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Show TOE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH Lucile is the Y Happiest Girl Tke KITCHEN CABINET mothers So many nowadays talk about giving their children fruit juices, as If this were a new discovery. As a matter of fact, for over fifty years, mothers have been accomplishing results far surpassing anything you can secure from home prepared fruit juices, by using pure, wholesome California Fig Syrup, which Is prepared under the most exacting laboratory supervision from ripe California Figs, richest of all fruits In laxative and nourishing properties. Its marvelous to see how bilious, weak, feverish, sallow, constipated, children respond to Its gentle Influence; how their breath clears up, color flames In their cheeks, and they become sturdy, playful, en- ergetlc again. A Western mother, Mrs. n. J. Stoll, Valley I. O., Ne- braska, says: My little daughter, Roma Lucile, was constipated from babyhood: I became worried about her and decided to give her some California Fig Syrup. It stopped her constipation quick; and the way It improved her color and made her pick site up made me realize how had been. She Is So sturdy and well now, and always In such good humor that neighbors say shes the happiest girl in the 'West Like all good things, California Fig Syrup is Imitated, but you can always get the genuine by looking for the name California on the carton. under-nourishe- SERVING I J ; i i (TRAN' POP SMS HE USTCR. SEE LOTS OF INDIANS HERE AN ASQUTS, AH' I FOUND BY HlGHT ARROW HE AO OUR CRICK, MYSELF . THERE ARE INDIAN C HOSTS ALL AROUND US AT THIS TIME. O' YEAR. -P- In U 8T d SAID 50,100, t OP AN'POPKNOWSS'- - By ELMO SCOTT WATSON ANG! goes another of our Illusions It Is In regard to 1 that pleasant period In auIndian sum- Watch Your j Kidneys! ! Scanty or Too Frequent Excretions Demand Prompt Attention. are too KIDNEY disorders It to heed pay the early signals. Scanty, burning or too frequent kidney excretion a drowsy, listless feeling; lameness, stiffnessandconstantbackacheare timely warnings. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys In cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes, use Doans Pills. Endorsed by users everywhere. ( Use for Waste Wood are Woodworking establishments now making use of much of their waste wood by taming it Into toys, simple furniture and household articles which are sold In department stores in knockdown and unpalnted form. tumn, known as mer. And as usual, It Is science which has disillusioned us. No less an authority than the United States weather bureau, basing its statement upon accurate meteorological observations, has this to say about that delectable season, famed for Its genial sunshine and alluring haze: Indian summer is the name applied in this country to a period of mild fall weather following a spell of unseasonable cold weather known as "squaw winter," such as occurred this falL It is not a fixed season in the calendar. In many years it is intermittent; that la, there may be several Indian summers in one autumn. Thoreau in notes on weather conditions at Concord, Mass., from 1851 to 18C0, records the occurrence of Indian summers on dates ranging from September 27 to December 13. In Europe as well as In this counthat a re try it is popularly believed newal of mild weather occurs every autumn, and the dates of its supposed occurrence are more definitely fixed The than is the case in America. period is associated with the names of various saints. The mild period thus, is known in different parts of Europe as "St. MaSt. Lukes Summer or rtins Summer. "St. Michaels Summer," and tradition fosters the Idea that It Is always mild and warm, about the time of these various saints days. Climatological facts, however, do not always square with this belief. Indian summer has always been a favorite theme of artists and poets, especially the latter who, however, have usually been better verse makers than meteorologists. "When was the red mans summer?" asks Lydia Huntley Sigourney, the Felicia of America and one of the early Nineteenth century poets. Then, without trying to fix the date In one of her poems, she says it came He-ma- Independence comes with Income. When the groves In fleeting colors wrote their own decay; When with heart Foreboding or depressed, the white man marked The signs of coming winter, then began The Indians joyous season. John rary of C. Brainerd, contempoMrs. Sigourney, Is more spe- G. cific In placing the season at the time When the frost Turns Into beauty all October's charm. Longfellow fixes the season about the first of November in a passage in his Evangeline as follows: Then followed that beautiful season, by the pious Acadian peasants the summer of All SalntB, Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landscape In all the freshLay es If Called stomachs sour, and need Keep their systems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia ! When tongue or breath tells of acid condition correct It with a spoonful of Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener more mothers should In- vote Its aid for their children. It Is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the harsher things too ofen employed for the purpose. No household should be without It. Phillips Is the genuine, prescrlp-tlona- l product physicians endorse for general use ; the name is Important. Milk of Magnesia has been the U. S. registered trade mark of the Charles II. Phillips Chemical Co. and Its pre- decessor Clmrles IT. Phillips since 1S75 Childrens Bn j new-creat- anti-aci- Phillips Milk of Magnesia telling pppeal to the housewife. Its flavor is so characteristic that nothing but egg plant tastes like iL Stuffed Egg Plant-B- oil two egg plants and halve them. Mince onion, two cloves of garlic and fry in a little fat Mince one green pepper, add to the onion and garlic; one cupful of cooked ham, one cupful of tomato pulp, four cupfuls of bread crumbs, parsley, seasoning, a few drops ol tabasco sauce. Fill the egg plant cover with buttered crumbs and brown In a hot oven. Carrots, Potato and String Beans Cut beans Into long strips, carrots likewise; cook both separately. Drain and arrange a mound of seasoned mashed potato on a chop plate, surround with a border of the carrots and at Intervals, lay four or five beana radiating from the mound. Garnish the top of the mound of potato In the same way. Serve very hot This Is a most attractive dish. Tomatoes Stuffed With Creamed Chicken. Cut the tops from the stem ends of firm green tomatoes, scoop ont the centers, scald or simmer until partly cooked, then season well with salt and butter and fill with creamed chicken. Place In gem pans and baste with butter and water while cooking. Just before serving cover with battered crumbs and brown quickly. Sliced green tomatoes, fried In egg crumbs and butter make a most delectable dish. They need plenty of seasoning, but make a very acceptable vegetable. Baked Cabbage With Bacon. Slice half a head of cabbnge and boll in one cupful of milk. Turn Into a baking dish after cooking five minutes, lay slices of bacon over the top of the cabbage, or grated cheese may be added if preferred. Bake until the cabbage Is well done. Macaroni With Celery. Cut celery Into lengths the same size as the macaroni. Cook the macaroni until half done then aid the celery and finish cooking. Add plenty of butter and serve with a thick white sauce. j Manchuria almost destroyed the village of Fuyu, not far from Mukden, Chinese newspapers report. Pools of blood-rewater formed In the streets, and the rain discolored houses. The Chinese Inhabitants explained the red rain by saying that some superhuman huntsman had shot a dragon in the sky. ness of childhood. Since election day comes in November, the following quotation from Whittiers, The Eve of Election also places Indian summer In that month: j VEGETABLES Egg plant Is one )f our choice and well liked vegetables, but It la not grown or used as it should be. Its appearance la so attractive that it should make a more j run-dow- n A Western Newspaper Union.) mans mind may ba likened to a garden, whlrh may be intelligently cultivated or allowed to run wild; but whether cultivated or neglected it must and will bring forth. If no useful seeds are put Into It, then sn abundance of usewill fall therein, less weed-seed- s and will oontlnue to product their kind." A d Red Rain Explained torrential fall of red rain 19. (t& From gold to gray Our mild sweet day Of Indian summer fades too soon; But tenderly pres:-agent- ," excuse or other. "The man is more resourceful Ilian Willie Williams, who was the lies! A press agent t lie West ever had. Chicagi-oncecame to actress French great and Willie Williams was put And Cornelia R. Doherty calls it the season Stephen Henry Thayer puts It a little later in the month when he says Theres a whisper on the hilltop a murmur in the wood. Theres a dream of golden glory WHEN THE ACORNS DROP that It is in the autumn's dotage, mid November, When skies, seductive, seem to woo the earth. Other poets, however, are more concerned with what it is rather than when it is and have given us some Sam Walter charming descriptions. Foss, in his Inimitable dialect, calls In the folIt a piece of sweetmeat lowing verse: Natur, the good old school-mar- who pities our distress. She gives her children every year a little glad recess; An' ol boys gray-head- and girls they feel their hearts thaw out. An' life flows on as muaic'ly as water from a spout; An' now the Ingin Summec time, 'ith A A A all its rest is here, piece of sweet meat stuck between the slices of the year; sorter reign er jubilee 'twixt snow an thunder showers; chunk of sweetness sandwiched in between the frost and flowers. Nor were the early American poets the only ones who paid their tribute, as witness the following by Marian Isabel Angus: INDIAN SUMMER Indian summer broods today Over the mellow autumn lands. Soft wiBpy veils of amethyst And amber pale stream from her hands. Vines hang heavy with purple grapes; Apple trees bend with crimson gems, And in the woods the great oak trees Are crowned with golden diadems. Like topazes the pumpkins lie Set in a rjng of brown and green. And mock the sun, while slender spears Of goldenrod make gay the scene. Nature Is drowsy; her work is done Now she awaits her winter rest; Harvest is over; the tired brown earth Will sleep with red leaves on her breast. And Minna Irving paints tills word picture of gayly-eolore- d INDIAN BLANKETS Sumac fires are burning brightly. Ruby-re- d the embers glow. Indian council fires rekindled From the ash of long ago; And the wind's a runner passing With his feet in deerskin shod, And a chiefs tali feather tosses In the dusty goldenrod. in- - the thicket. Purple asters edge the stream. And the braves to earth returning By the moons enchanted beam Hang their red and yellow blankets On the windy maple bough When the frosty night is over, For its Indian summer now. Wild grapes ripen Another famous dialect poet, Frank upon her trail. But she sternly said to him : No publicity. I insist on being left alone. Remember, sir, no pub- licity. Willie Williams laughed for y. Gee, he said, what a story I can make out o that:" First Oranges in Rutia The first oranges eaten in Russia were served on IotiomUin's table when he entertained Catherine the Great in 1701. and ev- erywhere; On the beech a russet cover, on the elm a mottled hood. While the walnut lifts her branches brown and bare. Oh, the crows hold their meeting in the old oaks top. And ho, for Indian summer when the acorns drop! a bloom upon the meadow like the ghost of summer flowers, But the forest and the valleys are Theres aflame, And on hillside and In hollow through- out all the misty hours the rjstling drops of autumn rain, Oh, the squirrels at his feasting in the Descend that Shaw is ills own a publisher said, and a het ter press agent never lived. Shaw counts that day lost which doesn't see him in t lie news columns on some Injun summer suits me, soft night and stilly day. And I could keep on dreamin till I dreamed my Ilfs away. Whereon it falls Transfigured stand in marble trance! L. Stanton, writing of Indian summer in his native state of Georgia, declares The Good Press Agent Bernard Above the sea Hangs, whits and calm, the hunter's moon. In its pale fire The village spire Shows like the zodiacs spectral lance; The painted walls old oaks top. And hp, for Indian summer when the acorns drop! Good Things. shelled Small squash makes a very attractive dish served In the folMiscellaneous Boft the chestnut and the hazelnut put on a richer brown. And the blackbirds all are gathered in a flock, buttons When up her yellow gowns. Then its time to heap the fodder In a shock. Oh, autumn's on her waning; better gather In thq crop! And ho, for Indian summer when the acorns drop! When manner: lowing Cook them whole, cut the top and mallow-ln-the-marsh- But not all the beautiful tributes to Indian summer have been In verse. Oliver Wendell Holmes, writer of delightful prose as well as poetry, In his essay on the seasons, says: In October, or early In November, after the equinoctial storms, comes the Indian summer. It Is the time to be In the woods or on the seashore a aweet season that should be given to lonely walks, to stumbling about In old churchyards, plucking on the way tlu aromatic silvery herb everlasting, and smelling at its dry flower until It etherizes the soul into aimless reveries outside of space and time. There it no need of trying to paint the still, warm, misty, dreamy Indian summer In words, there are many states that have no articulate vocabulary, and are only to be reproduced by music, and the mood this season produces Is of that nature. In "The Guardian Angel" he continues on that theme thus: To those who know the Indian summer of our northern states it is needless to describe the influence it exerts on the senses and the bouI. The still- ness of the landscape In that beautiful time is as If the planet were sleeping, like a top, before it begins to rock with the storms of autumn. All natures seem to find themselves more truly In Its light; love grows more tender, religion more spiritual, memory sees farther back into the past, grief revisits Its mossy marbles, the poet harvests the ripe thoughts which he will tie In sheaves of verses by his winter fireside. And in Elsie Yenner he refers again to this season by declaring that The real forest Is hardly still except in Indian summer, then there Is dentil in the house, and they are waiting for the sharp shrunken months to come with wtiite raiment for the summers burial." Evil in Imagination Sorrow itself is not so hard to bear ns the thoughts of sorrow coming. Airy ghosts that work no harm do terrify us more Ilian men In steel witli bloody purpose. Thomas Bailey. Cleaning Eyeglasses Washington optometrist BUgges'l-thone should grasp the glasses urn' no Ihe iiosepiece when cleaning eye glasses. In this way die screws in tie uoseplece are not loosened. A af re- move the seed& Mix the chopped removed, squash with chives and onion some , chopped, buttered bread crumbs and one small beef tongue chopped, salt, pepper, a beaten egg and a few tablespoonfuls of minced green pepper. Fill the shells, cover with buttered bread crumbs and a bit of cheese and brown In a hot oven. Garnish wltb parsley. Asparagus Tips With Eggs. Place asparagus In a buttered baking dish, cover with melted butter and salt to season, pour over four beaten eggs and place in the oven to bake. Serve on buttered toast Pickle. Cut unripe Cantaloupe cantaloupe Into sections and soak for three hours In one quart of water and one fourth cupful of salt Drain and add the fruit to one quart of water und one quart of sugar, one tablespoonful each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice, one cupful of vinegar and Let stand over boil ten minutes. night drain off the sirup and boll until thick; add the cantaloupe and cook until clear. Cabbage Relish. Take one quart of cabbage und one quart of green tomatoes, one pint of onion, one cup ful each of red pepper and green, one cupful of sugar, five tableapoonfuls of white mustard seed, one tablespoonful f of celery seed, teaspoonful of turmeric, one quart of vinegar, sail to season. Chop all vegetables, cook until tender. For a soup mixture for a quick srnp In winter an all surplus vegetables, using beans, carrots, celery, green pep pers and parsley. Here Is a good combination one cupful each of lime beans, celery cut flue, corn, one onion sliced, one green peprer, one table spoonful of salt, a little minced parsley. Can. cold pack method, using the period needed by vegetable for the loneest lime In cooking. Chutney. Two dozen ripe tomatoes, six onions, three red peppers, three green ones, one pound of seedless raisins, one cupful of celery, one dozen tart apples, two quarts of vine gar, three cupfuls of sugar and sail to taste. Chop the vegetables and nj Combine and cool: ides separately. until thick. Seal for winter. Some things people do to help tKa towels whenever any bad breath, or a feverishness, biliousness, lack of appetite warn of constipation, really weaken these organs. Only a doctor knows what will cleanse the system without harm. That is why the laxative in your home should have the approval of a family doctor. The wonderful product, known to millions as Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin is a family doctors prescription for sluggish bowels. It never varies from the original prescription which Dr. Caldwell wrote thousands of times in many years of practice, and proved safe and reliable for men, women and children. It is made from herbs and other pure ingredients, so it ia and can form no pleasant-tastinhabit. You can buy this popular laxative from all drugstores. g, Fc Title 40 Acres and half oil $15 Buy rights In proapectlra oil territory. GUARANTY ABSTRACT CO., Month!!, Ark. Superficial Flesh Wounds Try Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh datura tr authorized te relsndyour All lor tho II ret bo til o II not wilted. money Sofa Study of Hornets A freak hornets nest has been reported from Trap Comer, Oxford county, Maine. The nest was found at the home of Harry Silver. The t Insects have built the nest against pane of glass In something resembling the usual conical shape. However, the Interior may be seen through tbs glass, providing a very good observation specimen for any one Interested In the domesticity of hornets. j i A New Exterminator that Won't Kill Uveetock, Poultry , Doga, Goto, or exon Baby Chlcko can be used about the home,barn or poultry yard with absolute safety aait con tains it made of Squill, a rococo psltoo mended by U. 8, Dept, of Agriculture, unde the Connable process which insures maximum strength. Two cans killed 578 rats at Arkansas State Farm. Hundreds of other testimonials. K'R-- dAly Sold on a Money Back Ooaranteo. Insist extar the original Squill upon minator. All druggists, 75c. Large size (four timet as much) $2.00. Direct if dealer cannot supply you. Co., 8pringfiel4, 0. KILLS-RATS-ON- PARKERS HAIR BALSAM RemoTeslJandreff-fttopsHairFallln- g Restores Color end Beauty to Gray and Faded Heir 40a and fl.OOst Drogript Wits. Pstrhoktic, If. T FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal tor uie In connection with Parker Hair Balaam. Make th. hair toft and fluffy. 60 cent by mall or at drug-lat- a Ulacox Chemical Work,, Fatchogoa, N. I. H lures one-hal- 'KlLUt 7Wwc tC I took Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound before my first baby was bom and I am taking it now for my weakened condition after the birth of my second boy. Although I never have put on any flesh I am feeling good now and the Vegetable Compound has helped me in every way. It is surely a wonderful medicine and I will be glad to answer letters for I recommend it Mrs. Fred W; Davey, highly. Madison, Kansas. |