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Show r THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH, UTAH "Ij Lucile is the Happiest Girl" ick new many mothers nowadays talk about giving1 their children fruit juices, as if this were a new discovery. As a matter of fact, for over fifty years, mothers have been accomplishing results far surpassing anything you can secure from home prepared fruit juices, by using pure, wholesome California Fig Syrup, which Is prepared under the most exacting laboratory supervision from ripe California Figs, richest of all fruits in laxative and nourishing properties. Its marvelous to see how bilious, weak, feverish, sallow, constipated, d children respond to its gentle Influence; how their breath clears up, color flames in their cheeks, and they become sturdy, playful, energetic again. A Western mother, Mrs. H. J. Stoll, Valley P. O., Nebraska, 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 she up made me realize how had been. She is so sturdy and well now, and always in such good humor that neighbors say shes the happiest girl in the, West Like all good things, California Fig Syrup is imitated, but you can always get the genuine by looking for the name California on the carton. So The Twie-upjio-d under-nourishe- run-dow- A womans n (jRAH'POPSKff HE U3TER. SEE LOTS OF INDIANS HEW AN ABOUTS, AH' I FOUND ARROW HEAD RIGHT BY pleasures often beget heartaches; a mans, headaches. Her Line of Thought "Is your wife a thinking woman? Yes ; she thinks a lot about nothing and then says it. OUR CRICK, MYSELF. BET THERg ARE )U 1NDAN (JHDST5 ALL AROUND US AT THIS TIM POP O' YEAR. SAID 50,100, AfTPOPMOWSs - By ELMO SCOTT WATSON ANG! goes another of our illusions ! It is in regard to that pleasant period in Watch Your Kidneys! Too au- tumn, known as Indian sum. mer. And as usual, it is science which has disillusioned us. No less an authority than Scanty or Frequent Excretions Demand Prompt Attention . are too KIDNEY disorders It pays to heed Above the sea Hangs, white and calm, the hunter's moon. In its pale fire The village spire Shows like the zodiacs spectral lance; The painted walls Whereon it falls Transfigured stand in marble trance! Stephen Henry Thayer puts it a litthe United States weather tle later in the month when he says bureau, basing its statement that observaaccurate meteorological upon tions, has this to say about that It is In the autumns dotage, mid Nodelectable season, famed for its genial the early signals. Scanty, burning vember, When skies, seductive, seem to woo or too frequent kidney excretions; sunshine and alluring haze: the earth. a drowsy, listless feeling; lameness, Indian summer is the name applied stiffness and constant backache are in this country to a period of mild fall Other poets, however, are more conweather following a spell of unseasontimely warnings. as cold known squaw able weather cerned with what It Is rather than acnormal To promote kidney winter, such as occurred this fall. It when it is nd have given us some tion and assist your kidneys in is not a fixed season In the calendar. cleansing your blood of poisonous charming descriptions. Sam Walter In many years it is intermittent; ills. Endorsed P use Doans wastes, Indian be several Foss, in his inimitable dialect, calls there may that is, by users everywhere. summers in one autumn. Thoreau in it a piece of sweetmeat In the folnotes on weather conditions at Converse ; cord, Mass., from 1851 to 1800, records lowing on summers of occurrence Indian the Natur, the good eld school-mardates ranging from September 27 to who pities our distress, 13. December She gives her children every year a In Kurope as well as in this counrecess; try it is popularly believed that a re An ollittle glad d auboys and girls occurs mild newal weather cf every is It pleasanter to make a friend of they feel their hearts thaw out, of its dates the and tumn, supposed an enemy than to overcome him as an occurrence are more flows on as musicly as wadefinitely fixed An life ter from a spout; enemy. The than is the case in America. An now the Ingin Summer time, ith period is associated with the names of all its rest is here, various saints. The mild period thus, is known in A piece of sweet meat stuck between the slices of the year; different parts of Europe as St. Mar. A sorter reign er jubilee twlxt snow tins Summer, St. Lukes Summer" or an thunder showers; tradition and Michaels Summer," St of sweetness sandwiched in fosters the idea that U is always mild A chunk between the frost and flowers. and Warm, about the time of these various Baints days. Climatological Nor were the early American poets facts, however, do not always square with this belief. the only ones who paid their tribute, Indian summer baa always been a as witness the following by Marian favorite theme of artists and poets, Isabel Angus: especially the latter who, however, INDIAN SUMMER have usually been better verse makWhen was Indian summer broods today ers than meteorologists. Over the mellow autumn lands. the red mans summer? asfes Lydia Soft wispy veils of amethyst Huntley Sigourney, "the Felicia And amber pale stream from her of America and one of the early hands. Nineteenth century poets. Then, withhang heavy with purple grapes; out trying to fix the date in one of Vines Apple trees bend with crimson gems, her poems, she says it came And in the woods the great oak trees Are crowned with golden diadems. When the groves Like topazes the pumpkins lie In fleeting colors wrote their own deSet in a ring of brown and green, . cay; And mock the sun, while slender spears When heart Childrens stomachs sour, and need Foreboding or with Of goldenrod make gay the scene. depressed, the white an man marked Keep their systems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia ! The signs of coming winter, then began Nature Is drowsy; her work is done. Now she awaits her winter rest; When tongue or breath tells of acid The Indians Joyous season. Harvest is over; the tired brown earth condition correct it with a spoonful Will sleep with red leaves on her John G. C. Brainerd, a contempoof Phillips. Most men and women have breast. Mrs. Is of more speSigourney, been comforted by this universal rary cific in placing the season at the time d And Minna Irving paints this sweetener more mothers should Inword picture of voke Its aid for their children. It Is a When the frost pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes Turns Into beauty all October's charms. INDIAN BLANKETS more acid than the harsher things too Sumae fires are burning brightly. fixes season the about Longfellow often employed for the purpose. No Ruby-re- d the embers glow, the first of November in a passage in Indian household should be without it council fires rekindled his as follows: Evangeline From the ash of long ago; Phillips is the genuine, prescrip-tionthe winds a runner passing product physicians endorse for Then followed that beautiful season, ' And With his feet in deerskin shod. the name use; is general important Called by the pious Acadian peasants And a chief's tall feather tosses Milk of Magnesia has been the U.-the summer In the dusty goldenrod. Saints, registered trade mark of the Charles Filled was the air with a dreamy and magical light; and the landscape Wild grapes ripen In the thicket. H. Phillips Chemical Co. and Its prees if in all the freshLay Purple asters edge the stream, Charles H. decessor ness of childhood. Phillips since 1875 And the braves to earth returning ' By the moons enchanted beam Since election day comes in NovemHang their red and yellow blankets On the windy maple bough ber, the following quotation from When the frosty night is over. Whittiers, The Eve of Election" also For its Indian summer now. places Indian summer in that month: Another famous dialect poet, Frank From gold to gray L. Stanton, writing of Indian summer Our mild sweet day in hi native state of Geocgla, declares Of Indian summer fades too soon; ' that But tenderly - 2CTP m gray-heade- He-ma- Sweeter anti-aci- d. gayly-colore- al of-A- ll S. new-creat- Milk of Magnesia ed Injun summer suits me, soft night and stilly day. And I could keep on dreamlu till I dreamed my life away. And Cornelia R. Doherty calls it the season WHEN THE ACORNS DROP Theres a whisper on the hilltop and a murmur in the wood, Theres a dieata of golden glory everywhere; On the beech a russet cover, on the elm a mottled hood. While the walnut lifts her branches brown and bare. Oh, the crows hold their meeting In the eld oaks top, And ho, for Indian summer when the acorns drop! Theres a bloom upon the meadow like the ghost of summer flowers, But the .forest and the valleys are aflame. And on hillside and in hollow through- out all the misty hours Descend the rustling drops of autumn rain, Oh, the squirrels at his feasting in the old oaks top. And ho, for Indian summer when the acorns drop! Exclusive struc- tural and operative superiorities have definitely established Champion as the When the chestnut and the hazelnut put on a richer browp. And the blackbirds all are gathered in a flock. When buttons up her yellow gowns, Then its time to heap the fodder in a shock. Oh, autumns on her waning; better gather in the crop! And ho, for Indian summer when the mallow-in-the-mars- better spark plug. That is why Champion outseUs all hes others throughout the world. CIHIAMIPIRM SPARK PLUGS acorns drop! But not all the beautiful tributes to Indian summer have been in verse. Oliver Wendell Holmes, writer- - of delightful prose as well as poetry. In his essay on the seasons, says: In October, or early In November, after the equinoctial storms," comes the Indian summer. It is the time to be in the woods or on the seashore a sweet season that should be given to lonely walks, to stumbling about In old churchyards, plucking on the way tlu aromatic silvery herb everlasting, and smelling at its dry flower until it etherizes the soul into aimless reveries outside of space and time. There is no need of trying to paint the still, warm, misty, dreamy Indian summer in words, there are many states that have no articulate vocabulary, and are only to be reproduced by music, and the mood this season produces is of that nature. . In The Guardian Angel" he continues on that theme thus: To those who know the Indian summer of our northern states it is needless to describe the influence it exerts on the senses and the soul. The stillness of the landscape In that beautiful time is as if the planet were sleeping, like a top, before it begins to rock with the storms of autumn. All natures seem to find themselves more truly in its light; love grows more tender, religion more spiritual, memory sees farther back into the past, grief revisits its mossy marbles, the poet harvests the ripe thoughts which he will tie in sheaves of verses by his winter fireside. And in Elsie Venner he refers again to this season by declaring that The real forest is hardly still except in Indian summer ; then there is death in the house, and they are waiting for the sharp shrunken months to come with white raiment for the summers burial TOLEDO, OHIO Time isnt money; nearly every one has more time than money. 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