1
1 THE CHALLIS MESSENGER. CHALLIS. IDAHO £!!!!! Slice Libby’s Veal Loaf and garnish with cucumbers, water- cress and salad dressing— very tempting! Veal Loaf with such flavor! T HIS delicately flavored Veal Loaf is made with such perfection by Libby’s expert chefs in the immac- ulate Libby kitchens—that you will always want these chefs to make it for you. You find it so appetizing, so nutritious a meat at such little co$ and trouble. Order Libby’s Veal Loaf for lunch- eon today. Serve either hot or cold, your family will delight in it. Libby, M?Neill t Libby, Chicago c LAMP From the Inspira- tion of Florence Nightingale Has Grown the Great Red Cross ofToday » •I Hot Weather Poisons Hit The Stomach First How to Keep Your Stomach Strong, Cool and Sweet Hot weather always starts those t uick chemical changes which pro- nce poisons in meats, fish, fruits, vegetables, milk and food products. Such summer poisons in foods not only make well stomachs sick bat de- velop with dangerous rapidity in sensative, sick or ailing stomachs and bowels. These poisons not only generate gases and fluids which cause that Bloated, lumpy feeling, heartburn, sour stomach, belching,acidity,but endless other stomach and bowel miseries. A sure, safe, quick acting relief has been found which absorbe and neu- tralizes these poisons, too much acid and harmful gases. EATONIC Tab- lets, one or two taken after every meal, will keep your stomach sweet. You ■will have a good appetite to eat what you like, when you want it and be It’s wrong to talk about a man be- hind his back. Talk about him in front of his back. LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN Girls! Make bleaching lotion if skin is sunburned, tanned or freckled free from all those bad effects liable to come after a hearty meal in summer. EATONIC Tablets are hot weather protec- tors for tbe stomach. They guard against the germa that lurk in the things you eat and drink. They rebuild listless appetites, pro- mote digestion by aiding proper action of the stomach functions and insure speedy relief from indigestion and all stomach distress. EATONIC is good to eat like candy. People from all oversend grateful testimonials. Tens of thousands are obtaining relief with EATONIC every day but the best evidence Is to let your own stomach tell you tbe truth. Go to your druggist and get a big box of EATONIC. Tell him you want it for the pre- vention and sure relief of stomach and bowel disorders produced by hot weather poisons. Then if EATONIC falls to satisfy you—re- turn it to yonr druggist, whom you know and can trust. Be will cheerfully refund yonr money. If your druggist doesn’t keep EATONIC—drop os a postal. It will be de- livered to your address and you can that pay for it. Address, B. L. Kramer, Pres„ 1018 8. Wabash Ave., Chicago. 111. WHEN HE WAXED ELOQUENT Phonograph Record of Just What Mr. Smith Said Might Have Been Interesting. Speaking at a dinner. Representa- ; tive Joseph J. Russell of Missouri re- ferred to the glory of feminine fash- *ions and fittingly related a little story I along that line. I Recently Smith and Jones m ^ in a restaurant, and while daintily manip- ulating the abbreviated bits, their talk i turned to n comparison of domestic j expenses. First It was beef, next It was butter, and finally millinery came up for a few sighfnt remarks. “You should have seen the peach of a hat my wife toted home a few day ago.” said Smith. “It was all HE died only four years be- fore this great war and she was called the Lady with a Lamp—a lamp destined to shine for ages at a time. When Brit- ish soldiers were dying of neglect In military hospitals and the British nation was startled with the horror of the cry of the perishing at Scutari, it was a beautiful, cultured woman that answered the cry. And from this woman’s inspiration has grown all the Red Cross societies of the world. Florence Nightingale went out like an angel to the Crimean war. says a writer in the New York Sun. She scoured corruption and uneleanness ; from the hospital®, she gave food to ! the starving, clothes to the naked, com- fort to the sufferers. She made the j hospital a place of healing, not a foul [ couch on which famished, fevered vie- ' tlms were thrown to die. Born in Florence in 1820. She was born In Florence on May 15, 1820, and was named after her i birthplace, and she died eight years : ago on August 13, 1910, at the age of ninety years. Her parents were rich. Her mother was kind, clever and charming, but she did not In the least understand her daughter. Florence did not really understand herself. She was brilliantly educated : she became an accomplished linguist and musician, a witty and graceful let- ter writer, and she thought deeply about politics and religion. She trav- o 1 m \ % /A 4* =3 Æ & SZOÆÆyYGT jYJG//77/YGA j L£ 7 7 Æ hWZ/ * / / / ? "Z*? was to get down on her hands and knees and scrub the floors, and then cry : “Now. the strongest to the wash- tubs They were needed. Such washing of bed* linen as had been done had been done in cold water, and as it came back Florence Nightingale burned it. The doctors and officers objected to eled In Europe, she went to Egy^t. ' bpr- Books written at the time by studying not only the treasures of art the men who helped to officer the Cn- down with fever. to the hospitals there. The Crimea surgeons objected and reminded her that she was superintendent of the nursing staff in Turkey, and the Cri- mea was in Russia. But she went nevertheless. Stricken by the Camp Fever. She set to work reforming, as she had done at Scutari, but she had done very little when she herself was struck unveiled before her, but human life and suffering, too. It was this study of suffering that moved In her the desire to take up nursing. She saw the enormous need for organized nursing. In spite of great opposition she man- aged to study at various hospitals in England and Paris. At last she ap- proached her heart's desire by secur- ing an appointment as principal of a mean army show with what scorn they met her. Little by little she got her stores to- gether until she became the feeder and clother of the army at Scutari. She provided 50,000 men with shirts and great numbers with other clothing: she provided all the things that were She was carried to a hut immedi- ately behind those of the soldiers. In England the news of her Illness cre- ated a sensation as profound as If a great battle had been lost. She was very near death, yet she managed to pull through, but she recovered, with her beautiful black hair cut off. look- missing from the hospitals. “I have ing the ghost of her former self. met only two men In the Crimea, and one of them was Miss Nightingale." said sanatorium for governesses In Harley a traveler. _ _ _ _ . Ck.\ tt-.st»’ Squeeze the juice of two lemons Into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, sheke well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion plumes and other embellishing things, beautifier, at very, very small cost. and, after telling me that it was stand- Your grocer has the lemons and any ing llg!linst ray account at $30 she drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a . few cents. Massage this sweetly fra- grant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freck- les, sunburn, windburn and tan disap- pear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes ! It Is harmless.— Adv. A man’s crookedness often gets him Into financial straits. sweetly asked me what I thought of It.” “I see.” was the smiling response of .Tones. “Of course you told her.” “Oh. yes.” answered Smith, with a grim expression. “I simply raved over that hat for an hour.”—Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. street. She was there when the Cri mean war broke out. The English troops were sent to the Crimea and such a wretched apol- ogy for a hospital as they had was es- tablished on the spot, but the Turks made over to them certain buildings at Scutari, on the eastern shore of the Bosphorus, opposite Constantinople. To get the sick and wounded from the battlefield to Scutari took eight days, and a quarter of the men who made the voyage died on the horrible ships. At Scutari the commonest appliances of a workhouse sick ward were want- ing. Never Recognized Women Nurses. One day a strange thing happened. The British army had never recognized the existence of women nurses, but one morning two letters on the subject crossed in the post. One was from She worked 20 hours a day. She re- ceived the wounded, she dressed their wounds Until the surgeons could take them In hand. She washed and clothed and comforted them. She sat with them, encouraging them before When she was well enough she was taken back to Scutari, feehle, unable to feed herself or to speak above a whisper, but she would not go home. She worked on until the last British soldier had left the hospital and the war was over. At home by this time she had become national heroine. Hundreds of an operation. She gave them life and were written about her ; pamph- hope. She made them feel that lets describing her Ufe were sold in mercy had come on angel w ings into j the street. Her face was stamped on their bitter Mves. :pottery, on tradesmen’s paper bags. Drunken Orderlie* Vanished. on showmen’s booths, on notepaper in Her nurses were here, there and a thousand homes. Lifeboats, emi- everywhere—wherever the doctors grant ships, children, streets, waltzes, would allow her to send them. The race horses were named after her. rough, drunken, unskilled orderlies Î vanished from the nursing and skilled j and tender hands took their places. Florence Nightingale herself was the Lady of the Lamp. When the long day’s work was done she would go to her little stuffy room to begin her correspondence: then. 1after a time, when the surgeons had retired and the wards and corridors were dark, she would take her Httle lamp and steal quietly through the Cuticura Promotes rf//(l. .Hair Health draggiita: SoaoS. Ointment 26 A 50, Tale npleeach traeeC “ OaMemra. De»» teat— Kill All Flies! "Mi “0 U w dM jw bn», D aisy Fly K iller attract« m d kill» •II file«. Neat, dean, ornamental, coéTenlent and deep. ssSritïïr- Daisy Fly Killer MS hr M tn. ç • ___ __ espreee. prepaid, g 1.06. SMOis m m , iHMMuwn. ssookltk . n . v . What Made Him Laugh? An impertinent young man once de- clared that women positively could not keep a secret, whereupon a would-be youthful lady naturally took issue with Mm. stating that she had kept one since she was twenty-one. “But you will let It slip some day, said the impertinent young man. “No. I won’t.” she rejoined. "1 think that when I’ve kept It for twenty years I come pretty near knowing how.” lie laughed with an nlr of self-satis - faction. Florence Nightingale, suggesting that she should go out with two or three retired and the ward nurses at no cost to the nation : the other was from the husband of the lady she was writing to and was ad- dressed to Miss Nightingale, suggest- ing that she should go at the expense of the government. The man who wrote to Miss Nightingale was Sidney Herbert, a member of parliament, who She hated It all. but one thing pleasej her—the founding of a Nightingale fund, which she was to spend as she liked. Started Many Great Reforms. Her fund grew to over StSJO.OOO. and with this money behind her she estab- lished a training school for nurses and began many great reforms. She set her- self to reform entirely the health ar- IDAHO BUDGET A canning club for the boys and girls has been organized at Cambridge. The Emmett Chautauqua was very successful this year, and local people have contracted for another in 1919. The Old Folk's party at Kotiert was a great success with over 200 guests at tbe noon banquet. An interesting program followed the banquet. The Nampa Defense League now has 791 members and has had some ex- ceedingly important questions of pa- triotism before it In the past three months. Meridian women formed a War .Sav- ings society for the duration of the war last week. The organization is to be known as tbe Meridian War Sav- ings society. Five hundred people attended the * Traders’ Day sale at Caldwell last week. Fifty head of cattle. 100 hogs and miscellaneous goods were sold to the amount of 85000. G. W. Lewis suffered a broken rib as the result of a haying accident on the Gess ranch near Homedale. He was struck by a fork handle at a point on his rib. where it had been fractured before. The price of threshing was fixed at 0 cents per bushel for wheat and bar- ley and 5 cents for oats, tbe farmer to furnish coal, at a meeting of repre- sentatives of farm bureaus, held at Gooding recently. Herbert E. Zumwalt. formerly of McCall and Warren, died in Fran - from wounds. June 13. He was a member of Company H of the Second Idaho, but was transferred to tbe Second engineers. J. W. Galloway ’ was appointed by Governor Alexander as appeal agent under the draft for Washington coun- ty. to succeed G. C. Donart. who was lisqualified because of his being with- i the draft age limit. Van J. Chapin, who was sen- tenced to a term in thF Elmore county jail, in federal court last fall for tealing from interstate shipments of - goods at Glenns Ferry, was released from the Mountain Home Jail last week. The matter of caring for crops was discussed at a meeting of representa- tives of farm bureaus held at Gooding, and it was the sense of the meeting that an injustice was being done the farmers of Idaho under the present rulings of the government. Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Binford. promi- nent residents of Caldwell, were in- stantly killed on the Idaho City road near the Halfway hoase. when their car. driven by Mrs. Binford. failed to respond to the steering wheel and ran up the side of the hill and turned OTer backward. Byron Defenbach. certified account- ant, who has been auditing the treas- ury accounts for Bingham county, ha® found material discrepancies. The principal shortage, according to present indications, seems to have been in 1914. and amounts to $20.000. Auditing still continues. At least 2500 rabbits were killed in the big drive held at Mora by sports- men from Boise, and the vicinity about Mora, according to the estimates made when the smoke had cleared away from the barrage that was rained in the rabbit ranks by approximately 130 shooters. If a bible printed in the year 1712 sold in California recently for $22.500. would a bible printed in 1006 sell, and what would be its possible value? This is a question Dudley C. Watson of Twin Falls is pondering. He has the other bible, an edition more than 100 years older and in splendid condi- tion. In Idaho 969 corporations with in- comes amounting to $37.741.867 paid an income tax of $212.326. Thirty-two stock raisers with $2.713.375 incomes paid a tax of $13.717. The thirty-eight big mining companies, whose income was $8.424.441. paid a tax of $59.0R2. So to Speak. “I hear he spoke feelingly.” “You might call it feelingly, kept groping around for a word.” He PARKER'A HAIR RALSAI Baantyt* Gray or Faded Hair. He. aad »!■«»»» llnirelata. E v e ry W om an W ants Besides SavinAWheat Ma Says I'm Saving Cooking When I E at POST TOASTIES silent rooms among the sick and dy- ing men. She would kneel by bed the civil hospital records, the death after bed to speak a word of comfort : ' rate among soldiers in peace time was she would give medicine here, food or twice as high as among civilians, drink there. She turned her attention to the _______ ___ __________ No wonder the men worshiped her. workhouse system of hospital nursing held an appointment at the war office, though at first they were a Httle afraid and cleansed it of its horrors, and He and his wife were friends of Miss and shy. “Never be ashamed of yonr finally she assailed the entire hospital Nightingale, knowing her ambitions. ; wounds, my friend.” she would say in system of the country. She became and they felt that her hour had come, her gentle, musical voice. Her gen- she Lady of the Lamp indeed ; she be- She was appointed superintendent of tleness made poets of some of these came the high priestess of light and the women’s nursiug establishments in rough men. air. She founded mindern nursing, and There was a giant Highlander who all the great nursing associations and wrote home of her and her wqrk ®*'4iar'kif i l f t D ‘■u t “What a comfort it was to see W_J even pass ! She would speak to oi and nod to another, but she could n do it to all. you know—we were lyi >* there by hundreds—but we could k t- her shadow as it fell, and lay c- heads on the pillow again. eontenn b0|-s of thô S tate COUIUf It was a beautiful idea, and tl _ t soldier’s letter traveled round tgh tO m eet all loyal Cl rangements of the army, not only in , , . . . „ . - . ... e - .i ; seventeen lumber companies with $3.- time of war but in peace: for she «as I ------ able to show that horrible as were the English hospitals In Turkey. She started with 3S nurses, some well- trained. some not—good, bad and indif- ferent the best that could be got in the time available. Her masterly or- ganizing powers asserted themselves at once. After traveling across France she took ship at Marseilles and there laid in a great store of all manner of needful things. The task before her would have ap- palled most women, but It only served to Inspire her with a firmer determin- ation. There were several hospitals at Scutari, some bad, others worse, none good. There were five more hos- pitals to which she afterwards went, all horrible. The first thing the lady In chief did world. Longfellow used It in his po* on “The Lady of the Lamp.” a She stayed the winter at SctnB and made a revolution. 33 liereas I deaths had averaged 42 in every l|> they were now down to about two every 100. So in the spring of IS she went to the Crimea itself to attei ANTISEPTIC POWDER FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved ia watar for aw cb n step# pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflsm- ■ trton. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinhhem Mad. Co, for tea years. A healing wonder for mm I catarrh, •ore throat and W. N. U„ Salt Lake City. No. 28-1918. -Qoôôu. BEST CORN FLAKES EVER Crowded Washington When one stops to think that about [ the time America jumped into the war ; whirl there were, all told, only about 85 persons In the offices of the ord- nance department, including everybody from the boss to the office boy, and that before the following Christmas there were in the same department In Washington about thirty-five hundred souls, which promises to be closer to ten thousand by the time these lines stagger into print, then one must s. that this, plus a like swelling of forc^ in innumerable other governmental d partments, early resulted In a eonsij erable hatful of new white folk around town. AT THE HALL -Frank 3Yard O'Mallr in Ceutury Magazine. *e urgently requesl Exposed Throat Healthful. , tors. In direct corrobbratl»fiN>T '\\hiV Several American physicians practiC- ; Doctor Manguillere asserted, accord - ing ln Baris have corroborated the ap- ! ing to a cable letter from Paris. They nouncemeut made by the French t agree with him that the new mod# throat specialist. Doctor Manguillere, j that makes women expose their throata at the academy, that the new winter and necks is directly responsible. 47.687 incomes paid a tax of $19.797 Miss Rugna Sund of Sandpoint. who has been employed as a stenographer at the state house, received word last week that she had passed the prelim- inary examination for the yeomanry branch of the navy. A meeting was held last Saturday at Gooding to discuss the farm labor problem, which was well attended by county agents, farm bureau presidents and farmers generally from the section west of Pocatello and south of the Salmon river. An epidemic of bovine tuberculosis has broken out in eastern Idaho, as he result of the shipment into tie ection of a carload of infected cattle from Missouri, according to Dr. J. E. Ellis, governemnt specialist in charge of cattle tuberculosis prevention. A municipal corporation cannot ^ question the right of the state to ex- ercise its police power In the regula- tion of rates for public utilities ou the ; ground that by so doing it would im- pair the obligation of a contract, be- cause in this state no authority exists ! to enter Into contracts which will :n *f any manner abridge the power of th- state to regulate the rates, the state ^ j supreme court has held. s 1 Lack of moisture has caused dry s ! farm wheat to head short in some see- ,t tions. Irrigated wheat is developing i in fine condition and prospects for a j large crop are good. Oats and bar- ley look good, except In the north where these crops are drying up. Owing to the fact that there is ab- solutely no grass left In the sage brush this year, the rabbits are coming on to the farmers in drove® of thousands and have completely ruined several large wheat fields, and. If left alone, will ruin the entire wheat crop of the Mora vicinity.

The Challis messenger (Challis, Idaho) 1918-07-17 [p ]...nce poisons in meats, fish, fruits, vegetables, milk and food products. Such summer poisons in foods not only make well stomachs

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: The Challis messenger (Challis, Idaho) 1918-07-17 [p ]...nce poisons in meats, fish, fruits, vegetables, milk and food products. Such summer poisons in foods not only make well stomachs

1 THE CHALLIS MESSENGER. CHALLIS. IDAHO

£!!!!!Slice Libby’s Veal Loaf and garnish with cucumbers, water­cress a n d s a la d dressing— very tempting!

V e a l L o a f w it h s u c h f la v o r !

THIS delicately flavored V eal Loaf is made with such perfection by Libby’s expert chefs in the immac­

ulate Libby kitchens—that you will always want these chefs to make it for you. You find it so appetizing, so nutritious a meat at such little c o $ and trouble.

Order Libby’s Veal Loaf for lunch­eon today. Serve either hot or cold, your family will delight in it.

Libby, M?Neill t Libby, Chicago

c

LAMPFrom the Inspira­tion of Florence Nightingale Has Grown the Great Red Cross of Today

»■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■•■I

Hot W eather Poisons Hit The Stomach First

How to Keep Your Stomach Strong, Cool and Sweet

Hot weather always starts those

tuick chemical changes which pro­nce poisons in meats, fish, fruits,

vegetables, milk and food products.Such summer poisons in foods not

only make well stomachs sick bat de­velop with dangerous rapid ity in sensative, sick or ailing stomachs and bowels.

These poisons not only generate gases and fluids which cause that Bloated, lumpy feeling, heartburn, sour stomach, belching,acidity,but endless other stomach and bowel miseries.

A sure, safe, quick acting relief has been found which absorbe and neu­tralizes these poisons, too much acid and harmful gases. EATONIC Tab­lets, one or two taken after every meal, will keep your stomach sweet. You ■will have a good appetite to eat what you like, when you want it and be

I t ’s w rong to ta lk abou t a m an be­hind his back. T alk abou t him in fro n t of h is back.

LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN

Girls! Make bleaching lotion if skin is sunburned,

tanned or freckled

free from all those bad effects liable to come after a hearty meal in summer.

EATONIC Tablets are hot weather protec­tors for tbe stomach. They guard against the germa that lurk in the things you eat and drink. They rebuild listless appetites, pro­mote digestion by aiding proper action of the stomach functions and insure speedy relief from indigestion and all stomach distress.

EATONIC is good to eat like candy. People from all oversend grateful testimonials. Tens of th o u sa n d s are obtaining relief w ith EATONIC every day but the best evidence Is to let your own stomach tell you tbe truth. Go to your druggist and get a b ig box of EATONIC. Tell him you want it for the pre­vention and sure relief of stomach and bowel disorders produced by hot weather poisons.

Then if EATONIC falls to satisfy you—re­turn it to yonr druggist, whom you know and can trust. Be will cheerfully refund yonr money. If your d ru g g is t doesn’t keep EATONIC—drop os a postal. It will be de­livered to your address and you can that pay for it. Address, B. L. Kramer, Pres„ 1018 8. Wabash Ave., Chicago. 111.

W HEN HE WAXED ELOQUENT

Phonograph Record of Just W hat Mr.Smith Said Might Have Been

Interesting.

S peaking a t a d inner. R epresen ta- ; tive Joseph J . R ussell of M issouri re ­

ferred to the glory o f fem in ine fash- * ions and fittingly re la ted a li ttle s to ry I along th a t line.I R ecently Sm ith and Jones m ^ in a

res ta u ran t, and w hile d a in tily m anip ­u la ting the abbrev ia ted b its, th e ir ta lk

i tu rned to n com parison of dom estic j expenses. F irs t It w as beef, nex t It

w as bu tte r , and finally m illinery cam e up fo r a few sighfnt rem arks.

“You should have seen th e peach of a ha t my w ife to ted hom e a few day ago.” said Sm ith. “I t w as all

H E died only fo u r y ea rs be­fo re th is g re a t w a r and she w as ca lled th e Lady w ith a L am p— a lam p destined to sh ine fo r ages a t a tim e. W hen B r it ­ish so ld iers w ere dying of neglect In m ilita ry hosp ita ls an d th e B rit ish nation w as s ta r tle d w ith

th e h o rro r of th e cry o f th e p erish ing a t S cu ta ri, it w as a b eau tifu l, cu ltu red w om an th a t answ ered th e cry.

And from th is w om an’s in sp ira tio n h as grow n all the R ed C ross socie ties of th e world.

F lo rence N igh tingale w en t o u t like an angel to th e C rim ean w ar. says a w rite r in the New York Sun. She scoured co rrup tion and uneleanness ; from th e hospital®, she gave food to ! th e starv ing , c lo thes to th e naked, com- fo r t to th e sufferers. She m ade th e j hosp ita l a p lace o f healing , no t a foul [ couch on w hich fam ished , fev e red vie- ' tlm s w ere throw n to die.

Born in Florence in 1820.She w as born In F lo rence on M ay

15, 1820, and w as nam ed a f te r h e r i b irthp lace , and she d ied e igh t y ea rs : ago on A ugust 13, 1910, a t th e age of n ine ty years. H e r p a re n ts w ere rich . H e r m other w as k ind , c lever and charm ing, bu t she did not In th e le a s t u n d e rs ta n d h e r daugh te r.

F lo rence did not rea lly u n d ers ta n d h erse lf. She w as b rillia n tly educated : she becam e a n accom plished ling u is t and m usician, a w itty and g racefu l le t ­te r w rite r, and she though t deeply abou t po litics and religion. She trav -

o

1

m\

%/ A

4 * =3

Æ&

SZOÆÆyYGT jYJG//77/YGAjL £ 7 7 Æ hWZ/ * / / / ? " Z * ?

w as to get dow n on h er hands and knees and scrub th e floors, and then cry : “ Now. th e s trongest to th e wash- tubs They w ere needed. Such w ashing o f bed* linen as had been done had been done in cold w ate r, and as it cam e back F lo rence N ightingale burned it.

T he doctors and officers ob jected toeled In E urope, she w ent to E gy^ t. ' b pr- Books w ritten a t th e tim e bys tudy ing not only th e tre a s u re s o f a r t the m en who helped to officer th e C n- dow n w ith fever.

to the hosp ita ls th e re . T he C rim ea surgeons ob jected an d rem inded her th a t she w as su p erin ten d en t of th e nursing s taff in T u rk ey , and th e C ri­mea w as in R ussia . B u t she w ent nevertheless.

Stricken by th e Camp Fever.She se t to w ork reform ing, as she

had done a t S cu ta ri, b u t she had done very li ttle w hen she h e rse lf w as s truck

unveiled before her, b u t hum an life and suffering, too.

I t w as th is s tudy of suffering th a t moved In h e r th e desire to ta k e up nursing . She saw th e enorm ous need fo r organized nursing .

In sp ite of g rea t opposition she m an­aged to study a t va rio u s h o sp ita ls in E ng land and P aris . A t la s t she ap ­p roached h er h e a r t 's des ire by secu r­ing an appo in tm en t as p rinc ipal of a

m ean arm y show w ith w hat scorn they m et her.

L ittle by li ttle she got h e r s to res to ­ge th er until she becam e th e feed er and c lo ther of th e arm y a t S cu ta ri. She provided 50,000 m en w ith sh ir ts and g rea t num bers w ith o th e r c lo th ing : she provided all th e th ings th a t w ere

She w as ca rried to a h u t im m edi­ately behind those o f th e so ld iers. In E ngland th e new s of h e r Illness cre­a ted a sensation a s pro found as If a g rea t b a ttle had been lost. She was very n ea r dea th , yet she m anaged to pull through, bu t she recovered , w ith h er b eau tifu l b lack h a ir cu t off. look­

m issing from th e hosp ita ls . “I have ing th e ghost o f h e r fo rm er self.m et only tw o men In th e C rim ea, and one of them w as M iss N ightingale ." said

sana to rium fo r governesses In H arley a trav e le r._ _ _ _ . Ck.\ tt-.st»’

Squeeze the ju ice of tw o lem ons Into a bo ttle con tain ing th ree ounces of O rchard W hite, sheke well, and you have a q u a rte r p in t of th e b est freck le, sunburn and ta n lotion, and com plexion plum es and o th e r em bellishing th ings, beautifier, a t very, very sm all cost. and, a f te r te lling me th a t it w as stand-

Y our g rocer h as th e lem ons and any ing llg!linst ray accoun t a t $30 shedrug s to re or to ile t coun ter w ill supply th re e ounces of O rchard W hite fo r a

. few cents. M assage th is sw eetly f r a ­g ra n t lo tion in to th e face, neck, arm s an d hands each day and see how freck ­les, sunburn , w indburn and ta n d isap ­p e a r and how clear, so ft and w hite the sk in becomes. Yes ! I t Is harm less.— Adv.

A m an’s crookedness o ften g e ts him Into financial s tra its .

sw eetly asked me w hat I though t of It.”

“I see.” w as the sm iling response of .Tones. “Of course you to ld her.”

“Oh. yes.” answ ered S m ith , w ith a grim expression . “I sim ply raved over th a t h a t for an hour.”—P hiladelph ia Even ing T elegraph.

s tree t. She w as th e re w hen the Cri m ean w ar b roke out.

T he E nglish troops w ere sen t to th e C rim ea and such a w retched apol­ogy fo r a hosp ita l a s they h ad w as es­tab lish ed on the spot, b u t th e T u rk s m ade over to them ce rta in buildings a t S cu ta ri, on the e a s te rn sho re o f the B osphorus, opposite C onstan tinop le . To get th e sick and w ounded from th e battle field to S cu ta ri took eigh t days, an d a q u a r te r of th e m en w ho m ade th e voyage died on th e h o rrib le ships. A t S cu ta ri the com m onest app liances o f a w orkhouse sick w ard w ere w an t­ing.

Never Recognized Women Nurses.O ne day a s tran g e th in g happened.

T he B ritish arm y had never recognized th e ex istence o f w om en nurses, b u t one m orn ing tw o le tte rs on th e sub jec tcrossed in th e post. O ne w as from

She w orked 20 hours a day. She re­ceived the w ounded, she d ressed th e ir w ounds Until th e su rgeons could tak e them In hand. She w ashed and c lo thed and com forted them . She sa t w ith them , encouraging them befo re

W hen she w as w ell enough she w as taken back to S cu ta ri, feehle, unab le to feed h e rse lf o r to speak above a w hisper, bu t she w ould no t go home. She w orked on un til th e la s t B ritish so ld ier had le ft th e hosp ita l and th e w ar w as over.

At hom e by th is tim e she had become natio n a l hero ine. H undreds of

an opera tion . She gave them life an d w ere w ritten abou t h e r ; pam ph-hope. She m ade them fee l th a t le ts describ ing h er Ufe w ere sold in m ercy had com e on angel w ings in to j th e s tree t. H er face w as stam ped onth e ir b it te r Mves. : po ttery , on tra d esm en ’s p ap e r bags.

Drunken Orderlie* Vanished. on show m en’s booths, on no tepaper inH e r n u rses w ere here , th e re and a thousand hom es. L ifeboats, emi-

everyw here— w herever th e docto rs g ran t ships, ch ild ren , s tree ts , w altzes,w ould allow h e r to send them . T he race ho rses w ere nam ed a f te r her.rough, d runken , unsk illed o rderlies

Î van ished from th e nu rs ing and sk illed j and te n d er han d s took th e ir places.

F lo rence N igh tingale herse lf w as the L ady o f the Lam p.

W hen th e long day ’s w ork w as done she w ould go to h e r li ttle stuffy room to begin h e r co rrespondence: then .

1 a f te r a tim e, w hen th e su rgeons had re tire d and th e w ard s and co rridors w ere dark , she would ta k e h e r H ttle lam p an d stea l qu ie tly th rough the

C u tic u ra P rom otes

rf//(l. .Hair Healthdraggiita : S o ao S . Ointment 26 A 50, Tale n p le e a c h t r a e e C “ OaM emra. D e» » t e a t —

Kill All F lie s! "M i“0U w d M jw b n » , D a i s y F ly K i l l e r a ttrac t« m d kill» • I I f i le « . N e a t , d e a n , o r n a m e n t a l , c o é T e n l e n t a n d d e e p .

s s S r i t ï ï r -D aisy Fly K illerMS hr M t n . ç •

___ __ e sp r e e e . prepaid , g 1.06.SMOis m m , iHMMuwn. ssookltk. n. v.

What Made Him Laugh?An im pertinen t young m an once de ­

clared th a t women positively could not keep a secret, w hereupon a would-be youthful lady n a tu ra lly took issue w ith Mm. s ta tin g th a t she had kep t one since she w as tw enty-one.

“B ut you will le t It slip som e day, said the im pertinen t young m an.

“No. I w on’t.” she rejo ined . "1 th ink th a t w hen I’ve k ep t It fo r tw en ty years I come p re tty n ea r know ing how .”

l i e laughed w ith an n lr o f se lf-sa tis ­faction .

F lo rence N ightingale , suggesting th a t sh e should go ou t w ith tw o o r th re e re tire d and th e w ard n u rses a t no cost to th e natio n : the o th e r w as from th e husband o f the lad y she w as w ritin g to and w as ad ­d ressed to Miss N igh tingale , suggest­ing th a t she should go a t th e expense of the governm ent. T he m an who w ro te to Miss N igh tingale w as S idney H erb ert, a m em ber of pa rliam en t, who

She ha ted It all. b u t one th ing p le a s e j her— th e found ing of a N ightingale fund, w hich she w as to spend a s sheliked.

Started Many Great Reforms.H er fund grew to over StSJO.OOO. and

w ith th is money behind h e r she es tab ­lished a tra in in g school fo r n u rses and began m any g rea t refo rm s. She se t her­self to reform en tire ly th e h ea lth ar-

IDAHO BUDGETA canning club fo r th e boys and g irls

has been organized a t C am bridge.T he Em m ett C hautauqua w as very

successful th is year, and local people have con trac ted fo r an o th e r in 1919.

T he Old F o lk 's p a rty a t K otiert w as a g rea t success w ith over 200 guests a t tbe noon banque t. An in teresting program follow ed th e banque t.

T he N am pa D efense L eague now has 791 m em bers and has had som e ex­ceedingly im p o rtan t questions of pa ­trio tism befo re it In th e p as t th re e m onths.

M eridian women form ed a W ar .Sav­ings society fo r th e d u ra tio n o f the w a r la s t week. T h e o rgan iza tion is to be know n as tb e M erid ian W a r S av­ings society.

F ive hundred peop le a tten d e d th e * T ra d e rs ’ D ay sa le a t C aldw ell la s t week. F ifty head of c a ttle . 100 hogs and m iscellaneous goods w ere sold to th e am ount o f 85000.

G. W. Lew is suffered a broken r ib as th e re su lt of a hay ing ac ciden t on th e G ess ranch n ea r H om edale. H e was s tru ck by a fo rk h an d le a t a po in t on h is rib. w here it h ad been fra c tu re d before.

T he price o f th re sh in g w as fixed a t 0 cents p e r bushel fo r w hea t and b a r ­ley and 5 cen ts fo r oa ts, tb e fa rm e r to fu rn ish coal, a t a m eeting o f rep re ­sen ta tives of fa rm b u reaus, held a t Gooding recently .

H erb ert E . Z um w alt. fo rm erly of M cCall and W arren , d ied in F ra n - from w ounds. J u n e 13. H e w as a m em ber of Com pany H o f th e Second Idaho, bu t w as tra n s fe rre d to tb e Second engineers.

J . W. G allow ay ’ w as appo in ted by G overnor A lexander a s appeal agen t u nder th e d ra f t fo r W ash ing ton coun­ty . to succeed G. C. D onart. w ho w as lisqualified because of h is being w ith- i th e d ra f t ag e lim it.V an J . C hapin , w ho w as sen­

tenced to a te rm in thF E lm ore county ja il, in fe d e ra l co u rt la s t fa ll fo r

tealing from in te r s ta te sh ipm ents of - goods a t G lenns F e rry , w as re leased from th e M ountain H om e Jail la s t week.

T he m a tte r of c a rin g fo r crops w as d iscussed a t a m ee ting of re p re sen ta ­tives of farm b u rea u s held a t Gooding, and it w as th e sense o f th e m eeting th a t an in ju s tice w as being done th e fa rm ers of Idaho u n d e r th e p re sen t ru lings of th e governm ent.

Mr. and M rs. I. S. B in fo rd . p rom i­n en t res iden ts o f C aldw ell, w ere in ­s tan tly k illed on th e Idaho C ity road n ea r th e H alfw ay hoase. w hen th e ir car. d riven by M rs. B in fo rd . fa iled to respond to th e s te e rin g w heel and ra n up th e side of th e h ill and tu rn e d OTer backw ard .

B yron D efenbach. ce rtified accoun t­an t, who h a s been au d itin g th e tre a s ­u ry accoun ts fo r B ingham county, ha® found m a te ria l d iscrepancies. T he principal shortage , acco rd ing to p resen t indications, seem s to have been in 1914. and am ounts to $20.000. A uditing still continues.

At le as t 2500 ra b b its w ere k illed in the big d rive held a t M ora by sp o rts ­men from Boise, an d th e v ic in ity abou t M ora, according to th e e s tim ates m ade w hen th e sm oke h ad c lea red aw ay from the b a rra g e th a t w as ra in ed in th e rab b it ra n k s by app rox im ate ly 130 shooters.

I f a b ib le p r in te d in th e y ea r 1712 sold in C alifo rn ia recen tly fo r $22.500. w ould a b ib le p r in ted in 1006 sell, and w hat would b e i ts possib le va lue? T his is a q uestion D udley C. W atson o f Tw in F a lls is pondering . H e h as the o th e r bible, an ed ition m ore than 100 y ea rs o lder and in sp lendid condi­tion.

In Idaho 969 co rp o ra tio n s w ith in ­com es am oun ting to $37.741.867 paid an income ta x o f $212.326. T h irty -tw o s tock ra ise rs w ith $2.713.375 incom es paid a ta x of $13.717. T he th irty -e ig h t big m ining com panies, w hose income w as $8.424.441. pa id a ta x of $59.0R2.

So to Speak.“ I h ea r he spoke feelingly.” “You m ight call it feelingly,

kep t groping around fo r a w ord.”H e

PA R K ER 'A HAIR RALSAI

Baantyt* Gray or Faded Hair. He. aad »!■«»»» llnirelata.

E v e r y W o m a n W a n t s

Besides SavinAWheat Ma S a y s I'm S av ing C ooking W hen I E a t

POSTT O A S T IE S

s ile n t room s am ong th e sick and dy­ing m en. She w ould kneel by bed the civil hosp ita l records, th e dea th a f te r bed to speak a w ord of com fort : ' ra te am ong so ld ie rs in peace tim e w as she w ould give m edicine here, food o r tw ice as high as am ong civilians, d rin k th e re . She tu rn ed h e r a tten tio n to th e

_______ ___ __________ No w onder th e men w orshiped her. w orkhouse system of hosp ita l nursingheld an appo in tm ent a t th e w ar office, though a t first they w ere a H ttle a fra id and cleansed it of its ho rro rs , and H e and his w ife w ere fr ie n d s of M iss and shy. “ N ever be asham ed of yonr finally she assa iled th e en tire hospita l N ightingale , know ing h e r am bitions. ; w ounds, my friend .” she would say in system of the coun try . She becam e and they fe lt th a t h e r ho u r had come, h e r gentle, m usical voice. H er gen- she Lady of the L am p indeed ; she be-

She w as appo in ted su p erin ten d en t o f tleness m ade poets of some of th e se cam e th e high p rie s te ss o f light and th e w om en’s nu rs iu g es tab lish m en ts in rough m en. a ir. She founded mindern nursing , and

T h e re w as a g ian t H igh lander who all th e g rea t nu rs in g associa tions and w ro te hom e o f h e r and h er wqrk ■ ®*'4iar'kif i l f t D ‘■ u t “ W hat a com fort i t w as to see W_J even pass ! She w ould speak to oi and nod to an o th er, b u t she could ndo it to all. you know — we w ere lyi >*th e re by hund reds—b u t w e could k t-h e r shadow a s it fe ll, an d lay c-heads on the pillow again . eon tenn b 0 | - s o f t h ô S t a t e C O U I U f

I t w as a beau tifu l idea, and tl _ t

so ld ie r’s le tte r trave led round t g h t O m e e t a l l l o y a l C l

rangem ents o f th e arm y, no t only in , , . . . „. - . . . . e - . i ; sev en teen lu m b er com pan ies w ith $3.-tim e of w ar but in p ea c e : fo r she « a s I ------

able to show th a t ho rrib le a s w ere

th e E nglish h o sp ita ls In T u rkey . She s ta r te d w ith 3S nurses, som e well- tra in ed . some not— good, b ad and indif­f e r e n t the best th a t could be got in th e tim e ava ilab le . H e r m aste rly o r ­ganizing pow ers asse rte d them selves a t once. A fte r tra v e lin g ac ro ss F rance she took sh ip a t M arseilles and th e re la id in a g rea t s to re of all m anner o f needful th ings.

T he ta sk befo re h e r would have ap ­palled m ost wom en, b u t I t only served to Inspire h e r w ith a firm er determ in ­ation . T h e re w ere sev era l hosp ita ls a t S cu ta ri, som e bad, o th e rs w orse, none good. T h e re w ere five m ore hos­p ita ls to w hich sh e a f te rw a rd s w ent, a ll horrible.

T he first th ing the lady In ch ief did

w orld. Longfellow used It in h is po* on “T h e Lady o f th e L am p.” a

She s tayed th e w in te r a t S c tn B and m ade a revolu tion . 33 lie reas I d ea th s had averaged 42 in every l|> they w ere now dow n to abou t tw o every 100. So in th e sp ring of IS she w ent to the C rim ea itse lf to a tte i

A N T I S E P T I C P O W D E RFOR PERSONAL HYGIENE

Dissolved ia watar for a w c b n step# pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflsm- ■ t rton. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinhhem Mad. Co, for tea years. A healing wonder for m m I catarrh, •ore throat and

W. N. U„ Salt Lake City. No. 28-1918.

-Qoôôu.

BESTCORNFLAKESEVER

Crowded WashingtonW hen one s tops to th ink th a t abou t

[ th e tim e A m erica jum ped in to th e w ar ; w h irl th e re w ere, a ll to ld , only about

85 persons In th e offices of th e o rd ­nance depa rtm en t, inc luding everybody from the boss to th e office boy, and th a t before th e follow ing C hristm as th e re w ere in th e sam e d ep a rtm e n t In W ashington abou t th irty-five hundred souls, w hich p rom ises to be closer to ten thousand by th e tim e the se lines

s tag g e r in to p rin t, th en one m ust s. th a t th is, p lus a like sw elling of forc^ in innum erab le o th e r governm enta l d partm en ts, ea rly resu lted In a eonsij e rab le h a tfu l of new w hite folk around town.

AT THE

HALL-F ra n k 3Yard O 'M allr

in C eu tu ry M agazine. *e u r g e n t ly r e q u e s l

Exposed T h ro a t H ealth fu l. , to rs . In d ire c t corrobbratl»fiN>T '\\hiVS evera l A m erican physic ians practiC- ; D octor M anguillere asse rte d , accord ­

ing ln B aris have co rrobo ra ted th e ap- ! ing to a cab le le t te r from P aris . They nouncem eut m ade by th e F ren ch t ag re e w ith him th a t th e new mod# th ro a t specia list. D octor M anguillere , j th a t m akes w om en expose th e ir th ro a ta a t the academ y, th a t th e new w in te r and necks is d irec tly responsib le .

47.687 incom es paid a ta x o f $19.797 Miss R ugna S und of S andpoint. w ho

has been em ployed a s a s ten o g rap h er a t th e s ta te house, received w ord la s t week th a t she h ad passed th e prelim ­inary exam ina tion fo r the yeom anry b ranch o f th e navy.

A m eeting w as held la s t S a tu rday a t G ooding to d iscuss th e fa rm labor problem , w hich w as well a tten d e d by county agen ts , fa rm b u reau p res id en ts and fa rm ers gene ra lly from th e section w est of P oca te llo an d sou th of th e Salm on river.

An epidem ic o f bovine tubercu losis h as b roken o u t in e a s te rn Idaho, as he re su lt o f th e sh ipm en t in to tie ec tion of a ca rlo ad o f in fec ted ca ttle

from M issouri, accord ing to D r. J . E. E llis, governem nt specia list in charge o f ca ttle tube rcu lo sis preven tion .

A m unicipal co rpo ra tion canno t ^ question th e rig h t o f th e s ta te to ex ­

erc ise i ts police pow er In th e regu la ­tion of ra te s fo r public u ti lit ie s ou the

; ground th a t by so doing it would im­p a ir the ob ligation of a con trac t, be­cause in th is s ta te no au th o rity exists

! to en te r In to c o n trac ts w hich w ill :n *f any m an n er ab rid g e th e pow er of th-

s ta te to re g u la te th e ra tes , th e s ta te ^ j suprem e co u rt h a s held.

s 1 Lack o f m o istu re has caused d ry s ! fa rm w heat to head short in som e see- ,t tions. I r r ig a te d w heat is developing

i in fine cond ition and p rospects fo r a j la rge crop a re good. O a ts and b ar­

ley look good, excep t In the n o rth w here th e se crops a re dry ing up.

O wing to th e fa c t th a t th e re is ab ­so lu te ly no g ra s s le ft In the sage b rush th is year, th e rab b its a re com ing on to the fa rm ers in drove® of thousands and have com pletely ruined several la rge w hea t fields, and. If left alone, will ru in th e entire wheat crop of the M ora v icinity .