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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE. UTAH ? C$pAI B1 WANTED: J ANTED A man V i tell of our "VyE'LL VV Mother Walrus. gets to work en time, And who doesn't endanger the rest, By being the first one to rush away But all day long does his best listens to what he Is tol4 Then does that thing Just Who puts his heart and soul Inright; his Jobj And hustles with all his might, A man who never pities himself For having to pitch in and dig, But who Is determined to Just "maka good" And be worthy of being BIG. l A man who always tells And looks you straight man you can bank on To scorn deceit and a A A man who gives you . p9" O McCluie Ntvtsf jper THAT'S OLD STUFF!" I gUST DONE W0T Y'MEAN, OLD STUFF?. AW IRBqo1 SOMETHING TO Itself with the fvfry occupation lifts . larging life or mm wnu iiiwuvn I occupation that will not do that i man really nas a rism about that the mushroom season Is to put up for win- - found in the neias. L msiko delicious sauces, and va- L dishes when served with a few lihrnnms are aulte out of toe or- lrr They may be spiced and Lied like any other vegetable. Mushroom Catsup. Father fresh mushrooms and pack in In alternate layers of salt in a me jar. Let stand for twenty-fou- r Irs. Chop fine after standing and k well Let stand for two more s, then drain. Place the strained kid Id a kettle and bring to the Stag point and boll three minutes, every four cupfuls of the liquid one. cupful of good vinegar (cider Add one tablespoon- egar Is best). of cayenne popper, three of all- ice, two of ginger, one of cloves and half of mace. Boil until reduced half the amount, then bottle and while hot. Pickled Onions. water over small white fling onions to loosen the skins. U them, soak In strong brine twen- ionr hours. Wash and place In a prvlng kettle and cover with one rt skimmed milk and two parts wa- cou gently for ten minutes. Drain. F again and nonr Into bottles. Pill I'iAot spiced Seal In the vinegar. u manner. The milk keeps the m from turning yellow, it Is said. roar boiling r.nm Scrambled Fnna With pate one cupful of freshly grated e cuprui of milk,- one table- jumi or nnely minced trrpen nen- f, one - tablesnnnnfui teaspoonful of salt Put the Pepper and half of the milk In wpan and cook five minutes. tDe eggs and add the rest of the '1 0a tO the COm nn1 wlj- clnnr-"""I Set. Arill hntfQ. i It 11 aiiuJ OUll Wand serve on slices of buttered alf p - Rlnn.. -".acr rruncn. ee'fourlhs 0f a i sar and V Pnl 1)011 M th a,nd IS, C? e""er SIruP' of. of oran of Iomon Z 3' Iris ll at;; Ice. nuu e Weatiirn of twenty table-- three-- i Juice. and St,r until well iuart of apolli- - Newspaper Onion.) . it 1 " 1"! hear H to7VVara hWi 1 I By F. A. WALKER are rearing oei "8 dothes" SW hum or taste." - . .. . Criticism. It Is the "I's" that make it so popular. Listen to a habitual critic, a Every one of his criticisms begins with "I think" or "I believe" or "I see," and then follows his opinion, fully and freely expressed. fault-finde- r. Criticism, when the critic knows what he Is talking about and delivers his opinion in a constructive and helpful way, Is well worth while. When It Is offered without a basis of information and experience and without a service of betterment it is harmful and worse than useless. Too often the critic measures the learning and wisdom of others by the yardstick of his own ignorance or prejudice. One of the greatest statues carved by Michelangelo was the colossal "Young David," which he cut from a block of marble which another sculptor had rejected some forty years before. This statue of David and his superlative figure of Moses are the greatest statues since the days of Praxiteles and worthy to rank with the best Greece produced. When Michelangelo had finished "David" he asked some of his artist friends to view it, among them Sode-rln- i, of little talent nnd soon forgotten. Vasarl, who was a great admirer of Michelangelo and whose stories of the art world at that period are Interesting reading, tells the anecdote of Soderini's criticism as follows: "When he saw the statue it pleased him much, but he said to Michelangelo, who was engaged in retouching it, that he thought the nose was too thick. Michelangelo, seeing that Soderinl was below the statue, and could not see It truly, to satisfy him went up on the scaffold, taking with him a chisel nnd a little marble and made believe as if working, letting a little dust fall from his hand as he did so. but not at any time touching the nose of the figure. Then looking down at Soderinl he said : 'Look at it now.' "'It pleases me much better,' said Soderinl. 'you have given it life.' "'So,' says Vasarl, 'Michelangelo came down, pitying those who make a show of understanding matters about which they renlly know nothing.'" that because a man he really thinks criticism accepts your his. He your judgment better than you are because accepts it, perhaps, rather would he his boss or because endure your wrong Judgment than to waste his time in argument. who Disraeli, earl of Reaconsfleld. said: criticism, of had his full share "It Is much easier to be critical than to be correct." the Socrates, when he was told by wisest the was he that Delphic oracle was unman in all Greece, which -because Tla doubtedly true, replied: that I nlone of all the Greeks know that I know nothing." To criticize that which you yourself cannot equal Is Impudence. estiMeasure yourself before you mate others. There is no surer way to prove your littleIgnorance and establish your lo tne life ness than to devote your criticism of those whose efforts and the caaccomplishments are beyond pacity of your own endeavors. Do not think by McClur Newwajxr Syndicate) service-plus- , WANTED, such a man to get to the top And sit in the President's chair; If interested, apply any time To Just anyone, anywhere I (Copyright) o WHEN EVER since the world began and serpent convinced Eve that the Garden arrangements were not at all what they should be, criticism has been one of the most popular activities of the human mind. Did you ever notice how many Ts" there are In the word? lie. A man who works for vastly more Than so many dollars a day, Who Is ready for rapid promotion, too, Whenever it comes his way. IDEAS Ji on, It Is wise ns tiw surnlus ?J THINK ABOUT them know about us." Billie Brownie wag wearing his warm, warm coat which Old Man Winter had given him. It was made out of the same material that Old Man Winter had his wardrobe made of, for no matter how cold It Is, It Is never too cold for Old Man Winter. He Is protected from the cold by his regular winter clothing I But he won't tell anyone just how it Is made. And Billie was wearing the shoes and the cap and the earmuffs Old Man Winter had given him, too. "There are many of us about, as you can see." said Mother Walrus. And whose work is A Number One, Who never kicks at "overtime" When his regular work Is done. PICKING FLAWS SEASONABLE Low ITI" " " self Sjnjialt the truth in the eye, every time ways," said Tea, well let A man who TWENTY-ONJOSEPH BV At WAS I E K AYE "Uncle" Joe Cannon Began His Legal Struggles. TWENTY-ONI was a law student and was admitted to the bar a year. In Shelbyville, Ind., where I was practicing, I waited a whole year for a client who never came so I went to Tuscola, 111. because that was as far as my money would carry me on the railroad. Joseph G. Cannon. "Uncle Joe," as Mr. Cannon was popularly known, was made state's atJuditorney for the Twenty-sevent- h cial district of Illinois when he was and from then on unonly twenty-fiv- e til some years ago he had been In public office, becoming one of the famous political leaders In the country during his incumbency as speaker of the house. 21 AT (S E by McClur Newspaper Syndicate.) O "Ah, Mr. Walrus Isnt One of Your Skinny Gentlemen." "But, though we love to go about in big groups, we have a nice family life and are devoted to our own. "We are great, huge creatures, aren't we?" "Enormous," said Billie Brownie. "If it wouldn't be rude," he added, after a moment, "I would like to know how much you weigh." it O That: By H. 1 alternative? Hobson's Choice, so called In reference to the practice of Tobias Hob-son- . It is said that he was the first man in England to hire out hack horses. When a customer made his appearance, It was his practice to lead him into the stable and show his goodThe customer, ly array of beasts. however, was obliged to take the horse next to the door so that every one should be served alike, or according to his chance. Thereafter it became a byword to say, "Hobson's Choice" when what ought to have been one's choice was in reality forced upon one. Anna S. Turnquist. (, 1927, by Western Newspaper Union.) Rested Him "See here, sir," cried the Irate patron, "I want to complain about the waiter" "I'm glad to hear It," Interrupted the proprietor of the restaurant "Yes; It's a relief to hear a comfood. Bos plaint that isn't about the ton Post. :f 0 What Does Your Child f Want to Know r BARBARA BOURJAILY my own heart and, of course, why wouldn't he be?" Mother Walrus laughed a great, deep laugh. "Of course," she repeated, "why wouldn't he be, considering be Is the Walrus of my own heart? "He weighs three thousand pounds, and I weigh two thousand pounds. Isn't one of your "Ah, Mr. Wah-uskinny gentlemen. No, he Is fat, good and fat, and full of wrinkles, for the fat all wrinkles up, as there la so much of It "There Is plenty of fat to spare, you see, and it Just folds up and wrinkles up and lets you know that there Is nothing stingy about the fatness-- It's all there plenty of ItJ "His two Ivory tusks are the most beautiful I have ever seen. "We are slow creatures when we go over the Ice, but we're good swimmers." "Gracious," said Billie Brownie. "To think of weighing three thousand pounds." "It's a majestic thought, Isn't It?" suld Mother Walrus, with a Walrus smile. "Ah, yes," she continued, "we're not small or dainty. We go In for size and little else. "We have so much fat that there Isn't much room for brains. We're not very bright. In fact, we might almost be considered stupid. "But we're as sociable as sociable can be, and we're all very friendly with one another. "And, as I said before, though we are so friendly with one another, our own family always comes first. "I'm not much of a fighter. I will do no one any harm. "But If any one should come after my baby then, It Is very different! I should be so excited then, to protect my big little one, that I'd be afraid of no one and I'd fight, fight, fight. "The Mother Walruses will fight for their young. They are afraid of nothing, nothing, nothing If their young are in danger. "Such are the ways of the Walrus creatures," ended Mother Walrus, us she bellowed a good-hto Billie Brownie. y (Copyright.) AWS By . superstition with regard to the the membrane which sometimes envelopes a child's head at birth Is by no means extinct. It Is still by many supposed to indicate good fortune for the child so born and by many to be an infallible charm against drowning, for the person who can get possession of one and wears It about him. Now and then cauls are advertised for sale. What their market price is now is uncertain; but It Is said that "In the Seventeenth century sailors used to pay from $50 to $150 for one." "I was born with a caul," says Dickens in the beginning of "David and relates how his caul was purchased by an old lady in the neighborhood whom It preserved from death by drowning; the fact that she never in her life ventured on the water being merely Incidental. The caul superstition can be clearly traced back into remote history. It Is a survival of the worship of the Egyptian goddess Isis the caul Is the "Veil of Isis." The word Itself is a form of the old Gaelic "call," a veil. Just why Isis should have had an especial connection with the water nnd those who ventured upon it Is a trifle hazy; but there Is no doubt that she did and a ship was carried in the procession in her honor. It Is rather remarkable how often, in Investigating modern superstitions, ; we run across traces of It is a reminder of the persistency with which her cult Introduced itself into Grecian and Roman communities In spite of the opposition of priests and lawgivers. Viola Brothers Shore FOR THE GOOSE time a kid does some'm THE first might not be his fault But the second time is always yours. The kid that gets scalded drinkln' cocoa'll blow on an ice cream soda. You can gen'rally get bread for the . . . pearls without askin' FOR THE GANDER Formerly It was considered good dope to make friends with a girl's mother. Nowadays girls Is so contrary it's almost as much as your chances is worth, to have a girl's mother put In a kind word for you. ," p by McCliire Newspaper Syndicate.) O mm Besides months of cultivatin a girl's mother won't prove half as enlight-enito a man as five minutes' talk with a kid sister or brother. n' can, laws. Obeying nature's (Copyright) t WJ Aileen It 3 ( Pringle, the motion picture star, it considered one of the beat-dress- women of the screen. "Adapt the style to yourself instead of your, self to the style," says she, "and you will be amona the women, too." best-drese- d U For Meditation ocoooo-B- y LEONARD A. BARRETT TRIPLE LEVEL OF LIFE stone Is dead. It cannot with anything that It It has no correspondence. A stalled automobile is on a dead level. Its Intrinsic value has not decreased ; but its horse power Is nil. An automaton is on the dead level The flowers are on a higher level. They make contact with a larger world of They derive benefit correspondence. from the sun, rain and soil. Such contacts are necessary for their development The bird lives a still larger life because It has a larger correspondence. Nature has provided it with a larger area of communication. Put the bird Into a vacuum and Immediately it goes back to the dead level, because Its nerve of correspondence has been broken. The stone on the dead level Is acted upon from without. The bird on the living level possesses from within its You may power of communication. succeed In teaching a dog a trick, but the trick dies with the dog. He cannot teach It to another dog. The living level Is circumscribed by very definite limitations. The aspiring level knows no such limitations. The aspiring level Is the realms of ideals, purposes, burning ambitions. This inate desire to aspire has been denied to ail creation but man. He possesses Intelligence, the brute only Instinct Emerson wrote, "Man, thou art a palace of sight and sound, carrying In thy senses the nights and mornings, the summers and winters, carrying in thy brain the geometry of the city of God, nnd In thy breast all the bowers of love and all the realms of right and wrong." On the aspiring level, purposes should be high enough to give a constructive value to life and deep enough to guarantee a very real satisfactionfor, "The hand can never execute anything higher than the character can inspire." THE (. sur-roun- 1927. Wontern Newspaper Union.) o THE YOUNG LADY THE WAY However, It don't hurt to toss the old lady a few kind words now and then. Because if they don't like you, they got away of hangin' around the dining room, with the French doors half open and crampln' your style. But of course If you gotta lotta can count on your money to make the mere go. . . . Jack you (Copyright.) O CXK000K0 How It Started By CKKKKKK-CK- Jean Newton 0 THE "THRESHOLD" word which describes a or an entrance to a house or to a room and Is used figuratively to indicate the beginning or entering upon any experience as "the threshold of life," "the threshold of a career," has a very Interesting story. Specifically, the threshold Is a plank or stone or piece of timber which lies under a door, the sill, the place over which the first step Is taken on entering. It comes to us and that is the strange part of the story from the Anglo-Saxo"perswald" which, from "perscan," signifies "to thresh I" Tracing the connection of the word In Its modern sense with Its origin, we find that threshing, the beating out of the straw from grains, has for ages been the first step In the preparation of the harvest for market n rise whene'er they That light things 4 THIS TO THE WHY DOES CREAM RISE TOP OF THE MILK? of the milk Cream Is the fat part cause, this for And rises ; s IRVINQ KINQ CAULS 1 tures. "He's a Walrus after SUPERSTITIONS THE OBSON'S CHOICE" Is a phrase denoting a choice without an "Not rude at all, Billie Brownie," said Mother Walrus. "Not rude at all. Now my Mr. Walrus is one of the grandest and most superb of crea- CTHE WHY of Do You Know HI. V - ABOUT THE WALRUS A man who iJ Aileen Pringle likes to who work, And who can find things to do Without his needing a manager's help, And several assistants, too. I ill & M WJ trowel 8 ) by UcClure Newspaper Syndicate ) (Copyright) The young lady across the way says she sees letters of credit advertised for persons thinking of going abroad and If they can't afford to pay cash she should think they'd better stay at home. ( by McClur Newspaper Syndicate.) O Waterloo Repeated Hobbs I understand Tom and his wife Just had their first quarrel. Was it serious? Dobbs Very. He gave In and thus established a precedent , |