OCR Text |
Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH Electric Gardening Succeeds in Sweden NEED FOR SUPERIOR MANHOOD REV. W. H. WF.1CLE, By JR, Chaplain Eyiscopsl dollar. The truth and hope in minorities. All history, whether record of the power of minorities. There needs but one wise man so rapid is the contagion. Great men Longest Locomotive in the World Guild. need of America is superior gianhood, personalities and who will counteract oar materialistic tendencies and who listen to the voice-o- f God instead of the ring of the almighty THE Sweden has adopted electric gardening with success. These workers are laying brick pipes through which the wires are passed. The wires, when electrified, warm the soil and crops of vegetables flourish that ordinarily grow only In hothouses. Actors of any time must always be sought in the field of religion or art, is a in a company and all become wise, exist that there may be greater men. As Christians we were never meant to be lost in a crowd. We are to speak, act, and live differently than the multitudes. In a democratic country it requires an unusual amount of courage to draw apart and rise above ths common herd. There are disquieting signs in our national life today. We may not be worse than our ancestors, but I doubt very much if we are any better. There is a danger that we mistake license for freedom, and that we select the laws we choose to follow and scorn the others. In America we have been constantly exposed to religious influences, but with it there have been only sputters of righteousness. There is a tendency to accept institutional religion and organized Christianity rather than the compelling person of the Galilean Peasant. We have become so familiar with the outward aspects of the manifestations of Christianity that our attention and devotion and consecration have been weaned away from that which is most lasting and vital an individual and personal relationship with the Risen Christ. TEACHERS AND LABOR UNIONS By MARY C. BARKER, Preaident American Teacher Federation. miEN damp v changes in weatl;her, or expos-ra- ft ure to a makes joints ache, there is always quick relief ui Bayer Aspirin. It makes short work of headache or any little pain. Just as effective in the more serious suffering from neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism or lumbago. No ache d or pain is ever too for Bayer Aspirin to relieve, and it does not affect the heart. All druggists, with proven directions for various uses which many people have found invaluable in the relief of pain. deep-seate- , rlASPlRIN Aspirin Is th trade mark of Buyer Manufaotur of MuooaooUoacidwtot of Salicylicaoki Boys I Girts I Make Money Selling Article ever? housewife buys. Live wires $3 dally. Also bicycles, diamond rings. 80c gets samples and Instructions. Burns Laboratory. CincinnatLO. For Galled Horses The longest locomotive In the world, built at the Hill yard shops at Spokane, Wash., by the Great Northern It Is 11!) feet long and weighs 1,978,240 pounds. It Is the tirst of five such Iron horses to be built for transcontinental service. Each engine when completed will cost $200,000. HELPS EDUCATE LO President Hoovers Fishing Camp Through struggle of body and soul the workers of the world have attained, or are attaining, their right to associate for the advancement of Hanfords Balsam of Myrrh their just interests. We know that the labor movement is not just a AIIwlunfnrtWlllinlilwrmlltl selfish demand on the part of a particular group for something that it bn beak a Mi aW, does not have, but wants to possess. It is a humanitarian movement, whose watchword could be stated thus: Help yourself to attain the conLittle Note Appealed ditions necessary for you to function as a human being, as a worthy memto Traffic Cops Heart ber of your community. Help others to help themselves. Mrs. Harrison, a young matron of We teachers are in a real sense a labor organization. We are ons Montclair, drove to the business section to do a little shopping the other , of those 100 or more national and international unions that make up the day. She swerved to the curb as sha neared a store she Intended to palarger part of the American Federation of Labor. We are part of the labor movement, and we are so organized because tronize, but before she had reached that point her motor stalled. For 10 we believe that the principles of organized labor are sound, that organizaminutes she tried to get It to start, but without success. She gave It up tion of workers into unions is a necessary part of the human machinery as a had job and alighted to summon ' that has been set up in ths world to promote human progress. a mechanic. To her horror she disWe acknowledge our debt to organized labor for the conditions that covered that she was parked directly make it possible for us to operate in this way. It is our privilege, along In front of a lire hydrant. Mrs. Harrison knew that the Montwith all other workers of today, to build upon a foundation that was laid clair police were strict about such a hut she was resourceful. So those who have of us. the violation, preceded by struggles she hastily wrote a imte and stuck It Labors program is our program and labors interest is our interest, In the window. It read: Dear Mr. Officer Police dont give me a ticket. for what labor wants is that the interest of no group shall be subservient I couldnt make t lie thing go in the share all shall that of other interest to the good justly any group, and Ive gone for a mechanic. When she returned with the methings of life. ( -- dd BURDEN IMPOSED BY EDUCATION By DR. Miss Mary Stewart of Denver, Colo, and Washington, who has been appointed assistant director of education for the United States Indian service. In announcing her appointment Secretary Wilbur stated she would develop plans emphasizing vocational features in Indian schools. SON OF . Newspaper correspondents along with photographers THE WIZARD finally have been admitted to President Hoovers fishing camp In the Blue Kidge mountains of Virginia, and this is one of the first pictures they made there. It shows the summer White House Itself In Its picturesque setting. Most Beautiful Mother and Son ALBERT PARKER FITCH (Presbyterian), New York. Even though a man has a large store of general knowledge there i A a danger for him in the present day tendency toward specialization. mind whole must scene. his human educated on the man keep genuinely The insistence upon highly specialized training is turning upon the modern American world educated men and women with small minds. pitfall into which the man falls who knows just enough to find a flaw in everything, the temptation to retire into ones mind and watch the world go by. As though any knowledge is ultimate without action! It is nothing without the power to beget ideas, to beget action. The habit of dealing in universal concepts rather than realities, is a handicap, too, in that it makes its addicts forget that man faces conditions, not theories. And finally there is disillusionment. Unless they make their "minds the accomplices of their prejudices, the learned, even though they would, cannot share the soothing convictions of the untutored, for they look on history realizing that man, though he had made material gains, remained is a always BoyUh Incident Recalled than twenty-twyears ago three lads were fishing In the vicinity of West Kingfleld, N. H. On the way home, after resting beneath the shade of a maple tree, each lad placed a cent In the crotch of a limb of the tree. Recently on his West Kingfleld farm, A. W. Lander, on felling a tree, discovered three cents Imbedded In its wood. The Incident was recalled, as Mr. Landers son, who died several years ago, was one of those boys. The others were W. S. Stanley, now of Boston, and Rev. G. A. Woodcock, of Kingfleld. Mr. Lander will keep one of the coins In memory of his son and the 'other boys will each receive one as a keepsake. More The educated person faces life with certain handicaps and burdens which are the price of the knowledge he has acquired. Along with the great value that it brings, education brings into life a great burden, and with the burden, sorrow. There chanic she found a policeman reading the note and laughing heartily. Not only did he not give her a ticket, but be assisted the mechanic to get the motor going. New York Sun. just the same. o Qil From Shale Nova Scotias extensive oil-sha- are said to contain deposits, high percentages of oil, are to be ex- ploited as soon as the extraction plant which Is now being built at New Glasgow Is completed. which All Are you still In love? , Say, theres nothing still about ma wlien Im In love, The genuinely educated man rises above the burdens that education as did Jesus, the consummate genius. has to carry IDEA OF UNIVERSITY TRAINING By An especially posed portrait study of W. L. Edison of Wilmington, Del, son of the great inventor, Thomas A. Edison. Mr. Edison has recently perfected a new and radical improvement in radio receiving sets, employing a liquid in certain parts of the apparatus. This Is the first portrait of Mr. Edison to be made during the past fifteen years. Protecting Oyster Jersey law specifies that only bouts under sail power may engage In the hunt for seed oysters. They are obtained in the stretch of bay from Fortescue, N. J, to nearly opposite Delaware City, Del. The seed oysters are transplanted, then allowed to grow to marketable size, which requires from two to three years. A Mrs, Richard OConnor, twenty-two- . of Dover, N. J., and her son, James Richard, who were selected by unanimous vote as being the most beautiful American mother and son. Judges In this contest, which was t, nationwide, were John Barrymore, E. Scott Fitzgerald and Cornelius Jr, Van-deybil- I New DR. ROBERT M. HUTCHINS. President Elect Chicago Univeriity. university training is to unsettle the minds of young men, to widen their horizons, to inflame their intellects. It is not a hardening, or settling process. Education is not to teach men facts, theories or laws; it is not to reform them, or amuse them, or to make them expert technicians in any field; it is to teach them to think, to think straight, if possible; but to think always for themselves. My view of I would advise young persons contemplating entering school to know the fellows and to get a diploma, because it is the open sesame into the company of persons who matter, and to join their local country club or fraternal organization. These bodies have high ideals. They are organizations for mutual Their dues are lower than those of most colleges. You improvement. get to know the fellows in one. It would seem plausible to suppose that anyone can get from them most of the tlAigs one gets at the university, if one goes to the university because it is the thing to do. Choose a Profitable Vocation ! , Leant the Beauty Cultnre Ooiiree gtren by a , mao that baa tattht KB aindeni bow to , earn Bit) MONBT. Catalog sent oa reqneek CTAU HIGH SCHOOL, . OS' HtAlTb CLLTUKJB - Salt Lake Cits SSL CUCt Bldg. |