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Show • . THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Thursday, February 6, 1930 ~U.ess , Makeslifo Sweeter. Children witl fret, often fo!' no Children's stomachs sour,· and need 1 an anti-acid. Keep their systems I!Weet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia! When tongue or breath tells of acid condition-correct it with a spoonful ) of PhHlips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal 1 sweetener-more mothers should Invoke its aid for their children. It is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the harsher things too often employed for the purpose. No household should be without it. Phillips Is the genuine, prescrlp· tiona! product physicians endorse for general use; the name is important. "Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. S. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Ph!lllps Chemical Co. and Its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. apparent reason. But there's always one sure way to comfort a restless, fretful child. Castoria I Harmless as the recipe on the wrapper; mild and bland as it tastes. But its gentle action soothes a youngster more surely than some powerful medicine that is meant for the stronger systems of adults. That's the beauty of this special children's remedy I It may be given the tiniest infant-as often as there is any need. In cases of colic, diarrhea, ·or similar disturbance, it is invaluable. But it has enrvday uses all mothers should l ! ! - understand. A coated tongue calfs for a few drops to ward off consti· pation ; so does any suggestion of bad breath. Whenever children don't eat well, don't rest well, or have any little upset-this pure vegetable preparation is usu~lly all that's needed to set everythmg to rights. Genuine Castoria has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it. I He who-r;f~ses ~bat is just gi-:;es Some men have to grow angry In rp everything to him who Is armed. order to utilize what backbone the1: -Lucan. have. I/ PHILLIPS R / Milk . of Magnesia ~ NERVOUSNESS . Helpfully tro21i:ed with This Famous Aid J1 your nerves nre Jumpy and every llttlo notso or 1rrcgul3.rlty annoye you-YOU NEED KOl::NtG'S NEitVINE. This world-famous. tried nnd tested medicinal aid hassuccess.ruuy vroved its great ben~ flcla.J wortb in tho treatment ot Slccples&oncss. Nervous Indtgestfon and Nervous llrltabUlty. Agencies All Over the World. AT ALL DRUG STORES Generous FREE Sample Bottle Sent on Request Koen14 Medlciutt Co. DePt. 33 1045 No. Wells St. ; Chleai!O, Ill. Born February 12, 1809. Let us hope that the ladies In changing style do not adopt those skirts that had a book up In the back that started at the neck and ended goodness knows where.- Florida Times-Union. Love well the flag That he cherished so much, .And thanlc God for him ~ Ita soft folda you touch. Cllna> BEST MEDICINE SHE KNOWS OF to hla teachin&'O, Treasure witb care The words that held lova And wisdom and prayer. Five Copies of Lincoln's Speech At Gettysburg Ft. Meyers, Fla.-"Lydia E. Pink· ham's Vegetable Compound is the best medicine I ever of. Before my baby we.Q horn I was always weak and rundown. I had nervous spells until I couldn't do my housework. A ~''f~@tdJ ladytoldmeabout [~;:! tho Vegetable ·: and it ;:;::;:::~:=t=:;:;:::::;:::;r· strengthened me. Beside my I own housework am now working in a restaurant and I feel better tl!o.n I have in three years. I hope my letter will be the mea.ns of leading some other woman to better health."MRB. BERTHA RrVE115, 2914 Polk St., Ft. Meyers, Florida. h~.ard .l§1t£i¥GMMJ PILES Pile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get renee from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pila Ointment Q. R. (Quick Relief) Plle Ointnwnt Is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long attlicted, gua ran teed to give satisfactory relief or money refuuded. Before placing this pile ointment on the market for sale, It was put to the ncid test In both mlld and se-vere cases, never failing to produce wonderful results. If you are troubled with piles, do not experiment. Get Q. R. Pile Ointment. If your druggist does not carry it in stock, fill out the blank IJ~low and mall it to Q. R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah Q. n. ('o., Geutleruen : Inclosed find $1.00 r. 0. Money Orde• for One tuhe of Q. H. Pile Oinunent to be mailed prepaid to Name •...•••••••.•••.••.••••• P. 0. Address ..........•..••••• On cnnuitions that If I am not sntistled with results obtained, I am to receive money l•acl;: upon returning tube to your laboratoJ·y. 1 Honer his birthdaySet It apartUncoln the Jnighty, Th& humble of bean! KATHERINE EDELMAN. (@). 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) Says "Take Lydia E. Pink• ham's Vegetable Compound" m'.m~~:::.»:ili:::ilif.':.l .the address Is In pencil. Honer hia memory. Cherish his name, Let the fast-flying yeara But add to hls fame. Fashion Threat Died April 15. 1865. · Abraham Lincoln's uddress at Get' tysburg is unique among his speeches In many particulars, one of ~hlch Is that there are In existence at the present time no less than flve copies of It in Lincoln's own handwriting. In 'j only a few cases Is there a single copy of other speeches. The first Inaugural, for Instance, was composed in Springfield and set up In' pica type In the office of the Illinois State Journal, anrl, after some Interlineation and the addition of a closing paragraph sug· gested by Secretary Seward, was d~ livered from the corrected proot. and not from the original manuscript. So far as I am aware the manuscript was not brought away from Springfield by Lincoln nor preserved in the printing office. The Journal for many years had been accustomed to receiving edi1 torials and other matter in his band writing, and neither the editor, Simeon Francis, nor any one of his compos!. tors took thought U1at this was to h~ II come a document of historic Interest and that the original would he valu· able. The pencil was nsefl also to erase n few words at the bottom or the first page. The second Library of Congress draft Is a fair copy of the first draft. It is written wholly In Ink . Without stopping here and now to give my reasons, I believe that the first page of the first draft was written In Ink before Lincoln left Wash· lngton. If be completed this draft at the time, and there was a second page In Ink, he became dissatisfied with It and cast It aside. I think he wrote the second page, In pencil, In Gettysburg, probably on the uight befo1·e the delivery of the address. The seconfl Library of Congress draft I think wns written In Gettysburg on the morning of t11e delivery. The place of writing was in the home of Judge Wills. facIng the public square. Just to dispose of a question whic-h Is sure to rise, whether Lincoln did not write the address upon the bad1 of an envelope on the train on his way from Washington to Gettysburg. let me answer that he may have made a few penciled notes, and for this purpose may have used the huck of an envelope, but he did not w1·lte the address as a whole In any such fashion. In my judgment the two Library of Congress drafts were both I Copy Not Preserved. lllost of Lincoln's speeches, If writ· ten out, met a lil•e fate. If the copy ; 1 ~=~. ~~~~ol~~:.~s~~\0~~: t:!t~v~~~~= I basket, and no one rescued lt. After I he became President, or course, he ' knew and eve1·y one knew that his handwriting would be In demand, but no one looked for the time when his letter to General flouk~r would sell at auction for $10.000. So most of his speeches pe1·lshed In tne original manuscript, perished In the very proc· ess of preserving them In print; and of the few that were preserved there Is usually only one copy. The five copies of the Gettysbmg address, two are In the Library of Congress. One of them Is mainly In Ink, written on a sheet of paper head· ed with the usual "Executive Man· sion" caption. The other 8heet Is ruled letter paper of the same size, and with wide spaces between the lines. It Is the paper that was commonly used In the White House for speeches or doemnents likely to need Interlineation. and Is Identic-al In quality with that used by the Preslrlent for the second draft of the Gett~·shurg speech and for the second inaugural. The writing on the second sheet of the first draft of Lincoln deliverina bis speech •t the dcdica. tlon ot the National Cemetery at Gettysburs November 19. 1863. written before the del Ivery of tl1e address. Uf the other thrH! we 1mow tlJe history. They were all written after the address had been d~linred. Five Texts of Speech. The Orst two copies vary but little from each other. The last three copies vnr:v but little from one an· other. How they vary I have set forth In luterliuear versions In my "Life of Llucoln." The important fact Is that we have flve te:xts In Llncoln"s handwriting, no two of them exactly alike, and that they fall clearly into two gNups. two In one and the earlier group, three in the other anll the Inter group, am! that we know In detail the history o! U1e last three. Intermediate between these two groups In Lincoln's own hand ar~ a number of other versions printed at the tJJne. First of these Is the As· so<"lnted Press report prepared by Jo· ~·~-----------------------------seph L. Gilbert. He did not pretend to have taken down Lincoln's exact words, hut reported the speech partly In shorthand and checked up In a hasty comparison with Lincoln's man· uscrlpt. The second was a special report used In one Philadelphia newspaper, one Cincinnati newspaper and In the local newspaper In Gettysburg. It was a very poor report. The third wns. as I judge, the one report that tells us exactly what Lincoln did say. It was made by Charles Hale of the Boston Ad\'el"tiser, one of the ofll.clal Massachusetts commissioners. His written affirmation to Gov. John A. Andrew, that Lincoln spoke very slowly, and that Hale was ahle to get the precise wording, Is as good ns the oath of a court stenographer certifying the accuracy of his version. We know, I think. what Lincoln Intended to say, what he did say, what he was reported to have said, and what he wished be had said. Surely Lincoln's Words. Neither of the drafts of Lincoln's manuscript made before the delivery of the address <'Ontains the two words, "under God." Both say, "that we here highly resolve • . . that the nation shall have a ne\V birth of freedom." Rut every stenographic report, good, bad and Indifferent, says "that the nation shall, under God, have a new hlrth or freedom." 1.'here was no cornmoo source t'rom which all the reporters could have obtained those words but from Lincoln's own !Ips at the time or delivery. It will not do to say that Stanton suggested those words after Lincoln's return to Washington, for the words were telegraphed by at least three reporte1·s on the afternoon of delivery and published all over the country. Nor will It answer to sny that Seward sug~ested them the night before as words that would convey to the people assembled a suggestion of piety, for John G. Nicolay gives a clea1· history of the writing of the secotld draft on the morning of d!!llvery, and the second draft does not tnr.lude those words. But all three ot' Llncol.:.'s copies that \\·ere made after the address had been delivered do contain the words of the three or more reports marJe while he was spealdng, "under God." Lincoln said those words; the several Independent reports that went to tile wires at once agree that he said them ; and Lincoln certainly wished to be remembered as having said them. for he wrote them Into every one at the three copies which he made for permanent record. Where, then, did Lincoln get those words? He got them, I thin!,, out of Ills own stock of phraseology. He was not given to the careless use or religious phrases, but this one he used at other times. It carne to him as he sat on the platform at Gettysburg, Inspired by the sense of solemnity that the occasion brought upon him. The journey, the reception of the night hefore, the para<le, the sight of the hn t· tlefield, the loug and eloqueut orntion of E<lward Everett and the gTml ing depth of fe!'llng a~; his Oll'n time e-arn"" to spealt. roused In him a deeper !'en~l' of the nntion's need of reliarH·e 111 God than hac! been in his nlind 1YI11•11 he was enga~-;Pd In thP "'"~"'' o~t' "' il lng.-Willlam E BartCin. in llu• :'\t•\\ York Times Magazine. As soon as you realize you've taken cold-take some tablets of Bayer Aspirin. Almost before your head can stuff-up, you feel your cold is conquered. Those aches andal:ns you felt coming on will s_oon subside. Relief is ost instantaneous I Even if your cold has gained headway, tnd your temples throb and-xour very bones ache, these tablets will bring prompt relief. It is better, of course, to take Bayer Aspirin at the very first sneeze or cough-it will head-off the cold and spare you much discomfort. Get the genUine, wi~h proven directions for colds and headaches; neuralgta, neuritis, sore throat, and many important uses. BAYER ASPIRIN .&.apltin 18 the trade I ~k of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaeetleacldester of SallCYllcaci4 Poaaible Scandal Setting Pop Right E!ln-Atlas supported the earth. Pop--"You kissed my daughter unStelln-1 hope Mrs. Atlas didn't der my very nose." Percy-"Pardon bear about It. me, sir, nnder her nose." 5218 Happy People Give up Their Secret ru ST suppose you could get 6000 joy· usly happy people together in one big and could ask them what made them all so full of pep. Suppose, strangely enough, that all of them had discovered the same way to be happy. You would feel that here, if anywhere in the world, was the secret of how to get joy out of life. This is just what has happened during the last few weeks. We knew there were millions of people who had found the secret of happiness in the same way, and we asked them !n one or two small announcements 1n the magazines and newspapers to tell us their story. Letters came to us from practically all over the globe. All of them said "The secret of happiness is health." How to get this health? The way They have round the way to that all of these people had disBuoyant, Zestful Health, and covered was not some magic medithe Joy that goes with it cine, not some powerful dr~;~g1 not some difficult course of trammgbut only a simple, harmless, natural that it is only the inte.rnal ~ubrica method. It was to keep the body in- tion your body needs, JUSt hke any ternally clean, sweep1.1g its natural other machine. poisons away each day, regularly as It sounds like a fairy tale, doesn't " clock work-by the use of Nujol. it, to be well and happy so easily? These people had made a great Well, all you need to do to find out discovery. 'J7hey had found o~t ~hat if these people have made a real Nujol contams no drugs; that 1t 1s as discovery is to get a bottle of Nujol tasteless and colorless as pure water; today at any drug store and take it pleasant to take and forms no habit; for two weeks. It costs but a few that it cannot hurt you, no matter cents and it makes you feel like a how much you take; that it is non- million dollars. The sure way to fattening; not absorbed by the body; happiness is through health. ~ Use.; ~utieura A household preparation for over half a century. 'Y ¥ Those who know the secret of skin health and beauty use Cuticura Soap and Ointment regularly to keep the skin and 'scalp in good condition. They also find Cuticura Talcum ideal for every member of the family. 9 Soap .25c. Oiat.meat 25c. and SOc. Talcum .25c. Proprieton: Potter Draa a Chf'.mical Corpor•llo,_9 Malden, r.t:..._ |