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1 I 2 THE OGPEN STANDARD; OGDEN. .UTAH, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 7, 1920 llC I i"SYBUPOFFIG" CHILD'SLAXATIVE I jLook at tongue! Remove Poi- I ' sons from stomach, liver J ? and bowels Ii t Accept "California!' Syrup of Figs i fny look for the name California on , tthe package,' then you arc" sure your 'child 1b having the bes. and most Iharmless laxative or physic for the kittle stomach, Hvct and bowels. Chil dren love its delicious fruity taste. JFuIl directions for child's dose on itach bottle. Give it without fear. J Mother You must say "California.' ; AdvertiBcmcnt. IP'OH BOY" PLAYSflT ! OKI TIGHT J " Oh, Boy," a smart musical comedy .nd the fourth New York Princess theatre musical comedy success will lylay a matinee and an evening per formance at the Orpheum theatre to day. The tremendous success of "Oh, lioy" is due to its delightful wit and 'satire, its dainty production and tune (ful melodies. ' Some of the most popular musical numbers are "An Old-Fashioned Wife," 'Holled Into One," "Till the Clouds Roll By," "The. First Day of May," "Koo-la-loo," and "Nesting Time in 'Flatbush." Adv. oo ; State Game Warden to Bring Elk to Utah SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Jan. 7. Application for authority to bring one Khundred and eight head of elk, now re ported starving in the region adjoining (Yellowstone National park, to tho va rious Utah national forest reserves hvas made to tho interior department m Washington, D. C.,- today, by R. H. Siddoway, state game and" fish com missioner. Mr. Siddoway states that it his request for the elk is granted Jhey will be given stale protection. He hopes in this way to build up the !now depopulated Utah elk herds and likewise aid the starving animals. Conditions in Utah are excellent for Ahe propagation of large elk herds, Mr. feiddoway asserts. nn It's a good thing that the delegates didn't have to cat their meals from i w. k. Round Table, or they would! have left sooner than they did. .A fowl of any kind is always dressed to kill. Money is about the only part of your youth you can save, but Ii usually roes aa foolishly as the rest of It. U i That's right! Get all 3F011 can -for the money you spend whether it be much or little. Here's how to get your full money 's-wor tli in tea:- Don't buy common tea, even at a -low price per pound. It is extravagant per cup, because a pound makes so few cups unless you want tannin-strength, which is harmful. Pay the price for good, tea, which is full of tea flavor, and is' really cheaper per cup. You save money, and you get the cheer and invigora tion and rcstfulness that only nc tea can give. Schilling Tea is your tea. There are four flavors of Schilling 1 Tea Japan, Ceylon - India, Oolong, English Breakfast. All one quality. In Hj parchiuyn.incdmoisture-proof packages. At grocers everywhere. A Schilling & Co SatuJRraitcisco IliiliSTOF STRICKEN PUCES British Relief Director Reports Conditions So Deplorable as to Beggar Description LONDON". Dec. 20. Sir WHIiam Goode, the British director of relief.! declares thai Vienna is the worst of 1 all the famine-stricken places that he visited on a recent tour through ceu tral Europe. Although more than 2.-100.000 tons of foodstuffs, at a cost of nearly f 500. 000,000, have boon delivered in Euro pean relief since the signing of the armistice, by far the greatest share of which, he said, had been furnished by the United States under the direc tion t)f Herbert Hoover, conditions are gar description." A distinguished British army officer who had been in Vienna for some lime, Implored him before he left the Austrian capital: "For God's sake go home and tell thrm what it is like." Sir William told his ' experiences to the American Luncheon club here. ( I "I felt upon lenving Vienna," said I he, "as if 1 h:id spent ten days in the coll of a condemned murderer who lias given up all hope of a reprieve. I stayed at the best hotel but I saw no milk and no eggs the whole time 1 was there. In the bitter cold hall of the hotel, once the gayest rendezvous in Europe, tho visitors huddled together , in the gloom of one light where there used to be forty. They were more like shadows than representatives of the rich. Vienna's world-famous opera house is packed every afternoon.' vWhy? Women and men go there in or-' der to keep themselves warm and be-1 cause they have no work to do. Fuel Scare and High. "In my office I made several experi ments at working in overcoat and with blankets for the staff when the ther mometer inside was only one degree above freezing point. Finally 1 deter mined to got wood enough to light the one small fire for two days. It cost me 970 crowns, which, to the Viennese, is equivalent to about 30 or -10 pounds, "Do you wonder that the well-to-do people in Vienna are burning their furniture lo light their stoves? Can you imagine hew tho poor live or try ! to live? It is not unusual to see the , traffic in one of the main streets which leads lo the cemetery held up by hearses Nine-tenths carry the . bodies of children. Americans Feeding Children. 1 "In Vienna, in the palace of a for mer archduke, I saw thousands of children being fed with American re lief food under the control of a young naval officer, whom I was proud to recognize as one of those Americans who did excellent work in the early ' days of the commission for relief In ! Belgium. Our own British relief mis sions, both In Austria and In Hungary, and a number of unofficial British ' workers are doing everything possible lo stem the lido of distress." In Ser bia alone, Sir William declared, there are 500,000 fatherless children, most I of whom are suffering from hunger and exposure. "It seems to me that you cannot tri fle with starvation and privation in central Europe such as prevails today ' in Viennia without running the risk of a carnival of Bolshevism "which would probably not be confined to Ibis conti ! nent. I do not want lo cry 'wolf and I am rather inclined, to think that Bol- j shevism has been Used too much as a 1 bogy, but anyone with half an eye iraust realize that if, as a result of 'apparently legitimate grievances, 1 forces of unrest are loosed in the heart of Europe, the whole world, the 1 United States as well as ourselves, will be menaced." ; : Treaty Delay Blamed. i Sir William declared that "first and foremost among the causes of the pres ent situation in central Europe is the , delay in making peace. 1 "It scarcely seems to be realized in ' 'the tnited kingdom," he continued,' U'jsolated from the continent of Europe 1 I by a narrow strip of water and still less in tho United States, isolated by I I the Atlantic ocean, that AuBtria, Hun I gnry, Bulgaria and Turkey are still I technically at war with tho allies and,' what is more important, at war with most of their neighbors. j "As cne approaches the frontiers one finds every little wayside station j pacKCU wnn soldiers, uayuucis ii.tu ammunition wagons. War. and all the wasteful, effect of preparedness for war upon economic and Industrial progress, are vlsulazide for miles as cne travels through these countries. Many Do Not Know Nationality. "In many corners of central Europe today the inhabitants do not even know their own nationality. Until uni versal peace is ratified, until boun dary commissions are able to get to work, and until plebiscites can deter mine the future of democracies, cen tral Europe will be a patchwork of ethnological dislocation. An over-prolonged armistice, following upon four years of war, has knocked away al most every fundamental prop; polltl jcal financial and economic. "States on the Danube the main I avenue of traffic fear to send barges I out of their own territorial waters lest they should be appropriated by their next-door neighbor. Just as on land the British Tommy is the only safe guard for a train of supplies, so on :the Danube one of Admiral Trou bridge's British mine-layers, with a in itio British middy in command, Is the only guarantee of safc conduct. Food Trains leld Up. "The other day, on the Jugo-Slav frontier, trains of food supplies ar ranged by the allied relief missions and nil paid for by the Austrian gov ernment wore on their way to miti gate starvation in Vienna. At the last moment the Jugo-Slav government clapped on an csport duty of 50 per , cent and refused to permit the trains I to go forward unless that tax was paid ' In foreign oxchange. I .ventured to : take international law Into my own hands and, thanks to the rcsourceful ! ncss and intrepdity of .1 couple of young British army officers, those trains arrived in Vienna. "Another interlocking difficulty as between food and transport is the per sistent flocking of peasants with eggs, sacks of flour, live gecso and ducks and all kinds of agricultural produce into the towns. In snow, rain, or any kind of weather, you can see not only the inside but the roof of every rail- j ARE you aware of thb vital relation between He win describe the great service advantages of I jj . - tlTe selection and tire care, on the one side, Goodyear Truck Tires Solid Tires, Goodyear g W 1 and truck costs on the other -side? Cushion Tires' and Goodyear Pneumatic ' Cord I j , I ' Truck Tires. I I f ) It will pay you, the owner of the business, or the f ffl chief executive, to concentrate on this truck tire And he wil1 recommend the right tire for you E m j problem. the one that will do your work most economically. ')M Maybe there is a big leak in your truck costs, due He , .wiU. tel1 you of our sPeed workmanlike J I ! ; .directly or indirectly to tires, and you can stop it aPPhcatl0n service mde possible by our expert l I mechanics and big hydraulic press. H j You've stopped the other leaks-stop this. . Then he win explain our er.seffin servicej j JI j which is based on periodic, recorded inspection f IS As a first step, we suggest that you permit our 0f the tires and trucks in use to the end that f lE I representative to go into your problem for you. these tires may save you the last possible cent. Jfffi I J ' , He will explain, of course our service. This starts I I H with the selection of the right size of the right Probably he will point out your leak at once and l I jj . type of tire for your use. help you stop it. Why not ask him to call todav? ? i V S I '' Wb j G oody e a r Truck Ti r e S er v ic e Station , way carriage thronged with this quacking crowd of food speculators Their traffic has assumed sucli propor tions as to make legitimate railway YBUNG WOMEN TTiis Letter Tells How it May : be Overcome all Mothers Interested. Fort Dodge, la.- "From tho time ray ' daughter was 13 years old untU she was Hbat she would havo down in hIthf and at last a friend who i-r-ri had used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound told her about it and she has used sixteen bottle? and we always have it in the house. She feels fine now and ehe has no trouble at all each month. We al ways praise it and advise any friends who suffer to use j'our wonderful med icine." Mrs. Minnie Mandelko, 1005 S. 18th St, & 10th Avenue, Forfc Dodjge, Iowa. Girls who are troubled as Miss Man delko was, should immediately seek re 1 storation to health by taking Lydia E. i Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Those who need special advice may write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. These letters will be opened, read and an swered by a woman and held in 3trict ! confidence. , 1 I traveling almost impossible. What it I means In the problem of food distribu tion will be apparent when I tell you that a train or 10 carriages full of "the picturesque profiteering peddlers can only carry as much food as could be put ito four ordinary railway tructa." oo SOTTISH ESTATES OF ! BEMERSVDE FOR IS 'British Commander to be Made i Owner of Lands, Mansion and Title LONDON, Jan. 7. Tho prophecy of Thomas, the Rhymer, who wrote "Tyde what may betydc, Haig shall be Halg of Bemersyde," bids fair to bo fulfilled. A movement is on foot here to purchase the 'Scottish estates of Bemersyde, together with the historic mansion and present- them to Earl ITalg, (who adopted the designation of Earl Haig of Bemersyde on his leva tion to the peerage) as a record of the British people's -admiration for his tri umphant leadership of the British arm- jies during the war. The properly is now owned by Lieutenant Colonel A. 'B. Haig. It was the Bemersyde where Turner, : the painter, was taken by Sir Walter Scott, the poet, for the purpose of mak ing drawings to Illustrate the scenery of Scott's poems. The estates, which include the fa tuous mansion, have an area of 1306 acres and the market value is put at S26S.000 for which sum It has been (decided to appeal. They have been owned and occupied by the Halgs con tinuously for more than seven centuries- Bemersyde is situated In the parish of Alcrtoun, Scotland, in the very cen- mio- jgjaggumpj 'i ' i-ji. ii mwv tor of a district which for more than 300 years was tho battleground oi two) hostile nationalities as well as the l scene of almost never-ceasing inter nal conflict, rapine and dissension. Of the hundreds of forts and castles which once existed on the Scottish side of the border, Bemersyde is the only one that is, still inhabited as a manorial residence and inhabited, too, by the family that were its original founders. Bemersydo House Itself ntands on an elevated rocky bluff over handing one of the most beautiful reaches of tho river Tweed. On th6 opposite bank of the river Is the prom ontory of Old Melrose, tho spot on which the Saxon disciples of Aidan, more than 1200 years ago. uplifted the symbols of Christianity. Contributions toward the purchase of the estate arc to be accepted by every bank In England. oo Now fome wag comes forth with tho discovery that a traveling man's ex pense account is a good time table. itf ci"itJoncr Wm. K. Kerr, of JSggjfrl thr Cily ol Chicago.. "Fron Bwiii TmbI 171 y own experience with Nax KEa2UjN ated Iron I feci it Is such jnMjjgrX&Sfll valuable blood and body buOd FjK2GvXJ inc preparation that it ouzbt Uja3(r to be utcd in every hoi mill vwruly and prevented by every phy. tlclah in tfre couniry," Nuxotcd Iron belpa to mate healthier women and Ttrcmter, atw. dirrrnen. Satiifaetion cuxranteed or moasy, refunded. At all sood druecin. iSigsiing of Players f o rl920 Is Underway DETROIT. MICH.. Jan. 7 The siting of plnycrs for tho 1020 Detroit Amorlcin Lcapuc team already is under way. Two pitchers, two catchers and an outfielder were amonp the flrjt lo &n contraci They are Hubert "Dutch". J.con.-nd and Bernlo Bolanri; Bddlc Alnamlth ami Oficar Stanapc. and Robert Vcach. The usual stories Hint Ty Cobb, tho TlRera' star ccnterflel'der. may not pn ball next your arc In circulation, but ifttio credence. Is given them. Cobb's contract holds over for another year, and It gen erally is expected he will be with the club on openlnR- day. The DotrolL club will train at pMhcoii, Georgia. The pitching staff le schen. tiled to start out Fcbruury 22, the re mainder of the club following a veu later. Exhibition gamos in the south ogaln will be played with the Boston Xullonals, A proposal that the Tigers play the Cincinnati National April 10. probublv will not be accepted. Conflicting dalM Is given as the reason. An effort Is beln I made 'to nrrangc a contest on that da: j with tho Indianapolis team of tho Amer ican association. J I vw Greatest Church Drive j of World to Start' ATLANTIC CITY, X. j jau. 7. I Plans for the greatest world evange-' Ust campaign over attempted wero agreed upon nt a preliminary meeting I of the first post bellum conference of 1 tho Inter-church world movement. Rep resentatives of boards of home mis-! sions of nearly a score of Protectant denominations attended. A great drive for converts will be,. 3TI ntFFl, , . .Tn rt 1 I agqai I LJkiX.AA-I.JJi III III III MSU t'"' carried forward by 200.000 pastois in "very slate In the union. The cam- 9 jh' paign id to be terminated with a mar- Sj wf shalling of the hosts of rooruits for 'wii Christianity In all churches of the 1 country on Easter Sunday. W 'Utah Has Oil Gusher I Near Diamond Fork i m SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Jan. 7 I W, Utnh has an oil gusher, according to $ ffci a report received today from Thistle. f ifc a little town near tho entrance to Dia- I ftl mond Fork canyon, about C5 miles -J Hfc south of here. ri El( h J,?ei ?VPU ,is ro,01-tcl to have been flf Sll &nR P. by a comy- which has 0 f M been drilling near tho lower end of ' fifis Diamond 1-ork canyon during the past ii two months. jj Ki V. is stated when the drill passed H ! through the cap rock the oil spouted fi WR over the derrick and has since been S 91 flowing continually. 9 FOR MJUOfME I Use Antiseptic Liquid Zemo mm There is one remedy that, seldom ; i XoitetORtop itching- torture and relieve skin untation aod f.hat makes thesldn 1 HB' soft, clear and healthy ; WBt ' Any druggist can supply you with ' ': IMf F.cmo, which generally overcomes skin 1 ; W' diseases Eczema, itch, pimples, rashes, : i K' blackheads, in most cases give way - fflP' to Zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes WtLL disappear overnight Itching usually f wP stops instanUy , Zemo is a safe, anti- f. mm septic liquid, dcai,. easy to use and l aC dependable. It c6sr"inly 35c; an extr? ij largft bottle, Si no t will not stain, is not greasy ot 'J.ictv and is positively iEK5'' catt 101 tender sensitive 0uns. Tntls.V RoceCa.Clcvcliad.O. 1; ; . AdvertlscxnenU m