OCR Text |
Show THE PAYS0N1AN. PAYSON. UTAH. SEPTEMBER 1, 1922 YOUNG GIRLS NEED CARE Mothers, watch yourDaughtersHealth Health Is Happiness From the tlms girl reaches the ge of twelve until womanhood is established, ahe need all the care a thoughtful mother can give. Tbs oondition that the girl la then passing through isso critical, and may have such effects upon her future happiness and health, that ia It almost criminal for a mother or guardian to withhold counsel or ad- sister and sister-in-latake it and have only the highest praise for it It has been a household word in my mothers house for years. Mrs. Father yn Lynd, 2431 Gladys Ave., Chicago, 111. A Little Book Helped Her to Dead Milwaukee, Wis. My daughter took Lydia EL Pinkhams Vegetable Compound aa she was so weak and did not feel like going to school She was like that for a whole year before taking your Vegetable Compound. I founds little hook of yours in our mail-bo- x and decided to give her your medicine. She is now strong and wail and attends school every day. We recommend your Vegetable Compound to all mothers with weak daughters. You may uso this letter as a testimonial. Mrs. E.Kluczny, 917 20th Ave., Milwaukee. Wis. "I was always feeling tired and sleepy, was losing in weight and would faint at times. I had other troubles too, that made me feel badly. I read your little books and beard friends talk about the good Lydia EL Pinkharaa Vegetable Compound had done them, so I have taken it too. Tha results are most satisfactory, for I have gained in weight and my bad symptoms are gone. I recommend your Vegetable Compound to all my friends and you may make whatever use you like of this letter. Gloria Ramirez, ills 9th Avs., Tampa, Florida. w vice. Many a woman has suffered years ef prolonged pain and misery through having been the victim of thoughtlessness or ignorance on the part of those who should have guioed her through the dangers and difficulties that beset this period. Methers should teach their girls what danger comes from standing around with cold or wet feet, from lifting heavy articles, and from overworking. Do not let them over-studIf they complain of headache, pains In the back and lower limbs, they ned a mothers thoughtful care and sympathy. A Household Ward in Mothers House writes Mrs. Lynd, about Lydia El Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. My mother gave me Lydia EL Pinkhams Vegetable Compound when I was 14 vears old for troubles girls often nave and for loss of weight Then after I married I took the Vegetable Compound before each child was born and always when I felt the least run down. Both my y. Aliments Lydia E. Pinkhams Private Text-Boo- k to Women will be sent you free uponupon Peculiar request. Write to the Lydia E. Plnkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts, This book contains valuable Information. No Help. New Excuse. I feel blue." Look st the sky. It was almost an hour past Frank's bedtime, but mother's attempts to send him to bed were useless. Liko Thats bluer." all small boys, and each time Several times story book he he disliked to go to bed, he made a new excuse. he yawned over tho was reading, and Mra. Jordan said: "Now see, sonny, yours so sleepy now that you yawn all tho Aw, mom, Im not sleepy, he pen-tim- Why do women like e. slsted, I was Just opening my mouth to let In a Uttle fresh air." pipe smokers? Ws asked many women. One said: I NETT blind veterans of the World war were guided Into the gallery of the national house of representatives one day this summer. From there they went to the senate, then to a garden party at the White House. These veterans from the navy and from every European battlefield where Americans fought are being rehabilitated In the Evergreen School for the Blind In Baltimore. They want congress to grant them an Incorporation for an association which shall keep them together and enshrine their common sacrifice." It Is Representative Thomas D. Schall of Minnesota who has introduced the Incorporation bill. Calling the attention of the house to the visitors In the gallery, he made an eloquent speech that stirred even the blase house and brought forth many bursts of applause. Probably one reason the speech was eloquent was because the speaker knew what he was talking about. For he had been nnder fire with the boys on the firing line. He was on the American transport Mount Vernon when she was torpedoed off Brest September 5, with a loss of 37 killed. He was In France during July and August of 1918 and followed the Americans drive. As he said in his in the Chateau-Thierr- y speech : I was with Major Fuchs In Cohan, where white-ho- t fragments of shell lay smoking In the street, the town being shelled every 15 minutes. I experienced creeping upon hands and knees for about half a mile to avoid exposure to the enemy. I savored the heavy white dust, the flies, the heat, and the scantiness of water ; the smell of decaying flesh, where the human dominated the animal. I heard the mighty uproar of night attacks, where like heat lightning the barrage played along the sky ; the boom of artillery and the burst of shell ; the heavy rumble of trucks bringing troops, munitions and supplies to the front; and ambulances setting out with the wounded. From actual contact with soldiers In action, in field and camp, I know something of what our boys suffered and what they accomplished over there. I dined with them at mess and communed with them in bivouac In the night, at a time when mens tongues are loosed and they talk. Today they narrowly missed death. Perhaps It would be their turn tomorrow, and so on the verge of eternity they spoke their hearts and told the plain truth without fear or favor. No whiners among Just matter-of-facthem. No boasters. pure stuff, the dross burned away in actual fellowship with death, leaving their souls vibrant instruments of truth. If I had but one word with which to describe the American soldier, I would describe him with the word courage. No nntion in all the annals of war lias produced average individuals with such predominant courage, such unheard-o- f heroism, such willing offering of life. But Mr. Schall's speech was eloquent for another reason also: lie himself is a blind man lost sight through electric shock, says the Congressional Directory. Said he, in his introduction: "No doubt every one of these boys lias cried out In his hour of trial, O Lord, if possible, take this cup from me,' and would have chosen to have remained upon the battlefield, with no wakening, to bear, day after day, the heavy cross of silent waiting. The constantly recurring thought in the early days of blindness is,- Is not death to be preferred?' for they then reason with the mind of the seeing. I can remember upon losing iny sight, acquaintances meeting me after a lapse of time would say, Schall, I heard you were dead. I replied, Not dead, just blind !' But 1 could readily interpret what they thought. When they heard that I had lost my sight, they said to themselves, I would rather be dead.' And so, having said it, ihey concluded that I was dead. But I tun not dead. And 1 am quite sure that the Applause. blind soldiers who are here In the gallery today Mill prove that they are not dead. Applause. These men are muking good under their trials. t, There la one young lad np there, deaf In one ear, both hands gone, blind, yet he is studying law. He has learned the typewriter, and he writes as fine a letter as any one of you can do with your sight Applause. They are all very much alive. They have refused to be downed. They have tackled their handicap with the same spirit and go and dash that they bucked the stalemate of the trenches, and with a yell, 'Come on, boys, do you want to live forever? sent the American spirit up and down the allied lines to win the victory for the world. Applause. Here are some of the good things In the eloquent speech of this blind legislator speaking for the blind men: "We have been accustomed to believe the European propaganda that everything overseas is far, far better than our home product ; that to produce a soldier up to European grade, they must be drilled year after year. But here were these raw American boys performing deeds of Judgment, ded cision and valor that forced from their allies and opponents the admission that they had never seen or heard the like. A heroic soul here and there would have been within the bounds of expectation, but the constant grade .of the whole product of the nation, drafted and volunteers, with whom you came In contact there on the death fields could not but give you pause and force the thinking mind to ask why a nation had produced such universal phenomena. In touch with these wonderful men day after day, In whom heroism was as common as the dirt under foot, comparing them with the other soldiery, I was Impelled to ask myself what made this vast gap In the fortitude, courage, judgment, between human individuals of the same civilization, and the answer was driven In upon me that the difference lay In their greater soul power, because at last God had reared n government under which the soul, that thing akin to Him, could grow; a government whose aim was the development and fostering of Initiative of the Individual, where they had freedom to choose between right and wrong; where any citizen could aspire t the highest office In the land; where religion was unhampered, their thoughts unrestrained, where they dared to think and feel out loud ; where equal opportunity was their birthright, nnd no high wall of Verboten Is endured ; where each stands upon his own resources, for what he Is and what he can do, and every man is the equal of his neighbor; where the Stnrs and Stripes from the towers of our public schools speak the spirit of America and beckon her children to a heart of understanding that can discern between right and wrong. It is true the allies furnished the guns, but America furnished the soul that won the war. Until that soul was loosed In combat Applause. upon the battle fields defeat of the allies was Inevitable. Inris had been ordered evacuated. Big Bertha shells were bursting everywhere in the streets. Consternation prevailed. Lines of refugees were streaming from the city. A German army, headed by the Prussian Guard nnd commanded by the crown prince, was advancing with the steady precision of clockwork nt the rate of four to fivp miles a day. German patrols had been captured within six miles of Paris. The terrible bombardment and onslaught of the shock troops had forced the French back and back until the Germans, gaining possession of the heights about Pellcnu Wood, had cleared the roads for eight miles in advance. With their march unresisted for several miles abend, the Prussian Guard was ordered to put on their dress uniforms with spiked helmets. The officers decked themselves In dress regalln with starched bosom shirts. The Germans bad no other thought but that they were going triumphantly Into Paris. The French believed it, the English believed It, the Belgians believed it, the Italians believed it, all the world believed it. Put the boys of four American regiments did not believe it. The Fifth and Sixth marines, the Ninth nnd Twenty-thirinfantry of the Second division, being the nearest nt hand, were m v.ded inlo trucks as close as they could stand and hurried U the night to war-traine- d striking distance of the enemy. Af they passed the retreating French they were met with cries of, Youre zigzag; youre crazy. Bure death ahead. There Is no hope; go back. But these eager, FREEDOM FROM "Because a man who thinks things out, does them and goes all the way through with anything ha starts generally smokes a pipe if ha amokee st LAXATIVES Discovery by Scisntista Has Replaced Them. all and nearly always he doesamoks. Another replied: A pipe smoker Is more of a home man, It seems to me. Thera is no better picture of contentment than a man smoking a pipe in his home after the day's work is done. "He Is more honest, more reliable, more manly, said another but she wsa rather young. Pipeomokers are not so Jumpy nnd fidgety, so nervous as Theyre more easily contented, was the opinion of one woman. Thera were many reasons given by tha fair ladies; some of them not very powerful from n logical viewpoint. The significant feature of the questionnaire was that the great majority of the women admitted that they do like pipe smokers. And Just to show that woman is not tha only illogical of the two taxes, we asked n number of men why they liked the tobacco they smoked. One said it was strong enough for Mm, Another said it was mild enough for hiss and they were smoking the me brand. All of them bad soma more-or-leindefinite reason for lik ing a certain tobacco, but putting that feeling Into words was difficult. Evan our old Edgeworth smokers our beet friends have difficulty in telling why they like Edge-WortIt is n friendly, friend-makitobaoco that just suits me, wsa the best answer we could get. Just Americans, who had never smelled the smoke of battle were not made of the stuff that goes bock when the enemy Is In front. Unperturbed, they landed In the mud, and under cover of the woods formed their lines and calmly waited for the dawn, when shout 15,000 Americans met and held and stopped five German divisions So 'fierce and unfaltering was the Applause. attack that the enemy took it for granted thet there were unlimited reserves In the rear. The miracle was performed, the march on Paris stopped, the oncoming hordes turned back, the Chateau-Thierrdrive began, the destiny of civilization changed. Applause. The soul of America had wo because It had broken the cocksure spirit of the enemy, had rekindled In the breasts of the drooping allies a morale that ran from one end of the lines to the other. For the supersoldler of the world, with tremendous advantage of numbers, had been by a few simple, modest, untrained Americans; and these some Americans were here In great numbers, and they were coming by the thousands. The war could end in but one way. At the drive, when the pRll height of the Cliuteau-Thlerrof shat terrible certain dally advance, when the shelling of Paris and the nightmare of air raids was too recent to be forgotten, not a sou! could be found In the ranks of any army or In anr walk in life so base but he was free to admit that It was the American soldier who won the war, tnrned the tide, saved them when thev had their backs to the wall. Yat now. when It ts all safely over, there are those who ungratefully say, We would have won, anyway. They would, like h L (Applause. Our boys were far from their homes. It put shame Into the hearts of men who were fighting for their very hearth side and families to see such daring and spirit In lnds who needed no spur. It began June 6 at Belleau Wood and continued drive, the Somme camthrough the Alsne-Marn- e nttsmefThm$ Ypres-Lys- , Mihlel. St. through the paign, the whole thing. clear up to November 11. Six months But Edgeworth doesn't suit everyand the Job was done, rs Out of every hundred body. "Reared on American soil, Imbibing her printhere may be one or two who ciples of freedom, the American soldier did not couldn't get supreme satisfaction out need years of Intense training. He was used to of Edgeworth. thinking and deciding. In h pinch, every man was The Intelligence of the American Nevertheless, we would like to send on officer free samples of Edge-wort- h, any equipped him to understand the war game quickly. and we are sincere when we say Heroes every one, they dared to move apart that we would rather send samples to twenty, thirty, fifty, sixty feet; they dared to fight a man who thinks he will not like alone and die alone. The average run of the Euthe not Edgeworth for he may find he is Initiative has to soldier private ropean mistaken and then he will be the best fight alone and die alone. He fights best In mass smoker where he sees he form of his companion ahead, friend for Edgeworth that a be. could elbow of his at his the side, pal feels the rub of If you will send us your name and hears the tread of his comrade In the rear. He must have n crowd to give spirit and soul to do nnd die. address on a postcard, we will forward The American soldier, because of his Individual samples erf Edgeworth, Ready-Rubbe- d and Plug Slice. The samples are development hns soul power that dares stand alone. free and postpaid. If youll add The European must group this soul power to proname and address of your toduce the necessary courage. The American soldier the bacco dealer, wed appreciate the Wolves alone. In who dares hunt lion forage Is a courtesy. Address your card to packs. The American soldier Is an eagle who Larus & Brother Company, 50 dares soar aloft in the awful solitudes. Swallows South 21st Street, Richmond, Va. hover in thousands. The American soldier dares To Retail Tobacco Merchants: If to die rigid now. The European soldier tomorrow. jobber cannot supply you with your officer or who won soldier German the Ask the Larus & Brother ComEdgeworth, war, and he will tell you that it was the Ameriwill gladly send you prepaid by cans. That It was the Americans who advanced pany carton a one- - or post parcel without came bind nnd hesitation, Into no man's of any size of Plug Slice or Ready-Rubbon with that dogged determination that for the name price you would machine-gunest, ambush, hand grenades, the jobber. pay rifles, concealed mines, gas shells, curtains of fire, small nnd big' artillery, the blasts of bell itself PARkER3 could not slop. Applause. HAIR BALSAM Remove HannroffPtopsij air Kali Lnc It Is the soul in the breasts of these hoys np Restores Color end herein the gallery that is going to count. It Is the to Gray and Faded Hau Beavly 6o& and $1.09 at Uruirtlsta, soul that measures the size of the man, whet tier K. TUweni Cheat, W kg. f 'atrln or in the conflict of life, nnd our on the baftl-'flelHINDERCORNS Rtwow om,to cm-theblind friends in the gallery have bean tried and ioins, ale., sto?9 ail paio, ensures comfort ("1. atkM WRiktpg east. Uu. b? nail or at L'ruig found not U m ChaiiW Works. H. fist smooth-face- d Pills and salts give temporary relief from constipation only at the expense of permanent injury, stays an eminent medical authority Science has found s newer, better way a means as simple as Nature Itself. r In perfect health a natural lubricant keeps the food waste soft and moving. But when constipation exlata this natural lubricant Is not sufficient Medical authorities have found that tho gentle lubricating action of Nujol most closely resembles that of Nature's own laxative lubricant As Nujol Is not it cannot gripe- - It Is In no sense n medicine. And like pure water It is harmless and pleasant Nujol Is prescribed by physicians; used In leading hospitals. Get a bottle from your druggist today. non-smoke- y d y Parachute. Would you begin saving up to buy n fiyhig machine If you were sure yon wouldnt fall? Probably. The airplane never will become generally used nntfl f, It Is made with most of its danger eliminated. Steps are being made In that dlreo- tlen. London experiments with this device: When a plane starts falling, the pilot jerks out a pocket parachutm As the rush of wind opens It, the safety device lifts the pilot out of the falling machine and drops him gently fool-proo- as h. te earth. The rest of us will wait until we e have reasonable proof that the will not fail to function at the crucial moment ng pant-chat- Cutleurm Soap far tha Complexion. Nothing better than Cutleurm Soap dally and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum, and you have the Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Advertisement Meuse-Argonn- pipe-smoke- Barrage From Washington. Did you ever ask a favor of your pipe-smok- er congressman? "Once, said Mr. Oumpson. He fathered some legislation that was displeasing to me and I asked him to do me the favor of resigning. "He didnt oblige you, of courser "No, but hes been franking his speeches to me ever since, and Tm sorry now that I made him aware of my existence." Birmingham Smart Animal. Whnt makes your dog howl when be hears jazz? Intelligence, I suppose, replied Sir. Grumpson. two-doz- ed slmrp-slioote- r, n Y- fetch, I. 4 full years wir or mow guaranteed ffte and B0c) , (MW?) and lioes Supporters (aJl frizes, Mens Garters No rubber to rot from heat or sweat. Fhos- phor Bronze Kuatlees Springs giva the stretch, ASK YOUR DEALER. If he can't supply yoo. send nTnic. Accept no substitute. direct, giving Get the genuine Look for y ar.d name on buckle. Write for story ofguarantee Spring Stretch. STRtCH SUSPENDER COMPANY ftcclaxttw itannJtUtrrrt 4 tad fracaito Adrian, Mich. Dept. Q A i ! |