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Show Thursday, November 10, 1932 Doctors Give Creosote For Dangerous Cougls ' For many year our best doctor have prescribed creosote in tome form or coughs, cold and bronchitis, knowing how dangerous it it to let them bang on. Creomulaion with creosote and six Other highly important medicinal eJe menis, quickly and effectively stop all coughs and colds that otherwise might lead to serious trouble. Creomulsion Is powerful in the treat tnent of all colds and coughs no matter how long standing, yet it is absolutely harmless and is pleasant and easy to take. Your own druggist guarantees by refunding your money if you re not relieved after taking Creomul-io- n as directed. Beware the cough or cold that hings on. Always keep Creo mulsion on hand for instant use. (adv.) THE Fl It's 'mm ftar I NEPHI. UTAH TIMES-NEW- S, PAGE THREE fhis Week 3mmmi Va-W- J mnms ,J ARTHUR - li"' Pd fjszssa tr . a II vi iu Sfc Creo-mulsi- Trail for "Hikers" As conceived by Its proponents and already pHrtly realised, the Appala-chltrail Is a footpath for hikers In the Appalachian mountains, extending from Maine to Georgia, a distance of some 1,300 miles. To the end of 1929 approximately 500 miles of this trail have been constructed, for the most part hr New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Virginia. The. trail shuns automobile roads and lowlands, the purpose being to provide access to mountains and wild country of the eastern highlands for tramping, camping and outdoor recreation. Its route is the crest line of the Appalachian system, providing a skyline trail over mountain summits wherever the outlooks warrant and the ground permits the eA JT,SIS Zu.Z77SZ ffSZS Wmi,, TZ rf-C- d. t yf4Hf jt7S2ti 4aiy m AZm G r- -i - -J Paul Boncour, French minister of war, has a new plan to keep Europe peaceable. He would have I a "Kuropean army" with a European general Btaff. This army and staff would become active whenever the peace of Continental Europe might be threatened. An Interesting suggestion, but all would depend on who might be boss of the general staff of that "European army." The League of Nations, as Lloyd George has said, is "fading away" because it Is simply the instrument of two big European powers, with other mem I bers of the League a mere chorus. The real plan for Europe would be a "United States of Europe," such a union of States as we have here. But that will not come In an other thousand years. Races, languages, religions and ancient fueds make It impossible. The oldest Turk, Zaro Agha, re turns home to Istanbul, after wandering about America and Europe t.ytlS for two years, collecting money. He believes that he is 156 years old, and he Is probably far beyond 100. His wife, past 80, pulled her veil over her face when she saw htm coming in European clothing, not believing that he could be the same man In such strange garb. When she saw it was really he she gave bread to all the stray dogs In the neighborhood in thanksgiving for his safety. Clothes make a difference. Some savages that once wore only breech cloths, and now wear civilized coats and trousers, still wear the breech cloth under the trousers. Their the ory is that If you lack a breech cloth you are not decently dressed The first automobiles had dash boards. It is hard to change a habit. climb. Tired . . Nervous Wife Wins Back I Pep raw nerve S . Ve-ii- ii sl SJ A? rCC lQ Ar Mid HER 3 soothed. She banished that 'dead tired" feel- tnff Won nca vnuth ful color restful nights, active days all because she rid her system of bowel clogging wastes that were sapping her vitality. NR Tablets (Nature's Remedy)--tri- e mild, safe, all vegetable laxative worked the Uanstormation. Try it for constipation, biliousness bead- acnes, aizzyspei is, how recolds See freshed you feel. At all druggists' ZD cents. relief tot acid ind " Quick tion. heartburn. Only.10c St. Johns, Newfoundland, reports that prosperity has come back to northern Labrador. The Rev. B. na TUmS Tolerant Those people In the next yard aren't In our set. Bildoe But they have a fine set of garden tools. Brooklyn Eagle. Mrs. Bildoe ZZju PHOTOS FROM EJ-- BRONCHI-LYPTU- S jftSO f M S Upt lt i i W.W'OOt President Hoover recently issued the annual Presidential proclamation calling upon Americans to set aside Thursday, November 24, as Thanksgiving day. Above is shown a facsimile of the first Presidential Thanksgiving proclamation, issued by George Washington and setting the date as Thursday, November 26, 1789. fi M ZCf m By ELMO SCOTT WATSON S NOVEMBER 24 approaches, 91 Amer- icans realize that It's about "time to talk turkey." For November 24 Is Thanksgiving day and what would the American Thanksgiving day dinner table be without the presence of Act Promptly When Bladder a roasted turkey? Irregularities Disturb Sleep But before proceeding with a disHeed promptly bladder Ircussion of the species of fowl who, regularities; burning, scanty once a year, is our national bird, It might not and too frequent passage and be amiss to consider the origin of that typicalgetting up at night They may ly American expression "to talk turkey." If a warn of some disordered kidney certain tradition is to be believed, it had its or bladder condition. Try Doan's Pills. No other adverorigin In an incident which Is as typically Amertised diuretic is so widely used. ican as Is the custom of observing a ThanksNone so well recommended. giving day on the last Thursday In November LGetiDoan's today. and making It a feast day of typically-America- n edibles, chief of which is the native American turkey. Away back in the early, days (just when no one seems to know) in one of the thirteen coloQ m m af nrVisv a I nies (it cannot be stated posltlrely which one, fr B M 111 NH although from certain aspects of the Incident ''i? the suspicion arises that a Yankee was one of "J A Diuretic for the the actors,) an Indian and a white man agreed Kidneys to hunt together for a day and then to divide the spoils. This they did and the division proceeded agreeably enough until only a crow and The Linguist a turkey remained. Employer "Do you know shortThereupon the white man, volubly frank and hand?" Applicant "Like a native, seemingly generous In manner, said "Now you sir." London Humorist. may have the crow and I'll take the turkey; or I'll take the turkey and you may have the crow." But the red man was not so easily taken ERE IT IS THE WORLD'S BEST In by this glib proposal and replied Indignantly Bronchitis For ConghColda BRONCHI-LYPTU"Huh I Why you no talk turkey to me?" And S for Coughs No Olnoroforni. No Naroouo- - No Alcohol ever since that time, so says the legend,, when Made from the Bucalyptna. a wonder In Bronchial Tluables. AtfoardroggisloT write a person began to dissemble, to conceal his real for ITKKE (ample. LAB., M Ceres Art., Lot Aniteles, Calif. meaning In a superfluity of words, to attempt to Sold en KearantM or money bcK "put over" something on another, it became time i MILLION BOTTLES SOLD LAST YEAR for the other to advise him to "talk turkey," L e. to be straightforward and get down to A One tune can be repeated until business. it sounds like noise. Reference was made above to the fact that once a year the turkey Is our national bird. It seems a Is It the giraffe that great Is Just possible that he might have been our nawaste of material. tional bird the other 364 days that is, If a suggestion made by Jolly old Ben Franklin had been followed. And thereby hangs the tale of the first coins and seals that came from the mint when the new republic of the United States of America was established. These were rather crude affairs and the eagle on them looked very much like a turkey and a slightly tipsy turkey at that I Whereupon Franklin wrote this comment: "I am not displeased that the figure Is A man lass old as his organs; moat man can not known as a bald eagle, but looks more like be vigorous and healthy at 60 as well as at ISr a turkey. For In truth, the turkey is In com, Va 85, if they will but taks care of themselves properly. Invigorate your vital organs with parison a much more respectable bird, and withGold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules. It is one lie Is besides of the most reliable preparations known al a true native of America. to medicine. It has been widely prescribed (though a little vain and silly, it Is true, but for 237 years, the best proof that it works. not the worse emblem for that) a bird of cour' Insist on GOLD MEDAL. 35c & 75c age, and would not hesitate to attack a grenFREE A generous sample, free, if adier of the British guards, who should presume to enter his farmyard with a red coat on." you print your name and address across this advertisement and mail Franklin was quite right In calling the turkey to Department "A", care of a "true native of America." That he was one GOLD MEDAL of the authentic "first Americans" Is proved by HAARLEM OIL COMPANY the fact that his bonoa in fossil deposits show 320 36th Street, Brooklyn, New York that he is of prehistoric origin, and what appears to have been roosting places for dom- - C3v Z. - 'Hill ris Your Rest Disturbed? New Peace Plan Zaro Agha Goes Home Around the Igloo A Really Big Shovel u a BR1SBANB f i s. eeriij.e.a.uiW-i- : - J- - -- i. II ft J estic turkeys have been found attached to pueblos and cliff dwellings in excavated ruins of untold centuries ago. The Spaniards who conquered Mexico found turkeys, both wild and domesticated, in that country as early as 1519 and it was no less a person than Cortez's own confessor, Fra who wrote back to Spain from Mexico the following "There is a bird, much greater in bigness than a peacock, that is found within the forests and vegas all over this country. It surpasses as food any wild bird we have found up to this time. The natives do shoot these birds with arrows and catch them In various kinds of springes and snares. Specimens of this splendid fowl were almost immediately sent back to Spain and the Jewish merchants, who were the leading dealers in such commodities at the time, thought they looked more like peacocks than anything else. The Hebrew word for peacock was "tukkl," from a Hindu word "toka," meaning "trailing skirt," and these merchants began calling them "tukkls" or "American tukkls." Soon the word "tukkl" became corrupted to "turkey" and led to a confusion as to their origin, even though they were of American rather than Turkish nativity. From Spain the new delicacy from the New world spread to other parts of Europe and won Instant favor. Turkeys were taken to Persia by Armenians, and to Batavia by the Dutch. In France where the turkey was, and is, called "dinde" because they believed It. hailed from India the bird was first served for the wedding feast of the lively young Charles IX and Elizabeth of Austria. Twelve turkeys were considered fine enough for a royal gift from the merchants of Amiens to Charles. By the middle of the century, England met the bird, and In another 20 years It was being plentifully raised in various sections of Great Britain. And now comes one of the curious paradoxes of history. In that this "native American" became an immigrant to the shores of his own land. In 1620 a letter written to Governor Fndl-cot- t In Salem, Mass., by his agents in London assured him that "tame turkies shall be sent you by the nexte shlppe." So In a short time the New England variety of the North American wild turkey was being mixed with his partly domesticated descendant from- Mexico via England thus completing a curious tour. Aga-pid- - 100-yea- r, round-the-worl- d I t It Is probable that not one turkey in a thousand which will grace the Thanksgiving table this year will he a native wild turkey. For the original New England wild turkey (Meleagres Americana) Is all but extinct in the part of the country where he first made his appearance on that festal board. The wild turkey of today (Meleagres gallapavo sllvestris,) according to ornithologists, Is found In greatly reduced numbers only from Pennsylvania and Ohio south to the gulf states and west to Arkansas. There Is a smaller variety, the Florida wild turkey. In that state; In southern Texas Is another, the Rio Grande turkey and In the Rocky mountain region, another, Merriam's turkey. All modern domesticated turkeys are derived from the Mexican wild turkey (Meleagres Mexicana) of the earliest days. From him comes the exquisite penciling of modern domesticated turkeys. But to get back to why the turkey occupies such a prominent place on our Thanksgiving day dinner table of that first celebration, held in Plymouth In 1021, Edward Winslow wrote back to England as follows: "Our harvest being gotten In, our Governor sent foure men on fowling, that so we might after a more speciall manner rejoyce together, after we had gathered In the fruit of our labours; they foure In one day killed as much fowle, as with a little help beside, served the company almost a week, at which time amongst other recreations, we exercised our Amies, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest King Massasoyt, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five Deere, which they brought to the Plantation and bestowed on our Governor, and upon the Captaine (Standish) and others." There is no doubt that chief among the "fowle" at this feast was the native wild tui key. However, according .to Mary Austin, "Our elevation of the turkey to the place of honor on the Thanksgiving dinner table Is not entirely owing to Its traditional Importance to the first American Thanksgiving day; It is a tribute to the homemaking Instinct of the Puritad women who made the turkey brood a part of that association of men and their wild brethren which is Inseparable from the human idea of home. The Indians, domesticated the turkey chiefly for his feathers, which they prized. But I have no doubt that th3 English housew'fe, arriving chickenless, got her first feelinir of being at home from the brooding cluck of the turkey hen about her door." (Q br Western Nswapaper Union.) Lenz, Moravian missionary, brings the news. Fish have been running heavily, also other necessary things, and every family is well supplied for the winter. Mr. Mason heads the news "Prosperity Just Around the Igloo." They have igloos in northern Labrador. Machinery that makes manual labor less and less necessary is our big problem now. It is also the hope of civilization, which will come eventually. Machinery will be a problem for a little while, then a great blessing, and meanwhile you admire the mechanical marvels that will some day set men free from physical slavery. The Wall Street Journal describes a new shovel built by the Marion, Ohio, Steam Shovel Comx pany, How many thousands of men working painfully with pick and shovel will this giant shovel replace? Operated by electricity, it lifts up 54,000 pounds of earth at every bite, and the operator, with his shovel at the end of a long arm. can drop the earth 200 feet from the shovel, and on top of a seven story building if desired. This giant shovel will be used to strip the earth seventy feet deep, from the top of a rich coal field, laying bare the coal, which will also be scooped up, steam shovels doing away with painful mining underground. Copper, the metal, Is an empire in itself. The electrical industry rests on copper, which does not disappear in rust like iron. You may dig up copper pipes, In good condition, that were put underrgound in the Island of Crete before Deada-lu-s flew to safety from the Labyrinth. Copper, like everything else, sells too cheap and the emperors of copper will meet in New York soon to see what can be done about making prices better. The mysterious word "Katanga" originating in Africa, is most powerful in the copper empire. Britishers were wise when they gathered in those great South African properties that now give them the greatest gold, diamond and copper mines. Ellensburg, in the State of Wash ington, announces an Important gold strike in the Swauk area. Ten thousand dollars worth of gold, almost pure, was taken from one small pocket. This Interests everybody more than four years ago. The human mind responds to the magic word "gold." A really great gold discovery might bring prosperity around the corner, and In sight. It was the California gold rush In 1849 that did more than anything else to get rid of one depressed condition. Steam drove away the depression after the battle of Waterloo. Gold did it in the forties. Electric light and power did it in the latter part of the last century. Automobiles did it in the beginning of this century, after the depression of 1907. Then the Great War, and the outpouring of billions upset everything. Something will bring back prosperity now, but nobody knows what it is. Possibly hard work will do it. (.1932, br King Fatu Syndicate, Inc.) IVlGrcolizcdWax Skin FimYoung Keepsmd HiMdifta4. OM Mia tMrtiei m I ia oil luttii ail liUU ias UmtmmU rouu. die, hnty mnd ItuiM, m4 voivwty. Your look yaer to WtsaK u tka sUOtiats fmmmmm MrrinlOM mumm u m ptai wiUh ml u feat a- -l then tuft JV4euil4 of yiMv earn. 1m F&wdsmrf aulii At tlruc mumw. at. Salt Lake City's "Newest Hotel "Hi mmmmm HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 1.30 Jmt aii Uormon Tahtmttk ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. Landed Record Bass The world's record small mouth bass, weighing 13 pounds 8 ounces, was captured recently by "Red" Kennedy in Lake Gertrude, Lake county, Florida. The word "captured" is used advisedly, since Kennedy's line broke as the fish was being hauled Into the boat Fortunately be waa able to grab his prize and get It aboard, although he lost his rod overboard in the process. Kennedy attributes his luck to the fact that. In addition to being himself, tie was fishing with a plug. d red-heade- d Economies Professor When Is a bank most solid? Student When it is most liquid. Head CL Put Mentholatum in the nostrils to relieve congestion and clear the breathing passages. lsHSMjflTCll Absent Minded Auctioneer Any bid handsome bridge lamp? Woman's Voice Two for this This Mother Had Problem As a rule, milk Is about the best food for children, but there are times when they are much better off without it It should always be left off when children show by fever ish, fretful or cross spells, by bad breath, coated tongue, sallow skin, indigestion, biliousness, etc., that their stomach and bowels are out of order. In cases like this, California Fig Syrup never falls to work wonders, by the quick and gentle way it removes all the souring waste which is causing the trouble, regulates the stomach and bowels and gives these organs tone and strength so they continue to act normally of their own accord. Children love Its rich, fruity flavor and It's purely vegetable and harmless, even for babies. Millions of mothers have proved Its merit and reliability in over ou years of steadily Increasing nse. A Western mother, Mrs. May Suavely, Montrose, California, says : "My little girL Edna's, tendency to constipation was a problem to me until I began giving her California Fig Syrup. It helped her right away and soon her stomach and bowels were acting perfectly. Since then I've never had to have any advice about her bowels. I have also used California Fig Syrup with my little boy, with equal success." To be sure of getting the genuine, which physicians endorse, always ask for California Fig Syrup by the full name. In Hollywood "I've got a new plot for a movie." Louisville "Why be radical?" Courier-Journa- l. fi Clear Brain needs a sfomach s3 clean When lntt nal poison 1 tid accumulation clog hi aystem, your child U likely to fall down in hi tudiea Iom neaded enr trow anaemic- Keep htm clean Inside and yon keep him vital y ht. iiarfielfi Tea, at least Cfcica u araefc. ima piaasant. harmleam far to At all rirugnit). clmtnam Internally. P.O. "nklinaN.Y. it. lAMfli fftEKl earHatd Jm Ca. field tea a. . , a natural laiativs drink |