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Show UTAH STATESMAN Warm Drink Is Said to Banish Insomnia lobster aruied to tbe teeth, grinning dervlabea, relent less Rudolph Id pur A dream tour suit on a bicycle. through t lie Elyslan Helds, harps, gold winged cuplda, Ice cream for dessert "Take your choice of d reams, " said Mrs. Mary Whiten era In a talk before the American Home Health end WelDreams are fare league of 8L regulated by diet Good will triumph even In tbe dream world If the dreamer will avoid rich fooda at night Restraint In eating, and a warm soothing drink at bedtime will place even the releutless Rudolph among tbe ce- No More Distress after eating or drinking and Tat comet inf ovtr-idd- ilj quickly relieving belching, pa, ilixxi-neu, heartbarn, sick headache, nausea and other digestive d Ivor dare. Not a laxative but a teeted Sure Relief for Indigeetlon. Perfectly barmlaaa and pleasant to taka. Sand for fraa samples to Ball A Cow InCqOranfebu rf , N. Y. Afonwafaaa Digt Ami and lestials. Taunting sheep wouldnt put anyone but a public accountant to sleep, A warm drink before bedtime, both winter and summer, la both a cure for nightmare and a preventive of Rubles dream happily over a bottle of warm milk. Heat la Just as soothing to the stomach of an adult It Is, of course, not advisable to take stimulating drinks at bedtime, A warm beverage la the passport to the Elyslan fields of sleep. tha Brtalh 6 Bell-an- j S Hot. wafer 'tjtS&X Sure Relief ELL-AN-S FOR INDIGESTION 25tAND25 Balloon Stays in Air PACKAGES EVERYWHERE balloon that will stay In the sir for weeks ut a time has been Invented by M. Luclen Rodin of France. Bodln claims that bis new levies precludes the necessity of having to release all the gas from the bag In order to regulate Its altitude, Besides the balloon's ordinary gus bag Oiled with hydrogen, not sufficient to support It alone, the proposed craft will carry an auxiliary compartment Idled with air to supply buoyancy. The pilot can regulate bis altitude by beating or cooling tbe air, thus obviating the necessity of releasing any of the hydrogen. Chicago Dully News. A AVOID IIIMlatla Mitchell trmetherfm nmir Eye bat, lie, Mnas d r a ar i Tka Salve Mca AIUII IrrIUllia. M alawla that Inlaaa MBlartlae MM ail draffWa la MIBrtdliaTatCllr For SORE EYES HANFORDS Balsam of Myrrh bi healed Woudi Slice 1846 and Sores oa Mao and Beast Al Mm an aathaiM la nlaaJ year Snt haUla H aat aaitad. bearl lull ut grace a bead full of notions. A riarlka If you think a small boy Is feeble In his affections, buy him a pup and change your mind. la better than Peace Cicero. Mahj a man's finnnclal goose ha been cooked In a Jack-po- t la liberty In tranquility. wA&mngrazrirrjrTy CW.F&afe This Winter Fit Keep Your Kidneys Must Function Properly fiaifftlrry Ay rINTER ia hard on die kidneys. All too often colds and chills upset the action of die kidneys and allow poisons to remain in the system. That's why winter finds so many folks achy and tired; with backache, headache, dizzy spells and scanty, burning kidney secretions, Doahi Pills, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. Ask your neighbor! Doans Pills A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At aS deelm, 60c a bow Co Foitef-Milbu- ni Mff. ttrmuii, Buffalo, N. t When a Man Marries The dog at tbe Mohawk mine camp near New lliiKlcton, recently saved the buildings there from destruction by tire. Tired after returning to cuinp through bitter cold, the men fell asleep after havlns kindled a lire The stove became red hot and (lie floor begun to burn. The pup iiiiihhI on one of the heils i:nd aroii.-- a nmn who extinguished the llircnteiilug So you want to inurry my daughter? Are you able to support a family 7" I think so. New tldnk again, young man. i'liere are seven of us." Pittsburgh Sunday Telegraph. Only real problem about twin ba Idea In to put them to sleep at tha fta me lime. conflagrnl Ion. Vancouver ' Irovlnce 1702-1777- ." pur-pon- Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Stf2'1 Bayer package only contains proven directions. Protect Your Skin Against The Weather CUTICURA giplrla ta Hie trade mark ef Barer Thnt purpose Is repented In his second volume In which he says : Bayer boxes of IS tablets Lotties of 24 and 100 Druggiita. Muafkcton at Uasaacttkaddeatac at aallcrikaeU US. M OMqr- i- e. AddM l CXaUMat to Md a in. liMn Mqigfl tar -- Milan UnMM,Si Ceticam Shavbiv fill'll IV. Again ss In the first volume my Incessant endeavor has been to let IVasliiumon tall hla own story In hla own words, and to try to sea hla world and hla tlmea aa they must hnve looked to him. not as they appear to a backward gaie across a landscape lilted with tall nnks. that were once acorns and monuments that wera wire men. Washington, like avery other animal, vegetable and mineral, was an evolution In body and character. With him as with all other earthly played a vital part and changed him while he changed It. It Is no wirrlli-Kto represent him as a buy befort he became a rian. and a man he became wh'te a and before, god. Is no kindness to him In suppressing . And there tha fuels for ths more fully the truth about him Is told the greater his srhlevemeiu becomes. . . . It la the moat tragic of farces that so many Americana should Insist both thnt Washington could not tell a lls and that his chroniclers mar not tell the truth. All hough flip first volume of the 1 1 lichen' biogand the Hero." raphy la culled The Human the aecond volume. If anything, more than the nt Soap and Ointment will help you. After motoring, golf or other outdoor pastimes anoint the face and hands with Cuticura Ointment. After five minutes wash off with Cuticura Soap and hot water, rinsing with tepid or cold water; dry thoroughly. There is nothing better for keeping the akin soft and clear under all conditions of exposure. e ... and 1NSIST1 BAYER ASPIRIN e To anil out far at and to repeat aa faithfully aa possible Just wliat (leorge Vashlng--towas. did, said, wrote, thought, and why and how. The maln'elTon pee been to let Wnehington tell his own story aa fully aa pnmilbla In hla own words. This Is. Indeed, aa nearly an autobiography an I ran make It My incessant effort In this biography has been to are hla life as he aaw It. All other biographer havc tacitly assumed that he knew the future and budded himself grandly for It They have looked backward upon him through tha dsiallns aureola of his apotheosis. Put that waa not the way hs saw the world. He hnd to grope for hla faith and ha missed few of the pitfalls, the thorns and the torments of the way. No more did he miss the primroses, tha festivals, ths dances and sports and romances. poxi-lbl- SAY Brat, gives us an Insight Into George Washington, the human being. For It la In tbe period which this volume covers, 1702 to 1777, that we see Washington, tha Virginia planter who gambled, drank wine and rum, hunted, danced, and farmed as did the other country gentlemen of hla time. Nor do we have to rely upon the words of a Twentieth centnry biographer that he did these b Dog Saved Miners' Lives d SCOTT WATSON HE approach of February 22 recalls not only the great figure whom all Americans honor upon this dote but also the material relating to his life which has cume to light during tbe past year to moke even better our understanding and our appreciation of him even greater. As usual an amount of new Washingtonians, vast in quantity, considering the years that have Intervened since he walked the stage' of American history, has been unearthed end an even greater amount, heretofore ' known only to ' professional historians, lias been made available to the gen- erul public. And os usual the most Impoitant Washington-loa- n items are the new books whk-- have been written about him, Interpreting anew the life of this mun who has been the theme of so many biographers. Undoubtedly the outstanding Washington biography of the year Is the second vol- ume of Rupert Hughes study of blin, published by . Willlatn Morrow snd company of New York, which takes up the narrative where his first volume left off and tells the story of George Washington, the Rebel and the Iatriot, The Hughes Interpretation of Washington Is Important for more than one reason, the principal uiie being that he, more tluin any other Washington biographer, han Ihi-i- i the storm center of public discussion and as a result ninny people who would not otherwise be likely to read a biography of Washington have rushed to do so to see for themselves whether or not Hughes lias maligned the memory of the Father of Ilia Country. Of course, thin Is unfortunate for a man who Is seeking honestly to tell the truth Hnd no one can read the Ilughea1 volumes without being Impressed by the fact that he IS. Rut In the long run It Is a fortunate elreumslunce. heenuxe It Is making more Americans better scqunintpd (ban ever before with the faets about Washington, not Just the dim school hook legends. Though to some persons some of these facts may tie unpleasant, they cannot help seeing that the favorable aspects of Washington's character fur outweigh the unfavor able and they will Hud that it Is only by a consideration of both that they have reached some adequate undent undlng of the real Washington. lu Ids first volume Sir. Hughes stated his ss follows: ELMO For You to Be Well. . Ih-ln- g things. Washington himself la our authority and ha set down the whole record with painstaking accuracy In hla diaries and ledgers. A careful and n methodical mun this Virginia planter. Married to the wealthiest woman In America, possessed of thousands of acres of" land surrounding Mount Vernon, he had. with his own extensive Interests, a big Job on hla hands and he went about handling It In a careful and methodical manner. So he kept a close record of all of hla activities, his winnings and losses st cards, game killed, crops raised and sold, slaves bought and bartered, dances and dinners attended and all of the other dct&ils of the complex life of that period. If he oft set down anch entries ss Ity play tickets at Sundry Times fl.17-3,- " or By Lost on the Race S.a, or By Cards (loss) 10.S.", he also recorded frequently Ills generous Impulses thus : By Gave a Beggar, or "By Treating the Ladles 4a. At the end of every year he totaled np on one page all the sums taken, whether from tobacco, Burgess wages, house or farm rentals, and other sources of Income, not neglecting an occasional winning at cards for he was not even perfect aa gambler; he sometimes won, writes nughea. On the opposite page he summed up the outgo of all aorta snd then struck a balance. It Is delightful to find that hla books never came out right Some f hla explanations are Ingenuous By mistake In Count of the Englinh Sliver Inst By Cash lost, stolen, or paid away withyear, out charging." That the necessity for farm relief was sometimes as acute In his day as it Is today and that keeping s country estate was a great luxury then even as now Is shown by the following qnotatlon from his Journal : It is almost beyond belief that from 101 cows actually reported of a late enumeration of the Cattle that I am obliged to bay but- ter for the use of my family. Another Indication that Washington faced the same problems as Americans of todny Is shown by the doctor hills for his family Martha and her two children. Jack and Patsy Custls which were a large Item, nmountlng In one year to more than eighty pounds, not Including a physician who was kept on salary for the servants and slaves. He kept Ills diaries as faithfully as ha did his ledgers.1 Here he gives In his own matter-of-fac- t way the record of the teeming activities of Mount Vccnon. his fight with the stubborn Virginia soil, his straggle for more wealth through the cultivation of tobacco, ills efforts to secure fir himself nnd the soldiers who had been under large tracts of western land and, occasionally. In the latter years, of the drift toward revelation. Of Introspection he betrayed never s hint. Hughes says. A more emotionless diary was prob--' ntily never written. Ills only warmth waa shown In the pngea over which he wrote at the top, Aect of the Weather In Fehy" or whatever the month might be. Here It singularly pleased him to tie minute, enthusiastic and aa near to poetic as lie ever came. Exrept for the sufferings of his soldiers. Ills highest eloquence was reserved for the weather. , Remove from Washington's life Ills careers as n soldier and a statesman, and there remains little to distinguish him from the average successful business nmn of Ills day and ours," Hughes writes. But he was a scientist ns well. He hnd the spirit and wan always experimenting with manures and fertilisers, new methods of planting nnd plowing. Such was the Washington at Mount Vernon snd If we find It necessary to bring forward any more evidence of the humanness of the man It can be found In (he record of Washington ns commundcr-ln-rhle- f of the Continental army. Of his career In lids role Hughes has written: i-- , ... Pathos Is tha most endearing of all qualities and It has barn Impoanlbla ta tova or feet sorry for tha Waahlngton of tha t sat book a. Tat ha hlmstlf waa (fl I so-f- g US jdypk tSt. At AS s m PA&ttoir T&LsmirGTXM'jmAsy an Infinitely pathetic lonely figure. He was In ns Sanaa a god struck from tho brow of Providence In full uniform. Ho was a pdbr atruggler with Infinite difficulties at a time when chaos groaned la a swoon of torment from whose travail a nation was born and shaped amid 'the cries of pain and wrlthlnga of uncertainty. Nobody knew Just whet the right or the helpful thing to do, or what tha outcome would ba and Washington was as profoundly bewildered aa anybody. Everybody who knew him spoko of hla shyness, hla ambaraaemant Ha Inaplred awe and reverence also, but for tha purity of hla patriotism and tha lofilnesa of hla Ideas. Tet ha was wretchedly afraid of himself and ha had no ambit lone oxcept to grow rich, be free, cultivate his farm and hla friends, hla charities, and the other charms of this world and leave behind him an honorable name. He waa forever being appealed to to save Manila, relatives, regiments, colonies, or the nation from their own mistakes and Jealousies, and ha did hla best for them, going Into debt to lend money, taking on trustoechlpc to the neglevl of his own affairs, forever writing letters and keeping hooka, though1 ho lov d to danco and follow tho hounds and shuffle the cards and let the theater display before him tha woea and entangle-ment- s of peopla who would not aak hlmko arrange their llvaa for them. Is It surprising to And how exceedingly emotional Washington was, how bewildered, how senand how funk in hla criticisms. It is sitive. very touching to note hie concern about the public opinion of his efforts, and tho pain li nave him to be harshly criticised for Inactivity that lie could not help and dared not Justiry even to hie own friends and fellow officers. He mado no pretensions whatever to unusual wisdom or ability and protested Incessantly that ho waa Ignorant, Inexperienced and Incompeiant to hla problems, but that hla motives were honor-- , able, unstlflsh, and unmerconary. Tha man himself Is Infinitely more appealing, pitiful, heartbroken, tragic, gay, witty, vender, gracious, tactful, fearless, ferocious, heroic, and, at hla loftiest, sublime than tha dull grey hors manufactured by stupid dullards, stodgy polltl-claand mongers of untrulam. There la but one tiling needed to complete the picture of Washington, the human being, und that le to show thnt thin mun, who bus been so often painted as a towering deml-goInmpuble of the commonest of human emotions, wns it times capable of towering rages. Cowardice always Infuriated him and after one partlculnrly disgraceful exhibition of panic on the part of his troops we have this picture compiled from contemporary accounts : Throwing hla hat upon tha ground In a runs-po- rt of rage and Indignation, ho cried: Are these the men 1 am to defend America with?" He drew hla platola and them at hie men lit always thought a snapped coward better dead. Out hla platola would not tiro. It was said that ha drew hla sword and threatened to run the coward through. It Is known that he used the ranewhlp ha carried and he best hla people over the shoulders, flogged not only tha prlvato soldiers hut officers as well. Ho Isahed tho colonels serosa the shoulder blades, twinging hla plunging horse this way and that In Jhe torrent of men gona rat. He flailed l. brlgndler ... ns d -- gen-ora- And at last, when tho Brllleh approached very eloae, he waa eo bitten with deepalr that ho would nnt move and nn orderly had to lead hie boras sway. |