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Show '' W k K . A PI LITE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION. IXfcAH !!. S. STARTS MU Clean Kidneys By Drinking Lots of Water (4 FTtisV' Kidneys Bladder Bothers or Back Hurta If TakiBalts PRESIDENT COOLIDGE DIRECTS REQUEST TO FOUR NATIONS ASKING FOR MEETING Eating too tjttlch rich food may produce kidney trouble in some form, Special Message Read Before Congress ays a n authority, because Given Support; Senator the A Ids. created excite the kidneys. Borah Agrees Then they become overworked, get sluggish, clog up and cause all aorta-o- f distress, particularly backache and powers misery In the., kldbey - region, rheu Washington The great-sewere besought by the American . gov: made twinges, severe headaches, acid torpid liver, ernment to complete without delay stomach, constipation, and bladder sleeplessness; urinary the naval limitation program they be ' x. - ' arms 1921 in at the Washington gan The moment your back hurts or kidIn a diplomatic note conference. or ft bladder neys touched with anxiety lest the world bothersarent acting right,. lots of drinklhg" you, begin again drift into an era of competitive good water" and also get about four-ouncnavy building, Prebident Coolidge inof Jad SaltaXrom any good vited the governments of Great Brittake a tpblespoonfnl In a ain, France, Italy and Japan to join pharmacy,; before breakfast for a wafer glask df in with the United States negotiating few and your day kidneys may then an agreement that would place all act salts Is made-frofarnou .This Ape. of warcraft classes acid of the apd lemon first-clas- s grapes similar to those put upon combined with lfthia, and has-beeJuice, It the Washington treaty. ships by used for years to flush clogged, was proposed that the discussions be actlv-It- y; held at Geneva during the league of kidneys and stimulate them J in acids to the also neutralize, connations armaments conference to ' longer . vene there next mouth, and that the the system so that they no bladder-disordersgeneral principles of the Washington Irritate, thus often relieving .. . conference be accepted as the basis of can Jad Salt?, .not, Injpre anyone; negotiations. To a limited degree the a delightful 'effervescent llthia-wat- er makes the that president suggested drink .which millions of men ratio applied to Lhe respective capital and. theo to help-keeship strength of. the five powers be and women take now find the kidneys .urjnary organs include to downward carried cruisers, serious kidsubmarines and all other navy ships. clean, thns1 often 'avoiding ' ' - ney dIsorders. Idahoans Asks Pact Change , well-know- lrrl--tatio- n. v-- es under-limitation- s n p By ELMO SCOTT WATSON HU whole history of the American Revolution revolt es a round one limn George Washington. So it was eminently fitting that the one hundred nUen.ary of that In the history of tlnd the nation's Washington Representative and illtletli an tremendous event the world should iuieiest centered statue." One event of considerable significance connected with the celebration of Washington's birthday was the rediscovery" of what has been termed the last pot trait made of Washington, which Is with this article. The story of this por- - trait Is a romantic In 1702 a twent.v-three-- ) ear-olFiench man named Dairies Il.dtlmzar J ulien Kevert de St. Memln came to Ameiica from the tl'y ot Dijon and settled in Philadelphia. There he invented what lie called a "physhniotiace wild pantagraph with which lie was enabled to outline a human head on paper with mathematical exactness, reducing or enlarging it to any size for reproduction on a copper plate. The original was Unbilled on crayon and the clipper in mezzoone. d tint. went to Philadelphia and the Frenchman for what Is said to have been his last portrait. There Is authentic record of the fact that St. Memln loaned the original paniagraphic jiortrult to Hilbert Stuart, the most famous of all pnlnters of Washington. St Meudn never recovered the portrait from Stuart, for some unknown reason, and Stuart it to .7. Carson Itrevoort of Brooklyn, N. Y. Hrrvoiirt, it seems, lent some monev to Rev. J. D, Phillip, an F.piscopal minister of ltrnohlju, taking as senility the pastors library. In some way the portrait came Into Phillip's possession and lie pissed it on to a nephew, J. S. Phillip, who, probably little realizing Its value, gave It to the wife ef ids In son, George W. F. Phillip. the Phillip family removed from Brook i.vn to Riverside. 111., and Heoige Ihillip went into the fuel busmens in Lombard, IH. A few yeuis late? en a Pt front Brooklyn came to v'sit them and s),. - of the St. Merun portrait. Some time after this M Clare's Magazine eontrinofl a story of V. .n Irgton and about the St. 'reps n wti-al- t made the statement that tho original hail beet? Inst. V. hereupon the sons of Gioige V. F. 1 hillqi, ret:muhTli g tlioir aunt's statement that a St. Aleii.in I'ortraU was owned in their l.imily, began 1S.S0 t JL HAARLEM OIL nassa CAP correct internal troubles, ttimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on 'the original genuine Cold Medal. FOR Colds Coughs Senate Farm Pact Wavers Washington Rapidly approaching the final test of Its strength, the McNary-IIaugefarm relief bill was debated in both the house and senate with interest man.fest as to what President Coolidge would do if it is passed. For a while it appeared the o i. a.ut gained strength in the senate where a vote will be taken, Chairman MeXary of the agriculture committee announcing that an agreement had been reached with southern senators to vote for the measure with the equalization fee on cotton .deferred two' years. And the Bledsoe insurance plan in effect meanwhlie. Later, however, this program seemed to be upset as a result of a copference in the office 'of Vice President Dawes, who has advocated application of the equalization fee on all commodities alike. A number of western and southern senatois attended, and a difference of opiniot developed as to whether the fee on cotton should be deferred. n zAsritmzAir of umnnrom searching for it in the attic of their home and found the precious pantagraph. Its authenticity was established by otllclals of the Chicago Historical society. That was a number of jears ago. hut so far as Is known the portrait was never reproduced in print until It appeured in a Chicago newspaper 'birthday. upon the occasion 102d. of Washington's Although tho anniversary of a number of Revolutionary events during the year 192(1 served to bring about mention of Washingtons name from time to time, it was not until September that the controversy which arose from Hughes speech wns revived. This came about with the publication of two hooks "George Washington The Image and the Man," by W, E. Woodward (Bon' and Live-righ- t, N Y.) and "George Washington The Human Being and the Hero, 1722 1702. by Rupert Hughes (William Morrow A Co, N. Y.L While Hughes biography dealt with only the first thirty years of Washington's life. Woodward's covered his whole life from 1722 to 1 7!M The aitn of both was to teveal the retd Washington, hut by widely different methods. Hughes, covering less than half of Washington's life, backed up Ids statements with documentary authority, his effort being, as he stated, to let Washington tell his own story ns hilly as possible in his own words." Woodward's book was a study not only of Washington. hut more broadly of the era in v,hlch Washington lived, and It was more of a personal Interpretation of the nun and his time than the other. He Interpreted Washington more as a business man than in any other role and asserted bat Washington Is not really the least understood of our great men. but the best understood, because "he vvu r the American, common denominator. the average man deilied and raised to the nth lower . . . Here we see the typical captain of industry attitude." . The effect of these two hooks, both attempting to substitute the living, breathing Washington for the marble statue Washington, was to rev iv e Interest in the whole subject and whatever the verdict of critics on both volumes may tie, it is peihans not too much to say that the publication of the Woodward and the Hughes biographies mav well be regarded as among the outstanding events in telation to the Washingtoniana of 192i. If there is one whkli may challenge that claim it - the celebration vvlihh took pl.ue In Trenton. N. .1 . Inst December when the of the anir'v.r..!,ry battle of Trent. m was observed. With I'Vesidont and Mrs. Coohdae and thirteen governors, the prv sent exeeui'tes of the original colonies, astheir guests, the ei'lens of the .New Jersey capital sttged a series of mass meetings, parados and special chun h services In keeping with the Im portanoe of the winter right a tm Ired and fifty yems ago vlmi asbington and his continentals made heir lumens cros,rg of the Del.. ware to dtft'tU li.e llcssiaus and to present to the strug- I In 17PS Washington while there lie sat for haarlem oil has been a world-- , wide remedy for kidney, liver and ..bladder disprders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric add conditions. n , e 2YEARS nt 19'2l, the anniversary of the high IHiint in tho American war for independence? Cer- tainly it was not tile si'squieentennl.il celebration in the city where the Declaration of Independence was signed, for that celebration was a dismal failure. I'ndouhtedly the outstanding events were those which put upon the lips of ull Americans once more the name of Washington and caused them to take part in u dismiss, ion, width has not jt-- t ended, as to (lie "real Washington.'' So 192(1 will go down in histoiy, not only ns the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the of Independent e, hut also as the je.ir in which un immense store of information was added to the avi.ll.thle Wasldngtonlana and which promises well for further uctosslon to that national heritage In 10:17. As the lemilt of the events of 1020, we come to another celt hrutlon of Washington's hli ihdny with our knowledge of him enriched unJ, despite or perhaps, because of all the controversy that 1ms raged ovtr what was or was not the "real Washington, " a better appreciation of Just how mui li we owe to the untu we cull "The leather of ills Country." An arrangement of the 1020 Wnshingtonlnna items In cnroiiologieul order rather than attempting to consider them on the basis of lelatlve Importance shows the curious fact that this man, dead these 127 years, started ott the year ns a lieudliner. Tills came about when newspaper Itupert Hughes, the novelist, in January gave an address before the Sons of the American Revolution In the national capital and not only aroused the Ire of that organization, but stirred up u nation-widcontroversy, when lie told the truth bout Washington, ns lie wivv the truth. Although It turned out later that the speaker was misquoted, even at that some of ills statements were too strong for some persons to accept without protest. So the tempest in a teapot, which the aTalr seemed to be, took tm greater proportions as Hughes was successively mtatked and defended and others took a hand in the row. The net result was that, paradoxical as It may sound, George Washington became u "national hgure" once more, at least so far ns the newspapers wore concerned and one New York daily pointed out that Washingtons birthday was celebrated as never before because of Hughes' effort to represent Washington "us a man and not a FOR OVER Addi- six-stat- that man. What were the outstanding eent3 in the year attain on - son T. Smith of Idaho, chairman of the house irrigation committee, stirred up a hornets nest by publicly appealftig to the Utah legislature to reverse ite self and'yote Utah back into the Colorado river compact This appeal was incorporated in a fctate-naewhich Mr. Smith issued to .the. press. His statement clearly admitting that with Utah out of the combill canuot pact, the Swing-Johnsopass congress. Senator Smoot was in dined to ignore the statement as of no consequence, and one which woti.d receive scant attention in the Utah legislature. Of course, said the senator, anyone anywhere can appeal to the Utah or any other legislature, but I have confidence that our legislature will know what to do with this i- v I gltng young Republic the finest Christmas gill a victory at an hour when the hope for the cause of Independence that it could possibly desire . teemed dim. Whatever the now school of historians may eventually accomplish In showing that Washington was not the demlg d that lie lias, so often been minted, hut that lie was a human being with human frailties that is to say, hnwdver much they may take away from some of ns our lelief that lie was a paragon of nil lie virtues , It Is doubtful if they will ever he able even if they desire It, to dim the glorv of Washington, tin military leader. And in all of Ids record there no more brilliant achievement th..n,that which celebrated at Trontoti in Ps ember or that other victory in the same campaign the battle of Princeton, which was appropriately observed on January 3 of this year. Of this 'campaign Cyrus Townsend Brady has written "There are three things vvlihh determine the relative values of inilitarj enterprises I be From these .Idea, the method and the result joints of view. Washington's Trenton and Princeton campaign ranks among the most brilliant in history, and its conception and the mntmer of Its prosecution stamp him ns a soldier ot the lit st order. The importance of the end aimed at. and uttuined in large measure, can hardly be overstated Although neither of the engagements idea which took place In carrying out the cf It rose to the dignity of a battle, hut must rather he hissed hs lieavy skirmishes. I regard which are it us one of those decisive turning mints In history. Had the results been other than they were, the whole course of the world would have been altered, hi spite of the apparent insignificance of the oimratlons, the incidents of the campaign, when the material with which it was worked out is consirhred. are as fraught with Interest, as full of value to the sol dter, and evidence as much greatness In I lie lender, as if Washington had held tinder his command a hundred thousand men, and the little combats had been as great and as sanguinary as the gigantic Imtles of larger wars and later days. It is not numbeis. but strategy, tactics, personal courage, and things achieved, by which we Judge the soldier. "In these operations, which certainly repre-senfethe culminating period of his career. Wash ington displayed a dash and daring like that of Napoleon in his early Italian campaigns, an inflexible capacity of resistance and recuperation whVh suggests the great Frederick In his days e of adversity, and a determined, dogged, denied pcrstence which calls to mind the Indomitable (.rant. The fate of the Revolution was there. More than at deterr.lucd right then any other given period of that great conflict, the tanse of human liberty hung in the trcmbligf balance on that wild December night. " I 1 gi-e- ope-xulon- s d not-to-b- az-.- SUCCESSFUL 30C 60 FOR 90c c YEARS At all Druggists RtACKHEADS U cannot be bidden. Get rid o! them now by regular treatments with inflamed eyelids or other eye irritations. You will find a soothing arid safe In remedy MlTCHtLL EYE SALVE. Ball New . - , ., -- a KccftEX York City druggists. book you Want -- by mail, G O. D. Deseret Book Co. East So. Temple, Saif Lake City; Utah TAhy Committee Will Draft Tax Bill Washington Py unanimous agreement the house ways and means committee decided to begin drafting a new tax reduction bill during the recess of Chairman Green was incongress. structed to offer an amendment to the second deficiency bill when it comes before the house to provide funds for the committee to hold hearings. Actual work on the measure probably start epily in October and it is the committee's plan to, have the bill ready to present to the house when congress .convenes in December. It was decided to ask authority for a headed by Representative Bacharach, Republican, New Jersey, to conduct an inquiry into the administration of the customs service daring the summer months. . Citrus Fruit Moving Fast Florida, California and Chicago Texas are firing a regular ritrus bar-rafi-e at the rest of the country. The government bureau of agricultural economics reported that oranges are coming out of Florida and California nearly twice as fast as a year ago. Texas has already more than doubled last years movement of grapefruit. In addition. California's lemon output is 500 carloads in excess of the corresponding 1926 total. Ev.en citrus enthusiasts have been overwhelmed aud prices are tending downward. Liberals Fire Beselged City Managua. Nicaragua Eleven city blocks were burned at Chinanega in the course cf the fighting between the Conservatives and Liberals, acco-din- g to government reports. Generl Viquez. the Conservative commander in that section, declares the Liberals set fire to the city in order to burn out the government garrison. The Conservative losses are placed at 130 killed and 200 wounded. The Liberal losses are estimated at 200 lulled and 300. wound ed. The conservatives captured three machines guus and 150 rides. 44 WE PAY YOU CASH oM plates, diamond, discard Jewelry. Send goods u VVQIT1M1 GOLD UiLNTNO CO.. Ina, V6 Fifth Ave.. .New York City. Reversible Names After reusing about the reversible naffte of one Mr. PlAnalp, Harrah J. Reynolds of St on ington, Conn., comes forward with' his feenealpgyi- wherein a dozen reversible names are disclosed. "My gi'andfather was Asa Reynolds. He married Hannah-WellThey had 12 children; all lived' to get married. Their childrens names were Hannah, Asa' Emme, Irt, Aziza, Anna, Zerez, Axa, - Attn.-- Alila,1' 'N'timan, ITafrah. Boston Harrqb, . was - py-- . fnthet. s. j I -- i Globe. Climbing ': wife' w determined to What's LeJdea ;. Shes 'convinced that she caji keep "So your - move. - : up with a more' rapid bunch Boston Transcript. ornelgh-bors- . '' C TON S Ends pain at once In one minate pain from corns is ended. Dr. Shoii'a Zino-pad- s do this eaey-b- y removing the cease press'ng and rubting cr shoes. T hey tre thin, medicated, antiseptic, healing. At all id shoe stores. Cost bet a trifle. drtg Ill Scholls -- 'EiinO'padjs pain one on W. N. U., the Salt Lake City, is gone I No. 927 .. |