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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH Captain Sazarac Piles By Charles Tenney Jackson are usually due to straining when constipated. Nojol being a lubricant keeps the food waste soft and Copyright by The BobbsMerriU i i L t SELDOM SEE big knea Ilka this, but your horse way have e bunch or bruise on hie enklo, hock, stifle knee or t throat. will clean it off without laying up tha horse. No blister, no hair gone. Concentrated only a few drops required at an application. (230 livered. Describe special instructions, W. F. YOUNG, lot, 510 Lyass St, Company "THE PLOT NAPOLEON" therefore prevents straining. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it not only soothes the suffering of piles but relieves the irritation, brings comfort and helps to remove them.) not a Nujol is a lubricant so medicine or laxative cannot gripe. Try it today. 't per bottle deyour esse for and Bosk 8Afr SpriagfisU. Ilia. SYNOPSIS. Under the name of Captain Sazarac, and disguised. Jean Lafltte, former freebooter of Barataria, proscribed, returns to the city of New Orleans. He is recognized by two of his old companions, Alderman Dominique At the gaming and Beluche. tables Sazarac has won much money from Colonel Carr, British officer. John Jarvis, the citys first bohemian of the arts and letters, an oldtime friend of Lafltte, tells of a womans face and smile. As his last wager, Carr puts up a woman, presumably a slave. Custom compels Sazarac-taccept the stake. He wins. His old associates and Count Raoul de Almonaster accost him at Lafltte. A project of the youthful adventurers of New Orleans is the rescue of Napoleon Bonaparte from S. Helena, and a ship, the Seraphlne, has been made ready. From De Almonaster. Sazarac learns that the girl he "won at the card table is white, of high estate, and that the matter has been made a byword In the citys resorts. Sazarac finds Mademoiselle Lestron, a fellow passenger on a river steamer a few days before, and with whom he had fallen in love, is the girl and In chivalry foregoes his revenge against Carr. Jarvis admires Mademoiselle Lestron. He is a witness of the meeting and picks up a camellia which the girl had thrown, unJarvis is noticed, to Sazarac. dangerous; he talks too much in his cups. His old associates of the Barataria days urge Lafltte to take command of the ostensibly to rescue Napoleon but really to fly the black flag and cruise the seas. He Sera-phin- t I ' Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots Theres no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othlne double strength la to remove these homely spots. guaranteed Simply get an ounce of Othine from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you 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 an ounce ia needed to completely clear the akin and gain a beautiful, clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the Othine, as this is sold under guarantee of money back if It fails to remove freckles. double-streng- th Skin Troubles Soothed With Cuticura Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcnm 25c. EmS HURT? For horning or scaly lids, 'and to relieve inflamma-- , 'ttar and soreness, oie toMitchell direcEye Salve, according tions. Soothing, healing. ' BALL BUOKEL Tork ,47 Waverly Flan Nr W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. FOUR OCLOCK 23. IS TEA HOUR Almost Sacred Institution in Buenos Aires, and Practically Observed by All Classes. Tea Is an institution In Buenos Aires. All offices swear off work temporarily at 4 oclock each afternoon, while white-coateporters bring steaming enps around to the employees, and employers gather up canes and derby hats and saunter forth for the nearest tea salon. Because of the size of this fashionable promenade, Calle Florida, the Fifth avenue of Buenos Aires, is closed to vehicle traffic from 4:30 to 7:30, says the World Traveler magazine. The city Imbibes Its coffee and tea publicly. In the mornings the streets are congested with waiters from bars carrying nickel pots of Brazilian coffee to tardy office clerks. The Avenlda is swamped with other nonalcoholic drinkers who, by paying for a cup of coffee at a sidewalk table, get a post of vantage for the purpose of ogling pretty women out on shopping expeditions. d 10-ce- The Millionaire. They are telling In Moscow a good story of a profiteer who sat in the best restaurant guzzling away regardless of How can you gorge yourexpense. self like that, asked a friend, when so many millions are starving on the Volga? The profiteer took his knife from Ills mouth. Study on, he protested, you know what soviet millions are. London Dally Express. . It Is likely that people who conquer and dominate dont worry much. Its a gift. ' drink-swolle- e, CHAPTER IV DAIRY Dairyman Should Strive to Keep Calves Growing In raising heifer calves, the dairyman should seek to keep them growing constantly. A setback or slump in growth is costly and difficult to overcome, the New York state agricultural college at Ithaca has found. Many good calves have; been well fed and well grown until weaned, and then when turned out to pasture, have been Often this neglected and Runted. stunting Is perxjment, and undersized cows result. It Is usually better not to turn calves do believe! The respectable banker shrugged. Mr. Langhorne, we shall Enough take our business to the customs The city is a triflers town And this 1 1 1 the sailing of the Napo- Mr. Mayor, the folly leaps and grows! Sober, decent merchants entering the coffee houses are badgered by young roisterers to subscribe to the plot Napoleon Anything for a fanfaronade, even If it brought leon ship. 1 England and the United States to war Langhorne, the consul, raised a Two Gentlemen of Mystery. The Seraphlne, hand laughingly. The honorable the mayor, Monsieur good sirs, will be well watched once Rouiffignac, stood on the stone flags these crackbrains put her nose out the of the City hall, or Principal, as it passes! His majesty Is not atremble was yet called from the Spanish days, at this frolic! and looked contentedly out on the rue And with a bow the two gentlemen Chartres. He had come early, before departed. Half a square distant, the the heat of the day, for some. business consul turned to the banker. v with his clerks. Colonel Carr, sir has me distractA ed. He brings credentials from QueHeigh-o- ! sighed the mayor. long day for me! The council will bec that I cannot Ignore, and yet I not meet until ten but I shall cut mistrust him. Styled as a commisthem short ! Ah, there good morn- sioner to the rebellious subjects of the ing, Monsieur Mudge! Spanish king In New Granada, he has Mr. Mudge, of the banking firm of seemed overbusied up the Mississippi Mudge & Ficltert, was turning from on his way overland." You fear Carrs honesty? Faith, the street : a tall and Immaculate gentleman In high bell hat and new. long, the fellow has been too drunken to be And you know his brawl dangerous. with this Captain Sazarac? I should say they are both men of mystery out of the Northwest. The old talk of Aaron Burrs rival republic in the Mississippi valley Is revived again; but Continued. He would be at home anywhere Beluche watched the jester who had wandered back among the wine tuns searching for his pewter mug: Do you recall how our rough fellows vere amazed when we first tumbled him off a sacked merchantman down among us, and at once with our pistols at his head lie began to bawl for drink? As I live, thereafter, on the Petral, he feared nothing save that the next prize might have more gold than liquor ! He did us all honor, mused Lafltte. Eh, the old faces about me! the youngest of them all, Jarvis save Raoul, staggered to the table. Piracy, he lamented, "ruined me! I was treated all too famously by the cutthroats. But, Jean now, if we had a ship eh, well I The drink this way ! Ah, the ship! It appears we have forgotten why we are here! The ship? We have a ship ! , A ship? growled a new voice. Nez Coupe, the small wiry Canary Islander, with a face most frightfully disfigured by a saber cut, the most lawless of the former Grand Terre privateers, an outlaw still unpardoned, came to the What talk ! Not one of table lamp. us all could purchase a yawl boat! Beluche and Dominique fidgeted. Beluche gestured uneasily to the- fastidious De Almonaster. It seemed he must speak; It was for that they had fetched him to the council. There Is a ship appointed for a purpose, began the count, reservedly. The Girod ship, fitted by the citizenry for a certain purpose That Napoleon Bah! folly! growled Johanness : Childs play ! Ah, but a ship for your eye, my captain ! The grim grizzled faces looked from the captain to the youngest man. It Is difficult to announce, continued Raoul. But I have, this day, taken over my aunts Interest, and that of Monsieur Aliain, in the Girod ship. I have, therefore, a word as to her. As you all know, the Napoleon venture Is not a secret The mayor, Rouiffignac, the Creole families of the city, are heartily in sympathy with It. I have been against It until Monsieur Dominique proposed that we intrigue for Captain Sazarac to command. There was a shoKt derision, Incredulity, protest. The wilder ones upwould rose feverishly. Dominique have spoken, but Jarvis staggered up, A toast ! The plot cup In hand. And Ho, villains, all to the plot! he roared the louder. The devil take you! growled Beluche. The watchman on the cornerI, to Sazarac raised his hand. command? What madness again ! The the town are to man young blades-o- f the schooner they would be spanked to bed If Lafltte was to be known among them ! We have thought powerful Influence could be brought to bear for your A rare exploit to pardon, Monsieur. reinstate you seizing the emperor from his prison isle! Sazarac laughed idly: Quite ImGentlemen, I beg you possible. A ship! shouted Johanness, as If, suddenly, to his old eyes had leaped ' the vision of far sea days : The Seraphlne! Jean, and a ship again! A ship shaken free in the gulf, and any flag will serve! Silence, you fool! gasped Domi- If England Is In It Perdition, sir! Perdition with aldermen! Ho, you Beluche, with the gilt giincracks on yonr shoulders what do you think? and you and Jean on the quarter-decI at the lookouts? Name o G d! One crack at the fat fleets, and then south across the line! In the swamps off Point Le Garde," shouted Nez Coupe, I can enlist a dozen overnight who once sailed with Jean an Pierre I Is not so! He you mean! The merchant took snuff gravely, We trust that he represents nothing but some malicious sir. Last night, I am informed, he had Madame Pages pension in an uproar. Starting to beat a black girl, he wound up by striking his wife; and then having a set-t- o with some unknown guest or caller. And the lady who is his wife, sir Is not of ettle to brook outrage." Mrs. Carr Is of an old Tory family that fled from New York In the first war bitter against the American government far more than the British themselves. Then there is Carrs ward I had heard a famous beauty, sir." The young gallants already are agog for a peep at her when she Is driven on the Esplanade. But the women seek absolute seclusion, humiliated utterly at Colonel Carre conduct The girl Is of value to Carrs schemes, you think? Langhorne took his snuff absently. That Is the question. She was of a family that had great estates In the islands. She Is loyal to' the Carrs through gratitude to those who saved her life." The merchant glanced at the clock in the cathedral facade. Well, enough of this. The coffee houses have already forgotten the affair of Carr and this adventurer Sazarac. This week the sensation Is choosing the crew under Bosslere to man the Napoleon ship. Nothing has so tickled the popular fancy of the s, - 1 It who comes to Louisiana thinking to find friction between the Yankees and the Creoles must be a better diplomat than Colonel Carr, sir If that is what A Toast! The Plot! Ho, Villains, All to the Plot!" And He Roared the Louder. tight trousers outside h!3 equally tight boots; and behind him, the mayor noted, was Mr. Langhorne, the consul of Great Britain. The greetings were of punctilious respect. What makes you so early astir, As gentlemen? queried His Honor. for me I am the most lamentably overworked man in Louisiana. The governor sends me vast communications all In the English, these days, which, unfortunately, I cannot read so well ; and Monsieur La Tour, getting up his new city directory. Insists that I read his proofs and there Is not a picayune victualer, nor a mender of pots that he does not get In so that New Orleans may claim rank with Philadelphia or New York! La la I there are too many of us ' - now ! You may well" say, rejoined Mr. Mudge hurriedly, "complaint has already been made by the English captain petty thieves made away with some of his merchandise on the Hock. The customs people have pursued them I believe one fellow was shot In a fracas down Bayon near the plantation of Monsieur Berthoud. "An outrage, sir, protested the consul. In the name of his majesty I must make representations It Is an affair, sir, said Monsieur more for the Rouiffignac politely, United States authorities. Yes, but they are laughing about the town, sir! Rough fellows of the wineshops and the levees are all agog with this rumor' that the bandit of Barataria has returned; and at once an outrage Is put on the port's shipping! said the mayor, I know. "Hum, Thirty cases of muskets, by some mistake, put out from the English ship on the dock. The port officei-The captain of the Gennron lia protested, sir, famed the consul ; the cargo was destined for the Mexicoes, Barataria, s ' Creoles Wonderful Result fromLydla E. Pinkh&ms Vegetable Compound Beloit, Wi- Bossiere is to command, mused Mr. Mudge. "He, at least. Is a seaman. I I am an evil fegacy am forty-two.- " (TO BE CONTINUED.) Acquiring Knowledge. I pluck up the rood lissome herb-- , of sentences hy pruning, eat them h reading, digest them liv musing, nr ay them up at length hi Ihe hi i seat of memory. Queer. FUz.-ihe.l- My female trouble was - nought on by overwork. 1 had worked lin stores and had to do heavier work than my strength could stand, ana had to be on my feet most of the time. - Finally I had to give up thin work entirely and at home. Dostay ctors medicine did not give me much relief (Prepared by the United Statee Department of Agriculture ) The average age of milch cows when slaughtered for beef is ten years, and the price realized for such cows Is f about the price brought by younger cows sold for milking purInposes, according to a nation-wid- e vestigation of present conditions made this year by the United States Department of Agriculture. State averages of the age at which cows are sold for slaughter were remarkably uniform, there being no state with an average under nine years and no state with an average over eleven years. States showing an average of eleven years were Maryland, West Virginia, Florida, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Utah and Nevada. States with an average of nine years were New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. In the early spring this year, when the survey was made, milch cows showed an average sale price of $32 per head when sold for slaughter, or about 50 per cent of the average price , of $63 for cows sold at the same time for milking purposes. Few men novel readers thoroughly believe In" the hero. one-hal- i Tell Value of Sire by Production of Progeny Safe instant relief from CORNS cor Oiu minuUtnd tha pain of that coda! That' what Dr. SchoUa Zmo-pad- a 'trio caw remove the 4o-s- sy. They and heal the irritation. Thu from cutting your you avoid infection corns or using corrosive acids. Tkn; an for corns, calSizes tiaeptic: waterproof. louses, bunions. Get a box today at your dealers. shoe druggist's ot Dl Scholls XitiO'pads JM f the lohorotorics of The Scholl - Co.. otokers of Dr. Scholl's Foot Comfort Applmeu, Arch Sup torts, no. Mft- Put one on the pain is gone ! - The wrisest dairyman In the world cannot tell a prepotent bull by his looks or by his breeding. There Is no known way of telling a valuable sire only by his progeny. If his heifers are better producers than their dams he Is a good bull worth his weight In gold, but If his heifers are no Improvement over their dams, or if not so good, then he Is worthless as a sire. Who can tell what the result will be when yon mate an unknown bull with poor cows? No man can. The most perfect Individual, according to stand- ards, might he absolutely worthless, and If his sire was a proved prepotent bull and his dam had a worlds record he might not have this unknown, mysterious power of prepotency. He might transmit undesirable qualities Instead of desirable ones. cJ,dleiiooccaWf CHZSKBROUCH MANUFACTURING (CooaolUUtwD ItattStNM CO. Nw York Vaseline DAIRY NOTES RcgUSfttOS Yellow or White ! I trust your government does not take It seriously? The consul laughed shortly. We watch It, sir! The clipper may take twoscore gallants out of the city, for if the thing Is made fashionable enough, the Seraphlne would sail with her decks crammed by ambitious admirals, commodores, captains and lieutenants! Bonaparte, himself, would be astounded at the array of perfumed gentlemen who would greet him In his exile! and IflPIIOVEUEIIT out to pasture until after they are weaned, as It Is much easier to feed and care for them In the bam. Some and my mother farmers never pasture calves bom afwanted me to take E. Pinkhams JLvdia ter January 1, during the first summer. Vegetable Compound. I took a couple of By this means they avoid heat and bottlesof it and thought it didnot help me flies, which keep young calves from as much as it should, so I gave it up to try growing in summer. else. Nothing I took helped something Any pasture Intended for calves me much, so I finally decided to give the should have plenty of water and plenty Vegetable Compound another trial and to take enough of it to make sure of shade. If possible, It should be located near the bam In order to make it would help me. I have taken it over It convenient to watch over the calves, a year now and it has brought wonderful results. I have gained from 93 to provide salt and give feed. They 110 pounds and am keeping house now. should have some grain at least once My friends all notice the change in my a day, If normal growth Is expected. health. I will be glad to answer afi In most cases about two pounds Is letters that women write to me about Mrs. W. the Vegetable Compound. enough for each calf. The following G. Monson, 1515 Park Ave., Beloit, Wis. mixture Is recommended: Three hunMrs. Monson is willing to write to any dred pounds commeal, hominy feed or woman suffering from such troubles. ground barley, 300 pounds ground oats, 300 pounds wheat bran. New Use for Electricity. One hundred pounds of linseed oil The handsome hero of the movie who meal may be addid to this with good lights a cigarette and holds the light results, and it is advisable to do so In. his shaded hand so that his features during late summer, when hot weather may be exhibited in relief may not be has dried up the pasture and reduced striking tt match at all. He may be snap-lin- g the protein content of the grass, the switch of a wire that runs up his i After the calves reach an age of sleeve and connects with a baby arc nine to ten months, grain feeding de- that lights up his face and does more pends entirely upon the condition of Justice to his cleancuf features than the pasture. - If it Is plentiful, green the flame from a lighted match could and succulent, good growth can be ob- effect. tained without grain. But If It Is short and dried up, it should be supplement Exception. ed by the concentrate feeds. Foreman Yes, Ill give ye a Job sweepln an keepln the place clean. But Im a college graduate. State Averages of Age Well, then, maybe ye better start at Which Cows Are Sold on somethin simpler. From Life. 1 other jest FRIEI1DS NOTICED HINTS CHAPTER V hesitates. nique. lJE$Q5B Hist lamented Dominique. They can hear you to the levee! Let the young gentleman talk; then our captain will have It clearly. He shall be Sazarac until we are cleared, Captain Gaspar Sazarac with recommendations from the Americans of the West. Monsieur de Almonaster will vouch for Sazarac. I, myself, the alderman, have known this worthy Sazarac who is to be the secluded house guest of Monsieur de Almonaster, and Introduced aright ere we broach the Napoleon matter n Jarvis suddenly thrust his face close to the lamp. He grinned, wlth tipsy awakening. Why, so this Sazarac! Jean! a Ho, woman! You are overnight in the He town, and at once aywoman! fumbled In his breast and brought out a crushed flower, and laid It down with a mock flourish. Did you ever, Captain Gaspar Sazarac smel! camellias In the moonlight? Sazarac stood glancing from John Jarvis to the camellia upon the table. The jester was grinning knowingly. The Count de Almonaster turned a puzzled face upon them both. The affair of the English woman, Twaddle of the grumbled Beluche. A gossipers on the promenade. drunken fool, and an evil jest! Sazarac need not challenge. The scandal is upon Carr and his two women. But Jarvis continued to leer upon the leaders silent face. I wish I could paint love In a womans eye he mocked. Then there should be a mistress with a camellia In her hair at my studio. He turned away to draw his measure of wine. I But some thieving villains take ad vantage of the question raised The Baratarians, Monsieur Mayor!" blustered the merchant ; the pardoned rascals of Jean Lafltte! The very rumor of his return disturbs commerce. Look, now here comes old Gorgio, the crayfish seller as big a villain as is unhung, pardoned by the President! And do you think be will trouble himself to step off the banquette when gentlemen come by, when he knows that half of Louisiana has come to think of Jean Lafltte as more patriot than pirate? Hum hum, mused the placid mayor; "some maintain that he saved the city In 1815. Eh, my dear consul! but we are veiy good friends now, are we not? Hum hum and here comes Monsieur Dominique, who ought to know something about this Idle gossip of Lafltte. Mudge, the banker, bowed stiffly to the portly alderman; Langhorne, with a frown there were some fastidious gentry who did not care for equality with the pardoned and Falstaffian buccaneer. The mayor turned slyly to him. The Ah, Monsieur Dominique I gentlemen ask of a matter upon which you might enlighten us. Lafitte's reputed return The councilor raised a fat hand. And If It were true, rue Royals would be ribboned to welcome him, I V The time to train cows to eat well of roughage is when they are young. TOO Cow testing eliminates the cow kept loss, raises the average production of the herd and Increases the profits from dairying. at a Several weeks of liberal feeding with good roughage and from six to ten pounds of grain a day while cows are dry is good Insurance for efficient production In the next lactation period. A cold separator will not do good work. It Is best to run about a gallon of warm water through the bowl to warm It before turning on the milk.. The main reason why silage Is such a good milk feed Is because of Its succulence. The juices in it stimulate the cow to higher production. Every dairyman should work ont his own feeding rations, using the feeds he can grow most economically, then buying those he cannot grow In the '.est and cheapest forms. TOUPMJlU3f 1 LATE Death only a matter of short times Dont wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking LATHROPS W HAARLEM OIL; ' i- - f-- ' M j ! The worlds standard remedy for kidney, fiver, bladder and uric add troubles the National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists. Look for tha nama Gold Modal on box and accapt no imitation 1ATHE TIRED EYES Dr Thompson Eyewater. Buy at yourdrnifglstsor Booklet. Itlvr, Troy, JS. itto i' I |