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Show v PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION. ITT4H AAAAAAAaAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Keepfour Butter Uniform and NewsNoteo ltrs a Privilege Utah to Live in OGDEN HoldYour Customers Dont wait for your customers Ogden has been placed on to complain about the variable color of your butter. Keep your butter that golden June color the airmail route between Salt Lake and Great Falls, Mont., United States Senator William H. King advised the Ogden chamber of commerce by telegraph. Senator King stated that while the advertisement for an airmail contract between the two points of this route did not include Ogden, W. Irving Glover, second assistant postmaster general, assured the senator that Ogden would be placed on the route as an airmail depot v7 Too )m( com. out tor. JonlcJit wbo th. moon I, hoofin' ovr th. hill off rondr on' th. barvwt fluid. I. iwlmmln' la tb oioonllfht. n you 0.0 m th. Injun, and tb. t.pto jMt to plain to klo to Tou aan. .hi kaowd you would after a llttla whlla. Jmr notloa bow tha luvu turn rod Trout tbla tlma o' yaart That's ttot anutbar alfn ff ndiklna. Th.f, wton aa old Injun .parrtt fits tlrwl dancin' an flow bp on' aquata an n leaf t mb Why, I bln bear rnatlta' and whtapartn' an era. pin' round amonf tba leave, all tha tlma: an avar ones ta f whlla a tot f ' way ondw aoma fat old Injun f Jtot and comae floatin' down ta tha f round Sa. tor.', ana aow. 8aa It tat That's tha war paint rubbad off n on Injun f Tow, nuro's you ro born. . Purty noon nil tho Injun. II fo morehla' owoy nfln, back to tbo happy bunttn around, but boat aaa 'am troopin' bach tb sky jaw hasy with 'am and tbalr eampflraa mnotdarlo' away tot nuthin a tall.nuthin atailcept per nuthin' ever HAPPENS our HERE. A NEW BABY DOWN T Tom LINCOLN'S. By ELMO SCOTT WATSON NDIAN SUMMER has come and gone, but as usual It dll not pass this year without the Chicag. Tribune reprinting for the twentieth consecutive I i -- A l-- - J iAftn , As Th ere V a- - a Jaute Cieuj " Is There a Santa Claus? We take pleasure In answering J at once and thus prominently the communication below, expressing at the same time our great gratl- ficatlon that Its faithful author la numbered among the friends of the Sun: X X Dear Editor: "I am eight years old Some of my little T friends say there Is no Santa Claus. Papa 2 says, If you see It In the Sun Its so Please 4, teli me the truth, Is there a Santa Claus? VIRGINIA "115 West J OHANLON. street. Virginia, your little friends are wrong They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which Is not comprehensible By their Utile minds. All minds, Virginia, whether be wnen s or children's, are little. In thisthey great universe of ours man Is a mere Insect, an artl ln his Intellect, aa compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the Intelligence capable of grasping the whole truth and knowledge. Yes, Virginia, there Is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life Ita highest beauty and Joy. Alas, how dreary would be the world If there were ao Santa Claus! It would be as dreary aa If there were no Virginia. There would be no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance, to make tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment except In sense and Th eternal light with which childhoodlight. fllla the world would be extinguished. Not believe In Santa Claus! You might as well not believe In fairies! You might get your papa to hire men to watch In all the chimneys on Christmas eve to catch Santa Claus, but even If they did not see Santa Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but that Is no sign that there Is no Santa Claus. The most real things In the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but thats no proof that they are not three. Nobody can conceive or Imagine all the won-dors there are unseen In the worltL You tear apart a baby's rattle and see what makes the noise Inside, but there Is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love and romance can push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is It all real? Ah, Vlr- glnla. In all this world there Is nothing else real and abiding No Santa Claus! Thank God he lives and he lives forever. A thousand years from now. Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now. he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood. Ninety-fift- h JX - fc 2 T X j X X ,5, X X X f g r LITTLE GREEN TENTS Tha little green tents where the eoldlers deep. And the aunbeame play and the women weep The symbol of dole and gloom. little green tent Is a thing divine: little green tent Is a country's shrine. Where the patriots kneel and pray. And the brave men left, so old. so few, Were young and stalwart In slxty-twWhen they went to the war away. But It doesnt take an anniversary, such as Christmas, Thanksgiving or Memorial day, to pro duce a Newspaper Classic. Sometimes it Is a piece of oratory which, when printed in a news paper, seems to have as much appeal as whei It Is spoken. Then come requests for a reprint Ing In the paper In which the speech was orlgi nally reported ; other newspapers pick It up, and ! beholej another Newspaper Classic. Once upon a time Senator George G. Vest ol Missouri, while acting as an attorney in a law j suit In which a Missouri lio-idog was in volved, uttered a stirring tribute to mans best friend. - And Vests Dog Eulogy has beeom. JVYTON There is rejoicing on the a "Newspaper Classic that hag been reprinted j many People in the Uintah thousands of times. The same Is true of the "Bin Parf Grass masterpiece by Senator J J. Ingalls of Pf8 over tlie Practical completion ol lt unit of the VicKansas; of that tribute to The corn, the cor tim royal corn, by Governor Oglesby of Illinois tory highway. The road is now being rom Myton to Roosevelt and a and of the eulogy on Cotton by John Trotwood j l?se Moore of Tennessee. Other states hare from time Jew more ays put the finishing to time produced classics of more than local touches to the entire project. Since the state took the work over from the fame, but few have become nationally known. a Lyon Construction company a few have those above mentioned. weeks ago, rapid progress has been N all Newspaper Classics. however, are such because of their appeal to the deeper emo made. tions. Very often a bit of light v .rse. Just a uerai am money flippant 'ingle with an unforgettable lilt of rhythm amounting to $94,797 31 which w91 h or s.rlMLg phrase will so catch the public fane) applied to the cost of construction of that tong a?ter Its opuiarlty has apparently died highways in Duchesne, Summit Weber down newspapers will receive a request for its and Davis counties, was received Mon' How times have Thomas many George reprinvng. day at the office of John Walker state Lanigaos Ahkoond of Swat or the verses abom treasurer. Punch, Conductor. Punch With (are. the Joim SALT LAKE National forests ln componitlon of Isaac Bromley Noah Brooks, W. C Utah include approximately 7 991 300 Wyckoff nnd Moses P. Handy (they were not writ acres of land. occunv ten by Mark Twain, as is often asserted, although the high mountainThey usually the ranges crests he gave them wide circulation) been asked for of which exceed 8000 feet although I and reprinted? Nobody knows The times hav they generally extend down nearly been innumerable and they will be reprinted in to the foot of the range, in some in numerable times, as will all Newspaper Clafslc stances as low as 6000 feet The The o. . f X X 4 a X X as some of the newspapers using the article headed it. the sketch was printed In a large number of newspapers. Here is a pail of mothers, the sketch: Can you Imagine, In these closing days of the year, with Thanksgiving close upon us, a whole land without .grandmothers? That seems almost d Incredible m the communities the East and South, where no family reunion isofcomwithout at least one venerable figure so faplete miliar and so dear to all In that household the days of childhood's earliest recollection. from Yet, between the Rocky mountains and the Pacific coast there are hundreds of homes where children are growing up without a glimpse of their own, or any other child's grandmother. They know nothing of the dear face, the soft gray hair the quaint figure of that patient little woman who, day after day, alts ln the quiet corner of the old homo, knitting, knitting, and still knitting, while her thoughts are wandering far away ftito the long ago of her childhood. They know nothing of her gentle chldings, nor can they appreciate the quiet and kindly amusement In the et grandmother's expense; when after household searching the house for her specs, she Is reminded, la response to bar anxious Inquiry, that they are Keep the Sun Away Exposure of the uncovered roots of trees for five minutes may.be sufficient to injure the tree beyond recovery, says the American Tree association of Washington, which for a stamp SALT LAKE According to ' thfi will send you tree planting suggesweekly weather, crop and range re- tions. Fare in protection of the roots port, from the office of J. Cecil Alter, from sun, dry air, and wind will be weather observer in Salt Lake, precip- amply rewarded in the performance itation has been fairly general, and in of the trees after proper planting. most sections amounts have been sufficient to benefit ranges and fall grains. The soils have become too wet to plow in places, and sugar beet harvesting has been temporarily suspended, though this work is now fairly well along. PRICE District Road Engineer Take Salts at First Sign of Reuben Simpson and Inspector J. H. Bladder Irritation or Young of the federal bureau of public roads left for Emery county, where Backache they will Inspect the construction work, which is being done on federal The American men and women must aid project No. 4, the Price-Ferroconstantly guard against kidney highway has been accomplished during trouble because we often eat too much the past month, and Engineer Simpson food. Our blood is filled with rich expects it to be almost completed be- acids which the kidneys strive to fore frost interferes. filter out; they weaken from overSALT LAKE Gasoline taxes col- work, become sluggish, the eliminalected by the motor vehicle depart- tive tissues clog and the result is kidment of the secretary of states office ney trouble, bladder weakness anl in October totaled $150,000, including a general decline In health. $20,308.94 In back taxes paid by the When your kidneys feel like lumps Utah Oil Refining company. Net col- of lead ; your back hurts or the urine lections were approximately $130,000. is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are In 1926 collections for October were obliged to seek relief two or three $111,566.75, the October, 1927, increase times during the night; if you suffer being about $18,000. witli sick headache, or dizzy, nervous MYTON A. C. Marchant, of Myton. spells, acid stomach, or If you have during the past week has been buying rheumatism when the weather Is bad, turkeys in the Uintah basin for a mar- begin drinking lots of good soft water ket in Salt Lake City. Tuesday Mr. and get from your pharmacist about Marchant made a shipment of 300 and four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a paid 36 cents per pound for drecsed tablespoonful n a glass of water bebirds. Representatives of other com- fore breakfast for a few days and panies also are buying in the basin. your kidneys may then act fine. This famous silts is made from the The turkeys this year are in fine condiacid of grapes and lemon juice, comtion. bined with lithia, and has been used HELPER The united efforts of the for years to help flush and stimulate citizens residing along the banks of clogged kidneys, to neutralize the the Price river in this city have re- acids in the system so they no longer n sulted in the importal-of the coun are a source of irritation, thus o'tea ty steam shovel hers and the com relieving bladder disorders. mencing of work in and Jad Salts is Inexpensive, cannot ing the cliannel- - aeTmng During the jure, makes a delightful effervescent Ilthla-wate- r drink and belongs In every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney Mountain Dell, it was reported. The flushing any time. total deposit of rain end snow totaled the unusual water content of twi inches. It was estimated that it snow a Ar Dont treat Bore Inflamed C ed at least fifteen inches in smartinged ejns with power- Brighton ful f pJZpby band. A soothing ln Harry Hammond, waterworks observeffective, safe remedy er is in Salt Lake having gone down Is best KoenwaU for a few days from the watershed. drugglBta. HALL A BUCK EL New York City ROOSEVELT Following the of the last week, which were ol much value, all roads into the Uintah PARKERS basin are open and in good condition. HAIR BALSAM Traffic has not been held up unduly, Restores Color end and both the Strawberry route and the Boost? to Grey and Faded Hafa Castlegate-Duchesne Oc. and $1 00 at Drugrpifta roads have been HtwmTrhero Whs. Patchogne If Y. bearing heavy traffic throughout the FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for nee in storm period. Three inches of snow connection v Ith Parker's Hair Balsam. Hakes the a. hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at was reported on Indian summit last Hiacox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. f . week, but none since. LOGAN Elaborate preparations are Some Prefer Quiet Styles being completed by the Logan board Baris arbiters of mens fashions, of education for the dedicatiSn of the says an new high school plant located on exchange, have approved of First a royal blue South and Second West streets, Noevening suit for men to vember 30. Superintendent L. A. Peter-son- , be worn with pale blue crepe de chine Let em decree till they will have general 'charge of the underwear bust, say we. Speaking for one man, days activities. nothing can Induce ns to give up our LOGAN Utahs alfalfa seed Indus rose blue beige pongee for try is not likely to suffer as the re crepe de chine. Boston any pale Transcript suit or Canadas recent ruling against comman alfalfa seed and her new reg illations concerning the Importation ol certified seed of hardy varieties ac re not only annoying, but dangeroui cording to Dr. George Stewart agron r not attended to at once they ma: omist of the Utah experiment evelop into serious ailment station. Re&OTesDandntff-StopsflalrFAlli- And tha sod la part of the land saved When the flag of the enemy darklythey waved, T Sample) rain-storm- s o, X X ifree draja-dropp- Afe covered with flowers today. And between the tents walk the few. Who were young and stalwart in weary sixty-twWhen they went to the war away. The little green tents are built of eod. And they art not long and they are not broad, But they have lots of room. X long-settle- under the frills of her cap. Then there are th quaint old songs of long ago, that even the father! and mothers of tho present day know not, which grandmother, with a quaver In her voice, will hum and sing when she thinks no one la near to hear . . . Thousands of western boys and girls knoa nothing of this. A grandmother Is to them almost as much of a myth as the heroine of a falrj story. . . . It Is true there are some grand mothers ln the Far West, but they are Imported from the East and South. For most of them, the West Is too far away. No doubt their hearts often reach out tenderly toward their grandchildren ln end beyond the Rocky mountains. As to native-borgrandmothers, they are very hard to And west of the Rocky mountains With the exception of the early settlements In the Oregon country the Mormons In JJtah and the occasional home of the earlier trappers ln the mountains, or ranchmen In California, the civilization 1s too young for native-bor- n It was nearly forty grandmothers. years ago that the great rush was made to the gold Aelds of California, and not until ten years later did the tide of Immigration start for Pikes peak Possibly California may produce a few very youthful grandmothers, about, say, forty years of age but you can scarcely And a native-bor- n grand mother of even that early age ln Colorado. Like the Christmas Is There a Santa Claus? the Thanksgiving "No Grandmothers There struck a responsive chord In the hearts of It? readers and at their request It has been reprinted by newspaper editors many, many times since It was written. Out In Kansas, Memorial day would not be Me morial day if the local newspaper did not reprint a bit of verse once written by one of the favorite poets of the Sunflower state. Here Is Walt Ma sons poem which appears regularly In Kansas newspapers around May 30: n ' is. n repR'nt eo By KQues-r- Puh. Cb. (YK HbridJ Cburtesy Sr Wells & RidurJsw Ca., Btirlinttoa, Vermoat Drink Water "wen., 5?u iee mclean5 gone t' washin'ton T' 5.MADiSON 5 WORE IN. Abf OlT SPEUMAN Ten. 5 me This Bonapaete fella mas what's new Captured most o' Spain, OUT HERE, NEI 6H GOR. ? " Chicago Tribune time, annually, John T. famous cartoon, Injun Summer." The L'hrlstmas season Is almost here and soon the New York Sun will be reprint1 jg for the thirtieth consecutive time, annually, the reply of one of Its ditorial writers to Virginia O'Hanlon, the little girl who wanted to know if there was a Santa Claus. And It wont bo but a few weeks until the Kansas City Star recves a request from some reader which says, "Wont you please be sure to reprint II. T. Websters cartoon, Hardin County 1S0C, In your paper on Lincolns birthday? and when the Star does reprint It. It will be the tenth consecutive tim anjJfjiJy, that It ha? done so. Then a few weeks more and it will be nearly Memorial day. As that day approaches newsparers all over the state of Kansas (and no doubt In other states as well) will reprint Walt Mc.sms por i, Little Green Tents. For all of these the cartoons, Injun Summer anl Hardin County, 1809, the Lit cf prose called Is There a Santa Claus? and .he poem, Little Green Tents are "Newspaper Classics those Inspired pictorial or written pieces which their creators, newspaper men all of them, once turned out, little dreaming that these creations of theirs would become famous. For them It was all in the days work. But, somehow, what they wrote or what they drew caught the public fancy, because of some great beauty, some great truth or some inherent human appeal In It, and the public carefully clipped It from the newspaper and laid it aside for future enjoyment. Or perhaps the public, as that anniversary came around again, remembered how they had enjoyed that picture or hat bit of writing and immediately wrote to the editor of the paper in which they had seen it to ask, "Wont you please print It again? Injun Summer first appeared In the Chicago Tribune In the autumn of 1907 and almost Immediately McCutcheon began to receive letters of appreciation. But It was not until the next year that the cartoon began its career as a When Indian summer came Newspaper Classic. around that year, the Tribune began to receive letters from its readers, Please reprint John McCutclieons Injun Summer. It was the same the next year and the next and the next, until now the annual reprinting of the cartoon has become a tradition on the Tribune and an event to be looked forward to by the. readers of that newspaper as the herald that Indian summer is again at hand. Websters "Hardin County, 1809, first appeared in 1918. One of the newspapers which was then receiving the syndicate service which Included the work of this cartoonist, who If now on the staff of the New York World, was the Kansas City Star, and the next year, as Lincolns birthday approached, the Star began to receive requests that the cartoon be reprinted. So Hardin County, 1809. became a "Newspaper Classic and February 12 of each year sees 'ts reappearance. The example of is There a Santa Claus? as a Ne vspaper Classic is, If anything, more interesting than that of the cartoons. Not only has It been : .irinted In the New York Sun every year for the last 30 years, but It has been reprinted repeatedly In thousands of other newspapers the United States during that time. Curious to note. Its first appearance was not during the holiday season. Evidently little Virginia OHanlon began to be concerned about Santa Claus long before Christmas that year, for It wa tin September 21, 1S97, that the reply to her letter, written by Francis P. Church, an editorial writer, first appeared in the Sun. It is doubtful If there is any other single Christmas piece, with the possible exception of The Night Before Christmas, which is so widely known. Thanksgiving also has Its Newspaper Classic, even though it is not so well known as those connected with Christmas. Back in 1890 Irving Bacheller, the distinguished novelist, was the head of a newspaper syndicate In New York and one of his correspondents In the West was Will CL Ferril, now editor of the Rocky Mountain Herald In Denver. In that year Mr. Bacheller asked Jlr. Ferril to write a western article for Thanksgiving and in compliance he wrote an article, based on conditions in the Far West at that time, which he called No Crandmothers Tuere. Under that title, or the title A LaDd Without Grand- - or Drugs Excite the Kidneys, ANyrJgwS D0WNTTHvlUA6f,eZRvP 11 1 "buries Send UTAH Balance of $10,421.71 remained to the credit of the Utah Stats Fair association this year after all expenses of the last fair were paid, it was shown by a statement of the receipts and disbursements of the association for the year, issued by Ernest S. Holmes, manager, and Martha E. Gibbs, secretary, of the association. But yitr, lone about now, thojr all ooma back, laaatwaya tbalr partita do. Thty'ra hr now. Ton aan aaa 'am off acroaa tha field a. Look ral hard fie that kind a hasy. sristjr look out yonder I Well, thorn a Injun Injus aperrfl ma robin alone on dancin' In tha sunlight That a what tnfkeo that kind o' baa tbata oeerywhara lta Jest tha aperrlti of tha Injuns all coma hack. They re all around ua now Sea off yonder, sea them tepees? They kind a looks like porn shocks hem here, but them a Injun tents, aura as youre a foot hlqh. Bee 'em now? Sura, I knowed you could. Smell that smoky sort tf arnell In tha air? That a the eamp Area a buraln and their pipee oln Lots a' people .say U s Just leaves turnin', but it sin I Its tha campfires, an th' Injuns are boppln round 'em t' beat old Harry C everybody likes by putting a few drops of Dandelion Butter Color into the chum. It is purely vegetable, wholesome and absolutely tasteless. It meets all State and National Food laws. All large creameries have used Dandelion Butter Color for years. It does not col or buttermilk. You can get the large bottles for 35c from all drug or grocery stores. J n I Myton-Rooseve- . drug-sut- Coughs and Colds Boschees Syrup Is soothing and healing in such cases, and has been used for sixty-on- e years. 30c and 90o bottles. Buy it at your drug store. G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbury, CALIFORNIA DAIRY FARM. Fully Improved. Richest land. 1 mile thriving town. 160 acres, (24 000, 4 cash, balance eay. Rowell, 730 Miner ve. Stockton. Calif. WATER POWER GRIST MILL, with house and buildings ccmplet, in A- condition, et a price you cant beat. Horace B. Reed, Realtor, Morristown, Teon -l HOT High FLLSIIKS and other symptoms of Blood Pressure are quickly rel.eved for trial. Cleve. Chem. Co., II SOI Flood Bldg.. Ban Francisco, Calif. DON'T TE BAI I ftn!dnofl rurel;un-hear- d .f results, ol I Indian easily formula worki wonders; sent postpnid on receipt of $1 H. Warren. 710 Lakeside Bo, Beattie, Wash. Chr.itmafl Present? Buy Italian Accord eon . We import, make ro It exchange psir, yeaia guereotee. Quick d,ltvry Cats- locus Frfc r. Fort. TTl Prof. I't-f- n. y. "i Av., 1871. (established W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 49-19- 27. |