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■t . ^m"m* Th« FsijHvt Days Are Here—Weddings, Parties, Theatres, Dinners. Havs you proper jewslry fbr these occasions? Reasonable prices. BOYD PARK JEWELERS ,4„ BOYD PARK BLDG IOC MAIN STREET NEWHOUSE HOTEL MOST MODERN HOTEL WEST OF CHICAGO 30 Roams With Balk—0n« person $1.50; Two persons $2.50 70 Rooms With Bolh—One person $2.00; Two persons $3.00 125 Rooms With Both-One person $2.50, Two persons $3.50 100 Rooms With Both—One person $3.00; Two persons $4.00 75 Rooms With Both—One person $4.00; Two persmu $5.00 Popular Priced Cofie Shop and Dining Room Headquarters for Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada people ARTIFICIAL LIMBS FTT^WEuTARflFlSAriLIMB^Or^W^ for catalog. .155 W, Third South, Salt Lake City. WALKER'S BEAUTY PARLOR Switch transformation or hair by mail; cut sample ?om center of head. Switches worth $7.50 for $5. ransform&tiou worth $12 for $8.50. CLEANERS AND DYERS QUALITY SERVICE CLOTHES insured work guaranteed We pay return postage. Price list on request. MYERS CLEANERS AND DYERS 114-110 Ka*t Broadway Salt I^ake City WHO DOES YOUR CLEANING? Have your garments “Mastercleaned.” It is the economic, toanitary and •scientific way. Send your clothes by gttircel post. We pay return charges. Regal Cleaning Sc Dyeing Co., 150-150 E. Second So. MONUMENTS STANDARD MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Write for catalog.' -117 TV. Broadway, Salt Lake. TYPEWRITERS Distributors Corona Portable and Royal. All other jpakes sold, repaired and exchanged. Utah Typewriter Exchange Co. Salt Lake FLOWERS TOR ALL OCCASIONS MORRIS FLORAL CO. M East Second South Street. Salt Lake City. MiLLpR FLORAL CO. 10 E. Broadway.* Salt Lake City ART EMBROIDERY CO. Machinery Embroidering on Ladies Apparel. Out town business solicited.. Room 201 Brooks Arcade. RUBBER STAMPS AND STENCILS Seals and Ear Tags also manufactured. Send for samples, prices, etc. SALT LAKE STAMP CO. 65 West Broadway, Salt Lake City, L’tuh. VALI LArVL DUdlRCdd vULLLUL ^Savc lodging; work after school; enroll anytime ACCWTC 300 percent; $1 a pkg. Everybody buys. MUEtll 1 O Sample Free. i>udge Bros. Salt Lake. CREAM BOUGHT Best prices. Western Creamery Co. *44 W. 4th So. VULCANIZING Vulcanize it now Retreading. Quality, Service. Stand aril Tire Works, 461 S. State St., Salt I*ake. WELDING, AUTO and MACHINERY Auto Radi&t^rs built and repaired l>est and cheapest. Pottei' Welding and Repairing Co. 651 S. State Street. Salt Lake City, Utah. OLDSMOBILEPISTRIBUT ORS Cars and Trucks. Used Car Bargains. A. E. Tourssen, 447 S. Main Street, Salt Lake City. RUBBER HOSPITAL W’ecurA injured rubber articles—Boots, Shoes, Hot Water bottles. Tires, Tubes, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. Return charges prepaid. Western Rubber Sales Co., 134 East Broadway. ELASTICSTOCKINGMFRS. Manufacturers Abdominal. Maternity Supporters and truss, fi tiers. S. H. Bow mar Co., Brooks Arcade poultry^bought_ For hestresults ship your Poultry, Eggs and game to Fulton Market. Correct weight. Prompt re turns. Write for prices. HATSjCLEANED^ANDJBLOCKED^ Write Por Prices. Return Charges Prepaid. Braythe Hat Factory, lie E. Second South St. THE STATE CAFE—Headquarters for out of town people. Quality, service. M W. Broadway. PIPE AND MACHINERY. Western -Mac hinery Co., Judge Building. QUALIFY AS BARBER in few weeks. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE, 43 S. W. Temple,Salt Ijikc CANCERS, Tumors and Eczema Removed. A. M. Frecbuirn, *06 Utah Savings A mil Bldg. Ilemstitiling.'picatiiig. Mo'-hii** and Hand Em broidering. Buttons made. Expert Bend Work. The Embroidery Shop, 354 (lilt Building. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS BAYNES-BFEBE MUSIC CO. Everyth{hg known iisunusie. * Salt Isike City. lT|t 8. BBSIRESS COLLEGE School o|cffleieney. All commercial brnhelics. Catalog yee. no N. Main Street. Salt Lake City. KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS B|K'rbtlia4fl tn (irMg-iiinr, sinking. Ill ting1 ('nrantn. Ilt’nuditching. rmnrntdrring, hmidlng. tuvordion gnd side planting. Duttons iimde. 40 K. Uroadwny THE VANITF SHOPPE Unreel permanent wnW. Color restored to hair by MdenttAe method. Switches nnd tnmsformn tiona. 1QU S. State Street. Salt take City. Dally Thought. But po pleasure la comparable to the •tending upon the vantage ground of truth.-rSaoon. ♦ _ lister end Sheep Raising. In parts of Auatralla, where the average' yearly rainfall Is not more _ than Inches, a square mile of land vR support only eight or nine sheep. ’ In Buenoe Aires, the same riU area,' with thirty-four Inches of rain, >h supports 2.500 sheep. . |{ 3. Needs Long Seasoning. ^ Wood for tennis rackets requires at least jive years In the rough timber ’ 1 state lyjfore being cut up for use. Wood t>rn for pljnios Is kept, ns a rule, for 40 years pefore It la used. When a Woman is Nervous—Worried The lives of most women are Sail of worry. Men’s troubles are ad enough, but women’s are worse. Worry makes women sick. It pulls them down, and in their weakened condition they are sub ject to pains, aches, weakness, back aches, headaches and dizzy spells. Most women neglect their health, and for this they pay the penalty. Any woman will and that neglect does not pay. A little more atten tion to health would brighten up her life. If she asks her neighbors she finds that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription benefits a woman's whole system. It not only acta upon the troubles and weaknesses peculiar to women, but is an all round tonic that braces the entire body, overcoming nervousness, sleeplessness, headaches, dizziness and a run-down condition. Lents, Oregon—"In my younger days I was greatly distressed. I began using Dr. Tierce’s Favorite Prescription and received such relief that I can recommend it to others. I have raised a large famib/ and am a great-grand mother and have always Insisted on my danghters-m-law using Dr. Pieros’* Favorite Prescription daring expeotant periods.’’—Mas. B. F. Seely, 6411 64th Street. Clogged-Up liver Causes Headache It’s foolish to suffer from constipation, rick headache, biliousness, dizziness, indigestion, and kin dred ailments 8“: [CARTER'S] Pill* will end Jap ITTLE all misery in gg ■ \ f pr p a few hours. A Hng, , >. Purely vege- " B^l Llj table. Act AdHHHBlHL. gently on liver and bowels. Small Pill—Small Dose—Small Price Persistent Coughs •re Cancerous. Get prompt relief from Piao's. Stof«• irritation; soothing. Effective and safe fjc young and old. No opiates in PI SO S Dreaming of Skating. To dream of skating denotes Hint your success is very uncertain and de pends largely upon your efforts. To see others skate denotes a pleasant time. To buy, them, honor. GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER The Remedy With a Record of Fifty four Years of Surpassing Excellence. Those who suffer from nervous dyspepsia, constipation. Indigestion, torpid liver, dizziness, headaches, coming up of food, wind on stom ach, palpitation and other indica tions of fermentation and indiges tion will find Green’s August Flower a most effective and efficient assistant In the restoration of nature’s functions and a return to health and happiness. There could lie no better testimony of the value of tills remedy for these trou bles tlinn the fact that its use for the last flft.v-four years has extended Into many thousands of households all over the civilized world and no indication of any failure has been obtained in all that time where medicine could effect relief. Sold everywhere.—Adv. One Excepted. "Women are clamoring to get on all hoards now." "I don't notice any wild rush to llie washboard.” WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never suapcct it. Womens' complaints often prove to be nothing else hut kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other or gans to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, lose of am bition, nervousneea, are often times symp toms of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a physician's pre acription, obtained at any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle im mediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to teat this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.( for a ■ample bottle. When writing be sore and mention thia paper.—Adr. We All Do. "This trJlor advertises suits of a stylish cut." “I wish somebody would announce a price cut." w* ^Night .^Morning *»s_ eepYbur Eyes Cleon - Clear Healthy VWt* For Fro# CyO Coro Book Murtno Co. Chicago. UU W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 47-1920. -1T-I.il..hi 'l ■ ■ -■-I ■ | Harvest Time °- ■ i" ■ — ■ --- - - o is the climax of the perfect year; Cfhe winter's cold, the promise of the spring, CThe summer days, which joy and gladness bring, find fruition and fulfillment here, ....mammamgBmBaaKmmasmaBsm^ mmwf'smsv+m__ _ _ CHINESE HAVE DAY OF THANKS Tlie moon fenst Is one of the most popular und widely spread of all the Chinese pagan festivals. It lias many of the characteristics of the ancient moon-worship ceremonies of Syria and liioenleia. and it comes ns near to be ing a thanksgiving festival as any heathen feast could ever expect to be, celebrating the ingathering of the har vest. To the masses of the Chinese, however, there appears to be but a faint idea of genuine thanksgiving connected with this moon feast. It Is simply the remnant of an ancient In stitution, corning down from the re motest antiquity ns a mennlngless uct of nature worship. It Is possible that in the beginning, among the early Chinese people, the moon festival may have been less pngnn and more char acterized by feelings of thunkful re joicing than it is at present. However thnt may be, no wiser choice could have been mode by the missionaries In China toward establishing n genuine national Thanksgiving feast than the selection of tire day of the popular moon feast. The moon feast was first proclaimed a thanksgiving festival in 1906 nt Wu chang, where the large church was filled with a well-ordered crowd of Chinese, celebrating for the first time the newly appointed thanksgiving daj. The sacred building wns beau tifully adorned with offerings of staple articles of Chinese diet, like beans, rice, millet and other grains, not to speak of pomegranates, pears, apples, wine, salt and Hour. Wuchang Is a great city of nearly n million Inhabitants, situated far up the Ynng-tse-Klung, in the heart of Chinn. Its central position, among the teeming myriads of heathen Chi nese, renders It a good point for the spread of helpful and uplifting Ideas and truths, and In view of the readi ness of the Chinese nt home to adopt the best things presented to them for their own good, it Is expected that the old moon fenst will be gradually adopted. In Its newly baptized form, as the national thanksgiving day among the 2,000,000 or 3,000.000 of Chinese nt present under the Influence of Christianity, and In this way also gradually become the nntional thanks giving day among the votaries of Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism, In the course of their emancipation from the grosser, features of these time-honored religions. WEALTH WAITS THEGARNERING To every mnn there will come Ills dally hrend In answer to his dally prayer, though It come from the mill ing of wheat or he the salmon caught at the falls of the Spokane, without let or hindrance from any power of earth. If there Is food In plenty In one region, as by the fall of an nvn lanche down a mountain, It will cer tainly seek consumption In anothef region. And this the American hoy and girl owe to the good Providence and to the brave men who made this country one and have kept It one. It Is too much the blindness of our time to spenk ns If such a simple busi ness ac dally food came to us ns a matter of course. There Is, Indeed, a careless habit In which Americans often speak. Fourth of July orators and street corner braggarts alike talk of the nat ural products of this country almost In the tone of the emigrants who ex pect to pick up a doubloon upon the sidewalk. One Is tempted to ask such braggarts why the country did not produce such wealth 100 years or 200 years ago. Why was Dakota then a desert? Why were the hills of Alabama only a hiding place for a few thousand Creek Indians? Why did they not forge the Iron under their feet? Why did not the Iroquois In western New York pick from their trees the peaches and the pears such as have been growing there this autumn? The answer Is this: All the wealth of America comes to her from the work of her men and women. The victory which yields It Is their vic tory. It Is the victory of spirit con querlng matter. It comes In the dally mlrnele of dally life, where children of God. led by God, taught by God, alive in his life and fellow workmen with him, carry out Ids designs and subdue the earth. It Is neither sensible nor grateful to speak of teeming granaries, of In creasing trade, of new ndnes, of oil, of Iron or of gas ns If these things were wealth In themselves. They are only wealth when man strikes the rock and Its waters flow. And this man must be not the savage mnn who cares only for his own per sonal nppetite. It must be mnn, tho child of God. seeking a future better than today, determined to bring in a | nobler age than that which he lives in.—Edward Everett Hale. The Glad Old Days. Ah, for the age of Colonial holiday. Oh, for the time when Thanksgiving was youngl Don't you repine for the old way and Jolly way. Tinkle of tankard and spurting of bung? Didn’t the welkin resound with a folly gay, Didn’t the firelight vanquish the snow? Don’t you feel sore for the bright days of yore Regard for the truth must elicit a NO. Those, to be sure, were the days of fes tivity, Days when they dared to put brandy In mince; fluting however, was but one activity— Wolvee were at door and the Indians. Trim o' Somehow the time didn’t make for long 11 vlty; Thanksgiving dinner went off with a whoop— For as Fa carved the bird a commotion was heard, And showers of arrows came down In the soup. ThoBe were the times when they hadn’t a runabout Rolling them swiftly from theater to club; Movies were nix, and there wasn’t much fun about Dodging the bear cat while hunting for grub. A murderous blunderbus, weighing a ton about. Went with them always on purpose to slay Fach Iriquolsan with manners annoyin’— In short, we prefer to be th# .kful to day. Share Your Blessiitfls. That Is not true gratitude which docs not seek to share its gifts with others. “Rejoice In the Lord always,” says the Rlhle. Thanksgiving Is a good day to begin tliis habit. Cutlcura for Sore Hand*. 3onk hands on retiring In the hot suds 1 5f Cutlcura Soap, dry and ruh in Cu Icurn Ointment. Remove surplus 1 Ointment with tissue paper. This Is j July one of the things Cutlcura will do j ,f Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes.—Adv. Why? “How to Live More Than One Hun dred Years” Is the title of a recent hook. Hut what, we desire to ask, would he the object?—Philadelphia Public Ledger. Catarrh Catarrh Is a local ilineuso greatly Influ enced bv constitutional conditions. HALL'9 CATAllRH MEDICINE is a Tonic and Blood TurlHer. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE restores nornuR cotuiitions and allows Nature to do its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. If. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. His Experience. SlUicus—I am thoroughly convinced that nil women are the same.” Cynlcus—Don’t you believe It. Even one woman Isn’t the same fur any con siderable length of time.” USE “DIAMOND DYES” Dye right I Don’t risk your material In n poor dye. Each pncknge of "Diamond Dyes" contains directions so simple thnt any woman can diamond-dye a new, rich, fadeless color Into old garments, draperies, cover ings, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Buy "Diamond Dyes" — no other kind—then perfect results are guaranteed. Druggist has "Diamond Dyes Color Card”—1C rich colors. Adv. Not Merely American. An English writer comments upon our custom here of betting a hat on election and other contests. What's strange about It? We’ve often read of some Englishman winning a Derby. —Boston Transcript. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Warning! Unless you see the name “Rayer” on packnge or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayei package for Colds, Headache, Neural gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache Lumbago and for I*nln. Hnndy tic boxes of twelve Rayer Tablets of As pirin cost few cents. Druggists alsc sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Rayer Manufacture ot Mouoacetlcacidester of Salicycacld.— Adv. Jud Tunkins. Jud Tunkins says one thing that aiakes the help problem worse Is that so few people are willing to help themselves Back Given Out? There’s surely some reason for that lame, achy back. Likely it’s your kid neys. A cold or strain ofttimes congests the kidneys and slows them up. That may be the reason for that nagging backache, those sharp pains, that tired, worn-out feeling. You may have head aches and dizzy spells, too, with annoy ing bladder irregularity. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. They have helped thou sands. Ask your neighbor! A Utah Case Mrs. R. C. Lar son, E. Center St., Ephraim, Utah, says: *‘I have suf fered dreadfully with my back. There would be a dull, steady ache In the small of my i back and I would 5 be lame and sore. My kidneys would not act right. I read about Doan’s Kidney Pills and ’ used them. They $ quickly relieved me. Doan’s have never failed to cure any attack of kidney trouble I have had.” Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN'S ■y.VLV FOSTER-MtLBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. PAINS NEARLY DOUBLED ME DP Nothing Helped Me Until 1 Took Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound. Wyandotte, Mich. —“For the last four years l have doctored off and on without help. I have had pains every month so bad that I would nearly double up. Some times I could not sweep a room with out stopping to rest, and everything I ate upset my stomach. Three years ago I lost a child and suffered so badly that I was out of my head at times. My bowels did not move for days and I could not eat without suffering. The doctor could not help me and one day I told my husband that I could not stand the pain any longer and sent him to the drug-store to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound and threw the doctor’s medicine away. After taking three bottles of Vegetable Com pound and using two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash I could do my own housework. If it had not been for your medicine I don’t know where I would be today and I am never without a bottle of it in the house. You may publish this if you like that it may help some other woman.”—Mrs. Mary Stender, 120 Orange St., Wyandotte, Mich. VICTIMS RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles ara most dangerous be cause of their insidious attacks. Heed tha first warning they give that they need attention by taking COLD MEDAL The world’s standard remedy (or thaaa disorder*, will often ward off these dis ease* and strengthen the body against further attacks. Three sizes, all druggists, Leak fee the name Gold Modal on araT how and accopt no imitation DON’T CUT OUT A Hi l will leduce them and leave no blemishes. Stops lameness promptly. Does not blis ter or remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2. SO abottle delivered. Book6 R free ABSORBINE, JR., lor mankind, the antlaepth liniment for Boili. Brulaei. Sores. Swelling*. Varico** Vein*. Allay* Pain and Inflammation. Price f 1.2$ a bottle at drug* giat* or delivered. Will tell you more if you write. W. F. YOUNG. Inc., 310 Yamgis Soringlald, Maze 'Awful Sick With Gas Eatonic Brings Relief “I have been awful sick with gas," writes Mrs. W. H. Person, ‘‘and Eatonic is ail I can get to give me relief.” Acidity and gas on the stomach quickly taken up and carried out by Eatonic, then appetite and strength come back. And ninny other bodily miseries disappear when the stomach is right. Don’t let sourness, belching, bloating, indigestion and other stom ach Ills go on. Take Eatonic tablets after you eat—see how much better you feel. Big box costs only a trifle with your druggist’s guarantee. rnrni/l ro positively removed h, e, lurrr', rnrl.lf I Pv«ckl« Ototawnt— Your dr uniat or b| I nrUfVLEu Fr~ book. Dr. C. H. Bern ■ HhUUImyy Co., 2975 Michigan Avwnuw, Chicagj Cradle Boards. There nre nine different kinds ot cradle boards used by the various tribes of North American Indians. The Eskimos did not use such a board. Tlie baby was wrapped in tlie hood of the mother’s fur coat. In the most southern tribes the baby was merely bound to the mother's back by a strip of cloth long enough to hold It. Kill That Cold With CASCARA Ej QUININE FOR AND Colds, Coughs "OM^V La Gf>PP« Neglected Colda are Dangerous Ttfc* no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form docs not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Laxative—No in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT