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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH I News Notes Its a Privilege to Live in Utah BAYER ASPIRIN" PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told Dr. C. L. Jones of the United States bureau of animal industry and Orson P. Madsen, county agricultural agent for Carbon and Emery counties, returned to Price from Emery, where they tested a shipment of thirty-eigh- t purebred cows for tuberculosis. The cows, all high-grad- e Jersey stock, were shipped In from Iowa. The tests were made recently and observations showed there were no reactors among the herd. Price. In Bayer" Package Salt Lake City. A sheep and dairy calf club has been organized at Manti for the boys and girls of that community interested in practical agricultural and livestock studies, reports C. O. Stott, county agricultural agent; Each club member will commence the proUnless you see the Bayer Cross" ject with at least three bred ewes or on package or on tablets you are not one dairy calf, and will keep a com- getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin plete record of expenses and receipts. proved safe by millions and prescribed ,Each boy will be expected to show by physicians over twenty-fivyears for his best animal at the Sanpete county Colds Headache fair this fall Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Price. A showing of gas and oil Rheumatism ' in the well drilled here by the Price Neuralgia Pain, Pain Petroleum company which has been Each unbroken Bayer package conIn evidence since the drill first struck tains proven directions. boxes the solid formation, is an Indication of twelve tablets cost few Handy cents. Drugof possibilities of the Price structure, gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. according to John C. Crapo, geologist, who worked out the geology of the Smokeless Soft Coal structure In detail last summer. An Invention is being tried out to Myton. The Uintah Telephone com- make soft coal burn without emitting pany, J. R. Bullock, president, has be- any considerable quantity of smoke. gun a work of reconstruction, which By first thoroughly wetting the coal, is progressing in a satisfactory man- even of the cheapest grade, and then ner. The company is stringing a new burning It under a forced draught, It copper toll line from Vernal, by the Is said much of the smoke is elimway of Roosevelt and Myton, to Du- inate. The coal thus burned Is said chesne. It Is following the old line to be more efficient as the smoke represents a waste of carbon. More air as nearly as possible. Does not affect the Heart e HAT historic structure, the Wayside Inn, built In 10SO, and famous as the setting selected by Henry Wads-"wor'tLongfellow for his Tales, has again changed hands, Henry Ford Is the buyer, and he has announced Ids Intention of maintaining the old landmark located nt South Sudbury, Massachusetts, as a museum open to the public. Henry Ford, generally considered to be one of the worlds ten most famous living men,' has a taste for old Institutions, and a conviction that nothing good ever pusses off the earth, whether It Is a quadrille or au engineering device." Sixty-siyenrs after the Pilgrims landed, a family of some Importance by the name of Howe erected this ancient building os a residence. Sorno years later they lost their fortune and were forced to turn their home Into an Inn. For nbout 200 years it remained the property of the family, the last of the race, Squire Lymnn Howe, being the Landlord of the Tales. and Lafayette, it Is re, George Washington corded, were guests at the Inn. To the Continental troops during the Revolutionary war It was well known, for, being on the main highway to Burton, It was well situated for Its purpose. Longfellow was a frequent visitor nt the Inn, and three of his close friends, Prof. Daniel Treadwell, the "Theologlun, and T. W. Parsons, translator of Dante, the Poet, and Luigi Monti, political exile, professor in Harvard, nnd later United States consul In Palermo, the "Sicilian of the Tules," were In the habit of spending their summer vacations there, It Is not of record, however, that Longfellow saw them there, but In a letter dated October 80, 1802, shortly after he had begun to write the poem, he speaks of a visit there with his publisher, James T. Fields. Thus, with a picture of the Wayside Inn fresh In hls mind he wrote.' Salt Lake City. Grazing lands In acreage, 55,000, In Emerey county, will be offered for sale by the executive secretary of the state land board, the offer to be made at Castle Dale. The lands are appraised at $2.50 to $3 per acre. Salt Lake City. The state road h x , , i As ancient Is this hostelry As any in. the land may be, Built In the old Colonial day When men livyd in a grander way, With ampler hospitality; Now somewhat fallen to decay, With weather stains upon the wnll And stairways worn, nnd crazy doors And creaking and uneven floors, And chimneys huge and tiled and tall. After the death of Squire Lyman Howe, the place passed Into various hands, and finally was purchased by Edward R. Lemon, who restored It and Installed a fine collection of antiques, some of which originally were the property of the Howes, but had been scattered. It Ajas from Mrs. Lemon, his widow, that Mr. Ford bought It. The swinging sign that formerly bung over the front door of the old Inn recently was found In a Wellesley Hills (Mass.) hayloft and Is to be presented to Mr. Ford. William Diehl, a farmer, dug the relic out of a mass of Junk that had been collecting for years. About twenty yenrs ago, Mr. Diehl says, a party of Harvard students, bent on a lark, hired one of bis sleighs for a trip to Sudbury. When the sleigh was returned to him the sign was In it, and Diehl tossed It Into the hayloft. It 6hows a prancing, chestnut horse, on a gayly painted background, and bears the title Waysldo Inn." A painter who examined the work declared It must have been done more thun eighty years ago. Sudbury before long will have many historic buildings, grouped nbout the site of the Waysldo Inn, to show visitors. Recently Mr. Ford purchased the village smithy at Uxbridge, Mass., to many than the perhaps even more Inn itself. For It Inspired Longfellow's Immortal poem, the one we learned In school. "Under the spreading chestnut tree the village smithy stands, Is the way It begins, but how many of ns know the name of the mighty smith? Japhet Taft was his name, and It was he who In 1787 built the structure which the Detroit manufacturer now plans to add to his collection of The New England buildings and Implements. blacksmith shop wus purchased by W. W. Taylor for Mr. Ford from Louis Albec, who has owned the property for several years. Longfellow was Inspired to write his famous poem by seeing Japhet Taft before the forge. Later Mr. Taft fashioned pnrts of the original Into a miniature forge and sent It to the poet. The building Is being dismantled and will be taken to Sudbury In sections. Another building being added to the collection Is he last of the little red schoolhonses that well-know- n Lfa&rio. Chnilhy nernaiena once dotted the crossroads of almost every New England town. Arrangements have been completed for the purchase of the little district school n road. This building on the building was erected In 1S01 and Is believed to be the oldest authentic little sehoolhouse In New England. Besides being a little sehoolhouse, It has the added authenticity of still being painted red. No one knows when the lust coat of paint was applied to Its hand-hewclapboards, but beyond a few shabby. places on the weather side, the outside of the building still Is In a fine state of preservation. The Inside of the school Is today just as It was when the last class marched outjn the years Immediately following the war between the states. pulpit-lik- e The rostrum used by the country pedagogues still stands In one corner. The desks, much carved with Initials and cryptic Insignia are there and a heavily drawn "peu'cll mark In another corner indicates the founds within which unruly pupils were confined. The dunces bench .stllLstands firmly against the wall near the master's desk and a nail In the wall still holds a bunch of frazzled witch hazel switches tied by a thong. The spot has been the mecca of many picnic parties au'd reunions of former pupils, though of recent years the number of visitors has greatly decreased. In line with Mr. Ford's enthusiasm for restoring nnd preserving these historic relics of a bygone day Is hls equally strong Interest In the revival of the dances of our grandfathers. Not only Is he practicing them lilmsolf, but pupils of the Dearborn (Mlch.LJlleh.sctuopl also are given free Instruction on the dance floor three times a week. How many of you older readers remember the fishermans hornpipe, speed the plow, St. Patrick's day In the morning, French four, Scotch reel, Hull's victory, firemens dance, and the Sicilian circle? To Mr. Ford tne Intricacies of these good old dances are no longer mysteries, and he Is doing his bit toward popularizing them, not with a view to exterminating the modern dance If people like It. hut rather looking toward having young nnd old dance together, thus making the dance more fun for all. It Is not definitely known Just what started Mr. Ford ofT on this terpslchorenn tangent Possibly for Mr. Ford Is It was that verse in Ecclesiastes a student of the Bible: To everything there Is a season, and a time to every purpose under the sun; a time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to mourn and a time to dance." Some time ago, so the story goes, a dancing master In Worcester, Mass., one Benjamin B. Lovett, received a telephone cull late in the evening. This Is Mrs. Barker nt Wayside Inn speaking." Mrs. Barker is the principal hostess at the Inn nnd took dancing lessons from Lovett fifteen yenrs ago. Mr. Henry Ford," she said, "wants to know if you will come up here tomorrow morning for a talk with him at ten oclock." The dancing teacher, after he hung up the receiver, began to think over the engagement he had made nnd wonder what It was all about Lovett had been teaching modern dancing. He felt that Ford had no Interest In the ballroom concerts of the Twentieth century, nnd Lovett was rather shaky, he found, when he came to think e maneuvers. back on the He went over what books' he had, Ironed out the wrinkles of memory, and when he stepped out for Wayside Inn the next morning he felt capable for whatever examination might come. Mr. and Mrs. Ford were In the ballroom of the Inn when the professor arrived, and the manufacturer's first shot left Lovett gasping. Do you know the tippler Mr. Ford asked. Gardner-WInchendo- n old-tim- commission, accompanied by C. E. Knowlton, maintenance engineer, left on a tour of inspection of the highways In southwestern Utah. Zion national park and St. George will be Koto The dancing professor didnt, and he was between the devil and the blue sea. If be said he knew It, Mr. Ford would want to be shown. If he said he didnt, the dancing master figured that he would put him down as an Ignoramus. He decided on the truth, nevertheless. No, I dont," he said. "Ive heard of It somewhere, but I eant recall where. But Ill know It the next time I see you." Mr. Ford laughed heartily. Why, I caught him the first time, he said, turning to Mrs. Ford. Early the next morning Lovett got out hls automobile and went hunting that strange waxed floor bird, the ripple. He rode out of Massachusetts. He went Into New Hampshire. Here, there, he made Inquiry of fellow maestros. None could help him. ne crossed another state line. He came to Burlington, Vt The first woman he met, a dancing mistress, nodded when he asked If she knew the ripple. She said she had taught It ten years before. Have you the calls?" asked Lovett, eagerly. No, I havent," she said. Theyre out to my cottage, and thats twenty miles away." My car Is right here. Let me drive you out there,' suggested Lovett. Thats too bad, how, said the woman. The cottage Is on an Island, and the road 1$ torn up. You couldnt get over It now except by walking. The Worcester maestro continued his unusual quest. The next man visited offered the key to the problem. Sure, I know. The ripple Is what we call the Newport down East. Lovett went back to Ford all primed and full of ripples. A few months later the dancing master sold out hls five dancing halls nnd went to Dearborn as Mr. Fords private dancing teacher. The dances cannot be executed to the moan of the saxophone. Mr. Ford prefers music, believing that Jazz lacks rhythm. "All dancing and all music must have rhythm," he declared, and the Jazz music hasn't got rhythm." Recently he Invited A. Mellle Dund violinist and chamham, the pion of the state of Maine, to play at a barn . seventy-one-year-ol- dance In Detroit A Ford dance book Is In course of preparation, containing all the figures, and also a history of dancing. In this It will be pointed out that the dance begins and ends with a single couple and that the group spirit of fun Is absent It Is further quoted as saying: "This characteristic of the modern commercial dance Is determined by commercial considerations. The older form of dancing requires room. Room In cities, especially In cabarets, Is expensive. Hence a form of dancing has been encouraged that enables tlie largest possible number of paying couples to dance together In the smallest possible ultra-moder- n space. The result Is that In the modern method the movement of the dance Is mostly above the feet. Denunciation of the dance by the protectors of public morals has usually been occasioned by tho Importation of dances which are foreign to the expresstonal needs of our people. There have been Imported Into the United States of recent years dances that originated in the African Kongo, dances from the gypsies of the South American races of pampas, and dances from the southern Europe." The Dearborn dance manual will make no claim to the personal authorship of Mr. Ford, but it will give expression, it is understood, to the manufacturers sentiments on the subject For It appears to be no secret In Dearborn, and wherever Mr. Ford has Intimate friends, that hls latest motto Is, On with the dance I and that be lives up to It at every seasonable opportunity, firmly convinced that dancing of a rational and racially American character Is capable of being developed Into an Invaluable Instrument for soclai d -- visited. Moab. J. H. Young, highway engineer for the bureau of public roads, and H. S. Kerr, chief assistant state road engineer passed through Moab last Wednesday on their return, from San Juan county, where they made an investigation and definite location of the highway from Monticello to the state line. Washington. Part of the appropriation for the Salt Lake basin irrigation project carried in the interior department bill, on which a conference committee reached an agreement, can be spent on Utah lake control if the surveys of that unit show it to be wholly feasible, and the secretary of the interior can come to a complete understanding with the land owners as to payment of the costs. Ogden. The Ogden high school won the Ogden division debating championship by defeating Davis high school. The local school won from Boelder high school and will now meet a team from another division to -- qualify for the finals. helps combusion. ALLENS FOOT-EA- SE For Tired Foot It Cant Ba Beat At night when your feet are tired, soTe and swollen from much walking or dancing, sprinkle two ALLEN'SFOOT-EAS- in the powders gently E foot-bat- rub the sore and inflamed parts and relief Is like magic. Shake Allen's into your shoes in Foot-Ea- the morning and walk in comfort. It takes the friction from the shoe. Sold every where. ForFHEE Walking Doll, Sample and a Foot-Ease address, ALLEN'S Le Roy, N. T. FOOT-EAS- EYES HU Uob t ignore i fte danger gignals of aching eyee, red lids, blood flhot eyeball. Mitchell Eye Salve remove irrita tion, redoeea inflflmwiatjnp aootiiea pain. BALL A RtrCKBL 147 Waverly PI., New York STOMACH TROUBLES quickly leave. Greens August Flower is a stomachic corrective, has been used for 60 years and has given relief to thousands suffering with indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation, etc. At all druggists. 30c and 90c. If you cannot get it, write G. G. GREEN, INC., Woodbury, N. J. In Imitation Mr. Lisle---M- y dear, I have a splitCan you manage ting headache. rid of these people? Mrs. Lisle I cant very well show them the door. Certainly not; but you can show to-ge- t head of choice Ogden. Twenty-twHolstein cattle are en route to Utah yourself at the piano! from Fond du Lac, Wis., where they were purchased for Utah breeders by More Difficult Gilbert Thatcher, secretary of the Binks Did you ever try to climb a Utah Holstein Friesian Breeders as- greased pole? sociation. The purchases were made Jinks No, but Ive tried to stick to at the Clark classis, which is reputed good resolutions. Cincinnati to be the greatest sale of purebred cattle in the United States. o Ogden. Morrison & Knudsen, con- tractors of Boise, Idaho, were low bidders on three large road projects in northeastern Idaho when bide were opened at the district office of the United States bureau of public roads. The three bide aggregate $370, 147.97, and recommendation was made by B. J. Finch, district engineer, to the bureaus office In Washington, D. C., that the low bidder be awarded the contracts. , Manti. Mayor' A. Judd and mem bers of the city council have recently accepted plans submitted by Profes sor Emil Hansen, landscape gardener, for the beautifying of the Manti city park. Spanish Fork. With the awarding of more than $500 In prize money and the settlement of all sales accounts, one of the most successful exhibitions of livestock ever held in this section came to a close. Despite the handicap stormy weather put upon the efforts or the management of the Second Annual Utah County Livestock show and exhibitors, the show was pronounced a success. Richfield. The Richfield Commercial club held a largely attended luncheon at the clubrooms recently. The club determined to initiate and foster a cleanup program to make Richfield one of the cleanest and most sightly cities in the state. Myton. The flour mill of Myton which is owned by the Light & Powei company, and was managed this yeai by Lionel Babcock, has finished It season's run. More, than 8000 bushels of wheat was bandied during the year Sick bodies made strong I was wasted O te skeleton, ready to cask in. Tanias quickly built me up. A year ago diphthe- ria ran me down. Tanlac again canto to the rescue. I'm strong and vigorous now. Miss Clare Jepseu, 1303 So. 15th St., Burlingt- on, loan After a spell of Grippe or flu, when your system is all run down and your legs are so weak they can hardly hold up your body, start right In taking Tanlac. Its wonderful how soon you really do Improve! Tanlac sails right In and puts the system in fighting trim. It cleans the blood, revitalizes the digestive organs, gives you an appetite for solid food and makes you feel like a new person. Nothing will turn the trick quite as fast as Tanlac, made after the famous Tanlac formula from roots, barks and herbs. Buy a bottle today and get started back to full strength and vigor. Take Tanlac Vegetable rills for constipation. STOP THAT ITCHING You wont have to wait relief follows the first comforting touch of Resmol S' i |