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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS on't trifle with a cold rtanerous. :f'c A can't afford to risk If y ou Influenza. at hand a eep always ' )0XOf racr,. DALB mAa jf f (Elprtstmaa "UTAH Em if A la CfotrlM Birfertta I have been looking on this S evening at a merry company 1 of children assembled round j3 - that pretty French toy, a 3 ff Christmas tree. The tree was f planted on the middle of a great round table and tow- - n fL ered high above their heads ,2 It was brilliantly lighted by 01 a multitude of little tapers Tin if grip in 3 e. f i ;ritt.ib HiiT. pSuW. - ? dy. 4 and everywhere sparkled and Money box fc a Red ton At All Drug Stores DZMAMO IN D ENVOI oar wentera raw fo- r- - "rati .iWift jj tf & and For Shippers. I Tfs at Factory ftrrom- were ffi French nr Gun!?. Prices dp I , A i i ' y Vw o L Wolverhampton) perched f among the boughs, .is If In preparation for some fairy housekeeping. There were jolly, broad-face- 'A Vff little men, much more agreeable in appearance than many real men, and no wou-defor their beads took off tL and howed them to be full of siiL'nr nltims. There were There ffi fiddles and drums. tf were books, tambourines, workboxes, paint boxes, peep im gf. show boxes, sweetmeat boxes urjd all kinds of boxes. There were trinkets for the jf older girls, far brighter than J pi any grownup gold und Jew- - 3 jr els. There were baskets and fj In all devices, ffi S. pincushions W There were guns, swords and JS ha banners, real fruit, made nr- - J tiflcially dazzling with gold 3 lea: Imitation annles. pears ffft and walnuts, crammed with surprises. in soon, n a- js pretty child before me delightedly whispered to another pretty child, her bosom friend, "There was every- - SS Jw thing, and more." if tf PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM r, if toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Rest orin Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair, A the place f Ight man for ! sroumeni waae dv i own marsnai, for Reelection, would Seem Hard to Beat. up gentlemen," be- the uth, addressing the governing board the municipality of Grudge, "I am candidate for reappointment to the .sitlon of city marshal of our pro-esslve little burg. As yon know, om time Immaterial It has been the ivorite pastime of the bullies and jmrts of all small towns to whip the iirsnai. During my more or less ockered career In that capacity I ve been licked, In round numbers, by out every ambitious poogelist In the mmunity. After a feller has licked .e marshal a time or two It grows rter tame to him and he gives It up turns his talons to something else. "Mister Mayor and u Lafe Lazzenberry, well-know- n 3 if 9 3, The Man of the Hour (1 reckon, gents, that I i the logical candidate. A new man I respectfully all that, but so often I live about had my quoter, and should practically immune." Kansas City tar. 'ould have to go through my Waterloo 3Jtttnxbtt fving met f the Fish. Warden Hey, kid, don'J you I iow this ain't the season for trout? J Small Boy (lulling) Sure, but when is the season there ain't any around, M when it ain't, there's always a lot Mem. If the fish ain't coin' to obey rules, I ain't either. Boys' Life. Up to fThe most disjnistine siirht in Jprld Is a natural-borscoundrel to be good. n the try-I- s S S H month far famed! For festive days and nishta renowned, Joy fraught, with hallowed benedictions crowned; Life's annual clearing house for retrospective thought, Where pensive memory recalls the smiles, the tears, The hopes and joys of youth, the loves of vanished years, And sighs to see the havoc, sad, that Time has wrought. In regions of the north O hoary month! and east The song of bird and rippling of the brook have ceased, And Nature's thousand charms of summer days have fled. There Boreas reigns, fierce god of wind and storms; And winter all of verdure Into brown and white transforms And leaves no trace of life and beauty O sped. Thousands of undernourished people have found -- K CHRISTMAS OF LONG AGO d J" nn'"i B US E8 W ta thai fepetlub happy month! When keen anticipation, sweet. Flies swift on wings of ardent love to greet With gifts the friend, the lover or the kindred near. As Winter closer draws his icy fettered chains unselfish The heart expands and love O Poignant Pangs Come Instead of Peace, as Season Causes Thoughts of the Past Christmas, singularly enough for a festival that is supposed to celebrate joy, is characterized by sadness. The time of year, which is supposed to be fraught with good cheer, is laden with pjiin. Instead of peace, there are experienced poignant pangs. Nor is it cynicism which says so; the average man in the street will tell you the same. Neither is crabbed age sponsor for the crotchets of the time; unless, indeed, crabbed age begins In this hurried era when a man passes his majority. Nor Is the tragic contrust between the cloud, which now for the fifth Christmas darkens Europe and the world, and the bright Ftar of Bethlehem the reason for the somber tone that sounds beneath the gay notes of the season, as the deep diapason of the organ rolls beneath the rippling melody. No; it Is none of these things which imparts to Christmas the which is apparent to everybody who has passed into years of maturity. It's memory that does It. Memory plays tricks with us on these days. Perhaps more than on any other holiday our minds revert to Christmases that used to be. We like to think about it; we like to read the Christmas Carol, because it puts in everlasting words the emotion of gladness which used to dominate that day. No matter how humble the home, memory paints it in wonderful colors on this one day, from the time we jumped from the warm bed long before dawn and scampered across the cold floor to get the stocking which somehow had been stuffed during the night, to the end of the plethoric home festival, d and filled to the when, were rescued we of repletion point from the wreck of toys and packed wearily off to sleep, more or less troubled with painful suggestions of turkey and mince pie. There is only one thing that can make Christmas real to a grown-up- , and that is to do something for somebody who cannot pay it back. That otherism is, we begin to suspect, the thing which dominated the Christmases that used to be and made them so real that they remain wirm in memory. Unless you would have ' memory become a dry specter, you yourself must make real for little children of the now the pictures which memory conjures up for you of the Christmases that used to be Saturday Globe. som-berne- ss candy-smeare- ones most And speeds Us largess to the . dear. months Illustrious of most illustrious the peace and jny to all when Christ A htavenly choir announced Goodbtridings. Xr HIS CHRISTMAS RESOLUTION Wrth such mighty porterU .bore v This Prince of Peace wnorn net... HowXuls'he heart at thought JS.Tlos food- -- & y jfj steads, wardrobes, eight-daclocks and various oilier ur- tides of domestic furniture (wonderfully made In tin at fS B 'Vi,tV 152 Stephen Old a lil-- j Game lit wwiaiUbrinzbiemoneyherfc J - There twigs. ft , 13 rosy-cheeke- d fj3 J v.- i There were dolls hiding behind the green leaves, and there were real watches (with movable hands, at leasts and nn endless ca- pacity for being wound up) dangling from innumerable 5f I 7- v5-A 4 W for n J? .. of Angeles Times. scientific of nourishing cereals ar blend "7 helps Wonderfully Qealh and happiness. Steeds no Since Ogden Is located on the transcontinental airway it will uuU.tbtediy become a landing place for future aerial mall lines. Charles I'arker, aged 35, a laborer, from his home In Salt j has disappeared Lake, and his relatives fear he has met with foul play. The state road commission now holds $7.00t of highway bonds of the Issue of $000,000 authorized by the last legislature. One hundred war mothers of the Salt Lake organization have been appointed members of the hospitality committee to aid In welcoming the returning soldiers. Thousands of buttons for the fifth issue of the Liberty loan will be received here soon for distribution in Utah. The fifth Liberty loan will be launched April 1. The validity of the constitutional amendment, providing for the taxation of the net proceeds of mines which was adopted at the recent election, will be subject to court action. No more fitting Christmas present can be made than $100 in war suvings stamps, since I'tali must sell about $3,0iNMKKl worth by December 31 if tlie state is to meet Its quota. When an automobile he was driving struck a Denver & ltio Grande train of the I'ark City branch, 1'. Newman, humane officer was thrown from the machine and suffered" serious injuries. Over 400 girls and women in Salt Lake have found positions through the assistance of the woman's division of the United States department of. labor within the last month, according to records. Salt Lake boys aided greatly in the apple and sugar beet harvest during the month ended November 17. These boys ranged in age from 15 to IS years and they were sent from Salt Lake to five different points in the state. Sugar certificates for manufacturers and dealers will be abolished after December 1, according to Food Administrator Armstrong. Manufacturers of Ice cream, soda water and candles will be allowed sugar without permits. Dorothy Weston and Jennie Searls, two Ogden girls about 16 years of age. were arrested In Elko, Nev., on a charge of having forged a check. The check amounting to $100, is alleged to have been drawn against an Ogden firm. Legal steps have been taken to extradite William Henry Randolph, now In Virginia, wanted by Weber county authorities on a charge of having abducted two children from the home of his divorced wife, Mrs. Laura Randolph. Anarchy's red banner is not to be displayed in Salt Lake. An ordinance prohibiting the use of the red flag was unanimously passed last week by the city commission and an emergency clause carried by the measure makes it effective at once. Many acknowledgments of appreciation are being received by the Oregon Short Line Family War Service club from former employes of the railroad, now in military service, for the $2 checks recently mailed to them for Christmas presents. Since the summer of 1915 the state treasurer has held, as a trust, ?2503..'JG, the remainder of the estate of Marco Churich, an Austrian, who died in Utah. The heirs are residents of Austria. This amount will now beiurned over to A. Mitchell rainier, alien property custodian. Rigid quarantine, the same as for smallpox, will hereafter be used In all Spanish influenza cases in Ogden. All expersons afflicted and all persons posed will be isolated. Any infraction of the quarantine will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.- Heavy jail sentences will be imposed. Because liquor, confiscated under the state prohibition law and condemned by the courts to destruction, has been declared to lie necessary for saving f lives, menaced by influenza a stock debeen have to was which wet goods stroyed at tfalt Lake will probably be turned over to the hospitals. The second tie vote In the recent election has been reported. The first was on the vote cast for justice of the peace in Scofield in Carbon county, and the last In Daggett county, where term for count the vote for two-yecommissioner was equally divided between Leo Stewart and Niels Fallesen, each receiving 45 votes. Already surveys have been authorized for nearly 100 miles of roads in different sections of the state, with the purpose in view of immediate calls for bids, so that the work can be .commenced as soon as weather conditions will permit. Substitutes formerly bought with flour will he purchased by the government from local dealers and millers, according to a message received by the Utah food administration. Employes of the sugar factory at American Fork have been granted $4 shift in place of for an eight-hou- r twelve hours work at $4.50. j ft f KTtol--lUv- BUDGET Corn Bread. Religious .. i,ni hnked corn ...,i,. inui"inuiitna son brfad to r dinner. Her . corn complained tuui brOh', yes you do." the mother said. "wh "hwere seated at the table not understand little son who did Iho meaning of some of jour reu "Well, give me then," bread gious corn v . . Richter. a , ...i Happy Thought u-utrmiirth to life, only vpf "Q 0kyM .sail 0 ,"Bv&ar6ce JLco J This is going to be a glorious Christmas. J Give enduring gifts. I Write us for suggestions and prices. J Shop early. BOYD PARK MAKERS OF JEWELRY SIiJ.r IA6 MAIN BARGAINS IN USED lMtl4 w4 M CITY SALT 1AK CARS Oldiaobllo. Nt. lionjlt-125.- 0 to taOO. CmrDtre4 first elm rannlnf conditinnafr lfm 11 vint4 bf Kite pirtin. Writ. ki teuiM Um u4 tttctif Vtti Car ik, RuuUU-Dodd PASS kt. Dept., Auto Ca, SUMMER IN Salt Lak Ctcr TEMPLES Peking Custom of Which the Only Merit I Assurance of Absolut Peace and Quiet. "Temple parties" constitute a popu- lar form of diversion for the summer months in Peking. The hills to the westward are dotted with y temples rambling compounds of buildings built centuries ago by emperors in memory of departed ancestors. The buildings Invariably surround a paved court or often a series of such courts, shaded as a rule by trees. In the temple proper century-olla still to be found a gigantic "Buddha" arei or Idol before whom joss-sticlighted at Intervals by priests and acolytes, of whom there are generally a half dozen all told, occupying a por-- ? tion of the compound. It is quite easy and inexpensive to secure the use of one of these temples one or more of the unoccupied suba sidiary buildings: for a week-enweek or the whole summer. They are entirely without furniture except Insofar as a raised platform whereon the Chinese used to sleep might be called' furniture. Once installed the occupant enjoys absolute peace and quiet by day. As a rale he sleeps In the company of one of the lesser "Buddhas," who ts hidden behind a curtain. The only Intrusion upon hi" privacy occurs when the priest or acolyte brings food and places It before the Idol and returns later to remove what the rats havs left of It A number of the oldtlmers In Peking have their temple leased year after year and pass the summer there. For ths novice, owing to the general lack of everything that makes for comfort, once Is enough. It la a thing, however that everybody must do once. one-stor- d CRITICISM MUST BE KINDLY Nothing Good Can Come of Metho4 Which Does Not "Speak th Truth In Love." , ( There Is the story of a contentloufli man who said to his pastor. "I cais not preach or pray or sing, but can raise Objections." Such men arfl not rare. There is one, at least, lOi almost every church, club, lodge OS society of whatever kind. The crlttQ is ever with us. And, candidly, wa need him. We cannot do our best, work without him. He Is like th brake in the mechanism of a motor car. He' holds us back when wflf would go too fast If at times M delays our progress, he is neeessarjj to our safety. Hla conservatlsni counteracts the possible evils of rad lcalism. Much might be said for thfl economy of criticism. But the method of criticism is also Important The brake should work smoothly. The critic need not de stroy the organism he proposes td reform. Often the effect of his crltl cism is wholly destructive. Sometimes his methods remind us of the man whft setfire to a barn to rid it of rats. A sensitive srilrit wln had been harshly; treated by a eritia retorted, "I knotf. there is a cinder in my eye, but yon can't remove it with a crowbar." The apostolic injunction, "speaking the truth In leve," gives the critic at safe rule of action. No truth, howevei severe, is unwelcome, if It be spoketl In love. It takes the spirit of Christ to take the sinnet by the hand tag while we take slit by the throat ' Christian Herald. Protection From Live Wires. For the sure protection of linemen! handling live wires a pair of gloved Inside and one outside of the rubber gloves have been recommended. Tb.0 woven fabric Inside glove takes Bp per splratlon and shields the rubber from the finger nails and a leather gauntlet over the rubber glove protects fromj outside mechanical Injury, a!ts lr grasping tools and keeps the hands warm In winter. Friendship's Obligations. I must feel pride in my friend's ac- complishments as If they were mtn and a property in his virtues. |