OCR Text |
Show 1 EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE, UTAH fewR qve - W 1. lMHHfWIWI.)ii 4 JCH501 WOMAN'S PILGRIM! EYES J? y HOW THE THROUGH A jJ Kept Her Family fa Cooj A status to the Pilgrim Mafu By JEAN NEWTON A by the Ball Mass Syndicat. Inc.) Her Best Friend "My pocketbook Is my best friend," auu heard a woman say the other day. "If you have money you can get anything you want. Friends may prove false, children may be heartless, but your pocketbook never goes back on Hardship, a nation mi. I 5 r TK we honor env neer woWJ Jtor Shoulder tt Tt! band shfl home iathefj Lain L 5ap play rearei you." sturdy sonj Poor woman, so soured that she does sue daughters, not see the delusion and the snare. hi . vim . , is It t. Your pocketbook of course, oue bjjuu mm wove lor ner r d B One should useful and necessary. laujujr auu nucu Luc y wgPQ tji ra, brewed potent remedies fn . hope that more people would realize op how essential is providing for the later and herbs such, roots and r.!d I are now used in Pinv- E. Lydia or the rainy day. ntur But how many things your pocket-booA Massachusetts woman writs. w 5 Is absolutely powerless to buy. T Vila all rirknrn a ,.jt. " UH HOW " " can it and without which the things the tion. I was tired all the time. j times I would be in bed two or J U-abuy are impotent to bring you happb urie ness I days at a time, and the doctor yo. One wants to ask the woman who nave to give me something to quid ictic A friend told me about Lydia E w best friend, Is her it declares blver cynically nam s vegetaoie uompouna and : who seems to hold it wonderful results from it t" Can her pocketbook buy her help better after taking the second v nfid and cheer in sicki.ess? It can bring and I am never without it in th u 1th ( her medical attention, nurses, dainty now. I have told lots of people d food, but can It give her something to it. and they say It helps them. Q am willing to answer letters tj ffe get well for. the something or somewomen asiung aooui ma vegeJ to while worth fight makes it body 'hat Mrs. J. W. CbitchJ Compound." for life? Hammond Street, Cambridse, 1 In sorrow and bereavement, can her pocketbook huy her sympathy nnd consolation, can it give her comfort like Not So Good s p! the soothing of a friend? received by a Detroit rl Letter feci In doubt and tribulation can her store's credit manager In answer A reasthat her faith, buy pocketbook for information regarding request nte will brighten the suring' light that applicant for a charge account; S nit; darkest day? Sur : The man John D what yon In later yenrs, when the world's exin me is if his credit with replj citements wane, will her pocketbook say it ain't no good as he owes PStl worth life make her the ties that buy n while? Will it supply open doors fo $10 for six years und yesterday I ten more and I guess tli hearths that welcome her, will It bring rowed but he hlpotized nie an lie loving hearts to give life to her own crazy If has a chanct." you the fireside, no matter how drab and cheertv less the day outside? Candor Is the brightest gem fjrivf Will money buy her clinging arms criticism. Disraeli. sr and baby kisses, love, so'lcltude or devotion? Can money make her "beth long." No. There are things that money nr cannot buy that ar as necessary to 0 IT feed our heart's cravings as food to of nourish our heart's blood. Money canlie: not buy them neither can they be gotIn a ten for nothing. We must earn them tv In the heart's coin. I While the fire will not burn without ti FCR FIRST AID fuel, while we are ail happiest providtt every day on tne iann ing for nnd dependent upon ourselves, for need new a brings there are things that money cannot Ilia ."Vaseline" Jelly. A pure, buy nnd which are in truth our best ( burns, for safe remedy friends- - for they bring us happiness. iin cuts, rashes and tntnot m w k t iff !T1 r 4 4V If SU1 ' ft 11 rXM 1 1 & low r 1 "MP a 1? w t A ' l II i -- IKiN the European wur blew up on Monday morning. November 11, tlie detonation Jarred Aniirica's people Into the most wholewar-wear- fw 1 en-rl- half-clothe- d -' x 4 s , A Skis- - 1 y hearted, spontaneous, unrestrained and reckless celebration ever recorded. And what a celebration It was! Cities went wild and villages re--. Johcd. Everyone rushed to the streets to Join with the mad throng In Its unorganized pantiles and revelries. Doctors. and lawyers bunkers deserted their offices nd forjrot their dignity to add their voices und cheers to the general pandenmnlum. In the cities throughout the country, particularly the larger ones, the phenomena of that first Armistice day were strikingly of one order. What was happt-ninIn New York was happening In Chicago. And In Philadelphia. Milwaukee. San Kranclsco, Detroit. St. Louis. Atlanta. Cleveland and Host on It was the same. America really had two Armistice celebrations, the one of Thursday, November 7, four days earlier, precipitated by a Cabled rumor, serving us a rehearsal for the great exhibition of the following Monday. I'Yoin newspaper accounts of the following day we rend that in the cities-- particularly New York nnd Chicago, "delirium and license disputed Hie rule of the streets. The mad reve! of the day opprouehed an orgy by night." The wild celebration began in the darkness of the early morning hours of Monday, raged during the day. gnthering speed und recklessness the while, and ended in hysteria In the early morning lours of Tuesday. Before midnlirht the good tiatured rowdyism hnd become general. Thou sands of men and women had their hats knocked from their beads and trampled underneath the feet of the hilarious multitude. Those who bad lost their bats seized those of others and wore them away.' Dis':eve!ed gills snatched caps from sailors 1'tnl hats from men end were num'v kissed ami hugged In Joyous revenge. The girls were uo more backward or ditlident than he men Who cared? The kaiser had been whipped and the war was over. Starting In the darkness of Monday the shriek of morning, when men answered whistles by leaping from bed to seize revolvers nnd shotguns nnd rend the as yet unbroken filence of the neighborhood with the hark of firearms, the thing grew In proportion as the minutes and ho"urs passed on. Women, young nnd old, waited only long enough to throw overcoats oyer their night dresses before they rushed to the streets beating on kettles, tooting horns, and crying to neighbors that pence bad come. From open windows came the strains of "The Star Spangled Hanner," "Aim rlea," "Over There," und any other airs the sleepy-eyerevelers could think of. Then here nnd there along residential streets the flames of quickly kindled bonfires appeared, and In the dim light of the dawniug men nnd women performed weird tiances In honor of the kaiser's downfall. Trains leaving the awakening cities' roared through the countryside with whistles shrieking the news to suburban towns and outlying villages which soon blazed with light as the villagers arose to celebrate. Farmers, miles from the railroads, heard the screaming whistles and rose to telephone their neighbors or to apprise thera of vthe ty ftrtng shotguns. , i"-- The League of Mothers' Clubs published, the other day, the favorite dishes of President Coolidge, Governor Smith of New York and New York city's Mayor Walker. The favorite food of the mayor of New Y'ork city Is bread pudding. The governor of the Empire state prefers above any gastronomlcal delight the and humble corned beef And the President's and cabbage. greatest treat? Is It filet mlgnon, pate No indeed; it Is just de fol gras? plain doughnuts! His favorite luncheon dish we all know liver and bacon but beyond and above even that be likes to eat doughnuts! What does this prove that 'John O'Orndy and the colonel's boss are brothers under the skin? Oh no; we knew that long ago. The point that eems to us to merit comment is that three leaders In the country's affairs, men wh can afford to Indulge any craving of the pnlate, who can command all the delights of the epicure, enjoy most the simple foods thnt are within the reach of a day laborer. The mayor of a great city finds bread pudd'ng a trert; the governor of the richest state in the Union gets his greatest Joy of the tnble out of despised corned beef nnd cabbage ; and with a retinue of people provided to supply bis every want, with chefs trained to the finest intricacies of the culinary art. the President of the Unite I States desires not exotic delicacies, but Just plain doughnuts! This is merely a new illustration of n fact that those who the ?an have anything they desire wnnt very little. The tastes of the mighty are notoriously simple. Many people commiserate with themselves for lack of worldly goods and envy others with more material possessions, thinking that those possessions would bring ihem happiness. If nil those people could only be given carte blanche for a short time in the position of one who can command the material enjoyments which loom so Important to them they would soon be satiated und b glad to return, in other respects as in the matter of food, to And they their ow'n simple fare. would then have acquired the perspective and the true sense of values which mean content. well-know- n QVZZlAlfS the coming jof the light, the exodus from the residential districts Into the business sections downtown began. Hurriedly throwing on their With clothes, men and women rushed in search of any means of transportation which would take them to the scene where as actors they were to stage the nvost spectacular performance of its kind In history. Trolley cars, elevated trains nnd suburban lines dumped their shouting freight and went back empty for more. Motor cars, trucks and busses enrried twice as many passengers us there was norri for as they, picked their way through the crowding streets with exhaust wide opep nnd siiens and horns blowing. Eleven o'clock in the norning found downtown streets jammed ns on a New Year's eve. Mulling around and weaving in and out was n cheering, shouting, laughing crowd, which had brought with It nnd was continuing to procure every imaginable accessory which would add to the supennrnivnl spirit. All the rolsemaklng devices i nnfrn In the history of man were impressed into service. Horns sounded everywhere. Men and boys appeared rolling hugi- - garbage cans, them with clubs. Cowbelts, cymbals, dish-pan- s added to the uproar. ten-ceCrowds thronged the flve-anstores, del. pleting the stock of horns, clnekers, drums, dishpans, skillets and rolls of paper. Youths emerged with arms full of huge boxes of cheap talcum powder which soon began to dust the faces and clothing of the mob. Thrown nloft. it .descended In great clouds, whitening everything It touched. Old men marched down the streets beating women hammered children's drums. Gray-haireon shiny dishpans which were destined never to float n dish. All the while the noise was growing in vo'ume, but the crowd appeared to be bearing It the less. The canyons of the business district the senseless din, while the skyscrapers belched tons and tons of paper from their countless windows. F!y!ng bits of pnper filled the nir everywhere, rjntll It looked ns though a mighty snowstorm were sweeping the city. The streets became carpeted with It. Long streamers of ticker tape and adding machine rolls hung from trolley poles and wires and from windows nnd fire escapes. Confetti filled the air. From offices high In the nir came hundreds of pages of torn telephone directories, fluttering tc the street. The." littered the pavement. New stationery, filj cards, records, letters, wall pnper everything was hurled h, that mad scramble of released emotion. Olfice ,rls hurled the contents of wsstebaykets on the heads of the rioters below and then rushed to Join In the merrymaking on the streets. Pandemonium was a churchyard compared to this. It was All Fools' day. Fourth of July, Hallowe'en be.-itln- d con-ft'tt- and carnival rolled Into one mighty billow of merriment. Whenever a man appeared with a large flag he immediately became the leader of an Impromptu, unorganized parade, soon swelling into thousands, where staid matrons marched with chorus girls, where bartenders, still wearing their white aprons, linked arm and arm with men clad in ministerial garb, where white mingled with black, the rich with the poor, where good church women were not too good to march arm in arm with the outcast of the streets. Drunk with excitement, women and girls set the pace in the maddest revel the cities had ever known. Motor trucks and ice wagons became triumphal chariots where girls, still undaunted from a hundred maulings. rode astride the radiators disregarding the reckless display of silken hosiery, or clung in clusters to the necks of drivers and passengers to keep from falling while they sounded their wild penn of victory. No, It was not a peace celebration. It was a ric-tor- y riot. Reserve and propriety were thrown to the winds. Girls hugged and kissed men they never hnd seen before. Men hugged nnd kissed girls they never had seen before Men nnd women who had touched no liquor before in their lives Imbibed In saloons and from bottles passed freely anmng the crowds in the streets. A woman of sixty appeared riding through crowded thoroughfares on a stolid mule. That was Armistice day In America. BuJ America was not alone in her celebration. In Perls and in London the same wild scene was News of the signing of the being enacted. armistice by Germany came to London as a dls tlnct surprise. Up until eleven o'clock of that morning the streets were normal. People wero going about their business under the stress of wartime pressure which had borne down for more s thnn four years. Then suddenly there was an explosion. A ter Then all London swept en masse into the streets and went wild. The same shouts, the snme noise. The streets filled with seething humanity and traflle halted. Flags swirled everywhere. Old women sold them on the streets, the demand being almost as great for the Stars and Stripes as for the Union .Tack. Hotels, clubs, cafes and restaurants overflowed with Joyous men and women relensed from their war burden of more than four years. "The war Is over! The war Is over!" On through the day and on through the night the wild celebration plunged until sheer exhaustion put an end to the fierce nerrymaklng. On the following morning the large dining room of the Savoy hotel was strewn with the tired bodlei of sleeping men and women who, worn out w it! the dny's great strain, dropped In their tracks. well-know- rlfic silence. Hardly Cheerful Greeting A large number of travelers never actually see the beautiful scenery nnd monuments whose pictures they send home on post cards. One card showing a photograph of a vista in Pere la Chaise cemetery read: "Having a lbvely time. Wish you were here!'' A Difference The difference between a failure and a successful man Is rather aptly Illustrated by the fact that while the failure Is doubting whether a thing can be done, the successful man It folng ahead doing It Philadelphia Inquirer. Wf skin troubles. Take internally for coughs and cold's. Donghnats, Liver and. Bacon ha MrV. Company New York pe H State St. a"01"""" led Vaseline i RtO. u. fat. fr Bire owr Her Bcschee's Syrif it. It tit has been relieving coughs due Uti I for sixty years. Soothes the Cm Throf !)(1( IihK loosens the phlegm, promotes exm ration, gives a good night s rest j from coughing. 30c and 90c bottles, druggists. If you cennot get lt,"J to G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, ai lini el, IT. CuticuraSoa Mill rn Is Pure and Sweet lie Ideal for Chilcb he Sample 8op, Ointment, Tfllenm free. W Cnticara Uboratertet. Dtp. M, WiSim.VM 0! il DON'T R Ui lll- - INFLAMED LIDS it Increufn the irritation. Die M1TCUHLL, KYB BaI.VK, ilmple, delafe remedy. pendable, 25o at all dnig;lita. II .11 RnrVeL Sew YorV fit Good Artificial Milk fl'li; Artificial milk, which is asserts v nossess all the finalities of tf p'Pl: cow's milk, is to be mannfac4 i in tuenmarK. ine pruuun fWii i IMC not to be merely a substitute as the real butterfat is replam he p. vrfcfiiuno lata uiiu liic JS vitaniine gives it character of r.vi ' milk. I 'if "DANDELION BUTTER A harmless J COPt Mi vegetable butter ntnrps nml Pfnprn! stores sell of "Dandelion" for 35 cents. W H Came "I told you not to get those . in your nair. wares m ft a Sure ReS wel eft Hot vvatefl SureKeiii mr iMnir;rTl0i 25 and 75$ Pkgs.Sold EverywW Y- - itti |