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N ftet-.- rj-rlrrr- JUinn. j 00 lUt.nua- tar. !. ia He A Mur inn ihv :l ratl an by (1.1 u f1 of rblWj (il the j ! ) cue-IrU.n- M-l- Cm j Srjr h.i r. pr cirij ar.d aa '' For Piles, Corns Bunions, Chilblains, etc - 11 AS rjirt i vu ii Tin Mr. ;. pro-dor;l- n (r By ELKO SCOTT WATSON. Iullfortila TTIII1N llerlwrl lhmtr take the onlh of olthe ns Ireui on of the L'niled Slutr f ili-n- t Miirch 4, Culvln I'.kiIIiIuV of will become a member Masa-ndiusctt- of one of the exclusive orfiinlr.a-tlon- s In the worl4. At n time In It hlbtory has It Inn! more than live moiuher and that oeeurrml only once, In istVJ. Since then there have never been more Ihun two members In Ihla club at any one lime and since Wilson's death on February 3, ltCI. It Ima had only o William Howard Taft. For this organlrnlon. n very Important one, even though It la email lu membership, la the iinoltklul "KxTresl.lcnt! of the United States club." Just what Calvin Cool Id "e will do when he cluhM was uukuown at Joins the the time this article was written, although It imi) be announced by the time It appears lo print. .When that question came up some time ago. he .Is snld to hove remarked that he was Just going to whittle." which may have been the New Unpin nd way of saying that he was going to spend a leisurely vacation 'jefore taking up any other occupation. There Iihs been talk of his resuming his law practice In Northampton. Mass.; talk of his joining a New York law Arm and also talk . of his becoming an important oltlclnl In various business firms. If eventually be turns to politics there will be plenty of precedent. Three ex Presidents occupied Important federal positions after they left the White House. John Quincy Adams was elected to the United States bouse of representatives. Andrew Johnson was elected to the United States senate. William Howard Taft beennte and la now chief Justice In . the Supreme Court of the United States. Despite his historic I do not choose, It Is even possible that he may decide sometime to put thp tradition against the third term to a test and again run for President In this he again will have precedent irom his predecessors. Martin Van Buren was the first ex President to attempt a come-bacBefore the New Yorker all the American Presidents had served their two terms save the two Adamses. Van Buren slipped miserably In his two attempts, falling despite strenuous efforts to get the nomination of. 1844. and. In 1848, with the nomination fulling to gather a single electoral vote. After him Fillmore tried with scarcely better success. General Grant was the first man to attempt to fill a third term, running well for the nomination on the first 3G ballots, but finally giving way to James A. Garfield. That was In 1SS0. Cleveland was the only to regain the crown. Several before him tried to turn the trick; Roosevelt exactly twenty years later attempted the same thing. All failed where Cleveland succeeded. For defeated In 1888 by Benjamin Harrison, Cleveland waged a campaign that found him on March 4, 1803. riding to the Capitol. Cleveland was the only man to make this ride more than three times. In 1883, be rode with the outgoing President Arthur; In tSO. he gave over the reins to the Incoming President Harrison; In 1S03, lie took them back from the same man; !p 1807. he rode the trail for the last time carrying with him the William McKinley. Of the careers of the other William A. Milieu, writing In the Washington Star, offers this "onclse snmmary: ' Georgs Washington retired to the quiet of his beloved Mount Vernon after he surrendered the Presidenev on Marrh . 1797. but lived only a ted rest. True. coup! if years to enjoy his welt-ea- r al!f-d h wm to Philadelphia tn t TS8. when war -- seemed about lo l.inik aiih Pi sme. the old ally of the Inilid Mlatea, amt sp.nl ainne time re In oiganlsIiK the army, ahl. h he hnd lid au well the atrinuou years of the rutlop's birth A cold coMrai-trwh'le riding uhnut his broad acres roused his denlh. following a brief llltirss, on December It. 799. lie was sixty-seveyears old. John Adants. a signer of the Declaration of Independence and veteran t.f the Continental congress, retired from the Presidency on Marrh 4. IROI. lie died July 4, 1974, at hla native Quincy, Mass., at the ripe old age of ninety yeara. having lived to see hla eldest son become the sixth Presi. dent et the United States. Thomas Jefferson surrendered the Presidency March 4, 1809. and. curiously enough, died on the same day aa hla predecessor in olTP-e- , both of them passing away on the birthday of Calvin Coolldge, July 4. lie retired to prlvnte Ilf at hla residence, Montlcrllo, In Virginia. In 1819 he took a leading part In the founding of the Cniversity of Virginia at Charlottesville, and was rector of that Institution until his death In 18!6. at the age of eighty-thre- e years. James Madison left the Chief Executlveshlp on March 4, 1817. He retired to hla estate at Montpelier, Orange county, Va.. to enjoy prlvnte life. He was a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional convention of I8?9. and was rector of the University of Virginia. He died June 78. 1836, age eighty-thre- e James Monroe laid down the duties of the Presidency on March 4, 1875. and died July 4, 1831, at the age of seventy-thre- e years. He retired to his farm at Loudoun county, Virginia, and In the Virginia Constitutional convention of 1829, In which Madison likewise served, he was chosen president of that group. He moved to New Tork city in 1831 and died there. John Qutney Adams left the White House March 4, 1829, a coincidence tn that Coolldge. another man from Massachusetts, stepped out of the Presi1929. aa Adams was defeated candidate for dency in governor of Massachusetts In 1834, hut the Bay of him to the house state elected representatives end the eight sucos a Whig to the Twenty-secon- d 4. 1831. until Marrh ceeding congresses, serving from h!s death at the Capitol on Fehruary 23, 1848, of paralytic stroke, ot the age of eighty vears. Andrew Jackson closed yet another chapter tn his colorful career when he left the Presidency on March 4, 1837. Then he retired to the Hermitage his home near Nashville, Tenn., and died there June 3, I84S, of tuberculosis, at the age of seventy-eigh- t years. Martin Van Buren bade farewell to the White House officially on March , 1841. Defeated for as the Democratic candidate in 1840, eight years later he was the antlslavery candidate for President. He died in hie native Kinderhook, N. V.. July 24, 1862, during the Ctvib war, aged seventy-ninn 1 e yrats. John Tyler surrendered the reins of office on 1845. He was delegate to the peace convention in 1861, which tried to avert the Civil war, end served as its president. He had lived quletlv on his estateup to that time. With the approach of the conflict he plunged into politics again and after the proposale of the peace convention had failed, he threw In hie lot with his native Virginia and voted for secession. He was elected to the Confederate congress, out died before It assembled in Richmond, Vg., expiring January 18, 1862 In the Old Dominion capital, at the age of seventy-onyears. James Knox Polk lived but a short while after he was freed from the duties of the Presidency on March 4. 1849. Death came to him on June 15. e 1849, in Nashville, Tenn., at the age of years. Millard Fillmore laid down the onerous duties c the Presidential oflW on March 4. 1853, after having been defeated for renomination, as the Whig candidate by Gen. Winfield Scott. He resumed his law practice in Buffalo, N. V . and was chosen as the National American candidate for the Presidency in 1856. He was president of the Buffalo Historical sr.ciety, and during the Civil war he commanded a corps of home guards. He died March 8. 1874. at Buffalo at the aee of seventy-fouyears. Franklin Pierre turned over the aflaie of state to hs successor in the Presidency on March 4. 1857. He spent the latter years of his life in traveling extensively in Europe and died 0?tober S. 1869, at Concord N. B.. at the age of sixty four years James Buchanan, left the White House on March 4, ISM, and died June 1, 1868, at the age of seventy-seve- i years. He had retired to his home to Wheat-land- , near Lancaster, Pa. Andrew Johnson, who was nearly ousted by the senate, left the White House with the expiration of ble term on March 4, 1869 By an ironical turn March . e fifty-thre- r of fate, he was elected to the very body lh.it would flic with hate turned h'm out of the rrmuU-ntia- ! one vote more. He first retired to hia home in Tennessee and waa drfentrd aa a candidate for the senate before the legislature In 1570. lie .i defeated as an Independent candidate for the Fmty-thlr- d congresa, but having been a senator before lo Ins election to the Presidency, he was the senate and served from Marrh 4. 1S7S. until his death, July 31, 1875. at the home of hla daughter In Carters Ftatlon, Carter county, Tenn, at the agt of pixty-siyears. Ulysses Simpson Grant, Intrepid soldier, laid down the task of the Presidency on March 4, 1877 With hla wife and youngest eon he made a tour of the world, returning In 1879 He was boomed for a third term in 1580, but popular sentiment against this course proved too strong. In New York cliy, to which he moved, he became president of the Mexlean Southern railway and a sperial partner of the Arm of Grant & Ward, but In 1884 this firm failed, the former general suffering an acute financial loss. In 1885 congress restored him to he rank of general, giving him full pay on the retired list. To recoup his fortunes he begun to writs his memoirs, but a cancerous growth In the throat placed a painful handicap upon him and he vears. died July 28. 1885, at the age of slxtv-threx e at Mount McGregor, N. Y. Rutherford Blrrhard Hayes, who also had been a general In the Civil war, stepped out of the Presidential office on March 4, 1881. Until his death on January 17, 1893, his days were given over to education and philanthropy. At the end he was seventy years old. Chester Alan Arthur left the White House on to New York, where March 4, 1883, and retl-e- d death Overtook him on November 18 1886. a little more than a year after he hnd left r lie Chief at the tge of fifty-si- x years. Grover Cleveland stepped down from his high aa office leader of the nation for the second time an March 4, 1897. He had Aral sere.-- from March 4. to March 4, 1883 but during the intervening 1885, four years this lone American, who Is the only one In all history who was able to come ha.--k to the White House after he hnd left It, retired to New York to engage in the pi net ice of law He was called away from his briefs, however, by lo the Presidency In 1832. Accordingly, he served the second time for four vears, beginning Marrh 4. 1893. When his second term had been completed, Cleveland settled down In Princeton N. J. At Princeton university he deUvered an annual course of lectures on public affairs and wrote numerous articles. He died June 24. I9ii8. at the age of seventy-on- e years. Benjamin Harrison bade an official farewell to 1600 Pennsylvania avenue on March 4. 1893. This grandson of President William Heniy Harrison then returned to the practice of law and delivered a course of lectures at .eland Stanford university on constitutional law. He served as counsel for Veneiueln In the Boundary Arid tration commission. He represented the United States in 1899 ns a member of the Peace conference and became one of the International Board of Arbitration. In 1897 he had written "This Country of Ours." He died Marrh 13. 19(11, at Indianapolis vears. Ind, at the age of sixty-seve- n Theodore Roosevelt left the White House on March 4, 1909. to plunge into another phase of his spectacular career. Following the outdoor life of which he was such an ardent advocate, he hunted and explored over a w;de stretch of terrHorv in Africa and South America DisarreeinR with his successor, Taft, he lost hs flsht to be chosen as the Republican standard h a rer in 191 and formed his famous Bull Moose party, making a strenuous campaign and being rewarded for it by the voters in running ahead of the regular Republican candidate. His offer to raise a division to a id America in the World war was reiecled. but he was active in Its cause with the pen. He dird of heart trouble at Oyster Bay, N Y., on January 6, 1919. at the years. age of sixty-on- e Willism Howard Taft surrendered his Presi4. 19'3. and is nw the only on March dential Inga former President living He taught law at Yale until 1921. the year Harding appointed him Chief Justice cf the Supreme court, the post he now holds Wood row Wilson, the World war President, who like his Demotratic predecessor Cleveland, had fwetured at Princeton but later berame its presi- dent, elrted a strenuous and momentous eight years in the White House on M.'.reh 4, 1921 a broken man He entered a law partnership with hs i old friend Bainbridce Colby and maintained aa j summoned him on off.ee In Washington. yeara Februaiy 3. 1924. at the age of t'xty-seveAnglo-Venezuel- I , n the ro.tlt side of Ma.iSrtou prca.'ntui by (lie Majilotoi Tks cutter was lakm umr ilcl-taiiu- ..iJrxraj rrftotJoa-. ' t cvllo4s Ukd dt(s U he S)t. kou.1 4? Ki tirn twwheH I Cpkls.;.'1 . . Eloquent i mlvlso-liicn- t. Tl believe liiniiey talks?" '.Vs. mine Is always saying, I j cm-siructl- de-.h- e CEDAR CITY '4MXI I n. 9 -- 6-- flrKr hi f uas conn.iission ti;roiriaUd f 100 for the comrli t'.i n of the road at Lake Shore. SALT LAKE Provision for the and inainterrnce r.f livestock highways la contained in a hill 'introduced In the senate rtccnily by Senator K. J. Kvan. The bill e: the atate road commission, the state board of agriculture, county commissioners, city commissions, city councils and town hoards to designate. survey, build, protect and maintain those highways, to purchase Hie right of way therefor nrd to spend the necessary money for the carrying out of the purpc'es of this but. DUCHESNE According to presmt plans of the state road commission, roads In the Uintah basin will be greatly improved during this coming summer. Bids have been asked for the construction of four bridges. Two of thes bridges are over the Duchesne river, east of Duchesne, to connect with the completed project at Antelope, and the other two are on the Duchesne to Fruiilar.d route over Red creek and wash. The bridge ever Red ceek will be more than twenty feet above the surface of the water. RANDOLPH Heavy losses of wild fowl are beig suffered in the slough area near Laketown in Rich county, according to advices received recently by the state fish and game department. This area has never been known to freeze up before as solidly as it has this yea". The excessive and continued cold wcether, however, has closed up the grounds and the . Some ducks are starving to feed will be shipped Into the district by the department to tide the ducks over until the weather breaks. It is announced from the OCDEN anonydistrict forest office here-tha- t mous cash prizes of $1000 and $250, respectively will be awarded through the Society of American Foresters tor essays describing the present forestry situation in the United States, and remedy for proposing a nation-widits solution. The scope cf the essays submitted should be to suggest a plan for the forest situation that will solve the problem of a permanent and sufficient supply of forest products. Essays must not be over 3000 words In length and must be based on the actual situation in the United States. Tit r:'.y and iVrr.lrhca. Will PotHicter c r remove tho ho!r. Home trolled t'frinjj tei.mrr.t. At dropiiaor 1 larte Lock o l.ro. r on a; e imovc-d- . knifa ot f.Hng iron. AVsothinc reduce them rrrTjaner.tiy and leave no fm rfrm'iirM Tv-- ( (W cut Men t.iul Lilil aulHtl on tic I'l ..i tonniy ronunl Mor.i-In ri,3rd lo ri.nl matins In liu lr r u. A i.nlix.n auk sjifillve init (or the la.provt meat of the n; J V m whA eMf ruicHy r pt!l. tl wt pro-daii- n FT.OVO Mi P.4 e milk fIG.l pounds, MGS ;;1i Linford' a Balsam o Myrrh AJ m clrfvt t Ut r UaiM-la! Vn, poind I'ri ir.iirr. Tin avtrayr bull."Lit am 14 Cd .(!in!a, c inrun d iih 14. IG 'nun U lor tfta pirrwl'n.t fw-- isctj-rif.- s S n Herd Loprovt mtil IjrsoiJ.rs la tint tf l if AIji..!a Its .lu toe In odd. iLe name I I.IHij.u Is a Milk of Magnesia j . Vi-r- n, 'L si stnoA liultftW.s do not art Its a too! 1 1, Nch srry iLt.t j !iir e ni lu tj Jt. ii aafjjf I'tia In ' s4-firr- . if . , rrv-,-- cir.r r i.oa,i I.rr4 rii.M 1:1 trj J .f the Ctlf.NKON luif y ot xalby, Ir.duj ns Cun:jr, t!.T ot tli i.uaniaun alley t I VIi it.ti l r. i oily .jar..ii da ry U. I. Main.;: u II. A. tempo, ary t'ialrmn. !ii i t. n, fidrr.il a r i.,l.t In lull la a erletn daily oi I. m. a; C. O. K'oU, Swjalt? cxuniy roon-IMil, Slid S. It. Iwandl, r Arid t&.rrrs In slit iidarnc. f J. roLC5AN- - Ii.imr th" n n i Sit me tti'Uii'K snl ut)'. I lure tS t fit-rj..- in t tutd f .ti( ijr tl tin iiv j 0! s. Ii tra t In ii. uiim lino It tali dot ol in Mil s litUo trM.rary rriirf st I sur s!mab. I'litlip if bus srldliy romj.'n )Ji!b t.f M !7r-l- or i t3 (of Stomach is- - V I A. Sour 4 aub.asud Aitabft met tlr!c4 (in el ll'll tfr.ta ii.4 bbfiiua Jif I l ick i bu j:a CtCAlANTC fTJ l lil ttl'flb. Ibtl U (S infill ii tribe ItiM (xml Jc.f. HVHUM.K.U4 Siuihvia tlLi ! I tc Ml til j U Vull Some people are never satisfied nn-- I ih'y find out something Hint makes mi dl'sali.-ficd. What Will When your Children Ciy for If There is hardly a household that hasn't heard of Castoria At least five million homes are never without It If there are children in jVur family, there's almost daily need of its comfort. And any night may find you very thankful theres a bottle In the house. Just a few drops, and that colic or Is relieved; or diarrhea I constipation ' checked. A vegetable product ; a baby remedy meant for young folks. Castoria Is about the only thing you have ever heard doctors advise giving to Infants. Stronger medicines are dangerous to a tiny baby, however harmless they may be to grown-upGood old Castoria! Remember tlie name, and remember to buy It. It may spare yon a sleepless, anxious night. It Is always ready, always safe to use; in emergencies, or for everyday ailments. Any hour of the 1 s. day or night that Baby becomes fretful. or restless. Castoria was never more popular with mothers than It Is today. Every druggist has 1L Plans are now rapid- ly taking shape for the letting of the remaining contracts for completion of Carmel the section of the Zion-M- highway in Zion National park, according to E. T. Scoyen, superintendent. Mr. Scoyen has just returned from Ogden, where he conferred with B. J. Finch, district engineer. United Stales bureau of rublic roads, who Informed him that plans for the two bridges, ore across the Virgin river and the 4ther across Pine creek, are now practically c cmpltle. and ready to for bids. sui-Xa- im of void, take ft?- -! XI' BXMEjOX the lax- hat thoroughly clean testinea. It is the one ray to yet relief end rour health. Mild. iurely vegetable. it 25c. TONitml AIRIGHI 0 |