Show Others $400 a Maks Day So Gao You RootMr rtown Tnd b4Mira noitdttyatCruwfordHTiUe lain: anotbor in its hour made It's dotrI— brltuful of enjoyment The excellent tuuslo draws tbe crowd— the wary exciting ride keeps them when in motion appearance Brtchteyeeatohlng dumbly constructed— safely made You're Busy All the Time — In winter and summer one assistant needed Doily gaollne ooet only 66c Let us send yon detailed particular about tbe Circling Wave and It mono tusking power Youil be JbaifAuksui ink eon him et a I ABLE BODIKD MEN between the age of 20 and 40 wanted (o prepare for forest ranger examination 1100 to start Btute salary fi Reaaa WHIieme Aria occupation LADIKS— partle per hundred making eend stamped envelope Supply Co Mi Vernon la Earn at home belts Ktoonwell Quits Apparent “Do theatrical angels have wings?’’ “Certainly That Is how their mon- flies" ey JUDGE HEART CURED TROUBLE I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Kidney Pills lor Heart Trouble from which I had suffered for 5 years 1 had dizzy spells my eyes puffed breath was my short and I 'had chills and backache I took the pills about a year ago and have had no return of the palpitations Am now 63 years old able to do lots of Miller manual labor am Judge well and hearty and weigh about 200 pounds I feel very grateful that found Dodds Kidney Pills and you may publish this letter if you wish I am serving my third term as Probate Yours truly Judge of Gray Co PHILIP MILLER Cimarron Kan Correspond with Judge Miller about this wonderful remedy Dodds Kidney Pills 60c per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co Buffalo N T Write for Household Hints also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and recipes for dainty dishes All 3 sent free Adv Exceptions He— Must stolen goods always be restored ? She — Certainly He— All right Will you now take back the kiss I stole last night? Both "I heard quite a True paradoxical remark the other day" “What was It?" “That though there Is no excuse for crime there Is generally a warrant for it" Cook and the Cuckoo Mistress — Bridget what ails the cuckoo clock? I haven’t heard It today Bridget — Well mum there do be a cat around the kitchen an’ strange to afeared likely the poor come out Most Intensive "Do you believe in intensive gardening Mrs Hoerake?” asked the visitor “WeU rather” said Mrs Hoerake “I spent all last winter raising one In a soap box” — Harper’s geranium Weekly A Negative Merit She— Have you any strawberries? Dealer — Yes’m Here they are a quarter a box She — Goodness! They're miserable so green looking and Dealer — I know mum but there ain't enough In a box to do you any harm Everybody From Kid To Grandad Likes Post Toasties Thin of white bits crisp to cooked Com perfection and toasted to a delicate brown without the Indian touch of You sealed human hand get them package Ready to in the Eat A dish of Post Toasties for breakfast and lunch with thick cream or rich fruit juice is a dish that epicures might chortle Nourishing economical delicious “more-ish- ” over Gunstdn Hall or Mount Vernon two or three times a week to warm their The soldierly young planter gave blood In the hale sport and dine tothose who knew him best as well as gether afterwards— a cordial company those who met him but' to pass the of neighbors with as many topics of impression of a singular restraint and good talk as foxes to run to cover which lent a peculiar The hunt went fastest and most came dignity and charm to his speech and cessantly when Lord Fairfax carriage They deemed him deeply down from his lodge In the valley and passionate and yet could never re- joined them for days together in the field and at the table member to have seen him In a pasloved horses and dogs Washington sion The Impression was often a wholesome check upon strangers and with the heartiest sportsman of them even upon friends and neighbors who all He had a great gusto for stalking would have sought to impose upon deer with George Mason on him forested tractB round Gunston Hall Terrible In Hie Wrath and liked often to take gun or rod No doubt he had to way given bursts of passion In after lesser game when the days fell often enough dull but best of all he loved a horse’s when Incamp and upon the march back and the hard ride for hours todisobedience 6r cowardice efficiency gether after the dogs and a crafty angered him hotly and of a sudden — a horse It put a man to his There were stories to be heard 6f quarry men who had reason to remember points to ride a country where the how terrible he could be la bis wrath running was only for those who dared A Judge of Horseflesh But he bad learned In the very heat His own mounts could nowhere be and discipline of such scenes how he There was full must curb and guard himself against bettered in Virginia blood of Araby In his noble Magnolia and It was no doubt trials and surprise as good hunting blood as was to of command made in his youth that be found In the colony In his had given him the fine men and Ajax Valiant and Chlnkllng noted In him now he bred “so flew’d so He had been bred in a strict school His hounds sanded” so matched In speed and of manners at Belvoir and Greenway court and here at bis own Mount habit that they kept always tune and In the field pace “A cry together Vernon In the old days and tbe place more tuneable was never holla'd to must have seemed to him full of the nor cheered with horn” than theirs traditions of whatsoever was just and when they were let “spend their honest and lovely and of good report as he looked back to the time of his mouths’’ till echo replied “as if another chase was in the skies” ’Twas gentle brother It was still dangerous first to the stables for him always In to cross or thwart him indeed Poachthe morning and then to the kennels ers might look to be caught and It had been hard and anxious work soundly thrashed by the master himfor Washington to get his affairs self If he chanced their way Negli- to prosperous shape again when gent overseers might expect sharp was over and those long and unfaithful contractors the war summers penalties on the stricken a strict accounting If necessary work hopeless frontier Stock buildings fences — went wrong by their fault everything had to be renewed refitAlways Open to Conviction ted repaired He was exacting almost to the point For the first two or three years of harshness in every matter of just there were even provisions to buy so right or authority But he was open slow was the place to support Itself and wholesome as the day and rea- once more Not only all his own sonable to the point of pity In every but all he got by his ready money affair of humanity through It all marriage too and more besides was Now it was “my rascally overseer swallowed up and he found himself Hardwick" In his diary when certain In debt before matters were finally to were marps sent home “scarce able set to rights and profitable crops much less to assist in the made and hlghlone marketed But the thing business of the plantations” but not once done affairs cleared and became a month later it was “my worthy as If of own accord In the easy overseer Hardwick lying In Win- business of thetljelr estate chester of a broken leg" It was not A Master of Men In his way to add anything to the The men he had to deal with prespenalties of nature knew their master the young A quiet simplicity of life a ently and had matured bis plans and his genuine love of real sport rid him of planter Henceforth his affairs were morbid humors All up and down the discipline while the eighteenth English world were comcentury lasted gentlemen monly to be found drunk after dinner — outside New England where the efficient Puritan church had fastened so singular a discipline In manners upon a whole society — and Virginian gentlemen had a reputation for deep drinking which they had been at some pains to deserve A rural society craves excitement and can get It very simply by such There Is always leisure to practices sleep afterwards even though your dinner came in the middle of the day and there Is good reason you should Mount Vernon In the Old Days be thlfsty if you have been since daywell in hand and he could take his break in the saddle wholesome pleasures both handsomeNot a Hard Drinker and with a free heart To ride bard and to drink hard ly There was little that was debonair seemed to go together In Virginia as and masterful as the rhymes in a song about the disciplined Inevitably and 'twas famous hard riding after young soldier He had taken Pallas’s the fox over tbe rough fields and gift: three alone lead life these through the dense thickets If Wash- to And because sovereign power ington drank only small beer or cldei is right to follow- right were and a couple of glasses of Madeira at right In the scorn of consequence” dinner it was no doubt because be wisdom But he took heed of his life very had found his quick blood tonic and was matured by pleasand had set himself a hard generally enough ure no less than by duty done He regimen as a soldier In almost any He did not scruple to supply drink loved a game of cards and paid his stakes upon enough for the thirstiest gathering company the rubber like every other when he presented himself to the votman of bis century ers of tbe countryside as a candidate Enjoyed a Good Horse Race for the house of burgesses "A hogsHe did not find Annapolis or even head and a barrel of punch too far away to be visPhiladelphia galgallons of wine lons of strong cider and dinner for ited for tbe pleasure of seeing a good his friends" was what he cheerfully horse race or enjoying a round of and the balls and evenings at the theater to paid for at his first election voteB shake the rustic dullness off of a too poll footed but a few hundred constant stay at home Mrs Washingall told ton enjoyed such outings such little Mount Vernon saw as much company andvas constant merriment and fiings into the simple world of provinas much as he did and good cheer as any house In Virginia cial fashion and the master was no martinet to his they could not sit waiting all the year guests even though they came upon for the short season at Williamsburg A young man at once so handsome errands “Doctor Laurie professional came here I may add drunk” says so famous and so punctilious in point of dress as Colonel Washington comment without could his quiet diary not but make a notable figure in any had come the doctor upon though “I want neither lace nor emsummons to attend Mrs Washington society and was next morning suffered to use broidery" was tbe order he sent to “Plain clothes with a gold his lancet for her relief No doubt a London good fellow when sober and not to be or silver button (If worn In genteel My stature lightly chided when drunk like many dress) are all I desire Is six feet and otherwise rather slender a gallant horseman gentleman than corpulent" But he was careful who Joined the meet of the countryside at the hospitable place to follow the material the color and the fit was should be of the best and most tastetbe hounds when tbe bunting ful and that very elegant stuffs should good be provided from over the sea for Mrs Fox Hunting Winter and Summer There was fox bunting winter and Washington and her children and very in season and out but the substantial for the servants who were lunimer sport was best In the frosty days of to be in attendance upon the houseJanuary and February when the year hold — a livery of white and scarlet ’Twas a point of pride with Virgin-Ianof the was young and the gentlemen to know how to dress both well country round gathered at Belvoir or and In the fashion and the master of Mount Vernon would have deemed it an impropriety to be less careful than his neighbors less wqll dressed than his station and fortune warranted He watched the tradesmen sharply “ ’Tis a custom I have some reason to believe with many shopkeepers and tradesmen In London" he wrote bluntly to the Messrs Cary "when they know goods are bespoken for exportation to palm sometimes old and sometimes very slight and Indifferent goods upon us taking care at the same time to advance the price” and he wished them informed that their distant customers would not be so duped Longed to Go Abroad He longed once and again to be quit the narrow life of the colony and stretch himself for a little upon the broader English stage at home “But I am tied by the leg” he told hla friends there "and must set inclination aside My Indulging myself in a trip to England depends upon so many contingencies which In all probability may never occur that I dare not even think of such a gratification" But the disappointment bred no real discontent There could be no better air or company to come to maturity In than were to be had there in Virginia If a young man were poised and master of himself "We have few things here striking to European travelers (except our abundant woods)” he professed when he wrote to his kinsman Richard Washington in England “but little variety a welcome reception among a few friends and the open and prevalent hospitality of the country’’ but it was a land that bred men and men of affairs In no common fashion Unrest In the Colonies Especially now after the quickening of pulses that had come with tbe French war and Its sweep of continental even of International forces across the colonial stage hitherto set only for petty and sectional affairs The colonies had grown and restless as the plot thickened and thrust them forward to a role of consequence in the empire such as they had never thought to play and the events which succeeded hurried them to a cyj-imaturity It was’ a season a young man was sure to ripen in and there was good The house of burgesses was company very quiet the year Washington first took his place In It and stood abashed to hear himself praised but before veteran Mr Robinson Its already speaker was dead a notable change had set in At Odds With Parliament Within- five years before the country on tbe St Lawrence and the lakes was well out of the hands of the French the parliament In England had entered upon measure of government which seemed meant of deliberate purpose to set the colonies agog and In America every body of counselors stood betw’een anger and amazement to see their people in danger to be so put upon of the The threat and pressure French power upon the frontiers had tnade the colonies thoughtful always so long as it lasted of their dependence upon England for succor and defense should there come a time of of need to Once and again— often enough must they keep them sensible how stand or fall succeed or fail with the power at home— their own raw levies had taken part with the king’s troops out of England In some clumsy stroke or other against a French stronghold in the north or a Spanish fortress in the south and now at last they had gone with English troops Into the field In a national cause Provincials and redcoats had joined for a final grapple with the French to settle once and for all who should be owners and masters on the coveted continent No Longer Dependent The issue had been decisive By the summer 9f 1760 Washington could write his kinsman In England that the French were so thoroughly drubbed and bumbled that there remained do to reduce Canada from end to end to tbe British power But the very thoroughness of the success wrought a revolution In the relations of the colonies to the mother It rid them of their sense country of dependence English regiments no had mustered their thousands doubt upon the battlefields of the war In order that the colonies might be tree to possess the continent and It was hard to see how the thing could have been accomplished without them But It had been accomplished and would not need to be done again Not Overawed by Foreigners It had shown the colonial Moreover militia how strong they were even In the presence of regulars They had borne an equal almost everywhere part in the fighting and rank and file they had left with a keen resentment the open their rude contempt for equipment and rustic discipline which and Insotoo many arrogant officers the regulars lent men among had shown They knew that they had proved themselves the equals of any man in the king's pay In the fighting and they had come out of the hot business confident that henceforth at any rate they could dispense with English troops and take care of themselves both They had lost their fear of the French and their awe of the English ’Twas hardly an opportune time for statesmen in London to make a new and larger place for England's authorIn America and yet that was what ity they Immediately attempted Save Chatham and Burke and a few discerning men who had neither place nor power there was no longer any one In England who knew though It were never so vaguely the real temper and character of the colonists 'Twas matter of common knowledge and comment it la true that men of Massachusetts were beyond all reason Impatient of command or restraint which was affecting an Independence from com hardly to be distinguished tumacy and Insubordination but what ground was there to suppose that like haughty and ungovernable spirit lurked In the loyal and quiet south or among tbe prudent traders and phlegmatic farmers who were making tbe middle colonies so rich and so regard-fuof themselves In every point of gain or Interest? "Hands Off” the British Policy Statesmen of an elder generation had had a sure Instinct what must be the feeling of Englishmen In America and had with “a wise and salutary neglect" suffered them to take their own way in every matter of Though ministry after ministry had asserted a rigorous and exacting supremacy for the mother country In and had deevery affair of commerce termined as they pleased what the colonies should be Buffered to manufacture and how they should be allowed to trade — with what merchants In wbat commodities in what bottoms within what limits— they had withheld their hands hitherto from all direct exercise of authority In the handling of the Internal affairs of the Bcveral settlements had given them lea always to originate their own legislation and their own measures of finance until had become with t’em a thing as If of Immemorial privilege A Shrewd Statesman Sir William Keith sometime governor of Pennsylvania had suggested to Sir Rotert Walpole that he should raise revenue from the colonies “What!' exclaimed that shrewd master of men- - "I have Old England set against me and do you think I will have New England likewise?" But men had come Into authority In England now who lacked this stout and every clement of sound sagacity discretion English arms and English money they could say had Bwept the French power from America in order that the colonies might no longer suffer menace or rivalry A great debt had been piled up in the process Should not the colonies who had ’reaped the chief benefit bear part of the cost? burbad themselves Incurred They densome debts no doubt In the strugould very gle and their assemblies to willing likely profess themselves vote what they could should his majesty call upon them and press them an and But orderly system adequate of taxation could not be wrought out by the separate measures of a dozen petty legislatures 'twere best the taxation should be direct and by parliament whose authority Burely no man outside turbulent Boston would be mad enough seriously to question or resist (TO BE CONTINUED) We are doing a lot to keep this town awake Several thouxanrts of our alarm ring In time to et a lot of peoua wake you up Be ( nly II tor email ones Big Hen every morning ple oft to work on time all day It Jr UAKt ing are easily the husbands they select women Some by Milk Can Bank Gone Provo Herald: — Henry Meyer whose faith s milk can sa a repoaltory for money has been shattered told the police that he regrets that he did not leave s000the accumulation ol twenty years of work slid denial In savings bank Inatead of tranalerrlng It to a van for the aavimia bank is still doing bualneaa at the same old plais while the milk can has disappeared and In with It the In 20 years means putSaving a week ting aside an average of If Meyer had deposS d this weekly a aavings account the 4 per cent pound intercut would hare brought the total amount to it he would safe where and absolutely be could get when he wanted It SI will open a saviuga account Tou can bank here by mail This bank baa been In bualneaa years Walker Brothers Bankers Salt Laka City Few people are disappointed unjil after marriage la love Write for Our Free Monument Booklet —It will thoroughly post yon on All the newest monument values dealgna are and moat approved shown gt remember they are all of the Ducat cut But we have priced them lowerthau cheap cut monuments Write Today lor booklet Alan ask for Kuna Mantle booklet Elias Morris & Co Sons Salt Lka Temple St MarblaWork Mantlss Monumant Tils War A POSITIVE asJ PERMANENT CURE FOR Liquor snd Addictions Drug as sidiBna Tkws It sa privately STITUTE IxUei treated aa hemei Sealk T nrh laka City An Expensive Library Robert Ingersoll was famous for the library of Infidel books which he posOne sessed day a reporter called on Mr Ingersoll for an Interview and among other questions asked was: “Would you mind telling me how much your library cost you Mr In- gersoll?’" Looking over his shelves he an- swered: “Well my boy those books cost me anyhow the governorship of Illinois and perhaps the presidency of the United States!" — Ladies’ Home Journal Their “Don’t a name" “What tell me Fate there Is nothing In makes you say that?" “We had two men here named Cannon and the other Well Cannon was fired and Ball bounced” — Baltimore American Rose Culture In Bulgaria one White and red roses are grown the Ball former being easier to cultivate but was giving only about half as much oil of The Individual an Inferior quality growers distil their own oil Twelve A Clean-u- p to fifteen kilos of roses are distilled He — If I call pa “pop” why can’t I of water until 12 with 60 kilos call ma “mop?" kilos of distillate are obtained eight She — If you do slie’ll wipe the to ten such lots are then united and redistilled into long necked flasks In floor with you which the oil separates on standing Truth To produce one kilo of oil requires Bill — Why are you so certain that 300u kilos of roses of 1200000 flowIn the Jones Is a truthful man? The roses are gathered ers Will — He had a eye one day early morning and distilled the same and when I asked black him how he got It The pure oil from the various day districts shows variations In odor and he told me that a man hit him— Cinphysical properties and Is therefore cinnati Enquirer skillfully blended by the distributing Ons Comfort Is Adulteration houses before sale “Maud has promised to become my very largely carried on by the peasants who use ginger grass oil palma wife “Weir” replied his friend consolrosa oil geranium oil etc The pro ingly “I shouldn’t worry too much ductlon for 1910 was 3148 kilos — The over it Women frequently break Pharmaceutical Era their promises" Some Old Beliefs Superfluous Reasons The here The old beliefs persist In the Agitator— I have my southern lands and a tragi comic in- friend a leaflet giving seven reasons A why you should come out on strike stance reaches me from Venice old cockatoo kept by a British resident The Other— Look ’ere mate to I’Ve got one reason why I don’t come as a pet bad been accustomed You go an promenade about the roof garden out—an’ there she Is when the family went up there But argue with ’er— London Opinion one day recently It extended its conSlightly Flustrated stitutional to a neighbor’s roof and The curate (beginning his sermon) was promptly shot by him He subse— My — er — dear friends the week quently offered as a complete explanation the plea that he thought it was last we took “The World” an owl and that there was a very last week we took “The Flesh” this Now week we will go to “The Devil” young baby In his household strdenta of ancient Greek and Roman High Finance augury know that the perching of an “Brown Is coming over to borrow owl on the root foreboded death to one of the Inmates while Ovid Is J10 from you" “Thanks I won’t let him have It” among those who charge screech owls with sucking the blood of Infants “Please do As a favor to me” No Cats tor Alarm “If I refuse you will you do anything rash?" to “Nothing rasher than propose that Wallaby girl It was a tossup between you In the first place In fact” And twenty then the degrees thermometer dropped “Why “Well to Is It a favor to you?” you see he wants to me" — Detroit Free Press pay It A Gasoline Victim Hiram — The doctor says Ezra is from suffering Silas — Guess that’s it bgoshj The feller acted jest Ike anyone else until he got that automobile — Judge |