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Show SWEETEN ACID STOMACH THIS PlEASANT WAY When there's distress two hours after eating-heartburn, indigestion, gas-suspect excess acid. The best way to correct this is with an alkaiL Physicians prescribe Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. A spoonful of Phillips' Milk of llagnesia in a glass of water neutralizes many times Its volume In excess acid; and does it at once. To try it is to be through with crude methods forever. Be sure to get genuine Phllllps' Milk of Magnesia. .All drugstores have the generous 25c and 50c bottles. Full directions in package. Danger in Distinction English Bishop Makes Bishop James Cannon, Jr., said at a dinner In Blackstone: "An English bishop has come out with the assertion that he Is ready to preach the eternal verities, but not to preach that the animals went into the ark two by two. "Now, it is dangerous to talk that way. It makes people think that some of us preachers preach what we don't believe in-;-preach lies, In short. "It was under somEt such feeling, no doubt, that a cross-examining lawyer once shouted at a preacher witness: "'Now, sir, remember. please, we want the truth and nothing but the truth here. You're not in the pulpit now, you know."-Detroit Free Press. An Eminent Physician Prescribed this Tonic AS a young man Dr. R. V. Pierce practiced medicine in Pennsylvania. His prescriptions met with such great demand that he moved to Buffalo, N.Y. and put np in ready· to-nse form his well-known tonic for the blood, Aolden Medical Discovery. It aidsdigestion,acts as a tonic,and enriches the blood-clears away pimples and annoying eruptions and tends to keep the complexion fresh and clear. This medicine comes in both fluid and tablets. Ask yonr druggist for J-\ Dr. Pierce's &olden Medical Discovery Burning the "Clavie" Ancient customs are still sometimes ohserved, just for the fun or lt. At Burl!'head, the "clavi~>" v:as burned again, the only place In Scotland whl're this old ceremonv Is still noticed. Casks of tar were plaeed on the ruins of an ancient Roman altar and lighted, and the simple villagers danced around the flames. As soon as the heat permit· ted,· the celelmmts rushed toward the fire, scramhllng for coveted burnIng fagots and charcoal. The charcoal is put In pieces up the cottage .chimney to keep spirits and witches from coming down. Takes Time A boy was telling his friend about his great-grandfather. "He's ninety-two today," he said. "I!ln't that wonderful?" "I don't think so." was the reply. "Look at the time It's takl'n him to do lt."-Chilrlren's Magazine, Two Borea We don't know which makes for the duller evening-a woman telling about the removal of her appendix or a man telling about his stock market operatlom:.-Judge. REGULAR PAINS The modern Miss needs no "time out" for the time of month. If you've ever taken Bayer Aspirin for a headache, you know how soon the pain subsides. It is just as efiective in the relief of those pains pe<:uliar to women! Don't dedicate certain days of every month to sufiering. It's oldfashiOned. It's unnecessary. Aspirin will always enable you to carry-on in comfort. Take enough to assure you complete comfort. If it is genuine aspirin it cannot possibly hurt you. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart. It docs nothing but stop the pain, so use it freely. Headaches come at inconvenient times. So do colds. But a little Bayer Aspirin will always save the day. Neuralgia. Neuritis. Rheumatism. Pains that once kept people home are forgotten hall an hour after taking a few of these remarkable tablets. So are the little nagging aches that bring fatigue and "nerves" by day or a slecpiess night. Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets cost so very little after all, that il doesn't pay to experiment with imitations! Vir' Intermountain News -Briefly Told by Busy Readers SUMI\IER WHITE HOUSE PLAN PUBLICITY I>RIVE o. TO DOLI> STOCK SHOW TO PROTECT GAl\IE SNOW IS SCANTY CllEYENNE, WYO.-Plans for establishment of a snmmer White House on the shores of B1"ooklyn lake, in the Jackson Ilole country, are going forward. In anticipation that President Hoover might spend a vacation there this snmmer, the Mt. States Telephone and Telegraph company is planning a $200,000 tel· ephone circuit into the terril?ory. GRAGE, IDA.-$200 has been ~p propriated by the county con•mtssioners to finance the annual Black and White day to be held here in May. POCATELLO, IDA.-Tb.e local chamber of commerce will make a good will tour of Kemmerer and other points in Wyoming in May. NAMPA, IDA.-Members of the Nampa Fish and Game league are planning to construct a group of trout rearing ponds, with a view of making the Boise Vtll1ey a better place to fi!:h and hunt. CALDWELL, IDA.-Members ot' the chamber ot' commerce from Boise to Wei.~er are planning a cooperative campaign of publicity for western Idaho. The main project will be a booklet, containing information about this section of the state. COALVILLE, UT.-Snow depth! on watershed of upper 'Yeber river serving the Eeho reser~oir are less this year than for several seasons, according to data gathered by a snow survey recently. POCATELLO, IDA.-A financial report presented recently to the city council showed Pocatello's in· debtedness has been rednced from $615,000 a year ago to $582,000 at present. NAMPA, ID.A.-150 men have been employed by the Oregon Short Line railroad for the work of re· ballasting 50 miles of the track on its right of way between this city and Glenns Ferry. MORONI, UT.-Citizens have organized a local corps to fight the coddling moth and to pre,s erve apples and other fruit from destruction. TOOELE, UT.-.An extensive war has been started by the farmers of Tooele county for the eradication ot ground squirrels. The pocket gopher campaign started early in March has been successful. PROVO, UT.-Adoption (}f a nn· lform wage scale for strawberry pickers was agreed upon by unani· mous action of representative grow· ers of Provo Bench at meeting held recently at Orem. FARMINGTON, UT.-The dates to~ the Davis county farm bureau day and fair were set as August 25 and 2G at a meeting of' Davi1 county farm bureau officers. PROVO, UT.-Strong condemna· tion of any increases in this year's tax levy in Provo City and school district was voiced in a set of res· olutions adopted by the members of the Provo real estate board at a recent meeting. OGDEN, UT.-The 14th Ward L. D. S. chapel at Adams avenue between Thirty-seventh and Thirtyeighth streets, erected at a cost of $53,000 was damaged to the esti· mated amount of $20,000 by a fire. SPANISH FORK, UT.-At a meeting of the Nebo district board of education members voted to bond the district for $250,000 in order to carry out a bu!lding program. The board will conduct an educational campaign for the informing of the public as to the need of the expan· Bion. MONROE, UT.-For each quart of flies Monroe residents catch and bring to the city council in AprH, fifty cents will he paid. In May the price Is to be 25 cents per quart.. This announcement was made with the order of city officials to clean up yards, ditches and corrals. TONOPAH, NEV.-A new· ore body 30 feet wide has been struck on the Gold Dome mine, 30 miles south of Battle Mountain. The new ore was opened on the :WO foot lev· el and will be developed. MOSCOW, IDA.-Concentrates to the amount of 38,761 tons were produced by the Hecla Mining company operating in the Coeur d'Alene district in northern Idaho, the pa.st year. These concentrates had a value of $1,760,709. IDAHO :i'AI..LS, IDA.-Declaring that Idlaho needs a greater outlet for her potato crop if the state is to continue in the market, the Idaho Potato Dealers association decided to file a freight rate complaint with the interstate commet·ce commission and the Idaho public utilities commission. Reduction on all potato shipments to territory east of Chicago will be asked. OGDEN, UT.-.A lady, recently arrested by the police, has brought suit for damages tolallino.... $15,000, by the occasioned loss alleged for arrest. CALD\VELL, ID.A.-About G500 automobile licenses have been issued in Canyon county this year. A reJuctlon of 3000 ll<:en~es as compared with last year is shown. SAI,T LAKI•J CIY, UT.-An increase of $!J8S,li32.16 in total resources of all 12 banks of Salt Lake City is notPd in tho comparati~e statement of 1930 and 11\:jl, 0 ® D • Thursday, April 9, 1931 THE MIDVALE JOURNAL ~ These Brands Are Intermountain Made And Deserve Your Support Sally Sez This Week'• Prize Story: -By Jemen One ~f the foremost reaaono for 1toln~ Jnter-monntain.. produets is: The,. are the best monc1 can boy any.,.·.here. Your money thus spent, is a bent>ftt to your own part of the eoontry instt>ad of buildln~r up, and helplnc supput eastern Industries. Save healtll and money b:r buying home prodncta. .MRS. HAUDE BOUSE. Ashton, Ida. CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS ELECTRICAL PRODUCTS CoRPORATION 1046 So. Main Salt Lake City ASK YOUR GROCER FOR 1 • We're Not So Smart This world is truly the Garden of the Gods. But we have not even begun to taste its fruits. As yet we are eating only grass.-American Magazine. For Every Bakin&' N eccl Those who boost for their localities should "practice what they preach" by patronizln&' home Industry. Hewletts' Jams Home Fruit Home Sugar Home Labor Best Quality Westover, Virginia, Estate of William Byrd II. (PreparPd by the National Geographic ~oclety, \Vashin~ton, D. c. l (WN U Service.) ill~ setti~g aside of .thre~ are.as in Virginia as the Coloma! • ationa! monum~>nt. by proclamation of President Hoover, ct·eates what might be termed a "junior national park'' that is a shrine of .\merlean histot·y. Included In the monument is the !'<Outhern half of Jamestown !~land, where the tir!<t \"irginia settlement was made; a portion of the town of Williamgburg; unci the eastern half of Yorktown, with the surrounding battlefield arPa. But there are many other shrines in this region in which so many of the leaders of the Hepubllc lived. As one wanders up the James river. journeys up the Rappahannock, follows the Virginia shore of the Potomac, or motors along the eastern foothills of the Blue Ridge, he discovers hundreds of fine ol<f estates that have played a part in the drama of America. What a galaxy of gems of residen· tial m·chitecture greet us as we ramble around the Commonwealth I ~fount Vernon, the home of homes In American history, has been der,;cribed nnd plctm·ed innumerable times. Monticello, second only to Mount Yernon In its sacredness as a shrine, um·ivaled in its perfection of line, angle, and curve, unsnrpas><ed in the magnificence of its situation, has also been de><cribed by many pens. Arlington, with Its memories of Robert E. Lee and its Yalhnlla of soldier dead round nmout, Is a third Virginia estate well known to all readers . But Westover-what fairer spot Is there than this fine old home. with its memories of the second William Byrd and his fair daughter Evelyn? The E'merald clasp of the golden necklace of the James, it has been called. .As one sits on that glorious lawn, with Its magnificent trees, two centuries old, history recreates itself. ' Courtly cavaliers in brilliant coats, flowing ruffles, satin knee breeches, and with silver shoe buckles, jeweled swords, and golden snuiT boxes, gather there and pay court to lovely ladles with powdered hair, patches, fans, and dresses of flowered brocade, who come and go as in the days when WiHiam Byrd II was known as the Black Swan and Evelyn's beauty was the toast of two continents. We see again William Byrd III, in his scarlet regimentals, riding orr to his command In the French and Indian war, or In his lordly coach-and-six with liveried outriders, going with his ladles to visit their neighbors at Shirley and Brandon and other seats of the "River Barons." The fine old mansion, chaste and beautiful In· Its design, mellowed to old rose in hue, lovingly restored by its present owners, stands In as rich a glory as In any period of Its history, in the midst of Its magnificent riverbordered, yew-and-elm-studded lawn. Shirley and Brandon. Shirley is its neighbor up the river, Brandon down the stream. Who that has visited Shirley could ever forget this fine old three-storied, dormer-winFor dowed, square-built mansion? nearly two centuries it has sheltered hundreds who have played distln· f.tJlshed roles In the drama of Americ:m history. Here came, to wed the lovely Elizabeth Hill, John Carter, son ¢/. "tKlng" Carter of Corotoman who <..'?."~ed a quarter of a million acres of Virginia's choicest land and built a tlozen baronial seats for his many sons and daughters; and here also came l.lght Horse Harry Lee to woo and win the fair Anne Bill Carter. Brandon, seat of the Virginia Ilarrisons-who can Jeseribe its simple heautv, with Its two wings, its eentml structure connecting them, and its de· Jightful garden, as It has been restored b:V Its present owner? A list of the flowers that gt·ace the , l'iver garden of Brandon would constil tute a catalogue of all that are beau· • tiful and capable of thriving In the kindly soil and genial climate of the James. ~'hey have been brought toiether in a way that combines the T I ! I. beauty of the formal and the charm of the unstudied. A Hi-foot grass walk leads down from the old garden to the river, and as one looks from the front porch of the house down through the vista formed by the trees of the lawn that was the old garden, the prospect of the James is unsurpas:<ed. One wishes that he could take his 'readers on a ramble around Williams· burg, visiting the house of George Wythe, teacher of Thomas .Jefferson, John ::1-larshall, James ~Ionroe, Henry C'lay, and Edmund Rruldolph; stopping at Bassett hall, where Tom Moore wrote "~'he Firefly,'' and Inspecting the John l'uge home, where the plot of Mary Johnston's "Audrey" was laid. And one regrets that space limitations permit only a mention of Claremont Manor, Upper Brandon, 'Veyanoke, Flower de Hundred, and Ampthill, colonial gems come down through the agE's to us. On the Upper Neck. But the Northern Neck calls us. Here is Sabin Hall, with a situation as beautiful and a garden as delightful as can be found in ali Amerl~. "King" Carter built it for his son Landon, one of whose wives was Maria Byrd of Westover. At Mount Airy, with Its three houses grouped about a central axis and connected by curved, covered ways, alwass have llved the Tayloes, intermarried with the Platers and the Ogles of Maryland. The race horses or Governor Ogle and those of Colonel Tayloe were the most famous of the early American turt', and Colonel Tay· loe's race track brought the elite of two colonies together. Fa1-ther up the • orthern Neck we come to Stratford, Ancestral home of the Lees of Virginia. From its pre· cincts went two signers of the Dec· laration of Lndependence. Descend· ants of the original owner have included governors of Virginia and Maryland, generals In four wars, members of constitutional conventions, and many another whose name graces the pages of American history. Today It stands as a pitiful relic of Its one-time glory, but a Connecticut chapter of the Daughters of the 'Confederacy has recently acqalred it and Is making plans for its restoration to the aspect of days when Richard Henry Lee, Francis Lightfoot Lee, Light Horse Harry Lee, and Robert E. Lee were born there. On the north bank of the Rappahannock, at Fredericksbl.l!'g, stands Chatham, the home of the Fltzhughs. There George Washington courted ~Iartha Custis, there Robert E. Lee courted Mary Randolph Curtis, there Abraham Lincoln visited the Army of the Potomac. And across the river Is the little home where lived Mary Washington, Mother of the First President. One loves to visit the shrine. Where Mary Washington Lived. When George Washington reached maturity and left the Ferry farm, where he had spent most of his tender years after leaving Wakefield, his sister Betty invited their mother to come to Kenmore, nearby, which Fielding Lewis had built for his bride. Her unswer was: ":\Iy wants are few. I feel perfectly competent to take care of ,myself." So she moved, Instead, to the little cottage because "Geot·ge thought It best." History raises the curtain and gives ns a glimpse of her life there. Her daughter frets at not hearing news of ner brother George at the front, and is admonished that "the sister of the commanding general should be an example of fnith and fortitude." Lafayette visits her. He enters her garden by the side gate and finds her raking )paves and wearing a Iinsey-woolsey c.lre~s and a hroad-hrimmed hat over a i'lP:tterl unrll'rcnp. She takPS his hands In both of hers. "Ah, :\Iarquis." she exclaims, "son have come to sPe an old woman. But I can make you wei• come without changing my dress." Speaking of this visit later, Lafayette declared that he had sPen "the only Homan mother living at this day." NEW --- ASK FOR Tun~ In on .MORSING Mill{ PROGRAMS week will be paid for the $5 • 00 per best 50 word article on ''Why you should use Intermountain made Goods" -Bimilar to above. Send your dory to Intermountain Products Column. P. 0. Box 1645, Salt Lake City, If your story :~~:e::.. ~t•:aeo~:;:~---~~~-.$5.00 Forest Dale Potato Chips No Equal For Crispness and QnaUty Fadory--47 Ken1ington Ave. Salt Lake City-Tel. By 1741 BEET SUGAR Believe It if You Can "She Correct this sentence: bossed her family as a girl," said the gosip, "but !lhe never henpecks her husband." SLEEP OS Eberhardi.'s MoorOflt Inner Sprin&' M: attres~es Flows Freely in Cold Weather THE ONLY HOME OWNED MILK Time-Tested THE ONLY HOME SUGAR ICO MOTOR OIL ~~1!1.9_M!lk . Sperry Drifted Snow Flour Salt Lake Mattress and Mfg. Co. Rapid Growth During the Nyubia, Japan's rainy season, bullrushes sometimes grow a foot or more in height during 24 hours. :~~OSTLER'S Chocolates SPUD BAR-MILK SLICKER BAR ACE HIGH BAR Lawyers Preponderate Among the 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence, the occupation of lawyer predominated, 26 of them belonging to that profession. Sacred Music An oratorio is a sacred composition of solo voices, chorus or orchestra. It is usually semi-dramatic, and the text is usually taken from the Scriptures. It is sung without action, scenery or costume. ~:lrlrr.~u· APE X HAIR 0ll For AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Statue Held Symbol of .. Unity of Two People Swimming It Up The entire object of true educaSenior Daniel V. del Burgo, contion is to make people not merely sol general of Chile In this coun· do the right things, but enjoy the try, bas given a most interesting right things. description of "The Christ of the Andes,'' the inspir.ing sculpture which stands at a mountainous el· and enJoy Beautiful Grounds thi• Summer evation of 4,000 meters (13,000 Write !or FREE catalog feet) on the Chilean-Argentine fron· It Tells How, What and When tier, says the newspaper La Verdad, of Caracas, Venezuela. Senior del Burga says of this appealing figure Seed and Nursery Speeialiab that the suggestion for its estabSALT LAKE CITY, UTAH lishment came from seeing the Statue of Liberty In New York White Eagle Unknown There is no species of white harbor. It is seven meters high eagle. White eagles are freaks of (23 feet) and weighs three tons. species which are normally darker It can be seen for many kilometers on all the routes connecting the in eolor. two republics of Argentina and Chile and is held ln veneration by the peoples of both nations bePUMPS-MOTORS-WATER WHEELS cause it was erected, In 1902, to BOUGHT-BOLD-REPAIRED seal and commemorate the peac 543-9 WEST 2nd SOUTH ful settlement of the final dispute SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH between the two great South Amer· WANTED: Nam~s of A~tents to aell Christ· republics. It was the women ican local your mas Carda In 1931 throach printer. Plana lor 1931 being made now. of these two countries who collect-, Send in your name for details which will ed most of the funds necessary to make your selllnc easier without the troubles, mistakes and dela71 you had in defray the cost of the statue and transportation and erection Write its factoriea. representlntr eutem W. N. U .-P. 0. Box 1545, Salt Lake City, and whose influence was most exerted on the respective govern~- ------- -- ----·-··--------. :--··-------------•• meytq to provide a site and perpet•• PIPE ANI) FITTINGS ual maintenance for the monument. •• New and Reclaimed Christ of the .Andes'' siands "The Wr:te us for Prices In a lonely and desolate spot, much the same, no doubt, as the wilder· • SALT LAKE PIPE CO. Salt Lnke City i• 475 Weal 6th So ness in which "The Man of Sor• Send this add and get a 10% discount ' rows" spent 40 days or his life in :• • prayer and fasting. Yet the statue ~-----------------------------------------------· is not really lonely nor deserted, Cathedrals but visited constantly by thousands A cathedral is the church which In their journeys to and fro, who curtains the official seat or throne call It, too, "The Christ of Amity," of a bishop. As a rule they are for the statue is the symbol of the.,. large, but a small building can bonds of friendship which henceserve, as in the case of the tiny ca- forth and forever knit these two thedral of the Byzantine Greek peoples together in a Christian fel· lowship. typEJ at A t.hens. PLANT NOW! PORTER WALTON CO. Thomas Electric Co. I . • AMBASSADOR HOTEL Jnot a step from the bainess center. Quiet and Homelike. Pop· Jar p r i c e d. meal!l. Rat.. $2.00 to $5.00 per day, Commercial rates te aale!Jmen. Bervict> Garage In Conn«:tion 145 l!lo. Stfl East C. A. SHAY, Manager Phone Was. 3965 Salt Lake CUr LISTEN IN ON THE AMBASSADOR SERANADERS EVERY SAT., 6:45 P. H. • |