OCR Text |
Show 1 EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE. UTAH BEAUTY Howe Andrew Jackson, Border Captain TALKS Virtues of Quietr, oemsnness Good Americans By DUNCAN MARJORIE Ab'Oil Bv En ur,T,. CARE OF THE NECK receive th- - same your face? Every time you eleaise your face, do you Just as thoroughly and carefully cleanse your neck? If you use cleansing cream on your face, do you carry the same cleansing method down to the shoulders? And when you massage a rich, nourishing cream or pat with a good astringent do you automatically include your neck as parj of your face? Those In the know in beauty circles take all this for granted. During the winter months the neck needs even more attention than the face. Kxposure to the elements means dust and drying winds. Fur collars, scarves, etc., constantly rubbing against the skin make it rough and dark. In addition to the daily regime of cleansing, exercising and nourish ing rrom which most faces grow younger and lovelier, the neck needs frequent bleaching treatments, too. A smooth, white, swan like throat will be yours if you are faithful In this simple treatment Once or twice a week, whether you are bleaching your face or not, bleach the neck. First cleanse thoroughly with a good cleansing cream. Then spread your bleach over your neck ; a ready prepared cream or lotion, or a bleaching mask, or half peroxide and half lemon Juice. When you feel a tingling or drawing sensation remove. Now generously massage nourishing sklnfood. Bleaches are drying, you know, and this must be counteracted or lines and wrinkles will result Leave a little of the cream on over- 2S If a man talks a great lv wi me, i can usnait. J UiUf . u trilACO On a ne is reall "a l" ""at 6"los your neck pyKS diligent care as night In the morning, remove any of the cream that Is still left on the skin and pat with witcb hazel to which a few drops of benzoine have been added, or with a skin tonic qr astringent suited to your own needs (a mild tor.lc for the dry skin, a stronger astringent for the oily). If you use a finishing lotion or cream on face, be sure to carry It downward over the entire neck too. And as for powder. It should never stop at the Jawline. The proper way to blend powder Is on the up and up, from base of .neck to top of forehead. Remember that the pores of the skin, like the lungs perform a double function. They eliminate waste. They matter-oxy- gen, take In new, health-givinmoisture, electricity, tonic breaths of ozone by the sea or balsam in pine woods. The skin absorbs vari ous strengthening bath tonics, salt rubs, oils and other medlcants. ready-prepare- d g . , ft-- :. . I : i on the n IDINQ winds come iv. wing of winter's chapped Ups. And so many are now voicing that complaint that we had all better get together and do something definite to counteract the conditloa These chill days tend to chap and coarsen the lips. Very often the chapping and actual brea'ing of the thin skin Is aggravated by consta ?t moistening. So many of us 1o that unconsciously. At time Is It good for us and during the winter It Is very definitely harmful. Worst of all. It Is a natural thing to wet the lips when they feel parched, drawn and rough. Biting the lips Is another evil that too many women unconsciously indulge In. If your lips do not have that wee bit of dewiness that Is youthful and natural, call your pomade or cream to your assistance. If you use a nourish ing creara for face and neck, be sure to massage a little on your lips, too. Camphor Ice Is good and there are many co'orless pomades In the form of lipsticks that give the lips a dewy mist that seems to heighten their natural color and at the same time keeps the skin soft and protected. If your skin Is een- Before make-up- . erally dry and you are using a protective finishing cream, massage Just a wee bit of It on your lips, too. No need to use a great deal. A little is With your Index finger masenough. sage gently but with a firm, pressing movement Into your Hps. Now we come to the coloring of the lips. Choosing a lipstick becomes a delicate business during the cold months. The harsh, hard type of lipstick can be simply ruinous to the silky texture of the lips. If you find that your stick needs a great deal of rubbing to leave a colorful Impression, try losing It and choose a stick of creamy consistency Instead. Of course. If It is too soft and creamy. It will smear and leave an ugly line that smart women try to avoid. After you have carefully applied the color to the lips, give It time to set Don't eat or drink anything Immediately afterwards. Don't rub your Hps. moisten or bite them at any time, particularly not after they have been rouged. The purpose of rouge and powder Is to enhance your natural loveliness. Cosmetics add the lovely finishing outside touches which accentuate beauty or It nd an llluslonary charm, as a lovely dress decorate;, a lovely body. They are finishing touches, not foundations. They may be washed off. but the real foundation of beauty should he lasting, built Into health by proper living. . Bell Syndicate WXC grtc, i f The man not selfish i. , 45 . his hand In hQ . tt pie know burnins i there handle is, and WITH . . . a man lately commits . H;i fes crime In a o.hi t... bors saturated the snh, coal oil, tied the crin, "til and hnrno.l it Then T clearly insane, and nnM. . stand the simple law of nun ,,,use ana. effect. chmanf ,a , 1 1" .w.-vv-??- v I vt Tfe' -- V 4r 't. -- "t it ' a r"l Z One would thinv-of Abe Lincoln memorials, thati " lIli tares or , J guuu men in It ,j myself known thousands'of riii, Americans. .,..,,nm1i. '5' w ,,, ,. ' IHt iJKAVJL A print by Currier and Ivei which a historical document other than that have bestowed upon the productions of ...,..., UUI Uf m&T... iii .., Ht WAAHAWJ appeared in 1876 and hat, of course, no authority at which time and the affections of the American people these famous lithographers. From the gallery of the North Carolina Historical Commission, Raleigh. (, 1 T llva n w In SOUrl. WHPr i J - i.. d Tt hna Inn n. Kr.n ! i H snnwj uccu autu is always prosperous; that he mi lets his money get awav tnil etc. I know a man who been famous for stinginess M years ; my best stingy-mastotj about him. But I Dersonnli h depression got him ; he hasn't apJ lert. ... pictures fron Marquis James' "Andrew the Border Captain," courtesy the company.) n t SCOTT WATSON December day In 1814 a British army, sent in a fleet of ships to capture New Orleans, made a surprise landing below that city, thereby accomplishing what the commander of the American forces defending the city had been working day and night to prevent. When the news of this disaster to his plans was brought to him. he exclaimed to his staff officers: "I will smash them, so help me God!" Then followed his brilliant night attack of December 23 which held the invaders in check even though It did not "smash them." That happy result was destined to take place two weeks later on January 8. 1815, when this emphatic military leader won one of the most astounding victories In all history, a victory which nnse.i th way to the White House for him and put on the calendar of the American people a red letter day which calls for remembering the name of AnELMO By mda. . $: Jackson, ll Tfturn sain, c.u IN FORMAL DRESS Bobbs-Merri- . Berving only lemonade. mm never befory Z I seen men and women t respectable mingling freeiv t. ..J saloon. It Is another of the new uow so common in the United Painted by John Vanderlyn, it i believed in 1815, and bung in the council chamber of the Charleston City hall as a tribute to a native South Carolinan. Reproduced from a photograph of the original in the collection of Mra. Samuel C. Hei.kell of Knoxville. (All rn Kansas Just across a river bridge. I J ioicu ulc ui mese sa nnn ... ter of curiosity. More vdm.3 men were present The ni. .1 orderly and clean as a Sundy lin-iiii- drew SMOOTH, RUBY LIPS A-- ' I N A Jackson. That emphatic declaration quoted above has a peculiar significance. Notice. If you please, that "Old Hickory" did not say "WE will smash them." He said "I will smash them." And that gives point to the title chosen by a recent biographer for his book "Andrew Jackson, the Border Captain," by Marquis James, published hy the company. For the essence of the border spirit was individualism, a supreme on. the part of the borderer (or the frontiersman, if you prefer that name) In his ability to do what he set out to do. And only the man who had that supreme that "will to win." could hope to be a "border captain," a leader of borderers. The extent to which Jackson had It is indicated by James, in telling of his preparations for smashing the British lie.'ore that historic n January 8, as follows: "The Inexorable will was unleashed an instrument by which he believed he could accomplish anything. Had Charles Dickinson shot him through the brain Andrew Jackson counted on the power of sheer resolve to sustain him ions enough to kill his adversary. This mood possessed him now. His determination was formed to tis'it below New Orleans; If beaten there, to fight In New Orleans; If beaten there, to ftht above New Orleans to fi'ht until no living thing could withstand his Ineradicable impulse to victory. This was fury, but of the cool, calculating sort." Perhaps the most surprising thing about this "new portrait" of Jackson Is that It paints him as an aristocrat "Andrew Jackson an aristo crat? Impossible!" yon exclaim, because yon believe the school history tradition of him as the typical exponent of the frontier democracy. But the fact is that he was both a frontiersman and an aristocrat He was born on the Carolina frontier In the home of his uncle, James Crawford, whence his mother had gone after the death of his father. James Crawford was one of the wealthiest men of that part of the country. A large number of slaves tilled his fields and ran his gristmill and distillery. Even finer was the adjoining plantation of Robert Crawford, his brother, who was called Esnnlre hern use of his lenilorshln In local affairs. The first 17 years of Jackson's life were spent In the home of James Crawford and that of Robert Crawford was a "second home" to him. he was there so much. So he was no mere backwoodsman, for he "belonged to all the aristocracy there was In the Given the best education obtainable and that was more than the majority of the typical frontiersmen had his Interests were pointed toward things classical and he might possibly have gone Into the ministry, as his mother had planned for him, had not the Revolution Intervened. Very He early he showed aristocratic tendencies. loved good company and he loved good horses. He engaged In horse racing and cock fighting, two typical Interests of the Colonial gentleman. When he went dqwn to Charleston to receive a modest Inheritance, he proceeded to get rid of it In a gentlemanly way among the gentility of that old Southern town, who accepted him as one of them. Then he studied law at Salisbury and became a leading social light In that frontier settlement which had decidedly aristocratic leanings. Bohbs-Merri- Jack-sonia- Back-Country- I have the natural human tlon to hover around the rnvsterii the new, the unknown, but in iJ ering them during a long life,lJ learned caution, and wonder d have not I have been unable to decide best man J have ever known. U times I think he is a noted of magazines I have associated n At other ttaa Intimately. think he may be a colored maun ntn vnrtra ohi,t ma nnixt J slder an eminent physician I navels known: at other times I consider carrier who delivers my mail, ul grocer who sells me supplies, on A PRESENTATION PORTRAIT A miniature on ivory done at New Orleans in 1815 by Jean Francois Vallee, a Frenchman under the spell of the Napoleonic tradition. Learning of the opportunities there were for a young attorney beyond the mountains "he turned toward Tennessee with the comfortable assurance of the post of attorney general and goodly He early joined up with the Blount fees. faction In politics, associated with gentlemen who acquired lands far and near, revealed a sense of honor which resulted In an appalling number of challenges and duels, and gathered to himself the good things of the region in the form of political offices and military leadership. He had a period in both the house and senate of the United States. He became a major general In the state militia. Without undue struggle or hardship he acquired both place and power." Thus one reviewer of Marquis James' biography. If Jackson had aristocratic leanings In his youth, they became all the more apparent in his manhood. Within a few years after he had come to Tennessee he was a wealthy man with even greater riches in sight. At one time or another he owned outright or in partnership more than 100,000 acres of land. At different times he owned a distillery, a tavern and licensed ordinary, a boat yard, a race course, a large trading establishment with three stores In Tennessee and agents in New Orleans and Philadelphia and he was a stockholder in the Nashville bank, the first in Tennessee. He lived in a fine house on a model plantation called Hunter's Hill and that, as well as his later homes, the two "Hermitages" were very much a "gentleman's country seat." But Jackson was not as good a business man as he was a fine gentleman. All of his enterprises except the race track and the bank lost money. Soon he became so Involved In debt that he had to sell Hunter's Hill to pay out and he moved Into a blockhouse which became the first "Hermitage." Then It was discovered that he had sold settlers a large tract of land to which he did not possess a clear title, and that threatened to take the last dollar he owned. A crafty lawyer told him how he could find a legal loophole through which be could evade responsibility. Jackson's reply was typical of the man. He declared that he would protect the settlers' titles If It made him a pauper. Fortunately for him he was able to protect them without Impoverishing himself. It was such traits of character as these which helped make him a "border captain." Whatever faults he may have had, there was never any question of his personal Integrity. Particularly was this true of him as a judge during his early career in Tennessee. Of this James writes: "His record Is clean. Barring a little finesse in Indian matters, which was customary, no hint of Irregularity renders the dim beginnings of his career of a color with those of a few of our other western Immortals. On the bench Jackson was rectitude embodied. His law library was presentable and his acquaintance with It ample for the time and place. No written decision by hlrn is known, that practice being Inaugurated by Jackson's successor, John Overton. But tradition preserves the essence of his frequent charge to Juries. 'Do what Is RIGHT between these parties. That Is what the law always MEANS.' " Just as he was a leader In civil life, so he e an outstanding military leader, conscious of the fact that "the leader must sacrifice himself for his people." So when the War of 1812 broke out there was every good reason why Andrew Jackson should have remained at the Hermitage, enjoying the honors that already had come to him and the companionship of his ... hair-trigg- ... RACHEL JACKSON A miniature on ivory which Jackson wore about his neck for thirty years. Painted by Anna C. Peale in Washington, December, 1815. beloved Rachel. Certainly he had paid a high price for the right to enjoy the latter, risking his life time after time in challenges to duels and in uueis tnemsetves to shield her good name from slanderous whispers. ' Even though he had been elected mn1or-weral of the Tennessee milltfa ten venra hefor was no compelling reason for him to leave there i xiacneii ana marcn away to the wars. But he in stantly onered to President Madison a militia division of 2,500 trained men and promised to mane a successful Invasion of Canada within 00 days. But his offer was disregarded nnrt hurt it not been for Governor Blount of Tennessee, who nf Unit. signed his commission as malor-eenered States volunteers he might not have got Into me war at all. Through the machination of Gen. James Wilkinson, a scoundrel in hisrh nlacps if ihro o- was one, all of Jackson's efforts to serve his country were about to come to naught when the news came of the Creek uprising and the massacre at fort Minis In Alabama. Sn JnMr son started on the campaign which was to bring him his first military glory. But early in that campaign difficulties arose. Before he could win a decisive victory over the Creeks, the terra of eimsinienr or the majority of the volunteers under his command expired and the men prepared to go home without waiting for the arrival of remiorcements to take their nlaces Then "Governor Blount threw up the sponge. au.ising me evacuation or Fort Strother and a retreat to Tennessee. It was n litorni o,,, "l""""im i u Join the dismal file of funking military chieftains i.uwueu marcn into the Umbo had our management nt th . step and Andrew Jackson 'should wuiiipauy wnn tne dim shapes of Hull Hampton, Izard. Chandler, Winder the bi vuuiu oe lengtnened. So Jackson wrote a letter to Blount: "Arouse from yr. leathargy-desp- lse smiles or fawning snarling frowns-w- ith energy exercise yr. func-campaign must . . . yr. country mined. Callrapidly progress or out the full quota !lmUle.th! rde.rs of the Secy- War, arrest n" auty and let popu," larity perishI for the tnnmont anfuiie save becoming vnat retrograde under these circumstances? I win That was In December, 1813. A fncArt with ...... a. olullmr siiuation or . year 'nter, a. (although redcoat- enemy this time) Jackson was duplicating hi! "I- will ... norich Wllu lne statement "I will h6lp me God !" Smash t"e Creeks v Ts o. u.. llZlt? iti r,L nt ,cluru l0 Tennessee was a trt . umphal progress. A vpbt the British and "to "a Tad ha cnmnlntoli iu . had almost learned to cringe, this news came is. if . cu wun .Z2 fln(1 delirium flung the name of Andrew Jackson against the Later to a suggestion tht h .,u v " candidate for President he think I am stlCh a d- -4 Jo ?fc 700 what I am fit for. 1 can coUa'nd'a' bUyTf men In a ronph wa . 1 t to be Pres",n not "t . ident Thirteen rmracy thought differe ,y. To it sTnt thIs h'T" captain to thp vvhif iiunse, e by WMtern New,pp,r Uboil '' 1 I am able to tret alone falrlrtl with anybody, or anything, excetti politicians, who so persistently Iitj decency and common sense. mand that I cheer them. Americans were once a great Are we through? Cannot wt something to get back? But weed do It with relief for the old . Must ness that ruined us. . eo to the devil to meet the oredica of some trifling man who haswnnei book, or made a speech? ps pie. As far back as I can remep everybody has been longing to evervbodv nnnished. . . . Wei once we have all had our way; I'M of no one who is escaping punisW now. "I can't see that he is very those of ns In thp audience those on the platform. . . . as that eoes. none of us are. whats the matter with us.) I flm n tnrolpca mnn hnt SSJ M D in I)H ence of natural gas, a railway era Ing. a eun. or women. I am its exercise considerable cautloa The storv of neclect of old does not come entirelv. or ma': from the veterans themselves. MAi.itA in a half rlnTPD f9 PUIS,' l .; l mure relatives who iuiuio spread the story of his wrongs, and into every nook and corner wu taxpayer may be influenced uj triotism or sympathy. . . . Office ers are also a vast army, a a large number of relatives friends back of them clamorinj a lmAat ffverr attti Bkiii gicairr waste. ai"JUU - - j Vi - nnhllC , i i . i j luireucueu a iricuu bi 4i,A . . rrv, m (I nf the xiio tx.t iiic uiw- mil at iur .L. has been enormous as far oac CT'I r- can remember, but seems now than ever before. i .L. tA i to tw rfntine no uiraKs uui mm wiijici worst Is always expected in the flow of blood will at ie mh .,i,i hnve been mos or1 case during tne winter m ing any future period of P"P"" There are almost no ncn tik O Hrrif of i i B Arthur Rrlohona JWlIrl OVef Ue J t ii i lit uiat tne wininz out of millionaires by ; a go Street sharks was really cwr for the renubllc. as It would more making .... -- mninvmeni miirnr rive uie essary In bringing back prosp work, and, .l liipv In Sn r am .in.Aci reconciled worst this winter, ana with. . 1933. Bell Syndlcsts. n WNU " |