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-w THE OGDEN STANDARD: QGDEN, UTAH. SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1920 5 J J A VELVET DINNER GOWN I ft Thu velvet gown here photographed is a variation o the ban re; Ocau type of gown, and Is made o deep amethyst chiffon velvet. I A "skeleton bodice" of the velvet la most effective, worn over a iff bandeau of white lace and chiffon. The tunic Is in two panels, one In of which falls strnight from the top, while the other is slashed dia- j w gonally up to the left hip. IImj. the noted."thor j : : HELEN'S PUNISHMENT. ; ': "Is it poossible?" I said to myself, i "that a woman can utterly forget the j father of her children? Was it Ruth !B " Gaylord's pride which was speaking : when she said "that she was glad to dis : miss her husband from her heart; lhat she did not want to divide the love of 1 her children with anyone?" ' Someway I could conceive of a ' woman who, like Helen, could be so blinded by that magnetic attraction tV she called love, that she would forget the world, her duty to it; yes, even Jier duty to herself and follow where I lovo called. But reason has always seemed to me to be the touchstone of maternal love. As I had been lying there with the : knowledge that my hope. of the little ij new life I thought was coming to me, j was dead, I knew that notwithstanding j my grief, which had been great, I J could not feel the same unreasoning "j reaction against Fate that I should have had if my husband had been tak - en from me. All at once there was a great con h if -strlction about my heart! My husband .1 -what would I do if some woman ,j should come to me in the same way 'i that Helen Van Ness had gone to Ruth : and say: "I want your husband. He doesn't love you any more! He loves me!" Would I have stopped to consider the why or wherefore; would I have ;i said: "They drifted into this without thinking!" I do not believe so! )' Must Not Forget Duty. ) I think I would fight for my own. i ( He is mine. At one time, at least, life loved nie. He has taken upon him Ej self the responsibilities of marriage, I and now at the mere entrance into his fe- life of a lawless passion, he must not Mi ' forget he has a duty to me and to my : 1 children. This is what I should have decreed had I been Ruth Gaylord. Oth-j fc, ers might think otherwise. I wonder.1 ijj i Was Ruth a bigger and better f-i ft woman than I? Or had she tired of 5-. Bob and his Idiosyncrasies? It seemed ? ' ': 1 i 1 1 j i f . j 'i. 'n ' in ' i..r 1 lkBAKER9S '; Leo co AS i fpie LupcJzeon I .; Any time that any one . K wants a delicious drink jj with a real, satisfying, 3 (, sustaining food value. We guarantee its purity and . ' ' high quality. We have . ) been making chocolate and cocoa for nearly 140 years. 1 T waiter baker&cos I 1' ;. Jfa1rjgg!rf P0RCHE5TRJ.MASS to me, howpver, that no matin how much I had wished my husband away ; from mc, and I acknowledged to my-! self that I had wished it many times in the last few months, the mere , thought of his loving another woman ; would fan the affection that might, have cooled into love's hottest flame. "Ruth was wrong." I said to myself. "She should have told Helen when Hel .en made the confession to her, that 'she would keep her husband against the world. I renlly think it would have been better for Helen in the end!" Then my vagrant thoughts took up Helen's side of the matter, and I went back to her letter for a moment. No Invitations Extended. Coninuing, it read: "And, oh, Kath arine, I almost believe that I have, brought to Hobby the very thing from (which I tried to save him! Bob's' 1 friends- will not accept me. They in ivite him to lunchoon at restaurants;' j they do not take him to their clubs. ' I And since we have come here we have ' ! never been invited to the home of any ' of his friends. Even the women lhat I knew before my marriage to him pastf me on the street unseeing or with , the coldest of nods, as Alice did the j other day. j "I tried lo make it up to Bob. and we lie to each other by saying that we do not care for society now, nor its edicts, when we have each other. Hon estly, Kathorlne, I think that If we were on a desert island, Bob and I' might be perfectly happy. But, living in a world of convention, whose un written laws are supported by punish , men Is more severe than the breaking of thoso laws that were handed down! from Mount Sinai on tables of stone, I we find lhat we must perforce lake j j our medicine, bitter as aloes though ' ' it may be. j I "I am nol asking your pity, my near, nor the continuation of your friend ! ship, but I do want you to understand. ' 1 want you to have my side. I know I must cry 'peccavi' I acknowledge I have sinned, but perhaps like every 'other sinner, since the man who asked forgiveness of Him who died on the cross, I wish to evade my penalty-" Thoughts po Straying. The letter ended abruptly here, and 1 again my thoughts went straying, but this time lo Helen. I What should I do? I had loved 1 Helen from childhood. She had been, I my dearest friend, and through the years of our intimacy she had never done a thing to hurt me in any way. What was my duty in the matter? I could see from Helen's letter that she was deathly afraid that her only prop, Bobby's love, might be taken from under her by the speech of peo ple. I knew I should be censured by my entire coterie of friends and ac quaintances and yet after much think ing I came to the conclusion that I would not desert my friend in this tragic crisis of her life. Monday Thoughts of Home. 00 'Everything in life has been disap pointing to mc. Friends, husband, children, none of them have been what I expected they would be. I am end ing a miserable existence." This note was found in the apartment of a woman who committed suicide in one of our great cities. Surely this was a sad outlook on Jife, yet a mistaken one as well. It doesn't do to expect too much of per sons or circumstances. If wc do, quick disillusionment is sure to come. In this case one may as well wonder if the poor woman who found life such a great disappointment had herself been a model wife, mother, or friend, with the same attributes of perfection she was requiring in others in her associa tions with them. Her own desperate failure at the end goes to prove that she had not. It's a v(uyecesary.JJ.ng.-tprJm IIMTTOIJEW. FAVORITE. "THE MIRACLE OF IM" Texas Girl Had First Chance to Shine as Star in "The Quaker Girl" and Success Was Instant Lucy Cotton, who has the chief fem inine role in "The Miracle of Love," the picture at the Alhambr,a theatre tomorrow, is a Texas girl AVho has sprung into lAuch prominence recently Hot her fine work on the stage and screen. Miss Colton started her dram atic career in "The Quaker Girl," play ing second understudy to the star untli a fortunate (for Lucy) accident gave her the opportunity lo appear in the lead and attract the attention of the manager and the public. That was the beginning or a speedy rise to fame via 'Liltle Women," "Turn to the Right,' "J and "Up In Mabel's Room." In "The Mlracle'of Love," Miss Cot-; ion -has the part of a young English 1 Duchess, married 10 a worthless nobleman-, who endures her fate until she1 meetrf the younger son of a noble Tarn-, ily and falls in love With him. A dramatic story is woven around the tangled fortunes which uirns out hap pily for I he two principals. Some real istic British atmosphere has been pro duced in the picture, including a no table scene in iho House of Lords. Wyndham Standing plays opposite Miss Cotton. The picture was direct !od by Robert Z. Leonard. Adv. Lhe microscope inward occasionally for our field of vision. Instead of con- jstantly finding shortcomings in our' 'daily associates and lacks in our daily ' environment why not get a bit outside ;of our own narrow sphere of life and ;see if vt ourselves, aro nol in .turn a wee bit disappointing at' times to those we live with, and if they may not have lo exercise patience and forbear ance toward us. Lei's be fair you and I. We shall be j exceptional women, indeed, if, so do ing, wo can meditate with perfeel satis ; faction on the vision, it w;il be more I apt to fill our hearts with the sweet I virtue of humility and fire us with the desire to live more truly, patiently and wisely, instead of, in a gust of pas sion, departing by the suicide route to what ? 00 RELIVES, TIED ACHING MUSCLES Buy a bottle cf .Sloan's Lni ment and keep 'it handy for emergency. jr F I onlyhad some Sloan's Linl II raeut!" How often "you have said " thai! And then when the rheu matic twinge subsided rftor hours of suffering you forgot il! Don't do it again get a bottle today for possible use tonight! A sudden attack may come o.n sciatica, lumbago, sors muscles, stiff joints, neuralgia, the pains and aches result in from expos ure. You will soon relieve it wHh Sloan's the liniment that penetrates without rubbing. 38 years' leadership. Clean, econom ical. Three iizi 'iiip, 70c, SI. 10 - 00 FORMER KMSIHS PL! I CELEBRATE . Ml REM With a desire of getting every for mer Kansas residents at the reunion to be held January 29 at the First Bap tist church, Secretary I. W. Wherry is sending out loiters designed to pro cure the names of all who are eligible to lake part in the celebration. Among other things the letter sets forth tho good things that will take place at the reunion, including the "eats." The text of the letter Is as follows: "Dear Kansans: "Our twelfth annual rounion of for mer Kansas citizens will occur promptly at 6:30 p. m., January 29th. 1920, at the First Baptist church of this city. Tour receiving a copy of this invitation denotes your name is on our list. People whom you may know, that do not receive this letter, wo will appreciate your telephoning their names and addresses to number 2GG. "The menu is as follows: Roast Pork Brown Potatoes and Gravy Green Peas . , Salad Apple Pie with Cream and Cheese Jellv Hot Rolls Tea and Coffee "Dr. E. P. Mills will bo the speaker of the evening. Dr. Palmer and Pro fessor J. A. Smith will make some remarks. "We will concludo our entertainment at the church at ,9: 00 p. m. and ad journ lo the Cozy moving picture the atre, 247G Washington avenue, where former Kansan, Mr. S. B. Steck, will entertain us complimentary with his entire program of the evening, tho three-reel film entitled "Winning tho War with Wlreat," and other Kansas scenes. "Come, with your entire family and as many othor former Kansas people as possible. Adviso how many there will be bv return mail or telephone. " DR, S. W. WHERRY, Secretary, Utah-Kansas Ass'n. Lewis Block, Ogden. lTeQX'hQixe1266. IMPRISONED 15 YEARS FOR LOVE NEWYORK Love is responsible for the imprisonment for 15 years of Harriette Sere3 by her mother. Her parents explain it was their love for her that caused them to keop her locked in, and Harriette says she did not try to escape because she loved her mother. She is Tiere shown as she looked when rescued, and with her beBt playmate, a doll The Standard's U. k C. Bureau Articles of Interest to Farmers, Housekeepers and Others j Written for The Standard by Experts at Utah's Noted I I Agricultural College at Logan CARE OF BROOD SOW By Professor John T. Caine, III Director of Extension Division and Expert in Animal Husbandry ' U. A. C. This is thp time of year requiring tho most careful attention from the growers of swine. Farrowing time is always one of worry, as much depends upon good management at this period. Condition of Sow The brood sow should' be in good j flesh but not overly fat. It is not nec essary nor advantageous to have her thin, for if the sow does not have some fat stored on her body she will" not be 1 able to feed her pigs properly. Be sure that the pregnant sow has a large lot and takes plenty of exercise. You will not get strong pigs from a sow that has been closely housed. If the sow insists on lying around, drive her slowly for some distance every day. Feed - Caro should be taken to provide; plenty of good, clean feed for the sow. Feed just enough so that she will clean it all up in a short time and never so much that any remains in the trough. If the sow is not anxious for her feed let her miss a meal. Skim milk is one of the best feeds and should be used wherever possible. Al falfa and roots are good feeds when given with some grain and aro ad vised. For grains feed shorts, corn, ground barley, bran and a few oats. Rations Shorts 2 partr. I Barley 01 corn 2 parts. Bran 1 part. Oats 1 part. To be fed with alfalfa or with alfalfa and skim milk As soon as signs of farrojving are mm chesses TO OfflUNIZED HMDS SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Jan. 24 The organized and authorized charac ter of tho border raido was further in dicated in an attested confession of a Mexican prison taken in 1915 and sub mitted today to the senato sub-committee investigating the Mexican sit uation. It was incorporated in, a re port of Captain A. V. B. Anderson, then commanding Troop A, 12th cav alry. The prisoner described the actions of his organization toward Norrls, Hi dalgo county, as more of a regular organized unit commanded by a maor of the Carranza army. He said that after the expedition had arrived at a point some distance north of the Rio Grande. The major read the orders for the attack and assured them they had 1 been issued in accordance with Presi dent Carranza's instructions. American Soldier Mutilated. Similar testimony was given by I Thomas Mayfield, a former Texas', rnnger who submitted an affidavit by . Guadalupe Cuellar that Carranza. leaders had given orders for partici-j pation In one of the raids. He de- scribed the mutilation of one American , soldier by soldiers from the Carranza garrison. They cut off the ears of the soldier and carried them back to the garrison as souvenirs. Tho statement was attested by Captain Frank B. Mc- 112 MillSoBs jjijjv used last yearjjjjy to KILL COLDSk JILL'S CASCARAgQUININE , Standard cold remedy for 20 yeari in tablet form safe, lure, no RH opinteo break up a cold in 24 L hours relieves crip in 3 days. XVBk Money back if It faila. The InW ft rn Qam Genuine box ha a Red MSB m tpP with Mr- Hm" 1 1 seen cut the feed down materially so, thai you will not prouuee a feverish 1 ( condition in the sow. After farrowing i( give only warm walcr for the firstl twelve hours and for next few daysjf small amounts of light feeds, such as L gruels made from bran and shorts. I , Over-feeding at this period will cause! trouble. After a few days you can ' begin to feed liberally provided the' little pigs get plenty bf exercise 1 Pens Have a clean dry pen for-thc sow to1 farrow in and be sure that there are no holes in the floor or around the sides where the little pigs might get losu Arrange a rail around the sides' of the pen so that the sow will not be able to lie down on the pigs when they aro bunched up in the corners. This rail can be made by nailing a 2 by 6 1 plank around the walls about D inches from the floor so that it oxtends 6 inches out into the pen. I Be careful about bedding. Put in just a small amount of chaff or cut straw. If a large amount of straw is . used tho little pigs will get down un der it and the sow not knowing Nthey I are there, will lie down on them. Re- member that a pig saved is a pig) earned. Give sow plenty of exercise. Feed liberally on clean feeds. Cut out some feeding at farrowing lime. Prepare the pen carefully. ' Do not use much bedding. Good management, not good luck, means success. - 00 , I Now we understand that Professor) Porta believes that there is nothing 1 left for him but a job in the weather. , bureau. Women Made Young Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body full of youth and health may be yours if you will keep your system in order by regularly taking WW MEDAL Tho world's standard remedy for kidnoy, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, the onomlcs of lilo and looks. In uso sines 1696. All druggists, threo olzea. Look for tho name Gold Medal, m orory box and accept do tmitctlon Coy, now brigadier general. John L. Klelber, a district attorney of the border, gave a description of the attack on a train nonr Browns ville. Texas, which included another instance of the immunity German na tionality gave. He was a pnssenger On the train. On the same car wore two who claimed to be Germans. They were not molested. Were Detachment of Mexican Army Klelber's testimony was corrobora tive of that of others which tended to indicate the raiders were in reality a detachment of the Mexican army. Five Americans were shot on that occasion, tho leaders of lhe raiding party being Ancceto PIsnno and Luis de la Rosa. It also was indicated by the "witness thai the Mexicans on the American side of the border who have been killed or injured during the period of the raids, have been victims of their own countrymen's activities rather than of any deliberate attempt of Americans to injure them. Get your bananas and other fruit at Washington Fruit Store. We sell the most fruit, and the best. Confectionery and groceries. Prompt service at any time. Open all the time. Come in and get acquainted. 2319 Washington Avenue 00 - A man claims to have trisected a tri-1 angle, but there is nothing in his solu- Hon to -LellrU&.liow to geLaome sugar;' lA Con 27Z ZZO ZIS ! ; 3 The Promise and the j Certainty If yon place your surplus money m a specu- B latitve enterprise of any kind, you may have s j J the PROMISE of a high rate of interest, but ( B you also have the CERTAINTY of continual J c worry regarding the safety of your principal. J 1 s This continual worry is a high price to pay : H E -for the possibility of obtaining a little higher i " interest than could be secured by depositing , j a your money in this bank, at 4 per cent interest, . " B ' E COMPOUNDED QUARTERLY. I TOgbkn State Bank j ' I 1 Caprtal and Surplus $300,000.00 1 0 flO INTEREST COMPOUNDED I0 1 ' 1 s O QUARTERLY ON SAVINGS -k'Q 1 H EDBIIIOflUjlllHIl a'H Ei a ffl'U am HlHIdHIHlllk H FORMER PISIHTI5 GftLLER AT CAPITAL WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Former President Taft visited the capitol Fri day and conferred with senators ac tive in lhe movement for a peace treaty compromise. During his visit to the senate, Mr. Taft addressed briefly representatives of a local committee which had invit ed him1 to talk at a mass meeting in behalf of the treaty. He said he did not believe a compromise on the res ervation affecting Article 10 of the league of nations' covenant would kill the treaty. "The ratification of the treaty is in the hands of the senators." said Mr. Taft. "It must be worked out by them. Everyone knows how I stand ' on the treaty. I believe that the best way is to let the knowledge of the public desire that the treaty be rati I fied trickle into the 'senators. "At present about eighty senators I are in favor of ratification, about cven ,ly divided on the reservations. Only rthose fourteen reservations stand be tween them. It seems to me that com promise can be had and the treaty rat I ified. j "The altitude of tho president in re I gard to what he will do is not clear, 'it hns been said that Article 10 of the league of nations covenant is the heart of the league. And it is. in that it embraces the intention of the mem bers of the league to co-operate in pul I ting an end to war. But on the other hand, as a practical proposition, Arti cle 10 will rarely, if ever be invoked, for under articles 16 and 17 any at tempt to bring about war will be put down. So I believe that a compromise. 1 on this Article 10 can be made yith- out killing the league." 00 ; HAVE COLQRJH CHEEKS ' Be Better Looking Take Olive Tablets t To have a clear, pink dcin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days, you must keep vour body free from poisonous wastes. Dr Edwards' Olive Tablets (a vege table compound mixed with olive oil) act on the liver and bowels like calomel yet have no dangerous after effect. Take one nightly and note results. They start the bile and overcome constipation That s why millions of boxes are sold annually 10c and 25c- Advertisement. American Intervention Discouraged by Espena WASHINGTON, Jan. 24. American intervention in Mexico would be bad for both countries, Manuel E. Espena, former consul at New York and Phila delphia for Porflrlo Diaz, Mndero and Huerta and an opponent of the' Car ranza government, declared today be fore the senate foreign relations sub committee investigating Mexican af fairs. Intervention, he said, would cause , years of ill-feeling on the part of all Latin-American countries. 1 Espena testified that a revolution against Diaz followed publication of articles by John K. Turner, an Amerf- When you feel so ''blue" that evea the sky looks yellow, you need . BEECHAM'S , FILLS , A Elujgish liver and poorly serine Hdnya frdl to destroy food poisons, which affect tha I mind as well as the body. ' Laro"1 ?S S1 111 SrWAny (tiW&ffiA 'nr- I'H Mcdkino wMk$M where. , ! IH World. W&&aW 10c- 2Sc- ! j mrn nil n i i it m 'ii nun n i I n can, criticizing conditions in the , southern republic. Turner was assist ed in translation by a Mexican Social- 1 ist, and the latter. Espena declared, (i showed him a check from the Stand- 1 ard Oil company which was said to Jj have been refused oil concessions in ,j Mexico by Diaz. 11 Espena testified that when "William 1 Bayard Hale, who was sent to Mexico las President Wilson's representative, 'became pro-Hureta, he was supersed- 1 led promptly by John Lind. Tlie latter, ,ji 1 Espena said, was given a cool recep- , tion by Huerta and wrote former Sec- llH retary" of State Bryan that "Mexico M should be humbled." ' j COUGHED DAY AND NIGHT. j I John Vognue, Elberton, Ga., writes: JM J-'Last fall. when my neighbors were down with Influenza, I took a severe cold and before I was aware of my con- IH dition I was down sick in bed. I coughed night and day and my throat was raw and sore. I got a bottle of Fol- ey's Honey and Tar Compound an.l cook eight small doses in two hours. My condition began to improve and in a lew days I was as well as ever. In my opinion Foley's is the best cough IH medicine made." A. R. Mclntyre Drug Co. Advertisement. 00 I buy Liberty bonds at highest prices. If you have bonds for sale see me. J. J. Brummitt, 2417 Hudson ave- H nue. Phone 59. I jH 00 I IH 'industrial University I To Be Built in China I SHANGHAI, Dec. 2G. An 'industrial university to cost S5.00.000 will be erected in Shanghai if the plans of Chinese educators and Industrial lead ers are attained.. Tho idea was sug- lH gested bv Professor C. W. Woodworth i,H of the University of California, one L'H lime a lecturer at Nanking university. It is intended to conduct the univer sity on American lines, with equip ment and instructors from the United States. ' A novel feature of the proposed unl- versitv will be the incorporation in It of a complete cotton mill which will , cmplov its students and require them to perform productive toll as well as school work Three leading Chinese of Shanghai have gone to the United 1 States to visit schools and obtain ideas for the establishment of the uni- jH 00 There isn't any use in going to tho cellar if you think the world is com ing to an end. You'll go down fast jH enough, anyway. When it comes to increasing prices, the average dealer uses the multiplica tion tables for an adding machine. SUFFERED WITH RHEUMATISM. I CATARRH AND STOMACH TROUBLE "I think Number -10 For the Blood, as a blood purifier, has no equal. When 1 began to take Number '50, I was in very poor health, as I had rheu matism, catarrh, stomach trouble, lead poisoning, and an itch that I had tried almost every known remedy to relieve. I have taken six bottles of 'Number -lO' and am on a fast road io recovery. I owe my life to it, as I used to weigh 127 pounds and now weigh 1-1 S, my us ual weight. I could write more but this should be enough lo con vince the most skeptical, and you are at liberty to uso this letter any way you desire." George Klinker, ILlma, Ohio. ' The ingredients In "Number 40 For I the Blood" aro set down in the U. S. 'Dispensatory and other reliable medi cal books as follows. "Employed in disease of tho glandular system, in blood troubles, constipation, stomach, kidney and liver troubles, chronic rheumatism, catarrh, sores, ulcers, ec zema, skin eruptions, mercurial and lead poisoning. Under its use scroful ous swellings and bodily eruptions lhat have withstood other treatment disappear as if by magic." Prepared by J. C. Mendehall, Ev ansvillo, Ind.. 40 years a druggist. The. best druggist in your neighborhood sells Number 40, but if it happens that he does not, send direct to J. C. Men- ' denhall Medicine Company, Evans vllle, Ind., and receive it delivered to jl you at $1.25 per bottle, six bottles for ?7.00. A. Jl. Mclntyre Drug Co. Ad-t vertisomenL .