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1 IH j "IHh. UUUbIN STANDARD; UGDhiN, UIAM. I UhSDAY, JANUARY W, IV20 3 !' I1 IPIICTIIDIII NetContentsl5PluidI)raohi j J icS : lf,flOTMv)SJ f For Infants and Children. ftSTDF?li Mothers Know That Si lHSS Genuine Castoria UX LCOIIOL-3 PER CENtT" Sifi WAVfeietaWctaaraliojJrAs- AiWaVS ff a 8 ' similatinlhcFoodbjrRcula- dilvvu'vw a il i3ears ihQ Ap 55 1 ChccrfulncssandRcstConlains & "jr B 'i neither Opium. Morphine ncr p iM :GaEg. Mineral. NotNArgotw UI j F " 'GonitlpafionnndDiarrhoea. VT SI S 0 ' SSfSo' and Vcvcrishncss and I B U If Loss of Sleep I B W rcsullinthcrcfrojnMnlnfonc. ttW -HIT IB VP F Exact Copy of Wrapper. y V''Cftr'? tHL 'fiK''yf curAWY' new Yonxcnv. -f"! J.- - HH TT j , lhFT The Standard's U. A. C. Bureau j J Articles of Interest to Farmers, Housekeepers and Others ;j I Written for The Standard by Experts at Utah's Noted 8 . Agricultural College at Logan !i ii- I i i i- in -in- .,....,.,,,, .... ..un.J I POTATO PRODUCTION I Professor George Stewart, Utah Experiment Station Potatoes wore the first crop planted in Utah. In July 1817. the Mormon pioneers turned the water from City Creek ovor tho parched land near what js now the center of Salt Lake Citly. The ground was then broken and sown at once to potatoes. Only a small yield was obtained but this help ed materially to eke out the meager lood supply until the harvest of 1S4S. In the several hard years that follow ed, tire potato crop was one of the most important, if the not the most important source of food for the pion eer settlers. Ever since, Utah has !' f grown potatoes and is now rapidly in i creasing its acreage. No other vegetable in Utah is so widely grown and so regularly con i ! sumed for food. The high acre-yield and the relativo ease of cultivation li make it a profitable crop both for the I: home consumption and for market. , l Responding readily to the ititensivo cultivation mat must accompany nigu oriced land and irrigation, potatoes are an ideal food crop for the inter mountain country. Not only for hu man consumption but as feed for live stock, they possess .great intrinsic alue. Considerable quantities may. therefore, be produced even at long distances from market or from the railroad. Natural adaptation and Ion cxpori- Icnce in growing potatoes have mado production successful. This is shown ( in the regularly increasing acre-yield Notwithstanding, this, however, there is vast room for further improvement.' Better preparation of seedbeds, morel careful selection, bettor methods of; disease control, and wiser irrigation i are all comparatively simple and inexj pensive; yet they would greatly in- trease both the yield and the quality of Utah's potato crop. This is truei I not only on farms that grow potatoes j I almost entirely for home consumption; i but on those farms which grow truck I 1 potatoes for city markets and also on I those wich produce sufficient quantl-J ties of the general crop for interstate! shipment. All growers in this section can improve in some phase of potato production, most of them in several. No known region has yet made such; progress in potato growing as to havej no more lessons to learn. To this rule the farmers of Utah are not an exception. Striking Men Enjoined , From Picketing Yards SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 19. A tem porary injunction restraining striking employes of the Bethlehem Shipbuild ing corporation from picketing the yards of the company here and in Ala- imeda was issued by the United Slates district court here today. The injunction was directed against the boilermakers' and machinists' un ions and eight individual union lead ers. The company in its petition for the order said that government con tracts were being suspended uy the picketing acts and other activities of the strikers. A similar petition by the Schaw- FIVE MILLION PEOPLESk USED IT LAST YEAR CASCARaJPNINE i L Bromide 1 f. Stnndnrd cold remedy for 20 year Bk. in tablet form safe, ure, no flfe. opiates breaks up a cold In Z "5 hours relieves crip in 3 days. 01. Money back if it (ails, Tho m I fMnAi! genuine box has a Red i iil- - f Uy BH, At Alt Drug Storf Catcher Shipbuilding company of South San Francisco remains to be! acted upon. j The shipyard workers have been on j strike since September 30, following! differences ovor a wage agreement. ( rn 1 . Mexican Murderer Is I Sesiteiacec! to Death! GEORGETOWN. Texas, Jan. 19. ' Juan Chaballa. a Mexican was found 1 guilty of murder and sentenced to death In district court here today in connection" 'with the murder of-Atan-acclo Brabo. his wife and nine year-old daughter also Mexicans, near Jarrell. in this county last month. The family was murdered with an axe and Chabal la was arrested shortly after. He showed no emotion when an interpre ter read the verdict of him today. His attorneys will make a motion for a new ti la, i' was announced. i? 11 MED 1 ; TO IE DECALOGUE i I Federal Commission Declares j Prohibition Amendment and I Laws Will Stand i I NEW YORK, Jan 19 The prohi bition amendment was likened- to the iDecalouge today by John F. Kramer, federal prohibition enforcement com imissioner, in an address at the annual meeting of New York clergymen under I tho auspices of the anti-saloon league, j "Tho passions, the appetites and the desires of men," he said, "made it nec I cssnry for the promulgation of the 1 ten commandments, now embodied in Holy. Notwithstanding the fact that the commandments and our criminal 1 laws interfere with men's passions, ap- petites and desires, yet they still stand i and arc obeyed by the great mass of j American people. So I am sure it will be under the federal prohibition amendment and the laws enacted thereunder. "Why should this law be considered differently than any other law? Some say it interferes with tho personal lib erty of men and hence should not br enforced or obeyed. If it Avore no' for men's appetites we would ne-. no law with a penalty attached to it I Mr. Kramer gave warning that pop Jular support would be necessary foi effective enforcement of prohibition, saying : "The people of our country are apt to start things and then fall to keep up sufficient interest in them to see that they are carried to a successful conclusion. "I believe the people will accept this responsibility and perform the duty which plainly rests upon them." William H. Anderson, stale superin tendent of the anti-saloon league of New York, said thnt the only hope or the liquor interests lay in the possibil ity of repealing or changing the en forcement act and intimated that tho league would concentrate its fight to retain this law. 00 League to Control Sarre Valley Region PARIS, Jan. 19, (Havas.) The work of the league of natioDa is still confined to organization as mo only net of the league council at Its first meeting was to appoint members of the Sarre valley boundary commission which is not under the league's con trol. It is understood the league will take jurisdiction over the Sarre region when the administrative session has been organized CENSUS ENUMERATORS : COMPLETE FIVE OF , Offl DISTRICTS Five districts of the sixteen census districts of Ogden have been com pleted, according to George Roruney, Jr., in charge of the work here, and two districts from the country have been turned in completed. Recent storms handicapped work ers, Mr. Romney stated, and tho work will be delayed for a few days on that account. A complete return from all districts Is expected during the latter part of the week. The tendency of enumerators in Og den, Mr. Romney reports, is to work from outlying districts toward the bus iness district of the city. He states that practically all returns have been made from outlying districts and that the business portion will be visited this week. In any instance where persons feel that tho enumerators have, missed them. Mr Romney wishes a report at the offices in the federal building. - WARD WANTS TO JDH CITY ID COUNTY HEALTH OFFICES Tho health departments of Ogden city and Weber county arc to be com bined, according to Commissioner J. Ray Ward, in charge of the depart ment oi public health of the city, if county officials can be brought to in stitute the change. The plans for the uniting of the two departments have", been worked out and they show that a big saving can be made both tho city and county. I "At the present time Ogden taxpay ers are paying about 80 per cent of the taxes 01" the county. Out of these taxes comes the expense oLthe county health board, which works outside of the city only," said Ward "It is an easy matter to combine the two de partments to do the work even better than it is being done at present, in that there will be co-operation. I would like to have the two under one physi cian and one health inspector. It will reduce thc(number of men reguired to do the work and thus save the taxpay ers of the county considerable money." With these plans In view, Commis sioner Ward met with the county com missioners this afternoon and the mat ter has been taken under consideration. HITCHCOCK AND EDGE IE SPITED TILT Difference of Opinion Arises Over College Student Vote on League of Nations ; WASHINGTON, Jan. 19. Anothor .brief but spirited tilt occurred in the senate today when Senator Hitchcock, Nebraska, administration leader, pie senled final figures in the recent col-1 lege voto on tho peace treaty and ox- pressed satisfaction that a large ma-1 jority was against what he called "tho 1 ' destructive Lodge reservations." He als) commented on the size of the voto for unqualified ratification for which, the Nebraska senator said, the Demo-j crals "are ready to stand." Senator Edge, Republican, New .Tor : sey, replied that the college lotc was' 2 to 1 against unqualified ratification while Senator McCormlck, Republican, Illinois, said the League to Enforce Peace intervened in the college refer endum by furnishing speakers and ma-1 terial for speeches. An incident of the college referendum, he said, was "one : celebration" of the death of Theodore Roosevelt because the former presi dent could not participate j The discussion ended when Senator Brandegee, Republican.' Connecticut,' presented a protest from the China So ciety of the United States against lhe: Shantung award, adding that he would i refrain from submitting the Shantung' question to "a straw vote of college! boys of the country." 00 Still rain will continue to give you a ' soaked" feeling. Tells How to Stop a g g Bad Cough ?5 Surprlnlr.e ivsiiltn from this famona 0 J old liomt-nuiilo syrup. Emdly 3 v prepared and costs IUtle. W f on have n severe cough or chest cold accompanied with soreness, throiit .tickle, hoarseness, or dilfieiilt breathing," or if your child wakes up during tho night with croup and you want quick help, try this reliable old home-made cough rcmcdv. Any druggist can supply you with 'iy3 ounccd of Pinex. Pour this into a pint bottle nnd fill the bottle I with plain granulated sugar syrup. Or 3'ou can use clarified molasses, noncy, or corn svrun. instead of sugar syrup, if 1 desired. This recipe makes a pint of really rcniarkablo cough remedy. It tables good, and in spite of its low cost, 1 it can he depended upon to give quick nnd Listing relief. You can feci this take hold of a cough in a way that mean9 business. t loosens and raises the phlegm, 9tops throat tickle and soothes and heals tho , irritated membranes that line the throat , uud bronchial tubes with such prompt ! ness, case and certainty that it is really ! astonishing. ! Pinex is a special and highly concen- irated compound of genuine Norway ' pine extract, and is probably the best I known means of overcoming ecvero , coughs, throat and chest colds, j There are many worthless imitations I of this mixture. To nvoid dhappoint mont, nsk for "21- ounces of Plnex" with full directions and don't accept any thing else. -Guaranteed to give abaoluto ' satisfaction or money promptly rc I funded. The Pincx Co., Ft. Wayne, I Jnd. Advertisement. j '-jjjH ViJ sils! i. .. ' j pIrhour "Will your car do this ? I j I iphl ;'"-x! b! !-5fK ' ! I J Jflm.tefg, flag igSTDSrJ-';P33 ' ' SgS Leading automobile center. 'nav. , j JH! to splinters .. I Yet the car was going only 15 miles an hour -: I - E - lrST PePIc think of a reck- make them a source of protection Have your brakes inspected to- I . ''. I .XVJL less driver as one who goes instead of danger. day. Remember that every foot i$ ' "7. IT eaki,nS a!on ountry roads Perhaps a tightening of the brake of dermoid backed by Our "t . . ? 50 miles an hour or shotting rods, or an adjustrnent of the cqual. Guarantee: Thermoid will make . & through city streets faster than -s aH thflt needed 00d-or WE WILL. . the law allows. , .f .. . . 1 l - 1 garage man will know if rehnmg - Jn z ' Yet official records show that is necessary. iriermoid KUbbcr LompEn ; H .v. 76 of all automobile accidents Factory and Main Offices, Trenton, N.J. y ' v"- ' occur when the car is going 15 Why Thermoid Brake Lining is Ncw York. Chicago, San Francisco. Detroit, . i . . ; . ', miles an hour Or leSS. , , , -o Ancelci. Philadelphia, Cleveland. Plttsfiurth. ' H . -J J Safest and Wears longest Boston, London Pans, Tuna 1 4'- Safety, for yourself and your car, Canadian distributors i ;5 is not a matter of how fast you are In each square inch of Thermoid The Canadian f. irbnnks-Morsc Company. ' H li going.buthowquicklyyoucanstop. Erake Li,ni"g .40 f fe BVmm !i H j.-... ... material than in ordinary brake ) vM m ; Few motorists i:now how quickly lining This additional body gives mM& H - they should be able to stop their a doser texture which -s made BsBBl JIIm 1 H car. It is so easy to assume the tight and comnact by AyoVauJc S?8 . brakes are nght -until an emer- compression ' under 2,000 lbs. MfrMsK v gency shows they are all wrong. pressure. In addition to this, ' Sll $?M$Wk I ,i t t . j .j Thermoid is Grapnalized, an wfc&Sl&iM W.v; , How to avoid accidents , . r . v&tTY;'? 'wV.vtv.'V' J -f exclusive process in manufacture . rx V.VJ V'" v A simple inspection of your which enables it to resist moisture, W iiiiiil brakes at frequent intervals will oil and gasoline. IM&irWl " t " r" "eacrr CTO f) n '-.KiT- Ordinary Voven ThormoldHydraull : ) , -V.: fjermoB Brake Lira,iraq . :f. . Unin9 ft r t ' r r ' Notice the. leotely woven Notice the compact tcx- nydraulic Compressed b Bre. wtcrSi,v, .H ijut'ckly and utievenly, slovly. Gives uniform Makers of "Tnermoid-Hardy Universal Joints" and "Thermoid Crolidc Compound Tires" pmsUvwu IfcTfhin!" , irr.rta.i in . 1 ner.ruhn nm n-in. i , in v-1 ,tf,mmcrgf i .1 -r .. r. . . irn.i in.. . u.--F..r . 1 1 , muiiinuui I i I DISTRIBUTORS FOR I I Thermoid Brake Lining I EMIOOLlliO BEBKMHI li RUSSIA Special Train Carries Deported Radicals from America to Border of Soviet Republic I HANGO, Finland, Jan. 17. (Satur day) (By Tho Associated Press) The special train carrying to the bor der of soviet Russia Emma Goldman. Alexander Berkraan and 217 other rad icals, deported from the United Stales as undesirable aliens, is speeding to night towards Terijoki, about 2 miles from the frontier. Finnish -white-guards at stationed on each car plat form. Thirly of the radicals are in each car. The business of transferring the parly from the United Slates army transport Buford, which brought the undesirables to Ilango, to the special train was quickly accomplished. The officials aboard tho Buford were so well satisfied with the preparation made by tho Finnish officials that it was decided not to send a military de tachment with tho party, nor did Im migration 'Commissioner Berkshire consider it necessary to accompany it. The Buford is expected to sail for Ant werp tomorrow. Tho officers of the Buford informed the correspondent that there was o reason to believe the Bolshevik! would refuso lo receive any niomber of the party. The deportees themselves did not appear apprehensive, Emma Gold man saying shr believed the Bolshev ik! had been informed of their coming by courier, and that she thought her old Chicago friend "Bill" Shatoff, now military commissioner of Pctrograd, would probably bo at the frontier to receive the party. oo Senate Opens Second Week of Big Probe SAN ANTONIO, Tcx., Jan. 19. The senate sub-committee investigating the Mexican situation today began the sec ond week of its activities here under an arrangement for expediting the gathering ot evidence. Although more than 100 witnesses remained to be examined, members said it was hoped to conclude- the San Antonio hearings this week and have the committee go to El Paso for hear ings Senator Marcus Smith acted as I chairman in the hearings today in the absence of A. B. Fall, who was in El Past. nn War Department and Commanders to Meet WASHINGTON. Jan. 19. Confer ences of war department officials with commanders of the divisions and lerri i torlal departments should be mado a permanent policy to promote efficien cy and co-operation, according lo a resolution adopted by tho general offi cers attending the first such gathering which adjourned today. The meeting, which began January 12, was called by jSecietary Baker for discussion of poli jcics regarding reorganization of the j service for peace times and the "in terchange of ideas upon iiresent prob- lems. Warship to Leave Malta for Black Sea MALTA. Friday, Jan. 1G. Orders were received Thursday night lor a number of naval vessels to leave Malta apparently for the Black sea. Vice Admiral de Robeck sailed on Fri day on board the battleship Iron Duke, accompanied by the dostroyers Sera pis and Steadfast and tho steamer Hib iscus. Every other ship available is preparing to leave on Sunday filled to its capacity with stores. General Pershing to Spend Day at Forts SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 19 General Perahing arrived here early today from Portland, Oro., and planned to spend the entire day inspecting Puget Sound forts. Acting Governor. I. M. Howell met the general at the depot and welcomed him to Washington. Mayor C. B. Fitz gerald extended the city's greetlngc General Pershing tonight will be j tho guest of former service men at a boxing smoker here. Tomorrow he wUl ride in a parade and attend a public dinner. uu Attorneys Ask a New Trial for Harry New i , LOS ANGELES, Jan. 19. Attorneys ! for Harry New, convicted of second degreo murder" for killing his fiancee. Freda Lesser, filed in superior court today a motion for a new trial. Sen tencing of New, which was set for today, was continued until after argu ments on a motion for a new trial can be heard Friday. i Distillers Arrested on Charge of Fraud LOUISVILLE. Jan. 20. R. E. Wa th en, president and William Knebcl kamp, general manager of R. E. Wath en company, Louisville distillers, sur rendered to federal authorities on warrants charging an attempt to de fraud the government out of taxes on distilled spirits. Both were released Ion $2,000 bond for preliminary trial next week. Tho affidavits on which the war rants were based charge Wathen a principal, and Knebelkamp as acccs , sory illegally removed S.000 cases o. bottled in bond whisky tax-paid fo medicinal use, but sold It for beverag purposes, which requires an additiona The Wathen distillery, seized todaj with 35,000 barrels of whisky is tb oldest in the state. The Wathen stil was set up in 17SS. oo THAT WOULD DO! 1 The theater was In an uproar. ' "They're calling for the author. said the stage manager. "Oh. I can't make a speech." repliec the man responsible for the play. "Well, just go out in front and tel. them you're sorry." Yonkcrs States When a woman gets a perfect fit in a gown, it is nothing to what bor bus band will get when the bill comes tc JH , i'H Sore -throat I May lead to worse BAUME I ANALGESI QUE I BENGUE I used in time may 1 avoid severe ill- 'H ness. Get a tube. : TUBERCULOSIS 11 Y ' SMi of Tuberculosis, ho begai V jv ASt, experimenting on himself v ' jj, M-lfeHI r.nd discovered the Hom m j " Treatment, known as AD ' SO Pounds 18B Pound Latoat Photo DILINE. Auyono Witl coiighs showing- tubercula. 'H tcndncv or Tuberculosis, may uso It undo r plai.i directions. SemPyour name sm 2&dOT.AE - - 1S5ArcadcBu.ld.na - - '.l