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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS. JUNCTION, UTAH "DIAMOND DYES COLOR THINGS NEW SPEAKS TO MOTHERS! Eugene, Oregon. During my first expectancy I suffered from morning sickness and my back hurt me all tle time. I got so weak and miserable that 1 was not able to do much of anything. Finally I be-- g a n taking Dr. Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye Each package contains direc15-ce- nt tions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shades or dye rich, permanent colors In lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats, sweatstockings, ers, draperies, coverings, hangings everything Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color is wool or silk, or whether It Is linen, cotton or mixed goods. Pierces Favorite Prescription and it strengthened m e, relieved me of the backache and made me feel much better. I had practically no suffering, did not lose my strength, and my baby was Favorite Prevery strong and healthy. scription is a reliable medicine for women and especially helpful to the prospective mother." Mrs. C. L. Wilson, 344 E. 3d St. All dealers. Tablets or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for free medical advice. 1 VoT LA mV-f- A KK-K HKAl'TY O LAY. cants. UUY A L.OVKLACH, Uox 1076, lSrlona, Mont. Formula M SO Mrs. A. L. MacFeat, secretary of the Irish Free State legation, is the RUB YOUR EYES? Hr. Thompson's Hrowater. only woman member of the foreign , Ps Bnjr at yourdruiiglsi's or 11 N. in diplomatic corps Washington. Hirer, Troy, DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN Y. booklet. Clear Your Skin Take Tablets Without Fear If You See the Safety "Bayer Cross. 0( Disfiguring Blemishes Use Guticura Warning I Unless you see the name Samplo Soap, Olntmont, Talcum Bayer on package or on tablets you OaUcuraJLiiborAtiriJDi are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and W. N. U., Salt Lake Cit XPZJCOPAZ Address: No. 8 1926 -- prescribed by physicians for 25 years. Evil Is wrought by wunt of thought Suy Bayer when you buy Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous. Adv. ns well ns want of heart. CtmRCZZQ?27ZXZF C&J&tlRZXRATXJpYJZ VOtfftf, JZI, Children Beloved Poet Will (Sleep in Church's Shadow By trm. Dont give away all your good vice. The reason why love Is blind is so ad- Save a little fop yourself. that it will not see its finish. DEWITT J. MASON HEN Eugene Field moved, thirty years ago last summer, to his Sabine Farm, in the outskirts of Chicago, he said, Now that I am here in my own house, I shall do better work than ever before. The beloved childrens poet assembled his thousands of books ; arranged his treasured collection of antique bottles, old songs, bells, walking sticks and tops; hung on the wall the ax Gladstone had given him; laid out Danas scissors and was supremely happy. But he died that fail and was buried in Graceland cemetery. In Chicago. Now, the Sabine Farm home Is to give way to an apartment house ; also, Fields remains ar6 to be removed from Graceland cemetery to a specially built memorial tomb in the cloisters of the little Episcopal Church of the Holy Comforter at Kenilworth, ivy-cla- d 111. It may be that there have been poets not necessarily better poets, or more religious ones, writes Robert L. Duffus in the New York Times, who would feel more at home In the shadow of a cloister than would Eugene Field. Yet the two incidents together have their significance. The Sabine Farm dissolves Into the thin substance of dreams; but the memory of Eugene Field has not been corroded by the years. It may be, however, that those who pass through the Kenilworth cloisters will remember the author of The Sugar-PluTree. and Wynken, Blyn-keand Nod, and forget the madcap editor and colyumist of the old Denver and Chicago days ; the wild humorist who gave utterance to The Tribune Primer; the great Jester who lived for the purpose of making pose and pretense ridiculous ; the relentless n satirist Eugene Field came of a distinguished family, but not of one given to eccentric genius. His father, as counsel for the runaway negro Dred Scott made a protest against slavery which for a moment gave him naHis mother, a tional prominence. women of beauty and charm, died in 1856. when Eugene was only six years old, and he and his brother were brought up by an aunt Mary Field French, In Amherst, Mass. At fifteen he went to a school at Monson, Mass., kept by a clergyman and his wife, and at eighteen he entered Williams college. The influences that surrounded him were thus sobering if not absolutely Puritanical. He left Williams partly because of the death of his father and partly because of the facultys lack of enthusiasm over the prospect of having him any longer. He had not committed any unpardonable offenses, but he too plainly lacked that respect for office and authority which was deemed essential. Next year he entered Knox college, at Galesburg, 111., an event chiefly important because during that year he began newspaper work by contributing to the Galesburg Register. He was restless, and ' In 1870 moved on to the University of Missouri, at Columbia. The most significant thing that happened to him there was his THE WORLD'S GREATEST i meeting with the girl of fifteen who was later to become his wife. His share of his fathers estate was $8,000. At the end of the year in Columbia, Mo., he shook the dust of higher education forever from his feet and set off with his friend, Edgar Comstock, brother of the young lady with whom he was in love, for a hilarious tour of Europe. From time to time he cabled home for money. When six months had passed and the two adventurers had reached Italy the $8,000 was all gone. I came home broke, he afterward said, so I got married. Mrs. Field was then sixteen. Their life together was a happy one. She bore him eight children and understood his whimsical variety of humor. She also managed the family finances a task of which he was constitutionally Incapable. Their only clashes came when he was caught trying to smuggle home books when money was needed to pay the grocer. Field knew that he was not in every respect a model husband, and liked to tell about a conversation he once had in a dream with the patriarch Job. It is true, Job was represented as saying, that for a long time I enjoyed quite a reputation for being very patient, but now I have to take a back seat You see, theres a woman in Chicago named Mrs. Eugene Field who has proved herself a lot patienter than Field had always wanted to be an actor. He even bought complete sets ut costumes for Hamlet, Lear and Qthello, and in 1872 actually went out with a company of other reckless youths on a barnstorming tour. "In June, 1873, he went to the St. Louis Evening Journal as a cub reporter, and before the year closed was city editor. Subsequently, he was city editor of the Gazette of St. Joseph, a paragrapher for the Journal and the 1 TImes-Journ- al in St Louis, managing editor of the Kansas City Times, and then, in 1881, managing editor of the Denver Tribune. It was in Denver that he began to acquire more than local fame not merely as managing editor of a lively paper, but as paragrapher, dramatic critic, and, it is essential to add, practical joker. In 1883 he was called to Chicago, at a considerable increase of salary, to write whatever he pleased for the Chicago News. He took over a nondescript column called Current Gossip which blossomed out, on August 31, 1883, as the famous Sharps and Flats .Eugene Field did not talk, as A rule, In terms of Little Boy Blue or The Wanderer. lie saved that side of his nature mostly for pen and paDor. Yet it spilled out. I always feel like shedding tears he said to George Millard one Christmas, when I see all those people going home with, their little gifts for the babies. I cant help crying. It overwhelms me. He did not have to unbend to children. He understood them because he looked at the world through their eyes. For him, as for them, It had mystery. I believe he said, in ghosts, in witches and in fairies He had the air of a changeling ; an air of knowing more than he meant to tell. That mummers face as a friend called it, hid more than it revealed. He lamented, as newspaper men have dorie ever since the Acta DIurna oil Rome, that his Job left him insufficient time and strength. A gaunt, awkward, homely Pagliacci, counted on to make people laugh and cry. Not even his wife knew, perhaps, what he was like was off. wheh the make-u- p a standing offer announced Dana of double the Chicago salary if Field would come to New York, ne preferred to sit In the Record office and let fame find him there. If it so desired. A Little Book of Western Verse containing much of his best work, appeared in 1889, and in a popular edition In 1890; so did A Little Book of When he went- to Profitable Tales. England In 1889 he found his name a - passport into whatever literary circles he cared to enter. He was conscious of growing powers, of larger plans. But his health had never been robust, and because he hated exercise, was fond of tobacco and pastry, and would not take enough sleep, it grew worse. For years he fought, with humorous gallantry, the inroads of dyspepsia. In 1893 he nearly died of typhoid fever. His heart gave way, and he died in his sleep during the night of November 4, 1895. He may have felt death coming, for he had said, a few days before: This is the dying time of year ne had grown gentler and more like the childrens Eugene Field, i The uncouth, dancing spirit of the woods was less with him toward the last His final mood was that in which he wrote, by way of preface: Go forth, little lyrics, and sing to the hearts of men. This beautiful world is full of song and thy voices may not be heard at all but sing on, children of ours; sing to the hearts of men, and thy song shall at least swell the universal harmony that bespeaketb Gods love and the sweetness of " the next time you bake givo it just one honest and fair trial One test in your own kitchen will prove to you that there is a o big difference between Calumet: J and any other brand that foe uniform and wholesome bak ing it has no equal Sales l a Times Those o Any Other Brand Ill tell you why they wouldnt insure you You allowed constipation to become chronic it resulted in organic disease. - until finally People dont realize how insidious constipation is. Its first effects are hardly more than annoyances headaches, loss of appetite, sleeplessness and the like. .But in time, as the body is subjected to continued intestinal poisoning, it may lead to high blood pressure, rheumatism, diabetes or even Brights disease. Stop constipation if you wish to live long. Take a little Nujol every day that will keep you regular. Nujol relieves constipation in Natures way Constipation is dangerous for anybody. Nujol is safe for everybody. It does not affect the stomach and is not absorbed by the body. Medical au thori ties approveN ujol because it is sale, gentle and natural in i ts action. Nujol makes up for a deficiency temporary or chronic in the supply ofnaturallubricantin the intestines. It softens the waste matter and thus permits thorough and regular elimination without overtaxing the in testinal muscles. Nujol can be taken for any length of time without ill effects. To insure internal cleanliness, it should be taken regularly in accordance with the directions on each bottle. Unlike laxatives, it does not form a habit and can be discon rinued at any time. Ask your druggist for Nujol today and begin to enjoy the perfect health that is possible only when elimination is normal and regular. Nuio! 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