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. iHt OGDEN STANDARD: OGDEN, UTAH. hrtlDAY. APRIL 4, 1919. , 5 r J Coffee Advance Notice ! L On April 14th, we will advance our ' I Very Best Coffee 38c Good Coffee 33c ij Two pounds 75c Two pounds 65c We have kept the price clown and quality up This is the most reasonable coffee in the United States. Do you know that this is just one of fiftv-one of the GREAT EST CUT-RATE COFFEE STORES SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES'7 Acts under Government license, and looked upon as the coming- way for all coffee to reach the con sumer. DO YOU WANT TO PAY 10c FOR A CAN? YOU DO NOT WANT TO PAY 8c OR 10c TO MIDDLE MEN We .sell direct to the consumer, maintain our own coffee expert. Every one should use this system for coffee We GUARANTEE" the equal of 413c or 50c kind, or money back. 2350 Washington Avenue PACIFIC COFFEE STORES CO, I RELIABLE COFFEE MERCHANTS v I rr ji! Woman's Pagc I j Dorothy Dix Talks j THE PLEASURES OF MEMORY By DOROTHY DIX, the World's Highest Paid Woman Writer. j I A man who, in his time, was a bril I liant and conspicuous fisrure in the world Is now old. broken in health and I fortune and compelled b circum f stances to live ,in a dreary little vil- I I lage. ! "I have nothing left now but my ! memories, ' he wrote I he other day to a friend, ' but do not pity me for that because I ;t in happy in thinking ol the days that are nn more I do not dwell I I in this dully little hamlet I live in I I Washington, New York. London, Par I f is, and all the cities that I knew so I I well in my youth. My companions are Knot the provincial and stupid yokels that surround me. 1 am hobnobbing , with statesmen, financiers and the men that make things happen. I am l listening to the chatter of fine ladies I I in silken boudoirs. I arn laughing over 11 the stories of wits whose tongues have been dust and ashes almost half a El century. 'When I look out of m window I I do not see a straggling, muddy, ill Iff kept village street. I see Fifth ave- nue glittering in polished unshine in the afternoon. I see the lions of Tra- I falgar Square, or the cherry blossoms in the parks of Tokio in April. "Believe me the poet was wrong vben he said that "Sorrow's crown of bottow is remembering happier It things." To my mind the ultimate sor- row is for one to have nothing happy H to remember in one's old age." J Can you think of a finer example of ( B ihe brave attitude towards life than I this man holds? Njo weak whining II over his present estate, but a calm I and uncomplaining acceptance of it K with a philosophy that robs it of its ill hardness! No bitter railings at the un F justness of fate in depriving him of I the glories that once were his, but a I deep and abiding thankfulness for all t the pleasures and privileges that he has had! And what a lesson he teaches us l about the importance of saving up a I treasure of memory for our old age I upon which we can call when our in Hterests in the active every day work I about us have become thin and atlen I uated. Every wise man from Solomon I down, has tried to impress upon us the I necessity of saing up enough mon- ey, while we .ire young and strong, to il Lines or Wrinkles j Indicate I Carelessness nHERE is no need of 1 1 looking old. Neither years nor weather affect n the skin when properly cared for. A little care u each day will keep away 1 jj the wrinkles. W Try this simple formula "A little CREME F.LCAVA rubbed cnll inlo the tkio; theo if vou need color, a Tory I ill Irklciya route ipretd care fully oer tbe cheeL befora the cream it quite dry; and alter that the film ( laaa ponder over all " I CREME EIXAYA ' l ia a delightful, non-gi easy, dis appearing toilet cream that makes the Gkin like velvet. Your dealer has ELCA YA and ha sohl it for yean. Ask him, Jimei C. Crtne, Solt Agtnt fig Crene Elcays Elcay Rorjfc W hlraj a Fsce Powder V ' HS Madison Ave., New York jj support us during our old age, so that we may be saved from the misery of dependence and the shame of being a burden upon others But nobody ever tells us that it is just ns important to provide spiritual BUBtenance for our old age as it is to provide physical, and that unless we have stored up within ourselves some mental riches, we are bound to be de pendent on others for our entertain ment and our happiness when we come to the time of life when we are just an onlook. r at th game And the old who are spiritual para sites are more to be pitied, poorer, ' I more forlorn and more of a drag on j other people than are the old who merely have no money and make no call upon us save upon our pocket books. It is well for us to begin early to provide against this rainy day of old age; and there Is no better way than by laying up a store of memories that will be a bottomless treasure chest into which we can dip at will, and gloat over as a miser does over his hoarded gold. The great argument against Iixing in a rut, and doing the same things o er day after day, is not so much that it is dull and monotonous and narrowing to the individual, as that its memories are so few and so drab and tiresome. Think what it must be to the old man and woman of 80 to have nothing to re call but an endless procession of days In which they got up at the same time, did the same little round of tasks, met the same people and vent to bed at the same hour, after having wound the same clock and put a procession of j cats with the same names out of doors. Similarly the great argument in ta vor of traveling is not alone the pres ent pleasure it affords one, but the in j exhaustible resource of memories one I lays up of lovely places, nevs scenes 'and strange peoples. I No old person can be dull or lone some whose mind is a screen against which a never ending pageant of inter esting things that he or she has seen tis thrown. Comedy, tragedy, pathos and bathos, swaggering bullies and I gentle knights, heroes and renegades, I fine ladies and harlots, they have 1 known them all, and as they call them up one by one. in memory, it makes a human drama as thrilling and never ending as a Chinese play which goes on from generation to generation. It is not of course the privilege of. all to travel, but one does not need 1 to go beond one's own bailiwick to find the stuff of which Interesting memories are made, it takes money to buy railroad and steamship tickets but it takes only the seeing eye and the sympathetic heart to find romance and mystery, every variety of person ality, love and tenderness, hate and greed in those ;ibout us. Wise those who begin to observe In telligently early in life, and thus lay up interesting memories for their old I age and happy those who throw awaj all bitter and hurtful impressions as if they were poisonous weeds and w ho j keep only good and kindly recollec-1 tions to bloom like perennial flown in the gardens of memory. They shall know the true treasures! of mcmorv in their old age , yjj ! Council of Emigration Being Formed in j Bavarian Cities I MUNICH. Thursday, April . (By I The Assoilzied Ties-) A furthei I manifestation of the movement which j is spreading among many of the bet l ter class in Bavaria was the forma ! tion here today of the "council of emi I gration," under the auspicps of the League of South German Emigrants ! Many people are preparing to leave the cities and settle in the rural dis ! tints or In other German states. Peace Conference j To Come to Close Soon in France j LONDON, April 4. "We are in a position to anticipate that within a j comparatively few days, the stage will bo reachced in the peace conference 'which will permit Premier Lloyd George to return to England," Sir Rob ert Stevenson, minister of labor, de clared today at the re-assembling oi ' the Industrial council. PARERIT8-TEACHERS IT ! QIMCY SCHOOL j . ENTERTAINED The Parents -Teachers association of , the Quincy school met yesterday at j the school and enjoyed an excellent program of dancing and short talks j by the young students of the school, and also a talk by J. U. Eldredge Jr., on the school bond issue. Officers for I the ensuing year were elected. The , progiam was as follows. Folk dance, by pupils of the third I grade. Recitation, by Miss Irene Yates. Minute talk on Liberty bonds, by Master Harry Richardson The School bond issue bv J. (J. El dredge Jr. A Twelve Month School Year, by Miss Moyes. The following officers of the asso- j ciation were elected for the ensuing year: Mrs. H. C. Marchant, president; Mrs. J. T. Reeves, vice president. In speaking regarding the necessity of oiin the school bonds, Mr. El-j dredge ; i 1 in part : Those of you who have visited the Central Junior high school know of the deplorable unsanitary condition of this old remodeled, repatcherl struc ture, built 32 years ago as a church and which In the first place was to tally unfit for a modern school build ing where our children are housed the larger part of each day for nine months of the year, "The lavatories arc a disgrace and a menace to the health of the pupils attending there. The heating system Is totally inadequate and dangerous and no amount of replacing could possibly put it in condition to proper ly heat the building. "All agree that the lighting arrange ments are such that the pupils are at a great, disadvantage as in most moms lieht comes into the room from two sides instead of one, which prob ably accounts for so many children with defective eye-sight. The rooms are over crowded and it Is necessary in some class rooms to have two pupils to a seat. I believe the aver age a 1 1 eiiuaiice in men room uj ue GO to 70 when the regulations for modern school structures provide not to exceed 35 per class room "The present structure has a rapac ity of 350 while 550 are attending, making it impossible for the pupil to pi ogress to the extent that the par ents would wish and to which he or she is entitled as an individual. Remedy for Condition ' The remedy for this frightful con dition is to erect a modern structure on the present site, capable of prop erh housing at least 1000 pupils, where sanitary conditions, light and heat and general environment, will give to our school children, that to I which they are justly entitled a mod ern school building with all equipment necessary to the development of the pupils mcntallv, physically and mor ally. "We cannot hesitate because of cost. All progressive communities have long ago ceased to measure health, education and means of right,! and proper living In dollars and cents. It would be better for us to give up .m'I the worldly wealth we possess il it would be the only means to se cure those things which make for better future citizenship and present health and happiness of our children. South Washington School "The South Washington school la In practically the same condition as the j Central junior high school, excepting that the sanitary conditions are even, worse. The building is a veritable fire j trap, with its wooden partitions; Its! oil soaked floors, small stuffy hall Ways, etc. It is so constructed that the second floor has but an K Inch out er wall which is liable to collapse and j which certainly would collapse in case of fire starting in the basement. The possibility of a great catastrophe' which would possibly follow a fire or a collapse of this building makes one shudder in its contemplation. That so many of our children are permitted to go to school under such conditions is certainly a reflection on our Intelli gence as an enlightened, pfogressie community. 1 am told that more than 500 pupils are attending this School at the present time. New Building Necessary "A new building capable of having at least 1000 pupils should be erected on South Washington avenue at the earliest possible moment "in, COnclU OH I Will say that the remedy for such unsanitary uncivil ized, if not criminal conditions, which surround SO many of our children in those two districts, 1- now within your power. Our board of education has proposed to the taxpayers of Ogden that $500,000 school bonds be Issued for the purpose of building two mod ern school structures at ihe present locations, one at the Central junta high school and one at the Washing ton school. These buildings will and should, to care for our present and future needs, and to be a credit to our city, cost In the neighborhood of $200,000 each. Other school buildings throughout the city are in need of minor Improvements and repairs which will cost approximately with the necessary equipment, $100,000. "Our school board has appointed a committee of representative conserva tive business men of Ogden who will consult and advise with the board, not only to see that the best possible price is obtained for the bonds, but that the monej derived therfrom will be expended only as needed and for absolutely necessary purposes." ATTENTION GIRLS Why look for a new job all the time? In a few weeks you can learn a "Trade" that wi!l employ you permanent', the year round; short hours, satis factory conditions, and WE PAY YOU WHILE YOU LEARN. Apply John Scow croft & Sons Co., Mfg. Department. uu "And I suppose you and mamma never thoueht of me once while yon were gone," said a father to his little : daughter who had been away on a two ' weeks' visit "Oh, yes we did," replied the little I lady. "One morning we heard a man growling about his breakfast ana 1 mamma Bays 'That reminds me ot home and papa.' " SEEESE (Miw&ZmCQ- LESSEE 13 2479 PHONE ' a Washington PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS 288 Avenue LLJ a s 1 Annua! Sale Of 1 1 Parisian Ivory 1 20 PER CENT REDUCTION 0 0 00 Q Nothing strikes the fancy of g CtUXci OCWS- women or "sets off Milady's Q 3 dressing table as do pretty L3 pieces of iory; and nothing is more appropriate as a gift for r S ihe young girl graduate. There is economy in buying ivory S jlj toilet goods they never go out of fashion and pieces can al- rrj 0 ways be added. If you have not already started a'set of g 0 ivory, begin now during this sale and secure a complete set 03 E of toilet goods and accessories, or you can complete the set Q E you have already started. Remember, we bought these goods fj jlj at before-the-war prices and can save you considerable as tjj !i toilet luxuries have taken two decided raises since war p carted. E A FEW OF THE MANY PIECES Q Hair Brushes $2.00 P tL Combs 3'V t0 S1-50'' m yj&Mf Nai1 Flles 250 t0 100S5r- )r' Puff Boxes l.OOC'f S .tev 25 to $4.50 y HF" J Shoe Horns. 25c to $1.00 fcgL H rs'ms Sop Boxes 55 yZ&P m f Jmltlr Powder Boxes $1.09 VSEf r4Sjf' Chamois Buffers . . $2.50 ('jr R3 lllV'jy Complexion Brushes $1.00 W (3 3 Perfumes Bottles 35t? to $1.50 ml Cuticle Knives 25o to $1.00 m jtj Picture Frames 50r to $4.00 j f NO MISTAKES HERE C join the g j Every prescription tha en EARLY RISERS1 CLUB lid tors our store is put up bv It is hard 10 gel up these (2 registered pharmacists and mornings on ihe n-u tin,.- rrj li b 1 , . schedule, but you will wed- pi goes out again in completed (.()m ,hi. ( ,,. rinK ;ind j 3 form tuii of remedial value. beaming face of the "Tattler" f m which is ;t i;int;ible tcsiimon- Alarm Clock, its Intermittent hq r2 la that all drugs may be safe- ringing will get you out on t3 LLi Iv and profitablv bought here. tlnw Price $3.50. L v ' m Perfumes 1 " Z cc S B Waters T I Lotions g PI PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS QBEtaBE 9den' utah SSESSS ,5tP CLEAR The Two Standards By H Rb3s C0AL J Which All Utah Coals H yA Ji Have Been Judged I 'ffli TmolBW lBf " Whether the task be supplying I sL'cim in a locomotive or heat in ySPMjKj kitchen range-CASTLE GATE 00'; and CLE A Pi CREEK COALS arc H WW dependable and economical. - n m&mmw si I I DR. BEflTtf SAYS 10 SCHOOLS SHOULD BE CONDEMNED Both the Washington avenue and the Central Junior hih schools were condemned as firetraps, and as not fit to house children from a sanitary; standpoint, by Dr. T B. Beatty. sec retary of the state board of health, in two meetings held yesterday, one In the afternoon and another In the eve ning. The afternoon meeting was held by the Parent-Teachers association of t ho j Washington school. Dr. Beatty and R. E. Boyd being the speakers. Mr Boyd spoke first,. urging the support; of the bonds to be voted on April' 16th. Mr. Boyd spoke as a representa- tlve of the Rotary club and was a; member of the committee that investi-J gab id the condition of the Washington and Central Junior schools, condemn-1 ing both. The evening meeting was conduct ed under the auspices ol the Central 1 Junior Parent-Teachers' association, and Dr. Beatty was the first speaker He was followed by Prof, (ieorge Eaton, formerly a principal of the Og den high school, and now of Salt Lake' City. Dr. Beatty, In the course of his re-, marks, said that the condition of both buildings is such that thej should be condemned by the courts as dangerous! to human life. The doctor stated that the rebuilding of the schools, using the old structures, is an impossibility and that such an idea should be cast out New Buildings. "Progressive ideas along school lines dictate that new schools be built to replace these foul buildings," said the speaker Following is an excerpt from State' Architect Joseph Monson's report 'which brings home the awful eondi-l I tion of the schools, which Dr. Beatty J I read : "Tho toilet rooms are poorly light-' ed, not ventilated and are positively the most unsanitary apartments of I i this kind I have ever seen or inspect-l j ed. I do not believe it possible for an) human being to endure that stench' for a period of more than five min- i utes at any one time. My knowledge j of the vocabulary of the English lan-i I guage is inadequate to properly des ! crlbe the unsanitary condition of these apartments. The foul air, uox j ious gases and terrible stench escap ing from these rooms, pass up and I are diffused more or less throughout the entire building, and the children : are forced to breathe the air that has : thus become contaminated. And that isn't all, the worst lsyet to come, be- cause the occupauts must ol" necessity rebreathe the same air after it has' been him her polluted by mixing with 1 expired air." In concluding the address the doc tor made a commentary on a bond! opposer he had encountered. "If that man had received a greater amount of proper training, under more sat isfactory' conditions, he would now ' his disillusionment " Prof. Eaton Speaks. The next speaker was Professor Eaton, one of the foremost educators of the state, uho proceeded to analyze the position of the junior high schools In the school system. I 'at ing back from the introduction of the high schools into educational affairs, he proceeded to outline eaoh successive step of advancement until hs arrived at the present day and the! introduction of the above named me dium between the Mth trade and the high school. "This medium," he said, "is an inducement for the con tinuation of study, inasmuch as it makes closer articulation -between the traditional grades and the high school and furthermore facilitates to a great extent, the transition between these divisions." I oo Read tho Classified Ads. .iiiil SEP Daughter of Stee! King to Mary Ensi?n Miller NEW YORK, April 4 Miss Marga re1 Carnegie, daughter of Andrew I ar-nefri'-. and Ensign Roswell Miller, U. S. N, R . of this city, obtained a mar riage license today The wedding v. ill take place April 22. Ensign Miller is the son of the las! Roswell Miller, chairman of the Chi cago Milwaukee and St. Paul railway. He is 24 years old. Miss Carnegie is 22. and the only child of the former steel manufacturer. nn Big dance every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at the Assembly Hall, 2408 Wash ington Ave. Music by Jazz band. uu FILIPINOS ASK INDEPENDENCE The mission, including fort prom inent Filipinos and headed bv Manuel Quezon, president of the senate, upon being received in Secretary Baker's of fice today, presented a formal memo rial asking independence and pointing particularly to the record of the Phil ippines in the great war. President Wilson's Letter. In replying, the secretary read Presi dent Wilson's letter, addressed to him under date of March . It was as follows: "Will you express to the gentlemen of the commission representing the Philippine legislature my regret that I shall be unable to see them person ally on their arrival in Washington, as well as my hope that their mis sion will be a source of satisfaction to them and that It will result in bringing about the desirable ends set forth in the joint resolution of the leg islature approving the sending of the commission to the I'nited States. "I have been deeply gratified with the constant support and encourage ment received from the Filipino people and from the Philippine legislature In the trying period through which we are passing. The people of the United ijj States have, with reason, taken thu deepest pride in the loyalty and sup port of the Filipino people j "Though unable to meet the commis- I sion, the Filipino people shall not be absent from my thoughts Not the least important labor of the confer- ence which now requires my attention i is that ot making the pathway of the j weaker people of the world less per ilous a labor which should be and doubtless is, of deep and abiding in- j terest to the Filipino people, "I am sorry that I cannot look intc I the faces of the gentlemen of this mis- Ion ol the Philippine islands, and tell t them all that I have in mind and heart as 1 ihink of the patient labor i with the end almost in sight, under taken by the American and Filipino people for their permanent benefit I I know, however, that your sentiments are mine in this regard and that you wiil translate truly to them my own feelings." Baker Recounts Philippine History. Secretary Baker recounted the his tory of the Philippine government in I the relations of the islands and th American government from the time to the establishment of the military government to the present. The island people are now virtually independent, he said, the only link being the Amer I ican governor-general and most bind- I ing of ties, that of affection. Mr. Baker urged the mission to visit many American cities before it went back. Not was he only anxious to see what Americans were doing and thinking but he wanted the American I people to sec and know the manner of j I men the island gftvernmnt selected for such a great mission The wold was looking forward, Mr. ' Baker continued, to a time when the relations between the people should be bottomed on justice and peace but whatever might come as to the world at large, the relations between the people of the Philippines and the Am erican people were so founded and there could never be anything but I peace and understanding between Governor Harrison said the formal act granting independence was one that congress must lake and that the administration would present the mat ter to congress at the appropriate time He added he could assure the mission that the objection that seemed 'M to prevail in the United States a few years ago had greatly diminished, il it had not virtually vanished. . The mission called at the White House after their conference with Secretary Baker and paid its respects to Secretary Tumulty. This Pretty Girl Tells How She I Defies Age by Using Ordinary Oatmeal to Beautify Her Complexion New York Arcordim: to Mac I-.ilna Wilder, the "wheelt of time" may bo turned backward If HUM common I sense is used in taking earc of the skin. Like everything i lee the skin needs food care' and attention Tho pores to' .lo their work properly should be Kepi n and scrupulously clean. Alter be ing thoroughly cleansed thes should be fed to nourish and biinK to the 6liln that beautiful, youthful appearance every normal woman cravea Mies Wilder thOUgh Well past the time Of life when most complexions fade, is famous for her beautiful complexion, ami wnen 8vk.l how .she retains her youthful ap pearant e said: It Is a .simple process to appear j youthful. No one tomes within ten j years of guessing my ace. Here la my secret. Co to any grocery store and I meal Put a small Quantity ot tlx - meal in a bag of cheesecloth noout the alzc Of your hand. Drop on or Inlo the L.aK Hi Jrops of derwillo whl li m 1" obtained at any up-to-dato drug tor clip in warm water and use as vou would a wash cloth Wash your face, hands amis, neck and shoulders, night i.n.i morning Let it remain on the skin for a minute thus allowing the pores to alsorb the food value o( tho oatmeal Wash oil with warm water, lin.s, with cold water and dry thoroughlj Then apply derwillo This Is very important. In a short I lino your skin will undergo a marvelous change. A rosy hue mounts the cheeks and a baby soilness conns to the skin. The verj first im plication will convince you that this combination la a most effective one for beautifying purposes it is especially recommended for freckles, tan. sunburn, wrinkles, large pores, rough skin, as it freshens and beautifies tho complexion ana maKes rouirn. r u naiui.s nmi arm: smooth and white. It gives the skir. the appearance of youth and whatcvel lUCCeSB 1 havo i'v-rss iiMnaaJaBaal fl J at- BBpgSgjre. to dcr- MKvt'sDQE willo and oat- HRjflBv cry WuBBbb rf- KjiiQBB no mat- KK MbHHIhI life, Bsb&B '? iHE& afforil gmffiffiffj 'jSKKxR : I night and morn- Hr o8aBPk Ing in i". Br UWSH In ompli xion Then- not . JWal enough mom : in Mi. world to li ; v . Known huHo SoJlSwMAE EDNA VILDE F this method and ... H frequently pass fos iorty. Women tiiirt? year of age look like girls in th.-ir O-i-n.-. ggfl just cut this out so you won't forget Iti i trv It for a w . U. and it the end ol that time you will thank mc for publishing 1 formula' NOTK To get the liest effect be suit to follow tho complete instructions gi. ;. ggfl above. Vou havo only to get derwillo gH and oatmeal. You need nothing .-Ise and gga It's so slmplo that anyone can use it. anU ggfl 80 Incxpensiv that any woman can af ford o Derwillo can be obtalni I In this city from department stores and all up- - to-dat- druggists, including A. It. Mcln- gH tyre, and CuUcy Drug Co. Advertise ment, 11 H it