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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH JLVRS. J, M. CRAIG, of Los A n. Calif., whd says no ono oan feel more graceful for what haa dons than aha doea. ahe haa gained twelve and her health ia now betpounds ter than in years. Tanlaq. Declarea Health Comes to you and the children if you have Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery in the house. and grownFor ! ups this old fashioned vegetable tonic and is still used bv the million bottles every year. It was first used by everybody 50 years ago and is still safe and sane because it contains no alcohol or narcotic. It is made up of Blood root, Oregon Grape root,. Queens root, Stone root, Cherry Bark, without alcohol. Make your blood redder and your health better by going to your nearest druggist and obtaining Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery in tablet or liquid form,. little-one?- blood-mak- Of all tile people who have taken, Tanlac,' I dont believe there Is anyone who fedls any more grateful to it than I do, was the statement made recently by Mrs. J. M. Craig of 674 East Fortieth street, Los Angeles. "Like so many other families during the influenza epidemic last year we all had it, and my own illness, together with the worry over the rest of our, family, brought on a case of genuine nervous prostration. . I was so weak I couldnt even sweep the floor, and during the day I would have to lie down four or five times. I tried to walk but found out half a block was all I could stand before I gave out. Nervous spells came on me often. Every medicine I tried failed to rc?.ch my case until finally my husband urged me to try Tanlac, and I ani indeed thankful .that' he did, for it proved to be just what I needed. The first two bottles didnt seem to help me. I guess that was because I was so extremely bad off, but on the third bottle I could tell I was improving and thaf gave me more hopes than ever of getting well. My improvement from then on was rapid and by the time I had taken five bottles of Tanlac I was better and stronger than I had been In years. I was sleeping soundly at night and had gained twelve pounds in weight. That was several months ago and from, then until now I have been in as good health as I ever was in my life and have been doing all the house: the treatment of silver and the maintenance of the countrys monetary standard, not to mention sjich side issues as the greenback craze contests that were only settled by the titanic struggle of 1896 were all fought Ntut here during the term of his active service. He was an active participant In the efforts out of which was finally evolved the present civil service. He has participated in the enactment of all of the great tariff measures; in the legislation that has been passed for the protection and elevation of labor, including the Chinese exclusion law; in Sherman the , anti-trulaw for curbing corporate greed and monopoly ; in the law that built the Panama canal, linking the oceans, and realizing the dream of centuries ; in the legislation that was made necessary by twojgreatbless-wars, in the first of which we brought the of Cuba, to the struggling patriots ' .ingspf liberty and by the Philippines, and Porto Rico acquired the second brought to an end the greatest conflict that the world has ever known. Since he has been here he has seen four of the eighteen amendments to the Constitution adopted as part of the organic law. He has seen the ex--(. ' crea-panding business of the nation call for the Agriculnew executive three tion of departments ture, Commerce and Labor and Innumerable subsidiary bureaus. He has seen political parties rise and disappear and the issues which produced them cease to exist. But, above all, he has lived to see the American republic, which he has loved and labored for throughout all these years, and which Is in no small part the result of his handiwork, proclaimed as the leading nation in all the world. Gen. Isaac R. Sherwood of Ohio (born 1835) It is true that I am the oldest man who ever served in this historic chamber, ut I have always been ' told that there is no virtue in being old.' If ther were, I would be the most virtuous man here. W are here today with a living knockdown argumen of the theory of Doctor Osier (laughter) in Uncle Joe, who has honored this chamber with the longest service of any. man who ever served in any parbody in the world. After the 4th of liamentary ' March next I shall bid farewell to congress, and Uncle Joe will then be the oldest member of congress and the oldest menjber of any parliamen-- ' tary body in the world, and I wish him a parting "God bless you with all my heart. Speaker Frederick H. Gillett of Massachusetts The activities of the gentleman from Illinois in an official capacity have' probably affected directly and indirectly more millions of Americans than those of any Individual now dwelling upon the earth. Not only has he surpassed all the statesmen of America in length of service in conspicuous place in which he has been conspicuous, but he has surpassed the service of all save a very few statesmen in history, ancient end modern, and he stands today with a longer record of eminent position than any statesman now living in any nation of the world. Majority Floor Leader Frank W. Mondell of Wyoming We have not always agreed with Uncle Joe on either side, but we have all honored him for Ms virile ability and, more than that, for his stalwart, unwavering courage. Long may he remain here to remind those who come that a man can be courageous, that a man can stand for what he believes is right, even though it may not for the moment be popular. Uncle Joe" Cannon As I look into your faces . I am reminded that our honored speaker and his predecessor in that chair were approaching the polls to cast their first votes in 1872. Jim Mann, at the age of sixteen, was no doubt beginning his struggle with rival ambitions to continue a farmer, or become a lawyer; today he is an ornament to both professions, a true, scientific farmer and the most industrious and useful lawmaker I have ever known. My friends Rainey and Mondell, at the age of twelve, were beginning to figure life in perof at the while seven, age Rodenberg, centages, was winning his way with You would scarce ex, pect one of my age, and the ambitions of Claude Kitchin and Nick Longworth, at the age of three, were centered about their first pants. As I look over the house I find more than 100 of my colleagues who had not then been born. We have had great development in these years, and I am glad to have been a small part of it and to be able to continue with you in the work we here do for the peace and prosperity of the Ameri- can people and the world, so far as we can, by example in fraternity and charity. VI thank you from the bottom of my lwdrt. (Prolonged applause all the members risrng.) long-extend- . ' forty-fourt- h - : Sixty-secon- h, st (1903-1911- ). v ld , . - , ts commemorate today sccurSy establishes Joseph G. Cannon in the place of Father of all the American Congresses. when he took his seat at the beginning of Vhe Forty-thir- d congress, the gr.eat. empire of., the West was still the frontier of our civilization. That vast' and powerful section now so potent i the councils of the nation, was then without votes xcepting a narrow fringe of population on the ft res of the- - Pacific ocean, The sovereign states .rizona, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota., kho, Montana, New ere with,- ico, Utah, Washington out votes and were here by delegates. What a wonderful gajjy of brilliant men were here when he came to gress ! James G. Blaine, the Plumed Knlghl" ofKtnerican statesmen, was speaker of the house. James A, Garfield was .a member of "the Ohio delegation and was giving evidences of those talents of leadership which subsequently called him to the presidency. ' Julius C. Burrows, of Michigan ; James B. Beck, of Kentucky ;, William P. Frye, and Eugene Hide, of Maine ; Joseph R. Hawley, of Connecticut ; George F. Hoar, of Massachusetts; Roger Q. Mills, of Texas; and Stephen B. Elkins, of the territory of New Mexico, were elected members of the same house and were subsequently called to the other end of the capitol. But' there were, in that same Congress, men who rounded out, their congressional careers in this body and whose names are equally familiar to the American people. Among them might be mentioned Benjamin F. Butler of Massachusetts; Richard P. Bland, of Missouri; Sunset Cox, of New York ; William S. Holman, of Indiana ; John A. Kasson, of Iowa ; William R. Morrison, of Illinois; Samuel J. Rand-hl- l, of Pennsylvania ; Alexander H. Stephens, of rp. well-know- . 3, Box 8. Vanity in Animals Custom. The investigating scientist who has been studying wild animals has learned that members of the feline tribe do not play with their long claws on the bark of trees to sharpen them, as is popularly supposed, but the antics are a display of vanity on the part of the male, to show how agile and powerful he Is. Fun for .Women - . . Walla Walla, Wash. When I had tho measles I went oat a little too soon and took cold on my lungs. I had sharp pains. I took some medicine that I got from the' drug store .but nothing did me much good until I took a bottle of Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery. It did me great good. The Discovery has done my mother .and father, lots of Miss good, too, for neuralgia. Florence Boone, Linden St., Route . EPRESENTATIVE JOSEPH GURNEY CANNON, Republican, Eighteenth district of Illinois set a new American record the other day for service In congress, when he passed the mark set by Senator Justin S. Morrill of Vermont, who, as senator and representative, served 43 years, 9 months and 24 days. Counting his victory in the recent landslide, Mr. Cannop has been elected to congress 23 times. He Is now ending his year of service. He was- first elected to the- - Forty-thircongress (1873-5- ) and failed of (1893-5- ) to the Fifty-thir- d d and (1911-13- ) congresses. He was Fifty-nintspeaker in the Fifty-eightSixtieth and Sixty-firHis district congresses comprises' the counties of Clark, Cumberland. Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee and Vermilion, with a work by myself. population of about 250,000. He lives in Danville It is simply remarkable how Tan- and Is a lawyer and banker He was born In . ( lac has huilt me up and I have told Guilford, N. C.,, and will be eighty-fiv- e years old ' of everyone my friends and relatives May 7, 1921. wlifif a wonderful medicine It is. Uncle Joe Cannons name Is exceedingly faTanlac is sold, by leading druggists miliar to .the United States at large; probably few public men are more widely known. So the everywhere. Adv. foregoing facts about him are pretty generally Didnt Feaze Him. known. While veteran is interesting as an n A author was vainly en- Individual and athe, legislator he Is also interesting deavoring to write the other morning, as a landmark by which the progress of things when he .was repeatedly interrupted may be measured. The jubilation held by the son. by his house when Uncle Joe set the new service mark If you ask me one more question. was therefore a decidedly interesting affair. Times writer the harassed declared at last, have and we have changed with them changed I will go out and drown myself. since he was elected to cohgress in 1872 and here came the small voice are some Father, pf the utterances which hint at the come I see do and it? may you changes of nearly half a century. Former Speaker Champ Clark of Missouri When Joseph G. Cannon was born on the battleWOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROO- T field of Guilford Court House, a victory .for Lord Cornwallis, the fruits of which were repealed by Thousands of women have kidney and General Greene, we did not have any railroads, bladder trouble and never suspect it. Wttnens complaints often Drove to be any telegraphs, any telephones, a,ny sewing manothing else but kidney trouble, or the chines, any repeating rifles, and a thousand and result of kidney or bladder disease. one things that we consider necessary to our mod. If the kidneys are not in a healthy ern civilization. When we celebrated Uncle orcondition, they may cause the other Joes eightieth birthday I laid down the conditions become to diseased. gans Fain in the back, headache, loss of am- on which a man could serve as long as he had. bition, nervousness, are often times symp- In the first place, the politic? of his district must toms of kidney trouble. remain the same. 'In the second place, he must Dont delay starting treatment. Dr. be a man of. force and ability. In the third Kilmers Swamp-Root- , a physicians pre- place, must remain as faithful as the North scription, obtained at any drug store, may Star. hq I' said that Uncle Joe filled those con- be just the remedy needed to overcome ditlons. I think yet that he does., such conditions. William A. Rodenberg of Illinois JoSeph G. Get a medium or large size bottle imCannon was first elected in 1872 as a representamediately from any drug store. - However, if you wish first to test this tive in the Forty-thir- d congress .from the fourgreat preparation send tefi cents- to Dr. teenth district of Illinois, and he became a member ' Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a on sample bottle. When writing be sure and of this body on March 4, 1873, the same day which Ulysses S. Grant was, inaugurated for the mention this paper. Adv. second tiihe as President of the United States. Better Convert the Enemy. How far we have traveled since that day may Any business act- which nets' one be understood when w.e recall that at the time friend and one enemy is a bad propo- of Mr. Cannons first election the population of sition. For the enemy can accomplish the United States was estimated at 40,596,000 as more harm as a knocker than the against 106,000,000 today; there were 37 states friend can do' as a press agent or then as against 48 today ; the public wealth, which booster. The Nations Business. ' was estimated at something over $30,000,000,000 , in 1872, is placed at more than $300,000,000,000 now ; the bank deposits, which then amounted to Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bdttle of $1,250,000,000 have grown to $32,700,000,000, and CASTORIA, that famous old remedy from 66,000 for Infants and children, and see that it our railroad service has expanded miles of track In operation to more than 268,000 Bears the miles. That, In brief, summarizes Ihe vast strides Signature of that we have made in material progress since he ' In Use for Over SO Years. has been a member of this house. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria Some Idea of how the post office department has expanded can also be had when we remember that Where Small Savings Count. in 1873 the receipts aggregated $23,000,000 and the Small savings aru like stones in a disbursements $29,000,000, while last year the were $437,000,000 and the disbursements bridge; they form a firm support to carry one over the flood of an emer- $454,000,000. ; But It will not be because of his services upon gency. the committee on post offices and post roads, val- -' uable as they were, that his fame will rest. After j Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashes That Itch and burn .with hot baths serving for six years upon that committee he was of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle assigned by Samuel J. Randall, a Democratic anointings of Cuticura Ointment. speaker, to the committee on appropriations in congress, and it is because of his . Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe- the Forty-sixt- h cially if a little of .the fragrant Cuti- identity with the- - workings of that Important comcura Talcum Is dusted oh at the fin- mittee down to the timfe of his elevation to the ish. 25c each everywhere. Adv. speakership that his fame will remain assured , , f throughout the ages.. It can: be truthfully said How to Bo Popular. that no man has proved a stronger bulwark of . To be really popular you must allow at all times protection to the federal treasury people to tell you things that you al- and under all circumstances., in ready know, as If you had never heard Irrespective of the temporary interruptions we event the of them Dearborn Independent. career, and distinguished 'its long - er . Georgia,. t. At the other, end of the capitol might be mentioned Senators Allison, of Iowa ; Bayard, of Delaware; Cameron, of Pennsylvania; Carpenter, of Wisconsin ; Chandler, of Michigan ; Roscoe Conk-linof New York; Henry G. Davis, of West Virginia; Edmunds, of Vermont; Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey; Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine; John J. Ingalls, of Kansas ; John A Logan, of Ulindis ; Justin S. Morrill, of Vermont; Oliver P. Morton, of Indiana ; Carl Schurz, of Missouri ; John Sherman and Allen G. Thurman, of 'Ohio; William Wlndoni, of Minnesota. T Of the 371 senators, representatives and delegates who were recorded in1 that notable gathering, all but two have passed from the stage of public life, but a merciful providence has left us Speaker Cannon and General Sherwood in order that we might know that in those' days there were giant's g, j j upon the earth. It has been given to no other man in all our history to be so intimately .connected with so many historic characters. Mr. Cannon has served under 10 speakers of this house, in the following order ; James G. Blaine, Michael C. Kerr, Samuel J. Randall, J. Warren Keifer, John G. Carlisle, Thomas' B. Reed, Charles L. Crisp, David B. Henderson, Champ Clark and Frederick H. Gillett, while he himself occupied that exalted position for a period of eight years. He has also served under 10 presidents, as follows : Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, Harrison, McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson, and in a few weeks Harding will be added to the list. The Forty-thir- d congress, In which Mr. Cannon began his service, will be memorable because of the passage of the act providing for the' resumption of specie payments following the Civil war. The civil rights bill, the amnesty bill and much similar legislation of a reconstructive nature, made necessary by that uphappy event, need not be referred .to. The great granger movement finally resulted, in 1887, in the enactment of the Interstate commerce law. The numerous legislative battles growing out of -- to Diamond Dye 4 Garments, Draperies Dyed New for Few Cents Any yvoman can follow the simple directions in package and diamond-dy- e shabby, faded skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, coverings, everything into new. Dont risk your material in a poor dye that streaks or spots. Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind. Tell the druggist whether your material Is wool or silk, or If It'is cotton, linen, or a mixture. 16 rich colors. Adv. . Well? girl writes to her newspaper to say that children rarely cause panics, that it is the nervous, excitable women who are at fault. How about it? Colliers Weekly. A twelve-year-ol- d Sure Relief 6 Bell-an- s Hot water Sure Relief RELL-AN-S UP FOR INDIGESTION 50 good cigarettes 6 for 10c from one sack of GENUINE "mi DURHAM TOBACCO you cm cut out thorouThfui but you can clean them off promptly with and you work the hone lame time. Doe not blister or remove the hair. $2.50 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 R free. ABSORBINE, JR, the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured Muscles or Li pun rats, Interred Glands, Wen Cysts. Allays pain quickly, price 11.25 a bottte t druggists or delivered. W. F. YOUNG. Ine 310 Ternili H.. SsriniRsM. Msn. |