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BtmSi 'WQstfMgSaMfflQE jMfffi "'ms ' wJtWU HraHniPB nffti gaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaHH.aH9gaMgBira IT: III 1HE OGDEN S I ANDAKP: OCiULIM. U 1 AH, ILhbDAi, DLL LMBLK 30. 1(; 1 rJ 1 Comfort Feet That Itch And Burn With Cuticura For tired, aching, irritated, itching, feet warm bath with Cut'cura Soap followed by gentle applications ef Cuticura Oint ment arc most successful, Soap 25c, Ointtntnt 25 and KOc. Talcum 2Kc. Sold throueliout the Fwld. For sample each free jddress "Cuticura Lab oratorr. Dept. ZZF Maiden, Mm. ' 5MF( ulicura Seap he without ir.uc I I 1 1 Glory Bel Cost of j Shine In Ogden To I Remain at 10 Ce?ils Iv While idioe chines in Zion have id- T VagRQSsI to 1" cent, no indications of sueh j a movement in Ogden. lias yl been no- u tlced. Inquiry at various shoe stands of n Ilia city discloses the fact that while uw Iff coft of materials has in xeased to so.ni M extent, that a fair profit can '"till be i made on the 10 peilt basis. Should Iho J 30 cent condition COntBlUc to prevail in IB Ogden. this city v.;n be practically the Iff only one In the west in which a person Ml! rnn l shine for 10 cents. n It is reported that the 10 cent prio Hall IO' nine continue to prevail in the ' int. and in seme instances 5 cent shine IbH pallors an- known to be getting along II Supt. Hopkins Goes I To Boise Convention Supt. Karl Hopkins of the Ogden B hool system, departed Sunday aft crnooti for Boise v here ho will attend the state convention of hachers f.r ihe slate of Idaho during (he present Wt ok. Superintendent Hopkins will ad jl dress the teachers at two of the r ji meetings during I he week. Ho will return to Qgdcn Friday For Colds or Influenza IHf fnd as a Preventnlive lake LAX.V TIVR BRGMO QUININE Tablets. Look for K W. GROVE'S signature ou 1 the box. II Quorum of Seventy Is I Organized at Meeting n At meeting of the Ogden stake held 1 At the Weber Normal college Sunday the scvcntli Quorum of Seventy was or- jj ganized by J?emonr B Young Fortv- I four members were enrolled and the fol- I lowing presidents sustained. K Alfred Bumnierin, M ES Purfly, Clsr- Q nice A. Manning. Franklyn J Foulger, I Herman I Westei brook. Charles 1. Crov, a and Joseph J Hanison Cornelius Van I derdors was Sustained as Secretary. Tfc I six other quorums of the stake were re organized two weeks am BHI oo II Commissioner Jones II Will Take Vacation I Miles L. Jones, one of the retiring I members of the cltj commission, will I return to his position it ihe head or I the Miles L. Jones Ire company with I the ?ppearance of Ihe new c ..munis H sloners January commission.-1 Jones staled this morning thai lie I would fake a vacation before return J in? to his dunes after a four J en i pe- I riod with the city administration Railroad Men Will H Talk Fuel Saving Officials of the Salt Lake division of .tj' the Southern Pacific railroad win meet J today at Cariin. Nov., to attend a J9 fuel conservation meeting. 4 Officers from the general offlcen at ,J San Francleco will be present. I Among Ogdcn officiaLs who will be :M present at the meeting are: Supertn- VJ tendent B. A McBean. Master Me- 1 chanic David Hickey. Dhlsion Engi nerr Otis Weeks. Signal Supervisor M 1 M Mead and W. J. Toy, road foreman 2 of engines. '?S Others who will be present are A. W. jjj Kisther, assistant superintendent at Sparks; S. E Cannady, road foreman 'rS of engines; S. S. Small and Paul Jonea assistant master mechanics at Sparks. The conservation of fuel oil and coal will be the main topic of discussion at gajW, the meeting. S Ask fork "HILL'S'p FIVE MILLION PEOPLEfc H USED IT LAST YEAR Bfcfc. mm bills fe H CASCARA&QUININE b L StanSard cold remedy for 20 year H L i tablet form u(e, aure, no jl k Dpiatu breaWt up a cold in 24 H hours relieves grip in 3 dayi. BaaaaH nallWMoTle7 b,ck i U f,il he aLH nVaaaaaV fcnune box h'5 Rrd vJ'iillfiV kLp tw h Mr' Hni'" H Vjgy aaaW At A II Drag Stmrtt OGDEMTE IN FAVOR OF W. J. Blfl FOfi : PRESIDENT Thai he was overwhelmingly foi William Jennings Bryan as ihe iiemn icratic nominee for president in 1920. is the view advanced by Guy Johnson of Ogden one of the prominent Demo (i, lis ol i hp (ntermountain country. Mr. .lolinson said that Bryan was tin logical candidate because he was an c-nrly advocate of prohibition and womnn Suffrage, the greal commoner and friend of the laboring class and an adocato of a lpnsne of nations to guarantee world-wide peace. Hran. Mr Johnson said, was a man whose ideftS ujion world-wide problems and particularly of America, had been adopted and some oi which placed in laws The child labot law was one of Bryan's eSrliesI -in-ccst ion.1' COMMISSIONED ORDERS RETURN OF SPECIAL STARS An order calling in all special of ficer stars" has been issued by Com missioner of Public Safety Miles L, Jones. The order lakes effect imme diately, accord ng to Commissioner .lone. All oilier is haing in their possession bpecial officer ".stars" arc requested io return them to the police department. With the exception of the special of fii.crs employed as nicht watchmen at ihe incius!rial plants of the city, all badges will he collected "The order has hecn issued, in order that the incoming city officials will have a check on the special officers of the city," said Commissioner Jones his mcrning. nn SOW SCHOOL OH OF WEBER COONiy HIS JAN. 5 Monday, January r, 1920, in the Ti t Baptist (hurth on Grant avenue, there will he a meeting of ihe officers and department heads of the Weber t "ounly Sunday school union, repre sentifig the Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregational. Hapiist Christian, Episcopal and English Lutheran churches, when plaits for the operation of the union and suggestions for the conduct of the organization will be dis- .ied. The officers of the union are: President, H. A. Seip, Methodist Vice presider.t, John Thomas. Con- ci egatiOnal, Secretary, Jennie L. Berlnger, Cliris- tlan. Treasurer, W. R. Looney, Baptist. '.dull supei .hi ndeni. Mr. Milton, Met hod: 1 Younc; people, Mrs. Demson, Episco pal Primary . Oil; abeth Uolmstrom, Lutheran. Administratiyci Mr. Smith, Presbyterian. oo HOW HE ENDED KIDNEY TROUBLE. "I had a severe attack of kidneys trouble and for three weeks could not set out of doors and scarcely out of bed. write-, t ) Prewei, Village Sprite , Ala ' Could not bend over at all without the mcst excruciating pains. I purchased a bottle of Foley Kidney Pills. Was relieved after the first few doses and continued their use until completely cured. I consider Foley Kidney Pills ihe best kidne. remedy in ihe world No recurrence of my trouble a k Mclntyre Hru? Co. Adverl iscment. UU Middle Class in Great Britain Being Ground to Powder LONDON. Dec 30. Lord Buck master, formerly lord chancellor, de clared in the house of lords tbe other da lhat ihe people of "middle class" in Great Britain were belnc "slowly ground to powder under present condi lions. "There is a large body of people whom." he said, for want of a better definition, I will call the middle class, the people engaged as civil servants, doctors, lawyers, writers, and chooi masters, all the people who earn rela tively, aniall incomes, say from 300 to 1.000 pounds sterling, and who are the most thrifty and the most self-sacrificing class in the whole country "They are' people who stint them selves somei lines of almost the neces sities of life in order that ihey mav give their eons a better chance at school and at college; they are the class which has recruited all our finest ppople all over the globe. "What is the result? Every time the currency is inflated Ihe hand of the -'ate is put Into their pockets, and from their small, hard won earnings sums are taken away In order that oth er people may have more. "These are the people who are be ing slowly ground to powder undpr the present conditions, and I say it Is the class which represents the life-growing nolnt of the nation. If that class is once destroyed It will be impossible 'hat it should ever be replaced." Rendy Soon The comfort station win completed m Twsntyfourth street uid Washington avenue, within the next irn days. n rordinr to CommLtloAer Flycnr. The truth Is all right, but so mnn p. n i pie are ashamed to tell If, COLD DRIVES FLOCKS OF STRSNGE DIRDS FROM DILLS Driven from their usual mountain habitat by the severe fold of Sun da night, flocks of cedar quail, wax wings, and grosbeaks were seen in trees bordering various Ogden Streets this morning, The birds fh from tree lo tree in flocks, and appar etttl) are not used to mankind, being very much tamer than the sparrows which inhabit the cit The birds have evidently been driv en from the hills because of hunger. They nadih attack Ihe dry boxelder seeds, and upon stripping the tree "! its seeds, fly io the next one The e!ar quail are somewhat larg er than a sparrow, and are a beautiful bluish gray in color. On each wing is a liny feathel of flaming scarlet, that has the appearance of wax. The gros beaks have orange breasts and heavy bill'- typical to species of birds that i derive their sustenance from seeds Five Survivors of Belgian Steamer Battle For Life HALIFAX. N. S., Dec. 29. Five stir vivors ol iho crew ol ihe Belgian steamer Anton Van Driel were bat tling desperately for life tonight on the wreck of their ship which was fast be ing pounded to pieces on the jagged rocks wh-ch guard the entrance to St Mary's, bay. New Fojndland. Their only hope was lhal ihe wreck, swept incessantly by gigantic icy combers would hold together until a rescuing steamer from St John's was able to reach them. It was a slender hope for (he ill-fated ship had been driven on the rocks at a spot where no vessel could approach in safety except in the calmest weather. All day Img the fisher folk from the nrarbv virago of Si. Shott's had watched the unequal struggle foi life from the tops of the rugged cliffs v hich frowned down upon the wreck. They were absolutely powerless io The steamer, laden with a cargo of coal for Ihe Dutch government cleared from Sydney last Saturday under the command of Cap:ain Hurnweil Swept out of her course bv a terrific sea, she was hurled on St Shotls ledges short ly after 1 o'clock this morning. Boats rede immediately launched and promptly dashed to pieces against Ihe 1 -ii bv the mountainous wav i When morning broke the Inhabitants of the little fishing village saw flv men clinging desperate to the bridge of the doomed si earner while wreckage and bodies were tossed about in the breakers at the foot of the cliffs. The steamer 6rd red from SI John's to attempt a rescue cannot reach the scene of the wreck before tomorrow morning at the earliest. Reports re cehed hen late today from St Shotts declared that there were only lender chances of the ship holding together throughout the night. nn Noted Light Opera I Singer Dies At Home in Conkers Yonkfrs, Y , Dec 29. Pauline Hall, long noted as a light opera sing er, died at her ome here today ol pm u monla. She was on the stas-- foi more than 4u years Miss Hall was born in Cincinnati 59 years ago, her maiden name beinj Pauline Frederick A Smidgegall t fifteen she made her first appearance on the stage as a ballet dancer. Later she -war. In the chorus of a lishl opera company and appeared with Marv Anderson, pla Ing Lady Capulet in "Borneo artfi Juliet." Her first singing part was in 1882 in a licht opera known as "the merry war " This was followed by roles in various light operas and a short season with Nat QoodWin until she made her great est success, in originating the part of "Brminie" In the opera of that name which played B00 performances in New. oik and toured the country. Miss Hall became the head of her own company in 1892. appearing a Vivian, Far'l of Barrenlands," and Played in a version of "Cvrano de Bergerae," and oiher musical com edies of bite years she had appeared eiten in vaudeville Miss Hall was married In 1881 at St Louis to Edward White a mining man whom she divorced In 1S91 she married George P. frcClttian, a theat rical manager. They had one daugh ter. Paulirte Erminie M Clellan who sun tvrs her mother. nn FAMOUS POPLAR TREE WASHINGTON. Dec. 2 A pop lar tree at Spartanburg; S. C, the top of which was shot off during the Fourth of July celebration In 183 has been entered In the Hall of Fame- for trees which are being complied bv the American Forestry association. From Lisbon, O., comes the nomination of the tree under which the Indians and white set Hers came to an agreement regarding Iron ore to be used n mak ing kettles Ralph ; Smith of I IT clevllle o.. enter, the Logan Elm in that city C c. Kovce nominates the Sir Joseph Hooker Oak at Chico , Cal General Sherman estimated that 7 mm men could stand in the shade of this tree A. D. Dart nominate:; ihe 1 T.arg est Live Oak" In the south at Bruns wick, 8a., known to be a veteran m 17fi3. It has a circumference oi i; feet. UU The brave. fnred lie wns the flrt nude to become popular in this country jj waaaa ladies Keep Your Skin Clear, Sweet, Healthy With Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Talcum 1 r " $ H : uj Out tomorrow 1 NewMetor Records 1 for January S Tf you love music, there are certainly selections in this new list which will make a special appeal to you. Whether you have a preference D i &8 for operatic arias or concert songs, or lean toward instrumental music; HI whether popular song hits strike your fancy, or you revel in lively dance numhers, there is music of the kind you like best in these new records rag I H which you will surely want to hear and to have in your own home D once you have heard them. Si kf ?T'.imbrr 5iie Price . ,' Dear Heart Emilio dc Gogorra 64836 10 $100 Hyrr.r. to the S-jn (from "The Go, Jen Cockerel") Violin Mischa Elman 74507 12 1.50 jffl 1 . Sana Toi (Without Thee) Geraldine Farrar 87292 10 1.00 3 l . DonPaequalo Cavatino'Qjc: cuardo" (dancer. So Soft) Amelita Galli-Curci 74599 12 1.50 i Only You John McCormack 61S3S 10 1.03 H Invitation to the Waliz Philadelphia Orchestrn 74598 12 1.50 f- Pagltacci Prolog Pari I Renato Zanolli , 64331 10 1 00 H Pagliacci Prolog Part II Renato Zanelh 64S32 10 1 00 $ H I Am Climbing Mountains Albert Campbell and Henry Burr) You Didn't Want Mo When You Had Mo Henry Burr j llJ 85 Huih My Babe (2) Hnppy Land (3) C ome i hou Fount 1 of Every Bleseing Victor Orchetra I 1S622 10 .85 ma Lullaby from "Erminie" (2) Birds in the Night Victor Orchestra I My Baby' Armo Medley Fox Trot Accordion Pietro) i,l And He'd Say Oo-la-!a! Wee-Wee Medley One-Step Accor.i.on Pietro j' 0 f I Want a Daddy Who Will Rock Me to Sleep Medley , Fox Trot All Star Trio 1S626 10 .S All the Quakers are Shoulder Shakcrc Medley Fox Trot All Star Trio I wfl f' America the Beautiful (2) Star of the Summer Night Victor Military Band ) Speed the Republic (2) On',vard Christian Soldiert Victor Military Band 1S527 10 SS Wait Till You Get Them Up in the AAr, Boys Billy Murray B Floctin' Down to Cotton Town American Quartet i 13tj28 10 85 L j 1 Might Be Your "Oncc-in-a-While" Medley Fox Trot ) Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra ' jg62f) Patches Foa Trot Joseph C. Smith's Orchestral H Oh! What a Pal Was Mary Medley Waltz Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra ) H H Nobody Knows Medley One-Step Joseph C. Smith'a Orchestra f 18630 10 85 I Wonderful Pal Sterling Trio There's a Lot of Blue-Eyed Mtryi Down in Maryland Shannon Four 18631 W .85 Gems from "Sometime" Victor Light Opera Company yjjt j , Gems from "She's n Good Pellov" Victor Light Opera Company ) 3o694 12 1,35 Hear these new Victor Records to-morrow at any Victor dealer's. k lie will gladly give you an illustrated booklet describing these new records and play any music you wish to hear. New Victor Records ; 'j demonstrated at all dealers on the 1st of each month. Victrolas in ' great variety from $25 to $950. ' I ' Vtctrolawy Si B Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. 11 Iliini44aiinffiiiiiiinrii'- xxxxsamanxsamaA " wJlp g3ag:nTVMMmy " MrnsMarr-au iii a,aa,franTqriwi ri ' wmitmwmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmKmmmmt Alio . Gompers Points Out Omissions By Industrial Board WASHINGTON. Dec. 29. Failure of the president's Industrial innferenee "to rToC7il7.p definitely the oifr:inl7..ntlons of workers trade unions aa the baata for ( representations n fatal omission " Sam uel Gompera president of the American ; Federation of lahor. declared today in n statement discussing th tentative ceport ' of the commission. Certainly Mr. Gompers added, tbe con : fcrence should reconsider this point In j I order lo make possible the co-operation of tratfa earttera "which can i- expressed i only ihrousjh organisaJlon of their own I ittakinf ' Mr Gompers said that any jln to o tablish oi maintain anything like fair re - l tlons between workers and employer must avoid compulsory features declar ing that the mass of America's workers were "American CltlSehi end In that sov ereljrn dttstfAsnlp they are free men." Proposals ef eompulsory labor are ra pupnant. he added in order to promote constructive and permanent ehanges that will eliminate CSUS4 I of much Industrial unrest. Mr. Gompers said, the CCnfefence should con sider governmental agencies to provide the necessary Information and assistance in obtaining continuous betterment of working conditions. Thin problem, ho added, must ultimately be worked out by employers and employes with the advli and assistance of the government Discussing the Statement in the coni miKKion'n report regarding- relat ioiik Inp between employer md employe In large Industries, Mr Gompers declared that both employers nnd OfltplOySi must be orgoniied In order lo bettoMiS responsible psrtlea io any s stem of mediation or arbitration, otherwise he contended, the I Electric Baths And I Steam Heat Save I Frozen Turtles NEW YORK, Dec 29 Electric j baths and a steam heated room a first aid to twelve frozen 300-pound turtles, yhi(h arrived today on iho steamship Tivhes from Porl Limon, probabl averted . Bhortage c.t turtle oup ai Nei York hotels during the new yeai holidays. One turtle, said to he onl four hundred and ninety years old, was ! saved with great difficulty. Accustomed to the warm waters of the Caribbean, the turtles, which were In lanlcs on the top deck, were stiff as stone soon alter the vessel reached northern temperatures The Khip's physician reported an absence of pulse heat hut piescrlbed heal in large quan- i titles A deck shelter aft was fitted With electric lights and sleam pipes' and the turtles moved into it by means of a derrick. arbitration tribunal must deal with In dividual Instead of organized groups "The principles of representations de- I pends upon organization," he Raid Frank Morrison, secretary of the fedei aflon, also criticised the conference's sug- ' gcstionx. He noted particularly that there yvas no reference to collective ba gS thing or the necessity for organizations of workers and said "both of these prln- eiples are accepted by every forwarn lOoklhg man and woman In the counts ' i Get the Genuine USttfSk I and Avoid rf&STtib ll&LrX&SP Economy I sffls in Every Cake i Marriage Bureau To Get Husbands For American Girls new York. Dec. 29. A marrlagt ! bureau is being maintained by the Near Kasl Relief in Broussa, once cap ital Of the Turks in Asia Minor, in which Armenian glrlb rescued from Turkish harems are aided In geitinc; husbands Tins news was brought ihero today by Lieutenanl Cbestei Forrester Dunham of Chicago, a chap 'lain in the United States array ro serve He has bpen stationed at Broussa for the Near East Relief, and arrived on the Atlantic transport liner Blark Arrow. ' Armenians from ihe interior seek wives to renew their family life, And I the come to us," he said. "We In- j vestigate every case and If ihe man 1 ixnd girl are willing the marriage Is ' performed In all rases the man un derstands yvhat the girl has been through. So far all or these marriages have turned out happily " UU BROWNIES LEAVE SERVICE. LI 'Xlx IN, 1 lec. 13. The last group of "Brownies' have Ju9t left the gov ernment service. causing general j lamentation These worn young mcs Sanger girls yvho wars taken on during the war and were called brownies be-, ftause Of their special brown dresses which were supplied by the authorities It is claimed that they proved them selves much smarter and quicker than boyB, oo School Bells School bells aoundwd thai end of tbe rhristmus vacation at the ! Utah Agricultural College this mornlrn- j The other sehools of the state closed their j doors from December 19 to .latum r Ogden i-tiidontH and students from oth.-. Sections of the state returned to Logali ' last nighb Plenty of Coal is Arriving, Dealers Say g, 3ai;ei Coal in large amounts 1. arriving d: frg from points in I'tih, according io lo al llh'arc coal dealers With the oal strike setl d VhrJUr Die coal is now being received daily. Lol Kj cal yards repon ' -Shin, amounts rf eoal and the situation whieli I fflor was becoming a hen l now 1 1 s i I rl. ! Only 'qim, iMlh a PRINCESS LOUISE WEALTHY for p;H( BERLIN, Dec 12 Princess LouissjBhi , the divorced wife of Prince Philip gi Saxe-Coburg, and daughter of the latsfffciatic King Leopold 11 , of the Belgians, isPcr. reported lo have become a miliionalrtj wit fifty times ocr, reckoned in A'lsiriaaBW hea kronen. At tbe beginning ot the " afffts nf she was in the territory of the .nfraBr ar powers she is stated to have onlMBhe i Just received 5,000.000 francs left HPfns her out of her father's estate aiH) v thanks to the present rate of exchange Of ihe has obtained "n.fiiMi kronen ThsPjh a piinr-fc ia noNV in nt; ;,t 1 1 1 1 7 i n r. n al, is s 'icnna. JfCrct jvr H. The loss of hia Job Is apt to punetiinjgtSffa 0ej a man's vanity and let a lot of ceotisaBpOrtalf run out. P'ard --SEE JOYFUL EATSNG Unless your food is digested with- IE,,lnt out Ihe aftermath of painful acidity, Ifc'n; ihe joy is taken out of both eating Bfc lo. and living. IsgQar08' are wonderful In their help to the f-fci ila( stomach troubled mth oveT aridity, 'rona an j Pleasant to take relict prompt and l.IsigQc.(j definite. 5t' to r MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE E f the n., MACR5 OF SCOTT3 EMULSION jlt Ril) n II sgSHlll IIISWIIaaagseglSSSagT r rof for,f