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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, UTAH, SEPTEMBER 8, 1922 Suggests to Suffering Women the Road to Health Salt Lake The Utah state board of pardons will hold a meeting Saturday, September 10 at the Utah state prison. 30 iii, ... icv S'. YELLOWSTONE'S Woods Cross. The Woods Cross complant of the Woods Cross Canning pany will open for tomato packing for the first time in three years. - SEMI- Murray. James Ilodell, 18 years of age, a resident of llerriman, was drowned at Crystal hot luke, while bathing. 'Sv V CENTENNIAL HARKS ITASTHE - - V FIR5TDF NINETEEN GREAT 5CENIC Farmington At a meeting of the board of education the date of opening the schools of Davis county was fixed at September 18. It is expected that the enrollment will be unusually large, especially in high school. PLAYGROUNDS DFTHE AMERICAN PEOPLE Irovo. Utahs crop of onions this year aggregates 100 acres. The estimated yield is placed at 450 bushels tars will be per acre and fifty-twshipped . Last year the shipment was ninety cars. Reports to the bureau of crop statistics show that the c. n litinn of sugar beets in Utah Is highly favorable. V- - o Photo Y&401fjr07(gIJYaif2T& GftAflZ) y'4r Compound advertised in a newspaper and gave it a fair trial. Now I am able to do my work and dont even have a backache every month. am willing for these facts to be used as a testimonial to lead all who suffer with female troubles, as I did, to the right Mrs. Lula Vann, Box road to health. 43, Fulton, Arkansas. Its this sort of praise of Lydia E. Pink-haVegetable Compound, given by word of mouth and by letter, one woman to another, that should cause you to conn sider taking this medicine, if you are troubled with such symptoms as painful periods, weak, nervous feelings, miserable pains in your back, and cannot work at certain times. Here is a woman who is so grateful and glad to be relieved from a painful and nerve racking physical condition that she wishes to tell all fiick women. well-know- Salt Lake. The Utah tax commission has adjourned to meet again in October, at which time further consideration will he given of the work which has been before the commi3-sn and the special plans v. bidi have been worked out by Hiv.fessor Bullock, expert from Harvard university. CAm'QJtr,Axizoi.'i- - Laxatives Replaced b TO"- rocky mg Am 10 .,. ,v f H &. By the Use of Nujol Nujol is a lubricant not a medicine or laxative so cannot gripe. When you are constipated, not enough of .Natures lubricating liquid Is produced In tho bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Salt Lake The Horseshoe Pitcassociation of Utah will hold n tournament at tire coming state fair. The association has sent out a letter to She various counties requesting that same representative of the horseshoe piUichers In the cjnnty organize a club with a view of selecting the champion pitcher of the county to enter the state contest. Cacozwo hes . . " &t Doctors pre- scribe Nujol because It acts Rite tills natu- ral lubricant and thus replaces it. Try 28 Salt Lake. The state road commission has signed the cooperative agreement with Rich county for the grading and gravel surfacing of 7.5 miles of gravel surface road from Woodruff to the state line connecting up with the Rear River valley iu Mah and the Lincoln highway thru llvanston. Wyo. Costs of the project nre to be met 74 per cent by the federal government and 2G per cent by the county. EL ly every month from my waist down that I could not be on my feet half the time. I was not able to do my work without help. I saw your Vegetable Salt Lake Victor Peterson, a rail way striker, was shot and seriously wounded by a strike breaking negro. S' V- ri I used Lydia Fulton, Arkansas. Plnkhama Vegetable Compound for a or? ness in my side. I would suffer so bad- g JMTtSZ'TYJTlAm Caurfar'bfthWoirrP o Serv, ice 1ST ZKWrzrZZH By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN 1FTY years of National Parks lowstone hag been celebrating 1 Yel- Its this summer. When JS l "a9 PKtablished by uet of congress In 1872 It was the first public playground of the people created In all history. Now the United States has nineteen und several other nations have followed our example. Yellowstone Is a land of wonders nnd Its early history Is In keeping. Our third president, Thomas Jefferson, bought the Louisiana Purchase the unknown land between the Mississippi nnd the ltockles from Napoleon Bonaparte In 1S03. In the spring of ISO! Jefferson started Lewis and Clank westward from St. Louts to see what we had t for $lo,(XX000. They went to the mouth of the Columbia and returned to St. Louis In 1800, after being given up for lost, llot ti going and returning they passed a little to the north of the Yellowstone, but heard nothing of It. John Colter, one of their men, turned bnck before reaching St. Louis to trap beaver on the headwaters of the Missouri, lie discovered the Yellowstone In 1S07, returned to St. Louis In 1810 and told about the geysers and other marvels. St. Louis refused to believe nnd laughed at the Yellowstone ns Colter's Hell." Gen. William Clark, Colters commander, was apparently the only nmn to believe; on Clark's official map of the Lewis and Clark expedition you will find traced Colter's route In 1S07." Jim Bridger, one of Gen. Wllllnm IL Ashley's lieutenants In the Rocky Mountain Fur company, rediscovered the Yellowstone in 1827. Rrldger was ns good a mountaineer, plainsman nnd guide as this country ever saw. Hut he was a practical Joker along the line of monumental Ilea he was the Inventor of the obsidian cliff, boiling spring.' alum creek and echo canyon stories which have been Western classics for nearly a century. So Ids report of the Yellowstone wonders was set down merely ns another of Jim Itrldgers big yarns." In 1812 nnd again In 1SC2 men reported the won-ficof the Yellowstone. Nobody would believe In 1SCD the them. Washburn-Lnng-forexpedition from Montana succeeded In getting a hearing. Rut It was not until 1870 that a special federal government expedition established the existence of the Yellowstone. Thus It took sixty-threyears and more than six discoveries to put the Yellowstone officially on the map. Cornelius Hedges lie lias deserved well of Ids country September 18. 1870, by n camp fire In the Yellowstone, proposed that the wonderland he made a rational park a piddle playground set aside for the people's use forever. The Idea took. Congress established the Yellowstone National park March 1. 1872. The United States now lins nineteen national parks containing 10.850 square miles or G, 949.760 acres. Chronologically In the order of formation they nre us follows: 1832 Hot Springs, Arkansas, Oil ncres, originally a reservation, made a national park this jenr; 40 curative hot springs. Montana nnd Wyoming, 1S72 Yellowstone, Idaho. 3,348 square miles; geysers and other volcanic exhibits, Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, large lake, great animal preserve. 5S!)0Sequoln. California. 252 square miles; J2,0iH) big Irws over ten feet In diameter, and cotne oser thirty five feet and 5,000 years old. 180C Yosendte, California, 1,125 square mile; I m a. t t , rs semi-offici- e Salt Lake. From the number of license plates issued the state Is more than holding up to the average of an automobile for every ten people in the United -- States and the peak has not yet been reached. Statistics of motor vehicles now show that in the United States there are now nine and r million motor vehicles, almost twenty times the number in 1010 and the amount invested is while there has been Invested In road construction during the the sum of $2,526,-00,00period The average value of a truck ts figured at $1500 and of nn automobile $750. Utah has over $700,000 In liscense fees on autos this year. three-quarte- Att&RZCAlf PJOFteS AY Yosendte valley, high waterfalls, three groves of big trees. 1800 General Grant, California, four square miles; big trees. 1S09 Xjount Rainier, Washington. 324 square miles; Mount Rainier with forty-eigh- t square miles of glaeiers. 1SX)2 Crater Lake, .Oregon, 210 square miles; lake In crater of extinct volcano, with sides 1,000 feet high. 1003 Wind Cnve, South Dakota, seventeen square miles; cavern with many miles of galleries and chambers. 1004 Ilutt, Oklahoma. 843 acres; medicinal springs. 1904 Sullvs Hill, North Dakota, 7S0 acres; wild animal preserve. IfXXjMes,, Verde, Colorado, 77 square miles, prehistoric cliff dwellings. 1010 Glacier, Montana. 1,534 square mountains, lakes and glaciers. 1013 Rocky Mountain, Colorado. 307 miles, heart of the Rockies, Continental peaks up to 11,253 feet. Islands, 113 1010 Hawaii, llawallnn miles, three famous volcanoes on two Islands, tropical scenery. Lessen Volcanic, California. 124 square 11)10, miles; only active volcano In United States proper, other yolcanlc exhibits. 1017 Mount McKinley, Alaska, 2.290 square miles; highest mountain In North America (20.300 feet), great wild animal preserve; not yet accessible. 1919 Grand Canyon, Arizona, 958 square miles, gorge of the Colorado river. 1010 Lafayette, Maine. 3,000 nrres; group of mountains on Isle of Mount Desert. 1910 .ion, Utah. 120 square miles; gorge of the Rio Virgin Manj volumes could be filled with photographs of scenery In these national parks. The photographs reproduced herewith were selected for these reasons: Yellowstone Is the oldest, largest nnd best known of our national parks. Rocky Mountain is the most popular. Grand Canyon Is the greatest natural wonder in the world. Lafayette Is the only national park east or the Mississippi. Zion is the newest of our nineteen. The remaining picture, a scohe on the way to Rocky Mountain, is typical of the American people at piny In the national parks. The visitors to the national parks In 1021 numbered 1,007,323; the private nutomolfiles numbered 175.S25. Rocky Mountain led with 273,737 visitors and 57,438 automobiles. Hot Springs was second with 130,008 visitors. Yosendte was third with with 91.513 visitors ami 18,047 cars. Yellowstone had 81,051 visitors nnd 15,730 curs. Appropriations In 1021 were $1,031,540 nnd revenues were $390,028. Eventually the national pnrks will be practically The act of 1010 creating The national park service, a bureau of the Interior department, sets forth that the fundamental purpose of the national parks Is to conserve the scenery nnd the natural and historic objects and tbe wild Ufa therein und first-clas- s Photo hy fWCpuy l.S-- forest Service to provide for the enjoyment of the same In such manner nnd by such means as will leuve them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations. There will be more nat'onal parks. The policy of tbe national park service, as set forth In 1019 by the late Franklin B. Lane, then secretary of lira Interior, is that the national parks of the future should be justified by scenery of supreme nnd distinctive quality or some natural feature so extraordinary or unique as to be of national Interest nnd Importance. The national park system as now constituted, should not be lowered In standard, dignity and prestige by the Inclusion of nrens which express In less than tbe highest terms the particular class or kind of exhibit which they rep- resent" Tbe national park movement Is now nationThere Is nn army of enthusiasts. These enthusiasts nre preaching that the mission of the nntionnl parks Is manifold ; that general use of them by the people will bring physical, mental, moral and financial benefits. transcontinental t jurist trafThis nntlonnl-parfic by private car Is getting to be a big Udng, with tremendous possibilities In dollars. The Scenic West was literally full of motorists this summer on vucution trips ranging from two weeks to the whole season. All sorts of estimates have been made of what this means financially t,o the country to'' have this money spent at home Instead of It sightseeing abroad. It Is purely guesswork to estl mate wlmt the million nnd more visitors to the national parks this summer paid nut In money. An arbitrary minimum estluiute of $100 each gives a total of $100,000,000. The national park enthusiasts have formed an organization of their own the National Harks association. It was formed by unofficial frlesiris of the nntional pnrks to enter a field of the movement which the federal gevemment apparently docs not Intend to occupy. The present policy of congress If It has any nntionnl park policy Is merely to provide for the protection, maintenance nnd development of the parks, leaving It to the people Jo determine thp use they shall make of then'. The association is nn organization of the to enable them to use effectively people tliemst-iveAt present the etjoy-meplaygrounds. these public of the American people of Its national porks is largely emotional. Among Its many otlief activities the association purposes a campaign of education to double the enjoyment of the people It says In effect to the by adding understanding. American our national parks are natures great laboratories nnd museums. They are not merely wonders and scenery. They are exhibits on n mighty scale of the processes by which nnture has been and Is making America. You may double jour pleasure in these exhibits bv comprehending tbei; meaning through Intelligent study. Let ua 'Set But let us also know Am.vlriil America first! Let us know Its natural history us well t,s its national history. Let ns differentiate, dlstli-uis- l nnd appreciate. Then we shall xenlly know. Plica we shall really enjoy." wide. 1010-102- Trovo. The completion of the county court house will be rushed. Ogden. The Weber gymnasium building will be constructed in a short time. Cedar City. A bridge over Coal creek will be constructed at a cost of $40,000. Salt Lake. Utah leads all states in per acre production of alfalfa seed this year. k nt 1 Salt Lake. A 200 gallon capacity still has been raided and over 1700 tons of mashtfseized. Salt Lake. A plant to manufacture magnesium chloride from waters of Great Salt Lake is being launched. J. L. Llshonbee, proprietor a pool hall, was fined $10 by Judge Aie W. Turner on a charge of permitting minors to play pool in his place Hrovo. of of business. Farmington. Davis countys production of onions this year is reported At the best In quality and tbe largest production in the history of the county by W. T. Thayr.e of Farmington, county farm agent of Davis county. Vernal. The first leg of the Green River, River, Utah, voy. age, down the Green river, has been successfully accomplished by a crew of surveyors and boatmen under the leadership of K. W. Trimble, topographic engineer of Washington, D. C. Wyo.-Gree- n Although their fair city Is a long way from the nntive haunts of alligators, the residents of Ware, Mass., culled on the American Legion to run down a huge gator which was found In tbe swamp lnnd near the city, e Two million American club women pledged themselves to assist the American Legion in obtaining adequate hospital treatment for disabled World war veterans through their representatives at the meeting of the board of directors of the Genera! Federation of Womens Clubs st Chautuuquo, N, I. If candles were made In the shape of a cross some people would burn them at all four ends. The spectator often sees better than the actor. Tlie most uncommon thing is sense. Backache Is a Warning! Those agonizing twinges across the small of the back, that dull, throbbing backache may mean serious kidney weakness serious, if neglected, for it may lead to gravel, stone in the kidneys, hladder inflammation, dropsy or fatal Brights disease. If you are suffering with a bad back, have dizzy spells, headaches, nervous, despondent attacks or disordered kidney action, hettl Natures warning. Get after the cause. Doan't Kidney Pills have helped thousands. They should help you. Ask your neighbor I A Utah Case Jonah Mathias. V retired farmer, 8. .LAS' ' Second 8t, Brlg-lPyham, Utah, says: I suffered from1 severe .attacks backache. Bom times It was hard for me to get up from a chair, or from a stooped position. My kidneys caused me more or less trouble, too. I used Doans Kid' nev Pills and In a few days the back-acn- e left and my kidneys became -t Get Deoae at Any State, 60s a Bos DOAN C-S Ki!tM rOSTER-IGLBUR- N O- BUFFALO, N. V. Women Made Young Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body full of youth and health may be youra if you will keep your system in order by regularly taking COLD MEDAL ) Ths worlds standard remedy for kidney, fiver, bladder and uric acid troubles, the enemies of life and looks. In use since 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Leek for the name Cold Medal on every has ad accept no imitating THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS that make a horse Wheeze, Rear, have f I- -IT" TMck Wiad or Choke dears can be reduced with v I also I work. required bottle deli f.F.Ti Inga. other Bunches or Swell- No blister, ao hair lgene, and horse kept at notnioal only a few drops 'n application. $2.50 per Book 3 A free. 318 Tosh St. WtU.- -- |