OCR Text |
Show UTAH. NOVEMBER 18. 1921 THE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, door knobs gold-plate- d Nw York Apartment Hotel Would Aeem to Be Laet Word In Height of Luxury. And Com Recently Found In Tenn 8oeme to Substantiate Belief Long Hold by Scientists. That Is Why People Have to Die, taye High Authority Preeumed ODERN to Knew. Three hundred Park avenue, New Why do we die?" This question In Tennesaee In pro- Corn b Mkd of the editor of the fork, the new Sherry apartments Just historic that grew times, possibly before Joseph Journal of the rican Melical opened, Is probably the moat luxurious away his seven years supply In iodat,on reprWentlng all the doctors abode of wealth In the world, says a Egypt, wa8utearth m the land, aa the old saying goes. It has correspondent E. Meyer of the Bureau of We die becauoe we are so cora- doorknobs, chandeliers United sent to the and a separate set of elevators running Ethnology and plex, says the editor. So that la the reeion that the layto each of the sixteen floors. The Statee Department of Agriculture for Identification. man must accept. The Literary Digest apartments really are private homes. During recent excavations in David- Intervenes to say that It long has beeu The largest of thirty rooms has been son county, Tennessee, Mr. Meyer came that death Is As-p- gold-plate- rU; d silver-plate- d taken by Percy Rockefeller. The yearly rentals range from $10,000 to $55,000. There are ninety apartments: Among the leading director tenants are Richard T. Wilson, Gen. Coleman du Pont Col. B. B. McAlpln, Louis J. Horowitz, P. B. Page, F. Colt Johnson, Louis L. Dunham and L. M. BooAer. In furnishing the apartments Europe and America have been searched for ideas and materials. Louis Sherry has Installed $250,000 worth of Thirteenth-centurtapestries In his apartment Mr. Boomer sent to Norway for the wood used in his naapartmftqj, Mrs. Boomer being tive of that country. Some of the walls in many of the homes are huge canvases for paintings by noted artists. A magnificent ballroom, a restaurant a grill, a tearoom and confectionery shop occupy the first floor and mezzanine. If yoj want to locate at "Three Hundred Park avenue, you must be voted upon by the "director tenants, who are particular, very particular, Indeed. Philadelphia Public Ledger. UUnssmy a rnov m inn. Lord Dunsany, who, despite the slump In tbeaterland, has had a new play produced lit London recently, appears to be well nigh as facile a playwright as Lope de Vega, remarks the Manchester Guardian. FYom the preface to Plays of Bids and Men we learn that the longest of these, a three-ac- t tragedy, took him only three play took days to write; a two-ac- t two days; a one-aplay one day. The time allowance of an act a day was exceeded only In the case of The Queens Enemies, the single act of which took six days, and most readers of the volume will agree that It Is the least effective play of the four. Mr. Pond, the lecture agent under whose auspices Lord Dunsany toured To the States two years ago, says: see Lord Dunsany at work a thing which he seldom permits Is to see a He uses large, square-cu- t ceremonial. enameled paper, and he writes On one side he has with a quill pen. a great stack of fresh blotters, and when he finishes a pnge he blots It and throws the blotter away. a y ct upon a number of atone slab graves containing mortuary veeaels. Some of Roadless Russia. Russia Is almost a roadless lana Is inconceivable to the foreign vlji who has ever left the beaten tra the railways In Russia How a B1 empire can have subsisted so long so successfully without even n tense at roads. The secret lies !nj fact that for five or six months the year nature hersglf peov roads over the greater part of Ril admirable smooth, glossy roadwj snow. The traflLJ over hard-wor- n further cheapened over these rejf by the substitution of a sledge rurf for the wheel and axle. This bre the cost of land carriage as near freight ,j cheapness of water-born- e possible, and It Is the principal son why Russia In the Twentieth tjs f tury is still a roadless land. HUMAN MAKEUP TOO COMPLEX GREW IN PREHISTORIC TIMES How Twentieth Century Scientists Have Rubbed thdj Magis Lamp and Made the i believed by biologists not doe to any natural property of the protoplasm that makes up our bodily cell. Primitive cellular organisms that propagate by division may thus live Indefinitely. The higher organisms, we are told, die because their structure Is a complicated one. There la a very delicate state of balance, and It la easy to disturb It so fails. This Is ' ttgt the whole structure the prtca that we pay or tbe pllclty of our fusions. Would you rather be a protozoan and live for-j Is, In evr; or a man (ind dleT phis nature the alternative that halda out to ua. Moat of us probably wW b dlsp0sd to be glad that we are what we are, even If our enjoyment of the multitude of aptitudes and abilities with which nature has endowed us Is to be brief. Philadelphia Public these held specimens of charred maize From the In fairly good condlUon. size and shape of the grains it was possible to identify the variety as many-rowe- d tropical flint, a form about halfway between true flint and popcorn. The same type of Indian com occurs in the West Indies, and there Is no In the minds of . scientists but that there w as a very early com-- , unication between the West Indies and North America. Not only com but beans, squashes, pumpkins and tobacco are of tropical and aubtropl-- 1 cal origin. . These staples, now so Important throughout both hemispheres, found their way Into North America and were cultivated beyond the Great Lakes In j Canada long before the discovery oft America. There la abundant evidence BIb Forsat Nursery. of communication between the West nursery at Saratoga Th forestry Indies and Florida, and up the Missiswhich Is In the course of gpHnp, sippi and Its tributaries. organisation at this time, will be the largest In the world at no distant date. Star. Birth of When completed It will have an output Thu vast black maas, 20,000,000 of 10,000,000 trees per year and some times larger than the sun, demon- Idas of the scope of this new nursery strated to exist In the heavena by the may bo gained from the fact that Dutch scientist, Dr. Pannekpek, teems during the transplanting season last to upset all earlier astronomical calcu- spring the employees of this nursery lations. oeveivl times transplanted more than It la, comparatively speaking, so 126,000 white pines In a single day. near ua that Doctor Pannekoek sugSeven transplanting tables were In move must sun itself the that gests operation at one time. It la at these round It once In 2,000,000 years draw- tables that the transplanting boards are filled, by which fifty young trees ing the earth with It We believe that the black body are planted In a row simultaneously must consist of dust, and that this la The beds In which these plants are the first stage In the birth of a star, growing present a very attractive As It condenses It sight, the trees being all the same size said an expert becomes luminous and plunted In faultless rows. It until hotter gets and visible. Sudden flares or new stars have been seen In our lifetime, There were 623,869 marriages but the black cloud of dust appears to France last year aigainst 312,036 in be the real beginning. The number of births over 1913. The amazing feature la the near- deaths for 1920 was 139,000, coin ness of the body. It Is relatively aa pared with 58,000 in 1913. close to the earth as a foot rule would appear to be If only two feet away Twelve thousand legal executions from the eye. It Is quite possible Chinn, the yharly average in are kind of this bodies vaster even that The nearness Is relative. The which ' holds the world's record for exist. body Is 280,000,000,000,000 miles away. executions. I multi-questio- ( n Hay ppiracles J-Srfe Dream Age-ol- d of Alchemy. Come True (Told In Eight Sketches) By JOHN RAYMOND No.IL, THE AGE Within the last few years the world agencies developed has been electrified by the vast stride secretly in chemical made in the field of science by the ere- - - laboratories, ative chemist. Indeed, within a gener- We who are not ation the influence exerted upon the chemists 'hear entire fabric of our civilization front strange tales these within the laboratory has been so .days, no - less enormous that we are prepared at .strange, b e c a u s e last to accept the state- - they are true, of that we have passed beyond the hies and amber, or-aof machinery and have entered naments of ivory, into the more mysterious age of chenii 'shimmering silks, colors 'of every hue, istry. What tins new era is to bring forth and exotic per-the way of scientific discovery rests fumes once the upon conjecture, but certainly, thd precious cargo of miracles performed in the last halt desert caravans produced from a century have been sufficient to warrant substance as ordinary as coal tar. almost any expectancy. I has descended into America has heard that Germany s tbeTruly, chemistry of the earth and extracted chemists saved her from an early dis- - the depths secret formu!a of nature. Thc astrous defeat, both in the held and m0(iern researcher, by constant obtaining supplies. ence and has per Without the tremendous expansion of Jormcd the untiring effort, which kept the mysteries of niher plants for thc production of other ccnturies trates and ammon.a from the air by j ,he dprk and brandcd hfmKas one processes developed by her great aIlit.d with the dovil himself. The the war, without question, si.arrher n lindillg in coa, tar not only would have ended years bt lore it did, things of beauty, but remedies for as a result of the exhaustion of Ger ni0Sf harMn ills, has outdreamed the exi from the not s many explosives, aleheumt by transforming a base of her food supplies because ,into 8onlething far more pre-o- f the lack of fertilizer for her fieldsJ glance cious than gold. So great, in fact, have beep the ac- From this black, sticky mass .ne complislimcnts in the last few years adorns M lady with . colors rivalling that scientists now declare that a na- n their barbaric splendor, tion without applied chemistry will be distils perfumes that equal the jasdefenseless in war and laggards in mine and he .makes terrifying gases Previously unheard of scientific feats' that one day will make w'ir unthink-hav- e Thousands of articles upon been reported from the labors- which we depend, from TNT to of because but they necessity, tory, rose to fer quietly they were t blocks. froln attar of rLbbLrLLhe.V glamor' and then-- trap- - tifize.r and,from illumination gas to purple, are derived from the pings of romance while lesser achieve- - ryal substance. , ments on the field of battle and in the saple. council chambers of diplomats have ,As recently as 1700 a man who dared to say that he could produce a ruby been hailed by throngs. a lump of coal would have been Those of us who have left the class- art and room and the study hall far behind find atensod of practicing the black it difficult, lacking doubtless would have ended his career knowl- - a t1e stake. In thre4 centuries we technical To-da- y we accept have gone far edge, to compre hend this .swift these miracles .but few of us know transition from one how ,the miracles are wrought. And era to another, an yet there is no mystery, The succeeding sketches will showr period V amazing when the nations how the accidental discovery of an of the world are F.nglish boy at work in a laboratory in making serious. 1850 started the development of c replans to scrap their ative chemistry, and will tell how It worthless armies is possible to produce a silk purse, a and navies, depend-- , bottle of perfume, the colors of the ty ing for protection' rainbow, a variety of medicines, upotl the stuffs' and poisons, all from the ea , subtle but ' deadly material. rrj ge m One manufacturing plant has- tailed a chewing giiiu stand for l4 benefit of its, girl employees. Payton Sheet Metal Work8 4 Roofing, Furnaces,- Guttering J - All Kinds of Sheet Metal"" and Copper Work ' 'i First Nor ihSt. Near Orest Depci food-entire- American Butineu, New York) T In the tall of a firefly to lure wily bass at night, yet the contrivance has been used to good advantage by William P. Osborne of the New York State College of Forestry. a Small By Imprisoning fireflies In glass vial and rigging the- container with an Ingenious arrangement- of hooks, black bass have been found to succumb to the scintillations of the insects and to swallow with great rapidity hook, line and sinker. An ordinary tubular pUl bottle- Is fitted with a harness to which are fastened three pronged hooks, two on the sides and one on the end. ,Tlie bottle Is then equipped with a swivel similar to that used on a wooden minfireflies now. Four or five are placed In the bottle and (he bot(le sealed. Milwaukee Journals Bleeding and Sore Gums Teeth on Edge Are Sure Indications that You Have T ownsencf s church." EARLY A EARLY, Doctors of Chiropractic, Over Wlghtman Supply Company, Main StreaL Oflloe Hours from 10 to 1 and 2 to 6. - Aerial YOU CAN BE CURED a Progress In New Guinea. It Is 13 years ago that Znhn of the Evangelical Lutheran synod went to New Guinea and began his work among the natives, who were then largely heathen. There were many cannibals In the territory. A letter recently received from Morohe, shows wonderful spiritual progress. A large proportion of the Islanders have renounced heathenism and given up their Instruments of witchcraft. . It Is estimated that 8,000 of them hnve been received Into the Christian - good-size- ' , DR. L. D. PIOUTB - d Mall 8ervice. . Ecuador and Nicaragua are establishing aerial mall service, and In China 40 planes are operating 800 miles from Shanghai to Peking, ac-- . cording to the Nations Business. Passengers and pnrcels are carried as well as postal matter and on letters thus delivered In Old Cathay are stamps hearing by way of fitting contrast a pictured alrp'nne beside a picture of the Great WalL Will Cure You At All Drug Stores Do tho right thing at tho right ' time. Act quickly in time of danger. In time of kidney danger, Doans Kidney Pills are most effective. Ask your neighbor! Plenty of Fayson evidence of their worth. Second Simmons, Mrs. Arietta I caught a Ward, Payson, says: severe cold which settled on my kidIt caused lameness across my neys. I back and severe pains at night. was told of Donns Kidney Pills and Doans brought me I uscd them. and my relief strengthened quick kidneys and back. Over Three Years Later Mrs. Simmons said: Although I have no need of a kidney remedy now, I occasionally use Doans Kidney Pills. reThey always give tho same good sults. Don t Price 60c. at all dealers. ask for. get a remedy kidney simplr Deans Kidney Pills the Pame that Foster Milburn Mrs. Simmons had. Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. DWTIflT NOTICE United States Land Office, Salt Lak0 City, Utah, October 28, 1921, To Whom It May Concern; D&. L. N. ELLSWORTH DKNTIST Office, Payson Exchange Bavlnp Bank Building. T. C. JEPPSON, 8. C., CHIROPRACTOR K DOUOLAS& BLDG. P,.one 126. Office Hours 2 to G. Office Main 7 pan. F. TILSON. M. D. PHYSICIAN and SUTUi Street VUH at Residence Phone Payson, Utah """ yj vp jv Dw. 4? , Over Wightman Supply Company, Main Street, pffiee Hours 9 to 1 and 2 te 6. Saturdays, 0 to 1 Only. Office Phone 18. Bee. Pkona M i ACT QUICKLY PyorrheaRemedy Htato Engineer's Ollit-e- , Salt Lak City, Utah, November. 9, 1921. ... Notice is hoiehy giveu that .tin .Strawberry High Line Usual Co. wit. its principal .place of business at, layson, Utah, lias luado - appliciUwi in accordance with the requirement. of Sec. 8, Chapter 67, Session Lawr ef'Ulah, 1919, to 'change ' the point, of diveision and place of use rtl Hec. Ft. of water' from Ten (10) Hpring Creek in Utah ' County heretofore diverted at three points ' as. follows: 1447.2 ft. N. and 4303.5 ft.' E. of the 8. W. corner of Sec. 13;, also 300 ft. N. and 1500 ft. E. from' the center of Sec. 13; and 600 ft. K. and 1650 ft. E. from the center, of Sec. 24, all in Township 9 South, ltunge 1 East, Salt Lake Base and: Meridian, and used to irrigate EV4 Sec. 12, SW(4, 8Ei N W, Sec. 13, It is) township and range aforesaid. now desired to divert said water at two points, namely 190 ft. N. and ? 960 ft. W. of the S. E. corner , of j Sec. 13; and 580 ft. E. and 10 ft. of the S. E. corner of Sec. 13, bout The water will in T. 9 8., II. 1 E. bo conveyed a distance of 4700 ft. r in a diteh and there used to irrigate 1940 acres ot land embraced In' W Sec. .80, T. 8 S.; R. I rj See. 25, W E.; all of See. 1 except part ot NE See. 12, , NE14 nl SEV4 8EVi,'E and NEV Sec. 13, T. S., B. 1 ,E., This application ia r S. L. B. & M. designated in the State Engineer's vs ' ollico as No. "5 All protests agnnst the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be mado by affidavit in duplicate, accompanied with" a fee of $2.50, and filed in this office within thirty (30) days after tho completion of (he publication of this, no' tice. t R. E. CALDWELL, State Engineer. Pate of first publication Nov. 18, 1921. . Dnte of completion of publij cation Doc. 16, 1921. 1 ii battery f NOTICE TO WATER USERS, af , j - dill-matt- er Bottled Fireflies Lure Fish. Anyone would have supposed that fish were immune to demoralization of modern scientific progress, but even fishing Is coming under the away of advanced and entirely original Ideas of bait and fish hooks. Izaak Walton would have shuddered at the thought of using the storage ii - -- t he Institute ot sfe Tropical Fiah Off Jersey, . J James E. Taylor, while fishing Cape May, N. J., a short time ago, Ljj Into a shoal of pompano, a fish tl j never has lawn found outside of tr l leal waters. , Taylor and his ..t caught nearly UK) of them, FlaM men say that pompano bring aa hf as $1.20 a pound In southern marke Old inhabitants say it Is a sure all of a mild winter, as tropical flab m vet- caught this late north of nt (Ktlcased by f p JV p Ji ry Jgs J. H. ELLSWORTH DENTIST over Bank, Payson, Ut. Office Hours, 9 to 12; 1 to 6 Res. Phone 10S-- J Phone 23. 0.ce &ty $ $ 4 Notice is hereby given thnt tho stnto of Utah has filed in this office lists of lands, selocted byr the said State, under section 6 off the Act of Congress, approved July 16, 1894, as Indemnity School lands, viz: Serial No. 025997. LotSjfl and 9, SE4 Nwy4, HE Vi NEW, SWVi NE4, Section 15; Township 10 South, Range 3 East, Salt Lnkt Meridian. Copies of said lists, so far as they relate to said tracts bdescriptive subdivisions, have been conspicuously posted in this office for inspection by any person interested and by the public generally. During tho period of publication of this notice, or any time thereafter, and before final approval and certification, under reguladepartmental tions of April 25, .1907, protests or contests ngnSnst tlie claim of the State to any of tho tracts or subon divisions hereinbefore described the ground that the same is more valuable for mineral than for agricultural purposes, will bo received and noted for report to the General Land Office nt Washington, I). C. Failure so to protest or contest, be will within the time specified, considered sufficient evidence of character of the. tracts and the selections thereof. bi ing otlier- he ap wie free from objection, State. the to proved GOUT.P B. BL8KFLY, t r Register. |