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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE. UTAH Cradle of Liberty' fffeddinff Gifts Buy a Farm Now. theaoa Ub4 la cheaper thu It wtn erar be Main. Th II. a Haaraad Admin 1st ratio la preparvd to farnlah tr lnlormatloa to bomaarekara rceardins tannine opportunities. W hava not bins to aU; bo monoy to load; only Information to civa. Writ mo fully with Ntarcnco to your naeda, Nama tha atata yon want to learn about- - 1. I Ed ward a, Uanar. Asrtculturai Section, V. S. Kallroad Admlniatratton. Koom ti. WaabinctoB, IX C adv. . e ..Nothing can be more appro-.jatnor so well treasured as Park's. Oar modest rft from ease the way. Perfectly price fe to -- 7;It!(h BOYD s 4I . order by mail. C ' The mere fact that a man doesn't call yon a liar Is no reason that be doesn't think yon are one. PARK MAKERS 0FJEWE1AY iAU UK CTTI Cutlcura for Pimply Face. pimples and blackheads smear them with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off In five minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to Cutlcura Talcum. Adr. MAM STRICT go To remove WRVTrD H yon want bis wage learn baroer iraae. many small etd brtT: good opportunities open . 0,er draft se. Barber in army bar Get prepared officers commission. ekS Call or write. Motor Barber nl Jill fr JjEe, 8. West Temple 43 COULD St. ealt Lake la-du- de City. Silence Is more eloquent than words. Carlyle. NOT HOLD ARMADILLO Admits Underestimating Strength of Little Animal He Was Trying to Capture. Writer KIDNEYS ' WEAKENING? BETTER' LOOK OUT?; was a small boy, W. H. Hudson, the author of "Far Away and fame to grier wmie ne long Ago, single-hande- d to cap-was attempting an armadillo. One day, he says, J was standing on the mound at the iit of a moat, some 40 yards from ibere men were at work, when an irmadillo bolted from his earth and, ranning to the very spot where I was, Binding, bi:an vigorously digging to tary himself In the soil. Neither men nor dogs had seen him, ud I at once determined to capture Mm unaided by anyone. I Imagined that it would prove to be a very easy laid hold of his ask. Accordingly, black, tail with both hands ind began tugging to get him off the pound, but could not move him. He lent on digging furiously, and getting deeper and deeper Into the earth, and I won found that Instead of my pulling him out he was pulling me In after him. It hurt my pride to think that in animal no larger than a cat was beating nie in a trial of strength, and I held on more tenaciously than ever tugged and strained more violent ly, until not to lose hi in I had to go down flat on the ground.' But it was all for nothing. First my hands and then my aching arms were mrrled down into the earth, and I was forced to release my hold and get up to rid myself of the mold that he had been throwing up Into my face and all over my head, neck and shoulders. well-know- Frank. "What are you selling bananas for "To make a living." fiddl Mmb !lsf Companion. IS NOT GREELEY'S Great Editor Long Wrongly Credited With Advice, "Go West, Young Man, Go West." The famous epigram "Go West, man, go West," so commonly ittributed to the pen of Horace Gree-te- j. was not written flrat by that foung ven-trab- le editor of the New York Trite, but by John L. B. Soule, editor of the Terre Haute Express. In 1851 Richard Thompson, afterward secretary of the navy, urged Soule to go west and grow up with the country, ud praised the editor's talents as a witer. He wagered a barrel of flour "at Soule could write an article that tould be attributed to Horace Greedy. The result of the suggestion was column editorial about the West's opportunities for young men. It dec- lared that Horace Greeley could nev-- f have given a young man better'ad-ic- e than contained In the words, "Go fft, young man." Although stated merely as Soule thought Greeley "light have put It, newspapers all over the country began to credit Greedy with the epigram. So widespread i the quotation become that Gree-pape- r i'-- from reprinted the eSltorial the following the Express, with footnote "The : expression of this sentiment Ms been attributed to the editor of Tribune erroneously. But so fully J w he concur In the advice it gives ttat he indorses most heartily the Pigrammatlc advice of the Terre ute Express, and Joins in saying, w West, young man. go West'" A fte Are Here Told the Best Remedy for Their Troubles, Freemont, f - FAMOUS OLD d ' EPIGRAM Sky Went Along. woman wjs leaving a home where h&d hpon am aha t.ntt. warded the train whlrh whs to r away, the tears came fast little e . own, HU110US lO coiuion . HEW YORK HAS LIBERTY BELL - Liberty bell in hall, Philadelphia, Is famous throughout the world. Its ringing proclaimed liberty July 4, 1776, and ever since It has been sacred to all Americans. Everybody knows all about that bell, but the New York Herald tells of another which played a part in the stirring scenes of the republic's founding. The Herald says: Here in New York city is another liberty bell, a bell whose history is as remarkable as that of the Liberty bell n Philadelphia, but which is practl-ll- y unknown except to a few persons who have delved into ancient records ind documents concerning it. New York city's liberty bell hangs ;oncealed in the belfry of the Dutch Dhurch at Fifth avenue and Forty-eight- h street It has been in New York city since 1731. It proclaimed liberty to the citizens July 9, 1776, when Gen. George Washington read the adopted Declaration of Independence to the American troops and asked for its acceptance and ratification. Had the army not acclaimed liberty at that time and agreed to fight to death for freedom of Independence the Declaration would have become a worthless scrap of paper. But the army did acclaim tidliberty, and the bell rang out the ings here Just as the other bell in bePhiladelphia had done five days fore. Legacy to Old Dutch Church. New York city's Liberty bell was church given as a legacy to the Dutch of by one of the oldest inhabitants this city, Abraham de Peyster, who served as mayor, treasurer and councilor and as governor in 1701, and whose statue now stands in the place of that of George IH in the Bowling Green. The bell was cast In Amsterdam and bears an Inscription in Dutch, which, translated, reads: "I was made by Le Gravae and N. Muller, Amsterdam, 1731. Abraham de died Aug. Peyster, born July 8, 1657; church, Dutch to the A S, 1728. legacy New York." Almost the first public service of the bell was tolling for the death of George I, the German king of Great Britain, his .nd announcing the succession of forson George II. It welcomed seven Admiral George eign governors, from In Clinton to Sir William Tyron, and THE J FANEUIL fn mmmmmm; ! HALL. - "i " the effect of a cheering dlscov- I. m "e nan just made. "Why, motner. "claimed, "the sky is going right jWopie Wnd, Warning the citizens to protect themselves against the negroes, who threatened to rise and murdef the whites. They burned Governor Clarke's residence within the fort and the homes of Admiral Sir Peter Warren, Winant Van Zandt, Colonel Phlllipse and others. 1755 Announced the defeat of General Braddock. 1758 Announced the burning of Fort William Henry and the disaster at Ticonderoga. 1759 Rang for the capture of Quebec. 1760 Tolled for the death of George II and later for the accession of George III. 1764 Citizens called by the bell to protect the fishermen who had been r. impressed by a British The same day the Sons of Liberty were organized and summoned to meet by strokes of the bell. 1770 The British Sixteenth regiment attacked the Sons of Liberty, who had been summoned by the bell, and then occurred the battle of Golden Hill, when the first blood was shed in the American revolution, for it was five years before the battle of Lexington. 1775 News of the battle of Lexington reached New York city, and the citizens were summoned by the bell to seize a vessel in the harbor loaded with stores for the British army at Boston. 1775 News of the battle of Ticonderoga, and later of the battle of Bunker Hill, announced by the ringing of the bell. 1776 General proWashington claimed the Declaration of Independence to the American army, and the Liberty bell and other bells In the city rang for several hours. m man-of-wa- i 1 vases' U f , i FY !! 7TI J i . I s P tJr if :'ja,-u-, . r i JO P Proper Food Important A" a man thlnketh so Is he." Yes; r01 "'so: "As a man eateth so doth think." For the brain, a part of '2"e b(fly, Is bunt of fooL Los Angelei I Times. WORTH three times but failed. "Berry, $10,000 Lee after ceasing to be an executioner, Bet Flics! "SE3, Kill All riaead anywhere. DAISY FLY KILLKH attract aM flie. Neat, gltian, ornamental, aoaeenient and at Bradford as a phrenologist and eon. Mad ef BMtaE character reader," said Datas. Ills cant apill or tip over. ill not aoii eriniuro examcard bore the words: "Heads Guaranteed. iythin ined." He examined a good many FLY KIM. Kit at roar dealer or Of course you have heard of Datas, heads in his time." BOkJEK3.PllwKL'EVirooUTa. H.T. HAROLD the human encyclopedia the man " Dressed to Kill In who can memorize and reel off dates h name of a new is the quicker than the fire of a machine fabric CutictiraSoap being manufactured in Enggun ; the man on whose head the docIs land. an a fine stuff and The serge tors have placed a price of 2,000? Ideal for the "But I am not anxious to sell it yet essential part of projectiles. And now that the war Is over the for dissection," Datas told a writer Ccinplexion s for London the other day. stuff is going into the making of bo end ou. ininme. nil ui . i. l, Kunramm "It Is worth more to me than 2,000." clothes instead of shells, says the Sample each free of "Oatleara, Deal. E, Botte. " American. It North Datas has lately been devouring Philadelphia war facts and had just added a couple ought to make "staggeringly" Nova Scotia Cherries. clothes, don't you think? One of thousand in two and a half hours The province of Nova Scotia raises anto woman might say quite truly to his repertoire when we met. exceedingly large and luscious black "For an outlay of twopence," he other: "Oh, my dear, she was dressed cherries. ehellcloth." to in all kill, said, "I bought a little book on a Or, on the other hand, what clever bookstall, called Two Thousand Facts About the War.' I bought It and read opportunity for the feminine cat to the list through In two and a half say that her dear enemy has "shock1 hours and then knew it by. heart." ing taste in the matter of clothes!" New tbe Tims to Gat Rid ef Hum Ugly Spots Thwe'i bo longer tb slightest Deed of feeling There is no doubt about it I testaahamed of our freckles, as Othlno double Boy's Bill of Fare. ed Datas with the book In my hand, Is guaranteed to remora these bomely George Bailey, answering the in- strength and no matter what quesdon I asked spots. Simple get as ounce of Othtno doable him dates of battles, air raids, names quiry, "What is good for a boy to eat?" strength from druggist, and apply a Uttlo : casays of of ships sunk, famous generals' It nlgbt and joat morning and you should soon see eren that th worst freckles bare begun to dis"At this time of the year, according reers he answered them without hesiappear, while the lighter one bars vanished enCaroextant North to in the theories tirely. It la seldom that saor tbaa one ounce tation, says the writer. needed to completely clear tha skin sod gala Datas has had many amusing and lina in 1870, a boy should have dally Is a beautiful clear complexion. Be sura to ask for tbe double strength OthlB, curious experiences, but the most ex- plenty of green fruit, pine rosin, young a is Bold under guarantee of money baca traordinary was the friendly dinner he cucumbers, raw new potatoes, green U itthis falls to remote freckles Adr. shared with John Lee, the Babbacombe blackberries, doughnuts, branch water hole." two and hours in the swimming the late James Barry, and murderer, And lots of men make fools of them the executioner who tried to Hang Atlanta Constitution. selves by doing the fool things they are invited to do. London Doctors Eager to Examine Brain of Man Known as Human Encyclopedia. up kiUa all . "Shell-Cloth.- Shell-clot- Tit-Bit- good-lookin- g FRECKLES Economy to Both Health and Purse if IDIGESTEOFJ Caused by Aeid-8.on.n- oIi ot people in fact about I out of auffer mora or leas from indigestion, acute or chronlo. Nearly every case to caused by There are other stomach disorders which belchalso are sura algna of ing, heartburn, bloat after oatlng, food reare There stomach. aour, sassy peating, many ailments which, while they do not causa much distress In th stomach Itself, are, nevertheless, traceable to an Among these are nervousness, biliousness, cirrhosis of the liver, rheumatism. Impoverished blood, weakness. Insomnia, melancholia and a long train ot physical and mental mlserlea that keep the Victims tn miserable health year after year. The right thing to do Is to attack these ailments at their source set rid of the acid stomach. A wonderful modern remedy called EATONIC now makes It easy to do this. Ono of hundreds of thousands of grateful users of EATONIC writes: "I have been troubled with Intestinal Indigestion for about nine years and have spent quite a aum for medicine, but without relief. After using; EATONIC for a few days tho gas and patna In my bowela disappeared. EATONIC Is Just the remedy I needed." We hava thousands ef letters telling; ot these marvelous benefits. Try E ATONIC end you, too, will be just as snthusiastio In Us) praise. Your druggist has EATONIC. Get bia; too box from him today. He will refund your money If yon are not satisfied. follow a change from coffee to the American table drink 19 h. Acid-Stoma- A rich, beverage boiled full fifteen minutes after full-bodi- ed boiling begins. Pure and free from the nerve impairing drug, caffeine. it if HEAD Postum Cereal I. 3H" i jn THIS acid-stoma- -- Peculiar Feeling. I Cella had been ill for many weeks. iy aa day when she was stronger and been put in a chair, she slipped to the floor and stood for a mo-jon her feet "Oh," she said. In m surprised voice. "I feel heavy ' w I toysolf.' IYDU E.PINKHAH MEDICINE CO. LYNN.MABS. 1741 Millions Btorv We. lias iho greatest lrcsoird for tho qmatost good press. 4 nj. .... , VEGETABLE COMPOUMD Announcing the liberty of tha need to make the same di No matter what we leave be- mltTi tig thp hocsf A Russell Story. thof v, iof n W TT T?n- J11 told with gusto was of a mayor north of England town. His wor-- P for the sea presented some. seats Tront .. . t nmi naa tnis tnscrinen on iiineiu; Presented to the borough by the injur. Aid. Roirirlns. The sea is ;' and he made it" London Chron A la Sw&h. Cnss DfBIA E. PMKHAif particular: 'y. j passing through the critical Forth Haven, Connj "Lydia K. Pintham's Vegeta ble Compound restored my health after everything else had failed when passing through change of life. There Is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms," --&ixs, FiOBxsca IbhTiIi4,Bq 197, North, Haven, Conn. calamities. And it hangs today, almost unknown, in a dusty belfry in a most prominent position in New York. Its Voice Still Resonant This Liberty bell Is not cracked ; Us tone is as fine and sweet and resonant as on the day it rang at General Washington's command. Following are the more important occasions upon which New York's Liberty bell was rung In the eighteenth century, from the time it arrived In New York city in 1731 until it proclaimed liberty In 1776. The list bas been complied from colonial records and the history of New York and is authentic in every Ancient Jumel Mansion take Her "I was Ohio. after years called the citizens to defend their rights or warned them of 1735 O. years of age and had all period of life, being forty-si- x the symptoms incident to thai change heat Cashes, nervousness, and was in a general run down condition, so it was hard for ma to do my work. Lydia X. Pink-ham- 's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as the best remedy for my troubles, which it surely proved to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since taking it, and the annoying symptoms have dissp. peared." Mrs. M. GODBSK, OSS Napoleon fit, Fremont, Wed try. Dally Thought How many worthy men have we seed survive their own reputations. Moo talgue. todayf m Toufh's cial the Alien he bone-case- ment of the Netherlands granted a spee charter authorizing Its sale. The good housewife of Holland would almost as soon be without food as with out her "Ileal Dutch Drops," as she) quaintly calls GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. Their use restores) strength and is responsible in a great measure for the sturdy, robust health,! of the Hollanders. Do not delay. Go to your drogrtsft' and Insist on his supplying you with a box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. Take them as directed, and if yon are not satisfied with results your druggist will gladly refund your money, look for the name GOLD MEDAL oa the box and accept AO other. Ia sealed boxes, three sizes. Kidney and bladder troubles don't disappear of themselves. They grow upon you, slowly but steadily, undermining your health with deadly cerTictim to Intainty, until yoo fall curable disease. Stop your trouWs while thereia time. Don't wait until littU pains become big aches. Don't trifle with disease. To avoid future suffering begin trestment with GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules now. Take three or ' four every day until you feel that you are entirely free from pain. n This preparation has been one of the national remedies ot Holland for centuries, In lCiKJ the govern Sixtieth to One Hundred and Slxty- at One Hundred and The Jumel Is the beat known fcf aU Wash-wcoNew E streets and dAec'J'atUn, It was York, from here r directed the campaign tagton's iSe Britleh tide sweeping: over from Long loland. which by Kobert Morris. In 181 rt was emPtnI?tl!"h; house was owned In this house, at tlffersnt During rmel a French wine merchant. NapotoQB.rt Jerome and Joaeb Bowipam to ZeML tes'tbi Tclty purchased toe mansion. W2" b""" .i" nd ( FOR YOPR Two sizes, usually sold at 15c and 25c At Grocers Everywhere! I pllSfj PARK PSt'fl BALSAM HAIR ,.A toilet B elp prenaratlon ot meritT to eradicate dandruff. . FtffteitanB. Cnlnr en.l Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair J eq ana si. wet Lirtippi.t ( |