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Show , I '1 TOE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE. UTAH 1 , 1 All of Them Willing . to Testify to That V r t Robert W. Cbumhcra said In a literary argument at the Century club : It la claimed that our new acbool of .novelists are better writers .than the novelists of the pant, but who Is It makes this claim? Mr. Chambers smiled and went on: "An amateur photographer said one i t ' c psycho-analyti- 4 ! 4 I t ij dny J ,v l ut 4 : i , . , - t ' i 1 i ' n ff I Here's 'an article that says the flr.rit work In photogrupliy Is now The Taxi river In 'Is this statement true? companion. 'Of course believe It, nsk I p Champions every time. '! 'i or tumbUrihbeO ttllm nn iu Carr-- lo lu-(- r eonftrwtlrtt, mnd iMt cud analyUs tlnLtrmdn. ubout tlie ugliest stage bad thing that ever happened. "Yes, It was so ugly that It reminds me of a story. "The story Is nhout u very ugly man who railed one afternoon oh a fascinating young widow. As he sat with the widow very happily over a cup of tea and a cigarette her little daughter came In from school. "The child stared at the man for a moment In sllenc- -. Then she bnrvt out In wide-eyeImllgtudlon : I seen you at for shame he xoo yesterday without your clothes CSermpion X i (or ) -- H K 60 J DmIi Cmi oWr than For J 75 f t , Champion SparJCPugs d "ill8 on TOLEDO, OHIO ! !" Cat Mothers Squirrels RIAL CCif CSIT - A clean-uwas needed For money talk dont be deceived about high-ar- t money and money alone our p It iht bettor tporkjilughrtautrofsu 'it any' The clean-uof the New York stage lell Nevrnm Itooth Turklnglon to suy at mi Indianapolis reception: spark plugs. I use ( Its .true. If you dont One Guess as to What Animal He Resembled 6peed in fast runs it I asked his Any photographer? No. Any amateur" ' d 1 ur,' done by nin.it If there is one thing that counts most in getting away, fast to beat traffic-anfor v : A fi cut belonging to Wense ef Fairfax county, ,PCJ. sore, perspiring Virginia, recently lost three of her four kittens and Wea.se tried the experismarlinj fIST ment of giving her three baby squirrels In place of her dead progeny. The Shiite cat accepted the responsibility and I into apparently displaying os much Interest In the foster fuiully as In the one reystrr SHOES? maining kitten. The squirrels and cat apieared perfectly content mi vat nrr hmom mmm The same cat waa supplied with a family of three squirrels, by Wease two years ago and mothered them for several months until they were able to take care of themselves, when they If the weather never changed some left and were not acen again. folka wouldnt hart very much to talk for Itot. tired, i' Con-stab- le UUEN. 2u Try Kindness on Cabbages about A Hindu -- scientist with a thorny name declares that plants can feet Grace Tabor of the Womans Home By ELMO SCOTT WATSON ,NE of the tenderest love stories In American literature and one of Companion agrees with him and InAmerica's poets, who erect a statuary sists that the poor things are often 111 depicting "The Village made that love story Immortal, are Blacksmith." "Hiawatha1' will be Immortalized treated. The vegetarians ought to reto have an enduring memorial In In bronze by contributions from the Indians of member this when they scold the meat lYomleonl Dnvr Hotel Mot the form of a national park of the two countries and an effort will be made to eaters. And when better grow From plants Suffering Indlgettion and 1,000 acres. If present plans are Interest the school children of America in giving Stomech Trouble, Relieved by they are loved, like babies. carried forward to a successful conTenloe penny contributions which will make possible a clusion. That story Is the story of the quest of statue appropriate to Tlie Childrens Hour. "Everyone can Bell-A- n Evangeline, the Acadian mnlden, for her lover, s Halts Over-Acidit- y benefit by my ex Although they were characters of fiction, there the poet Is Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who once did live a Gabriel" and an "Evangeline" aaya pertence wrote her epic of love and devotion, and the This Widely Used 8ura Relief Can Be Orson C. Williams, whose love story Inspired Longfellow's poem. The project Is the establishment of a national reservaowner of Roaalyn Depended On Every Time. , nnme of the real Evangeline was Emmerltne tion near Ft. Mnrtlnvllte, I,a., to be known as Hotel, Denver. the was faithless Louis Gabriel" Lablche, Longfellow-Evangelln- e National Memorial purk. How disagreeable how exasperat"Neglect robbed and their life story Is a part of the tragic me of good health. Down In Louisiana tbe descendants of Evaning, how embarrassing to be sufferer tale of the simple folk of Acadia who were Eating became a from gas, belching, heartburn, sick gelines people, the Arndlnns, have formed a deported by British soldiery from their homes trial, for I suffered National Pnrk nJ'soeintlon. the headache, nausea and other digestive away back in 1753. The Acadlans were French from Indigestion BELL-Aof which is atated by Its officers as folS for Indigestion disorders. purpose colonists who had settled In what Is now Nova and gas that bloat Fcotla In 1007, and who lived a happy, contented d my stomach. I would almost Is a harmless, pleasant Sure Relict. lows: To build a great national memorial to the turn blind from dlsxlntss caused Tested by over SO years use. 23c and Acadlana; to erect a splendid hronxe statue, repexistence In their homes In the New world until by Indigestion and "was Just about 73c Ikgs. at all drug stores, or send resenting Longfellow and tlie heroine of his poem, caught In the maelstrom of world politics, stirred to give up when Tanlao was recomfor free samples to Rell A Co, Inc, Evangeline, the Aendlnn maiden of Grand Ire; up by the contest between England and France to to preserve the Evangeline Oak, a tree more than mended to me. Orangeburg, N. Y. Adv. decide which nation w'as to dominate the North "After taking It awhile Z felt four hundred years old, also the nnelent trees American continent. In the series of wars between stronger and my appetite returned around St. Martinsville, the scene of the poem; two countries which began In 1GS9 Acadia was the and I can truthfully say that Tan-la- c Replenishing Mail Bags to preserve the nnelent brick hulld'ng which a on the International now held pawn Is a fine tonlo and helped build More than 3,000,000 yards of surplus stands near the oak and which was the trading now tbe and French British. the by me hack to health." by canvas. Intended originally for army post of the Attnkapns Indians, and to build a As for the Acadlans themselves, they were In Over 40.000.000 bottles of this tents and wagon covers, has been museum In which will be kept the records and wonderful tonic, made from roots, the main neutral. In fact they were often referred turned over to post office authorities antiques used by the ertrly Acadlans and French barks and herbs, hare been sold. In the official papers of the time as the "Neuto for use as rnntl bags, says the DearAvoid steknesa Take Tanlao. The emigrants into Loulalnnn, as well as a record of tral French." While the sympathies of most of born Independent Ask each donor, so thnt the lives of these people, whom are results amazing. your drugthem no doubt leaned toward their own country-meI Longfellow Immortalized, may be studied by this gist for a bottle today and some of them supported tbe French Even In Alaska lee Is not given generation and generations to route. fur the most part they wished to be left cause, We do that In our seal our calmer away. It sells at $150 for half a In aeeordamw with this plan the association Is In their peacpful pursuits as farmers and alone In a mors amounts or ton' of to $4 answer. ton, moment would be afraid fishermen. The question of their allegiance waa enlisting the aid of every citizen of T.ouislana to than 2,000 pounds. Scott. have the first national park in the South located never definitely settled after any of the treaties In the Pelican state. It has already secured of pence, tnt In 1753, with France and England appropriation of $10,000 by the state legislature glrdlrg for the flnnl decisive struggle, the which haa made possible the purchase of a tract Acadlans found themselves caught between the of at least 250 acres and It Is asking the federal upper and nether millstones of British and French government for an appropriation of $100,000 tn demands, for their loyalty. order that mort land as much as 1,000 acres. If In that yenr the British, who then held Acadia, decided that the Acadlans were ?an enemy enpossible may be bought The project Is more than one to foster local pride, since by It the camped In the heart of the province" and deternatural beautlea of that section niav be made mined to force a They reiterated a more apparent and made accessible to the demand that had been made many years before, thousands of tourists from all parts of the country but which had never been inalsted upon that the who drive through the Acaillnn cunfry every Acadlans Fake an oath of allegiance to the British itowu upon pntu of forfeiture of their rights and year. For that reason the park has a national lands. What followed Is significance. It also has an International sigby George M. Wrong In "The Conquest of New France" In nificance In that French Canadians will be Invited to share In thus honoring tbe memory of those, of the Yale University Chronicles of America as follows : their people who, so many years ago. were forced to leave their homes and go Into clle. Ths thtni? was don tn th summer and autumn Included In the plans for the park are those for of 17SS. Colon! P.obsrt Monckton, a regular officer, two of his a sculptured group Longfellow and or of an Irleh peer, who alwaya showed an Ineffable auperlorltjr to provincial officers famous characters, Evangeline and Gabriel. This serving uniter him, was placed In charge of tha work. Ha group will be placed as nearly as possible to the ordered the mala Inhabitants of tha neighborhood spot where tradition says Evangeline kept her of Heausejour to meet him thtra on the tenth of tryst with the lover of her youth. Near It will be August Only about of them came some built a wudng pool and about this will stand the four hundred. He told them that the government HeQ exterminate its I He stepped in Peterman's! now at Halifax declared them rebels. Their lands cnlptured symbolic figures of Youth. Gladness, Saaala Faad la tha rigk, and all tholr goods wera forfeited; they fviCBT: n miU Love and Despair, as exemplified tn tbe poem. wera to ba kept Ih prison. Not yst, howaUt paaSar. And over aU this artificial beauty will tower the Haaa la lha right lnwlliUi ImmiI ever, was made known to them the decision that oaks and cypress trees which are lamn gruy moss-hunthey were to be treated a traitors of whom tho province must he rid. No attempt waa mads anysuch a prominent feature of tbe Louisiana ll i.rinw until from iMf Wl rrrcah!rs boacu ixhid to distinguish loyal from disloyal Acadlana. where thvlr in ll m the the of One lag a4 pUnea. They eairy beauty spots park landscape. British governor at Halifax, gava Major Lawreftca, rrrKKMAVS ACT FOOD aatarari. FH1 - - M iMr mm. TWj wriggla will be an garden In which will be ordere to tho military officers to clear tha country ever all the aifc a there, ever iMr !o her 4 0f. aU. Acadlana. to get them by any accessary t found flowers urilvas Evangeline aaS itwtr FIT USAS 1 Ull fllaa aat - ryv moan on hoard tho transports which would carry garden by the Basin of Minns and through which Krary aaa 41m a4 dtaUregratM. No 'PKTKRU A VS DlCOVXUT-aatara- U.thorn awoy, and to burn their houeeo and cropa aaiaa Sar, Walhlag U left Sal a litlla- Or will run ehaded walks, winding around quiet pools 00 that thoaenot caught might porlah or ba forced daat. FSTMUtAVS MOTH FOOU pra. a place of ancleut beauty whose only modern to1 surrender durlag tha coming winter. At tho Matha. whli ht raarkaa atari we ag Deat try la aapry. moment, tho harvest had Juat hoaa reaped or was touch a HI be the driveways for motorists, the tSaraaohaa. yra,piayaaapaa,ltlyr atari haaa a tpaalia latarilrit, Taa ripening. ika yaaag aa4 the agga (at SahtaS the gates that mark the entrance and the lighting ft aiagta lataalWWa ht ,n lata at. thaa, When tha stem work waa dona at Graad Pra. use make of the will tie which aU. possible WahaaahaJ tinlinli aaS kmUt Ika laara, atUaatawalaata system at Ptslquld. now Windsor, at Annapolis, there that. aaa 4a Wa SO haa Ow3j ft right p yaara aapartaaaa, aaariy wars harrowing scenes. In command of tho work park at night. that la Iraa. Grand Pro waa Colonel Winslow, an officer from at In ts Acadian the situated the park Although some of whose relatives twenty-fiv- e llaaaachuaetto country and will be a piom'orlal to the Acadlana, later were to ho driven, because of tholr years It will be.no less a memorial to Longfellow, the loyalty to tho British ktag, from their own homes wtU the supjwrt of many right fnaa m , Sa, 4U Boston to this very land of Acadia. Winslow bas already It poet. taHiril omt each hr teouvd a summon tn French to nil. the male America unions of The trades Interests. mA On habitants, down So lads of ten, to earns to tho Onigt will erect there a monununt symbolical 0, Long Grand Pra oa Friday, the fifth of Bep. j.hurca XOO Fifth Ata,N. T.c feUoWS poem. "The Builders." The Iron workers timber, tn learn the ordera ho had to Communicate, Those who did not appear were to forfait thalr of Canada and tha United States ar uniting to Orson VJiliiams 1. ( arz?csfxcm3aZAiDr-rABmH- C' best-love- d gup Regains Health Arce-nenu- N chess-boar- n Drive him out! Drive him out! show-down. well-describ- t u t r. . V-- one-thir- d all them-selv- -- ' Jee anlwa ton-le- ,, a w- 1 -- f 1UM& unit "to . V es goods. No doubt many of the Acadlana did not understand the aummons. FVw of them could read, and It hardly mattered to them that on ono occasion a notlca on tha church door was posted upside down. Borne four hundred anxious peasants appeared. Winslow read to them a proclamation to the effect that their houses and lands were forfeited and that they themselves and thalr families wars to be deported. Five vessels from Boston lay at Qrand Pra. In time more ships arrived, hut chill October had come before Winslow wee- finally ready. By this tlma tha Acadlana realized what waa to happen. Tha men were Joined by their families. Aa far as posatbla the people of the same village wera kept togathar. They wera forced to march to tha transports, a sorrow-lade- n company, women carrying babes In their arms, old and decrepit people borne In carta, young and strong men dragging what belongings they could gather. Winslow's task, as he says, tay heavy on his heart and hands-"Ihurts me to hear their weeping and walling and gnashing of teeth." By the first of November ha had embarked 1.S00 unhappy people. Ills last shipload he aent off on tha thirteenth of December. The suffering from cold must have been terrible. In all from Grand Pra and other places mors than ,000 Acadlans wera deported. They wee scattered In the English colonies from Main to Georgia and In both Franca and England. Many died; many, helpless In new surroundings, sank Into decrepit pauperism. Soma reached people of their own blood In the French colony of Louisiana and Canada. - t Among thoao who cam to Louisiana was younz Louis Arceneaux who had become separated from his sweetheart. Emmerllne and who settled on Bayou Tcche, a stream which winds In and out like a snake, hence Its name, which !.s the Indian term for snake. Here, too, ten years later came Emmerllne Lablche, who had been mourning the loss of her lover. And tha soul of tha fireflies. tha maiden, between the atars and Wandered alone wnd the cried, O, Gabriel. O, my beloved! Art thou eo near apto me, and yet I cannot behold theeT Ah. how often prairie!" thy fast have trod thla path to the At last Emmerllne found her lover, and tradition says that tha meeting took place beneath the historic Evangeline Oak on the Bayou Teche, where she learned that her faithless lover had married another. It was the story of Emmerllne Lablche and Louis Arcrncaux. told to Longfellow when ha was an Instructor at Harvard by a student from Louisiana, later 'Judge Henry Simon,' which tha poet wove into hla famous poem. If you visit St Martinsville, Ial, today they w!P point out to jtou tha house where "Gabriel (Louis Arceneaux) once lived and they will take you t4 the spot near the left wing of the old St Marti Catholic church, established In 1703 by Father Jean Francois, a Capuchin missionary, where sleeps Evangeline" (Emmerllne Lnblche). It Is not strictly true, as Longfellow has written It that thalr nameless graves, the lovara Under tha humble walls of the little Catholic churchyard. In the heart of tho city, they He, unknown and 81da by aid In era Bleeping. unnoticed. Dally tho tldea side them. of life go ebbing and flowing be- , But If you go there you will etlll hear the soft accents of the Acadian tongue and you may leant . that upon occasion ' Maidens aUlk wear their Norman caps and 'thatr'' klrtlea of homespun,, And by the evening flee repeat Evangelines story For the descendants of the exiled Acadlans are proud of their ancestry with Its heritage of sorrow, and In this country of primitive beauty they live simply, yet extending always a hospitality to tho. stranger that warms the heart It la tn honor of these simple, kindly people who "have left their forceful personality, tbe 'gray granite virtues l honesty and uprightness, piety and political power In the civil records throughout tbq United States the country they haTt done so much to develop., that the Loagfellow-EvangallnNational Memorial park Is to be established for the enjoyment V of all Americana. e f |