OCR Text |
Show " - "4 y;X A THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH. UTAH 4 Your Watch GaVeFlerv- Will not keep perfect time unless you have it gone over by an expert Send your watch to us by mail; we watch man about once each year, ' put it in perfect condition. A Feminine Answer to FOUNDED I&09 MAIN STREET SALT LAKE You Can Be Free from Pair as 1 Am, if You Do as I Did. down feelingthat I could not FFomaris Place Is in the Home MAKERS OF JEWELRY h HEAR ME I suffered witb Harrington, Me. backache, pains through my and such a bear the Contention That a BOYD PARK 4 meiv - SICK WOMEN CITY ing stand on my feet. I also had other dis- symptoms. At times I had to up work. I give tried a number of . YEAR ONCE BEGAN IN MARCH Change in Style May Be Said to Date From 1752 Great Militant ' Events in Month. Few people know, or, if they do, have forgotten, that March, and not January, at one time was the first month of the year, remarks the Chicago Journal. For commencing the year with March there seems to be sufficient reason in the fact that it lo , the first season after the dead year, In which decided symptoms of growth take place. The name is derived from the Romans, among whom it was at an early period the first month of the year, and continued to be In severs) countries to a comparatively late period, the legal year beginning, even In England, on March 26, until the change of style in 1752. For the Romans to dedicate their first month to Mars and call It Martius seems equally natural, considering the importance they attached to war and the use they made of it. In the history of our own country April appears to carry off the palm for the month In which great militant events occurred, yet in the world war Incidents a mimber of took place in March ; for Instance, the revolution in Russia in . 1917, when Czar Nicholas abdicated on March 15. front The big drive on the from Arras to La Feu began on the 21st, and Paris was In that month bombarded by Big Bertha. epoch-makin- g SEA WORM SAMOAN DELICACY Its Infrequent Arrival Always Mads the Occasion for the Holding of a Gr'-aFestival. t Palolo, the most prized of all gustatory delicacies In Samoa, declared by Americans who have tried it to be superior to the lobster. Is a marine worm, being rather mysterious In that It is never seen save on two or three nights in the entire year. Its appearance seems to be regulated by the moon. The palolo chooses the time for Jts first appearance on the night when the October moon changes. When the moon rises the sea Is seen to alive with green andJjhrown wriggling wonps, some of tbpm a rhe natives make tf jAival of the occasion, going out with dip nets among the reefs and scooping up the worms by the bushel. They paddle around in every available boat jvith lighted torches waiting for the moon, and then the scene becomes one of grlat and joyous excitement. The palolo comes once again when the November moon quarters, and Is not seen again until the following year. It is said to live in crannies of the coral reefs, coming to the surface to spawn at these lunar periods. Some of the worms are eaten as they wiggle, but the bulk of the catch Is reserved tor a big feast on the following day, s when they are wrapped in banana leaves and baked. th. I VvL-- ... Strong Caps of Paper. Astonishing strong paper caps, capable of withstanding powerful blows, though extremely light in weight, have been invented by a shipyard employee, and are Intended to be worn by workmen whose duties expose them to danger from falling objects, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. The process by which the novel head-geis produced has not been divulged, but it Is known that chemicals are employed to harden the material, without adding to its weight. Several styles have been made, the lightest weighing about seven ounces, and others slightly bolt more. In a recent test, a was dropped on one of them from a height of forty feet, with the result that a barely perceptible dent was made in the paper. The novel head coverings are proof against water and acids, and are nonconductors of electricity. 1 ar f ' 'V ,v w 1 i v i ,' V hr f . V.t- ' 4 V. . v J VL, V Privacy. said an Living without privacy, observant woman the other day, as one, must in an apartment or board-In- g house, leads us to nervous wreck. We feel the strain of too close contact with the other members of our 4 family and with our neighbors. But we do not know what the trouble Is. I We feel that something is wrong with ; the place we are living and we move. We simply move from one box to an--' ether. What we need Is more room room enough for privacy room enough to be alone. it ' ' r To Clean Beeswax. beeswax begins look dingy, It may be melted and r, to remolded. The grime drops off at once 4 f when the wag la melted on the surface ' t ,'?f bOBing water, and gives a clean piece off beeswax when remolded. , Whoa Sewing-roo- m dome Consolation. For the encouragement of men who ere proa to call - themselves hard names when they have done something nnUanally foolish, the wise man has said "Those who never make mistakes , never make anything else." D, w SAYS the perfumed youth, shivering slightly and edging closer to the radiator, Im a cave man myself. I believe that the old practice of wooing a woman with a club and dragging her home and making her stay there when you get her, really better than our modern practice. We men are still really cave men at heart, and would prefer that our women be clinging vines, as in the ancient times, ipstead of getting out and working at mens work. New York State Federation of Business and Professional Womens clubs was holding a banquet a few nights ago and a certain gentleman whose name is known from one end of the land to the other made a speech in which he told the women present he didnt In the least sympathize with their being business and professional women. In fact, he declared it his belief they all ought to be at home looking after the children Instead of being gathered about a banquet table listening to speeches by him or anybody else. The speaker didnt use the exact language of the perfumed youth, but he Implied most of It. Did he get away with it? He did not. Paraphrasr ing a popular song of days, Where there are cave men there must be cave women. And there was at least one of them at the banquet. She was Miss Gail Laughlin of San Francisco,' national president of the organization that was holding the banquet. Miss Laughlin looks meek enough, but she Isnt She followed the speaker just mentioned, and she said she was pretty well fed up on all this talk about cave men and clinging vines and women having no place in Industry; and figuratively, oh, very figuratively, of course, she proceeded to decorate the face of the eminent speaker with a few scratches. said Miss Laughlin, to stop an argu"Often, ment In public for womans entering this or that line of mans work the men will smile in a superior manner and admit they are afraid they have something of the cave man In them. That means they cant see any reason why women should be anything except clinging vines.-- .. But their history is slightly mixed when they the clinging vine in the put the cave man-an"Theres a good deal of ihe cave man in me." says the same picture, lUle clinging vine is a plant of a perfumed young man, "and I believe a womans place is later growth. ItUs a far cry from the cave womin ihe home The dinging vine the men who imagine themselves "cave an to this delicarely nurtured product of civilizamen" like to picture as their ideal 'mate is nos a product Sis man goAnd (modem if the tion. of ihe Cave man period at all ling to have visions of the good old have seen in our four walls of .he home great war the way in days of the cave man he must he con- which men and women naturally llni iecame mans work.,, i - A , jCaSSWFin Talking Cooking ls a mans sistent and incluck in his delectable up on the w hotheworl is diminishing to .basis. ' The- - ra primitive - dream fhe reat cae woman,' of the 'nations, in this country, Eng; uch an extent that many women, if job and womans place Is the parlor. -Lt(Str,'jt,her apartment in a hotel, land, France and the others, went inti they are to work at all, must go to As a matter of fact, there probably are Miss Laiighlin went into the subject military service. The women took u: Jhe office or the paid chefs today who feel factory, said Miss Just highly i about It. that with a New York Tribune reporter In the industries. ' way ' MUghlin. a manner which snowed that she has The situation was getting to the Now the surprise attendant upon "In the beginnings of the profesthe news that women were working sions women did not make much of point where there was no place for given much stud.Agto the domestic of thevnan and the woman in munition factories, were running a showing. They practiced medicine the women In the working world ex-to whose wooing consisted of a footrace streetcars and In in work the mens actual care of the sick. But go but out. There are even some doing and a blow on tlte ladys head with offices wouldnt have been so great, medicine, as a profession, was linked tremists who believe that the care of some hard, blunt Instrument. perhaps, if we had all remembered a In primitive times with tribal leader- children should be taken out of the If the men insist on delving Into little more of our ship and with priestcraft to such an home and away from the mothers the secrets of those monolithic predeMiss Laughlin reminds us that in extent that it belonged almost entirely hands. cessors of the New York apartment his account of primitive races the late to men. It is here the clinging vine gets house, said Miss Laughlin, then they Otis T. Mason, curator of ethnology It has been only in the last few into the picture, said Miss Laughlin. must take the consequences and an- In the United States 'National Museum, years that women were admitted to She developed as a hothouse plant, swer by what right they can call any points out some of the Industries which our medical schools of any standing. because there was nothing much for work the work of men, unless perhaps began as womans Work. He sayS: And the few women physicians before her to do. Industry had been moved It Is hunting and fishing. Back In that The slain deer lying before her cave the war had little or no real practice. from the home. Womans place was ideal period for which the modern man or brush shelter or wigwam! She Take it in our own time, out in some still In the home, but there was nothpines practically all of the work be- strikes off a sharp flake of flint for neighborhood where there is no doctor. ing for her to do. Often the mothers So when our a- knife. By that act she becomes the If some one is HI of a baby comes, do of these Idle girls were responsible for longed to the women. men talk about mans work Id like to first cutler. man? Certainly pot; their parasitism, because they had had we send for , know just what they mean. With this knife she carefully re- its a woman who is called in to help. to work so very hard themselves that The law? There isnt a mother, their ideal for their daughters was a Kipling Is one of the few men who moves the skin, little dreaming that really understand what the relation- thereby she is making herself the never has been a mother, who didnt, condition which would make It posof all subsequent at times, have to act as judge and sible for them to do nothing harder ship of the cave man and the cave patron saint woman was, according to Miss Laugh- butchers. Jury in the disputes of her children. than sit on a cushion and sew a fine lin. As proof of her contention she She rolls up the hide, then dresses Father may be the court of appeals, seam. cites his Just So stories, which he it with brains, smokes it, curries it, but she is on the bench all day. But the swing backward toward You will breaks Jt with implements of stone Every day a mother has to decide ami told to his best beloved. standards, when woman vas primitive remember the place where It says : and bone until she makes her reputa- act according to her decisions. And a worker, to the cave man period. If woe unto her if she is an unjust judge. you choose, made a long sweep during The man was wild, too. He was tion as the first currier and tanner. In the New England town where the war. Women had been seeping With needle of bone and thread of dreadfully wild. He didnt even begin to be tame until he met the wqman, sinew and seissors of flint, she cuts I was brought up, continued Miss into the professions and businesses and she told him that she did not like and makes the clothing for her lord Laughlin, the progress of modern in- before that time, .but their progress and family; no sign is over the door, vention did not touch us for a long had been almost Imperceptible. living In his wild ways. You will remember how it was. She but within dwells the first tailor and time. The industrial revolution, which e Thus efficiency, inherited took from the home so much of Its from their Industrious . picked out a nice, dry cave (proving, dressmaker. grandmothers, cave when a not reached there From leather especially prepared drudgery, had by the way, that there was no doubt, asserted Itself with their new woman before there was a cave man), she cuts and makes moccasins for her I was a little girl. e war-timjobs. Employers were satisWe made our own soap, onr own fied and clients made and she cleaned house properly and husband, thereby beginning the shoe So afte happy. own across our and skin meats, candles, cured industry. hung a dried wild horse women are staying with their tfypw She was toymaker for her chil- wove the cloth for our clothes. That work. the opening of the cave and said: Wipe your feet, dear, when you dren, modiste, milliner, upholsterer, is, the women did this work. According to Miss Laughlin, there wall decorator for her family. come in, amj now well keep house. Every man who is working In an isnt anything disastrous in the situais She was at first and is now the electric light plant doing the work And the man came in and lay down tion. She believes that there is beside the fire that the woman had universal cook.- - From the grasses that was once done by women mak- of work to be done for both menplenty and around her cabin she constructs the ing the lights. Every man who is women in built and went to sleep. and industrial professional mill is doing But just before he dozed off, said floor mat, the mattress, the screen, the working in a weaving the work formerly done by women. lines. Miss Laughlin, he probably threw wallet, the sail. Efi'ciency and work are not matShe is the mother of all spinners, Every man working In a soap facout his chest and remarked that he of sex, Is her dictum. ters done work believed and sallmakers. by formerly weavers, upholsterers, was a cave man himself tory is doing Miss Laughlin is far from the cave women. that a womans place was In the Again he says: The great canning factories, plants woman in looks, but she Is endowed To the field she goes with the home. And Miss Laughlin agrees with Mr. basket or wallet strapped across her for preserving food, eveh some of the with a vigor of mind and spirit which do her cave grandmothers would Kipling in the theory that the motive forehead. By the sweat of her face work of the meat packing industries, for keeping house was the protection she earns her bread and becomes the are built upon work that was formerly credit. Miss Laughlin practices law She was born In In San Francisco. all done by women. of the baby. Long periods without first pack animal. In the Philippine Islands, where the New England. Her college education Home again with her grain or food, which were bound to be part of the life of a nomadic people, were acorns, she thrashed and ground them basis of the family system was the was secured at Wellesley and she was hard on the young, and that is the into flour or bran, thereby mothering matriarch, the, mother was head of graduated In law from Cornell unireason the woman decided to keep the thrashing Industry and the mill- the family. She handled all the funds versity, one of two women in her class. In EuLater Miss Laughlin went to Colohouse. ing. Where It was impossible to find and budgeted her household. "In the beginning, women did all the caves or natural shelter for her family rope, among the small shopkeepers espe- rado, where she was active In politics, If were she designed and built the first wig- cially, women are the cashiers of the women having beea granted the right work, says Miss Laughlin. to vote in that state while she was going to say that such and such Is wams and forerunners f houses, thus family and of the business. , A number of years ago Cooking, homemaking and dress- In college. the work of one of the sexes we might being the first architect. A11 the peaceful arts of today, making are still done In the homes Miss Laughlin went to San Francisco as well admit that every man In Inwere once all over the country to such an extent and there she has built up a large Jaw dustry Is doing work which was orig- continues the account, At first her clients were womans peculiar province. Along that they are still considered womens practice. inally womans work. The real cave men were con- lines of industrialism she was pio- work, Miss Laughlin pointed out. But nearly all women. But the war added cerned with war and hunting. And neer, Inventor, author and originator." with community housekeeping and men to the list. ' And these men, who went to her first because their former the cave women had the Industrial t As conditions became more settled community kitchens and ready-mad- e field to themselves. Only when war for primitive tribes, men gave up their clothes, the day may come when the counsel had gone to war, have found tecame less Important did the men go warfare and entered womens indus- men in charge of the machines that the woman lawyer so competent that S for Industries, and even then they tries. Gradually they took nearly aU make the home go round will say : they retained her even when the men basis. We of them. As work was taken from Imagine those women applying for returned to their offices. d se on about a remedies but Lydia. E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound aid me more good than H, pre-wa- ,1 1 y. - . anything else. I ara regular, do not suffer the pains I used, to, keep house and do all my work. I recommend your medicine to all who suffer as I did and you may use my letMrs. Minnie Mitchter as you like. Harrington, Me. ell, There are many women who suffer as Mrs. Mitchell did and whoare being benefited by this great medicine every day. It has helped thousands of women who-havbeen troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-dowfeeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound contains no narcotics or harmful drugs. It is made from extracts of roots and herbs and is a safe medium for women. If you need special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Lynn, Mass. The liver Is the Road to Health If the liver is right the whole system la right Carters Little Liver Pills will gently awakenyour sluggish, dogged- up liver and relieve constipation, stomach . trouble, inac- - A tove bowel 8, loss of appe J CARTER'S I and dizziness. Purely vegetable. You need them. Small Pill Small Dose Small Price DR CARTERS IRON PILLS, Natures great nerve and blood tonic for Anemia, Rheumatism, Nervousness, Sleeplessness and Female Weakness. CciiIm nut Icn sliulan Three Great Men. I was making a speech at a banquet and in the course of my remarks said. Amerjcja .has, - produced only thiee-greamen Washington, Lincoln and Loud laughter drowned I, myself the rest of my remarks. I had intended to say, think Theodore Roosevelt.' But the laughter got my goat and I had to sit down without saying anything more. Exchange. t FRECKLES Now b the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the slightest need ot feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine double strength is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine double strength from your druggist, and apply a little of It night and morning and yoi should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than oneBklnounce is needed to comand gain a beautiful pletely clear the clear complexion. Be sure to aBk for the double strength Othine, as this is sold under guarantee ot money back If ft fails to remove freckles. Fortunes await the inventor of a lifeboat that will float on the sea of trouble. Men flatter merely to protect selves from women who flirt. them- . old-tim- -- 5 2-- JS Nerves All Unstrung "But Doans Hade Life Again Worth Living, Says Mrs. Harris "I was in excellent health nntil my kidneys weakened, says Mrs. N. A. Harris, 1009 Indiana St., Neodesha, Kansas. The kidney secretions burned like fire and passed so often I couldnt get a moments rest. My back ached and for days at a time I was bed, fonfined to tortured with the shaip pains. I couldnt stoop without fairly screaming with misery. I lost strength and weight and was so weak I a nervous be-ca- wreck. Head- aches and ness added blurred; Mn. Hurls dizzi- - to limbs, my distress. My sight nds and face were swollen and puffy sacs came under my eyes. I lost hope of being well again. Finally a neighbor brought me a box Doans Kidney Pills, and later I got several boxes, My troubles began to lessen and soon i could sleep all night and wake up refreshed and happy and life Was again worth living. I am now strong, healthy woman and owe my health and happiness to Doans, Sworn to before me. J. A. DEARDORFF, Notary Public. Gal Doans at Any Store, 60c a Box of DOANS F3STER-IOLBUR- N CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y. Cuticura Soap The Razor Safety Shaving Soap OBtkars8oap shaves without mof. Evsgywhstsgs. |