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Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah mm BUNKER HILL Br JAMKS II. TAVI.OIl (Ode sung-- at the dedication of the monument, June 17. 1843.) Lonely and still were the wood and hill And the wavei below yet slumbered. The breezes light of a summer John 1). Itockefcller, Jr., lecturing to a class at the Carnegie institute, declared that there was no such thing as luck. "No matter what seems to be lucky," ho declared, "will prove strictly a case of cause and effect, when carefully analyzed. night All the dewy hours numbered. It Is work and ability of some sort The sentry'a tramp from the that makes success, even for those camp. With his tone cf hasty warning, chaps whom we are prone to call Came low and clear to the yeoman's lucky." ear "And yet, Mr. Rockefeller," InterAs be watched the early dawning. posed a student, "1 have a friend The heroes thought, as they bravely who really Is lucky, with no sort of work or ubility connected with it." wrought, Their country's altar retiring. "You'll have to show me," grinned Of a noble land by valor's hand John 1)., Jr., and the class declared Made free and home endearing. In firm array when broke the dny Unit Its fellow member did make The deadly chares they waited. good w hen he said : And side by side In silent pride "Well, 1 have a friend who's got a With skill their prowess mated. wife and a cigarette lighter and they both work." GABBY GERTIE STWDIHSI ABOUT THE FIREWEED - !i wonderful power of helping those who feel sad and are In trouble, so will we learn to help the burnt of OMR," said the members "we lie fireweed family, f must take some beauty and color A to those black, burnt sections where the fires have raged." So the members of the fireweed 2 1 family followeo along as members i of the fireweed family always have. "It was Great - Great - Great Great - Great- Grandmother Fireweed who start- ed the Idea In the first place," said i the tall young member of the flre-- ? weed family, who was talking for ; " called for a coach. The Breeze Brothers carried her message to the Fairies, and they brought her a coach. "She climbed Into it, and so did many of the children and the "Great-Grandmoth- grandchildren. "Then she went to the burnt forest Oh. It made her flower heart ache to see the poor burnt trees. She sent the coach back for more of her family, and more, and more. "The coach kept coming back and forth. The ponies of Fairyland drew It along, and you know the ponies of Fairyland can run so fast and can even fly over meadows and fields and valleys when they get a proper start "Then talked to all of her family. "Tt Is enough that the people should have to see their forests destroyed,' she said. 'They have enough to bear In that Let us do what we can to make It look, less sorrowful an J forlorn.' "So started Fireweed housekeeping right then and there. "She told us to begin at the bottom of our stems and open up our flowers until we reached the top, making the hillsides and desolate places gay with our bright crimson dresses and suits. "Then she told us how to leave the seed vessel down along our stems, ready and walling to split open when the autumn came, so that they could be blown far and wide, and settle where other ground was burnt and dry. "Always we have done as she the others. "Maybe I should add a few more i ''.J ; j i 'Greats' there, but you understand what I meant that it happened a long long time ago. "I shalt Just speak of her as a for It would be r, r "Glorious Trees t the Forest Had Been Destroyed." r . e i I i I In v- t e t D n i to get all those each time I spoke. hard NECESSITIES VS. LUXURIES behind. r Jv-s- WVIy l "Acres of he recalled an early experience o f Sffx L. A. Barrett a clerking country store a came In, asking for a George Bancroft There were no in stock. Presently another customer made the same demand, then a third came Willi the same ropiest. After this third demand (he slore was supplied with plenty of Jack knives for sale. Keeping a supply on band proved to be a necessity. No long since a representative from an Insurance company called upon the writer to sell life liisiiriiiee. He was Informed that all was being carried that Jack-knife- ! F .IT.. 1930. MiClur Srnillrst J I . lo. l boyhood days. When In VVwti-r- Nrwipaper Union Buys for Cash all Grades of Cars. Sells fully guaranteed cars 60 days service McBRIDE Specializes in Latest Models all makes new or reconditioned. McBRIDE always has a large stock of Late Model Automobiles on hand tw the sword, then blood was poured Oppressions host dismaying; Death rent the air and the cannon's tlare O'er freedoms birth were playing. And that green height, witb the evening llgt.t Its crimson turf o'ershadlng. Had holy grown as freedom's throne Like her starry crown unfading. Then wsv-e- Seldom has any single act been of greater benefit to mankind than that of Pr. Caldwell In lRS.r., when he wrote the prescription which has carried his fame to the four corners of the earth. Over and over, Pr. Caldwell wrote the prescription B3 he found men, women and children suffering from those common symptoms of constipation, such as coated tongue, bad breath, headaches, gas, nausea, biliousness, no energy, lack of appetite, and similar things. Pemand for this prescription grew so fast, because of the pleasant, quick way It relieved such symptoms of constipation, that by 1SR8 Pr. Caldwell was forced to have It put up ready for use. Today, Pr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, as It Is called, Is always ready at . any drugstore. more the skies with summer dyes Above the fields are bending. And the waters still beneath the Watch Seeds hill At the last oflldal Inspection of Their crvslal wave are blending; But peace divine around the shrine, vegetable seeds made In New York tier boundless harvest wearing, state, It was found that six packets Bids us prc-lsllo deathless out of every list were worthless or fame too wen1 to be satisfactory, a seed Our fathers' matchless daring. analyst states In warning gardeners Todny lo plant dependable seeds. throng with feslsl song. The aarrd mount orrtlnwlng. I Have gathered hire with pomp and Once t, Including Packard, Chrysler, Cadillac. Graham-PaigEssex, Plymouth, Dodge, Hudson, Erskine, Pontiac, Studcbaker, Ford, Chevrolet. Willys-Knigh- e, I want to BUY, SELL or TRADE. McBRIDES-C- or. 7th South Main SALT LAKE CITY Twins Married 68 Years Short End of It Two women twins who were marThe American soldiers are accused ried GS years apt, and whose bus of :t)troducliii; potalo biiKS Into "If we took potato bups bands died the same year, recently Frunce. celebrated their eighty eighth birth over there," writes Kurvenal, "It was a d n bad trade." New York I'ost. day at lieerston, N. V. Hard Substance The only known thine harder than a diamond Is making the payments oil It.-I.- lfe. Stands freedom's pile In, glory's smile. Eternal vigil keeping. pike's peak on the American Flag forty-eight- TEST PROVES tr YOU'RE BOTHERED I? BY CARBON, CONOCO IS THE OIL FOR YOU! IF . Dear to the )kih of every motorist it the way bis cir performs under hcivy "pulls" . . . . nj nothing coiitnliutr s more to a sweet running motor tlwn absence of oihon troublci. Now, at hst. thetc is a moior oil which is truly outstanding in its cxttcim! low In the summer of ITt.'i. The occasion wn VVaoliltigloirs h commander In chief, Philadelphia The Why of Superstitions By SPIRITS AND BROOMS T)I.A('K a broom across the door and If any of your departed ,Ji lends wish to Speak Willi you ,1 ii lr spirits will Ik free to come ,i nd go ..s long as the broom re- laih" in poxliioii. The psart place SIX CYLINDER SENTENCES By DR. JOHN W. HOLLAND To (be average youth a sane holiday Is an Insane one. America's forward urging cry somiip to lie, "Higher and I t when the Llgh' Iloro liini to Connecticut on hi vny to dike command of lie- - troops nt Coston II. IRVING KING ler." Most any patriot, when singing "Amerlis," can sing, "I love tb v rock. Now that we have the radio, l"t some political genius nri.p mi, Khe u wlrclena politics. t'at riot are discovering that thet rimmd vnte n siralub' ticket with crooked men upon t. If (bo Amerlcnn pe"!1'' In holding unto Almighty o.(. ibey will te mighty hough to bold t'igi'tber. t Hl" Ikl ms NuMtnt-stti-rre- which the brM-ii- i occupies lit folklore Is a dohiull problem and m yet nppcars not to have been satisThe iitiderllng factorily solved. primithc Id'ii which animates Ihe current supercilious regarding ibU household Implement seems to still be undiscovered. The broom's place In sympathetic magic Is clear enough the act of sweeping being a physical art which Causes a Cor resKitidina operation against enemies, trouble, etc. But In that II Is th net a:il not the Implement that figure. The relation of the broom to the world 'f spirits Is vaguely dcllned; Ihe current superstitions and the present hvlleU of savages being often of a seemingly cotiirndlciory nature. Kor Instance brooms are supposed to be a protection, ncnlnsi witches yet wilehc ride broomstick on their nocturnal escapade. But both ammg savage IrlU-- and In current superstition many brooms are recardod as having an Intimate relationship with spirits which fact points to some primitive conception now priliaps lost forever In the darkness ij lime. Il Is Ibis which. In the siierstl-Hoa under discus-don- , bnHitn placed ncros (be thn'shobl to bo an Invitation to the spirits of dead friends to enter and bold r,,iicr with the living. s dincm-botlle- ruc IE, b S)rd flt Ceorje Bancroft the popular player, has Doris Kenyon as Ms leading woman In his latest picture. "Tht Caveman," a story cf a hero In the steel mills. Ban. croft bat been featured In "Ladies Lovt Brutes." HER TRIBUTE carbon-futtnin,'- As ; unJiruicv ituliu'rJ by the chemists' rcpoits fuilowim; t!ic tevent Pikes Peak Tests. CONCK,0 Cctm J't.jscsscJ Motot OJ is iht oil. bat-tlin- Tor after cacti trial run on each ('f the oils, motnts w ere torn down, the condition of the motors inspected", anJ the catbon cjrcfully scrapcJ t !f and saved Observations w etc made as to the liatJncss ar.J tenacity with which t!ic various catl-ofurmatior, clur. to the metal. cDcar Editor: RAMhiM shots of a trip dwn t!oadlde stntids selling frch CONOCOS supetinrity in this regard is prnvcti, in that the uibon fotmcj y Germ- - and fruit right from the Mi'is fun than sn oyster. Sign In Atknnsns: "t'oflius and caskets." IHt Jour own. Another buy, sell anil trade sign: "W mule." Sounds like a risky hn!nes. I ws urptcd to see what a big things Mis!ippl river levee- I. Having bad my bnk Jnl grsiled once. can Inuiglne what II cof's lo move so unit h dirt There' a iione with a gas well In the front yard. Hard lo beat that for servbe. melons field. ish some i ne would Invlie tap down a fonl mine. Hut maybe wouldn't have Hie right thing to wear. Lre-- I'arton. I w I Hm-Mish- t I mv son." The dfd. Its shsile mnJeMIc sleeping. As new stales Joined the I'nlon Hie niiiiiber ol stars on the flag ;mdua!!y Increased, so Unit the of each if America's wars lought under a flag different from 'hat of the others. In the Itcvolu-Iothe Hag had thirteen stars; In ihe War of IM'J It bad fifteen; In Ihe Civil war (for twenty-ninihe southern states were never as being lndeeliieiit) ; In Ihe war the flag and forty live, ami In Hie World war Ihe same number if stars Hint the field bears at this day. The firt (lag of the fnhed Plate to symbolize f tic thirteen Slate by lorlMtiini stripes wa carried by (be fir! tro.ip of Light Hor--of could be conveniently paid for. But the representative was wise at the It was only nfler be Sucgame. ceeded til making clear that addl- tlonal Insurance was necessary for Very Silent "What Is the 'silent drama.' ma?" "When the actors forget their lines, prayer. All hrarts with rapture glowing On Ihe gntv bed of the martyred Many Changes in Stars 1 v; says see htm first if you McBRIDE Spatilsh-Alierlca- i. I HIGH GRADE AUTOMOBILES s I the drain and flush with hot water. atM McBRIDE'S I Jack-knive- empty a can of fast working Lewis' Lye in "A DOCTOR aw A Rend for Free Book, "The Truth about Lye." if bis Bra JLA.EEP drains open . .1 at first sign of stoppage FAMOUS (Coovrtrht.) adequate protection, that a new pdlcy was written. "Necessity" won the argument We bear these days about the demands luxuries make upon us. Truly money Is spent for luxuries, more so. perhaps, than for neovs-slileHut necessities come first because they are essentlul. Luxuries are nonessential. Much money Is Sent upon luxuries because people have surplus money to Send. A wise man might be willing to borrow money to buy necessities, but he Is a very foolish man who will borrow Id order to buy luxuries. Nature also cares only for necessities. You cannot find a single thing In nature that might be classified as a luxury. She refuses to have anything to do with the nonessentials. Anything that Is not necessary to development Is automatically shuffled off. Luxuries, while enjoyable, should not be necessary to health, life or one's happiness. Neeessliy Is Ihe moiher of Invention. Fa riiuar. Thero Is no virlue like necessity . Sim k es tea re. m James D. Swan, Mgr. of Specialties' The Pennsylvania Salt Mfg. Co. Dept. SL.8, SO H. La Halle SU, Chicago asked. Only one more thing she said before she finished the talk that day, and It was this: "When we do what we can to help, won't people do all they can do to prevent forest fires? "We cannot be everywhere, nor do everything, and though we're gay and bright, we're not as the great trees of the forest are splendid, after years of growth. " 'So won't people do all they can to see that there Is never a picnic fire that is left without being entirely put out, and that never a lighted match or spark Is left to do barm? We ask that of people, In behalf of the great noble trees.'" By LEONARD A. BARRETT "The Mowers all trembled when they beard the news. They even beard of the little wild 'flowers Of the woods and of the forests 5 I "When you consult a rheumatism specialist you can expect to be soaked for your pains." MADE FAMILY FOR MEDITATION DCSINESS economists Inform us that the first step In making a market for a new product Is to create a demand for It Jobbers must become acquainted wlih the prodWhich had been destroyed. uct, and retail storekeeM'rs must "'But wbnr can we do about It?" know all about It. One of the the flowers all said. 'Burnt ground ways for a new product to Is so terrible. It is hard and dry-- Ob;' find a ready market Is by a group and they shivered again. of persons going from store to "'I will go and do what I can, store asking for aid Fireweed, that particular I a TI I nI o and hope my sons and daughters II I and my grandchildren and great- ! J course, they do grandchildren will help me.' VI not find It but ."'-"We'll help you, dear set the they htj.they all shouted, for f- , J store keeper -- vs. he was a great favorite. mil unnking. "'We will learn to grow where Is this new the ground is dry and burnt. We thing?" they Will learn that secret. ask. In lnrlnr "'Just as some people have the celeI'oiiwell'g brated lecture, left w 'V f WW J l.v II SAFtjnoNTo ONE PRESCRIPTION 'Greats' heard "Now, of a terrible lire that had taken place. "Word came to the members of the flower and weed families that there had been a terrible tire. "Glorious trees In the forest bad been destroyed, ferns and shrubs, trees of all kinds all had been destroyed. "Only ugly, charred stumps bad teen foe-ma- forests.' I One Example That Upset Young John D.'a Theory 1 TtoccsseJ oil was noticeably less I y volume and by weight. You may say, "li - do th t lali Kei in mt I Kiier Jrr.t in lit fiuwu.um." Here is the answer. In die c 1'il.e's Pwk tests, cscry Ojratin conJition iiitct si!i(.l l'ciausc constant cimi! frequent v.a of nioii'r racing, rapid tempciatutc chances, radical Ijitoineiiic f!utuatuns, ar,J hi;;h sjxr J dailies on the valky loads, ncaily every mgioting experience was met. The results of thee Tike's l eak Tcms, amvcJ at ly the compilaiion of moie than observations, surely appeal to your judgment of motor oil merit. Surety these become pooJ anJ suiT.cicnt Inicasons w hy yn come a new user of CONOCO Germ PiixesseJ Mi tor Oil . at the Sipnofthe CONOC Tsed Triangle. CONOCO GEkM I. gottn ndnsit That I look cute. 'Svlnlly when I go "Tott've Into tnv saline.' "ft V LtlV',' lt'ff!Ti ti5 1 Yv. 1 B 1 ne Certiftciie Me "nl Ameims t rf IV iwiint tn ot the Aitonwt-l- PROCESSED II MOTOR OIL MHAlf IN I A n 35c Sm lM Ox tiM . ., i Ssei-s- l 94 "1 |