Show t You r Liver is Clogged up That's Why Serb —Hava You’re Tired— No ApftkJ fpQC)0(XXXX)OOCXXXXXXX300(X)CXXX3(XXXXXXXXXXXXXX)OCXXX)OOClbol Utah’s Two Best Rings Oat rf CARTER’S U' LIVER PILLS will pul roe right io fcw day TWdo ay Imhh By Temple y X Uittu flVER UicwtiM wi Sick Brilwir nu uuu wxt ouu nxs Gcimin — w Signature siAU GAVE SIS AWAY - x- f r r A t 1 7 X7 IFLainbow Goldl Bailey isio by Associated The dimness of the big drawing room was slightly lessened by the glow of the light through the perforations of the samovar Evelyn was pouring the tea “I bad a letter from Christine this morning” she said as she handed a cup to Bruce McKenzie “What did she say?” he asked eagerly “Walt until these people go” she murmured “and then I will read It to you” It was it in packages Singing Birds Literary Prou after a silence return would Everyone sing— and “I thought that my be a triumphal entry hear me would want to now no one will care to hear me” Philip sank front of her down on tho fur rug In "Ia It all gone your voice ?" he asked softly “I still have a little voice she laid “but no one cares to bear Theie And again there waa alienee waa constraint too In the atmosphere for Bruce and Evelyn had grown Into Uvea each and away from other’s Christine's" Only In Philip’s heart waa the real welcome that she craved She felt this Instinctively and It waa her need of him perhaps that made her ask later when the four had talked of many things “Will you ride back to the hotel with me Philip? I know Evelyn had a dinner engagto say ement and Bruce will want to her without ua” Philip insisted upon a atop at a tearoom where they ordered Ices ai an excuse but ate nothing They talked of Bruce and of Evelyn and of the coming marriage “Evelyn chose the better part” Christine said “A woman is only a woman after alt hearts are happand It” an hour before the crowd melted away and even then they were not alone for Philip Herrick lounged on' the couch in the corner Evelyn read the note in an undertone After “I am coming home Evelyn ill these years of study my voice is a failure Do you remember that I used to say that I would find my pot of and gold at the end of the rainbow Bruce would tell me that no one ever All these really found rainbow gold? years I have been seeking a thing that did not exist and you have stayed at I home and have found happiness Her Little Brother — Say are you often think of you and Bruce and of goln’ ter marry my slater Bess? the friendship that has grown up be— — — Her Suitor Why er er er don’t tween you Something you said in know your last letter makes me feel that Her Little Brother — Well you are I you two are about to enter upon a iest” heard her tell pop she was goln’ ter dearer He felt that she regretted the Iobs relationship than friendship land you tonight and I wish you happiness I who have of Bruce and tried to comfort her ”1 in my search for don’t believe that you missed happiness would hare KEEP BABY’S SKIN CLEAR been happy with him Christine" he rainbow gold” Bruce and Evelyn looked at each said “With see She Few parents realize how many es- other looked at him startled “You she knows” Evelyn whom?” ahe demanded timable Uvea have been embittered said at last “With Bruce of course" he said From out of the shadows Philip Herand social and business success pre"Did “Oh she laughed a little vented by serious skin affections rick asked “Has she lost her voice?” which so often result from the neglect “Yes” Evelyn told him “her beauyou think — why Philip I am glad I and she gave up every- gave up Bruce It I had loved him of minor eruptions In Infancy and tiful voice could not have given him up childhood It I had With but a little care and thing for It” what was loved him no career could have taken She did not say however the use of the proper emollients baby’s skin and hair may be preserved puri- in the thoughts of each one of the me away from him and that waa why I went away to search for fied and beautified minor eruptions my pot of gold” She stopped for a moment prevented from becoming chronic and then she went on with some hesitatorturing disfiguring rashes ltchlngs tion: “There was some one else that irritations and chafings dispelled I loved but I was not light To this end nothing Is so pure so Philip to turn sweet so speedily effective as the conenough or frivolous enough from one man to another I felt that stant use ofCutlcura Soap assisted I must give up Bruce and test mywhen necessary by Cutlcura Ointment self— but the other man never told Send to Potter Drug & Chem Corp me Philip that he cared” sole proprietors Boston for their free in her voice made him Cutlcura Book telling all about Something look at her startled of the skin the care and treatment “Would you have given up your reer for that other man?” he IUST A NATURAL MISTAKE manded ‘I would "Yes” she said softly Gussie in Fancy Costume Astonished been glad to have used my voice have for a the Doorkeeper for love songs and lullabys Philip Moment knew that I was following a phantom that my greatest happiness would not Gussie was angular come from a career But I felt that He had a terand mast go away — because this other rible squint and a mouth like a steam man was true to his friend and roller All the same he reckoned on cause I felt that I must be very sure the a of at hit making something of myself” fancy dress ball and his costume was “I could not tell you You undeas elegant as his figure was unrstand ?”ie asked eagerly "I did not lovely dream that you cared and I thought With fast beating heart he stepped N Bruce’s life was bound up in you” from bis automobile outside Jauntily "I knew it she the town hall where the ball was be- Philip Sank Down ‘on the Fur Rug that had to bewasn’t" andsaid “But In Front of Her proved only my Ing held The hall porter stepped backgoing away could prove It And I am ward at the unsightly apparition more three as they sat in the dim room than glad that I went away he "Great Christopher Columbus!’’ I have learned now They had all loved Christine and she Philip because as he regarded Gussie gasped had been engaged to Bruce f but feelthat love is the greatest thing In the “No no my good man!” chirped I saw so many women over ing the call of her genius she had world Gussie as he tripped through the porchosen a career rather than marriage there living their pitiful little lives— tals "Chawles the First my dear fel- And now Evelyn and Bruce were en- women eaten up by jealousies and amlow — Chawles the First!” — London Anbitions and the craving for excitement gaged and Christine was coming back swers Behind the samovar and I learned that nothing makes a whisEvelyn woman happy but love and a home pered to her lover “I am afraid” Hard Shot Rockefeller's “Of what?” he demanded All the modern theories all the John D Rockefeller tried a game oi “That when she comes can never back you vanced make arguments On a will find golf on the links near Augusta that you have not forgotten— me believe anything else” rather difficult shot Mr Rockefellei her” And then he knew that all his waitstruck too low with his iron and at He shook his head "She did not ing was to have its reward told He the dust flew up he asked his caddy: love me and now I know that I did her then pf his dreams and of his “What have I hit?” not love her— not in the way that I desires He wanted her In his life It The boy laughed and answered: love you Evelyn” seemed to them both as they went boss” Their voices after that sank into a out that the world had changed murmured monotone The darkness there was a radiance about the Answering for Him and the man on the couch gathered was a reflection evening that Physician — And would you like to looking of the radiance within themselves the parted curtains through be a doctor Jack? could see the stars He thought of As he left her at her hotel Christine Mother (while Jack is still hesitat the girl who was coming back “I have found my pot of When whispered ing) —No no! The dear boy couldn’t she had gone away she had been radigold Philip” kill a fly —Punch ant with hope and beauty "Where?” he demanded She had been courted "At the other end of the rainbow" by a dozen admirers And she was coming back a failure she said "At the end that was nearRight food is a basis coming back to find her lover ready to est home Philip" For right living marry another woman His heart ached for her as It had Major Shurtz “There’s only one disease” never ached for himself His own Lou Emerson a Btate senator in love had been hidden that she might New York owns Says an eminent writer— some big shirt facnot be hurt by seeing It but through all “ Wrong living tories up in the northern part of the the years there had been for him no state and is very rich other woman “And but one cure— One day he visited Republican And even as he thought of her she in New York when B came parting the curtains softly and headquarters “Right living” B Odell Jr was chairman Odell was Standing there in the dimness before out and had left a is food flip young man in supplied by Right any of them saw her She laughed a little as she came charge Emerson walked in "Is Odell here?" toward them and they Jumped to he asked their feet In startled amazement “Nope” replied the flip young man “You didn’t expect me so soon?” she without getting up asked and kissed Evelyn and gave “Where Is he?” her hands to Bruce and to Philip she “Dunno” had lost some of her beauty She was It contains the vital “When will he be back?” paler and thinner and the light was “Dunno” She gave a little gone from her eves Body and Emerson turned to leave “Who tired sigh as she dropped into the I say called?” Elements of wheat and barley— chair that shall asked the flip Philip had placed in front young man of the fire for her Most important of which is Emerson went over to the flip young "How good It seems to be with you The Potassium Phosphate all again” she said “the three dear man caught hold of his shirt by the and said: “Tell him the man whom I played as a bosom people with Grown in the grain made that who shirt you are child" For rebuilding tissues Satun Presently she went on “And now wearing called”— Philadelphia Eeelyn Is going to marry Bruce which day Evening Post Broken down by daily use have come back Is as it should be Not Qualified to give you my blessing” Folks who use Grape-Nut- s was said lightly "Here’s a man whom word The but can comKnow this — they feel mend to you as a writer He is posPhilip watching her saw the trouble Did she still love Bruce? sessed of a great deal of In her face rude “There’s a Reason” make her still strength" Would this marriage Read “The Road to Wellville” “Oh then he wouldn’t do for polite more unhappy? I went she said “When literature” away" Found GrapeNuts English cxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxoooooool Copyright We bare them In our etore We relee to engagement and wedding ring Engagement rlnge from 26 up These are tingle ntone diamond o( the beat grade Our wedding ring are made ia All one piece of and 22 carat gold tiaos 8nltable prices LAKE Invited Corroepondauoe Reprinted from an article by Theodore Rooaevolt In The Outlook by special arrangement with The Outlook of which Theodore Rooeevelt le Contrtbutlnf Editor Copyright 114 by The Outlook Company All Rights Reserved LJke moat Americana interested in birds and books I know a good deal about English birds as they appear In i know the lark books of Shakespeare and Shelley and the Ettrick of know the lngbtlngale Shepherd Milton and Keats I know Wordsworth’s cuckoo I know mavis and merlle singing in the merry green wood of the old ballads I know Jenny Wren and Cock Robin of the nursery books Therefore I have always much desired to hear the birds in real life and the As I opportunity offered last June could snatch but a few hours from a very exacting round of pleasures and duties it was necessary for me to be with some companion who could idenIn Sir tify both song and singer Edward Grey a keen lover of outdoor life In all Its phases and a delightful companion who knows the songs and ways of English birds at very few do know them I found the best possible guide We left London on the morning of June 9 24 hours before I sailed from Southampton Getting off the train at Basingstoke we droye to the pretty Here smiling ’valley of the Itchen we tramped for three or four hours then again drove this time to the edge of the New Forest where we first took- tea at an inn and then tramped through the forest to an Inn on Its other side at Brockenhurst At the conclusion of our walk my companion made a list of the birds we had seen putting an asterisk opposite those which we had heard sing There were 41 of the former and 23 of the latter as follows: Thrush Blackbird Lark ’Yellow Hammer ‘Robin ’Wren ’Golden Crested Wren ’Goldfinch ’Greenfinch Pied Wagtail Sparrow ’Dunnock Missel Thrush (Hedge Accentor) Starling Rook Jackdaw ’Black Cap ’Garden Warbler ’Willow Warbler Chlff Chaff ’Wood Warbler ’Tree Creeper ’Reed Bunting ’Sedge Warbler Coot Water Hen Little Grebe (Dabchlck) Tufted Duck Wood Pigeon Stock Dove ’Turtle Dove Peewit jar “TitfCoal Tit) ’Cuckoo ’Night- ’Swallow Martin Swift Pheasant Partridge The bird that most impressed me on my walk was the blackbird I had already heard nightingales In abundance near Lake Como and had also listened to larks but I had never heard either the blackbird the song thrush or the black cap warbler and while I knew all three were good singers I did not know what really beautiful slngera they were Blackbirds were very abundant and they played a prominent part In the chorus which we heard throughout the day on every hand though perhaps loudest the following morning at dawn In Its habit? and manners the blackbird strikingly resembles our American robin and Indeed looks exactly like a robin with a yellow bill and plumage It hops everywhere over the lawns Just as our robin does and it lives in nests in the gardens in the same fashion Its song has a general resemblance to that of our robin but many of the notes are far more musical more like those of our wood thrush indeed there were individuals among those we heard certain of whose notes seemed to me almost to equal in point of melody the chimes of the wood thrush and the highest possible praise (or any song bird is to liken its song to that of the wood thrush or hermit I certainly thrush do not think that the blackbird has received full justice In the books I knew that It was a but I really had no idea bow singer fine a singer he was I suppose one of hi troubles has been his name Just as with our own cat bird When he In the ballads as the merle appears bracketed with hla cousin the mavis the song thrush it Is far easier to him as the master singer that he is It is a fine thing for England to have such an asset of the country-tida bird so common so much in evidence so fearless and such a really beautiful singer The most musical singer we heard was tho black cap warbler To my my ear its song seemed more musical than that of the nightingale It was astonishingly powerful for so small a bird In volume and continuity it does not come up to the songs of the thrushes and of certain other birds but In quality as an isolated bit of melody It can hardly be surpassed Among the minor singers the robin was noticeable We all know this pretty little bird from the books and was prepared to find him as friendly and attractive as he proved to be but had not realized how well be sang It was not a loud song but very musical and attractive and the bird Is said to sing practically all through the The song of the wren Inter year ested me much because It was not In the least like that of our house wrens but on the contrary like that of out winter wren The theme la the same as the winter wren's but the song did not teem to me to be so brilliantly musical as that of the tiny singer of the north woods The sedge warbler sang In the thick reeds a mocking ventriloquist lay which reminded me at times of 'the less pronounoed parts of our The yellow breaeted chat’s song cu:koo’s cry was singularly attractive and musical far more so than the rolling many times repeated note of our Ten days later at Sagamore Hill was among my own birds and waa much Interested as I listened to and looked at them In remembering the notes and actions of the birda I had seen in England On the evening of the first day I sat In my rocking chair on the broad veranda looking across the sound towards the glory of the sunset The thickly grassed hillside sloped down in front of me to a belt of forest from which rose the golden leisurely ehlming of the wood thrushes their vespers changing through the stllj air came the warble of vireo and tanager and after nightfall we heard the flight aong of an oven bird from the same belt of timber Overhead an oriole sang in the weeping elm now and then breaking his song to scold like an overgrown wren and cat birds Song sparrows sang In the shrubbery one robin had built its nest over the front and one over the back door and there was a chippy's nest In the wisteria vine by the porch During the next 24 hours saw and heard either right around the house or while walking down to bathe 42 through the woods the following birds Little Green Heron Quail Red Tailed Hawk Yellow Billed Cuckoo FTlcker Kingfisher Hummingbird Swift Meadow Lb rfe Rit Winged Black turd Sharp 4 Finch Song Bush Sparrow Chlpping—'Bphrrow Baltimore Sparrow Purple Finch Oriole Robin Scarlet Cowbunting Thrush Thrasher Cat Bird Scarlet Vireo Yellow War Tanager bier Green Warbler Bird Wood Pewee Crow Blue King Cedar Bird Jay Yellow Maryland Throat Chickadee Black and Whits Creeper Barn Swallow White Breasted Swallow Oven Bird Thistleflnch Ves perflnch Towhee Indigo Bunting nnd Grasshopper Sparrow Screech Owl I sent the companion of my Eng Lli walk John “Birds Burroughs' and Poets” John Burroughs’ life work li In beginning to have Its full effect many different lines When he first wrote there were few men of letter! In our country who knew nature at first band Now there are many who delight In our birds who know theli songs who keenly love all that belongs to life For instance Madison Caweln and Ernest McGaffy have for a number of years written of our woods and fields of tho birds and the flowers as only those can write who join to love of nature the gift of observation and the gift of description Mr Caweln Is a Kentuckian and another Kentuckian Miss Julia Stockton Dlnsmore in the little volume of poems which she has Just published includes many which describe with beauty and charm the and sights sounds so dear to all of us who know American life country Miss Dlnsmore knows Kentucky and the and the great gulf coast of Louisiana and she knows plains of North Dakota also the regions that lie outside or what can be seen with material vision For years In our family we have had some of her poems In the scrap book cut from newspapers when we knew nothing about her except the initials signed in the verses who Only one sees with the eyes of the spirit as well as the eyee of the body could have written the "Threnody" curiously attractive in its simplicity and pathos with which the little book opens It contains many poems that make a simThe writer knows blueilar appeal bird and robin redbird and field lark and whippoorwill Just as she knows southern rivers and western plains she knows rushing winds and running waters and the sights and sounds of and moreover lonely places she knows and almost tells those hidden things of the heart which never find complete utterance THEODORE ROOSEVELT 'No Cause for Alarm Still the 400 have decided” said the theatrical are about Ward— They say there "to give jon a trial Miss 275000 automobiles owned by Individ Please be ready to begin uals in the United States or one for rllrgton rehearsing Monday afternoon” every 400 population” Thank you so much But before we McAllister — Well are you in the 400 go any further I must inform you that yet?— Yonkers Statesmen shall positively refuse to wear tights or a gown that is cut low in the neck” Filling Up “Oh that’s all right In the part “What do you do when you have no that I’m going to give you you will news? It must be hard to fill up” merely have to stand behind a shed “When we have no news” explained and help to scream when the cyclone the New York journalist “we use larg strikes town” er type” ”1 manager Before sending your boy iwty to a boarding school investigate ALL I1ALL0US COLLEGE ALT LAKI CITY UTAH Catalogue Cent Free en Applleatlee Rev J J Cel nan President A POSITIVE aad PERMANENT CURE FOR Drunkenness Opium Diseases Ladiw Md Um THE KEEUT ublUrm Seed Taapk Stmt Salt Labe Civ J34 There It a privately a aaMdty ickaew kodaks :: PPLIRD KODAK Write for catalogue and literature Developing and printing Mail ordera given prompt attention alt Lake Photo Supply Ce Salt Lake City piionoGnaptis Cat an KDISOR PHONOORAPH n easy terms— S3 eaah and SI per week The 128 Talking Machine Stats Street Cl Salt Lake CRy all yer keeping Hhurihend us4 KngLUk Typewriting! Etc Nchool Book West First Bout h fltreet Lake City for fuU information to K Ce DAVIS Write Prim stknoilii I'uDDtn alAMri seals line siiaiWJi Rubber in atock Type Outfits and auppliea Mali ordera receive prompt attention LAKR STAMP CO Salt Lake City ALT Horrid “We were all on the beach” saye lady ‘In our bathing suits and one of those horrid newspaper photographers came along and took snapshots of us” “The wretch!” “Yes And I’ve bought his paper since then every and they haven’t printed my picture at all” — Chicago the Post The Wiser Course DeWolf Hopper in the course of a to Coney Island praised the lithe figures of the young girls who In blue bathing suits and silk stock Ings paced the glittering and windswept beach “These graceful girls” said tho '‘make me think of a you nr comedian lady I took down the other night to dinner iX " ‘Mr Hopper’ said she as she slp- ’did ped her cup of cold consomme you know I was starring in musical comedy now?’ ’“Why no’ said I ’I didn’t even know you’d studied singing’ “ ‘Oh I never studied singing’ sho ‘I took a replied gymnastic courso for the figure”’ — Louisville Times visit Wasted Sympathy ”1 feel sorry for that girl She has been going around all summer in one poor gown” She’s saving ‘Spare your sorrow her gowns to go away She’s got seven trunks packed” — Savannah Newff MAKES A DIFFERENCE ago in a southern years state a small boy had some puppies in a basket and he was trying to persuade a man to purchase one of them “Wouldn’t you like to buy a puppy sir?” he asked “What are your puppies my boy” the man questioned “are they Republicans or Democrats?” “They are Republicans” the boy answered and with convicquickly tion Much pleased the geneleman bought one of them Two weeks later the boy met the same man and tried to sell him another puppy “Well” asked the man "what kind have of puppies He today?” you glanced Into the basket and saw that they were from the same lot as that of his recent purchase “Democrats” the little fellow replied promptly “Ah” the man exclaimed “but two weeks ago 1 had one from the same family and you said that they were How do you acRepublican puppies count for that?” “O! Oh! Mister you see they have — their eyes open now” Ex Some Survival of the Fittest Mother — The teacher says you were fighting and got to school late this How was that? morning Tommy — Well the other boy didn’t get there at all — Ex In New York Gladys — Is it really such play? Doris — Oh it isn’t Just the play I’d want my father or brother to see hut it’s all right for us girls— Puck an improper A v |