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Show I TIIK SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. UTAH HEALTHY UTAH BRIEFS mwi COMPLEXIONS riMt4id at I'ittMufV'l'iw Law ll flu liuugUa bii HriiM ill li War VrlrTsM M4 4 day lurrllH l.ib to Kh .Ud at uiu-u- )tU Lf '$ I i' M A ww iiiHmi, f County '' tide olir) tVuidy my," rrru i.an4 la the tv-l- sMrudoio'r tit ! Leo ubiria of the irlia n. fo llak k ll Ivr-- fitly pUtt.Lrrv'd Alley g toners IltiUbj tUlMh complcikms 1 fr rWiM4 ktNy Hm nai Frva lh ' healthy ayHema. f palaaaa with M) nooiuurftii In leot r Cii) aham, i fiel mail 4 uf klamar . mil U rr1 M sim! Wu. War ll!-- f tttM-iSri bis lie the nl al utter b uusixt lad inter, fill all.li.H l rratll ofrly full.. llg a f.ml leu.lu A twn crop IVomiui 4 A Fea.aialaL ii Effective la aaiaQrf doara. All tfragflsu tQ tkla e aaf, acleatllc Uiailva. ik-a'- 1 Mug tiie InrtHol. ItHU-le- -al rl d growers held i their pruNcW. ivdar t'liy - A new f.rlersl building W Is lw radol brio, Dgau Suit for rlC3tx. damages, for an aui uvi.leni, was filed here ,y m a Wip'd tHIra of tbs tuerlltig to diter. I production Is BtUhnio city-llr- et Pkiltnnied nl 12 lo. per acre, will he riah'l tsdii-fV..ii- ui share of Ibe meld federal appropriation for suttey uf pul.lb' lauds. Ft. Ituugla IL H. Hcbnrr, of Fall to rvpre loike t'liy. ha low Mtil l lab In the Naibotl uhouilnt maiib al Cutup IVrry, August 21 and int II for constipation flM Slot Drag Slwn Medical mra of Land. hate Hart ed a war n the nrtr automatic drug store" which are being placed la railway statlona. bid el a and other public place. Th machine deal out aspirin, bismuth and other drug. The possibility of children grillng the drug ha prompted one patholo flat to predict that the machine will undoubtedly cause many faiallltr. clin to is KepleluU-- L) IL r rliy will endeavor to re the ltd Amerl.an Legion Hale coni ehl hot. Ogden A. live spraying uf orchards has lien omducle.1 In Welter t'oiiuiy. Ogden The rher Is la bridged nt lvi.ni Fnrr 1nrk In lltm for U. 1. Aih-letl- e inert AugttH 13 nnd 11 It. Salt laike S lallH parly holds Ils (rice 11.1 M-.- slate i'nt ml hm at og.lrn. Beairr A highway oirr the dl il.le tin Puffer laike Is lielug planted. Staler tile A 4 11 Swine club has hern organised here. IMer Stock melt hold an outing nt Wolf Cr.s k. IviiS.in-I5.4tHsiple attended the Logan holiday Pork orchard exert of Spuui-- h I lie College lull Ivogan Agricultural of the Utah eoinpletril HH By ELMO SCOTT WATSON AS MOST Americana know, Uncle Sara ,a the personification of the f Till ted States, Just as John Hull la the personification of Eng-4-land. Moat Americana, too, know I that there waa an original Uncle Sum,M a certain Samuel Wilson, prominent during the War of 1812. Hut there la much dispute about some of the details of his career and there Is more' than one version of the story linking him to the popular nickname of the symbol of our country. Not only are the facts of this original Uncle Sam's life subjects for dispute, but there is even a dispute over the date of his death and the place of his burial. Both New York and Indiana claim the latter honor and monuments have been edected over graves Jn each state, one In Troy, N. Y and the other in a cemetery near Merriam, Ind., each purporting to be the grave of the original Uncle Sum. Although this Samuel Wilson gave to our national vocabulary the term Uncle Sam," It has been the artists and cartoonists of the past century who have uinde Uncle Sam a familiar flgure to all of us. The first known figure of the United States In cartoon, from which the present flgure Uncle Sam has probably grown, appeared In an English puper about 1845. It was referred to as Brother Jonathan, the then common designation ef the United States in England. It may have been merely a close relative of Uncle Sam. In any case It represents (Figure 3) a young mnn, of decidedly flippant tendencies, dressed In the high hat, tall coat and tight trousers of the day, gayly thumbing his nose at the spectators. The original American cartoon of Uncle Sam was published March 13, 1852, In the New York Lantern, a comic weekly of the time. It was drawn by F. Bellow. In it (Figure 1), Is pictured an amused young man, wearing the high beaver hat, tight trousers, low-cu- t waistcoat, high collar aud bow tie In which he is still portrayed. It may safely be said that Bellow, In 1852, was the father of Uncle Sam, though his motherhood has been shrouded In the tales of an earlier year. Bellow's Uncle Sam, however, was still a young man, not having reached the stature and perfection of his later years. It was that great American cartoonist, Thomas Nast, however, who matured Uncle Sara and gave him to the world as we now know him. He was to go through a considerable evolution before Mr. Nast took him in hand. An English cartoon of about 1855 shows another phase of his development, a still young man of decidedly hostile Intentions (Figure 2), wearing the felt hat of our southern In planters, carrying the lash of the slave-drive- r his pocket, wearing a long-tailecoat and tight trousers, putting up his fist, at the conventional and amused John Bulk During the Civil war period another English cartoon shows Uncle Sam, still a beardless young man, as a showman, wear- - u broad-brimme- d d t The twelve cartoons shown above, provided by courtesy of the company, publishers of John Ersklnea Uncle Sam In the Eyes money, supporting the tottering figures of England, France and Italy. During the war cartoonists of great ability gave to the nation example after example of the figure Uncle Sam In which the element of caricature had been submerged and the sense of a national spirit personified, though the precise featuring of the flgure differed with the differing technique of Bobba-Merri- of His Family, were selected from American and foreign papers over a period of more than 50 years and illustrate the evolution of the cartoon figure Uncle Sam and some of the various ways in which different artists have thought of him. 1. First known example of the use of the cartoon figure of. Uncle Sam In the United States, published March 13, 1852, In the New York Lantern, drawn by F. Bellow. 2, 3, 4. Early examples of Uncle Sam published abroad more than 75 years ago. 5. Example by Oscar Cesare, New York Evening Post, published during the World war. 6. Example by Rollin Kirby, New York World, published during the war. 7. Example by J. H. Casset, New York World, published during the war. 8. Example by Charles Dana Gibson, published In Life during the war. 9. Spanish cartoon, during the Spanlsh-Amercan war. 10. German cartoon, during the Spanish.Amerl-ca- n war. 11. English cartoon, Just after the World war. 12. Italian cartoon, during the war. - L Ing a high beaver hut, tight trousers and longtailed coat (Figure 4). Thomas Nast added to the young man the chin whiskers that have been variously trimmed and combed by the artists of the past 50 years to indicate everything from a country bumpkin to a benevolent despot. Nnst also added the familiar starred vest and striped coat, and put stars on the hat. Nast made Uncle Sam a more real person than he had ever been before. It Is said that Nast took his Inspiration of Uncle Sam from the character of Abraham Lincoln, drawing Into his physiognomy some of the benevolence, kindly humor and tolerance that characterised Lincoln. American cartoonists have since followed the lead of Nast, generally giving their figures a dignity and an Impressiveness In keeping with the growth of American destiny. The Spanish-Americawar producer! a great flood of Uncle Sam cartoons. Most of them were unfriendly, with the single exception of England, who maintained an attitude, as Illustrated by her cartoonists, of amused expectancy, somewhat troubled by the growing power of her younger brother across the seas, but generally friendly. Naturally the Spanish cartoons of the period were the most vindictive. One (Figure 9) is typical. A German cartoon of the same period is far from flattering. Though the costume is faithfully portrayed, the figure Is that of a typical Hebrew peddler engaged in selling the fruits of his victory over Spain in the form of doves (Figure 10). A picturizatlon of Uncle Sara common abroad in recent years Is that of a very much bloated, exceedingly prosperous and none too cultured gentleman. An excellent example of this type appeared In Italy Just after the last war (Figure 12), showing a vast Unde Sam, fat and plastered with the artists. One of the most distinguished of these drawings appeared in Life, drawn by Charles Dana Gibson, the recognized dean of American illustrators. (Figure 8). Uncle Sam Is here portrayed as a fine elderly man of deep sympathy, supporting and congratulating a mother whose son Is going to the colors. The face Is patriarchal, the features benign. Another great American cartoonist, Oscar Cesare, drawing for the New York Evening Iost (Figure 5), shows an exceedingly dominant old gentleman In the act of offering the nation the choice between the shackles of autocracy and a Liberty bond. J. II. Cassel In the New York World shows an equally dominant Uncle Sam In a somewhat different mood, making a klndjy selection of the mnn power for the war through the selective draft (Figure 7). One of the most forceful of the American cartoonists, Rollin Kirby, drawing for the New York World, has frequently portrayed Uncle Sam. His figures, splendid In technique, may be taken by many as. the spirit of America they' like to consider as most definitely our own, physically powerful, determined and forceful of expression, e against the encroachments standing and Infringements of hurtful influences. Such an Uncle Sam (Figure 6) is shown ready to throw bodily from the country the undesirable influences contributing to lawlessness. Although the cartoonists have given us our conception of Uncle Sam as a national symbol, it has been left to a famous American novelist to portray him as a man. That novelist is John Erskine, whose book Uncle Sam In the Eyes of His Family" was published by the Bobbs-Merricompany recently. It was an ingenious idea that the novelist had. Recalling the familiar cartoons of. Uncle Sam, Mr. Erskine states his main purpose in a foreword to his book as follows: I have long believed that this figure might be filled out into a complete character, endowed with an inner as well as a public character." So he set about to tell a story that would be more than Just a novel about a mythical character; it would be a biography of a national temperament As a result Americans and our foreign cousins have for the first time In their lives an opportunity to know what Uncle Sam thinks about; how he would act under given circumstances; how he lives ; who his wife Is ; what domestic troubles he had and has; the nature of his business; his attitude toward his family, who must of course, be the nations about ns and their people. Renders of his book may or may not agree with the novelist, perhaps, as to his interpretation of this famous character. But, at least the idea of making him the hero of a novel is an Interesting step in the evolution of Uncle Sam. (S br WMtcra Kcwipapar Caioa.1 four-squar- ll n , eotiuiy orchard. Morgan Road from Huntsville will Is liuproicd If plans are successfully matured. Tooele V. Coclieran, 71, n harvest er worker, ivns found dead In a liny frll.l. i.ruin miiic mowing out of a tin caused accident to auto seriously Injuring Itorlo Alien. Ephraim Additional water supply U planned for Sanpete county through coox'rutiou with Emery county farm ers ami the federal government. Hyrum Work is being rushed on tl.e highway through I.ogau canyon. Richmond Cove, Richmond, Ily rum, Wellsvllle ami Mendon water users have now voted to accept the payment plan for suscriptions to water rights tinder the proposed Ily rum reclamation project. Ogden Welter County sheriff reports that Ogden jail has more prisoners than for many years past. Unemployment is blamed for this condition, Price That t lie Carbon-Emer- y Fish ami Game association will lie able to raise Its own piiensunts in another year from eggs produced in tills section seems certain in view of the success said to have lecn attained this season in hutching the gg. Fillmore Alleged to have killed Apolina Gonzales at Lyndyl on June 15, and captured in Salt Lake shortly afterward, Jose Urbina was found guilty of second degree murder by a Jury here. Brigham Ciiy Fire caused from the combine harspark when one vesters operating a field at Promontory Point Struck a rock, destroyed 50 acres of grain. Brigham City Flooding or 8,000 acres In the first unit of the Bear river wuter fowl refuge has started, following the acceptance by the government of th construction. Due to the lack of water, there has been little food in this area, but since the flooding it is antlfipated there will be food in abundance in the marshes. The improvement of the refuge is expected to be steady from now on. Provo Farmers and shippers of potatoes are warned to heed the state law regarding shipping and selling potatos. The law requires that all potatoes packed, loaded or offered for sale in the state as well as out of the state must have each sack or other container plainly branded or stenciled with the official grade contained therein. Potatoes thnt do not conform with the regular grades must he labeled with the word ungraded," or unclassified 30-ye- ar Mammoth B. Hansen, 12, dies ns result of injuries inflicted by the kick of a horse. Moab Cattle values in Utah have droppad one million dollars according to tax assessment records, Midvale The federal government expended $18,643.00 during the fiscal year In a war against rodents. Salt Lake The state 1930 records show 93,526 automobiles on the tax rolls as compared with 80.393 for 1929. Nephi A 44,000 volt power llDe from a connection In Jaab county to Delta la planned for the faU. CHILDREN CRY FOR IT medicine CHILDREN bate to take but every child love at a this pure vegetable preparation is just as good as it tastes; just as bland and just as harmless as the recipe reads. When Baby's cry warns of colic, a few drops of Castoria has him soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. Nothing is more valuable in diarrhea. When coated tongue or bad breath tell of constipation, invoke ils gentle aid to cleanse and regulate a child's bowels. In colds or children's diseases, ' you should use it to keep the system from clogging. . Castoria is sold in every drug store ; the genuine always bears Chas. II. Fletchers signature. the taste of Castoria. And French Glov Industry For centuries the French glove manufacturing industry has not only supplied practically the" entire local demand, but exported to nearly all countries of the world. The average value of the annual exports la 175,-000,0- francs, ns compared with corresponding imports of about 1,000,-00- 0 francs. The principal centers of production are Grenoble, Millau and St. Juiien, in the southeastern part of and France nnd Niort (Peux-Serves- ) (Haute-MarneUnited Chaumout States Department of Commerce . ), He who laughs last doesn't have the laugli on him. PILES Pile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pilo Ointment Q. R. (Quick Relief) Pile Ointment is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long afflicted, guaranteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this pile oint- ment on the market for sale, it was put to the acid test In both mild ajid severe cases, never failing to produce wonderful re- sults. If you are troubled with piles, do not experiment. Get Q. R. Pile Ointment. " If your druggist does not carry it in stock, fill out the blank below and mail It to R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah a Q. R. Co., Gentlemen : Inclosed find $1.00 F. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. R. Pile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to Name 9 P. O. Address On conditions that if I am not satisfied with resnlts obtained, I am to receive money back upon returning tube to your W.N U., Salt Lake City, No. 3 1- -1 93a |