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Show LlLUL f : Y THE MAMMOTH RECORD. 'MAMMOTH CITY, UTAH Weekly Health Tallis PRESIDENT URIC ACID IN THE SYSTEM BY LEE HSMITH, M. D.e " ' ? i) X' C" r ! Y : K Uric., acid is now generally recognized aS" the cause of more disease than was heretofore believed. .When-thkidneys are out of order uric aclji accumulates within the body in super-- ' abundance .The disordered kidneys do not filter the1 poisons out of th bloody as they ount to do and so th poison's Tenialn in the blood and float around ' until 'they find a place "to Th lodge, in form of urate salts. thing to' remember is that you may have Jrbeumatlspi in any part of th body .you mayi have paips anywhere youf back' may ache and your head may be dizzy but the trouble Is not .where the pain appears. .. The ' trouble is in the kidneys, and what is the first thing to do? You must excess uric" acid- - but of your sys-- i tem, which..can be klone py taking Anurio Tablets, the kplendid remedy which Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., has put 'on sals in the drug stores at a low price. Anuric Tablets (made double strength),' when taken into, the system as medicine, ha vs the peculiar power of. dissolving the urie acid deposited there. Drop a bit of sugar or salt into hot water, and it will disappear. In precisely the same way do these Anuric Tablets dissolve .uric acid. . .01 course, after ridding the'lsystem''of uric acid, it may return again unless you eat the right foods and live the right kind oi life, but Dr;' Pietce will advise you fully on proper food and correct .living if you write and ask him. He makes no charge for such advice. Take Anuric Tablets today, by all means, and get that urie acid out of your system. Dont, dont, dont, put the matter off.. - . The' Pessimists Dread. ; Hes an awful pessimist. Whats the matter now? to Growling about the pleasant winter we are having. What does he see in this winter te find1 fault with? Says he cant help worrying about what the price of Ice ingoing to le ; next summer.1 .Cutlcura Soothes Baby Rashes. That itch and burn with hot baths of Cutlcura Soap followed by gentle anointings of , Cutlcura . Ointment Nothing better, purer, sweeter, especially. if a llttje of the fragrant Cutlcura .Talcum Is dusted on at the fin-ls- h. 25? each everywhere. ) , 't Adv. , The . Idea. .. I conduct my piano business strictly Christian, principles. ilowdo you mean? stock ,My square. . op is both and upright , The cucumber' Is one of the oldest of cultivated-vegetabl, It has been cultivated 1m InrUafor S.OOO years. . es. PHYSICIAII WAS IH SERIOUS CONDITION Dr. Farnsworth Gives Doans Credits His Wonder--1 ful Recovery. Dr. T. G. Farnsworth, 76 S. Kanawha St., Buckhannon, W. Va.. retired physician of over forty years' experience, Congressman, Health Officer, Mayor and praises Doan's Kidney Pills. Here is Dr. Farnsworths experience as he tells it: - It was just a few years after my retiring from practic-tna- t I ing medicine found I was afflicted with severe disorder of the ..kidneys, and bladder. I grew stead-- . ily worse, and sometimes I was unable to. get around at all.- The kidney secretions were retarded and so pain ful in passing I would oiscry . was is con- - hr. Fsrajwscth dition. After I had lost hope in either remedies, Doans Kidney Pills were brought to my attention and I tried them.- I soon noticed a change for the better. ,T used .several boxes and they cured me completely. Never in my practice did I know a remedy that would accomplish what Doans Kidney Pills did, and I give them, my heartiest endorsement. Get Doans at Aar Stars, 60c a Box V y j - DOAN'S pfiSy FOSTER-M1LBUR- CO, N BUFFALO. N. T. DONT CUT OUT AShoeBoi,Capi Hock or Bursitis FOR will reduce, them and leave no blemishes. Does not bUs Stops lameness promptly. ter or remove th naif,' and hone canII be worked. $2. 50 a bottle delivered. Soots (It. ABSORBING, JR, for maUad. ike antiKWi Veins Unlmeul for- Bolls Bruit... Sons Swelllnfs Verieoee Price $1.25 a bottle at drag Allay Pain and laflanmatlan. tlatl or delivered. Will tell fm sore if fo wtiit. SLSprinflilsid. Mas W. F.YOUNG, F.O. F..J10 !! Bolts Beef and Milk that fp'BE oseInbreed both beet and milk la the Shorthorn. Shorthorn steer repeatedly broke the records at the markets In 1918, making the highest record on the open markbt of (30.60 per cwL And Shorthorn cows have milk records of over 17,000 lbs. per year, huthefarmrebmi. having extra scale, quality end quiet tasewsmt Troubles Bronchial Iks Irritation and Soothe distress. the by. using Do hoik promptly you relieve quickly and effectively a dependable remedy Irid icateo in His Boston Ad- dress Eagerness to Battle for league of Nations, Wilson Declares That Americans Who Would Have Their Country Fall The World Are Lacking In r Broad Vision.' .Boston. President Woodrow Wilson, just back from Europe, delivered an address in Mechanics hall Monday afternoon, February 24, in which- he threw down the gauntlet to those who distrust the proposed concert of governments, 'based, he declared, on the American ideals which have won the war for justice and humanity. The complete text of the presidents address follows: I wonder if you are half as glad to see me as I am te see you? It warms my heart to see a great body of my fellow citizens again, because in some respects "during the recent months I have 'been very lonely indeed without your comradeship and counsel, and I tried at every step of the work which fell to me to recall what I was sure would be your counsel with regard to the great matters- which were under consideration. I do not want you to think that I have not been appreciative of the extraordinarily generous reception which was given to me on the other side, in saying that it makes me Vvery happy to get home again. I do not mean to say that I was not very deeply touched by the cries that came from the great crowds on the other side. But I want to say to you in all honesty that I felt them to be a call of greeting to you rather than to me. I did not feel that the greeting was personal. 1 had in my heart: the overcrowding pride of being your representative and of receiving the plaudits of men everywhere who felt that your hearts beat with theirs in the cause of liberty. ' There was no mistaking the tone in the voices of those great crowds. It was not, a tone of mere greeting. It was not a tone of mere generous welcome ; it was the calling of comrade to comrade, the cries that come from men who say : We have waited for this day when the friends of liberty should come across the sea and shake hands with ns, to see that a new world was constructed upon a new basis and foundation of justice and right. I cant tell you the inspiration that came from the sentiments that came out of those simple voices of the crowd. And the proudest thing I have to report to you is that this great country of ours is trusted, throughout the world. . (,i I have not come to report the proceedings or the results of the proceedings of the peace conference; that would be premature. ' I can say that I have' received very tiappy impressions from this conference; the impression that while there are many, differences of judgment, while there are some divergences of object, there is, nevertheless, a common spirit and a common realization of the necessity of setting up new standards of right in the world. Not Masters, but Servants. Because the men who are in conference in Paris realize as keenly as any American can realize that they are not the masters of their people.; that they are the servants of their people, and that the spirit of their people has awakened to a new purpose and a new conception of their power to realize that purpose, and that no man dare go home from that conference and report anything less noble than was expected of it. The conference seems to you to go slowly; from day to day in Paris It seems to go slowly ; but I wonder if you realize the complexity of the task which it has undertaken? It seems as if the settlements of the war affect, and affect directly, every great, and I sometimes think every small, nation in the world, and no ,one decision can prudently be made which is not properly linked in with the great series of other decisions which must accompany with it., And it, must be reckoned the final result if the real quality and character of that result is' to be properly judged. What we are doing is to hear the whole case; hear it from the mouths of the men most interested; hear it from those who are officially commissioned to state it; hear the rival claims; hear the claims that affect new areas of the tvorUl, that affect new commercial and economic connections that have been established by the great world war through which we have gone. Claims of Nations Moderate. I have been struck by the moderateness of those who have represented national claims. I can testify that I have nowhere seen the gleam of pasI have seen earnestness, I have sion.seen tears come to the eyes of men people vlio pleaded for whom they were privileged to speak for; but they were not the tears of anguish, they were the tears of ardent : - down-trodde- hope. And I down-trodde- n i e that get TO TEST sallies, upon which Vergennes and Benjamin Franklin wrote their names, nothing but a modern scrap" of paper, no nations united to defend-it- , no great forces, combined to make it good, no assurance given to the and fearful people of the world, that they shall be Safe. Any man who thinks that America- - will take part in member rights that it was attempted giving the world any such rebuff and to extort ; they remember political am- disappointment ns that does not know v bitious, which it was attempted to real- America. ize and, while they believe that men T Invited io'Test Sentiment. have icoine- - into- - a different' temper, I invite him-ttest the sentiments thqy cannot forget these things, and of the nation. We set this up to make so do not resort to one another men free and we did not confine our for a dispassionate view of the, matconception and purpose to America; ters In controversy. They resort to and now we will make men fsee. If that riation which has1 won the envi- we (lid nop do that the fame of Amerias Of able distinction being regarded ca would be gone, and all her powers the friend of mankind. would Whenever it was desired to send a have tobe dissipated. She then would keep her power for those narsmall force of soldiers to occupy a row, selfish, provincial purposes which is it of where though1, piece territory seem so dear to some minds that have nobody else will be welcome, they ask no sweep beyond the nearest horizon. And where I for American soldiers. should welcome no sweeter challenge other soldiers would be looked upon than with suspicion and perhaps meet with me that. I have fighting blood in and it is sometimes a delight to let resistance, the , American soldier is it have scope, but if it is a challenge so have welcomed with acclaim. ,1 on this occasion it will be an indulmany grounds for pride op the other gence. Think of the picture ; think side of the water that I am tery thankthe utter blackness tliat would fall ful that they are not grounds for per- of on the world ! ' America has failed I sonal pride. America made a little essay at generAnd it has been an infipite pleasure to me to see those gallant soldiers of osity : and then withdrew ! America said We are your friends, but it ours, of whom the constitution of the was only for .today, not for tomorrow. United States made me the proud com-- , mander. .You may be proud of the America said: ..Here is our power to vindicate Twenty-sixtdivision, but I command said: Letright," and then the next day the Twenty-sixt- h division, and see we will takeright take care of itself and care of ourselves. Amerwhat they did under my direction ! And ica We set up a light to lead said: solAmerican the everybody praises along the. paths of liberty, but dier with the feeling that in praising men him he is subtracting from the. credit we have lowered it. It is intended We set only to light, our own path. of no one eles;- up a great ideal of liberty and then America Acted Her Ideals. we said : Liberty is a thing that you I have been searching for the fun- must win for yourself. Do' not" call damental fact that converted Europe upon us, and think of the world that to believe in us. Before the war Eu- we would leave! h rope did not believe in us as she does New Nations' Must Be Shielded.' now. She did not believe in us Do realize' how many new nathroughout the first three years of the tions you are going to be set up in tne war. She seems "really to have beof old and powerful nations lieved, that wre were lidding off be- presence cause we thought we could make more in Europe and left there, if left by, us, Do by staying out than by going fn. And, without, a disinterested friend? ail ofa sudden, in a short eighteen you believe in, the Iolish cause as I months,-thwhole verdict is reverses. do? Are you going to set up Poland, There can be but one explanation for immature, inexperienced, as yet unorit. They saw what we did that- with- ganized, and leave her with a circle out making a single claim, we put all of armies ardund her? Do you believe our men and all our means at the dis- in the aspirations of the as I do? Do the 'Jugo-SiaV- s posal of those who were fighting for know how many powers would be you their homes, in the first instance, but for a cause, the cause of human rights quick to pounce .upon them if there aud justice, and that we went in, not1 were not the guarantees. of the world to support their national claims, bui behind tliein liberty? it, The arrangements f the .present to support the great cause which they peace cannot stand a generation, unless held in common. And when they saw that America they are guaranteed by .. the, .united not only held ideals, but acted ideals forces of the, civilized vorld. And if they were converted to America and we do not guarantee tl cm, can you not became firm partisans of those ideals, see the picture? Yo'.r hearts have Instructed you where the burden of this - Fighting for Lives' and Country. 'naMen were lighting with tense muscle war fell. It did not fall upon the fall not did tional it upon treasuries; and lowered head until they came to the instruments' of ndministration ; it realize those things, feeling they wer did not fall upon tjie resources, of the counfor and lives their their fighting It fell upon . tj)e victims nations. try, and when these accents of what it homes where women were everywhere, was all about reached them front toiling in hope .that their men would America they lifted their heads, they come back. raised their eyes to heaven, when they Has No. Doubt of Verdict. saw men in khaki coming across the When I .think of the homes upon sea in fie spirit of crusaders, and they found tliat these were strange men, which dull despair would settle were reckless' of danger not only, but reck- this great hope disappointed, I should less because they seemed to see some-thin- wish for my part never to have had that made that danger worth America play any part whatever, in this attempt to emancipate the world. : i while. Men have testified to me in Europe But I talk as if there were any questhat our men were possessed by some- tion. I have no more doubt of the thing that they could only call a reli- verdict of America in this matter than in gious ferver. They were nop like an.v I have doubt' of the blood tliat' is of the other soldiers.They had a me. And so, my feHow' citizens, I have "ision, they, had a dream, and tliev were lighting in the dream, and, fight- conie back to report progress, and I ing in the dream, they turned the do not believe that the progress is gowhole tide of battle and it never cam-- ing to stop short of the goal. cThe nations of the world have set then-headback. now--t- o do a great thing, and now do you realize that this we established they are pot going to slacken their purconfidence have throughout the world, imposes a bur- pose. And when I speak of tne nations den upon us if 'you choose to call it of the world I do not speak of the a burden? It is one of those burdens governments of the world. I speak of which any nation ought to be proud the peoples tvho' (constitute the nations to carry. Any man who resists the of the world. They are in' the saddle 'going do' see to it that if present tides that run in the world and they-arwill find himself thrown upon a shore their present governments' do not; do so high and barren that it will seem as their will, some other governments if he had been separated from his hu- shall.- - And the secret is out. and the , . present governments know, it. man kind forever. tl Out of .Knowledge. ,Common Harmony of Continent Hope. Europe There is a gyeaf deal of harmony to The Europe that I left the other day1 was full of something that it had never be got out o . common knowledge. to felt fill its heart so full before. It There, is ,a great deal of sympathy atmossame in out the be of got living ' of the The was full of hope. Europe second year of the war, the Europe of phere and, except for the differences of the third year of the war was sinking languages, uliich puzzled my American to a sort of st bborn desperation. They ear very sadly,'' I could have believed did not see any great thing to he I was at home in Trance or in Italy or I was street, achieved even when the war should do in England-whewon. They hoped there would he some when I was in the presence of the when I vas in great halls salvage; they hoped thnt tliey cotiM crowds, irclear their territories of invading ar- where men were gathered together not feel I (lid of class. ' set respective., could ; up mies they hoped they their homes and start their industries quite.. as .much at home there as I do afresh. But they thought it would here, but I felt that now, at any rate, after this storin' of war had cleared the simply be the resumption of the old life that Europe had led led in fear, air,' then Were' seeing eye to eye everyled in anxiety, led in constant suspi- where ahd that these were the kind of cious watchfulness. They 'never folks who would understand what Ihe of kind of folks at home would underdreamed that it would he stand' nnd that tliey were thinking the settled peace and of justified hope. And now these ideals have wrought same tilings. this new magic, tliat all the peoples or Trying to Interpret America. It Is ii great comfort, for one thing, Europe are buoyed up and confident in (be spirit of hope, because they, be- to realize that you all undertsnnd the lieve that we are at the eve of a new language I am speaking. A friend of age in the world, when nations will mine said tliat to talk through an inunderstand one another, when nntions terpreter was like witnessing the com-- , will support one another in every just pound fracture of an idea. But of It is tliat, whatever the imeausQ, when nations will unite every moral and every physical strength to pediments, the channel of communicasee that the right shall prevail. tion, the idea Is the same; tliat it gets We Must Not Fail the World. registered, and It gets registered In If America were at this juncture to responsive hearts and receptive . ' fail the world, what would come of it? 1 I' have come hark fof a strenuous do not mean any disrespect to any other great people when I say tliar attempt to transact business for a litAmerica is the hope of t ho world ; and tle while In America, lint I have renlly if she does no;, justify tliat hope the (Mine back to say to you, in all soberresults are unthinkable. Men will be ness and honesty, that I have, been thrown back upon the bitterness of trying my best to speak your thoughts. When I sample myself, I think I find disappointment not only, hut the bit-- 1 terness of despair, All nations will he tliat I am a typical American, nnd if I set up as hostile camps again; the sample deep enough and get down to men at the peace conference will go what Is probably the true sluff of u home with their heads upon tlioir ninn, then I have lidpo tliat it Is part breasts, knowing tliat they have failed of the stuff that is like the other felfor they were bidden not to cojne lows at home. home from there until tliey did someAnd, therefore, probing deep In my thing more limn sign a treaty of peace. heart nnd trying to see the things Hint Suppose we sign the treaty of peace are right, without regard to the tilings and thnt it Is the most satisfactory that may bo debated ns expedient, I Irenty of peace Hint the confusing ele- feel that I am interpreting the purpose ments of th e modern world will afford, nnd the thought of America; nnd in nnd go homo and think about our la- loving America I find I have joined the bors; we will know that we have loft great majority of my fellow moi written upon the historic table at Ver- - throughout the world. n dont see how any man can fail to have been subdued by these pleas, subdued to this feeling, that he was not there to assert un individual judgment of his own, but to try to nssist the cause of humanity. In the midst of It all, every Interest seeks out first of nil when it readies Paris the representatives of the UnitBecause, and I ed States. Why? think I am stating the most wonderful fact in history because there is no nntion in Europe that suspects the motive of the United States. Hard to Forget Differences. It is impossible for men to believe that all ambitions have all of a sudden been foregone. They remember territory that was coveted ; they re SSI The Greatest Name In Goody-Lan- d - ou know realm of the child- hood dreams is a land of . sweets. Make some of those dreams ' a delightful reality h by taking home WRiGLEYS frequently. ! How about - tonight? - SEALED TIGHT KEPT RIGHT - CkechO-Sio-vaks&n- HORSE SALE DISTEMPER You know that when you sell or buy through the sales you have about one chance inS fifty to escape SALE STABLE DISTEMPER. SPOIIN is your true protection, your only safeguard, for as sure as you treat all your horses with it, you will soon be rid of the disease. It acts as a sure preventive, no matter how they are exposed. At all good druggists, horse goods houses, or delivered by the maufacturers. SPOIIN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Ind., U. S. A. g i i - s e I on-th- - pur-pos-o- Patience and Kindne'sc,. The tricks that man taught his little dog required a great deal of patience and kindness." ' answered Miss "Unquestionably, I cant understand what Cayenne. kept the little dog from biting him. EAT A TABLET! A Reglai; Champion. I hear that old Bill Simpkins is the most no account fellow. in your town, remarked the city cousin. , Not. good for anything, Is he?Wall, I dont want to be too hard agin the old feller, responded the man who had something gooi t say about everybody. He raises some of the likeliest lookin weeds In this part of the kentry. ' , , v ' DYSPEPSIA GONE '"I ; i A DIAPEPSIN INSTANTLY RELIEVES SOUR, GASSY OR ACID STOMACHS. Il't , Question. here nor, there." Then where in blazes is it? Chi, cago Daily News , Weil, PAPES ,t. its neither To keep clean and healthy take Doctor Pleasant Pellets. They regulate When meals hit back and your stom- Piercesbowels and stomach. Adv. liver, ach is sour, acid, gassy, or you feel full and bloated. When you have heavy Sin is as rust on a polished blade lumps of pain or headache from indi- you may rub' it .off, but its hard to regestion. Here is instant relief move the spots. ' 1 Dont Just as soon as you eat a tablet or two of Papes tfiapepsin ail the. dyspepsia, indigestion and stomach-'distresends. These pleasant, harmless tablets of Papes Diapepsin never fail to 'make upset stomachs feel fine, af once, and, they .cost very little at drug stores. Adv. ,, . V..J- " i! Nobody to Hear. . i I suppose, if I tried to kiss you, you would scream. Of course I would. But I'm suffering from a very weak throat.. , . wait until your col d develops Spanish Influenza or pneumonia. Kill it quick. CASCARA fef QUININE , ' , t f VI i l Standard cold remedy for 20 years In tabtet form safe, sure, no opiates breaks up a cold in 24 hours relieves grip in 3 days- - Money back if it fails. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. Hills picture. At All Drug Stores. -- Cirrus clpuds have been recorded more than seventeen miles above the W. surface of the earth. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY CLEANSES YOUR KIDNEYS For centuries GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has been a standard household remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and stomach trouble, and ail diseases connected with the urinary organs. The kidneys aud bladder are the must important organs of the body. They are the filters, ,the gunners of your blood. If the poisons which enter your system through the blood and stomach are not entirely thrown out by the kidneys and bladder, you are doomed. Weariness, sleeplessness, nervousness, despondency, backache, stomach trouble, headuche, pain in loins and lower abdomen, gall stones, gravel, difficulty when urinating, cloudy nnd bloody urine, rheu matism, sciatica and lumbago, all warn you to look after your kidneys nnd bind'dor. All these indicate some weakness of the kidneys or other organs or that the enemy miorobeJ which are always present in your system have attacked your weak spots. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are what you need. They are no a patent medieine, nor new discovery, For 200 years they have been a standard household remedy. They are the pure, original imported Haarlem Oil your used, and are perfectly harmless. The healing, soothing oil soaks into the cells and lining of the kidneys and through the bladder, driving out the poisonous germs. New life, fresh strength and health will come as you continue the treatment. When completely restored to your usual vigor, continue taking a capsule or two each day; they will keep you in condition aud prevent a return of the disease. Do not delay a minute. Delays are especially dangerous in kidney and bladder trouble. All druggists sell GOLD MEDAL Ilaarlein Oil Capsules. They will rvfnnd the money if not as represented. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are imfrom direct Holin the laboratories ported land. Tliey are prepared in correct quantity and convenient form, are easy to take and are positively guaranteed to give prompt relief. In three sizes, sealed packages. Ask for the original imported GOLD MEDAL. Accept no substitutes, Adv. ' |