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Show "Lucile is the Happiest Girl" So Many mothers nowaday! talk about giving their children (rait juices, at If this were a new dlscov-ery- . As a matter of fact for over fifty yean, mothers have been accomplishing results far surpassing anything you can secure from home prepared fruit Juices, by oslng pure, wholesome Call fornia Pig Syrup, which Is prepared under the most exacting laboratory supervision from rip California Figs, richest of all fruits in laxative and nourishing properties. It's marvelous to see how bilious, weak, feverish, sallow, constipated, under-nourishe- d children respond to Its gentle influence ; bow their breath clears up, color flames In their cheeks, and they become sturdy, playful, en-ergetic again. A Western mother, Mrs. H. J. stoll. Valley P. 0 Ne-braska, says: "My little daughter, Roma Lucile, was constipated from babyhood. I became worried about her and decided to give her some California Fig Syrup. It stopped her constipation quick; and the way It Improved her color and made her pick np made me realize how run-dow- n she had been. She is so sturdy and well now, and always In such good humor that neighbors Bay she's the happiest girl In the West" Like all good things, California Fig Syrup la Imitated, but you can always get the genuine by looking for the name "California" on the carton. (Mick new eiiefgjr TheJlhie-upjRw- J t m Vf I u. r. o, W. K$ MUM"' ' ' , ' ( I ' ' Cv;,v ' : ;T . .. .. . . f MJhnecessiuy A '" Pain! 1 i: ' S ... Nowaday people taVs Bayer Aspb. J flj 1 ft in far many little aches and pains, f ' ' V 1 I and as often a tbey encounter any I I f pain. J rxU, 1 Why not? It b a proven antJ- - L 1 f doteforpaln. Itworksl j jr J And Bayer Aspirin tablets art I I I I 1 V Utterly harmless. Yott have tba 1 I 1 ' - medical profession's word for that J J "" '"' they do not depress the heart. C So. don't let a cold ."run Ha course." Don't wait for a head- - yea can always turn to Bayer Aspto. ' i acha to "wear ofl.T Or regard lnforrftr. t neuralgia, neuritis, or even rheum-- Bayer Aspirin Is always avail- - .: atbm as something you must en-- able, and It always helps. FsmO t dura. Only a physidan can cops larixs yourself with its many uses, ' 5 with the cause of such pain, but and avoid a lot of needless suffering. t I Aqilria la tba toad audi at bji llinafartu at UaaotatieuUmtm ttikfVmM Watch Your Kidneys! Scanty or Too Frequent Excretions Demand Prompt Attention. KIDNEY disorders are too It pays to heed the early signals. Scanty, burning or too frequent kidney excretion) a drowsy,llKlcssfceling; lameness, sd fines an d constant backache are timely warnings. To promote normal kidney ac-tion and assist your kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wasri,uie Doan't Pills. Endorsed ggiEiajla Exclusive atru tural and operative supe-riorities have definitely established Champion as the f better spark plug. That ia why Champion outsells all others throughout the world. CHAMPION SPARK PLUGS TOLEDO. OHIO Children will fret, often for no rai ""tSs J apparent reason. But there's al-- W s&nffTJl I ways one sure way to comfort a m UiafPzfsL 1 restless, fretful child. Castorlal ,; S.Sp j' , ' Harmless as the recipe on the fft ...IP, I ' wrapper; mild and bland as it M ,"lfll,JSy tastes. But its gentle action H.,. . soothes a youngster more surely understand A coated tongue caffs than some powerful medicine for a few drops to ward off consti- - that is meant for the stronger nation; so does any suggestion of systems of adults. bad breath. Whenever children That's the beauty of this special don't eat well, don't rest well, or children's remedy I It may be have any little upset this pure : given the tiniest Infant as often vegetable preparation is usually ' as there is any need. In cases of all that's needed to set everything colic, diarrhea, or similar disturb- - to rights. Genuine Castoria has ' ance,' it is inval'iabjc But it has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on everyday uses all mothers should the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it ' Her Lin. of Thought And High or Low' "Is your wife a thinking womanr "And what did tbe hat costr "Yes; she thinks a lot about nothing "Oh, a mere song!" and then says It." "About how many notes r j YOU GET BOTH fitand satisfactory J wear. 1 whenyoubuy f LEVI STRAUSS ! BiborWdisf i Overalls theLeadin Brand for oyer 56years ANEW CDCd 1FTHEY pair, rnCC rip Askfor Levi's,, 'te!iabkMeKhandiseslicel85S Health living -- p-p Alt Winter Long Mamlooa CHnate Good Boteh Tiabl 3pludid KamAm l, .i,im Mo Xmtm aim Spring f MakesLtfk Sweeter Children's stomachs sour, and need an anti-aci- Keep their systems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia I When tongue or breath tells cf acid condition correct it with a spoonful of Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener more mothers should in-voke its aid for their children. It is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the harsher things too often employed fur the purpose. No household should be without it Phillips la the genuine, prescrlp-tlona- l product physicians endorse for general nse; tbe name la important "Milk of Magnesia" has been the U. 8. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co. and Its pre-decessor Charles H. Phillips since ISA Phillips Milk of Magnesia Try this treatment for pimples! fj ) mtjfcl . ANOINT WJTH WVC$ f , Jjr CeUicnra Ointment x. I f ) After a whik latht gently with - y Ctiticura Soap st y"fST5J snd tot water, . -- -' : 2 Yon will find nothing better for soothing iSy A and healing all forms of skin troubles. " j p, ""V OiamKot 25c. nd 50c. Soap 25c Tikum J5c 4""?5iiiE -- rff Sample each free. fS -- fclrro.,.- IE iT ) Afrhg.Curiciir."Pcp. B7. MIJ,I.Mt. V """j f why we behave like human beings I Br GEORGE DOUSSY. Ph. D. IX. D, ' ...... ...... ........... ..T Why Walking Is More Restful Than Standing IN WALKING, each leg rests half 1 the time. We be-cause neither leg gets rested. The shoulder muscles wblot hold the bead erect also acba from the strain In standing. As we nap la a chair the head nods. Flat feet are not due to a giving way of ligaments; ligaments limit Joint movement Feet become "flat" when the muscles of the arcb fall to support It ; the arch breaks down. The result Is a mld-tars- joint This Is most likely to happen in long, narrow feet Short feet and high Insteps go with large calves. To raise our body on our toes, we lift our beel. The toes are the fulcrum, the power Is tlie calf muscles; the weight falls on the foot at the ankle Joint but nearest the power at the beet Hence the greater need for large calf muscles. But small calves go with long heel bones. As the foot Is a lever of the second order, the long beel brings the weight nearer the fulcrum that Is, the toes. Henee "flat-foots- " do not step off their toes; the fallen arch destroys the lever of the foot ' We nod our head between skull and first vertebrae, or atlas; rotate, be-tween stlns and second vertebrae, or ails. Both movements are limited by ligaments; otherwise tba signal cord would be crushed. The main business of the face Is to bold the teeth-bearin- g jaws; eyes and nose moved In by accident The In-fant's face and neck seem small be-cause the brain la so large. Their real growth begins with the eruption of the teeth. The skull Is a fulcrum for the Jaw muscles tn chewing. Muscles to bold the fulcrum steady develop with the teeth. The neck grows larger. With the teeth all in place the neck reaches normal sire, the rounded "baby-face- " disappears; strong Jaws, powerful muscles, and prominences and ridges on bones of face and bead support the muscles of mastication. The tiny mastoid processes below the Infant's ears become adult structures as big as thumbs, required for muscle sup-port The first or milk, teeth should be in place by the end of the second year. Meanwhile the transverse ridges in the roof of the Infant's mouth disappear. The permanent dentition begins with the first molars In the seventh year; Incisors In the eighth and ninth ; premolars In the tenth and eleventh ; canine and second molars tn tha thirteenth to fourteenth; third molars, or wisdom teeth, in the seven-teenth to fortieth year. Startling changes of consequence mark the years of adoles-cence for both sexes. As these changes ere both physical and mental, and as they proceed under impulses from the gonads acting as glands of Internal secretion, they will be de-scribed In the chapter devoted to the endocrine organs. After maturity the body's chief task Is to maintain its equilibrium: pro-duce enough energy and best to keep np repairs and carry on. But from ovum to death, the body never ceases to change. Old age or senile changes precede natural death. These appear toward the end of a span of life which varies tn different species. This s.ian of life for some Invertebrates is less than 100 hours; for some Insects, 17 years; for some fishes and reptiles, over WO yetirs; for some birds and mammals, 120 years. Longevity Is not as 'Welsmann claimed, related to size of body. Some mammals live less than two years, some locusts seventeen. A dog Is old at 20. I have seen a parrot 117 years old; If matured In Its first year. A tortoise can live 850 years. ' No ele-phant known has exceeded 130 years. Nor does denth "nuturally" follow the reproductive stage; Innumerable ani-mals long survive their sex life. But every animal must reach sex ma-turity or its kind dies with It Old age Is decrepliude; the body Is worn out. The mechanism the Infant acquired to walk with breaks down. The spine IS not so supple, the cartilage disks between vertebrae shrink. This decreases stature as much as three Inrhes after fifty. The spine both collapses and "'stoops with age." The knees are bent the hip Joints stiff. The muscles shrink. The body loses Its natural fat Folds of skin appear on neck and face. Tbe toothless Jnws atrophy and the mouth loses its shape. Cheeks and temples cave In. The brain loses weight In the Inst 40 years of life as much aa three ounces. The heart Is enlsrged from over-actio- n to keep the blood coursing through thick, hard arteries. The pulse mounts again. It waa 134 at birth, 110 at the end of the first year, 72 at twenty-one- . After eighty. It Is 80. The lungs lose their elasticity, the walls become thicker. Msny women after fifty show a thicker neck, hair on the face, deeper-tone- d voice, more prominent cheek-bones, ridges over the eyes. Their "feminine"-- " traits are less feminine. It Is as though the Inactivity of the gonads pemiltted a retnrn to' a neu-tral condition, halfway between male and female. Old age, senility, decrepitude; the body Is worn out It can no longer function. Death. j by Gcorgt A. DwMT.) SUB ! 0 I Jv ' B " 2' IOSfl MIMI Bridge Luncheons' A LMOST everything In a woman's life Is closely bound op with bet personality, ber womanhood, her sex She Is bound to tske s woman's point of view. She reacts In , accordance with her nature as woman, not In neutral manner. It Is at once ber weak point and her strong point Men aren't Ilka that at all lien have the power to divide themselves Into different persnnslltles, A man Is s man and a business msn. Be Isys alde his personal feelings by the wsy he throws off his coat His very na-ture as man Is revealed now and then, not at all times, as Is the case with woman. Now as to modern Indoor sports-dan- ces and card games. Men whirl sround the floor and shuffle the cards at the table In a rather mechanical way. They dance, they play carda That's sIL With women. It Is differ-ent The dance snd the game appeal to them personally, as women. Women like to dance because the musical whirl Is so much love experi-ence for them. The dance enters their soul. The music makes special appeal The delicate embrace and the sense of being carried about on their tip-toe- s gives them thrills that men cannot get from their shuffles. But, Tm really talking about card games, which are supposed to belong to men. Since men are forced to take chances In business, s card game ap-peals to them, for It tenches them pa-tience and shows them bow to be good losers Such a sport Is a part of mun's life. But a bridge luncheon with a bunch of women is another thing altogether. It shows, first of all, that the modern woman Is largely a creature of lei-sure. Her home is supplied with all sorts of contrivances Invented by men, snd these contraptions make house-keeping so easy (bat women have plenty of spare time. There's no barm ' In this sort of thing. I suppose, but It seems to me that women who make such a business of bridge sra creatures who confess that they are trying to get out of life something which otherwise would be lacking. That something Is Love I If a woman loves snd Is loved ; If her heart ts swayed by tender emotions, shs will hsve no Interest In cards. It's foolish for women to place them-selves In positions where their happi-ness for the time being depends upon what cards they draw. The wise wom-an Is one who holds her fate In ber own bands, and does not have It dealt out to ber. Love and luck are as far spsrt as tbe poles. Those who are thrilled by love can have no Interest tn the out-come of hick. Gamblers are seldom If ever lovers. If you are lucky at cards, you are unfortunate In love, . Woman as Individualist HAVE been besting a lot about WE Superman but Just as little about the Superwoman. Twas ever thus. No doubt the robust care woman was Just as swift with the rolling pin as the cave man was with the club, but he got all the space In the primi-tive papers. Women rosy not be of the super variety, or the noisy kind of individ-ualists, hut when It comes to actual Individualism she's right there with the goods. She doesot boss! of her personality or f jrsonal liberty, but she has a way of using It The kind of life which men have made women lead has tended to create Inward ludivlduallty. Man went out Into the world to do his work snd see the sights. But this sort of thing wore th edge off his private person-ality. He became one of the gang, a regular feller. Meanwhile friend wife remained at home home or cave, harem or kitch-en. This sort of scheduled life gave her a chance to think, but not much to think about except herself.. The prlvary of her life produced the per-sonality of her being. When you hnve men, - yoo have bunches of them, for they grow' like bananas. They hsve always worked and fnu'lif and had their good times In groups of some sort srmles, gangs, clnhs, nnd the like. This bunching has never applied to women, who have grown up sepa-rately. Of course," this is often a bnd thing fur them, who do not have the sense of loyalty to their group that the men hsve. Rut they make up for that In their loyalty to Individuals. When a man decides opon a course ot conduct It Is because he thinks It best. Woman makes tbe sdme de-cision more slfly on the ground that It Is what she wants to da ' Men have all sorts of reasons for what they say. They can supply as many arguments as a salesman. Wom-an's one grand reason Is "Because." That satisfies her, II ought to convince you, she thinks. Woman's "Because" may not be the sign of good logic, but It Is a mark of Individuality. Then when It comes to matters of the heart, woman will always follow the lead of her feelings. Women are supposed to show In-dividuality In dress, snd they do all right But they show it In their heads and hearts aa well as their hats and frocks. (ffi br tb Bell Srastct las.) iiNews Notes ! . . o It't a Privilegt to Livt In i; UTAH :! MURRAY Due to the proximity of Urge mining and smelting operation, production of mineral fertiliser is rapidly becoming an Important and profitable Utah Industry. HEBER CITY The sheep Industry has Increased la Utah from 450,000 head in 18S3 to 2.866,000 head la IS 2a snd It Is now one of the greatest g states in the nation. MURRAr Last week wss the canning of the last of the largest crop of string beans ever cared for in this region by the Murray plant of the Rocky Mountain Packing corporation. During the summer vacation 400 children were used as pickers, being taken from their homes to the fields in trucks owned by the corporation, and back home again each evening. PROVO Fruit growers of Utah county are warned by H. V. Swenson, county inspector, against selling wormy fruit to the canneries. Last year, according to Mr. Swenson, the state law on this matter was slightly relaxed, but this year it will ba en-forced to the letter, and all offenders will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. The fruit thus infested cannot be offered for sale in any way, according to Mr. Swenson. SALT LAKE Gasoline tax collec-tions based on August sales set a new record tor all time, yielding a total of S214.286.26 for the single month, ac-cording to a statement compiled by T. F. Coombs, director of gas tax collections for Milton H. Welling, secretary of state. This represents a gain of more than $40,000 over the highest monthly record of any pre-vious year and is higher than any monthly collector made for any previous month of 1929. PROVO Powell slough, which was recently turned over to the state fish and game department by the Utah county commission, through the efforts of the Provo Conservation associa-tion, haa been set aside as a sanc-tuary for birds and animals acording to L. L. Bunnell, president of the Provo association. Bunnell re-turned from Salt Lake recently fol-lowing a conference with State Fish and Game Commissioner J. Arthur Meecham regarding tha move. VERNAL Pursuant to instructions received from the commissioner and state department of agriculture, the order of the department that requires all sheep coming from Colorado into Utah to be dipped before crossing the state line will be rigidly enforced this fall and winter. A W. McKay, chief deputy state livestock inspector is in Uintah county now and will patrol the o boundary until all sheep desiring entrance Into Utah have been dipped and have reached their winter quarters. OGDEN According to the figures given out by E. E. Wright office manager at the Ogden yards, 135,473 sheep hsve been sold here since Jan-uary 1, 1929. This number exceeds the sales for the first nine months of 1928 by 60,088 head and represents an 80 per cent Increase. Since conditions this year are comparatively the same in the sheep Industry as they were a year ago, this increase in sales is only accountable to a growing demand at the local market for tat lambs and ewes. PLEASANT GROVE One mile of ' concrete has been opened recently on the Utah county highway between Provo and Pleasant Grove, via Lake-vie- The new road is tbe standard width, 6 inches thick. This leaves but two and one half miles on this e stretch now unsaved. The unpaved portion la of crushed tgravel, and in fair shape. It is un-known when this gap will be closed with concrete, no project for It as yet having been considered by th coun-ty commission. ' UTAH Utah and Idaho farmers should raise more pigs, in the opinion of Nelson It Crow, publisher of the Form and Ranch Market Journal, who registered recently at the Newhouse hotel from Los Angeles. Mr. Crow is attending the Utah state fair in the interests of the fourth annual Christ-mas livestock show, November 3e to December 7, at the Los Angeles Union stockyards. Utah does not raise enough hogs to supply her own pork requirements, Mr. Crow said, pointing out that Utah packers last year paid more than $3,000,000 for hogs which came in from states as far east as Nebraska. LOGAN Loosened by the rain re-cently, a huge boulder fell from the cliffs above the Devil's Slide in Logan canyon. Water washed out approxi-mately 10 feet of the huge square water flume of the Utah Power and Light company. Debris filled up a section of the Logan, Hyde Park and Smlthfleld canal and also Cogged np the river for a short, acording to re-ports to the officials for the company and Deputy Sheriff Oliver Eames. The rain gauge at the power plant re-gistered .82 of an inch rain fall be-tween midnight and 4 a. m. Divergent Ideas John Wesley sold: "I throw money out of my bands, lest It Bnd its wsy Into my heart" Wesley differs tn opinion from the old barrister, who advised a novitiate at the bar as fol-lows: "First, young man, get on ; sec. ; oml, get honor: third, get honest" Oklahoma Methodist ' Tragedy A scientist has been trying to And out what the cave lady, for lack of a door, used lo slam. Perhaps It wss tbe cave man. Minneapolis Journal The Cat I The Sap Tea, a life guard once was given a medul for saving my life. The Girl Dear 1 Dear! I always thought they had to do something really wonderful to get medals! Cincinnati Enquirer. Road of Teeth False teeth compose the long white drive of a house In a village near New York. The owner, a dental supply dealer, decided to lay down a white gravel path, hut found that the cost would be too high. It occurred to him that, through lils business connections, he could get false teeth cheaper than gravel. This he did, and the strange secret was not revealed until a small boy from next door scooped a handful of teeth and ran home to spread the news. Strange Language "How did you feel In Paris where everybody talked a language you didn't understand?" "Like I do when there Is a crpwd of young people at the house talking this wise crack gibberish." ' Breeding Evil The place to stop most human : evils Is at the point where men begin ' talking to themselves. American Magazine. r '' Things We Don't See So many of us go through the day and hardly notice the sparkle of sunlight on a lake or goblet the ma-jestic sngles cast by a skyscraper or a picket fence, the grace of a cobweb swaying In the breeze, of a dandelion turned white and fluffy, of a gray road winding over a bill. Woman's Home Companion. . Concentrations of mustard gas So weak ss one part In 8,000,000 will ' ' , cause skin burns that require many v weeks to beat r Printers Kept Busy Department of Commerce figures for 1027 Indicate that in that year 277,495,544 volumes were published. School books accounted for 83,949,004 bf this number, and fiction came next with a total of 36,553,597. Of the re-mainder there were 31,047,094 Juvenile volumes, while religion and philoso-phy comprised 22,220,530. Starting Early The world's youngest "forged check artist" has been captured at Pueblo, Colo., according to police there. The young forger is but seven years old, and according to police signed the name of John Tatsko, to whom a $00 check was msde payable, and at- - tempted to cash It , In a Way, Ys A Pittsburgh woman who sued a company whose scales showed her to weigh 55 pounds more than she does, lost ber suit. The poor lady Is in a bad weigh. Farm and Fireside. Hitting on All Eight! r ' v ;VVs ' I - ': - Doctor Gives Hint to Lucky Salesman it asaaaMsaBBMaaBMsaaaaasi IT'S a wise isslipping;.Mr.R.F. man that knows Myers of 711 Rosedale Street; Baltimore, had the good for-tune to get his tip straight from one of his doctor custom-ers (he was selling for a phar-maceutical house) and since that lucky visit he haa increas ; ed his business 50 per cent. , For two years he had been driving from town to town, and naturally this threw his elimination out of shape. He felt himself slipping. Cathartics only made him worse. Then one day he was calling on a wise old physician, and asked his advice. "What you need, my boy,", said the doctor, "is a simple, easy, normal way to clean the poisons out of your system we all have them and with your kind of work they certainly cut down efficiency. Why don't you try NujolT' rWell, believe it or not," says Mr. Myers, In a few days I felt like a new man. "What's t into yout asked the home office, "yoat bus-!- i neas hss Increased 60 per cent! 2 That's tbe great thing about NujoL As soon as it begins to dean , the poisons out of your system it I makes you feel so well that you can t almost always do a much better job. f ; Nujol is not a medicine and eon- - tains no drugs. It is perfectly harm-- 9 less, forms no habit It is simply bodily lubrication, which everybody -- needs. You, like everybody else! . Why put off good health any longer? Go into any good drug store g and get a bottle of Nujol in a sealed . f package. Costs so little and means $ ' so much I Maybe you can increase " n I your efficiency 50 per cent too i !i Time Isn't money; nearly every one has more time than money. There are usually more celebrations than are worth while. Volunteer Fighting Force The French Foreign legion was en-gaged tn Europe during the World war. Replacements were not recruited for the legion. All enlistments were voluntary. Many persons went Into the legion because they were not tak-en Into the regular French army. , Latberaa Doctrine Martin Luther's "Little Catechism" Is the rreedal foundation of the doc-trines of the Lutheran church, and wss written by Martin Lutber In IS29. It begins wltb the ten commandments, and deals with the usual doctrines of creation, salvation and faith In Jesus Christ " , . Record Ysw Tree The largest yew tree ever trans-planted was the one taken from Den-ton, Md., to the Du Pont estate at Ken-ne- tt square. Pa. The tree la two boa dred years old. Hotel Letter Psper To nse hotel letter paper unless yoo sre a paying guest has been made a punishable offense In France. Washington Stsr. "V |