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Show THE PROGRESSIVE INDEPENDENT vt MercolizedWax RELIEVES HEADr Keeps Skin Young !SlM J fcMfclM lljMHT. fitatalkH.Mft Mi thm kaddaa Unr of VHi akta. T mm mMIn cun Fawdad talki ! I klliVTiifcnd IHmkj Wealth Fat lata tha Earth The United States, with about 8 per cent of the worlds population, uses approximately 19 per cent of the world's annual output of commercial fertiliser and ranks second only to Germany as a producer. The world's annual production Is worth 1592,285,000 on assumed values of $100 a ton tor nitrogen In the warehouses of the producer, and a of $50 a ton each for phosphoric add and potash. The total amount of plant food used by American farmers Increased 45 per cent from 1914 to 192& ackson and StamfesiMRiib fa"&hdlnhd1arit phsvfpos! &.SMCIMS1 anuai HAVE LOST. GRIP No Longer Feels Urge to Settle New Lands. j-alu- March to tha Arctic Summer excursions to the Arctic regions by airplane and dirigible are promised for the near future, but It will not be so long before the automobile tourist will be able to make bis way to Alaska with good roads all the way. The distance between Seattle and Fairbanks Is a trifle more than 2300 miles, and at the present time there are stretches of good roads for nearly 1,000 miles; so that there are comparatively small portions yet to be constructed. A hundred years or more ago Englishmen were swarn lug to every corner of the earth, taking over and populating vast stretches of new land, until It was possible as Indeed It may still be possible to say that there were more English-speakin- g peoples than there were those of any other tongue. In the last generation or t?o there has been a change. Britain still controls much of the vast areas of the earth. But Englishmen are no longer filling them up. Australia, despite its continental extent, remain a sparsely populated land, with most of the people concentrated In a few cities along the eastern coast. England proper teems with men and women unable to find work to do, but the (rid urge to get out and try whnt a new country can offer Is Battle of Vew Orleans One day In 1886 one of the callers at the White House wee William Allen, a congressman from Ohio. Jackson and Allen were discussing tha Their conversation la admission of Arkansas as follows: In Allens writings reported Do yon know, Mr. Alim, that this new state which hae Jnet become a pqrt of onr vast Bopnb-- 1 Bone. Officialdom, In both the motherland lie la one of the first substantially large fruits of In the colonies seeks to revive my victory at New Orleans?" asked the Presl- and the old swarming spirit Bnt wllh den. The tory published Allen was surprised end said so, remarking yp 5al tl,e P.11 that the Treaty of Ghent waa signed 15 days be- - j" who had Englishmen end was adding: battle fore the fought been persuaded to move to Australia I' JlIuffiMUan 'pmwst ! Golf Is Golf The Movie Magnate rm going to play golf today. His Secretary But you were to get married today, sir. fOiT he Movie Magnate Oh, all right sMiave her get to the links by 2 o'clock sharp. Cruel Mr. Grump A woman who really loves a man will bake a pie for him uow and then. Mr. Grinn Yes, and If she really loves him she will give the pie to the Iceman and buy another at the bakery. Diameter of Jupiter Jupiter has a diameter 11 times that of the earth, a volume 1300 times, and a mass more than 800 times that of this planet. W0 lf I . 1 ' "? I n ts h T. c,t Hedges PRESIDENT Advertising Federation of Americas lecently Stud: . . Reduced adverting appropriations will mesa we shall continue in reveae gear, while advertising to tell people about the Highest Happineta in Labor Well Performed Today the most welcome word that can come to millions Is a promise of employment to have a share In the worlds work. The song on which many of the older generation were brought up urged one to work In the morning hours, to work 'mid springing flowers, to work even through the sunny noon, and then on till the last beam fadeth, fadeth to shine But It wee a Joyous song, no more. and the only unhappy note in It was the one that suggested the oncoming of night, when man works no more. The most fervent prayer that most men make, especially those who have not much goods laid up against days of ease, come from ancient times: May I be taken In the midst of my work." So, far from work being a curse, Carlyle speaks of It as Ihe grand cure of all the maladies and miseries that ever beset mankind." It Is the bert physician. So in seeking to find employment for those out of work, the problem of misery le attacked at its root. Skill In labor la man's highest vocation, but It la through labor of some sort, whether by hand or brain, whether of ones choice or by compulsion, whether aa a vocation or an an avocation, that he finds hla way to his better and best self. Giving a man a Job Is the best form of helpfulness, If be Is still able to work. It has been often said that there Is no good obtainable without labor; but It Is better said that, there Is no good that Is to he put above the ability and the opportunity to labor. Kansas City Times. Salt Lake Citys fewest Hotel HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Tile Baths 200 Rooms Radio connection in evsty room. RATES FROM $1 JO Jml grown Mwss Tklwnsifc ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr-- The Ideal Vacation Land Sunshine All Winter Long Splendid rondo towering mountain ranges Highest type hotel dry invigorating air clear starlit night CaUfenria's Feramort Pasart Naygroaad CrM a Ctuttmy Fames Spifngjm Earthquakes' Oddities During the great Tokyo earthquake of 192o nearby coal mines were not affected, and a recent Texas earthquake which waa felt within a radius of several hundred mile had no effect on the Carlsbad caverns; within the earthquake zone. No Ead Deadbroke I kinds of money. pennies, nickels, ters." of Variety hear you have ell Badlybent Teah, dimes, and quar- Boys can be kept on the farm after they are of age, if they can have $25 a week to spend. well-know- which will enable diem to live fuller and hap. pier lives uriffpap its part, as k always has, in keep-bi- g Amp 1 basinets moving" 444444- T snail iToau I two-thir- Gilbert A relatlvely few of them are of profitable size and quality. Iu the comparatively warm tea water of the Miklmoto pearl farms millions of small oysters, hatched naturally, but under a certain amount of supervision, float for a while and then attach themselves to small tonee strewn on the bottom. There they remain for three years. Then Japanese diving girls go down and get them. By ELMO SCOTT WAT80N ANUABT 8 la a data lmperlahably prein tha annala of America In provided for the restoration of all territory, association with tha name of Andrew places and possessions taken by either nation exFor It waa on January 8, Jackson. during the war, with certain unimportant 1815, that ha won hla amaalng victory ceptions." over the British at tha Battle of Kew 4 Technically yon are quite correct" replied Orleans. Few, If any, victories In history were General Jackaon, and hli mn w anfittay tell more complete, more unexpected by the defeated ri.snt and proud than before. But my of disappointment, stara aad story or more contrary to military experience. Allen," said the old hero, those very words vation and despair. What Is probMtyGen. Sir.E. PsnkenJvam would have been need to defeat the purpose of In the first place, the vlctora were outnumably more suggestive, they tell also bered nearly two to one by the vanquished. Bnt In numbers one and two. Number the American commissioners at Ghent because that many of their numbers have beto was (me the Battle of New Orleans was fought after the what waa more Important waa the fact that, in fire first then step back and let number two war; 15 days after the war technically ceased come mentally deranged and that contrast to Jackson's nondescript army of a fire while uldde la frequent. he reloaded. About 800 yards from few regulars end a majority of undisciplined the riflemen there was a by treaty. If General Pakenham with hla 10,000 On this point Warren 8. Thompcanal great drainage could have annihilated my little army militia and volunteers, the British army was son, in his famous book, Danger back from the Mississippi river to the veterans running the the all and Orleana New contiguand trained toughened troops, and composed of Spots In World Population, has a swamp In the rear of the tilled land on which ous captured divisions which had scattered the Americans at we were territory,' technically after the war. Great stimulating discussion. At certain British the canal this Along operating. Bladenaburg with a volley and a shout, kilted formed, under tha fire of the few artillery pieces Britain would tend In their nation, history periods and tter iguored Thoma. Jeffer-Highlanders, famous regiments which had earned llke beM and had near enough to them to get their range. that treaty, fact, In the the Iron Duke, the praise of Wellington, to show that only farming But the instant I saw them I said to Coffee, Great Britain had Spanish Peninsula, and brawny negro detach- whom I directed to hurry to hie line, which was Moreover," he continued, with a rather low agriculturalists cards up her sleeve. ments recruited In the West Indies. It was such be first attacked: , we have got other standard of living can actually setBy to fit considered been have aa weuld an army 'Don are the transcripts from the Department tle a new 'land." But an industrialthem; they are oursF Coffee dashed forward, withstand the finest troops In Europe' Tn com- and Don't of State concerning the famous treaty of Ghent ised people, such as the English have called hla out, line; along riding solmand waa one of England's most brilliant hoot until you can see their belt buckles.' The Here are the minutes of the conference which become, gradually ceases to swarm. diers, Gen. Sir Edward Pakenham, of whom British were formed In mass, well closed up, were kept by Mr. Gallatin, who records: It ceases to be able to settle and de" Tha British commissioners emphatically de- - velop new lands, for the Wellington had said My partiality for him does and about two companies front dty life to la he not lead me astray when I tell you that I : "We do not admit Bonaparte's construc which It has become accustomed rendared on a moved at thus quick formed, British, "Thg one of tha best we have.' He was the Idol of Wo cannot ac- ders it unfit to master the soil. Such step, without firing a shot to within 100 yards tion of the laws of tha nations. hie officers, who agreed that they had n matter us." ' before to In relation It can exploit their any were who cept holding riflemen, people, says Thompson, served under aman whose good opinion they of the kneeling com- certain of Its accumulated resources, their American our one buckles moment of not see belt of could the fire "At that tin they hla were so desirous of having; and to fan in advance was executed as missioners comprehended the awfully deep sig- but . . . they are like the peo- estimation would have been worse than death.' enemies. The British on had been parada They marched nificance of those few words But every one of pie of the fabled island who lived by they though It as warfare of rules all the accepted So, by the step of veterans the commissioners of Greet Britain knew that taking In one anothers washings.' with to shoulder shoulder, British was the It was waged In those times, were. At 100 yards distance from onr General Pakenham was on the way to New OrThe troubles the expatriated Engwho should have won at New Orleans Instead aa they was given, Extend column front' leana with upward of 10,000 veteran soldiers, in lishmen are having in Australia and of the Americana. The only trouble with that Une the order march! Charge!' With bayonets their Judgment and It was a wise Judgment, too the similar troubles some of their Double theory la that the Americana were led by a at tha quick, came on ne at a run. 10,000 British soldiers should, and would, clean fellows have had In Canada are simthey charge; of reading great general with the rare attribute waa an anxious moment; I well knew up and wipe out an army which America could ply cases In point. If the new lands It own and "I an divining mind of opponent the correctly tiia course of action, endowed with an unyield- the charging column was made op of the picked muster, for the Pakenham Invasion was to be a nominally under the control of the British empire are soon to be filled, army. Seventy, sixty, fifty, triumphant military coup and surprise. ing temper end an iron hand, a relentless pur- troops of the British were they from tha silent Now, I can tell you, Mr. Allen, that I did not It will probably be with other folk pose, and the faculty of Inspiring troops to finally forty yards fcw Ung riflemen. All of my men I could see know, and my boys behind those bales did not than Englishmen from the industrifellow, obey, and trust him In the last extremity. rifles rested on the logs before know, what a prize the British were after nor alized mother country. Baltimore was their their long one waa passion of them, typifying Ha what a service we were rendering our country. Evening Snn. and prejudices, their faults and their virtues, thui. They obeyed their orders well; not redcoats were within We were simply typical American soldiers, fight-fort-y haring their hardships aa If he were a common hot was fired until the I sucyards I heard Coffees voice as he roared ng for onr country as American soldiers always Japanese "Pearl Farms private, never grudging them the credit In center of the for the aim are men, from 'Now, out; The dg . ready and willing to dare, do and die, cess. (Note: foregoing quotations Prove Good Investment I Sea-icross-belFire.' A second after the order a a Free for "The Paine1 D. But since I have been President I hare ascerFight wiph an line. our flash By leasing about 40,000 acres of rang along the Yale University Press Chronicles of crackling, biasing tained from diplomatic sources of unquestionable warm salt water in various bays told The smoke hung so heavily In the misty morning Jackson when Old Bo Hickory" did not Intend British ministry America). authority that the shores of Japan, planting the called see I not what could Louisialong happened. I hie air that to permit the treaty of Ghent to apply to the bis Kentucky and Tennessee riflemen, small oysters known scienana volunteers, hla Yankee sailors, hie Bara-tari- a Tom Overton and Abner Duncan of my staff, Louisiana Purchase at all. The whole body, Lord 8.000.000 as line. magaritifera martens! Liverpool, the Duke of Portland, Greenville, tifically pirated led by Jean Lafltte and all the and we galloped toward Coffee's In a major sureach year, performing back that a hla in confused, were elements ell army, British of them, utterly The other heterogeneous falling Perdval and Castlereegh, on of them, each gical operation of ranks In first wildcats,1 and emphatically denied the right of Napoleon disorderly mass, and the entire they could lick their weight never occurred to them bnt that they could also their column were blown away. For 200 yards to aell Louisiana. Therefore, their commission- then nursing the patients tenderly ers declared, Ye cannot accept Napoleon's In- for seven years, an average of lick their weight In British regulqya aa well. In onr front tha ground was covered with and dead dying terpretations of International law In relation to $2,000,000 worth of Japanese culture mass of writhing wounded, Bo that did ltl pearls Is produced for world markets was second advance The precisely redcoats what battle of the any matter before ns.' Itself, a As for description annually. the five In In Its volleys first the ending. victorious like one the given by could b better than "Now, yon see, Mr. Allen, said the proud old The originator and controlling facIs the L500 or more riflemen killed and wounded W17 ber0j tj,e British ministry In London held most here field? So famous on that general In this strange Industry Is Kochi-rh- l tor killed deed of them vehemently that this country had no right to that story of the Battle of New Orleans as Jackson British soldiers, Miklmoto, known as the pearl Mm if reported It to James Monroe, then secre- or mortally wounded. Immense territory no right at al. They Inof Japan. For 23 years he waa king" General Pakenham know where did not I tended to hold that It was entirely extraneous to tary of war: nine pearl farms before In or sent to operated have him, gone or I should the terms of the treaty of Ghent And, If GenThe battle commenced at a very little before lying, offer any service In my power to eral Pakenham had been successful at New Or- raising a profitable crop. Now, though to Inperson, aa aa the far and T a. nL, January 8, 1815, means of the scientific methods a. m. My render. leans as, under an of the ordinary rylea of war by fantry waa concerned It was over by 9 he was developed, he and his thousand two he lived hours after waa he told I he ought to have been, with hie tremendously force waa very much mixed. I had portions of assistants care for 7.000,000 pearl waa killed dead. I General hear, Keene, veterans hit If of deForty-fourtforce he had overwhelming Infantry regular the Seventh and and the . raising They sent a flag to me asking leave toptherl feated my uttl. thin Une of riflemen. If he had i oysters constantly, regiments, Kentucky and Tennessee riflemen, h " f of their which, dead, and wounded Bara-tarla- n tP WUed or captured me, If he had won that battle bury up their and marines sailors, States United creoles, a wounded offGreat Britain had ever reason to expect of experiment writes Earl Clmpln May men one of them, Capt. Dominique Yon, course; I granted. I was told by to refused file rank and tha absolutely icer that famous a he would have held hie ground. Moreover, In Popular Science Monthly. him, part of my artillery (and All pearls are produced by Irriwith no chance We have a third make free charge. would have fortified hie positions, and Great be gunner he wes), and two battalions of said.' tated oysters. A wild, natural or virAmericans thev aa these do,' such shooting Britain would have sent other veterans enough negroes. I had In the action about 8,000 men. when a bit of sand, One of the factors which makes the Battle ot to forever hold that great prise, the Louisiana gin pearl results The British strength was almost the same as crustacean or some other minute a was It fact le the that and drill New In Purchase. Orleans fought discipline. unique mine, bnt vastly superior tiny foreign substance accidentally Of their .force my riflemen killed and wounded after the treaty of peace had been signed per- my dear sir, British diplomacy and Brit- gets Into the oyster's body. If It Is two bel- ish"But, when In two time genthe an history Including only lees than In hour, haps combined knew nothing of not able to 2,117 military power eject the Intruder, the Uge rents fought a major military engagement my Tennessee end Kentucky riflemen. The will eral officers (both died on the field, each surrounds it with layers of a 75 oyster were That at fact with fan seven when colonels, officially they peacei division commander), of tha enemy was strong and Intelligent ; but the substance which, In time, becomes seven six bnt killed and many probably will of God waa far above It all. Providence la known to moat Americana, line end staff officers. I lost value of natural The ay of the Battle of New Orleans Oh, yea, ltl- wlUed that this nation should live, grow, and be pearl. Is due great to the fact that wounded. chiefly viean and affair pearls a wes astonishing on nee picturesque the cradle of the liberty of the world." Then As to tactics, there were very little In since It was wot after tlm war was I General Jackaon quoted a n either aide. We had some works of earth fronting tory, but hymn: waa really not very Important God moves In a mysterious way, hla wonders the river, bnt the Kentucky and Tennessee rifle- over It I from aside are the had wrong. main proQuite to perform, and concluded hla narration: Therein they attack, men, who sustained the -I fact that It had something to do with sending The astute diplomats, the trained commla-Andretected themselves by a work about two and Jackson to the White House. 14 years loners of Great Britain, cheerfully found it easy half feet high, made of logs placed two feet Its effect! on the later hie-- to throw sand Into the eyes of our honest com-toropart, and the space between filled In with earth. later. Its results and were Jackson mleelonera at Ghent; but, Allen, they could not of this country This work began at the Mississippi river, and ended la the swamp, being at a right angle with himself at the time of hie victory could not poa-- l ward off the cold lead which my rough and ready lbly have realized what those results were to be, riflemen sprinkled Into the faces of their red-an-y the river. more than he could have known that he wail coated veterans at New Orleans; All of the our of weakest portion the this Thinking a battle with the British when we were gied web that British diplomacy and English cun-a-t the men behind nnunlformed line; and seeing peace with them. But later he realized the Dlng could weave about our Inexperienced corn-ful-l trifling defenses, General Pakenham thought hie own words! mlssloners wae torn to pieces and soaked in significance of his victory the best thing to begin hla attack by carrying I g show. blood in half an hour. by the rifles the with bayonet this part of my line Presl--1 0f my squirrel-shootin- g waa were while he words spoken Those that on river the pioneers of the mo (inThere wee a very heavy fog the eerond of the 18 states to I tains aa they carefully took their aim from bamorning, and tha British had formed and were dent. Arkansas, be made In whole or In part from the Louisiana I jjmi those Invulnerable bales of cotton." of the The disposition knew before It I moving been admitted to the Union. M WMUn Mswspspw vaisa.) riflemen waa very simple. They were ld off Purchase, had Jut DenUamfaltarwlthttatttndlt ' McKesson crjtQBBiHS BRITON SEEMS TO e Unbreakable Spectacles Unbreakable spectacle lenses are a recent Invention. Two pieces of glass with a piece of celluloid between them are cemented together under pressure, forming one solid piece. This glass sandwich Is slightly thicker than ordinary glass, but It Is Just as transparent, the celluloid being Invisible. Unbreakable glass has for some time been employed In the windshields of motor vehicles and airplanes and In goggles, but this believed to be its first use in spectacles. CHtST ancJ BACKCCOLDS y - Talk It Over with Your Own Home Publisher g never-mlsiln- Every time you wash your face and hands use this delicately medicated Soap and note how it not only cleanses but also protects the skin. Mode of the purest ingredients, Catlcura Soap u ideal for daily use for all the family. and RfcTiL SoapSc. Ointment Sc.PBttsr Bra cum Sc. Pttmneton: & Chemical Corp Malden, Mu. 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