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Show THE HELPER TIMES, HELPER, UTAH By Drinking Lots of Water Salt to Flush Kidney Bladder Bother or Take If Back Hurt I Eating too much rich food may produce kidney trouble in- some form, says a authority, becaus the acids created excite the kidneys. Then they become overworked, tet sluggish, clog up and cause all son of distress, particularly backache aint misery In the kidney region, rheumatic twinges, 6evere headaches, add stomach, constipation, torpid liver., sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irriwell-know- 3U "S-JU-J- n -- tation. v4. 4 . Southernmost Land's End, (Prepared by th N'allonal GeoRrraphtc Society. Wushlntctuii. P C. of England's peninsula that tapers to Land's Eud Is an unfriendly const with Its heavy sea and winds and thick fogs, and a Its rocks are ever dangerous one. ready to tear holes In the stoutest vessel; Its currents are ever ready to drive them on. Hut it Is a picturesque coast; a wonderfully TUK coast beautiful const, both upon summer days and In winter storms; a coast with many harbors, none too easy of entrance by reason of rocks and tides, for any bu the many Impossible smallest craft, but all made as serviceable as natural difficulties permit There Is Penzance, the sunny little sea city, whence came those picturesque stage pirates that made tuneful our youth. The coast i3 no more beautiful here on Mounts Bay than elsewhere to east or west ; not so rugged or so wild as on Cornwall's northern shore, but tbe curve of green cliff Is very smooth and lovely, the sun shines warmly; the roses bloom; every baby ripple murmurs a sea story; every tiny breeze brings a legend. It Is a fascinating place not only for what It Is. but what It suggests. There Is Little Mousehole, on her right, beyond Newlyn lovely Newlyn, beloved of fishermen and artists. Mousehole ("Mousel," In local speech) was an Important port before London was a town. As for Marazlon, to her left, who shall measure her years? According "In the days of ing a statement without backing It up to Cornish history, with authority, another criticized him Ezekiel the prophet" It was already for "fatal Ulogic end false romance an Important city, to which Phoeniof the movies." A Harvard professor, cian merchants came for tin. For a Albert Dushnell Hart, announced that town which has entertained Phoenihe had found 207 errors of fact In cians and giants and has looked for the hook. Another reviewer declared centuries at a castled Island floatthat "Mr. Hughes walks on all the ing In a marvelous sea, Marazion Is eggs without breaking a single one. remarkable dull. No one goes there Even the most rabid biographical fun- except to visit the Island which gives damentalist will find little to com- the bay Its name. St. Michael's Mount. plain about in this book." St Michael's Mount, little brother So there yon are! The case of UnMichel off the P.reton pen Hughes, the biographer, Is proof to Mont anew of the statement made by one coast, Is a rocky islet 2l!0 feet high writer that OeoVge Washington Is an and a half mile from shore, with "elusive" person, for although "for which It Is connected by a natural forty years, from enrly manhood until causeway uncovered for nbont three the time of his death, he was In- hours at ordlnnry low tides. With creasingly in the public eyt, the real southwest gales the Island may rel of official main an Island for weeks, and with man, high on his and personal reserve, lias been hard high seas be Inaccessible even to to come at." A part of this Is no doubt boats. It Is a most picturesque pile; due to the early biographers, such as Its steep grassy slope, In snrlng-tlm- e Parson Weems, who began building yellow with a million daffodils, up the myths about him, and the In- crowned with the Irregular Jumble of creasing years only served to give chapel and costle and ringed by a them an Increasing firmness of fixity gleaming sea. It hns much history. Like the other in the KpuIar mind. Michael. It stood oik? In a forest St well hns It when Hughes expressed he wrote, "No other man In history and was pagan, 'hrhtlnn. dmidleal; has suffered so mnch from malfeas- It has been tenanted by saint and ance In office by historians. Nearly all sinner, soldier, monk, nnd knight. of Washington's biographers have felt Dearest to the heart, pirhnps. Is the t It their duty not ony to correct his story of Cormoran. whom later Killer deareM clew, perwritings, but to prettify In thel" haps because of the memories of litand falsify his character. frantic zeal for denaturing this big, tle girls and boys who loved the blundering, bewildered giant they have story long ago We may follow th onnst-llneastdone a further injustice to all his ward and southward to ihe Lizard, whom of have contemporaries, they made either dwarfs or acolytes, and passing the great wireless station of his sincere adversaries demons of open poldlm. or cm ncros the little mallet and envy. it Is poor patri- neck of land to Knlnmtith, n very otism, ridiculous Idolatry and rank fair harbor. Megnvlssey. beyond. Is dishonesty to rob the host of otlier but ft fishing port, where pilchards st Higglers for liberty and progress sometimes become sardines; but of their Just deserts and to pers'tuate Fowe. to which wi- - next come, has old slanders against his enemies nt j considerable past Importance and home and abroad In order to turn ' present pride. Once It wns one nf the grout e- Washington Into a god. As n god Washington was n woeful figure; as a ports of the kingdom Itoats from man he wn tremendous." Fowey sailed by scores to the o the r! ge of Palais, to the No wonder then that "the real Washington" In yet to be delineated I plundering of Normandy. "Fowey One type of mind would make him n gallants" swaggered on all tbe then Superman: another a Jinn. P.ut the known sens, nnd when not busy with final terdict of history probably will strangers turned to trimming their decide that he was : hit of both and rivals nearer home. Ftnallv tbcv were e which it will draw of Mm accused of piracy snd Edward IV the will be somewhere n between the two confiscated their fillips and guve them to Dartmouth. extremes. Eastward from Fnwey npon the coast, In a cleft so narrow, so Jagged, thlng else, Miould be found sprightly, so rocky one wonders why men those clear and excellent In some one partic- It for n home. Ilea Polperro. the most ular effect, we are to Inquire of our picturesque, the most unspoiled of ninfters. P.ut the beautiful fouls are Cornish fishing pom, retaining all they that are universal, open nnd Its onclrnt dignity of Ufa end labor ready for nil thin;'; if not Instructed. iitifhittcred by the summer villas now ;tt last capable of being ko. MoIi beginning to crowd the cliffs nbove pleas-ure-lovln- g ; SCOTT WATSON AT will the fiiiiil Ter-dlof history ni George Wnshlngton be: Man or Supormnn? If we are to believe the enrly Any Wogra-plier- s of the Father of His Country, it will he Superman, a paragon o? nil the virtues, who was not only first in war, liret In peace and first In the henrts of his countrymen but first In faultless living. 8uch is the model which Piirson Wcems, who lnveuted the cherry tree story, established, and it hns been Industriously copied by mnuy Inter biographers, especially those who write our school histories. n If we nre to believe a inter of historians, It will he Man, a mini of his times with the habits of a man of his tltms. Including Its faults its well as its virtues In short, George Washington, the human being. For more than a century George Washington hns baffled the historians In their elToit to present the "real Washington." Forty years ago one of thun, I'rof. John Hach McMaster, pointed out the difllcultles which confront the biographer of Washington when he siild : "General Washington Is known to us, and President Washington. But George Washington Is nn unknown man. When at last he Is net before us as he lived we fdmll rend less of the cherry tree and more of the man. Naught surely that Is heroic will be omitted, but side by side with what Is heroic will appear much d that Is commonplace. We shall the gnat commander repairing defeat with marvelous retrlty. healing the dissensions of his oillcers and calming the passions of his mutinous l'.ut we shall also hear bis troops, oaths and see hltti In the terrible outbursts of passion to which Mr. Jefferson has alluded and one of which Mr. By ELMO 1 1 et gen-eraflo- he-hol- I,car has described!. 'We shall see Mm refusing to be paid for bis servieen by congress, ret expecting from the family of the poor mason the shilling ilint was due. We (shall know of him ;is the cold nnd forbidding character with whom no fellow-titaever ventured to live on close and familiar tcims. We shall respect nnd honor film for being not the greatest of genf rals, not the most n Mystery in OM Rails salntly of his rare, but a man with ninny human frailties and much common sense, who rose In the fullness of timo to be the political deliverer of cur country." Those words, written nenrly half a century ago, long before r.ny effort had been made to dispel the myths which had grown up around Washington, are strangely prophetic of the events of the pnst year which have brought up ngaln the question of the real Washington and focused public attention upon It more fdiarply than It has ever been focused before. Outstanding among those events was the criticism which met the attempt by novelone of America's ists to write the sort of Washington biography of which McMaster speaks. The novelist wns Hupert Hughes nnd his biography was "George Washington, the Human Kelng and the Hero," published by William Morrow A Company of New Tork. In fact, looking back upon thp year Just past It Is curious to note how many times the two names "Rupert Hughes" and "George Washington" have appeared In the news dispatches together. It began In January when Hughes made a speech at a banquet of the Sons of the American Revolution in Washington, I. C, In which be was described as having pictured Washington ns a "profane, irreligious and pleasure-lovintimn," Although It was afterword learned that he had been misquoted, the mischief was done ns soon ns the story went out. best-know- n g Immediately he was attacked nnd defended all over the world. Sermons were delivered on his speech, his name was heard In congress and put In the Congressional It cord, senators denounced him and he received clippings of newspaper comment on his speech In ali..ost every language. French. Gtrman. Imtch. Spanish and Italian. Interest In the controversy was revived In September uhen the Hughes tiook appeared. Kven though It did not aroiisv such a storm as did his speech. It. too, u met with divided opinion, both censure and praise. for the most pari historians themselves were far from uiianitiiou.i In their wrdlcts. Where o.ie praised the biographer for his painstaking care In minute documenting af his stiitementf and refriilulng from mak s gallon. They are smnllcr than the-- o timde todi.y. but heavier in proportion. Aii'effoil will he made to determine Just what they are and bow they were of Iron or steel mils Wi IV ft'Hiiil In the rtlllis of the old made. city of St. Joseph, in Florida. Th " r. Co along the of The Beautiful Sou's old f t. .loscph miij lota railroad. The f.iet There H no so wretched and so . ph'-tli'i! ih.'-,of rail were tome iter:1.!" a soul wherein M.tue part leu- Im vvuf-for nisi, altliou;:! (hey i.'ir Kilicy i s not H'en to Shine; i , b.'tn lying In tlio open In sloth and tile fr.f i soul o tin-rmr-Ilint It will iii. ike a sally at one end or linn S"i jriirs :iroii-.eI t rest (liiit II, ey lane hern to i.ro't lu r ; Mid l,uv it fumes to pavy-hi I'hlliniidphlu fur luvcjii- - that a to liiliel, blind nnd :ry- Fragment riglit-of-w.'i- y St jKMl-jstn- blue-penci- - I ph-ttir- taigne. Net Unusual l lg,io:-atiee- i t Annt-Wh- did little F.essie get at nl her birthday party? Mother- - Six chiefs, aud the books, f.,iir handker- its land. Polperro a Polperro Is a d!d not always a IM112 In I he ns pn.f. had few Tip of England. tales, one sees retire clearly why men chose these clefts for habitations. Conveniently near ure coves and caves, undiscoverable by the keenest customs oillcers, ami boatmen could d sail In and out of those narrow harbors fearing no pursuit Let us look attentively at Polperro, at Its closely huddled houses, built on and In and of the rock; Us roses and fuchsias and clematis, which bloom as luxuriantly ns In southern climes ; for these rock clefts are sheltered from winter winds nnd warmed by the southern sun ; at Its littlo d gleaming harbor, where at high tide the boats rock lazily and at low water a thousand silvery gulls pick up their dainty feet discreetly In the ooze; at Its sleep, slippery cliffs, whence one has such glorious breezy views of sea and rock and headland, and of the warm sheltered valley at one's feet. Polperro attends to Its own business, and that does not includo catering to tourists. There are always artists at Polperro. They and the fishermen observe each other, become friends, perhaps; but business Is not mentioned between them, Clovelly tills a rock cleft on toe north Devon shore as Polperro does upon the southern Cornish one, but there all comparisons end. Clovelly may be still an earnest fishing village, but her looks belie It. "The most exquisite village in England" some one called her, and she deserves the title. From the coach-roawhere, at the top of the cliffs, you enter upon OloveUy's one street, to the sen ; or, if you come by boat, from the harbor to Hobby Drive, and the public road, everything Is dainty, elegant of Its kind, groomed to Impossible perfecNo whitewash gleams whiter tion. or bluer or more delicately yellow than here nt Clovelly; no roses, fuchsias, clematis, nor lilies bloom In more profusion ; no trees are richer and greener, no vines more luxuriantly graceful than there. Never a bit of paper litters that one stony street, more staircase than roadway ; no speck of dnst mars shining windows or spotless curtains; no noise of railroads, of trolley cars, of traffic, breaks the soft stillness of this vlllnge of delight. Down the street goes a long procession of tourists arriving by coach from fildoford or P.oscastle, stopping at every house to "Oh!" and "Ah !" and perhaps to buy souvenirs or to eat strawberries and cream. old rock-boun- rock-boun- The moment your back lurts or kidneys aren't acting right, or If bladder bothers you, begin drinking lots of good water and also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts Is made-frothe acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with llthla, and has been used for years to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity; also to neutralize the acids to' the system bo that they no longer Irritate, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts can not injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent llthla-wa- ter drink which millions of men and women take now and then to help-keethe kidneys and urinary organs-cleanthus often avoiding serious kidney disorders. p , FE VEI haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLF.M OIL correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. FCit Coughs d32taCeIcjs d Arthurlcan Legend. At Tintagel more than at any place, perhaps, what we bring measures what we take away. Come full of the Arthurian legend; come with Tennyson, with Hawker, with Mnllory. nnd. Tintagel hi one i 90C cannot be kidiLu. Get rid of them now by regular treatments wii'a Inflamed eyellda or other eye irritations. You wiil find a soothinff and nafe remedy In MITCH EL. L EYE SALVE. BALL RTX'KEL) New York Cltf drussist. BOOKS nies here; It Is for romance. and the little stone bouses of the village cling to the sides of the ravine as best they can. As a harbor wt should not approve of It. yet It has served a fishing fleet for 4 years. Pleasant enough It Is of a summer day, but In spring or autumn storm, when the waves come hurling In with nppnlling weight nnd force lo suck out ga!n, as If they would drng the village Into the depths, when the fleet Jockeys for hours !g Ihe trough of a vicious sea. unable to make the opening between the black cliffs, yet In constant pull of the surf, one enn but wonder why men made n home there. St. Ives sits by n smooth circle of sen Into which n tongue of rocky Inn.l thrusts a bold curving headland. Inclosing nn Inner harbor In the grctit sweep of the bay. Here by the sen ihvelU the "retil" St. Ives. stone-buil- t Charming Plac. to wilbMnnd the worst iKblug town but It storms of sen nnd time. depend mum fiKh for At ft. Ivis we touch "modern con day when smuc-lln- g veiiicnces" once more and can take a If not nn nrt. train-v- ery reluctantly, ll0 (ju,t rlvuls, nnd, reading tack to 'London. chw-pri-v.:ed- , Any book you w?nt -- by mail, C 0. D. Deserct Book Co.. Lake City Utah. East So. Temple. &ut 44 WE PAY YOU CASH Jrl'r. old plt-- t (JlanuiDrtu, 6cnd ipxkH to WlTlTlMi uoi.) UUtTNiNU Ino.. WHtth At9..Nhw lurk City. CiO Reversible Names spite of "modern criticism," you Tintagel Is not a port. Occasionally a boat comes In under the cliff with supplies for the vlllnge, but houses are few and there Is little fishing. Port Isaac, farther down the coast, Is a typical Cornish port. A fteep carriage road descends to Port Tsanc; At a!l Drufjglsts BLACKHEADS of savor nought but romance. Here are the ruins of Tintagel about you; across the chasm the yet more formless remains of Terrahll, the twin fortresses known to the nrllest .Cornish earls, itoman, Suxon. Norman hns built here; hut It Is not for architecture or archeology that will SUCCESSFUL FOft SU YEARS SOC After reading about the revecxihlw name of one Mr. Pluuulp, Ilarrah J. Reynolds of Stonlngton, Conn., cnnie forward with hid genealogy, whcrelit a dozen reversihle uaiiies are dlseliwe.l. "Sly grandfather wns A'sa Reynold t. lie married linnnah Wells. Tliey hud children ; all lived to wt married. Their children's names were lhmn'ili, Asn, Emine, Irl, Azlza, Anna. ZereK, Axa, Attn, Allla, Namnn, Ilarrah. Ilarrah wns my father." Ilostoti 12 Globe. Climbing wife Is determined i" What's her Idea?" "Slie's convinced that she can keep up with a more rapid hunch of nelh hors." Boston Transcript. "So your move. CORN v f& 1 Ends pain at oncef In one minute pain from corns is nrled. Dr. SchoH'o Zino-ptu'- .s do this safely by removing the cnuso prcs iir.g "1 d, rabbinircif r'.'.ocs. Theyaro thin, sntistptie, healing. At all drug and 6hoe stores. Cost but a Ullle. m!i-catt-- DSSdhoWB TLino-pctd- s Tut ons on Pol-pen- W. N. U., (lie pain cone! Salt Laks City, No. 7- -1 |