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Show THE SAUNA SUN..SALINA. UTAH DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN Is Your Work Hard? t Aspirin Marked With Bayer Croee" Haa Been Proved Safe by Mllliona. Is your work wearing you out? Are you tortured with throbbing backache feel tired, weak and worn out? Then look to your kidneys! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains lesult. One suffers annoying1 kidney irregularities; feels nervous, irritable and worn out. Dont wait! Use Doans Pills a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Workers everywhere recommend Doant. They should help you, too. Ask your neighbor Unless you see the name on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. Say "Bayer when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous. Adv.- - Warning "Bayer Attention to Little Matters Brought Surprising Results A Utah Case Eureka, Utah, says: Sharp, Once a story was widely circulated on how the United States government saved money by cutting out the blue stripes on mall bags. So" one knew Just why they were there except that they always had been. The suggestion contained In the story was taken up by some business firms, and was actively advanced by the Boston chamber of commerce, which Issued a booklet containing communications from Industrial and commercial concerns telling how they cut out the blue stripes" In their lines. One manufacturer saved $500 by regrlnding and mixing of a years accumulation of Inks of various colors and quantities for use in printing office forms. Another concern added a one-to- n truck to Its. larger tonnage truck fleet ami saved $I5,0()0a year by using the new addition for small city jobs. Still another company found It could save $10, (XX) a year by selling its automobile trucks and contracting for hauling. Another concern found that by giving fountain pens to employees It crfnld save In Ink alone ten times the annual investment in fountain pens. i I F. Jensen, twingingme pains over caught my right hip and throughof the my small back. There was a sore spot In FYa my baok and I had trouble with my kidneys sot lng too freely, got a box of Doan's Pills snd they rid me of the backache. Doans also put my kidneys in fine condition. DOANS pSc STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS FotUr-Milbu- m Co Mis. Chem. Buffalo, N. Y, Greens August Flower or Constipation, Indigestion and Torpid Liver Relieves that feeling of having eaten unwisely. 30c and 90c bottles. AT ALL DRUGGISTS. KEEP EYES WELL! Water will Stop wasting money on big shoe lr. Thompson them. At druggists or strengthen bills No need for It. Tell your 1167 Hirer repairN. Y. Booklet. Troy, man to put U8KIDE Soles on your shoes. USKIDE the Wonder Sole for Wear. Wears twice as long as best leather. Made by the United States Rubber Company. USKIDE Is comfortable, healthful, waterproof, - For their immediate relief sal Protects against slipping. For healing doctors prescribe hard workers snd hard walkers. Nothcan USKIDE. A man Vermont fazs ing wore a pair 25 months. Ask your shoe dealer for new shoes with USKIDE Solea. He either has them or can get for you. Adv. the I I ! , -- CKIN IRRITATIONS i r good-lookin- i (fenhiries Cbristmasf Observance Rave Wrought of THany TTh Ranges Good Admixture of Blood in Riffians ' ST. LUKE .11:10-1And the angel said unto them. Pear not; for behold I. bring you good tidings of great Joy, which shall be to all people. . Fox. unto you Is born this of day In the David a Savior, which Is Christ the Lord. city 1. -- Where go ye, simple shepherds all, who haste so fast by night, Leaving these your flocks 'and herds to wander as they will? . What thing can be more beautiful than this Stars perfect light? "Nay, this fair Star but leads us to the Worlds. rpQSt. perfect Light; We seek the radiant Son of God past starry vale . and hill. . Bv JOHN r DICKINSON SHERMAN of the first Christmas Day. Thus the poets vision of the Adorationof the Shepherds," which the artist Bouguerreau has put on canvas to- - the joy of all the aithful (No. 1). A familiar message Is St. Lukes to all the world and no anniversary la celebrated by more of the worlds peoples. The carol-boy- s have sung the same message for many generations In many Christmas languages and under many skies. Night jells the message thus: Yet the stage conch was even more of- a feature of life In England and for much longer. Especially was It a center of public attention at Christmas time (No. 2). And It Is worth while this holiday season to .turn back to Washington Irving's "Sketch Book" (1819) fob what he has to say about the Christmas coach in England. lie writes. In part: . , - In the course of a December tour In Yorkshire, I rode for-- a long distance In one of the publio .coaches on the day preceding Christmas. The coach was crowded; both Inside and out, with who,- by their talk, seemed principally bound to the mansions of relatives or friends, to While shepherds watched their flocks by night, ' eat the Christmas dinner. t was loaded, also, with All seated on the ground; hampers of game, and baskets and boxes of deliThe angel of the Lord came down. cacies; and hares hung dangling their long ears And glo.ry shone around. about the coachman's box, presents from distant And glory shone around. friends for the Impending feast. . . . The coachman has commonly a broad full face, ; Tear not, said he for mighty dread curiously mottled with red, as If the blood had Had seized their troubled mind . been forced by hard feeding into every vessel of Glad tidings of great Joy 1 bring, the skin; he Is swelled Into Jolly dimensions by To you and all mankind, To you and all mankind. frequent potations of malt liquors, and his bulk Is still further lnireased by a multiplicity of coats. To you In Davids town this day," . , In which he Is burled like a cauliflower, the upper Is born of David's line. one reaching to his heels. He wears a The Savior, who Is Christ, the Lord, . a hat, huge roll of colored And this shall be the slgur handkerchief about his neck, knowingly 'knotted And this shall be the sign: . and tucked In at the bottom; and has In summer-tim- e a large bouquet of flowers, the present, most likely, The heav'nly babe you there shall find,. of some enamored country lass. His waistcoat Is . To human view displayed, w commonly of some bright color, striped, and his All meanly wrapped In swathing bands, small-clothextend far below the knees to meet And In a manger, laid, ' a of Jockey boots which reach about half-wa- y And in a manger laid. up his legs. AIL this costume Is. maintained with much Other times other customs ! The first Christmas clslon; he has a pride In having his clothes of to was change the calendars Day important enough materials, and. notwithstanding the seem- of a large part of the world. And nearly twenty lng grossness of his appearance, theye Is still that neatness and propriety of person centuries have seen-ma- ny striking changes In Its which Is almost inherent In an Englishman. He observance. In the beginning Christmas was a curl- enjoys great consequence and" consideration along ous commingling of the Christian and the pagan.. the road; has frequent conferences with the village housewives, who. look upon his as a man of great For many peoples of Europe had celebrated a midtrust ajid dependence; and he seems to have a good winter festival long before Christ was born In understanding with every bright-eye- d country lass. Bethlehem. And It was not until, about 445 A. D. The moment he arrives where, the Aorses to be changed, he throws down the" reins, with somethat Christmas, in somewhat the form we now thing of an air, and abandons the cattle to the 'know it, was accepted .as a popular religious care. of the Hostler, his duty being ynerely to drive festival. Since then, "as times' have changed and them from one stage to another. When off the men have, changed with them, the customs of box,-- his hands are thrust Into the pockets of his t, great-coard and he rolls about the .with Christmas time have largely changed. most of an the absolute lordliness. air Here he. wre Americans as the of Christmas, present, Is surrounded by anadmlrlng throng of ' generally generation know it, has been evolved from the hostlers, stable boys, shoeblaeks, and those namen observance "of the day that was- brought to this Infest Inns and taverns, and less hangers-othat ' run errands and do all kind of odd Jobs, for the . country by the Jolly Dutch burghers of New privilege of battening on. the drippings, of the of Virginia, Amsterdam and the English-cavalierJdtehen and the taproorrl. These rJI look up to not through the. Pilgrims and Puritans of New him as to an oracle; treasure up his cant phrases; echo his opinions about, horses and.oth'er topics of England. Both Pilgrim and Puritan frowned on , above all, endeavor to lmltatd as- practiced by ' Jockey lore;.a-ndthe celebration of Christ-mashis air. and carriage. Every ragamuffin .that has a The' establishedthe Church of England. Puritans, coat to his ba,ck thrusts hist hands In the pockets, In England, it will be remembered, actually abolrolls In his gait, talks slang, and Is an embryo Coacliey. . ished Christmas Day by act of parliament DecemPerhaps It might lie owing to the pleasing, seber 24, 1652, and parliament sat. In session on . that reigned In my own mind that I fancied renity December 25 commonly called Christmas Day. I saw cheerfulness In every countenanace through-- , out the Journey'. A stage-coachowever, carries It was- not until the- restoration of Charles II In animation always with It, and puts, the world In 1G60 that Father Christmas (Santa Claus), the motion as It whirls along. The horn, sounded at Christmas tree and. the Christmas stocking came . the entrance to a village, produces a general bustle. Some hasten forth- to meet friends; .some with back .to their .own. . In bundles and bandboxes to secure places. A picturesque feature of life in the Nineteenth the meantime the coachman )has a world of small century which time has driven from the highway .' commissions to execute. . . . As the coach is the stage coach. This conveyance of our fathers rattles through the village everyone runs to the 'window. . . . At the corners are assembled Junand. forefathers went rolling and rocking across the tos of village Idlers and wise men, who take their continent Just behind the marching pioneer and there for the Important purpose of seeing stations railroad that was Just ahead of. the the company pass. . . . The. scene brought to town out In the It. an turned old writer's account of Christmas prepathose days mind to supplant rations: Now capons and hens, besides turkeys, to see the' stage come in just as even to this geese and ducks, with beef and mutton must all day In many parts of the country everybody who die for in twelve days a multitude of people will can get away goes down to the station to see the . not be fed with a little. . . train come in. The completion of the first transcontinental railroad In 1S69 spelled the finish for ' the great stage lines of the West But the stage ' Itself persisted for many years this writer has In 1919 as at late the ridden In the genuine thing Borkies until the automobile put It out of bus!-nelime. for , rs, e broad-brimm- es rlr cerrt-lUA- e . e inn-yar- - - - h, - - ss .. ed Alas and alack! Methinks In Florida Some weird Christmas celebrations Will be put across this year By Northern flivver-folkFity the sorrows of poor old Dad and Ma auto-came . Talked In a With two-thre-e lnpocent offsprings Clamorous for Christmas And Santa Claus a thousand miles away I Not a Christmas tree In sight ! No turkey! Nary a chimney-place- ! Nothing but autos and climate And real estate and realtors Omitting al reference to suckers! Think of stockings on a radiator, Filled with oranges and grape-fruiThink of a Christmas dinner Of canned beans and bakers mince pie I Many a crimp, O Florida, Will be committed in thy name December 25, 1925. ten-mil- t! I-- g The Riffs, against whom .France and Spain are now waging war, are not wild. Arab hlllmen, as many suppose, but Berbers, the descendants of the ancient Lyblans, who once ruled In north Africa, and of the Norse vikings, whose adventurous, raids extended to the Lybian shores. Irof. F. Ber-liouone of the foremost French historians of the day, has traced back the adversaancestry of the present-daries of France and Spain.. The ancient Lyblans, says Professor Beqiioux, once formed a powerful, confederation in northern Africa and attained a high degree of culture. It is thought that the early Greeks obtained their cult of Pallas Athene from the Africans, for the oldest statuettes of the goddess show her with the characteristic Ber-UCplaid of goatskin, which was the usual dress of the ancient Berber maidens in the Atlas mountains. y 1US the announcement - J g. . T MONT. LIVINOSTON. OEORQB EDWARDS, Bur Your Florida Aoreage and Late If priced right. Write full description, prlco A terms. Stottter. 171 N. B. lot St., Miami. Fla. Will MEN EARN WOMEN $10 DAILY OVERCOAT! taking orders for TOPCOATS. SLICKERS, ALLWEATUEH gar. ments "Direct to Wearer. Largeet line at lowest NO CAPITAL OR EXPERIENCE pricee. REQUIRED. Write today for attractive outfit .ample and instructions. Harrison Clothing Co., 803 K. C. Life Bldg, Kansas City, Me. super-quall- tr EM IDA Beans shipped year 'round, net yield high a $17J an acre. Ten million acres for cultivatioq $ij an acre up. Write for information DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Tallahassee, Florida Freshen a Heavy Skin With the antiseptic, fascinating Talcum Powder, an exquisitely . Cutl-cur- a scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume. Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cutlcura Toilet Trio (Soap, Ointment, Talcum). Advertisement. JouNeedi HOSTETJETt feMgCELEBRATEOI STOMACHIBITJER Millions for Sugar To the extent of 10,000,000 the Free Is subsidizing the growth of State custom The of giving gifts undoubtedly grew In Ireland. beets sugar The first facofit of. the offerings of the Three Wise Men," the for the of beet sugar is tory production his "Three Kings of Orient Melcholr, with gold; to be erected by a Belgian firm which Caspar, with his frankincense; Balthazar, with obtained the concession. There was his myrrh. It has persisted and grown through the centuries. It has now assumed such propor- lively competition among Irish towns be selected as the place for tions that It has Its abuses. Anyway, there Is the seeking to the factory. Carlow was chosen, and SPUGS the Society for the Prevention of Useless the decision was announced the Christmas when Giving. And there is the town band turned out and serenaded movement, which would abolish the "promiscuous the representatives. of the Belgian firm. trading in gifts' and bring about the payment of Bonfires were lighted and there was a Christmas bills before the middle of the followcelebration. general ing March. Uncle Sam, Postmaster (No. 4), has come to be the modern Santa Clqus. Ills activities Ducks Have Air Routes for weeks before Christmas Day 'are enormous. Wild ducks follow "passes the same He .has to spend, a million doiars or more for extra mail cars on the railroads. Extra clerks as a train follows the railroad. Up In cost another million. Extra motor trucks and Minnesota and North Dakota the cost another half million each. sportsmen lease up all the points on extra the lakes covered by the duck "passes. And these are only the large items on his bill. the almost Incredible They know the ducks will fly along All this .Is reflected-isuch passes. Of the 10,(XX) lnkes in buying of the people In the days immediately preceding Christmas Day.' It Is estimated for Minnesota there are perhaps 9.000 In which a wild duck Is never seen. Cap1925 at between $6,000,000,000 and $7,000,000,000! Although the American people are almost un- pers- Weekly. believably rich these days, this prodigious spendLovers may refuse to. say good-bing .is largely jpossible through the Christmas clubs now so popular in most parts of the country, the forever and yet put in two or three hours at It.- members saving week by week till holiday time. is seems to also The Christmas tree, it likely, gee a change. For generations millions of young cut-foChristmas, with eveFgreen trees have.beeji little regard for aDy other considerations. This year there is a growing disposition to check this drain on the forest resources of the future," which are recognized as all' too scanty. One- - proposal is that the trees shall be cut from national and state forests under scientific supervision of forests. Another Is that living trees he used and that they be 'replanted either "permaneutiy or until the next Christmas. It is also proposed that Christmas tree (No. 3), which is increasing in popular favor, shall be a living tree and a permanent fixture. The movement In favor of the living Christmas tree .has won the support of many organizations from the chamber of commerce to the Boy'SfoUtsi There is now a central organization, the National Plant," Flower and Fruit Guild, with headquarters in' New York City. The movement will also work for the preservation of holly MOTHER- ;- Fletcher's Cas-tor- ia and mistletoe, which-arfast vanishing from the is a pleasant, harmless Subland in consequence of ttie Christmas demand. mail-carrie- WOLF, COYOTE, BAT AND MICE EXTEBMIN ATOB Edwards Formulas, slmplo Instructions. Bold Oot 0 ooyoios ono night; fura for $60. brought $111.(0. Also trapping systom. Trapped I eoyotes ono night, same plaoa. Bird proof. Formulaalnstruotlona and Trapping oystom $1.60. Fro circular, rs It teode to promote goad health, (traagtbaa the digestive organs sad to hoop the stomach la good aoedltioo. At AU DneoiiU. aognrma oo.. rrmBusaa. i na W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 49-19- 25. Cup Makers Profit Radio shows are good things for the silver .loving cup makers. Nearly 300 cups were awarded by the two show ew held recently' York city. A cup went to the radio manufacturer who received the biggest order and a consolation cup to the man who re--, ceived the smallest order. There were cups for singers, mouth organists, recitatlonists and the most popEven the lunch ular performers. counter concessionaire received a cup because his chicken sandwiches were genuine and not bootleg! 'in-N- He conquers twice who conquer himself in victory. Gyrus. y A.fooL at forty 1 a fool Indeed.? Young. l stitute for Castor Oil Paregoric, Teething Props and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven dir ectiong on each package. Physician everywhere recommend lT it A |