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Show r THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH women 7ke KITCHEN two PRAISE SAME CABINET (ft till, Wulari MEDICINE Union.) Niiprwhich we Only the ponieealons use nra of praaant value to ua. A man may have a money fortune and yet be poverty atrtoken In the very things which that money would buy him. The money In hla all the time, but It la of little or no value to him because he lata It alona," Both Helped by Taking Lydia EL Pinkhams Vege table Compound "After the birth of my little daughter I could not was very badly think of going to a hospital, but grew steadily worse, being compelled to stay In bed two or three days e a e h week. A friend of my sisters told ot the good Lydia E. run-dow- HOT WEATHER DISHES 2Z& CVflZ&TO&A T&LGGZT By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HEN the historian of the future looks back upon the yeur 10-- 0, It la possible that the most significant event connected with that year which marks the oue hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the winning of American Independence will not be the Sesfiulceutennlal exposition at Thlladelphla nor any of the numerous local, Rtnte and national celebrations with their parades, pageants, gatherings of patriotic citizens, Bpeeebmaking and unveiling of monuments, but the publication of a Bet of books! A strong statement that, perhaps. Hut look at The Pageant of America, published in commemoration of the sesqulcentennlal of American Independence by the Tale University Press, and see if you still think this an overstatement I This article Is not a book review. It Is the story of a new kind of exploring expedition, of an adventure in American history. It Is a story of a fine piece of patriotic enterprise undertaken by an American university, the story of a brilliant achievement by a group of scholars whose perseverance and devotion to their task mntched the bold Imagination which conceived the Idea of their quest, an achievement of which all Americans cun be proud. When the North pole and the South pole were finally reached It seemed that Ihe po.slb'lltles for exploring hitherto unvlsltcd spots on the globe were definitely ended. Then mans curiosity turned to the past, to vanished peoples and vanished cultures so that the explorer could return from some distant corner of the earth nnd exhibit to us avid for new thrills, his trophies of an ancient day. During the last few years Egypt, Mongolia, Yucatan and South America have been yielding up their treasures of the distant past, and modern photography and Illustrations have made the obnewspaper jects of use end art of these ancient peoples as familiar to the average American as the articles life. cf bis every-daFive years ego the Yale University Press was atrnck with the Idea that ten generations of Americans who bare preceded the present one on this continent have left behind them a great mass of Interesting objects and pictorial records of scenes with which the American of today' Is totally unfamiliar. What then could be more interesting to us than to reveul to us our own antiquities? So the Press set out upon Its exploring expedition with .the sanction and under the supervision Of the Yale university councils committee on publications. P,a1ph Henry Gabriel of the history department of that Institution was selected for editor. With him were associated members of the Yale and other faculties. Henry Jones Ford and Harry Morgan Ayres were mode associate editors; Oliver McKee, assistant editor; Charles M. Andrews, Herbert E. Bolton, Irving N. Countryman, William E. Dodd, Dixon Ryan Fox, Allen Johnson, William Bennett Munro, Victor II. Ialtslta, Arthur M. Schleslngcr and Nathantat W. Stephenson, advisory editors, and Davis M. Matteson, Indexer. To their aid was summoned a group of brilliant writer and a staff of historical Investigators and the work begnn. The object of the expedition" was to discover material of all sorts which would enable them to present In pictorial form a historical record which any person, even the Immigrant who has not yet learned the tongue of Ms adopted country, could rend nnd see for himself the onward sweeping tnnrch of American progress In every phase of American life. From the beginning It was realized that American history goes buck much farther than that October day in 1402 when Columbus set foot on the soil of the New world, thnt the discovery of America was hut an Incident In the discovery of nnd Hint to Illustrate the background of American history It was necessnry to find pictures which would show the Influence In Europe as far buck as the time of Carplnl and Marco Polo. So the earliest dated picture In the Pageant Is a page from tho I.Htln manuscript of Adam i f Bremen, written In the Eleventh century. In which tho first mention of Vinlund Is imple. This manuscript was located In the Stunts Itibllothek at Vienna, Austria. It Is typical of the wide range of research ncces-saifor the success of tho undertaking. The l.hnirles of Europe, of Oanmhi nnd of Mexico wore ransacked for forgotten objects nnd pictures. The quest for material look the research workers to every possible source In thu 4X stntes of the Union, to private collections, government collections, historical societies, stale libraries, museums. art gullerles, learned societies, Institutes, religious and educational Institutions, municipal collections and archives and dealers collections. In every case only authentic pictures were accepted und mdny of these are reproduced for the first time. An example of this Is the portrait of Pocahontas, perhaps the most noted Indian woman In history, which Is one of tlm Illustrations for this article. The photographic reproduction of 11 During the warm days when burden and play so inwork seems viting, Is the time to rest on a shady porch or doorstep, or pack a basket for a day of rest Plnkhams Vegeand - recreation by n table Compound had stream or lake. If this done her, and my Is not possible make the sister bought me meals as simple as postwo bottles of It I sible and eat out on the had not taken all of one bottle when I was1 able to do some work. I porch or In the back yard. The chil- am up and truly a booster for Lydia E. Pink-ham- s dren will think It fun to do all the Vegetable Compound and yon carrylug and setting of table. may use my testimonial. Mas. Maymc and vegeWhen preparing fruit Ltkcb, 1119 Island Ave, Ext, McKees tables, as this is the time when much Rocks, Pa. Mrs. Hope L. Smith, a fanner's wife of that work must be done, choose a cool and shudy spot out of doors to of Route 3, Floyd, Va.,' says she was 111 for ten years with a good deal of shell the peas and pick over the berIn her side and so weak she could ries. Being out of doors makes the pain work. Lydia E. Pinkhams hardly work seem like play. Salads, Jellies Vegetable Compound has helped her bo and such dishes as can be prepared much she is telling her friends about it. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Comearly In the day aft In order. Is a dependable medicine. pound If the family enjoys pie, prepare the it und before the place night pastry on Ice, using the following reclpet, : Hot Water Paetry. Take one cupful f of lard, add cupful of boiling water, a teaspoouful of salt, stir until dissolved, then add three cupfuls of sifted flour. When well mixed set Into the Ice box. This will make two haarlem oil has been a worldcovered pies and one open crust. wide remedy for kidney, liver and When lining the pun, full the crust bladder disorders, rheumatism, Into the tin as this kind of pastry seems to shrink more than the cold lumbago and uric acid conditions. water pastry. Peachenno. To one cupful of peach pulp (ripe peuches put through- a H or less a of add sieve) sugar cupful C AP V L the peaches are very sweet, a tablebeaten three lemon of juice, spoonful stimulate vital egg whites and a cupful of whipped correct internal trouble!, organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist cream. Freeze. Baked as a souffle this makes a delightful dessert, using on the original genuine Gold Medal. the cream to serve on It The various Jellies and gelatins are good hot weather dishes, as they keep for a day or two. Grape Nectaiv Put a cupful ot sugar and a quart of water to boll. Cook ten minutes, then add the Juice of three lemons, two oranges, one-haof the work and all contribute to a faithful pres- a can of crushed pineapple, and a pint of grape Juice. Let stand three hours, entation of the origin, struggles and achieveDr. Scholl's Zlno-r- a ds I e tho safe, tors .hooting ments of a great people woven Into a rich then serve iced with sliced orange on treatment for corns. At drug and shoe stores. of each of glass. deeds. top For Free Stimplt stile The SduQ M!g. C. Quags tapestry great Caramel-Almon- d Ice Cream. Mix i The titles of the volumes Indicate the comprecupful of flour, one cupful ol hensive nature of the series and the names of the onc-haof a teaspoonful of men nnd women responsible for the Individual sugar, "Lino-pad- s of hot milk with two and cupfuls salt, volumes Is sufficient evidence that here Is an Puxoneoitthe '"pain is gone! one-hal- f caramel of one and cupfuls authentic Interpretation of America. Volume one, Adventurers In the Wilderness, Is by Clark and cook In a double boiler for twen-Timber waste be greater in the ty minutes, stirring constantly. Cook future than It Ismay Whssler, curator of the division of anthropology because many now, of the American Museum of Natural History and and freeze, When partly frozen add trees springing up will be harvested one cream of two and cupful at smaller diameters. cupfuls a noted writer on the subject of the American Inof ground almonds. Slake the caradian ; Constance Lindsay Skinner, historian, novel? cupist and playwright, and William Wood, author aud mel by melting one and water boll fifteen fuls and of boiling naval and historian. deals with It the mllltury native American before the coming of the white minutes. This flavoring Is good for pudding snuces, gravies, chop sue man, the Colonization of America by different and other dishes where such flavoring InEuropean countries down to the time of the Is used. evitable conflict for mastery In the New world. Fruits and Vegetables. Volume two, The Lure of the Frontier," by schools have great faith Vegetarian Ralph Henry Gabriel, associate professor of his6 Bell-an- s In tomatoes as .medicine for biliousat tells of our of westward the Yale, tory push Hot water ness and for all pioneers until the wilderness had been conRelief Sure forms of liver quered. Professor Gabriel Is also the author of VolIs betrouble. This ume three, Tollers of Land and Sea which Is the cause of the vegeepic of the farmer, the plow following the march table calomel In of the pioneer. The fisheries Industry Is suborquantltlea large dinated to agriculture In this book but. It presents which is found In 25$ and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere on adequate record of the harvesters of the sea. that vegetable To Malcolm Kelr, professor of economics at Dartfruit mouth college ami a noted author on economic DOtfT CRAY Rhubarb when subjects, fell the responsibility fur volumes four cooked Is a Psrkitn four gm? balr.rnidnallr while Its good laxative, suralr and snfrlr In prtrwf ot aud five, "The March of Commerce and The your boms. Uiisd nrsrfel roar, by agreeable acid Is cooling and stimumillion.. Mony-ba-guarantae. Epic of Industry." The names are The tender green leaves aro A lating. B0OKLBT and these two volumes no less than the used with other greens as food. others present a marvelous panorama of AmerLettuce is considered a good rem ican life. for Insotnnlu and nervousness At your Drutfist 75 edy Volume six, The Winning of Freedom," by WilHtttl4-CLU. W, MCMPMIft. TtNN. CMKMIfTSs wus conscious of Its vlr Shakespeare liam Wood, has a special Interest at this time tue for he letI Did eat remarks; becuuse It Is the record of the forces which tuce to Knew Her Hubby supper lust night that I am brought on the struggle for Independence and of so sleepy Y Is your wife so suspicious of "Why the thut struggle Itself, sesqulcentennlal of which wholethat but your Watercress, stenographer? cheap we are celebrating this year. Included In this o She worked for me once. some salad from the brook, contains also Is the pictorial record of the War of In such a form that It la sulphur 1S12 und the Mexican war aud In volume seven, In I left use of Liberty," Sir. Wood takes up the reudy to he assimilated Into the blood Dandelion greens enrry a high per theme of our military history at the opening of the conflict between the states and curries It centage of Iron, while the tender young leaves make exeelleut salads. down through the World wur. Mixed with potato snlud It improves It In toluiiie eight, Builders of the Republic," the People An Learning the Value of Spinach, which lias been called the, Pageant- turns from wars alarms to political hisOccasional Use. broom of the blood, stuads at the tory, which Frederic Austin Ogg, professor of head of vegetables In percentage of knows that a lax- the University of political science-a- t Iron. This vegetable has a most ths bowels. to the colonlul from of the days opening snrxej healthful actlou on both bowels and A diuretic performs similar funcCivil war. John Spencer Russet t, professor of tion to ths kidneys. Under ths kidneys. history at Smith college, then takes up the theme strain of nur modern life, our The onion, too often snubbed nnd New a of lu volume nine, "Mukers Nation ," and utilised organs are apt to become slugthose who would he ultra by carries It down to the present time. In volume ten gish and require assistance. fine, holds high place us a flnvor vegeMors and tnora people are learnLuther Allen Welgle, Sterling professor of religiIt is stimulating, laxative and ing to usa Doans Pills, ocous edueutlon at Yale, tells an Illustrated story of table; gcaerully purifying to the whole syscasionally, to insura good "Amerh-uIdealism," embracing American religitem. which ia so essential to ous life, education and the rise of humnnlturlan Beets are a nerve tonic and enrich good health. Mora than 30,000 movements. grataful uaars ha va given Doan's the blood. The Greeks held the heel algnad recommendations. The titles of the remaining volumes of the as Ideal for brain workers. Scarcely a community but has series speak for themselves. "The American Cucumbers are rich In potassium its representation. Aik your ami In Thomas In Letters, by Stanley ancient Spirit phosphorus; even Williams, neighbor I assistant professor of English at Yale; The times they were used as complexion American Spirit In Art," by Frank Jewett Mather, ben ut tiers externally, as well ns InPILLS Jr., Marquand professor of art and archeology ternally, GOc at Princeton university; Charles ltufus Morey of Carrots rank high these days with Stimulant Diuretic to tho Kidneys ttie same Institution, and William James Henderthe beauty specialist. One a day, Co , Mfg. Chemleta. Buffalo, N Y The American eaten ruw, Is said to rure n muddy son, music critic nnd author; skin nnd paint the rheek with roses. Spirit In Architecture," by Talbot Faulkner HamTeach Cherries stimulate the gastric Juices lin, architect, author nnd lecturer; "The American Stage, by Montrose Jonas Moses, editor and Benches are rich In Iron and are highdramatic critic, and "Annals of American Sport," ly recommended for anaemic people. Crimea are rich In aalts and are by Charles Pike Sawyer, newspaper man, critic and author all complete the picture of American fine laxative. Soothes and Heals life ns It has beet, through the centuries und ns It Rashes and Irritations Is today. nUi-vtOS- . FOU OVER 200 YEAES one-hul- '. QQl&MEQj s FOCAKOXrt&S (from fiirntty Ot-'Sih-st this authentic portrait, made by special arrangement with the present owner, who lives In England, has never been reproduced until It appeared In the Pageant When even the most exhaustive research disclosed the fact that no authentic picture, portraying an important point In our national history, existed, an original drawing was prepared either by Barry A. Ogden or C. W. Jeffreys, both distinguished historical artists. Three of the pictures which accompany this article VThe Conestoga Wagon," In which the tide of American expansion rolled westward, Pilgrims Learning to Fertilize With Fish. the earliest example of scientific agriculture" and Threshing Wheat In all by Mr. Jeffreys, are examples Colonial Days of this special work. Even more striking Is the fuct that Mr. Ogden took two and a half years to prepare a series of seventeen pages of illustrations depicting In color approximately 210 examples of the uniforms worn by officers and men In the army and navy through all the wars, as well as the uniforms of their opponents. This alone cost more than $0,000, but It presents a fund of historical Information which has never before been availuble to historians and writers. ' With more than 10,000 authenticated pictures as the basis, publication of The Pageant of America" was then begun In fifteen volumes, each with approximately 650 Illustrations and 60,000 words of text Although the Pageant Is a pictorial history, It Is not a history in pictures alone. Each volume begins with an essay or outline In which the historical development to be pictured Is swiftly and graphically described. Each chapter deals with a group of pictures In sequence with short Introductions und short cnptjons under the picture which tie together the pictures In the presentation of the main topic an Illustrated running story," as It were. In keeping with the dignity and Importance of the subject matter Is the craftsmanship which went Into tunklng these books: Special paper, s Instead of printing the pictures from from electrotypes made from and running the presses at half speed In order to Insure no evenness of Impression all contribute to marking an epoch In the art of bookmaking. The fact that history Is more than a record of war and politics was never more strikingly Illustrated than It Is In The Iagcunt ot America." Every phase of American activity Is represented. Agriculture, commerce. Industry, religion, education, the fine arts, literature, architecture, the drama and sports all are Included In the scope half-tone- half-tone- jr - -f- . s L V-J- Ends in one minute pain lf j COENS. DX Scholls lf ono-elgh- th ' one-hnl- Sure Relief ELL:AIMS FOR INDIGESTION EE k Cthan Restorer vol-um- What Is a Diuretic? - Everyone Wls-wisl- A-- lu eliqt-inati- y $ V2 ft li ! u i . - tp.- - I foetcr-MItbur- THRESHING WHEAT IN COLONIAL DAYS Drawn for the Pageant of America by C. W. Jeffreye from account! left by John Bordley of Maryland, one of the ploneere of American agrlcul. ture. Thle drawing llluetratee the unique method of threehlng grain on tho Bordley plantation. Children ToUe Cuticura 'FU.Um. I |