OCR Text |
Show vr; "1 f V Al - T '''f THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH fcpartaxt to all Wcsea Readers 0! this Paper Dont Go From Bad to Worse Thousands upon thousands of women save kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. Womens complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or He result of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other organa to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the back, head-icb- e and loss of ambition. 'Poor health makes you nervous, irritable and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Rooby restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the remedy needed to overcome such sonditions. Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp-Roothe great kidney, liver and bladder medicine, will d far By enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer ft Co., Binghamton, N. Y., yon may receive sample size bottle by Parcel Poet. Yon can purchase medium and large size bottles at all drug stores. Adv. half-sick- ? An Idaho Case t, t, DOAN'SFOSTER. MILBURN CO- DYES" Dye right! Dont risk your material in a poor dye. Each package of Diamond , Dyes contains directions so simple that any woman can diamond-dy- e a new, rich, fadeless color Into old garments, draperies, coverings, everything, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods. Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind then perfect results are guaranteed. Diamond Druggist has Dyes Color Card 16 rich colons. Adv. Oyster Feasts Revives. During the war years, England dropped the yearly oyster feasts at Whitstable and other beds, but they are now being resumed. The industry is ancient, and there are entertaining chapters in Its history and fable. It Is a pleasant tradition, for instance, that Nell Gwyn, who, made a master in chancery by Charles II, left a legacy to the benchers of Lincolns Inn to buy oysters for dinner. At the inspection of the Whitstable beds recently it was stated that this is a good oyster sea-- 1 son, and that, roughly 50,000,000 of the shell-fis- h will be available. Catarrh ' Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influenced constitutional conditions. by HAWS CATARRH MEDICINE is a Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, HAWS CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature to do its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Gross A Pittsburgh lawyer was conducting a case in court not long ago and one of the witnesses, a burly negro, con- fessed that at the time of his arrest he was engaged in a craps game. Immediately the lawyer said: Now, sir, I want you to tell the jury just how you deal craps. Wass dat? asked the witness, rolling his eyes. , Address the jury, sir! thundered the lawyer, and tell them just how you deal craps. Lemme outeu heah ! cried the witFust thing I know ness, uneasily. this gwlne to ask me how to drink a sandwich. Bostcv gem-ma- n Important to Mother Examine carefully ever; bottle ol CASTORIA, that famous old remedy tor Infants and children, and see that K Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria A Fiend for Gossip. Jones approached the yonng lady assistant and inquired: Keep music machine records? All kinds. Got any loud ones? Plenty of them. I want the loudest one you have. March, waltz, song or what? Anything, so long as It is loud." Whats the idea? My wife wants It to put on the machine when she has to leave the room so that the folks will have to: stop talking until she returns, and she Portwont miss any of the gossip. land Oregonian. "A Lady of Distinction by the delicate fascinating Influence of the perfume she uses. (8 recognized bath with Cntlcura, Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores, followed by a dusting with Cudcura Talcum powder usually means a clear, sweet, healthy skin. Adv. A Fishy. Exasperated though she was with her husband for showing himself Infirm of purpose, we dont believe Lady Macbeth called her husband a poor fish though a country newspaper Infirm old quotes ner as exclaiming: Bos-o- n porpoise, give ine the dagger! Transcript yftX.V BUFFALO, N. Y. Tree Planting. The government is making an earnest effort to induce many of the states to plant trees on a wholesale scale and in some measure restore their original wealth. There are thousands of acres lying idle, even In such populous states as New York and Pennsylvania which can be made to yield millions of dollars every year If planted with trees. It Is pointed out that although the Eastern states once possessed more than enough trees for their own use they must now Import lumber from the Pacific coast, of course, at great expense. Boys Life. vacation. After he had showed them to her he told her that she might have them. Where shall I put thejr he asked jauntily. Oh, over there in the nut bowl on the table, she told him. And she did not notice the downcast look that came over his face. DIAMOND I Get Doan's at Any Store, 60e a Bos downtown young business man went out to Irvington the other evening to call on his best girl, relates the Indianapolis News. He took along with him several kodak pictures ef himself, taken while he was on his USE Mrs M. E. Hinkle, Alice and Taylor Sts., Btackfoot, Idaho, says: My kidneys were out of order and my was weak back and lame. My kidacted irreguneys larly. I felt tired and languid all the time. As another of my family had used Doans Kidney Pills with good results, I them. Qne box gave continued using them tried me relief and until cured. Its Proper Sphere. In A ! Are you always weak, miserable and Then its time you found out what is wrong. Kidney weakness causes much suffering from backache, lameness, stiffness and rheumatic pains, and if neglected, brings danger of serious troubles dropsy, gravel and Brights disease. Dont delay. Usd Doans Kidney Pills. They have helped thousands and should help yon. Ask your neighbor! Safe at Last. Coming back from Bear lake this summer a tourist lost his way, and could not find any main traveled 'road. He rode on for some time until he met a couple of Italians, who were camping near the side of the road. He called out, asking for iufonna- tion as to the road he should take, and You go one received this answer: f mile and then Then you come to a railroad track. He go north-soutand you go same way as the railroad track. Los Angeles Times, this-a-wa- for President of the United States? Its an interest- lng question, anyway, now that the federal suffrage amendment has been ratified, and women are voters. And theres nothing new or startling about it. Many men are asking themselves the question to say nothing of what the women may or may not be thinking on the subject. Buttonhole any Intelligent man and ask him what he thinks and its likely hell talk about like this: I would not be surprised to see a woman candidate for the presidency before long. And four years from now theyre quite likely to be demanding and getting the vice presidency on one or both of the two leading party tickets. By the time the next presidential election gets around the women will have found themselves as politicians and will be in shape to make their power felt. Theyll certainly put in a claim for a cabinet position or two and for some of the Important elective or appointive offices. Wd might do worse. There are plenty of mighty capable women in this country, and a new broom sweeps clean, you A , WOMAN cf.T&frtZfe A. ( - know. well-shape- d Figures compiled by the census bureau and other government departments, indicate that the num- her of women In the United States over twenty-on- e years of age is 28,035,000, of whom approximately 26,500,000 are eligible to vote in the November election. Estimates of the number of eligible male voters, based on a population of 105,000,000, give approximately 31,500,000. The vote In the last presidential election was 18,528,-74It is seen therefore, that the voting power of women does not suffer much, as compared with that of the men. And there is no constitutional handicap to their administrative progress, says Martha Coman In the New York Herald, If the women themselves really want to see one of their number occupying the highest position it Is within the power of this nation to bestow. Women are eligible to the office of Chief Executive ,of the United States as well as to all cabinet positions and any of tbe minor, yet Important, offices which are either elective or appointive. Tennessees ratification of the federal suffrage amendment has opened up an unlimited field of voter. The gates power and 'activity to the-ne- w of the White House and the capitol swing wide to women If they care to enter. Do they? Suppose, now that American women are the political equals of men, they wanted to try their hand at ruling the nation. Theyve rocked the cradle a good many years and been politely referred to as rulers of the world. Picture them aspiring to the actual direction of national affairs Is there a woman who would make any sort of showing by the side of Senator Harding or Governor Cox or Franklin Roosevelt or Governor Cal3. , 1 vin Coolidge? Consider the feminine presidential timber. Who would be the logical selection of the 27,000.000 women who may vote at the next election? Their first! opportunity to put forward a woman candidate would be four years hence. By 1924 a lot of things may have happened. Many changes will have taken place. And if the feminist movement rushes' onward with ever Increasing momentum, as it has since 1915, there is no telling whether it will stop short of the White House. What if It did send numerous women to the senate and the house of representatives, to the cabinet and to gubernatorial offices? Are there women educated and trained sufficiently to fill these Important national and state offices? Time will have to answer these questions. Meanwhile why not canvass the possibilities? Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, saysr the Herald writer, might be the logical first woman president She is probably right in saying that. Anyway, Mrs. Catts name Is probably the first that would occur to the average American man and woman. This is because Mrs fatc has been well-inform- for some time the real leader of the woman suffrage movement She founded the International Womans Suffrage association and she was serving her second term as president of the National-America- n Suffrage association when It was recently merged into the League of Women Voters. She is probably the leading spirit in this latter organization. The league is nonpartisan. It Is well organized. Should it turn to the purpose of electing a woman president it has the membership and the organization to make Itself felt. The Herald writer says of Mrs. Catt, among other , things : Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt might be the log,, ical first woman president. We will not ask the National Woman Suffrage association leader whether she would consider accepting the nomination or not Her reply would spoil interesting speculation. She has battled so long and so earnestly for the national franchise for women that just now the only sort of life that appeals to her is one spent among the chickens and trees and solid home comforts of her farm at Briarcliff. If you broached such a thing to her as running for any public office she might take it as a bit of pleasantry. Her blue eyes would smile at you and the corners of her mouth would curve upward with an expression of amusement. However, candidates have been forced into nomination. This might happen to the suffrage leader If the pressure of her 2,000,000 adherents were directed toward such an end. There Is no woman In the United States better known than Mrs. Catt. Like Senator Harding, and Governor Cox she has had editorial experiences, having assisted her husband In editing a daily newspaper in an Iowa town. When Mr. Catt died his wife took a position as advertising solicitor. Probably she set type, just as did Senator Harding for his Marion newspaper, and she knew all about the business end of Journalism. While soliciting advertising her attention was drawn to the obstacles thrown In the way of the woman. And the more she considered these the more she thought of helping to remove them. She allied herself with the suffrage movement and just 20 years ago was elected president of the National American Woman Suffrage association. New York women voters have been urged by their suffrage leaders not to vote for a woman candidate Just because she Is a woman. Mrs. Catt was one of the first to give this advice. Fitness for office is the great test, according to their idea. The question of sex would hardly come up If Mrs. She Is a Catt were a presidential candidate. stateswoman of broad and generous vision, a student of international affairs; she has traveled around the world and has been closely associated with men and women of nearly every foreign country. She is kindly, sympathetic, considerate, and her mind has been trained to cope with tbe big issues of the day. And she has an organization the like of which no man running for president ever had to support him. ' When the women really enter politics, both state and national, the men will begin to realize the sort of organization these vote yearners have been building up for more than a score of years. It might have the power to sway an election, if brought to a test. The name of Miss Alice Taul, head of the National Woman's party, would probably be the next to occur to those who have kept in touch with the long suffrage struggle just ended. Concerning her the Herald writer says, in part : What sort of a president would Miss Alice Paul make? She has a large following, though Uiis militant worker for the enfranchisement of American women entered the fight recently, compared with Mrs. Catts long period of service. There are women who assert that Miss Paul has presidential qualifications, and in the event of her nomination she would be supported by members of the National Woman party, that organization of , pickets and hunger strikers and prison martyrs which Is soon to decide whether It will let its militant methods rust from not being used to concentrate them on persons who are blocking the way to some other goal of progress the pickets hope to reach. Visualize Miss Paul seated in the chair of state at the White House with a company of male pickets at its gates. Or picture her passing out to her official automobile through a crowd of banner-bearind and men clamoring for the presidents official recognition of their alleged wrongs and demanding her influence to right them. If It came to a contest between the leader of the conservative wing of the suffrage movement and the leader of the militant' wing the battle would, be fought with determination. No one would dare attempt to prophesy the outcome. Both women leaders have their adherents, and the fact that both are leaders proves they possess certain qualifications for the presidential role. Those who turn to the practical politician for their presidential material probably would think first of Mary Garrett Hay of New 'York, w ho was possibly the leader of the women at the Chicago convention, and of Mrs. George Bass of Chicago, who was much in evidence at the San Francisco convention. A statesman is none the worse for being an able politician. A shining example is Abraham Lincoln with no superior either as statesman or politician. Certainly Miss Hay and Mrs. Bass know their politics. Incidentally they are both club women of large experience. The man and woman will not overlook the club woman when considering the presidential possibilities. For the club woman Is a power in the land. Such bodies as the General Federation of Womens Clubs and the National Council of Women have nation-wid-e membership and organization. The General Federation, for example, has a membership of 2,500,000 and a state federation In every state. And all these big womens organizations are affiliated ; they can be united in the promotion of any one project. Organizations like the General Federation contain capable women of all kinds. As an example of the type of women abounding In the membership of these associations take the president of the General Federation, Mrs. Thomas G. Winter of one-hal- that-a-wa- y. g sash-drape- Minneapolis. Mrs. Winter Is a daughter of Rev. Charles G. Ames of Boston, and later of Philadelphia. Mrs. Ames was president of the New Century club of The daughter, Miss Ames, Philadelphia, 1887-8went to Wellesley college, where she took both a young man who practiced medicine In a rural district became famous and was called in consultation in many towns and cities because of his success in the treatment of disease. This was Dr. Pierce who afterward moved to Buffalo, N. Y. He made up his mind, to place some of his medicines before the public, and he put up what he called his Favorite Prescription," and placed it with the druggists in every state in the Union. For fifty years Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription has sold more largely throughout the United States than any other medicine of like character. Its the testimony of thousands of women that it has benefited or entirely eradicated such distressing ailments as women are prone to. It is now sold by druggists in tablet form as well as liquid. Astoria, Oregon. "I saw Doctor Pierces advertisement and as I had tried s many things for womans trouble without getting any help, I decided to try Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription, and I did so witfi good results. I think it is just great." Mrs. D. Berg. When Friendship Ceased. One day I was walking with a re- cent acquaintance of mine. In fact, our acquaintance was so recent that I did not even know my new acquaintances parents by sight. As we were bachelor and , master degrees. Before her mar walking along I noticed a man across riage Miss Ames devoted two years to teaching Ii the street who I thought looked funthe girls schools conducted by Mrs. Quincy Shaw, ny, and I drew my acquaintances atthe daughter of Professor Agassiz. tention to him by saying: Look at As chairman of the literature department Mrs. that foolish man across the looking Winter first served the federation nationally. street. My said: That Later she served as press chairman in both capac- is my father.acquaintance Tribune. Chicago e nation-widwas touch made with clubities and women. She next served as director and as secMain Idea With Youngster. Last June she was elected ond vice president. A youngster has ' caused his dad much worry by president streets withFor this office the woman has qualified through out looking first crossing for passing vehicles. breadth of work and culture. Playgrounds, visit- To impress upon the youngsters mind ing nurse and kindergarten associations have the necessity of being more careful, he known her leadership, and for eight years she was was telling his wife in the boys prespresident of the Womans club of Minneapolis. In ence a story of another little boy who, wartime she was chairman of the council of While crossing the street with an ice national defense and Minnesota commissionJbn cream cone, had been run down by a heavy motor truck. For a brief mopublic safety. She is author of several books, an accomplished ment the child sat in deep thought; public speaker, but the work df all these which then asked: Did he spill the cone, she holds of greatest value Is that done while di- pop? rector of Americanization for the General Federation. Her Working Plan was widely distributed About all the use some men have for and used. the golden role is to measure the conWhatever may be the prospect of a woman pres- duct of others. ident, there would seem to be a probability of a woman cabinet officer in the near future. Congress seems bent on reorganizing the departments and regrouping their activities. So there is likely to be a cabinet office dealing with child welfare, in protection of motherhood, national health and women in industry. And many people are of the opinion that such a cabinet office should logically be filWJ by a woman. Clean - Cleat-, mm Morn g EVes Keep Your Healthy Wnt for from fefc Cara Book Murine Co.Chicafo.uiA , |