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1 . THE OGDEN STANDARD: OGPEN, UTAH, THURSDAYNOVEMBER 14, 1918. ' I fgllNFUIINZA I Ttfpge Horlick's 1 ' SIH Malted .Milk ; jJHOpp FVutBnious9 BJigestSbBe . ' WJ' Vjtgv The REAL Food-Drink, instantly prepared. " r (388 a Madcbytlic ORIGINAL Horlick process and J ' l SSVl from carefully selected materials. ' KA Used successfully over century. I J VAGroAMpfyviLgs Endorsed by physicians everywhere- I j 3lF and 2rt HOrlick'S The OriginaB J lagisggj Thus avoiding imitaiBon I WILL COLONIZE I If 1.1 SElT.LllSj If STOCKHOLM, Sept. 10 (Corre-) II tpondence of the Associated Press.) II, German government officials and pri ll' vate associations are engaged in an If extensive movement to colonize Gcr r man settlers in the formerly Russian III IJaltic provinces of Caurland, Lithun ' nia and Esthonia. This is one phase ; and an imporlant'one of the German If plan to gain commercial and economic If ascendancy in those provinces border -If Ing on the Baltic sea. J A state colonization bureau is nl f ready in existence in Berlin, and a - special association for colonizing thei If eastern provinces has been formed In ' addition. This association has already f; accumulated a considerable fund rorj II the purpose of settling Germans In the. f 3altic provinces. The Saxon provincial ' diet has appropriated a half million j If marks for this purpose. This work Is' also being aided by the Baltic Ger mans. Many of them, holders of largo . entailed estates, have expressed a ! willingness to sell portions thereof naturally at a good price to intending German colonists. : Courland alcne, if It were as thickly populnted as East Prussia, could sup port 2,000,000 Inhabitants. It now has only 700,000. : Germany greatly ncedn food, " and hence devoted especial energy to bringing about a resumption and ex tension of agriculture in the Baltic f provinces. 'L Plans have been made in Germany to organise in Baltic cities or chambers of commerce along German linos. The city authorities of Riga have begun to carry out plans for a rehabilitation of the city's industrial life through the reopening of the factories whoso work was made Impossible by the dismantl ing of the machinery by the Germans during hostilities in this section. A be ginning is to he made with wooden' wares, especially furniture, for which there is a great demand in "Germany The Riga authorities are being sup ported actively by German experts and with German money. Without regard to the fact that the final settlement of the war may frus trate such work, the Germans are also! j planning or actually undertaking ex-1 tensive material reconstruction. "111-' J eluding buildings, canals and railroads. i There is a plan on foot for a canal y from Riga to Cherson. : the mouth of the Dnieper on the Clack sea. Late Baltic newspapers report that the Ger mans are building three railways on j the Island of Oesel, and that portions of them are even already in operation. i 00 WORTH 0SBE1 SUITES I t The almost unprecedented season V for excellent weather for' the sugar r. beet harvest in this place has been i well utilized by the farmers and at I: the end of the second week nearly ev- j ery farm had been cleared of the sach-1 1 arlne tubers and while the acreage had j been considerably reduced, the ton nage measured up to the usal standard and a very peculiar coincident is the ; fact that not a car has been loaded and as a consequence a veritable mountain of beets mark the dumping ; ground. I Clarence Eby, one of the first regis-1 , trants from this place for army serv-1 ice, and among the, first to go into , y actual service, was wounded on the battlefield July 19, 1918, and after wards reported dead from his wounds, ' it develops now through correspond ence of his folks back cast to Mrs. f John T. Hall of this place, that he was : 1 wounded slightly in the right arm and was only confined to hospital for a shor.t while and is now in limited serv ice and progressing nicely. ; ' All the boys in service from Nprth Ogden whose addresses could be ob , tained are being written to regularly; by the committee who has been as r signed that labor, a movement which had its incipiency in the parents' class of the Sunday school of the town. The Spanish influenza is evidently on the wane in this district, only two Trust Your Complexion To Cuticura Soap I H signs of pimples, redness or roughness appear touch them with Cuticura Ointment before bathing ' with Soap. Nothing purer, sweeter I or more speedily effective to clear 4 the complexion and keep it clear. fl!! ' SIA' B,Um" Sold fltitrr-W. p Olntmnta5Rndflc Tlcum 55c. falling victims to Its ravages, Mrs. Florence A. Barker, wife of Charles M. Barker, on the October 17, and Ilt- tie Moroni Roylance, infant of Mr. and Mrs. John and Mary Shipley Roylance, on November 2. Now that the election is over and the campaign smoke cleared away, and sober Judgment again enthroned spine of us no doubt are led to exclaim 'liow foolish wo mortals are," but take some comfort in the thought that owing to the very peculiar conditions, the one just closed was one of the most quiet campaigns waged here and with as lit tle excitement. In District 1 the Democrats were six votes in the lead and Randall District three head, but in the Second district the Republicans were 20 ahead, mak ing a gcnernl average In North Ogden or eleven In favor -of the Republicans. The claim of Woodruff Nelson of Box Elder county as the champion beet 1 topper, with 21 tons to his credit in one day. is likely to get him into trou' ble with either of the Warren boys ot North Ogden, EHhu Nathan, aged 5-1, J and Landsmer, aged 43, promising to meet Mr. Nelson in contest on any beet farm he may select for honors. no !F BACK HURTS 1 BEC1 01 MLlS j Flush your kidneys occasion I ally if you cat meat ! regularly. I 'o man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flush ing the kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores jSo they sluggishly filter or alrain only i part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder, disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurls, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, Irregular of passage or at tended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a la blespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid neys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer causes ir ritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent llthia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding se rious kidney complications. Adver- j Usement. "KEY" lOUSIES TO BE PROTECTED I LONDON. Oct. 20 Recommendation that "key" industries should be pro tected in Great Britain has been fol lowed by the organization of exhibi tion in England to show the products and roprescnt the claims of Industries which desire to be classified as "key" industries. It is reported by the American Chamber of Commerce in London thnt the traditional upholders of free trade in Great Britain are accusing the tar iff reformers of a desire to make the classification industry cover an ex tremely Inrge number of Industries. The situation, however, is still en 1 tlrely open. WILL CRACK ITS FOR TWO DAYS POINT MARION. Pa., Nov. I. A two day suspension or all ordinary oc cupations in Point Marion has been declared, and the population will de vote the en tiro time to cracking 75 bushels of black walnuts, which were recently gathered by residents of the town. Shells from the nuts will be shipped to the Pittsburgh division of the American Red Cross, nnd will eventually be used In the manufacture of gas masks for American boys fight ing In France. on I Read tho 'Classified Ads. TROOPS THINK OF MOTHER IFJIIINDED WITH THE AMERICAN ARMIES IN THE FIELD. Oct. 15. (Correspon dence of the Associated Press) "When an American soldier goes "over the top" or when he receives a bullet or shrapnel wound ho thinks of his mo ther. The French pollu thinks of his wife, and' the British Tommy of his sweetheart. This fact is borne out by the offi cers and doctors who have served in all three of the Allied armies,. They declare that when the American sol dier is wounded the first word on his lips In almost every case is "Mother." Even after he is removed to the hos pital he calls constantly for his mother. His British cousin, however, seems chiefly absorbed in his sweelchcart, and longs to see her "just once again," while his French compatriot thinks only of his "fern me bien alme." The correspondent of The Associat ed Press at the American front asked a number of soldiers what thought was most on their minds when they first left their trenchefl to attack the Ger mans. In nine cases out of ten the answer was "of home and mother." There were a few, however, who said that as thoy entered the battle their minds were given over wholly tp prayer, although they had never be fore been In the habit of "praying. Some of them kept before them words of encouragement and counsel con tained in letters from relatives. One soldier on the morning of the attack received a letter from his mo ther quoting the scriptural phrase, "Trust iii the Lord and no enemy shall prosper against thee." The soldier went through oiip of the bloodiest bat tles of the war that day and came out unscathed. qo IITOEHTO ' " SSVE MASTERPIECE i MILAN. Nov. 12 A heating appar J atus powerful enough to force heat throug': a pile of sandbags twelve feet thick and to dry without scorching the wall behind ia needed to preserve one of the world's masterpieces, "The Last Supper" of Leonardo da Vlncl which .'is painted on the wall of the church of Santa Maria delle Grazie here. The dampness which accumulates in tho sand necessary as a protection from air raids is fast fading the colors of the picture, already damaged by time. The restoration necossary for Leo hinrdo's picture is unsuited to the fres : coes of Luini and other masters palnt ! cd on the same wall. How to give each set of masterpieces the treatment required and still guard against tho danger In the nlr is the problem. So far the experts of the Italian Minis try of Fine Arts have been unable to find a solution. . nn iLUXIIlfi IT Of M OFFICER WITH THE AMERICAN TROOPS IN FRANCE, Oct. 20 (Correspon dence of the Associated Press) An amazing underground shelter or dug; out equipped with many luxuries is the home of the stafr of one American army corps which took a prominent part in the St. Mihicl fight. It Is lit tle less than an underground city club, with offices, sleeping quarters, baths, restaurants, kitchens, electric lights, telephone and bell boys in the persons of orderlies and messengers and many other appurtenances, of hotel life. Its occupation has permitted tho staff of this corps to operate in cfoso touch with the fighting troops much more closely behind tho lines than such a corps ordinarily ventures. From the outside the place was so inconspicuous, standing about two I hundred yards from the road, that ninety-nine out of a hundred motor ists would have driven by without seeing it at all. The one hundredth would have seen merely a slight ele vation in the muddy plain with two or three dark holes in the ground that might have been old shell craters or anything else. In reality the mud and grass .cover ing was nothing but a concealment of a thirty-foot "leiliug" of reinforced concrete, the black holes well camou flaged entrances leading down a slop ing runway to the brilliance of the electrically lighted interior. So stout j ly was the whole constructed that nn enemy shell of big calibre would scarcely do more than chip off a piece of the tpp, and no aviator's bomb could ever, even hitting directly, do much damage. Inside, parallel with the road and traversing the length of tho dugout, Avas a wide corridor the "main street" of the institution, in Avhich the com manding general rubbed shoulde with the orderlies and messengers a., they went from office to office. Off this main street led minor streets run ning to the rear and being used, for economy of space, as sleeping rooms for tho enlisted men at night. Arti ficial ventilation provided for tho con ! slant purification of the whole dugout, WtU SHAVE ' UNKNOWINGLY When Ton only- Wmore Iinlr 1 from fbe aurfnee of the alcln the result in ihn name an having'. The ft obly cotumon-aenno Tray to remove H hole Is to attnclx It under tho nlcln. a DeMlraclc, the original nanltni7 a liquid, does tkbi by absorption. 1 Only Kcnnbic SeMlracln has n I td oner-back cmarnntcc In ench I pneknee. At toilet counters In OOe, 91 nnd $3 lxc, or Uy mall from ue in plain wrapper on receipt of price. PRICE book mailed In plain ealed envelope on rHunt. De Miracle, 120th St. nnd Tnrk Are, 1 Nevr York. MBnHBBaaEBsBOBaaKa f ": ' T'f:- Good News from Washington : b 'H Part of "BULL" DURHAM Tobacco Released I to Civilians at Home to "Roll Their Own" H S: With the little muslin sack of "BULL" DURHAM in thorC. pockets of every one, of our fighting men on land and sea ' With good old "Bull" in the regular Army rations .t: ' iSwV:' And with the future demands of the War Department ,) i!H abundantly cared for, part of "BULL" DURHAM Tobacco is offered '.. ; - -'f ; .' 'again to the men at home who "roll their own". :'V ; . '? -V"'"'' And to these men I want to say, that in giving up so'frccly all A'';J;,; .'iJ ; . ' your "Bull", when your Country asked for it for its fighting men,'' -. ' " you did a human "bit". However small that little muslin sack may iJJ. seem, you may have the satisfaction of knowing that your sack of ' vCw "Bull" was meat and drink to some boy waiting or fighting at the 11 - front, and that your supply of "Bull" helped to make the distribution ( Ul , to our forces full and complete, and- make it quickly. Now that "0 L , , ' Washington assures us that such distribution is a fact, you will, I .. J , know, welcome the "Makings" home again. , jH : And with greater satisfaction and more pleasure than ever, you niri-'j sij. wn I know, with your own hands, roll a cigarette again for yourself a . t cigarette machines can't imitate the mildest, the most fragrant, . ' the most economical cigarette in the world. '. .-'"V . .m v - Am I wrong in thinking that you will be as proud as I am of . yur little muslinsack of "Bull"? ' ''---Sfr r4" '. j H " et. fCcO President '', 'I ; : Xl ' The American Tobacco Company : , H NEW YORK ill ' v ' m and the smell throughout was clean and sweet. Off the small streets, and off the big ones too, were the offices, constructed likewise for economy of space. Each was about ten feet wide and quite deep, with a narrow table running the length of tho rooms at which sat the officers and their assistants, working, working, all the time, answering tho telephone every moment or so, giving instructions and receiving reports. Instead of having the oporations de partment in one building, the intelli gence in another, and others scattered in as many more, all were here to gether, in offices with walls as nearly sound-proof as possible, under a ceil ing just high enough to enable a tall 'man to walk or stand without stoop ing, so close together that a moment could put one in touch with the other if necessary yet vastly far apnrt as far as any mutual or one-sided dis turbance was concerned. At the end of the big corridor was the kitchen compact to tho point of he . Ing a kitchenette. When the cooks J finished each meal the side streets ! could suddenly be transformed into little qosy dining rooms, each with Its long wooden table nnd narrow wooden benches. Ip less time than It takes to tell the general's mess was ready, the superior officer's mess and all the others, No sound could penetrate the great concrete roof, and tho great bombard ment that opened the St. Mihiel "show" could not be heard, as an As sociated Press correspondent who was there can attest. Yot outside tho building the cannon wore going "great guns" and the whole night was thun dering with tho noise. oo IMPORTANT DECISION ON OVER TIM E. Tho National Labor board has de cided that no employeo shall receive overtime unless he- works at least for ty. eight hours per week. Here are three vital clnuses in the decision: 1. The regular working time of each full wedk shall consist .of rorly-clght hours, divided intosix daily periods ol eight hours. All time worked in excess nriu iiria-m.i J i.n.i 1 1 ssssaga n h hi of eight hours within any one day or forty-eight hours within any one full week shall bo considered overtime and shall be paid for at the rate of time and a half, but any time worked on Sundays or holidays shall be consid ered extra time and shall be paid for at die rate of double time. 2. By mutual agreement between the management and the workers the daily working schedule may be so lengthened as to permit of a half-holiday "on one day of each week. 3. It is further provided that no worker shall be entitled to payment for overtime or extra time Sinless he shall work forty -eight hours in said full week (or forty hours when a holi day intervenes), except in case of ill ness, accident, misfortune or other just and necessary cause. 00 Holland to Settle Kaiser's Case Is the Belief of Van Dyke BOSTON, Nov. 13. Ur Henry Vau Dyke, former minister to the Nother lands, said tonight that Holland haa 1 Get -the GenuineP' i and AvoidSgf2 OHIGHESTER S PILLS r this viAiioxn misxu. a FtS J.ndlrt AUyonr ))ruzcliil(ot-j ( QcS'U C'hl.cnwler Diamond IirandiV &4W3& 1'IIU In Red and Hold roetalltcvV TCV--boit. ict'.cd with niao Ribbon. ' TV affrWl Take no other. II uy F roar " I I 7fr I'rnnclnt. AkforOHI.01U-:R.Tnn I C JP DIAMOND 1IKAND 1MLI.S. for SS y yefknoHnMBt,5ifeit,AlwiyiRellablf Of SOLD Bjf DRUGGISTS EVERYWHEfifi 1 BaE iSBBD always been a country in which inter national law has been respected and that "we can feel sure in regard to the latest fugitive who has taken refuge -within her borders that Hol land will do what is in accordance with law." "The very existence of Holland," said Dr. Van Dyke, "as a small, indc pendent and Intensely DemocraMo country depends upon the sanction of international law." "The kaiser's case must be settled Immm in accordance with justice and whllb IH he is waiting for this settlement, in my opinion, there could be no better 'H place for him to be kept in safety .than Holland." Tho Young "Women's Christian Aasocla- Hon of Calgary. Can.. Is asking that wo- ( men bo appointed to patrol the city. j I DON'T be without a Service Flag when our 1 1 I boys come marching home. l STANDARD SERVICE FLAG Size 10x14 inches 'H j one, two or three stars attached Regular price $1.50; t SALE PRICE $1.00 I All other Service Flags in stock, including Army, 1 1 I Navy, Aviation one, two, or three stars at 33 1-3 lM DISCOUNT. I NOTE: The above discount does not apply to our stock of regular American or Allied national flags. I jH I We carry the most extensive stock of wool and 1 I cotton American and Allied National Flags in the city. S Be one hundred per cent patriotic and display "OLD jH J GLORY" at your home, office or your place of busi- jH 1 ness. I Browning Bros. Co. I