of the Dardanelles Ijjy I Is 11-5 miles. Pontoon bridges were Bj I Jjuilt across the Dardanelles, then Lit called the Hellespont, by Xerxes of jm Persia and Alexander the Great of Wfl ' Macedonia before the Christian era. iJ PROHIBITED ZONE OFF IRELAND. N WASHING-TON, Feb. 4. Alterations jj in the prohibited zone In the Irish channel and North channel, promul II gated by the British admiralty, have M " been received by the state depart rj ments. It forbids navigation to all P vessels within the proscribed area M which lies between Ireland and Scot Si land. ill 1 O BUSINESS OUTLOOK Q If I ifvi 1917 aB 1,860 a yar of Ss III I 1 jG? commercial life. Factor- 5 I Clfl ica aro running to full (Lj 1 1 f 3 capacity. There Ic an lt increasing demand for I products and labor. 1 L There Jb a bright out- - lol Ml! ,ool for now buQ,no8' lc j Tho Commercial Na- IRI 1 Cj t'onal Bank will be CD HI , I fjfc pleaoed to serve you In lfi ; financial matters and r ; invites your account 1 it ' I D COMMERCIAL O ' I Q NATIONAL 8 I!, ft ILLII WRITES OF HIS EXPERIENCE 1DEK FI Mrs. G. N. Coffin. 2124 Washington avenue, has received a letter from her brother, R, M. Nolling, now with the transport motor company, in Franco. The young man formerly was a stu dent at the Ogden High school. The letter Is descriptive of actual fighting, camp life, association and above all, It is filled with a spirit of active content. The young man, al though he has been under fire numer ous times, insists that ho "has had occasion for np. grots." Withal, the letter is one of tae best yet published from the French front. It follows, in full: "In the Field, France, January 8, 191S. My Dear Slfltcr- Your Christ mas box was received Christmas day. It was raissent to one of our detache'd companies, but I got it O. K. Thanks very much for tho American candy. It is so much better than the French chocolates. The boys all thought that the fruit cake was Just the thing thanks very much from the motor transport bunch. "I received a package from the 0. H. S. It was quite a surprise and 1, certainly appreciate it. Many thanks to tho O. H S. and the young ladles who put It up and mailed it to me. "I was going to write you last night but I was too tired. I had a pretty hard run yesterday 125 miles through wind, fog and rain. I laid in today to do some very necessary work on my machine. I worked all morning and I can rest this afternoon and glad I can, too, for it is a regular blizzard out side. "I've had a pretty interesting time since I've been over 9 horc lots of work and no regrets so far. I received my first baptism of fire on the 24th of August, when I had occasion to pass through a village that Fritz was shelling. Tho way I felt was that every other place on earth was safe except the spot I was on. You can hear those shells coming toward you. It is one grand and glorious feeling when you hear them break and you are not hit. Imagine my feelings when ho sent over two or three together. It seemed as though ho was shooting at nothing else but mo. "Since that time I have witnessed several bombardments, air raids, etc. When I hear a report now, I am able to tell whether x It is an airplane, bomb, shell, gas shell or cannon, with very few mistakes. I cannot tell where a shell is going to hit when I hear it coming. Part of the .Tommies and their officers can tell exactly where a shell or machine gun bullets are going when they hear them whistle. "I rode past a company of Austra lians a few days ago and when they saw that I was an American, they all began to cheer. The Australians are) a fine bunch of active men and theyj seem think that Americans arc just-what the doctor ordered. I don't know -what the French soldier thinks of us. We can't talk to them and find out. It is very amusing to see a bunch of "Yanks" trying to talk to a bunch of 'Froggles.' There are more 'Ouls' 'wees' and 'Ah oules' going back and forth than there are shells cross ing tho battlefield. "Fritz calls the 'Jacks' or Scotch the 'Women of Hell.' "I guess because they are so handy with their bayonets. I have seen a couple of German planes brought down, the aviators in each case being captured unharmed. The last one, the Germans set on fire as soon as they landed. "We are housed fine for the winter and I think wo have a dandy camp. Our meals are pretty good, so I can't see where I can possibly kick. The members of tho motor transport com pany have organized a club which we, have named the 'Gol-a-ma Club.' We certainly stick by one another. All of our goods eats that wo receive through the mails go equally around the crowd. Your brother, Bob." The- letter closes with a postscript which inquires how his sister "liked 1 his latest photo." Tho letter had been 1 opened by a. censor. uu HEALTH REPORT According to the report just com i piled by George Shorten, city sanitary commissioner, there wore 73 births in Ogden during January and during the ( same period there were 31 deaths. Divided Into sexes, there wore 41 , girl babies and 32 boy babies born during the month. The reaper claimed " 12 males and 19 females. During December, there were 98 births, 48 boys and 50 girls, and dur- ing the same month there were an even 30 deaths, 13 females and 17 miles. The department received reports of 95 cases ofcon tagion during January. Cickenjox lead with 39 and measles was second with a total of 31. There were twelve cases of scarlet fever and seven of pneumonia, Thero was one case each of erysipelas, whooping cough apd typhoid fever. Spinal men ingitis, mumps, diphtheria, smallpox and infantile paralysis failed to reg ister. Thero were only 70 cases of contagion roportcd during December. In the milk and dairy department and tho santary division, the follow ing Items are reported: Dairies inspected, 4; total number of Inspections of all klndB, 92; writ ten notices served, 15; loads of ashes and other refuse disposed of at the city dump, 160; dogs destroyed, 33; horses, 8; dows, 1; hogs, 1; houses disinfected, 18, and rooms disinfected, 93. Thore wore 25 restaurants, gro ceries, bakeries, commission houses and confections inspected during tho month. SUPREME COURT POSTPONES CASE WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 4. To give opportunity to rectify a misunder standing made the supremo court to day postponed action until March 4 on Attorney General Gregory's motion to have Federal District Judge John M. Klllltts of Ohio bhow cause why he i should not be declared in contempt. V III MEN IE FROM OEM DISTRICT MS. The Ogden district of tho United States Railway Mail ncrvico has con tributed nine patriots to Uncle Sam's various fighting forces. In addition to having nine stars in their service flag, the local district of Railway Mail men is represented by at least one major, W. D. Danvers. Major Danvqrs, although an Ogden man, enlisted after going to San Fran cisco. The patriot roster includes Lieut. Ralph Poultor, Edwin M. Morrlssoy. Leonard M. Hubbell, Guy R. Prentiss. Daniel B. Johnson, John F. Rotzler, M. E. Williams, William Heath . and William Brandon. Some of them are In Franco, some in cantonments, and somo in the navy. All are stalwart, robust, intelligent and endowed with that rock-ribbed stability of character and fighting spirit that will put the kaiser in one of the lower furnaces of perdition. "We have not had our service flag made as yet," said O. L. Lemon, "but will place tho order as quickly as we can assemble accurate data as to the various regiments and cantonments. Thero also Is a possibility that more than nine men have enlisted from this district we began to count only thls morning. It is cortaln that the United States Railway Mail service has Its full quota." oo PRHS ST FORT ATTEMPT TO II THEIR ESCAPE SALT LAKE, Feb. 5. Another effort to escape from the prison camp at Fort Douglas was unearthed yesterday by prison guards, who discovered a tunnol under one of the buildings in tho civil ian part of the compound. The excava tion was just large enough to permit a man to crawl through it. and led in a southerly direction. Tho tunnel had progressed about ten feet. To reach a safe point of egress it would have to be dug about 100 yards. Tho excavated soil was very fine, indicating painstaking labor on the part of those seeking their lib erty, and a grim determination' to toil long and patiently in the quest for freedom. The tunnel was found under quarters No. 12 on tho side farthest from the car tracks. One end of the building rests upon a slight elevation and the I lower end is quite a distance from the ground. Probably Worked at Night. It is believed that the plotters elud ed the- guards at night and crawled un der an end of tho building, returning before morning. It Is considered hard ly probable that any of them would attempt to get under the building in tho daytime. They left no trace as to how they got under the building or as to the Instruments used In digging the tun nel. All prisoners are carefully search- ed before they are admitted to the camp, they are allowed to have no pocket knives or similar instruments, and care is taken by frequent inspec tion to ascertain that no such instru ments are in the camp. The prisoners at tho camp are not aware of the discovery of the attempt to escape and information about it will be kept from them. Col. George L. Bryam, commandant of the camp, has ordered a close watch and believes any would-be escapes will soon be discov ered. Will Keep Discovery Secret. Prisoners are not allowed to receive newspapers or other information from the outside and it is hardly considered likely that they will become aware of the discovery. A nation -wide search is being made for Ferdinand Kube and Kur Wllkens, the two men who made a successful getaway from Fort Douglas several weeks ago. Leon Bone, special agent of the department of justice, yesterday received a photograph of Kube show ing him In the uniform of the German army. The picture was mailed from Arizona whero Kube was living beforo ho was interned, and where he took part in I. W. W. agitation. A number of suspects who have been arrested in various parts of the coun try on suspicion of being either Kube or Wllkens have been released. oo POTASH PLANT WILL INCREASE CAPACITY SALT LAKE, Feb. 5. Coincident with tho visit here of Harold Ahlquist of Syracuse, N. Y., announcement Is made that tho Solvay Process com pany, which is operating a large pot ash plant near Tooele, will doublo tho capacity of Its plant. Mr. Ahlquist, who is heavily inter- Cuticura Cares For Your Face and Hands ! Dainty women everywhere use CuticufriSoap and no other for every- 1 day toilet purposes with touches of Ointment to purify and beautify the complexion, hands and hair. Abso lutely nothing better than these fra- ' grant, super-creamy emollients. Samplo Each Free by Man. Address post- 1 Card'"CutJcura, Dcpt.lSA, Boiton." Sold everywhere Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. jzMmks famiS li ffitijfeflrH f!vlS rS' I yOU a COpy tIlC 'ctor Rccorcl catalog the most complete catalog of 'ian I I trri??''j ' fM" 2 " UC' n Wlttl tt,Q '''k 3 J"10!11161? eascntlal to a perfect reproduction. 5 ') I j " 'ctro!a''3 the Reristcrc Ij" tfUiEl I I j I ll " iCaru bik ' 16 Ala as Dcsdoncm 5 IImwPIPVW i! V 2 Hclba asMarriuOTte iaraust 7 Gluck asJedda irmiiacq 12(hrrisonas(c)fhHfcrIafel7 EkrisbuHarirainBorcGxtuncw' v w'e ' E'Sjlenli 3(Wliurda3thldaino!cta'8 Scotli asScarpiaiaTosca 13 InclliasrCsnbinTosca IS LucaasRlnBarba-ofScvilk (S SlvAfe ' Dl fglP ' ' 4Farrar asTosca 9 Homccos AmncrisinAida 14 Calve as Carmen J9 )hilchill asAmforioaialarsifM iBiLClL tQOS' I fAyllaia'Ca?fgyf sSdMrcrcrtiaitasAa 15 Jwmd csMjiusirjfcb mrcust 50 NischaElman. flffiffigJ , I 5lUJJgwjj 21 Eft-cm ZSmbaUst 22TJascha Heifctz. 25 Maud Powell WmM C P H ' '' "SCa'F 33 ested in tho company, has been here for several days, making arrangements for Increasing the capacity of tho plant, and left last night for the east He announced before leaving that the plant would soon be In shape to turn out twice as much potash as is now being produced. The present capacity of the plant is four tons of potash a day and it is an nounced that the concern will soon be turning out not loss than eight tons a day. There are about 150 men em ployed at the plant now and It is stat ed that this number will be consider ably increased as soon as the enlarged plant is completed. STEPS TAKEN TO SETTLE CAR STRIKES ST. LOUIS, Fob. 4. First steps to ward the settlement of the street car strike were taken at noon when Mayor Kiel summoned union leaders and street railway officials to be in his office at 5 o'clock this afternoon. Attacks on street cars were reported to the car company today as having occurred on tho Wellston line, which connects the downtown soctlons with the northwestern district Up to 10 o'clock only forty cars wore In operation. The normal num ber for Monday mornings Is, 1100. 00 AN ECONOMIST. "You should ride a horse." "Can't afford It," said the apprehen sive person. "But it will give you an appetite." "Perhaps. But it will do the same "or the horse." Washington Star. 00 A BIG GUN. "Prof. Smart Is a man of large men xil caliber, is he not?" "Ho certainly is a big bore.-" Uni versity of Minnesota Minnehaha. 00- Rend tho Classified Ads. Read the Classified Ads. PEOPLE'S SUGAR CO. IS Mill EXCELLEI RECORD As an evidence of tho high efficiency attained during the first season's run in their new factory at Moroni, San pete county, Utah, officials of the Peo ple's Sugar company state that an av erage of 210 pounds of sugar was ex tracted from each ton of beets. This splendid showing Is acknowledged by experienced sugar manufacturers to be exceptional for the 1917 season, and 13 accounted for by two outstanding facts. ! First, tho Moroni factory, which Is SOLDERS IN CAMP The abrupt change from home comforts to camp life may be trying on your boy's health, but if he ; will only take the rich liquid-food in SCOTT'S EMESION it will create richer blood to es tablish body-warmth and fortify his ' lungs and throat Thousands of, soldiers all over the world take Scott's Emulsion SfcWv It is exactly what they need. TW J gcott t Bowne, Bloomfield. 2f. J. 17-30 ) the only western plant to bo operated throughout by electricity, is fully equipped with the most modern auto matic machinery. In designing the factory, months wero spent-in studying the advantages and disadvantages of niany other plants throughout tho county and the result Is conceded to be the "last word" in sugar mill con struction. The second big factor which ac counts for tho initial success of this company is that tho men operating tho factory were exports in their work, having had years of experience in the sugar-making business. Great care was taken in selecting tho heads of depart ments and other Important employees and only men trained in other sugar factories wore given positions. In speaking of his company's suc cess and the recent agreement to pay tho farmers ?9 a ton for beets, N. G-. Strlngham, secretary, says, "It has beon highly gratifying to have com pleted this first season's operations. Tho officers feel that much of the suc cess has beon due to the splendid co operation of the fanners of Sanpoto county. Already over 5000 acres have been signed up for 1918 and It is cor taln that this figure will bo materially increased before planting time. "Our company has readily agreed with tho other sugar companies of the state, to pay the new price, 39 a ton. fer beets, with the additional ar rangements proposed at the Logan roundup. Wo believe this will have a stimulating effect on sugar produc tion and that It vill result in tho Iarg- . est acreago of sugar beets ever plant ed in Utah. As sugar is recognized as one of tho most ncessary articles of food, we aro particularly anxious to do our part by backing up the Federal Food Administration in Its efforts to have more food produced." uu INDICTMENTS DISMISSED. BELLEVILLE, 111,, Feb. 4. -Tho In dictment of Mayor Mollman of Bast St. Louis, growing out of the race riots there last July was dismissed in the circuit court hero today. ' COUNTER CHffl p . Iff WAR I HELENA. Mont., Feb. 5.-Soebg is going to tell on you if you donipj m& f your income tax. Congress has w mtm it so that somebody muat tell, w J er he wants to or not in One section or tne war income ig law, exhaustively comprcliensw v scope, requires every person, wiu- cgjsu exception, and even' corporation, P .yjui nership, association, and j"8" company, in whatever capacity a jvy who paid $800 or more to Ijfliji son. corporation, partnership, wg. . 'Jn, tion, or InBuranco company, as est, rent, salaries, wages, PJi annuities compensation, renumej" , emoluments, or other fixed or cfcat, mlnablo gains, profits, and income report the name and addrcj jf , person, corporation, etc to wco payment was made, together mi amount of the payment, to ue . ,.jwf, missioner of Internal revenue at lngton. using a form J" U tho purpose. Form 1099, no ' had from all collector's ,c!Jt0IteJ J&Cy forms must be filled out i and rei on or beforo March 3, ' e0 : panlcd by Form 1096, whlcj n, . of transmittal and affidavit cen WW the accuracy of FormWa u mJjj INVALUABLE FOR COLDS , 7f tokj in tlmo this Clc'jjo 3rjt j. lesoena tbf. risk of chronic tbro nYttt trouble. tho remeJIaJ i,c4 , U." itlrn aro combined in thb '.Tr Of pound. j;0 baralul ilruea. iTJ jq; 50 cents a box, bdudZng f K f JCcJanan Laboratory, 'r't Advertisement, hri, to